Daily hansan
Lawrence, Kansas
61st Year, No.94
Monday, March 2, 1964
JACKSON
THE WINNERS — Members of the Sigma Chi fraternity-Gamma Phi Beta sorority Rock Chalk Revue skit, "All's Not In Vein," display the first place trophies they won in the competition, plus the traveling trophy. Their winning skirt was a satire of Watkins Hospital. From left: Lyle A.
"Mike" Robe, Jr., Arkansas City sophomore; Barbara Bauerle, Harlan, Iowa, Junior; Sandra Bornholdt, La Crosse senior; Hoite Caston, Independence senior; and David Nesbitt, Overland Park junior, who played Count Dracula. (Photo by Paul Kivett.)
Vampires' Win Rock Chalk
"All's Not In Vein," Sigma Chi-Gamma Phi Beta skit, won first place in the 1964 Rock Chalk Revue competition, Saturday night.
Based on the legend of the vampire, "Count Dracula," the winning skit satirized the operations of Watkins Hospital. The cast depicted the staff of the hospital as vampires and ghouls. All ended well when Blue Cross, played by Jack Powell, St. Louis, Mo., junior, and Blue Shield, played by Sandra Bornholdt, La Crosse senior, convinced the vampires to be like the "purest of the pure . . . Dean Emily."
The vampires are known blood drinkers and in the final scene Count Dracula, played by Dave Nesbitt, Beloxi, Miss., junior, said, "I was a four-pint-a-day vampire but I know I can kick the habit, Dean Emily."
haut, Dean Banyer,
Barbara Bauerle, Harlan, Iowa, junior, and a
director of the winning skit, said, "I think it's
great . . . it's worth every single minute."
"I think it's the greatest thing that has happened to us in a long time . . . and, Dean Emily, we love you," Mike Robe, Arkansas City sophomore and a director of the winning skit, commented.
Placing second was the Phi Kappa Psi-Delta Delta Delta offering, "Allewdwin and His Magic Pot."
The skit was based on the legend of Aladdin. Trying to escape the induction into the sultan's army. "Allerdwwin" consults a reference book.
"How to Escape the Draft." The book's advice coupled with the magic of a genie, place "Allewdwin" in the Sultan's Palace. Eventually love conquers and "Allewdwin" escapes the draft by marrying "Princess Bodroll Boudoir." The couple are to begin "marital bliss" in the Abdull Stouffer's Place.
The Alpha Tau-Chi Omega skit, "A Shot of Sherwood," and the Kappa Sigma-Delta Gamma skit, "You Can Take It With You," won honorable mentions.
Based on the legend of "Faust" the Kappa Sigma-Delta Gamma skit told the story of a sanitation engineer. Desiring to become Hugh Hefner, editor of Playboy magazine, the engineer, Faust, sells his soul to the devil. As the scene is shifted to a Playboy club, an angel comes to save Faust from his fate. However, the angel, a beautiful girl, falls in love with Faust. In the final scene, the Playboy club, Faust, and the angel all descend to hell to live "happily ever after."
The legend of "Robin Hood" served as the basis for the Alpha Tau Omega-Chi Omega skit. The production satirized KU's expansion program using a fictional Sherwood University as a setting. Robin Hood endeavors to find a way to raise more money for the university. However, he faces a problem in the form of the Sheriff of Nottingham, a wealthy alum. In the end, Robin Hood with the help of a clever Maid Marian outwits the sheriff.
Airliner Search Starts in Sierras
TAHOE VALLEY, Calif.—(UPI)—A wind-whipped snowstorm yielded to clearing skies early today over the High Sierra where a Constellation airliner with 85 persons aboard vanished within sight of Lake Tahoe's gambling and ski resorts.
A three-quarter moon broke through the overcast about three hours before dawn, as the swirling snow diminished to a few scattered flakes and the wind velocity decreased.
The four-engine Paradise airliner was believed to have crashed either into the lake or the rugged 9,000-foot mountains which surround it during an approach to the Tahoe Valley airport in a blizzard shortly before noon yesterday.
AIR, ground and surface units stood ready in northern California and Nevada in hope that the change in the weather would permit a full-scale search operation at daybreak.
The plane was flying from Salinas and San Jose, Calif., to the resort area with 81 passengers, including 37 patrons of a San Jose tavern and 16 employees of a Salinas department store. It carried a crew of four.
Search officials said the plane could have hit any of numerous peaks in the area or could have gone down in Desolation Valley, a wilderness area west of the lake which is so rugged it is almost impassable even under ideal summer conditions.
LT. COL. Alexander Sherry, who arrived here from the air rescue center at Hamilton Air Force Base to coordinate the search, said there was "no pattern" planned. He said reports of a low flying plane had been received from points throughout the area.
Search and rescue experts said there was an outside possibility the plane might not be found until after snows melt or-if in a Sierra lake—not at all. Other planes have crashed in the Sierras and not been found for months or years.
impressible even under heavy pressure. However, they would not discount the possibility that the constellation might have plunged into the lake, which nestles in the mountains at an altitude of 6,225 feet and is 1,645 feet deep.
The plane captain, veteran pilot Henry Norris, 43, of Alameda, Calif., made three brief radio reports as he approached the airport near the end of 150-mile non-stop flight from San Jose.
He radioed at 11:21 a.m. that he had sighted the south shore of the lake and was going off instruments for a visual approach. Four minutes later Norris reported he was over Meeks Bays about 15 miles from the airport, but his final transmission ended abruptly with the words, "Flight 901..."
AMONG the reports received at search headquarters was one from Charles Ebright, who lives on the southwest corner of Lake Tahoe. He said he heard a plane flying toward 9,800-foot Mt. Tallac about noon.
Austrian Air Crash Claims 83 Victims
INNSBRUCK, Austria—(UPI)—Mountain police today began digging out the bodies of 83 vacationers from snow-covered wreckage of a British airliner which crashed into an Alpine peak in Austria's worst air disaster.
Austrian and British experts sifted through the scattered wreckage for clues to the cause of the crash of the four-engine turbojet, Britannia, on Mount Glungetzer, six miles east of here. There were no survivors.
All persons aboard the British Eagle International Airlines charter plane were British except for a South African and an Austrian girl. Six of the passengers were children and three crew members were hostesses. Two families of four and five members perished.
THE RECOVERY teams were flown to the site by helicopter yesterday, a few hours after search planes discovered the wreckage.
terday, a few hours after search planes discovered the wreckage. Aviation experts said the airliner apparently hit the mountain about 70 feet from the summit Saturday afternoon. It then slid down the sheer side of the mountain to the tree line.
Johnson Finishes 100 Days; Confident of Future
WASHINGTON —(UPI)— President Johnson completed his first 100 days in the White House Saturday in a mood of confidence about his own and the nation's future.
The Chief Executive and his advisers moved past the 100-day marker with belief the administration's record has been good domestically and, despite criticism, on foreign fronts too.
Since succeeding to the presidency last Nov. 22 in Dallas, Tex., within hours after John F. Kennedy was assassinated, Johnson has faced one international crisis after another.
EXCEPT FOR A brief while ir which the world caught its breath after the Kennedy slaying, Johnson has had to deal with flareups involving Viet Nam, Panama, Cuba, Cyprus, Ghana, and Zanzibar.
The President took special note of international troubles when, in his
speech at the University of Southern California last Feb. 21, he said there was "room neither for complacency nor for alarm" in U.S. foreign policy
"The world has become small and turbulent," Johnson said. "New challenges knock daily at the White House, America's front door. . . If we were to solve them all tomorrow, there will be more next week.
"BUT THE WEATHERVANE of headlines is not the signpost of history. Larger than the troubles I have noted is the spreading civil war among Communists. And larger still is the steadily growing strength of the worldwide community of freedom."
The President's optimism on the international scene has not been shared by critics, particularly among Republicans, who feel that Johnson has been less than surefooted in his handling of foreign affairs.
On the domestic front, however, Johnson has used his strategic and tactical abilities to excellent advantage. His aides are encouraged by legislative results thus far—particularly the tax cut—and by a succession of polls showing high popularity and political strength for the President.
They do not expect the road to November's election to be smooth. But they are confident on the basis of present evidence that Johnson
Weather
Occasional snow and colder temperatures are forecast for tomorrow, after a low tonight of 30 degrees. Skies will be partly cloudy tonight and overcast Tuesday. Temperatures will be in the 30s tomorrow.
will defeat any Republican opponent.
THE 30-DAY PERIOD of mourning that followed Kennedy's death provided a moratorium on political criticism, but since then the Republicans have opened up on Johnson. The sharpest jabs have dealt with foreign policy issues—Cuba, Panama, Viet Nam.
It was during Johnson's first 100 days as President that Congress gave final approval to the tax cut.
But with the New Hampshire primary providing at least one major forum for Republican presidential contenders. Johnson also has undergone criticism on domestic matters. Questions have been raised about the economic results he has forecast from the tax reduction and about the impact of other measures, including the pending civil rights bill.
Johnson signed it into law Wednesday, hailing it as "the single most important step we have taken to strengthen our economy since before World War II."
AND IT WAS DURING those 100 days that the House—with much prodding from Johnson—approved the civil rights bill that is now before the Senate and will be for some time to come while southerners filibuster against it. But even southerners expect it to pass.
Johnson also, during this time, has set forth an additional list of priorities including medical care for the aged. And he has announced, and is laying strategy for, an "unconditional war on poverty" which will encompass a variety of measures under the coordination of Peace Corps Director Sargent Shriver.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday, March 2, 1964
Rock Chalk
Let's see: 80 rehearsal hours times 20 people in each of eight houses, plus a couple of months work by 40 staff members, plus innumerable hours spent writing scripts, painting scenery, sewing costumes, and building props—not to mention three performance hours times how ever many thousands of people were in the audience.
Was the time wasted?
ROCK CHALK REVUE, they say, is bigger and better than ever. A notable example was the winning skit, the Sigma Chi-Gamma Phi Beta production of "All's Not in Vein." Spoofing the staff and operation of Watkins Hospital, a wierd assortment of vampires, insurance salesmen, and bat boys provided an entertaining combination of script, dancing, special effects, good acting, and scenewry.
The skit's climax, the organ-accompanied "Hymn to Dean Emily," reached hilarious proportions with the lowering of a mock Cleopatra billboard, complete with Wescoe-Harrison, Alderson-Burton, and Taylor-Taylor characters.
The three others skits, however, completely lacerated their legends. In second place was the Phi Kappa Psi-Delta Delta Delta skit, "Alewdwin and His Magic Pot." An Arabion version of "How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying," the skit ruined outstanding sets, costumes, and dancing with some very crude jokes.
The Kappa Sigma-Delta Gamma skit portrayed a modern-day Faust who sells his soul to become Playboy's Hugh Hefner. The ensuing angel-devil struggle for Faust ends appropriately with the whole Playboy Club going to Hell.
STUDENT BODY president Robin Hood and alumni president Sheriff of Nottingham cavorted at Sherwood University in the Alpha Tau Omega-Chi Omega production. Amateurish choreography, costumes, and acting put this first skit last.
In between acts was a painfully poor serial slamming faith healers and Campus Crusade. Listening to the audience titter and watching the blue velvet curtain would have been more entertaining.
—Margaret Hughes
A New Hero
Cassius Clay's big moment in life must have come after the Liston fight when he had the sports writers crammed into his dressing room.
The writers had not given Clay a chance to go more than six rounds against Liston.
So Cassius babbled in his high-pitched voice like a high school mugger after bloodying the nose of a stuck-up classmate.
At one point he tried to lead the sports writers in a cheer for Cassius Clay. "Who's the greatest?! Who's the greatest?!!" he chanted, trying to cow the reporters into answering: "Cassius, Cassius."
Thanks for small favors, the reporters didn't answer. In the radio broadcast of the press conference, one writer was heard to snap disgustedly: "What the hell is going on here?"
Wittingly or unwittingly, the reporter had summed up the feelings of a lot of boxing fans.
* * *
A sport that was once followed avidly by Americans has become almost unrecognizable.
A string of undistinguished, non-fighting champions has made boxing a minor sport.
Not only does it look dirty—which it probably always has been—but it is downright uninteresting, despite Clay's poetry (his showmanship is on the level of Gorgeous George, Fra Farmer Brown, and Ivan the Terrible).
When I get old enough to use the phrase "When I was a kid," I'll sit down with someone and say, When I was a kid, there were dramatic fights and great champions.
I'll recall the night Joe Louis was forced to try a comeback against Ezzard Charles because of money trouble. The Bomber got beat bad, but he gave a real thrill to a kid and his brother in Kansas who huddled by a radio that night.
I'll not forget Joe Wolcott briefly holding the crown for which he had struggled so long, and the great Marciano who finally retired because he could find no one else to beat.
Archie Moore will be remembered as a legend in his own time, and Sugar Ray Robinson as incomparably classy.
Rocky Graziano will get mention for his fights and the biographical movie "Someone Up There Likes Me," which caught the fancy of American youth.
$$
* * * *
$$
The monologue will end in the mid-fifties, for after that came a crew of incomparably inspired fighters—Floyd Patterson, Pete Rademacher (an amateur who challenged for the heavyweight crown), Ingemar Johanssen (whose biggest victories came with the ladies), and, of course, Clay and Liston.
$$
* * * *
$$
Clay's victory is especially discouraging, because Liston had previously appeared to be an outstanding boxer and a legitimate champion.
Clay talked his way into the fight. The fact that he won made it, in a way, all the more absurd.
The sports writer who blurted, "What the hell is going on here?" stands as the real hero of the affair.
Tom Coffman
Reds and 'Fellow Travelers': Food for Congressman Nixon
Bv Mike Miller
When Richard Nixon was discharged from the Navy in 1946, the congressman from California's 12th district was Jerry Voorhis, a democrat whom the Republicans had been trying to unseat for a decade.
(Second of a three-part series.)
While in his youth, Voorhis had been registered as a socialist. He was a political evangelist and idealist who drifted into politics in the wake of Upton Sinclair's "End Poverty in California" movement.
WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENTS called him "the best Congressman west of the Mississippi" and California bankers and oilmen called him the worst.
Republican businessmen in the area formed a Committee of One Hundred to find a candidate who might be able to beat Voorhis. One of the names which came up was Richard Nixon. Nixon was contacted and asked two questions: Was he a Republican and was he available?
Nixon replied, "I guess I'm a Republican, I voted for Dewey in 1944." to the first question.
When he was interviewed by the committee, he said he recognized two schools of thought about the nature of the American system:
"YES, I'M very much available," was his reply to the latter question.
"One advocated by the New Deal is government control in regulating our lives. The other called for individual freedoms and all that initiative can produce. I hold with the latter viewpoint. I will be prepared to put on an aggressive campaign on a platform of progressive liberalism designed to return this district to the Republican party."
TEN YEARS later, then Vice-President Nixon said, "Communism was not the issue at any time in the '46 campaign."
A look at the campaign of 1946 cast doubt on this statement. Nixon and his associates referred to the "PAC (Political Action Committee) candidate and his Communist friends," although PAC did not endorse Voorhis.
One of the leaflets said, "A vote for Nixon is a vote against socialization of free American institutions, against the Political Action Committee, its Communist principles and its gigantic slush fund. Basically, the issue to be settled in this election is conflict between political philosophies. The present Congressman from this district has consistently supported the socialization of free American institutions."
Voorhis' most important piece of legislation in Congress was an anti-Communist bill which required any organization controlled by a foreign government to register with the Department of Justice.
NIXON, WHO HAD won acclaim as a high school debater, challenged Voorhis to a debate. Unlike in another debate which Nixon undertook 14 years later, he was the clear victor in the five-nart debate.
His attacks upon Voorhis put the Democrats on the defensive throughout most of the time.
1950, Nixon ran for the Senate against Mrs. He leen Gahagan Douglas, a liberal New Dealer who was openly hostile on the tidelands and other oil issues close to wealthy Californians.
Nixon was elected to the House by a landslide. He was re-elected in 1948.
His campaign managers told him he had to appeal to Democrats to help him win. So he didn't attack the Democratic party, but referred to the opposition as a supporter of the socialistic program running on the Democratic ticket."
wing congressman. Vito Marcantonio of New York. Mrs. Douglas voted 353 times like Marcantonio
THE RIGHT-WING Nixon campaign was given fodder when Sen. Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin launched his shrill crusade against "Communists in government." The outbreak of the Korean War also helped Nixon's campaign when he used the terms socialism and communism interchangeably.
He attacked Secretary of State Dean Acheson and the State Department for appeasing communism.
MRS. DOUGLAS was described by the Communists as "a capitalistic war-monger." She earned distinction in the House Foreign Affairs Committee for her active support of anti-Communist measures.
Nixon linked Mrs. Douglas' voting record with that of ultra-left-
Much of the correlation between Mrs. Douglas' voting record and that of Marcantonio was due to the fact that both voted as Democrats most of the time although Marcantonio was not elected as a Democrat.
After a bitterly fought campaign, Nixon defeated Mrs. Douglas by a substantial margin.
Mrs. Douglas described Nixon as "a flaming reactionary beside whom Bob Taft is a flaming liberal."
In his six years in Congress, Nixon compiled a record generally conservative on domestic issues and internationalist in foreign affairs.
AS A FRESHMAN legislator, he became a member of the powerful House Education and Labor Committee and the Committee on Un-American Activities.
It was in the latter committee where he became most widely known. Politically, the climax of Nixon's career in the House was the Alger Hiss affair. He was credited with a major role in the committee's investigation of Hiss which led to Hiss' conviction for perjury in 1950.
He supported the Taft-Hartley labor act in 1947, a conservative piece of legislation.
He was the co-author of the Mundt-Nixon bill of 1948, which dealt with the control of Communists. The bill called for the registration of Communists, identification of the sources of all printed and broadcast material issued by Communist front organizations; denied passports to Communist party members; denied federal employment to members of Communist front organizations; brought deportation proceedings against aliens convicted of Communist activity; increased the penalty for peace-time espionage to a $10,000 fine and a maximum of 10 years in prison and created a subversive activities control board which upon application by the attorney general would determine whether an organization was a Communist front group or a Communist action group.
WHILE IN the House, he was appointed to a committee to study the problem of overseas relief and
rehabilitation and went on a factfinding tour with the committee in 1947.
"He described himself as a chancetaker in foreign affairs. "I would take chances for peace and become more internationalistic," he said.
In the 19 months he was in the Senate, Nixon struck out aggressively on behalf of Gen. Douglas MacArthur's Korean strategy of settling for nothing less than unconditional surrender. He proposed a resolution that Truman reinstate MacArthur after the President had removed him from command in 1950.
Nixon also led an unsuccessful drive to block public housing, demanded the resignations of the chairmen of both political parties and thus identified himself as a foe of corruption in government, and joined the Congressional majority which overrode President Truman's veto of the McCarran-Walter immigration and nationality act of 1952.
In reference to the removal of MacArthur, Nixon said, "The only possible explanation of the President's action is that he felt it was necessary to get rid of MacArthur so that Acheson would be free to make a deal with the Chinese Communists along the lines proposed by the British."
HE CALLED for a new policy in the Far East which included military strength, a strong economy, including price controls, rationing and wage controls, and finally a policy of foreign alliances. He told the Women's National Republican Club in New York that the United Nations should intervene in Korea or face the prospect that the United States would get out.
A CONTEMPORARY assessment of Nixon's contribution in the Senate came from a poll of political scientists conducted by Dr. B. L. Johnson of Denver and Dr. W. E. Butt of Pennsylvania, in the early 1950's.
William S. White, a conservative Washington columnist, described Nixon's record in the Senate as "even more lacking in distinction than his record in the House."
In the poll, legislative specialists in the American Political Science Association rated senators on domestic and foreign attitudes, legislative ability, intellectual ability and personal integrity.
Nixon ranked number 71 out of the 96 Senators. Paul Douglas of Illinois ranked first and Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin came in 96th.
U.S. SUPREME COURT
RIGGED
CONGRESSIONAL
DISTRICTS
© M. HEARBLOCK
"They Have This Wild Idea That The House Of Representatives Should Be Representative"
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, March 2, 1964
Page 3
Religious Faith
The People Say...
Editor:
Mr. Grunau's letter on February 24 accuses me of violating "usual debate procedures," in a recent event advertised as a debate entitled "Christianity vs. Humanism." The reasons given for this charge are that I did not defend a thesis and that I was not "constructive." I should like to reply to these criticisms:
1. Both Mr. Wolff and I agreed that we were not conducting a formal debate, and the Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship insisted that they did not envisage the event as a formal debate. However, all the public announcements did clearly advertise it as a debate. This was unfortunate, and perhaps explains some (though not all) of Mr. Grunau's disappointment.
2. Nevertheless, I believe that I
4. Mr. Grunau contends that I "launched into an attack on the Christian faith." What I thought I was doing was to give as fair a definition of faith as I could. If I understand correctly what many Christian philosophers and theologians say about the nature of faith, then it would seem that faith is utterly beyond attack (in the sense of rational appraisal). To
did defend a thesis. The thesis was that having faith in a personal God, and feeling obligated to act in accordance with His will are not solutions to man's moral dilemma. My defense of this thesis consisted in pointing out what I take to be insuperable logical difficulties with the attempt to give a religious justification of ethical beliefs.
3. Whether such a thesis is "constructive" is not to be decided by whether it is interpreted as an attack or a defense of Christianity.
point this cut is not to attack faith, but merely to agree with what most Christians themselves insist upon."
5. In any case, I am not concerned in the least to cause anyone to lose their religious faith. I am concerned to scrutinize the claims made concerning what such faith logically implies in the way of moral beliefs.
6. It is surely obvious that the historical authenticity of the New Testament in its accounts of the resurrection of Jesus is not relevant to the thesis for which I was arguing. For even if it is true that Jesus arose from the dead, and this were conclusive evidence for His divinity, the person who believes this still must face the moral problems which I raised.
David Jones Department of Philosophy
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University Daily Kansan Monday, March 2,1964
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Page 8
KU Professors Eye Nuclear Arms Race
Monday, March 2, 1964 University Daily Kansan
If six countries have the 'bomb,' and somebody drops it unannounced, the country bombed will have a difficult time immediately determining who to "bomb" back.
George W. Brown, assistant professor of political science, and a panel member, explained the evolution of American thinking concerning arms. Prior to the advent of nuclear weapons, it was felt arms might delay war but could never prevent it permanently, he said. Now our national security strategy is suppose to deter and at the same time provide the weapons to "prevail" in case the deterrents fail.
The crucial problem is how to devise a strategy which has a psychologically deterring effect on the enemy and at the same time provides for fighting a war, in case the deterrents fail, without destroying ourselves.
When asked what the United States would do if Europe was actually attacked, the panel said the American policy was unclear. If Russia attacked Europe with conventional weapons, presumably the United States would meet it with conventional weapons. If nuclear weapons were to be used? This is what worries De Gaulle, a panel member replied.
A problem which haunts both American and Russian policy makers is the proliferation of nuclear weapons.
The problem was considered in the Current Events Forum Friday. During the question period after the panel had spoken, the question of why France should not be armed with atomic weapons was raised. In answer to this question, the panel pointed out that if France had nuclear arms, why should not West Germany, Egypt, Israel or Communist China have nuclear arms?
It was further pointed out that the more countries that have the "bomb," the greater the possibility of accidental war. The panel pointed out that today in both the United States and the Soviet Union, new weapons provide the basis of their deterrent strategy. Both are prepared to use nuclear arms to "prevail" if an attack does come.
Prof. Ketzel then listed the following loop hopes in today's disarmament plans.
First. nuclear arms are too hard to inspect thoroughly.
Second, before disarmament can effectively take place, the political problems between the United States and the Soviet Union should be solved.
Third, the differences in the sequence of disarmament must be agreed upon.
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NASA Seeks Students With Moon Chips
KU students encountering 'moon chips' are being asked to report such findings to the Kansas Geological Survey.
In a letter from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA) Frank C. Foley, director of the Geological Survey of Kansas, was asked to aid NASA in "locating stones which may have been produced by impact of meteorites."
Discovery of these specimens "will not only furnish useful information for the design of a lunar landing vehicle, but it will also give us (NASA) a start on the construction of the theories which we will need to explain the geology of the moon."
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University Daily Kansan Monday, March 2,1964
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University Daily Kansan Monday, March 2,1964
Mizzou Trackmen Edge KU in Big Eight Meet
KU's indoor track team, undefeated in competition all season, bowed to Missouri over the weekend, as the Tigers won the Big Eight Conference Championship Meet.
The Tigers, cited before the meet by Bill Easton, KU head track coach as the top contenders for the championship, scored in 12 of the 14
KU Cagers Meet Buffs
Coach Dick Harp's varsity cagers will be trying to place themselves in the winning team category as they meet Colorado tonight in Allen Field House.
The Jayhawks currently have a 6-6 record in conference play. KU defeated Nebraska last week. 64-55.
KU dumped the Buffaloes, 74-67, in the Big Eight's pre-season tournament at Kansas City then embarrassed Colorado badly with a 73-55 win at Boulder. But that was when the Jayhawks had Walt Wesley and Al Correll as eligible players.
The Jayhawks are expected to stick with their usual starting five for this contest. Harry Gibson and Steve Renko will start at forwards, George Unseld will play center, and Dave Schichle and Delvin Lewis will start at guard.
The freshman basketball squad will play Rockhurst in a game preceding the varsity contest. Tipoff time for the Hawklet game is 5:20. The varsity game begins at 7:35.
events in the competition and chalked up 57 points compared with the second place Jayhawks' 47.
After the meet, Coach Easton sailed the KU coaching staff was satisfied with the performances of the Jayhawk trackmen.
"We have no complaints," Coach Easton said. "We feel that the boys lived up to their reputations and by their efforts, kept up KU's tradition of a good track team."
Floyd Manning, Oxnard, Calif. senior, set a new record of 15-8 in the pole vault. Bill Younger of M.U. also cleared the bar at 15-8 to share Manning's record.
Both Manning and Younger narrowly missed clearing 16 feet in the competition. Manning won the event on the grounds of fewer misses.
The capacity crowd in Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium roared their approval of the vaulters' efforts as they neared the 16-foot mark.
On Younger's first try at 16 feet, he jostled the bar on his way over and was in the pit when the bar finally dropped from the standards.
Manning cleared the mark well on his second attempt, but knocked the bar off its perch with his arm on his way down.
KU kept pressure on the Tigers all through the meet. As Coach Easton had predicted earlier, the meet was close. KU's strongest showing came in the two-mile when the Jayhawks finished one-two-three.
John Lawson, Wyandotte sophomore, finished first in the two-mile ahead of Bill Silverberg and Paul
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difference in the number of laps in the race makes it hard to judge just where you are at a given time in the race.
"I thought I could win it," Lawson said. "Of course, I haven't run the two-mile all year, but I felt very good. I got behind about the middle of the race, but came up later and passed Bill (Silverberg) at the end
Lawson said the KU two-milers ran at a slower pace than they had planned.
Bill Chambers—third — 60-yard high hurdles; Bob Hansen—fourth—60-yard dash; Gayle Sayers—fourth—60-yard low hurdles; Tonnie Coane—third—mile run; Heraid Hadley—fifth—mile run; Tom Wright—second—440-yard run.
When asked about KU's chances for the outdoor track season, Coach Easton said he thought the team would be very good. "We're bringing
KU's Tyce Smith won the high jump at 6-6. Smith won the event due to fewer misses. Charles Twiss took fourth in the event with a 6-4 jump.
John Lawson—first—two mile; Bill Silverberg—second—two mile; Paul Acevedo—third—two mile; Herold Hadley—second — 1000-yard; John Donner—fourth — 1000-yard; Tyee Smith—first-high jump; Charles Twiss—fourth-high jump; Floyd Manning—first — pole vault; Jim Fanuchi-fifth-pole vault.
"We didn't run at the pace which we had planned before the race, Lawson said. "We had trouble getting used to the board track. I personally had trouble with the track because it is smaller than the one we run on at home. In Kansas City, there were 24 laps in the two-mile while at home there are 16. The
in some new people to help our effort," Easton said. "I think the outdoor team will be even better and, I hope, fiercer than the indoor team."
Coach Easton said the KU team kept the pressure on Mizzou right down to the end of the meet.
KU players who placed in the meet were;
"We had them scared." Coach Easton said, "right down to the very last events. It wasn't until the results of the 880 and the mile were in that Missouri could breathe easy."
OPENING MARCH 2
STUDENT TRAVEL COMMITTEE INFORMATION BOOTH of the STUDENT UNION
all foreign travel information, including job and study opportunities
- domestic ride exchange and bus charter program
a complete file of library, periodic, and faculty references
Save $300, Fly Jet To Europe
J-10
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- Roundtrip service to either London or Munich
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Check payable to: KU Student Government Flight Program
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University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Monday, March 2, 1964
KU Museum Displays Kansan's Paintings
Author Irving Stone, whose novel about Vincent Van Gogh was once made into a movie, also wrote a biographical novel about John Noble, titled "The Passionate Journe-."
About 400 people attended the opening of the exhibit titled "Organizers of the Armory Show." One side of the exhibition room is filled with works by artists Walt Kuhn and A. B. Davies, who were the organizers of the Armory Show, held in New York in 1913. The other wall displays paintings by many of the famous participants in the armory show.
By Rogers Worthington
John Noble, a Kansas artist whose paintings went on display in the Museum of Art yesterday, was once the subject of a novel by author Irving Stone.
By Rogers Worthington
Gerald Bernstein, curator of the museum, said that Noble's paintings are being exhibited to represent certain schools of artists that were excluded from the Armory Show.
Store considered Noble a mystic,
"because he believed that the only true task of the artist was to gaze upon the face of God, and to transcribe it."
Stone said that although Noble sensed all along, "he learned late in his life that no man can gaze on the face of God, let alone set it down on canvas or paper." "Yet," Stone said, "he could not live without this quest. Ultimately, it destroyed him."
Much of Noble's painting was about the sea, Stone said. "for in his mind the sea and vast flat prairies of Kansas, where he was born and grew up, were one and the same."
"John Noble," Stone said, "killed himself by drink. Unfortunately, it was not enough for him to die; in the process he had to destroy his work, his reputation, his friendships, his solid and hard-earned position in the history of American art."
"No man," he continued, "ever went to greater lengths, or more successfully, to antagonize the critics, dealers, collectors, the art
historians, in an effort to expunge himself and his work from the memory of man."
"He very nearly succeeded," Stone said. "And that would have been a tragic loss. But now, by exhibitions such as these, the record is being set straight. The heritage that John Noble left us is being part of our creative past."
Phyllis Rueb, St. Francis senior,
will perform in recital at 8 p.m.
tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Recital Scheduled At Swarthout Hall
Miss Rueb's program will be "Tocata in C Minor" by J. S. Bach, "Sonata in E. Major," Op. 109 by Beethoven, three compositions by Brahms and "Images" by Debussy.
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Watson Library Adds Mezzanine
When the new reference room on the second floor of Watson Library opens in early April, it will have a mezzanine extending across two-thirds of the room's width.
A representative of the state architect's office estimated that all major construction work on the library-with the exception of the sub-level stacks—should be completed by April 1.
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PERMANENT UNIVERSITY EVENTS CALENDAR MARCH,1964
SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY
1 ALL WORK GUARANTEED 2 Basketball, Colorado here 3 University Senate 4 Chamber Music New York Baroque Ensemble 5 Big 8 Swimming Meet, Iowa State Children's Theatre, "Peter, Peter, Pumpkin Eater" 6 Film Series "Peter, Peter" Concert Course Ralph Votapek, Pianist Big 8 Swimming Meet, Iowa State 7 Graduate Record Exams "Peter, Peter" Basketball, Okla. St. here Swimming Meet, Iowa St.
8 STEREOS REPAIRED 9 GUARANTEED USED TV's 10 TRANSISTOR RADIOS REPAIRED 11 Heart of America Debates 12 Heart of America Debates 13 High School Art Conference Heart of America Debates Film Series—"Cimarron" 14 Heart of America Debates
15 AUTO RADIOS and Air Conditioning Service 16 6-Week Grades Due Fine Arts Honor Recital 17 University Women's Club Style Show St. Patrick's Day 18 University Theatre, "The Tempest" 19 Art Film "The Tempest" 20 Film Series—"Mr. Hobbs Takes A Vacation" Speech and Drama Festival "The Tempest" First Day of Spring 21 "The Tempest" Speech and Drama Festival High School Dance Symposium
22 "The Tempest"
23 WE REPAIR ALL MAKES 24 DRIVE IN PARKING 25 Little Symphony Concert 26 Experimental Theatre 27 Experimental Theatre Film Series—"Hatari" Good Friday 28 Experimental Theatre
29 Easter University Symphony Concert 30 Faculty Recital University String Quartet 31 Experimental Theatre
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Monday, March 2, 1964
Eight Teams Advance To Bowl Semi-Finals
Eight undefeated teams advanced to the semi-finals of the KU College Bowl contest which will be March 15.
Stephenson hall, last year's College Bowl winner, and Alpha Kappa Lambda were the only undefeated teams in the second round of the preliminary matches yesterday. The other undefeated teams were determined in the round Feb. 23. The six teams are Delta Tau Delta fraternity, PROSE (Independent), Jolliffe, Battenfeld, Joseph R. Pearson No. 1, and Templin halls.
Teams of four students, representing KU living groups, answered questions concerning the density of planets, frequency of music notes, and the U.S. monetary system. Fifty toss-up questions were prepared for each of the 48 matches; however, not all were used in any match, Bob
The questions used in this year's competition are of a more serious type than in other years.
Shenk, Lawrence junior, and chairman of the College Bowl, said.
The contest began on Feb. 23 when half of the 32 entering teams competed in the first preliminary round. The second 16 teams competed yesterday.
This is the first year that the preliminary match procedure has been followed. It replaces the single-elimination system in deciding the teams to compete in the semi-, quarter-, and final rounds.
The exhibit includes drawings typical of the Oak Park period in which the Imperial Hotel was being built in Japan. Architects refer to this period as his most mature and creative.
The exhibit also shows Wright's plan for the United States Embassy in Japan.
The drawings represent a small chronological section of the life work of the famous architect. Two drawings date back to 1887 when the then 18-year-old Wright applied for employment as a craftsman with the firm of Adler and Sullivan.
The majority of the drawings are done in colored pencil.
Several drawings by architect Frank Lloyd Wright are on exhibit this week on the third floor of Marvin Hall.
The exhibit includes Wright's drawing for the Golden Beacon Building, designed for Chicago in 1956.
Another, drawn early in Wright's career, is of a home which combines the simple elegance of an old English cottage with the low, long lines of a modern day ranch home.
Tests Keep Moscow 'Hot Line' Warm
Frank L.Wright Art Exhibited
Under the new procedure, each of the 32 teams meets three opponents.
The drawings are the property of Curtis Besinger, associate professor of architecture, who for several years worked with Wright.
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Once every hour, seven days a week, a terse message crackles over wires between Washington and Moscow.
It is gibberish. It may say "the quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog's back." It may be a line from a musty technical journal or a scrap of classical Russian literature.
One hour the meaningless message goes from West to East; the next, East to West, hour upon hour, week upon week, month upon month. And yet "meaningless" may not be the right word.
THE MESSAGES ARE test transmissions of the "hot line" Russia and the United States set up last year to communicate in the moments before—and hopefully to forestall—mutual nuclear destruction.
THE THIRD, IN July, 1663, was the limited nuclear test ban agreement, finally signed in August. It banned nuclear testing in the atmosphere, under water and in space—all areas where tests can be detected from afar without inspection on Soviet soil, to which Russia objects.
The second agreement, in June, 1963, was the hot line agreement. It grew out of a long deadlock in Geneva disarmament negotiations, after the Russians, in April, 1963, suddenly agreed to discuss "collateral measures."
They reflect much about U.S.-Soviet relations—mistrust, fearful power, the unattainability of real disarmament, the nibbling efforts to achieve some protection from power.
THE FIRST WAS THE Antarctic Treaty of 1959, which banned military operations including nuclear weapons and nuclear tests from the Antarctic continent and provided for inspection against cheating. Early this year the United States conducted the first inspection of Russian Antarctic scientific bases under the treaty.
Russia and the United States stared into the abyss of war and had to exchange messages by press wires because diplomatic channels were too slow.
In 18 years of negotiations Russia and the United States have achieved no agreement for even a modicum of real disarmament. They have achieved four agreements for steps designed to whittle away at the risk of war.
The fourth, last October, was a U.S.-Soviet agreement which made possible a United Nations resolution calling on all nations to refrain from placing weapons of mass destruction in outer space.
It also stemmed from the October, 1962. Cuba-missile crisis in which
This last had a hollow ring inasmuch as military experts say it is impractical at present to try to put nuclear weapons into orbit. But the Russians wanted it—perhaps to demonstrate a mood of cooperation.
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Page 11
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University Daily Kansan
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Graduate men or older undergraduates—extra-nice furnished bachelor apartment Close to campus, ideal study conditions best of neighbors. Reasonably priced utilities paid. For appointment call VI 3-8534.
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Tutoring in all math classes from Math 2 to Math 23 by experienced instructor. Reasonable rates. Call VI 2-1424 after 6 p.m. for appointment.
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Page 12
University Daily KansanMonday, March 21 1964
KU's NDEA Funds Boosted, Available
KU has received an additional allocation of $334,775 under the student loan provisions of the National Defense Education Act (NDEA).
The ASC previously urged Kansas congressmen to work for the funds.
work for the funds. At an October meeting of the ASC, John E. Stuckey, Pittsburg senior and chairman of the council, submitted a resolution to send letters to Kansas representatives stressing the value of additional NDEA funds for KU student loans.
"I received answers from several of our representatives thanking us for our interest and indicating that they did intend to vote for this House bill," Stuckey said.
Robert Billings, director of Aids and Awards, said that the $334,775 was in addition to the ceiling set at $250,000, making KU's total NDEA allocation $584,775.
"Next year the ceiling for NDEA student loans will increase to $800.- 000 per institution, which should make a great increase in the number of loans available to KU students," Billings said.
Under NDEA, students may borrow up to $1,000 a year and a total of $5,000 for all higher education, with no interest rate while in school. Upon graduation a three per cent interest charge goes into effect with ten years to pay.
Congress has restricted funds to certain fields of study, such as education, engineering, modern foreign languages, mathematics, science and medicine. Elementary and secondary education majors also have the preference in repayment of the loan, in that 10 per cent of the amount borrowed is cancelled up to fifty per cent of the total loan for each year of teaching.
"We are hoping that congress will extend this cancellation to college
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Daffodil Chapel
Le Certele Francais se réunirna merceder la Française. La Française M. Robert Neely fera une causeie, sur ils Hawaii Tous ceux qui ont français sont cordialement invites.
TOMORROW
COMMITTEE
All Student Committee, 7 p.m.
Surfweek, Rocca, Kansas Union.
Savannah Northshore House Inquirer Classes.
7:30 p.m.
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
SUA To Present French Speaker
A member of the French Atomic Energy Commission and an attache to the French embassy in Washington, D.C. will discuss the French position on atomic energy here tomorrow.
Pierre Falquet will speak at 2:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
The talk is part of the Current Events Forum sponsored by Student Union Activities.
level teaching as well when they review and revise the act," Billings said.
Applications for loans are available in the office of Aids and Awards, 222 Strong Hall, on a first-come basis. Full-time students, in good standing in their work and in the University, and who show need for financial assistance are eligible.
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After Seven Weeks End Is Expected In Hoffa's Trial
CHATTANOOGA. Tenn.—(UPI)—James R. Hoffa's attorneys today pictured him as a man who pulled himself up "by his own bootstraps" and urged a 12-member federal jury to acquit the Teamsters union president of jury tampering charges. The case was expected to go to the jury late today.
"We know you will not separate him from his family," attorney Harry Berke said in concluding the final defense arguments. "May God bless you."
Special prosecutor John J. Hooker St. was to make one final argument for conviction before Federal Judge Frank Wilson, who reprimanded Hoffa today for boisterous conduct in the hallway outside the court-room, charges the jury and sends it out to consider a verdict.
HOFFA AND FIVE co-defendants are on trial here on charges they tried to fix another federal court jury two years ago. The trial is in its seventh week.
"You are on trial just like these defendants are on trial regardless of how bad they (the government) want Mr. Hoffa . . . our system of jurisprudence is more important." Berke said in winding up for the defense.
Before today's session began in Hofia's jury tampering trial, the Teamsters president loudly renewed his attack that the government was "like the Gestapo" in spying on him. His charges were made in a hallway near Wilson's courtroom.
When Wilson took his place on the bench, he said he had heard Hoffa in the hallways outside his courtroom, despite closed doors.
"SOMETHING HAS to be done to protect the jury from noise." Wilson said. The jury had not yet entered the room at the time.
"Let's discontinue these extremely loud arguments both inside and outside the court," Wilson told Hoffa and his attorneys who remained seated at the defense table.
Hoffa nodded acknowledgement.
BERKE SAID Hoffa should be believed over star government witness Edward Grady Partin, who linked Hoffa to the alleged jury tampering.
Berke, whose soft southern drawl often rose to a roar, charged Partin, a Louisiana teamster, sold himself to the government to frame Hoffa.
The defense also charged that too many marshals in the courtroom were causing a "trenchcoat atmosphere" in front of the jury.
lawyer, said he wanted to "breakup this military display."
James Haggerty, Hoffa's Detroit
ANOTHER DEFENSE lawyer, Harvey Silets, said "there can be only one inference (to the jury)—they are afraid we are going to tamper . . ."
Berkes said "with a whole world watching the trial . . . you'll (the jury) have to look for divine guidance.
"NO GRFATER crime could be committed than to convict an innocent man." Partin said.
"The newspapers have many stories where someone has gone to the gallows because someone else has told a falsehood.
Prosecution attorneys, in opening their arguments yesterday, accused Hoffa of a massive attack on the "foundation of American justice."
Snow to Kill Fake Spring
You may think that Spring has sprung, but don't be fooled. Those bermuda shorts and short-sleeved shirts won't protect you against the heavy snow, high winds, and falling temperatures that are moving across the Great Plains.
By mid-morning cold air had moved into western Kansas. It is expected to combine with a storm center to the south of Kansas and to develop a situation favorable for the much-needed rain and snow in the wheat state.
The weather bureau has issued livestock and hazardous driving warnings for the northwest parts of the state calling for rain changing to snow over the next 24 hours
Five inches of snow fell in Denver, Colo., before the storm started moving eastward. Tueson, Ariz., reported five inches of fresh snow at sunup this morning. Farmers are welcoming the storm as the snows are bringing precious moisture to the dry plains soil.
Tuesday, March 3, 1964
Local temperatures will cool markedly from the warm weather of the past few spring-like days. Skies will be cloudy and temperatures colder tonight with rain or snow likely. Tomorrow's sky will be cloudy with occasional snow. Low tonight will be in the lower 30's and tomorrow's high will be in the lower 40's.
61st Year, No.95
Recently, another such agency, the International Labor Organization (ILO), has been hampered and at times practically paralyzed in its work by an African campaign to force South Africa's expulsion. This campaign threatens to wreck the ILO.
Daily hansan
United Nations officials, supported by the United States, have been at pains for some time to keep politics out of the specialized agencies.
Lawrence, Kansas
Today's action was the second official act by France against Nationalist China. Two weeks ago, France vetoed Nationalist China's efforts to establish an embassy to the Common Market Executive Commission in Brussels.
THE CLASH between the United States and France came at today's opening sessions of WHO's 17th World Health Assembly.
"The government of France is in favor of the admission of the People's Republic of China to the World Health Organization." French Delegate Prof. Eugene Aujeleu told the conference.
Diplomatic sources in Paris said the move here was part of a French drive to seat Peking in the United Nations. Previous efforts by Eastern Bloe nations to obtain a U.N. seat for Red China have been defeated
WHO IS an agency related to th United Nations with headquarter in Geneva. It is not specifically par of the U.N., but is closely allied wit it.
The United States immediately condemned the French move.
France Asks Red China Be Let in UN Agency
American delegate Nathaniel McKitterick said China already "is rightfully represented," and to change this would be to "challenge the authority of the (United Nations) General Assembly—either for
GENEVA — (UPI)— France demanded today that Communist China replace Nationalist China as a member of the World Health Organization (WHO).
The move appeared to be part of a French campaign to get the Red Chinese into the United Nations which sponsors WHO.
It was France's first effort to gain a seat for Peking in an international organization since Paris recognized Bed China in January.
innocent reasons or for propaganda purposes."
WHO was set up as a result of a meeting of the U.N. Economic and Social Council but is not a part of the United Nations.
THE FRENCH demand was supported by the Communist members, led by the Soviet Union, of the 110-nation organization and by three African states—Guinea, Ghana and Somali.
Officials said, however, the Conference Credentials Committee already had accepted Nationalist China's credentials, so there was little prospect of French success. The Communists also have in the past tried but failed to get Red China admitted to WHO.
The Africans and Communists also
demanded the exclusion of South Africa from WHO and the assembly, but the Credentials Committee accepted South Africa as well, officials said.
McKitterick, director of the State Department's Office of International Economic and Social Affairs, said in his statement to the 400 doctors and health specialists attending the conference:
"TO CONCLUDE . . . that an assembly of doctors is the right place to prescribe new political divisions is surely wrong. Indeed, I might say presumptuous—as it would be if the United Nations or its Economic and Social Council should begin to tell this assembly how to eradicate smallpox or prescribe a course of medical research."
Specialist Questions Handling of Viet Nam
An international relations specialist said last night that he was skeptical about U.S. war policy in South Viet Nam.
Hans Morgenthau, professor of political science at the University of Chicago, said the Chinese can continue to meet our war offensive in South Viet Nam by "escalating" the war.
Morgenthau, who wrote "Politics Among the Nations," (the text used in a KU course on international politics) was invited to speak at KU by the Political Science Department.
MORGENTHAU SAID he was very dubious about the U.S. policy of "periferal containment of China."
He said if the U.S. continues to pursue this policy it will ultimately have to risk war with China. He compared our policy to the ill-fated Maginot Line.
If China armed Nicaragua, Guatemala, and Honduras, it would be analogous to our China containment policy, Morgenthau said. In such an event, the U.S. would fight China, he said.
On France, Morgenthau said the schism between France and the U.S. was "considerable," not "small," and it may have "revolutionary consequences."
Morgenthau debunked theories of international politics that give no weight to power balance considerations. Theories that foreign policies are rooted in the machinations of pressure groups, or in a manifest national destiny were among them.
US Seeks Large Ship Permit To USSR Ports for Trading
MOSCOW — (UPI)— The United States today sought to remove Soviet restrictions which prevent the use of large American ships to carry wheat to Soviet ports.
Commerce Department official Clarence Martin is discussing the Soviet harbor rules with officials of the Merchant Marine and Foreign Trade ministries. As they now stand, the rules bar ships drawing more than 32 feet of water from Soviet harbors.
THE RULES have not yet interfered with the shipment of grain. The only American vessel to arrive thus far, the Exilona, is a relatively small freighter of about 6,000 tons, drawing about 27 feet of water.
The United States feels the restrictions could frustrate attempts to implement President Johnson's pledge to transport half the U.S. grain sold to Russia in American ships.
They said work to deepen harbors of some ports has not yet been completed. The Soviet merchant fleet is made up of ships small enough to use the present facilities without trouble.
U. S. UNION leaders have suggested that lighters be used to unload the grain cargoes from larger ships outside the docking area.
But a Soviet Merchant Marine official, Igor M. Averin, said this would increase the cost of shipping and would add technical difficulties to the cargo handling.
Soviet newspaper readers yesterday learned one of the reasons their government has been forced to buy $1 billion worth of grain and flour from the United States, Australia, and Canada.
Martin has said that such expense probably would be paid by the shippers.
THE GOVERNMENT newspaper Izvestia, in a report on the 10th anniversary of the Virgin Lands, disclosed that these grain-growing areas suffered from drought for the past three years, in particular last year.
Sen. Morse to Speak On New Administration
Senator Wayne Morse, (D-Oré), will speak on aspects of the new administration at 8 p.m. Wednesday. April 1 in Hoch Auditorium.
His appearance is sponsored by the KU All Student Council and Student Union Activities. The lecture will be open to the Public without charge.
A reception will be held in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union following the talk.
The Virgin Lands program was originated by Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev as a means of stepping up agricultural production by utilizing millions of square miles of territory in central Asia that had not been sown before.
At first, the Virgin Lands added substantially to Soviet production. But in later years bad weather and troubles in recruiting work forces for the farms there cut into crop yields.
Fedor S. Kolomiets, the Communist Party official in charge of the Virgin Lands Program, said that the area made a net profit of nearly $1 billion in the 10 years.
BUT LAST year, he said, "the sun in the steppes was so hot it burned everything living."
Kolomiers said that despite bureaucratic failings and the tough climate, 100 million acres had been brought under the plow in the Virgin Lands and a total of $11 billion worth of wheat had been produced.
He said ways and means had been found to defeat dust bowl conditions and ensure stable harvests.
UNDERLYING ALL RATIONAL foreign policy is the desire of nations to "preserve the integrity of its institutions and its territory," Morgenthau said.
Although foreign policy is often cloaked in words of high purpose nations, nonetheless, strive for "the maintenance or restoration of the balance of power." Morgenthau said.
Although some theorists have said that the balance of power does not, in fact, exist, Morgenthau said there was no other theory to explain global events. Only if world government should come about could we ignore the power politics theory, he said.
To be opposed to power politics is to be "like a man opposed to swimming, who falls in the water," Morgenthau said.
Three objectives underlie U.S. foreign policy, Morgenthau said. Two of them have been important since our early history.
First, the U.S. has sought to preserve a balance of power in Western Europe. The ascendancy of any of these powers would result in its dominating the others. This would threaten us in turn, Morgenthau said.
SECOND, WE HAVE continually sought to remove European influence from this hemisphere. European power in this hemisphere would upset the balance of power in Europe, as well as weaken our influence in the West.
Third, we have attempted to hold constant the balance of power in Asia. This policy developed later. In pursuit of it we have opposed the domination of Asia by Japan or China, or by any European power.
Morgenthau, a small man in his sixties, speaks with a soft German accent. Before the war he was a councilor on Germany's labor arbitration court.
To avoid the Nazis, Morgenthau slipped through Spain and came to the U.S. in the late thirties. He taught for two years at Brooklyn College. Between 1939 and 1943 he was assistant professor of law, history, and political science at the University of Kansas City.
Morgenthau is now professor of political science at the University of Chicago, a post he has held since 1943.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 3, 1964
Friendly Sig
Here on top of ozone mountain, where everything is upbeat and seldom is heard a discouraging word (what with the babes sticking to short skirts this winter), things have been quite normal in this new semester.
THERE HAVE BEEN the customary rhubarbs and ruckuses, pickets, and a stage show to brighten the scene. But for the most part it has been study, class, study, class, aching eyeballs with the space age competition grinding hard at times.
At least, that's the perspective from the hill. But consider the good folk out in the valley, mom and dad, for instance.
Consider their perspective:
THEIR LATEST EXPOSURE to KU, where all their taxes go, was a full-page picture spread in Sunday's Topeka Capital on Sig, the friendly dog. Sig, the Sigma Chi's St. Bernard, is shown in numerous seductive poses—lounging in class, dozing in front of the TV, waddling through the rotunda.
rotunda. You get the distinct impression that Sig would be on the honor roll if he stayed awake in class.
Sig, the story says, is one of the four most notable things about the hill, the others being
traffic control booths, the Big Barn, and the English pro test. (Why leave off beaver-shooting?)
Anyway, the Capital could as easily have done a feature on Rock Chalk Revue. photographing a couple of fleshy scenes to remind the citizenry that we are living in the age of sex-on-exhibit.
that we are living in the KU image last week, via the papers, was the effigy hanging of one Dick Harp, patriot, citizen, member of Christian Athletes, and KU basketball coach. (But that was all in fun, with a ho-ho-ho, and a he-he-he.) And the Kansas wags were quick to point out that kids are crummier than ever.
However, probably the real blight on the hill this semester came from the political furor—the Rockwell-Bircher-Opcensky rumble with suitable pickets and publicity. Any tax-paying citizen can easily see that the campus speakers are either red-baiters and fascists, or pinkos and subversives.
But don't lose heart: not everything has turned out badly. Everyone has read in the papers that professors this year didn't get much of a raise—that REALLY would have made a bad impression.
Tom Coffman
'Loser' Reputation Hampers Nixon's Nomination Hopes
By Mike Miller
(Editor's Note: This article is the last of a three-part series on Richard M. Nixon. Series on Nelson Rockefeller and Barry Goldwater will follow.)
At the Republican National Convention, the party caucus picked young Richard Nixon as the vicepresidential candidate to run with Dwight D. Eisenhower.
A month later, however, things looked much darker for Nixon. He was accused of improperly accepting an $18,000 special fund raised by Southern California businessmen. For a time his candidacy was in jeopardy. Eisenhower took no stand at first on whether he should be given a new running mate.
When his candidacy for vicepresident was put up to the Republican National Committee, Nixon went on television with his "Checkers" speech to explain his position and asked viewers to send their reaction to the Republican
committee. The result of the ballot was 350 to 1 for his remaining on the ballot.
He stayed. IN THE CAMPAIGN, he continued his harangue against the Communists and the Liberals.
"Adlai, the appeaser who got a PhD. from Dean Acheson's 'College of Cowardly Communist Containment,'" was his description of Eisenhower's opponent. He accused Stevenson of being a friend of Alger Hiss, whom Nixon had investigated. Actually, Stevenson was just an acquaintance of Hiss.
Nixon was a busy vice-president. On occasions when the president was ill, in 1955, 1956 and 1957, Nixon presided at cabinet and National Security Council meetings and was credited with a major role in settling the 1959 steel strike.
On the president's behalf, he visited the Middle and Far East in 1953, the Caribbean in 1955.
southern Asia in 1956, Africa in 1957, South America and England in 1958, and the Soviet Union and Poland in 1959.
In his years as vice-president, Nixon became one of the most powerful men ever to hold the second position. Because of the illnesses of Eisenhower and because of his own trips, Nixon's influence was much greater than that of most vice-presidents, whose main function is to preside over the Senate.
THE VIEW OF Nixon changed during his years of the vice-presidency. Before 1952, he was viewed by many columnists, both liberal and conservative, as a brash young man who didn't belong in politics.
CONFLICTING STATEMENTS IN BOBBY BAKER CASE
SENATE COMMITTEE
HERBLOOK
In 1957, Arthur Krock of the New York Times said, "The new Nixon has ideas, is a realist in seeking and acknowledging the errors of his own regime. From all appearances, he is helping to formulate a new approach by the United States in the Cold War."
Walter Lippmann described Nixon as maturing successfully.
He still picked up some criticism, however. In 1956, in a Lincoln Day speech, he said, "And speaking for a unanimous Supreme Court, a great Republican Chief Justice, Earl Warren, has ordered an end to racial segregation in the nation's schools."
"It's Stereo, But Is It High Fidelity?"
"THE ONLY WAR we want to launch is the war against poverty, disease, ignorance and fear wherever it exists," he said in 1957.
LIPPMANN SAID. "A man who will exploit for partisan purposes such a decision of the Supreme Court does not have within his conscience those scruples which the country has a right to expect in a President of the United States."
Nixon has not announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination in 1964. Many say he will be drafted, however, as a compromise candidate between Gold-water's right-wing philosophy and Rockefeller's liberalism.
NIXON AND his opponent, John F. Kennedy, fought a tough, physically gruelling campaign. Nixon's whistle-stop tours took him to nearly every state in the Union. The candidates also held an unprecedented television debate.
Nixon must overcome one great obstacle, however, before he can hope for the GOP nomination. He has the reputation of being a loser. He must convince the leaders of the Republican party that he can overcome his defeat in 1960 and particularly his defeat in 1962 by the people of his own state.
Tax Cut, Liston-Clay Head News Review
Tax-weary Americans had cause to be happy last week. Congress passed, and President Johnson signed, the largest tax cut in the nation's history. The reduction means that about 80 million Americans will enjoy $10-$20 more a month in take-home pay. ...
Nearly 500,000 corporations will have their taxes cut by 9 per cent. The cuts go into effect March 5, but people are urged to put the added pay back into circulation with increased buying which, it is hoped, will spur the nation's economy.
ONE NEWS EVENT last week probably gripped the interest of more Americans than any other. The Louisville Lip, Cassius Clay, did the impossible. He took the heavyweight boxing crown from champion Sonny Liston on a seventh round TKO and then announced that he is a member of the Black Muslims, a black supremacy group.
But the Clay-Liston fight wasn't the only battle last week. On wartown Cyprus the situation between the Turkish and Greek Cypriots worsened. United Nations Secretary-General U Thant spent the week negotiating between Greece and Turkey but late in the week gave up and admitted defeat.
Over the weekend Turkish Cypriots began to mass in villages and more violent bloodshed is expected to raise the death toll even higher. The present battle stems from a constitutional change in the island's government that Turkish Cypriots, in the minority, feel would rob them of their rights. British-American efforts, as well as those of U Thant, at preserving the peace failed and the matter may be thrown into the U.N. General Assembly.
* *
Elsewhere in foreign relations the U.S. fared a little better. The eight-week-old Panama crisis seemed nearer settlement as the U.S. agreed to resume diplomatic relations preparatory to a review of the Canal Zone treaty.
THE ORGANIZATION of American States investigating committee charged Cuba with seeking and directing the overthrow of the government of Venezuela and other Latin American countries. Venezuela promptly called for a ban on trade with Castro's country. The U.S. agreed and Secretary of State Dean Rusk said there is "need for additional pressures" by Western Hemisphere nations.
French President Charles de Gaulle is finding that his recognition of Red China may have bad side effects. Common Market solidarity has been threatened by the recognition as De Gaulle and the other members have disagreed over measures leading to the inclusion of Nationalist China as an associate member in the trade group.
On the other hand, France has been blasted by the Red Chinese press for its colonialism in Africa. The Chinese accused France of
exploitation in the Congo and meddling in the internal affairs of Gabon. C'est la vie!
Racial violence continued to mark the news. Negro students protesting lunch counter segregation in Princess Anne, Md., were beaten by state and local police. Negro leaders charged that the officials' use of dogs against the demonstrators was brutal and unnecessary.
NEW YORK CITY has its school boycott, and last week Boston had one too. Thousands of Negro and white children boycotted the Boston public schools to protest alleged de facto segregation. No violence marked the second such protest in eight months.
Meanwhile forces for and against the administration's civil rights bill are organizing, and plans are being drawn for the battle which should start sometime next week. The controversial farm bill is being cleared first. The fight over the rights bill is not expected to end until some time this summer.
AND SPEAKING OF boycotts, the longshoremen's boycott against loading ships with wheat for Russia and other Eastern European countries has ended after successful negotiations between union leaders and Labor Secretary W. Willard Wirtz.
The agreement provides that one-half of all future ships carrying wheat to the Russians be American vessels.
* *
Around the country last week two trials and one Congressional investigation ground on. In Dallas the tedious work of selecting a jury in the Jack Ruby trial speeded up. Late in the week ten jury members had been picked.
JAMES R. HOFFA, head of the Teamsters U, took the stand in Chattanooga, Tenn., and asserted that the testimony given against him by the government's chief witness at his jury-tampering trial was "an absolute fabrication."
In Washington the investigation of Bobby Baker and "influence peddling" in the Senate was highlighted by the appearance of Baker and his attractive secretary, Nancy Carole Tyler. Baker refused to turn over records of his financial dealings to the Senate investigating committee.
AND THE KANSAS legislature did it again. Last year's reapportionment bill was declared invalid because it omitted Leawood. Last week the House bill signed by Gov. John Anderson was found to contain a clerical error in that a precinct in Prairie Village was included in two districts. The question of the law's constitutionality is presently being taken to the Kansas Supreme Court.
Kansas
would end to a week of news-
Charles O. Finley finally signed
an agreement on the stadium lease
with Kansas City officials. The
Athletics are here for four more
years.
—Rick Mabbu++
Dailij Hansan
111 Flint Hall University of Kansas student newspaper
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NEWS DEPARTMENT
Managing Editor
Mike Miller Managing Editor Russ Corbitt, Jackie Helstrom, Willis Henson, Kay Jarvis and Roy Miller, Assistant Managing Editors; Fred Frailey, City Editor; Leta Catheart, Society Editor; Marshall Caskey, Sports Editor; Charles Corcoran, Picture Editor.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
**Tom Coffman** ... Editorial Editor
**Vinay Kothari and Margaret Hughes** ... Assistant Editorial Editors
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Business Manager
Bob Brooks Business Manager Joanne Zabornik, Advertising Mgr.; Mike Barnes, National Advertising Mgr.; Walt Webb, Circulation Mgr.; Bob Phinney, Classified Advertising Mgr.; Ken Costich, Promotion Mgr.; Dana Stewart, Merchandising Mgr.
Tuesday, March 3, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
The People Say: Military Ball Furor Continues
Ball Betrays Military
Editor:
On a campus of 12,000 students it is hardly surprising that there is a divergence of opinion on basic social, moral, and economic issues. And on a campus with a vigorous ROTC program it is difficult to imagine any criticism of that program without swift rebuttals. Therefore Mr. Traylor's letter came as little surprise in addition to the many verbal comments that have reached me in regard to my letter last Wednesday.
The fact that I consider war and therefore military forces immoral was not exactly the central thesis of my original letter. My principal objection to our ROTC program, as given in my letter, was the occurrence of the military ball which is extremely deceptive in appearance. The comparative morality of nationalized killing is not at stake here — the fact remains that the ball is in no way related to the function of the ROTC program or the military in general except as a social "extra" that helps make the program more attractive to both present and prospective members. Thus the ball, being so overwhelmingly deceptive, should not be held under its present auspices.
Editor Editors
It is virtually impossible to debate the actual value of the military on this or any other campus. When any discussion about such a program is initiated, the local military leaders immediately jump to its defense by affirming what to them are the self-evident basic truths about the need for a military force. I don't propose to have the absolutely correct alternative to the military, but I feel that this is an area which could be successfully explored.
editor Roy Leta Cor-
nager tising tising Mgr.
As of now the members of the ROTC program at KU appear to be unwilling to look at any other possibilities for order in the world and thus a true discussion of the military in general and the ROTC program in particular with one of its members reminds me somewhat of trying to run a race with a man on a different track. It can't be done very successfully.
I continue to maintain that the military ball is a deceptive function, betraying the true nature of the military forces, and that it has no place on this campus under its current auspices.
Tim Miller Wichita junior
Irrational-Immoral
I. too, would like to voice my opinion of the ROTC program. Mr. Miller suggested that it was time to discuss and evaluate the purposes of the annual Military Ball. I would like to carry his evaluation a little further.
Personally, I have nothing against the military ball itself. Likewise, I understand the so-called "necessity" of preliminary military programs. My main objection is the general grounds upon which many college men are drawn into the ROTC program.
Who has not read the signs which imply that the service is glory, honor, prestige, money, and an easy way to see the world? The reasons many boys give for joining ROTC are financial need, desire to enter the service with office, and (unadmittedly) a psychological need for prestige and togetherness. These all appear to be valid reasons.
BUT WHY laud the man who can put his gun together in twenty seconds flat? That gun is a weapon—not a toy. Why draw pictures of fancy officer's clubs, flying for fun and money, beautiful women being attracted to uniforms? War is dirt and blood and guts.
The primary purpose of ROTC and military units is to organize with precision and perfection an undefeatable, lethal unit of humanity whose main goal is to obliterate some other segment of humanity.
We all agree that war is bad. We must all agree that under the circumstances, some wars have seemed necessary. But the real problem is the circumstance. War is preventable.
If ROTC can draw men into its ranks with the honest, forthright presentation of facts—the facts that war is hell and that peace is possible—with a clear concept of not
only war, but also its alternatives—then I say okey.
If ROTC cannot build its ranks honestly, then I suggest that it is time each and every one of us made an honest evaluation of the situation for ourselves.
Marion Gray Kansas City sophomore
Not Murderers
The letter appearing last week which discredited the ROTC program serves merely to illustrate its author's ignorance of the true purpose and function of both the ROTC and the armed forces, as well as his gross misconception of the relationship between the military establishment and our society.
ROTC cadets are not apprentice murderers. They are young men interested in safeguarding the security of their country by active participation in their nation's defense program. They are taught the principles of leadership which keep our defense efforts operating smoothly, and thereby maintain the independence and well-being of this country.
Before criticizing their participation in the ROTC program, it would have been well for the author of the letter to have considered the position of the ROTC cadets were our country attacked by an enemy. In such a case, by defending the country as officers in the armed forces, they would be voluntarily placing their lives in jeopardy on the nation's behalf. The author is evidently unaware of this.
The essential question here is not whether the military establishment is good for the society, but, can the society do without it? One of the conditions necessary for the maintenance of an independent society is that it be able to prevent its absorption into a larger or more powerful society. How long could the U.S. survive as an independent nation without a system of defense against Russia or Red China? Will an alternative method of preserving our national integrity suggest itself? I think not.
Unwritten Rules
Patrick J. Neuman Oklahoma City junior
KU Student Court ruled this week that students cannot park cars on the white markings of parking stalls under campus jurisdiction.
The white lines are 'no man's land' as far as the court is concerned. Once one tire is parked on a portion of the white stall markers, you are breaking an unpublished law and are subject to a blue ticket if a campus policeman discovers your dreadful sin.
At least two cases before the court were ruled guilty because the person had allowed one of the tires of his automobile to rest on a white line.
Ignorance of such rules is no defense, even if the only parking place left causes you to park with part of one wheel on a white stall line. You are guilty, knowingly or not, and may well be subject to a regular traffic ticket.
White-line violation is just one of the regulations not listed in "Parking and Traffic Regulations."
which is the only list of car rules available to students.
All of the court's unlisted car rules are not known, just this one to date. It is hoped for the economy and "safety" of the 65 percent of the student body that register automobiles at KU that said students may some day learn all the rules that apply to car-driving students.
Revising the car handbook might be suggested for the "safety" of the students.
T. S. Moore McAllen, Tex., sophomore
HAVE FUN! GET
CLEVER
PRACTICAL JOKES'
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, March 3, 1964
Anniversary Arrives For Barbed Wire Set
By Rick Mabutt
A group of 17 KU students, al. ex-prisoners of war, met in the Kansas Union 17 years ago this week and formed one of the most unusual clubs in KU's history.
They called their organization the Barbed Wire Club. It was for any student who had spent time in an enemy concentration camp during World War II. The original 19 members, who had a total time of over 100 months in captivity, called themselves "Kriegies," a name picked up in the German prison camps.
The club president was called the "Man of Confidence" after the German authorities who administered punishment to the war prisoners.
At the first meeting the "brothers in bondage" swapped war stories and reminisced about the food in the concentration camps.
Lifelong Devotion
ST.LOUIS-(UPI)-Edward W. McDonald has been a member of the Third Baptist Church here since he was enrolled by his grandmother at the age of six months.
McDonald is now 75, and Dr. Sterling Lorenz Price, the minister, says McDonald's records show he hasn't missed a Sunday in church in 60 years.
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First, all ingredients must meet wartime German standards.
Here is the recipe for a culinary delicacy they called "Luckenwald stew":
Collect the noon ration of potatoes (the size of golf balls) and the ration of bread (one-sixth part of a loaf) Cut the bread into cakes and peel the potatoes. Now eat the peelings. Then take the afternoon ration of tea (also good for shaving) and add it to the potatoes and bread. Pray. Then stew the mixture. If the bread dissolve into a palatable paste the whole thing should make good eating.
The four awards will be similar to the National Defense Education Act fellowships, providing $2,000, $2,200 and $2,400 annually for the first, second and third years of graduate study. The allowance will also cover fees and provide $400 for each dependent.
The fellowships, unlike the NDEA awards, will not be restricted as to field of study.
"These awards are one measure of the University's belief in the Peace Corps and in the quality of its volunteers, as well as in the value of the experience to the volunteers themselves." Dr. Wescoe said.
Financing will come from unrestricted funds which accompany the
Tech Waits
The Barbed Wire Club was first founded in New York in May of 1946. It soon spread around the nation and across the world. It proposed to promote "good will among men of all nationalities, races and creeds," and to support "peace, progress and economic security for all peoples."
NEW YORK — (UPI) — The Heisman Trophy, named in memory of a famed early day Georgia Tech football coach, never has been won by a Georgia Tech player.
Beginning in February, 1965, the University of Kansas will offer four graduate fellowships to veterans of the Peace Corps, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe announced today.
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for the Peace Corps fellowships. However, applications are sought from any Peace Corps veterans who consider themselves qualified.
The deadline for applications to be filed with the office of the Graduate School will be Oct. 1, 1964.
VAMPIRE
On Campus with Max Shulman
(Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!" and "Barefoot Boy With Cheek".)
THE SLOW RUSH
Illustrated below is the membership pin of a brand-new national fraternity called Signa Phi Nothing. To join Signa Phi Nothing and get this hideous membership pin absolutely free, simply take a pair of scissors, cut out the illustration, and paste it on your chest.
Let me hasten to state that I do not recommend your joining Sigma Phi Nothing. The only thing I recommend in this column is Marlboro Cigarettes, as any honest man would who likes good tobacco and a good filter, whose heart is quickened by a choice of soft pack or Flip-Top Box, and who gets paid every week for writing this column.
I am frankly hard put to think of any reason why you should join Sigma Phi Nothing. Some people, of course, are joiners by nature; if you are one such, I am bound to tell you there are any number of better organizations for you to join—the Cosa Nostra, for example, or the Society for the Placing of Water Troughs in Front of Equestrian Statues.
Cut it out and Paste it on your chest
The only thing Signa Phi Nothing has in common with other fraternities is a fraternity hymn. In fact, two hymns were submitted to a recent meeting of the national board of directors (none of whom attended). The first hymn goes;
But if you insist on joining Sigma Phi Nothing, let me give you several warnings. First off, it is the only fraternity which admits girls. Second, there is no pledge period; each new member immediately goes active. Perhaps "inactive" is a more accurate word: there are no meetings, no drives, no campaigns, no sports, no games, no dues, no grip, and no house.
Signa Phi Nothing,
Shining star,
How we wonder
If you are.
The second hymn, rather more poetic in content, is to be sung to the tune of Also Sprach Zarathustra:
A Guernsey's a cow,
A road is a lane,
When you're eating chow,
Remember the mein.
Pending the next meeting of the national board of directors (which will never be held) members are authorized to sing either hymn. Or, for that matter, Frenesi.
Perhaps you are wondering why there should be such a fraternity as Signa Phi Nothing. I can give you an answer—an answer with which you cannot possibly disagree: Signa Phi Nothing fills a well-needed gap.
Are you suffering from mental health? Is logic distorting your thinking? Is ambition encroaching on your native sloth? Is your long-cherished misinformation retreating before a sea of facts? In short, has education caught up with you?
or facts. In short, it is if so, congratulations. But spring is upon us and the sap is rising, and the mind looks back with poignant longing to the days when it was a puddle of unreason.
If—just for a moment—you want to recapture those careless vaporings, that warm, squishy confusion, then join Signa Phi Nothing and renew your acquaintance with feelessness. We promise nothing, and, by George, we deliver it!
\* \* \*
© 1964 Max Shulman
We, the makers of Mariboro Cigarettes, promise smoking enjoyment, and we think you'll think we deliver it—in all fifty states of this Union. Mariboro Country is where you are.
Tuesday, March 3, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page
Louisiana Victory Sought by GOP
NEW ORLEANS — (UPI) — Republicans today made their strongest bid since carpetbagger days to capture the governorship of Democratic Louisiana in an election threatened by the third man in the race.
Democrat John J. McKeithen was favored to win, but the GOP promised to give a good showing at the polls for their candidate, Charlton Lyons, even though only about 11,000 of the state's more than one million voters are Republican.
THE THIRD candidate, Thomas S. Williams, an unknown running on the States Rights Party ticket, was not expected to cause trouble at the polls but he did cause some consternation in the courts.
He sued in federal court in Baton Rouge to keep voters from balloting on a successor to Gov. Jimmie H. Davis, whom state law forbids seeking a second straight four-year term.
U. S. District Judge E. Gordon West refused to issue the order but did order state officials to appear before him to show cause why the results of the election should not be thrown out.
This would put in office incumbent Democrat C. C. (Taddy) Aycock.
Williams also asked for an injunction to prevent Secretary of State Wade O. Martin and the Louisiana legislature from approving the election results and asked that a new election be called.
In his suit, Williams charged all but 10 of the state's 64 parish (county) voting machine custodians had failed to tell him when they planned to seal their machines for the election.
HE SAID that if a new election cannot be held, the winning candidate for Lieutenant Governor should be named governor.
The 45-year-old McKeithen, a member of the public service commission from Columbia, La., surprised political observers when he won the Democratic nomination from former Ambassador Delesseps S. Morrison in the January runoff.
HE OVERCAME political obscurity to erase a 140,000 vote lead Morrison held over him in the Dec. 7 primary. McKeithen was forced to campaign when Lyons served notice the GOP planned an all-out fight for the governorship.
They are required by state law to tell candidates before they seal the machines.
Lyons left the Democratic Party in 1960 because of its liberal policies. He campaigned hard on a Goldwater platform of conservative government.
A Republican has not been governor in Louisiana since post Civil War days.
Besides Lyons, Republicans were entered in 18 house races and 6 state senate contests.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansale Tuesday, March 3,1964
Rights Group Lays Plans ForPicketing
The Civil Rights Coordinating Committee (CRCC) was established Sunday night to act as the steering committee for the picketing of Greek Week and Sigma Nu social fraternity during the Inter-Fraternity Council's (IFC) spring rush weekend.
The CRCC is a product of the Civil Rights Council (CRC) and KU Liberal Action Committee and exists for the purpose of working to remove discriminatory clauses and practices from all social fraternities and sororities at KU.
George Ragsdale, Lawrence senior and chairman of the CRC, was named as chairman of the CRCC.
"We plan," Ragsdale said, "to contact interested organizations on other campuses and ask them to pick their respective Sigma Nu chapters in order to convince the Sigma Nu's national office that their locals should be allowed to choose their brothers as they see fit."
CRCC's present activities were outlined as:
To circulate a petition to the students asking them to register their concern about the discriminatory clause in the constitution of Sigma Nu at KU and the de facto segregation of most social fraternities and sororites at KU.
Definite plans are being made to picket the Sigma Nu at KU during the Inter Fraternity Council's spring rush March 21 and to picket Greek Week March 28.
CRCC invites any organizations or students to join them in its cause.
The first mention that CRC and KULAC were going to join for the picketing was at the International Club meeting Saturday night during a civil rights panel discussion
Members of the steering committee of CRCC are: Art Spears, Kansas City junior; Truman Holman, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore; Bert Rinkel, Scott City junior and president of KULAC; and Doug Hager, Hutchinson senior.
Planning Starts For KU Relays
Although the KU Relays officially begins April 17, the Kansas Relays Committee has already begun planning; committee chairmen and new freshman members have been appointed.
Chairmen of the student committees are:
Bob Guenthner, Augusta senior and Bruce Hall, Coffeyville senior, cochairmen; Jeffrey Baxter, Raytown, Mo. junior, and George Benson, El Dorado junior, office managers; William Flannagan, Scott City junior, parade chairman; John Gradirer, Leawood junior, queen's chairman; and Robert Winn, Leawood sophomore, publicity chairman.
In addition to selecting the committee chairmen, the following freshmen were appointed to the committee:
Ken Whitenight, Lawrence, Rick Harrington, Terre Haule, Inud, David Hall, Coffeyville, Richard Hoener, Prairie Village, James Whitaker, Little River, Michael Grady, Leawood, Ted Haggart, Salina, and Martin Holmer, Wichita.
the freshman committee members were selected from a field of 50 applicants.
These committees will work with head track coach Bill Easton and will be responsible for much of the organizational work. They will process the applications, send them to other universities, and prepare the program as the applications are returned. Bob Guenthner, co-chairman, said.
This year the relays are expected to attract teams from all over the nation as well as individual track and field standouts. Guenther said.
"The KU Relays is the only 'Big Three' relays in which the office work is done by the students," Guenthner said. "In the Texas and the Drake relays the office staffs are specially hired."
The track and field events of this year's relays will be April 17 and 18 in Memorial Stadium.
There's Nothing Like 1,750 Drunk Elephants
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — (UPI) — Harassed game rangers in South Africa's famed Kruger National Park are trying to cope with 1,750 tipsy elephants.
The elephants have been disgracefully drunk for the last five weeks from eating the yellow fruit of the Marula trees which dot the game reserve.
Elephants, it seems, are rarely mean drunks but their alcoholic hijinks already put one man in a hospital and their annual binge has another week or two to run.
THE MARULA bears fruit for six or seven weeks each year. It has a cloyingly sweet, very rich flavor. Africans use it to brew a particularly potent beverage.
The elephants use a simpler process. They lumber from tree to tree, stuffing the fruit down their gullets. It ferments in their stomachs and shortly they are "loaded."
They wander red-eyed through the park, waving their trunks happily from side to side and looking for more Marulas.
"They very rarely get aggressive," a National Parks Board spokesman said, "and they never get paralytically drunk. They are just like any human being after five or six drinks."
A "TANKED-UP" elephant,however,is an unpredictable beast.Like a human being in a similar condition,he can become violently angry over a minor frustration.
An African railway worker named Judas is recovering in a hospital from his encounter with a herd of piee-eyed pachyderms.
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Judas was riding his bicycle, a bit unsteady himself after drinking Marula beer with some friends, when he came upon the elephants. They, too, had been imbibing of the sweet fruit.
THE HERD leader plucked Judas from his bicycle, tossed him into a
bush and flattened the bicycle with one stamp of his massive foot. Then he calmly turned to a nearby Marula tree and munched more fruit.
Two days later, near Kruger National Park headquarters at Skukuzan an African farmer narrowly escaped injury when his dog barked at a passing elephant bull, which was
under the influence. The bull glared blearily at the animal, then charged.
breathty at the animal, then charged. The dog ran into its master's grass hut for safety, followed by the indignant elephant.
Moments later, the satisfied bull elephant lurched off into the bush, with a complete grass hut around his neck like a collar.
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Page 7
Jayhawk Swimmers Seek Big-Eight Crown
KU's undefeated swimming team goes into this weekend's Big Eight championship meet hoping to prevent Oklahoma from winning its 10th consecutive conference title.
KU has never climbed to the top spot in the league, but did finish second behind the Sooners in 1962.
This year, however, according to Dick Reamon, Jayhawk swimming coach, the Oklahoma team may be in for a fall. Reamon said last night he felt KU to be the most likely team in the Big Eight to upset the hopes of the Sooners.
"O.U. IS the defending champion." Coach Reamon said, "and must be regarded as the team to beat, KU is, I believe, the leading contender in the conference for Oklahoma's title. We beat Iowa State and Nebraska and they were the other highly regarded teams in the conference."
Coach Reamon said the Jayhawk team's chances still depended to a great extent on whether or not Jim Basile, a top breaststroker will recover from a pulled muscle in his leg in time to compete in the Conference meet.
"KU's chances hinge." Coach Reamon said, "on whether or not we can use our breaststroker.
"Basile, if he competes, will be a top man in the 100 and 200 yard breaststroke and a mainstay in the medley relay. If he is unable to compete, we'll have to fight to take second in the meet."
COACH REAMON said, however, that Basile has been responding well to treatment and should be able to participate by this weekend.
"Basile worked out Friday and Sunday," Coach Reamon said. "But he's still weak. He swam the 100 in excellent time Sunday. The question is, of course, whether or not he will be able to last through the several races he must swim in the meet. We have no choice but to be optimistic and plan on his being in good shape."
According to Coach Reamon, the rest of his squad is in good health and shape for the meet. He said that, with the exception of a couple of minor illnesses, the squad was in excellent training and was ready for the meet.
Coach Reamon said the KU team has great depth of talent and would try to capitalize on the depth to win the meet.
"OKLAHOMA," Coach Reamon said, "lacks in depth. They have great individual performers, however, and will be going for the top places.
"We feel that depth—quality depth is necessary to a winning team. We hope to qualify a number of men in most of the events and get the third, fourth, fifth and sixth place points.
"The team which could really hurt us in our try for first is Nebraska. The Nebraska boys could grab a number of thirds, fourths, fifths and sixths and then we'd be out the points," Reamon said.
Coach Reamon said KU's big move for the title would come in the distance events.
THE KU TANKSTERS have practiced a total of 115 days this year. Each man on the team, according to Coach Reamon, has spent from 175-200 hours in the water since practice started in September.
The KU team left for Norman. Okla., last night. The swimmers will spend the week practicing starts and turns, while the divers will get used to the Oklahoma boards.
Members of the KU team who will participate in the championship meet include:
400 — Tom Hutchinson, Pete Stebbins, Mike Downey and Don Weiner; 50 freestyle—Dick Bisbee, Steve Brooks and Jack Allen; One meter dive — Ron Marsh, Don Buckholz and Dave Richwine; 400 medley relay — Bill Johnson, Jim Basile, Mike Downey and Dick Bisbee; 200 butterfly—Pete Stebbins, L. P. Jeter, Do Weiner and Mike Downey.
200 BACKSTROKE—Bill Johnson,
Jack 'Allen and Mike Downey;
200 breaststroke—Jim Basile; 500—Bill Mills,
Jerry Higgins, Mike Caldwell
and Stu Anderson; 200 freestyle—
Mike Caldwell, Bill Mills and Jerry
Higgins; 200 IM—Tom Hutchinson,
Mike Downey and Jack Allen; 1650—Bill Mills, Jerry Higgins, Mike Caldwell and Stu Anderson.
100 freestyle — Dick Bisbee and Steve Brooks; 100 breaststroke—Jim Basile; 100 backstroke—Bill Johnson and Jack Allen; 100 butterfly—Mike Downey, Tom Hutchinson, Pete Stebbins and Don Weiner; three meter dive — Ron Marsh, Don Buckholz and Dave Richwell; 400 freestyle relay—Dick Bisbee, Jerry Higgins, Mike Caldwell and either Steve Brooks, Bill Mills or Pete Stebbins.
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Wrestlers Meet Omaha To End First Season
The last dual wrestling meet of the season will be tonight at 7:30 p.m. in Allen Field House when the KU wrestling team meets Omaha University.
University Daily Kansan
In addition to its being the last meet of the season, it will be the last time before the Big Eight Wrestling Meet that KU will face outside opposition. The Big Eight Meet will be held in Stillwater, Okla., March 13-14.
The lineups for KU are:
125 10. -Mike Eilwens
130 lb.-Bill Brackett
137 lb.-Mike Morgan
The lineups for KU 123 lh - Mike Elwoll
137 Jb. - Mike Morgan
147 Jb. - Claude Summer
Sumner at 147 pounds is wrestling his first varsity match. The Stuart, Okla., native got the position on the team by winning a try-out match earlier this week.
147 lb.—Claude Sumner
157 lb. John Workman
157 lb.—John Worlund
167 lb.—Phil Doughty, captain
KU and Omaha have met one common opponent this season, Ft. Hays State. Ft. Hays defeated KU in the last match before this one, and in a recent meeting with Omaha, downed them 14-12.
Hvy.—Fred Elder
KU's entry in the Big Eight tournament along with the one from Missouri marks the first time these schools have entered the tournament.
The next afternoon, wrestlers who win the preliminary matches will compete for berths in the finals which will be later that evening.
The tournament will get underway at 1:30 p.m. March 13, with 80 wrestlers competing in the preliminary rounds.
Along with the finals will be consolation matches for third and fourth places.
This will be the first time all eight schools in the conference have sent teams to the conference meet.
In recent listings by Amateur Wrestling News, Iowa State is ranked first in the nation, and Oklahoma State second.
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Lewis' Overtime Shot Beats Colorado 73-71
A lay-in shot by Del Lewis with eight seconds to go in overtime gave the Jayhawk cagers a 73-71 victory over Colorado last night in Allen Field House.
The game-winning shot came on an appropriate day for Lewis—his birthday.
The overtime was set up by a lay-in by Buddy Vance with 48 seconds remaining in regulation play.
The Jayhawks and the Buffs played a close game through the first half, ending the period with Colorado ahead 39-38. Colorado led the Hawks through most of the second half. KU, however, tied the score 65-65 with 2:42 remaining in the game and set up the situation which led to the overtime and victory.
The high scorer for the Jayhawks was George Useld with 19. Unseld, who fouled out with 10:27 remaining in the regulation period was not the high scorer of the contest, however. Colorado's Mike Frink captured the high scorer's honors with 22.
After the game, Coach Dick Harp said he was pleased with the performance of the team.
"I thought," Harp said, "the team played as aggressively as it had since the Cincinnati game. I was real pleased with the boys."
When asked what sort of play or plays the Hawks used to win the close contest, Coach Harp said they used series designed to permit one shot. He gave all the credit to Lewis for setting up the play which clinched the victory.
"It was all Delvey after he got the ball," Coach Harp said. "He gets the credit."
Harp said he was pleased with the performances of Buddy Vance and Dave Schichtle.
"Buddy did a real good job after George left the game, Coach Harp said. "David's leadership in the stretch was a vital factor."
Harp said he thought Unseld and Vance did an excellent job of containing Colorado's 6-8 center, Jim Davis.
The crowd of 3,500 roared their approval of the efforts of the Jayhawks in the last seconds of the regulation period and through the overtime.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, March 3, 1964
Time Writer To Discuss Red Split
A special correspondent for Time Magazine who has spent several years behind the Iron Curtain and in Russia will speak here tonight on the Cino-Soviet split.
John Scott, Time correspondent,
will lecture at 7:30 in the Forum
Room of the Kansas Union. The
event is sponsored by the Committee
on East Asian Studies and the
School of Journalism.
Scott lived in Russia during the 1930's when he worked as a welder in the construction of a Soviet steel plant. He was later the Moscow representative of the Havas news agency.
In 1941 he was expelled from Russia for filing dispatches which reported growing indications of friction between the Nazis and the Soviets.
He has since written a book, "Beyond the Urals," which recounts his experiences during the years in Russia.
Since the early 1940's Scott has been a member of the Time-Life organization, and has been a Special Correspondent for Time Magazine for the past ten years.
Scott has been behind the Iron Curtain in the Soviet Union, in eastern Europe, and in the Middle East as a reporter. Gathering material for his report "Crises in Communist China-A Report on Red China and Her Neighbors," he spent four months on the fringes of the Bamboo Curtain that stretches from Japan to Pakistan.
The Student Travel Information booth, sponsored by the SUA, opened yesterday in the Kansas Union.
New SUA Booth Offers Free Travel Material
Committee representatives are Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla. junior, SUA; Susan Hartley, Atwood sophomore, ASC; and Lance Burr, Salina junior, People-to-People.
No tours will be organized through the service.
The booth is open from 11:30 to 1:30 Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. Members of Cwens, sophomore women's honorary, are serving as travel agents for the first month.
The number of countries represented on this campus has reached the all-time high of 74 despite a decline in the actual number of foreign students this spring.
Students Call 74 Countries Home
While there is no longer any student from Kenya, two new countries, Belgium and Viet Nam, are represented this semester.
The number of undergraduates from foreign countries rose from last fall's 146 to 159, but the total number dropped 16 from 423.
While these students come from such far off and recently in the news places as Cambodia, Brunei, Cyprus, Kuwait, Nepal, Yemen and the Congo Republic, most come from the countries long represented at KU
Coup Influences U.S. to Order Brass Choir to Skip Viet Nam
The KU Brass Choir, on now in the Far East, will not make its scheduled appearance in Viet Nam, Don Scheid, assistant to the dean of the School of Fine Arts, said yesterday.
The 18-member Brass Choir is now appearing in Ceylon.
The scheduled appearance was cancelled by United States State Department officials, Scheid said, because of the recent coup in Saigon.
Kenneth Bloomquist, director of the choir, recently reported on the ensemble's activities in Okinawa, the first ston of their three-month tour.
Our first public concert was held in the University of the Ryukyuys gymnasium with nearly 2,000 Okiawans in attendance. We played an hour and fifteen minute concert, and
were very warmly received and played many encores," he said.
Bloomquist said that it was suggested to him by local officials that the choir play longer concerts. "What makes this so amazing is that people were crammed into the theaters and concert halls and listened to the entire performance either standing or kneeling," he said.
"To sum things up," he continued, "we performed for packed houses through the week, associated with hundreds of Okinawans through workshops and visitations, were entertained by Okinawan folk singers and dancers of all ages, men skilled in the art of Karate and school children in instrumental and vocal groups."
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A comparison with four years ago when KU had 287 foreign students from 58 nations reveals that the greatest numerical increase came
from the Asian nations, both Near East and Far East. The Africa representation has increased about three times from 11 to 34.
These include India, Taiwan, Germany, Canada, Hong Kong, Iraq, Costa Rica, Iran, Korea, the Philippines and Venezuela.
Representation from Europe and South America showed little change.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
S-P-E-C-I-A-L
Tues., Wed., Thurs., Fri.
(Closed Monday)
HALIBUT STEAK DINNER
GARDEN FRESH SALAD
FRENCH FRIES
FRENCH BREAD AND BUTTER $1.00
COFFEE or TEA
We are now closed on Monday instead of Tuesday
We are now closed on Monday instead of Tuesday
THE STEAK HOUSE
1100 E. 23rd Lewie & Marian Goodrick VI 3-9753
A Basketball Coach and a Player.
1. I've been giving a lot of thought to the future-career-wise and goal-wise.
I've been pretty busy working on my hook shot.
I'm a terror off the boards.
3. Material reward is important, too so long as the job is one of profound significance.
7
A
5. How about you? What are your goals?
I'd like to score 30 against Tech.
2. As recipients of a college education, I feel it is incumbent upon us to work in areas which allow us to make a contribution to society.
3
Watch me dribble right around you.
4. What's more, the company I work for must be forward-looking and encourage initiative.
Notice the feather touch on the ball.
3
Oh, I've got a swell job with Equitable. They've got everything you're looking for. And they're a good team to work with
3
6. I mean after graduation.
See your Placement Officer for the date Equitable's employment representative will be on campus. Or write to William E. Blevins, Employment Manager.
The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United States Home Office: 1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10019 $ \circ $ 1964
---
Defected Soviet Spy Gives U.S. Information on Red Espionage
According to one report, this information has been turned over to the FBI and, in some cases, has resulted in the arrests of important Soviet bloc agents operating against the Western world outside the United States.
The Goleniewski defection, though it apparently occurred six years ago, was the second reported within a matter of weeks. Last month, the United States granted political asylum to Yuri A. Nosenko, described as a "staff officer" of the KGB, the Soviet Committee on State Security—Russia's all-purpose intelligence agency.
U. S. intelligence agencies were said to be still maintaining their contacts with Goleniewski. The FBI and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) refused to comment on any aspects of the case.
WASHINGTON — (UPI)— A Soviet secret police defector, now living in New York, has been feeding U.S. intelligence agents since 1958 with information which has led to arrests of important Red spies abroad.
It was learned yesterday that the defector, a Pole identified as "Michał Goleniewski" came to the United States in 1961. He previously had been in contact with U.S. intelligence sources in Poland.
THE RED AGENT was given the name of "Goleniewski" after arriving in this country with his wife to conceal his true identity. He was understood to be living somewhere in New York and has provided much information to U.S. intelligence.
NOSENKO, WHO defected from the Soviet delegation to the Geneva disarmament conference, was brought to the United States. A Russian embassy official in Washington was allowed to question him as was an official of the Swiss embassy but he insisted he wanted to stay in the United States.
Nothing has been heard about Nosekno since that time and it is believed he is undergoing "in-depth"
THE JOURNAL American story said Goleniewski, naming names, had "provided Washington with details of what looms as a greater scandal than the famous Alger Hiss case."
The dispatch, among other things, credited him with breaking the Irwin N. Scarbeck "sex and secrets" spy case in Warsaw in 1961. Scarbeck, an official of the U.S. embassy in Warsaw, was blackmailed by a beautiful Polish woman spy.
interrogation by U.S. intelligence agents about his life and duties with the KGB.
In a copyright dispatch yesterday, the New York Journal American said that Goleniewski had been a high-ranking operator in the KGB and had informed U.S. officials that Moscow had placed active "cells" in the CIA and the State Department, both in Washington and overseas.
ASKED ABOUT the Journal American story, White House press secretary Pierre Salinger said: "The White House doesn't comment on intelligence matters." It was understood elsewhere, however, that the story was not consistent in all respects with accounts of the episode reaching Washington.
Hiss, a former State Department official, was sentenced to prison for perjury as an outgrowth of the now-famous "pumpkin papers" spy case which catapulted a young congressman, Richard M. Nixon, to national prominence in the late 1940s.
The Journal American said Goleniewski's "shattering disclosures" included one that the KGB had been able to infiltrate U.S. embassies in all important cities abroad as well as "every U.S. agency except the FBI." However, this was one aspect of the story challenged here.
The Journal American story described Goleniewski as 41, husky, handsome and resembling "the Hollywood prototype of the suave, lady-killing spy."
Tuesday, March 3. 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 9
GOLENIEWSKI was described by the newspaper dispatch as having
New Hampshire Primary Attracts $2 Million Outlay
CÓNCORD, N.H. — (UPI) - The cost of the New Hampshire presidential primary will be more than 2 million.
That is big business in New Hampshire and partly because of it not many New Hampshire residents would be willing to give up their position as the first presidential nominee shake down.
The cost of the March 10 primary is expected to be one of the highest per voter in any major election and virtually all sections in the state are sharing in the outlay.
Each of the 150,000 or so voters will have cost the state, television networks, newspapers and wire services and candidates about $13.
To look at it another way, the cost of electing 14 of the 1,200 GOP national convention delegates and 20 of the 2,000 Democratic delegates boils up to about $60,000 per delegate.
Only $50,000 of this comes from the state coffers for manning the 302 polling places and preparing the ballots. The rest is being spent in getting elected and reporting the returns.
The candidates, Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, Senators Margaret Chase Smith and Barry Goldwater and former Minnesota Gov. Harold E. Stassen are criss-crossing the state almost constantly.
Rockefeller and Goldwater are expected to reach their legal spending limit of $100,000 and the other candidates, with the exception of Mrs. Smith, will spend hefty amounts.
And major write-in movements are costing the supporters of Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge and Richard M. Nixon.
About 50 reporters and television-radio crewmen have been following the candidates like shadows since January and their number will multiply several times.
ter status” to handle the flood of service requests.
Cullen says 200 technicians will be on duty round-the-clock during the primary to service a master switchboard that equals the size of boards in most small cities and will handle direct lines to polling places as well as radio-television communications. Sixty micro-wave dishes have been erected to beam television signals out of New Hampshire.
Edward H. Cullen, in charge of setting up telephone communications, estimated his costs on facilities and manpower alone at about $1 million.
The New England Telephone and Telegraph Co. has gone on "disas-
been blocked by the CIA from testifying on espionage matters before Senate or House committees although the Pole and many lawmakers were said to favor such a course.
In addition, the Journal American story said Goleniewski had been "thwarted by amateurs and, Stalinists, in the CIA and even kept from communicating his plight to responsible higher officials here."
Judges for the event will be Miriam Stewart Hamilton, assistant professor of voice; Mrs. Theodore Johnson, wife of assistant professor of organ and theory Theodore Johnson; and Clayton Krebbiel, assistant professor of music education and choral music.
Groups from the residence halls will compete for seven trophies in six group categories and overall production.
This year the KU Spring Sing will be in co-operation with the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) new project, Spring Fling.
The contest will be at 3:30, March 22, in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union.
New'Fling'Joins Old Spring Sing
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
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1963 CHEVROLET IMPALA Super Sport Coupe
A low mileage, one owner car traded in on a new Ford. It has a V-8 engine, 3 speed transmission, radio, heater, white sidewalls and many other extras. You can get a lot of car for the money in this one.
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--m the region made famous in history and poetry ARROW orings this distinctive shirting ...Khyber Cloth. Woven on native looms and dyed with the incomparable vegetable madder hues, it is tailored in our own impeccable ivy styling. Here is a sport shirt for your wardrobe that because of its distinguished appearance might end up being your favorite of them all.
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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." 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
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, March 3, 1964
Fear Of New Cyprus Fighting Hampers U.N. Peace Negotiations
NICOSIA, Cyprus —(UPI) —Western diplomats expressed doubts today that the United Nations peace plan will settle the Cyprus crisis.
While the U.N. Security Council in New York approached a vote on the peace plan, rival Greek and Turkish Cypriot bands massed in villages of the northwest, creating the danger of a major outbreak of fighting.
INFORMED OBSERVERS said the basic constitutional and political differences between the communities persist despite conciliation efforts
"There is absolutely no sign of the two sides even considering getting together," one diplomat said.
"While this continues, neither the security council resolutions nor an international peace -keeping force is likely to have much effect."
A resolution before the U.N. Security Council calls for the dispatch of an international peace force to Cyprus for three months and appointment of an impartial mediator to try to work out the communal differences. The plan would be supervised by U.N. Secretary General U Thant.
WHETHER THE plan could be implemented before more violence erupts was questionable to many diplomats here.
Heavily armed Greek Cypriots
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Foreign students: Sign up to attend International Night, U. of Missouri at KU. March 21. See Dean Coan's secretary, 228 Strong.
Catholic Mass. 5 p.m. St. Lawrence
Church, 1910 Stratford, Rd.
Chapel, 1810 Stirrup Rd. Ref.
ASC, 7 p.m., Sunflower Room, Kansas
Union
of the Beginners' Inquiry Forum, 7 p.m.
St. Lawrence Center, 1915 Stratford
New Beginners' Inquiry Forum, 7 p.m.
St. Lawrence Center, 1915 Stratford Rd.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship,
7:30 p.m., Kansas Union. "Return of Car-
ters"
Inquirer Class, 7:30 p.m. Canterbury House.
CENTRAL UNIVERSITY, 5 p.m. in
Lawry Center.
Futerstreit Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m., St.
Louisville Chapel
Inquirer Class, 3:45 p.m., Canterbury House.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth.
Pres. Picked By Alumni IFC
Dale S. Helmers of Kansas City, Mo., was elected temporary president of the new Alumni Interfraternity Council, at the first organization meeting last week. He will hold office until elections are conducted in the next regular meeting
The AIFC has been formed to promote the general welfare and the development of the fraternity system at KU, and to promote better fraternity-university relations.
The AIFC is also interested in supporting undergraduate interfraternity programs in cooperation with the university, and keeping fraternity alumni informed of current conditions which affect the chapters at the University.
The AIFC intends to set up a committee to discuss means to finance new fraternity physical plants and to promote the common interest of chapter building corporations in matters pertaining to taxes, insurance, rental rates and general finances.
At the meeting Wednesday, Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, told the AIFC that fraternities must use personal contact to attract prospective members on campus. He said that the university expects to have 6,000 undergraduate men on the campus this fall—a 500 man increase over last year. The fraternities should also pay more attention to potential new members who are transfer students. Alderson said.
Special guests at the meeting were Dr. W. Clarke Wescoe, chancellor; Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students; and Steve Stotts, Prairie Village senior and president of the undergraduate Interfraternity Council.
massed in villages near Photto, a Turkish fortress where two Greek hostages were held for more than 48 hours. Officials feared the Greeks might attack, setting off a wave of fighting that could prompt intervention by Turkey and Greece.
In apparent retaliation for seizure of the two Greek Cypiiots, some Greeks last night kidnapped two Turks outside Nicosia and held them as hostages
Tension has been high particularly in the northwest sector of this Mediterranean Island off the coast of Turkey. Turkish Cypriot refugees driven out of their villages the past few weeks have poured into Photta.
BOTH THE GREEK and Turkish governments indicated they would accept the U.N. resolution, at least in principle, as a means of safeguarding the peace on Cyprus. There were high hopes Cyprus President Makarios would go along too. Britain and the United States supported the measure.
Under the 1960 independence treaty, Britain, Greece and Turkey agreed to act as guarantors of Cyprus, sovereignty and constitution. The treaty gave the three powers rights of intervention for this purpose.
The Makarios also wants to amend
The Makarios Government, which is dominated by the Greek Cypriot majority, has expressed fears of an invasion by Turkey to protect the Turkish Cypriot minority. Makarios also wants to amend the constitution to abolish the minority veto rights in the government.
The fighting stems from Turkish Cypriot objections to Makarios, constitutional proposals. The Turks contend that partition of the island is the only solution to the crisis, but the Greeks oppose such action.
DIPLOMATS HERE said a U.N. resolution would be "merely a first step" toward any final solution. They said it was unlikely that traditional differences between the rival communities could be settled in the three months the peace force would police the island.
Specific problems, the diplomats said, were the composition of the force and the method of financing it. Makarios has definite ideas on both aspects, they said.
The international force would replace the British troops now supervising a shaky truce. Sporadic fighting which started around Christmas has caused hundreds of casualties and created the danger of possible conflict between NATO allies Greece and Turkey.
Human Emotion Understood In Terms of Security Drive
By Delos Smith
NEW YORK—(UPI)—The deep-down striving of human beings is for security and when you realize that is so, human emotions become understandable. This is a proposition of Dr. Jack C. Borel, a scientist whose subject is people.
Then you recognize human emotions can be arranged along a scale which has "arousal" at one end and "quiescence" at the other. Arousal results from perceived insecurity and perceived insecurity produces quiescence. These perceptions are constantly moving back and forth along the scale.
"Anger can be viewed as a strong arousal to a situation threatening our security," Dr. Borel said. "Grief and depression can certainly be seen as the response to lost security represented by the loss of a 'love' object.
"The psychotic may be viewed as the individual who has lost all hope of security in a rational world and creates his own illusionary world that appears to give some hope of predictability and control under his own terms."
"Anxiety by our conventional definition represents insecurity about the control or outcome of an impending situation. Love may represent our response to a situation that appears to enhance our security—that is, approval by a person who is seen as a source of security."
"The neurotics, which today in becoming the description of the 'norm' of our culture, represent lesser degrees of insecurity in particular areas or situations. The character disorders may be seen as greater degrees of insecurity with desperate attempts to relieve the constant burden of anxiety in impulsive 'irrational' outbursts.
He reminded of the paradoxical contradictions so often seen in human emotions, for instance, the ability of people on occasions to love and hate simultaneously. Love and hate, he said, "can represent the logical ambivalence of having one's security depend upon the approval of another."
by extension from the normal to the abnormal, so-called "mental illness" can be seen as a scale "representing varying degrees of perceived insecurity," he said.
AARDVARK
the magazine of a satire and parody is looking for a sales representative on the Kansas campus. For information, write:
AARDVARK, 740 North Rush St.,
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Borel was constructing a theoretic view intended to sharpen the understanding which people have of people. He is a psychiatric scientist at the California State Hospital at Camarillo and presented the view to his colleagues in a technical publication of the American Medical Association.
Several long-used theories of human behavior, including the Freudian, suggest that people have a basic need of security, and anthropologists and biologists have shown why they do by showing they've always been "physically poorly adapted for survival in a hostile environment."
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IN MEIHO COLOR
Clay Faces Draft Despite Claim
WASHINGTON—(UPI)A Selective Service spokesman said today a man could not qualify for draft exemption as a conscientious objector merely by claiming membership in a religious body opposed to violence.
"SUNDAY in New York"
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He made the statement when asked about reports that heavyweight boxing champion Cassius Clay might try to avoid military service on the ground that he is a member of the Black Muslim sect.
THE SPOKESMAN said that Selective Service did not have any "blanket policy" toward Black Muslims, or members of any other religious group.
"All applications for conscientious objector classification are handled on an individual basis, just like applications for occupational deferment," he said.
"Membership in a religious body which teaches pacifistic views is one piece of evidence which a man might submit to help establish his claim
to be a conscientious objector. But it is not enough by itself.
"Nor is it necessary to be a member of any church to make the claim. The law states only that the objection must be based on religious training and belief or on political or philosophical views, or personal moral codes."
A MAN WHO persuades his local draft board that he is a sincere conscientious objector is classified 1-AO if he is willing to perform non-combatant service in a military unit, or 1-O if he objects to any form of military participation. Men in the latter classification are required to put in two years of civilian work of "national importance," such as serving as attendants in mental hospitals.
"Would prizefighting be considered work of national importance for a conscientious objector?" a reporter asked.
"No, sir, it surely would not," said the spokesman.
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
LUNCHEON BOWL
R
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WHAT MADE THIS MAN DIFFERENT FROM ANY OTHER?
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Folks, here's a movie with "HEART"!...a warm story...a laugh...a bit of a sob, too...it's an evening of inspiring ENTERTAINMENT!
That's why we stake our reputation and your goodwill and confidence in us and boldly predict that you will thank us for telling you to see "ONE MAN'S WAY"
FRANK ROSS PRESENT
ONE man's way
-THE STORY OF NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
[Image of a person's face with dark hair and light skin tone]
FRANK ROSS PRESENTS ONE man's way -THE STORY OF NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
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ONE man's way
-THE STORY OF NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
1965
he had more courage than most...and he would need it for what lay ahead he started as a crime reporter...but something inside him wouldn't let him rest he heard a frightened girl's scream for help...a beautiful girl's call for excitement...and answered both he could do a wild dance step...or preach a sermon...or calm a desperate murderess he is a minister...a rebel...a man you'll never forget!
DON MURRAY
WILLIAM WINDOM CAROL DRIHMART DIANA HYLAND ELEANORE GRIFITJOHN W BLOCH
STARTS
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SHOWS 7:00 & 9:00
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THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
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ENDS TONITE—SUSAN HAYWARD "STOLEN HOURS"
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Books, over 1100 on dozens of subjects.
Stonehenge Book Stall, 1395 Tenn. (behind ATO house). Hours: Noon to midnight, Mon. thru Sat. 3-9
Page 11
1959 Renault, $295.00. Phone VI 3-5138
after 5.30. t¹
1956 Chevy, blue and white, top shape. Recently overhaulied. New tires, seat belt. Under-seat air conditioner. Outright sale. no trade. Very reasonable. Bob Swan. VI 3-4711 for 5 p.m. 3-6
For sale or trade, pistols, rifles, ammo,
drafting equipment, slide-rules, English
bicycles, lanterns, musical instruments. I
will trade for anything. Call VI 3-10-78
Richardson Music, headquarters for all types of folk instruments, e.g. the ukulele and bluegrass banjos in stock. For the person interested in pop music we have a compilations base, and amplifiers. Lessons on instruments. 18 E.9. 9th I.2-0021. 3-3
Tire prices slashed! Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Tire Center at 929 Mass. 36 monyl tubeless tires. Four 650 x 13' s, $40. Four 750 x 14' s, $44. Four 670 x 15' s, $44. Four 800 x 14' s, $50. Plus tax, exchange, installed! 4 whitewalls, $8 extra! 3-26
Record closeouts! All remaining 1963 stereo albums 50c. All 45's cut to 25c. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. (Motorola Headquarters). 3-5
New 16" lightweight portable TV, $29.
1 year guarantee on parts! Rent or buy,
$12 per month. Ray Stoneback's, 929
Mass. (Motorola Headquarters), 3-26
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS, Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale great savings after 6 p.m. week days-St. and Sunday. 837 Connecticut
Corvette hard-top, Fits 1957 to 1960.
Civic hardtop, Fits 1957 to 1960.
2-1000 or leave word at VI 3-1702. 3-4
LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. NEW AND USED GUNS, MILITARY WEAPON AND AMMO. WE ALSO REBLIUE, SPECIAL THIS WEEK, JUNGLE CARBINE. $23. 1026 OHIO, VI 2-1214. EVENINGS AND WEEKENDs. 3-4
Typewriter, new and used portables,
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Typewriter, adder, rentals and service.
Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St..
VI 3-3644.
For Forliter Brush Products phone VI 3-
9040 after 5 p.m. tf
German Shepherd pups, AKC registered
Lloyd Broyd, Lloyd Broyd,
shelsen. Phone KI 2-2559, BT
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
tapecam - $85 Lawrence Outdoor
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Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive outline and definition revisions theses and formulas. Formally known as the Thesis call. Call IV 2-3701. Free delivery. **Thesis:** $4.50.
FOR RENT
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
3 bedroom home with attached garage.
Nice yard with patio. Available on or before March 15. West 20th Terr. Call VI 2-3416. 3-10
Large 3-bedroom ranch home, practically new wall-to-wall carpet, air condition-
ment TV, antenna and attached garage.
Available about March 15. Call William
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3-10
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furnished 3-bedroom suite $55 per mo. 736 N. 3rd. Phone VI 3-4721
Mobile home for rent or sale 1 bedroom.
Mobile home and clean Call VI 3-4-
after 1 p.m.
Married, grad students, faculty, 2 bedroom, $75. Sleeping room, $25, 16 available. Room 1. Reserve new call. For brochure VI - 2116. Sleeve Apartment 1123 Indiana. **tt**
For one or two graduate age men, three room nicely furnished apt., private bath, large kitchen. Ideal study conditions. Best of neighbors. For appointment phone VI 3-8534. tt Crescent Heights two bedroom apartment! Swimming pool. 25th and Red-
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HAMBURGER
12c
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BURGER BAR
Graduate men or older undergraduates+ extra-nice furnished bachelor apartment close to campus, ideal study conditions. best of neighbors. Reasonably priced utilities paid. For appointment call VI 3-8534.
MISCELLANEOUS
Furnished, clean, three-room apartment.
Drinking, 511 Oh.
Have a party in the Big Red Schoo
door and piano Heated. Call VI 3-7455.
Tutoring in all math classes from Math 1 to Math 23 by experienced instructor. Reasonable rates. Call VI 2-1424 after 6 p.m. for appointment. 3-4
Beginning recorder group, faculty wives.
Need interested party to join. Meets every Thursday evening. We are not very good. Call VI 2-4414 at 5:30 p.m.
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. $
TYPING
Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (pica type). Mrs Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0558
Experienced secretary would like typing
home. Reasonable rates. Call VI.
1188.
Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term paper thesis, etc. Accurate work stands. Phone VI 3-5879. Charles attl. Patti.
Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason- sentations and theses, phone VI 3-7682. Mrs. Frank Gibson.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Tops — Glass & Zippers
Rear Glasses — Heater Glasses — Door Panels
Tallor Made Seat Covers at Competitive Prices with sewed double lock stitch. Lockie's Seat Covers
Jack's Sear Covers
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ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass.
Artists - Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics
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Experienced Tytpiest—Dissertations, Theses, Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 Rhode Island, VI 3-7485. tf
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon printer. IBM IV 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley. 408 West 13th **
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Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tf
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
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TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, documents and reports. Electronic Typewriter. Mrs McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 38-868f
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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Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Sigma-Corona electric machines: 35 special symbols. client service Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI2-3057. **tt**
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University Daily Kansan
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, March 3, 1964
New Judge Probable In Jack Ruby Trial
DALLAS — (UPI) — Judge Joe B. Brown broke out in a cold sweat and went home sick on the advice of his doctor today just before the Jack Ruby trial entered its 14th day. Opposing attorneys quarreled over whether another judge could sit in.
First reports said Brown, 55, had a cold and fever.
JUDGE J. FRANK Wilson, who loaned his big courtroom to Brown for the trial of Lee Harvey Oswald's slayer, was checking statutes to see whether he could take over.
Wilson called District Attorney Henry Wade and defense attorney Melyin Belli into chambers.
"I am convinced it's all right," Wade said.
"It is like coming in in the middle of an argument," said Belli.
"I don't see why we can't wait until Judge Brown gets back."
WADE said he learned that Brown's physician told him last night not to come to court today. The judge was eating breakfast in a restaurant near the courthouse when he started perspiring profusely.
Wade was asked whether Judge Wilson might take over permanently. The question was whether Wilson, if he took over, would remain permanently as trial judge, Wade said it was "a possibility."
"The statute provides that in cases of sickness, disability, death or resigning another judge may be allowed to finish the trial," Wade said.
HE SAID he thought Wilson "will likely preside until Judge Brown gets well" then, he said, "we'll cross the bridge" of whether Brown would be permitted under law to take over from Wilson again.
Yesterday afternoon, there appeared in a corridor close to the press room in the courthouse Maurice A. Melford of Chicago, national director of the National Epilepsy League, Inc. With him were two Dallas press agents.
THEY WERE identified as Mrs. Mickie Sullivan and Thomas W. Armstrong. Shortly the three were served holding subpoenas procured by the defense attorney, who demanded they be held in contempt. The demand was denied, after much shouting and name calling in Judge Joe B. Brown's chambers.
What had happened was that the packets had been handed out containing a "Fact Sheet on Epilepsy" and a "Memorandum to News Media." The latter said that 1.8 million American epileptics were on trial as well as Ruby because of the "psychomotor epileptic" defense. It said there was danger that arguments during Ruby's trial could "even further prejudice the public" against epileptics who are decent, capable citizens.
Defense attorneys Melvin Belli
and Joe H. Tonahill, in furious denunciations, charged that the visitors were trying to pass the literature to prospective jurors. The visitors countered that a deputy sheriff had gone with them to prevent that from happening. Brown ruled that none of the veniremens had received them and no harm was done.
HE DENIED motions for contempt against Mellford and the district attorney who was accused of collusion, and for a mistrial. He also denied a change of venue because of the occurrence, which Tonahill called "one of the most dastardly acts known to humanity."
Tonahill previously, on the record in chambers, had called Melford "trash, dirt, subversive . . ." Melford said he only was trying to inform the press.
The New York Baroque Ensemble, a five-piece group that specializes in 14th and 18th century music, will perform at 8 p.m. to-morrow night in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Ensemble to Perform Baroque Music
Other instruments in the group are flute, oboe, violin and harpsichord.
The Supreme Court also ordered the re-drawing of U.S. congressional districts in Texas but left an avenue open for delaying the change until after this year's election.
al Hall.
The ensemble is under the direction of Howard Vogel, who plays bassoon and recorder.
The ensemble, organized in the spring of 1961, has toured the United States and Canada but has performed most extensively in the New York City area.
A suit involving a hospital in Newport News, Va., is in trial now, he said.
In a written opinion, the court ruled, 9 to 0, that the Federal Power Commission (FPC) had jurisdiction over wholesale sales of electric power in interstate commerce without regard to state regulation.
The program for their KU appearance will include "Quartet in G Major" by Telemann, "Concert Royal No. 4" by Coupin, "Kammer Trio in F Major" by Handel, "Sonatas for Harpsichord" by Scarlett, "Scintet in B Minor" by Loeillet and "Concerto in G Major" by Naudot.
Hospital Lawsuits Set As Result of Court Ruling
Tickets may be purchased at the Murphy Box Office, or at the Bell Music store. Admission price will be $1.79.
The decision was a victory for the city of Colton, Calif., which has complained to the FPC about a rate hike by Southern California Edison Co. Earlier, the state public utilities commission had approved the increase.
New York attorney Michael Meltzner, who represents the legal defense fund of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), said law suits were planned for a number of other Southern cities. He noted that a spring trial already was scheduled on a complaint against Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta, the largest public hospital there.
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Supreme Court's refusal to disturb an anti-segregation order against two Greensboro, N.C. hospitals today foreshadowed a hospital desegregation drive throughout the South.
The Greensboro hospitals received construction funds under the federal Hill-Burton Act of 1946, which provides for grants paid to state treasuries.
The law allows "separate but equal" treatment of the two races. The 4th Circuit Court ruled this clause unconstitutional. It held further that the state and federal government were involved enough to permit invoking of constitutional rights by individuals dealing with the hospitals.
The 14th Amendment forbids states—but not private parties—to deny anyone "the equal protection of the laws."
A spokesman for the Health, Education and Welfare Department said the outcome clearly puts an end to any further "separate but equal" grants. As a matter of fact, none has been made since the 4th Circuit Court's decision on Nov. 1, 1963, the department stated.
The department has administered more than 7,000 Hill-Burton grants since the start of the hospital construction programs in 1948.
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The scientist, D. J. Levy, inventor of the technique, says the process has already been used successfully in the design of antennas for space vehicles.
Harold R. Willis, a Denver, Colo., safety engineer, told a meeting of behavioral scientists here that excess sleep causes carbon dioxide to accumulate in the blood. This has a similar effect on the body as too little sleep.
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SEATTLE—(UPI)A technique for spraying gold on—like paint is sprayed—may result in wider use of the precious metal, says a Lockheed Missiles and Space Co., scientist.
PALO ALTO, Calif.—(UPI)—Too much sleep acts like an anaesthesia on the human body and can cause serious errors in judgment.
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'Normal Response By Ruby to Killing
DALLAS — (UPI) — Jack Ruby's reaction to first news of President Kennedy's assassination was "nothing unusual," a state witness testified today at his murder trial.
The 52-year-old striptease nightclub operator, with a courtybow, pleaded innocent to the murder of accused assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, and then sat quietly listening to the testimony.
Lead-off witnesses for the state were employees of the Dallas Morning News advertising department, where Ruby was placing an ad for his club when the assassination took place Nov. 22.
JOHN NEWMAN, second witness, said Ruby was at his desk at the News. He said he and Ruby and other persons in the office went into an office to watch the Kennedy motorcade in Dallas on television.
A short time later, Newman said, they received the word that the President had been shot.
"Was there anything unusual about his behavior?" asked Asst. Dist. Atty. William F. Alexander.
"Nothing unusual, I would say, any more than anyone else," Newman replied.
THE FIRST witness was Don Campbell, a News advertising man
Larry Cole Still Critical
Larry Neal Cole, Jetmore freshman, remained in critical condition this morning at Lawrence Memorial Hospital from injuries received earlier this week in a one-car accident south of here on U.S. 59.
Cole's physician said he suffered very severe head injuries, but added his progress so far has been good.
Wednesday, March 4, 1964
Cole and a passenger, Barry Billings. WaKeeney sophomore, were thrown from a 1964 convertible Cole was driving five miles south of Lawrence.
THE CAR went out of control when Cole drove back into the right lane following an attempt to pass another car, Billings told the highway patrol.
When the car failed to make the curve, the car went into the ditch, skidded sideways and then overturned, the highway patrol said.
Billings suffered minor face and head injuries. He was kept overnight for observation and released Tuesday morning.
who said he had known Ruby for two years. He said he and Ruby were talking about ads for about 25 minutes after noon on Nov. 22—just before the sniper shot at the President.
Campbell said there was nothing "peculiar or unusual" about Ruby's behavior.
Ruby took notes hurriedly during he testimony.
Defense Attorney Melvin Belli asked Campbell if Ruby was "calm and collected."
"HE WAS just Jack Ruby as I knew him," the witness replied.
"Yes" said Campbell.
"And that was a pretty volatile individual, wasn't it?"
The sallow, haggard 52-year-old defendant stood at the defense table to hear the murder indictment after Judge Joe E. Brown in quick succession threw out defense motions to transfer the trial to another city and call it off for a sanity hearing.
"... unlawfully voluntarily and with malice aforethought did kill Lee Harvey Oswald with a gun . . ."
Wade went on.
Dressed in a blue suit and with chief defense attorney Melvin Belli at his side. Ruby listened solemnly to the reading by Dist. Atty. Henry Wade.
BELLI DEMANDED that he be allowed to repeat his plea to make it "Not guilty—by reason of insanity."
"JACK RUBENSTEIN, alias Jack Ruby," Wade began. Belli interrupted to say, "He answers to the name of Jack Ruby . . ."
"This court is only interested in whether he pleads guilty or not guilty." Brown said curtly.
The jury of eight men and four women, completed yesterday, filed into the box to reply "I do," when sworn in to render "A true verdict
"How do you plead?" asked Judge Brown, leaning forward and looking stern.
Ruby bowed from the waist and said in a relaxed, low voice: "Not guilty, your honor"
Lawrence, Kansas
Twenty-seven witnesses were sworn in, all looking solemn.
AMONG THEM were Mrs. Eva L. Grant of Dallas and Mrs. Eileen Kaminsky of Chicago, Ruby's sisters.
The state called its first witness to begin chronological re-counting of Ruby's actions during three days of history—from the moment of President Kennedy's assassination at 12:31 p.m. Dallas time. Nov. 22 until 11:21 a.m. Nov. 24 when Ruby shot Oswald.
Dailu hansan
61st Year, No.96
Vinay Kothari, Bombay, India senior and unmarried, unorganized district representative, submitted the original motion concerning People-to-People at the last ASC meeting.
Reuben McCornack, Abilene senior and student body president, said, "For the good of P-t-P I believe that such things as choosing officers should be done by the organization. The members should have at least some voice in the control of the organization."
ASC Lets P-t-P Choose Own Officers and Policy
Scattered snow flurries are expected by evening, with skies clearing by midnight. The low tonight will be 20 to 25 degrees.
THAT AMENDMENT would have abolished P-t-P as an ASC organization.
The All Student Council last night passed an amendment to let People-to-People choose its own officers and make its own policies.
Jerry Harper, Lawrence senior and People-to-People chairman, said at the last ASC meeting that he "felt very strongly that P-t-P should at least have the right to elect its own officers."
The amendment, introduced by Marshall Crowther, Lawrence second year law student and ASC vicechairman, also set up an advisory council to aid "communications between P-t-P and the ASC."
The council will consist of the student body president and vicepresident, the managing editor of the University Daily Kansan, the chairman of the All Student Council, two representatives from the International Club, and two members of the student body at large, appointed by the student body presiden-
CROWTHER SAID he believed the arrangement would work out best for "both the ASC and P-t-P."
Officers of P-t-P have previously been appointed by the student body president, because the organization was established at KU as an ASC committee.
Tomorrow will be generally fair and the high will be around 32 degrees.
Weather
Crowther's amendment gave P-t-P the right to elect officers, and provided for a council to act as v liaison between P-t-P and the ASC
The Little Hoover Commission earlier had recommended that People-to-People be kept under the ASC.
Scott Linscott, Topeka junior and chairman of the commission, said, "People-to-People adds prestige to the ASC and for this reason, if none other, it should remain a part of the Council."
He stressed, however, that the commission felt the process of selection of officers should be revised.
The Little Hoover Commission is currently investigating the necessity and efficiency of All Student Council committees.
In other business, the Council voted to turn over the production of the KU Student Directory to the University administration.
PREVIOUSLY THE directory has been assembled by students, headed by a business manager appointed by the ASC publications board.
Crowther, who submitted the amendment to remove the publication of the directory from students, said the administration could publish the directory "quicker and cheaper than it is now being done."
The Council also passed a resolution introduced by Kaye Whitaker, Wichita senior, which called for a bi-partisan committee to investigate the possible use of voting machines in KU elections.
Miss Whitaker said that with machines vote results could be tabulated in 30 minutes, instead of the hours necessary for counting ballots under the current system.
"I contacted William Bradish, election commissioner of Wyandotte County, and he offered to loan KU the machines, free of charge, except for transportation costs," she said.
She said the machines could probably not be used in the spring elections,but the committee would have plenty of time to investigate their use for next fall.
ABOUT 15 VOTING machines would be required, she said. In other proceedings, Arthur
Douville, Overland Park sophomore and chairman of the Human Rights Committee of the ASC, reported the management of the Plaza Club in Lawrence had been contacted, and that the Club no longer practices discrimination in renting its facilities to outside groups.
Douville pointed out that the club is under new management now, and that the alleged discriminatory practices of the club were tied to the previous management.
"Our policy now is to wait and see if this new management has discriminatory practices," he said.
"In a telephone conversation with the new manager, he claims the club now accepts any university group, regardless of race, creed or color." Douville said.
Douville said the HRC also has been conferring with the president of Sigma Nu fraternity regarding a discriminatory clause in the fraternity's charter.
"WE SUGGESTED that the clause be inserted in Sigma Nu's rush book." Douville said, "but aside from that we have made no radical suggestions regarding the clause."
Douville also announced a panel discussion on fraternity-sorority discrimination to be held, tentatively, on March 18. It would include representatives from all houses on the hill, he said.
Jim Cline, Rockford, Ill., junior and Athletic Seating Board chairman, announced that 300 to 500 better student seats for football games are being arranged.
He added that the ticket-buying procedure has been streamlined for the fall. Only one trip to Allen Field House will be required to purchase the tickets, rather than two visits as required in the past.
McCormack appointed Susan Hartley, Atwood sophomore, to replace Tom Woods, Arkansas City junior, as Student Government Travel Board chairman.
McCornack also announced that Hugh Taylor, Stoke-on-Trent, England, graduate student, has been named by the University Party to replace Robert Steffen, Staten Island, N.Y., graduate student, as a UP representative to the ASC.
Writer Warns U.S. to Avoid Sino-Soviet Split
By Roger Worthington
John Scott, a special correspondent for Time magazine, advised that the United States make "no fancy utilization of the schism" that exists between the Soviet Union and Communist China.
Speaking to KU students and faculty members last night on the Sino-Soviet split, Scott made it clear that the schism between the two giants of the communist bloc is very much a reality. But he advised that the U.S. not exploit their differences. "It is best to allow the conflict to work its own way out," he said.
HISTORIC ORIGINS of the split go back to the 2nd century when Russian raiders invaded China, Scott said. Several centuries later, Asian raiders invaded and occupied parts of Russia.
"Up until this century, the presence of them is still felt in Russian folklore," he said. "Mothers would tell their children, 'the Chinese will get you.'"
In a loud and clear voice and at a brisk pace, the journalist traced four factors leading to the rift between the U.S.S.R. and Communist China; historic, economic, political and what he called "theological," "any one of which," he said, could explain a Sino-Soviet split."
In discussing the economic factors of the split, Scott said the Chinese felt they had been taken advantage of by the Russians in several instances.
As late as the 19th century, he said, some areas of Russia were under Chinese rule.
THE RUSSIANS confiscated Japanese industrial equipment in Manchuria after fighting "a two-hour war" with Japanese troops at the close of World War II, Scott said. The equipment, which he said had been carelessly disassembled and transported to the Soviet Union where it grew rusty from disuse, was later given to the Chinese as part of the Soviet's aid program.
Russia sold trucks to China for $8,100, he said, while British-made vehicles of a higher quality were being sold for $4,500 in Hong Kong.
Chinese soybeans were sold to Russia for $70 a ton, he continued, while the market price for soybeans in non-communist countries was $110 a ton.
"China's gross national product per capita is now about $60 a year." Scott said, "less than 10% of her per capita gross national product of the Soviet Union, which is now nearing $1,000."
Scott said trade between the two nations has declined $55\%$ since 1959. The Chinese import very little from Russia now, he added, yet most of China's exports still go to Russia.
THE RUSSIANS CHARGED interest on all financial aid loaned, he said, which the Chinese resented having to pay. "They felt that
in the name of Karl Marx and international communism, such practices should be put aside."
A theoretical political conflict has been going on for a long time between the two nations, Scott said. "For a decade and a half, Mao Tse Tung was considered as a deviationist by Soviet leaders."
MAO TSE TUNG, he said, based his revolution on the support of the peasantry, rather than the working class, to whom the Russians gave a "weighted advantage."
"There continues to be increasingly overtly expressed contradictions between the two leaders."
The area where this aspect of the schism has had effect is in relations with new nations, whom China feels itself better qualified to lead. Scott said. "China in recent years has been engaging in increased activity in Asia, Africa and South America. . . . where they have instituted many aid programs."
"In the last 80 years, communists have consolidated themselves into an organizational structure whose leadership is bitterly contested, although all pay homage to the same bearded prophets and texts."
SCOTT SAID that while China's deviation from Soviet communism represents a separate movement, the outlines of an even newer movement can be seen in the more aggressive action of the Viet Cong in North Viet Nam.
"But the similarities between these three movements are far greater than their differences."
Warfare between the Soviet Union and Communist China, he said, would be "absurd for the Chinese, because they have no atomic weapons." Scott predicted that when the Chinese are able to produce an atomic bomb, "it's possible that the Russians could 'let' a missile or a bomber destroy their atomic installations."
Military conflicts between the two countries will probably follow the pattern of Japan and Russia in the late 1930's, Scott said. He added that "such military battles will probably be going on in the next few years."
THE VETERAN NEWSMAN also predicted that in a few years, French President De Gaulle's recent recognition of Communist China "will be viewed as salutary and convenient."
In response to a question from the audience, Scott gave his views on possible U.S. escalation of the war in Viet Nam, although he first disqualified himself as being an expert on the subject.
"It is my impression that the war is going very badly," he said. "There is ample evidence that there is unrest in North Viet Nam. I personally feel that if we did do this, (step up the war) it might be substantially rewarding."
"OF COURSE, that raises the question of whether the Chinese would intervene," he continued. "There is, historically, bad blood between the Chinese and Viet Nam. I believe the Chinese were badly disillusioned by their intervention in Korea. The Korean war hurt their economy. And besides, they have other things at hand, such as Tibet, and the border dispute with India."
"The danger of escalation would be at a minimum," he said.
Scott made one more prediction before he stepped down from the podium, concerning the future of Formosa.
"I believe some sort of accommodation will be made over Formosa. It was rumored when I was there, that Chiang Kai-chuo, (Chiang Kai-shek's eldest son) was in communication with the mainland. It was also rumored that the mainland offered him several government positions (if he would concede Formosa to Red China).
SCOTT SAID that Chiang Ching-kuo inadvertently indicated to him during a conversation, that he had received correspondence from the mainland, but said "with a smile" that "he did not answer them."
"But I doubt whether the Gemo (Chiang Kai-shek) would make an accommodation," he concluded.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 4,1964
Voting Machines
In last fall's campus elections, final returns were announced at 3:30 a.m. Several candidates lost who received more first preference votes than those who were elected. Eight invalid votes denied an additional representative to one of the living groups.
LAST NIGHT, the All Student Council passed a resolution that may lead to the shortening, simplification, and safeguarding of this campus' voting procedure.
ASC established a committee to investigate KU's use of voting machines. The election commissioner of Wyandotte County has promised an ASC representative the use of voting machines at no cost except transporting the machines from Kansas City. This cost would be less than the present expense of IBM equipment and material.
With voting machines, election returns would be available in no less than 30 minutes after the polls close.
Under this procedure, invalidated votes would be an impossibility. The machines also provide for write-in votes.
The one major problem that a shift to voting by machines presents is this: the present system of proportional representation and preference voting would probably be impossible.
THE HARE system of proportional representation was adopted in the fall of 1934 by the Men's Student Council. Voters mark candidates in preference order. When a candidate obtains a quota.
enough first-preference votes to be elected, his surplus is redistributed to those indicated as second choices. The number of representatives from a living district is determined by the number of valid ballots cast in the election.
The advantage of this system is supposed to be that membership in a legislative body may be divided between political parties in proportion to their voting strength.
The proportional representation procedure affects only elections in which several representatives are to be chosen from one district. These are the fall elections of living-group representatives to ASC.
At best, preference voting is complicated.
A SIMPLER plan that would work on voting machines is for each voter to mark the number of candidates to be elected. Since the number of representatives have to be determined before the election, a new criterion would have to be found.
One possibility is to base the representation on the number voting in the previous election.
Another possibility more consistent with national, state, and local legislative representation is to base the number on actual population of the living district. Needless to say, this plan would drastically alter the balance of ASC power. But would it not be more representative of the student body?
Margaret Hughes
TOYS
HERBLOCK
"Hey, Listen For Just A Little Bit More We Can Get A Real One"
Goldwater: Dashing, Devoted, and Damned
(Edition's Note; This is the first of a
three series on Sen. Barry
Barry Water.)
By Rick Mabbutt
Cheering, placard-waving, college students milled around an old-fashioned bandstand in a park in Austin, Tex. They had come to hear their leader, Barry Morris Goldwater, the junior senator from Arizona.
A reporter tapped one young Goldwater admirer on the shoulder and, having succeeded in getting his attention, asked him how he felt about the senator.
The student jubilantly pointed to a nearby building and said, "You see that building over there? If Goldwater told me to jump off it, I wouldn't even ask why. I'd just go jump!"
AN EXAGGERATION? Perhaps. But who is this man who has captured the loyalty and devotion of a highly vocal crowd of supporters? Who is this man who may be the Republican nominee for the presidency in 1964?
Barry Goldwater was born Jan. 1, 1899, in Phoenix, Ariz., the son of Baron and Josephine Goldwater. His father, a Jew (the name was originally Goldwasser), was a member of the Arizona Territorial Legislature.
Young Barry hated reading anything except Popular Mechanics and he was constantly puttering with gadgets of all kinds. He wired everything in sight, from toilet seats to his bed's headboard.
HE ATTENDED Union High School. where he was a poor student. School officials told his parents he should be a priest, since Latin was the only thing he was good at. But he was popular with his classmates and they elected him class president.
In 1924 his parents sent him to Staunton Military Academy in Virginia, where he continued his high jinks, to the distress of school authorities. They repeatedly asked his father to take him back. After four years he barely managed to be graduated. His record was not all black at Staunton; he was captain of the football team and at graduation he was chosen outstanding cadet.
He attended the University of Arizona for one year but dropped out because of boredom and worked in his family's department store where he had a natural charm and flair for selling. Appealing to the western heritage of the people, he marketed products with cattle brands. He also bottled and sold a successful brand of cologne (naturally named Gold, Water). Goldwater became president of the
company in 1937, and started a national fad with "antsy pants"—men's shorts covered with a design of red ants.
1941 came, and so did the war in Europe. Goldwater, who had been in the Army Reserve, was over age and had bad knees and bad eyes. He saw action as a ferry command pilot in the European and Asiatic theaters.
HAVING COMPiled a respectable war record, Goldwater was released in 1945 as a lieutenant colonel. He rejoined the Reserve and organized the Air Branch, which he served as chief of staff until 1952. The senator is now major-general and the only member of Congress licensed to fly jet aircraft.
jaw, and a wide, smiling mouth combine to make a handsome man. He walks with a slight limp—a result of an injury received in semipro basketball.
ANOTHER POLITICAL advantage is his attractive family. He married Margaret Johnson, daughter of a Muncie, Ind., industrialist, in 1934. They have four children: Joanne (Mrs. Thomas Ross), 25, Barry Jr., 23, Michael, 21, and Peggy, 16.
Joseph Alsop once asked Goldwater if he ever thought about waking up some morning and finding himself in the White House.
"Yes," Goldwater said, "and frankly it scares the hell out of me."
A. D. H.
He admits candidly that his first
Barry Goldwater plunged into politics in 1949 when he was elected to the Phoenix City Council on a reform-Republican ticket. Moving on to bigger things, he ran for a U.S. Senate seat in 1952, which he won by 7,000 votes over Ernest McFarland. Senate majority leader under President Truman. Goldwater admitted frankly, "I rode Ike's coattail."
Sen. Goldwater is a dynamo of energy. Civic-minded, he is a Mason, a Shriner, Elk, Moose, a member of the VFW, the American Legion and Sigma Chi. He believes the fraternity system is "a bastion of American strength."
Physically, Barry Goldwater is impressive. A six-footer, he keeps his weight at 185 and is in excellent health, Iron-gray hair, blue eyes, a pleasantly crooked nose, square
book, "The Conscience of a Conservative," and his thrice-weekly syndicated newspaper column are ghosted by Stephan Sheedeg, a Phoenix businessman and his campaign manager and speech writer.
Goldwater also once told a correspondent for the Saturday Evening Post, "You know, I haven't got a really first-class brain."
Some observers, however, disagree with this bit of self-analysis.
RUSSELL KIRK, a leading spokesman for the intellectuals of the right, praises Barry's intellect.
"Mr. Goldwater is more far-sighted than Mr. Kennedy; more quick-witted than Mr. Rockefeller; more self-reliant than Mr. Stevenson; more reflective than Mr. Eisenhower. He is not Disraeli (despite a similar flair) nor is he John Adams (notwithstanding a
certain similar hardheadedness).
"His good humor and friendliness are genuine; yet there remains always a certain reserve, almost invisible to the casual observer, that requires Mr. Goldwater to make up his own mind—and to live his inner life, in the phrase of Marcus Aurelius, 'as if upon a mountain.'
"Perhaps without willing it, the senator retains something now rare; dignity without pomposity."
MOST OF IHS briefings and intellectual assistance Goldwater obtains from a member of a Senate committee staff, or a conservatively inclined professor or two of his acquaintance, or a friendly newspaperman. These briefings, as opposed to the oral discussion favored by the late President Kennedy, usually take the form of a brief memorandum or informal chat.
"But the fact that the senator has gone so far, without a brain trust—this, I suggest, is strong evidence of his mental powers," Kirk savs.
Richard Rovere, writing in the New Yorker, says of Goldwater's characteristics: "He is the most doctrinaire man in American politics and at the same time the most self-bellittung. No one else has so gratuitously exposed to the public his missives, his hesitations, his anxieties, even his political shams.
"THE SENATOR'S CASE is a very odd one. He is a man devoid of vanity who finds himself playing a role that seems to require a good deal of vanity. He is an earnest, hard-working man who likes to present himself—part of the time, anyway—as a mere vote-hustler. He is basically a critic of ideas. He does not offer himself as a superior administrator or organizer. His differences with the Eisenhower and Kennedy administrations have not been over the way certain things
were being done but over the fact that they were being done at all.
"His right hand isn't always sure of what his right hand is doing. He has recently rented an electronic computer and hired a staff of punch-card people to determine the nature and extent of the doctrinal commitments he has made. Part of his difficulty, of course, is that he has said so much and sigmed so much that came from other right hands." Oh, hell. I've got ghosts all over the place," he has said.
Rev
"Ignorant but shrewd," says one of his colleagues. "He's read very little. He has no knowledge of economics. He's completely outside the world of ideas. Even his passion for the Constitution is based upon a misunderstanding of its nature."
The senator replied: "The truth is this: The answers to our problems are easy, but they are very hard to augment. The academic mind of the average radical can't understand simplification. The conservative answer is simple. Many answers can be black or white. In my years in business I learned that after you work on a problem long enough, the answers are very obvious."
A LIBERAL WRITER, Gore Viday, hesitates, saying: "I am not sure I would agree that Goldwater's ignorance of ideas is necessarily relevant to his ability or his capacity for growth."
A reporter once asked Goldwater, "Senator, your critics say you think in pure black and white teams and see no shades of gray. Do you consider this a sly insult to your mental processes?"
O train journey of f four Cha
Some critics have held that his shifting between doctrinal positions is not a mark of "conscious inconsistency . . . but of a consistent looseness of mind."
Daili'Yränsan
bounded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, dauv van. 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.
Wednesday, March 4,1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Once again the Daily Kansas, training ground for budding young journalists, has misused the power of the press in Miss Hughes' profound little commentary on Rock Chalk Revue.
I will be the first to admit the shortcomings of the in-between acts, but I feel that Miss Hughes was completely off base in her commentary on the Phi Kappa Psi-Delta Delta Delta skit and the two skits which took honorable mention. In the opinion of the judges and in the opinion of many in the audience, the Sigma Chi-Gamma Phi Beta skit was the best.
However, I would hardly say that the other three groups "completely lacerated their legends." All four skits were of better quality than some of the skits which have appeared in past Revues. We of the staff have made a large effort to clean up Rock Chalk Revue, and if Miss Hughes would listen to records of shows of the past few years, I think she would hear the difference.
Revue Review Off Base
It is very easy for Miss Hughes to criticize the "amateurish choreography, costumes and acting" of the show, but one must remember that Rock Chalk Revue is put on by amateurs. Very few of the people involved in Rock Chalk are in fine arts. Considering the short time which the groups have to prepare and the fact that all participants are full-time students, I think the
The following article, written by Reginaid Buxton, was published in October 7, 1937, issue of the UDBI. It was under the head "On The SHIN."
from the morgue
1912.
press.
& 22,
ates:
moon
versity
aw-
"Rumored — that student-owned cars will be banned from the Hill. Why? We don't know; we only heard."
Suggestions from a mad reformist: Close all entrances to the Campus so that only Summerfield scholars will be smart enough to find a way in. This will improve our scholastic standing.
To abolish the "loose atmosphere" surrounding children having a social time — institute square dances at parties and varsities — place an electrically charged barrier around the stadium to be turned on at night — three piece bathing suits for all male students — dress our drum majorette in full length skirts — 9:30 curfew for all Beta's putting an ending to their saparilla nipping after 10 p.m. — have the Graduate magazine, Kansas Engineer, and the Sour Owl stamped "Censored and Approved" by the deans of men and women subject to the approval of two-thirds of the YMCA and Watkins Hall members—and (this'll slay you) shoot down all students who have read and approved of Steinbeck's vulgar novel "Grapes of Wrath."
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quality of the skits is good, although there is certainly room for improvement.
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After these reforms are instituted our uncle Zeke can visit us without being shocked at the University's worldliness.
Also, I would suggest to Miss Hughes that if she would like to write an editorial on next year's show, she should acquaint herself a little more thoroughly with Rock Chalk before she makes her broad comments on the production which she seems to think bored the audience so.
David White
David Vine
Producer of Rock Chalk Revue
TESTING
The article of Feb. 25, "Rockwell Reconsidered—Free Speech Distorted," has moved me to comment where Mr. Lincoln Rockwell failed. In a democracy we shouldn't be surprised to have all sorts of nuts running loose. As long as they
don't break the law, their ideas are useful if only to stimulate discussion—of which there seems to be a notable lack at KU.
Mr. Galton seemed to imply that it would be desirable to silence men like Rockwell by denying them facilities such as the Kansas Union. This is a remarkable view for a staff member of an educational institution. Is there a better place where such ideas can be tested? If the Devil were scheduled to preach the extermination of the entire human race, I wouldn't miss it for the world.
I think Mr. Laird Wilcox is to be commended on his choice of a speaker. Rockwell's ideas may be false, but 2,500 people came to hear them. It's likely that his performance was more entertaining than one by Mr. Galton expounding on the principles of free speech.
Lawrence junior
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 4,1964
Three Groups to Join UP
Three living organizations have recently switched their campus political affiliation, according to Charles E. Whitman, Shawnee Mission senior and president of University Party.
Whitman said that Alpha Delta Psi sorority has switched its affiliation from Vox Populi to UP: The names of the other two organizations will be announced at the UP meeting tomorrow night.
UP candidates for president and vice-president of the student body
will be announced at the meeting tomorrow night, according to Whitman.
Thomas H. Bornholdt, Topeka senior and president of Vox Populi, said the Vox candidates will be announced at a Vox meeting Thursday night.
The spring election is scheduled for early April. KU students will go to the polls to elect the student body president and vice-president, and the All Student Council representatives from the academic divisions of the University.
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Wednesday, March 4.1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 8
France Says Her Atomic Power Will Help NATO, Deter Russia
The United States should not fear a strong and independent ally like France, but the nuclear armament of West Germany would be a threat rather than an asset.
This was the sentiment of Pierre Falquet, attache of the Atomic French Commission at the French Embassy in Washington, D.C., who spoke at the Current Events forum Tuesday.
FALQUFT justified the atomic armament of France as being in the best interests of the United States. The United States should welcome France's nuclear armament because they have the same goals and the same major enemies. By becoming a nuclear power, it will strengthen the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in voice and military might, he said.
France does not plan to share her nuclear powers with the other NATO powers for fear of proliferation (the spreading of nuclear powers among all nations), but the act of adding France to the 'nuclear club' will help deter war with Russia Falget said.
France has built up her atomic plants independently of other nuclear powers and she is independent of any other nation with regard to control of such armaments, he said. George W. Brown, assistant professor of political science, asked Falquet why West Germany shouldn't be allowed to nuclear arm herself with the same type of independent reasoning.
After a short technical French movie on the atomic plants in France, and a talk on the uses France plans for atomic energy in defense and public, the floor was opened to questions.
Honor Roll Lists Show Increases In Most Schools
Students may complain about the tough courses they are required to take in their major field, and despair over what they will do to their grades, but all is not lost.
Eight of the universities' ten schools report that more students are listed on the fall semester honor roll than achieved that rating last spring.
The graduate and fine arts schools have not yet made their honor rolls available, but all of the others report rises in honor roll numbers.
Only the business school shows a loss with six fewer students than were listed in the 1963 spring semester.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences shows the largest jump, 13 more students, making the total 645 as compared with 632 last spring. Sixty-two students had a 3. grade average this fall from 52 last spring. The college requires a 2.26 for the Dean's honor roll.
Other school increases include:
Pharmacy, from 20 to 27 with one
3, this fall; Journalism, from 8 to
20; Engineering and Architecture,
128 to 130, with 12 3.'s, and Business,
63 to 57, with 5 3.'s.
The School of Education requires the highest average of 2.46, or to be included in the top 10 per cent of the school. One hundred twenty-seven students made the grade compared to 123 last spring. 3. grade averages jumped from 13 to 16.
RICHLAND. Wash.—(UPI)—Benton County Coroner Dr. T. J. Albertwiez won the state championship in a cooking contest sponsored by the Potato Chip Institute.
Requirements in these schools are:
Pharmacy, a 21 for third year students, a 2.2 for fourth year and a
2.3 for seniors in pharmacy; Journalism, top ten per cent; Engineering
and Architecture, 2.25 or 39 grade points; and Business, a 2.2 for juniors and a 2.3 for seniors.
Cooking Corner
His "chipped stroganoff supreme"—hamburger topped with dumplings and potato chips—made him the second member of the family to become a state cooking titlist. His wife won a state contest for her banana split cake two years ago.
FALQUET SAID Germany has shown herself to be untrustworthy in the late years of history. (Meaning the first half of this century). A similar argument was given against nuclear arming Italy.
Someone then asked why is Sweden working on nuclear energy.
Falquet said that if Sweden was attacked by Russia, she could not expect any aid from NATO, therefore she must prepare.
HE CLAIMED that the newspapers and television in the U.S. have been unfair to France in their news reporting and interpretation.
When asked to state some instances of distortion, Falquet asked the audience to mention some of the recent news that was unflattering to France and he would judge the validity.
Clifford Ketzel, associate professor of political science, recalled the newspapers' claim that France was
He said that it would be many years before France becomes a nuclear power, and French policy is only to deter Russian aggression in Europe, not try to war with Russia.
FALQUET said the reason for NATO being minus French military support is because the French military has been split in feelings on the Algerian problem and the actions of President De Gaulle.
not fully cooperating in NATO and would not allow American bombers armed with nuclear warheads to base or land on French soil.
When he was asked about the advisability of putting the atomic bomb in the hands of the divided military that he had just described, Falquet said the French have the same atomic bomb system as the Americans. Only the President, De Gaulle, could 'push the button,'
Falquet said it was not necessary to allow American bombers on French soil since France now has had her own supersonic low flying bombers with atomic warheads since last July.
He was asked if De Gaulle plans to withdraw from NATO. Falquet said for France to withdraw from NATO at this time would mean suicide, and NATO at this time is a shield for France.
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 4, 1964
HOPE
CONGRATULATION to Sigma Chi-Gamma and Phi Kappa Psi-Delta
(Winners of the 1964 Ro
Sigma Nu Beta Theta Pi Delta Chi Delta Sigma Phi Lambda Chi Alpha
JACKSON
THEY'D BEEN THERE ON THE SHOW.
Triangle Phi Delta Theta Delta Tau Delta Phi Kappa Tau Kappa Sigma
Wednesday, March 4, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
TULATIONS
Gamma Phi Beta and Delta Delta Delta
64 Rock Chalk Revue)
MOTOR RACING
二
WE BACK
DRAC
Acacia Alpha Phi Alpha Delta Upsilon Pi Kappa Alpha Alpha Tau Omega
Theta Chi Tau Kappa Epsilon Alpha Kappa Lambda Sigma Phi Epsilon Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Photos by Paul Kivett and Charles Corcoran
NORTHWESTERN THEATRE
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 4,1964
Mat Coach Pleased With Team Despite 24-5 Defeat By Omaha
Despite the Jayhawk wrestlers' 24-5 loss to Omaha last night, Coach Terry Shockley said he thought the team had shown steady improvement from the first of the season and he was pleased with the progress they had made.
The Omaha matmate beat the KU grapplers in every weight division except the 177-pound class. The Jaya-hawks' Dick Davy won that class by a 7-4 decision over Omaha's Will Sheepard.
The other two KU points came as the result of a draw between Mike Morgan of KU and John Gerrad of Omaha in the 137-pound class.
"Davy was very strong in his class." Coach Shockley said. "Morgan was in fine shape, too."
Coach Shockley cited the performances of Davy and Morgan.
"THE OMAHA team was very good. They are well coached and have good depth. I knew they were going to be strong."
Coach Shockley said he thought the Jayhawks were doing very well for their first year in varsity competition.
"Our boys have improved so much from the beginning," Coach Shockley said. "It's really hard to believe. You can't fight experience like the Omaha boys have, but there is no comparison of the way our boys are wrestling now and the way they were at the first of the year."
Wichita Cagers To Play Drake
The Wichita Shockers, by beating North Texas Monday night, earned a chance for an N.C.A.A. berth as they wound up their season's play tied with Drake in the Missouri Valley.
Wichita will play a one-game playoff with Drake Friday night in Allen Field House.
The Wichita cagers beat North Texas 90-83 in a shooting spree before a sell-out crowd of 10.704 in Wichita. Dave Stallworth led the Shockers' offense as he scored 34 points. Stallworth won the conference scoring title for the second straight year, beating Ron Bonham of Cincinnati by seven points.
THE CHAMPIONSHIP was Wichita's first since joining the conference in 1945. Drake tied with Oklahoma State for the crown in 1939.
The Shockers finished their season with a 21-5 season's record, second best in the history of the school.
Drake finished at 20-5, best in the history of the school. Both teams finished at 10-2 in the Missouri Valley.
The winner of the playoff will advance to the Midwest regional tournament at Wichita March 13-14, and will go up against the winner of the Creighton-Oklahoma City first-round game scheduled to be played in Dallas Monday.
Officials at the 17,000-seat Allen Field House say the game will be sold out by the latter part of the week.
Tickets for the playoff contest are now on sale in Allen Field House.
The ticket office announced that all tickets for the game would be general admission and no seats would be reserved.
The tickets sell for $3 for adults and $1 for grade school, high school and university students. University students must present identification to purchase the tickets at the lower rate.
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"OUT OF the 27 men out for wrestling now," Coach Shockley said, "all of them will be back except (Phil) Doughty. We have a number of very promising freshman wrestlers and we have great expectations for the team next year. While this year has not been a successful one from the standpoint of meets won, it has been successful from the standpoint of improvement."
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The Jayhawk wrestlers are preparing to enter the Big Eight Conference championship meet March 13-14 in Stillwater, Okla. Coach Shockley said he thought either Iowa State or Oklahoma State to be the best bet for the title.
"I think." Coach Shockley said, "Iowa State or Oklahoma State will win the championship. Iowa State is ranked number one in the nation right now and Oklahoma State is ranked number two, so it looks as though it will be between those teams."
Coach Shockley said this is the first year that the Big Eight will
have a full complement of eight teams participating in the championship meet.
FRED ELDER, KU heavyweight, lost his second decision last night to Jim Jones of Omaha. Elder incurred his only other loss when he met Tinkler of Fort Hays State earlier in the season. He wrestled to a draw with the heavyweight from Kansas State in his only draw match of the season.
Results of all classes were as follows:
123-pound—Carl West, OU, pinned Mike Elwell, KU; 7.19; 130-pound—Gerald Shook, OU, dec. Bill Brackett, KU, 2-0; 137-pound—John Gerrad, OU, and Mike Morgan, KU, drew, 3-3; 147-pound—Phil Godute, OU, pinned Claude Sumner, KU; 5.05.
157-pound—Russ Clark, OU, dec.
John Worland, KU, 3-0; 167-pound—Rich Tomasek, OU, dec. Phil Doughty, KU, 3-0; 177-pound—Dick Davy, KU, dec. Will Shepard, OU, 7-4; HWT—Jim Jones, OU, dec. Fred Elder, KU, 3-1.
WILLIAM FERGUSON Attorney General GOP CANDIDATE FOR GOVERNOR
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Wednesday, March 4.1964 University Daily Kansan
School Heads Meet Friday
Page 9
Plans leading to an organization of a Kansas Association of School Business Officials will be discussed Friday in the Kansas Union.
Twenty-five to thirty Kansas school officials from the larger Kansas school districts are expected to attend the meeting, according to Dr. William York, associate professor of education and director of the program.
73 Points in Game
York said that the organization would try to affiliate with the International School Business Officials Association after details are completed. The school officials will not be involved in teaching but rather in the business side of running a school.
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Wilt Chamberlain of the San Francisco Warriors holds the Madison Square Garden single game scoring record with 73 points against the New York Knicks Nov. 16, 1962.
The meeting will include a lunch- en and a panel discussion on purchasing and the schools.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 4, 1964
Calling on Gamma Phi's
Wescoe, Taylor Nail Senior Keys
By Russ Corbitt (Assistant Managing Editor)
Last Friday and Saturday nights the winning Sigma Chi-Gamma Phi Beta Rock Chalk skit was climaxed with a "Hymn to Dean Emily" and the lowering of a mock Cleopatra bill board with characterizations of Chancellor Wescoe, Dean Taylor and Dean Alderson.
Monday afternoon the Dean of Women's office called the Gamma Phi Beta house and left orders that no senior keys were to be checked out Monday night.
At 11 p.m. Monday, Chancellor Wescos and Dean Taylor visited the sorority house, and all the women were assembled in the living room.
"WE REALIZE it is unusual for us to call on you at this time of night," Chancellor Wescoe said, "but we feel some things are best taken care of promptly."
care of problem. The Chancellor then proceeded to tell them how he had been unable to attend their performances, but had heard about certain portions of them.
Dean Taylor said the word which probably best described her and Chancellor Wescoe's feelings was "burt."
By then the air of suspense had been replaced by one of fright, according to Carol Jo Weber, Raytown. Mo. sophomore, who had played "Lady Bat" in the skit.
"I WAS ACTUALLY crying," she said. "I was afraid they were going to take the trophy back."
But then the Chancellor erased the panicked looks on the women's faces.
"We feel we had a great deal to
First Campus Blood Drive Successful
The first campus blood drive sponsored by the Blood Drive Subcommittee of the All Student Council was termed a "success" yesterday by the executive director of the Douglas County Red Cross, Mrs. Karel Blas.
The drive on campus was the second stop for the new equipment in the Douglas County bloodmobile. The equipment was set up by the Arnold Air Society in front of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house at 1540 La. The bloodmobile was open from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m.
THE BLOODMOBILE collected about 30 pints of whole blood during this time from members of the Phi Gamma Delta and Sigma Chi fraternities, Mrs. Blaas said.
This is the first of a series of drives to be conducted on the campus this spring, Don Nelson, Clay Center junior and chairman of the ASC Blood Drive subcommittee, said
An evaluation will be made of the blood drive held yesterday, and new locations for the bloodmobile will be announced. Tentative plans call for blood drives at Ellsworth hall March 17, and in the West Campus area March 31.
Official Bulletin
Students between the ages 18-21 must have their parents' written consent to donate blood to the Red Cross, Nelson said. Permission slips may be picked up at the Red Cross office or from Don Nelson.
Foreign students: Sign up to attend International Night, U. of Missouri at Kansas City, March 21. See Dean Coan's secretary, 228 Strong Hall.
TODAY
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence
Chanel, 1910 Strattford Rd.
Chapel, 1810 Stratfordra Rpa.
Epicapal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Der deutsche Stammtisch trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 5. Marz, um 4 hr 30 zu einem genuin Mannammenset in "Bildnoe." Ecke 14th - Tennessee. Wir werden annehmen.
Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion.
440-Boom, Pan American Room, Kansas
U.S.A.
Christian Science Organization, 7:38
p.m. Danforth Chapel. Everyone
welcome.
Student Peace Union, 7 p.m.
American Room, Kansas Union.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
do with you winning Rock Chalk,
and we are wondering how you plan
to share the trophy with us," he
said.
The two administrators then opened a box of candy for the women, and began laughing and joking with them.
"The Chancellor then asked us to
sing the 'Hymn to Dean Emily' because he had not heard it," Miss Weber said.
"We were all very honored that they took time out to come over and congratulate us. We were also pleased that they received our skit so open-mindedly as they did," she said.
Granada
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"SUNDAY
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CARL FOREMAN'S
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STARTS
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For appointment phone VI 3-8343. t
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Accurate expert typist would like typing in her home. Term papers and theses. Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. tf
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Page 11
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Wednesday, March 4.1964
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BUSINESS SERVICES
Multi-lingual secretarial service. German, Swahili, French, Spanish, Romanized Japanese. Call Amy Summers. VI 3-2933.
3.9
University Daily Kansan
L&M CAFE now under new management We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Our lunch is served on beautiful lunches, dinners, and sandwiches Your second cup of coffee always free,
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---
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, March 4, 1964
Word Expert To Discuss Semantics
Semantics, the study of the meanings of words, will be the subject of a lecture at 4:30 p.m., Friday, in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Professor Ullmann is editor of the only general linguistic periodical now published in Britain and has written a number of widely-used textbooks on semantics in French and English.
In the modern world with its arguments about "-isms" and their use, a study of semantics enables people to understand the words they use, and the changes that word meanings may take, according to Herbert Galton, assistant professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures.
The study of semantics involves not only the study of the present meaning of words, but expected changes, in meanings.
Stephen Ullmann, professor of romance languages at the University of Leeds in England, will discuss "New Bearings in Semantics."
CURRENTLY Professor Ullmann is a guest professor at the University of Toronto, Ontario. His book, "Language and Style," is to be released in American edition in the immediate future.
In structural semantics, the meaning of a word is explained against the background of related terms, he writes. The shift in meaning of one of these background terms can often be responsible for shifting the meaning of a number of other words.
It is with this area of study that Prof. Ullmann will lecture, Prof Galton said.
Dessert to Honor 110
Inter-residence Council's Scholarship Dessert, held each semester in honor of all independent women with a 2.5 grade average or better, will take place at 6:30 tonight in the Kansas room of the Union.
A trophy will be awarded to Miller Hall for the highest grade average.
P-t-P Forums Begin
The first in a series of nine "Foreign Students Abroad" forums will be this evening at 7:30 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The topic this week is "Israel."
The forums are presented by students who will visit the countries under the People-to-People program this summer. A different country will be presented each week.
The forum this week will include a movie and refreshments.
Twenty delegates are needed for the KU-Y Model UN.
Model UN Needs More Delegates
The twenty vacancies are in countries from the Arab, Sino-Soviet, and Western blocs.
There will be 117 nations represented in the Model UN.
Any KU student wishing to sign up is invited to do so in the KU-Y office in the Kansas Union before Friday.
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The 2nd Issue of the '64 Jayhawker...
88
Will Be Available Thursday and Friday From 8:30 a.m.'til 4:30 p.m.at the Information Booth.
Attention 2nd Semester Transfer Students:
You Can Buy Your Jayhawker Now and Begin Receiving Copies.
UP Pulls Greeks, ASC Men
Two fraternities officially aligned themselves with the University Party last night.
The petitions of Tau Kappa Epsilon and Phi Kappa Sigma were read and unanimously accepted by the University Party General Assembly.
Earlier in the week Alpha Delta Pi sorority announced that it had switched its support to the University Party.
"WE WILL LOSE a few votes as a result of the switch, but it will not seriously weaken the Vox Party
in the upcoming election," Thomas Bornholdt, Topeka senior, president of Vox Populi, said.
Bornholt refused to give any reasons for the three living groups shifting support. "It is up to the houses to give this information," he said this morning.
REPRESENTATIVES FROM Phi Kappa Sigma and Alpha Delta Pi were not available for comment early this morning.
Rod Lennard, Ottawa senior and TKE president, said, "we felt that our house could benefit more directly from an association with the University Party." "Also we felt that the candidates backed by UF were better than the others."
Commenting last night on the switches, Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission senior and UP chairman, said the "KU political system is rotten to the core. Vox especially."
ALSO FRANK JACOBSON. Devanan sophomore, ASC representative from the large men's Residence Halls, and Thomas Shumaker, Russell junior, representative from the Fraternity district, have switched affiliation from Vox Populi to UP.
Daily hansan
Thursday, March 5, 1964
Lawrence, Kansas
61st Year, No. 97
Attorney General Plans To Talk Here Tonight
Rv Lee Stone
Kansas has legal problems with paper-back pornography.
Kansas also has legal problems with its new House reapportionment law.
William Ferguson, attorney general of Kansas, who is responsible for resolving these problems will explain, tonight on campus, what he is doing about them.
FERGUSON IS ALSO A Republican candidate for governor. "I don't pretend to be a political speaker," Ferguson said. But, he said he would answer questions about his philosophy of government at a Young Republicans club meeting tonight.
Sam Evans, Jr., Salina junior, president of the Young Republicans, said Ferguson would speak at 7:30 p.m. in the Sunflower room of the Kansas Union.
Ferguson said he would come to KU today immediately after asking the Kansas Supreme Court to correct a House reapportionment law mistake that gives double representation to Prairie Village.
HE WANTS TO TAKE students "behind the scenes" of the reapportionment case, Ferguson said.
refused to correct it. The court claimed no power to put words into a law, namely "Leawood."
Although the Senate omitted Leawood township when it passed its reapportionment, the Supreme Court
To correct the law, the court said, would be tantamount to its assuming a legislative role, something plainly forbidden by the constitution.
THE GOVERNOR HAD TO call a special legislative session to patch up the law.
Now the state wishes to avoid the expense of a second special session to correct the House's mistake and has also taken the Prairie Village duplication to the court.
While he is arguing this case before the court today, Ferguson said he would point out to the court that they could possibly interpret a corrective action as resolving an "ambiguity". This would be "constructive" not legislative, Ferguson said.
DURING THE WEEK OF March 23, the U.S. Supreme Court will review another case on which Ferguson has worked since he became attorney general.
The court's decision on this case is expected to draw the line between what is obscene and what is literature, Ferguson said. Because the Supreme Court receives so many appeals, it reviews only those cases that have a "broad national application." Ferguson said.
The obscenity case, known as a Quantity of Books versus The State
of Kansas, arose when some paperback books were confiscated from a Wichita newsdealer. Officials who siezed the books described them as "obscene."
FERGUSON SAID the attorney general's office was not opposed to books like "Peyton Place," and "God's little Acre."
Paraphrasing retired Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter, Ferguson said his office wanted to control, "dirt for dirt's sake, or worse for money."
"Pornography is a little like dope," Ferguson said. "It has to become more erotic." To illustrate, Ferguson said he would bring samples of what his office believes to be "commercial smut" to the meeting. Some of the samples are dated from the time of the Wichita seizure, some are current.
FERGUSON, WHO GRADUATED from the KU College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in 1938, was on the Honor Roll his senior year. He majored in history. Ferguson's home is in Wellington.
In addition to his political duties with the Republican party, Ferguson is on the advisory council of the Young Americans for Freedom, he said.
The State of Kansas Election Statistics show that Ferguson won the post of Attorney General in 1960 by 251,295 votes a plurality of 57 percent. Ferguson's opponent in the race was Democrat Jules V. Doty, Ottawa attorney.
1970S
QUEEN CANDIDATES—One of these KU women will be queen of the Military Ball, Friday night in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union. Top row, from left, Linda Machin, Ottawa senior; Cynthia Dickson, Leavenworth freshman; Judy Fraser, Larned senior. Bottom row, from left, Sharon Rogers, Prairie Village sophomore; Karen Schwartz, Pratt junior; Kathy Bergstrom, Kansas City, Mo., junior.
Doty has also announced his candidacy for governor of Kansas and if he wins the Democratic primary, he may again be Ferguson's opponent.
The Young Republicans chairman said he hopes that his club will be able to bring other Republican gubernatorial candidates to the campus to inform students on political issues.
Twelve candidates have entered the race for governor. Six are Republicans, six are Democrats. Republicans include, McDill "Huck" Boyd, Phillipsburg publisher; William H. Avery, U.S. Congressman; Harold Chase, Lieutenant Governor; Paul Wunsch, president pro tem of the Kansas Senate; and Grant Dohme; and, of course, William H. Ferguson, attorney general.
Democratic candidates for the office are; Harry Wiles, Kansas Corporation Commission commissioner; Jules Doty; George Hart, Wichita; J. Don Coffin, owner of the Council Grove Telephone Company; Joseph w. Henkle, former lieutenant governor; and Ewell Stewart, a Democratic prohibitionist.
Weather
Clear skies are forecast tonight and partly cloudy Friday. According to the weather bureau, the low tonight will be in the upper 20's and the high Friday will be in the middle 50's.
THE HOME OF THE LOVE
(Photo by Charlie Corcoran)
UP CANDIDATES—Kaye Whitaker, Wichita senior, and Robert Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., junior, were announced last night by the University Party General Assembly as candidates for VicePresident and President of the student body. General elections will be April 1 and 2, 1964.
UP Names Ticket, Declares Platform
The University Party last night named Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., senior, as its candidate for student body president, and Kaye Whitaker, Wichita junior, as vice-presidential candidate.
The party's General Assembly also ratified a seven-plank campaign platform, and the names of the nominees for All Student Council from the school districts.
Council from the school board In accepting the UP nomination, Stewart said "The University Party is determined to bring a new era of student government to KU.
"This new era will be one of interest and concern for the student's needs," he continued. "It will be an era of emphasis on campus politics and student government."
ONE PLANK OF THE PLATFORM calls for an investigation into student employment on the campus, including inquiries into the hiring policies of departments and branches of the University, wages paid by them, and hiring policies of the businesses off the campus.
The University Party proposes the establishment of a committee to investigate the food services in the various living groups. It proposes a temporary committee to work with the KU Library to update and improve library files of examination and course material.
Also approved by the general assembly was a plank calling for an
(See text of platform on page 6.)
ASC service whereby students may anonymously evaluate teachers and teaching methods.
THE PLATFORM ALSO CALLS FOR A committee similar to the Little Hoover Commission which would operate year-around to test the effectiveness of the various ASC committees. UP also proposes to establish a system by which an ASC member attends each meeting of each ASC committee.
The platform also calls for establishment of a freshman leadership program to acquaint them with the various responsibilities and activities of student affairs at KU.
The UP platform supports the resolution introduced at the last ASC meeting by Miss Whitaker to form a committee to investigate the use of voting machines in campus elections.
The ASC candidates are college men, Carl Linquist, Prairie Village junior; college women, Mary Ruth Lanning, Lawrence sophomore; fine arts, Susan Lawrence, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore; pharmacy, George Brenner, Princeton junior; journalism, Roy Miller, Topeka junior; engineering, Ray Myers, Dodge City senior; business, Ken Robb, Mission junior; law, Pete Robertson, Lawrence first year law; graduate, Hugh Taylor, Stoke-on Trent, England, and education, Nancy Johnson, Caldwell junior. Miller and Taylor are incumbents.
Miss Johnson is president of Hashinger Hall, Linquist is president of Joseph R. Pearson Hall, and Brenner is president of Ellsworth Hall.
Commenting on the UP platform, Tom Bornholt, Topeka senior and president of Vox Populi, said, "I know that new ideas are hard to come up with in the second semester, but I didn't think they were this hard to come up with."
"We intend to go over the platform plank by plank," he said.
WHITMAN SAID the platform contains some "fine ideas."
"One of the first planks most responsive to the students needs is that asking an investigation of student wages. I am a University employee — a $1.05 slave. I think there is a crying need for investigation." he continued.
Bornholt said Vox Populi candidates will be ratified tonight and the party platform will be ratified March 12.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, March 5, 1964
Birth Control
Never before has the pressure of population risen, all over the world, so rapidly and steadily as it is rising today. A radio announcer said in a broadcast recently that the population is increasing at the rate of 100 million a year and is expected to reach 6 billion by the end of the century. This rate of growth includes 7,400 persons a day in the United States.
Overpopulation is the most serious of the world problems, and it needs serious attention and consideration. And now.
MAN'S FUTURE is most threatened by the pressure of growing population, not by the arms race and the political struggles—which get most of the attention.
The United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization reports that between one-third and one-half of the world's close to three billion people go to bed hungry. It has been predicted by the organization that in the next decade the equation between ill-fed mouths and available food could grow even more lopsided.
We have arrived at a point where the population is growing much faster than food production, especially in Asian countries like China and India.
The problem has become more acute as inventions in medicines and better sanitation cause a sharp cut in the death rate, especially deaths among young children, while the birth rate keeps right on growing. Until the 1830's, the population figure was increasing very slowly. The population at that time was only 1 billion. But the figure rose to 2 billion in just 100 years and jumped to near three billion in the next 30 years. If the rate of growth continues, demographers predict, the number seems certain to reach 6 billion by the year 2000.
THIS RAPID GROWTH is not desirable.
Today we don't have enough food and space for
the increasing number. According to FAO reports, there are now 12.5 acres of land for each man, woman, and child on earth, but because of climate and terrain only 3.7 acres per capita are cultivable. By the end of the century, with the population doubled, the cultivable area will decrease to 1.8 acres per person. (It has been estimated that more than 2.5 acres are necessary for the individual's need of food and space.) And even with this increasing shortage of land, we are adding several million hungry mouths every year.
POINTING OUT the danger of the problem, Eugene Black, former president of the World Bank, said in his annual report to the United Nations: "Unless population growth can be restrained, we may have to abandon for this generation our hopes of economic progress in the crowded lands of Asia and the Middle East."
Several solutions, such as improved technology and new sources of algae and other food minerals, have been suggested by many specialists on the subject. But in addition to these suggestions, effective birth control is necessary all over the world. There is a need for research in effective, cheap, and acceptable methods of birth control. More birth control clinics are necessary, and they must be authorized to provide birth control information, treatment, and material upon request. Public welfare funds should be used in providing contraceptive devices and information on how to use them.
The problem has to be overcome to banish hunger in the world and to bring the world peace. If it is unsolved, the supply of water and minerals will be exhausted—there will be wars in search of food and the human race will come to a disastrous end.
-Vinay Kothari
PICTATORSHIP SI,
DEMOCRACY NO!
CASTRO
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HERBLOCK
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Goldwater: The One True Conservative?--
Barry Goldwater is the symbol of conservatism in America. But he wasn't always the conservative that he is now. In fact, when he first entered the Senate in 1933 he refused to ally himself with the conservative faction on a key issue—the Senate filibuster which he wanted to outlaw.
Some political observers feel that the term "conservative" used to describe Barry Goldwater is a misnomer. They hold that he wants to abolish most of the legislation enacted by Congress in the last 20 years and return to a pre-war New Deal era rather than conserve present legislation.
The following is a listing of Goldwater's stands on various issues during his years as a senator. Where possible his voting record on these issues also is included.
FOREIGN POLICY: Goldwater maintains the U.S. should withdraw diplomatic recognition from all Communist governments, including that of the Soviet Union. He says, "We should make it clear in the most explicit terms that Communist governments are not tolerated in this Hemisphere and that the Castro regime, being such a government, will be eliminated. . . . I think we can operate an effective economic blockade of Cuba and I think we can do it at no risk of war."
In 1961, at the height of the Katanga crisis, Goldwater said, "The United States no longer has a place in the United Nations." Now he says, "The U.N. is a wonderful concept, but the world isn't ready for it . . . I would probably vote to get out, but I'm not clamoring to get out."
In 1960 he said about alliances that they "ultimately doom (us) to failure" but in 1962 he reversed this to "alliances form a great dam against the running tide." He advocates taking "the offensive in dealing with the world-wide Communist threat," and concerning the use of nuclear weapons, he asserts, "if possible, overt hostilities should always be avoided."
IN FOREIGN AID Goldwater favors loans or technical assistance—no gifts—to be given to friendly anti-Communist nations. He is against financial help to uncom-
mitted neutrals and he wishes to cut the overall foreign aid budget. At the same time he has voted for greater military and technical assistance to the U.S.'s best friends abroad.
He has voted consistently against funds for cultural exchange programs and he voted against President Kennedy's Peace Plan.
Federal Spending: Goldwater has urged that the government reduce its spending by 10 per cent each year, withdrawing from virtually all welfare fields. He views social security as an interference in the private lives of U.S. citizens; but rather than repeal the program, he wants it made voluntary instead of compulsory.
Four times (in 1958, '59, '60, '61) he voted against depressed-area bills and has strongly opposed medical care for the aged.
PUBLIC POWER: Goldwater voted to free gas producers from federal regulation, and voted against federal power projects, but he supported the $1 billion federally sponsored Upper Colorado River Storage Project, which will benefit Arizona.
Agriculture: "It's a question of repealing and going back to the law of supply and demand." Sen. Goldwater has said. He also called for an immediate end to price support programs, but recently he has favored cotton supports and legislation which would favor the mineral and oil interests in the nation (Arizona wealth consists, in part, of cotton and copper as well as lesser metals.)
He solved one such inconsistency with a single telephone call. He was asked why he voted for the $6 billion agricultural appropriation bill in late September after he had called for "a prompt and final termination of the farm-subsidy program." Goldwater denied that he had done so. When he was shown that he had, he called the clerk of the Senate and had his vote changed to no.
LABOR: He insists that he favors stronger unions—but free ones. He has backed right-to-work legislation but denies now that he ever did so. He has proposed revisions of the Taft-Hartley Act toughening restrictions on secondary boycotts and limitations on organizational picketing. He also has suggested federal prohibition of unions spending money for political purposes.
Constitutional Amendments: In 1960 he voted against an amendment sponsored by Sen. Holland for a Constitutional amendment to ban the poll tax and he also oppose a Constitutional amendment to permit the residents of the District of Columbia to vote in Presidential elections.
EDUCATION: "It is evident that increased school expenditures have more than kept pace with increased school needs," he has said, and "If we get back to readin', writin', and 'rithmetic, and an occasional little whack where it will help, then I think our education system will take care of itself."
He has voted against any sort of federal aid to education but he still believes that the federal government should establish "guidelines" in terms of curriculum requirements and standards at colleges and universities.
Taxes: In 1960 and earlier
Goldwater had hoped to eliminate the graduated income tax if the federal budget were cut sufficiently. Now he says, "We can't repeal the (graduated) income tax totally. It is an evil, (but) what I would propose is complete study of the whole tax problem."
THIS IS IN contrast to his earlier stand that "the government has a right to an equal percentage of each man's wealth and no more." He has supported tax increased exemptions for industries.
Supreme Court and Integration: "Despite the recent holding of the Supreme Court, I am firmly convinced not only that integrated schools are not required but that the Constitution does not permit any interference whatsoever by the Federal Government in the field of education. It may be just or wise or expedient for Negro children to attend the same schools as white children, but they do not have a civil right to do so which is provided by the Federal Constitution or which is enforceable by the Federal Government."
At one time he suggested that the Supreme Court's decision "isn't necessarily the law of the land," for "the Constitution is what the authors inflicted it to be and said it was—not what the Supreme Court says it is."
His present position is that troops should be used to enforce the laws and "If the Attorney General honestly feels more laws are needed, I'm in favor of giving them to him, to be used like a rifle against the precise problem."
SEN. GOLDWATER does not defend segregation; on public accommodations he has held: "As a merchant, I feel that a man in business who advertises for customers to come to his store . . . cannot deny (those customers), regardless of race, creed, or color, the opportunity to purchase in any department of that store or business."
Foreign Trade: Basically the senator takes a high-tariff, protectionist position. He voted against to reduce tariffs at bis discretion to reduce tariffs at bis discretion.
(Tomorrow, a look at the supporters of Earry Goldwater.)
Viet Nam Worries Philippines
The Philippines have been looking with increasing disquiet at the progress of events in South Viet Nam where the U.S. expenditure of $1.5 million a day and the assignment of 15,000 military advisers show no immediate sign of winning the guerilla war against communism.
By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst
In Indonesia, where he has been the guest of President Sukarno, Philippines President Diosdado Macapagal, staunchly anti-communist, has indicated he has been doing some thinking about the Philippines' own position.
BESIDES HAVING military agreements with the United States, the Philippines are a member of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) which was designed specifically to halt the march of Communism in Southeast Asia.
Lat quite Daily inter- rosy mind -spre direct vigor they least
His line of thinking could affect the future of important U.S.military bases in the Philippines, including the Air Force base at
Clark Field and the Cavite Naval Base.
It tuniciall or s more your
Macapagal believes that military alliances no longer are a sufficient deterrent to the dangers facing the area.
He rejects President Charles de Gaulle's concept of neutrality for Southeast Asia.
He also rejects what he calls "the old passive role of letting others assume responsibility which it is our duty and privilege to shoulder as independent countries."
SEPARATED FROM the question of military bases, this is a position which the United States could heartily endorse.
As for the bases, Macapagal has made no suggestion that he would revise the 1959 agreement which reduced the original 99-year lease to 25 years and gave the Philippines a greater voice in their use. He has, however, joined President Sukarno in demanding the eventual removal of similar British bases in the neighboring Malaysian Federation.
Macapagal's thinking clearly takes in the listless response of first the Laotian and now the South Vietnamese peasant, who beyond the necessity of survival, has shown little interest in the matter of his rulers, whether they be communist or anti-communist.
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Thursday, March 5, 1964
Lately, People-to-People caught quite a number of headlines in the Daily Kansan and evoked a sudden interest on campus. All seems so rosy about it: 14 international-minded, hospitality-and friendship-spreading form a board and direct with temperament and vigor international relationships; they even publish a newsletter (at least once in a while).
And the parties they give: swinging, and free beer, just think of that. On top of that you meet all sorts of people, too: members of other Greek groups, and all have so much fun.
It is such a worthwhile opportunity to show your interest especially when you are in a fraternity or sorority. Nothing probably adds more to one's social prestige than your membership in P-t-P.
Only foreign students are not too frequently met, at least not at more private entertainments of P-t-P. If you are not one of those lucky fellows who is cradled in the arms of a well-looked-upon sorority or fraternity where your brothers and sisters take care of you, or if you are not a "swell guy" who fits into the group, you may be given a sister or brother by P-t-P, someone who never shows up and who does not care what you are doing and whether you find your way or not.
If only ASC loses its supervision over P-t-P —yea, then life really begins to be great for this all-loving group.
Only if he comes to show his merits you'll be invited to some dinner and have to say some words of appreciation and off you go again. Maybe that's what you really want: choosing your own friends. But in the beginning it is very hard to do that. P-t-P certainly has done a great job in exchanges to other countries but in helping any foreign student to get acquainted it has failed.
Failed not in the eyes of those many committee members; they love it. And for that reason one should probably rename it into A-t-A: American to Asian (which happens pretty often); or into G-t-G: Greek to Greek (which happens even more often); or Guy to Girl (which happens most of the time.)
Lillith Inking Denmark
from the morgue
On January 1, 1945, a new academic schedule was approved at a meeting of the University Senate, composed of all faculty members who were associate professors, professors and deans. The schedule called for two 18-week semesters and an 8-week summer session each year at the University.
The accelerated program which had been in effect since July, 1943, was necessitated by the establishment of military units on the campus. Proposals for the new schedule were drawn up by the University calendar committee and presented by Verner Smith, chairman. They were passed with minor amendments.
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I must disagree with Tim Miller's protest of the annual Military Ball. I, too, feel that killing in any form is immoral and, as an institution which teaches and attempts to justify killing, the military is immoral. I do not feel, however, that protesting the Military Ball will in any way help the situation.
Most boys do not join ROTC for the glamour that institution is supposed to bring; they join because
if they don't they will be drafted sooner or later anyway. I'm sure Mr. Miller could find some better way to combat this great immorality than picketing the Military Ball, which, instead of being a deceptive trap for luring unsuspecting young men into the machine, is probably only an excuse for having a party.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 5, 1964
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AWS Elections Set
Thursday, March 5, 1964
University Daily Kansan
- The names of the candidates for Associated Women Students (AWS) Spring Elections have been released by the Dean of Women's office.
Page 5
Fair Warning
All women who are regularly enrolled are eligible to vote in the election next Wednesday. ___
SPOKANE, Wash.—(UPI)—The men who fly B52 jet bombers are greeted as they leave Fairchild Air Force base by this warning: "You are entering the most dangerous place in the world—the public highway. Drive carefully."
Women candidates for four of the primary offices include:
AWS INTER-RESIDENCE Hall Council Representative; Sharon Anderson, Topeka junior; Joy Long, Princeton sophomore, and Paula Dickens, Newton freshman.
CWEN'S ADVISER: Lynette Berg, Claude, Texas, sophomore; Carol McMahan, Wichita sophomore, and Sharon Stalcup, Lawrence sophomore.
PRESIDENT: Joan Fowler, Shawnee Mission junior; and Sheridan Whitcher, Prairie Village junior.
V I C E - PRESIDENT: Gwendolyn Fisher, Topeka junior; Anne Shontz, Kansas City. Mo., junior; and Jayne Lovd, Newton junior.
SECRETARY: Carolyn Brewster, Prairie Village freshman; Patricia Goering, Moundridge freshman; Kathryn Hewett, Fort Scott freshman; Spring Stidham, Park Ridge. Ill. freshman, and Mary Kleinberg, Lawrence freshman.
TREASURER: Ann Peterson,
Shawnee Mission sophomore; Janet
Phelps, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore;
Cheris Shelton, Edina, Minn., sophomore,
and Nancy J. Speirs, Dodge
City sophomore.
more.
AWS PANHELLENIC REPRESENTATIVE: Mary Lasiey, Shawnee Mission sophomore, and Vivian Williams, Topeka sophomore.
Other candidates include:
Comedy Opens At KU Theatre
An absurdist play with the title, "Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Momma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feeling So Sad," will be presented here March 26-31 and April 1-3 in the Experimental Theatre.
The comedy, written by Arthur Kopit, was a recent Broadway hit.
The play deals with an episode in the lives of a Madame Rosepettle and her son Jonathon.
As the curtain opens, the two have just arrived in Port Royal with the body of Madame Rosettle's husband, two fly-trapping plants, and a flesh-eating fish.
During the course of the production, Rosalie, a local Lolita type, tries to seduce Jonathon while Mrs. Rosepettle tries to entice someone else.
ELECTION PETITIONS
FOR
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APPLICATION DEADLINE:
MARCH 16
Information: Dick King — VI 3-0651
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STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES OFFICERS AND BOARD POSITIONS NOW OPEN
Applications are available in the SUA Activities Director's Office in the Kansas Union.
For Additional Information
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, March 5, 1964
UPPlatform
The University Party believes that the two basic functions of student government are 1) to enact legislation and 2) to inform the student. These two basic functions have as their purpose service to the student. Thus they must assess the following platform with the improvement of these two functions in mind.
STUDENT EMPLOYMENT
ASC Student Employment Committee: The University Party will establish an ASC Student Employment Committee to make recommendations concerning employment problems relating to KU students. This committee will look into these three areas: 1) Hiring policies of various departments; 2) Work conditions paid by these departments, and 3) Policies of off-campus business establishments in hiring KU students.
The University Party will establish a temporary ASC committee to work with the University to date and improve files of examinations and course material used by professors and instructors. The various departments of the university and request that they make available sample tests and other materials not regularly available to students.
FOOD COMMITTEE
ASC Food Committee: The University Party will establish an ASC Food Committee to investigate the procurement, preparation, and distribution of food within KU living groups. This committee will serve as an official chair for examinations and recommendations regarding such matters.
LIBRARY EXAMINATION FILES
STUDENT-TEACHER EVALUATION
STUDENT TEACHER Evaluation: The University Party will make available to the faculty, as an ASC service, a system whereby, after an evaluation by the students of their teaching methods. This Teacher Evaluation Service will be available to the faculty. This evaluation will be handled so that students taking part will remain anonymous, and therefore no face to face manner. ASC COMMITTEE SYSTEM
The University Party feels the two-part plank presented below will help provide positive guidance for the ASC committee system.
Part I. Committee Evaluation Board: The University Party will establish chair of committee, and the other shall hold sessions at least once per semester. This board shall, through interviewation, evaluate the effectiveness of each ASC committee. The duties of this committee shall be similar to the present Commission, only on a permanent basis.
Part II. The University Party will establish a system whereby each ASC member receives a meeting of each permanent ASC committee. Each ASC committee chairman will know which council member will handle his council each time and will notify the council member of the meetings. Thus, all council members workings of the committee system, but will provide a direct line between the council and the committee.
FRESHMAN LEADERSHIP PROGRAM
Freshman Leadership Program. The University Party will establish a freshman leader position in order to pick new students, better understand the responsibilities and problems of campus leadership positions which they may hold while at KU. This program's main purpose will be to teach freshmen how to give these freshmen a better understanding of campus leadership responsibilities.
The University Party will also include, as a part of this program, a Campus Leadership Day. This will consist of a series of discussions held in the campus leadership positions on campus. This program will benefit the entire university by bringing together these people for a discussion of common campus leadership problems.
Voting Machines: The University Party, in cooperation with the government, endorses the recent ASC resolution to form a committee to inform voters of voting machines in campus elections.
Pianist to Give KU Concert
Ralph Votapek, winner of the $10,- 000 first prize in the International Van Cliburn Piano Competition, will present a concert at 8:20 p.m. toorrow in the University Theatre.
Votapek won over 43 other pianists, including four Russians, when he walked off with the Van Cliburn trophy in Fort Worth last fall.
The 23-year-old pianist, who did not begin intensive study of the piano until he was in college, attended Wisconsin Conservatory, and later was graduated from Northwestern University.
After graduation Votapek went to New York City and attended Juliard for two years. When he was 20 he won the Naumberg Award, which gave him his New York recital debut.
Votapek was also a finalist in the Levintritt and Mitropoulos Competitions.
in tomorrow's concert, Votapek will play, "Toccata in E Minor" by Bach, "Sonata in E flat Major, K.283" by Mozart, "Symphonic Etudes, Opus 13" by Schumann, "Sonata No. 5 in C Major" by Prokofieff, Debussy's "Estamps," and "Sonata No. 4 in F sharp Major, Opus 30" by Scriabin.
CRC Asks Support for Picketing
The Civil Rights Council (CRC) the Civil Rights Coordinating Comlast night decided to ask the sup- mittee, which is composed of mem- port of other campus organizations bers of the CRC and Kansas Univer- in the CRC's plan to picket the sity Liberal Action Committee, Sigma Nu fraternity and the Greek should visit campus organizations to Week chariot races. enlist moral support and volun-
It was decided that members of teers for the picket project.
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Have Cake, Will Pedal
If you see a blond boy riding on a blue motorcycle with what looks like a cake box on the back of it, don't panic. It will probably just be Karl Zetmeir spreading birthday cheer to some lucky student.
Page 7
clerk to some of the Zetmeir, Topeka junior, is the head and sole operator of the KU Birthday Club, and his activities keep him busy throughout the entire school year.
sells.
Zetmeir got the idea for the club from Kansas State and Harvard Universities. He said it is not really a club at all but is an easy way for parents to insure delivery of a fresh, undamaged cake to their son or daughter.
ZETMEIR'S ENTERPRISE consists of finding out the birthdays of students and then sending direct mail pieces to their parents so they may order a birthday cake for their son or daughter. The cake, obtained from a private bakery in Lawrence, is delivered by Zetmeir on the student's birthday.
the school year. Since last spring Zetmeir, with an initial investment of his own money, has been running a business that is of service to parents of KU students and of pleasure to the students.
