World Spotlight UNForce Toughens For Greek Easter (Compiled From UPI Dispatches) NICOSIA, CYPRUS—The United Nations peace force implemented a new "get tough" policy in Cyprus today with the start of the Greek Orthodox Easter weekend. The Greek Cypriots relaxed their military pressures on the rival Turkish Cypriotes, but U.N. officials feared the Turks might use the holiday to launch a retaliatory operation. Turkish warships supported by military planes were reported maneuvering again in nearby waters, and Greece warned that its armed forces were alerted to counter any Turkish attempt to take advantage of the religious holiday in Cyprus. Authoritative sources in Athens said the Greek government had received reports that the Turks or Turkish Cypriots might take action against the Greek Cypriots observing the holiday. Greek Cypriot leaders said they planned no new military operations against the Turkish Cypriots—a move that may have been influenced by the tough new peace-enforcement line adopted by the U.N. peace troops. * * * Sen. John Serman Cooper, R-Ky., unveiled his own compromise last night which will have to be disposed of—before the Senate votes on the leadership's proposal. WASHINGTON—Senate leaders were confronted today with a new obstacle in their drive to approve a compromise jury trial amendment to the civil rights bill. Cooper's amendment would grant jury trials in criminal contempt cases arising from the civil rights bill to every one except state officials. Even in their case, a judge could grant jury trials at his discretion. The bipartisan leadership compromise of senate leaders Mike Mansfield and Everett Dirksen would provide jury trials in criminal contempt cases where the punishment was higher than a $300 fine or 30 days in jail. $$ * * * $$ WASHINGTON—Lyndon B. Johnson, who has served only five months as chief executive, already sees a need to reassess the 175-year-old office of the presidency and its powers. During a White House speech to historians and scholars yesterday, Johnson recalled how his brief period as President had made him aware "of how the office towers above the man who occupies it and gives to him strength that is much greater than his own." The presidency "is a difficult office, and anyone who occupies it must be a humble man before the task he faces," Johnson said. He urged his audience during the next 12 months "to focus more of our study and more of our discussion and more of our talent upon understanding this office and adding to the strength of this office." The occasion for Johnson's remarks was the commemoration of the 175th anniversary of the inauguration of George Washington as the nation's first president. \* \* \* KANSAS CITY, MO.—The City Council was scheduled to vote today on an ordinance providing for daylight saving time in Kansas City. The Chamber of Commerce yesterday urged councilmen to give daylight saving time a try. Later a referendum could be run on the issue, the Chamber told councilmen by letter. The three-member general committee of the council voted 2 to 1 in favor of the ordinance. Councilman John Maguire, one of the two councilmen seeking approval of the ordinance, said he felt sure of seven favorable votes, the number needed for passage, in 12-member council. 61st Year, No. 131 Daily hansan Lawrence, Kansas The first order of business was to have been the U.S. resolution to establish a Security Council. The U.S. delegation yielded the floor to New Zealand which moved to suspend the agenda. Last night delegates to the Model U.N. listened to Keith Adamson, deputy director of the Voice of America, speak at the Eldridge Hotel. Speaking of the problems involved in telling America's story abroad, Adamson said U.S. participation and support of the United Nations was a controversial subject. This passed by the necessary two-thirds majority and the new agenda placed the resolution on disarmament submitted by the Soviet Union on the floor for debate. Many people misunderstood the purpose of the United Nations both in the United States and abroad, he said. What is needed is more effective communication, Adamson emphasized. Friday, May 1, 1964 In the operation of the Voice of America which is part of the U.S. Information Agency, Adamson explained, "We must be complete and accurate in our coverage." THE VOICE OF AMERICA. a system of communication by radio, has to give the news which makes the United States look good and sometimes bad. Adamson explained. Any news which the radio may not give, he said, would be given by other radio stations and the listener in the foreign country would no longer have confidence in the Voice of America. AUFS Expert Keynotes 4th Model United Nations Broadcasting 800 hours a week, the Voice of America includes programs PARLIAMENTARIAN RICHARD White, Prairie Village junior, called the assembly to order in the temporary absence of the president, Michael McDowell, Lawrence junior. The fourth annual Model United Nations opened this morning with dignity, decorum and lack of demonstrations. Victor Du Bois, American University Field Staff expert who has been on campus this week, was the keynote speaker after the steering committee received regrets from President Johnson, Richard Nixon and Adlai Stevenson. Du Bois said that it is "more than mere naivety but dangerous disillusionment doomed to fail" to believe that the United States should quit the UN, give up foreign aid programs or refuse to become involved in world problems. The relationship between the United Nations and the Voice of America is one of open cooperation, Adamson said. The facilities of the radio stations of the Voice of America are available to the United Nations any time they want to use them, he explained. However, the Voice of America has its own programs that deal with the United Nations. of news, music, special interest, features and commentaries, Adamson said. The primary program of the Voice of America which deals with the United Nations, Adamson said, was U.S. Chess King MOSCOW — (UPI) — The Soviet Union unveiled new mobile "twin rockets" today in a war-and-peace display in Red Square opening its annual Mav Dav celebrations. New 'Twin Rockets' Open Red May Day Western observers believed the rockets were new ground-to-air missiles, variations of the missiles Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev once said could "hit a fly in the sky." one in which policies of the United States in the United Nations are explained. For example, he referred to several broadcasts which concerned the U.S.'s position on the question of admittance of Red China into the United Nations and the failure of the U.S.S.R. to pay its dues. The official Soviet news agency Tass called the new missiles "a new formidable weapon . . . the core of the fire power of the Soviet armed forces." However, Adamson explained there are problems involved in these broadcasts. Fischer, who has already performed 30 exhibitions this year, made it all look relatively easy. Within three hours, the time that it takes many amateurs to finish one game, Fischer had played 43 games. He won all games except a draw to Jack Winter. a 24-year-old operator of a drive-in restaurant in Kansas City. Another, who managed to stay with Fischer for about two hours, said: "He's just like a machine, doesn't make a mistake." "Just as people thought the League of Nations was something that it is not . . . they think of the U.N. as something it is not." Adamson said. One player, with a look of disbelief and amazement on his face, walked up to a friend, and said, "He took me in eleven moves." THE CLEEBRATIONS traditionally are dedicated to Communist unity, but this year they pointed up the deepening split between the Soviet Union and Red China, the two giants of the Communist world. The five-day forecast calls for warming trends to begin Monday with temperatures above 70 degrees. Fischer Beats 42 Challengers Cloudy and rainy weather with the chance of a few thunderstorms was the Weather Bureau's forecast today for the area tonight and tomorrow. Low tonight should be in the middle 50's, and the high tomorrow in the upper 60's. Despite a Chinese charge that the Russians withdrew its invitation to Peking to attend the celebrations, Chinese Ambassador Pan Tsu Li showed up among the foreign diplomatic guests. erboard to the next, seemingly taking in the situation in one swift glance, and hardly breaking his long stride as he would make what looked like an off-the-cuff move against each opponent. It took him only three to five minutes to make a play against each of his 43 challengers, and even less after the number of plavers became smaller. For the first time in years,however,a regular May Day delegation from Red China was conspicuously absent from Red Square. (Continued on page 8) The exhibition took place in the ballroom of the Kansas Union where at 25 tables, arranged in a large oval. 43 amateurs sat in studied concentration, trying to analyze the seemingly hasty moves of the young master. cause it was the only game he hadn't plaved. But it was no ordinary school dropout who played 43 games simultaneously in three hours, sending bewildered amateurs home carting chess sets under their arms, after Bobby Fischer, present U.S. Chess Champion for the fifth time, defeated 42 aspiring amateurs and drew only one game. Weather Forty-three college chess fans last night pitted their skill against a high school drop-out, and came out on the losing end. Fischer, who dropped out of high school in the middle of his junior year, calmly strode from one check- By Gary Noland rischer, considered by some experts to become the best chess master who ever lived, was a guest of the KU chess club. After giving a lecture on his 1962 game with the Russian, Mikhail Batvinnik, in the world team championship in Bulgaria. Fischer confidently exhibited his skill against anyone who might have had any doubts about the 20-year-old lanky Brooklyn lad who took up chess at the age of six be- The New China News Agency said there was no Soviet delegation at the May Day celebrations in Peking. THE MILITARY parade and other festivities in the square lasted four hours. Khrushchev and visiting Algerian President Ahmed Ben Bella led the dignitaries standin $ ^{n} $ atop Lenin's mausoleum as the parade rolled past in the square. Thousands of Russians turned the square into a sea of red flags. Wearing a natty suit, a homburg and a spring coat in the 70 degree weather, Khrushchev smiled and waved to the colorful mass of humanity, estimated at half a million strong, which surged, shuffled and danced through the square. As is the May Day custom, the Premier did not speak. Ben Bella wore his tie-less, Chinese-style khaki tunic and top coat, but no hat. THE ROLL-PAST of rockets, mobile cannons and troops carriers was followed by a mass demonstration of physical culture specialists and a parade of Muscovites carrying flags and placards. Junior From Wichita Wins Speaking Contest Pamela Stone, Wichita junior, won the 17th annual Delta Sigma Rho public speaking contest last night with her speech, "Negroes Are Unequal." Honorable mentions were given to Lacy Banks, Kansas City junior, for his speech, "New Wine, Old Bottles," and Carol Borg, Manhattan sophomore, for her speech on civil rights. Miss Stone won a set of the encyclopedias. Present among the diplomatic corps was U.S. Ambassador Foy D. Kohler who boycotted last year's parade when Cuban Premier Fidel Castro was the guest of honor. The twin rockets, with fins fore and after, trundled across the cobblestones on self-propelled launching platforms, mounted on tracks like a tank. BECAUSE THE rocket "twins" were mounted on the tracked vehicle, the observers said it was likely the Russians intended to use it as an anti-aircraft missile capable of operating in the field. The weapon was described by western military observers as a relatively low-altitude anti-aircraft missile. Attached to the rear of the approximately 30-foot-long rockets were what appeared to be smaller directional rockets. The Soviet forces also showed off polaris-type missiles that "can reach any continent," according to Tass, and a rocket that it claimed could send a space ship to the moon. Another item was a pilotless interceptor rocket. Class of '64 Has 31 Days For 1964 KU graduates, the magie number is 31. Thirty-one days from today, the Class of 1964 and those earning graduate degrees will march through the Campanile to Memorial Stadium where the 92nd annual commencement exercises will take place. COMMENCEMENT ACTIVITIES will begin formally on May 30 with alumni registration. Baccalaureate services will be at 7:30 p.m., May 31, in Memorial Stadium, with Rev. Dr. Franklin Clark Fry, President of the Lutheran Church in America giving the address. The 1964 commencement exercises will begin at 7 p.m., June 1, in Memorial Stadium. FOLLOWING THE processional, Governor John Anderson, Henry A. Bubb, chairman of the State Board of Regents, and Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will make the opening remarks, followed by the presentation of degrees. Regents Clement H. Hall and William F. Danenbarger will present the degrees. KU has not had a formal commencement address since the 1939 commencement. "Classes have been getting bigger and bigger, and time became a problem." Fred Ellsworth, Alumni adviser, said yesterday. "With the Regents, the Chancellor, and the governor speaking there isn't time for a formal address," Elsworth said. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, May 1, 1964 A Case Study for Humanists: Ann Z (Ann Z is a fictitious name in the following article. The author of this article I believe, similar to that of at least some on this campus.) When Ann Z came to KU a little more than a year ago, her primary goal was a husband. The secondary objective was to study. She had the notion that if she could but find a man, her power of concentration with the books would be incomparably higher. With this logic, Ann Z set out to fulfill goal one. THERE WERE PLACES to find men and ways to find men, Ann reasoned, and she made herself available. But our heroine discovered that competition for men was high and a serious demand for 18-year-old brides was relatively low. To compete in the great game, Ann spent several of the precious hours everyday trying to make herself A-1 OK looking. At last there was a taker, she thought. But alas! he turned out to be a passer-by, and her life went from bad to worse. The harder our protagonist tried to achieve goal one, the less she did about goal two—the books, you will remember. HER PARENTS were informed about her lackluster pursuit of goal number two. She convinced them that her failures were due to home-sickness, a new environment and an inadequate educational background. She thought she would do better in the future. No matter what she did, Ann felt, her GPA would not slip below minus one . . . for Ann was a great thinker. KU, she had heard, usually made its facilities available to each student for at least a year. AT THE END OF HER first semester, Ann Z found to her great delight that her reasoning had been correct. No matter what she did, her grades could go no lower than minus one. But Ann was a girl of courage. Second semester represented a second chance. There was still hope in the corner of her spunky heart that she would be able to achieve both of her goals. HOWEVER, HER SECOND semester did vary noticeably from her first. When she tried to study, she found herself of Joe or Robert or Johnny and wearing a bride's veil. She spent most of her time in places where she was likely to be seen by the mythical goal number one. Finally her parents, who saved money by giving up cigarettes and liquor to pay the tuition, had to tell her to find a job to support herself. They no more wished to assure her a college status. Unable to find financial support, Ann Z decided to leave the University and work. She felt sorry for the little she had achieved in school. But overall, she considered herself lucky not to receive a compulsory degree of double M.A. spelled MAMA... - Vinay Kothari Senators Chorus Their Objection On South Viet Nam Foreign Policy The rigid taboo that has so long silenced high-level debate on our foreign policy in Viet Nam and Southeast Asia has finally been breached. True, there have been a few lonesome voices, such as The Progressive's, that have spoken out for a decade against