Chairman Says Voting Heavy
Dick King, Kansas City sophomore and elections committee chairman, said the voting has been particularly heavy for this early in the election.
The total number of votes at 11 am. this morning was 652. Voting is the heaviest at the two polls in Strong Hall where 416 votes have been cast. The vote is considerably weaker at the polls in the Kansas Union and Murphy Hall, with 113 and 123 votes cast, respectively.
Last spring election, the total vote at 11:30 a.m. was 825, with a total of 586 votes being cast in Strong Hall.
THE POLLS, which were scheduled to open at 8 a.m., opened around 8:30 this morning. King said that this was good because it usually runs about 9 a.m. on the opening day.
King said there are two candidates from the large women's residence halls district to replace Peggy
Conner, Sacramento. Calif. senior, who has been recalled.
The two candidates are Beverley Nicks, Detroit, Mich., junior, running on the Vox ticket, and Jean Borlaug, Sierra Guadarrama, Mexico, junior, running on the UP ticket
A petition, last week, to recall Miss Conner was ruled void by the chief justice of the Student Court, but a new petition, circulated by Marsha Dutton, Colby senior, was certified by the elections committee last night.
Miss Conner said she did not think she would appeal to the Student Court this time.
Total votes cast at 11 a.m. in the school districts are: college men, 246; college women, 179; engineering and architecture, 66; education, 82; fine arts, 37; journalism, 10; graduate, 17; pharmacy, 7; law, 19; business 28.
are; senior class, 18; junior class, 33
sophomore class, 34.
Total votes cast for class officers
Ten votes had been cast by 11 a.m. for the large women's residence halls seat.
King said the polls will close at 6:15 p.m. and will open at 8 a.m. tomorrow.
In addition to the election of student body and class officers, one proposed amendment to the ASC Constitution was being voted on today
The question is concerned with whether or not to count invalid ballots, during the fall elections, in determining the number of representatives from a living district.
Last autumn, invalid ballots were not counted, and some living districts lost a representative because of this.
The proposed change would count all ballots cast, both valid and invalid, toward determining the number of representatives.
Daily hansan
61st Year, No. 116
Wednesday, April 1, 1964
UP Introduces Platform; ASC Asks Rebate Trim
Bv Garv Noland
Twelve hours before the spring election even began, University Party members last night introduced their entire platform to the All Student Council.
Five pieces of legislation, containing five of the six planks in the UP platform, were automatically referred to the Committee on Committees and Legislation, and will be taken up at the next ASC meeting.
Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., junior and UP candidate for student body president, said afterwards:
"THIS IS THE first time in the history of a KU party that a platform has been proposed in its entirety before the election in which it was proposed."
"The fact that they were introduced tonight is unimportant." Tom Bornholdt, Topeka senior and Vox president, said. The criticism Vox has been voicing of the UP platform is still the same. Bornholdt said.
The sixth plank of UP's platform, which would establish a temporary library committee to work with the staff of Watson Library to bring up to date and improve the files of examinations and course material, was passed as a resolution.
The four proposed bills and a proposed amendment, if passed at the next meeting, would mean the establishment of an ASC student employment committee, a food committee, a committee evaluation board, and also the establishment of a freshman leadership program, and a student-teacher evaluation system. The function of these committees are outlined in the UP platform.
IN OTHER BUSINESS, the council approved a Union executive committee to reduce the Kansas Union Bookstore rebates to students from 8 to 5 per cent in order to make more loans available to KU students under an expanded National Defense Student Loan program.
The resolution was introduced by John Stuckey, Pittsburg senior and ASC chairman, who explained that the 3 per cent of bookstore rebates would be turned over to the University to help pay for loans which the University could borrow in order to be eligible for larger grants from the federal government.
Under the program, the federal government supplies $9 for every $1 supplied by the school, Stuckey explained.
THE 3 PER CENT of rebate funds would be used to repay loans for the
"The new limit for federal funds supplied annually to any participat ing school is $800,000." Stuckey said. "Available funds for the institutional portion of the program at KU are rapidly being exhausted."
purpose of financing the University's share — $88,889 — of the program, Stuckey said.
Once the repayment has been completed, the funds diverted from the 8 per cent of bookstore rebates can be returned again to the students, Stuckey said.
The resolution will be sent to the Kansas Union executive board for its consideration.
The council passed a resolution establishing a committee to investigate broadening the powers of the ASC.
The resolution was introduced by Bill Panning, Ellinwood junior, who suggested that the committee examine the ASC constitution and write to other schools to find ways the ASC can become more effective.
Also passed was a resolution, introduced by Walter Bgoya, Tanganika junior, to recommend that the Board of Regents either reconsider the recent action banning the sale of cigarettes on campus or prohibit smoking altogether
BGOYA SAID MANY students have complained of the ban on cigarette sales. "Prohibiting the sale of cigarettes on campus is ridiculous. Smokers have rights, too."
Ali Hassan, India sophomore, said,
"We should not be treated as high school kids at the university level.
Farring (cigarette) machines is not going to reduce smoking; students are just going to make sure they
have enough cigarettes so they won't run out."
Gary Walker, Wichita sophomore, said the Board of Regents was not attempting to take away a right, but that they didn't want to be responsible for encouraging smoking, since it is considered unhealthy by the U.S. Surgeon General.
In other business, the Council unanimously passed a resolution, introduced by Dick King, Kansas City sophomore, permitting the distribution of a campus humor magazine called "The Bird."
SUSAN FLOOD, Hays senior and a member of the ASC publications committee, reported the committee felt there was a definite need for a campus humor magazine.
Included in the ordinance are such businesses as hotels, motels, places where food, drink or refreshments
The magazine will be published by a group from the School of Business. One of the students appearing before the Council said that it will be "a satire of campus life" and be of "high literary quality." He said it will be a quarterly magazine, and that there would only be one issue this semester.
An amendment, introduced at the last meeting, to abolish the housing committee was passed.
The ordinance makes it unlawful for any "owner, manager or employee of public accommodations to refuse services or facilities or to discriminate in providing services or facilities to any orderly person on the basis of race, creed, color or national origin."
Reuben McCornack, Abilene junior and student body president, had previously recommended, on the basis of a report from the Little Hoover Commission, that the Housing Committee be abolished because housing problems are adequately handled by the University.
City Council Passes Accomodations Law
The Lawrence city commission yesterday passed a public accommodations bill without discussion.
After the second and final reading of the ordinance by City Attorney Charles D. Stough, the council moved, seconded and voted to accept the ordinance.
THE ORDINANCE prohibits discrimination in certain places of public accommodation, authorizes the Lawrence Human Relations Commission to investigate complaints of violations of the ordinance, and provides for enforcement.
of any kind is served, swimming pools,places of amusement or recreation,theatres,retail and grocery stores,and trade,commercial or professional schools.
The ordinance provides for an investigation of an alleged violation by the LHRC. If the LHRC cannot persuade the person or establishment to comply with the ordinance, the city attorney can file a formal complaint in police court.
THE ORDINANCE does not,however,apply to private clubs or social organizations and businesses of a personal nature,such as barber and beauty shops.
Any person convicted of violating the ordinance can be bined a maximum of $100 and is subject to a maximum jail sentence of 90 days.
If the owner, manager or employee of any establishment is twice convicted of violating the ordinance, business can have its license revoked or suspended for 90 days.
A
FIRST BALLOT—Craig Stancliffe, Topeka junior, casts the first ballot in Strong Hall this morning as voting for the student body president, vice-president, and All Student Council representatives from the various schools, gets underway.
Talk "Tapping" Fires Campaign
On the eve of campus elections University Party (UP) and Vox Populi (Vox) party members and candidates were concerned with the political implications of a tape recording made at the Theta Chi fraternity house, last Sunday evening.
The tape recording occurred under circumstances which were described by Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., junior and UP candidate for student body president; Tom Bornholdt, Topeka senior and president of Vox Populi; Marshall Crowther, Lawrence second year law student and Vox candidate for student body president, and Peter Marsh, Overland Park sophomore and president of Theta Chi.
Stewart said that Alan Stamper, Plainville senior and member of UP, Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission senior, and secretary-general of UP, and himself went to the Theta Chi house in "good faith" to discuss a possible change of Theta Chi's party affiliation from Vox to UP.
Stewart said, "At 6:30 it was arranged for us to talk to the Theta Chis about affiliating with UP."
He further stated that he was at the Theta Chi house discussing the matter from approximately 6:30 to 8:45 last Sunday.
Both Bornholdt and Crowther stated last night that at the present time to best of their knowledge, the statements made by Stewart as to the circumstances under which the meeting occurred were true.
Bornholdt said: "I did not know the tape had been made until right after it had been taken."
Marsh, president of Theta Chi fraternity, said he was taking the personal responsibility, not as a member of Theta Chi but as an individual, for the tape recording made of the conversation between three UP members and four members of Theta Chi.
"We talked about two and one half hours and covered every issue on campus." Stewart said.
Stewart further stated that the recording of the conversation "is an invasion of my personal privacy."
Weather
The low tonight will be in the 50's and tomorrow's high will be in the lower 70's.
Skies will be partly cloudy with chances of thunderstorms tonight and tomorrow, the Topeka weather station predicted.
The tapes were edited after the meeting at the Theta Chi house Sunday night. Marsh said: "I edited it (the tape) and took the small talk out."
STEWART, who has heard the edited tape, which he states was approximately 18 minutes long, said, "The comments are taken out of context." He further stated: "Things were not only out of context but out of place."
Members of both political parties declined to state what was on the tape.
The tape recording and the editing was made without the sanction of either candidate. Neither candidate knew about the recording or the edited tape recording until after both had been completed. Stewart said that he did not learn of the recording and editing until Monday morning about 9 a.m.
Crowther said that he did not know of the tapes until early Monday morning about 1 a.m.
THE TAPES then came into the hands of Vox after they were edited. Brian Grace, Lawrence senior and member of Vox, said it was delivered by a Vox party worker. Grace said that he was one of the members of Vox who happened to be at the Delta Tau Delta house when the tape was given to Vox.
In the early morning hours on Monday morning, Bornholdt said, he listened to the edited tape all of the way through.
Although there were members of the party (Vox), Bornholdt said, who wished to use the recording in the campaign, he did not think that it should be used. Bornholdt said that he stated his view at the time and considered that the question of using the recording in the campaign was closed. He understood at that time that the recording would not be used.
Bornholdt also explained the circumstances under which the recording was made. He said: "This (the taping) was an individual action by people who were members of Vox Populi. However, this was not officially sanctioned by Vox Populi and Vox does not participate in this type of campaigning."
LATER ON Monday morning, Grace invited a UP party member, an independent, to come to the Delta Tau Delta house and listen to the edited tape.
(Continued on page 16)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 1, 1964
U.S. Neutralization
What's going on in Washington in the way of changing our foreign policy? Are the Johnson Administration and the Democratic leaders in Congress, notably Senators Mansfield and Fulbright, collaborating in softening public opinion toward U.S. withdrawal from the trouble spots of the world?
Sen. Mansfield of Montana, the Senate majority leader and chief spokesman for his party's man in the White House, recently agreed with President De Gaulle of France that "neutralization" of South Viet Nam may be the best way out of that mess.
Now comes Sen. Fulbright, of Arkansas, the intellectual who is chairman of the Senate's Foreign Affairs Committee, advocating:
(1) Acceptance of Communist Cuba and an end to our economic and political resistance to Castro-communism.
(2) Acceptance of the Panamanian President's demand that the United States agree in advance to negotiate changes in the Canal Zone Treaty, thus abandoning President Johnson's stand for discussion after Panama restores diplomatic recognition, but with no promise to negotiate changes.
The White House says that Sen. Fulbright has some interesting ideas but that he did not consult the Administration before making his speech. But between the Mansfield and Fulbright speeches, the President himself digressed from his talk to the AFL-CIO Building and Construction Trades Conference to make some foreign affairs observations pointing in the same direction.
"The world has changed and so has the method of dealing with disruptions of the peace," said President Johnson, raising again the spectre of nuclear war which could "wipe out from 50 to 100 million of our people . . . in a matter of an hour."
"We, the most powerful nation in the world, can afford to be patient," he said. "Our ultimate
strength is clear . . . power brings obligation . . .
The power of this country and the world expect more from their leaders than just a show of brute force. So, our hope and our purpose is to employ reasoned agreement instead of ready aggression; to preserve our honor without a world in ruins; to substitute, if we can, understanding for retaliation."
Is the President saying the United States is guilty of "aggression" in sending troops to help the South Vietnamese defend themselves from the Communist aggressor in North Viet Nam, Ho Chi Minh? In embargoing trade with Communist Cuba and trying to prevent Castro's agents from destroying other Latin American governments? In holding fast against Panamanian mobs in the Canal Zone which is deeded to the United States in perpetuity?
If these three speeches are trial balloons, sent up to see if the people would welcome withdrawal to "Fortress America" and the isolationism which failed to keep us out of two world wars, the President is likely to get a clear answer. Americans have not forgotten Neville Chamberlain nor our own isolationists of old.
If the President has no ready solution to the world's problems in which the United States cannot escape involvement, let him say so. The nation will understand. But let him not seek to lead us down the garden path with a blindfold over our eyes, in fear and trembling that the nuclear missile will arrive if we look at the cold realities of Communist aggression and elect to resist.
We believe the American people do not share the faint-hearted apprehensions of many in official Washington. We believe Americans will never be agreeable to surrender to communism, which is Sen. Mansfield's solution in Viet Nam and Sen. Fulbright's solution in Cuba. The President will be wrong if he associates himself with these sentiments.
- Portland Oregonian
The People Say...
More Discrimination
Unfortunately, some elements find it desirable to discriminate against those of us who have long legs, excluding us from swimming pools, barber shops, restaurants, and fraternities like KKK.
Since this long-legged discrimination, an affront to human dignity, is based purely on prejudice, I recommend the following actions to curb it:
1) We must abolish long-legged discrimination in all retail establishments. The fact that the retailer owns his store, his merchandise, and his service has nothing to do with it; he should be forced by law to allow me on his property, regardless of his feelings toward me.
2) We can picket the campus Greek Week and the Kappa Kappa Kappa house, in order to help KKK accept people with long legs.
3) We can circulate numerous complaining petitions carried by long-legged individuals who sympathize with our cause.
4) We must establish the LLRCC (Long-Legged Rights on Campus Commission) which will organize and coordinate the efforts of those who attempt to change the lamentable existing conditions.
Long-legged individuals, lovers of freedom, etc.—Unite! Under our leader, Martin Luther Long, chairman of NAALL (National Association for the advancement of Long Leggers) and under the slogan, "We shall over-conquer," we long-leggers shall rise to victory, equality, etc., and establish the long-legged individual as a proper pillar of society, a member-in-good-standing of KKK, and an integral part of the campus Greek Week.
Augusta freshman
***
KULAC Complaint
Recently, the campus has been beset by a storm of demonstration and protest, all emanating from one source, the Kansas University Liberal Action Committee. This organization, or rather the people behind it, seem to be involved in every bit of unorthodoxy
which exists on this campus.
Although they lend their support to a few causes which appear to be worthwhile, it would appear that their motives are questionable. Why does the same group of individuals back the Student Peace Union and Civil Rights Co-ordinating Committee, as well as KULAC? Could it be that they are seeking only sensation? Why does the rank and file of this organization consist of individuals who could hardly be considered representative of the average KU student? Could it be that KULAC is designed to allow the non-conformist to alleviate his frustration. I leave the answers to these questions to be determined by each individual.
While I do not oppose the existence of such an organization on campus, I do feel that these observations should be aired to enable the student who considers taking a subscription to the Kansas Free Press or buying a one-dollar membership in KULAC, to consider the uses of his pledging his name and his money. If he is able to identify himself with the leadership of KULAC, then he should contribute, but at least, let him consider the individuals, motives, and results which he is supporting.
Thomas Shores
Kansas City graduate student
Blasts Kothari Edition
I have been an avid reader of newspapers ever since my high school days, but never have I come across a journalist of Mr. Kothari's calibre. God save the professional! His articles (apparently he is required to write something every week) never fail to manifest the lowest and the most amorphous in the art of writing, and are almost invariably a mangle of uninformed and irresponsible journalism. He evaluates the world that passes before his limited vision with utter disregard for facts.
His recent article, "Kashmir Conflict Causes Violations," surpasses his previous pathetic attempts. For example, he accuses
Editor:
Pakistan for seeking China's aid to end Indian oppression in occupied Kashmir. If the current public pronouncements of Pakistan's President are any guide, the above accusation must be a figment of Mr. Kothari's blurred imagination. President Ayub, while deploring the long and explosive conflict between India and Pakistan, has said, "Any student of history knows that this sub-continent (Indo-Pakistan sub-continent) has been invaded (from outside) whenever there was internal strife and hostility." Pakistan, being a part of this sub-continent, can hardly afford to tolerate any outside intervention. Further, it seems that Mr. Kothari is ignorant of the fact that the Chinese are already in control of the territory they claim in Ladakh, because of India's inability and unwillingness to defend an area which she could not legitimately call her own. After all they, the Indians, too had occupied Kashmir by force and against the wishes of the people of the unfortunate land.
May I ask who are those "political crities," excluding Mr. Kothari himself, who "believes" that Pakistan has no case in Kashmir? I quote only one source, because of lack of space, to expose Mr. Kothari's lack of knowledge about the matter. The New York Times, February 25, 1964, wrote in part:
"The Pakistanis have, however, good reason to be discouraged and disgusted on the subject of Kashmir. It was taken from them by a trick in 1947 . . . Pakistan has the better side of justice on its side . . . Prime Minister Nehru, normally so high minded, lost his sense of political morality when it came to Kashmir."
Indeed it is the Indian case about Kashmir which lacks substance, blotted as it is with broken promises and Russian vetoes. I challenge Mr. Kothari, or anyone else for that matter, to discuss with me the respective merits of India-Pakistan cases with regard to Kashmir in a public debate
Rab Malik
Pakistan Graduate Student
CAMPAIGN
CONTRIBUTORS
G.O.P. PRIMARYS
DEM. PRIMARYS
© 1964 HERRLOCK
THE WAKEFIELD POST
"Open Up That Golden Gate California, Here We Come!"
Poll Finds Rockefeller Falling Down and Out
If the most recent Gallup poll is valid, Nelson Rockefeller's chances of capturing the GOP presidential nomination are negligible. In fact, it appears that Rockefeller won't even influence the making of the party platform.
Gallup asked 3,000 GOP county chairmen to state their preference for 1964. With sixty per cent responding, Rockefeller got 117 votes--only six per cent, finishing behind Goldwater (the winner), Nixeau, Lodge, and Scranton.
The chairmen were asked to indicate a second-place choice should their number one man not be nominated. Rockefeller came out worse after the second choice votes of Goldwater supporters were allocated.
HE FINISHED behind Nixon. Lodge, and Scranton.
At this time, Rockefeller was fresh from a smashing victory in the 1958 New York elections and was considered the bright light of the GOP fold.
Compare this to Rockefeller's 1960 position when Nixon felt the New York governor enough of a force to compromise the Republican platform to gain his support.
Since then, Rockefeller has suffered from a less emphatic win in the 1962 gubernatorial elections, followed by his divorce, the death of his son, and several serious setbacks with his home state legislature.
BOOK REVIEWS
THE UNIVERSE OF SCIENCE, by Charles-Noel Martin (Hill and Wang $3.95).
This is a book not for the advanced scholar but for the beginner or the layman interested in science. Charles-Noel Martin is a French nuclear physicist and journalist, and he attempts to survey what man knows concerning the structure of the universe.
Martin begins with the area of the tiniest of particles and proceeds to the vast universe itself. The first section concerns, then, the infinitesimal—cosmic rays, particles and anti-particles, matter, atoms, molecules and crystals. There then is a section on life, dealing with giant molecules, viruses and bacteria, life on other worlds.
"The Planet Earth" concerns itself with the beginnings, changes in climate, the question of whether there was a deluge, earth studies, space exploration. The final section deals with infinities—the planets, the sun, galaxies, evolution of the stars, the cosmologies, and structure of the universe.
Excellent black and white photographs accompany the text.
Dailij Yränsan
111 Flint Hall
University of Kansas student newspaper UNiversity 4-2646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office
P A
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.
Wednesday, April 1, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Popular Folk Songs Are 'Fake Folklore'
By Tom Moore
Popular folk songs heard on the radio and television today are not folklore; but the elephant jokes are, Robert Georges, instructor of English and a folklorist, said yesterday.
Georges said that the criteria for folklore is that the material, be it song, joke, or superstition, must be transferred from person to person orally with slight occurring in the material as it is retold.
Public interest in folklore in the U.S.A. intensified in the 1930's as America became a world power, Georges said.
The study of folklore, which dates back to the 19th century, has frequently been misunderstood. In the United States, it is the recording and study of ballads, of habits, of superstitions, of beliefs, and of narratives, he said.
In keeping with this new position, a need for a past filled with legendary heroes developed. To fill this need, a parade of fake heroes was created with all the qualities deemed necessary for an American legendary hero.
BETWEEN 1880 AND 1930, there was vigorous activity in folklore in the U.S., especially of the North American Indian folklore, ballad narratives, and Negro songs and spirituals.
AMONG THE FIRST was Paul Bunyan, who was created by a Minnesota lumber company as an advertising gimmick, Georges said. The idea of a lumberjack myth appealed to the writers of the 30's, and the Paul Bunyan story was born.
Joe Magarac (which is Hungarian for the word "jackass") was created for the Hungarian steelworkers in Pittsburgh. Pecos Bill, the Texan cyclone rider, was also created in this period.
Febold Feboldson was created as the greatest mid-western wheat farmer in the 30's. Feboldson could harvest whole fields in a single day and plow a hundred acres without machinery.
Even a female "fake heroine" was created, Georges added, who was known as Anne Christmas, the supposed legendary prostitute of New Orleans.
ALL THESE FAKE heroes had a bad effect on the image of folklore because the public began to see folk-lore as a fantasy. Georges said.
In Georges' folklore classes, he said that many of the students come into class for the first time expecting to see a bearded entertainer with dirty feet and perhaps a guitar on the desk.
he said that a folklorist usually dresses like other people, with a few exceptions in the ranks, and are trained to collect and compare folklore. The American folklorist is a trained scholar and not an entertainer.
The Tarpent Springs Greeks and their descendants have been Georges' main object of research for the summers of 1961-62.
GEORGES HAS done some of his field work in Tarpon Springs, Fla. where the population of 7,000 is about 40 per cent Greek origin.
From the material on the Greeks and their descendants that Georges has collected and studied, he has made these observations. They believe that St. Nicholas is constantly watching over them.
They never begin anything important on Tuesday because that was the day that Constantinople fell to the Turks in 1453.
That Tarpon Springs, a sea coast town, will always have a raging storm on St. Nicholas' Day, Dec. 6.
Every boat (the main industry of Tarpon Springs is sponge fishing) must carry a picture of St. Nichols (an icon) on the boat's cabin.
If the sea becomes very rough, the captain will dip the icon in the sea and the boat is supposedly free from harm.
BLACK IS CONSIDERED a bad omen by these Greeks and usually they are very careful about people who wear black.
SAN FRANCISCO — (UPI) California ranks third in the nation in outboard motor users with 412-000. trailing only New York and Michigan, according to the National Association of Engine and Boat Manufacturers and the Oatboard Industry Association.
Putt, Putt
All of these beliefs originated in Greece and have remained with these people at Tarpon Springs because of the ideal cultural climate.
These are not just things they remember, but things that continue to have a function in their society.
Donna Hanneman, Junction City junior, and John Sapp. Astoria, Ill., sophomore, were elected on-campus chairman and off-campus chairman, respectively, of the KU Peace Corps Committee.
Peace Corps Elect Chairmen
The election was held last night in an executive meeting of the Peace Corps Committee.
In other action, the executive committee evaluated the KU Peace Corps Week which ended March 26.
"About 91 people took the exam," John Fairhurst, Wichita senior, reported to the committee.
Earlier in the week, Fairhurst had outlined the goals of Peace Corps Week as being to inform the campus of Peace Corps activities and to encourage KU students to take advantage of the concentrated testing program.
Wild Times Up The River The Kansas State University
Y-ORPHEUM 1964
April 10-11
Tickets: Friday—$1.25 and $1.75
Saturday—$1.50
Write: Y-Orpheum
K-State Union Activities Center
Manhattan, Kansas
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
PÁGINA 14
CATCH UP WITH THE TIMES at ...
843 Mass.
diebolt's
VI 3-0454
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 1, 1964
Flexibility Preserved Chinese Tradition
By Lee Stone
A non-western brand of flexible orthodoxy may have been instrumental in preserving Chinese tradition down to the present time. This special orthodoxy may still be operative behind a screen of Marxist orthodoxy.
That proposition was put forth last night in an address by Benjamin Wallacker, associate professor of Oriental languages and literature.
Prof. Wallacker, in the first of two lectures, traced the descent of Chinese orthodoxy. The first part was called "The Chinese Point of View."
THE SECOND part of the series, which will be delivered on April 14 by Robert Burton, East Asian Area Studies lecturer, is called "The Chinese Communist Point of View."
The traditional attitude of Chinese to non-Chinese has been: "It is lamentable that you are not Chinese," Prof. Wallacker said.
The Chinese invite the cultural
Language Institute To Be in Colorado
The oriental language department announced that KU and the University of Colorado, with cooperation from Washington University at St. Louis, will sponsor a summer language institute to be held on the Colorado campus at Boulder.
The summer institute, which is held from June 13-Aug.24, offers intensive instruction at the beginning, intermediate, and advanced levels in Chinese and Japanese.
The institute is supported by matching funds provided by the United States Office of Education under the National Defense Education Act.
Mitsue Shibata and Chi-chou Huang, members of KU's oriental language department, will participate in the institute.
All interested students may contact Professor Benjamin Wallacker, 7St-F.
Official Bulletin
Teaching Interviews: April 2, Anchor
Kansas. Make appointments in 117 Calley
TODAY
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence
Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Le Certef français se reintrait mercredi 13 premier avril à 4 h. 30 dans la salle de séance. Le certef français se reintrait S. Smith partera sur ses recherches archeologiques en Oceanie l'amee passee. Il y aura des raffraichissements au cours s'il est donné au français cordialement invites.
Carillon Recital, 7 p.m., Bergen.
SUA Classical Film, 7 p.m., Fraser
Theater. "The Lady Vanishes" (Hitchcock).
Geology Lecture, 7:30 p.m., 426 Lindeney. "The Problem of Direction in Evolution"-Dr. H. J. MacGillavry, U. of Amsterdam.
Timely Topics, 7.30 p.m., St. Lawrence Center, 1910, Stratford, Rd.
Senior Recital, 8 p.m., Swarthout Hall.
Bonnie Ward.
SUA-ASC Lecture, 8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium. "Foreign Policy Under the New President"—Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore). Reception follows at Kansas Union.
On, Dad, Food Dad. . . 8:15 p.m.
Experimental Theatre.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m.
St. Lawrence Church, 10:30 a.m.
Holy Communion, 11:30 a.m., St.
Leonard's Church, 12:00 p.m.
Holy Communion, 11:30 a.m. St.
Anselm's Chapel, Canterbury House.
Mathematics Staff Seminar, 3:30 p.m.
119 Strong. "Semi-Linear Partial Differential Equations of Parabolic Type"—Prof. Haruo Murakami.
University Lecture, 4:30 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union. "The Changing Concept of Truth"—Stephan Koerner, U. of Bristol.
SUA Poetry Hour, 4:30 p.m., Music Room, Kansas Union.
Der deutsche Stammillt trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 2. April, um 4 Uhr 30 in Donnerstadt, einkehe 14th—Tenn. Alle sind erzählig und登gen. Wir werden einige Lieder singen.
Father-Day Saints Institute of Religion,
445 N. 78th St., Pan American Room, Kansas
Union
Continuing Philosophy Lecture. 7-30 p.m., Dyche Auditorium. "Obstacles to World Order II: Ideological."—Prof. Errol Harris.
Christian Science Organization. 7:30
welcome Danforth Chapel. Everyone
welcome
Sociology Colloquium, 206 Kansas University for Excellent Enceded Revolution" E-Gordon Jordan
Philosophy Club, 8 p.m. Faculty Club
of Nature...*Proof
Sirpham Kormany.*
College Life, 9 p.m., 1301 Campus Rd. "Is one Religion as Good as Another?"—Dr. William R. Bright founder of Campus Crusade for Christ International.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
outsider to share in the glories of Chinese culture, government, and values, but they do not much worry about the outsider's non-participation, Prof. Wallacker said.
WHAT IS IT the Chinese are so proud of? Prof. Wallacker said, Chinese traditions have remained essentially unchanged for 2500 years. The continuity in their customs and government have given them confidence in their ways, Prof. Wallacker said.
What are essentially Chinese traditions began when city-states were established in the Yellow River Valley. A succession of city-states came to dominate the valley which were eventually known as Hsia state. The Hsia state was feudal, "but feudal with a tremendously long footnote explaining it was not Western feudalism," Prof. Wallacker said.
Chinese influence spread south from the Yellow River to the barbarians by whom the Chinese were eventually threatened, Prof. Wallacker said. For about a thousand years, control of the government passed from one city-state to another. In about 500 B.C., a debate arose on how the society should be organized to preserve itself, Prof. Wallacker said.
THE MAIN contending philosophies were Mohism, Confucianism, Legalism or totalitarianism, and Taoism, Prof. Wallacker said.
The Confucianists believed in a "unity in society." "Society was expected to persist when all men agreed to have similar ways of doing things," Prof. Wallacker said. "If we all realize we are 'fellows', no one would bother us because all barbarians would want to be like us," the philosophy claimed, Prof. Wallacker said.
"Love each other and how can there be strife?" was the Mohist's pronouncement in life, Prof. Wallacker said. This philosophy didn't last long.
TAOISM WAS also formulated during this period, a period known in China as the "Time of Hundred Schools." That is, a time when a hundred philosophies flourished, Prof. Wallacker said.
Taoism put forth the idea that all men were part of a "transcendental unity." This philosophy offered "more to the individual than to the individual as a member of society." Prof. Wallacker said.
When China was unified by a legalist state, the Ch'in state, it went through a true social revolution. The Ch'in state was quickly overthrown but once "having gotten into the saddle, it burned all books," especially Confucian books, Wallacker said.
BOOK BURNING was not so much directed at Confucian books but at any kind of separatism. "The Ch'in state had not provided China with a system of values, it had only destroyed political separatism," Prof. Wallacker said.
The Ch'in state was followed by the Han dynasty which completed China's social revolution. It is from the Han state that adopted Confucianism as its official doctrine that the continuing Chinese tradition has sprung, Prof. Wallacker said.
The land-owning class was dispossessed and a new ruling class was instituted. But most important, Chinese officialdom was reformed along the lines of a civil service. To enter Chinese officialdom a job-seeker had to pass examination based on "Confucian textual material." Prof. Wallacker said.
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“A heresy requires a jealous Jehovah kind of God.” Wallacker said.
OTHER DYNASTIES did replace the Han but the civil service and Chinese traditions remained intact thereafter, Prof. Wallacker said.
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In the Judeao-Christian tradition, with its commitment to a single set of values, heresies can arise. This was not possible under Confucian traditions, Prof. Wallacker said.
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IN THE WEST, we tend to become concerned when official figures do not espouse the proper personal and religious beliefs. Wallacker termed this an "exclusion-of-belief-and-value system."
Whether or not the communists have changed all that will be the subject of the next lecture by Robert Burns.
At work the Chinese civil servant was a Confucianist, "at home and on weekends" he could be anything he wanted without the feeling that he was committing a heresy. He could be Buddhist, Taoist or whatever, on his own time, Wallacker said.
38 Years of Integrity
Even though the power at the top of Chinese officialdom may have passed from a belief in Confucianism as a whole it remained Confucian in its outlook.
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Wednesday, April 1, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Noah's Dove an April Fool?
Jes said.
come
s do
and
armed
and-
have nism in
No one knows for sure when or why April 1 came to be known as April Fool's Day, although there are several theories.
One theory is that it derived from an ancient pagan celebration of the vernal equinox, the time when the sun's center crosses the equator and days and nights are everywhere of equal length, about March 21.
These celebrations used to start on March 25, the original New Year's Day, and continue to April 1.
IN FRANCE it is thought that April Fool's Day began with the adoption of the reformed calendar by Charles IX in 1584 when New Year's Day, which was celebrated with gift exchanges, was changed from April to January 1.
Conservatives, who resented the change, were sent mock gifts from the "Wags" who favored the change, and the day became one for practical joking.
The first record of April Fool's Day in England is in a journal kept in 1698. Several persons were sent
Lance Burr Voted Next P-t-P Head
Lance Burr, Salina junior, was elected chairman of the executive board of People-to-People last night for the 1964-65 school year.
Other members of the board are as follows: Frank Bangs, Wichita junior, vice-chairman; Helen Nott, Evanston, Ill., junior, vice-chairman in charge of special projects; Prisilla Osborn, Stockton junior, secretary; Prakash Nagori, Aurangabad, India, sophomore, treasurer; Ann Peterson, Shawnee Mission sophomore, sister chairman; Jim Pitts, Wichita sophomore, brother chairman; Dale Spriggs, McPherson freshman, American Students Abroad; Marsha Moechtlen, Wichita freshman, office chairman; Joyce Palmer, Mission junior, membership; Terry Arthur, Manhattan sophomore, publicity; Karen Indall, Ottawa junior, and Jose Ocampo, Capas Taplac, Philippines, hospitality.
Jay SHOPPE
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then to the tower of London to see the lions washed. This joke was repeated a century and a half later when an unknown author sent invitations to a number of April Fools to come to the tower and see the lions washed.
A less serious theory, probably is that April Fool's Day originated when Noah sent the first dove out when there was no place for the bird to land.
Attention SENIOR and GRADUATE MEN Students WHO NEED SOME FINANCIAL HELP IN ORDER TO COMPLETE THEIR EDUCATION THIS YEAR AND WILL THEN COMMENCE WORK.
APPLY to STEVENS BROS. FOUNDATION, INC.
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NEW 5'64 directory lists 20,000 summer job openings in 50 states. MALE or FEMALE. Unprecedented research for students includes exact pay rates and job details. Names employers and their addresses for hiring in industry, summer camps, national parks, resorts, etc., etc., etc. Hurry!! jobs filled early. Send two dollars. Satisfaction guaranteed. Send to: Summer Jobs Directory—P. O. Box 13593—Phoenix Arizona.
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Largest NEW directory. Lists hundreds of permanent career opportunities in Europe, South America, Africa and the Pacific, for MALE or FEMALE. Totals 50 countries. Gives specific addresses and names prospective U.S. employers with foreign subsidiaries. Exceptionally high pay, free travel, etc. In addition, enclosed vital guide and procedures necessary to foreign employment. Satisfaction guaranteed. Send two dollars to Jobs Abroad Directory—P.O. Box 13593—Phoenix, Arizona.
SALE!
Kansas University Sweatshirts
Silver-all sizes WERE $3.10-NOW $2.00
Hooded—Navy—all sizes WERE $4.25—NOW $3.00
Black with Kansas on front—all sizes WERE $3.10-NOW $2.00
White-Zipper-all sizes with colored Jayhawk WERE $3.50-NOW $2.50
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 1, 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.
JIM AUFT, President of Freshman Class DON BEAHM, Vice-President of Freshman Class
DON BUCKHOLZ, President of Lambda Chi Alpha
JACKI CHURCHILL, President of Alpha Chi Omega
RICHARD EVANS, President of Kipappa Alpha
BILL CIBES, President of Stephenson Hall KEN COLEMAN, Co-Captain of Football Team RUSS CORBITT, President of Phi Kappa Theta DON DUFF, Vice-President of Sophmore Class
I have a
MIKE ELWELL, President of Sigma Nu
MARSHALL CROWTHER
SHERRY FITTS, GSP
LARRY GAMBLE, President of Sachem
HILDA GIBBSON, President of Mortar Board
T. LEE GRUEN, President of Jolliffe Hall
DANA HAYES, President of Sigma Kappa
BOB HICKS, President of Delta Chi
BOBBI JOHNSON, Secretary of Freshman Class
HELEN JORGENSON, President of Alpha Phi
JIM KAPP, President of Phi Kappa Tau
BRUCE KNIGHT, President of Kappa Sigma
CONNIE KOSFELD, Secretary of Junior Class
JUDY LIND, President of Alpha Omicron Pi
GARY LITTLE, Treasurer of Freshman Class
BYRON LOUDON, President of Delta Tau Delta
PETE MARSH, President of Theta Chi
MARILYN McPHERSON, President of Delta Gamma
RON MIDDENDORF, President of Foster Hall
BOB MOUTRIE, President of Hawkwatch Society
SUSAN NASH, President of Gamma Phi Beta
NANCY SODERSTROM, Corbin Hall
PAM STONE, President of Delta Delta Delta
JAY STRAYER, President of Sigma Alpha Epsilon
GREG TURNER, President of Phi Kappa Psi
CHARLES TURPEN, President of Battenfeld
GRETCHEN THOMPSON, Secretary of Sophomore Class
GEORGE UNSELD, Varsity Basketball
DICK WHITE, President of Triangle
RANDY WILLIAMS, President of Delta Upsilon
PAID FOR by Students for Excellence in Student Leadership.
2
JIM CLINE
Page 7
Senator Morse to Speak Tonight
Bob Enberg, McPherson junior and chairman of the Featured Speakers Series, said he had been in touch with Morse's secretary last night and had confirmed Morse's KU speaking engagement.
Senator Wayne Morse, Oregon Democrat, will definitely speak at KU tonight.
Morse will speak at 8 p.m. in Hoch auditorium. Afterwards, a reception will be held in the South Lounge of the Kansas Union. Both events are being sponsored by the All Student Council and Student Union Activities and are open to the public.
ENBERG SAID he was a "little worried" when he arrived home and found a message asking him "to call Washington." It was Morse's secretary wanting to confirm the speaking engagement, he said.
It was feared that debate on the civil rights bill now before the Senate would keep Morse in Washington, Enberg said.
Last December, Morse cancelled a scheduled address at KU because of Senate business on foreign aid appropriations.
MORSE, ALTHOUGH a supporter of the bill, took a stand on the bill last week that was, at first, puzzling.
He wanted the bill sent to the Senate Judiciary Committee. So did Southern Senators who dominate the committee and oppose the bill.
Morse, once dean of the law school at the University of Oregon, reasoned that the Judiciary Committee could deal with technicalities in the bill which could give rise to lengthy litigation in civil rights suits.
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His motion, although not passed by the Senate, would have allowed the committee ten days to study the bill. Senate records say.
SENATOR HUBERT Humphrey, Minnesota Democrat and floor manager of the civil rights bill, persuaded the Senate not to adopt Morse's motion when he pointed out that the Judiciary Committee had received 121 civil rights bills in the last ten years and had reported only one of them back to the floor, according to records.
SENATE PROCEDURE on a variety of bills was started last week by Morse.
One bill would provide assistance to local educational agencies to help in the education of needy families. Another Morse bill would prohibit the recruitment of strikebreakers in the District of Columbia.
Wednesday, April 1, 1964 University Daily Kansan
With 33 other senators, Morse also sponsored a bill that would establish an annual American Indian Day.
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The Classical Film Series
Alfred Hitchcock's
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Fraser Theater-7:00 p.m.
Admission: $.60
ARE YOU FOR
"C. L."? Carl Lindquist
IS
C
Competent Leadership
College Men Representative All Student Council Pd./Friends of C. L.
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A doctor is pointing at a patient lying on his back.
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A doctor is giving a patient instructions.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100.
4. It can provide money for my children's education.
Is that so?
A man in a suit is giving a cheerful expression. A person is lying on the ground with arms outstretched.
5. It can pay off the mortgage if I die. Or make money available for emergencies or opportunities. Or provide a lifetime income when I retire.
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6. Precisely. And over 11 million people do.Because I was telling you about Living Insurance from Equitable.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 1, 1964
Rainy
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Wednesday, April 1, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
German Music Critic Spent Years in Japan
A German who spent the years of World War II in Japan said that it was the Emperor of Japan who saved his life.
HE FIRST WENT to Japan in 1931 when he was invited by the Japanese government to become the musical director of the Imperial Academy of Music in Tokyo. Having received his education in Munich, Germany, and being a citizen of Germany, "I was ousted under pressure of the Nazis," after spending six years in Japan, he said. He said he served as musical advisor to the Royal Government of Thailand for two years before returning to Japan.
Prof. Pringsheim lived in Japan during the years of World War II. "It was not a pleasant time for me," he recalled.
Klaus Pringsheim, Sr., brother-in-law of the late German author Thomas Mann and father of Klaus Pringsheim, instructor of political science, looked back over his life last weekend. Professor Pringsheim, who visited Lawrence March 15-28, is a long-time composer, orchestra and choral conductor, and music critic. At present he is musical director of the Musashino Academy of Music in Tokyo, the Far East's largest college of music.
"I was very much depleted in my work because of the Nazis," Prof. Pringsheim said. He said often when he tried to free lance as a conductor the Nazis would stop him before he got a chance to perform.
"ABOUT 90 PER cent of Tokyo was razed during the last half year," he said. The houses in Japan which were made out of paper and wood burned very quickly.
However, during the war, the Japanese population was amazingly well-disciplined, Prof. Pringsheim said. "Bombings were almost never mentioned."
Even when the two nuclear bombs were dropped on Japan they were never spoken of until after the war, he recalled.
After World War II Prof. Pringsheim went to California where he spent four years lecturing, conducting, and teaching.
If the war had not ended when it did, Prof. Pringsheim felt that an American invasion would have been
very possible. "If there was one person who could prevent the American invasion," he said, "it was the Emperor."
However, by tradition the Emperor never appeared in public and his voice was never heard by his people. "He was about the clouds," Prof. Pringsheim said. Streets were evacuated and people could not look upon the Emperor when he went out.
Prof. Pringsheim is not even semiretired at the age of 80. He will tour Europe professionally next year. Before World War II he served as conductor of the Vienna State Opera, the Grand Theatre of Geneva, the opera in Prague, and the municipal 'theaters in Breslau and Bremen.
THE MILITARY HAD power during the war, he said, and the emperor had none. However, he said that after the nuclear bombs were dropped the Emperor "broke with all traditions" and spoke over a microphone to tell Japanese people that they would surrender.
Although there were threats on the Emperor's life after the announcement was made, "the Emperor was the only person they (the people of Japan) dared not touch," Prof. Pringsheim said.
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ON THE HILL
ON THE HILL
AL HACK
THE PRESIDENT OF THE U.S. CONGRESS
Dr. William R. Bright
former Student Leader and Business Executive
Speaker at 50 major Universities yearly in U.S.A.
Also Speaker at many Foreign Universities around the globe
PETER B. BURKE
Discussing
MORALITY & COLLEGE LIFE
9:00 p.m., Thursday, April 2
SAE HOUSE,1301 W. Campus
"1 of 18 babies born out of Wed Lock in U.S.A." "1 of 6 American Brides are pregnant before marriage."
EVERYONE WELCOME
Sponsored by Local Business Men.
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 1, 1964
Director of Libraries Receives Fellowship
Thomas R. Buckman, director of KU libraries, has been awarded a Guggenheim fellowship for the 1964-65 academic year, the foundation announced yesterday in New York.
He will study the organization of the book trade, particularly problems of book distribution in Scandinavia, the Soviet Union and several developing African countries. The basic study will be in Sweden, with shorter comparative work in other areas.
"The problem of effective book distribution which is basic to cultural and educational development is critical in the United States and in many of the emerging nations of Africa, Latin America and the East," Buckman said.
The Western European countries have been especially successful in meeting this problem, and their example may prove relevant elsewhere, he said.
Buckman came to KU from California in 1956 and served as head of the library's acquisitions department until he became associate director of libraries in 1960 and director of libraries in 1961.
He received the B.A. in speech and drama from College of the Pacific in 1947, studied Scandinavian and European literature at the University of Stockholm in Sweden
CROWTHER
CLINE
JIM CLINE
from 1948-51 and received the M.A. in Scandinavian area studies and the B.S. in library science from the University of Minnesota in 1952 and 1953 respectively.
He has published articles, reviews and translations in a number of scholarly publications and has been secretary-treasurer of the Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study.
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Can you avoid living in "Jamsville"?
It won't be easy. By 1980 most Americans will live in 40 large metropolitan areas—each with more than a million population. To keep your community from becoming a "Jamsville" will take people with ideas — ideas that can help cities move more traffic swiftly, safely and economically.
Some of the ideas come from them and women of General Electric who, in effect, form a "Progress Corps."
In major cities, they're helping to develop balanced transportation built around rapid rail-transit systems . . . and they're providing advanced equipment to power and control the trains. They're also developing a TV monitoring system that enables a single engineer to control miles of auto traffic . . . a jet engine
that speeds commuters in a hydrofoil ship over the waves . . . and another jet engine to lift travelers over traffic via turbocopter at 150 mph.
Traffic is only one of many problems General Electric people are working on. Their numerous projects, in this country and around the world, demand a variety of talents: engineering, finance, marketing, law, physics and many others.
If you'd like to join the "Progress Corps" after graduation, talk to your placement director. He can help qualified young people begin their careers at General Electric.
Progress Is Our Most Important Product
GENERAL ELECTRIC
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VISIT BENERAL ELECTRIC PROGRESSLAND • A WALT DISNEY PRESENTATION • AT THE NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR
---
Wednesday, April 1, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 11
[Image of a group of football players]
BIG BOY—Richard Pratt, 266-pound Jayhawk tackle from Olathe, works out on a blocking dummy in the KU team's second practice yesterday. Pratt is a returning letterman and figures to be a key figure in Coach Jack Mitchell's forward wall.
TOLD WITH VOLCANIC POWER AND PASSION!
ROCK HUDSON BURLIVES
GENA ROWLANDS
THE SPIRAL ROAD
CO STARRING GEOFFREY KEEN
in Eastman COLOR
Plus Cartoon 35c
Fraser Theater
Feature Times: 7 & 9:30 p.m.
FRIDAY FLICKS
New KU Basketball Coach First Non-Grad Since 1919
Ted Owens, KU's new head basketball coach, will be the first non-KU graduate to handle the Jayhawk team since 1919.
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
In that year, W. O. Hamilton, a William Jewell graduate, coached the last of his 10 seasons here. Hamilton's successor, Dr. F. C. (Phog) Allen, played basketball here under the game's inventor, Dr. James Naismith, soon after the turn of the century. Beginning with a first stint as coach in 1908 and 1909, Dr. Allen coached here through the 1956 season when he turned the position over to his assistant, Dick Harp.
Coach Harp ended an eight-year term with his resignation last week.
Owens was a guard at Oklahoma under Coach Bruce Drake in 1949-51. Naismith, who served nine years as KU's first coach, was a graduate of McGill University, of Montreal. Owens, thus, is only the fifth coach in KU's basketball history
An old fact surrounding Coach Owens is that every time he takes his KU team in to Stillwater, he can visit his mother-in-law.
The relative. Mrs. Nancy Amis, teaches Library Science at Oklahoma State.
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 1, 1964
Aid Program Designed to Help Youths
JIMMY GILMER and the FIREBALLS
DOT Record Hits ----- • SUGAR SHACK
• DAISY PETAL PICKIN
• AIN'T GONNA TELL NOBODY
Meadow Acres Ballroom, Topeka --- April 5, 8-11 p.m.
"All students admitted for $1 with I.D. card"
"We have a widening pool of youngsters for whom the ordinary vocational school is not suitable." Merrick told UPI in an interview. "They're too far behind. Our job is to try to rehabilitate them into the mainstream of American economic life."
The job problem would be severe enough, considering the high level of joblessness, but it's often impossible of solution for youths from slum homes who have not done well in school.
IN AN EFFORT to trace the problem, the selective service system has agreed to call boys for physical and mental testing at 18 instead of waiting four or five years until they are summoned for induction.
WASHINGTON — (UPI)— A Phi Beta Kappa is heading the Labor Department's efforts to help a new brand of "dead end kids" who have trouble passing an eighth grade school test.
UNEMPLOYMENT AMONG teen-agers, now about 15 per cent, has been triple the national rate. The baby boom following World War II means that 27 million youngsters will reach their 18th birthdays this year.
He said many Negroes, Puerto Ricans and Mexican-Americans fall into this category, partly because of past discrimination against them.
Steak Dinner
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4:30 - 10:30
DINE-A-MITE
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This will identify the youths who flunk mental or physical tests and focus attention on their needs. Merrick said. Results will be sent to regional Labor Department offices.
Merrick was assigned to administer the part of the manpower act aimed at the "least employable" youths from 17 to 21. New amendments to the law give the government more tools and up to $100 million in the fiscal year starting next July 1 to deal with the problem.
A series of centers for further testing, counseling, basic schooling and job-placement are envisioned by Merrick as part of the attack on the "unemployables" problem.
English Philosopher to Speak
Professor Stephan Korner of the University of Bristol, England will speak here twice tomorrow. He currently is visiting professor of philosophy at the University of Texas.
Today his job is to find ways to aid the growing number of teenagers who have failed in school and have few if any qualifications for the world of work.
Samuel V. Merrick, new assistant manpower administrator for youth programs, won admission to the fraternity for the scholastic elite at the University of Pennsylvania in the late '30s.
PATRONIZE YOUR
• ADVERTISERS •
He will give a University lecture at 4:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union on "The Changing Concept of Truth." At 8 p.m. he will speak to the Philosophy Club, meeting in the Faculty Club, on "Empirical Laws of Nature." Both are open to the public.
"This crowd of kids is not likely to learn a trade." Merrick said, "because they're not motivated or prepared to do that. But we think they can be prepared for starting jobs as helpers, factory workers or clerks.
One aim will be to encourage employers to drop their requirements for "high school graduates only" if a job does not require that degree of training. This would help those who dropped out of school before graduation get past the first hurdle, Merrick said.
The total helped by this new program will not be great—perhaps 60,000 to 70,000 in all. But Merrick believes it may demonstrate that ways can be found to salvage youngsters for a useful life even though they suffer severe educational handicaps.
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
TONIGHT SEN. WAYNE MORSE
M. V. D. PRAKASHAMAN
SUA and ASC present this Oregon Democrat who will discuss "Foreign Policy Under President Johnson"
*
* *
*
APRIL1 8 PM HOCH
Reception in South Lounge / Union following the speech
Wednesday, April 1, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 13
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
be elected President and Vice-President of the Student Body at the University of Kansas.
↑
→
Betty Ann Maline
John Fairhurst
Ken Scott
Robert Xidis
Kay Walker
Don Perkey
Mike Warren
Neil Johnson
Howard Wilcox
Barbara Cowen
Mike McDowell
Bob Woody
Bonnie Butler
Fred Fraick
Harry Bretschneider
Frank Jacobson
Bill Reese
- Larry Geiger
Rick Reynolds
Nancy Egy
Frank "Bucky" Thompson
Tom Tatlock
Richard Duwe
Carolyn Penner
George Tannous
President, Pi Beta Phi
Co-chairman, KU Peace Corps
AURH
Secretary, Ellsworth Hall
President, Kappa Kappa Gamma
Secretary, Templin Hall
President, Phi Delta Theta
Junior Vice-President, Eilsworth Hall
Co-Vice-President, KU-Y
People-to-People Board Member
President, Model UN General Assembly
Publicity Chairman, 1964-65 SUA Board
President, Tau Sigma
President, Phi Kappa Sigma
Former Vox Vice-President
Vice-President, Ellsworth Hall
President, Templin Hall
Secretary, Joseph R. Pearson
Treasurer, MRA
Co-Chairman, 1964 Greek Week
Editor,1964 JAYHAWKER Yearbook President, Alpha Kappa Lambda Former President,Sellards Hall ASC Representative
|
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
* In Monday's UDK, Larry Geiger was listed as the Secretary of the AURH. This is incorrect. Larry's actual office is listed above.
Page 14
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 1. 1964
U.S. Real Estate Men Enterprise in Europe
WASHINGTON —(UPI)— Voulez-vous acheter un supermarket a Chicago?
This is the kind of question six U.S. real estate men are going to be asking in Brussels one day this spring.
Or if you don't want to buy a supermarket, how about an office building, hotel, high-rise apartment, industrial plant, industrial site or shopping center?
THEYLL BE PEDDLING this kind of property in half a dozen European countries.
For the realtors it's a chance to make a buck. For the government it's a chance to cut the U.S. balance of payments deficit by bringing more dollars into this country from abroad.
Both want to take advantage of the new tendency for real estate money to go international. A British firm has taken a 50 percent interest in New York's new 59-story Pan-American building.
An Italian group is building a $60-million apartment complex near the Lincoln Memorial in Washington. Another British outfit is behind Boston's first big speculative office building.
THE COMMERCE DEPARTMENT has been helping American manufacturers get abroad to sell their products. So why not American real estate men, Commerce asked. The Society of Industrial Realtors liked the idea and picked six of its most prominent members to go.
The mission will talk to leading investors, bankers, mortgage lenders and industrialists in Sweden, the Netherlands, Belgium, West Germany, Switzerland and Italy.
Their sales pitch will run something like this;
- Land costs much less in the United States.
- The United States is growing.
- The United States is growing.
- Foreigners often don't have to pay any capital gains tax when they sell property in the United States.
- The United States is a stable country. Investors here don't have to worry about a revolution.
- You only need about 40 per cent cash to throw up a building in this country.
THE CALL HAS gone out to realtors and others up to offer property. The society has sent notices to the firms on Fortune Magazine's
500 list. So far, more than $200 million worth of property has been offered.
To be eligible for the mission, a property will have to list at $200,000 or more.
And it can't be some old dud that no one's been able to unload at home. Only new listings or ones recently on the market will qualify.
Questionnaires must accompany Peace Corps tests in order that the tests may be evaluated by Washington officials.
Peace Corps Questionnaires Necessary
There are about 30 KU students who took the tests during Peace Corps Week and did not turn in the questionnaires, Jack Croughan, Novato, Calif., senior, member of the Peace Corps committee, said.
"It is important that these students send their questionnaires to the Washington address stamped on the questionnaires immediately so that their tests may be considered," he said.
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He also noted that during Peace Corps Week a large number of students picked up questionnaires who did not take the test that week.
"The next Peace Corps test will be given in all U.S. Post Offices in all states and territories on
Saturday, April 11," Croughan said.
"This means that students can take the test in their home towns over spring vacation," he said.
The questionnaires, however, must be turned in at the time the test is taken.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
STUDENTS Grease Jobs . $1.00 Brake Adj. . 98c
Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
7 a.m.-11 p.m
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57
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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 Unive Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 1 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for ported before second insertion.
Page 15
FOR SALE
Pair of ElectroVoice Laptop loud speaker systems in walnut cabinets. One year old. Best offer. Call VI 2-1180 after 6 p.m. 4-14
1958 Thund-orbird Radio and heater.
Good condition, new tires. Call VI 213-4-
1-4-14
Motorola Stereo—TV walnut finish Console. Almost new, but $100 cheaper. Call Jerry, VI 3-0681 at 6 p.m. 4-14
Student will sell all guns in collection.
45 auto's. Lugers, 38 revolvers, miniature automatics, Ruger 22's, 410 double rifles, Sauer 68's, 45 revolvers, 22 lever action. While they last, 22 LR.
$6.50 per carton. Call VI 3-1110 after 6 p.m.
4-23
Abington Book Shop has "Punch." 1015¹² Mass. Next to Varsity Theater. 4-15
Abington Book Store. Chess Books and
Mass. Downtown next to Varsity Theater.
LAWRENCE FIREARMS COMPANY.
MILITARY WEAPONS. AMMO.
TRADES WANTED. SPECIAL: 22 CAL.
WESTERN REVOLVERS. NEW. $26.50.
WE ALSO REBLIUE. EVENINGS. 1026
OHIO. VI 2-1214. 4-15
1929 Model A Ford coupe. Good condition.
Call VI 2-1139. 4-2
New 10 speed Schwinn bicycle. Regular $66.95. Left in layaway since Christmas. In original box, $7.00 takes it! Ray Stoneback's, 929-831 Mass. 4-15
Used portable stereo. Powerful. $149.95.
Motorola 3 channel, guaranteed. $58
takes it! Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass.
Used Radios, $5 to $10. 4-15
Bicycle weather ahead! Rent or buy a 3 speed Royce Union, $15 per month. 1 month minimum rental. Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. 4-22
1957 Plymouth. 2 door, standard transmission. Call VI 3-5421, Dann Eapp. 4-1
Men's golf clubs. 6 Sam Searchamp,
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3-6728 4-1
Siamese 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. $90. Call VI 3-7922. 4-15
Record player stands. $11.95. Deluxe
Rock Stoneback's. 929-331 Mass. 4-1
Rock Stoneback's. 929-331 Mass. 4-1
1960 Corvair, good condition. 75k. Ask
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Halliarc communication receivers, mod-
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House, four years old, excellent condition. Three bedrooms, link fence, near school and swimming pool. $700 assumes loan. $78 a month. Obs. New appliances and furniture. 1955 Miller Drive. VI 3-6994. tf
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS. Cheater Slicks, etc. for sale; great savings after 6 p.m. weekly weekdays Saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut St. 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 St. Mass.
VI 3-'644. tt
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Tau Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised. extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
Premium ream-$85 Lawrence Outdoor.
1005 Mass
FOR RENT
Small, bachelor type furnished apartment. Suitable for one person. Private bath and Kitchen. Off street parking. Business phone VI 3-0005, residence VI 3-2029
3 room apartment for 2 K.U. boys, Single beds, shower, all utilities paid, neat 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
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Single or double room. Furnished, cook-
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Married, grad students, faculty, 2 bed-
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TYPING
Crescent Heights two bedroom apart-
ment. Swimming pool. 25th and Redbud.
Phone VI 2-3711. tf
Experienced secretary would like typing,
Mrs. Ethel Henderson, VI 2-0122.
Experienced typist with electric type-writer, available to type themes, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work standards and rates. Phone VI 3-8797. Charles tf Patti.
Experienced secretary would like typing in her home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 21188. tf
Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason-ment papers, themes, sentiments and themes, phone VI 3-7652, Mrs. Frank Gibson.
Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (pica type). Mrs. Fulcher, 101 Mississippi, VI 3-058.
Accurate expert typist would like typing in her home. Term papers and theses.
Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. tf
Experienced Typist—Dissertations, Theses,
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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
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VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles
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Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typhwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Ms. Barlow. 2407 Yale. VI 2-1643
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers. Typewriter. Typing machines rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McMeldowny. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI. 3856-78.
Term papers, Thesis. by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tf
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols and prompts. Prompt, efficient service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilman VI2-1546 or Mrs. Doroby Suzanne VI3-3057.
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- General typing service
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Big Store Service and Small Store Attention
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VOLKSWAGEN'S WANTED. Cash for your VW, Conzelman Motors, VW Sales Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway $9 So. **ff**
WARDS
University Daily Kansan
AUTO SERVICE CENTER
Help wanted in Lawrence Memorial Hospital laboratory. Registered or non-registered lab technologists to take night work and work also available if desired. Contact Mr. Torres at VI 3-3680, Ext. 62 between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. on days. 4-15
Have a party in the Big Red School
have a party in the door 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**
MISCELLANEOUS
Swimming Pool Serviceman—Part time.
Starting April. Full time Summer. Some
swimming pool experience preferred.
Work in Kansas City. Call VI 3-8993.
Wednesday, April 1. 1964
ONLY
HELP WANTED
VI 2-1708
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Girl to play electric organ part-time
Call VI 3-4743.
BURGERT'S
Shoe Service
Service for Shoes Since 1910
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JOE'S BAKERY
616 W. 9th
Hot doughnuts—sandwich cold drink
25c delivery VI 3-4720
The only thing better than a home cooked meal is Dinner At DUCKS Steaks & Seafoods A Specialty
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ART'S TEXACO
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Math tutoring over spring vacation. All courses through Math 23. Start reviewing for finals now, Call VI 2-4427. 4-14
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, formalis anc
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Rent a new electric, portable sewing machine,
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Surprise your roommate with a cake on that special occasion. The K.U. Birthday line of cakes. Free delivery and candy. Call VI 2-1791. 4-24
L&M CAFE now under new management
WE WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
We will have delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches.
Your second cup of coffee always free
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1105 Mass. VI 3-5878
Artists - Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics
One Stop Service
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
SKELLY
Is there a creative genius at K.U. who spends his time in class thinking up real wild greeting card ideas? We pay TOP prices for ideas or art aimed at college market. Write: College Hall Cards, Hickory Drive, Larchmont, N.Y. 4-15
The Catacombs nite club and Pizza Dear 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.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY. Peppermint Park Kiddyland operation for sale, 2203 by running this during the summer **4-13 VI** 2-015 at 5 p.m.
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Page 16
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 1, 1964
"Tapped" Conversation Fires Campaign
(Continued from page 1)
Grace said he called Carl Lindquist, Prairie Village junior and UP candidate for college men and asked him to come to the Delta Tau Delta house to listen to the tape.
"He (Grace) played the tapes to me." Lindquist said.
Both candidates for student body president said last night that to the best of their knowledge from sources within their own parties Grace did call Lindquist and asked him to come to the Delta Tau Delta house and listen to the tapes.
Bornholtld said that he had not really heard about it until later Monday afternoon because he had gone to bed and did not get back to the Delta Tau Delta house until about 4:30. Crowther also said that he did not hear about Grace inviting Lindouist until much later.
The tapes were then played in Temple hall Monday evening.
William Reese, Hiawatha junior and president of Templin Hall, and member of UP, stated that he heard the tape in the room of Jim Cline, Rockford, Ill., sophomore and Vox candidate for vice-president of the student body.
"I did not personally invite them (those individuals who listened to the tape in Templin Hall)," Cline stated.
CLINE SAID that the tape was played in his room. When asked if he wanted the tapes to be played he said, "I was sort of neutral on it." He explained that at the time he did not say one way or the other whether he wanted these tapes to be played.
Cline said that he knew nothing about the recording of the conversation at the Theta Chi house until late Sunday night. "I had no idea it was going to be made," he recalled.
Bornholdt said that when he learned that the tape was in Templin hall: "I went over there and put my foot down." he said. "I did not think it was a good idea to play the tapes."
THE TAPE was played again
about 10:30 p.m. in Templin Hall.
The tape was played in Cline's room at this time according to Dave Lutton, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore and a member of UP and Dee Gerstenberger, Park Forest, Ill., junior and member of Vox.
Before the debate in Ellsworth Hall between the two presidential and vice-presidential candidates on Monday night Crowther said that he was asked by some members of Vox to use the tape in the debate, "I was not in favor of this," Crowther explained
The tapes were not used in the debate.
Stewart was also aware of the tapes in Ellsworth Hall. He said that after the debate was over some party workers were invited to listen to the tape.
Stewart said that he talked to the person who had the tape and that Crowther was not there at the time, as far as he knew. "I informed him that if he did play the tape he would very possibly commit a libel," Stewart said.
STEWART said that he asked three things be required before the tape was played: 1) that the uncut version be played before the edited version, 2) that a University Daily Kansan reporter be present, and 3)that Crowther be present.
Stewart said that he asked that Crowther be there because Stewart believed that Crowther had nothing to do with the tapes and thought he would like to know.
Stewart said, "I was assured by Bornholdt at the time that he knew nothing about it."
Stewart then left, and Stewart said that the tape was never played at Ellsworth to his knowledge or the knowledge of the UP supporters there.
CROWTHER returned to Ellsworth to try to find out what had been done after Stewart left
Crowther said," The tape had not been played."
Crowther said that finally after discussion about the tapes they were
turned over to him. Crowther said ber. He gave a copy of the original ledge these tapes which were give he gave the edited tape and the tape to Stewart later in the evening to UP by himself were the one original tape to one UP party mem- Crowther said that to his know- tapes that existed.
Election Night Open House
KUOK
Studios-Hoch Basement
Stop in anytime Thursday Night, April 2, for election results.
Coffee and Donuts Free
CLIP AND SAVE
APRIL 1964
CLIP AND SAVE
SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY
Southside TV 1422 W. 23rd Phone VI3-5140
1 Experimental Theatre April Fool's Day 2 University Women's Coffee Experimental Theatre 3 Experimental Theatre District Music Festival Film Series— "The Spiral Road" 4 Spring Vacation District Music Festival Graduate Study in Business Exams
CLIP AND SAVE These coupons good all during month of April. Coupon must be presented
1 FREE TUBE with any TV repair if brought to shop
FREE LP NEEDLE with any phono lube & adjustment
I FREE SET BATTERIES with all transistor radio repair
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14 EXPERT SERVICE ON TV'S
15 Faculty Recital, University Woodwind Quartet
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18 Kansas Relays International Exposition Engineering Exposition Law School Admissions Test
19 STEREO AND HI-FI
20 GUARANTEED USED TV'S
21 DRIVE IN FACILITIES
22 Speech I Potpourri University Theatre, "Period of Adjustment"
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25 Model UN SUA Jazz Festival Graduate Record Exams "Period of Adjustment" Baseball, Oklahoma—here
26 University Chorus-Symphony Museum of Art Exhibition Symposium of Contemporary American Music
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29 TRANSISTOR RADIOS REPAIRED
30 Delta Sigma Rho Public Speaking Contest
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Daily hansan
Lawrence, Kansas
61st Year, No. 117
Thursday, April 2, 1964
By Lee Stone
Morse Questions Value Of South Viet Nam Fight
South Vietnam is not worth the life of a single American boy, Senator Wayne Morse, Oregon Democrat, told KU students last night. The statement was greeted with applause.
"A puppet is a puppet, and South Viet Nam has not had more that a U.S. puppet government in its ten years of existence," Morse said to an audience of about 500 assembled in Hoch Auditorium.
"I DO NOT believe that more than the tiny fraction of its fourteen million who have benefited and prospered from American assistance can be considered to be 'free' in any sense that Americans understand the word." Morse said.
What we are fighting for "is that
The U.S. should call a meeting of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) or the UN to resolve the trouble in South Vietnam, Morse said, trouble which is costing us American life and money. SEATO "was created to deal with threats to the peace in Southeast Asia, and an amendment (in the SEATO agreement) specifically described South Vietnam as an area of . . mutual interest to" SEATO parties, Morse said.
we are trying to pre-empt the area from what we fear may be Communism." But not for Vietnamese freedom. Morse said.
SEATO PARTNERS are New Zealand, Australia, Thailand, the Philippines, Pakistan, France, and Great Britain.
MacArthur Still Critical; Hospital Asks for Blood
WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Officials at Walter Reed Army Medical Center issued a call today for six pints of blood for ailing Gen. Douglas MacArthur. Volunteers at the big facility immediately filled the request.
Officials said the blood call did not constitute a crisis in the condition of the 84-year-old critically ill general. They said they simply wanted to have "fresh blood" on hand in MacArthur's recovery room. But the hospital said previously MacArthur's recovery chances are "not good."
EARLIER MEDICAL bulletins on his condition said MacArthur had received more than 21 pints of blood since his three major operations in a period of 24 days.
Officials said this was not the first time a call had been issued for blood among personnel at Walter Reed but they said it was the first time it had been done in Mac-Arthur's name.
Today's call was filled almost immediately, officials said.
First indications of a weakening heart yesterday dimmed hopes for MacArthur.
As the 84-year-old General of the Army ended a month in Walter
Reed, doctors said his chances for recovery are "not good."
TWO TELLTALE signs of the heart's condition quavered yesterday. His blood pressure dropped slightly and his pulse increased moderately. Both previously were stable.
A later bulletin reported some improvement in blood pressure. But even so, it said the old soldier's condition—still critical—had deteriorated within the past 24 hours.
Early today, his condition was reported unchanged.
Gen. Henry S. Murphey, Walter Reed commandant, also said MacArthur's kidney's were failing to waste from his body. While the prognosis is "not good," Murphey said there still was a definite chance for recovery.
MURPHEY'S HOPE was reflected in the great and small who spiritually were at the aging warrior's bedside.
A guard at the Smithsonian Institution telephoned the center to ask about MacArthur.
"We hope so." he added.
Morse said our SEATO partners are not with us in South Vietnam. "Is it because none of our treaty partners thinks we are right in trying to hold it as a U.S. area of influence?" he asked.
"He promoted me from Corporal to Captain on the battlefield—I'll never forget it."
The U.S. acted unilaterally in South Vietnam—not with our SEATO partners, Morse said. Our action was based on the "domino" theory, he said.
Morse said that the theory held that "South Vietnam was the first "domino" in the line. Next to it was Cambodia and Laos, then Thailand and Burma. Below Thailand stretches the Malaysian Federation, and beyond that. Indonesia."
"We convinced ourselves that any nations not imbedded with American economic and military aid programs, and all their attendant advisers, was as good as Communist," Morse said.
ALL WERE expected to drop into the "lap of Communism" if South Vietnam did so, Morse said.
He added that a "country not in the Western camp was considered to be in the Communist camp."
None of the Southeast Asian countries except North Vietnam which was never in the row, has become a Communist state. He said they are undemocratic and totalitarian, but so are South Vietnam and Thailand.
"THE MOST optimistic American forecast for South Vietnam was made by the Secretary of Defense when he said we would aid that country 'forever.'" Morse said.
Morse departed from his prepared text at this point to say the Secretary of Defense had no legitimate right to commit the American people to support South Vietnam "forever."
MORSE ALSO criticized U.S. aid to India and Pakistan. "Out of both countries are coming increasing reports of anti-Americanism generated by the aid we give the other," Morse said.
He said "One of the other fallacies of foreign aid is the assumption that the recipients will really line up against Communism.
If a nation's interests are opposed to Communism it will line up against it with or without our aid. If its interest coincides with Communism, all the aid we send them will not make much difference." Morse said.
Brazilian Congressional Move Installs Provisional President
RIO DE JANEIRO—(UPI)—Congress installed its own provisional president of Brazil today as sea and ground forces were reported converging on Porto Allegre, last military stronghold of hold-out President Joao Goulart.
The effect of the congressional action in the third day of revolt and turmoil in Brazil was to leave the country with two presidents—Goulart, who doggedly refused to quit, and Ranieri Mazzilli, speaker of the Chamber of Deputies who was first in line of presidential succession.
The crisis between the anti-Communist rebels and Goulart appeared to be nearing a showdown in the "cowboy state" of Rio Grande Do Sul where Goulart still had army support. The President had fled there from Rio after pausing in Brasilia, the capital, where he disclosed he had refused rebel demands that he quit.
REBEL GENERALS began the revolt against Goulart Tuesday night in protest against his drift to the left which the generals said was heading the country toward communism.
The anti-Goulart "Radio Liberty"
Radio Liberty reported that Second Army artillery and infantry forces were headed for Rio Grande Do Sul and that the main part of the Third Army which had been loyal to Goulart was defecting to the attacking troops. The radio said the garrison at Parana and the Third Infantry and Cavalry division had joined the rebels.
station, broadcasting from Sao Paulo. said today a destroyer and two torpedo boats had been sent to blockade Porto Allegre, "aiding 2nd Army (rebel) troops" who are marching on the city.
A DISPATCH FROM Paso De Los Libres, Argentina, said Brazilian troops at Uruguaiana across the border in Brazil had revolted and seized the post office, telephone exchange, power station, and banks there yesterday. The troops were part of the Third Army.
Radio Liberty consists of hundreds of radio stations in Sao Paulo state and elsewhere which are operating jointly with identical news and martial music programs.
There has been no major fighting in the revolt as yet, but the Goulart faction said its troops were moving toward the rebels in Sao Paulo.
Congressional leaders said a president to serve the balance of Goulart's term—probably Maj. Gen. Amaury Kruel, commander of the 2nd Army, or some other anti-Communist military leader—will be elected within 30 days as required by the Constitution.
THE PROVISIONAL PRESIDENT, in an "inaugural" speech, appealed for the help of Congress and the armed forces to "dissipate the anguished crisis of the Brazilian nation."
Weather
The cloudy skies and shower activity that began yesterday afternoon will continue tonight and tomorrow, according to the weather bureau. Temperatures will be somewhat cooler tonight and tomorrow. Tonight's low temperature will be in the low 50's.
Mazzilli was sworn in at the presidential palace in Brasilia 35 minutes after Senate President Auro Moura Andrade had formally notified a 9-minute joint session of congress that Goulart had "abandoned the presidency."
SPECIAL
176
FREE RIDES—The Vox Haul bus and several University Party cars were busy carrying students to the polls today as the election went into its last day. Driving the UP car was Ballis Bell, Abilene freshman, and riding was Roy Rawlings, Kansas City sophomore. (Photo by Tom Moore)
Light Vote Today Despite Big Rallies
Political rallies last night didn't appear to inspire any more voters this morning as the voting was lighter than yesterday at the same time.
Dick King, Kansas City sophomore and elections committee chairman, described the turnout this morning as "not as good as yesterday."
"But if today is any indication, the vote will probably run around 4,500." King said. In last spring's election, students cast 3,922 ballots.
KING SAID THE voting yesterday was fairly heavy for the first day. There were 2,496 votes cast yesterday, making the total for the first day and a half of the election 3,075 votes.
The total votes for the school districts at 11 a.m. today were college men,1,007;college women,755;education,409;engineering, 291;fine arts,149;graduate,157;business,157;law,59;pharmacy, 61;journalism,34.
The voting turnout continues to be the heaviest at the polls in Strong Hall where this morning's vote, up to 11 a.m., was 302, while 161 votes were cast at the Kansas Union and 116 votes at Murphy Hall.
The results of the race for student body president will be computed by 1 a.m. Friday morning or maybe later, King said.
TOTAL VOTES for class officers at 11 a.m. were: seniors, 260;
juniors, 199; sophomores, 278.
The polls were scheduled to close at 6:15 p.m. today, and the counting of the ballots was to begin at 8:30 p.m., King said.
The first day of campus elections was topped off by political rallies and car parades by both political parties.
THE UP RALLY was organized by a small group of party members who procured torches and posters. The group headed by Melville Linscott, Topeka junior, notified UP members at 8:00 p.m. last night that a UP torch parade would begin at 9 p.m. in O zone. By 9:00 p.m. cars began filling the lot and were sent out again to pick up UP supporters at the freshman women's dormitories.
UP people milled around in front of GSP chanting "It's our year" and "All the way with Bob and Kaye" while about a dozen Vox people paraded their painted sheets in front of the UP people.
Vox Populi was not sitting around during this time; they were organizing their own rally in the Joseph R. Pearson Hall parking lot. The rally was called on the spur of the moment and Vox was not equipped with torches or signs. Party supporters, however, gave them white sheets painted with the letters "VOX."
UP had picked up some freshman girls and returned to O zone to start the rally. They picked up UP placards. Men and women in about 250 cars started for North College to start the rally at 9:40 p.m.
AT NORTH COLLEGE the UP people picked up about 30 torches, and amid much shouting and honking, moved in front of Gertrude Sellards Pearson (GSP) residence halls.
The crowd, which was estimated at 1,000 by campus police, was almost all UP. After 15 minutes of shouting and honking, the crowd moved to Corbin Hall to be met by about 55 girls sitting on the roof who were yelling slogans for both Vox and UP. The crowd migrated to their cars after about 12 minutes of cheering.
BY 10:00 P.M., VOX HAD finished its rally, having paraded in small groups at North College and later at West Campus.
By 10:00 p.m., UP was hitting its prime. Again 30 torches were handed to UP men, this time as they entered the west dormitory area. First they assembled in front of Lewis Hall, chanting their "It's our year" and "All the way with Bob and Kaye." The dormitory residents looked out of their windows with puzzled faces at the chanting UP supporters. Five minutes later, the crowd of about 950, according to campus police, moved in front of Hashinger Hall and began the chants again.
Next they visited Ellsworth and Templin Halls. Each time they chanted for a dormitory group, a few of the residents came down to join, the remainder would just look on curiously.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 2,1964
Red Show-down
Premier Nikita Khrushchev will kick off his campaign in order to get support in his ideological dispute with Red China next month when the world Communist leaders will meet in Moscow to celebrate his 70th birthday anniversary.
According to reported sources in Budapest, a decision whether to call a world Communist meeting to judge the dispute between the two major states may come.
"If called, such a meeting would probably make the widening gap between the Russians and the Chinese unabridgeable," a copyrighted article of New York Times reports. "The Chinese would face the choice of being outvoted or ignoring the invitation to the meeting, thus conceding the argument to Moscow. . . ."
The argument in the Sino-Soviet dispute lies in the fact that China wants war and Russia wants peace. The Soviet Union accuses Communist China of warmongering and Red China, in turn, denounces Russia for betraying the interests of the revolution.
The Red Chinese aggression in the Southeast Asia shows that the Chinese Communists do not agree with Khrushchev that war is out of date in a nuclear age. They do not agree that capitalism can be vanquished by peaceful means. On this very point they are quarreling with the Soviet leadership. They have made it clear to the world that they are still set upon the policy of revolutionary aggression.
Communist China has been able to get support from a few Communist parties in Asia, especially from the ruling parties in North Korea and North Vietnam and the comparatively strong parties in Indonesia and Japan. The Chinese Communists have convinced these nations that Russia is not willing to help them win their revolutions since it (the Soviet Union) is afraid of nuclear war.
On the other hand, the Soviet Union has gained support from the Communist governments in Eastern Europe. It was reported that Khrushchev already has reached agreement with the Communist parties of Hungary, Poland, and Bulgaria. Khrushchev is believed to have received support from the Communist parties of West on the basis that China does not care whether the more developed countries survive so long as Red Chinese interests are satisfied.
However, looking at China's resources, its international relations, its propaganda machine and its people's efficiency, the Chinese Communists seem to be too limited to challenge the Soviet Union successfully. And if the meeting of the world Communists is called, only two possibilities exist: (1) Red China accepts the terms of the Soviet Union or (2) a complete break in the relations of the two largest Communist parties.
- Vinay Kothari
Guidance Bureau Provides Aid In Students' Search for Identity
CLOSED
BOBBY
BAKER
CASE
By Margaret Hughes Searching for your identity?
ACCORDING TO RECENT articles by sociologists, educators, and psychologists, this generation of college students is characterized by its "search for identity" the constant quest for who, where, and WHY.
The Guidance Bureau's seven staff members oversee an extensive program of counseling, testing, teaching, and research. The program is open and free of charge to all KU students.
Every year 900 to 1,000 KU students go exploring—into their personalities and abilities—at the Guidance Bureau in Bailey Hall.
Director of the Guidance Bureau is E. Gordon Colliser, professor of education, a cheerful chain-smoker with twinkly blue eyes.
"I DON'T THINK the 'search for identity' is any more pronounced now; but students are more honest and open about it
than they were 30 years ago," Prof. Collier said.
“Maybe searching for one's identity is more 'all right' now—more the socially acceptable thing to do.”
Prof. Collister explained the guidance program's extent: "We don't think it makes sense to categorize problems. In fact, we aren't concerned with students' problems, but with students who have problems."
STUDENTS OFTEN misinterpret the purpose of the Guidance Bureau. "They have the idea they can come in and have someone tell them, 'You should be a deepsea diver or a concert violinist,'" Prof. Collister said.
"We have no right to do this—a person's life belongs to him; we can't line out his life pattern," Prof. Collister explained. "We try to present him with possibilities and 'best estimates' so that he can better make his own choices."
Often, after a preliminary interview, a counselor will decide that test results will help in advising a
student. Most of the tests are ability, achievement, interest, and personality inventories.
"WHEN I CAME HERE in 1950," Prof. Collister said, "people thought of the Guidance Bureau as the place where they took tests. Now it is recognized that testing is only part of the program."
He added that test results must be explained and discussed, that they mean nothing by themselves.
"Test scores don't help a student know what to do." Prof. Collister said. "The average number of sessions we have with each student has doubled in the past few years."
"DESPITE THIS' search for identity' trend, there are still many students in college who have never sat down and thought about who they are," Prof. Collister commented.
"Perhaps this is a cultural effect: they feel people will think them selfish to do this kind of thinking.
"But after all, who are you going to spend more time with than yourself?"
The People Say...
Twisted Pretzels
The mounting pressure directed toward integration has put many fraternity and sorority members in the position of a twisted pretzel. As educated members of society, the Greeks typically recognize that segregation of the Negro has been cruel, crude, exploitive with injurious effects to the white as well as the Negro community. Likewise, the concept of "separate but equal" has little audience. Yet fraternity and sorority members may still have personal reluctances to associate closely with Negroes, reluctances which become expressed as the right to choose the person with whom you live; a point which deserves recognition rather than deision.
Of course I am aware that some of the Greek houses have consci-
Recognition of this growing but largely underlying sentiment is not yet accomplished. The Greek sys-
Perhaps until now it has been possible to avoid genuinely facing up to the discrepancy between the issue of desiring integration but at the same time wishing to stave off integrated housing. We could keep ourselves isolated by either putting it out of our minds, or dealing with it at arms length in the form of intellectual discussions. But the tide of national racial integration as well as the increased concern in Lawrence and on campus has put the issue of integration flat on our laps where we can no longer pretend it is only an academic issue.
In the same vein, it is my opinion that Chancellor Wescoe is doing a disservice to the fraternities and sororities by avoiding the leadership role of crystallizing the issue in a less tender-hearted manner. I recognize that the Chancellor is under considerable pressure which pushes him to take the least repugnant stand to both sides consonant with his value of ameliorating the civil rights issue. However, the hidden issue in Chancellor Wescoe's current stand is that it makes it difficult for the many who are feeling the pressure of their two discrepant values of being for civil rights but against integration in housing to make their feelings manifest. The implicit reasoning among these members is that the University's reluctance to take a positive stand also gives them license to avoid facing up to the issues which are nevertheless on their minds.
ten has yet to provide channels for the expression of these sentiments, no longer as an intellectual issue but with a view toward action and change. There is a need in these discussions to genuinely make it possible for members to express all of their feelings about the civil rights issue, their ambiguity, feelings of their desirability for solution, concern, as well as the traditional polar issue of integration versus private rights.
entiously made efforts to deliberate the issue. I understand that one sorority is making plans to actively rush and pledge Negro girls in the coming rush season. Nevertheless, though the issues are in the air, too many of us have yet to commit ourselves to the facts that:
2. The question is not one of "either-or" but rather "what and how is the best way of accomplishing integration . . . now!"
1. Integration of fraternities and sororities is inevitable.
Any choice involves giving one thing up for the other, but I feel the extent of our hesitance about accepting Negroes into fraternities and sororites reflects the wish that all alternatives can be satisfied and everybody can live happily ever after. Not so in the real world. Perhaps an overt recognition of this may assist people in moving out of obsessive deliberation into action and resolution.
It is no longer tenable to ride the civil rights horse in both directions at once, as was the minister who was picketing recently in front of the Student Union who maintained that he was not anti-Negro but was for serregation. A Negro girl in the crowd asked him if he in fact (as he said) loved all Negroes.
"Yes, I do," he piously replied "I don't," she said. Stephen Goldfarb San Diego, Calif., graduate student
Life Is Having Hubby Hanging in the Closet
Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mama's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feeling So Sad.
And so she had. On a hook. Stuffed by the friendly neighborhood taxidermist.
ENTER MADAME ROSEPETTLE, unaffectionately called Mama, who is mourning her murder of her husband with a Caribbean tour. Dressed in black (trimmed and lined in scarlet satin), Madame is the self-appointed tsaress of an entourage of piranha fish, venus fly traps, a corps of bellboys, a corpse, and other dependents (Jonathan). She spends her days keeping doors locked on her son Alfred (Edward? Robinson') and her nights combing the beaches for couples to kick sand at.
$
ROSALIE, WHOSE NOCTURNAL ACTIVITIES make ludicrous her pink and ruffled costume, manages to draw Jonathan into Madame's forbidden bedroom and sheds innumerable crinolines down to a slinky red slip. She does pretty well until Poor Dad falls out of the closet across the bed.
Yes, life is ugly outside Mama's suite—it's there waiting to seduce and sunburn her stammering, gangly, cloistered son. He occupies himself with his collections of stamps, coins, and books, and with ogling Rosalie, the red-headed babysitter, through a homemade telescope. "Call me Jonathan," he pleads with her, in an attempt to deny or establish his identity.
Now playing in the Experimental Theatre, "Oh Dad" will extend its run during the week after spring vacation. Its popularity is well justified by the script itself and by the excellent performances of the four main characters.
Nancy Vunovich, Arkansas City graduate student, is commanding and magnetic as Madame Rosepettle. The play never drags, even through Madame's seven-page monologue. She delivers her lines with professional ease.
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have
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Rosaliie, the babysitter-seductress, is effectively played by Judy Howell, Hinsdale, Ill., freshman. Commodore Roseabove, a wheezy old waltzer who resists kissing because of his asthma, is well portrayed by Tom Winston, Dallas, Tex., senior, with only occasional lapses in characterization.
BOB RUMPF, WEBSTER GROVES, MO., senior, plays the bumbling, naive Jonathan to bumbling, naive perfection.
The setting, lighting, and sound effects are unremarkable; it is the performances that put "Oh Dad" across as one of the best of the surdist plays.
ABSURD IT IS. The last line is Madame Rosepettle's query, "What is the meaning of all this?" Some would answer, "None at all." We would call it a valid and valuable comment on current customs and morals and on the sterility of personal relationships.
The
July
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—Margaret Hughes
THE Unive size a intern its ab guage
Dailij Könsan
111 Flint Hall
University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, trieweky 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.
100%
Thursday, April 2, 1964
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
$500,000 Grant Goes to KU Professors
Eleven faculty and staff members have been named recipients of awards for research and travel under the half-million dollar Ford Foundation grant, George M. Beckmann, associate dean of taculties and chairman of the KU Council for International Programs, announced.
The Ford grant, announced last July and giving KU $100,000 for five years, specifically provides funds for faculty members who specialize in international areas to renew more frequently their personal contacts in the area.
THE GRANT also provides the University with funds to increase the size and capabilities of its faculty in international education, to increase its ability to teach the "unusual languages," to purchase additional books
for library holdings in the international area and to continue experiments in international teaching and research throughout the University.
Under the grant three faculty members received awards in support of research in the 1964-65 academic year. They are:
fessor of philosophy; Frank H. H. King, associate professor of economics; Roy D. Laird, professor of political science; Robert E. Nunley, associate professor of geography and Charles L. Stansifer, assistant professor of history.
Dr. Errol E. Harris, Roy A. Roberts distinguished professor of philosophy, for research in Europe on the principles of international order;
Special travel awards in support of research have been given to Thomas R. Buckmann, director of libraries, Harry G. Shaffer, assistant professor of economics and Heinrich A. Stammler, professor and chairman of Slavic languages and literatures.
DR. MICHAEL KLIMENKO,
assistant professor of Slavic languages
and literatures, for research in Europe on the expansion of Christianity in Russian territory to the time of Peter the Great;
Dr. Raymond G. O'Connor, associate professor of history, for research in relation to the writing of a book titled "A History of American Foreign Policy from 1921 to 1841," to be volume seven of a series on American foreign policy published by the Atherton Press.
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INTERVIEWS 1965 ROCK CHALK REVUE PRODUCER & BUSINESS MANAGER
APPLICATION BY LETTER DESCRIBING QUALIFICATIONS, REASONS FOR APPLYING AND IDEAS CONCERNING THE REVUE.
DUE 5:00 P.M., APRIL 15 KU-Y OFFICE, KANSAS MEMORIAL UNION
INTERVIEWS: 7:30 P.M., APRIL 16
DONALD R. MEYER
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 2, 1964
Speakers Picked for Ad Day
Robert Peele, advertising director of the Topeka Capital-Journal, and Craig Starner, promotional art director of Look Magazine, will be two of the featured speakers at the eighth annual Advertising Day April 16.
It is sponsored by Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternity.
Featured will be "Creativity on Paper," a display of the imaginative uses of paper sponsored by the Champion Paper Co.
The purpose of the day is to give
BERING
Quinn, has contributed articles to the "Weekly People" the Socialis Labor Party's official organ.
BERING
Bering is married to the taste of Havana
First
Over 59 years, Bering grew Into the largest maker of all-Havana cigars in Tampa. Now, after the embargo, we are the only major independent left.
First, we had a really big warehouse stock. Then, we brought in a breweryful (that's where we put it) at the last minute.
Why? Why did Bering choose not to merge, like others, or go out of business?
Socialist To Speak at Forum
Secondly, we have our experts experimenting with tobacco samples from many spots in the world. The "Havana taste" of some of the new leaf surprises even us.
BOSTON — (UPI) — The Boston Bruins became the first team in the United States to join the National Hockey League in 1924.
Our reasoning is this: we've made our reputation by giving you the kind of pleasurable taste you've always wanted. And we figure that as long as we continue to deliver it, we have a good business going.
The national organizer for the Socialist Party is scheduled to speak before the SUA Minority Opinions Forum on April 24.
BERING CIGARS Since 1905
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interested students a glimpse into the field of advertising. Over the years Alpha Delta Sigma has invited many of the industry's leaders to give presentations on all phases of advertising.
Laird Wilcox, Lawrence freshman and chairman of the Minority Opinions Forum said John P. Quinn, who is eighty years old, is a tireless worker for the Socialist Labor Party.
The Round Corner Drug Store 801 Mass. (SEE OUR FINE STOCK)
The NROTC is planning a trip April 6-10 to visit Marine installations on the West Coast.
NROTC Plans Trip To West Coast Bases
They will fly to Lindsberg Field, California, visit the Marine Air Station at El Toro and 29 Palms, near Palm Beach.
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KU Student To Travel To Germany With IFY
James Cormode is taking a break from his studies to go to Germany on the International Farm Youth Exchange (IFY) April-October of this year.
150
Cormode, Lancaster junior, is one of four IFY delegates going to Germany where he will live with six families in different areas of the country: Hessen, Berlin, Baden-Wuttemberg, Bavaria, North Rhine-Westphalia, and Lower Saxony or Schleswig Holstein. He is to learn farming practices of the country by working on the farms as a member of the family.
ALL REPRESENTATIVES going to European and Middle East countries set sail on the USS Rotterdam April 15 in New York after a week of orientation in Washington, D.C.
Five other delegates are going from Kansas this year. Kansas has sent and received more people than any other state since the program began, Cormode said.
Cormode also hopes to investigate the mass communication systems of Germany.
For each delegate a state sends a delegate from a foreign country is sent in return. Delegates must be 20 to 30 years of age, single and have an agricultural background.
THE EXCHANGE, a part of the 4-H program, is supported by private funds donated by individuals and foundations. The Ford Foundation provided a major portion of the
BANJOON SINGH
Sir Knight Formal Rental 842 Mass. V13-9594
WHAT'S NEW IN THE APRIL ATLANTIC?
"Must the Colleges Police Sext?" John T. Rule, former Dean at M.I.T., in a provocative article, says "To deny a student the right to have a girl in his room is to punish him for what he do might with her".
"U.S.A. Revisited" John Dos Passos takes a new, kaleidoscopic view of our country — its turnpikes, motels, huge publicity parties, and some of the men who have formed the sinews of our society.
Phoebe-Lou Adams: "A Rough Map of Greece": The first of a new series on traveling in Greece alone by car, Real caviar.
Gerard Piel: "Abundance and the Future of Man"; American surpluses can be converted into dynamic benefits for India, for other develop-
and for the American economy.
The pursuit of excellence is the everyday job of The Atlantic's editors be it fiction or fact, poetry or prose. In ever-increasing numbers, those in pursuit of academic excellence find in The Atlantic a challenging, entertaining and enlightening companion. Get your copy today.
Atlanta
ON SALE NOW
funds from 1948-1963.
Cormode lives on a 140-acre farm with his parents and younger brother Gary, who is now a freshman here. He has been active in 4-H work since 1951, has won several poultry awards on the county level and was State Electric Champion in 1960.
Upon his return, Cormode will give talks in Atchison County and surrounding areas.
Steak Dinner
Sunday Nites
$1.25
4:30 - 10:30
DINE-A-MITE
23rd & La.
Page 5
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
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Let us help you decide. We have both.
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Thursday, April 2, 1964
University Daily Kansan
医生俯卧于病人背部
1. I just made a very smart buy.
Would you like to hear about it?
You can see I'm all ears.
A man in a suit is pointing up at another person lying on the ground.
2. It's an item that will stand me in good stead throughout my life.
You don't say.
A man smiling and giving a thumbs up to a woman lying on the bed.
3. It guarantees security for the family I expect to have shortly. Interesting.
A doctor is giving a massage to a patient.
4. It can provide money for my children's education.
Is that so?
A happy man giving a massage to a woman lying on her back.
5. It can pay off the mortgage if I die. Or make money available for emergencies or opportunities. Or provide a lifetime income when I retire.
Look, if anything was that good, a lot of people would have it.
SAMSON
6. Precisely. And over 11 million people do. Because I was telling you about Living Insurance from Equitable.
Tell me more.
For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable. For information about career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, 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 $ \textcircled{1} $1964
SUMMER JOBS
for STUDENTS
NEW S'64 directory lists 20,000 summer job openings in 50 states. MALE or FEMALE. Unprecedented research for students includes exact pay rates and job details. Names employers and their addresses for hiring in industry, summer camps, national parks, resorts, etc., etc., etc. Hurry!! jobs filled early. Send two dollars. Satisfaction guaranteed. Send to: Summer Jobs Directory—P. O. Box 13593—Phoenix, Arizona.
JOBS ABROAD
STUDENTS & TEACHERS
Largest NEW directory. Lists hundreds of permanent career opportunities in Europe, South America, Africa and the Pacific, for MALE or FEMALE. Totals 50 countries. Gives specific addresses and names prospective U.S. employers with foreign subsidiaries. Exceptionally high pay, free travel, etc. In addition, enclosed vital guide and procedures necessary to foreign employment. Satisfaction guaranteed. Send two dollars to Jobs Abroad Directory—P. O. Box 13593—Phoenix, Arizona.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 2. 1964
Students Vote 39 For HOPE Award
Thirty-nine faculty members have drawn the praise of their students in the form of nomination of the 1964 HOPE Award, Jane Lutton, Bartlesville, Okla. senior and publicity chairman for the selections committee, said last night.
The HOPE Award is presented each year to the faculty member voted most outstanding by seniors of all KU schools.
The recipient of this year's award will be announced at the senior coffee scheduled for April 22.
This year's nominees are:
Kenneth Armitage, associate professor L. rooboy; J. John Auselli, chairman of the department of history; W. Backus, professor of history; William Bass, assistant professor of anthropology; James A. Baur, technical assistant of chemist; James Bee, instructor of geography; Gioacchia Gierl, professor of art history; Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism; E. C. Buehler, chairman of the department of speech; Robert dies; J. A. Burzle, chairman of the department of German; Peter Caws, Rose Morgan professor of philosophy; Charles Dichel, assistant professor of business education; Karl Edwards, professor of education.
J. Eldson Fields, professor of political science; Clifford S. Griffin, associate professor of architecture; Avisitant professor of architecture; Earl S. Huyer, associate professor of chemistry; Clifford Ketzel, associate professor of political science; Paul Kitson, assistant professor of architecture; Mary Kleinberg, professor of chemistry; Mary E. Larson, associate professor of zoology;
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence
Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
University Lecture, 4:30 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union. "The Changing Concept of Truth"—Stephan Koerner, U. of Bristol
Der deutsche Stammtsitzt trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 2. April, um 4 Uhr 30 in der Bierbuehle. Ecke 14th—Tenn. Alle sind im Laden werden. Wir werden einige Linger singe.
SUA Poetry Hour, 4:30 p.m., Music Room, Kansas Union.
Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion,
Pan American Room, Kansas
Union.
Continuing Philosophy Lecture, 7:30 p.m., Dyche Auditorium. "Obstacles to World Order II: Ideological."—Prof. Erol Harris.
Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m., Danfort Chapel. Everyone wei-
CFM, 8 p.m. St. Lawrence Center,
1915 Stratford Rd.
Sociology Colloquium, "306 Kansas University Centered Revolution" - U. Gordon Erickson
Philosophy Club 8 p.m. Faculty Club
Imparted Laws of Nature"-.Prof.
Laws of Nature"-.Prof.
College Life, 9 p.m., 1301 Campus Rd.
Dr. William R. Bright founder of Cam-
Dr. William R. Bright founder of Cam-
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m., St.
Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
SUA FILM, 7 p.m., Fraser Theater.
"The Silent Road."
SUA FILM, 7 p.m., Fraser Theater.
"The Spiral Road."
Jewish Community Center Services.
**2018 Jewish Community Center Services.**
7:30 p.m., 917 Highland Dr. Refreshments.
Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
Patronize Your
Austin Lasbbrook, associate professor of classics; Bruce Linton, professor of speech and drama; Robert Montgomery, assistant professor of the school; Rilian Martt, professor of the School at Reliant
ENTERTAINMENT
Folix Moos, assistant professor of sociology and anthropology; Frank Nellick, assistant professor of sociology; Osborne professor of philosophy; W. Pozdrø, associate professor of organ and music theory; Dennis Quinn, assistant professor of English; Arvid Viktorsson, assistant professor of English; Edward Smisman, professor of pharmacy; James Stachowiak, assistant professor of psychology; Jole Cohen, assistant professor of James Sterritt, assistant professor of architecture; Marilyn Stokstad, associate professor of art history; Wyman Storet, associate professor of astronomy; James Sterritt, assistant professor of drawing and painting.
Write: Y-Orpheum
K-State Union Activities Center
Manhattan, Kansas
April 10-11
April 10-11
Tickets: Friday—$1.25 and $1.75
Saturday—$1.50
Wild Times Up The River The Kansas State University Y-ORPHEUM 1964
Kansan Advertisers
630 kc
KUOK
Steak Dinner
JIMMY GILMER and the FIREBALLS
DOT Record Hits ----- ● SUGAR SHACK
● DAISY PETAL PICKIN
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Meadow Acres Ballroom, Topeka —— April 5, 8-11 p.m.
"All students admitted for $1 with I.D. card"
air time:
4-12 p.m., Sun.-Fri.
SMOTHERS BROTHERS
Sunday Nites $1.25
appearing
Monday, April 13, 7:30 p.m.
4:30-10:30
DINE-A-MITE
23rd & La.
Whiting Field House
Student Union Activities Board Washburn University
presented by
at
selected sounds for KU students
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.
Let's go flying this Weekend - for only $2
T
or learn to fly at Erhart Flying Service Incorporated 1/2 Mile NE of Tee Pee Municipal
The Castle Tearoom For Your Dining pleasure 1307 Mass. VI 3-1151
BOYD'S CAFE
at 109 W. 6th St.
is ready to serve you
Tues-Sun. till 4 a.m.
Take A Study Break And Join The Gang at the Gaslight Tavern
C
VOLCANIC POWER AND PASSION!
ROCK HUDSON : BURLIVES
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Feature Times: 7 & 9:30 p.m.
Fraser Theater
FRIDAY FLICKS
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24
LC
Thursday, April 2,1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
KE
T
GUIDE
KE
OPEN THRU SPRING BREAK
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
for the finest in Steaks its...
★ Charcoal Broiled Steaks
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CHUCK WAGON
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PLACES TO GO & THINGS TO DO !
IRVING GRANZ presents.
AMERICA'S NO. 1 RECORDING STARS
AN EVENING WITH
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THE CHRISTIAN BAND
AN EVENING WITH the Kingston TRIO
EXTRA ATTRACTION The Nations Newest Singing Star NANCY WILSON
Municipal Aud., Kansas City, Mo.
Friday, April 17, 8:30 p.m.
Tickets $2, $3, $3.50, $4
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IE
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Starts SATURDAY
Walt Disney's
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Mat. Sat. & Sun. at 2:30
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Coming April 15
"A ROARING ENTERTAINMENT!" — New York Times
- New York Times
NEW YORK TIMES
Tom Jones
EASTMANCOLOR
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NOW! Starts at Dusk
"THE GREAT ESCAPE"
"Dr. No"
EXTRA BONUS SAT. NITE
Sunset
Sunset IN THEATRE - West on Nighway 40
DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40
Starts SUNDAY - - -
"CRY BATTLE"
"WAR IS HELL"
Both First-Run!
Yacht Club?
read the entertainment page
Ship Captain
(2)
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 2, 1964
(119)
Coach Bill Easton's Outdoor Track Team Enters Texas Relays Meet This Weekend
Coach Bill Easton's outdoor track squad, which finished out of the money at Texas last year for the first time since 1948, will attempt this weekend to begin another winning streak at the 37th annual Texas Relays.
Coach Easton's hopes ride, in part, on his 1964 four-mile relay edition. Since he came here in the fall of 1947, Easton's baton foursomes have won 25 victories in the Austin competition. Nine of the winning performances were by four-mile teams and four of these wins broke records.
The Jayhawks, however, haven't won the four-mile relay at Austin since 1959, when a team of Bill Mills, Dan Ralston, Tom Skutka and Cliff Cushman turned a time of 17:15.6, just three seconds away from its record performance of a year before. Since then, however, Houston and Nebraska have wiped out the KU mark. The Nebraska record of 17:01.8 stands as the record going into this year's competition.
THIS YEAR, however, Easton returns to Austin with a new relay team which is loaded with the kind of talent records are made of.
The quartet consists of Herakd Hadley, John Donner, Bill Silverberg and Paul Acevedo. These men ran a four mile time of 17:17.3 Monday over the track here. The track was in the process of being resurfaced when this time was established.
It is, reportedly, likely that John Lawson will replace Silverberg in the relay lineup since Silverberg is scheduled to run the three-mile in Friday night's competition. The four-
mile team leads off in the finals Saturday afternoon. Hadley is the only member of the four-milers who saw duty in any event at Texas last year.
The Jayhawk trackmen are expected also to score in every other relay in the meet with the exception of the sprint medley.
Big Eight champion pole vaulter Floyd (Buzz) Manning figures to be the top KU contender in the individual events at Texas.
Easton will take 30 members of his team to Austin, then lay over for a week before meeting Abilene Christian and New Mexico.
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Thursday, April 2.1964
University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Navy Offers Students Aid
KU has again been chosen one of 13 universities to conduct the pilot program for a Modified Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps program providing for two or three years of liberal financial assistance to the student.
The applicants will be chosen by Capt. Richard D. Gruber, commanding officer of the KU Naval ROTC, and the deans of the School of Engineering and Architecture and of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
The program will be open to five sophomores, who now have B averages and who will major in chemistry, mathematics, physics, or one of 11 engineering fields. Three alternates will be named.
The Navy chose the participating universities on the basis that these institutions have the most engineering and "hard science" areas accredited by the Engineers Council for Professional Development.
Application blanks and information can be obtained from the NROTC, 115 Military Science Building. The deadline for filing is April 24.
Prompt Electronic Service
on
TV Color TV Antennae
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Radios Transistors Car Radios
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When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified
Make sure
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your clothes cleaned and laundered before the big spring vacation.
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Geared for Spring . . . these crisp, cool shorts go anywhere in comfort. Choose from a Rally of Spring Shades and Fabrics including long-wearing blends of 65% 'Decron' polyester and 35% cotton fabric. *DUPont's Regina M. Penny* priced from $3.98.
CaPeR Casuals SMITH BROTHERS MANUFACTURING COMPANY CARTHAGE, MQ.
---
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 2, 1964
72031
Professor to Speak in West Berlin
Richard De George, associate professor of philosophy, is the only person from the United States invited to speak at an international conference April 9 and 10 in West Berlin.
Professor De George will talk on "Soviet Ethics and Soviet Society."
The conference is on "Philosophy, Ideology and Society in the Soviet Union" and is being held under the Section for Eastern European Sociology of the Eastern European Institute of the Free University of Berlin.
LAWRENCE Sanitary
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LAWRENCE SANITARY
MILK AND ICE CREAM COMPANY
VI 3-5511 202 West 6th
KU's Favorite SINCE 1920
A man dancing happily.
Fun is living in Park Plaza
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 PLAZA SOUTH
PARK PLAZA SOUTH
Ph. VI 2-3416
1912 W. 25th
Day or Night
the Dress Shoppe
EXPRESS
FOR SALE
DRUG STORE
BEAT STATE
REAL ESTATE
Can you avoid living in "Jamsville"?
It won't be easy. By 1980 most Americans will live in 40 large metropolitan areas-each with more than a million population. To keep your community from becoming a "Jamsville" will take people with ideas - ideas that can help cities move more traffic swiftly, safely and economically.
Some of the ideas come from the men and women of General Electric who, in effect, form a "Progress Corps."
In major cities, they're helping to develop balanced transportation built around rapid,rail-transit systems . . . and they're providing advanced equipment to power and control the trains. They're also developing a TV monitoring system that enables a single engineer to control miles of auto traffic .. a jet engine
that speeds commuters in a hydrofoil ship over the waves . . . and another jet engine to lift travelers over traffic via turbocopter at 150 mph.
Traffic is only one of many problems General Electric people are working on. Their numerous projects, in this country and around the world, demand a variety of talents: engineering, finance, marketing, law, physics and many others.
If you'd like to join the "Progress Corps" after graduation, talk to your placement director. He can help qualified young people begin their careers at General Electric.
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University Daily Kansan
FOR SALE
Wedding dresses. Sizes 7-8. Never worn.
apartment, between 4-6 p. 4-14
apartment, between 4-6 p. 4-14
Pair of ElectroVoice Lavton loud speaker systems in walnut cabinets. One year old. Best offer. Call VI 2-1180 after 6 p.m. 4-14
Page 11
1958 Thunderbird. Radio and heater.
Good condition, new tires. Call VI 2-430-7600.
Student will sell all guns in collection,
45 auto's, Lugers, 38 revolvers, miniature
automatics, Ruger 22's, 410 double
Revolver Desert Eagle, 22 lever action. While they last! 22 LR,
$6.50 per carton. Call VI 3-1110 after 6
p.m.
4-23
Motorola Sterco—TV walnut finish Conti-
mputer Jerry, VI 3-0881 after 6 p.m.
4-14
Abington Book Shop has "Punch" 1015% Mass. Next to Varsity Theater. 4-15
Abington Book Store. Chess Books and
Maps. Mass. Downtown. next to Varsity Theater. 4-15
LAWRENCE FIREARMS COMPANY.
MILITARY WEAPONS, AMMO.
TRADES WANTED. SPECIAL: 22 CAL.
WESTERN REVOLVERS. NEW. $26.50.
WE ALSO REBLUE. EVENINGS. 1026
OHIO. VI 2-1214. 4-15
1929 Model A Ford coupe. Good condition.
Call VI 2-1139. 4-2
New 10 speed Schwinn bicycle. Regular $66.95. Left in layaway since Christmas. In original box, $7.50 takes it! Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. 4-15
Used portable stereo. Powerful. $149.95.
Motorola 3 channel, guaranteed. $58
takes it! Ray Stoneback s, 929-931 Mass.
Used Radios, $5 to $10. 4-15
Bicycle weather ahead! Rent or buy a
3 speed Royce Union, $15 per month,
1 month minimum rental. Ray Stoneback's.
929 Mass. 4-22
Slamse kittens for sale. Call VI 3-5807 or see at 1515 E. 15th. 4th.
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, $90. Call VI 3-7922. 4-15
House four years old, excellent cond. cond. rooms, 600 sq. ft. near school and swing room, $700 loan. $78 a month. Ops. New appliances. furniture. 1985 MILLER Drive. VI 6994. 6894.
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS. Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale great savings after 6 p.m. every week day. Saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut tt
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.
For Forlier 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. Originally known as the Theta Theta Theta, now in Western civilization notes. All neatly rewritten, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
ream—$8.5 Lawrence Outdoor
1005 Mass
FOR RENT
Small, bachelor type furnished apartment. Suitable for one person. Private bath and kitchen. Off street parking with except electricity. $40 per month. Rogers Real Estate. 7 W Business phone VI 3-0005, residence VI 3-2929.
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, walle-to-wall carpetting, colored appliances, paved, off-street parking. Furnished if desired. Call VI 3-1116 for information.
Single or double room. Furnished, cooking facilities. All utilities paid. Call VI 2-9451 or see at 1244 La. tf
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 apart-
ment. 25th and Red dirt.
Phone VI 2-3711.
TYPING
Experienced secretary would like typing Mrs. Ethel Henderson, V 2-0122. t
Experienced tystpist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term thesis, etc. Accurate work stands and rates. Phone VI 3-8379, Charles Pattl.
Experienced secretary would like typing
her home. Reasonable rates. Call VI
1188
Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reasoned papers, thematic sertations and theses, phone VI 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson.
Experienced typist for thesis and term
oapers. Electric typewriter (pica type).
Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0558.
¹f
Experienced Typist—Dissertations, The-
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Coffee 2000 Rhode Island, VI 3-7485.
Accurate expert typist would like typing
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VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles
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Experienced typist, 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar with
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TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, course materials and lecture rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568
Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. **tf**
Typing; Dissertation theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols. convenient service. Call Desk. Promote efficient service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI 2-1546 or Mrs. Terry Moon VI 3-3057.
MILKILLENS SOS—always first quality
typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines
transcriptiones in tape transcriptions 01%
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 2, 1964
Around the Campus
Joint Festival Opens May 7
The first annual Religious Arts and Drama Festival, sponsored jointly by the KU Religious Drama Group and the St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, will be held from May 7 through 10.
Projected plans call for a religious film, two dramatic productions, a jazz workshop, and a University artist's showing of paintings and sculpture.
"The festival will be a pilot project toward a greater dialogue between the arts, drama, and the Church."
Student Checks Now Available
Student hourly pay checks are now available.
This announcement was made yesterday by Keith Nitcher, KU Comptroller.
The checks may be picked up in the Business Office, 121 Strong Hall, before the Spring vacation.
City School Here This Month
"Do You Know Your Community?" will be the theme of the 17th annual City Managers School here April 22-24.
The city managers school gives the leaders of city government a chance to hear lectures on the position the city manager should hold in the community and to listen to discussion sessions.
This school is a result of efforts of the City Managers Assoc. of Kansas, Missouri and of the University of Kansas.
Navy Film Runs Today
The movie "Ready for Sea," will be shown at 4 p.m. today in the Military Science Building. It was made by a commercial film studio for the Supply Corps of the U.S. Navy.
It depicts a college senior named W. B. Ellis who becomes interested in a Navy Commission, goes through OCS, attend Supply Corps School and joins the fleet.
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When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified
Baha'i Faith Strong, Leader Says
One of the most noticeable characteristics of members of the Kansas University Baha'i Club is their dedication to the principles of their faith in everyday activities.
Chris Ruhe, Leawood senior, president of the club, said the club's 15 members come from all parts of the world. He said this demonstrated the Baha'is belief that people of all races find equality with each other because they are equal before God.
Ruhe said many Baha'is on campub participate in civil rights activities on their own rather than as a group. Baha'is have no "color line" or racial segregation and membership includes people of different national and racial backgrounds.
The Baha'i faith differs from most religions in that there is no priesthood or professional clergy. The KU Baha'i Club itself meets each Friday evening in the homes of club members for teaching meetings.
"Five Baha'is from Lawrence meet
with the group". Ruhe said. "The faith is strongest in the United States in Southern California although national headquarters are located in Wilmette, Ill. The faith originated in Iran in 1844."
"Baha'is believe in one God, even though men have called Him by different names." Ruhe explained that God has revealed himself throughout history in different ways to different people. The same faith was developed and adopted to meet the needs of the people in each period of history. He called this theory "progressive revelation."
The Baha'a's vision of a united world begins with each man and woman. Individuals must have high moral standards and a new basis of belief if they are to become citizens of one world.
Ruhe said these standards of behavior often conflict with accepted behavior patterns found on a college campus. He cited drinking as an
example of a social behavior prohibited by Baha's.
Baha'u'llah, founder of the faith, has said that a "House of Justice" must be established in each community. This body or governing organization, elected by the people, would be composed of men and women so qualified that they would be "trustees of the Merciful among men." In the plan each nation's House of Justice would elect the International House of Justice. This international legislature would then make laws for a federalized world.
To help world unity, nations would need to choose an international language to be used along with their native tongue.
In outlining his plan for world order, Baha'u'llah declared that religion must show men how to build a just world. He said that religion must unite people or else it had no social value.
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Weather
The Weather Bureau predicted today that skies would be mostly cloudy with occasional rain today and through tonight. The high today is expected to be in the 50's.
Daily Hansan
61st Year, No. 118
Lawrence. Kansas
Friday, April 3, 1964
Election Special
Bob Stewart New President
THE BIG DANCE
THE VICTORY LOOK—Bob Stewart learns of UP's gaining control of the ASC in last night's election returns, while a jubilant crowd outside
the computation center in Bailey Hall receives word of Stewart's election as student body president. (Photos by Charlie Corcoran)
Long Wait for Results
Vigil in Bailey Ends Campaign
After weeks of campaigning, tired politicians strolled into the basement of Bailey Hall, took out cigarettes, selected a place along the wall to lean and settled back to await the outcome.
Party leaders gathered in small groups outside the Computation Center and tried to estimate the results of the election with party workers.
MARSHALL CROWTHER, VOX'S candidate waited for the last hour in a car in the parking lot behind Bailey. Bob Stewart, University Party's candidate, spent the evening in an off-campus apartment.
During this time, anxious party members gathered before the window where the returns were posted. When the winners of the school districts were posted, the hopes of UP politicians began to rise.
The counting started around 10 p.m. And it wasn't finished until 2:45 a.m. this morning.
ABOUT 1:30 A.M., UP had won six school districts and Vox three. Tension mounted as the already jubilant UP members waited for the final school district to be posted.
Finally the Elections Committee posted the winner of the college men's race. Carl Lindquist, (UP) Prairie Village junior, had defeated the Vox candidate by 26 votes, and excited and happy UP campaigners, wearing cowboy hats and campaign
Politicians from both parties took advantage of the lag to talk and renew friendships which had been temporarily forgotten during the rigors of the campaign.
UP people kept up the chanting and the singing for awhile, but then settled down and began to wonder if they would be able to top their victory by winning the position of student body president.
buttons reading "We try harder," shouted to the dejected Vox people at the other end of the hall:
"Wait till next spring and we'll get them all."
At 2:45 a.m., the talks came to an abrupt end.
Silence reigned when Charles Whitman, general secretary of UP, ascended the stairs from the counting room and announced that Bob Stewart was the new president of the student body.
THEN PANDEMONIUM BROKE LOOSE.
UP people slapped each other on the backs danced jigs, and took off for a horn-honking victory parade.
Gary Noland
After a few handshakes with jubilant UP leaders, the Vox members silently walked out through a side door. They met later to solemnly analyze the voting and start planning for next year's campaign.
Everyone, happy or unhappy with the results, looks forward to spring vacation.
v President UP Wins 8 to 3 In Council Race
By Gary Noland
Bob Stewart and Kaye Whitaker led the University Party to its biggest victory in the party's four-year history last night.
Stewart was elected president of the student body and Miss Whitaker was elected vice-president of the student body by a margin of 282 votes.
UP ALSO TOOK eight of the 11 All Student Council seats at stake.
Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., junior, and Whitaker, Wichita junior, polled 2,399 votes in defeating the Vox Populi student body presidential and vice-presidential candidates, Marshall Crowther, Lawrence second year law student, and Jim Cline, Rockford, Ill., junior, who polled 2,117 votes.
The victory gives UP its first student body president and its first majority on the ASC.
In taking seven of the ten ASC school seats and a representative from the large women's residence halls district, UP gained a majority of seats (20) on the council. Vox Populi, which previously held a majority of 22 seats, dropped to 18. There are 39 representatives on the ASC at the present time.
REACHED EARLY THIS MORNING, Stewart said, "I have an awfully lot of people to be grateful to.
"This is by far the most tremendous campaign put on by either party. The large vote (4,695) shows that students are interested and care about the issues."
Dick King, Kansas City sophomore and chairman of the Elections Committee, said the vote was one of the largest turnouts for a spring election.
WINNING UP CANDIDATES are Carl Lindquist, Prairie Village junior, college men; Mary Ruth Lanning, Lawrence sophomore, college women; Nancy Johnson, Caldwell junior, education; Roy Miller, Topeka junior, journalism; Susan Lawrence, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, fine arts; Ray Myers, Dodge City senior, engineering, and Hugh Taylor, Stoke-on-Trent, England, graduate.
Miller and Taylor are incumbents.
A tie between Miss Lawrence and the Vox candidate, Norma Sharp, Arkansas City junior, was broken by lot selection.
WINNING VOX CANDIDATES are John Benson, Prairie Village junior, business; Andy Graham, Lawrence second year, law, and Gary Gilstrap, Galena fourth year, pharmacy.
- * *
Results of Vote
**STUDENT BODY PRESIDENT**
AND VICE-PRESIDENT:
Marshall Crowther, Jim
Cline (VOX) 2,117
Bob Stewart, Kaye Whitaker
(UP) 2,399
**COLEGE MEN:**
Robert G. Hicks (VOX) 734
Carl Lindquist (UP) 760
**COLLEGE WOMEN:**
Carol Jo Weber (VOX) 501
Mary Ruth Lanning (UP) 621
**JOURNALISM:**
Russ Corbitt (VOX) 26
Roy Miller (UP) 33
**LAW:**
Andy Graham (VOX) 70
Pete Robertson (UP) 33
**GRADUATE:**
Dick Clark (VOX) 57
Hugh Taylor (UP) 143
**FINE ARTS:**
Norma Sharp (VOX) 138
Susan Lawrence (UP) 138
(Miss Lawrence declared winner.)