Vance Packard To Speak Here
IN ADDITION TO the mailing list he already has, Zetmeir is planning to expand the club to include
Vance Packard, author of four successful literary ventures which assail the weaknesses and subtly camoufaged evils in our social and economic underground, will speak here on March 11.
In running the business Zetmeir says he is selling a service to parents that they would not normally be able to get. Parents living some distance from Lawrence would not have an opportunity to send a cake if it were not for the service he sells.
here on March 14. Packard, whose 1957 best seller, "The Hidden Persuaders," was translated into nine languages, with nearly a million copies now in print, is being sponsored to KU by the Student Union Activities and the All Student Council.
PACKARD WILL SPEAK on "What's Happening to the American Character?" at 8:00 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium.
Packard is a native of Pennsylvania and has been an author, writer and teacher since he received his master's degree from Columbia Graduate School of Journalism more than twenty years ago.
Packard spent five years as a newspaperman in Boston and New York, after which he switched to writing magazine articles and books.
PACKARD IS THE author of "The Hidden Persuaders," "The Status Seekers," "The Waste Makers" and "The Pyramid Climbers." His first three books all reached number one on best-seller lists. He is the only author in recent years to have three books in a row reach the top rung in the non-fiction field.
For "The Hidden Persuaders," he drew on more than 1500 sources and read more than three million words on motivational research. For "The Status Seekers," he traveled in 15 states and eight foreign countries and brought together the findings of more than 150 sociologists. For "The Pyramid Climbers," he filled 167 notebooks while gathering material over a period of four years.
Pamphlet Distribution Suppression May End
Handbills as a means of expressing a student organization's point of view may soon return to the University of Kansas campus.
The University Senate Tuesday approved in principle the right of student organizations to publicize their views by on-campus distribution of handbills and leaflets.
The Senate Advisory committee and administrative officials were charged with working out regulations that would prevent the privilege from creating a burdensome litter problem. It was the litter problem that had previously caused the ban.
Thursday, March 5,1964 University Daily Kansan
The Senate, whose members are deans, professors and associate professors from all schools of the University, also vested down by a narrow margin a proposal to lengthen the period for final examinations.
cake deliveries from one student to another. This would mean that a student would be able to call the club and order a cake for a roommate or friend and have it delivered the same day—"at a saving," he says.
Zetmeir, who is majoring in business, has a number of other outside interests and jobs. He says that as long as he is making money, he seems to have a knack for seeing the possibilities of providing a needed service to people.
NEW YORK—(UPI)— Americans drank 20,366,103 (m) gallons of Scotch whisky, or more than 2.5 billion drinks, in 1962, according to researchers for a Scotch whisky firm.
Staggering Report
In addition to releasing this staggering figure, the Old Smuggler researchers took the occasion to scotch a popular belief—that color indicates the lightness of a Scotch. The true test of lightness is the bouquet and flavor, they said.
WILLIAM FERGUSON Attorney General GOP CANDIDATE FOR GOVERNOR
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 5, 1964
Varsity-Alumni Grid Contest To be Abandoned This Year
By Marshall Caskey (Sports Editor)
Head football coach Jack Mitchell has announced that the traditional varsity-alumni practice football game will be abandoned this Spring and be replaced with an intra-sound match.
The intra-squid contest is scheduled for May 2.
A. C. "Dutch" Lonborg confirmed the report and said the game has been discontinued for a number of reasons.
"ONE BIG problem with the game." Lonborg said, "was the trouble we were having getting the men playing professional ball to play in the varsity-alumni game. The pro coaches didn't like to let their players participate in the game. It was difficult to put together an alumni team who could give the varsity a good game."
"A second reason we did away with the game and the one with which I was most directly concerned, was the possibility of one of the alumni being injured in the game. Some of the men were out of shape and could have been badly injured in one of the contests," Lonborg said.
the varsity-alumni game, according to Wayne Replogle, assistant football coach, had its beginnings over twenty years ago.
"THEER WAS SOME semblance of a game," Replogle said, "before I came here in 1940. I can remember the games after 1940 very well because I coached the alumni for many years.
"I remember the 1941 game well. We played it in Haskell Stadium. The varsity team that year was the old Ray Evans team—the team that went to the Orange Bowl after the war. I was coaching the alumni team.
"We had a 3-0 lead at the half, but the varsity came back in the second period and beat us 24-3," Replogle said.
The game was not played during
Indoor Slates Last Meets
The 1964 track season ended last weekend for most members of Coach Bill Easton's squad. For a few men on the team, however, two more meets remain.
The two meets are the Chicago Daily News meet and the Milwaukee Journal games. The Chicago meet will be Saturday and the Milwaukee meet Monday.
Coach Easton said he plans to take a two-mile relay team from KU to the Chicago meet. Members of the relay team are Herold Hadley, John Donner, Lowell Paul and John Lawson.
Bill Dotson, former championship miler from KU, will also be participating in the Chicago meet. Dotson will be entered in the open mile.
Coach Easton announced that Floyd Manning, Bill Silverberg, Tyce Smith and Dotson will participate in the Milwaukee games. Manning will enter the pole vault, Silverberg the two-mile, Smith the high jump and Dotson the open mile.
Manning set a new Big Eight meet record over the weekend as he vaulted 15-8 in Kansas City, Silverberg ran the two mile in 9:05 two weeks ago to set a new Allen Field House record. Smith set three Field House records in the high jump during the season. His best jump was 6-83%.
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the war years, according to Replogle, because many of the alums were in the service.
"THEE WAS NO game in 1942, '43, "44 or "45," Replogle said, "and in '46 and '47, Evans and most of his teammates came back to school, but there weren't enough alums to play a game."
"In 1948, many of the men had graduated and we got up a game. I can remember coaching the alumni in that game and I can remember the barbecue afterward. The barbecue, of course, became a tradition right along with the game," Replogle said.
In 1951, the most famous players in KU football history, up to that time, assembled for the varsity-alumni tilt. Ray Evans, the Orange Bowl veteran and all-American played in the game. Otto Schnellbacher, Don Fambrough, Don "Red-Dog" Ettinger, Forrest Griffith, Mike McCormack and many well-known players also participated. The alums beat the varsity 13-6.
SINCE 1951, THE VARSITY teams have won seven of the traditional contests, while the alumni have won five. Last year, the varsity trounced the alums 33-0.
Reploge said he agreed that it was advisable to stop playing the traditional game.
"I think it's good that they called the game off," Replogle said. "If a man got really banged up—as might well have happened—it could have ruined him for life. Some of these men haven't been in shape for one or more years. You can't take a man out here when he's way out of shape and expect him to play against the well-trained college men."
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"Some of these alums have really gotten knocked for a loop in the Spring game, too. Some of them didn't recover for days."
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NOTICE
Vance Packard, social critic author (Hidden Persuaders, Waste Makers, Status Seekers, Pyramid Climbers), will speak on "What's Happening to the American Character?" March 11 Hoch Auditorium 8 p.m. Sponsored by SUA ASC
Reception for Mr. Packard in the Jayhawk Room of the Union following the speech
Thursday, March 5, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Lack Of Disinterest Threatens New Party
Campus political campaigns are just beginning, and a new party has finally made itself public.
militarily made The Apathy Party (AP), formed last fall by bi-partisan and nonpartisan campus leaders, developed from a joke into an exchange forum of ideas on student problems.
It now faces the need of a momentous slice of membership, otherwise extinction.
THE IDEA FOR AP bloomed in the mind of Alan Stamper, Plainville senior. Functions began after fall elections, usually taking place after the regular All Student Council meetings on Tuesday nights.
Recent partisan activity of some of AP's members have forced the party to limit its functions.
to mimic "Everyone is taking campus politics seriously again," said Merry Moore, Raytown, Mo., senior. "This
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Foreign Students: All students who have income from KU (employment, scholarships, assistantships) should see Mrs. Hardy, Payroll Office, 131 Strong, immediately. Urgent—concerns new U.S. income, tax law.
income to Marie People-io-People Tour to Abilee Kansas, and the Eisenhower Library and Museum. Sing up now in P-LP office. Kansas Union.
Der deutsche Stamptismt trifft sich am
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einem gemeindlichen Tennessee in,
wird oben cubed". Ecke 14th - Tennessee.
Wir werden auch singen.
Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion.
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Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Strattford Rd.
Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m.
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College Life, 9 p.m., Sunflower Room Kansas Union, Norm Robbins will speak Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Doeforth
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Jewish Community Center Services
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means AP will have to disband until after the spring elections."
BUT STAMPER, FOUNDER and general secretary of AP's FAG (Fun and Games) Committee, feels differently about the role of the party.
Atlantic
"AP will do its best to confuse the two major parties on every possible insignificant issue, thereby creating chaos in the ranks of those who oppose us; that is, those who claim to be genuinely interested in student government.
"AP's main function during the campaign will be to take a calm, collected look at what goes on—and laugh," Stamper said.
STAMPER STRESSED that AP will not run a slate of candidates to absolutely nothing. "In this respect AP is ahead of the other parties in that we achieve the same results without even trying."
Although most of the AP membership desires to retain their anonymity, there are a few who helped to clarify the purpose of AP.
"At the relaxed atmosphere of an AP meeting KU student leaders develop a deep and common bond of disinterest," said platform chairman, R. Michael Bush, Glendale, Mo., senior.
STAMPER REMAINS convinced that there is still hope for AP in spite of some seriousness in the spring elections.
"We invite anyone interested in the students but not in campus politics to attend our party caucuses held regularly at local campus spots," he said.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 5, 1964
Un-MilitaryBall Protests ROTC
An ad hoc committee opposed to war will hold an Un-Military Ball this weekend.
A spokesman for the group, Charles Hook, New York freshman, said the ball was "a counter-action to the ROTC Military Ball." The Un-Military Ball "implicitly protests militarism and student participation in military functions," Hook said.
The committee, "formed about a week ago," consists of ten members, Hook said. The chairman is Walter Bgova. Tanganyika senior.
The Herbie Smith Quartet will supply dance music for the ball, which will take place at 8:00 p.m. Saturday at 1420 Ohio.
The spokesman said the ball would be financed by door contributions of $1.00 per person and $1.75 per couple.
The ball will be open to all students, even ROTC members.
Last year a similar function called the "Anti-Military Ball" was held at KU. Hook said the name of the ball had been changed because the group did not want to give an I'm right-you're-wrong-im-pression.
"We do not want to say you're wrong, but say we are right," Hook said.
In past years, the function has drawn about 150 to 200 persons, Hook said. Several organizations on campus have been invited to distribute peace literature at the ball.
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Page 11
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---
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, March 5, 1964 | Scholor or Scholar?
Polish Schools Subject of Talk
The schools of Poland are dictated to the Communist puppet government of Poland except in the field of science.
This idea was discussed by Kenneth Anderson, dean of the School of Education, yesterday at the Faculty Forum in the Kansas Union.
Dean Anderson based his talk on a visit to Poland last April in which he made a survey of Polish schools for the State Department of the United States.
HE SAID all parts of schooling are dictated by the government except for science or medicine; consequently the scientists and the doctors are the most privileged class in Poland.
His impression of the Polish people is that they fear the Russians who rule them, but hate even worse the Germans who ravaged Poland.
Four-fifths of the boys are directed into technical schools because trained mechanics are in great need in Poland.
THE STUDENTS who do attend higher schools are highly subsidized by the government. Students usually
pay the minimum of tuition, and low room and board fees. The two major things that keep the Poles from becoming communists are their intellect and stubbornness, Dean Anderson said.
Patronize Kansan Advertisert
Even some of KU's scholars have mental lapses sometimes.
The invitations to Templin Hall's annual scholarship banquet on March 18 read:
- "Templin requests the pleasure of your company at its scholarship banquet. . ."
Surprise your roommate with a cake for that special occasion
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WITH THE DRIFTERS BAND & SHOW
Through the years, other groups have arrived and departed from the recording industry while The Drifters have become a permanent part of it. On stage,the Drifters are known for their frantic, yet precise, driving rhythm that makes it impossible for its audiences to remain seated. The Drifters & the five-piece Drifters Band, direct from the Apollo Theater in New York, guarantee the wildest 5 hours in the Big Barn this year.
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Native of Viet Nam Urges Peace
By Mary Halloran
"We want to live peacefully, But the war still goes on and on." Mrs. Do Thi Do Oanh, a native of South Viet Nam, said.
"I hate the Communists very much," she continued. "They make us much trouble."
In the United States a little over a year on a government grant. Mrs.Oanh is studying weaving and crafts at KU this semester.
When her studies are finished, she will return to South Viet Nam to teach vocational education in a Salign school's home economics department. She is one of seven
women in the United States on a similar plan.
AT THE TIME Mrs. Oanh left South Viet Nam, the conditions were "peaceful, very fine. Right now there is too much trouble in politics."
She characterized the Diem regime briefly.
"Ngo Dinh Diem was first appointed by the Americans," she said. "Then when it was time for elections, he was elected by the people. And before the trouble among the Buddhists, the Catholics and the Communist, he was very good. But he was influenced by his family too much."
"I don't know very much about General Nguyen Khanh, the latest leader, except he should be better. He is very young, an army man. He even got some training in the United States.
"TODAY THERE ARE bombs, bombs, all the time, even in Saigon. Before, the guerrillas were out in the country. They were only a little trouble. Now they are even in the city, Saigon, where it was always so peaceful. And they kill the people. What do they get?"
Mrs. Oanh said the guerrillas, the Viet Cong, are fanatics.
(Continued on page 12)
Daily hansan
61st Year, No. 98
Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, March 6, 1964
Attorney General Predicts More Reapportionment Woes
By Lee Stone
Is another storm on political representation brewing over Kansas?
William M. Ferguson, attorney general and Republican candidate for governor, said last night that a case soon to come before the U.S. District Court in Kansas City may be the beginning of—not legislative
—but congressional reapportionment woes for Kansas.
The case will come before the court on March 20 and can have three results—two of them spectacular, he said.
This case, Meeks versus Anderson, was discussed at the Young Republicans meeting last night while Ferguson was answering questions from the floor.
Ex-Assistant Instructor Bound Over Without Bond
John S. Edwards, 32, was bound over without bond yesterday for trial in the May term of district court on a charge of first degree murder.
Edwards, a former graduate student and assistant instructor in the KU Spanish department, is charged in connection with the Feb. 22 shooting of Pedro Escobar, 37, who also was an assistant instructor in the KU Spanish department.
A fifteen-minute session concluded the preliminary hearing which was started Feb. 27 in Douglas County Court. Judge Charles Rankin presided.
The defense requested that bond be set for the defendant and that the charge be reduced from first
degree murder to some lesser offense. Botn requests were refused and Edwards was returned to custody in the Douglas County jail.
During four hours of testimony Feb. 27, witnesses testified that Escobar was a guest at a party given by John H. Wolf, Penkintown, Pa., graduate student and an assistant instructor in the Spanish department. Edwards, who was having a party in an adjoining apartment, complained to Wolf over the telephone of the noise.
A few minutes later Edwards knocked on the door of Wolf's apartment with a .357 Magnum pistol. Escobar, who was dancing near the door, opened it and was shot in the chest, witnesses said.
FERGUSON SAID the case is similar to Georgia's Mayberry case which went before the U.S. Supreme Court and ended with Georgia's legislature being ordered to reapportion its unequal congressional districts strictly on the basis of population.
Georgia has not reapportioned for 50 years, Ferguson said, and neither has Kansas, except for a token reapportionment in 1954 when Kansas lost one congressman.
From the First to the Fifth Congressional District, there is a population difference of 40 per cent, Ferguson said. This does not meet the Supreme Court's direction of one man for one equal vote "as nearly as is practicable," he said.
If the district court decides in favor of Kansas, that will be the end of the matter, but if it decides otherwise, Kansas will have two choices. Ferguson said.
FIRST, he said, the governor could call another special session of the legislature to decide new districts.
Second, candidates for U.S. representative could run at large.
"Bob Dole would have to beat the bushes around Kansas City," Ferguson said.
Dale is the congressman from the western First District.
By extension of Ferguson's remark, Garner E. Shriver, the con-
(Continued on page 12)
Wichita Battles Drake
Missouri Valley Fans Invade KU
By Bob Jones (Assistant Sports Editor)
The game was expected to draw only 10,000 people. When the tickets went on sale, that many were sold in the first few hours.
Wichita University and Drake University basketball teams will meet here tonight to decide the Missouri Valley Conference representative in the NCAA tournament before a standing-room-only crowd of more than 17,000.
OF THIS TOTAL, 2,200 were purchased by persons in the Lawrence area. The rest were snapped up by eager Wichita fans, who are expected to begin flooding into Lawrence this afternoon.
By 11:00 a.m. Wednesday, the Missouri Valley Conference office stopped ticket sales in Lawrence and Wichita after over 12,000 of them were sold.
The remainder of the tickets were sold in Des Moines, making a total of over 15,000 people coming to Lawrence from out-of-town.
This is the third meeting for the two teams, their earlier games being a solit.
KTVH-TV in Wichita will broadcast the game for the Wichita and Des Moines areas. Jack McCelland, member of the MVC television committee, said the game will be broadcast because of the "unprecedented demand."
"WE HAVE PARKING space for 8,000 cars," Lonborg explained, "but I want to urge people to arrive early so we will have an orderly operation. Late comers will be forced to hunt for parking spots."
KU officials are anticipating more than a few woes in handling a crowd of this size. Athletic Director A. C. "Dutch" Lonborg issued an appeal to fans to arrive early for the game to avoid a huge traffic crush.
Fans for the Wichita-Drake basketball game may run into a bit of trouble with the weather tonight. Light snow is predicted for tonight and tomorrow. The low tonight will be in the upper 20s. It will be cloudy and colder toorrow. At noon today, winds were gusting at more than 40 m.p.h. on the campus.
Lonborg also stated he has enlarged the usual staff of ushers, Pinkerton men, city and campus police and highway patrol to handle the crowd.
Weather
Another problem arises from the
The 8 p.m. game will feature the co-champions of one of the top basketball conferences in the nation.
fact that all tickets will be general admission. Because there are no reserve seats, people will have to arrive as soon as the field house doors open at 6:00 p.m. to get good seats.
Wichita's team will be led by allAmerica Dave Stallworth, the Valley's leading scorer. In addition to Stallworth, the starting lineup for Wichita will be Kelly Pete, Dave Leach, Nate Bowman and Ernie Moore, who will be playing his last game for the Wheatshockers.
Moore is still eligible for college basketball under Missouri Valley rules, but the NCAA will not permit him to play in any post-season games.
For Drake, the starting lineup will be McCoy McLemore, Gene Bogash. Billy Foster, Fred West and Larry Prins.
More tickets to the game here were sold in Wichita than is the capacity of Wichita University's field house, which seats 10,500.
The Drake team is essentially the same one which was in the Missouri Valley cellar a year ago. The only addition to the team is Bogash, a transfer from Wilmington, N.C., Junior College.
GREAT LAKES
VOX CANDIDATES—Marshall Crowther, Lawrence second-year law, and James Cline, Rockford, Ill., junior, were announced last night by Vox Populi as candidates for president and vice-president of the student body. General elections will be April 1 and 2.
Vox Populi Picks Running Mates
By Susan Flood
Stressing that Vox Populi is the party which does things because "they needed to be done and are right for student government," Marshall Crowther, Lawrence second-year law student, accepted the nomination for student body president last night.
Jim Cline, Rockford, Ill., junior, is the party's candidate for vicepresident.
"I DO NOT BELIEVE in change for the sake of change," Crowther said, "but I do believe that Vox has and will continue with progressive improvement. What is necessary is the continuity of student leadership and effective programs to meet the demands of the students."
John Stuckey, Pittsburg senior and ASC chairman, compared what Crowther had said with what he called "UP's challenge for a filthy campaign."
"I view with contempt the kind of campaign UP may wage," Stuckey said. "For five years UP has talked about Vox, not about what Vox has done, for we have laid the groundwork for an outstanding student government.
"The two Vox men nominated tonight have not stood still all year waiting to be nominated," he said. "They have worked where they are and have not aspired to higher positions.
"There is nothing to the rumor that Vox is going to fold. We are not going to leave student government to irresponsible leaders. Work for Vox and what it has done and will do, not against the other party," Stuckey advised the party's general assembly.
REUBEN McCORNACK, Abilene senior and student body president, stressed the qualifications of Crowther and Cline.
Commenting on the statement by Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission senior and general secretary of UP, that the "KU political system is rotten to the core, Vox especially." McCornack said that there was more behind the story of the affiliation shifts than most students knew. He called Whitman's statement, "highly inappropriate."
CROWTHER SERVED ON THE ASC as a freshman in 1955. He transferred to Kansas Wesleyan University in Salina, his home town, as a junior. He was treasurer and president of the student body at Kansas Wesleyan.
After a seven year lapse, Crowther was again elected to the ASC last spring as School of Law representative and has served as vice-chairman of the Council since last November. He is also chairman of the ASC committee on committees and legislation, which makes recommendations on all ASC legislation, and prior to this was chairman of the Athletic Seating Board.
Cline is now chairman of the Athletic Seating Board, a member of Templin Hall Senate and social committee, a founder of the Men's Residence Association and past independent vice-president of Vox.
BORNHOLDT ANNOUNCED THAT interviews would be held after the meeting and on Sunday concerning ASC nominations. Vox candidates for school districts and the party platform will be announced and ratified Thursday.
Contacted about the meeting, Whitman said he would concur with Vox in the desire for a "clean, above-board campaign."
"We would welcome Vox to join us in what UP has always stood for, and we ask Vox to join with us in a pledge for high-level campaigning," Whitman said.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 6, 1964
Other Campuses:
Greek Living
College fraternities and sororites have been a focal point of increasing attention at our school and in our nation.
First, there is no doubt that the University or any other educational institution, which permits fraternities or sororities to exist, has also the power to extinguish their lives. At the University, the process would be perfectly simple and logical.
Since all fraternities and sororities are University-approved living residences, a withdrawal of approval would mean instant death. I point this out because many students, both fraternity and nonfraternity, think that this is the main issue around which discussion should revolve. There is, in fact, no substantial argument here.
The real crux of the situation involves the answer to this question: "Having the power to do so, should any educational institution force fraternities and sororites to integrate against their will?"
It is of primary importance to visualize what kind of organizations we are dealing with here. Fraternities stem from an instinct basic to human nature—that instinct which causes us to seek companionship among those with whom we share common interests on a broad scale.
Basic Freedom
If fraternities and sororities, or co-ops and clubs for that matter, were abolished tomorrow they would soon spring up again, perhaps only with different names, because this basic instinct is impossible to destroy. This freedom to peaceably assemble with those of our own choice when not infringing on others' rights has been essential to our claim of being a truly freedom-loving country.
Freedom Defined
In striving for the most objective appraisal, I believe we all would agree that it basically means as much freedom for all parties concerned which can be achieved at a particular time. This is a compromise definition, for without it, each interest group would naturally seek the maximum freedom for its group alone.
Fraternities admittedly set their own requirements for membership. They do this so that their members will remain unified and also so that no one will be admitted who would not be fully accepted. Fraternity membership requirements may change with the times, or they may not. If they do not voluntarily change, certain schools and students have advocated that they be forced to do so or suffer their death blow.
But is this seemingly simple solution accomplishing our goal of maximum freedom for all? By forcing these groups to accept an externally imposed standard, the word freedom would become a hollow, lifeless shell submerged in the fathomless depths of the New American Revolution.
—Daily Texan
When the day of this imposed standard arrives many will no doubt rejoice, but some will look silently to the banner of the revolution and to the one word emblazoned on its tattered remnants which has won the hearts, minds, and tears of so many. Only then will the terrible and excruciating irony of it all be realized—for that word is none other than freedom itself.
CIVIL RIGHTS BILL
SENATE
FILIBUSTER
RULE
@1964 HERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON PAST
Half Slave And Half Free
Dailij' Hänsan
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.
Rockefeller: Long Road Back From Divorce-
By Roy Miller (First of three-part series)
Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller's glimmer had all but burned out in the crystal ball of presidential politics two years ago this March.
Rockefeller, then the front-running candidate for the 1964 Republican presidential nomination, had divorced his wife of 31 years, the mother of five children. Most observers believed the New York governor's chances at the nomination were seriously—if not fatally—injured.
POLITICAL FORTUNE tellers saw another cloud in May of 1963 when Rockefeller remarried a divorcee and mother of four small children.
Sure, it was a personal matter, as Rockefeller emphasized. But would the rank-and-file of the Republican party or even the American electorate cross off two broken homes as a "personal matter?"
The question persists with the party conventions and national election only months away. But Nelson A. Rockefeller has made a tremendous rebound from the dark weekend in 1962 when he divorced his wife and less than 48 hours later learned of a son lost at sea.
WARREN WEAVER,political reporter for the New York Times, reflected recently on Rockefeller's divorce blemish, writing, "The political world immediately wondered how he could hope to survive as a political candidate."
"There is hardly a visible standard of power analysis or market research which does not define him as a bird that has but one wing. Yet he dismisses every scientific principle and proposes to try and fly on nothing else except his faith in himself and in his star. He is one Rockefeller who belongs not to the social science but to the novel and the poem."
And Murray Kempton wrote this year in New Republic:
POLLS INDICATE Rockefeller is gaining on Barry Goldwater, the senator from Arizona who replaced Rockefeller as the front runner. Just how much a gain the New York governor has made may be revealed March 10 when voters go to the polls in the New Hampshire primary.
Fifty-five-year-old Nelson Rockefeller comes from the richest family in America, a family that had made anything and everything in America—except politics—its business.
John D. Rockefeller, the baron of the Standard Oil trust, originated the family's wealth and its philanthropic foundation. The family had not spread its wealth into politics, however, until Nelson Rockefeller took an appointive position in the New Deal era.
ROCKEFELLER DIRECTED American affairs in Latin America during the Roosevelt war years. He became an assistant secretary of state and later headed President
A. BALLOV, GENEVA
A Phi Beta Kappa at Dartmouth, Rockefeller served as a special assistant to Eisenhower. He left an Eisenhower position as under secretary of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare to enter electoral politics.
He had his eye on the statehouse in Albany, N.Y., and maybe, at the same time, on a structure on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington.
Truman's International Development Advisory Board.
THE 1958 CONTEST for governor of New York was what Life magazine called "a voters' choice of millionaires . . . (the) greatest pitting of fortune against fortune in the history of the republic."
Known for his personal dislike of Nixon, Rockefeller continued to sound like a candidate. Before the national convention he issued a 2,700-word statement blasting
feller felt the party would accept Richard M. Nixon and only Richard M. Nixon in 1960.
Rockefeller defeated Averell Harriman, heir to Union Pacific fortunes. Almost simultaneously, the newly elected governor made steps that would take him to the verge of a presidential nomination in 1960.
Rockefeller was one of the first to declare himself a candidate for
the 1960 Republican nomination. He also was one of the first to withdraw.
(Continued on page 3)
AFTER POURING THOUSANDS of dollars into a staff, headquarters, polls and trips across the nation in an effort to determine Republicans' sentiment, the New York governor announced at the end of 1959 that he would not be a candidate for president in 1960. Rocke-
Goldwater And His Followers
By Rick Mabbutt
By Rick Mabbitt
(Last of a three-part series.)
The key element in Barry Goldwater's support is his position as chairman of the Senate Republican Campaign Committee. He held the job in 1955 and again in 1959. His responsibility is to insure the election of Republicans over Democrats to seats in the Senate. His allotting funds to conservative and liberal senators equally has received praise by his colleagues in the Senate. He also gives Senate hopefuls aid in organizational and campaign strategy.
Few positions provide more exposure of a presidential hopeful to politicians throughout the country. He is constantly conferring with governors, state chairmen and other leaders in the party who wield the influential power when convention time comes.
IN ADDITION to the strength of this position Goldwater has the backing of a number of politically minded groups.
The most vocal is the John Birch Society. Barry Goldwater has praised the Birchers as "the kind we need in politics."
we need in politics.
The head of the society, Robert Welch, writing in the Blue Book,
says: "I personally have been for Goldwater for President, for any great office."
Goldwater has suggested that Welch resign and then denied that he had done such a thing. Last fall he told U.S. News and World Report that Mr. Welch was not a supporter of his.
The New York Times says about the Goldwater movement: "It is more nearly a radical revolt, a gathering of the forces of the discontented and embittered. His supporters to start with include what Richard Nixon called "the nuts and kooks," and Rockefeller label the "lunatic fringe."
"The distinguishing characteristic of them all is their belief in the conspiratorial theory of the Communist menace. Capitalizing upon the sincerity, the zeal and the funds of the far right are at least three managerial strata. The grimiest is composed of professional exploiters—preachers staging anti-Communist crusades, false professors conducting mammoth anti-Communist 'schools', and the fake lecturers arousing eager audiences with shocking reports of treachery in high places.
"NOT FAR AWAY are the well-heeled financiers of the far right, those millionaires who—out of belief in the plot, or more personal distaste for 20th century limitations on economic gluttony—put up the wads of cash for publications, propaganda, ideological foundations and spurious "studies."
"The third group seeking to make use of all of these are a number of state and local politicians well aware of the manpower, energy, and finances of the far right. The one thing they care about is that the Birchers and their comrades, once enlisted in a cause, or for a candidate, are among the most devoted and hardest-working political foot soldiers today. But only in sound and fury are they its major element.
"FAR MORE MEANINGFUL politically is an entirely different class of the discontented and frustrated.
"These men and women are mostly young, mostly educated, mostly outspoken, without personal memories of the Great Depression—the traumatic experience of their fathers. They chafe under high taxes, and big government, a cold war to which they see no end and no alternative, restraints on business initiative, costly public-welfare programs, union dominance and the power of the "hyphenated-American" minority groups in the big urban centers.
Goldwater also draws the older traditional conservatives who followed Robert Taft and who accepted Eisenhower only grudgingly—that "unswerving Old Guard who have lost out to the predominantly Eastern, internationalist urban types called, derisively, the me-too Republicans."
GOLDWATER ALSO appeals strongly to the dominant strain of American isolationism that carries the notion of the natural and unquestionable superiority of all things American.
In addition there are two breeds of supporters on the Goldwater bandwagon who don't necessarily accept either his ideas or some of his support groups. These include Republicans who above all want to win and see Goldwater as having the best chance and southerners, both the segregationists and the growing new class of economic managers and professional men of the new rising industrial South.
"For what has made Barry Goldwater a significant leader instead of a dismal fringe leader is his distinctive personal charm, his constant example of candor and conviction, and his artful play upon the heart strings of American romanticism.
(Continued on page 3)
University Daily Kansan
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22.
es:
on
ity
w-
Page 3
Guilt by Proximity
During a recent visit on campus I had my attention called by a faculty friend to an exhibit at the Student Union of what purported to be a scale range of right- and left-wing literature. "Here's something I think I should protest to the chancellor about," said my friend, pointing to the right-wing case. And after looking I shared his concern. The exhibit was arranged to represent someone's idea of a spectral range of right-wing thought. The extreme was anchored by some blaring pamphlets on the Ku Klux Klan and material on nazism. Because of their bold typography, these two stood out far above anything else in the case, with one exception—up the line a few progressions was a picture of Sen. Barry Goldwater.
weeds water
early ae of include
want hav-
ern- and
omic gen
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A CASUAL OBSERVER could not help but get an association between the senator and terroristic cowardice wearing a white hood and the fascist wolf pack reputedly headed by George Lincoln Rockwell, a "leader" who leads nobody and is only important because he makes of himself a symbol of venom and thus piques some people's ideological curiosity. It might be suggested that the nutty young man also lends himself to a certain smear program by posing as the nadir of the far right. The classification is his.
Barry
or in-
erler is
in his
and
play
meri-
I could not escape the conclusion that the exhibit, through what might be termed "guilt by proximity" was a smear, and a vicious one, whether intended or not, on Sen. Goldwater. Several with me shared the conclusion.
From grave concern I took occasion to call the exhibit to the attention of Chancellor Wescoe. His reply stated that he and several colleagues had viewed the exhibit "objectively" and could see nothing offensive or unfair about it. "The explanatory material that is included with the exhibit," he wrote, "presents the picture adequately, honestly and forthrightly. One side of the board relates to organizations that have been categorized as being politically to the right." And he went on to point out that where the Senator's picture appeared were publications of legitimate conservative organizations.
True.
The People Say...
from the morgue
On Feb. 15, 1932, the Kansas Board of Regents established functions and duties of the Senate of the University.
Among the functions of the Senate, subject only to regents' veto, were:
2. Subject to limitations prescribed by the regents—to determine opening, closing and holiday dates.
1. Appointment of University Senate committees. (The committee report recognizes some committees as Senate committees and others as purely administrative, and responsible directly to the chancellor.)
3. To accredit work from other institutions of learning.
4. To make general regulations concerning scholarship, advanced standing, eligibility of students participating in student activities; absences of students for student activities, sports, glee clubs, or on class "inspection" trips; University honors, scholarships and honor organizations; convocations; University publications and student loans except such as are entrusted to the Endowment Association.
THERE ARE TWO weaknesses in this explanation. First, there can be no denying that an association was established, of graduation, Goldwater to KKK and fascism. And second, one wonders as to the logic and authority of whoever it was fixed the category.
The University Senate was made up of heads of all departments and members of the faculty of professorial or associate professorial rank from all the schools. The chancellor ex officio was president of the Senate.
In today's semantic jungle, the terms "right" and "conservative" are used interchangeably, and so, as a conservative, along with the many in Kansas, I feel maligned also. I agree with most of Sen. Goldwater's political and ideological stands, and I certainly do not concede that my philosophy in any way, shape or form is linked to or bears the slightest resemblance to the psychotic madness of Klan or Hitlerism. The implication is a serious reflection on all citizens of conservative mind, I, for one, resent it.
Would that some project be launched to restore some of our overworked words to the molds of honesty from which they lately have been freed to frolic and fraternize with all manner of ambiguous villainy.
WE SPEAK GLIBLY of right and left of center, and yet I would defy anyone to establish a center position. And right and left in what manner and by whose judgment and consent? The terms liberal and
Goldwater-conservative are just as equivocal, rendered relatively meaningless in this age of smear-conditioned tag words. It is our tragedy that truth cannot be spoken when words lose integrity or exact meaning, nor sense be recognized.
(Continued from page 2)
"EVERYTHING ABOUT Goldwater fits the ideal of that romanticism—from his personal good looks to his long one-man stand against big labor, big government and the dreary lavalike flow of what passes as political liberalism. He appears as the last of the rugged individualists, the underdog who won't stay down, the lone figure striding out to whip Big Brother.
"He combines idealist sentiment with frank appeal to individualistic myths of the good old days.
"Whatever the value of his own proposals, Goldwater has found an appealing idea to found them on—the defense of the rights and pre-rogatives of the individual in the age of the mass. He has become himself the symbol of that idea in the eyes of his followers.
"ANOTHER FACET of his attractiveness to the people is his ability to propose simple solutions to vastly complex issues. For example:
"Castro? Smash him."
"Berlin? Tell the Soviets it's none of their business."
"This way of handling problems, though perhaps it means nothing, has the ring of action and the appeal of decisiveness," the Times concludes.
GOLD WATER'S INFLUENCE and personal appeal are wide among college students. Goldwater gives something to the college students, something political observers call "a feeling of swimming against the current with no danger of drowning, a chance to rebel and conform at the same time."
And lastly, Charles M. Weisenberg, writing in the Commonweal, says: "There is in 'The Conscience of a Conservative' a stern and yet comforting father voice that speaks of the complexities and fluctuations of the modern scene from the vantage point of what appears to be solid rock. Senator Goldwater's view of political and social realities is a relatively simple one and it holds out the promise of a controlled future. It is much more acceptable by a high moral tone and an avowed dedication to individual freedom and nature."
In a clarification attempt I would say that the constant theme of all Goldwater utterances is that of men free to, as Sen Carl T. Curtis (R-Neb.) recently phrased it, "meet their responsibilities in life with a minimum of reliance on government." All points of his philosophy explain this key premise. Simply, this is the credo of the right, of conservatives. The liberal or leftist, on the other hand, subscribes to belief in the socialization of property, all or in major part, with government the caretaker and master of the individual citizen.
This then is Barry Morris Goldwater—the man, the record, and the support. Will these three elements be strong enough to carry him to the White House? Only time will tell.
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The far extreme of the right would be the extreme of individual freedom—anarchy. The extreme of the left—statism, regimentation.
To make any sense at all, fascism would have to home in on the extreme left.
Yours for Goldwater type forthrightness.
Dwight Payton Ellsworth, Kan.
Friday, March 6, 1964
Rockefeller—
(Continued from page 2)
Then, on the eve of the Republican national convention, Nixon flew to New York to iron out differences with Rockefeller. After accepting Rockefeller's refusal to serve as a vice-presidential candidate, Nixon worked Rockefeller's views on defense, reorganization of the executive branch, economic growth, farm policy, medical care for the aged and civil rights into the party platform.
Nixon for not speaking out on issues of the day,
ROCKEFELLER WAS rebuffed by his first legislature as the New York budget rose from $1.6 billion to $2.9 billion. His plan for fallout shelters was rejected (but a watered-down version was passed by the following session) along with his school aid plan and an antidiscrimination housing bill.
He came up for re-election as governor in 1962, and observers said a landslide victory would assure him the presidential nomination that slipped away in 1960. Although he did well in Democratic areas against Robert M. Morgen-
Rockefeller's program for 1964 included a major anti-crime program, stepped up housing for the aged and middle and low income groups, increased urban renewal, repeal of the state's railroad full crew laws and no tax increase.
thau. Rockefeller did not make the spectacular 800,000-1,000,000 vote victory that had been predicted.
IN RECENT WEEKS, Rockefeller has been the target of the New York liquor lobby as he has proposed legislation to revise the state's liquor laws.
Among his creations as governor have been an Atomic Research and Development Authority and a State Housing Finance Agency. Finding 600,000 unemployed when he assumed office in 1958, he had increased the number of jobs in New York by 450,000 by 1962.
It shouldn't be counted off as coincidence that Rockefeller has toyed with programs and plans in New York that he might be dealing with as president of the United States. In no less than 13 of 23 presidential elections since the Civil War, the governor of New York has been a candidate.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 6, 1964
U.S. Supreme Court Decision Illuminates District Extremes
WASHINGTON, —(UPI)— Republican Reps. Bruce Alger, John B. Bennett and Harold C. Ostergar are the men at both ends and the middle of the Supreme Court's recent "one person, one vote" decision on congressional redistricting.
The court ruled that state legislatures are supposed to draw congressional districts as close to equal in population as possible. The districts represented by Alger and Bennett show how far from that goal some states have strayed. Ostertag's district shows how close to perfect it is possible to get.
Alger's single vote in the House represents the entire population of Dallas, Tex., which was 951,527 in 1960 and estimated at more than 1.2 million now. It has the largest population of any district.
BENNETT VOTES FOR the 177,431 residents of eight counties in the western part of Michigan's upper peninsula. Its 1960 population was the smallest of any House district.
Oostertag represents a western New York State district which includes part of Rochester, N.Y. The district had 410,432 residents in 1960, which was closer than any other to the 410,481 national average used by the census bureau to apportion the 435 house seats.
The Supreme Court ruled in a suit challenging the makeup of Georgia's 10 districts, which now range in population from the 272,154 represented by Rep. Phil Landrum, D-Ga., to the 823,680 of Rep. Charles L. Weltner, D-Ga. Weltner's district was second only to Alger's in overpopulation.
The Georgia Legislature subsequently overhauled its congressional districts under a formula which put 329,738 residents in the smallest and 455,575 in the largest.
BUT SIMILAR SUITS have been filed in a number of other states, including Michigan, which did away with Bennett's district last year but still left some wide variances in population.
Some states are making an effort to solve the problem before the courts do it for them. The Maryland Legislature, which must deal with districts ranging in population from 711,045 to 243,570, will meet in special session next month to consider new boundaries.
It was this inequality in the relative value of a citizen's vote that the Supreme Court seeks to
Ancient Greek Art Shown in Fraser
A collection of ancient Greek artifacts can be seen in the classical department display case on the second floor of Fraser Hall for the next three weeks.
The relics are examples of model animals or "votive offerings" used by the ancient Greeks in religious sacrifices.
Also there are models of body limbs offered to Asklepios, god of healing, in the hope he would cure an ailing hand, arm or leg.
Stephen L. Glass, instructor of classical archaeology who set up the display, said large deposits of these relics are found in Corinth, Athens and Epidaurus, Greece.
A rooster, the oldest artifact in the collection, dates back to the 5th century B.C., said Glass.
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eliminate. Alger pointed out that his district was roughly five times the population of the neighboring Texas district represented by Rep. Ray Roberts, D-Tex.
The Supreme Court did not say how close to equality a congressional district population should be to comply with its ruling. Nor did it rule on gerrymandering, the practice of deliberately drawing a district's boundaries to favor one party.
A number of congressmen have addressed themselves to the problem of fair redictricting and tried to set up standards and methods to enforce them.
Chairman Emanuel Cellar, D.N.Y., of the House Judiciary Committee has been pushing for years a bill that would require congressional districts to be compact, have an unbroken boundary and vary no more than 20 per cent from the average derived by dividing each state's population by the number of congressional seats it is allocated.
A study by the Library of Congress last year showed that there were 125 congressional districts whose population was 20 per cent more or less than the state average. But this was somewhat misleading, because a state with one malapportioned district probably would have to redraw the boundaries of all its districts.
THEREFORE, THE 125 seats pinpointed by the study actually represent a far bigger redistricting job—the 30 states in which they occur have a total of 318 seats.
However, some observers believe the 20 per cent variation allowed by Cellar and Mathias would not fall within the Supreme Court's decision that "as nearly as is practicable one man's vote in a congressional election is to be worth as much as another's".
The Library of Congress in its 1963 study also listed the congressional districts which vary by 10 per cent or more from the state average. There were 235 districts in this category, but they occurred in 38 states with a total of 417 seats.
This list includes New York, which drew up new districts after the 1960 census and got every one within 15 per cent of the perfect figure.
But 13 of the 41 districts varied more than 10 per cent. And if that was the cutoff, the whole job might have to be done over.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 6, 1964
Harris Discusses Unified World Law
By Rogers Worthington
Both legal thinkers and political philosophers agree that an international federal authority would be the answer to the legal problems of world order.
That was the conclusion of Errol E. Harris, professor of philosophy, last night in a lecture on "The Legal Principles of International Order."
The theorists who advocate "legal monism"-an international law authority which would have the right and power to make, interpret, administer and enforce the law—base their theories on the assumption that a world community already exists, or has the potential to exist, Prof. Harris said.
PROF. HARRIS QUESTIONED whether such a community exists "in actuality or in potentiality, and if it
does, what would conditions be for its organization in practice."
Such a system of laws would regulate the relations between the activities of individual members of a world-wide community, rather than a plurality of communities of sovereign states, Prof. Harris said.
The system would be objective to everybody and would approximate the idea of natural law, "derived from the rational nature and purposes of the human race," he said.
But Prof. Harris said that the theory of "legal monism" does not "dispose finally of philosophical problems concerning the possibility of an ultimate objective standard of law and morals."
IT DOES, however, "provide a workable notion of a law, universal and valid for all mankind," he added.
Prof. Harris examined the ideas of several legal thinkers who advocate "legal monism."
Such theories, he said, "tend to give a definition of law which divorces it from political factors and makes it anterior to them."
A legal order is defined differently by each theorist of legal monism, Prof. Harris said, but they all seem to agree that "it is not dependent upon will or interest and so is prior to the form of the state or the assumption of power by a sovereign."
"IN THIS TYPE of theory," he added, "sovereignty is not regarded as a source of law and has no real legal status at all."
"Humanity, for this view of law," he continued, "is always taken in some sense, to constitute a single
A Rock Is Worth 1,000 Words
By Linda Ellis
To many children all over Kansas and the United States KU means Mrs. Grace Muilenberg.
Mrs. Muilenberg works with the Kansas Geological Survey and among her varied duties she has the responsibility for answering letters from children who want information concerning the soil, climate, topography and minerals of Kansas.
Letters arrive each day from California, Massachusetts, New York City and New Jersey from children requesting samples of chalk, Kansas rocks, or soil samples. Each letter gets a prompt, personal reply from Mrs. Mullenberg or one of her secretaries. Requests are filled when it is possible and each letter and the response is filed according to the year and the alphabet.
MRS. MUILENBERG says the children receive her address from their teachers, various chambers of commerce, state offices of the Departments of the Interior and other groups.
groups. Letters sent to the governor's office in Topeka are sent to Mrs. Mullenberg as are those sent to the Chamber of Commerce in Kansas City, and the Department of the
Interior in Topeka. They often are routed through several other agencies before they finally arrive in Mrs. Muilenberg's office.
Children as young as eight years old write to the office asking for small rocks and soil samples. Some of them are barely able to write and their requests are often simple and sincere. All of those who write are interested in learning something about Kansas.
ONE SMALL girl from the Bronx in New York wrote a barely legible note requesting the "most popular rock in Kansas." She drew an irregular circle on a piece of brown paper to indicate the exact size of the rock she wanted.
Another small girl started writing to the Geological Survey office about three years ago. She orginally wrote asking for a piece of rock and when she received an answer she wrote back again. She became familiar to the secretaries in the office and at one time even sent her picture in a letter.
The child kept writing to the office because she said "you are the only governor who has ever answered my letters." She first wrote to the governor of Kansas and her letter was forwarded to the office in
Lawrence. Since the time she received her first reply she has thought she was corresponding with the governor and addressed her letters: "Dear Governor, Mrs. Muiilenberg."
IN ADDITION to the letters she receives from school children Mrs. Muilenberg gets requests from teachers, housewives and other educators for information about the state. Every teacher who requests it receives a free box of 20 rock specimens from Kansas plus literature that goes with it.
The specimens included in the boxes are collected by geology instructors and students in the geology department who go out in the field for various projects. Each one brings back samples to be enclosed in the free boxes. The boxes are prepared and leaflets are printed with information about each rock. All of the information enclosed in the boxes is paid for by the State of Kansas and is given free to anyone who wants it.
MRS. MUILENBERG writes and edits most of the literature that is sent out. She does her own research and puts the booklets together.
Answering the letters is a small but vital part of the work done by the Kansas Geological Survey.
President Lives In Goldfish Bowl, Watched By All Eyes of the World
By Alvin Spivak
WASHINGTON —(UPI)— With the eyes of the world focused on him, it is next to impossible for a President to have much privacy.
Except in the well-guarded confines of the White House or behind other doors barred to outsiders, a President is someone for the public to see.
In campaign years, particularly,
e President likes to be seen.
BUT COMPLICATIONS arise—aside from the obvious ones of security—when a President insists upon privacy in the midst of a crowd.
The latest case in point is President Johnson's desire to avoid publicity, or perhaps more particularly the presence of the press, when he attends church or non-official social functions.
Despite extreme measures to divert, delude and discourage newsmen, word can hardly help getting out when Johnson goes to a downtown church packed with 1,500 worshippers or when he attends a party with hundreds of Texans in a centrally located Washington hotel.
That was what happened last Sunday, and is an example of what has been happening over recent weeks. The President's view has been that his religious worship is a private matter, and that his few chances for social relaxation should not be burdened by news coverage.
IN CONFLICT WITH this understandable viewpoint is the fact that Johnson, to paraphrase his own words, is "the only President we got." And when he is exposed to public view, whether in a church full of people or a hotel banquet hall, reporters and cameramen want to be on hand to
record his activities and maintain protective coverage should anything unexpected occur.
To throw newsmen off the track in several trips to private parties and receptions, Johnson has foregone the police motorcycle escort otherwise insisted upon by the Secret Service. The usual uniformed police guards outside the churches he attends were dispensed with when he went to services last Sunday and secret servicemen acted as if he had no plans to leave the White House.
The effect in a case like this—even though the size of crowds is reduced by a lack of advance notice—is to make the Secret Service's job of protecting Johnson more difficult when a passing throng does catch on to where he is.
AS FOR THE Texas State Society party that Johnson visited after church on Sunday, word had gone out from some of its members a day in advance that Johnson might be coming—even though White House secrecy was such that one Secret Service agent asserted "my lips are zippered."
In his first couple of months as President, Johnson went out of his way to make known as many of his activities as possible, official and unofficial. He wanted to assure the American public—shocked by the assassination of President John F. Kennedy—that a new Chief Executive had firm hold of the governmental reins and that even the gravest tragedy could not interrupt the flow of government.
There's only a reduced force of security personnel to cope with the onlookers.
Kennedy, too, when he was new
in office, permitted many details of his activities to be made known—including his church attendance, subject to a request to newsmen not to advertise the locale in advance.
But Kennedy later got irked about having his personal activities tracked. And Johnson is showing the same tendency. Which proves, if nothing else, the obvious point that even presidents are human.
With the exception of one, all the legal thinkers Prof. Harris discussed considered the universal legal system to be explicitly the law of the universal community. He added that the world community is, "as yet, relatively unorganized."
community to which the universal system of law corresponds."
"The organization of the world community," he said, "is assumed to be progressing and is taken to be both desirable and necessary for the adequate establishment of the rule of law in international relations throughout the world."
"It is anticipated," he continued, "that this process will result in the establishment of institutions with world-wide jurisdiction, the establishment, in short, of a world state."
This conclusion is common to all theories of legal monism, Prof. Harris said, "and the rehabilitation of the idea of sovereignty transferred to the world community, is obviously implied in it."
"The implication is uncongenial to several of the exponents of the theory, and they are to avoid it, but none with consistency or success," he concluded.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 6, 1964
Page 7
Around Campus
'Criticism Helped Ball'
Recent criticism of the Military Ball as an inducement to join the ROTC has not lowered enthusiasm for the ball, John Wettack, publicity chairman, said. He added that the comments made gave the ball more publicity than anything he could have done.
The Ball will be held today at 8:30 p.m. in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union.
Members of Scabbard and Blade have been working for two months organizing the Ball which was scheduled for Dec. 6, but due to the 30-day mourning period for President Kennedy, postponed.
The Airmen of Note, the Official Air Force Band, will be featured. Other attractions include the crowning of the queen by Chancellor Wescoe.
Two candidates for queen were chosen by each branch of the ROTC. They will be interviewed during the ball by the 5 judges.
Eight undefeated teams will battle for first place in the KU College Bowl Sunday. The winner will represent KU in the Big Eight College Bowl later this year.
The four-man teams have competed successfully against three of the 32 teams entered in the preliminary rounds.
They are; Cathy Burgstrom, Pi Beta Phi; Cindy Dickson, Pi Beta Phi; Judy Fraser, Sigma Kappa; Linda Machin, Pi Beta Phi; Sharon Rogers, Hashinger; and Karen Swartz, Delta Delta Delta.
College Bowl in Finals
The teams are asked questions concerning literature, philosophy, science, history, music, current events and mythology in the question-and-answer contest similar to the college bowl television show.
The undefeated teams represent Alpha Kappa Lambda and Delta Tau Delta social fraternities, Stephenson, Joliffe, Battenfeld, Templin, and Pearson Men's Residence Halls, and Prose, unaffiliated men.
Debaters in Minnesota
Four KU debaters will travel to the St. Paul-Minneapolis area this weekend to participate in the Northeast Debate Tournament at St. Thomas College.
Making the trip will be Margaret Miller. Red Wing, Minn., sophomore; Louis Floyd, Topeka freshman; Fred Kauffeld, Minneapolis, Minn., senior, and Laurelee Milberg, Arlington, Va., senior.
The teams will participate with about 70 other debate teams from across the country. Debate coach Wilmer Linkugel will accompany the teams.
"Can Foreign Aid Help?" will be discussed at 4:30 p.m. today in the Music Room of the Kansas Union.
Guest speakers will be Norman Jacobs, associate professor of sociology and anthropology and the East Asian Area, and Frank King, associate professor of economics and the East Asian area.
Talk on Foreign Aid
1
OLD vs. NEW—If the Old Pioneer would look Hall nearing completion. (Photo by Charles up from his work he would find the new Blake Corcoran)
Official Bulletin
**Foreign Students:** All students who have income from KU (employment, education), or from Mrs. Conard, 131 Strong Hall, immediately. Concerns new_income tax law.
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Vance Packard, social critic & author (Hidden Persuaders, Waste Makers, Status Seekers, Pyramid Climbers), will speak on "What's Happening to the American Character?" March 11 Hoch Auditorium 8 p.m. Sponsored by SUA ASC
Reception for Mr. Packard in the Jayhawk Room of the Union following the speech
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 6, 1964
A
HARRY GIBSON These two seniors . . .
ISA
20
BUDDY VANCE .. to play last KU game.
The slightly off key
fury's
present
wholesome entertainment for the liberal minded student. We also play a little music.
SAT., MARCH 7 at the
DINE-A-MITE
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Jayhawk Cagers Slate Last Game
Two members of the Jayhawker basketball team will play their last collegiate game Saturday night in Allen Field House.
Senior Harry Gibson and Buddy Vance will bow out of competition as the Jayhawks meet Oklahoma State. Tipoff time is 7:35 p.m.
The 1964 Big Eight championship has, of course, already been claimed by Kansas State. But there is ample incentive for both the Jayhawks and the Oklahoma team.
BY WINNING, KU can assure at least a share of third place in the final conference standings and come out with a 500-plus overall record of 13-12.
The Jayhawks' 73-71 overtime victory over Colorado here Monday lifted them into sole possession of third for a day. Missouri grabbed a share of the position Tuesday with a 74-60 win over Iowa State at Columbia.
Both teams trail Colorado (7-5) by a half-game, with Oklahoma State another half-length back in fifth at 6-6.
KU will also be looking to break O-State's four-game victory string in Lawrence. Not since 1959, when the Jayhawks scored a 58-49 triumph, have they tripped Hank Iba's trump, have Allen Field House.
Furthermore, the cowboys won a 52-50 overtime game here in 1958, which means they've won five of six here since they became members of the Big Eight Conference.
OKLAHOMA STATE, of course, has the same first-division designs as does KU. By winning this one, and their finale against arch-rival Oklahoma, the Cowboys could clinch nothing less than a third-place tie, thus matching their conference high-water mark of three seasons back.
Of equal importance is Iba's quest for his 700th collegiate coaching victory, a feat which would place him in the rare circle with his former KU antagonist, Phog Allen, whose 771 wins is still high in basketball history.
Coach Dick Harp said last night he felt encouraged about KU's chances of beating O-State.
"If we can continue," Coach Harp said, "to have the same sort of floor leadership as David Schichteg gave us against Colorado, I have to feel encouraged about our chances against Oklahoma State."
WHEN ASKED TO explain the recent surge in the fortunes of the KU cagers, Coach Harp said the
upswing was a difficult thing to explain.
"It's a hard question to answer," Coach Harp said, "I guess you'd have to say its a combination of effort and efficiency.
"Our Nebraska game (64-55) was good mechanically. (KU committed only five fouls and eight ball handling errors, made 18-20 free throws and shot 41 per cent from the field.) But we got beaten badly on the backboards which is a reflection of effort.
"Id say the Colorado game (KU won-73-71 in overtime) was our best game of the year for combined efficiency and effort.
"I understand their new boy, David Wright, is a fine backcourt player and Gene Johnson has improved at center. They beat us twice this year before they had Wright and when we had all our boys. Too, they have come out of their slump and played real well the last two games. You can see that we have a job on our hands," Coach Harp said.
Harp said a winning team is made up of a number of parts.
"It's made up of many things, but primarily self-discipline. Too, we played well on defense in both games." Coach Harp said.
"I just hope," Coach Harp said, "that we can follow the pattern we established in the Nebraska and Colorado games.
Gymnastics Team To End Season
The KU gymnastics team will end its home season at 2 p.m. Saturday in Robinson Gymnasium in a dual meet with Fort Hays State College.
The KU team has a 3-6 record for the season.
Steak Dinner
Sunday Nites
$1.25
4:30 - 10:30
DINE-A-MITE
23rd & La.
Depoters in town
ENJOY DRIVING WITH A TUNE UP from JACK AND GUNN'S SKELLY SERVICE 300 W 6th
★ ENGINE TUNE-UP
★ GENERATOR & STARTER REPAIR
★ BRAKE REPAIR
★ LUBRICATION & OIL CHANGE
Friday, March 6, 1964
University Daily Kansan
Page 9
M. R. H. Y. C. R. M. B. E. M. B. E. M. B. E. M. B. E. M. B. E. M. B. E. M. B. E. M. B. E. M. B. E. M. B. E. M. B. E. M. B. E. M. B. E. M. B. E. M. B. E. M. B. E. M. B. E.
CANDIDATES FOR AWS SENATE—Top from left: Paula Dickens, Sharon Anderson, Joy Long, Pat Goering, Carolyn Brewster, Spring Stidham, Jill Kleinberg, Sharon Stalcup, Lynn Berg, and Carol McMahan. Middle from left: Wendy Fisher, Jayne Loyd, Anne Shontz, Joan Fowler, Sherri Whitcher, Viviam
Williams, Mary Lynn Schwentker, and Mary Lasley. Bottom from left: Ann Peterson, Cheris Shelton, Janet Phelps, Jane Speirs, Donna Hunt, Jill Newburg, Claudia Reeder, and Susan Hartley.
AWS Examines Female Morals Conducts Campus-Wide Survey
KU women are being asked to consider moral rights and wrongs by the Rules of Women committee of AWS.
The committee this week is administering a survey consisting of 64 hypothetical situations which require answers of morally and ethically right, generally acceptable.
generally unacceptable and morally and ethically wrong.
WOMEN ARE ASKED to answer the 64-question survey as to what is morally right or wrong to them personally, and not to society as a whole.
The answer sheets are anonymous except for the year of graduation.
Volleyball, Table Tennis Plaved by KU Women
By Susan Hartley
Judy Cordonier, Kansas City freshman, won the women's intramural table tennis championship Wednesday night by defeating Ann Peterson, Shawne Mission sophomore 21-10 and 21-8 in the final round of play.
Twenty-one girls participated in the single elimination tournament sponsored by the Women's Recreation Association, Carolyn Guy, Lawrence sophomore and tournament champion, said.
Women's intramural volleyball competition moves into the fourth round of play next week with eight teams remaining in the single elimination tournament.
In Tuesday night's action, Alpha
Delta Pi won over GSP (1E) 2-1 and GSP (2W) defeated Delta Delta Delta also by a score of 2-1. Pi Beta Phi won over Watkins 2-0, and Hashinger defeated Kappa Kappa Gamma 2-0.
In other action, GSP (3E) won over Corbin 2-0, GSP (4W) defeated Douthart 2-0, and Kappa Alpha Theta defeated Carruth O'Leary 2-0.
The following teams will meet next Tuesday, March 10:
Hashinger vs GSP (4W)
Kappa Alpha Theta vs Pi Beta Phi
Alpha Delta Pi vs Chi Omega 7:4:
GSP (2W) vs GSP (3E)
The winners of these matches will participate in the semi-final round of the WRA-sponsored tournament.
The general categories of questions and examples are:
- Authority — Feeling resentment for being called before your living group's board of standards.
- RELIGION - CHANGING religious beliefs because of what is presented to you in college classes.
- Sex—engaging in mixed swimming parties in the nude.
- University regulations—Failing to report that a member of your living group has liquor in her room.
- Cultural values—Wearing short shorts in town.
- Dating—Dating a man who has also been dating a member of your living group.
- Patti Behen, Kansas City senior and chairman of the Roles of Women committee, said the survey is to determine moral standards at a midwestern university in comparison to eastern schools such as Vassar.
- Drinking — Drinking to "feel good" at a party.
"WE ARE ESPECIALLY interested in seeing what the women consider to be moral and ethical questions, both right and wrong." Miss Behen said.
Engagements
Cheryl Adams, Union Star, Mo. senior to Bud Anderson, James-town. N.Y. junior.
295 Women Move 32.000 Books
Mrs. Wood said the "bachelor as a cook just doesn't compare to the married man. We can tell almost immediately that a recipe has been submitted by a single man.
Dawn McFee, freshman at Wichita University to Mike Hubbard, Wichita senior.
THIS YEAR, there were 194,000 recipes submitted by 120,000 men, of whom 38 per cent were bachelors and 62 per cent married men, said a spokesman for the potato chip institute international which sponsors the contest.
Mrs. Wood, a nutritionist and food expert, for the last five years has examined and tested thousands of recipes sent in by amateur chefs to the men's national cooking championship.
The 1964 title will be settled at a "cookoff" Feb. 11 at the Americana Hotel in Miami Beach, Fla.
Jane Boyington, Goodland senior to Robert Moore, Meade junior.
There was a day when a woman being in a library was looked upon as ridiculous. Many thought women shouldn't have to use their brains.
"It usually has some kind of wine in it as an ingredient. The bachelor has gathered that wine cooking is gourmet cooking.
Mrs. Wood said every one of the men's national cooking championships has gone to married men. And in the last five years, only nine of the state championships which precede the national have been won by bachelors.
IT WOULD seem, she indicates, the only hope for the bachelor is to get married so he will have an "established" kitchen at his disposal.
And the sheer thought of women being able to use their muscles was absurdity.
Madonna Obermueller, Westfall senior to James Head, Des Moines. la. senior.
The girls, volunteers from all the organized houses, worked in three two-hour shifts for four days.
Not so now. KU women used both a couple of weeks ago. 295 women moved a total of 32,000 volumes into the new stack areas of the library.
Mrs. Wood said that on the whole men are becoming better cooks each year, based on recipes she combs through. There also must be more men cooking; the number entering the contest grows each year anyway.
NEW YORK—(UPI)—Bachelors are lousy cooks, says Marni Wood. And if anyone should know, she should.
The project was sponsored and organized by the service committee
"And it is sort of a hurry up, recipe—almost inevitably a man living alone doesn't cook at all or cooks in a hurry. Of course, there are exceptions. The true gourmet, a rare breed."
"HE IS likely to overseason."
Bachelors Can't Cook
Miss Devore said 590 hours were devoted to moving the books. She said most of the English and American literature sections, all of the philosophy and psychology volumes and several of the history sets were moved from the old stack areas to the newly-completed one.
of the AWS House of Representatives.
Pinnings
The women dusted the books and shelves and re-adjusted the height of the shelves before the books were actually moved to the new sites.
Jewelda Devore, Belleville sophomore and chairman of the service committee, said the library staff assistants instructed the women on the proper places for the moving books.
Nancy Sramek, Oswego freshman,
to Glen Barnard, Oswego sophomore,
Tau Kappa Epsilon.
Kay Lutjen, Des Moines, Ia. sophomore, Kappa Kappa Gamma, to Clay Blair, Joplin, Mo. sophomore, Phi Delta Theta
Un-Military Ball
Herb Smith Quartet and "The Student's Favorite Beverage"
Saturday, March 7 8:00 p.m. 1420 Ohio
Contribution: $1.00 per person $1.75 per couple
2. 1.3.1n8.2
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Friday, March 6, 1964
240 bwf80052
Facts Show How JFK Death Shook Americans
CHICAGO,—(UPI) —In cold percentages, statisticians told today how the assassination of President Kennedy burned into the nation's heart.
The statisticians, concluding a long study of reaction to the Nov. 22 tragedy, found that:
- Nine out of 10 Americans responded immediately with marked emotion to the assassination.
- Nine out of 10 expressed immediate sympathy for Mrs. Kennedy and the children.
- Four out of five "felt deeply the loss of someone very close and dear."
- Nine out of 10 suffered some physical discomfort during the four days following the slaying.
days following his death. • Five out of six felt "shame that such a thing could happen in our country."
The study was made by the National Opinion Research Center, an affiliate of the University of Chi
cago. Prof. Peter H. Rossi, director of the center, said never before "have modern techniques in the behavioral sciences been available to provide a reliable analysis of an event of such historical importance so quickly."
The report was based on personal interviews with 1,384 persons, considered to be a representative national sample.
"Frobably never before were the sentiments of the American public engaged so quickly and deeply by a political happening," the report said.
"THE NETWORKS OF mass communications and personal contact spread the news with a speed which was in all likelihood unprecedented and, instantaneously, public attention turned away from everyday personal concerns to the details and meaning of the improbable event," the report said.
In less than 30 minutes after the shooting, the report said, 68 per cent of adult Americans knew about it. Five and a half hours later the percentage rose to 99.8.
The researchers compared their findings with previous studies and concluded that the assassination had not changed the basic views of Americans toward the world around them.
"Three out of four still believe most people can be trusted," the report said. "Only two out of five expressed fears about how the United States would carry on."
Among "important findings" listed in the report were that the assassination saddened virtually every American, that there was a strong tendency to personify the event, and that most people followed the usual pattern of grief familiar to physicians.
THIS GRIEF PATTERN, the re-
Mrs. King Reveals
All Negros, Whites Concern King
ATLANTA —(UPI) —Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., has been concerned for "the common man and not just the Negro" as long as she has known him, his wife said today.
"When I first met him, he talked about this concern for the common man and about wanting to do something to correct the evils," the wife of the Negro integration leader said in an interview.
Since their marriage ten years ago, life has been filled with apprehension and excitement, children and — she admits — some twinges of jealousy that her husband lands in jail for his beliefs while she stays at home to care for their four youngsters.
The Kings had their first child two weeks before the outbreak of the 1955 Montgomery, Ala., bus boycott that started the young Negro preacher on his rapid rise.
"HE ALWAYS SAYS, you have to stay at home and look after the children, and I suppose he's right," she laughed.
Yolanda, the oldest child who is known in the family as "Yoki", was just an infant when a bomb went off in the King home at Montgomery. She remembers crosses burning in the yard and for a year or so has noticed the
Nurses Present Old West Play
Christine K. and her British Bunnies will be featured in the 13th annual production of Caduceus Capers.
The musical production is presented every year by the student nurses at the KU Medical Center. This year's play, "Buckskin and Bows," featuring Christine and the Bunnies, will be presented at 8 p.m. tonight and tomorrow at Battenfeld Auditorium in the Student Union of the Medical Center, at Rainbow and Olathe Boulevard in Kansas City.
"Buckskin and Bows" is set in the Old West. The plot recounts the story of girls from the East who track to the West looking for adventure and excitement. Undaunted, when their train derails and they lose their chaperons, the young ladies march on to Possum Trot.
However, on reaching their destination, the girls are forced to eat in a saloon, where they are confronted with the "crudeness" of Western girls.
Today, the production replaces the carnival as the primary moneymaking project of the student nurses.
The present-day musical production evolved from a series of skits which were presented by the nurses at their annual carnival.
Caduceus in the title of the show refers to the staff which was carried by the mythological figure, Hermes, and is now the symbol of the medical profession.
Tickets for the event cost $1.00 and can be purchased from any student nurses or bought at the door.
irregular home schedule of her father.
"She started asking why we are different and why white people don't like us," Mrs. King said. "I tried to tell her that most white people don't dislike Negroes, only some. And I would tell her that her father was trying to help relieve problems for all people. But Yoki is still the least secure of the children."
KING'S WIFE IS deeply committed to the struggle he is in, including its non-violent aspects.
"I had gone to Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio, where I had been exposed to pacifism and Quakerism," she recalled. "I had heard about Gandi (the Mahatma of India whose nonviolent revolution led to independence) and I remember that someone came to the college and lectured on the Indian struggle.
"We also had some conscientious objectors on the campus and it was integrated by the time I went there. My sister was the first Negro to attend. I had lived in that kind of a setting about six years before I met Martin."
She recalled that he told her he would return South "because that is where I can do the most good." As their courtship flowered she decided to give up ideas of a concert career and marry him.
She said they both had a strong "social consciousness" and that King did not think it was "fair or right for so much of the material things to be concentrated and owned by such a few people."
"He could never embrace communism but he felt that there could be a more equitable distribution of wealth in the country under our present system," she said.
it did not affect their attitudes toward civil rights, nor did it erode their basic optimism about other people's motives," the researchers said.
The report said that shortly after the assassination the nation lay vulnerable to violent appeals but that "no responsible leader took advantage" of the situation.
A world of strange places and moralities...in the most different and touching love story of our time!
The report added that while relatively few Americans condone political violence, they are not unaware of its past occurrence or its future possibility."
WILLIAM HOLDEN
in Ray Stark's
THE WORLD OF
SUZIE
WONG
Casting
NANCY KWAN
as SUZIE WONG
- SYLVIA SYMS • MICHAEL WILDING TECHNICOLOR
Plus Cartoon
35c
Feature Times: 7 & 9:30 p.m.
Fraser Theater
FRIDAY FLICKS
port said, consisted of an initial phase of shock; a developing awareness of the loss coupled with feelings of sadness, sorrow, shame and anger; the onset of physical symptoms such as tears, tenseness, sleeplessness, fatigue and loss of appetite; and, finally, a gradual recovery.
The report said that shortly after the assassination "only 11 per cent hoped the man who killed him should be shot down or lynched."
"The assassination of their president did not seem to make (Americans) more or less anti-communist,
LATIN AMERICAN NIGHT
COMO CARABI
International Club Saturday, March 7, 7:30 p.m. Big Eight Room
A SHATTERING ENTERTAINMENT EXPERIENCE!
A SHATTERING ENTERTAINMENT EXPERIENCE!
MELINA
JEANNE
ROSANNA
ROMY
ELAE
SENTA
I
A SHATTERING ENTERTAINMENT EXPERIENCE!
MELINA MERCOURI JEANNE MOREAU ROSANNA SCHIAFFINO ROMY SCHNEIDER ELKE SOMMER SENTA BERGER
Explosive... with THE SIX MOST EXCITING WOMEN IN THE WORLD!
CARL FOREMAN'S
THE VICTORS
From the man who fired "The Guns of Navarone".
starring VINCENT EDWARDS · FINNEY · HAMILTON · MERCOURI · MOREAU
GEORGE PEPPARD · ROMY SCHNEIDER · ROSANNA SCHIAFFINO · ELKE SOMMER
ELI WALLACH · CALLAN · FONDA · JAMES MITCHUM · SENTA BERGER
and MICHAEL oo-starring PETER
as ELDRIOGE
Starts TOMORROW!
CONT. SAT. & SUN.
SHOWS 1:15 - 4:40 - 8:05
Granada
THEATRE ...Telephone VI 3-5788
Explosive... with THE SIX MOST EXCITING WOMEN IN THE WORLD!
CARL FOREMAN'S
THE VICTORS
From the man who fired "The Guns of Navarone".
1234567890
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5783
Ends Tonite — "SUNDAY IN NEW YORK" 7:00 & 9:10
What a wonderful
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1045
NOW SHOWING!
ONE man's way The Story of NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
STARRING
DON MURRAY
CO STARRING
WILLIAM WINDOM
CAROL OHMART
Eve. 7:00 & 9:00 Mats. at 2:00
Sun. 2:30 - 4:40 - 6:50 - 9:00
SOON — "DR. STRANGE LOVE"
Classified Ads
FOR SALE
Used 3 speed Schwinn bikes. One lady's,
one man's. Both cut to $25. Ray Stoneback's,
$99 Mass. (New 3 speed Royce
Union in crate, $38.99.) 3-12
1957 MGA, red with white hardtop, wire wheels, new convertible top. Radio, heatter, seat belts. Excellent condition, $800. Call Jack Hibler, VI 2-0443. 3-12
For quality used parts see Benson's Auto
Salvage. 1902 Harper, North of 4-H
grounds. Phone VI 3-1626. Open evenings.
3-11
The latest and greatest in sound! Tran
sistored 4 track stereo tape deck for
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4838.
3-1
1957 Corvette grill, adapted for 1957 Chevy. Black canvas boot for 1957 Chevy. Blue leather top for 1957 Call David Hiebert, VI 3-1711 or Tony Warren, VI 2-2910.
G.E. 11" personable portable TV, Deluxe,
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at 6 p.m. 3-6
1953 Plymouth, excellent mechanical
5 and 7 p.m.
Call VI 2-2575 between
3-6
Springtime bargain. Vespa Motor Scooter with windshield, buddy seat, luggage carrier, and spare tire. $125. Call Robbie at Ext. 3055 or VI 3-6134. 3-6
Books, over 1100 on dozens of subjects.
Stonehene Book Stall, 1539 Tenn. (behind ATO house). Hours: Noon to midnight. Mon. thru Sat. 3-9
1959 Renault. $295.00. Phone VI 3-5139
after 5.30. tf
1956 Chevy, blue and white, top shape. Recently overhaulied. New tires, seat covers, excellent air conditioners. Used to trade. Very reasonable Bob Swan, VI 3-4711 after 5 p.m. 3-6
Page 11
For sale or trade, pistols, rifles, ammo,
drafting equipment, slide-rules, English
bicycles, lanterns, musical instruments
will trade for anything. Call VI 3-110
3-113
Tire prices slashed! Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center at 929 Mass. 36 mo nylon tubeless tires. Four 650 x 13" $40.
Four 750 x 14" $45, Four 670 x 15" $45.
Four 800 x 14" $50. Plus tax, exchange, installed! 4 whitewalls, $8 extra. 3-26
New 16" lightweight portable TV, $39.
1 year guarantee on parts! Rent or buy,
$12 per month. Ray Stoneback's, 929
Mass. (Motorola Headquarters). 3-26
Typewriter, new and used portables,
Typewriter, new and used portables,
Olivett, Royal and Smith Corona portables.
Typewriter, adder, rentals and service
ence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St.
913-3-8444
For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3-
9040 after 5 p.m. tf
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS. Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale at great savings after 6 p.m. week days; Saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut St.
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
Camper $-35, Lawrence Outdoor.
1005 Mass
German Sheepherp AKC registered
Lloyd Brasfield, Lloyd Brasfield,
sheisen. Phone KI 2-2539. Bf
tt
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive outlining of chapters and classes. Formally known as the Theta notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50.
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
FOR RENT
A large sleeping and study room for
the students. It is located. Call VI 3-4890, 1250 La. 3-10
Vacancies for young men in contemporary home. Large swimming pool. Private event venue. 5 meals per week $75 per 5 monthUtilities paid.Call V1 3-9635.3-11
Need male student to share apartment for rest of semester. Second floor, 540 Building entrance, off street parked Call in person. Apt. 2 or cal V3- 3566 after 6 p.m.
2 rooms for rent. Girls only. See at 1242
Louisiana.
3-10
3 bedroom home with attached garage.
Nice yard with patio. Available on or before March 15. West 20th Terr. Call VI 2-3416. 3-10
Large 3-bedroom ranch home, practically new wall-to-wall carpet, air condition-
tion, TV, antenna and attached garage.
Available about March 15. Call Vivian
2-3146.
Attractive 3-room furnished basement apartment. Private Bath and entrance. $55 per mo. 736 N. 3rd. Phone VI 3-4721.
Married, grad students, faculty, 2 bedroom, $75. Sleeping room, $25. 16 avail chure, VI 3-2116. Sneeze App. for bureh, VI 3-2116. Sneeze App. for bureh, 1123 Indiana. tf
For one or two graduate age men, three room nicely furnished apt., private bath. Bedroom with desk and chair. Ideal study conditions. Best of neighbors. For appointment phone VI 3-8534. ff
Crescent Heights two bedroom apart-
ment, 25th and Redbud.
Phone VI 2-5711.
Graduate men or older undergraduates— Close to campus, ideal study conditions. best of neighbors. Reasonably priced paid. For appointment call **3-8554**. V
TYPING
Furnished, clean, three-room apartment
Near IHQ, Side entrance. Ndrinking: 311 Ohio.
experienced secretary would like typing
her home. Reasonable rates. Call VI if
1188
Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (pica type) Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0558.
Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work stands forrd pattls. Phone VI 3-8379. Charles ttf Patti.
Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason- sentations, paper themed sertations and theses, phone VI 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson.
Accurate expert typist would like typing
Prompt service. Call VI T-3-2651.
Prompt service. Call VI T-3-2651.
Experienced Typist—Dissertations. Theses. Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 Rhode Island. VI 3-7485. tf
Professional typing by experienced secretary.
New electric typewriter, carbon
printer, fax machine.
VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley. 408 West 13th **+**
Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. **tf**
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
Legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577.
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2047 Yale, VI 2-1648.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers and memoirs. Electronic print rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568 tfr
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols machines; 35 special symbols for diagnostic service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-3057. ff
MILLIKENES SOS—always first quality
typing on LB.M. Carbon ribbon machines
tape transcriptions. Office
hours 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. i2-101. Malfast.
Phone VI 3-5920
FRATERNITY JEWELRY
A. complete line, including,
• Lavallers
• Pins
• Rings
● Guards
● Mugs
● Crests
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
IT'S OK TO OWE RAY
809 Mass.
One Stop Service
the KANASA FREE PRESS, the fighting liberal student newsletter at K.U., hair articles on nearly all subjects plus regular features. Current press run over seven hundred. Free sample copy. 14011 $ _{2}$ New York or call VI 3-8352. 3-12
★ Lubrication & Oil Change
Tutoring in all math classes from Math 2 to Math 23 by experienced instructor. Reasonable rates. Call VI 2-1424 after 6 p.m. for appointment. 3-6
MISCELLANEOUS
★ Engine Tune Up
★ Generator & Starter Repair
Brake Repair
WANTED
SKELLY
Have a party in the Big Red School
and plant and plan
Heated. Call VI 3-7455.
SKELLY SERVICE
300 W. 6th
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
Ride to Ft. Lauderdale, Daytona, or Miami Beach, Fla. Leave April 3. Help with expenses and driving. Call VI. 9368 or write J.P. 1703 W. 24th. Apt. (1).
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
JACK & GUNN'S
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
Rock and Roll Singer. Male or female
Prefer someone able to play piano, sax,
or rhythm guitar, but not essential. Call
Larry Breeden. VI 3-8544. 3-6
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign colns, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. ti
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
VOLKSWAGEN' WANTED. Cash for your VW, Conzelman Motors, VW Sales Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway 58 So.
tt
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
Business Directory
24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled
Tops — Glass & Zippers —
Tops — Glass & Zippers
Rear Glasses — Door lines —
Door Panels —
★ TUNE-UPS
YELLOW CAB CO.
VI 3-6333
VI 3-9271
ART'S TEXACO
9th & Mississippi
VI 3-9897
OPEN 24 hrs. a day
Tallor Made Seat Covers at Competitive Prices with sewed double lock stitch.
Jack's Seat Covers
545 Minn. VI 3-4242
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
838 Mass.
JIM'S CAFE
7,000 Pipes and every smoking accessory
Friday, March 6.1964
George's Pipe Shop
One Post Versalog slide rate, rule in the
Reward Call VI 2-1298 after 10 p.m. 3:54
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 6, 1964
World News Briefs
King Paul Dies; Son Takes Throne
ATHENS—(UPI)—King Paul I, whose courage and leadership helped beat back a Communist bid to seize Greece after World War II. died today in Tatoi Palace. He was 62.
Constantine, Paul's 23-year-old son, was to be sworn in as King almost immediately.
Paul lost his struggle for life after an operation for a serious stomach ulcer Feb. 21.
A brief rally followed the four-hour operation. But the King's condition steadily deteriorated until it became apparent that it was only a question of time before the end.
An official announcement from the palace said the King died at 4:25 p.m. (9:25 a.m. EST).
A medical bulletin this morning had reported a "very slight improvement" in the King's condition, reportedly because of an improvement in the functioning of his kidneys.
But three hours later, the improvement reversed itself, palace sources said, and the King entered the last hours of his life.
WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Gen. Douglas MacArthur underwent surgery today to determine if he has cancer. Army Surgeon General Leonard Heaton said the old soldier faced the admittedly dangerous operation in good spirits.
The abdominal operation was conducted at Walter Reed Hospital after tests disclosed that the 84-year-old military hero had an "obstructive jaundice of unknown origin"—which could be caused by cancer.
DALLAS—(UPI)—The prosecution drove toward a finale today in its attempt to show Jack Ruby was a sane killer who planned in advance to slay accused assassin Lee Harvey Oswald.
Such a case could qualify murder with malice, punishable by death in Texas. The defense was expected to lodge a strong insanity plea later in the day.
Two or three motion pictures of the Nov. 24 shooting and "a few" witnesses were planned today by the state, which hoped to complete its case by noon.
Three police officers testified yesterday for a total of 17 state witnesses during two days.
JACKSON, Miss.—(UPI) The 1871 charter of Tougaloo College says it is "to be accessible to all, irrespective of their religious tenets, and conducted on the most liberal principles. . . ."
The state legislature, in which many lawmakers feel the charter has been carried out much too fully in racial matters, soon will take up a bill to revoke the charter of the biracial liberal arts college.
State officials said legislative action would come following an investigation of the charges, and passage was considered probable.
NICOSIA, Cyprus—(UPI)—President Archbishop Makarios today ordered his Greek Cypriot followers to release their Turkish Cypriot prisoners to "relax tension" on this embattled island.
The move came as new fighting flared in the Northern Kyrenia region, threatening to torpedo the shaky truce, even before a United Nations peace force arrives for police duty.
1
James H. Johnston
IFC Elects New Leader
James H. Johnston, Independence, Mo., senior and a member of Phi Delta Theta, was elected president of the Interfraternity Council last night.
Johnston served on the Interfraternity Pledge Council as a freshman, and worked on the IFC Greek Week committee as a sophomore.
He has been serving this year as a member of the IFC executive council, and is co-chairman of Greek Week committee. He also is vice-president of Phi Delta Theta.
Other officers elected last night were Clark R. Mandigo, Kansas City sophomore, Sigma Chi, vice-president of Interfraternity Affairs; Robert E. Winn, Leawood sophomore, Phi Kappa Psi, vice-president of fraternity rush; Charles F. Lanning, Lawrence junior, Phi Gamma Delta, secretary; Byron C. Louden, Kansas City junior, Delta Tau Delta, treasurer.
Worm Research BringsUSGrant
William H. Coil, assistant professor of zoology, has received a renewal grant of $2,216 for his second year of research on reproduction in an unusual group of tapeworms that live in birds.
The grant was made by the Allergy and Infectious Diseases Institute of the United States Public Health Service, which also has allocated funds for the third and fourth years on the project.
Native of Viet Nam—
"They say they are not Communists, but that they have a different name and different aims than the Communists. They call themselves the "Front of Liberty," she said.
(Continued from page 1)
COMMENTING ON AMERICA'S role in the Viet Nam warfare, Mrs. Oanh said, "Remember, President Kennedy announced many times that we must keep South Viet Nam even though we may lose a lot of people.
"But I think these guerrillas who want to take over the south are Communists just the same. The Communists work in many ways and organize many parties. They are just as dangerous under another name."
"The important reason for the United States to fight is that Viet Nam is the gate to the Southeast Asian countries like Burma, India, and Thailand. The Communists want Viet Nam because they want to spread over Southeast Asia. As your Mr. Johnson says, 'It's a big problem.'"
West, I like freedom very much."
"Now communism is very glorious to the poor people. The villagers don't have enough and they don't understand government and politics. The Communists and the guerrillas talk to them, try to educate them, and, at the same time, make themselves very glorious and powerful.
"AMERICANS SHOULD GET close not only to the government and the army officers, but to the people. The Communists and the guerrillas get close and talk to the people.
Mrs. Oanh does, however, point to some possible changes in U.S. policy in South Viet Nam. "It is difficult because Americans should be closer to the Vietnamese people. The United States should try to get more understanding because now the people have too many ideas and no understanding of them.
She added that the suggested solution of neutralization was impossible. "We couldn't live peacefully. Any neutral country is later taken over by the Communists. Look at the neutral countries around my country.
"Actually they are not sincere, but they are very passionate. So the people believe. The government is far from them and the Communists close."
"America gives a lot of advisers, a lot of money, but doesn't know the people. And the war still goes on.
Why does the war continue?
Mrs. Oanh asked that question without finding an answer.
"They are very close to the Communists. I would like that my country be free and allied with the
"The guerrillas live under ground," she said. "They don't
"Yet the government has soldiers and machine guns, but still can't win. The government talks a lot but . . ."
She does not try to tell what will eventually happen. Instead, she said, "The situation is very bad. Who knows? It just depends on the Vietnamese themselves. If they want to be free, they will fight."
gressman from southeast Fourth Distriet would have to campaign in western Kansas and the rest of the state.
have enough men or enough guns.
She shrugged her shoulders.
(Continued from page 1)
Because of the problems that come to his office and the publicity they bring to his name, Ferguson says he believes that he has "an advantage that none of the other candidates have."
Attorney General-
Sitting on a corner of the speaker's table like a relaxed professor, Ferguson reaffirmed that he believes his prospects for being elected governor are good.
"THE YEAST in the successful dough of a political campaign is publicity." Ferguson said.
He said the "key" to his campaign would be "education."
Most of his address dealt with the two major legal issues of his term as attorney general—legislative reaportionment and obscene literature.
MRS. FERGUSON SAID she had chaultered the attorney general from Topeka because he was fatigued after arguing reapportionment before the Kansas Supreme Court.
Before the address, Harriet Ferguson, the attorney general's wife, said in conversation, "If Bill wins the reapportionment case it will save the state a lot of money," and the governor will not have to call another special session.
Ferguson said he had argued that the court should correct the House's "Prairie Village duplication" because it would not be, in effect, writing unconstitutional legislation, as it had decided in the Senate's "Leawood omission." It would be resolving an ambiguity, Ferguson said.
Furthermore, Ferguson said he had argued that the court would not be correcting a bill the governor did not sign—its second objection to correcting the Senate mistake.
Ferguson also explored the implications of his obscene books case, which is up for review by the U.S. Supreme Court March 20.
"IN THE AREA of censorship the Supreme Court has gone a long, long way to protect first amendment rights," Ferguson said. Ferguson said he believes it has gone too far.
"There is no longer the question of an over-zealous censor seizing books that have any whisper of literary quality." Ferguson said.
The audience laughed when Ferguson asserted he was not after "Playboy Magazine," but he is after "commercial smut peddlers."
IF THE SUPREME COURT decides against Ferguson's arguments he says he fears it will open the door to "hard core pornography" in Kansas.
Ferguson graduated from KU's College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in 1938 and from the Harvard Law School in 1941.
★★
TOPEKA—(UPI)—State officials today nervously waited to see which way the Kansas Supreme Court would jump on the question of correcting an error in the 1964 House of Representatives Reapportionment Act.
State Awaits Action On Reapportionment
The high court yesterday took under advisement a motion by Atty, Gen. William M. Ferguson asking that a mistake in the bill passed in the special session of the legislature be corrected.
As passed and signed by Gov John Anderson, one Johnson County precinct would be placed in two different representative districts.
Question asked by Supreme Court justices yesterday indicated the court might not be unanimously disposed to correcting the error.
Justice Price, however, said the law says in plain language" that the precinct is in two different districts and then asked how the court could be expected to know what the legislature intended.
Ferguson told the court it was "clear" the legislature intended to place the fourth precinct of ward two in Prairie Village in the 13th representative district—and not in both the 13th and 15th.
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Lawrence, Kansas
61st Year, No. 99
Monday. March 9, 1964
ROTC Picks Ball Queen
Linda Machin, Ottawa senior and a member of Pi Beta Phi was crowned queen of the Military Ball Friday night by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe.
SHE WAS CHOSEN queen from a group of five other girls. There were two candidates for each branch of ROTC. The others were, Cynthia Dickson, Leavenworth freshman; Judy Fraser, Larned senior; Sharon Rogers, Prairie Village sophomore; Karen Schwartz, Pratt junior, and Kathy Bergstrom, Kansas City, Mo., junior.
FRIENDSHIP
Members of Scabbard and Blade organized the ball that was originally planned for Dec. 6 but was postponed because of the 30-day mourning period for President Kennedy.
The Airmen of Note, the Official Air Force Band were featured.
MILITARY BALL QUEEN—Linda Machin, Ottawa senior, cries with surprise as she learns she has been chosen 1964 Military Ball Queen. Jerry Pullins, Council Grove senior and Miss Machin's escort, looks on. (Photo by Charles Corcoran.)
Economic Development Regarded As Necessary To Foreign Aid
Rational, self-generating economic development is necessary for foreign aid to accomplish what it set out to do, two professors concluded Friday.
"It is not merely a matter of spending U.S. taxpayer's money, but rather how to achieve the different goals of different countries," Frank H. King, associate professor of economics, told the SUA Current Events Forum.
"WHATEVER THE goal of the foreign aid, it must help to develop the country internally. It is no good to send military aid to a country where a higher standard of living is much more vital than a peace-time army."
The other speaker, Norman G. Jacobs, associate professor of sociology and anthropology, agreed with Prof. King that U.S. foreign aid has produced at least a temporary stability.
"But there must be better working human relations to understand why certain countries are
underdeveloped, and how the political order can be committed to economically rational ends," Prof. Jacobs said.
"The country must create an atmosphere of economic development and sustained growth of the gross national product." Prof. King said, "and foreign aid must be relevant and useful to this end."
Thus certain U.S. products, such as wheat, may not be as much benefit to foreign economics as would be the tools and instruction to grow their own wheat.
"TheSE COUNTRIES must be internally committed to development, and foreign aid must be committed to help the people do what is needed in their particular case," Prof. Jacobs said.
The suggestion of an international program for case study of foreign aid and assistance was mentioned by both professors, who have had experience with the international bank for reconstruction and development in the Far Eastern area.
World News Briefs
Plane Skids Safely
BOSTON—(UPI)A big airliner with 14 persons aboard skidded to a safe landing here early today although its nose wheel was locked in a retracted position because of a mechanical failure. No one was injured.
The Trans World Airlines (TWA) four-engine constellation nosed down at 55 miles an hour on a foam-covered runway at Logan International Airport. Capt. Alan W. Hall, the pilot, then slammed on the brakes and the silvery craft slid 800 feet on its nose to a safe stop. There was no fire.
The nine passengers and five crew members moved to a forward crew door and jumped four feet to the runway.
"They weren't even scratched—not even scared," said a doctor who examined them.
The plane was TWA's flight 312 from Dayton, Ohio, to Baltimore. It had been diverted first to New York and then here because of fog and rain.
The tedious nose-wheel-up landing was necessary because of a broken strut—a hydraulic piston which raises and lowers the nose wheel assembly, said Wall, a veteran flyer from Braintree, Mass.
GOP Vote Looms
CONCORD, N.H.—(UPI)—Rival Republican camps scrambled for still uncommitted votes today on the eve of the New Hampshire presidential primary.
Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, self-proclaimed underdog, was poised for a last-minute effort to win support before flying back to Albany tonight. Sen. Barry Goldwater was already back in Washington to await the verdict from the first trial run of the 1964 presidential primary season.
The weather bureau predicted clear and mild weather for Tuesday.
What was once a contest between the conservative Goldwater and the liberal Rockefeller has been blurred by campaigns in support of a big field of active and inactive challengers.
Drives to win write-in votes have been conducted on behalf of Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge and Richard Nixon.
Pre-primary assessments give Rockefeller more support than he was conceded when he announced his candidacy for President last fall. At that time, he was written off by most Republicans because of his remarriage to a divorcee mother of four children.
Rights Battle Starts
WASHINGTON—(UPI)A divided Senate prepared to launch its long-awaited civil rights fight today, with a Democratic leader predicting that the House-approved bill would be passed intact.
Senate Democratic whip Hubert H. Humphrey, Minn., floor manager for the bill, said there would be "no wheels and no deals and no compromise" to weaken the measure passed by the House a month ago.
The Senate battle was expected to start at noon (EST) when Democratic leader Mike Mansfield, Mont., attempts to call up the legislation to ban racial discrimination in voting, education, employment, unions, public accommodations and use of federal funds.
Southerners planned to lay siege immediately. The Southern forces indicated they might talk for a week or more on the debatable motion of Mansfield to make the bill the pending business.
SPU, Jazz, Fist-Fight Spark Un-Military Ball At Co-op
.
The night after scores of blue and olive-clad ROTC men escorted their dates to the annual Military Ball, about sixty couples and several stags attended the Un-Military Ball.
The Military Ball was in the Kansas Union Ballroom. The Un-Military Ball was in the main lounge of the Don Henry Co-op at 1420 Ohio St.
THE FUTURE officers and their dates danced to the music of the "Airmen of Note," a sixteen-piece band. Those at the Un-Military Ball danced to Herb Smith's modern jazz quartet.
In a corner at the Co-op two members of the Student Peace Union were busy selling SPU pins and bumper stickers for 25 cents apiece.
At one point in the evening, several ROTC members, traveling in cognito, dropped in to argue philosophies of war and peace with the button-bumper-sticker concessionaires.
Weather
Warmer temperatures are predicted for tomorrow by the weather bureau. After a low reading tonight of 28, a high tomorrow should be 50. Skies will become clear tonight and will remain clear to partly cloudy tomorrow.
ON THE EAST wall of the lounge were pictures of President Kennedy, former President Eisenhower, and General Omar Bradley.
Under Kennedy's picture were the words, "Mankind must put an end to war or war will put an end to mankind."
Under Bradley's picture were the words, "Wars can be prevented just as surely as they can be provoked. We who fail to prevent them, must share in the guilt for the dead."
Under Eisenhower's picture was the quote, "People want peace so much that governments better get out of their way and give it to them."
After each patron of the Un-Military Ball paid his one-dollar admission fee, his hand was stamped in green ink with the inscription, "REPORT ALL OBSCENE MAIL TO YOUR POSTMASTER. He seems to get quite a kick out of it."
BUT ONCE inside, everybody seemed to be enjoying themselves, except for one helmet-clad individual who attempted to splash beer on a photographer in retaliation for an un-solicited photograph of himself. The photographer did a quick side-step and the unhappy thrower missed his mark and the beer ended up on the dress of a nearby young lady.
[Image of three individuals]
UN-MILITARY BALL—Several of the 125 celebrants at the Un-Military Ball enjoy their beverage Saturday night. The "ball," occasioned in response to the Military Ball Friday night, was at Don Henry Co-op. The SPU sold buttons and bumper stickers. At one point, a fist-fight erupted between two members of the SPU. A
photographer took a picture of one of the people at the party without requesting permission. The person photographed tossed a glass of beer at the photographer, but the photographer side-stepped and the beer splashed down the front of a woman by-stander. (Photo by Tom Habler.)
Page 2
University Daily Kansas Monday, March 9. 1964
KU Civil Rights Push
A renewed vitality has come to the commitment to better human relations at KU, centering around the newly-formed Civil Rights Coordinating Committee.
Seeds which in times past have fallen on barren rock now find their way to fertile ground.
CRCC was formed to direct the civil rights demonstrations during spring rush and Greek Week. These demonstrations are aimed at the de facto segregation among fraternities and sororities.
More important, CRCC is seeking to broaden the base of pro-civil rights expression by enlisting the support of various campus organizations and living groups.
Because of this, the protest stands to be deeply meaningful.
* * * * *
The upcoming pickets could well be considered radical in the context of our non-volatile society, protests appearing to be the stuff of extremists. Not so, however, for the tide of events is changing. People who are not radical in terms of personality—call them moderates—are committing themselves to what is considered radical
International Club and People-to-People
action—purposeful and responsible as it may be.
Some campus organizations have not yet been approached for a commitment. Among them are the International Club and People-to-People.
The tie, which is both logical and spiritual, is the common commitment to bettering relationships between man and man.
However, because of the logical tie between the two internationally-oriented groups and the CRCC movement, the two elements could conceivably dove-tail into unity.
I-Club and People-to-People, by lending their weight to CRCC would be recognizing the greater issue—that the movement is for more than Civil Rights. Implicitly, CRCC is for human relations, understanding, a capacity for tolerance.
Fraternities
Some fraternity members, as of now, have interpreted the CRCC program as being a protest against fraternities—as a threat, thus an affront. It is not that at all, for in a deep sense it is a plea for greater brotherhood—a plea for carrying fraternity in Greek houses to its highest plane.
Tom Coffman
Military Ball
I would like to join Mr. Miller and Miss Gray in voicing my criticism of the ROTC and its "Military Ball."
War once was a method of resolving differences of opinion and conflicts of interest among groups. War was waged by a minority—the military—on a minority—the opposing military—and usually led to a victory for one side.
One hundred billion dollars of the world's resources are being wasted on the current buildup of tension between the East and the West. The thermonuclear conflict that this buildup is preparing for has little in common with anything that could be called war: whole populations would be murdered, and there surely could be no sort of "victory" for either side.
The People Say . . .
Instead of supporting the Military Ball, let's attend the Un-Military Ball. Instead of joining the ROTC, let's work for a stronger Student Peace Union. Instead of accepting the arms race we have inherited, let us work together for the human race.
The preparation for organized violence has always been a tragic affair. In the modern world of mega-bombs and over-kill, it is not only tragic, but impractical, unjustifiable, and immoral. Thermonuclear incineration of hundreds of millions of human beings would be a crime unparalleled in the history of the human race.
Charles R. Hook Topeka freshman
In opposition to those defeatists who claim that nothing can be changed, I believe that international machinery for resolving disputes in a civilized manner can and must be created. And I believe that we, as morally responsible individuals, can and ought to work for a lasting peace.
Greek Week
All things considered, it can well be concluded that the coincidence of Greek Week with Holy Week is a planned one, and that seems particularly appropriate.
Since one of the acknowledged purposes of the Greek system is the expression of coinciding Greek and Christian ideals, the observance of Greek Week could not occur at a more suitable time than the week containing Good Friday and leading up to Easter Sunday. Just as the Greek and Roman world engaged in festivities commending their way of life both before and after the crucifixion of the troublemaker who insisted on reminding them of the one God, so can the Greek system on the KU campus enjoy celebrating during this period of time in the Christian year. The Greeks will be able to enliven the world by their songs, races, and dance. It is indeed fortunate that Peter Nero will be here on Saturday night as a preview
to the iovful celebration of Easter.
Indeed, the activities of Greek Week are well planned to fit in with the season. The highest moment in the Christian Year is inaugurated by a celebration of the highest moment (or week of moments) in the Greek Year, and the lowest moment in the Christian Year may thus be completely hidden by the excitement of the Greek holidays. As Lent may easily become depressing, just as Good Friday almost inevitably becomes a time of real sorrow and loneliness, it is most fortunate that the Greeks are insightful enough to ignore the dark moments through happy hours of their own.
Lest the non-Greeks fail to recognize the very real validity of this proximity of the celebration of the Greek system to the high festival of the Christian faith, and its surrounding customs, let us more carefully compare the two: Item: Just as the celebration of Greek Week is superseded by Easter Sunday, so too was the pagan world muted and overcome by the birth, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Item: Just as the divinities of the Greek and Roman world were exalted in ignorance of the true Lord, so too is the Greek Week Queen raised up in defiance of the crucifixion of the Christ. Item: Just as Jesus' birth as a Jew for the life of the whole world shocked the Greeks and Romans in their carefully segregated cults and cultures, so too does the concern of the Christian faith for all men annoy the non-integrated Greek system on the KU campus. Let us with gratitude to the Greek system greet this fitting observance of Holy Week.
Paul B. Thomas Wichita sophomore
P-t-P Helps
I would like to ask Miss Inking whether she is quite sure that what she has written concerning People-to-People reflects the truth for most of the foreign students.
I think I have heard enough comments on the part of foreign students to be able to tell you. Miss Inking, that most of us are grateful to P-t-P: it has not chosen our own friends, but it has given us plenty of opportunities to meet both American and foreign students. (With beer parties, too. Everybody loves them.)
I would also like to ask her whether she feels that she has been quite far towards the students who work on the P-t-P board.
If you say that "... only foreign students are not too frequently met" . . . I can only remind you that one of the most common criticisms of P-t-P, is that the number of American students was always inferior to the number of foreign students present at parties and tours.
You need not be "a lucky fellow"
or a "swell guy" to be invited by P-t-P, but you do need a little effort on your part to make friends with the people you meet. Have we all made this effort, have we all tried to be pleasant and friendly, right from the start? Let us decide whether we have or not, especially before criticizing our "sister" or "brother" for not contacting us at once.
You might have been unlucky, but is this a good reason to make you think it was so with all of us, or to accuse people who have worked hard to have done it all for the sake of "social prestige?" I have personally met quite a few students who have given lots of their time and good will working for P-t-P: they have not done it for prestige, but just to help us, believe it or not, Miss Inking.
P-t-P has not failed in the eyes of the foreign students. We thank you, P-t-P, and we only wish we could help the American students who will come to our countries just as much as you have helped us.
Italy graduate student
Rosella Mamoli
Aids and Awards
Mr. Billings and his staff seldom deal in gratuities, never with platitudes nor condescension. They deal in services to students. Of all the thankless, unsung activities on this campus theirs is the most extraordinary.
Confucius has been credited with saying, "It is better to light one small candle than to curse the darkness." This letter is not an attempt to light that candle but an epistle of gratitude to the someone who has—Mr. Robert Billings, Director of Aids and Awards. For those "unfortunate" students who have not yet availed themselves of services offered by this organization, it is my privilege to inform you that the office is called "AIDS AND AWARDS," Room 222, Strong Hall.
Mr. Billings directs the Student Loan Committee guided not by rigid, inflexible laws of finance but by the Golden Rule. He and his staff exemplify the apogee of business-customer relations. They are never too busy to listen to and, if possible, to help a needy student.
In my five semesters at KU they were pestered by me religiously at least once every semester. Neither Mr. Billings nor any one of his staff was ever rude, abrupt, or discourteous with me. They never failed to alleviate my oppressive financial burden. They were always kind, considerate, and impressively efficient.
Mr. Billings and his entire staff deserve more plaudits and laudation. I regret leaving the University of Kansas with the knowledge that my dealings with the Student Loan Office will have to be terminated.
Harold Yoker
Lawrence graduate student
SEND THE MARINES TO CUBA OR THE STATE DEPARTMENT OR SOME PLACE!
DOWN WITH THE U.N. AND FOREIGN AID AND STUFF LIKE THAT!
"Absolutely! We Should Stay Out Of Foreign Affairs And We Should Make Other Counties Do As We Say"
Rocky and Federalism Liberal, Conservative?
(Second of a three-part series, written
titles from Hampshire primaries tomorrow.)
By Roy Miller
"He's so liberal he's a Democrat, not a Republican."
That is the Rockefeller image as interpreted by many persons. That is the image Nelson Rockefeller himself saw as a detriment to seeking the presidential nomination in 1960.
The fact is that Rockefeller is trying to look more like a conservative while not losing any of his policies or philosophy that classifies him as a liberal, or at least as being left of center.
ROCKEFELLER SHUNS "liberal" and "conservative" labels. But he says he's "an economic conservative and a human rights liberal."
Rockefeller, who felt the tax cut was long overdue, once said the best cure for the nation's economic growth would be to ease tax rules further on capital spending and to cut corporate taxes to restore profit margins. He also believes in a balanced budget.
Even though Rockefeller is probably the richest American ever elected to high office, the is not fundamentally conservative when it comes to things other than financial matters.
ACCORDING TO an article in Harper's magazine in 1959, "The truth is that he is probably as close to the lect as any man ever to run on his party's ticket."
Rockefeller supports the public accommodations section of the civil rights bill, and he favors the medicare package. He has an internationalist attitude possibly equaling the most international-minded Democrats.
In 1962, Rockefeller expressed his basic political creed this way:
"IN ADDITION TO the fact that
I was born a Republican, I believe in the worth and dignity of the individual—the concept of equal rights. I believe in private initiative and private enterprise: this is the growth factor in a democracy. I believe government close to the people is good government. And I believe in fiscal integrity."
After President Kennedy ran into "news management" trouble over the Cuban crisis, among other things, Rockefeller added to this platform a plank for "the people's right to know."
One of the most remarkable things stated by Rockefeller in his Godkin Lectures at Harvard University was the need for expansion of government at the state and local levels, not at the national level.
Rockefeller emphasized in the lectures on the future of federalism the decision by elected officials, the failure of the New Deal to recognize economic as well as social needs, and the need for new ideas in national politics.
CONCERNING TODAY'S politics, Rockefeller said in the lectures, "To call politics dirty is to call democracy dirty." He said labels have lost their meaning and he criticized what he called a "timidity of leadership."
Rockefeller said "it is time for states to lead" and, in the area of international politics, he placed faith in regional confederations and spoke of a need for world unity through a sort of federalism.
Except possibly in the area of economics, Rockefeller's views are not too different from those of John F. Kennedy.
But the difference is, and it is a big difference in this respect, Kennedy was a Democrat. Rockefeller needs to act more like a Republican if he is to win his party's nomination to the presidency.
DailijfHänsan
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 21;
N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates:
$3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence. Kan., every afternoon
during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University
holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence,
Kansas.
Monday, March 9, 1964
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Packard Has Flaws, KU Sociologists Say
Misconceptions and oversimplifications are two flaws in Vance Packard's books, according to three KU sociologists.
"Vance Packard has highly over-simplified the nature of class and mobility." E. Gordon Ericksen, professor of sociology and anthropology, said yesterday.' Prof. Ericksen added that Packard has done a great disservice to sociology by over-generalizing in his studies of social classes.
"On the whole it (Packard's work) is good," E. Jackson Baur, professor of sociology and anthropology, commented. However, Praf. Baur felt that there are weaknesses and misconceptions in Packard's books.
A need for accurate information was stressed by Carroll D. Clark, professor of sociology and anthropology. A sociological study needs to be accurate and the author needs to have material, Prof. Clark said.
The three sociologists said, however, that Vance Packard's works had helped to promote and popularize the field of sociology.
"I think that the popular interpretations of scientific findings for laymen is an important and legitimate function in a free society," Prof. Clark said.
Sociology has almost become a household word since Packard began writing his books, in the opinion of Prof. Ericksen. He said that until a few years ago people didn't know what was being talked about when sociology was discussed. They generally thought it had something to do with social work or socialism, he said.
"He (Packard) has done a great deal to bring to the public the knowledge of social class to the United States," Prof. Baur asserted.
The sociologists do not feel that Packard was an expert in the field of sociology:
"Vance Packard is not an expert at all," Prof. Ericksen said. "He's a pseudo-sociologist."
Although he knows a lot about writing, "I would consider him (Packard) a good writer and not an expert on anything," Prof. Baur commented.
Other members of the group of sociology instructors and Prof. Charles K. Warriner, head of the department of sociology and anthropology, do not feel they knew Packard's works well enough to comment.
Relay Starts Greek Week
Toga-clad Greeks in a torch relay from the steps of the Capitol building in Topeka to the Campaile will start off the Greek Week sports events on March 28.
The torch relay, which was dropped last year, was first started two years ago when members of Sigma Alpha Epsilon ran the relay from Topeka to the Chi Omega fountain to start off the annual chariot races.
The event is planned for this year with runners from all the fraternities carrying the torch a certain distance, Donald J. Gutteridge, Pittsburg senior and Greek Week public chairman, said.
ATTY. GEN. WILLIAM M.
Ferguson will light the torch at 11:00 a.m. on the east steps of the Capitol building. Runners will then carry the torch along U.S. Highway 40. Television coverage is planned for the torch-lighting at the Capitol, and a highway patrol escort will follow the runners, Gutteridge said.
In Memorial Stadium, after the chariot races, more athletic events are scheduled. New events this year will feature a pancake hurdle race, a walking race, a 440-yard relay and a medley relay. Trophies will be awarded to the winners of each event. Gutteridge said.
The runners are expected to arrive at 1:30 p.m. in front of the Campanile, where the annual Greek Week chariot races will begin.
AFTER THE RACES IN THE stadium, fraternity men living on the west side of the campus will pit their strength against the defending champions of the east side in a tug-of-war across Potter Lake.
Packard will speak here at 8 p.m. Wednesday night in Hoch Auditorium. He will lecture on "What's Happening to the American Character." The event is sponsored by Student Union Activities and the All Student Council.
A $12,144 grant from the Public Health Service has been awarded to J. Eugene Fox, Professor of Botany, for the study of cell division.
Botany Professor Receives Health Grant
Prof. Fox is in his third year of study on the project, entitled "Spontaneous Chemical Differentiation in Plant Tissue." The study is aimed at understanding how organisms regulate their own cell division.
Some cells and tissues, once formed, never divide again, but many can and do divide under the right experimental conditions, Prof. Fox said. The project attempts to isolate and chemically identify certain naturally occurring substances which induce cell division in tissues which normally do not divide.
The basic mechanisms underlying
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VANCE PACKARD to speak
Vance Packard, social critic & author (Hidden Persuaders, Waste Makers, Status Seekers, Pyramid Climbers), will speak on "What's Happening to the American Character?" March 11 Hoch Auditorium 8 p.m. Sponsored by SUA ASC
Reception for Mr. Packard in the Jayhawk Room of the Union following the speech
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Monday, March 9, 1964
Debate Tournament Schedules 32 Teams
Debate teams from all parts of the country will be at KU March 12-14 to participate in the "Heart of America" Debate Conference.
Thirty-two teams from 20 schools have registered for the three-day tournament to take place in the Kansas Union.
"THIS TOURAMENT draws some of the nation's finest teams," David Fractenberg, assistant instructor in speech and drama, and director of the tournament, said. "A large number of the teams that have participated here have ultimately won the right to compete in the national debate championship at West Point."
The topic to be used is the national collegiate debate question "Resolved: that the federal government should guarantee an opportunity for higher education to all qualified high school graduates."
DEBATES WILL BE conducted according to collegiate debate rules. Team numbers will be drawn and matched on Thursday morning in the Main Lobby of the Kansas Union.
Teams to compete will include: Baylor University, Brigham Young University, Dartmouth College, Kansas State University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Southern Illinois University, Minnesota University, Northwestern University, Ohio State University, University of Southern California, and Uniter States Air Force Academy.
The rounds will be one hour in
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length with each team having 20 minutes of constructive speeches and 10 minutes of rebuttal.
The duty of the affirmative team is to attack the status quo in the area of the debate topic. All assertions by the affirmative must be substantiated by evidence. After the affirmative has established a "need." they must provide a plan which they feel will alleviate the problems.
The duty of the negative team is to prove through the use of evidence and logic that the "need" issue of the affirmative team does not exist, or that it is not great enough to warrant a change from the present system.
Petitions for student body president, vice president, ASC council seats and all class offices are due March 16, announced Dick King, Kansas City sophomore and ASC elections committee chairman. These petitions may be picked up in the Dean of Students' office.
March 16 Deadline Student Criticism Solicited For ASC Petitions
For those who are running without a party affiliation, it is necessary to obtain 50 signatures for a class office and 150 for a council seat. The only exception is if 40 per cent of an applicant's school is less than 150. "In this case," said King, "40 per cent of the total paid registration is necessary."
Preparations for the ASC election on April 1 and 2 have been underway for approximately two weeks by the elections committee.
Fall and Winter Issues
of
64 JAYHAWKER
are available at Jayhawker office,115 Union Building 2-5 p.m. week days
IMPORTANT:
Do not Throw Away Your 1st Semester
Fee Receipt (The Little Orange Card)
In the past professors have criticized policies of the university; but it appears now students are to have a chance to voice their opinions.
On the suggestion of George R. Waggoner, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the Philosophical Bases of Absolutely Everything (PBOAE) is sponsoring a drive for letters of criticism about educational policies at KU.
Students are asked to submit criticisms in specific but not detailed form.
From the letters received, four or five will be selected and the authors will be asked to participate in a PBOAE lecture to which members of the faculty will be invited.
Letters may be left in the Student Union Activities office or sent to Donald Igelsrud, Room 441, 1122 West Campus Rd., Lawrence.
The selection will be made in April.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Sleepy Students Nap In Class; Claim Only 5 Hours Rest At Night
By Jackie Helstrom
How does he keep going indefinitely? By sleeping during the day, often in his classes?
(ASSUMPTION)
If complaints are to be taken seriously, the average college student is existing on five hours of sleep a night.
Professors are likely to see closed eyelids and drooping heads in some of their classes most of the time, but in general these sleeping beauties don't seem to bother them too much.
"IF MY STUDENTS don't find what I am saying interesting enough to keep them awake, it doesn't bother me," Earl A. Nehring, assistant professor of political science, commented.
"I don't do anything about a sleeping student. Depending on the time of day and the temperature, it's not unexpected. I can recall times when I fell asleep in class myself," he added.
In large introductory courses of 200 to 400 students there is usually somebody asleep, said William Bass, assistant professor of anthropology.
"When I see too many nodding,
I tell them a joke. That usually
wakes them up," he said.
He said that his formula for waking them un is to tell jokes.
PROF. BASS also said that he felt the student who consistently sleeps in class is usually the D or F student. He said that when he spots a continual napper, he takes down their seat number and checks on their grades. They are usually the poor students.
Professors who teach both the introductory and upperclass courses feel, however, that the students in the upperclass courses are not as likely to fall asleep.
Sleeping is probably easier in a large class because you have the feeling of anonymity, was the comment made by one student in considering why he falls asleep in certain classes.
tam classes.
But the anonymous sleeper in an upperclass course might have more trouble remaining anonymous.
JACK MIXER, Kansas City sophomore, said that a teacher once threw an eraser at him to wake him up.
Curator Sees Risk In Building Trend
"There is no growth without risk," Gerald Bernstein, curator of the Museum of Art said last night at the Faculty Club where he discussed the history and development of American campus architecture.
By Rogers Worthington
Bernstein was referring to the risk of ultra-modern buildings which fail to fit in with older buildings surrounding them, and are not successful in functionally fulfilling their purpose.
As an example of buildings that fail to relate with existing structures, Bernstein showed a slide of the auditorium and chapel on MIT's campus. The architect who designed the two buildings considered them to be failures. Bernstein said. "He called them 'egotistical'; not able to 'live with' the other structures."
BUT THE ARCHITECT, Eero Saarinen, later made amends for his "failure" at M.I.T. Bernstein said. Pointing to a slide of the library of the University of Chicago's Law School, Bernstein said, "this structure really works. This is an example of an extremely successful attempt to relate to surroundings."
Bernstein traced the trends in American campus architecture from the early 18th century to the present.
The first college buildings were "basically a memory style architecture," he said, "derivative from houses of old England."
Towards the middle of the 18th century the styles tended to be provincial and Georgian in design, "clearly an example of attachment to our English predecessors," he said.
BUT THOMAS JEFFERSON led a new trend in American architecture. Bernstein said, when he helped design the University of Virginia. Bernstein called the trend a "classical revival . although more Roman than Greek."
The library at the end of the
Official Bulletin
Foreign students: Sign up for March People-to-People Tour to Abilene, the Eisenhower Library and Museum, in R-1-P office. Kansas Union.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910. Stratford Rd.
TODAY
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth
Most methods are not quite this drastic, but some teachers do make some effort to keep students in upperclass courses awake.
pager Elmur Beth, professor of journalism, said that when he sees that someone is going to sleep he will first ask them a question to try to bring them back to life and if that doesn't work he will ask them to leave class for a few minutes to go out and get some air.
TOMORROW
TOWNS
Catholic Manuscript 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m.
Lawrence Chapel, 1101 Stratford Rd.
Inquiry Forum 7 p.m. St. Lawrence
Catholic Manuscript 1915 Stratford Rd.
Center, 1914. Straiton Rd.
Chancery Club, 7:15 p.m. Moot Court
Room, 6:00 p.m.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship,
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Danforth
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Western City Discussion, 9 p.m.
St
Western St. Stratford
BERNSTEIN REFERRED to this period of neo-classicism as "the most powerful movement in architecture in the beginning of the 19th century."
central mall was modeled after the Pantheon in Rome," he said.
But toward the middle of the 19th century, a new spirit, "a romantic spirit" began catching on: the Gothic.
"There is no point in their just sitting there and sleeping. I forget what I am trying to say because I start watching them," he said.
"We have at KU a fine example of collective architecture," he said. "We have all the styles here, copied from all the good buildings back East."
PROF. BETH said that there is only one student who ever slept through his classes. That was a boy he had several years ago who could sleep with his eyes open.
The Museum of Art, he said, was built in a spirit of Romanesque revival. Bernstein considers the building as "one of the most exciting buildings on campus." He said the best view of the Museum was from 14th street.
Bernstein also discussed what he called "aberration style," or "collective architecture."
Green Hall, he said, is an example of another direction in classical motifs. Renaissance classicism.
Campus architecture returned to neo-classicism and seemed to be "stuck in the mud" until there was a revival of Gothic architecture in the early thirties, Bernstein said.
But in 1940, a progressive modern architect was finally given an opportunity, Bernstein said. He was Frank Lloyd Wright, and he designed a building for a college in southern Florida that was "not necessarily exciting, but a break with tradition."
"I never knew about it until the semester was over."
Some professors can keep their students awake by a means that is not a conscious effort. David E. Dykstra, assistant professor of English, said that in the ten years he has been teaching he has never had a student go to sleep in his classes.
HONDA
a student go to sleep in He added, however, that if one did he did not think he would get very excited about it.
FROM THE STUDENTS' point of view, sleeping in class is looked upon with mixed feelings.
Some students say that if you can't stay awake you should stay home and sleep while others feel that you ought to go to class and at least try to stay awake. Such an effort shows that you are at least trying, they feel.
And the student who finds himself falling asleep will usually fight to stay awake.
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Smoking, doodling, fidgeting, and staring straight into the eyes of the teacher are some of the favorite methods.
meeds:
the woman said that when she discovers early in the semester that she is not going to be able to stay awake in one particular class, she will take a caffeine pill before that class every day.
VIRGINIA MAULDIN, St. Joseph,
Mo, sophomore, said that she has no
problem with sleeping in her classes.
She has never indulged simply because
she can't sleep in a sitting
position. And besides, she said, she is afraid she would fall off her
chair.
Once you start going to sleep in classes, it is a hard habit to break, Miss Mauldin commented.
THE FILM MONTHLY
24 JUNE 1986
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24 JUNE 1986
CAROLYN HANSON
IN ASSOCIATION WITH THE
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THE FILM MONTHLY
24 JUNE 1986
MARY LOUISE ST. CLAIR Kappa Kappa Gamma
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Monday, March 9.1964
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Malott to Speak at Pittsburg St.
Deane W. Malott, former KU Chancellor, will address, Kansas State College of Pittsburg's Honors Dav Convocation, April 6.
Malolew was Chancellor at Kansas University 12 years, then spent another dozen years as head of Cornell
University. He retired from Cornell in July 1963.
Pittsburg State officials said the former Kansan also will consult with Alumni and Endowment Association officials during his two-day stay.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Monday, March 9, 196
Jayhawk Swimmers Finish Second To OU
The KU swimming team, undefeated in its season's competition, bowed to Oklahoma over the weekend, as the Sooners won their tenth consecutive Big Eight swimming championship.
The Sooners won the meet with 119 points while KU followed with 102
Coach Dick Reamon said he thought the Jayhawks finished behind O-State because KU made certain "mistakes."
"WE COULD HAVE WON IT"
Coach Reamon said, "but we made some mistakes—we couldn't afford any mistakes."
"Actually, the mistakes and breaks just about evened themselves up. Out of the 17 men we took to the meet 15 of them scored and the other two placed seventh and qualified, Coach Reamon said.
Coach Reamon pointed out that
KU Cagers Clinch Third
The Jayhawk basketball team clinched at least a tie for third place in the Big Eight Conference Saturday night when it defeated Hank Iba's Oklahoma State team.
The Jayhawks easy (57-48) victory boosted the team won-lost record to 13-12.
Oklahoma State's Iba was, for the second time, denied his 700th victory as a coach. Both times he has gone for 700 the Cowboys lost to Kansas teams. Kansas State beat the O-Staters in overtime last week in Manhattan, then the Jayhawks romped Saturday night.
DEL LEWIS AND GEORGE Unseld led the attack for KU by scoring 17 and 16 points respectively.
The Jayhawk defense came to the foreground in the latter part of the game as O-State was able to score only two points in the last eight minutes of play.
The two points came with two seconds left in the game when a Cowboy player took a jump shot which bounced off the rim, George Unseld, in an attempt to get the ball, hit the net and the referee called goal tending.
One highlight of the game, as far as the crowd was concerned, came in the closing minutes of the contest when KU stalled very effectively. George Unseld, not known for his ball handling, put on a dribbling exhibition to keep the ball away from the O-State defenders and drew a roar of approval from the crowd.
GENE JOHNSON WAS the only Cowboy who scored in the double figures, scoring 10 points before fouling out of the contest.
Two KU seniors played their last collegiate contest Saturday night. Harry Gibson, starting forward, and Buddy Vance, reserve center, closed out their college careers by scoring five and two points respectively.
Oklahoma State now has a 14-10 record with one conference game remaining.
After the game, Coach Harp said he was pleased with the performances of the team members. He also predicted that KU will be in contention for next year's Big Eight crown.
Gymnasts Beat Fort Hays State
The KU gymnastics team, which was defeated by Fort Hays in their first meet of the season, snapped back to trounce the Tigers $69_{12}-49_{12}$ Saturday afternoon in the last home meet for the Jayhawkers.
KU men won first honors in four events and took second in two other events by a difference of only one-half of a point. Kent Dobbins, Lawrence sophomore, took all four firsts for the Jayhawkers.
Saturday's meet finished out the regular conference season for KU. Next weekend they will travel to Ames, Iowa, for the Big Eight Championship meet.
The KU squad finished with a 4-6 season record.
the Jayhawks took second place in the competition without taking first place in any event.
"Ours must be the only team in history which scored 100 or more points in a championship meet without winning a single first place. The fact that we were able to do so indicates that we have very good depth all the way through. I think we did pretty well in the meet. Oklahoma just made less errors."
"OKLAHOMA HAS A senior-laden team while ours is made up
largely of sophomores. Our boys were lacking somewhat in experience. Coach Reamon said Jerry Higgins' performance in the 1650 was outstanding.
"Higgins turned in an outstanding time in the 1650," Coach Reamon said. "He broke the conference record. The record was set by Schuette of Oklahoma and he's an All-American in that event. Higgins' time wasn't quite low enough for him to receive All-American honors, but I feel that with two
more weeks of practice before the national swimming meet, he should be capable of becoming All-American."
Events in which Jayhawk swimmers placed included:
1,650-yard freestyle — Jerry Higgins, second, Mike Caldwell, third, Bill Mills, fifth: 100-yard freestyle—Richard Bisbee, sixth; 100-yard breaststroke—Jim Basile, fourth; 100-yard backstroke—Jack Allen, third, Bill Johnson, fourth; 100-yard butterfly—Mike Downey, second
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Page 7
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Used 3 speed Schwinn bikes. One lady's, one man's. Both cut to $25. Ray Stoneback's, $29 Mass. (New 3 speed Royce Union in crate, $38.99.) 3-12
1957 MGA, red with white hardtop, wire wheels, new convertible top. Radio, heat-ear, seat belts. Excellent condition. $800. Call Jack Hibler. VI 2-0443. 3-12
The latest and greatest in sound! Transistorized 4 track stereo tape deck for your car. Jerry Blakely, 943 Ohio, VI 3-4838. 3-11
For quality used parts see Benson's Auto Salvage, 1902 Harper, North of 4-H grounds. Phone VI 3-1626. Open evenings. 3-11
1957 Corvette grill, adapted for 1957 Chevy. Black canvas boot for CHC-300, with rear top torq. for C-314. David Hiebert, VI 3-1711 or Tony Warren, VI 2-2910.
Books, over 1100 on dozes of subjects.
Stonehenge Book Stall, 1539 Tenn. (behind ATO house). Hours: Noon to midnight. Mon. thru Sat. 3-9
For sale or trade, pistols, rifles, ammo,
drafting equipment, slide-rules. English
bicycles, lanterns, musical instrument.
will trade for anything. Call VI 3-110-
13-113.
Tire prices slashed! Ray Stoneback's Discount Fire Center at 929 Mass. 36 m.
Four tubeless tires. Four 650 x 13" $40.
Four 750 x 14" $44. Four 670 x 15" $45.
Four 800 x 14" $50. Plus tax, exchange.
installed! 4 whitewalls, $8 extra! 3-26
New 16" lightweight portable TV. $99.
1 year guarantee on parts! Rent or buy,
$12 per month. Ruy Stoneback's.
40% Mass. (Motorola Headquarters). 3-26
Typewriters, new and used portables,
standards electrics, Olympia, Hermes,
Suffolk Royal and Smith Corona portables.
Typewriter, adder, rentals and service.
Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St.,
VI 3-3644. tf
For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3-9040 after 5 p.m. tf
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME
WHEELS, Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale
at great savings after a $87.39
Saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut
tt
German Shepherd pups, AKC registered and champion blood lines. Lloyd Bresheisen. Phone KI 2-2559. tf
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500 sheets to ream—$ .85. Lawrence Outlook, 1005 Mass. tf
FOR RENT
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, minimegraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tt
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and line outlining of the texts. Formerly known as the Theta notes Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50.
A large sleeping and study room for student. Close to campus and centrally located. Call VI 3-4890, 1220 La. 3-10
2 bedroom duplex, furnished. 1826 Missouri $95 per month. 1 bedroom duplex, furnished. 1826 Missouri $95 per month. 1 bedroom duplex, furnished. 75 Call T. A. Hemphill VI 3-3902. 3-13
Vacancies for young men in contemporary home. Large swimming pool vate conditioned, receiving meals per week. $75 per unit. Uphill paid. Call VI 3-1963. 3-11
2 rooms for rent. Girls only. See at 1242
Louisiana. ___ 3-10
2 bedroom home with attached garage.
Nice yard with patio. Available on or before March 15. West 20th Terr. Call VI 2-3416. 3-10
Large 3-bedroom ranch home, practically new wall-to-wall carpet, air conditioning. ed. TV antenna and attached garage, available about March 15. Call VI 2-3416.
Attractive 3-room furnished basement apartment. Private Bath and entrance.
$55 per mo. 736 N. 3rd. Phone.VI 3-4721.
tt
Married, grad students, faculty, 2 bed
room, $75. Sleeping room, $25.
able in Vita S-3216. Send for bro-
vice. Vita S-2116. Santee Apartments,
1123 Indiana. tt
For one or two graduate age men, three room nicely furnished apt, private bath. $1/2 blocks from school and institutions for neighbors. 1/4 student apartment. Phone VI 3-8534. **tf**
Graduate men or older undergraduates—extra nice furnished bachelor apartment. Close to campus, ideal study conditions, best of neighbors. Reasonably priced, utilities paid. For appointment call VI 3-8534.
Crescent Heights two bedroom apartment
Phone VI 2-3711.
TYPING
Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (pica type). Mrs.Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi. VI 3-0558. ff
Experienced secretary would like typing in her home, Reasonable rates. Call VI at 785-426-9000.
Experienced typist with electric type-
writer available to type themes, papers, thesis, etc. Stand-
and desk. Phone VI 3-8379. Mrs. Charles
Patti. tt
Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reasonable rates. For paper papers, phone VI 3-76527 Mr. Frank Gibson.
experienced Typist-Dissertations, Theses, Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 Rhode Island. VI 3-1748. tff
Accurate expert typist would like typing in her home. Term papers and theses. Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. tt
Mrs. Frank Gibson.
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carriage clock, Call 31-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley. 408 West 13th **tt**
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577.
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typrwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1645.
TYPING: Experientenced typist. Former secretary will type these tenures. Reasonable res. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568
MILKILLEN SOS—always first quality
typing on IB.M. Carbon ribbon machines
We also use tape transcription
in .m. p.m. 12 a.m. p.m. 12:11% Mass
Phone VI3-5920.
the KANASS FREE PRESS, the fighting liberal student newsletter at K.U., has articles on nearly all subjects plus regular features. Current press run over seven hundred. Free sample copy 14011; New York or call VI 3-8352. 3-12
Typing: Dissertations threses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corone electric machines; 35 special symbol carbon ribbon machines; 35 special symbol carbon ribbon machines; Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilber VI-12-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI 13-3057.
MISCELLANEOUS
Term papers. Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tt
Have a party in the Big Red School House. Good dance floor and piano. Heated. Call VI 3-7453. tf
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. t
WANTED
Bide to Ft. Lauderdale, Daytona, or Miami Beach. Fla. Leave April 3. Help with expenses and driving. Call VI 9365 or write JP. 1703 W. 24th. Apr. 13.
One Post Versalog slide rule. In the
Reynolds Calc VI 2-1299 after 10 p.m. 3-8
Reynolds Calc VI 2-1299 after 10 p.m. 3-8
VOLKSWAGEN'S WANTED. Cash for your VW, Conzeiman Motors, VW Sales Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway $ So.
Monday, March 9, 1964
LOST
BUSINESS SERVICES
Billfold, lost in Fraser Theater, Friday.
Feb. 7, between 9 and 12 p.m. Contact
Dave Till, 818 Kentucky.
Make a sound investment. KU student, experienced stereo hi-fi consultant, can help you design or expand component systems. Most major component lines available. Jerry Blakely, 943 Ohio, VI 3-4383. 3-11
L&M CAFE now under new management. We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
for breakfast, lunch, and dessertious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches.
Your second cup of coffee always free.
Multi-lingual secretarial service German.
Swahili, French, Spanish, Romanized
Japanese. Call Amy Summers, VI 3-2933.
3-9
-BUSINESS DIRECTORY-
AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS DALE'S BODY SHOP
All makes & models frame - body - fender - glass VI 3-4732 704 Vermont
the best professional
- general typing service
- automatic typing
- 24 hr. answering service
- mimegraph & photo-copying
VI 3-5920, 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Milliken's SOS
"the best professional service"
The only thing better than a home cooked meal is — Dinner At DUCKS Steaks & Seafoods A Specialty
Serving crisp tossed salads, choice of potatoes, zesty Vienna breads & country fresh butter. Sandwiches, too! Your favorite beverage
11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass.
One Stop Service
Engine Tune Up
★ Brake Repair
★ Lubrication & Oil Change
Generator & Starter Repair
ART'S TEXACO
300 W. 6th
SKELLY SERVICE
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
SKELLY
9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
VI 3-6333
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
JACK & GUNN'S
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
VI 3-9271
YELLOW CAB CO.
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled
Big Store Service and Small Store Attention
OPEN
24 hrs. a day
Book Nook
1021 Mass.
TUNE-UPS
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
838 Mass.
JIM'S CAFE
7,000 Pipes
George's Pipe Shop
727 Mass. VI 3-7164
"SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS"
and every smoking accessory
Artists - Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics
GRANT'S DRIVE-IN Pet Center Sure—Everything in the Pet Field 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921
GRANT'S DRIVE-IN
George's Hobby Shop
1105 Mass. VI 3-5087
Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking
Tops — Glass & Zippers —
Rear Glasses — Headlines —
Door Panels —
Tallor Made Seat Covers at Competitive Prices with sewed double lock stitch. Look for Seat Covers
REAL PET
Passports and Application Photos
Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 316 Mass. VI 3-1287.
Jack's Sear Covers
545 Minn. VI 3-4242
Dressmaking-alterations, formals and wedding gowns. Ola Smith, 939½ Mass.
VI 3-5263.
Hixons
HELP WANTED
string banco instruction. Folk styles.
low rates. Call VI 2-9486 after 6 p.m.
Bob Blank - Herb Williams
Fraternity Jewelry
721 Mass.
VI 3-0330
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
Balfour
Girl to play electric organ part-time.
Call VI 3-4743.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY. Peppermint Park Kiddyland operation for so many students running this during the summer. Call VI 2-0155 after 5 p.m. 4-3
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
RISK'S
Shirt Finishing Laundry
Wash & Fluff Dry
613 Vt. VI 3-4141
616 W. 9th
Hot doughnuts—sandwich cold drink
25c delivery VI 3-4720
JOE'S BAKERY
ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass.
BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ... 9.98
STUDENTS
LUBRICATION $1.00
Motor tune-ups, wheel balancing
all major brands
FREE—one quart of oil with each oil and filter change
PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE
1819 W 23rd VI 3-9694
FOR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS
- Lube
SEE MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER VI 3-1211
SHIP WINTER
- Wash
- Tune-up
CHEVROLET
- Brakes
- Front-end alignment
- Wheel balance
Open Thursday evening & Saturday till Noon VI 3-7700 738 N.H.
HAVING A PARTY?
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
616 Vt.
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
Ph. VI 3-0350
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Monday, March 9, 1964
Top KU Woman Fencer to Compete For Jr. World Title At Budapest
By Susan Flood
Swish-thrust-clank.
The yellow pencil touched the imaginary target and the swift wrist action stopped.
Claudia Reeder, the only woman fencer to be selected to compete in the Junior World Fencing Championship bout in Budapest, Hungary
March 26-30, and a possible '68 Olympics contender, relaxed her stance.
Miss Reeder, Kansas City sophomore, was demonstrating to her Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority sisters the speed and coordination which hard work and expert instruction have achieved.
Lecture Series To Honor Birthday of Shakespeare
Marking this 400th year since the birth of William Shakespeare, the Humanities Lecture Series at the University of Kansas will present a widely-acclaimed Shakespeare scholar, Madeline Doran, professor of English, University of Wisconsin. She will speak on "Shakespeare: Experimental Dramatist" at 8 p.m., March 17, in Fraser Theater. An informal reception by the Faculty Club will follow.
A new shuttle-bus service started will relieve crowded parking on top of Mt. Oread. The free shuttle-bus will run from the new parking lot at Sunflower Road and Sunnyside Avenue (16th Street—south of the power plant) to Fraser Hall. Service will begin at 7:30 p.m. and will be resumed for return trips at 9:15 p.m. after the lecture.
DURING HER THREE-DAY visit to KU, Prof. Doran will also speak to classes in English literature, English history, and dramatic theory and criticism. She is the fifth woman
scholar to speak in the Humanities Series, since it was begun in 1947.
She received her college education at San Diego State College, Stanford, and Iowa, and was awarded the Ph.D. at Stanford in 1930. After teaching at Wellesley, she joined the Wisconsin faculty in 1935 and has been professor there since 1952.
She has a fellowship at Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C., this spring; she had a grant to Huntington Library in San Marino, Calif., last fall and in 1560. Other fellowships granted her were by Stanford, the American Council of Learned Societies, and the AAUW. She has an honorary doctorate from Wheaton College, Massachusetts.
She has published several monographs and three books about Shakespeare and Elizabethan drama and was editor of three other volumes. Her work in progress is on "A Midsummer Night's Dream."
"The letter from the Amateur Fencer's League is the culmination of my training under the Maitre Fecheux, the former amateur and now professional champion fencer of the Racing Club in Paris," Miss Reeder said.
Miss Reeder perfected her techniques under Pecheux while studying on the KU language institute in Paris last summer.
After enrolling in the half-hour physical education course last spring Miss Reeder was chosen to compete on the KU fencing team, coached by John Dilliard and John Giele. She is on the fencing team again this year and has also studied with Salle Sandelli at the New York City Club. Sandelli makes all the US fencing equipment and imports from Europe.
"Although I may not do too well in my first international competition in Budapest, I hope is will help me on my way for tryouts of the '68 Olympics, Miss Reeder told her eager audience.
"It's and individual thinking sport, if you could call it a sport. You have to anticipate what move your opponent will make and then parry (keep his point away) and thrust in yourself."
She went on to explain that the target area is the body torso from thighs to neck. The metallic vests are electrically wired to a machine and to the foil (weapon). When the fencer hits a target area a red light flashes to tally the touch. If the opponent touches a non-target area such as the arm, a white light flashes and no score is tallied. Four target touches in a woman's bout wins.
CHEMISTS - B.S. M.S. & Ph.D.
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 derivatives, reactions, structure, and general physical and chemical properties of organic chemical raw materials.
Sign up for an interview with our representative on March 12,1964 At Your Placement Office
or write to
NORTHERN REGIONAL RESEARCH LABORATORY 1815 North University Street Peoria, Illinois 61604
U. S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service
KU's supersonic wind tunnel is now operational with speeds as high as 2,000 miles per hour.
Tunnel Hits Mach 4.5
KU's supersonic wind tunnel has no fans. It uses vacuum pumps and tanks. The part of the tunnel that is used for experimentation is actually a blow through.
The air in the two tanks is pumped out to form a partial vacuum of about eight per cent KU atmosphere. The pressure is identical to an altitude of 60,000 feet.
The inlet to the tanks consists of a blow through test chamber and an air control valve. In operation, the air rushes through the test chamber into the tanks at speeds of Mach 1.5 to 4.5 (855 to 2,500 miles per hour)
The test models are firmly fastened in the test chamber, and with the aid of light beams and mirrors, the effect of the air's speed passing around the models can be observed and recorded. The wind test lasts about 20 seconds. The test chamber is large enough to accommodate experimental models about the size of a coffee cup.
VINCENT MUIRHEAD, assistant professor of aerospace and engineering, said the tunnel is used as laboratory equipment in the study of supersonic air flow.
This wind tunnel is one of three
AMONG THE MORE THAN TWO million persons now living in Kansas are more than 60,000 young people enrolled in Kansas institutions of higher learning.
at KU. The largest tunnel is under Memorial Stadium and the other one is in the basement of the new Engineering building. A fourth tunnel is now being bid for contracting.
SUMMER
SESSION
HAWAII
6 WEEKS FROM $585
This 2th Annual Summer Program lets you attend University of Hawaii 1964 Summer Session in Honolulu. Includes round trip to Pan American Airways, get travel from West Coast... 22 planned activities, sightseeing, dances, beach parties, cruises, Walkikin Beach Hotel accommodations.
The Ader University Study Tour to Hawai'i; the program to the islandst All students and teachers can apply. Leave June 25, return August 10; but hurry, space is limited! Ask your friends to come.
APPLY NOW!
for applications see or mail coupon to official representative help
Maupintour Travel Service
The Malls Viking 3-1211
FREE! Hawaii Summer Session Bulletin
Send to...
Address...
City... Zone... State...
School...
ELECTION PETITIONS
FOR
Class officers and ASC Council Seats may be picked up in Dean of Students Office.
APPLICATION DEADLINE MARCH 16 Information: Dick King — VI 3-0651
C. K.
Yes,ILiveinParkPlaza
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
P
PARK PLAZA SOUTH
Ph. VI 2-3416
1912 W. 25th
Day or Night
Snow Hinders Turnout in First'64 Primary
CONCORD. N.H.—(UPI)—A late winter snowstorm and high winds slapped New Hampshire today, slowing and perhaps curtailing the vote in the nation's first 1964 presidential primary.
Heavy snow warnings were posted throughout the state and gale warnings on the coast by the U.S. Weather Bureau.
There was speculation the bad weather would cut down on the predicted vote of perhaps 175,000—125,-000 Republicans and 50,000 Democrats.
The state's Republicans were voting to offer the GOP some counsel on the choice of its 1964 presidential nominee. The meaning may be blurred but the results will be read closely for signs of strength or weakness shown by the major Republican presidential possibilities.
IN THE COASTAL city of Portsmouth, the snow was whipped by strong winds, traffic was slowed to a
crawl and the voting turnout was very light. But voting was reported heavy at the South Main Street engine house at Manchester after the polls opened, and Democratic Gov. John W. King was among the first to mark a ballot.
At Laconia, a city of 15,000 in the middle of the state, the vote was heavy when the polls opened but it tapered off.
Before the storm, a turnout of about 175,000 was predicted—125,000 Republicans and 50,000 Democrats.
New Hampshire has 302 polling places, most of them open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., because only one city, Portsmouth, has voting machines, and because of the extreme length of the Republican ballot, significant results from the Republican popularity poll are not expected until late tonight.
THE MOUNTAIN hamlet of Dixville, voting at the stroke of midnight, was the first community to
vote in the primary. The nine Republican voters gave two votes to New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, one vote to Sen. Barry Goldwater, three write-in votes to Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge and three write-in votes to former Vice-President Richard M. Nixon. Political observers generally figured Goldwater would carry the town.
Goldwater. Public opinion polls on the eve of the primary gave a slight lead to Goldwater over Rockefeller, both announced candidates for the GOP presidential nomination.
THE SAME polls indicated extraordinary strength for two write-in contenders—Lodge, U.S. ambassador to South Viet Nam, running third, and Nixon, running fourth. Trailing were Sen. Margaret Chase Smith of Maine and Harold E. Stassen, former governor of Minnesota and a previous presidential hopeful.
Goldwater, Rockefeller, Mrs Smith, and Stassen all have their
names on the popularity contest section of the ballot above the space for write-in votes. The Republicans also will elect 14 national convention delegates from among slates favoring Rockefeller, Goldwater, Lodge and Stassen and a slate of uncommitted delegate candidates.
- ROCKEFELLER—Today's vote provides his first test outside the public opinion polls to show whether or not he still must worry about the political handicap he acquired by remarriage to the divorced mother of four children.
- GOLDWATER -While the Arizona senator has said he can win the nomination without victory in New Hampshire, he has said it is important to show whether a Westerner from a small state can command support in the northeastern section of the country.
- LODGE—A strong showing would compel a reappraisal of Lodge's appeal as a presidential candidate and subject him to pressure to return from South Viet Nam to become an active candidate. But outside New England, Lodge's popularity rating is still low among Republicans who will be delegates to the national convention next July.
- NIXON—The Nixon write-in campaign, led by former Gov. Wesley Powell, seemed weaker than that for Lodge but a creditable showing will keep him among the GOP possibilities and encourage him to become more active.
- MRS. SMITH—She is described as the first serious woman candidate for President, but she has not conducted a serious campaign. She toured the state, just once, a month ago. She has no organization and no delegate slate.
- STASSEN—This once bright political prospect has not been taken seriously as a political candidate since 1948 and his campaign here is not taken seriously.
Dailu hansan
61st Year, No. 100
Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, March 10, 1964
Court's Libel Decision Seen As Press Support
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Supreme Court's historic decision in the New York Times libel case was viewed today as massive support for the right of the nation's press and people to criticize public officials.
The court, in a decision that establishes sweeping guidelines in the field of freedom of the press and speech, yesterday threw out a $500-000 libel judgment against the Times and four Negro clergymen who were co-defendants.
The judgment had been won in state courts by a Montgomery, Ala., police official.
A GOVERNMENT OFFICIAL can collect damages only if he can prove "actual malice," said Justice William J. Brennan, Jr., who wrote the decision.
The court's majority opinion stated strongly that critical statements about official conduct of government officers are protected by the constitutional guarantees of free speech and free press.
decision.
Brennan defined "actual malice" as a statement made "with knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard of whether it was false or not."
The court stopped short of ruling that an official can never bring a libel suit based on criticism of his official conduct, thus there remained a bar on reckless lying, for instance, in a political campaign.
The decision was seen as a block to retaliatory libel action against newspapers like the Times, or other news media, which, according to Justice Hugo L. Black's concurring opinion, could conceivably be labeled "outside agitators" in some section of the nation.
BLACK WOULD HAVE the court go further and rule that no libel suits can be brought against critics of a public official's conduct in office. He was joined in this view by Justices Arthur J. Goldberg and William O. Douglas. Goldberg noted particularly that he was not including the "private conduct of a public official or a private citizen."
He said the $500,000 verdict against the Times in the state courts gave "dramatic proof . . . that state libel laws threaten the very existence of an American press virile enough to publish unpopular views on public affairs and bold enough to criticize the conduct of public officials."
Black said he believes the first amendment to the constitution insures "an unconditional right to say what one pleases about public affairs."
GOLDEERG SAID: "If liability can attach to political criticism because it damages the reputation of a public official as a public official,
then no critical citizen can safely utter anything but faint praise about the government or its officials."
The standards set by the court yesterday must be applied also to lawsuits totaling $2.5 million brought by other Alabama officials against the Times and the four clergymen. All the actions are based on an advertisement published in the Times March 29, 1960, and dealing with the treatment of Negro student demonstrators in Montgomery and else-where.
The damage award in yesterday's case, brought by Montgomery Police Commissioner L. B. Sullivan, was thrown out on the grounds that:
thrown out
—No malice was shown even
though some of the statements were
not completely accurate.
There was no evidence that the statements in the advertisement referred specifically to him.
Cambodian Mission Seeks Red Weapons
HE TOLD A GROUP of royal dignitaries at a nationally-broadcast emergency conference yesterday that his efforts to win a negotiated neutral status for his kingdom have collapsed because of the hostility of the United States.
- From the Soviet Union -2 mig jet fighters, 12 field guns, 8 anti-aircraft guns, 15 mortars, 36 machine guns and 500 submachine guns.
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia—(UPI),
Neutralist Cambodia, which has
renounced American military aid
today sent a top-level mission to
Communist China and the Soviet
Union to negotiate arms purchases.
Lt. Gen. Lon Nol, Cambodian vice premier and commander-in-chief, headed the mission, which left Phnom Penh this morning for Peking via Vietiane, Laos.
The head of the military mission was honored last night at a dinner given by Then-Liang, Communist Chinese ambassador to Cambodia.
THE GENERAL and 12 highranking Cambodian officers are scheduled to spend 20 days in China and then fly to the Soviet Union. Government sources said the mission was authorized to negotiate weapons purchases.
The mission's departure followed a new verbal attack by Sihanouk on the United States.
Chief of state Prince Norodom Sihanouk, who renounced more than $10 million in annual military aid from the United States last year, disclosed last week that he hopes to obtain the following military equipment:
equipment
• From Communist China—200 troop transport trucks and a large number of light weapons.
(William P. Bundy, U.S. assistant secretary of state for far eastern affairs, headed for Bangkok, Thailand, today from Saigon, Viet Nam for talks believed aimed at persuading Thailand to participate in a four-power converence on Cambodian neutrality.)
He called U.S. counter-proposals "inacceptable and inadmissible" and said he has issued orders to his diplomatic representatives to reject them.
Sihanouk said U.S. opposition meant there was "no hope" of convening an international neutrality conference in Geneva or a limited four-power conference in Phnom Penh.
IN WASHINGTON, state department officials said they were puzzled by the report because the United States favors a four-power conference.
"Cambodia's frontiers have been clearly defined with Thailand in international treaties and the international court in The Hague, and with South Viet Nam by very favorable demarcation lines drawn by the then French governors of Cochinchina (now part of South Viet Nam)," Sihanouk said.
Sihanouk charged the United States "torpedoed" his suggestion that Cambodian borders be guaranteed by a conference including Cambodia, South Viet Nam, Thailand and the United States by proposing that mixed commissions outline the borders.
Weather
Increasing cloudiness has been predicted for tonight and tomorrow. A few scattered showers and colder temperatures are expected for tonight and tomorrow.
The low tonight will be in the upper 20s.
The high tomorrow will be in the 40s.
Oswald's Mother Barred from Trial As Court Witness
DALLAS—(UPI)—Mrs. Marguerite Oswald, arriving to watch the trial of her son's slayer, was stopped at the courtroom door today and subpoenaed as a prosecution witness. The move bars her from the court and from discussing the case.
Ruby looked on blankly as Mrs. Oswald appeared briefly to be sworn in.
"Mrs. Oswald, you will have to stay outside the courtroom until called as a witness," said Judge Joe B. Brown with a smile.
Mrs. Oswald had said she wanted to attend a session of the trial "not as a mother but as a person interested in justice."
DEPUTY Rosemary Allen removed Mrs. Oswald. She now could not discuss the case with anyone.
She said she wanted to "get a clue as to what happened last Nov. 24." when Jack Ruby shot Lee Harvey Oswald.
The defense began a parade of psychiatrists to back its contention that Ruby was insane and in a mental "blackout" when he shot Oswald.
IN A BLACK dress, gray hair pulled into a tight bun, the accused assassin's mother left the courtroom and sat silently on a wooden bench in the hallway outside.
If the jury believes that, as the law states, "A preponderance of the evidence" shows the nervous little defendant to have been insane when he killed President Kennedy's accused assassin Nov. 24, it must find him innocent of the charge of murder-with-malice.
THE TEST being applied here is the so-called McNaghten rule, established in England in 1843. It holds that to establish a defense of insanity it must be clearly proved the accused did not know the "nature and quality of his act," or if he did know it "that he did not know that he was doing what was wrong."
It was 12 minutes until 7 o'clock last night when court was adjourned with the excusing of the defense's opening witness in its attempt to bare Ruby's purported mental disease to the jury.
The witness was Roy Schafer, a Yale University psychologist who examined Ruby $ 9 \frac{1}{2} $ hours in December and saw him again in January. He told the state on cross examination that he had spent about 100 hours on this case, at $ 10 an hour, plus expenses. Before he got through, he had undergone some abrasive moments with Dist. Atty. Henry M. Wade, a drawing, sometimes roaring, former FBI man.
RIGHT OFF, Schafer said his psychological tests had convinced him Ruby had suffered "organic brain damage, and the most likely specific nature of it was psychomotor epilepsy." A couple of hours later, still under Belli's questioning, he was saying he felt Ruby had an abnormal mind and in all probability he was subject to "rage states" in which he did not know what he was doing.
ONE OF THE many tests he gave was the "story recall," in which he would tell Ruby a brief story and get him to tell back as much as he could remember. He said Ruby did "very poorly" on the following story and showed "several absurdities" in his re-telling.
The story: "The American liner New York struck a mine near Liverpool Monday evening. In spite of a blinding snowstorm and darkness, the 60 passengers, including 18 women, were all rescued though the boats were tossed about like corks in the heavy sea."
though the boats were tossed about this. Then he consulted his memory and came up with:
"The American liner struck a port in Liverpool, and in spite of the—what happened, 18 persons were rescued, including 16 women, by a British steamer. In spite of the storm the ships were bobbing up and down like corks. They were rescued by a British steamer."
Wade on cross examination immediately established through Schafer's testing that Ruby had an intelligence quotient of 109, which Schafer said "exceeds about 73 per cent of the American men of his age."
"You start at the top and come down 27 per cent and you'll find Jack Ruby," Wade said. "Isn't it unusual to get very high I.Q.'s in persons with organic brain damage?" Schafer said it was.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 10, 1964
Dialogue:
Halo on a Stick
(Editor's note: The opinion and viewpoint presented below does not represent the policy of the UDK editorial page. However, recognizing that there may well be two sides to every story, the following article by UDK staff writer Larry Schmidt is printed below.-Tom Coffman
Human rights are a personal matter. The principles of friendship and love lose the essence of their meaning when trotted out for exhibition and show. In contrast, they thrive on quiet sincerity, secret loyalties, and the sharing of loneliness.
Nonetheless, society demands that the acceptance or rejection of certain elements of mankind be made a public issue, and that each of us must take a stand on the question. We are not allowed to approach the situation on an individual-by-individual basis but must either be for or against the general inclusion or exclusion of certain groups from our midst. And, under the conditions of a democracy, there is no reason to feel even inconvenienced about having to make the decision. You know your own feelings and you express them, overtly or in more subtle ways.
MOST OF US would agree that it is a good thing to take positive measures to encourage further social acceptance of all individuals, regardless of race, creed, or color. Nor are there many who would say that an individual cannot attempt to persuade another to his point of view, so long as the rights of the one being persuaded are not ignored. On such a basis, private conversations, speeches, group demonstrations, and other actions are acceptable, if managed in an orderly fashion.
There is then, nothing basically wrong with either the moral principle upon which the civil rights movement is based or a public method of expression such as picketing.
Here at KU there are certain organizations whose members feel they can advance the cause of campus civil rights by picketing the Greek system in general and Sigma Nu in particular. The announced purposes of the demonstrations are to convince the national officials of Sigma Nu that they should remove a racially discriminatory clause from their constitution, and to try to eliminate what the demonstrators feel is de facto segregation in the fraternities and sororites at KU.
TO DEBATE whether or not it is within the authority of these aroused individuals to concern themselves with the positions the Greeks seem to have taken is missing the point. The only valid question is a practical one: are these ventures likely to produce the desired results?
The local chapter of Sigma Nu has apparently tried, without success, to have the discriminatory statement removed from the national constitution. Is the demonstration method more likely to get results than the efforts of the local chapter? There is the slim chance that it might, simply because of the threat to the fraternity's campus existence. But, limited to the campus, that chance would be very, very slight.
What the picketing groups may be hoping for
is the tremendous power of publicity. They have discovered in recent weeks that newsmen have a weakness for reporting stories which tend to sensationalize campus events. Apparently, anyone anywhere with a sign gets attention. If there are enough signs, the story may make the national wires and become a truly influential factor—even over stubborn fraternity leaders.
BUT,WOULD the end justify the means? Would the adverse publicity inherent in such cases, and directed at KU, be worth the relatively small gains derived from Sigma Nu's capitulation? Would the KU student body be forever indebted to these humble marchers for performing such a fine public service?
As for the Greek situation in general, since none of the other fraternities and sororites have discriminatory clauses, what good can be accomplished? Why concentrate on the Greeks? Are they necessarily more in favor of discrimination than any other individual on the campus?
Probably not. But the Greek houses, well organized as they are, provide perfect targets for arrows which can find nowhere else to go.
The fact that there are few, if any, Negroes in Greek houses at KU is as difficult to explain and as hard to defend as the fact that there are churches in Lawrence where all the bright, shining, Sunday-morning faces are white. Or why there are only a daring few who would cross the color line to date or marry. It is a complex maze of cultural stigmas which perpetuate these inequities. And, as the American mind crawls toward color blindness, so will the institutions which reflect the national conscience.
IN THE MEANTIME, by inviting groups of predominantly independent students to march with them, and choosing important Greek functions as locations for their demonstrations, the instigating picketers may well stir up enough resentment to (1) overshadow their original purpose in protesting, and (2) pry open still further the more-or-less natural rift between independents and Greeks. Result: no solution, more problems.
Since the picketing is not likely to bring about the desired change in Sigma Nu's constitution . . . not likely to bring sudden enlightenment to Greeks in general (while more likely to cause undue misunderstanding and friction between Greeks and independents) . . . not likely to appear as much more than carrying one's halo on a stick for public edification . . . then what good does it do to picket at all?
There is nothing wrong with the idea of letting it be known that you are in favor of loving thy neighbor. But probably the best way to convince others of the sincerity of your beliefs is to practice them; not necessarily in a conspicuous manner for demonstration purposes, but privately and genuinely. Here one may advance the cause of civil rights far beyond the minimum standards set by legislation or the empty gestures of paper compliance. Here is where the civil rights issue finds its real solution. In the human heart, not in the streets. — Larry Schmidt
A Parody:
Peace on Earth
The world is ugly. The world is full of war and full of hatred. I was born in this world, but I did not make this world. Something should be done.
My fellow man is part of this world of hatred and war. I worry about my fellow man. He is not peaceful. The ROTC is sponsored by my fellow man.
The ROTC teaches killing. Yes. The ROTC approves of mass murder. The ROTC is bad.
The ROTC has parties. The ROTC parties are bad because they dress murder up in a fancy uniform. The cadets escort pretty girls to the parties. The girls and uniforms make killing a pretty thing. Their big party is called the military ball.
Something should be done about the military ball. We could have a party too. We could make it an objection to the Military Ball. Yes, that is a good idea. We shall call it the un-military ball.
Later
Oh, yes . . . and the beasts from the wild shall be led by a child and the lions shall lay down by the lamb . . . oh, yes.
We had the un-military ball. Oh, my. We had the un-military ball as an objection to the military ball. One of the persons at the un-military ball busted another person in the mouth. Said second person has a cracked upper molar. Oh, my.
A newspaper photographer was at the unmilitary ball. The photographer took pictures. He took pictures without asking. Someone threw beer at the photographer. The beer missed the photographer. The beer hit a young lady. The dress of the young lady was soiled. Oh, my.
I worry about my fellow man. Something should be done.
Tom Coffman
Nixon, Lodge Strength Expected in Primary
By Mike Miller
Last week's national political stories were aimed at an event which is occurring today—the New Hampshire presidential primary.
The four Republican candidates who have filed in the primary—Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, Sen. Barry Goldwater, Sen. Margaret Chase Smith and Harold Stassen—have been pounding the New Hampshire countryside soliciting support.
TWO MEN who have not filed are expected to receive considerable backing, however. Joseph Alsop wrote last week that even heavy write-in showings by former Vice-President Richard M. Nixon and Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge would not allow them to be serious threats for the nomination. He said Nixon's lack of political home base and Lodge's position of viewing the campaign from Saigon would hurt the two.
PUBLIC OPINION polls show that Gov. Nelson Rockefeller has gained considerable strength during the campaign while Goldwater has lost ground badly. Most of the polls suggest that both Nixon and Lodge will get bigger-than-normal write-in votes and that Sen. Smith and Stassen will divide the remaining crumbs.
The primary campaign in New Hampshire sent Ralph McGill's thoughts back to the 1952 New Hampshire primary in which Sen. Robert Taft of Ohio was running against Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower.
In that primary, Taft ran ahead until the larger towns came in for Eisenhower. It was then that "Mr. Conservative" picked up the "Taft Can't Win" tag.
IN RELATING Taft's conservatism to the present-day Republican, McGill wrote, "The strobborn conservatism of Sen. Taft was based on conclusions intelligently reached. His conservatism matched Edmund Burke's definition of that philosophy: 'Show the thing you contend for to be reason; show it to be common sense; show it to be the means of attaining some useful end.'"
Rockefeller has changed his campaign tactics by blasting the Johnson administration's record in dealing with crises around the world. In a special press conference, Rockefeller said he would make foreign policy a major issue in his campaign and charged that the foreign policy of the administration "has been vacillating and contradictory."
IN HIS weekly news conference, President Johnson forecast better economic times ahead for the country. He cited recent reports of
economic gains and hinted at others which he said would be announced next week. He said unemployment is going down, employment is going up, capital investments in new plants and equipment are rising, the price news "is reassuring" and the stock market is hitting new highs. In the foreign field, the President described his communications with Premier Khrushchev as adequate and said he sees no reason for a meeting now.
Roy Roberts, editor of the Kansas City Star, wrote that the only thing that could beat Johnson in November is Johnson himself. Roberts said Johnson "would have to fall on his face and violently—perhaps in the foreign field—if there is to be a November upset."
Johnson in November
A Gallup poll released last week showed how public opinion support often is subject to sharp changes after the initial "honeymoon period" of a President.
Arthur Krock of the New York Times wrote that three events conceivably could divert U.S. voters from voting for Johnson when they go to the polls in November. These are the nomination of Atty. Gen Robert F. Kennedy for vicepresident, retention in the pending equal rights bill of a compulsory federal equal opportunities committee and a recession or galloping inflation in the economy.
THE SPHERE of foreign affairs which might be Johnson's stumbling block was clouded last week. France demanded that Communist China replace Nationalist China as a member of the United Nations World Health Organization. It was the first time any major international body has faced a challenge of the Chinese Nationalist delegation since France recognized Red China Jan. 28. At that time, the United States condemned the action.
Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara is in Viet Nam on a fact-finding trip. In a news conference before leaving, McNamara said "there has been evidence that in the last six months North Vietnamese support of the Communist Viet Cong has increased in South Viet Nam.
When he arrived in Saigon, McNamara pledged that the United States will stay in Viet Nam as long as necessary and provide whatever help is needed to beat the Communist guerrillas.
He told a cheering crowd. "There is no question of the United States abandoning Viet Nam. We shall stay for as long as it takes. We
(Continued on page 3)
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University Daily Kansan
McNamara in Viet Nam-
Page 3
shall provide whatever help is required to help you win your battle against the Communist insurgents."
(Continued from page 2)
In the Cyprus crisis, the United Nations Security Council voted unanimously last week to have Secretary-General U Thant set up a Cyprus peace force and to name a mediator to seek peace in the island republic. The Soviet Union cleared the way for the solid vote when it announced it would support the plan despite strong reservations on the provisions for the creation and control of the force.
In Athens, Greek anti-American demonstrators burned an effigy of President Johnson as rioting over the Cyprus issue erupted. The demonstrators claimed the U.S. is following a pro-Turkish line in attempts to settle strife on Cyprus. Shouts of "Johnson—Al Capone," and "Bravo Russia" were heard in Athens.
The Grecians received a severe blow later in the week, however, when King Paul died six days after he was stricken by complications from a stomach operation. He was succeeded by his 23-year-old son Constantine. Paul ascended the throne in the spring of 1947 after the death of his brother, George II.
Tuesday, March 10, 1964
IN DALLAS, the trial of Jack Ruby took on added excitement Friday when seven convicts escaped in the Dallas County Courthouse. One of the convicts threatened a Ruby witness with a fake gun. In more conventional action in the case, the final juror was picked to hear the murder trial after a substitute judge entered the case when Judge Joe B. Brown became ill. A Dallas policeman testified that shortly after Ruby shot Lee Harvey Oswald, he told officers, "Somenoe had to do it. You guys (the Dallas police couldn't do it."
Ruby Trial
Another police officer testified that Ruby told him he thought of killing Oswald the night after the President was assassinated and two days before Oswald was shot.
Letter from an Anxious Bircher Mr. Tom Coffman:
The People Say...
Your editorial combining "Rockwell-Bircher-OpcenSKY" is very typical of past performance, and it does not disturb me considering the source. I would simply ask, however, that you let someone with a persuasion other than your own write editorials to balance this tax-supported institution, at least for the sake of looking fair. Odds of ten to one are a normal experience for those of us attempting to understand the problems facing this country and correlate them with historical facts, which should make our present course apparent to anyone.
IN ANOTHER TRIAL, Jimmy Hoffa, Teamsters' president, was convicted of trying to fix a federal court jury. He will be sentenced this week. He faces a maximum of 10 years in prison and $10,000 in fines.
In Congress, the controversial farm bill passed the Senate. The administration-backed bill now will go to the House. It looms as important campaign material in the country's agricultural regions.
The Senate is preparing for the debate on the civil rights bill for this week. Speculation still exists as to whether enough support exists to limit debate on the bill and avert a possible southern filibuster.
***
Dailij Yänsan
University of Kansas student newspaper 111 Flint Hall
UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom
UNiversity 4-3198, business office
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Hoffa
You conveniently tie Communists, fascists and conservatives together, although I did not expect anything else from a liberal who preaches fair play. How about inviting some conservatives to write for the "Kansan"? It would be interesting to contemplate the reaction with such a move.
Bob Brooks .. Business Manager
Joanne Zabornik, Advertising Mgr.;
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Mgr. Walt Wall, Marketing Mgr.
Brian Stewart, Classified Advertising
Mgr.; Ken Costich, Promotion Mgr.;
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In Louisiana last week, a Republican who is an ardent supporter of Sen. Barry Goldwater provided the strongest Republican challenge in the state in nearly 100 years, but lost to Democrat John J. McKeithen. This election was seen as doubly dismal for the national Democrats because McKeithen beat a strong Kennedy administration man, DeLesseps S. Morrison, in the Democratic primary.
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(Editor's note; Mr. Robert D. Love is president of the Love Box Company in Wichita and a member of the John Birch Society.)
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University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 10, 1964
Humanity Rejected by Model UN
Humanity needs to be represented in the Model United Nations.
This is the contention of a group of individuals who are attempting to receive recognition as a special delegation to the Model U.N. The delegation for humanity sent a letter to the steering committee of the Model U.N. which the committee received last Tuesday, Dick Epps, Teopka senior and chairman of the Model U.N., said.
The delegation for humanity "wanted to represent the people of the world." Epps said.
Speaking for the delegation, Jim Cooley, Salina freshman and head of the delegation for humanity, said, "Sovereign nation states have a tendency not to represent the interests of humanity as a whole."
Cooley also said that the delegation felt that it could represent the interests of humanity as a whole.
The delegation is attempting to set up machinery whereby delegates could work in another atmosphere, Dick Lobdell, Salina freshman and member of the delegation, said.
Delegates for the humanitarian committee would attempt to empha-
Student Aid
BERKELEY, Calif.—(UPI) —The University of California has established a preparatory school for high school students who come from slum areas and who would ordinarily lack the opportunity to enter the university.
A scholarship fund of $100,000 was recently approved by the university. Between 50 and 100 students will be selected to take part in the initial classes, scheduled to begin in September.
Why is it leaning?
If you just ran a mile without stopping, would you be standing straight?
Why is it leaning?
If you just ran a mile without stopping, would you be standing straight?
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size "humanitarian interests rather than power politics," Lobdell explained.
BiC
"It should be pointed out to students the contrast between the way it (United Nations) is now set up and the way we hope to see it set up." Lobdell concluded.
"As far as we (the steering committee) are concerned . . . we're not going to let them in," Epps stated.
It was all right for the group to ask to be included in the Model
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U. N., Epps explained, "but it's not a campus arguing society."
If the delegation is not accepted by the steering committee they will either petition among the blocks to get support or will appear before the steering committee tonight, Cooley said.
The Model U.N. which is sponsored by the KU-Y will be held May 1 and 2. So far, 168 delegations are represented. Six more delegations remain to be filled, according to Epps.
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The Engineers' St. Patrick Day comes three days after everyone is through wearing the green.
Engineers Plan St. Pat Day
KU engineers have selected March 20 as the day they will wheelbarrow their elected St. Pat down Jayhawk Boulevard.
precede the Engineers' St. Patrick Day Dance, which will be held at 8 p.m. at the Holiday Inn where the KU engineering queen will be announced.
The queen will then reign over the 44th KU Engineering Exposition to be held April 17-18 in the new engineering building.
The parade down Jayhawk will
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Page 5
TravelGroupGathersInformation
Tuesday, March 10, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Handling of information concerning student travel in the U.S. and abroad is the basic function of the new Student Travel Committee.
"Because there are several organizations on campus which have information on student travel, it seems necessary to have a place to pool it, and to make it available to all interested students." Nancy Breidenthal, Kansas City junior and temporary Student Travel Committee chairman, said.
The committee is directed by advisers from People-to-People, SUA and the All Student Council. This advisory committee discusses suggestions for co-ordinating information from various sources and making that information available to the students. Miss Breidenthal said.
Gathering and compiling information is the main duty of the committee. Working from the suggestion of advisers, students are compiling lists of faculty members who have traveled abroad and who would be willing to help interested students. Miss Breidenthal said.
Most of the information which the committee distributes is concerned with student travel, but there is also some information on job opportunities in Europe and scholarships for study abroad, she said.
The most visible result of the committee's work is the large information booth located in the lobby of the Kansas Union.
"There is also an attempt now being made to get a list of KU students who have traveled abroad," she said. "In addition, we have a book list which includes all helpful printed material that will be filed in the SUA office."
"The booth will open officially Wednesday." Miss Reedential said. "We hope to keep it open from now on, on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays from 11:30 a.m. until 1:30 p.m.
"The booth will act as an infor-
maison director," she said. Students who inquire at the booth will be referred to a faculty member, another student, or some publication to answer his question, Miss Breidenthal said.
During the first three weeks of its operation the booth will be staffed by members of Cwens, sophomore women's honorary organization.
It is hoped that the availability of information on travel and study programs will stimulate more students into thinking about the possibilities of travel, Miss Breidenthal said.
Members of the advisory board include Lance Burr, Salina junior, representing People-to-People; John Mays, Lyons junior, representing SUA, and Susan Hartley, Atwood sophomore, representing ASC.
GEORGE WASHINGTON AND John Adams, the nation's first two Presidents, each contributed $100 to the Kentucky Academy, first public school authorized and incorporated by the Kentucky legislature and built at Pisgah near Lexington in 1794.
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Bullhead
On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!" and "Barefoot Boy With Cheek.")
A ROBE BY ANY OTHER NAME
With the Commencement Day just a couple of short months away, the question on everyone's lips is: "How did the different disciplines come to be marked by academic robes with hoods of different colors?" Everybody is asking it; I mean everybody! I mean I haven't been able to walk ten feet on any campus without somebody grabs my elbow and says, "How did the different disciplines come to be marked by academic robes with hoods of different colors, hey?"
This, I must say, is not the usual question asked by collegians who grab my elbow. Ordinarily they say "Hey, Shorty, got a Marlboro?" And this is fitting. After all, are they not collegians and therefore loaded with brains? And does not intelligence demand the tastiest in tobacco flavor? And does not Marlboro deliver a flavor that is uniquely delicious? And am I not short?
But I digress. Back to the colored hoods of academic robes. A doctor of philosophy wears blue, a doctor of medicine wears
Why, Why?
green, a master of arts wears white, a doctor of humanities wears crimson, a master of library science wears lemon yellow. Why? Why, for example, should a master of library science wear lemon yellow?
Well sir, to answer this vexing question, we must go back to March 14, 1844. On that date the first public library in the United States was established by Ulrich Sigfaoos. All of Mr. Sigfaoos's neighbors were of course wildly grateful—all, that is, except Wex Toddhunter.
Mr. Todhunter had hated Mr. Sigafoos since 1822 when both men had wooed the beautiful Melanie Zitt and Melanie had chosen Mr. Sigafoos because she was mad for dancing and Mr. Sigafoos knew all the latest steps—like the Missouri Compromise Samba, the Shays' Rebellion Schottische, and the James K. Polk Polka—while Mr. Todhunter, alas, could not dance at all, owing to a wound he had received at the Battle of New Orleans. (He was struck by a falling praline.)
Consumed with jealousy at the success of Mr. Sigafoos's library, Mr. Todhunter resolved to open a competing library. This he did, but he lured not one single patron away from Mr. Sigafoos. "What has Mr. Sigafoos got that I have not?" Mr. Todhunter kept asking himself, and finally the answer came to him: books.
So Todhunter stocked his library with lots of lovely books, and soon he was doing more business than his hated rival. But Mr. Sigafoos struck back. To regain his clientele, he began serving tea at his library every afternoon. Thereupon Mr. Todhunter, not to be outdone, began serving tea with sugar. Thereupon Mr. Sigafoos began serving tea with sugar and cream. Thereupon Mr. Todhunter began serving tea with sugar and cream and lemon.
This, of course, clinched the victory for Mr. Todhunter because he had the only lemon tree in town—in fact, in the entire state of Maine—and since that day lemon yellow has, of course, been the color on the robes of masters of library science.
(Incidentally, the defeated Mr. Sigafos packed up his library and moved to California where, alas, he failed once more. There were, to be sure, plenty of lemons to serve with his tea, but, alas, there was no cream because the cow was not introduced to California until 1937 by John Wayne.)
* * *
© 1964 Max Shulman
Today Californians, happy among their milch kine, are enjoying filtered Marlboro Cigarettes in soft pack or Flip-Top-Box, as are their fellow Americans in all fifty states of this Marlboro Country!
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 10, 1964
Non-Sensical Simpson Foundation Dedicated to Non-Serious Action
The "Roscoe G. Simpson Foundation of North America" has officially declared this week as "Roscoe G. Simpson Week," Jan Parkinson, Prairie Village sophomore, the organization's self-appointed leader said yesterday.
محمد الحسين الشعباني
"It's better to be rich and healthy than poor and sick."
Roscoe G. Simpson (1918)
Togetherness Pushed for SUA Jazz Concert
Organized living groups will be competing for the best seats at the SUA Spring Concert, featuring jazz pianist, Peter Nero, on a sales percentage basis.
Douglas D. Dedo, Birmingham, Mich., junior and chairman of the Spring Concert committee, said orders are being taken now for the bloc ticket sales, and should be turned in at the SUA Activities Director's office in the Kansas Union, Dedo said.
Dedo said the seating arrangement has been planned so that Greek houses will compete for the best seats on one side of Hoch Auditorium, and Independent living groups will compete for the best seats on the other side.
The best sections of the auditorium will be reserved for the living organization that sells the highest percentage of tickets to its members.
Ticket prices are $.75, $1.00 and $1.25, with the better seats selling at the higher price.
The deadline on bloot ticket sales is 5:00 p.m. March 16. Letters have been sent to all organized living groups, informing them of the ticket sales, Dedo said.
General admission tickets will go on sale March 18 at the ticket counter in the Kansas Union, the information booth, and Bell's music store. Two good sections have been reserved for married students and graduate students, and they will be sold on a first-come, first-serve basis.
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The occurrence of "Roscoe G. Simpson Week" during mid-term week was purely coincidental, Parkinson said, "but it's kind of nice that it worked out that way."
"Our group is so common-sensical that it's non-sensical," he said.
Parkinson said that the organization was dedicated to "not taking things too seriously."
---
The organization started as a joke last spring, Parkinson explained. "We make no attempt to link with any other movement," he added.
A queen will be selected from the five queen candidates at the Ball, Parkinson said.
Parkinson would make no extensive comment about the group's namesake, Roscoe G. Simpson, other
"Roscoe G. Simpson Week" will be climaxed by a motorcade across campus at 3:30 p.m. Friday, Parkinson said. About 15 cars will be participating in the motorcade, which will feature five queen candidates for the "Roscoe G. Simpson Week Ball," to be held later that evening. will be selected from the
"Anyone can attend the party," Parkinson said, "but attendance at the Governor's Ball will be by invitation only."
The organization's motto for the motorcade will be "I Go Rooscoe."
than, "he's the driving inspiration behind our organization."
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Tuesday, March 10, 1964
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Costa Rican School Alters Structure
Efficiency in administration and instruction is the basic aim of reforms now taking place in the University of Costa Rica.
"We have been discussing various reform measures for about 15 years, and we began to put them into operation in 1957." Fernando Murillo Bonilla and Eugenio Rodriguez Vega, both representing the University of Costa Rica, said.
BONILLA AND Vega are delegates to the fifth Seminar on Higher Education in the Americas now in session at KU.
"The first real reform in the academic field was to establish a General Studies program," the men said. This would correspond to the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at KU.
The program, like the College, requires all students to get a liberal background before proceeding into the professional school of their choice.
FIVE COURSES form the core of this one-year General Studies "faculty" (college), Spanish, philosophy, history of civilization, biology and sociology.
"We feel that these courses give the student a critical mind and will better prepare them for advanced instruction," the educators agreed.
their part. By giving all students a common background, it is assumed that they will be ready for more detailed study when they enter professional schools, Bonilla and Vega said.
The General Studies prog.. also be a benefit to instructors in the professional schools because it will require better instruction on
THE REFORM of the administration to fit this new academic program is the most recent of the reform attempts.
"There must be an administrative structure to deal effectively with the new objectives of the university," the educators said. "The administration must understand that they are the means to an end..that end being a well-run university," they said.
William Haber, dean of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, University of Michigan, will be the featured speaker at the seventh annual Supervisory Seminar today in the Kansas Union.
The seminar, open to managers, supervisors and foremen or anyone who works in a supervisory capacity,
is designed to permit participants meet, talk and exchange ideas with other persons in the same field.
About 120 people are expected to attend the seminar whose theme is "Adjusting to Change." It is being coordinated by University Extension and the Lawrence Adult Education Department.
Three engineering experts will speak March 17-19, in a lecture series sponsored by the School of Engineering and Architecture.
The speakers are Y. C. Fung, professor of aeronautics at the California Institute of Technology; Edward E. David Jr., director of the Computing and Information Research Center of the Bell Telephone Laboratories, New York; and Egor P. Popov, professor of civil engineering and immediate past chairman of the division of structural mechanics, University of California.
Three Engineers to Speak
Fung will lecture at 7:45 p.m., March 17; David will speak at 4:00 p.m., March 18; and Popov will speak at 4:00 p.m., March 19. All lectures will be presented in Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
It will be the main job of the administration to integrate the whole university. They must integrate teaching, research, and community function, they said.
Richard H. Benson, associate professor of geology, will participate in the International Indian Ocean Expedition this summer.
The expedition was organized by the Oceanographic Institution of Woods Hole, Mass., to study the nature and sediments of the ocean bottom. It will be sponsored by the National Science Foundation.
KU Professor to Study Ocean
The expedition is expected to attract scientists from all parts of the world.
the state, and we still charge according to ability to pay, but now we have set a maximum payment at $150," Bonilla and Vega said. "The money that we get from tuition is returned to the students in the form of scholarships."
The applications can be picked up in the People-to-People office in the Kansas Union any day between 11:30 and 12:30. The forms should be filled out and returned by March 13 so that interviews may be arranged for next week.
Foreign Student Jobs
Application forms are now available for foreign students seeking summer jobs.
Topic to Be Divine Love
Costa Rica, like many other Latia American universities, is located outside a major city in a "University city." This isolation, of sorts, guarantees the 5500 students at the university a secluded and academic atmosphere.
The nature and power of divine love will be discussed by James Watt, member of the Christian Science Board of Lectureship.
Watt will speak at 7:30 tonight in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. He is speaking at the invitation of the Christian Science Organization.
The association will handle donations for Miss Reeder, who has only ten days to raise the needed $900 for the March 20 trip. She has no funds of her own.
THE UNIVERSITY of Costa Rica differs in organization from U.S. universities, especially in its method for charging tuition. Instead of charging each student a fixed fee, the student is charged according to his ability to pay. This was changed under one of the recent administrative reforms, they said.
See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS
Miss Reeder says the opportunity to enter the Budapest competition is "the greatest thing that ever happened to me."
NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS
A fund for Claudia Reeder, Overland Park sophomore, the fencer who qualified as the only U.S. woman entry to the Junior Fencing Championships in Budapest this month, has been set up through the KU Endowment Association.
Fund Set Up For Fencer
A graduate of the Illinois Institute of Technology, Watt is currently on an extensive Christian Science lecture tour.
the reforms, they say "The university is maintained by
Around the Campus Supervisors to Meet
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 10, 1964
New Sooner Grid Coach Begins Spring Practice
NORMAN, Okla.—(UPI)—Gomer Jones, treating his new role as head football coach at the University of Oklahoma with a great amount of enthusiasm, sounded his first call for Spring practice today.
Jones, who succeeded Bud Wilkinson last January when Wilkinson resigned to run for the U.S. Senate, said he expects 85 candidates, including 28 lettermen.
Jones will be on somewhat of a spot this fall, as would be any coach who succeeded the remarkably successful Wilkinson. But, he contributed mightily to Wilkinson's successes, building powerful line after line through 17 years as Bud's "second banana." And, he knows all the inner workings of the Sooner attack and the well-manned team he inherits.
Jones says he will practice two weeks, four days each, and then take a week off for Easter vacation. The squad reassembles a week later and continues drills until the annual alumni game April 18.
EIGHT STARTERS are back. These include fullback Jim Grisham and tackle Ralph Neely, who were named to the second team of the 1963 United Press International All-America squad.
Other starters returning include guards Newt Burton and Ed McQuarters. Ends John Flynn and Rick McCurdy, center John Garrett and quarterback Bobby Page.
Nine alternates are back, including end Allen Bumgardner, tackles Jerry Goldsbby and Glen Condren, center Carl McAdams, guard Carl Schreiner, quarterback Tommy Pannell, halfbacks Larry Shields and Lance Rentzel and fullback Larry Brown. Defensive specialists Charlie Mayhue and David Voiles also return from the 1963 Sooner team that finished 8-2 and second to Nebraska in the Big Eight.
MIKE RINGER, who was the starting quarterback at the beginning of last season, appears to be recovering from an elbow injury that forced him to miss most of the campaign. But, he is not expected to scrimmage until after the Easter break.
Tackle Jim Riley, a 225-pounder from Enid, appears to be the top contender from the freshman ranks.
Gibson Named to Big-Eight Academic Team
Other sophomores-to-be who bear watching include halfbacks Ben Hart and Stan Crowder, quarterbacks Rodney Crosswhite and Buford (Boots) Bagby, fullback Jon Kennedy, halfbacks Eugene Ross, James Jackson and Jim Roberts and guard Ron Shields.
Halfbacks Bill Thomas and tackle Ronnie Smith, sophomores who could not play last season because of injuries, are expected to be in the thick of things this autumn.
Harry Gibson, who is as tough in the classroom as he is on the basketball floor, has been named to the Big Eight academic all-conference basketball team selected by three mid-western sports writers.
Gibson, a 2.5 mechanical engineering major, was starting forward on this year's team.
Gary Hassmann, a 3.0 mathematics and science major at Oklahoma State, heads the list of members of the academic all-stars.
Other members of the Big Eight academic honor team are Joe Gottfrid, 2.3 physics major from Kansas State; Max Moss, 2.5 veterinary medicine student at Kansas State and Jim Cooper, 2.4 history major at Oklahoma State.
The five Big Eight winners will be nominees for the All-American squad to be picked later this month.
The selection group for the Big Eight team was composed of Jay Simon, Daily Oklahoma, Oklahoma
---
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A. R. BURTON
"Third finger, left hand" has always been the rule for wedding rings.
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Applications are available in the SUA Activities Director's Office in the Kansas Union.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES OFFICERS AND BOARD POSITIONS NOW OPEN
Offices: President
For Additional Information
Call Ext. 3477
- Vice-President
- Secretary
- Treasurer
Positions:
- Arts & Exhibits
- Dance
- Hospitality
- Music & Drama
- Forums
- Recreation
- Public Relations
- Special Events
Tuesday, March 10, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Committee Helping Negroes Find Jobs
5432
WASHINGTON—(UPI)A federal committee devoted to opening up more job opportunities for Negroes and other minority groups is getting a big helping hand from the White House.
President Johnson already has addressed three groups of industrialists and businessmen to encourage them to sign "Plans for Progress" and end every aspect of racial bias in their firms.
And Johnson still serves as chairman of the President's Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity—a post he was assigned while vice president by the late John F. Kennedy.
"HE STILL TAKES an interest and makes decisions." Hobart Taylor, Jr., executive vice chairman of the committee who formerly was a special assistant to Johnson, told UPI. "The President is very much concerned with our work. I think he gives us a little priority."
The committee was charged by Kennedy with policing discrimination in employment under federal contracts as well as within the government itself. It has the power to order cancellation of a contract but has yet to use this authority.
"We've come close to it several times," Taylor said in an interview. "I've called people in here and told them their contracts would be cancelled or not renewed if they failed to comply. They always have taken corrective action."
COMPLIANCE WITH THE NON-discrimination ban in every federal contract is being pressed as vigorously as ever, Taylor said, with 150 compliance reports being processed each week.
But he prefers to emphasize the voluntary actions taken by business to promote opportunity for Negroes.
He said he formed an advisory council of business leaders to help carry out the program when he became convinced greater results could be obtained from private initiative.
PARTLY AS A result, 141 companies with 7 million employees have now signed the "Plans for Progress" and another 30 or so are expected to do so soon.
Officials of American Airlines have told other businessmen that their employees were relieved to see Negroes take jobs as reservations clerks and flight attendants.
Hiring Negroes without discrimination is now viewed as good business by many firms which would have resisted any federal directive in this field a year or so ago, Taylor believes.
"They were gratified to have the change made without the indignity of public pressure," said George Spater, executive vice president of American. "We have found 'Plans for Progress' is an acceptable vehicle for accomplishing gracefully something that sooner or later must be done."
TAYLOR IS INTERESTED in surveying the ranks of Negro college graduates to demonstrate the talent pool available to employers seeking qualified members of minority groups.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Catholic Mass. 5 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Inquiry Forum, 7 p.m. St. Lawrence
Center, 1915 Strattford, Rd.
Center, 1915 Stratford Rd.
Inquirer Class, 7:30 p.m., Canterbury
Holland
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship,
7:30 p.m., 306 Kansas Union. "Powerful
Beginnings; Acts 1, 2"—Rev. George
Darby.
Western Civ Discussion, 9 p.m., St.
Lawrence Center.
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
He said he is hopeful some of the nation's better colleges, such as those in the Big Ten Conference, will enter into informal alliances with Negro institutions to try to raise their teaching standards.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m., St.
Lawrence Chapel.
Lake Class.
Inquirer Class, 3:45 p.m., Canterbury
Bury
But he also is concerned about raising the standards of Negro schools that suffered under segregated systems of education.
El Ateneo reunirá el miercoles a las 4:30 en 1 Fraser. Un estudiante de K.U. hablaria de sus expertencias en el programa en Costa Rice." está invitado.
Lenten Bible Vigil, 7 p.m., St. Lawrence, Chanel
*imurey Topics.* 7:30 p.m. St. Lawrence
"HELL"-by an eyewitness almost.
ASC-SUA Current Events Speech, 8
p.m. Hoch, Vance Packard.
One of the few critics of the president's committee has been Herbert Hill, an official of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). He termed its work "impotent" so far as southern textile mills were concerned.
TAYLOR REPLIED THAT more than 90 per cent of the complaints filed by Hill have resulted in corrective action. The NAACP file 39 per cent of the complaints received by the committee in nearly two and one-half years of operation.
President Johnson said last Jan. 16 that 15 per cent of the new workers hired by the "Progress" companies were Negroes. That is about three times as many as they formerly employed, he said.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
He said no one should be hired merely because he is a Negro. But he pleaded with business leaders to drop artificial standards of race or religion in selecting employees. "You set the example," Johnson told them. "The example you set is followed down the line to many small enterprises in this nation. . . . So let us be sure that it is the most human leadership."
The tour will include visits to the Eisenhower museum and library, and the old Eisenhower home, Barry Farmer, Wichia junior and publicity chairman, said.
An Industrial Tour to Abilene will be sponsored by People-to-People on March 14.
P-t-P Sponsors Industrial Tour
This tour is of special interest to People-to-People because General Eisenhower is its honorary national chairman.
After visiting the Eisenhower museum the group will spend some time at "Old Abilene Town."
A bus will leave for Saturday's tour at 8:00 a.m. from the Kansas Union, is scheduled to return late that afternoon. Students are required to provide their own lunch.
Students may sign up in the People-to-People office in the Kansas Union for the tour.
Gangland Slayer Free After 23 Years
TRENTON, N.J. — (UPI) — "The Bug" gets out today.
Charles Workman, serving a life sentence for the bloody gangland slaying of prohibition-era policy kingpin Dutch Schultz, was expected to walk out of state prison on parole after 23 years behind bars.
Prison officials said his wife Catherine, would meet him at the penitentiary's gate and take him to their home in the Flushing section of New York City.
They do not know what his future plans are. He is now 54 and a grandfather.
Charlie the Bug, was convicted in 1941, nearly six years after Schultz and three of his underworld cronies were gunned down in a Newark restaurant.
An investigation of Murder Inc
by William O'Dwyer, then Kings County, N.Y. prosecutor, led to Workman's arrest.
Schultz, known as the beer baron of the Bronx in the 1920's and later as head of the policy rackett syndicate, was sitting in the Palace Chop House having dinner on Oct. 23, 1935. With him were Otto Biederman, Abe (Leo Frank) Landau and Lou (Lulu) Rosencranz.
Schultz had before him a record of a month's policy receipts totaling $827,253.54 and was studying them over dinner.
Accounts of the wild scene that followed vary.
A bartender said Schultz was in the washroom when a "big guy" came in and opened fire. Schultz's three henchmen returned the fire. When the Dutchman rushed from
the washroom to join the battle he was cut down.
Biederman and Rosencranz were mortally wounded and Landau was shot dead on the sidewalk outside where he followed the gunman.
Charlie the Bug, who pleaded no defense, was convicted mainly on the testimony of two former Murder Inc. Members, Abe (Kid Twist) Reles and Albert Tannenbaum.
Workman will be on parole for the rest of his life. He will have to report regularly to a New York parole officer.
At Rahway, Warden Warren Pinto said, he was "respected by the other inmates and even the guards." State prison Warden Howard Yeager said "I don't remember ever seeing a disciplinary report on him."