what we called last month "a policy so sterile and self-defeating that it oustant have been buried long ago." Now a whole chorus of Senatorial voices has openly and articulately raised doubts and objections concerning continuation of our Asia policy. Ironically, the beginning of open debate was inspired, in considerable measure, by France's imperious President Charles de Gaulle when he recognized Communist China and proposed to seek an end of hostilities in Viet Nam and neutralization of all Southeast Asia. "I THINK THE best thing our country can do," said Senator Mansfield. "is reassess its foreign policy . . . face up to the realities of today, and not depend so much on the wishes of yesterday." Senator E.L. Bartlett, Alaska Democrat, echoed Mansfield's position, emphasizing that France failed to find a military solution in Indochina a decade ago, as we are falling today. "It would seem evident," said Senator Bartlett, "that any possibility of obtaining a diplomatic solution should not be scorned . . . For too long our policies in Southeast Asia have been locked in rigid inflexible terms. For too long our response to any change has been dogmatic and absolute. We have lacked the flexibility to turn change to our advantage." The Senate majority leader and Montana Democrat, Mike Mansfield, responded by urging the Administration to encourage rather than spurn French efforts to negotiate with Communist China for a settlement in Southeast Asia. Senator Wayne Morse, the maverick Democrat from Oregon, asked, "When are the foreign and military policies of the United States going to move beyond World War II and the cold war. "I am completely opposed," said Senator Morse, "to increasing the scale of our participation in the Vietnamese war. . . We should never have gone in. We should never have stayed in. We should get out." Senator Allen J. Ellender, Louisiana Democrat, endorsed Morse's sharp opposition to our Viet Nam policy. "I have been advocating such a course of action," said Ellender. "After my last visit there, I again stated that we should never have gone in there, and that we should get out. My advice was never heeded. That is my advice today." SENATOR FRANK CHURCH. Idaho Democrat and member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, raised his voice in praise of President de Gaulle's efforts toward a negotiated settlement in Southeast Asia. In Senator Church's view, the United States risks becoming "a kind of Alice in Wonderland in world affairs" by basing its policies on myths such as the non-existence of Communist China. The most vigorous protest came from Senator Ernest Gruening, the other Democrat from Alaska. In a major foreign policy speech in the Senate, Senator Gruening stated flatly: "The time has come to reverse our policy of undertaking to defend areas such as South Viet Nam. . . All troops should immediately be relieved of combat assignments. . . A return of the troops to our own shores should begin." "I think we should begin to talk candidly about the realities in the world," said Senator Church. "To the extent that American policy is based upon myth, we disserve ourselves." There were spokesmen who defended current Administration policy with equal vigor, and some who indignantly denounced the critics for speaking out. Nor was there agreement by any means among the advocates of a change in the direction of our foreign policy as to which way we should go. THE SIGNIFICANT FACT that at long last a debate has begun. Some light and fresh air have permeated the dingy, muggy, long-unexplored policies we inherited from the cold war, the McCarthy era, and the briskness of John Foster Dulles. Hopefully, the debate will continue until it steers us into a more promising course. A few days after Senator Gruening had delivered his major policy address, Senator Morse rose in the Senate to denounce the press for "concealing" it from the American people. "It is interesting to observe," said Senator Morse, "that The New York Times, the Washington Post, The Washington Star, and many other newspapers have blacked out any news to the American people concerning the viewpoint of this very responsible member of this Senate. "When the people of a sovereign state elect a person to the Senate to represent them and the state, one would think that even though the editors disagree with the Senator, they would recognize the importance of our foreign and domestic policy with respect to South Viet Nam, and that at least an alleged free press would practice that great constitutional right and guarantee by telling the American people the viewpoint expressed by a man such as Senator Gruening." THE SENATOR from Oregon then revealed that he had "checked into the situation." "I find," said Morse, "that correspondents in the press galleries submitted their stories. AP and UPI correspondents sent in their stories and they were fair analyses . . . Manuscripts (of the speech) were sent to the press galleries a considerable time ahead of delivery, and early enough in the day so that no editor could say they were received after the deadline." This strikes us as a fair judgment. The press has a great responsibility, now that the long freeze on foreign policy debate seems to be thawing out, to provide the people with full and impartial access to the arguments. Anything less would represent a shocking betrayal of its role in a free society. The Senator then drew his conclusions. "Some editorial forces in this country do not want to give the American people the facts about the shocking American program in South Viet Nam." Dailij Fransan - The Progressive University 4-3646, newsroom University 4-3198, business office University 4-3846, newsroom University 4-3198, business office University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904 Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East St. St., New York 22, N.Y. National School. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Satu- rals and holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. STOP BEING POOR! DO YOU HEAR? BARR ©1964 HERBLOCK "See Our Man Has An Anti-Poverty Campaign Too" From 'Beat' to Action: Campus Regeneration The Peace Corps idea is spreading fast. Forty-six countries are now sending their young men and women into the world to help the poor countries, and a spontaneous volunteer student movement is also working quietly and effectively among the underprivileged children in our own cities. The Student Education corps at Michita State university is merely one of many illustrations of this movement in the United States. They had no money from the university, or the state, but a few of them reasoned that they might be able to deal with some of the worst of the children who came from broken homes and had no incentive to get an education. It started more than a year ago on the assumption that serious college undergraduates might be able to help the harassed and overworked teachers in the poor districts of Lansing, Pontiac and other cities within 100 miles of the Michigan State campus. NOW ABOUT 200 of these young college students go out as assistants to the slum school teachers several times a week. Some of them take on the backward pupils. Others work with the bright ones who are held back by the drones. A few go around the state with a "career caravan" illustrating the kinds of jobs that are available to students who do their work. But the main thing is not so much to help the young laggards with their work, but to make friends with them and thus provide good examples that are not available in many homes. The movement has now arrested the admiration of Gov. George Romney. He addressed a meeting of teachers from all over the state here this week to introduce the leaders of the State Education corps to a wider audience, and there is every indication that the movement will grow. Like the Peace Corps, the student volunteers go only where they are invited. Any school within reasonable range of the university can get them to help if it will only pay eight cents a mile to bring a carload of undergraduates from the campus. Nobody gets paid for the work, but David Gottlieb and Sandra A. Warden, who direct the corps, testify that they not only get all the volunteers they need, but that the volunteers themselves feel that they get as much out of the experience as the children they are trying to help. THE LARGER government programs are directed at training the school drop-outs. The Student Education corps attacks the same problem earlier. "In a few years," the corps says, "these youngsters will be unequally represented in the ranks of the habitually unemployed and unemployable. The ultimate aim of the corps is to help prevent premature drop-outs by showing these children that education is the key to a better life, by providing needed inspiration and motivation to continue with their schooling." This is not an isolated experiment. Similar activities are going on in other universities. Pomona college in California is another lively center. Gov. Terry Sanford of North Carolina is working with William Friday, president of the University of North Carolina, on a corps of volunteers to help the underprivileged, and Yale produced the Northern Student movement that is now active on many campuses not only in the field of education but of political action. For example, more than 1000 students from various colleges and universities, most of them affiliated with the Northern Student movement, will be going to Mississippi, Alabama, and Louisiana this summer to live in Negro homes and help the Negroes register for the November elections. Unlike his contemporaries in other countries, who were knocking over governments and leading the torrent of political change, the American student, it was said, wasn't engaged in anything and didn't care about anything. Well, something is happening on the campus. In some ways these student leaders are ahead of the government. And when the Congress finally gets around to backing a domestic Peace Corps and backing President Johnson's "war on poverty," quite a few young American men and women will already be in the field. James Reston, New York Times Friday, May 1, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Bloodthirsty Onlookers Depict Society's Sore By Louis Cassels United Press International A few weeks ago, in a quiet residential neighborhood of New York, 38 people watched a killer stalk a defenseless woman. It took him half an hour—and three separate attacks—to complete the brutal business of stabbing her to death. During that time, any one of the onlookers might have saved her life simply by picking up the telephone and calling the police. Not one of them lifted a finger to help her. As they explained later to police, they didn't want to get involved." ON APRIL 13, nearly 3,000 people gathered in the streets around the DeWitt Clinton Hotel in Albany, N.Y., to watch an emotionally distraught 19-year-old boy face back and forth along a narrow ledge on the 11th floor. "Go ahead and jump," somebody yelled. "Don't be chicken, jump," shouted another spectator. "Jump, jump jump," chanted a crowd of boys in unison. When police finally pulled the boy to safety, members of the crowd made no secret of their disappointment. "They really wanted to see him die." said a fireman, shaking his head in disbelief. WHAT DO THESE episodes reveal about the mental and spiritual health of our urban society? What do they say about the state of religion in America? UPI sought answers to these questions from a famous psychiatrist, a Protestant editor, a Roman Catholic bishop, and a Jewish rabbi. Dr. Robert H. Felix, director of the National Institute of Mental Health and past president of the American Psychiatric Association, said both incidents demonstrate the "dehumanizing" effects of life in an urban environment where relationships tend to become increasingly impersonal. "One of the marks of a fully civilized human being is a capacity for empathy and compassion toward others," he said. "People who stand by and watch a helpless woman be murdered, or exhort a Thirteen Students Given Finland Institute Grant Thirteen KU students are among those from 14 schools to be chosen to study Russian June 10-Aug. 21 at a summer language institute in Finland. The institute is a two-year-old cooperative program of KU and the University of Colorado, and is held under a Carnegie Corporation grant of $67,000 for three summers. Thirteen students from each cooperating institution are among those chosen this year. THE 40 WILL study intermediate or advanced Russian in the community of Jarvenpaa, Finland, which contains a substantial Russian population. The climax to their program will be a two-week study tour of the Soviet Union at the end of the summer. The participants will have nearly ideal conditions for learning the ProgramHonors Spanish Writer The 40th annual Cervantes Day will be tomorrow in Fraser Hall in memory, of the author of "Don Quijote." Following a 9 a.m. coffee, Marcos A. Morinigo, a specialist on Spanish and Spanish-American philology from the University of Illinois, will speak on "Cervantes y la Retorica" at 10 a.m. in Fraser Theater. Also at 10 a.m. the movie "Subida al Cielo" will be shown in Bailey Auditorium. The film will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. All morning demonstrations of equipment, tapes and film strips will be shown in the sound room and in 110 Fraser. A variety program will be held at 2 p.m. in Fraser Theater. At 4:30 p.m. Dr. Morinigo will lecture on "El Impacto del Español sobre las Lenguas Indigenas Americanas" in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. About 400-500 students from more than 30 schools in the area will attend the Cervantes Day programs. The event is sponsored by the Department of Romance Languages and the Kansas Chapter of American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese. Russian language. They will live and study together in a school building, made available to them by the city commission of Jarvenpaa. Their instructors will be S. F. Anderson of KU, assistant professor of Slavic language, and Father George Benigsen of Colorado, plus four Russian-speaking natives of the Finnish community. Each student will be required to speak only Russian. Dr. Frank E. Gaebelein, editor of Christianity Today magazine, said the incidents are symptomatic of the "callousness" which is widespread in contemporary society. Nyle Miller, Topeka senior; Janice Peavey, Wichita sophomore; Letha Schwiesow, Shawnee Mission junior; Peter Shrager, New York, N.Y., graduate student; Kenneth Smith, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Margarete Stolzenbach, Lawrence junior, and Evelyn Thomas, Baltimore, Md., graduate student. The 13 from KU chosen to participate in the 1964 institute are Carolyn Berneking, Lawrence junior; Henry F. Bisbee, Toledo, Ohio, sophomore; William Getz, Newton junior; Neil Johnson, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; William Kuhike, Lawrence graduate student; John Maloney, Lawrence junior. boy to commit suicide to provide them with a thrill, are acting in a way that can only be described as sub-human." "WE HAVE BECOME hardened—perhaps even addicted—to violence," he said. "The dreadful wars we have been through seem to have cheapened the value we place on a human life." A recital of American music will be presented to the International Club by Sigma Alpha Iota, women's music fraternity in the regular meeting at 8 p.m., Friday, in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union, Norma Renuvan. Junction City senior said I-Club to Hear Recital Refreshments and dancing in the Jayhawk Room will follow the program. involved' in the troubles of others is becoming characteristic of many people in our society." The Most Rev. Philip M. Han- 4:30 - 10:30 DINE-A-MITE 23rd & La. "It shows up not only in relation to personal problems, but in an indifferent attitude toward social problems such as poverty and racial injustice," he said. Steak Dinner Sunday Nites $1.25 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 1605, San Francisco, Calif. Rabbis Hirsch said unconcern for human suffering is totally incompatible with America's claim to be a "nation under God." LIVE AND WORK IN see yourself in our lovely Bridal Gowns nan, auxiliary Catholic bishop of Washington, D.C., said the incidents show that the Judeo-Christian concept of brotherly love is a practical necessity for decent community life. AVA'S BRIDAL SALON One of the first ethical questions raised in the Bible is, 'Am I my brother's keeper?' he said. "And the whole Bible answers, yes." It stands for Scholarship Money's Our Purpose. In 1961, the initials also stood for Support Merrily Our Project. Since its beginning, 12 names have been added to the memorial. The latest name to be added is that of Carole Jean Whiting, LaGrange, Ill. senior, who was killed in an automobile accident, April 4, Near Canton, Ala. Without it, he said, "our attitudes toward one another quickly degenerate into a kind of neutralism, in which we think of our neighbor only as a potential nuisance." 