**ENGINEERING:**
Ken Mathiasmeier (VOX) 246
Ray Myers (UP) 277
**EDUCATION:**
Margo VanAntwerp (VOX) 222
Nancy Johnson (UP) 268
**BUSINESS:**
John Benson (VOX) 165
Ken Robb (UP) 106
**PHARMACY:**
Gary Gilstrap (VOX) 44
George Brenner (UP) 25
Judith Lind * 11
Terry (Butch) Ball * 10
**REFERENDUM:**
For 3,587
Against 887
Void 204
LARGE WOMEN'S DORMS:
Beverley Nicks (VOX) ... 186
Jean Borlaug (UP) ... 200
SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS:
Secretary
Mary Kay Kennedy ... 763
Carol Stotts ... 460
Treasurer
William Engber ... 606
Arthur Spears ... 572
Vice-President
John Daniels ... 533
Daniel Wanamaker ... 626
President
John (Tonto) Mays ... 738
Gene LaFollette ... 511
JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS:
Secretary
Carol Nichols ... 491
Kathlyn Hogue ... 552
Treasurer
Elaine Rinkel ... 507
Peggy Smith ... 497
Vice-President
Earle Wagner ... 518
Lester Kahler ... 463
President
Clay Blair ... 678
Alan Brightman ... 424
SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS:
Secretary
Jean Burgardt ... 771
Diane Spickard ... 520
Treasurer
Elizabeth Roberts ... 698
Dean Eaton ... 554
Vice-President
William Stringer ... 670
Thomas Aiken ... 603
President
Donald Hunter ... 789
Robert (Pete) Smith ... 502
Tornado Swath Traced at KU
While many KU students were coming back to the campus Sunday, a KU graduate student was standing watch at the KU weather observation laboratory.
Richard Skaggs, Long Beach, California, graduate student, at 11:30 a.m. reported that severe weather predictions coming in on the Air Weather Service teletype in the new engineering building to Ferdinand C. Bates, associate professor of
10.
TORNADO WARNER — The first warnings of Sunday's tornado came from Richard Skaggs, Long Beach, California graduate student, Skaggs was watching the Air Weather Service teletype for severe weather predictions in the KU area when the first warning was sent. (Photo by T.S. Moore).
geology and meteorology.
Bates and Skaggs discussed the tornado possibilities, and Bates called the Lawrence Civil Defense at 12:00 noon.
BATES MADE an unofficial report to Howard Lindley, director of the Douglas County Civil Defense, about the possibilities of tornadoes in the Lawrence area.
Bates' warning of the tornado possibilities was confirmed later by the
Topeka weather station.
After reporting the possibility of a tornado, Bates went to the Lawrence Airport to watch his radar scope for any indications of tornadoes forming. He was soon joined by Bill Fenstemaker, of the KU Traffic and Security Office. He manned the two-way radio at the airport to help Bates keep officers informed of the movement of the tornado when it did develop.
SHERIFF FRED Broaker spotted the first funnel at 3:26 p.m. west of Lone Star Lake. At about the same time, Deputy Sheriff Doug McCleery spotted one near the lake, and Undersheriff Rex Johnson who was in the same area saw a third funnel.
The tornadoes were termed by many veteran county weather observers as the worst that ever hit here.
Among the returning KU students who saw the tornado and its after-effects was Walter Webb, Lawrence graduate.
WEBB WAS ABOUT 11 mile south of Garnett when he saw the first after-effects of the tornado He said the tornado had just hit but by the time he reached the stricken areas to offer aid, police officers were already there.
Webb said several cars, and a large semi-truck had been hit by the tornado. He described the truck as being "mangled into a ball like a wad of paper." He said the cars caught up in the tornado were not just pushed off the road, but were carried into the brush.
1nree people were hospitalized in Douglas County according to the sheriff's office with as many as twenty homes destroyed or badly damaged.
LEAVENWORTH POLICE reported Monday night that one man had died as a result of the tornado which struck in downtown Leavenworth. Electricity was out in most of downtown Leavenworth for most of Sunday evening and the city was placed under martial law until Monday morning.
The Leavenworth police force had to operate with walkie-talkies without power for their two-way radios. The hospital at Leavenworth was not effected by the tornado or the loss of electricity. They have their own emergency power supply.
Students living in the Engel Road residence halls had a front row seat for watching the tornados as they touched down west of Lawrence and then moved north and east toward downtown Leavenworth.
UP Analyzes Victory As Desire for Change
Eob Stewart, president-elect of the student body, said yesterday the election indicated KU students wanted a more "student orientated" government.
By Gary Noland
"I like to think that since we (UP) did elect the student body president and vice-president, and took 8 out of 11 council seats, that it is an expression by the students that they are ready to give us a try."
Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., junior, and Kaye Whitaker, Wichita senior, take the oath as student body president and vice-president tonight.
Attempting to analyze the April 1-2 election which gave University Party its first student body president and its first majority on the All Student Council, Stewart commented:
"I SAID EARLIER I thought the main issue was whether student government should change to a more student-orientated philosophy.
They, along with eleven new council members, will be sworn in at a meeting of the ASC at 7 o'clock
Stewart said the election helped to strengthen the two-party system, which he said was an essential part of student government.
"THE VOTE WAS so close that now we do have a good two-party system. Vox is still strong, but the students wanted somebody else to
Stewart defeated Marshall Crowther, Lawrence second year law student and Vox candidate for student body president, by 282 votes. A total of 4,695 votes were cast.
Stewart said his immediate plan is to organize ASC workshops for new members on the council and an ASC visitation program where council members would visit living groups to work with their leaders and discuss the issues.
"Also the gimmicks (campaign buttons, cowboy hats, and torch parades) helped them. These things conveyed a lot of catching enthusiasm."
I try it for a while."
Stewart attributed the victory to the "cooperation of Greeks and Independents" in UP.
"We proved Greeks and Independents do have a common ground and can work together," Stewart said.
"THEY (UP) got off to an earlier start in the campaigning and built up more momentum.
Tom Bornholdt, Topea senior and Vox chairman, told what he thought were two main reasons for the UP victory:
"Student government basically has responsibility for all student activities; to help, advise and work with other activities to see what student government can do for them," Stewart said.
Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, April 14, 1964
Dailu Hansan
The Kansas Board of Regents passed proposals yesterday in Topeka which will further restrict campus parking and raise parking fees at KU beginning in September.
The increased restrictions on traffic regulations were proposed to the Regents by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe.
Regents Raise Car Fees; Limit Hill Access More
By Tom Moore
The new restrictions outlined by Keith Lawton, vice chancellor are:
- Extension of restricted traffic hours on the central campus from 7:00 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. Monday through Friday.
- Restricted parking on the central campus will be extended to 11:00 p.m. instead of the present 3:30 p.m. limit.
- X zone and O zone will permit non-permit parking after 5:30 p.m.; X zone will continue to cost 10c for students without permits.
- Increase of all parking permit fees from $4 to $10.
LAWTON SAID the increase in parking fees is to pay for the traffic control services required by the growing number of student cars.
Lawton said that to do this will require additional traffic and safety personnel. The state legislature and the Board of Regents have said that vehicle users should pay the cost of university parking facilities because parking lots are operated on a pay-as-you-go basis.
Chancellor Wescoe commented: "The increasing numbers of student vehicles means confusion and lack of safety in coming years unless it is kept in an orderly pattern.
Lawton said the plans for the regulation changes had been reviewed and recommended by the faculty Senate Traffic and Safety Committee. In addition to the formal regulation changes, Lawton said there will be an intensification of enforcement on speed zones and safety zones.
"This, together with increasing requests from students, faculty, and staff for orderly parking regulations have brought about this decision for this request (to the regents)," the chancellor said.
Nine students contacted this morning said they did not agree with the new restrictions and fee increase. None of the students said they like the new rules.
"I feel they (Board of Regents) have disregarded the wishes of the students in most respects. I think the parking situation is just another example of how the KU student has lost his responsibility to himself and to the school. This responsibility has been taken by the board of regents," Steve Peterson, Lawrence senior, said.
"I think it is too much for a parking permit. The University can make money in other quarters. It looks like Big Brother is at it again." Dick Griffin, Bartlesville senior said.
"It's the way things go. The main thing is that parking restrictions on the hill have been extended until 11:00 p.m. This will make it difficult to attend Friday night functions on the hill and any studying you want to do in the evenings on the hill." Tom Sajwj, Lawrence graduate student, said.
"I'ts bound to come—too many people and not enough space," Jim Brink. Wichita freshman, said.
"TM AGAINST increasing the restrictions and raising the parking fees. I think a certain amount of restricting is necessary, but this is getting out of hand." Ed Williams, Leavenworth sophomore, said.
"I don't like it. I like to go on the
Weather
The weather will be generally fair tonight and tomorrow. Warmer temperatures are predicted for tomorrow. The low tonight will be in the upper 30s and the high tomorrow will be 70.
campus at 3:30 p.m. It makes it convenient to get down to the Union and back," Richard Vance, Shawnee Mission sophomore, said.
"IT IS UTTERLY ridiculous - if for no other reason than the parking problem while studying at the library. Jayhawk Boulevard just doesn't hold enough cars for those who study at the library at night. I can see a moderate fee increase, but not the more than double increase from $4 to $10. The ruling favors the dormitories and fraternity students and hurts the students who have to drive on the hill from off-campus houses." Ron Fahey, Quinter sophomore said.
"Who is the University for? The students seem to do all the suffering. I know many students who drive on the hill to study at night. It seems this is something the ASC (All Student Council) can look into." Fred Hoffman, Topeka senior said.
"I don't think the fee increase is so bad, but the restriction on parking to 11:00 p.m. is idiotic. The students have as much right to the parking facilities at night as do others. Is the college for the benefit of the students or the professors?" Cliff Roark, Scott City senior, said.
Chancellor Proposes Student Fee Hikes
The Board of Regents yesterday took under advisement a proposal by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe to increase student semester fees in state schools by $5 for Kansas students and $50 for out-of-state students.
In other action, the Regents approved in a 5-4 vote a clause for their by-laws providing for executive sessions.
HENRY BUBB, chairman of the Board of Regents, explained the change in procedure:
"This clause in our by-laws provides for closed discussion sessions," Bubb said. "I emphasize that no official votes will be taken in any of these executive sessions."
Bubb was one of the four members who voted against the clause. "No public body should be operated in secret," he said.
OTHER REGENTS who voted against the clause were Whitley Austin, Salina; Clyde Reed, Parsons; and William E. Dannenbarger, Concordia.
Ray Evans, member of the Board of Regents from Prairie Village, defended the supporters of the clause when contacted last evening.
"Any organization has certain subjects that shouldn't be discussed before the public," Evans said. "Even football teams have 'executive' meetings on the field."
"This clause doesn't represent much of a change from what we have now," Max Bickford, executive officer of the Board of Regents, said.
CHANCELLOR W. Clarke Wescoe said that the action concerning the executive sessions was taken before he arrived at the meeting, and therefore, he said, he was unable to comment.
At the meeting yesterday, Bubb also referred study of a tri- semester plan to the curriculum committee.
"Discussion of the tri-semester plan in the Board of Regents sprang from a discussion between James McCain, president of Kansas State University, and myself," Bubb said.
"THERE ARE MANY things to consider when contemplating a tri-semester plan." Bubb explained.
"Among them is consideration for secondary school schedules. This especially concerns secondary teachers who wish to take summer courses." he said.
"The first idea concerning the tri-semester plan came from a discussion of Kansas State's summer session," Bubb said.
Carole Jean Whiting Killed In Car Wreck
Carole Jean Whiting, La Grange, Ill., senior, was killed in an automobile accident near Clanton, Ala., Saturday, April 4.
Miss Whiting's fiance, Gerard Bates, Valencia, Pa., junior, said that the accident occurred at about 5:45 a.m. when the car Miss Whiting was driving, and in which he was a passenger collided with a vehicle driven by Talmadge Williams, 38, of Clanton.
"I WAS ASLEEP in the back seat of the car," Bates said. "Carole had been driving for about 45 minutes. We were headed from Birmingham to Montgomery, Alabama when it happened. We were to be married June first," he said.
Bates suffered minor injuries in the accident.
Funeral services and burial took place in La Grange last Wednesday.
Miss Whiting, 21, transferred to KU two years ago after attending Graceland College in Lamoni, Iowa. She was a resident of Carruth-O'Leary women's residence hall.
Miss Karlene Howell, assistant to the Dean of Women, said that Miss Whiting's name will be added to the AWS Memorial Scholarship Fund. The fund, which is supported by annual work projects by AWS members, was instituted in 1947 after two KU women were killed in an automobile accident. Scholarships are awarded annually to outstanding undergraduate women.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 14, 1964
Second to a Talking Horse:
LBJ and "Mr. Ed"
In his TV report to the nation on his first hundred days in office, President Johnson came up against the rating system. He ran second to "Mr. Ed," a talking horse. There is not a word yet from Jim Aubrey of CBS whether Mr. Johnson has been canceled. Or whether the sponsor has dropped him.
THE LOW RATING Mr. Johnson received should not have come as a shock to network executives, since they consider television audiences a mass of boobs. Of course the viewers didn't start out that way, but after ten or twelve
years of exposure to television their tastes have been so downgraded that when it was announced on all three networks that the President would speak and the Mr. Ed would be pre-empted, it was only natural that, out of resentment for having been deprived of their Sunday evening's visit with this horse, they should turn off their sets, sit around sulking in the dark, and wait till next week. Of course there are some Republicans who will argue that the preference for "Mr. Ed" rather than Mr. Johnson does not indicate a downgrading in taste.
— Goodman Ace in Saturday Review
A Choice to be Made?
Research or Teach
"What is expected of a college teacher when he is hired?" The answer would naturally be, "To Teach."
But the administration at Tufts University in Medford, Mass., thinks differently. A professor of philosophy, Woodrow Wilson Sayre, grandson of the President he was named for, did not have his contract renewed because of his "failure to publish scholarly research."
"We are satisfied that you have been effective in the classroom," the dean said, "but the promise of scholarly research has not materialized."
What they want, it seems, is a teacher who will shut himself up in some remote room and work out an absturse or abstract theory which
will be published in a paper under a long name, a paper that nobody but other researchers will read.
I'm not against research, not at all. That is the means by which the world's knowledge has been increased. But I think that teaching is extremely important too, and that anyone who is "effective in the classroom" should not only be allowed to teach, but encouraged too.
And let those who are inclined that way do scholarly research.
The dean might have given credit for scientific experimentation to Prof. Sayre for being one of four Americans to climb Mt.Everest.
-Z. B. Greene in the Topeka Capital
The People Say...
The Demonstration Dear Chosen Few:
You have been instrumental in completely changing the atmosphere from one of apathy to one of general concern. The issues shall not be discontinued. The issues shall be returned to the conference tables for due consideration.
Again I wish to thank those students who took part in the mass demonstrations of March 21 and 28. I want to thank you for your complete cooperation and for the excellent way you exhibited your commitments and concerns for the issues involved. You went beyond your call of duty by exposing yourselfs to possible humiliation, ridicule, and physical violence. These fears could not have been overlooked. However, they were easily overcome by determination and good will.
Fear not our failing to change the atmosphere. For if our demonstrations made no impression on our campus then it clearly indicates that we cannot leave the solution to the racial problem to the general student body.
Again, thank you for your efforts to make this a better place in which to live and study. I also wish to take this opportunity to thank those persons, demonstrators and non-demonstrators, who were thoughtful and concerned enough
to make the many needed contributions which proved invaluable.
Sincerely yours,
George Ragsdale
Kansas City senior
* *
Sig Ep's Slighted
It came to my attention earlier this week, that in the UDK article on Greek Week, mention of Sigma Phi Epsilon victories were omitted. We won first place in the Pancake race and Mike Bush, of Sigma Phi Epsilon, won a third-place trophy in the walking race. I believe these victories warranted recognition and it is disappointing that they were omitted. In the future, I and the men of Sigma Phi Epsilon would appreciate due recognition of our accomplishments and activities on the Hill.
U.S.A.
FURCISTER
MINORITY RULE
© 1964 NERBLOCK
Robert Guffin Lawrence junior
1964 AEROBLOCK
THE WATERMARK POINT
\* \* \*
"Sure I’m For Equalizing Things"
Fraternities
I have read the news articles and comments on integration in the UDK concerning fraternities and sororites. From reading these articles and comments, one would think the issue to be very complex. However, in reality it's rather simple. With the exception of one (and we all, if we ever read the UDK, know who they are) it appears to be up to the individual house who they pledge. This of course is not true. But this is not an issue at Kansas University. The real impediment to a Negro being pledged at KU is the simple fact that just one member or alumnus (or alumna) can prevent any pledging by simply saying NO. This black ball vote is identical to the veto power the USSR and the USA have used at the United Nations. Thus, until all the members and alumni of a house will accept Negroes, the single vote will prevent their being pledged.
A solution? I have none but time, let's face it, years until people will change the way they feel about other people. Any other kind of solution, at least the ones I've seen, involve the denying one group's right to select for another group's privilege to join.
Fred C. Hamilton
Lippmann's World: Post Cold-War Hopes
Walter Lippmann in a nation-wide hour-long television appearance last Wednesday sounded like America's psychiatrist. His essential message was that there is really very little for us to worry about.
The critical stage of the Cold War which threatens a nuclear holocaust has passed, Lippmann said. Red China remains as a threat, he conceded, but he was quick to emphasize that the Chinese do not have nuclear armaments. Given ten or fifteen years—a sounder economy and a more secure place among nations—Red China will not be a menace. The fat wolf does not roam far from his den.
SPEAKING ON the upcoming presidential elections, Lippmann all but returned LBJ to the White House without a contest. Whoever Johnson picks for a running mate will not influence the outcome of the election. Therefore, the President is in the position of picking a vice-presidential candidate on his personal qualifications. Lippmann mentioned Robert S. McNamara, secretary of defense, and Hubert Humphrey, Senate majority whip, as the two men best qualified.
Significantly, absent from WL's vice-president nominations was Robert Kennedy, who is most often mentioned for that position.
In a Gallup poll published during the holidays, Kennedy was first choice for Democratic vice-president candidate of 47 per cent of a national cross-section of Democrats.
HENRY CABOT LODGE will get the Republican nod if he can get the support of the party professionals, who are unimpressed with his ability as a campaigner after the 1960 elections when he was up for vice-president. Otherwise, Richard Nixon will get the nomination, playing the role of "caretaker" for the party while it rebuilds, according to the noted columnist.
Goldwater and Rockefeller, the only two prominent announced candidates, don't have a prayer.
Tragedy was not a stranger to the Kennedy family before last November 22 when John Kennedy was cut down in the Dallas murder.
JOSEPH P. Kennedy's oldest son, Joe Jr., died in an air crash in the Mediterranean in World War II. His second child, a daughter-Kathleen—also died in an air crash after working in London with the Red Cross during the bombing raids. Her husband, an English nobleman, was killed during battle action in France.
Joseph Kennedy himself suffered a severe stroke the winter before the president's death, and the infant Patrick Bouvier Kennedy died 39 hours after a pre-mature birth last fall.
ONLY RECENTLY Harold Lasky's "JFK: The Man and the Myth" dropped from the best-seller list after holding the number two spot behind "Profiles of Courage" for many weeks.
The national preoccupation with the life and death of John F. Kennedy continues. At the top, or near the top, of the non-fiction best-seller list are the late president's "Profiles in Courage;" "Four Days," AP's story of the assassination; and Jim Bishop's book on a day in the life of a president, written a short while before Kennedy's death.
$$
* * * *
$$
KU students might just have made the difference in Tuesday's public accommodations vote in Kansas City.
A
The ordinance passed by 1,743 votes out of a total of 89,209 votes cast.
Members of KU-Y and KULAC had spent two Saturdays in Negro districts of Kansas City on a voter registration drive.
* * *
It's called getting the pencil-and-paper ideals off Mount Oread and putting them to work.
A Coun tire night meml of th
University of Kansas student newspaper 111 Flint Hall
Dailiji'fänsan
UUNiversity 4-3646, newsroom
UUNiversity 4-3198, business office
BO Okla. ident expre will
The week sprin ness ered tion
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 Saturday and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas
NEWS DEPARTMENT
So
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"I few n propo dom
Managing Editor
Rex Carribb, 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.
"M
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towa
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Scl at th passe Robe awar
**Tom Coffman** Editorial Editor
Vinny Kothari and Margaret Hughes Assistant Editorial Editors
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 Costish, Promotion Mgr.; Dana Stewart, Merchandising Mgr.
Page 3
University Daily Kansan
ASC to Consider UP Platform
A Vox-controlled All Student Council will take action on the entire University Party platform tonight before swearing in new council members which will give UP control of the ASC.
The UP platform, introduced two weeks ago on the night before the spring election, falls under old business and must therefore be considered by the ASC before the installation of new council members.
"Chances are good for the passage of the platform." Stewart said.
BOB STEWART. Bartlesville, Okla., junior and student body president-elect elected on the UP ticket, expressed confidence that the ASC will approve the platform.
"I know the Vox people have a few reservations about some of our proposals, but the council very seldom votes strictly along party lines."
Tom Eornholdt, Topeka senior and Vox president, said the Vox would not vote against the legislation just because it was a UP platform, but he added that Vox "... still has valid criticisms of their (UP) platform."
John Stuckey, Pittsburgh senior and ASC chairman, said the new members will be sworn in after the council considers old business.
NOMINEES FOR ASC offices will then be accepted, but new officers will not be elected until the next ASC meeting. Stuckey said.
The UP platform contains five bills that were referred to the Committee on Committees and Legislation when they were introduced.
The bills provide for the establishment of an ASC student employment committee, a food committee, a committee evaluation board, and also the establishment of a freshman
Giant Belt
Scholarships and loans for students at the University of Kansas have passed the $2-million mark this year. Robert Billings, director of aids and awards, said today.
Tuesday, April 14, 1964
Scholarships, Loans Pass 2 Million
"More than 4,000 KU students in 5,940 transactions have been assisted toward their college degrees because
of gifts and bequests to the KU Endowment Association, Billings explained.
The $2-million total, which will continue to grow through June 30,
surpasses the record of approximately $1 3/4 million for scholarships and loans in 1962-63.
leadership program, and a student-teacher evaluation system.
Getting Engaged?
Nation On Rubber
Selling Engaged?
One UP plank, which would establish a library committee to work with the staff of Watson Library to update and improve the files of examinations and course material, was passed as a resolution at the last ASC meeting.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 14, 1964
Lodge Gets KU Push
The chairman of the Kansas for Lodge Committee is a 22-year-old KU student.
Thomas G. (Greg) Turner, Seattle, Wash., senior, was informed by a letter from the National Draft Lodge for President Committee March 3 that "any help is appreciated" in an attempt to get Lodge the Republican nomination for president. Turner said he had asked the national committee for permission to work under their auspices.
"The whole movement is voluntary," Turner explained. He said that there were 40 state volunteer groups in the United States at the present time.
"There is no overall national direction," Turner said as he explained the relationship between the national and state committee.
The local committee plans, Turner said, to get at least 5,000 signatures Wednesday night from Lawrence citizens on petitions to draft Lodge.
"We are having about 100 people meet at Carruth-O'Leary at about 6 or 6:30 p.m. to canvass South and West Lawrence," Turner commented.
Turner said he hoped to take the petitions to the state Republican convention on Saturday at Topeka. He explained that the reason the petitions are being presented is to try to influence the delegation to the Republican national convention to remain non-committed.
"Kansas being the strongest Republican state in the nation there is no reason for the national delegation to be committed," Turner said.
After the petitions are obtained from the Lawrence area and the convention on Saturday the Kansas for Lodge Committee will continue to work for Lodge.
The committee will work on obtaining support from areas of Western Kansas, Wichita, Kansas City, and Topeka, Turner said. Three students are already working to gather support in Hutchinson, Topeka, and Kansas City, Turner explained. Thomas Sheppard, Hutchinson junior, is working in Hutchinson, June
Anderson, Garden City senior, is trying to gather support in Topeka, and Steve Wilson, Leawood sophomore, is working in Kansas City.
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University Daily Kansan
Harold Chase to Speak at Chancery Club
Page 5
Harold Chase, lieutenant governor of Kansas and a Republican candidate for governor, will speak to the Chancery Club tonight.
Tuesday, April 14, 1964
Philip Cooper, Prairie Village senior, and president of the Chancery
"The public is cordially invited to attend if they are interested in the
topic," Cooper said. The meeting will be held in the Moot Court Room of Green Hall at 7:15 p.m. Cooper said the Chancery Club would attend to some business before the talk.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 14, 1964
74.3 Per Cent Pass English Proficiency Exam
English Proficiency examinees slumped to a new low in percentage this spring as 214 out of 833 students received failing grades.
David H. Jones, associate professor of philosophy and acting head of the English Proficiency Examination, released the test results after spring vacation.
His figures record a passing percentage of 74.3 per cent, as compared with 75.6 per cent in November, 1963, 81 per cent in the fall of 1962, and 76.6 per cent in 1961.
Robert A. Altchison, Jon James Alexiou, Elaine Allen, Jonnie Jo Allen, Alec Feldman, Jeffrey Jo Allen, Jill Anderson, Martha Ann Ashbaugh, John P. Atkinson, Charles W. Atwater, Carol Hines, Ayers, Jerry Lee Ayers, Jonathan Baldwin, Bobby Bailey, Shirley Klo Baker, James A. Balda, Claudia Sue Baldin, Lacy J Banks, Arlene C. Barron, Bobbette Bar-Adams, Nancy Sue Bassail, Nancy Sue Bassler, James S. Bates III, Antointe线 J. Baulbon
Anabelle Bayne, Joanne Karen Beal,
Norman Eugene Beal, Wanda Irene
Beard, Nancy Jean Behan, Douglas Alan
Bell, Michael Charles Bell, Ronald
Bell, Michael Robert Benson, Bencivengo, Judith A. Bengtson, Michael
M. Bennett, James Allen Benson, Robert
E. Berger, Carolyn V. Berningk, Merilyn
C. Cerrman, David A. Berveller, Jan
Marie Betts, Walter Scott Bgoya,
Elizabeth J. Biggs, David C. Bingham,
Martha Lou Libes, Thomas H. Birmingham,
Richland L. Bisbee, Bert E. Blackwell,
Gregg Nixon Blaseld, William T. Blue, Roger K. Bolinger, William C. Bondurant, Chester Allen Booe, Richard S. Bowman, Mary E. Bradish, Frances E. Bradley, Jacqueline Brahler, Robert Chase Branahan, Emily DeCortez, James Bruce S. Bruce S. Brenner, Robert L. Brickner, Margaret E. Bridges, David Warner Briggens, Dennis Robert Brown, Josiah Nyan Brown, Linda Gall Brown, Carrol Jean Bruce, Shirley Diane Bruner, Michael Nathan Budd, Robert Jean Richard K. Burke, Helen P. Burkett
Burns to Fraher
Gerald Duane Burns, Lance William Burr, Betty Mae Burton, William C Burud, Carol Sue Busch, Randolph H Butts, Robert Michael Byrne, Gerald Linton Carden, Ronald C, Carlock, Michael L. Carnahan, Fred B. Carothers,
Billie R. Carpenter, Helen Louise Carr,
Sylvia Morton Carr, William David
George George, Nancy Casey,
Georgienne D. Chaffin, Betty G.
Chambers, Frank Chen, Jacqueline
Frank, Clark Chen, Walter
C. Clark, Jane Jean Cleveland.
Bruce G. Cochener, Glenn Eugene Cochran, Darrel Lee Cloohon, Melinda Jane Cole, Richard N. Coleman, Ralph Edward Coles, David R. Collins, James Alber Comer, Cameron Johnson, Marcel Meliel Cook, James Cliffon, Robert E. Cope, Russell E. Corbitt, Harold V. Cordry, Harold G. Corwin Jr., Stirling H. Coward, Robert Charles Craig, Janet Kay, Crawford, Karen Allen crowley, Beniamin Allen Crowley, Bruce Dean Culley, Ray Arthur Curtis, Danny Joe Cushman, Clarinda Mae Daley.
Larry John Dalton, Tove B. Dana-
barger, David F. Darnell, Lana K.
Darrow, Kenneth Davidson Jr., Gregory
Seward David, Montague E. Davis, Nancy
Anne Defever, Gerald D. Denning,
Doubert, Phillip, Phillip, Doherty,
Maren F. Dominick, Cliffon H.
Donaldson, John Edwin Dooley, Patrick
M. Dowling, Gary E. Driskel, Donald
Dyer Duffy, Eleise Rose Duggan, Mary
K Dunlap, John Galbeal Dunn, Robert
E. Edwards, Carolyn Edwards, Wendell Dale Edwards, Carolyn
Lee Effertz.
Dwight David Egbert, Judith R. EggenberhJ. Myrlene Eklund, Charles E. Elliott, Melvin L. Elliott Jr., Earle B. Ellis, Margaret A. Elrod, David Kent J. Bergsten, Jonathan E. Ensley, Darlie D. Ericksen, Rahf O. Exline, Wilma C. Eymann, Ronald Floyd Fahey, Lana Lee Farabl, Dale Clinton Farney, Patrick John Farrell, Deanna Jane Feldman, Shirley Jean Fields, Robert John Fink, William J. Flanagan, Leonard T. Fletcher, Clara E. Fogarty, Robert Milton Foster, Thomas P. Fraher I
Fralinck to Kelm
Peter John Fralinck, Thomas Alley Frame, Richard Freeman, Carol Jean Fritts, Barbara Sue Funk, Luborah Al Graibraht, Mary Anne Gallops, Bernard Galton, John M. Gardner, Timothy J. Gardner, Nancy Jean Gayer, Nancy Sue Gibbs, David Parker, Jane Gibbs, David Parker, Gibson, Howard Wade Gibson, Betty Sue Glesier, Wayne H. Giles, Sheila Marie Gil, David Wynne Al Goff, Becky Ann Goodhar
Margaret Joan Goss, John Gary
Gayle Graham, Dorothy Karyn Gray,
Gayle Graham, Dorothy Karyn Gray
Ray
Facts and Fallacies about Jewelry
Christian
PETER HENRY BARKER
By
Never tamper with a diamond's setting, even if it's old.
FALLACY:
A worn or out-of-style setting for your valued diamond should not be tampered with. Not only do you take a chance on losing your diamond if the setting becomes badly worn and "loses its grip," but you can also in many cases make your diamond lovelier than ever in a modern setting. Diamonds never go out of style . . . but settings do!
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Ray Christian
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David B. Greenberg, Janice Kay Greiner,
Robert N. Gribble, Alice L. Griffith,
Robert A. Griffith, Albert L. Hardy,
Charles Grutzmacher, Steven K. Gugler,
Robert R. Gunn, Herald M. Hadley,
Robert J. Hahn, Mark S. Hopkins,
Gary Glen Hamilton, Larry A. Hamilton,
Carl Edward Hane, Kathleen E. Hanna,
Donna M. Hanneman, Diane V. Hansen,
Brooks Harder, Albert James Hardy.
You win, Mr. Bic.
I can't dent
this point!
Mary L. McDonnell, Michael L. McDowell, Timothy Lee McGinty, James Edward McGlinn, Barry Grant McGrath, McClellan Robert McHall, Millan, Thomas H. McNally, Howard P. Meigs, Rose Ann Melehler, Thomas S. Mendhenlton, Joseph A. Mermis, Roger D. Miller, Donna Lee Miller, Doula Mouiller, Donna Lee Miller, Judith L. Miller, Judith Y. Miller, Lois Elaine
John Joseph Harmon, F. Conley Harris,
Brenda Lee Harrison, Glenda L. Harwell,
Benna Heynes, Allan Ashley, Hazlett, Mary
Elizabeth Heck, Denis E. Hester, Leer
Johan Heenm, Teresa Mae Helnz, Henry
Hozzberg, Martha Ann Hershey,
Carl Klein, Paul Hines, Clarence R. Hicks, Robert Gordon Hicks,
Susan Lee Higbee, Judith Mary Higgins,
Bonda Higgins, David Michael Hill,
Carl Carl, Paul Hines, Michael
Michael M. Hites, Paul A. Hodge III
pow
Howard Hoffman, Catherine Holland,
Nancy Lou Holland, Ronald Alan Holt,
Daniel Bauer, Paul Berman, Mae Horner, Clifford M. Horseman, Kirk Taylor Horton, Robert B. Hosford, Dallom Adair Howard, Jeffrey G. Hubrig, John Fletcher, Patrick C. Mackenzie Richard R. Huffman, Jerome M. Hughes, Larry M. Hultquist, Myron J. Hunge.
Peggy Lynn Hurst, Charles A. Hurty, Peggy Hurst, Beverly Jean Igo, Wicht Inhar, Buffor Roy Innan, Chester Joe Isom Jr.
(Continued on page 9)
Fairlay Jones, Reese Clark Jones, Roger Wayne Jones, William Donald Jones, Ralph Gene Juhnke, Terry Ann Kadel, M. K. Malen, Kathleen K. Kaminska, Marie M. Kane, Suzanne Kannr, Ronald Leslie Kaser, John J. Keene, Betty T. Keim.
Robert Leroy Looney, James Allen Ludwig, Ronald Jay Luff, Gerald Robert Lusk, Maude E. Clark, Lusk, Kay Rae Lutjen, Frederic R. Mabbutt, Gene Coral Malone, Clark R. Manning, Lonnie Lee Manuel, James F. Martin, James Maynard Martin, James
Gary B. Kruger, Rodney E. Kuehn.
Jon P. LaFrance, Joseph H. Lake,
John J. Lees, Joseph R. Lakes,
Karen J. Layland, Mary Jo Leach, Linda
Roy League, Anne Clark Leavitt, Dennis
Lee, Richard Cal Leeds, Jane C. Lefebvre,
David O. Lewis, James E. Liddell,
Dewin Lewis, James Evans Liddell,
Claude H. Ligeti, Carl Gregg Lindquist,
Judith Evelyn Lister, Eric Anthony
Nicholas R. Richwood, Richard
Longerhead, Janet E. Loofbrowr
Charley Lee Looney.
Susan F. Kjarvis, Sandra Jenkins
Kevin K. Brashaw, Jenkins
Kay Jewell, Judith E. Jobson, Carl
Jonhson, Donna Kay Johnson, Jo Amm
Johnson, John Snyder, Johnston,
Johnstone, Lawrence J. Johnston, Edward
Keith to Monnier
Mamie Lee Keith, Kurt Alan Kelley,
Billie C. Kelly, Charles R. Kempthorne,
Fred Robert Kennedy, Pointer P. Kennedy,
James Martin Kerr, George M. Kerwin,
Jonas E. Kuzner, Maris Rae,
E. Kimbal Riley, Charles King,
William Edward King, N. Charlene
Kingry, Danny G. Kinker, Jon Norman
Kirk, William B. Klauer, Jack Klinkett,
Lawrence B. Knapp, Kent Knowlton,
Edwin G. Koehler, Judith Ann Koepe,
John Ann Koos, Larry N. Koppenhaver,
John G. Kozel, Diane Marie Kressen.
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Tuesday, April 14, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Khrushchev's Good Health Relieves Diplomats
MOSCOW — (UPI) — Most diplomats here expressed relief today that the report of Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's death was untrue.
Tass, the Soviet news agency, published denials of the false report shortly after midnight and then reported that Khrushchev met again this morning with visiting Polish Communist leaders. The Soviet press ignored the death rumor.
broken off.
Diplomats here and in Western European capitals were relieved because they feared Khrushchev's successor, whoever he might be, might be worse for the West.
BUT DURING THAT time, it flashed around the world, causing hundreds of telephone calls to newspapers and broadcast stations and a rush of diplomatic activity.
THEY SAID any change of leadership might put a halt to the East-West thaw begun last summer with the nuclear test ban treaty. Much of the Sino-Soviet dispute centers on
Many were routed out of bed by their foreign offices after midnight to cheek the report. By that time, it had been established that Khrushchev, who will be 70 Friday, was last seen "in full health" at a Kremlin reception and that the report, in the words of the TASS news agency director, Dmitri P. Goryunov. "It is just a silly rumor."
The report, by the West German news agency DPA, was out only five minutes last night before it was ordered held up for checking by the agency's editors and then withdrawn.
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oken off. "Apparently he misunderstood the explanation given in Russian," DPA said. The Japanese correspondent
Peking's dislike of Khrushchev's personal policies, and a successor might be more successful in healing that breach, they said.
Japanese journalist in Moscow may have started the death rumor when he asked the TASS news office why the text of Khrushchev's speech at the Kremlin reception had been
ACCORDING TO the agency, a
INTERVIEWS 1965 ROCK CHALK REVUE PRODUCER & BUSINESS MANAGER
APPLICATION BY LETTER DESCRIBING QUALIFICATIONS, REASONS FOR APPLYING AND IDEAS CONCERNING THE REVUE.
DUE 5:00 P.M., APRIL 15 KU-Y OFFICE, KANSAS MEMORIAL UNION
INTERVIEWS: 7:30 P.M., APRIL 16
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 14, 1964
Fullback Problem Appears Solved
The KU fullback situation is progressing fast enough to find Bill Gerhards, the position's lone returning letterman, fighting for his place.
With only a week of spring practice gone, the Leavenworth back is being pressured from three sides. Not necessarily in order, they are Ron Oelschlager, last year's starting slotback, who has been shifted to the fullback spot; holdout sophomore Dick Bacon, and Kent Craft, another coming second-year man, who was sidelined throughout 1963 by a knee operation.
"I think we're going to be all right at fullback," Coach Jack Mitchell was willing to say during the vacation recess, which has him and the staff working on the movie room and blackboard instead of the field.
This necessarily was the backfield position causing most concern at the outset of spring drills since those two power men, Ken Coleman and Armand Baughman, will be lifted by graduation in June. They amassed a two-man total of 720 net yards last year, all of it up the middle. They alternated on defense too.
Right now the scouting report on their replacements reads like this:
Oelschlager—Playing well both ways. Gives position more potential offensive quickness than Jayhawkers have shown here in recent years. Linebacking progress encouraging.
Gerhards--Slow rounding into form. Offense still long suit. Handicapped by short stature (5-8) as linebacker. Earned letter at No. 3 last year. Good running and blocking potential.
Golf and Tennis Squads Practice
Spring "vacation" for the KU golf and tennis teams meant traveling south and participating in a week-long series of matches in preparation for the upcoming Big Eight meets.
The golf team was also on a swing to the south. They played in two quadrangular matches at Oklahoma State and Oklahoma.
In the Oklahoma State meet, the host school, who is the defending NCAA champion, blasted the Jayhawks $12^{\frac{1}{2}}-2^{\frac{1}{2}}$, Wichita beat KU 12-3, and KU downed Nebraska 12-3.
At Norman, KU dropped all three matches, loosing to OU $ 12_{1/2}^{-} $ $ 2_{1/2}^{-} $ , Wichita 10-5, and Nebraska $ 8_{1/2}^{-} $ $ 6_{1/2}^{-} $
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Bacon—Big (210), but getting outside well enough to block ahead of halfbacks. Surprising quickness and speed. Making rapid progress as linebacker.
Craft—Coming back from knee operation better than staff anticipated, especially following layoff last spring and autumn. Carries overall promise.
Arden Gray, (Phillipsburg sophomore)—Inexperienced but promising. Starter with freshmen last year. Needs to shed weight to increase speed and quickness.
Practice resumed Monday, following a 10-day layoff.
Floyd Temple, head baseball coach, has announced a meeting of this year's prospects for the Jayhawk freshman team.
Coach Temple said he will meet with the freshman candidates at 5 p.m. today in the K-Room in Allen Field House.
Frosh Baseball Meeting Called
Coach Temple announced that this year's freshman coach will be Dick Rader, former infield and outfield player here.
Coach Temple said the main purpose for freshman baseball is to assess the ability of the new men. He said, however, that two games might be scheduled for the freshmen.
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ARENSBERG'S
VI 3-3470
819 Mass.
...
new of
new of
Page 9
University Daily Kansan
English Proficiency Exam-
(Continued from page 6)
Miller, Philip A. Miller, Roy Franklin
Miller, William James Miller, Mary Olive
Moberly, Barry R. Molineux, Suzanne
Gall Monnier.
Moneau to Sims
Tuesday, April 14, 1964
Richard Glen Monteau, Sandra D. Montgomery, Deanna Ruth Moore, Ralph Frowe Moore, Michael M. Moran, Stephen David Dylass Moll, Karol D. Mosshart, Stephen Daryl Moss, Jack A. Murphy, Patricia Ann Murphy, Linda Musser, Martha Ann Merrys, Ray Warren Myers, James Lauren Neal, John Edward Nelson, Nick T. Newberry, Larry Dean Newby, Jeffrey S. Nichols, Juliane Nison, Joanne Bergercker, Thomas H. Nitardy, Judith Ant Ronald Dean Novotny, Kathleen G. O'Brien, Virgil Raymond Ohse.
Barbara Sue Oliver, Maurice L. Ommerman, Barbara Ruth O'Neal, Marian Kay Owens, Penelope Rae Pars, Nancy P. Patterson, Charles Lewis Pattin, Joyce Pauls, Katherine Ann Payne, Byron Koppa, James M. Pestinger, Shella Anny Perry, James M. Pestinger, Michael D. Peterson, Mary Alice Pichner, Nestor Popil, Judith Lynn Powell, Keith Burns Prater, Charles W. Preston, Joan Pypet, Glen E. Quackenbush, Scottie Ragstad, Denis L. Ralston, Judith K. Kanbarager, Janice J. J. Reaster,
Alice Jane Reed. Herman K. Reed, Elizabeth J. Reese, Jacqueline L. Reese, Robert M. Rhoades, Kenny Arnold, Robert M. Rhoades, John Michael Rincke, David Alan Richwine, Ronald R. Runcke, Michael Ray Ritchey, James A. Roberts, Jeffrey S. Burcher, Lee Roberts, William O. Roberts, Bill Robinson Jr., J. Mike Rogers, William S. Rouma, Kenneth H. Rourke, Gary Paul
Rouver, Larry C. Row, Milton S. Rubin
Rouver, Larry C. Row, John F. Rupar,
Lion, Gerald Rauper
Terrance F. Rupp, Susan H. Russell,
Thomas E. Salisbury, Connie L. Satter-
white, Paul R. Scheffel, Dave R.
Scheffel, Schmidt James W.
Schroeder, Nane J. Schmidt
Allen C. Schuermann, John Robert
Colson, Kenneth) Paul Seck, Lawrence D.
Seidl, Gerald Wayne Selig, Suzanne M.
Sevr, Stephen Edward Shade, Theresa
Shannon, James Robert Sharp,
Blankey K., Christopher Luraye Shreve, John Stanley Shultz,
John R. Siculoff, Linda Grace Simon,
Nathaniel Sims.
Jim Norbert Stein, James M. Stephenson, Michael John Stevens, Robert B. Robertson, B. George, Mary Marie J. Stone Camille B. Stoyne S. Stotts, Linda H. Stuekey, Anna C. Stuckey, John G. Sturtidge, John R. Sturidge, Louise R. Summer, Claude Dwight Sutton, Ron Allen Swift, Robert E. Terrell, Mary A. Terry, Dennis Walter Teter, Paul B. Thomas, William Masas, Curry Thomason, Sally E. Thompson, Theodore Tindall J., William N. Toalson
Gerald Lea Skimmer, Robert Allen Slade, Lynne K. Slease, Bruce E. Smith, Lynne K. Sleese, Bruce E. Smith, Horton Kenneth, Smith, Ivan Smith, Jo Anne Smith, John E. Smith II, Nancy Carol Smith, Stephen George Msnyor, B. Brewer, B. Snyor, Msnyor, B. Brewer, B. Snyor, Nadine F. Snyer, Richard A. Snyer, Nancy Jane Speirs, Marjorie L. Speneer, John Wm. Speirs, Marjorie L. Speneer, John Wm. Stark, Mary Louise St. Clair, Mionn Dean Stecklein, Charles K. Stegner,
Maryetta Tomlin, Roger L. Torneden,
Stephan D. Toth, Prentice A. Townsend,
Kurtis Leslie Tull, Mary Turner, Ronald
E. Turner, M. Scott Turrentine, Alan
Skinner to Zuck
Henry Ude, Diane C. Underwood, James Paul, Upson Jr. Janett, Ann D. Vale, Paula Mackey, Ann E. Lefort, George E. Vertreese, Ruth Ingorebik Vikkal, Steven A. Niskup, Larry Vujnovich, Richard A. Wahaus, William Lippincott, John H. Keller, Margret A. Walters, Edward R. Wapp, Lynne Marie Warner, Sally Ann Warner, Lloyd Hal Warren, W. Thomas Wash, Jerry Porter, James G. Pease, Watkins, Jonni Era Watson, Judith Anne Watson, John Beecher Wayne, Ruth Rae Weir, Mary Beth Weston, Mary C. Wheat, Robert P. Winslow, William D. Whinery, Nancy Kay Whitaker, Doyle E. White Jr., JoAnn C. White, John Paul White, Fred Allan McDermott, David B. Allen Wilkens, John David Willcott, Polly Anne Williams, Stephen G. Williams, Stephanie R. Wills, Robert C. Williams, Beverley Sue Wingard, Edward L. Win
Robert K. Winslow, Stephen H. Wolf,
L. Wood, Tom Atwater Wright, Rebecca
May H. Yaple, John Edward Yorke,
Ann Monica Zlomcik, Wayne Joe Zuck.
*
Bunco Men Con Banks
FRESNO, Calif., —(UPI)— A group of fast-moving bunco men rushed into Fresno banks just 30 minutes before closing Tuesday and cashed rolls of coins assumed to be 50 cent pieces.
When the men had departed with $180 in currency, bank officials discovered that each roll contained one 50 cent piece at each end and 38 metal washers in the middle.
Spring is finally here. Have all your sports clothes cleaned so that you will be ready for all the springtime activities.
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Hog Harmony
GOWER, MQ. — (UPI) — Lee Schuster, manager of the 2,100-acre Schuster Brothers farm, installed a loud speaker system to pipe music into his hog-fattening units. It alternates half-hours of music and silence to calm the pigs down.
AUTO
WRECKING
NEW and USED PARTS
Tires and Glass East End of 9th Street VI3-0956
EVEN IF IT'S TRUE,
ISN'T IT IRRELEVANT?
Well, no, because the Bible deals mainly with you, but it's hard to understand it if you aren't familiar with it.
Rev. George Darby will give the fifth in a series of expositions from the book of Acts, tonight at 7:30 in the Student Union.
Sponsored by the K.U. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship
Lady Manhattan
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terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS
803 Mass.
VI 3-2241
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 14, 1964
False Deductions Often Claimed By Students, Professor Believes
Students should avoid claiming certain kinds of income tax deductions on their April 15 returns. To claim them may cause their reports to the Internal Revenue Service to be false.
Three kinds of income tax deductions are often mistakenly claimed by students, Sherwood Newton, associate professor of business administration, said.
These claims are erroneously
made for dependents, for taxable grants in aid, and for certain kinds of educational expenses, Prof. Newton said.
IF A STUDENT'S parents are claiming him as a dependent, he should not claim himself as a dependent. Married students who receive such support at college often mistakenly deduct themselves as dependents. Prof. Newton said.
Certain grants in aid are not taxable. Others are. If services to the university or some other institution are required by the grant in aid, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) classifies the grant as income. That is, the IRS, believes the grant to be the same as earned income, Prof. Newton said.
Wescoe Lists Promotions For 129 KU Professors
Promotions in academic rank for 78 members of the faculty at KU and for 51 at the KU School of Medicine in Kansas City were announced today by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe.
The promotions become effective July 1.
On the Lawrence campus;
To professor: Charles J. Baer, engineering drawing; Howard J. Baumpartt, human relations; Miss Margaret C. Byrne, speech; William H. Cape, political science; Robert E. Casad, law; Miss Barbara Clark, romance languages.
Jack W. Culvanehouse, physics; Richard T. DeGeorge, philosophy; Miss Evelyn Dearborn, music education; Marcus E. Hahn, music education; Clayton H. Krebbel, choral music.
Raymond C. Jackson, botany; Donald H. Jackson, biology; social work; John W. Podzro, music theory; Phil H. Rueschlohoff, art education; Gordon Wiesman, physics;
To associate professor: Robert D. Browne, Ph.D.; Michael M. Antipolos; microbiology; William H. Bass, anthropology; Kenneth Bloomquist, music; Miss Joyd, Boyd, English; Leron R. Capps education
Miss Genevieve Harglis, education:
David R. Hermansen, architecture; Mrs
Francesc B. Howatz, home economics
E. E. Waltzshulz, German; John
B. Johnston, mathematics.
Darwin W. Dalcoff, economics; Jacob Enoch, physics; J. Eugene Fox, botany; Robert Fraser, chemistry; Benjamin Frieden, retention biophysics; Herbert Gladin. Slavic
James A. Sterritt, architecture; William W. Stein, anthropology; Miss Ada Swineford, geology; Christopher Sword, microbiology; Pawell Szeptycki, mathe- toring; Erik Hering, drawing and painting; Edgar B. Wickberg, history; Miss Nita Watt, education
To assistant professor: William B. Allmon, English; Richard Andrewelli, p. Allmon; Geoffrey, history; Harry Compton, Robert A. Georges, art; history; Robert A. Georges, English
Joshua Pelleg, metallurgical engineering; Dennis B. Quina, English; Harry G. Moore, Machine operator; Sue Sheid, music; Delbert M. Shaikat, biologist; Lee M. Sonchorn, mathematics.
Chi-Chon Huang, oriental languages John H. Knowles, journalism; Robert W Robert history; Kenisha selecee Lynn H. Nelson history; Kemalse Newell, English Jack B. Orchid, English
Daniel E. Patterson, English; Klaus H. Pringsheim, political science; Dale R. Nockensmith, educational science; Richard A. Schronhorn, English; Richard A. Sachira, drawing and painting; Hugh H. Schwartz, economics; Henry L. Snyder, history; Raymond B. Waddington, Eng-
To Librarian III: Miss Alexandra Mason.
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To Librarian II: James Mayfield.
The promotions on the Kansas City campus are...
To professor: Dr. Robert E. Bolinger, medicine and gerontology; Dr. Thorki Jensen, microbiology; Dr. Gilbert S. Greenwald, obstetrics and gynecology, and Paul R. Schloerb, research professor in surgery.
To clinical professor; Dr. Tom D Y Cauper, assistant professor of Gordon C Sauer, medicine (dermology).
To associate professor: Dr. Daniel L. Azarnoff, medicine; Dr. Jacob D. Duerksen, microbiology; Dr. Mangesh R. Gattych, psychology; Dr. John Kepes, Dr. Fernando R. KGhricher, otorhinolarynomyopathy; Dr. Ruth M. Lapi, psychiatry.
Dr. William E. Larsen, Dr. Robert T. Manning, and Dr. William E. Ruth, all medicine; Dr. Donald J. Svoboda, pathology.
Dr. Aldo Vigliano, psychiatry; Dr. James C. Warren, obstetrics and gynecology, and Dr. Jack M. Zimmerman, surgery.
To associate clinical professor: Dr. Jack H. Hill; pathology; Dr. Ned W. Jenkins; pathology; Dr. E. Spruadlin; hearing and speech, and E. Dewey K. Ziegler, medicine (neurology).
To assistant professor; Dr. Remi Amelunex, biochemistry; Mr. Steven N. Angell, otorrhinolaryngology; Dr. William J. Cannon, obstetrics and gynecology; Dr. Knapman, anatomy; Dr. Akinyele Fabiyi, psychiatry; Jeanne E. Fish, psychiatry (psychology)
Dr. William L. Hayes, Dr. Robert P. Hudson, and Dr. Leo E. Johns, Jr., all have medical degrees from the University of macology; Dr. Rene A. Ruiz psychiatry (medical psychology); Dr. Arnold Korn, a psychiatrist at University Dr. David Waxman, medicine and preventive medicine and community health.
To assistant clinical professor; Dr. Ralph R. Beatty, physical medicine; Dr. Rolfe Allen Becker, ophthalmology; Dr. Marc Boyden, pediatrics; Dr. Albert Thomas, Dr. Thomas J. Fritzlen, pathology; Dr. Stanley Hellerstein, pediatrics.
Dr. T. Reid Jones, medicine; Mrs. Mazine B. Langley, audiology; Dr. Walace M. McKeen, Dr. Robert S. Mosser, Dr. Arthur Robertson, Dr. Margorie S. Sirridge, Dr. William T. Sirridge, Dr Edwin L. Slentz and Dr Harold W. Voth, all medicine.
According to this publisher, anyone, regardless of his present reading skill, can use this simple technique to improve his reading ability to a remarkable degree. Whether reading stories, books, technical matter, it becomes possible to read sentences at a glance and entire pages in seconds with this method.
A noted publisher in Chicago reports there is a simple technique of rapid reading which should enable you to double your reading speed and yet retain much more. Most people do not realize how much they could increase their pleasure, success and income by reading faster and more accurately.
STUDENTS DOING graduate study sometimes make deductions for educational expenses of which the IRS does not approve. If a graduate student is "maintaining his position," that is, doing additional study to remain at his present job, the extra education is an expense and, therefore, deductible, Prof. Newton said.
How Fast Can You Read?
But, if the graduate student is "advancing his position," that is, doing additional study to get a better job, then such education is an investment, and, therefore, not deductible. Prof. Newton said.
To acquaint the readers of this newspaper with the easy-to-follow rules for developing rapid reading skill, the company has printed full details of its interesting self-training method in a new book, "Adventures in Reading Improvement" mailed free to anyone who requests it. No obligation. Simply send your request to: Reading, 835 Diversey Parkway, Dept. 3244, Chicago 14,
Illinois. A postcard will do.
SPEAKING OF the reduction in income taxes, Prof. Newton said many of those who are paying withholding taxes are in for a "big surprise" when 1964 taxes are due.
The surprise will come when they learn they are paying taxes at the full reduction rate, while only a partial reduction has been authorized for 1964. These people will have to pay the government a difference at the end of the tax period.
The full reduction becomes effective in 1965. Prof. Newton described the withholding tax reduction in current effect as a "political trick."
Other changes made by the new tax law will have little effect on the taxes paid by the average person. The new law allows up to thirty percent of the tax-payers income to be contributed to charitable causes. This thirty percent is deductible. But, most people do not give thirty percent of their incomes to charity, Prof. Newton said.
The new law also "cracks down on deductions for certain state taxes," Prof. Newton said. Among them are deductions for auto licenses and driver's licenses. Cigarette and liquor taxes paid to states are no longer deductible, he said.
Now Showing! AT THE MOVIES
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5783
SEVEN DAYS IN MAY AN ETERNITY OF BUSINESS!
Varsity
TNEATRE ... Telephone V1 3-1065
Shows at 7:00 & 9:10
ENDS TONITE . .
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Starts 7:00 Both After 8:30
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TOMORROW
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Varsitu
TOMORROW!
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
Shows 6:40 & 9:10
Adults $1.00
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified
HELD OVER
OH
DAD,
POOR
DAD
mama's hung you in the closet and I'm feelin' so sad
FOUR NITES
Wednesday-Saturday April15,16,17&18
University Experimental Theater
the
[
Curtain Time 8:15 p.m.
Tickets 50c plus Student I.D.
MURPHY HALL
Page 11
Classified Ads
FOR SALE
1945 thru 56 322 Builek engine, 1949 thru 53 flat head V-8 Ford engine. Both in very good condition. 1949 thru 54 Chevy 1950 head V-8 Ford engine. Also many other good used parts. Benson's Auto Salvage, 1902 Harper. Phone VI 3-1626. Open evenings. 4-21
3-bedroom house on cul de sac, ceramic tile kitchen & bathroom, oak floors, sliding glass doors, full basement with shelter, attached garage, large fenced wall, walkway distance to K-U and elem. school. Prefer August possession date. No special assessments. $16,500.
Phone VI 2-0055 to 9:00 p.m.
1956 Ford. Call VI 2-9161 between 5 p.m.
and 9 p.m. 4-21
50 h.p. engine on 15 ft. boat with trailer
accessories. CVI MA 3-5229 with
p.m. 4-21
Shortwave communications receiver
excellent for shortwave listeners of amateur
radio, 'S' meter inside whip and outside
wire antenna. CVI 3-1254 after 5.4-2^
1960 Rambler 6 Custom 4 dr. air-conditioned, tinted glass, overdrive, individually adjustable reclining seats with head rest, radio and seat belt, white leather rolled pillen tires. Excellent condition throughout. See at 1514 Tennessee after 5. 4-21
University Daily Kansan
Walsh antique organ and commode.
Call V1 3-2402, 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
4-27
1951 Chevy 4 door. Very clean and in excellent condition. Call VI 2-1802 or see at 645 Maine after 5 p.m. 4-21
For sale by owner, 1960 Ford convertible,
white with red interior. Power steering,
auto trans, seat belts. Excellent condition.
Call VI 3-7294 after 4:45 p.m. 4-16
1964 model RCA 21" color TV. Guaranteed. Less than 2 months old. Very reasonable. Call VI 3-4635. 4-21
Mobile home for sale; 1959 Prairie Schooner, 10' x 36', 2 bedroom, new washer and air conditioner. Call VI 2-3098. 4-21
Violin, complete with case and boy,
Valued at $200. Sell for only $145. Call
3-4098 in Lawrence or write
John Brewer, 321 S. Oak, Ottawa,
Kansas 4-21
Men's 3 speed Schwinn bicycle. 2 baskets included, Reasonable. Call Jim Van Kirk VI 3-8153 after 7 p.m. 4-16
Wedding dresses. Sizes 7-8. Never worn.
apartment, between 4-6 p.m.
4-14
1958 Thunderbird. Radio and heater.
Good condition, new tires. Call VI 2-430-
4-14
Pair of ElectroVoice Layton loud speaker systems in walnut cabinets. One year old. Best offer. Call VI 2-1180 after 6 p.m. 4-14
Motorola Stereo—TV walnut finish Console. Almost new, but $100 cheaper. Call Jerry, VI 3-0681 at 6 p.m. 4-14
Student will sell all guns in collection.
45 auto, Lugers, 38 revolvers, miniature automatics, Ruger 22's, 410 double revolver, FNX 22's, 22 lever action. While they last!, 22 L.R.
$6.50 per carton. Call VI 3-1110 after 6 p.m.
4-23
Abington Book Store. Chess Books and
Machines. Mass. Downtown. Next to
varsity Theater. 4-15
Abington Book Shop has "Punch." 1015½
Mass. Next to Varsity Theater. 4-15
LAWRENCE FIREARMS COMPANY.
MILITARY WEAPONS. AMMO
TRADES WANTED. SPECIAL: 22 CAL
WESTERN REVOLVERS. NEW. $26.50.
WE ALSO REBLUE. EVENINGS. 1026
OHIO, VI 2-1214. 4-15
Used portable stereo. Powerful. $149.95.
Motorola 3 channel, guaranteed. $58
takes it! Ray Stoneback s., 929-931 Mass.
Used Radios, $5 to $10. 4-15
New 10 speed Schwinn bicycle. Regular $66.95. Left in layaway since Christmas.
In original box, $7.00 takes it! Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. 4-15
Bicycle weather ahead! Rent or buy a 3 speed Rycey Union, $15 per month, 1 month minimum rental. Ray Stoneback's.
929 Mass. 4-22
EX-HEARSE, transmission, cadilac. Standard transducer, radio, heater, new tires and battery. Ideal for hauling, camping or woodies. Cheap. Also sturdy car-top carrier and rack. $20. Mercury 10 h.p.
outboard, $50. Call VI 3-7922. 4-15
House four years old, excellent condition,
furnished room with pool, school and swimming pool. $700 assumes loan. $78 a month. Ops. New appliances.
furniture. 1935 MIller Drive. VI 6894.
6894.
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS. Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale at great savings after 6 p.m. week days; at Sunday and Sunday. 837 Connect St
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. tf
For Forlier Brush Products phone VI 3-
9040 after 5 p.m. ti
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Thetis Notes. Comprehensively civilization notes, all neat, completely revised, extremely comprehensive mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. ti
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
pound ream—$8.5 Lawrence Outdoor
1003 Mass
FOR RENT
large room, private half-bath and
hower. Kitchen privileges available.
Large, homey, attractively furnished, 4 room apartment. Kitchen built-ins and garbage disposal. Utilities paid except electricity. Call VI 3-7677. tf
Small, bachelor type furnished apartment. Suitable for one person. Private bath and kitchen. Off street parking. Month paid except electricity. $40 per month. Dogger's Real Estate. 7 W. Business phone VI 3-0005, residence VI 3-2929.
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.
Single or double room. Furnished, cook-
ing facilities paid. Call 8-2945 or see at 1244 La.
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 apart-
ment 25th and Redoub-
tion Phone WI 914-7311
TYPING
Fast, accurate work done on electric
drives and record rates. Call Bett
Vincent, VI 3-5043.
English major in graduate, experienced
teacher with experience in classroom
Special rates. Call VI 3-7787 4-21
Experienced secretary would like typing,
Mrs. Ethel Henderson, VI 2-0122, tt
Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term and thesis, etc. Accurate work standards and rates. Phone VI 3-8379; Mrs. Charles Patti.
experienced secretary would like typing
for home. Wouldable rates. Call VI.
188
Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason- sentations and papers, themes, sertations and theses, phone VI 3=7652 Mrs. Frank Gibson.
experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (plca type). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0558.
Experienced Typist—Dissertations, Theses. Manuscripts, and Term Paperms on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 Rhode Island. Vol I: 3-7485. **tf**
Accurate expert typist would like typing
Prompt service. Call VI 3-2681. Use
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Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon printer. VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Mariage) Holey, 408 West 13th. tt
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648.
secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
exegal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577.
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TYPING: Experientenced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, and conference rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568. tc
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines also do tape transcriptions. Office hard to do, m 12 p.m.—1021½ Mp Phone VI 3-5920
Washing and ironing in my home. $6 per bushel for washing and ironing. $3 per bushel for ironing only. Bring to 1514 Lindenwood Lane. 4-21
Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. **tf**
WANTED
VOLKSAGEN' WANTED. Cash for your VW. Conzelman Motors, VW Sales Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa. Hiway 59 So.
nave a party in the Big Red School
room and floor and plant
Heated. Call VI 3-7453.
MISCELLANEOUS
Buy. sell or trade rare American and
Foreign coins, military equipment
medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American
Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. ff
Help wanted in Lawrence Memorial Hospital laboratory. Registered or non-registered lab technologists to take night care. Weekend work also available. Desired contact Mr. Torres at VI-3680. Ext. 62 to 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. weekdays. 4-15
HELP WANTED
Girl to play electric organ part-time
CALL VI 3-4743
Math tutoring over spring vacation. All
classes begin on Monday. Review 4-14
for finals now. Call Vi 2-4427.
Dressmaking-alterations, formalis and dress-
kowns. Ola Smith. 939% M&F VI 3-5283
BUSINESS SERVICES
Surprise your roommate with a cake on that special occasion. The K.U. Birthday card shows the student body line of cakes. Free delivery and candles Call VI 2-1791. 4-24
U-Call, we haul. Anything, anytime. VI
3-5888. tf
Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery frented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1287.
L&M CAFE now under new management
WE MILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
We have a spacious restaurant with
concious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches.
Your second cup of coffee always free
Out-of-state students; Earn extra money by setting up distributorships for a nationally known product in your home or office. Call 2-2098 or VI 3-9515 now and arrange for an interview. Call now and be the first to cover your home area. 4-21
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Is there a creative genius at K.U. who spends his time in class thinking up real wild greeting card ideas? We pay TOP prizes for ideas or art aimed at college market. Write: College Hunk Cards. Hickory Drive, Larehmont, N.Y. 4-15
The Catacoms nite club and Pizza Dna 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
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WHICH ARE YOU?
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 14, 1964
Three Schools to Hold Special Days
There will be an ad day for advertising students, Law Day for law students and an Engineering Exposition for engineering students this month.
The international students will also have an International Festival Guest speakers will include an assistant to President Johnson on mental retardation, and a People-to-People executive who will talk to area city managers this month.
Beginning this schedule of events will be Dr. Stafford Warren, assistant to President Lyndon Johnson on mental retardation, who will speak at a luncheon Thursday in the Kansas Room of the Union. Guests will
Official Bulletin
Foreign students interested in applying for 4-day seminars on American life during June should see Dean Coan this week.
TODAY
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence
chapel, interment, 5 a.m.
college interest, attending Sunday's
Cana conference should call Bob Scott,
sign up for sibling bitters will Call
Fiona sign up for siblings will Call
Inquiry Forum, 7 p.m. St. Lawrence Center, 1915 Stratford Rd.
Chancery Club, 7:15 p.m. Moot Court
Fees, Civil Litigies and Law"
"Rio, Harold Carroll
SUA PROBA Lecture, 7:30 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union.
Robin, Kabala Univ.
Inquiry Class, 7:30 p.m., Canterbury
Burberry
Senior Recital, 8 p.m., Swarthout Hall,
Cornell Flt. violinist
Western Civ Discussion, 9 p.m., St.
Lawrence Center, 1815, Stratford, Rd.
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m.
Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Air Force Recruiting, 10-3-30 p.m.
Hawk's Nest, Kansas Union. Answer questions on officers training school and take applications.
Inquirer Class, 3:45 p.m., Canterbury House.
Timely Topics, 7.30 p.m. St. Lawrence Center, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Carillon Recital. 7 p.m., Albert Gerken.
Gerken, Al. Fraser, Fraser
Theater. I Vittelloni" (Italian), 549.
Faculty Recital, 8 p.m. Swarthout Hall.
University, Woodwind Quintet
History Club, 8:30 p.m., Trophy Room, Kansas Union. "Problems in Writing Colonial History"—James De V. Allen, Civil Service and University of Malaya
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
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For additional information contact:
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be university officials and representatives of state institutions for the mentally retarded.
ALSO ON THURSDAY the student chapters of Alpha Delta Sigma and Gamma Alpha Chi, professional national advertising fraternities for men and women, respectively, will sponsor a series of discussions and an exhibit for "Advertising Day on Campus."
Ad Day will conclude with the banquet address by John W. Beach, partner in Associated Advertising at Wichita.
UNITED
Friday the law students take over with speeches, moot court finals and awards. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will speak at the banquet held at the Holiday Inn that night, and Dean James K. Logan will present awards to outstanding members of the law classes.
A DISPLAY of award-winning advertisements and promotional exhibits will be on display in the Browsing Room of the Union.
At 3 p.m. in the Green Hall courtroom the James Barclay Smith moot court finals will be held. The two teams competing will be Allen Fanning, Shawnee Mission third year student, and George D. Blackwood Jr., Springfield, Mo., second year student, vs. Marshall Crowther, Salina second year student and John H. Johntz Jr., Wichita second year student.
WINNERS OF THE moot court competition will receive cash prizes and books, and represent KU in the national competition next fall.
Judges for the competition will be several U.S. and Kansas District judges and a retired justice of the U.S. Supreme Court.
Preceding the Kansas Relays, the Engineering Exposition will feature
EARN
SUMMER MONEY
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THE NUCLEAR engineering department will conduct tours through its 10,000 volt nuclear reactor and will perform actual operational experiments at the reactor for the public.
displays of engineering educational projects.
No Job Interview
No Investment
No Experience Necessary
Phi Beta Kappa Elects
Send for free information on selling Process Christmas Cards with customer's name imprinted. Send by mail or acquaintances, business firms.
Ask for Special Kit for College Students — including actual experiences of other college students who earned really big commissions selling this line of medium- and high-priced Christmas Cards.
The big-volume sales are made during the summer, and that's when you have the time! Free books that make us easy-to-follow instructions.
Speaker at the engineering banquet at 7 p.m. in the Union will be Carl Johnson of the Prichard Company, Consulting Engineers in Kansas City. Chairman of this year's exposition is James H. Carr, Carthage, Mo., fifth year student.
THE STUDENTS, all in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, are:
THE PROCESS CORPORATION (our 43rd year)
America's largest manufacturer of personalized greeting cards exclusively
Seven KU students have been accorded the election to Phi Beta Kappa, national honor society in the liberal arts, during their junior year.
Dudley Dean Allen, Lawrence, an economics major.
B. George Barisas, Kansas City who has a triple major in chemistry, German and mathematics.
WILLIAM J. Cibes, Jr., Altamont,
who is a candidate for four majors
Dept. T3, Chicago, Ill. 60650
3450 S. 54th Ave.
in German, mathematics, philosophy and political science.
Judith A. DesSpain, Wichita, who is majoring in English and German. Arthur B. Leonard II, Lawrence,
Terry Alan Miller, Baxter Springs, a major in chemistry.
PHILLIP H. Smith, Onaga, an English major.
The KU chapter of Phi Beta Kapa elects a larger number on the basis of records through their senior years.
FRATERNITY-SORORITY
Jewelry
GREEK LETTER
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Paddle with
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$3.25
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Sororities & Fraternities
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SUMMER JOBS
for STUDENTS
NEW S'64 directory lists 20,000 summer job openings in 50 states. MALE or FEMALE. Unprecedented research for students includes exact pay rates and job details. Names employers and their addresses for hiring in industry, summer camps, national parks, resorts, etc., etc., etc. Hurry!! jobs filled early. Send two dollars. Satisfaction guaranteed. Send to: Summer Jobs Directory—P. O. Box 13593—Phoenix, Arizona.
JOBS ABROAD
STUDENTS & TEACHERS
Largest NEW directory. Lists hundreds of permanent career opportunities in Europe, South America, Africa and the Pacific, for MALE or FEMALE. Totals 50 countries. Gives specific addresses and names prospective U.S. employers with foreign subsidiaries. Exceptionally high pay, free travel, etc. In addition, enclosed vital guide and procedures necessary to foreign employment. Satisfaction guaranteed. Send two dollars to Jobs Abroad Directory—P. O. Box 13502 Phoenix, Arizona.
Shriver Will Speak At KU Convocation
Sargent Shriver, director of $ ^{th} $
Peace Corps and of President Johnson's war on poverty, will speak at a KU convocation at 11:30 a.m. Monday, in Hoch Auditorium.
Vice-chancellor Raymond Nichols confirmed Shriver's speaking engagement at KU yesterday morning.
"All 11:30 classes will be cancellea on Monday so students may attend the convocation." Nichols said.
SHRIVER IS expected to discuss the Peace Corps in his talk, "Young Americans, Messengers for Peace."
A committee from the KU Peace Corps committee will meet Shriver at the Kansas City Airport on Monday morning and escort him to KU.
IMMEDIATELY AFTER the luncheon, Shriver will leave Lawrence for Kansas City, and fly to Wichita for an address to the annual state Chamber of Commerce meeting.
Following the convocation, Shriver will be honored by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, at a luncheon in the Kansas Union. The officers of the KU Peace Corps committee will be guests.
A Peace Corps information booth will be set up in the lobby of the Union Monday and Tuesday. It will be open from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. and will be staffed by the KU Peace Corps members, Donna Hanneman, Junction City junior and campus chairman of the Peace Corps committee, said.
Sargent Shriver
B
In Hoch auditorium, before and after Shriver's speech, the Peace Corps committee will also set up
tables and pass out information on the corps. The material is being sent from Washington for the Shriver visit.
A SPECIAL "on campus" Peace Corps test will be given at 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Jayhawk Room of the Union.
Shriver has never spoken before at KU, but was invited to speak on campus last year. Due to a pressing schedule he had to cancel the engagement.
Other Schools Asked About Traffic Rules
The office of the vice-chancellor of operations made a telephone survey of all Big Eight schools and seven other universities this morning in regard to traffic control and parking regulation and fees.
Vice-Chancellor Keith Lawton said long distance calls were made to the institutions which are of comparable size of KU and have similar parking problems.
There was no immediate conclusion concerning the telephone survey.
Lawton's study was prompted by the Board of Regents' approval Monday of an increase in traffic control and parking permit fees.
AT THE University of Missouri at Columbia, students are required to register their automobiles at a charge of $3.75 a year. The parking permit charge is $2.75 monthly, which means the annual cost is $24.75 a year.
At Kansas State University, the parking fee is $3. Three-thousand permits were issued this year for
Instructor Gets 5-21 Year Term
John Sanford Edwards, 33, 121 W. 14th street was sentenced in District Court Friday, April 3, to serve not less than five years and not more than 21 years in the state penitentiary at Lansing.
Earlier, Edwards had pleaded guilty to first degree manslaughter in connection with the February 22 fatal shooting of Pedro Escobar, 36, of Mexico.
Both men were assistant instructors of Spanish at KU.
Edwards was entertaining a group at his apartment at 121 W. 14th street. Escobar was at a party in the adjoining apartment of John Wolf. Edwards called the Wolf apartment to complain about the noise. When the noise did not stop, Edwards took a .38 caliber gun from his bedroom and went to the Wolf apartment.
When Escobar opened the door, the gun went off. Escobar died almost instantly from a bullet wound in the chest.
1. 300 available spaces.
At Nebraska University, the parking fee is $5 with faculty members having priority on central parking areas.
The University of Oklahoma requires that cars be registered at the rate of $5. There is no student parking at OU and no cars are allowed after 5 p.m. on the campus which includes parking meters.
IOWA STATE University recently changed its parking policy. The registration fee is now $3 with a parking fee of $40, reserved parking in the choice locations for staff and faculty; $20, less desirable locations for faculty and staff; and $8, student parking around the edge of the campus.
Oklahoma State University charges an annual parking fee of $10 and a registration fee of 50 cents.
UNIVERSITY of Iowa—No student parking except for students required to travel great distances ($12 for such students); $3 registration fee; $30 for reserved faculty parking.
Wisconsin—$36 for choice parking locations; $24 for perimeter parking; $12 for student parking "many miles" from the campus with shuttle bus service to the campus.
At schools outside of the Big Eight. the following regulations exist:
Since last Feb. 1 at Colorado, a parking fee of $2 a month has been charged.
Purdue—$100 for reserved faculty parking with permits approved by the president of the university; $60 and $25 for less desirable parking locations; no student parking on campus; freshmen and sophomores not allowed to have cars, and if caught with cars, students are penalized $25; $5 registration fee.
Michigan--Only seniors over 21 with 1.0 grade-point-average allowed permitted to have cars.
Texas= $5 for student parking; $6 for staff parking; $12 and $24 for faculty parking.
Kentucky — No freshmen and sophomores permitted to have cars
Indiana—No freshmen and sophomores permitted to have cars.
A recent article in Time magazine reported that students at the University of California at Los Angeles were cautioned to budget at least $90 for parking or transportation.
Daily hansan
Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, April 15, 1964
61st Year, No. 119
ASC Passes 2 UP Bills; 3 Defeated Temporarily
University Party met unbending opposition last night to three planks of its platform, but then retaliated by introducing the same, defeated bills as new legislation for the next All Student Council meeting.
By Gary Noland
Two UP bills establishing an evaluation board to investigate the effectiveness of ASC committees and a student leadership program committee to acquaint freshman students with the problems of campus leadership responsibilities passed the council.
THE BILLS CAME UP under old business and were acted upon by the Vox-controlled ASC before the swearing in of new council members.
Three other UP bills, however, were voted down by slim margins after lengthy debate.
The bills, introduced again after the new council members were sworn in, stand a good chance of passing at the next meeting because UP became the majority party in the spring elections, winning eight of the eleven council seats at stake.
UP members of the ASC introduced the party's entire platform as legislation two days before this month's election.
The proposed UP bill to establish a student-teacher evaluation committee was debated for about 45 minutes before it was defeated.
Criticism of the bill was expressed by several Vox people. Reuben McCornack, Abilene senior who last night finished his term as student body president, suggested that an intensive investigation be made to determine if the faculty would favor student evaluation of their teaching methods before establishing the committee.
"It is not relative what the teachers feel; it is what the students want." Walter Bgoyla, Tanganyika junior, replied. If the students want such a committee, then the committee should be formed, he said.
"The faculty must be convinced that we are acting responsibly," McCornack said.
Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla.
Skies will be partly cloudy and winds from the south will be increasing until evening.
Weather
Temperatures will drop to 40 degrees tonight, but will soar to a high of 80 degrees tomorrow, the Topeka Weather Station predicted today.
Heavy rains will lower the temperatures here this weekend starting either Friday night or Saturday.
junior and the new student body president, said the program would be voluntary on the part of faculty members.
Brian Grace, Lawrence senior, said the idea had been tried before and had failed.
"Because of these failures, we don't know how many teachers want it," Grace said.
Laurence Woodruff, dean of students and faculty advisor to the ASC, was asked to explain how the program was received in the past.
"The faculty received it enthusiastically in the past and some teachers still ask for such evaluations now." Woodruff said.
Woodruff said the program failed in the past because the students failed to see that it was carried out.
THE COUNCIL WAS still reluctant and voted 18-16 against the bill, which was introduced later as legislation for the next meeting.
The council also voted 18-16 against the proposed UP bill to establish an ASC food committee to investigate the procurement, preparation and distribution of food within in KU living groups.
The main criticism of the bill was that there are already agencies in each living group that are capable of handling this problem.
Stewart said the food committee would work with small living districts to organize a cooperative buying plan to cut expenses.
The defeated bill will be taken up again at the next meeting of the council.
The other UP bill defeated by the council would have established a student employment committee to investigate, evaluate and make recommendations concerning employment problems relating to KU students
OPPONENTS OF THE bill argued that this area is handled efficiently by the University Employment Service. The proponents of the bill said there were several organizations attempting to locate employment for students, and that a committee is needed to coordinate the efforts of these organizations.
The bill was defeated, 18-17, when John Stuckey, Pittsburg senior and ASC chairman, voted against the bill to break a 17-17 tie vote by council members.
In other business McCormack swore in Stewart as new student body president, and Kaye Whitaker, Wichita senior, as vice-president.
Stewart then administered the oath to the new council members.
A resolution was passed, requesting Keith Lawton, vice-cancellor of operations, to appear before the ASC at its next meeting and answer questions concerning the recent raise in parking fees and increased restrictions on campus parking. The resolution was introduced by Jim Cline, Rockford, Ill., junior.
"WE HAVE BEEN asking for financial reports from the Traffic and Security office for some time," Grace said. "It is time we get people in charge to answer our questions."
Grace also submitted a resolution directing the ASC publications committee to consult with the Kansan Board and report on financial matter of the University Daily Kansan.
Grace said that after conferring with the managing editor of the UDK, he felt there might be a need for ASC financial assistance to the UDK so the newspaper could provide more news service. Grace did not say exactly how this would be done, but asked for a report from the publication committee on its findings.
Before leaving office, McCornack appointed five delegates to attend a conference in St. Louis, where representatives from several universities will discuss a proposed national student organization to discuss problems challenging the effectiveness of student government.
THE PURPOSE OF the organization would be to promote the exchange of information and ideas between the student governments of colleges and universities.
The five delegates are McCornack,
Stewart, Ray Edwards, Bethesda,
Md., junior; Tom Shumaker, Russell
junior, and Sam Evans, Salina junior.
Nominations were submitted for ASC offices.
Nominees are Mike Miner, Lawrence junior, and Hugh Tavlor, Stoke-on-Trent, England, graduate student, for chairman; Gary Walker, Wichita sophomore, and Shumaker for vice-chairman; Jane Lefebure, Prairie Village junior, and Sandee Garvey, St. Louis, Mo., senior, for secretary, and Leo Schrey J. Leavenworth sophomore, and Ray Myers, Dodge City senior, for treasurer.
Officers will be elected at the next ASC meeting.
STEWART'S FIRST action as student body president was to appoint 41 students to the Student Advisory Board, a board made up of students in all schools of the University who are eligible for the Dean's Honor Roll. The board advises students as a supplement to the faculty advising system.
Stewart announced ASC committee applications committees have been mailed to living groups. Applications are due April 24. Interviews are scheduled April 26 and May 3.
Chase Lauds Lawyer-Legislators
By Lee Stone
More lawyers should enter politics, Harold Chase, lieutenant general of Kansas and candidate for governor, said last night at a meeting of the Chancery Club.
Chase, who is himself a lawyer, told law students that once legislators, who were not lawyers, would make the complaint, "This is a lawyer's bill," when they were confronted with bills they did not like.
Now "the vast majority of legislators really appreciate the contribution the legal profession makes to the orderly process of legislation," Chase said.
CHASE MENTIONED at least two reasons legislators appreciate colleagues trained in law. First, lawyers are usually good at "bill-drafting," that is, the writing of legislation in the proper legal terminology. Those not trained in law are likely to offer bills that sound good, but which are really "pious pronouncements," Chase said.
For example, someone unfamiliar with bill-drafting problems might
p propose a criminal statute that reads: "Unfair methods of competition shall be illegal." Short and direct, and obviously well-meant, such a law would be "vague and unconstitutional." Everyone would disagree about what was "unfair," Chase said.
Second, lawyers are appreciated by state legislators because there are so few of them in the legislature, Chase said.
Of the forty members of the Kansas Senate, only seventeen are lawyers. Chase said. This is "not quite as bad" as in the House, he said. There, 20 out of 125 members are lawyers.
CHASE SAID that in many counties throughout the state, public offices that require the talents of the lawyer "are going begging." In about half the counties, it is so difficult to
Chase called the small number of lawyers in the legislature "a recent development." "Farmers," he said, "have always provided more of our legislators" but, the present situation makes it difficult to staff key committees.
put lawyers in public office that the judges of county probate courts are not required to be lawyers, Chase said.
In an interview after the Chancery Club meeting, Chase spoke about his political career.
"I have not started a formal campaign," Chase said. But, he said, he has been keeping speaking engagements every day. Chase cited a long list of clubs, institutions, and other organizations he spoke to in the past week. Chase explained that "the lieutenant governor has a few duties besides making several discreet and tactful inquiries about the governor's health."
ONE OF HIS duties is to act as chairman of the Interstate Co-operation Committee, a state committee that works with similar committee in other states to enact uniform laws. One success, he and his committee had recently was the adoption of the Uniform Vehicle Safety Equipment Code, he said.
(Continued on page 12)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 15, 1964
Morals Revolution on U.S. Campus-
While the revolution has not yet reached some parts of the intellectual hinterland, many of the nation's oldest, largest, and most prominent universities are caught up in a painful struggle over sexual morality. The conflict pits deans against students, parents against children, and boys and girls against their own consciences. The soul-searching was pointedly exposed recently at Yale. In New Haven, the social revolution has evolved a special symbol (a necktie may be hung on the doorknob whenever a girl is in a student's room). Yet when the Rev. John McLaughlin, S.J., gave three spirited lectures defending morality, he drew overflow audiences of some 250 each time.
Despite their doubts, chastity remains a virtue for most of today's $4\frac{1}{2}$ million college students; but for a significant—and growing—minority the question has become academic. "We've discarded the idea that the loss of virginity is related to degeneracy," a husky Ohio State senior explained last week. "Premarial sex doesn't mean the downfall of society, at least not the kind of society that we're going to build."
But for precisely this reason, the question of sex on campus is not just academic. Ultimately, the new morality will have meaning for American society as a whole; today's campus code may be tomorrow's national morality.
Only 15 Minutes
The Easter Week sprees at Fort Lauderdale and Nassau represent merely the noisiest manifestations of the moral revolution. Far more relevant are the afternoon study dates which may begin with reading John Donne but may end up beneath the covers. Undoubtedly, the key to the new morality is the widespread belief that a boy and girl who have established what the campus calls "a meaningful relationship" have the moral right to sleep together.
"If a Harvard man dates a Radcliffe girl consistently, their friends just naturally assume that they're being intimate," explains a 20-year-old Harvard junior over a cup of black coffee at "Hayes-Bick," a Harvard Square cafeteria. "It's also assumed they're going to bed during parietary hours. Most parents and deans believe sex is an after-dark activity that takes several hours. My generation knows that any time of day is a good time and that all you need is fifteen minutes."
But for all their hard-boiled realism about sex, this generation assesses pre-marital affairs on a romantic basis: whether the couple is "in love" and is being indiscreet discreetly. "If two people are in love, there's nothing wrong with their sleeping together, provided no one gets hurt by it," says a University of Chicago coed who says she has been in love twice and slept with both boys.
Indeed, some students fail to see what, if anything, sex has to do with morality. "Stealing food from the dormitory refrigerator," says a Radcliffe senior, "would be more condemned around here than fornicating on the living-room couch."
What Goes On
Morals, moreover, differ from campus to campus. Last fall, for instance, Augustana College, a Lutheran school in Sioux Falls, S.D., made a concession to changing standards: it lifted the campus ban on student dancing. And at Santa Clara, a conservative Jesuit university south of San Francisco, the dean of women, Mrs. Viola Kamena, explains: "Sex is no problem on this campus, although I do think couples sometimes prolong
their good-nights too long on the steps of the dormitories."
Finally, necktie or no necktie, no one really knows what goes on behind the closed doors of student rooms. But allowing a considerable margin for error, those in the best position to know maintain that the morals revolution is a fact of life on today's campuses.
What the statistics and the guesses add up to is a moral code quite different from the one that served college students even a decade ago. For one thing, it is no longer considered "shoe" (good form) to try to seduce a girl by plying her with liquor, although a considerable amount is still consumed at student parties. For another, college boys and girls will frequently pass the night together, sometimes in the same bed, without engaging in anything more serious than heavy necking. Senior John Whitmoyer, former editor of The Dartmouth, says during Green Key spring weekend most students spend the night with their dates in cabins, fields, and haylofts, "but the percentage that actually have intercourse is small."
One result of all this is a proliferation of "technical virgins" on campuses across the country. A "technical" virgin is a girl or boy who has experienced almost all varieties of heterosexual sex—except intercourse. While some non-virgins ridicule technical virginity as "hypocritical," many girls have resorted to it to avoid the emotional and physical commitments of "going all the way." A Radcliffe economics major explained to a friend the other day: "I used to think it perfect nonsense to lie down with a boy, get undressed, or let him undress you—and then say let's stop. It's probably bosh, but I have built up this idealistic thing about the final act itself."
Two Girls in One
In the new campus code of sexual conduct, girls are supposed to be as free as boys in seeking sexual pleasure. ("So, sure, some girls roll in the hay a little," says Mary McGowan, 21, a columnist for the Daily Californian. "But they get rid of their anxieties and frustrations that way.") Boys, moreover, are not expected to seek sex in the company of prostitutes or the less virtuous of the "townies." One Michigan coed observes: "A boy used to date two girls simultaneously, a nice girl and a not-so-nice girl. Now he wants two girls in one. The nice girl who doesn't want to go along has a problem."
Nice girls have always had this kind of problem, but never have the tensions been as great or the pressures as manifold. First, there are the demands of boys, who now expect far more than boys once did. Then, there are the unhilarier-than-thou attitudes of girls who take pride in non-virginity. ("It's a load off my mind, losing my virgiliness," says one Vassar redhead. "Many girls feel inadequate because they're not having affairs."
The ultimate pressure, however, may come from the school environment itself. Few communities anywhere are as compulsive about the dicta of modern psychology as the contemporary U.S. college campus, and, whether she knows a paranoid from a paraboloid, the typical coed quickly learns a short-hand—and distorted-version of the Freudian manifesto: "Repressed sex is bad, expressed sex is good." Sexual morality may thus be reduced to the problem of supporting mental health.
Almost from the moment they first stroll through Taylor Gate at Vassar or meet their first dates under Wheeler Oak in Berkeley, many of today's coeds begin agonizing about their virginity—if they haven't already lost it in high school. At Bennington (which has no curfews), the agonizing seems to be especially acute. "If a girl reaches 20 and she's still a virgin,
she begins to wonder whether there's anything wrong with her as a woman," observes a slender Bennington junior.
Open Doors
Inevitably, the new morality has touched off a series of unpleasant confrontations between students and deans over the issue of where, when, and for how long boy should meet girl on campus. The dean of women at one Midwestern university grew so weary of the struggle a few years ago that she resigned rather than accept the emerging new standards of "sex and love."
Even at Notre Dame, the president, the Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, felt obliged recently to remind students that "if anyone seriously believes that he cannot become well-educated here without . . . girls in his room (he should) get free of Notre Dame." At Brandeis a few weeks ago, several hundred students staged a two-day demonstration to protest a new rule requiring that doors to dormitory rooms be kept open whenever a boy and girl are together inside. In an editorial, the student newspaper said, somewhat petulantly, that the new regulation "makes impossible any meaningful relationship between boy and girl."
That any intelligent college student could honestly suggest that Brandeis's "open-door" policy would interfere with the establishment of "meaningful relationships" seems hard to believe. But John U. Monro, dean of Harvard College, maintains that "many thoughtful students feel that the university has the responsibility to provide facilities for sexual adventure." It was Monro who inadvertently focused national attention on morals in the Yard last fall when he wrote a letter to The Harvard Crimson charging that a growing number of students were being indiscreetly indiscreet during parietal hours. Looking back on the incident, the likeable, crew-cut dean regrets the sensationalized headlines about "Wild Parties at Harvard" but insists: "I now think I'm dealing with a larger number of people than I believed last October."
Dr. Graham Blaine Jr., the 45-year-old Harvard and Radcliffe psychiatrist whose disturbing report on campus sex mores was distributed soon after Monro's blast in the Crimson, scoffs at student claims that restrictive parietal rules increase guilt feelings. "Admittedly," says psychiatrist Blaine, "a percentage of all these people who are having love relationships benefit from them, but they are a decided minority. It's a question of balancing the small amount of increased pleasure for the few against the great potential harm to the many. Strict enforcement of parietal rules bolsters the girls who aren't sure if they want to have an affair."
Certainly, early curfews bolster coeds who need or want a plausible excuse to avoid the temptations of an automobile back seat or, on rare occasions, a no-questions-asked motel. Moreover, while Vassar girls do not kiss and tell their dates that they can't go farther because the college disapproves, the school believes that president Sarah Blanding's now famous speech denouncing premarital sexual indulgence by its students has had a salutary effect. "We don't know if there's more or less sex among the students," says Vassar's Dr. Florence C. Wislocki, "but at least Miss Blanding made some of the girls stop and think. Before then, many felt we condoned sexual experimentation."
In the deepest sense, however, cracking down on visiting hours and tightening up on other parietal rules treats the symptoms, not the underlying causes, of the change in student morals. It is hardly news now that this generation of students was raised in the most permissive, affluent, and sex-suffused society in history. Rarely having
been told "no" by their parents, they went to formal dances at 10, had steady dates at 13, drove their own cars at 16, and went off to college at 17 already a trifle jaded by life. In their slang, the supreme accolade is "cool" and they cultivate "coolness" by being as aloof and dispassate as possible.
Yet, at college, especially at the cosmopolitan ones, the aloof generation has been suddenly thrust into an environment that is not only cool but coldly and sometimes cruelly competitive. They encounter a faculty that long ago said good-by to the Mr. Chipses who could be as devoted to students as they could to scholarship. Uncertain of themselves, but fearful of revealing their inner uncertainty to the outer world, many have sought an outlet and an identification in love and sex. The essential loneliness that pervades many affairs at college is perhaps best expressed by a small sign on the wall of the Harvard "Coop:" "It's the two of us against the world—and the world is winning."
Anxiety Antidote
For the lonely crowd at Harvard and other colleges, sex has become the antidote for anxiety. "If you can establish a good relationship with an attractive girl, it's a very good thing," says a worldly Harvard junior. "It gives you a sense of security. The ideal thing is to have someone you can depend on. Cambridge is such a cold, impersonal, aggressive place. There's a constant academic strain. You need the sense of security."
Sleeping with an attractive girl has always given boys an illusion of security and status, but as anything more than a temporary prop for the ego, sex seems like a fragile reed. Yet for students who think "it's the two of us against the world" sex becomes, as one Radcliffe girl expressed it, "the only way to get close to someone, really close so that you know everything about him." Occasionally, however, students get so close to each other that the effect is stifling, giving old grads the impression that today's undergraduates take their pleasures sadly.
If today's students act middleaged at 21, what will they be like at 40?
The optimists believe that the emphasis on monogamy and sex with love among this generation is good news for the future of marriage in the U.S., especially since so many college couples eventually formalize their trial unions.
In the long run, can a society that itself glorifies sex expect vigorous young boys and girls to pursue celibacy while pursuing their B.A.'s, M.A.'s, or Ph.D.'s? It is more than coincidence that one of the steady best sellers in campus bookshops is psychoanalyst Erich Fromm's "The Art of Loving," which glorifies the physical and spiritual union of male and female.
I Felt Guilty
But while today's students may convince themselves intellectually that sex is good, they seem to feel almost as guilty about sex for sex's sake as did their predecessors. A pretty 19-year-old Radcliffe sophomore who admits to "considerable sexual experience" says: "I imagine I have gone to bed with some boys just to see what would happen. I know there is nothing rational about this, and I probably wouldn't do it again that way. What everyone says about it being wrong is true—I feel guilty."
Significantly, many young men who tout the benefits of physical love for themselves and their dates hesitate to say they would give their own children blanket permission to say "yes." When asked whether he favored premarital sex, one Columbia senior in turn asked: "For me—or my kid sister?"
The new moralists on campus may argue that the guilt does not come from anything inherent in sex itself but is, in fact, induced by the vestiges of Victorianism in the social superstructure. All this may be true. However, it is unreasonable to believe that Victorian guilt will soon disappear from the campus, let alone from society as a whole. The groves of academe are not about to become an ivied "Dolce Vita."
Context of Love
That many students feel guilty about sex underscores still another essential truth: the sexual differences between men and women are more than anatomical. To the boy, the act of love may be more important than the context of love. To the girl, what comes before and what comes after love-making may be just as important as the act itself. No amount of rationalizing can alter this fact.
In defining its rules, the college should not, and probably cannot, deprive students of the right to test, experiment, and even rebel. In a perceptive article in the current issue of Atlantic, former MIT dean John Rule argues that the student "should to some degree cross swords with social conventions . . . in order that he may eventually subscribe to them willingly."
Cool Manner
Nevertheless, the college must not abdicate its role in conserving, transmitting, and helping to mold both moral and intellectual values. It must do this without sounding pompous or pious. The college must make clear in a firm, sophisticated, and sometimes even "cool" manner that sex with love is not really a moral standard, but an ambiguous slogan. In their bright college years, students should learn that sex can make extraordinary emotional demands as well as offer personal rewards. Sex can be fun, but at 19, or 20, it can also be very bad news.
the colleges cannot tell a student what to think about sex, especially this generation of students which, by general agreement, is sharper and smarter than its predecessors. The colleges can only present the contemporary facts of life to their undergraduates as candidly as possible and then keep their fingers crossed, hoping that somehow the lesson seeps in. It means taking a chance on their intelligence, but that, after all, is the real nature of education.
—Reprinted by permission of Newsweek
Dailij 17hnsan
University of Kansas student newspaper HH Eliot Hall
UUniversity 4-3646, newsroom
UUniversity 4-3198, business office
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press.
Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York
22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates:
$3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, April 15.1964 University Daily Kansan
Group to Appear at KU
Page 3
Jazz Fans Tap Toes to Lab Band
Student work in college laboratories isn't usually the sort of thing to attract big crowds, but there's one group that packs them in every week at North Texas State University.
Their subject is jazz and they're working toward a bachelor of music degree with a major in dance band. Their laboratory is the student union building, where various groups—large and small—play their own arrangements and compositions at a Thursday afternoon jam session.
This unique educational arrangement has attracted increasing national attention. The group is widely known among jazz musicians and they will appear at KU's Oread Jazz Festival—the North Texas State University "Lab Band."
THE "LAB BAND" has appeared on two network television shows, made records for the 90th Floor label, and performed throughout the country. In May, 1959, the group placed third in the nation in the "Best New Band" contest of the American Federation of Musicians.
Fun, Fellowship Objects Of International Festival
In 1960 and 1961, the Lab Band won top awards in the Collegiate Jazz Festival at Notre Dame University. In competition with bands from throughout the nation, the NTSU group was named the outstanding group of the festival and the best big band both years.
Joining American students with international students for fun and recreation is the primary goal of the 12th International Festival, which will be held at 6 p.m. Saturday in Hoch Auditorium.
"This goal is meant to help the students develop a deeper sense of international understanding and friendship," Gloria Macchiavello, Santiago City, Chile, graduate student, and chairman of the festival said in an interview last night.
"Our theme, 'Hand in Hand Around the World;' reflects our objectives," she continued.
"INFORMAL EXHIBITS from many foreign countries is the first part of the festival," Miss Macchiavello explained. "Each delegation will have its own booth with displays of costumes, jewelry, and items native to that country."
"A special feature in some of the booths will be the showing of colored slides of the country," she said.
A new feature of the festival will be a model "Miss Universe" contest.
The second part of the festival will be the program, which begins at 7:45 p.m.
"The contestants will be selected this week, and the winner will be elected during the festival," Miss Macchiavello said. "The winner will be announced during the program."
"Another new aspect of the program will be the addition of an American number," she explained.
Following the program, the exhibits will be opened to the public again, and the international students, many who will be wearing native costumes, will explain and answer questions about the various displays.
"So far great enthusiasm has been shown among both international students and American students for the festival," Miss Macchiavello said.
"We feel that it is beneficial to have the festival during the KU Relays because more people will be on the campus and will have a chance to see the displays," she continued.
The student musicians won a gold loving cup and silver plaque for second place at the Georgetown University Intercollegiate Jazz Festival in May, 1960. In 1960 and 1961 the Lab Band was the featured demonstration band for the Stan Kenton National Band Camp.
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THE STORY of jazz in the classrooms at the college began in 1942, when graduate student M. E. (Gene) Hall was asked to teach dance band arranging to two special students. Word got around and 15 students were enrolled. Hall joined the NTSU faculty in 1947 to develop舞 band study as part of the regular curriculum. Hall had been a professional jazz musician and radio program director.
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Foreign study may suit you, too. (It isn't for everyone.) This is the time of life when the experience of Europe can mean most. It will mean most if you use it to deepen and extend your formal studies.
You might look into it-and learn about our programs, including a new one opening next fall at the University of Madrid.
Our centers don't offer mere "civilization" courses. They aren't cozy little "ghettoes" for Americans. Institute programs immerse you in a great European university as deeply as your abilities allow. (We supplement and guide your studies, as necessary, to make sure they satisfy U. S. requirements.)
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 15, 1964
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McNamara Denies Charge
WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara today denied charges by a returning serviceman that the actual American casualty figures in Viet Nam had been "covered up."
McNamara also said the morale of U.S. military advisers in Viet Nam was "remarkably high," considering the situation in the wartorn nation. He said the Americans were "confident of ultimate success."
The cabinet member made the comments in a letter to Rep. William S. Broomfield, R-Mich., who had questioned him about charges made by former Air Force Sergeant Alvin Morrison of Ferndale, Mich. Morrison recently returned from Viet Nam to be honorably discharged.
"There has never been any attempt to cover up American casualty figures," McNamara said. "Casualty statistics, updated and published weekly, have always been available both in Saigon and Washington for examination."
Shepard Tries Pills, Diet
HOUSTON—(UPI)—Astronaut Alan Shepard Jr., America's first man in space, has gone to pills and a special diet to try to cure an ear injury that made him inelegible for the next U.S. orbital flight.
The 40-year-old Navy commander is making steady progress, said astronaut physician Dr. Charles Berry, but complete recovery "could take months."
At the heart of Shepard's trouble is a condition known as labyrinthitis, the medical term for a swelling of the tissues of the inner ear. This is the location of the delicate semi-circular canals which control human balance and orientation.
Pesticide Reformer Dies
SILVER SPRING, Md.—(UPI)—Author-scientist Rachel Carson, a gentle, shy woman who stirred a mighty storm with her pen, died yesterday of cancer at the age of 56.
She touched off a Senate investigation and a government crackdown on pesticide use. She said that wholesale use of chemical pesticides already had caused "severe, and in some cases catastrophic" losses of wildlife, and asserted that human lives were threatened. too
Miss Carson's controversial 1962 best-seller, "Silent Spring," spurred the federal government to action with a warning that man was poisoning his world with pesticides.
Interior Secretary Stewart L. Udall and Sen. Abraham A. Ribicoff, D-Conn., who spearheaded the Senate study of pesticide dangers, eulogized Miss Carson last night.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Foreign students: People-to-People barbecue picnic Thursday. 5 p.m., 1301 Woolsey Street, Georgetown Alpha Epsilon fraternity and Chi Omega sorority. All invited! Informal.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence
Council, 10 a.m. Married
couples interested in attorney
Cana conference should call Bob Scott.
Cana conference will sitters
call Eileen Sterley, VI 2-4385.
Timely Topics, 7:30 p.m. St. Lawrence Center, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Carillon Recital, 7 p.m., Albert Gerken,
Carillon Theater, 9 Vittelloni (Italian, $31).
Faculty Recital, 8 p.m. Swarthout Hall.
University Woodwind Quintet
History Club, 8:30 p.m., Trophy Room, Kansas Union. "Problems in Writing Colonial History"—James De V. Allen, King Civil Service and University of Malaya.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m.
Luke Church, Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Boyle Church, New York
Holy Communion, 11:30 a.m., St.
Anselm's Chapel, Canterbury House.
Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion,
415th St., Pan American Room, Kansas
Union.
Der deutsche Stammtish trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 16. April, um 4 Uhr 30 in der "Bierstube," ecke 14th Tenn. Alle sind herzlich eingeladen.
Continuing Philosophy Lecture, 7:30 p.m., 108 Strong, "Communism and World Order"—Dr. Errol Harris, Japanese Film Festival, 7:30 p.m., 303
Christian Science Organization, 7.30
walk. Danforth Chapel, Everyone
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Japanese Film Festival. 7:30 p.m., 303
Balley. "The Balliff" (Eng. sub.).
Minority Opinions Forum Tape-Discus-
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Christian Family Movement 8 p.m. St.
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Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
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Wednesday, April 15, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Political Study Getting Sociology Emphasis
"Sociological behavior is rising in importance in the field of political science," said Ethan P. Allen, professor of political science and director of the Governmental Research Center, in an interview yesterday.
"The emphasis has gone from the historic jurist to an increasing of the study and value of behavioral patterns, mathematics and psychology," he said.
Prof. Allen, who got his Ph.D from the State University of Iowa, said when he was in school it was common to get a major in political science and a minor in history. This has now changed and only one-fourth get a minor in history, with the rest following a course of sociology, economics or mathematics for their minor.
"NOW THAT intellectual wisdom has increased, the speculative approach which utilizes mathematics, sociology and psychology has become more important," he said.
"We used to read all of Plato . . . where now they just read excerpts." Dr. Allen said the articles and publications of the political science field have grown immensely since he was in school, and to prove his point he pointed to bookcases in his office that have been filled since he arrived in 1945. The student doesn't have the time to cover all these articles and to learn what each is trying to say.
Kansas Law Review Editors Named
John H. Johntz Jr., Wichita, has been elected editor-in-chief of the Kansas Law Review at the University of Kansas for 1964-65.
Associate editors on the KU legal quarterly are Edward M. Boyle, Shawnee Mission, and Cleve Douglas Miller, Salina. Sections editor is George D. Blackwood, Springfield, Mo.
Note editors are Walter C. Brauer III, Bonner Springs; James L. Crabtree, Ransom; and Loren L. Obley, Emporia, second year.
"The students now have to concentrate on two or three specific fields such as international politics and comparative governments where 30 years ago we majored in the field of political science," he said.
When asked the possible effects of the foreign aid cut President Johnson is requesting, Prof. Allen said, "A billion dollar cut from our domestic economy probably would not hurt our society very much where it could injure our relations with foreign countries if we cut a billion from our foreign budget."
"THEE COULD BE money left that hasn't been spent that President Johnson plans to spend with the $3.4 Eillion. This is something you can't answer unless you are in on the making of the budget," said Prof. Allen, who in 1944-45 worked for the Bureau of the Budget in the office of the president.
Prof. Allen said the question of whether the budget would be cut was hard to answer, but that he feels Johnson has a better chance than Kennedy ever had to keep most of his budget requests intact. This is due, he said, to Johnson's long tenure
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Prof. Allen said he felt the men in the government spent the money of the taxpayers wisely but that the question of whether the budget is padded or not depends on who is looking at the appropriation. If you are the head of a project you will feel you will need much more than the legislature will give you to do the job right.
Prof. Allen gave the example of the man during World War II who was in charge of protecting our shores from invasion. This man requested 10 times what the plants could produce in barbed wire. He wanted this amount whether other parts of the war got their barbed wire or not. He had a job, and to him this was a legitimate request.
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1. I've come across a fascinating fact about the population.
Do tell.
2. There are more females than males in the U.S.A.
Where are they all hiding?
A.
I am so excited to be joining you in the concert!
8. If you really want to find out what's going on with the population you should go see The Demograph.
man playing a trumpet
The who?
4. The Demograph - it's this gigantic population counter that Equitable put up at the World's Fair.
5. It gives you the up-to-the-minute story of the population explosion.
I've noticed more people around lately.
P
It tells you where the girls are?
TOMMY JOHNSON
1924
Can it explain how come, if there are more females than males, I have so much trouble meeting them?
6. Tells you how many babies are being born, how fast the population is growing. Stuff like that.
Be sure to see the Equitable Pavilion when you visit the World's Fair. For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable. For complete information about career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, or write to William E. Blevins, Employment Manager.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 15. 1964
Around the Campus Model UN Elects Leaders
Eight students have been elected bloc chairmen for the Model United Nations April 24-25 which this year will involve nearly 500 students.
Bloc chairmen, who will direct assembly maneuvers, are:
Janet Chartier, Salina sophomore, Non-aligned European bloc; John Stuckey, Pittsburg senior, Latin American bloc; Gail K. Weber, McCune junior, Non-aligned Asian bloc; and Don K. Blevins, Wichita junior. Western bloc.
Mont O'Leary, Baxter Springs senior, Arab bloc; David Hutchins, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, Sino-Soviet bloc; Timothy Miller, Wichita junior, African bloc; and Jerry Hoskins, Baxter Springs freshman, Western-aligned Asian nations.
Forum Sponsors Socialist
John P. Quinn, national organizer for the Socialist Labor Party, will speak to the KU Minority Opinions Forum at 4 p.m. April 24 in the Kansas Union.
Quinn, 80, has been national organizer for the SLP since 1927. He will speak about the party.
Quinn will visit several Kansas college campuses before appearing at KU.
K-State Takes Rifle Title
For the 12th year Kansas State University is winner of the Big Eight Gallery Smallbore Rifle Championship, following a closely contested tournament here last weekend in which only 49 points separated it and the seventh-place KU team.
Team coaches meeting in Lawrence Saturday voted to hold the tournament championships permanently at KU, with next year's match set for April 2-3.
All Big Eight schools competed in this year's tournament, with the exception of Colorado. Kansas State College at Pittsburg was invited to shoot in its place.
The Kansas State team, led by the National Rifle Association Inter-Collegiate All-American, Margaret Thompson, shot 2871 out of a possible 3,000. KU's score was 2822.
A KU firer, David John, Eatontown, N.J., senior, was named to the 10-member All-Conference team.
The Classical Film Series
presents Federico Fellini's
I. VITELLONI
From the maker of "81/2"
(Italian dialog — English subtitles)
Wednesday, April 15
FRASER THEATER - 7:00 P.M.
Admission: $.60
PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS
>
SUA INTERVIEWS Applications NOW available for Chairmanships For Fall '64 activities...
- Carnival
- Fall Concert
- Homecoming
- Popular Films
- Classical Films
- Orientation Week Activities
- Open House
- AND MANY OTHERS
please note: SUMMER BOARD positions are also open at this time
Pick up application blanks in the Activities Directors Office . . . 1st floor UNION
Wednesday, April 15, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Lungs Power Ex-KU Janitor In Rare Job
KU has its own glass blower who makes almost all the complex glass equipment used in experiments by the chemistry and physics departments.
Logan said there are very few professional pyrex glass blowers in the Middle West. Kansas State University recently hired one, but most of the other Big Eight schools do not have pyrex glass blowers. He said that he doesn't think there are any pyrex glass blowers in Kansas City, judging from the amount of side business he does for some Kansas City firms.
His trial period was to repair glass projects and "pinch hit," but after the first few days on the job a replacement was never mentioned.
KU Cigarette Machine Follows Dodo Trail
PYREX GLASSBLOWING is not the neon sign or figurine work that people usually associate with a glass blower. Logan's job is to construct complex apparatuses such as multiple openings on spheres and transfer pines.
Logan's shop is located in the basement of Malott Hall. He is usually busy with student projects, and works during the summer.
Walter L. Logan, who has been with KU for 20 years, is the glass blower for the campus. He uses only pyrex heat tempered glass because the glass projects he constructs are sometimes used in high temperature experiments.
Slowly but surely, cigarettes on campus have become scarce and more scarce.
Logan began working for the chemistry department in the middle forties, when KU's glass blower was hired for the government. Logan said that the previous man gave him about three months training in the glass blowing skill. When Logan did take the job 13 years ago, it was to be only temporary. He had worked seven years on campus as a janitor before becoming a glass blower.
BEFORE BECOMING a glass blower, he had often watched the glass blower with fascination. He originally tried out for the job in curiosity as to whether he could blow glass. The only instruction he ever received was the three months training from the previous glass blower and books he had read.
ed event happened. The operator, dents.
A small crowd gathered around the concessions operator, as he doloed out (for 30 cents) the last of the cigarette packages in the machine.
But, yesterday, one of the machines died.
Then the long-expected and dread-
with the help of a few boys, loaded the machine and rolled it away. The death of the machine was heralded by hisses and boos from the stu- But then perhaps, cigarette machines don't die, they just pass away.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 15, 1964
70 Years Old Friday
Nikita Appears Healthy Physically, Politically
In the following dispatch, UPI correspondent Henry Shapiro, who has spent more than 25 years in Moscow where he is dean of western newsmen, discusses the strengths and weaknesses of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, who celebrates his 70th birthday April 17.
By Henry Shapiro United Press International
Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev, "the ruler of all the Russians," will celebrate his 70th birthday Friday, apparently in better physical shape and more secure in his power than any of his predecessors in Soviet history.
Eleven years after his assumption of supreme authority, Khrushchev is now wrestling with two major critical problems which in many other countries could easily topple the ruling regime.
The once monolithic Communist International, which Lenin built and Stalin expanded and consolidated, has been convulsed by the irreparable break with China and resultant disarray in the world Communist movement. The Chinese are now hurling charges of treason and heresy against Khrushchev and are demanding his confinement "to the dustheap of history."
"THE CHINESE clamor for Khrushchev's head will have no more effect in the Soviet Union than a possible American appeal to the French people to remove DeGaulle," a veteran Western ambassador said.
recently. "It will only serve to strengthen his position with the Soviet leadership and people."
Domestically, the Soviet Union is experiencing a year of great hardship following the disastrous agricultural failures of 1963 and a host of other economic problems.
But Khrushchev during his entire career, from his humble beginning as a cattle herdsman in his native village of Kalinovka to mastery of the Kremlin, has shown a rare political genius which has enabled him to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat.
He emerged from the humiliating missile retreat from Cuba in October, 1962, only to be built up by Soviet propaganda as "a man of peace," who saved the world from nuclear holocaust.
KHRUSHCHIEV then contemptuously rejected Chinese charges of cowardice and surrender "to the American Paper Tiger," and with President Kennedy began to lay the foundation for an eventual understanding with the United States.
Earlier, in 1957, Khrushchev displayed another kind of political craftsmanship when virtually single-handed he defied the attempt of the Stalinist old guard to oust him from power.
"You did not elect me party leader, and I refuse to accept your decision," Khrushchev defiantly told the majority of the ruling presidium of the Communist party led by former premiers Molotov and Malenkov.
He then hastily summoned the central committee of the party which supported him fully and enabled him to turn the tables on his opponents who were reduced to political impotence.
Since then Khrushchev has consolidated his power with the appointment to all key offices of his loyal followers so that no man or institution appears able to challenge him.
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Since 1955 when, hat in hand, he went to Yugoslavia to apologize to Tito for Stalin's "mistakes," Khrushchev has journeyed 59 times to 19 countries and has logged tens of thousands of miles barnstorming his own domain.
A few days before his birthday he was mending Communist fences in Hungary with Premier Janos Dakar,
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More arduous trips to the United Arab Republic, Scandinavia and possibly to India are scheduled this year as Khrushchev shows no signs of abatement in his faith in personal diplomacy and persuasive talents.
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TO THE SENIOR CLASS OF 64
Success — What Is It?
Have each of you asked yourselves just what is it you really want to accomplish once you graduate? Of course the natural answer is "to be successful." But what is this elusive word "success?"
Success is the teacher who enjoys imparting knowledge to those she instructs, success is the businessman that wants to be in a position financially to give his family the "good life" and does, success is the research scientist who thrills at the breakthrough he has striven to accomplish.
Success, then, is the progressive realization of pre-established worthy goals. To succeed according to definition one must have goals.
Sit down today and write down the man or woman you want to be 10 years from now in terms of:
INCOME
RESPONSIBILITY
PRESTIGE
SOCIAL POSITION
SELF SATISFACTION
LEISURE TIME
Make sure you have one desire that outshines the others. A conflict in goals creates a conflict within. Use goals to help you grow. You are what you think you are and you become what you earnestly concentrate on becoming.
FULVICD College Master
John M. Suder
Dan Jansky
Gary Nu Delman
Ed Henry
1234567890
Temple Says Loss Doesn't Kill Chances
Page 9
Despite the Jayhawk baseball team's loss to Kansas State Saturday, Coach Floyd Temple still considers KU to be a contender for the 1964 Big Eight championship.
"I feel," Coach Temple said, "that the team has the potential to be a contender for the championship. This is, potentially, the best group I've ever had at KU."
In order to put more hitting strength into his lineup going into this weekend's series at Nebraska, Coach Temple plans a switch at three positions.
THE CHANGES will return Keith Kimerer, last year's regular third baseman to that spot, shifting Mike DerManuel, who has played the first nine games at third, to center field. Steve McGreevy, who has been in center, will take over at first for Dick Fanning.
Fanning went 0-for-11 batting cleanup in the K-State series to see his season's average drop to .042.
Temple plans to drop DerManuel, his early season's hitting flash at .469. In Fanning's position in the batting order.
DerManuel slammed seven hits and drove in eight runs in 12 times at bat against the Wildeats as KU won the series, 2-1.
McGREEYV, at .353 and second baseman Stirling Coward at .300 are the only other regular players over the .300 mark to date.
"I'm not disappointed in our overall team hitting," Temple said, "I'm just trying to get more."
Temple was complimentary to his pitching staff.
"I think that our three starting pitchers, (Steve) Renko, (Chuck) Dobson, and (Fred) Chana are three of the best we've had here. They're all sophomores and they could get much better.
Coach Temple said he also had three creditable relief pitchers in John Higgins, Steve King and Fred Litttoy.
Wednesday, April 15, 1964 University Daily Kaansan
THE JAYHAWKS raked K-State's pitching for 25 hits here last weekend, but could only get two singles from Wildcat reliever Jerry Fraser in the last six innings to lose the final game in the series, 5-7.
Bob Mulcahy, basketball coach at Seneca High School, Louisville, Ky. was named last week as assistant KU basketball coach.
New Freshman Coach Named
He replaces Ted Owens who moved up to the head coaching job after the resignation of Dick Harp on March 27.
Among the outstanding players from Mulcahy's Seneca teams were George Unseld, a member of the KU varsity; David Cosby, a starting guard for Cincinnati; Mike Redd, freshman star at Kentucky Wesleyan; and Westley Unseld, highly-sought Seneca senior, and brother of George.
Coach Owens, who selected the new coach said that he has known Mulcahy for four or five years and that, in his opinion, Mulcahy would be a valuable addition to the Jayhawks' basketball staff.
Chargers SLACKS
"He and I share the same concept regarding the handling of young men. Some of our ideas regarding basketball may differ, but that, I think, is a good thing," Coach Owens said.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 15, 1964
'Oh Dad' Held Over Dog Needed for Play
A cocker spaniel is being sought by the drama department for a play soon to be produced while another production is being held over for extra performances.
The upcoming production is a light comedy by Tennessee Williams. "Period of Adjustment."
"Oh, Dad Poor Dad, Mama Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feeling So Sad" had extended its performances to add an extra four nights, and will be presented at 8:15 p.m. tonight through Saturday in the Experimental Theatre. Tickets are now on sale for the extended production.
Tickets went on sale today for "Period of Adjustment" while a member of the cast was still missing. A well behaved cocker spaniel is the uncast character.
The play concerns two young married couples during different "periods of adjustment" in their marriages.
Eight members of the cast have already been chosen. The cast includes Charles Schmidt, Dixon, Ill., graduate student; Gigi Gibson, Independence junior; Bruce Owen, Lawrence graduate student; Teddy Weddingfeld, Norfolk, Va., junior; Jo Anne Smith, Wellington junior; Paul Broderick, Overland Park sophomore; Robin Huggins, Olathe freshman; Ann Runge, Higginsville, Mo., graduate student.
Tickets are available at the University Theatre box office for $2.40,
$1.80, $1.20 or free with presentation of a KU I.D.
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Some student when using the WATKINS HOSPITAL office telephone inadvertently carried off the hospital staff book containing the minutes of the staff meetings. Missing is a large size, gray cloth-covered, three-ring notebook.
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phone book with 2 speed derailer.
Call VF 3-119. 4-21
1954 thru 56 322 Buick engine. 1949 thru 53 flat head V-8 Ford engine. Both in very good condition. 1949 thru 54 Chevy standard trans. 1949 thru 54 Dodge other good used parts. Benson's Auto Salvage, 1902 Harper. Phone VI 3-1626. Open evenings. 4-21
3-bedroom house on cul de sac, ceramic tile kitchen & bathroom, oak floors, sliding glass doors, full basement with shelter, attached garage, large fenced yard with many trees, lovely long rock wall, large backyard pool, elem. school. Prefer August possession date. No special assessments. $16,500.
Phone VI 2-0054 before 9:00 p.m.
1956 Ford. Call VI 2-9161 between 5 p.m.
and 9 p.m. 4-21
50 h.p. engine on 15 ft. boat with trailer.
accessories. Call VI 3-5229 after
p.m. 4-21
Shortwave communications receiver — excellent for shortwave listeners of amateur radio. "S meter, inside whip and outside wire antenna. VI Call 3-2454 after 5-4-21
1660 Rambler 6 Custom 4 dr. air-conditioned, tinted glass, overdrive, individually adjustable reclining seats with head rest, radio and heater. Excellent nylon tires. Excellent condition through. See at 1514 Tennessee after 5.