The Classical Film Series
presents
Joan of the Angels
an outstanding film from Poland (English subtitles)
- * * *
Wednesday, March 11
Dyche Auditorium (this week only)
7:00 p.m. — Admission $.60
Advance single admission tickets Now on sale at Kansas Union
VANCE PACKARD to speak
Vance Packard, social critic & author (Hidden Persuaders, Waste Makers, Status Seekers, Pyramid Climbers), will speak on "What's Happening to the American Character?" March 11 Hoch Auditorium 8 p.m. Sponsored by SUA & ASC
Reception for Mr. Packard in the Jayhawk Room of the Union following the speech
Page 10
(6)
Tuesday, March 10. 1964
'Fun Loving' Prince Accepts Duties of Monarchy
The new King of the Hellenes, at 23, is Europe's youngest head of state.
During the past few months King Constantine has become less the fun-loving sportsman and more the introspective young crown prince faced with the inevitable destiny of monarchy.
To friends, it was almost as if he already knew, or had a premonition that the illness of his father, the late King Paul, would put the responsibilities of state on his shoulders.
"TINO" TO HIS FAMILY and intimates, King Constantine is engaged to 17-year-old Princess Anne-Marie of Denmark, now slated to become a queen while still a teenager.
Constantine is blue-eyed, fair-haired, weighs 176 pounds and stands just under six feet, two inches. He has an athlete's manner of moving and a competitive spirit that should serve him well in maintaining the position of the monarchy in modern, democratic Greece. Those who know him describe him as charming and witty, with unaffected manners and a strong character.
As Crown Prince, Constantine was the first member of modern royalty to win an Olympic gold medal, and the first Greek to win one in half a century. With only 18 months experience in competitive yachting, he sailed his dragon class
boat "Nirefs" to victory in the 1960 Olympic Regatta in Naples. He returned home to Athens that summer a hero.
The young king is an excellent horseman and likes fast cars, but after his engagement to Princess Anne-Marie he remarked to a friend, "I'm through with sports cars, I'm getting married."
THEY BECAME ENGAGED in January, 1963, when Anne-Marie was only 16 and at school in Copenhagen. She was still studying at Montreuin in Switzerland when King Paul was operated on Feb. 21 and she flew out to join the Greek royal family.
Anne-Marie's parents, King Frederick and Queen Ingrid of Denmark, wanted to observe Danish law and allow their daughter to marry only after her 18th birthday this Aug. 30. The wedding date was fixed for January. 1965.
Anne-Marie is expected to convert from the Protestant church to Greek Orthodox before their marriage.
It was not immediately known if this would be advanced or delayed because of Constantine's accession.
THE TWO HAVE the same great-great-grandfather, King Christian IX of Denmark, making them cousins, five times removed.
Constantine was born June 2, 1940,
the year Italian Dictator Benito
Mussolini invaded Greece. With
German help. Greece was eventually overrun by the Axis and the royal family went into exile.
A LOST WORLD—Abounds In New Adventure!
sports from his father who took up yachting again himself to help train "Tino" for the Olympics.
"THEN I HAD TO become sort of a sailing professor to the women in the family," the former Crown Prince once said. "I helped teach my mother and two sisters to sail." It was intended he should lead the Greek team to the Tokyo Olympics.
outside Athens, which was specially funded for him and draws students from all sections of society. The Crown Prince also attended classes at the University of Athens and received instruction at officers' training schools for all three branches of the Greek armed services. In 1958 he received weapons' training in the United States.
THE FILM 'THE MEN' BY RUSSELL BERRY IS A COMEDY AND A SOMEWHAT TRUE HISTORY OF THE NAZI GERMAN CIVIL WAR. WRITTEN BY RUSSELL BERRY AND DAVID KRAMER, WITH JOHN PALMER AND TOMMY GIBBONS. PRODUCED BY CHRISTOPHER WEBB. Directed BY RUSSELL BERRY. STUDIO: ROWE HALL, LONDON. PICTURE CREATED BY BARRY HUGHES. EDITOR: ROBERT DUNNER. DESIGNER: NICHOLAS VAN WESTHOUFF. SPECIAL EDITION BY CATHERINE SCHWARTZ. PREMIERE AT 8:30 PM ON TIME AT THE FILM STUDios, 212 WEST 7TH AVENUE, NEW YORK, NY 10026. (AUTHOR) JOEL KRAMER; (PRODUCERS) RUSSELL BERRY; DAVID KRAMER; TOMMY GIBBONS; JOHN PALMER; CATHERINE SCHWARTZ; ROBERT DUNNER; NICHOLAS VAN WESTHOUFF.
Constantine appears to be as strong-willed in his royal position as in sports competition. A few months ago, while abroad, he spoke out bitterly against critics of his 46-year-old mother's alleged role in Greek politics and against gossips who said his engagement to Anne-Marie was in danger.
As soon as the Crown Prince was properly backgrounded, King Paul began including him not only in informal royal functions but also in conferences on government affairs.
"I know I shouldn't comment on these things," he said, "but I'm angry at the gossips."
KING PAUL MADE SURE his son got an education with plenty of discipline, physical training and without pampering. He broke the Greek royal tradition of private education and sent Prince Constantine to the Anavryta boarding school
As Constantine has no brothers, Princess Irene becomes next in line to the throne until such time as Constantine has children. Constantine was first in line to King Paul instead of Sophie because males are preferred.
His youngest sister, Princess Irene, was born May 11, 1942, while they were in exile. Now 21, she is unmarried. Princess Sophie, 25, the eldest child of King Paul and German-born Queen Frederika's three children, is married to Prince Don Juan Carlos of Spain.
YUL BRYNNER
GEORGE CHAKIRIS
SHIRLEY ANNE FIELD
"KINGS OF THE SUN"
Their pyramids touched the sky
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FOR SALE
38. S&W revolver. Also dimer jacket
only on second pair. Only one 3-12
Lynn Carr, IV 2-35884.
Continuing book sale. 1539 Tennessee (benind ATO house). Open 12 to 10, 6pm.
"Paradise Lost books" 1-111, 5c each.
French Curves, 15 and 25 each. 3-16
Used 3 speed Schwinn bikes. One lady's,
one man's. Both cut to $25. Ray Stone-
back's, 929 Mass. (New 3 speed Royce
back's in crate, $38.99.) 3-12
1957 MGA, red with white hardtop, wire wheels, new convertible top. Radio, heater, seat belts. Excellent condition, $800. Call Jack Hibler, VI 2-0443. 3-12
The latest and greatest in sound! Transistorized 4 track stereo tape deck for your car. Jerry Blakely, 943 Ohio, VI 3-4383. 3-11
University Daily Kansan
For quality used parts see Benson's Auto Salvage, 1902 Harper, North of 4-H grounds. Phone VI 3-1626. Open evenings. 3-11
Page 11
For sale or trade, pistols, rifles, ammo,
drafting equipment, slide-rules, English
bicycles, lanterns, musical instruments
will trade for anything. Call VI 3-110-
3-113
Tire prices slashed! Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center at 929 Mass. 36 moylon tubeless tires. Four 650 x 13', $40.
Four 750 x 14', $44. Four 670 x 15', $44.
Four 800 x 14', $50. Plus tax, exchange.
installed! 4 whitewalls, $8 extra! 3-26
New 16" lightweight portable TV, $99.
1 year guarantee on parts! Rent or buy,
$12 per month. Rock Stoneback's, 929.
Mass. (Motorola Headquarters). 3-26
Typewriter, new and used portables,
standards, electrics. Olympia, Hermes,
Olivetti. Royal and Smith Corona portables.
Typewriter, adder, rentals and service.
Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St..
VI 3-3644.
For Forlull Brush Products phone VI 3-
9040 after 5 p.m. t'
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME
WHEELS. Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale
at great savings after 6 p.m. weekdays.
sunday and Sunday. 837 Connect-
tt
German Shepherd pups, AKC registered
shelters. Lloyd Bridgitt,
shelters. Phone KI 2-2559.
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
team -- $8.5, Lawrence Outdoor.
1005 Mass Paper
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive outlining of courses and classes. Formerly known as the Thesus notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery $4 50
western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tt
FOR RENT
2 bedroom duplex, furnished. 1826 Misc
moil. $35 per month. 1 bedroom duplex,
3 bedrooms. $55 per room. 3 room furnished apartment, $55 Call T A.
Hemphill VI, 3-3902. T - 13
A large sleeping and study room for
located. Call VI 3-4890, 1220 La. 3-10
Vacancies for young men in contemporary home. Large swimming pool. Private swimming pool. 5 eventy meals per week. $75 per month. Utilities paid. Call V1 3-963.5. 3-11
2 rooms for rent. Girls only. See at 1242 Louisiana. 3-10
3 bedroom home with attached garage.
Nice yard with patio. Available on or before March 15. West 20th Terr. Call I 2-3416.
3-10
Large 3-bedroom ranch home, practically new wall-to-wall carpet, air condition-
ment, TV antenna and attached garage.
Available about March 15. Call 823- 3416.
Jerry D. Nielsen
2-10
Married, grad students, faculty, 2 bedroom, $75. Sleeping room, $25. 16 availabrch, Reserve new care for briarch, VI 3-2116. Santee Apartments, 1123 Indiana. tt
For one or two graduate age men, three room nicely furnished apt., private bath. 3 blocks, lovely landscaping conditions. Best of neighbors. For appointment phone VI 3-8534. tf
Crescent Heights two bedroom apart-
bud. Phone VI 2-3711.
Experienced typist for thesis and term
work. Mail resume to Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, II 3-0588.
Graduate men or older undergraduates—Close to campus, ideal study conditions. best of neighbors. Reasonably priced. not paid. For appointment call **3-8534**. **tt**
TYPING
Experienced secretary would like typing in home. Reasonable rates. Call VI at 1188.
Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term thesis, and accredit work sites and rates. Phone VI 3-8379 Charles Patti. tt
Accurate expert typist would like typing of a keyword in these documents. Call: V31-3-2651. Prompt intents:
Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason- sentations and theses, paper VI 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson.
Experienced Typist—Dissertations, Theses, Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 Rhode Island, VI 3-1748. tt
Professional typing by experienced secretary.
New electric typewriter, carbon
paper, printer. Mail ID: VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 408 West 13th. tf
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
Legal terms. Marsha Griffi. VI 3-2577.
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typhwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2047 Yale, VI 2-1645.
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
house 7 a.m. tape tranfer machine
house 7 a.m. tape 12 p.m. -1021½ Mass.
Phone VI 3-5920.
TYPNG: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type insees, term papers, reports, Electric Typewriter, Mrs. McDowdney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8586 t
term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tt
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols. carbon ribbon if desired. Service call services. Suzanne Gilbert VI-2-146 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI-3-3057
MISCELLANEOUS
the KANSAS FREE PRESS, the fighting liberal student newsletter at K.U., has articles on nearly all subjects plus regular features. Current press run over seven hundred. Free sample copy. 1401$^2$ New York or call VI 3-8352. 3-12
Have a party in the Big Red School
door and plants
Heated. CLI VI 3-7454.
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. tt
WANTED
Upperclassman would like to rent a
room for himself. It will be
little difference. Call VI 2-1791-3
3-12
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ARENSBERG'S
Tuesday, March 10, 1964
819 Mass.
VOLKSAGEN'S WANTED. Cash for your VW, Conzelman Motors, VW Sales, Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway 59 So. tf
VI 3-3470
Y 1 - 2 Y F B E F B Y G
Ride to Ft. Lauderdale, Daytona, or Miami Beach, Fla. Leave April 3. Help with expenses and driving. Call VI 2-9365 or write JP. 1703 W. 24th. Apri
LOST
Billfold, lost in Fraser Theater, Friday,
Dave Tillie, 818 Kentucky.
Rent a new electric portable sewing machine,
$1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White
Sewing Center, 116 Mass. VI 3-1267.
Make sound investment. KU student, experienced stereo hi-fi consultant, can help you design or expand component systems. Most major component lines available. Jerry Blakely, 943 Ohio, VI 3-4383. 3-11
L&M MAFC now under new management WE WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. The office is located in the beautiful lunches, dinners, and sandwiches. Your second cup of coffee always free.
BUSINESS SERVICES
Surprise your roommate with a cake on that special occasion. The KU-1 Birthday Cake is the studious body line of cakes. Free delivery and candles. Call VI 2-1791. 4-24
Griff's
HAMBURGER
12c
Griff's
BURGER BAR
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Milliken's SOS
"the best professional service"
- General typing service
- Mimeograph & photo-copying
- 24 hr. answering service
1021 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass., V1 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
Motor tune-ups, wheel balancing
STUDENTS
FREE—one quart of oil with each oil and filter change
on and inter change
LUBRICATION ... $1.00
PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE
24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled
all major brands-
YELLOW CAB CO.
1819 W 23rd VI 3-9694
BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ... $.98
VI 3-6333
Dressmaking-alterations, formals and wedding gowns. Ola Smith, 9391/2 Mass.
VI 3-5263.
5 string banjo instruction. Folk styles.
Low rates. Call VI 2-9466 after 6 p.m. tf
HELP WANTED
Female dental assistant, age 21-30, mini-
0398 for appointment. Train. Call VI.
0398 for appointment.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
5
Girl to play electric organ part-time.
Call VI 3-4743. **tt**
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY. Peppermint Park Kiddyland operation for sale, 2203 miles from the beach through by running this during the summer. Call VI 2-0155 after 5 p.m. 4-3
For Fast Results READ and USE THE WANT ADS REGULARLY!
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Sat. 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Hours : Daily
8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
NO LONG WAITS North of Union
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613 Vt. VI 3-4141
RISK'S
Wash & Fluff Dry
Shirt Finishing Laundry
616 W. 9th
JOE'S BAKERY
Hot doughnuts—sandwich
cold drink
25c delivery VI 3-4720
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ART'S TEXACO
9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897
HAVING A PARTY?
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
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
616 Vt.
Ph. VI 3-0350
---
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 10, 1964
World News Briefs
2017
Plane Crashes Near Boston
The Slick Airways, Inc., plane plunged into a lumber yard*on Castle Island, a jut of land separated from the airport by Boston Harbor. None of the lumber yard workers was injured.
BOSTON—(UPI)一A four-engine DC-4 cargo plane crashed and burned in a sleet storm while approaching Logan International Airport today, killing all three crewmen.
Rescue workers removed one body from the wreckage. A second was thrown 50 feet from the plane, giving rise to early reports that a lumber yard employee had been killed.
One yard worker said the plane "hit right into the ground nose first and burst into fire."
The plane was making an approach to runway 4R, the field's instrument landing strip, when it hit the island about 1/4 mile from the runway.
Witnesses said the plane approached the island at an altitude of about 40 feet when it should have been about 500 feet off the ground.
Hoffa Plans Appeal
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn.—(UPI)—Defense attorneys for Teamsters President James R. Hoffa and three others convicted on Federal jury tampering charges, were expected to file motions for new trials here today.
James C. Haggerty Sr., Hoffa's chief legal counsel, said "my present play" is to request oral arguments on the motions.
U. S. District Court Judge Frank Wilson gave the defense 10 days to file the motions following Hoffa's conviction last Wednesday.
Hoffa and three codefendants, convicted of attempting to "corruptly influence" jurors during his 1962 conspiracy trial at Nashville, face sentencing by Wilson Thursday. They could draw prison terms up to 10 years.
Two other defendants in the case were found innocent.
Fighting Flares In Cyprus
NICOSIA, Cyprus—(UPI)—New fighting flared across Cyprus today and Vice-President Fazil Kuchuk "beseeched" Turkey, Greece and Britain to "rescue the Turkish Cypriots from the threat of genocide."
Kuchuk's message came as renewed communal warfare broke out in widely-separated towns and cities around the island, Greece, Turkey and Britain are guarantors of Cyprus' independence under the 1960 treaty. He asked them to fulfill their obligations.
At Paphos—the scene of yesterday's bloodshed—the Greek Cypriots accused the Turkish Cypriots of breaking the cease fire. The Greek controlled Cyprus news agency said the Greek Cypriots were "counterattacking, recapturing new posts."
The agency said British troops surrounded Turkish positions at the mountain town of Malia. But, it said, the Greek Cypriots "asked (them) to withdraw to avoid unpleasant consequences."
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Like some other outwardly prosperous nations, Japan is finding that a swiftly expanding economy is not an unmixed blessing.
VI 3-5585
1023 Mass.
AT THE CLOSE of this fiscal year on March 31, her gross national product will stand at around $61 billion, a jump of 13 per cent over last year.
U.S. Notes Japan's Mixed Blessings
By Phil Newsom
She is a world leader in the fishing industry and in shipbuilding. Her industry runs the gamut from cotton blouses to the sewing machines with which to put them together. From tiny transistor radios to pianos.
Despite limited space and a population which soon will reach 100 million, she produces almost enough rice to feed herself. But there are offsetting factors.
By Dirk Newton (UPI Foreign News Analyst)
Prostrate at the end of World War II. Japan's economic growth since then has been leaping forward at rates exceeding 10 per cent per year.
Since 1960, consumer prices have jumped 25 per cent, threatening to nullify Premier Hayato Ikeda's announced goal of doubling national income within a decade.
Before World War II, Japanese exports consisted mostly of raw silk and cotton textiles. Today the emphasis is on heavy industry and chemicals, requiring huge imports of raw materials and equipment.
THE RESULT IS that expanding exports cannot keep up with imports and Japan, like the United States, has a balance of payments problem. This year the deficit is expected to amount to about $100 million. For next year some estimates have placed the deficit as high as $700 million.
These were among the subjects which Secretary of State Dean Rusk and a high ranking U.S. delegation discussed with their Japanese opposite numbers in Tokyo last month.
The United States wanted Japanese support for sweeping worldwide tariff cuts in the so-called "Kennedy round" to talks to begin in Geneva in May.
The Japanese wanted relief from quotas limiting the import of Japanese goods into the United
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States and from a U.S. policy discouraging American investment abroad.
The talks were not conclusive but the United States recognized that Japan has special problems.
Despite the fact that Japan has withheld recognition from Peking,
she openly has expressed the wish to increase her trade with the Chinese mainland, now running at $137 million a year. The United States, which opposes free world trade with the Red Chinese, made no effort to persuade the Japanese to alter their course.
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U.S. Investigates Air Force Mishap
WIESBADEN, Germany—(UPI)—A U.S. Air Force reconnaissance plane shot down in East Germany yesterday may have been lured across the border by false signals, an Air Force spokesman said today.
U. S. authorities sought to learn the fate of the three crewmen of the RE66 plane. They parachutated over Communist territory but the Air Force said, "We don't know whether they are alive or dead."
THEY WERE identified as Capt. David I. Holland, of Holland, Minn., the pilot; 1st Lt. Harold W. Welch, of Detroit, Mich., the navigator; and Capt. Melvin J. Kessler, of Philadelphia, Pa., the instructor-navigator.
"It cannot be ruled out that the plane was led off course by radio jamming and false signals," Air Force spokesman Col. Mark Gilman said.
"As long as we have the capability of doing this—and we do—we must assume the other side can do it too." he added. "We have no concrete evidence at this time. But we are not ruling it out."
The United States protested against the shooting, second of an unarmed U.S. plane in little more than a month, and urged the Russians to return the three men.
THE RB66 TWIN jet plane apparently lost its way on a routine training mission over West Germany and strayed across the border
U. S. officials said last night there was no doubt the plane was shot down.
Gilman quoted an official Washington report saying three parachutes were seen dropping away from the falling RB66.
Two possible eyewitnesses—crewmen aboard a British commercial airliner—told UPI they saw no parachutes.
At Berlin, Capt. Kenneth McQueen of the British European Airways West Berlin-to-Hannover flight which passed near the scene at the reported time the RB66 went down, said he saw a plane that "looked like a Russian jet."
"ABOUT FIVE MILES from us I saw an aircraft and a sheet of flame behind it. Then the aircraft dived and disappeared into thick haze. Then smoke rose from the ground. From this we assumed that either the aircraft was engaged in rocket practice shooting at ground targets or that it had exploded and crashed." McQueen said.
Another crew member, who asked that his name be withheld, said he saw what might have been the American plane crashing.
"I saw a flash at the top of the haze. Then the flash turned to a puff of smoke over the haze and later a cloud of smoke rose from the ground. I had the impression of an aircraft going down," he said.
Flooding Ohio River Threatens Thousands
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — (UPI) Thousands of persons living in low-lying areas along the Ohio River in this area were bracing today for the worst-flooding and abandonment of their homes.
With the third highest Ohio River crest here in this century forecast, the National Red Cross estimated that 10,000 to 15,000 persons will be forced to flee their homes by the time the river reaches its high point sometime Friday morning.
As the torrential rainwaters of Sunday and Monday began moving into the Ohio from the flooded tributaries, streams and drainage systems, the U.S. Weather Bureau here revised an earlier prediction and forecast, instead, a crest of 18 feet above flood stage for the city.
WATERS WERE subsiding in some areas as the swollen Ohio posed threats to communities farther down river. Residents of a wide area of lowlands surrounding Louisville were told to be ready to leave for higher ground.
Also alerted for almost certain flooding were the communities of West Point and Shepardsville, south-west of Louisville on the Ohio.
An exodus from West Point—a town of 2.375—began last night on a large scale. More than 80 per cent of the community, mostly military personnel stationed at Fort Knox, was expected to be moved out sometime today.
FIFTY DISASTER-trained Red Cross workers set up a staging area and one in Cincinnati last night. Another 50 persons have been alerted for possible duty in the flood-stricken Ohio River valley.
Robert C. Edson, national Red Cross director of disaster services, said surveys indicate that rising waters thus far have affected 23 counties in Kentucky.
As the Licking rose to 45 feet, 17 feet above flood stage, state police said an estimated 600 families were moved out of their homes. Three-fourths of the town was under water.
Perhaps the hardest hit community was Falmouth, a town of 2,800 population 25 miles south of Cincinnati, at the forks of the Licking River.
SCORES OF Louisville residents were forced to flee from their homes yesterday after checked streams left homes flooded. However, many were returning to their homes to begin cleanup operations.
The Ohio was predicted to crest here Friday morning at 73 feet below the McAlpine Dam measuring station. The crest above the dam was expected to be 46 feet. The highest ever recorded at the gauge above the dam was 57.15 feet in January, 1937. A crest of 47.1 feet was recorded March 8, 1945.
Lawrence. Kansas
But victory in the first battle does not mean victory in the war. Outside his native New England, Lodge would rate low in any popularity poll among Republicans who will be delegates to the national convention next July. They will be glad to nominate him, however, if he looks, at convention time, like the candidate with the best chance of winning.
GOLDWATER and Rockefeller both had their names on the presidential preference section of the GOP ballot along with Mrs. Smith and Stassen, the Philadelphia lawyer who formerly was governor of Minnesota.
Lodge and Nixon were both the beneficiaries of organized write-in campaigns. Lodge was Nixon's running mate in 1960.
The New Hampshire result in the nation's first 1964 presidential primary will compel the national GOP to undertake a reassessment of its candidates with Lodge now entitled to much more attention.
Democrats had no real contest in their primary. They elected 20 national convention delegates from among candidates favoring the nomination of President Johnson and cast only write-in votes for president and vice-president.
A late winter storm dumped heavy snow on most of the state yesterday and held the total vote to about 100,000, less than was expected.
Returns from 276 of 302 precincts gave Lodge 25,616 votes; Goldwater 17,945; Rockefeller 15,822; Nixon 13,215; Mrs. Smith 1,619; Stassen
Weather
Wednesday, March 11, 1964
The low tonight will be 20-25 degrees, and the high tomorrow will be near 50 degrees, Topeka Weather Station reported.
Skies will clear by night fall and tomorrow's skies will be partly cloudy.
Lodge Wins on Write-ins, Snow Storm Limits Votes
Calls Bring Excitement, Money
CONCORD, N.H.—(UPI)—Ambasador Henry Cabot Lodge stepped into the front rank of Republican presidential contenders today with a stunning write-in victory in New Hampshire's Republican presidential primary.
61st Year, No. 101
NIXON, THE GOP'S standard bearer in 1960, claims he is not seeking the party's nomination this year but would be available for a draft at the Republican National Convention.
As a silent and unannounced candidate in Saigon, Lodge won over Sen. Barry Goldwater, who ran second, and Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, who was trailing in third place. Both had carried on intensive campaigns in the state before yesterday's vote.
Richard Nixon, another write-in,
took fourth place while Sen. Margaret Chase Smith (Maine), the only woman seeking the nomination,
edged out Harold E. Stassen for fifth place.
Daily hansan
For the last week, a phone call meant anything from congratulations on her selection to represent the United States in the Junior Fencing Championships in Budapest to a request to give a fencing demonstration at the NCAA basketball tournament in Kansas City.
Whenever Claudia Reeder, Kansas City sophomore, hears her phone buzz she gets more excited than the average KU coed.
More important to Miss Reeder at the moment, a call might indicate interest to contribute to a fund that will make it possible for her to participate in Budapest.
"A CALL last night indicated that I might receive an anonymous check for $500." Miss Reeder said.
even so would help Miss Reeder must raise the $900
"I'm sure this could not be right but even $$ would help."
1984
Claudia Reeder
in less than ten days. A fund has been set up to receive the money in the Endowment Association office. The university has no sources to sponsor an individual competitor.
Miss Reeder has written to Kansas senators and representatives asking about any group which might sponsor her. She has written area KU alumni associations, and has made a film strip demonstrating fencing techniques which is being run daily in the Kansas City area.
Individual contributions from her sorority sisters of Kappa Kappa Gamma, and the sorority's alumni groups hope to help boost the fund.
"Two hundred dollars has actually come in so far and this was from a grocery store chain, and a service station chain in the Kansas City area."
1,139; Gov. George Romney of Michigan (write-in) 87; and Gov. William W. Scranton of Pennsylvania (write-in) 65. President Johnson received 11,487 votes for president and Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, 9,004 for vice-president.
BY PUTTING Johnson ahead of Kennedy, New Hampshire Democrats avoided embarrassment for themselves, for Johnson and for Kennedy.
New Hampshire Republicans also voted yesterday to elect 14 national convention delegates from a field of 71 candidates.
The delegate tabulation was much slower than the count in the presidential preference vote. Lodge supporters led for all 14 spots in the delegation.
The next major Republican contest now appears to be coming in the May 15 Oregon primary. Lodge will be on the ballot there along with Goldwater, Rockefeller, Nixon, Mrs. Smith and Gov. William Scranton of Pennsylvania.
Lodge's victory will subject him to heavy pressure to resign his diplomatic post and return to become an active contender for the Republican nomination.
LODGE NOW FINDS himself in the same position into which he led Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1952. While Eisenhower stayed at his post as NATO commander in Europe, Lodge managed the campaign which began with victory in New Hampshire and won the presidential nomination for Eisenhower.
Lodge still bears political scars
from the 1952 campaign. He collected more as the GOP nominee for vicepresident in 1960. These scars will handicap the Lodge campaign as it moves outside New England.
In New Hampshire, that campaign was a smoothly functioning professional operation run by a handful of men who solicited pledges by mail.
In a brief statement prepared before the vote, Lodge said he would "very carefully consider" the results in New Hampshire.
HIS COMMENT was given Monday to his son, George Cabot Lodge, who had told his father by telephone that public opinion polls indicated strength for the ambassador.
Lodge's strength was apparent when the first small towns reported yesterday before the polls closed in most communities. Rockefeller took a brief lead when the vote was counted in Portsmouth, the only city with voting machines, but his lead vanished quickly when the write-in vote was counted in that city. Lodge regained the lead and never lost it.
Rockefeller conceded before midnight and said he would stick with his plans to fly to California this morning.
About the same time, Goldwater's New Hampshire manager, Stewart Lamprey, conceded that it appeared impossible to catch Lodge.
Goldwater, who was in Washington, never formally conceded but said he still had "a whale of a chance" in the rest of the country. He, too, is heading for California after a brief rest in his home state of Arizona.
- * *
GOP Party Leaders View Primary Results
By United Press International
By United Press International Backers of Sen. Barry Goldwater and Gov. Nelson Rockefeller were impressed but not shaken by the surprise write-in victory of Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge in Tuesday's New Hampshire Republican presidential primary.
A survey of Republican leaders throughout the country indicated a belief on their part that the New York governor and the Arizona senator are still running in front in the pre-convention race.
MANY VIEWED LODGE'S showing as a "favorite son" triumph in armchuck as he comes from neighboring Massachusetts. These GOP strategists discounted the ambassador's future prospects unless he becomes an active candidate for the GOP nomination.
Typical of reaction from the Goldwater camp was the evaluation by J. Drake Edens Jr., South Carolina State Republican chairman, Edens, a goldwater backer, said the Lodge vote "is strictly attributable to a favorite son situation."
Of the senator's showing, he said: "I am pleased we came out ahead of Gov. Rockefeller." Edens also expressed hope that those who are not serious candidates will stay out of future primaries so that Goldwater can prove he is a winner in a contest with Rockefeller.
FROM THE ROCKEFELLER standpoint, Fred A. Young, New York state Republican chairman, said the New Hampshire result "definitely restored" the governor as a prime contender.
He said Rockefeller made an "affirmatively significant showing" which should "not be measured by his failure to run as well as New England's favorite son but by his comeback from political limbo to run even with Goldwater and former vice president Richard M. Nixon."
Young predicted Rockefeller will do even better in Oregon and Call-
From neighboring Vermont, Mrs. Counsuelo North Baipley, GOP state chairman, termed the New Hampshire primary "not conclusive."
formia, thus paving the way for his nomination at the San Francisco convention in July.
"The results don't kill the chance of any candidate," she commented. "I am not surprised at Lodge's showing. He is extremely capable and everyone likes him."
EDWARD JANEWAY. Vermont GOP national committeeman, said new Hampshire showed the race is "still a wide open proposition but this hurts Goldwater most." He said the Vermont situation is still unsettled, however, and the delegation may go to San Francisco split between several candidates.
A Virginia national committeewoman, Mrs. Hazel K. Barger of Roanoke, commented: "I think Lodge made a terrific showing but unless he does come back and do some campaigning I don't think he's got a chance. It's a toss-up between Rockefeller and Goldwater."
However, another Virginian, national committeeman Nile Straugham said the New Hampshire showing "could make Lodge a strong and a real contender."
SIMILARLY, IN CHICAGO. Cook county Republican chairman Hayes Robertson, a Goldwater backer, said it was "a pretty big thing to be able to write in even a short name like Lodge on that many ballots". However, Robertson said if Lodge were the nominee, Illinois would go Democratic in November.
From Colorado, Herbert F. Koeher, chairman of the state Goldwater for president committee, termed the outcome surprising but added: "the New Hampshire result really didn't prove very much except the fact that the race is still wide open with Senator Goldwater well in the lead when all states are taken into account."
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 11, 1964
Model U.N.
A KU professor was telling his economics class about this spring's Model United Nations; "It says here the purpose is to learn about the countries and politics of the world. And all in two days. That's a bargain none of you can afford to miss."
BUT THE EDUCATIONAL phase of Model UN will be emphasized this year, according to the Steering Committee.
Several innovations have been made to encourage maximum delegate participation and learning. Each delegation is required to write a "Model UN term paper," due March 25, on the policies and problems of its country.
This paper should stimulate identification with the country's position, that delegations will vote and debate according to its country's policy, not their individual opinions.
INSTEAD OF THE Steering Committee's proposing areas for resolutions as in previous years, each delegation may submit a resolution to the Committee. On the strength of interest shown, the committee will list resolution areas for priority consideration by the General Assembly.
Another new feature this year will be the presence of an international student on the delegation of each country with a representative at KU. So a majority of the delegations will have
direct contact with a citizen of their countries.
BESIDES LEARNING about their own countries, Model UN delegates will find out about the structure of the General Assembly and bloc organization.
An international political figure will address the opening session.
If this year's Model United Nations lives up to its promise, it will be a worthwhile and educational experience for all students interested in international organization and world affairs.
Now about this humanity delegation. One could hardly argue the nobility of "wanting to represent the people of the world," or the validity of the statement, "Sovereign nation states have a tendency not to represent the interests of humanity as a whole."
Humanity Delegation
But the purpose of the Model UN is to simulate the real United Nations, which is not blessed with a delegation representing humanity. May we suggest that you with your noble desires sign up for a regular delegation and "emphasize humanitarian interests" from within?
Margaret Hughes
The People Say...
Only by Fighting
Mamma mia! Only to have been at the Military Ball! Such gallantry, gaiety, and politeness. ("Look buddy, open your own door. You isn't one of us.") The opaque blue and shady olive uniforms escorted their dates around, showing them what a unified, brotherly organization, such as ROTC, can really accomplish; a plush setting—the Kansas Union Ballroom; music by the renown "Airmen of Note"; and real intellect electrifying the air, ("My, you really look sharp tonight." "Thank you, sir." "However, next time use a little more Brasso on those buttons, O.K.?" "Yes sir, yes sir! I'm sorry sir."
But now that Un-Military Ball! I mean, what were those guys trying to do anyway? And in such a raunchy setting, the Don Henry Co-op. Gemuellichkeit? For the birds. And Herb Smith has nothing on Mulligan and his boys.
And all that silly bantering about world peace, civil rights, existence, and stuff. So what? Isn't man's ultimate moment embodied in a scene of a tired general, resting on a funny, gory shape, surveying with steely eyes a battlefield and quoting for posterity,
"We showed them boys. We won."
And all those able to speak, cry,
"Victory! Arrgh! We'll do it again."
So who cares about such junk as reading books, discussing issues, or stopping to think? Those SPU members (they were the sponsors—weren't they?) were really after a quick coin, selling kids' buttons with absurd slogans on them. They should have realized that buttons are made for polishing, just as minds are made for bashing.
And then that remarkable incident of the one punch. Bravo! After most of the people had left and the party was breaking up, there was this man, you see, who showed what a fraud the whole ball had been. He knew that things can only be settled by fighting, hitting, slugging! That's only sane. No doubt, the reporter and the photographer (UDK-March 9th), covering both balls, will endorse that, since their brains appear to be boggling with questions of ethics.
Andre Sedriks
Topeka sophomore
Don Henry
I would like to clear up a recent misunderstanding concerning the position of the Don Henry Co-operative House. I wish to emphasize the neutrality of the House and its members regarding various groups that hold functions here, the recent of which was KULAC and its Un-Military Ball.
* *
We rent our main lounge to campus groups which desire to have a meeting, party, or other
function on our premises, and which meet our requirements as to care of the house, hours to be observed, and the fee to be paid. Again we do not endorse nor oppose any campus group that wishes to hold a function here at its own expense. Any misunderstandings, inept behavior, or violence that occurs during a function on our premises can only be attributed to the organization having the function.
It is our policy that undesirable individuals, once detected, will not be allowed to return to any later function. We are concerned solely for the house, and our association with groups renting the main lounge is that of a neutral participant in a business transaction.
Neal R. Nelkin
Prairie Village freshman
Secretary, Don Henry Co-pp
* *
Military Education
During the recent semester I have observed the mounting attack upon the ROTC program with growing concern. My concern is not motivated solely by its threat to the nation's security but also by its eventual adverse effect upon the nation's domestic life.
As I read the letters to the editor and sense the agitation, I cannot help but ask myself if those who are supporting the "anti-military" appeal have ever asked themselves what might well occur if the ROTC programs throughout the nation were eliminated from the university curriculum. The answer often given is that the nation's defense efforts would be considerably weakened.
Although true in part, I feel this has been overly emphasized simply because the Department of Defense would immediately accelerate officer training programs on military reservations and have cause to enlarge the military academies. Herein lies the possible danger to our civil liberties. This drastic departure from our traditional reliance upon which has been generally termed the "militia system" could have the exact results so feared by the liberal thinker.
Consider what might happen if the military were allowed to assume sole responsibility for the development of military leadership. By divorcing the young college student from the campus we provide an opportunity for concentrated military indoctrination and enhance the possibility of the development of a military clique within the nation. Last year about 3,000 military leaders were commissioned by military sources whereas almost 14,000 were supplied by the nation's universities. Consider the possible consequences if these circumstances were reversed. By depending upon the university for a greater portion of military leadership, monolithic thinking is minimized and military vested interest is diffused.
In my opinion, it is the university ROTC program which continually compells the military establishment to reflect its popular character. In so doing, the program prevents to a large degree the development of a national military class.
For those who doubt the possible consequences of highly centralized military education, I would suggest a review of Professor Chih-up Liu's work, A Military History of Modern China. Princeton, 1956.
Edward J. Paris
Major, U.S. Army
Assistant Professor of
Military Science
Moral Myonia Mr. Schmidt:
\* \* \*
Dailij Fänsan
In/re your UDK article of March 10: pardon a value judgment, but you are intellectually and morally myopic. I shall be happy to meet you at any time and at any place to publicly discuss this.
John Garlinghouse Salina sophomore
111 Flint Hall
NEWS DEPARTMENT
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.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Managing Editor
Tom Coffman ... Editorial Editor
Vinay Kothari and Margaret Hughes ... Assistant Editorial Editors
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bob Brooks ... Business Manager
BARRY IN THE BOY
STICK WITH DICK NIKON
I'M FOR ROCKY
LODGE
©1964 HERBLOCK
THE WAHINGTON POST
"We're Agreed Then, That Viet-Nam As A Political Issues Must Not Be Neutralized"
Artist Thomas H. Benton Portrayed American Life
Gnome-like, bent 'n' bowed—weathered like the wooden cabins and leathered like the old sharecroppers, country fiddlers and miners that he depicted so aptly and often.
That is Thomas Hart Benton, 74 years old now, still painting and writing today the realism he once saw around him: "the raucous and robust, a violent and vulgar America." For, in the early 1900's, Benton wandered around this nation's interior etching in his youthful mind and sketching on paper all types of people, of places.
ALL HIS PAINTINGS, sketches, and lithographs express his boyish ways, his Tom Sawyer days in Neosho, Mo. His works recall the poverty-stricken economy of the Midwest as the 20th century barrelled in, leaving remnants of liberal democracy, idealism, western power, and populism.
This is what Tom Benton saw and this is what he painted: the Middle West, the Great Plains, and the Southern states in panoramic view. He came to Kansas City in 1935 from New York to make his permanent home in the Midwest. Some conservative Kansas Citians didn't like his brash realism. Some drew back at his agrarianism. They chose to ignore him—only an Ozark hillbilly, they probably said. Others accused him of fostering stale regionalism.
YET THE DECADES since the skeptical depression years have proved those criticisms largely invalid. In 1963, he was elected a member of the American Academy of Art. His paintings, murals and sketches have attracted a nationwide audience as they appear in both private and public collections from California to Missouri to New York. Today his works depict some folkways still struggling for survival from the Appalachians to the Orakes
Benton did paint hillbillies—people, if you please, and plenty of them. But more important, he brought culture in the form of art to Kansas City for the first time. Previously a mere railroad center with smelly stockyards, Kansas City began to change. A university, a symphony orchestra, an art gallery and institute appeared. And so did the already famous Thomas Hart Benton. He began preserving for posterity the memories of hard times, of crude times and cruel times that many wanted to forget.
Benton saw country fairs, rodeos, saloons, burlesque girls, and farmers whittling on bank steps. He saw oil, dust, death, and dawn. He saw square dances, plantations and cotton. He saw prayers and preaching, hard work and heartbreak.
But often tinted with humor, his paintings did not aim primarily to emphasize a spreading nation's deficiencies and regrets. Rather, Benton was choking in the smoke of recent industrialism, and clasping his hands over his ears at the oncoming clatter of mechanization. Gasping, he tried to reach once more the fresh air of the country, to see and hear again the unstunted growth of nature's creatures.
BENTON CALLED his autobiography "An Artist in America." More appropriately, the title should be "A Painter of America," for herein lies his contribution to our society. His murals and drawings are a sort of documentary-pages from the history of American life in the first half of the twentieth century. Like those contradictory, bygone days, his paintings are simple, straightforward. Yet they are as detailed, well-planned, and exciting as the first locomotive that puffed across the prairie "belching smoke."
parked across the plains, beckoning shoppers to farmers threw down their straw hats and shook their fists at the billows of black smoke left behind. "Damned old machines," they yelled.
Some people are still ranting about "damned old machines" in even stronger, louder language.
Thomas Hart Benton's murals recall when and how it all began. Linda Machin
Wednesday, March 11, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Nehru May Be Succeeded by Opposite Personality
NEW DELHI—(UPI)—Few Indian politicians are more unlike Jawaharlal Nehru than the man who is the front runner to succeed him as Prime Minister of India.
and
wn.
and
Lal Bahadur Shastri was hand-picked as the ailing premier's unofficial deputy and heir because he has just those qualities which Nehru lacks.
have ed a aralrs appear ri to gling
He prefers compromise to conflict, he hides from the limelight and he keeps his opinions to himself.
dity of
urt to
enter
ersity,
And
pre-
- and
THE 59-YEAR-OLD minister without portfolio was able to win the trust of Nehru and his party colleagues because he has never competed in the prime minister's own domain of personal magnetism, stirring oratory and the spinning of high-level policies.
Shastri is scarcely five feet tall. He has no showy trademarks such as Nehru's rosebud boutonniere.
arily
other,
and
mani-
f the
ture's
Nehru is well-traveled. Cambridge-educated and a skeptic about religion. Shastri has never been out of the Indian sub-continent and he is devoted to Hinduism.
America" for wings in life factory, they are that
Nehru is the scion of a rich, aristocratic, Brahmin family. Shastri is the self-made son of a humble village schoolteacher.
Shastri was born in 1904, near the sacred city of Benares. His father died while he was a child.
at the they
es" in
THE FAMILY CAME from the intermediate caste of professional men called Kayasthas. The family name was Srivastava, but names are flexible in India and Lal Bahadur (Jewel of Bravery) ceased using it years ago.
began. hin
The young Kayastha, like most of his ambitious caste fellows, set out to get the best education available. In those days, this meant a British education.
But in 1920 Mahatma Gandhi launched a campaign against cooperating with the British Government and its official schools. So Shastri gave up his western education at the age of 16 and joined a nationalistic Sanskrit college, which had no official standing.
This was the first of many occasions when the self-effacing little patriot sacrificed his own ambition
for the good of his nation or his party. This readiness for self-sacrifice is the quality most responsible for the respect he has won within Nehru's Congress Party.
The young nationalist distinguished himself at school in the study of Hindu philosophy and Sanskrit literature. He even received the highest scholarly rank of "Shastri." Although this is a title comparable to the academic degree of Bachelor of Arts, Shastri adopted it as his name.
Shastri devoted his life to nationalistic politics, shuttling back and forth between public office and British jails. Like Nehru, his first government job was on the municipal council of the north Indian city of Allahabad. In 1930 he went to jail for the first time and spent over two years behind bars for anti-British activity.
SHASTRÍ'S BIGGEST TALENT has always been in the field of party politics. He was such a good organization man that he was elected secretary general of the Congress Party machine in his home state, Uttar Pradesh, when he was only 30 years old.
Uttar Pradesh is the most populous state in India. It also is the state from which Nehru comes. By devoting 15 years to the state's politics, Shastri kept close to Nehru's side while proving that he could handle the internal rivalries of the party's biggest unit.
When India got ready for its first nationwide election, the Prime Minister plucked Shastri from the state capital and put him in charge of the national party's election campaign. The Congress won an overwhelming victory. Shastri was rewarded with a seat in the central government as Minister of Railwavs.
THE NEW RAILWAYS minister proved an efficient administrator for close to five years. Then a disastrous train crash brought a storm of criticism against the government-owned railways and Shastri resigned in atonement.
As often happened with Shastri's instances of self-sacrifice, his resignation strengthened his position
within the party. In this case, it left him free to manage the Congress campaign in the second general elections in 1957.
Shastri returned to the cabinet after the election victory. He held several portfolios. He traveled around the country healing frequent feuds between local party leaders.
NEHRU BEGAN TO lean even more on Shastri in 1962, when a Chinese invasion forced him to drop foreign policy advisor V. K. Krishna Menon.
When the 74-year-old Prime Minister was suddenly taken ill in January, Shastri was the obvious man to fill in for him. He had no political enemies and he held the respect of machine politicians whose elections he often had helped to win.
Even now that he is handling Nehru's routine work, Shastri refuses to talk about whether he may eventually succeed the prime minister.
"I AM HERE as long as the prime minister wants me," he told United Press International while strolling through his garden. "He could ask me to resign tomorrow."
Is he free to make government policy in Nehru's place?
"The prime minister makes policy. I am just carving it out."
Does he make decisions on his own?
"The decisions belong with the prime minister. But when he asks me to decide a matter, then I make the decision."
SHASTRI DOES HIS official decision-making at a desk next to Nehru's own office in the Ministry of External Affairs. But much of his real political work is handled in the shade of two banyan trees on the front lawn of his government villa.
There are no guards at Shastri's home and anybody with a grievance or petition can wander in through the 10-foot-high hedge which surrounds his garden.
Shastri receives visitors standing up. He strolls back and forth in the garden as he talks with them. His mobile conversations are supposed
Humor Returns to White House
By Alvin Spiyak
WASHINGTON —(UPI)— With the passage of time since the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, the pall at the White House has gradually been lifting and humor has been making its return.
This, unquestionably, is how Kennedy would have wanted it, as evidenced in the wry quips with which he inspired so much laughter among his associates and in his speeches and news conferences.
Now President Johnson, in his speeches is including prefatory gags and stories. A favorite, after he receives a glowing introduction, is his reclection of "the preacher in my county who went to his church on Sunday and found the congregation had presented him with a new automobile."
"HE GOT UP," Johnson recounts, "and had to respond to that great act of generosity on the spur of the moment. He started out something like this: 'I don't appreciate it, but I do deserve it.'"
The President has enjoyed laughing at himself in connection with his ardent drive to dim the lights at the executive mansion to cut the electricity bill.
Then he added that "the stories they write about the White House being in the dark are greatly exaggerated." He said there was "some truth" in reports that his two daughters studied their school lessons by kerosene lamps "but it is on the ranch and not in Washington."
"Unaccustomed as I am to bright lights, it is good to be able to see all of you again," he told the Women's National Press Club at its recent Eleanor Roosevelt Candlestick Award dinner here.
AT THE SAME dinner, Adlai E. Stevenson was back in his best humorous form. The U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations spent some time lauding Johnson, and then publicly told him:
"I see that even the Republican presidential candidates think that you have done well—except in two areas, domestic policy and foreign policy."
From the mouths of babes visiting the White House have come some reasons for adult laughter. One little boy, in the lobby of the office wing, saw a bigger than lifesize portrait of the heavily whiskered President Chester M. Arthur.
"Look. Mommy," he shouted,
"Captain Kangaroo!"
AND WHEN six-year-old Ronald and Donald Copper, of Coalcreek, Colo., poster twins for this year's National Easter Seal Campaign, were waiting to see Johnson, they told a questioner they were in the White House.
"Who lives in this house?" they were next asked.
"Bob Hope," they answered, impressed, perhaps, a bit more than anticipated at his chairmanship of the 1964 Easter Seal fund drive.
"The President," they replied.
"And who is the President?"
The unpredictable variety of
President Johnson's news conferences has inspired other quips. There have been news sessions at a coffee break, at a barbecue, in his office, in the White House Theater, in the State Department Conference Room, and back at the ornately chandeliered White House East Room.
Most have been untelevised, but two have been broadcast "live" and one was taped for delayed transmission.
One wag has suggested Johnson's next step may be to assemble newsmen in the White House garage, or a supply room. Then he will run through nine or ten minutes of minor announcements, go through another twenty minutes or so of questions and answers, grin, and finally tell reporters:
"I have just one closing comment. Smile, you're on Candid Camera."
to help him combine exercise with office work. But they also give him complete control over a conversation in a way that he could never have if a petitioner trapped him alone behind a desk.
CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS
OPEN HEARTH
(2)
- Pan-fried Chicken
- Pit Barbecued Ribs
Garden Fresh Salad
Choice of potatoes
onion rings
homemade
hot rolls
butter & drink
Shastri is an old fashioned Hindu patriarch who likes to have his whole family around him. This is one reason for his outdoor office hours. His nine-room villa is too crowded for business, with his wife, four sons, two daughters, his daughters' two husbands, a daughter-in-law and six grandchildren.
Dinners Include:
- Sandwiches
- Spanish Burgers
- Pizza Burgers
- Cheese Burgers
HAL'S STEAK HOUSE
VI2-9445
- Hal Burgers
Highway 59 South Across From Hillcrest Golf Course
Shastri can never replace Nehru in the role of the Heroic leader who holds the country together with the inspiration of instinct.
Closed Sundays Open:
4 - Midnight
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But nobody else in India has this magic. Those who do approach Nehru's personality have rivals who would cut them down if they tried to fill the prime minister's shoes.
---
This makes it almost certain that India's next government will be run by a collective of strong leaders, jealously watching each other. Such a collection will need a referee. Shastri is the kind of self-effacing middleman who seems best qualified for the job.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 11, 1964
Cuban Intervention Noted in All American Nations
By United Press International Castro Cuba has intervened in the internal affairs of every nation in the Americas.
Here is a documentation of that Communist infiltration:
Argentina. October, 1960. Cuban Ambassador Americo Cruz expelled after discovery of his participation in a Peronist plot against the government.
—Bolivia, December, 1960. Cuban Ambassador Jose Tabares expelled after three warnings against interference in Bolivia's internal affairs. Cuban charge d'affaires Mario Garcia Triana expelled for participation in plot against the government.
—BRAZIL, APRIL, 1961. Cuban embassy charged with distributing books on guerrilla warfare by Mao Tse-tung and Guevara among peasants in communist-ridden northeast. Nov., 1962. Ten Brazilian admirals denounce Castro-Communist infiltration in the armed forces. Dec., 1962. Police seize Cuban arms shipment smuggled in to communist peasant leader Francisco Juliao. Dec., 1962. State of Sao Paulo uncovers Cuban arms cache and instructions for revolutionary plot.
—Colombia. Sept., 1960. Labor ministry charges Cuban embassy with plotting agitation to foil an inter-American meeting. Sept., 1960. Senate formally accuses Cuban Ambassador Adolfo Rodriguez Veiga of interference in Colombia's internal affairs and demands his expulsion.
—Costa Rica. Nov., 1960. Havana radio calls on Costa Ricans to revolt against Echandi government. Government announces capture of Cuban communist guerrilla force in Nicaraguan frontier and seizure of arms, munitions and communist propaganda. Nov., 1960. Government accuses Cuba of sending planes over Costa Rica to drop arms and supplies to guerrilla forces trying to invade Nicaragua. Dec., 1962 and Jan., 1963, secret police report arrests of Castro agents with Communist revolt plans.
—CHILE. JUNE, 1961. Government accuses Cuban charge d'affaires Raul
Official Bulletin
TODAY
El Ateneo renuerá el mieleresales a la 4.30 en 1 Fraser. Un estudiante de K.U. hablara de sus expertenencias en el programa que le hace en Costa Rica. En invitados invitados.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Lutten Bible Vigil, 7 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel.
Timely Topics, 7:30 p.m., St. Lawrence Center, 'HELL'—a description and history by an eyewitness observer, almost.
ASC-SUA Current Events Speech, 8 p.m.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth
TOMORROW
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m., Sta.
Lawrence, Chapel.
Holy Communion, 11:30 a.m., St.
Anselm's Chapel, Canterbury House.
Anthson's Chapel
Mathematics Collouqium. 3:30 p.m.
102 Strom Hall. "Connectivity and
Pseudo-Trees in Directed Graphs" by
Mr. Robert G. Griswold, Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute; coffee at 3:20 p.m.
119 Strong.
Der deutsche Verein tiftt sich am Donnerstag, den 12. März, um 4 Uhr in 301 in 502 Fraser. Es gibt ein deutsches "Quiz-Programm" mit allerlei Fragen und Karten. Der interesse dafur haben, sind herzlich eingeladen. Erfrischungen gibt es auch.
Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion,
Union, Pan American Room, Kansas
Union.
Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel. Everyone WELCOME.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
Vieria Lamelas of plotting agitation to coincide with arrival of Adlai Stevenson, Aug., 1961. Interior ministry denounces revolutionary plot financed by communist Cuba. Oct., 1962. Foreign ministry protests to Cuban embassy against subversive propaganda shipped in to Chile from Cuba. March, 1963. Alfredo Garcia Almeida, second secretary of Cuban embassy, expelled for subversive activities.
Ecuador, April. 1962. Defense ministry says uprising of communist guerrillas in interior sponsored by Cuba, Jan., 1963. Castro accused of sending $40,000 donation to Ecuadorian revolutionary youth organization in Guayaquil. Group seized with bombs and arms.
—El Salvador. Dec., 1960. Cuban charge d'affaires Roberto LaSalle accused of financing pro-communist campaign. March, 1961. Interior ministry publishes photostats of correspondence between LaSalle and Cuban foreign minister Raul Roa relating to communist subversion campaign. July, 1961. Government breaks up Cuban-inspired communist conspiracy.
UNITED STATES. NOV., 1962. FBI seizes arms and explosives in possession of Castro agents including member of Cuban mission to United Nations. Jan., 1963. New York police arrest confessed Castro agent Mario Martinez Fernandez in Bronx. Nov., 1963.
Guatemala, April, 1960. Guatemala breaks relations with Cuba after discovering Cuban ambassador Antonio Rodriguez Echazabal to be organizing and financing anti-government disorders. Sept., 1960. Police arrest Castro agent Juan Claudio Larcos Fabian and seize plans for anti-government plot drafted in Cuba. Oct., 1960. Two Castro agents arrested on Sicacte Beach with 24 cans with coco labels containing Czech hand grenades for terrorist use. Nov., 1960 and March, 1962. Government charges Communist Cuba with responsibility for anti-government outbreaks.
—Haiti, April., 1959. Cuban embassy charged with promoting street disturbances. June, 1959. Cuban Ambassador Antonio Rodriguez expelled for participation in subversive activities. Aug., 1959. Thirty Cuba army troops disembark at Les Ires to start a revolution. Aug., 1959. Government closes Haitian embassy in Cuba after proving Cuban invasion of Haitian territory.
—Honduras. July, 1960. Cuban Ambassador Silvino Sorhgui accused of preaching Castro revolutionary doctrine on tour of interior. March, 1961. Government closes Cuban consulate in Puerto Cortes and expels Cuban consul Edelberto Diaz Alvarez on charges of activities contrary to democratic policies of Honduras.
—MEXICO, JUNE, 1961. Government confiscates three tons of Cuban communist propaganda consigned to Cuban embassy for distribution in Mexico July, 1961. Government seizes Cuban communist propaganda in offices of Castrote Prensa Latina News Agency and expels Castro agent Angel Boan for subversive activities. Nov., 1962. Military command at Matamoros squashes communist plot drafted in Havana for dynamiting of international bridges and public buildings in that zone. In same month, 40 persons arrested in Oaxaca state and charged with provoking disorders on Castro orders.
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—Nicaragua. May, 1959. Government reports landing of Cuban army plane on secret Costa Rican airbase with arms cargo for guerrillas planning invasion of Nicaragua. July, 1960. Nicaragua breaks relations with Cuba after finding Cuban Ambassador Quintin Pino Machado guilty of aiding guerrilla mountain forces. Nov., 1960. Cuban army invasion units with local plotters seize Diriamba and Jinotepe in abortive revolt attempt. Costa Rica notifies Nicaragua it has broken up Cuban group seeking to smuggle war material into Nicaragua for use in rebellion.
—PANAMA. OCT., 1959. Cuban Ambassador Jose Antonio Cabrera and Castro agent Gregorio Ortega seek to incite peasant masses at Chiriqui to "march on Panama Canal." Same month, government confirms Cuban complicity in strike of banana workers at Chiriqui. Jan., 1961. Government declared Cuban Ambassador Jose Antonio Cabrera persona non grata for interference in internal affairs of Panama. July, 1961. Premature bomb explosion in National Vanguard Party headquarters turns up Cuban embassy-prepared plan for street riots. Dec., 1961. Panama breaks relations with communist Cuba. Jan., 1963. Interior ministry accuses local communists trained and directed from Havana of seeking to incite peasants to revolt in Puerto Armuelles and Chiriqui. Jan., 1964. Cuban-trained Panamanian student communist leaders identified in leading role in bloody Panama City anti-American rioting.
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Jan., 1962. Anti-government plotter Carlos Mallen Herera in Teepan confesses acting under Havana's orders.
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—PARAGUAY. Dec., 1959. Government foils invasion of exiles from Argentine soil and accuses Cuba of financing revolt.
—Peru, May, 1960. Cuban President Osvaldo Dorticos accused of smuggling in arms in personal luggage on trip to Peru for use of antigovernment communists. Aug., 1960. Government accuses Cuban embassy of financing armed revolt movement in Cerro de Pasco. Sept., 1960. Government confiscated two tons of communist propaganda consigned to Cuban embassy. Oct., 1960. Cuban ambassador Luis Ricardo Alonso flees country after government discovery of communist plot and arrest of Chilean Castroite serving as intermediary between Cuban embassy and guerrilla forces in mountains. Dec., 1960. Government breaks relations with Cuba. May, 1962. State
security police foil communist plot directed from Havana for terrorist activities in Lima and other major cities. Jan., 1963. Communist newspaper Hoy published in Havana edi-
torially calls on Peruvians to "rise in arms" against government. March, 1963. Government arrests Castro-communist group in Huanuco department.
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Page 5
Cuba Represents Extension Of Iron Curtain Westward
By Francis McCarthy
I will output the text as it appears in the image.
In five years of Fidel Castro rule, Cuba has become the first Communist satellite in the new world. It is a full-fledged political and military offspring of the Soviet Union.
The long tentacles of Communist subversion have reached out from Havana, the Moscow of the Western Hemisphere, to touch every other American republic.
CURRENTLY. CUBA STANDS convicted of aggression against Venezuela by the Organization of American States (OAS) and accused of complicity at the least in the bloody January anti-American street riots in Panama.
The Iron Curtain has been extended to within 90 miles of U.S. shores.
Since Castro seized power in Jan. 1959, the record shows communist Cuban intervention in one form or another in the internal affairs of each and every American republic.
There has been argument pro and con as to whether Castro was a Communist while in the hills fighting the dictatorial Batista regime, or whether international communism moved in on his revolutionary movement taking advantage of a series of propitious circumstances.
Wednesday, March 11, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Speeches by both Castro himself and his right-hand aide, Ernesto (Che) Guevara have established that Marxist philosophy was behind the Cuban revolution even at its outset.
The argument is academic, for Castro's betrayal of the revolutionary ideals he first expounded has long been evident.
IN JULY, 1960. INAUGURATING the Communist-sponsored Latin American youth congress in Hayaana. Guevara said, in part:
"Our revolution discovered by its own methods the road which Marx points out. This revolutionary thought did not surge from the night to the morning. It is a dynamic idea because the revolution of today is not the revolution of yesterday and much less the insurrection before the victory . . ."
Castro himself repeated in several speeches in December, 1961, following the disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion attempt:
"I am a Marxist-Leninist. I always have been and I shall be to the end of my days. I had to create the deeds without any previous definitions. If I had defined my thoughts at the beginning (of the revolution), Cubans never would have followed me."
Guevara's speech to the leftist youth congress was delivered a few days after Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev announced to the world the support of Russian rockets for the Cuban revolution.
In this context, the following excerpt from Guevara's speech is significant:
"... AND THIS PEOPLE which is today before you, says; that although it should have to disappear from the earth for being the target of an atomic war; and they were the first to die; even though this island should disappear totally; its inhabitants would be completely happy and content to have fulfilled their purpose . . ."
That purpose would seem self-evident: to offer Cuba as the sacrificial lamb for the expansion of international communism.
Castro betrayed the revolution by conditioning the life of his country to the political exigencies of the Kremlin.
Through Castro's treachery, Cuba became a bastion of communism. In the heart of the American world only 90 miles from Florida, Cuba became a base of operations and international communist subversion and penetration of the Western Hemisphere.
JOSE MIRO CARDONA, first Cuban premier under Castro and now a leader in exile of Cuban refugees said the Sovietization of Cuba started immediately after Castro deposed his first president, Manuel Urrittia. only months after he seized power
The then revolutionary slogan of "freedom with bread, bread without fear" suddenly became "Cuba, underdeveloped country."
what a nominally Republican Cuba had established in 57 years of existence. He tore down the free enterprise system after a bloodbath ofiring squad executions without parallel in history.
Castro proclaimed the equality of man but in effect reduced Cubans to a level of equal misery.
The brutality of the early days of his regime created a generalized state of terror throughout the Western Hemisphere.
Castro used the slogan to destroy
COMUNIST PROPAGANDISTS throughout the world portrayed Castro as a hero and a liberator. They inflamed ultra-nationalist sentiment and the spirit of rebellion against constituted government.
At the end of Castro's first year in office, the withdrawal of Latin American capital to Europe and Canada was estimated at $3 billion. Three years later, at the end of 1963, the flight of capital was estimated at closer to $10 billion.
Communist-created Cuban propaganda organs carried a distorted image of post-Castro Cuba throughout the Americas. The peoples in countries underdeveloped economically began to demand social reforms so extensive as to threaten the collapse of all institutions.
The result in five short years of Castro rule has become evident; preaching unrest throughout the Western Hemisphere with all-time
high record outbreaks of conspiracies, bombings, insurrections and, in line with Kremlin policy, disorder and confusion.
Castro propagandists by pounding on the theme of United States imperialism have fomented anti-North American prejudice throughout the hemisphere and brought near, if not already accomplished, the collapse of the altruistic Alliance for Progress program.
CASTRO PROPAGANDISTS have sought to implant in the masses the image of a United States as the natural enemy of Latin America and have undermined the alliance by attacking it as insufficient and a 20th-century form of colonialism.
And although themselves subjugated in the political sense to an extra-continental and foreign power, Communist Cuban agents have virtually politically immobilized the Western Hemisphere with the dear-to-Latin America theme of "nonintervention and self-determination."
Peasants and some intellectuals have failed to realize that Soviet subjugation of Cuba has affected the whole hemisphere. The constant communist Cuban hammering on the non-intervention theme has blocked the obvious cure to the Cuban political problem: collective intervention by the American states in benefit of rather than to the prejudice of the peoples intervened.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 11, 1964
Study of KU Undergraduates Veiled by Scientific Caution
By Lee Stone
A veil of scientific caution is hiding a study of KU undergraduates to be published soon. The research for the study, which has taken place in secret at KU, is taking several years to complete. It is purported to be a thorough study of KU from the inside. The researchers involved themselves to some degree with various social and academic groups with the hope of learning about them.
It is a similar study to "Boys in White," a study of the KU Medical Center, Everett Hughes, director of community studies at Brandeis university, said.
"IM NOT REALLY going to tell you anything about it at this point," Hughes said.
The book-length study will be published this year by a commercial publisher, Hughes said. The public will be able to read it
Howard S. Becker, member of the Institute for the Study of Human Problems at Stanford University and one of the researchers, gave a sketchy account of the objectives of the study. Beckers said the study's purpose is to "find out what its like to be a college student." Various areas the study includes are academic work, extra-curricular activity, and dating and friendships, Becker said.
Around the Campus House Begins Addition
Sigma Phi Epsilon of 1645 Tennessee St., has begun construction of a large addition to their present house.
It will be located to the west side and will be an extension of the now existing individual study rooms.
A FORTY CAR parking lot is slated in the plans. The addition will expand the house to room 75 men. The addition will be completed by July first.
Debaters Win Honors
KU debate teams competing in St. Paul, Minn., this weekend earned debating honors.
In the 82-team Northwest Debate Tournament Margaret Miller, Red Wing, Minn., sophomore, and Louis Floyd, Topeka freshman, won six and lost two, to enter the octo-finals with the third best overall team rating.
Fred Kauffeld, Minneapolis, Minn., senior, and Lauralee Milberg, Arlington, Va., senior, also won six and lost two, to enter the octo-finals as the sixth best over-all team.
Both teams were defeated in the octo-finals: Floyd and Miss Miller were defeated by a University of Minnesota team and Kauffeld and Miss Milberg were defeated by a Nebraska State College team.
Sooter to Give Recital
Edward Sooter, tenor, will give a graduate recital tonight at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall of Murphy Hall.
Sooter, an assistant instructor in voice in the School of Fine Arts, was regional winner of the Metropolitan Opera auditions in 1960. He has appeared with the Baltimore Symphony as soloist in Bach's "Christmas Oratorio," and as soloist with the Wichita Choral Society in the "Messiah" and "Elijah."
At KU, Sooter has appeared in several University Chorus productions, and this fall he appeared as Lieutenant Pinkerton in Puccini's "Madame Butterfly." Sooter also sings the national anthem at home football and basketball games.
His program will consist of "Auf Dem Strom," by Schubert, "Poeme D'Un Jour" by Faure, "Un Di All'Azzuro Spazio" from "Andrea Chenier," "Amor Ti Vieta" from "Fedora" by Giordana, and "On Wenlock Edge" by Vaughan Williams.
Carol Stewart will be at the piano and accompanying will be Shirley Braming, violin; Marilyn Miller, violin; John Taddiken, viola; Walter Hawkey, cello; and Dale Bartlett, French horn.
No tickets are required for admission.
Concert Choir To Sing
The KU Concert Choir, formerly known as the A Cappella Choir, will present a public concert at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
James S. Ralston will direct the group of about 50 singers, Edward Sooter, graduate student, will be tenor soloist with the choir. He is a former district winner in the Metropolitan Opera auditions.
The program includes works by Lotti, Victoria, Gabrieli, DeBussy, Hindemith and Orff.
New Cadet Colonel
Palmer Smith, Medicine Lodge senior, was recently promoted to the rank of Cadet Colonel, the highest rank an Air Force cadet can attain. Smith is currently an engineering major at the University of Kansas, and has served since October of 1963 as Group Commander of the Air Force ROTC Detachment No.280.
As Cadet Group Commander, Smith is responsible for the organization, training, and discipline of the entire Air Force ROTC Corps of Cadets.
Smith will graduate from KU in June. He will be commissioned as a Second Lieutenant in the U.S. Air Force, and enter the Pilot Training Program shortly thereafter.
Hughes said Becker was charged with the responsibility of writing the book. Becker, however, does not want to claim complete authorship. Three researchers should get credit for authorship Becker said. They are Hughes, himself and Miss Blanche Geer, professor of sociology, Syracuse University.
BECKER IS also the author of "Boys in White," and "The Outsiders," a study of social deviates.
E. Gordon Ericksen, professor of sociology and anthropology at KU, gave some insight into the methods used by the reseachers. He would not vouch for the accuracy of his observations, however, because the researchers "played it close to the vest," he said.
"I was one of his (Hughes) guinea pigs," Prof. Ericksen said. "Hughes would say to me, 'Come on and tell me what you think of the University of Kansas.'"
"I would tell him, 'I like it here, I've been here for a number of years, and if I didn't like it, I would have left long ago,' " Prof. Ericksen said.
PROF. ERICKSEN said Miss Geer came to his Sociology I lectures and took copious notes, but he could never find out what she was after. She attached herself to a group of undergraduate girls and followed them through school and social life, Prof. Ericksen said.
hugnes predicted greater interest in the KU study than in the KU Medical Center study. "Everybody is interested in college, you see," he said.
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Page 7
Seclusion, Alert Mind Believed Drama Research Prerequisites
"To be a good researcher, you have to be able to bury yourself in a library and not worry about the world outside." Prof. Walter J. Meserve of the English department said yesterday.
The professor was speaking to an audience, predominantly graduate students in drama, about "Research in American Drama," at a Speech and Drama Colloquium in Murphy Hall.
PROF. MESERVE listed three other essential qualifications one should have in order to be a good researcher in drama: a concern for facts, a sound reasoning process, and the ability to write well.
Hall.
He defined the roles of the scholar, the critic and the researcher of American drama, and emphasized that the researcher should have "a thorough knowledge of the emotional, cultural and intellectual atmosphere" of the period he is studying.
"The researcher." he continued, "must be concerned with particulars. It's his job to accumulate and assess the facts. In doing this, he must acquire a very fine skepticism."
Skepticism is necessary because the researcher can expect to run into some 19th Century drama critics who "in their assessment, are unreliable." Prof. Meserve explained.
Wednesday, March 11, 1964 University Daily Kansan
"At one time," he pointed out, "the theater syndicate hired critics to review plays."
"WHEN DEALING with critical opinion in the 19th Century, "you have to remember who is writing, what is he writing for, and who he is writing for," he explained.
is writing.
Another concern of the researcher in American drama is textual problems, Prof. Meserve said. Piracy of plays was common in the 19th Century. Also, there are often several manuscript versions of the same play in existence, which creates the problem of establishing the original, or "deciding which one you think the author would have liked best," he said.
Examination of content of a play, such as social level, humor, satire, and names of characters, can often provide a key to the author's identity, or the authenticity of a manuscript version, the professor said.
script version, the problem
The main advantage of a textual
Art Contest This Week
An art contest, culminating in an exhibition and prizes for the winning entries, is being held this week by Delta Phi Delta, an honorary art organization.
Entries will be accepted until Friday, Dianne Turner, Kansas City, Mo. senior and publicity chairman for the organization said yesterday.
Entry blanks can be obtained at the design or drawing and painting office on the third floor of Strong Hall, the Kansas Union Bookstore, and Carter's Bookstore in downtown Lawrence.
An entry fee of $1.50 for up to two entries, and $3 for two to five entries will be charged. Proceeds will go toward an art scholarship, the recipient of which will be announced at the annual awards banquet this spring.
PRIZES and awards will be given for winning entries in ceramics, silversmithing, painting, graphics, and sculpture.
Preliminary judging of entries will begin on Friday. The judges are: R.W. McClosky of Hallmark Cards, James Hunt, art director at Washburn University in Topeka, and Gerald Bernstein, curator of the KU Museum of Art.
The winning entries will be announced at a tea to be held at 7 p.m. Sunday in the south lobby of the Kansas Union.
The exhibition of the winning entries will take place in the south lobby of the Kansas Union from March 5-20.
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study of a play is in learning about the creative process that goes into such a work. Also, he added, textual study reveals just what makes a successful play.
"IN THE ANALYSIS of any work, you find social and cultural forces at work on the dramatist," he said.
In concluding his talk, Prof. Meserve read from a research paper he wrote, "American Drama and the Rise of Realism."
SEVERAL OF the 19th Century's outstanding writers of realistic literature also tried their hand at writing blavs. Prof. Mesere said.
"Basically, realism in literature came because man was being forced to look at life more realistically," he said.
"Were their plays to represent them in American literature, however, their reputations today would be distinctly different from what they are. Both (Samuel) Clemens and (Henry) James were failures in
the theater. (William Dean) Howells was somewhat successful, but his realistic plays were enjoyed mainly by amateur theater groups," he added.
THE HIGH POINT for realism in American drama in the 19th Century was a play called "Margaret Fleming" by James A. Herne, the professor said.
Bret Harte and Stephen Crane were also drawn to the theater "both by its inherent fascination and by the possibility of a realistic drama," he said. But Harte and Crane also failed to write a successful play.
The play described the actions of a dissolute husband and his faithful, morally superior wife, Margaret. The realistic peak of the play occurred when in one scene, Margaret went through the motions of actually breast-feeding her child, he said.
"But this proved too much for the audience of 1891," he said. "Margaret Fleming" was banned in New York.
In the past professors have criticized the policies of the university; but it appears now that students are to have a chance to voice their opinions.
Students May Criticize KU
On the suggestion of George R. Waggoner, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the Philosophical Bases of Absolutely Everything (PBOAE) is sponsoring a drive for letters of criticism about educational policies at KU.
"The suggestion was made some time ago, but Dean Waggoner gave us the go ahead yesterday," Donald Ingelrsud, Minneapolis, Minn. senior, chairman of PBOAE, said.
Students are asked to submit criticisms in specific but not detailed form. The letters must be signed.
From the letters received four or five will be selected and the authors asked to participate in a panel discussion before faculty members. "This really gives the students a chance to voice their complaints," Ingelsrud said.
The selection will be made late in April.
Letters may be left in the Student Union Activities office in the Kansas Union, or sent to;
Don Ingelsrud, Room 1122 West Campus Road, Lawrence, Kansas
Don Ingelsrud, Room 441.
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 11, 1964
'Heart of America' Debate Begins Tomorrow
By Bobbie Bartelt
KU debaters call the "Heart of America" debate tournament "one of the most difficult tournaments on the circuit this season."
Margaret Miller, Red Wing, Minn., sophomore, and her colleague, Louis Floyd, Topeka freshman, expressed this opinion at a pre-tournament meeting of the KU debate squad last night.
KU will enter four two-man teams in the tournament. Students participating in the tournament are Fred Kauffeld, Minneapolis, Minn. senior; Lauralee Milberg, Arlington County, Va. senior; Judson Briegel, Kansas City freshman; Richard Hoskins, Bonner Springs freshman; Ruth Hatch, Evansville, Ind. freshman; Sharon Mahood, Springfield, Mo. freshman; Miss Miller, and Flovd.
"The teams are pretty much hand picked for this tournament," Floyd said. "They are selected on the basis of their records."
THE DEBATERS were meeting to discuss tactics before the tournament begins tomorrow morning.
"Teams are invited to the 'Heart of America' tournament not only on the basis of their records, but
also on the results in the KU tournament the previous year," David Fractenberg, assistant instructor in speech and drama, directors of the tournament. said.
"We consider the tournament a good one, because many of the teams who compete here will win the right to compete in the national championships at West Point," Fractenberg said.
THE KU debaters considered Southwest Missouri State, last year's winner at KU, the "team to beat." Other teams, which according to the debaters should be strong, are the University of Minnesota, Northwestern University, Southern Illinois College, and Wisconsin State College at Eau Claire.
"The topic for this year is a difficult one to argue," Miss Miller said. "After going to several tournaments we find the same arguments coming up. It's hard to find new material."
The topic for debate this year is "Resolved: that the federal government should guarantee an opportunity for higher education to all qualified high school graduates."
Preliminary rounds will begin at 10:00 a.m. tomorrow in the Kansas
Union, following registration and drawing of team numbers.
THERE WILL be four rounds of debate on Thursday and on Friday. Following the eight preliminary rounds, the 16 teams with the best win-loss record and most team points will advance to the octo-finals Saturday morning.
Speakers in the individual rounds are rated by judges on a point scale from 15 to 1, (15 is the best possible rating). Speaking ability, use of evidence, logic, and presentation are some of the factors judges take into consideration when computing a speaker rating.
Each member of the team receives a rating, and the team as a unit receives a rating. The team ratings will be totaled at the end of the preliminary rounds, and will partly determine the teams which advance to the octo-finals.
All rounds after the preliminary rounds will proceed as single- elimination matches.
The tournament banquet will be at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow, in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. George B. Smith, Dean of the Uni-
Russian Tour Deadline Extends For Lagging KU Applications
The application deadline for the summer Russian language program in Finland and the Soviet Union has been extended to March 16. This move will allow more KU students to apply for the program.
The previous March 10 deadline has been extended because there is a shortage of applicants from KU students, Professor Herbert J. Ellison, chairman of the Slavic and Soviet Area Studies Committee, said.
A ten-week, summer language program is being sponsored by the Universities of Kansas and Colorado. The program will include eight weeks of intensive Russian language study at a resident center in Jarven-paa, Finland, and a two-week study tour in the Soviet Union.
THIRTY-SIX students will be accepted, 12 from KU, 12 from CU, and the rest from other universities, Prof. Ellison said.
applicants must be undergraduate students who have completed a minimum of twelve semester hours of Russian. Advanced applicants must be either undergraduate students or graduate students who have completed a minimum of eighteen semester hours of Russian.
One-third of the students will be enrolled in the intermediate program, and two-thirds in the advanced level program. Intermediate
The total cost per student will be $1,150, which includes travel from New York to Finland and return, room and board in Jarvenpaa, thirteen days of travel in the Soviet Union, and the summer school fee for the University of Kansas.
SCHOLARSHIPS up to $850, based on financial need, will be available for students selected for the program.
Students will receive 10 hours of credit for successful completion of the program.
Prof. Ellison described the program as a real "bargain" for KU students, and said the shortage of applicants from KU students is contrary to the response last year, when the program was first started.
"Most of today's college students are the bumper crop of World War II babies. They lived in a family which experienced the struggles and tensions of not knowing whether loved ones would come back from the War. Many got off to a pretty poor start.
"The lucky ones experienced being united but even they grew up in homes where parents wanted to make up for lost time. In early childhood the parents" model was
Sherriffs explained further;
versity, will speak at the banquet. to hear them, and posters in the lobby of the Kansas Union will show interested students who would like where teams are debating.
"It took time for communications to be re-established and the majority to take over again. In the process, parents became cautious about what children said at the table. Teachers, too, were afraid to be controversial. The net result was that students became silent after growing up in homes and schools that were silent.
"Although it (the mental health movement) did a lot of needed good, it also did a lot of harm," he said. Some twisted Freud's theories, especially the one in which Freud said 'neuroses grow out of conflict.' This was twisted to say 'Don't let your child have conflicts, he might become neurotic.'
The mental health movement, loose supervision and a penchant to conform are other contributing factors, said Sherriff.
Educator Sees Student As Mirror of Society
"So, the campus extremists took over, and not the ones to the right as in their parents' day, but those to the left."
self-centered. Too, a majority of families withdrew from the political arena after the war. This is when the extremists were able to take over and we entered the period of 'McCarthyism.'
Applications can be picked up and returned in Room 22, Strong Hall, Prof. Ellison said.
THE NATURAL OUTGROWTH of this misconception, Sherriffs said, was the rise of progressive schools where students were allowed to "do whatever they wanted."
The program runs from June 10 to August 21, 1964. Jarvenpaa, Finland, was selected as the students' laboratory because of its large Russian population with which the students will be expected to establish contacts. The instructional program in Finland will be supplemented by tours to centers of Russian cultural interest and by lectures in Russian and Finnish specialists on various aspects of Russian history and culture.
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"IN OUR FASCINATION for students we tend to forget that they are not a breed apart from society but a part of it," he said. "They simply reflect what's happening in society in general."
"If students are 'nutty' in some areas, the chances are that society is, too. Students simply express it in some other way than society. Because of their age and nearsightedness they tend to reflect in magnified form recent experiences or events of society."
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Wednesday, March 11, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
High School Cagers To Meet in AA Meet
Eight of the best high school basketball squads come to Allen Field House Thursday, Friday and Saturday as KU plays host to the 1964 class AA state basketball tournament.
The tournament will be played Thursday afternoon and evening and Friday and Saturday evenings.
In the quarterfinals, which will be played Thursday. Manhattan meets Wichita West at 2 p.m. Wichita East plays Shawnee Mission North at 3:30, Wyandotte and Chanute meet at 7:30 and McPherson plays Leavenworth at 9.
THE SEMIFINALS in each of two brackets will then be played Friday night, with the winner of the Manhattan-Wichita West game meeting the winner of the Wyandotte-Chanute contest at 7:30 and the winner of the Wichita East-Shawnee Mission North game meeting the winner of the McPherson-Leavenworth game.
The consolation match in the tournament will be Saturday at 7:30 p.m. with the final game of the competition at 9.
Witchita East and McPherson have the best season records going into the tournament, each team boasting a 19-2 record. Wyandotte, however, with an 18-2 record, is considered to be the team to beat for the state crown.
MANHATTAN, representing the Central Kansas League, has a 17-3 record for its season's efforts. Wichita West, from the Wichita League, stands at 17-4.
Chanute, the Southeast Kansas League winner, finished up with a 16-6 overall, and Shawnee Mission North ended their competition in the Sunflower League with a 13-7 mark. Leavenworth, of the Centennial League, won 16 and lost 2 in their season's play.
The first state basketball tournament under official sanction, was played at Emporia State Teacher's College in 1912 and was won by the Reno County High School from Nickerson.
ALL TEAMS in the state competed in the same class until 1925 when all schools with enrollments of 200 or less were moved into a new division—Class B.
division. Kansas' first Class B state tournament was at Salina and was won by Haven High School. Through the years 1929-30, no Class B tournament was played. The Class B teams played with the Class A teams after the first-round district meets. In 1931, the two-tournament system was re-established.
was I. 1941, the schools were divided into three classes—AA, A and B. Hish schools with enrollments of more than 475 were put in the new class—AA. Schools with enrollments between 151 and 475 were in Class A and schools with 150 or below were in Class B.
Prep Gridders Sign For KU
Five more high school football players yesterday submitted signed letters of intent to KU, making a total of 38 so far.
They were halfback Drue Jennings of Argentine, Kansas City; tackles Kelly Sears of Milan, Mo., and Roger Rawlings of Marshall, Mo.; guard Fred Shawger of Central, Tulsa, Okla.; and halfback Rick Abernathy of Center, Kansas City, Mo.
In addition to his football ability, Jennings had an 'A' scholastic average and plans to major in engineering here. He has been clocked in 10 seconds flat in the 100-yard dash and was described by Coach Jack Mitchell as "fast and aggressive."
ST. LOUIS —(UPI) — ROOKIE Art Heyman of the New York Knickerbockers used to be the nextdoor boy of ex-Knickerbocker player Harry Gallatin, now coach of the St. Louis Hawks of the National Basketball Association.
Heyman, playing here against Gallatin's team recalled the time the Heymans and Gallats were neighbors at Oceanside. Long Island. "I used to play basketball at that hoop in your backyard," young Heyman told Gallatin.
IN 1962 schools were reclassified as follows: Class AA includes the 56 high schools with the largest enrollment; Class A the next 64; Class B the next 224 and Class BB the remainder. Eight teams from each class qualify for the state tournament.
This year, the teams in the four classes will have their championship play-at at four different centers- Class AA here, Class A at Hutchinson, Class B at Emporia, and Class BB at Dodge City.
Admission for the tournament will be $1 for general admission Thursday afternoon and $1.25 for Thursday, Friday and Saturday evenings.
KU students who wish to attend the tournament will be required to purchase the general admission tickets.
Reserved seats will be available for the evening contests at $1.50 for each evening, or $4 for the entire tournament. The three-night ticket also enables the purchaser to general admission to the afternoon games.
Houston Coach Named KU Relays Referee
Johnny Morriss, veteran Houston track coach, was today named referee of the 39th Kansas Relays here April 17-18.
IN 1947, he returned to his almamater, Southwestern Louisiana, as track coach and assistant football coach. After winning three Gulf States conference titles and being named "coach of the year" twice, Morriss moved up to the head job at Arkansas. There he piloted the Razorbacks to three Southwest Conference cross-country titles. From there he shifted to Michigan State. He broke into coaching at Abbey-
A collegiate track coach since 1936, Morrisse now is in his ninth year as Cougar head man. He came into that post after three years as assistant athletic director at Michigan State.
Morriss began his college coaching career at North Carolina, where he guided the Tarheels to four indoor and outdoor conference titles. He entered the Navy in 1942, serving a three-year hitch. He followed with a two-year stint with the Spalding Athletic Company in Chicago.
He broke into coaching at Abbeyville, La. High School. He was an
assistant at LSU while doing postgraduate work, and from there sprang to North Carolina.
AT HOUSTON. Morris has forged one NCAA cross-country championship team (1960); three NAAU champions ('59, '60, '61); two National Federation titles ('62 and '63) and when the Cougars were Missouri Valley members, three league track and cross-country titles.
Two Morriss products have earned Olympic berths; 15 have won NCAA titles; 16 NAAU crowns and 20 have earned All-American. His athletes have established six world records and eight NCAA marks.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 11, 1964
Treacherous Primary Road Has Tripped GOP Hopefuls
By Lyle C. Wilson United Press International
Upward of a dozen presidential primaries still are to come and the greatest of these takes place June 2 in California. The Republican who can win the California primary decisively probably can be nominated for president.
It is almost as simple as that, but not quite.
Fifteen states and the District of Columbia authorize presidential primaries. The presidential primary system more often eliminates contestants than it designates winners. Sometimes a primary does a bit of both.
THE BEGINNING OF the end of Sen. Robert A. Taft's White House dream came in New Hampshire's March, 1952, presidential primary. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, a reluctant and uncertain candidate, won all 14 New Hampshire delegates to the Republican National Convention. Ike took 46,000 popular votes to Taft's 35,000.
Wisconsin's presidential primary in April, 1944, blasted Wendell L. Willkie entirely out of the contest
for a Republican presidential renomination. Willkie was a bad last in a field of four in Wisconsin after a good New Hampshire beginning. He had been the 1940 Republican nominee.
Harold E. Stassen made a good start toward the 1948 Republican presidential nomination. The Republicans could have lost in 1948 only by conducting an unbelievably inept and superficial campaign, which they finally did. Stassen showed well in New Hampshire, Wisconsin, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, and Ohio.
Thomas E. Dewey knocked Stassen clear out of the contest in the Oregon presidential primary.
THE LATE SEN. Estes Kefauver of Tennessee was the handiest Democrat of his generation in presidential primary contests. Kefauver was a handsaking baby kisser, a tireless parader up and down the main streets of small towns.
But his remarkable presidential primary successes never paid off with presidential nomination. The best Kefauver could do was the vice presidential nomination on a
losing ticket in 1956 with Adlai E. Stevenson.
The primary system of indicating a preference for individuals seeking national and local office was established in 1903 by the late Robert M. LaFollette Sr., then Governor of Wisconsin. He caused the Wisconsin Legislature to enact the first statewide direct primary law.
The primary system responded to popular demand for elimination of the existing evils of nomination by party conventions or, as strikingly phrased by the late Raymond Clapper, nomination in a smoke-filled room.
Such nominations frequently were corruptly obtained and often picked not the best but the least desirable nominee. Most states now nominate for state and local office by primaries. But only 15 states and the District of Columbia provide for presidential primaries.
Politicians shudder at the thought that the presidential primary system may be extended to all 50 states. Politicians scarcely could be healthy or wealthy enough to survive preference primary campaigns in all 50 states and the District.
Tickets go on sale today for the University Theatre's production of "The Tempest."
--professional actor Arnold Moss will star in the play which is being produced in observance of the four hundredth anniversary of Shakespeare's birth. Moss has starred or been featured in Broadway plays and Hollywood films, and has appeared in leading roles on television and radio. He is best known for his leading roles in Shakespeare's "The Tempest," "King Lear," "Measure for Measure," and "Twelfth Night." In a movie, "The Fool Killers" soon to be released, he appears with Anthony Perkins.
A native of New York City, Moss has been director of the College Theater at Brooklyn College (1933-39), and director of the American Shakespeare Festival Theater and
The play will be at 8:15 p.m. on the evenings of March 18-22 at the University Theatre in Murphy Hall.
The public enjoys the primaries. They are colorful and interesting.
Steak Dinner
'Tempest' Tickets on Sale
World Spotlight
LONDON—(UPI)—Britain rolled out its ceremonial guns today for booming salutes to Queen Elizabeth II and her newborn third son,latest heir to the British throne.
181
Salute New Prince
Sunday Nites $1.25
Messages of congratulations poured into Buckingham Palace from all over the world for the 37-year-old Queen, who gave birth last night five days ahead of schedule. The baby, as yet unnamed, and mother were both reported doing fine.
The nation's joy at the birth of the Queen's fourth child was expected to be given audible and colorful expression today by a 41-gun salvo fired from pennant-decked warships and 21-gun salutes by troops in London's Hyde Park and on the banks of the Thames River outside the Tower of London. The Royal Air Force planned a flypast over Buckingham Palace.
4:30 - 10:30 DINE-A-MITE
Snyder said he gave chase to a black sedan which passed his radar patrol car at 76 miles per hour in a 30-mile per hour zone. The officer said the speeding car hit a bump at Holly Street and bounced into the air.
Snyder searched Liston following a short chase, he said, and "found a gun in his coat pocket and told him he was under arrest."
"I am absolutely delighted," the queen's husband, Prince Philip, said last night following the birth. A champagne toast was drunk in the palace to "the baby prince."
Liston spent less than an hour in jail, and then was charged with careless and reckless driving, carrying a concealed weapon, and driving without an operator's permit. He posted $300 bond. Police said he had $815.94 with him.
Ex-Champ Arrested
Mobs Hit Embassies
Liston, a Denver resident who lost his heavyweight crown Feb. 25 to Cassius Clay in Miami Beach, Fla., was arrested on an East Denver Boulevard not far from his home by Patrolman James (Buster) Snyder at 10 p.m.
"Our youth must be understood, if not excused," he said. "Whoever humiliates Cambodia humilates them and arouses their anger."
DENVER—(UPI)—Charles (Sonny) Liston who turned his tough talents into dollars as heavyweight boxing champion of the world, was arrested last night for carrying a concealed weapon and speeding.
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia—(UPI)—Cambodian demonstrators attacked and damaged the American and British embassies today and Chief of State Prince Norodom Sihanouk said he would apologize immediately for their "excesses."
The demonstrators broke most of the windows in the U.S. embassy with stones, ripped down the American flag, raised the Cambodian flag and smashed a car parked in front of the building.
He added that he could hardly blame the demonstrators for their anger against the United States and Britain, although he deplored their violence.
Sihanouk told a news conference shortly after the demonstrations that "these acts do not conform to our morality or our Buddhist education."
There were no immediate reports of injuries.
23rd & La.
Academy at Stratford, Conn. (1955- 56).
Tickets are available at the University Theatre Box Office in Murphy Hall. Students can obtain a ticket by presenting their fee payment and ID cards.
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Classified Ads
FM. RADIO AND STEREO SALE. G.E.
Compact F.M., $23. G.E. AM-FM AFC,
$29.94. G.E. 2 spkr. FM-CLK, $34.88.
Olympic 2 pc. stereo FM, $60. Emerson
2 pc. stereo FM, $93. G.E. stereo FM and
phono, $198. Motorola 5 spk. stereo FM,
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$159. G.E. portable stereo, 4 spk., $100.
Motorola coffee stereo, $88. Motorola
Twin Wing stereo, $55. Ray Stoneback's,
929 Mass. VIII 3-4170. 3-24
FOR SALE
1357 Plymouth 4-Dr. sedan $100. Must
entirely suit (size 16) $30. $17
i 3-4289 i 3-4299
For sale by owner. 38 Volvo, black, red interior, radio, seat belts, 2 new tires. Good mechanical condition. Reasonable. Call VI 2-9253 after 6 p.m. 3-17
Wollonsk tape recorder plus 1515 4
track. Call VI 2-1667. 3-17
Volkswagen and Renault owners! Nylon premium tubeless tires cut to $16 plus (tubeless retreads, Baxter) Stonebuck's Discount Tire Center, 929 Mass. 3-24
New battery portable all transistor phono.
Sounds like a console! 4 speeds, folds
into compact cabinet. Special offer
for cardboard only. $55.88
Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. 3-24
38 S&W revoiver. Also dinner jacket
Tiffany Lvnr Carrier. Only once
Lynn Carrier V 2-35883. 3-12
3-12
Continuing book sale. 1539 Tennessee (behind ATO house). Open 12 to 10, each week. $4.99. Paradise Lost books 1-111. 9c each. French Curves, 15 and 25 each. 3-16
Used 3 speed Schwinn bikes. One lady's, one man's. Both cut to $25. Ray Stone-back's, $929 Mass. (New 3 speed Royce Union in crate, $38.99.) 3-12
1957 MGA, red with white hardtop, wire wheels, new convertible top. Radio, heater, seat belts. Excellent condition, $800.
Call Jack Hibler. VI 2-0443. 3-12
The latest and greatest in sound! Transistorized 4 track stereo tape deck for your car. Jerry Blakely, 943 Ohio, VI 3-4388. 3-11
For quality used parts see Benson's Auto Salvage, 1902 Harper, North of 4- H grounds. Phone VI 3-1626. Open evenings. 3a11
For sale or trade, pistols, rifles, ammo,
drafting equipment, slide-rules. English
bicycles, lanterns, musical instruments
will trade for anything. Call Vi I 3-110
3-113
Tire prices slashed! Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center at 929 Mass. 36 molylon tubeless tires. Four 650 x 13 $'s,40.
Four 750 x 14 $'s, $44. Four 670 x 15 $'s,44.
Four 800 x 14 $'s, $50. Plus tax, exchange, installed! 4 whitewalls, $8 extra! 3-26
Page 11
New 16" lightweight portable TV, $99.
1 year guarantee on parts! Rent or buy.
$12 per month. Ray Stoneback's, 929
Mass. (Motorola Headquarters). 3-26
Typewriters, new and used portables,
standards, electrics, Olympia, Hermes,
Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables.
Typewriter, adder, rentals and service.
Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St.
VI 3-3644. tt
For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3-
9040 after 5 p.m.
German Shepherd pumps, AKC registered
champion dogs. Lloyd Bridgf
shells. Phone KI 2-2559. Brif
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS. Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale at great savings after 6 p.m. weekly day surday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut tt
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500 sheets to ream—$ .85. Lawrence Outlook 1005 Mass. tf
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for classes. Formerly titled The Tetra Notes. $370. Free delivery. $4.50 Warm civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive. minimegraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
FOR RENT
2 bedroom duplex, furnished. 1836 Missouri. $55 per month. 1 bedroom duplex, furnished. $55 per month. $55 per month. furnished apartment. $75. Car 3-13 A Hempilli. VI 3-3902.
Vacancies for young men in contemporary home. Large swimming pool. Pool equipped with fire suppression and 5 evening meals per week. $75 per month. Utilities paid. Call V1 3-9635. 3-11
Married, grad students, faculty, 2 bed-
room, $75. Sleeping room, $25, 16 avail-
able in. Reserve new柜. For bro-
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1123 Indiana. tl
For one or two graduate age men, three room nicely furnished apt., private bath. $I_2$ blocks. $I_3$ blocks. Best of neighbors conditions. Best of neighbors For appointment phone VI 3-8534. tl
Crescent Heights two bedroom apart-
ment. 25th and Rei-
tlement. Pigeon, NY - 5711-
Graduate men or older undergraduates-
extra-nice furnished bachelor apartment
Close to campus, ideal study conditions
best of neighbors. Reasonably priced
utilities paid. For appointment call VI
3-8534.
TYPING
Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (pica type)
Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi. VI 3-0558
Experienced secretary would like typing
her home. Reasonable rates. Call VI.
1188
Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work stamps and rates. Phone VI 3-8278. Charles "J" Patti.
Accurate expert typist would like typing in her home. Term papers and theses. Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. tf
Experienced typist with electric typewriter--fast accurate work with reason- ment papers themes, distributions and theses, phone VI 7-6822. ff. Frank Gibson.
Experienced Typist—Dissertations, Thesis, Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook.
2000 Rhode Island. VI 3-7485. tf
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon printer. IBM 310484 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley. 408 West 13th **
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
Legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577.
legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577.
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: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports. Electric Typewriter. Mrs McEldowney. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568 tf
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality
typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines
only, then tape transcriptions. Office
house 7 a.m. to 12 p.m. 1021-8434.
Phone VI 3-5920
Typing; Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols carbon ribbon—if desired. Prompt email service. Call Mrs. Dorothy Gulsen VI2-1034 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-1057.
Milliken's SOS
"the best professional service"
- General typing service
- Notary public
- 24 hr. answeriug service
- Mimeograph & photo-copying
1021 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
Big Store Service and Small Store Attention
Book Nook
1021 Mass.
ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass.
MEDITERRANEAN CRUISES. Portugal,
Spain, France, Italy, Baleater Islands,
Corsica, Greece. $799 for 60 days. Swedish
Schooner. Box 283. Seal Beah, Calif.
MISCELLANEOUS
The KANASS FREE PRESS, the fighting liberal student newsletter at KU., has articles on nearly all subjects plus regular features. Current press run over seven hundred. Free sample copy. 1401½ New York or call VI 3-8352. 3-12
Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tt
Would like to buy used guitar. Cal weekdays 4 to 5 p.m., VI 3-215-3, 3-1
WANTED
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass.
Upperclassman would like to rent a small apartment where noise makes little difference. Call VI 2-1791. 3-12
Have a party in the Big Red School
court, on the floor and plant
Heated. Call VI 3-7453
Ride to Ft. Lauderdale, Daytona, or Miami Beach, Fla. Leave April 3. Help with expenses and driving. Call VI 2-9365 or write J.P., 1703 W. 24th, Apht.
One Stop Service
VOLKSWAGEN'S WANTED. Cash for your VW, Conzelman Motors, VW Sales. Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway so So.
Tops — Glass & Zippers
Rear Glasses — Door lines —
Door Panels —
Tailor Made Seat Covers at Competitive Prices with sewed double lock stitch.
545 Minn. VI 3-4242
JOE'S BAKERY
★ TUNE-UPS
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
Hot doughnuts—sandwich cold drink
616 W. 9th
ART'S TEXACO
9th & Mississippi
VI 3-9897
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
★
25c delivery VI 3-4720
★ Engine Tune Up
The only thing better than a home cooked meal is Dinner At DUCKS Steaks & Seafoods A Specialty
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
Wednesday, March 11, 1964
300 W. 6th
Generator & Starter Repair
Serving crisp tossed salads, choice of potatoes, zesty Vienna breads & country fresh butter. Sandwiches, too! Your favorite beverage
Brake Repair
University Daily Kansan
★ Lubrication & Oil Change
LOST
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
On Friday, March 6. Key chain with 8
pins: Keypad Ctrl 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-
West Campus Road Call VI 2-4542-3-17
Bilford, lost in Fraser Theater, Friday.
Dave Till, 81st Kentucky. Contact
Dave Till, 81st Kentucky.
Pair of woman's blue reading glasses
lost Mareh 2 in vicinity of Strong Hall
or Union. Call Peggy Conner, V1-2 0368
3-12
Make a sound investment. KU student, experienced stereo hi-fi consultant, can help you design or expand component systems. Most major component lines available. Jerry Blakely, 943 Ohio, VI 3-4838. 3-11
SKELLY
VI 3-9271
BUSINESS SERVICES
L&M CAFE now under new management WE WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. We will offer delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches Your second cup of coffee always free.
Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery frented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass.
Surprise your roommate with a cake or that special occasion. The K.U. Birthday cake is the student body a line of cakes. Free delivery and card. Call VI 1-2791.
SKELLY SERVICE
RISK'S
Shirt Finishing Laundry
Wash & Fluff Dry
613 Vt. VI 3-4141
JACK & GUNN'S
George's Hobby Shop
1105 Mass. VI 3-5087
Artists - Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics
HIXON STUDIO
Portraits of Distinction
7,000 Pipes and every smoking accessory
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
838 Mass.
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
1218 Conn. VI 3-2921
施工人员
Pet Center Sure—Everything in the Pet Field
JIM'S CAFE
OPEN
24 hrs. a day
727 Mass. VI3-7164
"SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS"
George's Pipe Shop
GRANT'S DRIVE-IN
24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled
Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking
REAL PET
- ADVERTISERS -
Dressmaking-alterations, *formals* and dressmaking-gowns. Ola Smith. *VIII* 1939; *Massi V* 1941.
7 a.m.-11 p.m
5 string banjo instruction. Folk styles.
Low rates. Call VI 2-9466 after 6 p.m. tf
PATRONIZE YOUR
YELLOW CAB CO.
VI 3-6333
HELP WANTED
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Female dental assistant, age 21-30, mini-
mum height 5'8". Will train. Call VI 2-
0398 for appointment. tt
Girl to play electric organ part-time.
Call VI 3-4743.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY, Peppermint Park Kiddyland for operation, sale 2203 by running this during the summer VI 2-0155 after 5 p.m. 4-3
FRATERNITY JEWELRY
Automotive Service
Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel
Balancing
7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Brake Adj. . 98c
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
IT'S OK TO OWE RAY
809 Mass.
FINA SERVICE 1819 W.23rd
PAGE CREIGHTON
A complete line, including:
● Lavallers ● Guards
● Pins ● Mugs
● Rings ● Crests
Grease Jobs .. $1.00
STUDENTS
FOR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS
SEE MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER VI 3-1211
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 11, 1964
U.S., Soviets Still Discuss Bomb Treaty
By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst
When the United States, the Soviet Union and Britain initialled the partial nuclear test ban treaty in Moscow last July 25, they still were a long way from the general and complete disarmament which all three declared to be their goal.
As a matter of fact, it left intact the huge nuclear arsenals built up both by the United States and the Soviet Union, and, if it had significance it primarily was one of hope.
"For 18 years," Secretary of State Dean Rusk told the Senate, "We have held the communist drive in check largely by the deterrent force of our military strength.
"... BUT IF the promise of this treaty can be realized, if we can now take even this one step along a new course, then frail and fearful mankind may find another step and another until confidence replaces terror and hope takes over from despair."
The hope generated by the Moscow agreement in a world tired of cold war persisted last Jan. 21 when the 17-nation disarmament conference resumed deliberations in Geneva.
United Nations Secretary General U Thant has declared that both U.S. and Soviet policy is shaped by "an obsession with the past"-the United States by Pearl Harbor, and the Soviet Union by 1919 when the Western Allies attacked the new Bolshevik state.
AND IN GENEVA existing differences between the two nations quickly reasserted themselves.
They were the same differences which through 18 years and millions of words of talk had prevented real agreement. On the one hand was U.S. insistence on inspection and control of step-by-step disarmament and on the other Soviet charges that the West simply sought to spy on Soviet secrets.
Even so, U.S. disarmament chief William C. Foster returned to Washington in optimistic mood. He believed substantial progress would be made this year on slowing the arms race.
He believed the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. could agree to a halt in the manufacture of fissionable materials for nuclear weapons and to a freeze on nuclear weapons. Rusk has suggested the possibility of agreement on measures to prevent surprise attack.
DESPITE THE SEEMINGLY unchanged attitudes of negotiators on both sides at Geneva, other changes had occurred which were important.
U. S. leaders seemed certain that U.S. nuclear forces were "manifestly superior" to anything the Soviets had and with "tens of thousands" of nuclear warheads could negotiate from a position of strength.
There was also the fact that since President Kennedy's nuclear ultimatum to the Soviets over Cuba in October, 1962, the Russians had done little to rock the international boat.
Russia's huge wheat purchases were proof of Soviet difficulties at home and there no longer was any hiding the depth of Khrushchev's quarrel with Red China and a subsequent waning of Soviet authority in the Communist world.
Within the Western world there was still a difference of opinion as to how these developments inside Russia should be met.
Fallout Discussion By Oceanographer
A lecture on tracing the concentration of fallout, radio isotopes, in the Atlantic Ocean will be given at 7:30 p.m. Friday in room 122 Malott hall.
Thomas Sugihara, chairman of the chemistry department at Clark University in Worcester, Mass., will speak on "Tracers in Oceanography" as part of the KU section of the American Chemical Society.
The author of four successful books which attack the camouflaged evils in our social and economic systems will speak on "What's Happening to the American Character."
Vance Packard, Socio-Economic Critic, Speaks Tonight
Vance Packard will speak at 8 tonight in Hoch Auditorium.
Packard is a native of Pennsylvania and has been a writer and teacher since he received his master's degree from the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism more than twenty years ago.
Author of "The Hidden Persuad-
ers," "The Status Seekers," "The Waste Makers," and the "Pyramid Climbers." Packard's first three books all reached number one on best-seller lists.
For "The Pyramid Climbers"
Packard filled 167 notebooks while
gathering material over a period of four years. He traveled in 15 states and eight foreign countries to bring together the findings of more than 150 sociologists for the "Status Seekers."
TONIGHT
VANCE PACKARD
(Author of "The Hidden Persuaders" & others)
WILL SPEAK ON
"What's Happening To The American Character"
HOCH AUDITORIUM 8 P.M.
Reception for Mr. Packard in the Jayhawk Room of the Union following the speech.
- Sponsored by SUA and ASC -
Daily hansan
Lawrence, Kansas
61st Year, No. 102
Thursday, March 12, 1964
Hoffa Sentenced By Court; Faces Eight Year Jail Term
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. — (UPI)
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. — (UPI)
—Teamster President James R. Hofia today was sentenced to eight years in federal prison for trying to bribe a jury that heard conspiracy charges against him.
"I stand here today and state I am innocent," the 51-year-old president of the nation's largest labor union solemnly told Federal District Judge Frank Wilson, who sternly rebuked Hoffa in handing down the sentence.
Hoffa drew four years on each of two counts of jury tampering and was fined $10,000.
HIS ATTORNEYS ALREADY have announced plans to appeal the conviction by a 12-member federal jury last week, all the way to the Supreme Court if necessary.
Three of Hoffa's co-defendants in the case, heard during a marathon seven-week trial here, were sentenced to three years by Wilson. They were not fined.
They are former Nashville Teamsters Local President Ewing King; Detroit Teamsters Official Larry Campbell; and Nashville Negro handyman Thomas Ewing Parks. Each had been convicted on one count of jury tampering and could have been sentenced to five years and fined $5,000.
After court adjourned, Hoffa spoke to reporters on the steps of the courthouse.
"I HAVE NEVER witnessed anything such as I have witnessed in Chattanooga, Tenn., during the past eight weeks," he said.
He said he told members of his union, "The zeal of attorney General Robert Kennedy will be to destroy you unless you give in."
"I urge you not to give in," Hofa said.
There was a scattering of applause from spectators gathered around the union leader who then walked away to his hotel. He said he would fly to Florida immediately to visit his wife.
"I HAVE BEEN SENTENCED I will appeal, I am not guilty." Hoffa told reporters.
Wilson also cited Jacques Schiffer of New York, attorney for one of Hoffa's co-defendants for contempt of court. Wilson said Schiffer attempted to prevent and obstruct justice and "degrade and debase" respect for the court during the trial.
Wilson referred specifically to Schiffer's use of such language as "drumhead court martial," and "Stalinism . . . Hitler,ism . . . and all
kinds of isms' during his arguments in behalf of Parks.
Schiffer was fined $1,000 and sentenced to 60 days in jail.
Schiffer said he would appeal.
HOFFA. STANDING about 12 feet in front of Wilson, showed no visible sign of emotion when the sentence was pronounced.
He looked the judge in the eye as Wilson sharply rebuked him in the small oak paneled courtroom where the long trial took place.
"You stand here convicted... of tampering with the very soul of its nation, and its very foundation. Its basis of civilization of itself." Wilson said.
Hoffa was convicted of two counts of a federal indictment of attempting to bribe a federal jury at Nashville in 1962 which was hearing a conspiracy case against him. He faced a maximum of 10 years in prison and $10,000 fine.
HOFFA HAD SAID "that when the evidence is sifted calmly and cooly" it will show that he is innocent.
Wilson sentenced Hoffa to four years on each count—the sentences to run consecutively—and fined him $5,000 on each count.
Hoffa, typically chipper when he walked into the courtroom, was the first man off the elevator near Wilson's courtroom. He was dressed in a dark gray suit.
FLANKED BY HIS attorneys, he told newsmen, "I feel fine."
He stood in the hall outside the courtroom and talked to his attorneys for several minutes before entering.
Wilson asked Hoffa if his attorneys had anything to say. James Haggerty, Hoffa's chief attorney, said they did not but Hoffa did.
"I have lived my life serving my fellow man." Hoffa said.
"No one can say I betrayed my trust. . .my record stands for it-self.
"I HAVE NOT BETRAYED their (referring to his Teamsters Union members) trust and I am not guilty."
Wilson asked, "is there anything
Skies will be partly cloudy and temperatures will remain mild tonight and tomorrow. A few brief showers are possible late tomorrow.
Weather
The low tonight will be in the upper 30's.
The high tomorrow will be in the 60's.
further you care to say?"
Then Wilson began his preliminary remarks saying, "the verdict is substantiated by the evidence.
"No sir," Hoffa replied.
"It's difficult for the court to imagine a more wilful violation of the law."
"EVERYTHING WE CALL civilization depends on the proper administration of justice." Wilson said.
Undermining justice "would destroy this country" quicker than any combination of foreign enemies the Judge said.
Wilson then sentenced Hoffa to four years on each of the counts.
Two others were acquitted in the trial last week. They are Allen Dorfman, a Chicago insurance broker, and Nicholas Tweel, a Huntington, W. Va. businessman.
Wilson cited a series of incidents from the court transcript on which to base the contempt citation against Schiffer.
"I WOULD HAVE been guilty of improper conduct if I had not told the court what the government was doing to my client," Schiffer said.
Wilson indicated this was the first time in his judicial career he had cited an attorney for contempt.
"This court since it has taken the bench, hoped and prayed it would never have reason to cite an attorney for contempt." Wilson said. "There is nothing in my life that has caused me greater sadness than to prepare and file this certificate."
Schiffer asked Wilson to allow all arguments on the contempt citation and that they be heard by another judge.
Wilson overruled the request.
DEFENSE ATTORNEY James Haggerty later filed a motion containing what he termed additional grounds for a new trial. The motion said Hoffa did not receive a fair reason because of "marshalls and other government officials giving gifts to all the members of the jury."
The supplementary motion included an affidavit signed by Mrs. Dorothy Vaughn of Chattanooga. She said in the affidavit that U.S. Marshal known to her only by the name "Bob" rented a room in the home of her neighbor, Mrs. Margaret Daves.
The woman said in the affidavit that she was at Mrs. Daves' home the night of Feb. 21 and saw a stack of gift wrapped articles on a kitchen table. She heard "Bob" tell another marshal known to her as either "Jack Erwin" or "Evins" that the gifts were "for my jurors."
KU Seniors Win Nearly Half Of Wilson Fellowships In Big 8
Nineteen KU seniors have been selected to receive Woodrow Wilson Fellowships for 1964-65.
the selection, announced today through the Woodrow Wilson Foundation, awards each Fellow full financial support for one academic year at a graduate school in the United States or Canada.
KU WINNERS, all seniors, are Harold Baker, Osborne; Dale Brownawell, Kansas City, Mo.; Betty Dwyer, Wichita; Hilda Gibson, Lawrence; Gary Gossen, Wichita; Bruce Hall, Coffeyville; Larry Hutchinson, Hutchinson; Barry Isaac, Mankato; Steve Janke, Winfield; Lovell 'Tu' Jarvis, Winfield; Richard Johnson, Overland Park; Rebecca King, Emporia; John Magill, Shawne-Mission; Breon Mitchell, Salina; Merle Pattentig, McPherson; John Platt, Topeka; Richard Taylor, Shawne-Mission; Frank Thompson, Jr., Iola, and George Wilson, Medford, Ore.
Fellows are selected from about 10,000 candidates nominated by college faculty members throughout
OTHER SCHOOLS in Kansas which have Fellowship winners are St. Mary's—2, Wichita University—2, Washburn University—1, and Mount St. Scholastica—1.
the United States and Canada.
Forty-four Woodrow Wilson Fellowships were awarded to students in Big Eight Conference schools. KU had the most with 19. Following KU were Colorado-10, Missouri-5, Nebraska-5, Oklahoma-3, and Iowa State-2.
The Foundation annually awards fellowships to 1,000 prospective first-year graduate students in the United States and Canada. Another 1,500 students receive honorable mention.
The basic purpose of the fellowship is to attract qualified men and women to the field of college teaching. Therefore, if a student outside the humanities and social science
FUNDS FOR THE Woodrow Wilson Foundation are made available through grants from the Ford Foundation.
Awards are made primarily to students in the humanities and social science fields, according to a publication from the Woodrow Wilson Foundation.
A student's name must be submitted by a faculty member of a college or university in the United States or Canada for him to be eligible to receive a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship. Men and women of outstanding intellectual promise, and an interest in college teaching as a career are considered by the Foundation as eligible for nomination.
fields has a clear interest in college teaching as a career he may be nominated for the award.
Last year KU had 17 Woodrow Wilson Fellows; and three years ago 20 Fellows were selected from KU
COMPETENCE IN foreign languages; facility in disciplined fields, such as mathematics; ability in essay writing; and reports of independent study programs are some criteria by which a candidate is finally selected by the Foundation.
SOCIAL CRITIC—Vance Packard, author of several recent best-sellers on the social and moral decay in the United States, reflects for a moment during his speech in Hoch Auditorium last night. (Photo by Charles Corcoran)
Social Critic Knocks Society
By Roy Miller (Assistant Managing Editor)
Vance Packard spoke out against commercialization here last night, saying it had modified the American character to one of "hedonism—living for the moment, living it up."
The author of best-selling books and social critic suggested in his speech before about 1,000 persons in Hoch Auditorium that the individual was losing his self-identity. Packard called for more interest "in the values of mind and spirit."
Packard said the revolutions of science and technology and the growth of national productive capacity had profoundly altered the American character.
"TODAY WE ARE GETTING into a situation where we are being urged to consume goods simply to meet the needs of the productive process," he said. "These pressures and trends are forcing us to become happiness seekers for building a fun culture."
"It is time, I think, to see how these forces are changing the long-term spirit of the human character." Packard said.
"I THINK MORE THOUGHT should be given to leading our own lives. It is difficult, I think, for many persons to clearly be defined as individuals."
Packard, a member of the journalism faculty at New York University, said Americans are "seeing a disturbing and gross commercialization of our landscape" as a result of "forced abundance."
Packard is the author of "The Waste Makers," "Pyramid Climbers" and "The Hidden Persuaders." Another book, "The Naked Society," which concerns invasion of privacy, is to be published this month.
"We ARE A PEOPLE becoming more accepting of people unlike ourselves in economic and social background," Packard said in his speech. "We're also becoming much more interested in fine artistic creations.
"I think, as a people, we are becoming much less parochial."
He said the American character had been changed by the great growth of the general rise and well being of people, population, demand for education, mobility, giant organizations, leisure time and the national productive capacity."
"WE STILL HAVE OUR islands of poverty." Packard said. "But they primarily are people belonging to special groups. These problems can be solved for the most part by special programs."
He spoke of unemployment problems and attributed their cause to automation and the growth of population ("a factor symbolized by many people in this room").
"To maintain employment with these two factors, we need to create 50,000 jobs every week in the next decade," he said. Packard characterized the national economy as "forced abundance" and asserted that the "magic word of the economy is growth, more growth, faster growth."
PACKARD QUOTED FROM advertisements and meetings of advertisers and the advertising industry. Commenting on television commercials, he said:
"Each day and night we see noses dripping and intestines gurgling in our living rooms. We are expected to see a man and a girl kissing each other and then discussing their false teeth."
He spoke of buying on credit as "all this cohesion and pressure to keep us in debt" and cited a Chicago billboard which states:
"NOW YOU CAN BORROW enough to Get Completely Out of Debt."
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 12, 1964
Memo from Mac
Letter from my literary agent:
Dear Mr. McCormally:
I am returning the manuscript of what you describe as your first effort at writing crime fiction. I'm afraid I have bad news for you. The book has been around to several publishers. They all agree that you show promise, but they are passing up this offering. You have some very good ideas for your plot, but I'm afraid you have a tendency to overdo.
But to have the murder take place right in the basement of the police station, with the victim surrounded by policemen. That, Mr. McCormally, is just a little too far-fetched. Even readers of science fiction expect some minimum of credibility in the plots. Crime fiction readers are even more incredulous. The fiction writer is, of course, expected to take some liberties. But you go too far.
FOR EXAMPLE, it is a logical plot development for you to choose Dallas as the setting for the murder in your book. It is well known that Dallas has the highest murder rate in the country.
You compound this later on in the story when once again you seem to be trying to ridicule the police by having seven prisoners break out of jail and terrorize the courthouse during the trial of your murder suspect. Of course readers are used to reading sequences of this kind, but you can't expect them to believe that a police department which had world attention focused on it, would be so lax a second time.
Then, this business of having the escape attempt led by a fellow with a pistol made from a bar of soap. You know that is such old stuff—such a who-dun-it cliche—that even your most juvenile readers will not believe it.
OBVIOUSLY YOU ARE AWARE that modern fiction, if it is to sell, must be sprinkled with cuss words. But again, while your intentions were good, you go to extremes. For example, first you have the policeman shouting at the killer, while the crime is taking place: "Jack, you son of a bitch." Then, later on, you have the killer telling the policeman, "I hope the son of a bitch dies." You appear to be trying to make people believe that everyone in Dallas addresses everyone else as "son of a bitch." While my acquaintance with Dallas has been brief, I do not believe this is true.
You also are right on the old beam in realizing that a successful story needs sex. But, once, more, you let your imagination get the best of you.
YOU START OUT FINE by having your killer be the owner of a strip joint. This provides endless opportunities for injecting sex into the story. But, my goodness, how you muff it. The very first sex character which you develop to any degree is this witness, a strip tease dancer named Little Lynn (and I must say you do not show much imagination with the name). But how do you describe her? As pregnant. Now, who ever heard of a pregnant strip tease dancer? And, as if that weren't ridiculous enough, you have her three days overdue, and have the chief defense attorney suggest that he may deliver her in the courtroom. You clearly misunderstand the proper use of sex in fiction, which should be more concerned with the possible beginning, rather than end of gestation.
You also properly inject religion into the story, which is always good for a few extra readers, who may have tired of Fulton Sheen and Norman Peale. But your attempts are pretty clumsy. You have your main character boast that he did the killing to prove "that Jews have guts." Are you trying to flatter Jewish publishers, or appeal to the anti-Semitic readership.
No, Mr. McCormally, I believe you'd better stick to editorial writing. No one would ever believe your fiction.
John McCormally The Hutchinson News
The Victors
Carl Foreman has made something of a name for himself with such screenplays as "High Noon," "The Mouse That Roared," and "The Guns of Navarone." "The Vietors," which he wrote and produced, is the first film he has directed.
IN AN INTERVIEW for Saturday Review, Foreman said: "it is axiomatic that no studio is interested in what a film has to say; I happen to be interested in a film's meaning." Unfortunately, conscientiousness and good intentions are not sufficient to produce a good film.
"The Victors" may be considered Foreman's personal statement on the subject of war and more specifically on its effects on people. For close to three hours he bombards the audience with proof that war is a horrid business, that it does horrid things to people, and that in the end there are no victors. He even says at the last of the film that he considers it his warning to the world.
To get his point across—and it comes across relentlessly—he relies in large part on the technique of irony. But his use of it is artificial and exaggerated. Instead of following naturally from the events of the film, it is forced by arbitrary juxtaposition of sound and image. For instance, while a deserter is led to the site of his execution, we hear Frank Sinatra singing, "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas."
AS IF THIS were not sufficient to overwhelm the audience with what the director is getting at—after the shot is fired, a chorus bursts into a jubilant rendering of "Hark, the Herald Angels Sing." This was so absurd and so obviously contrived that the audience broke out in laughter.
Mr. Foreman quite obviously has something to say, and one cannot deny the importance of his subject, but it is unfortunate that he so underestimates his audience.
— Byron Leonard
Polish Puppets
I was very amazed to read in your March 5th issue that Poland has a "communist puppet government" and that the Polish people "fear the Russians who rule them."
To be a socialist state and a member of the Warsaw Pact does not imply being ruled by Russians. For someone who has enough interest in international politics to read newspapers from time to time, it should be obvious that the Polish government does not consist of Russian puppets. I do not think I have to mention the events of October 1956.
By the way, students in Poland do not pay a "minimum tuition," but pay no tuition at all.
I am sure that Dean Kenneth Anderson was misquoted by the unsigned author of the article.
Akiraze Bartke Poland graduate student
\* \* \*
Tibetan Brigade
Those few of us members of the Tibetan Mobile Loyalty Brigade remaining on this campus wish to register a protest. Our Anti-Military Ball, held in 1962 and 1963, has been connected with the infamous Un-Military Ball. We wish to disassociate the former from the latter.
Those persons responsible for the Un-Military Ball stressed prior to the occasion that the name was being changed because they were not anti-military.
Who after all is anti-military and who is un-military? We of the
from the morgue
The University Daily Kansan asked the University Senate in 1919 that one of its reporters be permitted to attend the meetings of the Senate and report them for the paper. In making this request the Kansan desired to give University news to the entire University.
The objection to make the doors open for the Kansan reporter was that some members of the Senate felt that the permission would hinder the proceedings of the Senate.
Protesting the Senate regulations, the UDK commented editorially: "The proceedings of a legislative body must be made public to its constituency. Nowhere in the history of the nations of the world can be found a successful legislative body which has existed for a number of years and kept its proceedings secret. Should the legislative body of the University of Kansas be an exception?"
The People Say...
Dailij Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
111. Flint Hall
UNIVERSITY of 4-3198, business office
Founded, 1889, became biweekly, 1904,
died in 2016.
Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, NY. Represented by National Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the university holidays, and University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
UNiversity 4-3846, newsroom
University 4-3806, business offices
Mike Miller Managing Editor
Russ Corbitt, Jackie Helstrom, Wilkins
Cormack, Dennis Helstrom, Assistant Managing Editors; Fred Fralley, City Editor; Leta Cathecr,
Social Editor; Marshall Caskey, Society Editor; Charles Corcoran, Picture Editor
NEWS DEPARTMENT
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Tom Coffman Editorial Writer
Hughes Assistant and
Hughes Assistant Editorial Editors
Brigade have never picked ROTC. We do not hate the military. Many of us have been in the service, and are just glad to be out.
Lawrence graduate student
Kenneth C. King
Bob Brooks Business Manager
Joanne Zabornik, Advertising Mgr;
Mike Barnes, National Advertising Mgr;
Jonathan Burris, Advertising Mgr;
Bob Phinney, Classified Advertising
Mgr; Ken Costich, Promotion Mgr;
Dana Stewart, Merchandising Mgr.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
* *
Prophet Schmidt
it certainly is reassuring to know that the UDK has on its staff such a practical thinker, authority, and prophet as Larry Schmidt (re: Halo on a Stick).
Quote a contrast from "see-all, hear-all, know-nothing" Blaine King. Pity all KU students are not as analytical, cautious, and sane as he. For if they were, perhaps we could keep the prevailing bourgeois, Bible-beltish, cow-townish, stagnant Kansas atmosphere around for another hundred years.
Wayne Inada
Bridgeport, Conn. junior
* *
Rock Chalk Revue Dear Mr. White.
Your accusation charging Miss Hughes with misusing the power of the fourth estate sounds like the “pot calling the kettle black.” If Miss Hughes has social responsibility, and she does, then you, as the producer of Rock Chalk Revue, also have social responsibility.
If Miss Hughes deflated your ego by her honest appraisal, you might consider the probable effect of the Sigma Chi-Gamma Phi Beta skit on the Dean of Women as she sat in the audience last Friday night—the defenseless target of a cruel, malicious, and unwarranted attack. No one will contest the superiority of the winning skit, but many were appalled by its lack of consideration and responsibility. If Rock Chalk Revue forfeits its responsibility, and it does have such responsibility, the producer has failed.
I realize that the staff of the Rock Chalk Revue has made a "great effort" to clean up the Rock Chalk Revue. If this year's production was the result of such an effort, then perhaps a new approach is needed. Why not listen to what made this year's Rock Chalk Revue "so great a success"—the "brand new witticisms," and "original humor" dealing with the college puns and off color jokes of thirty years ago?
I failed to comprehend your criticism of Miss Hughes on grounds of terminology. If "Rock Chalk Revue is put on by amateurs" as you say then Miss Hughes' use of the word "amateurish" would appear most appropriate. She could hardly have called those skis professional, now, could she?
I am sure that you, as the unprejudiced producer of Rock Chalk
Revue, were correct in stating "All four skits were of better quality than some of the skits which have appeared in past Revues." I should hope so. When you have the total number of skits from 37 years, it would seem highly probable that one could find one or two skits that were even of lower quality than 75 per cent of the skits this year.
---
Mr. White, in reference to "room for improvement," next year's skis should easily win a prize for the most improvement in one year—in comparison to the skits of the previous year.
Finally, I must admit that Rock Chalk Revue did not bore everyone. I am sure that the members of the participating Greek houses, the Rock Chalk Revue staff, and the freshmen who have never been exposed to a Rock Chalk Revue production were highly entertained. However, for the majority of the student body, who have seen and who have heard the same thing (and of better quality) before, it was a waste of time and money. Mr. White. I believe you should be extremely thankful that Miss Hughes was as lenient as she was. The majority of the student body has not been.
John Hassig
John Hassig
Kansas City, Kansas junior
Wm. H. Spencer
West. Chicago, Ill. junior
***
Editing Service
I have been told that any campus event will be listed in the **Rulletin** if the UDK is told about it. But isn't a newspaper more than an editing service? What about finding out what's going on, reporting?
It would be quite useful to KU students if the UDK would expand its reporting of campus events of general interest. Guest and faculty lectures, symposiums and debates, club and group meetings, concerts and film abound on campus. Yet one might infer from reading the UDK Bulletin, itself cleverly hidden in a new place in each issue, that the only extracurricular activities at KU are Western Civ discussions and chess club meetings.
Charles R. Hook
Topeka freshman
I have been told that the effort required to find out what's happening on campus is unfeasible, given the UDK reporters' limited time. Would it be so difficult? The news bureau in Strong, the Union office, and the various bulletin boards are packed with information. One reporter working a few hours a week ought to be able to collect the information. If he did, the UDK would be performing a useful service for which all KU students would be grateful.
STOP
©2014 HERBLOSE
THE WAITING PUT
"This Was A Railroad Job, In My Opinion"
Page 3
mpleinus But n am an itseffort oport-wap-hip-able. united The Union rmaw-fem able to did, did, KU
MICHAEL LONG and ANNA MORGAN
LADY LAWYERS—June Patton, Roeland Park third year student, and Anne Morgan, Kansas City, Mo., first year student, are among eight women enrolled in the KU Law School. Both are very interested in the study of law, and being in the minority does not stop these women from pursuing the career they want.
Female Perry Masons Hold Minority at KU
About the only thing Anne Morgan and June Hyatt Patton have in common is that they are in a distinct minority group here.
They are among eight women in the KU School of Law, but their reasons for studying law and their future plans are poles apart.
Miss Morgan, Kansas City, Mo. first year student, is interested in criminal and juvenile law.
A 1963 GRADUATE OF MIDDLEBURY College in Vermont, where she majored in political science and art history. Miss Morgan is interested in improving the nation's laws dealing with criminal and juvenile offenders. She hopes to get the background she needs at KU.
Mis Morgan, who has traveled to Europe several times and to South Africa, also expressed an interest in diplomatic work.
She thinks there is a definite prejudice against women in many professions, including law. She admits she sometimes feels a little uncomfortable in such a minority, but it hasn't stopped her from pursuing a career she wants.
MRS. PATTON, Roeland Park third year student, will be graduated this spring and plans to go into corporate and commercial law with Lawrence R. Wagner, Roeland Park attorney, for whom she has worked part time for almost two years.
Mrs. Patton and her husband are president and vice-president of their own corporation, Systems and Management Consulting, Inc., in Kansas City where they do consulting work in the electronic data processing field.
Mrs. Patton earned a bachelor's degree in psychology at Kansas City University in 1959 and worked for a year analyzing securities and investments.
SHE BECAME INTERESTED in law almost by chance, when she enrolled in a KCU law course "partly out of curiosity and partly for some intellectual activity."
Besides meeting her future husband in that course, she also developed a deep interest in law.
"I got 'hooked,'" she said. And she decided to enroll as a full time law student here.
Mrs. Patton thinks many women are well suited for legal careers, because they have patience with detail and have the ability to think deeply.
"IT'S A SHAME THERE are not more women in law. Many have a
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great variety of abilities which can best be utilized in law. I wish more school counselors would suggest the possibility of legal careers to women," she said.
Other women in the KU School of Law are Meredith Appel, Wichita first year student; Elizabeth Dyson, Lawrence third year student; Clarine Smissman, Lawrence second year student; Karen Stewart, Hutchinson second year student; Elizabeth Handleley, Dallas, Tex., first year student, and King Lan Lin, Taiwan special student.
Candidates Named In Class Elections
Sophomore, junior and senior class officers for next year will be elected April 1 and 2.
Announced candidates to date for senior class offices are: La- Follette, Overland Park and John "Tonto" Mays, Lyons for president; Dan Wanamaker, Salina and John Daniels, Kansas City, Mo. for vicepresident; secretary, Carol Stotts, Prairie Village and Mary Kay Kennedy, Lyons; treasurer, William Engber, Wichita.
Junior class slates will include Alan Brightman, Leawood and Clay Blair, Joplin, Mo. for president; Lester Kahler, Hollyrood and Earl Wagner, Independence, Mo. for vicepresident; Peggy Smith, Garden City and Carol Nichols, Hiawatha for secretary, and Kathlyn Hogue, Topeka for treasurer.
For the sophomore class Robert Smith, Kansas City and Donald Hunter, Abilene will run for president; Thomas Aiken, Lawrence and William Stringer, Overland Park for vice-president; Diane Spickard, Shawne Mission and Jean Burgardt, Des Moines, Iowa for secretary. Elizabeth Roberts, Shawnee Mission is the only declared candidate for treasurer.
Applications for class officers and ASC council seats to be elected at the same time may be picked up in the Dean of Students' office, Dick King, Kansas City sophomore and ASC elections committee chairman said.
Freshman class officers are elected at the beginning of the fall semester.
Thursday, March 12, 1964 University Daily Kansan
The deadline for applications is March 16.
NEW YORK - (UPI)—The New York Giants' 448 points for the 1963 National Football League season is second only to the 466 tallied by the Los Angeles Rams in 1950.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, March 12, 1964
Lodge Lacks Appeal On National Tlcket
By Lee Stone
Two KU political science professors, a Democrat and a Republican, generally agree on the implication of the New Hampshire primary election.
In separate interviews, both James E. Titus, an associate professor of political science, Democrat, and Earl Nehring, assistant professor of political science and a Republican agreed that:
- Henry Cabot Lodge, U.S. ambassador to South Viet Nam, and write-in candidate for president in the New Hampshire primary has not yet been proven as a candidate with national appeal.
NEHRING SAID. "I go along with the belief that Lodge's strength is not nation-wide."
Nehring believes, however, that Richard Nixon, the 1960 Republican presidential candidate, gained more than any other candidate. Nehring said Nixon did not have the backing of an organized campaign as did Lodge, yet Nixon polled half as many write-in votes. Nixon also has proven himself as a national political personality, and professional politicians will consider this, he said.
Like Prof. Nehring, Prof. Titus said that Lodge would have to prove himself outside of New England before he could be considered as a "serious candidate" for president. Because the UN is more popular in the East than the West, and because Lodge's name has borne the prestige of Ambassador to the UN, Lodge is better known and respected in the East. Prof. Titus said.
- Both professors believe that the Lodge write-in victory was also a
Council Invites Support Groups
More than 100 letters have been mailed to various organizations inviting them to become "supporting organizations" of the Civil Rights Coordinating Committee (CRCC), George Ragsdale, Lawrence senior and president of the Civil Rights Council, said last night.
The letter states that the only requirement for becoming a "supporting organization" is the giving of moral support to the CRCC.
A sample letter also explains that the CRCC was organized for the sole purpose of planning two mass demonstrations. A March 21 picket of the Sigma Nu fraternity is planned to protest the discriminatory clause in the national constitution of Sigma Nu fraternity.
A March 28 picket of the Greek Week chariot races will protest what the letter calls "... the de facto segregation in most KU fraternities and sororites."
Petitions protesting the Sigma Nu discriminatory clause and the "de facto" segregation of fraternities and sororites were distributed to members of the Civil Rights Council last night. Ragsdale said that after the petitions have been circulated among the students, they will be presented to the All Student Council for its consideration.
Ragsdale said they hope to get enough signatures to show that some action should be taken by the ASC.
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"Goldwater was hurt most." Prof. Nehring said. He believes the Barry Goldwater campaign suffered most because of Goldwater's remarks about social security and the UN.
Prof. Titus feels that "very probably" Lodge pulled support from Rockefeller.
victory for moderate forces in the Republican party.
BOTH LODGE AND Rockefeller are members of what Prof. Titus calls "the Eisenhower wing" of the Republican party.
Prof. Nehring said the primary was "useful" in that it showed that the Republican party has no "front-runner" at present, and that it provided "some kind of clarification" of Goldwater's philosophy.
BARBERS
PROF. TITUS SAID he could not recall a write-in candidate in primaries winning a national election. He warned however, against generalities, because Senator J. Strom Thurmond, (D-South Carolina), was a write-in contender in the general elections and won his Senate seat.
As further evidence that the unexpected can happen in elections, Prof. Titus said Dr. John R. Brinkley, a quack doctor who advertised the replacement of human organs with those of monkeys, won 30 per cent of the Kansas vote for governor when he ran as an Independent.
Marston McCluggage, professor of sociology and anthropology, said the people are not always aware of what motivates them in their choice of candidates. In a voter study of Erie County, Ohio, it was found that an uncommitted voter's vote could be predicted by his social and economic position most of the time, Prof. McCluggage said.
What motivates the voter's selection of a candidate is not yet understood. Prof. McCluggage said.
THOSE WITH whom persons identify and on whom they rely for approval are also factors in the voter's choice of candidates.
NO LONG WAITS North of Union
5
Klaus Pringshiem, instructor in East Asian Areas studies, did not believe that Lodge's victory would jeopardize his ambassadorship in South Viet Nam. On the contrary, he believed the unexpected vote of confidence by New Hampshire citizens would enhance his position as a diplomat. "People everywhere would tend to look up to him," Pringshiem said.
PRINGSIEM SAID he would be inclined to hand the victory to Lodge's son, Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., because it was he who conducted an extensive write-in campaign, not Lodge Sr.
Pringsheim feels Lodge remained properly aloof during the New Hampshire primary.
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The Missouri Valley Forensic League (MVFL) will honor E. C. Buchler, professor of speech and drama, at its annual conference March 26-29.
Forensics Honor KU Prof. Buehler
The 13 member schools of the MVFL will meet at KU.
THE CONFERENCE will feature six rounds of debates on the question, "Resolved, That the present method of making committee assignments in the United States Congress should be abolished."
Prof. Buehler was secretary of the league for 26 years.
A banquet March 26 in the Kansas Union will feature four tributes to Prof. Buehler by Don Olson, professor from University of Nebraska; Emeritus Howard T. Hill, professor from Kansas State University; Thorrel Fest, professor from University of Colorado; and Waldo Braden, professor from Louisiana State University.
The 13 schools will enter one representative in oratory and two representatives in extempore speech. About 52 students will attend. Trophies will be awarded individual winners.
DVD
---
THE CONFERENCE comes after another major KU speech event, the Heart of America Debate Tournament, being held now on the campus, Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
PROF. BUEHLER IS the author of 20 books on debate and public speaking, and he served as national president of Delta Sigma Rho, honorary speech society, for 11 years until 1953 when he became a trustee of the organization.
Universities participating in the conference are: Kansas State, Kansas, Wichita, Nebraska, Creighton, South Dakota, Iowa State, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Colorado, Louisiana State, Texas and St. Louis.
A. B. Leonard, professor of zoology and chairman of the zoology department, and Tong-Yun Ho, Taiwan graduate student, have discovered a new fossil dating method using protein degradation.
Proteins Fix Fossil Age
BY DETERMINING the pattern of protein degradation in rock strata of increasing age, they have been able to place the relative date of fossils by measuring protein content.
Prof. Leonard explained that protein is preserved intact in fossils
but that the amount decreases with the progression of geologic periods. He believes that with this information the relative age of shells on the Great Plains can be determined without knowing the exact stratographic position of the rocks in which the shells are preserved.
THE RESEARCH, sponsored by the National Science Foundation, took $2_{1/2}$ years.
The findings will be published in Science magazine and presented to the American Geological Society.
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by tion,
Senate Debates Rights Measure
By United Press International
The big tug-of-war has begun in the Senate over the House-approved civil rights bill. Some police chiefs probably wish it could have happened in the dead of winter.
THERE IS NO way to tell at this point just when the preliminary maneuvers will be disposed of so the bill itself can be brought up for debate. Educated guesses in Washington put the critical time for the measure at from three to five weeks in the future.
A. Phillip Fandolph, one of the "Big Five" Negro leaders in the nation and an architect of the 1963 march on Washington, already is going around the country urging grass roots demonstrations against senatorial efforts to delay the civil rights measure.
Prolonged debate over this controversial measure and the probability of a filibuster to block a vote will be a major tension factor on the civil rights front this spring. Integration groups are threatening to call major demonstrations in a "street corner lobby" for passage of the bill.
If history is any guide, April and May are the two most popular months for the massive racial demonstration. A stalled civil rights bill would give the promoters a rallying point of major proportion for spring uprisings.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who has threatened to re-open demonstrations in Emmingham next month, calls repeated attention to the status of the legislation.
ON THE OTHER side of the coin, it is probable that the leadership of the Negro organizations is being urged with great emphasis to soft-pedal demonstrations while the debate progresses.
Proponents of the civil rights bill, in full knowledge they have their best chance yet to get a strong measure approved, are reasoning that demonstrations in or out of Washington would simply cause opponents to dig in their heels to the last.
Thus, even if a bill were finally approved, its by-product would be bitterness and division. They feel this reaction would spill over to
Some Negro leaders, who have worked for years to get a civil rights measure with muscle approved, are hoping the impatient among their numbers will not trigger incidents that can lead quickly to violence.
states that already hate the thought of the measure, making enforcement difficult at best.
50
THEY HAVE one thing going in their favor. There is a growing distaste among Negroes themselves for huge demonstrations. An effort to produce a crowd for a downtown demonstration in Atlanta recently—this one on behalf of open public accommodations—failed completely.
At one point, demonstration lieutenants were going from store to store in a Negro area of Atlanta urging customers to join them downtown. The request was ignored.
We Want The Beatles
"The Negro community is getting more mature in its outlook on integration," a Negro leader commented. "The tide is going with us now. It's best that we move with the tide and not try to outrun it."
$ ^{thursday, March 12.1964} $ University Daily Kansan
LONDON—(UPI)—Sammy Davis Jr., who arrived here yesterday to do a one-man television show for the British Broadcasting Corp., said, "My main purpose while I'm here is to get the Beatles' autograph for my children. Mark and Tracey.
"I keep on saying to them—look here kids, I'm a great star. I earn a million dollars a year. They aren't interested. All they say is, 'We don't want your autograph, Pa. We want the Beatle.'"
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Students Seek End Of Ruling Group
STILLWATER, Okla., — (UPI)—The leader of a defeated proposal to ban prayers at Oklahoma State University football games planned today to circulate a petition to abolish the school's student senate.
The student senate voted last night, 13-8, against submitting the prayer proposal to the student body.
Most Stillwater ministers have voiced approval of the prayers, as Baptist Convention and Methodist Bishop W. Angie Smith.
The move had been started by Ken Balzer, a senior from New York, who presented a petition bearing 300 names asking that the pre-game prayers be stopped. Balzer said he was disappointed about the decision, and said he would start his anti-senate petition immediately.
The petition seeking to ban pregame prayers did not have the offical endorsement of any campus organization. But, it stirred up a controversy that produced statements from some of the state's top religious leaders.
Balzar was joined in the petition move by Steve Williams, a Cyril, Okla, senior, and Bonnie Yordi, an Ardmore, Okla., junior
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 12, 1964
Whitcher Elected AWS President
Associated Women Students have elected Sheridan Whitcher to preside over AWS senate and AWS activities.
Miss Whitcher, Prairie Village junior, defeated Joan Fowler, Shawnee Mission junior for the top office.
Gwendolyn Fisher, Topeka junior is the new vice-president of AWS and the presiding officer of the AWS house of representatives. Anne Shontz, Kansas City, Mo. junior is the runner-up.
ALL SECOND PLACE candidates for the AWS offices will serve on the sepate as committee chairmen.
for secretary Carolyn Brewster,
Prairie Village freshman ran first,
with Kathryn Hewett, Fort Scott
freshman second.
Ann Peterson, Shawnee Mission sophomore is the new treasurer. Janet Phelps, St. Louis, Mo. sophomore will be a committee chairman.
SERVING AS CWEN'S ADVISOR will be Carol McMahan, Wichita sophomore. Her runner-up is Lynette Berg, Claude, Texas, sophomore.
The coordinating Panhellenic and inter-residence hall representatives are Mary Lynn Schwentker, Ogallala, Nebr., sophomore and Sharon Anderson, Topека junior. The second place candidates for these respective offices were Mary Lasley, Shawnee Mission sophomore and Joy Long, Princeton sophomore.
Claudia Reeder, Overland Park sophomore will serve as the AWS representative to the ASC. Jill Newburg, Carmel, Ind., sophomore was the runner-up.
OTHER CANDIDATES FOR THE AWS offices were: vice-president, Janet Loyd, Newton junior; secretary, Patricia Goering, Moundridge
freshman, Spring Stidham, Park Ridge, Ill., freshman, and Mary Kleinberg, Lawrence fresh man; treasurer, Cheris Shelton, Edina, Minn., sophomore and Nancy J. Speirs, Dodge City sophomore.
Cwen's advisor, Sharon Stalcup Lawrence sophomore; Panhellenic, Vivian Williams, Topeka sophomore; Inter-residence hall representative, Paula Dickens, Newton freshman; ASC representative, Susan Hartley,
Atwood sophomore and Donna Hunt, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore.
The new AWS officers will take office March 24 and be installed at AWS Honor's Night May 3. Many of them will also attend the regional convention in Kentucky later this spring.
The total votes cast in the election were 1,624 which is 300 more than last year and represents over 50 per cent of the women in organized living groups.
Dean Emily Becomes Bunny At Scholarship Dinner
Dean Taylor in a bunny costume.
A TGIFer asleep on the speaker's table. Faust in French.
Absurdity broke loose at the Summerfield-Watkins dinner last night. Departing from the usual program of a symposium discussion, a committee of senior scholars staged a "happening."
WHILE BANANA CREAM pie was being served, a simultaneous reading of foreign-language classies (in the wrong language) began. Several students walked out
Reuben McCornack, Abilene senior, with cigar, red carnation, and wide necktie, harangued: "I am the man! I am the greatest!"
The committee began arranging the scholars according to their grade point averages. "A 6.0? That's the highest so far."
Everyone stood as the Star Spangled Banner was played wailingly on a clarinet, with moanful bassoon accompaniment.
A BALLET DANCER performed before a movie screen showing home movies of dogs and cats.
A Daily Kansan reporter interviewed celebrities, finding that Emily Taylor, dean of women, is "lukewarm about Margaret Chase Smith and feels women should stay in their place; the kitchen."
A pregnant Watkins scholar scrubbed floors while boys distributed down slips from a ladder.
After the confusion died down, Breon Mitchell, Salina senior, explained that the program was an expression of the new "pop art."
"IN THE HAPPENING,' the audience is the medium for the artist's expression. This summed up KU and especially the Summerfield-Watkins dinners," Mitchell explained.
The whole thing was over in little more than an hour. The participants went away wondering if, indeed, we are heading toward absurdity.
New Hampshire Opens Racing Lottery
SALEM, N. H. — (UPI) — New Hampshire entered the gambling business today with the nation's first lettery of the 20th Century.
Gov. John W. King will buy the very first sweepstakes ticket at Rockingham Park horse race track.
The state hopes to sell $10 million worth of them by Sept. 12.
The way was cleared for the fiscal experiment Tuesday when voters approved the nation's first lottery in 70 years by a 114,987 to 31,127 vote.
THE STATE PLANS to give away 40 per cent of its total sales with top prizes of $100,000 for every $1 million of tickets sold. There also will be hundreds of lesser prizes in each million dollar series.
Proceeds from the sweepstakes will go for educational purposes.
Thirty-six electronic machines to sell the tickets will be set up at Rockingham. Another 200 will be put in the 49 liquor stores, which are run by the state.
Edward J. Powers, former FBI agent in charge of New England and director of the sweepstakes program, said three other machines at the race track will handle volume sale—for more than 10 tickets. At these special booths the buyer can give the clerk a list of names and the money. He can return later to pick up his tickets.
THERE IS NO maximum number of tickets that can be bought.
After tonight's kickoff ceremony the tickets will be sold daily, except
Sunday, from 10 a.m. until 10 p.m.
at the track.
Also on hand for the program, besides King and Powers, will be Rep. Lawrence Pickett, D-Keene, who sponsored the bill and battled for its passage. He had suggested such a bill for the past 11 years in the legislature, but was defeated each time.
Launching of the sweepstake coincides with the opening day of the 1964 harness racing season in New Hampshire.
THE VOTERS were asked if they wanted the sweepstakes tickets sold in their towns, liquor stores or race tracks, the only places where the $3 tickets will be sold. No sweepstakes tickets will be sold outside of New Hampshire.
Out-of-state persons wishing to buy tickets must either come to New Hampshire, leaving their names and addresses on the tickets, or must arrange with a friend within the state to buy them. However, strict federal postage laws regarding lotteries could limit this method. No test case has been made.
Powers said he was "delighted and pleased with the response of the voters" to the sweepstakes, which faced stiff political and social opposition.
POWERS SAID he had no intention of buying the $10 federal gambling tax stamp required for some forms of gambling.
SALGON—(UPI)—Defense Secretary Robert McNamara today wound up his inspection tour of the Vietnamese guerrilla war and prepared a report to give President Johnson on his return to Washington.
McNAMARA'S MISSION has been overshadowed by the excitement caused here by Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge's New Hampshire presidential primary victory. Lodge said yesterday he was honored by the results but had no plans to resign or return to the United States in the near future.
"If the Internal Revenue Service says that we must purchase a tax
Attention returned to the guerrilla war today. A military spokesman reported a new outburst of Communist attacks that cost the government 29 dead.
stamp we will do so under protest because we contend that we do not come under the intent of the federal Wagering Act since ours is a state regulated program where the proceeds are going to education." Powers said.
Betore his departure, he scheduled another meeting with junta chairman Maj. Gen. Nguyen Khanh, whom he has promised full support for the fight against the Communist Viet Cong.
One attack took place early today in Binh Duong province 30 miles north of Saigon. Two government militiamen were killed and nine were wounded.
If it is determined the state falls under the 10 per cent gambling excise tax, the state legislature has provided that the price of the ticket could be boosted to $3.30 to compensate for any loss of educational revenue.
The worst setback for the government came Monday night in a Viet Cong raid in Ba Xuyen province south of Saigon. Twenty-one government troops were killed.
McNamara Ends Tour of Viet Nam
The total wounded from all the attacks was 48 and another 15 government soldiers were listed missing. In addition, the guerrillas captured 21 carbines, 2 submachine guns, and an automatic rifle.
ONE OF THE subjects McNamara discussed with Khanh, Lodge, and U.S. military commander Gen. Paul D. Harkins was the need for more weapons for South Viet Nam's second-line defense forces.
These forces, the National Guard, hamlet militia, and other units, are the key to Khanh's new plan to hold territory captured from the Communists.
Informed sources said about 8,000 weapons have been lost to the Communists in hundreds of attacks like those disclosed today.
Throughout the visit, McNamara stressed these two points—the United States, which has 15,000 troops serving here as military advisers, will continue its support of the war; and it firmly backs the six-week old government of Khanh.
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"I think is was the old spinster's association kicking up," she said at London airport yesterday.
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Cyprus Nears War; UN Troops Okayed
Bv United Press International
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Cyprus was at the brink of all-out war today, with British, Turkish and Greek, and Turkish Cypriot forces dug in around Nicosia in expectation of an explosion.
The Greek Cypriots last night abroached the truce zone agreement and a high British Military source said there were indications they soon would violate the zone. This could set off a "Battle of Nicosia."
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And in Paris, French government sources said today President De Gaulle will propose a drastic new plan for Cyprus—probably involving some form of partition—when the present acute emergency on the island ends.
At the United Nations, meanwhile, diplomatic sources predicted a United Nations peace force may be dispatched to Cyprus by this weekend now that the United States and Britain have agreed to pay half the $8 million costs.
With enough money apparently assured for a stable start for the peace-keeping operation, diplomatic sources said, positive responses to Thant's troops request were expected to come in and the forces could be underway to Cyprus by the weekend.
Quick action was important because of the rising tensions on the Mediterranean island.
THE TWO WESTERN powers broke the financial stalemate yesterday, and Secretary General Thant immediately conveyed the news to representatives of the six nations he had asked to supply troops.
DE GAULLE WILL make his move as soon as the fighting ends and the time appears ripe for a political settlement between the Greek and Turkish Cypriots, the sources said.
Among possible solutions De Gaulle has in mind were said to be.
- Transfer of the island to Greece.
- Partition of the island between Greek and Turkish Cyprites,
- Repatriation of the entire Turkish minority to Turkey, and
- Transfer of Cyprus to Greece and resettlement of the Turkish minority on another island.
The British warned the Greek Cypriotes that any action over the "Green Line"—or truce zone in Nicosia—would bring immediate retaliation. This almost certainly would
trigger major violence involving the Turkish Cypriots and Turkish army troops as well.
THE "GREEN LINE" is a 100-yard no-man's-land which has separated the warring Greek and Turkish sectors of the capital since the crisis erupted in December. It is the only area on the Mediterranean island where the British peacekeeping troops are empowered to shoot-to-kill automatically if either side violates the zone.
Rival Turkish and Greek Cypriot forces dug into sandbaggied positions commanding key spots in the Nicosia area. The British, beleaguered in their efforts to keep the peace, fortified their capital headquarters with anti-tank guns and heavy machine guns.
Just outside the capital. Turkish army troops—from a group of 600 stationed on the island—were in positions closer to Nicosia than ever before since the crisis started. Turkish Cypriot forces lined the main road north to Kyrenia, and Greek Cypriot forces reinforced their positions on the outskirts of the city.
THE CRISIS atmosphere was heightened by reports of American and Soviet warship movement in the Eastern Mediterranean and by Turkey's formal warning it would intervene militarily unless an international peace force is dispatched to Cyprus quickly.
Russia, which has promised to aid President Makarios, Greek Cypriots if Turkey intervenes, sent two destroyers through the Bosphorus into the Mediterranean yesterday.
Two warships of the U.S. 6th Fleet also sailed into the Eastern Mediterranean after visiting Istanbul, Turkey.
The geology department will offer three different sections of the beginning geology course next semester.
Course Broadened In Geology Dept.
The sections will consist of (1) students without a science background, (2) students with a good background in chemistry, and (3) students with a good background in chemistry and physics.
There will be appropriate lab sections for each course.
Wakefield Dort Jr., associate professor of geology, will be teaching the students with a science background and J. E. Anderson, instructor of geology, will teach those with a background in chemistry and physics. No instructor has been appointed to teach those with a chemistry background.
John W. Winslow, professor of geology, is now teaching on a part-time appointment here at KU.
Winslow, teaching Quantitive Ground Water Hydrology,a graduate course, is with the U.S. Geological Survey,Ground Water Division.
He did undergraduate work at Brown University and received his Ph.D. at the University of Illinois in 1957.
Flock to English Hoax
EAST MERSEA, England—(UPI)
—Amateur archaeologists flocked to this south England coastal town yesterday when bones believed to be those of a 200-million-year-old Ichthyosaurus were unearthed.
Thursday, March 12, 1964 University Daily Kansan
But the "sea monster" turned out to be a fraud. Robert MacDonald, a youth camp ward, said last night, "I buried a whale on the beach there seven years ago."
WHATCHAMACALLIT
March 13
Dance—Plav Cards—Have Fun
Hashinger Hall 9:00-12:00
Sponsored by Association of University Residence Halls (Ad Courtesy ASC)
Latin American Night
The Combo Caribe is the featured combo for Latin American Night sponsored by the International Club. Music and dancing representative of various Latin American countries will be the entertainment.
Participants of the Fifth Seminar on Higher Education in the Americas have been asked to attend as honored guests, Ramon Mayor, Placentas, Cuba, graduate, chairman of the program, said.
The program will be at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, in the Big 8 Rooms of the Kansas Union.
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Sunday Nites
$1.25
4:30 - 10:30
DINE-A-MITE
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Today, handling money in the form of cash is out-of-date. Let a checking account go to work for you this week.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 12, 1964
New Fearless Forecast Presents Predictions
By Bob Jones Asst. Sports Editor
The Mid-West NCAA Regional Tournament in Wichita this weekend will present four evenly matched teams, and all of the games in the tournament look as if they are going to be close.
In response to not-so-overwhelming public demand, I have stepped boldly forward to accurately predict (or at least try to come close to) the actual outcome of the regional tournament.
THE WHEATSHOCKERS, who are favored to win the regional, must find a way to stop the awesome backboard power of Creighton if they are to win.
Paul Silas of Creighton, 6-7, 230 lbs., is one of the best rebounders in the history of college basketball. This season he is averaging over 27 rebounds per game, and his teammates give him more than token help in that department.
Wichita will be playing without Ernie Moore in the backcourt, but if they have a reasonable shooting night, keep Nate Bowman from fouling out, and rebound the way they did in their playoff game with Drake, they should win easily.
Final score: Wichita 88, Creighton 82.
In the other game, it looks as if Texas Western has too much for Kansas State to handle. I should be hung for not sticking with the Big Eight representative, but Western's Jim "Bad News" Barnes is probably the best all-around center in the country, and his play will make the difference.
IN A PLAYOFF game earlier this week, Texas Western downed Southwest Conference champ Texas A&M when Barnes hit 14 out of 21 field goals the second half to finish the game with 41 points.
K-State is not capable of stopping Barnes, even with a zone, and Willie Murrell, the Big Eight's most valuable player, cannot match Earnes shot for shot.
As far as the rest of the K-State and Texas Western teams go, they are about even. Therefore, Barnes will be "bad news" for Kansas State as the Miners will down the Wildcats 70-65.
SATURDAY NIGHT, Kansas State should be able to down Creighton because of superior shooting, and adequate rebounding. The Cats have played stiffer competition this year, and because of this, will not let down after an important defeat the night before. Score K-State 89, Creighton 78.
The final game should be a tight one. Wichita will be seeking revenge for their only home defeat of the season, and Western will have the confidence of knowing the Shockers can be beaten in Wichita.
Wichita.
Because of the game played on Wichita's home court, they should have an edge, but again, the loss of Ernie Moore must be taken into account, so the two teams will be even.
THE BIG question is whether or not Barnes can be stopped. People say that Wichita has improved to the point where Barnes will not make any difference, but since the Wichita game, Barnes has made tremendous improvement.
Wichita will definitely have a speed edge over the Miners, but solid team support behind Barnes will again spell "bad news" for Wichita.
Texas Western to win by two, 65-63.
WELL, THERE is it, just as I see it. With the overall balance of the four teams, these predictions could be 100 per cent wrong, but right now this seems quite unlikely.
Trackmen To Enter K-State Invitational
KU trackmen will participate in the eighth running of the annual Kansas State Invitational Indoor Relays Saturday in Ahearn field house in Manhattan.
Coach Bill Easton said he plans to enter athletes in all events in the meet and the meet should be a good one with most of the Big Eight represented.
represented The afternoon-evening meet will start at 1:30 p.m. The evening's competition will begin at 7 p.m.
ABOUT 40 schools, including five members of the Big Eight Conference, are expected to bring squads to the invitational. The meet will be divided into university, college and freshman-juniure college divisions. In addition to KU, K-State, Iowa State, Oklahoma State and Colorado will be in the field from the Big Eight.
Coach Easton said he planned to take a number of freshmen to the meet. He pointed out that the upcoming meet is the last one the KU indoor team will run. Outdoor season begins with the Texas relays April 3-4.
NO TEAM scores will be kept in this meet, but the four relay races in each of the three classes—freshman-junior college, college and university—will be scored to determine a team winner in relays only.
Included in the relay competition will be the distance medley, sprint medley, two-mile and mile relays. Colorado is defending champion in the university division of the relays; Fort Hays State won last year's college division; and Southern Illinois freshmen won the 1963 frosh-iuco competition.
Coach Easton named the following men as participants in the meet:
Shot put—Gary Schwartz, Dave Millstein (freshman); Broad jump—Gayle Sayers; 300-yard — Doug Dienelt, Steve Ashurst (freshman); 75-yard high hurdles—Bill Chambers, Gayle Sayers, Lloyd Buzi
Harold House; 75-yard dash—Ron Suggs, Tom Wright, Doug Dienelt, Tom McBride (freshman).
DISTANCE MEDLEY relay—Tom Wright, Lowell Paul, Bill Silverberg, Herold Hadley, Ken Holm, John Donner, Tonnie Coane; Shuttle hurdle—Bill Chambers, Gayle Sayers, Lloyd Buzi, Harold House; 600-yard—Gary Ace, Bill Saul, Dwight Peck (freshman), Alan Fries (freshman); Pole vault—Floyd Manning, Jim Fanuchi, Phil Manuel (freshman), Mike Burdick (freshman); High jump—Charles Twiss, Tyce Smith, Steve Straight (freshman). Two-mile relay — Ken Holm, Lowell Paul, Bill Saul, John Donner, Herold Hadley, Tonie Coane; 1000-yard—Tonne Coane; Sprint medley relay—Lowell Paul, Ron Suggs, Tom Wright, Doug Diennet, Tonnie Coane, Herold Hadley, John Donner; 2-mile—Dave Kamera, Paul Acevedo, George Cabrero; Mile—Bill Silver-
berg, John Lawson, John Donner,
Tom Yergovitch (freshman); Mile
relay (freshman and junior college)
—Alan Fries, Steve Ashurst, Tom
Yergovitch, Dwight Peck; Mile
relay—Doug Dienelt, Lowell Paul,
Gary Ace, Bill Saul, Tom Wright.
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1964-'65 CHEERLEADER TRYOUTS
- Union Ballroom - Tues., March 24-7:00 p.m. -
All interested persons should attend the cheerleader instruction school to be held in Robinson Annex on Tues. & Thurs., March 17 & 19 at 7:00 p.m.
For more information call John Pound at VI 2-3102.
ASC Traditions Comm.
Thursday, March 12, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Ruby Defense Calls 'Ambush Witness'
By H. D. Quigg
DALLAS — (UPI)— Jack Ruby's defense planned to use its "ambush witness" today to fire a final burst of expert opinion declaring that Ruby was legally insane when he gunned down Lee Harvey Oswald.
He is Dr. Walter Bromberg, New York psychiatrist, who has said he believes that when Ruby saw the man charged with assassinating President Kennedy, there were unconscious factors forcing an irresistible impulse in an unstable man.
HOWEVER, the prosecution planned to counter Bromberg with Dr. Robert S. Schwab, of Harvard and the Massachusetts General Hospital.
This may be the final skirmish in the battle of technical opinion among mental, behavioral, and nervous-system experts.
Belli, a man of many surprises, has said previously of Bromberg: "I'm catching on to Texas customs; I'm keeping him for ambush."
The Ruby murder-with-malice trial was expected to go to the eightman, four-woman jury sometime Saturday.
Chief Defense Counsel Melvin Belli said he planned to end his rebuket by noon, and rest with Bromberg as the final witness.
Belll said he planned to use Bromberg as the final part of the defense surrebuttal case. Surrebuttail witnesses are recalled to rebut state rebuttal witnesses. But the state is also entitled to sur-surrebuttal (Dr. Schwab and others were standing by), and the process can be carried to infinity.
"This is an aggressive psychopath with definite anti-social feelings. He suffered an episodic psychosis at the time of the crime. It was of a depressive type. His act was in response to an irresistible impulse.
BROMBERG ONCE WROTE, after an eight-hour interview with Ruby:
"The eruptions of violent emotions disrupted his ego to the point that his knowledge of right and wrong were obliterated at the time of the crime. He suffered from a fugue state during which he did not know the nature and quality of his act."
The right-and-wrong, nature-and-quality statements are the classic definition of legal insanity. Each of the jurors has said there would be no hesitation in voting the chair for the 52-year-old former strip-joint boss if the facts warranted. But each also has said that if the preponderance of the evidence showed him insane when he pulled the trigger, there would be no hesitation in acquitting.
Bromberg in his report called Ruby a psychopathic personality.
THAT PHRASE first fell heavily on American minds during the two 1949 trials of Alger Hiss. A psychiatrist and psychologist both reported Hiss's accuser, Whittaker Chambers, was a psychopathic personality. Hiss had a hung jury on the first trial and was convicted of living under oath in the second.
Bromberg interviewed Ruby along with Dr. Manfred Guttmacher, the Baltimore psychiatrist who became the star defense witness when he testified he believed Ruby cracked under an insufferable emotional load and was legally insane when he shot Oswald.
The state yesterday produced re-
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buttul witnesses who not only contradicted Guttmacher's opinion but offered opposing views to defense testimony that Ruby was suffering a "psychomotor variant" type of seizure, probably was suffering psychomotor epilepsy, and had organic brain damage.
Griff's BURGER BAR
DR. SHEFF OLINGER, a Dallas neurologist, testified that the electroencephalograph (eeg) brain-wave tests on Ruby did not show organic brain damage or psychomotor epilepsy.
Dr. Robert Stubblefield of Southwest Medical School and a court-appointed member of a panel that studied Ruby, contradicted Guttmacher by answering a hypothetical question. If all the things the state has entered in evidence about Ruby were true, he said, he would consider Ruby legally sane when he fired.
Dr. John T. Holbrook, phychiatrist, disagreed "very strongly" with a defense psychologist's opinion that Ruby suffered organic brain damage. Peter Kellaway, a Baylor professor and president of the American Electro-encephalographic Society, said Ruby's EEG chart did not warrant a diagnosis of organic brain included Mrs. Eleanor Pitts, Ruby's damage.
The defense surrebuttal witnesses included Mrs. Eleanor Pitts, Ruby's apartment cleaning woman, who said she phoned Ruby on the morning of the Oswald shooting and noticed he was "talking strange." She said she was coming to clean before 2 p.m., and he told her to "call me" so he could tell her where the key would be. The Oswald shooting took place at 11:20 a.m.
ATHENS, Greece — (UPI)—Royalty, heads of state and an estimated half million Greek citizens today paid their last respects to King Paul of Greece in a solemn funeral ceremony followed by a procession through the streets of Athens.
Following the service, the long cortex formed to follow the King's coffin on foot through the streets of Athens, where an estimated 500,000 persons stood silently, many of them weeping, to say farewell.
THE ONLOOKERS, many of whom had been waiting for hours, lined the funeral route up to 20 deep in some places. Police and soldiers, standing at attention, formed a double line all along the broad streets where the official mourners passed.
Standing with Queen Mother Frederika, King Paul's widow, was their son, former Crown Prince Constantine, 23, who became the world's youngest monarch upon the death of his father.
Former President Harry S. Truman and Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson headed the United States delegation at the ceremony in the dimly-lit Cathedral of the Annunciation.
KINGS AND queens, princes and princesses, presidents and premiers stood with heads bowed as the arch-bishop of Athens, head of the Greek Orthodox Church, gave final blessings to the ruler who died a week ago at the age of 62.
King Paul's Funeral Attracts Notables
The coffin was torne on a horse-drawn gun carriage, preceded by the Athens police chief, 50 policemen and 18 other groups, including aides bearing the many medals King Paul won during his lifetime.
Walking in a large group after the royal family were the official representatives, including seven kings or ex-kings, three queens, more
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THE LONG cortege streched out so far behind that the first marchers had finished the half-mile walk long before those towards the end even left the cathedral. The official program listed more than 125 official groups, ranging from Boy Scouts to the Royal vacht club.
Chrysostomos, the 84-year-old archbishop of Athens and head of the Greek Orthodox church, led his
attendants in singing the 18 verses from psalm 19 which begins the burial service.
THERE, the coffin was placed aboard a hearse and taken the 20 miles to the Tatoi summer palace outside, where the burial was to take place. Only the royal family attends the burial itself.
The procession's end was the junction of Queen Sophia Avenue and King Constantine Avenue—directly across the street from the modern Hilton Hotel.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 12, 1964
U.S. Crewmen Alive Accused Of Spying
WIESBADEN, Germany—(UPI)—U.S. Army European Commander Gen. Paul L. Freeman has told the Soviet commander in East Germany he wants the three U.S. Air Force officers who were shot down by the Soviets "returned as soon as possible," it was announced today.
Freeman made his request in a letter sent last night to Gen. I. I. Yakubovsky, it was announced at U.S. Army headquarters in Heidelberg.
Freeman told the Soviets he has sent three "search parties" to the site of the crash of the RB 66 reconnaissance bomber, which strayed over the border into East Germany Tuesday.
AS THIS AND other efforts continued for the return of the crewmen, U.S. military officials expressed fear that they might be held in connection with Soviet charges that they were on a spy mission.
The United States denies this and says the twin-jet plane lost its bearings while on a training flight in West Germany.
The Soviets last night protested the intrusion of the plane into East Germany. They charged it penetrated 44 miles at an altitude of 30,-000 feet on a "military reconnaissance" mission before being owned
Freeman said to the Soviet General:
"IWOULD ASK that you see to it that the three members of the crew are returned as soon as possible to American authorities. If one or more of them is injured and not able to travel, I should expect to be so informed so that arrangements can be made for representatives of the U.S. military liaison mission to visit and assist them."
This was a reference to the American mission stationed in Potsdam, East Germany, which has travel privileges throughout the Soviet zone, granted in exchange for similar privileges to Soviet missions in the West.
There were reports that one of the crewmen was slightly injured in parachuting from the plane.
But it was not until yesterday that Western officials knew the crew had survived. The mayor of the East German city of Stendal, near the crash site, told UPI by telephone that the airmen were alive but had been "taken away," apparently by the Soviets.
AIR FORCE officials here were overjoyed at the news. But a few military men said privately they feared the Soviets might hold the crew on support of their spy plane charges.
U.S. Scrutinizes Cambodian Riot
WASHINGTON — (UPI) U.S. officials said today they are pressing "a full review of the facts" surrounding a mob attack on the American Embassy in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, yesterday.
State Department officials said a written protest has been made to the government of Prince Norodom Sihanouk over the invasion of the embassy by riotous youths. A spokesman said the mob inflicted massive damage after battering down the embassy doors.
Washington was reported far from satisfied with expressions of regret over the incident by Sihanouk and Cambodian Foreign Minister Hout Sambath. Sihanouk's statement of regret was coupled with an expression of sympathy for the rioters' feelings.
THE STATE Department said no U.S. Embassy personnel were injured. The riots apparently confined themselves to wrecking the first floor of the building and the grounds.
Only the day before the attack, the Department had sought to assure Sihanouk, in the wake of another bitter attack by the Prince on the United States, that it had no desire to meddle in his internal affairs and still wanted to go along with his proposal for neutralizing his country.
This was Moscow's version of the incident:
"Ivestigations on the site of the crash established that the plane carried special reconnaissance equipment for aerial photography and radio technical intelligence.
"It has been established that the plane penetrated into G.D.R. territory with the special purpose of carrying out military reconnaissance."
Western observers in Moscow said both the United States and Russia clearly regard the incident as serious. But they predicted neither side will permit it to mar the generally improving relations between East and West.
THEY RECALLED that in the last incident in January, when a T39 jet trainer strapped into East Germany and was shot down with the loss of all three crewmen, the diplomatic exchanges were stiff but not prolonged, and relations did not deteriorate in other fields.
Yesterday's protest note was also harshly worded. It charged the flight was premeditated and "a new aggressive act of the United States." It rejected the statement by the U.S. Charge D'Affaires in Moscow, Walter Stoessel, that the plane entered Communist territory by accident.
In addition to diplomatic activity on behalf of the crewmen, there were three teams of U.S. military men heading toward the crash site in East Germany.
The crewmen were identified as Capt. David I. Holland, 35, of Holand, Mich., the pilot; 1st Lt. Harold W. Welch, 24, of Detroit, Mich., the navigator; and Capt. Melvin J. Kesler, 30, of Philadelphia, an instructor-navigator.
THE MILITARY teams got permission from Soviet authorities to tour the East German countryside in search of the crewmen. At the time it was granted, the United States had not learned that the men had landed safely and were in custody.
There were reports that the plane had been downed over an area where Soviet troops were conducting maneuvers. It was not known whether the Soviets would deny access to this area on security grounds.
WE DARE YOU
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Friday
THE 13th
Special LATE
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SHOW
"DR. BLOOD'S COFFIN"
and
"The SNAKE WOMAN"
Starts 10:45 p.m.
All Seats 90c
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THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-S783
Foreign students: Today is last day to sign up for the People-to-People tour to Ablene and the Eisenhower Museum. Sign in at PtP office, Kansas Union.
WE DARE YOU
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TWIN
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Teaching Interviews; Mar. 12. Wisconsin State Colleges, Whitewater. Wis. Mat. in and 46 am., Milwaukee, Wis. e. office of his appointment bureau. 117 Bailey.
HORROR
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Official Bulletin
TODAY
Der deutsche Verein trifft such am Donnerstag, den 12. März, um 4 Uhr in 502 Fraser. Es gibt ein deutsches “Quiz-Programm” mit allerlei Fragen (aufutscht man die Interesse definiert haben, sind heizlich eingeladen. Erfrischungen gibt es, euch).
Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion,
Pan American Room, Kansas
union.
College Life Discussion, 9 p.m., 1643
Stratford Road. Arrowhead Springs film
Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m. Danfortch Chapel, Everyone Wel-
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
Jewish Community Center Services,
7:30 p.m., 9:15 High. Refreshments.
Coaches-CFM combined meeting,
8 p.m., Lawrence Center, 1915
Stratford Rd.
TOMORROW
Episcope Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth
Jewish Community Center Services.
7:30 p.m. 917 Highland, Refreshments.
KU Police To Use Radar To Check Driver's Speed
The days of speeding drivers on Jayhawk Boulevard are coming to an end. The KU police department now has extra help in catching speeders—a little chrome box.
The gadget is a radar speed detector unit that can be used in a patrol car and is carried on the side window. It operates on power from the cigarette lighter and is portable.
During this week the police have been practicing with the unit but next week practice is over and the issuing of tickets begins. The unit has already attracted attention on campus from some of the 65 per cent of the student body; the majority that have registered cars at KU.
E. P. Mooam, chief of the traffic and securities office, said that the use of the radar is to make the campus a safer place. He said the police
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1951 4-door wagon. V-8, automatic transmission, good condition. See to appreciate. $450. Call VI 3-1951 after 6 p.m. or Baldwin 594 3423. 3-18
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will trade for anything. Call VI 3-10-
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1957 MGA, red with white hardtop, wire wheels, new convertible top. Radio, heater, seat belts. Excellent condition, $800. Call Jack Hibler, VI 2-0443. 3-12
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Page 11
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SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS. Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale at great savings after 6 p.m. weekdays; midday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut st.
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FOR RENT
2 bedroom duplex, furnished. 1826 Missouri. $85 per month. 1 bedroom duplex. $85 per month. 3 room furnished apartment. $85 per month. A. Tempheh. VI 3-3902. Cata. 3-13
Married, grad students, faculty. 2 bedroom, $75. Sleeping room, $25. 16 avail. in Reserve now Call for brochure VI $3-2116. Santee Apartment 1123 Indiana
For one or two graduate age men, three room nicely furnished apt., private bath, washroom, locker. Ideal study conditions. Best of neighbors. For appointment phone VI 3-8534. tf
Crescent Heights two bedroom apart-
ment 25th and Redbud. Phone VI 2-3711.
TYPING
Graduate men or older undergraduates—
Close to campus, ideal study conditions,
best of neighbors. Reasonably priced,
paid. For appointment call V
3-8534
AUTO
WRECKING
NEW and USED PARTS
Experienced secretary would like typing her home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 7421188
Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (pica type). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0558.
Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term thesis, etc. Accurate work stands and rates. Phone VI 3-8379. Charles *tattl*
Tires and Glass
Accurate expert typist would like typing Prompt service. Call VTI 3-2651.
Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason-mentation papers, thematic sentations and theses, Gibson VI 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson.
Experienced Typist—Dissertations. Thees. Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 Rhode Island, VI 3-7485. tf
East End of 9th Street
VI 3-0956
Professional typing by experienced secretary.
New electric typewriter, carbon
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VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles
Mariage) Hillegay. 408 West 13th ¶¶
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
Legal terms. Marsha Goff, VI 3-2577
legal terms. Marsha Goff, VI 3-2577
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers and reports on scientific rates. Electric Typewriter, Mrs McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568, tf
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality
typing on LB.M. Carbon ribbon machines
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MISCELLANEOUS
THE KANSAS FREE PRESS, the fighting articles on nearly all subjects plus regular features. Current press run over seven刊. 401% of copies. York or call VI 3-8525 3-12
Have a party in the Big Red School
door andoor plant
Heated. CALI VI 3-7453.
Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tf
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. tf
Would like to buy used guitar. Call weekdays 4 to 5 p.m., VI 3-2155. 3-17
WANTED
Upperclassman would like to rent a
bureau. Call difference 1-2791. 3-12
little difference. Call VI 2-1791.
Ride to Ft. Lauderdale, Daytona, or Miami Beach. Fla. Leave April 3. Help with expenses and driving. Call VI 2-9365 or write J.P. 1703 W. 24th. Apt. 13.
University Daily Kansan
VOLKSAWENG’S WANTED. Cash to
your VW, Conzelman Motors, VW Sales.
Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway $9
So.
On Friday, March 6. Key chain with 8
keys on the back of the phone.
West Campus Road, Call VI 2-4542; 3-
LOST
Thursday, March 12, 1964
Pair of woman's blue reading glasses lost March 2 in viellency of Strong Hall or Union. Call Peggy Conner, VI 2-9388
3.19
Billfield, lost in Fraser Theater, Friday.
Dave Tillie, 818 Kentucky.
BUSINESS SERVICES
Surprise your roommate with a cake on that special occasion. The K.U. Birthday cake is the student body's fun line of cakes. Free delivery and 4-24 Call VI 1-791.
Dressmaking-alterations, formalis and
dressings. Ola Smith, 939 % M.S.
VI 3-5283
L&M CAFE now under new management
We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
For lunches, dinners, and sandwiches
Your second cup of coffee always free.
Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 316 Mass. VI 3-1267
5 string banjo folk. Folk styles
Low rates. Call VI 2-9466 after 6 p.m. fm
Milliken's SOS
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"the best professional service"
on
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4:30
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presents Robert Burton
CURRENT EVENTS FORUM
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speaking on
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 12, 1964
Barry, Rocky Go To California Undaunted
UPI—The two leading GOP presidential candidates, their enthusiasm still high despite the result of the New Hampshire primary, resumed their campaigning today with an eye on the California election June 2.
The winner of the first-in-the-nation primary, Henry Cabot Lodge, however, remained at his ambassadorial post in South Viet Nam and gave no indication he would return home to campaign actively for the Republic nomination.
THE EFFECT of the New Hampshire primary on New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller or Arizona Sen. Barry M. Goldwater's chances of success in their effort was inconclusive. But, a survey of GOP leaders across the nation reflected the opinion that the GOP convention this summer will be the scene of a wide-open fight for the nomination.
BOTH CANDIDATES plan to step up their activities in California and elsewhere, both to overcome the effect of the New Hampshire return and to nail down additional delegate support for the summer convention.
A great many of the party representatives, acknowledging Lodge's 11,000-vote victory margin without ever leaving Saigon, still were skeptical that his supporters would be able to repeat the feat in other primaries or that he would capture the nomination unless he returns to the United States before the GOP gathering in July. The ambassador's smashing write-in success in the New England contest, they inferred, was more a tribute by the state's voters for a Massachusetts neighbor than an overhealing defeat for either Rockefeller or Goldwater.
Lodge garnered 34.8 per cent of the total vote cast Tuesday. Goldwater picked up 21.7 per cent, Rockefeller 21 per cent and Richard M. Nixon 16 per cent.
Goldwater stopped today in Phoenix, Ariz., on his way to California to be grand marshall of a rodeo in the city. He leaves his home town tonight for 10 days of campaigning for California's 86 presidential primary votes.
BEFORE LEAVING Washington, Goldwater admitted he had made some "goofs" during his tours of New Hampshire, but he promised that he and his supporters would not
PATTY KOOS Alpha Phi
make the same mistakes elsewhere.
Rockefeller already is in California where he conceded yesterday that polls in that state and Oregon showed him as the underdog. To overcome this role, the New York governor planned to follow a rigorous four-day handshaking and speaking tour.
An Easter suit—black and white cotton knit—with its own bow blouse — $23.00
WHILE THE two leading announced candidates battled in California, the two most mentioned dark horse prospects for the nomination. Richard M. Nixon and William W. Scranton, continued to maintain they were not candidates.
The result of the New Hampshire primary has not affected his plans, Nixon said last night. "I have no intentions of becoming an active candidate," he said while volunteering to "speak for the Republican Party, if they want me, and to unite it."
COACH HOUSE Closets For Town and Country
COACH HOUSE Clothes For Town and Country
12th and Oread VI 3-6369
Pennsylvania Governor Scranton, still refusing to enter the race for the nomination, said that the New Hampshire primary result had made Lodge a serious contender for the Republican prize.
Two Will Survive In College Bowl
The field of nine remaining teams in KU's College Bowl Contest will be narrowed to two Sunday afternoon in the contest's third round in the Kansas Union.
Pearson Hall will meet Alpha Kappa Lambda at 1:45 in the first match. The other terms will compete at 2:30. Matching for this round will be: Prose vs. Alpha Kappa Lambda; Stephenson Hall vs. Battenfeld Hall; Joseph R. Pearson vs. Delta Tau Delta; and Jolliffe Hall vs. Templin.
The winners of the Alpha Kappa Lambda-Prose match will meet the Stephenson-Battenfeld winner, and the J.R.P.-Delta Tau Delta winner will compete against the winner of the Jolliffe-Templin match, both at 3:15.
The winners of the 3:15 match will compete in a final contest. However, the date has not yet been selected since negotiations are still in process for having this match taped for television viewing in surrounding areas.
The sunday matches will be held in the Pine and Forum rooms of the Union and in rooms 305 and 306.
Dethroned Boxing Champ Faces 10-Year Jail Term
DENVER—(UPI)—Sonny Liston today faced the possibility of a 10-year prison term for carrying a concealed weapon.
Liston, who lost his crown to Cassius Clay two weeks ago, had other troubles, too. He and his Intercontinental Promotions were sued yesterday for $1,150,000 for breach of contract.
Last week, Ben Bently, Liston's former publicity manager, sued him in Chicago for back pay.
A .22 caliber pistol was found on the former heavyweight boxing champion's person Tuesday night when a police officer stopped him for speeding down a Denver boulevard.
THIS LAW PERMITS felony charges to be filed against a convicted felon found to be carrying a weapon. Conviction carries a two to ten year sentence.
Since Liston has a police record, authorities were attempting to determine whether the concealed weapon charge filed against him yesterday constitutes a felony under a Colorado law passed last year.
Liston served two terms on felony charges in Missouri in the 1950's.
totaling more than three years. Denver police said they had asked the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Washington to forward Liston's police record to Denver.
Liston served a term in the Missouri State Penitentiary in Jefferson City from May, 1850, to Oct., 1952, on first degree robbery charges, and a nine-month sentence in the Missouri County Workhouse after pleading guilty to assault to kill
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[Picture of a person seated at a piano, playing it.]
kansas union BOOKSTORE
THE NORTH STREET GIRLS SCHOOL
GREEK WEEK QUEEN CANDIDATES—One of these women will reign over Greek Week March 26-28. Front row, from left; Delores Tutton, Wichita senior; Cynthia Childers, Merriam senior; Mary Morozzo, Council Grove junior; Sherry Dart, Leawood junior; Sandy Coffman, Pittsburg junior. Back row, Beth Cook, Arlington, Va., senior; Sandy McCarty, Wichita senior; Martha Parmley, Wichita senior; Pat Wise, Wichita sophomore; Carolyn Eymann, Atchison sophomore; Pam Stone, Wichita junior. (Photo by Paul Kivett)
Daily hansan
Lawrence, Kansas
61st Year, No. 103
Friday, March 13. 1964
Board of Education Hesitates
City Split on Sex Course
By Nancy Schroeter
The Lawrence Board of Education announced this week a sex education program will not begin at the present time.
The decision was approved unanimously on the board after Dr. George R. Learned of 1065 Wellington and presented petitions, signed by more than 500 persons, which asked the board to reconsider the action it had taken Feb. 23. It voted then to initiate a program of sex education in the Lawrence schools. When asked to make a statement on the action Dr. Learned declined to comment.
Organized by the Lawrence Board of Education, the committee on sex education had its report approved by the board at its Feb. 23 meeting. The report stated: "Proper instruction in the area of human reproduction and sexual behavior is not only desirable, but particularly necessary today."
THE UNANIMOUS decision of the committee on sex education as stated in its report was to recommend that the "school take the initiative in a gradual and progressive course of instruction in all matters, including sexual, pertaining to human growth and development, at no period interrupted, and adapted to the students' level of maturity and understanding."
Further recommendations in the report included:
report methods
"The school staff should be responsible for developing an outline of the program to be followed, drawing heavily upon the special resources we have in Lawrence . . .
Social Board Probes Reports On Living Area
Reports of beer-drinking and fighting in the quarters of a living group are forcing a committee of the All Student Council to investigate the matter.
gate the maze.
Lee S. Pierres, Park Ridge, Ill.
sonsen and chairman of the ASC
Social Committee, said his committee
would meet Tuesday to look into
reports that beer-drinking and
fighting took place at the Un-Mili-
tary Ball last Saturday in the lounge
of Don Henry Co-op.
"The committee has not met with anone officially so far," Ayres said. Donald K. Alderson, of men, said yesterday:
"I think an inquiry should be made and I am confident it will be made."
Alderson said the ASC Social Committee should make the investigation, not the University.
"The schools should continue to provide special counseling services on an individual basis to these students with personal questions or problems.
"A PROGRAM of adult education should be offered annually, paralleling and supporting the program in the schools."
Purposes of the committee on sex education were outlined in a memo to committee members from the Superintendent of Schools, Carl S. Knox. dated Oct. 25, 1963.
The purpose of the committee was four-fold. One purpose was to serve as a sounding board from the community and to reflect ideas and opinions concerning the role of the schools in teaching proper attitudes and knowledge.
The committee was to indicate the degree of importance, emphasis and scope which it felt this area of instruction should have in the school curriculum.
The committee was also to suggest safeguards that should be taken in this area of instruction to insure the best interests of the children, and to indicate the responsibility of other groups and agencies in this area of instruction for boys and girls according to the memo.
THE COMMITTEE was to proceed, as explained in the memo, by inviting in for their contributions "any individual who wishes to express himself relative to the subject and give him ample opportunity to be heard without prejudice."
But, during the process of compiling information on sex education, the committee found that the report became controversial. Marston McCluggage, professor of human relations, sociology and anthropology and chairman of the committee on sex education, said.
"Resource people" were also to be invited to provide the committee with information that might not otherwise be available.
Letters the committee received during its investigation which began Nov. 25, 1963, were about 50 per cent for sex education in the schools and 50 per cent against, Prof. McCluggage said.
Cottage land
"We are not opposed to sex education, as such." Mrs. Albert Burgstahler of 1620 Massachusetts and a citizen who voiced opposition to the plan, said.
SPEAKNG FOR herself and her husband, Albert Burgstahler, associate professor of chemistry, Mrs.
Weather
Cool air will move into the Lawrence area this evening from the east, possibly causing scattered thunder showers that will last until tomorrow morning. Tomorrow's skies will be clear. The high tonight will be in the lower 30s and the high tomorrow will be in the upper 50s.
Burgstahler explained, "We feel the primary responsibility for sex education rests with the home."
She said that there should be some guiding principal in the sex education program, and would like to see sex education presented so it is made clear that it is not either moral or ethical to have sexual relationships outside of marriage.
The recommendation of the committee on sex education, Mrs. Burgstahler said, was to present sex education by giving the facts to the students. She said that sex should be presented in the light of what is right and what is wrong..
"Most of the community feels
(Continued on page 8)
Vox Advocates Stadium Growth
A plan to build an addition to the student side of the stadium is the number one plank ratified by the General Assembly of Vox Populi last night.
The stadium addition would be financed by increasing the reserved season ticket price to about $5.
This plan would not go into effect until fall of 1965 when the addition would be completed.
Another plank calls for an investigation of all methods of student pre-enrollment, such as IBM card systems discussed at the Big Eight Student Government Convention this fall.
A PLANK CALLING for reorganization and fair enforcement of traffic regulations specifies such things as opening zones for Saturday and vacation parking.
Another of Vox's planks calls for encouragement of the Kansan to publish actions, without the names of students or groups, which come before the disciplinary and social committees for a better understanding of the nature of violations.
A suggestion to replace Pinkerton men with students to take tickets at all athletic events is an effort to ease the student employment problem.
Vox also endorses the apprentice system to train interested students as non-voting members of ASC committees.
ONE PLANK CALLS for student planning of Homecoming activities and a student poll to solicit opinions on the grading system.
Two other ideas of the Vox platform call for an alumni visitation program to become familiar with various professional and technical fields, and the establishment of a student Centennial committee.
(Text of platform on page 8)
"I feel we have a great deal to campaign with in our candidates and platform," Vox president Tom Bornholdt, Topeka senior said.
"We advocate meaningful actions for the students interest with a lot less trivia than UP."
UNIVERSITY PARTY general secretary Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission senior, said "some of the planks are good, however, most of them cannot be implemented by students."
Vox candidates for school district seats which were ratified are: College Women, Carol Jo Webber, Raytown, Mo., sophomore; College Men, Robert Hicks, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Education, Margo VanAntwerp, Plymouth, Mich., junior; Journalism, Russell Corbitt, Chanute senior; Fine Arts, Norma Sharp, Arkansas City junior; Business, John Benson, Prairie Village junior; Engineering and Architecture, Ken Mathiasmeier, Arkansas City sophomore; Pharmacy, Gary Gilstrap, Galena fourth year; and Law, Andy Graham, Lawrence second year.
Granham, Lawrence second yelr. Vox has not finished interviewing candidates for the Graduate school seat.
In Heart of America Event
Debaters Call Competition Stiff
By Bobbie Bartelt
The reputation enjoyed by the Heart of America debate tournament for being one of the debate circuit's most difficult tournaments has not changed this year.
Debaters from all parts of the United States commented yesterday about the stiff competition they had met after one day of debating.
"This tournament is always good." Annette Wright, Springfield, Mo., senior from Southwest Missouri State, said. Miss Wright and her colleague, Kent Keller, Springfield, Mo., junior, are the members of the team that won the KU tournament last year.
A TEAM FROM Southwest Missouri State has won the Heart of America tournament for the last two years.
Teams from the West Coast noticed the similarity between debating in West Coast tournaments and Mid-western tournaments.
"There is a relaxed feeling in the West and Midwest that isn't found in Eastern debating," a group from the University of Southern California agreed.
Dartmouth debaters, however, disagreed with the California group.
"THE PACE IN Eastern debating is much slower. We have nearly an hour's wait between rounds," Brian Butler of Dartmouth College said.
The preliminary rounds will end this afternoon, when the octo-final winners will be announced.
These 16 teams which survive the preliminaries will advance to the octa-, quarter-, semi-, and final rounds, all to be conducted Saturday in the Kansas Union.