623 Indiana VI 2-0056 The first SMOP scholarship was awarded in the spring of 1949. The $50 scholarship was awarded to one girl. Since then, the amount has increased to $250 awarded to two or three girls, depending on available funds. By Leta Cathcart (Society Editor) Also see our cocktail dresses Rabbi Richard G. Hirsch, director of the Social Action Center of Reform Judaism in Washington, said that "unwillingness to 'get In 1948, the scholarship was called the KU Women's Memorial Scholarship. Later, the name was changed to AWS Memorial Scholarship. In 1960, the name became popularly known as the SMOP scholarship. What started as a tragedy has resulted in the AWS Memorial Scholarship Fund. Hoop rentals THE SMOP SCHOLARSHIPS will be awarded at All Women's Night, Monday, May 4 in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall. On November 23, 1948, two KU women, Fredrika Ekblad and Geraldine Cuddy, were killed in a Thanksgiving vacation automobile accident near McPherson. The student-initiated scholarship, awarded annually at the AWS All Women's Night, was established on Dec. 2 of the same year. The scholarship is intended to perpetuate the memory of all women students whose academic careers are ended by death. Conceived in Tragedy AWS to Award Scholarship BASIS FOR SELECTION includes need, scholarship and leadership in the living group and on campus. The applicant must have been in residence at KU for at least a semester at the time of selection. An auxiliary committee of the AWS House of Representatives 125 YAMAHA ERN'S CYCLE SHOP 950 N.3rd VI 3-5815 We Service All Makes of Cycles supervise the projects which raise the funds for the scholarship. The House of Representatives includes one representative from each women's living group on campus. The SMOP committee has supervised money-raising projects ranging from a slave auction of University officials to a Dean for a Day program. 1961, Chancellor Wescoe was auctioned to Lewis Hall for $141. A few day's later, Chancellor Wescoe served as a bus boy at Lewis Hall's diner. He wore the traditional white cap and jacket Later that month, he performed the function of an assistant resident director when he was on hand to check all the women into the residence hall at closing and lock the doors. After spirited bidding between the two freshman residence halls, Gertrude Sellards Pearson and Corbin, Emily Taylor, dean of women, became the property of Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall. She sold for $106.25. These women were auctioned to men's and women's living groups and the project brought $636.70. The initials SMOP meant "Slave Maidens on Parade." DONALD K. ALDERSON, dean of men, brought $80 from Corbin Hall. Dean Alderson also served as a waiter. The SMOP committee also sponsored a late-night that year. The project netted $722. After the officials had been sold, officers of campus organizations were also auctioned, including presidents and past presidents of living groups. THE YEAR BEFORE, 1960. Pi Beta Phi sorority and Corbin Hall raised the most money for the scholarship fund. The money-raising projects were originated within the groups. As prizes they exchanged duty with Emily Taylor, dean of women. The president of the Pi Beta Phi sorority ran into some problems her day in office. A woman student from the University of Chicago (actually a KU drama student) asked to be admitted to KU after she had been expelled from the Chicago school for unexplained disciplinary reasons. This year's projects included a late night on the first night of the Rock Chalk Revue and a Christmas Card Post Office. The Post Office delivered to all organized living groups, student offices, departments and faculty offices, and the administration. Cards could be sent for 2 cents and packages for 10 cents. The Post Office operated from December 12 through the 18th. 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 Ph. VI 2-3416 1912 W. 25th Day or Night Page 4 University Dany Kansan Friday, May 1, 1964 Humanism Seen As Tie That Binds Humanism, the basic element and current trend in both the east and the west, is the tie that binds and the one factor which may make the hope of "peaceful co-existence" a permanent reality, Errol Harris, professor of philosophy, said last night in his twenty-third war and peace lecture. Marxism and democracy share somewhat the same origins. Both can be traced to the seventeenth century document, "The Rights of Man," by Thomas Paine, whose writings were a source of inspiration to French and American revolutionaries. Prof. Harris said. But in that document, Paine became the forerunner of socialism, in that he is the first advocate of practical social reform in the direction of the welfare state, the professor said. Forum to Discuss AWS Sex Survey "Values of KU Women" will be the topic of the Current Events Forum at 4:30 p.m. today in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. The panel will present findings from a survey made by the Associated Women Students about a month ago. The Roles of Women committee of AWS asked all KU women students to complete a questionnaire in order to determine the values of KU women. The panel consists of Miss Emily Taylor, dean of Women; the Rev. Paul Davis of the Plymouth Congregational Church; Max Stalcup, a teacher at Lawrence high school, and Jerilyn Williamson, Bastrop, La., graduate student. Marxism was a direct descendant of the revolutionary and humanitarian movement which produced the republican democracies of America and France, he continued. Marxism almost grew out of the vacuum created by social conditions in France which made a mockery of the democratic ideals of the revolutionaries, he said. But Prof. Harris said there are "two mutually incompatible elements" in the Marxian philosophy. "An indispensable element of humanitarianism, without which many of its pronouncements would be unwarranted, . . . and a materialistic totalitarianism which provides the system of explanatory concepts by which it'interprets historical events and justifies undemocratic policies are the two elements," he said. Another conflict, Prof. Harris said, is found within the Marxists adherence to the theory of dialectical materialism, which "has consequences militating against humanitarian ideals." Prof. Harris said the dialectical theory holds that matter is the sole reality and behaves according to dialectical laws which produce changes. It is a rigid theory, which applies to economic, historical, and physical laws. But, as Prof. Harris pointed out, just as the laws of nature cannot be changed, so the theories which depend on them cannot be revised. This, the professor said, is the reason why Marxists are averse to revisionism. "It is tantamount to revising the laws of nature." Another conflict between humanitarianism and materialism was pointed out by the professor. "Materialism suppresses recognition of the value of human individuality . . . and exalt the interests of the class (the proletariat) . . . failing to recognize the fact that the interests of the class are nothing other than those of the persons composing it." Another consequence of the theory is that in the face of historical material laws, human individual choice is negligible, he said. But beginning with the repudiation of Stalinism, there seems to have been more stress on humanitarianism, and less on dialectal materialism. Prof. Harris illustrated his comment by pointing to the relaxation of totalitarian restrictions in the Soviet Union, and a resurgence of independent thinking, "cautious and qualified, but significant." In the works of one Polish communist philosopher, Adam Schaff, appears an emphasis upon the humanistic elements in marxism and a playing down of the materialistic. In his writings, Schaff also indicates that Marxism is very much an open philosophy, and not as impervious to subtle revision as the law of dialectical materialism would have it be, he said. Prof. Harris sees in this kind of thinking a hope that "the gradual erosion of totalitarianism by humanitarianism within the movement could provide a fruitful means of reconciliation between east and west." But the movement towards humanism must be in the western countries too, the professor pointed out. Racialism at home, and support of dictatorial regimes abroad run directly counter to democratic principles, he said. Prof. Harris said real efforts on the part of the liberal democratic countries to practice what they preach, would spur on the Marxists to greater efforts in the direction of humanitarianism in order to prove to the uncommitted nations that communism was superior. Season Ticket Orders Go on Sale Monday Orders for reserved student tickets for the 1964 football games will be accepted beginning Monday at Allen Field House. The sale begins at 8:30 a.m. to noon and 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. daily through Thursday. Students who will be seniors, graduate and law students may purchase tickets Monday and Tuesday; junior's on Wednesday, and future sophomores may purchase tickets Thursday. Student ID cards must be presented along with a $1.50 handling fee. Official Bulletin TODAY SUA Current Events Forum, 4:30 p.m. Music Room, Kansas Union. Lecture, 4:30 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union. "El Impacto del Español sobre las Lengues Indigenas Americanas"—Dr. Marcos Morinigo, U. of Illinois. SATURDAY German Graduate Reading Exam, 9:30 a.m., 205 Fraser. Varsity Baseball, 1 p.m., Quigley Field. KU-Iowa State. SUNDAY AWS Junior-Senior Brunch, 9:30 a.m. Ballroom, Kansas Union. Oread Friends Meeting, 10:30 a.m. Dearthath meeting to this Quaker meeting for worship. SUA Chess Club, 2 p.m. Kansas Union. Big 8 Room, Kansas Union. Big 8 Room, Kansas Union. HERMAN DR PEPPER SALES HERMAN DR PEPPER SALES WE CALL IT OUR "PEPPER TO PEOPLE" PROGRAM A OR PEPPER BOTTILING CO. LAWRENCE RAY for the finest in Steaks its... ★ Charcoal Broiled Steaks ★ Cooked to your taste ★ Service to please you CHUCK WAGON 24th & Iowa VI 3-9844 ONCE AGAIN!! THE COMMANCHEROS LIVE AND IN COLOR AT THE TEEPEE "Straight from Rosemary's Lounge in K.C." FRIDAY ONLY! From 8:30 to 12:00 ENTERT Steak Dinner Sunday Nites $1.25 4:30 - 10:30 DINE-A-MITE 23rd & La. [ WEEKE DATE SPE YOUR DA GETS TO BE EVERY OTHER $ FRE 6 p.m. FRIDAY - 61 MIKU Jay Bo KANSAS UN MOM BOWLS I 蜜蜂 ...th bbb Friday, May 1, 1964 University Daily Kansan ERTAINMENT GUIDE Page 8 The Castle Tearoom For Your Dining pleasure 1307 Mass. VI 3-1151 ner les ITE 630 kc KUOK air time: 4-12 p.m., Sun.-Fri. selected sounds for KU students BOYD'S CAFE at 109 W.6th St. is ready to serve you Tues.-Sun. till 4 a.m. LOOK . . . FOR ONLY 50c SUNDAY, May 3 Barbeque beef sandwich, baked beans salad, cake, and dessert. SUNDAY.May 3 Community Building ... 11:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. Sponsored by Boy Scout Troop #53 Admission paid at the door or any troop member will have tickets Admission paid at the door or any troop member will have tickets EEKEND SPECIAL! YOUR DATE ITS TO BOWL Y OTHER GAME FREE $ DAY - 6 p.m. SUNDAY Jay Bowl ANSAS UNION DOM BOWLS FREE ! From: The Friday Flicks Committee "The Hustler" will not be at the Flicks this Friday. Due to circumstances 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 Flicks Committee Period of Adjustment plus cartoon friday fraser theater flicks 7 & 9:30 35c ...the more the "MERRIER" at... DIXON'S DRIVE-IN "where food is better" FAST DELIVERY 7 DAYS A WEEK... 2500 W 6th NOW! SIDNEY POITIER in "Lilies of the Field" Evenings 7:00 & 9:00 Mat. Sat. 2:00 Adults $1.25 Children 50c Granada THEATRE...Telephone W3-5760 Starts SOON! It's A Modern Arabian Nights-Mare Of Outrageous Fun! TONY RANDALL BURL IVES EASTMAN COLOR The Brass Bottle The Brass BOTTLE NOW! ENDS SATURDAY "Tom Jones" Evenings 6:40 & 9:05 Mat. Sat. 2:00 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1963 Starts SUNDAY! PETER PARKER Greenwich Village Story KICKS AMERICA'S TABOOS GENTLY IN THE PANTS... JACK O'CONNELL ROBERT HOGAN MELinda PLANK A COMEDY IN TELEVISION Boston University JACK O'CONNELL ROBERT HOGAN MELINDA PLANK Sunday Cont. From 2:30 Shows 2:30 - 4:40 - 6:50 - 9:00 Monday 7:00 & 9:00 ADULTS ONLY — 90c TONITE & SAT. "BATTLE GROUND" AND "GO FOR BROKE" 2 BONUS HITS SAT. "The Brain From Planet Arous" "Teenage Monster" Open 7:00 Startsusk Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 49 Starts SUNDAY! WALLOPS THE DAYLIGHTS OUT OF EVERY WESTERN YOU'VE EVER SEEN! STARTS SUNDAY! WALLOPS THE DAYLIGHTS OUT OF EVERY WESTERN YOU'VE EVER SEEN! JOHN MAUREEN WAYNE + O'HARA "McLINTOCK!" IS MCNIFICENT! TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION* Feat. at 7:55 only Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, May 1, 1964 Now Steve Renko Is Batting Cleanup By Russ Corbitt (Assistant Managing Editor) 11-24-23. Sounds like football signals? Well, that's partly correct. Those are the three numbers by which Steve Renko, sophomore three-sport letterman, is known to Big Eight sports fans. EARLY IN THE FALL, Steve put on his pads and jersey No.11 for the KU football team. Renko was the starting quarterback the entire season. After the footballs were stored away for the season, Steve suddenly decided to report to Coach Dick Harp for varsity basketball and was given jersey No.24. He joined the team late, but scored 10 points in his first game, and was a starter off and on the remainder of the season. Then came what is probably Steve's favorite sport—baseball. He reported for Coach Floyd Temple's pitching staff, and was issued uniform No. 23. TOM HEDRICK, director of the KU sports network, said he thinks Renko is probably the only major college athlete who is starting on three varsity teams. Hedrick said he is positive Steve is the sophomore starter in three sports. Renko, considered one of the best athletes ever to come out of Wyandotte High School, Kansas City, has been offered contracts by major league baseball teams. Currently, he is leading the Jayhawk pitching staff with a record of four wins and no losses. He has an earned-run-average of 0.90, and has registered 28 strikeouts. BUT HIS STRONG right arm is not Steve's only asset to the Jav Hawk team. When he is not on the mound, Renko doubles by starting in the outfield so Temple can take advantage of his hitting power. In the three-game series at Oklahoma State last weekend, Steve pitched a 6-5 victory in the opener, and unloaded a batting show of two home runs and seven hits in 12 times at bat in the series. That hitting streak boosted Renko's batting average from .297 to .354, second only to firstbaseman-outfielder Steve McGreevy's .390 among club regulars. THE PERFORMANCE ALSO caused Temple to move Steve into the cleanup spot in the batting order. That is where he will be this weekend when the Jayhawks try to overtake Iowa State in the Big Eight race at Quigley Field. Renko will pitch the first game of Friday's doubleheader, scheduled for 1:30 p.m. A nine-inning game is scheduled for 1 p.m. Saturday. KU Downs Creighton, 7-0; Face Wichita in Next Meet During the match, Kansas dropped only five games in the 14 sets played. The results of yesterday's match: The next home match for the Jayhawks will be this afternoon when they meet Wichita for the third time this season. In two previous matches KU and Wichita have won one apiece, both by the score of 4-3. The results of yesterday's match: Jim Burns KU def. Jim Fogarty 6-0, 6-1. Assistant Coach Quits For Washburn Post Bill Jennings has resigned as KU assistant football coach to become athletic director and physical education chairman at Washburn University. Topeka At KU, Jennings was offensive backfield coach, and had worked this spring with the Jayhawk defensive backs. He