1951 Chevy 4 door. Very clean and in excellent condition. Call VI 2-1802 or see at 645 Maine after 5 p.m. 4-21
1964 model RCA 21" color TV. Guaran-
reasonable. Call VX 3-4635. 4-21
Page 111
Walnut antique organ and commode,
CALL VI 3-2402, 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
4-27
For sale by owner; 1960 Ford convertible, white with red interior. Power steering, auto trans, seat belts. Excellent condition. Call VI 3-7294 after 4:45 p.m. 4-16
Mobile home for sale; 1959 Prairie Schooner, 10' x 36', 2 bedroom, new washer and air conditioner. Call VI 2-3098. 4-21
Violin, complete with case and key,
Valued at $20.00 for only $145. Call
3-4098 in Lawrences or write
John Brewer, 321 S. Oak, Ottawa, K-
john.
Men's 3 speed Schwinn bicycle. 2 baskets
C1 Cam Jim Cali Van Kian
V 3-815 after 7 p.m.
K 4-16
Student will sell all guns in collection, 45 auto's. Lugers, 38 revolvers, miniature automatics, Ruger 22's, 410 double blb, 30.06 Deer Rifles, Winchester 90-30, deer action. While they last it $6.5 per carton. Call VI 3-1110 after 6-43
Abington Book Shop has "Punch." 101$^5/2$ Mass. Next to Varsity Theater. 4-15
Abington Book Store. Chess Books and
Museum of Art. Mass. Downtown.
next to Varsity Theater. 4-15
LAWRENCE FIREARMS COMPANY.
BROOKS WANTED SPECIAL: 22 CAL.
WESTERN REVOLVERS. NEW. $26.50.
TRADES WANTED. EVENINGS.
QHIO. V-1 21-143 4-15
New 10 speed Schwinn bicycle. Regular $66.95. Left in hayway since Christmas.
In original box. $57.00 takes it! Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. 4-15
Used portable stereo. Powerful. $149.95.
Motorola 3 channel, guaranteed. $58
takes it! Ray Stoneback s, 929-931 Mass.
Used Radios, $5 to $10. 4-15
Bicycle weather ahead! Rent or buy a 3 speed Royce Union, $15 per month, 1 month minimum rental. Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. 4-22
EX-HEARSE, 1951 Cadillac. Standard transmission, 24-inch for hauling or camping or woodshes Cheap. Also sturdy car-top outboard, $20, Call VI 3-7922. 4-15
Typewriter. new and used portables, standards, electrics Olympia, Hermes, Roberto Rosso, rentals, portables, Typewriter, adder, rentals and service, Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St.,
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME
WHEELS, Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale
at great savings after 6 p.m. week days,
and Sunday. 817 Connectt
St.
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
New shipment "am-85" Lawrence Outlook.
100% Satisfaction Guarantee.
Surprise your roommate with a cake or
that special occasion. The K.U. Birthday
party includes a student body a line
of cakes. Free delivery and candles.
Call VI 2-1791.
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Tau University Free Delivery. $4.50 Western civilization all, all, all. completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3-
9040 after 5 p.m. tt
FOR RENT
Two single rooms, extra nice for 2 adult men or two ladies. $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from campus. West Hills. Share large bathroom, outside entrance with hallway, private room with private Air conditioned. For someone who will stay next fall. Call VI-3-3077. 4-17
A large room, private half-bath and shower. Kitchen privileges available. Residence is located in Mississippi. Recently remodeled and cooled for summer. Call VI 2-0298. 4-21
Large, homey, attractively furnished, 4 room apartment. Kitchen built-ins and garbage disposal. Utilities paid except electricity. Call VI 3-7677. tt
Small, bachelor type furnished apartment. Suitable for one person. Private bath and kitchen. Off street parking. Bill's pale except electricity. $40 per hour. Goerger's Real Estate. 7 W. Business phone VI 3-0005, residence VI 3-2929.
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.
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
Single or double room. Furnished, cook-
ing facilities paid. Call if
2-9451 or see at 1244 La.
fax:
University Daily Kansan
Crescent Heights two bedroom apart-
ment. 25th and Redbed.
Phone VI 2-3711.
TYPING
Fast, accurate work done electric rates Call Betti Vincent, VI 3-5504.
English major in graduate, experienced
licensed nurse with classes
Special rates. Call VI 3-7787 4-21
Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work stands. Phone VI 3-8397. Charles Patti.
Experienced secretary would like typing in her home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 2-1188. tf
Accurate expert typist would like typing Prompt service. Call V1 T-2651. Prompt service. Call V1 T-2651.
in her home. Tern papers and
Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651.
Experienced typist with electric type-
writer; fast accurate work with reason-
able speed, paper sizes, serri-
tations and theses, phone VI 3-7652.
Mrs. Frank Gibson.
Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. **tf**
Milliken's SOS
"the best professional service"
- General typing service
- 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.
613 Vt. VI 3-4141
RISK'S
RISK'S Shirt Finishing Laundry
LEONARD'S STANDARD SERVICE 9th & Indiana VI 3-9830
FRATERNITY JEWELRY
A complete line, including,
● Lavenders ● Guards
● Pins ● Mugs
● Rings ● Crests
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
IT'S OK TO OWE RAY
809 Mass.
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. Vol I. 3-7485. tt
Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (pica type). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0558.
Professiona! typing by experienced secretary,
New electric typewriter, carbon
brush pen, watercolor paint.
VI 3-6048 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.
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, research articles and conference rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568.
WANTED
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
We also do tape transcriptions. Office phone 851 m. to 12 p.m. -10221½ MHz Phone VI 3-5920
Washing and ironing in my home. $6 per bushel for washing and ironing. $3 per bushel for ironing only. Bring to 1514 Lindenwood Lane. 4-21
VOLKSAGEN' WANTED. Cash for your VW. Conzelman Motors, VW Sales. Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway 59 So. tf
Have a party in the Big Red School
Heated. Call VI 3-7453.
MISCELLANEOUS
George's Hobby Shop
1105 Mass. VI 3-5087
Artists - Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics
JOE'S BAKERY
616 W. 9th
Hot doughnuts—sandwich cold drink
25c delivery VI 3-4720
BURGERT'S
Shoe Service
Service for Shoes Since 1910
1113 Mass. St. VI 3-0691
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 FINISHING
NEW YORK CLEANERS Delivery Service
The only thing better than a home cooked meal is — Dinner At
926 Mass. VI 3-0501
Steaks & Seafoods A Specialty
DUCKS
Serving crisp tossed salads,
choice of potatoes, zesty
Vienna breads & country fresh
butter. Sandwiches, too!
Your favorite beverage
11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass.
Portraits of Distinction
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Wednesday, April 15, 1964
Buy, sell or trade rare American and
Foreign coins, military equipment,
medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American
Coin Mart. 1025 Mass.
Opportunity for male keyboard musician interested in sales demonstrations. Write giving age, experience, type of instrument, occupation to University Daily Kansan, Box 10, 4-2f
HELP WANTED
Help wanted in Lawrence Memorial Hospital laboratory. Registered or non-registered lab technologists to take night work. Weed labor also available desired. Contact Mr. Torres at VI 3-3680. Ext. 62 between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. weekdays. 4-15
Girl to play electric organ part-time
Call VI 3-4743.
BUSINESS SERVICES
Dressmaking-alterations, formalis and
gowns. Ola Smith, 93% M1
V 3-5832
U-Call, we haul. Anything, anytime. VI
3-5888. tf
Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. Sewing Center, 316 Mass. VI 3-1267 t
& MCAF new under new management
We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
lunches, dinners, and sandwiches
Your second cup of coffee always free.
AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS
DALE'S BODY SHOP
All makes & models
frame - body - fender - glass
VI 3-4732 704 Vermont
Tops — Glass & Zippers
Rear Glasses — Headlines —
Panels
Tailor Made Seat Covers at Competitive Prices with sewed double lock stitch.
Jack's Seat Covers
Jack's Seat Covers
545 Minn. VI 3-4242
YELLOW CAB CO.
ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass.
VI 3-6333
24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
★ TUNE-UPS
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
ART'S TEXACO
9th & Mississippi
VI 3-9897
STUDENTS! SAVE WITH THIS AD!!
"Front End Special"
- Front end aligned
- Front end aligned
- Front wheels balanced, bearing renamed
- Steering checked
- Steering checked ONLY $6.88
$6.88
Let us prove how we can save
we need or all we need
WARDS
"Come in Today"
729 N.H. VI 2-1708
AUTO SERVICE CENTER
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Out-of-state students; Earn extra money by setting up distributorships for a nationally known product in your home address. Call 2-5089 or UT 3-815 now and arrange for an interview. Call now and be the first o cover your home area. 4-21
Is there a creative genius at KU, who
spends his time in class thinking up real
wild greeting card ideas? We pay TOP
prices for ideas or art aimed at college
market. Write: College Hall Cards,
Hickory Drive, Larchmont, N.Y. 4-15
The Catacombs nite club and Pizza Done 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.
--on shocks, mufflers, tail pipes and installation.
MISCO
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
PLANS-A-PARTY
When Hallmark Plans-a-Party,
you receive
the compliments
Hallmark
4 E. 7th VI 3-2261
BULLOCK'S
- Parker Pens
- Stationery
- Printing
--on shocks, mufflers, tail pipes and installation.
GB
Recording Service and Party Music
Recordings Available
of
— Rock Chalk Revue
— Spring Sing
— Greek Week Sing
1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780
$ $ $ $ $ $
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
$ $ $ $ $ $
One Stop Service
★ Engine Tune Up
Generator & Starter Repair
★ Brake Repair
★ Lubrication & Oil Change
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
JACK & GUNN'S
SKELLY SERVICE
SKELLY
300 W. 6th VI 3-9271
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 15, 1964
Chase Lauds—
(Continued from page 1)
His committee has also been active in the adoption of a Uniform Driver's License Act.
In 1963 the Legislature adopted some resolutions that could lead to changes in the United States Constitution. Although, Kansas adopted two of them, Chase fought a third one which would create a Court of the Union, that is, fifty state supreme court judges who would review Supreme Court Decisions on appeal.
CHASE SAID he was asked by a legislator to introduce legislation that would prevent George Lincoln Rockwell from speaking at KU. He refused on the grounds that, "I have great faith in the administration of the university and in the good judgment of the student body."
Speaking of politicians in general, Chase said, "I am suspicious and downright alarmed at the man who has a simple solution to the state's problems."
Chase was asked about his position on the advisory council of the Young Americans for Freedom club, a club which backs Barry Goldwater for president. "I would be glad to serve in this capacity for any group of young people who are seriously interested in politics," Chase said.
Although he has been approached about it, Chase said, A Chase for Governor Club had not formed yet at KU. ___
Pharmacy Speech
The second annual McPike lecture in the school of pharmacy will be at 3:30 p.m. Friday in 324 Malott Hall.
School of Religion Publishes Quarterly Bulletin
religion at a large, tax-supported university.
through which the school may communicate with its students. It serves to give information about the school, and acquaint the readers with the problems and rewards of teaching
ONE OF THE resolutions adopted by the legislature would prevent the Supreme Court from reviewing apportionment legislation. The other would alter amendment procedures. A "Your Government" bulletin of the Governmental Research Center predicts failure for the adoption of the resolutions by enough states to make them constitutional.
"Religion" is the title of a new bulletin published by the Kansas School of Religion this year.
"I said I wouldn't present it," Chase said he told the committee. "I can't view a court made up of fifty justices as a judicial body," he said.
and July. It is sent to ministers, priests, and laymen of the various churches who desire to know about the functions of the Kansas School of Religion.
"Religion" is to be published on a quarterly basis, with editions coming out in October, January, April,
The periodical is intended to satisfy the need for a literary medium
OUR BRIDAL REGISTRY is a silver love letter
OUR BRIDAL REGISTRY
is a silver love letter
In it you register your sterling pattern preference, then your family and friends know what to choose for you. Come in and list your pattern today!
Debussy
Awakening
Old Master
Fontana
TOWLE STERLING
4-Pc. Place Settings, from $24.50
Tea Spoons, from $4.75
Serving Pieces, from $5.00
Marks Jewelers
817 Mass.
In it you register your sterling pattern preference, then your family and friends know what to choose for you. Come in and list your pattern today!
Debussy
Awakening
Old Master
Fontana
TOWLE
STERLING
OREAD JAZZ FESTIVAL
SATURDAY, APRIL 25
Featuring
12 of the nation's best collegiate jazz groups and...
- Woody Herman with his Swingin' Herd
Sign up now for block tickets in your living group.
I are a engineer
Emc²
I've got something up my sleeve
E=MC²
I are a engineer
$E=mc^2$
I've got something up my sleeve
$E=mc^2$
It's a phenomenon of astronomical magnitude
Even artsy-craftsies, cane-walkers, and jocks have been looking excited
34
And dates will grub it up
Engineer Exposition
this Fri. — 12noon-9pm.
this Sat. — 9am.-12noon
In the new Engineer Building
✨ ✨ ✨
It's a phenomina
of astronomical
magnitude
Even artsy-craftsies,
cane-walkers,
and jocks
have been
looking excited
And
dates
will
grub
it up
34
And
es
will
grub
it up
Daily hansan
Lawrence, Kansas
61st Year, No. 120
Thursday, April 16, 1964
Vox Contests Election; Two Seats in Question
By Gary Noland
Two seats on the All Student Council that were filled by University Party candidates in the spring election are being contested by the losing Vox candidates.
One plaintiff, Beverly Nicks, Detroit, Mich., junior (Vox), charges negligence on the part of the elections committee, and the other plaintiff, Norma Sharp (Vox), Arkansas City junior, said "voided" ballots may have determined the winner when the vote ended in a tie.
Miss Nicks is protesting the election for large women's dorms. Jean Borlaug, (UP) Sierra Guadarrama, Mexico, junior, defeated Miss Nicks by a narrow margin of 14 votes (200-186).
MISS SHARP IS protesting the outcome of the election for the School of Fine Arts. Susan Lawrence (UP), Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, won, by lot, over Miss Sharp when
the vote ended in a 138-138 tie.
The plaintiffs were to present their cases in a preliminary hearing in the Student Court this afternoon.
Miss Nicks said this morning that she was protesting "negligence on the part of the elections committee" for not passing out ballots for all voters from her district.
"Several people talked to me on both days of the election, and said they were not given the ballots for the large women's dorms." Miss Nicks said.
SHE SAID SHE thought there were a significant number of these people who could have made a difference in the outcome.
Dick King, Kansas City sophomore and chairman of the elections committee, said the committee was aware before the election that this might be a problem.
"In regard to large women's dorms, the people who were handing out
the ballots in all polls were advised to be on the watchout for the addresses of voters from this district." King said.
Chinese Greet Niki, Not Seen As a Truce
"The elections committee was checking on this throughout the election and we feel there was no error and the situation was handled adequately." King said.
LONDON—(UPI)—Red China's top leaders today warmly congratulated Premier Nikita Khrushchev on his 70th birthday and said the Sino-Soviet conflict was "only temporary."
Mao Tze-tung and his top aides, in a lengthy telegram to the Soviet leader, cited differences between them but said "we are deeply convinced that all this is only temporary."
MISS SHAPP said she felt the elections committee may have erred in voiding three ballots which might have determined the winner.
"I think that we should find out the intent of the voters," she said.
The telegram was transmitted by the official New China news agency and monitored here today.
Fees Would Be $337 and $127
This is $45 more than the difference now.
If the fee increase proposed to the Board of Regents by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe is approved, students from out-of-state will pay $210 more than students from Kansas.
The Board of Regents Monday took under advisement Chancellor Wessoe's proposal to increase student semester fees in state schools by $5 for Kansas students and $50 for out-of-state students.
Chancellor Wescoe said this morning that the fee increase was "an approach to revenue to maintain the level of the quality of the University."
He said it was prompted by the increase in the number of faculty, the need to increase faculty salaries and general operating expenses of the University.
THE FEES WOULD be raised to $127 for in-state and $337 for out-of-state. They are presently $122 and $287 respectively.
"The ratio of $5 for in-state and $50 for out-of-state students was arrived at by comparison with other universities," Chancellor Wescoe said.
THE CHANCELLOR said that when fees were raised two years ago KU was in a medium range in regard to other Big Eight schools.
James Gunn, administrative assistant to the Chancellor, said that a more limited number of out-of-state students are selected for admittance to KU according to the following priorities: the sons and daughters of KU alumni, then applicants in states bordering Kansas, and third, other out-of-state students.
"If the proposed increase is approved for next fall KU will actually be below the medium of other schools." Wescoe said.
James K. Hitt, registrar, said that about 25 per cent of the students are out-of-state residents, but that this varies somewhat each semester.
Ballots are voided by the elections committee when the intent of the voter is not clear. Miss Sharp feels that there may have been a mistake in avoiding these ballots.
It was the first official Peking reaction to Khrushchev's mounting attacks on Chinese rulers and Mao Tze-tung personally.
"We firmly believe that, as demanded by the people of our two countries and by revolutionary people everywhere, the Chinese and Soviet parties, our two countries and our two peoples will in the long run closely unite in the struggle to oppose imperialism and reaction, to uphold Marxism-Leninism and proletarian internationalism, to safeguard the unity of the Socialist camp and the international Communist movement, to support the revolutionary movement of the oppressed peoples and nations of the world and to defend world peace."
BUT CLOSER study indicated there was no sign that Peking was backing down in its ideological clash with Russia.
They believed the message indicated that Peking has no intention of breaking formally with Russia and would prefer diplomatic relations to be maintained as a face saver while the feud continues.
At first sight, the move appeared to be an "olive branch" held out by Peking to Moscow.
It added, "Long live invincible revolutionary Marxism," thus underlining that Peking stands by its hard line and for revolutionary Marxism, in contrast to Moscow's policy of peaceful co-existence.
"Although at present there are differences between you and us on a number of questions of principle concerning Marxism-Leninism and there is lack of unity, we are deeply convinced that all of this is only temporary," the message said.
The telegram was signed by Mao Tze-tung, the chairman (president) of Red China Liu Shao-chi, and Premier Chou En-lai.
The Peking leaders addressed Khrushchev as "dear comrade" and wished him "good health and long life."
EXPERTS SAID the message reflected Peking's determination to go ahead with its policy, which it considers the only correct line, in the expectation of swinging Russia and other Communists eventually over to its side.
King explained the position of the elections committee on this matter:
"THE DECISION was made when we were going through the ballots that the intent of the voters could not be determined on the ballots that were voided. This was agreed to by the leaders of both political parties," King said.
If the protests are successful, the University Party could lose its majority on the ASC, which it won in this spring's election. UP took eight of the eleven council seats at stake, and now holds a slim majority of two seats.
Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission senior and UP general secretary, said last night that Vox was resorting to "sharp political maneuvering" to gain a majority on the ASC since they were unable to win one in the election.
"Since the split is so close in the council, Vox Populi are going to do as much as they can to get their candidates on the council," Whitman said.
TOM BORNHOLDT, Topeka senior and Vox chairman, said Whitman's statement was "very naive."
Whitman said that if they "can get an injunction from the student court, then they can, by political play, control the council. It would be a sharp maneuver, and it doesn't seem that they are losing very graciously as we have done in the past."
"It seems rather foolish to say that a candidate should not have the right to protest an election when it is close." Bornholdt said.
"UP was gracious in past elections because they lost by large majorities." Bornholdt said.
Violations Spur Car Permit Hike
By Bobbie Bartelt
The hiring of eight additional security officers and the restriction of eight campus parking zones will be two of the results of the recent changes in KU traffic controls and parking permit fees.
The new traffic regulations which will affect the 10,536 owners of cars registered with the KU Traffic and Security Office were explained yesterday afternoon by Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor of operations.
Lawton discussed the changes in parking restrictions, traffic access to the campus, and parking permit fees approved Monday by the Kansas Board of Regents.
"WHEN TRAFFIC control and parking problems interfere with the educational processes of the University, it is time to revise the control." he said.
Identified as chief problem areas by Lawton were parking rights after 3:30, daily access to the campus by vehicles, and enforcement of the KU traffic regulations, especially at night.
The need for a change in parking regulations at night was demonstrated when people who worked on the campus at night complained of not having adequate parking facilities. Lawton said.
"These people were professors, graduate students doing research, and others having night duties to perform in the University," he said.
"AS A RESULT, eight of the university's 25 parking lots will be restricted zones until 11:00 p.m. Monday-Friday," Lawton continued.
The restricted zones are the following: H behind Strong and Snow Halls, Q on the street behind the library, T in front of Fraser Hall, D behind Hoch Auditorium, G behind Malott Hall, L near the Dyche Museum, R behind Robinson Gymnasium and V behind Summerfield Hall.
All other lots will have unrestricted parking after 3:30 p.m., and the toll gate on Zone X will be lifted and locked after 5:30 p.m., Lawton said.
"Nightly parking violations have become flagrant," Lawton continued.
"With our limited staff of patrolmen, we are having a problem enforcing the traffic regulations," Lawton said.
HE NAMED such violations as double parking, parking in yellow zones, and "boxing" other cars in a space as some of the most common violations.
"It is common knowledge that drivers exercise little self-discipline," he continued.
"We will continue to issue special parking and access permits to those who can demonstrate an adequate need for them," Lawton said.
MEDICAL PROBLEMS, research studies and station-to-station hauling were some of the reasons Lawton gave as valid for the permits.
"In these cases, we feel that vehicles are essential to an education, but for the majority of the students, a car is a privilege," he said.
Another of the problems pointed out by Lawton was the one of enforcement of traffic regulations.
"To provide for the additional personnel required to deal with the increasing volume of cars on the campus we have decided to raise the parking permit fee," Lawton said. "It was decided that the added costs should be paid on a 'pay-as-you-use' basis."
The fee increase approved by the Board of Regents is from $4 to $10 and is effective Sept. 1.
Campus Chest Funds Will Go To KU Track Star's Charity
The 1964 KU Campus Chest will send money to a former KU track star who is presently operating a Bov's Ranch in Augusta.
The Glenn Cunningham Boy's Ranch of Augusta will be one of three recipients of the Campus Chest money collected next week from April 20 - 25 during Campus Chest Week. The other two organizations that will receive money will be the World University Service and International Foreign Student Service.
Cunningham, world champion miler at KU in the 1930s has spent most of his life operating the ranch for teenagers in Kansas. He began the ranch after his discharge from the service following World War II. In response to a letter sent to him by co-chairman, of Campus Chest, John Pound, Fredonia junior, Cunningham sent a letter March 28, 1964 explaining his financial problems to Pound concerning the ranch. The following excerpts are from his letter.
WHEN I came out of the service after World War II, I decided to
retire and do some work with kids," Cunningham wrote. "I had quite a bit of land and resources that I felt would take care of my family as long as we needed it. During the past sixteen years we have had more than 7,400 boys and girls at our ranch."
"Some are here for only a day, several days, or weeks . . . Our primary interest has been in those who come from unfortunate home situations who can not afford to go to a camp. Through the years we have actually had more girls than boys. Few people realize that girls have as many, or more problems than boys. . . We know that we can help hundreds of them for the same amount of money it costs the courts on one individual after they tangle with the law." Cunningham said.
"We know of no place that takes these young people, especially girls, unless they have been in trouble. We earnestly feel that we have helped many (kids) over some rough spots in their lives, and have helped them avoid temptations they were facing."
"We would like to continue doing this for many more.
"WE HAVE NEVER charged any of the kids for anything, and through the years have had only an average of $70 of outside' help. After spending what money we had during the early years on working with them, we sold a section of land to continue. Then we started borrowing until we mortgaged everything we had and we have nothing left to go on. We have been the only two adults doing the work and supervising the youngsters which means extremely long hours and hard work." Cunningham added.
It is difficult trying to do the work involved, spend the time with the youngsters and find the time
(Continued on page 12)
Weather
It will be partly cloudy, windy and warm tonight and Friday according to the weather bureau. The low tonight will be around 60.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 16, 1964
Elections and ASC
Vox Populi bowed out Tuesday night, victims of new interest by independents in student government and the general feeling that it was "time for a change."
THE INCREASED INTEREST in the ASC election was evidenced by the large rise in the total vote and by the campaign demonstrations on Daisy Hill.
The new officers are, we feel, qualified and dedicated to furthering student government at KU. Perhaps next year Mickey Mouse won't get 179 votes for President.
Reuben McCormack ended his term as Student Body President with several suggested reforms for ASC members to consider.
First, that major student body officers receive a salary, as editors of student publications do now. Certainly the expenditure of time and personal finances that these officers make deserves compensation.
Fond Farewells
McCORNACK ALSO SUGGESTED that more freshmen and sophomores be involved on the ASC to provide more continuity in student government.
But then, in vague terms and referring to the Newsweek article reprinted in yesterday's Kansan, McCornack asked the ASC to investigate and "do something about" the "morals problem on this campus." Was this inane pronouncement perhaps a substitute for a statement on human rights?
JOHN STUCKEY, retiring ASC chairman, also addressed the Council. He suggested reform in the area of campaign expenditures, financial reports from ASC-supported organizations, and recall procedure, all of which would bring about more efficient and effective government.
Stuckey also made a strong plea for ASC action against discrimination. He emphasized the role of individual ASC members in working for civil rights. "As long as any one of you know of any existing discrimination and are not actively working against it, you yourself are discriminating."
Stuckey's speech was a fitting end to his outstanding term as ASC chairman.
The outcome of this afternoon's preliminary hearings on contested ASC elections could upset the balance on the Council. Now University Party has a majority of two, but two petitions have been filed with the Student Court.
Vox Majority?
THE FIRST is in the Fine Arts contest, in which a tie vote was decided by lot in favor of the UP candidate. Norma Sharp, the defeated Vox candidate, claims that a hand-counted ballot was unfairly declared invalid.
In the special election to fill the Large Women's Halls post, a claim of negligence by the elections commission has been made by the Vox loser, Bev Nicks. Reportedly, many district residents were not given ballots, while several freshman women voted in the election.
Hugh Taylor
Hugh Taylor, University Party's nominee for ASC chairman, seems an excellent choice. Taylor was appointed to the Graduate School seat in February and was elected by a large majority this spring.
A graduate student in political science from Stoke-on-Trent, England, Taylor has a law degree from Exeter. He was a runner-up in the English Debating Championship. British delegate to the Council of Europe Youth Conference in 1962, and president of the university debating society at Exeter.
S400 Under
When the new Student Body President and Vice-President moved into the ASC office last week, surprise, surprise! There was not enough money to buy paper for committee applications. In fact, the outgoing ASC secretary told them that the ASC has a $400 (that's right, four hundred dollar) deficit.
Margaret Hughes
MacArthur: A Great Legend
Douglas MacArthur was one of the great legends of his time.
By Rick Mabbutt
the great legends of his true. Controversy, perpetuated by those who worshipped him and those who hated him, surrounds his name to such an extent as to make an objective judgment about him almost impossible. But something can be understood about MacArthur by answering the questions: "Who was he?" and "What was his impact on America and the world?"
Courage always was cited as being MacArthur's dominating characteristic. The risks that he took, almost to the point of foolishness, were legendary. One observer reported: "Like all courage that isn't stupid, his was a feat of will. A soldier, frankly frightened but faithfully at his side completely exposed during an air-raid at Corregidor, said, 'I felt the General's knees shaking.'"
"In most Oriental countries the man who shows no fear is master," said author-historian John Gunther, *MacArthur was* that man. The courage that made him go unarmed and unprotected during his five years in Tokyo as the leader of the occupation forces, also made a god of him in the eyes of the Japanese and chiefly accounted for his success in ruling the conquered nation.
The general was a brilliant man and a military genius. The greatest general of World War II, in the opinion of many, and perhaps one of the greatest of all time, Mac-Arthur relied on his intuition and bold, daring moves for his military successes.
He was a handsome man with a personal magnetism that inspired almost blind devotion from his staff members. His persuasiveness won him many battles with superior officers and other branches of the Armed Forces.
But there was another side to Douglas MacArthur. Next to courage his most dominating characteristic was ego. Hand in glove with his egotism was his love of theatrics. MacArthur was fancy and colorful and many people hated him for just that reason.
He also was disliked because he was the personification of the military man in a society of civilians that distrusted the military. Aloof, (during the occupation of Japan he consulted no more than 15 Japanese leaders) and sensitive to criticism, he was quick to take credit when things went well, but unwilling to share the blame for failure.
The people loved MacArthur, but not as a politician. In 1944 and 1948 there were loud, but short-lived booms for him as a Presidential candidate. He did not want the nomination in 1944, but he did have political aspirations in 1948. However, his backers were isolationists and other fringe groups. He never won the favor of the influential Republican leaders. He was also hurt by the opposition of organizations made up of ex-GI's.
MacArthur's sense of duty and of his "divine mission," combined with his extreme egotism, made him seek a "larger role in affairs than is normally accorded any generals, thus confirming a distrust of military figures in politics, firmly rooted in the American tradition," says Louis Merton in The Reporter.
This seeking a larger role in things (MacArthur was intensely conscious of history) led him to attempt to make American foreign policy.
Here he met his Waterloo in the person of the President of the United States. Harry S. Truman.
By his public pronouncements, MacArthur was advocating and forming a policy on Korea and China that was different from that proposed by the President and his
On the positive side history will remember him for his island-hopping campaign across the Pacific, his landing at Inchon, and his being largely responsible for the building of a wrecked nation into a thriving power in an incredibly short length of time.
History has shown that some of MacArthur's proposals might have been best. Nevertheless, he was under the command of Truman and was subject to his orders.
How will history treat MacArthur and his tremendous impact on the American people? The public indignation over his firing was greater than the response to F.D.R.'s court-packing plan. Most Americans took it as a personal affront.
MacArthur overstepped his authority and was recalled from Korea for that reason. Truman was right, but perhaps harsh in his method of firing the man who was the virtual political and military ruler of Japan and most of the Far East.
"Was he truly a great man?" At least he performed the extraordinary feat of conquering an enemy, occupying its territory and making the people like it," says Gunther.
On the negative side, history will say that he was a man who let his ego and sense of mission blind him to his proper role in the service of his country.
Douglas MacArthur, the man is gone. Hated bitterly by some, adored almost as a god by many. A brilliant man, but sometimes misguided, who had the best interests of his country in the forefront of his thinking, is gone.
His good outweighed the bad and the history of which he was so conscious will not treat him harshly.
MacArthur, the legend, will live
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THE WASHINGTON POST
Fission
Why Senator Smith Won't Be President
Clare Booth Luce, herself a famous politician and writer, reviews a biography of Sen. Margaret Chase Smith in this month's Saturday Review.
The biographer, Frank Graham Jr., contends that women all over the nation should support Senator Smith's bid for the Presidency both because of her political qualifications and her symbolism of women's rights.
MRS. LUCE REPLIES to Graham's contention;
"The answer, I believe, is clear, but paradoxical. Senator Smith can project an admirable personal image but, unfortunately, widowed and childless, she cannot project that "family" image which tradition associates with the aspirant to the White House, and which offers the main appeal to many women voters in national elections.
"The plain fact is that the vast majority of voters want not only a President, but a First Family. Millions of American wives and mothers "identify" with the President's family, even as their husbands "identify" with their chosen leader. The possible vote-getting, or vote-losing capacity of candidates' wives and children is seldom ignored by professional politicians when choosing their candidates at the conventions. In the days before the late President's death, a Democratic politico was heard to observe that Jackie, Caroline, and John-John would pull the Administration through any crisis short of a major depression.
"THE PECULIAR IRONY of Senator Smith's position it that the same unhappy personal circumstances that will in part prevent her from securing the nomination are precisely those which have enabled her to reach her present eminence.
Down to Gehenna
Or up to the Throne,
Who travels alone
"Traveling alone, Margaret Chase Smith has been able to go faster, and higher, in professional politics than almost any other woman in our history. And for all women who are also alone, and consequently unencumbered by a conflict of family loyalties, she is an exemplar. There are many such women."
"But to her far more numerous sisters who have given up early the hope or desire of a career for the values of family life, she is also an inspiration. For what her long and distinguished career has proven is that there is no inherent inferiority in women that prevents them from competing successfully with men in a "man's world." There is simply a price to be paid—living alone and liking it.
IT IS UNFAIR, perhaps, that men need not pay the same price for success, or service to the nation, but short of a revolution in the relations between the sexes, this is the way it is. Nevertheless, there are high compensations for able women who are willing to pay the price for having a career. Certainly not the least of the many compensations that Senator Smith has enjoyed is the esteem in which the Lady from Maine is held throughout the Union."
Dailij Hansan
111 Flint Hall
University of Kansas student newspaper
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Law- Kansas
rence, Kansas
Page 3
Ensemble Earns KU Cultural Reputation
Thursday, April 16, 1964 University Daily Kansan
The KU Brass Choir, now on the last leg of its far Eastern tour, has helped earn KU the reputation of excellence in cultural exchange programs.
The compliment was paid by John Netherton, director of the U.S. branch of the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs spoke before the Midwest America assembly which met
Another Strong To Join Faculty
John William Strong, an Illinois attorney and grandson of the late Chancellor Frank Strong, will join the KU Law faculty in September.
Strong, who will be 29 when he joins the KU faculty, comes from a legal-minded family with a long KU heritage.
Since his graduation he has practiced with the law firm of Le Forgee, Samuels, Miller, Schroeder and Jackson of Decatur. Ill. At KU he will teach in the field of business associations and in legal research and writing.
Strong's grandfather was the KU chancellor from 1902-18 and later taught in the Law School.
Strong was graduated from Yale in 1957 with a major in English and he attended the University of Illinois College of Law where he was graduated first in his class in 1962. He was a member of Order of the Coif and editor-in-chief of the Illinois Law Forum.
Strong's sister, Mary Elizabeth, now Mrs. Larry Brennan of Overland Park, received a bachelor's degree in elementary education at KU in 1960. She is the first granddaughter of a KU chancellor ever to attend KU.
Mrs. Strong is the former Margaret Waite Cleary of Urbana, Ill., a 1962 graduate of Stanford University. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. Cleary. Her father is a professor of law at the University of Illinois.
week. Netherton was on the campus as a resource person in the 4-day assembly which brought together 61 persons from Kansas and western Missouri to consider the role of cultural affairs in foreign relations.
NETHERTON SAID KU plays "highly important role," and is making an "exemplary contribution" to the international exchange programs of the United States. He said the 23 members choir performed before 50,000 persons in Ceylon, and in Laos, the largest audience ever assembled for a program of western music.
The group was congratulated by the Laotian prime minister following a concert during which Mrs. Kenneth Bloomquist, wife of the choir's director, sang the Laotian national anthem.
In addition to performing concerts, the choir has been making television appearances, recordings for local radio stations, and conducting workshops and clinics for local musicians and student groups.
CHOIR DIRECTOR Bloomquist reported that the group has been received in Malaysia by "wildly appreciative" capacity audiences.
"We always seem to impress our local organizers and sponsors with the attendance and response we draw," he wrote.
CLARENCE AWAYA, Honolulu senior and bass player with the choir and the jazz quintet, reported on the excellence of several of the Malaysian jazz musicians. He reported that members of the jazz quintet have been enjoying sessions with local jazzmen, many of whom have never before had the opportunity to hear an American jazz musician.
Following the choir's concerts in Indonesia, they will report for Canberra, Australia, where they will complete their three-month tour.
PETER A. CAMPBELL
Willard F. Libby
Nobel Chemist Speaks Tonight
Willard F. Libby, 1960 winner of the Nobel prize in chemistry and professor of chemistry at the University of California at Los Angeles, will speak here tonight and tomorrow afternoon.
Besides his public lecture at 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall, he will speak at a chemistry department colloquium at 3:30 p.m. Tomorrow in 124 Malott.
Tonight's lecture on "Radiocarbon Dating," is second in an interdisciplinary series sponsored by funds from an earlier $100,000 National Aeronautics and Space Administration grant to KU. The lecture will be followed by a reception in Murphy Hall.
Tomorrow's lecture topic is 'Chemical Approaches to Materials Research."
Prof. Libby became well-known for his work from 1945-54 at the University of Chicago, on natural Carbon-14 (radiocarbon) and its application to the dating of archeological artifacts.
He has received a number of awards besides the Nobel prize. These include the Albert Einstein Medal Award and at least 10 other citations, several Guggenheim Memorial Foundation fellowships and membership in honorary societies in the U.S. and abroad.
Fund-Raising Concert To Be Given Sunday
Free will offerings at a concert to be given this Sunday may help a KU student to a YMCA international work camp and leadership seminar in Hong Kong this summer.
Lacy Banks, Kansas City junior and recently elected co-president of the KU-Y, will sing religious and popular songs at 2:30 p.m. in the Wesley Foundation.
Banks is one of six U.S. male students selected for the workshop and seminar in Hong Kong June 27 to August 24.
THE CONFERENCE is sponsored by the West Central Area Council of the YMCA.
Banks must raise 70 per cent of the necessary $2,000 in order to attend. He was chosen by application on the basis on leadership in the KU-Y.
"The workers will build dormitories to house refugees coming to Hong Kong from Communist China," Banks said.
"IT IS SIMILAR to the Peace Corps in that we will help to alleviate the poor and overcrowded conditions. Many refugees sleep in gutters or on hillsides," Banks added.
He said that the seminars will give students of different national, racial and linguistic backgrounds a chance to test, re-think, modify or re-affirm the views they hold in common with students in other parts of the world.
"My personal philosophy is involvement in life to glorify it," Banks said. "This will be an opportunity not only to help others but to learn from such a unique environment and to broaden my knowledge by involvement in a new situation."
A FRENCH AND Spanish major. Banks has also been preaching for 11 years throughout 12 states. He will either study law or become an ordained minister when he is graduated, he says.
He won second place in the campus speaking contest last year and last summer sang in the performance of "Showboat" at the Starlight Theatre in Kansas City.
Sociologists Give Studies
Four professors in the department of sociology are giving research papers at the 28th Annual Midwest Sociological meeting scheduled to run through Saturday in the Hotel President in Kansas City, Missouri.
Charles K. Warriner, professor of sociology and anthropology, will present his paper "The Problem of Organization Purpose" in the section on social participation.
E. Gordon Ericksen, professor of sociology and anthropology will present his paper entitled "Virility, Virginity Complexes in Social Demography of an Andracentric Society: Costa Rica" to the section on population and ecology.
Ray P. Cuzzort, associate professor of sociology and anthropology, will present his paper on "Explanation, Evaluation and Social Policy" to the section on research methods.
Gary Maranell, assistant professor of sociology and anthropology will present his paper on "A Factor Analytic Study of Selected Dimensions of Religiosity" to the section on social psychology.
Norman G. Jacobs, associate professor of sociology and anthropology is serving as chairman of a special section on Max Weber.
MAKE YOUR DATE-MARK YOUR CALENDAR
FOR THE
KANSAS RELAYS DANCE
SATURDAY, APRIL 18 8:00 P.M., UNION BALLROOM
MUSIC BY THE FABULOUS FLIPPERS
"KU to TOKYO"
per couple
$1.50
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 16, 1964
Adjustment Said Basic at School
The basic problems of the foreign student are the basic problems of students everywhere, Clark Coan, assistant dean of men and international student adviser, said yesterday.
In a talk at the Faculty Forum, Cean discussed the aspects of the program for foreign students.
FIVE BASIC adjustments face the student when he comes to an American university, Coan stated. These are social, academic, cultural, economic, and physical.
The KU international student program attempts to help the student with these adjustments through three objectives.
Coan read the three objectives as:
Coan read the three objectives as:
• To offer the international students educational, cultural and social opportunities.
- To make international students aware and to create an appreciation of the many facets of life in the United States so as to be able to communicate intelligently about this country in the interests of international understanding.
- To aid in the enrichment of the campus for Kansas students and faculty.
At present, Coan said, there are 420 foreign students here. He compared KU's foreign student enrollment to that of other schools: "Proportional to our total enrollment we probably have a little less than the national average."
There are 74 countries represented at KU and the students are majoring primarily in engineering, sciences, humanities and social studies. Coan said.
"THEY (THE students) come to us on all types of financial arrangements," Coan explained. These include students with teacher assistantships, scholarships, financial support from their home country, and part time jobs.
Last year 10,000 or 11,000 preliminary inquiries were made by
foreign students who wished to study at KU. The big problem for the University, Coan said, was to select the foreign students that the University would admit.
It is difficult, Coan said, to evaluate the transcripts of those who have attended schools in their native country because of a lack of knowledge about schools in foreign countries.
English also poses a problem in considering the foreign student for entrance, Coan said. Each has had a different degree of training in English and Coan explained that it was again difficult to evaluate just how valuable this training had been with each individual.
He suggested several things which students and residents of Lawrence might do to make adjustments for the foreign student easier.
First Coan said that we should place ourselves in a position similar to that of the foreign student. It was also important Coan said to be patient, sincere, and natural around foreign students.
When first meeting and getting acquainted with a foreign student Coan also cautioned: "Be careful to not ask embarrassing questions," and be careful to not discuss controversial questions.
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SUA INTERVIEWS
Applications NOW available for Chairmanships For Fall '64 activities...
- Carnival
- Fall Concert
- Homecoming
- Orientation Week Activities
- Popular Films
- Union Open House
- Classical Films
- Bowling
- Jazz Festival
Travel
- AND MANY OTHERS
- Exhibits
- Picture Lending Library
- Quarterback Club
please note: SUMMER BOARD positions are also open at this time
Pick up application blanks immediately in the Activities Director's Office . .1st floor UNION
Thursday, April 16, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Belgian Doctor Wages Campaign In Support of Spinning Domicile
He has tried everything, including a hunger strike, to try to induce the government to finance his dream of making his house that goes round available to everyone.
BRUSSELS — (UPI) — Belgian inventor Dr. Francois Massau, 60, is in a spin over his turn-around house.
ON A SUNNY morning in winter, the seven windows of the spacious living room may be turned toward the road. But two hours later, the same windows may be looking out upon the pine wood at the back of the house while two of the home's four bedrooms are facing the road.
Massau has been convinced since 1952 that he has invented the house of the future. To prove it, he built one for himself in 1958 and has inhabited it ever since—"comfortably," he insists—with his wife and three sons.
Massau says he first thought of building a turning house in 1952. He abandoned a fairly prosperous coal business to do it. When the prototype was finished he and his family moved in.
"BUT I WAS also out 3.5 million francs ($70,000), and now I have reached the end of the road." he said in an interview.
"I need an extra 4 million ($80,000) to do further research, build four more prototypes of varying sizes, and work out a proper cost system. Only then can I offer my invention for commercial exploitation."
The government, however, has turned down his request for a development loan—even though Massau once went on a hunger strike drinking only coffee.
He has received dozens of letters from various parts of the world asking for information. Builders in the south of France wrote that they were particularly interested. Others, from tropical countries, said the turning house would be
the answer to keeping the sun away from inhabited rooms.
"BUT YOU CAN also avoid the sun as much as you like. It makes fixed houses look like products of a primitive age," he said.
"With my house," said Massau, "you can take in every minute of sunshine."
Reaching behind him, the inventor pushed a green button and with a slight sound the living room, four bedrooms, kitchen and entrance lobby began to turn.
"For power I use an electric motor of one-tenth horsepower, stationed in the cellar," he said. "The rooms turn around a stationary central unit which houses the bathroom, lavatory, water mains and the main cable for the electricity supply."
The roof and cellar as well as the center of the house, remain stationary.
"If you want the bathroom now, while we sit here," he explained, "you will find it just opposite one
of the bedrooms. But in about half an hour you will find it facing the living room.
"WITH MY NEW prototype where everything can turn and the power supplies will be installed in the cellar, all rooms in the house will keep their places in relation to each other."
"When we moved into this house in February, 1958," he recalled, "the temperature outside was 14 degrees. By some judicious juggling which kept the sun shining into the living room I managed an inside temperature of 71 degrees without using any heating."
"Three months ago," he said, "we had to sell some jewelry and I am doing odd jobs to pay my bills. My wife has gone back to work as a schoolteacher.
Eut Massau admits that even all the sun he can catch won't make him solvent.
"But I refuse to give up now. In the end, the government must see that I am worth helping."
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44TH ANNUAL
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ENGINEERING EXPOSITION
44th ANNUAL
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ENGINEERING EXPOSITION
FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1964
12 noon - 9 p.m.
SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 1964
9 a.m. - 12 noon
OPENING CEREMONY
SATURDAY, APRIL 18th
9 a.m. - 12 noon
44th Annual University of Kansas Engineering Exposition
FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1964
12noon – 9p.m.
SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 1964
9a.m. – 12noon
OPENING CEREMONY
SATURDAY, APRIL 18
9a.m. – 12noon
Bring your date to the Engineering Exposition
See the 2000 lb. machine that flies without wings!
See the nuclear reactor in operation!
It's easy to operate
Don't miss Engineering Exposition
Friday, noon till 9p.m.
Saturday, 9am. til noon
In the new Engineering Building
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Friday, noon til 9pm.
Saturday, 9am. til noon
In the new Engineering Building
Don't miss Engineering Exposition Friday, noon to 9 p.m. Saturday, 9 a.m. til noon In the new Engineering Building
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 16, 1964
Around the Campus
Seniors Win Music Awards
Two KU seniors have won the grand prize of $500 and the top vocalist award of $250 in the 1964 Naftzger Young Artists competition in Wichita.
Nathan N. Goldblatt, Mission, won the $500 and an engagement as soloist with the Wichita Symphony Orchestra during the 1964-65 season.
David Holloway, Gas City, won $250 as best vocalist. He is a baritone.
Goldblatt performed a portion of the Mozart Piano Concerto in D Minor. He performed the entire concerto with the KU Symphony Orchestra the week before the contest.
The Naftzger competition, involving $1,250 in prizes, is for student musicians who are residents of Kansas or are enrolled in a Kansas college or university. There were 32 entrants with nine being chosen finalists.
Professor Buehler Honored
Professor E. C. "Bill" Buehler of the speech faculty received the distinguished almuni award of the Delta Sigma Rho-Tau Kappa Alpha Forensic Society at its annual meeting this week in Indianapolis, Ind.
The award was one of five made to men "whose lives and services exemplify the heritage and ideals of Delta Sigma Rho-Tau Kappa Alpha."
Professor Buehler will retire from teaching in June after 39 years on the Kansas faculty. Most of these years he was director of debate and for the past seven years he has been in charge of the basic speech course which enrolls a thousand students a semester.
Professor Buehler was elected national president of Delta Sigma Rho, honorary speech society, in 1942 and served in that office for 11 years. For 25 years he was secretary of the Missouri Valley Forensic League, which includes schools from the Canadian border to Mexico.
Chemist to Japan Meeting
A KU chemistry professor is chairman of a session and is presenting a paper at the Third International Symposium on Chemistry of Natural Products held April 12-18 at the Kyoto Kaikan in Kyoto, Japan.
Dr. Albert W. Burgstahler, associate professor and holder of an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation research fellowship, is chairman of the session on the synthesis of steroidal hormones. His research report concerns a newly discovered attractive interaction between alkyl groups and carbon-carbon double bonds in certain types of steroids and terpenes.
More than 50 chemists from the United States are attending the symposium, which was organized by the Science Council of Japan and the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry.
Dr. Burgstahler's paper represents research that he and Theodore F. Niemann, Burlington, Ia., graduate student, have been working on under a grant from the National Science Foundation.
Niemann is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Niemann of Burlington, Ia. He graduated from the high school there in 1959 and attended the State University of Iowa through 1961.
KU Student Publishes Text
A book on communism for high school students and written by a KU student who soon will receive the Ph.D. degree has been published by a San Francisco firm.
Howard Mehlinger, Marion graduate student, is author of the book, "Communism in Theory and Practice: A Book of Readings for High School Students," Chandler Co. is the publisher.
Mehlinger, at 32 is completing work for a doctoral degree in Russian history, and is experienced in secondary education as well. Among his honors is a citation received in October,1962, of the Valley Forge Classroom Teachers program.
From 1959-63 he taught social studies at Lawrence High School. Last year he was director of a joint Pittsburgh, Pa., Public Schools-Carnegie Institute of Technology project to prepare high school social studies material.
He recently was appointed assistant on a foreign relations project of the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools and will be stationed in the Chicago area.
Mehlinger, a 1953 graduate of McPherson College, received a masters in education from KU in 1959. He is a member of Phi Delta Kappa, national education fraternity.
Professor to Examine Kansas Indian Tribes
James A. Clifton, assistant professor of anthropology, will continue his study of the modern-day Indians of the Pottawatomie tribe in Northeast Kansas with assistance from a two-year grant by the National Science Foundation.
For the past two years he has been doing research in the Holton and Horton areas with support from the Kansas City Association of Trusts and Foundations and from KU basic research funds.
International Banquet
April 26, 1964
6:00 p.m.
Union Ballroom
Non-Member Tickets
$2.50
Union Information Desk
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Member Tickets
$1.75
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64
2 miles West Highway 40
Saturday, April 18-5 to 10 p.m.
- Free students favorite beverage
- 2 bands, including the Flippers till 8 p.m.
- Bring your ID — guests and non-seniors must pay a pittance of $2.
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Thursday, April 16, 1964 University Daily Kansan
630 kc
KUOK
air time:
4-12 p.m., Sun.-Fri.
selected sounds for KU
students
Page 7
ENTERTAINMENT
Let's go flying this Weekend — for only $2
or learn to fly at Erhart Flying Service Incorporated 1/2 Mile NE of Tee Pee Municipal
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Fraser Theater
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I'll put the image here.
Wait, the caption says "The image is likely a photo of two men." The one on the left has his mouth open as if he was smiling, and the one on the right has his mouth closed. It looks like they are in a friendly or humorous pose.
Let's re-read the text carefully.
"This is not an actual photo. It's a stylized representation. I made it with a simple black-and-white background."
Yes, that's what it looks like.
I will output this information as follows:
- Image content: Two men facing each other in a friendly or humorous pose.
- Background: Black-and-white.
- Text caption: "This is not an actual photo. It's a stylized representation. I made it with a simple black-and-white background."
I will format the text as follows:
This is not an actual photo. It's a stylized representation. I made it with a simple black-and-white background.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Senior Party to Travel On 4-Hour Train Loop
A maximum of 850 KU seniors and their guests will take a four-hour trip on a 21-car train on May 2.
The train will leave Lawrence at 7 p.m. and travel a loop which includes Kansas City, Emporia, Topeka and back to Lawrence, nonstop.
Several fraternity bands will play for dancing in the box cars, and free beverages will be served in the lounge cars.
FIVE BUSES WILL take seniors and their guests from Zone O parking lot across from Allen Field House to board the train. Students are asked to leave their cars in Zone O and buses will return the group to their cars after the train trip.
"This is an extra function originating this year for seniors and their guests," Dennis Nelson, Topeka senior and co-chairman of the senior class special events committee, said.
"Since the train can hold only 850 people the tickets will be sold on a first come first serve basis at $2 per ticket." Nelson said.
Tickets will go on sale in men's living groups this week-end and will be sold at the information booth on Jayhawk Boulevard Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of next week.
ORIGINAL PLANS FOR the train trip proposed a stopover for dinner and a concert by a big name band in Hutchinson. This was changed because of expenses and the complications of unloading and reloading the students in Hutchinson, Nelson said.
This Saturday night the senior class will host a party on the Lawrence drag strip, two miles west on highway 40. The Flippers and another band will play from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Radio Educator WillHelpHonor Bard's Birthday
Mr. Edwin Browne, director of educational AM-FM radio at the University of Kansas, has been named a member of the national committee of the Shakespeare Anniversary Committee.
Mr. Browne's acceptance of the honor was received by Mr. Eugene R. Black, chairman, and president of the American Shakespeare Festival Theatre at Stratford, Connecticut.
A committee to celebrate the Shakespeare quadricentennial was first proposed by the late President John F. Kennedy.
President Johnson announced on Monday, February 17, 1964, that a committee would lead this country's official celebration of the 400th anniversary of the birth of William Shakespeare.
The President indicated that he would like the committee to direct its efforts "to reawaken interest in the vitality and beauty of the English language through the works of William Shakespeare" by working closely with teachers and students in schools and colleges throughout the country.
The committee can aid our country also, the President said, by acquainting foreign visitors with the many American Shakespeare festivals and productions which are taking place in this anniversary year. In his statement, the President
In his statement the President said:
"The 400th anniversary of the birth of William Shakespeare is calling forth special celebrations and festivals everywhere in the world. Proper note of this occasion will be taken throughout the year 1964 by our official United States Shakespeare Anniversary Committee.
"This committee will direct its efforts to reawaken interest in the vitality and beauty of the English language through the works of William Shakespeare. It will work closely with teachers of the English language, teachers of speech and Shakespearean scholars throughout the country.
The cost for this party is $2 for non-seniors and guests accompanied by seniors. Seniors with senior ID's will be admitted free.
MORE DETAILS FOR the train trip will be given at the senior coffee next Wednesday from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. in the ballroom of the Kansas Union.
"The senior coffee will serve to announce the graduation details and the senior breakfast which will be later. At this time seniors will also vote on the Hope award for the outstanding professor and on the senior gift," Jay Cook, Webster Groves, Mo., senior and co-chairman of the special events committee, said.
Jose Sandoval, winner of the special artist's diploma of "magna cum laude" in the 1962 International Van Cliburn Piano Competition, will be featured in a recital here this week end.
Recital to be Given By KU Pianist
Sandoval, Mexico freshman, has performed as a soloist in numerous orchestra concerts, and also on radio and television. He is presently continuing his advanced piano studies here under the Mexican pianist, Angelica Marles von Sauer.
In May of 1963, Sandoval was chosen as "the best instrumentalist" at the Naztfger Contest in Wichita from among fifty contestants.
The recital is being sponsored by the International Club and is scheduled for 8 p.m. Friday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
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terri's LAWRENCE. KANSAS
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Honor Award Banquet To be Held April 29
The chemistry department's ninth annual Honors Award Banquet will be held at 6:00 p.m. Wednesday, April 29 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
VI 3-2241
Dr. W. Albert Noyes, Jr., professor of chemistry at the University of Texas and past president of the American Chemical Association, will speak on "The University and the Mid-Twentieth Century."
Awards will be made to graduate and undergraduate students who have done outstanding work this semester at KU.
Tickets may be obtained for $2.25 in 224 of Malott Hall.
Steak Dinner
Sunday Nites
$1.25
4:30 - 10:30
DINE-A-MITE
23rd & Lg.
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Ks Is
Spon Kansa: lect the fa meet of the
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Thursday, April 16, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Kansas Relays Referee Is Devoted To Track
Sportswriters covering the 1958 Kansas Relays were trying to collect their thoughts after witnessing the fastest sprint medley relay in meet history when the south door of the old pressbox banged open.
"A 1:48.0 for Gail (Hodgson) on that anchor," shouted Bill Carroll, who had just seen his Oklahoma foursome set a new intercollegiate record of 3:19.5. "Whooope," he yelled, slapping startled reporters on the back.
The scribes barely had time to turn around when the door flew open again. This time it was John Morriss of Houston.
"A 3:19.6 and we're second," he roared. "Look at that." And he grabbed the nearest writer, shoving his stopwatch up under his nose. He ran half the press row, jabbing his watch in their faces and shouting loud enough to be heard in the lobby of the Eldridge Hotel.
NOBODY REALLY saw the time on his watch. He was jostling and stabbing so hard you couldn't have read it had it been a grandfather clock.
That was typical of Morriss, who is referee of the 39th Kansas Relays this weekend. He gets as cranked-up at a track meet as a football coach watching his team race the clock in the winning touchdown drive.
Three years ago at the Mason-Dixon games in Louisville, Morris was watching runners settle into their blocks for the 300. Houston's Earl Harlen was on the pole. As the race started Harlen's foot slipped off the track.
Johnny bolted out of his seat into the middle of the track, yelling . . . "Stop the race. Stop the race."
AS THE FIELD stormed toward him, he suddenly realized where he was and dashed off toward the officials to register his protest under safer conditions.
No coach in the land seems more devoted to his profession. Morrisr has been known to mark a track himself ahead of a meet in Houston, pour gasoline and burn it off after a rain, set hurdles, sell tickets and act as clerk of course and referee. Southwest observers say his meets are on schedule and his infiild clear.
Nobody could blame Morriss for his disappointment at Kansas that year. His foursome was two-tenths under the then-pending 3:19.8 intercollegiate mark by California and :03.2 under Oklahoma State's Relays record. Yet didn't win.
As a matter of fact the top three teams in that race were under Cal's mark; the top five below the Relays record. With an anchor leg that matched Hodgson, Don Loadman or Houston; Tom Burch of Oklahoma State; Mike Fleming, Nebraska, and Bob Tague, Kansas, the Cowpokes ran 3:19.7; Nebraska 3:20.0, and Kansas 3:20.4.
OKLAHOMA'S clocking that day still is the third-fastest on the all-
time Big Eight books. The marks by Oklahoma State and Nebraska still stand as school records. KU's time, in fifth place, would have won every other Sprint Medley here since that event was added to the Relays card in 1936.
That scene could be re-enacted this weekend since the field will be spiked by two new entries which did not run at Texas a week ago, Missouri and Texas. The Tigers will mount their formidable anchorman, Robin Lingle, in the cleanup half. Texas will counter either with their top半 mile-miler, Loy Gunter, or mile ace, Richard Romo, both of whom were victimized by Lingle at Austin.
Tennis Squad Shuts Out Washburn Again
The KU tennis team swept all seven matches to shut out the Washburn University team for the second time this season.
The Jayhawks now have a 6-1 win record in tennis competition this year. The lone loss was to a strong Oklahoma team 4-3.
OKLAHOMA IS co-favored, along with Kansas to annex the Big Eight tennis title now held by Oklahoma State.
Prior to the second Washburn match, KU had downed Oklahoma City University, TCU, North Texas State, and wound up their road trip with a 5-2 victory over Oklahoma State.
homa, and there was a high wind during the match," he said.
Denzel Gibbons, coach of the tennis squad, said he is pleased with the playing of the team "We weren't playing our best in our loss to Okla-
"However, the boys are coming along, and they'll do all right."
Steak Dinner
Sunday Nites $1.25
4:30-10:30
DINE-A-MITE
23rd & La.
OREAD JAZZ FESTIVAL SATURDAY, APRIL 25
Featuring
- 12 of the nation's best collegiate jazz groups competing for a trip to play jazz dates in Europe and many other awards
From 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. in the Union Five Finalists at 8:00 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium
- Woody Herman in concert with his Swingin' Herd at 10:00 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium
Sign up now for block tickets in your living group.
Tickets will be sold in Information Booth.
$1.50 for the whole day with Student IDs $1.75 General Public.
DURING THE 39th K.U. RELAYS, ENJOY AN EXCELLENT DINNER AND A PLEASANT EVENING DANCING TO THE MUSIC OF THE PETERSON TRIO. A COMPLETE MENU IS AVAILABLE TO THE PUBLIC.
FIREBIRD
THE 2222 Iowa
RESTAURANT
Phone VI 2-2222
THE NEXT MATCH for the tennis team will be against Missouri this Saturday afternoon on the tennis courts west of Allen Field House.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 16, 1964
Work on Legislature Available to Students
Graduate students can intern in a direct participation-observer program with the Kansas Legislature, if they qualify.
Those accepted for the program will receive a $4,000 stipend. In- terns can also receive ten hours of graduate study credit.
"This is an excellent opportunity for journalists, lawyers, and others interested in public service to meet the major lobbyists, mem-
This is an excellent opportunity others interested in public service bers of the legislature, and other public officials." Earl Nehring, assistant professor of political science and co-ordinator of the program, said.
INTERNS should gain an intimate knowledge of the legislative process, Prof. Nehring said. During legislative sessions interns will be assigned to key legislators, such as the speaker of the house and the president protem of the senate. In this capacity, the interns will assist in the legislative process. Nehring said.
While the legislature is not in session, the interns will work in the Research Department of the Legislative Council. The council studies problems assigned to it by the legislature, and sometimes studies problems on its own, Prof. Nehring said. Those accepted for the program should plan to live in Topeka during the ten month period, he said.
Up to five internships are available. Prof. Nehring said. Because this program has funds for five more years, undergraduates who are interested in government should keep it in mind if they plan to do graduate study. Nehring said.
FUNDS FOR THE program are provided by the legislature and by the Ford Foundation. Nehring said.
A seminar, under Prof. Nehring's direction, is another part of the internship program. It is for participation in this part that academic credit is given. "We bring top political scientists to talk to those who participate in the seminar," he said.
The deadline for applications is May 1, Prof. Nehring said.
Good Squirrel Report
SACRAMENTO, —(UPI)— Assemblyman George Zenovich, who led a drive to capture six squirrels at Fresno County Court House Park and transfer them to State Capitol Park to perpetuate the species made his first annual squirrel report yesterday to the full assembly.
"I am very happy to announce that the superintendent of the park saw two baby squirrels yesterday." Zenovich said. "I have cigars."
Backers Plan Avery Meeting
The KU Avery for Governor committee is holding a reception for Kansas congressman William H. Avery tomorrow night to give faculty members the opportunity to meet the Republican candidate for governor.
The reception will be given at 5 p.m. in the Kansas room of the Kansas Union.
"Congressman Avery, a University of Kansas graduate with a major in political science, has an impressive record in support of significant programs relating to higher education," the committee said.
Among legislation dealing with higher education that has received Avery's support is the National Defense Education Act of 1958, the Health Professions Educational Assistance Act of 1963, and the Higher Education Facilities Act of 1963, the committee said.
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Faculty Members To Present Papers
Three KU faculty members will describe their studies of measuring the earth's surface by high-altitude satellite Thursday in Washington, D.C.
Richard K. Moore, professor of electrical engineering, and instructors B. E. Parkins and C. G. Chia will deliver two papers before the International Scientific Radio Union.
The first paper will describe how Moore, Parkins, and instructor A. K. Fung used information from the U.S.-Canadian satellite, "Alouette," to obtain the first high-altitude measurements of the radio reflection properties of the earth. Radio-wave reflection can be used to measure large parts of the earth's surface.
The work was supported at the KU Center for Research, Inc., by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, with the cooperation of the Defense Research Board of Canada.
The second paper, by Parkins and Moore, will describe the first experiments in the new acoustic measuring tank at the Center for Research. The tank is designed to simulate radar measurement signals bounced off the moon.
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TV Color TV Antennae
on
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Radios Transistors Car Radios
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University Daily Kansan
Classified Ads
Page 11
FOR SALE
1962 Norton 650 ce, cycle. Good condi-
tion. Call VI 2-9100. Room 343. 4-22
room. Call VII 2-9101. Room 343. 4-22
1960 Olds convertible, Dynamic 88. Power steering and brakes, whitewalls, radio heater, Excellent condition $1,400. Cal VI 3-7017. 4-2
Two purebred German Shepherd puppies
10 weeks old. 185 each. Call
3-5681
Four Navy officer's white dress uniforms,
size 38. Never been used. Call VI 3-200-
4179.
Continuing our book and print sale with about 1,000 added volumes. Come over and browse moon to 10. Monday thru Saturday. 1539 Tenn., behind ATO hospital.
1956 Chevy 4 door hard top. V-8 autome-
chical. Radio, heater, good mechanical
condition. Needs body work. $350. Call
VI 2-4428, 5:30-7 p.m.
4-21
1960 Jaguar 3.4 sedan. Auto transmission, air conditioned. Fine wood and leather interior. $2185. Owner going to Europe for summer. Call VI 3-875 anytime. 4-21
1959 Jaguar X-15-750 Roadster. $1600 or trade for late model VW. Call VI 3-6806 or see at building 13-6 Stouffer after 5 p.m.
4-17
English bike in brand new condition 3.
Bicycle trunk with 2 speed derailers.
Call VF 3-119. 4-21
1954 thru 56 322 Builc engine, 1949 thru 53 flat head V-8 Ford engine. Both in very good condition. 1949 thru 54 Chevro standard trans. 1953 thru 56 Olds radio. 1950 thru 56 Parts parts of his 'Auto Salvage, 1902 Harper. Phone VI 3-1626. Open evenings. 4-21
3-bedroom house on cul d sac, ceramic tile kitchen & bathroom, oak floors, sliding glass doors, full basement with shelter, attached garage, large fenced yard with many trees, lovely long rock wall, hardwood floor, elementary elem. school. Prefer August possession date. No special assessments. $16,500.
Phone VI 2-0045 before 9:00 p.m.
50 h.p. engine on 15 ft. boat with trailer.
accessories. CaVI II 5-3229 after
p.m. 4-21
Shortwave communications receiver — excellent for shortwave listeners of amateur radio; “S” meter, inside whip and outside wire antenna. Call VI 3-2454 from 5-421
1960 Rambler 6 Custom 4 dr. air-conditioned, tinted glass, overdrive, individually adjustable reclining seats with head rest radio and heater. Exactly new white fill. Full leather. See at 1514 Tennessee after throughout. See at 1514 Tennessee after 5.
Walhut antique organ and commode.
CALL Vi 1 3-2402, 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
4-27
1951 Chevie 4 door. Very clean and in
condition. 2-1802 bottle at
645 Maine after 5 p.m.
4-21
For sale by owner; 1960 Ford convertible, white with red interior. Power steering, auto trans., seat belts. Excellent condition. Call IV 3-7294 after 4:45 p.m. 4-16
1964 model RCA 21" color TV, Guaran-
reasonable. Call V13 3-4655. 4-21
Mobile, home for sale; 1959 *Prunie Schooner*, 10' x 36', 2 bedroom, new washer and air conditioner. Call VI 24-3098. 4-21
Violin, complete with case and bow.
Valued at $200. Sell for only $145. Call
John 4088 in S. Oak, Ottawa,
John Browner, 321 S. Oak, Ottawa,
Kansas.
Student will sell all guns in collection.
45 auto's, Lugers, 38 revolvers, miniature automatics, Roger 22's, 410 double revolvers, Roder 21's, 22 lever action. While the last! 21 J.R.
$6.50 per carton. Call VI 3-1110 after 6 p.m.
4-23
Bicycle weather ahead! Rent or buy a 3 speed Royce Union, $15 per month, 1 month minimum rental. Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. 4-22
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS, Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale great savings after 6 p.m. week days. Saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut tt
Typewriters, new and used portables,
standards, electrics, Olympia, Hermes,
Divelli, Royal and Smith Corona portables.
Typewriter, adder, rentals and service.
Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass St.,
VI 3-644.
New shipment of Pink typing paper. $50
Stream—$85. Lawrence Outdoor,
1003 Mass.
surprise your roommate with a cake on hat special occasion. The K.U. Birthday card is the student body line of cakes. Free delivery and candles. *all VI 2-1791*. **4-24**
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta notes. Vol II 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50 each. Lately revised, extremely comprehensive, nimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Copy VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
For Forlier Brush Products phone VI 3-9040 after 5 p.m. tf
FOR RENT
farm house for summer months. Call VI-
1-1255 after 6 p.m.
4-22
Two single rooms, extra nice for 2 adult men or two ladies. $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from campus, West Hills. Share large bathroom, outdoor patio, WiFi, phone available. Air conditioned. Prefer someone who will stay next fall. Call VI 3-3077. 4-17
A large room, private half-bath and shower. Kitchen privileges available. Bedroom. Resort in Mississippi. Recently remodeled and equipped for summer. Call VI 2-0298. 4-21
Large, homey, attractively furnished, 4 room apartment. Kitchen built-ins and garbage disposal. Utilities paid except electricity. Call VI 3-7677. tf
One and 2 bedroom apartments available now! 101 new units available Aug. 15. swimming pool, air conditioning, wall-o-wall carpeting, colored appliances, saved, off-street parking. Furnished if desired. Call VI 3-1116 for information.
single or double room. Furnished, cook-
ing, cleaning and paid. See call.
-19451 or see at 1244 Lau. Call tl-
Married, grad students, faculty, 2 bedroom, $75. Only 10 left for June. Reserve now. Call for brochure, VI 3-2116. Santee Apartments, 1123 Indiana. tt
English major graduate, experienced
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Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work stands. Phone VI 3-8379. Charles Patti.
Experienced secretary would like typing
experience. Reasonable rates. Call Vi
1188
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Fast. accurate work done electric rates. Call Bet Vincent, VI 3-5504.
Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reasonable rates. For term papers, themes, dissertations and theses, phone VI 3-7652.
Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tf
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Experienced Typist—Dissertations, The-
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University Daily Kansan
Sixty-Three Seniors To Phi Beta Kappa
Sixty-three seniors have been elected to the local chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, national honor society in the liberal arts.
This is the largest group ever chosen by the KU chapter, which was the first founded west of the Mississippi river in 1890.
However, the seniors chosen and the seven members of the same class who were elected as juniors are only 9 per cent of the seniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. National Phi Beta Kappa rules permit the election of up to 15 per cent.
THE MINIMUM GRADE-point average 2.48 also equals the record high "cutting score" used last year. At KU an A grade is 3.0, a B is 2.0.
Those honored are in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences except five in the School of Education and one in the School of Journalism.
Those elected are:
Harold Arthur Baker, anthropology and linguistics, Osborne; Mary, L Baumgartner, German, Overland grant, Biology, Bergen; music and philosophy, Independence; John R Berens, mathematics, El Dorado; Patricia Berns, B.S., Education, Peabody; Elmer Leroy Birney, psychology, Bucklein; Mrs Grace Blinson Blakez, chemistry, Bellweir
Judith A. Bodenhause, mathematics,
Topeka; Kenneth W. Boyer, mathematics
and B.S.; chemistry, Hemple, Mo; David
Gilbert, English, mathematics;
Dale Brownnell, German and math-
matics, Kansas City; Joy Catherine
Bullis, Russian and Slavic & Soviet
Area, Davenport, Ia.; Analee Burns,
Mary, Danbury; James Kemper Campion, English,
Paola; William Joseph Campion, chem-
istry, Liberal; Robert Heaton Cathey,
sociology, Shawnee Mission; Mrs. Doris
Channel, B.S., education, Kansas
City.
Official Bulletin
Mrs. Marilyn M. Crabtree, English and
Foreign students: People-to-People barbecue picnic Thursday, 5 p.m., 1301 West Campus Park, Host: Sigma Alpha Omega sorority, Chi Chi Omega sorority, All in knickknack. Informal
International Festival: rehearsal tonight 6:45 p.m. Hoch Auditorium. If you have a part in the program please be there.
TODAY
Catholic Mass. 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Hill. Call Wednesday morning at attending Sunday's Cana conference should call Bob Scott, call Erik2606 or baby sitters call Callen Sturbridge VI 1-24385
Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion,
4480 N. Pkwy., Pan American Room, Kansas
Ultramont
De dautesch Stammtisch trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 16. April, um 4 Uhr 30 in der "Bierstube," ecke 14th Tenn. Alle sind herzlich eingeladen.
Continuing Philosophy Lecture, 7:30 p.m.
and World Order"Dr. Errol Harris.
Japanese Film Festival, 7:30 p.m., 303 Bailey, "The Balliff" (Eng. sub.).
Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Everyone wel-
Minority Opinions Forum Tape-Disease enbacker, an Anti-Communist Address.
Christian Family Movement, 8 p.m., McKenzie Courtford Rd. All married couples welcome.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth
College Life Discussion: 9 p.m., 1640
Society Life: Discussion of a Practical
Christianity.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Kansas Relays, 9 a.m., Memorial Stadi
...
Engineering Exposition, noon. Engineering Displays will be open 9:30 a.m.
University Lecture, 4 p.m., Big 8 Room, Kansas Union. "The New Dialectal Survey of England, I."—Prof. Harold Orton, U. of Leeds, England.
SUA CURRENT EVENTS Forum. 4:30
pam. Forum Foom. Kansas Union.
Boston. Forum Foom.
Theater. "The Notorious Landlady." Jewish Community Center Services, 7:30 p.m., 917 Highland Dr. Refreshments.
Pre-Cana Conferences for people planning marriage, 7:30 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1910 Stratford Road, New Hampshire Christian College Rancher Harold Mickey and "Christian Behavior in Courtship and Marriage"—Rt. Dr. Msgr. Kenneth Sourlock.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
French, Ransom; Mrs. Gretchen Miller Dukelow, microbiology, Mission; Betty Wichita, economics and mathematics Wichita, Education, Ford University, French, Lawrence; Dwayne F. Fischer, B.S. in chemistry, Osborne; Lawrence, molecular biology, Lawrence; Pamela Kay Gunnell, psychology, Bartville斯, Okla.; William Don George, anthropology, Kansas City; Gary Newbern, mathematics and physics,offer; Lovell Stuber "Tu" Jarvis, Winfield.
Steak Dinner
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Margaret A. Jeter, art, Hays; Stuart D.Keown, political science, Hutchinson; Rebecca F. King, English, Emporia; Mrs Nancy Dodge Kirk, French and German; Dr. Michael Sawyer, education, Haven; Barbara G. Lamb chemistry and mathematics, Hutchinson; Carl Maxwell Logan, economics, Holiday; Donald F. Martin, international relations, Kansas City; Charles A. Rappaport, education, Karin Sue McCarthy, B.S., education, Wichita; Lauralea Milberg, history and speech & drama, Arlington, Va.
Mrs. Judith Laidig Moats, mathematics
Chatham, N.J.; Philip John Mohler,
Monroe, N.J.; Phillip Johnson,
Monroe, philosophy and zoology, Dallas,
Tex.; Edwin A. Nordstrom, chemistry
and mathematics; Newton, Merle D.
Brown, physics; Weller, Mrs. Susan Whitley Peters, English and German, Lawrence; John Raymond Platt, philosophy and psychology, Topeka
Amela Sue Hickey B.S. ecology
Joel L. Kochar, toch echology
Topeka; Carol C. Rose, English and
Spanish, Lawrence; Lary R. Schiefelbush,
mathematics; Lawrence; Ark
Lewis Clark, mathematics-Great David Clark Scott, mathematics and
philosophy, Jackson Heights, N.Y.
Anna Victoria Sheldon, French and international relations, Independence; Donald Lewis Smyth, German, Sharon Springs; Janet Gail Sturgess, English, Kansas City, Mo.; Virginia Sullowold, Missouri; Mary McPherson, Taylor, mathematics, Leawood; Michael L. Trollope, chemistry and zoology, Wichita; Jerry Lee Ulrich, history and philosophy, Iola; Robert W. Wahl, German, Lyons; Bette K. Weinshulboug, German and mathematicus Augusta, George M. Wilsner Jr., philosopher, Ore, William S. Woodard, classical archaeology, Lawrence; Joanne D Zabornik, B.S., journalism, Kansas City.
Campus Chest Funds -
to earn all of the money necessary to keep things going.
Now we have reached the limit of our resources, unless we can find sponsorship."
(Continued from page 1)
"At the present time. . we have a boy who was involved with the law and in less than two months, the court spent over $4,500 on him. We were asked by the Juvenile Court in Wichita to take him in with us, although they have no money to send us for his support. He was out of school, but is now back in school and doing satisfactory work and is happy with us," he said.
To stimulate student donations to the Campus Chest this year, a contest is to be staged among the living groups for trophies.
The four trophies will be awarded as follows to the groups having the highest donations per person: one for the fraternities and men scholarship halls; one for the sororites and the women scholarship halls; one for the women's large dormitories; and one for the men's large dormitories.
LETTERS HAVE BEEN sent to the presidents of all living groups, Pound said.
Independents and married students are asked to give through an organized house. Pound said.
"To help Campus Chest reach its goal of $3,000 this year, our freshman class has organized a freshman activity." James Aust, Prairie Village freshman and president of the freshman class, said. "This activity will be a late Friday movie April 25, and late permission for all freshman women who attend this function has been obtained. The money we have after charging freshmen admissions and paying for the downtown theatre services will be donated to Campus Chest."
Rights Amendment Votes Delayed, Southerner Says
WASHINGTON. —(UPI)—Southern Senators expressed confidence today that they are making progress against the "veil of emotional hysteria" surrounding the Civil Rights bill in the Senate.
They voiced doubt after a caucus that there will be any voting within the next week on possible changes in the house-passed bill.
Sen. Richard Russell, D-Ga., leader of the Senate Dixie Democratic bloc, said after the caucus:
"I think we are making slow but sure progress in piercing the veil of emotional hysteria which the
proponents have thrown up around this bill."
There has been speculation that there might be votes on amendments within the next week, but Russell said he doubted it.
RUSSELL ALSO said southerners expect to decide their position on each amendment as it comes up, rather than follow a general policy of attempting to modify or oppose all revisions.
The Georgia veteran said further that he does not believe proponents have the votes so far to halt debate — that is, two-thirds of those voting.
Sixteen leading participants and scholars in community affairs will speak at the 17th City Managers' School Wednesday through Friday (April 22-24) at KU.
City Heads Meet at KU April 22-24
Opening day speeches will be given by William H. Key, executive director of the Topeka Urban Renewal Agency; Prof. Peter H. Rossi, director of the University of Chicago's National Opinion Rsearch Center, and Jepta J. Carrell, research associate with Community Studies, Inc., Kansas City, Mo.
Their addresses on the theme, "Do You Know Your Community?" will be presented to nearly 100 city managers from a 10-state area.
THEIR TOPICS will cover a sociological view of the community, power structure and council-manager relations. The speakers later will draw their ideas together in a panel led by Hugo Wall, dean of the University of Wichita Graduate School.
Speakers Thursday are Oscar A. Ehrhardt, secretary of the St. Louis, Mo. Labor Council, AFL-CIO, whose topic will be labor's expectations of city government. Business expectations will be presented by C. C. Kilker, executive vice president of the Kansas State Chamber of Commerce, Topeka.
A panel discussion on minorities and city government, also on Thursday, will be led by Fredrick D. Lewis, dean of the School of Law, University of Missouri at Kansas City, and chairman of the Kansas City, Mo., Human Relations Commission.
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An Editorial Parking Fees
The parking permit fee increase recently passed by the Board of Regents is unfair to many students and faculty members.
It is unfair to students with cars who live in large dormitories. It is unfair to students who live more than walking distance from the campus. It is unfair to the faculty members who drive to classes
The new arrangement will require all permit holders to pay $10 for their parking sticker next September. The current cost of these stickers is $4.
The cost per se of these stickers is not unfair. It is comparable to the arrangement at other campuses in our situation.
ITS DISCRIMINATORY nature is unfair, however.
The student who lives in a large residence hall must have a parking permit to park his automobile in the hall's parking lot. These lots are not preferred spots. They are at the student's place of residence.
Many faculty members and some students who live off campus drive to class. For the student or faculty member who lives several miles from campus, it is almost a necessity to drive to class. He must park his car somewhere in the vicinity of the campus. Several parking lots are located close to the campus. These drivers must either park in these lots or try to find a parking spot on one of the city streets. The latter is not always desirable.
Many students with cars will not have to pay this $10 fee because their campus home provides free parking.
These students depend on the traffic and security office as much as the students whose places of residence requires that they have a parking permit.
With the increase of students and cars, the Traffic and Security department definitely needs more revenue.
THE MOST logical solution is a fee for auto registration. Since state law requires that every car on campus be registered, the registration fee would be a method of beefing up the revenue of the campus police.
This would not be at the expense of an arbitrarily decided few, however. It would be at the expense of everyone who has a car on campus and who depends on the campus police.
Discriminatory Raises
Fees, fees, fees. Every time you turn around, it seems, there is a fee increase. The latest proposal, following on the heels of the parking permit increase, is that of Chancellor Wescoe to raise the general student fee of in-state students by $5 and out-of-state students by $50.
Wescoe's proposal has been taken under advisement by the Board of Regents.
Obviously, costs are increasing all the time and fee increases are necessary if KU is to be a quality university.
WE DONT OBJECT to the increase in fees. But, once more, we think the highly discriminatory nature of the proposal is unfortunate—if not unfair.
The out-of-state students would bear the brunt of the increased costs. In this proposed fee raise alone they would be required to pay $90 a year more than Kansas residents. They are already paying $287 per semester as compared to in-state fees of $122 per semester. If the chancellor's proposal passes at the next Regents meeting, non-residents will be paying $337 per semester as compared to $127 per semester for residents.
The effect would be to make greater financial problems for present non-resident students and discourage non-resident students in the future from attending.
We hear a lot about understanding of other nations as one of the great needs of the U.S. population—hence the increased emphasis on foreign student programs.
INCREASED UNDERSTANDING of other parts of this country is a similar problem, but there never seems to be much concern shown for it. Kansans more than anyone else should be aware of regional myths about certain states, for many people still look on Kansas as a rather primitive state where farmers fight to keep buffalo out of their corn patches. And, yes, almost everyone is aware of the dust bowl disaster in the 1930's and the 1951 flood and the interminable heat.
JAMES GUNN, public relations adviser for the administration, has said recently that in-state students are given entrance preference, then sons and daughters of non-resident KU alumni, then students applying from bordering states. In other words, the administration policy is to encourage students of Kansas or near ansas to come here and to discourage others.
Kansas could profit if this administrative attitude were changed. There would be more students from across the nation learn about Kansas, and more Kansans would know what is going on around the nation.
The Editors
Dailu hansan
61st Year. No. 121
Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, April 17, 1964
Big Weekend Features Running of KU Relays
Winds were expected to shift to north or northwest by noon the KU weather observation station stated. Winds were expected to pick up to 25-35 miles per hour by this afternoon. Showers were expected this afternoon with a high of 75 degrees.
By Marshall Caskey (Sports Editor)
Some of the finest track and field talent in the country will participate in the 39th running of the Kansas Relaws here this weekend.
the prospect of more windy weather today and tomorrow lessened the chances that other records would be set in Memorial Stadium.
PRELIMINARY EVENTS comprised most of today's competition which ends at 4:45 p.m. Saturday's action begins in earnest at 1 p.m.
The performers range all the way from high school stars to all-Americas and all will be seeking glory in the Mt. Oread Olympics.
Coach Bill Easton has entered KU trackmen in most of the Relays events.
THE FIRST winner in this year's event was a 34-year-old former Polish army officer who won the 10,000-meter run in record time yesterday afternoon.
There were few dropouts in the gruelling race despite 20- and 30-mile an hour winds and an 83-degree temperature.
The Weather Bureau predicted that skies would be partly cloudy through tomorrow. Tomorrow's temperatures are expected to be cool.
John Macy, formerly of the University of Houston, covered the distance (nearly six miles) in 29:46, a minute faster than the former KU Relays record set two years ago.
High on the list of KU performers is pole vaulter Floyd Manning, Manning won the Big Eight indoor meet with a vault of $15-8 \frac{1}{2}$ and is an individual threat in that event this weekend.
Easton also has entered his record-shattering four-mile relay team. The fourmilers, who broke the Texas Relay record April 4, are Bill Silverberg, who ran a 4:15; John Donner, who ran 4:11; Herald Hadley, who was 4:13.3, and John Lawson, who had 4:17.7.
THE MISSOURI Tigers are likely to enter the four-mile.
"They have the talent," Easton said, "and if they enter the four-mile—and there is no reason to believe they won't—they'll be rough."
The biggest of Missouri's big guns is, of course, Robin Lingle. Lingle was named the outstanding performer at the Texas Relays after he ran a 1:48 anchor 880 and a 4:02.4 finishing mile in the twowheel and the distance medley.
Missouri, with Lingle, must be considered the favorite in the two-mile and the Tigers were considered by some to be in line to smash the world's record in that event.
Only five defending relays champions will appear at the meet. Of the five only one, Jim Miller, Colorado hurdler, is considered to be a strong contender to defend his title.
MILLER WON THE 400-meter hurdles in a time of 52.6 seconds last year. To date, in this year's meets he has clocked a time of 51.9—one
of the best times in the country.
Competing against Miller will be former KU star and Olympic silver medal winner, Cliff Cusman.
Cushman, presently in the Air Force, has been training here with his former coach. Cushman won the event here in 1957, 1960 and 1961.
ANOTHER DEFENDING Relays champion is Nate Adams, Purdue spinner who won the 100-yard and 100-meter dashes here last year.
Adams, who is hampered with a pulled thigh muscle, will be hard-pressed, if he competes, by KU's Ron Hanson, Roger Sayers and Terry Williams of Omaha and Charles Greene from Nebraska.
The other defending champions who will be on hand are Geoff Walker, Houston, in the 5,000-meter (the metric distance is substituted for the three-mile during Olympic years); Pat Closhey, former Houston star, 10,000, and Kent Floerke, formerly of KU, in the triple jump.
(Continued on page 3)
Two ASC Members Barred from Office
The Student Court yesterday issued temporary restraining orders, barring two elected All Student Council members from the ASC until trials scheduled for next week.
The restraining orders were issued after a preliminary hearing when Norma Sharp, Arkansas City junior, and Beverly Nicks, Detroit, Mich., junior, contested the results of the spring election in which they were defeated.
Miss Sharp and Miss Nicks, who ran on a Vox ticket, were defeated by two University Party candidates in close races.
SUSAN LAWRENCE, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, won by lot over Miss Sharp after the vote ended in a 138-138 tie in the School of Fine Arts race.
Jean Borlaug, Sierra Guadarrama, Mexico, junior, defeated Miss Nickis by 14 votes (200-186) in the large women's dorm race.
Tom Thompson, Atchison thirdyear law student and chief justice of the Student Court, said the restraining orders will be in effect until the trials at which time the question of facts and proof will be settled.
MISS NICKS has charged "negligence on the part of Elections Committee" for not giving ballots to all voters from her district. She contended that several people from her district were not given the ballots for the large women's dorms.
The attorneys for Miss Nicks and Jean Borlau waived the preliminary hearing yesterday. Trial was set for 7 p.m. Wednesday.
Miss Sharp questioned the voiding of three ballots which she feels might have determined the winner.
The attorney for Miss Sharp said she would subpeona all the ballots for the School of Fine Arts in case there were any errors.
GEM Highlights Exposition
KU's Ground Effects Machine (GEM) III is on display at the 44th Annual Engineering Exposition which opened today in the New Engineering Building.
Student and departmental projects will also be on display to depict different facets of the GEM III and of other projects in the engineering departments.
"THE PROCESS for Progress," theme of this year's exposition, began today as Camille Storey, Overland Park sophomore and engineering queen, cut the exposition ribbon at noon.
Visitors to the Exposition enter the Engineering Building at the main south entrance where they find arrows and signs that tell the directions to go to see all the exhibits.
All the exhibits are in the Engineering Building except the GEM III, which is in the parking lot west of the building. The nuclear reactor, which has its own building adjacent to the Engineering Building, is also on display.
The Exposition, which started at noon today, will run until 9:00 tonight and be open tomorrow from 9:00 a.m. until noon. The affair will be climaxed at 7:00 p.m. Saturday with the 1964 Engineering Exposition Banquet in the Big Eight room of the Kansas Union. Students are invited to attend the banquet. Tickets
SPEAKER for the banquet will be Karl Johnson, vice president of J. R. Pritchard and Company of Kansas City.
may be obtained from Engineering Council representatives or in the office of the School of Engineering.
The projects on display have been divided into two broad groups. One group includes the student organizations such as honorary fraternities and clubs, and the departments within the School of Engineering. The students will emphasize the progress of engineering and the departments will show the processes used in the study of engineering. The two groups make up this year's theme, "Process for Progress."
The following are sub themes for each project and the group of students working on the projects:
The theme was chosen to highlight the type of work in which the students and departments are presently engaged.
KAPPA ETA KAPPA has "Novelty for Progress"; American Society of Metallurgists and the American Institute of Mechanical Engineering
are presenting "Progress in Materials;" Eta Kappa Nu and electrical engineering students have "Simulation Techniques."
The Architectural Engineers Association is presenting "Building and Education;" Alpha Chi Sigma is presenting "Machine Teaching of Chemistry;" and the American Society of Civil Engineers has "Coordinated Planning for Progress."
Petroleum Engineering Club has "Energy for Progress," the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics have a display of miniature flying GEMs named "GEMs of the Future."
Scarab and American Institute of Architects have "Progressive Architecture;" and the chemical engineering students have joined together to make "Process for Products."
All the engineering departments have projects on display which are characteristic of the work done in their departments.
The projects have been planned for several months and most of the departmental and student projects were completed yesterday.
TROPHIES will be awarded for the best student displays Saturday at the banquet.
Judges have been selected from the Kansas Engineering Society, the administration, and Lawrence businessmen.
Chairman of the 44th Annual Engineering Exposition is James Carr, Carthage, Missouri, fifth year engineer.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 17, 1964
His Invention Solved Skin Grafting Problem
By Charles Corcoran
I owe the use of my left leg to a retired KU professor.
If it were not for the creative genius of Professor Emeritus George Hood, 86, of the School of Engineering, a third degree burn I received several years ago would certainly have cost me my left leg, or at least the ability to use it.
Early in the 1930's, the late Dr. Earl C. Padgett, then a professor of clinical surgery at the KU School of Medicine in Kansas City, approached Dean George C. Shaad of the School of Engineering with a request that he recommend someone to undertake the invention of an instrument that would cut uniform skin grafts.
UP TO THAT time, skin grafts were not unknown, but the operation of removing a layer of healthy skin to replace that which had been damaged had to be done free hand. Surgeons had no instruments to aid them in the slicing of a regularly shaped piece of skin of desired thickness.
The accuracy of early grafting work was solely dependent on the surgeon's skill.
The design problem was laid before Bood, then a professor of engineering drawing here. After years of experimentation and development, Prof. Hood was able to remove the letters from a sheepskin diploma with a machine he called the Dermatome.
His machine, created in the basement of his home, could slice a
section of skin from .005 to .02 inches thick. The first Dermatome blades were made from sharpened hacksaw blades: they now are produced by a razor blade company.
THE DERMATOME WAS first used on a human being in an operation in 1938 at the Bell hospital in Kansas City, Mo.
Prof. Hood was present at that operation and when the surgeon shook his head indicating that he was afraid to cut the skin to be grafted. Hood took over and cut the first calibrated skin graft.
The operation was a success!
In 1942, Prof. Hood was granted the patent on the Dermatome. An interference case was decided in his favor.
THE MACHINE is phenomenally simple in appearance: it has one moving part. the cutting apparatus.
The machine consists of a curved, aluminum casting with a razor edged blade attached in such a way that the distance between the curved face and blade can be closely adjusted.
Before an operation, the curved face and the patient's skin which is to be removed are coated with a special rubber cement developed by Prof. Hood. The curved surface is rolled on the patient's body and the cement-coated skin adheres to the curved surface and is lifted gently away from the body.
As the skin is pulled up, the razor-sharp blade, which is preset to the desired thickness, easily slices off a transparent layer of
THE SCHOLAR
skin of uniform thickness and area. The size of the skin removed depends upon the size of the coated area.
LEG-SAVING MACHINE--George Hood, professor emeritus of engineering, examines the Dermatome device he invented for more effective skin grafts. (Photo by Charles Corcoran)
THE REMOVED LAYER of skin is then either sutured to the area to be covered or put into a salt solution until it is to be used. The area the skin is removed from heals in about ten days. Thirty days later more skin can be cut from the same area if necessary.
Innumerable limbs and torsos were saved and repaired in World
Applications for K-Book editor and business manager for next year will be due Wednesday in the University Relations office, 223 Strong Hall.
Applications Due For K-Book Staff
War II because of the Dermatome where before they might have been amputated. The Jan. 9, 1943 KU Newsletter states that the machine saved soldiers "from being disfigured or crippled for life. The Army and Navy have ordered hundreds for use in the various hospitals."
To date, more than 10,000 of these Dermatomes have been made and sold. About 4,000 of a motorized version, which looks something like a large bladed barber's hair clipper, have also been manufactured and sold.
The K-Book is a combination of general information about KU and a calendar of University events.
Prof. Hood has also made a small, circular Dermatome which does not have its own cutting edge and, in 1953, a "giant" Dermatome which cuts a 15 by 8 inch graft.
making possible surgical treatment of severe burns and other denuding injuries."
Prof. Hood also has been named an American Man of Science, has been awarded the Distinguished Service Award of the American Society for Engineering Education and is in "Who's Who In Engineering."
IN APRIL OF 1955. Prof. Hood was awarded the Holley Medal from the American Society of Mechanical Engineers for his invention. The citation accompanying the award reads "For his act of genius in inventing the Dermatome, a skin grafting machine,
His other inventions include types of gas engines, a gas explosive pump, drawing instruments and a photographic method for producing perspective layouts from aircraft sections.
He has also written textbooks on engineering drawing which he considers to be the "language of the engineer."
Prof. Hood was born in Chicago in 1877 and he entered KU in 1898. He is one of the last surviving members of the twelve founders of the Alpha Tau Omega social fraternity here.
He taught engineering drawing at KU from the time of his graduation in 1902 with a B.S. degree until his retirement in 1947.
WHO SAID THE SENIORS DON'T FUNCTION!
To keep the party spirit of the Senior Class tied over from the party-meet on the Lawrence Drag Strip, Saturday April 18,the Seniors are going to have . yes. THE GREAT TRAIN RIDE
6:30—cars meet in Zone O
7:00----buses will take seniors and guests from Zone O to the train.
7-11 THE GREAT TRAIN RIDE. Buses will be waiting to return students to cars.
TRAIN HOLDS
LIMITED NUMBER FIRST COME,FIRST SERVED
---
DANCING IN BAGGAGE CARS SWINGING BANDS FAVORITE BEVERAGES
64
COST: $5. per ticket.Tickets will be sold over the weekend in the living groups and MONDAY, TUESDAY, and WEDNESDAY in the Information Booth.
SAT., MAY 2,1964
Friday, April 17, 1964
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Big Weekend Features KU Relays-
(Continued from page 1)
Rice's Ed Red, last year's javelin champion, was forced to scratch because of a strained side. Last year, Red threw the spear $ 256-1 1 \frac{1}{2} $ and
erased KU Olympic thrower Bill Alley's mark of 254-9.
This year's competition will be run in an improved Memorial Stadium, and features an expanded schedule of events. Easton, who is
★★
"On to Tokyo" theme of the 1964 KU Relays, will be carried out in activities planned by the Relays Committee and Student Union Activities for Saturday's social events.
The relays activities, which began yesterday with the 10.000-meter run in Memorial Stadium, will continue through the SUA-sponsored dance Saturday night.
Oriental Theme Added To Relays Social Fetes
LEADING THE PARADE will be A. C. "Dutch" Lonborg, retiring KU athletic director, who has been selected Grand Marshall.
Beginning Saturday's activities will be the Relays parade, which will start from South Park at 10 a.m.
Lonborg will lead the parade down Massachusetts Street to Seventh Street where he and Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, and the Relays queen and her attendants will leave the parade and enter the reviewing stand in front of the Eldridge Hotel.
Joan McGregor, Leawood senior,
is Relays queen. Her attendants are Judy Railsback, Hutchinson sophomore, and Sandy Kaiser, Paola sophomore.
Six floats, built by 12 KU living groups, will be presented in oriental design, carrying out the theme of the Relays, William Flannagan, Scott City junior, said.
LIVING GROUPS entering floats are Joseph R. Pearson-Sigma Kappa; Hashing-Ellsworth; Lewis-Templin; Triangle-Alpha Omicron Pi; Alpha Kappa Lambda; and Phi Delta Theta-Pi Beta Phi.
The KU marching band will be the main musical group. Other entries in the parade include an ROTC color guard and five high
AN EVENING WITH
the Kingston Trio
EXTRA ATTRACTION
NANCY WILSON
NEW SINGING STAR
Municipal Aud.
Kansas City, Mo.
Tonight at 8:30 p.m.
Tickets $2, $3, $3.50, $4
Now on Sale
At Arena Box Office
school bands from Eudora, Yates Center, Lawrence High School, Haskell Institute and Madison High School.
Saturday night the "Flippers" will provide the music for a dance sponsored by the SUA committee in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union.
During the intermission, Kaye Whitaker, Wichita junior and recently elected vice-president of the student body, will present the queen and her attendants.
100-yard. Ron Hanson; 120-yard high hurdles, Bill Chambers and Gayle Sayers; javelin, Thomas Purma and Larry Hoover; discus; Gary Schwartz and Charles Tywse; broad jump, Tyce Smith and Charles Twiss; broad jump, Glenn Martin and Sayers.
NEW RUNWAYS and takeoffs for all jumping events have been constructed of rubberized, all-weather, asphalt. The new surfaces will eliminate problems with rain which sometimes hampered the participants in the jumping events in the past.
meet director, added the 400-meter dash to the card for the open class and three new events, the mile steeplechase, triple jump and 330 intermediate hurdles in the high school division.
Easton said he thought the track was in good shape for competition.
Coach Easton said KU's entrants in the Relays will include;
Pole vault, Floyd Manning and Jim Fanucelli; mile, Paul Acevedo and Dave Kamarr; quarter-mile relay, Sayers, Tom Wright, Ronald Suggs, Davies, Dawn Kamarr; half-mile relay, Sayers, Wright, Suggs, Hanson and Dienelt.
111 Flint Hall
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Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904.
biweekly 1893, daily biweekly 1905.
Mile relay, Hanson, Suggs, Bill Saul, Lowell Paul, Wright, Bob McNickle and Charles Lanning; 2-mile relay, Charles Lanning; 3-mile relay, Herald Hadley and John Donner; distance medley relay, Wright, Paul, Lawson, Hadley and Acevedo; 10,000, George Cabrera and Jose Conheras; step and jump, Cabrera and Conheras; step and jump, Glenn Martin and Savers; 3000-meter steeplechase, Silverberg and Dave Kamarr.
Member Inland Daily Press Association.
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East E50 St., New York 22, N.Y.
National Bank of America. National. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon dur-
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VI 3-0200
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 17, 1964
Festival Adds 'Miss Universe' Contest
A new addition to the International Festival this year is a "Miss Universe" contest.
The International Festival, to be tomorrow night in Hoch Auditorium, will feature exhibits and a program.
with students from different nations participating. n.m
The candidates are: Norma Repuyan, Philippines; Bushra Karaman, Israel; Gloria Macchiavello, Chile; Tove丹enbarger, Norway;
Patty Koos, United States (People-to-People); Anke Neumann, Germany; Mariela Vaz, Venezuela; Rebecca Cedeno, Ecuador (exchange student at Lawrence High School); Nilofer Ahmed, Pakistan; Blanche Shen, Hong Kong.
terrill's
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NOTE SHOW TIMES SUNDAY
Shows 2:00 - 4:05 - 6:45 - 9:20 Feat. 2:00 - 4:40 - 7:15 - 9:55
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Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
TODAY
Official Bulletin
Page 5
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m.
Louwrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Engineering Exposition. Engineering
building Displays will be open until 3:30
University Lecture, 4 p.m., Big 8 Room,
Kansas Union, "The New Dialectal Survey
of England, L."—Prof. Harold Orton,
U. of Leeds, England.
SUA Current Events Forum, 4:30 p.m.
Forum Room, Kansas Union.
SUA Film, 7 p.m., 9:30 p.m., Fraser Theater, "The Notorious Landlady."
Jewish Community Center Services.
7.30 p.m., 917 Highland Dr, Refresh-
floor
Pre-Cana Conferences for people planning marriage, 7:30 p.m., St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1910 Stratford Road Love in Christian Beliefs Health Help Ministry "Christian Behaviors in Courtship and Marriage" -Rt. Rev. Mary McKennith Soulock
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth
Friday, April 17, 1964 University Daily Kansan
SATURDAY
Kansas Relays, Memorial Stadium. 9 a.m.
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m.
Lawrence, Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd
Engineering Exposition, Engineering Building 9 a.m. until noon.
University Lecture, Prof. Harold Otton
U. of Leeds, Enland, "The New Dialog-
tal Survey of England, II." 306 Kansas
Varsity Tennis, KU-Missouri. Allen Field House, 1:30 and 3:30.
International Festival Exhibits, Hoch
Aktionshorn, 6 p.m. Entertainment at
Kansas Relays Dance, Ballroom, Kansas Union, 8 p.m.
SUNDAY
Catholic Masses, 8 p.m. St. Lawrence
Catholic Mass at Oxford Rd. Rd. 3-10 a.m.
Fraser Theater.
see yourself in our lovely Bridal Yours
see yourself in our lovely Bridal Gowns
AVA'S BRIDAL SALON
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VI 2-0056
Also see our cocktail dresses
Hoop rentals
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
Cann, Con't ayes. 1:30 p.m. St. Lawrences,
Married couples are urged to attend.
Olive married couples are urged to attend.
SUA Duplicate Bridge, Jayhawk Room,
Kaussis Union. 2 p.m.
Douthart Hail 10th Anniversary Tea, 345 La., 2 p.m.
Carillon Recital, Albert Gerken, 3 p.m.
Faculty Club Buffet, Prof. Klaus
Pringsheim, speaker, 5 p.m.
WELCOME TO THE 39TH ANNUAL KANSAS RELAYS
UNIVERSITY
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ENGINEERING EXPOSITION
UNIVERSITY ENGINEERING
ENGINEERING
OF KANSA5 EXPOSITION
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FRIDAY
12 Noon to 9 p.m.
SATURDAY
9 a.m. to 12 Noon
EXPOSITION ADMISSION FREE NEW ENGINEERING BUILDING
The Fashion Race Ends at diebolt's!
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diebolt's
843 Mass. VI 3-0454
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 17, 1964
10
MISS LAWRENCE FINALISTS—These are the finalists in the Miss Lawrence contest who will participate in a pageant April 29. They are (left to right, top row) Pat Wise, Wichita sophomore; Sharon Gillespie, Paola freshman; Nancy Edwards, Lawrence sophomore; Mary Phillips, Kansas City junior; Mary Geiger, Topeka sophomore, and Constance Crum, Manhattan freshman, and (bottom row) Jo Anne Hetzke, Lawrence freshman; Patricia Goering, Moundridge freshman; Catherine Bergstrom, Topeka sophomore; Jackie Garland, Lawrence freshman; Norma Sharp, Arkansas City junior, and Jo Anne Woster, Mission junior. (Photo by Tom Moore)
Best Dressed Woman Competes In Glamour Magazine Contest
By Leta Cathcart (Society Editor)
With little previous experience, Kathy Stormont, Greenwich, Conn. junior, has become a contestant in a national fashion competition.
Miss Stormont is the KU candidate for Glamour's Best Dressed Girl contest. The choice was made on her poise, fashion sense, posture, grooming and ability to meet people.
31 candidates were first chosen from all women's living groups. The contestants were then narrowed down to ten.
AT THE FINAL fashion show,
Miss Stormont was selected to represent KU in the national contest. KU's contest was sponsored by AWS Fashion Board.
Engagements
Jane Schulz, Russell sophomore, Camma Phi Beta, to Charles Hurty, Wichita Junior, Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Jane Miller, Wichita freshman, to Donald Lueke, Mission senior.
Cindy Snyder, Bethesda, Md., junior, Hashinger, to Don Rea, North Kansas City, Mo., junior, Kappa Sigma.
Martha Ahrens, Topeka sophomore, Delta Gamma, to Ed Bachofer, Salina junior, Kappa Sigma.
The KU winner modeled for a short time in Pasadena, Calif. when she was in high school.
Miss Stormont modeled three outfits, one each for school, formal and church wear. An orange wool skirt, a striped blazer, and dark brown purse and shoes was the outfit Miss Stormont chose for school year.
For formal wear, Miss Stormont wore a black crepe cocktail dress with scoop neck and petal sectioned-over panels. Her accessories were black silk shoes and black gloves. To explain her version of church wear, Miss Stormont wore a navy blue suit, a white choir-boy blouse, with a small straw hat and white gloves.
ACCORDING TO Miss Stormont,
good clothes sense is innate. She said
most people know what colors are
compatible, but some are unable to
choose items in their wardrobe to
coordinate with other items.
After having won the KU contest, Fashion Board financed her application to Glamour Magazine's contest. The application consisted of three pictures, a personality profile, her campus activities, the basis for the KU contest and the publicity given the event.
Miss Stormont's pictures feature her in front of Dyche Hall, on the inside walkway of Murphy Hall and on the backstage of the University Theater in Murphy.
The selection of the Glamour semi-finalists is to be announced soon. Miss Stormont said. The 30 semi-finalists will be selected from girls from colleges and universities all over the United States.
TEN FINALISTS in the national competition will be chosen by the middle of May, Miss Stormont said. If Miss Stormont is one of the finalists, she will go to New York. She will be featured, with the other nine winners, in the fall issue of the magazine.
Despite her title of best dressed woman on campus, Miss Stormont belongs to the cult who wear sweatshirt and jeans. "My summer slacks are almost all levis," she said.
Miss Stormont does not fit the popular image of the fashionablydressed eastern co-ed forging her career in the stimulating atmosphere of New York City.
Pinnings
Susan Schrader, Kinsley senior,
Alpha Chi Omega, to Byron London,
Kansas City, Mo. junior, Delta Tau
Delta.
Nancy Andrews, Mission freshman at Stephen College, Columbia, Mo. to John Chambliss, Mission sophomore, Sigma Nu.
Eleventh Annual
INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL
Saturday, April 18
and After the Show Program — 7:30 p.m.
Exhibits 6:00 p.m.
Plus
INTERNATIONAL BEAUTY QUEEN CONTEST
Trophies for the prize exhibit and program skit
Hoch Auditorium
Admission Free
Theme: "Hand-in-hand Around the World"
I
KU,- MEET JAZZ...
ALL DAY SATURDAY APRIL 25
The Oread Jazz Festival is one of the biggest events to ever take place on the KU campus!
★ Woody Herman and his "Swingin' Herd" __ in concert. . . .
12 collegiate jazz groups (including two former winners of the Notre Dame Jazz Festival) competing for such awards as
- a playing tour of Europe
- instruments to best musicians
- scholarships
- stereo phonograph
- records
- and many more
ALL DAY FOR $1.50
Tickets on sale Monday at information booth
Friday, April 17, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
THE BEST RELAY ENDS AT THE STABLES
THE STABLES
7UP
J.M.
Why? Because The Stables offers a casual atmosphere with fun and hilarity. Come out before, during, or after the Relays. Enjoy food, drink, and song with half of the KU student body. Do your part in upholding The Stables Relay Party tradition.
THE STABLES
1401 W. 7th
VI 3-9644
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 17, 1964
WELCOME TO THE 39th
BROADWAY
ACACIA
ALPHA KAPPA LAMBDA
ALPHA TAU OMEGA
FORT ANNIE
DELTA SIGMA PHI
THE BOSTON CAFE
DELTA TAU DELTA
DELTA UPSILON
PHI KAPPA TAU
10200
PHI KAPPA THETA
THE HISTORY OF MIDDLEBORO, IN 1905
PI KAPPA ALPHA
UNIVERSITY OF KAI
---
1.
Friday, April 17, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
ANNUAL KU RELAYS
THETA CHI
1950
SIGMA NU
HILTON HILLS
PHI KAPPA PSI
KAPPA ALPHA PSI
KAPPA SIGMA
The image is too blurry to accurately recognize any text.
FRESNO
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA
SINCE 1950
TAU KAPPA EPSILON
I will not be able to provide a detailed description of the image without it.
TRIANGLE
THORNTON
PHI GAMMA DELTA
ISAS FRATERNITIES
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 17, 1964
The Following Drug Stores Support The 39th Annual Kansas Relays
Cooper Walgren Agency Drug Store 847 Mass. VI3-4516
Key Rexall Drugs Malls Shopping Center VI 3-3771
Medical Arts Pharmacy 4th & Maine VI 3-4160
Alf T. H. Oleson Pharmacy 101 W. 10th, EUDORA KI 2-2533
Raney Downtown Drug Store 909 Mass. VI 3-3521
Raney Hillcrest Drug Store Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-9012
Raney Plaza Drug Store Dillon's Plaza VI 3-0684
Rankin Drug Company 1101 Mass. VI3-5440
Round Corner Drug Store 801 Mass. VI3-0200
Van's Prescription Shop 105 E.8th VI3-4044
For Reputable Pharmaceuticals, Visit These Fine Stores Throughout The Year
K
Page 11
KU Humor Magazine Emerges
University Daily Kansan
By Susan Flood
After several years absence from the campus, a campus humor magazine will make its appearance in May.
'The Bird' will be published by an independent corporation called 'The Bird Publishing Company.'
Stockholders in the company are Thomas Woods, Arkansas City junior; John Oakson, Leawood senior; Clark Ellis, Wichita senior; Phil Cooper, Prairie Village senior, and William Bradbury, Shawnee Mission junior.
"The first issue will of course spell out the Bird philosophy," Woods said. "In addition we will have 'The Bird' awards for outstanding endeavors or character, 'The Bird' advises on areas of utmost importance, and 'A Day With...'"
"WE HOPE TO have 'The Bird' ready to glorify student life by May 4," Woods said. "The price of 40 cents is minimal for the dividends to be derived from reading 'The Bird.'"
Woods said he would not reveal all the contents but did give a few hints as to material in 'The Bird.'
"Not to be outdone by the Jayhawker, we will have several 'Hillfloppers,' and to help the 'Bird' readers we will have a 'Student Aids Department' featuring sample tests."
WOODS ALSO SAID an advertisement in 'The Bird' would promote a kit to "help professors write their own textbooks."
Woods said they had received several letters expressing "grave concern" over 'The Bird' and that these would be "duly answered" in the first issue.
The ASC gave permission to The Bird Publishing Company to distribute the publication on campus and in University living districts.
The Bird Publishing Company will be responsible for all financial losses or gains, however.
Writers for the first issue of 'The Bird' are Tom Tatlock, Wichita senior; Don Eversmeyer, Wright City, Mo., senior, and John Middleton, Kansas City, Mo., senior.
Cartoons are by Thomas Eaton, a former KU student and cartoonist for the Kansan and Jayhawker who is presently in the army and stationed at San Antonio, Tex.
THE COVER, which features a caricature of a Jayhawker, was designed by William Gamm, Lawrence senior. Art work is by Larry Seidl, Lawrence senior, and photography by Russ LaVigne, Lawrence freshman.
"Some of us will be around next year and we plan to make 'The Bird' a quarterly publication," Woods said.
Friday, April 17, 1964
Reds Said Caught In 'Peace Paradox'
"Neither Marx nor Engles favored a rigid doctrinaire method in practical politics. They described their doctrine as an 'open' theory, adaptable in the course of experience," he said.
The compatability of communism, orthodox and revised, with the prospect of international peace and order was examined last night by Errol E. Harris, Professor of Philosophy, continuing his lectures on the philosophy of war and peace.
"Lenin maintained that Marxism should not be regarded as something
Barring the possibility of world revolution, orthodox Marxists say war is the inevitable prelude to international communism, Prof. Harris said.
BUT ORTHODOX Marxism is out of date, the professor said. Times have changed and with them communist thinking is also changing.
Lenin maintained that between states of opposing ideology the ultimate relation is inevitable conflict, he added.
completed and inviolable. Nevertheless . . . any change has somehow to be demonstrated as flowing from the underlying economic necessity of class conflict if it is not to be castigated as heresy."
ALTHOUGH SOVIET legal theorists did their best to evolve a notion of international law in accordance with Marxist theory, this has proved difficult, the professor continued, because Marx said law is an adjunct of the state and thus all law is devised in the interests of some class, enabling it to retain control of the means of production.
"BUT INTERNATIONAL law is not imposed by one class upon another, but ostensibly expresses a common interest among states," he said.
"We have seen that international law is not law in the proper sense and is largely an ideology, but its basis is not the economic relations between classes, as the Marxian doctrine ought to maintain. It is the power relations between sovereign states."
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Friday. April 17, 1964
The Following Lawrence
"Merchants of Good Grooming
"
Welcome You To The
RELAYS
CORRECTED TEXT
The well-groomed students of KU are as much a tradition as the relays themselves. These established merchants take pride in the fine courteous service they offer to students, faculty, and townspeople. Drop in soon and see for yourself.
HAIR CUTTING
Eldridge Hotel Barber Shop
Free Parking Lot
PRINCETONS AND FLATTOPS
Open 8-5:30 Close Saturday Noon
VI 3-0821
Plaza Barber
Shop
"Lawrence's Newest With All The Latest Equipment & Services" PLENTY OF FREE PARKING 1804 Dillons Plaza
Hair Creations By Beauty Services George Corn's
"AT THE CAMPUS"
CAMPUS BEAUTY
SHOPPE
VI 3-3034
1144 Indiana
CORN'S STUDIO OF BEAUTY "DOWNTOWN"
VI 3-4666
23 W. 9th St.
HOUKS BARBER SHOP
"Serving the Campus and Downtown Since 1912"
DOWNTWON CLOSE TO EVERYTHING is the
2 Barbers 924 Mass.
JAYHAWK BARBER SHOP
2 Barbers 727 Mass.
20
Blane & Jesse's
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Open Late Every Week Night 4 Convenient Locations
Malls Shopping Center ... Ph. VI 2-1144
Hillcrest Shopping Center Ph. VI 2-1978
Hillcrest Shopping Center ------------ Ph. V12-1978
Dillon Plaza ------------ Ph. V12-3114
Dillon Plaza ... Ph. VI 2-3114
Downtown, 940 Mass. Ph. VI 2-1946
"Where The Students Go"
5 BARBERS
No Long Waits
Good Princetons and Flattops
North of Student Union
Campus Barber Shop
Hillcrest Barber Shop
"In the center of activity at Hillcrest Shopping Center"
Free Parking Space Galore
5 BARBERS
Open 8-6 Tuesday thru Friday
Open Saturday 8-5
Cut 'n' Curl VI3-5569 843 N.H.
Betty Rose Pickett, Owner
Barbara Espy Stylist Janice Shimel
In The Malls Shopping Center It's
STADIUM BARBER SHOP 4 Chairs All Styles Joe - Don - Jack - Chuck
Page 13
Friday, April 17, 1964
kim NOVAK jack LEMMON Fred ASTAIRE Have you heard the one about...THE NATURIOUS LANDIADY
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Plus Cartoon
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38 Years of Integrity
VI 3-2355
Kansas Union to Miss $100,000 Because of Ban on Cigarettes
By Nancy Schroeter
Smokers aren't the only ones who will feel the effects of a ban on the sale of cigarettes on the KU campus.
Frank Burge, director of the Kansas Union, said yesterday sales of cigarettes gave the Union a gross revenue of about $100,000 a year.
"Obviously, there will be a loss in revenue," Burge said.
Two other effects of the ban have been increased off-campus sales and increased "bumming" of cigarettes.
"IN MY JUDGMENT, the services being performed at the concession and information counter are essential to the operation of the Union and it is my sincere hope it will not be necessary to curtail them."
Fever since Wednesday cigarettes
When asked what could happen to the services, Burge said, "We are studying very carefully the entire matter of sales and services and shall continue to do so."
have not been sold on campus in accordance with a Kansas State Board of Regents ruling that cigarettes will not be sold on university property.
Several students felt that the banning of cigarettes will make no difference in the amount of smoking done by students.
Students are beginning to buy by the carton instead of the pack since the cigarettes ban was put into effect.
"I think it is silly because it's going to be an inconvenience for the students rather than a curb on-moking," non-smoker Stan Morris, Yates Center freshman, said.
ONE STUDENT felt that the lack of cigarettes easily available on campus will help her to stop smoking.
MOST FACULTY MEMBERS who were asked about the cigarette ban felt it was a good thing although the majority of them did not smoke cigarettes if they smoked at all.
"I just don't have enough will power and maybe this will help." Martha Novak, Kansas City sophomore, said.
"I think it is grossly unfair and to me it is just another instance where officials are trying to decide what the students should do." Wesley Drever Garnett senior and a
cigarette smoker, said.
Businesses close to campus have noticed an increase in cigarette sales. The recent increase in taxes on cigarettes has caused the businesses to raise their price. Cigarettes sold over the counter now cost 30 cents and machine prices have gone up to 35 cents a package.
Merchants in the city of Lawrence also expect to do more business, although it is too early to tell exactly how great the increase will be, these merchants say.
Cigarettes will not be sold in the stadium. Students, as well as visitors at the KU Relays, will be unable to buy cigarettes.
Spring is finally here. Have all your sports clothes cleaned so that you will be ready for all the springtime activities
springtime activities.
WILLIAMS BOWLING
FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S
Independent DRIVE-IN
900 Miss.
DOWNTOWN PLANT
740 Vt.
Independent
LAUNDRY AND
DRY CLEANERS
9th and Mississippi
Independent
LAUNDRY AND
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K
Page 14
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 17, 1964
Get A Date And Bring Her To The
4
44
44TH ANNUAL
UNIVERSITY ENGINEERING
UNIVERSITY OF KANSA5 ENGINEERING EXPOSITION
"Process for Progress"
FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1964 12 noon to 9 p.m.
SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 1964 9 a.m. to 12 noon
SEE
1) A 2,000 lb. machine fly without wings 2) Nuclear Reactor in action
EXPOSITION ADMISSION FREE NEW ENGINEERING BUILDING
ENGINEERING AWARDS BANQUET
7:00 P.M. SATURDAY STUDENT UNION
Classified Ads
FOR SALE
1962 Norton 650 c.c. cycles. Good condi-
tion. Fully functional pistons. Call VI 2-9100, Room 943, 4-22
1960 Olds convertible, Dynamic 88. Power steering and brakes, whitewalls, radio,
heater. Excellent condition. $1,400. Call VI 3-7017. 4-22
Two purebred German Shepherd pups
10 weeks old. $15 each. CALL
3-5681. 4-21
Four Navy officer's white dress uniforms,
size 38. Never been used. Call VI 31-421
3-421
Continuing our book and print sale with about 1,000 added volumes. Come over and browse now to 10. Monday thru Saturday. 1539 Tenn., behind ATD 4-21
1956 Chevy 4 door hard top. V-8 mechanical. Radio, heater, good mechanical condition. Needs body work. $350. Call VI 2-4428, 5:30-7 p.m. C-421
1960 Jaguar 3.4 sedan. Auto transmission, air conditioned. Fine wood and leather interior. $2185. Owner going to Europe for summer. CALL VI 3-875 anytime. 4-21
1959 Jaguar X-15-750 Roadster. $1600 or trade for late model VW. Call VI 3-6806 or see at building 13-6 Stouffer after 5 p.m.
4-17
English bike in brand new condition. 3
Bike with 2 speed derailer.