Oregon State Patent
University
Institute
School of Law
University of Oregon
DEBATE CHAMPS—Caught eying the trophy which their school has won for two consecutive years are Annette Wright and Kent Keller, members of the debate team from Southwest Missouri State College. The traveling trophy is the prize for the winner of the Heart of America debate tournament now in progress in the Kansas Union. (Photo by Paul Kivett)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
The G.O.P. Victor
"I'm a conservative, like all of us, in the sense that I want to conserve the good things we have; I'm a liberal, like all of us, in the sense that I want to go to even better things."
These were the words of Henry Cabot Lodge, who surprised the nation with his write-in victory in the New Hampshire primary last Tuesday.
The six feet-three inch, handsome, 61 year-old ambassador to South Viet Nam, was born in a town in Massachusetts and was educated at Harvard. He lost his father when he was 7. His grandfather, Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge who kept the United States out of the League of Nations, reared him and taught him politics.
Under the influence of the elder Lodge, the junior came out as an isolationist; but, after the war, he became an ardent internationalist.
The ambassador was a senator from Massachusetts for 13 years and served as the chief delegate to the United Nations for seven years.
But Lodge was not only a statesman, he was also a warrior. His support for the military preparedness was reflected in his book "The Cult of Weakness," published in 1932. His love for the military uniform was proved when he left the Senate to become a major in the armored tank corps. The first senator to go on active duty since the Civil War, he traveled as a staff officer through Italy, Southern France and Germany and emerged with the rank of lieutenant colonel. For his unselfish and brave service during the war, he was awarded many medals, including the Legion of Merit and the Bronze Star for valor.
In the U.S. Senate, he always pursued a bipartisan foreign policy against communism, and supported such issues as the Truman Doctrine, the Marshall Plan and NATO. On domestic issues, he was a backer of Democratic sponsored welfare and labor measures.
After Ambassador Lodge lost his senatorial seat to the late President John F. Kennedy in 1952, he (Lodge) was made a "personal member" of General Eisenhower's cabinet. President Eisenhower put Lodge on an important job of shaping U.S. foreign policy.
Lodge was offered a position of ambassadorship to South Viet Nam by Secretary of State Dean Rusk last year when Frederick E. Nolting Jr., then ambassador to South Viet Nam, asked for transfer due to family reasons. Lodge was selected on the basis of his experience and interest and also, Rusk wanted to appoint a Republican in order to gain GOP support in foreign aid measures.
In his short period of time in South Viet Nam, Lodge was able to represent the United States successfully and helped the Vietnamese in keeping communism out of their nation. At present, during this period of crisis, his tough policies and practices are admired by Americans and Vietnamese.
Describing the character of Lodge, Stanley Karnow wrote in an article in the Saturday Evening Post: "Lodge is not a naturally warm, gregarious individual. He can be curt and haughty with subordinates, and he feels uncomfortable in a crowd. Unlike Johnson, he is a reserved, New England patrician whose ideal is closer to John Adams."
"Nevertheless, Lodge managed to turn his loftiness to advantage in the election by projecting himself as a statesman too concerned with the broader issues to descend into petty political squabbles."
* * * * * *
Since Lodge has won the GOP New Hampshire battle with a great margin over declared warriors such as Sen. Barry Goldwater, Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, and Sen. Margaret Chase Smith, the question now remains: "Whether the ambassador would resign from his post to campaign in order to get the GOP presidential nomination?"
If Lodge wants to campaign, he has to give up his job in South Viet Nam, as the Hatch Act forbids officers and employees of the Executive Branch of the Federal Government to take any active part in the political campaigns.
After the ambassador heard the news of his victory, he commented: "It's a great honor and a great compliment. I am happy. I don't plan to go to the United States and do not intend to resign."
Whatever his decision may be, it is certain that his son would carry on the campaign for him and that his supporters would write in his name on the ballot if it is not there.
- * * * * *
In a recent Gallup Poll which asked voters to rate each of the leading GOP contenders against Johnson, Ambassador Lodge held the first position—ahead of both Sen. Goldwater and Gov. Rockefeller. In the poll, Richard Nixon was rated second.
The last Tuesday primary proved the truth of the Gallup Poll.
The election also presented an interesting fact that people want to choose the candidate for the highest executive position who is not only liked by the U.S. citizens, but also liked by the citizens of the world.
The reason for the primary outcome is due to the fact that Goldwater is too much of an extremist, Nixon is a two time loser with the final failure in the California gubernatorial contest, Rockefeller is divorced and has a new marriage life—so, excluding dark horses such as Gov. Scranton and Gov. Romney, the only contender left was Lodge.
The present situation is such that, as Roscoe Drummond, columnist for the New York Herald Tribune wrote, "The unresolved question is not whether Mr. Lodge is going to resign his ambassadorship and become an open, active and campaigning candidate for the nomination—but when."
- Vinay Kothari
Dailij Mänsan
111 Flint Hall University of Kansas student newspaper UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daly Jan. 16, 1912
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press
Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 21
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
Russ Corbitt, Jackie Helstrom, Willis Henson, Kay Jarvis and Roy Miller, Assistant Managing Editors; Fred Frailey, City Editor; Leta Cathcart, Society Editor; Marshall Caskey, Sports Editor; Charles Corcoran, Picture Editor.
Managing Editor
Vinay Kothari and Margaret Hughes ... Assistant Editorial Editors
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bob Brooks
Bob Brooks Business Manager
Joanne Zabornik, Advertising Mgr.; Mike Barnes, National Advertising
Mgr.; Walt Webb, Circulation Mgr.; Bob Phinney, Classified Advertising
Mgr.; Ken Costich, Promotion Mgr.; Dana Stewart, Merchandising Mgr.
from the morgue...
In February 1912, the University Council introduced a new grading system by which all instructors were required to report weekly the attendance and general standing of the students in their class.
The blanks were sent out from the Deans office on Thursday and were filled out and returned Friday. These weekly reports were copied and filed in the Dean office where they were open to inspection by eligibility committees.
"One great advantage of the system," Dean Templin said, "is that the majority of the instructors say that it improves the work noticeably, and that the regularity of attendance has also been increased.
"Another advantage is that it serves as a warning to students who are doing poor work. If, however, they find that their reports have all been good during the semester, and then they fail at the end, they will have good reason for raising an objection."
1954 HERRLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
"So I Said To Those Wise-Guy Kids, 'Do You Know Of Anyone Who Is Living In Abject Poverty . . . ?' "
BOOK REVIEWS
HORIZON, Winter 1964 ($5).
Much more than arty is the new issue of Horizon, and it should have immense popular appeal for that reason. A Princeton sociologist, Morroe Berger, discusses the development and significance of the Black Muslim movement, one of the most controversial subjects of the day.
Berger shows that the Negro established his relation to the religion and culture of Islam through his discovery of African history, a history of which the Negro could be proud. The Black Muslims make their appeal, he says, to descendants of the African slaves who lost their identity centuries ago.
Berger describes the 12-point program of the Muslim movement, and suggests that the movement, small today, has the potential for considerable growth.
Other articles in the new issue: "The Year One," an entertaining discussion of the beginnings of modern history; "The King and Us," about the westernization of Siam; Manet, the reluctant revolutionary in painting (a beautiful color spread is included); the rock monasteries of Cappadocia, in central Turkey; Francis Bacon, the great maker of modern thought; Henry Fielding, the author of some of the first great English novels, notably "Tom Jones," and Adah Isaacs Menken, famed entertainer of a century ago.
Here we have, in inexpensive paperback, the controversial writings of Mark Twain that found themselves on the best-seller list when they appeared about a year ago. These are essays so red hot that Clara Clemens, the author's daughter, long prevented their publication, even after they had been edited by DeVoto. She finally withdrew her objections, and readers gained insights into Mark Twain that had been suggested in "The Mysterious Stranger," and, if one cared to dig deeply enough, in much of what he wrote.
In essence, this is a collection that reveals the pessimism and the sardonic bitterness of Mark Twain. But his views on religion simply could not be permitted in a conventional world, and only today, when discussion of religion presumably is freer than in the past, can we see what our greatest writer had to say.
"Letters from the Earth" are supposedly letters written by Satan to Michael and Gabriel in heaven. So Satan is revealed here giving his fellow archangels his views on mankind and his stupidities and his religion and even his cherished Bible. Another section is called "Papers of the Adam Family," and this includes parts of the diaries of Methuselah and Shem and the autobiography of Eve.
LETTERS FROM THE EARTH, by Mark Twain, edited by Vernard DeVoto (Crest, 60 cents).
There are relatively inoffensive writings here, too, such as a further Clemens attack on poor old James Fenimore Cooper. Actually, even though some parts of the "Letters" are a bit rougher, there is little here that can't be found in "The Mysterious Stranger," or even in some of the more savage sections of "The Innocents Abroad." Yet this is unquestionably one of the important literary revelations of recent years.—CMP
---
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Harris Says World Community Depends on Common Interests
Friday, March 13, 1964
REAL PEACE and not "sham" peace (or cold war) is the condition of security, Prof. Harris said. "The inter-war truce that we call peace, during which an unstable balance of power is maintained, is so liable to degenerate into conflict that it can be described only in terms of insecurity."
The realization of an international community depends upon the existence and recognition of common interests among the nations of the world, Errol E. Harris, professor of philosophy, said last night.
Bv Garv Noland
"Today the threat of nuclear extinction is so tolerable and so real, that the interest in peace and security is vital and indispensable. . . The common interest in security is thus the core of world community interests at the present time." Prof. Harris said.
The nations of the world have important interests in common, Prof. Harris said. "The first and most obvious interest which is common to the peoples of the world today is security."
terms of炎症 Prof. Harris pointed to the present dispute between Greek and Turkish Cyrtiotes as an example.
At the present time these conditions are not fulfilled because of the power struggle among the "Great Powers" and the preoccupation of new nations with internal problems, Prof. Harris said
IT IS NOT sufficient just to have these common interests. This community of interest must be felt by those who share it to be of "para- mount" importance. Prof. Harris said.
Other examples of common interests among the nations of the world are economic interdependence as evidenced by world trade, cultural interdependence as illustrated by the exchanges of students and teachers, a common intellectual interest in science and art, and the worldwide spread of Western culture. These are a few of the common interests of nations which can form the foundation of a world community, Prof. Harris said.
This dispute, which is purely a "domestic matter on a tiny island, contains all the seeds of a world war," he said.
gers of power politics may bring the nations to a better realization of their common interests; but those dangers are so grave that to wait for that result involves appalling risks." Harris said, "A widespread campaign of propaganda and education is essential to accelerate the centripetal process."
"In time, the frustration and dan-
"WHAT IS needed is a loyalty to an international ideal and an authority which represents it." Prof. Harris said. "Such loyalty need not replace the feelings of patriotism we harbour for our national community any more than loyalty to the United States abolishes our attachment to the home state in which we live."
Prof. Harris cited NATO and the OAS as movements in the right direction. These regional organizations will not necessarily alleviate power politics or remove the threat of war, but they will provide the experience of cooperation and the working of subrational institutions, and it will make common interests more apparent, Prof. Harris said.
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THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES SALUTE: GEORGE PYLAND
Engineering at Southwestern Bell offers many facets for developing talents and abilities. For George Pyland (B.S.M.E., 1958), his present position of District Engineer, Victoria, Texas, makes him responsible for all outside plant engineering in some 25 towns.
This is quite a demanding position for a young man only five years out of college. But for George, this is just another opportunity to prove himself. Throughout his career with the telephone company, he has been given every chance to show his capacity for increased responsibilities.
In previous assignments, George has supervised large numbers of employees responsible for maintaining top-quality telephone service. He has supervised outside maintenance and repair personnel as well as coordinating the work functions of central office people. His initiative has paid off in satisfaction and increased compensation.
George Pyland, 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.
THE DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
WASHINGTON
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VOL. 97
TWO RINGS
BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Friday, March 13, 1964
In 10-Year Plan
Campus Face Lifting Continues
By Susan Flood
More goes into University expansion than money, mortar, machine and manpower.
For back of the buildings are the builders, one of whom is Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor for operations, plant development and co-ordinations.
This large title encompasses a large job. It encompasses such things as construction to keep pace with enrollment, and development to keep pace with construction.
"It IS IMPORTANT to the student and to the University that not only are there good facilities for classroom and laboratory work but also that there are good walks, streets and parking lots available," Lawton said.
"Just as we appreciate the student and faculty patience during the library construction, so we think they appreciate conveniences such as the campus walk now being constructed over Potter Lake dam and the planned two-way loop which will connect Watkin's Hospital, new Blake and new Fraser Hall with Lilac Lane."
With the library revamping almost complete, and Blake 45 per cent finished, the next activity will be on the intramural fields where a new gymnasium will begin to rise in September.
In the planning also is a biological science building where Robinson Annex and tennis courts are located.
WHEN THESE TWO are complete, Robinson and Haworth will come down to make room for a building with about four floors of classrooms and two or more of offices.
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"It is more convenient to have a classroom building on the top of the hill, and to move the gymnasium and sciences somewhat further away. Although there is need for general classrooms the space across from Strong Hall must be made available first," Lawton said.
The hope is that new Fraser can be started before late fall. The building will house behavior sciences, and it is hoped that some additional funds will be available through science and research foundation grants.
Although new Fraser will replace the Pioneer Statue and part of Lilac Lane, the eight-story replacement will reflect the traditional style of
the east campus. Old and new Fraser will stand together until the land across from Strong Hall is available for more classroom space.
When old Fraser falls, it is hoped that the landmark flags of the twin towers can be transferred to the new building.
THE 10-YEAR plan of University construction will be designed according to increasing enrollment demands, Lawton said. He projected additions to Mallott and Lindley, a new graphic arts and architecture building and possibly a small administration office building.
The annexes, however, will remain for quite awhile.
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Jayhawker Gymnasts to Compete In Their First Conference Meet
Page 5
Six members of the KU gymnastics team will compete in the Big Eight Conference meet at Iowa State this weekend.
Rv Glenn Phillips
State this week. This is the first year KU has offered gymnastics as a varsity sport.
The gymnastics team has grown from a humble beginning as a club organized by a few interested students.
Top Ball Teams EnterRegionals Across Country
UCLA, the team that had everything during the regular season, opens its bid tonight for the NCAA major college basketball title.
By United Press International
The Uclans carry a perfect 26-0 mark into the Far West Regionals, were named the no. 1 team in the nation by UPI's board of coaches and John Wooden was honored as coach of the year.
UCLA plays upstart Seattle in the nightcap of a doubleheader at Corvallis, Ore. Utah State meets San Francisco in the opening game.
DEFENDING CHAMPION Loyola of Chicago goes against Michigan and Kentucky plays Ohio University in the Mideast Regionals at Minneapolis, Minn.
In the East Regionals at Raleigh N.C., Duke takes on Villanova anc Princeton meets Connecticut, while Wichita faces Creighton and Texas Western is pitted against Kansas State at Wichita, Kan., in the Midwest Regionals.
The National Invitation Tournament opened in New York last night with St. Joseph's (Pa.) defeating Miami (Fla.). 86-76, and New York University stopping Syracuse, 77-68.
ST. JOSEPH'S beat the nation's no. 1 scoring team at its own run-and-shoot game as Steve Courtin tallied 30 points for the Hawks and Billy Oakes netted 21. Rick Barry, fifth leading scorer in the country, led Miami with 35 points.
NYU finally mastered an opponent's all-court press and advanced to the quarter-final round. Happy Hairston topped the Violets with 29 points and Dave Bing had a Syracuse high of 31.
Evansville, gunning for its third NCAA small college title, advanced to the final round of the tourney at Evansville, Ind., by ripping the State College of Iowa, 82-67. he Aces meet unrated Akron tonight for the championship. Akron disposed of North Carolina A&T, 57-48, in a semi-final game.
semi-main game.
Jerry Sloan led a parade of four Evansville scorers in double figures with 23 points. Randy Berentz and Bill Stevens each scored 14 points for Akron.
State Meet Scores
Manhattan 57, Wichita West 55
Shawne e-Mission North 43,
Wichita East 40
Wyandotte 75, Chanute 19
McPherson 77, Leavenworth 74
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For the first year, Bob Lockwood, present varsity coach, was team captain on the basis of being highpoint man in each meet.
KKΓ
Laptad returned as coach for the 1958-59 season as interest in the team began to grow. Lockwood was named captain of the team again.
Lockwood, an accomplished gymnast, continued to spur the growth of the club-increasing its membership, holding more meets and working to improve the gymnasts' techniques.
KKΓ
GYMNASTICS BEGAN in the 1957-58 school year with five club members. The club was coached by a graduate student, Dick Laptad, and had a few competitive meets.
Laptad gave up his coaching duties in the third year of the club's existence and was replaced by Lockwood.
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THE TEAM CONTINUED its growth in the next three years, partially financed by the athletic department.
Gymnastics became a varsity sport this year along with wrestling, another of the so-called minor sports. The team totals 28 members, including about 13 freshmen.
With its victory over Fort Hays State last Saturday, KU took a self-acclaimed state championship. There is no official state title competition, but the Jayhawkers have defeated every collegiate gymnastics team in the state.
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Lockwood says this year's team has considerable depth. It will lose only one member by graduation.
As high school gymnastics grows in the state, KU should have an even bigger and bigger source of talent.
The current leader in prep gymnastics is Lawrence High School.
Matmen Enter Big 8 Meet
Going into the Big Eight Conference championship wrestling meet this weekend, Coach Terry Shockley said he feels his team has "improved greatly" since the first of the season.
nasties is Lawrence High School. Lockwood predicted KU will place fourth in the Big Eight meet at Ames. Kent Dobbins, the Jayhawks' No. 1 performer, will be entered in four events and is expected by Lockwood to win at least one medal.
The championship wrestling will be at Stillwater, Okla. Competition begins tonight and the outcome of the meet is expected to go far toward determining the favorite in the national championships.
Oklahoma, the 1963 NCAA titlist, and Oklahoma State, last year's conference winner, must yield at least a share of the top billing to undefeated Iowa State.
Iowa State and Oklahoma State are the two top-rated teams in the nation and are figured to fight it out for the title now held by the Cowboys. Iowa State and Oklahoma State fought to a 12-12 draw in a
LISBON—(UPI)—Eduardo Filipe, 27, an army deserter, snatched a French woman tourist's purse during the rush hour in downtown Lisbon yesterday.
Into Arms of Police
He almost made a perfect getaway. But he was hit by an automobile and bounced into the arms of a policeman.
dual meeting between the two in January.
All teams in the Big Eight are entered in the meet, with the exception of Missouri's Tigers. Most of the schools have at least nine entries. This will be the first conference competition in 30 years for KU
A capacity turnout is anticipated for the meet. More than 7,000 ardent fans are expected.
Shockley said at the conclusion of the regular season's competition, his team had improved remarkably since the beginning of the year.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 13, 1964
---
World Spotlight
Soviets Question Pilots
BERLIN—(UPI)—Soviet authorities are investigating the "personal responsibility" of three U.S. Air Force officers shot down over East Germany on an alleged spy mission, an East German government spokesman said today.
"In order to file charges, one must have evidence," the foreign ministry spokesman told UPI.
He said it is "unlikely" the three Americans who were shot down Tuesday will be tried by an East German court. He said it is not yet determined if the Soviets have a "legal right" to try the airmen.
The spokesman said the three Americans are now in Russian custody and undergoing questioning by Soviet officials.
Forgery in Baker Case
WASHINGTON—(UPI)—An accountant charged today that his name was forged on one of Bobby Baker's federal tax returns.
In an affidavit, Milton L. Hauft, the accountant, claimed that his signature on the Baker statement, as well as on a tax return for the Carousel Motel which Baker partly owned, were forgeries.
The affidavit was read to reporters by Sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa., shortly before the start of a showdown meeting of the Senate Rules Committee to determine the future of the nearly five-month-old investigation into the business and financial transactions of former Senate Aide Robert G. Baker.
Rocket Lab Fails
CAPE KENNEDY—(UPI)The United States today failed in an attempt to rocket a tiny gold-plated laboratory 23,000 miles into space to learn more about the earth's magnetic field.
The 33-pound probe plunged into the South Atlantic off the coast of South America after the upper stage of the four-stage Blue Scout Jr. rocket failed to ignite at an altitude of several hundred miles.
The Air Force said the payload, which separated from its $500,000 booster before impact, radioed back some data on the earth's magnetic field but scientists said it was not known if any of the data would be useful.
Birchers Oppose Bill
LOS ANGELES—(UPI)—The John Birch Society was on record today as opposing current civil rights legislation before Congress, branding the measure as giving the federal government "tremendous dictatorial power."
John Rousselot, former Republican Congressman from California and now western states governor for the Birch Society, made the announcement yesterday on the civil rights measure.
Rousselot told a news conference that the society's national council met in Pasadena, Calif., March 7 and formulated its statement on the measure. He quoted that statement as saying: "Congress has never seriously considered a more dangerous piece of legislation."
Part of a $750 grant to the architecture department from the Tile Council of America has been used to buy a radial arm drill press for use in a special model shop.
Recognition of the positive role that Latin American universities can play in national development was considered one of the most significant results of the Fifth Seminar on Higher Education in the Americas which ended here today.
According to the conditions of the grant, up to $250 may be used to purchase equipment, while the remaining $500 is allocated for scholarships or student loan funds.
The participants were eager to listen and participate, Deal said. "Attendance for nearly all functions was 100 per cent."
Grant Put to Use
"Wide associations with Americans and with other Latin American educators were very beneficial to the staff, the assistant director, of the Serripar, said.
"The group has been very well received on campus and in Lawrence." Deal said. "During their stay, they visited in the homes of faculty members and in various campus organized living groups where they were hospitably received."
THE GROUP WAS most impressed by the organized housing here, he said. "There is no such thing as organized housing in Latin American universities. In fact, many universities in Latin America aren't located on campuses, but are spread throughout the large cities."
"THE PERSONAL AND professional report between members of the seminar with North American representatives and among themselves has been, perhaps, the most valuable benefit of the seminar," John P. Augelli, chairman of the Latin American Area Studies Program, and associate director of the Seminar, said.
The purpose of the plan is to extend aid to talented and needy students, as well as to encourage high standards in the teaching of courses on building materials.
"The only way to progress is through education," Jose Mariano Da Rocha Filho, director of the Universidade de Santa Maria, Brazil, said. "I have found the seminar very helpful, and the results, the best available on the subject of education in the Americas."
"The group has worked hard," George R. Waggoner, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and director of the seminar, said. "And all the departments and schools of KU have co-operated canably."
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For six weeks, 19 educators, representing 10 countries in Latin America, have been meeting in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union to hear lectures and participate in discussions concerning the roles their universities can play in national development.
Da Rocha also expressed his pleasure in the frank discussions that were encouraged.
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"The exchanges of experiences here were very valuable, and I shall be able to apply much of what I have learned here," Padre Andres D. Reghenez, rector of the Universidad Catolica de Santa Fe, Argentina, said. "The seminar took place in a very cordial environment."
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OTHER EDUCATORS commented on the high quality of the speakers who addressed the group at various times throughout the seminar. Among the guest speakers of national reputation who spoke to the participants were Gregory Wolfe, member of the Committee for Economic Development; William Spencer, assistant secretary of the Council on Higher Education in the American Republics; Dr. Homer Rainey, professor of higher education at the University of Colorado, and Robert Scott, political scientist from the University of Illinois and the Brookings Institute.
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The results of the seminar have been so successful that already ground work is being done on further exchange programs between KU and various Latin American universities, Prof. Augelli said.
"It is also significant that the members of the seminar are making plans to work with each other after they return to their home universities." he said.
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University Daily Kansan
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FOR RENT
Single room very near Kansas Union at 1140 Mississippi. Completely remodeled to include new facilities for graduate students. Air conditioned for summer. Call 3-2028. 3-19
2 bedroom duplex, furnished. 1826 Missouri. $95 per month. 1 bedroom duplex, furnished. 1826 Missouri. $55 per month. 1 bedroom, furnished apartment. $75. Call T.A. Hemphill. VI 3-3902. 3-12
Married, grad students, faculty, 2 bedroom, $75. Sleeping room, $25. Available in room 3. Reserve now for brook VI - 3-2116. Santee Apartments, 1123 Indiana. tt
For one or two graduate age men, three room nicely furnished apt. rooms, utilities paid. Ideal study conditions. Best of neighbors. For appointment phone VI 3-8543. tf
Crescent Heights two bedroom apart-
ment. 25th and Reddif-
phone. Phone VI 2-3711.
Graduate men or older undergraduates—extra nice furnished bachelor apartment Close to campus, ideal study conditions. best of neighbors. Reasonably priced utilities paid. For appointment call VI 3-8534. tf
TYPING
Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (plica type). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi. VI 3-0558. ##
Experienced secretary would like typing for home, Reasonable rates. Call VI 1188.
Experienced typist with electric type-
writer available to type themes,
paper thesis, etc. At Acura stand,
stand-
phone. Phone VI 3-8379. Mrs. Charles
Patti.
Experienced typlist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason-mentation papers, themes, sertations and these, phone VI T 3-7652, Mrs. Frank Gibson.
Experienced Typtist—Dissertations, Theses, Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 Rhode Island, VI 3-1745. tf
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon printer. Volunteer at VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley. 408 West Mrs. **tf**
Accurate expert typist would like typing in her home. Term papers and theses Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. tf
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
Legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577
10000970808674293696
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, books and articles on rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568 t
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2047 Yale, VI 2-1648.
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols, carbon ribbon; if desired, Propaples of water. Mrs. Doris. Suzanne Gilbert VI 2-1546 or Mrs. Carr. Missuana Gilbert VI 2-1546 or Mrs. Carr. Missuana Gilbert VI 3-3057.
Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five.
Artists - Architects
Crafts & Model Building Supplies
Custom Plastics
George's Hobby Shop
1105 Mass. VI 3-5087
Big Store Service and Small Store Attention
Book Nook 1021 Mass.
Portraits of Distinction
摄影师
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
HIXON STUDIO
MILKILLENS SOS—always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines tape transcription. Office hours 7 a.m., tape p. 1014.-Milkiller Phone VI-3920. Mass lt
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. tf
WANTED
Have a party in the Big Red School House. Good dance floor and piano.
Deated. Call VI 3-7453. tf
MISCELLANEOUS
Would like to buy used guitar. Call weekdays 4 to 5 p.m. VI 3-2155. 3-17
VOLKSAGEN'G WANTED. Cash for your VW. Conzelman Motors, VW Sales. Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway 59 So. tf
On Friday, March 6 Key chain with 8
key cards to the left. West Campus Road, Call VI 2-4542, 3-17
Billfold, lost in Fraser Theater, Friday,
Dave Tillie, 818 Kentucky.
Surprise your roommate with a cake on that special occasion. The KU B. Birthday Party will be the student body's full line of cakes. Free delivery and candles. Call VI 2-1791. 4-24
LOST
BUSINESS SERVICES
616 W. 9th
JOE'S BAKERY
Hot doughnuts—sandwich cold drink
George's Pipe Shop
Tops -- Glass & Zippers --
Rear Glasses -- Headlines --
Door Panels --
"SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS"
25c delivery VI 3-4720
727 Mass. VI 3-7164
Tailor Made Seat Covers at Competitive Prices with sewed double lock stitch.
7,000 Pipes and every smoking accessory
JIM'S CAFE
838 Mass.
OPEN 24 hrs. a day
Jack's Sail Cover VI 3-4242
545 Minn.
JEWELRY
A complete line, including:
● Lavallers • Guards
● Pins • Mugs
● Rings • Crests
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
IT'S OK TO OWE RAY
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
FRATERNITY JEWELRY
JEWELERS
IT'S OK TO OWE RAY
809 Mass.
L&M CAFE now unner new management We WILL be open from 9 am to 6 p.m. Each room is a delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches. Your second cup of coffee always free.
Friday, March 13, 1964
Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 116 Mass. VI 3-1267
Dressmaking-alterations, formats and
gowns. Ola Smith, 939 1/2 Maui
VI 3-5283
U-Call, we haul. Anything, anytime. VI
3-5888. tt
VI 3-6333
24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled
HELP WANTED
Student secretary. Must be enrolled in at least one hour. 30 hours a week job.
Exceptional wages. Starting April.
Through the end of June. Call UN 4-18-3
YELLOW CAB CO.
5 string banio instruction Folk styles
Low rates, Call VI 2-9466 after 6 p.m. tl
Milliken's SOS
Girl to play electric organ part-time
Call VI 3-4743.
"the best professional service"
- General typing service
- Notary public
- Notary public*
* 24 hr answering service*
- Mimeograph & photo-copying
STUDENTS
1021½ Mass., V1 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass.
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Tours & Cruises Everywhere
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
AL LAUTER
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Automotive Service
Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel
Balancing
7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Steamship Lines
The only thing better than a home cooked meal is Dinner At DUCKS Steaks & Seafoods A Specialty
Travel Agency
Serving crisp tossed salads,
choice of potatoes, zesty
Vienna breads & country fresh
butter. Sandwiches, too!
Your favorite beverage
VI 3-0152
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
746 Mass.
AIR LINES
Domestic ⊤ Foreign
Balfour
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass.
Fraternity Jewelry
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY. Peppermint Park Kiddyland operation for sale. 2203 and 2214. Outside the summer closure by running this during the summer. Call VI 2-0155 a.p. 5-m. 4-3
TRANSPORTATION
Wanted. ride from 1038 Vermont to Prairie Village area. Leaving anytime after 3:30 Friday afternoon. Call VI 3-6293. 3-18
One Stop Service
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VI 3-9271
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BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
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9th & Mississippi
VI 3-9897
FOR
FOR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER VI 3-1211
SEE MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES
- Small enough to give personal attention.
COMPLETE SERVICE FOR CHEVYS OLDS
- Big enough to have all the equipment.
VI 3-7700
738 N.H.
SHIP WINTER
CHEVROLET
HAVING A PARTY?
We are always happy to serve you with
Ice cold beverages Chips nuts cookies
Chips, nuts, cookies
Variety of grocery items
Crushed ice, candy
Crushed ice, canny 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
City Split on Sex—
(Continued from page 1)
this way," Mrs. Burgstahler commented. She estimated approximately 80 to 90 per cent of the community supported her view of sex education in the schools.
"... first and foremost it is none of the school's business," Mrs. Harold Allen of 1617 Hillcrest and a citizen who voiced opposition to the plan, stated.
"The SCHOOLS have all they car
do already . . . Why add an unnecessary burden on the teacher," Mrs. Allen explained.
Mrs. Allen agreed with Mrs. Burgstahler that sex education was primarily a responsibility of the parents.
A member of the Lawrence Board of Education and the secretary of the committee on sex education supported the proposed program.
"All of the board members have no desire to have an education program which is not within the bounds
Vox Populi Platform
Vox Populi continues to stand for growth, responsibility and continuity in student government in order to bring services to meet the needs of students in our community. We are present at the University of Kansas. Therefore, we propose the following actions:
STADIUM SEATING
Realizing the need for better student seating in Memorial Stadium, and recognizing the situation which will arise due to increased enrollment, the university decided to the student side of the stadium to be completed by the fall of 1965.
Vox Populil will initiate an investigation of all methods of pre-enrollment among the problems of the students caused by the present enrollment system.
PRE-ENROLLMENT
TRAFFIC REGULATIONS
Vox Populi shall work for the reorganization and fair enforcement of traffic regulation at KU in such areas as opening zones for Saturday parking, opening car parks, periods, and better student understanding of acts constituting violations.
DISCIPLINARY PROBLEMS
of proper development of the boys and girls of Lawrence," J. J. Wilson, director of dormitory administration and a member of the board of education, said.
WILSON, WHILE discussing the controversy surrounding sex education in the Lawrence schools, said, "I think misunderstanding comes with lack of understanding as to how this (sex education) can be accomplished in the schools."
DISCUSSION
In order that the student body may have a better understanding of actions constituting violations which come before the disciplinary and social committee, we will ensure that each small encourage the University Daily Karsan to publish all actions of this
committee, without the names of the students or groups involved.
Vox Populi will work to ease the student employment problem by replacing Pinkerton men with students at all athletic events.
APPRENTICE SYSTEM
Vox Populi, in order to provide more continuity in student government and to insure qualified members on the All Student Council committees, shall establish an apprentice system whereby interested students may serve as non-voting members of committees, gaining experience in the responsibilities and purposes of these committees.
HOMECOMING AND GRADING SYSTEM
Because of the desire for student planning of homecoming activities, and the current controversy over the grading system, Vox Popull feels it necessary for Student Council to conduct a student solliciting opinion on these issues.
ALUMNI VISITATION
In order to utilize the resources and experiences of our alumni, Vox Populi shall establish an Alumni visitation program, whereby students will be given the opportunity to become familiar with various professional and technical fields.
CENTENNIAL COMMITTEE
Vox Populi will establish a special Student Centennial Committee to work with the executive of KU's Centennial Celebration.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Teaching Interviews; Mar. 13, Milwaukee, Ws. *e.* and bs.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. Short Lenten
"I think, also, some of the protesters have a lack of confidence in the board." Wilson added.
Newman couples and CFM combined meeting. 8 p.m., St. Lawrence Center.
People-to-People Industrial Tour to Ablene. 8 a.m., meet in front of Union. Plan to spend all day touring Eisenhowen-Announ and Library and Old Ablene Town.
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m.
Livance Chapel. Confessions, 4-5 and
7-L8.
SATURDAY
7:30 p.m. 917 Highland. Refreshments.
Epicapalic Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
International Club meeting scheduled for 7:30 p.m. has been cancelled
Peace Corps Exam, 8:30 a.m., Lawrence Post Office, 7th and New Hampshire.
Post Office, 7th and New Hampshire. "Between Me and Thee" by the KU Religious Drama Group, 8 p.m., Wesley Foundation.
Eread Friends, 10:30 a.m. Danforth
will come to this Quaker meet-
eer, for worse.
Catholic Masses, 8 a.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 10 a.m. Rd., 9:30 and 11 Fragar Theater.
Morning Worship 10:45 a.m. Westminster Center, The Treasure in Old
SUA Chess Club. 2 p.m. Kansas Union.
Boston University. 4 p.m. Kansas Union.
Kansas Union. Jesuit Panel on Premarital Sex* — James Fennell. S.J.
Nebraska Union. Jennie Dalz. Jams and James Blueyer. S.C. Plan to attend.
CAMPUS BARBER SHOP
Hours : Daily
8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Sat. 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Hours : Daily
Speaking of the committee Mrs. Allen said, "We felt if we had a program based on biological facts from kindergarten through high school that we would have better adjusted parents."
Teachers, she said, have received requests from some parents to explain sex to the children.
Since the personal enmity between Khrushchev and Chinese leader Mao Tse-tung is so deep as to make reconciliation seem impossible, the speculation inevitably leads to the possibility that some other drastic step is under consideration.
Mrs. Bill E. Amyx of 715 Elm and secretary of the committee on sex education said, "Some families do not communicate at all."
5 BARBERS NO LONG WAITS North of Union
At the present time "no program will be introduced" for sex education in the school, Superintendent Knox said.
Lending weight to speculation that an important move is in the making have been reports that for the last two weeks Khrushchev has been consulting communist-bloch leaders on the future of Sino-Soviet relations, and that the communist parties of Western Europe, Italy, France and elsewhere, also have been holding important discussions in anticipation of a showdown.
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The most drastic step would seem to be a formal break between the two, thus making official a quarrel which already has divided the communist world into two camps.
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Because of the atmosphere of negativism and dissention produced by "strong difference of opinion in the community . . . at this time to introduce anything new and different in the curriculum . . . would not provide the best situation for the children to learn under," Knox said.
Ober's Junior Miss
The occasion was a Romanian Communist Party Congress at which Khrushchev reiterated his policy of peaceful co-existence, declared that communists "cannot repeat today mechanically what Lenin said many decades ago," and said that "in our day only madmen and maniacs launch calls for a new world war."
Since in the intervening years the quarrel, and the reasons for it have been well publicized, another meeting now to go over the same subject must arouse speculation.
Italian communist leader Palmiro Togliatti has sided with Khrushchev in the dispute but has been reported disturbed by a break within his own ranks and the emergence of an extreme wing opposed to his policy of comparative restraint in domestic politics. This wing seems closer aligned to the policies of Peking rather than Moscow.
Soviet Bloc Meeting Possible In Budapest
It may be recalled it was in June, 1960, in Bucharest, a neighboring East European capital, that the name-calling between the Soviet Union and Red China erupted during a similar summit meeting and the outside world first began to learn of the widening rift between the two.
By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst
Another Soviet-bloc summit conference seems to be in the making, this time in Budapest.
Other reports, however, from both Moscow and Eastern Europe say that the real subject is to be Red China.
Ostensible excuse for the meeting would be the April 4 anniversary of the German defeat in Hungary at which Soviet Premier Nitka Khrushchev is to be a distinguished guest.
PARKING TAXI
ENJOY DRIVING
WITH A TUNE UP
from
JACK AND GUNN'S
SKELLY SERVICE
300 W 6th
★ ENGINE TUNE-UP
★ GENERATOR & STARTER REPAIR
★ BRAKE REPAIR
★ LUBRICATION & OIL CHANGE
Dailu hansan
Lawrence, Kansas
61st Year, No. 104
Monday, March 16, 1964
JRP Lodges Formal Protest After College Bowl Contest
By Lee Stone
The Joseph R. Pearson Hall College Bowl team has lodged a protest with the College Bowl committee that may invalidate a semi-final contest that was held last weekend.
As it now stands after the quarter and semi-finals yesterday, the finalists in the question-and-answer game based on the rapid recall of specific facts are the Stephenson and Templin residence hall teams.
But, after the semi-final contest, the JRP team, which was matched
with Templin, filed a protest with the College Bowl committee over the handling of a "toss-up question."
Bob Shenk, Lawrence junior and College Bowl committee chairman, said the protest asserts that the question was handled illegitimately by the contest's moderator.
The toss-un question in dispute is about mathematics. It asks which derivative of a formula establishes inflection points. The answer is the second derivative, Shenk said.
Missouri Team Takes Third Debate Tourney
Unless a toss-up question has an
Southwest Missouri State College won the Heart of America debate tournament Saturday for the third consecutive year.
The negative team from SMS defeated the affirmative from Brigham Young University by the unanimous decision of five judges.
"THE USE OF EVIDENCE seemed to be the key to the winning teams." Kent Keller, member of the Southwest Missouri State team said. "This late in the season everyone has the same evidence and arguments, it just depends on how they are presented," he said.
"The tournament here is one of the strongest in the country, and the competition was stiff," Annette Wright, second member of the winning team, said.
State, the University of Minnesota and Augustana College to gain a place in final competition.
SIXTEEN TEAMS SURVIVED the preliminary rounds Thursday and Friday, and advanced to the Octo-finals. Two KU teams were in the Octo-finals and of the two, one proceeded to the quarter-finals.
The Missouri team won over Ohio
Members of the KU team that got into the quarter-final rounds were Lauralee Milberg, Arlington County, Va., senior, and Fred Kauffeld, Minneapolis, Minn., senior. Other KU debaters who competed in the octofinals were Judson Briegel, Kansas City freshman, and Richard Hoskins, Bonner Springs freshman.
The traveling trophy was presented to Southwest Missouri State College for the third time by E. C. Buchler, professor of speech and drama.
obvious answer like "yes" or "no," the opposing team is to be given the opportunity to answer when the question was not correctly answered by the team asked.
THE MODERATOR, who ruled that the answer to the mathematics question was "obvious," did not put the question to the JRP team, Shenk said.
If JRP had had a chance to try to answer the question, it might have added 20 to 60 points to its team score. Shenk said.
The semi-final score between Templin and JRP was 225 to 205.
Shenk said the "College Bowl" committee would rule on JRP's protest Wednesday. If they rule in favor of JRP, the committee may reschedule the match, Shenk said.
SEMI-FINAL SCORES in the College Bowl matches according to the scoreboard are:
The quarter-final scores were: Alpha Kappa Lambda—284, Prose—240; Stephenson—270, Battenfeld—200; JRP—310, Delta Tau Delta—103; Templain—195, Jolliffe—130.
Stephenson-225, Alpha KappaLambda-185; Templin-225, JRP-205.
The final contest of the College Bowl games will be played on the stage of Hoch Auditorium on March 26 at 1:30 p.m. The contest will be taped for television by WIBW-TV, a Toneka CBS affiliate, Shenk said.
WHETHER THE FINAL is telecast or not depends on two things, Shenk said. First, whether the contest is "good enough," and, second, whether the CBS producers of College Bowl would release their copyright prerogatives, Shenk said.
KU YRs Lead Collegiate Defeat Against Conservative Resolution
The KU Young Republicans led the state conventions of the Collegiate Young Republicans in the defeat of a conservative civil rights resolution at Topeka yesterday.
The resolution, which was introduced by the Kansas State delegation, asked that Kansas senators vote against the civil rights bill now before the U.S. Senate.
THE KU DELEGATION, led by Sam Evans, Salina junior, managed to change the resolution to support Kansas senators who voted according to their own best judgment.
Evans, who missed the convention banquet because he was hoarse and weary from politiking, said the outcome of the convention was "excellent."
Evans was particularly pleased because KU's club was the "only club to be elected to as many as three positions" in the state organization.
STUDENTS WINNING POSTS in the state organization are Jane Oeglerle, Salina junior, secretary; William Porter, Topeka freshman, administrative assistant; and Susan Hartley, Atwood sophomore, first vice-president of the women's organization. This last office was previously held by another KU delegate, Priscilla Osborn, Stockton junior.
MIDDLETON SAID. "A very highly placed person in the state organization of the CYR was instrumental in instigating this support against the conservative clause."
The Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) were responsible for the resolutions opposing civil rights legislation, Evans said. (YAF is a faction in some Young Republicans clubs that backs Barry Goldwater, Arizona senator, for president. It is known among Republicans as an active supporter of particularly conservative measures.)
William Middleton, Kansas State freshman and chairman of the Kansas State Young Republicans, in a private interview described the civil rights bill as "the greatest political power grab that has been conceived by the executive branch of the government in this century."
Evans said the convention appeared to want a civil rights bill, "but not in its present form."
Evans said the anti-civil rights resolutions sounded like they came right out of an ad.
The KU delegation has also led the convention in its rejection of a resolution proposed by the delegation of Washburn University which committed the organization to support certain Republican candidates before the state primaries.
BRIAN GREENWOOD
ART EXHIBIT—Roberta Smith, Oskaloosa senior, president of Delta Phi Delta, honorary art organization, views a sculpture titled "Rhythm Method," by Jon Thogmartin. The Delta Phi Delta art exhibit will be in the Kansas Union until March 28. Story on page three. (Photo by Charles Corcoran.)
KU-Y Pulls Backing From CRCC Pickets
Reversing an earlier decision, the KU-Y has voted not to support the Civil Rights Coordinating Committee in its protest of alleged Greek discrimination.
In the first KU-Y decision, moral support was given to the picketing of Sigma Nu fraternity during an IFC rush weekend March 21, and the Greek Week chariot races March 28.
AT THAT TIME, no decision was made whether this would take the form of monetary support or participation in the picketing.
In an open meeting Friday, the KU-Y cabinet accepted a letter to be sent to fraternities and sororities which reverses the decision of March 6.
The letter says in part the cabinet passed the original motion to support the CRCC "believing that students would realize that the KU-Y cabinet was protesting only against discrimination and not against fraternities and sororities as such."
"IT HAS BECOME CLEAR that this assumption was incorrect and that students do not make this distinction. The cabinet therefore reverses its original action, realizing our policy must not be alien to any type of living group," the letter said.
Discussion of the decision hinged on the basic religious structure of the group.
There had been some question whether the original action of March 6 was constitutional since a quorum of the cabinet was not present. However, Tom Moore, advisor to the Y, said no one had suggested the absence of a quorum at the time.
"THE KU-Y SHOWS that it is open to everyone," Steve Wilson,
Leawood sophomore and member of the cabinet said.
"We don't need to align with factions and thus alienate others to help the Y's purpose."
Kay Consolder, Wichita senior and co-president stressed that the KU-Y was not a "neutral" organization in issues of discrimination.
CRCC chairman George Ragsdale, Lawrence senior, and not a member of the cabinet stated the purpose of the picketing.
"CRCC IS FIGHTING for the sincere, congenial right of fraternities and sororites to associate with whom they wish. Whether by explicit clauses like Sigma Nu, or implicit national controls, the Greeks do not have the choice to consider anyone they might wish to."
"We wish progress not forced desegregation. I am convinced that the benefits of fraternities outweigh the discrepancies, if there are any. I am also convinced of the Greeks' sincerese desire to acknowledge all persons as human beings." Ragsdale said.
"If there were a way without publicity I would like it, but only by outside pressure can we help the fraternities remove the restrictions against freedom of consideration."
In explaining the connection between the KU Liberal Action Committee (KULAC) and the CRC, Ragsdale said they were committed to similar civil rights missions. "as I believe the KU-Y to be."
Tom Moore said that the CRCC had used the name KU-Y in connection with the picketing in "good faith" as to the original decision, but that it would be dropped from any future publicity.
Johnson Calls For Approval of Poverty Bill
WASHINGTON—(UPI)—President Johnson, calling for "total victory" in the war against poverty, asked congress today to approve a five-point, $962.5 million program to help open the doors to prosperity for the nation's poor.
In a special message the chief executive proposed creation of a new federal office of economic opportunity, headed by Peace Corps Director Sargent Shriver, to lead the battle.
Johnson asked Congress to approve plans for a "job corps" that eventually would grow to 100,000 youths who would be modern-day counterparts of the "CCC Boys" of the New Deal days in more than 100 camps across the land.
He also asked for new programs to help needy students work their way through college and to provide federal subsidies for community plans in attacking poverty in cities and on farms.
THE PRESIDENT PROPOSED formation of a "domestic peace corps" to be called the Volunteers for America, which would enlist the skills of young and old in the assault on the causes of poverty.
Johnson said every dollar he was asking congress to authorize for the program had been included in the $97.9 billion budget he sent to Capitol Hill last January. The total cost comes to 1 per cent of the federal budget, he said.
"We are fully aware that this
program will not eliminate all the poverty in America in a few months or a few years," he said.
"Poverty is deeply rooted and its causes are many.
"BUT THIS PROGRAM will show the way to new opportunities for millions of our fellow citizens. It will provide a lever with which
Weather
Partly cloudy today through Tuesday. Winds shifting to northerly and turning colder. Strong northerly winds tonight. Colder tonight and Tuesday.
Low tonight will be in the mid 20's. High tomorrow will be in the low 40's.
we can begin to open the door to our prosperity for those who have been kept outside."
The proposed "job corps" would be composed of youths from 16 to 21 years old who would be selected from those who are not qualified for useful work. A corps of 40,000 boys and men in 100 camps and job training centers around the country is contemplated for the first year.
About half would work on special conservation projects to give them work experience and the other 50 per cent would get a blend of training, basic education and work assignments in the training center.
GOVERNMENT SOURCES said
the corps would not accept drug addicts or other delinquents but would choose those who might benefit most from leaving home and learning in a new environment. Members of the Armed Forces may be used as instructors and federal facilities, including army camps, may be leased to house corps members.
Officials said that a nationally known educator had been selected to head the job corps. His name was not disclosed.
These officials also said the administration had considered and rejected a proposal to lower the draft registration age from 18 to 17 in a move to spot youths who need help most.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday, March 16, 19
Mexico's Sins
In order to achieve its development Mexico had to commit a number of sins. Perhaps every developing country commits sins, but Mexico's biggest sins consisted in violating the classic theory of democracy and the classic theory of economics.
After the middle of the nineteenth century, when Mexico became independent, all its liberal constitutions were inspired by Montesqueu's ideas of the balance of power, by Madison's ideas of a system of checks and balances, by Tocqueville's notions of local government. Those who drafted the current federal constitution, which was promulgated in 1917, preserved these ideals and added others, recognizing the rights of the workers to organize and to strike, characteristic of an industrial society and of democracy as it evolved in Europe and America.
BUT THE classic theory of democracy was not applicable in Mexico, and the multiparty system gave way to the system of a predominant party, unique and inevitably victorious. The concentration of power in the hands of the chief executive was initiated in 1917. The head of the central government began then to exercise control over the leaders, the political bosses, and the military chiefs. The process continued with the Chamber of Deputies and the revolutionary army, the unions, the farmers' organizations, and the bureaucrats and civil servants. The only recalcitrants were the rural property owners, who were beginning to feel the effects of the agrarian reform, and the clergy. The latter remained opposed to the government.
The process of concentration of power reached its peak about 1934 with the accession to the presidency of General Lázaro Cárdenas. After that the concentration of the presidential power and of the central government diminished somewhat, but the state maintained its strength and its unity.
THERE ARE statistics that confirm this hypothesis. Since the founding of the National Revolutionary Party in 1929, the PRI has never lost a presidential election, any election for governor, or any senatorial election. During this period the party has brought to power 6 presidents, nearly 200 governors, and 282 senators. From the presidential election of 1910 until the last election in 1958, the government candidate won more than 90 percent of the votes.
The strength of the opposition parties is insignificant. The federal government gained the support of more than 90 percent of organized labor.
The power of the executive against the Congress reached its peak under Cardenas and Ávila Camacho. All the proposed legislation which the President submitted to Congress was approved unanimously. The Supreme Court of Justice favored the President in all major decisions without exception. Governors could be deposed constitutionally; they were subjected to a very effective system of political control in that they depended for their finances on the federal government, which controlled an average of 90 percent of the state revenues.
THE MEXICAN state thus violated the basic principles of the classic theory of democracy. But this sin permitted its development; it put faith in an extraordinarily useful instrument for the development of a nation-state far different in concept from middle-class Europe or the United States.
The presidential regime served to defeat the connivance of the legislature, the army, and the clergy. The central regime in fact ended the regional feuds and the intervention of local governments by controlling the local political bosses. And in general the unity of decision of the government served to combat instability; the government met the assaults against the state which the large foreign companies encouraged for their own advantage; it was able to cope with the differences between governors and presidents which elsewhere led to anarchy and bloodshed; and finally, it served to keep the military in check.
BY 1960 THE great political bosses who had dominated the country had disappeared, except for two or three who hold much reduced power. The army represents a steadily decreasing strength in proportion to that of labor and is absorbing only 8 to 10 percent of the total federal expenditure, less than in any other Latin-American country with the exception of Costa Rica. The clergy can no longer pretend to be a state within a state, having been deprived of its great wealth in the nineteenth century. Divided between traditionalists and progressives, the clergy encounters a country in which political-religious affiliation is not only constitutionally prohibited but except in a few areas does not operate.
—reprinted from the Atlantic Monthly
Jacobs Corrects
The People Say...
I would appreciate insertion of the following in your column, in connection with the press report of my participation in the SUA Current Events Forum.
I would like to clear up two inaccuracies which crept into your article "Economic development regarded as necessary to foreign aid" in the March 9 issue of the KANSAN.
(1) The final sentence in the first column is a garbled version of a major point. It should have read, (with reference to the role of the sociologist in economic development programs) "in addition to concern with good working human relations, a necessity exists for research into the problem of understanding why certain countries are underdeveloped, etc." As stated it would appear that the two problems are one, which is opposed to my position.
(2) It is my colleague alone who has had experience with the International Bank. My own experience, other than that of a researcher, has been with the occupation in Japan and most recently with ICA (now AID) in Iran.
Thank you.
Norman Jacobs
Associate Professor of
Sociology
- * *
Prejudice Fight
We're confused. We hear you say, "Tm for civil rights. I favor integration. I like Negroes." But we don't see you doing anything to indicate that you really mean this. Of course you don't have to prove you feel this way by picketing (but do you understand this position?). We do wonder though
Karen Jo Emel
Colby senior
Douglas M. Hager
Hutchinson senior
when only a few KU students show up at a meeting designed to discuss this one means of furthering civil rights on our campus. Last night the CRCC held a meeting to explain why demonstrations are being held and all of you we hear say, 'This isn't the way to fight prejudice' didn't come to explain how you feel. WHY?
\* \* \*
In a letter to the Kansan printed in the March 10 issue, Mr. Bob Love issued a challenge to the Kansan to let conservatives write for the paper. As a journalism student and a member of the Kansan staff I would like to answer the challenge by explaining the Kansan to Mr. Love and anyone else who feels that their position is being discriminated against by Kansan writers.
Reply from Kansan Editor:
The Kansan staff is composed stricly of journalism students. Anyone planning to make newspaper writing a career and majoring in journalism at this University
The problem, if, as Mr. Love suggests there is a problem, is that the type of person who plans to spend his life as a journalist is usually liberally oriented. Young journalists are idealists or they would not be entering a field where the pay is low, the hours are long, and the work demands much of their lives. They are, to a large extent, people who would like to do what they, can to contribute their part to humanity, and have chosen the field of communications as their medium. These young people are not very likely to be conservative. They are more often of the type Mr. Love would label "wild eved radicals."
automatically becomes a member of the Kansan staff. No one is asked his political affiliation before he is allowed to enter the journalism school, there is no effort to restrict conservatives from taking journalism courses.
When and if a student enrolls in the William Allen White School of Journalism who is a conservative, he too will get his chance to write for the Kansan. Until then we must rely on the staff that is available.
Jackie Helstrom Wichita senior
DailiJ Hänsan
111 Flint Hall University of Kansas student newspaper
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889 became biweekly 1904 trivia 1926
2009, 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 21,
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.
FIRE HOSE CLUB AUTO
© 1974 HERBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
"And, Over Here, The Enemy - People"
Other Campuses
Rockwell for President
UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA—George Lincoln Rockwell's appearance on campus stirred as much controversy and comment as at KU.
A Daily Minnesota article defended the right of the sponsoring campus club to invite Rockwell. An editorial page cartoon showed two students gazing at a "Rockwell for President" billboard, with the accompanying caption: "He doesn't have a ghost of a chance. He's divorced and he doesn't go to church."
Greek Orgy
UNIVERSITY OF IOWA—On the editorial page of the Daily Iowan:
Fraternity men in the state of Indiana seem to be lacking in a genuine knowledge of history. Several of these men, members of Phi Delta Theta chapters throughout the state, were arrested recently for throwing an orgy in an Indianapolis hotel.
Historically the Romans, not the Greeks, have been associated with orgies. If the effects of the weekend activities of the collegians are any indication, it's easy to see why Rome fell.
OKLAHOMA STATE UNIVERSITY—The O'Collegian recently printed a statement issued by the Association of University Ministers, opposing prayer before OSU football games.
Prayer and Football
From the statement: "Prayer is a sacred moment within the life of an individual to be encountered in either private or corporate gatherings. . . The primary reason for our stand is our understanding of group prayer. . . Since the football audience is not a community which shares a common faith, there can be no common faith. . . Since the football crowd does not and cannot gather for common worship, it is a violation of them and a misuse of worship to attempt to impose upon them through a prayer any particular form of worship. . . We do not see public prayer as an appropriate instrument of evangelism."
Irma to Dallas
CREIGHTON UNIVERSITY—An "Irma to Dallas" campaign has collected over $100 to send the Bluejays' good luck charm with the team to the Dallas NCAA playoffs.
"Irma" is the assistant food manager of the Student Center, Mrs. Irma Trumbauer.
One of the team members explained, "We won every game she attended this year, so we decided to do something about the tournament."
Truth Squad
UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA—A Truth Squad has been formed to consider such questions as "Are you lost in the factory?" and "Is this a Godless university?"
A panel discussion and question period are features of the frequent meetings on campus problems.
University Daily Kansan
University Faculty Freed for Politics
Page 3
MANHATTAN—(UPI)—The Kansas Board of Regents was scheduled to meet at Kansas State University today.
Yesterday, the regents adopted two resolutions offered by Clvde Reed. Parsons publisher, regarding political activity in Kansas educational institutions.
One resolution would permit state university and college personnel to accept any public or political party position "which does not require substantial time away from assigned duties or in other respects infringe upon them." The motion would cover city commissions, school boards, planning groups, county, state and national party committees.
Monday, March 16, 1964
The resolution also stated that leave without salary would be given to persons wishing to seek public office which would require them to be away from jobs for sustained periods.
not interfere with the institutions functions and that the sponsoring groups pay for the facilities in advance.
The motion liberalized the previous rulings which applied only to student organizations.
Another resolution approved yesterday would permit political gatherings in state education institution facilities provided that there would be no charge for students, that there was no other similar facilities in the community, that the function would
The regents also approved a pay standard for faculty promotions, saying that promotions in rank should be accompanied by proportional increases in salary. The Board, however, provided for a 15 per cent deviation above or below salary standards in any faculty rank.
Art Contest Winners Cited
Winners of the Delta Phi Delta art contest were presented their awards last night
First place in the painting division went to Conley Harris, whose "Mimi: Portrait of a Girl" won the $25 Hallmark award. Diane Olson's "Nude" took the second place award $15 from Delta Phi Delta.
In the graphics division, Larry McMillan won first place with his "Bird Without a head." Second place went to Kenneth Horwege's "Composition In Black, Yellow and Blue."
Sculptor Jim Williams took first place in his division for his impression of "Bicycles." Second place went to Ira Winarsky for his "War Machine." The "War Machine" was made of: a pick head, parts of an old wood stove, a rake, a flat iron, a boiler plate, a horn, and a tri-cycle wheel.
In the crafts division, Rosemary Hooper won first place for her textile fabric, "Pisano." Robert Brown's weaving, "Harem Pillows" received honorable mention.
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PAPER LABELS
THE PRAIRIE ROOM WILL BE OPEN THIS TUESDAY, MARCH 17, FOR THOSE WHO WISH TO DINE IN THE KANSAS UNION BEFORE THE UNIVERSITY'S WOMEN'S CLUB STYLE SHOW.
THE PRAIRIE ROOM IS OPEN FROM 5:00 P.M. TO 9:00 P.M.
By Reservation Only — Call UN 4-3540
Kansas Union Food Services
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Monday, March 16, 1964
Gym,Mat Team Score In League
KU's gymnastics and wrestling teams scored in their respective Big Eight championship tournaments over the weekend, but failed to make the winner's circle in either of the contests.
The Jayhawk Gymnasts scored 13 points in their loop meet at Ames, Iowa. The Nebraska Cornhuskers, winners of the title, scored 203.5 points to win easily in the first annual conference meet.
Iowa State finished second with 154.5, Colorado was next with 129, KU next, and Kansas State followed the Javhawks with 4.
The wrestling team scored 4 points in their conference meet at Stillwater, Oklahoma thanks to a fourth-place win by Bill Brackett in the 115-pound class.
The Oklahoma State Cowboys won the championship by scoring 103 points—the most ever scored by a Big Eight team in the championship tournament.
In winning their title, the Cowboys advanced a man to the finals of the tournament in each of the 10 weight classes. The win was the fourth consecutive for the O-Staters.
Iowa State finished second in the competition with 79 points. Colorado was third with 55, Oklahoma fourth with 42, Kansas State fifth with 16 and Nebraska sixth with 6. Missouri did not enter a team in the tournament.
KU's Fred Elder was seeded number two in the heavyweight class, but lost to Baker of K-State whom he had tied in an earlier meeting. Phil Doughty advanced to the semifinals on a bye, then lost to Teckham of Iowa State.
Coach Terry Shockley said he thought the Jayhawk wrestlers were warmly accepted at the tournament. This has been the first year for varsity wrestling at KU and Shockley said he thought the team made a good showing under the circumstances.
The first business meeting of the KU Cricket Club will be at 7:30 p.m. today in the Cottontwood room of the Kansas Union.
Cricket Club Meets
Lalit Kothari, Bombay, India senior and captain of the club, said the purpose of the meeting is to elect officers and plan activities of the club for the season.
He also said that new membership will be accepted in the meeting.
At present, the club is trying to organize matches with the teams in Kansas City, Leavenworth, Manhattan, St. Louis, Columbia, Mo.
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1964-'65 CHEERLEADER TRYOUTS
-Union Ballroom-Tues., March 24-7:00 p.m.--
All interested persons should attend the cheerleader instruction school to be held in Robinson Annex on Tues. & Thurs., March 17 & 19 at 7:00 p.m.
ASC Traditions Comm.
Indonesia Shuns Democracy; Sukarno Starts 'Guided' System
Page 5
Dynamic President Sukarno rules the 100 million people of Indonesia with a system of government he calls "guided democracy."
DJAKARTA, Indonesia—(UPI) One of the largest nations in the world has turned its back on democracy.
His avowed intent is to restore to his people the national unity and fervor that won Indonesia her independence from the Netherlands, and to forge a new sense of national identity and purpose.
Indonesia is a vast equatorial archipelago of more than 13,000 islands dotted over the South Pacific Ocean from Asia to Australia. It is rich in natural resources and unexplored lands. Its fertile soil produces many types of food.
But, in fact, it is merely an unguided autocracy; the most serious indictment against President Sukarno is not that he has accumulated almost absolute power, but that he has failed to use it.
"GUIDED DEMOCRACY" is dismissed by critics as "misguided democracy" — wrong-headed, iron-fisted dictatorship hellbent for communist totalitarianism.
The Dutch had turned the islands into a major source of oil, rubber, tin and a veritable cornucopia of forest and plantation products.
THE YOUNG REPUBLIC began its history with an acknowledged and undisputed national language, a history of religious tolerance, a commitment to representative government, and a fierce sense of national identity transcending old and deep ethnic rivalries.
Its leadership included a remarkable triumvirate: Sukarno, a consummate orator of unrivaled mass appeal; Mohammed Hatta, a pragmatic administrator of unquestioned integrity; and Sutan Sijahir, a brilliant and perceptive political mind.
Had these three men been able to blend their views and destinies instead of whitewashing their differences, the postwar experiment in parliamentarianism might have survived.
But the nation's political force soon decomposed into a myriad of self-seeking parties vying for position and privilege. The country sank into stagnation and civil war. Dramatic change was urgently needed.
IN JULY, 1959. PRESIDENT Sukarno stepped in with "guided democracy" and the promise of dynamic leadership toward "rediscovery of our revolution."
He scrapped the new constitution and restored the revolutionary constitution of 1945 with its broad presidential powers.
He named himself premier, replaced the elected Parliament with presidential appointees, banned the influential Masjumi and Socialist parties from alleged rebel sympathies, and founded an all-embracing "national front" incorporating all parties, clubs, professional groups, and other organizations.
"Liberal democracy"—the concept of rival parties competing without restraint for voter approval—was decried as unsuited to Indonesian character.
Official Bulletin
Teaching Interviews Mar. 17, Newton;
Torrance, Calif. March 18, Kirkwood,
Mo. Mar. 19, Parkville, Mo. Make appointments in 117 Bailey.
TODAY
manemetics Colloquium, 4:30 p.m. l-13
Set for the Generalized Reduced Hausdorff Moment Problem" — E. Benton Research Center, Research Center, Madison, WI.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Graduate Student Discussion, 7:30 p.m.
St. Lawrence Center, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Film on Christian Science Education will be shown.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Daporth.
TOMORROW
Catholic Mass, 6:45 a.m., St. Lawrence Chanel.
p.m. Hawks Kauai, Kansas Union
ASC, 7 p.m. Sunflower Room, Kansas
Air Force Recruiting, 10 am.-3:30
ASC, 7 p.m., Sunflower Room, Kansas Union.
Inquiry Forum, 7 p.m., St. Lawrence Center.
Inquier Classes, 7:30 p.m. Canterbury House.
President Sukarno's dissatisfaction with the party system, which he considered divisive, gave birth to the idea of "Nasakom"—an anagram of the Indonesian words for nationalism, religion, and communism.
THE NEWSPAPERS WERE transformed into "tools of the revolution" and public criticism of the government was curtailed.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30
the Ancientism Hall of the
Abbey Hall-Rev George George Dawe.
ALEXANDRA GEORGE JARBY
Western Civ Discussion, 9 p.m., St.
Lawrence Center.
Apostles, II"—Rev. George Darby.
Western City, Discussion. 9 p.m., St.
Eaise轿 Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
"Nasakom" in public affairs was intended to blend the major currents of Indonesian thought into a single mighty river carrying the ship of state to its destiny, with Sukarno at the helm.
WHEN SUKARNO TOOK control he pledged three things: restoration of internal security, eviction of the Dutch from West Irian (New Guinea), and provision of basic food
Nolen Ellison, former KU basketball star, will discuss the topic, "Is There Any Answer to the Race Question?" Thursday.
Ellison to Speak Here Thursday
He will speak at 9 p.m. in the Student Union before a meeting of College Life, a bi-monthly, informal get-together sponsored by the Campus Crusade for Christ.
Ellison, who was the highest scoring guard in KU history, played for KU from 1959 to 1963. He was awarded the Most Valuable Player award for his play in the 1962-63 Big Eight tournament, and was picked to the All-Big Eight team for that same year.
Ellison will come to KU from his coaching job at Sumner high school in Kansas City.
GOD OF TIME
In the first two he achieved notable successes.
The armed forces under General A. H. Nasution quashed the civil war in Sumatra and Celebes, rounding up its leadership with promises of amnesty. They cleaned out the fanatic west Javanese Darul Islam terrorists, and isolated the die-hard south Moluccan rebels in the hills of Ceram.
and clothing necessities for the people.
IN 1962 SUKARNO pried the Netherlands from its last foothold in the Archipelago with a dramatic nationwide mobilization campaign and the judicious deployment of paratroop commandos in the West Irian jungles, generating international pressure for a negotiated settlement.
While we are postponing, life speeds by—
Seneca said it around 25 A.D. and wise men have been echoing his remark ever since.
Our campus office specializes in life insurance programming for young men. For full information about the benefits of getting a headstart, stop by or telephone.
Today, no man can afford to postpone his financial planning. And an integral part of that planning is a life insurance program.
These were clearcut objectives in which the President was passionately concerned and where his enormous executive and political power could be effectively employed. But they were achieved at the expense of the third objective: a healthy, prosperous economy.
SENECA
Kermit D. Hoffmeier 1722 W.9th VI3-5692
It is in the handling of Indonesia's ailing economy that "guided democracy" has most conspicuously failed to improve on its predecessors.
Monday, March 16, 1964 University Daily Kansan P
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, March 16, 1964
Southern Negroes to Campaign
Rv United Press International
By United Press International Negro leaders announced last night they will put up two congressional candidates in Mississippi this year and bring in 1,000 northern college students to work in a "peace corps" for voter registration this summer.
summer. The announcement was made at Jackson by the "Council of Federated Organizations" (COFO) a group of various major civil rights organizations.
COFO said Mrs. Fannie Lou Hamer of Ruleville plans to run for Congress in the Second District and Rev. John Cameron of Hattiesburg in the Fifth District. Spokesmen said the two would seek to get their names on the June Democratic Primary ballot.
AARON HENRY, Mississippi president of the NAACP, said if Mrs. Hamer and Cameron lost, they would go to Washington anyway and try to unseat the winning white candidates.
"We intend to challenge these congressmen for their seats on the floor of Congress because they cannot be legally ejected where so many Negroes are deprived of voting." Henry said.
Henry said the 1,000 northern college students would come to Mississippi at their own expense to work for voter registration and to staff "freedom schools and freedom centers" throughout the state.
AMONG THOSE. were Greenwood and Jackson, scene of violent demonstrations last year and at Hattiesburg and Canton, sites of more recent "Freedom Day" demonstrations.
He said the drive "will move into every county in the state" but he picked out 25 cities that he said would be centers of activity.
He said the students would come primarily from Harvard, Yale, the University of Oregon, Oberlin College, Stanford University, the University of Illinois and the University of North Carolina.
The elm trees shading Jayhawk Boulevard look "like a gal's head with her hair up in curlers" commented Professor Robert E. Beer, chairman of the entomology department.
"Bidrin is injected by drilling holes around a tree trunk," Prof. Beer continued, "and inserting a needle connected to vial containing the serum. The serum seeps into the tree's vascular system in about half an hour. To be effective, inoculation is done when the elm buds open."
"Cost of inoculation is figured at approximately $2.40 per tree," Beer said.
In a new attempt to control the spread of Dutch elm disease on campus, Prof. Beer said, some elm trees were inoculated with bidrin today. Bidrin is an organic phosphate insecticide that his been used experimentally in Wisconsin to control the disease. Inoculation of the campus trees was also done experimentally, he said.
Elm Inoculation Starts
Dutch elm disease in the Lawrence area has been a problem for several years, Beer explained. There is no cure for it, although
Robert Moses of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee said the "freedom schools" would be set up with the cooperation of the National Council of Churches.
"Tree removal is expensive, costing approximately $75 per tree," Beer said. "Spraying raises objections because it may kill small mammals and birds.
Prof. Beer said the bark beetle first infested trees in the eastern part of the U.S. about 1930, and has spread as far west as Butler County in Kansas. On its way west, the beetle invaded Urbana, Ill., and Columbus, Ohio, wiping out all the elms in both cities, he said.
the disease can be controlled by removing infected trees or by spraying to kill the European bark beetle, which carries the disease-causing fungus, he said.
HENRY SAID COFO hopes to see 28,000 more Negroes registered to vote in Mississippi by the end of the summer.
Henry said the students would "be something like a Peace Corps to Mississippi" and that they would live with local Negro families.
In another political-civil rights development in the south, six Negroes have announced in Tuskegee, Ala., they will run as independent candidates for city and county offices this fall against white opponents.
Five other Negroes had announced plans earlier to face white candidates for local office in the May 5 Democratic primary in Tuskegee where whites are out-numbered five to one.
"Unless the beetle is eliminated here, Lawrence and KU may look forward to the same fate," Beer said.
Elsewhere:
- Xenia, Ohio—in the estimated 500 persons milled in the street in front of the Greene County jail for an hour yesterday in sympathy for 109 Negroes and whites arrested during a demonstration at nearby Yellow Springs against a barber who refuses to cut the hair of Negroes. There were no disturbances, authorities said.
- ANNAPOLIS, MD.-Civil rights leaders are enthusiastic over Maryland's new public accommodations law passed in the last day of a special session Saturday by the state General Assembly. But the head of an all-white businessmen's group said the law "will be like the 18th amendment—it will be on the books but never be able to be controlled."
- New York—The second boycott of city public schools is scheduled today but without the backing of major civil rights organizations that supported a walkout on Feb. 3 that saw 464,000 students miss classes.
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JFK Committee to Report On Memorial Proposals
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The John F. Kennedy Memorial Fund committee will report to the All Student Council, Tuesday, on the proposals the committee has been considering for a memorial to the late President.
Jon J. Alexiou, Mission junior and chairman of the JFK committee, said that one of the committee's recommendations is that one of the new rooms in Watson Library be dedicated in memory of Kennedy. Alexiou said he has been conferring with Thomas R. Buckman, director of libraries, about this proposal.
Buckman said the possibility of such a memorial has been discussed, but nothing definite has been decided. Buckman said he thought it would be appropriate to dedicate a room in memory of Kennedy because the late President was a very serious student and the author of several books.
The ASC unanimously approved the establishment of the JFK committee on Dec. 3. The motion was introduced by Ali Hassan, India sophomore and International Club representative who said: "The late President emphasized education and started the Peace Corps, both of which gave new openings for young people. It is fitting that students of the University preserve something as a token of appreciation to this man."
A resolution at the last meeting of the ASC to abolish the JFK committee was tabled. The resolution, submitted by Roy Miller, Topeka junior, proposed that the committee be dissolved because it had not yet planned the erection of a memorial.
Other suggestions that the committee has been considering, Alexiou said, are a memorial room in the Kansas Union or a monument to be constructed on campus.
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Very nice. Maybe they could start you off at a hundred grand a year.
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I'm afraid to tell you what I think.
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$159
Motor
Twin
929 M
See your Placement Officer for the date Equitable's employment representative will be on campus. Or write to William E. Blevins, Employment Manager.
For sa interie
Good
Call
The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United States Home Office: 1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10019 $ \circ $ 1964
Wolle track.
Volks premi
tax.
Stone
Mass.
New I Sound into c to K Stone Conti (behli Mond "Para Frenc
Tire count
nylon
Four
Four
instal
New
1 yea
$12
Mass.
New sheet 1005
For 9040
Gern and cheis
Page 7
g of it- sub- un- be yet aerial.
Classified Ads
FOR SALE
New, unused set of Encyclopedia Britannica. Half price. Phone VI 3-5929 after 6 p.m. 3-19
1956 4-door wagon. V-8, automatic transmission, good condition. See to appreciate; $450. Call VI 3-1951 after 6 p.m. or Baldwin 594 3423. 3-19
tative er.
tes
1964
2 stereos for sale. Console, $60. Portable.
$60. VI 2-3885. 3-19
FM RADIO AND STEREO SALE. G.E Compact F.M., $23. G.E AM-FM AFC $29.94. G.E. 2 spkr. FM-CLK, $34.88 Olympic 2 pc. stereo FM, $60. Emerson 2 pc. stereo FM, $93. G.E stereo FM, $98. phono, $198. Motorola 2 pc. stereo FM, $159. Motorola coffee stereo and FM, $159. G.E portable stereo, 4 spk., $100. Motorola coffee stereo, $88. Motorola Twin wired stereo, $5. Ray Stoneback's, $92 Mass. VI 3-4170. 3-24
Wollensk tape recorder plus 1515 4
track. Call VI 2-1667. 3-17
For sale by owner. 58 Volvo, black, red interior, radio, seat belts, 2 new tires.
Good mechanical condition. Reasonable.
Call VI 2-9253 after 6 p.m. 3-17
Volkswagen and Renault owners! Nylon premium tubeless tires cut to 16% tax (tubeless retreads, $11 Exg. Ray Buckhair's Back Discount Tire Center 929 Mass. 3-24
New battery portable all transistor phono.
Sounds like a console! 4 speeds, folds into compact carrying case. Special offer to Kansuwa: $55.88. May 24
9:28am MB1 Mass.
Continuing book sale. 1539 Tennessee (behind ATO house). Open 12 to Monday. Send a letter of interest to 10 copies Lost books 1-111, 5c each. French Curves, 15 and 25 each. 3-16
The tires slashed! Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center at 329 Mass. 36 monylubet tuleslash. Four 650 x 13" $40. Four 750 x 14" $44. Four 670 x 15" $44. Four 800 x 14" $50. Plus tax, exchange, installed! 4 whitewalls. $8 extra! 3-26
New 16" lightweight portable TV, $99.
1 year guarantee on parts! Rent or buy.
$12 per month. Ray Stoneback's, 929
Mass. (Motorola Headquarters). 3-26
Typewriter, new and used portables,
standards, electrics. Olympia, Hermes,
Olivetti. Royal and Smith Corona portables.
Typewriter, adder, rentals and service.
Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St.
VI 3-3644.
For Forlur Brush Products phone VI 8-
9040 after 5 p.m. tf
German Shepherd pumps, AKC registered and charged with the theft of Lloyd Lloyd. Phone KI 2-2589. If it
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME
WHEELS, Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale
at great savings after 6 p.m. weekdays
saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut
tt
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
ram-the-85 $ Lawrence Outdoor
1005 Mass
FOR RENT
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as 'Biology for the Delivery' delivery. $4.50. Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extensively comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tt
Married, grad students, faculty, 2 bedroom, $75. Sleeping room, $25. 16 availability in Reserve now. Call for warehouse VI 3-2118. Sneeze台 for furniture, 1123 Indiana. **aff**
Single room very near Kansas Union at 1140 Mississippi St. Completely remodeled ideal for graduate students. Accommodated for summer. Call VI 2-0289. 3-19
For one or two graduate men, three room nicely furnished apt., private bath, and kitchen. Ideal study conditions. Best of neighbors. For appointment phone VI 3-8543. **tf**
Crescent Heights two bedroom apart-
bud. Phone VI 2-3711.
Graduate men or older undergraduates—extra nice furnished bachelor apartment. Close to campus, ideal study conditions. best of neighbors. Reasonably priced. utilities paid. For appointment call VI 3-8534.
TYPING
Experienced typist for thesis and term
work. Send resume to:
Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 70-0588.
Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type terms, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work stands. Phone VICT 3-8379. Mrs. Charles Fatti.
Experienced secretary would like typing home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 1188.
Accurate expert typist would like typing
the prompt service. Call VI 3-2651.
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Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason- sentations, papers, themat- sations and theses, phone VI 3-7652. tf
Mrs. Frank Gibson.
Experienced Typist—Dissertations, Thesis
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and special symbols available. Prompt
2000 Rhode Island VI V1-3487 Robert Coat
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon printer. Office equipment. VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 408 West 13th st
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
Legal termes. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports. Electric Typewriter. Mrs McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8686 tf
Experienced typist, 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2047 Yale, VI 2-1648.
Typing: Dissertation theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols, carbon ribbon—if desired. Prompt efficiency service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI-124 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VIII-3057.
Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tt
MILIKLENIS SOS—always first quality
typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
hours to tape transcription. 7 a.m. tau. 12 p.m. $121% Mass.
Phone VI-3-5820. **tt**
TRANSPORTATION
Wanted, ride from 1028 Vermont to Prairie Village area. Leaving anytime after 3:30 Friday afternoon. Call VI 3-6293.
MISCELLANEOUS
Have a party in the Big Red School House. Good dance floor and piano. Heated. Call VI 3-7453. tf
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign colns, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. tf
George's Hobby Shop
1105 Mass. VI 3-5087
Artists-Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics
Big Store Service and Small Store Attention
Book Nook
1021 Mass.
REAL PET
WANTED
Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking
GRANT'S DRIVE-IN Pet Center Sure-Everything in the Pet Field VI.2 2021
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Would like to buy used guitar. Call weekdays 4 to 5 p.m., VI 3-21-53. 3-17
VOLKSWAGEN'S WANTED. Cash for your VW, Conzelman Motors, VW Sales. Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway 59 So. tf
LOST
BUSINESS SERVICES
On Friday, March 6. Key chain with 8
Wesley Campus Road. Call VI 2-4542 - 3-17
West Campus Road. Call VI 2-4542 - 3-17
Surprise your roommate with a cake on that special occasion. The K.U. Birthday cake is free for the student body line of cakes. Free delivery and candles. Call VI 2-1791. 4-24
Spring Fling—Need to get ready? Needed alterations can be done by calling UI. Campus 3-20 Baby sitting in my home. Fenced yard. Any age sitting. Call UI 3-1456. 3-20
3billfield, lost in Fraser Theater, Friday,
Dave Till, 818 Kentucky.
Contact Dave Till, 818 Kentucky.
24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled
VI 3-6333
YELLOW CAB CO.
JOE'S BAKERY
25c delivery VI 3-4720
Hot doughnuts—sandwich cold drink
616 W. 9th
Jack's Sear Covers
545 Minn.
VI 3-4242
Tops — Glass & Zippers —
Tallor Made Seat Covers at Competitive Prices with sewed double lock stitch.
Tops — Glass & Zippers
Rear Glasses — Heavy linings —
Door Panels —
"SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS"
Portraits of Distinction
PHOTOGRAPHY
727 Mass. VI 3-7164
7,000 Pipes and every smoking accessory
George's Pipe Shop
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
HIXON STUDIO
OPEN 24 hrs. a day
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
L&M CAFE now under new management. WE WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, and delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches. Your second cup of coffee always free.
U-Call, we haul. Anything, anytime. v. 3-
5-3888.
tt
Monday, March 16, 1964
JIM'S CAFE
838 Mass.
Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 116 Mass. VI 3-1267. tp
Dressmaking-alterations, formals and
suits. Ola Smith, 939½ Max
VI 3-5263
RISK'S
Shirt Finishing Laundry
Wash & Fluff Dry
All makes & models frame - body - fender - glass
AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS
DALE'S BODY SHOP
Milliken's SOS
613 Vt. VI 3-4141
VI 3-4732 704 Vermont
"the best professional service"
- General typing service
- Notary public
- 24 hr. answering service
1021½ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
STUDENTS
The only thing better than a home cooked meal is — Dinner At DUCKS Steaks & Seafoods A Specialty
24 m. identifying photo
• Mimeograph & photo-copying
University Daily Kansan
ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass.
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Serving crisp tossed salads,
choice of potatoes, zesty
Vienna breads Gr country fresh
butter. Sandwiches, too!
Your favorite beverage
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Automotive Service
Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel
Balancing
11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass.
7 a.m.-11 p.m
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
VI 3-0152
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
Tours Cruises Everywhere
Fraternity Jewelry
Balfour
ART'S TEXACO
9th & Mississippi
VI 3-9897
Steamship Lines
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
Travel Agency
1 5 string banjo instruction. Folk styles.
Low rates. Call VI L2-9466 after 6 p.m.
AIR LINES
One Stop Service
★ TUNE-UPS
Student secretary. Must be enrolled in at least one hour. 30 hours a week job. Exceptional wages. Starting April 29 through the end of June. Call UNI 3-18
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY. Peppermint Park Kiddyland operation for sale, through college or by running this during the summer. Call VI 2-0155 at 5 p.m. 4-3
Domestic Foreign
HELP WANTED
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Engine Tune Up
★ Lubrication & Oil Change
Brake Repair
Girl to play electric organ part-time.
Call VI 3-4743. 16
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
VI 3-9271
Generator & Starter Repair
SKELLY
JACK & GUNN'S
SKELLY SERVICE
300 W. 6th
746 Mass.
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
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THE NAME FOR SERVICE
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FOR
TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS
SEE MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES
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COMPLETE SERVICE FOR CHEVYS
& OLDS
- Small enough to give personal attention.
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738 N.H.
VI 3-7700
SHIP WINTER
CHEVROLET
HAVING A PARTY?
We are always happy to serve you with
Ice cold beverages China nut cookie
Chips, nuts, cookies
Variety of grocery items
Crushed ice, candy
Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds
OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING
616 Vt
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
Ph. VI 3-0350
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Monday, March 16, 1964
New Yorkers Concerned Over Lawlessness in Classrooms
NEW YORK—(UPI)—New York sends 900,000 children to public school every day, then waits for the newspapers to report how many of them attacked their teachers with knives, chairs, fists or teeth.
Lately, the attacks have averaged three a day. Some teachers say the average would be higher if some principals, seeking to keep a clean slate in the front office, did not quietly overlook some assaults.
Day after dreary day, the newspapers tell of attacks by 13 or 14 or 15-year olds upon no greater provocation than a teacher's instructions to his pupils to take off their coats or take their seats or stop running in the hallways.
A FEW TEACHERS have been carried away in ambulances, their glasses smashed, their clothing ripped, their hands bearing bite marks. Other teachers, well-trained in educational theory but short on courses in the art of self-protection, are scared to go to school each day.
Many New Yorkers are alarmed. Charles Cogen, president of the Teachers' Union, is so alarmed he proposed legislation to increase retirement and death benefits for teachers "who die or are hurt in the line of duty." Dr. Calvin E. Gross, the superintendent of schools, went along with the idea.
No one knows why the number of attacks increased so drastically within the last month and some teachers insist the only thing that has increased is the number of attacks reported to board of education headquarters in Brooklyn, which tries, to oversee 843 schools.
The problem is of such proportions that the school system reissued a 1962 directive telling which attacks to report and which to ignore.
"ON THE ONE hand, we don't want to overwhelm the police with trifling incidents," it says. "On the other, we do not want to neglect situations which could become serious to us. When in doubt, report it."
The Feb. 3 school boycott, organized by Negro and Puerto Rican groups, which kept 360,000 children out of school to demand faster integration, is blamed by some teachers for provoking the assaults by teaching lawlessness.
"The two girls who attacked me wouldn't have done so before the school boycott," says Mrs. Oliva Vale, whose eyes were blackened in an attack 24 days ago.
Nancy Pakelik, a pretty substitute music teacher, had her dress torn by an unruly student. She blames the boycott, saying it was an open display of contempt for the authority of teachers and schools.
PUBLICITY ALSO IS blamed.
Mrs. Adele B. Tunick, president of the United Parents Association, whose group says it represents 400,-000 parents, encourages "some evidence that publicity encourages more" attache-
But the chief villain blamed by everyone is a school system which is grossly overcrowded and understaffed and which had to resort, more and more, to double sessions.
The lack of money is the root of this evil, most authorities agree. The children who attack their teachers—nearly all of them Negro or Puerto Rican — invariably come from the city's poorest neighborhoods.
And a lack of money in the school system frustrates its attempts to pay attention to rowdy children before they become troublemakers.
KNOWLEDGE OF HOW to prevent the pupil attacks is abundant, insists Louis Hays, who directs classes which serve troubled children. "We know more than we'll use in 100 years," he says. "What we need is a whole range of resources for which the know-how is available, but the money is not."
Money is not likely to be soon forthcoming. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, pledged not to raise taxes, has discarded a suggestion by the leaders of his majority Republicans in the legislature, to raise school aid this year.
New York has one school psychologist for every 10,000 pupils. That's not enough, says Dr. Simon S. Silverman, head of the board of education's Bureau of Child Guidance. The assaults will continue, he predicts, "until we have the resources—money and manpower—to take care of our emotionally disturbed pupils." His bureau, with a staff of 400, handled 22,000 cases last year.
Charles Staloff is the principal of junior high school 149, in a Bronx neighborhood of three-story tenements, a school built to accommodate 1,200 pupils but with an enrollment of 1.700. He blames broken homes, common in his neighborhood.
“AS LONG AS there are homes where the father is not present, or where he has no authority, there will be children who will present problems in a school situation,” he says.
The attacks themselves throw little light on their cause. They seem to be provoked by the most minor admonitions.
In the Bronx, teacher Irving Goldman told a 15-year-old boy who was blocking the entrance to the school cafeteria to move along. The boy went after Goldman with a chair and had to be wrestled to the floor by other teachers.
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VI 3-4366
Daily hansan
61st Year, No. 105
Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, March 17, 1964
"Domestic Peace Corps" Urged in Poverty War
WASHINGTON—(UPI)--Congress got a chance today to sink its teeth into President Johnson's long-awaited anti-poverty program. Republicans said the dish was made up of leftovers.
Less than 24 hours after the President sent the wide-ranging $692.5 million proposal to Congress, a House Education and Labor Subcommittee called for testimony from Peace Corps Director Sargent Shriver, Johnson's choice to head the "war on poverty."
Chairman Walter Heller of the President's council of economic advisers also was scheduled to testify at the hearing (10:30 a.m. EST).
THE JOHNSON PROGRAM would
Dean of Engineering Steps Down to Teach
offer new skills and environments to underprivileged youths, finance locally planned anti-poverty projects, recruit a "domestic peace corps," and provide loans and grants to small farmers and businessmen in poverty areas.
In a speech last night in St. Paul, Minn., Shriver denied that the anti-poverty program was "an election-year gimmick . . . government patternism or handouts . . . (or) a hopeless exercise."
He asserted it would "give people the chance to develop their own capacities, not make them more dependent on the capacities or generosity of others." The investment now will lead to a much greater saving in tax-financed welfare programs, he said.
Dean John S. McNown has asked to be relieved as dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture at the end of the 1964-65 academic year to return to full-time teaching and research.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe told the Kansas Board of Regents at a meeting in Manhattan yesterday that the University will honor Dean McNown's request.
366
CHANCELOR WESCOE said the University knew of McNown's intention to return to teaching and research when he accepted the administrative position in 1957.
In a telephone interview last night, Dean McNown said that his intention is to remain at the University for his teaching and research.
Dean McNown said the selection of his successor would be up to the
Chancellor and the Board of Regents.
He is especially interested in pursuing studies of hydraulics, learning processes for engineers and the role of engineering in the development of emerging countries.
DEAN McNOWN received his B.S. degree in engineering from KU in 1936, his M.S. from the State University of Iowa in 1937, his Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota in 1942, and a D.Sc. from the University of Grenoble, France, in 1951.
Prior to returning to KU, Dean McNown was professor of mechanics and hydraulics at Iowa, and professor of engineering mechanics at Michigan.
His father, Prof. Emeritus W. C. McNown taught civil engineering at KU from 1907 until his retirement in 1950.
THE PRESIDENT'S PROPOSALS inspired a round of ringing praise from Democrats, but Republicans found little to cheer about.
"About 70 per cent of this is reheated legislative leftovers," said Rep. Charles E. Goodell, R.N.Y., a member of the special education and labor subcommittee.
"He has given us Kennedy programs with new names," Rep. Albert H. Quie, R-Minn., another member said.
The Republicans, who hastened to say they were just as interested in eliminating poverty as the man in the White House, showed no sign of embracing the proposals for a youth "job corps," the domestic peace corps, local work-training and college work-study plans.
Their general views was that similar programs had been offered to congress by the late President John F. Kennedy and found wanting. Resubmission as part of a Johnson program did not make them more popular with the GOP members.
THE COOL REPUBLICAN reaction obviously did not surprise the Democrats. Selection of Rep, Phil Landrum, D-Ga., to be chief house sponsor of the poverty program was seen as a clear sign that the administration was out for southern Democratic, rather than Republican, votes for the proposal. Although regarded as a moderate among southerners, Landrum is more conservative than most education and labor committee Democrats and some of its Republicans.
Weather
Administration strategists obviously were banking on the acceptability of Johnson and Landrum to southern members to make up any election-year deficit of Republican support.
Temperatures will be fair and mild Wednesday ranging in the lower 60's. Light southwesterly winds are expected. The low tonight will be in the middle 30's.
THE VISION IS NOW
Engineers' St. Patrick's Day Queen candidates are: (left to right) Jackie Caeser, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore; Camille Storey, Overland Park sophomore; Jareth Donnan, Webster Groves, Mo., freshman; Kay Mourning, Clearwater junior; Louise Elaine Proctor, Augusta junior.
A candidate not shown is Marilyn J. Veatch, Wichita freshman.
The queen will be selected by a panel of engineers, and will be announced at the Engineers' St. Patrick's Day Dance on Friday night. The dance is at 8:30 p.m. at the Holiday Inn.
All KU students are invited to attend the dance.
A KU Engineers' St. Patrick will also be chosen, but not all the candidates have been nominated yet.
The elected St. Patrick will be announced on Thursday. On Friday he will make the annual St. Patrick trip across the campus in a wheelbarrow.
The queen selected will also reign over the 44th Annual KU Engineering Exposition on April 17-18.
The School of Engineering is also having an open house in the new Engineering building starting today at 3:30 p.m. until 10 p.m. and from 3:30 until 9 p.m. on Wednesday and Thursday. (Photo by Tim Richardson)
CIGARETTES
NEVER AGAIN-By April 15 this cigarette vending machine will be removed as will all others on campus. Sales of cigarettes in the Kansas Union will also be prohibited by the Board of Regents ban on sales of cigarettes on state college and university campuses. (Photo by Charles Corcoran)
Cigarette Sales Banned At KU
By Bobby Bartelt
The Board of Regents decision yesterday to ban the sale of cigarettes on all state supported campuses was probably the first such action taken in the United States.
The order came after a report by Dr. C. Frederick Kittle, associate professor of surgery at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City.
"I COULD certainly urge that cigarette sales be banned on the state university campuses," Kittle told the Board.
The order, which passed the Board of Regents unanimously, will become effective April 15.
"I probably need not remind you that no other non-medical university or college of which I am aware has banned cigarette sales and certainly no other state has taken such action," Kittle said.
THE EFFECT OF the order on KU was explained by Raymond Nichols, vice-chancellor of finance.
Specific plans for following the Board of Regents decision have not yet been made. Nichols said.
"There will be no cigarettes sold on the University campus or property," Nichols said. This includes vending machines and across-the-counter sales in the Kansas Union, he said.
"Sale of cigarettes will be banned from cigarette machines located in university buildings and residence halls, and in the union." L. C. Woodruff, dean of students, said. "We have no immediate jurisdiction over the fraternity and sorority houses."
NEITHER FRANK BURGE, director of the Kansas Union, nor Kevin Remick, concessions manager, had any comment concerning yesterday's Board action.
Most KU students were unaware of the Board's action last night. When the action was explained, most reactions were similar:
"The rule won't effect those who don't smoke, and will annoy those who do, but won't stop them," said one Hashinger Hall resident.
"Students will only go off campus and buy cigarettes by the carton," said one resident of JRP. "It won't result in cutting down on the number of students smoking."
"The ACTION IS probably the result of national pressures to get young people to stop smoking." Patricia Behen, Kansas City senior, and president of Lewis Hall said. "The overall effect of the action will undoubtedly be negative among those who smoke."
Roy Miller, Topeka junior, and representative to the All Student Council from the School of Journalism, plans to introduce a resolution to ban cigarette smoking in the classrooms at the ASC meeting tonight. Included in this resolution will be a clause to commend the State Board of Regents for their decision.
FOLLOWING THE removal of cigarette machines from the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe appointed a committee to look into the smoking problem on the KU campus.
The names of members of the committee have been withheld, and the findings of the committee have not been released.
"The object of the committee was not to ban smoking, but to question whether the University should facilitate smoking by providing cigarette machines on the campus," James R. Surface, vice-chancellor of the university, said at the time the committee was appointed.
Dean Woodruff said he felt that the findings of the committee may have influenced the Board of Regents decision.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 17, 1964
Party Platforms
Spring Ritual
Still confused?
But surely almost all of you have already decided for whom to vote in the campus spring election.
There are so many criteria for making an intelligent decision:
LIVING GROUP AFFILIATION. Actual command or social pressure alleviates the student's distress in making voting decisions. How easy to vote a straight ticket for the party your house endorses.
PARTY PERFORMANCE. Any party which has carried out more than 10 per cent of its last platform gets an automatic edge. Or figure out which party has stolen more candidates from the other.
THE UNDERDOG. You Yankee-Johnson-Liston haters can follow suit by supporting the underdog party (whichever one that is).
PATRONAGE. Those of you lucky chosen few who have already been promised positions don't even have a decision to make.
Now there may be one or two who still can't make up your minds. Perhaps you can decide (imagine!) on the issues.
And so we come to the platforms—those recently-published masterpieces of complex sentences. Here are set down the stands and programs that each party will so vigorously support. What better way to decide on candidates than by evaluating their platforms?
VOX POPULI proposes to alleviate lack of
But hold on. University Party would set up an ASC service by which students could "anonymously and objectively" tell his last semester prof just what he thinks of him.
student employment by replacing Pinkerton men with students at all athletic events.
UP, OBSESSED WITH the concept of leadership, would establish a Freshman Leadership Program and a Campus Leadership Day to bring together student and faculty leaders to discuss "common campus leadership problems and responsibilities."
Then Vox directs the University Daily Kansan to publish actions of the disciplinary and social committees, something the Kansan would gladly do if the committees would furnish the information.
And Vox plans to investigate all methods of pre-enrollment. Fine, but the registrar, who knows much more about the whole problem, has been working on plans for pre-enrollment for quite a while.
UP, not to be outdone, wants every ASC member to spend half his life attending committee meetings, to "better understand the workings of the committee system."
Well, this week brings the first day of spring; the Independents are Flinging and the Greeks are Weeking; and the young man's fancies—if he's of a political nature—turn to platform writing.
— Margaret Hughes
In the Name of Progress
Nose to the Grindstone
It has been said of 19th Century university students in Germany, during the rule of the Iron Cancellor Bismarck, that one-third failed, onethird of the students cracked—either mentally or physically—under the pressure, and the surviving third were graduated to be the shapers of Germany.
IN THE United States today, certainly more than one-third of the students who start school are being graduated. However, in the drive for excellence, students are being subjected to tremendous pressures, some of which may be doing more harm than good.
The country's educational system took a turn for the serious, following aeons of slumber, when we found that the Russians could push a metal ball into orbit and we couldn't.
Coupled with the crash program in space exploration came a crash program in education. It seems that people looked around, asking what could be done, and decided that the first thing would be to make school tougher.
THIS PART OF the solution to the education problem fitted in nicely with the Puritan heritage, for many Americans see something intrinsically sacred about hard work. At any rate, some schools and departments have dished out work—even if it is only busy-work—by the basketful.
The aim of the work load is unquestionably noble, presuming that it is designed to build a population equipped to cope with the awesome problems of 20th Century life.
Despite the good intentions, the doctrine of hard work may in some cases be a hindrance to solving the basic problems—for the basic problems seem to be how man can live with his fellow man, control his scientific genius, and adjust to the tensions of an industrial and technological culture.
LOOK AROUND YOU. In one sense, much of a university could be described as a community of physically ugly—and more important—psychologically ugly people.
How many people, here on the KU campus, are caught in the mechanics of the doctrine of hard work to the point where, in the process of staying alive, they have forgotten how to live?
How many students feel so driven that they have reached a point of alienation from themselves and from their fellows? have no time to sit down and consider themselves, those they love, those with whom they want to communicate.
HOW MANY students are scarred by the exertion—the scars ranging from baggy eyes and itchy scalp to profound psychological problems resulting in, say, suicide.
Admitted, a grinding work load may turn out students highly trained and highly skilled. But what good does the skill and training do if it comes from people who are unbalanced, unhealthy, and who lack a reasonable perspective from which to work.
Tom Coffman
The People Say . . .
Last month during the KU-K-State game, my car and about 20 or 30 others were towed by the campus police from C-lot south of Lindley Hall. The reason given for towing the car was that they were blocking the drive.
Kampus Kops
It seems that sometime during the last few weeks, these venerable officers of the law had erected three small signs near the entrances to the lot saying: "No parking in center lane." The signs are the same size and shape as signs which say, "C-lot parking by permit only." The signs are also
placed several feet off to the side of the entrances, and at night are practically invisible to the uninitiated. The question, then, seems to be: Are students expected to know by instinct when a rule has been changed?
When I asked a patrolman in the lot where my car was, he replied, "I don't know; that's your problem." I then asked why it had been towed away. He replied, "You'll find out soon enough. Go up to Hoch." A second question then arises: Can students expect courtesy from officers of the law?
My date, a friend, his date, and I then went up to Hoch and waited for nearly an hour while an elderly gentleman typed out release forms with one finger. A third question: Can we expect police officials to be efficient?
After parking in practically the same spot during basketball games for three years, I was amazed to find that it was wrong. But then when the "KU Kampus Kops" strike with the swiftness of the blitzkrieg, some new rules can hardly go unnoticed.
Allen Monasmith Wichita junior
Ruby, Hoffa, Libel Trials Made Week Memorable
By Roy Miller
A surprise victory in the first presidential primary . . . new evidence in a Senate investigation. . . a heightening in the Cyprus crisis . . . a U.S. official's survey in Viet Nam. . . flooding in the Ohio River valley . . . the opening rounds in a civil rights legislative battle . . . international intrigue.
All these were elements in the news last week. But three results of the American process of justice were the most dominating factors that could make the last week one of the most remembered of 1964.
In the historic and highly publicized trial in Dallas, Jack Ruby was condemned to death in a jury's swift verdict of murder with malice.
WITH THE NATION watching, just as it had watched Ruby's shooting of accused presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, Judge Joe. E. Brown read the jury's verdict, which flatly rejected the main plea of the defense—that Ruby was temporarily insane when he shot Oswald.
With the verdict handed down, the judge protested that a television camera remained in operation longer than it was supposed to. Defense attorney Melvin Belli called the decision the result of a "railroad kangaroo jury" and said he would enter a motion for appeal.
JACK RUBY sat in the courtroom as if he did not realize what was taking place. Even hours later he talked as if no decision had been made on his fate.
His fate, too, was far from being decided. With an appeal expected—Belli contended the court made 30 reversible errors—the case of Jack Ruby could continue for years.
In another court, this one the U.S. Supreme Court, a decision was hailed as a constitutional landmark for freedom of the press and speech.
THE NATION'S highest court reversed a decision on a libel suit against the New York Times in connection with an advertisement for which an Alabama court awarded a half-million-dollar judgement to the police commissioner of Montgomery, Ala.
The Supreme Court ruled that a public official cannot recover for libel damages of his official performance unless he proves that the statement was made with deliberate malice.
The Topeka State Journal commented in an editorial regarding the Supreme Court decision, "The decision is dramatic evidence that a press virile enough to publish unpopular views on public affairs and bold enough to criticize the conduct of public officials must be free to do so without the threat of laws that might threaten its very existence."
Hoffa Appeal Overruled
JAMES R. HOFFA, convicted on charges of jury-tampering, was sentenced to eight years in prison and fined $10,000 in U.S. District Court in Chattanooga.
U. S. District Court Judge Frank Wilson told the president of the Teamsters Union that Hoffa had been convicted "of having tampered with the very soul of this nation." The court later overruled motions for a new trial.
Nothing Positive In Lodge Victory
Henry Cabot Lodge won the New Hampshire presidential primary, first primary of the season, in a surprising write-in vote.
"THIS WAS A BIGGER upset than the Clay-Liston bout," the Milwaukee Journal said in an editorial. "Two top contenders all but got knocked out of the ring by a man who wasn't there."
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York and Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona had spent weeks campaigning in New Hampshire while Lodge stayed in South Viet Nam as U.S. ambassador there and kept saying he was not a candidate for president.
Lodge's smashing victory was interpreted by Jack Williams of the Kansas City Star as a victory for President Johnson: "The lanky Texan scored more heavily in the outcome of the GOP voting than he did in his own Democratic party primary. . ."
(Continued on page 3)
BOOK REVIEWS
OLIVER WISWELL, by Kenneth Roberts (Crest, 95 cents); ARUNDEL, by Kenneth Roberts (Crest, 95 cents).
And now we have parts 3 and 4 of Fawcett's publishing coup of 1963—the works of Kenneth Roberts, one of America's best historical novelists. As with "Northwest Passage" and "Lydia Bailey" it is necessary to state certain reservations, that today's sophisticated readers probably will not be as swept up in these vast epics as were the simpler folk of the thirties and early forties. But those who love a gusty—and reasonably accurate—historical yarn will love "Oliver Wiswell" and "Arundel."
America in revolutionary days was the stage on which Roberts' people performed. And famous Americans and Englishmen dart in and out of the forests and the battles. Such real people, usually, come through better than the heroes and heroines, for Roberts normally had a story-teller who was in the center of the stage but somehow out of things. And the heroines are unbelievable.
In "Arundel," Roberts gives us mainly the long march on Quebec, an expedition in which Benedict Arnold was to prove his courage and heroism. Roberts was an Arnold partisan, and he starts to tell us in "Arundel" the chain of events that led to the Arnold defection. His hero is Steven Nason, and his clown is Cap Huff, the same chap who shows up in several other Roberts novels and distinguishes himself with his manufacturing of hot buttered rum.
"Arundel," by the way, has like "Northwest Passage" a simply tremendous long march. Roberts excelled at such depictions. There is action, and excitement enough for any boy-as the moviemakers saw, of any age.
"Oliver Wiswell" further reflects the somewhat inconclastic approach to history that marked Kenneth Roberts. For Oliver Wiswell is no conventional patriot fighting the British. He is a Tory, and he undergoes patriot repression that must shock those of us raised in the Parson Weems tradition of colonial history.
We see here the narrow-mindedness of many colonials, and we are treated to depictions of prisons, tar-and-feather incidents, destruction, invasion of civil liberties and so on. This is a long, detailed, indignant, sometimes frustrating, action-filled story of the Revolution.-CMP
Tuesday, March 17, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Baker Case Open, Peace Force to Cyprus, Russians Down Jet—
(Continued from page 2)
MOST OBSERVERS saw the election as a defeat for Goldwater. At any rate, both Rockefeller and Goldwater were campaigning in California for the June 2 primary, considered the most important of the presidential primaries.
Early last week, it appeared that the Senate investigation of Bobby Baker was nearing an end. But, an accountant said his name was forged on Baker's federal income tax returns.
Now, the investigation promises to continue a few more weeks, depending upon how much damaging evidence Democrats and Republicans feel they can withstand in this election year.
**\* \* \***
Canadian troops numbering 1,000 were sent to strife-torn Cyprus as the UN Security Council attempted to avert an all-out war between Greek and Turkish Cypriots.
SECRETARY GENERAL U Thant hopes to have a 7,000-man peace force in Cyprus in the near future. Just as plans for the peace force were being announced, Turkey warned it would intervene unless a cease-fire was put into effect. Archbishop Makarios, prime minister of Cyprus, declared that Turkish intervention would mean war
A U.S. RB-66 plane and its crew of three was shot down by a Russian fighter over Communist East Germany. By week's end, U.S. officials were attempting to determine where the Russians were holding the three crewmen as Communist officials in East Berlin refused to give any information on the condition on or chances for release of the airmen.
THE UNITED STATES said the plane strapted into hostile territory. But the Soviet Union said it would release the Air Force officers if the U.S. government admits it ordered them to fly over East Germany as spies.
In Cambodia, the American and British embassies and the U.S. Information Service library were sacked at Phnom Penh by rioting Cambodians. Reasons for the well-planned riot were not clear.
Malcolm W. Browne, the Associated Press' correspondent in Saigon, said the riots may have been meant to coincide with secretary McNamara's visit to Viet Nam. There had been earlier reports that some of the recent fighting
d we
, de-
, de-
f the
between South Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces had taken place on the Cambodian frontier.
AS FOR ROBERT McNamara's trip to Viet Nam, it was his third trip there in five months to see what could be done about the war.
Back from his trip McNamara told President Johnson increased U.S. aid was needed in the war against Communist guerrillas.
In Kansas, the biggest story was evidence of declining support for Barry Goldwater for the Republican nomination. In a first District GOP convention at Dodge City, uncommitted delegates were elected, an action which led to the belief that the Kansas delegation to this summer's convention will be uninstructed.
In Congress, the House gave a smashing defeat to an administration pay increase bill which included a $10,000-a-year pay increase for members of Congress.
The civil rights bill started what promises to be a long journey in the Senate last week. Debate last week concerned a motion to take up the bill for consideration. Southern opponents of the bill are resisting efforts by supporters of the bill to debate the bill without first referring it to the Judiciary Committee.
In sports, it was basketball tournament time. As a result of the biggest tournaments—the NCAA Regionals—Kansas State will meet UCLA and Duke will play Michigan in the NCAA championships in Kansas City this weekend.
Claude Siton of the New York Times warned, "... if Congress delays in providing guidelines along which solutions may be worked out, there may be a tendency to take the problem into the
streets rather than wait for the orderly processes of litigation and legislation to take their course."
PRESIDENT JOHNSON promised aid to thousands of families who suffered losses in the worst Ohio Riiver Valley flood in 20 years. Flood waters were receding by week's end, but the flood left in its wake damage estimated at $50 million, and nine deaths.
\* \* \*
---
University 4-3198, business office
Founded 1898, became bweekly期 1904
University of Kansas student newspaper 111 Flint Hall
Dailij Hansan
Member Inland Mail College Ass. Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East St., New York 22, N.Y. National Mall subscription rates; $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturs. Special offers and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
University 4-3646, newsroom
University 4.2198, business office
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Mike Miller Managing Editor Russ Corbitt, Jackie Holler, Willis Sturm, Charles Corcoran Assistant Managing Editors; Fred Fralley, City Editor; Letta Catracy,editor; Marshall Caskey, Sports Editor; Charles Corcoran, Picture Editor
Tom Coffman Editorial Writer
Vinay Kotharl and Margaret
Elliott Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Hughes ... Assistant Editorial Editors
Brows Business Manager
Joanne Zabornik, Advertising Mgr; J
Marine James, General Advertis-
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Interviews for Membership on the
STUDENT ADVISORY BOARD
Sign up for interview times at the All Student Council office in the Union by 5:00 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18
Interview times that will be available-
- 1:00-5:00 p.m., Friday, March 20
- 9:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Sat., March 21
MEMBERSHIP—Outstanding sophomore and junior students from each school.
PURPOSE—to help advise undergraduate students during enrollment and through the academic year.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 17, 1964
Humanities Lecture to Be Tonight
William Shakespeare, an "experimental dramatist," will be discussed tonight by one of the nation's outstanding Shakespearean scholars.
Madeleine Doran, professor of English at the University of Wisconsin and Shakespeare scholar, will be the fifth woman to speak in the Humanities series. The talk will be at 8 p.m. tonight in Fraser Theater.
Miss Doran is the author of three books about Shakespeare, and editor
of three others. She has also written many articles for scholarly journals.
Her book "Endeavors or ... regarded as a book on Shakespeare that people other than specialists can enjoy.
Professor Doran taught two members of the KU English department who once studied at the University of Wisconsin.
Dennis Quinn, assistant professor of English, remembers Prof. Doran
as being "a teacher who had a very lively sense of Shakespeare's person."
Franklyn Nelick, associate professor of English, is also one of Miss Doran's former pupils.
Prof. Doran began guest lecturing at KU yesterday. She will be here through Wednesday, speaking to classes in English literature, history, and dramatic theory and criticism.
A. S.C. * All Student Council Meeting Tuesday, March 17-6:00 p.m.
Union, Sunflower Room
- Public Welcome
Gerald Bernstein, curator of the Museum of Art, will lecture on Reigion and Art in the second of four public lectures in Myers Hall.
Bernstein to Give Religion Talk
William J. Moore, dean of the Kansas school of Religion, said the lecture will deal with the history of architecture and the way in which religious interests are channeled through architectural forms.
The lecture, which will be illustrated with slides, will be at 7 p.m. Wednesday.
Prof. Nelick will speak on "Religion and Literature."
The final two lectures of the Religion and Life series will be presented by Franklyn C. Nelick, associate professor of English, on March 25 and April 1.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 17, 1964
'Superstitious' Winter Gambles with Fortune
By Jack Brannan United Press International
MANHATTAN — (UPI) — Tex Winter, the sometimes superstitious basketball coach at Kansas State, gambled with his luck today.
He sent his brown suit to the cleaners.
But he wasn't worried. It was due back in time for him to wear again by Friday night. That is when Kansas State meets top-ranked and undefeated UCLA in the national semi-finals of the NCAA basketball tournament in Kansas City.
Winter has worn the suit, a brown wool with muted black plaid, for each of his team's last 13 games. And Kansas State has won them all en route to the Big Eight Conference and then the NCAA Midwest Regional championships.
"But if I hadn't sent the suit to the cleaners today," said Winter, "the suit itself would have been our biggest offensive threat in Kansas City."
Winter has worn the suit on game nights since last Jan. 27, when Kansas State started its winning streak with a 97-91 victory over Oklahoma.
The 13th victory in the streak, which also was Winter's 200th in 11 years at Kansas State, came last Saturday night when his team walloped sixth-ranked Wichita 94-86 for the Midwest Regional crown.
In the steamy dressing room after the game, Winter said he would not consider sending the suit to the cleaner until after next weekend. But he changed his mind today after returning home and examining the fabric.
"I don't sit alone on the bench, you know," he explained. "And any-way, it's not the suit that has been winning games for us."
"If there is any luck in that suit, the cleaners certainly won't be able to take it out.
"So I'll be wearing it again in Kansas City. You can bet on that."
Wichita and ninth-ranked Texas Western, Kansas State's first victim in the Midwest Regional, would be tough to convince that the suit had anything to do with Kansas State's success. The credit went, instead, to
KUTrack Team Schedules 12 Outdoor Meets
KU will run a 12-meet Outdoor track and field schedule this spring, opening at the Texas Relays, April 3-4.
Coach Bill Easton's squad will run the schedule with a corps of six Big Eight champions and 11 lettermen. The former roster includes three newly-crowned kings: pole vaulter Floyd Manning; two-miler John Lawson, and high jumper Tyce Smith won indoor titles two weeks ago in Kansas City. Manning also won the 1963 outdoor title at Manhattan last May as did Glen Martin in the broad jump and Paul Acevedo in the three-mile.
heriad Hadley won the 1963 indoor two-mile and came back this year to score a fifth in the mile and second in the 1,000.
Acevedo is the lone NCAA placewinner among this team, having finished sixth in the three-mile at Albuquerque last June.
PAT CULPEPER, LINEBACKER and co-captain of the undefeated 1962 University of Texas football team, is now freshman coach at his alma mater.
Murrell, a 6-foot-6 forward and the Big Eight Player of the Year, led Kansas State's offense with 52 points and 21 rebounds in the two games. He was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player.
a tenacious 1-3-1 zone defense and Willie Murrell.
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The Most Valuable Player honor was quite an accomplishment, considering that All-American Dave Stallworth of Wichita beat Murrell in all statistics with 59 points and 39 rebounds. But even Stallworth's 37 points in the final game against Kansas State couldn't bring the Missouri Valley Conference co-champion the regional title.
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And the Kansas State zone defense, which gave opponents the corner and outside shots but nothing near the basket, smothered the attack tactics of both Wichita and Texas Western.
Jim Barnes, Texas Western's powerful 6-foot-7 center, went out against Kansas State in the first game with a 30.6-point scoring average and a 22-per-game rebounding mark. The zone choked him off with four points and nine rebounds in a game that Kansas State won 64-60.
The zone didn't stop Stallworth, who is deadly from all sections of the court. But it stopped his teammates, and that was all Kansas State needed to take its second regional championship under Winter.
Winter said his team played its "very best" against Wichita because the players knew they must in order to win.
But the Kansas State players knew, too, that Winter was wearing his lucky brown suit.
Shocker Coach Voices Interest InCoaching KU
WICHITA—(UPI)—Coach Ralph Miller brought the University of Wichita to the peak of its basketball success in his 13th season this year.
But he still has an unfulfilled ambition to coach someday at his alma mater, the University of Kansas.
And adding fuel to Miller's ambition is a current report that Coach Dick Harp may soon resign.
"There are not many schools I would consider moving to from Wichita. But Kansas is the big one among those I would consider."
"There will always be a soft spot in my heart for Kansas," said Miller, who was captain of the Kansas basketball team in 1942.
Miller emphasized, however, that he is not seeking another job.
When he became coach at Wichita in 1951, the Missouri Valley Conference team was a consistent loser. But after his first season, Wichita became a winner and has remained a winner since then.
The past season was the finest for both Miller and Wichita. His team won a share of the conference championship for the first time, made its first appearance in the NCAA tournament, finished with a 23-6 record, and ranked sixth in the final national ratings.
"If I wanted to change, this would be the time to do it," said Miller, who has a 220-133 record at Wichita.
"But I don't see that there is anything I can say as long as they have a coach at Kansas."
KU won 42 games and lost only eight in Harp's first two seasons. But when Chamberlain left one year early to join the pros, KU basketball fortunes began to dwindle. In the six seasons since Chamberlain departed, Harp has had a 79-74 record.
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FALLACY:
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Page 7
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Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols, carbon ribbon if desired. Praise Service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI 2-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI 3-1557.
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University Daily Kansan
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coln Mart. 1025 Mass.
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a beautiful tale of medieval Japan (Japanese dialog - English subtitles)
- *
Billfold, lost in Fraser Theater, Friday.
Dave Tallis, S18 Kentucky. Contact
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Wednesday, March 18
Admission: $.60
Tuesday, March 17. 1964
LOST
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On Friday, March 6. Key enain with 8
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The Classical Film Series
UGETSU
Abington Book Store offers a free search service for out-of-print books. Downtown, $1015_{1/2}$ Mass. Next to Varsity Theater. 3-19
Spring Fling—Need to get ready? Needed alterations can be done by calling VI 2-645 to a campus nurse. Baby sitting in my home yard. Any age child. Call VI 3-1456. 3-20
Surprise your roommate with a cake on
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 17, 1964
ASC Supported Organizations To Have Fund Sources Judged
Campus organizations now supported by the All Student Council will be re-evaluated this spring to consider their eligibility to apply for appropriations from the ASC, Charles S. Portwood, Shawnee Mission senior, has announced.
Portwood, ASC treasurer, said the University Appropriations Committee will meet March 26 to decide whether organizations should be responsible to the University or the ASC. No organization may apply to both sources for funds.
Organizations which have educational or public relation functions are the responsibility of the University, while organizations of a social service or administrative nature are the responsibility of the ASC.
One organization considered certain to ask its classification be changed is People-to-People, which is operating on a $2,000 budget from the ASC this year.
Leaders of P-t-P clashed recently with the ASC over a Council provision that groups which it supports submit financial reports every two months. The funds of P-t-P
JRP Endorses UP Candidates
Joseph R. Pearson, large men's residence hall has affiliated with University Party.
The hall council, the governing body of JRP, voted Sunday night to endorse UP as the campus political party "most representative" of the hall's interests.
"THIS IS ACTUALLY an official manifestation of what JRP has supported for the last four years," Carl Lindquist, Kansas City junior and JRP president, said. "JRP has always felt that there was a fine working relationship of Greeks and independents in UP. There is mutual respect and cooperation, and the independents have much more say in UP than they do in Vox."
"Every Vox worker in JRP has switched to UP by his own decision or has lost interest," he said.
This is the only time a large residence hall has declared an official party affiliation.
I FEEL IT will definitely solidify the hall to stand firmly behind the party which we feel will work both for good student government and for our interests," Lindquist said.
Lindquist is a former independent co-chairman of UP and the party's candidate for College Men's seat this spring.
JRP is represented on the ASC by Cordell Meeks, Kansas City senior, and on the UP campus council by Fred Hoffman, Topeka senior as independent vice-president, and Larry Geiger, Mission sophomore as nominations co-chairman.
Tom Bornholdt, Topeka senior and Vox president, said JRP could not make an intelligent choice as they had never been exposed to both parties.
"THE LEADERSHIP in JRP has always been UP and they have choked off any attempt of Vox to approach the residents." Bornholdt said.
"The residents in JRP have followed along without protest, or knowing anything about Vox."
UP independent vice-president Hoffman said the hall affiliation was a definite advantage for the independents in UP.
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were frozen for several weeks until the report was made and both sides agreed that the status of P-t-P should be re-evaluated. People-to-People leaders contend their organization should be supported directly by the University.
"WELL BE reviewing the status of all organizations which we now support." Portwood said. "If someone would like to apply for special consideration or a change in status, they should present an application to the University Appropriations Committee."
Portwood said several organizations overlap the classifications, and the ASC has provided that the University Appropriations Committee shall meet during the spring semester of each even-numbered year to re-evaluate the classification of organizations petitioning for funds, and the criteria by which the organizations are classified.
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
Portwood said the deadline for applications is midnight Saturday, March 21. All applications should state the reason why the classification should be changed and the applicants must appear before the committee to discuss their case.
APPLICATIONS will be received by Portwood at 1245 W. Campus Rd., he said.
The University Appropriations Committee consists of Raymond Nichols, vice-chancellor of finance; Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students, and Portwood.
Portwood said the ASC now supports about 13 organizations that are classified as either social, service or administrative. The ASC bill governing appropriations states that any organization dissatisfied with its classification may have its case reviewed before the University Appropriations Committee.
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America Acclaims Dr. Strangelove!
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Wednesday, March 18, 1964
Lawrence, Kansas
N.J. 10
The first annual "Spring Fling," including a sports car rally, menwomen volleyball games, a bicycle race, a picnic, a dance and a duck race—if sponsors can find their ducks—will be this weekend.
Daily hansan
The Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) is sponsoring this weekend's activities for students living in scholarship and residence halls.
Ducknappers Active As Spring 'Flings'
By Nancy Schroeter
DUCKNAPPERS BEWARE—From left to right, Jerilyn Lappin, Logan; Kathy Lucas, Kansas City, Mo.; and Ruth Bramble, Independence; all seniors, are shown commanding their posts in front of Carruth-O'Leary residence hall while guarding their duck for the Assoc. University Residence Hall Spring Fling. The duck will be raced across Potter Lake this Saturday. (Photo by Charlie Corcoran)
Ernie Rosenthal, Kansas City sophomore and chairman of the "Spring Fling," says the duck race, which is scheduled for 2:30 p.m. Saturday, is "the big thing now."
FOURTEEN DUCKS ARRIVED at KU last Saturday to be kept by various living groups until they race across Potter Lake, Saturday.
This weekend will climax a week of ducknapping among various living groups in spite of padlocked cages and posted guards.
Activities for the weekend will begin at 9 p.m., Friday, with a dance at Lewis Hall. The presentation of trophies after the Spring Sing at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the ballroom of the Kansas Union will complete the weekend's activities.
Two trophies will be given for the winning men's group and the winning women's group, Rosenthal explained. The winners will be chosen from the number of points accumulated in various activities on Saturday, Rosenthal said.
A SPORTS CAR RALLY is planned at 9 a.m. at the Lewis Hall parking lot to begin Saturday's activities. Men-women teams will play volleyball at 9:30 p.m. A bicycle race at 11 from Templin around the Chi Omega fountain and back to Templin will occupy the rest of the morning, Rosenthal said.
At noon a picnic is planned at Potter Lake. Various races, such as, a pie eating contest and a "bod" race are scheduled for 1 p.m. Rosenthal said. After the duck race, the activities on Saturday will end with a semi-formal dance at 8:30 p.m. in the ballroom of the Kansas Union.
61st Year. No. 106
ASC Votes Against Support Of CRCC's Picket Protest
By Garl Noland
The All Student Council voted last night against supporting the Civil Rights Coordinating Committee in the CRCC's protest demonstrations against Sigma Nu fraternity and the Greek Week chariot races.
Reuben McCormack, Ablene junior and student body president, questioned the legality of the ASC's supporting the CRCC.
"This group is outside of student government and we have our own committee (the Human Rights Committee) to handle such problems." McCornack said.
JOHN STUCKEY, Pittsburg senior and ASC chairman, read a letter from the CRCC requesting ASC support in the March 21 picketing against the discriminatory clause in Sigma Nu's national constitution, and the March 28 picketing of the Greek Week chariot races, which, the letter states, "... will be in protest of the de facto segregation in most KU fraternities and sororities."
McCORNACK SAID he was told by the president of Sigma Nu that picketing of the fraternity probably would not help in getting the clause removed. The fraternity has attempted in the past to have the clause revoked.
The proposal for ASC support was introduced by Walter Bgoya, Tanganyika junior, who said that such action by the ASC would help Sigma Nu obtain a waiver from the national organization on its discriminatory clause. Bgoya said that by giving support to the CRCC, the ASC would be supporting Sigma Nu by applying pressure on the national organization.
Egoya's amendment was defeated, and a resolution introduced by Gerald R. Bell, McLouth senior, proposing that the ASC request the Sigma Nu national organization to grant the local chapter an exemption from the discriminatory clause, was tabled until the next meeting.
A resolution to abolish the John F. Kennedy Memorial Fund Committee was defeated after Jon J. Alexiou, Mission junior and chairman of the committee, reported on the committee's work.
Alexiou said the committee had ruled out the possibility of dedicating one of the new rooms in Watson Library in memory of the late President, because of the University's tradition of naming buildings after people who have been directly connected with the school.
THE COMMITTEE is now considering the cost of a plaque to be placed in one of the buildings on campus. It would be inscribed with a quote from one of John F. Kennedy's speeches.
Two new bills were passed and one resinded in other business
one rescinded in other business. One bill, submitted by Gary Walker, Wichita sophomore, establishes a permanent student opinion committee. The purpose of the committee is to sample student opinion on issues of local, state, or national significance, in order to help the ASC in drafting legislation and to provide students with helpful information.
The other new bill, submitted by Michael E. Miner, Lawrence junior and Ali Hassan, India sophomore provides for special representatives to the ASC. Non-voting representatives may be permitted from any
\* \* \*
Recall Petition Presented
A petition was presented to the All Student Council last night signed by 201 residents of the large women's residence hall district to recall one of its ASC representatives.
The petition, presented by Marsha Dutton, Colby senior and a resident of Carruth-O'Leary Hall, asks the recall of Peggy Connor, Sacramento, Calif., senior, on the grounds that she no longer represent the district.
MISS CONNOR was elected as an unaffiliated candidate from the large women's residence hall district in last fall's election. A former resident in C & O, she moved into an apartment this semester and now resides in the unmarried-unorganized district.
council." Miss Dutton said.
"I circulated the petition to recall Miss Connor as representative from the large women's district because we felt she did not have active contact with the district, and thus could not represent us properly on the
The constitution provides for the recall of a representative by a petition with valid signatures of 25 per cent of the district in question.
The elections committee of the ASC must determine whether the signatures are valid and constitute 25 per cent of the district's residence, which in this case is 196.
Contacted after the meeting, Miss Connor said she felt the recall was "primarily a personal insult."
"THOSE WHO have seen me on the council know that I have worked to make the ASC worthwhile and to function for the students," Miss Connor said. "If I had felt that I could not properly represent the district I would have resigned.
"I moved out of the dorm because of financial reasons, but feel that I have kept contact in order to continue to represent their interests," she said.
Shakespeare Once Thought 'Artless'
By Rogers Worthington
But the impression that Shakespeare gave of "lack of art" was partly due to his "bursting opulence in theme, mood, character, and language . . . appearing to a more disciplined age as quite unrestrained by rule or taste." Prof. Doran said.
The idea that Shakespeare was a "rude, untutored genius" was a popular one in the late 17th and early 18th century. Prof. Madeleine Doran, visiting humanities lecturer said last night.
The Augustan age held its impression of Shakespeare's "rude, untutored genius," because the age was a formalistic one, she said.
PROF. DORAN, regarded as one of the nation's outstanding Shakespearean scholars, made the remarks in a talk titled, "Shakespeare: Experimental Dramatist."
In referring to Shakespeare as an
Prof. Doran used one of Shakespeare's early plays, "Romeo and Juliet," to illustrate some of the "experimental" aspects of Shakespeare's artistry.
Rather than working against tradition and convention, she said, Shakespeare worked with them. But he did more than just "fill up old bottles with a heady brew of fresh characters and poetry," she added.
"experimental dramatist." Prof. Doran made it clear she was not a radical "either in making absolutely new beginnings or in rebelling against what had gone before."
Firstly, Shakespeare reduced the time span of the story, sacrificing ordinary realism to speed in order to gain emotional intensity and a heightened dramatic irony, Prof. Doran said.
BUT HE NOT ONLY speeded up the action, she continued, "but folded it back on itself." This technique caused the creation of expectancy, and the sharing of secrets with the audience. "This," she said, "is one of the primary techniques of Shakespeare's art."
Secondly, Shakespeare endowed his principal characters with a depth and individuality, not possessed in the original story. "He even creates an altogether new character in Mercutio, who had been no more than a name in the original story," she said.
Shakespeare also "exploited" setting to emphasize the theme and mood, the professor said. In "Romeo and Juliet," setting and imagery "together mark the central tragic irony of the play."
"Romeo and Juliet" is not perfect, Prof. Doran said, "but the play is truly remarkable in the way in which fable, character, setting, and
poetry, all work together towards a common end—the end which is the work of art, the tragedy of the star-crossed lovers."
Another aspect of Shakespeare's originality, the professor said, is his use of history. Usually regarded as "far too cluttered up with people, events, and irrelevancies to turn into drama," Shakespeare sought to bring it on the stage with a shape and a meaning.
PROF. DORAN discussed "King Lear," referring to it as Shakespeare at his most daring, and at probably his greatest reach of vision and of art."
"He usually chose the method of "Hamlet" or "Othello," in which the experience of life-like characters in a realistic setting is so vividly and sympathetically presented that it comes home to us; and this is its universal validity."
organization not representing any living group, school or academic organization. Special representatives will have speaking privileges on any measures, and under certain conditions they may propose legislation.
THE ASC RESCINDED a 1956 bill establishing the World University Service committee. Linda Crass, Wilmington, Del., senior, and WUS chairman, said she thought there was no need for a separate committee since money from Campus Chest is donated to WUS. The amendment to abolish the WUS committee was proposed by Miner.
The council voted against having primaries for this spring's election. Charles R. King, Jr., Kansas City sophomore and elections committee chairman, submitted the resolution because of the shortage of candidates.
Another resolution instructing the publications committee of the ASC to cooperate with the University Daily Kansan to determine the feasibility of constructing Kansan distribution boxes near dormitories was passed. The proposal was submitted by Sandra Garvey, St. Louis, Mo., senior.
Stephenson Affiliates With Vox
Stephenson scholarship hall voted unanimously last night to affiliate with Vox Populi.
Representatives of the hall said they had been "taken for granted" by the University Party and thus could see definite advantages to affiliating with Vox.
"We have nothing to lose and everything to gain by this move," said Raymond Germonprez, Topeka sophomore.
"UP IS always optimistic before elections, but when their candidates lose they put them aside."
"Vox impressed us with their interest and organization. Vox pointed out UP's weaknesses in the small men's district, and showed promise of helping to raise interest and participation of Stephenson in student government and campus politics." Germonprez said.
Jim Frazier, Topека junior and independent vice-president of Vox said he felt the affiliation came about naturally because "Vox offers better quality platforms, candidates and approaches to student government."
UP GENERAL secretary Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission senior, stated that Stephenson affiliated with Vox but did not switch from UP to Vox.
"Stephenson has not been a dues-paying member of UP this semester and we did not consider them as an actual affiliated hall. Thus they are not changing but making an affiliation." Whitman said.
"As regards Rav (Germonprez) he has an obligation to maintain his interest in, and to offer his services to student government. He had not done this since losing in the fall."
"UP is very interested in the affairs of the scholarship hall district and in seeing them properly represented. This does not, however, include making deals but rather to encourage their interest and participation if they so desire." Whitman said,
Weather
Tonight will be partly cloudy with a low of 38 degrees.
Tomorrow will be partly cloudy and warmer with the high to be near 70 degrees.
Winds were predicted to reach high of 20 miles per hour today.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 18, 1964
Independent Hymn
Sprung Fling
Following is a Hymn to Independents, to be sung either to the tune of "Battle Hymn of the Republic" or "Pop! Goes the Weasel."
Outshone for years by the glorious Greeks, Thwarted in our attempts at togetherness. Exhausted trying to find a function for AURH, We have emerged victorious. We have overcome our problems. We have challenged Greek Week. We have become competitive and united.
Hail Spring Fling.
* * * * *
We sing praises to thy goals and activities.
To thy 24-inch traveling trophies.
To thy inspiring spirit and participation.
To the gymkana in Lewis parking lot.
To co-ced volleyball (with alternating swats).
To thy bicycle race (past the --- ---- fountain).
To thy hot dogs, baked beans, and orange juice.
To thy egg toss, "bod" race, and pie-eating
contest.
* * * * *
And now to speak of thy highest glory:
The Duck Race.
Oh crowning event of the weekend!
Oh 12-point Duck Regulations.
How we have suffered in the friendly game:
Girls kicked in the ribs and drug into shubbery.
Boys locked in closets to keep them from stealing.
Gangs of freshman boys roaming Engel Road at closing.
The joys of duck guarding and ducknapping.
Fun, fun, fun, fun, fun.
Aren't we glad we're Independents!!!
— Margaret Hughes
The People Say . . .
Regents Benevolent
On Monday, March 16, a day which will long be remembered in Kansas history as an occasion of great humanitarian benevolence, the Kansas Board of Regents, in their infinite wisdom, voted to ban the sale of cigarettes on state operated college and university campuses effective April 15.
This letter is not written in outraged protest. Who are we to question the informed and intelligent decisions of such an eminent body of men? In actuality, this is no protest at all; we would like to lend our support to what is perhaps the most enlightened decision since the stadium expansion. This dynamic action will serve not only to protect the health of our student bodies, but will also serve to promote a resurgence of that morality upon which our nation, state, and universities were founded.
This decision could not have
Dailij Mansan
111 Flint Hall
Founded 1889, became bweekly 1904.
Autumnly 1889, daily Jan 16, 1912
Triweekly.
Baltimore, Maryland Daily Press Association,
Associated Collegiate Press Rep. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East Sold SL, Newark, NJ.
International Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during holidays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
come at a more opportune time, for it is quite in keeping with our President's war on inflation and poverty. It is refreshing to realize that the Regents have grasped the essence of this renewal of economic advancement. This policy decision will prove a great stimulus to local business and thus to the community as a whole.
Years from now history will look back upon this decision and say, "Here, here is where Freedom made her stand!" It is hoped that this action is but a prologue to the complete abolition of this evil practice. Then, and only then, will this triumph be complete. Let us all unite in prayerful dedication to this high moral end.
David W. Harrop
Kansas City, Mo., sophomore
Richard A. Lobdell
Salina freshman
Marvin D. Nestler
Atchison graduate
***
Sigma Nu and Hypocrisy Too
The idea, it seems, is to get a Negro into a Greek house. But doesn't this amount to endorsement, on the part of the Negro who may one day gain entrance into the now "white-Christian" brotherhoods, of the very thing he is ostensibly fighting against: prejudiced discrimination?
Exclusiveness is not only a characteristic of fraternities and sororities, it is a guiding principal. I see
nothing wrong with being discriminating and exclusive if the criteria are defensible on rational grounds. But what is rational about racial, religious and social prejudice? Is the Negro fighting merely for his turn to put thumbs down on the next guy who "doesn't quite fit in with us?" I would hope not, for that would be very much like kissing the hand that slugs you.
Jack Klinknett Prairie Village junior
* *
UDK Ad Flops
Gee, thanks to the great cooperation of the UDK advertising department, we almost had a complete "floop" at the Latin American evening sponsored by the International Club last Saturday, March 7.
The first ad announced our Combo Caribe in big bold letters as Como Carabi. Some people wondered whether we were going to have a Swahili spelling contest or a Polynesian bean dance. Then, five days after the program was presented, the feature story appears in the paper. Better late than never, they say, but that is stretching it a little bit too far.
By the way, please spell my hometown as Placetas, and not Placentas! I was born in that place, but not from it.
My best wishes to the staff in their future endeavors.
Ramon A. Mayor Cuba graduate student
Early Marriage Stampede Leads to False Choices
The great American stampede into early marriage is characterized by at least two major side effects: first, what might be called the "marriage blackout." This is a phenomenon in which the young woman's vision stops completely at the point of marriage. Beyond that point she loses sight of herself as an individual human being. Second, and corollary, is the "false choice," the idea that a young woman in this society must choose between marriage and a career.
IT IS AN IRONIC, though easily observed, truth that girls who do make a commitment to education and to personal development almost always find marriage opportunities within their own level of accomplishment. These marriages have a far better chance of success because they are between two whole people and seldom pose the false choice between being a partner or being a person.
What underlies the urgent drive of today's young women to early marriage as an end rather than a beginning? Many things, of course; but we should not overlook a seldom-mentioned fact: America, more than any other enlightened society in this last half of the twentieth century, puts a social stigma—overt or hidden—on the simple fact of a woman's remaining unmarried. The hue and cry is led by women. Men could hardly care less. In fact they are developing a real respect for the women with courage enough to stand against the pack.
IT HAS LONG BEEN a part of the American cultural myth that fathers are unanimous in wanting "my boy to have it better than I did." The same attitude is seen in most mothers toward their daughters. It goes something like this: Avoid the dangers inherent in years of education and years of work. Marry as early as possible without appearing to be frantic, and try for the best prospect of suburban prosperity and security.
The fact is that many American families are experiencing a declining level of education to the point where both parents are college-educated but many daughters are unlikely to be. The real mother-daughter relationship in this great American mating spectacle has been little understood outside the psychiatric world. It has received much less attention than the mother-son relationship. There is mounting evidence that Mom's memory of her own working years, her own escape from singleness, her vanity for her daughter's popularity are all fairly strong shoves toward early marriage.
For public scrutiny of the American woman, 1963 was a banner year. In addition to the very impressive report of President Kennedy's commission, there was a flood of magazine articles and books, ranging from the best-selling handbook Sex and the Single Girl to the virtually fact-free vision entitled The Feminine Mystique. Out of it all certain things emerge clearly:
WOMEN AROSE as women in the middle of the nineteenth century.
They demanded, as they should have, certain basic rights.
Having achieved these rights, they have been almost finicky in the selectivity with which they exercise them.
Rights to own things are very popular.
RIGHTS TO DO THINGS, such as become well-educated, vote, run for office, enter the professions, are handled like old-fashioned jewelry; they are valued but they lie unused in a drawer.
jewelry, they are "right" which women have always had, frequently scorned, never fought for, is the one to which they now rush in fevered haste, the right to get married.
Perhaps it is time for women, married or unmarried, to arise as individuals committed to perfect themselves as human beings wherever they are, whatever they do. In this direction lies what is called happiness. There is no mystique about it.
The Atlantic Monthly
ONE NIGHT WE
GOT HOME FROM
WHAT I THOUGHT
WAS A PERFECTLY
LOVELY EVENING
WITH MY NEIGH-
BORS AND I FOUND
THAT CHARLIE WAS
ABSOLUTELY FURIOUS WITH ME.
WELL, I FIND ITS BEST WITH CHARLIE NEVER TO LET THINGS SIMMER. SO I SAID, "WHAT'S MY CRIME TONIGHT, CHARLIE? I THOUGHT WE HAD A PERFECTLY LOVELY EVENING."
"
AND CHARLIE BLEW UP AT ME. "DO YOU EVER LISTEN TO YOURSELF TALK, PHYLLIS? MY HOUSE, MY CAR, MY CHILDREN! WEVE BEEN MARRIED FIFTEN YEARS AND IVE NEVER HEARD YOU SAY OUR! ISN'T THERE ANY ROOM FOR AN DUR' IN THIS MARRIAGE?"
WELL, I MUST SAY
THAT TIME HE
REALLY REACHED
ME. HALF THE
NIGHT I SAT UP
WORRYING WHY
DON'T I INCLUDE
CHARLIE IN MY
LIFE?
C C
AM I SELFISH?
AM I POSSESSIVE? AM I A MONSTER?
BUT THEN TOWARD MORNING IT SUDDENLY OCCURRED TO ME
WHO IS CHARLIE?
MY HUSBAND!
SO I DON'T WORRY ABOUT IT ANY-MORE.
Wednesday, March 18, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Composer to Speak On Japanese Music
A noted composer and conductor and father of a KU faculty member arrived this week for a two-week lecture series on campus.
Prof. Klaus Pringsheim will speak al director of the Musashino Academy of Music in Tokyo, Japan, is appearing here as part of a lecture tour in the United States and Canada. His youngest son, Klaus Pringsheim Jr., is instructor of political science here.
The senior Pringsheim will speak to a convocation of music students on "An Introduction to Japanese Music" at 2:30 p.m. March 24 in Swarthout Hourc Hall. The lecture, sponsored by the School of Fine Arts, is open to the public.
ANOTHER public lecture, as yet unscheduled, will be sponsored by the German department. Prof.
The KU Young Democrats Club will elect officers tonight.
Y-D's to Elect New Officers
Carl M. Logan, Holliday senior and president of the Young Democrats, said the election will be held in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union at 7:30 p.m. At 8 p.m. the doors will be locked and ballots will be cast.
Logan said the candidates for the five elective offices in the club are:
For president, Mike J. Rodgers,
Hutchinson junior, and George
Gronenman, Kansas City sophomore.
For vice-president, Marsha Babicki, Topea sophome, and Donald D. Duff. Topea sophome.
For secretary, Martha S. Allen,
Shawney Mission senior, and
Jacquelyn S. Thayer, Ellsworth
freshman.
For treasurer, Robert Jennings Smith. West Plains, Mo. sophomore, and N. L. Rapagnani, Mission sophomore.
Pringsheim will also talk on his Nobel prize-winning brother-in-law, the late Thomas Mann.
Other lectures will be to classes, and will be on topics ranging from Japanese and Thai music to functional harmony and music history.
For college council representative, Bradford Sumner, Leawood junior, and Angus L. Wright, Salina freshman.
Prof. Pringsheim has been decorated repeatedly by the German and Japanese governments for his contributions to musical life.
He has conducted most of the great orchestras of Europe, including a concert in 1952, his 50th year as a director, with the Berlin Philharmonic. A pupil of Gustav Mahler, he conducted the first complete cycle of Mahler's works with the Berlin Philharmonic in the interwar years.
AS A MUSICOLOGIST he has completed a 1,200-page work on the origins and development of occidental harmony, counterpoint and modern compositional techniques. His compositions include songs with orchestra, an opera, a Japanese symphony and incidental music for dramatic works.
In his earlier years he conducted the Vienna State Opera, Grand Theater of Geneva, the opera in Prague, and municipal theaters in Breslau and Bremen, was musical director of opera theaters in Berlin.
In 1931 he became musical director of the Imperial Academy of Music in Tokyo. Later he served for two years as musical advisor to the royal government of Thailand.
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SAN FRANCISCO- $62 round trip and NEW ORLEANS - $30 round trip
Inquire immediately at the SUA office in the Union on the main floor or call Mrs. Giele at UN 4-3477.
PAYMENTS DUE March 27
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 18, 1964
Lectures Highlight Engineering Week
Y. C. Fung, professor of aeronautics at the California Institute of Technology, officially inaugurated the KU Engineers' open house last night with his lecture on non-linear problems of measuring the strength of the thin metal cylinder walls used in aircraft and rockets.
The open house features three lectures-one for each day.
Edward E. David, Jr., director of Computing and Information Research Center of Bell Telephone Laboratories, will speak on "The Interface Between Engineering and Biology" at 4 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall of Murphy Hall.
"RESEARCH in Structural Engineering" will be discussed at 4 p.m. Thursday by Egor P. Popov, chairman of the division of Structural Engineering and Structural Mechanics at the University of California.
Senior Pictures Deadline Friday
Seniors must have their pictures taken by Friday if they wish to be represented in the commencement issue of the Jayhawker.
Estes Studio is the official photographer for senior pictures and appointments must be made through them.
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In addition to these three lectures, the New Engineering Building will be open for inspection from 3:30 p.m. until 9 p.m.today and tomorrow.
Available at KIRSTEN'S 925 Iowa (Free Parking)
On Friday, the KU student engineers will have their annual KU Engineering St. Patrick's Day. It will feature the election of a KU engineering student as St. Pat and the selection of a 1964 Engineer's queen. She will reign at a dance to be held at 8:30 that night at the Holiday Inn. Only couples will be admitted to the dance.
All KU students and interested Lawrence residents are invited. Visitors from off campus will be allowed to park in the N zone which is located immediately north of Allen Field House.
She will also reign over the KU Engineering Exposition on April 17-18.
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Forum Features Four Films
Four short films on peace, thermonuclear war, and non-violence will be presented this afternoon by the SUA Minority Opinions Forum.
One of the films, "Walk Toward Freedom," contrasts non-violence and mob violence as means of social protest. The film was made from newsreels of Montgomery, Alabama campaigns of Negroes for civil rights.
Page 5
Other films include a documentary "H-Bomb Over the U.S." which shows the effect of a ten-megaton bomb on a metropolis; "Language of Faces," a film which shows how far Americans have gone in accepting militarism; and "Which Way The Wind," a film in which actors demonstrate a nation's glorification of war.
THE FILMS will be shown at 4:30 this afternoon in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Wednesday, March 18, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Laird Wilcox. Lawrence freshman
and chairman of the SUA Minority Opinions Forum, also announced a new series of programs which present dissent from majority opinion in tape-recorded form.
"Which Way America" is a tape recording on the program which presents a debate between Barry Goldwater, U.S. senator from Arizona, and Norman Thomas, the former socialist candidate for president.
The conservative-socialist debate took place in Tucson, Ariz., less than a year ago. Wilcox said.
THE TAPE-discussion series called "Ideas of Our Times," will begin on March 19 and will be held once a week at 8 p.m. on Thursdays in the Kansas Union.
The first tape, "About Young Writers," is an address by Nedrick Young, a blacklisted Hollywood cinema writer. In the address Young discusses the effect of the film in-
Discussions will be held after each listening session. Wilcox said.
dusty blacklist on writers. The blacklist was begun in the 1940's, Wilcox said.
Wheels Begin Turning For Peace Corps Week
Five representatives of the Peace Corps from Washington, D.C., will be on campus next week to participate in the KU Peace Corps Week.
"The two goals of the week will be to try to encourage KU students to take advantage of the concentrated testing program for the Peace Corps, and also to inform the campus of the Peace Corps activities," John Fairhurst, Wichita junior, said.
The idea of having the week was suggested by officials of the Peace Corps in Washington, and the first Peace Corps representative arrived today to aid the KU committee in planning the week, Fairhurst said.
FOUR HOURS a day have been planned for testing programs, March 23-26. The programs will be administered by the Washington representatives from 10 a.m. to noon and from 2-4 p.m. in the Cottonwood-Meadowlark rooms of the Kansas Union. It is hoped that all interested students will take advantage of the testing opportunity, Fairhurst said.
Other tapes in the "Ideas in Our Times" series include talks and documentaries by William F. Buckley, editor of the conservative magazine, "National Review?" Martin Luther King, Alabama sit-in leader; Eddie Rickenbacker, conservative leader; and the Rev. Morris McCracken, leader of the Tennessee attempt of Negro farmers to register to vote.
The information program will be carried out using a Peace Corps center, set up in the union lobby, and through visits by the Washington representatives to various classes and living groups.
"We (members of the Peace Corps committee) have checked with several department heads about scheduling class appearances for the Washington representatives," Fairhurst said. Emphasis is being placed on engineering, education, and science classes.
The highlight of the week will be a Recognition Banquet at 5:30 p.m.
Wednesday, in the Kansas room of the Union. Attendance at the banquet is by invitation only. W. Clarke Wescoe, Chancellor of the University, confirmed yesterday that he will speak at the banquet, Fairhurst said.
A general Peace Corps meeting, planned by the Washington representatives, will follow the banquet and coffee, and is open to the public. The specific program for the general meeting has not yet been determined.
FOLLOWING the banquet a coffee time will be opened to all interested students.
"It is the aim of the week's activities to stimulate student interest in the Peace Corps," Clark Coan, assistant dean, and faculty adviser to the Peace Corps committee, said. "The Washington representatives are trying to encourage students to take the tests and possibly join the Peace Corps."
A Peace Corps Week booklet, compiled by the news media committee, will be distributed free of charge in living groups Friday. The booklet, which will contain basic information about the Peace Corps and Peace Corps Week, is dedicated to President John F. Kennedy.
SAN FRANCISCO—(UPI)—Vandals turned a playground gym into a swimming pool. They turned on two emergency water hydrants in the building, filling the gym with 30,000 gallons of water.
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Three coeds working in Europe EUROPEAN JOBS
The trend among students is to work in Europe during the summer. Thousands of jobs (e.g. resort, lifeguarding and office work) and travel grants are available to every registered student. Some wages are as high as $400 a month. For a complete prospectus, job and travel grant applications, a $1 ASIS book coupon and handling and airmail charges send $1 to Dept. M, American Student Information Service, 22 Ave. de la Liberte, Luxembourg City, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg.
Interviews for Membership on the
STUDENT ADVISORY BOARD
Sign up for interview times at the All Student Council office in the Union by 5:00 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18
Interview times that will be available-
- 1:00-5:00 p.m., Friday, March 20
- 9:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Sat., March 21
MEMBERSHIP—Outstanding sophomore and junior students from each school.
PURPOSE—to help advise undergraduate students during enrollment and through the academic year.
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ANNUAL PASSOVER SEDER
Reservations are being taken by Mrs. Jerome Yochim at
Reservations must be in by MAR.19
The B'nai B'rith Hillel Counselorship at the University of Kansas, announces their annual community Passover Seder for all Jewish persons and their guests in Lawrence and surrounding areas.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 18, 1964
Professors Granted Leaves
Thirty faculty members have been granted sabbatical leaves during the 1964-65 academic year, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe announced yesterday. They are:
NACHMAN Aronszajn, Summerfield distinguished professor of mathematics, to conduct research in Paris, France.
Cswald P. Backus, professor of history, to do research in Finland and Poland on the history of theft in Russian law and a history of Poland and Lithuania, 1385-1795.
Thomas R. Buckman, director of libraries, to study the organization of the book trade in Sweden.
Elliott Gillerman, associate professor of geology, to do research in Peru in connection with a Fulbright lectureship at the Escuela Nacional de Ingenieros (National University of Engineers) in Lima.
Frances Ingemann, associate professor of English, to do field work in New Guinea in linguistics.
STUART Levine, assistant professor of English, to finish a book on the arts in the United States.
Walter J. Mikols, assistant professor of physical education, to finish requirements for the Ph.D. degree at the State University of Iowa.
Leland D. Miller, associate professor of occupational therapy, to complete requirements for the Ph.D. degree at the University of Missouri.
David Paretsky, professor of microbiology, to study mechanisms of biochemical reactions in laboratories in England, Paris and Czechoslovakia.
Edward I. Shaw, associate professor of radiation biophysics, to study in the fields of mathematics and physics and conduct research in the field of radiation.
PAUL E. Wilson, professor of law to study the administration of criminal justice on local levels in England and Scotland.
Herbert F. Wright, professor of psychology, to prepare a report on the City-Town Research project and to study ecological methods of research in Europe.
Gerhard Zuther, assistant professor of English, to study German translation of American literature in the post-World War II period.
Fall semester leaves will be taken by:
Gale R. Adkins, associate professor of speech and journalism, to complete requirements for a Ph.D. degree at the University of Texne
Margaret C. Byrne, associate professor of speech, to study European methods of evaluating and training children with language disorders.
DONALD D. Haines, associate professor of civil engineering, to study methods, materials and machines used in modern construction.
Richard S. Howey, professor of economics, to conduct research in New York and Cambridge, Mass., on the early histories of economic thought.
H. A. Ireland, professor of geology, to conduct field studies on heavy mineral assemblages and correlation of tertiary beds of New Zealand.
Raymond C. Jackson, associate professor of botany, to conduct research in the southwestern United States and northern and central Mexico on the evolution of several genera of the family Compositae.
Walter E. Sandelius, professor of political science, to complete monographs in political philosophy.
DAVID S. Simonett, associate professor of geography, to complete research on the role of landslides in slope development in the high rainfall tropics.
Thomas R. Smith, professor of geography, to finish research and writing in the fields of historical cartography and economic geogra-
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George R. Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, to complete research and writing on a handbook on higher education in Latin America.
Kenneth B. Armitage, associate professor of zoology, to do research at Monterey, Calif., on population ecology of fresh water zooplanktons
RECORDS
KENNETH C. Deemer, professor of mechanics, to study engineering education in South America.
Francis H. Heller, professor of political science, to study in West Germany in the area of federalism.
Donald R. McCoy, associate professor of history, to study in Topeka, New York and Washington, D.C., on the history of the United States, 1920-29.
RECORDS
Paul G. Roofe, professor of zoology, to work on a biography of C. Judson Herrick.
Edward L. Ruhe, associate professor of English, to do research in England on Milton's early biographers and prepare a bibliographical study of Edmund Curll.
Robert D. Tomasek, associate professor of political science, to finish research and a book on Chilean politics.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 18.1964
Two Coalitions In Each Class Entered in Officers' Elections
Two coalitions each for sophomore, junior and senior class officers met yesterday's deadline for applications.
The election of class officers, ASC representatives and student body president and vice-president will be April 1 and 2.
For sophomore class, Donald Hunter, Abilene, will run for president with William Stringer, Overland Park, Jean Burgardt, Des Moines, Iowa, and Elizabeth Roberts, Shawnee Mission, all freshmen, for vice-president, secretary and treasurer respectively.
The other sophomore ticket is headed by Robert (Pete) Smith, Kansas City, and includes Thomas Alken, Lawrence; Diane Spickard, Shawnee Mission; and Dean Eaton,
Studyat Bonn U. Open to Juniors
KU's second junior-year-abroad program will begin next September at the University of Bonn, Germany, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe announced yesterday.
The first program for the academic-year-abroad is the present arrangement with the University of Costa Rica.
KU students who will have completed at least four semesters of college work and have demonstrated their ability in German will be eligible to apply for admission to the program. Next fall eight to ten students will be attending regular classes in Germany, taught in German, instead of classes at KU.
KU WILL award full academic credit for the studies at Bonn. Costs, including round-trip transportation from New York to Bonn, university fees, room and board, and field trips, will be $1,600.
Regular course work, which starts in November, will be preceded by an intensive language perfection phase involving at least six hours a day of language work at the Friedrich-Wilhelm University of Bonn beginning Sept. 14. The Bonn academic year ends in late July, with a long recess in March and April.
The first semester, students will live in private homes; the second, in university residence halls.
A limited number of scholarships will be available to cover all or part of the travel expenses.
The negotiations for the program were handled by Prof. J. A. Burzle, chairman of Germanic Languages and Literatures and longtime head of the KU Fulbright Committee.
Leawood, for the other offices.
Junior coalitions for president, vice-president, secretary and treasurer split into the following: Clay Blair, Joplin, Mo.; Earle Wagner, Independence, Mo.; Carol Nichols, Hawatha; and Elaine Rinkel, Scott City, against Alan Brightman, Leawood; Lester Kahier, Holyrood; Peggy Smith, Garden City; and Kathlyn Hogue, Topeka, all sophomores.
Running for senior class officers will be John (Tonto) Mays, Lyons, with his slate of John Daniels, Kansas City, Mo.; Mary Kay Kennedy, Lyons; and William Engber, Wichita. The other coalition is headed by
John LaFollette, Overland Park,
with Daniel Wanamaker, Salina;
Carol Stotts, Prairie Village; and
Arthur Spears, Kansas City, all juniors.
They are Judith Lind, Clay Center third year, and Terry (Butch) Ball, Atchison fourth year. Ball was elected to the Pharmacy seat as a UP candidate last spring.
In the ASC school elections two unaffiliated candidates have petitioned to run from the Pharmacy School.
The other two Pharmacy candidates who are affiliated with parties are George Brenner, Princeton third year, UP, and Gary Gilstrap, Galena fourth year, Vox.
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His talk will be sponsored by the KU Dames and the University Women's Club. The talk will be open to the public.
Shriver served eight years in the Kansas Senate and four years in the Kansas House. He is now running for his third congressional term.
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Wednesday, March 18, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Medical Center Gets $100,000 for Testing
Page 9
A grant of $100,000 to the KU Medical Center at Kansas City for a five-year testing and training program in the correct use of drugs was announced yesterday.
The grant is from the Burroughs Wellcome Fund, a pharmaceutical company active in the United States and Britain. It is the fifth such grant made by the company in recent years.
WILLIAM N. CREASY, president of the fund, said, "The primary purpose (of the fund) is to assist medical schools with a first-class teacher to develop laboratories where young physicians may learn to apply basic scientific techniques in the study of drug mechanisms."
Dr. Daniel L. Azarnoff, assistant professor of medicine at the KU Medical Center, has been appointed by the Burroughs Wellcome Fund as
director of the testing program.
LABORATORY TESTS may give clues as to how the new drugs will work, and the desirable or undesirable effects on humans might be determined in the laboratory by experiments with animals.
Dr. Azarnoff received his M.D. from KU in 1955. Before returning to KU as a member of the faculty, he taught at Washington University and St. Louis University. His research interest has been in drugs that influence the metabolism of fats by the body.
He plans to continue his research of drugs as to their side effects and relation to metabolism.
"Our program basically will be to train more physicians in how and why drugs affect body processes, and to be sure of their overall safety through proper use," Azarnoff said.
John Hanessian, a speaker from the American Universities Field Staff, will be visiting KU for eight days beginning Thursday.
He will be speaking to three or four classes each school day of his stay.
AUFS Staffer Visits KU
His main area of study for the AUFS has been of national and international developments in respect to the polar areas. He has also had an opportunity to acquaint himself with some aspects of Middle Eastern affairs, notably the progress of Iran's land reform program.
BEFORE joining AUFS in 1960, he had been attached to the staff responsible for the American contribution to the International Geophysical Year program. In that capacity, he visited bases in the Arctic and Antarctic.
In 1958 he was awarded a fellowship by the Institute of Current World Affairs to take graduate studies at Cambridge University and do research on polar problems.
The subject of his doctoral thesis now in preparation is international controls in Antarctica. The manuscript is also being considered for British publication.
Hanessian will be at KU until Friday, April 27.
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"THE COLLEGE JEWELER"
809 MASS.
WELCOME SPRING
Your present wardrobe will look like new for spring when you send it to-
Malls
Acme
1111 Mass.
Hillcrest
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 18, 1964
UCLA Meets Kansas State; Bruins Hope for Perfect Year
By Gary Kale UPI Sports Writer
UCLA hopes to sign it "30" as an end to a perfect season at the NCAA basketball tournament climax in Kansas City this weekend.
The Bruins, having eliminated San Francisco, 76-72, in the Far West regionals last Saturday, enter the crucial phase of the 1964 games with a 28-0 record. They play Kansas State in the national semifinals Friday night and if successful move to the title round against the winner of the Michigan-Duke game on Saturday.
If UCLA wins the championship, it will finish the campaign with a 30-0 record.
KANSAS STATE captured the Midwest Regions with a 94-86 win over Wichita at Wichita; Duke demolished Connecticut, 101-54, in the eastern Finals at Raleigh, N.C., and Michigan stopped Ohio University, 69-57, in the Mideast final at Minneapolis.
In the National Invitational Tournament at New York, New York University advanced to the semifinal round with a surprise 79-66 win over top-seeded Depaul and Bradley joined the Violets in this bracket by Edging St. Joseph's (Pa.) 83-81. Advancing to the quarter-finals were Army with a 64-62 squeaker over St. Bonaventure and Drake with an 87-82 triumph over Pittsburgh.
Rockhurst College of Kansas City stunned defending champion Pan American (Tex.), 66-56, to win the NAIA tournament.
The NCAA Semi-final at Kansas City is an all-round grudge gambit. UCLA defeated Kansas State earlier this season and Michigan took the measure of Duke in a previous encounter when the Blue Devils were experimenting with defensive systems.
ALL AMERICAN Walt Hazzard and Gail Goodrich, UCLA's brilliant backcourt tandem, proved too much for San Francisco, which handed the Bruins their last defeat in an NCAA consolation round last year.
Hazzard scored 25 points,14 in the second half to help erase San Francisco's 36-28 halftime lead and end the Don's 19-game winning streak.
The least worried member of the Bruins was Coach Johnny Wooden after the Bruins' poor first half at Corvallis, Ore.
"This club is a percentage shooting club," he explained, and the shots just had to fall in the second half if the players kept at it."
KANSAS STATE used an effective 1-3-1 defensive that stopped everyone but all America Dave Stall-
Former Player For Jayhawks Receives Grant
Brian Palmer, Winnipeg, Canada senior, has been named the first recipient of the Jack Wolfe Memorial award in the department of physical education.
The award memorializes the late Jack Wolfe, a former KU basketball player, who was killed in an airplane accident near Norman, Okla., last Oct. 19. Wolfe had, for several years been a basketball coach at Colby High School in Colby.
The award of $50 represents the income from more than $1,000 contributed by more than 200 friends of Wolfe, who earned the B.S. degree from KU in 1955 and the M.S. degree in 1959.
Palmer was a quarterback on the KU football squad two years ago. His strength is passing. Last fall, he did not attend KU, but instead put in a season in the Canadian professional football league.
His name will be the first inscribed on the Memorial plaque.
FRANK MALZONE OF THE Boston Red Sox led American League third baseman in double plays for five seasons from 1957 through 1961.
worth, who scored 37 points for Wichita. Willie Murrell led a balanced Wildcat attack with 28 points. Four teammates scored in double figures as Kansas State won its 13th straight game this season.
Duke moved into the semi-finals for the second consecutive year. Jeff Mullins tallied 30 points against Connecticut, which had previously upset Temple and Princeton. The Blue Devils, hoping to better their third place finish in the 1963 tourney, rapped out a 62-27 halftime lead that ended Connecticut's chances of advancement.
Cazzie Russell refused to be stopped by an injured ankle and went out to score 25 points for Michigan. Bill Buntin added 15 points for the Wolverines to help halt Ohio University dream of a title, especially after the Bobcats had upset Kentucky last Friday night.
In regional consolation games; East—Villanova defeated Princeton, 74-62; Mideast—Loyola of Chicago beat Kentucky, 100-91; Midwest—Texas Western downed Creighton, 63-52; West—Seattle trounced Utah State, 88-78.
HAVING A PARTY?
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
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350
FOR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS
SEE MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER VI 3-1211
A NEW KIND OF FOLK SOUND
the Womenfolk
Make a date with Elaine, Joyce, Leni, Babs and Judy. They call themselves "The Women-folk." They're the most thrilling new folk group on records and their sound is fresh and different on songs like "Green Mountain Boys," "Old Maid's Lament" and "Whistling Gypsy Rover." Keep your date at your record dealer today. Don't keep five ladies waiting!
RCA VICTOR The most trusted name in sound
Darnedest hillbilly weddin you ever saw! NOW SHOWING! MAIL ORDER BRIDE Buddy EBSEN·Keir DULLEA-Lois NETTLETON PANAVISION* AND METROCOLOR
Darnedest hillbilly weddin you ever saw!
Granada
TNEATR3 ...Telephone VI 3-5788
Shows at 7:00 & 9:00
NATALIE WOOD STEVE McQUEEN
Starts SAT.
NATALIE WOOD
STEVE McQUEEN
5 ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS
Love WITH THE
PROPER STRANGER
WRITTEN BY APNOLD SCHULMAN
Arts
T.
I Love WITH THE
DROPER STRANGER
Written by ARNOLD SCHILMAN
Peter Sellers • George C. Scott
Stanley Kubrick's
Dr. Strangelove
Or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying
And Love The Bomb
the hot-line suspense comedy
also starring Sterling Hayden Keenan Wynn-Slim Pickens and introducing Tracy Reed (as "Miss Foreign Affairs")
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
1
Starts TODAY!
Shows 7:00 & 9:00
This Attraction Adults $1.00
More To Come—"WONDERFUL WORLD OF BROS. GRIMM"
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
I love a man in Van Heusen "417"!
He's completely masculine and so-o-o attractive in the V-Taper fit. Slim and trim all the way. I like the casual roll of the Button-Down and the neat look of the Snap-Tab. For that smart authentic styling - sport or dress - Van Heusen's really got it!
FROM THE
417
COLLECTION
VAN MEUSEN
FROM THE
417
COLLECTION
VAN HEUSEN
VAN HEUSEN'
younger by design
V-Taper—for the lean trim look.
-
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR SALE
Page 11
for the best in used parts, motors radios,
accessories--Benson's Auto Salvage,
1092 Harper north. 4-10 grounds.
VI 3-1626. Open evenings. 3-24
17" console TV. Must sell. Call VI 2-4197
after 6 p.m.
Gibson Amplifier, 2 channel tremolo
Amps - Mains only
Reasonably priced. Call V1 s-1219. 3-20
LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. NEW AND USED GUNS, MILITARY, WEAPONS, AMMO. THIS IS THE WELCOME BOOK WITH THE REBLUE, 1026 OHIO. CALL, VI 2-1214 evertings. 3-23
1960 Ford convertible for sale by owner.
after 4.45 p.m.
Phone VI 3-23
Phone VII 3-23
Abington Book Store carries the 'Lon-
gton' at 10161 Halloween. Next to Varsity Theater. 3-19
House, four years old, excellent condition. Three bedrooms, link fence, near school and swimming pool. $700 assumes loan. $78 a month. Ops. New appliances and furniture. 1955 Miller Drive. VI 3-6994. tf
New, unused set of Encyclopedia Brill-
ing paper price. Phone VI 3-19
after 6 p.m.
1056 4-door wagon, V-8, automatic transmission, good condition. See to appreciate; $450. Call VI 3-1951 after 6 p.m. or Baldwin 954 3423. 3-19
2 stereos for sale. Console; $60. Portable.
$50. VI 2-3885.
3-19
FM. RADIO AND STEREO SALE G.E.
Compact F.M., $23. G.E. AM-CLM,
$29.94.
table 2 pc stereo $34.88.
table 2 pc stereo $60. Emerson
2 pc. stereo FM, $93. G.E. stereo FM
phono $183. Motorola coffee stereo
$159. Motorola coffee stereo and FM,
$159. G.E. portable stereo 4 spk, $100.
Motorola coffee stereo 4 spk, $100.
Motorola coffee stereo 4 spk, $55. Ray Stoneback's,
923 Mass. V 3-14710 - 3-24
Volkswagen and, Renault owners! Nylon premium tubeless tires cut to $16 plus tax (tubeless retreads, ESG, Exq. Mass.) back's Discount Tire Chelers, 929 Mass. 3-24
Tire prices slashed! Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center at 929 Mass. 36 mo tonyl tubeless tires. Four 650 x 13' $x4, Four 750 x 14' $x4, Four 670 x 15' $x4, Four 800 x 14' $x5, Plus tax, exchange. Installed! 4 whitewalls, $8 extra!. 3-26
New battery portable all transistor phono.
Sounds like a console! 4 speeds, folds into compact computer cases. Special price only!
Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. $55.38 Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. $55.38
New 16" lightweight portable TV, $99.
1 year guarantee on parts! Rent or buy,
$12 per month. Ray Stoneback's, $92
Mass. (Motorola Headquarters). 3-26
For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3-
9040 after 5 p.m. tf
Typewriters, new and used portables,
standards, electrics. Olympia, Hermes,
Olivetti. Royal and Smith Corona portables.
Typewriter, adder, rentals and service.
Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St.
VI 3-3644.
German Sheepdrops pumps, AKC registered
Lloyd Lloyd Brothers, LLC, Lloyd Bro-
sheisen, Phone KI 2-2559.
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
mechanic cream~$8.5. Lawrence Outdoor~
1005 Mass USA
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the man's notes. Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, timemegraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
FOR RENT
Furnished kitchenette on 2nd floor at
Oft-off street parking. Call VI 3-5566, 3-20
Two room furnished apartment See
3-30 p.m. 821 Indiana or call V-342
4168.
Rooms for men students. Singles for $25.
Doubles for $20. Refrigerator and linens furnished. Cooking privileges. 1116 Tenn.
or call VI 3-2575. 3-23
Single room very near Kansas Union at 1140 Mississippi. Completely remodeled bedroom. Ideal for graduate students. Air conditioned for summer. Call VI 2-0298. 3-19
Married, grad students, faculty, 2 bedroom, $75. Sleeping room, $25. 16 available in June. Reserve now. Call for brochure 211-2116. Santa Apartments 1123 Indiana.
For one or two graduate age men, three room nicely furnished apt., private bath. 4 blocks from home. For appointment conditions. Best of neighbors. For appointment phone VI-38543. tt
Crescent Heights two bedroom apartment. Phone: VI, 5-2711.
Graduate men or older undergraduates-extra nice furnished bachelor apartment Close to campus, ideal study conditions best of neighbors. Reasonably priced utilities paid. For appointment call VI 3-8534. tf
TYPING
Experienced secretary would like typing
for home. Reasonable rates. Call VI
1188
Experienced typist for thesis and term paper. Send resume to Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi VI 3-0558.
experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work stands. Phone VI 3-8379. Charles mtf Patti.
Accurate expert typist would like typing
their prompts. Call VI 3-3888 and these
Prompt sets. Call VI 3-3888.
Experienced typist with electric typewriter--fast accurate work with reason-mental papers, thematic sentiments and theses, phone VI S-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson.
Experienced Typlist—Dissertations, The-
Electric Typewriter and Electric typewriter with carbon ribbon
and special symbols available. Prompt
2000 Rhode Island, VI 3-7485. Cool
2000 Rhode Island, VI 3-7485.
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon printer. Cable typewriter. VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 408 West 13th. **tf**
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale. VI 2-1648.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
legal terms. Marsha Goff, VI 3-2577
Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tt
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type the papers, term papers, resumes, and rates. Electric Typewriter, Mrs. McEldowney. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568.
Typing; Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols carbon ribbon—if desired. Prompt, efficient service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbeck of 1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VT 3-3057
MILKILLEN. SOS—always first, quality
typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
We also use m.p.m to tape transcriptions. Office
Phone VI 3-5920. p.m.12-1021½. Matec
Phone VI 3-5920.
AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS DALE'S BODY SHOP
All makes & models
frame - body - fender - glass
VI 3-4732 704 Vermont
RISK'S
Shirt Finishing Laundry
Wash & Fluff Dry
613 Vt. VI 3-4141
One Stop Service
★ Generator & Starter Repair
★ Brake Repair
★ Lubrication & Oil Change
Engine Tune Up
Wanted, ride from 1028 Vermont to Prairie Village area. Leaving anytime after 3:30 Friday afternoon. Call VI 3-6293. 3-18
SKELLY
SKELLY SERVICE
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
300 W. 6th
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
Have a party in the Big Red School
Door and plant
Heated. Call VI 3-7453.
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
MISCELLANEOUS
TRANSPORTATION
Two tickets to N.C.A.A. finals Friday at
day call. VIII G 3-1144 after 3-
p.m.
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. tf
VOLKSWAGEN'S WANTED. Cash for your VW, Conzelman Motors, VW Sales. Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway 59 So.
tf
Reasonable priced. 3-speed man's bike.
3-1144 after 5:30 p.m. Bob 3-23
Dowell.
WANTED
Billfield, lost in Fraser Theater, Friday,
Dave Tillie, p.m. p.m. Contact
Dave Tillie, 818 Kentucky,
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
JACK & GUNN'S
Abington Book Store offers a free search service for out-of-print books. Downtown, $1015_{1/2}$ Mass. Next to Varsity Theater. 3-19
★ TUNE-UPS
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
U-Call, we haul. Anything, anytime. VI 3-5888. tt
BUSINESS SERVICES
ART'S TEXACO
LOST
VI 3-9271
9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897
VI 3-6333
24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled
YELLOW CAB CO.
Wednesday, March 18, 1964
Surprise your roommate with a cake on that special occasion. The K.U. Birthday cake is the student body a line of cakes. Free delivery and cards. Call VI 2-1791.
FRATERNITY JEWELRY
Spring Fling—Need to get ready? Needed alterations can be done by calling VI 5-240 or calling IV 5-230. Baby sitting in my home. Fenced yard. Any age sitting. Call III 3-1456. 3-24
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
IT'S OK TO OWE RAY
809 Mass.
A complete line, including,
● Lavailers ● Guards
● Pins ● Mugs
● Rings ● Crests
The only thing better than a home cooked meal is
Dinner At
DUCKS
Steaks & Seafoods
A Specialty
DUCKS
Steaks & Seafoods
A Specialty
L&M CAFE now unner new management We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Each week for delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches Your second cup of coffee always free.
Serving crisp tossed salads,
choice of potatoes, zesty
Vienna breads & country fresh
butter. Sandwiches, too!
Your favorite beverage
11-9-30 Daily 814 M
Dressmaking-aiterations. formals and
business-county towns. Ola Smith. 939$ \frac{1}{2}$ MII
VI 3-5283.
5 string banjo instruction Folk styles
Low rates. Call VI 2-9466 after 6 p.m. fm
Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 116 Mass. VI 3-1267 tf
11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass.
Tops — Glass & Zippers —
Rear Glasses — Headlines —
Panels.
University Daily Kansan
Tallor Made Seat Covers at Competitive Prices with sewed double lock stitch. Loads in Seat Covers
Jack's Seat Covers
545 Minn. VI 3-4242
Big Store Service and Small Store Attention
Book Nook
1021 Mass.
Artists - Architects
Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics
7,000 Pipes and every smoking accessory
George's Pipe Shop
George's Hobby Shop
1105 Mass. VI 3-5087
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
838 Mass.
OPEN 24 hrs. a day
JIM'S CAFE
727 Mass. VI 3-7164
Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
"SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS"
STUDENTS
PAGE* CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
Portraits of Distinction
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Photographer
HELP WANTED
Swimming pool serviceman, part time starting in April, full time in summer. Some swimming pool experience preferred. Work in Kansas City. Call VI 3-8993.
Ambitious young man with experience
in real life. Write a real proposition for the right man. Write,
giving resume of experience, age, career.
10. University Daly, Karen.
Flint Hall
3-24
Student secretary. Must be enrolled in at least one hour. 30 hours a week job.
Exceptional wages. Starting April. Through the end of June. Call UN 1-3835
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Girl to play electric organ part-time.
Call VI 3-4743.
ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY. Peppermint
Park Kiddyland operation for sale, 2203
6848 N. Washington street through cemetery,
by running this during the summer. Call
VI 2-0155 after 5 p.m. 4-3
Milliken's SOS "the best professional service"
- Notary public
- "the best professional service"
- General typing service
- Notation public
JOE'S BAKERY
Hot doughnuts—sandwich cold drink
25c delivery VI 3-4720
24H unimaging service
Mimeograph & photo-copying
616 W. 9th
- Notary public
- 24 hr. answering service
1021 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass., V1 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
Fraternity Jewelry
Balfour
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
REAL PET
Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking
GRANT'S DRIVE-IN Pet Center Sure—Everything in the Pet Field 1218 Corp VI 3-2921
Domestic & Foreign Steamship Lines
1218 Conn. VI 3-2921
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Travel Agency AIR LINES
Tours Cruises Everywhere
746 Mass.
VI 3-0152
COMPLETE SERVICE FOR CHEVYS & OLDS
- Small enough to give personal attention.
- Big enough to have all the equipment.
VI 3-7700
SHIP WINTER
738 N.H.
CHEVROLET
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 18, 1964
World Spotlight
Wallace Launches Campaign
OSHKOSH, Wis.—(UPI)—A confident Gov. George Wallace of Alabama pushed his campaign in Wisconsin's presidential primary today along the state's Fox River valley, where "people believe in conservative government."
Wallace flew here from Milwaukee aboard his state-owned, twin-engine airplane and planned to return to Montgomery, Ala., tonight after a speech to a young conservative club at Oshkosh State College.
The segregationist governor launched his campaign yesterday at Appleton. Wis., the home town of the late Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy
Appleton, Wis.; the Supreme Court of Alabama. Wallace praised McCarthy as being "a little ahead of his time" and passed out "Confederate money"—Gold-plated medallions left over from his inauguration as governor of Alabama.
WASHINGTON—(UPI)—The State Department has received reports that new efforts are being made to recruit U.S. college students for a trip to Cuba this summer.
Collegians Plan Cuba Trip
Officials warned yesterday that American citizens traveling to Cuba without permission face loss of passport and possible criminal prosecution.
A group called the "Permanent Student Committee for Travel to Cuba" has been making recruiting efforts, authorities said. Last summer 59 American students visited Cuba despite State Department opposition. Their passports were later revoked and four persons connected with the trip face legal action.
SAN ANTONIO, Tex.—(UPI)Movie star John Wayne, who is being promoted as a Republican presidential candidate in Texas by a group of college students, will make a campaign speech here next month—for another candidate.
Another Nominee For GOP
Wayne will be featured speaker at a fund-raising dinner April 6 for Gordon McLendon, Dallas radio and television executive seeking the Democratic nomination for the U.S. Senate.
A student committee at the University of Dallas opened a campaign several weeks ago to secure the GOP presidential nomination for Wayne, under the slogan "We Need A President Who Can Act."
Clay Fails Exam Again
WASHINGTON—(UPI)World heavyweight champion Cassius Clay has failed a mental aptitude test for entry into the Army for a second time, the Washington Post said today.
"I don't know the exact amount but I know I can make all the vital expenses to go now," Miss Reeder said.
Fencer Gets Trip Money
The fund to send Claudia Reeder, Shawne Mission sophomore and the only U.S. women's representative to the International Fencing Competition in Budapest, has cleared the necessary $900 mark.
The newspaper said that Clay, who failed an earlier test, took the second examination in his home city of Louisville, Ky., last Friday and scored low.
"I wish there was a way to thank everyone who made this possible, but so many are anonymous contributions."
Miss Reeder will fly from Kansas City to New York, to join the U.S. male competitor, a high school senior from New Jersey. They will飞 to Budapest for a few days' training before elimination bouts begin.
Fathers of Kappa Kappa Gamma, Miss Reeder's sorority, contributed $250 after a collection was taken at the Father's Weekend last week. Many of the contributions came from Kansas City, Topeka, and Salina alumni.
Le Carce français se réunira mercede, le 18 mars, à 4 h. 30 dans la siècle 12 de Fraser, M. Recht parlera she la théatre de la société; elle réunie doute a nous préparer à mieux apprécier la piece d'Anoulh, L'Alouette, qui sera représente la semaine prochaine. Il y a deux mesurements aussi! Tous ceux qui s'intéressent au français cordialement invites.
Official Bulletin
Lenten Bible Vigil, 7 p.m., St. Lawrence Channel
A Pentagon spokesman refused to comment on the report.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence
Chanel, 1910, Stratford, Rd.
Timely Times, 7:30 p.m. st. Lawrence Chapel. Panel for girls on "Can Catholic Marriage Really Work?"—Mrs. Alex Kevin McKeough, Mary, Garry, Stephen.
Pi Sigma Alpha 7:30 p.m. 210 Strong
discussion of April
initiation, meeting
Wednesday, Mar.18
(Regular buffet service always available)
Episcopal Evening Prayer, Danforth.
9:30 p.m.
A psychiatrist was said to have tested Clay to see if he was attempting to flunk the tests on purpose to avoid Army service, but found he was not malingering, the Post said.
The Little Banquet MALL SHOPPING CENTER
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m., St.
Lawrence, Chapel.
TOMORROW
Holy Communion, 11:30 a.m. . St.
Anselm's Chapel, Canterbury House.
DUBLIN—(UPI)—Playwright Brendan Behan alternated between coma and semi-consciousness today in his struggle for life in Dublin's Meath Hospital.
p.m. Pan American Room, Kansas Union,
Kappa Phi 7, p.m., First Methodist Church
ONLY $1
A hospital spokesman said this morning the flamboyant 41-year-old dramatist was "lapsing between a coma and a semi-conscious condition. At the moment he is semi-conscious. His condition continues to be extremely grave."
Irish Playwright In Coma
Christian Science Organization, 7:30
pm. Danforthe Everyone Welcome
A team of specialists brought in an artificial kidney machine last night in the battle against jaundice resulting from a liver ailment. Behan also has diabetes.
Epispecial Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth.
ALL YOU CAN EAT!
FRIED CHICKEN
THE Jay SHOPPE
Downtown
835 Mass.
THE Jay SHOPPE
Downtown
835 Mass.
NOW!
New spring wraps
and
culottes in denims
and dacron and
cotton
$8-$10-$12
print shirts
$4-$5-$6.50
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
The Classical Film Series
UGETSU
presents
a beautiful tale of medieval Japan (Japanese dialog — English subtitles)
- *
Wednesday, March 18 Fraser Theater-7:00 p.m.
I I
Admission: $.60
Single admission tickets on sale Now in the Kansas Union
LBJ Promises Economy in Aid
WASHINGTON—(UPI)—President Johnson asked Congress today for a "no waste, no retreat" foreign aid program of $3.4 billion and promised to cut bureaucracy and speed up efforts to put recipient nations on a self-supporting basis.
It was the smallest foreign aid request since the program began in 1948. Johnson, aware of the growing tendency in Congress to slash foreign aid funds, warned against cutting his request.
"We will be laying up a harvest of woe for us and our children if we shrink from the task of grappling in the world community with poverty and ignorance," he said.
BUT INITIAL REACTION in Congress was that the program would be cut anyway. Rep. Otto E. Passman, D-La., chief house critic of foreign aid, said he was sure there was "plenty of fat in it" and senate GOP leader Everett M. Dirksen, Ill., predicted it would be cut.
The President requested new legislation to permit the foreign aid agency—known as the Agency for International Development (AID) —to cut deadwood from its staff.
He also announced plans to appoint a new committee of "distinguished private citizens" to keep a continuing eye on AID programs and advise him on policy.
Johnson said "waste or inefficiency or extravagance" in the AID program could not be tolerated, but it was "equally repugnant to our national interest to retreat from our obligations and commitments while freedom remains under siege."
THE PRESIDENT SET the foreign aid request for the fiscal year beginning next July 1 at $3.4 billion, made up of $1 billion military assistance and $2.4 billion economic aid.
He emphasized that this was more than $1 billion less than the late President Kennedy requested and only slightly more than the $3 billion Congress actually voted.
Justifying his request, Johnson said: "We wish to build a world in which the weak can walk without fear and in which even the smallest nation can work out its own destiny without the danger of violence and aggression."
He said Communists "flourish wherever we falter."
Johnson placed heavy stress on increasing efficiency. He said the AID agency had been ordered to reduce its personnel by 1,200 by July 1,1965.The agency now employs 7,000 Americans and 9,000 foreign nationals.
He said further consolidation of overseas AID missions with U.S. embassies had been ordered, and that the pentagon had been instructed to reduce the staffs of overseas military AID missions.
HE ASKED CONGRESS for authority to fire "a limited number" of supervisory and policy-making officials of AID who could not otherwise be dismissed because of job protection. He also requested legislation to apply foreign service firing procedures to civil service employees of AID who now may be fired only for gross failings.
employees of M.D whose Another major theme of the message was getting more countries to the point where they no longer need U.S. aid except for loans on hard business terms.
hard business terms. "Wherever possible," Johnson said, "we will speed up the transition from reliance on aid to self-support."
Johnson strongly urged Congress to restore funds cut by the House from the U.S. contribution to the International Development Association, which would be more than matched by funds from other industrial nations unless the U.S. backs out. He said this country should encourage other advanced nations to bear their share of the foreign aid burden.
Daily hansan
Thursday, March 19, 1964
61st Year, No. 107
Lawrence. Kansas
ANOTHER DEMONSTRATION protesting the discriminatory clause of Sigma Nu fraternity is planned for Saturday.
Plans for the picketing of Sigma Nu fraternity during the Interfraternity Council rush weekend were discussed last night. The demonstrators, in dress clothes, plan to march down Jayhawk Blvd. from the Kansas Union and then to the Sigma Nu house on Emery Road. They will picket from 1:30 to 3 p.m. in front of the fraternity house.
George Ragadale, Lawrence senior and president of the Civil Rights Council, said the demonstrations are "definitely not a protest against the Greek system."
CRCC to March at Lighting Of Greek Week Relay Torch
The CRCC is also planning to demonstrate during the Greek Week chariot races.
"Many of us represent fraternities and sororites," he said. "We hope by exhibiting our sincere concern we will arouse the student body, the administration, state officials and the public to the extent that someone will take positive action to give fraternities and sororites the freedom
By Gary Noland
Rinkel said a letter would be sent to the attorney general, explaining the purpose of the demonstration. The CRCC supports the Greek system, but it wishes to register its "concern about the existing de facto segregation," he said.
When Atty, Gen. William Ferguson next Saturday lights the torch for the Greek Week relay from the Capitol in Topeka to the Campanile, he will be confronted with civil rights demonstrators from KU.
The Civil Rights Coordinating Committee announced last night it will carry its protests against alleged Greek discrimination to the Capitol. This part of Greek Week festivities is scheduled to be televised.
THE EVENT WHICH will be picketed is a planned ceremony on the steps of the Capitol. The attorney general will light a torch which will be relayed by Greek runners from Topeka to the Campanile, where the traditional chariot races will begin.
"We see this as a means of telling the people of our state that there are KU students concerned about human dignity." Elbert J. Rinkel, Scott City junior and a member of CRCC, said.
to recognize the equality of minority groups."
RAGSDALE SAID the Sigma Nu's have changed their position concerning the demonstration. He said that during a discussion with members of the fraternity, he received the impression that the Sigma Nu's felt the pressure of the pickets would help them get the discriminatory clause
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe today issued a statement giving the University's position on the subject of discriminatory clauses in the constitutions of Greek living organizations.
"I have been visited by several thoughtful members of the University student body who have asked that the University's policy statement on discriminatory clauses in fraternity and sorority constitutions, issued in 1962, be reissued. I am pleased to reissue the statement and to note the evidences of progress," Wescoe said.
The text of the statement is as follows:
As a general principle, the University upholds the basic human right of individuals or groups to
The University of Kansas supports all organized groups on its campus in their efforts to make this a better place in which to live and study. It has supported fraternities and sororites in the past, and will do so in the future, for their positive contributions to the areas of student housing and social adjustment.
removed from their national constitution. Ragsdale said he was told later by the president of Sigma Nu that this was not the case.
John Elwell, president of Sigma Nu fraternity, said last night that Ragsdale had misinterpreted what was said during the discussion.
(Continued on page 12)
select those with whom they wish to be closely associated. The University believes, however, that discriminatory clauses which remove from consideration for membership persons solely on the basis of their race are not consistent with the principles of our nation, and it is the hope and expectation of the University that these clauses will be removed where they still exist.
Such action will be of value only as it comes freely and voluntarily, because the members of these organizations have come to recognize for themselves how prejudice hurts not only those it is practiced against but those who practice it. For this reason the University of Kansas plans to issue no decrees and to set no deadlines. The progress in this matter shown by fraternities and sororites in the past gives the University confidence that they can work out for themselves solutions which will satisfy not only themselves but the society in which they live.
W. Clarke Wescoe Chancellor
U.S. Satellite Fails In Orbiting Attempt
CAPE KENNEDY — (UPI) The United States today apparently failed in an attempt to orbit a satellite designed to examine the ionosphere and test a new space tracking system using intense rays of light called Lasers.
The double duty satellite was hurled aloft by a three-stage delta rocket at 5:14 a.m. but disappeared about 20 minutes later.
Official Hits AMA 'Deal'
WASHINGTON —(UPI)— Rep. Frank Thompson Jr., (D-N.J.), accused the American Medical Association today of siding with the tobacco industry against federal efforts to label cigarettes a health hazard in return for support in its fight against Medicare.
Thompson said the AMA opposed the regulation, proposed by the Federal Trade Commission, as part of a deal to get tobacco state congressem to vote against the administration's proposal for a health insurance plan for the aged under social security.
The accusation was vigorously denied by the AMA.
THE AMA'S opposition was one of the surprise developments of the Federal Trade Commission's hearings this week on the proposed cigarette advertising and labeling regulations.
Dr. F. J. L. Blasingame, AMA executive Vice President, in a letter to the commission, said that the health hazards of "excessive smoking have been well-publicized for more than 10 years and are common knowledge." He said the answer to removing the hazards from cigarette smoking lay in more research, not in any labeling rules.
TUESDAY, JULY 20TH
THE YORK TIMES
YORK, N.Y. -- A group of kids playing basketball outside a house on Tuesday night.
Two unidentified Pearson Hall men gang up on a wet and unidentified Battenfeld Hall man during one battle scene last night, probably during their study break.
The battle consisted of about a hundred scholarship hall men, all in the interest of continuing the Battenfeld-Pearson feud. These two halls have been feuding for some time now, and
the semi-warm night was too much of a temptation.
The battle appeared to consist of the Battenfeld men running across the street to douse the Pearson men, retreating, and then being attacked by the wet Pearson men.
The water follies were watched by about 25 cautious, but dry, spectators; all of whom seemed quite water-shy.
THE SPACE AGENCY said radio data indicated that the third stage, the rocket that gives its payload the final push into orbit, worked for about half of its normal burning time.
"This subnormal performance would prohibit attainment of orbit," a space agency spokesman said. If the satellite was not traveling fast enough, it would fall back to earth to a fiery death.
The Douglas Delta rocket has scored in unprecedented string of 22 straight success. Its last failure came on the first delta shot in May, 1960, with an Echo balloon satellite.
ALTHOUGH THE SATELLITE'S primary job was to explore the ionosphere on a global basis for the first time, it was the unrelated laser experiment that gave the 120-pound propeller-shaped moonlet special significance.
The satellite's loss ruined planned attempts tonight to test the first practical space application of lasers. A pencil thin beam of red ruby light from an energy gun mounted on a telescope at Wallops Island, Va., was to have been fired at the satellite.