will assume duties at Washburn July 1. Lance Burr KU def. John Lammers 6-0: 6-0. Jay Lysaught KU def. Terry Tomkin 6-0; 6-1. John Grantham KU def. Tom Stabile 6-0; 6-0. Barry McGrath KU def. Cathy Welsh 6-0: 6-0. Burns-Burr 6-1; def. Fogarty-Tam- mers 6-1: 6-1. Lysaught-McGrath def. Tonkin-Stabile 6-0; 6-1. After today's match, the KU team will play Nebraska and Iowa State next weekend, and in two weeks will participate in the Big Eight tournament. KU and Oklahoma are co-favorites to take this year's championship. In other sports action, the KU track squad will participate in a meet against Southern Illinois. The field events are scheduled to get underway at 7 p.m. with the first running event scheduled for 7:30 Saturday. Southern Illinois will be led by George Woods, second place shot-putter in the KU Relays. Also figured to cause the Jayhawkers trouble are hurdler Herb Walker and quarter-miler Carv Carr. FIRST TIME EVER!! MISS ANN BREWER AND THE FLAMES AT THE TEEPEE SATURDAY NIGHT FROM 9 TO 12 KERBY'S DEPENDABLE STATION - 'Vett headquarters Mobilgas 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 1 VI 3-9608 9th & Ky. The only thing better than a home cooked meal is Dinner At DUCKS Steaks & Seafoods A Specialty Serving crisp tossed salads, choice of potatoes, zesty Vienna breads & country fresh butter. Sandwiches, too! Your favorite beverage 11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass. CAMERA Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO 7,000 Pipes and every smoking accessory I am a priest. AT HONN'S LAUNDRY IT'S George's Pipe Shop 727 Mass. VI 3-7164 "SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS" "SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS" Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Clean— the cleanest laundry in town inspect our facilities, you'll agree Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER HAL'S STEAK HOUSE Clean your whole wash the Honn way Wash 20c Dry 10c BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY STUDENTS JIM'S CAFE DINING PLEASURE AT ITS BEST! Fraternity Jewelry BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ___ 6.98 OPEN 24 hrs. a day 838 Mass. featuring Open-hearth charcoal broiled Steaks Chicken — Shrimp — Sandwiches Ribs Cleanyour best suits and coats in our coin-on dry clean machine "Laundry Time is Honn Time" 19th & La. LUBRICATION ... $1.00 Motor tune-ups, wheel balancing FREE—one quart of oil with each oil and filter change — all major brands — PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W 23rd VI 3-9694 Open:4-Midnight Highway 59 South VI 2-9445 Across from Hillcrest Golf Course Travel Agency AIR LINES FIRST NATIONAL BANK Domestic Foreign Steamship Lines Tours Cruises Everywhere VI 3-0152 746 Mass. 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 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 Trium good climb $175. Volkswagen device sary. Originality IN FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION especially for you by Alexander's 826 10WA LAWRENCE, KANSAS FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PHONE VL 3-1229 1956 addin typew Four Size week Schwi year Has t Call I Velve tea, lunch encyo port, 1963 VI 2 1958 3-399 1962 tion, pisto New shee 1005 CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE 1957 Imperial. Power steering, brakes, seats, windows, and aerial. Automatic radios, stereo. Compatible with woo 900 x 14 whitewalls. Original condition. By owner. $995. Call VI 2-258-5-7 Trumph Cub. Recently rebuilt and in good condition. Excellent cycle for hill climbing, etc. Accept highest bid over $175. Call EI 2-4219. 5-7 Volkswagen rack and cover. Custom tailored in Germany. Simple anchoring device for cover. No tying down necessary. $20 complete. Call VI 31-588-5-4 Schwinn Traveller bicycle. Men's, one year old, little used, exquisite. Excellent condition. Automatically. Gall Larry Day, VI 3-9765 between 5 and 8 p.m. 5-1 1956 VW. $700 or trade. Barrett electric adding machine. $60. Royal portable typewriter. $50. Call VI 2-4207. 5-1 Four used General jet air tubeless tires. Size 7.50 x 4. Only $20. Must sell this week. Call VI 3-3478 after 5 p.m. 5-5 Velvet evening coat. Etched glasses, iced tea, sheer burt, wine, juices, chocolates, cookies, history, encyclopedia. Furniture, chairs, davenport, bed, and dresser. Call VI 3-0391 1963 VW sunroof. Excellent shape. Cali IV 2-3147. 5-4 1958 TR-3. Silver, fairly cheap. Call VI 3-390 after 6 p.m. weekdays. 5-4 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. Good condition. just overhaulred, 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. $250. Call VI 2-1940. 5-1 1866 Norton motorcycle, 350 c.c. Excellent contact. Gene at Mass. Mass. after 4 p.m. 5-1 1958 black and white cord convertible. Power steering and brakes, good condition, original owner. Call VI 3-5003, 1618 Rose Lane. The newest and greatest sound to hit campus! When the BANDITS JOB, you hardly notice the loss until you leave. Call Larry Breeden. VI 3-844 5-1 Wedding dress, size 7-8, 1817 La. Upnats, west apartement 4 to 6 pm. New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500 sheets to ream—$.85. Lawrence Outlook. 1005 M.A.s. tf SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS, Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale at great savings after 6 p.m. week end Saturday and Sunday. 837 Connector tt Student will sell all guns in collection. 45 auto's, Lugers, 38 revolvers, miniature automatics, Ruger 22's, 40 Auto blbl, 30.06 Deer Hair revolver 30-30, lever action. While they last! 22 L.R. $5.5 per carton. Call VI 3-1110 after 6 PM 5-7 Typewriter, new and used portables, standards, electrics, Olympia, Hermes, Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portales. Typewriter, adder, rentals and serv- Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St. Wl. 3-3644. Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as The notes. Call V1.100. Free delivery. $4.50 Western civilization notes. All new, comprehensive, revised, extremely comprehensive, memigraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Copy VI 1-291 for free delivery. tf For Fuller Brush products phone VI 3-8904 after 5 p.m. FOR RENT Bedroom with shower and half-bath. Klitchen privileges if desired. See at 516 La. ___ 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. Santee Academy, 1123 Ind., VI 3-2118 Patronize Kansan Advertisers One Stop Service Generator & Starter Repair Engine Tune Up Brake Repair ★ Lubrication & Oil Change WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE 1 bedroom attractively furnished apartment in quiet location. Large cool rooms, furniture included, later. Will rent for all or part of summer to married, grad, or responsible student. You are reserved now ($5 per month) 71 W 255 Apt. D or call VI 3-407-517-9322 Bachelor Studio Apartment for graduate or older undergraduate men. $1\frac{1}{2}$ blocks from Union. Newly remodeled nicely furnished and Private ideal study condominium available to low summer rates. Singles and doubles. For appointment call VI 3-8534. 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. 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 3-1116 for information. JACK & GUNN'S Single or double room. Furnished, cook- ware provided. Audit. Call it 2-8451 or see at 1244 La. Crescent Heights two bedroom apart- ment. 25th and Red bed. Phone VI 2-3711. SKELLY SERVICE Brown and white puppy. Mixture, like If found contact Mr. Helms at 1000 Ohio, or call 714-258-6233. LOST Gold woman's watch. Reward. Call Anne, Room 433. VI 3-9123. 5-4 SKELLY TYPING 300 W. 6th 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, VI 2-0210. 5-12 Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work at home. Phone VI 3-8379. Mrs. Charles Patti. Term papers accurately and neatly typed on good grade bond paper. Minor corrections, carbon copy, extra first page. Call VI 3-0875. 5-21 Fast. accurate work done on electric drives. Better rates. Call Bett Vincent, VI 3-514-300. Experienced secretary would like typing in home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 1188 Accurate expert typist would like typing in her home. Term papers and theses. Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. tt VI 3-9271 Experienced typist with electric typewriter--fast accurate work with reason- sentations and theses, paper VI 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson. tt ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING Page 7 NEW YORK CLEANERS Delivery Service 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Tailor Made Seat Covers at Competitive Prices with sewed double lock stitch. Look! Seat Covers Tops — Glass & Zippers Rear Glasses — Hotlines — Door Panels — Jack's Sear Covers VI 3-4242 545 Minn. Experienced typist for thesis and term work. Send resume to: Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VT 9-0588 545 Minn. VI 3-5569 STUDENTS! SAVE WITH THIS AD!! Cut n Curl BEAUTY SALON production permanents, sets. Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. **tf** "Front End Special" graduation permanents, sets, - Front end aligned, - Front wheels balanced, 843 N.H. latest styles. 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 - Front end aligned - Steering checked Let us prove how we can save you money on all your car needs bearings repacked "Come in Today" TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, articles, and reports on rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. Mc-Edlowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568. $6.88 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. tt Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable Mrs. Barlow. 2047 Yale, VI 2-1648. ONLY MILKIENKS SOS—always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines. hours a.m. tape transcription. Office hours 7 a.m. p. 12m. p-12%/12% Man Phone VI 3-5920. - Steering checked Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577. tf BUSINESS SERVICES Dressmaking-aftertests, formats and gowns. Ola Smith, 939% **M** acu V 3-5283 WARDS U-Call, we haul. Anything, anytime. V1 3-5888. tf Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center. $16 Mass. VI 3-1267. L&M CAFE now under new management on Sundays and holidays. Try our delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches Your second cup of coffee always free. Pre-nursery play and learn group has several openings for two and three year olds. May 1 to Aug. 1. Air conditioned home with wading pool. Teacher with M.A. Morning or afternoon, inexpensive. Call VI 2-3749. 5-4 MISCELLANEOUS AUTO SERVICE CENTER Lube - Wheel Bal. - Brakes 729 N.H. VI 2-1708 25c delivery Open 24 hours except Saturday evening 19th & Mass. VI 3-9802 616 W. 9th BOB'S CONOCO University Daily Kansan A complete line, including, • Lavaliers • Guards • Pins • Mugs • Rings • Crests JOE'S BAKERY How do you save money by spending a lot of it at the Lawrence Book Nook? 1021 Mass. JEWELRY FRATERNITY Friday, May 1. 1964 Ray Christian JEWELERS IT'S OK TO OWE RAY 809 Mass. ★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT THE NAME FOR SERVICE BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED ★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK ★ MUFFLER SERVICE ★ TUNE-UPS ★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M. ART'S TEXACO 9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897 Have a party in the Big Red School door and floor, and piano. Heated. Call VI 3-7454. Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. t The Catecombs nite club and Pizza Dear Cafe. Modest Investment. Ideal way for 2-3 students to go on through college For information call VI 3-9703 Friday or Saturday LO 1-7251, K.C., Mo., Sunday through Thursday. tf BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Summer work. Large corporation needs 1 male students for full time work. Car necessary. Apply: Student Union, Room 905A, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Thursday. Patronize Kansan Advertisers 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 RISK'S Shirt Finishing Laundry Wash & Fluff Dry 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS All makes & models frame - body - fender - glass DALE'S BODY SHOP VI 3-4732 704 Vermont Artists - Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics Milliken's SOS "the best professional service" - general typing service - automatic typing - 24 hr. answering service - mimegraph & photo-copying 1021½ Mass., VI 3-5020, 7 a.m.-11 p.m. CAR OWNERS SAVE UP TO 40% on shocks, mufflers, tall pines and installation. pipes and installation - 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 $ $ $ $ $ $ Opportunity for male keyboard musician interested in sales demonstrations. Write giving experience, type of instructive and businessy, to University Daily Kanran, Box 10. 5-4 WANTED Large or small basite amplifier component system. Call Carl Schwalb, 5-1 3-7025. Cash paid for your book store receipts. No waiting period. Call V 2-108-1. 5-4 Riders wanted from Lawrence to K.C. and back this summer. Leave in morn- ing 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. PLANS-A-PARTY When Hallmark Plans-a-Party, you receive the compliments Hallmark BULLOCK'S 4 E. 7th VI 3-2261 - Parker Pens - Stationery - Printing 1 GB G Recording Service and Party Music Recordings Available of — Rock Chalk Revue — Spring Sing Greek Week Sing 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 Completed Swimming Pool Completed Swimming Pool CALL VI 2-3711 Mgr's Office, 2428 Redbud, Apt. D New Luxury Addition Opening This Summer . . . MAKE YOUR NEXT MOVE Crescent Heights THE OAKS 1 Bedroom ★ Swimming Pool FOR INFORMATION CONTACT Crescent Heights Ants, Mar. Crescent Heights Apts. Mgr. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers FREE VACATION SERVICE - with this ad! Bring in this coupon and get our Registered Mechanic 10 POINT SAFETY CHECK — 10 POINT SAFETY CHECK - We will check (1) Cooling System (2) Fan Belts (3) Lights & Signal System (4) Wheel Bearings (5) Brakes (6) Wipers (7) Exhaust system (8) Steering (9) Fuel System and (10) Ignition System. ABSOLUTELY FREE!! Be Careful Be Sure Be safe Before Returning Home Call on us TODAY. VI 3-6697 SANDERS MOTOR CO. Lincoln-Mercury Studebaker 9th & Miss. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, May 1, 1964 AUFS Expert- (Continued from page 1) He commented further by saying that the U.N. was not an organization to prevent war or to enforce peace. Rather, Adamson said, it was an organization which tried to use its collective judgment to influence its members to do a better job in maintaining peace. Many people in the world do not know what the U.N. can and cannot do and the Voice of America, through its programs, attempts to inform these people, Adamson explained. Other programs also carried on by the U.S.I.A. to explain U.S. policies to foreign countries are press services and information center services, Adamson said. The press services include three magazines in foreign languages: "America," in Russian; "Life in America," sent to the Arabic nations; and "Problems of Communism," sent to scholars as resource material on the subject of Communism versus Democracy. The world-wide information center services have libraries, exhibits and music services. Adamson explained. The 182 libraries offer all types of reading material, and the center serves as a place where questions concerning the U.S. can be answered. Music libraries are also available featuring American music, Adamson said. Student Court Declares Election Invalid at OSU The election for the entire slate of Student Association officers and student senators at Oklahoma State University was declared invalid and will have to be reheld. ELECTION WILL BE Monday for president, vice-president, and secretary of the association and all college senators that had been voted on previously. OSU's Student Supreme Court unanimously ruled the April 14 general election had been improperly conducted and ordered another election, The Daily O'Collegian said. The ruling was given after John Woods, Association vice-presidential candidate, filed a petition stating that the party affiliation of each candidate had not been listed on the ballots. He said the discrepancy was in direct violation of the Student Constitution and cited the particular by-law of the Student Association. Woods, an Independent candidate, lost the election by 61 votes to Bob McCaffree, unaffiliated candidate. He contended the elections results may have been different had his party affiliation been listed. All those interested report to room 203 Robinson at 4:30 Tuesday, May 5. The course will be open to boys and girls. THE AFFILIATIONS HAD been left off the election machines from the time the polls opened at 8 a.m. until approximately 9:30 a.m. In that time, an estimated 500 persons voted. Red Cross Senior Lifesaving Course Will Be Offered. The court's decision did not affect the second round of balloting for class officers. Those elections have already been reheld—with party affiliations clearly printed on the ballots. Want to Rent a House? Read the Kansan Classifieds. PARK CAMP Steak Dinner Sunday Nites $1.25 4:30 - 10:30 DINE-A-MITE 23rd & La. Want to Rent a House? Read the Kansan Classifieds. Flowers for all Occasions at OWENS We wire flowers anywhere in the free world 9th & Ind. VI 3-6111 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers QUALITY AND STYLE! Artcarved® WEDDING RINGS Why buy ordinary rings when a prize-winning Artcarved costs no more? Starting at $8.00. CHAPEL SET Groom's Ring ... $29.50 Bride's Ring ... $27.50 Just one of our 300 Different Styles! Marks Jewelers 817 Mass. MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY MEMBER OF AGS NATIONAL BRIDAL SERV Patronize Your Flowers for all Occasions at OWENS We wire flowers anywhere in the free world 9th & Ind. VI 3-6111 14K I Atticovol QUALITY AND STYLE! Artcarved® WEDDING RINGS Why buy ordinary rings when a prize-winning Artcarved costs no more? Starting at $8.00. CHAPEL SET Groom's Ring ... $29.50 Bride's Ring ... $27.50 Just one of our 300 Different Styles! Marks Jewelers 817 Mass. MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY MEMBER OF AGS NATIONAL BRIDAL SERVICES Patronize Your Advertisers Marks Jewelers Marks Jewelers 817 Mass. AGS MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY MEMBER OF MARS NATIONAL BRIDAL SERVIC 817 Mass. MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY THINKING OF HAVING A PARTY? THEN HAVE IT— AND LET THE KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE HANDLE ALL ARRANGEMENTS TEAS WE OFFER FACILITIES FOR COFFEES - REFRESHMENTS - WEDDING RECEPTIONS - OR JUST ANY OCCASION KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE Model UN Acts Daily hansan On 6 Resolutions 61st Year. No. 132 Students pondered, debated and voted on Friday and Saturday in Hoch Auditorium. The occasion was the fifth Model United Nations, sponsored by the KU-Y, which offers students the opportunity to learn about the U.N. through experience. Action was taken on six of the eight resolutions on the agenda. Two other resolutions were presented from the floor. Resolutions on the Security Council, South Africa, the admittance of Red China to the U.N., disarmament, Israel, and a peace-keeping force were considered and the assembly adjourned before discussing resolutions on Kashmir and the Oder-Neisse boundary of Poland. The sixth resolution discussed on the agenda, the resolution concerning Israel proposed: 1) all aid and assistance from the U.N. to Israel be stopped; 2) member nations of the U.N. use all their moral, political, and economic power they have to persuade Israel to abide by the letter and the spirit of the U.N. charter and resolutions; 3) legal possession of land in Palestine be restored to occupants in residence before the conflict of 1947; 4) all immigrants in Palestine since 1947 be returned to their native countries or resettled; 5) if Israel does not comply with parts 3 and 4 the membership of Israel in the U.N. be terminated. After presentation by Jordan who sponsored the resolution and some discussion, a roll call vote was recorded and the proposal failed to pass. Jordan, who stated that Israel had imperialistic and expansionistic tendencies, and the remainder of the Arab bloc walked out of the General Assembly, leaving with a declaration of war against Israel. Brazil immediately proposed a resolution calling for a peacekeeping force to be sent to Israel. In addition another separate resolution calling for a mediation board in Israel was proposed. Both resolutions passed. Disarmament through the declaration of specific countries as nuclear free zones was jointly proposed by the U.S. and U.S.S.R. The resolution passed and called for immediate action as soon as a method of enforcement could be found. The U.S. proposal concerning the Security Council asked for a change in the number of members. The present five permanent members, United States, the Republic of China, France, the U.S.S.R., and Great Britain would remain on the council, but the non-permanent membership would be changed from six to nine. Only the affirmative vote of nine members would be required on procedural matters where as seven were required before. Other decisions by the council would require nine votes including the concurring votes of the permanent members. The proposal passed although France moved to declare the assembly incompetent to rule on or discuss the resolution. Tanganyika presented a resolution calling for a condemnation by the U.N. of the policies and practices of apartheid in South Africa. If the policies in South Africa did not change, the U.N. members were asked to cut off diplomatic relations with South Africa. The resolution passed. A peace-keeping force which would be on permanent alert was proposed by New Zealand. The force would be used at the request of the Secretary-General "when the recognized government of a member nation requested United Nations assistance." This resolution was also passed by the assembly. After debate between France and the Republic of China, the question of admitting the People's Republic of China was tabled. Attempts were made to bring the resolution back on to the floor for discussion. However, before this could be accomplished a request for a count of delegations present was made. The necessary majority of nations was not present at the time of the count and the assembly was forced to adjourn under the rules of parliamentary procedure at 3:30 p.m. Saturday. Lawton to Answer Questions On Parking in ASC Session Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor of operations, said he will attend a special meeting of the All Student Council to discuss the recent hike in parking permit fees and increased parking restrictions. The ASC voted unanimously Tuesday to have the special session since Lawton was unable to attend the regular ASC meeting. SEVERAL ASC members voiced strong opposition to the new traffic program which raises permit fees from the present $4 rate to $10, and restricts parking on central campus zones to faculty members until 11:00 p.m. Jim Cline, Rockford, Ill., junior and representative from the large men's residence halls, said in an interview last night he thought the residence hall residents deserved an explanation for the fee hike. "It is not fair that only the residence hall students pay more to park their cars in our hall lots," Cline said. "The basic question I want to ask is why they need to raise this fee, and especially why any raise is not more representative of the entire campus. CLINE SAID THAT if the fee was to increase the number of security officers, these would not be used around the residence halls. "The dormitory office takes care of hiring any security officers themselves to look after the cars, the parking lot and the area around the halls and this is included in our dormitory fee." Rights Debate Stopped Briefly WASHINGTON — (UPI) — A well-dressed young Negro interrupted the Senate's civil rights debate today when he rose in the gallery and loudly criticized the poor attendance on the floor. The Negro, speaking slowly, asked "How can you say you are protecting the black man when there are only five of you there. "I thought this is America," he said, "the land of the free." The Negro spoke for several minutes until he was ushered out of the visitors gallery by attendants. He made no effort to resist and was hustled up the stairs and out the door. Cline also said he would like to know why the extra 281 spaces were necessary for faculty members and not for students on campus at night. He asked why persons needing or desiring to park on campus at night couldn't pay a special fee for a night parking sticker. ANOTHER QUESTION Cline plans to ask Lawton is what the officers in the traffic control booths do after the campus is open for traffic in the afternoon. "I hope interested students will attend the meeting, especially those from the large residence halls, so that we can all better understand the problems and the rationale behind these proposed solutions." Cline said. Lawton had no comment on what he would say to the ASC, but Mike Miner, Lawrence junior and ASC chairman, said he had asked Lawton to briefly explain the new program and then answer questions from the floor. The council session at 7:00 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas Union will be the first special session since the meeting following President Kennedy's death. Although it is not a regular, meeting. Miner said the council will also discuss any new business council members want to bring up. AWS to Give Honors Tonight to KU Women Highlight of this year's work by KU women students will be tonight, when the Associated Women Students (AWS) presents its annual "Honors Night." "To honor women for past work, to announce the programs for the coming year, and to culminate the year's activities are the purposes of such an Honors Night." Dean Emily Taylor said in an interview yesterday afternoon. "Honors Night" will begin at 8:15 p.m. in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall. MOST OF THE awards to be presented are being kept secret until this evening, Carol McMahan, Wichita sophomore, and chairman of the Honors Night committee, said. Among the "surprise" honors to be announced will be the tapping of new members of Cwens and Mortar Board. Cwens is a national sophomore women's honorary society, whose members are selected during the spring of their freshman year on the basis of scholarship, leadership in living groups, and campus activities. At KU, the major project of the Cwens is the orientation of freshman women. "Mortar Board honors women for three year's work," Miss McMahan said. MEMBERS OF MORTAR Board are senior women, selected by the outgoing chapter for their scholarship, leadership, and service. Also included in the list of "surprise" honors, will be the announcement of counsellors for the freshman women's dormitories. "This position is an honor because, although many apply for the position, the final choices are carefully selected," Miss McMahan said. Also to be announced tonight will be the selection of the outstanding women students from each living group, and the American Association of University women's (AAUW) outstanding woman student. Members of the AWS Fashion Board for 1964-65 will be presented at the honor's night function, as will the new members of the AWS Senate and House of Representatives. "THE AWS SENATORS are elected from the campus at large, and the representatives are elected from each of the living groups," Miss McMahan said. She said that the oath of office will be administered to Sherry Whitcher, Prairie Village senior, who will administer the oath to the newly elected senators and representatives. Senior. Freshman Women Vote Same on Sex Bv Lee Stone KU women are one per cent more liberal in their views on premarital sex after four years of college, according to the results of Associated Women Students moral attitudes study. Eight per cent of the freshman women and nine per cent of the senior women at KU believe it is acceptable or morally right to have sexual intercourse before marriage Percentages double if engagement is given as an added condition. Survey Results On Page 10 This is a tabulation revealed Friday in a study conducted by the roles of women committee of Associated Women Students. The study also shows 77 percent of KU freshman women and 83 percent of senior women are opposed to necking in public. However, roughly the same percentage of women believe it is alright to neck in parked cars. RESULTS OF the study were presented for discussion Friday by Patricia Behen, Kansas City senior and chairman of the roles of women committee, to a panel of KU and Lawrence leaders. About 200 students, mostly women, were present. Little criticism was directed at the study by the panel. Jerilyn Williamson, a former director of a women's residence hall here, said, however, that it was difficult to infer behavior from the study. She said that was because the questions could be easily "projected onto others." This would cause the respondent to answer according to how she felt others should respond, not how she actually feels, Miss Williamson, Bastrop, La., graduate student, said. MISS WILLIAMSON described the study as a cross-sectional study, not a longitudinal study. Therefore, she does not believe the study shows proof of a trend in student attitudes as they become seniors. Seniors are generally regarded freer in their attitudes than freshmen, the study shows. The Rev. Paul E. Davis, pastor of the Plymouth Congregational Church, objected to the exclusion of questions relating to "broad citizenship responsibilities." He wanted to know how attitudes toward civil rights and the traditions handed down by pilgrims are regarded by today's college women. Miss Behen explained citizenship questions were excluded because the test would have been too long. Max Stalcp, guidance counselor at Lawrence High School, was also in general agreement with the test results. "I FEEL I COULD have predicted the outcome," Stalcup said. The report shows, in Stalcup's opinion, that the mental health Weather Skies will be partly cloudy this afternoon and tonight with chances for showers late today, the weather bureau said. Winds will lessen tonight with the expected temperature in the 60's this evening. Tuesday the high is expected to be in the 80's. and moral standards of KU women are good. "I was a little surprised," Stalcup said, "that although nearly a third of KU women think it is alright to ride with someone who has been drinking, only about 10 percent of them think it alright to drink and drive themselves." E. Jackson Baur, professor of sociology and anthropology, was asked to make an independent evaluation of the study. "Kinsey showed that college people are more conservative than the rest of the population," Baur said. Baur believes the AWS roles of women survey bears out that observation. Baur found no significant difficulties with the testing procedure. He said, however, that the test results could only be used to refer to women living in organized AS TO ATTITUDES on drinking, Baur found a "fairly striking difference" between seniors and freshmen. More seniors tend to accept drinking according to the study, he said. houses, the only class of women tested. As did Miss Williamson, Prof. Baur raised a question about confusion on the part of the persons tested. There were four categories into which the respondent was asked to fit his response to a question—ethically or morally right, generally acceptable, generally unacceptable, and ethically and morally wrong. THERE ARE FOUR kinds of responses here. And, "They are not mutually exclusive," Prof. Baur said. One kind of response has to do with social concepts, the other with ethical concepts, he said. In order to do away with the confusion caused by this classification. Prof. Baur suggested combining positive and negative responses. This would leave only two classifications to interpret. Miss Behen had done this in presenting the data to the audience when the results were announced. "I think the phrasing of the questions is good-simple and clear, Prof. Baur said. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, May 4, 1964 The Great House: Brittle? Red, Red. It's Red They Say: A fossil is a hollow and crumbly thing—sapped by the ages of its life substance until only the skeletal form remains. An engineer would not think of building a structure of fossils, for they lack the essential tensile strength and flexibility needed to bend without breaking when conditions change. FOR INSTANCE, Jim Johnston, new president of the interfraternity council, left me with the distinct impression that the IFC was going to do as little as possible about fraternity-soriority racial integration. In fact, at one point in the discussion, Johnston said that the IFC should stay out of the area of integration entirely. Fraternities should not be coerced into or pressured into integrating, Johnston reasoned, because any coercive force threatened Greek independence—in fact, the entire Greek system of choosing whom they please as members. After the panel discussion on fraternity-soriority discrimination Wednesday night, I wondered if the great Greek House at KU is not a house made of fossil. When pressed further about the role of the IFC, Johnston pulled out the rush pamphlet and pointed to two pictures of a president of a Negro fraternity sitting down with the white fellows. Maybe the IFC thinks they've got a tame one. Anyway, having a Negro in the IFC rush pamphlet indicates that Greeks are very open-minded about the question. Johnston, like many of the good brothers, seems to be pre-occupied with the precious little Greek right to discriminate against whomever they want—incidentally, to discriminate against Negroes. ART DOUVILLE, chairman of the Human Rights Council, moderated the panel. Douville, a sophomore, explained that the role of the HRC was to study the "problem" and bring the different sides together to talk it over. The HRC is a branch of the ASC-i.e., an official body of the student government. The HRC this year has, according to Chairman Douville, taken a poll, talked to the Plaza Club about its nasty discriminatory policies and sponsored the enlightening and stimulating discussion of Wednesday night. Well and good. In fact, this is the approach needed. KU could talk about fraternity-sorority integration for the next ten years and become as backward in relation to the country as, say, Barry Goldwater. It seems increasingly clear that the HRC means talk, poll, discuss. And this HRC talk-talk approach doesn't come out as even fruitful conversation. The much-vaunted HRC poll was, in my opinion, invalid. There was something like a 62 per cent return on the questionnaires, and most of the questions were directed. Example: "It is best that Negroes have their own fraternities and sororites since they have their own particular attitudes and interests which they can best engage in together." BOB STEWART, newly-elected president of the student body, stated that he substantially agreed with Chairman Douville's definition of the role of the Human Rights Council. Douville then cited the power of "moral suasion," the chancellor's policy catch-phrase on discriminatory matters. Again, well and good. Moral suasion might make some progress, but the IFC and HRC seem to think that moral suasion means doing as little as possible. The moral suasion approach would seem more acceptable to the anti-segregationists if there was evidence of these august governing bodies doing a little moral persuading. IF MORAL SUASION fails, if fraternities are not integrated, then anti-segregationists' last course will be to demand that the university administration set a deadline for pledging non-Caucasians on a quota basis—a policy which has not been advocated in the past. Deadlines have been set at Berkeley and Colorado University, and there is no guarantee that such a thing would not be done at KU if Greeks continue to unanimously exercise their right to discriminate on the basis of skin pigment. The Greeks and the IFC and the Greek-dominated student government might do well to sway their ranks to integration, if for no other motive than enlightened self-interest. The Greek system of pledging would be wrecked if a quota were set. The great Greek building as it exists today would come tumbling down. This could only happen if the Greeks and Greek-oriented student government continue to just talk, if the Great House continues to muddle along, if—to state it bluntly—the Great House is built of fossils. Notes from the past... Tom Coffman In olden society, everything was different; unity and uniformity were nowhere to be met with. In modern society, everything threatens to become so much alike, that the peculiar characteristics of each individual will soon be entirely lost in the general aspect of the world. Our forefathers were ever prone to make an improper use of the notion that private rights ought to be respected; and we are naturally prone, on the other hand, to exaggerate the idea that the interest of a private individual ought always to bend to the interest of the many.—Alexis de Tocqueville, 1840 Dailij Mansan Founded 1889, became bweekly 1904 stimulus. 1899, daily. 1910 triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Member Inland Daily Press Association presented by National Advertising Service. 18 East St. New York 22, N.Y. New service: United Press Interna- tional. Accepts semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturday. Accepts examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. Far Side of the Hill By Tom Coffman The glare of TV camera lights . . . suspicion of subversion cast about recklessly . . . the inquisitorial voice: "Are you now, or have you ever been, a member of the Communist Party?" It takes a certain mentality to ask the "Are you now, or have you ever been . . ." type of question. It is the kind of mentality which sees a commie hiding behind every rock and rill. THIS MENTALITY EXISTS among a segment of the KU community. The last time it popped up was around election week when the rumor spread across campus that the KU Liberal Action Committee, a new student group, was affiliated nationally with the Socialist Labor Party, which was defined as a communist-front organization—in other words, KULAC came out sounding like a front. A great many people around election time asked me questions about KULAC in a way that I imagine a medical patient asks his doctor if he has TB or cancer. The fact that KULAC advocates an intensive liberal platform, that it advocates a change of attitudes in certain areas, made KULAC suspect in the eyes of the establishment. In fact, KULAC is not closely affiliated with any national organization, although several of its members belong to Students for Democracy Society—a national liberal student organization. KULAC's principal areas of interest are civil liberties, civil rights, peace and multi-lateral disarmament, and 20th century morality. THE KULAC RUMOR is but a small incident among many which have persisted at this center of enlightenment. The most frightening incidents have come from state legislators who have banded together to insist that the KU faculty be investigated for the purpose of turning out teachers who spread "un-American" ideas among the students. The attempted "pink" purges represent a real threat to academic freedom. Apparently the faculty does not take it lightly. For instance, a 165-member American Civil Liberties Union chapter operates in Lawrence with strong faculty support. In turn, the KU incidents are but minor reflections of the strand of thought which runs through the national mentality to suppress anyone who is not, as Mencken put it, a "100 per cent American." Huge votes continue to roll up for undeclared GOP presidential candidates. In the Massachusetts primary Henry Cabot Lodge won by a seven-to-one write-in margin over his closest contender —Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona. Gov. William Scranton won the Pennsylvania primary with 211,533 write-in votes over Lodge's 71,580 write-in votes. Nixon followed with 33,219 write-in votes, then Goldwater, Sen. Margaret Chase Smith and George Romney. Lodge's prestige as a potential candidate was greatly enhanced because of his good showing in Scranton's state. Goldwater continues to claim that he is nearing a first-ballot nomination at the GOP convention in July, but it is difficult to see the validity of his opinion. It sounds, in fact, like a band-wagon ploy. The Lodge-Scranton-Nixon write-ins seem to indicate a clear rejection of Goldwater's rightist extremism. Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, the other prominent declared candidate, is lagging so badly as to not be considered a force in the platform-making at the convention—as he was in 1960 when he forced a compromise platform onto Richard Nixon. WE ON THE RIGHT ARE AT A LOSS TO UNDERSTAND THE MEANING OF THE WORD "RADICAL" AS USED IN THE PHRASE "RADICAL RIGHT." THE TERM"RADICAL" IN THIS CONTEXT CAN ONLY BE DEFENDED WHEN APPLIED TO WHAT OUR SOCIETY PRETENDS TO BE, NOT WHAT IT IS. RECENT ROLLS CITING NORTHERN WHITE REACTION TO THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT ILLUSTRATE HOW LITTLE THE NATION IS INTERESTED IN EQUALITY WHEN A MIDDLE-CLASS, WHITE CROSS SECTION IS NOT INVOLVED. V I AFTER ALL DOES NOT THE RADICAL RIGHT STAND FOR PRINCIPLES. THAT MOST AMERICANS, ONCE THEY ARE COMFORTABLE, GENERALLY SUPPORT: - SO THE RADICAL RIGHTS PRO- GRAM IN THE INTEGRATION FIELD DOES NOT DIFFER FROM THE REAL DESIRES OF THE MAN ON THE STREET. HOWEVER, IT DOES DIFFER FROM WHAT THE MAN ON THE STREET HAS BEEN TAUGHT HE SHOULD DESIRE. i.e., YOU O ©1969 JULIE TETRASY 1-19 i.e."I'VE GOT MINE, YOU GET YOURS" ? IN THIS CASE, AND OTHERS, THE RADICAL RIGHT CAN BE CALLED "RADICAL" ONLY IN THE SENSE THAT IT DEPARTS FROM OUR OFFICIAL BELIEFS, NOT OUR PRIVATE ONES. A ONCE WE GET PEOPLE TO VOTE EMOTIONALLY INSTEAD OF RATIONALLY WE WILL WIN IN A LANDSLIDE. $ [ 1 + 2 ] \times [ 3 - 4 ] $ Monday, May 4, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 3 World Tension Reflects on 1939 World's Fair By Myron Feinsilber United Press International NEW YORK — (UPI) — Chancellor Adolf Hitler had just made new demands on Poland, young Joe Di-Maggio was in the hospital with a torn muscle and in Detroit Father Coughlin was on the radio, saying democracy had failed. This was the way the world behaved on April 30,1939,the sunny Sunday on which Flushing Meadows' first World's Fair opened. The New York Times, devoting nearly 10 of its 42 pages the next day to coverage of the fair, found it "a spectacle of surprising beauty and magnificence, especially last night when the whole fair and the heavens above it were bathed in soft, glowing colors with the most modern lighting effects and when fireworks combined with flame, water and color displays on the lagoon of nations, the pools in constitution mall and the surface of fountain lake." The speechmakers, the Times noted, emphasized "the message of peaceful progress that the fair brings to mankind in an era when the whole world is troubled by war and threats of war." President Franklin D. Roosevelt, in his seventh year of office, came to open the fair and the photographers caught him in a characteristic pose: riding in the back seat of an open touring car, his head thrown back in jolly laughter. THE PEACE WAS THREATENED, and those who hoped FDR would deliver democracy's reply to Hitler's Polish ultimatum were disappointed that day. He chose generalities. "Often, I think," the President said, "we Americans offer up the silent prayer that on the continent of Europe, from which the American hemisphere was principally colonized, the years to come will break down many barriers to intercourse between nations — barriers which may be historic but which so greatly through the centuries have led to strife and hindered friendship and normal intercourse." Hitler had just rejected a plan offered by FDR which would, he said, have guaranteed peace for 10 years. War was to come to Europe that year. The war clouds were not to be observed at the fair. Six-year-old Allen Jarisson of Great Neck, Long Island, N.Y., had the distinction of becoming the fair's first lost tot. He was wearing a white uniform with a stripe of orange and white along his long trousers. Many boys, still in knickers, were not so lucky. Allen's mother claimed him later that afternoon. There was a new device to open the eyes wide at the fair—television. FDR became the first President to go before the "tele-camera" and "reports from receiving outposts scattered throughout a 50-mile radius of New York indicated that the spectacle by television was highly successful and that a new industry had been launched into the World of Tomorrow." "Overemphasis, keynote of World's Fair publicity, bore bitter fruit yesterday," he wrote. "The prediction that opening day would bring out more than 1,000,000 persons kept away hundreds of thousands of ticket holders. Even by official estimate, attendance yesterday did not come within whooping distance of 1,000,-000." Meyer Berger of the Times, later to become one of journalism's legendary figures, took a poke at the fair's press agents. THE DEPRESSION from which America was emerging was not forgotten. The Works Progress Administration (WPA), which had a $250-. 000 exhibition hall at the fair, disclosed that it had asked for cut admission rates for relief workers. To get to the fair, the Long Island railroad offered a bargain ride: "10 minutes, 10 cents," its advertisements said. And American Airlines proudly announced non-stop flights to Detroit taking only three hours, 29 minutes for $32.70 in a "giant 21-passenger flagship." were offered at $1.240. For motorists, LaSallez, "the only distinctive car on the road today." Time magazine, a fledging teenager seeking subscribers, took out a rare full-page ad to tell why it was vital in "these news-jammed days of 1939." Its ad portrayed a fashionable woman saying, "I'm a banker's wife and judging from our friends, people aren't just talking of cabbages and kings these days. We all seem to think about real problems too—like revising or repealing the Neutrality Act—or will there be a coal strike—or what to do about relief." Red Cross Senior Lifesaving Course Will Be Offered. All those interested report to room 203 Robinson at 4:30 Tuesday, May 5. The course will be open to boys and girls. Philippines Fight Piracy MANILA — (UPI) — Philippine police and civilian authorities have formed task forces to stamp out piracy in Manila Bay. The piracy problem came into national focus when some so-called "bay pirates" pounced on a boat carrying constabulary soldiers disguised as fishermen two miles off nearby Cavite City. THESE ARE THE same bay waters where Commodore George Dewey defeated the Spanish Armada in 1898 and Gen. Douglas A. McArthur pledged, "I shall return." Four pirates, armed with pistols and carbines, were killed in the 40-minute gunbattle. The dawn encounter took place just after the pirates stripped two fishing boats of an inboard motor, fishing lamps and the fishermen's catch. After robbing their second victim, the pirates turned on a third boat, not knowing that the "fishermen" were soldiers. QUESTIONINGS OF captured Their area of operation extends from Batangas Province north to Bataan Peninsula, which border on Manila Bay. pirates disclosed that most of these modern-day blackbeards are from the city's slum districts. Lt. Col. Diosdado Garcia, constabulary commander of Pampanga Province, said the pirates not only prey on fishermen, but occasionally raid coastal villages. GARCIA SAID the pirates pounce on the milkfish motorboats, using submachine guns to terrorize fishpond owners and crew members. They impound the boat, sell the fish and then steal the marine engine for resale in Manila, he said. The pirates' method, according to Garcia, shows they have their own intelligence network. They know when fishpond owners are harvesting a heavy "bangus" (milkfish) crop for sale in Manila and suburbs and at what time the crop is shipped out to Manila, he said. 