Call VV 3-110. 4-21
1945 thru 56 322 Builc engine, 1949 thru 53 flat head V-8 Ford engine. Both in very good condition, 1949 thru 54 Chevy standard trans. 1949 thru 54 Honda other food use parts. Benson's Auto Salvage, 1902 Harper. Phone VI 3-1626. Open evenings. 4-21
3-bedroom house on cul de sac, ceramic tile kitchen & bathroom, oak floors, sliding glass doors, full basement with shelter, attached garage, large fenced yard with many trees lovely walkway, walking stairs, K.U. elem school. Prefer August possession date. No special assessments. $16,500. Phone VI 2-0005 to 9:00 p.m. tt
Shortwave communications receiver — excellent for shortwave listeners of amateur, stationary, "S" meter inside whip and outside wire antenna. Cell VI 3-245 after 5. 4-21
RISK'S
Shirt Finishing Laundry
Wash & Fluff Dry
613 Vt. VL 2414
Milliken's SOS
"the best professional service"
- Notary public
- General typing service
- 24 hr. answering service
1021 $ _{1/2} $ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
616 W. 9th
JOE'S BAKERY
Hot doughnuts—sandwich
cold drink
25c delivery
VI 3-4720
GB
Recording Service and Party Music
Recordings Available
of
— Spring Sing
— Rock Chalk Revue
Greek Week Sing
1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780
1960 Rambler 6. Custom 4 dr. air-conditioned, tinted glass, overdrive, individually adjustable reclining seats with headrests, motorized counter neat new white-wall nylon tires. Excellent condition throughout. See at 1514 Tennessee after 5. 4-21
Walnut antique organ and commode.
Bellwood tombstone to be installed.
Call Vi 3-2402, 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
4-27
STUDENTS
50 h.p. engine on 15 ft. boat with trailer.
accessories. Call VI 3-5229 after 4-21
p.m.
1951 Chevie 4 door. Very clean and
clean. 12-1802 or 4-211
at 645 Chevie after 5 p.m.
1964 model RCA 21" color TV. Guaranteed. Less than 2 months old. Very reasonable. Call VI 3-4635. 4-21
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
Mobile home for sale; 1959 Prairie Schooner, 10' x 36' 2 bedroom, new washer and air conditioner. Call VI 2-3098.
Violin, complete with case and key,
Valued at $200. Sell for only $145. Call
S 4108 in Lawrence or Karsan.
John Brewer, 321 S. Oak, Ottawa, W-
Johns. 4-21
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Student will sell all guns in collection.
45 auto's, Lugers, 38 revolvers, miniature automatics, Roger "22" s., 410 double rifles, and 496 magazines.
22 lever action. While they last! 22 LR,
$6.50 per carton. Call VI 3-1110 after 6 p.m.
4-23
Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing
Bicycle weather ahead! Rent or buy a 3 speed Royce Union, $15 per month, 1 month minimum rental. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 4-22
Typewriters, new and used portables.
Television equipment, mail and
Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter, adder, rennals and serv-
ence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St.
VI 3-5444.
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME
WHEELS. Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale
at great savings after 6 p.m. week days.
saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut.
st.
7 a.m.-11 p.m
PAGE CREIGHTON
new shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
ream- $85. Lawrence Outdoor.
005 Mass
Surprise your roommate with a cake on that special occasion. The K.U. Birthday card contains the student body a line of cakes. Free delivery and 4-24 Call VI 2-1791.
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta XII Western civilization note; all clearly rewritten, extremely comprehensive, nimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
for Fuller Brush Products phone VI 5-
9040 after 5 p.m. tf
--experienced secretary would like typing for home. Reasonable rates. Call Vl 1188
1012
When Hallmark
Plans a Party,
you receive
the compliments
Hallmark
PLANS-A-PARTY
BULLOCK'S
- Parker Pens
4 E. 7th
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
VI 3-2261
FOR RENT
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
- Parker Pens
- Stationery
- Printing
★ TUNE-UPS
Farm house for summer months. Call VI
2-1255 after 6 p.m.
4-21
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
Page 15
9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897
ART'S TEXACO
Two single rooms, extra nice for 2 adult men or two ladies. $1 block from campus, West Hills. Share large bathroom, outdoor pool, WiFi. Phone available. Air conditioned. Prey someone who will stay next fall. Call VI-3-3077.
A large room, private half-bath and shower. Kitchen privileges available. Basket access. Restaurant. Mississippi. Recently remodeled and cooled for summer. Call VI 2-0289-41
Large, homey, attractively furnished, 4 room apartment. Kitchen built-ins and garbage disposal. Utilities paid except electricity. Call VI 3-7677. tf
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.
Single or double room. Furnished, cook-
ing area and kitchen paid. Call
2-9451 or see at 1244 La.
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 apart-
ment. 25th and Redbud.
Phone VI 2-3711.
Term paper or thesis typed to your
author. Accepted by Sage. Satish
guaranteed. VI 3-1029.
4-29
TYPING
Fast, accurate work done ↵ electric rates. Call Bet Vincent, VI 3-5504.
Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term and thesis, etc. Access work stands and rates. Phone VI 3-8379. Mrs. Charles Patti.
Accurate expert typist would like typing in her home. Service papers and theses.
Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651.
KERBY'S DEPENDABLE STATION
- 'Vett headquarters
Mobilqas
- Specialists in all makes & models including sports cars "We'll pick up your car and deliver it FREE on any service call."
Wheel Bal. - Oil - Wash- Lube
VI 3-9608 9th & Ky.
MAKE YOUR NEXT MOVE
Crescent Heights
Completed Swimming Pool
CALL VI 2-3711
Mgr's Office, 2428 Redbud, Apt. D
New Luxury Addition
Opening This Summer . .
THE OAKS
HAVING A PARTY?
Crescent Heights Apts. Mgr.
Swimming Pool
★1 Bedroom
Friday, April 17, 1964
We are always happy to serve you with
FOR INFORMATION CONTACT
Ice cold beverages
Chips, nuts, cookies
Variety of grocery items
Experienced typist, with electric, typewriter—fast accurate work with reason- sentations and papers, themes, distortions and telephons, phone VI 3-7682 Mrs. Frank Gibson. tf
Crushed ice, candy
Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds
Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. **tt**
OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
Experienced typist for thesis and term paper. Send resume to Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0588.
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, Vol I: 3-7485. tf
616 Vt.
Ph. VI 3-0350
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon printer. VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Mariage) Hilegny. 408 West 13th. tt
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
Attorney will do typing in legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577.
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typerwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, and research papers. Electric Typewriter, Mrs. M. Eldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568. tft
MILIKENLS SOS—always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines
tape to tape transcription. Office hours—7 a.m. to 12 p.m. i—0124%! Make
Phone VI 3-5920
BUSINESS SERVICES
U-Call, we haul. Anything, anytime. Vi
3-5888.
Dressmaking-alterations, formalis
ainted gowns. Ola Smith, 939%11 Mass
date 12/23
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
University Daily Kansan
L&M CAFE now under new management
we are open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
on Sundays and from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
loving lunches, dinners, and sandwiches
Your second cup of coffee always free
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
The Catecombs nite club and Pizza Dawn Cafe. Modes' Investment. Ideal why 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.
Out-of-state students; Earn extra money by setting up distributorships for a national known product in your home address. Call now and arrange 2-2089 or VI 3-9515 now and arrange for an interview. Call now and be the first to cover your home area. 4-21
MISCELLANEOUS
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. tt
Have a party in the Big Red School
room and floor and plant.
Heated. Call VI 3-7455.
HELP WANTED
WANTED
Girl to play electric organ part-time.
Call VI 3-4743.
Opportunity for male keyboard musician interested in sales demonstrations. Write detailed description of type of instrument and availability, to University Daily Kansan, Box 10. 4-23
Washing and ironing in my home. $6 per bushel for washing and ironing. $3 per bushel for ironing only. Bring to 1514 Lindenwood Lane. 4-21
VOLKSAGEN' WANTED. Cash for your VW. Conzelman Motors, VW Sales, Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway 59 So.
April 26,1964
International Banquet April 26.1964
6:00 p.m.
Union Ballroom
Non-Member Tickets
$2.50
Union Information Desk
* * *
Member Tickets
$1.75
International Club Office
TIME
GREAT
SAUNTERING
SLACKS
From a slow loiter to a sandlot run, these lean-tailored stacks move comfortably wherever you go. Many masculine shades, tailored from handsome, durable 65% "Dacron"* polyester 65% ombed cotton, the proven performance blend. *DuPont Resin*, M. Ernest E. Fletcher
EU
CaPER Casuals
SMITH BROTHERS MANUFACTURING COMPANY CARTHAGE, MQ
Page 16
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 17, 1964
WELCOME ALUMS
SUPPORT A GROWING KANSAS UNIVERSITY
Norris Brothers Inc.
1515 W. 6th VI 3-6911
Plumbing-Heating-Air Conditioning Electrical
Lawrence Ready Mix "Quality Concrete"
430 Maple VI 3-1688
Logan-Moore Lumber Co.
"Quality Service and Satisfaction"
Kiln Dried Lumber
1011 North 3rd VI 3-0931
BUD JENNINGS CARPETS AND DRAPERIES
JAN McCULLOUGH 1007 Mass.
KENNETH "BUD" JENNINGS VI 3-9090
Lawrence Construction Co., Inc.
- General Construction
- Remodeling
- Residential
- Asphalt Patching Driveways and Parking Areas
FRANK O. RALEY 540 W.23rd
HERB WEIDENSAUL VI3-0777
Ramsey's Decorating Service
Wall Paper, Paints, Venetian Blinds, Window Shades, Awnings, Combination Storms, Ceramic Tile, Carpet, Counter Tops, and Floor Covering Phone VI 3-4075 818 Mass.
Everly
Roofing and Heating Air Conditioning
2200 East 23rd VI 3-3433
Modern Gas, Inc.
506 East 23rd VI 3-4655
Wilson Glass Company
512 E. 9th VI 3-6136
K. K. Hammig
Sheet Metal and Furnaces
Air Conditioning
VI 3-1361 1011 Mass.
Number 6 Service
Tom O. Akin Enterprise
West 23rd St.at 59 Hiway VI 3-9812
Building for a BETTER LAWRENCE and a BETTER KANSAS UNIVERSITY!
Apathy Impedes State Constitutional Revision
By Roy Miller Assistant Managing Editor
Often overlooked because of the persisting image that has cowboys and Indians and buffaloes roaming the wide open spaces of the state, Kansas has not been unwilling to experiment politically.
The state led in the development of the legislative council as a means for improving legislation. It was one of the leaders in the use of cash-basis budgeting as a requirement for local governmental units.
The Kansas Industrial Court, outlawed by the U.S. Supreme Court, was designed as a device for settling labor-management problems.
BUT, DESPITE THESE and other pioneering efforts in government and politics, Kansas is operating in the Space Age under a constitution that was drafted in—and has not been altered substantially since-1859.
There are persons who feels the constitution restricts the state's functioning and should be revised. Others feel the constitution has stood the test of time and needs no over-all revision.
And, basic to the presentation of argument for and against revision—either limited or unlimited . . . by amendment or constitutional convention—is the fact that there is no widespread interest either way.
The constitution of the state of Kansas, known as the Wyandotte Constitution, was adopted July 29, 1859. Its ordinance, preamble, 20-part Bill of Rights and 15 articles comprise a constitution of about 8,000 words.
AS STATE CONSTITUTIONS go, that of Kansas is relatively short. Only six other states have shorter constitutions.
And, as state constitutions go, Kansas' is relatively old. Only 12 states have older constitutions. Twenty-three of the states in the Union when Kansas gained statehood have adopted new constitutions.
Article 14 of the Kansas Constitution provides for constitutional changes by amendment or constitutional convention.
Propositions for amendments first need two-thirds approval of each house. If approved by the Legislature, the propositions then are submitted to the electorate and become part of the constitution upon approval of a majority of the voters.
NO MORE THAN three amendments may be submitted to voters at any one election.
The section of Article 14 on the calling of a convention "to revise, amend or change this constitution" states that two-thirds approval of the question is needed in each house of the Legislature.
Upon legislators' approval, the question goes to voters at the next general election. If a majority of the persons "voting at such election shall have voted for a convention, the Legislature shall, at the next session, provide for calling the same."
Kansans have voted on 71 proposals to amend the constitution. Forty-nine of these propositions have been approved. Three additional amendments will be submitted for voters' approval at the general election this November.
The late Mrs. Frances Sanford Nelson, author of "Constitutional Change in Kansas," a pamphlet published in 1958 by the KU Governmental Research Center, wrote:
"OF THE . . AMENDMENTS which have been adopted, only a handful would seem to represent necessary changes in, or additions to, fundamental law.
"Considering the social, historical and technological changes which have occurred, there can hardly be objection to terming 'fundamental' the amendments which established and repealed prohibition; gave the governor an item veto; gave women the vote; provided for the recall of public officers; permitted a progressive income tax; established a civil service and a modern highway system.
★
★
★
★
Redistricting Eliminates 'Deadlock'
Now that the Kansas Legislative Reapportionment Act of 1964 has been upheld by the Supreme Court, the chances of increased revision of the Kansas Constitution seem somewhat increased.
One person who subscribes to this theory is James W. Drury, professor of political science and one who has written on and teaches the subject of revision of the state constitution.
"I think a better apportionment of the Legislature will make it more possible for revision of the constitution," Prof. Drury said, "for now there won't be this business of deadlock on reapportionment."
DRURY IS QUICK to add. however, that the chances of an intensified movement for revision remain remote.
"I think the people of the state of Kansas, by and large, are pleased with their constitution," he said.
"The primary thing is that you have to get the support of a significant segment of people knowledgeable on this sort of thing and who are in a position of political leadership.
"Somewhere along the line, you're going to have to have political party organizations take a stand.
"I JUST CAN'T be encouraged on the possibility of it." Drury continued. "I just don't see revision of the constitution on the horizon in Kansas.
"We've done things piecemeal, so I just don't see a break in past performance now for revision."
Reapportionment is expected to give urban areas greater representation in the Legislature. This is the reason proponents of constitutional revision may derive some satisfaction as rural interests generally have been opposed to revision efforts.
And, too, as Prof. Drury pointed out, reapportionment could guarantee fairer representation of the state in a constitutional convention, should one ever be called. Members to the convention would be named by the Legislature.
BUT, JUST AS a solution to the unequitable representation problem has eliminated a "deadlock," it also may have removed the
Prof. Drury and James E. Titus, associate professor of political science, wrote in a KU Governmental Research Center publication in 1960:
chief motivation of some who advocate revision.
"On the state level . . . the present methods of reapportionment have shown their inadequacy for achieving even a tolerable conformance with our democratic ideal.
"Probably this in itself is the best single argument for changing substantially the constitutional provisions on reapportionment. In turn, failure to arrive at acceptable answers on how to reapportion stands as an almost insurmountable obstacle to constitutional change."
And Drury said in a textbook, ("The Government of Kansas," published by the University of Kansas Press) in 1961:
"Indeed, it seems almost as if major reapportionment is to come only through constitutional revision and constitutional revision only after reapportionment."
-Roy Miller
"It would seem, however, that if the constitution genuinely represented fundamental law and were flexible enough to permit change as society changes, the greater number of the proposed amendments would not have been necessary. . .
"Moreover, most of the amendments are as restrictive as the parts of the constitution which made them necessary, setting up new areas in which further amendments will be necessary if legislators and governors are to be able to carry out the will of the people as that will changes."
SIXTY-SEVEN PROPOSALS for a constitutional convention have been introduced in the Kansas Legislature since its first session in 1861. Only twice, however, was such a proposition submitted to voters. There has been no convention.
In 1880, the proposal for a convention was defeated overwhelmingly, no county giving it majority support. In 1892, only 463 votes separated those for and against the calling of a convention.
William H. Cape, associate professor of political science, writing in "Constitutional Revision in Kansas," a 1958 publication of the KU Governmental Research Center, stated:
"Recent legislatures have considered proposals to call a convention to revise the constitution but the legislators and voters have generally shown little interest.
"THE DECISION AS to whether there is a need to 'modernize' the Wyandotte Constitution by a constitutional convention or by multiple amendments calls for a thorough study of the present document and of the proposed changes.
SECTION B
UNIVERSITY
Daily Hansan
Lawrence, Kansas
61st Year, No. 121
Friday, April 17, 1964
FRITZ CO. is OLDER than the KANSAS RELAYS (founded 1921) (founded 1923)
It has been a privilege to serve the Students and Faculty of KU throughout these 43 years.
Stop by and say "Howdy" Expert service by men with "KNOW HOW"
CITIES SERVICE
FRITZ CO.
8th & New Hampshire - VI 3-4321
Open Thursday 'til 8:30 p.m. DOWNTOWN -- NEAR EVERYTHING
CITIES SERVICE
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 17, 1964
April 17,1964
Dear Faculty and Students,
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Friday, April 17, 1964
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Ideological War Has Ups, Downs; No Winner
By Bruce W. Munn
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. — (UPI) — Nobody wins a propaganda war.
That is the consensus of diplomats whose concern since 1945 largely has been ideological warfare—the struggle for the minds of men.
The field of such a conflict expands and contracts; its goals are reached and new objectives set up; its aims telescope or divide themselves like amoeba in a never-constant kaleidoscope.
Thus, at any specific point, it is next to impossible to say definitely that anyone is winning the ideological war.
FOR MANY YEARS after World War II, it was a clear cut "good guys vs. bad guys" struggle between the United States and the Soviet Union. Now, the Communist side is split by the rift between Moscow and Peking, and the East-West conflict is further muddled by the question of Castro Cuba and infiltration efforts in Latin America.
French President Charles de Gaulle's go-it-alone attitude has created another target area for the major propaganda opponents. The development of the "nonaligned" segment, especially through the emergence of African countries, has widened the field.
Even in the NATO alliance, strong militarily but sharply divided politically, rebellion against U.S. leadership has created the need for expanded ideological efforts.
U. S. officials, approached for an opinion on which side is winning the ideological war, are reluctant to give a definite assessment. They remain confident that in the long run—perhaps over decades—the Communists must lose because of inherent weaknesses in their present system, if the United States and the rest of the "free world" remain militarily strong and reasonably united on political and economic fronts.
RUSSIAN OFFICIALS admit no ideological opposition. They remain steadfast to Marxist-Leninist insistence on the correctness of Communism as inevitably the only way for the world. But, as Russia's rift with Red China continues, Moscow's propagandists subtly give way on some political points much as they quietly dropped their insistence of past years that Russians invented "beisbol."
At the moment, the troubles besetting the Kremlin appear to
be offset and possibly exceeded
by the disarray of the free world
the free world. Moscow's debit sheet lists the Sino-Soviet split, a growing desire in most Eastern European satellites to try to increase their relations with the West, the graphic evidence that Communism has failed to solve its agricultural problems and many of its industrial headaches—and a demonstrable lack of success in newly-independent Africa.
Washington is concerned about the split between the United States and its European allies about the question of trade with Communist countries, particularly Cuba, the schism with De Gaulle, the failure of many underdeveloped countries to create political stability in which to use lavish U.S. aid, and an indifference to the American campaign to save Southeast Asia.
From this global balance sheet, it would appear that nobody is decisively ahead on points in the ideological war.
BUT DIPLOMATIC ANALYSES of individual trouble spots would indicate that U.S. officials should take into account that in some particularly sensitive areas, they are losing ground which might prove in the long run to have a great effect on the outcome of the struggle.
Analyses from key points in the world show that, in the opinion of veteran and qualified observers, the situation in various phases of the ideological war is as follows:
- Over-all balance: London observers feel that while Russia is losing in Europe, Africa and Asia, the United States has lost in France on many issues and in most of Europe on the Cuba question. Paris observers find more sympathy with the United States than with Russia, but declare that the ideology of neither "cuts much ice" there.
Latin America finds the U.S. effort more effective. Asia reports the United States ahead in most countries, especially since the Moscow-Peking split. Berlin reports that the United States can do very little wrong in Germany, where "the most effective propaganda machine would fail when confronted with the Berlin blockade and the Wall."
WASHINGTON'S MOST notable failure in Germany has been the lack of real effort to explain why the Berlin Wall has been tolerated.
- Africa: most of this continent.
which is more of an ideological battlefield than any other, remains uncommitted to either Moscow or Washington.
But there are other contestants in Africa, some friendly, some not: Britain and France in their former colonies, the Arabs, Israel, and—not least—Red China which pictures Russia as part of the same "white west" which for so long "enslaved" Africa's peoples.
There is no doubt that Communist influence has grown from virtually nothing when Africa began its rush to independence with Ghana in 1957 to that of a considerable force today.
BUT RUSSIA HAS had setbacks—in the Congo, in Guinea, in its program to educate African students in Moscow.
The United States has produced a running file of U.S. information Service (USIS) news, trips to America, aid, education and training. It has both suffered and gained from its alliance with former colonial powers. It has suffered from its civil rights problems at home. It has gained from the Peace Corps.
Africa is not one Africa, but several. Part is Arab, part is black. Part speaks Franch, part English, part Arabic. Part is radical, part conservative. Each has its own ideas, both some are in common; opposition to colonialism and a desire to develop.
Generally, the U.S. effort probably has been more successful with the present African leaders than with the youth, who are tasting education and are increasingly impatient for development and jobs and increasingly disenchanted with corruption where it exists. To them, the United States represents the status quo.
IT IS A tribute to Communist success that "capitalism" often equates in the African mind with "imperialism."
African diplomats at the United Nations say privately that their reluctance to oppose Russia here stems from a belief that they can count on the United States to "do what is right" but they are not sure what the Soviet Union will do.
They look to Washington for substantial aid—while insisting on their right to be non-aligned—but declare that if it is refused, while they might become "anti-west" they would not become "pro-Communist."
The recognized ranking danger in Africa is to allow the Commu-
Coed Just 'One of the (900) Boys'
MARIETTA, Ga.—(UPI)—Pretty Lucia Nelson, 19, is the only girl among more than 900 men attending Southern Tech here.
She is interested in electricity and electronics—and is being accepted as "one of the boys."
Students Aid Relays Work
During the weeks before the KU Relays, the Relays Committee has been doing the organizational work, planning the parade and selecting the queen.
The committee worked under the co-chairmanship of Robert Guenther, Augusta senior, and Bruce Hall, Coffeville senior.
Jeffery Baxter, Raytown. Mo., junior, and George Benson, El Dorado junior, office managers; William Flannagan, Scott C. junior, parade chairman; Gary Gradinger, Leawood junior, queen chairman, and Robert Winn, Leawood sophomore, publicity.
Other student committee chairmen are:
Some new plans to be tried this year are selling tickets in bloes to stimulate more student interest, and to try to make arrangements with Kansas City country clubs to facilitate sales, Bob Guenther, Relays Committee chairman, snid.
"We expect the entries this year to be outstanding, because it is an Olympic year," he said.
So far as the latter ambition is concerned, Miss Nelson believes she is making progress.
"I was at Georgia for a year and a half and had five French courses," she said. "I just couldn't face any more French lessons when there was so much else I wanted to do."
"Recently I was invited to join a fraternity," she said. "I guess I am just one of the fellows now."
One thing she wanted to do was study electronics, and she chose Southern Tech where she is majoring in electrical engineering, with an electronics option. Her other courses are mathematics, public speaking and human relations.
MISS NELSON, a native of Woodbine, Ga., entered Tech in January, transferring from the University of Georgia where she had been taking liberal arts courses.
Graduation will come two years from now. Miss Nelson hopes to work with radio, television or x-ray equipment.
She is not the first female student to attend Tech but is the first resident student. She does not live on campus, but in a private residence near the school.
WHILE OTHER GIRLS her age were playing with dolls, Lucia tinkered with wires and a soldering iron. In high school she built her own short wave radio set.
She eats breakfast and dinner with her landlady and takes her lunch which she eats with a group of Tech secretaries.
She also constructed an FM tuner and helped her older brother build a hi-fi amplifier.
"I am so outnumbered in class," she said, "I enjoy the female companionship during lunch hour."
MANY WESTERN diplomats and observers believe Washington downgraded the recent African visit by Chinese Premier Chou Enlai by pointing out that he made no large offers of aid and was not greeted by enthusiastic demonstrations.
These experts believe that United States missed the real significance of Chou's safari, which they contend was to lay the groundwork for China's efforts to gain control of the Communist movement in Africa when it achieves effective proportions.
Complete Radio Coverage
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KU Relays and the Relays Parade
- De Gaulle: There is general acceptance that the French leader's recognition of Red China, his veto of British membership in the Common Market, his rejection of European dependence on U.S. military might, his espousal of neutralization of Southeast Asia, have weakened the Western ideological position.
nists a foothold for the establishment of their mechanisms. When disenchantment comes, the Communists then have the power to hold down anti-Communism forcibly.
KLWN AM Dial 1320
His new offensive to win influence in Latin America is debatable and, among some diplomats, has ranked the question "is grandeur exportable?" alongside the question "is revolution exportable?"
EXPERTS IN ASIA, where the U.S. is conceded a great edge over Russia and China in the non-Communist areas, agree that De Gaulle's recognition of Peking "rocked the continent to the rafters."
But U.N. experts, while conceding that De Gaulle's action enhanced Communist China's chances of gaining a seat, feel certain that Peking will not replace Formosa in the world organization this year.
French economic and cultural influence in Africa is great. Its political influence will be measured by whether the former French colonies follow Paris' lead and vote to put Red China in the United Nations.
De Gaulle's advocacy of a neutral Southeast Asia has stirred up all the former French colonies in Indochina. But U.S. policy in Viet Nam generally is supported in Asia except in Cambodia and the Communist-controlled portions of Laos, North Korea and North Viet Nam. Neutralist countries such as Indonesia, India, Ceylon and Burma have passively objected to the U.S. effort in Viet Nam, but have not made a major issue of it.
Europe watches De Gaulle with interest. German opinion regards him as a menace to Western unity but his firm stand on West Berlin and his refusal to negotiate the issue of Germany with Moscow is applauded.
Latin America is inclined to regard him as a focal point for the independents. And there is wide recognition everywhere that he was the first to stand beside Washington when President Kennedy decided to make a do-or-die issue of Cuba.
- Cuba: U.S. policy on Cuba appears to be a bust. France and other European countries regard the U.S. embargo on trade with
Castro as useless, ineffective and unjustified, although they honor the embargo on strategic shipments to all Communists countries. Britain, whose bus deal outraged Washington, justifies its position with the contention that a "fat Communist" is less dangerous than a hungry one.
Britain supports the United States in the dispute, although London still rankles over Suez. Latin America thinks the canal treaty should be renegotiated. Asia, meaning mainly Japan, is not concerned as long as the waterway remains open to its ships.
- Latin America; While U.S. officials acknowledge that the Alliance for Progress has failed to catch fire in almost three years, they believe a good basis has been laid for eventual success and hemispheric solidarity.
- Latin America finds the trade embargo unwelcome, even though popularly endorsed. Except for Japan, which supports it, Asia couldn't care less.
- Panama: the U.S.-Panama dispute on the canal is pretty much of a bore to the rest of the world. Observers in France report "malicious glee" at Washington's plight after the U.S. opposition to the British-French-Iraeli attempt to take over the Suez Canal in 1956.
Latin Americans have a genuine fear, however, that hemispheric solidarity is seriously threatened. De Gaulle's "invasion" of the hemisphere also gives pause, but realistic Latin diplomats are asking how much the French leader is able to spend in this part of the world.
HOWEVER, U.S. OFFICIALS privately express extreme concern over whether the program inaugurated by President Kennedy will ever be able to achieve appreciable gains, since it counts on large private investment—both foreign and domestic—which is actually declining because of the trend toward nationalization in many Latin American countries.
Meantime, these officials report that whatever efforts countries south of the border may have made to prevent Castro-Communist infiltration, it has not lessened and may be increasing. The French have not been much moved by U.S. attempts to enroll them in the cause of Western Hemispheric solidarity against Communism. They have not forgotten that the United States politely snubbed De Gaulle's 1958 call for a worldwide policy-making directorate of the U.S., Britain and France. They see no reason why France should now help bail the United States out of its problems with the Communists.
In sum, the "big picture" of East-West ideological conflict currently seems blurred by an overlay of individual domestic problems.
The thermo-nuclear balance of terror has diminished in most minds the immediacy of an all-out war threat and in most countries—especially the underdeveloped and developing—the race appears not to the most powerful transmitters but to the capital that can offer most to relieve the everyday problems in the country concerned.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 17, 1964
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University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Omaha's Williams Leads Sprint Classic
Terry Williams learned to run hard as a lad of 10, chasing down his more fortunate neighborhood friends who owned bicycles.
"I always did like to run even when I wasn't chasing bicycles," Williams continues. "Just challenges among the neighborhood gang at different distances. There's where I really started. I came out of all that thinking. I was pretty fast."
He was . . . and is. he beat Rocket Roger (a brother of Gale Sayers) in OU's opening indoor dual this winter against Doane College. This means he equalled the American record. Unofficially he had a tie for about a month before Florida A & M's Bob Hayes scorched that :05.9 in the National AAU.
WILLIAMS ALSO OWNS a 100 victory over Sayers, clipping him in a dual against Washburn last spring. During the season he clicked off two : 69.5 centuries and one straightaway 220 as low as 20.8.
Williams was third in the NAIA 100 last year, but was knocked out of the 220 even before it started by jumping twice in the final. He ran second to Sayers in the CIC Indoor 60 last month and won the 300 in :31.2 after setting a record of :30.0 in the prelims.
He is certain to be a contender here when 100-yard dash finalists go to the post in the 39th Kansas Relays. Sayers barely lost this crown to Purdue's Nate Adams last year, but is ineligible for a repeat try since he is running his fourth year for Coach Lloyd Cardwell.
As usual the traffic will be thick. Adams, third in the NCAA 100 and 220 last year, is expected to defend his title. The early checklist shows such other luminaries as Houston's Boyd Timmons, fourth here last year, and his new teammate, Mike Spratt, plus a Big Eight gang of Rick Beldner, Missouri's Indoor 60 champion; Anthony Watson, Oklahoma; Dale Alexander, Kansas State, and Bob Henson, KU.
YOU GET THE idea from Cardwell, a three-time conference hurdles champion for Nebraska in the
OSU-NUSpat Spikes Relay
There's a mile relay feud boiling in the Big Eight Conference that is certain to claim a spectacular share of the spotlight when Midwest and Southwest spiked-shoe aces faceoff in the KU and Drake Relays.
The principals are Oklahoma State and Nebraska, seldom rivals in any sport until the Cowpokes were welcomed into the old Big Seven in 1957
The flame was lit at the outset of the past indoor season when the Huskers nudged the Waddies in a dual at Lincoln on a new track record of 3:21.5. OS clocked 3:22.8.
THE RESULT PROMPTED Poke boss Ralph Higgins to remark, "They won't ever beat us again."
This was tall talk about an opponent that showed such powers as veteran Gil Gebo and new soph sensation Dave Crook in its lineup. But that didn't bother Hig. He'd spat major mouthfuls before and, more often than not, backed them up with high performance from his teams.
The Waddies won the rematch at the conference games in Kansas City, coming within six-tenths of the league record in 3:18.2, as Nebraska clocked 3:21.
But the Huskers stung the Pokes in the Chicago Daily News meet in 3:18.1 after State anchorman Ray Bothwell went down in a leg-tangling collision with Crock in the bell lap. OS was fourth in a four-team field on 3:23.0, good considering Bothwell lost contact with the field after his fall.
TWO NIGHTS LATER in the National Federation at Milwaukee, the Cowboys pulled even again by edging Nebraska four-tenths on a 3:18.0.
Higgins long has been known to board his runners for an all-out effort in the mile relay, the climax-event of any cinder carnival.
mid-thirties, that the 5-11, 170-pound Williams can be as good as Sayers.
"He's a stronger boy," Lloyd points out. "His times were consistently better than Roger's as a freshman. We've had to work a lot on his starts.
"He was coming up straight as
soon as he left the blocks. Then he had a habit of diving for the tape when he got within three or four yards of it instead of running through. When he did this he quit using his arms.
"You quit running when you quit using your arms.
tance. We've run him in a lot of 500's and 440's this year. Yes, with experience he might be as good as Roger."
"Actually, the 220 is his best dis-
Right now Cardie is desperately searching for two more passable sprinters to fill out what could be formidable 440 and 880 relay quartets.
Awaits Swimming Pool
Gymnasium To Go Up in Phases
By Susan Flood
KU will have a new gymnasium within a few years, but it may have to wait awhile for a swimming pool.
The one-million dollars allocated for the new gymnasium will include only what one-million dollars can include, Henry Shenk, chairman of the physical education department. said.
"WELL BUILD AS many facilities into phase one of the new building as we can, but no one can say whether a pool can be covered," Prof. Shenk said.
Plans for phase one include at least two separate gymnasiums with two basketball courts in each one, gymnastic rooms, men's and women's dressing rooms and office and classrooms.
Phase one will take up at least one of the intramural fields but space has been allotted east of the
parking lot to level and plant several more playing fields.
"We'll still be in fine shape as far as intramurals stand," Prof. Shenk said. "Robinson annexes back of Malott will stand for quite awhile."
WHEN MORE MONEY is available, the second phase of the gymnasium will provide further facilities. There is no deadline set for start or completion of either phase. More instructors will be hired as enrollment increases dictate the need, Prof. Shenk said.
Keith Lawton, vice chancellor for operations, said both the need for expanded gymnasium facilities and the need for the space Robinson now occupies necessitate the building of the new gymnasium, even though the phase plan is not the most desirable.
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University Daily Kansan Friday, April 17, 1964
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Friday, April 17, 1964
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
OU OU
OU OU OU OU 24
PETER MORRIS
SOONER PERFORMERS—Led by Anthony Watson (far right), the performers from Oklahoma are expected to be here this weekend for the KU RELAYS.
OU
24
From left, they are John English, Preston Bagley, Mike Hewitt, Walt Mizell and Watson, a spinner and broad jumper who is considered an Olympics prospect.
Sayers' Spikes Still Flying in Memorial Stadium
Gale Sayers, who is best known for playing football in Memorial Stadium, will be competing in his first KU Relays here this weekend.
Sayers, KU's all-America half-back, is scheduled to compete in the low and high hurdles and the broad jump events.
Up to this year, it was frowned upon—to put it mildly—for football players to miss spring drills and participate in spring sports.
But, because of a change of policy in the athletic department, the players are being allowed to make themselves available for spring sports.
AND GAYLE SAVERS isn't the only football player who has taken
advantage of this change in policy
Steve Renko, Harley Catlin and Jim Shanks are members of the baseball team. Dave Crandall,
Lloyd Buzzi and Brian Schweda are competing in track.
PROBLEMS FOR SAYERS early in the season were getting into
"I didn't decide to go out for track because of the change," Sayers says. "I just decided to go out for track because I figured it would build up my speed."
After only a week's practice, Sayers placed fourth in the low hurdles in the Big Eight indoor meet in February. His first outdoor action came earlier this month in the Texas Relays at Austin.
shape and reviving the form that placed him in the national high school track spotlight as a senior.
Sayers' 24-10% leap as a senior at Omaha Central High School gave him the nation's best prep broad jump of the season.
The same year he ran the 120- yard high hurdles in :14.5, a time lower than the existing state record, and ran the 180-yard low hurdles in :19.7.
Savers, who led the nation in rushing most weeks last season, broke at least one record in every meet as a senior. In what he considers his best meet, he broke records in his three specialties and ran a leg of the record-
NOT ONLY DOES Galloping Gale think track will increase his speed, he also thinks it will help him be in better condition for football next fall.
breaking 880-yard relay team.
"I plan to work out all summer long," he says. "If I didn't go out for track, I'd probably have trouble getting myself to work."
"But, with track running into June anyway, it won't be any problem."
AND, IN CASE you're interested, here's Sayers' predictions for Jayhawker football in 1964:
"We should win 11 straight—10 on the schedule and the bowl game. We've got all the horses. "We're two deep in all positions, and in some positions three deep.
"Oklahoma should be tough again in the conference, but I don't see how we can lose. Syracuse will be a problem, too. They'll be tough because they've got a lot of boys back, too."
New Facilities, Events in Relays
The 39th Kansas Relays field will have an expanded card and improved facilities.
Meet Director Bill Easton has added one new event, the 400-meter dash in the open class, and three new events, the mile steeplechase, triple jump, and 330 intermediate hurdles, in the high school division.
"There is a good field available for this event." Easton explained in regard to addition of the open quarter, which never has been run here. "Too, it is an Olympic event and this is an Olympic year."
The three new prep events will be counterparts of three traditional open events. The triple jump, once included only on Olympic years, has been a fixture here since 1952. The steeplechase stretches over 2000 meters for university, college and post-grad contenders; the intermediate hurdles over 400 meters.
They, too, were added to the permanent card in 52. The three new schoolboy events also will be annual affairs.
"We are trying to offer Kansas high school distance men something to run in the spring," Easton said. "Cross country has grown tremendously in this state, plus the foot of the emphasis in this country is more and more toward Olympic events and the Kansas Relays always has offered collegians, and post-grads an opportunity to compete in these."
IT WILL BE an invitational affair, with a limit of six men. Invitations already have been issued to Earl Young, a former Olympian; Ray Sadler, Texas Southern; Charles Strong, four-time Big Eight champion from Oklahoma State, and Ollan Cassell, formerly of Houston. All have run close to 46.0 in open competition. All but Sadlier are post-grads.
into Memorial Stadium for Relays weekend.
Pole-vaulters and high-jumpers will draw an extra bonus with addition of foam-rubber pits which will replace the old sand-sawdust landing areas in these two events. Kansas used these pits during the Indoor season and will wheel both
The steeplechase water-jump already has been dredged and track resurfacing has begun.
Relays writers and broadcasters will be working out of the new Jay-hawker press box, a 97" x 20" concrete structure, for the first time. This was ready for the 1963 football season, but last year's earnival was covered in the old box amidst the confusion of stadium expansion.
BEST NEWS FOR competitors will be pouring of all-weather rubberized asphalt runways and take-offs for all four jumping events. Construction of the new surfaces was begun recently. Heavy rain formerly forced the leapers into swampy going, which grew progressively worse in every round.
Some of the eager scribes started dismantling the old box at the close of 1563.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 17, 1964
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KANSAS RELAYS ORDER OF EVENTS
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9:30—Quarter Mile Relay—High School—Preliminaries (Time Basis)
10:30—One Mile Relay—Junior College—Preliminaries
minimaries
10:45—One Mile Relay—Freshmen—Preliminaries
11:30—1500 Meter Run—Decathlon
FIELD EVENTS
9:15—Discus Throw—Decathlon
10:00—Pole Vault—Decathlon
10:00—Discus Throw—High School—Preliminaries—Finals
10:00—Triple Jump—High School—Preliminaries
—Finals
10. 45—Javelin—Decathlon
1:10—University of Kansas Band—Flag Raising Cerremony—R.O.T.C. Units
1:20—Presentation of Kansas Relays Queen Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe
TRACK EVENTS
1:30—120 Yard High Hurdles—University and College—Finals
1:35—Distance Medley Reloy (440-880-3/4-
Mile)—College—Finals
1:50—Distance Medley Relay (440-880-3/4-
Mile) —University—Finals
2:05—100 Yard Dash—University and College
-Finals
2:10—100-Yard Dash—Invitational—Girls—
Finals
2:15—Sprint Medley Relay (440-220-220-880)
—High School —Finals
2:20—Glenn Cunningham 1500 Meter Run— Open—Invitational five to six men— Finals
2:30—Quarter Mile Relay—High School—Finals
2:40----440 Yard Relay—Girls—Invitational Finals
2:50—Quarter Mile Relay—College—Finals
2:55—Quarter Mile Relay—University—Finals
3:00—Two Mile Relay—High School—Invitational—Finals
3. 25—Two Mile Relay—University—Finals
3:15—Two Mile Relay—College—Finals
3:35—Half Mile Relay—K.C., Mo. H.S.—Finals
3:45—Half Mile Relay—High School—Finals
3:55—Half Mile Relay—College—Finals
4:40—One Mile Relay—High School—Finals
4:00—Half Mile Relax—University—Finish
4:10—3000 Meter Steeplechase—Open—Finals
4:30—Steeplechase—1 Mile—H.S.—Finals
4:50—One Mile Relay—Junior College—Finals
5:00—One Mile Relay—Freshmen—Finals
5:20—One Mile Relay—University—Finals
5:10—One Mile Relay—College—Finals
FIELD EVENTS
5:10 One Mile Relay College Finals
1:00—Pole Vault—University and College—Preliminaries—Finals
1:30—Shot Put—University and College—Preliminaries—Finals
1:30—High Jump—University and College—Preliminaries & Finals
1:30—Hop, Step and Jump—Open—University and College—Preliminaries and Finals
2:30—Javelin Throw—University and College—Preliminaries—Finals
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University Daily Kansan Friday, April 17, 1964
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Page 13
Prison Exchange Policy Turned Tide in Civil War
United Press International
A few small holes in the Union offense and defense remained to be plugged up as April, 1864 came to a close and the Civil War equivalent of D-day approached.
From now on until it ended the war for the Union was to be one of attition as well as of offense. One way to cripple the Confederacy, Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, new commander of all the northern armies, decided, was to quit exchanging war prisoners.
Prisoner exchange in the Civil War was an on-again off-again affair. Sometimes prisoners were paroled on the spot when they signed up not to fight again until regularly exchanged. Grant had done that at Vicksburg, releasing the captured garrison rather then send them all the way north to prison camps. He believed, too, that many of them had enough of war and never would fight again.
BUT SOME OF the Confederate
Beginning of the End Awaits 1964 Seniors
May 22 will mark the beginning of the last set of final exams for many of the seniors of 64.
some of the graduates will enroll for graduate study, but most of them will have finished their formal education June 1, commencement day.
For all, this has meant passing the English proficiency and fulfilling the foreign language requirements.
STARTING WITH THE Relays today, there are many activities which will keep seniors and undergraduates busy until the end of the semester. They are:
April 17 Kansas Relays. Engineering Exposition Baseball, Colorado, there.
18 Kansas Relays.
International Festival.
Engineering Exposition.
Baseball, Colorado,
there.
Law School Admission Test
22 & 23 Speech I Potpourri,
University Theatre,
"Period of Adjustment."
24 "Period of Adjustment."
Baseball, Oklahoma - there.
25 SUA Jazz Festival.
Graduate Record Exams.
"Period of Adjustment."
Baseball, Oklahoma,
there.
French Ph.D. Reading Exam.
26 University Chorus Symphony Concert Museum of Art Exhibition Opening.
27 Accountants Day.
30 Bobby Fischer, world's chess champion.
Delta Sigma Rho Public Affairs Speaking Contest
May 1 Baseball, Iowa State,
here.
Model UN.
NDEA Loan Application deadline for summer session.
2 Baseball, Iowa State,
here.
College Board Exams.
Cervantes Day.
German Ph.D. Reading
Exam.
Victor DuBois, expert
on former French areas
of West Africa, American
Universities Field
Staff Speaker.
Model UM
3 Symposium of Contemporary American Music
4 AWS Honors Night. Symposium of Contemporary American
5 Symposium of Contemporary American music
18 Law School semester exams begin.
8 ROTC Chancellor's Review Baseball, Oklahoma State, there
17 Pops Concert.
Drama Symposium.
Baseball, Nebraska,
there.
Western Civilization Exam.
19 Baseball, Kansas State here
9 Kansan Board Dinner.
Baseball, Oklahoma
State, there.
Language Proficiency
Exam.
20 Baseball, Kansas State,
here.
10 Band Concert.
16 Big Eight Outdoor Championships in track, golf, tennis, Oklahoma State.
22-28 Final Exams.
14 Drama Symposium.
15 Drama Symposium.
parolees were captured in the fighting around Chattanooga without having been exchanged.
That turned the wrath of the North against Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton and he prohibited any more paroles.
June 1 Commencement. Joint ROTC Commissioning. NDEA Loan Application deadline for 1964-65
15 Drama Symposium.
Baseball, Nebraska,
there.
land, Mai, Gen. Alfred Pleasanton who had been commanding the cavalry was sent to Missouri.
Sheridan arrived in Washington on April 4. Grant was the only officer he knew in the capital and their acquaintance had been short.
He went to see Stanton and "I could feel that (he) was eyeing me closely and searchingly, endeavoring to form some estimate about one he knew absolutely nothing . . ." Sheridan wrote 24 years later.
Summer enrollment and classes in the School of Law begin June 2. Summer enrollment in the other schools is June 5-6. Classes begin June 8. The English Proficiency Exam will be given June 13 during the summer school session.
Another complicating factor was the northern reluctance to do anything that might be construed as recognizing the Confederacy as a nation. Exchange of prisoners was stopped several times on that score.
Still another factor was the Confederate attitude on Negro soldiers who might be captured and their white officers. President Jefferson Davis warned that captured Negro soldiers would go back into slavery and their white officers would be turned over to the states to be treated as instigators of slave insurrection. That in effect meant death. President Lincoln promised prompt and equal retaliation.
Reports of starvation rations in southern war prisoner camps prompted Stanton at one point to reduce food for Confederate prisoners by 20 per cent and later to threaten to give imprisoned Southerners the same rations Union captives were getting in Confederate camps. The threat never was carried out.
When Grant was made general of the armies Stanton prepared a memorandum advocating stopping all prison exchanges, pointing out that the South benefited more than the North when captives were traded man for man because the manpower
AT ANOTHER TIME Stanton sent rations to Richmond for Union prisoners. False reports circulated in the North that the Confederates confiscated the rations for themselves. The South resented the accusations and stopped distribution of the food.
HE AND THE troops did.
On April 17 Grant ordered no more exchanges.
of the Confederacy was vanishing and the North still had plenty of material.
"It is hard on our men in southern prison camps not to exchange them." Grant said, "but it is humanity to those left in the ranks . . . Every man we hold, when released on parole or otherwise, becomes an active soldier against us at once, either directly or indirectly. If we commence a system of exchange which liberates all prisoners taken, we will have to fight on until the South is exterminated. If we hold those caught they will amount to no more than dead men."
GRANT COMBED OUT all the northern garrisons for men to fight in his spring offensives. Soldiers who had spent the whole war in soft garrisons suddenly were sent to the front. To replace them the governors of Illinois, Iowa, Ohio, Wisconsin and Indiana on April 23 offered 100,000 100-day men for guard duty. President Lincoln accepted them, giving Grant added strength.
Grant was dissatisfied with the cavalry of the Army of the Potomac. He and the President were discussing it one day and Grant said he wanted the best possible men for the job of leading the mounted troops.
Maj. Gen. Henry W. Halleck, who had willingly stepped down to chief of staff when Grant became commander, was at the conference and said:
"I was rather young in appearance—looking even under than over thirty-three—but five feet, five inches in height, and thin almost to emaciation, weighing only 115 pounds. If I had ever possessed any self-assertion in manners or speech, it certainly vanished in the presence of the imperious secretary . . ."
"THE VERY MAN I want," Gran replied.
"How would Sheridan do?"
So Maj. Gen. Philip H. Sheridan was summoned from the West. He was primarily an infant officer. At the time he was commanding a division in the Army of the Cumber-
They told the story about him at the time when the Union forces captured the rifle pits at the foot of the ridge—the objective—Sheridan borrowed a flask from a staff officer, took a long pull, waved it at the Confederate headquarters above and said: "Here's at you."
SHERIDAN CAME TO his new command with a reputation as a fighter. His division was one of those which broke the Confederate center at Missionary Ridge.
Two Confederate guns fired at the group, showering Sheridan with dirt. "That is ungenerous; I shall take those guns for that," Sheridan replied.
Sheridan would put the eastern cavalry to work in his western way. A cavalryman to Sheridan was "only an infantryman with four detachable legs," using repeating carbines and revolvers but not the ancient badge of the mounted man, the saber.
MAKE A DATE TO BOWL TONIGHT
DATE SPECIAL
Your Date
GETS TO BOWL
EVERY OTHER GAME
F-R-E-E
6 p.m. Friday — 6 p.m. Sunday
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
MAKE A DATE TO BOWL TONIGHT
BASKETBALL
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KANSAS UNION
Page 14
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 17, 1964
PRAIRIE ROOM
The Prairie Room serves the very best in charcoal broiled steaks, shish kebabs and seafoods. A special luncheon menu is available for your convenience.
11:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.
5:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m.
UNION CAFETERIA
The Kansas Union Cafeteria offers a wide selection of foods for a delicious meal. Join us soon.
10:30 a.m.-1:20 p.m.
4:30 p.m.-6:35 p.m.
HAWK'S NEST
The Hawk's Nest offers good food throughout the day, whether you desire a full meal, snack, or a refreshing drink. Join the fun.
CATERING SERVICE
The Catering Service is tailored for your specific needs. Call us for your appointment. Phone UN 4-3509
KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE
Friday, April 17, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 19
39th relays
KU
CONCESSIONS
MARSHALL JONES
Page 16
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 17, 1964
KANSAS RELAYS
DANCE
SATURDAY, APRIL 18
8PM UNION BALLROOM
MUSIC BY THE FLIPPERS
"ON TO TOKYO"
EVERYONE INVITED
$1.50 PER COUPLE
Trucks, Cranes Herald World's Fair
"About half way between West Egg and New York the motor road hastily joins the railroad and runs beside it for a quarter of a mile so as to shrink away from a certain desolate area of land. This is the valley of ashes — a fantastic farm where ashes grow like wheat into ridges and hills and grotesque gardens . . ."
—"The Great Gatsby," F. Scott Fitzgerald, 1925.
BY SHEMED S. SNIDER
(United Press International)
NEW YORK - On a meadow that once was a valley of ashes the sounds of trucks and cranes, of drills and hammers blore out a countdown to the biggest show ever. The 1964-65 New York World's Fair is just around the corner.
By GERALD S SNYDER
On Wednesday, the bands will play, the fountains will burst and the first of 70 million curious people will spin through the turnstiles into Flushing Meadow, at 464-acre fantasyland east of Manhattan. Represented will be 58 countries and 23 states.
Russia won't be there and neither will England, Italy nor Canada. But as the exposition's president, Robert Moses, puts it: "We'll get along without them."
THE FAIR PROBABLY will. Seven weeks before opening day Moses announced the sale of 28,034,987 advance tickets, worth $35,219,602 — equal to the total paid admissions of the 1993-94 New York World's Fair, three times the paid admission of the 1962 Seattle Fair, and more than the box office take of all of last year's major league baseball games.
While keeping construction going on time, tough-minded Moses has tangled with the Paris based Bureau of International Expositions (BIE) over the fair's accreditation, with New York City over the price of children's tickets, with architects over the exposition's building style and with the city's traffic commissioner who adamantly predicts a COLOSSAL JAM on the fair's new highways.
Moses, 75, also has disagreed with his own chief engineer who happened to remark that "eight or 10" pavilions would still be
FAIR FACTS
FAIR FACTS
Dates of Fair:
April 22-Oct. 18, 1964
April 21-Oct. 17, 1965
Site:
Flushing Meadow, New York
Admission:
Adults $2, children $1
Estimated Attendance:
40 million first year, 30 million second year
Occasion for Fair:
Tercentenary of New York City
Symbol:
Unisphere
Theme:
Peace Through Understanding
unfinished on opening day ("The fair will be ready and ready in its entirety," Moses said in a news release the next day) and he even managed to incur the wrath of the Ambassador of Kuwait.
"WE ARE ASKED," Moses said in a February speech at Palm Beach, Fla., "why we lay claim to being a world's fair when quite a few regions and areas are missing.
Instead of celebrating the presence in the fair of many nations, old and new, who are eagerly participating, the critics shake their gory locks mournfully and ask where are the British Raj, Malagasy, Rudolph the Rainer and his roulette, the Sultan of Kuwait with his bottomless oil, Cadillaas, hares, heat, sand flies and camel dung?"
But no matter what may happen from now on, the fair is sure to shape up as the most elaborate of any ever assembled.
The speech came to the attention of a senator, was printed in the Congressional Record and seen there by Jamil al-Hassani, press officer of the Kuwait Embassy in Washington who wrote Moses a letter in protest.
ON THE SAME land where the trilon and perisphere blossomed during the 1939-40 world's fair, building styles range from small kiosks and authentic American
Indian dwellings to IBM's eggshaped pavilion designed by the late Eero Saarinen, Kodak's "floatini carpet" concrete roof structure and an ornate three-story hair belonging to Hong Kong.
When they were first planning the fair, Moses said he didn't care if the buildings were "avant-garde, fin de siècle, reactionary, electric, rococo, siroco, General Grant, General Mills, Corbu, Corbel, Bauhaus, skull and bones — they are all the same to us."
If visitors are surprised at what they see on the outside they are apt to be awed at what they see inside. The fair promises everything from Michelangelo's marble Pieta to a Walt Disney-created figure of Lincoln that will rise from a sitting position, shake hands with the visitor and answer his questions.
There will also be a "people wall" in one pavilion which will hydraulically lift an entire audience into a theater, a duck farm incubator (with eggs hatching daily); a pizza school, with exhibits of different types of pizzas made around the world; a replica of Charles Lindbergh's "Spirit of
Related Story, page 2
lake amusement area and an 80-foot high replica of an automobile tire will revolve with 24 barrel-shaped gondolas.
St. Louis;" the ancient temple of Anghor Wat and hundreds of other displays ranging from the works of Velazquez, Goya, El Greco and Zurburian to the Holy Ikon of the Virgin of Kagan and a six-stage carousel auditorium "where audiences will move from stage to stage without leaving their seats."
Admission to the fair will be $2 for adults and $1 for children under 12 with youngsters under two admitted free. Fair officials claim that 75 percent of all exhibits will not charge admission and of the 134 full-sized pavilions 119 will have no entrance fee.
A "Jaycopter" will simulate the action, controls and flight pattern of a conventional helicopter; a monorail will whirl around the
One estimate (there are many) has the average adult spending $7.50 during the course of a day.
This does not include meals. In 174 restaurants and 24 snack bars visitors will buy everything from Argentine empanadas (meat patties), Belgian gaufres (waffles), Korean "Kimsee" and Maryland sea food to a complete seven-course Chinese dinner (for 99c) and popular priced hot dogs (30c) and hamburgers (40c).
For the foot-sore there'll be 10,000 benches and in the Simmons Beautyrest "Land of Enchantment" a chance to lie down in the quiet and comfort of one of 44 rest alcoves complete with contour beds and disposable sheets and pillowcases. Admission to the building is free. Rest alcoves $1 per half hour. It's estimated it will take 12 days to see the entire fair.
THE FAIR WILL have its own hospital, doctors, nurses and attendants and six first aid stations on the grounds.
During the 1939 fair at Flushing Meadow television was just an embryo and RCA amazed visitors then with a remarkable invention.
This year RCA will operate the world's largest closed-circuit color television network, consisting of about 300 color receivers in pavil
ions, waiting rooms, restaurants and private VIP lounges.
The network also will help alleviate one of mankind's oldest problems — the lost child. The faces of the little lost ones will be flashed on the screen in living color — tears and all.
DESTINED TO attract the largest crowds are the two largest pavilions — General Motors and Ford. They're neighbors in the sprawling transportation section and each is trying to outdo the other.
GM will have an elaborate version of the "Futurama" it introduced in 1939-40. About 70,000 visitors a day will lean back in contour chairs and move at four miles per hour through jungles, deserts and cities of the future.
The Ford feature attraction will be a Disney-created "Magic Skyway" with a ride in a variety of the company's 1964 convertibles through primeval swamps, caves and worlds of tomorrow.
THERE'LL BE NO girl shows at the 1964 fair. Bob Moses laid down the law: "We shall have no cheap midway with mechanical gadgets, freaks, shills and dubious sideshows."
But there will be entertainment—from steel drum bands, calypso singers and limbo dancers to ice reviews, boat rides, live snake dances and Elsie the Cow. There will be hula girls in the "Alohatheatre" of the Hawaiian exhibit.
Admission to a "color carousel" of one building will be restricted to women where the ladies will be treated to a personal hair-coloring analysis via electronic computer. The analysis will be made, the fair has announced, "during a delightful six-minute
ride in a beautiful, glass-enclosed circular building."
Connecticut-born Moses, who has been a park builder, highway constructor and operator, slum clearer and builder of great buildings, got into his first tiff when the BIE refused to approve the New York World's Fair as a fair. The BIE said it had approved the Seattle World's Fair in 1962 and that its rules held two fairs could not be held in the same country in any 10 year period.
THE SOVIET UNION withdrew its plans for a pavilion when the U.S. State Department asked for an equal two-season session for a U.S. pavilion in Russia. The Russians were ready to admit the United States for one season only and the plans fell through.
Britain and Canada, looking toward a BIE-approved exposition in Canada in 1967, also have stayed out. Among those who are in: Austria, Belgium, the Republic of China, Japan, Morocco, Denmark, France, Greece, India, Indonesia, Ireland, Israel (backed by a group of American businessmen), Jordan, Lebanon, Malaysia, Pakistan, the Philippines, Sweden, the Vatican and the United States with its $17 million block-square "Challenge to Greatness" pavilion.
The states represented: Hawaii,
Alaska, Florida, Illinois, Loui-
(Continued on page 2)
SECTION C
UNIVERSITY
Daily Hansan
Lawrence, Kansas 61st Year, No. 121 Friday, April 17, 1964
the new Magic Mist Coin-op car wash is Open Now
MAGIC MIST
COIN OR
CAR WASH
Only 25c to wash your car
OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY
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Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 17, 1964
1.
New York City Offers Much To World's Fair Visitors
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Many of the 70 million visitors expected to come to the New York World's Fair during the next two years will be making their first trip to the Big City on the East Coast.
It has operas, concerts, ballets, art shows and similar cultural activities. It has horse racing (flats and trotters), two big league baseball teams (if you include the Mets), the football Giants and Jets, boxing, international soccer matches and even cricket and hurling games.
First-timers can collect extra dividends by arranging itineraries to include some of the countless attractions in the metropolitan area. Probably no other city in the world can offer as many.
NEW YORK CITY is the fun fashion, food and financial center of the United States. It has more theaters, movies, museums, restaurants, hotels, night clubs and other places of entertainment than any other city.
There are public golf courses and tennis, handball and ping pong
courts. There are swimming, fishing, boating and other water sports in the Atlantic Ocean and Long Island Sound. There are sumptuous bowling centers and billiard parlors.
THERE ARE PARKS where you can play checkers or chess, pitch horseshoes or roll a game of hooji
You can go horseback riding in the center of the city (Central Park) or relax in a horsedrawn carriage complete with fringe on top. You can eat at sidewalk cafes in Times Square (if you don't mind the gas fumes and noise), grab a hotdog, pizza or hamburger at a quick-lunch counter or street pushheart, enjoy an espresso in an arty Greenwich village cafe, or dine to the strains of a string orchestra in the swanky Hotel Plaza.
Dining out can be an adventure — every type of cuisine from Creole to Continental is available. There are French, Italian, and German restaurants rated among the tops in the world.
There are Chinatown, Little Italy, Harlem and communities of Scandinavian, Irish, Russian, German
Trucks. Cranes-
THE CITY OF New York is comprised of five boroughs, but only the Bronx is on the mainland. Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens, and Richmond (Staten Island) are on islands.
(Continued from page 1)
siana, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, six New England states, New Mexico, New York (city and state), Oklahoma, Oregon, New Jersey, Texas, West Virginia and Wisconsin.
and other European and Middle and near Eastern peoples where cafes and restaurants offer old country dishes at more moderate prices.
The boroughs are linked by bridges and/or vehicular and subway tunnels. (Don't, if you can help it, drive or ride the subway or buses during the morning or evening rush hours.) Ferries run between Richmond and Manhattan and Brooklyn
Here are some of the top attractions for adults and children by boroughs:
Fair officials insist it will, but traffic commissioner Henry A. Barnes, who has long been at odds on the matter with Robert Moses, is already wondering what might happen Sunday when 50,000 people will be going to and from the new municipal sports stadium near the fair site, with perhaps a million people going to the beach and 400,000 or more inside the fair grounds.
Much of the traffic will be going back into Manhattan via existing bridges or tunnels, Barnes points out.
Manhattan— The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Natural History. The Empire State and RCA buildings. Rockefeller Center, Times Square, Fifth Avenue and Broadway — still the Great White Way.
WHEN THE FAIR finally swings open its gates (there'll be eight of them) drivers will find out at last whether the new $124 million arterial transportation system will be able to handle the loads on the expressways.
Many parking lots in Manhattan already have upped their rates in anticipation of the fair but Barnes advises motorists it will still be wise to leave their cars in Manhattan and take the 15-cent subway ride out to the fair grounds — the Transit Authority will have special trains running
Visitors Bureau to recommend overnight accommodations, and within a radius of 35 road miles of the fair 380 hotels and motels with about 100,000 transient rooms have agreed that their rates during the fair seasons will not exceed their regular rates.
A SPECIAL HOUSING reservation office has been set up by the New York Convention and
Among the fair's huge structures only the heliport, the Hall of Science and the steel skeleton Unisphere of the earth (symbolizing the fair's theme: "Peace Through Understanding") will survive. The rest will be torn down.
The Hudson River piers where the world's biggest liners dock.
Bronx: The Bronx Zoo, one of the world's largest with nearly 3,000 animals, birds, and other species of fauna.
The famed Botanical Gardens. Yankee Stadium. Freedomland, a 205-acre entertainment center laid out in the form of the continental United States.
Brooklyn: Coney Island for swimming in the Atlantic Ocean and the Steeplechase Amusement Park with its parachute jump.
The New York Aquarium, the Brooklyn Children's Museum.
Queens: The John F. Kennedy International airport. The new William Shea Stadium and Casey Stengel's Mets. And, of course, the World's Fair.
CUBBERMATIC
BUDAPEST, Hungary—In a cemetery outside Budapest, a headstone reads: "My big boy, age 18, 1956."
It was a mother's final word of endearmment for an only son, one of the thousands who died in the holocaust of 1956 when the Hungarians rose up against Communist rule and fell beneath the treads of Russian tanks.
And there, over a dish of chocolate cake smothered in whipped cream, a non-Communist young woman is asked if freedom of political discussion is now permitted.
Yet, even a short visit to Budapest confirms that times have changed and that a measure of gaiety has returned to this ancient city astride the Danube.
ATOP CASTLE hill close by the one-time seat of Hungarian royalty is a building which in the 15th century housed Budapest's first printing firm. Today it is a coffee house.
She shrugs and replies. "We do not discuss it anymore. Instead we make jokes." And it is a fact that in Budapest there is a nightclub featuring an act devoted to political satire, not all of it directed against the West.
"HOW ABOUT the young intellectuals who sparked the 1956 revolt?"
YAMAHA
By Phil Newsom (UPI Foreign News Analyst)
"Oh, they still complain, but now it is because they cannot get Italian shoes." And the young woman laughs.
The relaxation brought about by the regime of Janos Kadar, for whatever its reasons, evidences itself in other ways, including such touches of capitalism as the tip for services rendered.
The taxicab driver smiles a little more pleasantly when a tip is added to his fare.
THE GYPSY violin player in a state owned restaurant plays with
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Hungarians Relax As Soviet Rule Eases
a bit more spirit when a 100-florin note is slipped in his pocket.
These things the regime looks upon with tolerance.
Hungary's trade at the moment is almost wholly within the East Communist bloc. But for certain of its amusements and its luxuries it continues to look to the West.
In the shops, better stocked than in most Eastern countries, are French perfumes and English wool-lons. A few still are privately owned.
IN THE BUDAPEST Tancpalota,
a dancing palace, also state-owned,
a slender, dark-haired girl sings
Alexander's Ragtime Band.
When she is finished, the band swings into action for the dancing
"Before 1956," one said, "we could not have Gypsy music or coffee houses. We could not even be Hungarian."
one dancer. And on the dance floor, they dressed young dancers, the girls with upswept teased hair-dos go into . twist . twist . twist .
Mouthful
NEW YORK — (UPI)— To show children how to brush their teeth properly, a New York dentist uses a giant-size set of teeth about four feet in diameter with huge toothbrush and collapsible tube to match. The youngsters are kept amused by the out-size toothbrushing tools while the dental hygiene fundamentals are stressed.
WESTERN OBSERVERS credit the change in Hungary in part to the 1956 revolt which frightened Communist rulers into the knowledge that a relaxation of iron rule was necessary to prevent widespread revolt, and to a desire for the hard currency brought in by tourists.
Certainly the Kadar regime is no less Communist than the one which preceded it and in the leaders' minds there must be a question as to how far this relaxation can be permitted to go. But for the Hungarians it is a welcome change.
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Page 3
University Daily Kansan
LBJ Introduces New Hat Trends
NEW YORK —(UPI)— President Johnson, an addict of western style hats, has had a momentous impact on the men's hat industry. Almost every major manufacturer is introducing the LBJ hat this Spring with presidential approval.
Creation of what is called a "three gallon" hat for city wear is the first major development in men's hat styles in many years and its public acceptance is expected to be given a boost with a Fall Hat Festival following the Summer Olympics in Tokyo.
The cowboy look was taken up by American athletes participating in the Pan American Games at Sao Paulo, Brazil, last year and will be given a worldwide introduction at the Olympics. The Olympic parade hats might be described as the five gallon size.
FOR YEARS JOHNSON has got his hats from the John B. Stetson Company or Byer-Rolnick at Garland, Tex., where a Dress Western or Rancher's Hat was designed for use as friendship gifts at his LBJ ranch. These were a little more western than the LBJ.
Imprinted in the lining of the gift hats is a solid map of Texas in gold with Johnson City and the LBJ ranch in red, blue and black in a white area in the heart of the state. Johnson also has the equipment to stamp gold initials in the lining.
One LBJ version designed by Charles H. Salesky, president of the Hat Corporation of America, has a brim scaled down to 2 inches with crown lower than the Texas version.
It has a slightly lower center crease crown, side pinches and a brim with a slight curl. It may be worn off the face with brim up, or as a snap brim. This is basically the LBJ hat but each manufacturer will have slight variations.
RIBBONS ARE VERY narrow and the most popular color is "silver
belly" though others are black medium brown and light gray. Salsky feels the modifications will make a man feel as much at home wearing it down Madison Avenue as in the southwest.
We was so confident of success of the hat he ordered 100 tons of white fur in France to assure uninterrupted production. He also reported the response was so great from nonwestern areas he designed a Lady LBJ for anyone who wants a his or her effect. The Lady LBJ is worn strictly off the face.
And for summer you can buy an LBJ in straw in either Panama or Milan-type braids.
I. Benjamin Parrill, president of Miller Bros. Hat Co., which designed and made the Pan American and Olympic hats, admits they were inspired by Johnson's western image. "The psychological influence of the president is vitally significant," he said.
OTHER HAT NEWS: Predictably there are more lighter shades ranging from natural straws to white Panamas to go with the new lighter shades in suits, and lighter felts with narrower bands. A new Spring shape for men is the Shikari," marked by sharp angular shaping of the crown. For boys it is a "Slipstream," molded and with narrow brim.
Trims for straw hats run from crisp checks through Indian Madras, regimental stripes, batiks, paisleys and Shantungts with some woven straw bands. In sports or "fun" hats the sky is the limit with trims including anything from miniature beer cans to fish nets and golf clubs.
More subdued sports hats and caps in cloth run from seersucker to solid poplins in any color of the rainbow. One seen recently at Palm Springs, Calif., as worn by TV's Andy Williams was a white, flattop hat of water-repellant poplin with a bright club stripe band.
Weekend to Include International Festival
Exhibits and a program of skits will be featured in the International Festival tomorrow night.
Exhibits from various countries, represented by students at KU. will be in Hoch auditorium and opened to the public at 6 p.m.
The program, consisting of skis and acts by groups representing various countries, will begin at 7:30.
Friday, April 17, 1964
Gloria Macchiavello, Santiago City, Chile, graduate student, is general chairman of the festival.
AEC Workers Hunt Radiation With Rod. Gun
RICHLAND, Wash. —(UPI)— Charles McCoy and Bob Beavers have a license to hunt and fish the year around. It's their job. Furthermore, they are provided with ammunition guns, rods, bait, lures and even a boat.
Beavers and McCoy work for the Radiation Protection Operation at the Atomic Energy Commission's laboratories at the Hanford Atomic Works near here.
McCoy and Beavers are part of a team that checks for radiation within a radius of 700 miles of Hanford. Other personnel investigate milk supplies, test drinking water and pasture grass, and sample air as far away as Great Falls, Mont.
IT IS THEIR JOB to check for possible contamination from the huge plutonium plant. Consequently they fish the Columbia River from McNary Dam to Priest Rapids. And they shoot ducks and geese on the Hanford Reservation. Their quarry is then examined for radioactivity
But McCoy and Beavers are the lucky ones. All they do the year around is hunt and fish.
THEY BAG ABOUT 100 ducks and geese a year and they can do it from a powerboat, a privilege denied ordinary nimrods. Their happy hunting grounds inside the reservation boundaries are closed to every other hunter.
Male Fashion Features Spring Striped Shirts
NEW YORK — (UFI) — The profusion of striped shirts in the 1964 spring and summer lines once again shows that many American manufacturers draw their inspiration from London where bold stripes were the rage a couple of years ago.
And, ignoring the fall line now in the manufacturer's showrooms, and trying to forget that recent style shows in London featured a gold lame evening shirt and a business shirt edged with what looked suspiciously like tatting, here is a report on shirts in the stores now:
Stripes are the dominant feature in both business and sports shirts, ranging from quarter-inch width in colors as dark as navy on white to pencil thin stripes or multi-stripes against a white or off white background.
Also new for spring is a profusion of shirt-jackets, sometimes called shirt-jacs. These are hip length, are worn outside the shirt, and usually have an adjustable waistband.
MANUFACTURERS HAVE come up with a wide array of colors for the stripes and in doing so have provided a new group of solid colors to complement them.
In collar styles the button-down continues to be No. 1 in the traditional field but there are a few revivals — the long pointed non-button-down of the 20s and 30s, with or without a pin. Spread collars remain tops in sports shirts.
Some stretch fabrics are already on the market but are not generally available in all lines. Some are in cotton but many are combinations of polyester and cotton and such stretch yarns as Dyca.
THE BIG COLOR news is the background, featured under such names as Old Salt, Slightly White, Parchment and — sometimes — just plain off white. This makes an ideal background for such loud colors as Chapel Hill orange, bottle green, burgundy and chocolate.
Gant features an oxford voile in zephyr weight . . . a pebble stripe series in quarter-inch stripes which
are not bold because the pebbly weave presents a broken effect . . . a cotton gingham overplaid looking almost like madras.
Van Heusen emphasizes taper in its 417 collection with slightly longer button-down collars . . . Favored colors are bottle green, camel and burgundy . . . In synthetics the emphasis was in color — 14 in all in solids and stripes.
Creighton features a new Cambala cloth with foulard and paisley prints or muted vari-Roman or regimental stripes on dark corn . . . a navy-striped oxford to be worn with blazers.
Merrill-Sharpe showed striped "shorties" shirts with matching kimono with mandarin sleeves for beach or other lounging.
Shirt-jacs were No. 1 at Enro. One particularly handsome was a heavy weight cotton mesh which looked like a lightweight knit cardigan with Italian collar.
Manhattan, which introduced its V-matic adjustable collar last year in white only, brought it out in stripes and short sleeves. Stripes ran wild in the D.Q. line but there were also tattersalls and herringbone weaves.
Hathaway emphasizes a light color called India Lemon in both dress and sport shirts in stripes, checks and solid colors . . . gingham checks shown in business shirts.
Arrow showed uncompromising stripes in gold, bottle green, red, Chapel Hill orange, blue and gray in varying widths . . . Collar and sleeves size in boys' wear with heavy emphasis on taper for the teen-ager.
B. V.D. came up with colored T-shirts with pockets in a dozen colors to be worn tucked in or flopping outside. Excello showed a long button down collar with or without buttons.
Eagle showed a longer spread collar and a round collar without eyelets. Truval went in for a broader roll, longer point button down. Wings showed a group of higher bandcollars.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 17, 1964
一
Automobile Makers Trace Car Cancer
DETROIT—(UPI)—The automotive industry has declared all-out war on rust—the creeping villain that has sent millions of cars to the scrap heap.
Engineers say the multi-million dollar struggle is beginning to pay off. All four of the U.S. automakers have extensive rust prevention programs—starting with the shell of the car all the way to the finished product.
PLASTICS HAVE BEEN called into use in some areas, such as clips that hold exterior trim on the cars. In the past, metal clips were used under trim and proved a source of rust.
Zinc and aluminum coated metals are used whenever possible, especially in key underbody parts such as rocker arm panels. Key parts are also designed in such a way that water will not collect and in some cases holes have been drilled in the parts so water will run out.
The biggest gains have come from ever-increasing use of corrosion resistant metals on underbodies of automobiles. But close scrutiny to the type of paints and primers also has paid some dividends.
THROUGHOUT MOST OF the United States, rust is a major problem in preservation of cars. In some areas, it's ocean spray and salt in the air that pose the biggest hazards. In other areas, it's salt and chemicals used to melt snow.
Rust-inhibiting chemicals are used on key metal parts and careful attention is paid primers and final paints for rust resistant properties.
The industry mounts a three-pronged attack against rust.
The plastic clips don't rust and have the added advantage of not chipping the paint like metal ones did. Plastic and vinyl sponge materials now are used in many areas to prevent rust and paint chipping that previously occurred.
The raw car body gets more than its share of attention. American Motors has been completely submerging all
Rambler bodies in rust-inhibiting chemicals since 1958.
General Motors uses a spray system instead of dipping as does Ford. Chrysler uses a combination dipspray system and all four U.S. automakers say that the cars are thoroughly covered with the rust-inhibiting chemicals.
THE FIGHT AGAINST rust doesn't stop in the factory. Major auto firms constantly survey cars in parking lots and on the streets all over the country to see just how and where the rust is affecting the vehicles.
Rust has never posed as serious problem to European cars as it does to American vehicles. Salt is not used as frequently for road clearance in Europe and better care generally is taken of the cars once a person buys one.
A spokesman for Volkswagen, the beetle-shaped German car that is the most popular import in this country, said special primers are used and a total of four separate coats of paint applied, including primers and finished coat.
However, foreign makers do attempt to prevent rust on their cars.
Also, he said, the construction of our cars, especially the underbody, does not collect water or lend itself to rusting as readily as do American vehicles.
Engineers agree that there is only one way for the motorist to aid in the fight against rust. That's keeping the car as clean as possible.
TUCSON, Ariz. — (UPI) — Red pyracantha berries are being blamed for making robins drunk in this southern Arizona resort city. This is possible because the berries ferment and are an outside attraction to hungry robins. But John Schaefer, head of the Tucson Audubon Society, suspects the birds are not drunk all the time—merely overstuffed.
Rollickin' Robins
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University Daily Kansan
Fire Alarm System Uses Space Age Techniques
The occasional cry of a stray cat and the drum of rain on garbage pail covers were the only sounds that bettiebert was happening.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. —(UPI)—The streets glimmered in midnight rain. It was quiet; most families were sleeping.
Friday. April 17, 1964
A cruising taxicab driver spotted the fire. Two blocks away, he found a light flickering on top of an alarm box. He raced from his cab, jerked the box open and pulled a lever.
High in the attic of a three-story house, a few threadbare wires were rubbing together. Insulation began to smoke, then burn. A nearby pile of discarded clothes started to smoulder.
SEVERAL MINUTES LATER. flames licked the attic walls and darted through a window.
Instantly, nearly $2.5 million worth of fire alarm equipment—the largest single unit in the country—umped into action.
Mechanism in the box sent a series of impulses which were recorded in two strategic locations—the Memphis Fire Alarm center and a substation between the center and the alarm box. In both places, firemen manning recorders tensed and began to concentrate as the coded signals came in.
IMPULSES SENT FROM the box were electrically transcribed into signals telling the firemen which box was pulled. A quick search of a numbered file told them the box's location and the call numbers of the nearest fire companies.
A vocal alarm operator hit switches opening speaking systems in the stations involved. Through a microphone tied in with the alarm console, he dispatched two pumpers, a hook and ladder truck, a salvage corps truck and a district chief to the scene.
In the station house, the firemen on duty watch had seen the coded signals come in seconds earlier, so he was ready. A loud signal buzzed, waking the other firemen and sending them scurrying into turnout pants, coats and boots.
Thirty seconds after the cab driver pulled the box, fire fighters were on their way to the blaze.
MEMPHIS—LONG CONSIDERED a headquarters of fire education and training, decided several years ago
that it could not afford to settle for less than the most efficient system of dispatching its firemen.
Commissioner Claude A. Armour and Fire Chief E. A. Hamilton had rigid specifications made up, and a contract was awarded to the Gamewell Co. of Upper Newton Falls, Mass. The firm custom built a multimillion dollar alarm system for the new Armour Training Center fire alarm office.
Included in the system are 984 alarm boxes—about one-third equipped with designating lights superimposed to work on the box's power supply; equipment for eight substations located at fire houses throughout the city; and more than 350 miles of underground and aerial cable.
Also included—and focal point of the complex alarm system—is the console at the alarm center. It is the only one of its kind in the country.
THE CONSOLE CONSISTS of a vocal alarm transmitter and receiver, a master recorder for signals from alarm boxes, alarm circuit transmitters and a two-way public address system.
A voice recorder built into the console records on tape everything spoken over the console or its adjoining telephone switchboard. The recorder, which can instantly play back telephone conversations, leaves no margin for error on alarms called in by phone.
The telephone switchboard, which is built into the console, contains direct lines to all the city's 31 fire houses as well as incoming trunk lines for fire and business calls. Dual transmitter-receiver radio equipment is housed in a tiny room adjacent to the alarm console and works in conjunction with it.
The center also features a unique control panel board designed and built by Memphis firemen.
THE BOARD SHOWS at a glance the location of all fire companies as well as district and deputy chiefs. Companies are lettered on a map of the city at the geographic site of their fire houses, and are designated by a white light.
When a company goes to a fire or is out of service for some other reason, the light is turned to red. It is green when the company is out of its house, but in touch with
the alarm center by radio. A similar system is used to keep up with the location of the chiefs, whose names are kept listed next to the map.
"It helps us keep in constant touch with all our equipment," said district chief James R. Boatwright, the assistant chief dispatcher. District Chief A.A. Alexander built the board in the fire department's shop and a local firm wired it.
Boatwright placed the board's value at between $15,000 to $20,000. District Chief Jesse A. Gennette, chief dispatcher, supervises the operations of the complete alarm set up.
The city's new alarm setup already has become a model for other fire departments throughout the country. The principle of an independent alarm box whose signals cannot interfier with those of another box has created almost instantaneous fire service.
THE FIRE DEPARTMENT learns of fires in four ways — through alarm boxes, telephone calls, auxiliary methods (ADT local alarm service), and miscellaneous methods. The latter include persons actually going to a fire station to report a fire; policemen seeing a blaze, and other such wavs.
Memphis — rated in the top fire insurance classification for some years by the National Board of Fire Underwriters — has a total complement of more than 900 on its fire department staff. Of these about 750 are actual fire fighters in 31 stations and seven crash companies at the Metropolitan Airport In 1963, these men answered 12,905 fire alarms
Firemen are dispatched to the scene by use of the vocal alarm circuit, the telegraph circuit (in coded signals), direct line telephone or radio.
And they answer them faster than ever before.
Shake!
NEW YORK—(UPI)—The handshake stems from peaceful desires of primitive civilizations, reports Encyclopedia Americana. Men began the custom by extending their hands to show they were not going to use their weapons.
Mind Gets Emphasis During Leisure Time
AUSTIN, Tex. —(UPI)— A University of Texas psychologist suggests greater emphasis on the use of the mind and less on muscles as a profitable way to spend leisure time.
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The expert, Dr. Fillmore H. Sanford, said man's most distinctive attribute is his head. Perhaps his greatest satisfaction can come from the creating and satisfying use of that head, Dr. Sanford figures.
HE PREDICTED A 20-hour work week for the American worker in the near future — "providing there is not a 20-minute war."
Dr. Sanford referred to a special group where he said one can observe both the dangers and the opportunities of increasing amounts of leisure.
"Many of these women," he said. "now find for themselves new careers, new patterns of existence, new ways to contribute to the human enterprise."
But in the future survival of civilization as we know it may depend on man's capacity to use leisure time creatively.
Dr. Sanford said that in the past, man's continued survival depended on his capacity to gain a bare existence from a hostile environment.
He described this group as those middle-class women, in the midforties, whose children have reached maturity.
"In the coming age of leisure," Sanford said, "fortunate is the man who has got himself involved in the accumulation of knowledge.
On the other hand, others do not make such a successful recovery
KII
Dr. C. R. Carpenter, professor of psychology at Pennsylvania State University, is investigating why the monkeys don't produce more offspring.
Dr. Carpenter, who has been observing and collecting data on the famed monkey population for 30 years, believes the answer to why the monkeys don't become overabundant may have some bearing on the population dynamics of their most recent relative — man.
The leaf-eating monkeys are surrounded by a lush food supply and have no predatory animals to contend with.
One of Dr. Carpenter's hunches group tensions in densely populated monkey areas might tend to reduce the fertility in females.
"They can be seen frequently coming down with 4-B Syndrome, he said.
Scientists are studying a colony of howler monkeys on the Island of Barro Colorado in the Panama Canal Zone. The colony refuses to let itself become overpopulated, even though the monkeys live in an ideal setting.
Baby Boom Solved By Monkey Colonv
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.—(UPI) The monkey may be able to help the newest branch of his family tree with man's most pressing problem—the population explosion.
Sanford described this as bridge, burbon, bon bons and boredom.
from what he branded "the addition of motherhood and housewifery."
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 17, 1964
WELCOME
to 39th annual Kansas Relays.
The Kansas Union Book Store represents one of the many "plus" services the University offers. Please feel free to browse through our store in the Kansas Union Building.
RELAYS SPECIALS SWEATSHIRTS
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NORTH
RECORD-BREAKER—Hylke van der Wal of Manitoba University is shown here leading the field in the 3000-meter steeplechase which he won in the record time of 8:56.3 in the Kansas Relays Saturday. (Photo by Charles Corcoran)
Mizzou, SWC Win KU Relays Honors
By Marshall Caskey (Sports Editor)
KU trackmen won three individual events in the 39th running of the Kansas Relays over the weekend.
The Jayhawks, however, were unable to win any of the relays which were dominated by teams from the Southwest Conference and by the Missouri Tigers.
Floyd Manning won the pole vault with a 15-9 $ _{1/2} $ effort—the third highest vault in Big Eight history. Manning won the event on fewer misses as Oklahoma's Jim Farrell also cleared the winning height.
Bob Hanson won the 100-yard dash for KU with a time of 109.7 and Tyce Smith wound up on top in the high jump with a 6-4 1/4 lean
SOUTHWEST CONFERENCE teams won four of the five relay events Saturday as Missouri brought the Big Eight its only baton win in the two-mile. The Tigers, who were thought by some to be in line to smash the world's record in that event won the event with a time of 7:26.6—somewhat above the world mark. The Tiger's middle distance star, Robin Lingle, anchored the race with a 1:49.9 clocking.
Southern teams swept the rest of the relays. Southern Methodist trounced Oklahoma in both the 440 and 880 contests. In the last event of the relays, Rice defeated Nebraska in the mile relay, despite a nearly successful effort by the Cornhuskers.
Six meet records were broken and two tied in the finals of the meet. The 31-year-old record in the Glenn Cunningham 1500-meter run fell to Ray Stevens, formerly from Nebraska, as he ran a time of 3:47.9. The old record was set by Cunningham himself in his days as a trackman here. The metric distance is run only on Olympic years and Cunningham's record of 3:53.3 had survived.
DANNY ROBERTS, from Texas A and M heaved the shot put a distance of $60 - 23\frac{1}{4}$. Roberts' victory in that event gave him a rare double victory in the weight events as he had won the discus throw Friday. The Jayhawks' Bill Nieder set the previous record of 59-77 in 1956.
Hylke van der Wal of Manitoba University set a new mark in the 3000-meter steeplechase. Van der Wal ran the distance in a time of 8.56.3, erasing the old record of 9:12.5 set in 1958.
Relays records also fell as Emporia State roared through the college distance medley in 9:48.4 as anchor man John Camien turned in a 4:03.2 mile to cap the record-setting effort. Texas and Southern Methodist set the other relay records with their winning times.
A crowd of 9,000 assembled Saturday to watch the contests, despite temperatures which ranged in the 50's.
JIM RYUN, a high school junior from Wichita East drew roars of approval from the crowd as he turned some of the best prep times
Jazzmen to Converge for Festival
(Continued on page 5)
This Friday and Saturday should see the campus crawling with musicians, but musicians of a very special breed.
And by Monday, the KU campus may have lost the dubiously distinctive title of the "hinterlands" of jazz, once bestowed on it by west coast jazz writer, John William Hardy.
PLANS FOR THIS weekend's Oread Jazz Festival have been in preparation for the past year and a half. Saturday, the twelve members of the Festival's steering committee, headed by Prof. Michael Maher of the department of zoology, and Mike Bush, Glendale, Mo., senior, will reap the fruits of their sweat and labor.
They will be bringing to Kansas the first major Midwestern collegiate jazz festival.
Twelve jazz groups, ranging in size from a 16-piece band to a trio, will be competing for awards
Saturday. The big prize is a European tour for the top group of six men or less. Other prizes are instruments, a stereo phonograph, records, and $200 scholarships to the Berklee School of Music.
IN ADDITION, the best small group and best big band will play at "Jazz Homecoming" next Sunday in Kansas City. "Jazz Homecoming," sponsored by Kansas City Jazz, Inc., will be a marathon jazz "bash" including such name jazz men as Bob Brookmeyer, Carmell Jones, and Woody Herman. The small group will be given $75 for their engagement, and the big band will be given $150.
Daily hansan
One of the competing groups here will be the Midwestern Jazz Quintet, based at the Kansas City Conservatory of Music. The group's altoist, Herb Smith, Memphis, Tenn., senior, is the only musician from KU competing in the festival.
61st Year, No. 122
(Continued on page 3)
Lawrence, Kansas
By Bobbie Bartelt
Sargent Shriver today praised the Peace Corps, because "we have done exactly what we said we would."
Shriver, director of the Peace Corps and director of the "War on Poverty", spoke this morning at a convocation in Hoch Auditorium.
"We have seven people of all ages, all sexes, and from all backgrounds to serve in countries, living just as the people do, without the advantages of better housing, transportation," he said.
Shriver Observes Corps As Real Success Story
SHRIVER SAID THAT THE Peace Corps was unique because its cost of operation has been decreasing throughout its three-and-a-half year life.
It is possible that the All Student Council may be operating on a deficit budget by the end of the semester if it goes ahead with the printing of an updated constitution bill booklet.
"By keeping the cost of the Peace Corps down, we are one of the few organizations in Washington that has the combined support of both Sen. Hubert Humphry (D-Minn.) and Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz.)." he continued.
"There is no discrimination,racial or religious,in our selection of volunteers," Shriver said.
"WE HAVE PROTESTANTS working in predominantly Catholic countries, and the fact that we employ Jews doesn't keep us from working in Moslem nations," he continued.
The ASC now has a balance of $560 for operating expenses, according to ASC treasurer, Charles Portwood, Shawnee Mission senior.
"In government..t, this is very unusual." Sbriver said.
Shriver spoke to about 3300 people and a stray dog, which wandered on stage mid-way through the speech.
Council Budget May End in Red
Portwood said he had previously estimated expenses to the end of the semester, and projected a possible $300 to $400 deficit. This figure is not definite. Portwood said, and if some expenses are less than expected, there may not be a deficit at all.
Shriver praised the fact that Peace Corps volunteers are selected on the merit basis.
"MUST BE ONE OF Goldwater's supporters." Shriver equipped.
Portwood said that unexpected back bills of around $300 had to be paid out of this year's budget. Most of these were bills that had not been received, he said.
Monday, April 20, 1964
"At the outset of our idea, we were cautioned against sending any more Americans abroad, but I guess we were too ignorant to be scared by these warnings." Shriver said.
"Peace Corps volunteers have proven competent," Shriver said.
He said only one Peace Corps volunteer has ever been asked to leave a country because his work was incompetent.
"ABOUT 85 PER CENT of the volunteers are college graduates, and 15 percent hold advanced degrees," he continued.
"At present there are over 300 volunteers teaching in colleges and universities abroad," Shriver explained.
"We have volunteers in 60 Latin American universities, universities that are supposed to be cesspools of
Marxism and hotbeds of radicalism," he said.
"IT WAS IN THESE SAME Latin American areas that Richard Nixon was stoned and spit upon."
Members of the Peace Corps have proven extremely popular wherever they are sent, Shrivc said.
Peace Corps programs have worked out so well in the United States that currently 19 nations are trying to implement similar programs, Shriver said.
"I will leave for West Germany on Thursday to meet with officials from the West German Peace Corps, who have displayed a real interest in work of this nature," Shriver said.
Following the convocation Shriver was honored at lunchon given by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe in the Kansas Union.
Electrical Display Gets First Award
KU electrical engineers received the award for best display Saturday night for their student project at the 4th Annual KU Engineering Exposition this weekend.
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and Eta Kappa Nu, two student groups, were presented the award at a banquet, which was held in the Kansas Union.
The Petroleum Engineering Club and the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA), won second and third places, respectively.
The winning electrical display, introduced the concept of simulation with some examples of its application. A model radar system was shown as a particular example. The display showed a radar set working under water as cardboard radar displays were explained by electrical students. John Kroger, Lawrence senior, was chairman of the electrical engineering group.
THE SECOND PLACE petroleum engineers winners built a display which depicted the use of natural gas in the formation of certain petrochemicals which were being used by the petroleum engineers in scaled chemical engineering processes to produce nylon, synthetic rubber, and plastic. Wimoh Tiokronegoro, Djakarta, Indonesia senior, was chairman of the petroleum engineers.
Weather
The weather bureau predicted unsettled weather for tonight and tomorrow. Scattered thundershowers are forecast for this afternoon and evening. It will be slightly cooler tonight and tomorrow, with skies partly cloudy tomorrow. The high today will be in the 70's, the low tonight in the 50's. The high tomorrow will be in the 60's.
The third place winners, AIAA, showed applications and principles of the ground effects machine (GEM III). They showed in detail its application to different types of roadbeds. They built a model country side, to the scale of about six inch trees, over which they flew model GEMs powered by batteries. The AIAA exhibit chairman was Kenneth Leone, Alexandria, Va. sophomore.
The student exhibits were judged by three criteria. The first was voting by the visitors who came to the exposition. They were handed ballots as they entered the engineering building and placed them in a ballot box when they left.
THE SECOND AND THIRD criteria were judged by men from the Engineering Council, the administration, and several professional men.
Along with the 11 student displays, there were eight departmental exhibits. Among the most popular was the Mechanics and Aerospace departmental exhibit, KU's GEM III, which flew in the new engineering building parking lot.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 20, 1964
Vicious Circle
(The following is the first part of a three-part series.)
Bv Rick Mabbutt
American Negroes are poor, and the effects of years of discrimination by whites combined with the effects of increased automation in industry make the chances of greatly improving their economic situation quite small.
A recent survey by the Johnson administration lists 35 million Americans as being "poor." Their incomes are less than $3,000 annually. Of those poor, nearly eight million are Negroes or other nonwhites. Thus, a people who constitute slightly less than 10 per cent of the population of the country account for 22 per cent of the nation's poor.
Gunnar Myrdal, in "An American Dilemma," says, "In the beginning the Negroes were owned as property. When slavery disappeared, caste remained. Within this framework of adverse tradition the average Negro in every generation has had a most disadvantageous start. Discrimination against Negroes is thus rooted in the tradition of economic exploitation."
Discrimination by whites against the Negro is the chief underlying force accounting for the Negro's low social and economic position. To understand the bases for this discrimination one must go back to the founding of slavery in the United States.
False racial beliefs helped to justify this exploitation of the Negro. In the economic sphere, as a result of untrue racial beliefs, the Negro has been considered inherently inferior as a consumer and a worker.
The attitude is that "God himself has made the Negro to be only a servant or a laborer employed for menial, dirty, heavy and disagreeable work. And, since practically all such work is badly
paid, it is God's will that the Nerro should have a low income."
According to Myrdal, white prejudice takes the form of attitudes which operate in three ways.
(1) Many white workers, even if they think that Negroes generally should have a fair share in the job opportunities in this country, tend to be opposed to Negro competition in the particular localities, industries, occupations, and establishments where they themselves work.
(3) Many employers believe that Negroes are inferior as workers, except for dirty, heavy, hot or otherwise unattractive work. Perhaps even more important is the fact that they pay much attention to the attitudes of both customers and white workers.
(2) Some customers object to being served by Negroes unless the Negro has an apparently menial position.
These conditions are self-perpetuating in a number of ways. To illustrate the consequences of the first attitude listed above, imagine that one state, by means of legislation, abolished racial discrimination in economic matters within that state. If similar measures were not taken by other states the expected result would be an increase of Negro migration to that state.
"Thus," Myrdal says, "the very fact that there is economic discrimination constitutes an added motive for every individual white group to maintain such discriminatory practices."
In this manner discrimination by whites has placed severe restriction on the Negro laborer. Myrdal classifies these limitations into four types.
(1) Negroes are kept out of certain industries, North as well as South.
(2) In industries where Negroes
are working, they are often confined to certain establishments, whereas other establishments are kept entirely white.
(3) In practically all industries where Negroes are accepted, they are confined to unskilled occupations and to such semi-skilled and skilled occupations as are unattractive to white workers. The main exceptions to this rule are in the building industry, where the Negro had acquired a position during slavery but has been losing ground since then.
(4) Finally, there is geographical segregation. Negroes in the North are concentrated in a few large cities. In the western centers there is still only a small number of Negro workers. Negroes are even scarcer in the small northern and western cities.
This migration and concentration in the North is, Myrdal explains, "because the North has offered the Negro more economic opportunities (in relief if not in employment), more security as a citizen, and a greater freedom as a human being."
Since most Negro workers are forced into low-paid service occupations or unskilled, menial jobs in industry, they are the first workers to lose their jobs and the last to be hired again. Increased automation threatens not only the unskilled Negro laborer but also the semi-skilled worker. To date, no facilities for retraining such displaced workers have been provided.
Thus, the casual relationship involving discrimination and secondary factors such as inadequate vocational and other educational facilities is a vicious circle. It mires the Negro in a low economic and social position and makes it extremely difficult for him to escape his poor conditions or to improve them.
New Approaches and Techniques:
SNCC-"Snick"
There were two new elements in the Atlanta demonstrations of the Student Non-Violent Coordination Committee ("Snick"). One was the use of nonviolent techniques like fasting and sitting in front of police vehicles. The other was the anxiety to identify with the Negro working class.
THE STUDENT movement of 1960-61 consisted of middle-class young people. Silence on the picket line, "proper" dress, dignity and fluency in the courtroom made a favorable impression on public opinion. The demonstrator by his acceptable behavior made visible his readiness to enter the white middle-class world. Since that time "Snick" has deliberately attempted to reach beyond the middle-class. Its organizers have sought out the hard-core Black Belt counties in southwest Georgia and the Mississippi Delta and they share the poverty of those they work among.
IN THE ATLANTA demonstrations "Snick" approached an urban community with a militancy learned in Albany, Ga., and Greenwood, Miss. It went out to organize people who were so badly off that they could scarcely go anywhere but up. When the UN subcommittee on the prevention of
discrimination and protection of minorities visited Atlanta at the height of the picketing, "Snick" greeted it with a leaflet describing "Buttermilk Bottom," a slum in the heart of the city where 16,000 Negroes live amid unpaved streets and uncollected garbage. The leaflet concluded: "As long as we are in a country that feeds the hungry of the world and stores its excess food in a fleet on the Hudson River, then we cannot forget our own poor or leave slums to be profited from by landlords."
THE SAME AWARENESS of poverty as the core of segregation was shown in SNCC support for the demands of unemployed miners in Kentucky, and its attention to housing problems in Washington, D.C.
One of my students put this changing conception of the task of the civil rights movement in a more personal way. "When I came to college," she said, "my goal was a big house in the suburbs." A visit to the SNCC office led to her increasing involvement and, in the last week of January, to jail.
— Staughton Lynd in The New Republic
from the morgue
On Feb. 19, 1919, the University Senate was burned in effigy by the senior law class in front of Green Hall. After hanging a rag doll, the effigy of the Senate, to a lamp post in front of the law building, the laws cut down the figure with somewhat lively ceremonies and threw it into a fire immediately in front of the law's home, where it was burned to a crisp.
The demonstration against the Senate at Green Hall was said to be expression of the feeling
of students of the School of Law toward the faculty organization. Yells of "Bolsheviki," armbands and hatbands and ties of bright red were everywhere in evidence. A placard bearing the words "An Expression of Student Feeling," was hung out in front of the building.
The demonstration took place to show the administration the sentiment of the students against the usurpation of their powers by the University Senate.
Daily Hansan
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904
triweekly 1908, daily 16, 1912
Musee de la Harbor Inland Daily Press Association. Associated College Rep. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East St. 50, New York 22, N.Y. National. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturday and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
111 Flint Hall
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Mike Miller ... Managing Editor
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Vinay Kothari and Margaret Hughes Assistant Editorial Editors
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bob Brooks Business Manager
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BOOK REVIEWS
C. Vann Woodward, who has written extensively on the social status of the Negro in America, contributes a discerning and interesting approach in another in the American Heritage series on significant Supreme Court decisions. The famous Plessy v. Ferguson case, which finally was canceled out by the desegregation decision of 1954, is the subject of Woodward's "The Birth of Jim Crow" (American Heritage, April, 1964, $3.95).
Plessy v. Ferguson followed a period in which, although intermingling of the races was not absolute, white and Negro did associate freely, without outside comment or interference. Then came Jim Crow laws requiring railroads to carry Negroes apart from whites. One of these laws was passed in Louisiana, and a test case was carried to the high court.
As any reasonably good student of history or government knows, Plessy v. Ferguson upheld segregation. The lone dissenter was Justice John Marshall Harlan; the year was 1896. It was a landmark decision, and it shaped American social patterns for more than half a century.
A beautifully illustrated article tells the story of Maximilian and Napoleon in Mexico, and of the devious operations of a former U.S. senator named William Gwin, who had visions of gold in Sonora, a place for Confederates to flee, and an important position under Maximilian. Another article describes the fight William Penn waged for religious freedom; another nostalgically portrays the ferry boat, which is slowly giving way to bridges and tunnels.
The American Heritage pattern is truly eclectic in the new issue. Besides the Woodward article one can read a vastly entertaining (albeit frightening) article about the Millerites and the Second Coming, that frustrating October night in 1844 when the faithful awaited the great day and were sadly disappointed.
Many readers will enjoy reading about the cooking of the Pennsylvania Dutch, the silk-stocking citizens' army of Gen. Wood in 1915, and Lizzie Borden, who may-or may not-have hacked up her father and stepmother.
One of the mightiest novels of modern times is this story of the Cossacks by Sholokhov. Forget that it appeared in 1928, in the Stalin era of Russia. It is not in the least doctrinaire, and in scope it compares with Tolstoy's "War and Peace."
It was the first in a cycle of novels about the Cossacks of the Don Valley, and it is set in the World War I and Soviet revolution periods. It is earthy and turbulent and bloody. Sholokhov is a greater novelist than Pasternak, is one of the best of the 20th century, and this new paperback edition deserves a wide audience.
* * *
$$
***
$$
AND QUIET FLOWS THE DON, by Mikhail Sholokhov (Signet Classics, 95 cents).
INVISIBLE MAN, by Ralph Ellison (Signet, 75 cents).
This novel of a decade ago is probably the best novel yet written by a Negro. It won the National Book Award for fiction in 1953, and is reissued in a new edition. Those who have read James Baldwin should turn now to Ralph Ellison, for he is a better writer.
"Invisible Man" is the story of a southern Negro who comes north, becomes involved in revolutionary movements, and eventually comes to realize that he has no identity at all in the world of either North or South. The style is exceptional; the point of view makes the book especially important in today's racially torn country.
Monday, April 20,1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
LBJ Policy Reduces Nuclear Stockpiling
BULLETIN
MOSCOW —(UPI)— Premier Nikita S. Khrushev announced tonight the Soviet Union has stopped construction of two new atomic reactors and will "reduce substantially" its production of uranium for nuclear weapons.
NEW YORK — (UPI) — President Johnson announced today that he has ordered a further "substantial reduction" in U.S. production of enriched uranium for nuclear weapons. He said Nikita S. Khrushchev has indicated he plans a similar move.
In a wide-ranging foreign policy speech, Johnson also disclosed that he has sent William Bundy, Assistant Secretary of State for Far Eastern Affairs, to Laos for a first-hand look at the political crisis there.
Discussing domestic politics, Johnson said "partisan politics must yield to national need." In this connection, he said he has instructed the departments of State, Defense and the Central Intelligence Agency to be ready to provide "major candidates" for the presidency with "all possible information helpful to their discussion of American policy."
Johnson also reaffirmed U.S. policy to isolate Cuba. He likewise reiterated this country's determination to win the war in Viet Nam and put in a plug for congressional approval of his new foreign air requests.
BUT THE PRESIDENT'S address, made before the annual meeting of the Associated Press at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel, dealt mainly with foreign policy.
Reiterating his willingness to seek
"We will discuss any problem, listen to any proposal pursue any agreement, take any action which might lessen the chance of war without sacrificing the interests of our allies or our own ability to defend the alliance against attack."
solutions to cold war problems with Russia, Johnson declared:
Johnson said his order reducing uranium production would be carried out over a four-year period. Added to previous reductions, he said, the new cut will mean an over-all decrease in the production of plutonium by 20 per cent and of enriched uranium by 40 per cent.
JOHNSON LAST Jan. 8 announced a 25 per cent cut in uranium production and called on the Soviet Union to take a similar step. The President's statement today that Khrushchev has now indicated a similar move was the first indication the Russians might follow suit.
"I am happy to say that Chairman Khrushchev has now indicated to me that he intends to make a move in this same direction."
"By bringing production in line with need," he said, "we reduce tension while maintaining all necessary power.
The uranium cut is an example of what Secretary of State Dean Rusk has described as limiting the arms race by "mutual example." Rusk has argued that while the United States and Russia may not be able to reach formal agreements limiting military production they may be able to curb such production unilaterally provided each is aware that the other is taking similar action.
Jazzmen to—
Green, hails from the Chicago area where the three members are enrolled at Wright Junior College.
(Continued from page 1)
The One O'clock Lab Band from North Texas State University has a heritage of outstanding big bands behind it. NTSU has consistently produced big bands which have received national recognition.
The Denver University State band has the distinction of having won last year's Notre Dame Collegiate Jazz Festival.
The Cerritos College State Band is a veteran of jazz concerts and music festivals in the Los Angeles area. They recently recorded an album with Bud Brisbois, a former trumpeter with the Stan Kenton orchestra.
A septet from the Chicago area features seven men who all have experience playing with the Quincy Metropolitan Symphony.
THE GEORGE SOUTHGATE Quintet is composed of members from several Illinois colleges and universities.
The Jazzwinds Sextet, the most recent entrant, has been mustering up experience for the last four months playing in St. Louis, Mo., night clubs.
The Bill Farmer Quartet is also from North Texas State University. The group's leader has been playing vibes for a year.
The Mitch Farber Sextet boasts the most experienced personnel of any group in the festival. Members have played with such jazzmen as Bill Root, Don Ellis, and Slide Hampton. Members are mostly from the New York and Philadelphia area.
The Joplin Jr. College Stage Band was formed last fall, and features the youngest average age of any group in the festival, eighteen and a half.
People-to-People
Forum on Germany 7:30—Forum Room—Union Wednesday, April 22
- Social Period with German student
- Free coffee
- Film
of special interest to students traveling to Germany this summer
Select KU's Miss Universe
Tove Danenbarger of Norway was selected "Miss Universe" during the 12th International Festival Saturday night.
Colorful costumes, exotic music, and varied exhibits lent an international atmosphere to Hoch Auditorium.
BOOTHS SHOWING native costumes, jewelry, and trinkets were opened to the public at 6 p.m. Students from each country represented were at the booths, dressed in native costumes, and answered any questions that observers asked.
which demonstrated native skills with drums and songs in their native tongues.
Winner of the best booth award was the group from the Philippines. Depicted in their booth was a Philippine house, in which some of the students demonstrated a Filipino game.
Skits, dances, and music highlighted the program presented at 7:45. First prize in the performing groups went to the African group,
MISS DANENBARGER was selected by a panel of judges after each of the 10 contestants had been introduced to the audience. The judges were Emily Taylor, dean of women; Robert V. Mollan, assistant professor of political science; John Stuckey, chairman of the All Student Council; Rosella Mamoli, Venice, Italy, graduate student, and Shafik Hashmi, Hyderabad, India, graduate student.
Following the program the booths were re-opened.
Ancient Sport
NEW YORK—(UPI)—Boxing, which was originated in ancient Mesopotamia, achieved its first dignity as a sport when it was introduced at the 23rd Olympiad in Greece in 688 B.C.
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TO THE SENIOR CLASS OF 64
Get the Action Habit
The test of a successful person is the ability to meet and work out problems as they arise. Probably the greatest single contribution your college education has given you is the ability to evaluate criteria and make a reasonable decision.
There is a fine line between simple procrastination and the desire to have time to accumulate fact on which to base a rational decision. Often times we must be willing to compromise with perfection lest we wait forever to take action and thereby miss the tide of fortune.
Now is a magic word. Tomorrow, next semester, later, sometime, are often synonyms for never — a failure word. Many people have good intentions; very few act on them. Ideas have value only when they are acted upon.
Have a tough decision to make as to what courses to take or what job opportunity is best for you? Seize the initiative. Have the ability and the ambition to take the ball and run. Remember today is tomorrow's yesterday.
FULLNICO
College Master
John M. Suder
Dan Jansky
Gary Nu Delman
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 20, 1964
Official Bulletin
German Graduate Reading Exam, 9:30
am., May 2, 205 Fraser, Candidates
must register in 306 Fraser by 4:30 p.m.
Friday, April 24.
TODAY
University Lecture, 3.45 p.m. Jayahawk Room, Kansas Union. "Chinese Communist Foreign Policy"—Robert A. Scalanino, U. of Calif., at Berkeley.
Speech 1 Potpourri Tryouts, 4:30 p.m.
Strong Hall.
Student Peace Union 4:30 p.m., Pan American Room, Kansas Union.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. There will be no graduate discussion group this evening.
NASA Lecture, 8 p.m., Dr. Stanley Miller, the University of California at Johns Hopkins in the Promotion of Organic Comms on the Primitive Earth," Summerfield Auditorium.
Faculty Recital, 8 p.m. Swartouth Hall Angelica Morales von Sauer, plaza
Guil Club, 8 p.m. Kansas Union Regulars and other interested persons
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m.
St Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Air Force Recruiting, 16:3-3 p.m.
Hawk's Nest, Kansas Union. Sgt.
Hawk's Training School. Responds to
occer Training School and take applications
for the Officers Training School.
SUA Coffee, 4 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union. "Regionalism in American Speech"-Dr. Albert H. Marckwardt, Humanities Lecturer.
Beginners' Inquiry Forum, 7 p.m. St.
Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Inquirer Class, 7:30 p.m. Canterbury
House.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m., Kansas, Union, "Bible Study."
Humanities Lecture, 8 p.m., Fraser Theater, "The Future of English"-Dr. Albert H. Marckwardt, Princeton linguistics scholar.
Senior Recital, 8 p.m. Swarthout Re-
cital, 10 a.m. Leith Curtis, soprano. Joan
Morge, flute.
Western Civ Discussion, 9 p.m., St.
Lawrence Chapel, 101 Stratford Rd.
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
Dean Moreau Takes Position
Dean Emeritus Frederick J. Moreau of the School of Law will join the faculty of the University of California's Hastings College of Law in San Francisco next fall.
Dean Moreau retired last spring after having served on the KU faculty since 1929. He was dean of the School of Law from 1937-57 and was acting dean from 1960-62.
. . . bring the whole gang along to DIXON'S . . . "WHERE FOOD IS BETTER
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TAMPA BAY MUSEUM
Competitors include: DENVER UNIVERSITY STAGE BAND (Winners of the 1963 Notre Dame Jazz Festival)
— Woody-Herman will be one of several noted jazz critics and will be in concert with his Swingin' Herd at the finals
— 12 collegiate jazz bands from universities throughout the nation will be competing for spectacular prizes, including a tour of Europe
ALL DAY SATURDAY, APRIL 25 $1.50 (with ID) or $1.75
(ticket admits you to the Union during the day and the Hoch concert at 8)
TICKETS NOW ON SALE IN UNION OR INFORMATION BOOTH
Monday, April 20, 1964
University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Yankees Finally Win But Fail to Hit Home Runs
Yogi Berra tasted victory as a manager for the first time but he's still waiting to see the vaunted New York power.
After dropping three consecutive extra inning contests, the American League champions picked up their first win by downing the Baltimore Orioles, 5-3, in a rain-delayed game. But Berra is still haunted by the thought that his Yankees are the only major league team without a home run this season.
The new skipper had to wait out a one hour and 15 minute shower that stalled the New York win and inflicted the initial defeat upon Baltimore. Berra is still visualizing the day the dormant Yankee bats explode and his team begins to score with the consistency inherent in the Yankee tradition.
WHEN THE RAINS came the Yankees had a 2-0 lead after a walk, Joe Pepitone's double (his first safety after an 0-14 start) and a single to Clete Boyer off starter and loser Milt Pappas, who did not return when the rain due to a stiff shoulder.
Pepitone, Roger Maris and Bobby Richardson had two hits each in the nine-hit Yankee attack. Bud Daley hurled only one inning last year because of an arm injury,
went the first five innings and got the victory. Steve Hamilton pitched the final four frames.
In other American League action, Minnesota thumped Detroit, 12-3, in the first game of a doubleheader, but the Tigers won the nightcap, 3-1; Chicago blanked Boston, 6-0; Kansas City stopped Washington, 5-1; and Los Angeles at Cleveland was rained out.
In the National League, Milwaukee nipped Los Angeles, 3-2, in 12 innings, for the Dodgers fifth straight setback; San Francisco pounded Cincinnati, 13-6; the Mets blanked Pittsburgh, 6-0; Philadelphia stopped Chicago, 8-1; and St. Louis defeated Houston, 6-1.
American League home run king Harmon Killebrew conected twice in the Twins' first-game triumph. Rich Rollins and Don Mincher added seven more hits to the Minnesota 18-hit total. Camilo Pascual went all the way for his first victory of the year but was plagued by an old malady, the gopher ball. All three Tiger runs were the result of homers by Don McAuliffe, Don Wert and George Thomas, the latter in a pinch-hitting role.
THOMAS STARTED the second game and knocked in two runs with another home run and a sacrifice fly. Dave Wickersham, ac-
Mizzou, SWC Win—
(Continued from page 1)
ever clocked. Ryun anchored his team's record breaking 2-mile relay effort with a red-hot 1:52.0 half-mile. On Friday, he set an individual record in the prep mile with a 4:11. clocking.
The Relays included girls' invitational events and the colorful team from the Texas track club provided a highlight to the meet.
Winners in the college and University classes were:
University mile relay—Rice; University 880-yard relay—Southern Methodist; University medley relay—Texas; University 440-yard relay—Southern Methodist; University 2-mile relay—Missouri; College distance medley—Emporia State; College 440-yard relay—Lincoln (Mo.) University; College 880-yard relay—Lincoln; College mile relay—Texas; College 2-mile relay—Texas Southern.
The White Sox scored four times in the fifth inning on singles by Don Buford, Floyd Robinson, Ron Hansen and Jerry MertNeyt, a walk and errors by Connolly and second baseman Dalton Jones.
400-meter dash—Ollan Cassell, Houston; Triple jump—John Kelly, Boulder, Colo.; Glenn Cunningham 1500-meter run—Ray Stevens, Lincoln, Neb.; 3,000-meter steepchase—Hlyke van der Wal, Manitoba; Pole vault, Floyd Manning, KU; Javelin—Mike Pitko, Emporia State; Shot put, Danny Roberts, Texas A&M; High jump, Tyce Smith, KU; 100-yard dash, Bob Hansen, KU; 120-yard high hurdles, Bob May. Rice; 100-meter dash, Roger Sayers, Omaha; Decathlon, Jerry Dyes. Abilene Christian.
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quired by Detroit in the Rocky Colavit trade with Kansas City, gave up only four hits while going the distance for his first triumph of the season.
Veterans Johnny Buzhardt and
Ph. VI 2-3416
Hoyt Wilhelm combined to spoil rookie Ed Connolly's major league debut. Buzhardt scattered five hits in seven innings and Wilhelm did not allow a man to reach base in the two frames he worked.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 20,1964
Senate Contemplates Civil Rights After House Passes Legislation
WASHINGTON,—(UPI)—Highlights of the civil rights bill passed by the House and now pending before the Senate:
VOTING (TITLE 1) — For voting in federal elections, outlaws discriminatory registration tests or standards; requires literacy tests, if used, to be written examinations; establishes a sixth grade education as a legal "presumption of literacy"; allows either the justice department or voting officials to demand trial of voting suits by three-judge federal courts; directs courts to expedite voting cases.
PUBLIC (TITLE 2) tion based or national
ACCOMMODATIONS
— Outlaws discrimination on race, color, religion origin against customers
of hotels and other lodgings, restaurants and other eating places, theaters, sports arenas and other places of entertainment. Specified businesses covered if activities "affect" interstate commerce, or practice discrimination under protection of state or local law, custom or tradition. Private clubs, small rooming houses and retail stores, unless connected with covered establishments, are exempted. The attorney general would give local officials "reasonable time" to act before intervening.
DESEGREGATION (TITLES 3 & 4)—Authorizes the Justice Department to initiate suits to desegregate public schools and parks, libraries and other publicly-owned, operated
or managed facilities. Permits the Justice Department to intervene in individuals, suits charging denial of equal protection of law because of race, color, religion or national origin. Permits U.S. Office of Education to give financial and technical assistance to school districts seeking to meet problems of desegregation.
- * * *
CIVIL RIGHTS COMMISSION (TITLE 5) - Life of commission extended for four years until Sept. 30, 1968; new authority granted to act as civil rights information clerking house, and to investigate vote frauds.
Washington — (UPI)— Summer will be pressing close and politically hot before the Senate has worked its will on the civil rights bill.
Time Short for Senate
By William Theis
mittee chairman, faculty firesides chairman, current events discussion chairman, African studies group chairman, office staff chairman, world university service committee chairman, and voter education program chairman.
And "working its will" may have several meanings — more likely to be shaped by outside events than by the months of Senate debate.
The current cabinet is discussing other possible programs for next year such as marriage counseling discussion group, community service, and a freshman camp.
LEGISLATORS' EARS are attuned to events outside the Senate chamber and the Capitol grounds. The scope of racial unrest — pressure by non-violent or violent means—is viewed as the truly uncertain factor in the civil rights struggle.
"I just don't believe the Senate, as an institution, can let its image as a responsible body be damaged by dragging this fight on into June. There are other things that have to be done in this 'session."
Few lawmakers see a real chance of the Senate completing its action on the House-passed measure before June 1. It could take longer. But as one top Republican explained:
Liberals fighting for the bill in Congress are now warning sternly against immoderate demonstrations by Negro or other pro-civil rights groups. They fear such outside events, particularly if they result in bloodshed and property damage, can only hurt the chances of enacting a strong bill.
And they see Alabama Gov. George Wallace's showing in the Wisconsin primary as a partial portent of northern defection from support of the civil rights cause.
AS IT NOW STANDS, the bill would ban racial discrimination in voting, employment, unions, education, public accommodations and
Albert H. Marckwardt, professor of linguistics at Princeton University, will speak about "The Future of English" in the next Humanities Lecture at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Fraser Theater.
Two more cabinet meetings will be held on May 6 and 13. Installation of new officers will be May 10.
In addition to giving the Humanities Lecture, Prof. Markwardt will speak on "Regionalism in American Speech" at a coffee forum at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
He will also speak to classes in linguistics, advanced composition, modern English grammar, American civilization, and American literature.
Besides publishing five books in the linguistics field, Prof. Marckwardt has written hundreds of articles, essays, and reviews, and has lectured on languages, literature, problems of teaching, and philosophy of education.
Noted Linguist To Speak Here
He has been a leader in the National Council of Teachers of English and in the Modern Language Association.
A visiting professor at the University of Mexico in 1943-44, Prof. Marckwardt has also been a Fulbright lecturer at the Universities of Vienna and Graz in 1953-54, and was State Department consultant in English teaching in Italy in 1954.
Cabinet members are expected to attend cabinet meetings every week, help decide major policy of the organization, report on progress in their specific areas, and volunteer to work on sub-committees. The positions are held from May, 1964 to May, 1965.
use of federal funds. It is certain to be amended, but the changes are not expected to be "crippling."
Beginning Tuesday, April 21, the KU-Y will begin accepting applications from students for cabinet positions. Interviews will be held through Thursday with the executive board and staff members.
FEDERAL FUNDS (TITLE 6) Repeals all provisions permitting "separate but equal" use of federal aid funds; rejouires federal agencies to see that state and local governments do not discriminate with government aid; permits funds to be cut off if discrimination does not stop.
The strategy of the bill's supporters is to limit revisions to those which would be acceptable to House backers, principally Rep. William McCulloch, R-Ohio, and fellow Republicans who helped draft and pass the measure.
EMPLOYMENT (TITLE 7) Ontlaws discrimination based on race, color, religion, national origin or sex in hiring and firing by employers, membership policies of labor unions and job referrals by employment agencies.
But after six weeks of Senate debate, the body is only approaching the point of considering its first amendments. Not until there have been some decisions on critical amendments, leaders contend, can there be any realistic estimates of the battle's outcome.
In the past, sub-committee chairmen have been chosen from interested students outside the Y. Next year all such activities will be handled by cabinet members.
SENATE GOP LEADER Everett M. Dirksen, Ill. introduced 10 of 11 proposed amendments to the fair employment section of the bill on April 16, and they are expected to be the first considered by the Senate.
Dirksen said his proposals, worked out in cooperation with some fellow Republicans, will not "impair, weaken or emasculate" the bill.