Scientists hoped that the ray, many times brighter than sunlight, would be reflected by 360 tiny mirrors mounted on the satellite and bounce back to the Wallops station. By measuring the time the beam took to return to earth, it was hoped a fix would be obtained on the satellite's position far more accurate than radar or radio tracking.
Weather
The rain which started this morning will continue tonight with a chance for a thunderstorm, according to the Weather Bureau. Clouds will be decreasing later tonight and skies will be fair Friday. Tonight's low will be around 30 and temperatures will be colder tomorrow.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 19, 1964
---
Freedom. Freedom
Smoke, Smoke
Look what the grey-beards on the Board of Regents did! Those yokels took away our freedom. Can't buy the daily smokes on the hill any more. Let me tell you, buddy, we're coming to a sorry end. A fellow doesn't have his freedom any more.
***
Freedom, freedom, freedom. The word probably has as many connotations as any word in the language.
What we need is more freedom. Freedom to be a doper. Freedom to jump off a bridge. Freedom to destroy oneself. Freedom to work on a lung cancer or a coronary, can't be hindered by driving downtown to buy cigarettes.
Bristle up. Get mad. The Board of Regents treats us like a bunch of kids. They took away our freedom.
-Tom Coffman
Justice:
Ruby Trial
The dramatic trial of Jack Ruby, which has received world-wide attention, ended last Saturday with a verdict that will require him to go to the electric chair. The judgment of the 12 men and women of the jury has created a mixed feeling of approval and disapproval over the world.
It has been the recitation of some people that the killing of Lee Harvey Oswald, the suspected assassin of President Kennedy, shows Jack Ruby's love for the late President, and therefore, he (Ruby) should not be punished by the law. His action may have been due to his passing through a high emotional strain at the time of the incident. On the other hand, many people consider Ruby a criminal rather than a hero for his action.
SURELY, HIS ACTION was not heroic for it covered forever the real truth.
Some people describe his motive for his action as a move to gain publicity. But it is hard to say anything about his motive, since many doubt whether Ruby knew the actual motive.
The defense attorney, Melvin Belli, tried to prove Ruby's act as a temporary insanity which, of course, is not true. An insane man would never be able to do what Ruby did in presence of the so-called highly qualified security officers.
THE EVIDENCE presented to show Ruby's insanity was disregarded by the jury which condemned him to death. The jury members had a choice of four verdicts. The sugegsted verdicts were: guilty of murder with malice, guilty of murder without malice, innocent, and innocent through madness. The jury reached the verdict, guilty of murder with malice, since other choices were invalidated by the presented facts.
But the judgment was not acceptable by Mr. Belli, who said he will take the case to the courts of appeal. The defense attorney accused the jury of being prejudiced and biased. Among his several accusations was included a seating of a juror with alleged prior decision.
"Appeal. Appeal. I want to assure each one of these jurors that we will take this case to a court where there is justice under the law," said Mr. Belli after he heard the verdict.
THE DEFENSE ATTORNEY, of course, was referring to the courts of appeal which have powers to reverse the decision of the lower courts or send back the case with recommendations if they find errors in the proceedings of the lower courts.
But it is certain that the efforts of the jury in the Ruby trial were to seek the truth and promote the fundamental law of the state and human decency.
— Vinay Kothari
An Editorial From the Past:
On CRCC
The hottest places in hell are reserved for those who, in a time of . . . moral crisis, maintain their neutrality. -Dante
Hypocrisy or Truth?
The disagreement over the Military Ball being presented under false auspices has served to bring out the very attitude that the opposition is decriving. The epitom of this attitude is Mr. Neuman's letter which glorifies serving in the military. The point in question is not the necessity or righteousness of the military, it is the fact that the military uses deception and falsities to entice young men into its service. The Military Ball is an excellent example of this.
The People Say...
Through the use of this device the military attempts to present a false picture of its reality. What sort of a picture of the service does the Military Ball present? That the service is glory, honor, prestige and integrity. On the basis of functions such as the Military Ball and the misleading advertisements of the various branches, who
High sounding and hypocritical phrases such as "Young men interested in safeguarding the security of our country..." and "They are taught the principles of leadership..." are precisely the perversions of truth used to lure young men into the clutches of the military. Once they have signed away their constitutional rights they are trapped and all the pretenses and shams are dropped away to show the naked steel. The recruiting offices do not tell what the service consists of in actuality. Hypocrisy, lies, aggrandizement of power, the worthlessness of the individual and a Machiavellian suppression of decency for a justifiable goal. There is no denying the need for a military force but there is no need to present a completely false and deceiving front. More truthful forms of advertising might be
could deny the splendor and virtue of serving in the military?
I am not speaking in a theoretical manner. I am speaking from the experience of living under this tyrannical repression of freedom and life for three years. Although I despise this type of militaristic society I abhor even more the liars and phonies who attempt to present this Dantean Inferno as decent and good.
"Learn how to get power by stepping on other people;" "Have your own slaves;" or "How to be cruel and unjust in 10 easy lessons." They don't teach leadership, they teach how to order people about by using one's power.
I am not against the Military Ball as an enjoyable social event. I am decrying the use of it as a decoy to trap enlistees. By and of itself it will not do this, but it is a symbol of the type of program used by the military.
Dick McLaughlin
Dick McLaughlin Shawnee Mission junior
Lodge
Lodge
Lodge
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©1964 HERBLOCK
©1964 HERBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
"That's The Trouble Dealing With People That Can Write"
The Tempest, to sit down and read through, is a pretty silly fairy tale of white magic, adolescent crushes, and Italian intrigue, although it has been called "the story of Renaissance man" and "one of the most beautiful plays in the world." Last night the University Theatre staged a most original and creative interpretation of the Shakespearean comedy.
THE DEEP STAGE in Murphy Hall was filled with an arrangement of ramps and stairs and platforms, with occasional additions of such scenery as the ship. The masterful lighting and sound effects added to the setting's novelty and effectiveness. Magnificent described the costumes: rich, clashy-colored, and glittery.
Arnold Moss, a professional actor reputed to be one of the world's ten best Shakespearean performers, was disappointing. As the benevolent magician ex-king Prospero, Moss muffled and even missed some of his lines, although his soliloquies were sometimes impressive.
Murphyites Stage An Imaginative 'Tempest'
RICHARD FRIESEN, Prairie Village junior, was graceful as Ariel, whose spirit was well amplified by the four female manifestations of Ariel's Quality.
Caliban, Richard Kelton (Miami, Okla., junior), Trinculo, Charles Schmidt (Dixon, Ill., graduate student), and Stephano, Bruce Owen (Miami, Okla., graduate student), provide hilarious high points with their drunken quest and eight-limbed monsters.
THE KING OF NAPLES and his entourage were entertaining in some well-blocked scenes, especially the witty sword-playing and monster evasion.
The most enjoyable parts of the play were the comic scenes of several groups of characters. Miranda, played by Sharon Scoville (Kansas City graduate student), and Ferdinand, Paul Hough (Topeka freshman), seemed a pair of Rock Chalk Revue rejects in their burlesque portrayal of two infatuation-smitten teenagers.
Perhaps there was too much business—trap doors and cart wheels and various stunts—in an attempt to keep Shakespeare from dragging. Many of the scenes were deleted or changed around, including Prospero's epilogue, which was taken from a fourth-act speech.
But on the whole, the play was a pleasing balance of the classic production and an imaginative approach.
Margaret Hughes
111 Flint Hall University of Kansas student newspaper
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Italy Receives Financial Aid To Curb Inflationary Trends
Page 3
By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst
The end of the first 100 days of Italian Premier Aldo Moro's center-left government finds important changes occurring, both in the nation's "miracle" economy and among its left-wing political parties.
Italy's economic growth in recent years has surpassed even that of France and West Germany. But it also has led to galloping inflation which recently has caused a flight of capital and a trade deficit threatening her gold and dollar reserves.
Over the weekend, the United States and a number of European banks moved to tide Italy over its financial emergency until the government's own attempts to put on the inflation brakes take hold.
The government's own efforts have included new taxes to help meet a budget deficit and measures to curb consumer spending.
THE HELP CAME in the form of a billion dollars in credit designed to halt speculation in the Italian Lira.
Particularly hard hit was the booming business in new automobiles which rapidly has been converting Italy to a nation on wheels
The curbs include tightened restrictions on instalment buying, a new auto sales tax and vastly increased gasoline taxes.
Leaders representing 40 per cent of the party membership announced in January they were breaking away from the Nenni leadership and forming a party of their own to be known as the Italian Socialist Party of Proletarian unity.
THE AUSTERITY measures have brought complaints from both labor and business and have led to strains within the Moro government in which left-wing socialists are participating for the first time since the years just after World War II.
However, since there seems no practical alternative to the center-left cooperation of Socialists and Christian Democrats, the government is expected to survive and there are hopes that steps to hail the inflationary spiral have been taken in time.
Directly connected with Socialist Leader Fietro Nenni's decision to lead his left-wing party into the government has been an important party split.
IT GAVE ITALY three socialist parties, including the democratic Socialists of Giuseppe Saragat who now is Italian foreign minister. Nenni is a deputy premier.
Outside the government, but pressuring for a voice, are the Italian Communists who themselves are split.
One out of four Italians votes Communist, but in the party conference which ended Sunday in Naples there were complaints of a declining membership and charges that the leadership had lost touch with the people.
Chi Omegas Begin Work On Construction of Wing
Erected in 1925, the Chi Omega sorority house is now undergoing its first major addition.
The construction, which began Feb. 27, should be completed by next September, Mrs. Paul R. Dring,
1654 University Drive and a member of the corporation board of the Chi Omega, said.
The new addition became necessary, Jo Lynne Talbott, Shawnee Mission senior, and a member of Chi Omega, said, because the original building was constructed to handle only 48 women. There are 60 women living in the present chapter house.
Miss Talbott explained that when the new addition is finished the capacity of the house will be 70 women, and each room will provide living quarters for two women.
An important element in the debate was the split between a pro-Chinese faction and the leadership of Palmiro Togliatti, the Communist veteran who cautiously advocates the co-existence line of Nikita Khrushchev.
The $125,000 project includes a
large dining room and kitchen on the ground floor, and five new bedrooms and a bath on both the second and third floor, Mrs. Dring said.
"Basically, it will make the house look double its present size," Mrs. Dring said. She explained that the new wing will be constructed to look as much like the present house as possible.
Thursday, March 19.1964 University Daily Kansan
The new wing will be constructed so that it will connect with the north side of the present house. Mrs. Dring said. It will not be necessary to knock out the present north side of the house completely. Mrs. Dring explained. "There will just be enough construction to connect the hallways," she said.
There will also be some remodeling of the housemother's quarters and the area directly right of the main entrance to the house, Mrs. Dring said.
Khrushchev's suggestion that Italian Communists improve their relations with the Catholic church in a spirit of coexistence view little public reaction from the delegates. It had been interpreted as a move by Khrushchev to improve Communist chances for a role in government and to check the pro-Chinese.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 19, 1964
'No Pirating' In Universities Declares Regents' Chairman
The chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents has declared that there will be "no pirating" of state university coaches and that Kansas State University football will not be pulled out of debt by raising student fees.
Henry Bubb, Topeka financier and chairman of the Regents, discounted a United Press International hint that Wichita University basketball coach Ralph Miller might come to KU next year and also said that K-State football is not the responsibility of the Regents.
COACH MILLER said yesterday that the UPI story of his wanting to come to KU was purely speculative and a "vicious rumor which could do nobody any good."
This was after UPI had previously quoted coach Miller as saying, "There will always be a soft spot in my heart for Kansas. There are not many schools I would consider moving to from Wichita, but Kansas
University is the big one among those I would consider."
The UPI story continued to quote coach Miller as saying he was not seeking another job, but "if I wanted to change, this would be the time to do it. But I don't see that there is anything I can say as long as they have a coach at Kansas."
THE POLICY of the Regents through the years has been against "pirating" coaches or faculty members among state schools. On July 1, Wichita University will become a member of the state university system controlled by the Regents.
Bubb declared there was "nothing" to the UPI report that coach Miller wants to come to KU.
"THERE WILL be no pirating among the institutions in this state and that applies among coaches as well as faculty members," he stated. Bubb also said yesterday that K-State University will have to find its own way out of its football dol-
drums, affirming that football was not the responsibility of the Regents.
The sum of $60,000 has been mentioned as the figure needed to bolster Kansas State's 1964 football program, and a proposal to raise student fees $5 a semester was brought up in Manhattan Sunday.
B U B B DECLARED yesterday,
"We're not going to raise fees."
He said if Kansas State wants to raise money for athletics through fees, it is up to K-State president James McCain to submit a proposal.
"I am almost certain the board will okay almost anything he submits that doesn't raise fees," Chairman Bubb said.
He said the Regents will deal only with the K-State president and "we are not going to tell them (the students) they have to have a good football team."
The K-State student senate has scheduled a meeting today to consider other means of bailing out its football team.
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Page 5
Metallurgy Department Moves Office to Fowler
The office of Metallurgy and Materials department is on the move to Fowler Shops.
Metallurgy, one of the eight branches within the School of Engineering and Architecture, has had its offices housed in Lindley Hall since the late forties when the metallurgy department was named Mining and Metallurgy.
METALLURGY HAS had its shops and equipment mostly in Fowler Hall, which means a lot of walking for the professors between the offices and the work shops. Now both the offices and shops are
Poisoning Talk Set For Tonight
The School of Pharmacy and the Lawrence Parent Teachers Association (PTA) will co-sponsor a program tonight to instruct parents in methods of protecting their children from being poisoned.
The talk will be at 7:30 p.m. in the Lawrence High School Auditorium. No admission will be charged.
The Public Health Service reports each year about 500 children under five die as a result of accidental poisoning. Such total poisoning accidents involve 500,000 children per year.
The fault of many such accidents falls on the parents for leaving harmful poisons within reach of children. Aside from the medicines like aspirins and sleeping pills, the following liquids are equally dangerous: cleaning and polishing agents, pesticides, and petroleum distillate products like kerosene, lighter fluid, furniture polish and waxes.
The talk on poisoning is part of National Poison Week.
Metallurgy is not connected with the Geology department, although much of their work was connected with the Geology department when mining was still in the metallurgy division. Since the metallurgy division has gone to the study of refined metals, the connection has ended.
The new department of Metallurgy and Materials Engineering is the result of combining the old department of Engineering and Manufacturing Processes with the department of Mining and Metallurgical Engineering since both use the same shops.
METALLURGY AT KU has become more concerned with the uses and working of metals rather than with the extraction of metals from ores. This gradual shift to the study of metal working and machining is the common ground that they find with the mechanical engineers.
Kenneth E. Rose, professor of metallurgy engineering, said he hoped that the move to Fowler Hall would be completed by the end of this semester.
The geology department and the chemical engineers will occupy the Metallurgists' space in Li- $ ^{i}$ Hall when the metallurgists finish moving.
Thursday, March 19, 1964
Hospital Director Gets Merit Award
The director of Watkins Memorial Hospital received an Award of Merit from the Central College Health Association (CCHA).
The presentation was made during the CCHA conference Saturday at South West Missouri State College in Springfield, Missouri, to Dr. Ralph Cautenon for his services to the state, community, and campus.
SAN FRANCISCO—(UPI)—Oops! The state Division of Industrial Safety conducted tests and found that floors were too slippery in its local offices.
A brief memorial was made at the conference for Dr. M.E.Gross, then president-elect of the association and a member of the Watkins Hospital staff, who died January 7, 1964.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 19, 1964
Consultant Arrives to Advise Peace Corps Week Planning
Planning for Peace Corps week reached the final stages yesterday with the arrival of Gregory Simms, Peace Corps consultant from Washington.
Simms, a KU graduate, met with the Peace Corps Week committee yesterday to complete plans for the upcoming week March 23-26.
"We want to share with the campus what the Peace Corps is and what it is doing abroad," Simms said after a planning session.
"I THINK Americans have been sheltered from some of the world's reality," Simms said. "It certainly isn't a popular sport to visit America's slums."
Simms entered the Peace Corps after working as a social worker in New York City. In New York he was director of the Mariboro Houses Community Center of the New York City Housing Authority.
"The Peace Corps offers a unique opportunity to people who wish to share the advantages of our society with others who are less privileged" Simms said. The Peace Corps volunteers also learn to appreciate the situations of the world's underprivi-
legged people, as they are required to live at the same standard as the people with whom they work, he said.
"THE ADVANTAGES to people with backgrounds in anthropology, languages, law, and architecture are obvious." Simms continued. "The service allows young people to practice their careers at a level of respect and challenge, without the competition that is always present here."
Simms was not a Peace Corps volunteer, but has always been a staff man. From September 1962- August 1963 he served as the Peace Corps Deputy Representative in the Dominican Republic.
At present, Simms works with the Peace Corps to aid college Peace Corps programs.
COLLEGE PROGRAMS, like the one at KU next week, serve as "bridges between under-developed societies." The under-developed societies are a) the masses of small under-developed nations; and b) the United States, which is under-developed in its consideration and understanding of the "poor" nations, he said.
STUDENTS
PLANNING A PARTY OR BANQUET?
CHECK OUR FACILITIES FOR YOUR NEEDS LARGE OR SMALL GROUPS DANCING SPACE AVAILABLE FOOD AND BEVERAGE SERVICE
Contact Mr. Larson at VI 3-7991
Holiday Inn
METRO HOTELS
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And at such a modest cost . . .
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Assisting Simms are seven other Washington representatives from Peace Corps headquarters. Among the representatives to visit during the week will be a KU graduate, Janet Hanneman, who has served as a Peace Corps volunteer nurse.
These units have been newly decorated — with new drapes, carpets disposals, etc. All Units Air-Conditioned Provincial Furniture Available
P
THE WASHINGTON representatives will answer students' questions in an information booth which the Peace Corps committee will set up in the Kansas Union lobby for the week.
PARK PLAZA SOUTH
These representatives will also be visiting living groups and will be participating in various classes. Arrangements for classroom presentations were scheduled to be completed last night, John Fairhurst, Wichita junior and chairman of the committee, said.
Ph. VI 2-3416
1912 W. 25th
Day or Night
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GROWTH
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ST. LOUIS—(UPI)—Jack Sophir drives around town in an automobile of ancient vintage on which he tells one and all that he is a "Jack of All Trades" and "Master of Some." Sophir offers services from house wiring and roofing to art lessons in drawing, painting and sculpture. All this and more is printed
on the body of the automobile.
Also visible: Player pianos repaired; oil paintings cleaned; antique restoration; plumbing and tree pruning, carpentry, masonry, repairs to automobiles, musical instruments, power mowers, electric appliances, welding, brazing and even rototilling.
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"THE COLLEGE JEWELER 809 MASS.
Page 7
Hardy Poles Make Economic Advances
Ey Phil Newsom
UPI Foreign News Analyst
By Pim Newson
From 1957 through 1963, The United States sold Poland around $500 million worth of farm products, including sizeable amounts of grain.
The grain went into Polish hams which in turn went into Polish exports, becoming one of Poland's best earners of Western hard currency.
By the end of 1963, the figure had fallen to 55 per cent with machines and industrial consumer goods increasing to 45 per cent. But the system depends upon an important "if."
And in its turn the hard currency went into the machines needed by Poland in her headlong rush to convert an agricultural economy to an industrial one. That Poland has made progress under the system may be seen by a look at the nature of Polish exports.
The "if" is the weather. A succession of two disappointing crop years and the severe winter of 1962-63 broke the cycle and the Polish economy began to slide toward stagnation. Transportation broke down, plants closed for lack of fuel and raw material. Unemployment rose and with it the discontent of Polish workers.
IN 1956, 75 per cent of Polish exports consisted of foodstuffs, raw materials and semi-finished goods.
Consumer costs for coal, gas and electricity jumped 100 per cent.
The hard-drinking Polish worker was hit by a 15 per cent jump in the price of vodka.
THE CENTRAL COMMITTEE of the Polish Communist Party has been wrestling with the problem of the troubled economy since last July and on June 15 is expected to present its economic plan for 1968-70 to a party congress. For the
Official Bulletin
Obtain a questionnaire for special Peace Corps examination in Peace Corps of Students' Office, 228 Strong. Exam administered to any interested student (and qualified non-students) twice daily. Mon. through Thurs. and Sat. morning.
TODAY
Teaching Interviews: Mar. 23. Rowland Calif. Make appointment in 117 Bailey.
der deutsche Stammtisch trifft sich
am Donnerstag, den 19. März, um 4 Uhr
30 in der "Bierburst", Ecke 14th - Tenn.
wir werden auch einige Lieder singen.
University Daily Kansan
Latter-Day Institute of Religion, 4:30 p.m. Pan American Room, Kansas Union Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Gate, 101 West Fulton Rd.
Kappa Phi, 7 p.m., First Methodist Church.
Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Everyone wel
College Life, 9 p.m. Sunflower Room Kansas Union. "Is There an Answer to the Race Question?"—Nolan Ellison former KU basketball star.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m., St.
Lawrence Chapel.
Jewish Community Center
7:30 p.m., 917 Highland Dr. Refresh-Take
music
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Dentforth
congress it will be the first meeting since 1959.
Young Democrats Elect New Officers
Major goals of the new five-year plan, according to party leader Wladyslaw Gomulka, will be creation of 1.5 million new jobs and elimination of the need to import grain for bread and animal fodder.
The Young Democrats met last night and elected five new officers.
They are Mike J. Rogers, Hutchinson junior, president; Marsha Babicki, Topeka senior, vice-president; R.J. Smith, West Plains, Mo. sophomore, Treasurer; Marsha Allen, Lawrence junior, secretary; and Bradford Sumner, Leawood junior, collegiate council representative.
The whole picture of Poland is one of contrasts and Gomulka, one of the few men successfully to defy Khrushchev in recent years has ruled by delicate checks and balances.
Within the party he balances a right wing favoring return to the hard line of Stalinism against "revisionists" arguing that to win the support of the masses the party must serve the popular interest.
THE GOVERNMENT opposes the Catholic Church to which most Poles belong and occasionally increases pressure against it but short of similar measures practised within the Soviet Union.
AUTO WRECKING NEW and USED PARTS
Free enterprise is permitted to an extent greater than in any other Communist-bloc nation. Official statistics show more than 15,000 privately operated retail stores in Poland.
Tires and Glass
Nearly 90 per cent of Poland's farmland is in private hands.
East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956
The Polish farmer is like the weather, easy to talk about but hard to change. Polish agriculture is the best of any Communist nation. But the Polish peasant is stubbornly fond of his own way of life.
He also is stubbornly fond of his horse which the government would like to replace with a non-grain-eating tractor. Recently the government noted with some dismay that the horse population had increased to the point where there are now 14 horses for every 250 acres of privately-owned land.
Steak Dinner
Sunday Nites
$1.25
4:30 - 10:30
DINE-A-MITE
23rd & La.
Sigma Xi To Meet
Carlyle S. Smith, professor of sociology and anthropology, will speak at the meeting of Sigma Xi, honorary scientific research society, at 7:30 p.m. today in room 411 of Summerfield Hall.
Prof. Smith will speak on his recent archeological exploration in Polynesia and show slides.
Thursday, March 19, 1964
LONDON, — (UPI) — Charles Cooper, 46, said last night he lost interest in girls after one jilted him when he was 16.
Monev. But No Women
Too bad, girls. Cooper won $633,375.20 in the football pool yesterday.
Be a Scholar before graduation or a Wit, Hero, Playmate, Wolf. Authentic-looking certificates, 179 various "Titles" available. Fool people. AweFS. Send to friends. Free brochure. Write Gag Awards, Box 66745. Houston, Texas, 77006. Be a speculator.
TRADITIONAL FOOTWEAR
Cole Haan
in step with The "NATURAL SHOULDER" Look
Traditional footwear is a way of dress for the young man of today. Cole Haan Shoes are made in the best tradition of Down-East Maine craftsmanship. The cobblers take pride in hand crafting Cole Haan Shoes—as the meticulous details will reveal. Styles in this custom footwear reflect good taste. "Ask the man who wears them."
THE CLASSIC CORDOVAN DRESS SADDLE
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Black on Brown, Black on Black $29.95 Fully leather-lined, hand-rounded soles and heels
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SUA SPRING CONCERT
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PETER NERO FOR GREEK WEEK
appeared at
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March 28
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 19, 1964
Solons, Professors Help Hi-Y Visitors
Kansas legislators and KU political science professors worked yesterday with participants in the Kansas Hi-Y Youth in a Government Prelegislative Conference.
Nearly 130 high school men from the north-east region met in the Kansas Union to discuss and practice Kansas legislative procedures. The pre-legislative session was preparatory to the Kansas Hi-Y Model Legislature to be held in Topeka in April.
THE PURPOSE of the session was three-fold, Tom Moore, executive-secretary of the KU-Y, said.
First, the members elected certain officers to represent their region at the Topeka meeting. Senate and House of Representatives, officials were selected.
"The offices elected for the Model legislature rotate from region to region each year," Moore explained.
SIMILAR MEETINGS were taking place in Hays, Pittsburg, and Wichita for the same purpose as the one here, Moore said. The other regions will elect the model "governor," "lieutenant governor," and other legislative officials.
The second and third objectives for the conference were concerning the drafting and presentation of bills to the Model legislature.
Earl Nehring, assistant professor of political science, explained Kansas legislative procedure to the group during the morning part of the conference. He discussed how
Tickets On Sale For 'Poor Dad'
The play will be at 8:15 on the evenings of March 26-31 and April 1-3.
Tickets went on sale this morning for the Experimental Theatre's production of "Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' So Sad."
Madame Rosepettle, one of the major characters in the play, has the hobby of stalking the beach at night and kicking sand in the faces of lovers.
She has several trophies from her adventures around the world but her favorite one is her husband. She has had him stuffed by a taxi-dermist after his death and keeps him hanging in her closet as a constant reminder of her philosophy of life:
"Life is a husband hanging from a hook in the closet . . . Oh it's a bad day when you have to stare life in the face, and you find he doesn't smile at all; just hangs there—with his tongue sticking out."
Besides a Piranha fish, a Venus flytrap, and two cadavers (one cat, one human) the cast includes: Nancy Vunovich, Arkansas City graduate student; Robert Rumpf, Webster Groves, Mo., senior; Tom Winston, Dallas, Texas, senior; Judy Howell, Hinsdale, Illinois, freshman; Bob Bowersock, Shawnee Mission senior; Alan Glines, Independence junior; Wayne Macura, Bridgeport, Conn., junior; Steve Butler, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, sophomore; Larry Millinger, Wichita sophomore, and Bela KIRALYfalui, Belkany, Hungary, graduate student.
Tickets are available at the University Theatre box office in Murphy Hall. Tickets cost $1 or $50.
A RECORD TV-RADIO NETWORK fight fee of $300,000 was paid for the second Rocky Marciano-Joe Walcott title bout in 1953, which last two minutes and 25 seconds.
Steak Dinner
bills were introduced and presented in the legislative houses.
4:30-10:30 DINE-A-MITE 23rd & Lo
Sunday Nites $1.25
23rd & La.
DURING THE AFTERNOON sessions, the Hi-Y members practiced legislative procedure. Each delegation had brought a "bill" to the conference from his local Hi-Y chapter. The bills were changed and refined with the aid of various resourceful people on hand to give aid.
Donald Hult, state senator, and John Vogel, state representative, gave the groups aid, as did James Drury, professor of political science; James Titus and William Cape, associate professors of political science, and Donald Moomau, chief of the KU police.
They discussed the bills following legislative procedure. Later committees were formed to change wordings and to clarify meanings.
"We hope the conference will give each boy the ability to think logically and realistically about problems that can be solved through legislative action," Moore said. "A common problem discussed is the one concerning driver education and highway safety."
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The Pit C
KU
9th & Iowa Free Parking
The PIT CREW invites you to TGIF
This Friday Afternoon
Special benefits to those wearing the Pit Crew sweatshirt.
Get yours and join the fun at
THE SOUTHERN PIT
"Best Sandwiches in Town"
Mon. - Thurs. — Open 2 p.m. to Midnight
Fri. - Sat. — Open 11:30 a.m. to Midnight
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TUESDAY, MARCH 24,1964
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University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Substitute Discussed For Maiming, Killing
Chemical warfare is a substitute for "maiming and killing people," Maj. Frank A. Jones, a member of the U.S. Army Chemical Corps, said yesterday at the Faculty Forum.
Maj. Jones spoke of herbicides and incapacitants in respect to the role they play in biological and chemical warfare.
An incapacitating agent, Maj. Jones explained, is a non-lethal agent. It can either make persons physically immobile or mentally disabled. Maj. Jones said.
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One of the major advantages of LSD in warfare is that "you have not torn up cities and the people are still alive." Mai. Jones said.
ANDERSON RENTAL
812 New Hamp. VI 3-2044
"You become completely disorientated," Maj. Jones commented, when speaking of his experience.
Maj Jones described on a personal level the effects which LSD has on individuals. In May, 1959, Maj. Jones participated as a volunteer in a test involving LSD.
"WITHIN TWO HOURS after taking the agent, I realized that something was happening but I was not sure just what it was," he recalled. "My heels began to itch. I suddenly left my desk and began to walk . . . I experienced hallucinations such as seeing a wall turn every color possible; seeing the lettuce and tomato on my lunch tray turn all colors and even move . . . After a night's rest, I was back at my desk apparently none the worse for my experience.
EXPLAINING THAT incapacitating agents are chemical and not biological, Major Jones referred to "mustard gas" as an example. He said that "mustard gas," used during World War I, created water blisters on the skin of the enemy. The gas was not lethal, he explained, but temporarily incapacitated the enemy and kept him out of the war.
There are two types of incapacitating agents — psychochemical agents which disturb a person's mental process and physical agents which "render a person incapable of bodily control." Major Jones said. LSD was mentioned by Maj. Jones as being the incapacitating agent which was under the consideration of the Army.
Patronize Kansan Advertisert
Herbicides are compounds which kill plants, Maj. Jones said.
IN THE ACTION of the Republic of Viet Nam against the Viet Cong, herbicides find a military use, according to Maj. Jones. He explained that the Viet Cong guerrilla operations from deep in the dense vegetation along "roads, canals, paths, trails or other places where it is to his advantage."
"The guerrilla depends heavily upon the dense vegetation to conceal his movements and also permit him to ambush from a very short range," he said.
The United States, Maj. Jones said, has been assisting the Republic of Viet Nam by showing them how to use herbicides to kill the vegetation on either side of the roads, canals, and other routes.
As a result of killing vegetation, Maj. Jones said, "The guerrilla, in order to ambush in these treated areas, must now strike his target from a distance off the road. The target elements now have an advantage in these areas of being able to react to the ambush with a degree of control and coordination."
THE AMATEUR ATHLETIC Union was formed in 1888 when amateur athletics seemed at the mercy of unscrupulous independent promoters and is generally credited with establishing modern amateur sport in this country as it is known today.
SUA
JAZZ FORUM
from K.C., The Midwestern Jazz Quintet featuring Herb Smith—alto sax Bill Hargrave-trumpet
Sunday, March 22
3:00—Big 8 Room-Union Admission Free
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 19, 196
THIS EVENING...
By Roy Miller
"My daddy, who is a presacher, once told me that if I could ever get a job using my mouth, and make money at it, I'd have it made."
Tom Hedrick, director of the KU Sports Network and the speaker above, apparently has "it made."
The radio announcer and KU soccer coach was named today as Kansas' Outstanding Sportscaster of the Year. His selection by the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association marked the third time in four years Hedrick has received the honor.
FOR THOSE who feel compelled to reach for the telephone to congratulate Hedrick: Don't! He's in Hutchinson today as the voice of the National Junior College Basketball Tournament Network.
Hedrick started his broadcasting career in Lawrence at KLWN where he covered Lawrence High School football and the KU Relays. While he was working toward his master's degree in radio-television at KU from 1956 to 1958, he assisted Monte Moore, his KU Network predecessor.
The following two years, Hedrick was sports director of KOCA, Kilgore, Tex., and KWBW, Hutchinson.
Kilgore, Tex, and KWBW, Hutchinson. He also covered games of Kansas' last professional baseball team, the Topeka Reds for KJAY in Topeka.
AS PART of his honor as being named as the state's leading sportscaster, Hedrick will attend the National Sportscaster and Sportswriters Convention April 6-7 at Salisbury, N.C.
Hedrick says talking comes naturally for him.
Hedrick, one of the best skilled announcers in the area, covers so many—and varied—sporting events, fellow sportswriters and announcers wonder what he'll promote next.
I KEEP wondering when he'll cover a soccer match or a gymnastics meet plav-by-play.
I still remember the warm September afternoon two years ago when Hedrick, engineer and broadcasting equipment occupied a balcony of a Stouffer Place unit.
Hedrick was on the spot to cover the annual intrasquad football scrimmage. Unfortunately, the scrimmage was transferred to Memorial Stadium at the last minute.
It took Hedrick a while last fall to learn how many persons comprise a soccer team.
Reinstatment No Surprise To Packers' Paul Hornung
By Oscar Fraley UPI Sports Writer
MIAMI — Paul Hornung wasn't particularly surprised when the news came to him and he and Alex Karras had been reinstated by National Football League Commissioner Pete Rozelle after a year's suspension on gambling charges.
"It's wonderful news, of course," said the Green Bay Packer halfback. "But we met with Rozelle 10 days ago and I suspected the suspension would be lifted."
So did everybody else because the general feeling was that if all facets of the case had been revealed and there was no reason to suspect that they weren't, then the period in sackeloth and ashes without any time limit seemed pretty strong stuff.
HORNUNG AND Karras, the massive Detroit Lion tackle, were simply doing what comes naturally. Everybody bats on his own horse
This is not to condone a pro griller in making a wager on his own team. The rules say you can't, so you don't. Hornung and Karras admitted they did.
Their sin in the eyes of the NFL had to do with the size and the consistency of their betting, plus association with certain sordid citizens.
Karras first admitted that he had wagered on games but subsequently said he never bet "more than a pack of cigarettes or a couple of cigars." Rozelle's investigation showed that he had placed "at least six significant bets" on NFL games.
THERE WAS no evidence he ever had bet against his own team. Nor had Hornung. But Rozelle charged that Karras had met individuals described by police as "known hodlums" and he "continued associating with these individuals after learning of their backgrounds and habits."
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OKLAHOMA CITY —(UPI) —The national collegiate wrestling tournament, which begins Thursday in Ithaca, N.Y. has been practically an Oklahoma institution right from the start.
The NCAA meet has been held 33 times and Oklahoma State has won 23 team championships—including the first one, in 1928. The University of Oklahoma has won six times. That leaves only five years that either the Cowboys or the Sooners have not prevailed.
Bird TV-Radio Service
Three Iowa teams—Iowa State, Iowa Teachers and Cornell—each captured one title, as did Penn State and Indiana. Penn State in 1953 was the last non-Oklahoma team to turn the trick. Oklahoma won last year. Oklahoma State took the title the two previous years, scoring a record 82 points in 1961 and equaling that in 1962. Oklahoma won in 1960 after two more Oklahoma victories, and so on.
PHONE VI 3-8855
NCAA Wrestling-'Oklahoma Institution'
908 Mass. St. — Lawrence, Kans. —
OKLAHOMA STATE. Big Eight champion for the fourth straight year, is again favored in the NCAA, with Iowa State its No. 1 challenger. Since the Big Eight came into existence (with the addition of Oklahoma State in 1958, the conference has been at least 1-2 in the NCAA meet every year, and 1-2-3 twice with Iowa State joining the two Oklahoma teams.
Oklahoma State has won 74 individual championships and had 10 wrestlers win three times. These included heavyweight Earl McCready (1928-30), Jack Van Bebber (155 in 1929 and 165 in 1930-31), Conrad Caldwell (165 in 1929 and 175 in 1930-31), Ross Flood (126 pounds, 1933135), Rex Peery (118, 1933-35), Stanley Henson (145 pounds in 1937 and 1938 and 155 in 39), Joe McDaniel (118 pounds in 1937-38 and 121 on 1939), David Arndt (145 in 1941 and 1942 and
JAMES STEWANT MAUREEN O'HARA JIMMY TAKES A VACATION. YOU HAVE ALL THE FUN!
---
Mr.HOBBS
TAKES a
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co-starring FaBIAN
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THE PRESIDENT OF BROADWAY
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136 in 1946), Heavyweight Richard Hutton (1947-48-50) and current head Coach Myron Roderick (137 in 1954 and 130 on 1955 and '56).
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THE OKLAHOMA Sooners have had two triple winners. Dan Hodge, now a professional wrestler, won in 1955, '56 and 1957 at 177 pounds, and was named the meet's outstanding performer in 1956 and 1957. The other three-time champion was Wayne Martin, who won in 1934 at 135, '35 at 145 and '36 at 134.
VI 3-2091
813 Mass.
Mickey Martin, Wayne's son won the 130-pound title for Oklahoma in 1962 and '63 and was named the outstanding wrestler last year.
AWARD
(
NATALIE WOOD
NAMED STAR OF THE YEAR
BY UNITED THEATRE OWNERS OF HEART OF AMERICA
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Page 11
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
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Like new 1961 Ford Galaxie 4-door sedan Full power equipment, air-conditioner, heater, radio. New snow tires and car record player. Buy or trade with 1963 or 1964 car of any make. Call VI 2-1051 or see at 1244 Ohio. 3-26
for the best in used parts, motors, radios,
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VI 3-1626. Open evenings. 3-24
17" console TV. Must sell. Call VI 2-4197
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Gibson Amplifier, 2 channel tremolo,
Reasonably priced. Call V1 2-1291. 3-20
LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. NEW AND USED GUNS, MILITARY AMMO. MIJER LUGER, WE ALSO REBELU. 1026 OHIO. CALL VI 2-124 evenings. 3-23
1960 Ford convertible for sale by owner.
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after 4:45 p.m.
3-23
Abington Book Store carries the "London Observer." Downtown, $1016_{1/2}$ Mass. to Variety Theater. 3-19
House, four years old, excellent condition. Three bedrooms, link fence, near pool and swimming pool. $700 assumes loan. $78 a month. Ops. New appliances and furniture. 1955 Miller Drive. VI 3-6994.
New, unused set of Envelopopedia Britannica. Half price. Phone VI 3-5929 after 6 p.m.
3-19
1956 4-door wagon. V-8, automatic transmission, good condition. See to appreciate $150. Call VI 3-1951 after 6 p.m. or Raldwin 594 3423. 3-19
2 stereos for sale. Console, $60. Portable.
$50, VI 2-3885. 3-19
FM RADIO AND STEREO SALE. G.E.
Compact FM, $23. G.E. AM-FM AFC,
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Olympic 2 pc. stereo FM, $60. Emergo
2 pc. stereo FM, $93. G.E. stereo
phono, $198. Motorola 5 spkr. stereo FM,
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G.E. pop stereo, 8 stereo, $88. Motoria
Twin Wing stereo, $55. Ray Stoneback's
$29 Mass, VI 3-4170, 3-24
Volkwagen and Renault owners! Nylon premium tubeless tires cut to tax (tubeless retreads, Exg.) Ray Mackenbach's Discount Tire Center, 929 Massack. 3-24
New battery portable all transistor phone.
Sounds like a console! Good value!
In conjunction with special offer
into computer readers only: $55.38. Ray
Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass.
Tire prices slashed! Ray Stoneback's Discount to the Center at 929 Mass. 36 m.
Four tubeless tires. Four 650 x 13' $40.
Four 750 x 14' $44. Four 670 x 15' $4.
Four 800 x 14' $50. Plus tax, exchange.
installed! 4 whitewalls, 8 extra. 3-26
New 16" lightweight portable TV, $99.
1 year guarantee on parts! Rent or buy,
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tt
Typewriters, new and used portables,
standards, electrics, Olympia, Hermes,
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Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St.
VI 3-3644. St.
For. Forlair Brush Products phone VI 3-
9040 after 5 p.m. tf
German Shepherd pups, AKC registered and licensed in New York. Lloyd Brianden. Phone KI 2-2559.
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500 sheets to ream—$.85. Lawrence Outlook. 1005 Mass. tf
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for classes. Formerly known as Sheets notes. Western civilization notes. $4.50 Western civilization notes. All new, commute graphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. t
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Furnished Kitchenette on 2nd floor at
Off-street parking. Call VI 3-3566. 3-20
Two room furnished apartment See
3:30 p.m. 821 Indiana or call y
4168.
3-24
Rooms for men students. Singles for $25.
Doubles for $20. Refrigerator and linens furnished. Cooking privileges. 1116 Tenn.
or call VI 3-2257. 3-23
Single room very near Kansas Union at 1140 Mississippi. Completely remodeled and furnished. Ideal for graduate students. Air conditioned for summer. Call VI 2-0298. 3-19
Married, grad students, faculty, 2 bedroom, $75. Sleeping room, $25. 16 available in June. Reserve now. Call for brochure - 2116 Santee Apartments, 1123 Indiana. tt
123 Indiana
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tf
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Phone VI 3-2711.
tf
Graduate men or older undergraduates-
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Close to campus, ideal study conditions,
neighbors. Reasonably utilizes paid. For appointment call VI 3-854.
TYPING
Experienced secretary would like typing in her home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 2-1188. tff
Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work is required. Phone VI 3-8393. Mrs. Charles Tafl
Experienced typist for thesis and term paper. Mail resume to Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0588.
Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason- sentations and theses, phone IV 3-7682. Mrs. Frank Gibson. tt
Accurate expert typist would like typing in her home. Term papers and theses.
Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. tf
Experienced Typist—Dissertations, Theses, Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook.
2000 Rhode Island,岛 3-7485. tf
Professional typing by experienced secretary.
New electric typewriter, carbon printer.
VI 3-8045 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 409 West 13th. **tt**
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these term papers, research reports and press releases. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568.
University Daily Kansan
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols carbon ribbon instruments service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI-1248 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI-3057.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
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MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines We also de tape transcriptions. Office tapes 7 m. tape 12 p.m. 102-11/4 Manage Phone VI 3-5920.
Interviews for Membership
STUDENT ADVISORY BOARD
on the
INTERVIEW TIMES ARE
Sign up for an interview at the All Student Council office in the Union by 5:00 p.m. THURSDAY, MARCH 19.
STILL AVAILABLE.
Interview times that will be available-
- 1:00-5:00 p.m., Friday, March 20
- 9:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Sat., March 21
MEMBERSHIP—Outstanding sophomore and junior students from each school.
PURPOSE—to help advise undergraduate students during enrollment and through the academic year.
term papers, Thesis, by experienced
ypists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. **tf**
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Have a party in the Big Red School
for the floor and plant
Heated. Call VI 3-7455.
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. **tf**
Two tickets to N.C.A.A. finals Friday or Saturday night. Call VI 3-1144 after 5:30 p.m.
3-19
WANTED
Reasonable priced. 3-speed man's bike.
3-1144 after 5:30 p.m. Bob
Dowell. Bob 3-25
VOLKSWAGEN' WANTED. Cash for your VW, Conzelman Motors, VW Sales, Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway 59 So. tf
Billfold, lost in Fraser Theater, Friday.
Feb. 7, between 9 and 12 p.m. Contact
Dave Till, 818 Kentucky.
tt
BUSINESS SERVICE
U-Call, we haul. Anything, anytime. VI
3-5888. tt
Abington Book Store offers a free search service for out-of-print books. Downtown, $1015^{1/2}$ Mass. Next to Varsity Theater. 3-19
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Surprise your roommate with a cake on that special occasion. The K-420 camera, the student body a full line of cakes. Free delivery and candles. Call VI 1-2791. 4-24
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
JOE'S BAKERY
616 W. 9th
Hot doughnuts—sandwich
cold drink
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VI 3-6333
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Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 316 Mass. VI 3-1287. tfr
Dressmaking-alterations. *formals* and
*dresses*. Ola Smith, 9391 Åkås VI
VI 3-5283
5 string banjo instruction. Folk styles Low rates. Call VI 2-9466 after 6 p.m. t
HELP WANTED
Swimming pool serviceman, part time starting in April, full time in summer. Some swimming pool experience preferred. Work in Kansas City. Call VI 3-839-3203
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Girl to play electric organ part-time.
Call VI 3-4743. **tt**
Ambitious young man with experience in shoe sales. Salary and commission. A real proposition for the right man. Write, giving resume of experience, age, etc. to Box 10, University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall. 3-24
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY. Peppermint Park Kiddyland operation for sale. 2203 West Butler in the summer cemetery. Bring this during the summer. Call Vi 2-0155 after 5 p.m. **4-3**
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ice cold beverages
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616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, March 19, 1964
Scholar to Tell Of Negro Revolution
"Time"-honored as one of the foremost Negro scholars in the United States is Dr. John Hope Franklin who will give a Humanities Lecture Series address on "The Civil Rights Revolution: Its Historical Setting" at 8 p.m., Tuesday, March 24.
The lecture will be given in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union. It will be followed by a reception at the Faculty Club. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will introduce the visiting scholar.
Dr. Franklin was pictured in a full-color section of Time magazine's issue of January 3 devoted to some 30 outstanding Negroes in America. He is chairman of the department of history at Brooklyn College but will join the history faculty of the University of Chicago this year.
LAST YEAR, HE WAS Pitt Professor of American History at Cambridge University in England. From KU, he will fly to Hyderabad, India, to represent the United States at the opening of the American History Research Center at Osmania University.
At 4 p.m. on Tuesday, March 24 he will speak on "The Past in the Future of the South" in the Jayhawk Room of Kansas Union; this matinee program will be sponsored by Student Union Activities.
At 4 p.m. on Monday, March 23, he will meet with history faculty members and graduate students in the Big Eight Room of Kansas Union; the discussion is being arranged by Dr. Stitt Robinson, history.
DURING HIS THREE-DAY visit to the KU campus, Dr. Franklin will also speak at 9:30 a.m. Monday in 110 Strong to History 184 on "The Role of History in Social Change." At 2:30 p.m. that day in 2 Strong Annex E and at 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, March 25, in 110 Fraser, he will speak to Sociology 2 classes on "World History and Social Change." At 1:30 p.m. Wednesday in 110 Strong he will speak to History 187 on "Rediscovering the American Negro's History."
He was born in Oklahoma in 1915, was educated in Tulsa public schools, received the B.A. at Fisk University, and the M.A. and Ph.D. at Harvard. He was awarded Edwin Austin and Julius Rosenwald Fellowships and was President's Fellow at Brown University. He taught at Fisk, St. Augustine's College, North
1970
JAN NEAL Delta Gamma
Double check for Easter — a navy and white coat dress. Carry a red purse for accent.
Carolina College, and Howard University, and has been chairman of the history department at Brooklyn College since 1956.
He has been visiting professor at Harvard, Wisconsin, Cornell, California, and Hawaii universities. He was professor at the Salzburg Seminar in Austria, was visiting lecturer at the Seminar in American Studies at Cambridge, and attended the 10th International Congress of Historical Sciences in Rome. President Kennedy appointed him to a three-year term on the Board of Foreign Scholarships, and he held a Fulbright grant to several Australian universities.
COACH HOUSE
Charles Per Town and Country
12th & Oread VI 3-6369
He was awarded honorary degrees by Morgan State College, Virginia State College, and Lincoln University. He was the first Negro elected to the Cosmos Club in Washington, D.C.
Elwell, Wichita senior, said Ragsdale thought the picketing would put pressure on the Sigma Nu national chapter to remove the clause. "He's interpreting this as helping the Sigma Nu fraternity." Elwell said.
(Continued from page 1)
ELWELL SAID THE picketing could influence rushees and could only hurt the chapter. He did not think that the picketing would have any influence with the national chapter.
CRCC To Picket Ceremony—
The KU Sigma Nu chapter unsuccessfully attempted to remove the clause at the last national convention.
Good looking co-eds who have dreams of becoming a beauty queen can learn the rules for the Miss Lawrence-KU Pageant at an orientation tea 10 a.m. Saturday in room 306 of the Kansas Union.
'Miss Lawrence' Entrants Invited to Orientation Tea
Ragsdale said the following organizations are supporting the CRCC: Alpha Phi Alpha, Alpha Kappa Alpha, Delta Sigma Tau, Kappa Alpha Psi, Kansas University Liberal Action Committee, Newman Club, Evangelical United Brethren, Don
Ragsdale said the decision of the All Student Council to not support the CRCC did no damage to the cause.
Single women between the ages of 18 and 28 are eligible for the pageant. The preliminaries will be held on April 1 and 2 at 7 p.m. in the Kansas University Ballroom.
The tea will provide an opportunity for prospective entrants to ask questions. Application blanks for the pageant will be available at the tea.
The annual contest, sponsored by the Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce, is a preliminary to the Miss America Pageant.
Other qualifications for pageant entrants are: residency in Lawrence for the past six months; single marital status, never married, divorced, or had a marriage annulled. The entrants also must be of good character and must possess poise, personality, intelligence, charm and beauty.
In addition, entrants must give a three-minute talent presentation.
The talent may be singing, dancing, playing a musical instrument, dramatic reading, art display, dress designing, creative poetry, writing, or she may give a talk on the career she wishes to pursue.
An entrant may be either an amateur or a professional in her area of talent.
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THE LATEST CIVIL rights controversy on campus started on Feb. 12 when the Civil Rights Council petitioned the IFC to clarify its stand on the integration of minority groups into the KU fraternity system. At
that time the CRC asked the IFC to withdraw recognition from fraternities with discriminatory clauses.
The IFC took no special action and stated it would maintain the policy that moral suasion, not force, should be used to help fraternities remove discriminatory clauses.
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Daily hansan
61st Year, No. 108
Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, March 20,1964
Pickets Seen As No 'Aid' By Sigma Nu
The president of Sigma Nu fraternity said yesterday the pressure of pickets will not help Sigma Nu in removing its discriminatory clause.
John Elwell, Wichita senior and president of Sigma Nu, said the following is a statement of Sigma Nu's policy;
- "We must bargain from a position of strength at our National Convention. We do desire to stay in our National.
- "Fressure and publicity in the form of pickets will not help Sigma Nu in removing the discriminatory clause.
- "Pickets during rush week or rush weekends will weaken our chapter.
- "This will lower our strength within our national and impede or halt our progress.
- "We are only one of 134 chapters. If we are forced to close our doors or go local, 133 chapters on other campuses will continue to operate under the discriminatory clause. So in effect, the program outlined by the CRCC will not accomplish the ends desired."
George Ragsdale, Lawrence senior and president of the Civil Rights Coordinating Committee, said he thought the picketing would help the Sigma Nu's get their clause removed.
"THEY (SIGMA NU) can say nothing else publicly. If they condone civil rights movements, they will probably lose their charter," Ragsdale said.
Ragsdale said the CRCC will carry out its plans to picket the Sigma Nu fraternity, Saturday.
Weather
Snow on the ground and drizzle in the air marked the first day of spring today.
Skies will clear tonight with colder temperatures down to 20 degrees expected. The high tomorrow will be in the 30s with fair skies.
MIDDLEBURG
SPRINGTIME AT KU?—Spring arrived today with snow on the KU campus. (Photo by Charles Corcoran)
Gains State Stature
YD's Growth Rapid
One of the smallest clubs in Kansas only three weeks ago, KU Young Democrats is believed to be the largest collegiate Democratic organization in the state today.
The club had a membership of 120 persons three weeks ago. The club's membership now is 293, enough to allow the club to have the maximum number of votes (10) in the state convention April 24-26 at Topeka.
(Jacquelyn Thayer, Ellsworth freshman, was elected secretary of KU YD's Wednesday. It was incorrectly stated in yesterday's edition of the Kansan that Martha Allen, Lawrence junior, was elected secretary.)
Mike Rogers, Hutchinson junior and newly elected president of the Young Demos, said last night the sudden increase in membership was caused by a campaign between he and George Groneman, Kansas City sophomore, for president.
"This boost in membership is a good thing that came out of our campaign." Rogers said. "We got out and found Democrats on the campus, believe it or not."
Rogers said the club will help the Douglas County Democratic party organization in polling and in a voter registration drive.
Baccalaureate Speaker Chosen
The minister Time magazine called "the most influential leader of world Protestantism," the Rev. Franklin Clark Fry, will give the baccalaureate sermon May 31 to KU students who will be receiving their degrees the following evening.
The Rev. Fry is serving as the first president of the new 3,200,000-member of Lutheran Church in America.
As a young student, the Rev. Fry watched from the sidelines at the great merger of 1918 that united the General Synod, United Synod of the South, and the General Council in the United Lutheran Church. The Rev. Fry's father wrote many of the documents of the early merger
He was elected at the constituting convention of the LCA in Detroit, Mich., in June, 1962, after having served since 1944 as president of the former United Lutheran Church in America. The new church was created through the merger of the ULCA with the Augustana, American Evangelical, and Finnish Lutheran Churches.
THE LUTHERAN and ecumenical tradition started early in the Fry family. The Rev. Fry's grandfather was Jacob Fry of the Philadelphia Lutheran Seminary. His father was the churchman, Franklin Foster Fry.
Forty-four years later as a new Lutheran Church became a reality, it was his son who fashioned much of the constitution and by-laws of the new Lutheran Church.
He later became president of the ULCA's New York and New England Synod and the first secretary of the ULCA Board of American Missions.
The Rev. Fry addresses hundreds of church, civic, and educational groups each year. He served as chaplain at a session of the 1950 Democratic national convention.
He carries on his duties in church administration in addition to scores of meetings of boards and agencies of his own church, the National Lutheran Council, the Joint Commission on Lutheran Unity, the National Council of Churches, the Lutheran World Federation, and the
World Council of Churches.
HE HAS LED delegations to South America and to South Africa. In its cover article about the Rev, Fry, Time magazine said he was "more familiar these days in Washington, London, or Africa than in New Rochelle" and one of "the two or three American churchmen with a wide international reputation."
The Rev. Fry was graduated from Hamilton College, Clinton, N.Y., in 1921, studied at the American School for Classical Studies in Athens, was graduated from the Philadelphia Lutheran Theological Seminary in 1925, and was ordained by the United Lutheran Synod of New York and New England.
He served for four years as pastor of Redeemer Church at Yonkers, N.Y., then for 15 years as pastor of Trinity Lutheran Church of Akron, Ohio, before resigning to accept election as president of the United Lutheran Church in America.
Vox Lashes UP Platform
The president of Vox Populi said last night some of University's planks aren't too bad, a factor which is "very unusual" for UP.
In addition to discussing UP's platform, Vox also ratified the affiliation of Stephenson and Douthart scholarship halls.
Douthart is the only women's scholarship hall to affiliate with either political party this year.
TOM BORNHOLDT, Topeka senior and Vox president, said many of UP's plans had been tried unsuccessfully or were already in effect.
"For example, the idea of student employment emphasizes what Vox is stressing continually," Bornholdt said.
"If UP had any continuity, they would know that the ASC once had such a committee which was abol-
(Continued on page 12)
De Gaullism Threatens Key Free World Defenses
By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst
In Europe and in Asia, three alliances which are keystones of free world defenses against Communism are under strain or in danger of collapse.
They are NATO, SEATO and CENTO, forged in years of crisis under United States leadership and based on a policy of containment which would meet Communist force with force anywhere in the world.
The strains arise from aggressive De Gaullism and its repercussions in both Europe and Asia, from the growing influence of Red China in Asia, from neutralism and a whole new set of related circumstances.
H. H. BURTON
IN EUROPE, NATO is in disarray because of President Charles de Gaulle's determination either to stand aloof or to use it for his own purposes.
In Asia, SEATO—the Southeast Asian Treaty Organization—is imperiled by U.S. reversals in South Viet Nam, by De Gaulle's call for neutralism there and a growing doubt that Western-sponsored alliances, geared to repel attack from the outside, can meet the more insidious danger of infiltration and subversion from within.
CENTO—the Central Treaty Organization—the Mid East link between NATO and SEATO, is threatened by Pakistan's antagonism toward the United States for its aid to India and by Pakistan's increasing friendliness toward Red China.
Economically, Britain, France and West Germany already are competing for trade with the Soviets.
CHARLES DE GAULLE . . . alliance critic
BRITAIN IS REPORTED ready to grant the Soviets $200 million in long-term credits for a fiber factory, with
- * * *
other agreements to follow. France also is reported ready to complete a major trade agreement.
French recognition of Communist China places new pressures upon Japan to let down its trade barriers with the Reds.
Free world unity has been the goal of every U.S.
president since World War II, pursued at a cost of U.S. lives and more than $100 billion.
NATO was born in 1949 out of the fear which swept a demobilized Europe when an aggressive Soviet Union, its World War II armies still intact, imposed the Berlin blockade.
THE BIRTH OF SEATO, extending Western protection to the nations of Southeast Asia, came in 1954 after France lost to the Communist-supported forces of Ho Chi Minh the final battle for Indo-China at Dien Bien Phu.
In 1955 came the Baghdad Pact, predecessor of today's CENTO, after the crisis over Suez.
But the earth has turned as no man could have foreseen since completion of those globe girdling alliances.
In 1956, U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles thunders that neutrality is both "obsolete" and "immoral."
YET IN 1961,23 non-aligned nations are able to meet in Belgrade and criticize with varying degrees of neutrality both the United States and the Soviet Union. Nearly all receive both U.S. and Communist aid.
The once-monolithic Communist world splits and as the United States and Russia build their nuclear arsenals to the point of overkill, there is in Europe added an intangible which perhaps hastens the decay of unity.
That is the belief that neither nuclear giant will risk a global war and that Russian freedom of movement is limited by her quarrel with Red China and economic and agricultural problems at home.
(Continued on page 8)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 20,1964
Unemployment
Poverty lurks in the midst of plenty—for even the bitter, baffling problem of unemployment exists on the KU campus.
Today, students undoubtedly earn more, spend more, and enjoy more material wealth than students of the past. Yet within this there lies a paradox: 70 per cent of the whole student body is jobless. Out of this 70 per cent, more than 10 per cent is willing to work, provided there are good paying jobs available or better—white collar—jobs available. There are more than 200 students, searching for any type of employment to earn some money.
MANY STUDENTS, enrolled and registered at KU with a hope of obtaining a job on the campus, are disappointed by the employment situation on the campus. Their efforts to find work and money to care for their needs, fees, books have increased. The whole problem is that there isn't enough work for everybody.
At least six in every 10 students who drop out in the middle of the school year are forced to leave the college because of finance and unemployment problems.
THE PROBLEM HAS arisen principally because some students want only particular kinds of job. Lawrence, being a small industry town, is not able to provide these particular types of jobs.
The problem has become more acute, since the number of students is annually increasing. In the past, more people were looking for student help; and today more students are looking for extra work. The University can't afford new channels of work for this growing number of students. The present state of unemployment is caused by the disproportion between the number of students and the number of jobs available.
Also, there is a sharp increase in the employment percentage of junior and senior high school students on the campus. This has created a complex and undesirable situation.
The two places on campus which employ the most students, Watson Library and the Kansas Union, are causes of this poor employment condition. These two places hire junior and senior high school students because they are cheap labor. These places do not have to pay higher salaries
to these high school boys and girls. The salary given by these two places ranges from 65 cents an hour to $1 an hour.
THIS IS UNSOUND. These boys and girls do not actually need employment. They work even for this low salary just to get extra pocket money. They don't need money to support themselves. If these two places stopped hiring these junior and senior high students, there would be more vacancies for college students and the degree of their finance problems would be reduced. These high school boys and girls can be replaced with college students who have to work in order to support themselves while in school.
The University has established an employment bureau in Strong Hall to assist the students in locating jobs. The bureau is responsible for aiding some 1,000 men and women students to attend college each year. These students do everything from taking care of children and washing windows to chauffeuring and sign painting.
THE METHODS USED BY the bureau are quite commendable. The office works the year round, sending out letters to Lawrence home owners, business houses and members of the faculty and requesting them to offer employment to students.
The problem can be solved if every person who can possibly give work should use the college student help.
There are a number of houses in Lawrence that could take a college student in to do work just for a room if the owner would just realize it. There are a lot of odd jobs around a house which students would gladly do to put a roof over their heads.
The number of jobs could be increased greatly if the faculty and townsppeople would just stretch a bit, look around, and find several hours work a week for students.
In short, the problem would be solved if these people would just simply help students to put themselves through college.
Let's hope that the winning political party in the coming election will carry out their student work planks and solve this problem.
- Vinay Kothari
Dreams, Aspirations of JFK's Visit To Latin America Deteriorate
By Phil Newsom
UPI Foreign News Analyst
"We have made a beginning, and the fruits of that beginning . . . give cause to hope for the future." President John F. Kennedy at the San Jose Conference of Central American presidents, March 19, 1963.
And what of those hopes a year later? Two of the six Central American presidents present on that day fell to violent revolution. A third Central American nation, Panama, became locked in bitter controversy with the United States. Cuba remained a symbol of Communist penetration of the Western Hemisphere.
And hopes and aspirations remained largely a dream.
* *
It was warm and pleasant that day a year ago in San Jose, Costa Rica, dimmed only slightly by the volcanic ash drifting down from erupting Mt. Irazu.
And when the President of the United States stopped speaking and stepped from the platform, he and the warmly affectionate crowd of 35,000 surged toward each other, the one ignoring his security guards and the other the restraining ropes which burned hands, wrists and midriffs from the pressure of the throng behind.
THE SCENE was El Bosque, the huge housing project being built just outside San Jose with funds from the Alliance for Progress.
For the president, his trip to Costa Rica and the meeting with the six Central American presidents had been a succession of triumphs both in public and in the serious work of the conference.
And among the presidents of Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua and Panama there had been demonstrated a unity of purpose holding out hope for a new stability and a new way of life for 12 million people to whom poverty and violent revolution has become a tradition.
But within the year:
THE GOVERNMENTS of Guatemala and Honduras would fall to military coups.
"The establishment and maintenance of representative and constitutional government is an essential element in the Alliance for Progress." Rusk said.
From Washington would come a new warning against the new upsurge of Latin American military governments. The United States views the rise of such governments "with the utmost gravity," said Secretary of State Dean Rusk.
Diplomatic relations between the United States and Panama would be broken by a renewed dispute over the Panama Canal.
And upon Costa Rica, the most democratic and stable of all Central American governments, tragedy of another sort would fall.
During Kennedy's visit, the falling ash from the erupting volcano Irazu had been but a minor inconvenience, irritating to the eyes and to breathing but an irritation which quickly would pass.
IT DID NOT pass and Costa Ricans now recall that it was only 43 years ago that the same volcano nearly destroyed the original capital of Cartago at the volcano's base. Today, cattle are dying in ash-covered pastures, thousands of acres of coffee have been destroyed and in related industries unemployment is spreading. Volcanologists said Irazu might continue to erupt for the next five years.
- * *
When Kennedy went to San
Jose it was to discuss with the six other presidents the Alliance for Progress and the economic integration of Central America, which had made its first feeble beginnings in 1960 with the creation of a Central American common market first composed of El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua and later joined by Costa Rica.
"WE WILL BUILD a wall around Cuba-not a wall of mortar or brick or barbed wire, but a wall of dedicated men determined to protect their own freedom and governeity.
In his opening speech to the conference in San Jose's baroque opera house, the president declared:
And it was to economics that the conference devoted most of its attention. The Central American presidents promised to work toward integrating their economies and to press reforms in agriculture, taxation, education, public administration and social welfare.
sovereignty.
... we cannot be satisfied with the progress we have made. People who have waited for centuries for opportunity and dignity cannot wait much longer."
President Kennedy pledged U.S. financial aid, including a $6 million survey to determine how such aid could best be applied for the benefit of all six countries.
Politically, the final communique avoided direct mention of Cuba, but pledged further efforts to halt Soviet expansion in the Western Hemisphere and declared communism the greatest obstacle to Central America's economic development.
The United States already had pledged large sums toward the
(Continued on page 3)
WE HAVE TO KEEP NEGROES FROM THE POLLS BECAUSE THEY D OUTVOTE US
BESIDES, THEY ARE NOT INTERESTED IN VOTING ANYHOW
ANTI- CIVIL RIGHTS STRATEGISTS
© 1964 HEKBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
"It's A Shrewd Move To Confuse Our Opponents"
BOOK REVIEWS
IDEOLOGY AND POWER IN THE AGE OF JACKSON, edited with an introduction by Edwin C. Rozwenc (Doubleday Anchor, $1.45).
George Caleb Bingham's famous genre painting, "Stump Speaking" adorns the cover of this excellent new paperback, one of three with which Anchor Books inaugurates its "Documents in American Civilization Series." These first volumes, if they are representative of coming volumes, will give strong academic competition to the Amherst series, "Problems in American Civilization."
The editor of this volume has had considerable experience in the Amherst series, as a matter of fact. In this new book he takes key documents from the Age of Jackson, paintings as well as writings, to illustrate what was developing in American civilization 130 years ago.
A varied group of writers is assembled here. The names include George Tucker, De Tocqueville, Michel Chevalier, Webster, the American Whig Review, James Fenimore Cooper, Emerson, William M. Gouge, the National Trades Union, the McGuffey Readers, Horace Mann, Charles G. Finney, Jackson himself, William Leggett, Roger B. Taney, Thomas Hart Benton, William M. Holland, Francis J. Grund, Davy Crockett, the Democratic Review, George Bancroft, Henry Clay, Orestes A. Brownson and Calvin Colton.
COMMENTATORS ON THE DECADES of the common man, therefore, include French observers, Whig politicians, a novelist, the essayist of self-reliance, a pioneer educator, a revivalist, Democratic politicians, a New York newspaper editor, a Supreme Court justice, a braggart of the frontier, a historian and a Unitarian-turned-Catholic.
What does this illustrate, then? Diversity more than anything. Diversity is what keeps students of American civilization from finding the synthesis they seem to be striving for. Even as the common man of Jackson was finding a voice, others were speaking critically of democracy, even an individualist like Emerson. And Jacksonianism meant more than the rise of the frontier. Many of the writings concern the new meanings of governmental power, and the conflict between labor and capital.
The selections generally are excellent. So are the illustrations. American Studies people long have recognized the importance of both folk art and sophisticated art in understanding a culture. Rozwenc uses Thomas Cole's elaborate and fantastic allegory of civilization; views of Lowell, Mass., where experiments in industry and education were taking place; frontier folk in the grip of revivalism; cartoons assailing "King Andrew," John Neagle's familiar "Pat Lyon at the Forge," and that fantastic home of P. T. Barnum called "Iranistan."—CMP
* * * *
THE RECONSTRUCTION. A DOCUMENTARY HISTORY: 1865- 1877, by James P. Shenton (Capricorn, $1.75).
Though this volume may be used as straight history, it should be regarded as one more in a long line of recent paperbacks that make available the key documents that undergird history. In the present climate of conflict over race, such a book is of particular importance, for the period of Reconstruction may be said to be at the base of today's difficulties.
Like others before him, James P. Shenton uses Appomattox and the 1876 election as beginning and terminal points, though some documents go slightly beyond 1876 and 1877. Writings are included from publications of the day, diaries, letters, orders, and we find here the Black Code, Ku Klux Klan confessions, descriptions of the despoiled South, arguments over the capacity of the Negro to vote and perform in public life, and the like.
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Friday, March 20, 1964
News Coverage
Editor:
I am writing in regard to two matters- 1) the Latin American Night program of March 7, and 2) the CRCC picketings to be held later this month.
The People Say...
In regard to the first matter, the Latin American students at KU put on an excellent program and dance on March 7, and over 200 people attended. The Kansas had been notified three days before the program that it was to be on March 7, and an ad was placed in the Kansas that ran an March 6. However, the only article that appeared in connection with the program was one with publicity content that was printed the week after the program was over.
The second matter concerns the civil rights issue at KU. The International Club has been asked to join the Civil Rights Coordinating Committee and to give it support. As a social organization, International Club cannot join CRCC. However, the club will give moral support to CRCC and to strictly-planned and well-organized picketings of short duration for the purpose of supporting civil rights, so long as such picketing is not carried out in an insulting manner, and is not carried out for the purpose of destroying any particular organization.
On Monday, March 9, a frontpage spread was given to the Anti-Military Ball, an event which was highly publicized but poorly attended. Although the International Club did not feature any "trained murderers" or beer-throwing and fist-swinging pacifists, it did present an informative and entertaining program which was well-attended by students, faculty, and Latin American educators who were attending a conference at KU at the time.
International Club is interested in letting other people know what types of programs it carries out, and where it stands on issues involving human dignity. However, as a social and educational organization, it cannot join a united front and act like a political organization. Individual members are free to determine their own actions. The club itself, however, acts under limitations due to responsibilities owed to its members, the student body, and the administration.
Charles A. Marvin President of the International Club
\* \* \*
CRCC and Holy Week
I feel it necessary that I share, in part, a letter dated, Friday, March 13, 1964. I received this letter as chairman of the Civil Rights Coordinating Committee. It reads in part: "... all your activities fall within Holy Week. In one sense, there is no more appropriate time for such demonstrations, for this was the moment in human time that all human distinctions were abolished by the suffering and
death of Jesus Christ. After the crucifixion of our Lord there is no sense in talking about Jew, Greek, white, black, male or female. In this sense, the timing for the demonstrations is perfect."
George Ragsdale Kansas City senior
**
Draft Shy
Mr. Miller (note my sincerity and sign of deep respect): I, for one, believe that there is nothing wrong with killing in defense of one's country if there is no other course of action readily available. What I do object to is a person who must resort to flagrant name-calling and distortion of facts in "defense" of his beliefs instead of offering constructive criticism, which, I believe, would be the more mature approach.
However, Mr. Miller, since you say that the Military Ball is the real objective of your letter (funny how so many people seemed to miss that point), let's discuss it for a few lines. In your letter of March 3, you stated, "... the ball is in no way related to the function of the ROTC program or the military in general except as a social 'extra' that helps make the program more attractive to both present and prospective members." Therefore, I interpret your display of "creative writing" to mean that, for the above reasons, the Military Ball should be eliminated.
If that is your meaning, Mr. Miller, please answer the following questions. Is the annual Homecoming Dance related to the process of education or is it merely one of the university's social "extras"? What about the SUA Carnival, Greek Week, Rock Chalk Revue, etc. Are they related to education or are they merely social "extras"?
Let me assure you, Mr. Miller, the cadets support the Military Ball in both physical organization and financial assistance. No one is forced to attend.
forced a win. Mr. Miller—BE SERIOUS! Rarely have I ever seen someone so scared of being drafted.
Kenneth J. Costich
Oak Park, Ill., senior
***
Twisted Minds
With apologies to Mr. Tom Coffman, I would like to say that for reasons usually related to amusement of a rather low form, I frequently scan the editorial page of the UDK. And on my masochistic days, I seek out those items signed by one Larry Schmidt. Where does he get off?
In his dialogue of March 10, he makes an appeal (to whom I am not certain, but that's OK—he probably wasn't either) to the effect that the Civil Rights issue be resolved in the individual human heart—physiologically, psychologically, and sociologically impossible. The least we can do is to leave this mythical arena and move into the arena of the individual human mind. But do we stop there? What
Dailij IIänsan
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, 1911 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
Russ Corbitt, Jackie Helstrom, Willis Henson, Kay Jarvis and Roy
Miller, Assistant Managing Editors; Fred Frailey, City Editor; Leta
Cathcart, Society Editor; Marshall Caskey, Sports Editor; Charles Cor-
coran, Picture Editor.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
**Tom Coffman** Editorial Edito.
Visnay Kothari and Margaret Hughes Assistant Editorial Editors
about the little and twisted (a value judgment on my part) minds? Do we make no attempt to winten them?
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bob Brooks Business Manager
Joanne Zabornik, Advertising Mgr.; Mike Barnes, National Advertising
Mgr.; Walt Webb, Circulation Mgr.; Bob Phinney, Classified Advertising
Mgr.; Ken Costich, Promotion Mgr.; Dana Stewart, Merchandising Mgr.
There are two basic appositive routes to the eventual resolution of the Civil Rights issue. One is that we wait for public opinion (a crude totality of that which exists in private minds) to change and take action only after this action can be smugly accommodated by public opinion. At best, Mr. Schmidt, this is a rather slow process. The other is that there are those amongst us who would be bold enough to implement certain types of action in hopes that this action hastens the change in public opinion, and thus, the eventual resolution of the issue. And if any one thing can be said about the issue, it is that its resolution must be hastened.
Terry Brungardt Hays graduate student
JFK's Visit -development of Central America.
(Continued from page 2)
ment attributed to "recognized communist elements acting with countries of the same ideology."
SINCE 1945, the total had amounted to $412 million. Guatemala received $150 million. It was the largest single share and reflected U.S. hopes to prevent another communist takeover such as put Guatemala in communist hands from 1951 to 1954. Nicaragua, a dictatorship, received $52 million; Honduras, $40 million; El Salvador, $17 million, and Panama, $75 million.
But, while the San Jose Conference had sought to avoid political issues, the six Central American presidents could not avoid them at home.
On March 31, the government fell to a military revolt led by defense minister Enrique Peralta Azurdia who became provisional president.
President Miguel Ydigoras Fuentes of Guatemala returned home to meet a wave of sabotage and terrorism which the gover-
ON SEPT. 25, 1963, the Honduras government of President Ramon Villeda Morales fell to a military coup d'état headed by Col. Osvaldo Lopez, chief of the armed forces.
In both Guatemala and Honduras the revolt leaders accused the former governments of negligence and blindness against communist infiltration and subversion.
Fearing the rise of extreme rightwing military dictatorships, the U.S. response was a temporary cut-off of its economic and military aid.
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Chevrolet will go to any length to make you happy
Things have changed a lot since a Chevy was only a Chevy. Especially your ideas of what you want a Chevy to be.
So now you have the Jet-smooth Chevrolet—17 1/2 feet of pure luxury, bumper to bumper. The size makes it a luxury car. But not the price.
Or you can choose the thrifty Chevy II,
a 15½-foot family car with all kinds of
passenger and luggage space.
This year, your choice might be the new 16-foot-plus Chevelle, sized to fit nicely between Chevrolet and Chevy II (and between parking meters, with five whole feet left over).
Then, too, there's the sporty 15-foot Corvair, so right for so many people (you girls, in particular) that we've never touched an inch of it. And finally, Corvette—still $14\frac{1}{2}$ feet and still too much for any true sports-car lover to say no to.
The long and short of it is, you don't have to go to any length to find exactly
CHEVROLET
go to any length to find exactly the kind of car you want. Just see the five different lines of cars at your Chevrolet dealers'.
THE GREAT HIGHWAY PERFORMERS Chevrolet • Chevelle • Chevy II • Corvair • Corvette See them at your Chevrolet Showroom
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Friday, March 20, 1964
Mitchell Seeks Linebackers As Spring Football Begins
KU's spring football practice gets underway Monday, and Coach Jack Mitchell's attention will be focused on 12 linebacking candidates.
"Finding linebackers," Mitchell said, "is our major problem, mainly because our linebacking experience is very limited and this is a phase of defense in which we need to improve greatly."
About 80 prospects are expected to report for football. Two Jayhawk regulars, All-America halfback Gayle Sayers and quarterback Steve Renko, will miss football drills for duty with the track and baseball squads. Sayers is scheduled for action in both hurdles events and the broad jump. Renko is a pitcher.
COMPLICATING THE LOSS of KU's experienced linebackers is the graduation loss of veteran fullbacks Ken Coleman and Armand Baughman, who doubled in damaging the opposing teams both as backs and backers through the last two seasons.
John Hadl, two-time All-America quarterback here in 1960 and 1961, and now with the San Diego Chargers, will work with Jayhawk quarterbacks during spring practice.
The original plan calls for left guards and fullbacks to fill the back-up posts, but this could change to a pair of fullbacks or a pair of guards since the new Big Eight rules will allow a measure of platooming next season.
M. DAVID BURTON
Coach Jack Mitchell
The opening sets of nominees to
fill the important positions line up this wav:
Left guards--Greg Roth, 204, Hays, junior; Santo Buda, 205, Omaha, Neb, sophomore; Kim Smith, 180, Fort Worth, Texas, junior; Bill Perry, 185, Herington, Junior; Fred Heidinger, 190, Jacksonville, Ill., sophomore and R. B. Miller, 205, Platte City, Mo., sophomore.
FULLBACKS — DICK BACON
K-State a Two-Point Pick Over No.1-Ranked UCLA
KANSAS CITY—(UPI)—The oddsmakers ignored past performances in making Duke a four-point favorite over Michigan and Kansas State a two-point pick over UCLA tonight in the semifinals of the NCAA basketball playoffs.
UCLA, unbeaten in 28 regular season games and named the national champion, scored a 78-75 victory over Kansas State (22-5) and Michigan (22-4) breezed to an 83-67 triumph over Duke (25-4) in December.
But the changes which K-State's Tex Winter and Duke's Vic Bubas have made in their teams since then convinced the oddsmakers to throw out those early season games.
"WE WERE DOING a lot of experimenting then," Winter says of his club at the time it bowed to UCLA, "and since then we have settled on seven boys—a rather unusual trend for me since I normally make full use of my bench."
The Atlantic Coast Conference champions now live up to a "fast, exciting and entertaining" tag with their rapid-fire fast break.
BUT, THE "coming of age" of one man on each club has probably had as much to do with their late-season success as anything else.
For Kansas State, it was the development of forward Jeff Simons, a junior playmaker without a noticeable weakness, to bolster the likes of 6-6 Willie Murrell and 7-foot Roger Suttner.
For Duke, it was the mid-February about-face performance of 6-10 senior Jay Buckley, who—in Bubas' words—"suddenly started playing and rebounding like a demon" while Duke was winning 18 of its last 19 games.
Michigan coach Dave Strack, whose tallest starters are 6-7 Bill Buntin and Oliver Dardin, still figures "rebounding is our forte" and hopes to use that tactic plus the 23-point shooting average of Buntin and 24.6-point output of soph Cazzie Russell to dunk Duke's hopes.
Tonight's losers will play for third place at 7 p.m. tomorrow night with the winners meeting for the national championship at 9 p.m.
Flowers for all Occasions at OWENS
***
210, Neodesha, sophomore; Arden Gray, 195, Phillipsburg, sophomore; Kent Craft, 190, Council Grove, sophomore; Bill Gerhards, 213, Leavenworth, junior; Dennis Liggett, 189, King City, Mo., junior, and Ron Oelschlag, 195, Marion, senior.
We wire flowers anywhere in the free world
****
9th & Ind.
VI 3-6111
Oelschlager has been a slotback for the past two seasons, but with Gerhards the lone letterman hold-over at this spot, the Jayhawks are in need of propping here.
Gerhards carries good running and blocking potential, but his 5-8 height is certain to be a linebacking handcap. Gray, a starter with last year's unbeaten freshmen, and Bacon, are rated good young prospects. Craft did a good job with the 1962 frog squash, but missed last season with a knee injury as did Liggett.
Roth is the only experienced guard, earning his letter last year on the No. 3 unit as a sophomore. He made a 20-yard touchdown run with a fourth-quarter interception at Wyoming last October as the Jayhawks came back from a two-touchdown deficit for a 25-21 victory.
Smith also lettered as a third-stringer last year, but has limited experience as a linebacker. Through necessity, Buda played end with the 1963 freshmen, but was a high school guard.
Perry was regarded as the best linebacker on the squad last spring, but was required to sit out the season under the transfer rule. Heidinger impressed coaches with his quick, aggressive defensive play with the freshmen last year. Miller is also regarded as a good prospect.
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Erfday, March 20, 1964 University.Daily Kansan
Spring? Afraid Not
Page 5
By Leta Cathcart (Society Editor)
So you thought spring was here? Well, guess what fooled you. So at this time of year, as always, the question of the proper wardrobe arises.
Wool skirts and sweaters are fine for the outdoors, but they are too heavy for sitting in classes. The rain makes a raincoat necessary, but the ordinary unlined raincoat is too light for the chilly winds that are common on the Hill.
And yet cottons are not warm enough. Then there is the problem of Kansas weather. It has a nasty reputation of changing on the hour, every hour.
My advice? Punt. Freeze one day, bake the next, and hope spring, the real one, that is, comes pretty soon.
Co-ed Volleyball To Begin
By Susan Hartley
By Susan Hartley
The GSP (4W) volleyball team captured the women's intramural volleyball championship Tuesday night defeating Alpha Delta Pi 15-8, 9-13, 15-1 in a competitive three matches. Both teams earned their place in the finals earlier the same evening with GSP (4W) defeating Pi Beta Phi 10-5, 15-4, and Alpha Delta Pi defeating GSP (Θ) 15-4, 6-12, 13-11 bringing the seven week tournament to a close.
Twenty-eight living groups have signed up 27 teams to participate in the first Women's Recreation Association co-rec volleyball tournament beginning next Tuesday, March 24.
The co-rec volleyball division is a new facet of the WRA program in which the women's living groups invite men's living groups to be partners in a volleyball team which will then participate in tournament action. Each living group can only participate with one other living group, but the partnership allowed two teams. All the coalitions except one took advantage of this opportunity and entered two teams in the competition.
EACH TEAM CONSISTS of 12 members, 6 men and 6 women, of which 3 of each play at any given time. Rules are set up so that the men and women must alternate in returning the ball so that the male members of the team will not completely dominate the game.
All four women's scholarship halls have entered teams with Selaras playing with Pearson, Miller playing with Stephenson, Watkins with Jo-
Engagements
Kay Jarvis, Kansas City Junior to Larry Morlan, McPherson sophomore.
Sue Alexander, Shawnee Mission sophomore, to Jack Carolan, Devon Pa. sophomore.
Ellen Hassler, Chapman senior;
Alpha Omicron Pi, to David Boles
Abilene junior at Kansas State
University.
D. T. Tutton, Wichita senior, Alpha Phi, to Mike Bush, Glendale, Mo. senior, Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Carol Shank, Prairie Village freshman, to Trey DeVoe, Dallas, Tex. senior, Pi Kappa Alpha.
Betty Grout, Columbus senior at Mercy School of Nursing, to Richard Evans, Columbus junior, Pi Kappa Alpha.
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liffe, and Douthart and Battenfeld. The two freshman dormitories also entered the competition with GSP pairing off with Alpha KappaLambda and Corbin hall with Lambda Chi Alpha.
THE SORORITY DISTRICT held its own entering 8 partnerships and 15 teams. The Alpha Chi Omega will be playing with Delta Upsilon; the Kappa Sigma; Chi Omega with Alpha Tau Cmega; Delta Delta Delta with Delta Tau Delta; Pi Beta Phi with sigma Chi; Kappa Kappa Gamma with Phi Gamma Delta; Delta Gamma with Phi Delta Theta, and the Gamma Phi Betas with the Sigma Alpha Epsilons.
Janice Slinksigk, Overland Park senior at Texas Christian University, Alpha Gamma Delta, to Henry White, Council Grove junior, Pi Kappa Alpha.
Pinnings
Donna Gaeddert, Hutchinson sephomore, Pi Beta Phi, to Bob Wbrewster, Shawnee Mission senior, Phi Delta Theta.
Karen Cornett, Bellvue, Neb. junior,
Gamma Phi Beta, to Lowell
Evjen, Kansas City, Mo. senior, Delta
Tau Delta.
Daily hansan
UNIVERSITY Daily Hansan PRESENTS for the KU Student An Entertainment Page
An Entertainment Page SEE PAGE 6 & 7
UP
That Will Tell You -
1) what is playing at the shows
2) where to go afterwards
3) where to dine
40 what to do in Lawrence
5) how you can spend the afternoon in the air
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819 Mass.
ARENSBERG'S
VI 3-3470
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday, March 20, 196
ENTERTAINMENT
GU
An Entertainment Guide for the student...to help you enjoy your weekend.
This is the first in a series of advertisements showing you things to do and places to go to make the most of your leisure time.
The Castle Tearoom For Your Dining pleasure 1307 Mass. VI 3-1151
Enjoy Fine Foods
This Weekend At
THE STEAK HOUSE
"Where every meal is a feast"
1100 E. 23rd VI 3-9753
Dine and Bowl at Hillcrest Bowl
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at 109 6th St. is ready to serve you
Tues-Sun. till 4 a.m.
for the finest in Steaks its...
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WEEKEND DATE SPECIAL
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YOUR DATE GETS TO BOWL EVERY OTHER GAME $ F-R-E-E$
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air time:
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Entrees
Roast Sirloin of Beef
Serving 12 Noon to 3 p.m. Restaurant closes at 7:00 p.m.
Baked Virginia Ham
Southern Fried Chicken
Jumbo Shrimp
Oven Brown Potatoes or Potato Fluffs
Choice of 10 Salads & Relishes
Hot Rolls and Butter
Choice of Vegetables
Dancing on Friday and Saturday Night
Price includes Coffee, Tea, Milk, or Coke
Firebird Restaurant
Open Daily from 4 to 9 Closed Monday Friday & Saturday from 4 to 10
Smothers Brotho and Peter Nero
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Take A Study And Join The Gan at the Gaslight Ta
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Plus Cartoo
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Feature Times: 7 & 9
Fraser Theat
FRIDAY FL
Friday, March 20, 1964 University Daily Kansan
GUIDE
Page 7
PLACES TO GO- THINGS TO DO!
ers Brothers and Peter Nero
ELL'S VI 3-2644
Study Break nd Join the Gang at the right Tavern
C
---
TAKES A VACATION...
YOU HAVE ALL THE FUN!
JAMES MAUREEN
STEWART O'HARA
JERRY WALD'S PRODUCTION OF
Mr. HOBBS
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co-starring
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JOHN SAXON • MARIE WILSON
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INTRODUCING
LAURI PETERS and VALERIE VARDA
Plus Cartoon 35c
Times: 7 & 9:30 p.m.
aser Theater
AY FLICKS
SMOTHERS BROTHERS
Monday, April 13, 7:30 p.m.
Whiting Field House presented by Student Union Activities Board Washburn University
Tickets: Student $1.75 Gen. Admission $2.75 On sale: Student Union Washburn University Mail orders accepted Please enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your check or money order.
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
--mg
5 ACADEMY NOMINATIONS including BEST ACTRESS for MISS NATALIE WOOD
TIM ROBERTS
THEY MET BY CHANCE...
and with that meeting their story unfolds there was a moment when everything was risked. . .
---
NATALIE
WOOD
STEVE
McQUEEN
A PAKULA-MILLBAN PRODUCTION
LOVE WITH THE
PROPER STRANGER
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone M 3-5790
Sat. mat. 2:00, Eve. 7:00-9:00 Sun. Continuous From 2:30
Starts TOMORROW!
ENDS TONITE — "MAIL ORDER BRIDE" 7:00 & 9:00
"Dr. Strangelove is a wildly comic nightmare! — LIFE
Peter Sellers · George C. Scott
Stanley Kubrick's
Dr. Strangelove
or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb
Varsity
the hot-line suspense comedy!
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
Adults $1.00 — Children 50c
SOON — "Wonderful World of the BROS. GRIMM"
Sun. 2:30 - 4:40 - 6:50 - 9:00
NOW! Tonite at 7:00 & 9:00
Sat. 2:00 7:00 & 9:00
TONITE - SAT. - SUN.
Open 6:30 — Starts 7:00
"KING KONG"
Sunset
AND
DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on highway 40
"MIGHTY JOE YOUNG"
Plus Bonus Hit
Plus bonus Hit 10:30 Tonite & Saturday
10:30 Triton & Saturday
"DOCTOR AT SEA"
"DOCTOR AT SEA"
FULL-TIME OPERATION AFTER MARCH 27
PETER
Rana
MARCH 28
C. M. M.
100
NERO
TICKETS ON SALE NOW
1
HOCH
PETER
D. R. S. P.
M. M.
INFORMATION BOOTH
100
NERO
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Friday, March 20.1964
De Gaulle Wants Atomic Power for France—
(Continued from page 1)
And it was this at least in part which enabled De Gaulle on Jan. 14, 1963, to issue his declaration of independence, diminishing both United States and British influence on the continent of Europe and reciting that "France intends to have its national nuclear defense."
THE SOVIET UNION'S acquisition of a nuclear arsenal, he said, had completely changed the U.S. position.
U.S. nuclear strength, he said,
remains "the essential guarantee of world peace" . . . but . . . "no one in the world—particularly no one in America—can say if, where, when, how and to what extent the American nuclear weapons would be employed to defend Europe . . . France must have her own share in her own destiny."
The schism between De Gaulle and the United States and De Gaulle and Britain guaranteed that the Atlantic Treaty never again would be the same.
The terms of the treaty provide that it shall be revised in 1969.
BUT AMONG DIPLOMATS there is a growing belief that 1964 will be the year of decision, and for more reasons than De Gaulle.
The fear of a clash between Greece and Turkey over Cyprus already has weakened NATO defenses in the Eastern Mediterranean.
At the other end of the alliance, Britain faces a general election this year, with the Labor party given a strong chance to win.
Within the Labor party is a strong neutralist wing whose voice, though largely silent now, could at some time in the future contribute further to the weakness of NATO.
TO THE CLAMOR within NATO for a greater part in the control of its nuclear weapons, the United States has proposed a multi-nation naval force armed with the nuclear-tipped Polaris missile. It has been flatly rejected by France, received luke-warm by Britain and Italy, with only West Germany enthusiastically for it.
It is a political concept designed to still any future German desire for nuclear weapons of its own. Even in the U.S., military men frankly doubt that it is practical.
The always-apparent weaknesses of SEATO also have been enhanced by differences among its Western members.
SEATO is a consultative alliance and not, like NATO, equipped with a unified command.
With the exception of Malaysia, which is a British concern, responsibility for Southeast Asia's defense against Communist envelopment has been borne almost alone by the United States.
Official Bulletin
Teaching Interviews: Mar. 23, Rowland Calif. Make appointment in 117 Ealey.
Obtain a questionnaire for special
Office. Kansas Union basement or Dean
of Students, 228 Strong, Examinations
daily, Mon.-Thursday and
Sat. morning.
TODAY
Catholic Mass. 5 p.m., St. Lawrence
Chapel, 1910 Stratford, Rd.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
Jewish Community Center Services,
71st p.m., 917 Highland Dr. Refreshment
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses. 6:45 a.m., 5 p.M. at
Lawrence Chapel. Confessions: 4-5 and
7-12
International Club, 8 p.m., Big 8 Room, Kansas Union. English Style Debate—"America Should Be in British Commonwealth."
SUNDAY
Catholic Masses, 8 a.m. St. Lawrence
Cape Cod Rd., 9:30 and 11
am. Frangipani Church
Oread Friends Meeting, 10:30 a.m.
Dana Moynihan to the Quaker meeting for worship.
SUA Chess Club, 2 p.m., Kansas Union
Steak Dinner
Sunday Nites $1.25
4:30 - 10:30
DINE-A-MITE
23rd & La.
U. S. ATTEMPTS to convert Laos into a pro-Western stronghold met oposition from both France and Britain who feared a head-on clash with Red China.
In the end, the United States was forced to write off its Laotian experiment as a $300 million failure and to accept for Laos a questionable neutrality.
De Gaulle is betting on a similar fate for the $1.5 million-per-day U.S. effort in South Vietnam. And with his recognition of Red China and advocacy of Vietnamese neutrality proposes to reinstate the French influence lost at Dien Bien Phu.
FAILURE TO ACHIEVE allied unity in Laos, led neighboring Thailand openly to question the value of its ties with SEATO.
Fear of similar results in South Viet Nam led Cambodian leader Norodom Sihanouk to renounce $30 million in annual aid from the United States and to seek his balance with Red China in renewed ties to France.
eagerly accepted. De Gaulle, without bothering to announce it, had withdrawn from SEATO, just as in effect he had from NATO. For De Gaulle SEATO already was dead.
For France it was an offer
And in the Philippines, a traditional U.S. ally in Southeast Asia, President Diosdado Macapagal took a whole new look at alliances.
THE SYSTEM OF military alliances, he decided is no longer a sufficient deterrent to the dangers facing Southeast Asia.
"... despite enormous expenditures for military aid in Southeast Asian countries, the maintenance and consolidation of national independence remain in grave danger..."
The danger to CENTO springs from the deep distrust between Pakistan and India and their dispute over Kashmir.
From this also springs Pakistani antagonism toward the United States.
Pakistan is dependent upon the United States both for military and economic support, and only last September won U.S. agreement for another $70 million loan.
But Pakistani president Ayub
as he finds them of "no use."
The weapons, he believes, eventually may be turned against Pakistan.
He has concluded a border agreement with Red China and a handful of other agreements including an exchange of landing rights for Pakistani and Red Chinese airliners.
SUA Jazz Forum to Have Midwestern Jazz Quintet
Bill Hargrave, leader and trumpet player of the group, is a former KU student. Hargrave's musical influences are varied, but in his playing, one can detect strains of trumpeters Nat Adderly, Kenny Dorham, and occasionally, Dizzy Gillespie and Miles Davis.
Altoist Herb Smith, Memphis, Tenn., junior, is the group's other horn player. Smith's playing has been heard around campus for the last three years.
The Midwestern Jazz Quintet, consisting of four students of the Kansas City Conservatory of Music, and one KU student, will provide the music. The group will feature several original compositions by members of the group in addition to tunes by Horace Silver, Miles Davis, and Curtis Amy.
And it was with special pleasure that early this year he received the Red Chinese announcement that it was abandoning a policy of neutrality toward the Kashmir dispute and siding with Pakistan.
Live music will be featured at the Student Union Activities Jazz Forum at 3 p.m. Sunday in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
Khan has warned that he will quit his Western alliances as soon
Khan dislikes what he believes is growing U.S. tolerance for non-alignment as opposed to the Eisenhower-Dulles emphasis on alliances and especially he dislikes the military aid which the United States has poured into India for defense against Red China.
Weavers
high fashion's
a-foot
the Easter-perfect pump in
fashion's favored square
throat mid-heel.
12.95
Citations
• spring red
• black patent
• white lightning
السلام عليكم الحميدي
Have you read the Engineer?
To Express The Glory Of Easter
To Express The
Glory Of Easter
Wire Flowers This
Easter
Anywhere in the Free World
Owens
MINTH & INDIANA
V1.3-6111
FLOWER SHOP
Friday, March 20,1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
ENGINEERING DAY and St. Pat's DANCE
THESE FIRMS SALUTE THE ENGINEERS ON THEIR DAY!
Lawrence Ready Mix
5th & Maple VI 3-1688
Friend Lumber Co.
1029 N.H. VI 3-0360
B. A. Green Construction Co.
1207 Iowa VI3-5277
Penny Ready Mix
730 Del. VI 3-8100
Morton Building Materials 900 E.15th VI3-2125
Logan-Moore Lumber Co.
1011 N. 3rd VI3-0931
Peter von Knorring Masonry Contractors 611 Ill. VI3-4198
D. A. Grob Construction 1820 Ohio VI3-6805
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Friday, March 20, 1964
Other Schools Outdo KU in Physical Education
Rv Susan Flood
Since cars were banned from the campus, walking is the only form of physical education at KU.
This is because KU is the only state school which does not require physical education as part of every student's curriculum.
"THE REQUIRED program which was offered until 1936 and during the war years was not successful." Henry Shenk, professor of physical education, said this week.
"Actually the facilities in Robinson now, and even the facilities in the proposed new gymnasium would not be adequate if all students were required to enroll in a physical education program," Shenk added.
Gilbert Ulmer, assistant dean of the College, said that there has been little discussion about requiring physical education at KU.
"One view often expressed is that to require physical education would make it distasteful to many students," said Dean Ulmer. "A large percent of the students do elect to take activity courses, and
many more participate in intramurals or varsity sports."
DEAN ULMER SAID although President Kennedy's emphasis on physical fitness may have had some effect on requirements in schools, there is still doubt about how much required physical education can really accomplish.
"Required physical education is not the same thing as physical fitness," Dean Ulmer said. "A few minutes a week cannot do much for physical fitness, especially if the enthusiasm is lost by making it compulsory."
Both Dean Ulmer and Prof. Shenk stressed the advantages of learning a sport which can be continued after school.
"There is a great value in learning a sport, such as swimming, which a person can participate in after his schooling, and thus can remain in good physical condition." Prof. Shenk said.
THE BIGGEST overlooked benefit from physical participation, Prof. Shenk said, is the release from the tensions which exist in a college community. He felt this is often accomplished through intramural sports participation.
"It was a great thing for physical fitness when they banned cars from the campus so that students would have to walk more." Prof. Shenk said.
Dean Ulmer also felt that the contemporary pattern of life has made Americans less physically fit, and stressed walking as one simple way to build up stamina.
While KU may feel physical fitness can be attained in ways other than by requiring physical education courses, three Kansas schools do not.
AUTHORITIES AT Kansas State University, Washburn University, and the University of Wichita all laud their programs of required physical education.
All three schools used to require two years of physical education, but Kansas State dropped to one year last fall. All meet two times a week for an hour each. Washburn dropped from three hours this year.
Kansas State is the only school of the three which offers no college credit for the required hours. Washburn and Wichita each offer
one credit hour per semester, which is the same as KU allows for non-required courses.
Kansas State is also the only school which does not allow students to elect the sports activities they wish to take. The program there includes body building exercises.
WICHITA UNIVERSITY has several exceptions in its program. For example, those enrolled in ROTC are exempt from physical education requirements, and participation in varsity sports accounts for one semester of required physical education per varsity sport.
Wichita also allows women students to repeat an activity course, but not males.
The activity courses at all the state schools differ for women only in the type of sport offered. The stress for women is more on coordination type courses—such as synchronized swimming, modern dance, body mechanics and archery—rather than bodily contact sports.
These three state schools stated approval of required physical education. According to one, Prof. George M. Parker, Washburn University, the college faculty recently gave a strong vote of confidence to the program.
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
★ TUNE-UPS
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
Speaker Says Love, God Will Solve Race Problem
ART'S TEXACO
9th & Mississippi
VI 3-9897
A real answer to today's race problems lies in the love of God and faith in Jesus Christ.
This was the solution given last night at the College Life meeting by Nolen Ellison, all-conference basketball guard for KU last year
Ellison cited three solutions to the race problem, two of which have been tried.
The first of the solutions tried in history was one of hatred and
The first of the solutions tried fear. In the South, the Negro was put in a low class by groups like the Ku Klux Klan. This solution worked, but not good, because one day the Negro got a little education and realized that he did have the worse plight of a dual system, Ellison said.
The second solution to the race problem has been to isolate the Negroes. A separate society, Ellison said, but existing side by side.
The idea of two groups, such as the white and the Negro, existing apart has not worked in history, because it invited trouble and friction. Ellison said. It points out the difference in the two instead of the common grounds, and this friction might invite Communism, he said.
The third solution and perhaps the best Ellison explained, is the necessity of finding a common denominator. This common denominator is the love of God and faith in Jesus Christ, Elison said.
KU-Y Elects
"There is a power behind the universe, and that power is Jesus Christ," Ellison said. "If we saw him in our problems (race), there would not be any problems."
Lacy Banks, Kansas City junior, and Julie Winkler, Caney junior, were elected as co-presidents of the KU-Y last night.
During a membership meeting attended by about 70 members of the KU-Y, six persons were elected as the new officers for the coming school year.
Other officers elected were covice-presidents: Howard Wilcox, Lawrence sophomore, and Winnie Frazae. Wichita junior; co-secretary-treasurer, Mary Barber, Concordia junior, and James Maxwell, Douglas junior.
English Style - Debate-
"America Should Be in the British Common Market"
Saturday, 8:00 p.m.
Big Eight Room
Spring is almost here, and this means many social affairs. Make sure you look your Best.
THE DAYTON MEN'S CLUB
FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S
Independent DRIVE-IN 900 Miss.
DOWNTOWN PLANT 740 Vt.
Independent
LAUNDRY AND
DRY CLEANERS
9th and Mississippi
Two sp records.
wheels.
aquarium
1960 Ma shape. $
Cla
Like n sedan. I tioning, and ca with 19 VI 2-10:
For the etc. acc 1902 Ha VI 3-16
17" con after 6 Gibson foot sw Reason:
K
LAWRI
USED
AMMO
$37.50.
CALL
House.
tion. T
school
loan. $
and fu
6994.
1960 Fo Excelle after 4
FM 81
Compa
Olymp
2 pc.s
phono.
$159.
Motorol
929 M
New
1 yea
$12
Mass.
Tire p count
nylon
Four
Four
Install
SPE
WHEI
at gre
Satur
St.
Type stand Olivebles. Ice. VI 3-
For 9040
Classified Ads
FOR SALE
1960 MatchTess 500 cc twish. Excellent shape, shape. 455, Call 31-6106. 3-26
Two speaker stereo with stand and records. $30. Portable TV. Stand on wheels. $3. Three tropical fish with aquarium. $4. Call VI 2-4255. 3-24
Like new 1961 Ford Galaxie 4-door sedan. Full power equipment, air-conditioning, heater, radio. New snow tires and car record player. Buy or trade with 1963 or 1964 car of any make. Call VI 2-1051 or see at 1244 Ohio. 3-26
for the best in used parts, motors, radios,
etc. accessories—Benson's Auto Salvage.
1902 Harper, north of 4-H grounds. Phone
VI 3-1626. Open evenings. 3-24
17" console TV. Must sell. Call VI 2-4197
@ 6 p.m. tt
Gibson Amplifier, 2 channel, tremolo,
Reasonably priced. Call VT 12-1291. 3-20
LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. NEW AND
USED GUNS, MILITARY
AMMO BOXES, LUGER,
LUGER, WE ALSO REBLUE. 1026 OHIO.
CALL I V 2-1214 evenings. 3-23
Page 11
1960 Ford convertible for sale by owner.
Excellent condition. Phone VI 3-7294
after 4:45 p.m.
3-23
House, four years old, excellent condition. Three bedrooms, link fence, near school and swimming pool. $700 assumes loan. $78 a month. Ops. New appliances and furniture. 1955 Miller Drive. VI 3-6994. tf
FM, RADIO and STEREO SALE. G.E.
music FM, $23. G.E. AM-FM AFC.
$28.94. G.E. 2 spkr. FM-CLK. $34.88.
Olympic 2 pc. stereo FM. $60. Emerson
2 pc. stereo FM. $93. G.E. stereo FM and
phono. $198. Motorola 5 spk. stereo FM.
$197. Motorola coffee stereo FM.
$159. G.E. pop stereo 4 spk. $100.
G.E. pop stereo 5 stereo. $88. Motorola
Twin Wing stereo. $55. Ray Stoneback's.
$299. Mass. V3-4170. 3-24
Volkswagen and Renault owners! Nylon premium tubeless tires cut to tax (tubeless retreads, $16.99 EA). Raymond's back discount Tire Center, 929 Masson, 3-24
New battery portable all transistor phono.
Sounds like a console! 4 speeds,
into compact speaker for an offer
all new readers only: $55.88. Ray
Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. 3-24
Tire prices slashed! Ray Stonebaker's Discount Tire Center at 929 Mass. 36 monylon tubeless tires. Four 650 x 13 s., $40.
Four 750 x 14 s., $44. Four 670 x 15 s., $44. Four 800 x 14 s., $50. Plus tax, exchange.
installed! 4 whitewalls, $8 extra. 3-26
New 16" lightweight portable TV, $99.
1 year guarantee on parts! Rent or buy,
$12 per month. Ray Stoneback's,
Mass. (Motorola Headquarters). 3-26
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME
WHEELS, Cheater Slicks, etc. for sale
at great savings after 6 p.m. weekdays,
sunday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut
tt
For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3-
9040 after 5 p.m. tf
Typewriter, new and used portables,
standards, electrics. Olympia, Hermes.
Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables.
Typewriter, adder, rentals and service
Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St..
VI 3-*7644.
German Shepherd pups, AKC registered
bred by Covington Lloyd Brosseh
bison. Phone KI 2-2559. **Bt**
New shipment of Pink typing paper 500
ream- $3.5 Lawrence Outdoor
1005 Mass
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for classes. Formerly known as notes. Most civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, minimegraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 21-901 for free delivery. tf
FOR RENT
Single or double room. Furnished, cook-
ing area. Room is paid. Call if
2-9453 or see at 1244 La.
Furnished apartment for single man.
5:30 p.m. 1633 Vermont.
3-26
Furnished kitchenette on 2nd floor a
bathroom. On-site parking. Call VI 3-3566. 3-20
Two room furnished apartment. See after 3:30 p.m. 821 Indiana or call VI 3- 4168. 3-24
Rooms for men students. Singles for $25.
Doubles for $20. Refrigerator and linens furnished. Cooking privileges. 1161 Tenn.
or call VI 3-2257. 3-23
Married, grad students, faculty, 2 bedroom, $75. Sleeping room, $25. 16 available in June. Reserve now. Call for details. -2116. Santee安妮公寓, 1123 Indiana. . . . .
For one or two graduate age men, three room nicely furnished apt. prince suite. Ideal study conditions. Prices paid. Ideal study conditions. Best of neighbors. For appointment phone VI 3-8534. tt Crescent Heights two bedroom apartment n.pt. n.pt. 25th and Red. Phone VI 2-3711. tt
Graduate men or older undergraduates extra- nice furnished bachelor apartment Close to campus, ideal study conditions best of neighbors. Reasonably priced utilizes paid. For appointment call VI 3-85.4. tr
TYPING
Experienced secretary would like typing in her home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 2188. tf
Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term papers, thesis, etc. accredited work available. Phone vi. EI 3-8379. Mrs. Charles Patti.
Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (pica type). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi. VI 3-0558.
Accurate expert typist would like typing in her home. Term papers and theses. Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. tt
Experienced typist with electric typewriter--fast accurate work with reasons, suggestions, papers, phone conversations and theses, paper VI. VI 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson.
Experienced Typist—Dissertations, Theses, Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 Rhode Island. VI 3-1485. tf
Professional typing by experienced secretary,
New electric typewriter, writer,
Call 91-36045 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 Yale, VI 2-1648.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, publications. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568
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. tf
MILLIKENES SOS--always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
We also do tape transcriptions. Office
tapes 7 mm. p.m. 12pm.-many! Phone VI 3-5920
Artists-Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics
George's Hobby Shop
1105 Mass. VT 3-5087
The only thing better than a home cooked meal is
Dinner At
DUCKS
Steaks & Seafoods
A Specialty
Serving crisp tossed salads, choice of potatoes, zesty Vienna breads & country fresh butter. Sandwiches, too! Your favorite beverage
11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass.
term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. **tf**
7,000 Pipes and every smoking accessory
MISCELLANEOUS
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass.
Have a party in the Big Red School
Room with plants and plants.
Hented. Call VI 3-7453.
727 Mass. VI 3-7164
WANTED
Reasonable priced, 3-speed man's bike.
Call VI 3-1144 after 5:30 p.m. Bob Mc-
Dowell.
3-23
George's Pipe Shop
VOLKSAGEN’ WANTED. Cash for your VW, Conzelman Motors, VW Sales. Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway 59 So.
tt
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
Billfold, lost in Fraser Theater, Friday,
Feb. 7, between 9 and 12 p.m. Contact
Dave Till, 818 Kentucky.
tt
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
TAX FREE EUROPEAN CARS. Army officer planning summer trip to Europe. Will pick up any brand European car and deliver to port for U.S. arrival about July 15. Includes VW 1500. Details, call VI 2-1318. 3-24
LOST
"SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS"
Dressmaking-aiterations, formals and gowns. Ola Smith, 938% MIII VI 3-5283
BUSINESS SERVICES
Hot doughnuts—sandwich cold drink
25c delivery VI 3-4720
JOE'S BAKERY
616 W. 9th
Balfour
Milliken's SOS
"the best professional service"
Fraternity Jewelry
- General typing service
1021 $ _{1/2} $ Mass., V1 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
- 24 hr. answering service
- General typing service
- Notary public
- Mimegraph & photo-copying
M
Portraits of Distinction
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
L&M CAFE now under new management We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. every day for delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches Your second cup of coffee always free.
Spring Fling—Need to get ready? Needs alterations can be done by calling VI 2 805-326-9143, Campus, Baby sitting in my home. Fenced yard. Any age call. Call VI 3-4156. 3-2
JIM'S CAFE
Surprise your roommate with a cake on that special occasion. The K.U. Bairthday cake, the student box, a line of cakes. Free delivery and candles. Cali VI 2-1791. 4-24
Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery frented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 116 Mass. VI 3-1267 t
OPEN 24 hrs. a day
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
Automotive Service
Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel
Balancing
7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Friday, March 20, 1964
838 Mass.
U-Call, we haul. Anything, anytime. Vl 3-5888. u
Girl to play electric organ part-time
Call VT 3-4743.
HELP WANTED
Travel Agency AIR LINES
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
STUDENTS
RISK'S
Shirt Finishing Laundry
Wash & Fluff Dry
613 Vt. VI 3-4141
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
University Daily Kansan
Steamship Lines
Tops — Glass & Zippers —
Rear Glass Sets — Headlines —
Door Panels —
Domestic ⊕ Foreign
Tailor Made Seat Covers at Competitive Prices with sewed double lock stitch. Lock's Seat Covers
Big Store Service
Tours & Cruises Everywhere
Jack's Sear Covers
545 Minn.
VI 3-4242
Small Store Attention
Book Nook
1021 Mass.
746 Mass.
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
IT'S OK TO OWE RAY
809 Mass.
A complete line, including,
• Lavaliers • Guards
• Pins • Mugs
• Rings • Crests
FRATERNITY JEWELRY
VI 3-0152
Swimming pool serviceman, part time starting in April, full time in summer. Some swimming pool experience preferred. Work in Kansas City. Call VI 3-880-7622.
Ambitious young man with experience in shoe sales. Salary and commission. A real proposition for the right man. Write, giving resume of experience, age, etc. to Box 10, University Daily Ransan, Flint Hall. 3-24
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY, Peppermint Park Kiddyland operation for sale. 303 by running this during the summer. Call VI 2-0155 after 5 p.m. 4-3
YELLOW CAB CO.
VI 3-6333
24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled
VI 3-4732 704 Vermont
All makes & models frame - body - fender - glass
AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS
DALE'S BODY SHOP
ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass.
One Stop Service
★ Engine Tune Up
VI 3-9271
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
★ Lubrication & Oil Change
JACK & GUNN'S
Brake Repair
SKELLY
★ Generator & Starter Repair
SKELLY SERVICE
300 W. 6th
FOR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS
SEE MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER VI 3-1211
COMPLETE SERVICE FOR CHEVYS & OLDS
& OLDS
- Small enough to give personal attention.
- Big enough to have all the equipment.
VI 3-7700
738 N.H.
SHIP WINTER
CHEVROLET
HAVING A PARTY?
We are always happy to serve you with
Ice cold beverages China make cookies
Chips, nuts, cookies
Variety of grocery items
Crushed ice, candy
Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds
OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING
616 Vt.
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 20, 1964
College Faculty to Discuss Educational Policy
A special report from the Administrative Committee of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences concerning procedures by which higher education is conducted in the College will be discussed at a faculty meeting Tuesday.
The report, Notes on Educational Policy" is part of a communications issued this week from the office of George R. Waggoner, Dean of the College.
The communication stressed that the points illustrated in the report were only for discussion purposes and "not fully developed proposals ready for formal action."
THE THREE PROBLEM areas considered by the report were the following.
following.
• How can the curriculum be changed to provide students with the opportunity to exercise the initiative and to take responsibility for the pursuit of their education?
Spring Sing Fete Slated for Sunday
Inter-residence Council's (IRC) annual Spring Sing will be in the Kansas Union ballroom at 3:30 p.m. Sunday. The theme this year is Serenade to Spring.
Groups from all member halls of Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) will compete for seven trophies to be presented at 5:00 p.m. by Carol Wendt. IRC president.
Spring Fling trophies will also be presented at this time.
Vox Lashes (Continued from page 1)
ished because there was nothing for it, to do.
"UP always cries about too many inefficient committees and then they want to create another one which can do nothing that the administration can't do much better," Bornholdt said.
Jim Cline, Rockford, Ill., junior, and candidate for vice-president of the student body, said the food committee advocated by UP is worthless since each hall has its own food committees to work with the dietitians.
BORNHOLDT ALSO ATTACKED the plan advocating making examinations' files available in the library. He said it had been tried before and proved unworkable because the professors felt it was "an infringement on their academic freedom."
Although Bornholtt commended the Little Hoover Commission he said UP's proposed ASC committee evaluation was not a function of the council members.
Cline added that council members did not have time to sit on all committees and reports could serve as a direct line on the over-all work of the committee.
In regard to the freshman leadership program proposed by UP, Bornholdt said the ASC Public Elations committee had been promoting an apprentice system all year
Contacted after the meeting, Mary Beth Gast, Paola sophomore and Vox representative on the ASC, said Douthart affiliated to "find out how we can benefit from belonging to Vox."
In other business the general assembly ratified Richard Clark, Salina graduate student, as the party's candidate for the graduate school seat.
"There is more interest now in the women's scholarship hall district and Vox has encouraged this." Miss Gast explained.
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- How can the examination procedures on which grades are based be modified to motivate students towards true scholarship and a coherent liberal education?
- How can the over-emphasis on grades and grade point averages be reduced?
The Administrative Committee, whose members were not revealed, submitted with these problems, the following "comments" for discussion by the faculty when it meets at 4:00 p.m., in Bailey auditorium.
4.10 pm.
Changes in curriculum, suggested in the report, were basically to "eliminate or expand all courses of less than three hours credit, adjusting as many courses as possible to four hours credit, and encouraging the faculty to meet their classes less frequently but for longer periods of time."
This change would relieve the student of having to enroll in five or six different courses each semester. The report states that "with this situation the students' intellectual and psychic energy is scattered among several areas simultaneous-
OTHER CURRICULUM changes suggested in the report concerned the ratio of laboratory hours to classroom hours, the ratio of out of class study to the amount of credit given, and the encouragement of seminar, discussion, and laboratory activities.
The report considered the essaytype exam a "desirable alternative" to the objective exam, which the committee felt subjected the
Panel to Discuss Grading System
"Is Our Grading System Obsolete?" will be discussed by a panel at 4:30 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Members of the Current Events Forum panel will be William Bass, assistant professor of anthropology and sociology, Austin Lashbrook, associate professor of the classics, and Frank Thompson, Lawrence senior and president of the Intermediary Board.
student to "short-term memorization, rapid recall, and split-second judgment."
judgment. The committee also reported that the number of exams given during the semester should be reduced to "the minimum necessary for evaluation of a student's performance." This reduction would eliminate "shot-gun" quizzes, which the report states are "unitive devices rather than tests of scholarly ability."
WITH RESPECT to the final examination period the committee suggested in the report that the examination period be expanded to approximately two weeks, that three hours be allowed for each examination, and that no student be required to take more than two final exams in one day.
According to the report, the committee felt that under the present system students must "place a premium on rapid recall and rapid grading."
The report also suggested that a week at the end of each semester should be set aside for reading and reflection. "Final exams follow too
closely upon the pressure-filled last week to allow any time for this purpose," the report stated.
THE GRADING system was the final point discussed in the report. It was suggested that graduation requirements might be stated in terms of hours of passing work rather than in both hours and grade-points. The report also suggested changing the grading scale from A, B, C, D, and F, to H (honors), P (pass), and F (fail).
The committee lastly suggested the use of comprehensive examinations during the junior and senior years. The examination given during the junior year would measure the student's progress in liberal education, and the senior exam would "evaluate his mastery of the major area."
THE ADOPTION of either proposal would make the continued use of the English proficiency examination unnecessary, the report stated.
The committee stressed again that the proposals were not fully developed, but would be a basis for discussion of the stated problems.
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61st Year, No. 109
Monday, March 23, 1964
Corps Workers On KU Campus
Bv Bobbie Bartelt
Climbing a mountain is a test of oneself, not a struggle against the mountain, one of the American conquerors of Mount Everest said.
William F. Unsoeld, a member of the successful 1963 American expedition to the summit of the world's highest peak, is on campus this week to participate in the KU Peace Corps Week.
UNSOELD MADE THE HIMALAYAN climb while on leave of absence from his duties as Peace Corps representative in Nepal. He was given permission to make the Mount Everest climb by Sargent Shriver, director of the Peace Corps.
At KU, Unsoeld, and six other representatives from the Peace Corps, will be giving information about the Peace Corps in an information booth in the Kansas Union Lobby, in classroom lectures, and on visits to various campus living groups.
Unsoeld will speak at the Peace Corps Recognition Banquet Wednesday evening.
Unsoeld took his position with the Peace Corps while serving as a professor of philosophy and religion at Oregon State University. He entered the Peace Corps on a staff assignment, as volunteers in the Corps may not have dependents.
IN SEPTEMBER, 1962 Unsoeld was sent as a deputy Peace Corps representative to Nepal, a small country in the Himalaya mountains.
mountains. "Nepal's people live on about the same standard as people did in 15th Century Europe," Unsoeld said. "It is not surprising that our 100 volunteers have not made a great impact.
"The job in Nepal is not made easier because they are not overly eager to change the ways of their ancient civilization," he said. Because of the seven per cent literacy rate in the country, the Nepalese have little communication with the outside world, and consequently have little desire to change, Unsoeld explained.
"POVERTY, EDUCATION, and disease are the major problems facing Peace Corps volunteers in Nepal today," Unsoeld said. Volunteers now carry small pox vaccination kits with them, and even though they may have had no training, they give the vaccinations, he continued.
continued.
"Training in the basic health practices—like giving shots and vaccinations, and delivering babies—is part of the training now being given to the third group of volunteers to Nepal," Unsoeld said.
This phase of Peace Corps training was one reason given for terming "versatility" the most important quality of a person interested in the Peace Corps.
"BUT A PROSPECTIVE VOLUNTEER must also have a genuine interest in people," Unsoeld said. "In addition, he must be flexible That is, he must be able to change his standards, otherwise he would never be able to adopt to the extremely different cultures to which he will be subjected as a member of the Peace Corps."
he will be subjected as a he Unsoeld's last post in Nepal before returning to the States was as head Peace Corps representative to Nepal. In this post he works in a counseling position as well as an administrative one.
"I have to keep before our volunteers the objectives of the Peace Corps, as well as trying to prevent them from becoming discouraged," Unsoeld said. "The work in Nepal isn't glamorous, nor are results always obvious."
PETER S. BURGESS
Sargent Shriver
Peace Corps Head May Appear at KU
Sargent Shriver, director of the Peace Corps and President Johnson's war on poverty, is tentatively scheduled to speak here April 20.
"I'm pretty sure he'll be here. He has a real tight schedule and has to speak the same day at a luncheon at Wichita.
A Jim Murray, Leawood junior and publicity chairman of the KU Peace Corps Organization, said last night:
"No definite arrangements have been worked out, but I imagine he would speak at a convocation."
Shriver has been mentioned in recent weeks as a possible Democratic vice-presidential nominee.
Large Halls Take Fling
Awards for the Spring Fling were Carruth-O'Leary won first place for their mixed ensembles group.
The Spring Fling became an accomplished feat this weekend with almost every large residence hall winning something.
winning some of the special Whatchamacallit with the live music of the Nocturnes began the Spring Fling which was created this year by the Association of University Residence Halls.
THE COMPETITIVE EVENTS for the weekend began on the very cold Saturday morning in the Lewis
(Continued on page 8)
Pickets Protest Sigma Nu Clause
Bv Garv Noland
The weather cleared, the sun shone, and 100 peaceful and orderly demonstrators turned out to picket Sigma Nu fraternity Saturday afternoon.
Picketers marched up and down Emery Road for almost two hours, protesting the discriminatory clause in the national constitution of Sigma Nu.
THE NUMBER OF DEMONSTRATORS exceeded the expectations of everyone, including the leader of the pickets, George Ragsdale, Lawrence senior and chairman of the Civil Rights Coordinating Committee. The CRCC was formed to coordinate several campus organizations in mass demonstrations protesting alleged de facto segregation of KU fraternities and sororities.
John Elwell, Wichita senior and president of Sigma Nu fraternity, said he had expected from 40 to 50 demonstrators and was surprised at the number that showed up.
The neatly-dressed demonstrators sang "We Shall Overcome," while small groups of fraternity men looked on. The pickets paraded back and forth from the intersection of Oxford Road and High Drive to the front entrance of the Sigma Nu house.
THEY MARCHED PAST three fraternities and two sororities in order to picket the front and back entrances of the Sima Nu house. Ragsdale said the purpose was not to picket all five houses, but just the Sigma Nu house.
"The others just happened to be next to Sigma Nu," Ragsdale said.
said:
Ragsdale said he thought the picketing would make a significant impression on the national organization of Sigma Nu. Elwell said it probably wouldn't, however.
THE CRCC said it was picketing the KU chapter of Sigma Nu to help the chapter remove its discriminatory clause. The KU chapter unsuccessfully attempted to remove the clause from the Sigma Nu constitution at the last national convention.
The CRCC claims that pressure in the form of pickets will force the national chapter to remove the clause.
Some of the signs read: "Greek segregation must end," "Greeks are all right, if discrimination they fight," "Cigarettes were important enough for action, how about discrimination," and "Chancellor Wescoe, where is thy voice?"
WHEN THE PICKETS arrived, after marching across Jayhawk Boulevard from the Kansas Union, a small group of fraternity men greeted them with a few verses of "Dixie."
greeted them with a few wives. Later on, several cars flying Confederate flags drove past the demonstrators, but there were no other incidents.
Elwell said the demonstrators were orderly and stressed that the Sigma Nu's main concern was to make sure there were no incidents.
AT 2:30 P.M., the demonstrators lined up along the road in front of the Sigma Nu house and maintained a few minutes of silent protest. They then sang "We Shall Overcome," and marched to the front steps of Strong Hall where they sang the first verse of the "Battle Hymn of the Republic," and then dispersed.
The CRCC plans to picket the torch lighting ceremony in Topeka and the Greek Week chariot races next Saturday. Atty. Gen. William Ferguson will light the torch and the event is scheduled to be televised.
Youth One of "Most Explosive Problems" in U.S.
(Editor's note: In the following dispatch, the first of five, the National Reporter of United Press International examines the serious plight of American youth. Subsequent dispatch shows what will deal with their parents, the assorted enthusiasms of youth and the economic problem that youth presents.)
By Harry Ferguson
WASHINGTON — (UPI) The plight of American youth is serious, is on the road to becoming desperate and, in the words of Secretary of Labor Willard Wirtz, could develop into one of the "most explosive problems in the nation's history."
President Johnson has just recommended to congress a $962.5 million war chest to finance his battle against nobility, and it includes such plans for youth as a "job corps" of 100,000. But the people are fighting the crisis on a day-to-day basis say privately that this barely will make a dent in the problem. They think we should be talking in terms of massive and prompt action involving the spending of billions, not millions.
Most politicians step over the problem of youth, or warily walk around it because they don't know what to do about it.
AS WE HAVE just seen in the New Hampshire primary, candidates assault the eardrums of the voters with discussions of Khrushchev, taxes, Cyprus, Castro, civil rights, Zanzibar, the U.S. Supreme Court and Viet Nam. If any of them so much as mentioned the problems of youth, it eluded the attention of this faithful newspaper reader.
Unless there is prompt and massive action, it seems certain that the plight of the teen-ager will still be a skeleton in our national closet years after Khrushchev and Castro are dead and some sort of peace has settled upon Viet Nam, Cyprus and Zanzibar.
- Nearly one out of every six teen-agers who wants work can't find any. Almost one-fourth of the nation's unemployed are teen-agers and the situation will get worse as
Here is the problem:
automation dries up the number of jobs available to the untrained.
- In the present decade 26 million will not have finished high school and 2.5 million will not even have finished grade school. They are the last to be hired and the first to be fired.
- In the last decade juvenile delinquency has increased twice as fast as the child population. Delinquency is most prevalent in our big cities and there is a relentless movement of Americans from rural to urban centers.
- You would assume the juvenile delinquency would decline in a prosperous nation, but the U.S. Children's Bureau finds that just the opposite is true. The richer
Weather
Skies will remain cloudy tonight and tomorrow, with rain tonight changing to snow. Temperatures will drop into the mid 39's tonight and remain colder tomorrow.
America becomes, the higher goes the delinquency rate and the same is true for all nations.
THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT is aware of the problem, but as long as a year ago admitted it could not cope with it by itself.
"It has its roots in such things as school drop-outs, broken homes, racial discrimination, slum housing and youth unemployment." said Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, who has made exhaustive studies of the problem. "The Federal Government cannot solve these problems. Our role is to encourage, to offer assistance and to try to stimulate new local action. The fight is going to be won or lost at the grass-roots level."
And what is happening at the grass roots level? Chiefly, a bewildering and contradictory body of lows. If a 18-year-old boy steals an automobile inside the city limits of Baltimore, he is taken into an adult criminal court. If he steals a car outside the city limits, he goes into a juvenile court. Our states and
cities differ widely on who is a juvenile delinquent and why.
And so do the experts. Not only on who is a juvenile delinquent, but what to do about him. Roul Tunley, an amateur, visited widely among the experts and in his book, "Kids, Crime and Choas", came to the conclusion that many experts not only are making no dent in juvenile delinquency, but are working at cross purposes with one another.
HE TELLS ABOUT playwright Arthur Miller inviting 14 experts to his home at a time when he was considering writing a play about juvenile delinquency and then quotes Miller:
One expert saw it from the psychiatric view, another from the statistical viewpoint, another from the settlement house viewpoint. several things surprised me about this meeting, but the main thing was that this was obviously the first time they had ever met one another.
(Continued on page 12)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday, March 23, 1964
Supreme Court Decision:
A Freer Press
In the recent Supreme Court libel case ruling, the press was given license to make defamatory statements of fact about public officials.
Wrote Justice Brennan:
"The constitutional guarantees require, we think, a Federal rule that prohibits a public official from recovering damages for a dafamatory falsehood relating to his official conduct unless he proves that the statement was made without 'actual malice'—that is, with knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard of whether it was false or not."
The ruling was generally hailed by the press and civil libertarian groups as being a real step towards more open and meaningful discussion of public affairs.
PROBABLY it is, because newspapers will no
longer have to live in fear of being ruined financially by a libel suit brought against them for criticizing a public official.
- * * * * *
However, there could well be dangerous effect in the Supreme Court decision.
Before the ruling, able men avoided public life because of the stigma on politicians. It is an American cliche to say that politics is "dirty business."
It seems that giving the press license to say just about anything it pleases will only aggravate the attitude towards serving in public life. The air may well just get so full of mud that even more able men will stay at home.
Tom Coffman
Johnson's First 100 Days:
A Success Story
It is an amazing thing to behold the way this man has been showing himself in the four months he has been in the White House. There is about him an oversized quality that might even be greatness, although one cannot say that there has been greatness in any single act or speech or in their cumulative impact. Sometimes he is just right, mostly on the solemn occasions when he beseeched some of the advisers of the former administration not to leave him, not to break the continuity, as if he were not on his own now; at other times he seems to be pulling somebody's leg, as when he appealed to "men of ideas" to help him on a sometime, anytime basis, and without status.
IN FOREIGN POLICY, his speeches, and for all we know his actions, have undoubtedly been inspired by his desire to follow the line of the New Frontier, but with the dark, Wagnerian notes of drama, with the somber prophecy of endless stretches of toil ahead, all gone. Instead, there is more of a lullaby quality in his speeches; everything will turn out more or less all right; we had better stick to the troubles we have lost we make room for worse, and so forth. In his foreign-affairs pronouncements he is inclined to overplay the Texan provincial act in spite of the fact that he has completely reached national stature. But so far, he seems inclined to prefer exhibiting this national stature only for home consumption.
With all due respect, we fail to be convinced by his show of provincialism, and we would advise foreign leaders to go slow in reaching their conclusions and to keep their guard up. The same advice could be given to some of the domestic opponents in both parties. The man gives an enormous amount of himself to the job, but keeps at least an equal amount to himself, taking notes, storing up. There is, we feel, a sophisticated, deliberate quality in his folksy lack of sophistication. He keeps his energy in reserve for the right time. That time may come even before he is elected to a term of his own.
HE IS GREATLY CONCERNED with what is printed about him and reacts, so it is said, tirelessly and crudely. Frequently, authoritative reporters from Washington carry in their columns scarcely veiled hints of background news on imminent policy developments that sometimes sound as if they had been planted directly in the Oval Room or else near it. As is well known, he dislikes the traditional press conference for the excellent reason that he is not good at it. But why isn't he good? We are inclined to think he is the kind of person who wants to keep purposeful control over his Freudian slips.
Of course he is self-centered. But what man ever got to that position who was not? We have the feeling that he is centered on what he is going to do in living up to that position, rather than on his own image. Quite a man, we would say.
Max Ascoli The Reporter
Hopefully, a Better UDK:
Letters Policy
Because of the intense activity on campus in recent months, the UDK editorial department has been blessed with a deluge of letters to the editor for "The People Say" column.
In the past, it has been policy to reprint all letters which do not violate laws concerning the press, such as libel laws and invasion of privacy laws, and do not violate general standards of good taste.
BECAUSE of the length and number of the letters submitted, some of them have been printed so late as to be untimely.
To give UDK readers relevant and timely reading matter in the letters column, the blanket policy of reprinting all letters has been revised as follows:
1. When a letter is submitted longer than 300
3. Letters which address a subject of so limited interest that only a handful of readers will know to what the contributor is referring will not be printed.
2. Letters which do no more than echo views already expressed in the column will not be printed.
words, the contributor will be asked to rewrite his comments in briefer form.
FOR A positive word about readers' contributions—the letters are stimulating to other readers and UDK writers alike. Often they express a significant view which the staff has overlooked.
- * *
It is hoped that these policy revisions will further stimulate the interest in "The People Say" column.
- The Editors
Dialogue
Questions Picketing As Effective Method
(Editor's Note: The "Dialogue" column is open to informative opinion articles from readers and UDK staff writers other than the editorial page staff.)
The Civil Rights Coordinating Committee picketed the Sigma Nu fraternity Saturday and plans to picket the lighting of the Greek Week torch and the chariot races this weekend.
THIS WRITER is in deep sympathy with the aims and goals of the CRCC and the civil rights movement on the KU campus. But at the same time it seems necessary to question some of the methods that are being used to advance the movement.
After talking to a good many students one thing seems clear. The civil rights movement is losing much of the support and sympathy that it once had from the white students.
Why? Many students are tired of the picketing of almost any and everything. It has caused an attitude of "So what, they are always picketing something." It has also hurt a good many feelings.
THE CRCC HAS EXPLAINED time and again that they cannot stress enough that the demonstrations are not against the fraternity and sorority system."
But students, and not just fraternity and sorority members exclusively, still feel themselves threatened in some way by the protest demonstrations. The reasons for fear are many and are largely unjustified. White economic, political, and social status is seen as being usurped by the rising Negro.
The crux of the Negro problem in America is the attitudes of the whites towards the Negro. Because they lack the same economic, political, and social power that the white enjoy the Negro can make no significant advances until the whites can change their minds and their hearts.
"IF, FOR EXAMPLE, we assume that for some reason white prejudice could be decreased and discrimination mitigated, this is likely to cause a rise in Negro standards, which may decrease white prejudice still a little more, which would again allow Negro standards to rise, and so on through mutual interaction. If instead, discrimination should become intensified, we should see the vicious circle spiraling downward."
"White prejudice and discrimination keep the Negro low in standards of living, health, education, manners and morals. This, in its turn, gives support to white prejudice. White prejudice and Negro standards thus mutually 'cause' each other. If things remain about as they are and have been, this means that the two forces happen to balance each other. If either of the factors changes, this will cause a change in the other factor, too, and start a process of interaction where the change in one factor will continuously be supported by the reaction of the other factor.
GUNNAR MYRDAL, in his "An American Dilemma," a classic survey of the American Negro, outlines his "principle of cumulation," sometimes called the "vicious circle," in this way:
THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT discovered long ago that initial advances of the Negro position could be made by playing on the guilt feelings of the whites. Guilt can be a powerful force but it is doubtful whether it is effective in the long run. It would appear that feelings of guilt lead only to more prejudice. It is pretty hard to love someone who makes you feel guilty.
Moreover, white people are moved by the spirit of freedom and the American dream of equal opportunity for all as well as by the major economic, social and political forces. The discrepancy between what white people believe and what they do causes them to feel guilty.
While picketing by the CRCC probably does not increase discrimination it does tend to increase prejudice and one can apply Myrdal's concept of the "vicious circle" to the present campus situation. If the opinion sampled is any indication the circle is at a standstill or the spiral has already started downward.
11
to love someone who makes you feel better. Myrdal suggests that more education, through academic training and sincere social contact, might eradicate some of the false beliefs among whites concerning the Negro.
Both black and white must dedicate themselves to a clear-sighted understanding of the problem and a practical and rational approach to the solution of the racial question. The whole issue must not be distorted by excessive emotionalism.
There is no easy solution to the*racial question in America. Panaceas are futile. We cannot afford to delude ourselves into believing that we can change everything overnight, in the next year or in the next twenty years.
— Rick Mabbutt
Dailiifhansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
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Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press.
Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York
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NEWS DEPARTMENT
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INFORMAL DEPARTMENT
Mike Miller ... Managing Editor
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US Foreign Aid Battle Expected; LBJ Submits 'Pre-Shrunk' Bill
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — In the past two decades the United States has spent more than $100 billion in foreign aid in some 100 countries around the world to help build up shattered post-war economies or keep Communism at bay.
This year, as in all past years, the debate continues—has the expenditure been worth it? How long must it go on? And in what amounts?
HE BASES THIS ON THE expectation that a number of recipients—among them Greece, Israel, Mexico, Venezuela and the Philippines—are approaching the point where their economies can continue to develop without grant or "soft" type loans.
FOR THE PAST TWO YEARS Congress has cut administration requests by $1 billion or more. This year in the federal budget the Johnson administration has sent Congress what it calls a "preshrunk" $3.4 billion request for military and economic aid. This would be for the fiscal year 1965 which begins July 1.
U. S. foreign aid director David E. Bell predicts that in the next few years aid should be at least a "plateau" and, hopefully, will decline.
By pre-shrunk President Johnson means—or hopes to convince the legislators—that he has already made the $1 billion cut and that Congress should not do so. But prospects are that the request will cause as big a fight this year as ever.
1912.
Press.
York
States:
Moonoo
versity
Law
In preparing his new program for fiscal 1965, the President placed new stress on "transition" countries such as these, devising individual programs for them which provide for tapering-off over a period of years.
YET THERE ARE OTHER factors which make it impossible for aid officials to predict with any certainty what aid needs will be in the future. One is the uncertainty of military needs of the cold war.
Editor
Editor
Another is that in programs such as the Alliance for Progress for
nager
Latin America the Administration has pledged to aid individual countries according to the degree to which they undertake economic and social reforms and, in short, aid themselves.
Secretary of State Dean Rusk recently devoted all of a major speech to the debate over foreign aid, answering point by point the principle arguments of critics.
THESE WERE THE major criticisms and Rusk's answers:
- That it is simply too expensive: "The new funds requested by the President for the next fiscal year," Rusk said, "are about one-sixteenth of our military budget, less than 4 per cent of the federal budget, less
Page 3
Building Starts On Fifth Dorm
Construction will begin this week on a new ten-story men's dormitory, to be located southwest of Ellsworth Hall, on "Daisy Hill."
The new dormitory, to be the fifth in "residence hall complex." is scheduled for completion by September 1965. J. J. Wilson, director of dormitories and housing, said.
The Clarence Vollmer Construction Company of Wichita won the contract for the new dorm, with a low bid of $1,907.31. Wilson said.
Blasting will be used to start the foundation. An explosives expert on the job will make preliminary blasts to record the amount of vibration, so as to insure safety to the other dorms in the area.
Wilson doubted that anyone will hear the blasting. "It will be a low charge, controlled, minor blasting operation." he said.
than 3.5 of one per cent of our gross national product.
"It amounts to $17.80 for each American citizen. Of this, $5.25 from each of us is for military assistance, and $12.55 for economic and technical assistance."
- That goes to too many countries which criticize or disagree with the United States;
"We seek no satellites," Rusk said. "We are not trying to buy friends—and if we were trying to, we could not expect to do it with aid that amounts to one or two per cent of the income of the recipient. Our objective is to help these countries to grow in independence and freedom. We must expect independent countries to disagree with us at times."
"Before we become outraged," Rusk declared, "let us recall that preventing corruption is a constant battle and that we ourselves have brought it under reasonable control only in the last generation."
- THAT SOME GOVERNMENTS receiving U.S. aid are corrupt;
- That there is waste:
"I am sure there has been some waste," Rusk said. "Some of the countries we have helped have suffered from turbulence caused or aggrivated by communist subversion or aggression.
"Under such conditions, you don't expect peace-time efficiency. Moreover, some of these countries lack experienced administrators. There have also been problems due to rapid turn-overs of personnel in our own aid organizations . . . but I believe we now have a well-administered organization."
"We are impatient . . .." Rusk said. "We prefer to have them do it by Democratic means. But, as we know from our own history, social and economic reforms involve tensions, political difficulties, delays."
- That progress is too slow;
FORD
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Monday, March 23, 1964 University Daily Kansan
819 Mass.
VI 3-3470
Thursday
6:00 — Union
Greek Week dinner
Friday
8:00 – HOCH
GREEK WEEK SING
(Admission Free)
Saturday
1:30 — Campanile
Torch lighting
1:45 — Campanile
Chariot race
2:00 — Stadium
Pancake race
3:00 — Stadium
Relays start
4:15 — Potter’s
Tug-of-war
4:35 — Potter’s
Picnic
Sunday
Easter observance
MARCH 23 – 28
Thursday
6:00 — Union
Greek Week dinner
Friday
8:00 – HOCH
GREEK WEEK SING
(Admission Free)
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MARCH 23-28
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Monday, March 23,1964
Prayer Ban Under Study
By Louis Cassels United Press International
A congressional committee is about to disprove the political axiom that lawmakers shy away from religious controversy in an election year.
Plunging headlong into one of the most diverse disputes in American religious life, the House Judiciary Committee has announced plans to begin public hearings sometime next month on proposed constitutional amendments to permit prayer and Bible reading in public schools.
Before the committee are no less than 96 different measures which House members have introduced to overturn the 1963 Supreme Court ruling forbidding religious excercises in public schools.
THE PROPOSAL WITH the strongest backing is sponsored by Rep. Frank J. Becker, R-N.Y., which would amend the Constitution by adding these words:
"Nothing in this Constitution shall be deemed to prohibit the offering, reading from, or listening to prayers or Biblical scriptures, if participation therin is on a voluntary basis, in any government or public school, institution or public place."
Committee Chairman Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., supports the supreme Court ruling and would like to give Becker's amendment a quiet burial. But Celler is forced to go ahead with hearings because Becker has obtained the signatures of 161 House members on a discharge petition.
CONGRESSIONAL MAIL is reported to be running heavily in favor of the Becker Amendment. Citizens groups have been formed in New York, California, Massachusetts and other states to campaign for restoration of prayer and Bible reading to public schools.
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Monday, March 23,1964 University Daily Kansan
Disaccord, Politics Seen at Trade Meet
Propaganda haymaking on the part of the Communists will certainly be a major feature at the outset.
GENEVA. —(UPI)— Political friction threatens the mammoth United Nations Conference on Trade and Development which opens here today
Qualified officials responsible for controlling the unwieldy conference expect an initial week or two of politicking before concrete work can start.
THE CONFERENCE is scheduler to end June 15 after a run of 12 weeks. There will be more than 1,500 delegates from 122 nations, making it the worlds biggest trade conference ever held.
Page 5
A staff member of the Topeca Daily Capital for 35 years, Mrs. Constance Van Natta Gardner, was announced yesterday as outstanding Kansas woman journalist by the KU chapter of Theta Sigma Phi, honorary society for women in journalism.
A question being asked by many responsible diplomats is whether or
She will he honored Thursday night at a dinner of Theta Sigma Phi.
Mrs. Gardner joined the staff of the Topeka paper in 1929 following her graduation from Washburn University. After working in the women's department and in the news department for several years, she decided two years ago to shift to parttime status in the combined Capital-Journal women's department. She works on page layout on Mondays and Tuesdays, and on Wednesdays draws on her contacts for news for use the rest of the week. She also works in place of three other members of the Women's department during their vacations.
Theta Sigs To Honor Journalist
mrs. Gardner is a past president of the Kansas Newspaperwomen and also an alumnus of Nonoso, Washburn University's honorary society for women, and of the Washburn Alumni. At present she is a member of the board of directors of the Washburn Alumni.
not the size of the conference will defeat its aims, which are to boost world trade and spur the growth of economies in developing countries.
The differences are enormous in the political and economic systems and in the basic characteristics of the nations taking part.
She has continued her study of writing at the Bread Loaf Writer's Conference, Middlebury, Vt., University of Colorado Summer Writer's Workshop, the University of Kansas Summer Writer's Conference, and with Frances Grinstead in the KU Bureau of Correspondence. She has also won numerous awards from Kansas Press Women and the National Federation of Press Women for her writing.
Old frictions are expected to be spotlighted between east and west, between the rich countries in the north and the poor in the south, as well as between basic economic thinking between Western nations themselves.
The education editor of the Kansas City Star since 1954. Mrs. Patricia Jansen Doyle, will speak at the dinner Thursday.
France, which has just recognized Peking, would then most probably support such a motion as it did recently in the World Health Organization.
The Soviet Union may well lead the rest of the Communist bloc in demanding that Peking be invited in and asking why it wasn't.
IF THEY WERE invited, what about East Germany, North Korea and North Viet Nam, the Communists will ask. This sort of theme poses a serious problem for conference organizers.
Mrs. Doyle has spent most of the years since her graduation from the University of Kansas as a staff writer on the Star. She received her B.S. in journalism from the William Allen White School of Journalism in 1951.
Mrs. Constance Gardner
Jane A.
The Communists and a lot of developing countries as well will probably ask why such nations as West Germany, South Korea and South Viet Nam were invited although they do not belong to the United Nations.
THERE IS ALSO the question of Red China, for that country, with one-quarter of the world's population, is not participating and was not invited to do so.
The developing countries, which took over the proposal for the conference from Moscow, much to the Kremlin's displeasure, have a whole stack of demands to make. Thus the improvement of economic and fiscal systems in developing nations will be another item for discussion.
The Communists also will renew their charges that Western industrialized nations have grouped together and surrounded themselves with protective trade barriers.
Led by Moscow, the Eastern bloc—which first proposed the conference back in 1956—will demand a greater chunk of world trade.
THE COMUNISTS as usual will do a lot of talking about the moral responsibility of helping developing areas with large investments without talking much about the money they are willing to hand out.
The West itself will have internal troubles. In particular many Western countries such as the U.S. and Britian differ on the subject of preferential treatment for developing countries.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Monday, March 23, 1964
Republicans Anticipate Active Nixon Campaign
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — While waiting for the dust to settle from the New Hampshire primary, Republicans are keeping an alert watch for signs of a more active presidential campaign for Richard M. Nixon.
NIXON MADE A RESPECTABLE showing with more than 15,000 write-in votes in the New Hampshire presidential primary March 10 but ran fourth behind Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, Goldwater and Rockefeller.
Forester.
Lodge's spectacular write-in victory failed to still the oft-heard comment that "the pros don't want Lodge." The "pros" will lead the state delegations to the national convention in July.
Although he will be out of the country on a journey in the Far East until next month, the former vice president seems to be edging closer to the role of an active candidate for the GOP nomination.
date for the GOT trophy. He already is regarded as the front runner by some Republicans who always have doubted that either of the two most active candidates—Sen. Barry Goldwater and Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller—could win the nomination.
The next big Republican contest comes May 15 in the Oregon primary, another free-for-all.
Lewis Duck Wins Race
By Jackie Helstrom
(Assistant Managing Editor)
Today Fang, the Superduck of Lewis Hall, is the most well known and respected duck on campus. He is the famous winner of the Spring Fling Duck Race.
Fung Ducie expected Fang to win the race and like a true winner he stayed behind until at just the right minute. Then suddenly put his mind to winning and shot straight across the finish line.
EVEN THOUGH HE WAS one of only two white ducks competing Fang was a real dark horse. His training before the race had been sacrificed by his desire to get around to all the other halls, especially Flsworth and Templin, to size up his competitors.
his competitors.
And when the whistle blew he was off like a flash ahead of all the other ducks on the pond.
BUT THEN THE RACE slowed to a standstill while everybody sort of floated here and there. Fang took advantage of the situation to draw the attention of the crowd away from himself until the moment of victory would arrive.
He calmly swam to the starting end of the pond and climbed out of the water where he could rest better for that last minute effort that would carry him across the line to victory.
Then, finally, he knew the time for his sprint had arrived. Without faltering he swam straight across the pond, never hesitating until he had crossed the finish line and climbed out of the water at the other end, the victor. ___
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Teaching Interviews; Mar. 25, Valley View, Overland Park—elementary only April 2, Anchorage, Alaska; Kansas City, Kas.
KAR Mathematics Colloquium, 4:30 p.m., 103 Strong Hall. "Function of Finite Markov Chains"—Frederick W. Leysieffer, U. of Michigan.
Student Peace Union, 4:30 p.m., Sunflower Room, Kansas University
Jower House
Chapel, Mass. 5 p.m. St. Lawrence
Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
b. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
c. Church of the Holy Spirit.
Graduate Student Discussion Group. 7:30 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford. Panel on Ecumenical Possibilities.
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m. St.
Lawrence Chapel.
Air Force Officers Selection Team, 9.30-12, Aids and Awards Office, 10-3-30, Hawks Nest, Kansas Union. Will interview OTS Applicants.
Inquiry Forum, 7 p.m. St. Lawrence Center, 1915 Stratford Rd.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship,
7:30 p.m., Kansas University
George Darby,
George Darby,
Inquirer Classes, 7:30 p.m. Canterbury
House.
Canterbury City, Discussion, 9 p.m. St.
honor
Western Civ Discussion, 9 p.m., St
Lawrence Center.
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
Partisans of Lodge and Nixon will not have to cast write-in votes in Oregon. Both names will appear on the bailout along with those of Goldwater, Rockefeller, Sen. Margaret Chase Smith of Maine and Gov. William W. Scranton of Pennsylvania.
TUESDAY, MARCH 24,1964
AS THE OREGON test approaches, the GOP will watch to see whether and how serious a campaign is mounted by or for Nixon.
But Lodge benefited most in New Hampshire from disenchantment with Goldwater and Rockefeller. He also was helped by an imaginative, well-organized campaign handled by draft-Lodge agents who will try to repeat their success in Oregon.
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Monday, March 23, 1964 University Daily Kansar
Page 7
Wolverines Likely To Succeed UCLA
KANSAS CITY. Mo. —(UPI) Coach Dave Strack's Michigan Wolverines, who boast many of the characteristics which carried UCLA to a perfect season, loomed today as the logical long-range choice to succeed UCLA as the National Collegiate basketball champions.
timed season (60-8).
But Wooden concedes he will have a "pretty good team" next winter with starting juniors Gail Goodrich and Keith Erickson coming back as seniors and spectacular gophomore Ken Washington—the sixth starter—returning for an expected brilliant second chapter in a promising career.
The Wolverines, who won the third place title in last weekend's 26th annuel NCAA championships with a 100-90 consolation victory over Kansas State, lose only one of the five quick youngsters who carried the load for the Big Ten cochamps.
But Coach John Wooden's "perpetual motion" UCLA Bruins, with their amazing speed, sticky zone press defense and deceptive rebounding, may also hustle their way back to the championship finals where they demoralized Duke 98-83 last Saturday night.
Duke's Vic Bubas and Kansas State's Tex Winter also will have some strong holdover strength. But if they are to make the 1965 final big four a repeat of this year's championship, they will have to come up with an unexpected talent.
WOODEN LOSES all-America guard Walt Hazzard, center Fred Slaughter and forward Jack Hirsch from his battling Bruins, who became only the third NCAA champion in history to complete an untarnished season (30-0).
Michigan loses only outside bombardier Bob Cantrell from the team which finished the season with a 23-5 record.
STRACK, A QUIET, stoical coach,
admits he looks forward to next
Cassius' Title In Jeopardy
NEW ORLEANS—(UPI)—Emile Bruneau said today he expects Cassius Clay to be toppled from his heavyweight throne before nightfall for "acts detrimental to boxing."
all for arts Bruneau, president of a New Orleans finance company, is chairman of the World Boxing Association's (WBA) powerful eight-man world championship committee.
championship committee. He said he had been "alerted" that WBA president Ed Lassman of Miami Beach wanted the championship committee to vote today on whether to withdraw WBA title recognition from the 22-year-old Clay of Louisville, Ky.
Lassman explained that Clay was a detriment to boxing on two counts:
derniment
● The specific charge that he signed a contract with Inter-Continental Promotions, Inc., (of which Liston is president) to promote his future fights, and he did that signing b-e-f-o-r-e he fought Sonny last month.
- The general charge that Clay's conduct—particularly as a crusader for the Black Muslims—"is provoking world-wide criticism and is setting a very poor example for the youth of the world."
youth of the world.
"I'll poll my seven fellow-commiteemen by telephone," Bruneau explained. "And I'm almost positive the vote will overwhelmingly withdraw WBA championship recognition from Clay.
Brummer added: "Personally, I think both Clay and Sonny Liston should be put out of boxing. I don't believe they belong in the sport."
believe the difference. It was from veteran Liston of Denver, Colo., that Muhammed (CQ) Ali—the Black Muslim name Clay has adopted—won the crown on a strange technical knockout at the start of the seventh round in Miami Beach, Feb. 25.
Bruneau said the other seven men on his world championship committee are: Wilbert Lewis of Seattle, Bob Evans of Louisville, Bob Summitt of Nashville (Tenn.), Norvell Lee of Washington (D.C.), George Barton of Minneapolis, Joe Triner of Chicago and Harry Falk of Palo Alto (Calif.).
season with center Bill Buntin, the tournament's high scorer with 52 points, flashy Cazzie Russell and steady Larry Tregoning and Oliver Darden coming back.
Buntin, who scored 33 points in the consolation victory over K-State when Russell sat out the game with an aggravated ankle injury, made the all-tournament team along with Goodrich and Hazzard of UCLA, Duke's Jeff Mullins and Kansas State's Willie Murrell. Buntin also tied Murrell in total rebounds with 23.
Goodrich and Washington were the scoring heroes of the UCLA blitz of Duke in the finals with 27 and 26 points, respectively, after they had contributed 14 and 13 points in the 90-84 semi-finals defeat of Kansas State.
Russell fired in 21 points on a game leg in the Wolverines' 91-80 semi-finals loss to Duke; Tregoning collected 16 and Darden 17 points in the third place as they helped Buntin take up the slack caused by Russell's departure.
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University Daily Kansan Monday, March 23, 1964
Jolie vaut une voiture de la marque Volkswagen.
FRANTIC FOLLOWUP—Two unidentified girls laugh as they experience difficulty in one of the events of the sports car rally held Saturday morning in the Lewis Hall parking lot.
Large Halls Take—
(Continued from page 1)
Hall parking lot with a sports car gymkana.
At 9 a.m. the first sports car began the routine of driving between poles, backing up, and various maneuvers designed to test the skill of the driver and which required the teamwork of both the drivers and riders.
The winner of the sports car rally was Fred Samuelson, Wichita junior, in a Volkswagen.
The climax of the weekend came with the Spring Sing yesterday which is an annual production of the Inter-residence Council, (IRC). Templin and Lewis claimed a majority of the honors.
Templin won first in both the large and small men's ensembles divisions, as well as the trophy for the best overall production.
LEWIS RECEIVED FIRST in the large and small women's ensemble divisions. Joseph R. Pearson and presented following the Spring Sing
by Carol Wendt, Bonner Springs senior and IRC president.
The much publicized duck race was won Saturday by Fang, Lewis hall's white duck. Ducks floated everywhere except across the finish line until Fang, who had stepped out at the starting line, stepped into the water and swam to the other side.
The trophy for the most points in the men's division in the Spring Fling was won by the 7th floor of Templin, and the trophy for the most points in the women's division was won by the 5th floor of Lewis.
The picnic was switched from Potter Lake to Allen Field House because of the cold weather. Several hundred people attended, Lance Jessee, Kansas City, Mo., senior and Templin vice-president, said. The bicicle race was canceled.
The Watkins-4th floor Joseph R. Pearson combination won the first place trophy in the volley-ball competition.
De Gaulle Encounters Independence Demands
FORT DE FRANCE, Martinique
FORT DE FRANCE, Martinique — (UPI) — President Charles de Gaulle today encountered growing demands for independence in this French Caribbean possession which he described as a "speck of dust."
The first sounds of discontent came shortly after De Gaulle and his wife arrived yesterday to a tumultuous reception on their tour of the French West Indies.
Mayor Aime Cesaire suddenly switched in his welcoming speech from praise for De Gaulle to a demand for an end to the departmental status of Martinique.
The French leader was spending the day on this island, the last stop
Recall Valid Says ASC
A petition presented at the last ASC meeting to recall a representative from the large women's residence hall has been certified as valid.
ASC elections committee chairman, Dick King, Kansas City sophomore, said the petition to recall Peggy Conner, Sacramento, Calif. senior, has been certified as representing a valid 25% of the district.
The petition was circulated by Marsha Dutton, Colby senior, on the grounds that Miss Conner could no longer properly represent the large women's dorms since she is now living in an apartment.
If Miss Conner appeals to the student court and receives an injunction to stop the elections for her replacement, the elections committee will have to hold a separate election after the student court ruling.
"We had planned to hold the elections for a new large women's representative in conjunction with the regular spring elections April 1 and 2." King said.
on his tour before flying back to Paris tomorrow morning.
THE SWING through the French Caribbean territories followed De Gaulle's visit to Mexico last week to promote increased trade with France and support for his independent policies as a world power striving to regain past grandeur.
Prior to his visit here, De Gaulle stopped in Guadeloupe and French Guiana. The people of Guadeloupe, like the residents of Martinique, called for autonomy when De Gaulle addressed them.
De Gaulle's reply to the demands yesterday was:
Cesaire, a National Assembly deputy, said Martinique need's France's help, understanding and guidance to overcome the island's problems of unemployment, slow development and over-population. But he added:
"A state is not built with specks of dust."
"What would this man be if at the price of all these evident advantages he was led to give up his soul?"
"WE CAN no longer elude a problem which preoccupies our youth—that of the reform of our status, of our political structures."
He said the Martinique people did not want to sit on the sidelines while history is made. He said France had contributed many things, even to "forging men." But he added:
Some of the audience shouted for Cesaire to be quiet in front of De Gaulle, but others yelled for "autonomy, autonomy."
De Gaulle, obviously agitated, said in his brief remarks "I am more than ever sure that France is following the good route and those who are her children will stay with her."
FBI Revises Most-Wanted List
LATER, in a speech to parliamentarians, De Gaulle said in a pointed response to Cesaire, "The only chance for Martinique is France. Between America and Europe there is nothing in the ocean except a few specks of dust."
WASHINGTON—(UPI)—A man-about-crime who once used a press card as a ruse to escape from prison was placed today on the FBI's list of 10 most wanted fugitives. An extreme rarity, this is the second time his name has been on the list.
This second-time-around criminal is Quay Cleon Kilburn, who was captured within seven weeks the first time he made the most wanted list in 1958. He is described by the FBI as an extremely dangerous armed robbery specialist—a craft, versatile man who likes gambling, conservative clothes and rich foods in the best restaurants. But he has spent most of his adult life in jail.
KILBURN IS REPORTED heavily armed, and may be traveling with a woman who has served time for strong-arm robbery, the FBI said. His operations have centered in the West—primarily in Utah.
Kilburn currently is being sought on bad check and petty larceny charges in Salt Lake City. Other charges on his 20-year record include bank robbery, embezzlement, car theft, black market dealing in army clothing in 1944, and supplying narcotics to a 14-year-old boy
capable of conversing easily on almost any subject. He reads widely.
THE FBI CALLED him "daring and skilled." Examples:
The 40-year-old Kilburn has been described as smug, egotistical, intelligent, self-assured, confident and
- On Oct. 24, 1957, in Utah State prison, he flashed a press card identifying him as editor of the prison newspaper and explained to a guard that he wanted to go through the gates to interview prisoners working just outside. He never came back. An edition of the prison newspaper later listed him on the staff: "Quay Cleon Kilburn—editor at large."
- On June 2, 1958, when the FBI caught him in Los Angeles and ended his first appearance on the
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10-most-wanted list, Kilburn was disguised with an expensive false mustache and had a handful of expertly forged identification cards. Realistic looking thumb prints turned out to be of Kilburn's big toes.
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Page 9
U.S. Grant Lacking in Leadership When Seen Off the Battle Field
By United Press International
By United Press International This man Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, who stood in the teeth of the winds of history in March 1864, who was he? What had he done to warrant command of all the Union armies?
Certainly as a soldier he was unprepossessing. Five feet, eight inches tall, he was stoop-shouldered, except in the saddle. He wore whiskers, as did nearly every other man in the Civil War—general or private. His were reddish-brown, often called sandy, cut short, probably unevenly, as was his hair of the same color.
HE SET NO example for his men in dress. He seldom wore the double-breasted uniform coat of a general with its two rows of brass buttons. If he did it hardly ever was buttoned. He preferred a short private's jacket with only the three stars on his shoulder straps indicating rank. He owned sashes and swords, but seldom was seen with either.
When he became lieutenant general, Grant lacked a month and a half of being 42 years old. That was about middle-aged for generals in the Civil War, neither old nor young.
He generally wore a black military hat, size $7\frac{1}{4}$ set straight on the top of his head. He usually had his left hand in his pants pocket. Often as not his right hand grasped his coat lacel if he was talking to some one.
His carelessness in military dress probably dated from the Mexican War when he served under Gen. Zachary Taylor whose unmilitary attire became a part of history.
Contemporaries described the new lieutenant general as having a well-formed head, a high forehead creased horizontally, piercing blue-gray
eyes, somewhat shrunken, a mouth and a stubborn chin.
GRANT WAS A soldier by his father's choice, not his own. He dreaded West Point and was unhappy most of his four years there. He was graduated in 1843, an undistinguished scholar, 21st in a class of 39. His best subjects were mathematics and horsemanship. He was the best rider at the point then or for years to come.
He won two brevets in the Mexican War and returned to garrison duty until 1854 when he resigned, presumably because he drank too much whiskey.
From then until Civil War days he was a failure as a farmer, clerk and real estate salesman. He was a clerk in his brother's leather goods store in Galena, Ill., when the war started. There, it seemed, he would spend the rest of his days.
It was several months after Fort Sumter before he could get a command, although other resigned officers got them for the asking. Finally he became a colonel of a fractious Illinois regiment.
FROM THEN ON he was a failure no more. But he had his bad campaigns with the good.
After several tries he captured Vicksburg and there showed a brilliance for maneuvering still admired by military men. He retrieved the Union defeat at Chickamauga by winning Missionary Ridge.
he captured Fort Donelson in February 1862 and his first Confederate army. He came within one of his sandy whiskers of losing the battle of Shiloh.
But all these victories, spectacular as some of them were, came against second-string Confederate Generals—Floyd, Pillow and Buckner at Donelson, Beauregard at Shiloh.
Beckwith to Get New Trial
JACKSON, Miss. —(UPI)—Circuit Judge Leon Hendrick was scheduled today to set the date for a new trial for Byron De La Beckwith, a segregationist charged with the ambush slaying of Negro civi rights leader Medgar Evers.
Attorney for both sides said they will ask for an early second trial at a hearing by Hendrick today.
Beckwith, 42, has been in jail since FBI agents arrested him last June 22.
HIS FIRST TRIAL ENDED in a hung jury on Feb. 7. Hendrick declared a mistrial when the 12-man, all-white jury reported it was hopelessly deadlocked after 11 hours of deliberation.
News of a hung jury, after a drama-packed trial of nearly two weeks, surprised both Negro and
Three KU Students Receive Fellowships
University Daily Kansan
Three KU graduate students have been awarded National Science Foundation Cooperative Graduate Fellowships for 1964-65.
David G. Lash, Lawrence, Ted J. Suffridge, Lawrence, and Charles R. Combrink, Caddo, Okla., will receive a stipend, an allowance for dependents and fee payment. Combrink will receive a research allowance of $500.
John R. Hedstron, Kansas City, has received a National Science Foundation Summer Fellowship for Graduate Teaching Assistants for 1964.
white leaders.
remberton at Vicksburg and Bragg at Missionary Ridge. He had met only one first rate Confederate general, Joseph E. Johnston, in the Vicksburg campaign and Johnston did not offer battle.
The defendant, an outspoken crusader against integration, told his attorneys. "I was not discouraged. Now let's get a new trial as soon as we can."
Much of the state's case during the first trial centered around a high-powered rifle found near the scene where Evers, state field secretary for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), was shot down in the driveway of his home after returning from a civil rights rally June 12.
THE RIFLE WAS FOUND in a nearby honey suckle thicket and expert testimony was presented by the state in an effort to prove the weapon bore Beckwith's fingerprint.
THAT WAS HIS military record when he became lieutenant general. It was a better record than any other Union general had. He had learned his soldiering the hard way, from colonel up.
But several defense witnesses swore they saw Beckwith, at Greenwood, Miss., near the hour of the shooting.
The first trial included long testimony from Beckwith, who swore to the jury that he was not Evers assassin.
Handed the alleged murder weapon as he sat on the witness stand, Beckwith examined the rifle and said it resembled one he had owned and which was stolen from him a few hours before Evers was killed.
- AIN'T GONNA TELL NOBODY
JIMMY GILMER and the FIREBALLS
He was no follower of Napoleon's tactics, as were so many Civil War generals. He admitted he had never read any texts on strategy or tactics beving the usual manuals.
For a physician on his staff he once summed up his philosophy of fighting like this:
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"Find out where your enemy is, get at him as soon as you can and strike him as hard as you can, and keep on moving."
Mondav. March 23. 1964
ERTRUDE SELLARDS PEARSON
RESIDENCE HALL
invites the public to
A SUNRISE SERVICE
EASTER SUNDAY
6:15 a.m. at the Campanile
That was Grant's job now—hit the enemy hard and often on all fronts and keep on until the superior manpower and industrial muscles of the North crush the Confederacy. No other kind of warfare would win. For it was obvious that crippled as the South was at the start of 1864 there was plenty of fight left.
6:15 a.m. at the Campanile
ALONG WITH HIS new job Grant had a new foe to fight- Gen. Robert E. Lee. They were about as unlike as two men could be.
Both were West Pointers and both were first class fighters. There the parallels ended.
Yale Chorus Returns
The Yale Russian Chorus will perform at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow evening in Hoch Auditorium.
This is the group's second appearance at KU. They performed here last spring.
THE CHORAL GROUP is composed of about thirty Yale students and faculty members. Dennis Mickiewicz founded the chorus in 1954.
The chorus has sung and traveled in several foreign countries. It has
traveled to Russia where the chorus has sung in places such as Red Square in Moscow singing and speaking to the people in their language. Other places where the chorus has visited are: Lille, France, where it won first place in the "Festival de Chant Choral;" the Salle Plevel, Paris; a memorial concert for Dag Hammarkjold in Geneva; Zurich; Copenhagen; Stockholm; and the Communist-sponsored Helsinki Youth Festival in Helsinki, Finland.
PETITIONS
Available at the
To fill one seat in the Large Women's Dorm District of the ASC.
Dean of Students office
Deadline: March 25, 5:00
Information: Dick King VI3-0651
VIEW 1
look for the label to be sure
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Monday, March 23,1964
Harvard M.D. Sees Possibility Science May Overcome Heredity
By Delos Smith UPI Science Editor
NEW YORK—Dr. Samuel A. Levine sees the possibility of science interfering with heredity in order to give longer life and better health to persons whose ancestral 'tendencies' are against them.
"We may not be able to change our parents but we may be able to change ourselves or our offspring," he said. Before it can be done, however, science must find out what is at the base of these "tendencies."
specific inherited defect been iden- | tified."
As of now, science speaks loosely of them. "We speak of the family tendency to diabetes, hypertension, gout, coronary disease and many other conditions," he continued. "In only a few of such diseases has the
MILWAUKEE, Wis. — (UPI) — Wisconsin Democrats readied political "truth squads" today to hound the steps of Alabama Gov. George Wallace in the state's presidential primary.
Wisconsin Democrats Prepare for Wallace
Wallace was scheduled to arrive here at noon (EST) and resume his politicking with a speech at White-water State College later in the day.
'L'Alouette' Is Tuesday Night
Le Treteau de Paris Theatre Co. will produce the play "L'Alouette," by Jean Anouilh, at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow at the University Theatre in Murphy Hall.
The theatre company is under the auspices of the French government, and has the patronage of M. Edouard Morot-Sir, Cultural Counselor to the French Embassy.
Le Treteau de Paris Theatre Co. will tour 65 campus cities with their 1964 production of "L'Alouette." The company toured the U.S. in 1588. At that time, it was the first professional French company to tour the U.S. since Sarah Bernhardt sponsored such a company in 1891. Since 1960 the American tour of the company has become an annual affair.
"L'Alouette" (the lark), produced by Jean de Rigualto, is the story of Joan of Arc.
HIS HOPE was directed at structure rather than at function. No one, he said, doubts "the size and shape of the ears, the wrinkles on our brow or face, the shape of the head, the color of the eyes and so forth are mainly determined by hereditary factors."
The segregations governor spent nearly all of last week campaigning on college campuses and small town streets in his bid to "shake the eyeteeth of national politicians" with a big vote in the April 7 primary.
WISCONSIN GOV. JOHN Reynolds, the Democrat's "favorite son" candidate, said last night that a substantial vote for Wallace would "give heart to the hatemongers from coast to coast."
In a Palm Sunday political speech, Reynolds urged Democrats to be tolerant of Wallace supporters "because they do not know fully what they are doing."
State Democratic leaders said they would play "tollow the leader" with Wallace, crossing and re-crossing the campaign trail of the Southerner to speak to every group he does.
WALLACE HAS ALSO entered presidential primaries in Indiana (May 5) and Maryland (May 19). The Senate floorleader on civil rights, Sen. Hubert Humphrey, D-Minn., said yesterday in Detroit that he hoped Wallace would not be successful in his northern campaigns.
"I hope the people will see the moral issue on this question." Humphrey said.
Wisconsin Democrats led by Reynolds warned party members that Wallace "must not be looked upon as a joke."
Reynolds said the effects of the primary would be felt far beyond Wisconsin. He said the size of Wallace's vote would measureably affect the fate of the civil rights bill.
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Then how about the diameter of arteries to the vital organs, and also their configurations? For instance, a person's ancestral patterns may give him arteries to the adrenal or pituitary glands that are slightly larger than is ideal.
Dr. Levine, who is professor of medicine emeritus, Harvard University, focused on these endocrine glands because "the endocrine system has such profound effect on all the organs and functions of the body. In a large measure it determines whether we are alert or sluggish, tall or short, whether we are dark or fair, hairy or hairless, hypertensive or hypotensive.
"The effect of a very slight alteration in the caliber of any artery to a vital structure is going on constantly 24 hours a day and for many years. It would follow that a child who appears to be quite normal at birth, but whose parents are hypertensive may remain very well but have a very slightly larger adrenal artery than normal, just as he may have larger ears than normal.
"THE VERY slightly increased blood flow to the adrenal glands may have resulted in a minute increase in the production of epinephrine or norepinephrine. After 30 years of this excessive secretion clinical hypertension could have resulted."
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SOON — "The Wonderful World of the BROS. GRIMM"
Jazz Quintet Plays Variety Of Modern Jazz at Forum
The Midwestern Jazz Quintet entertained the audience at yesterday's Jazz Forum with a program that ran the gamut of modern jazz, from Be-Bop mainstream to "the new thing."
The group opened with Horace Silver's composition, "Hippy." The up-tempo of the tune provided the group with a brisk workout.
After several pieces, Herb Smith, alto saxophone, and Bill Hargrave, trumpet, took a break while the percussion section did some free-form improvisation. Some interesting interplay took place between Manfred Eaton on piano and Dick Youngstein on bass. Drummer Gray provided the free-form excursion with solid, but sensitive support.
The quintet then improvised on a tune called "Dear John." The tune has no written chorus, and the soloists are confined to the harmonic and rhythmic limits of the dorian mode and 3/4 time. Hargrave dedicated the tune to tenor saxophonist John Coltarue, who has been experimenting with model improvisation for the last few years.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
JIM'S CAFE
838 Mass.
OPEN
24 hrs. a day
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
7,000 Pipes and every smoking accessory
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
George's Pipe Shop
727 Mass. V13-7164
"SMOKING IS CUR ONLY BUSINESS"
Balfour
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
STUDENTS
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing
7 a.m.-11 p.m
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
FOR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER VI 3-1211
SEE MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES
HAVING A PARTY?
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
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350
COMPLETE SERVICE FOR CHEVYS
& OLDS
931
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- Small enough to give personal attention.
- Big enough to have all the equipment.
VI 3-7700
SHIP WINTER
738 N.H.
CHEVROLET
-Classified Ads
FOR SALE
Terry cloth seat covers. We fit all sizes including VW, Heavy goz, $6.88. Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929-831 Mass. 3-27
Beautiful ladies ski boots, size 8. Black
quilted parka, size 14. Call VI 3-25
3-25
Academy Award Songs. 33 LP record, on RCA Victor Dynagrove recording. $3.98 value for 99c. $1.50 in stereo. At Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. 3-27
Set of four 500x11' recaps, $25 takes all
change, Xay Ray, Stoneback冲撞, 3-27
601 Mass, 3-27
1661 Corvair Monza Coupe 900 by owner.
4 speed, big motor, bucket seats, safety
belts. R&H. Low mileage. One owner.
Call VI 3-6753.
Guitar, 3 months old, never used. Like
new condition. Call VI 3-6242. 3-25
Erico Hi-Fi Component. Perfect condition.
Call VI 2-1180 after 6 p.m.
3-27
1960 Matchless 500 cc twin. Excellent
shape $459; Call 510; 3-6106. 3-26
Two speaker stereo with stand and records. $30. Portable TV, Stand on wheels. $3. Three tropical fish with aquarium, $4. Call VI 2-4255. 3-24
Like new 1961 Ford Galaxie 4-door sedan. Full Power equipment, air-conditioning, heater, radio. New snow tires and car record player. Buy or trade with 1963 or 1964 car of any make. Call VI 2-1051 or see at 1244 Ohio. 3-26
For the best in used parts, motors, radios,
etc. accessories-Benson's Auto Salvage,
190 Harper, north of 4-H grounds. Phone
VI 3-1626. Open evenings. 3-24
17" console TV. Must sell. Call VI 2-4197
at 6 p.m.
LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. NEW AND USED GUNS, MILITARY WEAK AMMO-HUMMER HIS ALSO UGGER, WE LEO REBLUE, 1026 OHIO CALL VI 2-1214 evenings. 3-23
1960 Ford convertible for sale by owner.
Phone VI 3-238
after 4:45 p.m.
House, four years old, excellent condition. Three bedrooms, link fence, near school and swimming pool. $700 assumes loan. $78 a month. Ops. New appliances and furniture. 1955 Miller Drive. VI 3-6994. tf
FM RADIUM AND STEREO SALE. G.E.
Compact F.M., $23. G.E. AM-FM AFC,
$29.94. G.E. 2 spkr. FM-CLK, $34.88.
Olympic 2 pc. stereo FM, $60. Emerson
pc. stereo FM, $93. G.E. stereo FM,
phono, $188. Motorola 5 spkr stereo FM,
$197. Motorola 5 portable stereo and
FM, $198. Portable stereo, 4 spkr, $100.
Motorola coffee stereo, $88. Motorola
Twin Wing stereo, $55. Ray Stoneback's,
$92 Mass. VI 3-4170. 3-24
Volkswagen and Renault owners! Nylon premium tubeless tires cut to $16 plus tax (tubeless retreads, $11 Exc. Abandon's back Discount Tire Center, 929 Mass.
New 16" lightweight portable TV, $99.
1 year guarantee on parts! Rent or buy.
$12 per month. Ray Stoneback's, 929
Mass. (Motorola Headquarters). 3-26
Tire prices slashed! Ray Stonebush's Discount To The Center at 929 Mass. 36 mo. tire tubeless tires. Four 650 x 13' s, $40. Four 750 x 14' s, $44. Four 670 x 15' s, $44. Four 800 x 14' s, $50. Plus tax, exchange, installed! 4 whitewalls, $8 extra!. 3-26
New battery portable all transistor phono.
Sounds like a console! 4 speeds, into compax
to handle rack-mounted players. Offer
riders tracking only: $55.88
Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. 3-24
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME
WHEELS. Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale
at great savings after 6 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut
Typewriter, new and used portables,
standards, electrics. Olympia, Hermes,
Olivetti. Royal and Smith Corona portables.
Typewriter, adder. rentals and service.
Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St..
VI 3-*644*. tf
For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3-
9040 after 5 p.m. tf
German Shepherd pups, AKC registered
Lloyd Brod shelsen. Phone KI 2-2559. Lloyd Brod
shelsen. Phone KI 2-2559.
New shipment of Pink typing paper, 506
1005 Mass Paper - $3.55 Lawrence Outlet,
1005 Mass Paper
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as notes. Free delivery. $4.50 cover civilization notes. All new, completely extremely, comprehensive, immintegraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. ti
FOR RENT
One bedroom house, completely furnished. Call VI 3-0554 after touch pad 3-27
Single or double room. Furnished. cook-
ing. Bathroom. paid. Call 2-8451 or see at 1244 La.
Furnished apartment for single man.
3:1209 p. 5:30 p. 1633 Vermont.
4-26
Two room furnished apartment. See
4168. 3:30 p.m. 821 Indiana or call VY.
3-24
Rooms for men students. Singles for $25.
Doubles for $20. Refrigerator and linens furnished. Cooking privileges. 1116 Tenn.
or call VI 3-2257. 3-23
Married. grad students, faculty, 2 bedroom. $75. Sleeping room, $25. 16 avail. Reserve now. Call for brunch. VI .3-2116. Santee Apartment. 1123 Indiana. ft
For one or two graduate age men, three room nicely furnished apt., private bath.
For apartment ideal study conditions. Best of neighbors.
For appointment phone VI 3-8534. tf
Crescent Heights two bedroom apart-
ment. Phone VI 2-3711. Redbelt.
Phone VI 2-3711.
Graduate men or older undergraduates—
Close to campus, ideal study conditions,
best of neighbors. Reasonably priced,
paid. For appointment call
3-85 4.
TYPING
Experienced typist with electric type-
writer available to type themes, term
paper thesis, etc. Education work estar-
died. Phone VI 3-8379, Mrs. Charles
Patti.
Experienced secretary would like typing
her home. Reasonable rates. Call VI
1188
Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (pica type). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0558. tf
Accurate expert typist would like typing
the prompt. Call V1-3-2651.
These Prompt works. Call V1-3-2651.
Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reasonings on paper they sentiments and theses, phone VI 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson.
Experienced Typist—Dissertations. Theses. Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 Rhode Island. V 3-7485. tf
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**
ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING
REPAIRS — LEATHER FINISHING
NEW YORK CLEANERS
Delivery Service
926 Mass. VI 3-0501
24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled
YELLOW CAB CO.
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow. 2047 Yale. VI 2-1643.
Book Nook 1021 Mass.
Big Store Service and Small Store Attention
Milliken's SOS
"the best professional service"
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-257.
- General typing service
- Notary public
24 hr. answeriing service
1021 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
- Mimeograph & photo-copying
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type the papers, term papers, conference papers, and rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8586 t
Page 11
摄影
HIXON STUDIO
Portraits of Distinction
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Typing; Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols. carbon ribbon—if desired. Prompt service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-164 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-3057.
MILIKLENE SOS—always first quality
typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
e also do tape transcriptions. Office
hours 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. -1021-0314 Man's
Phone VI 3-5820
Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. ff
MISCELLANEOUS
Have a party in the Big Red School
floor and floor and plant
Heated. CALI VI 3-7453.
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass.
WANTED
Reasonable priced. 3-speed man's bike.
3-1144 after 5:30 p.m. Bob 2-33
Dowell.
VOLKSAGEN’ WANTED. Cash for your VW, Conzelman Motors, VW Sales. Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hlway 59 So.
Bilford, lost in Fraser Theater, Friday.
Dave Tillie, 818 Kentucky. Conta
Dave Tillie, 818 Kentucky.
LOST
Dressmaking-alterations. *formals* and
gowns. Ola Smith, 939 $1½; *Mast*
VI 3-5263.
BUSINESS SERVICES
RISK'S
613 Vt. VI 3-4141
Shirt Finishing Laundry
Wash & Fluff Dry
Artists - Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics
George's Hobby Shop
1105 Mass. VI 3-5087
Tops — Glass & Zippers —
Rear Glasses — Headlines —
Door Panels —
Taller Made Seat Covers at
Computer with
sheet with
sewed double lock stitch.
Jack's Sear Covers
545 Minn. VI 3-4242
- Your satisfaction GUARANTEED
$ $ $ $ $ $
on shocks, mufflers, tail pines and installation.
- All makes and models including sports cars
40%
40%
- Trained mechanics for quality service
CAR OWNERS
40%
40%
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Auto Service Center
729 N.H. VI 2-1708
Montgomery Wards
pipes and installation.
$ $ $ $ $ $
Travel Agency
Tours Cruises Everywhere
746 Mass.
Monday, March 23,1964
Domestic Foreign
AIR LINES
Steamship Lines
VI 3-0152
TAX FREE EUROPEAN' CARS. Army officer planning summer trip to Europe. Will pick up any brand European car and deliver to port for U.S. arrival about July 15. Includes VW 1500. Details. call VI 2-1318. 3-24
U-Call, we haul. Anything, anytime. VI
3-5888. tf
Surprise your roommate with a cake on that special occasion. The K-U. Birthday cupcakes serve the student body a line of cakes. Free delivery and cards. Call VI 2-1791.
L&M CAFE now uner new management We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
for lunches, cocktails, delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches. Your second cup of coffee always free.
University Daily Kansan
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
Originality
IN FLOWERS
FOR EVERY OCCASION
especially for you
by Alexander's
826 10WA
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PHONE VI. 2-3320
Lube - Wheel Bal. - Brakes
19th & Mass. VI 3-9802
FREE! qt. of oil with oil change & filter BOB'S CONOCO
AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS DALE'S BODY SHOP
616 W. 9th
VI 3-4732 704 Vermont
cold drink
All makes & models frame - body - fender - glass
Hot doughnuts—sandwich cold drink
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
JOE'S BAKERY
Ambitious young man with experience in the law. Great proposition for the right man. Write, living resume of experience. age, etc. 10. University Daily Kane. Flint Hall. 3-24
25c delivery VI 3-4720
ALLEN'S NEWS
School Supplies 1115 Mass.
REAL PET
Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY. Peppermint
Park Kiddyland operation for sale. 22038
through October by running this during the summer. Call
VI 2-0155 at 5 p.m.
Pet Center
GRANT'S DRIVE-IN
Girl to play electric organ part-time. Call VI 3-4743.
Student secretary. Must be enrolled in at least one hour. 30 hour a week job. Exceptional wages. Starting April 29 through the end of June, Call UN 4-3815.
1218 Conn. VI 3-2921
Sure—Everything in the Pet Field
Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 316 Mass. VI 3-1267.
HELP WANTED
9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
ART'S TEXACO
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
★ TUNE-UPS
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
Shoe Service
BURGERT'S
Service for Shoes Since 1910
1113 Mass. St. VI 3-0691
The only thing better than a home cooked meal is Dinner At DUCKS Steals & Seafoods A Specialty
Serving crisp tossed salads,
choice of potatoes, zesty
Vienna breads & country fresh
butter. Sandwiches, too!
Your favorite beverage
11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass.
Engine Tune Up
One Stop Service
Generator & Starter Repair
Brake Repair
★ Lubrication & Oil Change
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
JACK & GUNN'S
SKELLY SERVICE
300 W. 6th
SKELLY
VI 3-9271
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729 N.H. VI 2-1708
University Daily Kansan Monday, March 23, 1964
Long History Behind Relocating Negroes
By Al Kuetner United Press International
Since the days when slavery fell into disfavor in the United States, there have been recurring suggestions that Negroes in the South be relocated in and out of the country.
Thomas Jefferson was one of the first to advance the idea seriously. Georgia Sen. Richard B. Russell is the latest.
The Georgian, currently the Dixie field marshal of an effort to prevent passage of a new civil rights bill, says he will introduce a relocation plan as an amendment to the legislation.
ABOUT THE ONLY racial resettlement program that had even moderate success resulted in the creation of Liberia, now a thriving nation on the west coast of Africa.
The Liberian colony was set up under the auspices of the American colonization society in 1816 and the first group of "free Negroes" from the U.S. sailed for Africa in 1822.
When the late Theodore Bilbo, the arch-segregationist Senator from Mississippi, proposed the same idea 120 years later, it was greeted with furious opposition.
The Senate held up his seating for the new term to which he had been elected and he died before he could take office.
THE RELOCATION IDEA subsided the following the Bilbo era, only to be revived in the age of rising racial turbulence that followed the 1954 Supreme Court school desegregation decision and the "blockbusting" moves by some Negroes into white neighborhoods.
In Georgia, a legislator, Alpha Fowler, suggested that a fund be set up to buy homes for Negroes next door to prominent national figures who were active in desegregation matters. His plan died quickly.
Then came the so-called "reverse freedom rides" of 1962. These came out of Louisiana and Arkansas and were the brain child of George Sigelman, an aide to Louisiana segregationist Leander Perez.
MORE THAN 100 Negroes took backers up on offers of travel pay to distant points, including Hyannis Port, Mass., the home of President Kennedy. Many were left stranded, and some still are on relief far from their Southern homes.
American Youth-
(Continued from page 1)
Each one had his set of undeniable facts and yet by the end of the evening, I had again to ask myself—what causes juvenile delinquency?"
Even if the experts are in agreement, Tunley writes, many of them are unable to communicate, and he cites the following passage from a speech by a psychiatrist who had been working in a boy's training school: "Unseen and unheard but always omniscent are the subtle and covert resistances inevitably encountered when a contrapuntal modality invades the province of reeducational discipline."
The experts are going through a bad time. Marion K. Sanders in an article in Harper's magazine imagined an all-out nuclear attack She wrote that on the following day the doctors would be treating burns, the ministers would be running soup kitchens, the policemen would be herding children into rubble heaps where teachers would be holding classes. But the social workers would call a conference on "interpersonal relationships in a time of intensified anxiety states."
ACTUALLY, THINGS ARE not quite that bad. There are thousands of experts and social workers who do not spend all their time attending conferences, but are in the thick of the fight.
Get into the
✩ Spring
Swing...
Have all your Spring styles
cleaned for the
spring social events...
LAWRENCE
launderers and dry cleaners
Peter
Nero
March 28
Hoch
MARCO L. BENZANE
If I Were Dick Harp, I Would Hang Around To See
PETER NERO
If I Were The KU Grounds Crew, I Would Take A Break To See
PETER NERO
If I Were The Kappa Sig's. I Would Throw A Party For
PETER NERO
1 5^2
Peter
Nero
March 28
Hoch
A. D. Pandey
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
India Approves Soviet Arms Ban
GENEVA—(UPI)—India announced its support of a Soviet disarmament today in a move that startled the West.
Indian disarmament negotiator V. C. Trevedi said his government favors Moscow's "nuclear umbrella" proposal, which calls for the destruction of all nuclear weapons—except a limited number retained for defense by the United States and Russia—as a first step toward disarmament.
THE WEST has rejected this plan, chiefly because the Russians have offered no guarantee of verification of weapons destruction.
"India views with favor the principle contained in the (Soviet foreign minister) Gromyko proposal of a nuclear umbrella and suggests that the committee discussions will proceed more fruitfully if this thesis is accepted by all of us," Trevedi said.
U. S. negotiator Adrian S. Fisher asked Tsarapkin just how many and what kind of weapons Russia proposed to retain under its plan and what inspection measures it would accept to prevent cheating.
THE UNITED STATES favors a plan for "balanced disarmament" under which the nuclear arsenals of Russia and the West would be destroyed by stages—30 per cent in the first stage and 35 per cent in each of two succeeding stages.
Earlier, Brazil accused the United States, Britain and Russia of acting like a "nuclear directorate" and criticized their failure to move ahead in disarmament negotiations.
Brazilian Foreign Minister Joao Araujo Castro, in a hard-hitting speech to the 17-nation disarmament conference, charged that the three nuclear powers have ignored neutralist proposals and at times have paid scant attention to the conference itself.
Soviet spokesman Semyon K. Tsarapkin expressed delight at the Indian statement. He called on the West to "agree in principle" to Moscow's plan at once.
HE SAID THERE should be more "sense of urgency" in the disarmament talks. He said the major powers simply are repeating the same ideas over and over.
Brazil is one of the eight unaligned countries participating in the arms talk. Araujo, who came to Geneva for the United Nations Trade Conference which opened yesterday, was the second foreign minister to address the disarmament group. Britain's R. A. Butler spoke to the delegates last month.
The Brazilian said it is no longer possible to be too hopeful about the conference as was the case when it resumed two months ago.
SINCE THE CONFERENCE resumed in January, the negotiations have made no concrete progress. The co-chairmen, Russia and the United States, have failed so far to agree on an agenda for direct bargaining.
Araujo said 1964 should be a year of progress on disarmament and not "the year of stalemate, which it may well turn out to be."
He said the delegates should not delude themselves into thinking they are making progress on the U.N. General Assembly's request to negotiate "with a sense of urgency" a complete nuclear test ban treaty.
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ARAUJO CRITICIZED the United States, Britain and Russia for "by-passing" the Geneva conference in working out last year's partial test ban agreement.
"Can we find here any sense of urgency, on this matter?" he asked. "And, what is more serious, can we find any trace of negotiations being carried on? There have been no discussions on a complete test ban since the conference resumed Jan. 21."
"They chose . . . to act as if they were a nuclear directorate," he said.
Tuesday, March 24, 1964
said.
The Brazilian said it was "just indulging in cold war tactics" to try to pin down the responsibility for the lack of progress, but he added "there is no concealing the fact that world opinion is disappointed."
Lawrence, Kansas
Daily hansan
61st Year, No. 110
Jacksonville Units Brace For New Racial Violence
JACKSONVILLE. Fla. —(UPI)— Reinforced police units here braced for the possibility of new racial violence today following a bloody night of demonstrations in which whites were beaten, slashed and shot.
Hundreds of anxious whites telephoned police headquarters this morning, asking if it were safe to venture out onto the streets. They were told that order had been restored.
A Negro woman was killed by gunfire during the height of last night's disturbance in the city's Negro area. Roving gangs of Negroes hurled bricks, bottles and rocks at whites who ventured into the area. Order was finally restored by no-
Order was finally restored by police units about 1:30 a.m. (EST).
SEVERAL STREETS in the Negro section were littered with broken
POLICE ARRESTED 127 persons yesterday afternoon and last night. Sixty-five of them were convicted of unlawful assembly and disorderly conduct in city court trials that ran until 3 a.m. today.