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 With the big parties, honor banquets and steak fries coming up. you will want to always look your best. Q FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN DOWNTOWN PLANT 900 Miss. 740 Vt. POLYVILLE Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi K Page 4 University Dauy Kansan Monday, May 4,1964 Brazil Homes Largest Source Of Japanese Outside of Orient By Gary J. Neeleman United Press International SAO PAULO, Brazil — Fifty-six years ago 165 Japanese families walked down the gangplank of the Kasadomaru liner in the port city of Santos to begin a new life in the rolling hinterlands of Brazil's Sao Paulo state. There are 600,000 Japanese and Today, the state has the biggest concentration of Japanese citizens and their descendants in the world, outside of Japan. Diplomat Thinks Red Split Started in 1948 by Slavs By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst In Vienna, earlier this month, a United States diplomat with long years of service both inside and on the fringe of the iron curtain, was speculating on the date when it might be said the first cracks appeared in the structure of world communism. This correspondent had just returned to Vienna from a brief visit to Budapest, Hungary, and had suggested that one such date might be the 1956 Hungarian Revolution. The American diplomat made it much earlier, placing it instead at June, 1948, when Joseph Stalin expelled Yugoslavia from the cominform for hostility toward the Soviet Union and deviation from Marxism-Leninism. Soviet efforts later to turn the tide and to restore total Moscow authority, as in the Soviet attempt to isolate Albania, failed. AND THIS, finally, brings us to the events surrounding Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's celebration last week of his 70th birthday. TWO CONCLUSIONS may be drawn. One is that the satellites oppose an open break with the Red Chinese because of the factionalism it would encourage within their own parties. The other is that, despite his own great power, Khrushchev is not entirely a free agent either within the Soviet Union or within that portion of world Communism which sides with him against the Chinese. Mao, as leader of the world's most populous Communist nation and a veteran revolutionary, regards himself as the logical interpreter of Leninism. And as of today there are three kinds of Communism — the kind practiced by the Soviet Union, the kind advocated by the Red Chinese and the Nationalist Communism rising in the western satellites. Japanese-Brazilians living in this country — South America's biggest nation. Only about 160,000 were actually born in Japan. More than 400,000 live in Sao Paulo state, many of them in a district of this industrial city known as "The Japanese gardens." There are about 30 Japanese-financed industries in Brazil with a total investment of about $50 million, producing everything from fishing tackle to heavy equipment. There are tour Japanese banks, nine export-import companies, 15 representation firms, several insurance companies, three Japanese language newspapers, one Japanese language radio station, three Japanese movie theaters, and 30 Japanese restaurants — some complete with teahouses, geisha girls and oriental music. Subcontinent Seeks Peace Risquè Before a cheering throng of 50,000 in Srinagar, capital of disputed Kashmir, a Kashmiri politician voiced words to which the United States could utter a fervent "amen." It is a goal urgently sought by statesmen of the United States, Britain and the United Nations over 17 years but one which constantly eludes them, keeping India and Pakistan at the brink of war and poisoning U.S. relationships with both. The speaker was Mirza Mohammed Afzal Beg, in Kashmir politics second only to the man beside him on the platform, Sheik Mohammed Abdullah, the "Lion of Kashmir." "We will not have peace or security in the subcontinent," he said, "until the problem of Kashmir is settled and India and Pakistan live in friendship." 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 BOTH MEN just had been released from prison where they spent more than 10 years for advocating self-determination for Kashmir against the will of India. THE JAPANESE COLONY plays an important part in Brazil's agricultural economy. The two Japanese farm cooperatives here are among the largest in South America. "Cotia," the biggest Japanese farm co-op, has 6,600 families. The other, "Cooperative Agricola Sul Brasil," has 3,000. These farms produce the majority of Sao Paulo state's green vegetables, strawberries, tomatoes and potatoes and all of its tea. By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst For Indian Prime Minister Jawharlal Nehru, Abdullah's release had been a calculated risk but one that apparently had gone wrong. MEN! In plastic! Old Spice DEODORANT Here's deodorant protection YOU CAN TRUST Old Spice Stick Deodorant...fastest, neatest way to all day, every day protection! It's the man's deodorant preferred by men...absolutely dependable. Glides on smoothly, speedily...dries in record time. Old Spice Stick Deodorant — most convenient, most economical deodorant money can buy. 1.00 plus tax. Old Spice STICK DEODORANT SHULTON TO THE SENIOR CLASS OF 64 Bargain with Life For a Penny? "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. 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 men he talked with. 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 hire, only to learn, dismayed, That any wage I had asked of life, Life would have willingly paid. FULLICO College Master FULLICO College Master John M. Suder Dan Jansky Gary Nu Delman University Daily Kansan Page 5 Monday, May 4, 1964 Art Moves to Sand Bar Some art students at KU felt restrained. Although the general belief is that any art today, and therefore the artist, is hardly restrained, some student artists felt cramped by the lack of space on third floor Strong. Thus several ingenious art students conceived the idea of moving to a sand bar and building along the beach. FOR THE LAST two weekends the students making the field trip to the sand bar have not been restrained by water, wind, rain or night. Nor has their native art work been restrained. Utilizing old materials carted from Strong and Bailey annexes, they also took advantage of the sand and water. One art student, who preferred to keep his identity as anonymous as his art work, said that in some peoples' minds this might be considered as "littering the beach." But if they built sand castles, they were ten or fifteen feet high with black pipes sticking out at creative angles or tin cans and other debris lining the castle walls. Or further on, one might see a student at work laying a piece of red cloth and hanging a canope over a well-known piece of equipment, called in slang a "throne" and better known as an "outhouse." MUCH CAN BE DONE with leftovers in the food department, like the prickly cover of raw pineapples, forming a design in the sand which is flanked by raw hotdogs and empty milk cartons. Some students did take the clue from nature and planted tree stumps in the sand, or dug irrigation ditches criss-crossing one another. "In my mind it is unrestraining the innermost creative urges of the artist in an open area unbounded by walls or criticism," he said. KISMET. CAPRI Keepake Keepake KISMET Keepake Keepake CAPRI RIVIERA DELAVAN RIVIERA DELAVAN THE ENGAGEMENT RING WITH THE PERFECT CENTER DIAMOND Keepsake True artistry is expressed in the brilliant fashion styling of every Keepsake diamond engagement ring. Each setting is a masterpiece of design, reflecting the full brilliance and beauty of the center diamond . . a perfect gem of flawless clarity, fine color and meticulous modern cut. The name, Keepsake, in the ring and on the tag is your assurance of fine quality and lasting satisfaction. Your very personal Keepsake diamond ring is awaiting your selection at your Keepsake Jeweler's store. Find him in the yellow pages. Prices from $100 to $2500. Rings enlarged to show beauty of detail $Trade-mark registered. HOW TO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING Please send two new booklets, "How to Plan Your Engagement and Wedding" and "Choosing Your Diamond Rings," both for only 25c. Also send special offer of beautiful 44 page Bride's Book. Nome. Address KEEPSAKE DIAMOND RINGS, SYRACUSE, NEW YORK NSF Grant Continues Professor's Beetle Study Robert R. Sokal, professor of statistical biology has received a $29,700 grant from the National Science Foundation for a three-year study of the red flour beetle, a common pest of stored grain products. The grant continues NSF support of the project begun in 1961 under a $25,300 grant. Title of the study is "Natural Selection During Population Growth of Tribolium." Tribolium is the scientific name for the beetle. Dr. Sokal's research is in a relatively new borderline field between genetics and ecology. He is attempting to throw light on the environmental components of evolutionary change. LEAVING for the SUMMER? It's much easier for you to Travel Light and it's much easier on your hard-to-pack bulky winter clothes to have them - Cleaned with gentle SANITONE Care - Moth-proofed Free! - Stored in our safe refrigerated, Fire, Moth and Theft-Proof vault Why haul heavy closet-filling winter clothes back and forth. Store them in a large box at Lawrence Laundry and keep them safe and SANITONE Clean— X X A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z C FREE... INSURANCE UP TO $200 VALUE 2% extra for additional value n e g- d n- re ce nd LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H.-VI 3-3711 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, May 4, 1964 NOW IT'S HERE! A Pocket Billiard and Snooker Tournament For The Beginner - For Any Person That Loves The Game. Every Tuesday CALL SHOT 7:30 P.M. Every Wednesday SNOOKER 7:30 P.M. Soon 8 BALL ON Thursday Nite I am very proud of you. I am a student at New York University. You are a wonderful person. I will miss you and hope that you can continue your studies and make a difference in the world. Thank you for your help. No Entry Fee, Only Table Time. The Tournament for the Beginner. All Entries Eligible for Numerous Prizes. - A Tournament That Is Fun, Not Serious. - For Ladies as well as Gentlemen. - Cash Awards - Gifts - Prizes. - PRIZES - — TAKE THE CUE — - GIFTS - - PRIZES * * GIFTS * They Have Made These Gifts and Prizes Possible!!!! Shopping Center Malls Barber Shop Key Rexall Drug Store Kief's Records and Hi-Fi Peggy's Gifts Pay Less Shoe Store T.G.&Y,Store The Little Banquet Safeway Store Elms Sinclair, Entrance to The Malls Daylight Donuts, 530 W.23rd., Across from the Malls Allen's Drive In, 1404 W.23rd Bradford's 66 Service, 25th and Iowa Diebolt's Clothing Store, 843 Massachusetts Driscoll Beauty Salon, 908 Massachusetts Campus Hideaway, 106 North Park Guenther Jewelry, 824 Massachusetts Hillcrest Bowl, 9th and Iowa Honn's Laundry, 19th and Louisiana, Across from the High School Harvey's Shoe Store. 1300 West 23rd Raney Drug Stores at Hillcrest, Plaza and 9th and Massachusetts Seyler's Gardenland, 914 West 23rd . The GOLDEN CUE 23rd & Naismith Monday, May 4, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 7 Chambers Becomes A Threat In The Big Eight Triple Jump KU's 6-4 hurdler, Bill Chambers, is writing one of the oddest chapters in Big Eight track. Rarely working at one of the most complex events on the card, the Triple Jump, he already has risen to No. 6 on the all-time Big Eight list. This came on a bound of 47-514 in last weekend's Drake Relays and a 46-10 Saturday against Southern Illinois. The field being what it was at Drake, this leap was good enough only for fifth. But it is notable that only two Kansans, Kent Floerle, the Big Eight's all-time king with a collegiate top of $50-10^{4}$ in 1958, and Blaine Hollinger (48-3) in '56, ever have spanned more ground. NEBRASKA'S VICTOR Brooks moved up behind Floerke in this same meet on 49-21-2. Oklahoma's Erwin Cook stands at $49-1 \frac{1}{2}$ (1955); Leander Durley, Colorado, 47-10-9 (1963). Then comes Chambers, who, for the moment at least, has out-stripped veteran teammates Glen Martin and Bob Looney, who work overtime on the event. Significantly, all other members of this clite list, save Durley, were, or are, natural broad-jumpers. And Durley owns enough built-in spring to clear 6-10%4 in the high jump. Yet Chambers spends the bulk of his practice time on his primary event, the 120 highs. HIS EFFORT at Drake marked the third consecutive outing in which he has extended his personal best. He was a surprise third in the Big Eight games at Manhattan last May at 45-10, helping Kansas wield a 15 point lick in this event which contributed heavily to its unscheduled snatch of the team championship. His next try didn't come until the Kansas Relays two weeks ago. He reached 46-6, even though failing to gain the final. He added almost a foot at Des Moines as Arizona's Gale Hopkins grazed the Intercollegiate record by $1\frac{1}{4}$ inches at 51-8. "I didn't even practice before the Drake Relays." Chambers admits. "I didn't even have step marks. I just ran through once then started jumping. Last year I didn't jump until two weeks before the conference meet. Looney and Martin and I were talking about where we could score points in the league meet. I figured the triple jump would be wide open and the high hurdles looked tough. So I went to work a little. I got over 40 feet against Southern Illinois and a little over 43 against Oklahoma. I found out it was a fun event. I don't feel the pressure like I do in the hurdles. "I'm going to have to strat practicing more though. Unless I do I'll get to the point where I can't go any farther. Right now I'm not getting a very good jump because I have to take off with my left foot and my right foot is the strong one. I use it for the hop and step so this leaves the left as the takeoff leg for the jump. I've been getting only 15-16 feet. I should be up to 18-19. Now I'm trying to get more speed. Chambers has improved in the highs too. A i:14.8 and i:14.9 clocker last year, he owns two i:14.5, a i:14.6 and a i:14.7 this spring. He reached the finals at Texas and Drake, although not placing in either. He was third in the Big Eight Indoor at 60 yards. KEEP ALERT! SAFE NoDoz TABLETS 15 TABLETS SAFE AS COFFEE THE SAFE WAY to stay alert without harmful stimulants NoDoz keeps you mentally alert with the same safe refresher found in coffee and tea. Yet NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. Absolutely not habit-forming. Next time monotony makes you feel drowsy while driving, working or studying, do as millions do . . . perk up with safe, effective NoDoz tablets. Another fine product of Grove Laboratories. Career Opportunity in eastern Kansas with Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co. of Milwaukee, Wisconsin Intervieweing in 202 Summerfield Hall Thursday, May 7 KANSAS CITY LAWRENCE ATCHISON HIAWATHA SABETHA EMPORIA FRANKFORT MARYSVILLE MANHATTAN TOPEKA INDEPENDENCE OVERLAND PARK PITTSBURG CHANUTE OTTAWA LEAVENWORTH HOLTON PRAIRIE VILLAGE Coffee, Rolls and Movie May 7, 8:00, in Summerfield Hall For Additional Information Call Local District Agent Corlett Cotton in Lawrence National Bank Building - VI 3-1533 Keith Hiesterman — Interviewer FREE BEAUTY GIFT for you! BEAUTY BASICS Teen-agers get your FREE Bonne Bell gift, the basics you need for a clear and lovely complexion. Bonne Bell Beauty Basics GIFT BOX Yours for Attending Katz Annual BEAUTY FORUM Theatre Saturday, May 16, 1:30 p.m. GET YOUR Free Tickets at 50th ANNIVERSARY Katz 1914-1964 COSMETIC CENTERS Come Hear BONNE BELL IN PERSON! PETER BROWN She will help you with your problems of skin care and make-up. M I made a better deal YOU CAN TOO... AT THE HOTEL ELDRIDGE "Your Assurance of the right Address" Special Student Summer Rates Each room beautifully remodeled with the freedom of apartment living. Plus these conveniences TV, radio and Inn Room coffee - Daily maid service - All linens furnished - 5% discount on all cleaning and laundry with one day service bus service to and from campus - Hourly bus service to and from campus - Let us keep your little black book with our answering service - Rates from $50 a month Call for information on package plan to include room and board VI 3-0281 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, May 4, 1964 Manning Clears 16; KU Sweeps Events Jayhawk pole vaulter Floyd Manning cleared 16-1$ \frac{3}{4} $ in a dual meet with Southern Illinois at Carbondale Saturday. His feat highlighted the performances of KU athletes over the weekend as the Jayhawks rolled over competition on all fronts. Coach Bill Easton's track team won 13 of 17 events at Carbondale and set records in four classes. Manning's jump erased the meet record of 14-8 which he set last year. The vault made Manning the first man in Big Eight history to clear 16 feet. The previous high mark set by a Big Eight competitor was a 15- 10 $ \frac{4} {3} $ effort by George Davies of Oklahoma State. The vault was also the highest mark set by a collegiate jumper this year. Jayhawk weightman Gary Schwartz took a third in the javelin, second in the shot put and then threw the discus $ 164-9 \frac{1}{2} $ to win that event. Bill Silverberg set a meet and stadium record with a 8:59.6 in the two mile. Bill Chambers won the 120 high hurdles with a 14.6 clocking and then brushed off the meet record in the triple jump with a 46-10 effort. In baseball, the Jayhawks grabbed second place in the Big Eight Conference by defeating the Iowa State Cyclones three games in a row at Quigley Field. Fred Chana threw a two-hit shutout as KU beat the Cyclones 3-0 Saturday afternoon to close out the successful series. Chana struck out six men and walked four to make himself the third consecutive Javhawk winner. On Friday, KU's Steve Renko and Chuck Dobson beat Iowa State 7-1 and 5-1. In golf, KU won two quadrangular meets over the weekend, defeating Nebraska, Kansas State and Missouri twice. The first match, played at Lawrence Country Club, was swept by KU, which beat Missouri $ 13\frac{1}{2}-1\frac{1}{2} $ , Nebraska 14-1, and Kansas State $ 11\frac{1}{2}-3\frac{1}{2} $ KU's John Hanna, Lawrence senior, was medalist for the meet with a three-under-par total of 69. Saturday, the scene shifted to Manhattan where KU again downed the three teams, but not by so decisive a margin. KU edged K-State 8-7, beat Nebraska 13-2, and beat Missouri 10-5. In this match Reid Holbrook, Kansas City junior, was low man among the four participating schools with a 73. The KU tennis team beat Wichita for the second time this season, 5-2. KU's record is now 11-2. The Jayhawks have lost to Wichita and Oklahoma University. In The Spring, A Young Man's Formal Should Look Like This: After Six BY RUDOFKER M. J. F. S. 