KU-Y Hunts for Cabinet
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"This is to provide more continuity in our organization," Julie Winkler, Kansas City sophomore and co-president of the Y, said. "The cabinet will work as a steering committee and recruit as many people as it needs for other work."
Big Store Service and Small Store Attention
Those applying for positions do not need to have had previous experience with the KU-Y. The basic criteria is to seem capable and to show enough interest to work actively in the Y program.
SHOW STARTS AT DUSK Doris Day — James Garner "THE THRILL OF IT ALL" plus Bob Hope "CRITICS CHOICE"
Cabinet positions now open are KU-Y Jayhawker editors, freshman program adviser, handicapped children's program chairman, turor service chairman, teacher assistants chairman, Model U.N. steering com-
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Door Panels —
Tailor Made Seat Covers at Competitive Prices with sewed double lock stitch. Jack's Seat Covers
Jack's Seat Covers
545 Minn. VI 3-4242
ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass.
COMPLETE SERVICE FOR CHEVYS & OLDS
- Small enough to give personal attention.
Big enough to have all the equipment.
VI3-7700
SHIP WINTER
738 N.H.
CHEVROLET
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
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Travel Agency AIR LINES
Domestic Foreign Steamship Lines Tours Cruises Everywhere
746 Mass.
VI 3-0152
Originality
IN FLOWERS
FOR EVERY OCCASION
especially for you
by
Alexander's
826 10WA
LAWRENDE, KANSAS
FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PHONE VL 2-3339
C
21" 2 order
Germ
1/500
Anne
Slight for s can b after
1962 snow AM. $4,800
1963 miles. 9458. Wedd stairs.
Conti about and Satur
1956 (matic condition VI 2-
1960 J
air co
interio
for su
Englis
speed
Call V
1954 t
53 fla-
very
standa
Also i
son's
VI 3-1
3-bed tile
slidin shelfte yard elem.
date Phone
50 h.p.
All ae
p.m.
Short excell teur ar, "i wire
1960 tioned
ually
rest, 1
wall
throug
5
Walnu good & Call V
1951 excell at 64:
1964 1 teed reasher
Mobil washse 308.
New sheet:
1005
Classified Ads
FOR SALE
VW, 1961. 45,000 miles. Sun roof, export model, in good condition. Call VI 3-4902. 4-24
des
vision
group
man,
tee
ro-
Gretsch guitar, Chet Akkins model with Bixby. Also 40 watt 2 channel Rickenbacker amp. Contact Mike Wertz, VI 3-7922. 4-24
21" Zenith console TV. Good working order.
$75. Call VI 3-4635. 4-24
1954 Dodge 4 door, V-8, standard, good
3-3083 between 5 and 7 p.ra.
4-24-2
3-3084 between 5 and 7 pra.
German 35 mm camera. 2.8 Tessar lens,
10x45mm objective. Dell-1320. Annex N, UNI-
ANN, Annex N-4-3160 or VI 2-41-4-24
1962 Pontiac Grand Prix White, new snow tires, factory air. full power, FMAM, perfect condition. Original price, $4,800. Asking $2,495. Call VI 3-424-544
Slightly used miniature tape recorder for sale. Original cost was $100. You can buy it for only $20. 840¹₂ Kentucky after 5 p.m.
4-24
1963 Voltswagen 2 door sedan. 9,000
condition. condition. VC4-12
9458, evenings.
Wedding dress, size 7-8.1 187 La. U-
stairs, west apartment. 4 to 6 p.m.
1962 Norton 550 c.c. cycle. Good condition, just overhaulied, high compression pistons. Call VI 2-9100, Room 943. 4-22
1960 Olds convertible, Dynamic 88. Power steering and brakes, whitewalls, radio, heater. Excellent condition. $1,400. Call VI 3-7017. 4-22
Four Navy officer's white dress uniforms, size 38. Never been used. Call VI 3-2007. 4-21
1956 Chevy 4 door hard top V-8 mechanical Radio, heater, good mechanical condition. Needs work. $350. Call VI 2-4428, 5:30-7 p.m. 4-21
English bike in brand new condition 3;
Bicycle mat with 2 speed derailer;
Call VF 3-119;
4-21
1960 Jaguar 3.4 sedan. Auto transmission, air conditioned. Fine wood and leather interior. $2185. Owner going to Europe for summer. Call VI 3-8759 anytime. 4-21
Shortwave communications receiver — excellent for shortwave listeners of amateur radio. For longer-range, "S" meter, inside hip and outside wire antenna. Call VI 3-2454 after 5. 4-21
3-bedroom house on cul de sac, ceramic tile kitchen & bathroom, oak floors, sliding glass doors, full basement with shelter, attached garage, large fenced yard with many items, lovely long rock element, wood floor, elementary school. Prefer August possession date. No special assessments. $16,500. Phone VI 2-0005 to 9:00 p.m.
50 h.p. engine on 15 ft. boat with trailer.
All accessories. Call VI 3-5229 after 5:30
p.m.
4-21
1960 Rambler 6 Custom 4 dr. air-conditioned, tinted glass, overdrive, individually adjustable reclining seats with head rest, radio and heater. Nearly new white-throughly nylon tires. Excellent condition throughout. See at 1514 Tennessee after 5.
Walnut antique organ and commode.
East side of building 525. Call VI 3-2402, 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
4-27
1951 Chevy 4 door. Very clean and in excellent condition. Call VI 2-1802 or see at 64 Maine after 5 p.m.
4-24
1964 model RCA 21" color TV. Guaranteed. Less than 2 months old. Very reasonable. Call VI 3-4635. 4-21
Mobile home for sale; 1959 Prairie Schooner, 10' x 36', 2 bedroom, new washer and air conditioner. Call VI 2-3098. 4-21
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
paper cream--$85 Lawrence Outdoor
1905 M $
Artists - Architects
Crafts & Model Building Supplies
Custom Plastics
George's Hobby Shop
114 Mass.
VI 3-5087
JOE'S BAKERY
Open 24 hours except Saturday evening
616 W. 9th
25c delivery VI 3-4720
Milliken's SOS
"the best professional service"
- general typing serv
- 24 hr. answering service
- automatic typing
1021½ Mass, VI 3-5026, 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Violin, complete with case and bow.
Valued at $200. Sell for only $145. Call
John Brewer in Lawrence or write
John Brewer, 321 S. Oak, Ottawa,
Kansas.
- mimeograph & photo-copying
Student will sell all guns in collection 45 auto's, Lugers, 38 revolvers, miniature automatics, Roger 22's, 410 double 46's, 390 double 47's, 422 lever action. While they last! 22 LR, $8.50 per carton. Call VI 3-1110 after p.m. 4-2'
Bicycle weather ahead! Rent or buy a 3 speed Royce Union, $15 per month, 1 month minimum rental. Ray Stoneback's 929 Mass. 4-2
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME
WHEELS. Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale
great savings after 6 p.m. week days.
Saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut
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 3-644. t
Surprise your roommate with a cake on that special occasion. The K.U. Birthday Party is the student body in the line of cakes. Free delivery and cakes. Call VI 2-1791.
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Tetracentrum; note the $4.50 Western civilization notes; all the completely revised, extremely comprehensive, minimegrahed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Copy VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
FOR RENT
For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3-9040 after 5 p.m. tf
Room with private entrance and bath.
Room 351; Enclosed, modeled.
Union 353; Call VI 3-6891. 4-24
Air conditioner rentals .1 ton, 220 volts.
Air conditioning installed.
Stoneback's, 929-319 Mass. 4-24
Farm house for summer months. Call VV 2-1255 after 6 p.m. 4-22
Page 7
A large room, private half-bath and shower. Kitchen privileges available. Bathroom equipped in Mississippi. Recently remodeled, and cooled for summer. Call VI 2-0298 4-2'
Large, homey, attractively furnished, 4 room apartment. Kitchen built-ins and garbage disposal. Utilities paid except electricity. Call VI 3-7677. tf
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.
Single or double room. Furnished, cook-
ing room and kitchen paid. Call
2-8451 or see at 1244 La.
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 apart-
ment 25th and Redford.
Phone VI 2-3711.
LOST
Blue French purse in Waston Library.
Call VI 2-0112. Reward.
4-24
AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS
DALE'S BODY SHOP
All makes & models
frame - body - fender - glass
VL 3.4 704 Y
VI 3-4732 704 Vermont
The only thing better than a home cooked meal is Dinner At DUCKS Steaks & Seafoods A Specialty
TYPING
STUDENTS! SAVE WITH THIS AD!!
11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass.
Experienced secretary would like typing.
Standard rate. Mrs. Ethel Henderson.
2565 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122. 4-30
- Front end aligned
Serving crisp tossed salads,
choice of potatoes, zesty
Vienna breads & country fresh
butter. Sandwiches, too!
Your favorite beverage
"Front End Special"
- Front wheels balanced,
bearing reocked
Term paper or thesis typed to your
paper and delivered. Satisfies
guarantee. VI 3-1029. 4-29
- Steering checked ONLY
English major graduate, experienced typist wants term paper and theses work. Special rates. Call VI 3-7787. 4-21
Experienced tystp with electric type-
writer available to type themes, term
thems, thesis, etc. Accurate work stand-
ard paper. Phone VI 3-8379. Mrs. Charli-
Patti.
Experienced secretary would like typing in her home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 2-1188.
$6.88
bearings repacked
"Come in Today"
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 reason- sentations and theses, phone VI 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson.
Fast, accurate work done & electric rates. Call Bett Vincent, VI 3-5504.
Term papers. Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tf
Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (plca typer). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3=0558. $^{ff}$
WARDS
Let us prove how we can save you money on all your car needs
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
AUTO SERVICE CENTER
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon printer. Mail to Charles VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 409 West 13th. **tt**
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
Legal derms. Marsha Griffi. VI 3-2577.
TYPING: Experiented typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, manuscripts, and other publications rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568.
Lube - Wheel Bal. - Brakes
FREE! qt. of oil with oil change & filter
BOB'S CONOCO
729 N.H. VI 2-1708
Patronize Kansan Advertisert
ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING
REPAIRS — LEATHER FINISHING
NEW YORK CLEANERS Delivery Service
19th & Mass. VI 3-9802
RISK'S
Photographer
926 Mass. VI 3-0501
Shirt Finishing Laundry
Wash & Fluff Dry
613 Vt. VI 3-4141
HIXON
STUDIO
Portraits of Distinction
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mills, NV 83290
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
★ TUNE-UPS
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
Monday, April 20,1964
ART'S TEXACO
9th & Mississippi
VI 3-9897
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality
typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
The tape has transcriptures. Office
hours 7 a.m., taupe p.12m—0121% Mass.
Phone VI-3920
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1645
BUSINESS SERVICES
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, formals an wedding gowns. Ola Smith, 939% $15
**
U-Call, we haul. Anything, anytime. VI 3-5888. 14
L&M CAFE now under new management. We open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m on Sundays and are very popular, delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches Your second cup of coffee always free.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
The Catacombs nite club and Pizza Dia
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. tt
University Daily Kansan
Out-of-state students; Earn extra money by setting up distributorships for a nationally known product in your home information call VI 2-089 or VI 3-9515 and arrange for an interview. Call now and be the first to cover your home area. 4-21
MISCELLANEOUS
Have a party in the Big Red School
and plant and plum.
Heated. VI CL 3-7453.
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart, 1025 Mass. tf
YELLOW CAB CO.
VI 3-6333
24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled
Service for Shoes Since 1910
1113 Mass. St. VI 3-0691
Shoe Service
BURGERT'S
REAL PET
Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking
GRANT'S DRIVE-IN Pet Center Sure—Everything in the Pet Field 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921
1218 Conn. VI 3-2921
One Stop Service
Brake Repair
★ Engine Tune Up
★ Lubrication & Oil Change
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
- Generator & Starter Repair
JACK & GUNN'S
SKELLY SERVICE
SKELLY
300 W. 6th VI 3-9271
HELP WANTED
portrait models for art classes. $1 per
jour. No experience necessary. Call UM
-3935 between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. 4-24
Male junior student for part time work, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. daily and Saturdays from 10 a.m. to no apt. until you have these three hours. Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. 4-24
Opportunity for male keyboard musicians interested in sales demonstrations. Write age exp, type of instrument and availability, to University Daily Kansan, Box 10. 4-22
Birl to play electric organ part-time.
Ski VI 3-4743.
WANTED
Washing and ironing in my home $6 per
ushel for washing and ironing. $3 per
ushel for ironing only. Bring to 15%*
Lindenwood Lane. 4-21
FOUND
One pair of contact lens and case.
The camera is the ad call Ad
Wilhelm at VI 3-6806. 4-22
VOLKSWAGEN'S WANTED. Cash for your VW, Conzelman Motors, VW Sales, Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway 59 So. tf
When Hallmark
Plans-a-Party,
you receive
the compliments
Hallmark
PLANS-A-PARTY
- Stationery
* Printing
- Parker Pens
BULLOCK'S
4 E. 7th VI 3-2261
GB
Recording Service and Party Music
Recordings Available of
— Rock Chalk Revue
— Spring Sing
— Greek Week Sing
$ $ $ $ $ $
1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780
CAR OWNERS SAVE UP TO 40%
on shocks, mufflers, tail pipes and installation.
- All makes and models including sports cars
- Trained mechanics for quality service
- Montgomery Wards
- Your satisfaction
GUARANTEED
Montgomery Wards
Auto Service Center
729 N.H. VI 2-1708
$ $ $ $ $ $
FOR
TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS
SEE
MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER VI 3-1211
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 20,1964
Fountain of Youth Leads to Major U.S. Swindle
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Millions of Americans cling stubbornly to the belief that there is a fountain of youth somewhere over the rainbow, and they are swindled out of $500 million annually.
They buy things that not only cannot possibly help them but actually endanger their health and in some cases their lives. Take, for instance, Mme. Cora Galenti-Smith and her "fountain of beauty ranch." Before she was fined and sentenced to prison for mail fraud she had separated gullible American women from $1 million.
What she advertised was "a glorious facial rejuvenation," which turned out to be some sort of skin peeling process. What she used was a strong solution of carbolic acid which left many of her victims disfigured for life.
- **TAKE THE CASE of Mrs. Alice Hill cited by the Federal Food and Drug Administration. She drove 165 miles to see a man who advertised a cure-all herb tonic. He examined her left foot and then advised her she had a tumor in the right breast, diabetes, arthritis, a malfunction of the gall bladder and possibly cancer of the colon. She bought $185 worth of tonic before she realized it wasn't helping her.
No federal expert even attempts to guess what Americans spend annually on things they believe have nutritional value, the so-called diet supplements. Some of them are valuable and needed when taken under the supervision of a physician. Others are a waste of money.
Commissioner George P. Larrick of the Food and Drug Administration believes so many persons, particularly in the higher age brackets, waste their money because they accept as truth at least one of the following four myths.
- That all diseases are due to faulty diet.
- That our food is nutritional inferior because the American soil is impoverished from long use.
- That commercial food processing destroys nutritional value. Larkrick says the fact is that processing reduces the values of some foods, preserves it intact in some and in others actually adds to it.
AID to Help Private Companies Explore Business Opportunities
WASHINGTON — (UPI)— The Agency for International Development (AID) has earmarked $715,500 to help private U.S. companies explore business opportunities in Asia, Latin America and Africa.
Asian nations receive by far the greatest attention. Up to $395,500 can be spent in Asia. $250,000 in Africa, $234,000 in Latin America and $61,000 in Turkey.
This is only half the total available. Every dollar put up by the U.S. government agency must be matched by a dollar from the private U.S. business concerned.
AID'S OFFICE of Development Finance and Private Enterprise, which conducts the program, said the rate of investment survey agreements signed by AID and U.S. businessmen has more than doubled during the current fiscal year.
At present AID is participating with private firms in 59 studies in developing nations of the world.
Under the program, AID helps private industry investigate specific commercial opportunities that would also contribute to economic growth in "friendly" developing countries. The agency will pay up
to 50 per cent of the costs of such surveys. AID pays its share only if the firm decides not to go ahead with the venture after the survey is completed. In that event, the survey report becomes the property of the U.S. Government and may be made available to other prospective investors. If the firm goes ahead with the project, it pays all survey costs.
- *That minor aches and fatigue mean a person is eating the wrong thing or not enough for the right thing.*
OF THE 12 surveys which have been completed so far, two have resulted in positive decisions by sponsoring firms to invest in the country. Several others have indicated they probably would go ahead, and three have decided not to invest.
Pakistan, the number two recipient (next to India) of U.S. foreign aid, was carmarked for the most surveys—nine totaling $130,00. India had six for $63,100 and Turkey two for $61,000.
The Philippines also was high on the list. Programmed for the Philippines was a $40,000 survey of the transportation system by the D.C. Transit Company of Washington D.C., and a $28,200 look by the Padoo Company into the possi-
billies of a chain of supermarkets in the island nation.
THE LIST OF possible business ventures being investigated includes hotels, motels, book distribution, fruit processing, paper mills, plastic fabrication, furniture manufacturing, silk processing, carpet manufacturing, foundries, housing, mushroom culture, a land whaling station and manufacturing of plywood, cheese, cement, machine tools, pesticides and paint resins.
What do researchers look for to determine whether a particular product could be manufactured economically in a particular country? Again the list is long.
They investigate the potential market for the product, both immediate and future; methods of using the product in the host country, the necessity of training consumers in the proper use of the product, the availability of skilled and semi-skilled workers, possible plant sites, construction costs of plants or warehouses, availability of raw materials and their transportation costs, government regulations that would affect a new business, and possible sources of local financing
THOUSANDS OF persons still are being swindled as a result of Dr. Elisha Perkins and his "metallic tractor." He obtained a patent in 1796 on two metal rods about three inches. By pulling them downward over the affected part of the body, the disease was supposed to be vanked out.
George Washington was one of Perkins' patients, but there is no record of a cure.
"Perkins' theories were widely disseminated in this country and abroad," says the Food and Drug Administration. "They still persist today. We see them in the magnetic belts, agnetic bracelets and many types of complicated-looking contraptions. There is no scientific evidence to support the theories of Dr. Perkins and all devices based on his theories are considered worthless for any medical purpose."
Currently there is much interest in sea water on the theory it contains minerals not available elsewhere, and the going price seems to be $3.75 a gallon. The Food and Drug Administration rules that sea water is useless and, in the case of heart patients, can be dangerous. It made a six-state roundup of persons who were selling it and advertising it would help or cure persons suffering from cancer, diabetes, epilepsy, asthma, arthritis, insanity, cataracts, high blood pressure, baldness, sterility, split finger nails, goiter, and gray hair.
4
Chance fights ever on the side of the prudent — EURIPIDES
Prudence has a way of bringing good luck. Euripides knew it way back when, and it's true as ever today.
Are you being prudent about your financial future? It's never too early to start and it's wise to begin with a foundation of life insurance. Delay could be costly.
Our campus office specializes in life insurance programming for young people. Stop by to see us or telephone.
Kermit D. Hoffmeier
1722 W 9th
VI 3-5692
PROVIDENT MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA
ATTENTION!! SENIORS-TO-BE
Applications For 1965 Senior Class Committee Positions Are Available At Alumni Office,127 Strong. Students Living In Organized Groups May Pick Up Applications From Their House President.
DEADLINE APRIL 22
SENIOR COMMITTEES INCLUDE:
BREAKFAST
RING
PICNIC & SENIOR DAY
GIFT
SPECIAL EVENTS
PUBLICITY
CALENDAR ANNOUNCEMENTS HOPE AWARD REGALIA ALUMNI RELATIONS HOUSE REPRESENTATIVES
New China Policy Urged by Expert
A specialist in Far Eastern affairs concluded a lecture on Communist China's foreign policy by stating that the United States must try to "complicate the decision-making policies of that authoritarian state."
Prof. Robert A. Scalapino, chairman of the political science department at the University of California at Berkeley, yesterday said "once you complicate decision making processes, you complicate the pure simplicity with which Communist China wants to view the world."
Tuesday, April 21, 1964
PROF, SCALAPINO, author of numerous magazine articles, coauthor of the Conlon report on Eastern Foreign policy, and editor of "Asian Survey," a magazine dealing with contemporary political developments in Far Eastern political affairs, was sponsored in a University Lecture by the KU political science department.
Discussing the non-recognition policy of the United States toward Communist China, Prof. Scalapino said, "We're in an uncomfortable position where there are no short-run gains and where there are long-run hazards in a policy change.
"The Chinese communists feel our policy is a losing one. They like it just as it is because it is serving them best. If we change our Chinese policy, we would have to recognize just one China.
"THEYWOULD rather have us isolated from our allies and the neutral nations with a policy that no one else will follow. They are not going to change their policy toward us, so we must build some complexities in their policy making as they have done to us," he said.
The first involves the correct tactics for success in the Communist movement.
The Chinese communists are in a paradoxical position, Prof Scalapino said. They have to follow a tough line "ideologically," but pragmatically, "they are not about to challenge us militarily, at least for a decade or more."
"THE ISSUE OF communist tactics and strategy for victory is the big issue between Russian and Communist China." Prof. Scalapino said. "Russia thinks in terms of economic, political and military competition with the United States—nation to nation competition. The Chinese think in terms of unfolding the world revolution."
Discussing the Sino-Soviet split, Prof. Scalapino said there were three basic underlying issues on which the Soviets and the Chinese communists disagreed.
The argument is over who is following the true Marxist-Leninism policy, Prof. Scalapino said.
The second issue of Sino-Soviet disagreement is over the organization and decision-making of the movement, Prof. Scalapino said.
"THEY FACE THE same problems we do . . . the nation state can no longer function alone. Power at the end of this century will be held by clusters of states on a supranational level. The struggle for a supranational organ of communist states is being lost at the present time, because of the ideological conflict," Prof. Scalapino said.
Prof. Scalapino said that for eight months, Communist China has instructed its revolutionary groups to struggle everywhere for the control of the communist movement, and the movement is being fragmented. Fragments are emerging as two different communist parties where there was only one, he said.
THE CHINESE TACTIC is to categorize the leadership of both the United States and Russia as "big power chauvinism," oblivious to the needs of small countries, he said.
The third issue concerns economic and technical assistance to one's allies. Russia has rejected the advancement of the communist countries on the same level by withdrawing economic aid to keep them in line with Moscow, Prof. Scalapino said.
"Communist China is now determined to build a third force in the world, and assume leadership over the peasantry. . . Chinese committments to Asia and Africa will be considerable in the next decade," Prof. Scalapino said.
Daily Hansan
Lawrence, Kansas
Senate Attempts Curb On Civil Rights Debate
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Senate leaders maneuvered today to tighten the reins on speech-making and quicken the pace of debate on the civil rights bill.
Democratic whip Hubert H. Humphrey, Minn., planned to renew his demand for stricter enforcement of the rule allowing a senator two speeches on each issue. A lively floor fight could develop from his action.
Humphrey tried unsuccessfully to force the two-speech rule last night and prevent Sen. George A. Smathers (D-Fla), from speaking against the House-approved bill.
SMATHERS PROTESTED HUMPHREY'S attempt to enforce the rule. Humphrey finally gave up when Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen, Ill., suggested that Smathers had been given insufficient notice of the crackdown.
Strict enforcement of the two-speech rule would be a moral victory for Humphrey and the bill's supporters.
But it would pose only minor
Linguist to Talk On New English
What's happened to the King's English after being kicked around by the common people for many generations?
Will things worsen for squares and lames who aren't hip?
The Future of English" will be forecast by a distinguished linguistics scholar in a Humanities Series lecture at 8 p.m. tonight in Fraser Theater. The speaker, Albert H. Marckwardt, professor of linguistics at Princeton University, taught at the University of Michigan for 30 years and there gained international recognition as an authority on the English language.
Will the mother tongue be twisted further by pop song writers, teenagers, hipsters and sports announcers?
"To help solve the parking problem," Prof. Elmer F. B, Humanities chairman said, "a free shuttle bus would be run from the free parking lot south of the power plant to the theater, beginning at 7:30 p.m."
An informal reception after the lecture will be given by the Faculty Club.
problems for Southern opponents who could arm themselves with a series of amendments and speak twice on each proposal.
In other civil rights action, the New York World's Fair, which opens tomorrow, may provide the city with its biggest traffic jam in history if civil rights demonstrators go ahead with plans for a "stallin-
Despite a court restraining order issued yesterday and sharp warnings from city officials, leaders of rebellious chapters of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) thus far have refused to call off the planned demonstrations.
Mayor Robert F. Wagner scolded the organizers yesterday as men holding "a gun at the heart of the city."
OBSERVERS POINTED out that the stall-in plans may have gathered so much momentum the organizers may not be able to halt the demonstration.
Also threatened for the opening day of the fair is disruption of subway and Long Island rail road service to the fair site and sit-in blockades of key bridges and tunnels between Manhattan and the Long Island fair site.
National CORE leaders, who are opposed to the stall-in meanwhile, announced a series of civil disobedience protests for inside the fair.
Mayor Wagner, in his strongest statement to date on stall-in type activities, promised that "in any case the law will be enforced." A new law provides $50 fines and 30 days in jail for stalling cars on city expressways and bridges.
POLICE OFFICIALS PLANNED emergency tactics to handle the demonstrations inside or outside the fair grounds and to provide maximum security for the opening day visit of President Johnson.
U. N. ambassador Adlai Stevenson, speaking at the fair yesterday, deplored the stall-in plans and declared that "civil wrongs don't make civil rights."
Wagner said that illegal civil rights protests would "do more harm to the civil rights cause than anything Dixiecrat senators can do in Washington or the forces of bigotry can do in the city."
Chairman Emanuel Celler of the House Judiciary Committee, who played a key role in House passage
of a strong rights bill, called the stall-in the same "kind of irresponsibility" practiced by Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace. d"plor edum oifining ionered
JAMES FARMER. National director of CORE who suspended the Brooklyn CORE chapter for instigating the stall-in, said that the targets of the national group's demonstrations would be pavilions of some southern states and of the General Motors, Schaefer Beer and Ford Motor companies.
Farmer pictured a number of sensational demonstrations that conceivably could lead to arrest and said he would personally bring an electric cattle prod of the kind used against Negroes in the South.
The fair ground demonstrations, he said were designed "to point up the contrast between the glitter fantasy world of technological abundance shown in the official exhibits and the real world of discrimination, poverty and brutality faced by millions of Negro Americans."
Solon Predicts Rights Passage
By Lee Stone
Senator Frank Carlson predicted yesterday that the Senate will pass the omnibus civil rights bill now before it. He said there will be only minor amendments to the bill.
Sen. Carlson made the prediction while strolling under overcoat skies from Hoch Auditorium to the Kansas Union yesterday morning. He had just attended convocation where Sargent Shriver, director of the Peace Corps spoke. Sen. Carlson was present on the speaker's platform but did not make remarks to the audience.
The senator's mail, at first, produced letters that were nine to one against the omnibus civil rights bill, Sen. Carlson said. Now, the mail is three to five against the bill, he said.
Sen. Carlson also predicted that Governor Wallace of Alabama, who is running for the U.S. presidency on a segregationist platform, would get "a big vote in Maryland." Sen. Carlson said some Washingtonians were predicting that Wallace would win the Maryland primary. "I don't go that far," the senator said.
U. S.,
U.S. Russia To Reduce Atomic Arms Stock
WASHINGTON — (UPI) The United States and the Soviet Union are reducing their production of uranium for atomic weapons in a move that President Johnson believes will help speed the day when "nation shall not lift up sword against nation . . ."
Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home was expected to announce a similar cutback on Britain's part today in a statement to the House of Commons in London.
Announcement of the major step toward curbing the arms race, the biggest move to ease East-West tensions since the signing of the nuclear test ban treaty last August, was made simultaneously by Johnson in New York and Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev in Moscow yesterday.
Douglas-Home's announcement today will leave only France of the original four engaged in an all-out nuclear production effort. French President Charles de Gaulle has insisted that an independent nuclear force is vital for his country and it is one of his major aims.
REACTION ON CAPITOL Hill to Johnson's action was mixed.
Chairman J. William Fulbright, (D-Ak.), of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee called the move "a favorable and hopeful development ...". Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, (R-Iowa), said he had "no particular confidence" in the Soviet promise, which he described as "indefinite."
JOHNSON SAID the United States would make a substantial reduction in its production of enriched uranium during the next four years. He said that, added to previous cutbacks, this will mean a total decrease of 20 per cent in U.S. output of plutonium and a 40 per cent cutback in uranium production.
In his statement, Khrushchev made no mention of his serious dispute with Communist China or of his warming relations with the West. He said the Russian cutback was "an opportunity for improving mutual understanding with other states on the necessity of avoiding a nuclear war."
Khrushchev said Russia was halting construction of two new atomic reactors for the production of plutonium and reducing "substantially" production of uranium-235 during
"the next several years." He said the Soviet Union also would divert more fissionable materials for power, industry, farming, medicine, the distillation of sea water and other peaceful uses.
NO SIGNED AGREEMENT was involved and, because there is no provision for inspection, neither side can be sure the other will carry out its promise.
But administration officials explained that Johnson's initial move in January and his action yesterday would in no way affect U.S. security. They said U.S. stockpiling of nuclear weapons had reached a point where most of the nation's "inventory" was complete, thus permitting a slowing down in the rate of stockpiling and a slackening of production of fissionable materials.
Johnson said he had "treaffirmed all the safeguards against weakening our nuclear strength which we adopted at the time of the test ban treaty." The White House reported later that U.S. underground nuclear tests over the past eight months had provided important new information about new weapons designs and effects.
Weather
Clear to partly cloudy through Wednesday. Cooler this afternoon and tonight. Low tonight near 45. High Wednesday near 70.
IN ANNOUNCING HIS MOVE, Khrushchev noted that both the United States and the Soviet Union had been competing for many years in stockpiling nuclear weapons and that the cost of producing them was "very considerable."
U. S. officials speculated that t Khrushchev had decided that the Soviet Union's inventory also was big enough, or that he might be under heavy internal pressure to commit more Soviet resources to agriculture or consumer goods.
In his New York speech at a lunch for Associated Press editors
Johnson indicated in his State of the Union message that he was concerned about the heavy cost of weapons production. He said then that, even in the absence of firm agreements with Russia, "We must not stockpile arms beyond our needs or seek an excess of military power that could be provocative as well as wasteful."
yesterday, he voiced this concern again. "We must not operate a WPA nuclear project just to provide employment when our (nuclear) needs are met," he said.
BUT, THE PRESIDENT SAID, the United States must maintain its military strength to pursue peace for all men.
"We must remember that peace will not come suddenly," Johnson said.
In a statement of policy almost identical in form and content to that enunciated by his predecessor, the late John F. Kennedy, Johnson said:
"We will discuss any problem, listen to any proposal, pursue any agreement, take any action which might lessen the chance of war without sacrificing the interests of our allies or our own ability to defend the alliance against attack."
Then the President added his own touch, saying: "Thus I am hopeful that we can take important steps toward the day when, in the words of the Book of Micah, nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war anymore."
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 21, 1964
Theoretically, a Laughing-stock:
Shriver
R. Sargent Shriver spoke yesterday as one who sees the world as a series of outposts where small victories are being won against cynicism.
Shriver was not a word-mouther, nor fervent to the point of being feverish. He was, rather, an ex-Chicago businessman who, by accident of marriage to the late president's sister, became the molder of an idealistic program . . . a program which also was to double as a Cold War weapon against the Reds.
Still, he spoke as a person with militant zeal, with a sort of vision. Standing in his stylish suit, he recalled a Missouri farm boy and a Chicago Jew who died together in Africa . . . a brawny Yank in Thailand . . . a school teacher in Togo tutoring the president.
Cocky, brash—this was also part of Shriver. "We did what we set out to do," was his main theme as he reviewed the Peace Corps accomplishments during the last three years. The Corps had proved the scoffers wrong,
Shriver said, and he seemed to take particular pleasure in that.
Shriver, it seemed, had a near electric effect on his audience in Hoch Auditorium. "He got to everyone in there," reflected a professor afterwards.
Given the popular beliefs about American collegiates, it is strange that a man with Shriver's message should be so well-received on campus. Strange, even, that he was not a laughing-stock.
He was in effect, peddling two years of hardship and self-sacrifice, promising poor living conditions and negligible pay.
You hear it everywhere that American youth responds to a house in suburbia, the promise of two TV sets, a lighted patio and a new car.
Strange that a man with such a message should be well-received here . . . an exbusinessman who spoke of small victories won over cynicism.
Tom Coffman
Part Two, Minority Rights:
Federal Legislation
Rick Mabbutt
Negro leaders and civil rights advocates have turned to Congress in an effort to end white discrimination in the economic sphere, particularly in the area of equal employment opportunities.
In the past, Congress has been reluctant to extend federal power into this sector of society. Most action in this area has been in the form of presidential executive orders, which are limited to activities supported by federal funds.
Now Congress is using the "commerce" clause (Art. 1, Sec. 8), which gives it the power to regulate commerce and other internal affairs of the country, and Sec. I of the 14th Amendment, which gives equal protection of the law to all citizens, as the legal basis for legislation of equal employment opportunities
THE FEDERAL BANK OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Truman
THE HOUSE-PASSED civil rights bill presently being debated in the Senate contains a section aimed specifically at ending discrimination in employment.
Title VII of the proposed law forbids labor unions and employers of 25 or more workers from discriminating in hiring or admitting to membership workers on the basis of race, creed, religion, color, national origin, or ancestry. The bill provides equal opportunities for employment and advancement for all government employees. It forbids discrimination in apprenticeship or other training programs sponsored by the federal government.
A hotly disputed portion of the bill would create an Equal Employment Opportunities Commission to investigate alleged discriminatory practices and to make recommendations to Congress for corrective legislation in this area.
Title VII of the civil rights bill is greater in scope than any previous federal action. Below is a summary of the significant federal action since 1933:
1933: THE UNEMPLOYMENT Relief Act provided "that in employing citizens for the purpose of this Act no discrimination shall be made on account of race, color, or creed."
1939: The Hatch Act stated that "it shall be unlawful . . . to deprive
"It shall be unlawful . . . to deprive . . . any person or any employment . . . made possible by any Act of Congress appropriating funds for work relief purposes, on account of race, creed, color, or any political activity . . ."
World War II years: The Civilian Pilot Training Act of 1939, the Selective Training and Service Act of 1940, the Act of Oct. 9, 1940, providing for the training and education of defense workers, and the Nurse Training Act of 1943 all contained non-discrimination clauses.
1940: Executive Order 8587 amended the Civil Service rules to include a proscription against racial discrimination in governmental employment. The Ramspeck Act of the same year repeated this prohibition.
1941: Faced with a threatened Negro march on Washington, President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 8802 on June 25, establishing a five-man Fair Employment Practices Committee. This was an independent, advisory agency charged with providing for the "full and equitable participation of all workers in defense industries without discrimination because of race, creed, color, or national origin."
THE ORDER WAS BROAD in scope and applied to employment by the federal government, to all defense contracts, and to vocational and training programs administered by federal agencies.
Disputes arising from complaints filed against a group of railroads and rail union's led to the suspension of the committee's operations early in 1943.
1943: President Roosevelt issuea Executive Order 946 on May 27. It established a Fair Employment Practices Committee with expanded provisions for "voluntary" enforcement. Its jurisdiction included all employment by government contractors, whether or not engaged in "defense work," recruitment and training for war production, federal employment, and discrimination in union membership. The committee ended its activities on June 28, 1946.
1948: ON JULY 26, President Truman issued Executive Order 9380 establishing a Fair Employment Board within the Civil Service Commission to secure "fair employment throughout the federal establishment, without discrimination because of race, color, religion, or national origin."
1551: President Truman issued a series of executive orders directing certain government agencies to include non-discrimination clauses in their procurement contracts. Executive Order 10308 established an 11-member Committee on Government Contract Compliance which terminated with the end of the Truman administration.
1953: President Eisenhower issued Executive Order 10479 establishing the President's Committee on Government Contracts to act in an advisory and consultative capacity on the national non-discrimination policy.
THE NEW YORKER
Eisenhower
1555: PRESIDENT EISENHOWER's Executive Order 10590 created the President's Committee on Government Employment Policy as an interdepartmental agency outside the Civil Service Commission.
1961: President Kennedy's Executive Order 10925 abolished the presidential committees and the committees on government contracts. It created the President's Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity. Another Order, No. 11114, in June of 1963, extended the committee's power to apply to construction projects carried out through federal grants or loans to state and local governments and to private organizations.
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Communist Schism Is Week's Big Story
When a college food riot gains status as the No. I story in the Kansas City Star, you begin to wonder if the passing week represented a lull as far as news goes.
And, no doubt the week was quiet as most weeks go in these turbulent times. After all, many persons were racing against a deadline to complete their income tax returns.
But closer examination reveals there was plenty of news last week. And most of it concerned the growing schism between China and Russia and Premier Khrushchev.
One of the wildest stories of the week concerned a report that Khrushchev had died. But this story, which caused a sensation around the world was erroneous and a West German news agency—Deutsche Presse Agentur (DPA)—apologized for circulating the report.
Nikita Khrushchev was very much alive four days later, when he celebrated his 70th birthday. An informal summit meeting of the Soviet bloc—leaders of Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Mongolia and Poland — gathered for the birthday party.
The celebration involved more of a discussion of the growing Sino-Soviet split than a birthday. John Hightower, Associated Press analyst, wrote, "The raging quarrel between Soviet and Chinese Communist leaders appears now to be moving rapidly toward a formal break which the Soviets apparently wish to avoid but the Chinese may be determined to force."
Khrushchev said in a speech at a Polish-Russian friendship meeting that the Chinese Communists "have created serious difficulties for the world Communist movement and placed it on the verge of split."
Preston Grover. Moscow correspondent for the Associated Press, said the battle between the Chinese and Russians consists of two main points:
- **"The battle between Russia and China is a battle for the third world — Asia, Africa and Latin America. It is reported . . . that Premier Khrushchev holds this view."**
- The battle between the two is a battle for Communist leadership itself, with China's challenge already shaking the movement apart."
L
Bigger Bombs
In the United States, there also was a split. It stemmed from testimony by Gen. Curtis E. LeMay in which the Air Force chief of staff said Russia had narrowed the gap of U.S. military superiority and that the United States should develop a 100-megaton nuclear bomb,
Dr. Harold Brown, Pentagon director of research, refuted the statements about the 100-megaton bomb, saying "it does not seem at this time to make sense to do such development."
The Defense Department issued a statement which stressed "the increasing military superiority of the United States." Defense Secretary McNamara said intelligence estimates were used because he wanted to eliminate any "myth" about declining U.S. military superiority,
The Pentagon statement emphasized U.S. military superiority with its 540 strategic bombers, 750 balistic missiles, 192 Polaris missiles and its nuclear-powered Polaris submarines.
Sen. Barry Goldwater kept the dispute stirred up by accusing President Johnson and McNamara of letting American power "lag and slide. Unless the defense policies of this administration are changed," he said, "we will face a deterrent gap through which the full force of advanced Soviet weapons may be felt."
By week's end, the split seemed to lessen—at least in the open. And, in another development of military nature, President Johnson said at a press conference that a study would be undertaken which could result in elimination of the draft in the 1970s.
The President spoke of a need for some of the resources now devoted to national security to be used "on better society and a greater society."
Presidential Race
The presidential primary merrygo-round took another turn last week. Even though Sen. Margaret Chase Smith got 26 per cent of the vote, most Republican leaders interpreted Goldwater's victory in Illinois (64 per cent of the vote) as a sign the Arizona senator could still capture the Republican nomination this summer.
The number of delegates committed to Goldwater on the first ballot grew over the weekend. Six-
(Continued on page 3)
Tuesday, April 21, 1964
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Lodge Said Gaining, Right Debate Bogged-
(Continued from page 2)
teen delegates from his home state were pledged along with 29 from Illinois, 20 from Louisiana and two from Minnesota.
Jack Bell, who covers the Senate for the Associated Press, wrote last week that uncommitted party leaders appear to be relying on former President Eisenhower to spark "stop-Goldwater efforts" at the Republican convention.
"... party pros have formed the impression that Eisenhower will abandon his stated neutrality if he fears Goldwater might win the nomination and control the party organization for the next four years," he wrote.
Richard Nixon told the American Society of Newspaper Editors that Goldwater either will get the nomination or come very close to it if the Arizonan wins the California primary.
ry-
last
aret
the
in-
in
) as
could
mi-
om
first
Six-
The latest Gallup Poll, however, showed Henry Cabot Lodge gaining in popularity in a supposed situation where Lodge would be running against Lyndon Johnson for president.
Of Lodge, Jack Bell wrote, "Influential Republicans of all shades of opinion believe primary victories will not be enough and Henry Cabot Lodge must campaign personally if he wants to try to win the GOP presidential nomination.
The AP's James Marlow last week wrote about the weirdness of this presidential year, calling it "one of the weirdest in a long time." He pointed to the surprise strength of Mrs. Smith ("a woman without a chance") and Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace ("a prince of southern segregationists" who did "surprisingly well in the North").
Marlow further commented how weird it was that two hard-working campaigners, Rockefeller and Goldwater, "finish behind the silent Sam type — Lodge — who wasn't even there."
* *
The civil rights debate moved at a slow pace in the Senate last week, so slow that Sen. Hubert Humphrey was talking about roundthe-clock sessions to force voting.
The New York Times' James Reston wrote:
"An odd mood of foreboding is developing in the civil rights debate in the Senate. The leaders on both sides—segregationists as well as integrationists—share a common feat: This is that they will not be able to control events during the long summer debate and that some ghastly accident will inflame the races and once more command this doom-filled story."
Reston said a lot will depend on how the public reacts to the upcoming Senate filibuster. And, about filibusters, Walter Lippmann said:
"A filibuster which delays legislation for months to come, or even stops it entirely, will not only subvert faith in the supremacy of law, but will most surely lead eventually to the destruction of the filibuster altogether."
* *
Humberto Castello Branco was sworn in as president of Brazil last week and it appeared that a diplomatic break with Cuba was imminent. He replaced President Joao Goulart who was ousted and sent into exile because of his leftist tendencies.
South Viet Nam suffered its heaviest casualties in the Viet Nam war last week. American advisers reported nearly 300 government soldiers dead or wounded after a three-day battle with two Communist Viet Cong battalions.
Risqué
The Southeast Asia Treaty Organization expressed concern over the continuing Communist aggression and agreed (with France abstaining) that members of SEATO "should remain prepared if necessary to take further steps" under the SEATO treaty.
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In France, Charles de Gaulle said the French must build a nuclear force whatever the cost or rely on "uncertain" U.S. protection.
The big story in Kansas last week was the defeat of Gov. John Anderson in his bid to be one of the delegates to the Republican national convention. Sam Mellinger, Emporia, was elected Republican national committeeman to succeed Harry Darby.
The biggest campus story was reaction to Board of Regents approval of increased traffic control, parking fees and parking restrictions. The Board of Regents took under advisement KU Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe's proposal to increase in-state student fees $10 and out-state student fees $50.
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triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 21, 1964
Teacher to Give Taylor Lecture
KU book buffs will have the opportunity to hear Herbert Faulkner West, artist, teacher, writer and book collector, Prof. West is a book lege tomorrow when he will present the annual Taylor Book Collection lecture.
Professor West will speak on "The World of Wonderful Books" at 4 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. He is chairman of the Dartmouth department of comparative literature and is author of two books, "Modern Book Collecting for the Impecunious Amateur," and "The Mind on the Wing." The latter is a collection of essays from three of Prof. West's personal friends, Robert Frost, H. L. Mencken and Henry Miller.
Official Bulletin
German Graduate Reading Exam, 9:30 a.m., May 2, 205 Fraser. Candidates must register in 306 Fraser by 4:30 p.m., Friday, April 24.
Teaching interview: Friday, April 24. Cleveland, Ohio.
Wednesday is the last day to register for the Western Clv Exam, 130 Strong.
TODAY
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. There will be no graduate discussion group this evening.
SCA Coffee, 4 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union. "Regionalism in American Speech"—Dr. Albert H. Marckwardt, Humanities Lecturer.
Beginners' Inquiry Forum, 7 p.m. St.
Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Inquier Class, 7:30 p.m., Canterbury
House.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m., Kansas Union, "Bible Study."
Humanities Lecture, 8 p.m., Fraser Theater. "The Future of English"-Dr. Albert H. Marckwardt, Princeton linguistics scholar.
Senior Recital, 8 p.m. Swainthout Ree-
lance, Altha Curtis, soprano; Joan Moore, flute
Western Civ Discussion, 9 p.m., St.
Lawrence Church, 1010 Fifth Street, Rd.
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
TOMORROW
Senior Class Meeting, 9:30 a.m., Ballroom, Kansas Union.
Air Force Recruiting 10-3-20 p.m.
Jackie Nest, Kansas Union. Sgt.
Ebart Howard questions on Officer Training School and opportunities for the Officers Training School.
Faculty Forum, Noon, English Room, Kansas Union. "The Intellectual's Place in Changing Africa"—Victor Bu Dois. AUFS.
Inquiry Class, 3:45 p.m., Canterbury House.
Taylor Book Lecture, 4 p.m., Forum Routh Kansas University. Herb Wart, Dartmouth
Le Cerule francais se reunira mercredi le 22 avril a 4 h. 30 dans la salle 11 de Fraser. Monsieur Serge Gaulaupe donnant causerie sur "Poésie et Folle" y il aurait dissuisse d'insultements! Tous ceux qui s'intèrissent au français cordialement invités.
Carillon Recital, 7 p.m. Amen Gerken.
SUA Classical Film, 7 p.m. Dyche
Auditorium. "A Nous la Liberte."
(French, 1931)
Speech I Potpourri Finals, 8 p.m.
Fraser Theater.
"Period of Adjustment," 8:15 p.m.
University Theater.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
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Page 5
'Taffy' Will Walk-On Tomorrow in KU Play
By Nancy Schroeter
Since a dog has finally been found,
"Period of Adjustment." by Tennessee
Williams will open at 8:15 p.m.
tomorrow in the University Theatre.
Tuesday, April 21, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Two weeks ago a dog was needed to complete the cast of characters for the play.
A WEEK AGO, 12-year-old Michael Ores, who lives with his parents at 1913 Madeline Lane. offered his cocker spaniel's assistance.
The Speech I Potpourri finals will be at 8 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday nights in Fraser Theater.
Eight different students will compete each night and three students each night will be awarded gavels as winners.
The difficulty in finding the other cast member was to find an animal that was well-trained and easy to work with. The drama department put out a public request for a cockier spannel to perform the two "walk-ons" in the play.
"Taffy," the dog, is doing a good job in the play, Gordon Beck, instructor of speech and drama and director of the play, said.
Speech I Holds Contest Finals
The event is part of the Speech I course taught at the university. Each Speech I class selects one representative to compete. There are approximately 50 classes, E.C. Buchler, professor of speech and drama explained. The students in the semifinals are divided into two groups of 25. Out of these two groups of eight students are chosen for the final competition.
"ABOUT EIGHT YEARS ago we (the speech department) decided to have informative speeches." Prof. Buehler said. Before this time the speeches could be varied, he explained.
The eight minute speeches have "multiple values," Prof. Buehler said. First, the speech potpourri consolidates the Speech I program, and second it "brings into focus many essential things that make up an informative speech," he remarked.
The trend in speeches is more and more towards the informative speech, Prof. Buchler said. This speech helps, he explained, "to give the audience new information or additional insights."
THE JUDGES for the final contest on Wednesday and Thursday nights are the Speech I students. Each student is given a card when he comes to listen to the speeches. At the end of the speeches the students vote for what they feel is the best one. The votes are then counted and the top three on either night wins.
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A comedy, the play concerns two young married couples who are going through a "period of adjustment." One couple, Isabel and George, have just been married, but their wedding night was spent with Isabel sleeping in a chair and George sleeping in a bed.
BUT RALPH'S WIFE, Dorthea, has skipped out because Ralph quit his job. As Christmas Eve proceeds, however, problems are resolved. Dorthea comes back to Ralph and Isabel and George work out their problems.
The sequence of events in the play takes place in one night. Christmas Eve—when the bride and groom of one frustrating night are visiting at the home of George's old Army "buddy," Ralph.
KKΓ
There will be performances at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow through Saturday at the University Theatre in Murphy Hall.
Students may obtain tickets at the University Theatre Box Office in Murphy Hall on presentation of their KU LD.
BRIMAN'S leading jewelers
The deadline for students registering for the Spring Western Civilization Comprehensive Examination is 5 p.m. tomorrow.
The exam will be given at 1 p.m. Saturday, May 16. Students who do not register now will have to wait until July 25, 1964 to take the exam.
Registration End Near For Civilization Exam
Sophomores taking the exam will receive 4 hours credit; junior and seniors only 2 hours cred it.
Honor students wishing to take the oral exam must obtain written permission from their discussion leader and a permit from the western civilization office.
Only 268 students had registered Monday. This represents about half the students who should be taking the exam when compared with the 547 students who took it last May.
ST. LOUIS—(UPI)—The St. Louis Cardinals acquired Rogers Hornsby for $400 in 1915 and in 1929 he was acquired by the Chicago Cubs for five players and $200,000.
Bargain
Student Advisory Board Adds 33 New Members
Thirty-three Student Advisory Board appointments have been made from the College, the schools of Engineering, Fine Arts, Education, Pharmacy, Journalism, and Business, and auxiliary positions.
Those chosen were in the top 10 percent of their schools. A 2.3 or above GPA was required for an appointment from the College.
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences:
Phillip Eastep, Wichita sophomore; Billie Thompson, Ballwin, Mo. sophomore; John Thompson, Salem, Mo. sophomore; Anna Rodelandra, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Vivian Williams, Topeka sophomore; William Frick, Shawnee Miss sophomore; Letha Schwissow, Shawnee Miss senior, Letha Schwissow, Shawnee Miss junior, Ann Barry Flood, Lawrence sophomore
**School of Engineering:** Carole Jones, Kansas University; freshman; Iryn J. Epperson, Jr.; Jessica K. Koch, Jr.; Leawood sophomore; William Weisen, Leawood sophomore; and Dellert Moore, Traceys sophomore.
New members selected by the board and ratified by the All Student Council at the last meeting.
Fine Arts: Susan Ebel, Toppea junior; Joan Woster Mission junior; Patriciae Winchita, Sophomore; George H. Porter, Sophomore; Shortidge, Park Ridge, Ill.; sophomore;
School of Education: Sharon Nelson, Larned junior; Ronald Middendorf, Dodge City sophomore; Dodge City sophomore; Janet LaDow, Fredonia sophomore; Nancy Harrington, Suspect Heights, IL. sophomore; and Diana Hunt, Kansas City. Mo. sophomore.
and Connie Roeder, Burlington sopho- more.
School of Pharmacy: Mary Ann Robinson, Independence sophomore, John Journalsmith, Johann碧尔, Cross River, Idaho, and Riek Mabbutt, Shoshone, Idaho, junior.
School of Business: Don Bostwick, Aaron Mendel, Jon Kinsley, son junior; Melvin O'Connor, Wichita sophomore; James Gossett, Glendale, Dodge City senior and Jack Wilhelm, Dodge City senator.
Auxiliary appointments: Jon R. Harkavy, Bartlesville, Okla., junior; Karen Indall, Ottawa junior; Bill Cibes, Alta-mont junior; Jeff Eichholz, Stockton sophomore; Richard Woolson sophomore; Carol McMahan, Wichita sophomore; Herbert Beck, Council sophomore; and John Tulloch, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore.
Literate State
BURLINGAME, Calif.—(UPI) California leads the nation in number of high school graduates, with about 205,000 in 1963, the National Education Association reports.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 21, 1964
Around the Campus
Four More Get Fulbrights
Four more KU students have received Fulbright fellowships, J. A. Burzle, professor of German and Fulbright advisor, said.
The awards will go to W. Dale Brownawell, Kansas City, Charles Marvin, Lawrence, Douglas M. Hager, Hutchinson, all seniors, and Petra Moore, Fort Worth, Tex., graduate student. A previously announced award went to Bruce M. Royle, Hopkinton, Mass., graduate student, who will study English in India.
Brownawell will study German and mathematics at the University of Toulouse, France; Hager will study classics and German at the University of Munich, and Miss Moore will study anthropology in Bolivia.
The Fulbright awards provide costs of transportation, orientation, tuition, books and maintenance, and is part of the international cultural and educational program of the U.S. Department of State.
One of the goals is to promote international cooperation for educational and cultural advancement, and to increase mutual understanding between the peoples of the United States and countries abroad.
Focus on Family Life
About 100 social workers from Kansas and the Greater Kansas City area will focus their attention on contemporary family life at the Social Work Day May 4 at KU.
Charlton Price, visiting assistant professor of sociology, will lead the workers as they study implications of contemporary family life for social work and social work education.
Prof. Price, a consultant to the Menninger Foundation and Midwest Research Institute, formerly was a research associate in the Bureau of Applied Social Research at Columbia University. He is co-author of "Men, Management, and Mental Health," a report of a study of the Kansas Power and Light Co.
Virgil V. Shoop, consultant in social work for the Kansas City, Mo., office of the national Institute of Mental Health, will give the banquet address. His topic is "Priorities for Social Work—Some Speculations."
Philosopher to Speak
Prof. Roderick M. Chisholm, chairman of the Brown University department of philosophy, will give the sixth Ernest H. Lindley Memorial Lecture Thursday.
Prof. Chisholm will speak on "Freedom and the Nature of the Self" at 4:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. He will speak again on "Notes on Pleasure and Desire" at 8:30 p.m. in 306 Kansas Union at a meeting of the philosophy club. Both events are open to the public.
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The Classical Film Series
A NOUS LA LIBERTE
(a brilliant French satire)
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Dyche Auditorium (this week only)
7:00 p.m.—Admission: $.60
F
Page 7
University Daily Kansan
Fencer Returns to Waiting Books After Try For Budapest Trophy
Claudia Reeder has settled down to books and classes at KU after her recent encounter with top notch fencing competition in Budapest, Hungary.
Miss Reeder, a sophomore from Overland Park, was the only woman from the United States to be certified to enter the Junior (under 20) International Fencing Championships with 300 other fencers from all parts of the world.
Her trip was sponsored by donations from private individuals.
She didn't bring home any medals. In fact she was eliminated in the early rounds, as were most of the competitors. She was defeated by the third and fourth place winners.
HER PARTNER, Michael Gaylor of New Jersey, took 12th place in sabre, but was eliminated in the other two events (foil and epee).
Miss Reeder still spent most of her time fencing with many of the European teams, and she received training from Hungarian, Yugoslavian and English coaches.
She also got to observe the strong points of all the competing teams, and she was duly impressed by the "intense training, good coaching and the dedication of the teams there."
After the competition in Hungary the two Americans spent four days in Belgrade as guests of the Yugoslavian Federation. Their hosts, the
two national champions of Yugoslavia, invited the pair to return to the country next October for the invitational international fencing tournament in Belgrade.
MISS REEDER AND Gaylor were surprised the emphasis placed on fencing, and sports in general, in Europe.
In the places we visited the whole social life revolves around sports clubs. They're just like families. Sports is a very serious business there, and in Budapest thousands of people came for each event," she said.
One thing Miss Reeder learned from her trip, aside from fencing pointers, is that foreign language is definitely her field. A French and Spanish major at KU she spoke French most of her time in Europe.
Interpreters were provided for the
Executive to Discuss Foreign Trade Field
An executive of the American Institute for Foreign Trade will be here April 27 to discuss current developments and opportunities in the foreign trade field.
Berger Erickson, executive vice president of the AIFT will also be available for interviews with students interested in the field of foreign commerce.
Erickson teaches international commerce at the Institute in Phoenix, Arizona.
Tuesday, April 21, 1964
occasions when there was no common language. Still there were times when she had to resort to sign language and gestures, and she said it was amazing how well persons can communicate when they really want to.
THE AMERICANS COMPRISED the smallest group at Budapest, but they held the publicity spotlight along with the Russian delegation. The Hungarian press seemed very much interested in the Americans' opinions on the competition and the city of Budapest.
Miss Reeder was the subject of a radio interview, and on Easter Sunday she was taken about the city by a Hungarian who was a United Press International representative. Appropriately for Easter, he took her to five churches and threw in a tour of the city (all the while snapping pictures).
About the only immediate reminder of her past and future in the fencing world is a large silver bowi, engraved with her name and "Sports Illustrated Award of Merit" which was sent to her by the editors of that magazine.
But home again, she is trying to catch up on the two weeks of classes she missed. She is finding it no small chore.
And she knows she has a lot of work to do before she's ready for the 1968 Olympics.
in White America
AN UNPARALLELED EXPERIENCE
"A flaming editorial. 'In White America' can laugh and mourn, but most of all it is filled with indignation and it comes amusingly and passionately alive." -Taubman, New York Times Utilizing excerpts from actual documents, six actors recreate the history of the American Negro. Beginning with an account of the 18th century slave trade, the remarkable presentation spans the years in words, hymns and folk music, concluding with a first-person description of the integration attempt at the high school in Little Rock. It is a slice-of-life drama that provides an emotional experience of extraordinary depth. The Original Cast Album includes four pages of authentic photographs and drawings.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 21, 1964
Coach Mitchell Uses Turned Halfback 'T'
Jack Mitchell has dusted-off the pigeon-toed T in KU's spring practice.
He hasn't gone all the way as he did at Wichita when he turned both halfbacks slightly to the inside off a standard-T alignment. The Wheatshockers used the new style in a 9-1-0 season and the Missouri Valley championship. Mitchell has tilted only his right half in drills so far and plans to keep it that way.
"Turning a halfback pigeon-toed depends on how much speed you have at that position and what you're trying to accomplish with him." Mitchell explains. "Right now our biggest concern is to get our right halfbacks outside faster."
Four coming sophomores, Vernon Dickey, Grand Jurition, Colo.; Dan Millen, Omaha, Neb.; J. C. Hixon, St. Francis, and Loyce Bailey, Topeka, are running there. Gale Sayers returns in the Fall.
Simms Stokes, holdover sophomore quarterback who dislocated his shoulder last week in scrimmage, will be out for the remainder of the spring season, according to Dean Nesmith, team trainer. Stokes had been playing at left half and quarterback during the Spring workout.
Kansas was clipped by injury almost weekly last year losing the likes of tackle Dick Pratt, and guard John Garber for the second half of the campaign and veteran tackle Tommy Thompson; center-tackle Jim Becker and center Buddy Walker for extended periods.
Through the first weeks of practice, the Jayhawks have been sticking with a standard-T backfield
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Facts and
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By
Ray
Christian
Facts and Fallacies about Jewelry
BURTON J. BURTON
FALLACY:
Rings have been the most popular jewelry with all peoples.
FACT:
In most countries, since time immemorial, rings have been the most popular of all forms of jewelry. But there is one exception . . . the Eskimos. Admiral Robert Peary took rings on his Polar expeditions and couldn't barter with them. One reason seems to be that in the drastically cold polar climate even the slight pressure of a ring is dangerous to circulation.
alignment behind an unbalanced line. They went to the latter in the fifth game against Oklahoma last year and rode it to fifth on the national rushing tables at 243.1 net yards per game. Their backfield showed a slot most of the time, however. Mitchell plans to continue use of that tactic, but right now is concentrating on the new aspects of his offense.
CONCLUSION:
South of the pole, everyone loves a ring . . . and you'll love our selection of rings for every occasion . . . every person.
"One thing," Mitchell said, "that pigeon-toed halfback helps is that you don't need to send him one step in motion. I'd like to get away from a man one step in motion because sometimes officials see him move and throw flags even though you're sending him legally.
He listed most of the progress coming from Bill Perry, coming Herington junior guard; Ron Oelschlager, veteran halfback who has been converted to full; Kent Craft, coming sophomore fullback from Council Grove; Dick Bacon, rookie fullback from Neodesha, and R. B. Miller, Platte City, Mo. coming sophomore guard.
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
(Formerly Gustafson)
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The Jayhawk baseball team, with a 5-1 record, is tied with Oklahoma in running a close second in the Big Eight standings.
KU made a three game sweep over cellar-dwelling Nebraska to pull from fourth place into the tie for second.
Versatile Steve Renko has begun dividing his time between baseball and spring football. Renko practiced baseball from 3 to 4 p.m. yesterday and then worked out with the football team from 4 to 6, according to Jack Mitchell, head football coach.
Renko, who boasts a 3-0 pitching record for the Jayhawks, threw an 8-4 victory over the Cornhuskers in the doubleheader Friday.
The Tigers lifted their season's record to 4-0 with a 2-0 win over Iowa State Friday. The loss was the first for the Cyclones against one defeat.
Baseball Team in Second
Missouri, the league's defending champion, is leading the race and is, in fact, shooting for an unprecedented third straight title.
Saturday's scheduled doubleheader between Iowa State and Missouri was rained out.
Nebraska, still looking for its first conference victory, dropped deeper into the cellar, five games behind Missouri.
The Oklahoma Sooners, who were tied 3-0 with Mizzou last week, took a tumble against Kansas State as they split a doubleheader with the Wildcats Friday in Manhattan. The Sooners came back Saturday to defeat the Wildcats 5-4 in 14 innings
the University Theater presents
Period Of Adjustment
by Tennessee Williams
April 22-25
Wednesday-Saturday
8:15
Murphy Hall
K.U. ID
Admits
Oklahoma State and Colorado finally got into the victory column, against each other. Colorado and K-State are tied for fifth place and Oklahoma State ranks seventh.
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VI 3-2241
1 1
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University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Rose Morgan Visiting Professor Prunes Trees, Rolls Logs at KU
KU received an unexpected bonus when an eminent New Jersey zoologist accepted an invitation to be this semester's Rose Morgan visiting professor.
Alan A. Boyden, professor of zoology, who retired from the Rutgers University staff in 1962, has been teaching, lecturing to special groups, conducting research and writing while at KU. What has come as a surprise to students and staff is that he also has been pruning trees.
As a Rose Morgan visiting professor, Prof. Boyden lives at the residence of the late KU professor
of English, who left her home to the KU Endowment Association. The association in turn made it available rent-free to distinguished visiting professors and their families.
AFTER PROF. BOYDEN had been here only one week, he borrowed tools from the KU building and grounds department, shinned up the largest tree on the property and sawed off two large, broken limbs. The job obviously was professional
A few weeks later, Prof. Boyden joined local crews as they trimmed branches obstructing power lines. The group soon was joined by men from the adjacent Delta Tau Delta
fraternity. And, although the students at first mistook Boyden for a crew member, the afternoon ended as a capital success.
Logs for firewood had been cooperatively rolled down to Morgan Place and up to the fraternity house.
PROF. BOYDEN is one of a few leading scientists concerned with a more critical approach to the systematic classification of the animal and plant world.
A KU professor has been awarded the first visiting professorship by Radio Free Europe in Munich, Germany.
Prof. Boyden's next university lecture is planned for April 24. He will speak on Charles Darwin and Alfred Wallace, the two men generally credited with development of the natural selection theory.
Harry G. Shaffer, who will become associate professor of economics June 1, is using the research facilities of RFE to further his study of comparative economic systems and enterprise efficiency in the Soviet Union and East Europe.
Born in Austria, Prof. Shaffer came to the United States in 1940. He completed his undergraduate and graduate studies at New York University, and taught at Concord College, West Virginia, and at the University of Alabama before coming to KU.
Prof. Shaffer is the editor of "Soviet Economy: A Collection of Western and Soviet Views," and is now editing a second book on the same subject.
Radio Free Europe is a private American network of five stations which is fighting communist propaganda with broadcasts to Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Rumania and Bulgaria. RFE uses the work of the visiting professors for research and broadcast material.
Shaffer Given European Post
Ski-Bv-Night
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Night skiing is gaining in popularity in New England and other areas. In New Hampshire alone, at least eight slopes are floodlighted.
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Tuesday, April 21, 1964
Enter the Gretsch Folk Guitar Contest
1st Prize: 20th Century-Fox Recording Contract.
talented, young people interested in folk guitar, the Gretsch Guitar Company is sponsoring a contest making a professional career available to performer or group. Fill out an official entry blank at your nearest Gretsch guitar dealer and mail it together with your performance on tape or record of two minutes or more in duration. OR fill out an entry, BUT remember there is a special bonus prize for the winner using the official entry blank from your dealer.
2nd Prize for folk artist: Any Gretsch folk instrument up to $200 in value.
2nd Prize for folk group: Any Gretelsch folk instruments up to $500 in value,
72 Additional Prizes: 20th Century-Fox record album of your choice.
Special Bonus Prizes for winning entries on official dealer entry blanks.
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Contest void where prohibited or restricted. All entries must be submitted by May 15, 1964. Contest winners will be notified by May 30, 1964.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 21, 1964
Professor Discusses Sociology, History
Sociology students had better start carrying more hours of history if they really want to know what they're talking about.
That was the essence of what Harvard sociologist George C. Homans said yesterday in a lecture titled "Sociology and History."
Mr. Homans, who is president of the American Sociological Association in addition to teaching at Harvard, seemed to feel strongly about the importance of knowledge of history for sociologists.
"MANY SOCIOLOGISTS are content to make hifalutin' comments about social change without having ever studied (the history of) social change," he said.
"Some sociologists thought they could patronize the historians and write better history than the historians," he continued.
In pointing out the differences between the two fields, Professor Homans described historians as being concerned with events in time sequences. Historians feel guilty about writing about contemporary history, he said, while sociologists like to write about contemporary history.
History is concerned with kings and politics, he continued, while sociology is concerned with slums and
urban renewal. While sociologists have been suspicious of great men, and would rather deal with groups of large numbers, historians are very concerned with and interested in great men.
PROFESSOR HOMANS referred to sociology as a "latecomer" among the academic disciplines. Early European sociologists were often great men from other disciplines, he said.
Although sociology developed independently from history, it wasn't too long after its beginning that the interests of historians began to converge with the kind of thing sociologists were interested in, he said.
Using his own knowledge of seventeenth century English history as an example, Prof. Homans pointed out the different kinds of social history sociologists need to study in order to interpret sociological trends and developments within any given period.
"Sociologists seismom master the facts of economic history," he continued. "And yet historians act like sociologists in the study of certain problems, because the nature of the problem forces them to do so."
"Sociologists must have mastered the monographs written by those who have," he said.
"KU,..Meet JAZZ"
SCILITUM UNIVERSITATIS KANSENIS
EMERGENCIES
ESTABLISHED 1864
This SATURDAY, April 25, KU will have a chance to meet jazz from all parts of the United States as 12 collegiate groups meet here for the first O READ JAZZ FESTIVAL.
They will be competing for such prizes as a concert trip to Europe, new instruments, scholarships, and many others.
To top the evening off, Woody Herman and his Swingin' Herd will give a concert in Hoch along with the five group finalists.
TICKETS ARE NOW ON SALE AT THE INFORMATION BOOTH.
$1.50 with ID or $1.75 includes admittance to all day preliminaries in the Union and the concert at 8 p.m. in Hoch.
For the first time the University will offer summer residence hall accommodations with meal service. Air-conditioned Ellsworth Hall will be available as a co-educational residence. Carruth-O'Leary Hall also will be co-educational but without meals.
The KU summer session schedule listing 586 course offerings by 52 schools and departments is now being distributed. The session will run from June 8 to August 1.
Summer Session Offers 586 Courses
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German 35 mm camera. 23 Tessar lens.
1/500 shutter. $50, Jim Hirkhouse, Baily
Annex, UN 4-3160 or VI 2-904. 4-24
slightly used miniature tape recorder for sale. Original cost was $100. You can buy it for only $20. 840$1/2 Kentucky after 5 p.m.
4-24
1962 Pontiac Grand Prix White, new snow tires, factory air, full power, FM-AM, perfect condition. Original price $4,800. Asking $2,495. Call VI 3-5080-424
Wedding dress, size 7-8.181 La. Upstairs, west apartment. 4 to 6 p.m.
1962 650 c.e. cycle, Good condi-
pilators. Call VI 2-9100. Room 43. 4-22
1963 Volkswagen 2 door sedan. 9,000
4945, evenings. Call V1-284-
4958, evenings.
Four Navy officer's white dress uniforms size 38. Never been used. Call VI 31-421-3-421
1960 Olds convertible, Dynamic 88. Power steering and brakes, whitewalls, radio,
heater. Excellent condition. $1,400. Call VI 3-7017.
1056 Chevy 4 door hard top V-8 automac-
ial Radio, heater, good mechanical
condition. Needs body work. $350. Call
VL 2-4428, 5:30 t.p.m.
English bike in brand new condition, 3
calf Vul C-1110 with 2 speed derailers,
4-21
1960 Januar 3.4 sedan. Auto transmission, air conditioned. Fine wood and leather interior. $2185. Owner going to Europe for summer. Call VI 3-8759 anytime. 4-21
1954 thru 56 322 Buick engine, 1949 thru 53 flat head V-8 Ford engine. Both in very good condition. 1949 thru 54 Chevy standard trans. 1953 thru 54 used parts. 1954 used parts. Benson's Auto Salvage, 1902 Harper. Phone VI 3-1626. Open evenings. 4-21
3-bedroom house on cul de sac, ceramic tile kitchen & bathroom, oak floors, sliding glass doors, full basement with shelter, attached garage, large fence yard with many windows, distance to K.U. and elem school. Prefer August possession date. No special assessments. $16,500.
Phone VI 2-6005 to 3:00 p.m. fax
Shortwave communications receiver — excellent for shortwave listeners of amateur radio. With "S" meter, inside whip and outside wire, antenna C1 M 3-2454 from 5.4-21
50 h.p. engine on 15 ft. boat with trailer.
All accessories. Call VI 3-5229 after 5:30 p.m.
4-21
1660 Rambler 6 Custom 4 dr. air-conditioned, tinted glass, overdrive, individually adjustable reclining seats with headrest, radio and heated pillow, nylon jacket Excellent condition before. See at 1514 Tennessee after 5. 4-21
Walnut antique organ and commode.
Cali V1 III=3-2402, 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
4-27
1951 Chevie 4 door. Very clean and in
at 642 Maine after 5 p.m.
1982 Chevie 4 door. 2-1892 or
between 642 Maine after 5 p.m.
1964 model RCA 21" color TV. Guaranteed. Less than 2 months old. Very reasonable. Call VI 3-4635. 4-21
Mobile home for sale; 1959 Prairie Schooner 10' x 36' 2 bedroom, new washer and air conditioner. Call VI 23098. 4-2
New shipment of Pink typing paper, 50
to ream -$8.55 Lawrence Outlook
1005 M
Violin, complete with case and bow,
Valued at $200. Sell for only $145. Cal.
410, Brewster, in Lawrence of New
John Brewer, 321 S. Oak, Ottawa, Karp
888.
Page
Student will sell all guns in collection.
45 auto's, Lugers, 38 revolvers, miniature automatics. Huger '22's, 410 double revolvers. Muzzle load '22 lever action'. While they last! 22 L/H, 6.50 per carton. Call VI 3-1110 after 6 m.
4-23
bicycle weather ahead! Rent or buy a 3 speed Royce Union, $15 per month, 1 month minimum rental. Ray Stoneback's, 29 Mass. 4-22
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS. Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale great savings after 6 p.m. week day$; midday and Sunday. 837 Connect tt
Typewriters, new and used portables,
dandards, electrics. Olympia, Hermes,
Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portales,
Typewriter, adder, rentals and service.
Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St..
VI 3-3644.
Surprise your roommate with a cake on that special occasion. The K.U. Birthday cake is the student podium line of cakes. Free delivery and candles Call VI 2-1791. 4-24
*printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the delivery.* *$4.50 Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, timemographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Copy VI T 21-09 for free delivery tl
FOR RENT
Air conditioner rentals 1 ton, 220 volts,
installed. installed. Stoneback's, 929-391 Mass. 4-24
For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3-
040 after 5 p.m. tt
Farm house for summer months. Call VI 2-1255 after 6 p.m. 4-22
A large room, private half-bath and shower. Kitchen privileges available. Meal prep near kitchen. Music recently remodeled and cooked for summer. Call VI 2-0298. 4-21
Large, homey, attractively furnished, 4 room apartment. Kitchen built-ins and garbage disposal. Utilities paid except electricity. Call VI 3-7677. tf
One and 2 bedroom apartments available, pool 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.
Single or double room. Furnished, cook-
ing area. Free to use and paid. Call it
2-9453 or see at 1244 La.
Married, grad students, faculty, 2 bedroom. $75. Only 10 left for June. Reserve now. Call for brochure, VI 3-2116. Santee Apartments, 1123 Indiana. tf
Crescent Heights two bedroom apart-
ment. Swimming pool. 25th and Redd-
oug. Phone VI 2-3711. tt
LOST
Blue French purse in Waston Library.
Call VI 2-0112. Reward. 4-24
TYPING
Experientied secretary would like typing.
2026 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122 4-30
Term paper or thesis typed to your
request. Satisfies the guaranteed.
VI 3-1029 4-29
Fast. accurate work done call electric rates. Vincent, VI 3-5540 Call Betty
Milliken's SOS
"the best professional service"
automatic typing
24 hr. answering service
BURGERT'S
- general typing service
- automatic typing
mimegraph & photocopying
1021$^2$/ Mass, I 3-5920, 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
- mimeograph & photo-copying
Service for Shoes Since 1910
FREE! qt. of oil with oil change & filter BOB'S CONOCO
1113 Mass. St. VI 3-0691
Shoe Service
papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work stand
phone. VI II $-S879; Mrs. Charl
Patil.
19th & Mass. VI 3-9802
Lube - Wheel Bal. - Brakes
KERBY'S DEPENDABLE
English major on graduate, experience
in teaching English to middle-
age and pre-teen Special rates. Call VI. M-37875 4-2
Mobilgas
Experienced secretary would like typing in her home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 2-1188.
- 'Vett head- quarters
Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason- sentations and theses, phone VI 3-7652 Mrs. Frank Gibson.
Accurate expert typist would like typing in her home. Term papers and theses Prompt service. Call VI 3-2851. tt
Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (plica type). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0558.
Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tt
Experienced typist with electric type-Tuesday. April 21.
Experienced Typist—Dissertations, Theses. Manuscripts, and Term Paperns 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 printer. Telephone IV 3-6048 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 2-3577.
1-800-252-4200. www.marshagoff.com
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers.
PhD students, Masters, PhD rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 38-858t. ff
- Specialists in all makes & models including sports cars
"We'll pick up your car and deliver it FREE on any service call."
MILIKLENS SOS—always first quality
typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
tape transcriptions. Office
hours 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. $212-10113 Man!
Phone VI 3-5920
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typrwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mes. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648.
Wheel Bal.- Oil - Wash- Lube
One pair of contact lens and case
Identify and pay for this ad. Call Jack
Wilhelm at VI 3-6866. 4-22
FOUND
VI 3-9608 9th & Ky.
JOE'S BAKERY
Open 24 hours except Saturday evening
616 W. 9th
ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING
25c delivery VI 3-4720
REPAIRS — LEATHER REFINISHING
Delivery Service
926 Mass. VI 3-0501
NEW YORK CLEANERS
Automotive Service
Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel
Balancing
7 a.m.-11 p.m.
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
MAKE YOUR NEXT MOVE
Crescent Heights
Completed Swimming Pool
THE OAKS
Mgr's Office, 2428 Redbud, Apt. D
CALL VI 2-3711
Opening This Summer . . .
★1 Bedroom
★2 Bedrooms
Swimming Pool
FOR INFORMATION CONTACT
BUSINESS SERVICES
University Daily Kansan
Crescent Heights Apts. Mgr.
dressmaking-alterations, formalis and
gowns. Ola Smith, 939% Mils.
VI 3-5283
Would like to do sewing and alterations
seams, seams, seams, seams,
reasonable. Call VI 2-9380. 4-27
U-Call, we haul, Anything, anytime. VI
3-5888. tt
L&M CAFE now new management We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. (Monday through Saturday) delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches Your second cup of coffee always free.
Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery is granted for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 116 Mass. VI 3-1267 t
Out-of-state students; Earn extra money by setting up distributorships for a nationally known product in your home area. For complete information call for an interview. Call now and arrange for an interview. Call how and be the first to cover your home area. 4-21
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
The Catacombs nite club and Pizza Dear
their students for 2-3 students to go through college
For information call VI 3-9703 Friday or
K.C. M., Sunda,
through Thursday.
MISCELLANEOUS
Male junior student for part time work.
11 a.m. to 2 p.m. daily and Saturday's
workdays. Do not apply unless you have these hours open
Stoneback's, 929-313 Mass. 4-24
Have a party in the Big Red School
door and plant
Heated. CALL VI 3-7453.
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. t
RISK'S
Shirt Finishing Laundry
Shirt Finishing
Wash & Fluff Dry
513 Vt. VI 3-414
VI 3-6333
24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled
YELLOW CAB CO.
AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS
DALE'S BODY SHOP
All makes & models
trame - body - fender - glass
VI 3-4732 704 Vermont
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897
ART'S TEXACO
STUDENTS! SAVE WITH THIS AD!!
"Front End Special"
- Front end aligned
- Front wheels balanced, lever arm reached
- Front end aligned
- Front wheels balan
- ● Front wheels balanced,
bearings repacked
- Steering checked
- Steering checked ONLY
$6.88
Let us prove how we can save you money on all your car needs
"Come in Today"
AUTO SERVICE CENTER
WARDS
729 N.H. VI 2-1708
Portrait models for art classes. $1 per hour. No experience necessary. Call UN 4-3935 between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. 4-24
Opportunity for male keyboard musician interested in sales demonstrations. Write experience type of investment and eligibility to University Daily Kansan, Box 10. 4-22
Girl to play electric organ part-time. Call VI 3-4743.
WANTED
Will give $25 for best ladies' or men's lightweight bike available. Prefer multiple speed. Call VI 2-3456. 4-23
Washing and ironing in my home. $6 per bushel for washing and ironing. $3 per bushel for ironing only. Bring to 151¾ Lindenwood Lane. 4-21
VOLKSWAGEN'S WANTED. Cash for your VW. Conzelman Motors, VW Sales,
Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway $®
So. **tf**
When Hallmark Plans-a-Party,
you receive the compliments
Hallmark
PLANS-A-PAR
- Parker Pens
- Stationery
- Printing
BULLOCK'S
4 E. 7th VI 3-2261
--on shocks, mufflers, tail pipes and installation.
GB
Recording Service and Party Music
Recordings Available
of
— Rock Chalk Revue
— Spring Sing
— Greek Week Sing
1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780
$ $ $ $ $ $
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
$ $ $ $ $ $
One Stop Service
Engine Tune Up
Generator & Starter Repair
Brake Repair
★ Lubrication & Oil Change
JACK & GUNN'S
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
SKELLY SERVICE
300 W. 6th
SKELLY
VI 3-9271
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 21, 1964
Application for College Board Nears Deadline
Applications are now being taken by the College Intermediary Board to fill vacancies caused by the graduation of some of its members this spring.
All sophomores and juniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences interested in one of these positions may submit a letter of application to the board.
The deadline for letters of application is May 4. Letters should be sent to the College Intermediary Board, 206 Strong Hall, or given to a present member of the Board.
This letter should contain all pertinent personal information, such as class, major, and G.P.A. and particularly any specific suggestions or a discussion covering such areas as the grading system, pre-enrollment, required courses, and junior or senior comprehensive examinations which the applicant feels the Board should investigate.
The Intermediary Board is composed of 10 undergraduate students in the College, who work closely with Deans Heller, Waggoner and Lewis.
Included in these 10 members are the two representatives elected from the College district to the All Student Council.
Any student, whether or not he applied for membership, may submit suggestions for problem investigation to the Board.
Now Showing! AT THE MOVIES
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Awards Go to Students at Annual Law Day Banquet
Awards to outstanding students in the KU School of Law were presented by Dean James K. Logan at the annual Law Day banquet last Friday.
Order of the Coif, the highest
scholastic recognition, went to Robert Lewis, Alwood, an August graduate now assistant to Attorney General William Ferguson in Topeka, Jerry G. Elliott, Hutchinson third year student, and Benjamin Langel,
Salina third year student.
Lewis also received the Lawyer's Title Insurance Corps. $100 award for the highest three year grade average in property classes. Elliott also received the G.C.
Elliott also received the C. C.
Stewart award as the senior exhibiting outstanding leadership and scholarship. The William L. Burdick award for the outstanding 1963-64 first year student went to John H. Johntz Jr., Wichita.
THERE ARE
MANY WAYS
TO KEEP THINGS
COOL
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Instead
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ACME will moth proof all your items free of charge and insure them up to $200.00.
Save time, money, storage space and trouble by using ACME'S cold storage.
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Daily Hansan
Wednesday, April 22, 1964
Lawrence, Kansas
61st Year, No.124
MARY SCHNEIDER
Professor James Sterritt
HOPE Award Given To James Sterritt
By Janet Chartier
James A. Sterritt, associate professor of architecture, was presented the HOPE award by the class of 1964 at a senior coffee this morning.
Sterritt was selected on the basis of his willingness to help students, success in challenging their minds, devotion to his profession contributions to university cultural life, and publications and creative work.
After receiving his BFA and MA at Wayne University, Detroit, Michigan, in 1951 and 1952, Prof. Sterritt taught art at New York State University in Brockpart until 1953. From 1953-55 he was an instructor of art at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Tex., when he was promoted to associate professor. Coming to KU as an instructor in architecture in 1956 he was made an assistant professor in 1957 and associate professor in 1964.
PROF. STERRITT is presently a member of the advisory board and the curriculum committee for the department of architecture, the planning committee for the National Bronze Casting Conference here at KU, graduate studies and research committee, and is the advisor for Scarab, student honorary architectural society.
In the past he has served on the abstract studies committee, physical plant committee, and the library committee.
He also belongs to such professional organizations as the American Association of University Professors, College Art Association, American Craftsmen's Council, and Scarab.
HIS ART is now displayed in collections in many museums, art centers, and architectural firms in the United States.
Prof. Sterritt's work has been appearing in national exhibitions since 1956. He has won such honors as the Dr. & Mrs. Meyer O. Cantor award in Detroit in 1959. At the 4th Annual Exhibition of Southwest American Art held at the Oklahoma Art center in Oklahoma City, he won a $600 purchase award for a sculpture of steel and copper called The Pole.
Prof. Sterritt was selected by a senior committee of representatives from each school after nominations were made by seniors. Since the class of 1959 established an endowment of $2,000, an award has been given, annually, to a dedicated educator. The award expresses the students' appreciation to dedicated educators through the Honor for the Outstanding Progressive Educator.
Senior committee members were D. T. Dutton, Wichita, journalism; James Carr, Carthage, Mo., engineering and architecture; Larry Gamble, Pittsburg, business; Carla Maness, Independence, Mo., fine arts; Paula Mausolf, Hoisington, pharmacy; Frank Thompson, Lawrence, college; Marilyn Murphy, Leawood, chairman and secretary; Bob Swan, Topeka, chairman and arrangements; Janie Lutton, Bartlesville, Okla., Kansan publicity; Mike Bush, in charge of ballots; and Phil Mohler, LuVerne, Minn., in charge of resources.
Linguistics Scholar Predicts More World Usage of English
Clayton Krehbiel, associate professor of music education and choral music first received the award in 1959. Oscar Haugh, professor of education, was the recipient of last year's award.
A linguistics scholar completed the 17th year of KU's Humanities Lectures last night by saying that there will be more speakers, world-wide, using the English language, either as a first or secondary language.
Albert H. Marckwardt, professor of linguistics at Princeton University, also emphasized that the vocabulary of the English language will creately increase by the year 2000.
ing of the "Alley Oop" comic strip travels, via a time machine, that there never seems to be a problem of communication," Prof. Marckwardt said.
Prof. Marekwardt developed "The Future of English" by tracing historical trends and projecting the dangers of extreme liberty or confinement in the use of the language.
"I AM ALWAYS amused in read-
"The question of dissimulation of English as a native, and as a secondary, language largely rests on the growth of English speaking persons in the United States. Before the American revolution English was in fifth place. In one century English rose to first place with 23 million speakers.
Elections Trial Tonight; ASC Seat To Be Decided
One of two trials for All Student Council members who were temporarily barred from the council will be this evening.
The trial concerns the election of an ASC representative from the large women's dorm, who won by a margin of 14 votes in the spring election.
The council seat for this district was won by Jean Borlaug, Sierra Guadarrama, Mexico, junior, who ran on a University Party ticket
MISS BORLAUG DEFATED the Vox candidate, Beverley Nicks, Detroit. Mich., junior, by a vote of 200-186.
Miss Nicks is contesting the election and charging "negligence on the part of the elections committee" for not passing out ballots to all voters from her district.
She claims that a significant number of people who might have made a difference in the outcome, were not given ballots for the large women's dorm district.
DICK KING, KANSAS CITY sophomore and elections committee chairman, has said that pollworkers were advised to be on the watchout for the addresses of voters from this district, and that he felt the situation was handled adequately.
Last week the Student Court is issued a temporary restraining order barring Miss Borlaug from the ASC until the trial, scheduled for 7 p.m. tonight.
TOMORROW NIGHT, a trial will be held to determine if Susan Lawrence, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, will be permitted to retain her seat as a representative from the School of Fine Arts.
If the court rules in favor of the plaintiff, Miss Nicks, a special election may have to be held to fill the seat on the council.
Miss Lawrence won, by lot, over
Norma Sharp, Arkansas City junior, after the vote ended in a 138-138 tie.
Miss Sharp is questioning the voiding of three ballots which she feels might have made a difference in the outcome.
THE DISPUTE over the representative from the large women's dorm began March 18. A petition, signed by 201 residents of the large women's residence district, to recall one of its ASC representatives, Peggy Connor, Sacramento, Calif., senior, was then presented to the ASC.
The petition was later voided by the Student Court because it did not give sufficient reason for the recall; but a new petition, presented the night before elections, was certified by the elections committee, and candidates from this district were placed on the ballots.
Ordinarily, the representatives from the living districts are elected in the fall, but the spring election for student body president, vicepresident and school representatives, was also a special election to fill the seat vacated by the recall petition.
The trials could make a significant change in the outcome of the election. UP, for the first time, gained a majority on the ASC, but only by two seats. If the plaintiffs are successful, both parties would have the same number of seats until special elections.
LAST WEEK, UP found it difficult to push through their election platform, as three of their planks were defeated by the outgoing council.
Undaunted UP members, anticipating the majority they would have when the new council members were sworn in, introduced their bills a second time.
"By 2350 it has been predicted that there will be a billion English speakers, but the real opportunity for future development of the language lies in its potentialities as a common international language."
"THEIEE-FIETTHS of the world's radio broadcasts are in English, and three-fourths of the world's mail is written in English. Although there is a saying that the optimist learns Russian and the pessimist learns Chinese, I would not sell English short."
Marcwardt gave numerous examples of English use as a workable compromise language in areas of several regional dialects such as Africa.
"Although English will never be a completely uniform language, which would take some of the flavor away, the development will greatly expand the size of the vocabulary.
"When Webster's seventh edition comes out in about 2060 it will contain approximately one million words. This is in comparison to 37,-000 words in the dictionary of Olde English."
"ALTHOUGH foreign borrowing will continue the great change will be in the manipulation and compounding of elements already present in the language. The addition of suffixes, derivatives, change in long vowels and in stress and inflection of syllables will produce the most variations in the language.
The dangers of the great future of the English language lie in the present social and cultural restrictions. Until speakers of the English language acquire assurance in the use it will not develop its fullest potentiality as a tool of communication."
Marekwardt spoke on the "Regionalism of American Speech" at the SUA Forum yesterday. He said that language classifies the speaker not only socially but regionally as well.
He said that linguistic atlases which study regional differences show the most marked variation to be related to size of vocabulary and in pronunciation.
"The atlases reflect settlement history, foreign migrations, educational influences and persistence of old local cultures.
"In a geographical mobile population such as the U.S. it is not surprising that regional cultures are becoming blurred but language still retains some distinctive characteristics."
Weather
Mild temperatures expected for tonight and Thursday, according to the Topeka weather bureau. Scattered thundershowers are possible for Thursday. Low tonight is expected to be in the 50's, high Thursday in the 70's.
Students Plan For Trips To Europe
By Bobbie Bartelt
With only six weeks of the spring semester remaining many KU students are weighing luggage, taking shots and saving money in preparation for a summer on the Continent.
The ways of reaching Europe are many, and vary from an ASC-sponsored jet trip to ocean liners.
SOME STUDENTS will go with a large group,some will go only with a friend.
Special groups will go to study and earn credit hours in a language, others will go merely for relaxation and sightseeing.
At the beginning of the semester, the All Student Council hoped there would be enough demand to charter a jet to Europe, but it was later
decided to charter only a block of seats.
Reuben McCornack, Abilene senior and former student body president, said last night about 30 students so far have made reservations for the ASC trip.
The group will meet in London for the return flight.
These tourists will leave New York June 3 and land in London the following day.
"TIMING IS THE best advantage of this trip," McCornack said. "We will leave right after school is out, when interest is highest, and will return in plenty of time for a trip
"Students are on their own while in Europe," McCornack said. "They will have eight and a half weeks in Europe."
to the World's Fair, or to prepare for fall classes."
Any student who has attended classes for the last six months, and who is regularly enrolled is eligible to go, McCornack said. The absolute deadline for reservations is midnight Monday. The cost is $330.
Some of the other students who embark on European travels this summer will be participating in summer language institutes.
Linda Nelson, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, will be attending the French language institute at the Sorbonne University in Paris.
"Our group will leave June 8 from Kennedy International Airport and will land in Brussels," Miss Nelson said.
(Continued on page 12)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 22, 1964
Part Three, Minority Rights
State Legislation
By Rick Mabbutt
Legislative action against discrimination in employment policies has not been limited solely to the federal government.
During the past two decades numerous states have experimented with Fair Employment Practices (FEP) laws making such discrimination unlawful.
Strong opposition has come from business organizations and labor unions who feel that such legislation infringes on their right to conduct their affairs in any manner they please.
"The opposition." Sen. Jaeob K. Javits (R-N.Y.) says in his book, "Discrimination, USA," "bases its public attitude on an 'appeal to reason.' It affirms its abhorrence of prejudice and discrimination, and supports equality of opportunity. But its leaders argue that legislation cannot prevent discrimination. They quote Henry Thomas Buckle, the English historian as follows:
"TO SEEK TO CHANGE OPINIONS by law is worse than futile. It not only fails, but it causes a reaction which leaves the opinions stronger than ever. First, alter the opinion, and then you may alter the law."
"Much as I admire Buckle as a historian and thinker," Javits continues, "I believe this approach ignores the fact that law itself can teach. Scientists studying human behavior know now that the best way to restrain discrimination is to initiate a community pattern of non-discriminatory behavior. People living in integrated housing, for example—no matter how prejudiced they may have been—frequently come to appreciate neighbors of different racial and religious background just by living near them.
'LAWS AGAINST DISCRIMINATION operate in the same way. The law opens people's minds to the problem and a solution because behavior in violation of the law
may carry punishment with it; living with the law—and the overwhelming majority of our people is law-abiding—can and often does remove the prejudice."
Because of this philosophy, and despite the heavy opposition, FEP laws have been enacted by 25 states. An additional five states have adopted laws prohibiting discrimination but have not enacted FEP legislation as such.
One can understand the nature of antidiscrimination laws by examining the FEP legislation of Kansas. House Bill No.243, passed by the legislature in 1961, makes the following provisions:
IT FIRST EXPLAINS the attitude of the state toward discrimination in employment. "The practice or policy of discrimination against individuals in relation to employment by reason of their race, religion, color, national origin, or ancestry is a matter of concern to the state, that such discrimination threatens not only the rights and privileges of the inhabitants of the state of Kansas but menaces the institutions and foundations of a free democratic state.
"It is hereby declared to be the policy of the state of Kansas to eliminate discrimination in all employment relations. It is also declared to be the policy of this state to assure equal opportunities and encouragement to every citizen regardless of race, religion, color, national origin or ancestry, in securing and holding, without discrimination, employment in any field of work or labor for which he is properly qualified. It is further declared that the opportunity to secure and hold employment is a civil right of every citizen."
mission is given power to resolve matters of discrimination by conciliation and persuasion.
THE BILL ASO CREATED a fi v-e-member antidiscrimination commission to (1) develop broad-range education programs designed to prevent and eliminate discrimination . . . and (2) receive, investigate and resolve complaints alleging discrimination in employment . . . The Civil Rights Com-
The law forbids (1) an employer of eight or more workers to discriminate on the basis of race.
(2) Labor organizations do discriminate on a racial basis against a union member, an employer or an individual employed by an employer.
(3) Employers, employment agencies, or labor unions to use application forms which express, directly or indirectly, any limitation or discrimination because of race, "unless based on a bona fide occupational qualification."
(4) An employer or labor union to discriminate against or fire a person because he has opposed practices forbidden in the bill or because he has filed a complaint or testified under this act.
(5) Any person to coerce the doing of any acts forbidden under this act.
THE BILL ALSO gives the attorney general or county attorney power to secure enforcement of the commission's orders through writs of mandamus which command the defendant to perform some act, i.e., hire a qualified Negro worker, or through injunctions which forbid the defendant to do some act, i.e., discriminate or fire a qualified Negro laborer.
These provisions make House Bill No. 243 similar in many respects to the current federal civil rights bill and to FEP legislation in other states. Four states—Delaware, Vermont, Iowa and Idaho—have FEP laws administered judicially whereas the other 21 states carry out the laws through administrative bodies such as the Kansas Civil Rights Commission
Two other Kansas laws also forbid discrimination. One outlaws discrimination in hiring of workers for public works projects financed by state or municipal governments and the other prevents discriminatory labor unions to bargain with employers.
Cleveland Death
Clergy's Role
What should be the roles of the churches and clergy in the civil rights crisis? Many Americans must be asking themselves this since the death of the Rev. Bruce W. Klunder, the former Oregonian who was crushed by a bulldozer on a school construction site in Cleveland.
LOUIS LOMAX, NEGRO AUTHOR and integration leader, accused white ministers of having kept quiet when they should have spoken out for the brotherhood of all men. Failure of the churches, he said in an Urban League speech in Portland, has placed the cross of Christ in the hands of secularism.
As a generality, Mr. Lomax's accusation cannot be denied. Too many ministers of the gospel have failed to convey to their congregations the basic teachings of their professed religion. Too many church members have retained their prejudices against persons of minority races and faiths.
Lately clergymen have been in front ranks of the integration forces. Many of them have not only preached eloquently on the theme, but have marched with the demonstrators and have been arrested and jailed as a consequence. Community efforts to solve race problems and inequities in housing, employment, education, etc., are often led by white ministers. Many others are active participants in such endeavors.
UNDOUBTEDLY, IT IS TOO LATE merely to preach. The clergy must act as well. But the cause of civil rights will suffer rather than benefit from such incidents as the one in Cleveland. One casts no reflection on the motives or Christian dedication of the late Presbyterian minister in questioning his method of martyrdom. Lying down behind a bulldozer and being accidentally crushed by it will not end de facto segregation in Cleveland or elsewhere. Extremism can only bring strong reaction on whichever side it is practiced. The Rev. Mr. Klunder, who was held in high esteem by former classmates at Oregon State University and others who knew him, unquestionably could have done much more for race equality by other means.
The new school being built in a Negro section may consolidate de facto segregation in Cleveland. But it may also provide better facilities for education of a minority which needs it. The question is debatable: it cannot be solved by interfering with the workmen who are properly proceeding with the task they were hired to perform. Such methods can only result in death and rioting. This the clergy must seek to avoid as they continue to work for the human rights proclaimed both by their religion and by the U.S. Constitution.
- The Oregonian
ECONOMY WELFARE
©1964 HERBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
"Say, About That 'Better Deal' ___ "
Red, Red--Other People
Rousselot, now the western district director of the John Birch Society, said many of the Negro civil rights leaders are Communists, and the rights bill is a power grab which the Reds will use later to take over the country.
Last Tuesday at the University of Oregon, one John H. Rousselot—former California congressman—delivered a fiery speech against the pending civil rights legislation.
Martin Luther King and Roy Wilkins both belong to Communist front groups, said Rousselot. In fact, Eleanor Roosevelt herself belonged to 80 front groups in her lifetime, Rousselot asserted.
THE OREGON DAILY Emerald reported: "Rousselot did not blame the Negroes or segregationists for the existing racial strife in certain areas of the country, but placed the blame 'where it properly belongs, on the shoulders of the Communist party of the United States.'"
The solution to race problems in the country, as Rousselot sees it, is to encourage Negroes to improve themselves and take advantage of the free enterprise system. The American people have a great deal of sympathy for all minority groups who are trying to be better Americans, the ex-congressman added.
Margaret Chase Smith is supposed to have spent less than $1,000 campaigning for the Illinois primary. However, the Maine senator polled almost one-third of the Republican votes cast. . . Three coeds recently de-activated from a Colorado University sorority because the national advisor attempted to stop one of the girls from dating a Negro. Said the advisor: "The problem was one of standards, a girl doesn't have a right to do as she pleases when she becomes a member of a group that upholds high standards." . . Other news from Boulder: There has been a recent dope investigation at the CU campus and several Marijuana users were arrested. A boy who played the role of informer to the police was beaten up three times by marijuana users.
The informer then attempted to commit suicide. . . A Conference on World Affairs panel has agreed that the American educational system destroys creativity. Stanley F. Reed, president of Reed Research Institution, commented on doctoral dissertations: "All modern Ph.D. theses I have seen are just a big, strained mass of analysis. There is no creativity involved. . . Nobel prize-winner Linus Pauling said Wednesday at San Jose State College that Red China should be admitted to the UN so her nuclear force might be controlled. Pauling, prominent anti-nuclear force crusader, said the UN "has kept the world from getting into a worse situation than it is and has done much in the settling of disputes." ...
Two thousand copies of Eric Hoffer's "The True Believer" were sold in one week at Brigham Young University when Hoffer was there last week. George Lincoln Rockwell constantly referred to Hoffer's book in his KU speech. The Nazi takes his theory of crowd manipulation directly from Hoffer.
Dailij Hansan
111 Flint Hall
University of Kansas student newspaper
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, April 22,1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Carmell Jones' Trumpet Treats KU Jazz Buffs
By Rogers Worthington
Jazz fans received a rare treat last night when West Coast Trump peter Carmell Jones stepped into a local tavern on Jayhawk Boulevard with his lyrical horn.
Tuesday night, since this past fall, has been jazz night at the Gaslight Tavern, with music provided by a quartet composed of KU students. Mainstays of the group have been Herb Smith, Memphis senior, alto, Charlie Matthews, K. C., Kansas junior, bass, Jim Hamlett, K. C., Kansas, piano, and Gerry Walls, Topeka senior, drums.
But last night the four musicians were joined by the Carmell Jones, who is currently playing at a Kansas City, Mo. nightclub.
Jimmy Carter
Jones, who is in the area to participate in "Kansas City Homecoming," a jazz bash at K. C.'s municipal auditorium this Sunday, is a former KU student. He attended KU in 1958-1960, after serving a two-year hitch in the army.
A rumor about Jones appearing at the tavern traveled through the grapevine of campus jazzophiles
Carmell Jones
late last week, and the tavern was filled, even before the trumpeter's arrival, beyond capacity.
Jones appeared shortly before 10 pm. and took a seat with some friends near the bandstand. Those who recognized him, noticed with chagrin that he did not have his trumpet.
He sat, listening to the quartet
play, and talking quietly with friends and fans, for about half an hour. Those who knew of his presence anxiously began to wonder if he was going to play.
But when the quartet took a break, Jones left for a few minutes, and returned with trumpet in hand.
line band launched into Charlie Parker's "Confirmation," and Jones took the first solo.
The drone of noise and conversation began to subside as Jones breezed through the tune. And people who had not been aware of his presence, suddenly were.
The notes from his trumpet cut through the smoke-clogged air and the quartet rose to meet the challenge.
The crowd exploded into applause. Jones and aloist Smith played in unison on "Four," a tune made popular by Miles Davis.
On "Blue Moon," Jones followed singer Jan Wheaton, Cherryvale senior, with a strong, lyrical solo. On "Walkin'," Jones and Smith played a rhythmic riff and traded four bar phrases which brought
the house down with cheers and applause.
Near the end of the evening, Mike Bush, Glendale, Mo. senior and member of the Oread Jazz Festival steering committee, announced the possibility of another session tonight at the tavern with Jones again present.
Bush also announced that the noon hour Saturday during the Festival, which had been set aside as a rest
period, would be open to local jazz musicians who are not entered in the festival and would like an opportunity to play. The session, he said, would take place in the Union Ballroom following elimination late Saturday morning.
Jones, who has been playing and recording on the west coast for the past three years, will go to New York early next week where he will join Horace Silver's quintet.
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 22.1964
Freshman Class Sponsors Films To Raise Campus Chest Money
The freshman class is sponsoring two late movies Friday night for freshmen to raise money for the Campus Chest.
Campus Chest will distribute the money collected this week to three institutions: the Glenn Cunningham Boys' Ranch in Augusta; World University Service; and International Foreign Student Service.
The freshman class will use two downtown Lawrence theatres to show the movies. The Granada will show "The Manchurian Candidate" and the Varsity will show "Days of Wine and Roses."
THE MOVIES WILL start at 11 p.m. and finish at about 2 a.m. Late permission for freshman women attending the shows has been obtained. No permission has been obtained for inner-class women.
Tickets will be sold only to freshmen; upper classmen dating freshman women must have the women buy the tickets, Mike Cann, Russell freshman and chairman of the ticket sales, said.
There are 1,500 seats available for freshmen and their dates. Tickets cost $1.00 per person.
The freshman class officers hope to raise $700 for Campus Chest after all theatre expenses are paid.
Tickets must be bought in advance since no tickets will be available at the door.
THE MONEY will help the Cunningham Boys' Ranch continue taking in displaced children of the Augusta and Wichita area.
The Cunninghams shelter many children each year who would otherwise not have the benefit of a temporary foster home.
ALEXANDRA CROSSEN
CAMPUS CHEST RECIPIENT—Glenn Cunningham stands with his two daughters on horseback, Sandra and Sara, along with David Leonard from New York City. The scene is at the Boys' Ranch of the former world mile record holder of the 1930's from KU.
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The 14th Biannual KU Pharmacy Extension Course begins today in Wichita and is being conducted by four KU professors.
It is a short refresher course for practicing pharmacists.
The four professors are: Dr. Raymond E. Hopponen, professor of pharmacy, who will speak on "Drug Absorption;" Dr. Mathis P. Mertes, assistant professor of pharmaceutical chemistry, will speak on "Drugs for the Treatment of Bacterial Infection;" Dr. Edward E. Swissman, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry, will speak on "The Placebo Problem;" and Dr. Robert A. Wiley, assistant professor of pharmaceutical chemistry, will speak on "Physiology and Aspects of the Treatment of Pain."
The traveling pharmacy extension course will be in Wichita today, in Garden City tomorrow, in Salina Friday, and in Kansas City May 5.
Accompanying the group will be John L. Rose, of the Kansas Pharmaceutical Association of Topeka,a graduate of KU.
ROTC Cadet Receives Engineering Award
KU ROTC Cadet James F. Hamilton, Leavenworth junior will receive the Society of American Military Engineers scholarship award.
Hamilton is in the upper 12 percent of his class in engineering, and he ranks in the upper five percent in military subjects. He has received the outstanding Pershing Rifleman award, the Chicago Tribune award, and he was elected commander of the Army Exhibition Drill Team. He plans to make the Army his career after graduation.
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Wednesday, April 22, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Cities Getting Recreation Aia
By Greg Swartz
From tennis and arts and crafts to wheelchair basketball and weight control clubs, Kansas cities are providing their residents with various recreational programs.
As an aid to these cities, the state maintains a recreational consulting service. The consultant is Larry Heeb, assistant professor of physical education.
Prof. Heeb said he spends about half of his time on his consultant job and the other half as a KU teacher.
The main part of his consulting job consists of aiding cities form recreation commissions, getting mill levies increased and advising these commissions once they are created on their programs, Prof. Heeb said.
THEERE ARE THREE phases to the services he offers, Prof. Heeb said. In addition to the consulting service, his job is also to gather and disseminate information about recreation programs in Kansas cities and to provide in-service training.
Prof. Heeb came to KU in 1953 when the consulting service was started. He had been recreation commissioner for the city of Lawrence.
ONE INSTANCE of local differences Prof. Heeb cited was a situation in Arkansas City. There the junior high school is located next to the recreation center. A recreational program is conducted in the center during the students' lunch hour.
Heeb said Determining the type of program is sometimes complicated, Prof. Heeb said, since "it depends on the interests and backgrounds of the people."
In McPherson the recreation program is tied closely with the local YMCA. When the city started its own recreation program, it asked the secretary of the YMCA to head it. As a result some of the city's programs are conducted jointly with the YMCA, Prof. Heeb said.
sain.
To help in the dissemination of news about recreation, Prof. Heeb said he clips articles from various publications about current activities in the field. He is also responsible for the publication of the biennial Kansas Recreation Directory which lists data about the various recreation programs in the state.
To aid in-service training, Prof. Heeb is partially responsible for various conferences and schools in recreation each year.
EVERY FEBRUARY, a Midwest Conference on recreation is at KU. It is a one-week school planned jointly by his office, the National Recreation Commission and the KU Governmental Research Center.
Classes are held for the people engaged in recreation work in the various cities by KU staff members and guest instructors, Prof. Heeb said.
Every city's recreation program varies. Prof. Heeb said.
Iopeka has a situation where they operate on school property, but mostly on park property," he said.
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are conducted which include such activities as social activities, athletic contests, and arts and crafts for all ages, even pre-school children.
Arkansas City operates a day camp as well as a program for the handicapped which includes wheelchair basketball and wheelchair square dancing, Prof. Heeb said.
Bridge instruction for high school students, a duplicate bridge club, a weight-control club, an ornithology club and instruction in ceramics and tile crafts are also part of the Arkansas City program, he said.
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The greatest need in recreation is adequate personnel, Prof. Heeb said. Many cities are looking for recreation superintendents.
CITING ONE CITY without a superintendent, "I just don't know where we are going to find someone to take that job," he said. "This office has an obligation to find qualified people to fill the positions."
Most of the full-time recreation personnel have a college education, but most of those trained in Kansas have drifted to other states, he said.
IN 1963. THE Kansas legislature passed a bill allowing a city to raise its mill levy for recreational programs up to two mills for every dollar of assessed valuation.
Financing recreation programs has ceased to be a major problem, Prof. Heeb said.
The first mill may be appropriated by the recreation commission itself, but the second mill must be approved by the school board, park board, or whatever group the recreation commission is set up under.
Prof. Heeb said he has found no city in Kansas which, once they got the first mill, was unable to get the second upon request.
The new man-made reservoirs which are being built in Kansas are providing some cities with new opportunities, Prof. Heeb said.
New Mathematics Library Named for Top Teacher
Wealthy Babcock, a member of the mathematics faculty for 41 years, has been honored by the naming for her of the mathematics library.
"Miss Babcock is remembered by thousands of KU's former students as one of the best-loved teachers of mathematics," Prof. Price said. "Many learned their analytic geometry, calculus, and differential equations from her, and many of today's students seek to enroll in her classes because of her reputation as a sympathetic and effective teacher."
The recently remodeled and enlarged mathematics library, now to be known as the Wealthy Babcock Mathematics Library, is in Strong Hall. It is a branch of the main KU library.
G. Bailey Price, department chairman, announced the recognition at the annual mathematics honors dinner and noted that it came upon the 30th anniversary of Miss Babcock's appointment as departmental librarian in April of 1984.
MISS BABCOCK has served for
many years on various KU scholarship committees and has been known as an understanding adviser of students in regard to financial problems.
Prof. Price paid particular tribute to Miss Babcock's effectiveness in building the mathematics library during the depression years of the 1930's and the war years of the 1940's.
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 22,1964
JAZZ FESTIVAL?
What's a collegiate jazz festival? And what is planned for the Oread Jazz Festival on April 25th here at KU? A jazz festival is a gathering of collegiate jazz groups brought together to compete for awards and prizes. The idea of a collegiate jazz festival achieved a high degree of popularity and acceptance at the University of Notre Dame and has spread to a number of Eastern schools, such as Villanova and Georgetown University.
The Oread Jazz Festival is the first major festival in the Midwest. Because of its central location, KU's festival has assumed national proportions not found in any previous festival. Twelve excellent collegiate groups will be here on April 25th. These musicians come from California, Texas Colorado, Missouri, Indiana, and Illinois to compete for awards never before offered in collegiate competition.
1. Assistance in transportation to Europe and engagements while on tour is being offered by People-to-People of Kansas City.
2. Instruments are to be given to the best musicians in reed, brass and rhythm.
3. Three scholarships to the Berklee School of Music in Boston.
4. Two scholarships to the National Stage Band Camps.
5. Engagements for the best big band and the best small group at the Kansas City Jazz Marathon, each group will be paid $150.00 and $75.00 respectively.
6. Set of band fronts from the Selmer Co.
7. Subscriptions to "Downbeat" magazine and record albums.
Last, but far from least, the OJF boasts an unequalled judging panel. In addition to acting as a judge, Woody Herman will give a concert in Hoch the nite of the festival. The other judges include: Martin Williams, the critic and reviewer for "Downbeat," "Saturday Review," and several other national magazines; Robert Share, director of Berklee School of Music in Boston; Creed Taylor, with Verve Records, acting as a talent scout; George Salisbury of the Kansas City Conservatory of Music; and Matt Betton, former administrator of the Stan Kenton Summer Music Camps.
In summary, the members of the Oread Jazz Festival Steering Committee feel that this is the finest collegiate jazz festival anywhere. We are prejudiced no doubt, but we feel that this is not only a terrific chance to hear some of the best jazz in the nation, but also a chance for KU to make a name for itself in yet another area of student endeavor. We hope you will feel the same way, and we hope to see you at the festival.
Remember, your $1.50 ticket is good for both the daytime sessions in the Union and the concert in Hoch that nite. So, if you can't make all of the festival, it will be worth your while to attend even part of it.
You may purchase tickets at the Information Booth,the Union ticket counter,Kief's and Bell's downtown, or at the door both day and nite sessions.
Wednesday, April 22, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Easton's Trackmen Prepare For Drake Relays
KANSAS
POLE VAULTER—Floyd Manning prepares himself for the 15-9 1/2 vault which brought him the championship in that event at the Kansas Relays here Saturday. Manning should be a key figure in KU's individual championship hopes as the Jayhawks enter the Drake Relays this weekend.
With the memory of the Kansas Relays still fresh in their minds, Coach Bill Easton's trackmen are preparing for their next big challenge—the Drake Relays.
Easton has not yet announced the list of Jayhawk entrants in the Drake games, but it was thought that a relatively small number of athletes would make the trek to Des Moines.
Easton said that while he had no regrets about the Kansas Relays here last weekend, he was, at the same time, not completely satisfied with the performance of the Jayhawk team.
ACCORDING to Easton, the KU team effort will be hurt somewhat this weekend by the loss of distance runner Dave Kamrar.
"We found out," Easton said, "that Kamrar has mononucleosis. That will hurt us in the three-mile. We have no way of knowing how long it will take him to recover, he is working out some now, but we don't know how well he's coming along."
Although the list of those going to Drake is not yet available, one sure participant is Kansas Relays champion pole vaulter, Floyd Manning. Manning, who won the Big Eight indoor championship with a vault of 15-8, had the best outing of his career here Saturday as he won his event with a $15-9_{1/2}$ effort. He won the Relays title on fewer misses, however, since Oklahoma's Jim Farrell also cleared the bar at $15-9_{1/2}$.
ANOTHER SAFE bet to go to Des Moines is Tyce Smith, Smith, the highest jumper in KU history, won his event here Saturday with a 6-4/1 leap. This was, however, by no means Smith's best jump. The Cherryale senior set varsity indoor records in three consecutive meets during the 1964 indoor season with progressive marks of 6-8/1⁴, 6-8/1² and 6-8/³⁴. He won the Big Eight indoor title on fewer misses at 6-6.
The Jayhawks' only other Kansas Relays champion, spinter Bob Hanson, will probably represent KU in the 100-yard and 100-meter competition at Drake. Hanson won the 100-yard here with a :09.7 clocking. He was forced out of indoor competition with an injury, but has run the 100-yard in :09.5.
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About this year's Jayhawk squad, Easton said:
Dyche Auditorium (this week only)
Easton has not yet disclosed who will comprise any of the relay teams which will go to Drake. He commanded the performance of the four-mile relay team here. The four-mile team (Bill Silverberg, John Donner, John Lawson and Herald Hadley) placed second behind Mis-
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 22,1964
Organizer to Speak
Ideas of Socialists Clash
By Dave Pomeroy
The Socialist Labor Party is quick to point out in its official newspaper, the Weekly People, that the views expressed by their national organizer, John P. Quinn, at the SUA Minority Opinions Forum Friday will differ with those of other political parties describing themselves as "socialist."
The Weekly People says that the SLP, which was organized in 1890, is the only bona fide party of socialism in the United States and has no connection with other parties or groups that call themselves socialist —primarily the Socialist Party and the Socialist Workers Party.
THE SOCIALIST Labor Party organ describes the Socialist Party as a reform group whose principals are the same as Roosevelt New Deal policies. Instead of furthering the cause of socialism, the Socialist Party in reality has openly admitted its program was used to save capitalism, the program it was supposedly designed to destroy, says the Weekly People.
In proof of these statements the Weekly People says the Socialist Party "has for decades advocated a hodgepodge of national ownership, state ownership, municipal ownership, cooperatives, etc." Such policies, the paper says, call for the continuance of capitalism and not the abolition of capitalism and the establishment of the "Socialist Industrial Republic" that the SLP advocates.
THE SOCIALIST Labor Party also attacks the Socialist Workers Party and says it is equally as fraudulent in its presumptuous use of the term "socialist."
According to the SLP paper, the Socialist Workers Party is a "Communist splinter group. It subscribes to all the familiar Russian 'Communist' tenets and many, if not most, of its tactics have been borrowed from the Russian Revolution."
Laird M. Wilcox, chairman of the Minority Opinions Forum, said the
Socialist Workers Party is included in the "Attorney General's Subversive List."
The Weekly People also denounces any connection between the Socialist Labor Party and the Communist Party.
"THE COMMUNIST Party has become thoroughly discredited in the eyes of decent, thinking people," says the paper.
The Socialist Labor Party feels that there is no possibility of any real or lasting improvement for the working class within the structure of capitalism. The longer capitalism lasts, the paper says, the more difficult the transition from capitalism to socialism will be.
Capitalism cannot be abolished by a political party, but must result from a united effort by workers as a class as advocated by the Socialist Labor Party, the group says.
"It is the aim of the SLP to create a society in which wars will be but evil memories, a society in which poverty will have disappeared, in which freedom will have been made secure, and in which democracy will have become the prevailing society for all," says the Weekly People.
THE SOCIALIST Labor Party platform says there will be no private ownership of the land and industries in a socialist society and no wage system where the workers receive in wages only a fraction of the goods they produce. Instead, there will be a complete democracy where people will vote from where they work rather from where they live.
The Socialist Labor Party is organized nationally, but does not appear on the ballot in all states because election laws vary locally.
In at least half of the states it is virtually impossible for a minority party to qualify for a place on the ballot. In Ohio, the law does not provide for a write-in vote. Because of these laws, the SLP has never been able to appear on the ballot in all states in a national election.
ARNOLD PETERSON, national secretary of the SLP, said candidates for the 1964 Presidential election will be nominated at the national convention which will convene in New York City on May 2.
Quinn spoke at Friends University in Wichita on April 21 and at the University of Wichita the following day.
Pi Sigma Alpha, national honorary political science fraternity, honored three outstanding members and presented faculty awards to four more Tuesday at the annual initiation banquet.
THE FRATERNITY honored Martha Allen, Lawrence senior, as the outstanding woman in political science by presenting her with the American Legion Auxiliary (Girls' State) award.
Faculty awards of subscriptions to professional journals were presented to Carl Stephen Long, Mission senior; Charles A. Marvin, Lawrence senior; Alan L. Roff, Winfield senior, and Ann Victoria Sheldon, Independence senior.
William Joseph Cibes Jr., Altamont junior, received the Gustafson scholarship and Donald Fraser Martin, Kansas City senior, received the Pi Sigma Alpha award as the outstanding man.
Political Scientists Honored
New officers were elected for the year, and 32 students were initiated into the fraternity.
IN ELECTIONS, Walter Van Asselt, Grand Haven, Mich., graduate student, was elected president; Hugh Jeffrey Taylor, Enson, Stoke-on-Trent, England, graduate student,
President's Advisor Sees No Future Inflation Signs
Leland J. Pritchard, professor of economics at KU, is president of the association.
There are no significant bottle-necks to justify an opinion that the American economy is on the threshold of another round of inflation, was the report given by the chairman of President Johnson's Council on Economic Advisers Friday in Chicago.
MICHAEL MALONE, Overland Park graduate student; Joseph D. McGratch, University of Chicago Lawrence instructor of political science; D. Farrell Munsell, Hays graduate student; Kenneth Ostrander, Wallowa, Oreg Graduate student, and Alan L. Roff, Winfield school
W. Merrill Downer, Topeka graduate student; Gerald William Dykes, Leavenworth senior; Nancy Jo Eggy, Topeka professor; Rober E. Harmon, Newton senior; John Otis Kent, Kansas City senior; James Willkam Kola, Eau Claire, Wise. graduate student; Kimpe, Kansas City, Mo. graduate student, and Tracey Love, Wichita junior.
Ann Victoria Sheldon, Independence senior; Seffi Shibru, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; Jeffrey Terry, Beethoven, both Sowers, Kansas City, Mo, junior; Hugh Jeffrey Taylor, Enson, Stoke-on-Trent, England graduate student; Frank Witty, Temple University, Van Assell, Grand Haven, Mich, graduate student; W. L. Van Nieuwenhuyse, Shawnee senior; Franz von Sauer, Lawyer; James Fitzpatrick, Daniels, Wanamakake, Salina junior, and Wayne J. Zuck, Merriam senior.