Police Chief Luther Reynolds cancelled days off for the police force and special 45-man emergency unit was on standby alert to move in if new violence flared.
glass, bricks and other debris from last night's violence.
State troopers sped to an expressway leading through the section and blocked all traffic from entering the area. Reinforced police patrols gradually restored order and City Police Capt. Leslie Anderson said around 1:30 a.m. (EST) that "all is quiet."
IT WAS THE FIRST such violence in the state's second largest city, near the Georgia border, since a 1960 racial flareup when organized bands of Negro youths staged hit-and-run violence strikes through the city.
The gangs last night attacked motorists and pedestrians—all white, with one apparent exception. Three sailors, including two Negroes were fired upon by a Negro man as they sat in a parked car. Two of the sailors were wounded slightly.
A Negro woman, Jonnie Mae Chappell, was fatally shot in the stomach from a passing car as she searched for her purse outside a suburban grocery. Witnesses were unable to identify the car or its occupants.
BILLY JAMES, a 25-year-old white man, said his car was forced to the curb by a carload of Negroes
and he was dragged out, tied to a tree and slashed with razors.
A bullet creased the head of Carlos Gonzales, a Cuban, as he drove through the section where the Chappell woman was killed.
Margarita Robena, riding with Gonzales, said she saw a crowd of Negroes when the shot was fired.
A white youth walking through the Negro section was beaten by three young Negroes wielding lead pipes and a hospital spokesman said his head wounds required 10 stitches. A white man was "quite well beaten, including kicks in the chest, many abrasions on the face and hemorrhage of the left eye," according to doctors.
Ferguson Approves CRCC Demonstration
A NUMBER OF PERSONS were injured by flying glass during the downtown demonstration yesterday afternoon which erupted into a brick and bottle throwing melee.
THE TORCH lighting ceremony will take place on the east steps of the Capitol building. The torch then
Atty. Gen. William Ferguson said last night he will be "heartily" in favor of the civil rights demonstration planned for the Greek Weektorch lighting ceremony in Topeka, Saturday.
"I was a Kansas University fraternity man. Because there may be inequities in the charter or rules of some of the fraternities or sororities, this should not militate against all of them. However, I feel that if inequities do exist they should be brought to light and civil rights demonstrations, in my view, are an excellent way to call attention to the problem, and I am heartily in favor of such a demonstration either at KU or at the torch lighting ceremony."
In a telephone interview last night, Ferguson, who will light the torch at a ceremony which will be picketed by members of the Civil Rights Coordinating Committee (CRCC), said:
will be relayed by KU fraternity men from Topeka to the Campanile where the annual chariot races will begin.
The torch lighting, which is scheduled to be televised, will begin at 11 a.m.
Bert Rinkel, Scott City junior and a member of the CRCC steering committee, said that the CRCC plans to have about 100 demonstrators at Topeka.
The pickets will stand in silent protest while the torch is lit, Rinkel said.
FERGUSON, A Republican candidate for governor, graduated from KU with a major in history. While at KU, he was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Anderson said 127 persons were arrested during the afternoon demonstration. Trials began at 7 p.m. (EST) and ran until 3 a.m. Among those tried, 65 were convicted of unlawful assembly and disorderly conduct charges with sentences ranging from one week to 15 days in jail and fines from $25 to $50. Eleven of the defendants were acquitted.
Two years ago, Ferguson lit a torch for a relay from Topeka. Then, only members of Sigma Alpha Epsilon participated in the relay. This year, fraternity men from all the KU chapters will carry the torch a certain distance.
"This is my second time lighting the torch, and I am happy to do it again." Ferguson said.
U.S.Ambassador Stabbed in Tokyo
TOKYO—(UPI) — U.S. Ambassador Edwin O. Reischauer was stabbed in the leg today by a 19-year-old Japanese man who police said was mentally retarded. Embassy officials said the four-inch wound was serious but not critical.
Reischauer, 53-year-old former Harvard professor, underwent surgery for more than two and one-half hours to probe and stitch the wound in his right thigh. He was given a transfusion because of "considerable" loss of blood.
Reischauer was saved from possible further injury by two Americans who wrestled with his assailant, Kowa Shiotani, held him until police arrived, and then gave first aid to the ambasador.
POLICE SAID Shiotani had been a mental patient in his home city of Numazu, 100 miles from Tokyo. They said he appeared to have several grievances against the United States for its postwar policy in Japan.
The government expressed regret
Police said Shiotani told them he also had poured gasoline on a rug inside a U.S. embassy house in January. They said he had been arrested on suspicion of arson but released.
Today, Shiotani climbed a wall and entered the embassy compound. He approached Reischauer as the ambassador was walking out of the buildings on his way to lunch.
for the incident, the latest in a series of political stabbings.
Reischauer was born in Japan of American missionary parents and speaks Japanese fluently.
"I was getting ready to leave the chancery and saw the ambassador coming down the stairs. I started to open the door but the ambassador beat me to it. The ambassador then stepped out.
JOHN FERCHAK of Fairfax, Va. one of the Americans who seized the youth, described the scene that followed:
"At the same time, right at the doorway, out of nowhere came this
man into the building. He brushed against the ambassador. The man came in and the ambassador said, 'Who is this man?'
"I LOOKED AT him and saw the knife in his hand. I grabbed him from the back, forcing him to the floor and forced the knife from his hand. The knife was a short one with a triangular blade."
Another Marine guard, Cpl. Lester L. Wells, of Eaton Rapids, Mich., also assisted.
A Marine guard, Sgt. Carl D. Macek of San Diego, Calif., helped subdue Shiotani.
FERCHAK THEN drove Reischauer to a Japanese hospital a short
Weather
One to three inches of snow forecast for tonight and tomorrow.
distance from the embassy building, Reischauer went immediately into surgery. An embassy official said he was in the operating room within five minutes after the stabbing.
Temperatures tonight will be in the 20's with overcast skies, tomorrow's high will be in the low 30's with skies cloudy.
The hospital's Japanese chief surgeon, Kei Mikanagi, said the six-inch knife penetrated about four inches into Reischauer's leg. It went in two inches, struck a bone, and then went another two inches around the bone, he said.
The wound was about halfway between the knee and hip joint on the outside of Reischauer's right leg.
Davis stood by as the Japanese doctors performed the surgery.
U. S. NAVY Surgeon Capt. G. M. Davis of Bixby, Okla., who was flown by helicopter to the hospital after the operation began, said Reischauer would have to remain in the hospital today and tomorrow.
An embassy spokesman said the wound would take about a month to heal.
.
Negroes have held sit-ins at downtown hotels and restaurants for the past two weeks and Mayor Hayden Burns during the past weekend made a "special police" of about 400 firemen. Firebombs were hurled Sunday night at a campaign office of Burns, a candidate for governor. Burns blamed the uprisings on his political opponents who denied the accusation.
THE CURRENT DEMONSTRATIONS followed the disbanding of the city's bi-racial committee which said it had been unable to bring about desegregation of downtown hotels and restaurants. The committee, appointed after the 1960 violence, had negotiated the integration of many public buildings such as the city auditorium, sports colosseum and Gator Bowl stadium.
Racial Strife ToBe Discussed
The historical setting of the civil rights revolution will be discussed tonight by John Hope Franklin, visiting humanities series lecturer, at 8 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Prof. Franklin, a 49-year-old Oklahoman, is chairman of the history department at Brooklyn College in New York City. Next fall he will be on the history department staff at the University of Chicago.
Prof. Franklin has written eight books about the history of the South, and many articles appearing in historical journals.
Time magazine, in their January 3 issue, included Prof. Franklin in a full-color section devoted to about 30 distinguished American Negroes.
A Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Fisk University, Prof. Franklin received his doctorate from Harvard in 1941.
He has taught at several universities and was recently visiting lecturer at a Seminar in American Studies at Cambridge. He has twice served as professor at the Salzburg (Austria) Seminar in American Studies.
President Kennedy appointed Prof. Franklin to a 3-year term on the Board of Foreign Scholarships.
In addition to tonight's lecture, Prof. Franklin will speak on "The Past in The Future of The South" this afternoon at 4 p.m. in the Javahawk Room of the Kansas Union.
After his visit to KU, Prof. Franklin will fly to Hyderabad, India, to represent the United States at the opening of the American History Research Center at Osmania University.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 24, 1964
Dignity and Indignance:
March 21, 1964
KU, Saturday, March 21, 1964, the second day of spring. There was to be a civil rights appeal for ending exclusion from fraternities and sororities on the basis of skin color. People would be affected, including myself. Then, I wasn't sure how.
Time to assemble was set for 12:30 in the union parking lot.
Close to 100 Negroes and whites gathered. Brief speeches were made by two CRCC leaders—one Negro, one white. It was to be a day of meaningful protest, they said. There was to be no violence. Marchers were to keep orderly ranks. You are here as individuals, said one, to act as a group because of the individual convictions to which each in his own way has arrived.
THE SUN WAS bright, but the March wind carried a token chill from the winter just past.
The marchers fell into line as planned . . two by two, headed for the Sigma Nu house on Emery Road.
The men wore suit and tie. The women wore dresses. Only an 18-month-old boy named Tony, the son of one of the marchers, was not dressed so. He gurgled in wonder, then fell asleep in the arms of a friend; he wasn't responsible for his world, at least for awhile.
Spot interviews with 30 of the marchers showed that most were from Kansas or Missouri. A few were from across the country—New Orleans, Boston, San Francisco, Hattiesburg, Mississippi. Several were foreign students. The average grade point was between 1:6 and 1.7.
AS THE LINE stretched along Jayhawk Blvd., with the marchers singing occasionally, it was greeted by hundreds of on-looking faces. Mostly friendly faces, curious faces, a few hostile faces.
There was a 15-minute walk, warm, and pleasant with conversation. At the end, on the lawn of a fraternity house on the hill over Emery Road a group of men huddled. When the line passed beneath, they hooted and broke into the chorus of Dixie. "Look away . . . look away."
It made me glad I had picked up a sign. It was not a day for neutrality.
The chorus on the hill broke into an uneasy and self-conscious laughter. They looked to each other, presumably for reassurance.
IN TERMS OF numbers, the jibes from above were not representative. A basketball game went uninterrupted on the Sigma Nu basketball court. Many stayed in their rooms. Many stood quietly on the slope in their Saturday sweat-shirts and cut-off jeans and chatted with friends. But because of the silence of the many on the slope, the grotesque behavior of the few dominated:
There was a large black labrador dog with a leonine head. A man had a stick which he would throw towards the pickets, and the dog would run barking to fetch it.
There were several cars displaying confederate flags which careened past at high speed. From the window of one car a large dixie flag was held aloft by a man wearing a big stetson. He yelled, and was answered by a chorus of cheers from a group of 30 or 40 on the hill.
From the second floor window of a fraternity house someone played a tape-recording of gun-fire, then a tape of "Dixie" again turned up so loud as to carry over the entire area.
THERE WERE other insults. They came from people who, essentially, were little different from the people marching.
The 100 in the street, as picketers, appeared invulnerable. They had purpose, bestdefined in one sentence by George Ragsdale Negro CRCC chairman, in a statement made Friday to the press:
"We hope that by exhibiting our concern we will arouse the student body, the school administration, state officials, and the public to the extent that someone will take positive action."
An officer of Sigma Nu came down to talk with some of the CRCC leaders and reporters. He talked of conventions, caucuses, committees—what he saw as the realities of removing discriminatory clauses in fraternity constitutions.
The marchers, he said, did not understand. The Sigma Nu's had tried before to have the clause removed by the national organization. They were still trying, he said. Their motion to have the "white" clause reconsidered, said the officer, stressing that he was speaking as an individual and not as a fraternity representative, would be blocked from the agenda by the dominating Southern elements of the national.
THE PUBLICITY created by the picket would alert the Southerners.
Several fraternity men gathered around nodding assent. Yes, this "show of concern" was not necessary. Someone above yelled, "Buy them tickets to Africa." A fraternity man in the circle looked up and winced.
The march lasted two hours. The curious, the friendly, the hostile drove past and looked on. They had been given something to think about on a warm Saturday afternoon besides golf and tennis, dates and books. The picket line swelled a little as new people joined in. The heckling subsided.
March 21, 1964, KU, the second day of spring.
Shriver Commands Poverty War
By Rick Mabbutt
President Lyndon B. Johnson declared open war on poverty in America last week with the establishment of a new executive agency, the Office of Economic Opportunities, which will be headed by Sargent Shriver.
The anti-poverty program, as the President outlined it to Congress, centers on a job corps reminiscent of the Civilian Conservation Corps of the 1930s.
The $962_{1/2}$-million-dollar plan also provides for a Peace Corps-styled body of 3,000 to 5,000 volunteers who will work in various phases of the battle against poverty.
Some 100,000 young men, draft rejects and school dropouts, will work on conservation projects and be given special job training and work experience.
Although the poverty war occupied the top news spot of the week another Johnson message to Congress received much attention. On Thursday the President asked Congress for $3.4 billion in foreign aid to help "build a world in which
the weak can walk without fear."
Canal Crisis Clouded
THE PRESIDENT WAS REPORTED as being brusque and cool to most of the Latin American ambassadors at a Monday meeting of the Alliance for Progress. Observers feel that Johnson wishes to avoid any appearance of negotiating with a "pistol at his head." At the end of the week he said in a statement that "We are prepared to review every issue which now divides us..."
On Monday President Johnson contradicted the statement and declared that there had been "no meeting of minds." On Wednesday the OAS commission decided to abandon mediation efforts, saying their efforts had been "frustrated."
Internationally, Latin America was prominent in the week's news. Confusion reigned over the U.S.-Panama dispute over the Canal Zone. Such confusion started last Sunday when a special commission of the Organization of American States announced, in effect, that the dispute seemed settled.
Not content with France's influence in Europe and Asia Gen. Charles de Gaulle was in Mexico last week on a trip that was heralded as the "start of a drive to extend French influence through Latin America."
The island of Cyprus was quieter last week as tension between Greek and Turkish Cypriots lessened. The reason for the new calm seemed to be the arrival of the Canadian troops, part of a U.N. police force. However, over the weekend tension increased as the two factions began to maneuver for control of a vital highway on the island.
Calm on Cyprus Ends
Delays in the formation of the peace force have left the way open for renewed strife.
A week-long series of bloody riots between Hindus and Moslems took more than 100 lives, most of them Hindu, in central India. The mutual hatred of the two religious groups which occupy India is centuries old.
PRIME MINISTER NEHRU told the Indian Parliament that Indian troops would cross the cease-fire
(Continued on page 3)
VOTERS
NIXON
DIDGAL KERBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
"Pardon Me, Did You Knock?"
Dialogue Coaching Change Rumors Damage Basketball Plans
Dick Harp said in late January he was pondering whether to make this year his last as head basketball coach at KU.
THE LAST WE HEARD, Harp still had not decided his plans. Some people were expecting a decision at the end of the 1963-64 basketball season—a fairly successful one for Harp considering the Jayhawkers finished in a tie for third place in the Big Eight Conference.
Since the first inkling that the past season might be Harp's last, rumors have ranged from the probable to the unbelievable to the fantastic.
The point is—and it's one that merits immediate attention—that this apparent indecision and the deluge of rumors is hurting KU's basketball program—and, perhaps, the entire KU athletic program.
THIS IS THE TIME of year when high school players are being sought for Jayhawker teams of the future. We can sympathize with the high school prospect who wonders for whom he'll be playing in college.
That pretty well sums up our feelings. We have a hunch Harp will stay on at least for next season. He no doubt would gain great satisfaction from coaching the team next year's promises to be or the outstanding player George Unseld promises to be.
In view of this indication's adverse effect on recruiting alone, the chancellor, the KU Athletic Board, the athletic director or someone should act immediately. We think Harp should say whether he intends to continue as KU's basketball coach or enter some other field, such as work with the Fellowship of Christian Athletes with which he is actively connected.
WHAT WOULD HAPPEN if Harp decided to quit? Well, according to the various rumors, it'd be this way:
We
- That Ralph Miller, coach of Wichita's Missouri Valley Conference championship team, would replace Harp. (A statement from the chairman of the Board of Regents has indicated this might not be possible, however.)
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- That Walt Shublom, coach of Wyandotte's state high school championship team, will replace Harp.
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Page 3
Tuesday, March 24, 1964
Week's News in Review-
University Daily Kansan
(Continued from page 2)
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Pakistan's foreign minister, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, said his country would smash any such attack, and he did not rule out the possibility of asking Red China for help in Pakistan's recurring border dispute with India.
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THE LARGEST COMMUNIST party outside the Red bloc went over to the Chinese side in the ideological battle between Moscow and Peking. The Indonesian Communist party, almost $2\frac{1}{2}$ million strong, has been a fence-sitter in the squabble. But last week the party denounced the nuclear test ban signed by Moscow saying, "It would have been much better had there be no such treaty" and added that the pact had paralyzed the world movement.
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Walt. W. Rostow, chairman of the State Department's planning council, rejected De Gaulle's proposal for neutralization as the Western policy in Southeast Asia and asked for Western Europe to support the U.S. stand.
his boss.
IN DISARMAMENT TALKS in Geneva the U.S. charged that the current Soviet proposals would provide "an instrument of nuclear blackmail" and pave the way for anarchy in the world community.
Viet Nam continued to make headlines. The White House said that the war there will cost us more money and will require increased U.S. participation in military and civil affairs in that country.
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In one of the best operations in recent months the South Vietnamese forces captured about 300 suspected Communists in an attack on a village near the Cambodian border.
Miller
CAMBODIA PROTESTED that the village was in their territory
and postponed the opening of peace talks with a peace delegation from South Viet Nam in Phnom Penh, the Cambodian capital.
South Viet Nam apologized for the air attack but protested that Cambodian fighters shot down an American-piloted Vietnamese plane.
After stubbornly refusing to release three American fliers who were captured March 12 when their plane strayed into East German territory the Soviet Union announced late Sunday that they would release the last two fliers. They previously had freed one of the Americans who had been injured parachuting to safety.
- * *
Nationally it was a quiet week. The trials were over. Jack Ruby filed an appeal of his conviction after firing Melvin Belli, his colorful trial lawyer who had criticized the conduct of the trial. And Teamster boss Jimmy Hoffa was preparing to take his jury-tampering conviction to a higher court.
The congressional investigation of Bobby Baker was marked by cries of partisanship. Republicans accused the Democrats of trying to put the Baker "skeleton" back in the closet before this year's elections.
Sen. Richard Russell (D-Ga.) proposed a relocation program to be added to the civil rights bill. It was aimed at giving all states an equal proportion of Negroes. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-Minn.) charged that the southerners with "pulling Dixie rabbits out of the hat" to divert attention from key provisions of the civil rights bill.
A railroad workers strike which could have paralyzed the nation's railroads was averted last week by court injunctions against the threatening strikers and a change in the union's strategy.
Pierre Salinger, the President's Press secretary, resigned last week to run for the Democratic nomination for U.S. senator from California, his native state.
The Senate may vote this week on whether or not to send the civil rights bill to the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., leader of the southern fight against segregation, predicted Thursday that civil rights demonstrations will reach record proportions this year.
"I think we will see demonstrations on a level and size we've never seen before," he said.
And to end the survey of the week's news highlights a story which made as many big headlines as almost any other story. Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton were finally married, in Montreal, Canada.
CRCC Support
The People Say . . .
We wish to take this opportunity to express our approval and support of CRCC's plans to picket in protest of discriminatory practices in KU fraternities.
It is important, we feel, to divorce this protest action from any feelings about fraternities per se. The issue is not fraternities vs. independents; it is whether university-supported living groups should, morally or legally, have the right to deny membership to people on the basis of race.
We think they should not. The issue goes beyond discriminatory clauses, though these are important. Discriminatory attitudes and practices on the part of all white fraternities are at least as important.
We recognize that change in attitudes, policies and culture is not easy; it requires bravery and some dedication. We would hope that such change can come about through efforts of fraternities themselves, together with university support. Barring this, we applaud the commitment of the CRCC.
Richard L. Burke
Ricard L. Burke
Human Relation Department
David Jones
Philosophy Department
Harrison Madden
Human Relation Department
Gary M. Maranell
Sociology Department
William Stephens
Bureau of Child Rsearch
DailijIränsan
111 Flint Hall
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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SUA & ASC present this Oregon Democrat who will discuss "Foreign Policy under President Johnson"
APRIL 1 8PM HOCH
Reception in South Lounge / Union following the speech
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 24, 1964
These Fraternities Hope That You Will Enjoy All The Greek Week Activities March 23 - March 29
1964
PHI KAPPA PSI
SIGMA CHI
THETA CHI
SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON
PHI GAMMA DELTA
ALPHA TAU OMEGA
PHI DELTA THETA
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA
ALPHA KAPPA LAMBDA
PHI KAPPA TAU
PHI KAPPA SIGMA
Tuesday, March 24, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Vice President Has Become Important Figure
By Alvin Spivak
WASHINGTON (UPI) Once upon a time there was a vice president named Throttlebottom who served under a president named Wintergreen.
Their constituency was a Broadway theater audience and they were the brainchildren of playwrights George S. Kaufman and Morrie Ryskind. Their antics in "Of Thee I Sing," with music by George I Ira Gershwin, resulted in a 1932 Pulitzer Prize for drama.
It couldn't happen now. No one would believe the show's premise, for example, that the only way Throttlebottom could see the White House was on a public tour.
THE ASCENDENCY OF the vice president's role was emphasized in the duties delegated to Richard M. Nixon when he held the office, and in his prominence during former President Dwight D. Eisenhower's illnesses.
has made it clear he wants the lesson to stick.
In his television interview Sunday, Johnson expressed a pointed credio for selection of a vice presidential candidate by the Democratic—and presumably the Republican—national convention. He said:
"I would hope that the only thing that would appeal to any delegate would be this question: Is this the best equipped and best trained and best fitted man to serve as president should he be called on to do so?"
WHEN KENNEDY MADE Johnson his surprise selection as a running mate in 1960, the general supposition was that it was to help win the Southern and Western areas where the Texan was popular.
After Kennedy's death, he was quoted as having also told friends that he chose Johnson because he considered the former Senate Democratic leader the best man—next to him—to be president if events decreed.
nominee for political value. A man with the qualifications Johnson described would be expected to have built up a favorable political record, too—by virtue of experience, name or associations.
THUS THE CURRENT Democratic roster of possibilities now includes Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, Peace Corps and poverty war coordinator Sargent Shriver, Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, U.N. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson, New York Mayor Robert F. Wagner, and Sen. Eugene McCarthy.
Which one of these, if any, will be chosen is something that is expected to depend on Johnson's own desires as the undisputed prospect for the Democratic presidential nomination. What his desires are, he isn't saying except for that credo.
But in the Sunday interview he made a couple of things clear;
"The president must have great confidence in the vice president . . . so the president's recommendation's should not be treated lightly."
"I would be less than frank if I said that I thought that it was wise at this stage of the game for either the president or the (candidates for) vice president to be carrying on a campaign for the office."
The latter remark applied to the efforts by Robert Kennedy supporters in New Hampshire and Wisconsin to boom him for the vice presidency—despite his public efforts to discourage them.
nothing to encourage those efforts". Johnson said. He added that reports of a feud between them because of this situation were "newspaper talk."
"The attorney general and I have talked about that, and I think he understands my viewpoints, and I take his word that he has done
But presidential nominees don't like to be pushed—even unofficially into their vice presidential choices.
Johnson is continuing to keep his own counsel about a potential running mate and probably won't finally make up his mind until convention time, depending on the political situation then. He may come up with a big surprise for everyone. Jack Kennedy did in 1960.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 24,1964
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Tuesday, March 24, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Peking, Moscow Bid For Sinkiang Riches
Page 7
dollar stakes.
The prize is Sinkiang—an immense Chinese province five times the size of Texas. It is an untapped natural treasure house, rich in oil and the uranium the Chinese need to build an arsenal of nuclear weapons.
TOKYO — (UPI) — Out in the windswept desert of northern China, Peking and Moscow are playing a deadly game of diplomacy for billion dollar stakes.
Fawns in the game are a people called the Uigurs, who for centuries have inhabited central Asia. Followers of Islam, they are racially related to the modern people of Turkey.
IN OLDEN TIMES the Uigurs raided China and often made life miserable for Chinese governments. But in recent centuries, the Uigurs' history has been a continual struggle to keep at a minimum the authority Peking and Moscow exercise over them.
The Chinese have admitted publicly that armed clashes took place in recent years between their frontier guards and Russia's. Reports from India, now at odds with China, say the Chinese Uigurs have been fleeing China, attempting to join their kinsmen in Russia.
It is getting harder all the time. With modern methods of transport and communications at their disposal, the governments in Peking and Moscow find it far easier to assert their authority over the table lands of central Asia.
TODAY THE RIVALRY between Russia and China rubs raw in Sinkiang.
Largest numbers of them live in Sinkiang—others in three of the smaller "republics" of the Soviet Union.
The Soviet Union is so powerful that it feels confident of its ability to control the Uigurs within its boundaries. It allows them a large amount of local authority. And because Russia is more advanced than China, it offers them a higher standard of living.
The Chinese have not been able to be so generous.
They need Sinkiang badly, and to assert Chinese authority there they have taken to settling Chinese army veterans on the arid table lands of Sinkiang.
Industrialization also is being
REPORTS OF MASS flights of Uigurs from China into the Soviet Union filter out of central Asia. The clashes between Soviet and Chinese troops are said to have occurred when Chinese crossed into Russian territory to hunt for fleeing Uigurs
pushed in an effort to get at Sinkiang's oil and uranium.
BY 1958, the Chinese and Russians were heading for a clash over leadership of the Communist world. The Chinese halted construction of a trans-Sinkiang highway which would have given the Russians greater entry into Sinkiang.
sources.
The Chinese, in return, agreed to allow the Uigurs in China to use the Russian script employed by their kinsmen living just over the boundary in the Soviet Union.
The Russian script they were employing make it a little too easy for them to be progpandized by their kinsmen across the border.
Recent pictures in Japanese newspapers of Sinkiang's major city, Uramuchi, show a nearly treeless landscape, dotted with heavy masonry buildings. There are more factory smokestacks than Westerners, dedicated to a belief in Chinese backwardness, would expect to see.
As recently as 15 years ago, the Russians probably could have cut Sinkiang loose from China without much trouble. The Chinese Communists, who came to power in 1949, were in no position to challenge a Russian effort to take over the area at that time.
But Josef Stalin was in a generous mood toward China and decided to let Sinkiang alone in return for promises that Russia would share in exploitation of Sinkiang's resources.
Russian consulates there were closed. The Uigurs were told they would have to learn to write all over again, this time in the Latin alphabet.
Time alone will tell whether this potential economic treasure chest remains in the hands of the Peking Communists or is added to the enormous resources already at the disposal of the Soviet Union.
Sideline
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 24, 1964
Two Swim Team Members To Compete in NCAA Meet
Two members of the 1963-64 Jayhawk swimming team, which finished its dual meet season with a perfect 9-0 record, will represent KU in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) championship competition this weekend.
The two swimmers, Jerry Higgins,
Wichita sophomore, and Mike Downey,
Coffeville junior, will leave
Lawrence Thursday for the event at
Yale University in New Haven,
Conn.
Higgins, who made the all-Big Eight squad in the 200 freestyle, the 500 freestyle and the 1650 freestyle, will be swimming the 200 and 1650 in the national meet. He won two second and one third place in the Big Eight Conference meet.
In the 1650, which runs no preliminaries, Higgins established a new Big Eight record time of 18:43.3, besting the old conference mark set by Charles Schutte of Oklahoma in the loop meet last year.
Schutte came back later in this year's meet and bested Higgins' mark and won the event.
When asked about Higgins' chances in the NCAA competition, Coach Dick Reamon said he thought Higgins had a good chance to win All-America honors in the 1650.
"Jerry hadn't swum the 1650 before this year's Big Eight meet." Coach Reamon said. We don't have that event in our regular dual meet season. It's not a popular distance
because of its distance. The only time the teams encounter the 1650 is in conference or national competition.
"Higgins has been working very hard for this meet and I now expect him to swim the 1650 in a time of 18:20—which should get him All-America honors," Coach Reamon said.
Downey, who set a new Big Eight record in the 100-butterfly, will be swimming in that event in the NCAA meet.
Coach Reamon said he thought Higgins to be a better all-round swimmer than Eldon Ward, KU's only All-America, who graduated in 1962.
Downey swam the record time of 55.1 in a preliminary race in the meet at Norman, placed second in the conference meet due to a judge's decision.
Coach Reamon said he thought Downey would swim in the low 54 second range at the NCAA meet.
"I think" Coach Reamon said, "that Mike would have swum the 100 in the low 54's in the Big Eight meet, except that he was working on the 200 and 400 individual medleys as well. I believe he'll do very well at the national meet."
Coach Reamon pointed out that this is the first time in the history of swimming at KU that anyone from the Jayhawk team has represented the school at the NCAA meet.
Jayhawk Tennis Team To Open Season's Play
By Glen Phillips
The Kansas tennis team will open their season this year with a dual meet Wednesday with Washburn University at Topeka and, according to Coach Denzel Gibbens, the Jayhawkers should win the contest easily.
This, according to coach Gibbens, should be the first of many victories for the Jayhawkers as they move into this season with what Coach Gibbens describes as "one of the best teams we have ever had here." Last year, KU finished second in Big Eight conference competition. This year the varsity squad with seven men is strengthened by the return of four lettermen, Jim Burns, St. Joseph, Mo., junior, was one half of the Big Eight doubles championship team from last year. His teammate Barry McGrath, Topeka junior, won the no. five singles matches conference competition.
Lance Burr, Salina junior, held down the #2 position on the KU squad last year and John Guyot, Arkansas City junior, is rated by the coach as an excellent threat in the doubles events. There are also three sophomore prospects moving up to spark the Jayhawkers' effort. John Grantham, Topeka, was the Kansas State High School champion for three years. Likewise, Jay Lysaught, Oklahoma City, was the Oklahoma State High School champ during his senior year. They are backed up by Chris Pinet of Lawrence.
This year's Jayhawker squad has, according to Coach Gibbens, depth. He says there are no "stars" that will outshine other members of the team.
"There should be no great difference between the man in the number one slot and the man in number five," Coach Gibbens said. Also, tennis has been granted a small amount of scholarship aid to be offered to prospective members who might not otherwise attend KU.
One week after their first meet with Washburn the Jayhawkers will begin their annual week-long southern trip. Special scheduling has allowed the KU team to travel to Oklahoma and Texas to meet the Oklahoma and the Oklahoma State teams as well as Oklahoma City University, North Texas State University, and TCU. This trip lets the Hawkers meet the Oklahoma schools and some of the north Texas schools without excessive travelling by either team.
According to Coach Gibbens, the battle for the Big Eight crown this year will be between the Sooners and the Jayhawkers.
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"The fact that they qualified for the national meet," Coach Reamon said, "indicates that they are top men in their events. Both men are underclassmen and I think it's fine to have them qualifying for national competition."
Coach Reamon said the two swimmers were the best in the history of KU swimming in their respective events.
Cagers Select Twinbill Teams For Next Year
Opponents for the 1964 Sunflower Doubleheader at KU and Kansas State next December will be Loyola of Chicago and Penn State. Dates for the event are Dec. 11-12.
The two Kansas teams continue a tradition of inviting intersectional basketball powers to compete here. Loyola, 1963 N.C.A.A. champions, built a 22-5 record this season and entered national playoffs. The Ramblers were derailed by Michigan in the Mideast Regionals.
Penn State finished 16-7 for the season's competition.
Following the usual pattern of the traditional doubleheader, the two Kansas teams will face guest teams at Manhattan the first night, then reverse opponents in Allen Field House the second night. Pairings for the Friday, Dec. 11, games at K-State match KU against Penn State in the first game and K-State against Loyola in the second. In Allen Field House Dec. 12, K-State will play Penn State in the first game; KU will meet Loyola in the second.
The doubleheaders were begun in 1957 and have become an annual basketball highlight for the Kansas teams.
This season's guest teams were U.C.L.A. — this year's N.C.A.A. champion, and U.S.C.
Senator Hits Pro Boxing
WASHINGTON, —(UPI)— Sen. Philip A. Hart, (D-Mich.), said today that professional boxing was the "object of general public disrespect and distrust."
"Time is running out for the boxing business unless something is done." he declared.
METAL BAND
Hart, chairman of the Senate Antitrust and Monopoly subcommittee, said there was "a growing suspicion that the sport is controlled by hidden manipulators and that the men who go into the ring and take the knocks are the ones who profit least from the gate receipts."
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Thursday
00 — Union
Greek Week dinner
Friday
8:00 – HOCH
GREEK WEEK SING
(Admission Free)
G
GREEK
W
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1:45-Campanile Chariot race
Saturday 1:30-Campanile Torch lighting
2:00—Stadium Pancake race
3:00 Stadium Relays start
4:15—Potter's Tug-of-war
4:35—Potter's Picnic
Sunday Easter observance
MARCH 23-28
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
Page 9
KU Senior Earns Third Top Award
Breon Mitchell, Salina senior, has earned a Danforth Graduate Fellowship to round out his "triple crown" of the top three graduate scholarships in national competition.
Mitchell holds a Rhodes Scholarship and a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship in addition to the latest award.
The Danforth Fellowship provides enough tuition and living expenses for four years of study that is directed to the Ph.D. level. The receiver is expected to prepare himself for a career in college teaching. One thousand U.S. students entered national competition for the award. One hundred won.
Mitchell is the first student in the Kansas-Missouri area to earn the "triple crown" since KU's Fred Morrison of Colby and Ray Nichols Jr., of Lawrence won the honors in 1961 and 1960, respectively.
Since the Danforth program was established in 1952, KU students have earned nine of the awards, the first in 1955.
As recipient of the top three scholastic awards in the nation, Mitchell faced some unusual decisions. He has chosen to take the Rhodes scholarship first, where he will study philosophy at Oxford University in England for three years.
Mitchell is the fourth KU Rhodes scholar in six years and the 15th KU recipient since the program began. He is one of 19 Woodrow Wilson Fellows from KU this year.
He will defer the other grants until he completes his studies at Oxford.
Mitchell said, "I have always felt my ability to get along in school is due to my background."
There were always plenty of good books at home, and his parents had a good attitude toward learning, he said.
Mitchell said he thought scholastic excellence is due, in part, to having attended a good high school in his home town. Salina.
The language programs offered at KU have also contributed to his successful undergraduate years, Mitchell said. The opportunity to travel abroad in connection with language study is not offered in a lot of universities, Mitchell said.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Teaching Interviews: Mar. 25—Overland Park.
SUA COFFEE, 4 p.m., Jayhawk Room Kansas Union, "The Past in the Future of the South"—Dr. John Hope Franklin Humanities Lecturer.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Inquiry Forum, 7 p.m. St. Lawrence
Center, 1915 Stratford Rd. Anyone may
enter.
Inquirer Class, 7:30 p.m., Canterbury House.
*Inter-Varsity* Christian Fellowship, with
*Inter-Missional* missionary to the Apostles,
*IIIT—Irv* - George Darby.
Humanities Lecture, 8 p.m., Ballroom,
Kansas Union. "The Civil Rights Revolution:
Its Historical Setting"—Dr. John Hone, Franklin.
Yale Russian Chorus, 8 p.m., Hoc
Auditorium.
Western Civ Discussion, 9 p.m., St
Louisville, Center, 191, Stratford Rd.
Le Trecau de Paris, 8:15 p.m., University Theater. *Al Louette*
Lawrence Center, 1915 Stratford fld.
Dispensal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Daphne R.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m.
St. Paul's Church 7:30 a.m.
Bible and po Thinley Topics Lecture
Air Force Officers Selection Team, 9:30-12, Aids and Awards Office. 10-3-30, Hawks Nest, Kansas Union. To interview OTS applicants.
Inquirer Class, 3:45 p.m., Canterbury House.
Logan-Clendening Lecture, 4:30 p.m.
Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. Eng-
ical Medical Humanists: Thomas D. O'Malley
—Dr. Charles D. O'Malley,
UCLA.
peace ps Coffee and General Meeting
Coffee ps SUA Classical Film, 7 p.m. Fraser
Theater. The Bank Dick (W. C.
Battie Horn) (Peter Sellers).
Model U.N., 7:30 p.m., Ballroom, Kansas. Union.
Little Symphony Concert, 8 p.m.
Swarthout Hall.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
YOU CAN'T ACCEPT THE BIBLE,
CAN YOU?
Mitchell is the first KU student to be graduated with four majors: German, philosophy, art history and humanities. He carries a heavy academic load, and has maintained a 2.86 grade point average for all work at KU.
That's your decision, but most students haven't investigated enough to make the decision an intelligent one. You need a third of a series of expositions from the book of Acts, tonight in the Student Union.
Mitchell has held a Summerfield scholarship, KU's highest academic recognition for undergraduate men. He is a varsity tennis team letterman, the recipient of Phi Delta Theta social fraternity's national outstanding undergraduate award, and he has just finished a term as president of Student Union Activities.
He studied in France and Germany during the summers, and he is originator and editor of "Versuch," undergraduate German literary magazine. He also held a Carnegie Corporation undergraduate research grant in Vienna, Austria in 1962.
Earl A. Nehring, assistant professor of political science, is chairman of the newly formed Republican council of arts, professions, and sciences, which was formed last Monday.
Tuesday, March 24,1964 University Daily Kansan
Professor Heads State GOP Group
Nehring was elected Wednesday at a meeting in Topeka of faculty representatives from Kansas colleges and universities, following Monday's decision by the Kansas Board of Regents to allow Kansas college faculty members to take part in political party activities, using their official titles as identification.
Dr. John H. Kessel, director of the arts, professions, and sciences division of the national Republican party, addressed the group, stressing the need for such a council in Kansas.
He said that many faculty members and members of the "lively arts" throughout the U.S. take an active part in Republican party activities.
HOPE Applications Due In Alumni Office
Nominations of professors to receive the HOPE award (Honors for Outstanding Progressive Educators) are due March 31.
Any senior is eligible to submit the name of a professor for the $100 award, Marilyn Murphy, Leawood senior and co-chairman of the HOPE award committee, said.
The award which was established by the senior class of 1959 will be given to any full time faculty member who has taught at the university for at least two years. The award will be presented at the senior coffee April 22. Miss Murphy said.
Seniors can obtain nomination forms from the Alumni Office or any senior representative.
senior representatives are used to determine how the KU teacher is deserving of the award:
Official's Interest in Peace Corps First Aroused by Ethiopian Work
- The faculty member's willingness to help students.
By Bobbie Bartelt
Seeing the Peace Corps volunteers working in Ethiopia while on a State Department assignment first aroused James Adams' interest in the Peace Corps.
The African region, with which Adams is currently associated, has 2,200 volunteers, most of whom are teaching. Others are engaged in various building and community development projects, he said.
A project in a small coastal country is teaching the people the advantages of fishing co-operatively.
Adams is visiting KU this week with five other Peace Corps officials. He is the executive officer for the Africa region in the Washington office of the Peace Corps.
Before joining the Peace Corps staff, Adams worked with the State Department in Ethiopia and in Bonn, West Germany. He was impressed by the Peace Corps as being the organization "most likely to succeed."
"In the Peace Corps I found people who were really interested in helping others," the representative said. "I was also impressed by the needs of the people they helped."
"We are trying to teach these people that they should coordinate their fishing boats, rather than competing with one boat against another." Adams explained.
Since the problem of education is the most immediate problem in Africa today, Peace Corps volunteers are devoting much time to teaching.
"In some cases, it is a matter of introducing new things, as well as ideas," he said. One place a volunteer had to introduce the blackboard—and not a green one.
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"The acceptance of the volunteers is rather like when an American family accepts a new family on the block," Adams said. "The friendship grows until, once I heard the following conversation between a little native boy and his mother."
"The blackboard was merely a wall painted black, and the children used soft stones as chalk, but the idea was new to these people," Adams said.
The term "white" carries a foreign
'What's that white man doing here,' the child asked.
"He's not white, he's Peace Corps,' the mother replied."
tone among Africans, Adams said. The goal of the Peace Corps is to try to remove the foreign aspect.
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"The results aren't the kind that are immediately visible." Adams said. In trying to explain the results of the Peace Corps mission so far, he called on the following statement from a young man who had recently worked for the Peace Corps abroad:
"I didn't expect to make much of a change, but I know the world won't be the same any more."
The variety of volunteers attracted by the Peace Corps is great, Adams said.
"There are many different reasons volunteers have for joining the
He explained the last reason by saying that the level of independence in their work achieved by the volunteers would take several years to achieve in the States.
Corps," he further explained. "Some come for experience in foreign affairs, others for the real spiritual reason of helping others, and others just don't want to fight it out in the States."
"The work is slow." Adams said. "But we have to introduce 19th Century ideas before we can go on to 20th Century concepts."
"The minds of these people are open, unsophisticated and intensely curious, which explains why the key to helping them lies in education," Adams said.
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- The faculty member's success in stimulating students or challenging the students toward thinking.
- The faculty member's devotion to profession.
- The faculty member's contribution to general cultural life of the University.
- Nominations are to be submitted to the Alumni Office in Strong Hall.
- The faculty member's publications, and creative work will be considered, but not to the extent as will be the instructor's contributions to students.
The HOPE award committee will choose the recipient of the award from the nominations. The committee is composed of six seniors appointed by the president of the senior class and one senior selected by the deans of each of the seven undergraduate schools in the University.
The six appointed members are: Robert A. Swan, Topeka senior, and Marilyn Murphy, Leawood senior co-chairmen of the committee); Larry Gamble, Pittsburg senior (also representative from the School of Business); Robert Bush, Glendale, Mo.; senior; Sarah Jane Lutton, Barlesville, Okla.; senior; Philip Mohler, Laverne, Minn., senior.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 24,1964
Today's Delinquent Youth Seen As Special Breed
By Harry Ferguson
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Almost every adult American did something in his youth that would have listed him as a juvenile delinquent had he been caught. Public nudity is widely held to be an offense, but most boys at sometime plunged unclothed into the old swimming hole. Both boys and girls on Halloween committed acts that amounted to the defacement or destruction of property.
The fact that so many youths are not caught makes it difficult to measure the size of delinquent acts in the United States. The U.S. Children's Bureau estimates 1.1 million persons under age 18 were arrested in 1962 and the figure does not include arrests for minor traffic violations. Nobody is bold enough to make a guess on the number of juvenile law breakers who don't get taught.
Juvenile delinquency is not something that sprangle into life in our generation. Roul Tunley in his comprehensive book "Kids, Crime and Chaos" points out that four thousand years ago an Egyptian priest wrote, "vandalism is rife and crime of all kinds is rampant among our young people." Socrates complained that young Athenians "contradict their parents, gobble up the best at the table and tyrannize over their teachers." In 1764 the Rev. Henry M. Muhlenberg tried to quiet the boys in his congregation in Philadelphia and they shouted back "go to hell."
But there is almost unanimous agreement among experts that today's juvenile delinquents are a special breed. They are growing to adulthood in the age of anxiety and they reflect the fears and worries of their parents.
"They are living in a pressure
Youth Has Trouble Halting Dad's Smoke
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Mark Stephenson has really had his troubles trying to get his father to quit smoking.
The problems of the 13-year-old budding scientist from Grand Island, N.Y., appeared in yesterday's congressional record, placed there by Sen. Maurine Neuberger, D-Ore., who said Mark's letter to her was a "delightful commentary."
MARK WROTE that he decided back in the sixth grade to try to stop his father from smoking.
"I built my own smoking machine," he said.
People Likened To Hedgehogs
The first major conference on the psychological effects of architectural types and community environment on human beings was held in Topeka last weekend by the Menninger Foundation.
One of the points of discussion was that the kind of house and the kind of community in which an individual is reared defines what he can be and what he can do.
Lawrence R. Good, instructor of architecture, and Paul V. Gump, associate professor of psychology, were among the behavioral scientists and representatives of the housing industry who attended.
Prof. Gump said the conference was "very valuable, not because of what I learned there, but because I learned where I can learn some more."
Another topic discussed was the problem of privacy. Dr. Karl Menninger compared humans to hedgehogs in that they neither like to be too far nor too close to others.
On The Level
MEDFORD, Mass. — (UPI) — A platform which is not affected by random tilting of the earth has been designed at Tufts University to test high precision instruments.
Demonstrated to remain level over a six-hour period, such a stable platform will permit the calibration of high precision instruments such as gyroscopes and serve as a base for many geophysical instruments. It was designed by Prof. Kenarto Tsutsumi, associate professor of civil! engineering at Tufts.
Mark improvised a suction pump from a bicycle pump with a reversed valve to suck air. He arranged glass tubes to hold cigarettes. The machine produced a little tar.
"I buy cigarettes by the carton when I have enough money," he said and when funds ran low, he wrote several tobacco companies seeking old and bent cigarettes. Two replied but politely turned him down.
NEXT CAME the white mice problem. The mice got tumors when Mark painted them with the tar but the tumors disappeared when he stopped painting.
"They sure have gotten irritable tough," he explained.
About this time, the surgeon general issued his report on health hazards of cigarette smoking.
"With all the publicity since the surgeon general's report came out, it kinda stole my thunder," Mark said.
For his science fair project in April, he has two problems: getting a dry tobacco leaf for display and keeping the mice from dying of tumors.
Engineers to Discuss Junior-Senior Test
Professional engineers will present a panel discussion on Engineering In Training test (EIT) at 7:30 tonight in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity, and the Kansas Engineering Society are sponsoring the seminar on professional engineering to acquaint KU juniors and seniors in engineering on the history and the type of problems found on the EIT test.
A professional engineer is one who is granted a license to practice engineering by the state. Only professional engineers are recognized as engineers legally and consequently all consulting engineers must have a professional license.
A panel of professional engineers led by R. I. McKinney, professor of civil engineering, will discuss the licensing laws and the EIT exam.
This is an annual presentation, therefore KU juniors and seniors in engineering are urged to attend.
Students from Ivy League to
Pacific Coast will spend spring break in
One mile closer to the sun for lots more fun!
ASPEN. COLO.
Here's what it means to you —
There's a group going from KU
Call—VI 2-3082 or VI 2-1491
The teen-ager inhabits a world of worry and self doubt. Many of the things he worries about seem trivial to his parents, but unless the troubles are met head-on and resolved the teen-agers frustration explodes into violence and anti-social acts. He is caught between his natural bent toward destruction and the rules and laws of society which attempt to change its nature.
cooker," says Philip G. Green, director of the Children's Bureau Division of Juvenile Delinquency. "It is an age in which divorce is on the increase, adult crime is soaring, competition to climb to the top of the economic heap is at its fiercest and there are nagging threats of war and annihilation by the hydrogen bomb."
We are born violent creatures who delight in destruction. Persons who doubt this are invited to place a two-year-old in a room filled with breakable objects and return an hour later. The fun in erecting a tower of blocks is not in building them up but in knocking them over. Only discipline and law, working over the years, can change us from destroyers into conformers to the rules of society.
- What does he worry about? Dr. H. H. Remmers of Purdue University and D. H. Radler attempted to find out in a national survey. Their findings, published under the title of "The American Teen-ager," list these leading causes for worry among punis in the 12th grade:
- I want people to like me more.
- I get stage fright before a group.
- worry too much about little things.
- I want to gain (or lose) weight
*I do things I regret later.*
*I can't help day dreaming.*
HORACE
- I want to get rid of pimples.
Each man has his own place-
Unless these worries are at least in part allayed somewhere along
Horace knew what he was talking about.
Fido
Your place may be in life insurance sales and sales management. If you want to be in business for yourself, with no ceiling on potential income, you should look into the many advantages offered by a career in life insurance.
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the line, the teen-ager is likely to rebel against his environment, distrust his parents and allow his frustrations to explode into rebellion against society. As already noted, the people who know the most about juvenile delinquency are the last to assert that they can pin point the cause of it.
PROVIDENT MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA
Richard Perlman of the Children's Bureau believes there are six reasons why teen-agers become delinquents, but he does not attempt to select the dominant one or to say precisely how many of them are involved in any given case. They are:
- Poor housing primarily in big cities.
- Post-war prosperity with success being increasingly emphasized in material terms. The lack of opportunity for achieving success brings increasing pressure toward deviant behavior.
- Increasing break-down of family control.
- The growing number of working mothers, leaving the children on their own for long stretches of the day.
- Violence as reported and depicted in magazines, movies, television and newspapers. Two movies "The Blackboard Jungle" and "The Wild Ones" frequently are cited as dangerous because they tend to make teen-agers want to imitate the actions of juvenile delinquents,
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- Impending threats of war and annihilation producing attitudes of irresponsibility.
So social workers are much in the position of a person who has all the pieces of a jig-saw puzzle but so far hasn't been able to fit them together. One thing all of them are sure about—delinquency is not confined to teen-agers living in poverty. Rich kids, as we shall see later, commit delinquent acts purely for kicks.
GROWTH
RESPONSIBILITY
NATALIE
WOOD
STEVE
McQUEEN
NATALIE WOOD
STEVE McQUEEN
A PRAIRIE MILLMAN PRODUCTION
LOVE WITH THE
PROPER STRANGER
WRITTED BY ARNOLD SCHULMEIN
NOW! 7:00 & 9:00
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Next—"Paris When It Sizzles"
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Peter Sellers
George C. Scott
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One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75; Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansas Business Office in Flint Hall by 1 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not re-
FOR SALE
Tuesday, March 24, 1964
SEAT COVERS. Closing out all last year's stock. Complete sets as low as $7.50. Front seats for compacts. $2.50. Ray Stoneback's 929 Mass. 3-30
Sail boat. Flying Jr., 13 feet, fhglaser glass
too. #450. Call VI 3-5862. 3-30
£850. Calm VI 3-5862. 3-30
Beautiful ladies ski boots, 8. Black
quilted parka size 14. Call VI 3-25
3-25
Terry cloth seat cover. We fit all sizes including VW, Heavy goz, $6.88. Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929-931 Mass. 3-27
Academy Award Songs. 33 LP record, on RCA Victor Dynagrove recording, $3.98 value for 99c. $1.50 in stereo. At Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. 3-27
Set of four 590x15" recaps, $25 takes all
change. Really. Change Stoneback. 3-27
991 Mass. 3-27
Guitar, 3 months old, never used. Like new condition. Call VI 3-6242. 3-25
Eico HI-Fl Component. Perfect condition.
Call VI 21-1880 after 6 p.m.
3-27
1960 Matchless 500 cc twin. Excellent
shape, $450. Call 513 6-3106. 3-26
Two speaker stereo with stand and records. $30. Portable TV. Stand on wheels. $3. Three tropical fish with aquarium, $4. Call VI 2-4255. 3-24
Page 11
Like new 1961 Ford Galaxie 4-door
electric sedan, tuning, heater, radio. New snow tires and car record player. Buy or trade
V2-1061 or see at 1241 Ohio. 3-26
for the best in used parts, motors, radios,
etc. accessories-Benson's Auto Salvage.
1062 Harper, north of 4-H grounds. Phone
VI 3-1626. Open evenings. 3-24
17" console TV. Must sell. Call VI 2-4197
after 6 p.m. tf
House, four years old, excellent condition. Three bedrooms, link fence, near school and swimming pool. $700 assumes loan. $78 a month. Ops. New appliances and furniture. 1955 Miller Drive. VI 3-6994.
FM RADIO AND STEREO SALE. G.E.
Compact F.M., $23. G.E. AM-FM AFC.
$29.94. G.E. 2 spkr. FM-CLK. $34.88.
Olympic 2 p. stereo FM, $60. Emerson
2 p. stereo FM, $93. G.E. stereo FM and
phono $188. Motorola 5 spk. stereo,
$195. Motorola 7 spk. stereo and FM,
$159. G.E. portable stereo, 4 spk. $100.
Motorola coffee stereo, $88. Motorola
Twin Wing stereo, $55. Ray Stoneback's,
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volkswagen and Renault owners! Nylon premium tubeless tires cut to $16 plus (tubeless retreats, $15 Exg. Stonebuck's Discount Tire Center, 329 Mass. 3-24
New battery portable all transistor phono.
Sounds like a console! 4 speeds, folds
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o Kansan readers only; $55.88
R Stoneback's. 929-931 Mass. 3-24
fire prices slashed! Ray Stoneback's Dis-
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New 16" lightweight portable TV, $99.
1 year guarantee on parts! Rent or buy,
$12 per month. Ray Stoneback's, 929
Mass. (Motorola Headquarters). 3-26
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS. The Clicks Slicer, etc., for sale it great savings after 6 p.m. weekdays Saturday and Sunday. 837 Connection tt
For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3-
3040 after 5 p.m. tt
Typewriter, new and used portables,
Typewriter, Royal and Smith Corona portables,
Typewriter, adder, rentals and servi-
ence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St.
9 - 3644
Derman Shepherd pups. AKC registered
dhelsen. Phone KI 2-2559. Lloyd Btf
tt
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
ream- $ . 45 Lawrence Outdoor
. 005 Mass
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the journal "Worms." Worm civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, timemegraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
Single or double room. Furnished, cook-
ing area. Please call. Paid. Call t-
2-9451 or see at 1244 La.
FOR RENT
One bedroom house, completely fur-
nished. Call VI 3-0554 at 7 p.m.
past.
Furnished apartment for single man.
1-3209
5:30 p.m. p. 1633 Vermont. 3-26
Two room furnished apartment. See
3:30 p.m. 821 Indiana or call v-243-
4168
Married, grad students, faculty, 2 bedroom, $75. Sleeping room, $25. 16 available in June. Reserve now. Call for brochure: -2116. Santee Annex 1123 Indiana. aft
For one or two graduate age men, three room nicely furnished apt., private bath. 3 blocks, balcony, private bldg. Adjoining conditions. Best of neighbors. For appointment phone VI-3-8534. tf
Crescent Heights two bedroom apart-
bed. Phone VI 2-3711.
Graduate men or older undergraduates can close to campus, ideal study conditions. best of neighbors. Reasonably priced. paid. For appointment call t-385-4.
TYPING
Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes. term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work atmts. Phone VI 3-8379. Mrs. Charles Pattl.
Experienced secretary would like typing on home. Reasonable rates. Call VI tt 1188.
Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (plica type). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0558. **tf**
Accurate expert typist would like typing
Prompt prompt. Call VI I-3-2651
Prompt prompt. Call VI I-3-2651
Experienced typist with electric typewriter--fast accurate work with reason- sentations and these, phone VI 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson.
Experienced Typlist—Dissertations, Theses, Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 Rhode Island, V3-7485. tt
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbo-
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Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1644.
University Daily Kansan
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
Legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577.
Legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577.
Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. ff
presents
W. C. Fields
in
also: Peter Sellers comedy short
The Classical Film Series
The Bank Duck
- *
Fraser Theater----7:00 Admission: $.60
Now on sale at Kansas Union
Single admission tickets
TYPING: Experimented typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, and articles. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEdloweny, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-886f.
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols. carbon ribbon—if desired. Promptly service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-146 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI8-3057
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines. We also use tm. tape transcriptions. Office phone VI 3-5920. pn. 1221-0143. ManuPhone VI 3-5920.
MISCELLANEOUS
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. tf
Have a party in the Big Red School
Floor and floor and plant.
Heated. CVI SI 3-7455.
WANTED
VOLKSAGEN'WANTED. Cash for your VW, Conzelman Motors, VW Sales. Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway 59 So.
LOST
Billfold, lost in Fraser Theater, Friday,
Dave Tillie, 818 Kentucky.
BUSINESS SERVICES
TAX FREE EUROPEAN CARS. Army officer planning summer trip to Europe. Will pick up any brand European car and deliver to port for U.S. arrival about July 15. Includes VW 1500. Details. call VI 2-1318. 3-24
Dressmaking-alterations, formals and dressmaking-gowns. Ola Smith, 939½ Mansi V 1-5282
U-Call, we haul. Anything, anytime. VI 3-5888. tf
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
JOE'S BAKERY
616 W. 9th
Hot doughnuts—sandwich
cold drink
25c delivery VI 3-4720
YELLOW CAB CO.
VI 3-6333
24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled
RISK'S
Shirt Finishing Laundry
Wash & Fluff Dry
613 Vt. VI 3-4141
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
ART'S TEXACO
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
ART'S TEAM
9th & Mississippi
VI 3-9897
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
Surprise your roommate with a cake on that special occasion. The K.U. Birthday card offers the student box and line of cake tree delivery and candles. Cal. VI 2-1791. 4-24
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
L&M CAFE now under new management
WE WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
at the excellent lunches, dinners, and sandwiches.
Your second cup of coffee always free
★ TUNE-UPS
Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center. 316 Mass. VI 3-1287.
HELP WANTED
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
lift to play electric organ part-time.
all VI 3-4743.
Student secretary. Must be enrolled in:
at least one hour. 30 hour a week job.
Exceptional wages. Starting April
through the end of June. Call UN 4-
298
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Ambitious young man with experience
in design, art and engineering
real proposition for the right man. Write,
giving resume of experience, age, ect.
10, University Daily. Karen Flint Hall
3-25
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY. Peppermint Park Kiddyland operation for sale. Through college by running this during the summer. Call VI 2-0155 at 5 p.m.
Phone in your
CI
Classified Ad
Milliken's SOS
- Notary public
"the best professional service"
- General typing service
- 24 hr. answering service
1021 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass., V1 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
- Mimeograph & photo-copying
STUDENTS Grease Jobs . $1.00 Brake Adj. . 98c
7 a.m.-11 p.m
Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
MAKE YOUR
NEXT MOVE
Crescent
Heights
Completed Swimming Pool
CALL VI 2-3711
Mgr's Office, 2428 Redbud, Apt. D
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Opening This Summer . . .
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FOR INFORMATION CONTACT Crescent Heights Apts. Mgr.
HAVING A PARTY?
We are always happy to serve you with
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Chips, nuts, cookies
Variety of grocery items
Crushed ice, candy
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OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 24, 1964
World Spotlight
MacArthur Improved
WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Gen. Douglas MacArthur battled back today from his second major operation in 18 days. Fifteen hours after the long operation, the signs appeared to favor another victory for the old soldier.
MacArthur was admittedly in serious condition after a six-hour operation to halt severe internal bleeding, but sources at Walter Reed Army Medical Center said his blood pressure and heartbeat were normal this morning after the anesthesia wore off.
Finn to Mediate Cyprus
NICOSIA, Cyprus—(UPI)—Final approval of a Finnish diplomat as Cyprus mediator appeared assured today, and chances rose for a negotiated settlement of the island's bitter communal dispute.
U. N. Secretary General U Thant was expected to make an announcement shortly on the acceptance of Sakari Tuomioja by the four nations involved, informed sources in Geneva reported. The Finn was proposed to the governments by Thant yesterday.
Greece and Britain announced approval today and Turkey and Cyprus were reported to favor Tuomioja for the ticklish job of trying to resolve the political differences between the warring Greek and Turkish Cypriots.
Peter Lorre Dies
HOLLYWOOD—(UPI)—Peter Lorre, mild-mannered Hungarianborn actor who brought terror and nervous laughter to moviegoers for three decades in his familiar role as a homicidal villain, died yesterday of an apparent stroke.
Funeral services will be conducted at 1 p.m. Thursday at the Pierce Bros. Mortuary Chapel here.
Lorre, 59, was found dead by housekeeper Beatrice Lane, his body lying clad in nightclothes beside a bed in his small combination bedroom-study apartment.
His wife, Anna Marie, from whom he was separated, and a daughter, Katherine. 10. were summoned after the body was found.
Mrs. Lorre was to have appeared in court yesterday for a default divorce hearing but the case was postponed at the last minute. They married in Hamburg, Germany in 1953. She was his third wife.
De Gaulle Home from Mexico
PARIS—(UPI)—President Charles de Gaulle returned home today from a tour of Mexico and the French West Indies which was aimed at increasing French influence in the hemisphere.
De Gaulle's American-made 707 jetliner landed in pouring rain at Orly Airport at 7 a.m., nearly an hour ahead of schedule. He made no arrival statement.
Despite the early hour, Premier Georges Pompidou and half a dozen other cabinet ministers were waiting at the airport to greet the President and his wife.
The trip has been hailed as a success in France and as a good omen for the extensive swing through South America he will make this fall.
Air Force Flying Lab Fails
CAPE KENNEDY—(UPI)—The second Air Force attempt to fire a delta-winged glider to the edge of space and retrieve it after a searing glide back to earth failed today when its booster rocket misfired.
The 1,176-pound flying laboratory, designed to help pave the way for manned spaceships of the future, plunged into the Atlantic about 500 miles to the southeast-far short of ships and planes that hoped to recover it 2.100 miles downrange.
An Air Force spokesman said the spacecraft apparently did not separate from its dead upper stage rocket and "probably sank just like a spear." However, two planes refueled and began a search on the slim chance it remained afloat.
Symphony To Perform Tomorrow
The KU Little Symphony, under the direction of Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts, will give a concert at 8 p.m. tomorrow night in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Organized by Dean Gorton 13 years ago, this chamber group of faculty members and advanced students presents standard orchestral repertoire, but also specializes in bringing to the public music seldom performed by the larger orchestras.
The Little Symphony serves as a vehicle for many contemporary offerings as well as obscure works of recognized masters.
Opening the program will be "Concerto Grosso in D Minor" by Vivaldi. Margaret Ling, instructor of Harp, and John Boulton, instructor of flute, wil be featured in Howard Hanson's "Serenade."
Other compositions on the program will be, "Tritico Botticelliano," by Respighi, and "Symphony No. 5" by Schubert.
The concert is open to the public without charge.
Corps Explained At Union Booth
Peace Corps Week at KU has begun.
Yesterday there were interviews and classroom lectures while representatives answered questions at the information booth in the lobby of the Kansas Union.
The information booth was covered with colorful pamphlets and folders describing every phase of Peace Corps activity. Peace Corps fact books were spread over the counter, with various project reports from South American and African countries, and questionnaires to be filled out by interested students.
Joe Andreano, a Peace Corps representative from Washington working in the booth, reported that after a day in operation about 40 students had signed up to take the Peace Corps tests.
A new film distributed by the Peace Corps is being shown every afternoon at 4:00 and again at 6:30. The film is approximately 28 minutes in length, and concerns Peace Corps activities in various project areas.
"The KU Peace Corps committee has done a wonderful job of organizing the Week," James Adams, another of the Washington representatives said. "The booth was set up Friday, so only last minute touches were necessary before he opened Monday morning."
John Fairhurst, Wichita junior, is the chairman of the Peace Corps Committee which planned the Week.
Compilation
WASHINGTON —(UPI)— Walter Johnson of the Washington Senators compiled the lowest earned run average for one season among regular pitchers when he finished with a 1.14 mark in 1913.
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS
Sales — Rentals — Service
PETITIONS
See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS
LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
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To fill one seat in the Large Women's Dorm District of the ASC.
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Peter
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March 28
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M. D. K. A.
If I Were Jack Mitchell I Would Punt For
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If I Lived In Templin I Would Race My Duck Across Potter's For
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March 28
Hoch
I
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified
Faculty Discusses Grade. Class Plans
By Lee Stone
Life and study at KU may be much different for future students than for today's.
The faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences met yesterday afternoon to discuss ten proposals, made by the College administrative committee, which could change the grading system at KU, and also the ratio of class to study time.
DAVID SIMONETT, associate professor of geology and meteorology and a member of the administrative committee, said, "These things move very slowly." He said not to expect any definite action on the proposals until next year. Even then, action would not be conclusive, Prof. Simonett' said.
Simonett said.
Describing how slowly changes in a university can be, Prof. Simonett said that in 1956 a move was started to revise the curriculum. "It took three years to bear fruit," he said.
The ten proposals were presented in question form. Generally, they provide suggested ways of giving the students a greater share of the responsibility for his own education. They are:
- Should the number of courses a student must enroll in be reduced?
● SHOULD THE relationship between class hours and outside study be changed to give more credit value to outside study?
value to outcomes
- Should seminar, discussion and laboratory activities replace lectures in some courses?
- Should more comprehensive essay type examinations be given instead of objective examinations?
- Should shot-gun examinations be eliminated?
- Should the time for final examinations be longer than one week so professors could prepare and grade essay examinations? The committee
A former ASC large women's residence halls representative said last night she would file an appeal with the student court to contest her recall.
ASC Recall In Protest
Peggy Conner, Sacramento, Calif,
senior, who was served with the
recall petition at the last ASC meeting,
said she would contest the recall on the grounds that the action was unconstitutional.
wonders if cramming the whole examination schedule into one week is desirable, a College communique said.
was unconstitutional.
"The only reason given for my recall was that I moved out of the hall and thus could no longer represent the district." Miss Conner said.
- Should the emphasis on grades and grade-point averages be reduced?
said. "This is not unconstitutional according to the ASC. A council member may now retain his seat if he moves out of the district from which he was elected," Miss Conner said.
- **SHOULD THERE BE a period between each term for the student to reflect on his studies?**
- Should the weight of the course grade be reduced and the weight of comprehensive examinations be increased?
"I will continue to make plans for the replacement election from large women's halls until I receive an injunction from the student court stopping me," King said.
The petition, which was circulated by Marsha Dutton, Colby senior, was certified by ASC election chairman Dick King, Kansas City sophomore, as representing a valid 25 percent of district.
Miss Conner said she would file the appeal today. Her defense attorney, Fred Petzold, Lawrence second year law student, said there would be a preliminary hearing within a few days, and ultimately a trial.
This election is to be held with the regular spring elections April 1 and 2. Applications of candidates are due at 5:00 today in the Dean of Students office.
Fetzold said it would probably be a week or more before the appeal comes to trial. This would mean that the special election could not be held April 1 and 2 if an injunction is issued at the preliminary hearing
According to the ASC section on recall Miss Conner is off the council if the petition is certified by the elections committee.
Miss Conner said she wished to clear up the confusion centering around the reasons for the petition being circulated.
"I would like to stand up for my representation on the council. I did not run for the name of being on the ASC only or I would have taken the easy way and run with a party instead of unaffiliated." Miss Conner said.
Whether or not the proposals are adopted can not take away the good effect of discussing them. Prof. Worth said. Although the suggestions may be "a little beyond us now" Prof Worth said, they can nevertheless provide the faculty with guide lines or material for "just philosophizing."
George Worth, associate professor of English and member of the committee which made the proposals, said, "I don't think any one of us is in one hundred percent favor of all the proposals."
PROF. WORTH SAID he was particularly in favor of the first proposal, to reduce the number of courses taken at one time. "I was brought up under a system where you took three or four courses at a time. I wonder how students stand up under the present system," Prof. Worth said.
Asked if he would go as far as require that a student study only one course at a time, Prof. Worth said this was "maybe too utopian."
Prof. Simonett appeared to favor the proposal that would eliminate shot-gun examinations. "They are an indignity," he said. He believes, however, that it is still up to individual professors as to whether they should use them.
ALL THE proposals "are predicated on somewhat utopian notions." Prof. Simonett said. Speaking of Tuesday's meeting, the professor said there was too little time to discuss the issues thoroughly. "We thrashed in a muddy fashion around the edges of the questions," he said.
Other members of the College administrative committee are George R. Waggoner, dean of the College and chairman of the committee; Austin Lashbrook, associate professor of classics; Frederick Samson, professor of comparative biology and physiology; G. Baley Price, professor of mathematics; and Joseph Camin, professor of entomology.
Members of the College administrative committee are elected by the college faculty.
The freezing rain that began last night will continue, changing to snow during the night, according to the weather bureau. Temperatures will continue to drop tonight, falling to 20. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy and warmer.
Weather
Daily hansan
Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, March 25, 1964
**IN 1962 NEGROES picketed for their rights in Albany, Georgia. "In so doing," he said, "they were operating in an American tradition."**
The civil rights revolution entered its third phase in 1961, when the jails of Birmingham were filled to capacity with freedom riders, Prof Franklin said.
"In the summer of 1963, Negroes and whites were demonstrating all over the United States. This culminated in the march on Washington, and the civil rights revolution entered its fourth stage.
PROF. FRANKLIN pointed out that there were three distinctive new elements in these demonstrations. New techniques were introduced, such as sit-ins and boycots; whites joined in with Negroes; and the movement was dominated by young people.
Negro Historian Describes Civil Rights as 'Revolution'
The movement was "characterized on the whole as a non-violent one, in the American tradition," he said.
61st Year, No. 111
The "freedom riders," as they came to be called, were in a position to stimulate support of large numbers of citizens, Prof. Franklin said.
PROF. FRANKLIN told of CORE members (Congress of Racial Equality) traveling in buses throughout the South, testing the effectiveness of the Supreme Court's ruling which constitutionally guaranteed equality on vehicles involved in interstate transportation.
John Hope Franklin, historian and visiting humanities series lecturer, made it clear last night that the civil rights movement in the United States is a revolution.
By Rogers Worthington
Franklin, chairman of the department of history at Brooklyn College, Brooklyn, New York, cited 1956 as the year the civil rights revolution started in full force, but added that "it did not occur in a vacuum."
Three significant developments arose out of the discrimination and arrest of a woman on a bus in Montgomery, Alabama in 1956. An ad hoc organization in Montgomery defending the woman developed the new techniques of protestation and the emergence of Martin Luther King.
The second salvo came in 1960 when four Negro students participated in the first sit-in at a lunch counter in Greensboro, North Carolina. The four men, who were refused a cup of coffee, remained seated until closing time, when they were arrested, Prof. Franklin said
R. A. M. KING
John Hope Franklin
AT EMANCIPATION, he said. Negroes were stunned that there was no attempt made by their former masters and liberators to provide opportunities for them to secure an education, jobs and political rights.
"They protested and sent representatives to the President, asking that they be recognized as free people. They wanted freedom of the jury box, the cartridge box and the ballot box," he said.
The Negroes' plight was made even more dramatic, he said, by experiences they had during reconstruction.
"DURING THAT period, the rights of Negroes dwindled rapidly."
of Negroes. Prof. Franklin pointed out that a considerable number of Negroes, reaching the conclusion that there was no hope for them in the South, migrated to Kansas.
migrated. In 1893, when the Supreme Court declared the Civil Rights Act of 1875 unconstitutional, one Negro leader said "We Negroes, by the action of the Supreme Court and the U.S. government . . . have been bantised in ice water."
PROF. FRANKLIN said that Negroes then began to organize and demand their rights. They also began to defend themselves intellectually against the interpreters of Social Darwinism, who said Negroes were "unfit, uncivilized and inferior."
Serenade Sororities
Yale Singers Do Unexpected
While being entertained by KU students Monday night, they decided to warm up their voices by an un-
Applause was heard coming from the rotunda in Strong Hall yesterday as members of the Yale Russian Chorus sang between classes beginning at 2:20 p.m. yesterday.
chorus second Climaxing their stay of more than twenty-four hours they gave a concert in Hoch Auditorium last night
Singing in the style and language of the Russian people, the chorus stopped about 100 students and professors who paused to listen. The impromptu singing was part of the chorus' second trip to KU.
A MEMBER of the Yale Russian Chorus described the chorus' activities since coming to KU. About 4:30 Monday afternoon they arrived by chartered bus at the Kansas Union and after eating, members of the chorus were taken to fraternity houses where they would stay for the next two nights.
KU-Y, which sponsored the chorus' visit here, had a reception at the Kansas Union after which the chorus sang at a couple of sororites.
"It it just sounded too good to be any KU fraternity," Susan Lawrence, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore and member of Kappa Kappa Gamma, said.
"WE COULDNT believe it was the Yale Russian chorus on our front lawn at 12:30. Several of them waved pop bottles, and they did a Russian-type dance." Miss Lawrence said.
registered serenade at the Kappa Kappa Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta sorority houses.
The chorus sang four songs at the Kappa house, and then went down the hill and sang two more at the Theta house before leaving.
members of the chorus ate dinner at various living groups last night and about two-thirds of them went back to the Kappa house for coffee and cookies after the concert.
This time they were invited and the serenade was registered with the Dean of Women's office.
THE CHORUS gave impromptu concerts at the Union and Strong Hall before members of the chorus spent their afternoon studying, visiting friends, or doing whatever they
wished. The chorus left at 8 a.m. to day to go back to New Haven, Conn.
Friendliness and hospitality from students impressed the chorus. "Even when we wanted beds we had red carpets," Karl Ziegler, the temporary director of the chorus, said.
"I'm impressed with how friendly everyone is," James Epps, a member of the chorus, remarked.
SEVERAL MEMBERS of the chorus commented on the hills around KU. One member of the chorus was quite impressed with the size of the University and said "it's all on a hill of what I thought was flat country."
"I was very happy to see the only hill in Kansas," Daniel Gsovski, a member of the chorus, said.
"I'm surprised you can't see Okla home from here." Pete Andrews, a member of the chorus, remarked
Most chorus members had enjoyed the students they had met at KU very much. "I haven't met anyone I dislike yet." Andrews commented.
The chorus which was founded in 1954 sings Russian songs in the style and language of the Russian people
Surprisingly, Prof. Franklin said, many "so-called quality" magazines, such as Atlantic Monthly and Harper's, took the view of the Social Darwinists. But intellectual Negroes rose to defend the attacks on their capabilities and offered proof, citing Negroes who were quite capable of scholarly, scientific and intellectual achievement.
It was then, he said, that William B. Du Bois and other Negroes met in Niagara Falls and formed "the Niagara movement."
AT THE TURN of the century, Prof. Franklin said, Du Bois predicted that the "problem of the 20th century will be the problem of the color line."
After the establishment of the NAACP in 1909, Negroes started becoming a more urban group, flocking to the big cities where industry thrived.
They were in a position to give each other confidence, security and self-respect, providing them with the self-assurance and courage to push forward for their rights, he said.
As late as 1941, Negroes had to protest their rights in national defense industries. Prof. Franklin said. A march was planned on Washington, he added, but President Roosevelt proclaimed fair employment in industries involved in national defense.
Parties Drop DormDebate
The University Party and Vox Populi apparently have scheduled themselves out of debates at the freshman women's residence halls, originally planned for tomorrow night.
UP general secretary Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission senior, said at the UP campus council meeting last night that it was impossible to match the schedules of the two candidates running for student body president.
"I have always questioned the effectiveness of debates anyway." Whitman said, "Bob (Stewart, UP) and Marshall (Crowther, Vox) have made other commitments and we cannot agree on a time when both are available."
WHITMAN SAID the only alternative which both parties had agreed on was to have freshman workers for each party debate the issues and candidates.
"This is a new plan which might stir up more interest in the freshman dorms. Freshman girls who work in the parties are quite enthusiastic and knowledgeable about student government and can answer what freshman girls want to know," Whitman said.
However, Vox Populi president,
Tom Bornholdt, Topeka senior, said
after the meeting that he had not
and would not agree to a substitute
freshman debate tomorrow night.
"The original debate in the freshman halls was scheduled and agreed upon by both parties. We will show up for the debate with our Vox candidates and party representatives." Bornholdt said.
"WE HAVE NO intention of having freshman Vox workers debate. This was not the original agreement with the University Party and we will act on our initial understanding of the debate conditions." Bornholdt said.
Candidates from both parties will give statements about their platforms and answer questions at 10:30 tonight at Templin Hall. They will follow the same general procedure tomorrow night at 9:30 in Lewis and 10:00 in Hashinger.
In other business UP announced that they will hold interviews for a candidate for large women's residence halls representative at 4:00 today in Hashinger lobby.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 25, 1964
France in Mexico
French President Charles de Gaulle's ambition to gain world power popped up once again last week when he hailed the achievements of the Mexican people and offered them friendly help. The desire was first evident when he vetoed Great Britain's entry to the European Common Market; it was later seen in his recognition of Red China.
AFTER ESTABLISHING FRENCH influence over Southeast Asia, especially over Communist China, Cambodia, Indonesia, and Pakistan, General de Gaulle has turned toward the Latin American countries, of which Mexico was the first target. The following targets are Brazil, Uruguay, Argentina, and Peru, which he will visit in September.
In his recent visit to Mexico, De Gaulle proposed a "massive scientific-cultural-technical exchange program" between France and Mexico. "The hero of the freedom and grandeur of the French people," as Mexican President Adolfo Lopez Mateos called him (De Gaulle), offered a hand to Mexico in order to step forward into a changing world.
"The world is in transformation," he told the Mexican people in Spanish language—the device which the General very often uses to convince people abroad. "Nothing is more important than cooperation among countries like ours."
The French President's visit was not at all a failure. The 73-year-old leader spoke from the
presidential balcony overlooking Constitution Plaza. This was an honor for him, since he was the first chief of state ever to speak from that place. Also, he was the first French president ever to visit a Latin American nation. It is believed that he was successfully able to make some business transactions with President Lopez Mateos.
MR. DE GAULLE'S TRIP has raised a question about U.S.-Mexican relations. Many U.S. political leaders and critics believe the trip was a French propaganda move to create special relations between France and Mexico in order to put an end to or diminish the relationship between Mexico and its neighboring nations.
But this does not seem true since the U.S. beats France both in foreign aid and trade. Mexico receives approximately $1 billion foreign aid from the U.S. in contrast to $150 million from France. Last year, Mexican exports to the U.S. were valued at $944 million while exports to France were worth $32.1 million.
Whatever his reasons may be, it is certain that Mr. de Gaulle's purpose was to spread French influence in Latin American countries and create close trade, political, and cultural ties with the Latin Americans. General de Gaulle also dreams of a "united and renovated Latin World," perhaps under French sponsorship.
- Vinay Kothari
The People Say...
To the Fling Springer
Margaret Dear, we're sending our humble apologies
For violating the precious, sacred
greekologies;
We realize now we surely must have been pnitwits
To forget that only KU Greeks can have picnics.
And we'll have to admit that we just hadn't thought before
That a duck race is quite the same as a tug-of-war.
And all those who aren't uncultured impossible Freaks
Know that laughing and singing and playing are solely for Greeks.
So we'll give up the ducks and races and showery;
We hate to force you to write such lousy poetry.
Women of Watkins
Unemployment
You had an editorial entitled "Unemployment" on March 20 that begins with "Poverty lurks in the midst of plenty . . ." As relating to that editorial, my letter should begin "Ignorance lurks in the midst of education . . ."
It is hard to tell if the author's name- Vinay Kothari -is that of a male or female (it is no doubt a male, but the logic is too female) -but, according to the basic thought of the thing, it must have been written by someone who has never had to work and who is writing for those who don't.
Oh, the brilliance of it all—"Seventy percent of the whole student body is jobless"—but wait—"more than ten percent is willing to work"—ahem—"provided there are good paying jobs available or
better—white collar—jobs available." Who in the hell wouldn't be willing to work for those jobs? Why are we fiddling around in school if not for those? But again there is something subtle here, people. Why are not these people working if they are willing?
Well, the editor says that many students, enrolled and registered at KU with the hope of obtaining a So why didn't they try to get their job on campus, are disappointed. jobs before they enrolled—like in the summer? It is often advisable to apply for a job before one goes to work. Then again, if they can't get a job on campus, they might try off campus—I mean, that is just a suggestion.
ECONOMY DRIVE
POSTMASTER GENERAL
©1964 MERRBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
Vinay Kothari tries to answer by saying Lawrence does not have "these particular types of jobs" (whatever they are). I have found that the jobs in town do exist if one wishes to apply. You see, there is an unclassified section in the Journal World which offers jobs quite often. And if not there, the University Employment Agency has a list. People go there and ask and find mostly dishwashing jobs in dorms and fraternities. These jobs pay about sixty cents per hour which is poor—but, if it is a matter of leaving school for financial reasons, these jobs are quite acceptable. He, she, it (the editor) mentions the terrible pay of Watson and the Kansas Union. The jobs are often taken by high school students which is too bad; however, jobs around town pay a dollar per hour. And these jobs can be found if they are wanted (even if they are not listed).
"We Can Cut Down A Little More Some People Are Still Getting Their Mail On Time"
This brings us to the main thesis of the editorial—“The problem has arisen principally because some students want only particular kinds of job.” What more is there to say? How does one say anything after this? What one means by such an atrocious statement is that these students do not actually need a job but that, if they could get one like “this,” they would have a little extra pocket money (like the high school kids). And these are just the kind of people who would get the jobs instead of those who need them.
The editor has several solutions to the problem which completely contradict the rest of the editorial. Time would be wasted even more by commenting on them. But the solution is that "let's hope" that from now on persons stop sympathizing with lazy Wishforts and stop writing public articles in ignorance.
John K. Danenbarger
Dr. Strangelove 'Blasts' Nuclear Age Insanity
In "Dr. Strangelove," producer-director Stanley Kubrick ("Paths of Glory," "Lolita") has dealt with one of the most important issues of our time: The Bomb. The film is based on the perfectly serious novel "Red Alert," which Kubrick had intended to film in a perfectly serious manner. But in adapting it he discovered that if he removed all of its absurd and paradoxical elements the realism would be lost too. So an entirely different approach was used—and this "nightmare comedy" was the result.
We may comfort ourselves with the thought that it is improbable that a psychotic general, obsessed with the idea that fluoridation is a communist plot—and there are people who believe that—would send a squadron of bombers to destroy Russia and the rest of the world as a result. But beneath all the satire there is a nagging veracity that leaves us not a little bit uncomfortable.
KUBRICK'S PRESENTATION, more than just comic, is wildly satirical and unquestionably funny. But at the same time it is close enough to reality to make us consider the problem of the Bomb (especially in the hands of human beings) in other than the usual vague and abstract terms.
Kubrick's approach to "Dr. Strangelove" is daring and uncompromising and each of its elements bears the stamp of his direction. The screenplay and dialogue are well written and form a sound base for the film. Its humor, far superior to that in the usual Hollywood comedy, raises it to the level of original satire and at that probably one of the best in a good many years.
MOST SIGNIFICANT, however, his choice and handling of actors are almost without fault. Of course, one expects Peter Sellers to put in a good performance even in three roles. But George S. Scott as General "Buck" Turgidson is equally impressive.
Because Kubrick is a former still photographer, his films are always well photographed: this one is no exception. Witness for example the appropriate use of a newsreel style photography during the battle sequences at Burpclson Air Base.
K
Stanley Kubrick has thus produced one of the most exciting and interesting American films to be made in quite some time. It should establish him as one of our most significant directors.
KU given
KU tional Summ teachii school
- Byron Leonard
War Objectors Win N.Y. Court Case
The U.S. Court of Appeals in New York has recognized the right of an individual to refuse military service if it conflicts with his conscience, even if he does not affirm belief in a supreme being. The three-man court, in an important test case, reversed the conviction of Daniel Andrew Seeger for violating the Selective Service Act by refusing induction.
KU NSF ships. to the was schoo
THE ACT, as amended by Congress in 1948, requires a conscientious objector to prove that his religious faith includes belief in a supreme being. Seeger, who comes from an "exceptionally religious" Roman Catholic family—two of his uncles are priests—who is employed by the American Friends Service Committee, refused to assert belief or disbelief in the deity. He opposed war as a betrayal of freedom and humanity "and more important . . . unethical."
IN dents Fello
JUDGE KAUFMAN said that among such well-established religious sects as Buddhism, Taoism, Ethical Culture, and Secular Humanism, a belief in a supreme being is not taught. He held therefore that Selective Service requirement of such a belief was, in effect, discriminatory under the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment.
The Court decided, in an opinion written by Judge Irving R. Kaufman, that when Seeger "insists he is obeying the dictates of his conscience . . . it would seem impossible to say with assurance that he is not bowing to 'external commands' in virtually the same sense as is the objector who defers to the will of a supernatural power."
Amendment. If this decision is upheld eventually by the Supreme Court, the restricted definition of "conscientious" objector prescribed by Congress will be set aside and the individual conscience will become, as it should, the true test of the objector.
- The Progressive
Daili Hänsan
University of Kansas student newspaper 111 Flint Hall UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office
The fellow student
Eac ceiver tain 1 dition NSF'. week short
CG Sum Teac Broa Arth Illin Ier. l Rush phy; zooel Kan
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
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NEWS DEPARTMENT
Mike Miller ... Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Tom Coffman ... Editorial Editor
Bob Brooks Business Manager
Wednesday, March 25,1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
are for dur-
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KU Receives 37 Fellowships
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KU received 14 of the 51 awards given in the conference.
art, the Con home, as
KU graduates received more National Science Foundation (NSF) Summer Fellowships for graduate teaching assistants than any other school in the Big Eight.
16, 1912.
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KU graduates also received 16 NSF Cooperative Graduate Fellowships. This total matched the total to the University of Colorado which was greater than the other six schools in the Big Eight.
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al Editor
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IN ADDITION, KU graduate students received seven NSF Graduate Fellowships.
These make a total of 37 NSF fellowships granted to KU graduate students for 1964.
Each graduate student selected receives a stipend (a grant for a certain project) of $85 per week in addition to having all his fees paid by NSF. The tenure is usually for 12 weeks, however, some are for as short as eight weeks.
GRADUATES SELECTED for Summer Fellowships for Graduate Teaching Assistants are Larry L Broadie, Lawrence, pharmacy; Arthur Lewis Buikema Jr., Beecher, Illinois, zoology; John Edward Butler, Rice Lake, Wis., zoology; Donald Rusk Currey, Leavenworth, geography; Mrs. Rose Loretta Rose, Eudora, zoology; John Richard Hedstrom, Kansas City, mathematics.
Roger LeRoy Kaesler, Lawrence, geology; Erwin Eugene Manahan, Peabody, chemistry; Ronald Dean Mathis, Liberty, Mo., chemistry; Charles William Myers, Lawrence, zoology; Ronald Henry Rynbrandt, Dorr, Mich, chemistry.
John Daniel Shoemaker, who will also receive a NSF Cooperative Graduate Fellowship, Lawton, Okla. chemistry; Jon Charles Barlow, Lawrence, zoology.
John Daniel Shoemaker, who will also receive a NSF Cooperative Fellowship, Lawton, Okla., graduate, in chemistry; Jon Charles Barlow, Lawrence graduate, in the field of zoology in life sciences.
The NSF Cooperative Graduate Fellowships for 1964 will receive $2.400 to $2.800 for a twelve month period, depending on his year in graduate work. If the student is married, he receives an addition dependency allowance of $500 for each dependent.
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GRADUATES RECEIVING the NSF Cooperative Graduate Fellowship are William D. Baxter, Lawrence, zoology; Paul Nolan Browne, Lee's Summit, Mo.; electronics; Charles Roy Combrimk, Caddo, Okla., mathematics; George Campbell Eickwort, Lynbrook, N.Y., entomology.
Richard M. Kellogg, Arlington chemistry; David Griffiths Lash, Lawrence, mathematics; James Gregory McCreary, Norman, Okla., chemical engineering; Elizabeth Alice Mtaggert, Lawrence, sociology; Wendel Lane Nelson, Pocatello, Idaho, chemistry.
Darrel Lee Schindler, Lawrence, chemical engineering; John Daniel Shoemaker, Lawton, Okla., chemistry; Edwin Burnell Smith, Lawrence, botany; Ted J. Suffridge, Lawrence, mathematics; Gerald Joseph Throop, Wamego, chemistry; Alan Edward Tonelli, Cicero, Ill., chemical engineering.
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Graduate students receiving the NSF Graduate Fellowships for 1964 are Ronald L. Daggett, Winfield, engineering; Thomas L. Jenkins, Lawrence, chemistry; Roger L. Kaesler, Lawrence, earth sciences;
Robert D. Koob, Hawarden, Iowa, chemistry; Karl E. Spear II, Baldwin, chemistry; and Harold L. Willis, Shawnee Mission, zoology.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 25, 1964
Communications Breakdown Blamed for Youth Problems
By Harry Ferguson
WASHINGTON — (UPI)—George Bernard Shaw once said it would be a better world "if parents would only realize how they bore their children." He struck at the heart of one of the major causes of juvenile delinquency—the inability of many parents to communicate with teen-agers.
The cold and unpleasant fact seems to be that millions of American children have either a resigned attitude of tolerance or outright contempt for their parents. Case histories show that is especially true in broken homes—one of the prime factors in juvenile delinquency—and the bad news about that is that about one in every five American marriages ends in separation or divorce.
But the problem also exists in marriages that appear to be permanent and happy. One of the signs of the times is that currently in McCall's magazine an article by Barbara Lang advises teen-agers in all seriousness on how to bambooze their parents into thinking everything is all right. It is necessary, she writes, to make parents feel secure and her advice includes:
- TALK TO your parents. "A friend of mine named Geraldine didn't talk to her parents for years because she knew they wouldn't understand her." But when Geraldine reached 17 she decided to talk to her parents without really saying anything, telling them trivial things. She reported her parents are now happy and no longer give her third degrees on what she has been doing.
- Ask their advice. This will work
Give Blood, Shake Hands With Wescoe
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will be the attending physician for the Red Cross blood donation from 3:30 until 5:30 Thursday afternoon at Ellsworth hall.
Donald Nelson, Clay Center junior and chairman of the blood donation subcommittee, said this will be the second appearance for the Red Cross' mobile blood donation unit and the sixth of the committee's planned donations.
planned donor. The subcommittee is a branch of the Health Committee of the All Student Council.
SINCE THE SUBCOMMITTEE'S beginning, six blood donation drives have been held. The first drive was last Oct. 22 when the subcommittee members and several ASC members gave blood. Nov. 5 the Theta Chi's gave blood under the subcommittee's direction and on Nov. 19 several residents from Joseph R. Pearson hall gave blood at the subcommittee's request.
Several Olin Templein hall residents also gave blood late in November at the subcommittee's request.
In February of 1964, the Douglas County Red Cross chapter obtained the mobile blood donation unit. This eliminated many of the previous problems of transporting students to the Lawrence Memorial Hospital for blood donations.
The mobile unit was first used on campus March 3 at the Phi Gamma Delta house. Members of Phi Gamma Delta and the Sigma Chi fraternities gave blood.
The next visit of the mobile unit on campus after this Thursday's donation at Ellsworth hall will be March 31 at the Kappa Sigma house. Kappa Sigma, Delta Upsilon, Sigma Nu and Theta Chi fraternities will give blood during the mobile unit's third visit.
April 21 the mobile unit will visit the men's scholarship hall area.
TO DONATE BLOOD, students must be 18 years old or older. If the student is between the ages of 18 and 21, he must have a signed release from his parents or guardian giving the Red Cross permission to use his blood.
only if you follow the advice they give you and, therefore, you should ask their opinion only on things that don't really matter to you. Like whether you should serve an onion or cheese dip at your party.
Students over 21 years old may give blood without parental consent.
It is a waste of time for parents to shower money and gifts on teenagers in the hope of keeping them out of trouble. Rich kids become delinquents, too. A teen-age slum boy who holds up the owner of the corner candy store with a switchblade knife may be doing it because he wants money to buy food. Children with too much money don't have that excuse and they commit senseless acts just for the thrill of violating the law.
"I KNOW A boy whose parents gave him everything." said Philip G. Green of the U.S. Children's Bureau. "They spent a lot of money to buy him a snapping new convertible. He got behind the wheel, drove three blocks and saw a battered jalopy standing at the curb. He got out of his new convertible, got into the jalopy and drove away. Obviously he wasn't improving his method of transportation. He was just getting a kick out of doing something illegal and when he was caught he showed no remorse."
Rich children sometimes commit mass vandalism. A recent example of it was a debut party outside New York for Miss Fernanda Wanamaker Wetherill, Ill. Her parents had rented a nearby mansion where the boys could spend the night. After the dance was over the boys retired to the mansion and wrecked it by swinging on chandeliers, throwing furniture out on the beach and breaking windows for a total damage of $10,000.
About 100 boys were involved, but only 11 of them will be brought to trial, and the charge will be malicious mischief, an offense that does not carry a burdensome penalty.
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under attack for over-codding their children and forcing them to do foolish things for the sake of status. Martha Lear, in her book "The Child Worshippers," cites the cases of mothers who put brassieres on 11-year-old girls and send their sons to summer camp where French is taught so the boys can come home and say "Bon mother, Mama." And some mothers, she writes, don't know when to leave their children alone and she quotes one of them:
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Applications for KU Date Book editor and business manager are due April 15 in the University Relations office, 233 Strong.
Applicants should include their name, address, school and grade point average, experience and reasons for applying.
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Wednesday, March 25, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Mayor Rusty Springer last night predicted that the proposed public accommodation ordinance for Lawrence would be passed "unanimously" at the next City Commission meeting.
Final Action On Ordinance SetForMarch31
After hearing discussion at its meeting yesterday, the Commission set Tuesday as the date for final action on the ordinance.
There was no expressed opposition to the ordinance at the meeting, but because of parliamentary procedure, final action had to be delayed.
Stough said the Lawrence HRC will first investigate a complaint and shall attempt to bring about a reconciliation between the parties involved. If reconciliation fails, the HRC may refer the matter to the city attorney who may initiate action against the violator.
Charles D. Stough, city attorney, said the ordinance "will require by law that all those facilities that are described as public accommodations serve all orderly people, regardless of race, color or creed."
The ordinance provides for a maximum fine of $100 for violation, possible imprisonment for not more than 90 days, and, upon two convictions, the suspension of any license granted by the city. ___
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SENIORS: NOMINATE YOUR SELECTION FOR THE HOPE AWARD!
EXPLAIN HOW THE KU TEACHER OF YOUR CHOICE MEETS WITH THE FOLLOWING CRITERIA :
1. Willingness to help students.
2. Success in stimulating students or challenging the students toward thinking.
3. Devotion to profession.
4. Contribution to general cultural life of the University.
5. Publications, creative work, etc., will be considered, but not to the extent as will be the instructor's contributions to students.
(THE NOMINEES MUST BE A FULL-TIME FACULTY MEMBER AND MUST HAVE TAUGHT AT LEAST TWO YEARS AT THE UNIVERSITY.)
↓ ↓
You may obtain a nomination form at the Alumni Office, 127 Strong Hall, from your senior representative, or use the form. Turn in your nomination to the Alumni Office, 127 Strong Hall, by March 31st.
Nomination Form, HOPE AWARD:
His or Her school or department
Teacher's name ___
Subject Taught
Your name ___, address
Phone
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 25,1964
Antioch Southern Baptist Church 1127 Iowa
Congregational Church 925 Vermont Morning Worship - 9:00 and 11:00 a.m.
The Evangelical United Brethren
1501 Massachusetts
Sunrise Service - 6:00 a.m.
Morning Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Trinity Lutheran Church
Trinity Lutheran Church
1245 New Hampshire
Sunrise Service - 6:00 a.m.
Holy Communion - 8:00 a.m.
Morning Worship - 9:00 and 11:00 a.m.
North Lawrence Christian Church
647 Elm
Church School - 9:50 a.m.
Morning Worship - 11:00 a.m.
St. John's Catholic Church
1229 Vermont
Worship Services - Thurs. - 7:30 a.m.
Fri. - 1:30 p.m.
Sat. - 7:30 p.m
Good Shepherd Lutheran Church
2312 Harvard Road
Good Friday Communion - 7:30 p.m.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m
Easter Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Ninth St. Baptist Church (th and Ohio
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Attend Church
JESUS RISING
Plan to attend the church of your choice w Easter. Check the schedule for times of Sur cial services being heli
Plymouth Congregation 925 Vermont Easter Worship - 9:00 and
St. James A.M.E.
7th and Maple
Easter Service - 11:00 a.m.
First Baptist Ch
801 Kentucky
Sunday School — 9:45
Morning Worship — 11
Evening Fellowship — 6
Wednesday, March 25, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
h Easter Sunday
PRAYING
ur choice with your family and friends this times of Sunday services and for notes of spees being held this week.
Congregational Church
925 Vermont
Worship - 9:00 and 11:00 a.m.
First Baptist Church
801 Kentucky
Monday School — 9:45 a.m.
Naming Worship — 11:00 a.m.
ing Fellowship — 6:15 p.m.
First Southern Baptist Church 19th and Naismith Easter Worship - 8:30 and 11:00 a.m.
First Christian Church
1000 Kentucky
Morning Worship - 8:30
and 10:45 a.m. - EASTER DISCOVERY
Church School - 9:30 a.m
Trinity Episcopal Church 1011 Vermont Worship Services at 7:30, 9:00 and 10:45 a.m.
Synod-Immanuel Lutheran Church
1646 Vermont
Sunrise Service - 6:00 a.m. at the Sunset Drive-In
Morning Worship - 8:30 and 11:30 a.m.
at the church
First Methodist Church 946 Vermont Morning Worship - 8:45 and 11:00 a.m.
First Presbyterian Church
901 Vermont Maundy Thursday Communion - 7:30 a.m. Good Friday Council of Churches Service 12:00 to 3:00 p.m. Easter Worship Services - 9:00 and 11:00 a.m. Church School - 9:45 a.m.
Bible Chapel
1001 Kentucky
Westminster Chapel
1204 Oread
Easter Worship - 10:45 a.m.
North Lawrence Baptist
5th and Lyons St.
Early Morning Service — 6:30 a.m.
Sunday School — 9:45 a.m.
Easter Worship — 11:00 a.m.
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 25,1964
Students' Intentions Form Basis For Taylor Book Collection Prize
Undergraduates who collect books with a purpose in mind could possibly be eligible for a $100 or $50 prize.
Students with a collection of not less than 35, or more than 60 books have until April 20 to enter the eighth annual Taylor Book Collection Competition, said W. Stuart Forth, associate director of libraries.
Prospective contestants should see either Forth, in the Watson library office, or Terrence Williams, in the department of special collections.
FORTH EMPHASIZED that the judges will be primarily interested in the entrant's intentions, and in collections which fulfill their intentions.
Contestants must submit a bibliography of their collections, and a statement, not over 400 words long, of their purpose in making the collection, including some reference to the circumstances under which the collection was made.
After preliminary judging, which will be made on the basis of the
bibliographies and statements, finalists will be asked to bring their collections to the library for final judging.
Forth added that the winner of the Taylor award may compete for the Amy Loveman $1,000 National Award.
MRS. ELIZABETH Taylor of Kansas City, Missouri, patron of the award, is herself quite a book collector, said Forth.
Long interested in general collecting, Mrs. Taylor developed a strong interest in Henry Mencken. Today she owns one of the world's major Mencken collections.
Mrs. Taylor started the Taylor book award competition eight years ago, to "encourage the delights of reading and book collecting," he said.
Forth said Mrs. Taylor, who recognizes fellow collectors, likes to meet the winners of the annual award.
Discussing the competition, Forth said, "The award serves to bring
into focus a student's direction or goal in reading and collecting. It makes them more aware of what area they are working toward."
Forth said that graduate students were not eligible for the contest "because they would submit what would amount to a professional collection."
Steak Dinner
Sunday Nites
$1.25
4:30-10:30 DINE-A-MITE 23rd & La.
Housemothers • Students
Apartment Mgrs. & Tenants
Simplify Spring House Cleaning with...
PROFESSIONAL LAUNDERING AND DRY CLEANING
DRAPERIES
CURTAINS
SLIP COVERS
RUGS
A Stitch in Time for SPRING!
NewYork Cleaners
926 Mass.
Merchants of Good Appearance
VI 3-0501
TAILORING and ALTERATIONS
DRAPERIES
CURTAINS
SLIP COVERS
RUGS
A Stitch in Time
SPRING
A Stitch in Time for SPRING!
TAILORING
and
ALTERATIONS
TAILORING and ALTERATIONS
Thursday
6:00 — Union
Greek Week dinner
Friday
8:00 – HOCH
GREEK WEEK
SING
(Admission Free)
GREEK
Saturday
1:30 — Campanile
Torch lighting
1:45 — Campanile
Chariot race
2:00 — Stadium
Pancake race
3:00 — Stadium
Relays start
4:15 — Potter’s
Tug-of-war
4:35 — Potter’s
Picnic
Sunday
Easter observance
sday
0—Union
Greek Week
dinner
Friday
8:00 – HOCH
GREEK WEEK
SING
(Admission Free)
G
W
K
MARCH 23-28
Page 9
Wednesday, March 25, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Corps Meeting to Feature Speech by Deputy Director
The Peace Corps will have a coffee from 7:00 to 7:30 tonight and an open meeting from 7:30 to 9:00 in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
William F. Unsoeld, who was deputy director of the Peace Corps in Nepal, will be the main speaker at the meeting.
He will tell of his experiences in Nepal and answer questions about the Peace Corps, Jack Croughan, Novato, California senior and co-chairman of the campus Peace Corps, said.
Janet Hanneman, a former KU Peace Corps worker in western Pakistan, will also speak about her experiences and answer questions.
We Rent Most Anything
Party Supplies • Dishes
Silverware • Tables • Chairs
Power Tools • Polishers
Sanders • Ladders • Rollers
Tow Bars • Spray Guns
Cement Mixers • Power Rakes
ANDERSON RENTAL
812 New Homp. VI 3-2044
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Glamour Debs
$7.99
Red - White
Black - Bone
Patent
4-10
AAA to B
REDMAN'S SHOES
Glamour Debs
$7.99
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4-10
AAA to B
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Sir Knight
MEN'S FORMAL RENTALS
SPRING FORMAL?
Sir Knight offers a full selection of styles and sizes designed to dress and fit you perfectly for that special occasion.
ROYAL MASTER CLEANERS
842 Mass. VI3-9594
Peter
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March 28
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PETER
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 25, 1964
Sportswriter TobeHonored
Bert McCrane, retired Des Moines Register-Tribune sportswriter, has been named Honorary Referee of the 39th Kansas Relays here April 17 and 18.
McCrane has written about all but one running of the Relays since 1926 during his 43-year career. He is a charter member of the Football Writers Association of America.
McCrane was cited three times among "Best Sports Stories of the Year" for his accounts of football and was equally well-known in the Midwest for his coverage of basketball, track and golf.
McCrane broke in with the old Des Moines Capital and moved to the Register-Tribune two years later. He ended his career by covering the Nebraska-Auburn Orange Bowl football game last New Year's Day.
Spring Intramurals Registration Due
The deadline for all students wishing to participate in spring intramural sports is Wednesday, April 1. Walter Mikols, director of intramurals, has announced.
The sports included in the spring schedule include: Badminton, handball, horseshoes, tennis and softball. Badminton, handball and horseshoes will be conducted on the single elimination basis. "A" and "B" competition will participate in softball.
A meeting of all managers will be Monday, April 13 in room 203 in Robinson Gymnasium.
Mikols said the deadline had been established to enable competition in the sports to get underway right after Spring Vacation. He emphasized that no applications can be accepted after the vacation.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
JIM'S CAFE
838 Mass.
OPEN
24 hrs. a day
BREAKFAST OUR
SPECIALTY
7,000 Pipes and every smoking accessory
George's Pipe Shop
727 Mass. VI 3-7164
"SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS"
Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
Balfour
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
STUDENTS
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
Automotive Service
Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel
Balancing
7 a.m.-11 p.m
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
FOR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS
SEE MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER VI 3-1211
COMPLETE SERVICE FOR CHEVYS & OLDS
- Small enough to give personal attention.
· Big enough to have all the equipment.
VI3-7700
738 N.H.
SHIP WINTER
CHEVROLET
HAVING A PARTY?
OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING
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
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350
The Classical Film Series presents
W. C. Fields in
The Bank Dick also: Peter Sellers comedy short
- * Wednesday, March 25 Fraser Theater----7:00 Admission: $.60
Single admission tickets Now on sale at Kansas Union
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Bobbie Brooks
Crope a la mode ...
our smashing white dress of
76% acetate/24% rayon
arepe that moves in a
flurry of pleats. Special
topping: looped pulldown,
55% cotton/45% mohair
in whiz-bang pastels.
Sizes 5-15.
$23
DOWNTOWN 835 Mass.
Jay SHOPPE
Brooks
n,
air
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
Page 11
One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75. Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 1 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not re-
FOR SALE
SEAT COVERS. Closing out all last year's stock. Complete sets as low as $7.50. Front seats for compacts, $2.50. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 3-30
Beautiful ladies ski boots, size 8. Black quilted park, size 14. Call VI 3-207-8645.
Terry cloth seat covers. We fit all sizes including VW. Heavy gas, $6.88. Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929-931 Mass. 3-27
University Daily, Kansan
Academy Award Songs. 33 LP record, on RCA Victor Dynagrove recording. $3.98 value for 99c. $1.50 in stereo. At Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. 3-27
Set of four 590x15' recaps, $35 takes al four in exchange. Ray Stoneback's, 929 931 Mass. 3-2
Guitar, 3 months old, never used. Like
new condition. Call VI 3-6242. 3-25
1960 Matchless 500 cc twin. Excellent
shape, $450. Call Us 3-6106. 3-26
Like new 1961 Ford Galaxie 4-door sedan, Full power equipment, air-conditioning, heater, radio. New snow tires and car record player. Buy or trade with 1963 or 1964 car of any make. Call VI 2-1051 or see at 1244 Ohio. 3-26
House, four years old, excellent condition. Three bedrooms, link fence, near school and swimming pool. $700 assumes loan. $78 a month. Ops. New appliances and furniture. 1955 Miller Drive. VI 3-6994. tf
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME
WHEELS, Cheater Slicks, etc. for sale
at great savings after 6 p.m. week day
Saturday and Sunday. 877 Connecticut
tt
Tire prices slashed! Ray Stonebake's Discount Tire Center at 923 Mass. 36 month molylenet tubeless tires. Four 650 x 13" $40, Four 750 x 14" $44, Four 670 x 15" $44, Four 800 x 14" $50. Plus tax, exchange, installed! 4 whitewalls, $8 extra. 3-26
New 16" lightweight portable TV, $99.
1 year guarantee on parts Rent or rent.
$12 per month. Ray Stoneback's, 929
Mass. (Motorola Headquarters). 3-26
Typewriter, new and used portables,
standards, electronics. Olympia, Hermes.
Olivetti. Royal and Smith Corona portables.
Typewriter, adder, rentals and service.
Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St.
VI 3-3644.
For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3-
9040 after 5 p.m. tf
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for classes. Formerly known to the library. Free delivery. $4.50 Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, immehigraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
BURGERT'S
Service for Shoes Since 1910
1113 Mass. St.
VI 3-0691
Shoe Service
FREE! qt. of oil with oil change & filter BOB'S CONOCO
Lube - Wheel Bal. - Brakes
19th & Mass. VI 3-9802
--four piece
BAND
the blue velvets of Kansas City
with male singer
Don Martin, 5526 Ash Shawnee Mission, Kansas CO 2-6016
--experienced typist for thesis and term
exams. PhD in English, University of
Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 0-0588.
FRATERNITY JEWELRY
A. complete line, including,
• Lavallies
• Pins
• Rings
Married, grad students, faculty, 2 bedroom, $75. Only 10 left for June. Reserve now. Call for brochure, VI 3-2116, Santee Apartments, 1123 Indiana. tf
Furnished apartment for single man.
V-1 3209 - 5:30 p.m. 1633 Vermont.
3-26
Single or double room. Furnished, cook-
ing, laundry and paid. Call ti-
2-8451 or see at 1244 La.
Jerman Shepherd pups, AKC registered
thesden. Foine KI 2-2599. Lloyd B
trf
New shipment of Pink typing paper. $56
Stream—$85 Lawrence Outdoor
1005 Mass
For one or two graduate age men, three room nicely furnished apt., private bath, drywall, and flooring. Ideal study conditions. Best of neighbors. *for appointment phone VI 3-8534.* **tt**
One bedroom house, completely furnished. Call VI 3-0554 at 7 p.m. 3-27
FOR RENT
Cessert Heights two bedroom apart-
rently 25th and Red Bed
2d. Phone VI 2-5711
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
IT'S OK TO OWE RAY
809 Mass.
Graduate men or older undergraduates.
Close to campus, ideal study conditions.
best of neighbors. Reasonably priced,
paid. For appointment call **tt**
- 3-85-4.
TYPING
Experienced secretary would like typing in home. Reasonable rates. Call VI **tf** 1188
Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term thesis, etc. Accurate work emails and rates. Phone VI 3-8879. Charles tf Patti.
Accurate expert typist would like typing in her home. Term papers and theses. Prompt service. Call VI 3-2851.
Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason- sentations and theses, phone VI 3-7652 Mrs. Frank Gibson.
ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING
REPAIRS — LEATHER FINISHING
NEW YORK CLEANERS Delivery Service
926 Mass. VI 3-0501
YELLOW CAB CO.
24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled
YELLOW CAB CO.
VI 3-6333
experienced Typet- Dissertations, Theses, Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 3000 Rhode Island, I.V. 3-7485. tf
Milliken's SOS
Professional typing by experienced secretary.
New electric typewriter, carbon
pencil, calculator, stapler.
VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles
(Marlene) Higley, 408 West 13th. tt
- Notary public
- "the best professional service"
- General typing service
- 24 hr. answering service
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow. 2047 Yale. VI 2-1648.
Have a party in the Big Red School
Foot Pool, floor and patio
Heated. Call VI 3-7455.
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality
typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines
transcription tape transcriptions
hours 7 a.m. 12 p.m. 12412 Mass
phone VI 3-5920
ft
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coln Mart. 1025 Mass. t
Rear Glasses — Headlines — Door Panels —
- Mimeograph & photo-copying
Term papers. Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 8-6296 after five. **tf**
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbol ribbon machines; 40 general service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-3057.
MISCELLANEOUS
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, manuscripts, and conference reports. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568
STUDENTS! SAVE WITH THIS AD!!
1021 ½ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
Tailor Made Seat Covers at
Compete Here with sew
sewed double lock stitch.
Tops -- Glass & Zippers -on shocks, mufflers, tail pipes and installation.
AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS DALE'S BODY SHOP
"Front End Special"
All makes & models
frame - body - fender - glass
713-4732 704 Vermont
JACK'S SEAT COVERS VI 3-4212
545 Minn.
Let us prove how we can save you money on all your car needs
VI 3-4732 704 Vermont
"Come in Today"
WARDS
AUTO SERVICE CENTER
729 N.H. VI 2-1708
Artists - Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics
Wednesday, March 25,1964
- Front end aligned
- Front wheels balanced,
bearings repacked
- Steering checked
ONLY
$6.88
VOLKSJAGEN'S WANTED. Cash for your VW, Conzelman Motors. VW Sales. Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa. Hiway 98 So. tf
WANTED
Ride to vicinity of Portland, Oregon or in that general direction. Will share driving and expenses. Leave April 3 or 4. Call VI 3-5798 for Jim. 3-27
Billfold, lost in Fraser Theater, Friday.
Feb. 7, between 9 and 12 p.m. Contact
Dave Till, 818 Kentucky. tf
LOST
Hot doughnuts—sandwich cold drink
616 W. 9th
HELP WANTED
Student secretary. Must be enrolled in at least one hour. 30 hour a week job. Exceptional wages. Starting April through the end of June. Call UN 4-3835
College man needed. We need a college man for a summer sales job which is not door-to-door. Salary is $150 per week plus expense. Traveling is involved. Write: Forrest Tenant, $338 Skyline Drive, Shawnee Mission, Kansas. 3-31
Girl to play electric organ part-time
Call VI 3-4743.
JOE'S BAKERY
25c delivery VI 3-4720
Serving crisp tossed salads,
choice of potatoes, zesty
Vienna breads & country fresh
butter. Sandwiches, too!
Your favorite beverage
Book Nook
1021 Mass.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
The Catecombs nite club and Pizza Dena Cafe. Modest Investment. Ideal way for 2-3 students to go through college. For information call VI 3-9703 Friday or Saturday LO 1-7251, K.C., Mo., Sunday through Thursday. tf
Small Store Attention
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY. Peppermint Park Kiddyland operation for sale. 2205 room through the summer by running this during the summer. Call VI 2-0155 after 5 p.m. Call 41
Big Store Service
The only thing better than a home cooked meal is
Dinner At
DUCKS
Steaks & Seafoods
A Specialty
ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass.
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass.
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
★ TUNE-UPS
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
ART'S TEXACO
9th & Mississippi
VI 3-9897
One Stop Service
★ Engine Tune Up
Generator & Starter Repair
Brake Repair
★ Lubrication & Oil Change
SKELLY SERVICE
SKELLY
300 W. 6th
VI 3-9271
BUSINESS SERVICES
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
JACK & GUNN'S
Dressmaking-iterations, formals and wedding gowns. Ola Smith, 939 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. VI 3-5263. tf
U-Call, we haul. Anything, anytime. VK
3-5888. tf
Surprise your roommate with a cake on that special occasion. The K.U. Birthday cake is the student's birthday cake line of cakes. Free delivery and candles. Call VI 2-1791. 4-24
L&M CAFE now under new management. We WILL be open from 9 a.m., to 5 p.m. for our delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches. Your second cup of coffee always free.
Patronize Kansan Advertiserz
Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center. 116 Mass. VI 3-1287.
REAL PET
Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking
GRANT'S DRIVE-IN Pet Center Sure-Everything in the Pet Field 1218 Corn VI 3-2921
GRANT'S DRIVE-IN
摄像师
1218 Conn. VI 3-2921
Portraits of Distinction
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Originality
FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PHONE VI.2-1320
CAR OWNERS SAVE UP TO 40%
$ $ $ $ $ $
- All makes and models
including sports cars
- Trained mechanics for quality service
- Your satisfaction
GUARANTEED
Montgomery Wards
Auto Service Center
729 N.H. VI 2-1708
Originality
IN FLOWERS
FOR EVERY OCCASION
especially for you
by
Alexander's
826 10WA
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PHONE VT. 2-3320
$ $ $ $ $ $
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Travel Agency AIR LINES
Domestic Foreign
Steamship Lines
Tours Cruises Everywhere
746 Mass.
VI 3-0152
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 25, 1964
Corps Worker Found Expression For Idealism in Aiding Pakistanis
An expression for her idealistic outlook on life was what Janet Hanneman sought in the Peace Corps.
A 1958 KU graduate, Miss Hanneman is visiting the campus this week as a recruiter for the Peace Corps. She majored in nursing while attending KU, and later put this training into practice on her Peace Corps assignment in Lahore, West Pakistan.
While serving in Pakistan, Miss Hanneman was a member of the staff of a 1500 patient government- operated hospital for the mentally
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Logan-Clendening Lecture, 4:30 p.m.
Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. "English Medical Humanists: Thomas Linacre and John Caius"—Dr. Charles D. O'Malley,
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. There will be no Lenten Bible Vigil nor Timely Topics Lecture.
*Peace Corps Coffee and General Meeting*
*Washington University SUA Classical Film*, 7 p.m., Fraser
Theater, "The Bank Dick" (W. E.
Fields), "Horn" (Mukinese,
Kukinese), "Pelzer Sellers)
Model U.N., 7:30 p.m., Ballroom, Kanes. Union.
Little Symphony Concert, 8 p.m.
Swarthout Hall.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
TOMORROW
Air Force Officers Selection Team
10-12 noon, Aids and Awards; 10-3:30 p.m. Hawk's Nest, Kansas Union. Will interview OTS applicants.
Holy Communion, 11:30 a.m., St.
Anselm's Chapel, Canterbury House.
AARC Library Lecture, 3:30 p.m., Forum
Room. Four Centuries of Shakespeare
and Romance.
Public, Lecture, 4 p.m.
Sunflower Boom,
600 W. 58th St., Jim Kim
Registrations of Thomas Mam
maematics Colloquium, 3.30 p.m., 119 Strong Hall. "Miniature Varieties and Kahler Submanifolds"—Alfred Gray, UVM at Los Angeles. Coffee at 9:20 p.m.
Der deutsche Verein trifft sich am Dommerstag, den 26. März, und 4 Uhr im Studentenhaus (Sunflower Room). Herr Prof. Klaus Prinsheim, shr., spricht auf english über seine "Recollections of Hann." Alle sind herzlich eingeselten.
Poetry Hour, 4:30 p.m. Music Room,
Kansas Union. Read your own poem.
Leave your name and title of poem in
the notebook and bring to meeting.
Informal coffee as usual.
Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion Kansas Union, Pan American Room Kansas Union
Kappa Phi 7 p.m. First Methodist Church, Meal in the Upper Room.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., 8:30 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stradford Rd.
Karpe Phi, 7 p.m. First Methodist Church
Continuing Philosophy Lecture, 7.30 p.m., Dyehe Auditorium, "Obstacles to World Order I: Cultural and Political" Feral E. Harris
Christian Science Organization, 7:30
Danforth Chapel. Everyone welcome.
Experimental Theater, 8:15 p.m. “Oh,
In the Closet and I'm Feeling So Sad.”
Eniscipale Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
Public and Solemn adoration of the Holy Eucharist begins at 9:30 p.m. Sign up at the Chapel for one half hour periods.
GROWTH
RESPONSIBILITY
Janet Hanneman
12
ill. She lived with a Pakistani family, adopted the native dress, and learned the native tongue, Urdu as part of her "people-to-people" approach to the job.
"CO-OPERATION FROM the Pakistani was the key to making my work in Pakistan a success," she said. Dressed in flowing pants, print tunic, and long stole, she discussed her pop, her experiences, and her impressions of the time she spent in Pakistan.
"The hospital in which I worked, was built in 1900 on 'Jail Row,'" she explained. "On either side of the
hospital was a jail-one for men, the other for women."
THE PLACEMENT of the hospital among the city's jails reflects the early attitude of the people towards the mentally ill, she explained. "The staffs in those early hospitals were mostly illiterate, and had little or no training in psychiatric care."
"A week ago Sunday, I arrived in the U.S. from Pakistan. Two days later I was recruiting on the campus at Providence, Rhode Island," she said.
"The change that has taken place, however, is tremendous." Miss Hanneman said. "In the two years that I served there, they changed the row of 'cells' given to the violent patients into an admissions ward. That row of cells used to have nothing inside but a small pile of straw, and often the patients had few clothes," she continued.
"THE PAKISTANIS are a warm, hospitable people, and they make true friends," she said. "In general, I was very well received in the country, and I was more appreciated when I attempted to adopt their customs and language."
Miss Hanneman's home is in Junction City, but since her return from Pakistan, she has been able to see her parents only one day. While at KU, she is visiting her sister, Donna, a junior who is head of the KU Peace Corps counseling service.
"My immediate future plans are to return to Washington as a recruiter for the Peace Corps on college and university campuses," Miss Hanneman concluded. "Later I may want to take a staff position, but I do definitely want to return, sometime, to Pakistan."
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Coach Dick Harp Resigns
Daily Hansan
61st Year, No. 112
Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, March 26, 1964
Vox, UP Meetings Liven Quiet Campus Campaign
A quiet campus campaign became noticeably more obvious as Vox Populi and University Party held their last formal meetings before the elections.
Vox's presidential candidate Marshall Crowther, Lawrence second-year law students, said Vox approaching the campaign with the idea that the students are intelligent and desire a responsible campaign for responsible student government.
"When the elections are over the cowboy hats and buttons are put away, but the University is left with people to fill student body and student council offices," Crowther said.
"I feel that students are concerned about how these offices will be filled, and they want an opportunity to see and hear the candidates, to ask questions and to have them answered, to gauge the performance, rather than to watch a gimmick, fun, big laugh approach to student government."
Crowther held up a UP button which said "We Try Harder" and said the students could see who is "trying harder to run a responsible campaign."
UP general secretary, Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission senior, replied later that "the point of the buttons and stetsons is to remind students of the platform on which University Party runs, and the qualifications of the candidates which we support."
(See related story page four.)
"We feel that our candidates and platform speaks for itself," Whitman said.
Student body president, Reuben McCornack. Abilene senior, officially endorsed Crowther and Jim Clina. Rockford, Ill., junior, for the offices of student body president and vice-president.
McCormack charged that UP's candidate, Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla. junior, was seeking the "title of the office and not the responsibilities."
"It is quite obvious and general knowledge that Bob has been seeking this office for a long time but his work on the ASC has not indicated that he is an effective leader."
"Marshall is considered a leader among the students who have seen him exercise the responsibility entrusted to him on the council, and in achieving things of significance for the student body," McCornack said.
McCormack said that Kaye Whitaker, Wichita junior and UP's candidate for vice-president, had not performed on the council so as to inspire confidence in her ability to act as student body vice-president. He said Cline had introduced important legislation and achieved much on the council.
Edwards Pleads Guilty to Charge
John Sanford Edwards, 33, of 121 W. 14th St., yesterday pleaded guilty to a charge of first-degree manslaughter in connection with the fatal shooting of Pedro Escobar, 36, on Feb. 22.
District Court Judge Frank Gray will pass sentence at 11 a.m. April 3.
Edwards, a former assistant instructor in the KU department of Spanish was originally charged with first degree murder. Ralph King, county attorney, said the charge was reduced to first-degree manslaughter because the evidence brought out at the preliminary hearing did not warrant the charge of first-degree murder.
According to witnesses, Escobar was a guest at a party given by John H. Wolf, also an assistant instructor in the department of Spanish. Edwards, who had complained about the noise of the party over the telephone a few minutes before the shooting, knocked on the door of Wolf's apartment with a 357 caliber Magnum pistol.
Escobar, also an assistant instructor in the KU department of Spanish, was dancing near the door. Witnesses said he opened the door and was shot in the chest.
Edwards was also having a small party in an apartment adjoining Wolf's.
"You can't separate the offices and the responsibilities they entail. This must be the criteria, and because of their interest and past performance Crowther and Cline are the best candidates to represent KU." McCormack said.
At the UP meeting, Stewart reminded the general assembly that next week will be one of the "most crucial weeks in KU's political history."
Calling for an "energetic, positive and clean campaign," he said that "none of us are going to stoop to the level of working or talking in poor taste or poor faith."
UP's general secretary Charles Whitman said that the voting public knew UP's platform, and it was an "excellent one."
"There is no need to make derogatory remarks about the opposition." Whitman said.
Whitman said that Vox was trying to make an issue out of UP's vicepresidential candidate, Kaye Whitaker's sex, and said that capabilities are what counts.
Anette Luyben, UP party worker, said the attack was "unjustified, prejudiced and biased."
"Some of the best council members have been women and Dean Heller's wife was vice-president of the student body when she was in school here." Miss Lyuben said.
Contacted on the proposed statement by Vox, Tom Bornholdt, Topeka senior and Vox president, said Vox was not making an issue that the candidate was a woman.
"The fact she is a woman will not hamper her but Cline is more effective and qualified as to the duties of the office," Bornholdt said.
Both party leaders explained their position on the freshman women's debates, and did agree on a time to schedule them.
Weather
A return to spring weather is predicted by the weather bureau for tonight and tomorrow. Skies will remain fair tonight and tomorrow, with a low temperature tonight of about 15 degrees. Tomorrow's high reading will be in the middle 40's.
College Bowl Finals Set For Today
Beneath the glare of stage lights, the two contending teams from Stephenson Hall and Tempin Hall will test their skill at rapid recall before the eye of the television camera today in the final College Bowl match.
Last night both teams were confident of their ability to win.
Dale Brownwell, Kansas City senior, a Stephenson team member, described his team's pre-contest preparation in this way: "We aren't doing anything."
"Tomorrow," Brownawell said, "we may get together and see how fast we can hit the 'reaction table'" (an electronic device that signals the moderator a team believes it has the answer).
Erownawell believed a set of warm-up questions before the show for the rehearsal of the camera crew would put the Stephenson team in fighting form. The outcome? "You
George Barisak, Kansas City, Mo. senior and captain of the Templin hall team said his team was not preparing either.
always need the right questions.' Brownwell said.
Barisas said, "It has been our experience that pre-game preparation serves no purpose. A good night's sleep is best."
Three out of Stephenson's four team members are veteran College Bowl contenders. Barisas said that their experience has enabled them to judge the weaknesses of their team and caused each team member to work toward self-preparation.
The Stephenson team, which will retire the College Bowl if it wins this, its third contest, has been preparing since last fall. Judy Bodenhausen, Topea senior and College Bowl questions chairman, said.
Regarding a protest that was filed with the College Bowl committee by the Joseph R. Pearson Hall team during the semi-finals, Miss Bodenhausen said the protest was overruled.
Bodenhausen said, "Since this contest is going to be taped for television, we have tried to make the questions a little snazzier."
The JRP team said a toss-up question should have been deferred to them when the opposing team missed it. The moderator, in not doing so, "was acting in his best judgment," Miss Bodenhausen said. Because of this and because there was no precedent covering the situation, Miss Bodenhausen said JRP's protest was overruled.
The moderator for the television version of College Bowl is Francis Heller, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Miss Bodenhausen said.
"Snazzing up" the questions was done by writing "human interest" into the introductory parts, and by trying to state the questions in a way that would be entertaining, Miss Bodenausen said.
No Successor Yet; Harp Favors Owens
By Roy Miller (Assistant Managing Editor)
Dick Harp announced his resignation today as head basketball coach at the University of Kansas.
The resignation becomes effective July 1, and no successor has been named.
"I have determined that it is time for me to retire from coaching." Harp said in a prepared statement. "My association with the University of Kansas has been a wonderful experience.
"YET, IT SEEMS that careful consideration of all factors dictates that I resign," he stated. "My plans for the future are not definite at the moment."
Harp, 44, has been KU's head coach the last eight years.
Harp indicated as early as late January he was contemplating whether to make the 1963-64 season his last as KU basketball coach.
Charles H. Oldfather, professor of law and chairman of the athletic board, said, "Like many other people, I know that Dick has his own reasons for resigning and I would wish him luck in any type of endeavor he would take."
WHEN REACHED in his office this morning, Coach Harp said he hoped Ted Owens, his assistant coach, would be named as his successor. This particular time is a good time to resign," Harp said as he worked on his income tax. "I think we have an opportunity to make a big move forward in the future.
"I am hopeful that this will be under Ted's guidance, but I wouldn't want to put the bee on him, so to speak.
"I have every confidence in him and the future of Kansas basketball," he continued. "And, this coupled with my personal considerations, dictate that it is a good time to do it." (resign.)
A. E. BROWN
Dick Harp
"We have the chance of an immediate fine future in basketball, I am sure that all of the boys would like to work to make their future under Ted's guidance and I hope that he will be appointed."
OWENS, WHO WAS interviewed in the lobby of Allen Field House answered questions deliberately with his arms folded and a student directory in one hand. The present assistant coach paced in a small circle as he answered questions.
"This didn't come to me as a complete surprise," Owens said, "because I'd known that he hadn't planned to coach for a long time."
"But I hadn't known exactly when he planned to quit."
"Of course." Owens continued, "I definitely want the job. We'll work awfully hard to get the program back on a comparative basis as far as the championship is concerned.
"I CERTAINLY don't want to leave KU at the time it appears we're making the big breakthrough.
"I love to coach basketball," Owens said, "and this is the best possible place to coach."
Commenting on Harp's resignation, A. C. (Dutch) Lonborg, KU athletic director, said:
"This comes as no surprise since we realize Dick has been contemplating this move for some time. I personally want to express my thanks to him for his contribution to our athletic program and wish him well in whatever future he endeavors to follow."
Harp has been connected with KU basketball 21 years as either player or coach. He joined the coaching staff as assistant to Dr. F.C. (Phog) Allen in 1949 after serving two years as head coach at William Jewell College, Liberty, Mo.
HE SERVED as assistant coach until 1957 when he succeeded Allen who had reached retirement age.
For 10 years of head coaching, Harp's teams have won 136 games and lost 105. His record at KU is 116-82.
Harp is only the fourth coach in 74 years of KU basketball. Dr. James Naismith, the founder of the sport, was the first coach.
Other coaches were W. O. Hamilton and Howard Engleman, the latter only serving for a half a year.
IT WAS NOT immediately known who would succeed Harp. There were reports earlier that Ralph Miller, coach of Wichita's Missouri Valley champions, would come to KU.
This report was denied by Miller, Henry Bubb, chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents, said there would be no "pirating" of coaches between the state's schools.
Harp's assistant coach, Ted Owens, has been here four years. Owens joined the KU staff after coaching three years at Cameron State Junior College, Lawton, Okla.
Owens' teams reached the semifinals of the National Junior College Tournament an unprecedented three consecutive years.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 26, 1964
ASC, Regents, Senate, Chancellor
Power Structure
Power.
Who has it, how is it divided, restricted, and used in the government and administration of the University of Kansas?
In view of the coming All-Student Council election and a general haziness surrounding KU government, this article will attempt to define and classify the university power structure, especially concerning the Governor, state legislature, Board of Regents, the Chancellor, University Senate, and ASC.
THE UNIVERSITY WAS CREATED by the Kansas legislature almost one hundred years ago. Administration is in the hands of the State Board of Regents. The nine-man board is appointed by the Governor for four-year overlapping terms. The appointments are approved by the Kansas Senate.
To the Board of Regents is given the power to "prescribe bylaws . . . to regulate the course of instruction, and . . . prescribe the books, authorities, and apparatus to be used. . .." The Board hires and pays the Chancellor, and has authority over the conferring of degrees, admissions, tuitions and fees, the sale of university land, and the state geological and biological surveys. Annual appointments must be approved by the board of regents.
The Chancellor hires all employees and is the chief executive officer of the university. He is also chairman of the University Senate.
THE PRESENT CODE of the University Senate was approved in 1932 by the Board of Regents. Members include associate and full professors, plus the executive secretary, the deans, the registrar, the directors of division, chairmen of departments, and the business manager.
Powers of the University Senate are divided into limited, advisory, and full. Under functions subject to veto by the Chancellor or the Board of Regents are such powers as setting the university calendar, accrediting other institutions of learning, questions of scholarship, attendance, advanced standing, eligibility, honors, convocations, some publications, and student loans.
The University Senate may advise the Chancellor, the Board of Regents, or the faculties on the following questions: the abolition or establishment of schools, divisions, and departments; student health and living conditions, student relations, publications, and organizations.
FULL POWERS OF THE SENATE include appointment of its own advisory and special committees, delegations of its functions, and formulation of regulations of the conduct of committees and officers.
Committees of the Senate number close to 25, covering everything from orientation week to commencement.
One section of the Senate code provides: "Meetings of the Senate are not open to reporters of the Daily Kansan or of any other news organ. Proper publicity will be given to Senate proceedings by the presence at Senate meetings of the University Director of Publicity."
IN 1925 THE SENATE gave the Student Council full responsibility for extra-curricular activities. All ASC legislation as of 1943, must be approved by the Chancellor.
ASC, according to its constitution, has all powers necessary to carry out its purpose: (a) To unite in a single, self-governing body the students of the University of Kansas and to promote and regulate their extra-curricular activities. (b) To coordinate student activities with the programs of the faculty and administrative governing bodies. (c) By so doing, to promote the highest interests of the University of Kansas and to cultivate loyalty to the University among its students.
EXECUTIVE POWERS are delegated to the student body president and vice-president, while the All Student Council is the legislative branch. The judiciary powers are vested in the student court and the disciplinary committee.
In brief, this is the power hierarchy of KU administration: the state legislature and Governor appoint the Board of Regents and appropriate funds for KU; the Board of Regents hires the Chancellor and regulates "the course of instruction:" the Chancellor is the chief executive officer of the university and chairman of the University Senate, which deals mainly with academic questions; while the ASC is mostly limited to extra-curricular activities.
Margaret Hughes
Military Parallel
War on Poverty
If "war on poverty" seems too easy a phrase, too dramatic an oversimplification, it has one large virtue. The parallel between military action and President Johnson's proposals is an apt one in several ways. There will be small battles fought on a great variety of fronts, and some of them will be frustrating failures. It will be a simple matter of bookkeeping to count the immediate costs but far more difficult to estimate the long-term gain. And while most will agree that the "war" must be waged, critics of particular tactics in one sector, of slow progress in another, will be many.
TO CARRY THE PARALLEL FURTHER, the President's message makes it clear that he offers no single new weapon guaranteed to bring victory. Some of the proposals, such as that for enlisting up to 100,000 youths in a "job corps," would concentrate on familiar stand-bys — vocational training and basic education mixed with the therapy of useful work. In part this program has its inspiration in the Civilian Conservation Corps of the Thirties, which did enjoy its solid successes. Another familiar note is struck with the proposal for a domestic Peace Corps that would use highly motivated social and vocational workers in such difficult pockets of poverty as city slums, Indian reservations and migratory camps.
One of the most important features of Mr. Johnson's program is his emphasis on local action. The Federal Government is indeed limited in the amount it can do directly for individuals. To the extent that communities can mobilize their own educational, health and social services and focus them on the problems they know most intimately, Federal assistance will be available. Here there is a desirable degree of flexibility which holds a good deal of promise. Once again the emphasis is on the tools already at hand; the job is to make more and better use of them.
WHATEVER THE FATE in Congress of particular features of the plan, the President has given heartening emphasis to the great need for renewed efforts. Industrial technology, farming, even the services are moving ahead at an accelerating rate, demanding higher and higher skills of those who would work for their living. Left behind in increasing numbers are the unskilled. These are our poor. To the extent that they can be reached by renewed endeavors of the Federal Government, the community and private employers, the effort must be made. The only alternative is the paradox of an affluent society pock-marked with poverty in which the uneducated, the unmotivated and the unequipped breed yet more of their kind in a frustratingly vicious circle.
— The Baltimore Evening Sun
A man in a suit is pulling on a rope tied to another person's neck. Both individuals are facing water, with waves crashing around them. The background features palm trees and a rainy sky.
$\textcircled{1964}$ HERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON POST
"I Had No Idea There Were So Many Banana Peels Around This Canal"
Kashmir Conflict Causes Violations
The recent incident of Hindu-Moslem rioting, raping and looting in East India, in which more than 150 people were killed, was a repetition of the situation that occurred last month in East Pakistan. The communal riots in both these countries are a result of the existing tensions between the two nations over the issue of Kashmir.
Since the partition of India and Pakistan in 1947, both the nations have been aggressive toward each other for their traditional dispute. The United Nations, which established the cease fire line in 1949, has attempted several times to resolve the conflict, but it was unsuccessful.
THE THREAT OF Communist China has increased in Southeast Asia as Pakistan has sought the Red Chinese help in order to defeat India in the fight. Pakistan is afraid that India might use U.S. and Great Britain military aid against Pakistan—the aid, which India claims, is for the protection from Communist China aggression on her borders.
Red China, which also has border dispute with India, looked at Pakistan's request for aid as an opportunity to gain a part of the Ladakh frontier district of Kashmir. So it abolished its neutrality in the Kashmir conflict last month and decided to help Pakistan.
Pakistan. SEVERAL SUGGESTIONS have been made to solve the problem. A British representative expressed his feelings in the Security Council of the United Nations, and said a solution to the Kashmir dispute could be found in dividing it between Hindus and Moslems.
But the British attitude created a furor in the Indian Parliament, which does not want Hindu-Moslem division in Kashmir.
Commenting on the British feeling, Lal Bahadur Shastri, expected Prime Minister of India, said he was told the "Moslem community in India was not prepared to accept that the integration of Jammu and Kashmir with India was not complete and that there was something still left to be done to integrate it."
ANOTHER SUGGESTION was made that the people of Kashmir decide their own destiny. But as the fact exists, 77 per cent, which is Moslem, of 4.4 million population of Kashmir may decide to unite with "the Moslems of Pakistan rather than the Hindus of India." Prime Minister Nehru did not approve the suggestion on the basis that India has natural right over the most beautiful state of Kashmir.
There was no complete opposition to the suggestions from the Pakistani side. The reason for the Pakistani attitude toward the suggestions, many political critics believe, is due to the fact that Pakistan does not have really any case and that it will not lose anything if the decision is made in favor of India.
THE PROBLEM is so serious and both the parties are so stubborn that it appears the conflict will not be solved in the very near future.
As long as the conflict exists, there will be communal riots in both the nations. And if the governments of Pakistan and India fail to ensure that communal harmony prevail, religion minority groups in both the countries will not be able to live in amity.- Vinay Kothari
DailijTiansan
111 Flint Hall
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.
Thursday, March 26, 1964
The People Say...
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Don't Fence Me In
After three years of standing by and watching the KU maintenance crew do their "busy work," my understanding has reached the breaking point.
I've always appreciated the fact that KU has spent considerable money on its football program, in fact, I have never missed a game in my three years at KU. I was more than happy that KU got its stadium expansion, but the money spent on the practice field west of Allen Field House is a different story.
During the last three years the football practice field has taken on the appearance of the demilitarized zone between East and West Germany. First, a snow fence was erected, and then encircling the snow fence was constructed a barb-wire fence. These fences were to keep subversive individuals from defacing the grass that the "dainty" little football players never mar. Pity the people who walked into this zone at night. Now these two fences have been torn down, and a new 6-foot fence erected. I do not object to this, but the placing of trees every-other-yard around this fence is absurd.
tub-near
stts in a fail groups thari
What would a Kansas taxpayer say if he knew his money was being used for tearing down and erecting fences, and planting trees, around the football practice field, while other spots on the KU campus go untouched. I hope for safety's sake that no one attempts to watch a KU practice this year, land mines may be installed next. With the new fence and trees, Kansas should win the Big Eight next year.
George D. Lasater Wichita junior
Referring to Miss Hughes' noble hymn written in commemoration of the independent Spring Fling, let us say—it wasn't.
Antagonized
Press.
York
rates:
moonoon
versity
Laws City sophomore
Miss Hughes has succeeded in antagonizing the independents. Her editorial was a personal affront to many of us. We do not feel we should have to be apologetic for being independent, as Miss Hughes apparently would like us to do.
What is her purpose in mocking an attempt by the AURH to plan a weekend of fun? We would like to know where Miss Hughes got her extraordinary clairvoyance. At least she could have waited until after the Spring Fling to see whether on not it sprung.
To paraphrase Miss Hughes' "Independent Hymn."
"The joys of slamming Spring Fling,
Fun, fun, fun, fun, fun,
Aren't we glad we're editorial writers!!
Karen Lambert
Leavenworth sophomore
Patty Ashton
Kansas City sophomore
Ruby Trial
The trial of Jack Ruby a week ago in Dallas has brought several moral and practical issues to the light. That a sentence was determined by the jurors is unquestionable; but that justice—or human decency—was upheld is very questionable.
The concept of legal justice has had a twisted development in the Western world. For its ultimate purpose jurisprudence claims the prevention and punishment of crime. To bring this about an example must be made to others of the individual involved in the criminal act. That is effected by the latter's chastisement and "forced-reformation." In extreme acts of criminality—murder, genocide—the law has often believed the individual worthless to society and his death the most salutary admonition to those inclined to commit a like offense.
Now with respect to a felon's being made responsible to civil justice I have no essential quarrel.
But capital punishment is a perversion and not an employment of justice. The law must always be tempered with ethical considerations. The controversy raging today, of whether the death penalty prevents extreme criminality, and the citing of statistics on all sides is, I think, not as significant as the point I propose. And that is, even if capital punishment were proven to be deterrent to murder, etc., it would hardly be justifiable. To take the life of any man for
whatever reason is barbaric since such an act runs contrary to man's nature. Yet men, corrupted by sonorous titles of "justice" and "duty" depart from their original inclinations. Then they prefer to condemn rather than to forgive, understand, and reform.
I was somewhat amused at hearing President Johnson and other American noteworthies, after the death of President Kennedy, espouse "reason", "calmness." Does anyone believe that Mr. Oswald would have been spared death, respite all the "reason" around.
Tvrants of various hues and degrees—Chang, Franco, Nasser, Mao, Castro, Sukarno, and Khrushchev have all spoken of "justice" and "righteousness." But how many, in the same manner as Ruby's jurors, have killed and punished brutally? There may be superficial differences in thought between a Dallas juryman and Chairman Mao, but are there any great differences in their attitudes toward society's outcasts or toward man as a whole? The jury in Dallas has condemned Ruby to death; it has spit upon MAN.
Gordon Sites Wichita sophomore
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Special Reduced Air Fares To Europe This Summer
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 26, 1964
Frenchmen Criticize De Gaulle For 'Sugar Daddy' Reputation
By Joseph W. Grigg
PARIS — (UPI) — President Charles de Gaulle of France is coming under heavy fire for trying to play "Uncle Sugar" too much and too often.
He has been getting a lot of political mileage by showing that France, in proportion to its population, hands out more foreign aid than any other country—including the United States.
Now, as De Gaulle sets out to win more friends and influence more people with additional largesse to Latin America, Frenchmen are beginning to kick at picking up the tab.
tab.
A HEFTY DEBATE has been launched in the French press over assertions that De Gaulle's program of economic handouts is bleeding France dry.
It is being charged that France is squandering money on palaces and armies for African rulers that could well be put to use on highways, schools and housing for this country.
It is being asked why Frenchmen should pay out aid funds to Latin America when millions still are without proper housing in France itself.
De Gaulle is well aware of the mounting storm of criticism. He tried to head it off in part in his Jan. 31 news conference by emphasizing the importance of France's foreign aid effort.
HE PLANS A counterattack against critics of his foreign aid program in a series of speeches during a meet-the-people tour of North-Eastern France in April.
France currently is spending more than $1.2 billion annually on foreign aid. Although the United States spends nearly three times that amount, it does, in fact, make France per head of population and in relation to her national income the world's largest dispenser of foreign aid.
Nearly all of it goes to France's former African colonies currently.
By far the greatest proportion of this—more than $200 million annually—is given to Algeria under the 1962 Evian agreement, which gave the former French North African possession independence.
BUT IT IS being asked now why France has sent nearly 20,000 schoolteachers to Africa—14,650 of them to Algeria—at the French taxpayer's expense when French schools and universities are desperately undermanned.
Raymond Cartier, one of France's best known newspapermen, touched off the foreign aid debate in a recent series of articles in the weekly
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Paris-Match, in which he noted among other things that one out of six French homes still has no running water and one in four is more than a century old.
He pointed out that most of France's canal system was built in the reign of Louis XIV, more than 300 years ago, and that France today c ranks only seventeenth in the world in its telecommunications setup.
Why, Cartier acked, should France pay out to build gleaming marble
palaces for the "strong man" rulers of her former African colonies, many of whom since then have been toppled by revolutions despite the backing of French funds and French troops.
The pro-government daily La Nation hit back with an angry rebuttal, arguing that France can fully afford her foreign aid handouts and that in any case her place in the world makes it her duty to help underdeveloped nations.
Templin Residents Listen To Debate by Candidates
About 200 Templel hall residents heard the first debate between candidates for Student Body President and Vice-president last night.
Stressing experience and qualifications in student government, Marshall Crowther and Jim Cline, Vox Populi running mates, said they want to promote growth with a sense of responsibility.
Bob Stewart and Kaye Whitaker, University Party candidates, each explained two planks in the UP platform, saying their programs are "things students themselves can effect."
BOTH CROWTHER and Stewart emphasized the importance of voters becoming informed on the issues, the candidates stands, and past records of the parties.
"You must match up campaign promises with what has a good chance of becoming reality." Crowther said.
Following five-minute speeches by each of the candidates was a question-and-answer period. Asked what their parties could do to benefit Temple hall, Stewart answered, "We want to seek out those who are interested in each hall to apply for student government appointments."
CROWTHER REPLIED to the same question, "Vox Populi wants to benefit all the students. Any student who is qualified will receive appointments."
One man asked the vice-presidential candidates about their stand on the civil rights issue.
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Miss Whitaker said, "We are very interested in this matter and want to actively support the HRC."
One man asked Cline, himself a resident of Templin, why an access road to the Engel Road complex (in last fall's Vox Populi platform) could not be built, since Vox is now proposing an addition to the football
Cline said, "We can get a road built if you all collect money to build it. The Board of Regents will not vote any funds for it. The stadium expansion would be paid for by a price increase in student season tickets."
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A new 570-man residence hall is scheduled for completion by 1965.
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The professional journalism fraternity, Sigma Delta Chi, has elected new officers.
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Page 5
Passover To Begin Tomorrow
Jews the world over are preparing to celebrate the eight-day festival of Passover which begins tomorrow.
The Passover holiday is one of the oldest, on the Jewish calendar, having been observed for over 3,000 years.
Thursday, March 26, 1964 University Daily Kansan
It started as a simple shepherd festival. After the exodus of the Jews from Egypt it became a national holiday marking not only the emancipation of the Jews from slavery, but the birth of the Jewish nation.
WHEN THE JEWS settled in Palestine, the advent of the Passover coincided with the start of the grain harvest and it began to be celebrated as a farmers' festival.
ALTHOUGH THE details of the Seder vary with the country or the degree of orthodoxy of the family, they are essentially the same everywhere.
The name Passover is a reminder that the angel of death passed over the homes of the Hebrews during the plague of the first-born in Egypt. It also recalls the crossing of the Red Sea by the Jews in their flight from the Pharaoh's army.
A traditional ceremonial dinner the Seder, ushers in the Passover festival.
The father, the head of the family, is seated at the head of the table. In front of him is set the Seder plate with the symbolic foods arranged in a prescribed order: the three matzoths (a type of dumpling) signifying the unity of the Jewish people; a shankbone denotes the paschal lamb; the roasted egg is a reminder of the offering made by pilgrims at the Temple; the horoset, a concoction of nuts and apples which look like the bricks and the mortar the Jews made for the Pharaoh while they were in slavery.
IN THE CENTER of the Seder plate is horseradish which signifies the bitterness of their former slav-
Also important is the opening of the door for Elijah, the prophet, who is said to visit every Jewish home on Seder night. The children with keen eyes are convinced the contents of the goblet of wine set aside for the prophet are visibly lessened with the opening and shutting of the door.
Bread and all food not especially prepared for Fassover are removed from the home, and specially prepared food is brought in.
table.
TO MAKE CERTAIN that all bread has been removed from the home, the father and children go from corner to corner the night before Seder with a candle, duster and wooden spoon, reciting a special prayer.
Not only friends and family attend the Seder, but often strangers are invited as guests.
ery, and in the lower left hand corner is placed a sprig of parsley, a symbol of spring life and hope.
a spirit of spring, life and hope.
The Seder opens with the traditional "Kiddush," prayer of sanctification over the wine, and is followed by the reading of the Haggadah, the story of the exodus from Egypt. This is done in both Hebrew and English.
A highlight of the dinner is the asking of four questions by the youngest child present: (1) Why Matzoth? " (2) "Why the horseradish?" (3) "Why dip the horseradish twice?" (4) "Why recline on pillows?"
ANOTHER HIGH point is the hiding by the father of the Afikoman, the second of the three matzoths on the Seder plate, which must be found by one of the children and returned to the head of the family before the family can leave the
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 26, 1964
Frightened Smokers Sneaking Back to Normal
Rv United Press International
By United Press International Jittery cigarette smokers may be puffing pipes in public and chewing more gum lately, but the great cancer scare appears to be wearing off.
Cigarette sales, which dropped as much as 30 per cent after the surgeon general's committee drew a link between cigarettes and cancer last Jan. 11, are starting to come back.
back. United Press International echeeked state tax officials and major tobacco wholesalers and retailers throughout the nation to determine what happened to cigarettes in the two and a half months since the government report threw a scare into the country's smokers.
Sales are still down in many areas. But authoritative sources in at least 12 states reported that cigarettes were starting to come back in March.
IN SOME BIG CITIES, retailers said cigarette sales were just like old times, and there were indications in other states that the drop in sales had reached bottom and an upwings was in the making.
One sign of the times was in Dalhart, Tex., where a one-man academy for high school students on the evils of smoking may not go into a second semester because of waning interest.
Lawrence Ashby, 87, a retired judge who said his father died of "tobacco heart" and his cousin of "tobacco fits," offered in January to give $2.50 to every tobacco-smoking student who enrolled in his class.
Eight girls, all non-smokers already, signed up and the judge said he isn't sure he will start another class.
There were these developments in the nation's smoking habits:
- DEALERS REPORTED that customers who tried to stop and couldn't were switching to king-sized filter tip cigarettes. The regular-sized, non-filter cigarettes were the worst sales sufferers.
- Smokers still trying to quit seemed to be switching to chewing gum. William Wrigley, head of the Chicago-based chewing gum firm
that bears his name, said the government reporting is having "at least a minor influence on sales."
- Cigar makers haven't had it so good in years. Industry spokesmen estimated sales increases would go as high as 30 per cent over last year.
- Newcomers to the stogie chomping habit were women who wouldn't have touched a cigar or a cigar smoker with a ten-foot pole three months ago. Women were puffing on dainty cigarillos, and the Cigar Institute of America estimated as many as 60,000 may have joined the cigar clan.
- SALES OF PIPES and pipe tobacco were as much as 50 per cent above normal. An Oklahoma City wholesaler said "it seems all the
new smokers went to the high grade" pipe tobacco.
Most states had a crucial interest in cigarette sales. At least 29 states get at least five per cent of their total revenue from cigarette taxes. New Jersey gets nearly 13 per cent of its revenue from tobacco taxes—top in the nation.
Pennsylvania Gov. William Scranton's proposed $1.1 billion budget—drawn up before the government report on smoking was issued—may be thrown out of balance by decreased cigarette revenues. Scranton said estimated collections on the cigarette levy will total $4 million less than the $93.7 million originally planned for.
Other states with a big interest in cigarette sales were Illinois, where cigarette tax revenues dropped more
than $1 million since the report was made public, and New York, which scooped in $123.6 million in cigarette taxes last year.
FEDERAL REVENUE from tobacco taxes rose to a record $2.1 billion last year and the 47 states which levy a tobacco tax collected an additional $1.1 billion—also a record.
States where tax receipts or business returns showed cigarette sales climbing back up included Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, South Carolina, West Virginia, Indiana, Oklahoma, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Wisconsin, New Jersey and Oregon.
Cigarette sales were still suffering in Maine, Delaware, New York state, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Utah, Texas, New Mexico, Nebraska, California, Alabama and Florida.
Other states reported cigarette sales leveling off and ready to start an upswing.
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Thursday, March 26, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
LBJ Persuasion Sweet or Rough; Talks Sway Recalcitrant ADA
Ey Lyle C. Wilson United Press International
"The Treatment" is the description given by President Johnson's friends and foes to the political therapy by which LBJ persuades citizens to vote for or otherwise to endorse the administration's projects.
"The Treatment" varies from the gentle laying on of hands to muscular arm twisting calculated to wrest that member in its socket. The gentle laying on of hands includes such things as a White House lunch or a birthday telephone call.
Lunch at the White House may be accompanied by a dip in the presidential pool. If no birthday or other fete offers, the treatment may be via telephone call expressing the president's flattering desire for advice, help and counsel.
The arm twisting is reserved mostly for members of Congress whose votes are required. There is, in fact, not much difference between Johnson's bare knuckle handling of a recalcitrant Congressman and the bully boy methods which were employed by the late president John F. Kennedy. A major difference, of course, is that Johnson's methods get results.
For the non-member of Congress the Johnson treatment is likely to be all sweetness and light; no arm twisting whatever or, at least, none that the patient immediately can detect. Thus it is that the politically-minded in Washington are chuckling over the reported effect of the Johnson treatment on Joseph L. Rauh, Jr., the Washington, D.C., spokesman for ADA. ADA is Americans for Democratic Action, a leftwing group denounced by its enemies as a menace to the Republic but conceded by all to be an effective political force with style.
The right-wing National Review noted Rauh's treatment in a recent issue as follows: "The whirlwind courtship of ADA Panjandrum Joseph L. Rauh Jr. by Lyndon Johnson has started to pay big dividends. Johnson offered Rauh a seat on the presidential airplane to New York for Herbert Lehman's funeral just a few days after his inauguration. Since then he has asked Rauh repeatedly to the White House and listened to him and his conferes on civil rights.
Result: The ADA, which four years ago pointedly endorsed only the top half of the Kennedy-Johnson ticket, is now telling the boys, "it's okay to go all the way with LBJ."
That would be a switch. On June 30, 1960, when LBJ was seeking the Democratic presidential nomination, ADA said of him: "He (LBJ) is a conservative, anti-civil rights, gas-
and-oil senator. He has supported all of the major anti-labor legislation enacted during the past two decades and bragged about it."
again that his first loyalty is to the Southern racists."
As late as February, last year, Rauh said: "Vice President Lyndon Johnson has demonstrated once
Whether Rauh has forgiven LBJ and has persuaded ADA to do likewise perhaps remains to be proven, but it is a fact that ADA's anti-Johnson barrage has been silenced.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 26,1964
Golf Season Opens With O-State Meet
By Glen Phillips
The KU golf team will open its season Tuesday when it meets Oklahoma State, champions in the Big Eight, on the Cowboys' own course at Stillwater.
The Jayhawkers will be strengthened this year by the return of five of the six lettermen from last year. Leading the KU squad will be John Hanna, Lawrence senior, who was runner-up in the Kansas state men's championships last year and has been among the top five contenders at the Big Eight conference meet for the last two years.
There are two returning two-year lettermen, Reid Holbrook Kansas City senior, and Paul Carlson, Lawrence senior.
Frank Kirk, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Scott Linscott, Topeka junior, and Ron Szczygiel, Leavenworth junior, are other returning lettermen.
Coach Dick Reamon expects some strength from the sophomore members of the team—John Beougher, Lawrence; Dodge Engelman, Salina; and Richard King, Salina.
Mike Rhodes, Newton junior; and Kim Corbin, Wichita senior, are two new upperclass members of the squad.
Coach Reamon said there will be a battle for the five playing positions for meets among the 11 members of the squad.
Reamon said the competition in the league this year is going to be especially tough. While Oklahoma State has won the golf title every year since they have been in the conference, and Oklahoma has always been a very strong contender, Reamon feels that his Jayhawkers will be able to do pretty well.
The KU men are already suffering because of the completely unpredictable Kansas weather. The men are supposed to play 72 holes of golf so that their scores can be evaluated and the starters for a meet can be determined. Snow, sleet, wind and rain have hampered the efforts so that they have not even shot enough for Reamon to rate them for the match with OSU next week.
The Stillwater match is the beginning of the Jayhawkers' annual swing through the southern schools. On Wednesday, KU will meet the Oklahoma Sooners at Norman.
On April 3 and 4 the Jayhawkers will compete with about 16 other teams in the Shawnee Invitational, one of the top college tournaments in the country, according to Reamon.
Reamon's hopes for a winning season are based upon strength in his senior players. However, he feels that he has promise in the sophomores and there are some good looking players coming up on the freshman team.
The University supplies some scholarship aid to encourage golfers here. There is an open tourney held at the Lawrence Country Club each year during Orientation week. All interested students may enter and play 72 holes. For the best eight scores, the University will pay the fees for their season's play on the Lawrence course. For the best four scores, the University supplies a scholarship that pays tuition and books.
The fall tournament takes advantage of the better weather and better condition of the course for choosing the golfers that will play on the varsity squad.
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SECOND
CHICAGO — (UPI) — Owner Charles O. Finley of the Kansas City Athletics began a battle against the potent New York Yankees today, requesting American League action to force the elimination of the short foul lines in Yankee Stadium.
"The other American League clubs have been beating their heads against a brick wall," Finley said. "The Yanks have won 21 pennants in the last 28 years, and if something isn't done, they'll win 21 or more in the next 28."
Finley said a survey showed that in the past 28 years, the Yankees had hit 2,143 home runs in their own park compared to 1,345 for their opponents and had won 1,459 games against 707 for their foes. On the road the Yankees had won 1,240 and lost 918.
"Down through the years," he said, "the Yankees have concentrated on having players who can pull that ball. The opposing team's pitchers try to pitch to keep the Yanks
Finley charged that the "big reason" for the Yankee success was the "short foul lines, 296 feet in right field and 301 in left field," and pointed to a 1958 regulation that the minimum distance for new parks was 325 feet at each foul line.
"IM NOT KNOCKING the Yankee organization, not trying to take any credit away from the Yankee players, past or present," he said. "But it's impossible for the other clubs to compete with the Yankees' playing field advantages, because winning produces financial dividends."
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Finley Protesting Short Yankee Foul Lines
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from pulling, they're not used to pitching in the stadium, they get behind, and have to groove one and bang.
"The hitter sees that short foul line and psychologically, he tries to pull, but the Yankee pitcher are used to that, they get the hitter behind, and he doesn't get that pitch."
"YOU DON'T HAVE to be a genius to know what's going on in
Yankee Stadium," he said. "It becomes obvious immediately. What puzzles me is the fact that the Yankees were permitted to continue with their short foul lines and restrictions placed on all other teams.
"They must have been wondering how long they were going to get away with this, and then the rules committee gives them protection in writing and says the other teams can't come down to where they are."
On Campus with Max Shulman
(Author of Rally Round the Flag, Boys!"
and "Barefoot Boy With Cheek.")
WELL-KNOWN FAMOUS PEOPLE: No. 1
This is the first in a series of 48 million columns examining the careers of men who have significantly altered the world we live in. We begin today with Max Planck.
Max Planck (or The Pearl of the Pacific, as he is often called) gave to modern physics the law known as Planck's Constant. Many people when they first hear of this law, throw up their hands and exclaim, "Golly whiskers, this is too deep for little old me!"
(Iincidentally, speaking of whiskers, I cannot help but mention Personna Stainless Steel Razor Blades. Personna is the blade for people who can't shave after every meal. It shaves you closely, cleanly, and more frequently than any other stainless steel blade on the market. The makers of Personna have publicly declared—and do here repeat—that if Personna Blades don't give you more luxury shaves than any other stainless steel blade, they will buy you whatever blade you think is better. Could anything be more fair? I, for one, think not.)
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But I digress. We were speaking of Planck's Constant, which is not, as many think, difficult to understand. It simply states that matter sometimes behaves like waves, and waves sometimes behave like matter. To give you a homely illustration, pick up your pencil and wave it. Your pencil, you will surely agree, is matter—yet look at the little rascal wave! Or take flags, Ann-Margret.
mings. Of All-Mariea Planck's Constant, uncomplicated as it is, nevertheless provided science with the key that unlocked the atom, made space travel possible, and conquered denture slippage. Honors were heaped upon Mr. Planck (or The City of Brotherly Love, as he is familiarly known as). He was awarded the Nobel Prize, the Little Brown Jug, and Disneyland. But the honor that pleased Mr. Planck most was that plankton were named after him.
But I digress. Back to Max Planck who, it must be said, showed no indication of his scientific genius as a youngerster. In fact, for the first six years of his life he did not speak at all except to pound his spoon on his bowl and shout "More gruel!" Imagine, then, the surprise of his parents when on his seventh birthday little Max suddenly cried, "Papa! Mama! Something is wrong with the Second Law of Thermodynamics!" So astonished were the elder Plancks that they rushed out and dug the Kiel Canal.
Plankton, as we know, are the floating colonies of one-celled animals on which fishes feed. Plankton, in their turn, feed upon one-half called animals called krill (named, incidentally, after Dr. Morris Krill who invented the house cat). Krill, in their turn, feed upon peanut butter sandwiches mostly-or, when they are in season, cheeseburgers.
Meanwhile Max, constructing a erude Petrie dish out of two small pieces of petrie and his gruel bowl, began to experiment with thermodynamics. By dinner time he had discovered Planck's Constant. Hungry but happy, he rushed to Heidelberg University to announce his findings. He arrived, unfortunately, during the Erich von Stroheim Sesquicentennial, and everyone was so busy dancing and duelling that young Planck could find nobody to listen to him. The festival, however, ended after two years and Planck was finally able to report his discovery.
Well sir, the rest is history. Einstein daily cried, "E equals me squared!" Edison invented Marconi. Eli Whitney invented Georgia Tech, and Michelangelo invented the ceiling. This later became known as the Humboldt Current.
© 1964 Max Shultman
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Page 9
Mitchell Plans to Switch Oelschlager to Fullback
The most significant change Coach Jack Mitchell plans in his spring football lineup is to switch Ron Oelschlager, veteran Marion slotback, to fullback.
Coach Mitchell returns only one letterman at this position, Bill Gerhards, when practice opens. And Gerhards, Leavenworth junior, saw only limited action last year when he played behind the twin threats, Ken Coleman and Armand Baughman.
THIS PAIR netted 720 yards last season, 29 per cent of KU's total ground offense. Coleman was, in fact, a three-year standby—netting 1400 yards in his career here—sixth highest in KU history.
With the two veterans available, Gerhards, a 5-8, 213-pound fireplug,
All this means the fullback position will show far less experience than any of the other three backfield posts when football begins in the Fall.
carried only nine times, netting 28 yards. Coleman and Baughman also were linebackers.
THE COACHING staff is confident Gerhards can get the job done. He opens the hole quickly, breaks tackles past the line and has shown satisfactory blocking ability. But the proven manpower is low and the experience is thin. Therefore, Mitchell has elected to conduct the fullback experiment with Oelschlager, a proven football player of Big Eight caliber.
As a sophomore, the sturdy senior-to-be broke in as asgay Layes Sayers'
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relief man at the slotback position.
Last year, he alternated with Tony Leiker as a starter in the slot with his playing weight at 195. He is, possibly the Jayhawks' best all-round back, with his abilities as a tough, fast runner; good receiver, satisfactory passer, excellent blocker and good defensively.
Ron Oelschlager
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THERE APPEARS to be little doubt that he can do the job as fullback, especially since Coach Mitchell plans more slot duty for his fullbacks next fall, instead of using a halfback to fill the bill. The big question now is how quickly Oelschlager can learn an inside line-backing job after two years on the corner.
The linebacking question has been Coach Mitchell's thorn-in-side as he prepared for spring grid practice. Oellschlager and Gerhards will be joined in the spring traffic by three sophomores, Dick Bacon, 210, Neodesha; Kent Craft, 190, Council Grove; Arden Gray, 195, Phillipsburg, and one junior squadman, Dennis Liggett, 189, King City, Missouri.
"Pilch," Mitchell said, "was a fine defensive tackle in high school." He definitely is a football player who will make a place for himself at some position.
Liggett has missed two seasons for the Jayhawks with knee injuries and will be testing the limb after an operation. So will Craft, who missed last season after sharing duty with Gerhards and Steve Renko on the '62 freshman team. Bacon was not used last year since there was little room for rookies with Coleman and Baughman available. Gray was a starter with the '63 freshmen.
Thursday, March 26.1964 University Daily Kansan
THEIR OTHER personnel switches will also draw considerable attention. The list includes Jim Pilch from fullback to tackle; Gary Dahlin, halfback to end, and Ronnie Honkins, center to right guard.
Mitchell said Dablin, who is 6-0 and weighs 190, is strong, likes contact, and should help KU's end position.
"Hopkins." Mitchell said, "has defensive ability and size, we need both on our line."
Of the 29 lettermen in camp, at least seven are scheduled for duty in spring sports. Halfback Gayle Sayers, Dave Crandall and Lloyd Buzzi have joined Bill Easton's outdoor track squad. Renko, guards Ron Marsh and Harley Catlin and tackle Jim Shanks are working out with the baseball club.
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
He topped the day's runners with 74 yards in 17 carries in the win over MU's freshmen last fall.
CLINE-
Mitchell's spring practice hopes have lately been dampened—or perhaps better, frozen—by the bad spring weather. As the schedule now reads, practice should get under way Monday.
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With the conclusion of winter sports, KU has swept into the lead for the 1963-64 Big Eight All-sports sweepstakes on 23 points.
KU Leads Sports Sweepstakes With the End of Winter Sports
PD/VP
Competing for the first time since 1931 in wrestling, the JEyhawks finished last in the league mat competition at Stillwater, but were charged with seven points instead of eight since Missouri did not compete. KU also scored fourth in
Gymnastics, which was added to the official sports list this winter. Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, and Missouri did not compete. The Jayhawks won cross-country in November for their only title to date, placed second in indoor track in a tough chase of the champion Missouri Tigers and rallied impressively through the stretch to bag third in basketball.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 26, 1964
WITH THE END OF WEDNESDAY
KANSAS MAP—Repairing and correcting an old physical map of Kansas for the Kansas Geological Survey are Mrs. J. Thomason, Lawrence senior, and Larry Crady, Lawrence freshman. The large physical map was made by R.C.Moore, professor of geology, more than ten years ago. The physical map usually stands on the landing between first and second floors of Lindley Hall. (Photo by Tom Moore.)
Rain, Snow, Dandelions Added to Greek Woes
KU Greeks are having other problems during Greek Week besides pickets. One is the weather, the other a lack of "dandelions" for the Dandelion War.
Because of the unpredictable spring weather this year, the Greeks are taking no chances. Most of Saturday's events are going to be held in Allen Field House, Jim Johnston, Independence, Mo., junior and co-chairman of the Greek Week committee, has announced.
THE SPORTS events Saturday, which include a pancake hurdle race, a walking race, a 440-yard relay, an 880-yard relay, and a tug-of-war, will be held in the field house. It was planned to have them in Memorial Stadium. The Greek Week picnic will also be held in the field house.
Johnston said the chariot races will be held on Naismith Dr., in front of the fieldhouse, if the weather permits.
The Greeks' war on dandelions will have to wait until April 25, Kay Walker, Park Ridge, Ill., junior and co-chairman of the service project committee, said.
"We took a quick survey around campus before the snow and found two dandelions," she said.
The Greeks had planned to revive the dandelion project which was popular in the 1940's. On the first Dandelion Day in 1941, seventy-three student-faculty teams dug up more than 93,000 pounds of dandelions.
**GREEK WEEK activities were scheduled to get under way at 6 p.m. tonight with the Greek Week banquet in the Kansas Union ballroom. The main speaker is Jay Barrington, station manager of WDAF radio in Kansas City. The Greek Week queen and her two attendants will be announced at the
banquet, and scholarship trophies presented to fraternities and sororities.
Greek Week sing will be at 8 p.m. Friday in Hoch Auditorium. Nine groups have been selected from a field of sixteen in the preliminaries for the concert.
Chosen to compete in the small men's ensemble were Delta Tau Delta, Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Nu, Alpha Kappa Lambda and Tau Kappa Epsilon.
For the small women's ensemble, Alpha Phi, Delta Delta Delta, Alpha Chi Omega and Alpha Omicron Pi were selected.
DELTA DELTA Delta and Delta Tau Delta are the defending winners in their categories.
Preliminaries were not necessary for large women's or large men's divisions because the number of entries received correspond to the number of positions available.
Sigma Kappa, Delta Gamma and Chi Omega are entered in the large women's division. Gamma Phi Beta won this division last year.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Beta Theta Pi, Delta Upsilon and Lambda Chi Alpha are entered in the large men's division. Sigma Alpha Epsilon won this competition last year.
Peter Nero will be featured in the spring concert at 8 p.m. Saturday in Hoch auditorium. He is being sponsored by Student Union Activities in conjunction with Greek Week.
Official Bulletin
Foreign Students who have been invited to attend the Harry S. Truman Harry S. Carson City should return the reservation card to 228 Strong right away.
TODAY
Der deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 26. März, um 4 Uhr im Studentenhaus (Sunflower Room). Herr Prof. Klaus Kringshausmüll, st., spat. am Mauer seine Rede sinds Thomas Mann." Alle sind herzlich eingeladen.
Public Lecture, 4 p.m., Sunflower Room, Kansas Uom. Recollection of Thomas Mann—Klaus Pringsheim Sr.
Latter-Day Saints Institute of Reli-
kship, Pan American Room.
Kansas Union.
Poetry Hour, 4:30 p.m. Music Room,
signed by the author own poem.
Coffee or as usual.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., 8:30 p.m., St. Stephen's Church, Balaam, Sacramento, California; Pilgrimage and Solomon adoration of the Holy Eucharist begins at 9:30 p.m. St. Simon the Chapel for one-hour periods
Kappa Phi 7 pm., First Methodist Church. Meal in the Upper Room.
Christian Science Organization, 736-
pam., Danforth Chapel. Wei-
eel.
Continuing Philosophy Lecture, 7:30
World Order I: Cultural and Political
-Dr. Errol E. Harris
Dr. Erlin B. Earley, *Earley* Dad, Mama's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feeling So Sad." 8:15 p.m., Experimental Theater, Murphy."
Model UN Blocs Select Officers
After six months of planning by the KU-Y Model United Nations Steering Committee, delegates met last night to begin their final plans.
Approximately 350 delegates attended the assembly, Tom Moore, executive secretary of the KU-Y, said.
The Big 8 Room was filled and people were standing in the doorway to hear Clifford Ketzel, associate professor of political science, and William F. Unsoseo, past deputy director of the Peace Corps in Nepal.
After a thirty minute general assembly meetings, the eight blocs went into separate meetings to elect officers and determine questions that they wish to have brought up in the Model UN.
Janet Chartier, Salina sophmore representing Finland, was elected chairman of the Non-Aligned European bloc.
John Stuckey, Pittsburgh senior representing Brazil, was elected chairman of Latin American bloc.
Air Force Officers Selection Team. 1:30-12. Aids and Awards Office; 10-3:30 p.m., Hawk's Nest, Kansas Union. Will interview OTS applicants.
Gail Weber, McCune junior representing India, was elected chairman of the Non-Aligned Asian bloc.
TOMORROW
Adoration of the Cross and Good Friday
Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Don Blevis, Wichita junior representing Greece, was elected chairman of the Western bloc.
Mathematics Colloquium, 4:30 p.m., 103 Strong Hall. "Dedekind Completion of C(X)"—Prof. Donald G. Johnson, Pennsylvania State U.
Mont O'Leary, Baxter Springs senior representing Morocco, was elected chairman of the Arab bloc.
Dave Hutchins, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore representing the Soviet Union, was elected chairman of the Sino-Soviet bloc.
SUA Film, 7 p.m., 9:30 p.m., Fraser Theater, "Hatari."
E. C. Franklin Lecture, 8 p.m., 303 Bailey, "N.M.R. Studies of Fast Reactions"-Dr. H. S. Gutowsky, U. of Illinois.
SUA Current Events Forum, 4:30 p.m.
Music Room, Kansas Union.
Jerry Hoskins, Bonner Springs freshman representing Pakistan, was elected chairman of the Western-Allied Asian nations.
"Oh, Dad. Poor Dad. Mama's Hung Yao." "Sad. Evil. Experimental Theater. 8:15 a.m. Experimental Theater. Jewish Community Center. Services 7:30 p.m., 917 Highland Dr. Refreshments.
Tim Miller, Wichita sophomore representing Niger, was elected chairman of the African bloc.
Episcalic Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Dantforth.
"The level of enthusiasm and knowledge of the delegates is extremely high this year. This is going to be a most active Model UN." Dick Epps, Topeka senior and chairman of the Model UN steering committee, said.
Three Accept Foundation Bid
A Kansas publisher, a nationally known historian, and a Pulitzer prize winning Washington correspondent have accepted invitations to become trustees of the William Allen White Foundation.
David H. Clymer, general manager of The El Dargo Times
They are:
Walter Johnson, professor of history at the University of Chicago and author of the book "William Allen White's America."
Clark R. Mollenhoff, Washington correspondent for the Cowles Publications, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting.
'Oh Dad, Poor Dad' to Open
"Oh, Dad Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You In The Closet and I'm Feelin' So Sad" will be presented at 8:15 tonight in the Experimental Theatre in Murphy hall.
The play, written by Arthur L Kopit, "... is very funny in an unusual way," Perry Schwarz, Lawrence graduate student and director of the play, said.
THE PLAYWRIGHT, Schwarz explained, "... takes a serious situation and makes it funny."
"Its (the play) comedy is a comedy of a more grotesque standard," he said.
Principal character in the play is the mother, Madame Rosepettle, Schwarz said, who completely dominates people, especially her son, Jonathan.
"HE (THE SON) is not allowed to do anything . . . that the mother has not created for him," Schwarz explained. Madame Rosepettle has shut off Jonathan from the world in the assurance that he is content with the situation.
Part of Madame Rosepettle's view
of the world is expressed when she says: "Life . . . is never funny. It's grim! It's there every morning breathing in your face the moment you open your red baggy eyes."
However, contrary to his mother's opinion, Jonathan is not completely content. Schwarz said that Jonathan tries to break away from his mother but is unsuccessful because his mother has so much control over him.
TWO OTHER characters also enter the play—Rosalie, who tries to compete with Madame Rosepette for Jonathan's affections, and Commodore Roseabove who attempts to marry Madame Rosepette. Rosalie loses her battle for Jonathan. Commodore Roseabove receives a similar fate when Madame Rosepette destroys him as a man, Schwarz said.
"The play is full of theatrical gimmicks." Schwarz commented. For example, the script calls for a piranha fish that talks and Venus flytraps that come to life.
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Page 11
Thursday, March 26. 1964 University Daily Kansan
669
NELSON BOWMAN
Peace Corps Called Germ of Great Idea
John F. Kennedy recognized the "germ of a great idea" in the Peace Corps, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe told guests at the Peace Corps Recognition banquet last night.
UNSOELD AND WESCOE—William Unsoeld, member of the U.S. team that reached the summit of Mount Everest in May 1963, chats with Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe following the Peace Corps Recognition Banquet last night. Unsoeld, a Washington representative from the Peace Corps, spoke to the Peace Corps Committee at the banquet. He has been participating in the KU Peace Corps Week as a recruiter, and lecturer. Unsoeld returned in Oct. 1963 from Nepal, where he was a member of the Peace Corps staff. (Photo by Charles Corcoran.)
The banquet was the highlight of KU Peace Corps week which ends today, following intensive recruiting by Washington representatives, lectures in class by the representatives and returned volunteers, and numerous sessions of Peace Corps testing.
By Bobbie Bartelt
"Little has proved more valuable to the people of the United States and to the cause of the world than the Peace Corps," Chancellor Wescoe said.
FOLLOWING CHANCELLOR Wescoe, Bob Swan, Topeka senior, and Peace Corps advisor, reminisced about the activities of the KU Peace Corps Committee since its founding two years ago.
Swan highlighted the KU Costa Rica project, and cited the national survey of campus interest in the Peace Corps.
"During the 1961-62 semester, we had one meeting and attracted two people," Swan said.
Also making some brief comments was William Unsoeld, Peace Corps representative from Washington, D.C., who scaled Mount Everest in May. 1963.
"I HADN'T EVEN heard of the KU Peace Corps Committee before I came to the campus," Unsoeld said. "Therefore you can be sure that I wasn't briefed on any comments I will make.
"The committee here at KU seems to have the far-sighted, visionary approach that the Peace Corps needs," Unsoeld said.
A coffee hour followed the banquet, when both Unsoeld and Janet Hanneman, a Peace Corps volunteer who recently returned from Pakistan, answered informal questions.
MISS HANNEMAN wore the Pakistani punjabi dress that has made her stand out among the representatives in the Peace Corps information booth in the Kansas Union lobby this week.
Miss Hanneman was featured in the new Peace Corps film, "Mission in Discovery," shown at the general meeting yesterday. The film showed Miss Hanneman, and other Peace Corps volunteers as they worked and lived in various countries, doing everything from teaching to planting crops.
INFORMAL QUESTIONS, answered by Miss Hanneman and Don Smith, a volunteer who recently returned from the Philippines, brought out interesting anecdotes from the Peace Corps workers.
Countries featured in the film were Pakistan, where Miss Hanneman served as a psychiatric nurse, Peru, Venezuela, and Turkey.
"Teaching sanitation presented a major problem in the Philippines," Smith said. "It wasn't teaching them how to build the facilities that was hard, it was persuading them the necessity of using them to prevent disease."
Smith taught English at the sixth grade level in the Philippines. He was graduated with a degree in political science, and was not instructed in teaching until he took the Peace Corps training program.
WHEN QUESTIONED about the amount of time that a volunteer spends on his job, Smith replied:
"You're on the job whether you are actually teaching or whether you are answering questions on your back porch. It's all a part of the job."
Digging Thieves Stealing Pages Of Early Italy
3117024865190
ROME—(UPI)—The soil of Italy, fabulously rich in the ruins of dead civilizations, is being plundered to the tune of more than a million dollars a day, according to a leading archeologist.
Prof. Dino Adamesteanu, who is making a study of the subject for the Superintendency of Fine Arts, says a growing army of clandestine diggers operate in violation of the law to find a ready market for antiquities both within the country and abroad.
Not only that, he says, they are making it impossible for bona fide archeologists to study in any comprehensive way many of the ancient cultures that once flourished in Italy.
THE THEFT OF archeological treasures from the ground has been going on for years, but only recently has it developed on a large scale. archeologists say.
They attribute this to the fact that ownership of ancient relicles has become "fashionable" just in the past three or four years.
They aren't quite sure how to account for this phenomenon. It may have something to do with the increasing affluence of Europeans and with an improvement in cultural standards. It has also been suggested that mankind, as it leaps into the uncertainties of the space age, feels a need to get a more secure grip on its own past.
Italian authorities say the center of the international archeological market is in Switzerland, where powerful business organizations maintain contacts with clandestine diggers all over Europe, but particularly in Italy.
Most of them, of course, are smalltime operators, but there is no calculating how much of the archeological treasure they plunder in a year, say the archeologists.
IT ISNT HARD to find the illegal diggers. Anyone visiting almost any archeological site in Italy that is outside a major city can see them.
Removing "hot" merchandise of this sort from Italy is no problem, since customs inspectors rarely look into suitcases of travelers. Once a treasure is gone, there is no international law which permits its recovery.
Archeologists say one of the major centers of illicit activity in recent years has been the island of Sicily.
For a long time it was believed the ancient Greek colonies along Sicily's southern coast were the only major sources of archeological material on the island.
Easter Customs are Colorful
Easter is this Sunday and all over the land children are looking forward to dyeing eggs and a visit from the Easter bunny.
No one knows just how the practice of coloring eggs first began, but the pagan Norsemen dyed them red in honor of Thor and yellow for Eostre (who lent her name to Easter).
The early Christians also favored red because to them it signified the blood of Christ. Medieval Englishmen enjoyed red, blue and violet dyes.
The Persians and the Russians created elaborate works of art using blown eggshells intact. The Russians finally began to make egg-shaped jewels of precious metals, enamels and gems. The jewels usually contained a tiny, exquisite icon.
In China, little egg-shaped baubles were intricately nested together. When they were opened a tiny carved chick was revealed in the center.
There are some strange superstitions about eggshells. Ancient Dalmatians were careful to throw eggshells as far from the house as possible—to create a boundary line which snakes could not cross.
The Germans always burned them because they believed that witches, who ordinarily could not cross water, were able to sail over in eggshell boats.
Birthdays
ST. LOUIS —(UPI) — William J. McGoagan, David Lipman and Robert Posen, sports writers on the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, celebrate birthdays on the same day—February 13.
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 26, 1964
Around the Campus
Professor to Present Thesis
Walter M. Kollmorgen, university distinguished professor of geography, will present a thesis next week at the annual convention of the Association of American Geographers.
Prof. Kollmorgen, who will be a visiting lecturer at the University of Colorado this summer, will present his thesis on "The Grazing of Transient Cattle in the Blue-Stem Pasture Areas of Kansas-Oklahoma."
Also attending the convention Sunday through Thursday in Syracuse, N.Y., will be John P. Augelli, George Jenks, A. W. Kuchler and Thomas R. Smith, professors of geography, and Robert E. Nunley, associate professor of geography.
Harvard Professor Here
I. Bernard Cohen, a professor at Harvard University, will give a lecture Monday, with sponsorship by the committee on the history and philosophy of science.
He will speak on "Newton, Kepler and Galileo" at 3:30 p.m. in 426 Lindley Hall.
Grant Aids Graduates
A new program supporting eight graduate traineeships in engineering at KU has been inaugurated by a $39,344 grant from the National Science Foundation.
The trainees will receive $2,200, $2,400 or $2,600, depending upon the level of graduate study. In addition, University fees will be paid, and dependent allowances of $500 for a wife and each child will be provided.
Two awards will be in electrical engineering, two in engineering mechanics, one in sanitary engineering, and three in fields to be determined by the University.
This is the first year the NSF program will go into effect, William J. Argersinger Jr., associate dean of faculties for research, said, who will direct the program. Dean Argersinger said it is expected the program will be expanded next year to include a larger number of grants, not necessarily restricted to the engineering sciences.
Shakespeare Scholar Speaks
Giles E. Dawson, curator of books and manuscripts at the Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington, D.C., will give the 11th annual KU library lecture on books and bibliography.
Dawson will speak on "Four Centuries of Shakespeare Publication" at 3:30 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Dawson is an Elizabethan scholar and an expert in Elizabethan handwriting. He has written articles and reviews dealing with the Elizabethan stage, and since 1950 he has been associate editor of the Shakespeare Quarterly.
He has been associated with the Folger Shakespeare Library since 1932, and since 1935 he has lectured in English in the graduate school of the Catholic University of America.
Dawson is now studying English town records for information about wandering players. The project has uncovered much information about the provincial theater in Elizabethn England.
The lecture is one of many events in the year-long celebration of the quadricentenary of Shakespeare's birth.
Casting Foundry Displayed
The first prototype design for a bronze-casting foundry by Stuart Barger, Harrisonville, Mo., graduate student, will be displayed and discussed during the Third National Sculpture Casting Conference here today, tomorrow and Saturday.
Barger, the only student participant in the conference, said that previous foundries had been rather "makeshift." His design represents the "ideal" bronze-casting foundry.
Barger's plans will be on display in the Kansas Union during the conference.
Lecture Goes Into Record
The text of the William Allen White memorial lecture delivered last month at KU has been inserted in the Congressional Record.
The address dealing with the investigative responsibilities of the press was given at KU February 10 by Clark Mollenhoff, Washington correspondent for the Cowles Publications. It was printed in the Record for March 3 at the request of Senator Wayne Morse of Oregon.
Mollenhoff, in the address, was critical of the Washington press corps for failing to dig for the real stories behind the official statements.
NATO Future Worries Europe
GENEVA—(UPI)—Allied leaders this side of the Atlantic are increasingly worried over the future of NATO, the West's principal defense alignment against Russia.
Their immediate fears have been triggered by the serious clash between Greece and Turkey over their conflicting interests in Cyprus.
Both are members of NATO and constitute the alliance's chief pivot on NATO's sensitive southern flank in Europe which guards the strategic Mediterranean.
GREEK-TURKISH tension is likely to linger, even if the immediate danger of a head-on clash over Cyrusus is averted.
But this is only one of the troubling aspects which cast a shadow over the NATO alliance.
Already NATO has been weakened by French President Charles de Gaulle's go-it-alone tactics that have reduced France to a member in name only of the Western defense alliance.
More recently De Gaulle has been reported to be seeking a sweeping reorganization of NATO which would reduce American leadership and alter the Atlantic character of the alignment.
West Germany, too, is dissatisfied with the way NATO is run. She feels she should be given a bigger say and representation in NATO's highest strategy councils, equal to that of the United States, Britain and France.
BUT THIS IS not all
Britain, in turn, is chary of keeping 55,000 troops in West Germany under NATO arrangements while scraping the barrel of her strategic reserve at home to meet emergency requirements, such as the recent flare-up in Cyprus.
Britain also is cool to American suggestions that, along with other European nations, she should make a larger contribution to NATO's conventional forces. Already she resents having to put up $225 million a year for the upkeep of her forces in Germany for which she has to beg for German relief support.
The smaller NATO nations also how decreasing enthusiasm for
keeping up their contributions to NATO. They often are under pressure from opposition parties at home which cite lessened international tension as a reason for cutting the arms bill.
These developments tend to have an increasingly paralyzed effect on both immediate and long term defense planning, and European diplomats frankly fear the handicaps might get worse.
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Thursday, March 26,1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 13
World Spotlight
6
1045
Viet Nam Costing $1.3 Billion
WASHINGTON — (UPI)— The war in Viet Nam has cost the United States an estimated $1.3 billion, Congressional sources said today.
They said Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara cited the sum at a closed meeting of the House Foreign Affairs Committee yesterday.
McNamara also denied charges by an ex-Air Force sergeant that the morale of U.S. military advisers in Viet Nam is very low.
The defense secretary and Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said they felt just the opposite—that it was very high.
The charge had been made by Alvin Morrison of Ferndale, Mich. in talks with Rep. William S. Broomfield (R-Mich.). Morrison recently returned from Viet Nam to be honorably discharged from the Air Force.
Broomfield said Morrison also had questioned whether the real number of American dead had been reported and claimed that the Vietnamese were improperly using some U.S. military equipment.
The Congressman said McNamara promised a detailed investigation of all of Morrison's allegations and a complete report on them.
Ship Snaps in Sea
The USS Raleigh, a Navy amphibious landing dock with a doctor aboard, radioed the Coast Guard that one man was dead. Earlier reports said that several were injured in the explosion and subsequent breakup of the 523-foot vessel.
NORFOLK, Va.—(UPI)—An explosion ripped the tanker San Jacinto off the Virginia coast early today. The vessel broke in two four hours later in rolling seas and Navy helicopters attempted to pluck survivors off the ship's drifting stern.
The merchant ship Mobil Pegasus, first to reach the scene 40 miles east of Chincoteague on Virginia's eastern shore, radicaled that it picked up "several survivors" from a lifeboat. It was one of these men who was reported dead, the Coast Guard said.
Mail Robbers Charged
AYELSBURY, England—(UPI)—A jury today convicted 11 persons in the $7.3 million "great mail train robbery," biggest theft of all time.
The jury took 67 hours to reach its verdict, the longest deliberation in British legal history.
Seven of the defendants were convicted of actually taking part in the armed robbery of the Royal Mail train last Aug. 8. Others were found guilty of conspiracy and receiving stolen property.
Despite the convictions, the case was far from closed. Some ring-leaders of the robbery gang are still at large and most of the loot still is missing.
Police Want Charges
TOKYO—(UPI)—Police recommended today that felonious assault charges be filed against the 19-year-old youth who plunged a knife into the leg of U.S. Ambassador Edwin O. Reischauer.
Investigating police asked the public prosecutor's office to charge Kowa Shioya with inflicting injuries on another person and illegal entry into the American Embassy. Shioya has admitted attacking Reischauer as he walked out of the embassy office Tuesday.
The charges carry a maximum sentence of 12 years in prison, but under Japanese law imprisonment probably would not exceed three years.
Tokyo metropolitan police could have sent Shiya to a juvenile court. They said he has spent time in a mental institution.
Italian Work to Travel
VATICAN CITY—(UPI)—The Vatican announced today that Michelangelo's Pieta is going to the New York World's Fair despite a squabble between U.S. and Italian packing experts.
Both the technical office of St. Peter's Basilica and Edward M. Kinney, head of the Vatican Pavilion Transport Committee for the World's Fair, admitted that differences had cropped up.
"Any minor difference of opinion which may have existed—and believe me, they have been minuscule—between the Vatican Pavilion Committee and the authorities in the Vatican with whom we have been in contact have long since been settled," he said.
Kinney, who also is director of purchasing and shipping of Catholic Relief Services (NCWC), hastened to describe them as minuscule."
De Gaulle Mav Go to Moscow
PARIS—(UPI)—President Charles de Gaulle, whose relations with Washington have been strained, today was reported in line for another invitation from Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev to visit Moscow.
A presidential emissary, former Premier Edgar Faure, was leaving today for a two-week visit to Russia. His trip was interpreted in diplomatic circles as a first step toward warmer French relations with the Kremlin.
While Faure described his trip as private, it was a similar visit by him to Communist China last fall that led to De Gaulle's recognition of the Peking regime. Since then De Gaulle has pushed a campaign to restore France's influence in Southeast Asia and Latin America.
Several Books By KU Authors Placed in White House Library
Books by at least 10 persons connected with the University of Kansas are being placed in the White House Library.
Among the 1,780 titles chosen by the committee of leading United States scholars, librarians and publishers are 16 books by present or former faculty members and by former students.
The list was entered into the Congressional Record last week.
Present faculty members whose works were chosen for the reference library are:
Clifford Stephen Griffin, associate professor of history, "Their Brothers' Keepers." 1800-1855. Rutgers, 1960.
John Isc, professor emeritus of economics, "Our National Park Policy," Johns Hopkins Press. 161.
James Claude Malin, professor emeritus of history, "The Grassland of North America," Lawrence, Kas. 1947.
Carl Lotus Becker, former member of the history faculty. "Everyman His Own Historian," F. S. Crofts, 1935, and "The Declaration of Independence," Knopf, 1942.
Former Faculty members having books selected are:
Herbert Feis, members of the economics faculty from 1922-25, "The Road to Pearl Harbor." Princeton, 1950; "Churchill, Roosevelt, Stalin," Princeton, 1857; "Between War and Peace; the Potsdam Conference," Princeton, 1950, and "Japan Subdued," Princeton, 1961.
Robert Taft, member of the chemistry faculty from 1922 until his death in 1955. "Photography and the American Scene," Maacmillan, 1938, and "Artists and Illustrators of the Old West," 1850-1900. Scribner, 1953.
Former students whose books were chosen are:
Carl Leslie Cannon (1912), "American Book Collectors and Collecting from Colonial Times to the Present." Wilson, 1941.
Lloyd A. Metzler (1935), "Income, Employment and Public Policy." Essays by Lloyd A. Metzler and others, W. W. Norton, 1948.
Edward Sagendorph Mason (1919). "The Corporation in Modern Society" (ed.), Harvard, 1959, and "Economic Concentration and the Monopoly Problem," Harvard, 1957.
William Allen White, Emporia editor and KU alumnus, "A Puritan in Babylon," Macmillan, 1938. Another book "The Great Crusade."
Another book. "The Great Crusade
and After, 1914-28," is by Preston William Slosson, son of Edwin Emery Slosson, KU graduate of 1990.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 26, 1964
Advice Given Against Panicking At Forms of Beatlemania in Youth
By Harry Ferguson
WASHINGTON —(UPI) One mistake parents of teen-agers make is that they are inclined to worry about the wrong things. The Beatles induce fever among the youthful female of the species, but the patients always recover without any significant residual trauma.
Psychologists advise parents not to panic when Beatlemania sets in, but to take a philosophical attitude and console themselves by recalling the inscription on one of the mightiest temples of antiquity: "This, too, shall pass away."
Some form of Beatlemania has been with us for 40 years. In the twenties a young man named Rudy Vallie sent the girls into swoons by assuring them in a nasal croon that "my time is your time." He also exhorted them to raise the stein to dear old Maine and shout till the rafters ring. More recently adults have endured Elvis Presley although there is evidence that the king is dying and the Beatles are preparing a coup d'etat.
Vallee, Presley and the Beatles have two things in common—a gimmick and the lack of overwhelming talent. Vallee's gimmick was to sing through a megaphone to make certain that his none-too-robust voice penetrated to the far corners of the room.
Presley's vocal equipment will never make him a candidate for the Metropolitan Opera and his gimmick is the exotic or if you prefer, erotic -movements he makes while singing. If you will pardon a personal opinion, the sounds produced by the Beatles remind this correspondent of the wailing of cats on the rooftops of their native Liverpool, but their boycott against barber shops seems to make them something special.
There may be more than one reason for the popularity of the Beatles, but psychologists say the main one is the status that comes from belonging to a group. Teen-agers have a compulsion to conform and to organize their conformity. In boys it takes the form of dressing alike and driving the particular type of automobile that happens to be popular at the moment. In girls it
takes the form of becoming Beatlemaniacs and even if a girl really doesn't care about the music she is hearing, she is never going to admit it.
The urge to form groups—usually clubs of some sort of secret nature—occurs in children even before they become teen-agers. Being rejected by a club can become, in the full sense of the phrase, an adolescent tragedy. It fairly frequently occurs that boys and girls leave college because they were not invited to join a fraternity or sorority.
join a trade union
A Purdue University national poll of teen-agers documents the urge toward conformity. It found:
- Teen-agers "try very hard" to do everything that will please their friends.
- They feel "greatly upset" if a certain group does not approve of them.
- There is nothing worse than "being considered an odd ball" by other people.
Some psychologists advise parents to do more than merely endure such phenomenon as Beatlemania. They should encourage it by, for instance, furnishing money to buy a phonograph record or two. The worst thing you can do is downgrade the Beatles publicly.
Robert Andrews of the UPI Washington Bureau stirred the admiration of his colleagues recently when he wrote a dispatch beginning: "The Beatles, four reasons why there may not always be an England, arrived in Washington today." This was reported to three teen-age girls, two of whom said Andrews was a square. The other one said he was a square slob.
On a comparative basis, the United States looks worse than any other nation when the statistics on juvenile delinquency are compared. That is because our experts work in a wider age range and are more frank in reporting their findings.
The U.S. Children's Bureau collects statistics from age 10 through age 17. Russia claims a low juvenile delinquency rate but the fact is the Soviet experts work in only the ranges of ages 14 to 16 and do not arrest a youth unless he has committed a felony that also applies to adults.
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One of the more successful bus packer-drivers had this answer yesterday: "Just tell them to push, make two rows in the aisles, hold on to the hand rails, and move to the rear. There is plenty of room for more students."
There are about 32.6 million teenagers in America. In 1962 the number arrested was 1.1 million. So far we have dealt almost entirely on the gloomy side of American youth and what we need to keep the picture in perspective is to remember there are 31.5 million teenagers who are law-abiding and leading normal lives.
The unexpected March snow has caused the problem of how to pack 80 to 100 students into a 36-passenger, green and white, bus.
They seem, in fact, to be fired in many cases by idealism and a sense of responsibility toward their families and the world. The Peace Corps is constantly surprised by the number of young people who volunteer for a service that holds small promise of material reward.
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Page 15
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Record player stands, $11.95. Deluxe
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Terry cloth seat covers. We fit all sizes including VW, Heavy goz, $6.88. Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929-37 3-27
Academy Award Songs. 33 LP record. on RCA Victor Dynagrove recording. $3.98 value for 99c. $1.50 in stereo. At Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. 3-27
Set of four 509x15' recaps, $35 takes all
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1960 Matchless 500 cc twin. Excellent
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Like new 1961 Ford Galaxie 4-door sedan. Full power equipment, air-conditioning, heater, radio. New snow tires and car record player. Buy or trade with 1963 or 1964 car of any make. Call VI 2-1051 or see at 1244 Ohio. 3-26
40
House, four years old, excellent condition. Three bedrooms, link fence, near school and swimming pool. $700 assumes loan. $78 a month. Ops. New appliances and furniture. 1955 Miller Drive. VI 3-6994. tt
Tire prices slashed! Ray Stonebake's Discount Tire Center at 929 Mass. 36 monylon tubeless tires. Four 650 x 13' s40, Four 750 x 14' s43, $44. Four 670 x 15' s44, Four 800 x 14' s50, Plus tax, exchange. Installed! 4 whitewalls, $8 extra. 3-26
New 16" lightweight portable TV. $99.
1 year guarantee on parts! Rent or buy.
$12 per month. Ray Stoneback's, 3-28
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SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS. Chester Slicks, etc., for sale at great savings after 6 p.m. weekdays; Saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut
Typewriters, new and used portables,
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printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as Notes on Civilization delivery, $4.50 completely civilized notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, timecographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
jerman Shepherd puns, AKC registered
helsen, Phone KL 2-2559. Lloyd
hessen, Phone KL 2-2559. 3-27
new shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
meam - $85 Lawrence Outdoor.
Mass 850
FOR RENT
Furnished apartment, 3 rooms and bath.
Roomy and attractive. Private. Between KU and downtown. $60 plus electricity per month. Call VI 3-3913. 4-1
One bedroom house, completely fut-
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2:37.
Single or double room. Furnished. cook-
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-2491 or see at 1244 La.
Furnished apartment for single man.
1-3209 p. 5-30 p. 1633 Vermont. 3-26
Married, grad students, faculty, 2 bedroom. $75. Only 10 left for June. Reserve now. Call for brochure, VI 3-2116. Santee Apartments, 1123 Indiana. tf
For one or two graduate age men, three room nicely furnished apt., private bedroom. Send proof of paid ideal study conditions. Best of neighbors For appointment phone VI 3-8543. tt
Cressent Heights two bedroom apart-
ment. Phone VT 2-3711.
or graduate men or older undergraduates—extra nice furnished bachelor apartment Close to campus, ideal study conditions, best of neighbors. Reasonably priced, utilities paid. For appointment call VI 3-854- 4. tt
United Christian Youth Movement sponsors
EASTER SUNRISE SERVICE
5:45 a.m.
On the west side of Potter Lake
Singles Ping-Pong Tournament
in both Men's and Women's divisions Union: Big 8 Room 6:00 Mon., March 30
REGISTER at JAYBOWL
by
SUNDAY-MARCH29
TYPING
Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (piecage type). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0558. ff
Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work standards. Phone VI 3-8378; Ms. Charl Pattil.
Experienced secretary would like typing in her home. Reasonable rates.Call VI 21188. tf
Accurate expert typist would like typing in her home. Term papers and theses. Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. tf
Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason- sentations and theses, phone VI 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson.
Experienced Typlist-Dissertations, Theses, Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 Rhode Island, Island I. 3-7485. tt
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon printer. 8 p.m. VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley. 408 West 13th. **tf**
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2047 Yale, VI 2-1648
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
Legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577
legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, books. Electric Typewriter. Mrs McEldowney. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568
Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five.
MILIKENS B. SOS—always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
We also do tape transcriptions. Office p.m. to m.p. 1021-ppm1.55
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University Daily Kansan
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613 Vt. VI 3-4141
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VI 3-6333
MISCELLANEOUS
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Thursday, March 26, 1964
24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled
YELLOW CAB CO.
Whenever accidentally picked up the staff notebook at Watkins Hospital, please return the book. No questions asked.
3-27
Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols carbon ribbon if-desired. Prompt, efficient service. Call Ms. Suzanne VI2-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-
HELP WANTED
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Have a party in the Big Red School
Housetable and plant and plant
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616 W. 9th
Hot doughnuts—sandwich
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Buy, sell or trade rare American an
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College man needed. We need a college man for a summer sales job which is not door-to-door. Salary is $150 per hour plus expense. How much the required travel is involved. Write: Forrest Tennant, 3358 Skylane Drive, Shawnee Mission, Kansas. 3-31
Ride to vicinity of Portland, Oregon or in that general direction. Will share driving and expenses. Leave April 3 or 4. Call VI 3-5798 for Jim. 3-27
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
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1218 Conn. VI 3-2921
Student secretary. Must be enrolled in at least one hour. 30 hour a week job. Exceptional wages. Starting April 20 through the end of June. Call UN 4-395-3178.
service. Mail. or visit:
VI 2-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI 3-
3057.
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
★ TUNE-UPS
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
Girl to play electric organ part-time
Call VI 3-4743.
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Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
Automotive Service
Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel
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7 a.m.-11 p.m.
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1819 W. 23rd
FRATERNITY
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A complete line, including.
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809 Mass.
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The Catecumbs nite club and Pizza Den
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For information call VI 3-9703 Friday or
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BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY. Peppermint Park Kiddyland operation for sale. 2203 rooms through October by running this during the summer. VI 2-0155 after 5 p.m. 4-3
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 26, 1964
P
N
PETER NERO is here
Saturday, March 28 for GREEK WEEK
Tickets $1.25, $1.00 and $.75 On Sale Now at
- the information booth
- the ticket counter of the Union
- Bell's Music Company 925 Mass.
Thursday
6:00 — Union Greek Week dinner
Friday
8:00 – HOCH GREEK WEEK SING (Admission Free)
GREEK WEEK
Saturday
1:30 — Campanil Torch lighting
1:45 — Campanil Chariot race
2:00 — Stadium Pancake race
3:00 — Stadium Relays start
4:15 — Potter's Tug-of-war
4:35 — Potter's Picnic
Sunday
Easter observance
MARCH 23 — 28
• the ticket counter of the
• Bell's Music Company
925 Mass.
GREEK
Thursday
6:00 — Union
Greek Week
dinner
Friday
8:00 – HOCH
GREEK WEEK
SING
(Admission Free)
G
G
R
E
W
E
E
E
K
K
Daily Hansan
kansas union BOOKSTORE
PAPERBACK EDITION
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1964
NUMBER
Bookstore Opens in Watson
PAPERBACKS, ANYONE? - The paperback book craze has hit Watson Library. With the cooperation of the Kansas Union Book Store, a small paperback bookstore will be opened in
Watson Library at 1:30 p.m. Thursday, March 26. The 1,500 volumes will supplement student textbooks, and the paperbacks already are available in the Kansas Union Book Store.
By Leta Cathcart
Paperback books, once reserved for lurid mass consumption, have now invaded Watson Library in the form of scholarly books on everything from physics to philosophy.
James Stoner, manager of the Union Book Store, said the opening of the auxiliary bookstore in Watson will be at 1:30 p.m. Thursday, March 26.
The bookstore in the library, as yet without a name, is scheduled to be open Sunday through Friday. 1:30 to 5 p.m., and from 6:30 to 10 p.m. Stoner said these hours are subject to change as convenient times for the students can be determined.
TWO-THIRDS OF THE BOOKS stocked in the library bookstore will not be available in the Union Book Store, Stoner said. The paperback books in the library store are all university press editions. They include Minnesota Press, Cambridge, Chicago and Notre Dame Press editions.
The new store will house 1.500 volumes which deal with, among other things, business, history, literature, religion, mathematics and psychology.
Stoner said the new bookstore will help reduce the pressure on the library. He said many students request paperbacks at Watson, but that the library has not stocked them up to now.
THE BOOKSTORE IN WATSON is intended to supplement the textbooks and library books already available. The College Outline Series, books on almost any conceivable academic subject, also will be sold in the new bookstore.
A few racks of school supplies will be available—pencils, paper, flash cards and foreign language verb wheels. However, the bulk of the space in the new bookstore will be devoted to paperback books.
A feature of the new bookstore is the series of pamphlets of literary criticism of American authors, published by the University of Minnesota Press.
STONER SAID THE UNION bookstore was asked to expand its services to Watson Library so
that some of the pressure would be taken off the present library facilities.
The new store is located in the new part of the undergraduate level of the library, just beyond the periodicals room.
This is the first time since August 1961 that the Union bookstore has expanded. At that time, the lower level of the bookstore was opened and became overrun with racks of paperback books.
The paperback book craze began at KU in 1853 with one shelf and 36 titles. It now has expanded to include 700 feet of shelf space and 7,600 titles, on the lower level of the Kansas Union.
THE PAPERBACK CRAZE hit America in the early 1950s, Stoner said. At that time, most of the books offered were murder mysteries, westerns and lurid novels. Now a great quantity of the 26,000 titles available in paperback editions deal with academic subjects. Stoner also said the colleges are partly responsible for this trend.
Stoner said he thought college students were largely responsible for the ready acceptance of paperbacks. He offered finances as a reason why college students are such a lucrative market for the relatively inexpensive paperbacks.
At the time the Union Book Store first started selling paperbacks, it was able to offer 35 per cent of all the paperback titles in print. Stoner said now it is able to offer only 25 per cent of available titles, with the same number of titles offered in the Book Store.
THE CATALOGUE of paperback books was the size of the KU student Directory. It now looks more like a middle-sized phone book.
Stoner are said approximately 28,000 books are sold during a fiscal year in the Union Book Store. Most of these books are concerned with the students' classes and cannot be classed as "light reading."
Stoner attributed this fact to the hours the Union Book Store is open. Since it is open only during school hours, the students may be too occupied with their studies to be interested in the latest light novel.
STONER ALSO ATTRIBUTED the popularity of the paperbacks to the fact that a wider range of material could be kept available for the student. Although the production price for a paperback is only 25 cents less than for a hardback, the paperbacks are cheaper
and easier to carry around. Many students supplement their regular textbooks with paperbacks.
Curled edges and loose pages probably will prevent the paperback books from being used as regular textbooks. A paperback's life span depends on the amount of tender loving care its owner gives it.
By the end of a semester, most of them look as if they had gone through a few floods, at least five civil wars, and assorted tornadoes.
A significant development in the paperback situation has been the movement of many publishers into the paperback field. Books which sold in expensive hardback editions now are being used in classes, and appear on library shelves.
FAMILIAR-AND NOT-SO-FAMiliar—classics have been added to paperback lines that once concentrated on James Hilton, Thorne Smith and Erle Stanley Gardner. Practically all the works of such American novelists as Mark Twain, Henry James, Theodore Dreiser, James Fenimore Cooper and Nathaniel Hawthorne have become available.
Titles by Tolstoy, Charles Dickens, Flaubert, Zola and Dumas have begun to compete with each other. Students assigned to read such books in their literature classes now have several volumes to choose among, though certain translations are in higher academic favor than others.
Histories and biographies are in wide popularity. A work like Henry Adams's "Mont-Saint-Michel and Chartres," once restrict to expensive, scholarly looking editions, is one example: it is available from at least two paperback publishers.
THE STUDENT WHO once longed to have a copy of Dos Passos' "U.S.A." but hated to pay the hardback price now can get a copy of this famous work in paperback. Contemporary novels move these days to the paperback lists in a matter of months.
Another important feature of the paperback revolution is the volumes from university presses, which will be found in the new bookstore in the library. Such editions are among the most de luxe and favored of paperbacks now coming to stores like those on the KU campus.
Surge of Students to Affect Textbook Situation
By Russell L. Reynolds Executive Editor The College Store Journal
Managers of College stores and faculties of colleges and universities are going to have to change their habits of ordering books in the future.
When the real flood of students begins to inundate the campuses starting next fall, no publisher is going to be able physically to ship the needed texts in the months of August and early September.
The problem that one prominent publisher had this fall is merely a prelude to what inevitably is going to happen to every major publisher. The hole at the end of their processing and shipping funnel just will not accommodate the tremendous flood of orders. Publishers have been making and will continue to make every effort to supply the books since it means profit to them to do so, wise managers and faculties will not expect shipments of major quantities in 30 or 40 days.
THE SMART COLLEGE STORE manager will be ordering texts three and four months ahead.
Even though the publisher is able to ship enough books in such a short time, stores delaying their orders are going to be victims of out-of-stock situations. With the expected tremendous enrollments no publisher will be able to anticipate the demands for a particular book.
It takes from six to eight weeks to get a book reprinted. So the stores placing orders even sixty days ahead of classes run a considerable risk of being without the books when they are needed for study sessions.
Many major schools report that their information generally is only fifty per cent complete one month before sessions begin. Therefore, faculty will have to be warned that they will not have the books on hand at the beginning of school unless they choose their texts ninety days or more in advance of the date of book needs.
THE REAL PROBLEM is just how to get the message across to the faculty themselves.
NACS has heard the story of a neighboring manager who had only seventy per cent of his books on hand at the start of the current
academic year. This led the local newspaper to feature a big account of the shortage of books. Other managers in the area reported that their administrations were concerned about the situation.
THE LESSON FOR US is quite simple.
Next spring every available medium reaching college faculty should be used to warn about the coming shortage of textbooks. Publishers should carry this message to the faculty with their representatives. Stories also should be placed in student newspapers.
Certainly their requisitions for books should carry this message .minimum order time for texts is sixty to ninety days. They can protect themselves by placing orders with each publisher as they are received rather than accumulating them.
ORDERS FOR SINGLE TEXTS are processed through a warehouse much faster than orders for several titles amounting to hundreds of books. This technique also will get more prompt notice of out-of-stock situations.
Now, let me pass along to you
a little advice which might prevent vour having ulcers too soon.
It is easy to feel that the publisher is bungling intentionally and that he is taking personal advantage of you. Without accepting the blame yourself, you can report that you placed the order, know the date, realize that the book has not arrived and express your belief that the publisher surely is flooded with orders but is making every effort to fill them.
When a book fails to arrive we all know that the manager is on the firing line facing hundreds of disappointed students and irate faculty.
PUBLISHERS DO NOT announce new books or new editions with the expectation of not delivering on time. It is only human to be a little optimistic about delivery dates.
Certainly no publisher willfully ships the wrong book, does not ship at all, or fails to report on inquiries.
Most delays in publishing a book are not on the doorstep of the publisher. They are right in the lap of the faculty writer who does not deliver on time . . . but oddly enough expects the publisher to.
There is no intention here of whitewashing the publishers who do not communicate. Many of them simply fail to recognize that every book not shipped represents a minor disaster for a student somewhere.
Communication back to the customer on non-shipment of books is one of the principal problems of business.
THE MOST IRRITATING single thing a publisher can do is fail to answer various communications about books which have not arrived in the College Store.
The best advice for publisher personnel is this . . . do not promise anything when you do not expect to deliver. There is entirely too much promising "to call back" . . . "to wire back" . . . "to ship today" . . . and the like.
There is no use filling the air with repriminations about publisher inefficiencies and inadequacies.
Let's not be quiet about failures to produce, but let's remember that we are in this together and we have a common job to do . . . that of providing tools for college education.
.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 26, 1964
Histories—from Adams to Michener
M O N T- SA I N T-MICHEL AND CHARTRES, by Henry Adams (Sentry, $2.45).
Among the greatest of modern classics is this description of the architecture, art, attitudes, philosophy, theology, politics, commerce, economics, sociology and literature of the Middle Ages. "Mont-Saint-Michel and Chartres" has enduring significance in several realms, and like "The Education of Henry Adams" demonstrates the amazing insights of its author.
This Sentry volume gives a normally expensive book to readers in attractive paperback form. It lacks the photographs found in some volumes, but these, after all, are readily available. What makes the book endure is the marvelous prose of Adams.
For Adams became absorbed in medievalism, and in his growing disenchantment with his age more and more found himself, sympathetically at least, a man of an earlier time. In the Virgin he found a medieval symbol comparable to the dynamos of his age which entrapped him so. In the soaring Gothic architecture, notably of the two structures in his title, he found man aspiring in a way that he had not aspired since.
REPUBLICAN ASCENDANCY,
1921-1933, by John D. Hicks (Harper
Torchbooks, $2.25).
This volume is in the New American Nation series, by a distinguished historian known for "The American Nation" and "Our Federal Union." It is a review of the years under Harding, Coolidge and Hoover, ending with the coming to power of Roosevelt.
Hicks does not merely review government. We see the many national and world conferences on disarmament, the rise of prohibition and its attendant miseries, the mood of isolation sweeping the country, the movies and the coming of radio, the development of the automobile as a national institution, H. L. Mencken and other critics.
The look at America, then, is an overall one, and with the perspective of today, plus the help of the historian, we can see how the depression came about, the national mood, the tragedy that struck in 1929. Here is an important, fascinating story.
THE BRIDGE AT ANDAU, by James A. Michener (Bantam Pathfinder, 40 cents).
Less than a year after the now-historic Hungarian uprising against Soviet oppression James Michener published this volume. It received considerable attention in 1957, and like John Hersey's "Hiroshima" it is a piece of reporting that deserves a wide reading today.
The very young will not remember the Hungarian rebellion that started Oct. 23, 1956, when children, students, workers and housewives for a few days enjoyed freedom, freedom that ended in bloody reprisal. Michener interviewed many of those fleeing Hungary after the Battle of Budapest, and he assisted in the escape of many.
A sweeping view of the age of Jackson is provided in this excellent history, one which probably is inferior to that by Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. but still engrossing and discerning.
THE JACKSONIAN ERA. by Glydon G. Van Deusen (Harper Torchbooks, $1.95).
The book itself is somewhat smaller than similar histories of the age, but it does provide a revealing look into that time of ferment and change in national life. Van Deusen, who also wrote what is the best biography of Horace Greeley, treats the Jacksonian era from the 1828 election through the election of Taylor in 1848.
If there is a significant contribution in this book it may be Van Deusen's departure from the traditional view that the Democrats were the heroes and the Whigs the villains. The author sees the time of Jackson as being so much in flux that it is virtually impossible to categorize events and issues as neatly as historians once seemed to succeed in doing.
THE LIBERAL HOUR, by John Kenneth Galbraith (Mentor, 50 cents).
That favorite whipping boy of the American right gives here another cause for complaints. Galbraith loves to snipe at American shibboleths, and several come under his scrutiny in this book.
He discusses the facts of economic competition with Russia and inflation in the United States; myths and misreadings of history from the Civil War to the depression, and then that American institution, the political convention.
He shows how politicians turn ordinary candidates into that amazing giant we see on television. He also turns on his native Canada to show how royalty serves as a force in that democracy.
Galbraith, Harvard economist and former ambassador to India, is author of such works as "The Great Crash" and "The Affluent Society."
ANDRE MAUROIS PRESENTS THE LIVING THOUGHTS OF VOLTAIRE (Premier, 50 cents).
This is another in the Premier "Living Thoughts" series, which already has provided volumes on Jefferson, Thoreau, Emerson, Machiavelli, Confucius, Spinoza, Darwin, Toelstoy, Paine, and Marx. And it contains the predictable writings of this great 18th century iconoclast.
Maurois tells us that a man like Voltaire was necessary to cut under the hypocrisy and pretense of his age. Voltaire still represents to many the enemy of religion, the symbol of Reason.
AN AGE OF KINGS, by William Shakespeare (Pyramid, 75 cents).
These are eight historical plays by Shakespeare, as presented on the television series of the British Broadcasting Corp. The plays are "Richard II," "Henry IV, Part I," "Henry IV, Part 2," "Henry V," "Henry VI, Part 1," "Henry VI, Part 2," "Henry VI, Part 3" and "Richard III."
NEW, FROM OXFORD Galaxy Books
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Diplomacy by SIR HAROLD NICOLSON GB115 $1.50
World History, 1914-1961
by DAVID THOMSON GB116 $1.50
International Relations by JOSEPH FRANKEL GB117 $1.50
Oxford Paperbacks
The Modern State by R. M. MACIVER OX73 $2.45
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Muhammad by w. MONTGOMERY WATT OX78 $1.85
Medieval Technology and Social Change
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Government and Parliament by LORD MORRISON OF LAMBETH OX80 $2.50
Studies in Shakespeare
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Letters on Poetry from W. B. Yeats to Dorothy Wellesley edited by DOROTHY WELLESLEY OX82 $2.25
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THREE FROM HENRY CECIL Three witty novels all set against the background of the legal profession in England: Alibi for a Judge, Daughters in Law, Ways and Means, 95c each
HADRIAN THE SEVENTH—Fr. Rolle (Frederick Baron Corvo). The classic novel of an outcast Englishman who becomes Pope. 95c
THREE BY P. G. WODEHOUSE Here are three offerings by the master of wackiness: The Heart of a Goof, Hot Water, and Indiscretions of Archie. 85c each
THE FLAW IN THE CRYSTAL—Godfrey Smith. A tense psychological novel in which a man's past is brought to light by a government security probe. 65c
COURTROOM U.S.A. 2-Rupert Furneaux.An absorbing account of four of the most exciting trials in the annals of American crime, 65c
FAMOUS TRIALS 8-Edited by James H. Hodge Five sensational trials in British history including that of the notorious Captain Kidd. 85c
THE CASE OF TORCHES—Clark Smith. Murder, suicide, and espionage combine in this fast-paced thriller. 65c
THE EVOLUTION MAN—Roy Lewis. A highly amusing bit of speculation on what life may have been like among the cavemen, 95c
THE MAN WHO WON THE POOLS—J. I. M. Stewart. An amusing and provocative tale of an ordinary man who suddenly wins a fortune. 95c
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THE OTHER AMERICA: Poverty in the United States—Michael Harrington. The best-selling book that sparked the 'war on poverty.' 95c
EXPERIMENTAL PHYSICAL RESEARCH Robert H. Thouless.An opportunity for the general reader to understand and evaluate for himself the fascinating work being done in parapsychology. 95c
A DICTIONARY OF MODERN HISTORY 1789-1945—A. W. Palmer. A guide to personalities, events, and ideas throughout the world during the past 150 years. $1.25
SPACE IN THE SIXTIES—Patrick Moore. The work being done today in space research and speculations about where it will lead. 95c
ANGER AND AFTER: A Guide to the New British Drama—John Russell Taylor. A comprehensive guide to the whole of contemporary British drama. $1.25
THE NECESSITY OF ART: A Marxist Approach—Ernst Fischer. The first English translation of the most discussed book on art to appear since the Second World War. $1.25
THE PENGUIN BOOK OF SICK VERSE—Edited by George MacBeth. Poems by English and American poets from the Elizabethans to the present day depicting the gloomy, morbid side of life. 95c
THE PELICAN HISTORY OF MUSIC 2: Renaissance and Baroque—Edited by Alec Robertson and Denis Stevens. This second volume in the Pelican History of Music series brings the story up to the mid-eighteenth century. Musical illus., and 24 pages of plates. $1.65
The Pelican Gospel Commentaries. The first three of four new Gospel commentaries for the layman designed to relate the teachings of Christ to the 20th century, in the light of the latest archeological, historical, and linguistic research.
THE GOSPEL OF ST. MATTHEW—John Fenton. $1.95
THE GOSPEL OF ST. MARK—D. E. Nineham. $1.95
THE GOSPEL OF ST. LUKE—G. B. Caird. $1.65
ROMAN CATHOLICISM—Sebastian Bullough. A Dominican scholar explains the faith and practice of the Roman Catholic Church for the student and the general reader, $1.25
EAST AFRICA: THE SEARCH FOR UNITY—A.
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THE LIFE OF SHAKESPEARE—F. E. Halliday.
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THE COMEDY OF ERRORS—William Shakespeare. Edited with an Introduction by Paul A. Jorgensen. 50c
THE TAMING OF THE SHREW—William Shakespeare. Edited with an Introduction by Richard Hosley, 65c
RACINE: PHAEDRA AND OTHER PLAYS—trans. by John Cairncross. New translations into modern English blank verse of three of Racine's great tragedies: Phaedra, Iphigenia, and Athaliah. $1.45
SALLUST: THE JUGURTHINE WAR AND THE CONSPIRACY OF CATILINE—trans. by S. A. Handford. These new translations of Sallust's only complete works to survive preserve all the qualities of the original Latin. 95c
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Thursday, March 26, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Wars, Fires, Sea Battles and Muckrakers
AUSCHWITZ, by Dr. Miklos Niyisli (Crest, 50 cents).
In the wake of the movie "Judgment at Nuremberg" and Shirer's "Rise and Fall of the Third Reich" has come a splurge of books about the horror's of Hitler's Germany. The cover labels Auschwitz "Eichmann's inferno," and so it was. This book is an eyewitness account, written by a victim who survived, a Jew and a doctor who had to perform autopsies and dissections on Jewish corpses.
By now most of us know even the most vicious horrors of the death camps. But the present college generation, even in the shocking world in which it lives, needs to know more. "Auschwitz" and the other books in the genre are not for mealtime reading, but they are important, to understand the Nazis and to understand ourselves.
THE DIPLOMACY OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION, by Samuel Flagg Bemis (Midland; Indiana University Press; $1.75).
The most important of all American historians of diplomacy is Samuel Flagg Bemis, and this is one of his best histories. It is a history of one of the critical times in American history, and a history that is loaded with big names and big events.
Largely it is a story of the negotiations between the 13 colonies and France, but the negotiations with Spain and the Netherlands also were important, and make part of the story. It is never a dull or pedantic history, for Bemis is a historian who knows the desirability of making a work live from a literary as well as historical standpoint.
Through our diplomats, notably that famous negotiator, Benjamin Franklin, France was brought into the controversy in 1778, and helped to swing victory toward the patriot cause. Bemis tells this story, and devotes several chapters to negotiations with the British in the 1780s after the Battle of Yorktown sealed victory for the Americans.
THE SOUTH IN NORTERN EYES, 1831 TO 1861, by Howard R. Floan (McGraw-Hill Paperbacks, $2.45).
A special kind of service is provided in this book by Howard Floan, a service of interest to those concerned with how myths, legends and images are created in society. Floan presents as his thesis the belief that misinformation about the South played a large role in the attacks on slavery and the denunciations of the southerner.
He turns to writings of prominent northerners for proof. These include the abolitionists Garrison and Phillips, the poet Whitier, the poet-critic Lowell, the Concord philosophers Emerson and Thoreau, Longfellow, Holmes and Hawthorne, New England magazine writers, New Yorkers, Melville, the influential editor Bryant, and the poet Whitman.
THE GREAT CHICAGO FIRE, by Robert Cromie (MrGraw-Hill Paperbacks, $2.75).
Exciting social history has been written by a reporter for the Chicago Tribune, the kind of history greatly popular in recent years. This attractive paperback has in addition to the text several drawings and photographs of one of the most famous fires in history.
"One dark night...when people were in bed, /Old Mrs. Leary lit a lantern in her shed: /The cow kicked it over, winked its eye, and said,/There'll be a hot time in the old town tonight." That's an old jingle that reminds us of the famous legend. The fire did start at the O'Leary's, but unfortunately there is no proof that the cow was responsible.
THE ARMADA, by Garrett Mattingly (Sentry, $1.95).
It started the night of Oct. 8, 1871, on DeKoven Street. By the time the blaze had flared up and been driven by a southwesterly wind, and then burned for two days, there was property loss amounting to millions of dollars, and there were 100,000 homeless people.
Garrett Mattingly, a professor of European history at Columbia University, conceived in "The Armada" a history as readable, as meaningful, as related to its times as De Voto's "Across the Wide Missouri" and "The Course of Empire." He started with the intention of doing little more than a monograph, and emerged with a history in the grand manner, one that won a special citation from the Pulitzer Prize Committee.
"The Armada" appeared in 1959. It is a story of the naval campaign of 1588 that culminated in the defeat of the Spanish fleet by the British and that ensured independence not only for the English but for the French and Dutch as well. Mattingly begins with the execution of Mary Queen of Scots, and provides a full-fledged study of European power politics in the 16th century.
Here are some of the names and subjects—S. S. McClure, the editor, writing on three great articles in one issue of McClure's; Lincoln Steffens, on the shame of Minneapolis; Ida M. Tarbell, on the Standard Oil Company and the oil war of 1872; Ray Stannard Baker, on miners and scabs.
This is a treasure trove for the student of American history, government, or journalism. It is a set of primary documents by those vigorous and dramatic writers whose exposes of American society early in the century led Theodore Roosevelt to criticize them as "muckrakers."
THE MUCKRAKERS, edited by Arthur and Lila Weinberg (Capricorn, $2.45).
Theodore Roosevelt, on the man with the muckrake; David Graham Phillips, on the treason of the Senate; William Hard, on Uncle Joe Cannon; Mark Sullivan, on how congressmen vote; C. P. Connolly, on the controlled state of Montana; Steffens and Claude H. Wetmore, on boss rule in St. Louis.
John L. Mathews, on monopoly; Samuel Hopkins Adams, on patent medicines; Upton Sinclair, on the packing-houses; Baker, on racial questions in the South; William English Walling, on racial questions in the North; Thomas W. Lawson, on stock manipulation.
Will Irwin, on ward politics;
Baker, on the railroads; Charles Edward Russell, on Trinity Church and the tenements; Edwin Markham, on children of the looms, and George Kibbe Turner, on white slavery.
THE COMING CAESARS, by Amaury de Riencourt (Capricorn, $1.95).
Historical warnings are offered in this 1957 book that should have special appeal to those who fear the executive leviathan in America. Amaury de Riencourt interprets American history and destiny as a Caesarism that threatens our survival as a free nation.
He analyzes our history in terms of the development of western society in the past 400 years. As he considers Jackson, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Truman and others he insistently draws parallels with the fate of other leaders in other times.
The author believes that the West is threatened by Caesarism, which he defines as a "slow, often century-old, unconscious development that ends in a voluntary surrender of a free people escaping from freedom to one autocratic master."
THE SILENT LANGUAGE, by Edward T. Hall (Premier, 60 cents).
This is a book for anthropologists and semanticists, which takes in quite a lot of folks today. Hall deals with cultural patterns of today in an effort to understand behavior.
Hall holds that manners and behavior often are more important than words, and that Americans too frequently do not understand how they are communicating themselves, through their behavior, to people of other countries.
CITIES IN THE WILDERNESS, by Carl Bridenbaugh (Capricorn, $2.65); CITIES IN REVOLT, by Carl Bridenbaugh (Capricorn, $2.65).
These beautiful volumes are companion works, excellent histories of the growth of urban life in America.
In the first volume, Carl Bridenbaugh treats the founding and growth of the great cities of colonial America—Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Newport and Charleston. In the second, he assesses the development of an urban civilization in the same cities.
Bridenbaugh won the Justin Winson prize of the American Historical Association for "Cities in the Wilderness." The first volume embraces 1625-1742; the second 1743-1776. Students of colonial history and American civilization will find them rich and engrossing reading.
ITALIAN LITERATURE FROM THE BEGINNINGS TO ARIOSTO; ITALIAN LITERATURE FROM ARIOSTO TO THE LATE RENAISSANCE, by John Addington Symonds (2 vols., Capricorn, $1.85 each).
The biographer of Michelangelo wrote these near-classic works, which appear in a handsome paperback edition that will stand a lot of wear. The work stems from Symonds' belief that "Literature must always prove the surest guide to the investigator of a people's character at some decisive epoch."
The chief concern of Symonds is the 1300-1530 period, but he begins by discussing Italian literature in the Middle Ages and then considers the great names—Dante, Petrarch and Boccaccio. He treats secular and religious poetry, Lorenzo de Medici, the romantic epic and Ariosto.
One chapter is on the "Orlando Furioso," and others deal with the novellieri, the drama, pastoral and didactic poetry, burlesque poetry and satire, history and philosophy and the meaning of the Renaissance.
CLIFF'S NOTES - only $1.00 each
NOTES ON SHAKESPEARE PLAYS
ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA
AS YOU LIKE IT
CORIOLANUS
HAMLET
JULIUS CAESAR
KING HENRY IV - PART I
KING HENRY IV - PART II
KING HENRY V
KING LEAR
MACBETH
MEASURE FOR MEASURE
MERCHANT OF VENICE
MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM
MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING
OTHELLO
RICHARD II
RICHARD III
ROMEO AND JULIET
THE TAMING OF THE SHREW
TEMPEST
TWELFTH NIGHT
NOTES ON OTHER CLASSICS
THE AENEID
ALL THE KING'S MEN
ARMS AND THE MAN
BABBITT
CAESAR AND CLEOPATRA
CRIME AND PUNISHMENT
DAVID COPPERFIELD
A FAREWELL TO ARMS
GREAT EXPECTATIONS
GULLIVER'S TRAVELS
HUCKLEBERRY FINN
THE ILIAD
IVANHOE
JOSEPH ANDREWS
LORD JIM
MAYOR OF CASTERBRIDGE
MOBY DICK
MY ANTONIA
THE ODYSSEY
OF HUMAN BONDAGE
PARADISE LOST
PRIDE AND PREJUDICE
BOTANY INTERMEDIATE ALGEBRA
PYGMALION
THE REPUBLIC
RETURN OF THE NATIVE
SCARLET LETTER
SILAS MARNER
THE SOUND AND THE FURY
TALE OF TWO CITIES
VICAR OF WAKEFIELD
VICTORY
WALDEN
WUTHERING HEIGHTS
OTHER TITLES
DICTIONARY OF SYNONYMS AND ANTONYMS
SECRETS OF STUDYING ZOOLOGY
NEW NOTES AVAILABLE SOON
ABSALOM, ABSALOM (March 15)
LORD OF THE FLIES (Febr. 15)
MAN AND SUPERMAN (March 15)
A PASSAGE TO INDIA (Febr.15)
TOM SAWYER (Febr.15)
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 26, 1964
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IMMANUEL KANT: Lectures on Ethics. Introduction by Lewis W. Beck. TB/105 $1.75
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ARTHUR S. LINK; Woodrow Wilson and the Progressive Era, 1910-1917. Illus. TB/3023 $1.95
PERRY MILLER & THOMAS H. JOHNSON, Editors: The Puritans: A Sourcebook of Their Writings.
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GEORGE E. MOWRY: The Era of theodore Roosevelt and the Birth of Modern America, 1900-1912. Illus. TB/3022 $1.95
SIR LEWIS NAMIER: Vanished Supremacies: Essays on European History, 1812-1918.
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FERDINAND SCHEVILL: Medieval and Renaissance Florence. Volume I: Medieval Florence. Illus.
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Available at the Book Store or write Harper & Row, Publishers, Inc., Dept. 36,
49 E. 33rd St., New York 16, N. Y. Catalog on request.
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ERICH FROMM: The Art of Loving: An Inquiry into the Nature of Love. CN/1 $1.25
CARL N. DEGLER: Out of Our Past: The Forces That Shaped Modern America. CN/2 $2.45
JOHN W. GARDNER: Excellence: Can We BeEqual and
Excellent Too? CN/3 $1.35
RICHARD HUGHES: In Hazard (fiction). CN/4 $1.50
EDMUND STILLMAN and WILLIAM PEAFF: The New Politics: America and the End of the Postwar World. CN/5 $1.35
E. L. Woodward: History of England: Roman Times to the End of First World War. CN/6 $1.35
L. C. B. SEAMAN: From Vienna to Versailles: European Politics and Diplomacy, 1815-1920. CN/8 $1.35
ALDLOUS HUXLEY: The Doors of Perception and Heaven
and Hell. CN/7 $1.35
JOHN HORNE BURNS: The Gallery (fiction). CN/9 $1.75
STUART CHASE: The Proper Study of Mankind: The Science of Human Relations. CN/10 $1.85
ROBERT STRAUSZ-HUPE et al.: Trotracted Conflict; A Study of Communist Strategy. CN/11 $1.50
HUGH THOMAS: The Spanish Civil War. CN/12 $2.95
HENRY A. GRUNWALD, Ed.: Salinger: A Critical and Personal Portrait. CN/13 $1.75
D. W. BROGAN: The French Nation: From Napoleon to Pâtain, 1815-1940. CN/14 $1.85
NELSON ALGREN: Never Come Morning (fiction).
CN/15 $1.75
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CHESTER WILMOT: The Struggle for Europe: World War II in Western Europe. CN/17 $2.95
JOYCE CARY: The African Witch (fiction). CN/18 $1.75
DOROTHY SAYERS: Strong Poison (fiction). CN/19 $1.35
JULIAN SYMONS: The Plain Man (fiction). CN/20 $1.25
harper TORCHBOOKS
November
ROBERT C. BINKLEY: Realism and Nationalism, 1852-1871.
Illus.
TB/3038 $2.45
ROBERT A. DAHL and CHARLES E. LINDBLOM: Politics, Economics, and Welfare: Planning and Political-Economic Systems resolved into Basic Social Processes.
CLEMENT EATON: The Growth of Southern Civilization, 1790-
1860. Illus. TB/3040 $2.45
CARLTON J. H. HAYES: A Generation of Materialism, 1871-
1900. Illus. TB/3039 $2.75
JOHN D. Hicks: Republican Ascendancy, 1921-1933. Illus.
TB/3041 $2.25
JOHN F. KENNEDY; A Nation of Immigrants. Illus.
TB/1118 $ .95
ROBERT H. JACKSON: The Supreme Court in the American System of Government. TB/1106 $95
R. KLIBANSKY and H. J. PATON, Eds.: Philosophy and History:
The Ernst Casseri Festschrift. Illus. TB/1115 $2.75
LEONARD W. LEVY: Freedom of Speech and Press in Early American History: Legacy of Suppression. New Preface by Author. TB/1109 $2.25
KINGSLEY MARTIN: French Liberal Thought in the Eighteenth Century: A Study of Political Ideas from Bayle to Condorcet. TB/1114 $1.85
BERNARD MAYO: Myths and Men: Patrick Henry, George
Washington, Thomas Jefferson. TB/1108 $95
JOHN U. NEF: Western Civilization Since the Renaissance:
Peace, War, Industry, and the Arts. New Introduction
by Author.
TB/1113 $2.45
HENRI PIRNNE: Early Democracies in the Low Countries:
Urban Society and Political Conflict in the Middle Ages
and the Renaissance. New Introduction by John H.
Mundy. TB/1110 $1.65
HENRY OSBORN TAYLOR: The Classical Heritage of the Middle Ages. Intro. and Bibliog. by Kenneth M. Setten. [First published as TB/48, The Emergence of Christian Culture in the West]. TB/1117 $1.75
FRANK THISTLETHWAITE: America and the Atlantic Community: Anglo-American Aspects, 1790-1850.
nity: Anglo-American Aspects, 1790-1850. TB/1107 $1.45
FERDINAND TONNIES: Community and Society; Gemeinschaft
and Gesellschaft. Trans, and Ed. by C. P. Loomis.
G. M. TREVELYAN: England in the Age of Wycliffe, 1368-1520.
TB/1121 $1.95
TB/1111 $2.45
VESPASIANO: Renaissance Princes, Popes, and Prelates; Lives of Illustrious Men of the XVth Century: The Vespasiano Memoirs. New Introduction by Myron P. Gilmore. Illus.
January
THOMAS CORBISLEY, S. J.: Roman Catholicism. New Appendix by Author. TB/112 $9.5
C. AUERBACH: The Science of Genetics, Illus. TB/568 $1.85
RANDOLPH S. BOURNE: War and the Intellectuals: Collected Essays, 1915-1919. Edited with an Introduction by Carl Resek. TB/3043 $1.95
EDWARD CONZE, et al., Eds.: Buddhist Texts Through the Ages. TB/113 $1.85
FRANKLIN EDGERTON, Trans. and Ed.: The Bhagavad Gita.
TR/415 $1
PAUL FRIEDLANDER: Plato: An Introduction. Illus.
TB/ 2017 $2.75
GEORGE GAMOW: Biography of Physics. Illus. TB/567 $1.95
MARCUS LEE HANSEN: The Immigrant in American History. Edited with Foreword by Arthur M. Schlesinger. TB/1120 $1.50
OSCAR HANDLIN, Ed.: This Was America: As Recorded by European Travelers in the 18th, 19th, and 20th Centuries. Illus. TB/1119 $2.95
KYUE HASELDEN: The Racial Problem in Christian Perspective. New Introduction by Author. TB/116 $1.45
Aldous Huxley: Antic Hay & The Gioconda Smile, Introduc-
tion by Martin Green. TB/350 $1.95
ADOUS HUXLEY: Brave New World & Brave New World Revisited. Introduction by C. P. Snow. TB/3501 $2.45
IMMANUEL KANT: The Doctrine of Virtue: Part II of The Metaphysic of Morals. Trans. with Intro. and Notes by Mary J. Gregor, Foreword by H. J. Paton. TB/110 $1.85
ALDUS HUXLEY: Point Counter Point, Introduction by C. P.
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SWAMI NIKHIIANANDA, Trans. and Ed.: The Upanishads: A
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WALTER E. WEYL: The New Democracy: An Essay on Certain Political and Economic Tendencies in the U.S. New Introduction by Charles Forcey. TB/3042 $2.35
E. B. WHITE: One Man's Meat. New Introduction by Walter Elair.
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CHARLES FRANKEL: The Democratic Prospect. CN/29 $1.45
JOHN CHAMBERLAIN: The Enterprising Americans: *A Business*
*History of the United States. Illus.* CN/ 30 $1.65
LEO ROSTEN: The Return of Hyman Kaplan: A Novel.
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GEORGE RYLANDS, Ed.: The Ages of Man: A Shakespeare Anthology.
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kansas union BOOKSTORE
Thursday, March 26, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
-
Books
of
Books of more than academic interest
Art
Le Corbusier WHEN THE CATHEDRALS WERE WHITE Drawings by the author $2.25 Le Corbusier examines the architecture and people of New York and proposes a beautiful, new, vertical city.
Biography
Tyrone Guthrie
A LIFE IN THE THEATRE $2.49
One of the great producer-directoractors of the contemporary stage proves himself a vivid, captivating autobiographer.
A LIFE IN THE THEATRE $2.45
Louis M. Hacker
ALEXANDER HAMILTON $2.75 A shrewd analysis in which Hamilton is presented as a great libertarian devoted to justice in a regime of law.
A. W. Lawrence
A. W. Lawrence
T. E. LAWRENCE BY
HIS FRIENDS $2.95
A new selection of memoirs by Winston Churchill, W. H. Auden, George Bernard Shaw, and 53 others.
Economics
Crawford H. Greenewalt
How uncommon men fit into modern corporations and common men can be encouraged to perform uncommon deeds.
Alvin H. Hansen
THE AMERICAN
ECONOMY $1.95
The diversified American economic system and its complex interactions.
Alvin H. Hansen
A GUIDE TO KEYNES $2.45 A study of the theories of Keynes, whose ideas have profoundly influenced economic activity in the West.
Alvin H. Hansen
*
Deals with trends and developments in money supply, national income, public debt management, fiscal policy and the banking system.
MONETARY THEORY AND FISCAL POLICY $2.75
MONETARY THEORY AND
McGraw-Hill Paperbacks
Oskar Lange and Fred M. Taylor
A classic analysis of socialist economy which presents some of its problems while refuting its impracticality.
ON THE ECONOMIC THEORY
OF SOCIALISM $2.15
Dan T. Smith
FEDERAL TAX REFORM $2.45 With a special section prepared for the McGraw-Hill Paperback edition on recent administration proposals.
Education
James Bryant Conant
THE AMERICAN HIGH
SCHOOL TODAY $1.95
SLUMS AND SUBURBS $1.95
Famed Conant Reports, "likely to determine for a generation the direction in which public education develops."
National Education Association
SCHOOLS FOR
THE SIXTIES $1.95
Fiction
THE SIXTIES $1.95 Summary of the NEA's special committee. Project on Instruction, which makes thoughtful recommendations for public and professional efforts to improve instruction in our schools.
Heinrich Boll
BILLIARDS AT
HALF-PAST NINE $2.65
A moving novel of contemporary Germany.
"... Boll has no peer as a storyteller."—Saturday Review.
Doris Lessing
THE GOLDEN NOTEBOOK $2.95 A brilliant novel about a modern woman writer who records her experiences—political, emotion, sexual—in an effort to reassess herself and her world.
Jack London and R. L. Fish THE ASSASSINATION BUREAU, LTD. $1.65 Vintage London, published for the first time in 1963. Fish completed the final third from London's notes.
History
Carl G. Gustavson
A PREFACE TO HISTORY $2.05 Understanding history through events revealing social forces, causation, and change.
Arthur K. Moore
THE FRONTIER MIND $2.15
This brilliant, controversial and original study argues that the frontier gave birth, not to democracy, but to much that is invidious in American life.
Humor
Robert E. Ouirk
A brilliant description of American intervention in Mexico during the Woodrow Wilson administration by an outstanding young historian.
AN AFFAIR OF HONOR $2.25
Richard Armour
Twisted Tales FROM $1.75 SHAKESPEARE "In which Shakespeare's best-known plays are presented in new (hilarious) light."
J Abner Peddiwell
TWISTED TALES FROM
THE SABER-TOOTHED
CURRICULUM $1.50 A satire on paleolithic education, with reference to its contemporary remnants.
Literature
James Boswell, Frederick A. Pottle,
editor
BOSWELL'S LONDON
JOURNAL, 1762-1763 $2.45
BOSWELL IN HOLLAND,
1763-1764 $2.75
BOSWELL ON THE
GRAND TOUR $2.95
W. K. Wimsatt and F. A. Pottle,
editors
BOSWELL FOR THE
DEFENCE $2.95
Explores 18th-century Europe, including encounters with Rousseau, Voltaire, the beautiful Zelide and Mr. Johnson. From the Yale Edition of Boswell's private papers.
Anton Chekhov
LATE BLOOMING FLOWERS
AND OTHER STORIES $1.95
A novella never before published in the United States, plus new translations of stories spanning Chekhov's career.
Poetry
Heinrich Heine
LYRIC POEMS
AND BALLADS $2.35
A bilingual edition of love poetry,
beautifully translated by Ernst Feise.
Political Science
Gaetano Mosca
THE RULING CLASS $3.95 A basic work in political science, holding that in every country power is wielded by a relatively small group. Edited and translated by A. Livington.
Bernard Taper
GOMILLIION VS. LIGHTFOOT:
APARTHEID IN ALABAMA $1.45
An engrossing report of the Tuskegee gerrymander, rejected by the Supreme Court in a far-reaching decision supporting the voting equality of Negroes.
Psychology
John Dollard and Neal Miller
John Dollard and Neal Miller PERSONALITY AND PSYCHOTHERAPY $3.25 Brilliant analysis in terms of learning, thinking, and culture.A classic.
Roy R. Grinker and John P. Spiegel
MEN UNDER STRESS
A classic study exploring neuroses revealed by combat experiences—one of the most important works in psychiatry.
Hans Selye
THE STRESS OF LIFE $2.75
Dr. Selye's revolutionary concept of stress as the cause of mental and physical illness-for both laymen and specialists.
Scientific
Philip L. Alger
MATHEMATICS FOR SCIENCE
AND ENGINEERING $2.25
Procedures for technical problem solving, with problems and answers.
E. U. Condon and P. M. Morse
QUANTUM MECHANICS $2.95
One of the first (1929) books on this subject—a major contribution to the literature of modern physics.
Philip L. Alger
Galilei Galileo
DIALOGUES CONCERNING
TWO NEW SCIENCES $2.95
The famous Henry Crew-Alfonso De
Salvio translation of this literary and
scientific classic.
D. C. Ipsen
UNITS, DIMENSIONS, AND
DIMENSIONLESS NUMBERS $2.65
DIMENSIONLESS NUMBERS $2.09 Theory as the basis for fruitful development and use of techniques in dimensional analysis. A comprehensive text.
Theodore von Karman
AERODYNAMICS $2.45 A history and study of the science of flight from the first airplane to the jet.
J. V. Uspensky
AN INTRODUCTION
TO MATHEMATICAL
PROBABILITY $2.95
A clear presentation of one of the most important bases of modern science.
Theodore Caplow
Sociology
THE SOCIOLOGY OF WORK $2.95 Study of occupational sociology for psychologists, personnel and guidance workers, wage economists and laymen.
Milton Gordon
SOCIAL CLASS IN
SOCIAL CLASS II AMERICAN SOCIOLOGY $2.95
The literature of social classes is explored in a major study of this significant area of social thought.
Ashley Montagu
ANTHROPOLOGY AND HUMAN NATURE $2.75
Practical uses of this justifiably popular field as set forth by one of its most eminent practitioners.
Samuel Ramos
PROFILE OF MAN AND
PROFILE OF MARY WARD CULTURE IN MEXICO $2.45
The first English translation of a true classic by a Mexican scholar who seeks in the culture and psychology of his people a foundation for national growth.
Leslie A. White
Leslie A. White
THE EVOLUTION
OF CULTURE $2.95
An outstanding work illuminating the development of civilization.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 26, 1964
Histories of Rome, U.S. Are on New Book Lists
A SHORT HISTORY OF ROME,
MONARCHY AND REPUBLIC, by
Guglielmo Ferrero and Corrado
Barbagallo (2 vols., Capricorn, $1.95
each).
This work appeared in 1918, written originally for teachers and more advanced students in colleges and universities. The writers set out to provide a main outline of the history of Rome, stressing the most significant events and individuals.
Vol. 1 treats the 754 B.C.-44 B.C. period, Vol. II that of 44 B.C.-476 A.D. This roughly, means the foundation of the city to the death of Caesar in the first volume and the death of Caesar to the fall of the western empire in the second.
Ferrero and Barbagallo tell the story of the beginnings of Rome, a commercial village on Tiber, its development and rise to dominance in the ancient world, and then the grandeur of the Roman civilization and its eventual downfall.
THE NEW NATION, by Charles M. Wiltse (American Century, $1.75); FABRIC OF FREEDOM, by Esmond Wright (American Century, $1.75); THE STAKES OF POWER, by Roy F. Nichols (American Century, $1.75; all three available in cloth, $4.50).
With historian David Donald as general editor, the American Century series has embarked on a new set of books, "The Making of America." These three embrace more than 100 years of American history, "Fabric of Freedom" considering the 1763-1800 period, "The New Nation" 1800-1845, and "The Stakes of Power" 1845-1877.
The authors are distinguished; Esmond Wright is professor of modern history at the University of Glasgow; Charles M. Wiltse chief historian of the Army Medical Service, and Roy F. Nichols dean of the graduate school of arts and sciences and vice-provost of the University of Pennsylvania.
"FABRIC OF FREEDOM" deals roughly with that period including the American Revolution and the birth pangs of the new republic.
Wright treats the emergence of American nationality when the United States was a feeble and struggling nation, one which had fought, in Wright's belief, 13 separate revolutions for independence.
Wright demonstrates that the new nation which came into being in the 1790s was one that maintained some semblances of inequality but also one which believed every man had rights and responsibilities. "It was a society of free individuals, standing on their own feet, on native ground."
"The New Nation" presents the ages of Jefferson and Jackson and the beginnings of the sectional rift. This era considers the new alliance of southern agrarians and northern city bosses, the start of the fight against slavery, the triumph of laissez-faire capitalism and the opening of the West.
IN 1845, WHERE WILTSE ends his story, the nation was flexing its muscles, orators and editorial writers were speaking of manifest destiny, and a war of conquest was about to be fought.
In "The Stakes of Power," Roy Nichols, who has written previously of the Civil War, describes the steps leading to war, war itself, and the unsettled America of early reconstruction, the America which in the election of 1876 almost burst again into armed conflict.
This latter book won an Athenaeum of Philadelphia book award in 1961. All three books, by the way, have excellent bibliographical essays.
AFTER THE LOST GENERATION, by John W. Aldridge (Noonday, $1.45).
Literary concerns in recent years have been largely with important figures of the twenties. That is why this criticism, which appeared more than a decade ago, and then was brought up to date to include later persons, received such attention, and why it deserves further attention today.
the writers of the forties, and reconsiders earlier writers who still were producing in that period. The old-timers he treats are Hemingway, Fitzgerald and Dos Passos, paying particular attention to "The Last Tycoon." "The Grand Design" and "For Whom the Bell Tolls."
Aldridge discusses in this book
But the focus then shifts to recent names. These include what Aldridge terms the "illusionless lads of the Forties"—Norman Mailer, Irwin Shaw, John Horne Burns, Truman Capote, Gore Vidal, Paul Bowles, Alfred Hayes and so on. Aldridge considers how the postwar novel has become a vast panorama of war, an analysis of the racial question, a treatment of the loss of identity, a dealing with conflicts in cultures or the homosexual in society.
INTRODUCTION TO THE ART OF THE MOVIES, edited by Lewis Jacobs (Noonday—Farrar, Straus and Cudahy, $1.95).
For several decades, aficionados of the movies have known the name of Lewis Jacobs. This is an excellent paperback original which Jacobs has compiled from some of the best writing done on the movies since the early silent period.
The scope here is broad, and eclectic, dealing with artistic analyses and also glowing appreciations. These articles are by people who have enjoyed the film. There are some important and well-remembered names here.
The authors include Dudley Nichols, the great screen writer of "Stagecoach" and "The Informer"; Dwight Macdonald, the critic; Vachel Lindsay, once a critic himself; Gilbert Seldes, celebrated viewer of all the lively arts; Kenneth MacGowan, one-time film producer and late teacher of film technique; Hollis Alpert, critic for Saturday Review; James Johnson Sweeney, famed critic of the past, and Sergei Eisenstein, the Russian film genius.
THE INDIAN AND THE WHITE MAN, edited with an introduction by Wilbom E. Washburn (Doubleday Anchor, $1.95).
This is a splendid paperback original, one of three to launch Anchor Books' Documents in American Civilization. It is a huge book, one that should interest all students of American studies, no matter what their disciplines may be.
Wilcomb E. Washburn carries strong credentials as editor of the volume. He has vast academic experience, and is curator of the Division of Political History at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington. He also, obviously, loves Indian lore, and this is a book of real treasures.
First, the illustrations. We see Amerigo Vespucci and the primitive Indian woman of America, several views of Pocahontas, an Iroquois mask, Shem Drowne's Indian weather vane, the Paxton boys massacring Indians, Joseph Brant as portrayed by Gilbert Stuart, captured whites, Custer at the Little Big Horn, two views of Geronimo, Edward Hicks' primitive painting of Penn and the Indians, Red Jacket's medal, heroic portraits of plains Indians, Sequoyah, Horatio Greenough's "Rescue Group," and others.
THE DOCUMENTS THEMSELVES RANGE from accounts of the earliest white-Indian encounters to the "Declaration of Indian Purpose" prepared at the American Indian Conference in Chicago in 1961.
There would be no purpose in trying to list all the writers represented here. But a few are of particular relevance. Columbus tells of meeting the Indians, as does Cartier. There are the stories concerning John Smith, Pocahontas and John Rolfe. Franklin, Jefferson and John Adams all knew the Indian well; they are in this book. John Cotton gives Puritan justification for dispossession of the Indian, and our pioneer novelist, Hugh Henry Brackenridge, comments on the "animals, vulgarly called Indians."
Marshall's decision in Cherokee Nation v. Georgia is here, and Theodore Roosevelt decries the pro-Indian sentimentalists. Cadwallader Colden writes of the fur trade. Franklin describes the marauding Paxton family. Captain Eugene Ware, Kansas' own "Ironquill," writes about the Indian wars of a century ago. Henry Adams tells how that Indian fighter, William Henry Harrison, attained fame. The explorer John Wesley Powell is in these pages, as is that eminent modern-day spokesman for the Indian, John Collier.
There is, finally, a section on the Indian and literature. Here are writings by Montaigne, Rousseau (who helped give us the concept of the noble savage), Jefferson, De Witt Clinton, Melville and Parkman, and D. H. Lawrence, Hemingway and Faulkner from recent years.—CMP
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95¢ paper, $1.95 hard cover
ALL FOR LOVE Dryden
LADY WINDERMERE'S FAN Wilde
SHE STOOPS TO CONQUER
Goldmuth
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EARNEST Wilde
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VOLPONE, OR THE FOX Jonson
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LOVE AND INTRIGUE
Schiller $1.25*
MARY STUART Schiller 95***
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AUSTEN: Emma, Bradbrook
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Enville
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MOLIERE: Tartuffe, Hall
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VOLTAIRE: Candide, Barber
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EICHENDORFF: Aus dem Leben eines
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GOTTHELL: Hans Joggeli der Erbvetter,
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Thursday. March 26, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Nizer, Wilson, FDR, and Assassins
MY LIFE IN COURT, by Louis Nizer (Pyramid, 95 cents).
At the top of many best-seller lists for many weeks was this nonfiction book, an autobiography by a famous trial lawyer. It is still being talked about, and one of the cases Nizer depicts, the Quentin Reynolds-Westbrook Pegler libel case, has moved successfully to the Broadway stage.
It is tribute to say that a book reads like a novel, but this one does, with the eternal fascination of courtroom drama. Louis Nizer singles out some fantastic cases—the Reynolds-Pegler affair, sordid and ugly; the "War of the Roses," Billy Rose and divorce; the "Rum and Coca-Cola" comedy; the marital mixup of John Jacob Astor, and the Loews' proxy battle.
The book is always interesting,
always absorbing. There is nothing
cheap here, nothing sensational.
It deserves a wide audience.
OLD JULES, by Mari Sandez
(Bison Bocks, $1.60)
The University of Nebraska Press has made a singular contribution in publishing this book in paperback. Since "Old Jules" appeared in the mid-thirties it has acquired special status as a story of the Midwestern frontier. Mari Sandoz provided a portrait in "Old Jules" that ranks with the people in Willa Cather's novels, and the book itself, though non-fiction, compares favorably with the classic Cather tales.
Nebraska is the setting, specifically the upper Niobrara country in western Nebraska, which is something of the Midwest and something of the West, too. The setting becomes almost as important as Jules Ami Sandoz itself, and the author's intention was to tell the story of a community as well as of her father.
So we have here a story of primitive life, of violence, of hunts, of accidents, of the drama of nature, the winds and the isolation that other writers—O. E. Rolvaag and Hamlin Garland come to mind, and John Ice of Kansas, who wrote of the pioneer life of his family—also have recorded.
THE ASSASSINS, by Robert J.
Donovan (Popular, 60 cents).
Timely and exciting is this book by the author of "PT 109." Robert J. Donovan has added a chapter on the assassination of President Kennedy, and this will give the book even greater notoriety and sales, in all likelihood. Readers of the New Yorker will recall some of these stories as having appeared originally in that magazine.
The reporting is accurate, the style fast-moving. Donovan deals not only with the four men who murdered Lincoln, Garfield, McKinley and Kennedy, but also with the attempted assassinations of Jackson, Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Truman.
In inevitably the best of the chapters concern the successful assassins — Lee Oswald, John Wilkes Booth, Charles Guiteau, and Leon Czolgosz.
EDISON, A BIOGRAPHY. by Matthew Josephson (McGraw-Hill Paperbacks, $2.55).
Schoolboys growing up in the first three decades of this century knew Thomas A. Edison as one of the great hero figures, and this is the way Matthew Josephson, author of "The Robber Barons," presents Edison in this excellent biography.
Edison invented the carbon microphone, the electric light, the phonograph, and developed the motion picture camera. Beyond these he busied himself with many other inventions, made a fortune, became the darling of conservatives, and gave us aphelisms ranking with those of Poor Richard of the 18th century.
He was never a philosopher, or would-be philosopher, like his contemporary Carnegie or his friend Ford. He was largely a symbol, a folk hero, never a great original thinker, a practical tinkerer who worked out of pragmatism rather than pure science. Josephson's biography is full-scale, possibly the best book yet on Edison.
This is a special and unique kind of history. One president wrote a diseeming and compassionate book about another president, a member of the opposition party under whom he served in World War I. This makes "The Ordeal of Woodrow Wilson" distinctive from most other books about Wilson.
Hoover was head of Belgian relief, food administrator of the United States, and a member of the President's American War Council. He worked closely with Wilson, and after the war was director of relief and reconstruction of Europe and a member of the President's Economic Advisory Council in Paris. All of this made him an insider.
And a sympathetic insider. He does not try to offer a full-fledged biography of Wilson; rather he describes Wilson as war president; negotiator at Versailles, and earnest pleader for the League of Nations and ratification of the peace treaty. Hoover sees Wilson as a liberal of the 19th century stamp, not a doctrinaire liberal of the 20th century, and to Hoover "socialistic," variety.
NARRATIVE OF THE LIFE OF FREDERICK DOUGLASS (Dolphin, 85 cents).
In 1845 a young American of only 28 published his autobiography. This point in itself would seem unimportant, but the young man was a former Negro slave who only recently had obtained his freedom. He was Frederick Douglass, and his narrative is a landmark in the history of the Negro in America.
Douglass became the first Negro newspaper editor and the first significant leader of his race in America. He was a man of genuine intellect, and his book is no random document by an untrained writer. Beyond that he was a man of depth, and his story is moving and perceptive.
THE ORDEAL OF WOODROW
WILSON, by Herbert Hoover (McGraw-Hill Paperbacks, $2.25).
NOTHING TO FEAR, by Franklin D. Roosevelt (Popular, 75 cents).
Here is a collection of Roosevelt speeches, first published in 1946, with a preface by Roosevelt's close friend and aide, Harry Hopkins, and a special introduction by Allan Nevins. The editor was Ben D. Zevin.
For many readers, this book will recall those 12 years when Roosevelt was the dominant individual in American life, for those who loved him, those who admired him, and those who hated him. His speeches illustrate why he struck such emotions in his listeners, and in newspaper readers. There are 62 different speeches, ranging from the convention address of 1932 when he brought forth the "New Deal" idea to the speech he was to have delivered April 13, 1945, at a Jefferson Day dinner.
THE INHERTORS, by John Tebel
(Popular, 60 cents).
Hearst is one of the men portrayed in this story of the great American fortunes. There are also portraits, and descriptions of the spending and high life, of the Astors, the Dodges, the Dukes and Reynoldses of tobacco fame, the Vanderbiltts, Hearst, the Du Ponts, the McCormicks and Fields of Chicago, the Drexels and Mellons, the Guggenheimis and Morgans, the Carnegies and Rockefellers and others who have been, in the Tebbel term, "Lords and Ladies Bountiful."
A historian whose special interest has been the men Matthew Josephson calls "the robber barons" is the author of this entertaining and valuable work, John Tebbel also has done histories in American journalism, including a biography of William Randolph Hearst.
GOOD READING, edited by J. Sherwood Weber (Mentor, 75 cents).
Now comes the 19th edition of a popular bibliography that should be on the shelf of every University of Kansas student. This work is revised, updated and expanded, and was prepared by the Committee on College Reading.
HITLER'S SECRET BOOK, introduction by Telford Taylor (Evergreen, $2.45).
What the book is, apparently,
is an unpublished book by Hitler,
confiscated in May 1945 by an
American officer in Germany. It
had been dictated in 1928 and
placed in a Nazi safe.
This is billed as a sequel to "Mein Kampf," and it has an introduction by a retired brigadier general who was chief counsel at the Nuremberg war crimes trials.
Hitler sets forth his foreign policy and gives his rationalization for war. There are attacks on the Jews, the French, the Bolsheviks, and so on.
This giant of a book contains nearly 1,000 pages and misses nothing, it would seem, in the life of this 20th century giant. It is difficult to see how anything else needs to be said about Eugene O'Neill.
O'NEILL, by Barbara and Arthur
Gelb (Delta, $3.75).
The authors present the youthful O'Neill, the years at sea, years which contributed so much to the later plays, the gold expedition in Honduras, life in Greenwich Village, and life in Provincetown. The books that made their imprint on O'Neill are treated, and the playwrights, Strindberg and the classical Greeks who are so evident in O'Neill's plays.
The authors set out to do a conventional biography, but found O'Neill was too mighty for that. His life was so entwined with his plays that much had to be said to explain the man and his work. Furthermore, his early years, and the backgrounds of his parents, also were too relevant to be ignored.
The authors give us a picture of the parents, the neurotic mother and the twisted, flamboyant father who had played Monte Cristo so long that he almost lived the part in real life. This segment of O'Neill's life is known to those acquainted with that posthumous masterpiece, "Long Day's Journey into Night."
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 26, 1964
New Plays Include Anthologies, O'Neill, Albee
THE GOLDEN AGE; THE ROMANTIC INFLUENCE; SEEDS OF MODERN DRAMA, all edited by Norris Houghton in the Laurel Masterpieces of Continental Drama series (Dell Laurel, 75 cents each except Vol. II, 95 cents).
Another excellent, attractive paperback series is appearing with this group. The titles are familiar, and there is a valuable introduction by the editors of the series.
The titles are, in Volume I, Lope de Vega's "The Sheep Well," Calderon's "Life Is a Dream," Corneille's "The Cid," Racine's Phaedra" and Moliere's "The Misanthrope." Those in "The Romantic Influence" are Goethe's "Faust," Part I, Schiller's "Mary Stuart," Hugo's "Hernani" and Rostand's "Cyrano de bergerac." In "Seeds of Modern Drama" are Zola's "Therese Raquit," Ibsen's "An Enemy of the People," Strindberg's "Miss Julie," Hauptmann's "The Weavers" and Chekhov's "The Sea Gull."
All in all, a varied collection for those interested in developments in the drama.
TWO PLAYS, by Francois Billet-doux (Mermaid Dramabook, $1.50, in cloth $3.50); MATTY AND THE MORON AND MADONNA, by Herbert Lieberman (Spotlight Dramabook, $1.50, in cloth $3.50); SEVEN PLAYS, by Michel de Ghelderode (Mermaid Dramabook, $1.95, in cloth $4.95); THE TESTMENT OF SAMUEL BECKETT, by Josephine Jacobsen and William R. Mueller (Dramabook, $1.75, in cloth $3.95).
This collection of plays is grouped together because all tell us much about playwrights and their view of the world today. One of the four volumes is an essay on one of the more influential writers of the theatre of the absurd.
Billetdoux's plays are "Tehn-Tchin" and "Chez Torpe," the first a highly successful play on Broadway, the second best known in Europe. "Tehn-Tchin" deals with two strangers who meet, become lovers, and drift into alcoholism. "Chez Torpe" takes place in an inn
run in eastern Europe, to which comes an inspector of police drawn there by the suicides of five guests.
"Matty and the Moron and Madonna" is a play which won first prize in the 1963 Charles E. Sergel drama competition at the University of Chicago. It is to be produced off-Broadway—where else? "The Testament of Samuel Beckett" is a study of the work of the man best known for "Waiting for Godot." The writers deal with Beckett's techniques, his poetry, his comic approach.
The plays by Ghelderode include "Red Magic," "Hop, Signor!," "The Death of Doctor Faust," "Christopher Columbus," "A Night of Pity," "Piet Bouteille" and "Miss Jairus." Not a well-known name in America, Ghelderode has achieved considerable fame in Europe with radio and television broadcasts and theatrical performances. He died in April 1962.
SHAKESPEARE ARRANGED FOR MODERN READING, edited by Frank W. Cady and Van H. Cartmell (Premier, 95 cents).
Once more the burden of thought has been lifted from the American reader, who has had everything from the Bible to "Huckleberry Finn" put in 20th century form. How long will this go on? Must everything be reduced to the mind that grasps only "The Carpetbaggers" and the comic books?
Perhaps this book is a service. There are eight comedies here in digest form — digest and modern English (though we have been spared the ultimate logic of this approach to literature, language of the streets and the restroom wall). Here are "The Comedy of Errors," "Love's Labour's Lost," "Two Gentlemen of Verona," "A Midsummer Night's Dream," "The Merchant of Venice" (a comedy?), "The Taming of the Shrew," "Much Ado About Nothing," "The Merry Wives of Windsor," "As You Like It." "Twelfth Night," "All's Well That Ends Well," "Measure for Measure," "The Winter's Tale" and "The Tempest."
SHAKESPEARE ARRANGED FOR MODERN READING, edited by Frank W. Cady and Van H. Cartmell (Premier, 95 cents).
Now the tragedies have been put into primer form, or is this view too harsh? Perhaps if this will get people to read Shakespeare it will be worth it. Into almost 500 pages the editors have packed "Hamlet," "Macbeth," "Othello," "King Lear," "Antony and Cleopatra," "Romeo and Juliet," "Julius Caesar," "Coriolanus," "Cymbeline," "Titus Andronicus," "Timon of Athens," "Trailus and Cressida" and "Pericles."
WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF?', by Edward Albee (Cardinal, 75 cents).
In a number of deadly Broadway seasons this has been possibly the most exciting of plays. It won the Drama Critics Circle and Tony awards for 1962-63, and must be regarded as a shattering experience for either the reader or the viewer.
It is a marital drama, and it reveals the brittle and also brutal talent of Edward Albee. Though it is funny it also will be shocking to many readers, and repelling to others.
10 SHORT PLAYS, edited by M. Jerry Weiss (Dell, 60 cents)
—A good anthology in the Laurel series. The editor has selected some good titles by some well known writers. Here are the contents—"The Happy Journey to Trenton and Camden," by Thornton Wilder; "The Case of the Crushed Petunias," by Tennessee Williams; "The Triumph of the Egg," by Sherwood Anderson; "Coming Through the Rye," by Saroyan; "The Feast of Ortolans," by Maxwell Anderson; "Visit to a Small Planet" (the television play), by Gore Vidal; "Suppressed Desires," by Susan Glaspell; "Parents Are People," by M. Jerry Weiss; "My Client Curley" (radio play), by Norman Corwin, and "Quare Medicine," by Paul Green.
LONG DAY'S JOURNEY INTO NIGHT, by Eugene O'Neill (Yale, $1.45); A TOUCH OF THE POET, by Eugene O'Neill (Yale, $1.25). Two beautifully bound paperbacks are offered the reader in these volumes, the last plays of Eugene O'Neill. "Long Day's Journey into Night" was written in 1940 but not released for performance until 1956, a few years after the playwright's death. "A Touch of the Poet" was the last full-length play O'Neill finished. It was produced on Broadway in 1958.
One finds in these plays autobiographical views into the playwright's life. "Long Day's Journey into Night" is an emotionally shattering play to see or to read, the family of old actor James Tyrone tearing each other apart in a long miserable day.
"A Touch of the Poet" takes place in the 1820s, and it also is a forceful drama about an actor. The power of O'Neill is demonstrated well in these plays, which fortunately are available in paper-back form.
WAITING FOR GODOT, by Samuel Beckett (Evergreen, $1.45); FOUR PLAYS, by Eugene Ionesco (Evergreen ($1.95); A TASTE OF HONEY, by Shelagh Delaney (Evergreen, $1.45).
These new plays in paperback are of two kinds. The plays of Beckett and Ionesco represent the new in the theater, that of Shelagh Delaney, while not the old, certainly the more traditional.
"Waiting for Godot" was quite a sensation, though many still don't know for sure what Samuel Beckett is saying. The play may be classed in the "theater of the absurd," and certainly is of symbolic interest as well as dramatic. It gave overnight fame to Beckett. Is it about God? Well, that's one interpretation. Bert Lahr, who starred in it on Broadway, didn't know what it was about.
Ionesco, even more, is of the "absurd" movement. In this volume are "The Bald Soprano," "The
Lesson," "The Chairs" and "Jack, or the Submission." All four are highly experimental in nature, funny yet terrifying. In the crazy world of the sixties Ionesco may be making more sense than we yet know.
As for "A Taste of Honey," it now is well known in the movies as well as stage. It deals with an English working-class girl and her friends and lovers—the Negro sailor who makes her pregnant, the homosexual art student, her mother, her mother's new husband.
IBSEN, LETTERS AND SPEECHES, edited by Evert Springchorn (Hill and Wang Dramabook, $2.45; in cloth, $5.75).
The editors of Dramabooks have performed a real service here, publication of the first English edition of Ibsen's letters since 1905. Included are 276 letters, 13 speeches, 4 prefaces and 1 autobiographical fragment. There are 129 letters not available in the earlier edition.
The student of Ibsen will be interested to read the great playwright's views on conventions of 19th century Norway, his fight for social progress, for rights of women and so on. The editor is associate professor of drama at the experimental theatre, Vassar College.
THE MERRY-GO-ROUND OF LOVE, AND SELECTED STORIES, by Luigi Pirandello (Signet Classics, 75 cents).
Though best known as a playwright, the Italian Luigi Pirandello also wrote a good many tales before he became one of the giants of the 20th century theater. This new volume presents a number of these.
The settings range from Sicily to Rome and deal with people caught in all kinds of situations—frustrated youth, miserable old age, unhappy married couples, others in isolation. "The Merry-Go-Round of Love" is presented, in English, for the first time.
There are 15 stories altogether.
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A CANDLE FOR ST. JUDE by Rumer Godden 1.25
Novel set in a London ballet school.
EXILE'S RETURN by Malcolm Cowley 1.45
The 'last generation' and its leading literary figures.
PHILOSOPHER'S HOLIDAY by Irwin Edman 1.25
Personal anecdotes and ideas.
THE VICTIM by Saul Bellow 1.65
Novel of a man harried to the verge of insanity.
THE CREATION OF THE UNIVERSE by George Gamow 1.25
Origin and evolution of the universe.
BRIGHTON ROCK by Graham Greene 1.45
Guilt and villainy at a British seaside resort.
A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNG MAN by James Joyce 1.45
"Part of the lasting literature of our age."
THE LOVE LETTERS OF PHYLLIIS McGINLEY .95
Humorous verse.
KAMONGO by Homer W. Smith 1.25
A discussion on man's place in the universe.
THE SONG OF BERNADETTE by Franz Werfel 1.65
Novel of the miracle at Lourdes.
AN EPIODE OF SPARROWS by Rumer Godden 1.25
Novel of two London street children.
BYRON IN ITALY by Peter Quennell Biography. 1.25
LIE DOWN IN DARKNESS by William Styron 1.65
With this novel Styron achieved worldwide recognition.
THE QUIET AMERICAN by Graham Greene 1.25
An idealistic young American in war-torn Saigon.
HERMAN MELVILLE: A CRITICAL BIOGRAPHY by Newton Arvin 1.85
NATHANIEL HEAWTHORNE: A CRITICAL BIOGRAPHY by Mark Van Doren 1.45
ETRUSCAN PLACES by D. H. Lawrence 1.25
Perhaps the most beautifully written of all travel books.
LOSER TAKES ALL by Graham Greene .95
An "entertainment," written originally as a film scenario.
ARISTOTLE'S POLITICS AND POETICS 1.45
Politics trans. by Benjamin Jowett, Poetics by Thomas Twining.
DYLAN THOMAS IN AMERICA by John Malcolm Brinnin 1.65
The last years in the life of the famous poet.
THE CRAFT OF FICTION by Percy Lubbock 1.45
The famous writer's manual.
THE GRAPES OF WRATH by John Steinbeck 1.91
The memorable novel about the "Okies."
LUCKY JIM by Kingspley Amis 1.4
Life in an English university—half satire, half force.
RADIATION: WHAT IT IS AND HOW IT AFFECTS YOU BY Jack Schubert and Ralph E. Lapp 1.45
SONS AND LOVERS by D. H. Lawrence 1.65
Lawrence's third novel, his most popular book.
THE LITERARY SITUATION by Malcolm Cowley 1.45
Writing and writers in mid-century America.
WINESBURG, OHIO by Sherwood Anderson 1.45
A midwestern town is laid bare in these stories.
THE POWER AND THE GLORY by Graham Greene 1.45
A brilliant tale of suspense and diving terror.
RACE: SCIENCE AND POLITICS by Ruth Benedict 1.25
A refutation of the claims of the racists.
THE SUPREME DOCTRINE: PSYCHOLOGICAL STUDIES IN ZEN THOUGHT by Hubert Benoit 1.25
ON THE ROAD by Jack Kerouac 1.45
The novel of the beat generation.
THE OPPOSING SELF by Lionel Trilling 1.25
Nine essays on the self, from Wordsworth to Orwell.
PETER ABELAND by Helen Waddell 1.45
Tragic story of the immortal twelfth-century lovers.
WRITERS AT WORK: THE PARIS REVIEW INTERVIEWS edited by Malcolm Cowley 1.45
Insights into personality and work habits of some distinguished authors of our day.
REMINISCENCES OF TOLSTOY, CHEKNOV AND ANDREDEYE by Maxim Gorky 1.25
NOTRE-DAME OF PARIS by Allan Temko
Building the great cathedral. 32 pages of illustrations.
SEX, LITERATURE, AND CENSORSHIP by D. H. Lawrence 1.25
Eight essays.
OF SOCIETIES AND MEN by Caryl P. Hoskins
A scientist explores the problems of man, and society.
ANGLO-SAXON ATTITUDES by Angus Wilson
A novel.
WOMEN IN LOVE by D. H. Lawrence 1.85
Novel which Lawrence regarded as his best book.
THE CROWD by Gustave Le Bon 1.45
Prophetic study of mass psychology.
PLEASURES OF MUSIC edited by Jacques Barsun 1.95
Great writing about music and musicians.
THE ADVENTURES OF AUGIE MARCH by Saul Bellow 1.95
A novel.
KANGAROO by D. H. Lawrence 1.85
Novel about Australia.
JOURNEY WITHOUT MAPS by Graham Greene 1.45
An arduous journey through the wilderness of Liberia.
THE LITTLE FOXES by Lillian Hellman 1.25
Drama about a wealthy southern family in a crisis.
THE RAINBOW by D. H. Lawrence 1.85
Lawrence's longest and most ambitious novel.
THE QUESTION OF HAMLET by Harry Levin 1.25
A new interpretation of Hamlet.
HOLISM AND EVOLUTION by Jan Christian Smuts 1.65
A scientific concept important to this century.
VENTURE TO THE INTERIOR by Laurens van der Post 1.45
Exposition into the unmapped regions of Central Africa.
THE END OF THE AFFAIR by Graham Greene
Novel of love and hate in modern London.
AARON'S ROD by D. H. Lawrence 1.45
Ends the trilogy begun by The Rainbow and Women in Love.
THE MEDIEVAL MANICHEE by Steven Runciman 1.45
Brilliant study of a major Christian heresy.
THE EDWARDIANS by V. Sackville-West 1.45
A portrait of an age in the form of a novel.
THE BEST OF SAKI
Stories of a master, selected by Graham Greene.
THE GREAT REHEARSALS by Carl Van Doren
The making of the U. S. Constitution.
THE THINKING REED by ROBECA West 1.65
Novel of a beautiful woman's search for love.
SEIZE THE DAY by Seul Bollow
Saga of a man in one climactic day.
THE WAY THINGS ARE by P. W. Bridgman 1.75
The nature of experience, by the Nobel Prize-winning physicist.
MAN, MORALS, AND SOCIETY by J. C. Flugel 1.65
What psychiatry has to suggest about ethics and religion.
THE POTTING SHED by Graham Greene 9.9
A play about a miracle.
Vol. 1 | THE COMPLETE 1.45
Vol. 2 | SHORT STORIES 1.45
Vol. 3 | OF D. H. LAWRENCE 1.45
LEAVES OF GRASS by Walt Whitman, the original edition, with an Introduction by Malcolm Cowley 9.9
THE ROYAL GAME with AMOK, and LETTER FROM AN UNKNOWN WOMAN by Stefan Zweig 1.25
A novel and two famous novels.
WHI Mely
POWER AND PERSONALITY by Harold D. Lasswell
The relation between leaders and those who are led.
THE TIME OF MAN by Elizabeth Madox Roberts
A novel.
THE AUNT'S STORY by Patrick White
Novel of a woman's search for happiness.
THE UNITED STATES AND CHINA by John King, Fairbank
Analysis of Chinese society, culture and politics.
THE SOFT VOICE OF THE SERPENT by Nadine Gordimer
Short stories.
TWENTY-ONE STORIES by Graham Greene
STORY WRITING by Edith Ronald Mitrielees
Specific, basic rules with practical application.
THE UNITED STATES AND JAPAN by Edwin D. Reischauer
Analysis of Japanese society, culture and politics.
LOVE AMONG THE ARTISTS by George Bernard Shaw
A novel.
THE REPUBLIC by Charles A. Beard
The roots of American political institutions.
THE LOG FROM THE SEA OF CORTEZ by John Steinbeck
Report of an expedition to the Gulf of California.
MRS. BRIDGE by Evan S. Connell, Jr.
Award-winning portrait of a disillusioned suburban matron.
SEA AND SARDINIA by D. H. Lawrence
Travel.
THE ANATOMY OF PEACE by Emery Reves
Proposal for international government and law.
THE OUTERMOST HOUSE by Henry Beston
A year of life on the Great Beach of Cape Cod.
FOUR WAYS OF BEING HUMAN by Gene Lisitzky
Study of four primitive tribes.
TORTILLA FLAT by John Steinbeck
Mexican paisano of Monterey, California.
THE NEXT HUNDRED YEARS: Man's Natural and Technological Resources by Harrison Brown, James Banner, and John Weir
THE ROOTS OF AMERICAN COMMUNISM by Theodore Draper
From its beginnings to the 1920s.
AMERICAN COMMUNISM AND SOVIET RUSSIA by Theodore Draper
IN PARENTHEISIS by David Jones
Poetic narrative of seven months during World War I.
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THE VIKING PRESS 625 MADISON AVENUE NEW YORK 22 NY
Thursday, March 26, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Melville Revival Evident in Current Volumes
WHITE JACKET, by Herman Melville (Evergreen, $1.95).
Here is a big, relatively unknown novel by Melville. It is a record of Melville's last sea voyage, and appeared after his return to Boston from the Pacific.
"White Jacket" takes place aboard the Neversink, "a floating hell upon a wooden-walled Gomorrah." Life was harsh for a sailor in those days, and Melville pulls no punches, indicting oppression on the high seas.
William Plomer wrote the introduction for this attractive new volume.
The book was read by many congressmen and is believed to have had a profound influence in abolishing corporal punishment in the Navy.
REDBURN: HIS FIRST VOYAGE. by Herman Melville (Anchor, 95 cents).
Here is one of the several novels of the sea by Melville, one that appeared a year or so after "Omoo" and two years before "Moby Dick." It is an adventure story, but one that offers insights and revelations that foreshadow that more-than-adventure story, "Moby Dick."
"Redburn" describes Melville's first voyage to England as a sailor. The author describes life in London and Liverpool, and gives an early view of an American confronting a civilization quite different from his own. He sees sights that remind one of Dickens.
Newton Arvin wrote that the book's "inward subject is the initiation of innocence to evil." Some readers will read the book on this symbolic level; others will enjoy it for its description, its narrative, its adventure.
MARDI, by Herman Melville (Capricorn, $2.25).
This appears to be the year for Melville in paperback, especially Melville novels not generally known. "Mardi" is the first book-
length work by Melville, and has long been out of print.
Like most of the other books by Melville, "Mardi" deals with the sea, and H. Bruce Franklin suggests in an introduction that only the later works of Melville keep the book from being regarded as a major work in our literature.
The author combines realistic adventure with satire, studies of science, poetry, history, politicals, philosophy, mythology and religion. Like "Utopia" or "Candide" it is a philosophic voyage in narrative form.
AMERICAN HUMOR: A STUDY OF THE NATIONAL CHARACTER, by Constance Rourke (Anchor, 95 cents).
Students of American culture find this volume one that is indispensable. Constance Rourke deals with many figures in our literature and our folk tradition, and sees humor as a basic component in our present-day arts as well as in our past. The late Bernard DeVoto called it "by far the most important book ever written in the field."
Miss Rourke deals with the legendary Yankee, the peddler, the sharp trader; the frontier boaster, like Davy Crockett; the Negro; the actor and the minstrel; the playwrights of the 19th century; Lincoln; Whitman and Hawthorne; Mark Twain; Henry James and his American abroad; Mr. Dooley and Vachel Lindsay. The book is a rich one, warmly written and perceptive throughout.
THE WIZARD OF OZ, by L. Frank Baum (Crest, 40 cents).
Scarcely recommended for the sophisticated collegiate, this children's classic may appeal to the parents. Or perhaps you want to compare it with that Judy Garland film that keeps showing up on television. Whatever your motive, you may find that "The Wizard of Oz" really is a fine book for children of all ages.
THE RED ROVER, by James Fenimore Cooper (Bison Books, $1.85).
In an attractive paperback printed from plates that go back more than a century, the Nebraska Press has presented one of the celebrated tales of James Penimore Cooper, but not one of his familiar tales of the forests. "The Red Rover" is about the sea; Cooper knew the sea and he loved it, and Warren S. Walker, who wrote the introduction to this volume, suggests that Cooper would have been a major American literary figure had he written nothing but his sea stories.
This particular edition is that of 1859, that often called the Darley Edition, and it helps to maintain the flavor of this early-day novel, which came from Cooper's pen in 1828. From his own sea experience, Cooper wrote of the Red Rover, a hero-villain who is both American revolutionary and pirate. He is in the Royal Navy, fights a duel with an officer, and is forced to flee the law. He then begins his war against the British fleet.
U.S.A. by John Dos Passos (Sentry,
$3.95).
Here, for the first time in a single-volume paperback, is the novel that many critics regard as the outstanding American novel of the 20th century. It is a new edition, entirely reset, but it includes the famous illustrations by Reginald Marsh found in earlier editions.
"U.S.A." of course, is the three novels, "The 42nd Parallel," "Nineteen Nineteen" and "The Big Money." The three form much more of an entity than later novels by Dos Passos assembled into one volume.
It is a sweeping picture of 20th century that Dos Passos unfolds here, and it also is a revealing look into the author's mind and changing attitudes, even though it is about as objective a piece of
writing as one could find. "U.S.A." is highly experimental, Dos Passos using devices earlier attempted in "Manhattan Transfer." Readers of Mailer's "the Naked and the Dead" will find that Dos Passos must have greatly impressed the younger writer.
MANHATTAN TRANSFER, by John Dos Passos (Sentry, $2.45).
When this novel appeared in 1925 some critics were disposed to shrug it off as a feeble imitation of Joyce or as a novel that the general public could not care about. It has survived for almost 40 years, and today is regarded as a fore-runner of the author's "U.S.A." as well as of other novels.
As a matter of fact, "Manhattan Transfer" seems almost old hat today, so familiar is its experimentation. Taking a group of New York stories, Dos Passos gives us a mosaic of the big city scene, all the stories coming together more or less to describe life in the twenties.
Its style was fresh and new, its vernacular believable. It had, and still has, the rhythm, the sights, the sounds and the smells of the city. The novel has achieved near-classic status, despite its shaky beginnings.
ACTION AT AQUILA, by Hervey Allen (Popular, 60 cents).
On the heels of his great success with "Anthony Adverse," Hervey Allen published this Civil War novel in the late thirties. Recent and continuing interest in the war should mean more readers for the book, even though it is not in a class with the other Allen books or even with the war novels of Mac-Kinlay Kantor.
It is conventional Civil War romance, and it is full of action. Allen was a writer who loved history, and he kept this story of the events leading up to a battle accurate and relatively unembellished with fictional nonsense.
MARGARET FULLER, AMERICAN ROMANTIC, edited by Perry Miller (Anchor, $1.45).
It is difficult to think of any American woman (Dorothy Thompson is a possible name to consider) who captures the imagination quite like Margaret Fuller. Even more than Emerson she was the center of Transcendentalism, and she fascinated people of our time even as she repelled them (Thoreau or Hawthorne) or drew them into her circle (Alcott or Channing).
Perry Miller, who has done similar services for other Transcendentalists, has collected writings of Margaret Fuller in this Anchor original. This woman who proclaimed that she accepted the universe is represented by writings from the Dial, that short-lived but quite important magazine; the New York Tribune, whose editor then was Horaee Greeley, her plea for woman suffrage, "Woman in the Nineteenth Century," and other works.
THE OCTOPUS, by Frank Norris
(Signet Classics, 75 cents).
Recognized as a classic naturalistic literature is this turn-of-the-century novel, now in an attractive Signet edition. "The Octopus" was envisioned as the first of a "trilogy of wheat" by the young novelist, the second being "The Pit." Norris died before the trilogy could be realized.
"The Octopus," however, makes the name of Norris secure in literary history. It is set in the San Joaquin Valley in California, where the mighty Southern Pacific—the octopus of the title—is overpowering the wheat farmers. It is mighty and brutal battle fought there, and many innocent lives are claimed.
Though an indictment of the railroad, "The Octopus" also is a lyrical story of the land, with beautiful passages, in particular, of the sowing of wheat. The characterizations also are strong.
CAL PAPERBACKS for
NEW TITLES FALL 1963
THE INLAND WHALE
Nine Stories Retold from California Indian Legends by Theodora Kroeber. "The Inland Whale has pioneered in bringing the oral literature of primitive peoples into the realm of literary criticism and comparative style."—American Anthropologist. Cal 88 $1.50
SHAKEPEARE'S TRAGIC FRONTIER
The World of His Final Tragedies by Willard Farnham. "Professor Farnham has written a remarkably rich and perceptive book."—Saturday Review.
Cal. 85, $1.95
POSTWAR BRITISH FICTION
New Accents and Attitudes by James Gindin. "For livelier, and more acute, than anything written on its subject this side of the Atlantic."—Times Educational Supplement.
Cal 86 $1.95
A CULTURAL HISTORY OF SPANISH AMERICA
From Conquest to Independence by Mariano Picon-Salas. "Its style, warmth,
and freedom from doctrinaire attitudes should also win the approval of its
English-speaking readers."—Hispania Cal 90 $1.95
JOHN DONNE'S SERMONS ON THE PSALMS AND GOSPELS
With a Selection of Prayers and Meditations. Edited, with an Introduction,
by Evelyn M. Simpson. The glory of John Donne's prose at its best is very
different from that of his verse, but is equal to it; and there can be no question
that his best prose is in his sermons.
Cal 84 $1.95
JOHN DONNE'S SERMONS ON THE PSALMS AND GOSPELS
AN ANTHROPOLOGIST LOOKS AT HISTORY
Selected Essays by A. L. Kroeber. In fourteen essays, written during the last decade of his life, the renowned anthropologist studies aspects of culture growth, civilization, the role of style in cultures, and the interrelations of history and anthropology.
Cal 87 $1.95
Epigrams, Maxims, Memoranda, and Memoirs of an Apocryphal Professor. With an Appendix of Poems from the "Apocryphal Songbooks" by Antonio Machado. Translated by Ben Belitt. Antonio Machado is not only a major lyric poet of Spanish literature, but, in the degree to which poetry may be said to engage the metaphysical intuition, its exemplary poet-philosopher. Cal 89 $1.50
JUAN DE MAIRENA
By William and Charlotte Wiser. The original text of a triumphant pioneer work of a generation ago, with an added text telling of Mrs. Wiser's return to the North Indian village of Karimpur. Her account of continuity and change will interest not only the social scientist but anyone concerned with fresh insights into contemporary society. Cal 91 $1.95
RFHIND MUD WALLS. 1930-1960
SPRING 1964
Information Education Entertainment
CARMINA ARCHILOCHI
ARAB NATIONALISM
The Fragments of Archilochos. Translated and edited by Guy Davenport. Although he is little known in our time, all ancient authorities praised the supreme grace and mordant wit of the soldier-poet, Archilochos. The verve, courage and joyous insight of these poems are presented here in brilliant translation.
Cal 92 $1.50
AVANT-GARDE
An Anthology. Edited by Sylvia G. Haim. "One of the most important studies of the doctrines of Arab nationalism to appear in recent years."—Middle East Forum Cal 93 $1.95
The Experimental Theater in France by Leonard Cabell Pronko. "The best introduction to the avant-garde playwrights of France we have in English."—Howard Clurman in New York Times Book Review Cal 96 $1.50
ELEMENTS OF CRITICAL THEORY
By Wayne Shumaker. "The great critical synthesis of our time."—Virginia Quarterly Review Col 98 $1.95
A NEW APPROACH TO JOYCE
The Portrait of the Artist as a Guidebook by Robert S. Ryf. "Ryf furnishes a clear and intelligent blueprint for The Portrait that is at once available for any good reader's understanding."—Los Angeles Times Cal 97 $1.95
ISHI IN TWO WORLDS
A Biography of the Last Wild Indian in North America by Theodora Kroceb.
"The warmth and understanding with which Ishi's story is told give this book its special quality. It can, I think, without exaggeration, be called one of the great American stories, a contribution not only to our history but to our literature."
—Lewis Gannett "A book that all Americans should read." New York Times Cal 94 $1.95
ERAS AND MODES IN ENGLISH POETRY
By Josephine Miles. This is the Second Edition, revised and enlarged, of a work widely acclaimed as a masterly example of linguistic analysis combining statistical word-counting with informed, perceptive studies of poetic style. Cal 95 $1.95
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS Berkeley
Page 10
University Daily, Kansan Thursday, March 26, 1964
Popular Titles Include Fitzgerald, Wouk, Lewis
THE BEAUTIFUL AND DAMNED BY F. Scott Fitzgerald (Scribner Library, $1.95).
This brings to four the Fitzgerald books in this distinguished paperback format. University students who have read "This Side of Paradise," as a starter, are hereby advised that the pretty look at the lost generation has become sullen.
Maybe, perhaps, because even by 1922 Fitzgerald's own look was being altered, even though Fitzgerald denied that his life and Zelda's was the life of Gloria and Anthony Patch in the new novel. The Patches live glamorously, freely, selfishly and rebelliously, and wind up in despair.
The novel represented an improvement over the earlier book, but only a step on the way to "The Great Gatsby by" and "Tender Is the Night." Fitzgerald maintains even further his feeling for life and the vernacular. He also shows his understanding of the jazz age, depth that reveals him to us today as perhaps the most accurate chronicler of that period we have had in America.
THE CAINE MUTINY, by Herman Wouk. (Dell, 95 cents).
Though its literary qualities and its social perceptions do not rank with those of, say, "From Here to Eternity" or "The Naked and the Dead," this may be the best pure adventure story to come out of World War II. There is likely to be an audience ready for "The Caine Mutiny" for years to come.
The novel won the Pulitzer prize, formed part of a fine Broadway play, and became a good though not great movie. It is, of course, the story of Willie Keith and his experiences aboard the minesweeper Caine in World War II. But Willie becomes a character of lesser interest than the neurotic Captain Queegr or the dedicated Maryk, who leads the "mutiny."
Queeg has passed into the national imagination, the captain hated by his men as "Old Yellow Stain." There are many other characters, a riproaring typhoon, considerable humor, romantic interludes ashore (though not many), and the mutiny and trial. If you haven't read this book, here's a good paperback edition.
CIMARRON, by Edna Ferber
(Bantam Pathfinder, 60 cents).
The critics scoff at Edna Ferber, and the people continue to read her. It is likely that "Cimarron" would be one of the best-thumbed volumes in the public libraries of America, a novel of tremendous readership and appeal since its publication 33 years ago. It has enjoyed many reprints and two film versions, one good enough to win the academy award of 1931.
"Cimarron" is a fast-moving, exciting story of the Oklahoma Land Rush and the growth of Oklahoma that followed it. Like most Ferber novels it is largely about a woman, the Kansas-bred Sabra Cravat, who marries the footloose dreamer from Oklahoma named Yancey Cravat, and lives to become the first lady of the territory and a wife who sees her husband on only rare occasions.
DRUMS ALONG THE MOHAWK,
by Walter D. Edmonds (Bantam
Pathfinder. 75 cents).
In the mid-thirties, when depression-soured Americans were looking for a way to spend their time, the historical novel really flourished, and "Drums Along the Mohawk" was one of the most popular. Here it is again, in a new paperback edition, and it remains a stirring story of the frontier.
Edmonds was always an expert and accurate chronicler of the New York country, and in "Drums Along the Mohawk" he describes the people who lived in the Mohawk valley in 1776, especially Gil and Lana Martin, newlyweds who had to clear the soil, plant it, build a cabin, and fight Indians and British.
There is good local color in this entertaining novel, and some high excitement. This is a vivid way to learn early American history, as the Indians rip through the frontier settlements and destroy everything in sight. Long, slightly superficial, always diverting—this is "Drums Along the Mohawk."
CATCH-22, by Joseph Heller (Dell,
75 cents).
Another story of World War II that has been batting around now for some time and is going into its 10th Dell paperback printing is Joseph Heller's "Catch-22." It is different from "The Caine Mutiny" in plot and mood, but may entertain the collegiate generation even more.
The story is about Air Force men and the island on which they wildly carouse in the Mediterranean. It's also about their women, for these lads are much less inhibited than the higher types of "The Caine Mutiny."
Maybe it offers social comment too. It's more likely that "Catch-22" will be read as a wild and amusing tale than as an important picture of war.
ETERNAL FIRE, by Calder Willingham (Dell, 95 cents).
This is the what's-it novel of the last few years. We are led to believe that this shocking writer is saying something about our society, but what the book really seems is one sensation after another.
Beyond that, it's a kind of Gothic horror tale, with a little of Faulkner at his Gothic worst ("Absalom, Absalom"), "The Castle of Ottranto," "Wuthering Heights," and contrivances lifted right out of "Uncle Tom's Cabin," Dickens and Victorianism. You see, there's
this ancient estate down in Georgia, where the evil Judge Ball conspires to deprive his ward Randolph of his intenitence. He keeps the boy from marrying little old Laurie Mae, and imports a seducer to go to work on that sweet child. Oh yes, Laurie Mae has a dwarf guard. Oh yes, the eternal fire of love wins out.
Sex, passion, alcoholism, lechery,
voueurism, idiocy, homosexuality,
sadism, lunacy, nymphomania, incest—what a movie ad that would make! For the folks who want a thrill but like it to be significant, bill this as a parable of good and evil. Or as satire. Or as a deep criticism of the South. Take your pick.
WORLD SO WIDE, by Sinclair Lewis (Fyramid, 35 cents).
This is a posthumously published novel by Sinclair Lewis, his last and unfortunately not his best. It is sometimes amusing, sometimes perceptive, several notches better than "The God Seeker" or "The Prodigial Parents," but far weaker than the books of the twenties.
"World So Wide" deals with the architect Hayden Chart, who goes to Italy after the death of his wife in an accident, and gets himself involved with two women. Clearly Lewis is returning to the scene of "Dodsworth," and Dodsworth is even a character (as Lewis in other novels uses the characters of earlier books).
KINGS ROW, by Henry Bellamann (Crest, 95 cents).
When this novel appeared in 1940 it swept to immediate sensation on the best-seller lists. The reasons are obvious today. It was in the critical tradition of "Main Street" but even more in the tradition that later gave us such trash as "Sironia, Texas" and "Peyton Place."
Though "Kings Row" is not a great American novel it is an exciting one Kings Row, we may assume, is a Kansas town, maybe even Topeka. Its Hero is Parris Mitchell, hero, that is, aside from the grim little village where the story takes place. Its heroes are two—Cassandra Tower and Randy Monaghan the first a mysterious wisp whose father is the town doctor and the town mystery, the second a loving and lovable girl from the shanty Irish part of town.
OIL FOR THE LAMPS OF CHINA by Alice Tisdale Hobart (Pyramid, 60 cents).
This, of course, is a novel of an earlier day. Mrs Hobart wrote the book in 1933, when our mental pictures of China were a combination of Fu Manchu, Charlie Chan and Pearl S. Buck. It was an effective storv, but it rings of the past.
"Oil" concerns Stephen Chase and his wife Hester, mining engineer people in the China of revolutionary days. We see conflict between wife and the organization,
and conflict between the wife and a strange culture.
It is a vivid, detailed story, somewhat slow-moving, better than the later Buck novels but inferior to "The Good Earth" and "Dragon Seed." The author had lived in China since 1910 and knew well that land of ferment. So her story is authentic, even though it is not first-class fiction.
TALES OF TERROR AND SUSPENSE, edited by Stewart H. Benedict (Dell, 45 cents).
A collection that has some pretty well-known names. Among the wild ones paraded here are "Mademoiselle de Seuderi," by E. T. A. Hoffman; "Matee Falcone" (not really very wild), by Prosper Mérimée; "A Descent into the Malehstrom," by Poe; "Mr. Justice Harbottle," by J. Sheridan LeFanu; "The Traveler's Story of a Terribly Strange Bed," by Wilkie Collins; "The Souaw," by Bram Stoker (who wrote "Dracula"); "The Hand," by de Maspant; "The Adventure of the Speckled Band," by Doyle: "The Strange Ride of Morrowble Jukes," by Kipling; "The Lodger," by Marie Belloc-Lowndes (about Jack the Ripper); "The Escape." by Hereward Carrington; "The Vanishing Lady," by Woollcott (an old standard), and "The Small Assessin," by Ray Bradbury. Though some of these must be labeled prosac, this isn't, all told, a bad bunch for winter—or spring—evenings.
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Thursday, March 26, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 11
Fiction
Marcia Davenport: OF LENA GEYER
The Scribner Library
A novel about the career of a great opera singer by a writer intimate with the operatic and musical world. $1.45
BABYLON REVISITED AND OTHER STORIES
THE BEAUTIFUL AND DAMNED
Includes "The Ice Palace," "May Day," "The Diamond as Big as the Ritz," "Winter Dreams," "Absolution," "The Rich Boy," "The Freshest Boy," "Crazy Sunday" and "The Long Way Out." $1.25
The author's second novel tracing the early course of a young marriage and presenting in the heroine, Gloria Gilbert, one of Fitzgerald's most original creations. $1.95
THE GREAT GATSBY
A novel of romantic love, infidelity and inevitable violence creating a now classical portrait of the era of the Twenties. $1.25
TENDER IS THE NIGHT
The story of an idealist, his doomed marriage, his corrosion and fall. A novel of increasing popularity and reputation, here in its original text. $1.45
THIS SIDE OF PARADISE
John Galsworthy: THE MAN OF PROPERTY
The author's first novel, which catapulted him to fame at the age of twenty-three. The story of a young college man and his times—prep school, Princeton, success and failure. $1.45
A novel about the passion and possessiveness in an upper middle-class English family at the turn of the century. $1.45
Ernest Hemingway: A FAREWELL TO ARMS
This poignant novel, set in Italy during World War I, is one of the most moving love stories ever written, a classic of its time. $1.65
FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS
A timeless epic of the Spanish Civil War—recognized as one of the great modern novels. $1.95
IN OUR TIME
Includes "Indian Camp," "The Batter," "The End of Something," "My Old Man," "Big Two-Hearted River," and many other of Hemingway's earliest stories. $1.25
THE SNOWS OF KILIMANJARO AND OTHER STORIES
Includes "A Clean, Well-Lighted Place," "A Day's Wait,
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"In Another Country," "The Killers," "A Way You'll Never
Be," "Fifty Grand," "The Short Happy Life of Francis
Macomber." $1.25
THE SUN ALSO RISES
This novel about a group of young expatriates living in Europe in the wake of World War I established Hemingway as one of the leading writers of our time. $1.45
Rolfe Humphries: THE AENEID OF VIRGIL
A verse translation by a prominent American poet, as eas-
flowing and as fresh in spirit as the original Latin epic. $1.65
Ring Lardner: HAIRCUT AND OTHER STORIES
Includes "I Can't Breathe," "Alibi Ike," "Zone of Quiet," "Champion," "A Day with Conrad Green," "The Love Nest," "The Golden Honeymoon," "Horseshoes" and "Some Like Them Cold." $1.25
Aubrev Menen:
A novel set in Limbo, a remote, fictional section of India, in which three highly educated and articulate Englishmen, an American missionary, and a phony Swami pool their eccentric talents in the defense of a local chieftain accused of murder.
THE PREVALENCE OF WITCHES
THE RAMAYANA
A mischievous retelling of the Hindu classic, which recounts the adventures of Prince Rama who lived in India some 2500 years ago. $1.45
An historical novel of Harold, King of England, and William the Norman written with wonderful artistry in the austere fashion of a contemporary chronicle. $1.65
Hope Muntz: THE GOLDEN WARRIOR
The compassionate story of the Zulu pastor Stephen Kumalo and his son Absalom told against a background of the beautiful and troubled land of South Africa, torn by bitter racial ferment and unrest. $1.45
Alan Paton: CRY, THE BELOVED COUNTRY
TOO LATE THE PHALAROPE
A novel about a young white South African police lieutenant, idolized in his community, who violates one of the strictest laws of that country governing the relationship between white and black. $1.45
Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings: THE YEARLING
This novel of backwoods Florida and the tender relationship of a young boy and his tame fawn has become a classic work of American literature. $1.65
George Santayana: THE LAST PURITAN
This first and only novel by a world-famous philosopher is not only a brilliant analysis of the New England character but also a profound commentary on the moral and material idols of the Twentieth Century. $1.95
Robert E. Sherwood: ABE LINCOLN IN ILLINOIS
C. P. Snow: THE AFFAIR
A play about the life of Lincoln from the 1830's in New
Malmec, Illinois, to 1861, when he set out for Washington.
The story of a scientific fraud and its explosive effect on a great English university. In the Strangers and Brothers sequence. $1.65
THE CONSCIENCE OF THE RICH
Individual independence and family loyalty form the basis of a bitter conflict between father and son in this novel about a wealthy and powerful Jewish family in London—in the Strangers and Brothers sequence. $1.65
THE LIGHT AND THE DARK
The fourth novel in the *Strangers and Brothers* sequence this is the story of the brilliant and attractive young Cambridge scholar Roy Calvert, a man suffering from, and in the end tragically destroyed by, relentless personal despair. $1.65
THE NEW MEN
A novel about scientists involved in the wartime race to harness atomic fission and the moral issues of integrity and responsibility in a divided world—in the Strangers and Brothers sequence. $1.45
STRANGERS AND BROTHERS
The first novel in the Strangers and Brothers sequence, this is primarily the story of George Passant, a brilliant young lawyer in an English provincial town whose tragic flaw of character finally leads to the wreckage of his own high hopes. $1.45$
Christine Weston: INDIGO
A novel of India in the years before its independence, portraying a group of young people of different origins (French, English and Indian) and dramatizing the deep cultural and political conflicts in a colonial nation. $1.65
Edith Wharton:
THE CUSTOM OF THE COUNTRY
A novel of New York society in the early 1900's when the age of innocence was coming to an end. $1.95
ETHAN FROME
This short novel, a tragic love story set in a remote New England background, has become one of the classics of Twentieth Century American literature. $1.25
A novel of New York society in the early 1900's centering on the personal tragedy of Lily Bart, broken by the standards of an inflexible era. $1.45
THE HOUSE OF MIRTH
ROMAN FEVER AND OTHER STORIES
A collection of eight stories drawn from every period of Mrs.
Wharton's literary career. $1.45
Thomas Wolfe: LOOK HOMEWARD, ANGEL
Wolfe's first and probably most widely read novel, depicting the coming of age of Eugene Gant, his boyhood in North Carolina and his growing passion to experience all of life. $ \cdot $ 0.15
Criticism and Essays
Elizabeth Drew: T. S. ELIOT:
Born in New York City.
A comprehensive interpretation of the poetry of T. S. Eliot with full analyses of the longer poems. $1.25
The Design of His Poetry
Henry James: THE ART OF THE NOVEL
Henry James: THE ART OF
Eighteen critical Prefaces from the New York Edition of
Henry James. $1.65
Pamela Hansford Johnson:
THE ART OF THOMAS WOLFE
Susanne K. Langer: PROBLEMS OF ART
A re-issue of the critical and appreciative study "Hungry Gulliver," with a new title, and a Preface by the English novelist especially prepared for this edition. $1.25
An introduction to the author's comprehensive theory of art which has established her as one of the foremost contemporary philosophers. $1.25
Thomas Marc Parrott: WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE:
A Handbook
A narrative and critical account of Shakespeare's life as a playwright and actor and of his works in drama and poetry.
A SHORT VIEW OF ELIZABETHAN DRAMA
Thomas Marc Parrott and Robert H. Ball:
A SHORT VIEW OF ELIZABETHAN DRAMA
Edmund Wilson: AXEL'S CASTLE
A now classic critical study of the imaginative literature of 1870 to 1930, with separate chapters on Symbolism and on the work of Yeats, Valery, Eliot, Proust, Joyce and Gertrude Stein. $1.45
Biography & Personal Narrative
Winston S. Churchill: MY EARLY LIFE:
A Roving Commission
Ernest Hemingway: GREEN HILLS OF AFRICA
The story of the launching of Sir Winston's career and the formation of his character at Harrow, Sandhurst, and with the Army in India and Africa. $1.65
The account of a month of big-game hunting in Africa: humorous and personal, intensely vivid, and inspired throughout by the author's love for that beautiful land. $1.45
Henry James: A SMALL BOY AND OTHERS
Mariorie Kinnan Rawlings: CROSS CREEK
A memoir of the childhood of the great novelist and his brother William James: from his earliest recollections to the late 1850's. $1.65
A personal account of the people, the scenery, and the wildlife of a remote Florida hamlet. $1.65
The Background of My Life
George Santayana: PERSONS AND PLACES:
The first volume of Santana's autobiography covering the period up to the time of his coming into full maturity. $1.45
Andrew Turnbull: SCOTT FITZGERALD
This comprehensive biography of the famous American novelist provides a living portrait of a tormented but always appealing genius. $1.65
Jesse Squirrel
THE THREAD THAT RUNS SO TRUE
A now classic personal narrative of the author's experiences as a teacher in the mountain region of Kentucky. $1.45$
History and the Social Sciences
H. Stuart Hughes: OSWALD SPENGLER
A critical pioneer estimate of Spengler's The Decline of the West and of the critical influence of this philosopher of history. $1.45
David Riesman: THORSTEIN VEBLEN
A critical study of one of the most challenging figures in modern economic thought, author of The Theory of the Leisure Class. $ \mathbf{1}. 2 5 $
Various Philosophy, Religion and
Science Books Available
---
Charles Scribner's Sons
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 26. 1964
Two Books by West Plus Oliver La Farge
TWO NOVELS BY NATHANEL WEST: THE DREAM LIFE OF BALSO SNELL and A COOL MILLION (Noonday, $1.65).
These are for the West cultist, which has become sizable in recent years. These, unfortunately, are not in a class with either "Miss Lonelyhearts" or "The Day of the Locust." Yet, without comparing them to those books (modern works of art in their way), one must conclude that "Balso Snell" and "A Cool Million" are still of interest.
West died in an automobile crash in 1940, when he was only 37, his talent unrealized. He was in decline for years, but has been discovered of late. This book includes novels of 1931 and 1934.
"The Dream Life of Balso Snell" is little more than a vignette, a fantasy that takes place inside the Trojan horse. There is wild humor and beautiful writing in both this and "A Cool Million," a Horatio Alger type story that takes place in the depression and sets out to shatter a good many popular conceptions of Americans.
SO RED THE ROSE, by Stark Young. (Popular, 75 cents).
Though Stark Young is best known as a critic, he wrote this novel in the early thirties, some time before "Gone with the Wind," and it achieved considerable popularity as a story of the antebellum South. The years have not been good for "So Red the Rose," and today it looks like a far more romanticized view of things than 30 years ago.
years ago.
The author's setting is Mississippi, there is the conventional southern heroine, there is the fiery father, there is the dashing lover. Donald Davidson, in an introduction, gives to the novel considerable significance, more than it may deserve. Speaking in a literary sense it is the superior of Margaret Mitchell's story of Scarlett O'Hara; in a dramatic sense it is inferior; in terms of commenting on the war
and its meaning it marks no new ground.
LAUGHING BOY, by Oliver La-
Farge (Sentry, 8.195).
Last August the newspapers of America reported the death of Oliver LaFarge, novelist, anthropologist, and authority on the American Indian. He was best known for his slight, lyrical novel, "Laughing Boy," which won the Pulitzer prize for 1829, despite the competition of such books as "Look Homeward, Angel."
Its stature then was somewhat higher than that of today, though it may be the most believable novel yet written about the Indian. Its hero is the Navajo. Laughing Boy; its heroine his mate, Slim Girl. Laughing Boy and the conflict of his civilization with that of the white man provides the plot.
LaFarge, who lived in New Mexico, knew well the ceremonial dances, the work of silversmithing and rug weaving, the speech patterns of the Indian. These are basic to this beautiful book, which remains, despite some slips, a sturdy modern classic.
THE ART OF THE NOVEL, by Henry James (Scribner Library, $1.65).
Students of the novel could find few books of more help to them than this collection of critical prefaces by Henry James. These were done for the Scribner edition of James' novels which appeared in the first decade of this century.
James was selective, and tended to regard lightly certain of his works, so they do not show up among these prefaces. But most of the familiar titles are here, with James spelling out for us just what he was doing and trying to say.
PUTNAM'S CONCISE MYTHOLOGICAL DICTIONARY (Capricorn, $1.45).
Here is an interesting little guide for the service of students of literature and mythology.
a 95 each simplified approach to the classics
Barron's Educational Series, Inc. Great Neck, N.Y.
Detailed Analyses and Summaries for every student who needs a simple, direct approach to the classics
PLATO &
ARISTOTLE
CHAUCER
DANTE
FIELDING
FAUST I-II
VERGIL
HOMER:
ILIAD AND
ODYSSEY
MILTON
ROUSSEAU
OTHER TITLE:
SHAKESPEARE:
OTHELLO
MACBETH
KING LEAR
JULIUS CAESAR
HAMLET
OTHER TITLES IN ACTIVE PREPARATION
JAMES
TWAIN
HAWTHORNE
WHITMAN
MELVILLE:
MOBY DICK
VAN NOSTRAND PAPERBACKS
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ELEMENTARY PARTICLES #1
by David H. Frisch & Alan M. Thorndike $1.75
RADIO EXPLORATION OF THE PLANETARY SYSTEM #2 by Alex G. Smith & Thomas D. Carr $1.50
WAVES AND OSCILLATIONS #4 by R. A. Waldron
CRYSTALS AND LIGHT: An Introduction to Optical Crystallography #5 by Elizabeth A. Wood
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THEORIES OF MOTIVATION IN LEARNING #19 edited by Richard C. Teevan & Robert C. Birney
THEORIES OF MOTIVATION IN PERSONALITY A SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY #20 edited by Richard C. Teevan & Robert C. Birney
CONVERSATIONS WITH JUNG: And Reactions from Ernest Jones #23 by Richard I. Evans
ANTHROPOLOGY: The Human Science #22 edited by Margaret Mead
ATHLETICS
ANVIL BOOKS
May
THE DEFEAT OF THE CONFEDERACY #71 edited by Henry Steele Commager
DOCUMENTS ON MODERN AFRICA #72 edited by T. Walter Wallbank
VARIETIES OF FASCISM #73 by Eugen Weber
A BASIC HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA #74 by Don E. Fehrenbacher
THE MAKING OF THE AMERICAN CONSTITUTION #75 by Merrill Jensen
THE DEMOCRATS, 1789-1964: A Short History of a Popular Party #76 bu William N. Chambers
THE WORLD IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY, Revised Edition #4 by Louis L. Snyder
CONTEMPORARY AFRICA: Continent in Transition,
Revised Edition #15
by T. Walter Wallbank
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A NEW SOVIET HEARTLAND? #21 by David J. M. Hooson POLAND BETWEEN EAST AND WEST #22 by Norman J. G. Pounds THE PHILIPPINES #23 by Alden Cutshall
Available at your college bookstore:
D. VAN NOSTRAND COMPANY, INC. 120 Alexander Street Princeton, New Jersey
Thursday, March 26, 1964 University Daily Kansan
GOETHE'S FAUST, translated by Walter Kaufman (Anchor, $1.45)
Page 13
There is no need, of course, to provide a plot summary of one of the most famous works in literature. What should be pointed out to the University student is that which singles out this particular "Faust."
These would seem to be the key points. It is an attractive, well bound volume, with paper that will not curl or turn brown in a few weeks. It has, printed on the right hand page, the English text; on the left the German. It appears to be
as close as a translation into English can be.
Reviewers praised this as the best translation of "Faust." And Kaufmann provides what may be one of the longest and most detailed introductions on record.
AMOROUS TALES FROM THE DECAMERON, translated by Rex Benedict (Crest. 50 cents).
Here are 23 of the racy tales of Boeceacio that have delighted readers since the 14th century. You college boys and girls who want a change from "The Prize" and
"Catch-22" will find some delightful reading here—stories of cuckolds, villains, gossips, monks, always amusing and always perceptive.
SIX SHORT MASTERPIECES BY TOLSTOY, with introduction by F. D. Reeve (Dell Laurel, 75 cents).
Most of the titles in this collection are not well known, though one of them, "The Kreutzer Sonata," has been a controversial title for many years. The range over Tolstoy's career is considerable, titles starting when he was 28 and
extending till he was 75. All of them give illumination into the mind and heart of this complex man.
Besides "Sonata," the works include "Two Hussars," "A Happy Married Life," "Yardstick," "The Death of Ivan Ilyich" and "After the Ball."
PIED PIPER, by Nevil Shute (Popular, 60 cents).
The late Nevil Shute gave us in this wartime novel a warm and
engrossing story that will make good reading. Like the other Shute novels it is low-keyed, and it beautifully develops a portrait of a believable man.
The hero actually is a kind of pied piper, an old man named John Sidney Howard, a Londoner who is caught on the continent when World War II breaks out, and finds himself leading, one at a time, outcast victims of war—children—to safety.
Paperbacks to broaden and enrich your educational background and interests . . .
BN
COLLEGE OUTLINE SERIES
ART • DRAMA • MUSIC
History of Art ... 1.75
History of Music ... 1.75
Introduction to Music ... 1.50
Outlines of Shakespeare's Plays ... 1.25
Play Production ... 1.95
ECONOMICS • BUSINESS LAW
Accounting Problems and
How to Solve Them ... 1.45
Business Law ... 2.25
Business Management ... 1.95
Business Writing ... 1.75
Corporation Finance ... 1.75
Economic History of the U.S. ... 1.75
Elementary Accounting ... 1.50
History of Economic Thought ... 2.50
Labor Economics & Industrial
Relations ... 1.95
Marketing ... 1.50
Money and Banking ... 1.50
Principles of Economics ... 1.75
Statistical Methods ... 1.75
Tables for Statisticians ... 1.50
History of Education ... 1.25
Best Methods of Study ... 1.00
How to Take Examinations
in College ... 1.25
How to Write Better
Examinations ... .50
EDUCATION • STUDY AIDS
LANGUAGE
French Grammar ... 1.50
German Grammar ... 1.50
Latin ... 2.50
Spanish Grammar ... 1.25
ENGLISH • SPEECH
English Composition ... 2.50
English Grammar ... 1.75
New Survey of Journalism ... 2.50
Research and Report Writing ... 1.25
Technical Writing ... 1.25
Writing Term Papers
and Reports ... 1.25
Speech: A Handbook of Voice
Training, Diction and
Public Speaking ... 1.50
HISTORY • POLITICAL SCIENCE
LITERATURE
American Colonial and Revolutionary History ... 1.50
American Historical Documents ... 2.25
Ancient History ... 1.50
Ancient, Medieval & Modern History ... 1.75
History of England ... 1.50
History of Europe 1500-1848 ... 1.25
History of Europe since 1815 ... 1.75
History of Russia ... 1.95
Latin American History ... 2.50
Outline History of the Middle Ages ... 1.50
United States to 1865 ... 1.25
United States since 1865 ... 1.50
Western Civilization to 1500 ... 1.95
Western Civilization since 1500 ... 1.95
World since 1914 ... 2.25
American Government ... 1.50
Constitution of the U.S. ... .65
Political Science ... 1.50
State and Local Government ... 1.85
World Politics ... 1.95
American Literature ... 1.75
Bible as Literature: Old Testament History and Biography ... 1.25
Guide to English Literature from Beowulf through Chaucer and Medieval Drama ... 2.25
Molders of the Modern Mind: 111 Books That Have Shaped Western Civilization ... 2.25
Outline History of English Literature, Vol. 1: To Dryden ... 1.95
Outline History of English Literature, Vol. 2: Since Milton ... 1.95
Outline History of German Literature ... 2.25
World Literature: Vol. I: Greek, Roman, Oriental & Medieval Classics ... 1.50
World Literature, Vol. 2: Italian, French, Spanish, German, Russian Literature since 1300 ... 1.95
MATHEMATICS ENGINEERING
Algebra ... 1.50
Analytic Geometry ... 1.50
Analytic Geometry Problems with Solutions ... 1.75
College Geometry ... 1.95
Calculus ... 1.45
College Mathematics ... 1.75
Differential Equations ... 1.75
Logarithmic and Trigonometric Tables to 5 Places ... 1.25
Plane and Spherical Trigonometry ... 1.95
Engineering Descriptive Geometry ... 2.25
Engineering Drawing ... 2.50
PHILOSOPHY • RELIGION
Handbook in the History of Philosophy 1.95
Philosophy: An Introduction 1.75
Readings in Philosophy 1.95
Basic Logic 1.50
PSYCHOLOGY
Abnormal Psychology ... 1.75
Child Psychology ... 1.50
Educational Psychology ... 1.50
General Psychology ... 1.65
Readings in General Psychology ... 2.25
SCIENCE
Anatomy and Physiology: Vol. 1 2.50
Anatomy and Physiology: Vol. 2 2.50
Atlas of Human Anatomy (8 colors) ... 2.95
Bacteriology: Principles and Practice ... 2.50
Biology ... 1.50
Chemistry Problems and How to Solve Them ... 1.50
First Year College Chemistry ... 1.75
Organic Chemistry ... 2.25
Physical Chemistry ... 1.75
General Botany ... 1.25
General Zoology ... 1.75
Geology ... 1.75
Heredity: An Introduction to Genetics ... 1.75
Physics ... 1.25
Physics Problems and How to Solve Them ... 1.50
Physics without Mathematics ... 1.25
Quantitative Analysis ... 1.50
SOCIOLOGY ANTHROPOLOGY
General Anthropology 1.75
Marriage and the Family 2.25
Principles of Sociology 1.75
Selections from Other B&N Paperback Series
Bosch. *Bosman* .75
Braque. *Damase* .75
Chagall. *Damase* .75
Hals. *Beeren* .75
Playboy of the Western World
and Riders to the Sea. *Synge* .95
Guide to the Ballet. *Verwer* 1.50
Paintings of the Western World.
*De Jong* 1.75
Your Introduction to Law.
*Coughlin* 1.75
College Entrance Counselor,
*Weehler, Blum & Friedman* 3.50
College Entrance Examinations.
*Weehler, Blum & Friedman* 2.25
Brief History of the Western
World. *Easton* 1.95
Portraits of Power. *Alyling* 2.50
Political Ideals. *Russell* .95
India's Freedom. *Nehru* .95
Punctuate It Right! *Shaw* .95
Plot Outlines of 101 Best Novels. Edited by Grozier & Gillett 1.75
Macbeth: A Complete Guide to the Play. McCutchan .95
Background of English Literature Grierson 1.75
English Literature: Values and Traditions. Evans .95
Sense and Sensibility in Modern Poetry. O Connor 1.75
Thomas Wolfe. Walser 1.00
James Fenimore Cooper. Walker 1.25
Hart Crane. Hazo 1.25
John Steinbeck. Fontenrose 1.25
William Faulkner. Thompson 1.50
Dostoevsky. Carr 1.50
Literary History of Rome from the Origins to the Close of the Golden Age. Duff 2.95
Chaucer and His England. Coulton 2.25
Medieval People. *Power* ... 1.75
Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions. *Abbott* ... 1.00
Outline of the Bible: Book by Book. *Landis* ... 1.25
Indian Philosophy: A Critical Survey. *Sharma* ... 2.25
Prehistoric Religion. *James* ... 1.95
Seasonal Feasts and Festivals. *James* ... 1.75
Essential Schopenhauer. *Schopenhauer* ... 1.25
Making Friends with the Stars. *Zadde* ... 1.25
Biology for the Modern World. *Waddington* ... .95
Chemistry for the Modern World. *Porter* ... .95
Physics for the Modern World. *Andrade* ... .95
Body-Building and Self-Defense. *Callum* ... 1.25
PORTRAITS OF POWER
THE NEW YORK TIMES
February 26, 1930
In this collection of portraits by the New York Times, a wide variety of characters from history and art are depicted. From a young boy in the streets to a man on a balcony, each portrait tells a story. The photographs are taken in New York City during the Great Depression, when the city was undergoing a dramatic economic crisis. The images reflect the mood of the time, with a focus on the struggles and challenges faced by people in the city. The portraits also highlight the diversity of the population, including men, women, and children. Each portrait is a window into the past, providing a glimpse into the lives of those who lived during that period.
PORTRAITS OF POWER
WILLIAM PAGNERER
body-building and self-defense
AUTHOR OF THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY AND MONOGRAPHY BOOKS
SENSE
AND
SENSIBILITY
IN
MODERN
POETRY
MAKING FRIENDS WITH THE STARS POLITICAL IDEALS BOSCH MACBETH AVAILABLE AT YOUR CAMPUS STORE
B
Send for free booklet listing all B&N paperbacks
ARNES
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105 Fifth Avenue New York,N.Y. 10003
Page 14
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 26, 1964
British Titles Include Cary, Huxley Novels
AN AMERICAN VISITOR, by Joyce Cary (Anchor, 95 cents); A HOUSE OF CHILDREN, by Joyce Cary (Anchor, 95 cents).
Since his death a few years ago what amounts to a Joyce Cary cult has come into being. These are almost unknown novels, published in a quality line and pointing to the need for more Americans to become acquainted with the frequently strange, usually engrossing, sometimes wildly comic books of Carv.
"The American Visitor" first appeared in 1933. It describes a young woman journalist who comes to 20th century Africa with Rousseauian notions of what she will find. She comes into conflict with the more experienced and more practical Europeans, and gains a bit of humility in so doing. One feels that some modern American diplomats might profit from this tale.
"A House of Children" dates to 1941. It is an autobiographical novel, one in which Cary describes a family of cousins, of many children, and an Irish summer they spent. It actually deals with a child's world, and is wise and funny, and always captivating.
ANTIC HAY and THE GIOCONDA SMILE, by Aldous Huxley (Harper Torchbooks, $1.95).
From the early twenties come these novels of Aldous Huxley, whose recent death has fixed attention on him, but who has been a force in western letters for nearly 40 years. "Antic Hay" may be the best-known of Huxley's works, outside "Brave New World." "The Gioconda Smile" is barely more than a short story.
The brilliant wit, the cynicism, the complexities of style that mark the later Huxley novels are present in these views of 20th century society. Like Evelyn Waugh, Huxley was adept at shattering our views of the upper middle class and telling us much about ourselves in so doing.
THE LIGHT AND THE DARK, by C. P. Snow (Scribner Library,
$1.65).
Knowing an unread C. P. Snow novel lies before one is a good feeling. Snow is one of the fine
writers of today, even though he is not known in the popular sense—heaven forbid—of an Irving Wallace. This book, which first appeared in 1947, is the second in the cycle Snow calls "Strangers and Brothers."
The narrator remains, of course, Lewis Eliot, who tells all the stories, but the central figure is Roy Calvert, who has shown up in some of the other books. Cambridge is the setting, and, like "The Masters," this book shows us the dons behind the scenes.
The crises concern whether Calvert will be elected a fellow of the college, and whether drink can help him solve his problems. Resolution comes in the RAF during the war. Once again, C. P. Snow gives us an amazing insight into the minds and ideas of the twenties and thirties.
This was George Eliot's last novel, and it is probably her least known. Here is an extremely attractive paperback, with an introduction by F. R. Leavis.
DANIEL DERONDA, by George Eliot (Harper Torchbooks, $2.25).
There continues to be some controversy about the theme of the book, and some critics suggest that the title character is not the true hero of the story. Most of the interest seems to attach to the heroine, Gwendolen Harleth.
Like "Middlemarch" this is a novel of considerable scope, almost Tolstoyan, in the view of Leavis. Though it is a minor classic alongside other Victorian novels it is one that deserves attention.
INDIGO, by Christine Weston
(Scribner Library, $1.65).
Here is a novel of 1943, exotic, well-told, and highly flavored. Christine Weston wrote of the India before independence, and it is one of the best stories written about that fabled land.
The story deals with the growth and development of young Jacques de St. Remy, and of the indigo factory of his family. We see the inevitable conflict between cultures, told in a leisurely fashion.
The novel has none of the flamboyance of Bromfield's "The Rains Came." It is much steadier and much more revealing, both of the
Indian and the occidentals who lived in India when that country was still a colonial country.
NIGHTMARE ABBEY and CROT-CHET CASTLE, by Thomas Love Peacock (Capricorn, $1.45).
Comparatively little known are these satirical novels by Thomas Love Peacock, which date to 1813 and 1831, respectively. The books are curiosities, unorthodox in form and deserving of examination by modern readers.
In "Nightmare Abbey," Peacock has a go at the trappings of Romanticism, which were giving us some of our best and also wildest Gothic tales. "Crotchet Castle" is almost entirely conversational, with odd talk and interesting eccentrics.
CAPTAIN COURAGEOUS by Rudyard Kipling (Dell Laurel, 35 cents).
In this famous boys' book, Kipling takes us aboard the schooner We're Here for a voyage in which 15-year-old Harvey Cheyne learns humility and compassion. It is a good story of the life of the Gloucester fishermen, of the captain, of Manuel the Portuguese who becomes the boy's mentor.
Kipling regarded this as his best book, and it is full of excitement and meaningful characterization. Though it will continue to find most of its readers in the younger generation, there are many adults who like to forget their problems and return now and then to the exciting tales of Stevenson, Dumas and Kipling.
A HANDFUL OF DUST and DECLINE AND FALL, by Evelyn Waugh (Dell Laurel, 75 cents).
These two novels go back to 1934 and 1928, respectively, and are among several by Waugh appearing in the Laurel line. Like most of the author's books they offer devastating pictures of 20th century English society.
"A Handful of Dust" gives us Waugh commenting on the upper classes, of Brenda, Tong and their circle, whose social and ethical standards are outside those of "regular society." According to
them, for example, any sin is acceptable provided it is done in good taste.
"Decline and Fall" is an amusing look at such British institutions as the public school, traditions of Oxford, sportsmanship, the gentry, the remittance man and so on. It is light and frothy and always entertaining.
THE ROVER, by Joseph Conrad
(Anchor, 95 cents); CHANCE, by
Joseph Conrad (Anchor, $1.45).
"The Rover" was Conrad's last novel, and, though a novel of adventure and of the sea, it is somewhat different in both mood and setting from the other works. Its time is the era of the French Revolution, its hero a man named Peyrol, a sailor, a gunner, a pirate. He returns to France at the time of the Revolution and is drawn into a love affair between two young people. And he is forced to give up the retirement he has yearned for.
This is a thoughtful tale, one that for the aging Conrad could have elements of autobiography. "Chance" is a story of love and intrigue, the affair between Flora de Barral and Captain Anthony of the vessel Ferndale. An atmosphere of doom hangs over this novel, as it does over several by Conrad.
THE SKY AND THE FOREST, by C.S. Forester (Pyramid, 50 cents).
An adventure tale quite unlike the Hornblower novels, but utilizing the setting of his "African Queen," is C. S. Forester's "The Sky and the Forest." It is not entirely successful, for on one level it appears to be a symbolic allegory and on another a tale written for readers of Boys' Life. It deals with the African native Loa, god and king of his village. First he is taken as a slave, but eventually returns home. Then again his land is invaded by Europeans, and Loa is killed.
Forester has done something here that is exciting and always interesting, though to some readers it may seem too grim and too violent. He might have done something as memorable as a Conrad or a Melville, but unfortunately "The Sky and the Forest" does not quite come off. It is still a stirring, entertaining book.
THE BLACK ARROW, by Robert Louis Stevenson (Dell, 45 cents).
It is quite a drop, or perhaps quite a rise, from contemporary fiction to this boy's novel, an exciting tale in the Laurel series. Stevenson his story in England during the War of the Roses, and it's about Dick Shelton, his scheming guardian Sir Daniel Brackley (familiar trappings), and the men of the Black Arrow.
Escape, disguises, secret passages, ambushes, dashing action—all mark this story. And, despite what you're thinking, you're really not too old for it.
A COFFIN FOR DIMITRIOS, by Eric Ambler (Dell. 60 cents).
This old friend from World War II days will never find itself on the reading list in English Lit. It doesn't even have respectability as a novel, for it falls into that even lower category—mysteries. And it's more fun than most of the serious bilge thrown at us these days.
Eric Ambler sets his investigator off on the trail of the mysterious and evil Dimitrios, who was mixed up in more shenanigans than even Bobby Baker. A bad nut. In the countries of the Mediterranean, in deep dark settings, in restaurants and saloons dark with smoke. Oh, you've seen it all, with Zachary Scott, Peter Lorre and Sydney Greenstreet. Now read the book. It's better.
DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE, by Robert Louis Stevenson (Popular, 40 cent)—one of the greatest of all short novels and one of the most familiar tales in fiction. Stevenson gives here the exciting and symbolic story of good and evil existing side by side in man's nature. This book should be a standard on the shelves of those who want the greatest works in literature.
New and forthcoming titles in Indiana's quality paperback series MIDLAND BOOKS
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THE QUESTION OF JEAN-JACQUES ROUSSEAU
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VERGIL'S AENEID
Translated, introduction, notes by L. R. Lind, Chairman, Department of Classics and Classical Archeology, University of Kansas.
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INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESS Bloomington
A
A practical, new supplement to any "complete works" edition of Shakespeare Reading Shakespeare's Plays George R. Price Michigan State University
CONTENTS
Suggestions for Study
Shakespeare's Theater and Company
Elizabethan Attitudes
Shakespeare's Career
Canon, Chronology,and Text
Chronology of Literature
and Events,1557-1616
"READING SHAKESPEARE'S PLAYS should prove to be a useful aid to the college student of Shakespeare at the sophomore, junior or senior level." —Sunday Advocate
"Although the book is only approximately 120 pages in length, it presents concisely and succinctly a wealth of information requisite to a proper understanding of the plays and the period." The Standard Times
THE F Baldwi
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Thursday. March 26, 1964 University Daily Kânsam
Page 15
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THE FIRE NEXT TIME, by James Baldwin (Delta, $1.65).
Few books sear the American consciousness quite like "The Fire Next Time." It is a little book, scarcely more than an essay. It appeared about a year ago, and it has commanded considerable attention, as well as giving new impetus to the career of its author, James Baldwin.
There are two parts to "The Fire Next Time," one a letter to Baldwin's nephew on the centennial of the Emancipation Proclamation, the other a "Letter From a Region in My Mind." The first appeared originally in The Progressive, the second in the New Yorker. The first, while eloquent, may be dismissed with relatively no comment. The fire and the acid and the excitement are in the second.
It is in this essay that Baldwin gives us his views of the Black Muslim movement and records the Black Muslim views of the white man. It is also here that we hear about Baldwin the boy preacher who got religion and assisted his hated father in preaching in their primitive store-front church two decades ago.
SILENT SPRING, by Rachel Carson (Crest, 75 cents).
The furor over this book still has not abated. It appeared more than a year ago, and its appearance in paperback should keep the pesticide controversy active for some time.
Rachel Carson wrote this book with excellent qualifications as a scientist and naturalist. She wrote it from strong presumptions about what she viewed as the evils of chemical pest-killers. Her detractors and defenders took up arms late in 1962 and are still at it.
"Silent Spring" makes a plea to both public and private sources to avoid indiscriminate use of pesticides. Such use, she fears, could eventually destroy life on earth. Already, the balance of nature has been upset, Miss Carson feels.
A HISTORY OF MODERN POLITICAL CONSTITUTIONS, by C. F. Strong (Capricorn, $1.95).
The first American edition of this work appeared only in 1963, and this is an attractive paperback, printed on excellent paper. It should prove of great service to the student of government.
C. F. Strong is a British teacher and author of several books in history. The present volume is an introductory guide which covers the background, nature and function of political constitutions. It has a study of the origins and development of the British and American constitutions; the constitutions of the fourth and fifth French republics, the Italian republic and the Federal Republic of Germany, the U.S.S.R. and other Communist states.
It also considers the British commonwealth of nations, the new states in Asia and Africa, and the charter of the United Nations.
THE MANAGERIAL REVOLUTION, by James Burnham (Midland; Indiana University Press; 8.195).
Though this now-famous book would seem to bear some relationship to a work like Whyte's "The Organization Man" it was conceived in a way quite different from viewing American society in the 1950s. James Burnham wrote the book in 1940, out of his own experience in the revolution of communism, and the original inspiration came from his feeling that the Soviet Union, far from being a worker's union, was one belonging to the managers.
This, it should be remembered, was in a time of not only Communist ferment but also of Nazism and the New Deal. Burnham looked about even further and concluded that what was emerging in the world was a managerial society quite different from the classical definitions of capitalism and socialism.
He accordingly examines several societies and predicts the emergence of a new ruling class, the managers. He predicts, too, that American capitalism and Soviet communism would become, in time, societies greatly similar in their managerial aspects.
THE GREAT RELIGIONS BY WHICH MEN LIVE, by Floyd H. Ross and Tynette Hills (Premier, 60 cents).
Here is a small but thoughtful handbook that gives some basic interpretations of world religions for the student. Ross and Mrs. Hills bring their own religious and educational backgrounds to bear in such a way that the reader sees that many world religions—not just one—can provide insight and comfort and practical help.
The strokes are quite broad, for the authors do not break down religious beliefs into tiny sects. Basically the religions discussed are these: Brahmanic Hinduism, Buddhism, Taoism, Confucianism, Christianity, Shintoism, Judaism and Islam.
The authors suggest that the only valid religions are those which have some meaning for all mankind, that the narrow belief which shuts out all other thought is of little value. They oppose the tendency of religions to be at war with each other, in a battle to the death.
WILD AMERICA, by Roger Tory Peterson and James Fisher (Sentry, $2.85).
Garnished with beautiful woodcuts in an almost harsh black and white, this is truly one of the most attractive paperbacks available. Peterson did the illustrations, and both he and Fisher are distinguished naturalists, who have written and explored extensively.
"Wild America" describes a 30,000-mile journey, one that does not spend its time on the cities but examines nature instead. Peterson and Fisher started on the Atlantic and went west, and visited national parks, monuments, fish and wildlife refuges, bird sanctuaries, and anything else that to them seemed conservation
The trip lasted 14 weeks. The reader is taken across the land, seeing natural beauties, birds, animals and flowers, along wild trails, through New England and into the southern Appalachians, the everglades, the wilderness, the desert.
the country of the big trees, Crater Lake. Yosemite, the seal islands and so on.
There probably is no more zealous guardian of the American people, than William O. Douglas. He makes the far right impatient, and sometimes he sounds as though he wants to go John Stuart Mill one better. But he is a vigilant watchdog, and a good man to have around.
THE RIGHT OF THE PEOPLE. by William O. Douglas (Pyramid, 50 cents).
"The Right of the People" is a learned but warm discussion of the meaning of liberty in a free society. There are three central concerns voiced here—for freedom of expression, for the right to bet let alone, and for the supremacy of the civilian authority over the military.
In dealing with these, Justice Douglas discusses the meaning of the first amendment, of censorship, right of privacy, legislative investigations, loyalty oaths, religious freedom, the right to defy an unconstitutional law, review by civilian courts, jurisdiction of military tribunals over civilians, and martial law.
In these troubled sixties, when ethical and moral values are upset, when many men seem to be losing their identity in a superhighway civilization (if you miss the turn at the cloverleaf you have to go miles to get back on the track), it is well to consider the force of psychoanalysis in our lives.
The task of Hendrick M. Ruitenbeek was to assemble 25 writings on psychoanalysis that bear on our culture and are not ornated only for the technically trained. Though this is not light summer-type reading, it should be of special interest to students of American culture and American values.
PSYCHOANALYSIS AND CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN CULTURE, edited by Hendrick M. Ruitenbeek (Delta, $2.45).
THE WASTE MAKERS, by Vance Packard (Cardinal, 60 cents).
In this one Vance Packard has another go at contemporary American society, and where he cracked at status seeking and motivational researchers in previous books he strikes hard at built-in obsolescence in this one.
Deliberate waste is his target, and Americans who get stuck with lemons of all kinds will sympathize, and read with indignation. Consumption is the great glory for many Americans, and we need constant reminders that materialism by itself is a goal that shatters civilizations.
Packard offers more than indignation, he offers advice as well. And even those who will dislike his message probably will read about it with absorption.
ONE MAN'S MEAT, by E. B.
White (Harper Torchbooks, $1.85).
Some of the warmest, sharpest,
most discerning writing of our time
is in this new paperback. E. B.
White holds rank with Robert
Benchley and James Thurber as a
humorist of the 20th century,
and this book, published in 1942,
contains some of his best work.
tans of it appeared originally in the New Yorker, for White has been a New Yorker mainstay for many years. It is not funny-ha-ha stuff, because some readers will have to probe a bit to see why they are amused.
There is some exaggeration, a lot that paints the distinctions between country and city folk, essays on the weather, on the movies, on war, birds and country life. All of it is quiet and charming and quite revealing of life in America of a quarter of a century ago.
THE TELEVISION WRITER, by Erik Barnouw (Hill and Wang, $1.45).
Out of considerable experience in teaching and writing, Erik Barnow, who is in charge of television and film courses at Columbia University, has written a valuable new book about a highly significant new field.
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IBSEN: LETTERS AND SPEECHES ed. by Evert Sprinchorn. First English edition since 1905. $2.45; Cl. $5.75
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Page 16
University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 26,1964
China, Italy, Mexico Offer Settings for Novels
THE SAND PEBBLES, by Richard McKenna (Crest, 95 cents).
An epic tale of high adventure that won the $10,000 Harper Prize and stayed high on the best-seller lists for half a year is now in paperback. It is exciting, but not only that, for it is meaningful. Some critics compared it to "The Caine Mutiny." It is a better book, and it has considerably more scope.
"The Sand Pebbles" is about a gunboat that cruises on a tributary of the Yangtze River in the province of Hunan, and its central character is a machinist named Jake Holman. The boat is the San Pablo, captured from the Spanish in '98, largely manned by ill-paid Chinese coolies, with the Americans mostly trying to have a good time on shore and take in the river towns.
Then comes the Chinese revolution, and onto the stage steps even the famous Chiang Kai-shek. Comes a mutiny, and action leading to the climax.
THE MAGNIFICENT BASTARDS, by L. Herndon Crockett (Dell, 75 cents).
A reprinting of a war novel that has been kicking around since 1954, and which you may have seen in a movie called "The Proud and Profane," with William Holden and Deborah Kerr. It's about a big tough marine raider and the mean wav he treats a lovely lady. All told, a reasonably good war story
RAPBIT, RUN, by John Updike (Crest, 60 cents); PIGEON FEATHERS, AND OTHER STORIES, by John Undike (Crest, 50 cents); THE SAME DOOR, by John Updike (Crest, 50 cents);
THE CENTAUR, by John Updike (Crest, 60 cents); THE POORHOUSE FAIR, by John Updike (Crest, 50 cents).
As you can see, Crest is publishing John Updike. In this time of writers of not particularly commanding talent this man looks good. The trouble is, he hasn't really written a first-class book yet, even though each of these has the touches of excellence.
Three of these are novels; two are collections of short stories, these being "The Same Door" and "Pigeon Feathers, etc." The short stories especially reveal Udlike as a man of style, beautiful metaphors, sharp phrases, excellent description. What bothers one is the feeling that the stories are relatively insignificant, like a story called "The Crow in the Weeds" that moves from a young man's excitement at the beauty of a winter morning to his wife's rapid bringing him back down to earth.
But these are still vignettes of living. The student of creative writing should know them, even though the student of explicit sexual description may know more about them. For Updike, though his work is not pornography, does have quite a feeling for the juicy episode. This quality underscores "Rabbit, Run," a story of frustration, about a one-time great basketball star (in high school), his bitter marriage, his adventure with a prostitute, his inability to come to grips with life. "The Poorhouse Fair" is a novel, too, short and exhibiting Updike's understanding of his society.
"The Centaur" has certain pretensions, starting right with its title, continuing with a quotation from Karl Barth on its title page. We get the modernized myth of Chiron, the centaur who sacrifices immortality as an atement for Prometheus. This kind of thing goes on and on, and symbolism runs rampant, as it should in any book likely to find itself on a reading list these days.
The novel itself as a portrait of a school-teacher, his son and their relationship. It is a book, frequently eloquent, that never quite makes it.
GIOVANNI'S ROOM, by James Baldwin (Dell. 60 cents).
This one goes back almost a decade, after "Go Tell It on the Mountain" but before "Another Country." If your taste runs to "Another Country" this is your book. It seems almost a foreshadowing, though it is far shorter.
James Baldwin is a troubling writer, one of real insights and understanding but also addicted to the cheap and the sensational. You have to accept, it seems, the beauty and the glory of the homosexual relationship. There is some of this, and also of the relationship between man and woman.
If you want to know about Baldwin as racial spokesman this, by the way, is not the book. Read his essays, or read "Go Tell It on the Mountain."
DAUIGHTER OF SILENCE, by Morris L. West (Dell, 60 cents).
Morris L. West has moved high among contemporary writers with his absorbing, meaningful novels, "The Devil's Advocate" and "The Shoes of the Fisherman." This is an interesting and well-written novel of 1961 which also has received high praise.
Like "The Devil's Advocate" it is set in Italy, and it deals with the trial of a young girl in a vendetta murder. The backgrounds, mood, plot are all believable. And like the other West books there is considerable understanding of human motivation, of good and evil. West is a thoughtful writer who deserves the position he has received in current literature.
THE BRAVE BULLS, by Tom Lea
(Little, Brown. $1.95).
Besides being an excellent writer, Tom Lea dogs beautiful illustrations. The text and the illustrations, in combination, make "The Brave Bulls" a paperback buy selldom equaled.
Readers may have encountered this novel more than a decade ago,
or may have seen it in Robert Rossen's fine motion picture. This is a story of bull-fighting, particularly of Louis Bello, "the swordsman of Guerrerae." It is a story of the bull ring, and the breeding farms.
Most especially it is a story of fear. Seldom does one encounter a novel which conveys so well the mind of the craftsman of the bull ring; one recalls it from Hemingway's "Death in the Afternoon," his short stories, or some of the episodes in "For Whom the Bell Tolls."
ALSO THE HILLS, by Frances Parkinson Keyes (Crest, 95 cents).
The ladies have a big old blockbuster ahead of them that will work them through many handkerchiefs. Frances Parkinson Keyes has given them some of their teariest moments, and "Also the Hills" is calculated to brighten many days with its sentiment.
It is a story of love and marriage in a New England family, and also a story of war.
THE CARDINAL, by Henry Morton Robinson (Cardinal, 75 cents).
This novel is due for a lot more mileage, because it has been made into a blockbuster movie by Otto Preminger, and the publishers have given the book a movie tie-in.
It's worth some mileage, for, though not a great novel, it is a good one. First published in 1950, it deals with an American priest, Stephen Fermoyle, who becomes a cardinal of the Catholic Church. Then unfolds a dramatic tale of considerable excitement and incident.
Here, in a novel of 1961, are the literary tricks but little of the message that made for great John Dos Passos a quarter of a century ago. Yet the book is still better than
MID-CENTURY, by John Dos Passos (Cardinal. 75 cents).
most of what this once-gifted writer has given us since "Adventures of a Young Man" and "Number One."
The Camera Eye and Newsreel tricks that marked "U.S.A." become the "Documentary" in "Mid-Century." And Dos Passos gives us portraits of contemporary figures as he tells his fictional tale.
We get, for examples, two Deans, the film star James and the General William. There also are Eleanor Roosevelt, LaFollette, and John L. Lewis, among others.
THE LIGHT IN THE FOREST, by Conrad Richter (Bantam Pathfinder. 40 cents).
"The Light in the Forest" has assumed almost the proportions of a modern classic. It is a slight volume and a slight tale, but it can be read by people of all ages. As many know, it received the Disney imprint a few years ago, though the Disney interpretation was one of the film producer's lesser efforts.
It is a tale of the frontier, about a white boy captured by the Indians when he was only 4 adopted into the tribe and renamed and raised as "True Son." The boy grows to manhood as an Indian, thinks as an Indian, and then is returned to his original people after a treaty with the Indians.
MRS. PARKINGTON, Louis Bromfield (Pyramid, 60 cents).
Few American novelists of the thirties and forties surpassed Louis Bromfield in the unreeling of rich, panoramic stories of detail and color. "Mrs. Parkington" is a book of this type, and it was the basis of one of those many Greer Garson-Walter Fidgeon movies of the World War II era.
The story is that of a girl out of a rough Nevada town, who marries a robber baron of the Gilded Age, becomes a grand dame, and watches her family and America change about her.
EVERGREEN BOOKS
E-373. HITLER'S SECRET BOOK. Introduction by Telford Taylor. The long-suppressed sequel to Mein Kampf. $2.45
E-370. EDUCATION FOR FREEDOM. By Robert M Hutchins. One of America's leading educators looks at the crisis facing higher education today. $1.45
E-368. FICCIONES. By Jorge Luis Borges. Stories, fantasies, and fables by the Argentine satirist whom Time calls "the greatest living writer in Spanish." $2.45
E-362. SADISM AND MASOCHISM. Vol. 1. By Wilhelm Stekel. The first paperbound edition of a pioneering classic on the psychology of hate and cruelty. $2.95
E-359. THE LABYRINTH OF SOLITUDE. Life and Thought in Mexico. By Octavio Paz. Penetrating comment by an outstanding Mexican poet on his nation's character and culture. $1.95
E-358. INTRODUCTION TO MODERN EXISTENTIALISM. By Dr. Ernst Breisach. A comprehensive discussion of one of the major philosophes of modern times. $2.45
BECKETT!
E-318. HAPPY DAYS $1.45
E-226. KRAPP'S LAST TAPE $1.95
E-96. ENDGAME $1.25
E-33. WAITING FOR GODOT $1.45
E-18. MOLLOY. A novel $2.25
E-355. PRESCRIPTION FOR REBELLION.
By Robert M. Lindner. The author of Rebel Without a Cause challenges psychology and psychiatry to help change society for the better.
$1.95
E-353. E-354. FRIGIDITY IN WOMAN,
Vols. I & II. By Wilhelm Stekel. A timeless classic of psychoanalytic literature, packed with case histories. Each volume, $1.95
E-352. PARAPSYCHOLOGY. By René Sudre. A survey of the accomplishments of psychological research from its beginnings to the present.
$2.95
E-351. THE ART OF MAKING DANCES.
By Doris Humphrey. A lucid, practical book on choreography by one of the great figures of the dance world.
$1.95
E-344. THE VISIT. A play by Friedrich Dürrennatt. The first complete version in English of the unforgettable macabre parable of justice and society that starred Lunt and Fontanne.
E-338. THE LION IN LOVE. A play by Shelagh Delaney. A rollicking portrait of England's poorer classes. $1.75
E-337. ADOLESCENCE: Its Social Psychology. By C. M. Fleming. What recent long-term studies have revealed about the adolescent at home, at school, and on the threshold of the working world. $2.45
E-332. MUNTU: An Outline of the New African Culture. By Janheinz Jahn. A classic of modern anthropology. $2.45
GENET!
E-208. THE BLACKS $1.75
E-130. THE BALCONY $1.95
E-44. THE MAIDS and DEATHWATCH $1.95
E-324. THE FUTURE AS HISTORY. By Robert L. Heilbroner. Brilliantly analyzes the forces at work behind the headlines. "So good it deserves more than praise."—Sidney Hook. $1.75
E-321. FEMALE SEXUALITY. By Marie Bonaparte. An exploration of the erotic function in women. $1.95
E-320. LAST YEAR AT MARIENBAD. By Alain Robbe-Grillet. The film script for the famous motion picture directed by Alain Resnais. Illustrated. $1.95
E-319. CAPITAL PUNISIMENT: A World View. By James Avery Joyce. Surveys judicial killing — including the Chessman case — as practiced in all nations which retain the death penalty. $1.95
E-288. AUTO-EROTISM. By Wilhelm Stekel. A psychiatric study challenging the superstitions that have sprung up about the phenomenon. $2.95
E-286. THE SOCIOLOGICAL IMAGINATION.
By C. Wright Mills. The author of
The Power Elite sharply attacks some of his
fellow social analysts. $1.95
E-276. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF SEX RELATIONS. By Theodore Reik. A refreshing new interpretation of the differences between sexual desire and romantic love. $1.95
E-270. WHAT IS CYBERNETICS? By G. T. Guilbaud. A lively exposition of one of the greatest boons — and threats — to modern man, with explanations of feedback, automation, missiles, etc. $1.45
E-250. THE PSYCHOANALYSIS OF CHILDREN. By Melanie Klein. "A landmark of analytical literature."—International Journal of Psychoanalysis. $2.95
IONESCO!
E-259. RHINOCEROS $1.95
E-189. THE KILLER $1.95
E-119. AMEDEE, THE NEW TEN-
ANT, VICTIMS OF DUTY $1.95
E-101. FOUR PLAYS. The Bald Soprano; The Lesson; The Chairs; Jack,
or the Submission $1.95
E-249. THE HANDBOOK OF DREAM ANALYSIS. BY Emil A. Gutheil. Over 600 specific dreams carefully examined and clarified. $2.95
E-237. THE NEW AMERICAN POETRY:
1945-1960. Edited by Donald M. Allen.
Ginsberg, Korenau, Ferlinghetti, Olson, and
40 others — plus revealing statements by
the poets themselves. $2.95
E-201. DEAR THEO: The Autobiography of Vincent Van Gogh. Edited by Irving and Jean Stone. The artist's tormented life as revealed in his own writings, edited by the authors of Lust for Life. $3.95
E-190. 100 SELECTED POEMS OF E. E.
CUMMINGS. Lyrics, love poems, bitingly
funny satires. $1.75
E-185. PATTERNS OF PSYCHOSEXUAL INFANTILISM. By Wilhelm Stekel. Sexuality in childhood, exhibitionism, narcissism, and many other subjects are discussed. A classic study. $2.95
E-159. A TASTE OF HONEY. A play by Shelagh Delaney. "A sensation . . . not to be forgotten."—N.Y. World Telegram. $1.45
E-151. THE HOSTAGE. A play by Brendan Behan. "Shocking, sprawling, howlingly off key, marvelously in tune, humane and hilarious."—Time. $1.75
PINTER!
E-350. THREE PLAYS. The Collection; A Slight Ache; The Dwarfs $1.95
E-315. THE BIRTHDAY PARTY and THE ROOM $1.75
E-299. THE CARETAKER and THE DUMB WAITER $1.75
THE BEST IN PAPERBACKS
E-145. THE WONDER THAT WAS INDIA.
By A. L. Basham. A dazzling cultural history of India. 668 pages, over 200 half-tone plates. $6½" x 10".
$4.95
E-143. ALBERT-CAMUS. By Philip Thody.
A detailed interpretation of the Nobel Prize-winner's novels and plays. $1.45
E-121. THE VOYEUR. By Alain Robbe-Grillet. A tense, disturbing novel by one of France's leading experimental writers. "Offers the reader the shock of a new experience."—Saturday Review. $2.25
E-108. A WALKER IN THE CITY. By Alfred Kazin. One of America's foremost literary critics vividly and poetically recalls his Brooklyn boyhood. $1.95.
E-91. SPECIALIZED TECHNIQUES IN PSYCHOTHERAPY. Edited by Gustave Bychowski and J. Louise Despert. Includes essays on narcosynthesis, hypnoanalysis, and telepathy. $2.45.
E-90. THREE PLAYS by Ugo Betti. Summertime; The Queen and the Rebels; Burnt Flower Bed. $1.95
BRECHT!
E-372. MOTHER COURAGE $1.95
E-187. SELECTED POEMS OF BERTOLT BRECHT: A Bilingual Edition.
Translated by H. H. Hays $1.95
E-53. PARABLES FOR THE THEATRE. The Good Woman of Setzuan;
The Caucasian Chalk Circle $1.95
E-42. THREEPENNY NOVEL $2.95
E-69. THE QUARE FELLOW. By Brend-n Behan. A rowdy, exciting drama by the headline-making Irish playwright. $1.95
E-57. SELECTED POEMS. By Lawrence Durrell. Poetry by a leading English writer — the author of the famed Alexandria quartet. $1.75
E-47. THE FORGOTTEN LANGUAGE. By Erich Fromm. An introduction to the understanding of dreams, fairy tales, and myths. $1.75
E-6. THE MARQUIS DE SADE. By Simone de Beauvoir. "Perhaps the very best thing yet written on the subject."—Edmund Wilson. With selections from Sade's writings. $1.95
PETER W. HUNTER
Friday, March 27, 1964
Chief Justice Tom Thompson, Atchison third year law student, issued a temporary restraining order against the ASC elections committee.
GREEK WEEK COURT—Martha Parmley, Wichita senior, was crowned as Greek Week queen last night. Her attendants are: Mary Morozzo, Council Grove junior, standing at the left, and Carolyn Eymann, Atchison sophomore, standing at the right.
Thompson said in his opinion that the petition to recall Peggy Conner, Sacramento, Calif., senior and representative from the large women's dorms, did not state the reasons for the recall.
Marsha Dutton, Colby senior, who circulated the original petition which recalled Miss Conner, said after the hearing she would default the trial Monday night.
ACCORDING TO THE ASC constitution, no reasons are needed for a recall from a certified 25 percent of the district.
Council Recall Petition Voided by Student Court
Miss Dutton said she would circulate a new petition on the grounds of "inadequate representation and present it to the ASC Tuesday night.
Lawrence, Kansas
The petition to recall a representative on the All Student Council was ruled void by the chief justice of the Student Court yesterday.
Contacted later Miss Conner said they would have difficulty proving her representation had been "inadequate."
"It will show this is a maneuver without a strong basis and she is afraid to face facts," Miss Conner said.
If ASC election chairman Dick King, Kansas City sophomore, certifies the new petition as representing a valid 25 percent of the district Miss Conner will be recalled again.
Unless Miss Conner appeals and asks for an emergency hearing on the new petition, the election for her replacement will be held in conjunction with the regular spring elections Wednesday and Thursday.
"IF MARSHA DOESN'T show up for the trial on the first petition she is taking a weak stand," Miss Conner said.
Miss Conner said she did not know at this time what her further course of action would be.
"I will show up at the trial Monday night to contest the original petition," Miss Conner said.
Two candidates have filed applications for the special election. They are: Beverley Nicks, Detroit, Mich. sophomore, Vox Populi, and Judith Berlaug, Sierra Guadarrama, Mex., sophomore, University Party.
Daily hansan
61st Year. No. 113
CRCC Demonstrations To Be Made in Silence
THE CHARIOT races, which had been scheduled to be held on Campanile Drive, are being held on Naismith Drive because the other events have been moved to the field house.
The civil rights demonstrations to-morrow will be silent ones.
George Ragsdale, Kansas City senior and chairman of the Civil Rights Coordinating Committee, made this announcement last night as the CRCC completed plans for its Greek Week protests against racial segregation in fraternities and sororities.
THE FIRST demonstration will be a picket of the torch lighting ceremony in Topeka, and the second will be a picket of the Greek Week chariot races.
Ragsdale said the demonstrations will be silent in order to minimize the possibility of violence. During the picket of the Sigma Nu fraternity last Saturday, the demonstrators sang freedom songs while they marched.
Ragsdale said he thought singing might tend to agitate some of the spectators.
The demonstrators plan to be in Topeka at 11 a.m. to picket in front of the Capitol while Atty. Gen. William Ferguson is lighting a torch. The torch will be relayed from Topeka to Lawrence by fraternity men.
The relay runners are expected to arrive in front of Allen Field House at 1:30 p.m. to begin the chariot races.
Skies will be partly cloudy through tomorrow night.
Weather
The low tonight will be in the 30's and tomorrow's high temperature will be slightly warmer than the 50 degree temperature expected today.
The demonstrators will assemble at Memorial Stadium and march to Naismith Drive where they will
Wins College Bowl
For the third consecutive time, Stephenson Hall's team is the annual winner of the College Bowl, KU's contest in rapid recall.
Stephenson Edges Templin
The question before them was to identify the painters associated with a set of prints. Templin missed two and the final score was established— Stephenson 125, Templin 115.
Just before the last round of the game, the finalists, Stephenson and Templin Halls, were tied at 95. Then, Stephenson pushed its score ahead to 125. Templin rebounded by hitting the buzzer first and signaling to the moderator it wanted to answer the last toss-up question. By answering it correctly, Templin took the initiative away from Stephenson.
"Under the rules of the game, Templin Hall will be allowed to finish answering the bonus question." Dean Heller said.
NOW THE GAME was within a few seconds of using up the allotted playing time. Templin was given a bonus question and began firing back answers, answers that could tie the two teams again, open another round, and give them another chance to win.
DALE BROWNAWELL, Kansas City senior and member of the Stephenson team said, "Naturally we feel pretty lucky."
The Templin team, after a whispered split-second conference, readied themselves to answer. There was no chance to win now, but they could tie the game.
The moderator, Francis Heller, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, spoke deliberately.
"Time!" called the time-keeper.
The College Bowl contests are "always a fight right down to the wire," Brownawell said. It was the same when Stephenson challenged Joseph R. Pearson Hall and Beta Theta Pi fraternity in previous College Bowl finals, Brownawell said.
Templin's team was George Barisas, Kansas City, Mo., senior and captain; Peter Whalen, Wichita sophomore; Tom Parker, Tonganoxie sophomore; and Bob Olander, Salina junior.
Jim Girard, Wichita junior and captain of the winning team, pointed out Gary Gregg, Coldwater freshman, as the key man on their team. "I don't know how he learned so much in high school," Girard said.
Ron Jones, St. John senior, was the other member of the Stephenson team.
The final College Bowl contest was taped for television by WIBW-TV in Topeka. The details and responsibility of production were shouldered by students enrolled in radio and television courses.
The winners are now eligible to compete in the Big Eight College Bowl contest May 2 in Oklahoma City.
No final arrangements have been made for telecasting the match.
The program was delayed twice by technical difficulties. It was not underway until twenty minutes after it was scheduled to begin.
Charles Boomer, Kansas City graduate student and producer, brought laughter from the audience of about 200, by reporting that birds roosting on the television antennae were responsible for the delay. "They warm themselves in the parabolic dish," he said.
stand along the sides of the road with picket signs, Ragsdale said.
Ragsdale said the demonstration will be larger than the one at the Sigma Nu, fraternity where 100 demonstrators marched for two hours.
10
GEORGE RAGSDALE Good weather ahead? . . .
Ragsdale, a stocky man who stands about 5-10, said that it will take time before Negro students are pledged to fraternities and sororities but he believes that the demonstrations help.
The demonstrations will show that there are a large number of students concerned about the situation, he said.
RAGSDALE. WHO is majoring in engineering physics, has been active in civil rights groups on campus for three years. He worked with the demonstration against the University housing list two years ago.
Ragsdale said he has been active in the CRC before, but that this is his most active year. He is very much concerned with the issue of civil rights, and he feels that there has been progress made while he has been a student at KU.
Ragsdale graduated from Sumner High School, then a segregated high school in Kansas City.
"I had never associated with white students until I went to Boys State," Ragsdale said.
Ragsdale was president of his high school class for four consecutive years. He was also president of the Hi-Y club, the Physics club, the Math club, and the Dramatics club while he was in high school.
RAGSDALE SAID, "Prejudices against minority groups have decreased because there are more opportunities open now, and these have increased inter-racial relations and changed attitudes.
"However, many minority group members still do not feel a part of the University, because both sides refrain from complete association."
No Coach Named; Conference Called
Wade Stinson, incoming athletic director, who is seeking a new basketball coach, called a press conference for 3:30 p.m. today.
The conference will be in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union.
In developments earlier today, Stinson said that a petition signed by KU basketball players supporting Ted Owens, assistant coach under Dick Harp, "will have no weight whatsoever."
"Ive not made a decision yet, I'd rather not say who I've talked to," he added.
SEVERAL NAMES have been mentioned as Harp's successor, including Owens, Ralph Miller, the coach at Wichita University, Dean Smith, coach at North Carolina, and Walt Shubloom, coach at Wyandotte High School.
When told about the reported possibilities, Stinson called it "mere speculation."
Stinson said his choice of a successor to Coach Dick Harp, who resigned yesterday, would have to be approved by the KU athletic board, Chancellor W. Clarke Wessoe, and the Board of Rentals, in that order.
Sources close to the KU athletic department said Owens and Miller are the most likely candidates.
EARLIER IN THE MONTH, Henry Bubb, Toocka, chairman of the Board of Regents, said, "There will be no pirating among the institutions in this state and that applies among coaches as well as faculty members."
Stinson said today he has not talked to Bubb, but he said he interpreted Bubb's remarks as not being a "complete thumbs down."
Seventeen players who will be eligible for the 1964-65 basketball team have signed a petition "giving full support to Ted Owens becoming the next head coach at the University of Kansas."
The petition circulated by George Unseid. All-Big Eight center, was started yesterday morning following the announcement that Dick Harp,
head basketball coach, had resigned.
head basketball coach, had resigned. Owens has been Harp's assistant for the past four years, coming to KU from Cameron Junior College, Lawton, Okla., where he had a 93-23 record.
THE PETITION was presented yesterday to Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, who in turn gave it to Wade Stinson, incoming athletic director.
The petition read as follows:
"We the members of the KU basketball team of the year 1964-65 signed this petition giving full support to Ted Owens becoming the next head coach at the University of Kansas."
SIGNED: GEORGE UNSELD,
Dave Schichtle, Dick Ruggles, Jeff
Flias, Riney Lochmann, Sherman
Stimley, Walter Wesley, Fred Chana,
Del Lewis, Jim Gough, Bud Woolery,
Kerry Bolton, Wayne Loving, Dave
Brill, Larry Norris, Steve Renko,
and Ron Franz.
Pete Townsnd, also a member of the 1963-64 team, was the only member of the team who could not be reached. Unseld said.
One copy of the petition will be sent to the Kansas State Board of Regents in care of Henry Fubb, Regents chairman, Unseld said.
UNSIELD SAID he talked to Chancellor Wescoe yesterday afternoon when he donated blood at Elsworth hall where Chancellor Wescoe was the attending physician for a compus blood drive.
"He (Dr. Wescoe) said something to the effect, 'Is this what you men want,' I said, 'Yes,' and he said, 'I'll pess it on.' Unseeld Said.
The above conversation between Unseld and Dr. Wescoe took place as Unseld lay on his back giving a pint of blood.
THE GENERAL REACTION among the players, when interviewed yesterday afternoon, was surprise. Most of the players heard the news of Coach Harp's decision over the radio, or from another team member.
"I was shocked and surprised to be coach Carharp's decision," Jim
(Continued on page 16)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday, March 27,1964
The Candidates Say... Stewart-UP Crowther-Vox
Q: What, in your opinion, are the basic issues in this campaign?
A: The issue which University Party sees as most central to the campaign is: whether or not our student government should undergo a change to a more comprehensive emphasis on the student in student government.
Q: What is your position on what you have above defined as the basic issues?
A: We believe that students can investigate, recommend solutions to, and act on their own problems. There are in fact three steps to a more student-oriented student government:
1) By actively seeking out interested students.
2) By giving participants in student government challenging programs.
3) By working closely with these students to help implement these programs.
Q: What are the powers of the Student Body President?
A: Potentially, the powers of the president of the student body stem from his own personality and personal policies. For instance, he should be the single, most powerful force in the area of legislation through forceful presentation of his policies and programs to the council. Also, his influence with alumni, administrators, and faculty will be great if he himself shows responsibility, creativity, and sincere concern for the growth and development of the University.
Q: What are your qualifications, in terms of previous experience, to be president of the student body?
A: This question presupposes that legislative experience is the primary qualification which should be considered in choosing a Student Body President. I personally believe that the areas of administrative experience, academic achievement, and legislative experience are all equally important to be qualified to serve as president of the student body.
Besides serving in administrative positions in other campus organizations, I have had the following direct connection with student government: I have been on the interviewing board two years, and served on two ASC committees. This year as a member of the council, I have introduced eight pieces of legislation, and have been a member of the Committee on Committees and Legislation and the Little Hoover Commission. I feel that these varied connections with student government should serve as a good background for understanding the workings and problems involved in all facets of student government.
Q: What parts of your party's platform are most significant to you?
A: The two most important planks of our platform are, first, the Student Employment Committee and, second, the Student-Teacher Evaluation. The party's student employment plank emphasizes the concept of students themselves solving basic campus problems. The student-teacher evaluation plank emphasizes our belief that students themselves can make worthwhile contributions to the academic standards of the University. Both of these planks, as do the rest of our planks, emphasize what students can do for themselves.
Q: What do you think should be done to further promote racial integration among KU living groups.
A: The basic problem which is faced here on this campus, as well as in other parts of our country, is that individuals judge members of other races and creeds according to individually preconceived ideas. The problem in this case is to break down prejudices on an individual level. Here is one area in which the power of the Student Body President must be exercised as a matter of his personal policy and through the influence of his personality and office. The first step is to actively encourage the participation of members of minority groups in student government and to influence the leaders of other campus activities to do the same. By this participation and, more importantly, through the consequent inter-racial contact, preconceived ideas will begin to be broken down and relationships based on mutual and worthwhile grounds will be established.
Q: What, in your opinion, are the basic issues in the campaign? What is your position on these issues?
A: I think there is a basic difference in the approach of the two parties toward the needs of the students. I feel, as does Vox Populi, that continuity is a necessity in student government; therefore having initiated a new apprentice system this year we plan to develop and enlarge the program in a sound, well-thought-out approach.
UP is using old ideas that in the past didn't work, like the teacher-evaluation program, or that having investigated the problem another agency was found to be able to handle it better as with the Labor Committee which was turned over to the Office of Aids and Awards. Contrasted with this, we think of new things for the benefit of the students where the needs exist such as Stadium expansion. This shows the scope of our thinking and the role student government can play.
Q: What is your conception of the power of the president of the student body?
A: A. Appointive power with approval of 2/3 members present.
1. All faculty advisory and university committees.
2. Members of the Student Court.
3. Secretary, Department of Student Welfare.
4. All executive committees not designated under the Student Body Vice-president.
5. Delargements to student conventions.
B. Power to veto over legislation.
C. Speaking privileges on ASC—recommend legislation, set forth policies on issues.
D. Speaking power on:
1. Union Operating Board.
2. Athletic Board.
Q: What, in terms of previous student government experience, qualifies you to be student body president?
A: 1. Chairman, ASC Committee on Committee, Vice Chairman-ASC
2. Chairman, ASC Elections Committee
3. Chairman, ASC Athletic Seating Board
4. ASC Law School representative
5. ASC Freshman men's representative
6. Student Council Treasurer — Kansas Weslevan
i. Student Body President—Kansas Weslevan
Q: What, in your opinion, are the most significant planks of your party's platform. Why are they significant?
A: A. I feel that our two most significant platform planks are Stadium Seating and the Apprentice System. Concerning stadium seating, there is a definite need based on the growth of the student body (20,000 in 1970—double in ten years). Due to the bonded indebtedness because of the addition to the west side, the Athletic Board is financially unable to undertake this. A sound, feasible plan has been discussed with many people and the money will be raised after construction is completed.
The number one problem of student government is continuity. The apprentice system will provide interested students with experience.
A: To me the question of further promoting racial integration is not as important as this question seems to assume. The overwhelming majority of students do not feel that student government should take any action in this area. Action taken by student government along this line would be definite proposals to meet specific problems. There is no need for more policy statements; the position of the ASC is quite clearly expressed in ASC Bill No. 7. With this bill in mind we have worked with particular groups, particularly Sigma Nu; March 3rd the ASC passed a resolution directing a letter to Sigma Nu National, giving our support to attempt to help them eliminate the clause.
Q: What do you think could be done to further racial integration of KU living groups?
I am opposed to forced integration of segregation. We should aid organizations in removing legal barriers, but we should also recognize the right of members of a group to choose associates. Student government should take action when requested with recommendations from HRC, which is the co-ordinating arm of student government in this area.
U.S. SENATE
FLUBBISTER
CIVIL RIGHTS
PRESS CONTAINER GOVERNMENT
WIA HERBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
"Would It Be Gentlemanly To Interfere With A Fellow Club Member?"
No, the headline is not a misprint. But don't worry, TIGF occurs only once each year, and no more than a smattering of students change their routines to fit its mood.
-TIGF-
The gleaming beaches along Florida's east coast are still clogged with book-weary collegians off on a perpetual binge of sun, sand . . . and foam. Student-vacationers in sheltered corners of the Rockies continue to slash graceful arcs down powdery slopes, and only a couple of chairs on the ski tow are vacant.
For Jayhawkers it's the start of another weekend of toil and trouble over the more unpleasant aspects of university life—term papers, belated hour exams, and the first faint rumblings from home about that double-F "down" in House and Garden Insect Study. Still there are a few, mostly intangible end-of-the-week joys which never change, unless there's a special on pitchers down the street from your regular pub. If there's a hint of sunshine, Lone Star, or any relatively secluded outdoor spot is suddenly transformed into what might as well be an animated used-car lot. And, later, under the cover of darkness, there are the usual merry-makings.
No, as far as most are concerned, there's not likely to be much change between TIGF and TIGF.
Well, there might be a slight alteration of plans here and there. Friday afternoon may mean a special Easter hairdo, frantic last-minute calls in search of the furry white bunny she's hinted for, a visit to your friendly neighborhood package store for a supply of fizz and what-not for your welcome-to-Spring version of purple passion, and perhaps a drive down Vermont to locate the right church for your semi-annual pilgrimage to the pew.
Then, tonight's the Sing, that funny movie is held over, eggs still aren't colored, the baskets haven't been arranged, and somebody's got to pick up the chocolate-covered crosses before the stores close. Anyway, why get excited about this one day? Don't we have enough to muddle over in these difficult times without dredging up old tragedies?
TIGF!
Huh? You don't understand?
Then picture this: a hill, probably not much different than own Mount Oread; a small group of people, some indignant, others humbled; three crosses, the center of attention. On two of these hang criminals receiving their punishment, on the other, an innocent carpenter being crucified to satisfy public opinion, because he disturbed the status quo.
TIGF! This Is Good Friday. The day those long years ago when Jesus Christ gave his life that you and I might be reborn. And where are you today? What are you doing? What are your plans?
Stop. Glance back over these lines and fit yourself into the story. Have you taken even one moment in a quiet place today to think about that man, bleeding for humanity? Or are you one of those Jesus was speaking to when He looked up from His agony and said, "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do."
—Larry Schmidt
—Judy Hodge
Dailij'1fänsan
111 Flint Hall
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.
B
GRANT 12 YOUNG
AVES, JW. S., 1991
DEFEAS, P.J. M.
- A multidisciplinary research fellow in the School of Applied Sciences at the University of Southampton.
Friday, March 27, 1964
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Harris Cites World Order Deterrents
If the obstacles to world peace are insuperable, "we can but wait helplessly for Armageddon." Prof. Errol E. Harris said last night in discussing the social and political obstacles to international order.
"But if we are to survive, the choice is not open to us to admit the obstacles as insuperable," he added.
The professor cited several obstacles, the first of which was nationalism. Nationalism which excludes people regarded as nationally different, and is free from domination by any non-national authority, opposes recognition of "wider community" and any movement toward "supernational organization," he said.
FREUDIAN psychologists explain nationalism in terms of repressed primitive impulses in childhood, he said, which later gain release and are projected upon the national body and the symbols associated with it.
Thus, while individuals may be modest about themselves, they feel no restraint about pride and boastfulness concerning their nation, he said. The same principle applies to criticism, he continued. Personal criticism is more readily tolerated than national criticism.
Individual tempers are controlled pretty well, he added, "but the least slight to our national honor excites violent indignation."
Prof. Harris said the Freudians explain a nation's confidence in its own power as being derived from an infantile belief in one's own omnipotence.
BUT THE professor pointed out contradictions in the Freudians' explanation. They say citizens have a father-image of the nation-state, which developed from security provided by parents during childhood.
"But in the next breath they tell us that the behavior of individuals (males) is influenced by the Oedipus complex, an antagonism to the father formed in childhood through sexual jealousy, and that the consequent desire to bring vengeance on the father is then transferred to foreign nations" he said.
"The Freudian theory, therefore, combines elements of plausibility with others so confusing and conflicting, that it is scarcely credible."
Another explanation for nationalistic feelings is given by social psychologists, who use the "ingroup" and "out-group" theory.
THE IN-GROUP acknowledges obligations to its own members, but not to members of the out-group. Lives of members of the out-group are not considered important.
"Thus between the two groups the natural sentiment is hostility."
Prof. Harris did not dispute this view, but pointed out that it is a relative one, dependent upon the conditions of which a person is recognized as belonging to either group.
"A student will adopt an in-group attitude to fellow Kansans, and an outgroup attitude to Nebraskans; an in-group attitude to Americans, and an out-group attitude to foreigners."
ANOTHER OBSTACLE to world order the professor cited, was racial prejudice. He said that although there are no pure races, differences in skin pigmentation and facial types are sufficient to engender race consciousness.
"And with this, there have come to be associated violent prejudices without the least rational basis against one alleged race by another."
With the exception of anti- semitism, racial prejudice hardly existed before the eighteenth century, he said.
"It was only after the colonial era had set in that the white races adopted an attitude of superiority, and after the spread of slavery and the slave trade with Africa."
"IN ALL CASES the root of race prejudice is fear of submergence in, and loss of status to, a group hitherto held in subjection."
Another obstacle to international community is difference of social and political traditions. Prof. Harris referred to the differences of social background and political experience between the more developed countries and the new independent African and Asian states.
Presidential Candidate Profiles Crowther Stewart
Vox Populi's candidate for student body president, Marshall Crowther, has held the office before, but not at KU.
Crowther, Lawrence second-year law student, was elected treasurer and president of the student body at Kansas Wesleyan College after transferring from KU in 1959. Prior to that he served on the All Student Council as a freshman representative.
Since returning to KU Law School, Crowther has been on the ASC as law representative, chairman of the Athletic Seating Board and a member of the ASC Elections Committee
CROWTHER HAS BEEN vice-chairman of the ASC since November and chairman of the Committee-on-Committees and Legislation as part of his duties as vice-chairman
"I believe that student government should provide progressive continuity, actual student services and a two-way communication system between students and the council," Crowther said.
"VOX UTILIZES ITS council members to see and explain what has or is being done, what needs to be done and the best way to do it," Crowther said.
Stressing that student government leaders and party leaders should be separated but working for the same benefits, Crowther said a party is responsible "not only to select responsible people to run for office and to serve on committees, but also to explain why or why not legislation is accomplished."
"Although I am not an undergraduate. I feel my knowledge of the interests and problems of students is the same."
Crowther said the role of student leaders was to make a sincere and determined effort to investigate and propose legislation for concrete improvement and services for students.
As a former student body president, Crowther believes the role of an executive position is to suggest, advise, coordinate and represent student government and student interests.
CROWTHER'S FORMER qualifications include Outstanding Speaker of Kansas Boys State, county chairman of Statewide Activities, placement in the Campus Speaking contest and serving as pledge-class officer in Delta Upsilon fraternity.
At Kansas Wesleyan, Crowther also was a varsity tennis player.
Stewart—
A. B. GARDNER
Marshall Crowther
(1)
Bob Stewart
A man with a big smile. He is wearing a shirt and has his hands on his chest.
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Bob Stewart, University Party's candidate for student body president, has been active in KU student government and activities since he was a freshman.
HOLDING A fraternity seat on the ASC, Stewart also is a member of the Committee-on-Committees and Legislation and the Little Hoover Commission.
"I believe in a dual role of a student body president," Stewart said. "That is, the so-called "coat and tie" image when representing the students publicly, but also the shirt sleeves rolled up to actively work with committees, council members and students in general.
Day or Night
He has been a member of the All Student Council Current Events and Public Relations Committees, and was a delegate to the Big Eight Student Government Conference last fall.
"The council representatives should feel a real responsibility to fully inform, discuss and explain issues and legislation to the student body."
Stewart feels the political parties should make a determined effort to seek out interested, responsible leadership and inform and train them early to make the committees work efficiently.
"I FEEL THE committees should be expanded or contracted, whichever proves more effective for their functioning. There should be a permanent Little Hoover Commission to evaluate and offer positive guidance and training for committee members," Stewart said.
Stewart feels that ASC representatives should interview applicants for committees rather than party representatives.
"By doing this they would be more aware of who is best qualified to receive the appointments, and they would know some of the scope in which the committees could work." Stewart said.
"Maybe this would help to interest more students in student government so that a few do not have to run all the business of the council."
"This, too, would enlarge the relationship of students to student government and help inform them of council matters."
Stewart is a member of Sigma Chi fraternity.