Martha Allen, Lawrence senior; Ben F. Barrett, Topeka graduate student; Ken F. Burke, Topeka graduate student; Linda Kay Cash, Fairview Park, Ohio senior; William Joseph Clibes JB Jr., Altaqua junior; Oval G. Clanton, Pittsburg graduate student, and Babette Cowley, Downs senior.
The report was made Friday at the 28th Annual Meeting of the Midwest Economic Association, where five KU professors spoke. The report was made by Walter W. Heller, chairman of the President's Council.
Other KU professors at the meeting were Ronald Olsen, assistant professor of economics; Darwin Daicoff, assistant professor of economics; Ronald Calgaard, assistant professor of economics; Charles B. Saunders, professor of business administration; and Harold Krogh, professor of business administration.
was chosen as vice president, and Ella Kline, Wichita junior, was elected secretary.
Thirty-two students initiated into the fraternity are:
About 90 members attended the meeting, according to Pritchard.
FRIED CHICKEN
ALL YOU CAN EAT!
ONLY $1
Wednesday, April 22 (Regular buffet service always available)
The Little Banquet MALL SHOPPING CENTER
64
ATTENTION SENIORS
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AT
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Page 9
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Most Credit Card Thieves Fail
By Paul Corcoran
LOS ANGELES — (UPI) — The boast of a fictive that he lived royally on stolen credit cards for four years, sounded a discordant note today in a computer era in which hard cash is almost a novelty.
But many major firms using credit cards for everything from golf balls to air plane travel claim the case of Peter J. Moskoviz is an increasingly rare exception to the general rule.
QUITE FREQUENTLY, one is worth more than that $100 bill for what it can buy on credit.
Instead, these companies claim the American consumer is a good student learning—sometimes the hard way—to protect the plastic credit card with the same tender care he would give a crisp $100 bill.
The case of Moskovicz, 32, came to light by accident. He checked into a hotel near International Airport using an alias, Dr. Robert Fisher, unaware that another alleged doctor occupied the same room before him. Police were drawn to him while investigating the earlier occupant.
Moskovicz, booked on a forgery charge, boasted he lived for the past four years on stolen credit cards, and occasional cash. "I'm wanted in almost every state in the union and at least four Canadian provinces," he said.
Police said Moskovicz, whose latest spree began in Toronto, Canada early this year, claimed he stole cards in various cities—such as Chicago, San Francisco, and New York They said he told them he ran up a few bills he paid with stolen credit cards, then stole another auto before leaving town.
FOR OBVIOUS REASONS, most firms don't like to go into detail on how they are coping with thieves who use pilfered credit cards like stolen money.
But they are working at the problem, and feel the general situation is improving because card-holders are more conscious of making quick reports once their tabs are stolen.
"The person who uses a stolen credit card is a con man, the same as a man who lives on forged checks," said a spokesman for Carte Blanche, of the Hilton Credit Corp. His firm uses computers set to alert employees when cards listed as stolen are used without authorization.
Carte Blanche, like BankAmericard, the system used by Bank of America, accepts responsibility for any use of cards after a theft is reported.
Wednesday, April 22, 1964 University Daily Kansan
THE BANK OF AMERICA representative declined to go into specifics, but claims generally good results in handling 1.3 million cards in California alone. Short duration—six months—on the life of the card, and a limit on the maximum purchase
A spokesman for one western oil company said the problem of stolen cards had decreased in the past five years, despite an increase in the number of persons using them.
requiring a check with a bank office were credited with aiding Bank of America in its program.
Another oil firm, Union Oil, now does substantially all its business in credit transactions, but had no greater proportion of abuses than in times when money was used more frequently.
The Moskovicz case, although regarded an exception, was not isolated.
Wireless Electronic Fiddle FCC Approved, Sends FM
LAST WEEK, for example, a juvenile judge ordered two 15-year-old Pittsburgh boys arrested here returned to Pennsylvania. The boys had taken a car and traveled 3,000 miles on a stolen gasoline credit card.
SAN FRANCISCO — (UPI)— Paul Revere may have broadcast from one plug, but Bert Hanson has the first bass fiddle with a radio station built into it.
AND THE SOUND is spectacular. A listener can catch the subtle tones behind the basic rhythm drives of a big band bass coming in with the full crew, instead of having to wait for a rare solo.
Moskovicz's asserted escapade was far more expansive. He used aliases, Fisher, Peter Martin, Peter Miller and Tobert Anderson. He ran up $1,000 in clothing store bills alone, and used the credit card of Dr. Robert Fisher of Portland, Ore., to buy $250 in various items at the hotel where he was arrested.
Hanson, a 37-year-old music teacher, accomplished jazz and classical musician, is giving his space age descendant of the standard finger-whanging bull box a trial run at Bimbo's huge, supermarket-sized night club here.
Not only that, it's licensed by the Federal Communications Commission.
"It can send for 200 yards with
The bass is a compact, electronically-tuned instrument of buterite plastic. It's equipped with a tiny, $371_{2}$ watt transmitter which plugs into the instrument behind the strings. The antenna is concealed inside the bass's neck.
the present power," the handsome bass player commented. "The sound is transmitted by transisters to an FM receiver, and then through an amplifier and speakers.
Preliminary investigation by police showed Moskovice was injured on charges of grand theft and forgery in Chicago, Sandusky, Ohio, New York, Las Vegas, Nev., Phoenix, San Francisco, Portland and Toronto.
the receiving rig, which would make any high fidelity fanatic's ears vibrate, can be placed most anywhere in line with the audience, leaving Hanson free to move around, un encumbered by the tangled cords and occasional distortion of conventional amplifying equipment.
"I EXPECT TO pick up taxi-cab calls any night, he said with a grin.
It's probably a good thing, too. He's playing in a show featuring specially arranged folk songs of Greece, Yugoslavia, Turkey and other Mediterranean steps — and a couple of those belly dancers certainly make a man's mind wander. He could trip and break a leg.
The bass is the brainchild of Everett Hull, president of the Ampeg Electronics Corp., Hanson said.
When taken into custody, he had possession of stolen credit cards from a department store and oil firm.
"THE CARDS WERE stacked against him from the start," a policeman commented wryly.
Police and representatives of most credit firms agreed a way of coping with abuses was care in handling the cards, as well as prompt notification when stolen or lost.
As one oil company executive explained it: "I lost one card last week, and I didn't waste a day in reporting it."
He was speaking from experience, and the knowledge that there are those who make a precarious business of living off the fat of the credit card empire.
The Holiday Inn RESTAURANT BRING THE FAMILY
1/2 FRIED CHICKEN
Complete with
• Creamed Potatoes
• Country Gravy
• Cole Slaw
• Loaf of Homemade Bread
• Butter
$155
PERSON
UNDER 10 — $1.1
EVERY SUNDAY 11:30 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M.
SPECIAL EVERY FRIDAY
$100
FISH FRY
ALL YOU CAN EAT
Children 75c
11:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Holiday Inn
THE FORTY FOUR
MANHATTAN HOTEL
415 WEST 30TH ST.
847-624-3000
PERSON
THE
HOLIDAY INN RESTAURANT 23rd and Iowa
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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
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Ph. VI 2-3416
SOUTH
1912 W. 25th
Day or Night
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
DYEABLE PUMPS in White Peau De Soie
Risqué
Mid or high heels also in white patent, black patient and black calf.
$10.99
COBENA
WE TINT FABRIC SHOES ANY COLOR
Other dyeable white
satin pumps $8.99
McCoy's SHOES
813 Mass.
VI 3-2091
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 22, 1964
Solon Says Kansas Pioneered Rights Bill
Because violations of most Kansas civil rights law are crimes, not civil offenses, Sen. Frank Carlson, Kansas Republican, believes Kansas civil rights law is "stronger" than the omnibus civil rights bill before the Senate.
Senator Carlson made the observation Monday during a visit to the campus. Senator Carlson is in Kansas for several days to honor speaking commitments.
In Topeka yesterday, William Ferguson, attorney general of Kansas and Republican gubernatorial candidate, outlined Kansas civil rights law. Kansas was the fifth state to enact a public accommodations act. That was in 1874, he said. Violations of the law are crimes, the attorney general said.
The Fair Employment Practices Act was passed about ten years ago while he was a member of the state legislature, Ferguson said. There have "never been any restraints" on voting in Kansas, so Kansas has never needed a law in this area, Ferguson said.
Carl Glatt, director of the Kansas Civil Rights Commission, also commented upon Senator Carlson's evaluation of Kansas civil rights law. "I don't believe the Senate bill goes any further than the Kansas bill and the Kansas bill has deficiencies in coverage," Glatt said.
Glatt said violations of the public accommodations law carried fines up to $1000 for each violation or a year in jail, or both. He did not know of any fines greater than $100 being assessed to a violator. Glatt said.
The public accommodations law of
Official Bulletin
German Graduate Reading Exam, 9:30 a.m., May 2, 205 Fraser, Candidates must register in 306 Fraser by 4:30 p.m.
Friday, April 24.
Teaching interview: Friday, April 24,
Cleveland, Ohio. 117 Bailey.
Today is the last day to register for the Western Cvx Exam, 130 Strong.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Sirsatford Rd.
Taylor Book Lecture, 4 p.m., Forum
Room, Kansas University. Herb Wart, Dearth,
Mary Kline.
Le Carcer francais se réunira mercede le 22 avril à 4 h. 30 dans la salle 11 de Fraser. Monsieur Serge Gaupelleu donna une causeur sur "Poise et Folle". Le carcer ne chiffresme! Tous ceux qui sintéressent au français sont cordialement invités.
Carmon Recital, 7 p.m., Albert Gerken.
SUA Classical Film, 7 p.m., Dyche Auditorium, "A Nous la Liberte."
(French, 1921)
TOMORROW Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m., St.
"Period of Adjustment," 8:15 p.m.
University Theater.
Speech I Potpourri Finals, 8 p.m.
Fraser Theater
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:35 a.m., 5 p.m.
Lutheran Mass, 6:30 a.m.
Holy Communion, 11:30 a.m. St.
John the Baptist Church, 9:45 a.m.
SCA Poetry Hour, 4:30 p.m., Music Room, Kansas Union. Dan Jaffe, recognized poet, faculty of UMKC, reading his own poetry.
Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion,
4th Avenue, Pan American Room, Kansas
Union, MO.
Lindley Lecture, 4:30 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union. "Freedom and the Nature of the Self."-Prof. Roderick M. Chisholm. Brown University.
Philosophy Lecture, 7:30 p.m., 108
Philipson *Harris and World Order*
=Dr. Errol Harris
Christian Science Organization, 7:30 pm. Danforth Chapel. Everyone welcome.
University Lecture 8 p.m. B 8 Room, Kansas Union: The '18th Century Intellectual Newton and Locke'—Rev. G. R. Craige, Andover Newton Theol. Sch., Mass.
"Period of Adjustment," 8:15 p.m.
University Theater.
Philosophy Club. 8:30 p.m., 306 Kansas Union. "Notes on Pleasure and Desire"
—Prof. Roderick M. Chisholm, Brown U.
Stewart (TEK House). "The Biggest Game of All"—Bill Krisher, All-American Football Player.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
1874 was amended in 1959 Glatt said. The amendment makes it a crime for any business with a municipal license to refuse service to any person, he said.
In many Kansas towns, municipal licenses are not required.
Steak Dinner
Ferguson said that he had been asked by President Kennedy to come to the White House and brief him on Kansas civil rights law. Our laws "rank as high as those of any state in the union," Ferguson said. Although some would make all violations of civil rights law a criminal offense, Ferguson believes "the method of enforcement is not significant." Ferguson describes Kansas civil rights provisions as "a full civil rights package."
Tau Sigma to Hold Old Record Sale
Sunday Nites $1.25
Music lovers may be able to purchase some of their favorite old records tomorrow at a miniature sidewalk bazaar in front of Robinson Gymnasium.
The records, mostly 45 rpm's with
the beaters, are for 19
cents each or three for 50 cents.
Tau Sigma, honorary dance fraternity, will set up a stand in front of the building tomorrow to sell old records from noon until 2:30 p.m.
4:30-10:30 DINE-A-MITE 23rd & La.
If the young dancers do not completely exhaust their supply during the grand opening tomorrow, the sale will be held again next Tuesday.
NOW THRU FRIDAY Return by Popular Demand
Dr. Strangelove
or How I Stopped Worrying
and Learned to Love the Bomb
Granada
THEATRE ..Telephone VI 3-5788
Coming SATURDAY . . .
YUL BRYNNER
RICHARD WIDMARK
GEORGE CHAKINIS
"FLIGHT/FROM ASHIYA"
Filmed in
PANAVISION [EASTMANCOLOR]
--and every smoking accessory
Held Over! Best Picture of the Year
Ten KU students and two members of the administration will leave Wednesday morning for the National Association of College and University Residence Halls (NACURH) in Denver. The conference will be April 23-25.
Tom Jones!
IN EASTMAN COLOR
OPEN AT 6:15
Shows 6:40 & 9:05
Those attending will be Mary Francis Watson, assistant to the dean of women; Arthur McElhenie, assistant to the dean of men; Jim Tschehtelin, Shawnee Mission junior and chairman of the KU Association of University Residence Halls
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1045
Soon . . .
"LILIES OF THE FIELD"
"HOW THE WEST WAS WON"
Group Attends National AURH Meeting
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40
---
OPEN 6:45
SHOW STARTS AT DUSK
Sunset
How do you save money by spending a lot of it at the Lawrence Book Nook? 1021 Mass.
Starts TONITE!
Rock Hudson in
Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking
REAL PET
(AURH); John Underwood, Parsons senior and AURH vice-chairman; Joan Olson, Omaha, Neb. sophomore and AURH secretary; and Ron Rardin, Leawood sophomore and AURH treasurer.
Selected representatives are Karen Shoop, St. John junior; Susan Griffiths, Chanute junior; Pat Service, Kansas City senior; Elaine Rinkel, Scott City sophomore; Leo Schrey, Leavenworth sophomore, and Ernie Rosenthal, Kansas City sophomore.
BESIDES THE presentation of topics, there will be an election of national officers. Jim Tschecheltelin and Joan Olson will run for chairman and secretary of the NACURH, respectively.
Other topics for general discussion will include a national honorary for residence hall members. The award would be presented to individuals who have contributed to residence hall living.
'Gathering of Eagles'
Plus
Marlon Brando
'The Ugly American'
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
GRANT'S DRIVE-IN Pet Center Sure—Everything in the Pet Field 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921
7,000 Pipes
"SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS"
George's Pipe Shop
727 Mass. VI 3-7164
"SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS!"
ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass.
JIM'S CAFE
838 Mass.
OPEN 24 hrs. a day
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
Fraternity Jewelry
STUDENTS
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
Balfour
Automotive Service
Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel
Balancing
7 a.m. 11 p.m.
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Tops — Glass & Zippers —
Bear Glasses — Headlines —
Door Panels —
Tailor Made Seat Covers at
Competitive Prices with
sewed double lock stitch.
Jack's Seat Covers
545 Minn. VI 3-4242
7 a.m.-11 p.m
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS
FOR
SEE
MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER VI 3-1211
COMPLETE SERVICE FOR CHEVYS OLDS
- Small enough to give personal attention.
VI 3-7700
- Big enough to have all the equipment.
SHIP WINTER
CHEVROLET
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
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Travel Agency AIR LINES
Domestic Foreign
Steamship Lines
Tours Cruises Everywhere
746 Mass.
VI 3-0152
Originality
IN FLOWERS
FOR EVERY OCCASION
especially for you
by
Alexander's
826 10WA
LAWRENDE, KANSAS
FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PHONE VL. 2-3229
Cla
Fender Dave. 32
1956 AU
and good
2038.
1962 Jaw
age. Re
over $300
or call 718-544-1500
Press ca FIC) 61 reflect finder. C offer. C
EICO Ste
$29. Aqt
complete
35mm cam
matic fil
$48. Cal
1959 Jan trade for or see a p.m.
LAWRE
USED
.303 EN
.22 REV
EVENIN
Used K reasona
1957 Ch automa radio a Low m 0182.
Air con with ov lically p and we
1957 MC top, rage good the mo 1325 Te
Heathk shortw diodes.
BFO f
VI 3-2
VW.1 model, 4902.
Gretsc Bixby backer 7922.
21" Z order.
1954 I
condit
3-3938
Germa 1/500 Annex
1962 snow AM. $4,800
Slightly for sa can be after !
Wedd stairs
1963 miles,
9458.
1962
tion,
piston
1960 steeri heate VI 3.
3-bed tile slidin shelted yard wall, elem. date. Phon
Waln good Call
Pat
ch.
242
Classified Ads
of n ofelinairRH,
Fender electric guitar and amp. Cal
Dave, 327 Ellsworth Hall after 6 p.
weeks.
FOR SALE
1956 AUSTIN HEALEY. Overhaul
good paint. Must sell. Call Vib
2038.
4-23
1962 Jawa, 175ce "Sramberl." Low mileage. Recently overhaulied. Best offer over $300.00. See today at 432½ Missouri or call VI 3-9078. 4-28
Press camera 21¼ x 3¼ (SPEED GRAFIC) 6 film holders, cellenoid flash gun, reflector local plane shutter, reflector local plane finder, $75 or offer. Call VI 2-1480. 4-28
EICO Stereo Adapter, excellent condition $9.
Aquarium 3½ gal. stainless steel,
complete with air pump, etc. $9. German
35mm camera ROBOT. Xenon 1.9,
automatic film advance. With all accessories.
$48. Call VI 3-3312. 4-28
LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. NEW AND
USED GUNS, AMMQ A
INDEXPENSIVE INEXPRESSIVE
22 REVOLVERS. WE ALSO REBLUE.
EVENINGS. 1026 OCHI V 1-214 4-28
1959 Janguar XK 150 Roadster. $1600 or trade for late model VW. Call VI 3-5086 or see at building 13-6 Stouffer after 5 p.m. 4-22
Air conditioned 1960 Rambler Custom 6 with overdrive. Very clean and mechanically perfect. Call VI 2-2454 evenings and weekends. 4-27
1957 MGA. Wire wheels, fiberglass hard-
top, radio, heater, new convertible top,
good electric truss, tradeable tire.
Money make offer, Jack Hilber,
1325 Tenn. VI 2-0443.
4-27
Used Kay Electric Guitar. Will sell very reasonable. Call VI 3-3507 after 5 p.m.
1957 Chevy Bel-Air 2 door hardtop. V-8 automatic, power steering and brakes radio and heater. White over turquoise mileage. Asking $600. Call V-8 0182 4-27
Heathkit Mohican general coverage shortwave receiver. 10 transistors and 6 diodes to lose. Factory aligned. Factory aligned. $95 Call VI 3-2454 evenings and weekends. 4-27
Gretsch guitar, Chet Atkins model wii
Bixby. Also 40 wart 2 channel Rickenb-
acker amp. Contact Mike Wertz, VI 3-
7922. 4-24
VW, 1961. 45,000 miles. Sun roof, export model, in good condition. Call VI 3-4902. 4-24
21" Zenith console TV. Good working order. $75. Call VI 3-4635. 4-24
1854 Dodge 4 door, V-8, standard, good
1860 Dodge 4 door, V-8, standard, good
1832 between 2 and 7 p. m.
4-425
3-295
German 35 mm camera, 2 $ Tessar lens,
50mm f2.8 lens, F3.5-4.8 APO.
Aphex, UN 4-3160 or VI 2-904. - 4-244
Slightly used miniature tape recorder for sale. Original cost was $100. You can buy it for only $20. 840½ Kentucky after 5 p.m.
4-24
1963 Volkswagen 2 door sedan. 9,000
9458 evenings. Vicki Call VI-728
1962 Pontiac Grand Prix White, new snow tires, factory air, full power, FM-AM, perfect condition. Original PM-4$8,800. Asking $2.95. Call VI 3-5030-424
Wedding dress, size 7-8.187 La. Upstairs, west apartment. 4 to 6 pm.
1962 Norton 650 c.c. cycle. Good condition. just overhauled, high compression pistons. Call VI 2-9100, Room 943. 4-22
1960 Olds convertible, Dynamic 88. Power steering and brakes, whitewalls, radio, heater. Excellent condition. $1,400. Call VI 3-7017.
3-bedroom house on cul de sac, ceramic
tile kitchen & bathroom, oak floors,
sliding glass doors, full basement with
shelter, attached garage, large rock
yard with many plants, long rock
distance to K.U. and elem school. Prefer August possession
date. No special assessments. $16,500.
Phone VI 2-0005 to 9:00 p.m.
Walnut antique organ and commode.
Kiln call VI 3-2402, 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
4-27
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
George's Hobby Shop
1105 Mass. VI 3-5087
Artists-Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics
JOE'S BAKERY
25c delivery VI 3-4720
JOE'S BAKERY 616 W.9th Open 24 hours except Saturday evening VL3-472
Milliken's SOS
"the best professional service"
1951 Chevy 4 door. Very clean and in excellent condition. Call VI 2-1802 or see 642 Maize after 5 p.m. 4-24
ew shipment of Plink typing paper. 500
ream—$85. Lawrence Outdoor.
905 MLS.
student will sell all guns in collection.
15 auto's, Lugers, 38 revolvers, miniature automatics, Roger 22's, 410 double 66 Deep Green, 22 Hercules, 22 lacer action. While they last! 22 LR,
6.50 per carton. Call VI 3-1110 after 6
pm. 5-7
bicycle weather ahead! Rent or buy a 3 speed Royce Union, $15 per month, 1 month minimum rental. Ray Stoneback's. 4-22 29 Mass.
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS, Chelter Slices, etc., for sale
it great savings after 6 p.m. week days,
saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut
typewriters, new and used portables,
standards, electrics, Olympia, Hermes,
Olivietti, Royal and Smith Corona portables.
Typewriter, adder, rentals and service.
Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St.,
V1 3-3644.
24 hr. answering service
Surprise your roommate with a cake on that special occasion. The K.U. Birthday cupcake is the student body a little of cakes. Free delivery and candy. Call VI 2-1791. 4-24
- general typing service
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta notes. Contains detailed 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
1021½ Mass. VI 3-5920, 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
- automatic typing
The following apts, available June 1st—
One 3 room nicely furnished pri. ent. &
bath, air conditioned $85.00 per unit,
newly redecorated, 2 bedroom furnished
apt. pri. ent. & bath, air conditioned,
newly redecorated, $85.00 per unit,
utilizes paid—Furnished 2 room efficiency
apt. pri. ent. & bath, $20.00 per unit,
air conditioned, $55.00 per unit, utilizes paid—Furnished 2 room efficiency
apt. pri. ent. & bath, $20.00 per unit,
all within 2½ blocks of campus. Call VI
3-7830 or VI 3-0298.
4-28
Summer rooms. Remodeled and newly furnished. Very near K.U. and Union. 1140 Mississippi. Fresh coffee and retriggerator available. Call VI 2-0298. 4-28
for Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3-
404 after 5 p.m. tt
Available June 1. Pleasant furnished basement apartment in new house just south of the train station. Private bathroom and entrance. VI 3-6313. 1103 W. 19th Terrace. 4-28
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Page 11
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 22,1964
Around the Campus Jeffrey Elected Alumni Head
Balfour S. Jeffrey, president of the Kansas Power and Light Company, Topeka, will serve a one-year term as president of the KU Alumni Association, effective in June.
Vice President for the 1964-65 year will be Charles E. Spahr of Shaker Heights, Ohio, president of the Standard Oil Company of Ohio.
Jeffrey and Spahr were selected by the Board of Directors of the Alumni Association, who in turn are elected by vote of the nearly 20,000 members.
Faculty Exchanges Planned
KU will join six other United States schools with Latin American area programs in a committee that plans faculty interchanges.
John Augelli, professor of geography and chairman of the KU Latin American area program, will represent KU at a meeting of the Management Committee of the U.S.-Latin American Faculty Interchange Program scheduled next November in Cuernavaca, Mexico.
The committee consists of representatives of leading U.S. schools, including Columbia, Stanford, Cornell and the University of California at Los Angeles. They are participants in the faculty exchange agreement, which is supported by the Ford Foundation and administered by the Foreign Area Fellowship Program.
Speech Winners Chosen
Eight KU students have become finalists in the Speech I potpourri.
The students are: Roland (Rolly) Reeb, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, "The Fascinating World of One-Sided Surfaces." Cecily Pitts, Merriam freshman, "Quack Magic." Dan Clothier, Wichita sophomore, "Testing for College Entrance." Kirsten J. Norberg, Richards-Gebaur Air Force Base, Mo., "Water Safety: Red Cross and Common Sense." Paul A. Hodge III, Coffeyville sophomore, "Some New Developments in Medicine on Alcoholism." Sheila Reynolds, Hutchinson sophomore, "The Big Dipper." Glenn Pierce, Derby freshman, "Positive Control." Barbara Lee, Prairie Village sophomore, "The Skills of the Surgeon."
DuBois Last AUFS Speaker
Victor Du Bois, an expert on the French-influenced areas of West Africa, will be the last American Universities Field Staff speaker at KU this year.
Dr. Du Bois will speak to 15 KU student and faculty groups and he will speak once at Lawrence High School during his April 23-May 1 visit at KU.
Dr. Du Bois holds the B.S. degree in anthropology from Northwestern University and the M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Princeton University. He has been with the AUFS since 1962.
Two Win Scholarships
The KU Class of 1913 scholarships covering University fees have been awarded to KU seniors Hilda Gibson, Lawrence, and Jack Croughan, Novato, Calif.
Miss Gibson is a French and sociology major at KU. She has been president of Mortar Board, member of La Confrerie and Pi Delta Phi French honorary societies, and she has held a National Science Foundation undergraduate research grant.
She has been active in Associated Women Students, the KU-Y, the Dean's Advisory Council, and she was chosen outstanding member of Delta Gamma social sorority.
Croughan, a chemistry major, has held research grants from the National Science Foundation and the Kansas Heart Association, and he has been a consistent honor roll student.
He has held a scholarship hall award and has been president of Pearson Hall two terms and a member of the hall judiciary council. He is a member of Sachem senior men's honorary society, the All Student Council and he has been vice moderator of the Westminster Center. He has held several scholarships at KU.
Combined Concert Sunday
KU musical organizations and choirs of the two Lawrence junior high schools will combine to present the monumental "War Requiem" by Benjamin Britten in Hoch Auditorium at 3:30 p.m. Sunday.
Clayton H. Krehbiel, professor of choral music, will conduct the 300-voice University Chorus, the 80-voice Concert Choir, the combined choirs of Central and West Junior Highs, the University symphony orchestra, and a chamber orchestra.
Soloists will be KU faculty members: Mrs. Miriam Stewart Hamilton, soprano; Reinhold Schmidt, bass-baritone; and Edward Sooter, tenor. Richard Gayhart will be the organist.
George Weldon has coached the West juniors and Sheila Brown is the director of the Central choir.
Benjamin Britten, the composer, chose as his text poems by Wilfred Owen, a British soldier killed just one week before the end of World War I. The first performance was for the dedication of the rebuilt St. Michael's Cathedral of Coventry, England, in 1962.
Critics have described Britten's "protest against the destruction of life" as a musical, poetic, and philosophical masterpiece.
There is no charge for the program.
Doctors Strike For Free Choice
Editor's note: One of the doctor's complaints that led to their strike against the new Belgian health law was that they would be regimented in the manner of British physicians who operate under a national health plan. The following dispatch describes the differences between the British and Belgian systems and explains the operation of the plan in Britain.
LONDON—(UPI)A major difference between the British national health plan and the Belgian law that caused the doctor's strike is the matter of free choice.
In Britain doctors either may or may not enlist in the national health program. Under the Belgian law doctors must join.
The British National Health Service ((NHS) was first proposed during Sir Winston Churchill's wartime coalition government but was put into effect by the postwar Labor government in 1948.
TODAY'S BRITONS regard it not as a charity but a right. It is regularly used by approximately 95 per cent of the population and served by all but about three per cent of the nation's doctors.
Doctors are not without some strong criticisms of the program. Most frequently put forward is a complaint that they must work too hard for too little money and that the availability of free service crowds their offices with too many people with minor complaints who would not see a doctor if it cost them money. It is argued that this diminishes the chances of a doctor giving all patients the best possible care.
Each British citizen pays for the service through direct and general taxation. A deduction of 12 shillings a week (1.68)—partly matched by employers on a sliding scale—is made from each pay packet under the government's national insurance program. Of this sum two shillings, ten penny (40 cents) is specifically for the NHS. The balance helps finance such things as pensions, unemployment benefits and the like.
THEERE ALSO ARE some moderate charges for medication. They include such fees as two shillings (28 cents) for each prescription, one pound ($2.80) for dental treatment, and from two pounds ($5.60) to about four pounds, six shillings ($12.04) for dentures. A patient who prefers to be treated by a private doctor must pay for his own drugs but is eligible to go to a NHS hospital for free treatment.
Students Plan-
(Continued from page 1)
THERE ARE ABOUT 40 students in the French language program, she said.
"We will attend classes at the Sorbonne in Paris for six weeks," Miss Nelson explained. "During that time the girls will live in 'girl's housing' and the boys, in a monastery."
"The approximate cost of the foreign language institute is $830 for out-of-state students and $750 for residents. This covers board, room, tuition, and travel allowance.
"Any other expenditures, books, trips, and tours, must be extra. We get six hours credit for the summer course, or the equivalent of French 3 and 4."
P-T-P WILL SPONSOR flights to and from Europe, working in connection with national People-to-People, which has two overseas travel programs.
KU's People-to-People is also sponsoring its American Students Abroad program this year.
One of the P-t-P programs gives students a chartered flight to Europe, requiring that they attend an orientation program in Washington before leaving for Brussels.
The Student Ambassador program, also under the P-t-P American Students Abroad program, gives students the opportunity to stay in private homes while touring Europe. The "student ambassadors" are required to stay in homes in at least three different countries.
The ambassador program requires a six-week orientation program, 10 to 15 hours of a foreign language, the recommendation of the chairman of the university P-t-P chapter and membership in the college P-t-P program.
Finally, there are the independent travelers. These students have made various plans for their European tour, from first class jet flights to ships.
These students will get around Europe on bikes, motorcycles, and in rented cars.
Contrary to some conceptions of the British national health scheme both doctors and patients have the right of staying outside the service, or combining it with private treatment. Patients may choose their doctors.
tists' wages went up from an average 2,400 pounds ($6,720) to 2,740 pounds ($7,570).
Doctors, in addition to having the choice of enlisting in NHS or not, can practice under NHS and have private paying patients. Many do. It is estimated there are only about 500 to 600 doctors in Britain who have remained entirely out of NHS.
BY BRITISH, although not by American standards or those of some other Western countries, doctors are relatively well paid under the NHS. Those in general practice were given a 14 per cent pay boost last year, or an increase from 2,425 pounds ($6,750) on the average to 2,765 pounds ($7,642) annually. Den-
The NHS provides complete family doctor and dental service plus the services of surgeons and other specialists in NHS hospitals. Ambulance service is included and there is a special nursing service for home patients.
The annual cost of the program is roughly 3.75 per cent of Britain's gross national product or nearly $2 billion. It represents about $40 for each man, woman and child in the country. In the tax breakdown, roughly 72 per cent comes from the federal treasury, four per cent from local government taxes, five per cent from superannuation schemes and the balance from the token payments made for drugs, etc.
A general practitioner is allowed a maximum of 3,500 patients and is paid a basic 18 shillings ($2.52) per year for each. The British Medical Association has estimated that the average number of patients per doctor is 2,200.
To encourage a buildup of a doctor's practice, each doctor is paid a 12 shilling ($1.68) bonus for each patient on his list between the numbers 500 and 1,501.
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255
Students Suffer FromShoplifting In Book Store
By Susan Flood
Shoplifting in the Kansas Union Book Store is, in effect, taking money from fellow students.
"Since the Book Store operates on a cooperative basis and refunds to the students through rebate slips, any theft just cheats the student who commits it," James Stoner, manager of the Book Store said.
STONER SAID THAT although the percentage of the student body who have been apprehended for shoplifting is small there has been a "fair number in the past six weeks."
"The staff of the Book Store has apprehended about three students a week who are attempting to take things," Stoner said.
"Any shoplifting which goes undetected is too great."
Stoner said the merchandise taken ranges from 45c paperback novels to the most expensive books and supplies. Articles commonly taken are art materials, notebooks and contemporary greeting cards.
DONALD K. ALDERSON, dean of men, said students should be concerned about the shoplifting since the monetary loss is reflected in the rebates by the Book Store at the end of each semester.
"We do not want to tolerate this kind of behavior or to have it show up in other areas," Dean Alderson said.
"Although we do not stress in any orientation period that shoplifting is not acceptable we assume the students realize this is the case before they come here."
Alderson said that self-service and modern merchandising makes items attractive and immediately accessible. He quoted from a recent magazine article which says: "In self-service we ask our customers to help themselves. They sure do."
ANY STUDENT APPREHENDED for shoplifting appears before the ASC Disciplinary Board. The action of the board relates to the offense, the previous record of the student, and the individual case. Dean Alderson said.
"In addition to having it placed on his record the student who is apprehended for shoplifting may be called upon to make a contribution to the fund in the Endowment Association, and may be subject to disciplinary probation or possible suspension."
"Suspension from the University occurs when it is a very serious act of theft, or if there has been an earlier problem with the student," Alderson said.
DISCIPLINARY PROBATION is defined in the following manner: "Disciplinary probation at the University of Kansas describes the status of the student who has admitted guilt or who has been found, through the proper University sources, to be related to the violation of campus regulations, certain laws of the community and state, and/or commonly accepted standards of student conduct.
Disciplinary probation may extend from one semester to an indefinite period. All students who are placed on disciplinary probation will receive written notice of this fact, as will their parents.
Individuals involved in serious irregularities while on Disciplinary Probation may expect to have their student status immediately reviewed, with suspension a distinct possibility at this juncture."
THE DISCIPLINARY BOARD is composed of six students appointed by the president of the student body and five administrative and faculty representatives from the University Senate. The faculty members are: James E.Titus, associate professor of political science, E.Jackson Baur, professor of sociology and anthropology, the student's academic dean and the Dean of Men and Dean of Women.
The six students presently serving on the Board are Breon Mitchell, Salina senior, Curtis Boswell, Louisburg senior, Brian Grace, Lawrence senior, Gerald Dykes, Leavenworth senior, John McCulloh, Abilene junior, and Janice (Gigi) Gibson, Independence junior.
A survey of several stores in downtown Lawrence indicates that the percentage of KU students apprehended for shoplifting is not great.
ONE STORE MANAGER said it is "not fair to criticize the bulk of KU students for the actions of a small few."
The new shoplifting law allows store managers or employees to apprehend a shoplifter while he is still in the store if there is good reason to believe that he is acting in a custom foreign to the usual method of shopping.
Dailu Hansan
"This affords more protection to the merchants than when we previously had to follow the person outside and stop him before he could get away," a local store manager said.
"If an employer notices a person taking an article from a shelf and concealing it in his clothing, the employer may stop him immediately."
Thursday, April 23, 1964
Lawrence, Kansas
61st Year, No. 125
Student Court Reseats Woman After Marginal Victory Case
Bv Gary Noland
Ruling that it is the duty of the voters to know what they are voting on, the Student Court last night reinstated Jean Borlaug, Sierra Guadarrama, Mexico, junior, to her seat on the All Student Council.
The ruling concluded a trial in which Miss Borlaug's election as a representative from the large women's residence halls district was being contested by Beverley Nicks, Detroit junior.
Miss Nicks (Vox) lost the race to Miss Borlaug (UP) by only 14 votes (200-186). At the trial, she charged "negligence on the part of the elections committee" for not passing out ballots to all voters from her district, and for not sufficiently informing students of the special election concerning the large women's residence representative. Last week she obtained a temporary restraining order barring Miss Borlaug from the ASC until the trial
scheduled early on the first morning of the spring election to fill a seat vacated by the recall of a representative of the district. Normally living district representatives are elected in the fall.
The special election for a representative from this district was
The number of courtroom spectators dwindled to only a handful as the trial dragged on for four hours with the plaintiff's attorney, Allen Knouft, Topeka second year law student, charging that "slipshod running of the election" and failure of the elections committee to give "reasonable notice" of the special election resulted in a discrepancy between the number of women voting from the large women's residence district and the actual number of these voters who received the special ballot with the names of the two candidates from this district.
Knoutt produced evidence to show that 426 women from this district received dean's cards, meaning that this number voted in the general election, but he said the official
Tornadoes, High Wind Rip Central Kansas
Kansas City's metropolitan area experienced its first tornadoes of the season when several funnel clouds were reported, mostly in suburban areas. Most reports were unconfirmed.
The thunderstorms moved into Missouri, causing tornadoes to touch down in several areas, but little damage was reported.
POLICE AND WEATHER Bureau personnel confirmed the sighting of at least two tornadoes in suburban Kansas City, but no damage was reported other than power lines downed.
The bulk of the damage was reported in the Hutchinson, Kan., area. Tornadoes touched down at
UPI—Tornadoes, hail and high winds whirled out of violent thunderstorms in Central Kansas Wednesday and dipped down into several communities in its drive east-ward, causing an estimated quarter of a million dollars in damages. No injuries were reported.
Zenith and possibly at Sylvia and Emporia, Kan., but officials were not sure if damages at Sylvia and Emporia were caused by tornadoes or high winds.
Civil defense sirens and factory whistles sounded in Topeka and in Kansas City, police, firemen and civil defense officials sounded warnings in preparation to the severe weather conditions.
Hail the size of baseballs was reported at Emporia and high winds and hail was reported at Council Grove. Three tornadoes touched down in the rural area of Emporia, Council Grove and Cottonwood Falls, but no damage was reported.
A FUNNEL CLOUD was reported but unconfirmed at Latham, Mo., southwest of California, Mo. The hickory county sheriff reported a funnel at Osceola, Mo., but no damage was reported there either.
election tally showed only 393 ballots were cast for the large women's residence district.
Tornadoes passed over Nevada and El Dorado Springs, Mo., but little more than minor wind damage was reported.
Knouft said this discrepancy showed that 33 women from this district voted in the spring election, but did not vote for their representative to the ASC.
Knoutt called 13 witnesses from this living district who testified that they voted in the spring election, but did not receive a ballot for large women's residence representative.
All except one of these witnesses said they did not ask for the special ballot, and were not even aware of the special election.
Nancy Cleveland, Kansas City sophomore, who testified as an eligible voter from this district, said: "I asked for the ballot for large women's residence. I thought I had received it, but when I went to vote, I didn't have it."
She said she voted without returning and asking for the ballot again, because the polls were crowded and she was in a hurry.
Miss Borlaug's attorney, Mike Penny, Lawrence third year law student, argued the election was run smoothly and that there had been publicity in the University Daily Kansan about the recall of Peggy Conner, Sacramento, Calif., senior, so that the voters "should have known what they were voting on.
"The time to find out about an election is before the election, not after," he said.
Penny introduced as evidence, March 18,23,25,27,and April 1 issues of the UDK, which carried articles about the recall petition and the possibility of a special election in conjunction with the spring election.
It was due to the "negligence" of the voters that they were not informed of the special election, Penny argued in his final remarks.
The plaintiffs' attorney, Allen Knoutt, also contended that 75 women whose dean's cards listed them as "commuting" students, were actually residents of the large women's residence district.
A member of the elections committee. Tom Shumaker, Russell junior, testified that several "people said the address on the dean's card was wrong. They were asked to go to the Business Office and have it corrected."
Face Fascination Is Art Theme In Diversified Exhibit Sunday
By Rogers Worthington
Ever since Narcissus fell in love with the reflection of his own face, man has been fascinated by the image of the human face.
The subject of the human face and its images as interpreted by artists is the theme of an exhibit, titled "Images: 23 Interpretations," to be held in the Museum of Art beginning Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m.
The works of such major artists as Picasso, Manet, Toulouse-Lautrec and Rodin will be represented.
"DIVERSITY," EMPHASIZED Gerald Bernstein, curator of the art museum, "is the main point of the show." Paintings will run the gamut of artistic interpretation from photographic realism to abstraction, he said.
"But for all the abstraction, there is always the image."
Bernstein, who feels that many people think of modern art as monolithic, thinks this exhibition will also serve as an educational device.
"This show will re-enforce the fact that there is diversity in modern
art, and that there is no one consistent path or direction."
"IN MANY WAYS," Bernstein continued, "this show is the most important exhibit we've had all year.
"We've gone out of our way to get perfect examples of all the important schools and styles," he said.
Woman." (Bernstein's title) represents the cubist school of art, in which Picasso was so influential.
The time period covered by the 23 different interpretations of the human face begins in the nineteenth century and extends right up to the present, Bernstein explained.
Pablo Picasso's "Hatchet-headed
AS AN EXAMPLE, Bernstein referred to the handling of light and the "dissolving of form in light" by artists of different time periods.
In many of the paintings by artists of the realist and naturalist schools, certain similarities exist despite differences in time periods in which the works were produced, he said.
one painting, by Pavel Tchelti chew, titled "Interior Landscape head," depicts the human head as being constructed of concentric circles.
The painting shows Picasso's attempt to make use of the fourth dimension, time, for which he saecrificed the third dimension, depth, Bernstein said.
"Sands of Time" by Robert Green, a surrealist, also a KU faculty member, will be on display.
In addition to the paintings, three sculptures will be in the exhibit. Rodin's bust of Baudelaire will be among the three.
The other two are of T. E. Eliot, and John Marin, an American landscape painter.
Weather
Partly cloudy to cloudy and unsettled conditions are forecast for Friday. The weather bureau forecast occasional thunderstorms for tonight and tomorrow. The high tomorrow will be in the middle 60's.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 23,1964
ASC Finances
The ASC treasurer has reported that the All Student Council will probably end the year $300-$400 in the hole.
How could this happen and does it matter?
THE UNIVERSITY APPROPRIATES to the ASC a fixed percentage of student activity fee receipts (about $.28 per student per semester) plus special allotments for such ASC-supported organizations as People-to-People.
At the budget session last October, the ASC voted $5,117 of its $8,300 appropriation to other organizations. The original request of $3,583 for the ASC itself was cut by $400 at the session.
A system of order voucher forms and authorization by the ASC treasurer keeps track of ASC expenditures. The treasurer began the year, he reports, with a deficit of $107 and about $250 worth of unpaid bills from the year before. Several unforeseen expenditures, such as $150 for the Conference on Higher Education in Kansas, will keep the budget from being balanced this year.
Then there are those who are ready to yell
SOME STUDENT POLITICIANS support the "national debt" theory of ASC deficit. In other words, there will always be a student body and a student council. So the ASC can keep running up a "bookkeeping deficit" that would never need to be paid.
"Irresponsibility" at the outgoing officers because the balance won't come out $0.00.
RAYMOND NICHOLS, vice chancellor and financial adviser to the ASC, explained the situation quite clearly. He said the University expects the ASC to live within its budget. It is possible that a small deficit could be incurred before the business office realized that the organization had gone over its budget. But as soon as it is known, the treasurer would be called in for a conference with the vice chancellor. Nichols said that only in cases of real emergency would additional funds be granted.
The ASC will probably start next year with a small deficit and a couple of hundred dollars in unpaid bills, similar to this year's situation.
IN ORDER TO LIVE within its budget next year, the ASC should consider the following suggestions: Ask the University for a larger appropriation, in view of the expected deficit, new projects, and increased costs. Allow more leeway for unexpected expenses, at least more than the $100 miscellaneous fund in this year's budget. And try to keep a closer check on and tighter control of ASC spending.
Hopefully, the ASC will solve its money problems next year, for fiscal responsibility is one of the most important aspects of responsible student government.
— Margaret Hughes
The People Say
We're Sorry
Editor:
This campus has dodged issues long enough. As an institution in the heart of the Midwest, the University of Kansas has been partially shielded from many of the burning issues of modern America. Such things as the peace movement and movements against HUAC and the McCarran Act have really not affected KU at all.
But we, the marchers in the demonstrations, are convinced that there is a wrong to be righted on this campus, even if it arouses the anger of such people as the authors of these letters.
Harvard, Berkeley, Wisconsin and other schools have groups of dissenters on their campus. Now Kansas joins these schools in that there is an active dissenting group on its campus.
Other campuses, because of active groups of students and faculty, have been greatly affected by many of these movements. These campuses include the University of California at Berkeley, Harvard University, Yale University, Columbia University, the University of Wisconsin, the University of Michigan and others. These great universities have all had their active and sometimes not so small groups of people who were concerned with political and moral issues.
We are sorry that you do not like us; we are sorry that you find our motivation suspect. But if they can picket and protest at Harvard, Berkeley and Wisconsin we have the right to do the same thing at KU. Again, we are sorry you don't approve of us but it looks like we are here to stay.
Chris Ruhe Wilmette,Ill., senior
The most important issue today, civil rights, has also been actively contested at these schools. Much to the chagrin of some people, the University of Kansas has not proven to be immune to the civil rights movement. These people view the demonstrations of March 21st-28th as evil and disrupting to their way of life.
As an active participant in these demonstrations I am sorry that we have upset and alienated some people, for example the two dubious authors of "The People Say" letters in the University Daily Kansan on April 1. I am sorry that we have rocked your boat.
* *
Virginity Test
Editor:
It has come to my attention that the dean of women has been having difficulty in meting out justice for immoral behavior by women
students. The sin which is at issue here is disobedience of the closing hours decree. Although Dean Taylor has shown remarkable ingenuity in trapping offenders she has been somewhat frustrated in her attempts to direct "justice" and promote attitudes of virtue and chastity.
The university rules seem to indicate the following alternatives: expel the girl, put her on probation, release her with no penalty. This set of alternatives is applicable only to clearly cut cases.
Since most of the situations encountered have been quite complex, the relationship of the rules and any particular case has been rather obscure. It is evident that some procedure is needed which will provide a basis for the establishment of clearly cut guilt or innocence.
I suggest that the person in question be sent to Watkins Hospital for a virginity test. This would take only a short time and could be covered by the student health fee. With the information from these tests, the correct course of action can be easily and comprehensively defined. Those who fail the test would be immediately expelled. Those who passed would be immediately released.
I believe this plan would eliminate the frustration which comes from being unsure as to what measures should be taken and which prevents Dean Taylor from deriving full satisfaction from the execution of her duties.
A great deal of the expense of catching these girls, e.g., long distance phone calls, could be saved by the adoption of this plan. This money could be used to establish a scholarship fund to provide financial reward for those who pass the test. I believe that the reverence of virtue and chastity could be bolstered in this way.
Larry Ben Franklin Salina sophomore
***
Wolf Cries
Discrimination, quality. What do these words really mean? Fick a definition, any definition to suit a particular humanity façade. They're all popular, so none can be wrong. Any day now may be their last. They're worn out. The English department is probably already hemorrhaging over them.
Editor:
In contention with Friday's editorial on the dictatorial parking permit increase and the "suggested" tuition hike, here is a bone you can chew for a while. Did you ever consider the fact that residents of this here state are mandatory taxpayers and that a portion of the
mandatory rate goes to support the thinking factories? And may I be so prejudiced to ask where you got the little ole idea that non-supporters should be placed on the same list with the avid taxpayers? It's not only in this here corn patch that native sons and daughters are given priority over out-of-staters. Just you look at the surrounding fields. And when you hollar "Discrimination!" or unfair like a seven-year-old you might hear an echo say "You're cheating!"
Now I'm not for a price increase in anything, much less like the way the parking permit fees were increased or for Chancellor Wescoe's tuition fee increase suggestion based on the old ché蚀 that a high price is the only assurance of quality. (Speaking as one of the herd, I can't see the cool, clear water for the dust.) If his assumption is true, what happened to the pressurized unification policy that theorized the greater the number using the same facilities the more abundant the materials to be used?
The ones who are discriminated against are the students with a limited number of hours per semester. These students are usually married or have to entirely foot their higher education bill, but by far the most are married. They pay a high price for their endeavors in acquiring a higher education. The married student is greatly limited in the number of hours per semester. If a man, he usually has to work full time or supplement whatever loan he has to provide for his family. If a woman, she is also limited in the number of hours because her role as housewife has to be fulfilled to a certain degree before she can undertake academic work.
The married students are not bemoaning the fact that it will take longer to reach their goals or have any intentions of blaming anyone for their handicaps. Most are glad to have the available opportunity to continue their studies. They do have a lot of determination and must be fairly competent that they will someday reach their goal.
For a tuition fee comparison let's take a student working toward a B.A. teaching degree (128 hrs.), who is limited to 8 hours credit per semester: non-resident, $4,592; resident, $1,952. Compare these figures with a student capable of 16 hours credit per semester: non-resident, $2,296; resident $976. This comparison is based on the fee raise for the '63 fall semester. Who is and will continue to pay the most for an unjust hike in tuition or otherwise? The wolf cries were heard but I can't believe either knew what they were wailing for.
P. J. Spencer
Lawrence sophomore
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Please, Mr. Williams No More Comedies
Tennessee Williams is not known as a writer of comedies—and it is easy to understand why.
Most of this occurs or is explained in the first five minutes. From then until the end of the two-and-a-half-hour play, nothing much really happens. The two couples (surprise!) are reconciled to the tune of a Crosbyan "White Christmas."
Strangely enough, last night's production was fairly enjoyable. Although the "funny" scenes amount to about 15 minutes total, the philosophizing and satire that Williams includes brighten up the play.
Take the plot of the current University Theatre production of "Period of Adjustment."
A HONEYMOON COUPLE who have just spent their wedding night at the Old Man River Motel, he in the bed and she in a chair, descend upon an old Army buddy, whose wife has just walked out on him. On Christmas Eve yet.
CHARLES SCHMIDT, Dixon, Ill., graduate student, got off to a shaky start by over-playing the slightly tipsy Ralph. Sobering up, Schmidt gave a fine portrayal of a man snared in a six-year trap of a father-in-law/boss who proposed to him, an unattractive, sex-hungry wife, a sissified son, and a Spanish-style stucco cottage in a shaky suburbia.
Gigi Gibson, Independence junior, cast as the bride Isabel, has played several dumb-broad roles. She excels in them. A sheltered student nurse from Sweetwater, Texas, Isabel parades around in a pink peignoir until the audience wonders how in the world George can resist her.
But George has problems of his own. Bruce Owen, Lawrence graduate student, plays the self-professed lady killer who used to entertain the painted women of Tokyo by teaching them English. George met Isabel in a St. Louis hospital where he was being treated for a strange palsy. Fearing impotence, George makes Isabel miserable by man-handling her and then charging her with coldness. Owen was convincingly nervous and belligerent.
SEVERAL OTHER ACTORS are worth mentioning: Ann Runge, Higginsville, Mo., graduate student, as Ralph's repentant wife; Jo-Anne Smith, Wellington junior, an over-shrill matriarch; and Paul Broderick, Overland Park sophomore, an over-stuffed blow-hard.
The set was disappointing: the Spanish-stucco-suburbia should have beat the audience over the head.
But the real fault of the play was the way it dragged. Perhaps at a quickened pace, the comedy would have been more forceful.
— Margaret Hughes
Dailyj Hansan
111 Flint Hall
University of Kansas student newspaper
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
Page 3
Socialist Organizer To Speak at Forum
Bv Lee Stone
An 80-year-old socialist will speak here tomorrow as a guest of the SUA Minority Opinions Forum. He is John P. Quinn, national organizer of the Socialist Labor Party (SLP), the oldest Marxist party in the U.S.
The Minority Opinions Forum for Quinn will be held in the Big Eight and Regionalist rooms of the Kansas Union at 4:30 p.m. Quinn will speak on "The Causes of Unemployment and the Socialist Solution."
"QUINN HAS BEEN national organizer for the SLP since 1927," Laird Wilcox, Lawrence freshman and chairman of the Minority Opinions Forum, said.
According to V. O. Key Jr., the writer of a textbook on party politics, small and persistent parties like the SLP, "have only the gentlest impact on the course of events."
Standard research materials have little to say about Quinn. However, there are many references to Quinn's party and its policies.
"Yet, their members derive profound satisfaction from participation in (party) activities . . ."
During the 1960 presidential election, the SLP polled 47,000 votes in 18 states; during the 1956 election it polled 30,267 votes, Key says.
D. D. EGBERT AND Stow Pearson, editors of a fat, two-volume study of American socialism which was supported by the Rockefeller Foundation, show the importance the SLP has had in influencing American style socialism.
The arguments which led to the splitting up of the SLP are the same ones which have confronted socialists since Marx's day, Egbert and Pearson say. They include the question of whether the Marxist revolution must be violent, or gradual, or be achieved by parliamentary means. Also, the socialists have wondered what their relationship to labor unions and international communism should be, Egbert and Pearson say.
KEY GIVES clues as to how the SLP, the generic American socialist
party, has decided these issues. "It regards itself as a revolutionary party which can by some way or another liquidate the capitalist system peacefully," Key said.
The SLP, according to Key, regards Stalinism as false Marxism. "The only difference is that instead of being exploited by a capitalist class (as American workers are) the Russian workers are exploited by the State, and for the benefit of a privileged bureaucratic caste," Key says.
THE SLP DEFINES its relationship to the Socialist Party in biting terms. The Socialist Party "is a fraud, a swindle perpetrated on the American worker, an organization that is up to its ears in capitalist politics," Key says.
Since the SLP dates its beginning to the 1890's, and Quinn has been its organizer for 37 of its 84 years of existence, it is reasonable to assume that Quinn has had some influence on the development of Marxist philosophy in this country.
The SLP also included the "internal Vatican organization" among its antagonists, the political scientist said.
In a recent issue of the SLP's party organ, "The Weekly People," is a request for $200,000 in contributions to finance SLP participation in the coming national elections.
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Thursday, April 23,1964 University Daily Kansan
Ex-Athlete to Give Talk on Religion
Sales - Rentals - Service
A former pro-football star will speak at College Life at 9 p.m. Thursday in the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity house.
LAWRENCE
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Bill Krisher, who was captain for the Dallas Texans. Football Club and All-Pro Offensive Guard in the American Football League in 1960, is now Associate director of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes.
Krisher, who was also one of the starters for the college all-stars in 1958 against the National Football League champion Detroit Lions, will speak on how his belief in Jesus Christ has formed his life.
Dance Fraternity Has Election of Officers
Tau Sigma, honorary dance fraternity, has elected officers for the 1964-65 year, Ann Bueker, Lawrence senior and out-going president of the fraternity, said.
The new president is Mary Messenheimer, Minneapolis, Minn., sophomore. Others who were elected are: Marybeth Weekes, Beatrice, Neb., sophomore and vice-president; Pat Postlethwaite, Kansas City, Mo., junior and recording secretary, and Ronnie Eickmeyer, Prairie Village junior and treasurer.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 23,1964
KU Woman to Chart Language Spoken by New Guinea Natives
A woman instructor will leave KU this summer to do a year's study of the unwritten language of Ipili, spoken by Ipili natives on the highlands of New Guinea.
Francis Ingemann, associate professor of English and linguistics will take her sabbatical year from KU starting in July to try to document an unwritten language.
SHE SAID that in a year's time she hopes to have prepared an Ipill language book for the government and for missionaries.
Miss Ingemann will be financed by her KU sabbatical semester pay, the Lutheran Church, and her own pocketbook. A sabbatical year is a paid independent research period for instructors who have taught on the hill for about seven years.
Miss Ingemann started teaching at KU in 1957 after graduating from Indiana University with a degree in linguistics.
Miss Ingemann said there are more than 500 languages spoken in New Guinea, and that only a small number of these have been studied.
She will be living with some Lutheran missionaries who have been in the area since last fall.
NEW GUINEA lies north of Australia.
The area of the Ipili natives has only recently been reopened to the white man. It was opened up in the 1930's by a gold rush, but the miners were soon run out by the government. The Australian government sent patrols through the Ipilidist every few years, but other than during these patrols, white men have not ventured into this restricted area since the 1930's.
The Ipili area was opened last year and Lutheran missionaries have entered the area.
Miss Ingemann said that until the natives began trading with the white man, their culture was primitive. They lacked the knowledge
of weaving cloth and working metal. THE SAID she will be near other Lutheran missionaries who have been working in an adjacent area,
according to correspondence she has had with the missionaries in the Ipili area, but she does not know how close is the adjacent area.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Laird Wilcox Wins Book Award
A new precedent was established yesterday when this year's Taylor Book Awards winners were announced.
Two contestants tied for second place and a collection of political pamphlets took the first place award.
LAIRD WILCOX, Lawrence freshman, won the first place award for his collection titled "Ephemeral Political Literature in the United States."
The two second place winners were Jerry Ulrich, Lawrence senior, for his collection titled "Varieties of Intellectual History," and Lawrence Morgan, Lawrence senior, whose collection was titled "A Listener's Library of Books on Music."
Wilcox received a check for $100,
and Ulrich and Morgan each received
checks for $35.
Henry Snyder, instructor of history, who announced the three winners, explained that the second place award was tied because "it was difficult to make a choice . . all of them have qualities which make them desirable."
THE JUDGES, ETHNA Vincent, a Toneka book collector; Errol Harris, professor of philosophy, and Snyder, felt that the most impressive qualities of the collections chosen were their range of topics and the manner in which the books were collected, Spyder said.
Following the awards, an informal lecture was given by a book collector and Dartmouth professor of comparative literature. Herbert Faulkner West, who spoke extemporaneously on the pleasures and values of book collecting.
The awards were presented to the winners by Mrs. Elizabeth Taylor, the establisher and benefactress of the annual competition.
Prof. West, who referred to himself as an "impecunious amateur" collector, felt one of the chief pleasures and values of book collecting is in the contact made with other collectors, dealers, and writers.
Thursday, April 23, 1964
DURING HIS CAREER, West has established friendships with such literary personages as Robert Frost, H. L. Mencken, and Henry Miller. He almost got to meet Joseph Conrad, but Conrad died in England shortly before West arrived.
Books, West feels, "make you a more civilized person." As prime requisites for collecting, "all you need is a love for the chase, and a little bit of money," he said.
For aspiring collectors who don't have a lot of ready capital, West recmanded collecting books by leser-known authors, rather than major authors. As an example of the value placed on rare works by major authors, West referred to Robert Frost's first book, "A Boy's Will," which originally sold for five shillings when it was published twenty years ago, but is now worth $500 a copy.
P. A. M. S.
SALLY SANDERS Alpha Omicron Pi Know the score at the Jazz Festival... clothes by Coach House (of course).
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lection of Henry L. Mencken, part of which is on display in the foyer of Watson Library, as "remarkably complete."
West referred to Mrs. Tavlor's colon
12th & Oread
West concluded his remarks by partially attributing his happy life to the pleasures he has received from book collecting.
April 26,1964
6:00 p.m.
International Banquet
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SPEAKER: Norman M. Mallett, British Consul
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 23, 1964
Engineering, Architecture Honors To Be Discussed
The purposes and activities of honor associations with regard to engineering and architecture students will be discussed at 7:30 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
The meeting is mainly to get an idea of what these organizations could be doing, John Hutson, Kansas City junior, said.
The panel will be: Eugene George, professor of architecture; J. O. Maloney, professor of chemical engineering; Robert Smith, professor of civil engineering; Kenneth Rose, professor of metallurgy and materials engineering; John Warfield, professor of electrical engineering and Richard Moore, professor of electrical engineering.
Donald Metzeler, associate dean of engineering, will moderate.
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Coast Guard Teaches Safety
SAN FRANCISCO — (UPI) -The U.S. Coast Guard operated 35 mobile boarding teams throughout the United States in 1963 to spread boating safety education to waters under federal control.
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STUDENTS RESERVED SEATS FOR 1964 FOOTBALL
*
STUDENTS MUST ORDER SEASON TICKETS FOR NEXT FALL'S HOME FOOTBALL GAMES ACCORDING TO THE FOLLOWING PRIORITY SCHEDULE IF THEY WISH TO SIT IN THEIR CLASS SECTION.
*
Monday, May 4 and Tuesday, May 5
Students who will be in the Fall Semester, 1964:
Seniors, Graduate Students,Law Students
Wednesday, May 6
Students who will be Juniors in the Fall Semester,1964:
Thursday, May 7
Students who will be in the Fall Semester, 1964: Sophomores
PLEASE READ THE FOLLOWING CAREFULLY
Tickets will be applied for at Allen Field House — 8:30 a.m. to 12:00 noon and 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. daily. Enter north doors of the Field House and go down the east corridor: ID CARDS MUST BE PRESENTED AND EACH STUDENT SHOULD BE PREPARED TO PAY A FEE OF $1.50 PER SEASON TICKET AT THIS TIME TO COVER THE COSTS OF ADMINISTRATION. (Any applications for refunds of the $1.50 fee must be made in writing to the Athletic Seating Committee of the All Student Council prior to Sept. 1, 1964).
Orders may be placed according to the above schedule and information for picking up your tickets next fall will be distributed to you during the 1964 Fall enrollment period. Students who fail to apply during their assigned day will not be given priority with their class section.
Group applications, within a priority group, will be limited to not more than twenty-five (25). (Exceptions will be considered in the case of exceptionally large pledge classes or classes within men's or women's residence halls.) It should be noted that independent groups can apply in groups if they so desire. All block applications will be given priority according to the student of lowest classification. The person(s) applying for a group must present ID cards for all members of the group.
After all applications are in during this Spring application, a drawing will be held, within each priority group to determine seat location. In this way an
equal opportunity will be afforded to each student so long as you have made application on your assigned priority date. Individual orders and group orders will each be numbered and carry the same weight in the drawing of lots. The Athletic Seating Committee of the ASC will supervise the drawing of lots soon after the end of the ticket application period.
Season tickets for student spouses who are themselves students may be ordered at the earlier priority of either spouse. Season tickets for student spouses who are not themselves students may be ordered at the time their student spouse orders his or her ticket. The price for all student spouse tickets is $7.50. A price of $6.50 applies to housemothers, whose orders may be placed during any priority period.
New 1964 medical students will apply at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City next fall for their season tickets.
Pep Club members must present evidence of membership to be assigned seats in pep club sections. Members of the University Marching Band will have seats reserved automatically and need not order tickets.
To speed up group applications, arrange ID cards according to the following; A-F, G-L, M-R, S-Z, and present these grouped ID's to the proper tables set up in the East Lobby of Allen Field House.
UC
NOTE: ID Cards Alone Will NOT Admit Students to Football Games Next Fall. A Reserved Seat Ticket Will Be Necessary
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- The TCU game is played during the week of enrollment and for this reason, admission to this game will be by your ID card and fall 1964 certificate of registration. All other games will require a student reserved seat ticket.
Du poet
Thursday, April 23, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Untidy Poet Caused Controversy in 1800's
A 19th century English poet was once subject to an investigation because he left wine and cigar lucifers on his desk.
The poet was Arthur William Edgar O'Shaughnessy. The investigation the poet underwent was described in a talk given by William D Paden, professor of the English department, at the Faculty Forum, yesterday.
IN TELLING OF the 18 years O'Shaughnessy spent as a junior assistant of zoology at the British museum of natural history, Prof. Paden described the controversy which arose from the investigation.
"He was very nearsighted." Prof. Paden said of O'Shaughnessy. And during the time he spent at the museum "His attention to trays of bugs and beetles was disasterous," Prof. Paden said.
During the investigation of the poet, because of the "mess" on his
desk, O'Shaughnessy had supporters for his cause, as well as, persons who wanted to see him released from his position.
THE HEAD of the departments of natural history and Lord Linton, the man who had nominated O'Shaughnessy for his position, supported the poet. When O'Shaughnessy's case came up for consideration by the museum's board of trustees, the poet was severely reprimanded. Prof. Paden said, and asked for a report of O'Shaughnessy's conduct for the next three months.
The head of the zoology department wanted to dismiss O'Shaughnessy and wrote that he felt the poet was incompetent, Prof. Paden said. However, the controversy passed when it was discovered that information which applied to the investigation had been suppressed by the head of the zoology department.
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MALLS SHOPPING CENTER OPEN DAILY 9 to 9
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 23, 1964
International Club Themes Brotherhood
"Circle of Brotherhood" will be the theme followed by members of the International Club at the annual International Club dinner Sunday.
Foreign dishes, entertainment, and a program will "provide the international students with an opportunity to express their thanks to people who have helped them throughout the year," Charles Marvin, Lawrence senior and president of the International Club, said.
FOODS, PREFARED by the international students, will be representative dishes of the students' countries.
Twelve different dishes, representing eight nations, will be served. Each guest will receive a portion of each dish, and his plate will be accompanied by a diagram locating and naming each sample.
ENTERTAINMENT DURING the dinner will be provided by a Latin American combo, and a skit, "East Side Story," a satire on the United Nations.
The dinner will be at 6 p.m. in the Grand Ballroom of the Kansas Union.
Following the meal, Norman L. Hallett, British Consul, will speak on "World Revolution-Newly Independent Nations and Evolution of the British Commonwealth."
KU Glass Blower One of Several in Big 8
KU is one of the majority of the Big Eight schools which has a glass blower.
KU's glass blower is Walter L. Logan, who has been with KU for 20 years. His former job with KU was as a store-keeper for the chemistry department and not as a janitor as was stated in an earlier article in the University Daily Kansan.
TOLD WITH VOLCANIC POWER AND PASSION!
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In Eastern COLOR
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COSTARIZING GEOFFREY KEEN in Eastern COLOR
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VI 3-4366
U
9
ALL DAY SATURDAY APRIL 25
KU,- MEET JAZZ...
The City I will s in Ur
Sc H
The Oread Jazz Festival is one of the biggest events to ever take place on the KU campus!
★ Woody Herman and his "Swingin' Herd" in concert at 8 p.m. in Hoch
★ 12 collegiate jazz groups (including two former winners of the Notre Dame Jazz Festival) competing for such awards as
- a playing tour of Europe
Ber ICMA lingto at 6 p the K 17th
- scholarships
- instruments to best musicians
- stereo phonograph
The yester Comm
L. rector nation at the former and 1 11 an Futun
- records
- and many more
ALL DAY $1.50 (ID), $1.75 without TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT INFORMATION BOOTH or UNION
University Daily Kansan
Page 9
School for City Managers Hosts International Official
The president of the International City Managers' Association (ICMA) will speak on "The Manager's Role in Urban Education" here tonight.
Bert W. Johnson, president of the ICMA and county manager of Arlington County, Virginia, will speak at 6 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union at a dinner of the 17th annual City Managers School.
Theme for the school which began yesterday is "Do You Know Your Community?"
L. P. Cookingham, executive director of People-to-People International, Kansas City, Mo., will speak at the school tomorrow. Cookingham, former city manager of Kansas City and Fort Worth, Tex., will speak at 11 a.m. on "The Community of the Future."
Donald Hayman, visiting professor
of political science here, will speak at 9 a.m. tomorrow on "The Manager's Relationship with Community Organizations and Citizens' Advisory Groups."
John G. Grumm, associate professor of political science, will speak at 10 a.m. on "Measuring and Evaluating Community Opinion."
In a panel session which was to be from 1:30-3:00 p.m. today, "Minorities and City Government" was discussed. Frederick D. Lewis, dean of the School of Law at the University of Missouri at Kansas City, led the panel discussion.
Famous Dizzy
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — (UPI) Dizzy Dean was elected to the baseball hall of fame in 1953.
CASH
for your
REBATE SLIPS
NOW
No Waiting Period
VI2-0180
Randcraft
SHOES FOR YOUNG MEN
MIX BUSINESS
WITH PLEASURE
Wear these with
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for either style is
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smooth cowhide.
Durable composition
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REDMAN'S SHOES
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$9.99
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Area Educators Meet
A conference for administrators from 17 area schools will be held Saturday in the School of Education.
Approximately 30 secondary school officials and 10 KU professors will meet to discuss student teaching programs.
Thursday, April 23, 1964
The effects of psychology on lawyers and the law will be discussed at the Psychology Club at 7:30 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Talk Set on Psychology, Law
Dan Hopson Jr., professor of law.
will speak on "The Psychologist and the Legal Profession." Prof. Hopson said that he will explain the lawyers reaction to the new discipline of psychology into the field of law.
A man in a tuxedo stands next to a woman in a long, flowing dress. The woman kneels on one knee, holding the sword vertically with her left hand. The man stands behind her, smiling at her.
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. VI 3-9594
Jon Jones
I Will NOT Clean It Up !
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 23.1964
Spring Intramural Competition Underway For Many Teams
By Bob Jones (Assistant Sports Editor)
Play got underway this week in the intramural softball competition, as about a fourth of the competing teams saw action, while some games were postponed because of wet fields.
The standings after the first week of action show Beta Theta Pi in the lead of Division I in fraternity 'A' competition with a 2-0 record, but followed closely by Sigma Nu and the Delta Tau Delta with 1-0 records.
In division II, there was only one game played as Phi Kappa Theta beat Phi Gamma Delta. And in division III, Phi Kappa Psi downed Phi Delta Theta for the only action in that division.
THERE were only two games played in any of the independent
'A' divisions. Both games were in division I, and Templin and Stephenson Halls were the victors.
In the 'B' divisions, Sigma Phi Epsilon and Phi Delta Theta have 1-0 records in fraternity division no I. Delta Tau Delta and Theta Chi have 1-0 records in Division II.
In division III there were no games played, and Triangle forfeited to Sigma Alpha Epsilon for the only action in division IV.
In independent 'B' play, again there were only two games played, and both of them were in division I.
TEMPLIN 3N downed Chemistry, and MAE beat the Kucimats.
In addition to the softball games, play is now underway in Badminton, Horseshoes, Handball and Tennis, with the finals in these tournaments to be played in May.
Walter Mikols, Intramural Athletics Director, has also set Monday as the final deadline for entries in the intramural swimming meet, which will be held April 29-30 in the Robinson Gym pool.
The reason for the early deadline is that all entries in the meet must have a minimum of six practice sessions of one hour each before they are eligible to participate.
THIS REQUIREMENT is to build up the swimmers' "water conditioning," which will reduce the number of muscle strains.
The preliminaries in all events (except relays and diving) will be at 4:15 p.m. on April 29, with the finals the next day.
The preliminary events will be based on time. The eight best times in each event will score one qualifying point. The four best times in each event will swim in the finals.
DAYLIGHT
DONUTS
MMMMMMM
GOOD
530 W. 23rd St.
DAYLIGHT DONUT SHOP
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
NOW!
LAST 2 DAYS RETURNED!
By Popular Demand For A Limited Engagement
Dr. Strangelove Or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb
Shows 7:00 & 9:10
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5728
Starts SAT...
THE MOST FEARLESS BREED OF MEN ON EARTH —
The Airborne Minutemen of the Rescue Service!
YUL BRYNNER
RICHARD WIDMARK
GEORGE CHAKIRIS
"FLIGHT FROM ASHIYA"
Firmed in PANAVISION and EASTMANCOLOR
Relabeled the LIMITED ARTISTS
HELD OVER!
4 ACADEMY AWARDS
Tom Jones!
IN EASTMAN COLOR Open 6:15 Shows at 6:40 & 9:10
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
Soon . . .
"LILIES OF THE FIELD"
"HOW THE WEST WAS WON"
ROCK HUDSON
"Gathering of Eagles"
PLUS
MARLQN BRANDO
"The Ugly American"
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40
OPEN 6:45
SHOW STARTS AT DUSK
The Best Possible of Summers awaits You...
1950
HUNTER
PAEBA
PALMER
A. K.
PRIORITY
as you enjoy the subtle mist along the Mosel . as you set above the Mediterranean along the Costa Brava . as you cheer for the Cobras at LeMans . or simply marvel at sights in Rome. You . with your friends can be a part of a fascinating adventure, enjoying the best possible of summers — this summer — in Europe. You'll leave June 3 . aboard a scheduled Boeing 707 jet for London. Tour the Isles, the continent, as you desire. Let pure excitement, wonder prevail. Follow the Rhine . follow the Grand Prix circuit . visit the museums, the galleries. Whatever you pursue, it will be living, loving adventure.
After 8 wonderful weeks you'll return . the ideal time, July 31st . ready for school preparation, rush planning, or simply time for being with family.
The special-extra-special-rate for this fun-filled adventure is only $330...the lowest possible rate available for roundtrip to London and back ...and it is being made to you, the KU student, faculty and staff, your families, by ASC...it's non-profit.
The remaining vacancies are limited, so if you want to enjoy the best possible of summers, call John Benson or Reuben McCornack, VI 3-6866 or write same at 1111 W. 11th. Monday is the final deadline.
Do it now . . . Have fun.
One day Kansan
Fender Dave, :
1956 A
and go
2038.
1962 Jav age. R over $30 or call
£ICO St
$29. Ac
complet
35mm c
matic fi
$48. Ca
Press c
FIC) 6
3 refle
finder.
offer. C
1957 Cl automa radio a Low n 0182
LAWRE
USED
.303 EN
.22 RE
EVEN11
Used Reasona
Air con with or visually and we
Heathk shortw diodes.
BFO 1
VI 3-2
VW, 19 model, 4902.
Gretsch Bixby.
backer
7922.
1954 I
conditi
3-3938
21" Z order.
1957 Mt
top, rae
good ti
the me
1325 Te
Germa
1/500
Annex
Slightly for sa can bu after 5
1962 1
snow
AM.
$4,800.
Weddi
stairs.
3-bedr
sliding
shelter
yard
elem
date.
Phone.
Walnu good s Call V
1951 excellent at 642
New sheets
1005 1
For 1
9040
Page 11
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75. Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansas Business Office in Flint Hall by 1 p.m. if desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion.
Thursday, April 23.1964
FOR SALE
Fender electric guitar and amp. Call Dave, 327 Ellsworth Hall, after 6 p.m.
1962 dawa, 175ce "Seramblier." Low mileage. Recently overhaulied. Best offer over $300.00. See today at 432]₂ Missouri or call VI 3-9078. 4-28
1956 AUSTIN HEALEY. Over overlaid
2038 good paint Must sell. Call V1
4-28
EICO Stere Adapter, excellent condition,
$29. Aquarium $3½ gal. stainless steel,
complete with air pump, etc. $9. German
35mm camera ROBOT. Xenon 1.9, automatic film advance. With all accessories,
$48. Call VI 3-3312. 4-28
Press camera 214 x 314 (SPEED GRAFIC) 6 film holders, cellenoid flash gun, 3 telescope pole range finder, shutter, undo holder, ocular range finder, $75 or more
Call VI. C1-2-1480 4-28
LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. NEW AND
USED GUNS, AMMO
USED GUNS, INEXPENSIVE
22 REVOLVERS. WE ALSO REBLUE.
EVENINGS. 1025 OCHR. V-1 2124. 4-28
1957 MGA. Wire wheels, flexl玻璃 hard-
top, radio, heater, new convertible top,
good tires. Consider sellable trade, cover,
offer. Jack Hibeler.
1825 Tennis. VI 2-0443.
4-27
Air conditioned 1960 Rambler Custom 6 with overdrive. Very clean and mechanically perfect. Call VI 3-2454 evenings and weekends. 4-28
Used Kay Electric Guitar. Will sell very reasonable.
Call VI 3-3507 after 5 1-427
1957 Chevy Bel-Air 2 door hardtop. V-8
automatic, power steering and brakes.
radio and heater. White over turret.
Low mileage. Asking $650. Call VI
2-47
VW, 1961. 45,000 miles. Sun roof, export-
model. in good condition. Call VI-24-87.
Heathkit Mohican general coverage shortwave receiver, 10 translators and diodes. Fold form. Factory aligned. $95 Call VI 3-245 evenings and weekends. 4-27
21" Zenith console TV. Good working
order: $75. Call VI 3-4635. 4-24
Gretsch guitar, Chet Atkins model with Bixby. Also 40 watt 2 channel Rickenbacker amp. Contact Mike Wertz. VI 3-7922. 4-24
German 35 mm camera. 2 3 Tessar lenses.
ANXen 4-3160 or VI 2-940. 4-24
Anneson XN 4-3160 or VI 2-940. 4-24
1954 Dodge 4 door, V-8, standard, food
and water coolers.
2033 between 5 and 7 p.m.
4-25
Slightly used miniature tape recorder for sale. Original cost was $100. You can buy it for only $20. 840½ Kentucky after 5 p.m. 4-24
Wedding dress, size 7-8. 1817 La. Upstairs, west apartment. 4 to 6 p.m.
Walnut antique organ and commode
Cai VI. 3-2402, 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
4-27
3-bedroom house on cul de sac, ceramic tile kitchen & bathroom, oak floors, sliding glass doors, full basement shelter, attached garage, large fenced yard with many trees, level long rocked porch, distance to KU. and elem school. Prefer August possession date. No special assessments. $16,500. Phone VI 2-0005 to 3:00 p.m.
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500 sheets to ream—$.85. Lawrence Outlook. 1005 M..ss. tt
1951 Chevy 4 door. Very clean and in excellent condition. Call VI 2-1802 or see at 642 Maime after 5 p.m. 4-24
Student will sell all guns in collection.
45 auto's. Lugers. 38 revolvers, miniature automatics. Ruger 22's, 416 M16 blbl. 30 Deer Heel 30-30 lever action. While they last! 22 LR. $6 per carton. Call VI 3-1110 after 6 PM. 5-7
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS, Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale at great savings after 6 p.m. work day Saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut
Typewriters, new and used portables,
standards, electronics, Olympia, Hermes,
Ollevetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables.
Typewriter, adder, rentals and service.
Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St.
VI 3-"644.
Surprise your roommate with a cake on that special occasion. The K.U.Birthday cake is the student body's full line of cakes. Free delivery and candles Call VI 2-1791.
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the *Western civilization notes*. $4.50 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
For Forluler Brush Products phone VI 3-
9040 after 5 p.m. tf
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
FOR RENT
3 room furnished efficiency apartment.
Private bath and entrance. Clean off street parking. Close to Stadium. Adults only. No pets. Possession immediately or in summer. Summer rates. Inquire at 1001 Mississippi. 4-29
The following apts. available June 1st-
One 3 room nicely furnished pri. ent. &
utilities paid—one 3 bedroom furnished
apt. pri. ent. & bath, air conditioned,
newly redecorated, $85.00 per mo. utili-
ties paid—Furnished 2 room efficiency
apt. pri. ent. & bath, $50.00 per mo.
utilies paid—Garage for garage for
all within 2' blocks of campus. Call VI
3-7830 or VI 3-0298.
Summer rooms for women. Remodeled and all new accessories. Fresh coffee and refrigerator available. 1140 Mississippi. near K.U. and Union. Call V-4-28
0298.
Summer rooms. Remodeled and newly furnished. Very near K.U. and Union. 1140 Mississippi. Fresh coffee and refrigerator available. Call VI 2-0298. 4-28
Available June 1. Pleasant furnished basement apartment in new house just next to campus with two students. Private bath and entrance VI 3-6813. 1103 W. I9 Tenor. 4-28
Room with private entrance and bath.
Room with private enclosed.
Union. $35. Call VI 3-6911. 4-24
Air conditioner rentals 1 ton, 220 volts.
Cashiers installed 4-24
Stoneback's, 929-313 Mass.
Large, homey, attractively furnished, 4 room apartment. Kitchen built-ins and garbage disposal. Utilities paid except electricity. Call VI 3-7677. tf
Married, grad students, faculty, 2-bedroom, from $75. Only 4 left for June. Reserve now. Call for brochure. V13-2163. Santee Apartment, 1123 Indiana. tf
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 8-1116 for information.
LOST
Crescent Heights two bedroom apart-
n.nt. Swimming pool. 25th and Red-
bud. Phone VI 2-3711. tf
2 month old brown collie-shepherd that
fell in the fire at Kappa Sig Fraternity, M 3-1702
4-291
Blue French purse in Waston Library.
Call VI 2-0112. Reward. 4-24
FOUND
The best possible summer for you. Ad-
dress appropriately, the complete套装
in today’s Kansan. 4-23
TYPING
Term papers accurately and neatly typed on good grade bond paper. Minor corrections, copy, extra first page.
Call VI 3-0875. 5-21
Experienced secretary would like typing.
Henderson 2565 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122. 4-30
Term paper or thesis typed to your
request. Satisfies guaranteed. VI - 31029.
4-29
experienced typist with electric type-
writer available to type themes, term
apers, thesis, etc. Accurate work stand-
ards. Phone VI 3-8397, Charles .mar-
tell?
Experienced secretary would like typing for home. Reasonable rates. Call V if 1188
Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason- sentations and theses, paper VI 3-7652 Mrs. Frank Gibson. tf
Accurate expert typist would like typing a prompt service. Call VI 3-2851. and these Prompt service: Call VI 3-2851.
Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tt
Experienced typist for thesis and term
writing. Send resume to:
Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi. VI 3-0558.
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
pencil. Inventory $30.00.
VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles
(Marlene) Higley, 408 West 13th. **tf**
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
Attorney will do typing in legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, and memoirs. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. Mc-Edlowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568.
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648.
BUSINESS SERVICES
Dressmaking-alterations, formalis and dress-
gowns. Ola Smith, 93% III Max VI
S-5283
Would like to do sewing and alterations
Seems too messy. Seems too
Reasonable. Call VI 2-9830. 4-27
When Hallmark Plans-a-Party, you receive the compliments
Hallmark
PLANS-A-PARTY
- Parker Pens
- Stationery
- Printing
BULLOCK'S
4 E. 7th
VI 3-2261
---
Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery thronted for two weeks or more. White sewing Center, 916 Mass. V 3-1267-
L&M CAFE now unner new management We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Our lunch service includes delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches Your second cup of coffee always free.
U-Call, we haul. Anything, anytime. VI
3-5888. tf
MISCELLANEOUS
Have a party in the Big Red School
Room and plan and plant Heated. Call VI 3-7453.
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. tt
The Catacombs nite club and Pizza Dear
Students will attend for 2-3 students to go through college
For information call VI 3-9703 Friday or
Saturday at K.C., M.O., Sunday
through Thursday.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
FRATERNITY JEWELRY
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
IT'S OK TO OWE RAY
809 Mam.
1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780
A complete line, including,
● Lavaliers ● Guards
● Pins ● Mugs
● Rings ● Crests
WANTED
VOLKSAGEN' WANTED. Cash for your VW, Conzelman Motors, VW Sales, Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway 59 So.
LEONARD'S STANDARD SERVICE
Will give $25 for best ladies' or men's
tire speed. Call Vi 2-3456. **4-23**
tire speed. Call Vi 2-3456. **4-23**
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
9th & Indiana VI 3-9830
Girl to play electric organ part-time. Call VI 3-4743.
RISK'S
Shirt Finishing Laundry
Wash & Fluff Dry
513 Vt. VI 3-4141
GRANT'S DRIVE-IN
Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking
Pet Center
Sure—Everything in the
Pet Field
Male junior student for part time work,
11 a.m. to 2 p.m. daily and Saturdays
11 a.m. to 10 a.m. Do not ap-
plaint unless you have these hours
Backstone's, 929-391 Mass. 4-24
616 W. 9th Open 24 hours except Saturday evening
REAL PET
JOE'S BAKERY
Recordings Available of
— Rock Chalk Revue
— Spring Sing
— Greek Week Sing
1218 Conn. VI 3-2921
Portrait models for art classes. $1 per
person.
4-3935 between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. 4-24
25c delivery
GB
HELP WANTED
Recording Service and Party Music
VI 3-4720
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.
ART'S TEXACO
9th & Mississippi
VI 3-9897
YELLOW CAB CO.
VI 3-6333
24 Mr. Service Radio Controlled
**Milkenkens SOS**
"the best professional service"
● general typing service
● automatic typing
● 24 hr. answering service
● mimegraph & photo-copying
21½ Mass., V3-5120, 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Milliken's SOS
Completed Swimming Pool
CALL VI 2-3711
Mgr's Office, 2428 Redbud, Apt. D
New Luxury Addition
Opening This Summer . . .
- Specialists in all makes & models including sports cars "We'll pick up your car and deliver it FREE
VI 3-9608 9th & Ky.
KERBY'S DEPENDABLE STATION
Wheel Bal. - Oil - Wash- Lube
STUDENTS
Mobilgas
Completed Swimming Pool
THE OAKS
PAGE CREIGHTON
- 'Vett head-
quarters
MAKE YOUR
NEXT MOVE
Crescent
Heighis
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
1 Bedroom
2 bedrooms
Swimming Pool
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
FOR INFORMATION CONTACT Crescent Heights Apts. Mgr.
AUTO GLASS
TABLE TOPS
AUTO GLASS INSTALLED
7 a.m.-11 p.m
SUDDEN SERVICE
East End of 9th Street
VI 3-4416
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing
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
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING
616 Vt.
Ph. VI 3-0350
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 23, 1964
B-School Dean Named to Talk To Accountants
Joseph McGuire, dean of the School of Business, will be the key speaker at the 10th annual Accountant's Day.
Dean McGuire will speak on "Controls, Welfare and Freedom" at 6:30 p.m. Monday at a dinner in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
Accountant's Day is sponsored by the KU Accounting Society in cooperation with the Kansas City Chapter of the National Association of Accountants.
THOMAS MILLER, associate professor of business administration, will speak on "Generalization and Specialization: A Problem in Communication" at a luncheon.
Curtis Boswell, Louisberg senior and co-chairman of Accountant's Day, is moderator of a 10:30 a.m. symposium on "Electronic Data Processing: Four Views."
Members of the panel are Lawrence E. Johnson, Arthur Young and Co.; Donald Clingenpeel, Internal Revenue Service; James M. Maxwell, International Business Machines, and Elwyn Davies, the Fleming Co.
Maurice McGill, of Touche, Ross, Bailey & Smart, Kansas City, Mo., will speak at 1:30 p.m. in the Forum Room on "Profitability Accounting for Planning and Control."
W. KEITH Weltmer, professor of business administration, will moderate a panel discussion at 4 p.m. on "Responsibility Accounting." Members of the panel are Merrill A. Joslin Jr., Peat Marwick, Mitchell and Co.; Howard C. Vanhoeren, Century Refining Co., and Saul D. Kass, Harzfeld's, all of Kansas City.
Norman L. Cochran, president of the Kansas City Chapter of the National Association of Accountants, will preside at the dinner.
Official Bulletin
German Graduate Reading Exam, 9:30 a.m., May 2, 205 Fraser. Candidates must register in 306 Fraser by 4:30 p.m., Friday. April 24.
Teaching interview: Friday, April 24, Cleveland, Ohio. 117 Bailey.
Internation Banquet, 6 p.m., Sunday, Kansas Union. Dishes from around the world. Sponsored by the KU International Club.
Student International Soccer School June 14-20, Howard U., Washington, D.C. Open to all students at minimum cost See Dean Coan.
TODAY
Der deutscher „Verein” aprilt sch am
Der stag, dag. den Apriluft ist
desstag, dag. den Apriluft ist
Es enthält ch originales
Puppenspiel, “Das war die Woche, die
war.” Erwirrungen. Alle sind eingelad-
SUA Poetry Hour, 4:30 p.m., Music Room, Kansas Union, Dan Jaffe, recognized poet, faculty of UMKC, reading his own poetry.
Lindley Lecture, 4:30 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union. "Freedom and the Nature of the Self."-Prof. Roderick M. Chilsholm, Brown University.
Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion,
Pan. American Room, Kansas
Union.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Psychology Club 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. "The Psychologist and the Legal Profession"—Prof. Dan Jason, School of Law. Everyone知道
Philosophy Lecture 7:30 p.m. 108
Harris, Dr. Ernst, Harrls.
Christian Science Organization, 7:30 pm
Danforth Chapel. Everyone welcome.
University Lecture, 8 p.m. Big 8 Room,
Kansas Union, "The 18th Century Intel-
llectual Newton and Locke"
Rev G, A. Craus, Andover Newton
Twohl, Sub. Mass
"Period of Adjustment," 8:15 p.m.
University Theater.
Philosophy Club 8:30 p.m. 306 Kansas
University
— Prof. Rodrick M. Chisholon, Brown U.
College Life, 9 p.m., 1911 Stewart (TEK House), "The Biggest Game of All"—Bill Krisher, All-American Football Player.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses. 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m.
St Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
SUA Current Events Forum, 4:30 p.m.
Forum Room, Kansas Union.
SUA Film, 7 p.m., 9:30 p.m., Fraser Theater, "The Outsiders."
Mathematics Colloquium, 4:30 p.m. 103 Strong Hall. "Non-Continuous Linear Transformation of Locally Convex Expressions"—Prof. Gottfried M. Kothe, U. of Heidelberg.
Pre-Cana Conference, 7:30 p.m., St.
Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
This is the second session in a three
session series.
Jewish Community Center Services. 7:30
npm. 917 Highland Dr. Refreshments.
University Lecture, 8 p.m.
Dyche University
Lecture, 9 a.m. to 10 a.m.
Anam
Bordwell, KU Kose Morgan professor
"Period of Adjustment," 8:15 p.m.
University Theatre.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
Applications For Peace Corps Committees Due Friday
Interviews for the 1964-65 KU Peace Corps Committee will be conducted from 2 p.m.-5 p.m. Sunday
Corps office, Room 112 of the Kansas Union.
Applications due by 5 p.m. Friday, may be picked up in the Peace
Applicants will be notified by telephone concerning exact time and place of the interviews.
The eight positions are: Speaker's Bureau, Promotion, Off-campus projects, Secretarial Staff, Research, Counseling Service, Special Events, and Treasurer.
Questions concerning the applications should be directed to Donna Hanneman. Junction City junior.
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Hard work by KU students created the first Oread Jazz Festival.
Countless Letters, Phone Calls Precede Festival
In the fall of 1962, Robert M. Bush, Glendale, Mo., senior, and members of the Jazz Festival Committee, went before the Student Union Activities Board and proposed a jazz festival. The board told him to go ahead, Bush said.
With the voluntary cooperation of interested students,plans were made,letters written,and
dates set. Bush said that the task was "monumental."
The festival, created by student effort, will be all day tomorrow. The preliminary competition for the 12 groups entered occurs from 10 a.m. to noon and from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom. The five finalists and Woody Herman's Herd perform beginning at 8 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium.
NINETEEN MONTHS OF work by students.
with the help of Michael Maher, assistant professor of zoology, has given KU its first jazz festival.
All through the spring semester of 1963, Bush explained, the students planned with the advice of music and jazz buffs in Kansas City and Lawrence. Bush recalls the biggest concern of the students was getting a "big name" to play at the festival and prizes for the collegiate bands entered.
Letters and phone calls soon followed, Bush
(Continued on page 3)
Dailu hansan
61st Year, No. 126
World Spotlight
Friday, April 24, 1964
Johnson Crowded On Poverty Tour
SOUTH BEND, Ind.—(UPI)—President and Mrs. Johnson, on the start of a four-state tour of poverty-stricken areas, were caught for five minutes today in a milling crowd which pressed around the Chief Executive on a football field in South Bend.
At least one woman was carried away, apparently injured, from the jam of an estimated 5,000 persons waiting for the President on his helicopter hop from Chicago to this northern Indiana City.
The President's Secret Service agents worked furiously to get Johnson out of the crowd of hundreds who pushed close around him and Mrs. Johnson.
Johnson once tried to calm the excited crowd—raising both arms over his head in a pacifying gesture—but to no avail.
Agents finally wedged a path for him.
Johnson was unsmiling but later broke into a grin as he continued shaking hands in a more orderly fashion after emerging from the crowd.
It was Johnson's first stop on a tour of the front lines of his war against poverty campaign.
Bases Shutdown
WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara today announced the shutdown—complete or partial—of 22 military installations and facilities with the elimination of 10,056 jobs.
McNamara told a news conference that the shutdowns and reductions plus the sale of two industrial reserve plants, the consolidation of defense contracting offices in 29 U.S. cities and several other economy measures would save $68 million annually in the United States and abroad over the next $3½ years.
Wallace Jeered
BLOOMINGTON, Ind.—(UPI)—Alabama's Gov. George C. Wallace, his composure frayed a bit by a raucous, jeering reception from about 3,000 Indiana University students, carried his Hoosier primary campaign into Southern Indiana today.
Wallace's opponent in the May 5 primary, Indiana Gov. Matthew E. Welsh, headed north to meet President Johnson in South Bend.
The Alabama segregationist had about 200 hissing, cat-calling students walk out in the middle of his speech last night.
The meeting began with wild laughter when Wallace was introduced as "a man who has done much to improve the lot of the Negro in his home state."
Nazi Flees Germany
HANNOVER, Germany—(UPI)—A fugitive Nazi mass murderer flew to Switzerland after escaping from a maximum security jail with the aid of an old Hitlerite comrade, police said today.
They said his plane trip followed by hours his escape from the Braunschweig jail—from which he slipped with the aid of a guard who had served with him in Adolf Hitler's forces.
Hans Walter Zech-Nenntwich, convicted of the slaughter of Jews, used a private airplane to fly to Basel, Switzerland, early yesterday, police said.
They said the 47-year-old former Nazi SS officer flew to Basel in a private plane belonging to a textile manufacturer. The plane took off from nearby Nordhorn.
Police said they had unconfirmed reports that Zech-Nenntwich was joined in the plane by a woman friend, Margrit (Little Angel) Steinheuer. 32.
Frazier Chosen Vox President
Jim Frazier, Topeka senior, was elected President of Vox Populi last night.
Other officers elected were: Jon Alexion, Mission junior, vicepresident; Pris Osborn, Stockton junior, secretary; and Mike Pallesen, Topeka freshman, treasurer.
Frazier succeeds Tom Bornholdt,
Topeka senior.
Sig Nus Give Brother Blood
The Red Cross bloodmobile in front of Sigma Nu fraternity yesterday had special significance for the members—they were donating blood specifically for a member of Sigma Nu.
This blood will be exchanged for the type required by William Monty, St. Joseph, Mo., senior, who is in critical condition in a St. Joe hospital with a bleeding ulcer, Tim Wettack, Coffeyville junior and president of Sigma Nu, said.
"It takes two pints of our blood to exchange for one pint at the community center in St. Joe. Monty has to pay $25 a pint unless it is replaced by donations in his name," Wettack said.
The bloodmobile was supposed to make its scheduled stop at Stephenson scholarship hall, but many of the members of Stephenson were in the hospital with measles. Several residents of Stephenson gave blood at the Sigma Nu house when they learned the Sigma Nus had requested that the blood go to Monty.
Students interested in donating blood for Monty can go to Lawrence Memorial Hospital between 4:30 and 6:00 next Tuesday.
Court Gives Vox Contested Seat
The Student Court last night reversed the announced outcome of the spring election for All Student Council representative from the School of Fine Arts, and ordered that Norma Sharp, Arkansas City junior, be declared the representative from that district.
The court's ruling nullifies the decision of the elections committee, at the time of the spring election, declaring Susan Lawrence, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, the winner in that district.
The failure of the election committee to redistribute two write-in ballots to the indicated second choice candidate was the reason for the court's ruling.
In the spring election, the elections committee announced that Miss Lawrence (UP) had won, by lot, over Miss Sharp (VOX) after the vote ended in a 138-138 tie.
There are 39 seats on the council. Before the trial, UP had a slim majority (20) by two seats over Vox (18). Now, neither party has a distinct majority, being tied with 19 seats each. One council member is unaffiliated.
The result of the trial last night has changed, slightly, the complexion of the all Student Council.
DURING THE TRIAL, evidence also revealed an error by the elections committee in the handcounting of 14 ballots, but the deciding factor in the case, was the policy of the elections committee in the matter of redistribution of two write-in ballots, which was contradictory to the procedure outlined by the ASC constitution.
In the race for representative from the School of Fine Arts, there were two write-in ballots cast for Gary Little, Prairie Village freshman. The two voters in this case, designated Norma Sharp as their second choice.
The ASC bill on elections states that "the quota of votes shall be determined by dividing the total number of valid ballots cast . . . by one more than the total number of positions to be filled." The quota necessary in the race between Miss Sharp and Miss Lawrence was 139 votes.
The elections bill also specifies that the candidate with the lowest number of votes, who cannot possibly win, shall be declared defeated, and his ballots redistributed, by hand, to the voter's second choice (in this case, Miss Sharp) until one candidate receives the required quota of votes.
(Continued on page 12)
Study Organizations
Sociologists Tackle Projects
By Bobbie Bartelt
Student attitudes toward education, the changing role of women in the Costa Rican society and the functions of voluntary organizations illustrate the diversity of research work being done by members of the department of sociology.
Many of the projects are still in the research and appraisal stages, and the final results will not be known in the immediate future.
E. Jackson Baur, professor of sociology, explained his work concerning student attitudes toward a college education in an interview Wednesday afternoon.
"WE WERE CONCERNED with how participation in campus life influenced students' studies and their attitudes toward education," Prof. Baur said.
"A representative sampling of students was taken, and they were interviewed six times during their
four undergraduate years," Prof. Baur explained.
In addition to the interviews, 200 personal histories, selected from students taking introductory sociology courses, were collected and studied.
"ALSO STUDENTS taking seminars in sociological research observed student behavior in certain campus groups, in which the researchers themselves were participants," Prof. Baur said.
Weather
The study was also concerned with comparing students participating in honors courses to those in the regular program.
The Weather Bureau today said skies probably would be mostly cloudy with scattered thunderstorms through tonight and early morning. The low temperatures tonight are expected to be in the middle 50's.
"This project is about 15 months from completion," Prof. Eaur said. "During the coming months we will analyze the data and write the final reports."
THE CHANGING ROLE of the woman in Costa Rica's middle class is the subject of a study, "The Gentel Revolution," being done by Gordon Ericksen, professor of sociology.
Prof. Ericksen spent last summer in Costa Rica working on his pilot project and will return to Costa Rica this summer to continue gathering material. He is working under the KU-Costa Rica Faculty Exchange program.
"Middle class women in urban Costa Rica are showing signs of acting like middle class American girls," Prof. Ericksen said.
"Accordingly, they are asking Who am I?, and 'What do I want
(Continued on page 12)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 24, 1964
RFK, Shriver, Humphrey & McNamara.
Which One?
Who will be the running mate of President Johnson on the Democratic ticket for the office of vice-president of the United States? This question has arisen today as it always does almost every four years when the President in the office decides to run for the second term.
Several names have been mentioned and are being considered as possibilities for the position of vice-president. Among them include Robert F. Kennedy, attorney general; Robert McNamara, secretary of defense; Abraham Ribicoff, senator from Connecticut; Hubert Humphrey, senator from Minnesota; Edmund Gerald "Pat" Brown, governor of California; George Wallace, governor of Alabama; J. W. Fulbright, senator from Arkansas and chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee; R. Sargent Shriver Jr., director of Peace Corps and of President Johnson's War on Poverty; and many others.
BUT LOOKING AT the qualifications of these men, only four persons are likely to be the choice for the second highest position in the nation. (The qualifications here are based on popularity, likability, experience, standing on issues such as Civil Rights, Medical Care, prayer in the public schools, taxation, foreign policy, and so forth.) Those four persons are Kennedy, McNamara, Humphrey and Shriver.
* * * * *
Born on Nov. 20, 1925, in Brookline, Mass., Robert F. Kennedy was educated at Milton Academy. He was graduated from Harvard in 1948 and then studied law at the University of Virginia. In 1951 he was admitted to the Massachusetts bar.
Before becoming attorney general, he served the government as an attorney with the criminal division of the Department of Justice and as a member of the Senate Permanent Sub-Committee on Investigations headed by Senator Joseph R. McCarthy.
KENNEDY RESIGNED from his government job to become the campaign manager for his brother, the late President John F. Kennedy, who later appointed him (Robert) as attorney general.
Bobby in the last four years has always tried to promote integration and equality. He has launched a campaign to decrease crime and juvenile delinquency. He was sent to Asia by President Johnson to investigate the conflict over the newly-born Malaysia.
A FIRM BELIEVER in civil rights, he stated his support of the Civil Rights Bill now before the Senate that each and every part of the bill is important and that no part should be omitted. He had always supported his brother's program and advised him whenever necessary.
Robert should help Johnson pull votes from the East because of the popularity of the Kennedy family.
* * * * *
ANOTHER POSSIBLE candidate is R. Sargent Shriver Jr., a brother-in-law of the late President Kennedy.
The 48-year-old Peace Corps director is a liberal Catholic and has a Midwestern background. He served as an executive of the Merchandise Mart in Chicago for 12 years until he quit to serve as Peace Corps director. In Chicago he was very active in civic affairs.
Shriver received close attention of political observers when President Johnson asked him to deliver personal and confidential messages to Pope Paul VI in the Holy Land, to Jordan's King Hussein, and to Israel's Premier Leo Eshkelon.
PRESIDENT JOHNSON and Shriver have worked together closely since 1960. They seem to
get along well. Recent appointment of Shriver as director of President Johnson's war on poverty gives an indication that the President is considering him as his running mate on the Democratic ticket.
The President has described Shriver as "one of the most brilliant, most able and most competent officials in the Government."
* * * * *
The man most often considered is Senator Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota, who developed liberal political philosophy through his experiences during the draught and depression years. A native of South Dakota, he graduated from the University of Minnesota in 1939 and became interested in politics.
HUMPHREY WAS elected mayor of Minneapolis at 34. In 1948 he was elected senator from Minnesota and was re-elected in 1954 and 1960.
The Senator received a great deal of attention in 1958 when he spent eight hours with Premier Nikita Khrushchev. He was a hopeful candidate for the presidency in the 1960 election, but he ran a weak second to John F. Kennedy in the presidential primaries.
In January 1961, he was elected the majority whip by his Democratic colleagues in the 87th Congress. In the Senate he has been a very persuasive man and has gained the respect and affection from his conservative colleagues. He is particularly known for his "Food for Peace" as well as for his farm welfare measures.
Among some of the bills which he has favored and endorsed are the Youth Employment Bill, the Civil Rights Bill, and Medical Care for the Aged. He is well known for his work on the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, for his work which helped create the National Defense Education Act, and for his love of the Peace Corps.
He is considered to be the most noisy extrovert since Teddy Roosevelt.
* * * *
There are signs that President Johnson is encouraging the discussion of Robert McNamara as a possible candidate.
A native of San Francisco, McNamara attended the University of California and Harvard School of Business. He worked for a year with a California accounting firm after receiving his M.A. from Harvard and then returned to Harvard as assistant professor of business administration.
The People Say.
McNamara was a commissioned officer in the Air Force during World War II and reached the rank of Lieutenant Colonel by the end of the war. He was the first person outside the Ford family to become the president of the Ford Motor Company, which he joined after the war.
IN 1960 HE WAS appointed secretary of defense by President Kennedy. He served also as a close assistant to President Kennedy, especially during the Cuban blockade and signing of the Nuclear Ban Treaty. He was sent to South Viet Nam to study the situation there and evaluate the American policy.
The 47-year-old Secretary of Defense is a registered Republican but considers himself independent. He has built himself quite a reputation in the past three years and is expected to gain support from his native state.
As the present situation stands it is very hard to tell who will be picked in the Democratic convention for the job of vice-president. And the question will not be resolved until that time.
- Vinay Kothari
$$
* * * * *
$$
Knocks Parking
Editor:
When we came to Miller and Watkins, it was a privilege to live here. Now, it seems, we are to become burdened by this privilege. With the new parking regulations to be enacted in September, any
student wishing to see a Miller or Watkins girl before closing must hike up the hill from Ohio. Why must our dates be limited to nature-lovers and athletes?
Some of us ride home with friends whose cars bear the KU Student parking sticker. Starting next year, these friends will not be able to park closer than Ohio, and be
we will have to carry our luggage one block and down seventy steps which are often dahgerously icy. Perhaps $ \frac{1}{2} $ - hour parking stickers for Zone T can be given to students wishing to pick up a girl and her luggage. Or will Chancellor Wesco lend us the Wescoe family butler to carry our luggage for us?
Two Millerites
SCRANTON
SAME STATEMENTS AS BEFORE
© 1964 HERBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
"I Wanted To Make Sure Everything Was Clear"
BOOK REVIEWS
THE FLINT AND THE FLAME: THE ARTISTRY OF CHARLES DICKENS, by Earle Davis (University of Missouri Press. $6.95).
Some of us remember Dickens with resentment as one of those "classic" authors whose work was crammed down our reluctant throats in high school. Others, belonging to an older generation, think of him affectionately as a good-natured sentimental entertainer—the "Christmas-card Dickens." Others still—earnest young men and women who have taken courses on the theory of the novel before having read much fiction—dismiss him scornfully as a bunglar who knew nothing about Art, never having worshipped at the shrine of Henry James.
All these folks will read Professor Davis' book with profit. The author (chairman of the English Department at our sister state university up the river) shows in great detail how Dickens developed from a rather sloppy storyteller steeped in 18th century literary traditions and the atmosphere of the early Victorian stage into a master craftsman who integrated his plots ever more skillfully as his career progressed.
As he grew artistically, Dickens' comments on his civilization became more penetrating and more savage, so that aesthetic skill and social vision can be seen working together in his mature books. What emerges in mid-career—particularly after "David Copperfield," Mr. Davis holds—is a first-rate novelist whose acquaintance no sophisticated reader need shun: a novelist, on the contrary, who should be respectfully considered along with such fashionable modern giants of fiction as Faulkner and Kafka.—George Worth, Chairman, Department of English
* * *
BLEAK HOUSE, by Charles Dickens (Signet Classics, 75 cents).
More and more this novel is coming to be regarded as one of the greatest, if not the greatest, of Dickens' novels. It is giant in size and giant in scope, Dickens offering a strong denunciation of an archaic legal system at the same time that he provides a bitting picture of society.
A long lawsuit over an inheritance is the central point of the plot. Dickens gives here some of his best characterizations, his best social satire. Geoffrey Tillotson, who has written an afterword, calls the book "the finest literary work the 19th century produced in England."
* * *
PEER GYNT. by Henrik Ibsen (Signet Classics, 60 cents).
Readers of plays will cheer the availability of this Ibsen drama in paperback. It is one of the most familiar stories in literature as well as in music, an epic dramatic poem rooted in the romantic folklore of Norway. Its pertinence lies in the eternal meaning it conveys—man's search for meaning in a frightening world.
The translation and foreword are by Rolf Fjelde, poet and critic. This is a new and welcome translation.
Daily Hansan
111 Flint Hall
University of Kansas student newspaper
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.
Friday April 24,1964
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Countless Letters, Phone Calls Precede-
(Continued from page 1)
said in an attempt to find the "big name" band. Then late last April or May Woody Herman was playing at a country club in Topeka. Bush said that he and other students went to meet Herman, listen to him and talk about their planned Jazz festival.
Last summer the students signed Woody Herman to play tomorrow night.
PRIZES BEGAN TO come in, Bush said, in response to the letters and phone calls that had been made earlier. Last spring, 1963 University People-to-People, Inc., offered an award of $235 per person to help defray costs of a tour of Europe as a prize. The offer came to represent the top prize of the festival—a trip to Europe and an opportunity to play in European jazz festivals.
An additional prize offered to the winning group of the jazz festival was announced by Bush yesterday. Two weeks before the group goes
Concert Series Starts Sunday
The sixth annual Symposium of Contemporary American Music opens Sunday evening and will continue through Tuesday with a series of free public concerts featuring unpublished music.
Prof. Vladimir Ussachevsky of Columbia University and a principal participant in the Columbia- Princeton Electronic Music Center, will be guest composer.
Guy Fraser Harrison, conductor of the Oklahoma City Symphony, will direct the symposium orchestra as Robert Baustian, professor of orchestra, is on leave.
Prof. Ussachevsky's "Creation-Prologue," a composition for four choruses with electronic accompaniment, will highlight a concert by the KU Chamber Choir Monday evening. The select vocal unit's program of new music will be at 8 p.m. in the University Theater. Prof. Clayton H. Krehbiel is the conductor.
The symposium opens at 8 Sunday evening in the Swarthout Recital Hall with a concert of new chamber music by KU faculty members and the Chorale.
to Europe they will play at New York's World Fair.
The group will play for two weeks. Bush estimated that each player will earn approximately $500 for their performances.
Other prizes will be offered the musicians including instruments and an engagement at Jazz Homecoming Sunday in Kansas City.
In order to attract and select participants for the jazz festival, Bush said, letters and pamphlets
were sent to 500 colleges and universities. The twelve bands selected were chosen from tape recordings. Bush said.
"I THINK, THAT in an overall comparison of jazz festivals, we outstrip them all," Bush remarked.
The campus radio station, KUOK, will broadcast the festival. Radio stations which will use KUOK's facilities by "plugging in."
KLWN in Lawrence and KANU in Lawrence.
Radio stations which will use KUOK's facilities by "plugging in." Bush said, are KTOP in Topeka.
The twelve bands competing are: Denver University' Stage Band; Big Band in Cougarland, Houston; Quincy College Contemporary Jazz Ensemble; Mitch Farber Sextet; Jazzwinds Sextet of Washington University; Kansas City Jazz Quintet; George Southgate Quintet; The Green Trio; Bill Farmer Stage Band; Cerritos College Stage Band, and North Texas State University Lab Band.
Steak Dinner
Sunday Nites $1.25
4:30 - 10:30
DINE-A-MITE
23rd & La.
Morgan Professor to Lecture
Alan Boyden, Rose Morgan visiting professor of zoology at KU will deliver a University lecture on "Men and Ideals" at 8 p.m. tonight in Dyche Auditorium.
Prof. Boyden is a former professor, research associate and director of the Rutgers Serological Museum which he founded in 1948. He retired from the staff in 1962.
Much of his research effort has been directed toward a more critical approach to the systematic classification of the animal and plant world. His method, which he describes as the "present nature" method, challenges assumptions held since Darwin.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 24, 1964
Harris Discusses Human Dignity
The principles of democratic government, liberty, equality and fraternity, should not be limited by national frontiers, Errol Harris, professor of philosophy, said in a war and peace lecture titled "Democracy and World Order."
The main emphasis in an ideal democracy is placed on the ultimate value of human individuality, and the recognition of the individual dignity, he said.
"This is the only valid basis for social and political equality. Without it, there is little sense in calling political ideas, practices or constitutional forms democratic," Prof. Harris said.
THE PROFESSOR equated human welfare with social welfare, and called individuality "a social product."
"Thus the welfare of society is
Top Talkers Take Honors
Four sophomores and two freshmen took top honors in the Spring 1564 Speech I Potpourri Contest which ended last night.
The three winners the first night were Roland (Rolly) Reed, Kansas City, Mo.; Paul Hodge III, Coffeyville; and Sheila Reynolds, Hutchinson. All are sophomores.
The three winners last night were W. H. Farrar, Jr., Arkansas City sophomore; Marcia Dozier, Topeka freshman, and Walter H. Mooney, Wichita freshman.
Official Bulletin
German Graduate Reading Exam, 9:30 a.m., May 2, 205 Fraser. Candidates must register in 306 Fraser by 4:30 p.m.,
Student International Soccer School June 14-20, Howard U., Washington, D.C. Open to all students at minimum cost. See Dean Coan.
TODAY
SUA Current Events Forum, 4:30 p.m.
Forum Room, Kansas Union.
SUA Film, 7 p.m., 9:30 p.m., Fraser Theater, "The Outsiders."
Mathematics Colloquium, 4:30 p.m. 103 Strong Hall. "Non-Continuous Linear Tension of Locally Convex Spaces"—Prof. Gottfried M. Kothe, U of Heldeberg.
Pre-Cana Conference, 7:30 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. This is the second session in a three session series.
"Period of Adjustment," 8:15 p.m. University Theatre.
SATURDAY
Medical School Admissions Test. 203
Bailey. 8 a.m.
French PhD. Reading Exams. 9:30
a.family.
"Bonfire Party," 6:30 p.m. Meet at St.
Lawrence Center. 1915 Stratford
is not a "couple only" affair, this
is not a "couples only" affair.
"Period of Adjustment," 8:15 p.m.
University Theater.
SUNDAY
Oread Friends Meeting, 10:30 a.m. Dan.
I'll be coming to come to this Quaker
meeting, for weight.
Museum of Art Opening Exhibition-
Relation, 2 p.m. "Images 2 Interpretation-
Circle of Brotherhood International
Banquet. 6 p.m., Ballroom, Kansas Union.
SNEA Banquet, 6:30 p.m., Big 8 Room,
Kansas Union.
nothing more or beyond or separable from the welfare of the individual members of the society, and neither can be fully achieved at the expense of the other.
"Liberty, in consequence, is socially indivisible." he said.
Prof. Harris outlined the historical origins of democracy which he referred to as the essential ideals of western civilization.
THE GREEKS WERE the first to challenge authoritarianism, and conceive political liberty, rule by majority vote, and constitutional government.
The Romans recognized that their citizens had rights which the law must protect. Their legal system was the first to have universal applicability.
"THE PRINCIPLES of human relationship and conduct enunciated by Christ are thus the principles of a democratic community," he added.
Christ urged fraternity as the only proper relationship between men, if a really free community is to be maintained. The doctrine is summed up in Christ's statement, "Ye are all brethren," the professor said.
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HUBER
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ERN'S CYCLE SHOP
950 N. 3rd VI3-5815
We Service All Makes of Cycles
SPEAKER: Norman M. Mallett, British Consul
Union Ballroom
6:00 p.m.
Non-member tickets
$2.50
Union Information
Desk
\* \* \*
April 26,1964
International Banquet
Member tickets
$1.75
International Club
Office
Herter Speaks at KSU
By Jim Scheetz (Of the Kansas State Collegian)
'Geneva Talks to Be Giant Step'
By Jim Scheetz
MANHATTAN-Christian Herter, U.S. trade representative and former Secretary of State, climaxed the first of a two-day regional Common Market conference on the campus of Kansas State University yesterday.
After outlining the history of the GATT negotiations, Herter stated that the sixth round of negotiations known as the Kennedy Round—will open May 4 in Geneva.
Ambassador Herter, Dr. Hans Broder-krohs, director of Agricultural Economics of the Common Market; Kansas Sen. Frank Carlson, and Dr. Dag Humphrey, author and Tufts University professor, were among the more than 12 international experts discussing the economic and political implications of the European Common Market.
Speaking before an audience of 2,000 in Ahearn Fieldhouse, Herter stated that the success of the coming round of General Agreement on
"These negotiations are likely to be long and difficult." Herter said. "There are a number of major problems which will have to be solved before we can bring them to a successful conclusion.
Tariffs and Trade (GATT) talks in Geneva with the Common Market nations would be a giant step toward establishing a worldwide partnership for progress among the free nations.
JRP and Stephenson Plan Grudge Match
A "grudge match" between the championship College Bowl team from Stephenson Hall and the Joseph R. Pearson team will be at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
"The grudge' is that JRP didn't get to meet Stephenson in the finals, although we played several practice matches before the competition," Thomas Winston, Dallas, Tex., senior, a JRP resident said.
"The Common Market is engaged in replacing the individual agricultural system of its six-member nations by a common agricultural policy applying to all of them." Herter said. "The shape this policy takes is obviously a matter of great concern to us."
No classes were cancelled for the conference. However, students could be excused from classes upon request.
PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS
IT'S TRADE 'N' TRAVEL TIME AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEAL
Sport Coupes above: Corvette Sting Ray, Chevy II Nova, Corvair Monza, Chevelle Malibu, Chevolet Impala.
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It's get-the-cottage-ready time. Put-the-boat-in-the-water time. Baseball time. Trade 'N' Travel Time at your Chevrolet dealer's. Time to get out of that wintertime rut, into one of Chevrolet's five great highway performers.
Now it's easy to go on vacation first class—without paying a first-class price. In a luxury Jet-smooth Chevrolet, for example. This beauty rivals just about any car in styling, performance and comfort. Or try a totally new type of travel in the youthfully styled
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FOR THE GREAT HIGHWAY PERFORMERS
Now thrifty Chevy II has hill-flattening power. Unique Corvair offers extra power that accents its road-hugging rear engine traction. And the exciting Corvette speaks for itself.
Yes, right now is new car time. T-N-T Time. Time to get the most fun from a new car. To get a great trade on your old one. To get a big choice at your Chevrolet dealer's. Come on in!
CHECK THE T-N-T DEALS ON CHEVROLET • CHEVELLE • CHEVY II • CORVAIR AND CORVETTE NOW AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER'S
Friday, April 24, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
LAOA
Here's the Perfect Start of a Date to the Oread Jazz Festival.
Before you attend the 1964 Oread Jazz Festival this Saturday, treat yourself and your date to a superb meal in the Prairie Room of the Kansas Union. Enjoy your favorite choice of charcoal broiled steaks served with large baked potato, tossed green salad, relishes, hard rolls and butter.
THE PRAIRIE ROOM IS OPEN FROM 11:00 A.M. TO 2:00 P.M. FOR LUNCH 5:00 P.M. TO 9:00 P.M. FOR DINNER
For reservations call UN 4-3540
Kansas Union Food Services
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 24, 1964
Manager Inaction Charged
By Roy Miller (Assistant Managing Editor)
The president of the International City Managers' Association said here last night that city managers are not "likely to do so many wrong things as it is that they too often fail to do anything at all."
Speaking at the 17th annual City Managers school, Bert W. Johnson, president of the ICMA and county manager of Arlington County, Va., said resistance to new ideas places city managers "in the position of leaving undone those things which we ought to have done.
"There must be courage to confront all significant problems and needs with the knowledge that some problems, such as delinquency and unemployment, are not completely soluble and that some of the solutions lie outside of action by local government," he continued.
"WE MUST NOT fail to be educators as we fortify our need for courage."
Johnson has served as city manager at Lebanon, Mo., Boulder, Colo., and Evanston, Ill.
Speaking on the role of the city manager in urban education, Johnson said the city manager must "educate so that his own value preferences become those of the governing boards he serves."
He said city managers should strive to secure an "healthier attitude" toward all levels of government.
"UNLESS WE HAVE fixed our goals we would never know we were advancing toward them."
Minorities and city government were discussed at an afternoon session by a panel moderated by Fredrick D. Lewis, dean of the School
of Law at the University of Missouri at Kansas City and chairman of the Kansas City Human Relations Commission.
Members of the panel were:
Lee Vertis Swinton, attorney and president of the Kansas City branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; Russell E. McClure, city manager, Wichita; Peter D. Newquist, assistant director of industrial relations and security of the Bendix Corporation and chairman of the Kansas City Chamber of Commerce's Fair Employment Commission, and Dale Henry, regional director of the National Conference on Christians and Jews, Wichita.
"I THINK WITHOUT question the most serious problem a city manager will be facing in the next five to ten years will be problems relating to human relations," Dean Lewis said.
Lewis spoke of the Human Relations Commission's work in pushing passage of the public accommodations ordinance in Kansas City.
"We're in a fact-finding position," Lewis continued. "These are emotional problems, not intellectual problems. The only way you can deal with them is with facts, not with emotions."
Newquist, who heads a commission that was formed in June, 1963, said he is "convinced that the great issue in the nation today is employment. I am convinced the Negro is more concerned where he works than where he lives or where he eats.
"HE HAS NEVER had any real reason in the past 100 years to desire this employment," Newquist continued.
HERMAN'S "THOUGHT FOR THE WEEK"
TAKING A CASE TO COURT IS A TRYING AFFAIR?
(TRYING DR PEPPER HAS HELPED MANY AFFAIRS.)
-HERMAN
DR PEPPER
FIRESSTONE
WIRELESS
DR PEPPER BOTTLING CO. OF LAWRENCE
Newquist urged the city managers to seek support of the business community in their efforts to seek fair employment for Negroes.
DR PEPPER
FINESTONE
TUBELESS
Newquist said there was difficulty in finding qualified Negroes for certain types of employment because they haven't had incentive for training.
The Castle Tearoom For Your Dining pleasure 1307 Mass. VI 3-115]
HEART
DR PEPPER BOTTLING CO OF LAWRENCE
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
BOYD'S CAFE
at 109 W. 6th St. is ready to serve you Tues.-Sun. till 4 a.m.
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April 24
Dance-Play Cards-Have Fun
(Ad Courtesy ASC)
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for the finest in Steaks its...
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air time:
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IN EASTMAN COLOR
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Tonite Shapes 6:40 & 9:10
Sat. Mat. 2:00 — 6:40 & 9:10
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STARTS WED ...
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Page 7
Friday, April 24, 1964 University Dally Kansan
IDE- PLACES TO GO THINGS TO DO!
Sports
GET THE GANG TOGETHER FOR A BOWLING PARTY THIS WEEKEND
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
GET THE GANG TOGETHER
FOR A BOWLING PARTY
THIS WEEKEND
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
VOLCANIC POWER AND PASSION!
ROCK HUDSON · BURL IVES
THE SPIRAL ROAD
Eastman COLOR
co-starring
GENA ROWLANDS
GEOFFREY KEEN
Plus Cartoon
35c
Feature Times: 7 & 9:30 p.m.
Fraser Theater
FRIDAY FLICKS
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
VOLCANIC POWER AND PASSION!
ROCK HUDSON · BURL IVES
VOLCANIC POWER AND PASSION!
ROCK HUDSON · BURL IVES
THE SPIRAL ROAD
Eastman COLOR
co-starring
GENA ROWLANDS
GEOFFREY KEEN
Plus Cartoon
35c
Feature Times: 7 & 9:30 p.m.
Fraser Theater
FRIDAY FLICKS
THE SPIRAL ROAD
Eastman COLOR
ee-sterina
"Here's The Oread Jazz Festival"
From 10 a.m. on these twelve groups will be competing for awards unequalled in size and importance by any other jazz festival.The five top groups of the afternoon will give a concert in Hoch at 8 p.m.along with . . .
WOODY HERMAN AND HIS SWINGIN'HERD
Performance Time:
Group's name:
10:00 a.m.
Denver University Stage Band
10:30 a.m.
Big Band in Cougarland
11:00 a.m.
Quincy College Contemporary Jazz Ensemble
11:30 a.m.
Mitch Farber Sextet
11:30 to 12:30
OPEN JAM SESSION
1:00 p.m.
Jazzwinds Sextet of Washington University
1:30 p.m.
Midwestern Jazz Quintet
2:00 p.m.
George Southgate Quintet
2:30 p.m.
The Green Trio
3:00 p.m.
Bill Farmer Quartet
3:30 p.m.
Joplin Jr. College Band
4:00 p.m.
Cerritos College Stage Band
4:30 p.m.
North Texas Lab Band
12 hours of jazz including the Woody Herman session - only $1.50 . . . one ticket for a whole day of exciting competition and good sounds.
SEE YOU IN THE UNION TOMORROW AND LATER IN HOCH
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 24,1964
Athletes Set for Big Weekend
Jayhawk athletes are preparing for a busy time this weekend, as competition is scheduled in all Spring sports, and most teams will be on the road.
Coach Floyd Temple will welcome back sophomore righthander Charles Dobson to KU's baseball pitching rotation as the Jayhawks travel to Oklahoma State for the third round in Big Eight baseball competition.
Dobson and catcher Tim Gardner missed the 3-0 sweep at Nebraska last weekend because of an early-week collision in an intra-squad game which sidelined both.
DOBSON IS SCHEDULED to work the second game at Stillwater today with Steve Renko in the first. Fred Chana will start the nine-inning singleton on Saturday.
The team will go to Stillwater tied with Oklahoma for second place in the league at 5-1. The Cowboys are seventh at 1-3. Missouri's defending champion leads at 4-0.
Coach Bill Easton's trackmen, fresh from the Kansas Relays here last weekend, go to Des Moines, Iowa today and tomorrow for the Drake Relays.
KU WILL SEND up three individual champions from its own meet at Des Moines:
Bob Hanson, who won the 100 in 69.7; Floyd Manning, who won the pole vault in $ 15-9 \frac{1}{2} $ , and Tyce Smith who jumped $ 6-4\frac{1}{2} $ to win the high jump.
Easton will also enter the fourmile relay team to compete against Missouri and Texas, who defeated the Jayhawks here.
The Jayhawk tennis team, with an 11-1 record, goes into a quadrangular meet today and tomorrow with Air Force, Colorado State and Wichita at Wichita. The KU tennis team shut out the Missouri Tigers, 7-0, last weekend.
KU golfers host Oklahoma State today, then go to Columbia Saturday to take on the Missouri Tigers. The KU golfers are expecting to finish in the first division in the Big-Eight championship meet May 15 and 16 in Stillwater.
The Jayhawk football team will have an intra-squad scrimmage Saturday morning in Memorial Stadium.
Music To Listen To—Music To Hunt Night Crawlers To—Music To Drink To
Rock 'n' Roll — Surfin' Sounds — Uptown — Dog — Twist — Clinchin' Music
PARTY PLANNERS ORGANIZERS SOCIAL CHAIRMEN THE BANDITS ARE Stealing The Show Around Lawrence !
- The Swingingest Group at Large
- At The Waters Edge: even the fish listened to the sound of the Bandits at the Teke Party at Tongie Lake.
- At the Sandbar or at Lone Star: the Bandits generate their own electricity to generate their own sound.
- Most Sensational Sound To Hit Lawrence — No party will be complete without music by the Bandits — be it at the Sandbar, in the Barn or in your own house.
SOME MAY DATES STILL OPEN
Blues — New Tunes — Old Favorites — Music To Dance To
Call: Manager Larry Breeden, VI 3-8544 or Gary Archer or Ben Cutler, VI 2-3008
Music That KU Students Like To Hear — Rock 'n' Roll — Surfin' Sounds
GREAT
TOURING
SLACKS
Trim, tapered, easy moving .they go anywhere you like.
Crisp and clean .beltless and cuffless. Many fine fabrics
including long wearing blends of 65% "Dacron" *polyester*
and 35% combed cotton. *DuPont's Reg. T.M.* From 5.95
CaPER Casuals
UFA
SMITH BROTHERS MANUFACTURING COMPANY CARTHAGE, MO.
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
Presents
SUA MINORITY OPINIONS FORUM
JOHN P. QUINN National Organizer For The
SOCIALIST LABOR PARTY
K
"THE CAUSE OF UNEMPLOYMENT AND THE SOCIALIST SOLUTION"
FRIDAY, APRIL 24-4:30 P.M. BIG EIGHT ROOM-KANSAS UNION
NOTE: A taped debate between Michael Harrington of the Socialist Party — Social Democratic Federation and Fred Schwarz of the Christian Anti-Communism Crusade will be played at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, April 30th, in the Kansas Union. Room number will be announced on the board in the lobby.
Friday, April 24,1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Keep in swing with the following...
9
Lawrence Laundry 10th + N. Hamp guaranteed quality
First National Bank 8TH + Mass.-Drive-in 9TH+Tenn. member-Federal Deposit Insurance Co
Kirsten's Sportswear Hillcrest- free parking Virginia Inn + Restaurant 2907 W.6th make graduation reservations now
Richardson Music Co. 18 E.9th quality instruments, rentals
$ \textcircled{8} $
Roberts Jewelry 833 Mass diamonds, watches, jewelry
Key Rexall Drugs 711 W 23rd complete service 9am-9pm
9 :
Drake Bakery 907 Mass catering to college students
Owens Flowers
9th + Ind. VI. 36111
wire Flowers to mother by Florists Telegraph Delivery
So. Ridge Plaza Apts 2350 Ridge Crt apts for summer available
Oread
Jazz!!
april 25
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 24,1964
State Justice Gets Award
John F. Forton, justice of the Kansas Supreme Court, has received the first KU School of Law Distinguished Alumnus Citation.
The award was presented today in Kansas City at the annual meeting of the School of Law alumni in conjunction with the spring meeting of the Kansas Bar Association.
Justice Fontron, formerly of Hutchinson, was also presented an engraved silver desk box.
He is a member of the class of 1926.
He is the first Justice of the Kansas Supreme Court appointed under the new method of judicial selection.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
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803 MASS.
VI 3-2241
-BUSINESS DIRECTORY-
How do you save money by spending a lot of it at the Lawrence Book Nook? 1021 Mass.
FRATERNITY
A. complete line, including,
● Lavailers
● Pins
● Rings
● Guards
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Ray Christian
JEWELERS
IT'S OK TO OWE BAY
809 Mass.
JEWELRY
Portraits of Distinction
HIXON STUDIO
摄影师
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
7,000 Pipes and every smoking accessory
George's Pipe Shop
727 Mass. VI 3-7164
"SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS"
JIM'S CAFE
838 Mass.
OPEN 24 hrs. a day
BREAKFAST OUB SPECIALTY
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Automotive Service
Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel
Balancing
7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
STUDENTS
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
Juck's Sear Covers
545 Minn. VI 3-4242
Balfour
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
Tops — Glass & Zippers —
Rear Glasses — Headlines —
Door Panels —
Tailor Made Seat Covers at
Competitive Prices with
sewed double lock stitch.
Jack's Seat Covers
545 Minn. VI 3-4242
KERBY'S DEPENDABLE STATION
- 'Vett headquarters
ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass.
Mobilgas
Specialists in all makes &
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"We'll pick up your car
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Wheel Bal. - Oil - Wash- Lube
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The only thing better than a home cooked meal is — Dinner At DUCKS Steaks & Seafoods A Specialty
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738 N.H.
CHEVROLET
FOR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS
SEE MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES
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We are always happy to serve you with
Ice cold beverages
Chips, nuts, cookies
Variety of grocery items
Crushed ice, candy
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University Daily Kansan
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75. Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 11am the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported here.
FOR SALE
3-bedroom house on cul de sac near KU in Schwegler School district. Ceramic tile kitchen and bathroom, oak floors, 12 x 12 dining room with sliding glass doors, full basement with sheer walls, fur warmers with feeder to wit many trees and beautiful 140' rock wall. No special assessments. $15,750. VI 2-0005. 4-30
Page 11
Nikkon camera with 50 mm lens, case,
flash gun, accessory close up lens, other
accessories. See Dr. Clifton at 502A
Dyche or call UN 4-3951. 4-30
Toy puppies. $50 each, 1 black, 1 brown,
1 white. Adorable pets. After 4 p.m.
Cecil Browning, Linwood, Kansas. Call
44F3.
Student must sacrifice 1959 T-Bird. Excellent shape. Best offer takes. Friday and Saturday only. Call VI 3-8348. 4-24
Fender electric guitar and amp. Call Dave, 327 Ellsworth Hall, after 6 p.m. (2) 518-290-4200.
1956 AUSTIN HEALEY. New overhaul and good paint. Must sell. Call VI 2-
2038. 4-28
1962 Jawa, 175cse "Sramberl." Low mileage. Recently overhauled. Best offer over $300.00. See today at $432!₂ Missouri or call VI 3-9078. 4-28
EICO Stereo Adapter, excellent condition,
$29. Aquarium $3½ gal. stainless steel,
complete with air pump, etc. $9. German
35mm camera ROBOT. Xenon 1.9,
automatic film advance. With all accessories,
$48. Call VI $3-3312. 4-28
Press camera 21/4 × 31/4 (SPEED GRAFIC) 6 film holders, cellenoid flash gun, lens, camera frame shutter, finder. Couple range finder, $75 or less. Call Offer VI 2-1480. 4-28
LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. NEW AND USED GUNS. AMMO LUGERS. 98.
JAMES CAREY BOWTIES. 12 REVOLVERS. WE ALSO REBLUE.
EVENINGS. 1026 OHIO V. 1-2142 4-28
1957 Chevy Bel-Air 2 door hardtop. V-8 automatic, power steering and brakes.
1957 MGA. Wire wheels, fiberglass hardtop, radio, heater, new convertible top, leather, tradeable roof, the money, make offer, Jack Hibler, 1325 Tenn. VI 2-0443.
4-27
automatic, power steering and brakes,
radio and heater. White over turquoise.
Low mileage. Asking $650. Call VI
2-0182.
4-27
Used Kay Electric Guitar. Will sell very reasonable.
Call VI 3-3507 after 5:42-4-27
VW 1961. 145,000 miles. Sun roof, export
import in good condition. Call VI 4284.
4902.
21" Zenith console TV. Good working order. $75. Call VI 3-4635. 4-24
Gretsch guitar, Chet Atkins model with Bixby. Also 40 watt 2 channel Rickenbacker amp. Contact Mike Wertz, VI 3-7922. 4-24
1954 Dodge 4 door, V-8, Standard, good
3203 between 5 and 7 p.m.
3-3038 between 5 and 7 p.m.
German 35 mm camera, 2.8 Tessar lens,
16mm f2.8 Macro, with zoom capability.
Annex, UNC 4-3160 or VI 2-1940 - 2-424
Slightly used miniature tape recorder for sale. Original cost was $100. You can buy it for only $20. 8401/₂ Kentucky after 5 p.m. 4-24
1962 Pontiac Grand Prix. White, new snow tires, factory air, full power, FM-AM, perfect condition. Original price, $4,800. Asking $2,495. Call VI 3-424-
Walnut antique organ and commode.
Call VI 3-2402, 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
4-27
Wedding dress, size 7-8. 1817 La. Upstairs, west apartment. 4 to 6 p.m.
1951 Chevyl 4 door. Very clean and in
at 642 Maine after 5 p.m.
4-24
New shipment of Pink typing paper. $90
team - $85 Lawrence Outdoor
1005 M *
Student will sell all guns in collection.
45 auto's. Lugers, 38 revolvers, miniature automatics, Roger 22's, 410 double blunge 30.06 Deer Reaper resistor 30-22, deer action. While they the rifle, R.$.50 per carton Call VI 3-1110 after 6 p.m. 5-7
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS. Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale at great savings after 6 p.m. weekdays, midday and Sunday. 837 Connect St
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.
Surprise your roommate with a cake on
that special occasion. The K.U. Birthday
cake provides the student body a line
of cakes. Free delivery and
Call VI 2-1791. *4-24*
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all new editions. Call VI 2-3701 Free delivery $4.50 Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive minimegraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. If
For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 8-
9040 after 5 p.m. tf
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
FOR RENT
Bachelor Studio Apartment for graduate or older undergraduate men. $1/2 blocks furnished, utilities paid. nicely ideal study conditions. A few still available at low summer rates. Singles and doubles. For appointment call VI 3-8534.
1 bedroom attractively furnished apartment in quiet location. Large cool rooms, carpeted and carpeted later. Will rent for all or part of summer to married, grad, or responsible student. Will be reserved for $65 per month.
731 W, 25th Apt. D or call VI 3-1071 - VI 3-9233
3 room furnished efficiency apartment. Private bath and entrance. Clean off street parking. Close to Stadium. Adults only. No pets. Possession immediately or in summer. Summer rates. Inquire a 1001 Mississippi. 4-2
The following apts. available J June 1st:
One 3 room nicely furnished pri. ent. &
utilities paid—one bed price $62.50 per mo.
apt. pri. ent. & bath, air conditioned,
newly redecorated, $85.00 per mo. utili-
ties paid—2 rooms $149.00 per mo.
air conditioned, $55.00 per mo., utili-
ties paid—Furnished 2 room efficiency
apt. ent. & bath, $50.00 per mo.
utilities paid—All garage for all
within 2½ blocks of campus. Call VI
3-7830 or VI 3-0298.
4-
Summer rooms for women. Remodeler and all new accessories. Fresh coffee an refrigerator available. 1140 Mississippi near K.U. and Union. Call V1 4-298.
Summer rooms. Remodeled and newl furnished. Very near K.U. and Union 1140 Mississippi. Fresh coffee and refresher available. Call VI 2-0298. 4-2
Available June 1. Pleasant furnished
basement apartment in new house just
near campus. Please send two ma-
nual students. Private bath and entrance
V-3-6313. 1103 W. 19 Tenrance. 4-2
Room with private entrance and bath
Room with room models.
Union #53; Call VI 3-6981
4-2
4-2
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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. $^{**}$
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Friday, April 24, 1964
LOST
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Term paper and paper by experienced
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Term papers accurately and neatly typed on good grade bond paper. Minor corrections, carbon copy, extra first page. Call VI 3-0875. 5-21
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Experienced secretary would like typing.
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Fast. accurate work done on electric
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Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reasonings, paperers, themes, sertations and theses, phone VI 3-7582 Mrs. Frank Gibson
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tt
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Secretary will do typing in home. Past.
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L&M CAFE now under new management
WILL BE open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
During lunch, good delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches.
Your second cup of coffee always free.
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BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
The Catacombs 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.
HELP WANTED
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For Fast Results READ and USE THE WANT ADS REGULARLY!
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 24, 1964
Court Gives—
(Continued from page 1)
THE QUOTA NECESSARY in the race between Miss Sharp and Miss Lawrence was 139 votes. The elections committee did not transfer these two ballots to Miss Sharp at the time of the counting, which would have given her a victory over Miss Lawrence.
Instead, the election committee, decided the election by lot as specified in the ASC constitution in case of a tie vote.
The plaintiff's attorney, Rick Kastner, Lawrence first year law student, called Dick King, Kansas City sophomore and elections committee chairman to the stand to explain why the redistribution was not carried out.
"In the fall election, because there are many candidates from one district, the quota system and redistribution is followed. In the spring election, because there are usually just two candidates for each district, the traditional practice is to base the outcome on a plurality vote." King said.
King said this was the policy that the elections committee decided upon before the election.
MORE EVIDENCE, produced at the trial, showed that the election committee erred in the hand counting of 16 ballots that were rejected by the IBM computer machines which are used to count most of the ballots.
Sociologists Tackle-
(Continued from page 1)
to make of myself rather than just a wife and mother?" he said.
"There is some likelihood that this genteel revolution by the women to identify with new roles may lead to family planning—with women being as vigorous participants as the men," he said.
The title, "Genteel Revolution," fits Prof. Ericksen's research work because the women of Costa Rica feel obliged outwardly to subscribe to church (Roman Catholic) based definitions, while they carry on their crusade for greater participation in the institutions of Costa Rica.
"THE MAJOR CHANGE in the middle-class woman's attitudes has been from the institution (home and church) to the person (independence, rather than dependence)," Prof. Ericksen said.
The project began three years ago when Prof. Ericksen started collecting information on the population explosion in Costa Rica.
The result of the study will be a book, tentatively called "The Gentel Revolution," and should be completed in about a year and a half.
VOLUNTARY ASSOCIATIONS in Lawrence were studied in detail by Charles Warriner, professor of sociology.
"We were interested in learning what the voluntary associations were
Choirs to Present 'War Requiem'
The School of Fine Arts will present the "War Requiem" by Benjamin Britten at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium.
Clayton Krebbiel will conduct the 300-voice University Chorus, the 80-voice Concert Choir and the combined junior high choirs of Central and West junior high schools. The University Symphony, a chamber orchestra and organist Richard Gayhart will provide instrumental background.
like as organizations, and also their functions for members and the community" Prof. Warriner explained.
Information was gathered by interviewing members of the organizations, attending the meetings, reading documents about the organizations, and collecting various newspaper clippings. Prof. Warriner said.
"There are about 750 voluntary organizations, exclusive of student clubs, in Lawrence," Prof. Warriner said. "These organizations range from the neighborhood bridge club to the League of Women Voters." Included in the study were such organizations as square dance clubs, lodges, fraternities and service clubs.
"THE PUBLIC DOESN'T recognize these small bridge clubs as organizations, but they have many of the characteristics of a formal organization, including rules, regular meetings, and in some cases certain rituals that are followed," he continued.
"It is also true that men belong to as many clubs as women," he said. "The popular notion that women belong to more is false."
If You
If You KNIT You'll find all the Bernat Yarns and Paks at Terril's
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1
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ARENSBERG'S
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61st Year, No. 127
Monday, April 27, 1964
NTSU Sweeps 'Oread' Festival
North Texas State University ran away with the Oread Jazz Festival Saturday.
The N.T.S.U. Lab Band won the "best big band" award over four competitors, while the Bill Farmer Quartet, composed of the lab band's rhythm section, took the small group honors.
The University of Kansas emerged a victor too. Herb Smith, Memphis, Tenn., senior, was judged the best reed player in the festival, even though his Midwestern Jazz Quintet did not make the finals. A $200 scholarship to the Berklee School of Music and a new Le Blanc saxophone were awarded Smith.
IN ADDITION, three members of the Farmer combo won personal acclaim for their performances.
Three members of the Farmer Quartet received individual awards, Ed Soph, drummer for the quartet and the N.T.S.U. band, received a $200 scholarship to Berklee School of Music.
THE QUARTET'S pianist, Dan Haerle, also with the N.T.S.U. band, received a stereo phonograph. The group's bassist, John Wilmeth, received a scholarship to the National Stage Band Summer Camp, for his trumpet work with the N.T.S.U. band.
To the Bill Farmer Quartet went a two week engagement at the Lousiana Pavillion at the World's Fair in New York, and a European tour.
Both the Farmer Quartet and
***
Herman Herd Shakes Hoch
Bv Glen Phillips
The walls of Hoch shook Saturday night when Woody Herman and his herd unlimbered a swinging, hourlong concert that ended the Oread Jazz Festival.
The new Herman herd, now about two and one-half years old, has been acclaimed by critics as perhaps the greatest Herman band yet. When asked, after the contest, how he felt about this statement, Herman replied that it certainly was possible. "This is the most consistent band I have had." Herman feels the men in his organization now are as good or better musicians than he had in the past. He feels that each of his men has the potential to become another Stan Getz or Shorty Rogers, jazz greats who worked with the Herman band.
Herman attributes most of this success in choosing talented members for his band to the Berklee School of Music in Boston. Presently, eleven members of the fifteen-man group have attended the Berklee School. The production of such musicians "is certainly a compliment to Berklee."
THERE IS no doubt as to the future of big band jazz with Herman. He says emphatically, "There will always be some big bands!" There has been a resurgence of interest in the large bands, he said, however, "there will never be another 'Golden age' for the big bands."
The groups that appeared here at the festival pleased Herman very much. He said that they were all very good. The Lab Band from North Texas State University impressed him greatly. "I have heard the North Texas State bands for the last several years and I think that this organization is the best I have heard."
The idea of having a jazz festival has the approval of the veteran band leader. He hopes that the Oread festival will continue because "... these things do some real good work."
the N.T.SU. Lab band appeared at "Jazz Homecoming" held in Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium yesterday. The Quartet received $75 for their appearance, and the band received $150.
Other awards went to Lynn Zoric, trumpeter with the Denver University Stage Band, who received a $200 scholarship to Berklee School of Music.
BRENT McKESER, bassist with the Mitch Farber Sextet, received a scholarship to the National Stage Band Summer Camp.
al Stage Band Joe Fisher, trombonist with the Quincy College Contemporary Ensemble, also received a scholarship to the National Stage Band Summer camp.
More than 120 jazz musicians participated in the festival. Groups ranging in size from a trio to sixteen piece bands played before the audience in the Kansas Union Ballroom Saturday morning and afternoon.
FIVE OF THE twelve groups were chosen as finalists during the semi-finals held in the afternoon. They were the North Texas State University One O'Clock Lab Band, The Mitch Farber Sextet, the Bill Farmer Quartet, the "Bunky" Green Trio, and the Denver University Stage Band.
The five groups performed Saturday evening in Hoch Auditorium and were followed by a concert by Woody Herman and his Swingin' Herd.
While Woody and his band wailed, the judges deliberated as to who the winners would be.
MICHAEL MAHER, professor of zoology, and one of the organizers of the festival, said that the Farmer Quartet was chosen because of its cohesiveness as a group and the high quality of improvisation they displayed during their afternoon performance.
According to Prof. Maher, the chances are pretty good that about this time next year, there will be a second Oread Jazz Festival
1960
Victor D. DuBois
AUFS Man Visiting KU
An American researcher of Guinea and French West Africa will be visiting on campus for the remainder of the week.
Victor D. Du Bois, KU's second American Universities Field Staff speaker this semester, is visiting classes in politics, history, geography and economics.
His topics range from "Communism in Africa" to "African Nationalism and American Foreign Policy" to "Tribalism Versus Nationalism in Former Sub-Saharan French Africa."
Du Bois, who was awarded his Ph.D. in political science by Princeton University shortly after he joined AUFS in 1962, returned to West Africa in that year to observe and report on developments in the area that formerly was French West Africa.
Having majored in anthropology for his B.S. at Northwestern University, he earned his M.A. at that university in political science before completing his graduate studies at Princeton.
Under the terms of a Ford Fellowship in 1959, he did the field work for doctoral dissertation on Guinea.
Doom Predicted For Capitalism
A Minorities Opinion forum speaker Friday predicted doom for American capitalism but not for American democracy.
John P. Quinn, Socialist Labor Party (SLP) candidate for California senator, said that as automation applied to industry, a man's labor will lose its value, and so will the man.
Since a job-seeker will not be able to compete with cheap machine labor "the machine will get the job," the socialist said.
AS WORKERS FEEL the pressure of automation, they will organize themselves into "socialistic industrial unions" and democratically take over the country. Quinn said.
Being organized, workers will have the power to "back up" their votes and sustain the necessary constitutional changes to effect a "ballot-box revolution". Quinn said.
Although Quinn's prediction is rooted in the Marxist theory of dialectical materialism, he cited only "capitalistic evidence" to show that automation threatens all classes of workers.
workers.
• Center for the Study of Democratic Action, Santa Barbara, California, states: By the time the automation of industry is complete "90 per cent of the labor force will have no work whatever." Quinn said, the organization also reported that the labor force was increasing twice as fast as job opportunities were increasing.
creasing.
• Francis Heller, economic advisor to the Kennedy and Johnson administrations says: The U.S. has had an unemployment problem for 71 months in a row. Fifteen per cent of the production capacity of American factories is idle.
- John L. Snyder Jr., a manufacturer of automated machinery states: Five thousand dollars will eliminate the job of one man.
Quinn's party, however, is not opposed to machines. "The more machines, the better," Quinn said.
Machines reduce a man's hours of toil. When their beneficial effect is distributed among all, men will only have to work a few hours a day, Quinn said.
Technical Skill of Little Use To Americans in Viet Nam
Editor's note: In Viet Nam 15,500 Americans are involved in the only current shooting war between east and west. Who are these men and what is it like for them in this country? United Press paddies an internal arrests? United Press's Saigon manager, who has returned to the United States after two years in Viet Nam, describes them and tells how they are the communist chief in the following story. It is the first of three reports on the fighting men in Viet Nam.
By Neil Sheehan United Press International
The lean American captain, his two-day growth of beard glistening with sweat, looked across the river where the villagers' huts were burning and said quietly, "Well, if those people weren't Viet Cong before, they sure are now."
When the Vietnamese government battalion had camped in the village the previous night, several men had been wounded by grenade booby traps cleverly hidden along nearby paths. Unable to find the guerrillas who had acutally planted the grenades, the government troops put the peasants' huts to the torch.
It was just a passing incident in the listless, years-long war against the communist guerrillas in South Viet Nam.
BUT TO the young American it represented another wasted dav
in the rice paddies, another in those endless, frustratint series of marches where a few men are killed, a few wounded and a few more discontented peasants left behind to aid the still elusive and increasingly dangerous enemy.
"When I first landed in Saigon and had my briefings I thought I was lucky to get to Viet Nam before the war was over. But when you spend some time down here in the Mekong Delta it looks like a mountain nine million miles high," the captain added.
The remark typifies an experience thousands of young American officers and men are undergoing in South Viet Nam, where they are fighting and dying in the third war America has waged in Asia in the last 20 years.
They are learning that their highly technical western military training is often of little use to them here.
THE INSTRUCTORS back home taught them how to lead a company in an assault on a line of
Weather
Skies will remain partly cloudy tonight, turning fair tomorrow. Tonight's low will be about 40; the high tomorrow will be in the 60's.
concrete pillboxes, but didn't explain how to tell when a simple-looking Vietnamese peasant is actually a communist district chief. Nor did they learn how to root a Viet Cong shadow government apparatus out of what appears to be placid village.
They learned to command and lead men in battle. In Viet Nam they are not commanders, but "Advisers", and the books said nothing about how to get advice across to a Vietnamese officer who frequently does not want to listen.
There are approximately 15,500 American military men in South Viet Nam. Roughly two-thirds are staff officers, mechanics, communications technicians and administrative personnel. They are referred to somewhat derisively as Saigon Commands" by the remaining 4,500 U.S. Army field advisers, helicopter and air force crews and special forces teams in the field who risk their lives in combat against the Viet Cong day in and day out.
For these combat soldiers life consists of rising from a mosquito-ridden bunk at 5 a.m. to pilot a troop-laden helicopter into a rice paddy, while the tracers from the
(Continued on page 3)
"The only way to earn a living is with a job which the worker does not own" the socialist said. And, "No capitalist runs a business to fulfill the needs of people," Quinn said.
"PRESIDENT JOHNSON faces a formidable opponent as he fights his war on poverty," Quinn said. He said the reason is that "capitalism cannot do away with unemployment." Instead capitalism creates unemployment.
Unemployment will not be eliminated as long as the tools of production are owned by capitalists, rather than by all the people. Quinn said. About fifty persons attended Quinn's speech. They asked him several questions about his ideas on government.
QUINN WAS ASKED how money would be distributed under a socialist economic system. He said, there would be no money, as such, but "vouchers for useful social labor." Men would be paid according to what they produced, Quinn said. U.S. gold reserves could be used to fill workers' teeth.
Quinn was also asked how socialism was working in Europe. He replied that there was "no socialism in the world." It would "take a highly industrialized country like the U.S." to bring about socialism. He believed that if the United States became a socialist country, the world would follow.
What would become of capitalists, he was asked. "Capitalists are always saying how good work is for the people, how it builds moral qualities. We will give some of it to the capitalists." Quinn said. ___
Soviets Fight To Save City
MOSCOW — (UPI) — Soviet engineers today expressed confidence of winning a "battle of nature" to save the fabled ancient city of Samarkind from a threatened flood by millions of tons of water.
Waters of the Zeravshan River strained against a natural dam caused by a massive landslide in the Central Asian region. Collapse of the 800-foot-high barrier would send the water down the valley across the ring cotton and grape area where 500,000 people live.
Moscow radio said this morning, however, that engineers had nearly finished a "by-pass canal" around the dam, slowing the rise in pressure.
Dynamite is being put into place and the charges will be detonated Wednesday, forcing the river into a new bed and allowing the accumulated water to run off harmlessly, the radio said.
At that time, it said, "the danger of floods will be completely eliminated."
Reports from the dam said the water had been rising 15 inches an hour and had formed a 100-foot deep lake in three days. But Moscow radio said this morning the rate of increase had slowed to six inches an hour.
At least 50,000 persons were removed from their villages.
Lack of Interest Kills Train Trip
The senior class train trip has been cancelled due to insufficient interest.
canceled Jerry Pullins, Grove Council senior and president of the senior class, said the train trip which was scheduled for May 2 did not fill up enough cars to make the charter possible.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 27, 1964
Personality Gap?
1964 Race
Lyndon Johnson as the Democrat presidential candidate in 1964 is supposed to be unbeatable—or so say most of the political analysts. He is, obviously, in an extremely strong position—Soviet relations are improving, his legislation is moving well in Congress, there are no major world crises at this time, there is a big Democrat majority in Congress, and so forth. Polls indicate that if the election were held tomorrow, LBJ would win by an unprecedented majority.
However, he does have liabilities, and politics is a world of "ifs."
If, for instance, Johnson is forced into a television debate like the one between Kennedy and Nixon in 1960 voters might flock to the polls to vote for the opposition. Johnson is anything but "videogenic," as the saying goes. His voice is halting, even unpleasant. Another point—Johnson is undoubtedly smart, but he does not give the impression of quick intelligence.
Consider, for example, the contrast on a TV debate between the President and the debonair Henry Cabot Lodge, who captured the public imagination in his one brief TV appearance as ambassador to the UN when he presented the "bugged" gift from the Russians on the floor of the General Assembly.
Flip as it may sound, LBJ's personality might lose him more votes than, say, a split in the Democratic party.
His rhetoric is far from stirring. For a time, speeches and pronouncements went along passably well in a neo-Kennedy fashion. Now Ted
Sorenson has left the staff to write a Kennedy biography, and Johnson's speeches go from bad to worse.
Two other specific points are worth mentioning.
One—the civil rights issue. If the Civil Rights bill does not pass this spring in Congress, there are indications that the South and the eastern industrial cities will be a bloodbath this summer. Voter sympathy for civil rights backers might be dimmed by violence or by, for instance, stunts such as the demonstrations held at the opening of the World's Fair. The administration in power, whatever its political stripe, justly or unjustly has to take much of the blame for what goes on in the country.
Point two—Southeast Asia. American failures there are becoming increasingly obvious despite the pretty words put out by Robert McNamara recently. Many of the leaders are talking about a shift of foreign policy towards that area which the Republicans might well interpret as accommodation.
When Secretary of State Dean Rusk was in Saigon recently, the Viet Cong raided only 14 miles from the edge of the city—apparently as a show of strength. Whatever happens in Viet Nam, the Democrats probably stand to lose by it. If they push the war harder, the old cry that the Democrats always get the U.S. in a war will come up. If they try to negotiate a sort of neutrality for our allies, there will be cries of appeasement.
It might be an interesting election . . . if . . .
The People Say.
KULAC Defense
Editor:
Tom Shores' protest against KULAC appeared in your April Fool issue, and I was delighted to read it, for I was about to decide you'd completely ignored the traditions of the day. My congratulations go to Mr. Shores for his deft satire, and I hope he won't be offended when I suggest that the subtlety of his treatment may have led some to take him seriously. A few words, then, to provide the obvious answers to Tom's attack—an attack which balances ingeniously on the line between the reality and the parody of the convention-bound, apathetic, hyper-conservative attitude.
KULAC, says he, seems to be involved in "every bit of unorthodoxy which exists on this campus." A condemnation? An exaggeration? Yes, both, for by "unorthodoxy" he can only mean political liberality—a position antagonistic to the Conservative (if not to the conservative) and frightening to those who seek security in apathy. He exaggerates also, for no matter how active and enthusiastic the organization may be, it can hardly be responsible for every expression of intelligent political concern on a large and progressive campus such as this. Nor has KULAC been involved in the less responsible bits of "unorthodoxy" which occasionally occur.
"Why does the same group of individuals back the SPU and CRCC as well as KULAC? Could it be that they are seeking only sensation?" Is there such a conflict between concerns for the survival of the race and for the rights of the individual? The frightened,
the selfish, or the unthinking may eling fearfully to the status quo, or may feel that membership, however inactive, in one such organization is enough to enlist their names "on the side of progress" without risking the dangers of real involvement. It is no surprise, though, to find the truly concerned and the unafraid actively engaged in as many "liberal actions" as possible.
"WHY DOES THE rank and file of this organization consist of individuals who could hardly be considered representative of the average KU student?" I'll tell you why, Tom. It's because the average KU student doesn't take the time to be informed (or just doesn't give a damn) about the issues with which KULAC concerns itself. The only real way in which KULAC members are "abnormal" students is in their refusal to conform to the norm of lethargy.
NUCLEAR TEST-BAN TREATY
MORE CONSUMER GOODS
"That's How Decadence Sets In——First He's In Favor Of Living; And Now Better Living"
"Could it be that KULAC is designed to allow the nonconformist to alleviate his frustrations?" Of course! If one refuses to conform to the standards of his time—to the passive acceptance of injustice and irresponsibility—then inactivity is indeed frustrating. When one refuses to turn a blind eye to such wrongs, work in an organization such as KULAC surely does alleviate frustrations—at least as much as is possible until the problems are finally conquered.
BY SUGGESTING that one should join or contribute to KULAC only "if he is able to identify with the leadership." Mr. Shores shows us one element basic to the attitude he parodies—the conviction that all student organizations are primarily social, not political, and that though we may talk of motives and ideals, these are not really so important as being with a nice, compatible bunch of fellows. One should be pretty careful about association with anybody but white, midwestern, middle-class Protestants.
Again I apologize to Tom Shores for feeling the need to explain his humor, and I hope that by doing so I haven't spoiled the joke for anyone. Many may, like myself, have seen the point and been stimulated to join KULAC, but I fear that Kansan readers just aren't used to any but the bluntest sort of satire, and some may have missed Tom's real intent.
Lawrence graduate student
BOOK REVIEWS
JFK: The Man and the Myth—
I read Victor Lasky's "JFK: The Man and the Myth" during spring break. Given the American attitude at this point in time, it was—I suppose—a slightly irreverent thing to do.
The word given me about the book was that it would move any citizen of good will into believing that the late president was now suffering the trials of perdition.
I started reading with the honorable intention of refuting in my own mind Lasky's case against President Kennedy. On page five I noted that the author quoted Westbrook Pegler, one of the less reputable syndicated columnists. Page six, a quote from the National Review, a conservative pulp sheet edited by William Buckley Jr. Page nine I focused my attention on a quote from a paper of noted demagoguery, the New York Daily News ("Junior—Bobby Kennedy—is an egg-head to end all egg-heads.")
SIX HUNDRED PAGES later I was a bit worn down, if only by the force of attrition.
This book, you will remember, was published shortly before the assassination. It was billed as one of the most controversial books of our decade. The day after the Dallas murder, it was taken off the bookstands as a token of respect for the dead president.
The book's publication was resumed shortly, and for several months it vied with "Profiles in Courage" for the top spot on the non-fiction best-seller list.
The Lasky message, in a few words, is this: John F. Kennedy had two main attributes—charm and money. They got him into the White House. Kennedy's idealism, says Lasky, was contrived, synthetic. His principal motivation in life was to gain power.
He was the pawn of his father's frustrated political ambitions. Kennedy's 1960 campaign was conceived in the cynicism of manipulating voters by hook or crook; the fruit which,it bore was an administration all tinsel and shiny things, but lacking in essential guts.
KENNEDY'S ELECTION to the nation's highest office was, according to Lasky, a victory for Madison Avenue, money unlimited, IBM machines, the pollsters, and Kennedy's "videogenic qualities." The issues on which Kennedy campaigned were contrived — the "missile gap." U.S. protection of the off-shore Chinese islands, the Russian rate of economic growth, etc.
Although the book is saturated with anecdotes, facts, and "documentation," Lasky made no apparent attempt to be objective. His purpose seemed to be to destroy the widely-held belief that President Kennedy is (now, was) an honorable man and worthy of high office.
The author finds himself today in the position of writing irreverently of the dead. If he firmly believes what he wrote, he has no need to feel apologetic. If what he set out is true, the adulation of John F. Kennedy in death is an absurdity.
Tom Coffman
* * * *
POLICY AND POWER, by Ruhl Bartlett (Hill and Wang, $5).
For some students of American history, few subjects prove as constantly engrossing, and even entertaining, as that of foreign policy. Here is a broad but thoughtful study of two centuries of American foreign relations, written by a professor of diplomatic history at Tufts University, and published in the new Hill and Wang series on American history.
This book is not as thorough or as documented as, say, the well-known histories by Samuel Bemis or Thomas Bailey. Bartlett is not pretending to do as much. He is, flatly, trying to offer in brief form a summary of foreign policy developments in this country, from the days when the United States was a struggling new nation down to the modern period when the word "colossus" much better describes the American nation.
Bartlett believes the need for an intelligent citizen understanding of foreign policy is even more imperative today than in the past, and that this need complicates the matter, because foreign policy has become so complex. He comments, of course, on the very way in which foreign policy has become a critical domestic issue.
For many readers, the recent chapters may prove most valuable. Most of us are still too close to the Truman era, the cold war, the bitterness over Korea, the British-French-Israeli action in Egypt, Communist penetration in this hemisphere, and disputes over our relations with Yugoslavia and Spain, to evaluate any of these properly.
Bartlett calls his final chapter "The Continuing Crisis," which seems an apt summing-up for a question—that of foreign affairs—which will never reach final solution. We seemed able to retreat at one time into peace and quiet. That is no longer the case. Even the most nationalist-oriented politicians have to make some admissions that we have a stake in the affairs of the world. All of this Bartlett makes plain.-CMP
Dailij Hänsan
111 Flint Hall University of Kansas student newspaper
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas
Monday. April 27, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Consul Reviews Anglo-American Relations
The Anglo-American partnership, in spite of the ups and downs is one of the most important facts on the international scene.
Norman Hallett, British Consult in Kansas City outlined the cooperation between the British Commonwealth and the United States at the annual International Dinner last night.
"The hopes of the free world now rest upon increasing effectiveness of the United Nations and the regional bodies, such as NATO, SEATO, and the OAS," he said.
HE SAID THE United States is the most prosperous nation in the world today, but with that power goes added responsibility.
Britain is recovering from shocks of the last 50 years—the wars, and the economic and social revolutions in Britain itself," he said.
Britain and the United States, through co-operation have the responsibility of helping the developing nations of the world, he said.
"The Imperial tariff preference agreement, which allows tariff preference to be shown to Commonwealth nations has recently been extended to all developing
nations." Hallett said.
HE ALSO MENTIONED the British volunteer corps,"which predates your Peace Corps," student and cultural exchanges as some of the steps Great Britain has taken to aid developing countries.
Hallett's speech followed the International Dinner in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union.
Foods, prepared by the members of the International Club were served.
Perhaps the most well-known of the dishes was pizza, representing Italy. Other foods were from India, Philippines, Scandinavia, Costa Rica, the Arab nations, Spain and Pakistan.
The plates were accompanied by programs which had a diagram of the plate and the location of the various dishes.
Opening the program, A. Abdul-Rahim, Syria, introduced Charles Marvin, Lawwrrence senior, president of the International Club who gave the welcome address.
ALSO AT THE head table were Humayun Mirza, India, president of the India Club, Mr. and Mrs.
Technical Skill-
(Continued from page 1)
communist machine guns reach up for them in bright, eager arcs and the bullets rip into their planes with short, snapping cracks.
It is listening to the eerie silence of a patrol creeping through the jungle being broken by the boom of the mortars coming in over the treetops and the screams of dying men.
IT IS THE strange, naked sensation of racing in a jeep down a narrow dirt road through the lush green banana-tree groves when the mines suddenly go off with a throaty roar and the death rattle of the tommyguns sounds up ahead.
It is endless slogging through the muck of the rice paddies under the furnace-like heat of a tropical sun, followed by the sweet, cool taste of fresh cocoanut milk.
Who are these Americans who advise and fight alongside the Vietnamese infantrymen, who fly the helicopters, fighters and bombers into battle?
They are realists and profession-
THEY MAY WIND UP better- educated than their civilian counter-parts back in the United States because they have long, lonely hours to while away reading and have traveled widely.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
University Lecture. 4 p.m., 200 Engineering Building, "Science, Technology and Industrial Growth"—Dr. John B. Rag, Harvey Mudd College.
University Lecture, 4 p.m. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. "The Atlas-Makers of Amsterdam in the 17th Century."—Cornelis Koeman, U. of Utrecht.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence
Chancel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Graduate Physics Colloquium, 4:30 p.m. 155 Malott "New Techniques in Gamma-Ray Spectroscopy"—Dr. F. W. Bras.
Graduate Discussion Group, 7:30 p.m.
St. Lawrence Center, 1910 Chipford
Road, "Birth Control - Anand Childrens,
Jack Donovan, Joe Emonds, and Ed
Wooldridge
Choral Concert, 8 p.m., University Theater.
University Lecture, 8 p.m., Museum of Art. "El Arte Popular de Mexico" Porfirio Martinez Penaloza, Mexico City folklorist.
Ioc
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m. St.
Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Air Force Recruiting, 10-3-30 p.m.
Hawk's Nest, Kansas Union. Sgt.
Eherbart will answer questions and take applications for Officer Training School.
Porfirio Martinez en elatozo
garaje y vuelve a palmar entre Lopez
Velarde y el Estridinismo."
Vulnerability Lecture. 3:30 p.m., Dyche University Auditorium. "Challenges and Opportunities in Tropical Sciences"—Dr. Jay M. Savage, San Jose, Costa Rica.
Savage, Sam
Delta Sigma Rho Public Affairs Speaking
Preliminaries, 4:30 p.m. 102 Strong.
Beginners' Inquiry Forum, 7 p.m. St.
Berkshire, 1915 Stratford, Rd.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m.
palm Beach Campus. Bible study and
education of officers.
Inquirer Class, 7.30 p.m., Canterbury House.
Orchestra Concert, 8 p.m.
Symposium Orchestra Concert, 8 p.m.
University Theater. For discussion, 9 a.m. p.m.
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
Western Civ Discussion, 9 p.m., St
Lawrence Center, 1915 Stratford Rd.
of People-to-People.
The speaking portion of the program was followed by a Latin American combo, the Combe Caribe.
"You have to accept death in war. It's the price of admission to the ball game," one seasoned helicopter pilot said.
Norman Hallett, A. Abdul-Rahim,
toastmaster, Charles Marvin, Dean
and Mrs. Clark Coan, advisor to
the International Club, and Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry Harper, chairman
The rising casualty figures show that on the average of every third day one of these men dies in battle.
THE U.S. officers in Viet Nam span more than two decades of American fighting experience.
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TO THE SENIOR CLASS OF 64
Bargain with Life For a Penny?
Recently we talked with a recruiting specialist whose main job is visiting the college campuses to recruit graduating seniors. His remarks indicated he was very discouraged about many of the attitudes of the young man he talked with.
"You'd be surprised how many 22-year-olds are more interested in our retirement plan then in anything else we have to offer. The thing I can't understand is why should young people these days be so ultra-conservative, so narrow in their view of the future."
You'd be surprised how many people sell themselves short — self-depreciation. Instead ask yourself what are your chief assets. Then think in terms of how much you can accomplish using these assets,
Think big. Remember what the mind can conceive can be achieved. See what can be achieved, not just what is. Stretch your vision—grow big by thinking big.
I bargained with life for a penny,
And life would pay no more.
However, I begged at evening when
I counted my scanty score.
For life is a just employer, it gives you what you ask,
But once you have set the wages, Why, you must bear the task.
I worked for a menial's hire, only to learn, dismayed,
That any wage I had asked of life, Life would have willingly paid.
FULNICO
College Master
John M. Suder
John M. Suder
Dan Jansky
Gary Nu Delman
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 27,1964
Oread Jazz Fans Split Over Merits of Bands
A schism was discovered in the ranks of jazz fans who attended the Oread Jazz Festival Saturday.
There were big band fans and small group fans, and they argued with each other the merits of small and large size jazz groups.
Big band addicts held that no small group could compete with the roaring, surging power that a 16-piece band is capable of mustering. For testimony, they cited the North Texas State University Lab band, which won first place honors in the big band category of the festival.
M.
Woody Herman
And they were, in a sense, right, because the N.T.S.T. band did surge and roar, and unleashed a voluminous amount of power, and the audience reciprocated with almost equally voluminous applause.
True, agreed the small group jazz buffs, no trio, quintet or sextet could register as many decibels
But volume, they argued, isn't the only criteria for good jazz. Improvisation, they held, is the essence of jazz, and no big band could provide as much freedom for a soloist as could a small group.
on a volume level measuring device as could a big band.
The small group buffs also cited the old conflict of quality versus quantity. Anybody can read "charts," they claim, but it takes real talent to improvise well for several choruses with nothing but a rhythm section for support.
And quite a substantial number of big-name jazz musicians who now lead their own small groups, or play with other small groups, swear by the valuable training and experience a big band provides for the young, aspiring jazz musician.
But the fact is, it takes real talent to improvise well, no matter what the musical context is.
Also, there is no doubt that big bands have served as breeding grounds for some of the best jazz musicians in the world.
But in the end, the choice of which side of the seismist to stand on, is purely a subjective one, and it is possible to stand with one foot on either side.
KUYD Plans to Host Gubernatorial Hopefuls
The five candidates for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination are expected to be on campus tomorrow night.
Mike Rogers, Hutchinson junior and chairman of the KU Young Democrats, said last night that J. Donald Coffin, Council Grove; Joseph Henkle, Great Bend, and Jules Doty and George Hart of Wichita will give brief speeches and answer questions during the club's meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Gerald S. Bernstein, curator of the Museum of Art and instructor of art history at the University of Kansas has received a Kent Graduate Fellowship from the Danforth Foundation of St. Louis, Mo.
Art Curator Gets Grant
Bernstein is one of 32 outstanding men chosen from among 400 applicants for "remarkable promise as leaders within higher education in North America." The award will provide a $3,600 stipend, plus tuition and fees, for up to three years of study.
The fellowship program is aimed at encouraging faculty members for teaching or administration in American colleges and universities. The awards are given to men "who combine excellence in scholarship with a genuine religious commitment which they hold relevant to their chosen profession."
A native of New York City, Bernstein earned the A.B. degree from Adelphi College in 1957 and the M.A. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1959. He is a candidate for the Ph.D. degree at Pennsylvania, and will be on leave of absence from KU next year to finish his work toward the Ph.D. His special field of interest is American architecture of the 19th century.
Music To Listen To—Music To Hunt Night Crawlers To—Music To Drink To
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University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Women's Honor Groups To Tap Hopefuls May 4
Monday, April 27, 1964
Mortar Board sent letters of congratulations to over 500 National Merit and Watkins scholarship finalists. They provided speakers and hostesses for High School Leadership Day and the annual high school principal's conference.
Mortar Board, senior women's honor society at KU, decided this year to initiate their own "Project Bootstrap."
"We feel the project this year combines our goals of Service, Scholarship and Leadership and will prove to be of some real value to the University," Miss Gibson said.
According to national Mortar Board standards, new members are chosen in the spring by the unanimous vote of the chapter. No chapter is permitted to have less than five or more than 25 members and there is a definite scholarship standard set by the national which must be met by each candidate.
Hilda Gibson, Lawrence senior and president of Mortar Board, held a special tea with Lawrence senior women to talk about the role of town girls at KU.
They spoke before high school assemblies and alumni groups. Individual members had teas in their home towns to entertain and discuss KU with outstanding high school senior, women.
Mortar Board was established nationally by several local senior honor societies to render service to their Alma Maters.
Torch Chapter of Mortar Board at KU began as a local society in 1912 through the work of a woman faculty member. The first nine members were nominated by letters from the faculty on the basis of scholarship and campus activities. All but two of the nine original members are still living.
FROM A HISTORY of the KU chapter comes the explanation for Torch being a secret society: "In order that its service to the campus may be done without thought of public acclaim or recognition."
In 1924 Torch society was incorporated into the national organization of Mortar Board. Since that time its projects have included such things as the establishment of residence halls for women, participation in surveys, publication of pamphlets to aid women students, the establishment of Mortar Board scholarships, and recognition of outstanding senior women.
For the last 32 years the KU alumni group has held an annual Mortar Board reunion luncheon during Commencement week-end. At the 50th anniversary in 1962 four of the charter members attended.
No longer secret, Mortar Board will tap its new senior members at Honor's Night of AWS All Women's Day May 4. These girls will have been selected on an equal basis of scholarship, leadership and service by the outgoing chapter.
"EVERY JUNIOR girl fills out an application, and also nominates others for Mortar Board," Miss Gibson said. "In addition faculty members, department heads and campus leaders are asked to nominate potential members."
The selected members are notified of this honor in a private, secret way but it is not officially announced until the tapping at Honor's Night." Miss Gibson said.
"The president and vice-president are selected by the outgoing members and are announced at Honor's Night by placing a mortar board hat with a gold tassel on the new president's head, and one with a silver tassel on the vice-president."
* *
One of the first persons incoming freshman women meet when they move into the freshman residence halls is their Cwen.
Cwens, a national sophomore women's honorary society, is now in its fourth year of existence at KU. Members are chosen in the spring of their freshman year. They are tapped on All Women's Night. Membership is based on scholarship, leadership in the freshman residence halls and campus activities. Recommendations are also given by the
CWEN IS THE Anglo-Saxon word for queen or lady.
The Tau chapter of Cwens was founded at KU in 1960, when the Jay Sisters, a sophomore women's organization in charge of freshman orientation, were granted their charter from the National Cwen Society.
freshmen and by the people who work closely with the freshman women.
Once having been tapped, the Cwens have no time to rest on their laurels.
Probably their largest single project is freshman orientation in the fall. They help the freshman women move in and help them become better acquainted with KU, its activities and traditions.
EACH CWEN IS assigned a floor in the freshman residence halls. The Cwen helps the counselor acquaint the freshman women with
The National Society of Cwens was founded in 1922 by Thyrsa W. Amos, Dean of Women at the University of Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh, Pa.
KU. She attends University functions with her floor and attends floor meetings. She also visits her floor when she has a chance.
This year, in connection with the freshman orientation program, Cwens have spent two weekends, once each semester, in the freshman residence halls. The regular freshman counselors took a vacation on these weekends.
Also at the beginning of the school year, the Cwens sponsored a picnic for sophomore women at Potter Lake. Over fried chicken and other box-lunch goodies, they recalled the good old days on "4 East" or "3 South."
The Cwens sponsored a breakfast and a tea, one each semester of this year, for the floor officers in the freshman residence halls.
THIS YEAR'S Cwens helped the Douglas County Cancer Society by collecting contributions for the Ernie Davis Leukemia Fund at the KU-Syracuse University football game early this fall.
So Who Likes Spring?
By Leta Cathcart (Society Editor)
I'm confused. Everyone thinks spring is the best thing that ever got itself invented.
Personally, I don't think spring is that sharp. Oh, I know, all the little budding flowers, green grass and all that other gunk.
You see, with all the little budding flowers, and green grass, comes hay fever. And I happen to have an intense dislike for hay fever.
When I get up on those lovely pollen-ridden mornings in spring, there is always some joker that asks me if I have been on an all-night drunk. This is just because I have bleary eyes. Then there's always some bright teacher who makes a nasty remark about the number of times I've sneezed in the last hour.
The people who really make me mad are those who say "Oh, it's all in your mind."
At least we agree on the central location of my hideous malady. I would localize it a little more and say it's in my nasal passages, however.
Myself, I like frost. I know, people aren't supposed to like cold weather. But at least I can talk without people asking me if I have a speech impediment.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 27,1964
Jayhawk Trackmen Can't Repeat at Drake
Jayhawk trackmen were unable to repeat any of their Kansas Relays victories over the weekend as they went without an individual win at the Drake Relays in Des Moines.
w inn the Drake Kenshf Of KU's three defending Kansas Relays champions, Tyce Smith (high jump), Floyd Manning (pole vault) and Bob Hansen (100- yard dash), only Manning finished as high as a tie for second in his event.
The pole vault was won by Bill Younger of Missouri as he reached his career high of 15-91/4. Manning ended up in a tie with Bill Pemelton from Abilene Christian and James Farrell from Oklahoma at 15-1
Smith wound up a five-way tie for fifth in the high jump at $6 - 4\frac{1}{2}$. Two jumpers from Missouri grabbed a share of the four-way tie for first place in the event at $6 - 6\frac{1}{4}$. Bill Summers from William Jewell and David Taylor of Kirksville State tied with Bob Lambert of Air Force and Tom Missler of Indiana in clearing that height.
Hansen also finished fifth in his event. The 100 was won by Trenton Jackson from Illinois in a time of 0:9.5. Hansen clocked 0:9.6.
The Missouri Tigers' astonishing two-mile relay team turned another record-breaking performance at Des Moines. The Tigers knocked eight seconds off the previous mark of 7:28.6 set by KU in 1961.
Mizzou's mark was the fastest clocking ever for a Big Eight twomile team at 7:20.6. This record is only 1.6 seconds off the American record for the event. KU placed fourth in the event with a time of 7:34.7.
The Jayhawks took second in the distance medley relay with a 9:54.1 as the event was won by Western Michigan.
On Friday, Paul Acevedo took third in the two-mile with a time of 9:06—the best time of his career.
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played, when Chester Anderson of WU beat John Grantham in the final singles event.
WU then swept both doubles matches to squeak out a 4-3 decision over the KU team.
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KU Baseball Team Loses to Cowboys
YUL RRYNNER
RICHARD WIDMARK
GEORGE CHAKIRIS
"FLIGHT/FROM ASHIKA"
Founded in PANAVISION EASTMANCOLOR
Coach Floyd Temple's baseball team had their Big Eight championship hopes dampened somewhat over the weekend as it dropped two of three games to the Oklahoma State Cowboys at Stillwater.
"THE BEATLES COME TO TOWN"
Shows 7:00 & 9:05
A two out single by the Cowpokes' Mike Miller enabled the O-Staters to grab a 4-3 win over KU Saturday. This was the second win for O-State in the series as the Jayhawks dropped half a double header Fridav.
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HURRY! Last 2 Days!
Tom Jones!
The losses left KU 6-3 in the conference and 11-4 for the season. The Missouri Tigers, in the meantime took a firmer grip on their first place league standing as they swept both ends of a doubleheader from the Kansas State Wildcats.
Winners in the singles matches for KU were Jim Burns who defeated Ben Anzola, Lance Burr who defeated Van Thompson, and Jay Lysauke who defeated Phil Adrian.
Shows 6:40 & 9:05
STARTS WEDNESDAY . . .
Best Actor Award!
In the first of two golf matches played last weekend, KU came close to upsetting NCAA champion Oklahoma State.
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The KU tennis team split two matches with Wichita University and the golfers dropped matches to Oklahoma State and Missouri in action this weekend.
Friday afternoon, the Jayhawk tennis team beat WU 4-3 as Lysaught, Burr and Grantham won singles matches, and Lysaught and Grantham teamed for a doubles victory.
KU, Wichita Split Tennis Golfers Lose Two Rounds
Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking
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Saturday Wichita won 4-3 as KU took the first three singles matches played, but could not win the meet. KU will play a rematch with Wichita here at 1:00 p.m. Friday.
In a dual match with Wichita University, KU had taken a 3-1 lead with four of five singles matches
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FOR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS
SEE MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER VI 3-1211
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
- Small enough to give personal attention.
- Big enough to have all the equipment.
VI 3-7700
738 N.H.
SHIP WINTER
CHEVROLET
Travel Agency AIR LINES
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Domestic & Foreign
Steamship Lines
Tours & Cruises Everywhere
746 Mass.
VI 3-0152
Originality
IN FLOWERS
FOR EVERY OCCASION
especially for you
by
Alexander's
826 IDWA
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PHONE VL 3-1120
SH YO
One day,
Kansan B
1962 Nortion, just pistons. C
1960 Nort condition Mass. aft
1958 black Power station, orig Rose La
Zeiss Bin and oil Paired 10
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JOB, you they lea
8544.
3-bedroom
in Schw
tile kittec
x 12 d
doors
many tr
no spec
0005.
Nikkon flash gu accessor Dyche
Toy doc
1 white
Cecil B
44F3.
1956 AU and good 2038.
1962 Jav age. R over $30 or call
EICO St
$29. Ac
complet
35mm c
matic fi
$48. Ca
Press o
FIC) 6
3 refle
finder.
offer. (
1957 M top, ra good ti the m 1325 T
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USED
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reason:
1957 C
automat
radio a
Low n
0182.
Weddin stairs,
Walnu good sl Call V
New sheets 1005
.45 au
tature bbl
30.
art at gre
Saturn
St
Typew
stands
Olef
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VI 3-1
Prints outl
line
notes
Westes
pletely
mimers
copy
For
9040
Bach or from furni ideal able doubt
is, ds
Page 7
Monday, April 27, 1964
bublescision
of the
matches
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SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
came down
J
One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $17.59. Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 1 p.m. The ad is desired. Not responsible for errors not noticed; mortgaged before second insertion.
FOR SALE
1962 Norton 650 c.c. ecule. Good condition, just overhaulied, high compression pistons. Call VI 2-9100. Room 943. 5-1
Zeiss Binocular Microscope, 5X, 8X, 40X and oil immersion (90X) objectives. Paired 10X oculars. $250. Call VI 2-1940. 5-1
1960 Norton motorcycle. 350 c.c. Excellent condition. $300. Contact Gene at 704½ Mass. after 4 p.m. 5-1
1958 black and white Ford convertible.
Power steering and brakes, good condition,
original owner. Call VI 3-5003, 1618 Rose Lane.
The newest and greatest sound to hit campus! When the BANDITS SUI JOB, you hardly notice the late until leave. Call Larry Breeden, VI 3-8544.
3-bedroom house on cul de sac near KU in Schwegler School district. Ceramic tile kitchen and bathroom, oak floors, 12 dining room with walls, 12 doors, full basement with shelter, attached large fenced wall with any trees and beautiful 140' rock wall. No special assessments $15,750 VI 2-0005. 4-30
Nikon camera with 50 mm lens, case,
flash gun, accessory close up lenses, other
accessories. See Dr. Clifton at 502A
Dyche or call UN 4-3951. 4-30
Toy puppies, $50 each, 1 black, 1 brown,
1 white. Adorable pets. After 4 p.m.
Cecil Browning, Linwood, Kansas. Call
44F3. 4-30
1956 AUSTIN HEALEY. New overhaul and good paint. Must sell. Call VI 2-2038.
4-28
1962 Jawa, 175ce "Scrambler." Low mileage. Recently overhauled. Best offer over $300.00. See today at 432½ Missouri or call VI 3-9078. 4-28
EICO Sterco Adapter, excellent condition,
$29. Aquarium 3½ gal. stainless steel,
applicable with air pump, etc. $9. German
56mm camera ROBOT. Xenon 1.9, auto-
matic film advance. With all accessories,
$48. Call VI 3-3312. 4-28
Press camera 21¼ x 31¾ (SPEED GRAFIC) 6 film holders, cellenoid flash gun, reflector pole scope sheater, shutter $75 or best offer. Call VI 2-1480. 4-28
Used Kay Electric Guitar. Will sell very reasonable.
Call VI 3-3507 - 1,4,5,6,7
4-27
1857 MGA. Wire wheels, fiberglass hard-
top, radio, heater, new convertible,
good tires, good shape, safe treadle use.
1825 Term, make offer, Jack Hielbr.
1825 Term, VI 2-0443.
4-27
LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. NEW AND
USED GUNS AMMO QUALITY
22 REVOLVERS WE ALSO REBLUE.
EVENINGS 1026 OCHI V 1-2142 4-28
1957 Chevy Bel-Air 2 door hardtop. V-8
automatic, power steering and brakes,
radio and heaters. White exterior.
Mileage. Asking $50. Call VI
2012
4-27
Wedding dress, size 7-8. 1817 La. Upstairs, west apartement 4 to 6 p.m.
Walnut antique organ and commode.
Call VI 3-2402, 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
4-27
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
ream- $ . 85 Lawrence Outdoor
1005 M *
Student will sell all guns in collection.
45 auto, Lugers, 38 revolvers, miniature automatics, Ruger 22's, 40 Auto blb., 30.06 Deer rifle, 30-30.06 Lever action. While they last! 22 L.R. $6.99 per carton. Call VI 3-1110 after 6 LR. 5-7
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS, Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale at great savings after 6 p.m. week days. Saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut
Typewriters, new and used portables,
machines, electrics, Olympia, Hermes,
Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables,
Typewriter, adder, rentals and service.
Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St.
VI 3-2644
University Daily Kansan
Printed biology notes: 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revises for classes. Formerly stored in the Thatsa Library at 3701. Free delivery. $4.50. Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, commehimegraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Copy VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3-
9040 after 5 p.m. tf
FOR RENT
Bachelor Studio Apartment for graduate or older undergraduate men. $1_{2}$ blocks from Union. Newly remodeled armour. Parking and study conditions. A few still available at low summer rates. Singles and doubles. For appointment call VI 3-8534.
1 bedroom attractively furnished apartment in quiet location. Large cool rooms, carpeted floors. Later. Will rent for all or part of summer to married, grad, or responsible student. Must be reserved now. $65 per month. 91-32923. Apt. D or call VI 3-10473. 91-32923. 5-1
3 room furnished efficiency apartment.
Private bath and entrance. Clean off street parking. Close to Stadium. Adults only. No pets. Possession immediately or in summer. Summer rates. Inquire at 1001 Mississippi. 4-29
The following apts, available June 1st-
One 3 room nicely furnished pri. ent.
& utilities paid—one 3 bedroom furnished
apts, pri. ent. & bath, air conditioned,
newly redecorated, $55.00 per mo., util.
ent, air conditioned, $55.00 per mo., util.
itses paid—Furnished 2 room efficiency
apts, pri. ent. & bath 2 rooms, util.
ent, air conditioned, $55.00 per mo.,
utiles paid—Furnished 2 room efficiency
apts, pri. ent. Also a new garage for rent,
All within 2¹'s blocks of campus. Call Vi.
3-7830 or VI 3-0298.
4-VI
Summer rooms for women. Remodeled and all new accessories. Fresh coffee and refrigerator available. 1140 Mississippi near KU, and Union. Call V-4-2098.
Summer rooms. Remodeled and newly furnished. Very near K.U. and Union. 1140 Mississippi. Fresh coffee and refrigerator available. Call VI 2-0298. 4-28
Available June 1. I. Pleasant furnished basement apartment in new house just south of the office. Two floor view. The fire mae Private. Private bath and entrance 3-6313. 1103 W. 19th Terrace. 4-28
Married, grad students, faculty, 2-bedroom, from $75. Only 4 left for June. Reserve now. Call for brochure, VI3-2116. Santee Apartment, 1123 Indiana. tf
large, homey, attractively furnished, 4
room apartment. Kitchen built-ins and
garbage disposal. Utilities paid except
electricity. Call VI 3-7677. tf
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. **ff**
Single or double room. Furnished, cook-
ing room. Room available. Call u-
724-9511 or see at 1244 Lau. Call u-
Crescent Heights two bedroom apart-
ment. Swimming pool. 25th and Redbud.
Phone VI 2-3711. **tf**
Kappa Sigma Sweetheart and pin with pearl,
Nancy Constack at VI 3-9123.
4-29
LOST
2 month old brown collies-shepherd that
kappa Sig Fraternity, V 3-7102 - 4-29
TYPING
Term paper and thesis by experienced typist. Call VI 3-7172 after 5:30 p.m. 4-30
Term papers accurately and neatly typed on good grade bond paper. Minor corrections, carbon copy, extra first page.
Call VI 3-0875. 5-21
Experienced secretary would like typing.
Hendrick 2565 Ridge Court, VI 2-0123
4-30
Milliken's SOS
"the best professional service"
- general typing set
- automatic typing
- 24 hr. answering service
1021½ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
How do you save money by spending a lot of it at the Lawrence Book Nook? 1021 Mass.
Tailor Made Seat Covers at
Composed Sheet with
sewed double lock stitch.
Tops — Glass & Zippers
Rear Glasses — Door Clinics —
Door Panels —
Jack's Sear Covers
545 Minn.
VI 3-4242
ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass.
Portraits of Distinction
Construction Worker
Bob Blank, Photographer
HIXON STUDIO
Term paper or paper types typed to your
home or home type. Satisfies
guarantee. VI 3-1029.
4-29
Fast, accurate work done on electric
vehicles at lower rates. Call Betti
Vincent, VI 3-514-3980
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work stands proudly. Phone VI 3-8879; Mrs. Charles Pattl.
Experienced secretary would like typing
in home. Reasonable rates. Call V
1188.
Accurate expert typist would like typing
the prompt. These are those that
Prompt service. Call VI T-3-2651.
Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason- sentations and theses, phone VI 8-7652. 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, II V-3-7485. tf
Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (plica type). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0558. tt
Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tt
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon fibre vibrator, microphone. Mail 6080 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Mary) Higley, 408 West 13th. tt
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers,
articles and manuscripts. Resumes rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs McEldowney. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI. 3-8568. ttt
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
Secretary will do legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
FREE! qt. of oil with oil change & filter BOB'S CONOCO
Lube - Wheel Bal. - Brakes
19th & Mass. VI 3-9802
AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS DALE'S BODY SHOP
All makes & models frame - body - fender - glass
VI 3-4732 704 Vermont
JOE'S BAKERY
616 W. 9th Open 24 hours except Saturday evening
25c delivery VI 3-4720
The only thing better than a home cooked meal is Dinner At DUCKS Steaks & Seafoods A Specialty
butter. Sandwiches, too! Your favorite beverage
11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass.
Serving crisp tossed salads,
$ $ $ $ $ $
Vienna breads & country fresh
butter, Sandwiches, ton!
CAR OWNERS SAVE UP TO 40%
on shocks, mufflers, tail pipes and installation.
choice of potatoes, zesty
Vienno breads & country fresh
- All makes and models including sports cars
- Trained mechanics for quality service
- Your satisfaction
GUARANTEED
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2047 Yale. VI 2-1643
Montgomery Wards Auto Service Center 729 N.H. VI 2-1708
$ $ $ $ $ $
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines
tape tape transcription. Off-
hours 7 a.m. to 12 p.m. $125. Mass.
Phone VI 3-5920.
Would like to do sewing and alterations
Reasonable. Call VI 2-9380. 4-27
BUSINESS SERVICES
Dressmaking-alterations, formula and dressmaking-gowns. Ola Smith, 939½ Manila VI 3-5282
U-Call, we haul. Anything, anytime. V1 3-5888. tf
Rent a new electric portable sewing machine,
$1 per week. Free delivery
rented* for two weeks or more. White
Sewing Center, 16 Mass. VI 3-1287
*
L&M CAFE now under new management We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. All dining tables are covered with delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches Your second cup of coffee always free.
MISCELLANEOUS
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart, 1025 Mass. tf
YELLOW CAB CO.
VI 3-6333
24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled
BURGERT'S Shoe Service
Service for Shoes Since 1910
1113 Mass. St. VI 3-0691
Wash & Fluff Dry
Shirt Finishing Laundry
RISK'S
613 Vt. VI 3-4141
Artists - Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics
George's Hobby Shop 1105 Mass. VI 3-5087
GB
Recording Service and Party Music
Recordings Available
Rock Chalk Revue
Greek Week Sing
1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780
One Stop Service
★ Engine Tune Up
★ Generator & Starter Repair
★ Lubrication & Oil Change
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
SKELLY SERVICE
300 W. 6th
VI 3-9271
SKELLY
The Catacombs nite club and Pizza Dna
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.
HELP WANTED
JACK & GUNN'
Girl to play electric organ part-time.
Call VI 3-4743.
WANTED
Riders wanted from Lawrence to K.C. and back this summer. Leave in morning and return in evening. For information call VI 2-4568 after 6 p.m. 5-8
ALTERATIONS RE-WEAVING REPAIRS LEATHER REFINISHING NEW YORK CLEANERS Delivery Service
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
VOLKSWAGEN'S WANTED. Cash for your VW. Cozelman Motors, VW Sales, Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway 59 So.
926 Mass. VI 3-0501
When Hallmark Plans-a-Party, you receive the compliments
Hallmark
2020
PLANS-A-PARTY
BULLOCK'S
- Parker Pens
- Stationery
- Printing
4 E. 7th VI 3-2261
Look for this sign
American Gem Society
When buying diamonds Look for this sign
Registered Jeweler
AGS
In Lawrence, your Authorized Dealer is Delbert A. Eisele
Marks Jewelers
817 Mass. VI 3-4266
STUDENTS! SAVE WITH THIS AD!!
"Front End Special"
- Front end aligned
- Front wheels balanced,
bearings repacked
- Steering checked
ONLY
$6.88
Let us prove how we can save you money on all your car needs
"Come in Today"
WARDS
AUTO SERVICE CENTER
729 N.H. VI 2-1708
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
★ TUNE-UPS
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
ART'S TEXACO
9th & Mississippi
VI 3-9897
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 27, 1964
Court Denies Attempt To Alter Rail Ruling
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Supreme Court refused today to examine the Railroad Arbitration Board decision that could eventually eliminate 30,000 firemen's jobs and leave the status of 19,000 other crewmen in doubt.
The brief order lets stand as final a decision upholding the board handed down Feb. 20, 1964, by the U.S. Court of Appeals here. Earlier, the unions had also lost in Federal District Court.
Justice Arthur J. Goldberg, a former Secretary of Labor during the period of the dispute, did not participate in today's action.
CONGRESS CREATED the special seven-man arbitration panel last August in order to head off a railroad strike. The panel was to look into two matters: Use of firemen on locomotives in freight and yard service; and the size of crews outside the engine cab (sometimes referred to as the "crew consist" issue).
The panel's judgment, announced Nov. 26, 1963, allowed the carriers to
start reducing the number of firemen's jobs, with most of the cutback resulting from unfilled vacancies. A formula was worked out for the crew consist problem.
Meantime the unions and the carriers negotiated on other matters not covered by the arbitrators' decision. Last week President Johnson announced that agreement had been reached on those issues to fend off another threatened strike.
Hobbesian Theory Challenged
THE DISPUTE HAS been going on since late 1559.
In their appeal to the Supreme Court, the unions contended, among other things, that the arbitration deprived them of their rights without the "due process of law" guaranteed in the Constitution and that the act passed by Congress did not provide the board with sufficient guidance.
They said Federal District Judge Alexander Holtzoff should have convened a special three-judge federal court to hear their challenge under the Constitution.
Philosophy students and professors challenged the logical basis of Lindeley lecturer Roderick Chisholm's theory of pleasure and desire Thursday night at the Philosophy Club meeting.
roderick Chisholm, professor of philosophy at Brown University, said a new basis for moral action must be found "because, if the Hobbesian account is true, people are not morally responsible for the things they do." The Hobbesian view holds that human behavior is determined by past events. This is the view science is said to take by many authorities.
Prof. Chisholm, an acknowledged
Close Call
TUCSON, Ariz.—(UPI)—Patrolman Gerald Halversion is thankful that the pastor of the Open Door Baptist Church doesn't aim at prowlers. Halperson parked his patrol car and walked down an alley to answer a complaint of a barking dog at the parsonage of the church. Suddenly a shot rang out. Halversion scurried back to the street and contacted the Rev. Audrey Corder at the front door of the parsonage. With smoking shotgun in hand, the minister told the policeman he just scared off a prowler by firing the weapon
such, and he does not prefer not-'h' as such to 'h' as such."
Prof. Edward S. Robinson, professor of philosophy, objected to the use of "as such." He said he understood very well what it meant to prefer one thing to another. But, he said, he would be "bewildered" if he were asked if he preferred one thing "as such" to another thing "as such."
That big Spring Formal is just around the corner. Will you look your best for this important occasion?
That big Spring
Formal is just
around the corner.
Will you look
your best for
this important
occasion?
FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE
IT'S
Independent DRIVE-IN
900 Miss.
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740 Vt.
Independent
LAUNDRY AND
DRY CLEANERS
9th and Mississippi
Prof. Chisholm replied that there was "no way of making a choice if one did not prefer one thing, "as such." From there, the discussion reved up to a high level philosophical dispute.
That big Spring
Formal is just
around the corner.
Will you look
your best for
this important
occasion?
FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE
IT'S
Independent DRIVE-IN 900 Miss. DOWNTOWN PLANT 740 Vt.
Independent
LAUNDRY AND
DRY CLEANERS
9th and Mississippi
From Cole of California
HIGH LIFE...
the liquid shape of Arnel acetate double knit jersey in a tingle-clean print topped by salt white. Soft blouson eased over snug-fitting boy shorts
— fluid all the way. Blue, Green, Lavender, Gold. 8-16
terrill's
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
803 MASS. VI 3-2241
leader in analytic philosophy. contends that there is no logical or casual connection between pleasure and desire, therefore determined behavior is not possible.
The definition of "indifferent," for instance, was: "He is indifferent toward 'h' as such, provided: he does not prefer 'h' as such to not-h' as
FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE
IT'S
Independent DRIVE-IN
900 Miss.
DOWNTOWN PLANT
740 Vt.
Independent
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9th and Mississippi
TWELVE DEFINITIONS of terms used in his theory were cast in the form of logical propositions by Prof. Chisholm. Afterwards, club members and professor parried with the visiting philosopher as to what the definitions meant.
Independent
LAUNDRY AND
DRY CLEANERS
9th and Mississippi
K
HIGH FASHION FOR YOUR SPRINGTIME!
Swimwear styles that put all the others to shame.
From
Cole
of California
HIGH LIFE...
the liquid shape of Arnel
acetate double knit jersey in
a tingle-clean print topped
by salt white. Soft blouson
eased over snug-fitting boy shorts
— fluid all the way. Blue, Green, Lavender,
Gold. 8-16
terrill's
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS
ot-'h'
ofofes-
to the
ondernt to
ut, he
if he
thing
much."
there
nice if
g. "as
ass
osoph-
Cigarette Firms To Curb Minors
NEW YORK — (UPI)— The nation's leading cigarette manufacturers have joined hands in a move to discourage youngsters from smoking.
The Tobacco Institute, which represents the manufacturers, announced yesterday a new code designed to curb advertising stressing athletic prowess, social distinction and sex appeal.
The tobacco industry has been under fire since a report by U.S. Surgeon General Luther L. Terry more than four months ago linking smoking to cancer and other diseases.
However, attorneys for the institute told a public hearing of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) last March 16 that such a code had been in the works for some time.
The code, still subject to clearance by the Department of Justice under anti-trust laws, affects advertising on radio and television and in newspapers and magazines.
Under the code, all cigarette advertising first would have to be approved by an independent administrator, who would enforce the code and fine violators up to $100,000 for infractions. The administrator has not yet been named.
The code bans advertising in the form of testimonials by well-known athletes or former athletes and forbids advertising in college newspapers and magazines or in comic books or comic supplements to newspapers.
The code also prohibits the distribution of cigarette samples to persons under the age of 21 and bans "promotional efforts" on school or college campuses or in fraternity or sorority houses.
Cigarette advertising under the code is prohibited on programs or in publications aimed at youths, and persons depicted in advertising as smokers must be at least 25 years old and must appear to be that old.
The announcement was made in behalf of the American Tobacco Co., Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., Larus & Brother Co. Inc., Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co., P. Lorillard Co., Philip Morris Inc., R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Stephano Brothers Inc., and the United States Tobacco Co.
Despite the institute's action, however, FTC chairman Paul Rand Dixon said in Washington that the code would not change government plans for federal regulations on cigarette advertising.
The agency has proposed attaching health hazard warnings to every cigarette package, and it has suggested that similar warnings accompany radio and television advertisements.
"I doubt if (the code) would affect our deliberations," Dixon said.
A product (the code) would affect our developments, Dickson said. Sen. Maurine Neuberger, D-Ore., an outspoken opponent of cigarette smoking, indicated she felt the code did not go far enough because it "fails to require adequate effective warning in cigarette advertising and labeling."
However, she said the code should eliminate "those most offensive appeals to adolescence and immaturity which have too long scarred the face of advertising media."
Democratic Hopefuls For Governor Here
Four of the six Democratic candidates for governor will present their ideas on state government here tonight.
The KU Young Democrats will present the candidates in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union at 7:30 p.m., Mike Rogers, Hutchinson junior and president of the KU Y.D.'s said.
George Groneman, Kansas City sonhomore, will provide rides to and from the meeting for those who wish to attend, Jacke Thayer, Ellsworth freshman and secretary of the Young Democrats, said.
J. Don Coffin, a KU alumnus, is proprietor of an independent telephone company in Council Grove. Coffin also has an interest in an insurance company. He and his wife, Bertha Coffin, usually campaign together. McDonald said.
FRANK McDONALD, Lawrence businessman and former county chairman of the Douglas County Democrats, was asked about the candidates.
gather. Joseph Henkle, who was lieutenant governor in the Docking administration, is a Great Bend businessman, the former county chairman said.
Jules Doty, an Ottawa attorney, was once Cherokee County attorney where he served two terms. In the last state election, Doty was a candidate for attorney general, McDonald said.
George Hart, once a furrier in Wichita, served as state treasurer in the Docking administration, McDonald said.
The two Democratic candidates for
governor who will not be present are Harry Wiles, commissioner of the Kansas State Industrial Development Commission and a KU alumnus, and Ewell Stewart, a resident of Fort Scott. All the Democratic candidates for governor were invited to the forum, the Young Democrats' president said.
"Persons who don't order this spring cannot expect to sit within the goal lines," Jim Cline, Rockford, Ill., junior and chairman of the Athletic Seating Board of the All Student Council, said.
Orders for reserved seats for KU football games next fall will be taken beginning next week.
NEXT WEEK'S PRIORITY schedule for ordering the tickets is as follows:
Tickets to be Sold For Fall Football
A handling fee of $1.50 must accompany the orders which will be taken in Allen Fieldhouse from 8:30 a.m.-12 noon and 1:30-4:30 p.m. ID cards must be presented.
Monday and Tuesday—seniors, graduate students and law students.
Wednesday—iunjors.
Thursday—sophomores.
Dailu Hansan
Group applications are limited to 25 persons, except for exceptionally large pledge classes or classes in residence halls.
Lawrence, Kansas
Eight topics are now on the agenda for the four Model UN sessions which will be on Friday and Saturday in Hoch Auditorium.
Tuesday, April 28, 1964
The eight proposals which will be discussed by the delegates in the event sponsored by the KU-Y concern the security council, South Africa, the People's Republic of China, disarmament, Israel, the Kashmir plebiscite, the Oder-Neisse boundary of Poland, and peace keeping operations of the United Nations.
Model UN activities will begin at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in the Eldridge Hotel with a dinner sponsored by the Douglas County Association for the United Nations. Keith Adamson, deputy director of Voice of America, will be the speaker.
Eight Topics On Agenda For Model UN Sessions
ADAMSON WILL speak on how the United States describes its actions in the United Nations to other nations of the world.
nations of the world. A diplomatic reception will follow the dinner in the Crystal Room of the hotel.
The schedule Friday in Hoch Auditorium includes the opening session from 9:30 a.m. to noon, break for lunch from noon-1:30 p.m., and the
second session from 1:30-4:30 p.m.
The Saturday schedule includes the break for lunch from noon-1 p.m.
third session from 9 a.m. to noon,
and the fourth session from 1 p.m. to adjournment.
THE ISRAEL resolution, submitted by Jordan, calls for the restoration of Palestine to its pre-1947 occupants. The proposal asks that "the legal possession of land in Palestine be restored to the occupants in residence before the armed conflict of 1947," and that "all immigrants arriving in Palestine since 1947 . . . be returned to their native countries or resettled in any other nation that will allow their residence."
The security council resolution proposed by the United States asks that the membership of the council consist of fourteen members instead of eleven members. The permanent members of the council would remain the same according to the resolution but the elected members shall change from six to nine.
This year the Model UN steering committee has accepted resolutions in a different manner than before. In past years resolutions were submitted concerning previously announce-
Battle is Vocation For Vietnamese
Editor's note: This is the second in a three part series in which United Press International's Saigon management returned to South Viet Nam after two years. South Viet Nam, describes the war which is going on in the rice paddies and rain forests of that country.
ed subjects. This year resolutions were accepted on any subject of which eight were placed on the agenda by the steering committee.
By Neil Sheehan United Press International
The hardy peasants who followed the 13th-century Vietnamese hero Marshal Tran Hung Dao into battle and broke the charge of the fierce Mongol horsemen are still fighting in the rice paddies of Viet Nam.
The uniforms, tactics and weapons have changed, but the men are the same even though they are divided into two armies locked in civil war; the U.S. supported government troops and the communist guerrillas.
Like his communist guerrilla enemy, the modern Vietnamese soldier is probably the son of a peasant family. He is at best only slightly educated. He took up a soldier's profession because he was conscripted or because, in a land where war has for centuries been a way of life, he looks on arms as an honorable way to earn a living for himself and his family.
He didn't have much choice in any case. There are few alternative opportunities in this country for a peasant boy other than staying on his father's ricefields or drifting to the towns and cities to work as a coolie laborer. But with both sides in this war pressing hungriily for recruits he would prabably have ended up fighting for either the government or the communists. He may even have a brother in the ranks of the communist Viet Cong.
THE VIETNAMESE SOLDIER is short and slight, averaging about five feet four inches tall. But his baggy American-style fatigues, festooned with grenades and ammunition belts, hide a wiry and muscular body.
He is also, along with his Viet Cong enemy, probably the toughest and bravest soldier in Southeast
His over-sized U.S. Army helmet and hefty M-1 rifle give him a slightly comical appearance to the foreign eye. As a private he earns the equivalent of $14 a month. He is easy-going, cheerful and stoically resigned to the risks of his profession.
Asia, for courage is an old Vietnamese virtue.
The average Vietnamese private is in his late teens or early twenties. The non-commissioned officers are an older breed in their late twenties or early thirties and in most cases fought under the French in the first Indochina war. Both privates and non-coms are generally married and have children.
"WE MAY NOT get to all eight." Tom Moore, executive secretary of the KU-Y said, but he pointed out that in most years the Model UN deals with more than eight resolutions.
In the field the Vietnamese soldier is capable of great endurance. To the amazement of Americans he will cheerfully and uncomplainingly slog through the oozing mud of the rice paddies for hours under a broiling sun with a heavy load of ammunition or a 35-pound radic strapped to his 110 pound body.
Seasoned American advisers find little fault with the individual Vietnamese soldier. They consider him a good warrior and when he does not fight well they blame his failure on the lack of competent leadership at the company and battalion level.
In battle the Vietnamese soldier is calm and quiet. If well-led, he is capable of feats of great bravery under fire, but will not expose himself or push ahead undress the officers and non-coms show the way.
WHEN WOUNDED he rarely screams or cries, for this is considered unmanly. To Americans it is always an amazing sight to watch a Vietnamese soldier.
(Continued on page 12)
Weather
In the past there have been key- note speakers, but the Model UN has not found a speaker for this year, Richard Epps, Topeka senior and chairman of the Model UN steering committee, said.
Skies were beginning to clear in Western Kansas today after a night that brought more showers to eastern and central areas.
The clearing was expected to progress slowly eastward today with Kansas skies becoming mostly fair tonight and tomorrow.
Brisk winds continued to blow today but not nearly as strong as yesterday's which gusted as high as 70 m.p.h. and produced heavy blowing dust in the southwest.
Yesterday afternoon blowing dust had cut visibility at Liberal to one-eighth of a mile.
This year, for the first time, the delegations had to submit papers about the international policies and problems of the country they are representing, Epps said. He said he was certain each delegation had done at least minor research.
Highs today were expected to range near 60 in most areas, with overnight lows from 30's Northwest to 40's Southeast.
MODEL UN DELEGATES are often thought to be ill-informed, because they are Americans, Epps said. This year, however, foreign students are working with about 60 delegations and will be able to debate and vote on resolutions, he continued.
"Model United Nations offers an experience in international politics through which students can learn the structure and problems of diplomatic relations." Epps said.
In addition to his Model UN activities, Adamson will speak about the Voice of America and its career opportunities at 4:30 p.m., tomorrow in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Adamson, a native Kansan, has been a public affairs officer in Cairo, Egypt and was transferred to the U.S. Information Agency, of which the Voice of America is a branch, in 1953.
The All Student Council will again consider three planks of the University Party election platform at its meeting tonight.
Adamson will speak at Ottawa and Baker Universities on Thursday.
UP Platform Rises Again
The three bills were defeated by slim margins at the last ASC meeting by a Vox-controlled council, but were introduced a second time by UP members, who were anticipating a UP majority on the council after new council members were sworn in.
With 39 council seats presently occupied on the ASC, Walter Bgoya, Tanganyika junior, who is unaffiliated with either party, has the deciding vote if the council votes along party lines.
THE UP COUNCIL had had a majority at the last ASC meeting until a Vox candidate successfully contested her spring election defeat. This tied campus political parties with 19 Vox seats and 19 UP seats on the council.
The three bills, if passed, would establish ASC committees on student employment, the procurement, preparation and distribution of food within KU living groups, and a student-teacher evaluation program
IN OTHER BUSINESS this evening, the ASC will elect new officers. Nominations were submitted last week.
Nominees for chairman are Mike Miner, Lawrence junior, and Hugh Taylor, Stoke-on-Trent, England, graduate student; for vice-chairman, Gary Walker, Wichita sophomore, and Tom Shumaker, Russell junior; for secretary, Liane Lebebure, Prairie Village junior, and Sandee Garvey, St Louis, Mo., senior; and for treasurer, Leo Schrey Jr., Leavenworth sophomore, and Ray Myers, Dodge City senior.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 28, 1964
10. ( )
No Accident:
The Johnson Success
When President Kennedy was killed, a national healer was needed. Lyndon B. Johnson was that healer ready made.
Somewhere, sometime in the life of the Texas politician, Johnson was struck by a Biblical passage; "Come let us reason together." Perhaps that moment, whenever it was, has historic significance to the United States—for the philosophy is one well-suited to a person thrown into the presidency when the country was badly shaken. Much has been written of Johnson's favorite quotation. His record as Senator and President prove that it is not a hollow one.
In an interview recently, Walter Lippmann observed that Johnson has succeeded in "binding the nation's wounds." A new book of Johnson's major speeches since 1953 indicate that his success has not been an accident.
In one speech, made in 1958, Johnson said: "I am a free man, an American, a United States Senator, and a Democrat, in that order." The statement is hardly dramatic in itself, but it reflects a philosophic base.
IN THIS 1958 SPEECH, Johnson went on to say: "At the heart of my own beliefs is a rebellion against this very process of classifying, labeling, and filing Americans under headings: regional, economic, occupational, religious, racial, or otherwise. . . Our political philosophies, I have found, are the sum of our life's experience. God made no man so simple or his life so sterile that such experience can be summarized in an adjective."
After citing the flexibility of the Constitution as a virtue, Johnson said: "I believe there is always a national answer to each national problem..."
Later, explaining his self-definition: "Some
who equate personal philosophies with popular dogma might inquire, endlessly, as to my 'position' on this issue or some other. Philosophies, as I conceive them at least, are not made of answers to issues, but of approaches more enduring and encompassing...
He expressed his unity theme a different way when he addressed the Senate Democratic Conference in 1953; "We (the Democrat senators) are now in the minority. I have never agreed with the statement that it is 'the business of the opposition to oppose.' I do not believe that the American people have sent us here merely to obstruct.
"I BELIEVE WE are here to fight for a positive program—a program geared not just to opposing the majority, but to serving America."
On November 27 of last year, addressing a joint session of Congress: "I profoundly hope that the tragedy and the torment of these terrible days will bind us together in new fellowship, making us one people..."
This could have been a statement dictated by expediency, coming from some men. After considering some of Johnson's previous speeches, it seems to be anything but a glib pronouncement.
"Let all who speak," he said to the American people on November 28, "and all who teach and all who preach and all who publish and all who broadcast and all who read or listen—let them reflect upon their responsibilities to bind our wounds..."
Johnson's success as President has proved that he, for his part, was ready for the responsibility.
Avoidance of dogma.
Unity through consensus.
"Come let us reason together."
Lyndon B. Johnson, president and healer.
Tom Coffman
The People Say
Demonstration
Editor:
I feel that the civil rights demonstration was a success in all respects, but unfortunately it appears to have been misunderstood. It seems unnecessary to reiterate that the demonstration was not directed against Greek houses—it was not anti-Greek, only anti-segregation in all its forms, including Greek. There were several fraternity and sorority members in the picket line, myself included. The point of a non-violent demonstration as I see it is that we (the picketers) don't want any more than you are willing to give. Force as a weapon has been renounced. But so has so called "moral sassion" been renounced for obvious reasons.
One hundred students out of a body of ten thousand is not a very good percentage, and I feel certain that except for reasons of apathy and social pressure there could have been five to ten times that number. Social pressure and apathy can be fought; last Saturday's demonstration was fighting against this, civil rights demonstrations for years have been fighting this. And there have been victories. Racism as a stand has been taken over by the likes of Commander Rockwell—it is no longer accepted in principle. If a person favors segregation, he keeps his mouth shut. It is not a "fashionable" position, and this is a victory. The picket lines will swell with every demonstration, and there will be more victories, perhaps even some day a
final victory when phrases like "human dignity," and "equal opportunity" take on real meaning.
Lawrence, senior
Steve McNown
Dailij Hansan
411 Flint Hall
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Strange Migrants
HONG KONG—(UPI)—Communist China is encouraging "undesirable aliens" White Russian farmers living in its remote Sinkiang province—to pack up their bags and leave the country.
Sinkiang, in far Northwest China, shares a troubled border with Soviet Kazakhstan.
A group of 125 Russian refugees arrived here after traveling nearly 3,500 miles across mainland China. Most will go to Australia to join relatives.
The leader of the refugee group, Gregori Michenko, said he was surprised when a local Communist official told the Russians in late February that those who wished to leave the country could apply for exit permits.
There are about 1,200 White Russians living in Yining, which is about 100 miles from Russia. They fled their homes when Stalin began rural collectivization.
UNTIL THE COMMUNISTS seized power in 1949, they were farmers in the fertile Yining Valley. At first, they rented land at a negligible fee from the provincial warlord government. The Nationalists, then in power, had only nominal control over such governments.
When the Communists came to power, they seized Sinkiang. Then in 1558, Peking embarked on its ambitious "Great Leap Forward." The Communists attempted to persuade the Russians in Sinkiang to join communes.
The Russians, who had challenged Stalin's collectivization program thirty years ago, refused to join, gave up their land, and moved to the town of Yining. The Communist authorities were displeased.
NOW, SIX YEARS LATER, the anti-Chinese incidents in Yining, allegedly instigated by the Soviet Union, have become a part of the feud between the two Communist countries. Peking is more worried about this province than any other part of China.
Most of the newly arrived Russian refugees in Hong Kong will be sailing to Australia in a month to join their relatives. They will travel under the auspices of the United Nations Commission for Refugees, and the World Council of Churches.
The remaining Russians in Sinkiang, some 1,000, are expected to cross China in the near future.
Khrushchev
By Phil Newsom
A guessing game already popular in world capitals and likely to spread is the name of the man who will succeed Nikita Khrushchev.
Giving it current impetus have been two events.
One is the fact that last week the bouncy Khrushchev oberved his 70th birthday, not generally recognized as retirement age for world leaders but a reminder that Khrushchev no longer is young.
The other was the false report a few days earlier of Khrushchev's death.
One student of Soviet affairs once remarked that there is no such thing as a Soviet expert, only varying degrees of ignorance.
The same comment must be made now in any attempt to name the man who finally will emerge after Khrushchev, and after surviving the dog-eat-dog politics of the Kremlin hierarchy.
Within the Soviet political structure there is no provision for an orderly ascent to the power which Krushchev now holds and which Stalin and Lenin held before him.
After Stalin's death in 1953, it took Khrushchev four more years to consolidate his present position wherein he is at the same time first secretary of the Communist party and Premier, placing him at the top of both government and party apparatus, and a member
of the Party Presidium, the small, select group which makes basic Soviet policy decisions.
Almost certainly the new man also will represent something new in top Soviet leadership. That is, he will not be one who played an important role in the Bolshevik revolution.
Wyacheslav Molotov, who might have played such a role, is in disgrace as one of the anti-party men who sought to remove Khrushchev and seemingly is out of the party picture.
Anastas Mikoyan, who might also qualify, has not been well and his relationship with Khrushevheli also is said to have cooled.
Frol R. Kozlov, one-time heir-apparent, also is ill and Mikhail A. Suslov seems to have eliminated himself by opposing certain of Khrushchev's internal policies.
BY A PROCESS of elimination, most of the experts seem to have centered on Leonid I. Brezhnev, who occupies a post which might be called the Presidency of the Soviet Union and also is a member of the Presidium.
He is respected within the party and also is popular among the experts and technicians who do not think in ideological terms but who occupy an increasingly important role in Soviet decisions. He also is regarded as one most likely to continue the so-called liberal approach favored by Khrushchev.
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Boxing
Page 3
Law School Gets 2-Year Grant For Study of Legal Education
The KU School of Law, with the help of a two-year $20,000 grant from the National Council on Legal Clinics, will tackle one of the major problems facing legal education today—bridging the gap between law school and practice.
"Most schools in the nation and many bar associations," said Dean James K. Logan of the School of Law, "are searching for some way to give the new lawyer experience."
Three states—New Hampshire, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island—require an apprenticeship of six to 12 months before law school graduates can take the bar examination, Dean Logan explained.
SOME LAWYERS suggest the need for a fourth year of law school. Others think this will unnecessarily prolong legal education, already lengthened by the requirement of a bachelor's degree before entry into law school.
The results, however, have been unsatisfactory. Law firms usually look on apprentice lawyers as slave labor, using them as leg men, Dean Logan said. New Jersey had an internship requirement for several years but recently abandoned it.
The situation is further complicated by the recent Supreme Court decision that every person accused of a felony is entitled to legal counsel. The trend toward distributing court appointments as trial lawyers means that every lawyer may have to take his turn in court, and court work has become a diminishingly small part of legal practice, Dean Logan said.
"The effect of the ruling," he added, "is to make every member of the bar a criminal lawyer. Some legal authorities believe that the Supreme Court will rule next that legal counsel to the accused must be adequate."
THE STUDENT-CLERKS will attend all trials and hearings during the 8-week period and observe the operation of the court and the work of the attorneys.
The KU School of Law is planning an 8-week student clerkship with a Kansas or Missouri trial judge, working under his supervision, assisting him in research, the drafting of orders, and other duties similar to those performed by clerks for Federal District judges.
Most students will have had a course in Trial Practice, which will be moved from the third year of the KU program to the second year, and in Legal Ethics. After their return for their senior years, they will enroll in a seminar on the problems of judicial administration. Compressed "block" courses also will be
available for the remaining eight weeks of the fall semester.
Tuesday, April 28, 1964 University Daily Kansan
The experimental program will start this summer for a few students and get into full swing with the beginning of the fall semester. Each year 25 of the 45-50 seniors will participate in the program. Judges asked to help have responded with almost 100 per cent enthusiasm. Some have offered to take the student-clerks into their home for the period, rent-free.
The students also have been enthusiastic.
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"Some of them have begged to be included," Dean Logan said, "and it was hard to select the half of the senior class which would be given this experience. Most young lawyers and lawyers-to-be have a queasy feeling about the courtroom. By the time they have had their courses in Trial Practice and Legal Ethics, have argued two cases in the moot court, and have enjoyed eight weeks in close association with a district court and its presiding judge, they will be better prepared for the full spectrum of legal practice than any law school graduates anywhere."
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The Orchestra, made up of KU faculty members and students, assisted by members of the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra, will
The Symposium Orchestra concert at 8 p.m. tonight in the University Theatre, will also perform compositions by American composers.
The University Chamber Choi performed Vladimir Ussachevsky's "Creation-Prologue," a composition for four choruses with electronic accompaniment last night in the University Theatre.
THE CHOIR, under the direction of Clayton Krehbiel, performed nine other compositions by American composers. Three of the compositions, "Psalm 148 (Praise the Lard)" by Maurice Weed, and "Love Spell" and "Spell of Sleep" by Juli Nunlist, received their premiere performance.
Ussachevsky, who came to the United States from Russia in 1830, is regarded as one of America's outstanding composers of electronic music. A principal participant in the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center, Ussachevsky is here as guest composer in the sixth annual Symposium of Contemporary American Music.
be conducted by Guy Fraser Harrison, guest conductor of the Symposium and conductor of the Oklahoma City Symphony.
Electronic Music Supports Choir
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University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 28, 1964
New Peace Corps Group Plans Course Guides, Speaking Tour
Pre-enrollment course guides to prospective Peace Corps volunteers, a summer state-wide speaking tour, and a Peace Corps Week in conjunction with a state-wide Peace Corps Conference are some of the activities being planned by KU's new Peace Corps committee.
Donna Hanneman, Junction City junior, on-campus chairman of the 1964-65 Peace Corps Committee, announced last night the following people as new members of the Peace Corps committee:
BOB CROSIER, Lawrence junior, promotion; Jacquelyn Thayer, Ellsworth freshman, editor of Peace Corps News; Micheal Metzler, Lawrence sophomore, engineering liaison; Charles Turpin, Omaha, Neb., sophomore, off-campus speakers bureau.
Marc Plitt, Nanuet, N.Y., freshman, counseling service; Janet Chartier, Salina freshman, Gary Hamilton, Geneseo graduate student and Paul Moreau, Fall River, Mass., freshman, research staff, and Frank Munday, Denver, Colo., sophomore, special events.
Ronald Johnson, Mt. Vernon, Mo., graduate student, on-campus speakers bureau; Susan Griffiths, Chanute junior, treasurer; Lauri Fitzgerald, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, staff secretaries.
TO AID STUDENTS in planning course work to agree with future
Student Anti-Semites
BUENOS AIRES — (UPI) — About 100 youths, their arms outstretched in the Nazi salute, shouted anti-Jewish slogans, at a meeting sponsored here last night by the Arab League.
The youths linked the names of Argentina's ousted ex-president Juan D. Peron and Egypt's Gamal A. Nasser in such slogans as "Nasser, Peron—only one heart!"
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plans for service in the Peace Corps, the research staff will spend the summer months studying the courses offered and select those most valuable. Miss Hanneman said.
"The Peace Corps plans to have a booth at enrollment in the fall, staffed by members of the Peace Corps Counseling Service, to help interested students," she explained.
"We will also be interested in letting the campus know about the Peace Corps' new senior year program," she said.
THE SENIOR YEAR program is one which will allow students who have passed the Peace Corps test during their junior year to take a training program during the summer following their junior year.
After the summer training program, the student returns to school and then briefly completes a training program after graduation and then goes into service.
"The volunteers under a program of this type will be more prepared
for their jobs," Miss Hanneman said.
"This also gives the volunteers more opportunity to know what they want to give and get out of the Peace Corps," she continued.
Highlighting next year's activities will be the Peace Corps Week, to be in conjunction with a state-wide Peace Corps conference.
Activities for the Peace Corps this summer will be the establishment of a summer speaking tour. The committee will try to set up Peace Corps information booths at major state activities this summer, Miss Hanneman said.
"For example, we will try to set up booths at the Hutchinson State fair, and the fair at Topeka," she said.
Peace Corps Week will be similar to the one this year, but students from other colleges, high school students and parents of Peace Corps volunteers will also be invited to KU. Miss Hanneman explained.
+ +
love and marriage-college style
The bridge from student to married student is a long and very narrow one, laced with parental opposition, financial burdens and immaturity. Yet, thousands of young men and women cross it every year.
How well do they make the transition from carefree, fun-loving "dates" to responsible husbands, wives...and often parents?
A recent nationwide study by Redbook magazine brings to light some of the strains, the dangers and the possible benefits of college marriages. It's must reading for every undergrad!
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THE MAGAZINE FOR YOUNG ADULTS / On sale at your newsstand now
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified
FORD MUSTANG
NEW GRRR IN TOWN
Ford Mustang . . . a car as American as its name. And one that aptly fits the dictionary definition: small, hardy and half-wild. Conceived as a nimble, sporty car, the Mustang offers distinctive styling in two tasty packages—Convertible and Hardtop. Both are 2-door, 4-passenger vehicles. The price? Sporty going never came more economically.
It took a lot of hard work and many people with creativity, imagination and drive to get the "grrrr" to town. All kinds of skills were involved: styling, research, manufacturing, marketing, product planning and many others were needed and will be needed in the future. For the Mustang is merely the latest expression of Ford Motor Company's ability to anticipate modern tastes in driving.
In Ford Motor Company's search to find better ways to do the unexpected, there is the constant need to enlist people with a flair for the future. This year, approximately 1,000 college graduates in all areas of study and with all kinds of majors can enjoy the challenge of creating new automotive marketing and manufacturing concepts. If you're interested in joining a leader in a growing industry, check with your Placement Office or write us. Maybe you can help "tame" the next Mustang.
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 28, 1964
Page 5
ALEXANDER ROSNER
Budding jazzmen competed, . . .
1964
OREAD
Jazz
Festival
M
The 1964 Oread Jazz Festival, the culmination of nearly two years of planning by a Student Union Activities committee, marked what may be the first of a series of annual KU jazz contests.
The festival attracted twenty entrants from across the country, twelve of which were ultimately chosen to appear at KU. Big bands and small groups vied for finalist positions Saturday morning and afternoon in the Kansas Union. Five groups made it to the finals in Hoch Auditorium Saturday night, two big bands, a sextet, a quartet and a trio.
Winning the small group category the Bill Farmer Quartet was awarded an engagement at Jazz Land in the Louisiana Pavilion at the New York World's Fair and transportation expenses to Europe this summer.
(Photos by Charlie Corcoran)
CENTRAL
trying to outdo one another, . . .
SIR BENNETT HOLMES
while Woody Herman showed 'em how.
Bernard Dempsey
Needless to say, the judges had their hands full.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 28, 1964
Study to Relate Roles Of Design, Behavior
The National Institute of Mental Health has awarded a $15,000 grant for one year to the KU departments of architecture and psychology and the State Hospital in Topeka to study the effects of architectural design on human behavioral patterns.
Lawrence R. Good, instructor of architecture and program director, said the grant will be used primarily for detailed planning of a five-year program. Further financial assistance by the N.I.M.H. will depend upon the merit of the proposed long-term program.
THE MENNINGER Foundation in Topeka will assist in the program. They stimulated interest in the subject last month when they sponsored the first major conference dealing with the effects of architectural types and community environment on human beings.
The research group has scheduled two projects upon which their future work will be based. The first is a
continuation of the Kirkbride Mental Health Hospital ward project. It will involve changing the ward environment at the Topeka State Hospital and observing the resultant changes in the behavior of the patients and staff members.
THE SECOND PROJECT will be the mass transfer of one entire patient treatment section from an old masonry building to a contemporary garden-type structure. Again, as in the first project, changes in the behavior of the patients and staff members will be recorded.
There is at present no other research being done in this field. "The results of the program," said Good, "should have direct application in the design of mental health centers and community hospitals of the future."
An exhibit of art by women students opens today in the Browsing Room of the Kansas Union.
Women's Art Work On Display in Union
Work done by graduate and undergraduate women is exhibited. Displays range from painting and sculpture to ceramics and jewelry.
The art exhibit which will end May 5 is part of the All Women's Day activities sponsored by the Associated Women Students (AWS). Activities for All Women's Day begin today and end May 5.
NSF Grants Offer Summerfield Courses
A total of ten advanced students will be awarded two Summerfield work courses offered here under a $3,000 grant from the National Science Foundation.
Students taking a course in field methods of systematic vertebrate paleontology will do most of their work in parts of New Mexico and Colorado. Those in a similar course on systematic vertebrate zoology will study primarily in Oaxaca, Mexico.
A panel discussion on fraternity sorority discrimination at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union will represent all areas of the campus and all views of civil rights.
Discrimination To Be Discussed
According to Arthur Douville, Overland Park sophomore and chairman of the Human Rights Committee (HRC) of the ASC, the panel discussion will "bring together people from all interests who have been outstanding leaders in discussion and controversy over fraternity-sorority discrimination at KU."
"By this interaction and discussion we hope to educate interested students as to the issues and varying degrees of views which exist here," Douville said.
Students on the panel are: Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla. junior and president of the student body; George Ragsdale, Lawrence senior and chairman of the Civil Rights Council; and Mike Elwell, Wichita senior and past president of Sigma Nu fraternity.
Thomas Coffman, Lyndon junior and editorial editor of University Daily Kansan; Joey Emel, Colby senior and past president of Chi Omega
sorority; and James Johnston, Independence, Mo., junior and president of the Interfraternity Council.
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Page 7
KUStudent Elected President Of Residence Hall Association
University Daily Kansan
Jim Tschchechtelin, Shawnee Mission junior and chairman of the KU Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) was elected president of the National Association of College and University Residence Halls (NACURH) in the association's conference last weekend in Denver, Colo.
Joan Olson, Omaha, Neb., sophomore and secretary-treasurer of AURH. was elected secretary-treasurer of the NACURH.
The major item of business at the conference was the acceptance of 40 new members of the organization which more than doubles its size and increases its membership to 65 colleges and universities.
The additional schools made possible the organization of two new regional residence hall organizations—the Pacific Coast and the North Atlantic, Tschechetelin said.
The national organization was formed four years ago when two regional residence hall groups, a Mid-west association and an InterMountain association, merged to form the national organization. Only the South Atlantic region remains unorganized.
Tschechtelin said the organization of that region will be one of his big tasks during the coming year. The University of North Carolina has expressed interest in becoming a member, Tschechtelin said.
"We'll probably be going down to talk to these people," Tschechtelin said.
said. Tschechtelin said he hoped to have the national newsletter published on a more regular basis than had been done in the past.
been done The 247 delegate conference, the
Facts and Fallacies about Jewelry
Ray
By
largest in NACURH history, ratified the establishment of a national residence hall honorary. The members will be selected on the basis of scholarship and service to the residence halls, Tschechetlin said.
Christian
PETER MORRIS
The bill creating it, Tschechtelin said, "Provided a very broad structure so each campus can have its own organization." Each school would set its own requirements within the general framework, he said.
FALLACY:
"Third finger, left hand" has always been the rule for wedding rings.
The ancient Greeks favored the third finger, left hand, for betrothal rings, but through the centuries the practice varied. In most countries from the 13th to the 16th century, and as late as the 18th century, the right hand was used—and any finger! The little finger was often used.
FACT:
A student assistant exchange program is being started this summer by the national organization. Southern Illinois University and Pennsylvania State University will exchange residence hall counselors (student assistants) so they can study the residence halls and assistance methods of the other school.
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Tschechtelin said he hoped the program could be expanded to the regular school year with schools exchanging student assistants for an entire year.
CONCLUSION:
Conference delegates also established a sister college program in which two schools would work together doing research and working out their problems.
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
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Each school presented a planned discussion on the various problems confronting residence halls. The KU topic was "Residence Hall Planning from Theory to Reality." The discussion ranged from attached cafeteria
facilities in residence halls and rooms for two or suite arrangements, to the merits of large multifloor residence halls or small two-three floor residence halls.
Chargers SLACKS
Tschechtelin, who was elected by a 25-4 margin over a candidate from Colorado State University, said one thing he hoped to establish is a national residence hall week. If such a week came about, he said, the KU Spring Fling would be carried on in conjunction with the national week.
SEAURUS
Elected vice-president of NAC-URH was Sam Hunt of Washington State University (Pullman, Wash.) where next year's conference will be held.
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Tschechtelin called the KU delegation at the conference the best there. "It was one of the largest delegations with 12 members. It was vital to the election," he said.
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Seniors Give Books As Gift
The class of 1964 will provide a special collection of rare books for the library as the second half of their class gift.
The rare books collection polled 169 votes at the senior coffee last week. A piano for the Forum Room of the Kansas Union and a marker commemorating the act of organizing the University of Kansas, the other two gifts suggested by the committee, received 85 and 69 votes respectively.
John Stuckey, Pittsburgh senior and co-chairman of the gift committee, described the gift of rare books as an "intellectual" choice as opposed to the usefulness of the piano, and the traditional quality of the marker.
would be given to the library to select the rare collection.
Stuckey said that about $3,000
Spray nozzles for the Chi Omega fountain, a speaker system in Hoch Auditorium and pomp outfits for the speaker system at the stadium were also suggested from the audience. These items received few votes, Stuckey said.
On Senior Day, Oct. 26, the senior class presented the first part of their gift, eight 15-inch loudspeakers in the stadium. The speakers were presented to the school at that time so they might be used during the fall football season.
Cost of the loudspeakers and installation came to about $1,000, thus making the total '64 gifts total about $4,000.
21
1. I've decided on the kind or job
I want when I graduate.
Knowing you, I'd guess it to be something modest like Secretary of State or President of GE.
8. Well, I did run an extremely successful Nickel-a-Pickle sale.
Don't forget to demand plenty of stock options.
Look-why don't you see if you can qualify for one of Equitable's executive training programs. The work is interesting, the pay is good. And if you prove you have the ability, you may very well end up with a title and a couple of assistants.
5. I'd be willing to settle for a vice-presidency.
I
A
2. 1 hadn't thought of those specifically. What I had in mind was a job where they give you a lot of assistants. I think that would be nice.
Very nice. Maybe they could start you off at a hundred grand a year.
4. You think maybe I should lower my sights a little.
I'm afraid to tell you what I think.
SAN JOSE
6. You really have a way of seeing through a problem.
Rooming with you has taught me a lot.
See your Placement Officer for the date Equitable's employment representative will be on campus. Or write to William E. Blevins, Employment Manager.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 28, 1964
Missouri Coach Calls Lingle 'A Coaches Dream'
COLUMBIA, Mo. — (UPI) — Missouri Track Coach Tom Botts' description of his star anchor-man Robin Lingle: "Team wise, he's a coach's dream, a real team man. The team comes first, Lingle second with him."
Lingle has established himself as one of the nation's most promising track stars. The Tiger whiz creates a stir of excitement wherever he competes, which has included London and Spain.
His track laurels are many. He was voted the most outstanding performer at the Texas Relays and repeated the honor at the KU classic.
Lingle owns three Big Eight indoor marks outright. He's run the fastest mile (4:03.2), half-mile (1:-50.9) and 1000-yards (2:07.6) in conference history.
"We're all very proud of him," Hogan said. "He has outstanding scholastic ability as well as athletic ability."
Ralph Arnold Lingle, Jr., the son of a Philadelphia policeman, is one of those rarities in collegiate athletics. A gifted athlete, a superior student and a young man overflowing with so much discipline, it makes you think he's still a West Point cadet.
HIS 1000-yard mark, second to Canadian Bill Crothers at last year's Chicago Daily News Meet, stands as an American Record.
ACCORDING TO Joseph Hogan dean of Missouri's engineering school, Lingle ranks in the top 10 per cent of all engineering students.
Lingle transferred to Missouri last year, after two years at the Academy.
He said he decided to resign from West Point because he preferred an engineering degree to a military career.
Hogan stressed that Lingle never asks for special favors. After competing in the New York Athletic Club indoor meet last fall, he was back in class the next morning.
Here at KU, Lingle anchored a sizzling 4:01 mile to spark his Tiger mates to a meet 4-mile relay record of 16:41.6.
Missouri's blazing foursome, touted a sure bet to challenge the world's pending two-mile relay record of 7:19 by Oregon State, came close at Texas in 7:22.7, when Lingle flashed home in 1:48.3.
"That all started in Texas," he said about publicity that Missouri might shatter the world mark.
"I will never say, or predict when or where we might break a record," Lingle said. "But I do think we are capable. We never aim at setting any records, we go out to win the race."
"TIM SORRY that all got started." Botts said in reference to the publicity. "We run to try and win the race and let the records take care of themselves. I think the boys felt the pressure at Kansas."
"I think Robin's biggest asset is his mental attitude. He's a positive thinker, cheerful, optimistic, but not cocky." Botts said.
"He also has a great deal of mental discipline which I think is important."
"I think very highly of these four young men," Botts went on. "Lingle
on the Olympic team. He said he believed he would have to crack the four-minute barrier to grab a spot on the U.S. team. When reminded that his grade-
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point average of 3.54 was a similar figure to Peter Snell's world record mile, (3.54.4). Lingle chuckled, "Quite a coincidence. I never even thought of it that way."
for somebody, and with them as a team. The tie binds the four of us, we're actually one person out there running," Lingle said. His goal is a 1500-meter berth
of course is outstanding, but the other three (Larry Ray, Bill Rawson and Charlie Conrad) are doing an outstanding job too."
"I get more of a thrill competing
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Page 9
Miss Kansas Semi-Final Held Tomorrow in Union
The Kansas semi-finals for the Miss America pageant are this week at KU.
Miss Lawrence-KU will be crowned at 8:00 Wednesday night in the Union Ballroom after competing in a talent contest and modeling a swim suit and evening gown.
Cy Sticer, KLWN announcer, will be master of ceremonies for the pageant, and Karen Swartz, Pratt junior and last year's Miss Kansas, will crown the new Miss Lawrence-KU.
Judging for the pageant will be based upon ten points for a three minute talent presentation and five points each for evening gown and swim suit appearances.
Pepsi-Cola scholarships will be awarded to the two runner-ups and Miss Lawrence-KU will receive a
wardrobe from local merchants.
Tickets for the pageant are available at the door or may be purchased from local merchants and AWS representatives in women's living groups for $1.
The twelve semi-finalists are: Patricia Wise, Wichita sophomore; Sharon Gillespie, Paola freshman; Nancy Edwards, Lawrence sophomore; Mary Phillips, Kansas City junior; Mary Geiger, Topeka sophomore.
The twelve finalists will select Miss Congeniality.
Constance Crum, Manhattan freshman; Jo Anne Hetzke, Lawrence freshman; Patricia Goering, Moundridge freshman; Catherine Bergstrom, Topeka sophomore; Jackie Garland, Lawrence freshman; Norma Sharp, Arkansas City junior, and Jo Anne Woster, Mission junior.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Delta Sigma Rho Public Affairs Speaking Preliminaries, 4:30 p.m. 102强. Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Strattford Rd.
Beginners' Inquiry Forum, 7 p.m. St.
Louisville Center, 1915 Stratford, Rd.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m.
Kansas City. Bible study and
reunion.
Inquirer Class, 7:30 p.m., Canterbury House.