STEWART ALSO FEELS that the ASC should coordinate more of its activities with other campus organizations, as do the ASC Current Events Committee and Student Union Activities in bringing speakers to the campus.
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Page 4
2017年3月14日 星期五
University Daily Kansan Friday, March 27.1964
J
HAPPY
EASTER
TO
ALL
OUR
FRIENDS
Independent Laundry 740 Vermont
Alexander's Flower Shop
826 Iowa
Park Plaza South Inc. 1912 W. 25th
Union Cab Co.
105 E. 10th
Lawrence National Bank 647 Massachusetts
Acme Laundry & Dry Cleaners
1111 Massachusetts
925 Iowa
711 W. 23rd
El Matador Cafe
446 Locust
Lawrence Bus Co.
841 Pennsylvania
Plaza Club
2222 Iowa
Old Mission Inn 1904 Massachusetts
---
Wichi There
It three a.m. mate:
A gutte cover
The constru
Te
fough
V.
Roma
rites .
Rome
Th
thron
of the
The all oth day of
JC told— captiv Frida
Th son's been Minn.
Ho recon days autho failed
W.
busy
civil
Ki which stagee
He begin first w
Ki action demo
PH strate bodian villag
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It of Sta shot of the A
Page 5
Friday, March 27, 1964
World Spotlight
(By United Press International)
Wichita U. Building Burned
WICHITA-A major fire virtually destroyed the Art Building at Wichita University today, one of the oldest structures on the campus. There were no injuries.
The cause was not determined immediately.
It was not determined immediately if six valuable paintings in the three-story brick structure were lost. The fire broke out about 3:30 a.m. and was brought under control about 6:15 a.m. Damage estimates were incomplete.
A rear wall collapsed about 5 a.m. Much of the building was gutted. Nobody was in the structure when the flames were discovered.
The school is closed at present for Easter vacation. The building constructed in the 1920s, originally was used as a library.
Ten companies of firemen, including three extra aerial units, fought the blaze.
Pope Leads Church in Mourning
The Pope, clad in the red robes of mourning, was to leave his throne in St. Peter's and walk barefoot to kiss a crucifix at the foot of the altar during an afternoon ceremony.
VATICAN CITY—Pope Paul VI today led the world's 500 million Roman Catholics in mourning the death of Christ in Good Friday rites scheduled in St. Peter's Basilica and among the ruins of ancient Rome.
The altar was bare and the church bells were silent, like those of all other Catholic churches throughout the world on the most solemn day of the Christian calendar.
Soviets Release Airmen
JOHNSON CITY, Tex.—President Johnson waited today to be told—and to tell the American people—that two U.S. airmen held captive in East Germany since March 10 have been freed on Good Friday by the Communists.
The Texas White House issued official word shortly after Johnson's arrival last night for an Easter vacation that arrangements had been made for release today of Capt. David I. Holland, of Holland, Minn., and Capt. Melvin J. Kessler, of Philadelphia, Pa.
Holland and Kessler were among three crewmen of an RB-66 reconnaissance bomber that was shot down by a Soviet fighter 17 days ago after straying over the East German border. American authorities insisted they were on a routine training mission and failed to receive U.S. radio warnings they were off course.
King said the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), which he heads, would sponsor demonstrations if Southern senators staged a "determined" filibuster against the civil rights bill.
WASHINGTON—The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. completed a busy day on Capitol Hill yesterday by announcing tentative plans for civil rights demonstrations throughout the nation.
King Plans New Program
He said the SCLC would consider the filibuster "determined" and begin the demonstrations if the bill did not come to a vote by the first week in May.
King would not reveal details of the proposed "dramatic direct action program" but he left no doubt that the program would include demonstrations.
Cambodia Honors U.S. Loss
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia—About 300 college students demonstrated against the United States today as a memorial to the Cambodians killed in a U.S.-aided South Vietnamese raid on a border village.
There was no violence. American and British officials stood nearby watching.
It was disclosed that Prince Norodom Sihanouk, Cambodian Chief of State, will decorate his pilot son whose American-supplied fighter shot down an unarmed U.S. observation plane during the raid, killing the American pilot and a Vietnamese observer.
JOIN THE TRIBE!
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DAWSON SAID since 1591, Shakespeare's works have been printed in more than 70 languages, but all of the printings lack accuracy.
Curator Says Work By Bard Changed
Dawson's lecture was in honor of the 400th anniversary since Shakespeare's birth. He gave his talk at the 11th Annual Bibliography Lecture.
Publishers are not wholly to blame for this fault in the accuracy since they tried to make Shakespeare works more readable. They attempted this by dropping phrases or substituting the publisher's own interpretation.
Current works by William Shakespeare are not accurate representations because of an English copyright law and the lack of authentic texts of his writings, a curator of Shakespearean works said yesterday.
Giles E. Dawson, curator of William Shakespeare's works in the Folger Library in Washington, D.C., explained the loss of accuracy to an early perpetual copyright law for publishers in England. The law stated that publisher to whom a writer sold his writings was the perpetual keeper of such writings, unless the publisher sold them to another publisher.
Stationer and Company were the first to publish Shakespeare's writings under a Royal Charter from the English Government. The charter meant that the government had censorship privileges and regulated the number of editions that the firm could print.
This 'safe' printing was Shakespeare's works. Every few years the publisher would try Shakespeare's works again and would list the books as having been revised. It is these revisions that Dawson has spent much time in tracing.
Because publishers have to guess at the possibility of a writer's works to sell, which happened often in the 16th century as well as now, the publishers printed safe or known public favorites.
After the right of the publisher's copyright on Shakespearean works had changed hands several times in the 16th and 17th century, the Enlish Government passed a law stating that copyrights were good for only 21 years unless the works had been acquired before the law was enacted or hence. The law was actually stated contradictory, but it meant copyrights were only good for 21 years.
THE BENEFITS of this type or copyright went to the publisher rather than to the writer.
The charter gave this publisher the power of complete price control. All books were registered before first prints on the Shakespeare works.
By 1730, the number of printers had greatly increased and were waiting for the copyright to run out. When it did, the small printers began printing Shakespeare's works, but the copyright holder was able to bluff the newcomers because of the
WE TRY
HARDER
vague stating of the 1709 copyright law
WE TRY HARDER
BY USING THE threat of court action, the publisher was able to keep others out of the Shakespearean printing market.
In 1734, Robert Walker, an English printer, started printing the "Merry Wives of Winsor" in installments or serial form which was a challenge to Tonson II's copyright on Shakespearean works.
Tonson and Walker exchanged many threats, but no court action was taken because Tonson had become afraid that Walker could prove the copyright law did hold.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday, March 27, 1964
This Easter Sunday at the Prairie Room
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Around the Campus 16 Cheerleaders Chosen
Sixteen persons have been elected KU varsity cheerleaders for the coming year.
Other regular cheerleaders; Patti Bennett, Olathe sophomore; Bruce Bauerle, Harlan, Iowa, freshman; Mary Jane Epp, Tribune sophomore; Bob Hopkins, Wichita junior; Marsha Ballard, Wichita sophomore; Mary Lasley, Mission sophomore.
Head cheedleader is Larry Colburn, Lawrence sophomore. Colburn's assistant will be Bob Pitner, Glasco junior.
Friday, March 27,1964 University Daily Kansan Page 7
First alternates are Jerree Johnson, Wichita freshman; and Thomas Bagby, Coffeyville junior.
Other alternates are: Carol Nelson, Webster Groves, Mo. junior; Jim Stephens, Emporia freshman; Phyllis Schneider, Shawnee Mission junior; Kristine Bergman, St. Louis, Mo. sophomore; Irene Gibson, Independence, Kan. junior; Albert N. (Mike) Lemoine III, Leawood junior.
L. R. Lind, chairman of the Department of Classics and Classical Archaeology, was to speak to the Clasical Association of the Middle West and South today at the University of Virginia on a rare manuscript he discovered in Los Angeles.
The 12th century manuscript contains 296 lines of translation by Constantine Africanus from "Omnia Opera" written by Isaac Israeli, a Jewish physician of the Middle Ages. Lind said the manuscript deals with observations on fever by the Greek physician Galen.
Professor at Classics Meeting
Lind found the document as the binding for Vitruvius's "De Architectura" (1496), while browsing through a rare book collection in a as a research professor in medical history at UCLA.
Music Program Set
The School of Fine Arts will present a chamber music program Monday at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall featuring the University String Quartet and Roy Hamlin Johnson, pianist.
The University Quartet is composed of artist-teachers on the KU staff. They are Raymond Cerf and Theodore Johnson, violinists, Karel Blaas, violist, and Raymond Stuhl, cellist.
Latin Program Gets Grant
A $20,000 grant from the Old Dominion Foundation of New York will finance two institutes for Latin teachers to be held this summer here.
The foundation has given the University a total of $30.000 in the past two years, the largest grant in the United States for the promotion of Latin studies.
The foundation supports programs in liberal education and the arts. The grant was awarded jointly to KU and to the American Classical League, the only national organization solely for the promotion of Latin studies.
David R. King, Salina freshman, was selected KU Air Force ROTC "Cadet of the Month" for February.
Freshman Top Cadet
King was nominated by his Squadron Commander and selected by the cadet officer honor board over ten other cadets.
Delta Tau Delta social fraternity Educational Foundation scholarships have gone to Guy T. Schantz, Wichita junior, and Ronald Horwege, St. Francis sophomore.
Fraternity Honors Students
The $125 awards are for general fees at the University.
The grant will support the third year of efforts to classify the insect by numerical taxonomy, a method developed in part at KU. Numerical taxonomy, which uses high-speed computers to group organisms, has been criticized by scientists who use traditional methods of observation and analysis.
Mosquito Study Aided
A $15,000 renewal grant for a numerical study of mosquitoes has been awarded KU by the U.S. Public Health Service.
Charles D. Michener, Watkins distinguished professor of entomology is acting director of the grant. Principal investigator is Robert R. Sokal, professor of statistical biology who is a Fulbright lecturer this academic year at universities in Israel.
Scholarship Fund Set
The Bertenshaw Scholarship Fund of more than $11,000 has been established here to assist young men of Independence and Montgomery County in obtaining a liberal education.
The fund comes from the estate of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Bertenshaw. He was a businessman and attorney for 50 years before his death in 1947. Mrs. Bertenshaw died last year.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said the first award will be $450 for the 1964-65 year. It is hoped one or more awards totaling $500 can be made each subsequent year.
Lawrence Churches Plan Special Easter Services
With Easter this Sunday and spring vacation yet a week away, Lawrence churches are planning special activities for KU students.
A sunrise service will be presented at 5:45 a.m. Sunday at Potter Lake. The event is sponsored by United Christian Youth Movement, a youth division of the Lawrence Council of Churches.
Students from the Lawrence junior high schools and the Lawrence High School are members of the organization which has planned the service.
In case of bad weather, the service will be moved to the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St.
Besides special Easter services being presented in all of the Lawrence churches, some churches are having special Easter dramas.
"I Saw Him," an Easter drama involving 14 students, will be presented at 7:30 p.m. today at the Baptist Activities Building, 1221 Oread.
Westminster Center, 1204 Oread, will also be presenting an Easter drama. Students will read "The King Comes to His Own," a part of a series of 12 plays on the life of Jesus. The reading will be presented
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Westminster Married Couples, 6:30 p.m.
1204 Oread. Supper and discussion. "Theological Background of Separation of Church and State."
SUA Current Events Forum, 4:30 p.m.
Music Room, Kansas Union.
Mathematics Colloquium, 4:30 p.m., 103 Strong Hall. "Dedekind Completion of C(X)—Prof. Donald G. Johnson of Pennsylvania State U."
E. C. Franklin Lecture, 8 p.m., 300 Bailey. "N.M.R. Studies of Fast Reactions"—Dr. H. S. Gutowsky, U. of Illinois.
SATURDAY
Peace Corps final time during Peace Corps week to take qualifying examination. Interested students should be at the Kansas Union at 9 a.m.
Catholic Confessions: 10 a.m.-noon,
1-5 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910
Stratford Rd. No regular confessions at
7-8 p.m. this day.
Peter Nero Concert, 8 p.m., Hoch Auditorium.
International Club. 8 p.m. Big 8 Room.
International Club. 8 p.m. Factory. Film
Comedy. And, Sound Comedy.
Easter Vigil Service, 11 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Easter Mass, 12 midnight, St. Lawrence Chapel. This will be a short Mass so that girls can be back to their rooms by closing. EASTER CHAPEL
EASTER SUNDAY
Catholic Masses 8 a.m. St. Lawrenc-
t Chapel Rd. 930 and 130
miles, Fraser Theater.
SUA Chess Club, 2 p.m. Kansas Union,
Cavillon Recital, 3 p.m. Albert Gerken.
University Symphony Concert, 3:30
p.m. University Theatre.
p Easter Flea Market theatre.
Easter Flea Market, 41st St. Lawrence Center, 1915 Stratford. All students stay over the weekend are invited to attend and enjoy this Latin-American treat.
Oread Friends, 10:30 a.m. Danforth
Everyone welcome to this Quaker meet-
ing.
at 7:00 p.m. Sunday at the center. James K. Hitt, director of admissions and chairman of the calendar committee said KU is still in session over Easter because "we like to have our vacation in the middle of the semester."
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Friday, March 27, 1964
ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE-
PLACES TO GO
THINGS TO DO
Dine and Bowl at Hillerest Bowl
for the finest in Steaks its...
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Enjoy Fine Foods
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THE STEAK HOUSE
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1100 E. 23rd VI 3-9753
BOYD'S CAFE
at 109 W.6th St. is ready to serve you Tues-Sun. till 4 a.m.
Easter Sunday Smorgasbord
$1.50
$1.50 Serving 12 Noon to 3 p.m. $1.25 for members Dancing on Friday and Saturday Night—
Featuring the Peterson Trio
Barbecue Ribs
Choice of 10 Salads & Relishes
Oven Brown Potatoes or Potato Fluffs
Baked Virginia Ham
Jumbo Shrimp
Choice of Vegetables
Southern Fried Chicken
Hot Rolls and Butter
Price includes Coffee, Tea, Milk, or Coke
Restaurant closes at 7:00 p.m.
Firebird Restaurant
Open Daily from 4 to 9 Closed Monday Friday & Saturday from 4 to 10
HERMAN'S THOUGHT FOR THE WEEK
EVERY MAN LOSES A CASE NOW AND THEN, EM, MR. BELL-EVE?
DR PEPPER
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Take A Study Break And Join The Gang at the Gaslight Tavern
C
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Friday, March 27, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
ERS BROTHERS
appearing
April 13,7:30 p.m.
at
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presented by
Inion Activities Board
hburn University
$1.75 — Gen. Admission $2.75 Union — Washburn University Oil orders accepted stamped, self-addressed envelope or check or money order.
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PETER
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is here
Saturday, March 28 for GREEK WEEK
Tickets $1.25,$1.00 and $.75 On Sale Now at
- the ticket counter of the Union
- the information booth
- Bell's Music Company
925 Mass.
- tickets on sale at the door
---
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 27, 1964
Coach Likes Pitching With Opener Near
Considering that KU's baseball team lost the top three pitchers from its last season's staff, Coach Floyd Temple is optimistic about his team's chances.
"Overall, I think our pitching could be as good or better than it has been." Temple said.
Perhaps some explanation is necessary for one to understand Temple's bold remark. Claimed by graduation were All-Big Eight pick Carl Nelson, now signed by the New York Mets; Jerry Waldschmidt, a mainstay for three years, and Roger Brock, a left-hander who obtained good results over the past two seasons.
TEMPILE'S OPTMISM is based on the addition of four strong-armed sophomores, Steve Renko, football quarterback, who is working on his third varsity sport will be an important figure on the mound for the Jayhawks. Fred Chana, 6-6 reserve basketball forward, Charles Dobson and Steve King also reinforce Temple's hopes.
Three of these men—probably the first three listed—will open the season as starters as Temple sights the weekly three-game series against each Big Eight competitor. Here are his thumbnail sketches of each prospective pitcher:
- Dobson — Excellent fastball. Needs to improve curve.
- Chana - Satisfactory fastball and curve. Control average to good.
- Renko- Good fastball, good curve, surprisingly good control.
- King — Best control on the staff. Average fastball and curve.
Behind this foursome of hurlers, Temple will carry three more pitchers, Steve Lunsford, two letter lefthander and holdover juniors John Higgins and Fred Littooy. This is more depth than Temple has ever enjoyed since coming to KU.
THE PITCHING STAFF is not the only flexible part of the Temple baseball machine either.
Veteran Dick Fanning, Big Eight home run and RBI king as a sophomore two seasons ago, returns at first base, but may have to share time with another lefthanded hitter Steve McGreevy, who topped the club's batting average last year as he hit .303.
McGreevy is an outfielder and will be in center field when the Jayhawks open a six-game swing into Texas Wednesday.
Gola
REOPENING!
FULL-TIME
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LINE IN THE AVE · West on Highway 49
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BOOD FOOD
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BRING the KIDDIES to playland
TONITE & SAT.
Robt. Mitchum
"RAMPAGE"
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Bob Hope
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2 BONUS HITS
SAT. NITE
STARTS SUNDAY —
for Easter
Tony Curtis
"40 Pounds of Trouble"
AND
Sinatra — Martin
"SERGEANTS 3"
GIANT SCREEN
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Economical and Fun
BRING THE KIDDIES
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TONITE & SAT.
Robt. Mitchum
"RAMPAGE"
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Bob Hope
"CALL ME BWANA"
2 BONUS HITS
SAT. NITE
HOPE IN THE CAN
SCHOOL
Newcomer Sterling Coward, an all-American junior college player from Wilmington, N.C., has moved last year's regular, Dick Ruggles, from second to shortstop, where he will battle two-year starter, Don Miller. Whoever loses this job will be available for relief at second and third as well as shortstop.
"Up until this bad weather hit," Temple said. "I've been real pleased with the progress of our squad. All the pitchers have gone at least six innings and have looked all right. This sets us back a week. Worse yet, we haven't been able to get in any weekend intra-squad games and that's the only way to get a club ready."
In Texas, KU will face five clubs which started the season a month ago. Temple will fly a squad of 17 men, departing Tuesday.
Temple's major trouble at the moment is the cold weather which has driven his squad into Allen Field House.
The slated games line up this way: April 1—Randolph A.F.B. at San Antonio; 2—St. Mary's at San Antonio; 3—St. Edwards at Austin; 4—Texas Lutheran at Seguin; 6—Randolph A.F.B. at San Antonio; 7—Trinity at San Antonio
By Leo H. Petersen (UPI Sports Editor)
Yankees Favored Again in AL
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — The New York Yankees come pretty close to death and taxes at rating as a sure thing.
They aren't counting the 1964 American League pennant in the bag, but they'll be mighty surprised if they don't win it.
"It may not be easy," admits their new manager, Yogi Berra, "but I can't see any club beating us out."
NEITHER CAN the vast majority of baseball experts.
The Yankee lineup for the coming season is set, with only a couple of pitching spots and outfield and infield utility berths open. And there are some promising rookies battling for the few jobs up for grabs.
Providing their two slugging outfield stars, Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris, are sound, the Yankees look like money in the bank. They won last year with Mantle and Maris out a large part of the season and despite the fact they had to re-organize their pitching staff. It was said of the 1963 Yankees that they won the pennant with their junior varsity and then lost the world series to the Los Angeles Dodgers in four straight games with their varsity.
Berra insists that that world series shellacking will have no effect on the team although rival managers feel it might have. Berra says that's wishful thinking on their part.
THERE'S NO chance of breaking into the regular lineup.
It features an outfield of Mantle, Maris and Tom Tresh; an infield of Joe Pepitone at first, Bobby Richardson at second, Tony Kubek at short and Clete Boyer at third with Elston Howard, the league's most valuable player last season, behind the plate
Although he played in only 65 games last season because of injuries, Mantle still hit .314 with 15 home runs and 35 runs batted in. An off season operation seems to have overcome his left knee trouble. Maris got into 90 games, hitting .269 with 23 HR's and 53 RBI's and shows no signs of being handicapped by a shoulder injury he suffered in the World Series. Tresh, as a sophomore, batted .269 with 25 home runs and 72 runs batted in.
If they are sound, they form the best trio of outfielders in the majors.
THE YANKEES believe their infield is the best, too. Pepitone, a goat in the Yankees World Series disaster, had a fine year otherwise, and is generally regarded as future great. He batted .271 with 27 home runs and 89 runs batted in. Richardson, Kubek and Boyer had only average seasons last year, batting .265, .257 and .251, respectively. But with Pepitone they form an impregnable inner defense.
There is little doubt that Howard is the best catcher in baseball. He hit .287 last season with 28 HR's and 85 RBI's.
Berra says that Johnny Blanchard, who also can play the outfield, will confine his duties to understudying Howard this year. Berra said he was in the market for a
third string catcher for it doesn't look like rookie Jake Gibbs is going to make it.
The infield utility men will be Harry Bright, Phil Linz, who would be the regular shortstop for most American League clubs, and Pedro Gonzales, up from Richmond where he hit 307. Gonzales has all the makings of a future star.
THE VETERAN Hector Lopez will be the first outfield replacement with two rookies, Elvio Jiminez and Archie Moore, fighting for the other spot. Moore is a bonus player who will count against the Yankee roster in 1964.
As outstanding as the Yankees are in the other departments, Berra believes that their pitching could be their biggest asset.
For starters he has left handers Whitey Ford (24-7) and Al Downing (13-5) and right handers Jim Bouton (21-7) and Ralph Terry (17-15).
Behind them are Stan Williams (9-8) and Bill Stafford (4-8), both right handers. Stafford was a big disappointment in 1963, but he is determined to make up for it this year and came to spring training camp 29 pounds lighter than a year ago. Until he ran into his 1963 troubles, Stafford was rated one of the most promising young pitchers in the game.
It's easy to understand why Berra isn't worried about his pitching or anything else except injuries. Unless the Yankees run into an abnormal amount of them, they appear a gold-edged bet to win their fifth straight American League pennant.
Special Reduced Air Fares To Europe This Summer
FOR Kansas University Students, Faculty and Immediate Family
$320
Round trip from New York to Manchester, England For those who want to visit Great Britain.
$356
Round trip from New York to Brussels, Belgium For those who want to visit the continent.
By BOAC and Sabena scheduled Jet Services Return by jet at end of summer
DEPART NEW YORK JUNE 16th and JUNE 17th
Limited Number of Seats Available on "First Come, First Served" Basis
For Information, Apply to Room 106 Strong PROF. E.E.HARRIS Ph.UN4-3977
Friday, March 27,1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 11
MERCHANTS OF LAWRENCE WELCOME GREEK WEEK
Friday
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Saturday 1:30-Campanile Torch lighting
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2:00-Stadium Pancake race
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4:35 Potter's Picnic
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Friday, March 27, 1964
High Court Sets New Inquiry Into Desegregation
WASHINGTON —(UPI)— The Supreme Court has set Monday and Tuesday of next week for a broad new inquiry into racial desegregation of public schools.
Two cases will be up for scrutiny.
One is the 13-year-old lawsuit from Prince Edward County, Va., where local authorities closed the schools in 1959 rather than allow Negro children to attend classes with white children.
THE OTHER, from Atlanta, Ga., deals with a 12-year, stair-step desegregation plan which has been working through pupil transfers. Birmingham and Mobile, Ala., and Savannah, Ga., have adopted the same idea.
This will be the court's first major plunge into the race problem in schools since its momentous desegregation ruling of 1954 and its 1955 sequel. The policy has been to let the Federal District Courts handle the aftermath.
Now, 10 years later, the justices
have been forced to take another look.
The two cases illustrate the forces of resistance that have brought the problem to the court's door again—(1) gradualism and (2) downright refusal to integrate.
THE NINE justices made it known twice last term that they are less than satisfied with the way school desegregation is going. They upset a plan used in Knoxville, Tenn., and Davidson County, a part of greater Nashville, which permitted students to transfer from schools where their race was a minority.
In a case dealing with public parks and playgrounds, the court unexpectedly went out of its way to rap "indefinite delay in elimination of racial barriers in schools."
On one other occasion in the past 10 years the court spoke out forcefully. That was following the 1957 disturbances at Little Rock, Ark., which were quelled only
after President Dwight D. Eisenhower sent in U.S. troops to stand behind a federal court order to desegregate Central High School.
In an unusual opinion signed by all the justices, the court in 1958 reiterated its 1954 holdings: "The 14th Amendment forbids states to use their governmental powers to bar children on racial grounds from attending schools where there is state participation through any arrangement, management, funds or property."
REFERRING TO the anti-integration tactics of Gov. Orval Faubus and the Arkansas Legislature, the court added that the rights of Negro children could not be "nullified openly and directly by state legislators or state executive or judicial officers, nbr nullified by them through evasive schemes for segregation whether attempted 'ingeniously or ingenuously.'"
This quotation is the key to the Atlanta case now before the court. The legal defense fund of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) maintains that the city's stair-step plan is nothing more than an evasive scheme to retain a segregated system rather than a means of eliminating it.
Under the plan, Atlanta's 11th and 12th grades were desegregated in 1961, the 10th in 1962 and the 9th in the current school year. Transfer of Negro pupils in these grades has resulted in 145 of 58,600 Negro pupils attending school with 58,000 white students.
Unlike the Tennessee cases last year, race is not a specified factor in the transfer. Children have in the past had to satisfy 17 pupil placement qualifications. One, for example, was "the psychological qualification of the pupil for the type of teaching and associations involved."
THE FOURTH Federal Circuit Court struck down "personality interviews" and certain scholastic requirements, and Atlanta authorities told the Supreme Court that even more tests have since been eliminated.
"Any child may attend the school nearest his home merely by saying it is his desire to do so," the brief said.
It explained that Atlanta "has traditionally not had a rigid system of zones"
line is reached the city will still have a bi-racial system. The association seeks a shortening of the time span and an order for "a unitary non-racial system."
The NAACP still contends that Atlanta is pursuing "token" desegregation; that when the end of the
The association also objects to the continued segregation of teachers, but the city said the Fifth Circuit Court properly postponed this issue.
IN DECIDING the case the Supreme Court will hark back to its 1955 holding that desegregation must be accomplished "with all deliberate speed."
$61 Million in Red
Soviet Debt May Wreck U.N.
What does this phrase mean? Lower courts have applied it with sharply differing results, depending on time, place and circumstances.
When You're in Doubt—Try It Out,
Kansan Classifieds.
By Bruce W. Munn
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.—(UPI)
Russia is again threatening to
wreck the United Nations.
Steak Dinner
Sunday Nites
$1.25
The Soviet Union owes the United Nations—in its own name—$52,623,137 for the peace-keeping operations in the Congo and in the Middle East. With the accounts of Byelorussia and the Ukraine, which are parts of the Soviet Union, added in Moscow's total debt for peace is $61,073,934. The 11 Soviet bloc countries, including Cuba, owe $70,805,169 for the peace-keeping operations
Now Moscow says that any attempt to use U.N. charter procedures designed to make delinquents pay up is the action "of those who do not care for the United Nations and who do not take into account the prospectives (sic) of its breakup as the result of such actions."
Article 19 at the first meeting of the next assembly session, now expected to open Nov. 10.
4:30-10:30
DINE-A-MITE
23rd & La.
AT FIRST GLANCE, the constitutional position, appears simple.
Fear that such action would lead Russia to withdraw from the organization has given other members pause, and there is serious doubt whether the assembly would endorse strict application of Article 19.
The United States has served notice it will insist on application of
The World Court reinforced Article 19 two years ago in an advisory opinion that peace-keeping costs are assessable against all members in the same manner as the regular operating budget of the world organization.
Article 19 of the charter provides that a member in arrears the equivalent of its assessments for the preceding two full years "shall have no vote" in the General Assembly. The wording is mandatory.
THE MIDDLE EAST U.N. Force (UNEF) was established by the General Assembly; the Congo operation was initiated by the council. But the assembly set up financial arrangements for both.
But the Russians also have a legal leg, however shaky, under them. They contend that since the charter gave responsibility for the maintenance of peace to the Security Council, only that 11-nation group—in which the Soviet Union has a veto—can initiate peace-keeping actions and the means of financing them.
Last week, Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson of the United States and Sir Patrick Dean of Britain put a new plan before Soviet Ambassador Nikolai T. Fedorenko.
ITS FIRST REQUIREMENT is that all members would pay up enough to get beneath the two-year cut-off mark. This would cost Russia about $9 million for itself alone.
It provides that all future peacekeeping operations would first be submitted to the council—as Russia insists—but with the assembly having the say in their financing—as the West says is legal.
It would establish a committee of the five permanent council members, five developed and five under-developed countries to work out an assessment scale for peace-keeping operations.
All the West has heard in reply, a spokesman said, is what they have read in the newspapers. That was a Soviet government statement that any attempt to force it to pay up is an unfriendly act "and we may be obliged to reconsider our attitude towards the U.N. activities."
Russia tried to break up the U.N. in 1950, when it walked out until Red China is admitted. It walked back seven months later after the Korean War started.
It tried again in 1960, demanding a "troika" administration to replace Secretary General Dag Hammarskjöld. It backed down in the election of U Thant as Hammarskjöld's successor.
It tried a third time two years ago
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
when it sought to cut off any further money for the Congo operation, a move that mustered only the 11 Soviet bloc votes.
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Friday, March 27, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 13
Easter Dining Guide
THIS IS THE DECEMBER OF 1950. WE WANT YOU TO BE A PART OF IT.
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12:00 - 9 p.m.
THE STEAK HOUSE
1100 E.23rd
11:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m.
LITTLE BANQUET
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Kansas Union 11:30 - 1:30
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Page 14
University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 27, 1964
Many Youths Found to Lose Hope, Desire for Job
(Editor's Note: This is the fifth and last series on the plight of American youth.)
By Harry Ferguson
WASHINGTON —(UPI)— The discouraging thing about the teenage unemployment crisis is that the people who are trying to solve it are becoming discouraged.
Not all of them will admit it publicly, but in private they talk about nothing but gloom and despair. They think that events relentlessly are pushing millions of teen-agers into a blind alley of idleness from which there is no exit. The worst factor is that a sizeable number of the kids already have lost hope and don't care whether they find jobs.
The U.S. children's bureau sets forth the following facts:
- Twenty-nine per cent of the children who dropped out before finishing high school in 1962 could not find jobs.
- In 1960, two out of every three youths were living in cities and by 1970 it is estimated the rate will be three out of four. The under-educated ones who can't find jobs, spend their time mostly on the streets and provide an enormous
recruiting pool for juvenile gangs
recruiting pool for juvenile gangs.
- The American economy will have to provide between 19 and 21 million jobs in the coming decade to soak up the teen-agers coming into the labor market. Some estimates—probably a bit high—are that automation is eliminating 40,000 jobs a week.
President Johnson has declared an unconditional war on poverty and is committed to solving the youth unemployment problem. But the question the experts are asking is—how and when? Most of them think only a crash program is the answer and they talk about spending 10 billion dollars quickly.
THEY ARE IGNORING the political facts of life. The Johnson administration, in this election year, is committed to economy even to cutting down the White House electric bill.
Persons who expect Lyndon Johnson to come out now in favor of a billion dollars-plus appropriation for youth or anything else are either naive or think the President is, which he isn't.
There has been considerable experimentation in a program to retrain under-educated teen-agers to give them marketable skills. Here and there they seem to be working fairly well. But the other day the Wall Street Journal disclosed this report:
"Consider what recently happened with the Youth Career Development Center in Newark, N.J., a government sponsored pilot project aimed at finding new ways to combat teen-aged joblessness.
"SOCIAL WORKERS . . . arranged a short training course for would-be waiters and waitresses. The instruction ranged from personal hygiene to how to figure out the sales tax on a customer's check.
"It seemed like a good idea, for the Newark papers were full of want-ads for waiters. Several local restaurant owners even called the center promising to hire any of its graduates.
"But the course never got under way. Joseph Viviani, an official of the center, glumly tells why: 'We simply couldn't get enough youngsters who wanted to be waiters.' I'm afraid that sort of work isn't
Just as soon, and they would just as soon employed 'Viviani said only II 14,000 youths who sought jobs through the center have been
placed. But he thinks the rate would have been 25 per cent except for the fact he couldn't find any kids interested in certain types of work.
glamorous enough, and they would just as soon remain unemployed."
Make sure your clothes look sharp and fresh for all the Greek Week activities.
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SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75; Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 1 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion.
FOR SALE
Quality Seattle puppies, Champion bloodlines. MacGeorge Scotties "for quality, not price" Glan and Margaret Davis. Highway 69 at Fairtax Bridge, Box 9083, Kansas City, 50 (Riverside), Mo. Phone SH-1784. 3-27
Slamee kittens for sale. Call VI 3-5907 or see at 1515 E. 15th.
EX-HEARSE, 1951 Cadillac. Standard transmission, radio, heater, new tires and battery. Ideal for hauling, camping or woodsies. Cheap. Also sturdy car-top carrier and rack. $20. Mercury 10 h.p. outboard, $20. Call VI 3-7922. 4-2
Hallierc communication receiver, model SX-100. $200 or best offer. Call Ke Wendel, VI 2-9100. 4-
1960 Corvair, good condition. $750. Ask for Arthur Ma, VI 3-7451, 1122 W. Campus, JRP. 4-1
Record player stands, $11.95. Deluxe brass stands cut to $6, while they last! Ray Stoneback's, 929-331 Mass. 4-1
SEAT COVERS. Closing out all last year's stock. Complete sets as low as $7.50. Front seats for compacts. $2.50. Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. 3-30
Terry cloth seat covers. We fit all sizes including VW. Heavy goz. $6,88. Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929-931 Mass. 3-27
Academy Award Songs, 33 LP record, on RCA Victor Dynagrove record. $3.98 value for 99c. $1.50 in stereo. At Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. 3-27
Set of four 590x15' 'recaps, $35 takes all four in exchange. Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. 3-27
For Forlair Brush Products phone VI 3-
9040 after 5 p.m. tf
House, four years old, excellent condition. Three bedrooms, link fence near school and swimming pool. $700 assumes loan. $78 a month. Ops. New appliances and furniture. 1955 Miller Drive. VI 3-6949.
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SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS, Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale save savings after 6 p.m. week of Saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut th'
Typewriter, new and used portables,
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Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables.
Typewriter, adder, rentals and service.
Lawrence Typewriter, 725 Mass. St.
VI 3-7644.
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Tau University Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Copy VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
German Shepherd pups, AKC registered and champion blood lines. Lloyd Brecheisen. Phone KL 2-2559. 3-27
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
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FOR RENT
One and 2 bedroom apartments available now! 101 new units available Aug. 15. Swimming pool, air conditioning, wall-to-wall carpeting, colored appliances, paved, off-street parking. Furnished if desired. Call VI 3-1116 for information.
Furnished apartment. 3 rooms and bath.
Roomy and attractive. Private. Between KU and downtown. $60 plus electricity per month. Call VI 3-3913. 4-1
One bedroom house, completely fur-
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Call VI 3-1054 after 7 p.m., 2-37
Single or double room. Furnished. cook-
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Married, grad students, faculty, 2 bedroom, $75. Only 10 left for June. Reserve now. Call for brochure, VI 3-2116. Santee Apartments, 1123 Indiana. tf
Crescent Heights two bedroom apartn. t. Swimming pool 25th and Redbcd. Phone VI 2-3711. tf
TYPING
Experienced secretary would like typing,
Mrs. Ebel Henderson, VI 2-0123, tt
Experienced typist with electric type-
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Experienced secretary would like typing in her home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 2-1188.
Accurate expert typist would like typing
Prompt service. Call VF i-3-2651
Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (plica type). Mrs. Fulcher. 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0558. **ff**
Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason-mental papers, themes, sertations and theses, phone VI 3-7652 Mrs. Frank Gibson.
Experienced Typist—Dissertations. Theses. Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook 2000 Rhode Island. VI 3-7485. tt
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon printer. Mail resume to Charles 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 Mrs. Bariow, Bar201, 704 Yale, VI 2-1648.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
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Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 or email tf
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, books, articles and reports. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8868 t
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality typing on B.I.M. Carbon ribbon machines. also use tape transcriptions. Office hot 7 a.m. to tape 12 p.m.-10:25! Mass Phone VI 3-5920
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols mibson desired. Prompt, efficient service Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon V1f 3057.
WANTED
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Page 15
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Page 16
University Daily Kansan Friday, March 27, 1964
No Coach Named Yet. But Conference Called—
(Continued from page 1)
Gough, Chanute junior, said. "But I think that's easy to understand when you consider how much pressure he was under. No man should have to put up with so much pressure."
"I was surprised when I first heard the news," Wayne Loving, Kansas City sophomore, said. "I thought it was a rumor at first."
MONTE JOHNSON. Athletic public relations director, also voiced his surprise at Harp's decision.
"There were many conflicting rumors, but I can say that it was his own decision."
All the team members contacted yesterday voiced strong support of Ted Owens as coach Harp's successor.
"We are, of course, sorry to see the coach leave," Unseld said, "but we are now concerned with getting Owens in as his replacement."
Stinson, who doesn't officially become KU athletic director until July 1, arrived on campus yesterday to get accustomed to his job.
It is Stinson's job to find a successor to Dick Harp, KU's head basketball coach, who announced his resignation yesterday.
"I didn't know the resignation was official until I heard about it just now on the telephone," Stinson, Chicago insurance man and former KU football player, said in the chancellor's office yesterday.
STINSON SAID then he had taken no steps toward finding a new basketball coach—"but I've got a few ideas," he added.
Harp said he hopes his assistant coach, Ted Owers, will become coach. Owens said he "definitely wants the job." Seventeen players who will be eligible for basketball competition next season have signed a petition requesting that Owens be named coach.
ONE OF THE MOST persistent rumors around campus yesterday was that Ralph Miller, Wichita coach, was trying to be lured to KU.
MILLER WAS CONTACTED yesterday in Iowa City where he was being interviewed for the head
coaching position at the University of Iowa
“This is the first news I've heard of it." Miller was quoted in reference to Harp's resignation. "I don't have anything to say about it."
Miller had told friends previously that he would be interested in coming to KU if a vacancy ever developed. He was a standout in both football and basketball for KU in the late '90s.
Miller apparently thought he would not be considered for a spot at KU because of a statement made a week ago by Henry Bubb, chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents.
Bubb said, "There will be no pirating among the institutions in this state and that applies among coaches as well as faculty members." Bubb was quoted in UPI reports yesterday as saying that he understood Miller has informed officials at Wichita that he did not plan to return there next year.
BUBE SAID: "If that should be the case and if the new athletic director (Stinson) wants to talk to Miller, then he should talk to Dr.
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Emory Lindquist, president of Wichita University, for permission to do so. There would be no objection to that."
the new coach. "I'm not suggesting they talk to Ralph Miller or anyone else," he said. "That's strictly up to the athletic director. All we (the Board of Regents) do is approve or reject."
Bubb made it plain that he is not trying to influence the selection of
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Daily hansan
61st Year, No.114
Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, March 30, 1964
Alaskan Disaster Victims Begin Rebuilding Tasks
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — (UPI)—Pioneer-spirited Alaskans, ignoring still another massive earthquake, today began rebuilding whole towns and parts of shattered cities, searched for more victims of Friday's quake and buried the dead.
Rescue units and medical teams fanned out through the 900-mile coastal arc ripped by a force more than 10 times greater than an atomic bomb to aid the injured and prevent typhoid epidemics. Food kitchens brought food to the homeless and even bowling alleys were turned into hotels to shelter them from the 18-degree weather.
At least 63 persons were known dead, with the possibility that scores of Aleutian natives may have been killed. Federal authorities, after an
aerial survey and on-the-scene checks, said the total of known dead and missing numbered 88.
TEN PERSONS were dead and 16 missing in Crescent City, Calif., battered by four tidal waves from the quake on Good Friday. Three children were missing, one dead, from one family which was swept from a beach at Depoe Bay, Ore.
Damage estimates in Alaska ranged from $500 million by Edward McDermott, director of President Johnson's Office of Emergency Planning, to more than $850 million by state authorities.
Officials said it would be weeks, possibly months, before the full number of casualties would be known and the damages completely determined.
Rights Group Pickets During Greek Week
By Gary Noland
KU civil rights demonstrators picked the Greek Week torch lighting ceremony at Topeka Saturday and then hurried back to Lawrence to picket the Greek Week chariot races.
At Topeka, about 75 demonstrators, organized by the leadership of the Civil Rights Coordinating Committee (CRCC), picketed at the steps of the capital building while Atty. Gen. William Ferguson lighted a torch which was relayed from Topeka to Lawrence by fraternity members.
The demonstration, which protested alleged de facto segregation by KU fraternities and sororites, seemed peaceful and orderly. Ferguson, who last week said he was heartily in favor of the pickets as a way to call attention to the problem, went among the picketers, shaking hands and asking names.
FERGUSON STOPPED when he met George Ragsdale, Kansas City senior and chairman of the CRCC, told him, "Real nice demonstration you have here."
A number of fraternity and sorority members attended the ceremony on the east steps of the capital. One of them, Jay Strayer, Shawnee Mission senior, said, "This (the picketing) serves no purpose in my mind. It is just a way to get some recognition. Moral suasion is the only way to solve the problem."
Ferguson said he was pleased to inaugurate the marathon again. He lighted a torch in the same type of ceremony two years ago.
HE ALSO SAID that demonstrating is the most successful way to explain to the public an unpopular cause.
Ferguson, a Republican candidate for governor, said he did not think the demonstration would have any effect on his campaign.
At the chariot races in Lawrence, over 100 demonstrators marched quietly while several hundred cheering Greeks and spectators shouted encouragement to their favorite runners.
THE GREEKS had known for some time that the demonstration was to take place. One of them, Steve McCammon, Keota, Iowa senior, said, "We knew they were going to do it, and it is anti-climactic."
WHEN TOLD THAT most of the Greeks were not paying much attention to the pickets, Ragsdale said. "This indicates that something ought to be done because these people do not take segregation seriously."
Many of the picket signs were directed toward Chancellor Wescoe's policy of "moral suasion" to eliminate segregation. The chancellor stated his policy two years ago, and again this year.
- * *
Voting Move in CR Meet
Following the Greek Week picketing, about 60 of the picketers attended a meeting and decided to take their civil rights cause to the student body presidential candidates.
Bert Rinkel, Scott City junior, suggested that if each person was to contact four or five people who would vote for the candidate most favorable toward civil rights, they might be able to swing the election, with 250 to 300 votes, to the candidate they wanted.
After a lengthy discussion of several possible tactics, the people at the meeting agreed to have Rinkel and George Ragsdale, Kansas City senior and president of the Civil Rights Council, ask the candidates if they would do two things:
- Make all appointments regardless of race, color or creed.
- Strengthen the Human Rights Committee of the All Student Council.
Rinkel suggested that the latter could be accomplished by putting experienced members who would be willing to take action, on the HRC.
Since the Civil Rights Coordinating Committee was automatically dissolved after the demonstrations Saturday, (it was formed only for the purpose of the past demonstrations), the persons at the meeting did not officially represent any organization. They preferred to be referred to as just individuals interested in civil rights.
Futhermore, they emphasized that they would not be working as an organization, and that they would not endorse as an organization, any candidate. However, as "individuals for civil rights," they would consider the candidate most favorable toward their cause.
Weather
The quake caused "a tremendous economic impact . . . many will never recover," said state Commerce Commissioner Abe Romick.
THE TOWNS OF Kodiak and Seward appeared to have been worst hit by the rolling, wrenching upheaval.
Skies will remain fair tonight and tomorrow, according to the U.S. Weather Bureau. Temperatures will begin their climb back to seasonal normals this afternoon and tonight. Tonight's low temperature will be between 25 and 30 degrees. It will be warmer tomorrow.
A fresh quake last night struck near sparsely settled Unimak Island at the extreme southwest of the Aleutian Islands. It registered at almost 7 on the Richter Quake Scale—compared with 8.5 on the scale for the Friday tremor.
Officials said they doubted any new danger from tidal waves. Technically, such waves are seismic, not caused by tides, despite the commonly accepted description of them.
HUNDREDS OF tons of goods, supplies, tools, electrical generators and medical supplies, including water purification tablets, were being shuttled into Elmendorf Air Force Base at battered Anchorage.
Casualties included 31 known dead at Valdes, 11 at Kodiak, 12 in Anchorage, 8 in Seward and 1 at Whittier.
This was the scene at major points of devastation:
In Anchorage, a city of 100,000, most downtown office buildings ruined or severely damaged. One store sunk so far in a fissure only its roof showed on the buckled street level. The modern residential community of Turnagain was a shambles with homes carried off their foundations by a massive slide
IN SEWARD, a town of 2,000, Presidential Aide McDermott described the situation as "aawful, awful." Smoke still rose from the blackened remains of a dozen waterfront oil storage tanks. The shoreline looked as though it had been bombed. About 50 freight cars lay scattered like a child's toy trains. Twisted track rooped into the sea.
In Kodiak, a town of 2,600 on an island, it's famed crab and salmon canneries were shattered and power was off. Buildings from the town
(Continued on page 12)
Weather Moves Greeks to Allen
Despite picketers, dandelions, cold weather and a broken microphone, the 1964 Greek Week closed out its activities Saturday night.
Greek Week was officially begun Thursday night with the annual banquet. The banquet was highlighted by the crowning of Martha Parmely, Wichita senior and member of Kappa Alpha Theta, as the Green Week Queen. Mary Morozzo, Council Grove junior, Delta Gamma, and Carolyn Eymann, Atchison sophomore, Pi Beta Phi, were named attendants.
Beta Theta Pi received a first place scholarship award in its division and Kappa Alpha Theta received the award for the sororities.
The scene switched to Hoch Auditorium Friday for the Greek Week Sing. The winner of the large sorority division was Delta Gamma. Delta Delta Delta won the small women's division.
IN THE fraternity division, Delta Tau Delta won the small men's award for the third consecutive year while Lambda Chi Alpha took the winning trophy for the large men's with last year's winner Sigma Alpha Epsilon taking second.
Saturday morning found everyone in Topeka either watching the lighting of the torch or carrying a sign. About 100 picketers turned out for the torch lighting ceremony with Attorney General Ferguson. Ferguson talked with both picketers and the Greeks before lighting the torch, saying he was pleased to be asked to do the honors for the second year in a row.
He also complimented the marchers on their orderly demonstration.
Bill Dotson, former KU track star, began the first leg of the torch's journey back to Lawrence. The torch was carried by 33 runners from all of the fraternity groups.
WHILE THE torch made its way along U.S. 40 back to the campus, picketers and Greeks alike hurried to their respective posts in front of Allen Field House. Here everyone waited for the last runner to bring the torch up Naismith Drive, and for the traditional Saturday events to start.
With the torch's arrival, the chariot races began. While more than 100 picketers circled the island in the center of the road, Delta Upsilon fraternity pulled its way to the first place trophy.
Signs such as "Ferguson is with us. Where is Wescoe?","Equality now," and "Eat at Joe's" continued to circle as everyone else moved into the field house for the athletic events.
DELTA TAU DELTA won the 440-yard relay and Phi Gamma Delta won the 880-yard relay. In the "walking race," Ray Hartzell, Lompoc, Calif., sophomore, of the Delta Chi fraternity edged Walter Wesley, Fort Myers, Fla., freshman, of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity for first place.
In the tug-of-war, the west side gained an early advantage but the east side began to recover. Then a large part of the crowd sprung to the aid of the team on the west end of the rope, and the west won—under protest from the east side participants, who were watered down with a hose.
DELTA UPSILON was awarded the first-place trophy for total team points, and the crowd moved to the lobby or cars for a picnic box lunch.
Greek Week was concluded Saturday night with the Peter Nero concert in Hoch Auditorium.
Owens Named Successor to Harp As Head KU Basketball Coach
By Bob Jones (Assistant Sports Editor)
Ted Owens was named Friday as the fifth head basketball coach in the history of KU.
He was born and raised in the southwestern Oklahoma town of Hollis, and played college basketball at the University of Oklahoma under Bruce Drake.
Drake said Owens "was one of the greatest two-handed set shots that I have ever seen in basketball."
"He achieved this by wearing out three or four basketballs shooting baskets every summer."
AFTER GRADUATION from OU, Owens was assistant to Drake for a year. He played basketball in the U.S. Army and played for the Ada Oilers in the National Industrial Basketball League.
He was then head coach at Cameron Junior College, Lawton, Okla., compiling a 93-24 won-lost record.
He never won fewer than 20 games per season at Cameron, and his teams reached the National junior college tournament semifinals an unprecedented three straight years.
In 1960 he became assistant coach at KU, producing some outstanding freshman teams.
What kind of basketball does Owens like to play?
He says he likes to be on the offense, even when the team does not have the ball.
HE SAYS he does this by "pressure" defense—pressing the opponent all over the court.
Owens emphasizes that his teams will have a
lot of enthusiasm and hustle, and he will actively recruit any player-high school or junior college that will help improve the KU basketball team's overall speed.
"If we find that we cannot find the proper ingredients for a championship team in Kansas, then we will go outside the state.
"We want to get every outstanding prospect in this state," Owens said.
"Actually, we are looking for the type boy who will help us compete for not only the Big Eight title, but put us in the national picture as well.
"But, first of all," he added, "we will seek to recruit every top boy in Kansas."
COMMENTING on the petition which was signed by 17 KU basketball players supporting his appointment to the head coaching job, Owens said:
"I think that in any type of organization the support of the members is required if you are going to succeed. I was quite pleased the boys who know me best have that kind of confidence in me."
As far as the outlook for next season, Owens thinks the present KU team has many assets. He sees lack of speed as the biggest handicap to the team, and he says he is going to try to correct this problem through recruiting.
"The theories I have (about basketball) are not necessarily the result of my close association with Bruce (Drake) or Dick (Harp)." Owens continued.
"But rather, I think that many of my thoughts about the game have come from the fine opportunity I've had at the University of Kansas to see how the game is played on both the east and west coast as well as the midwest."
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday, March 30,1964
No Issues:
No Endorsement
The UDK breaks with tradition this year by not endorsing a candidate for student body president.
As was pointed out by both Bob Stewart and Marshall Crowther, there is no basic issue in this campaign other than the question of whether there should be a change of executive administration from Vox to UP. This is, at best, a perfunetory issue which is elementary to any contested election.
Both candidates appear intelligent and have considerable experience in student government. Either one would present a good image of the University.
There is nothing remarkable about the Vox and UP platforms. There are, of course, differences. For instance, voters must choose between the Vox apprentice
system and the UP freshman leadership program; the voter must decide whether he prefers government emphasis on stadium seating by Vox or a teacher evaluation program by UP, etc.
However, an endorsement as such does not seem called for because we see no basic conflict between the philosophies and ideas of the two candidates. In other words, we find no ground on which to either disagree or agree with either candidate.
Until there are basic ideas and issues at stake in the campus spring campaigns until KU elections become something more than a matter of personalities and politicking-an endorsement is not warranted.
- UDK Editorial Board
A Poet's Peace Treaty
Peace has been the dream of man through the ages. In recent years, there has been a resurgence of peace oration, some of it quite eloquent. However, none seems to me to approach in poetic beauty the speech of the Indian, Deganawida, on the formation of the Five Tribes peace:
"I, Deganawida, and the Confederated Chiefs, now uproot the tallest pine tree, and into the cavity thereby made we cast all weapons of war. Into the depths of the earth, deep down into the under-earth currents of water flowing to unknown regions, we cast all weapons of strife. We bury them from sight and we plant again the tree. Thus shall the Great Peace be established."
This Indian orator had a speech impediment. According to Indian belief, he was of virgin birth. The legendary Hiawatha, who was supposed to have been reborn through Deganawida's spiritual powers, was speechmaker for the orator.
The peace pact sealed by his words stood for more than 200 years among the Mohawk, Seneca, Oneida, Cayuga, and Onondaga Indians. — TC
Copy from the "Last News," a fundamentalist four-page newspaper:
"At four o'clock this morning an elderly gentleman was seen angily tearing down his newsstand on Times Square. 'I'm burning all this trash so that maybe God will have mercy on my soul. I've peddled this junk for 20 years and I know it has ruined the lives of thousands of young people—but maybe there is still hope for me."
In the flag, a four-star box says "FINAL."
from the morgue
As the climax of the revolutionary spirit against the University Senate grew among the students during the year 1919, resolutions were adopted unanimously at the "indignation" meeting against entire control of student affairs by the Senate. The resolutions demanded the right of the students to have a voice in their own government.
The indignation meeting was called at Fraser Hall by the law students who burned the Senate in effigy in front of Green Hall on Feb.19,1919.
In addition, a resolution for University convocations was also unanimously adopted. Fraser Hall Chapel was packed with opponents of the system of control. The percentage of women was unusually high.
In the meeting, many speakers said that a majority of the Senate members were in favor of student control but they allowed themselves to be overruled by a minority that considered students irresponsible.
BOOK REVIEWS
THE JESUITS, A HISTORY OF THE SOCIETY OF JESUS, by Rene Fulop-Miller (Capricorn, $2.45).
First published in 1930 as "The Power and Secret of the Jesuits," this work has special value to the student of history as well as the student of religion. Fulop-Miller does not attempt to set forth a history of the Jesuits so much as a portrait of the famous worldwide organization of Roman Catholicism.
The author demonstrates how such an organization has become of international influence and describes the controversies in which the Society of Jesus has been involved—Loyola himself, the question of free will, and so on. He writes of the Jesuits in time of war and revolution, of the Jesuit explorers, of the conflict with science, and even deals with such subject matter as the fictional Grand Inquisitor of Dostoevsky.
* * * *
JOHN PAUL JONES: A SAILOR'S BIOGRAPHY, by Samuel Eliot Morison (Little Brown, $2.45).
Here is a beautifully edited, bound, and printed paperback. Beyond this, here is one of the most remarkable biographies of recent years (it appeared in 1958), a book that won the Pulitzer prize in biography and continued to enhance the reputation of our leading historian of America on the seas.
Morison immediately and automatically rejects what he considers the considerable nonsense surrounding our No. 1 naval hero, a man who has captured the imagination of novelists and readers for many generations He admits to knowing much less than the novelists who can willingly and easily fabricate romances about Paul Jones. Yet he writes, as always, in a style as swift-moving and as entertaining as that of most of our better historical novelists.
Reciting the amazing career of our hero of the Revolution seems pointless; this is what Morison does in a biography of great sweep. Much remains unknown about John Paul Jones, but Morison is able to chronicle the rise from obscurity and poverty to naval eminence and some controversy, including Russian involvements, and finally death and burial in France.
* * *
GUY MANNERING, by Sir Walter Scott (Everyman's Library).
This, the second of the Waverly novels, is less a historical novel and more a novel of life in Scotland as viewed by Scott. It was published in 1815, and was, despite its lessened gothic trappings, still a romantic novel.
Guy Mannering is a young Englishman traveling through Scotland, who casts a horoscope for the Laird of Ellagowan and sees catastrophe for the Laird's family. And catastrophe follows, especially for the Laird's daughter, Lucy. Back comes Guy Mannering, from India, to the rescue, and into all kinds of skulduggery he becomes involved.
John Buchan regarded "Guy Mannering" as one of the top three novels by Scott. Even though the exciting settings of the other books has been abandoned, this is a novel that will appeal to those who like stories of missing heirs and damsels in distress.
Dailijl'Fänsan
111 Flint Hall
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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BAR MASTER
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Jac As
By The Fla,
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Jacksonville Race Unrest Seen As Unorganized and Aimless
By United Press International
By United Press International The racial blowup in Jacksonville, Fla., apparently is one of those seemingly aimless things that come during a period of general turmoil and unrest. It is like a tornado that suddenly spews off the rim of a hurricane.
With the rock and bottle throwing, shootings and death in Jacksonville, some facts need to be kept in mind:
- With 46,000 Negroes in the city's population, only about 1,500 were involved at the height of the current violence.
- There was no apparent organized effort with specific complaints, goals and motives.
- On the surface, this appeared to be the eruption of large scale vandalism and rowdyism.
The Jacksonville trouble was triggered by the conviction and sentencing of 20 Negroes charged with violation of the state anti-trespass law at local segregated restaurants.
The incident was picked up by young Negroes, mostly high school students, as an excuse for some wild blowing off of pent-up emotions. Like forest fires that begin with a single match, this one could become dangerous.
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People sent its Southern executive, Mrs. Ruby Hurley, to Jacksonville in an effort
Students Asked to Name Fink Award Candidates
Students are asked to nominate candidates for the H. Bernard Fink Award, an annual prize of $1000 for distinguished undergraduate teaching, says Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe.
Chancellor Wescоe said in a letter to the academic deans, nominations should be made by April 20 so that the recipient of the Fink Award could be announced at commencement.
Anyone in the university community can submit nominations to an anonymous committee that awards the prize. The nomination should be accompanied with sufficient evidence to give the committee a starting place for evaluation.
NOMINATIONS SHOULD be addressed to the Fink Award committee in care of the chancellor, the letter stated.
The anonymous committee on the award, in a communique, set out these following guidelines for those preparing nominations:
- Teaching, in keeping with the spirit of the award, is defined as meaning "to educate, or draw out
and to develop harmoniously the mental and moral powers of other individuals. The teacher is one who points the way, encourages effort, removes obstacles and creates a setting that provides opportunities and incentives for effective learning. There is not teaching except as learning takes place in another person.
- THE NOMINEE should be a teacher who helps students develop attitudes that stimulate effective learning, who provides experiences that stimulate the learning process, who encourages the student to be self-reliant, and develop his own values.
- "Excellence in teaching, a matter of subjective judgment, in the skillfulness with which the student is guided toward understandsand toward making meaningful contributions to the world about him," the communique said.
A copy of the communique, "Thoughts on Learning and Teaching," may be obtained in the chancellor's office, Chancellor Wescoe said.
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Monday, March 30,1964 University Daily Kansan
THE JACKSONVILLE situation is somewhat complicated by the fact that Mayor Haydon Burns is running for the office of governor this year. Burns, nominally classified as a moderate, is one of six candidates on the Democratic ticket.
Burns will have to depend for much of his support on the vote in North Florida which is considerably more segregation-minded than South Florida. The major now has thrust upon him at the height of an election campaign an angry racial crisis that puts the demonstrators in direct conflict with state and local laws.
Burns has sworn in 496 firemen as special officers to cope with the racial problem and has publicly rebuked the demonstrators. He said their actions would "not be tolerated" in Jacksonville. He said small groups would be allowed to picket and would be permitted to parade.
The city's racial climate has been fairly good except for sporadic outbursts. But it also has its militant element, on both sides of the color line.
Official spring semester enrollment at the University of Kansas is at a new high of 11,749, up 9.2 percent or 986 over the 1963 spring figure
Enrollment Hits New High
Leading the rise was the Graduate School, up 334 to 2,359, although greater percentage growths were experienced by the smaller Schools of Business, Pharmacy and Law.
Further evidence of the concentration of the KU student body at the post-graduate and junior-senior levels is the increase of 403 seniors and 151 juniors, bringing those classes to 2,151 and 2,017 respectively. On the Lawrence campus there are 2,388 students at the post-graduate level compared to 2,170 classified as freshmen.
Enrollment on the Lawrence campus is 10,717, up 880, and at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City 1,032, up 106.
Registration in the schools of the University is: College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, 4,631 (+242); Graduate School, 2,359 (+334); School of Education, 1,176 (+84); School of Engineering and Architecture, 1,156 (+70); School of Medicine, 897 (+50); School of Fine Arts, 613 (+25); School of Business, 545 (+96); School of Law, 173
(+28); School of Pharmacy, 132
(+25); School of Journalism, 101
(+6).
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Monday. March 30,1964
Great Potential Seen For Classroom TV
"The potential of educational television is enormous and an attempt should be made to use it." Fred Samson, chairman of the department of biochemistry and physiology, said.
Prof. Samson believes his department is the only one at KU to use television in the classroom outside of the radio and television department and the Medical Center in Kansas City.
The closed circuit television system set up in Haworth hall differs in several ways from educational television as it is commonly used.
The main difference between the setup here and that of an ordinary educational television station is that the signals never leave the building. Instead, the transmitter and receivers are in the same room.
PROF. SAMSON uses the pictures to supplement his lectures rather than using them as his sole teaching device. In this way he uses television much as an instructor would use films or other visual aids.
This allows his entire class to view experiments and printed material that could normally be seen only by a few students. Many things can actually be seen better by using the camera.
The equipment has its limitations and must be properly understood before it can be usd effectively, Prof. Samson warned. Improper preparation results in a loss of time and does not accomplish its intended purpose.
The system belongs to the university and Prof. Samson would like to see its use by other departments whenever the need arises.
PROF. SAMSON said, however, that it usually takes more time to move and set up the equipment than the amount of time it will actually be used. As a result it has found little use outside of the physiology laboratory.
The television sets can be used to receive KCSD-TV, Kansas City's educational television station on channel 19, when they are attached to the ultra-high frequency television antenna on top of Haworth hall.
Florida Demonstrations Set
ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. — (UPI)—Negro leaders planned more demonstrations in this tourist city today where the mother of the governor of Massachusetts attempted to cause a plush hotel to integrate last night.
"We're going to make this a pretty hot place," Hosea Williams, an official of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said.
"EVERY FAMILY ought to be willing to serve and leave its blood in the jail if necessary." Williams told a Negro rally last night.
Williams spoke to about 350 cheering Negroes at the Zion Baptist Church shortly after Mrs. Malcolm Peabody, 72-year-old mother of Massachusetts Gov. Endicott Peabody, attempted to register at the Ponce de Leon hotel with two other white women and a Negro woman last night. The hotel clerk told Mrs. Peabody, after asking her if she had
reservations, that there were no rooms available.
About 20,000 persons entered the city, the oldest in the nation, over the weekend for an Easter Sunday celebration, jamming hotels and motels.
Ten-white and Negro demonstrators were arrested yesterday. Police maintained a tight security watch and one police department source said several hundred men had entered the city, presumably, to counteract the integrationist demonstrations.
A TOTAL OF 36 Negroes and whites have been arrested here since demonstrations began during the weekend.
St. John's County Sheriff L. O. Davis said 14 Negro men were put on bread and water diets in the county jail when they threw Sunday chicken dinners on the floors and refused to clean them up.
JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS Al Brightman Pres.
"CENTENNIAL 66"
Les Kahler — Vice-Pres.
Kathy Hogue — Sec.
Peggy Smith — Treas.
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Faculty Artists Open Downtown Gallery
Eight KU faculty members have opened a cooperative art gallery in downtown Lawrence to display their work. Works range from naturalism to abstract expressionism.
but the artists only hope to cover the gallery expenses through sales. Displaying artists are available for questions at the gallery.
"Our objective is to bring works of art to the community," said Robert Wright, director of the gallery. Drawings and paintings are for sale
A two-man show will be held March 29-April 17 featuring the work of Robert Wright and Harold Boyd, instructors in drawing and painting. Boyd is primarily a print
maker, while Wright is an abstract expressionist.
The last show features the work of John Talleur and Dwight Burnham, associate professors of drawing and painting, and Randall Sadler, instructor in drawing and painting.
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Monday, March 30, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Many Students Jailed InDaytona Disturbance
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — (UPI) Police said today they arrested more than 100 college students whose annual frolics on the beaches got out of hand yesterday resulting in a mellee broken up by club-swinging police.
Police Chief A. O. Folsom Jr. said those arrested were booked on charges ranging from disorderly conduct and unlawful assembly and attempting to start a riot.
But the chief denied that there actually was a riot.
"THEY JUST got out of line," Folsom said.
The candidates for student body president and vice-president will debate in Ellsworth hall tonight following a request by some of its residents for them to appear there.
"They jumped on the police to start with but we were ready and
The campaign will wind up when the candidates, Bob Stewart, Bartesville, Okla., junior, and Kaye Whitaker, Wichita junior, UP candidates for president and vice-president, and Marshall Crowther, Lawrence second year law student, and Jim Cline, Rockford, Ill., junior, Vox candidates for president and vice-president, debate at 6 p.m. at Corbin Hall and at 6:45 p.m. at Gertrude Sellards Pearson hall.
Thursday night some of the residents of the large men's residence hall circulated a petition to have the candidates debate in their hall. The political parties accepted and the debate will be at 10 p.m.
Debate Set At Ellsworth
Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission senior and UP general secretary, said the UP candidates had made "prior commitments" and had informed Vox that UP could not meet the time schedule.
The elections for student body president and vice-president. All Student Council school representatives, and class officers will be Wednesday and Thursday. Polls will be located in the Murphy lobby, the Union lobby, and Strong rotunda. They will be open from 8:30 a.m. to 5:45 p.m. both days.
Vox candidates and party representatives appeared for debates in the freshman women's dorms last Thursday, but University Party candidates and representatives did not.
Election returns are expected by 11 p.m. Thursday, Dick King, Kansas City sophomore and elections chairman, said.
GROWTH RESPONSIBILITY VOX
Folsom estimated the crowd of collegians at 75,000. They were packed along a beach running little more than two miles in an Easter Vacation frolic that has become a tradition at Florida beaches.
Authorities said approximately 1,000 collegians have been arrested since the annual migration began a week ago.
"I SAW AT LEAST a half dozen students clubbed by police and knocked unconscious," said Carl Warner of UPI newsfilm. "I saw one student who was apparently drunk or asleep and an officer asked him to move. The guy woke up about half way and the cop clubbed him."
Police moved in with motorcycles and squad cars to break up "blanket tossing."
But Folsom said no student or policeman was hurt.
"Whatever they claim is untrue," the chief said. "Things are back to normal now."
"We announced to them what the law was over the loud speaker and then we dispersed the crowd and arrested the agitators."
Bret Dark, 21, of Chicago and a student at Northern Illinois University, said the melee started from two incidents.
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Dean McNown to Begin Nigerian Program
John S. McNown, dean of the KU School of Engineering and Architecture, will spend the next week in Nigeria, helping to develop a new idea in American aid to Africans.
Ford Foundation to Ahmadu Bello University, the university of the northern region of Nigeria, where he will meet with local officials considering design and construction of an industrial production plant.
Dean McNown is being sent by the
This is the new idea: instead of simply building a plant, Amerieans are enlisting the aid of Africans in designing projects to lift their nations' economies.
Keep all your Spring Fashions
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Monday, March 30, 1964
(SAVE THIS CENTER PAGE FOR YOUR
The Dollars and Sense of
Now, only $263.90 roundtrip from New York to Shannon, Ireland on the new Excursion Fare . . . and relatively new low fares available to all other cities in Europe.
Starting April 1st, jet air fares to Europe go down in price. The new jet fares, offered by the transatlantic airlines belonging to the International Air Transport Association (IATA) which includes all the major flag
carriers, make sense in two ways. In dollars, the new fares save you money and encourage more Americans to visit Europe, and more Europeans to visit the U.S.A. In variety, the new fares give you several choices so that you can find the fare that's fairest for you. Look them over. Pick one out. And plan to go to Europe this year. Air reservations and tickets may be secured at Maupintour Travel Service at The Malls Shopping Center.
Maupin travel famous SAS Sc France,
ECONOMY-CLASS OFF SEASON FARES
21 DAY EXCU
EASTBOUND
APRIL
S M T W T F S 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
MAY
S M T W T F S 1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21
JUNE
S M T W T F S 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
APRIL
S M T W T F S 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
MAY
S M T W T F S 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
JUNE
S M T W T F S 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
JULY
S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31
SEPTEMBER
S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30
JULY
S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30
AUGUST
S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4
6 7 8 9 10 11
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30
SEPTEMBER
S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30
29 30
OCTOBER
S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4
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
DECEMBER
S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4 5 6
4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
NOVEMBER
S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4 5 6
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
DECEMBER
S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4 5 6
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
29 30
ECONOMY-CLASS OFF SEASON FARES now stretch into May and begin again in early August for your Eastbound going flights and are through half of July and begin again in late September for your Westbound return flights. See date chart above. You can take advantage of the lower Economy-Class Off Season fares on any date shown in the above calendar, but not on days where no date appears. These low fares have been reduced about $100 roundtrip between New York and most European destinations. During the period for which no date appears on the calendar above, you can still travel Economy-Class at the slightly higher Economy-Class On Season (or referred to sometimes as the Peak Season) fares. Examples of the Off Season and On Season fares are shown below. In the peak season, the Economy-Class fares have been reduced about $15 roundtrip under the fares in existence prior to April 1st. When you travel during both seasons, Economy Class, a combination of the Off Season and On Season fares will apply. Example: Jet to Europe on June 20th (On Season) and return on July 16th (Off Season), your air fare will be half of the roundtrip On Season and half of the roundtrip Off Season fares for your destination point. A variety of stop overs are permitted, too, en route to your destination city and upon your return. And, your ticket is good for one whole year. Jet travel to Europe is cheaper now than ever before! Apply soon to Maupintour for your first choice of departure and return dates.
These round-trip jet fares permit you to travel to Europe on any date shown in the calendar to the right, but not on days where no date appears. You may return from Europe 14 days after you leave (but not before) the U.S.A., but not later than 21 days after you commence your trip. Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays are not authorized as Excursion Fare travel days in either direction. You must travel Eastbound across the Atlantic (and return across the Atlantic) on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, or Thursdays. This Excursion Fare permits you a full 21 days in Europe plus your day of travel from the USA and can save you as much as $184.-50 over the peak season regular Economy fare. Stopover privileges en route to your destination city and upon your return are permitted . . . and there are oftentimes a variety of cities you can visit all for the same fare of your destination city. The Excursion Fare is the greatest bargain, unprecedented, in jet travel today. You do not have to belong to a group to take advantage of the Excursion Fare. Get together with your friends, or travel by yourself, for a three week vacation in Europe this year. Apply early to Maupintour for your first choice of dates.
APRIL
S M T W T F S
1 2
6 7 8 9
13 14 15 16
20 21 22 23
27 28 29 30
JULY
S M T W T F S
13 14 15 16
20 21 22 23
27 28 29 30
OCTOBER
S M T W T F S
1
5 6 7 8
12 13 14 15
19 20 21 22
26 27 28 29
All Fares In U.S. Dollars SAMPLE LOW FARES TO EUROPE AND THE MIDDLE
Between NEW YORK and First Class Jet Round Trip Economy Off Season Round Trip Economy On Season Round Trip 21-Day Economy Excursion Round Trip Jet Economy Affinity Group Round Trip
AMSTERDAM 754.30 440.80 526.30 341.80 356.00
ANKARA 1138.10 722.00 807.50 623.00 537.00
ATHENS 1087.80 690.90 776.40 591.90 516.00
BARCELONA 783.80 465.40 550.90 366.40 372.00
BASLE 792.30 478.80 564.30 379.80 380.00
BEIRUT 1285.60 798.00 883.50 699.00 616.00
BELGRADE 945.90 592.30 677.80 493.30 453.00
BERLIN 829.40 510.00 595.50 411.00 400.00
BERNE 792.30 478.80 564.30 379.80 380.00
BRUSSELS 754.30 440.80 526.30 341.80 356.00
CAIRO 1285.60 798.00 883.50 699.00 616.00
COLOGNE/BONN 792.30 478.80 564.30 379.80 380.00
COPENHAGEN 792.30 478.80 564.30 379.80 380.00
DAMASCUS 1285.60 798.00 883.50 699.00 616.00
DUBLIN 675.30 369.40 454.90 277.00 310.00
DUSSELDORF 792.30 478.80 564.30 379.80 380.00
FRANKFURT 792.30 478.80 564.30 379.80 380.00
GENEVA 792.30 478.80 564.30 379.80 380.00
GLASGOW 676.40 370.50 456.00 271.50 311.00
HAMBURG 792.30 478.80 564.30 379.80 380.00
HELSINKI 922.50 579.50 665.00 480.50 445.00
INNSBRUCK 816.30 498.40 583.90 399.40 393.00
There are many bargains in travel and accommodations still available in Europe. But hurry! Don't be last and take third or fourth choice! For example, the EURAILPASS grants you unlimited rail travel throughout the whole of the Continent of Western Europe from Sweden to Portugal and the tip of Italy and the cost is low. EURAILPASS is available only for purchase in the U.S.A. in advance of your departure for Europe. The EURAILPASS is available from Maupintour at The Malls. Be sure to purchase an EURAILPASS if you are going to be doing any cross-country travel on the Continent. It will save you money. Ask Maupintour for the EURAILPASS free folder for complete information.
VOLKSWAGEN sedans, convertibles, station wagons, and other models are available for purchase at reduced prices in Europe if you make your purchase from Maupintour before you depart U.S.A. Delivery can be arranged at most European cities and you will be amazed about how much money you can save. You can either have your car shipped home or can sell your car in Europe before you return home. Drive-Now Pay Later financing available, too. And, Maupintour can arrange for your purchase of many other different makes of cars for delivery in Europe. Want to rent a car in Europe? Maupintour can easily arrange this, too.
Between NEW YORK and First Class Jet Round Trip Economy Off Season Round Trip Econo R
ISTANBUL 1134.20 716.30
LISBON 712.50 399.00
LONDON 712.50 399.00
MADRID 754.30 440.80
MANCHESTER 699.20 385.70
MILAN 843.60 503.50
MOSCOW 1109.50 730.00
MUNICH 799.90 486.40
NICE 837.90 503.50
PALMA 784.20 470.70
PARIS 754.30 440.80
PRAGUE 851.80 526.30
ROME 890.60 544.40
SHANNON 657.40 362.90
SOFIA 1018.60 642.60
STOCKHOLM 849.90 536.40
STUTTGART 792.30 478.80
TEHERAN 1443.70 946.20
TEL AVIV 1285.60 798.00
VIENNA 851.80 526.30
WARSAW 949.30 592.80
ZAGREB 880.30 547.60
ZURICH 792.30 478.80
SEE EUROPE for $5 A DAY! Hotel accommodations, breakfast and get-acquainted sightseeing excursions can all be included for as little as $5 a day with arrangements prepaid
and definitely confirmed to you in advance. Be an "expected" guest each night instead of spending wasteful and frustrating hours trying to find a suitable and an economical place to stay after arrival in each city. Ask for Maupintour's folder, "Europe On $5 A Day." (We have a $10 a day program, too, for those who want standard class hotels with private baths.) CAMPING arrangements? Did you know there are several different, and very economical, Camping programs which you can take advantage of while holidaying in Europe? There are established Camping services close by every major city, resort, and scenic area in Europe. And, the facilities are good, comfortable, and a real way to meet and know the people. Ak for Maupintour's folder, "Camping in Europe."
ESCORTER TOURS. One of the best ways to insure your enjoyment of Europe, to understand the historical, contemporary, and cultural attractions of Europe, and to meet people of interest, is to participate in a well directed and programmed Escorted Tour. You will see far more, do far more, and meet many more interesting people, and have a much more exciting and memorable experience as a member of a good Escorted Tour. . . . and you will not have the worries and wasteful, frustrating hours of attempting to discover accident what is most noteworthy and enjoyable to see. What is best, all of your hotels, guided excursions, special events, parties, meals, transfers, luggage handling are included in one price and taken care of for you. This permits $100% of your time to be free to see and learn
about Europe and to chores of foreign tr have an experienced parents will be more know that students Visit Maupintour's programs now avail are a number of s available.
YACHTING through Switzerland? A crui Spain, the music fies up on your language France? . . . whatev at Mupintour.
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(AGE FOR YOUR FUTURE REFERENCE)
Monday, March 30;1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
of the New Low Air Fares
mey is to that out. be
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EXCURSION FARES
EASTBOUND
APRIL
M T W T F S
1 2
6 7 8 9
13 14 15 16
20 21 22 23
27 28 29 30
MAY
S M T W T F S
4 5 6 7
11 12 13 14
18 19 20 21
25 26 27 28
JUNE
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4
8 9 10 11
JULY
M T W T F S
3 4 5 6
14 15 16
21 22 23
27 28 29 30
AUGUST
S M T W T F S
3 4 5 6
31
SEPTEMBER
S M T W T F S
1 2 3
7 8 9 10
14 15 16 17
21 22 23 24
28 29 30
OCTOBER
M T W T F S
1
5 6 7 8
12 13 14 15
19 20 21 22
26 27 28 29
NOVEMBER
S M T W T F S
2 3 4 5
DECEMBER
S M T W T F S
MIDDLE EAST
Day Off Season Round Trip Economy On Season Round Trip 21-Day Economy Excursion Round Trip Jet Economy Affinity Gp. Rd-Trip
716.30 801.80 617.30 532.00
899.00 484.50 300.00 325.00
899.00 484.50 300.00 325.00
840.80 526.30 341.80 356.00
885.70 471.20 286.70 320.00
503.50 589.00 404.50 396.00
730.00 815.50 631.00 545.00
486.40 571.90 387.40 385.00
503.50 589.00 404.50 396.00
470.70 556.20 371.70 375.00
440.80 526.30 341.80 356.00
526.30 611.80 427.30 411.00
544.40 629.90 445.40 422.00
862.90 437.00 263.90 299.00
542.60 728.10 543.60 485.00
536.40 621.90 437.40 417.00
478.80 564.30 379.80 380.00
946.20 1031.70 847.20 773.00
798.00 883.50 699.00 616.00
526.30 611.80 427.30 411.00
592.80 678.30 493.80 454.00
647.60 633.10 448.60 424.00
478.80 564.30 379.80 380.00
about Europe and to enjoy yourself without being endlessly burdened with the time wasting chores of foreign travel. You will be with people of your own age and interest, and will have an experienced and knowledgeable Travel Director accompanying your party. (Many parents will be more at ease, and more agreeable to financing a summer abroad, when they know that students will be with a group assisted by a competent and responsible leader.) Visit Maupintour's office at The Malls to look over the variety of excellent Escorted Tour programs now available for the student (and for the adult) to Europe this summer. There are a number of study tours, language tours, and professional interest tour programs available.
YACHTING through the Greek Isles of the Aegean? A leisurely boat trip up the Rhine to Switzerland? A cruise down the Danube from Vienna to the Black Sea? Lapland, southern Spain, the music festivals, the North Cape, a week in a Castle, living with a family to brush up on your language, or a Summer Session at a University in Spain, Austria, Italy, or France? . . . whatever is your bent in travel abroad this year, you can find the information at Maupintour.
NORTH AMERICA-ISRAEL GROUP FARES
At the now well-known roundtrip fare from New York of only $535, you can jet to Israel and then you can stop over in Europe at one stop-over city, such as Zurich, right in the heart of Europe. And we assemble the group of 40 passengers that you travel with. You don't have to worry, in this specific instance, of getting together with your own affinity group. This is the only exception to the "Group Fare" rule. Choose your departure to Israel from this chart or apply to Maupintour for additional departures with a selection of other one stop over cities:
| Leave New York | Arrive Tel Aviv | Number of days in Israel | Arrive Zurich | Number of days in Europe | Return New York | | | | APRIL 6 | 13 | APRIL 19 | | APRIL 12 | APRIL 13 | 11 | APRIL 24 | 16 | MAY 10 | | APRIL 26 | APRIL 27 | 11 | MAY 8 | 16 | MAY 24 | | MAY 10 | MAY 11 | 11 | MAY 22 | 16 | JUNE 7 | | MAY 24 | MAY 25 | 11 | JUNE 5 | 16 | JUNE 21 | | MAY 31 | JUNE 1 | 11 | JUNE 12 | 16 | JUNE 28 | | JUNE 6 | JUNE 7 | 12 | JUNE 19 | 21 | JULY 10 | | JUNE 13 | JUNE 14 | 12 | JUNE 26 | 21 | JULY 17 | | JUNE 21 | JUNE 22 | 11 | JULY 3 | 21 | JULY 24 | | JUNE 27 | JUNE 28 | 12 | JULY 10 | 21 | JULY 31 | | JUNE 28 | JUNE 29 | 15 | JULY 14 | 40 | AUGUST 23 | | JULY 4 | JULY 5 | 12 | JULY 17 | 21 | AUGUST 7 | | JULY 5 | JULY 6 | 15 | JULY 21 | 40 | AUGUST 30 | | JULY 11 | JULY 12 | 12 | JULY 24 | 21 | AUGUST 14 | | JULY 18 | JULY 19 | 12 | JULY 31 | 21 | AUGUST 21 | | JULY 25 | JULY 26 | 12 | AUGUST 7 | 20 | AUGUST 27 |
FIRST-CLASS FARES, round-trip, have been reduced $190.00 between New York and European destinations. Now you can savor the privacy and the touch of elegance of first-class jet travel for just a little more than you used to pay for economy-class!
EASTBOUND
JUNE
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4
8 9 10 11
15 16 17 18
22 23 24 25
JULY
S M T W T F S
13 14 15 16
20 21 22 23
27 28 29 30
AUGUST
S M T W T F S
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
SEPTEMBER
S M T W T F S
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
EASTBOUND
JUNE
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4
8 9 10 11
15 16 17 18
22 23 24 25
JULY
S M T W T F S
'13 14 15 16
20 21 22 23
27 28 29 30
AUGUST
S M T W T F S
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
SEPTEMBER
S M T W T F S
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
WESTBOUND
JUNE
S M T W T F S
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
JULY
S M T W T F S
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
AUGUST
S M T W T F S
3 4 5 6
10 11 12 13
17 18 19 20
SEPTEMBER
S M T W T F S
7 8 9 10
14 15 16 17
21 22 23 24
28 29 30
SPECIAL GROUP FARES
Perhaps of most interest to you are the new low "Group Fares." These special jet transportation bargains are available to members, and accompanying immediate family, of an affinity group (such as members of a club, an organization, an association, an educational institution, etc.; local, regional, or national). For example, members of a fraternal or organized residence hall group, or of a social service or religious or professional body, whether participants would be drawn from the campus only or from all the members of the national organization throughout the USA, are eligible for the low Group Fares. Date of transatlantic travel, Eastbound and Westbound (the going and returning flight legs) must originate on the dates shown in the adjoining calendar, and the party must be a minimum of 25 persons drawn from the affinity group, and their accompanying immediate family.
Members of an affinity body can get together on their own and organize their own party of 25 or more persons from within their organization or educational institution and, in so far as the air fare rules are concerned, it is not required for such self-organized affinity "Group Fare" parties to be officially sponsored activities of their organization. This is not charter transportation but travel by the regular scheduled jet aircraft of the international flag carriers such as TWA, Pan Am, Sabena, BOAC, KLM, SAS, etc.
For information about two special KU affinity groups departing June 16th and June 17th by jet for Europe at the new Group Fares (as low as $320 to $356 roundtrip from New York), available to all KU students, faculty, and accompanying family, please apply immediately to Prof. E. E. Harris, Rm. 106, Strong Hall, ph. UN 4-3976
FOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS, SEE
MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE
The Malls Shopping Center
Phone VIking 3-1211
-
8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Weekdays — Until 12:00 Noon on Saturdays
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Monday, March 30, 1964
STUDENTS FOR
STEWART - WHITAKER
In the interest of decent, progressive, responsible student government, we, the undersigned, consider it imperative that Bob Stewart and Kave Whitaker
Kaye Whitaker
be elected President and Vice-President of the Student Body at the University of Kansas.
↑
Priscilla Scheldt
Tom Tatlock
Alan Stamper
John Dunn
Mike Rogers
John Bumgarner
Dennis Nelson
Ed Vaughn
Dan Epp
Donna Multer
Bill Reese
Lance Jesse
Larry Geiger
Frank Jacobson
Rick Reynolds
Harry Bretschneider
Clark Mandigo
Bob Ritter
Scott Linscott
Lee Ayres
Susan Smith
Nancy Breidenthal
Susie Fisher
Sandy Coffman
President, Chi Omega
Editor, 1963 JAYHAWKER Yearbook
Editor, 1964 JAYHAWKER Yearbook
Treasurer, Young Republicans
President, Young Democrats
President, Phi Gamma Delta
President, Alpha Tau Omega
President, Sigma Phi Epsilon
President, Tau Kappa Epsilon
President, Alpha Delta Pi
President, Templin Hall
Vice-President, Templin Hall
Secretary, AURH
Vice-President, Ellsworth Hall
Treasurer, MRA
Former Vox Vice-President
Vice-President, IFC
President, Junior Class
Past Treasurer, SUA
Chairman, Social Committee (ASC)
Senior Class Exec. Committee
Student Travel Committee
Frosh Hawk Advisor
JAYHAWKER Secretary
100%
Although this statement reflects our personal views only, we firmly believe that your support in this election can change the existing system of campus politics for the betterment of Student Government and the benefit of the Student Body of the University of Kansas.
Paid for by the STUDENTS for STEWART-WHITAKER COMMITTEE
Monday, March 30, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
De Gaulle Pushes 'Independence' from Washington
PARIS—(UPI)—President Charles de Gaulle's tumultuous welcome in Mexico last week will make him more obstinate to deal with than ever.
It will confirm again his rooted conviction that a policy of "independence" from Washington pays off.
Not that De Gaulle himself ever doubted the Mexican state visit would be still another glittering personal triumph for him.
But it was something of an experiment—a sort of dry run for other trips later.
Among these are a planned four-to-six week's grand tour of the rest of Latin America in October and November, and possible trips in 1965 to Africa, Russia, Pakistan, India and the Far East.
Everything points now to the fall tour of Latin America blossoming into a grand triumphal progress that will boost the general's own standing—not to mention French
prestige—throughout the non-committed world.
So, though De Gaulle took care to avoid giving "anti-American" overtones to his Mexican visit and will do the same for his fall tour of Latin America, the implication is clear for all to see.
It is that he has something to offer the non-committed nations, including those in the United States' own backyard—a policy of "independence" from Washington while still getting economic and technical
aid.
The Mexicans evidently liked what they heard from De Gaulle. Presumably other Latin Americans will, too.
So De Gaulle can be expected over the next two years—much longer if he runs for a second term in 1965—to pursue with fresh gusto the "independent" line which has proved an increasing cause of headaches to Washington since he came to power.
see yourself in our lovely
Bridal Gowns
AVA'S BRIDAL SALON
623 Indiana
VI 2-0056
Also see our cocktail dresses
Hoop rentals
When You're in Doubt—Try It Out,
SEN. WAYNE MORSE
SUA & ASC present this Oregon Democrat who will discuss "Foreign Policy under President Johnson"
APRIL 1 8PM HOCH
Reception in South Lounge / Union following the speech
SENIORS: NOMINATE YOUR SELECTION FOR THE HOPE AWARD!
DEADLINE MARCH 31 EXPLAIN HOW THE KU TEACHER OF YOUR CHOICE MEETS WITH THE FOLLOWING CRITERIA:
1. Willingness to help students.
2. Success in stimulating students or challenging the students toward thinking.
3. Devotion to profession.
4. Contribution to general cultural life of the University.
5. Publications, creative work, etc., will be considered, but not to the extent as will be the instructor's contributions to students.
(THE NOMINEES MUST BE A FULL-TIME FACULTY MEMBER AND MUST HAVE TAUGHT AT LEAST TWO YEARS AT THE UNIVERSITY.)
You may obtain a nomination form at the Alumni Office, 127 Strong Hall, from your senior representative, or use the form. Turn in your nomination to the Alumni Office, 127 Strong Hall.
Nomination Form, HOPE AWARD:
Teacher's name ___
His or Her school or department
Subject Taught
Your name ___, address_
Phone ___
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Monday, March 30.1964
Mantle Leads Yanks
(UPI)—The tension and anxiety over Mickey Mantle's physical condition have eased a bit for the New York Yankees.
The powerful centerfielder hit two home runs which carried the Yankees to a 6-4 victory over Cincinnati yesterday, but the final score wasn't the most important development of the day for the American league champions.
Mantle's health has been the top question in the Yankee camp this spring and his performance yesterday in Tampa, Fla., showed he is progressing fairly well after an off-season knee operation.
BOTH HOME RUNS came from the righthand side and they accounted for three Yankee runs. Now the big questions will be what affect the operation has on his field and his swing from the lefthand side.
Sandy Koufax of the Los Angeles Dodgers became the first pitcher in either league to go nine innings, but he lost his third straight exhibition decision. He has one victory.
Koufax lost to the Minnesota Twins; 3-1, despite allowing five hits and striking out seven. A two-
run homer by Jimmie Hall was the big blow off Koufax.
Outfieldder Willie Horton continued his sensational spring showing for the Detroit Tigers yesterday, hitting home runs in both games as the Tigers swept a doubleheader from the Chicago White Sox, 2-1 and 3-0.
HORTON'S HOME RUN in the opener came in the ninth inning when he was sent up as a pinch-hitter. His two home runs raised his spring total to five.
Carlton Willey extended his string of scoreless innings to 17 in an 8-3 New York Met victory over Washington. Wiley pitched three innings for the Mets who broke Washington's five-game win streak. Tim Harkness had a home run and a double for the Mets.
A two-out single by Bill White in the 11th inning enabled St. Louis to defeat Milwaukee, 6-5, and end the Braves' winning streak at seven games.
Utility infielder Julio Gotay hit two home runs and drove in five runs with four hits while leading the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 13-4 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies.
(UPI) — The Cincinnati Royals have earned the chance they've been waiting for, and tonight St. Louis and Los Angeles meet for a similar prize.
Royals-76ers NBA Battle Set
The Royals defeated the Philadelphia 76ers, 130-124, last night to advance into the National Basketball Association's Eastern division finals against the world champion Boston Celtics.
The Hawks and Lakers, deadlocked at two games apiece, will meet at St. Louis tonight to determine who will meet San Francisco in the Western division finals.
The ROYALS didn't have an easy-time with the injury-plagued 76ers in the fifth game of their series at Cincinnati.
He connected on all nine of his field goal attempts in the second half after being held to six points in the first two periods.
The 76ers, with Lee Shaffer, Larry Costello and Dave Gambe, playing minor roles due to injuries, managed to stay close to Cincinnati all evening, but in the end, Oscar Robertson was the big difference.
Robertson, who made 12 of 12 from the foul line, wound up with 32 points and set up 36 more with 18 assists.
USAF F-105, unleashing air-to-ground rockets at simulated enemy target.
School's Out.
Right now, graduation seems way off in the wild blue yonder. But it's not too early to start planning. In the future, you'll look back on decisions you make today with satisfaction... or regret.
What can an Air Force career mean to you in tangible gain? The opportunity to take on executive responsibilities you might otherwise wait years to attain. And a head-start into one of a wide range of possible careers in the exciting Aerospace Age.
As an Air Force officer, for example, you may be flying a supersonic jet...helping to keep America's guard up. Or you may be in an Air Force laboratory, working to solve an intricate scientific or technological problem.
Doing jobs like these, you can hold your head high. In addition to being essential to your country, they're the beginnings of a profession of dignity and purpose.
For more information, see the Professor of Air Science.
U.S. Air Force
no AFROTC unit on your campus, contact your nearest Air Force recruiter.
HE HAD PLENTY OF help from Arlen Bockhorn who had 23 points, Jack Twyman with 22 points and Tom Hawkins with 18 points and 10 rebounds in a relief role.
Cincinnati had an excellent night from the field, making 56 per cent of its shots. And on the foul line the Royals made 24 of 26.
Johnny Kerr, with 31 points, Chet Walker with 27 and Paul Neumann with 22 were high for Philadelphia.
The Royals-Celtics series should be extremely tough. Cincinnati has the season's edge with the Celtics, 7-5, but Red Auerbach's club is well-rested and waiting for a start on their sixth straight world's title.
Jumping
Fun is living in Park Plaza
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
PARK PLAZA SOUTH
Ph. VI 2-3416
1912 W. 25th
Day or Night
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
FOR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS
SEE MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER VI 3-1211
COMPLETE SERVICE FOR CHEVYS fx OLDS
& OLDS
- Small enough to give personal attention
Big enough to have all the equipment.
VI 3-7700
738 N.H.
SHIP WINTER CHEVROLET
CHEVROLET
HAVING A PARTY?
e 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
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350
Men's g
pionship
VI 3-675
1957 Ply
mission.
Siamese
or see a
SPEE WHEEL at great Saturda St
For Fu
9040 aft
Printed outlinin line ar lines ar Western pletely mimecog copy. C
New sh
sheets t
1005 Ms
One an now! 1 Swim to-wall paved, desired.
3 room beds, s campus Mississippi
Furnish Roomy KU and per moi
Single fac
2-9451
Married room,
$ now. C.
Apartm
Ser 1113
Lut 19th
AIR
REP.
NE
926
613
DA
VI
Page 11
-Classified Ads-
FOR SALE
Men's golf clubs. 6 Sam Snead Chap-
ley IWIs Ironls and 3 Woods. 1-3, 6-927. 4-1
EX-HEARSE, 1951 Cadillac. Standard transmission, radio, heater, new tires and battery. Ideal for hauling, camping or woodsies. Cheap. Also sturdy car-top carrier and rack. $20. Mercury 10 h.p. outboard, $20. Call VI 3-7922. 4-2
University Daily Kansan
1557 Plymouth. 2 door, standard transmission. Call VI 3-5421, Dan Epp. 4-1 Slamse kittens for sale. Call VI 3-5907 or see at 1515 E. 15th. 4-2
Hailcart communication receiver, mod-
dul best offer. Call 4-1-
Wendel, VI 2-9100
1960 Corvair, good condition. $750. Ask
Ma, MA. VI 3-7451, 1122 W. Ck-
pus, JP.
Record player stands. $11.95. Deluxe
player stands. $11.95. Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. 4-1
SEAT COVERS. Closing out all last year's stock. Complete sets as low as $7.50. Front seats for compacts, $2.50. Ray Stoneback's 929 Mass. 3-30
House, four years old, excellent condition. Three bedrooms, link fence, near school and swimming pool. $700 assumes loan. $78 a month. Ops. New appliances and furniture. 1955 Miller Drive. VI 3-6994. tf
SPEED EQUIPMENT -- CHROME
WHEELS, Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale
at great savings after 6 p.m. week days
saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut
St!
Typewriters, and used portables,
standards, electronics. Olympia, Hermes,
Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portable.
Typewriter, adder, rentals and service.
Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St..
VI 3~644.
For Forlater Brush Products phone VI 3-
9040 after 5 p.m. tf
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly, known as Biology for delivery. $4.50 Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per cony. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. if
FOR RENT
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
ream-$85 Lawrence Outdoor.
1005 Mass
3 room apartment for 2 K.U. boys. Single beds, shower, all utilities paid, near campus and stadium. Inquire at 1005 Mississippi or call VI 3-4349. 4-3
One and 2 bedroom apartments available now! 101 new units available Aug. 15. Swimming pool, air conditioning, wall-to-wall carpeting, colored appliances, paved, off-street parking. Furnished if desired. Call VI 3-1116 for information.
Furnished apartment. 3 rooms and bath.
Roomy and attractive. Private. Between KU and downtown. $60 plus electricity per month. Call VI 3-3913. 4-1
Single or double room. Furnished, cooking facilities. All utilities paid. Call VI 2-9451 or see at 1244 La.
Married grad students, faculty. 2 bchs. Call for brochure. June. Reserve now. Call for brochure. VI 3-2116. Santee Apartments, 1123 Indiana. tt
BURGERT'S
Shoe Service
1113 Mass. St. VI 3-0691
Service for Shoes Since 1910
FREE! qt. of oil with oil change & filter
BOB'S CONOCO
Lube - Wheel Bal. - Brakes 19th & Mass. VI 3-9802
ALTERATIONS RE-WEAVING REPAIRS LEATHER REFINISHING NEW YORK CLEANERS Delivery Service
926 Mass. VI 3-0501
RISK'S
Shirt Finishing Laundry
Wash & Fluff Dry
613 Vt. VI 3-4141
AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS
DALE'S BODY SHOP
All makes & models
frame - body - fender - glass
VI 3-4732 704 Vermont
Crescent Heights two bedroom apart-
ment. 25th and Redbud.
Phone VI 2-3711.
TYPING
Experienced secretary would like typing.
Mrs. Ethel Henderson, V 1-02123, tt
Experienced typist with electric typewriter, available to type themes, term thesis, etc. Accurate work standards and rates. Phone VI 3-8479, Charles Pattl.
Experienced secretary would like typing in her home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 2-1188.
Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (plca type). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0558. ff
Accurate expert typist would like typing in her home. Term papers and theses. Prompt service. Call VI 3-2851. tt
Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason- sentations, papers, themes- sertations and theses, books IV 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson.
Experienced Typlist—Dissertations, Theses, Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 Rhode Island, VI 3-7485. tt
Professional typing by experienced secretary.
New electric typewriter, carbon keyboard.
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, 2047 Yale, VI 2-1648.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
Legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI: 3257-77.
legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI: 3257-77.
TYPING: Experiented typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, and other reports, and rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568, tfr
YELLOW CAB CO.
VI 3-6333
24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled
7,000 Pipes and every smoking accessory
George's Pipe Shop
727 Mass. VI 3-7164
"SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS"
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
Fraternity Jewelry
STUDENTS! SAVE WITH THIS AD!!
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
Balfour
"Front End Special"
- Front end aligned
- Front wheels balanced, bearing squeaked
Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. **tf**
Let us prove how we can save you money on all your car needs
bearings repacked Steering checked
MILKILLENS SOS+always first quality typing on LB.M. Carbon ribbon machines tape transcription. Office hours- 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. - 1021-. mhz. Phone VI-3-5920.
- Steering checkea ONLY $6.88
WANTED
"Come in Today"
Typing: Dissertation theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols, carbon ibbon cell. Desired. Prompt, effilateral call. Desired. Mrs. Suzanne Glenn VI 2-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Vii VI 3-3057.
WOLKSWAGEN'S WANTED. Cash for
our VW, Conzelman Motors, VW Sales,
service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway 59
so.
WARDS
Have a party in the Big Red School
have a party in the big red school and plant
Heated. Call VI 3-7453
HELP WANTED
MISCELLANEOUS
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. If
AUTO SERVICE CENTER
College man needed. We need a college man for a summer sales job which is not door-to-door. Salary is $150 per week and the student fee is $250 since traveling is involved. Write: Forrest Tennant, 5358 Skylane Drive, Shawnee Mission, Kansas. 3-31
Artists - Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics
George's Hobby Shop
1105 Mass. VI 3-5087
Milliken's SOS
729 N.H. VI 2-1708
- General typing service
- "the best professional service"
- 24 hr. answering service
$1021\frac{1}{2}$ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
- Notary public
- Mimeograph & photo-copying
JOE'S BAKERY
Hot doughnuts—sandwich cold drink
25c delivery VI 3-4720
Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.11 p.m
JIM'S CAFE
OPEN 24 hrs. a day
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
838 Mass.
BREAKFAST OUB SPECIALTY
7 a.m.-11 p.m
STUDENTS
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Monday, March 30, 1964
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
Girl to play electric organ part-time
Call VI 3-4743. H
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
★ TUNE-UPS
LOST
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
Will do baby sitting in your home evenings. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. W. S. Stevens, VI 2-4568 after 6 p.m. 4-3
Dressmaking-alterations, formula's and
dresses' gowns. Ola Smith. 939% II
VI 3-5263
Ballfield, lost in Fraser Theater. Friday.
Dave Tillie, 818 Kentucky.
BUSINESS SERVICES
ART'S TEXACO
9th & Mississippi
VI 3-9897
Surprise your roommate with a cake on that special occasion. The K.U. Birthday cake is the student body a line of cakes. Free delivery and call Vi 1-2713. 4-24
U-Call, we haul. Anything, anytime. VI 3-5888.
Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 116 Mass. VI 3-1267 t.
ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass.
Big Store Service and Small Store Attention
Book Nook
1021 Mass.
Portraits of Distinction
HIXON STUDIO
Videographer
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
One Stop Service
★ Engine Tune Up
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
★ Lubrication & Oil Change
SKELLY
SKELLY SERVICE
Brake Repair
300 W. 6th
VI 3-9271
Generator & Starter Repair
L&M CAFE now under new management. WE WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Every day. We have delicious lunches, dimmers, and sandwiches. Your second cup of coffee always free.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Monday, March 30, 1964
Smoking Affects Unborn
PALM BEACH SHORES, Flea— (UPI)—Can smoking cigarettes affect the unconceived children of smokers?
Dr. Reimert T. Ravenholt, associate professor of preventative medicine at the University of Washington at Seattle, applied the principle of evolution to this question and concluded they could.
The penalties could range from stunted stature and poor function to deformities and childhood cancer, according to Ravenholt.
Ravenhoit started his study with the premise that 'certain substances from the environment outside the body can cause the progeny of cells inside to differ abnormally from the parents.
AMONG THE SUBSTANCES are some which are part of smoke from burning cigarettes, tobacco and other combustions such as those in automobile motors. They can "mutate" or change body cells. Therefore, it follows, said Ravenholt, they can do no less to germ cells.
Men and women of reproductive age "make" germ cells constantly and some become the beginnings of new life—children. If they are already changed in parental bodies toward abnormalities, any offspring which results from them will pay any penalties thus built into them.
Ravenholt told the Science Writers' Seminar of the American Cancer Society that anatomically there could be no question of these substances taken into the body in cigarette smoke reaching the organs in which germ cells are replicating themselves by the cellular method of dividing and redividing. The substances get to these organs by way of the blood stream, he said.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Student Peace Union, 4:30 p.m., Pan American Room, Kansas Union.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
SUA Ping Pong Tournament, 6 p.m.
Big 8 Room, Kansas Union.
Lawrence Center, 1910 Stratford Hall
University String, SW swarthout Hall
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m. St.
Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford, dr
Air Force Recruiting. 10-3:30 p.m.
Hawk's Nest, Kansas Union. Answer questions on officers training school and take applications for the OFS
Mechanics-Aerospace Lecture, 3:30 p.m.
200 Engineering Building, "American Folklore: Its Scope and Method"—Robert Georges.
SUA Ping Pong Tournament, 6 p.m.
Big 8 Room, Kansas Union.
Big 8 Room, Kansas Union.
Inquiring Class, 7 p.m., St. Lawrence
Center, 1915 Stratford Rd.
Western Civ Lecture, 7:30 p.m., Mu-
GO ABSOLUTELY APE IN
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Next . . WALT DISNEY'S "A TIGER WALKS"
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THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF THE BROTHERS GRIMM IN WONDERFUL COLOR Shows at 7:00 & 9:20
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STARTS THURSDAY - - -
"MUTINY ON
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"Oh, Dad, Poor Dad, Mama's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feeling So Sad." 1:15 p.m.. Experimental Theater.
Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7.30
Maryland v. The University of the Aposhs,
—Rev George Darby;
From Room, Kansas Union. "The Chinese Point of View" - Prof. Ben Wallacker. Inquirer Class, 7:30 p.m., Canterbury House.
TONITE & TUES. . .
"40 Pounds of Trouble"
AND
"SERGEANTS 3"
Open 6:45—Starts 7:15
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on Highway 40
Western Civ Discussion, 9 p.m. St.
Lawrence Center, 1915 Stratford Rd.
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
saum of Art Lecture Hall. "Art in the 19th century—Dr. James Connellly." PROGRAM
STARTS WED. ---- "THE GREAT ESCAPE" AND "DOCTOR NO"
Alaskan Disaster Victims
(Continued from page 1)
floated as far as two miles at sea. Aleut natives fled their villages on Kodiak Island.
Vaccines, blankets, and other medical supplies are being rushed in. Portable generators are being sent in by the Navy and a Navy tender is steaming from Puget Sound to be set up as a hospital and control center for the battered Kodiak region.
IN VALDEZ, population 1,220, the waterfront looks as though it was sawed off. Docks were shattered and homes were snapped from their
foundation and shredded into kindling.
Nevertheless, life went on. People went to Easter Sunday services wearing parks and hoods, not the finery they had planned to wear.
"I'm going to start over." was the statement on hundreds of lips.
CROWTHER
"We have received a jolt, physically as well as mentally," said the Rev. Alexander C. Zabriki of St. Mary's Episcopal Church in Anchorage. "But we'll build and rebuild."
BARS WERE closed by order of police. Streets were cleared in Anchorage by 7 p.m. on police orders.
VOTE for
Marshall Crowther STUDENT BODY PRESIDENT
ELECT
Pd./Friends of C. L.
Carl Lindquist "C. L."
College Men Representative All Student Council
PATRONIZE YOUR
ADVERTISERS
PD/VP
JIM CLINE STUDENT BODY VICE-PRESIDENT
Special Reduced Air Fares
To Europe
This Summer
Kansas University Students, Faculty and Immediate Family
$320
Round trip from New York to Manchester, England For those who want to visit Great Britain.
$356
Round trip from New York to Brussels, Belgium For those who want to visit the continent.
DEPART NEW YORK JUNE 16th and JUNE 17th
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For Information, Apply to Room 106 Strong PROF. E.E.HARRIS Ph.UN4-3977
-CROWTHER
-CLINE
Debate Sparks Campus Election
Timed debate and a timed question-and-answer period marked the political activity on campus last night.
Marshall Crowther, Lawrence second year law student, and Jim Cline, Rockford, Ill., junior, Vox candidates for student body president and vice-president, and Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., junior, and Kaye Whitaker, Wichita junior, the UP candidates, debated in Ellsworth Hall on request of some of the hall's residents.
Both presidential candidates discussed their overall concept of student government. Crowther spoke first: "I believe in effecting good student government by selecting qualified workers."
Persons should be selected on the basis of their qualifications, Crowther said, when they express the desire to help with student government.
The Vox platform "can be done with the help of the students," Crowther explained. He felt that finding the best qualified students to work in student government would help the campus to secure better student government.
"Many of the things we offer in our platforms are things which have been kicked around but no one took the bull by the horns;" Crowther explained while he was telling the audience about Vox's platform.
Stewart explained his concept of student government: "We want a more student-oriented student government."
Stewart said to achieve this goal of student orientation, "We should actively seek out interested and responsible individuals who are interested in student government, we should challenge these individuals and we should work with them."
Often, Stewart said, students are invited to fill out application blanks for positions in student government but no one encourages them. All Student Council representatives should try to encourage qualified individuals, he said.
"I think all of the planks in our platform are very ambitious programs. These planks are the challenge," Stewart explained.
A challenging program, Stewart feels, gives the students a feeling of responsibility.
When working with students in student government, Stewart felt that these students who have expressed interest in student government should be encouraged.
Miss Whitaker also discussed the proposed freshman leadership program: "This program tries to objectively involve students in what KU has to offer in leadership activities."
Jim Cline, Vox candidate for vice-president, explained the athletic seating plank in the Vox platform. The problem as it now exists Cline said: "Students are now sitting half way around the horseshoe."
Cline said that his party proposed that more stadium seating for the students be built.
During the question-and-answer period, it was asked what stand both of the candidates took on the civil rights issue here at KU.
Crowther said that he thought every individual should be considered on personal qualifications only.
Stewart said on the same question: "I think the president of the student body should encourage members of minority groups to participate in student government."
Tuesday, March 31, 1964
Lawrence, Kansas
61st Year, No. 115
Dailu hansan
Crowther. Lawrence second-year law student, replied to the same question by saying, "I think that as a politician and a campaigner, he (Stewart) is one of the persons that is working very hard. His campaign has been a vigorous one, and with good, vigorous campaigns, students take more interest."
STEWART SAID the basic issue of the campaign is "should student government undergo a change to a more comprehensive emphasis on the student in student government.
"I feel that many times our student government becomes involved in itself and there is a vacuum or void between the government and the student."
Close Race Predicted By Campus Politicians
With campus elections beginning tomorrow, both candidates for student body president are saying the outcome will be close.
After about three weeks of handshaking and campaign speeches, each is hesitant to predict his own victory, although both have planned victory parties.
MARSHALL CROWTHER, Vox candidate for student body president, said last night:
"I think that it will probably be close. If I can explain the things I stand for, I think the election can be won, and I hope I can present my side to the people."
Bob Stewart, UP candidate for student body president, said: "I am very confident it will be a close race. I believe it will be the best race the University Party has been in. If the amount of work we have put in is any indication, (of the outcome) we will come out very well."
When asked to size up his opponent, Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., junior said: "He (Crowther) is a very good opponent, a mature and responsible individual. I don't know what experience he has had on the undergraduate level, but he is responsible."
(Related story on page 3.)
Skies will be partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow. The low tonight will be in the middle 30's and the high tomorrow will be in the 60's, the weather bureau said.
Weather
Crowther said the basic issue "... inviles the ideas that Vox has worked for in the past." If this government has done what the students want, the students will return it, Crowther said.
BOTH CANDIDATES said they did not expect their voting strength to come from any one section of the campus. Both said that during their campaigns, they have drawn strength from all over the campus.
Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission senior and UP general secretary, said recent switches in the party affiliations of living groups from Vox to UP, have significantly added to UP's strength.
Tom Bornholdt, Topeka senior and Vox Populi president, said of the three switches. "We have lost more than we picked up, but we had more of an advantage to start with. We are a strong party, we have a better chance of winning, but it will be close."
Stewart said the UP victory party will be at the Jayhawk Cafe, and Crowther said the Vox victory party will be at the Dine-A-Mite.
U.S. Goes to Rescue In Shattered Alaska
And weary citizens of the 49th state gained additional encouragement in a report that the list of fatalities resulting from the Good Friday earthquake was dwindling
ANCHORAGE, Alaska —(UPI)— An armada of planes, corps of rescue workers and Uncle Sam's bank-roll today went to the rescue of quake ravaged and economically shattered Alaska.
"The dead and presumed dead now total 105," said Donald Lowell, state director of civil defense. Unofficial figures earlier today were set at 153 and later dropped to 121.
ANOTHER 13 PERSONS were killed and 18 were missing and presumed dead as the result of tidal waves spawned by the quake which lashed California and Oregon coasts.
Lowell said he expected to have a complete list of the Alaska dead and presumed dead, with a city-by-city breakdown, at 9 a.m. AST (2 p.m. EST). He said 80 per cent of the victims on his list were victims of the tidal waves.
The constant fluctuation in the figures since the quake is because of ruptured communications.
Officials feared scores, perhaps hundreds, of Aleuts and Eskimos may have died in more desolate regions of the 1,500-mile disaster zone. They said the full toll may never be known.
TWO OTHER LATE developments caused concern in the litter
concern in the jittery area. The University of California at Berkeley reported that a "moderately strong" earthquake occurred early today off the western coast of Canada in the area between Vancouver Island and Queen Charlotte Island.
The quake was not felt in Anchorage, and university officials emphasized that the tremor was not an aftershock of the Alaska disaster. The Canadian quake, centered in the Pacific Ocean, was recorded at 1:05 a.m. PST (4:05 a.m. EST) and registered between 6 and $ \frac{6}{4} $ on the Richter scale.
The Coast Guard also announced that a potentially dangerous film of diesel and jet fuel fed by ruptured tanks at Seward had spread over parts of Cook Inlet. The situation was being watched carefully and all open flame was banned in the area.
Meanwhile, a stream of 15 giant C124 Globemaster Air Force transports were in a 48-hour shuttle from McChord Air Force Base, Wash., to Elmendorf Field with 235-000 pounds of vitally needed supplies for the ravaged state.
The supplies ranged from disposable diapers to candles, vaccines to portable generators.
Senator Morse Speaks in Hoch Tomorrow
Senator Wayne Morse, Oregon Democrat, who was once refused a position on KU law faculty, will speak here tomorrow.
Senator Morse, who now holds at least five academic and jurisprudence degrees, will speak on "Foreign Policy Under the New President." He will speak at Hoch auditorium at 8 p.m. and immediately following, a reception will be held in the South Lounge of the Kansas Union. Both events, which are sponsored by the All Student Council and Student Union Activities, are open to the public.
James K. Logan, Dean of the School of Law, said "In retrospect, we would be glad to have such a man" on the law school faculty. Morse, at time he made his application, was teaching law at the University of Oregon. That would have been in 1929 or 1930, judging from the dates in a Featured Speakers Series communique.
Two years later Morse became dean of Oregon's law school. He was thirty years old, the youngest law school dean in the country. Dean Logan said he was surprised at this, because Logan had thought himself to have been the youngest law school dean. Dean Logan was appointed at the age of thirty-one.
The information on the Morse application to the law school was found in Robert Smith's biography of Morse, "A Tiger in the Senate."
In 1954 Morse set a Senate record for the longest filibuster. He opposed placing Texas tidelands oil reserves under the control of that state and filibustered the issue non-stop for 22 hours, 26 minutes. The record still stands.
In 1962 Morse, in a Senate speech, vowed to cut foreign aid expenditures by $500 million, but failed to get Senate support. Speaking of foreign "supporting assistance" in a Senate speech Morse said, "It is the payroll on which we put nations all over the world that are unwilling to put their economic houses in order and are unwilling to live within their means."
Although Morse holds the Senate record for the longest non-stop filibuster, he has sponsored a rules bill to impose cloture on debates. His plan would allow debate to be shut off by a simple majority of those present.
This however, would have the condition that sixteen senators file a petition seven days after the debate had started.
Morse has contended European nations who are members of NATO
are not carrying their share of the financial burden.
"The poor-mouthing of European defense ministers that are too poor to meet their commitments to NATO
100
Sen. Wayne Morse
comes in especially bad taste from those ministers who also want their nations to be nuclear powers," he said.
"They only convince me that one or the other of their contentions is completely fallacious," Morse said in a Senate speech last December.
When the Bobby Baker scandals became a matter for Senate investigation, Morse reminded senators that all of them had been helped by Baker. Speaking for himself, he said that he was "not one who regrets the services of a friend." "I'm not going to walk out just because a friend makes mistakes." Morse said
Baker, however, followed "the wise course of action under the circumstances" in resigning, Morse said.
Shortly thereafter, Morse sponsored legislation to improve congressional ethics.
Morse, who is chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee's subcommittee on Latin America, has tried to amend aid bills to those
Morse has been opposed to aid for Pakistan because Pakistani were making deals with Communist China. He also has opposed aid to Sukarno of Indonesia. If it were not for U.S. aid Sukarno "would be in bed with the communists now," Morse told the Senate.
countries. His amendments would exclude those countries from foreign aid who do not adopt self-help reforms.
In the last session of Congress, Morse also tried to get aid bills amended to exclude countries with balance-of-payment problems and problems with their budget support.
Morse was invited to KU last December. Because Senate foreign aid appropriations were brought to the floor at that time, Morse cancelled his engagement here, Kenneth Van Blaricum, Meade freshman and publicity chairman of the series, said.
Bob Enberg, McPherson junior and chairman of the series said he had talked with Morse's secretary a few days ago to see if the civil rights debate would keep Morse from his speaking engagement this time. There has been no change in plans, Enberg said.
Morse began his career in politics under the progressive banner of the Republican "Fighting Bob" Lafolette.
Morse was elected senator in 1944. He became disillusioned with the prospects for liberalism in the Republican party, a communique from the series said, and ran as an Independent. In 1955 he joined the Democratic party.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday. March 31.1964
American Values:
Cases in Point
Do Americans tend to stress the relatively unimportant and temporary aspects of life? As a result, do we neglect the more worthwhile and valuable things in life?
The critics of the American value system, who answer these two questions with an emphatic "yes," just may be right.
This writer is aware of two cases, both of which involve KU students that might support the above statement. They are similar in some respects, but far different in one highly important area, the final outcome.
The cases may serve as a limited example of what our critics allege is an over-emphasis on athletics, with a resultant harm to academic and cultural programs on college and university campuses.
MOST OF YOU readers are acquainted with the case of KU's highly-publicized woman fencer, Claudia Reeder. Miss Reeder was the only woman asked to join a U.S. fencing team on a trip to a tournament in Budapest, Hungary.
But she had a problem. She lacked the necessary money, around $900, to finance her trip.
The story of her situation hit the papers. The Daily Kansan, the Lawrence Journal-World, the Kansas City Star and other area papers picked up the story and gave it prominent display.
Money from sympathetic and evidently well-to-do readers began pouring in. The Endowment Association agreed to handle all the contributions.
WITHIN SEVERAL WEEKS' time the $900 was raised through donations from individuals and various civic organizations.
Miss Reeder was able to make the trip and, although she was defeated in the first round of the tournament, she represented KU and the U.S. well.
A nasty cynic might say that she received all that support just because the whole thing enhanced KU's prestige.
However, I think this, at best, could be only a partial explanation for the tremendous response which made it possible for a talented girl to represent our country abroad.
Now ccompare Miss Reeder's case to that of another KU student. (The student's name will not be used, but this writer wishes to point out that there must be a number of students in similar situations.)
The student, a girl, wishes to participate in "Cross-Roads Africa," a privately-sponsored cultural exchange program this summer. The program is not one of idle touring and gawking at the natives, but resembles the Peace Corps in nature.
The students, both African and American, spend the summer participating in a series of panel discussions, exchanging information and views. In addition, they help in work projects, such as the construction of much-needed schools and hospitals for the African people.
THE PLAN sounds like one that will benefit all concerned and will further the understanding between the African and American people. A worthwhile goal in almost everyone's eyes.
Her problem. She also lacks the money to finance the trip and meet her expenses, which would amount to a little over $1,000.
Administration officials and the deans of several schools, who recently toured Africa extensively, listened sympathetically to her problem, but so far have been unable to direct her to any sources who could help her. There just does not seem to be money available, from private contributors, civic clubs, or cultural institutions, for a project such as this one.
THESE TWO cases point out what seems, to me at least, to be a distressing aspect of our value system.
Have we really reached a point where athletic contests have become more important than the opportunities for increasing inter-cultural understanding and the strengthening of the ties of world brotherhood?
If these two cases are in any way indicative, it would appear that way.
I hope I'm wrong.
SENATE INQUIRY
BOBBY BAKER
© 1964 HERRBLOEK
1964 HERBLOCK
“And So, The Curtain Falls ——— 1 Said, ‘And
So, The Curtain Falls!’ ——— ”
Dailij Hansan
111 Flint Hall
111 Flint Hall
University of Kansas student newspaper
UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom
UNiversity 4-3198, business office
9. 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.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Tom Coffman ... Editorial Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bob Brooks ... Business Manager
Holy Week Didn't Change Tone of News—
By Mike Miller
Last Week was Holy Week.
Holy Week is the most solemn week in the Christian year.
Holy Week, 1964, was marked by natural disaster, bloodshed and verbal battles throughout the world.
On an Easter weekend when most Americans' thoughts were turned from the miseries of today's world, an earthquake ripped through Alaska. Its after-effects spread down the Pacific coastline to California, leaving at least 66 persons dead and damaging an estimated 850 million dollars in property.
The quake, which released 10 million times more energy than the atomic bomb which destroyed Hiroshima in 1945, buckled streets, collapsed buildings and cut off public utilities with yawning fissures in the earth's surface.
About four inches of snow and temperatures below freezing added to the misery. Giant sea waves from the quake smashed into smaller towns rimming the Gulf of Alaska. In their wake, as the waves progressed down the Pacific coast from Canada to California, was a trail of devastation. At least 10 persons died and 50 are missing in Crescent City, Calif., more than 2,000 miles from the quake.
Although the death toll is not expected to reach into the hundreds as originally predicted, the downtown section of Anchorage, Alaska's largest city with a metropolitan population of about 60,000, was virtually destroyed. William J. Tobin, managing editor of the Anchorage Daily Times, said the disaster was almost too great to comprehend.
Rights Bill in Senate
On the East coast of the United States, things were almost as explosive, if not as destructive. The Senate broke a 15-day deadlock and voted to take up formal consideration on the House-passed civil rights bill. Southern opposition finally allowed the vote to come on the motion made by Democratic leader, Mike Mansfield of Montana. It passed 67-17.
Ironically, the vote cleared the way for a motion by Sen. Wayne Morse of Oregon to send the bill to the Senate Judiciary Committee, headed by Southern camp member Sen. James O. Eastland of Mississippi, for 10 days of study. The southern forces lost another battle when Morse's motion was defeated by a 50-34 vote. The action set up the bill for debate this week.
Another southern senator made big news last week, but not in the area of civil rights. Sen. J. William Fulbright of Arkansas, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, called on the Johnson administration to abandon "old myths" and face up to "the new realities of our time." He advocated a candid re-evaluation of the U.S. policy toward Cuba and said the crisis with Panama over the Canal Zone has been unnecessarily protracted for reasons of domestic politics and national pride and sensitivity on both sides.
Fulbright Attacks Foreign Policy
Fulbright's attack on the administration was doubly interesting because of the high favor he holds
in the eyes of President Johnson and because he has been frequently mentioned as a candidate for secretary of state if Dean Rusk should resign.
Judging by the newspaper columns, Fulbright's speech before Congress managed to upset almost everyone—Republicans and Democrats alike. Sen. George Smathers of Florida, another member of the foreign relations committee, branded Fulbright's stand on Cuba as "monumentally naive and unrealistic."
Secretary of State Dean Rusk also took offense at Fulbright's stab at the U.S. foreign policy. Asked at a news conference about Fulbright's declaration that Castro is not a grave threat to the country and that the U.S. economic boycott of the island is a flop, Rusk said, "Castro is more than a nuisance. He is a threat to this hemisphere." Rusk did admit that Fulbright's speech was "thoughtful and thought-provoking," however.
Rep. William E. Miller, Republican national chairman, said Fulbright is promoting appeasement and compared his course to that of Neville Chamberlain in the 1930's.
Rockefeller Chances Further Dimmed
In the battle for the Republican presidential nomination, Gov. Nelson Rockefeller received two setbacks this week, both in his home state of New York. The New York World-Telegram and Sun reported that top New York state Republican party chiefs have "virtually given up" on Rockefeller and will refuse to support him publicly in the New York primary, June 2.
In the New York Legislature, Rockefeller suffered serious defeats on two major issues.
In a Gallup poll released Sunday, Sen. Barry Goldwater emerged as the solid favorite of Republican county chairmen. He received nearly half of all votes cast by the party "pros." He was followed by Nixon, Lodge, Scranton and Rockefeller.
Meanwhile, Lodge forces were trying to convince party leaders that the U.S. ambassador to Viet Nam is an authentic candidate. The supporters have announced there now are draft-Lodge organizations in 34 states.
While the Republicans are trying to find a presidential candidate, the Democrats are thinking about a running mate for President Johnson in November. Some are suggesting that Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara would be a good candidate, although he is believed to be a Republican.
***
President Johnson last week received cheers from the United Auto Workers convention in his appeal for "warm-hearted war" on the home front for the welfare of the American people. He promised the convention to pass the civil rights and medical aid bills.
In another speech, the President said a general war would be impossible in this nuclear age and that the nations must follow "reasoned agreement instead of ready aggression" in dealing with global problems.
Fliers Released
In foreign relations last week, the Russians released two U.S. airmen whose reconnaissance plane was shot down by a Soviet fighter
over East Germany earlier this month. Communist East Germany asserted that the airmen were "expelled" after the United States gave assurances that strict orders had been issued to prevent a recurrence of air violations. A charge that the plane was spying was repeated by the Soviets and denied by the United States.
Pr
With the approval of the Greek, Turkish and British governments, Secretary General U Thant of the United Nations appointed former Finnish premier Sakari S. Tuomioja, U.N. mediator for the Cyprus dispute.
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The stabbing of U.S. ambassador to Japan by a deranged Japanese youth set the stage for the first live telecast from Japan to the United States. Over the Relay II communications satellite Premier Havato Ikeda expressed his country's deepest regrets for the incident. U.S. Ambassador Edwin O. Reischauer was reported recovering from a wound in his right thigh and doctors said the wound should be healed in two weeks.
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Tuesday, March 31, 1964
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Preparations Made as Election Nears
While the candidates are busy wrapping up three weeks of hard campaigning, the elections committee is preparing for two days of poll work.
Charles R. King, Kansas City sophomore and All Student Council elections committee chairman, said the polls will open at 8 a.m., Wednesday and Thursday, and will be open until 6:15 p.m.
Polls will be located at three different places on campus—the first floor of Strong Hall, the main lobby of the Kansas Union, and the main entrance of Murphy Hall.
AFTER PRESENTING their dean's card, which can be picked up at the polls, students may cast ballots for student body president and vice-president, All Student Council representatives, and class officers.
King said students will also vote on a proposed constitutional amendment concerning the procedure for determining the number of representatives from living districts.
dor ese first the II hier nuciO. eright and
Presently, the number of representatives from any living group
Official Bulletin
Teaching Interviews: April 2. Anchorage, Alaska. Make appointments in 117 Bellevue.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapeco, 1910 Stratford Rd.
SUA Ping Fong Tournament, 6 p.m.
Big 8 Room, Kansas Union.
8 Big Room, Kansas Union
Inquiring
St. Lawrence
Court,
19th St., Scarpard, Rd.
Western Civ Lecture, 7:30 p.m. Mussel
the Bible Country. Dr. James Cormelly
PBOAE Lecture, 7:30 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union. *The Chinese Point of View*—Prof. Ber Walmckeer Class, 7:30 p.m., Canterbury House.
Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30
pm. Kansas Association of the Apos-
torians, Darby, Derby
"Oh, Dad, Poor Dad, Mama's Hung You
Hung Your Head! The Theater,
Saturday 8:15 p.m., Experimental Hall.
Lawrence Center, 1915 Stratford Rd.
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m., St.
Laurence, Chanel.
Air Force Recruiting 10-3.30 p.m.
Hawk's Nest, Kansas Union. Answer questions on officers training school and take applications for OTS.
Inquirer Class, 3:45 p.m., Canterbury House.
Le Cercle francais se réunitra mercredi 13 premier avril a 4 h. 30 dans la salle du spectacle de la maison. 5. Smith parla parler sur ses recherches archéologiques en Oceanie l'année pasée. Au sein des archives, ils cesse s'intenser au francis ion cordialement invites.
is determined from the number of "valid" ballots cast. The amendment would strike out the word "valid" and the number of representatives would be determined from the "total" number of ballots cast.
Carillon Recital, 7 p.m., Albert Gerken.
SUA Classical Film, 7 p.m., Fraser Theater. "The Lady Vanishes" (Hitchcock).
Geology Lecture, 7:30 p.m., 426 Lindley. "The Problem of Direction in Evolution"-Dr. H. J. MacGillavry, U. of Amsterdam.
CKUW I ПЕК
Timely Topics, 7:30 p.m. St. Lawrence Center, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Senior Recital, 8 p.m., Swarthout Hall.
Bonnie Ward.
SUA-AC Lecture, 8 p.m., Hoch Auditorium. "Foreign Policy Under the New President"—Sen. Wayne Morse (D.-Ore). Reception follows at Kansas Union.
King said the reason for the proposed change is that the large men's residence halls were denied a representative last fall because only valid ballots were counted toward representation.
"Oh, Dad, Pood Dad, . . . " 8:15 p.m.
Experimental Theatre.
Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
CROWTHER
VOTE for Marshall Crowther STUDENT BODY PRESIDENT
VOX CANDIDATES for ASC school seats are: college men, Robert G. Hicks, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore; college women, Carol Jo Webber, Raytown, Mo. junior; education, Margo VanAntwerp, Plymouth, Mich., junior; journalism, Russell Corbitt, Chanute senior; fine arts, Norma Sharp, Arkansas City junior; business, John Benson, Prairie Village junior; engineering and architecture, Ken Mathiasmeier, Arkansas city sophomore; pharmacy, Gary Gilstrap, Galena fourth year; law, Andy Graham, Lawrence second year; graduate, Dick Clark, Kansas "City, Mo.
CROWTHER
JIM CLINE
STUDENT BODY
VICE-PRESIDENT
UP candidates for ASC school seats are: college men, Carl Linguist. Prairie Village junior; college women. Mary Ruth Lanning. Lawrence sophomore; fine arts, Susan Lawrence. Bartlesville. Okla., sophomore; pharmacy, Gorge Brenner. Princeton junior; journalism, Roy Miller, Topeka junior; engineering and architecture, Ray Myers, Dodge City senior; business, Ken Robb.
Mission junior; law, Pete Robertson, Lawrence first year law; graduate, Hugh Taylor, Stoke-on-Trent, England, and education, Nancy Johnson, Caldwell junior.
The other sophomore ticket is headed by Robert (Pete) Smith, Kansas City, and includes Thomas Aiken, Lawrence; Diane Spickard, Shawnee Mission; and Dean Eaton Leawood, for the other officers.
SOPHOMORE class, Donald Hunter, Abilene, will run for president with William Stringer, Overland Park, Jean Burgardt, Des Moines, Iowa, and Elizabeth Roberts, Shawnee Mission, all freshmen, for vice-president, secretary and treasurer respectively.
Junior coalitions for president, vice-president, secretary and treasurer split into the following: Clay Blair, Joplin, Mo., Earle Wagner, Independence, Mo., Carl Nichols, Hiawatha, and Elaine Rinkel, Scott City, against Alan Brightman, Leawood, Lester Kahler, Holyrood,
There are two coalitions each for sophomore, junior and senior class officers.
Brain Plus Brawn
Peggy Smith, Garden City, and Kathlyn Hogue, Topeka, all sophomores.
-CLINE
ST. LOUIS—(UPI)—Quarterback Charley Johnson of the St. Louis Cardinals and quarterback Frank Ryan of the Cleveland Browns hold master's degrees.
PD/VP
NEW AND USED
PORTABLES STANDARDS
ELECTRICS
Sales — Rentals — Service
RUNNING FOR senior class offices are John (Tonto) Mays, Lyons, with his slate of John Daniels, Kansas City, Mo; Mary Kay Kennedy, Lyons; and William Engber, Wichita. The other coalition is headed by John LaFollette, Overland Park, with Daniel Wanamaker, Salma, Carol Stotts, Prairie Village, and Arthur Spears, Kansas City, all juniors.
Johnson has a degree in chemical engineering; Ryan, in mathematics.
In the ASC's school elections two unaffiliated candidates have petitioned to run from the pharmacy school. They are Judith Lind, Clay Center third year, and Terry (Butch) Ball, Atchison fourth year. Ball was elected to the pharmacy seat as a UP candidate last spring.
See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS
LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER
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PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS
Al Brightman - Pres.
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Les Kahler — Vice-Pres.
Kathy Hogue — Sec.
Peggy Smith — Treas.
Pd./BKHS
Special Reduced Air Fares To Europe This Summer
Kansas University Students, Faculty and Immediate Family
$320
Round trip from New York to Manchester, England For those who want to visit Great Britain.
$356
Round trip from New York to Brussels, Belgium For those who want to visit the continent.
DEPART NEW YORK JUNE 16th and JUNE 17th
By BOAC and Sabena scheduled Jet Services Return by jet at end of summer
Limited Number of Seats Available on "First Come, First Served" Basis
For Information, Apply to Room 106 Strong PROF. E.E.HARRIS Ph. UN4-3977
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 31, 1964
VOTE FOR THE MAN NOT FOR THE PARTY
To all KU students
We encourage all students to join with us in voting for excellence in student government leadership. Our group is a mixture of students representing both political parties, many living groups and a variety of campus activities. We feel that the approaching election offers all students a challenge.
It is imperative that candidates be considered as individuals rather than members of particular political parties. And it is equally imperative that we vote as individuals rather than members of meaningless political blocks. Please join us in supporting Marshall Crowther for Student Body President and Jim Cline for Student Body Vice-President.
C.
MARSHALL CROWTHER
LYNN ANDERSON, Past President of ASC, TKE
SANDY BORNHOLDT, College Intermediary Board
CURT BOSWELL, Past President of Templin Hall
SHERRY BUCHANAN, President of GSP
LANCE BURR, Chairman of People-to-People
JIM CARR, Past President of IFC
JAVED CHAK, International Club
BILL DICKINSON, President of Pershing Rifles
SAM EVANS, President of Young Republicans
JOAN FOWLER, AWS Representative to ASC
BOB GUENTHNER, College Intermediary Board
MAX LOGAN, President of Student Advisory Board,
Past President of Young Democrats
JERRY PULLINS, Senior Class President,
Cadet Commander of Army ROTC
ART SPEARS, President of Alpha Phi Alpha
JIM STANDERFER, Past President of Templin Hall
DAVE STINSON, Senior Class Treasurer
TOMMY THOMPSON, Varsity Football
BECKY WILLIAMSON, President of Jay Jones
REUBEN McCORNACK, Student Body President
JOHN UNDERWOOD, Student Body Vice-President
JOHN STUCKEY, Chairman, All Student Council
PHIL HARRISON, Vice-President, Senior Class
MERRY MOORE, Secretary, Senior Class
MARY MOROZZO, Vice-President, SUA
PAID FOR by Students for Excellence in Student Leadership.
S1
The Assoc.
"One United lock. O pregnar
JIM CLINE
The A serves status i make o dren ye
Those under R. Brig tional r Moralit p.m. T Epsilon
His s regular KU's movem
The mented movem as "No
The conferr ary de meritor velopm for th peace."
Tuesday, March 31, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Speaker to Discuss Morality
The American Family Service Assoc. announced:
The National University of Korea conferred on Mr. Bright the honorary degree of doctor of law "for meritorious contributions to the development of human culture and for the advancement of world peace," in the early 1950's.
"One of 18 babies born in the United States is born out of wedlock. One of six American brides is pregnant before marriage."
The American Bar Association observes that the American divorce status is a mess . . . divorce courts make orphans of some 750,000 children yearly.
His speech will be presented at a regular meeting of College Life, KU's interdenominational student movement.
Those will be some of the topics under consideration when William R. Bright, a former owner of a national manufacturing firm, speaks on Morality and College Life at 9:00 p.m. Thursday at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity house.
The Los Angeles Times commented regarding this Christian movement, which Mr. Bright directs, as "No movement of our time is
likely to have a healthier effect on the religious life of America."
Rick Duwe, Lucas senior said, "College life's success stems from the fact that it has emphasized the significant aspect of Christianity . . . the person of Christ and His personal concern for each of us."
---
William R. Bright
Delvin Lewis, Pauline sophomore, said, "We are here in college to get a well-rounded education and in order to get a well-rounded view we should consider the Christian faith as to whether it has any basis for our lives. College life presents the basis of the Christianity and one is allowed to draw his own decisions."
Thursday evening's discussion by Mr. Bright will last for about 45 minutes and all KU students are invited to the SAE house to hear him.
Dedicated
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo—(UPI)—Lester B. Dill, owner of Meramec Caverns, a tourist attraction on Route 66 at Stanton, Mo., is so intent on promoting Missouri as "The Cave State" that he is promoting his competitors.
CLOSEOUT
Dill has pictures and brochures on all caves in the state in a room in his cave and members of his staff are available to answer questions on them. There are about two dozen state and commercial caves in the state. For years, Dill also has been trying to get the Missouri legislature to okay putting the tag, "Cave State," on car license plates.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 31, 1964
THE BIGGEST FOOLISH PRICES ON
Books At $.99
1. YESTERMORROW; Notes on Man's Progress. By Kurt W. Marek (C. W. Ceram). How art, literature, religion, sex, language and man himself are being transformed by modern science and technology; an experimental, excitingly original speculations by author of "Gods, Graves and Scholars." Pub. at $3.50 . Sale $9
2. Our Threatened Rights—THE PRICE OF LIBERTY. By Alan Barth. Provoctive study, with a wealth of examples from recent court cases, of the abuses of law enforcement agencies—wiredapay, giamares are dental of counsel, ete—and the problems of crime without becoming a police state. Pub. at $4.50. Sale. 99
3. AN AMERICAN IN WASHINGTON.
By Russell Baker, Irreverent guide to survival in the nation's capital. Witty, thoroughly tested advice on how to drop names, pick up a luncheon tab, face a Congressional committee and press "fresh" (greet a visitor) a la Lyndon Johnson.
Pub. at $3.95 Sale 99
4. FRIDAY NIGHT POKER. By Irv
Moddy. Practical and entertaining in-
troductions. The best poker game,
who enjoys a friendly 5-10-25 game of
dealer's choice. Teaches you how to
win at any term of poker, how to play
with others, and the payoffs the pro-
fessor Illus. Pub. at $3.95. Sale. $9
5. MAN AND SPACE, by Clive E. Davis. Concise, profusely-illustrated handbook summarizing what we know about space and the earth's atmosphere: the U.S. space program, the moon Atlas, Mercury and Explorer space shots, how we expect to probe the moon and much more.
Pub. at $2.75
6. A CONCISE DICTIONARY OF ABREVIATIONS, Ed. by Prof. George Mayberry. Basic abbreviations, acronyms, clipped and short forms—essential for the library, office desk, puzzle fan. Pub. at $3.75 . . . . .
7. ALBERT SCHWEITZER—His Philosophy of Life. By Gabriel Langledit. The most objective study of Schweitzer available, analyzing his background, personality and controversial religious views. How can we view this "agnostic" and "ethical mystic" touches God in his own profound way. Pub. at $3.00 ... Sale. 99
8. Thomas Mann: THE STORY OF A TOVEL. A now recent—not only the story of a woman named Ramsay, but a veritable autobiography of the great novelist's later years. The delights and touches of must theme the process, his life in wartime California are described with masterly charm added well. $4.00. Sales. 99
9. Cornelia Ois Skinner's ELEGANT WIFS AND GRAND HORIZONTALS.
Sparkling panorama of Paris in the tres gaul '90s—its gilded society, irrepetent wares and splendid city cemesans.
Many illustrations of the period.
Fub. at $5.00 . . . Sale . . 99
10. HOUSEWIVES' GUIDE TO ANTIQUES. By Leslie Gross, Everything interesting, and using antiques in the home. How to judge values, detect fakes, combine antiquies with modern furnishings, and illustrate illustrations. Pub. at $4.00. Sale .99
11. LITTLE ME—The Intimate Memoirs of Belle Poirine, as told to Patrick Dennis. The Hollywood autobiography of Belle poirine is a parody so witty, wicked and wacky that you'll rear with laughter from first page to last. Here's the "uncut story" of Belle's sensational career, from her brother Jonathan, who uses his sceptol of the movies, of her army of lovers and descent into "deprivacy" and how she finally found health, wealth and happiness after successful funny photographs by Cris Alexander. Pub. at $9.59 . Sale. 99
12. THE HEART OF JAPAN. By Alexander Campbell. A veritable "Japanese campfire" that reveals how people themselves expose the real reality behind the exploding economy, point of view and use of the gelsha, Shintoshi and the Americanization of the popular culture.
Books At $1.49 And $1.98
13. BURL IVES IRISH SONGS. A darlin' collection that includes "Molly Malone," "The Girl I Left Behind Me," Endearing Young Charmis, and 47 the singer, for a laughter, and strife. Compiled by America's great folk singer, and edited with new piano accompaniments by Michael Bowles. 8" X11". Sale $1.49
14. GOETHE AS A SCIENTIST, by Rudolf Magnus. Here we see the great diversity of life on earth, an outstanding botanist, geologist, mineralogist and meteorologist, mineralogist side of him, kindly inscribed as "Sir Chas. Sherington. Pub. at $3.50. Sale $1.49."
15. A FIETEENTH CENTURY COOKRY BOKE. Compiled by John L. Anderson. Delightful curiosity, charming gift for the feysley, fyshe, byrds, meties, cakys, swetts and other dishes are offered—and all of them come from old British books, the British Illustrations Glossary, gay color images 7"x 9¼". Pub at $4.50 . Sale $1.98
16. John Gunther: INSIDE EUROPE
TODAY. One of America's greatest reporters take a penetrating look at
Europe in the 1960s—the Berlin crisis,
be Gaulle. De Krühschus and much more.
Pub. at $4.95 ... Sale $1.98
17. WILLIAM SAROYAN'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY—Here Comes There Goes You Know Who. Unlike any life story you've ever read—honest, funny, sad, moving—the ups and downs, personal experience one of the most fiercely individual written photographs has produced. 15 pages of photos.
Pub. at $3.95 Sale $1.99
18. GIORDANO BRUNO: His Life and Thought, by Dorothea Waley Singer. A fine biography of one of the most daring scholars of science. Here we see a heroic, persecuted, but exasperating man, quarreling with everyone, wandering through the 16th century universities of England to discover and learn about the stake in Rome. Reviews Bruno's literary, scientific and philosophic work and contains an annotated translation of the great book "Illus. On the Infinite Universes of Worlds." Illus.
Pub. at $6.00 Sale $1.98
19. ENCYCLOPEDIA OF MURDER. By Colin Wilson. Over 350 narrative accounts over four centuries and five continents — Lizzie Borden, Leopold and Loeb, equally intriguing cases of homicide. Includes articles on the assassination of public men, the death penalty, and nine crimes. 70 illus. Pub. at $ .75. *Sales $1.98*
20. The Civil War—ROAD TO MANASAS. By R. H. Beattie, Jr. Absorbing narrative of the strategy, tactics, leading personalities of the Union forces, learning from experience of Fort Sumter, the end of the Battle of Bull Run. Illus. Orig. $3.95 Sale $1.98
21. American Pioneer--ELISHA KENT KANE AND THE SEAFARING FRONTIER. By Jeannette Mirsky. From 1850 to 1857 this naval physician-turned-expert led the first credible exploits in the uncharted Arctic. Here, in a fine blend of biography and hair-raising adventure story, Kane is shown as the embodiment, in heart, and outlook, of the American society its time. Sale $1.98 Fub. at $3.75
22. Muller's ENGLISH-GERMAN DICTIONARY with German-English crossword international phonetic pronunciations 600 pages, cloth binding ... Only $1.98
23. Forbidden Rites—SECRETS OF THE CUNA EARTH MOTHER. By Prof. Clyde E. Keeler Describes primitive traditions, sacred practices and sex rituals of the Cunaji People who never before revealed to a white man. Illus. $6.00. Sale $1.98
Books At $2.98
24. THE FORGOTTEN PEOPLE. By Seymour Freidlin. Top correspondent's eye-witness account of the fate of 100 million Europeans under Soviet imperialism, from the fall of Berlin through the rise of Hitler in 1961. Country-by-country analysis, present trends and future hopes. Photos. Pub. at $5.95 Sale $2.98
25. FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT. By Finis Farr. First full-length biography of the American and world architecture. Countless anecdotes reveal the master's personality and his philosophy of life and art. 46 illustrations. Sale $2.98 Pub. at b. $5.95
26. NATURE AND MAN'S FATE. By Garrett Hardin. Here, in vivid, dramatic terms, a distinguished biologist explores the crucial social, political and ethical problems of our time in light of humanity's creation, solution and heredity. Illus. "A triumph extraordinarily well-written" — Ashley Montagu. Pub. at $6.00. Sale $2.98
27. THE MILITARY LEGACY OF THE CIVIL WAR. By Jay Luvaas. Fascinating account of what European observers or Civil War officers experienced and learned from its success as warfare warfare and European military theory. Illus. Pub. at $5.95 . Sale $2.98
28. THE ULTIMATE DECISION: The President as Commander in Chief, ed. by Ernest B. May, Six outstanding hispanic leaders, Cunliffe, and W. E. Emerson, provide the essential background on the most potentially dangerous power in the war against the seven wartime Presidents; from the War of 1812 to the Korean War (and by Eisenhower in the U-2 incident) is complex political, military and technical implications for war or peace in the '60's. Pub. at $6.00. Sale $2.98
29. THE GODS OF PREHISTORIC
MAN, by Johannes Maringer. Incredibly rich and engrossing picture of a prehistoric Stone Age man. Hunting rites, the bear cult, reindeer worship, cult of the mother goddess, ancestor and spirit worship, craftsmanship and early palacial times to the threshold of history, are vividly described from the artistic and archaeological evi-
ness illustrated. Pub. at $7.75. Sale $2.98
30. PHYSICS IN THE SOVIET UNION,
by A. S. KOMANAYAN. An exposition of
—electrodynamics, quantum mechanics,
statistical physics, etc.—as taught
by physics students and physicists
graduate levels in Russia today. 59 pp.
Pub. at $7.50 Sale $2.98
OTHER BOOK AND PRINT VALUES AT
Tuesday, March 31, 1964 University Daily Kansan
APRIL FOOL PRANK ON CAMPUS!
BOOKS AND PRINTS
Books At $2.98
31. WORLDS BEYOND THE HORIZON.
By Joachim C. Leithauser. The great discoveries and adventures of Columbus, Vespucio, da Cama, Magellan, Magenel, Descartes, da Calahain, Stanley, Peary, Byrd, others. Illus.
Pub. at $6.75
Sale $2.98
32. THE SATURDAY REVIEW GALLERY. From the pages of America's leading cultural magazine—the best, the most significant, the most enjoyable book ever published—is Faulkner. Joyce, Churchill, it also is recalled by such literary lights as Santayaana. Thurber, Ford, others. Pub. at $6.00 $ Sale $2.98
33. THE DESTRUCTION OF LORD RAGLAN. By Christopher Hibbert. Winner of the Heinmann Award for historical novel "Land and Sea" by the History of "The Charge of the Light Brigade" and the horrors of Sebastopol—and the paradox of the brilliant general who, with his police and shame of his government's political blunders. Illus. "The Crime War never been more convincingly described." —London Times. $29.90
Orig. $6.50 Sale $2.98
34. ROGER CASEMENT—Irish Pat'of, English Traitor, by Rene MacColl. Absurd, tragic, and spectacular, the controversial figure struggles for Irish indifference—the man England knighted for his African heritage in 1916. Deals intensively with the infamous "Black Diaries" and the question of *Cassement* its homosexuality, and reexamines its significance in the light of new evidence. Pub. at $5.00. Sale $2.98
35. BRANWELL BRONTE, by Winifred Gerny. Hypnotic biography of the adored brother of the Bronte sisters, who displayed fabulous talons as a child, and was an astounding man. A brilliant picture of the Bronte household and its famous women, and of a man whose feverish dreams lbd aim only to drink, opium, and dispair. The distrunt idol of "Wuthering Heights." 32 sales of Pub. at $7.50. Sales @ $9.99.
Books At $3.98 And Up
36. SCIENCE AND SENSIBILITY, by James R. Newman. Two-volume collection and civilization, by the distinguished American scholar. Searching biographies of eminent thinkers from Bacon to Keynes, showing how great men change our world. Plus a wide range of essays, full of scientific and human insight, on technology, politics etc. plus 2 vols. boxed. Pub at $10.00. Sale $9.98 the set
37. Modern Chess Theory — INDIAN SYSTEMS, by Ludek Pachman, International Grandmaster. An exhaustive, up-to-date survey of some of the most important openings of the modern game and exotic that they were dubbed "Indian." Detailed analyses and evaluations of positions in the Nimzovitch Tribe, Indian Catalan Tribe, Attack Balai, Balai Tribe, every other rel d system and variation. 293 diagrammed games—a goldmine for the serious player. Only $3.98
38. PAUL RAND: His Work from 1946 to 1958, ed. by Y. Kamckura. Wit and intelligence, a unique economy of means, the highest level of creative imagination; these are the hallmarks of his work and immediately illustrated graphic art. Here is a dazzling display of his work, from book jackets to large-scale ad campaigns, that will delight the eye and the mind with their original symbolism and sheer inspiration. Over $1 million in color), text and captions, *10 x 91", Pub. at $13.50 Sale $3.98
Sale $3.98
39. PAUL KLEE—His Life and Work, by Felix Klee. An intimate portrait, by its own unpublished drawing upon Klee's own published work, including 162 excellent reproductions of his paintings, drawings and documents, in addition to the fascinating biographical works of Klee (wholesome human being), there is a full thematic study of Klee's ichography and three appendices listing and describing every entire oeuvre. Pub. at $7.50. Sale $4.99.
40. TOWARD MODERN SCIENCE. Ed. by R. M. Paltar. A two-volume collection of the Western scientific tradition. Studies in Egyptian mathematics, Greek science biology, etc., etc. Contributors include, Singer, Sarton, Sington. Sir Chosus, Dan, Duthem, Castiglioni, many dissertations on modern Orig. $9.00 Sale $3.98 the set
41. EGYPTIAN ART, by Boris de Rachewitz. A lucidly-written, hand-
made work of great artistry and life and ideas that produced Egyptian
painting, sculpture and architecture. 102 color,
display the best classical items, uncovered by the latest archaeological
research, including pottery, woodcarvery,
Bach's work and beyond.
Pub. at $6.95. Sale $3.98
42. WILLIAM BYRD OF VIRGINIA:
The London Diary and Other Writings.
Ed. by L. B. Wright. Rakish, ribald details of Byrd's daily rounds of taverns,
gaming houses and brothels, 1717 to
1765. Unkness and historical
fascination of Peepers and Boswell
—and then some. 647 pages.
Pub. at $10.00. Sale $3.98
43. A HISTORY OF INDIA. By Michael Edwardas, Absorbing, comprehensive civilizations, spanning 5,000 years of grandeur, decadence and re-birth. With 75 magnificent photographic illustrations of life and art. Sale $3.98
Pub: at $7.50
4. PICASCO AS A BOOK ARTIST. By A. Horodisch. Comprehensive study of design and art, construction and design. 70 magnificent etchings, line-blocks, woodcuts, lithographs illustrated limited editions. $75. Picasco illustrated limited editions. $75. Pub. at $6.50 Sale $3.98
45. RENOIR: His Life and Work. By
Francois Fosea. A definitive biography of the man and his artistic achievement, set against the background of the Impressionist movement. Illustrated 43. $19.50 splendid reproductions of Renoir's painting drawings and sculpture, 69 in full color.
$6.95 Sale $3.98
46. THE REALM OF THE GREAT GODDESS. By Sibylle von Cles-Reden. Who were the mysterious megalith builders of Stonehene, Carnac, Malta and Sardinia? Here is a brilliant reconstruction of the world of pagan, pre- ancient man—his beliefs, superstitions, cults, tombs and fortifications in stone. Over 200 remarkable photo-illustrations and drawings. Pub. at $10.00 ... Sale $3.98
Orig. pub. at $12.50 ... Only $4.95
47. GUNS OF THE OLD WEST. By C. E. Chapel. Here are the American firearms that opened the frontier and conquered the West. Tells exactly what guns were used, when, where, how and where they were used in the freaks and one-of-a-kind guns as well as the standbys. Over 500 photos and scale drawings.
Portfolios of Color Prints
**91. VAN GOGH MASTEPIECES.**
Color reproductions of "Sunflower-
Camp," other masterpieces. **x1'14**.
Pub. at $6 . 8 color prints now $1
48. PARIS STREET SCENES. Paintings of sidewalk caties, kiosks, boutique of the real Paris. 10 x 14. Pub. at $3.00. 6 color prints now $1
50. MOTHER GOOSE NURSERY PICTURES, by Leonard Weigand, Series A, Little Bo Peep, Old Mother Hubbard, Three Little Kittens, Peter Peter Pumpkin Eater, Ride a Cock with the Lions, and Tails, these favorites as captured by the noted children's illustrator. 13"×16" Special set of 6 $1
51. HORSES, by Savitt. Stunning portraits, charming mare and colt skins, whimsical scenes—all captured with stucco decorative effect. These rank among the finest equistretch paintings of the 19th century. Pub. at $8. Set of 8 now $198
52. FREDERIC REMINGTON'S "BUCKSKINS." Stirring paintings by the greatest artist of the Old West, a master painter in war paint, Colorful, decorative, perfect for office, den and playroom. 13"x17". 07/30/98. $9.99.
Pub. at $7.50 .. Set of 8—now $2.98
53. HARBOR SCENES—Marine Watercolors by Henry Casser, Fishing boats, inland coves and harbor homes, surf, sand and rock—in magnificent colors. 14 "x11". Pub. at $4.. 4 color prints—now $1
54. VIEWS OF ROME by Piranesi.
Beautiful engravings of colonades,
sculptures, etc. Extremely
decorative. 19 'x13'$¹.
Pub. at $4 . . . Set of 6—now $1.98
55. BRONCO BUSTERS, by Frederic Remington. Wild horses and masterful bronco-busters of the raw frontier. $14 \times 19^{\prime}$.
Pub. at $3 ... Set of 2—now $1
56. CATS AND KITTENES, Lovable Persians and Siamese in full color.
12" x16".
Pub. at $7.50 . Set of 8—now $1.98
57. CHINESE WATERCOLORS. The Famous Tung Lai-Chen paintings of Oriental fruits, flowers and birds. 6 color prints vividly reproduced in watercolors with backgrounds. 11" x15". Price at $15.00. Set of 6 Color prints — now $2.98
58. CURRIER AND IVES PRINTS.
A superb selection of favorite
Americana, faithfully reproduced.
Paint at $4. 6 color prints, new $1
Pub. at $4 ... 6 color prints—now $1
DEGAS DANCERS & BALLET SCENES. Eight fine color reproductions of the master's best-loved paints, including obey favorites "The Dancing Class," "Religious" and "Dancer with Bouquet," 11"x14".
Pub. at $3.50 .. Set of 8—now $1.98
kansas UNION BOOKSTORE
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 31, 1964
(SAVE THIS CENTER PAGE FOR YOUR
The Dollars and Sense of
Now, only $263.90 roundtrip from New York to Shannon, Ireland on the new Excursion Fare . . . and relatively new low fares available to all other cities in Europe.
Starting April 1st, jet air fares to Europe go down in price. The new jet fares, offered by the transatlantic airlines belonging to the International Air Transport Association (IATA) which includes all the major flag
carriers, make sense in two ways. In dollars, the new fares save you money and encourage more Americans to visit Europe, and more Europeans to visit the U.S.A. In variety, the new fares give you several choices so that you can find the fare that's fairest for you. Look them over. Pick one out. And plan to go to Europe this year. Air reservations and tickets may be secured at Maupintour Travel Service at The Malls Shopping Center.
Maupita
travel
famous
SAS S
France
ECONOMY-CLASS OFF SEASON FARES
21 DAY EXCU
EASTBOUND
APRIL
S M T W T F S 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
MAY
S M T W T F S 1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21
JUNE
S M T W T F S 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
APRIL
S M T W T F S 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
MAY
S M T W T F S 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
JUNE
S M T W T F S 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
JULY
S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31
SEPTEMBER
S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16
JULY
S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16
AUGUST
S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16
SEPTEMBER
S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16
29 30
OCTOBER
S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4
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
NOVEMBER
S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30
DECEMBER
S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4
6 7 8 9 10 11
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
OCTOBER
S M T W T F S 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
NOVEMBER
S M T W T F S 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
DECEMBER
S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4
6 7 8 9 10 11
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31
ECONOMY-CLASS OFF SEASON FARES now stretch into May and begin again in early August for your Eastbound going flights and are through half of July and begin again in late September for your Westbound return flights. See date chart above. You can take advantage of the lower Economy-Class Off Season fares on any date shown in the above calendar, but not on days where no date appears. These low fares have been reduced about $100 roundtrip between New York and most European destinations. During the period for which no date appears on the calendar above, you can still travel Economy-Class at the slightly higher Economy-Class On Season (or referred to sometimes as the Peak Season) fares. Examples of the Off Season and On Season fares are shown below. In the peak season, the Economy-Class fares have been reduced about $15 roundtrip under the fares in existence prior to April 1st. When you travel during both seasons, Economy Class, a combination of the Off Season and On Season fares will apply. Example: Jet to Europe on June 20th (On Season) and return on July 16th (Off Season), your air fare will be half of the roundtrip On Season and half of the roundtrip Off Season fares for your destination point. A variety of stop overs are permitted, too, en route to your destination city and upon your return. And, your ticket is good for one whole year. Jet travel to Europe is cheaper now than ever before! Apply soon to Maupintour for your first choice of departure and return dates.
These round-trip jet fares permit you to travel to Europe on any date shown in the calendar to the right, but not on days where no date appears. You may return from Europe 14 days after you leave (but not before) the U.S.A., but not later than 21 days after you commence your trip. Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays are not authorized as Excursion Fare travel days in either direction. You must travel Eastbound across the Atlantic (and return across the Atlantic) on Mon d ays, T ues d ays, Wednesdays, or Thursdays. This Excursion Fare permits you a full 21 days in Europe plus your day of travel from the USA and can save you as much as $184.-50 over the peak season regular Economy fare. Stopover privileges en route to your destination city and upon your return are permitted . . . and there are oftentimes a variety of cities you can visit all for the same fare of your destination city. The Excursion Fare is the greatest bargain, unprecedented, in jet travel today. You do not have to belong to a group to take advantage of the Excursion Fare. Get together with your friends, or travel by yourself, for a three week vacation in Europe this year. Apply early to Maupintour for your first choice of dates.
APRIL
S M T W T F S
1 2
6 7 8 9
13 14 15 16
20 21 22 23
27 28 29 30
JULY
S M T W T F S
13 14 15 16
20 21 22 23
27 28 29 30
OCTOBER
S M T W T F S
1
5 6 7 8
12 13 14 15
19 20 21 22
26 27 28 29
OCTOBER
S M T W T F S
1
5 6 7 8
12 13 14 15
19 20 21 22
26 27 28 29
All Fares In U.S. Dollars SAMPLE LOW FARES TO EUROPE AND THE MIDDLE
| Between NEW YORK and | First Class Jet Round Trip | Economy Off Season Round Trip | Economy On Season Round Trip | 21-Day Economy Excursion Round Trip | Jet Economy Affinity Group Round Trip | | AMSTERDAM | 754.30 | 440.80 | 526.30 | 341.80 | 356.00 | | ANKARA | 1138.10 | 722.00 | 807.50 | 623.00 | 537.00 | | ATHENS | 1087.80 | 690.90 | 776.40 | 591.90 | 516.00 | | BARCELONA | 783.80 | 465.40 | 550.90 | 366.40 | 372.00 | | BASLE | 792.30 | 478.80 | 564.30 | 379.80 | 380.00 | | BEIRUT | 1285.60 | 798.00 | 883.50 | 699.00 | 616.00 | | BELGRADE | 945.90 | 592.30 | 677.80 | 493.30 | 453.00 | | BERLIN | 829.40 | 510.00 | 595.50 | 411.00 | 400.00 | | BERNE | 792.30 | 478.80 | 564.30 | 379.80 | 380.00 | | BRUSSELS | 754.30 | 440.80 | 526.30 | 341.80 | 356.00 | | CAIRO | 1285.60 | 798.00 | 883.50 | 699.00 | 616.00 | | COLOGNE/BONN | 792.30 | 478.80 | 564.30 | 379.80 | 380.00 | | COPENHAGEN | 792.30 | 478.80 | 564.30 | 379.80 | 380.00 | | DAMASCUS | 1285.60 | 798.00 | 883.50 | 699.00 | 616.00 | | DUBLIN | 675.30 | 369.40 | 454.90 | 277.00 | 310.00 | | DUSSELDORF | 792.30 | 478.80 | 564.30 | 379.80 | 380.00 | | FRANKFURT | 792.30 | 478.80 | 564.30 | 379.80 | 380.00 | | GENEVA | 792.30 | 478.80 | 564.30 | 379.80 | 380.00 | | GLASGOW | 676.40 | 370.50 | 456.00 | 271.50 | 311.00 | | HAMBURG | 792.30 | 478.80 | 564.30 | 379.80 | 380.00 | | HELSINKI | 922.50 | 579.50 | 665.00 | 480.50 | 445.00 | | INNSBRUCK | 816.30 | 498.40 | 583.90 | 399.40 | 393.00 |
There are many bargains in travel and accommodations still available in Europe. But hurry! Don't be last and take third or fourth choice! For example, the EURAILPASS grants you unlimited rail travel throughout the whole of the Continent of Western Europe from Sweden to Portugal and the tip of Italy and the cost is low. EURAILPASS is available only for purchase in the U.S.A. in advance of your departure for Europe. The EURAILPASS is available from Maupintour at The Malls. Be sure to purchase an EURAILPASS if you are going to be doing any cross-country travel on the Continent. It will save you money. Ask Maupintour for the EURAILPASS free folder for complete information.
VOLKSWAGEN sedge convertible station
VOLKSWAGEN sedans, convertibles, station wagons, and other models are available for purchase at reduced prices in Europe if you make your purchase from Maupintour before you depart U.S.A. Delivery can be arranged at most European cities and you will be amazed about how much money you can save. You can either have your car shipped home or can sell your car in Europe before you return home. Drive-Now Pay Later financing available, too. And, Maupintour can arrange for your purchase of many other different makes of cars for delivery in Europe. Want to rent a car in Europe? Maupintour can easily arrange this, too.
SEE EUROPE FOR $5 A DAY! Hotel accommodations, breakfast and get-acquainted sightseeing excursions can all be included for as little as $5 a day with arrangements prepaid
Between
NEW YORK and
First Class Jet
Round Trip
Economy Off Season
Round Trip
Economy
Roll
ISTANBUL
1134.20
716.30
8
LISBON
712.50
399.00
4
LONDON
712.50
399.00
4
MADRID
754.30
440.80
5
MANCHESTER
699.20
385.70
4
MILAN
843.60
503.50
5
MOSCOW
1109.50
730.00
8
MUNICH
799.90
486.40
5
NICE
837.90
503.50
5
PALMA
784.20
470.70
5
PARIS
754.30
440.80
5
PRAGUE
851.80
526.30
6
ROME
890.60
544.40
6
SHANNON
657.40
362.90
4
SOFIA
1018.60
642.60
7
STOCKHOLM
849.90
536.40
6
STUTTGART
792.30
478.80
5
TEHERAN
1443.70
946.20
10
TEL AVIV
1285.60
798.00
8
VIENNA
851.80
526.30
6
WARSAW
949.30
592.80
6
ZAGREB
880.30
547.60
6
ZURICH
792.30
478.80
5
and definitely confirmed to you in advance. Be an "expected" guest each night instead of spending wasteful and frustrating hours trying to find a suitable and an economical place to stay after arrival in each city. Ask for Maupintour's folder, "Europe On $5 A Day." (We have a $10 a day program, too, for those who want standard class hotels with private baths.) CAMPING arrangements? Did you know there are several different, and very economical, Camping programs which you can take advantage of while holidaying in Europe? There are established Camping services close by every major city, resort, and scenic area in Europe. And, the facilities are good, comfortable, and a real way to meet and know the people. Ask for Maupintour's folder, "Camping in Europe."
EXCORTER TOURS. One of the best ways to insure your enjoyment of Europe, to understand the historical, contemporary and cultural attractions of Europe, and to meet people of interest, to participate in a well directed and programmed Escorted Tour. You will see far more, do far more, and meet many more interesting people, and have a much more exciting and memorable experience as a member of a good Escorted Tour. . . . and you will not have the worries and wasteful, frustrating hours of attempting to discover by accident what is most noteworthy and enjoyable to see. What is best, all of your hotels, guided excursions, special events, parties, meals, transfers, luggage handling are included in one price and taken care of for you. This permits 100% of your time to be free to see and learn
about Europe and to enchores of foreign travel have an experienced parents will be more a know that students we Visit Maupintout's offer programs now available are a number of stu- available.
YACHTING through t Switzerland? A cruise Spain, the music festiv up on your language, France? . . whatever at Maupintour.
AGE FOR YOUR FUTURE REFERENCE)
Tuesday, March 31, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
of the New Low Air Fares
money is to that out. y be
Maupintour Travel Service at The Malls Shopping Center is an authorized travel agent for all the world's airlines including, to name a few, such famous carriers as TWA, Pan Am, Sabena Belgian World Airlines, BOAC, SAS Scandinavian Airlines, Irish International Airlines, Iberia, El Al, Air France, Alitalia, KLM Royal Dutch Airlines, Lufthansa, Swissair, Trans-
Canada, Panagra, Braniff, United Airlines, American, Northwest Orient Airlines, Varig, Aeroflot, LOT, Olympic, Thai International, Japan Air Lines, Icelandic, and many, many more. For up-to-date flight schedule and fare information, and for reservations and tickets, apply to Maupintour Travel Service, The Malls, phone Viking 3-1211.
Y EXCURSION FARES
EASTBOUND
APRIL
M T W T F S
1 1 2
6 7 8 9
13 14 15 16
20 21 22 23
27 28 29 30
MAY
S M T W T F S
4 5 6 7
11 12 13 14
18 19 20 21
25 26 27 28
JUNE
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4
8 9 10 11
JULY
S T W T F S
3 4 5 6
13 14 15 16
20 21 22 23
27 28 29 30
AUGUST
S M T W T F S
3 4 5 6
31
SEPTEMBER
S M T W T F S
1 2 3
7 8 9 10
14 15 16 17
21 22 23 24
28 29 30
OCTOBER
S T W T F S
1
5 6 7 8
12 13 14 15
19 20 21 22
26 27 28 29
NOVEMBER
S M T W T F S
2 3 4 5
DECEMBER
S M T W T F S
MIDDLE EAST
Day Off Season Round Trip Economy On Season Round Trip 21-Day Economy Excursion Round Trip Jet Economy Affinity Gp. Rd-Trip 16.30 801.80 617.30 532.00 99.00 484.50 300.00 325.00 99.00 484.50 300.00 325.00 40.80 526.30 341.80 356.00 85.70 471.20 286.70 320.00 103.50 589.00 404.50 396.00 100.00 815.50 631.00 545.00 106.40 571.90 387.40 385
about Europe and to enjoy yourself without being endlessly burdened with the time wasting chores of foreign travel. You will be with people of your own age and interest, and will have an experienced and knowledgeable Travel Director accompanying your party. (Many parents will be more at ease, and more agreeable to financing a summer abroad, when they know that students will be with a group assisted by a competent and responsible leader.) Visit Maupintour's office at The Mallis to look over the variety of excellent Escorted Tour programs now available for the student (and for the adult) to Europe this summer. There are a number of study tours, language tours, and professional interest tour programs available.
FACHTING through the Greek Isles of the Aegean? A leisurely boat trip up the Rhine to Switzerland? A cruise down the Danube from Vienna to the Black Sea? Lapland, southern Spain, the music festivals, the North Cape, a week in a Castle, living with a family to brush up on your language, or a Summer Session at a University in Spain, Austria, Italy, or France? . . . whatever is your bent in travel abroad this year, you can find the information at Maupintour.
NORTH AMERICA-ISRAEL GROUP FARES
At the now well-known roundtrip fare from New York of only $535, you can jet to Israel and then you can stop over in Europe at one stop-over city, such as Zurich, right in the heart of Europe. And we assemble the group of 40 passengers that you travel with. You don't have to worry, in this specific instance, of getting together with your own affinity group. This is the only exception to the "Group Fare" rule. Choose your departure to Israel from this chart or apply to Maupintour for additional departures with a selection of other one stop over cities:
| Leave New York | Arrive Tel Aviv | Number of days in Israel | Arrive Zurich | Number of days in Europe | Return New York | | | | APRIL 6 | 13 | APRIL 19 | | APRIL 12 | APRIL 13 | 11 | APRIL 24 | 16 | MAY 10 | | APRIL 26 | APRIL 27 | 11 | MAY 8 | 16 | MAY 24 | | MAY 10 | MAY 11 | 11 | MAY 22 | 16 | JUNE 7 | | MAY 24 | MAY 25 | 11 | JUNE 5 | 16 | JUNE 21 | | MAY 31 | JUNE 1 | 11 | JUNE 12 | 16 | JUNE 28 | | JUNE 6 | JUNE 7 | 12 | JUNE 19 | 21 | JULY 10 | | JUNE 13 | JUNE 14 | 12 | JUNE 26 | 21 | JULY 17 | | JUNE 21 | JUNE 22 | 11 | JULY 3 | 21 | JULY 24 | | JUNE 27 | JUNE 28 | 12 | JULY 10 | 21 | JULY 31 | | JUNE 28 | JUNE 29 | 15 | JULY 14 | 40 | AUGUST 23 | | JULY 4 | JULY 5 | 12 | JULY 17 | 21 | AUGUST 7 | | JULY 5 | JULY 6 | 15 | JULY 21 | 40 | AUGUST 30 | | JULY 11 | JULY 12 | 12 | JULY 24 | 21 | AUGUST 14 | | JULY 18 | JULY 19 | 12 | JULY 31 | 21 | AUGUST 21 | | JULY 25 | JULY 26 | 12 | AUGUST 7 | 20 | AUGUST 27 |
FIRST-CLASS FARES, round-trip, have been reduced $190.00 between New York and European destinations. Now you can savor the privacy and the touch of elegance of first-class jet travel for just a little more than you used to pay for economy-class!
EASTBOUND
JUNE
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4
8 9 10 11
15 16 17 18
22 23 24 25
JULY
S M T W T F S
13 14 15 16
20 21 22 23
27 28 29 30
AUGUST
S M T W T F S
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
SEPTEMBER
S M T W T F S
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
EASTBOUND
JUNE
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4
8 9 10 11
15 16 17 18
22 23 24 25
JULY
S M T W T F S
13 14 15 16
20 21 22 23
27 28 29 30
AUGUST
S M T W T F S
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
SEPTEMBER
S M T W T F S
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
WESTBOUND
JUNE
S M T W T F S
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
JULY
S M T W T F S
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
AUGUST
S M T W T F S
3 4 5 6
10 11 12 13
17 18 19 20
SEPTEMBER
S M T W T F S
7 8 9 10
14 15 16 17
21 22 23 24
28 29 30
WESTBOUND
JUNE
S M T W T F S
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
JULY
S M T W T F S
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
AUGUST
S M T W T F S
3 4 5 6
10 11 12 13
17 18 19 20
SEPTEMBER
S M T W T F S
7 8 9 10
14 15 16 17
21 22 23 24
28 29 30
SPECIAL GROUP FARES
Perhaps of most interest to you are the new low "Group Fares." These special jet transportation bargains are available to members, and accompanying immediate family, of an affinity group (such as members of a club, an organization, an association, an educational institution, etc.; local, regional, or national). For example, members of a fraternal or organized residence hall group, or of a social service or religious or professional body, whether participants would be drawn from the campus only or from all the members of the national organization throughout the USA, are eligible for the low Group Fares. Date of transatlantic travel, Eastbound and Westbound (the going and returning flight legs) must originate on the dates shown in the adjoining calendar, and the party must be a minimum of 25 persons drawn from the affinity group, and their accompanying immediate family.
Members of an affinity body can get together on their own and organize their own party of 25 or more persons from within their organization or educational institution and, in so far as the air fare rules are concerned, it is not required for such self-organized affinity "Group Fare" parties to be officially sponsored activities of their organization. This is not charter transportation but travel by the regular scheduled jet aircraft of the international flag carriers such as TWA, Pan Am, Sabena, BOAC, KLM, SAS, etc.
For information about two special KU affinity groups departing June 16th and June 17th by jet for Europe at the new Group Fares (as low as $320 to $356 roundtrip from New York), available to all KU students, faculty, and accompanying family, please apply immediately to Prof. E. E. Harris, Rm. 106, Strong Hall, ph. UN 4-3976,
FOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS, SEE
MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE
The Malls Shopping Center
Phone VIiking 3-1211
8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Weekdays — Until 12:00 Noon on Saturdays
Page 10 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 31, 1964
Bus Trips Cancelled For Lack of Interest
The Student Union Activities travel committee has cancelled all bus trips for the spring vacation.
Bob Enberg, McPherson junior
Student Faces Grand Larceny
George W, Porter II, Leawood sorhomore, has been charged with grand larceny in connection with a theft Saturday morning of more than $650 from his fraternity house.
Porter admitted taking the cash and checks from the office of the president of the Phi Kappa Theta fraternity and then hiding the money and burning the cheeks, according to Sheriff Fred Brocker and Undersheriff Rex Johnson, when they apprehended Porter.
The money was hidden in the Santa Fe railroad depot in Lawrence and has been recovered.
PORTER IS now free on $1,500 bond and will be arraigned at 10 a.m. Friday in County Court by Judge C. C. Rankin. Porter was arrested Saturday afternoon after being followed six miles northwest of Lawrence near Lakeview by Broeker, Johnson, and Jim Collins, assistant police chief. He was attempting to recover the safe he had discarded on the side of the road when he was apprehended by the police.
Collins said Porter admitted taking the metal strong box of cash and checks. He told Collins he returned from Kansas City about 6 a.m. Saturday and entered the Phi Kappa Theta fraternity.
After taking the money Porter told Collins he took the box and drove to Lakeview, opened the box, removed the money and burned the cheeks. He then took the money to the Santa Fe station and locked it in a locker, Collins said.
Porter told Collins he took the money to finance a trip to Mexico.
and president of SUA, said the reason for calling off the buses to New York, New Orleans and San Francisco was lack of interest.
He said there were too few people interested and the buses were not chartered.
Enberg said the people who had originally signed up for the trip had obviously "found other ways" of getting home.
The original plan for the trips was for students to sign a list in the SUA office indicating an interest in going on one of the busses. The next week a down payment was to be paid in the office and last Friday the remainder of the fair was to be paid
On Friday 11 people had cancelled the New York trip and only 3 people were interested in going on the bus to San Francisco.
Enberg said the travel committee plans to set up the trips again next year for Christmas, Thanksgiving and Spring vacations. He said the only reasons for the cancellations was the lack of student interest.
Wednesday at 3:30 p.m. in the Forum room of the Kansas Union, professor of psychology Roger Barker will discuss the results of a study of English and American children that he began ten years ago and recently completed.
Prof. Barker traveled to Layburn, Yorkshire, England, ten years ago to gather data on the children there in a "growing up" situation, Sally Brackett, Hinsdale, Ill. senior and president of the undergraduate psychology club said. The club will sponsor the lecture.
Prof. Barker's study was made in conjunction with the Midwestern Psychological Field Station in Oskaloosa, of which he is currently director.
Child Study to be Discussed
Last fall Prof. Barker returned to Layburn to gather new data to compare with data recently gathered in Oskalosa.
Prof. Barker will discuss the results of this "study across cultures and intervals of time," Prof. Herbert Wright, head of the department of psychology, said.
"The program will not be so technical that those not in psychology can't understand it," Miss Brackett said.
"The study was conducted with children from five years of age, through high school," she explained. "An attempt was made to determine what forces from their environment work on them to cause them to develop as they do," she said.
PALISADE, N.J.—(UPI)—Richard Schiess, 23, who doesn't even have a car driver's license, takes a ship-load of 32 passengers at a time, more than 200 times a day, on a flight to the moon and back.
ARE YOU FOR "C. L."? Carl Lindquist IS
Schieh this spring will begin his fifth year as chief pilot of the Space Rocket at Palisades Amusement Park, where the two-minute round trip "unar flight" originates.
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temperament, and location (rural or urban). Miss Brackett said.
Marks Jewelers 817 Mass.
"How children grow up, and the forces that act on them are the primary studies carried on by the station," Miss Brackett said.
Professor Barker was head of the KU psychology department from 1932-47, and during that time, he and Prof. Wright established the Midwest Psychological Field Station at Oskaloosa.
The station is unique, in that it is the only one of its kind in the nation. Miss Brackett said.
O18
GROWTH
RESPONSIBILITY
VOX
MARK YOUR CALENDAR NOW!
KANSAS RELAYS
DANCE Music By THE FABULOUS FLIPPERS
Theme this year - "KU TO TOKYO"
APRIL 18
Admission - $1.50 per couple
8:30 - 11:30
LBJ's 'Better Deal' Slogan Only Latest in Long Series
Tuesday, March 31, 1964 University Daily Kansan I
Rv Alvin Snivak
WASHINGTON —(UPI) — Back-stairs at the White House; While President Johnson's aides hesitate to comment about his campaign slogan for this year, Democratic headquarters has made it practically official.
The "Better Deal" slogan came to the surface relatively unobtrusively two Sundays ago when Johnson, interviewed for television, was asked if any "handy label" had come to mind for his new administration.
"LBJ Goal: 'Better Deal'" was the main headline in the latest edition of the party's official publication. "Democrat."
"I haven't thought of any slogan," the President replied and then added with a trace of a grin "but I suppose all of us want a better deal, don't we?"
TWO NIGHTS later, in a political speech at a Democratic fund raising dinner here, Johnson used the "Better Deal" slogan twice, in passing.
The questioner had recalled that preceding administrations flourished the labels of a New Deal, Fair Deal, Great Crusade, and New Frontier.
White House reporters asked the President's former press secretary, Pierre Salinger and his new one, George E. Reedy, whether this was significant. Neither would say. Reedy, as press secretaries so often
do, told reporters Johnson's words spoke for themselves.
But what with Johnson's announced war on poverty, the tax cut, his civil rights battle and other administration programs which he has insisted would improve the lot of Americans, the odds are he will be talking about a "Better Deal" from now on.
Whether Johnson himself, in that televised interview, or whether one of his aides coined the slogan probably will remain confidential until long after the President leaves office.
Franklin D. Roosevelt's "New Deal" was born with as little fanfare as Johnson's "Better Deal."
JUDGE SAMUEL Roseman, an FDR braintrouter, put the words into a revised draft of Roosevelt's speech accepting the 1932 Democratic presidential nomination. Historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., in his "The Crisis of the Old Order," told about it this way:
"Rosenman, dogged perhaps by the title of Stewart Chase's article in the current New Republic ('A New Deal for America') but without noting any special significance (any more than Roosevelt did when he came to deliver the words), set down the sentence. 'I pledge you, I pledge myself, to a new deal for American people.'"
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University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 31. 1964
Mouse Named Write-in Candidate For Student Body President
By Jackie Helstrom
(Assistant Managing Editor)
A new candidate has entered the race for student body president. Mickey Mouse.
Mickey Mouse has little chance of getting elected, however, since none of his votes will be counted, Charles R. King Jr., Kansas City sophomore and elections chairman, said.
WHEN ASKED what would be done with the ballots, King said. "They will be voided."
A group of 13 KU men are conducting a poster campaign for Mickey Mouse as a third candidate for the office in an effort to give students, who feel campus politics serves no useful purpose, a chance to express themselves.
"We feel that the politics at KU serves no real purpose other than the egos of the candidates and that they become defunct between elections," said J. Warren Hildrith, Leawood sophomore, who is a member of the group.
HE SAID he and his friends had felt this way for a long time, but had done nothing about it until the other day when they saw large "Vote Mickey Mouse" painted on the sidewalks.
He said the Mickey Mouse pro-
A discussion of "Religion and Literature" will be presented tomorrow as part of a series of four lectures in a Religion and Life series sponsored by the School of Religion.
GLASS
Literature Discussion Set in Religion Series
portable tape recorder simplifies class work
THE POSTERS make the protest essentially like those of groups like the Civil Rights Co-ordinating Council when they picket. Hildith said
But he felt that if students would follow up this protest and back the write-in campaign, it would give the group an actual method of polling student opinion.
Hildrith said the posters they have been distributing to further the campaign are more than a protest against campus politics. Mickey Mouse supporters want students actually to
Franklyn Nelick, associate professor of English, will give the lecture at 7:00 p.m., Wednesday, in Myers Hall.
motors hoped this write-in campaign would force students to think of expressing their feelings rather than which of the two candidates they would vote for in spite of a feeling that it was "mickey-mouse."
write in Mickey Mouse on their ballots.
26
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Ralph Miller Named Coach At Iowa U.
Page 13
Miller will replace Coach Sharm Scheuerman who submitted his resignation to the Big Ten school after six years there. Scheuerman said he planned to enter private business.
Coach Ralph Miller of the University of Wichita and a former KU player, has been named head coach at the University of Iowa.
Coach Miller, a former player at KU, had earlier voiced an interest in a coaching job here. At the time of his expressed interest, KU's head coach's position was filled by Dick Harp, who resigned Thursday. Ted Owens, Harp's assistant here, was named head coach Friday, thus squelching speculation that Miller might come here.
"We are interested in having the best possible basketball team at Iowa and a coach of the highest quality is the first prerequisite."
Evashevski said Miller was the only candidate for the coaching position to be invited to the Iowa campus for interviews and was the only one to which the job had been offered.
While at KU as a player, Miller, a native of Chanute was named to the 1942 all-conference squad. At that time, KU was a member of the Big Six Conference.
"We believe," Evashevski said, "we are placing our basketball future in the hands of an outstanding coach. His teams play an exciting type of basketball which we believe will meet the hearty approval of Iowa fans.
Miller brought the Wheatshockers of Wichita to the peak of their basketball success. When he became coach there, the team was a consistent loser. After his first year there, the team became and stayed consistent winners.
IN NAMING MILLER to the Iowa post, Forest Evashevski, athletic director said:
The past season was Miller's finest year at Wichita. The 'Shockers finished the year with a 23-6 record, snagged a share of the Missouri Valley Conference title and earned a berth in the NCAA tournament.
Spring Football Practice Finally Gets Underway
Of the 73,19 were lettermen. Ten other lettermen who are expected back for the season were occupied with other events.
Spring football practice finally got underway yesterday with 73 men reporting to Coach Jack Mitchell and his staff.
Reserve center Jim Becker, alternate tackle Tommy Thompson and Guard Ron Marsh will not participate in spring practice.
First string guard Harley Catlain.
No. 1 quarterback Steve Renko and reserve tackle Jim Shanks were with Coach Floyd Temple's baseball team; tackle Brian Schweda, halfback Gayle Sayers, second string quarterback Dave Crandall and reserve halfback Floyd Buzzi were working out with the track team.
Becker is still troubled with a calcium deposit in his knee which knocked him out of action last year. Thompson is also out with knee trouble and Marsh is out recovering from plastic surgery which was performed on his face after he was involved in an auto accident last fall.
John Hadl, former KU quarterback and All-American, is assisting Coach Mitchell by working with the quarterbacks this spring.
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Tuesday, March 31, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Freedom from imperfections is the main factor in the value of a gem.
Stan The Man
Probably the chief reason for the value of a precious stone is its scarcity. For example, the Aquamarine, one of the alternate March birthstones, belongs to the same family as the emerald. It is equally beautiful and far more free of imperfections. But the rarer emeral is more costly.
ST. LOUIS — (UPI) — Stan (The Man) Musial, retired St. Louis Cardinal outfielder made exactly the same number of hits at home as he did on the road—1,815. Musial, in his 22-plus seasons in the National League ended his career in 1963 with a total of 19 major league records, 29 other National League marks and nine-allstar game standards.
Ray
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Page 14
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 31, 1964
STUDENTS FOR
STEWART - WHITAKER
S
In the interest of decent, progressive, responsible student government, we, the undersigned, consider it imperative that Bob Stewart and
Kaye Whitaker
be elected President and Vice-President of the Student Body at the University of Kansas.
↑
Frank "Bucky" Thompson
Frank Bucky Thompson Dave White Producer, 1964 Rock Chalk Revue Mike Milroy House Manager, 1964 Rock Chalk Revue Chuck Marvin President, International Club
Hume A. Mizra President, India Club
George Tannous ASC Representative
Cordell Meeks ASC Representative
Don Eversmeyer Past ASC Representative
John Seevers President, SNEA
President, Class of 1966
Bruce Hall Co-Chairman, Kansas Relays Committee
Jack Croughan
Virgil Young Vice-President, Joseph R. Pearson Hall
Tieie Rosenthal Templin Hall
Ernie Rosenthal
Past Vice-President, Interfraternity Council President Abdel Kader Riyadh
Wayne Rice Gary Gradinger
President, Alpha Kappa Psi
President of Owl Society and of Phi Gamma Delta.
Past President, Kappa Alpha Theta
一
Although this statement reflects our personal views only, we firmly believe that your support in this election can change the existing system of campus politics for the betterment of Student Government and the benefit of the Student Body of the University of Kansas.
Paid for by the STUDENTS for STEWART-WHITAKER COMMITTEE
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Page 15
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HELP WANTED
University Daily Kansan
Help wanted in Lawrence Memorial Hospital laboratory. Registered or non-registered lab technologists to take night care. Weekend work also available. Required. Contact Mr. Torres at VI 3-3680, Ext. 6 between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. weekdays. 4-15
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Page 16
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 31, 1964
Moscow, Peking Break Discounted
WASHINGTON — (UPI)—American authorities today discounted speculation that Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev might hold a summit meeting of Communist leaders to read the troublesome Chinese Reds out of the world body.
Despite the bitterness of Peking's latest attack on Khrushchev, most Soviet affairs experts here thought it unlikely the Russian leader would be lured into a formal break which might damage his position rather than improve it.
Khrushchev's current visit to Hungary, as well as the gathering of Communist leaders in Moscow April 17 to celebrate his 70th birthday, will be watched closely for some clues as to his intentions.
The Chinese Communist Party, in 30,000-word attack yesterday, called on Russians and other Communists to discard Khrushchev as their leader.
THE EXPECTATION IS that Khrushev will use both occasions to try to solidify support for his "peaceful coexistence" policy, which the militant Chinese Reds claim is nothing but "capitalization" to the capitalistic West.
Some analysts thought the Chinese Reds might be trying to goad Khrushchev into formally breaking relations, which Peking might exploit in its effort to gain leadership of the world Communist movement.
The majority opinion here, however, was that the wily Soviet leader would not fall into such a trap.
IT IS EXPECTED that Khrushchev will continue the ideological debate, counting on time and the trend of events to vindicate his position. It was difficult to see what he
could gain by forcing an open break in the international movement.
Some of the Red parties in backward nations, although still acknowledging Russia's leadership of world communism, are impressed by China's more extreme policy, which Peking contends is the only effective road to success.
NSF Funds Award KU Total of $44,200
In the event of a formal or final break between Moscow and Peking, some of them might well decide to cast their lot with Peking.
A total of $44,200 in research funds from the National Science Foundation has been awarded to KU faculty members for studies in physics, mathematics and geology.
Richard C. Sapp, associate professor of physics, has received a continuation grant of $27,400 for research on "Magnetism and Nuclear Orientation at Low Temperatures."
Prof. Sapp's research in nuclear alignment concerns analyzing methods by which radioactive nuclei in crystals, cooled magnetically to almost absolute zero, can be forced to line up parallel to each other. The goal is to obtain new information on the properties of nuclei.
Wakefield Dort, professor of geology, has received $4,800 to study the "Development and Distribution of Antarctic Cirques." A cirque is a
Prof. Dort hopes to determine, through the study of aerial photographs, more about the development of antarctic glaciers. The study may provide information about changes in the climate of the antarctic. Dr. Dort has done previous research in this field on the northern Rocky Mountains.
scoped out area in the high mountains which acts as a source of mountain glaciers.
Charles J. Himmelberg, assistant professor of mathematics, received
$3,200 for work on "Theory of Retracts." Prof. Himmelberg will do a theoretical study on characteristic properties of absolute retracts—abstract geometric configurations which have many of the properties of convex sets. They are the object of considerable study in the area of mathematics called topology.
George Springer, professor of mathematics, and S. M. Shah, visiting professor of mathematics received $8,800 for research on "Theory of Functions of a Complex Variable."
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SOPHOMORES:
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We, the undersigned members of the Class of '66, heartily endorse and strongly recommend that you
VOTE CLAY BLAIR
Junior Class President
Terry Arther Jill Newberg
Larry Bast Carol Nichols
Glen Barnard Jim Pitts
Beth Beamer Claudia Reeder
Lyn Berg Steve Renko
Kris Bergman Elaine Rinkel
Tom Eliott Tom Ruzicka
Bob Hansen George Tannous
Bill Henry Craig Twyman
Riney Lochman Mike Vineyard
Kay Lutjen Earle Wagner
Mike McPherson Bob Woody
---
THIS AD PAID FOR BY THE ABOVE MENTIONED MEMBERS OF THE CLASS OF '66 |