HOUSE.
Symposium Orchestra Concert, 8 p.m.
Thu.
Tuesday, April 28, 1964
University Theatre,
Western City Discussion, 9 p.m.
St.
St. Louis University
University of St. Louis
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m.
St Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Air Force Recruiting, 10-3:30 p.m.
Hawk's Nest, Kansas University. Sgt
Eberhart will answer questions and take applications for Officer Training School
Newman Senior Banquet Tickets will be available for $150. Kansas Union. Tickets will be $1.50.
Faculty Forum, Noon, English Room, Kansas Union. "The Intellectual's Place in Changing Africa"—Victor Du Bois, AUFS.
Inquirer Class, 3:45 p.m., Canterbury House.
Political Science Lecture, 4:30 p.m.
Kansas Union. "The USIS and Career
Opportunities Therein".-Keith Adamson,
deputy director, Voice of America.
SUA Classical Film 7 p.m. Fraser Theater *Un Chien Andalou* and *Blood*
*Theatre*
Timely Topics Discussion. 7:30 p.m.
St. Lawrence Center, 1910 Stratford Rd.
"Dependence of the Bible on the Church"
Roy, Brendan, Downey
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Graduate Recital, 8 p.m., Swarthout
Recital Hall, Sharon Sooter, soprano.
Miss Lawrence Pageant Finals, 8 p.m.
Ballroom, Kansas Union.
Newman Club Executive meeting. 8:30 p.m.
1915 Stradford Rd. Important meeting.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 28, 1964
Britisher to Teach English
LONDON—(UPI)—An enterprising member of Parliament has opened a language school, one of whose objects is to teach Americans to speak English.
The school's operator is Richard Reader Harris, who says to-mah-to, instead of to-may-to.
"It's by public demand (pronounced dee-mahnd)," he said. "I keep meeting Americans who want to acquire just that touch of the old school tie or Oxford accent for business or social purposes.
"They seem to think it adds a bit of class (clahas)."
The idea (eye-dee-ah) of Americans having to learn their own language made me laugh (larf), but I showed up at the Imperial Language Center in Jueens Gate today as the first pupil.
"It's not as unusual as you might think," said the principal, Peter Darby, fellow of the Royal Society of Arts. "Ever since British actors have begun to do well in the United States efforts have been made to imitate their accent.
10
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One
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University Daily Kansan
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
Page 11
One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75; Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 1 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not re-
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 28, 1964
Battle is Vocation—
(Continued from page 1)
His legs torn up by shrapnel from a Viet Cong booby trap or mine, calmly lying on a stretcher waiting to be bandaged and evacuated, his dark peasant's face, a mask of resignation.
To the Vietnamese soldier the American advisers are an endless source of fun and "good-smelling" cigarettes. He smilingly watches the tall, lanky large-nosed foreigners—whom he generally considers somewhat naive, and uninitiated—with ill-concealed amusement.
When a unit has to cross one of the thousands of narrow canals which slice the Mekong delta, Vietnamese soldiers will stand aside and gleefully watch the American wobble and sway his way along the single slippery log which serves as an excuse for a bridge. If the foreigner loses his balance and tumbles into the muddy water they will giggle uncontrollably, for Vietnamese rarely laugh in the boisterous fashion of Westerners.
The Vietnamese soldier is quick to acknowledge the American's dedication and bravery but somewhat skeptical of their ability to advise him how to fight his communist enemy.
In Vietnamese eyes the American also takes the war too seriously and is too eager to plunge ahead with frontal attacks and risk his life in close-in combat.
ALTHOUGH THE AMERICAN has only a year to serve in Vief Nam, the Vietnamese soldier has been fighting most of his adult life. For him, the war is endless. He knows that if he survives a battle today he will only have to face another one tomorrow or next week.
He is not highly motivated politically or psychologically, as is his communist enemy, because he receives little effective political training.
A Vietnamese will uncomplainingly accept a drab diet of boiled rice and fried fish if he must. But because war is a way of life, he carries as many of the comforts of home with him as he can.
A Vietnamese unit marching off to battle is an incredible sight, with blackened and battered pots and pans and live chickens and ducks dangling from the troops' bulging knapsacks.
GOOD EATING is a traditional Vietnamese pleasure. At the slightest halt, the troops light fires and cook themselves a snack. Unless it is actively engaged with the enemy, a Vietnamese unit usually stops for a combined lunch and siesta, another traditional Vietnamese pleasure. Orders are sometimes curiously slow coming down from headquarters at lunchtime because
G W
plan now for A SUMMER SEMESTER IN THE NATION'S CAPITAL
at The George Washington University
TWO TERMS
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July 23-August 28
the commander is eating, too, and his staff doesn't want to disturb him
- Air-conditioned classrooms and library
- Housing available in student residence halls
mann doesn't want to disturb him.
Vietnamese soldiers like fresh food and consider the American habit of eating from cans an unnecessary barbarian. An American-inspired attempt to introduce specially-prepared canned Vietnamese C-rations for field use was a miserable failure.
When they run out of their own fresh food the troops help themselves to the peasants' cocoutan, chickens, ducks and eggs but in many cases now are forced by their officers to pay for what they take.
- Urban campus just four blocks from the White House
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Because soldiering has been for centuries such a common occupation in this country, it has become a favorite theme in Vietnamese literature and popular music. Hundreds of popular songs are written around the romantic situation of a soldier fighting at the front while his sweetheart pines for him back home.
WASHINGTON FOREIGN LANGUAGE UNIVERSITY
1861 WEST BROADWAY
HE WILL SPEND a month's pay to buy a Japanese transistor radio so that he can listen to these songs in the field from the nearest government radio station.
The George Washington University
One of these tunes, a sad, litling melody called "A Rainy Evening on the Cambodian Border," has become almost the theme song of the Vietnamese army, a kind of "Lili Marlene" of the second Indochina war. It was banned by Madame Ngo Dinh Nhu during the days of the now defunct Ngo family regime, but re-appeared on the government radio as soon as the Ngo fell.
The young girl calls to her soldier-sweetheart, "What are you doing under the evening rain at the Border? Why do you stand waiting at the edge of the river? Look at the dark and rain-soaked jungle. It seems to tell you to come home and bring joy to your loved one here."
THE SOLDIER ANSWERS. "I am yearning at the front for my sweetheart back home and I love even the color of the shirt she sent me. But I am a man and I also dream of courage in battle and my path lies through the driving rain."
When the sun sets on the rice paddies of the Mekong delta the government soldiers button up inside their little mud-walled forts and hope they will live to see another dawn. The night, they know, belongs to the Viet Cong.
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Democrat Hopefuls For Governorship Explain State Needs
By Lee Stone
Four democratic candidates for governor of Kansas asked for the support of the KU Young Democrats Club last night.
The KU club, which is the largest in the state, had asked the candidates to come here and explain their views on state politics.
The four candidates are George Hart, Wichita; Jules Doty, Ottawa; J. Donald Coffin, Council Grove; and Joseph Henkle, Great Bend.
Jules Doty, a practicing Ottawa attorney, is considered by many Democrats to be a leading contender for the Democratic nomination.
Doty, who favors "liquor-by-the-drink," said, "buy a drink, not a bottle." A ten per cent tax on each drink sold would provide an estimated six million dollars in revenue for Kansas schools, he continued.
DOTY CLAIMS THE SUPPORT of the Kansas City Chamber of Commerce, the Kansas State Chamber of Commerce, Associated Industries, and the tourist industry in Kansas.
Doty said he was in Wichita last week, where he gained entrance to a "private club" of which he was not a member. This club "filled up with University of Wichita students, and no one asked how old they were, either," he said.
In Kansas "there are 1500 bars where they are serving liquor by the drink now," the candidate said. "If liquor by the drink were legalized, these places could be regulated to insure that reputable people run them," Doty said.
GEORGE HART, who is known among Democrats as one of the hardest campaigners in the party, said the issues in the race for governor would be the Sunday closing law, a minimum wage and hour law, taxes, and education. Hart said he had a plan for raising taxes in Kansas, but declined to say what it was.
"If I tell it now, the other candidates will jump up and say 'Me too,'" Hart said. I am not going to tell what it is until I am nominated."
In an interview before the YD's meeting, Hart discussed paramutual wagering at length. It may, therefore, be Hart's plan to offer legislation, if elected, which would introduce para-mutual wagering in Kansas.
"Liquor-by-the-drink" would bring "gangsters and the syndicate into Kansas," Hart said.
Hart, state treasurer during the George Docking administration, said, "I went into the state treasury broke, and I came out broke, and that's a good recommendation."
J. DONALD COFFIN, proprietor of the Council Grove Telephone Company, promised a "grassroots campaign." His program for Kansas includes sixteen issues. Among them are the abolition of the state income tax, placing a two per cent tax on the premiums of Kansas insurance companies and holding foreign corporations liable for violations of Kansas law.
Coffin would also seek legislation that would allow the attorney general to prosecute violations of the code of ethics of the Kansas Bar Association.
During the last election, Coffin ran for lieutenant governor. He was the first in 1964 to announce his candidacy for governor of the state. Coffin is a KU graduate with a degree in law from Washburn University.
JOSEPH HENKLE, who was lieutenant governor during the Docking administration, promised that he would raise taxes only as a last resort. He would provide funds for education by more economical government in Kansas. In 1957 and 1958, a study was made of measures to make Kansas state government more economical, the Great Bend candidate said. "Not a one has been put into effect," he added.
Henkle said he favors a tax write-off for banks on loans made to new Kansas industries. This, Henkle holds, would encourage industrial development in Kansas.
"I am not for liquor-by-the-drink," Henkle said. It would require at least two and one-half years to make such a measure constitutional: Kansas needs revenue immediately, he said.
Although Henkle does not have a college degree, he said he went to junior college. "I've had more correspondence courses in my life than you can shake a stick at," he said.
TWO OTHER DEMOCRAT HOPEFULS were not present at the Young Democrats meeting. One, a leading candidate, Harry Wiles, of St. John, is serving on the Kansas Corporation Commission. The other, Ewell Stewart, Fort Scott, has previously been a candidate for governor running on a prohibition platform. Stewart was not available for comment.
Wiles, in a Topeka interview, said he was campaigning for a school foundation program to solve Kansas' problems in education finance. His goals, if he becomes governor, he says, "are identical to the stated aims of the State Chamber of Commerce."
Wednesday, April 29, 1964
Wiles, a KU graduate, received a degree in business in 1938 and a degree in law in 1941. The hurdle record he set while on the KU track team stood for 22 years.
WILES SUPPORTS a school foundation program, but one which is "realistic and not a compromised conglomeration."
Dailu hansan
Lawrence, Kansas
61st Year, No. 129
ASC Discusses Parking; Elects Miner Chairman
By Gary Noland
A grumbling, dissatisfied All Student Council last night voted unanimously to have a special session to have vice-chancellor Keith Lawton answer questions concerning the recent hike in parking permit fees and increased parking restrictions.
In a letter to the council, Lawton, vice-chancellor for operations, said he was unable to accept an invitation to last night's session because he was out of town.
Instead, Jay Strayer, Shawnee Mission senior and chairman of the traffic and safety committee, explained the reasons behind the parking permit increases and parking restrictions, but failed to satisfy council members who wished a personal audience with Lawton.
Jim Cline, Rockford, Ill., junior, said, "The fee hike is highly discriminatory because the people that will pay for this are going to be the people in the residence halls." (Students who live in the large residence halls must have parking permits to park in the halls' parking lots.)
The revenue from the $6 hike in parking permit fees will be used to hire eight security officers and increase facilities for more strict enforcement of traffic regulations, Strayer explained.
IN CALLING FOR a special session for Tuesday Cline said "the nationale behind the situation is not sound."
"They say that professors and others doing night work need parking privileges while the students pay for this at the tune of $10 a year—to hire more police to give students more tickets," Cline said, describing it as a "vicious circle."
IN OTHER BUSINESS, the council passed a resolution to send letters to Kansas congressmen thanking them for supporting the civil rights bill passed by the House of Representatives, and also urging Kansas senators, Frank Carlson and James B. Pearson, to support cloture on the civil rights debate.
Bill Panning, Ellinwood junior, argued that there may be many KU students who oppose the civil rights bill and would not support such a letter. The ASC should not send the letter as though it is representative of the student body, he said.
"I HAVE NO OBJECTION to sending letters as individuals, but as the ASC, we represent the opinion of the student body.
"And if we are to represent the opinion of the students, we must know what the students feel about it (civil rights bill)." Panning said.
Panning said he would not support the letter and moved that it be amended to read "signed by those members of the council who wish to do so."
His amendment was ruled invalid because the precedent had been established that all letters are signed "All Student Council"
even though some vote against it.
IN OTHER ACTION, the council elected Mike Miner, Lawrence junior, as ASC chairman. Miner has served on the ASC for three years, and has served on all but one of the ASC's committees.
Other officers elected were: Gary Walker, Wichita sophomore, vice-chairman; Ray Meyers, Dodge City senior, treasurer; and Sandee Garvey, St. Louis, Mo., senior, secretary.
Of the three UP bills that were up before the council for a second time, two were defeated and the other tabled.
The bill to establish a student-teacher evaluation committee was defeated 21-1 after Ray Edwards, Bethesda, Md., junior, suggested that this program be handled by the student advisory board.
THE BILL TO establish a food committee was defeated by voice vote when council members explained that residence hall dietitians and the Association of University Residence Halls recommended that this problem be left to individual groups.
A bill to establish a student employment committee was tabled until further investigation could determine its feasibility.
In a report to the council, Chuck Portwood, Shawnee Mission senior and outgoing ASC treasurer, said the council may not go in the red this year, but he recommended that the council appropriate a miscellaneous fund next year for unexpected expenses.
AUFS Speaker
Guinea Freedom Examined
By Tom Moore
The proliferation of bureaucracy in French West Africa is mainly due to the influence and action of the French, according to Victor D. Du Bois.
Du Bois, a representative of the American Universities Field Staff, lectured yesterday in a Political Science 110 class where he talked on "Guinea: The Pilot State."
Du Bois said Guinea, which is located on the west coast of Africa, has been recovering from the French pull out in December of 1958. The French pulled out when the natives of Guinea voted to have independence when offered by French President Charles de Gaulle in early 1958.
DU BOIS SAID "De Gaulle removed almost all the French government administrators from French Guinea in hopes that it would collapse without French guidance."
When all the French administrators and French Civil service workers left, the country was left no more than a handful of Africans to run the suddenly independent country.
When French Guinea (the French was dropped when the country became independent) voted to be independent, De Gaulle promised that all French personnel would be removed within two months of the day of Guinea's independence.
True to their word, Du Bois said, the French were out of Guinea by December of 1958, along with the destruction of much French property by Frenchmen.
"THEY DROVE government cars into the sea, burned public records, and tore out the plumbing in their government apartments," Du Bois said.
The first president of Guinea, Sékou Toure', quickly filled administration and civil service positions with African (Guinea) natives who
In all of Guinea at the time, there were about 13 lawyers who were quickly incorporated into positions of leadership in the government.
showed the slightest possibility of being able to manipulate a post; this went all the way from Foreign Minister to the typists.
With such a situation as having to place untrained natives in positions, Guinea acquired a problem that has become common in many parts of Africa.
THAT PROBLEM, Du Bois said, is that many of the natives began practicing extreme nepotism.
He said this was result of the French influence since nepotism is common in French government, and the old triple law of the man of means in a family or clan is obligated by tradition to support those members of the family which cannot support themselves.
"Since a position of power in the government allowed for such excessive nepotism (hiring of members of one's family), the bureaucracy of Guinea increased at a fantastic rate." he said.
Due to lack of educated leaders, Guinea is a one party country which has control over the press. The press in Guinea enjoys a monopoly and do so by staying in favor with the party in power.
AS AN EXAMPLE of some of the extravagance of some of the former West African republics, he cited a case of a former African colony borrowing several million dollars
Weather
The weather will remain generally fair through Thursday, according to the weather bureau. Winds will be 10 to 20 miles per hour tonight, becoming moderate by tomorrow. Low temperature tonight will be near 45, high tomorrow will be in the 70's.
(the equivalent in French francs) to build the presidential palace in a country which did not have a hospital.
Another African republic spent about $18 million on the president's palace when the budget for the country for that year was only about $25 million, but Du Bois said they were in a hurry to get the palace built.
Much to De Gaulle's disappointment, Du Bois said, Guinea did not collapse through lack of administrators, but the uneducated and unskilled Africans slowed the economy of Guinea greatly, although not to the point of collapse.
In the past six years, he said, the public has become aware of the corruption in the government and the president has taken several steps to slow down the drain. "This drain in some of the republics accounts is for as much as 60 per cent of national budget; most of which goes to government family employees who sit around offices doing nothing to earn their wages."
THE PRESIDENTS of African Republics have given talks about the terrible corruption in government that they are part of, but only until recently have the officials become alarmed as to the growing dissent of the populations of these republics.
Some of the presidents have taken steps of reducing the number of ministers, reduce the number of parliamentarians, and cutting down on the privileges of government officials.
Some of the privileges, aside from a general government pay of $100 per week for ministers, are a paid for apartment, paid for trips (as many as 20 trips to France per year by ministers is not uncommon), and a free hand as to who and how many employees ministers may have, Du Bois said.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 29, 1964
Please Explain
If you know the meaning of "banal" or what Rubens did for a living, you're ahead of most college graduates.
GEORGE GALLUP, who ought to have enough to do predicting elections this year, sent out 327 pollsters who gave thousands of people the following quiz:
1. Who is the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court?
2. If ships are denied the use of the Suez Canal what route do they usually travel to get from England to India?
3. Does the Constitution of the United States prohibit a third term for Presidents?
4. Who is usually regarded the father of psychoanalysis?
5. What is the chief religion of Pakistan?
6. Just as a rough guess, what per cent of profit would you say the average company makes?
7. Can the Supreme Court nullify or rule out a law passed by Congress and approved by the President?
8. What is the shortest air route from Seattle to Stockholm?
With which country do you connect
9. Nehru? 10. Nasser? 11 Adenauer?
Can you tell who these persons were or what they did to become famous?
13. Thackeray? 13. Rubens? 14.
Tiberius? 15. Strindberg? 16. Emerson?
17. Mozart? 18. Gainsborough?
19. Pasteur? 20. Livy? 21.
Kant? 22. Vermeer? 23. Sibelius?
24. Schopenhauer?
Gallup's conclusion, printed in Sunday's "This Week," was that, "although college training might impart a great deal of knowledge in a special field, it does not improve a person's general knowledge as much as you might expect."
HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES averaged seven correct; those who had attended college averaged nine; college graduates answered 12. Really a hard test.
Please.
Someone discover that George Gallup somehow messed up his usually accurate statistics.
Someone tell me he took the test and scored 24.
SOMEONE TELL ME these little facts aren't things everybody picks up in high school courses and general reading.
Someone convince me people don't need at least a superficial knowledge of their cultural background and current events.
Someone please explain how the average U.S. college graduate could miss half the questions on this simple, simple, simple test.
- Margaret Hughes
Answers to Gallup Quiz
1. Earl Warren 2. Around Africa
3. Yes 4. Freud 5. Moslem 6. Under
10 per cent 7. Yes 8. Over the North
Pole
9. India 10. Egypt 11. West Germany
12. English novelist 13. Painter
14. Roman emperor 15. Swedish dramatist 16. American essayist 17. Composer 18. English painter 19. Scientist 20. Historian 21. Philosopher 22. Painter 23. Finnish composer 24. Greman philosopher
The People Say . . .
Unjust Punishment
In reply to Mr. Franklin's letter in the UDK:
Someone should inform this naive, ill-informed gentleman of a few facts. It is my intention to enlighten him.
I will grant him the fact that many of our young feminine beings have lost one of their most sacred possessions due to morals, but that is all I will grant him.
Scarlet fever has taken this sacred possession away from a good percentage of our women. I ask you, should we expel these girls after they fail their virginity tests?
RULE OF "GERMANE DISCUSSION"
SENATE TALK
OLD FLAPJAH
What about the girls who have lost their virginity due to a fall they have taken during childhood? Should we expel them when they fail the test?
HERBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
There are many other diseases that have taken some of our young ladies' virginity away. Some of them are such diseases as smallpox and measles. Should they be expelled?
"Ah, Who Wantsa Walk A Straight Line Anyhow?"
Dailijfransan
University of Kansas student newspaper
* *
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Representation 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.
Lawrence sophomore
Fred J. Black
There are sports, such as tennis, field-hockey, and horseback riding which also cause the loss of virginity in young women. Do you, I submit, want to expel them too?
If Mr. Franklin is looking for a solution to the morals problem on campus, I suggest he look elsewhere. Too many, not at fault, would be unjustly punished.
Absurdity
In reference to the letter in the April 23rd issue of the UDK by Mr. Franklin concerning his solution to the women's disciplinary problem, we find it hard to believe that he is actually serious, but apparently he is. A virginity test is not only the most absurd thing we have ever heard of, but should be labeled as outright slander toward the women of the University of Kansas.
There is absolutely no logical connection between late hours and a solution involving a test such as that proposed by Mr. Franklin. This is an institution of learning in a free nation, and a physical examination on moral principles is not only an invasion of privacy but certainly no cause to be expelled from the University!
Perhaps Mr. Franklin, to set his mind at ease, would like to conduct the tests himself.
Peter V. Bieri
Seneca freshman
Tom Petroshak
Shawnee-Mission freshman
Bob Leiter Cunningham freshman
Raymond Naughton St. Louis, Mo., freshman
From Other Campuses
Marijuana
Twelve students at the University of Colorado were recently acquitted of a narcotics charge. All twelve had been either using marijuana, selling it, or carrying it.
District Judge William E. Buck ruled that marijuana was not a narcotic as defined by Colorado statute.
An expert witness gave this testimony: "Marijuana has no addictive powers, it does not have the habit-forming characteristics even tobacco may have."
Judge Buck ruled the Colorado narcotics statute was unconstitutional for two reasons: (1) Marijuana exhibits characteristics different from a narcotic as defined by law, and (2) The State Board of Health's power to define a narcotic was ruled an unconstitutional delegation of legislative authority.
In theory, the lives of some of the 12 defendants were at stake since state statute provides the death penalty for selling narcotics to anyone under 25.
Jews in Alabama
The University of Alabama elected a Jewish student to the presidency of the student body. The UA newspaper, the Crimson- White, proudly announced that the campus was no longer "a home for bigots."
"The nation should take another look at our campus," wrote a student, "and at a recent trend which separates us from the stereotype (of the South)."
Fag Ban at M.U.
At the University of Missouri, the administration is investigating the feasibility of banning cigarette machines from campus. . .
Racial discrimination in fraternities is a hot topic of debate at MU now. The KU Greek Week demonstrations have apparently become a factor of consideration. The editor of the MU Maneater wrote: "Many IFC members feel, and even have been warned, that the KU Greek Week picketing by CORE (sic) members might be repeated here." (The Congress on Racial Equality had nothing to do with the KU demonstrations.) "Several fraternities on that campus still have white clauses, and all practice de facto segregation."
Loud Speakers Solo In Electronic Music
Two sopranos and a series of Altec and Ampex loud speakers were the soloists at the choral music concert of the contemporary American music symposium here last night.
THE SPEAKERS were the unique part of the music of guest composer Vladimir Ussachevsky. The sopranos had a more conventional task.
"Three Shakespearean Songs" by Arthur Frackenpohl, a setting of Edna St. Vincent Millay's "Afternoon on a Hill" by Thomas Bricecetti, "Psalm 148 (Praise the Lord)" by Maurice Weed, "Love Spell" and "Spell of Sleep" by Juli Nunlist, and two of the 12 Weinheber madrigals by Paul Hindemith.
The program, besides Mr. Ussachevsky's "Creation," included:
The Frackenpohl offerings were traditional in harmony and sparkled with rhythmic freshness. Mr. Frackenpohl writes well for voices, and when it is needed he can produce a good singing melody, Ineta Williams, Wichita junior, sang the solo in the second song, "Never Doubt I Love," with sureness and a fine musical sense.
THE BRICCETTI AND WEED numbers were rather ordinary and directionless. To this reviewer they were uninteresting.
However, the audience of 500 was then treated to the beautiful sonorities and contrapuntal textures of Mrs. Nunlist's two pieces, "Love Spell" seemed to have all the direction that the Briccetti and Weed pieces lacked, and was greatly enhanced by the rich soprano voice of Patricia Wise, Wichita sophomore. "Spell of Sleep" created a lovely nocturnal mood.
Mrs. Nunlist, a housewife from Chagrin Falls, Ohio, wrote better choral pieces than the two men, established composers, who preceeded her.
THE HINDEMITH PIECES are generally unknown, although they are fine music. Hindemith, who died last December, was the outstanding German musical craftsman of our time. His work has had great influence on American contemporary music, since he taught for more than 10 years at Yale, beginning in 1943.
The gigantic challenges of the avant-garde "Creation-Prologur" of Ussacnevsky were met adequately by Mr. Krehbiel, his Chamber Choir, a few members of the Concert Choir, Mr. Ussachevsky and his machines. Electronic music of this type proved to be both a novel and exciting experience for the audience, which did not find the piece nearly as weird as it had supposed. One might even say it was rather nice.
E. John Taddiken
Wednesday, April 29, 1964 University Daily Kansan
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U.S. Chess Champion to Play Fifty KU Students-At Once
en
The present U.S. Chess Champion for the fifth time, Bobby Fischer, will be the guest of the KU Chess Club tomorrow.
Youngest player ever to win the National Junior Championship, Fischer will appear at 7 p.m. in the ballroom of the Kansas Union.
After giving a lecture about one or more of his games from the recent U.S. Championship competition in which he achieved a 11-0 result against a field of U.S. masters, Fischer will give an exhibition of his skill by playing 50
Seven men have been elected officers of the KU Alpha Psi chapter of Phi Epsilon Kappa, professional physical education fraternity.
Jan Jantzen, Hill City sophomore president; Dave Schichtle, Tulisa, Okla. junior, vice-president; Monty Nelson, Lawrence sophomore, secretary; Harley Cordray, sophomore, secretary; Martin Fort Worth, Tex junior, sergeant-at-arms; Dennis Bender, Luray junior, historian; and Darol Rodrock, Marysville sophomore, guide.
Officers Elected For PE Fraternity
AT THE AGE of six Fischer,
a 20-year-old from Brooklyn, N.Y.
learned to play chess.
games simultaneously, Charles Gish, Lawrence graduate student and KU Chess club president, said.
Wednesday, April 29
ALL YOU CAN EAT!
NOW FISCHER has become the most widely publicized and controversial chess personality of any generation, Gish said. He has been considered by many to be the greatest chess master in the history of the game. Just how great he really is depends upon his ability to control his greatest enemy—himself. Gish stated.
ONLY $1
(Regular buffet service always available)
Fischer, who never finished high school, is considered to be among the top 10 players in the world today according to the latest rating lists published by the U.S. Chess Federation. He is tied for first in the rating with a Soviet citizen, Tigran Petrosian, for the current world championship.
The Little Banquet MALL SHOPPING CENTER
Anyone who wishes to play against Fischer should send reservations along with $4 to the Student Union Activities office in the union. Spectators will be charged a 50 cent fee at the door.
FRIED CHICKEN
The Classical Film Series
presents Surrealist Films
(Luis Bunuel & Salvador_ Dali)
UN CHIEN ANDALOU
BLOOD OF A POET
(Jean Cocteau)
also: documentary
LAND WITHOUT BREAD
- * *
Wednesday, April 29
Fraser Theater-7:00 p.m.
Admission: $.60
*
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STUDENTS RESERVED SEATS FOR 1964 FOOTBALL
STUDENTS MUST ORDER SEASON TICKETS FOR NEXT FALL'S HOME FOOTBALL GAMES ACCORDING TO THE FOLLOWING PRIORITY SCHEDULE IF THEY WISH TO SIT IN THEIR CLASS SECTION.
*
Monday, May 4 and Tuesday, May 5
Students who will be Seniors, Graduate in the Fall Semester,1964: Students,Law Students
Wednesday, May 6
Students who will be in the Fall Semester, 1964: Juniors
Thursday, May 7
Students who will be in the Fall Semester, 1964: Sophomores
PLEASE READ THE FOLLOWING CAREFULLY
Tickets will be applied for at Allen Field House — 8:30 a.m. to 12:00 noon and 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. daily. Enter north doors of the Field House and go down the east corridor; ID CARDS MUST BE PRESENTED AND EACH STUDENT SHOULD BE PREPARED TO PAY A FEE of $1.50 PER SEASON TICKET AT THIS TIME TO COVER THE COSTS OF ADMINISTRATION. (Any applications for refunds of the $1.50 fee must be made in writing to the Athletic Seating Committee of the All Student Council prior to Sept. 1, 1964).
Group applications, within a priority group, will be limited to not more than twenty-five (25). (Exceptions will be considered in the case of exceptionally large pledge classes or classes within men's or women's residence halls.) It should be noted that independent groups can apply in groups if they so desire. All block applications will be given priority according to the student of lowest classification. The person(s) applying for a group must present ID cards for all members of the group.
Orders may be placed according to the above schedule and information for picking up your tickets next fall will be distributed to you during the 1964 Fall enrollment period. Students who fail to apply during their assigned day will not be given priority with their class section.
After all applications are in during this Spring application, a drawing will be held, within each priority group to determine seat location. In this way an
equal opportunity will be afforded to each student so long as you have made application on your assigned priority date. Individual orders and group orders will each be numbered and carry the same weight in the drawing of lots. The Athletic Seating Committee of the ASC will supervise the drawing of lots soon after the end of the ticket application period.
Season tickets for student spouses who are themselves students may be ordered at the earlier priority of either spouse. Season tickets for student spouses who are not themselves students may be ordered at the time their student spouse orders his or her ticket. The price for all student spouse tickets is $7.50. A price of $6.50 applies to housemothers, whose orders may be placed during any priority period.
New 1964 medical students will apply at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City next fall for their season tickets.
Pep Club members must present evidence of membership to be assigned seats in pep club sections. Members of the University Marching Band will have seats reserved automatically and need not order tickets.
To speed up group applications, arrange ID cards according to the following: A-F, G-L, M-R, S-Z, and present these grouped ID's to the proper tables set up in the East Lobby of Allen Field House.
NOTE: ID Cards Alone Will NOT Admit Students to Football Games Next Fall. A Reserved Seat Ticket Will Be Necessary
- The TCU game is played during the week of enrollment and for this reason, admission to this game will be by your ID card and fall 1964 certificate of registration. All other games will require a student reserved seat ticket.
Page 4
University Dany Kansan
Wednesday, April 29, 1964
AWS to Reveal Survey Results Of KU Women's Values Friday
"Values of KU Women" will be the topic for the Current Events Forum, 4:30 p.m. Friday in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
The presentation is the result of a study made about a month ago by the Associated Women Students (AWS). In determining the values of KU women, the AWS Roles of Women committee requested that KU women students fill out a questionnaire, Patricia A. Behen, Kansas City senior and chairman of the committee said.
The results of the questionnaire were then tabulated by the committee and a panel will evaluate the results Friday.
The panel consists of Emily Taylor, dean of women; the Rev. Paul Davis of the Plymouth Congregational Church; Mr. Max Stalcup, a teacher at Lawrence high school, and Jerilyn Williamson, Bastrop, La., graduate student studying sociology.
Faculty Members
Write 94 Books
Ninety-four books, 859 articles, and 143 book reviews were published by KU faculty members in the 1931-62 academic year, according to the Graduate School's annual listing, "Publications of the Faculty."
Additionally, 112 faculty members served as editors of scholarly journals or performed other editorial work.
The average for this year is one in every five full-time faculty published a book, better than one in five performed major editorial work, better than one in four contributed a book review, and by average every faculty member wrote and had published one and one-half articles.
MISS LAWRENCE - KU PAGEANT
Now the official preliminary to MISS AMERICA PAGEANT
will feature the evening gowns, talent and swim suit presentation at the
KU Union Ballroom
8 p.m. Wednesday, April 29
Miss Lawrence—K.U. will be crowned by Karen Schwartz Miss Kansas of 1964
Tickets at the door — admission $1.00
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]
Wednesday, April 29, 1964 University Dally Kansan
Page 9
Thefts, Measles Hit Watkins
The big missing article is a 14th or 15th century Dutch painting which had been on loan from the art museum, and which hung to the right of the pharmacy window.
A centuries-old Museum of Art painting, a staff minutes book and a sofa cushion are missing from Watkin's Hospital.
The 32 by 46 inch painting reflects the artist's image in a brass pitcher and is in heavy browns, blacks and greens, bordered by green velvet.
"IT IS HARD TO remember details of a picture you see every day." Dr. Ralph Canuteson, director of the hospital, said. "The art museum cannot identify it or estimate the value since it was loaned to us about ten years ago when the museum was being reorganized."
As near as the hospital can guess, the painting was taken the night of March 29, probably after midnight. The lobby is kept open all night.
"The nurse on duty had some rather rowdy students come in about 12:15 but we did not notice the picture missing until the next day," he said.
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"We did not think we would have to nail any pictures to the wall or cushions to the chairs in a hospital."
DR. CANUTESON SAID a cushion from the sofa in the main lobby was taken several days ago. "It is not likely this was picked up by accident, as it would probably make a good cushion for a sand bar party.
LASTS LONGER STAYS-LWELIER
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"The weekly staff meeting minutes book was probably picked up by accident." Dr. Ralph Canuteson said.
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Thefts are not the only problem facing Watkins Hospital. German measles are attacking many KU students, and with it comes the problem of isolating the students suffering from measles.
"It looks just like a notebook and was undoubtedly picked up by mistake at the front desk. If this is discovered to be the case we would appreciate having it returned."
ACCORDING TO medical law, students with measles can't be locked up by quarantine but they should be isolated.
Dr. Canuteson said that in a close community such as KU, students running around campus and living groups with the measles are infecting those they come into contact with.
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"After the rash has broken out the persons can still contaminate we prefer to put them in the hospital as long as we have beds in order to protect others.
"We have had a constant succession of cases of the three day, or German, measles all year but there have been many more cases since spring vacation.
HURRY! It May End Soon!
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"ONE DAY LAST week we had ten students in Watkin's with the measles, but we are more worried about those running around spreading them."
"The student definitely needs to limit his activities for a few days and get plenty of rest."
2 BEST OF KIND MOVIES 'BATTLE GROUND' AND
Dr. Canuteson said the symptoms vary but usually resemble those of a cold, such as slight temperature and sore glands before the rash appears.
"GO FOR BROKE"
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When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
U.S.
Let's say for a minute, this is you.
Once you wear the gold bars of a second lieutenant in the United States Air Force, what's in store for you?
Well, you may fly an aircraft entrusted with a vital defense mission. Or you may lead a research team tackling problems on the frontier of knowledge. You'll be helping to run an organization that's essential to the safety of the free world.
Sounds like you'll be called on to shoulder a good deal of responsibility, doesn't it?
But when you come right down to it, that's what your college U.S. Air Force
years have been preparing you for. You've got ability and a good education. Now's the time to put them to work!
You'll have every opportunity to prove your talents in the Air Force. By doing so, you can put yourself and your country ahead.
If you're not already enrolled in ROTC, you can earn your commission at Air Force Officer Training School-a three-month course that's open to both men and women college graduates. To apply,
you must be within 210 days of graduation.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 29, 1964
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 PLAZA SOUTH
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The difference is simply: Savings. A Thrifti-Check account will cost little if you need but a few checks per month and amounts for deposit are small. If your personal finances are more active and involve more checks and more dollars, Regular checking may be more economical for you.
Let us help you decide. We have both.
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The "Progress Corps" comes to the Fair
General Electric men and women have been gathering at the New York World's Fair, bringing the latest developments from the wonderful world of electricity.
They've made their pavilion - Progressland - entertaining. It's a bright show, enhanced by the master showmanship of Walt Disney.
But, more than that, it's your chance to see, as in no other way, the career opportunities offered in the electrical industry. For here, under one huge dome, is assembled a full range of the electrical ideas that are helping millions of people throughout the world progress toward better lives. Ideas that come from the people at General Electric, who form a real "Progress Corps."
There are new electronic ideas for medicine that promise better patient
care in our hospitals. Ideas for more efficient factories, less-congested transportation, better community lighting, increased highway safety, and more comfortable living at home And there's the first large-scale public demonstration of nuclear fusion the energy process of the sun.
For you, Progressland is a rare chance to see what General Electric can offer in terms of a meaningful career in engineering, finance, marketing, law, sales and many other specialties.
If this looks like your career path, talk to your placement director. He can help qualified people begin their careers at General Electric.
Progress Is Our Most Important Product
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University Daily Kansan
NSF Awards Thirteen Grants
Wednesday, April 29, 1964
Page 7
Thirteen students at KU have been named recipients of National Science Foundation undergraduate research awards in pharmacy for the 1964-65 year.
Each will receive awards of $800 for research work under a senior faculty member in the School of
Pharmacy this summer and in the 1964-65 school year. The awards are provided by a $25,200 grant to the University from the NSF.
ademic-year appointment only)
Robert D. Bennett, third-year, Eureka;
Jerry L. Born, third-year, Beloit;
William D. Brodble, fourth-year,
Eureka; Sharon S. Fink, third-year,
Manhattan; Quentin E. Gilman,
third-year, Manhattan; Thomas B.
Harrison, third-year, Liberal.
Each of the 13 undergraduate research scholars are enrolled in the School of Pharmacy. They are: Larry D. Alkire, third-year, Plainville (ac-
Two are Initiated Into Architecture Society
Tau Sigma Delta, national architecture honor society, held its formal initiation last night in the Castle Tea Room.
The initiates were Kurt Von Achen, Eudora graduate student, and William Textor, Leavenworth senior.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Political Science Lecture, 4:30 p.m.
Kansas Union, "The USIS and Career Opportunities Therein"-Keith Adamson,
deputy director, Voice of America.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Carillon Recital, 7 p.m., Albert Gerken. SUA Classical Film, 7 p.m., Fraser Theater. "Un Chien Andalou" and "Blood of a Poet."
Timely Topics Discussion, 7:30 p.m.
St. Lawrence Center, 1910 Stratford Rd.
"Dependence of the Bible on the Church"
-Roy, Brendan Downey.
Mr. Charles S. Haines II, New York architect and 1929 graduate of KU, was made an honorary member.
Graduate Recital, 8 p.m. Swarthout Recital Hall, Sharon Sooter, soprano.
Miss Lawrence Pageant Finals, 8 p.m.
Ballroom, Kansas Union.
Newman Club Executive meeting, 8:30
Pond Road, Rd. Important meeting, 915 Strat-
ford Rd.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
TOMORROW
Varsity Tennis, 2:30 p.m. Allen Field House Courts, KU-Creation U of Omaha
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m.
St. Luke's Church, 10:30 a.m.
Holy Communion, 11:30 a.m., St.
Mathematics Staff Seminar, 3:30 p.m.
119 Strong. "On a Conjecture of Minkowski in the Geometry of Numbers"—Peter Gruber.
Poetry Hour, 4:30 p.m., Music Room,
Kansas Union.
Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion.
4:30 p.m., Pan American Room, Kansas Union.
AAUN Banquet, 6:30 p.m. Eldridge
Holt Jeff Adamson, Voice of America,
speaker.
SU Chess Exhibition, 7 p.m. Baller-
ansas Union, Bobby Fischer, U.S.
Champion
Philosophy Lecture. 7:30 p.m., 108
COLUMBIA, Discussion of Differences"
—Ernest Harris.
Western Civ Extra Lecture, 7:30 p.m.
Museum of Art Lecture Room. Gerald
Bernstein. Dept. of Art History—"Art
is the 20th Century."
Christian Science Organization, 7:30
am Danforth Chapel. Everyone welcome.
Delta Sigma Sha Public Affairs Speak-
ments Rho 8 p.m., Big 8 Airways, Kansas
Union,
Mary E. Hodges, fourth-year,
Monument; Danny L. Lattin, fourth-
year, Smith Center; Duane D. Miller,
third-year, Larned; Kenneth F.
Nelson, fourth-year, Herington;
Eugene J. Sparks, fourth-year, Glendora,
N.J., and Don D. Vannaman,
third-year, Ashland.
Christian Family Movement (CFM).
8 p.m. St. Lawrence Center, 1915 Strat-
nation Social Inquiry on "Discern-
nation in Our Community." Visitors
welcome.
College Life, 9 p.m. 808 Mississippi St.
St. Johns and slides on Arrowhead
Springs.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
Der deutsche Stammtisch trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 30. April, um 4 Uhr 30 in der "Bierstube," 14th-Tenn. Es gibt Möglichelchen auf deutsches zuwahren wir sind immer allerlei deutsche Lieder. Alle sind herzlich eingeladen.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday. April 29.1964
LAMSAS
Harley Catlin
Mitchell Transfers Catlin From Guard to End Spot
Harley Catlin, veteran Jayhawk guard, has been shifted to end in Spring practice by Coach Jack Mitchell.
Catlin's change of position is one of four player changes which have been announced by Mitchell this Spring.
KU has only two returning lettermen at the ends since Larry Fairchild, Salina veteran, was shifted to center. The two are All-Big Eight holdover Mike Shinn and Bob Robben.
In still another move, Mitchell switched 266-pound tackle Richard Pratt to guard. He also returned Sandy Buda, Omaha freshman to end after a trial at guard, and he moved R. B. Miller, Platt City, Mo., to fullback from guard.
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Netmen to Meet Creighton U.
The KU tennis team will play a match with Creighton University this afternoon on the courts west of Allen Fieldhouse.
The KU team will be out to improve a record of 12 wins and only two defeats.
The Jayhawks split a pair of matches with Wichita University and dropped one match to Oklahoma University, favorites with KU to take the Big Eight championship.
Friday afternoon at 1 p.m. KU will play the third of a series of matches with Wichita. The first meeting between the two teams this season brought KU a 4-3 victory. The next day, Wichita won as it defeated KU in the final two doubles matches and won both doubles matches to win 4-3.
Members of the tennis team are:
Jim Burns, St. Joseph, Mo., junior;
Lance Burr, Salina junior; Jay
Lysaught, Oklahoma City, Okla.
sophomore; John Guyot, Arkansas
City junior; John Grantham, Topeka
sophomore, and Barry McGrath,
Topeka junior.
A
Dance to the Furys Friday at the Dine-a-Mite
THERE'S ALWAYS TIME TO READ A GOOD BOOK KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE
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Page 9
Model U.N. Offers Opportunity To Consider World Problems
By Linda Ellis
For the fifth time KU students will w rangle with the problems of the world and try to resolve a few of them.
Wednesday, April 29, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Since its introduction in 1960, the Model United Nations has been the place where students can see a reasonable facsimile of the world body in action.
At the first meeting of the Model UN in the spring of 1960, students representing about 70 countries voted on resolutions concerning the admission of Red China to the UN, the banning of nuclear testing and Algerian independence.
The 1964 session will be Friday and Saturday.
In the initial activity over the new function, students wrote papers about the functioning of the United Nations and interest in the whole system was boosted.
OF THE THREE resolutions discussed during that session all were passed during the individual voting on the second day of the assembly. The resolution on Red China was defeated during the nation voting.
At the first Model UN, former President Harry S. Truman gave the opening address to a convocation in Hoch Auditorium.
At the second meeting of the Model UN in 1961, the Red China issue was dropped and Cuba and the Congo were the major questions of the day. The "UN" had grown to 82 nations and there were four resolutions passed in place of the former three.
AT THE 1963 meeting, the focus had again gone back to disarmament, allowing Red China to participate in programs of specialized UN agencies and placing foreign aid grants on an international basis. At this last meeting, Frederick R. Boland, president of the United Nations Security Council, delivered the keynote address.
With an enlarged program, the Model UN will open May 1 and will consider at least eight resolutions.
The resolution on the admittance of the Peoples Republic of China is again on the agenda. There is also one concerning disarmament. Some of the new problems to be discussed deal with the Arab-Israel crisis and the Oder-Neisse boundary of Poland.
As in past meetings of the Model UN, delegates from many foreign countries will discuss and argue over some old and some relatively new problems to the world community.
ANOTHER RESOLUTION condemns apartheid policies in South Africa as "incompatible with membership in the United Nations." It also says the UN and other agencies should deny economic and technical assistance to South Africa.
The Model UN has followed the mechanical ideas of the United Nations and has tried to vote the way the representative countries would. On the second day of discussions, the student delegates will get a chance to express their personal views. In the past, student voting has been opposite bloc voting.
The 1964 Model UN session has, as yet, no keynote speaker. It does have before it a number of controversial topics that will give students an opportunity to see how various countries think and act in regard to the United Nations.
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THURSDAY, APRIL 30 STARTING TIME — 7:00 P.M. UNION BALLROOM
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 29, 1964
Master Plan For Bicycles Announced
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe today made public a new campus master plan for bicycle parking and traffic.
Main features of the plan are (1) construction of many new parking racks to accommodate the increasing number of bicycles, and (2) a minimum amount of traffic regulation, just enough to keep bicycle usage safe and orderly.
Many of the new racks will be added this summer, said Keith Lawton, vice chancellor for operations.
Several types of racks have been designed by Alton Thomas, University landscape architect, with an eye toward making them both functional and unobtrusive. Thomas' design for a recessed concrete parking rack, now in use at several locations on the campus, has been widely praised and copied by other schools, Lawton said.
As for the traffic regulations, they are few, simple, and similar to those followed by other vehicles. These five regulations have been included in next September's KU parking and traffic regulations:
- Bicyclists on the campus must follow the Motor Vehicle Code of the State of Kansas unless clearly not applicable.
- Every bicycle on the campus must display a current city of Lawrence bicycle license decal. The license fee is 25 cents.
- The ordinances of the City of Lawrence pertaining to moving traffic, as applicable to bicycles, prevail on the campus streets, driveways and parking lots.
- State regulations prohibit the operation of bicycles upon any sidewalk or pedestrian walk on the campus.
- Bicycles must not be parked in campus buildings.
A new booklet listing these regulations and other vehicle parking and traffic regulations is available at the Traffic and Security office in Hoch Auditorium.
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REAL PET
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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
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616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350
BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ... $.98
BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ___ $.98
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Motor tune-up, wheel balancing
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all motor brands
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Classified Ads FOR SALE
Schwinn Traveller bicycle. Men's, one year old, little used, excellent condition. Two speeds and shifts automatically. Call day, Day III, 3-9765 between 8 p.m. 5-1
1956 VW. $700 or trade. Barrett electric adding machine, $60. Royal portable typewriter, $50. Call VI 2-4287. 5-1
Four used General jet air tubeless tires.
week. Call VI 3-3478 after 5 p.m.
Velvet evening coat. Etched glasses, iced tea, sheer bat, wine, juices, dresses, linens, envelopes, encyclopedia. Furniture, chairs, davenport, bed, and dresser. Call VI 3-0309.
1963 VW sunroof. Excellent shape. Call VI 2-3147. 5-4
1958 TR-3. Silver, fairly cheap. Call VI
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1948 Plymouth 4 door. Radio, heater,
orange color. $80. Evening and week-
ends call VI 2-3778. Runs smoothly, not
an oil burner. 5-4
1962 Norton 850 cce. cycle, Good condi-
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1660 Norton motorcycle 350 c.c. Excellent Contact. Gene at 742-358-9531 Mass., after 4 p.m. 5-1
Page 11
Zeiss Binocular Microscope, 5X, 8X, 40X,
and oil immersion (90X) objectives
10X oculars. $250. Call VI 2-1940.
5-1
1958 black and white ford convertible.
Power steering and brakes, good condition,
original owner. Call VI 3-5003, 1618 Rose Lane.
The newest and greatest sound to hit campus! When the BANDITS PULL Away you'll hard notice the loss in them they leave. Call Larry Breeden, VI 3-8544.
3-bedroom house on cul de sac near KU in Schwegler School district. Ceramic tile kitchen and bathroom, oak floors, 12 x 12 dining room with sliding glass doors, full basement with sliding glass doors, teached large fenetre yard with teached trees and beautiful 140' rock wall. No special assessments. $15,750. VI 2-005. 4-30
Toy poodles. $50 each, 1 black, 1 brown,
1 white. Adorable pets. After 4 p.m.
Cecil Browning, Linwood, Kansas. Call
44F3. 4-30
Wedding dress, size 7-8. 1817 La. Upstairs, west apartment. 4 to 6 p.m.
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
cream --$85. Lawrence Outdoor.
1065 M $
Student will sell all guns in collection.
45 auto's, Lugers, 38 revolvers, miniature automatics, Roger 22's, 410 doublb. 30.06 Deer action. While they last! 22 LR. $6.50 per carton. Call VI 3-1110 after 6 p.m. 5-7
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME
WHEELS, Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale
at great savings after 6 p.m. weekdays.
Saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut
tt
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the *Weights Notes*. Cited in Fee delivery *$4.50* Weights civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive commimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery **tt** For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3-8040 after 5 p.m.
FOUND
Typewriter, new and used portables,
standards, electrics. Olympia, Hermes,
Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables.
Typewriter, addr. rentals and service.
Lawrence Typewriter. 735 Mass. St.
VI 3-3644.
Pink girl's prescription glasses left at party Saturday night CV II 5-1995. 4-30
FOR RENT
One and two bedroom apartments. 1232
La. Call VI 3-4271. 5-12
Married, grad students, faculty. Efficiency apartment from $65 and small house from $70. Available in June. Call now Sante Apartments, 1123 Ind., VI 3-2116
AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS DALE'S BODY SHOP
All makes & models
trame - body - fender - glass
VI 3-4732 704 Vermont
VI 3-4732 704 Vermont
Artists - Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics
George's Hobby Shop
1105 Mass. VI 3-5087
JOE'S BAKERY
Bachelor Studio Apartment for graduate or older undergraduate men. 1½ block from Union. Newly remodeled, nicely furnished studio with ideal study conditions. A few still available at low summer rates. Singles and doubles. For appointment call VI 3-8534
616 W. 9th
Large, homey, attractively furnished, 4
bedroom. Kitchen has gas stove, summer
rates. Kitchen built-ins and garbage
disposal. Utilities paid except for
summer months.
3 room furnished efficiency apartment,
2 bedroom, 1 full size street parking. Close to Stadium. Adults only. No pets. Possession immediately or
summer rates. Inquire
1001 Mississippi. 4-29
1 bedroom attractively furnished apartment in quiet location. Large cool room with balcony. Will rent for all or part of summe to married, grad, or responsible student Must be reserved now. $65 per month 1-3255 Apt. D or call VI 5-407 1-93 3223
Married, grad students, faculty, 2-bedroom, from $75. Only 4 left for June. Reserve now. Call for brochure, VI3-2116. Santee Apartment, 1123 Indiana.
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.
Open 24 hours except Saturday evening
Single or double room. Furnished, cook-
ing equipment provided. Paid. Call
2-9451 or see at 1244 Ls.
Crescent Heights two bedroom apart-
bud. Phone VI 2-3711.
Kappa Sigma Sweetheart pin with pearl.
Vancy Constack at VI 3-9123. 4-29
Vancy Constack at VI 3-9123. 4-29
Gold woman's watch. Reward. Call Anne,
Room 433, VI 3-9123. 5-4
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month old brown collie shepherd that
Cappa Sig Fraternity, VI 3-1702. 4-29
TYPING
Experienced typist would like typing in her home. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Marvin Brown, 1725 Kentucky. VI 2-0210. 5-12
25c delivery VI 3-4720
Term paper and the 3-7172 by experienced typist. Call VI 3-7172 after 5:30 p.m. 4-30
Term papers accurately and neatly typed on good grade bond paper. Minor corrections, carbon copy, extra first page.
Call VI 3-0875. 5-21
Experienced secretary would like typing.
2565 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122 Henderson
4-30
Term paper or thesis typed to your
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Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work status. Phone VI 3-8379. Charles Patti.
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Portraits of Distinction
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721 Mass. VI 3-0330
HIXON STUDIO
Accurate expert typist would like typing a prompt service. Call VI T-3-2651. Prompt service. Call VI T-3-2651.
Experienced secretary would like typing home. Reasonable rates. Call VI at 1188
Fast, accurate work done on electric,
hydraulic power rates. Call Betty,
Vincent, VI 3-5804.
on shocks, mufflers, tail pipes and installation.
$ $ $ $ $ CAR OWNERS SAVE UP TO 40%
University Daily Kansan
- Trained mechanics for quality service
- All makes and models
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Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason- sittations and theses, phone VI 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson.
- Your satisfaction
GUARANTEED
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, Vol I: 3-7485. tf
Montgomery Wards
Experienced typist for thesis and term paper. Send resume to Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 0-8588.
Term papers. Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tt
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, and reports to the college rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEidowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-886t
Professional typing by experienced secretary.
New electric typewriter, carbon
printer. Mail reply to:
VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 408 West 13th. tf
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typerwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Bairrow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1645.
Auto Service Center
729 N.H. VI 2-1708
MILKILLENS SOS—always first quality
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THE NAME FOR SERVICE
L&M CAFE now under new management WE WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Every Monday, there are excellent lunches, dinners, and sandwiches Your second cup of coffee always free
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
Pre-nursery, play and learn group has
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elds. May 1 to Aug 1. Air conditioned
home with wading pool. Teacher with
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Call VI. 2-3749
Have a party in the Big Red School
in the door and plant
Heated. Call VT 3-7453.
MISCELLANEOUS
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. t
★ TUNE-UPS
The Cateacombs 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
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
Opportunity for male keyboard musician interested in sales demonstrations. Write giving age experience, type of instrument and education to University Daily Kansan, Box 10. 5-4
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
HELP WANTED
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Girl to play electric organ part-time Call VI 3-4743.
BURGERT'S Shoe Service
Service for Shoes Since 1910
1113 Mass. St. VI 3-0691
ART'S TEXACO
9th & Mississippi
VI 3-9897
FREE! qt. of oil with oil change & filter
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Generator & Starter Repair
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JACK & GUNN'S
WANTED
Large or small amplifier component system. Call Carl Schwam, 5-7025.
300 W. 6th
Cash paid for your book store receipts.
No waiting period. Call Vi 2-0180. 5-4
Riders wanted from Lawrence to K.C.
and back this summer. Leave in morning
and return in evening. For information
call VI 2-4568 after 6 p.m. 5-8
--of
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729 N.H. VI 2-1708
AT HONN'S LAUNDRY IT'S
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Clean — your whole wash — the Honn way Wash 20c Dry 10c
Clean your best suits and coats in our coin-on dry clean machine
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featuring
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VI2-9445
尚
Highway 59 South
Across from Hillcrest Golf Course
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 29,1964
Peasant Changes Into 'Phantom-Like' Figure
The following dispatch describing the Viet Cong guerrilla fighters is the third and last of a series on the men who are waging the war in Viet Nam.
By Neil Sheehan
By Neil Sheenan United Press International
The Vietnamese communist guerrilla is a legendary,phantom-like figure in 20th century warfare. He has proven that his own human resources and ingenuity can defeat the best technology and massive fire-power of modern western-style armies.
Like his government enemy, the average hard-core Viet Cong guerrilla is a South Vietnamese peasant lad in his early twenties.
But by the time he has completed the roughly two years of political and military education which qualify him for full membership in an elite communist regular unit, he is no longer an easy-going cheerful young farmer.
A strange and forbidding metamorphosis has taken place. He has been transformed into a lean, hard and disciplined fighter, capable of lying on his back for hours in the filthy ooze of a flooded rice paddy, breathing through a hollow reed to avoid searching government troops.
HE HAS LEARNED to man a machinegun calmly and with deadly accuracy against strafing fighter-bombers and attacking government troops while the artillery shells crash around his foxhole and his comrades are burned to blackened flesh by flaming napalm.
He can march 15 miles under the tropical sun, plunge into a ferocious four-hour night infantry assault on a fortified government outpost and then march another 15 miles the following day to avoid retaliating government troops.
A hard core Viet Cong's career begins when he is persuaded or sometimes intimidated by a communist political agent in his home village into enlisting in the local village guerrilla squad.
After his day's work in the rice fields, the young peasant listens to long hours of political indoctrination by Viet Cong agents. He is told over and over again that the Americans are "imperialist aggressors" who have invaded South Viet Nam in order to enslave the Vietnamese people and use the country as a Far Eastern military base.
The Americans, who many of these peasants have never seen, are portrayed as "warmongers" who enjoy bombing Vietnamese women and children.
THE PEASANT BOY is told that the Saigon government is a "puppet" of the Americans and that government troops are commanded by U.S. officers and are just "mercenaries."
His grievances against local government officials or militiamen are played upon carefully. He endlessly repeats the lessons he has learned in these indoctrination classes, is criticized by his comrades on how well he has absorbed what he has been told and then criticizes himself, all in public.
The Viet Cong never mention communism in their propaganda. They portray themselves as nationalists fighting to liberate the country from foreign invaders.
As a village guerrilla, the young peasant also learns to spy on local government outposts and report the
weaknesses in their defenses. He keeps an eye on government troop movements along roads in the vicinity and guides hard-core communist units through his area when they move in.
IF HE PERFORMS well as a village guerrilla he is moved up into one of the communist district companies or platoons. He is still a parttime soldier but his military training is stepped up. The political indoctrination and "self-criticism" sessions never stop.
Soon he graduates into one of the provincial Viet Cong battalions. He is a full-time soldier now and his real military training begins.
Chinese communist leader Mao Tze-tung has said that in order to succeed, the guerrilla must swim like a fish in a sea of the people. The guerrilla is taught the three "togethers" which are the Viet Cong formula for such warfare:
—Live with the people.
-work with the people. Fat with the people.
Eat with the The standard Viet Cong garb typifies this strategy. It consists of the same black shirt and trousers worn by Vietnamese peasants, with a turtle-shaped woven reel helmet covered with a thin plastic fabric to keep off the sun and rain.
WHEN ACTS OF TERRORISM such as beheadings are carried out against local government officials, landlords, or peasants friendly to the government, the recruit is told that these cruel acts are fully justified because these persons are "traitors" to the nation.
IN A HARD-CORE battalion he is commanded by officers who are
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With this kind of leadership, the hard-core communist guerrilla is a formidable enemy.
members of the Vietnamese communist party and who have had years of experience in guerrilla warfare, both against the French and the U.S.-backed government forces. Although they are southerners, these Viet Cong officers have been through staff and command schools in North Viet Nam. Company commanders in one well-known communist battalion average 34 years old with an incredible 16 years of combat behind them.
Dance to the Furys Friday at the Dine-a-Mite
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ARENSBERG'S VI 3-3470 819 Mass
Model UN Delegations Huddle to Plan Maneuvers
Bv Nancy Schroeter
Student delegates huddled in small groups last night to decide last minute maneuvers for action this weekend at the Model United Nations.
SS.
In and around various conference rooms of the Kansas Union, the African, Arab, Western and Soviet blocs conferred on the resolutions on the agenda and proposed amendments and new resolutions.
Eight resolutions now stand on the agenda before the opening of the Model U.N. at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow morning in Hoch Auditorium. The resolutions include proposals concerning the Security Council, South Africa, the admittance of the People's Republic of China, disarmament, Israel, Kashmir Plebiscite.
Oder-Neise boundary of Poland, and peace keeping operations.
THE AFRICAN BLOC stands "solidly behind" the resolution on South Africa, according to Timothy Miller, Wichita sophomore and chairman of the African bloc. The resolution which was proposed by Tanganyika requests economic sanctions against South Africa for its apartheid system. If the sanctions do not work and the policies regarding the colored people by the Republic of South Africa do not improve, member states of the United Nations are asked to break off diplomatic relations with the Republic of South Africa, the resolution states.
The delegation from Dahomey proposed another resolution to support the resolution on South Africa, David Michener, Lawrence senior and head of the delegation from Dahomey, said. Michener said that the African bloc supported the resolution which asks for the African bloc to resist any changes in the agenda. The South Africa resolution is now second on the agenda of business for the Model U.N. Any changes could possibly be made from the floor when the Model U.N. meets.
THE PROPOSAL on the Security Council, asking for a change in the constitution of the Model U.N., is sponsored by the U.S. The present eleven members of the Security Council would be changed to fourteen and an affirmative vote by nine members would be sufficient
for a decision by the Security Council on procedural matters and questions of Pacific Settlement of Disputes, the resolution proposes.
An amendment to the resolution was proposed last night by Ghana and Ethiopia to give veto power back to permanent members of the Security Council. The original resolution takes this power away, Larry Knupp, Great Bend senior and chairman of the delegation from the U.S., said.
New Zealand's resolution proposes to establish a permanent U.N. peacekeeping force under the control of the Secretary-General. The force, composed of from 500 to 1000 volunteers, could be sent into countries requesting the force by the Secretary-General of the UN, John Sharp,
Osawatomic sophomore and chairman of the New Zealand delegation, said.
IF MORE TROOPS were needed,
Sharp explained, a two-thirds vote
of the General Assembly could
approve the use of troop contingents.
An amendment was proposed to this resolution by the Philippines and the Republic of China. The proposed amendment would increase the peace keeping force from the present 500-1000 to 5,000 individuals.
Other resolutions on a denuclearized zone, foreign aid, and the Panama Canal might also be discussed if proposals are brought before the Model U.N. and the General Assembly moves to consider them.
Daily hansan
Lawrence, Kansas
The Model U.N. will start Friday and adjourn Saturday afternoon.
Thursday, April 30, 1964
61st Year, No. 130
the
MISS LAWRENCE-KU—Cathy Bergstrom, Topeka junior, was crowned last night in the Kansas Union Ball Room as Miss Lawrence-KU. Shown flanking Miss Bergstrom are (left) Norma Sharp, Arkansas City junior, the second runner-up and Constance Crum, Manhattan freshman, first runner-up.
KU Girl Chosen Miss Lawrence
Catherine Bergstrom, Topeka junior, was selected "Miss Lawrence-KU" last night, and began a trip that perhaps leads to Atlantic City and the "Miss America" pageant.
Constance Crum, Manhattan freshman, was named first runner-up and Norma Sharp, Arkansas City junior, was second runner-up.
MISS BERGSTROM was selected from a field of 12 semifinalists who participated in evening gown, talent, and swim suit competition last night.
Pat Wise, Wichita sophomore, and Jacki Garland, Lawrence freshman, were also named as finalists, and competed with Miss Bergstrom, Miss Crum and Miss Sharp in a personality competition.
"I guess I'm still stunned," Miss Bergstrom said in a telephone interview this morning.
"Last night I just came home and went to sleep," she said.
Last night I just came home and went to sleep Miss Bergstrom gave an essay on her choice of physical therapy as a career for her talent presentation.
"I cannot deny that helping a child walk for the very first time would be a most rewarding experience," she said.
"And I cannot deny that my gifts of hope and patience are the gifts which I can best give.
"COURAGE IS CATCHING," she concluded.
Miss Bergstrom is a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority, and is active in Angel Flight. She likes to read, sew, and sing, "though never by myself," in her spare time.
She has been a competitive swimmer, and was a medal-winner in the AAU Junior Olympics.
Contestants were judged 50 per cent on talent (trained and potential), and 50 per cent on swimsuit, evening gown, and personality interview competition.
Poise, personality, graciousness, beauty, and gentility were some of the qualities to be considered by the judges.
Joanne Woster, Mission junior, was selected "Miss Congeniality" by a vote of the contestants.
Student Panel Reviews Discrimination Conflict
By Susan Flood
A panel on fraternity-sorority discrimination last night rehashed current controversial issues.
Discussion of the Sigma Nu discriminatory clause, the role of the ASC and the HRC, individual attitudes and barriers, fraternity and sorority national barriers, the administration's role and the "private" rights of selection presented varying views in the questions and answers
According to ASC human rights committee chairman Arthur Douville, Overland Park sophomore and moderator of the panel, the purpose was to bring "outstanding and outspoken individuals together to interact and discuss the issues and to give interested students an awareness and understanding of the issues."
STUDENTS on the panel were Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla. junior and student body president; James Johnston, Independence, Mo., junior and president of the Interfraternity Council; Karen J. Emel, Colby senior and past Chi Omega sorority president; George Ragsdale, Lawrence senior and chairman of the Civil Rights Council (CRC); Mike Elwell, Wichita senior and past president of Sigma Na fraternity; and Thomas Coffman, Lyndon junior and editorial editor of the University Daily Kansan.
Ragsdale answered Douville's first
question about anti-Greek feelings by saying that the picketing of Sigma Nu rush week-end March 21 and the demonstrations at the Greek Week chariot races March 28 had been misunderstood by some to be anti-Greek rather than anti-discrimination.
"This is wrong." Ragsdale said. "In all our literature and articles we went beyond the call of duty to be cognizant and considerate in realizing the benefits of fraternities and the complexities of desegregation. We were protesting racial discrimination only."
Elwell was then asked to explain the accusation of inertia or inability of the Sigma Nu chapter to remove their national discriminatory clause.
ELWELL SAID the chapter had been instrumental at the national convention two years ago in bringing the issue to the floor for a vote. He said that with many Sigma Nu chapters oriented in the South, they were unable to muster a two-thirds majority vote required to have the national remove the clause.
"The voting patterns indicate some change in attitudes in all parts," Elwell said. "If we can present some valid, sincere reasons rather than the expediency of the pressure at KU perhaps we can convince our national leaders to take effective initiative themselves."
Miss Emel then said the main problem facing sororites was the
Wallace and Bishop Sheen Plea for School Prayer
WASHINGTON. — (UPI)—Bishop Fulton J. Sheen and Alabama Gov. George Wallace each attacked Supreme Court decisions forbidding prayers in public schools today and called for action by Congress to override them.
The well known Roman Catholic Prelate and the controversial southern governor appeared before the House Judiciary Committee. The group is considering 147 proposals to amend the constitution to nullify the court's ruling outlawing religious worship as a required part of public school programs.
BISHOP SHEEN criticized the court for taking over what he said was a responsibility of Congress. He said the theory that an effort is being made to eliminate the separation of church and state in this country was "founded on a myth."
Gov. Wallace, in his prepared statement was much stronger. He said the prayer decisions were "part of a deliberate design to subordinate the American people, their faith, their customs and their religious traditions to a godless state."
Bishop Sheen and Wallace appeared after the committee heard a group of leading protestant churchmen condemn proposed constitutional amendments as potential infringements on religious liberty, rather than props for it.
BISHOP SHEEN SAID neither the Catholic nor protestant churches in this country desire any established religion in the United States. He added that "the decision of the Supreme Court on the subject of prayer in schools is founded on a myth—the myth of preventing the establishing of religion or the union of church and state."
Weather
Skies will be partly cloudy today and tonight with chances for a shower today.
Friday the skies will be fair with the winds becoming moderate. The high today is expected in the upper 60's and the low tonight will be in the 50's.
alumni recommendation required for pledging.
"There is a group of interested Greeks who have been meeting since the demonstrations and we are discussing how to get the alumni approval out of the hands of city boards," she said.
JOHNSTON SAID it would be invalid for the IFC to demand the expulsion of Sigma Nu since Sigma Nu has been progressive in its attempts to have the clause removed.
He also said that to cause Sigma Nu to lose its national status would be detrimental to the fraternity system and to the University.
Coffman explained the Kansan is strictly an objective newspaper in its new columns but that the editorials against fraternity discrimination are according to the policy of the editorial editor.
The ASC position was described in part as a mediator group to exchange ideas, analyze and evaluate. Stewart said that as the official organ of the ASC, the HRC should attempt to be liaison between opposing views.
COFFMAN suggested the function of the HRC should be integration, as this was inherent in its name. Stewart replied that the main problem was individual prejudice, which could not be removed by forced integration.
"Forced integration is the last straw," Ragsdale said. "The atmosphere has changed for some progress since the demonstrations, but if the complete refusal to cooperate remains, some intervention may be the only way."
Ragsdale said there is nothing wrong in having KU require that all organizations be free to choose whom they want without binding restrictions.
ELWELL QUESTIONED that even without any clauses, a single member in many fraternities could stop a Negro from being pledged.
"If this should happen soon I would probably scream and suspect discrimination," Ragsdale said, "But even to consider us at all would be an improvement."
"If we consider ourselves leaders at KU then the University should take the leadership in the recognition of equality of all its members," Ragsdale said.
Asked whether fraternities were private or semi-private institutions Johnston said he felt they were private and should remain so as far as the University stepping in.
"TO FORCE integration would be to lose a concept of fraternity." Johnson said. "There will always be groups formed with common interests which may exclude persons for various reasons."
Miss Emel agreed that fraternities
(Continued on page 3)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 30, 1964
New Tradition:
Congrats, Seniors
Today the editorial page of the University Daily Kansan breaks with precedent.
THERE HAVE BEEN HOWLS in the news-
room. "But it's an unbreakable tradition!"
Someone is draping black crepe around the editorial desk. Dark armbands are being passed around.
For a hallowed custom of Page two is (at least temporarily) at an end.
CRITICIZING, with neither sympathy nor mercy, the senior gift.
What ancient tradition do we bury today?
Past editorial writers have blasted such acts of senior beneficence as the relief map of the KU campus, the silver tea service for the Art Museum, and the eight 15-inch loudspeakers for the football stadium.
Not that these comments were unjustified. In fact, we agree with their criticisms.
BUT THE CLASS OF 1964 has broken tradition; and we are forced to follow suit.
Last week the senior class voted to donate $3,000 to the library for a special collection of rare books. In what the co-chairman of the gift committee called an "intellectual choice," the class defeated proposals for a piano for the Forum Room, a commemorative marker, spray nozzles for the Chi Omega fountain, and pomp outfits.
THE BOOK COLLECTION will be a valuable addition to the library and to the improvement of intellectual facilities at the university. We congratulate the senior class for its choice.
Hopefully, the seniors have established a new tradition of worthwhile contributions to their alma mater.
— Margaret Hughes
The People Say..
No Parking
We would like to offer our suggestions for modification of the proposed new parking regulations for the university campus. As we understand it, the new plan would end the present "closed campus" for vehicular traffic at 4:45 rather than 3:30, raise parking fees from $4 to $10, and extend present parking restrictions on "central campus" zones from the present 3:30 to 11:00 p.m.
We have no information regarding expenses, so we must assume the fee raise is justified. Nor do we regard the extension of "closed campus" hours to 4:45 as particularly important, although we fail to see any particular gain from the extension. The point we wish to modify is that of parking zone restrictions extending until 11:00.
From our own experience and that of others, we contend that the various secretaries, administrators and professors who occupy these central zones during the day do not need nearly so much space in the evening hours, since most of them have the good sense to stay home.
Students, however, find the library and laboratories most attractive in the evening hours. Most of them have already made the
trek from outlying dormitories at least once or twice already during the day and appreciate the chance to drive onto the campus in the evening. Many of the coeds in particular appreciate this, since few are partial to long walks on a dark campus in the late hours of the evening. For those of the student body, including a large proportion of the graduate students, who may live several miles from the campus, the ability to hunt out a parking place in the evening is quite important.
We suggest accordingly that rather than extend parking restrictions on all central zones, extend them on only one or two—small ones. We suggest the zone behind Strong Hall and perhaps one of the "F" group. This should meet the needs of the staff who do work in the evenings and at the same time allow the needs of the students to be met. There may be certain administrative difficulties involved in such a plan, but we believe they would be no more difficult than those of policing the entire zoned area.
Jack D. Salmon
Lawrence graduate student
Louis Mallavia
Lawrence graduate student
Teacher Evaluation
Recently the New York Times took up the question of teacher evaluation at the college level while considering the case of an unproductive philosophy professor soon to be released from the faculty of Tufts University. To be sure he had published, but his sole book was considered outside the range of relevant professional work. His teacher performance was evaluated with the statement, "effective in the classroom."
After bringing the Times article to the attention of a Kansas faculty member I commented that published material (considered in volume) and personal characteristics (considered in terms of affective relations with fellow department members) were the only apparent criteria used by academics and faculty administrators for the evaluation and concomitant hiring, firing, and promoting of fellow professionals.
HIGH-CLIMBING
ECONOMIC
OUTLOOK
LONG-STEMMED
POLITICAL
POLLS
LATE BLOOMING
RAILROAD
SETTLEMENT
CROSS-BRED
NUCLEAR
SUTBACK
HERBLOZE
THE WASHINGTON POST
To my surprise the faculty member agreed in essence with what I had considered a facetious remark. He added that the excellence of published material was sometimes important, but that sheer massiveness in a resume of accepted articles and books usually had a highly beneficial impact upon evaluations.
Teaching prowess, he went on, meant "next to nothing" since no one—including a department chairman—would "presume to evaluate a fellow professor and thereby violate the sanctity of academic independence and freedom." He concluded that classroom incompetence was often quite general even in the best of institutions, and could many times be found in the seminars and lectures of "guys who are famous and secure." The sane recourse, the KU faculty member advised, was cynically to "accept their little game" and to make the best of it, a role best adopted by most professors and "all graduate students who want to make it through."
What ubiquitous "they" was he talking about? I am tempted to think he meant others like himself, without courage to leave the playing field and imagination to invent a new and better game.
As a student spectator with a stake in the outcome of a coming struggle over the issue of the meaning and nature of preferred scholarship in different types of academic communities, I suggest we debut with an immediate search for intelligent procedures with which to rate the teaching performances of professors. One expedient, which has already been put to limited use, is the anonymous, unsolicited student evaluation.
Arthur M. Harkins Ottawa graduate student
Photographic Death Stalks 'Time' Party
Headlines are another sort of death. It was hard not to be reminded of the mortician's train of funeral cars as the somber limousines crawled past the portal of the fiftystory hosterly so discretely discharging — black tie and the girls in glory — the invited guests who in some past incarnation had been the subjects of coverstories in this weekly magazine of national — nay international — circulation.
"I saw your picture in the paper."
IMPECCABLY GLADHANDED the guests throng room after salmontinted room where waiters, who left their own faces behind in the pantry, deftly circulate cocktail trays. The aroma of luxury. Every alcoholic exhalation: gin, vermouth and zest of lemon, warm-sweet of bourbon, smoky reek of scotch, all buoyed on rafts of toasted cheese, caviar canapes, fat gooseliver, anchovies, olives...
Camera men abound. The camera men neither eat nor drink. Tirelessly they snap famous faces, twisting in and out between eminent waistcoats, squirming with dervish whirls under brassiered bosoms, converge on politicians whose eyes roll come hither at the nearest lens.
The photographers are mad for angles. They crouch behind their cocked cameras, shoot up, shoot down, back off on all fours. They teeter on stepladders, they balance on mantels, they crawl up the walls.
A DOZEN CAMERAS pin down each front page phiz. Lens stares into lens. Say cheese. Flashlight blanks out flashlight, making eyes blink behind the glare on glasses, picking out a swollen ear, shiny pores on a nose, creases in a woman's neck, or the peevish wrinkle at the corner of a mouth smiling that public smile.
The public image is the photograph.
In the flicker and flare, face stares into face. There's a phrase that freezes unspoken on every tongue: "By God I thought you were dead."
Posycolored ladies and their whitefronted escorts throng every box. The dancefloor is all tables. While spotlights cut satin swaths through the smoke-blue air, trays glitter as nimbly the waiters pass brook trout in aspic, some marvel of soup, rare roast beef veiled in sauce, pour just the right wine. . . Nebuchadnezzar never feasted so the day he spelled his doom off the Babylonian wall.
Can it be that the Arabs are right, and the dour pueblodwellers of our own Southwest, when they say the camera takes something away that can never be recovered, skims some private value off the soul?
WE MUST LISTEN TOO. Public address. These tidings are all glad. Keep it light. Informal. Let's not get stuffy. Penguin figures talk and teeter behind the distant mike, extolling, explaining, wise-cracking why and how
each of these poor humans:
bundles of nerves, hearts resolutely pumping blood, anguished tubs of guts, congeries of interacting braincells, suffering nocturnal despair, rejoicing in inexplicable morning aspirations,
became.
out of all the infinite possibilities of human kind,
Material for a Cover Story.
PALMS STING from clapping. On a screen above the stage the enormous simulacrum shines while a tiny black and white figure
nons up to humble and now behind his table.
That simp on the screen can't be me. Where? When? A case of mistaken identity. No never. Least of all in a photograph redrawn and tinted by the art department. Maybe some inkling of a former self now long since scraped. It is today's self that lives. The dead selves linger on as photographs.
"Wouldn't it be funny," I ask my neighbors, "if it turned out that we were really all dead, and this Hall of Fame was an ingenious Hell?"
NOBODY SEEMS the least amused by the suggestion.
The Greeks might have thought so. For the Greeks the spirits of the dead were simulacra, very like a photograph, bereft of blood and brain and nerve. Those ghosts, that Odysseus, at another famous banquet in the royal hall of the rich Phaeacians, told Alcinous about. —
who crawded so fearfully around him when he cut the ram's throat on Ocean's shore that he had to draw his sword to cow them. —
were mere images of men, antique celebrities crowding out of Erebus to drink of the live blood. Achilles hissed he'd rather be a slave, a poor man's slave on earth, than king of all the celebrated dead. When Odysseus' own mother's ghost rose up before the pool of blood he tried to take her in his arms, but like smoke she drifted through his fingers: the image has no life.
The party lasted till long after midnight. Then we all went home to search out our pictures in the morning paper.
- John Dos Passos, describing the anniversary party of Time magazine in Atlantic Monthly.
DailijYfänsan
University of Kansas student newspaper
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, April 30, 1964
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Student Panel Reviews-
(Continued from page 1)
and sororities are private but said since they are sanctioned by the University they should not exclude anyone on the basis of race.
"If they are private they should be honestly private and not restrictive. If they do not select individuals on their own merits they should state it and make no pretensions." Miss Emel said.
In answer to Johnston's statement that it would be a violation of freedom to force a fraternity to pledge a Negro, Ragsdale said it is not debatable where the greatest good lies and that "human dignity cannot be compared with discrimination."
RAGSDALE then said Chancellor Wescoe's statement that he did not condone discrimination but would not enforce integration was like saying: "Keep off the grass but if you step on it nothing will happen to you."
Douville stated that Chancellor Wescoe feels "moral suasion has been effective against prejudice in the past."
Johnston explained that the IFC felt it had been a definite detriment to social contact when the Negro fraternities did not take part in rush last fall. Johnston said another program of the IFC is the formation of a committee to determine what it can do to help with civil rights while maintaining the interfraternity as well.
Ragsdale said he had petitioned the IFC to include in their rush book a definite statement encouraging members of all races.
Johnston said although the statement was omitted from the booklet this year there were pictures of Negro participation in executive council and Greek Week to show that the IFC does welcome everyone.
"MANY SIGNS say all are welcome but really mean white only," Ragsdale said.
Questions from the audience brought a comment from an Episopaiyan student chaplain that "clauses and blackballs are incompatible with a fraternity's obligation to the University."
"IT IS NOT a question of what they (HRC and ASC) have done but rather have they done enough." Miss Emel asked.
Several questions were raised about the validity of the HRC survey, the actions of the HRC this year and the role of the ASC.
The panel then answered questions of many students who remained.
Asked afterwards if he felt a deadline should be set Ragsdale said a very liberal time for Negroes to be pledged would be three years.
"If there is then an entire atmosphere of noncooperation there will be more forceful demonstrations for the administration to step in.
"THE ADMINISTRATION should require that the nationals have nothing to do with the method of selection or the groups should become local or go off campus," Ragsdale said.
Johnston said more personal contact through rush and individual houses and members was needed.
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The Hustler will not be at the Friday Flicks
Due to circumstanes beyond our control the film "The Hustler" will not arrive in time for this Friday's scheduled showing.
We, of the Friday Flicks committee, wish to apologize and to present, in its place, another first rate film: Period of Adjustment
Sincerely
The Friday
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VI 3-0281
Page 4
University Dany Kansan Thursday, April 30, 1964
Cadets, Midshipmen to March In Ceremony for Chancellor
The three ROTC Units at KU (Army, Navy, and Air Force), have scheduled a "Chancellor's Review" for Dr. W. Clarke Wescoe on May 15.
The review, in honor of the Chancellor, will be solely a student production—that is, the Corps of Cadets and the Battalion of Midshipmen will plan and execute the ceremony on their own as a part of their leadership training programs.
An addition to the ceremony this year—and a precedent at KU—will be KU's marching band. Russell L Wiley, professor of band, after consulting with members of the band —normally not in "session" at this time of year—agreed to participate.
PROF. WILEY indicated he would field a 40 piece band for this ceremony. With the bright band uniforms and the different uniforms of the three ROTC units, the event should be a colorful one. Mr. Wiley suggested the occasion would give Chancellor Wescoe a good excuse to officially "inspect" KU's marching band as they pass the reviewing stand.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion,
a 30 p.m., Pan American Room, Kansas City
Poetry Hour, 4:30 p.m., Music Room, Kansas Union.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Strattord Rd.
Der deutsche Stammtisch trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 30. April, um 4 Uhr 30 in der "Bierstube," 14th-Tenn. Es gibt Möglichenkraft, auf deutsch zu untersteigen. Sie sind singen伯尔韦德deutsche Lieder. Alle sind herzlich eingeladen.
AUAU Banquet, 6:30 p.m., Eldridge
Jonathan with Adamson, Voice of America,
speaker.
SUA. Chess Exhibition, 7 p.m., Ballantine's Union, Bobby Fischer, U.S. Champion.
Philosophy Lecture. 7:30 p.m., 108
Annual conclamation of Differences¹
= Ernest Hargreaves²
Christian Science Organization, 7:30
p.m. Danforth Chapel. Everyone welcome.
Delta Sigma Rho Public Affairs Speak-
eens 8 p.m., Big 8 Airport Kansas
Union
Christian Family Movement (CFM),
8 p.m. St. Lawrence Center, 1915 Strat-
ford Rd. Social Inquiry on "Discrimi-
nation in Our Community." Visitors
welcome.
College Life, 5 p.m., 808 Mississippi St.
Davenport and slides on Arrowhead
Sorings.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m. St.
Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Strattford Rd.
Field. KU-Iowa State.
Varsity Tennis p.m., Allen Field
Dance p.m., KU-Wichita.
SUA Current Events Forum, 4:30 p.m.
Music Room, Kansas Union.
Lecture, 4:30 p.m. , Forum Room, Kansas Union. "El Impacto del Esposil sobre las Languas Indigens Americanos" —Dr. Marcos Moríngo U. of Illinois. With Community Center Services, 7:30 p.m., 917 Highland Dr. Refreshments.
Pre-Cana Conference, 7:30 p.m., St. Lawrence Center, 1910 Stratford Dr. Rd. William T. Sirridge, Dr. Marjorie Sirridge and Rt. Msr, Michael Price, speakers.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
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The chancellor will use the occasion to present awards to three distinguished students from each of the ROTC units, and to address some remarks to the student commanders (all senior) of the cadet and midshipman organizations.
The overall commander of the cadet-midshipman organizations for the review this year is the Navy's Midshipman Capt. Douglas Pickersgill, Kansas City senior and Commanding Officer of the Battalion of Midshipmen.
LAWRENCE
TYPEWRITER
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
THE ARMY'S CORPS of Cadets
will be led by Cadet Col. Jerald L Pullins, Council Grove senior; the Navy's Battalion of Midshipmen by Midshipman Comm. Neil F. Wood, Executive Officer, Topeka senior, acting for Midshipman Capt. Pickersgill; and the Air Force's Corps of Cadets by Cadet Col. Palmer W. Smith, Medicine Lodge senior.
The ceremony is scheduled to begin at 3:45 p.m., May 15. It will be held on the intramural athletic fields directly across from Allen Field House. In case of inclement weather, a modified ceremony will be held in the field house.
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THURSDAY, APRIL 30 STARTING TIME - 7:00 P.M. UNION BALLROOM
Brandt Suspected of Supporting Independent Actions of Berlin
Page 5
By Joseph B. Fleming
EERLIN -(UPI)- The Western allies are concerned about the increasing tendency of the West Berlin city government to act without consulting them.
At worst, a serious international incident might arise if the city again acts without consulting the United States, Britain and France in the extremely sensitive field of security.
In various ways Mayor Willy Brandt's government is said to be trying to extend its authority and increase its powers at the expense of the city's three occupation powers.
Some of these acts are dismissed by Western allied officials as the natural expression of city impatience with a long occupation and an often unwieldy process of consultation.
The city's attitude puzzles allied officials. They do not know what the city is up to or what it hopes to gain by laxity in fulfilling its obligation to consult the allies or by outright failure to do so.
But some are viewed seriously. Fears exist that a unilateral city act could weaken the city's' legal position and play into Communist hands.
The Big Three and West Berliners became allies during the 1948-1949 blockade.
As the years went by the alliance grew stronger, affection developed.
by the air not grow stronger, affection developed. The alliance and affection still exist but lately the Western allies have been keeping a wary eye on the "Schoeosjerg Rathaus," the seat of the West Berlin city government.
Ever since the wall went up on Aug. 13, 1961 there has been an undercurrent of tension in the relations between the city and the "protective powers," as the city calls the Big Three.
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University Daily Kansan
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4:30 - 10:30
DINE-A-MITE
23rd & La.
Some Western officials believe city officials decided, in effect, that if the Western Allies were so weak they allowed the wall to go up, there was not much sense in consulting them about other problems.
The city began to act independently some time after the wall went up, but the new West Berlin attitude did not become readily apparent until April 8 when West Berlin police at the U.S. Army's Checkpoint Charlie demanded that Russian diplomats identify themselves to get into West Berlin.
It turned out that Deputy Mayor Heinrich Albertz, who also is in charge of city security, had ordered the checks without consulting the Allies.
The U.S. mission here immediately ordered the police to stop checking Russian diplomats.
In the first place, Western allied officials said, the city knows that the Western Allies for years have been asserting that Berlin fourpower officials—Russian or Western allied—may be checked only by one of the four powers and not by Germans—East or West.
This is one of the foundations of the Western Allies' Berlin policy. Discarding this plank—and the Russians would be very happy to discard it—would mean interference
not only with the Western Allied right to enter East Berlin but could endanger the vital Western allied traffic to the city.
Western officials are not sure how big a part Mayor Brandt plays in the campaign. They would like to believe subordinates are responsible.
Thursday, April 30, 1964
Others assert that Brandt cannot be ignorant of what his top aides are doing and say they would not dare act without his support.
If Brandt knows, what are his aims?
In addition to being Mayor he is now head of the West German Social Democratic Party and again candidate for chancellor against Ludwig Erhard, a Christian Democrat.
LIVE AND WORK IN ENGLAND FRANCE SWEDEN
all Europe. Career and temporary work. Many firms pay transportation. Detailed employment and travel information, tells how, where to apply. $2.50. European Employment Council, Box 16055, San Francisco, Calif.
Native Son
FRANKFORT, Ky.—(UPI)—John Fox Jr., author of "The Trail of the Lonesome Pine," "The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come," and other novels, was born in 1863 near Paris, Ky.
Dance to the Furys Friday at the Dine-a-Mite
Electronic Service
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Radios Transistors Car Radios
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 30, 1964
After 169 Years Service, Teachers, Staffer to Retire
Five faculty and staff members who retire this spring after giving 169 years of service will be honored at the all-University retirement dinner May 7.
The five are: E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, 39 years; Allie Merle Conger, associate professor of piano, 36 years; Miss Mary E. Larson, associate professor of zoology, 42 years; Ruth E. McNair, associate professor of biology, 33 years; and N. Webster Rickhoff, manager of the Kansas City center of University Extension, 19 years.
The four teachers will retire June 30 after having attained age 70. Rickoff, an administrator, took full retirement at 65 and will move to emeritus status April 30.
The retirement dinner will be at 6:15 p.m., May 7, in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Faculty and staff may obtain tickets in person or by phone from the ticket center in the Union lounge.
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 PLAZA SOUTH
Ph. VI 2-3416 1912 W. 25th Day or Night
A NAME YOU CAN TRUST
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H H
"THE COLLEGE JEWELER"
809 MASS.
Thursday, April 30,1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Possible $180 Deficit Faces ASC Treasury
The outgoing treasurer of the All Student Council has submitted a financial report of projected expenditures to the end of the school year, which indicates the ASC will find itself with a $180 deficit.
This is an increase of $72 over the ASC deficit for 1962-63 of $108.
Chuck Portwood, Shawnee Mission senior and former ASC treasurer, said the deficit is a result of unexpected expenditures.
ASC failed to allow for in the budget session last fall.
Total student government expenditures for operating expenses as of April 23 were $2,619, leaving total assets on the same date at $750.
assets of
Projected expenditures from April
23 to the end of the semester are $930.
Portwood indicated, however, that he did not expect the $200 bill for the printing of an updated constitution bill book for council members to come in until next year. In this case, the books for this year would show a $20 surplus.
THE FOLLOWING figures, submitted by Portwood, show ASC income and expenditures for the year:
Allocation ... $8,300
Kamala Student Conference fees ... $ 186
Total assets ... $8,486
Appropriations to ASC supported or-
ganizations:
Association of University Resi-
tionals ... $ 94
People-to-People ... 2,000
Current Events ... 942
Business School Council ... 187
Education School Council ... 283
Human Rights Committee delegates to convention on race and religion ... 94
Alanina Phigma ... 170
Mortar Board ... 200
Radio Production Center ... 723
American Pharmaceutical Association ... 188
Starbuck Bar Association ... 250
Total Appropriations $5,117
Total Appropriations ... $5,117
ASC expenditures:
Deficit from previous year ... $ 108
Project ... 700
Office Rent ... 120
Telephone ... 75
Office equipment ... 200
Big Eight dues ... 100
Big Eight Student Government Conference ... 150
Office Equipment ... 250
Traditions Committee ... 100
Public Relations Committee ... 225
Kansas Student Conference ... 210
Falls from previous year ... 210
Miscellaneous ... 281
Total expenditures to April 23 ... $2,619
Total Assets to April 25 ... $750
Projected expenses to end of school year:
Fourth round election bill ... $400
Jayhawker ... 180
Printing of Constitution ... 200
Printing of U.S. stamps ... 150
Total projected expenses ... $930
Total Deficit ... $180
Tuesday
COLLEEN RYAN Kappa Alpha Theta
For travel — drip-dry skirts, shells, jackets — coordinated and available in white, cocoa, or blue
KU Professor Publishes Book
Herbert Ellison, associate professor of history and chairman of the Slavic and Soviet area program at KU, is the author of a newly published "History of Russia."
The 644-page work differs from many historical studies of Russia, since it emphasizes the modern period, including the development of the international communist movement and the course of recent Soviet foreign policy. Holt, Rinehart and Winston is the publisher.
C
COACH HOUSE
Guests For Tours and Guests
12th & Oread VI 3-6369
Because the book concentrates on the recent period, it is expected to help meet a current demand for such a text by colleges and universities. A 32-page bibliography contributes to the book's usefulness as a source for advanced students.
AUTO WRECKING NEW and USED PARTS
Tires and Glass East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956
In The Spring, A Young Man's Formal Should Look Like This:
After Six
BY RUDOFKER
Coat $32.50
Trousers $14.95
Shorts — Regulars — Longs — Extra Longs
We also maintain a complete stock of AFTER SIX formal wear and accessories for RENTAL.
THE Town Shop
DOWNTOWN
THE University Shop
ON THE HILL
After Six BY RUDOFKER
SINGING FASHION
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
Firestone
FRITZ CO
GAS
BRING YOUR CAR TO 8th at NEW HAMPSHIRE AND GET THE FINEST SERVICE IN LAWRENCE BY MEN WITH 'KNOW HOW'
FRITZ CO.
CITIES SERVICE
8th & New Hampshire - VI 3-4321
Open Thursday 'til 8:30 p.m.
DOWNTOWN -- NEAR EVERYTHING
CITIES SERVICE
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 30, 1964
O'Brien Emerges to Fill Gap at Center
Dance to the Furys Friday at the Dine-a-Mite
nursing leg injuries. Fairchild, third-string as a sophomore, spent last year plugging a thin corps of ends.
Sudden emergence of Mike C'Brien, heretofore a question mark in KU's football hopes, could go a long way toward filling the gap at center with which the Jayhawks opened Spring practice.
exclusively offense the last two-thirds of the season, is due for graduation in June. His understudies Walker and Jim Becker, still were
"I got it hit good a couple of times this spring but it held up real well." O'Brien enthuses. "It feels pretty good now. If I can get through spring practice I'm sure it will be all right."
Now he's up to 95 pounds on the springs and figures he'll go over 100 by summer.
The 6-5, 220-pound junior is in his second week on re-trial as a linebacker and Coach Jack Mitchell is enthusiastic about his comeback. If he can maintain this pace to the end of drills May 9, and if veteran Larry Fairchild continues to improve and Buldyl Walker returns to full-time action, the Jayhawkers will meet Big Eight standards in the pivot next season.
"For the first time since his freshman year," Mitchell said, "Mike is physically able to play. And he certainly has impressed all the coaches with his aggressiveness and enthusiasm."
LITTLE WONDER the staff was concerned over center when drills began. Pete Quatrochi, all-league a year ago even though he played
Kansan Classifieds.
When he returned last Fall he could boist 80 pounds (60 is playing weight and 90 is the genuine strength pull) with his lame knee. But he was hit hard during practice and it was re-injured. When he began on the training room springs again he could lift only 20. He hobbled all season and dropped almost out of sight. He played briefly a total of five minutes at tackle in the routs of Kansas State and Oklahoma State.
BUT HE was drydocked with a knee injury through the early practice rounds the following Fall. A Christmas-time operation kept him out of spring practice.
O'Brien was a good prospect when he reported in 1961 after a career as an end-fullback at Liberal high. He and Brian Schweda were regular tackles on the freshman club that autumn. Switched to center in the spring, he impressed as a green, but potentially good linebacker.
World's Fair Quiz-
1) Where is the World's Fair?
2) What is the cheapest way to go?
3) How much does it cost?
4) What does this price include?
5) How can I make reservations?
Answers
1) New York 2) KU World's Fair Limited
3) $139.00 4) Special Air Charter Flight, 5 days & 4 nights, includes hotel, insurance, admission to World's Fair
5) Call Doug Vogel at VI 2-2920 (after 5 p.m.)
"A Checking Account Sure Makes Money Obsolete"
A Checking Account Sends
Makes Money Obsolete"
You can mail a check without danger, suffer no loss if your checkbook is misplaced or stolen. A checking account gives you cash at your fingertips, always in the right amount.
You can pay your bills from the comfort of your living room with an automatic receipt for every payment. Cancelled checks remind you of income tax deductions you may have forgotten.
Today, handling money in the form of cash is out-of-date. Let a checking account go to work for you this week.
1st
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCI
8TH AND MASSACHUSETTS • LAWRENCE, KANSAS • VI 3-0182
DRIVE-IN BANK AT 9th AND TENNESSEE ST.
MEMBER FUSSAL DEPT INSURANCE CORPORATION
STUDENTS RESERVED SEATS FOR 1964 FOOTBALL
*
STUDENTS MUST ORDER SEASON TICKETS FOR NEXT FALL'S HOME FOOTBALL GAMES ACCORDING TO THE FOLLOWING PRIORITY SCHEDULE IF THEY WISH TO SIT IN THEIR CLASS SECTION.
*
Monday, May 4 and Tuesday, May 5
Students who will be Seniors,Graduate in the Fall Semester,1964: Students,Law Students
Wednesday, May 6
Students who will be Juniors in the Fall Semester,1964:
Thursday, May 7
Students who will be in the Fall Semester, 1964:
Sophomores
PLEASE READ THE FOLLOWING CAREFULLY
Tickets will be applied for at Allen Field House — 8:30 a.m. to 12:00 noon and 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. daily. Enter north doors of the Field House and go down the east corridor: ID CARDS MUST BE PRESENTED AND EACH STUDENT SHOULD BE PREPARED TO PAY A FEE OF $1.50 PER SEASON TICKET AT THIS TIME TO COVER THE COSTS OF ADMINISTRATION. (Any applications for refunds of the $1.50 fee must be made in writing to the Athletic Seating Committee of the All Student Council prior to Sept. 1, 1964).
Group applications, within a priority group, will be limited to not more than twenty-five (25). (Exceptions will be considered in the case of exceptionally large pledge classes or classes within men's or women's residence halls.) It should be noted that independent groups can apply in groups if they so desire. All block applications will be given priority according to the student of lowest classification. The person(s) applying for a group must present ID cards for all members of the group.
After all applications are in during this Spring application, a drawing will be held, within each priority group to determine seat location. In this way an
Orders may be placed according to the above schedule and information for picking up your tickets next fall will be distributed to you during the 1964 Fall enrollment period. Students who fail to apply during their assigned day will not be given priority with their class section.
equal opportunity will be afforded to each student so long as you have made application on your assigned priority date. Individual orders and group orders will each be numbered and carry the same weight in the drawing of lots. The Athletic Seating Committee of the ASC will supervise the drawing of lots soon after the end of the ticket application period.
Season tickets for student spouses who are themselves students may be ordered at the earlier priority of either spouse. Season tickets for student spouses who are not themselves students may be ordered at the time their student spouse orders his or her ticket. The price for all student spouse tickets is $7.50. A price of $6.50 applies to housemothers, whose orders may be placed during any priority period.
New 1964 medical students will apply at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City next fall for their season tickets.
Pep Club members must present evidence of membership to be assigned seats in pep club sections. Members of the University Marching Band will have seats reserved automatically and need not order tickets.
To speed up group applications, arrange ID cards according to the following: A-F, G-L, M-R, S-Z, and present these grouped ID's to the proper tables set up in the East Lobby of Allen Field House.
NOTE: ID Cards Alone Will NOT Admit Students to Football Games Next Fall. A Reserved Seat Ticket Will Be Necessary
- The TCU game is played during the week of enrollment and for this reason, admission to this game will be by your ID card and fall 1964 certificate of registration. All other games will require a student reserved seat ticket.
Thursday, April 30.1964 University Daily Kansan P
Civil Righters Request Power of Subpoena
not make subpoena powers available to its state anti-discrimination agency," the report said.
sible for delaying tactics, then they would be more apt to hurry investigations.
an order of the Commission,'” the report said.
The lack of subpoena powers causes delays in civil rights investigations, the commission said, because witnesses fear "job reprisal" if they testify voluntarily.
"KANSAS IS THE one state among 22 states with enforceable fair employment laws which does"
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
DAYLIGHT DONUTS
530 W. 23rd St.
DAYLIGHT DONUT SHOP
*AUTHENTIC DESIGN*
Arnold Palmer
™TM ARNOLD PALMER
THE look for the label to be sure
NATIONALLY ADVERTISED
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DAYVILLE ILUOURE
with VYCRON® Polyester Fiber...
designed by the world's most famous golfer
1295
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WINDBREAKER® not only asked Arnold Palmer, they actually let him design that jacket. Result—this handsome, easy wear, easy care Arnold Palmer jacket styled with floating shoulders, take-up side tabs and free-swinging pleated S-T-R-E-T-C-H nylon mesh backswing. Water repellent, washable and it wears better because of its 65% Vycron® polyester fiber and 35% cotton content.
Ober's
821 Mass.
VI 3-1951
AS ADVERTISED IN ESQUIRE
Have a Burnt Ivory®
THE RICH CIGAR TONE
The strong masculine flavor of this rich cigar tone leather appeals instantly to young-thinking men. Hand-sewn detailing adds the custom touch.
exclusive with Taylor made
$17.95 to $18.95
Royal College Shop
837 Mass.
when are 65% DACRON® & 35% cotton in Post-Grad slacks by h.i.s®
This is the fabric combo that makes music with sleek good looks and washable durability. And Post-Grads are the bona fide authentics that trim you up and taper you down. Tried-and-t rue tailored with belt loops, traditional pockets, neat cuffs. Only $6.95 in the colors you like...at the stores you like.
*Du Pont's Reg. TM for its Polyester Fiber*
WIN ATRIP TO EUROPE
Pick up your "Destination Europe" contest entry form at any store featuring the h.i.s.label. Nothing to buy! Easy to win! h.i.s offers you your choice of seven different trips this summer to your favorite European city by luxurious jet. Enter now!
DAYLIGHT DONUTS
530 W. 23rd St.
DAYLIGHT DONUT SHOP
"AUTHENTIC DESIGN"
Arnold Palmer
®TM ARNOLD PALMER
THE look for the label to be sure
ARNOLD PALMER
NATIONALLY ADVERTISED
WINDBREAKER®
WINDBREAKER Danville Co.
DANville, ILINOIS
with VYCRON® Polyester Fiber...
designed by the world's most famous golfer
1295
What does the world's most famous golf pro look for in a jacket? WINDBREAKER® not only asked Arnold Palmer, they actually let him design that jacket. Result—this handsome, easy wear, easy care Arnold Palmer jacket styled with floating shoulders, take-up side tabs and free-swinging pleated S-T-R-E-T-C-H nylon mesh backswing. Water repellent, washable and it wears better because of its 65% Vycron® polyester fiber and 35% cotton content.
Ober's
"AUTHENTIC DESIGN"
Arnold Palmer
®TM ARNOLD PALMER
NATIONALLY ADVERTISED
WINDBREAKER
MADE IN AMERICA BY
WINDBREAKER Danville Co.
DANVILLE, ILLINOIS
Ober's
AS ADVERTISED IN ESQUIRE
Have a Burnt Ivory*
THE RICH CIGAR TONE
The strong masculine flavor of this rich cigar tone leather appeals instantly to young-thinking men. Hand-sewn detailing adds the custom touch.
exclusive with Taylor made
$17.95 to $18.95
Royal College Shop
exclusive with
Taylor Made
SHOE
taylor made
exclusive with Taylor Made
Taylor Made
SHOE
BROOKS BROTHERS
Royal College Shop
Dance to the Furys Friday at the Dine-a-Mite
when are 65% and 35% good marks?
when they're 65% DACRON* & 35% cotton in Post-Grad slacks by h.i.s.
This is the fabric combo that makes music with sleek good looks and washable durability. And Post Grads are the bona fide authentics that trim you up and taper you down. Tried-and-true tailored with belt loops, traditional pockets, neat cuffs. Only $6.95 in the colors you like...at the
Page 10
...
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 30, 1964
Former State Governor Teaches Ethics Course in Law School
Walter A. Huxman of Topeka is beginning and ending a brief teaching career at the KU Law School exactly 50 years after receiving the LLB. degree from KU.
Huxman was Kansas governor from 1936-38 and a U.S. Circuit Judge, 10th Circuit, U.S. Court of Appeals, from 1939 until his retirement seven years ago.
problems of legal ethics. He commutes from Topeka to meet his weekly class.
Governor Huxeman has found that
Governor Huxman is donating his time to teach a required one-hour KU law course entitled "The Legal Profession" in which he discusses
teaching law is no small job. He spends three or four hours a day preparing questions and materials for the one-hour course.
Dance to the Furys Friday at the Dine-a-Mite
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
SEE FRIDAY'S KANSAN
ORACLE SET
Groom's Ring $39.50
Bride's Ring $39.50
Designed for Young Moderns
UKE | Amara
Artcarved WEDDING RINGS
ORACLE SET
Groom's Ring ... $39.50
Bride's Ring ... $39.50
Rings enclosed to detail.
Not only the loveliest, but the most modern styles in town! Hundreds to choose from, all in excellent taste. Prices start at $8.00.
Your KU I.D. is your pass to credit
1 Antique
Open an account in just 3 minutes
CORSICAN SET
Groom's Ring $29.50
Bride's Ring ... $27.50
VI 3-4366
BRIMAN'S leading jewelers
743 Mass.
Risqué
DYEABLE PUMPS
Mid or high heels in white peau de soie $10.99
COBENA
SHOES PURCHASED HERE DYED FREE OF CHARGE white satin dyeable pumps $8.99
McCoy's SHOES
813 Mass.
VI 3-2091
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Don't Forget...
You'll want a subscription to next semester's
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TO KEEP UP WITH CAMPUS NEWS!
ONE SEMESTER $3.00
FULL YEAR $5.00
Subscribe NOW!
Your Daily Kansan will be mailed to you.
Kansan Business Office, Journalism Building
+
2015. 04.28
Cla
Volksw tailored device sary. $2
1956 VV adding typewri
Schwinn year old Has twi Call La 8 p.m.
Four u Size 7. week.
Velvet tea, s lunchec encyclo port, b
1963 V
VI 2-31
1958 T
3-3990
1948 P orange ends can oil
1960 No condition Mass.
1962 N tion, ju pistons
Zeiss B and C Paired
1958 b Power tion, o Rose 1
New sheets
1005
Pink
Edwa
Call
Classified Ads
FOR SALE
Volkswagen rack and cover. Custom tailored in Germany. Simple anchoring device for cover. No tying down necessary. $20 complete. Call V1 3-4588, 5-8610
1956 VW. $700 or trade. Barrett electric
typewriter. $50. CV I VI 2-4207. 5-1
Schwinn Traveler bicycle. Men's, one year old, little used, excellent condition. Two speeds and two automatic conditions. Call Rhyll Day, VI 1-9765 between 5 and 8 p.m.
Page 11
Four used General jet air tubeless tires.
Size 750 x 14. Only $20. Must sell this week. Call VI 3-3478 after 5 p.m. 5-5
Velvet evening coat. Etched glasses, iced tea, saucer, betet, wine. Furniture, baskets, history, encyclopedia. Furniture, chairs, davenport, bed, and dresser. Call VI 3-0389
1968 VW sunroof. Excellent shape. Call VI 2-3147. 5-4
1958 TR-3. Silver, fairly cheap. Call VI-
3-390 after 6 p.m. weekdays. VI-4
1948 Plymouth 4 door. Radio, heater,
orange color. $80. Evening and week-
ends call VI 2-3778. Runs smoothly, not
an oil burner. 5-4
1962 Norton 650 c.c. cycle, cycle Good condi-
nitions. Call VI 2-9100. Room 943. 5-1
1960 Norton motorcycle, 353 c.c. Excellent
Makrol, contact Gense Contact Gense,
mass, after 4 p.m. 7-51
Zeiss Binocular Microscope, 5X, 8X, 40X,
and oil immersion (90X) objects.
Paired 10X oculars. $250. Call VI 2-1940.
5-1
1958 black and white kord convertible.
Power steering and brakes, good condition,
original owner. Call VI 3-5003, 1618 Rose Lane.
The newest and greatest sound to hit campus! When the BANDITS JOB, you'll hardly notice the loss until leave. Call Larry Breeden VI 3-843-51-1
3-bedroom house on cul de sac near KL in Schwegler School district. Ceramic tile kitchen and bathroom, oak floors, 12 x 12 dining room with plating doors, full basement with shelter, attached garden, fenced yard with trees and beautiful 140' rock wall. No special assessments. $15,750. VI 2-0005.
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
treasured-ream --35. Lawrence Outdoor,
1005 Miles
Wedding dress, size 7-8.1 187 La. Upstairs, west apartment. 4 to 6 p.m.
Toy poodles. $50 each, 1 black, 1 brown,
1 white. Adorable pets. After 4 p.m.
Cecil Browning, Linwood, Kansas. Call
44F3. 4-30
Typewriters, new and used portables,
standards, electrics. Olympia, Hermes,
Oliviett. Royal and Smith Corona portables.
Typewriter, adder, rentals and service.
Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St.,
VI A-3644.
SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME
WHEELS, Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale
at great savings after 6 p.m. weekly
Saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut
tt
Student will sell all guns in collection.
45 auto's, Lugers, 38 revolvers, miniature automatics, Ruger, 22 s., 40 bbl, 30.06 Deer Heavy Armor, 30-30, deer action. While they last! 22 LR., $5.5 per carton. Call VI 3-1110 after 6 p.m. 5-7
FOUND
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the "notes." Call Vi I 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50 Western civil service. All new, comprehensive revised, extremely comprehensive imminecaged and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI i 2-1901 for free delivery. tt For Fuller Brush Products phone VI i 3-1804 after 5 p.m.
Pink girl's prescription glasses left at Edward Sprigg's party Saturday night. Call VI 2-1995. 4-30
FOR RENT
Bedroom with shower and half-bath Kitchen privileges if desired See at page 5-6
One and two bedroom apartments. 1232
La. Call VI 3-4271. 5-12
Married, grad students, faculty. Efficiency apartment from $65 and small house from $70. Available in June. Call now. Sante Apartments, 1123 Ind., IV. 3-214-71
Bachelor Studio Apartment for graduate or older undergraduate men. $12 blocks from Union. New remodeled office and parking. Ideal study conditions. A few still available at low rates. Singles and doubles. For appointment call VI 3-8534.
1 bedroom attractively furnished apartment in quiet location. Large cow rooms, kitchen, laundry room. Will rent for all or part of summer to married, grad, or responsible student. Must be reserved now. $65 per month w/ 25% Apt. D or call VI 3-4077-51 I 9-32223-
Large, homey, attractively furnished, 4
room apartment. For summer months at
summer rates. Kitchen built-ins and
garbage disposal. Utilities paid except
electricity. Call VI 3-7677. Will rent for
summer months. tf
Married, grad students, faculty, 2-bedroom, from $75. Only 4 left for June. Reserve now. Call for brochure. V13-216. Santee Apartment, 1123 Indiana. **tt**
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 3-116 for information
Single or double room. Furnished, cook
room. See also paid. Call 2-8451 or see at 1244 La.
Crescent Heights two bedroom apart-
ment 25th and Nedrbud. Phone VI 2-3711.
Gold woman's watch. Reward. Call Anne,
Room 433, VI 3-9123.
5-4
TYPING
LOST
Experienced typist would like to do
the following service, standard
rates. Call VI 3-7819
Experienced typist would like typing in her home. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Marvin Brown, 1725 Kentucky, V-2-0210. 5-12
Term paper and the thesis by experienced typist. Call VI 3-7172 after 5:30 p.m. 4-30
Term papers accurately and neatly typed on good grade bond paper. Minor corrections, carbon copy, extra first page.
Call VI 3-0875. 5-21
Experienced secretary would like typing.
2565 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122. 4-30
Experienced tystp with electric typewriter available to type themes, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work stands Patti. Phone VI 3-8399, Mrs. Charles Patti.
Fast, accurate work done on electric
drives and rate rates. Call Bette
Vincent; VI 3-5504.
Experienced secretary would like typing in home. Reasonable rates. Call VI at 1188
Accurate expert typet would like typing
the prompt service. Call VI 3-2851.
Prompt service. Call VI 3-2851.
Experienced typlist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason-sertations and theses, phone VI 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson.
Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (pica type). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0558.
Term papers. Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. **tf**
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**
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Milliken's SOS
"the best professional service"
- general typing service
- general typing service
- automatic typing
- 24 hr. answering service
- mimeograph & photo-copying
1021½ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
TYPING: Experimented typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, books, magazines and news rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568 tfr
Professional typing by experienced secretary,
New electric typewriter, carbon printer.
VI 3-6048 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.
KERBY'S DEPENDABLE STATION
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow. 2047 Yale, VI 2-1648.
MILLIKENS I.B.M. SOS—always first quality
typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
We also do mTape transcription. Office
phone 912-5820. p.m. 1021--1024% Mac
Phone VI.1-5820.
JOE'S BAKERY
BUSINESS SERVICES
In Lawrence, your Authorized Dealer is Delbert A. Eisele
Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery is rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267.
9th & Indiana VI 3-9830
Dressmaking- alterations. formals and
gowns. Ola Smith. 93% M1.
V 3-5232
L&M CAFE now under new management We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. and will be filled with delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches Your second cup of coffee always free.
U-Call, we haul. Anything, anytime. V1
3-5888. tf
25c delivery
Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing
AGS
LEONARD'S
Marks Jewelers
817 Mass. VI 3-4266
STANDARD SERVICE
Open 24 hours except Saturday evening
- 'Vett head- quarters
Mobilgas
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY
616 W. 9th
REAL PET
VI 3-4720
GRANT'S DRIVE-IN
Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking
- Specialists in all makes & models including sports cars
"We'll pick up your car and deliver it FREE on any service call."
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Wheel Bal. - Oil - Wash - Lube
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
VI 3-9608 9th & Ky.
7 a.m.-11 p.m
When buying diamonds Look for this sign
STUDENTS
MEMBER OF NATIONAL BRIDAL SERVICE
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
1218 Conn. VI 3-2921
Pet Center
Sure—Everything in the
Pet Field
218 Conn. VL 3-20
Thursday, April 30, 1964
MISCELLANEOUS
Pre-nursery play and learn group has
preschool age children. Olds. May 1 to Aug 1. Air conditioned home with wading pool. Teacher with
or afternoon, inexpensely. Call VI 2-3749. 5-4
Have a party in the Big Red School
door and plant
Heated. Call VI 3-7453.
GB
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coln Mart, 1025 Mass. tf
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
The Catacombs nite club and Pizza Den 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.
University Daily Kansan
Recording Service and Party Music
HELP WANTED
Recordings Available
of
— Rock Chalk Revue
— Spring Sing
— Greek \ chk Sing
1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780
Opportunity for male keyboard musician interested in sales demonstrations. Write a brief description of type of instrument and availability, to University Daily Kansan, Box 10. 5-4
WANTED
Large or small basic amplifier component system. Call Carl Schwanm.
3-7025. 5-1
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
RISK'S
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
Cash paid for your book store receipts.
No waiting period. Call VI 2-0180. 5-4
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
Shirt Finishing Laundry
Wash & Fluff Dry
513 Vt. VI 3-4141
★ TUNE-UPS
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
VI 3-6333
A. complete line, including,
● Lavaliers ● Guards
● Pins ● Mugs
● Rings ● Crests
JEWELRY
ART'S TEXACO
24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled
9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897
FRATERNITY JEWELRY
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
IT'S OK TO OWN RAY
JEWELERS
IT'S OK TO OWE BAY
809 Mans.
Riders wanted from Lawrence to K.C.
and back this summer. Leave in morning
and return in evening. For information
call VI 2-4568 after 6 p.m. 5-8
VOLKSWAGEN'S WANTED. Cash for
your VW. Conzelman Motors, VW Sales,
Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, HIway 59
So.
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
--featuring Open-hearth charcoal broiled Steaks Chicken — Shrimp — Sandwiches Ribs
PLANS-A-PARTY
When Hallmark Plants-Party, you receive the compliments
Hallmark
- Parker Pens
- Stationery
- Printing
BULLOCK'S
4 E. 7th VI 3-2261
Completed Swimming Pool
CALL V1 2-3711
Mgr's Office, 2428 Redbud, Apt. D.
New Luxury Addition
Opening This Summer . . .
MAKE YOUR NEXT MOVE
Crescent Heights
1
Completed Swimming Pool
1 Bedroom
2 Bedrooms
Swimming Pool
THE OAKS
FOR INFORMATION CONTACT
Crescent Heights Apts. Mgr.
AT HONN'S LAUNDRY IT'S
Clean— your whole wash—the Honn way Wash 20c Dry 10c
Clean— the cleanest laundry in town inspect our facilities,you'll agree
Cleanyour best suits and coats in our coin-on dry clean machine
"Laundry Time is Honn Time” 19th & La.
DINING PLEASURE AT ITS BEST!
HAL'S STEAK HOUSE
THE STORY BEHIND THE TITLE IS A MEMORIAL OF A MAN WHO WAS KNOWN FOR HIS CAPACITIES IN SPORTS AND HIGH LEVELS.
Open: 4-Midnight Highway 59 South
VI 2-9445 Across from Hillcrest Golf Course
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 Thursday, April 30, 1964
Six Contestants Compete Today In Speech Fest
The 17th annual Delta Sigma Rho public speaking finals will be held at 8 p.m. tonight in the Union.
The original field of 17 contestants was narrowed to six finalists Tuesday night, E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, said yesterday.
Competing for the prize, a set of the Encyclopedia Americana, are John Stuckey, Pittsburg senior, "Can We Trust the States?"; Karen Crowe, Wichita sophomore, "The Life Force or the Death Force"; Lacy Banks, Kansas City junior, "New Wine, Old Bottles"; Carol Borg, Manhattan sophomore, who will speak on the subject of civil rights; Melvin O'Conner, Wichita sophomore, "The Fourth 'R' Religion," and Pamela Stone, Wichita junior, "Negroes Are Unequal."
Steak Dinner
Sunday Nites $1.25
4:30-10:30
DINE-A-MITE
23rd & La.
NOW!
SHOWS 7:00 & 9:00
Sidney
Poitier
IS HOMER IN
RALPH NELSON'S Lilies of the Field ADULTS $1.25 CHILDREN 50c
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
Starts SUN.
Tony Randall
in "THE BRASS BOTTLE"
--teachers in the area to study cellular and systematic physiology on Saturdays, while they teach during the week. The grant provides travel expenses to and from KU, books and fees, plus operational costs.
HURRY!
ENDS SOON!
Tom Jones!
Shows 6:40 & 9:05
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
SOON!
"HOW THE WEST WAS WON"
Starts TONITE!
Starts TONITE!
2 Great G.I. Hits
"BATTLE GROUND"
and
"GO FOR BROKE"
Sunset
DIVE IN THEATRE · West on Bigham (4)
Sunset
TICKET IN THEATRE • West on Railway 41
OPEN 7:00 — STARTS DUSK
ADULTS 85c — KIDDIES FREE
A$7,360 National Science Foundation grant announced today by the University of Kansas will support an in-service institute in physiology for secondary school teachers of biological science in 1964-65.
NSF Grant Supports Physiology Institute
The grant will allow 20 high school
Dr. William M. Balfour, visiting
associate professor of comparative biochemistry and physiology, is institute director.
The lecture and laboratory instruction may be taken for credit to be applied to the master of science in education degree.
Dance to the Furys Friday at the Dine-a-Mite
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
THERE ARE
MANY WAYS
TO KEEP THINGS
COOL
...but Acme does it best!
Instead
of dragging home all your winter clothes have them cleaned and put in ACME'S cold storage. Up to 30 items for only $3.95 (doesn't include cleaning).
ACME will moth proof all your items free of charge and insure them up to $200.00.
Save time, money, storage space and trouble by using ACME'S cold storage.
Call VI 3-5155 for free pick up.
Acme
1 HOUR PERSONALIZED
HILLCREST
JET LIGHTNING SERVICE
- 1111 MASS. - THE MALLS