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 PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS 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). 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. 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. Monday, May 4, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 9 Most of Europe Lacks Racial Discrimination There are approximately 400,000 Algerians in France and they are pouring into the country at a rate of hundreds daily. In addition, there are between 40,000 and 50,000 African Negro workers and about 5,000 By John Martinco By John Martinco United Press International Respect in Jazz Is Buff's Theme Outside of Great Britain Negroes encounter little or no racial discrimination in Europe. FRANCE IS ranked among countries with the least racial, color or religious discrimination in the world. Such discrimination as exists in the country is mainly economic and has to do with the heavy Algerian population. Reports from United Press International correspondents indicated one exception—Zurich, Switzerland. There, foreign Negroes are reported having trouble finding living accommodations. Zurich newspapers have reported that landlords more or less politely turn away colored youths who answer classified ads for apartments. No noticeable municipal counter-action has been taken as individuals are free to rent to whomever they choose. The main potential field of discrimination in Switzerland is among the 700,000 foreign laborers employed in the country, most of them Italians. There is little discrimination, except in housing. But, some smart restaurants don't exactly cater to all Italian patrons, although there are no known cases where entry has been refused outright. "A Plea for Respectability," a title concerning the respectability of jazz as a form of music, will be the subject of a lecture this evening. Phil Jacka, Lawrence senior will relate his topic to an architectural display in 301 Marvin Hall from Pennsylvania State University exploring the special architectural needs of a jazz musician. Jacka will discuss the indictment inferred by the display, and he will give examples of jazz forms. Jacka does a jazz show on KLWN radio, and is a senior in architecture. A bill which would give Protestants equal rights with Catholics is reported under study. African students from the former French colonies. Algerian and black African workers, because of lack of technical qualifications, tend to get only unskilled jobs at low wages. Because they arrive in France with no money and get low-paid employment, they tend to gravitate to slum areas of the big cities. Entire slum sections of Paris and its industrial suburbs have become "little casbahs" as a result of mass settlement by Algerian or African immigrants. Despite a more liberal attitude on the part of the Spanish Catholic hierarchy, government and public as a whole. Protestants still face more difficulties in Spain. In Spain, Protestants constitute the only group subject to legal and social discrimination in an officially Roman Catholic country. IT IS PRACTICALLY impossible for a Spanish Protestant to become an officer in the armed services or to hold civil service post of responsibility. Some families and businesses will not hire Protestants. When Protestants die in Spain they may not be buried in hallowed ground which means that in many small towns, where there is only one cemetery, they have to be buried outside the cemetery grounds. Both Protestants and Jews are small minorities in Spain, which has an estimated 30,000 Protestants and 8,000 Jews out of a total population of about 32 million. The wealthier black Africans find little or no color prejudice in France. Several African heads of state and other leaders have French wives who they married while studying in France. Better class, educated Algerians and Africans are freely accepted in French society or business. Gaston Monnerville, President of the French Senate, is a Negro from French Guiana. Spanish Jews are legally and socially far better off than Protestants. THERE IS no color bar in hotels, restaurants or night clubs. Neighboring Portugal is a country that practices no racial discrimination either at home or in its overseas provinces. Negroes can be seen in Lisbon walking hand-in-hand with whites of the opposite sex, and weddings between the races have been frequent for centuries. If You're on Cupid's List Marks JEWELERS choose your Paper Trousseau at Marks doing so assures correctness . . . confers distinction. Invitations Announcements Informals Thank You Notes Reception Napkins Our bridal consultant will help you with friendly and understanding counsel in all phases of your wedding preparation. Charge or Budget Terms! Marks JEWELERS Marks JEWELERS AGS 817 Mass. MEMBER OF NATIONAL BRIDAL SERVICE Associated Women Students (AWS) sponsored the annual event which was held in the ballroom of the Kansas union. The breakfast is held in honor of the seniors Donna Miller, Wichita junior, said After a breakfast of fruit cup, Canadian bacon, and blueberry muffins, Mrs. Benjamin Page, who founded the costume wing of the Kansas City museum in 1946, emceed a fashion show of the nightgowns. AGS MRS. PAGE PRECEDED the showing with a brief history of nightgowns. They were introduced in the 18th century, but at that time, only the royalty could afford to wear them. Senior Women Honored Since their beginnings, nightgowns have followed the fashion trends of the time. Nightgowns of the last 100 years passed in review at the junior-senior breakfast yesterday morning. Century of Nightgowns Parade In Review at AWS Breakfast THE FIRST NIGHTGOWN to be presented was one of the 1840 vintage. Nightgowns in this period were anything but revealing. They covered the wearer from head to toe. When bustled dresses were the style, so were bustled nightgowns. The Civil War gowns were of heavier material and less fancy decoration. Night caps always accompanied the gown. In 1875, bustles were the big thing in dresses. Massachusetts passed a law that forbade women to appear in dresses on the streets without a bustle. Nightgowns followed the trend. Any nightgown that was The future is purchased by the present— Samuel Johnson fashionable had a bustle. Starting to plan your financial future while you're young and still in college is a wise decision. And the life insurance program that you begin now could turn out to be the most valuable part of that financial planning. We'd like to add to Dr. Johnson's thought: And the present is NOW. Our Campus office specializes in planning life insurance programs for college men and women. For full information about the benefits of getting a head start, stop by or telephone. 1889 USHERED in the era of "gay" nightgowns, according to Mrs. Page. Puffed sleeves were the vogue that year. Train travel had just been introduced and nightgowns were more comfortable for travel. Mrs. Page said women were advised to take off their stays and their shoes before retiring in case of a wreck. Kermit D. Hoffmeier 1722 W 9th VI 3-5692 Thinner material for nightgowns was introduced in 1894. This was considered very daring for that time, Mrs. Page said. PROVIDENT MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA 1905 nightgowns followed the trend in street wear by having bolero jacket to match the nightgown. Neck lines also dropped to a daring new low. THE ERA OF the flapper was evident in the nightgown styles of that time. They were short, slightly below the knee, and sleeveless. A negligee and gown was introduced during World War II. Mrs. Page commented that they were no longer called nightgowns, but peignoirs. The modern nightgown took the form of the baby-doll pajamas that were especially popular in 1956. Mrs.Page said they were "not recommended for anyone past college age." MRS. PAGE ENDED by saying that nightgowns had not changed very radically in the past 100 years. "They were much the same in 1855 as in 1955," she said. AWS Fashion Board modeled the nightgowns which were provided by Mrs. Page. s'snr PATRONIZE YOUR • ADVERTISERS` Man, the stampede's on for BRASS RINGER Go see fly with the belt in 'Leon Wonder World' at the N.Y. World's Fair Amphitheatre! Hop to it, meet the new "Brass Ringer," it really gets around. It's clean and lean. With man-size brush eyelets and wraparound too guard. Long on looks, strong on comfort, great on wear. Made of washable cotton duck in a new smoky white chino, also in white. Medium width, sizes 5 to 12, 13, 14. Stampede on down to your nearest store and let 'em rustle y' up a pair. Ask for "Brass Ringer" Keds® today! it's a . United States Rubber Rockefeller Center, New York 20, New York Look for the blue label the Keds Page 10 University Daily Kansan Monday, May 4, 1964 Survey of Women's Morals Grew From Study at Michigan State The AWS study of moral attitudes was fashioned after a study given at Michigan State in the middle 1550's, Emily Taylor, dean of women, said Friday afternoon. Although sophomore and junior women were tested, their responses were not tabulated for the report. Patti Behen, Kansas City senior and chairman of the roles of women committee, said. She explained there was too little time to organize all the responses. A total of 1900 responses were received. Of those, 220 were the responses of seniors, and 730 the responses of freshmen. All responses to questions take the same form as the first one stated. Negative responses bring the total of the percent of response to 100. Therefore, they have been excluded. - Hostility Items — Losing your temper from time to time. Freshmen believing the above to be morally right or generally acceptable behavior, 82 per cent; seniors having the same attitude, 81 per cent. Feeling resentment for being called before your living group's board of standards, 35, 36. Being critical of your parents, 49, 56. - Hating certain people, 32, 34. Feeling very angry with someone, 86, 87. Showing disrespect for those in authority, 10, 15. Frequently feeling jealous of someone in your family, 32, 25. Feeling dislike for persons because they are in authority, 10, 13. - Sex Items—Heavy petting if engaged, 45, 57. Having sexual intercourse prior to marriage if engaged, 14, 16. Kissing a boy on the first date, 67, 71. Attending movies because they have been advertised as "sex film," 34, 36. Discussing sex with someone of the opposite sex, 87, 94. Necking in parked cars, 70, 82 Thinking a good deal about sex, 62, 66. Having sexual intercourse prior to marriage (not engaged), 8, 9. Listening to dirty jokes in mixed groups, 43, 48. Engaging in mixed swimming parties in the nude, 2, 1. Permitting yourself to become sexually aroused, 60, 70. Susan Cole, St. John senior, has been chosen 1964 Color Girl of the Naval ROTC Battalion of Midshipmen at KU. Miss Cole, representing Gamma Phi Beta sorority, was chosen from among six finalists by the 1964 Honor Platoon of midshipmen. Naval ROTC Chooses 1964 Color Girl Miss Cole will then inspect the Battalion with Captain Richard D. Gruber, professor of Naval Science. Miss Cole will be presented at the Naval ROTC Annual Spring Review and parade Friday night in Allen Field House. She will transfer the national ensign and unit flag from one Color Guard to another, symbolizing the transferral of responsibility from the graduating midshipmen to the junior class. Named to Post Miss Cole will be honored at the Midshipman's Ring Dance at 8 p.m. Saturday in the ballroom of the Kansas Union. Robert Hull, visiting lecturer in orchestra here during the spring semester, has been appointed dean of the College of Fine Arts at the University of Arizona effective July 1. French kissing after several dates, 63, 59. Necking in public (such as in front of dorms), 23, 16. Selecting novels because they emphasize sex, 29, 32. Heavy petting (not engaged), 21, 18. Having strong sexual impulses, 64, 74. - Religious Items—Choosing a religion that is different from that of your parents, 88, 92. Having religious doubts, 93, 95. Changing religious beliefs because of what is presented to you in college classes, 59, 70. Doubting many of the things in the Bible, 73, 82. Failing to attend church regularly, 48, 59. Dating a boy of a different religion, 90, 89. Getting serious with a boy of a different religion, 74, 74. Marrying someone of a different religion, 72, 70. INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS - University Regulations—Going to parties which are contrary to University regulations, 21, 36. Using an exam which has been illegally obtained, 12, 10. Failing to report that a member of your living group is not in after closing hours, 28, 29. Cheating on exams if others in your class are doing so, 8, 8. Monthly from the Soviet Union In English or in Russian Carries reviews & Marxist analysis of world developments; theoretical articles & analysis of Soviet foreign policy. One Year Subscription - $3.50 Failing to report someone you observed cheating, 51, 51. Letting students copy from your test paper in class, 7, 6. Failing to report that a member of your living group has liquor in her room, 40, 47. Breaking University regulations regarding hours, 7, 15. - Dating Items—Breaking dates, 26, 27. Dating a man who has also been dating a member of your living group, 77, 62. Attending a party in a man's apartment, 76, 95. Allowing yourself to be "picked-up," 6, 7. Staying at parties where there is excessive drinking and petting, even though you do not behave this way yourself, 35, 30. Attending unchaperoned overnight parties, 16, 31. Imported Publications & Products 1 Union Square, N.Y.C. 3 AMERICA'S MIGHTIEST ADVENTURE! 24 GREAT STARS! 3 TOP DIRECTORS! METRO·GOLDWYN·MAYER and CINERAMA present HOW THE WEST WAS WON METROCOLOR® Starts Wednesday Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-MS Dating a man of whom others disapprove, 68, 75. Compromising your standards on a date to insure having another date, 7, 3. HOW THE WEST WAS WON METROCOLOR® - Drinking Items—Riding with a driver who has been drinking, 23, 31. Drinking and driving with passengers in your car, 11, 9. Having a daily drink, 37, 47. Getting intoxicated occasionally, 35, 43. Drinking and driving alone, 8, 11. Going to public drinking places unescorted, 12, 27. Drinking "to feel good" at a party, 49, 61. Social drinking, 76, 85. - Cultural value items—Using race as one basis for choosing your associates, 37, 35. Occasionally lying in order to avoid an unpleasant situation, 47, 53. Wearing short shorts in town, 11, 10. Wearing clothes chosen deliberately to emphasize your figure, 63, 71. Habitual smoking, 50, 55. Swearing, 36, 31. Having friends whose moral standards are lower than your own, 53, 57. Lying about your age in order to buy drinks, 27, 43. Varsity TREATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Sidney Poitier IS HOMER IN RALPH NELSON'S Lilies of the Field Granada THEATRE...Telephone W 3-5700 NOW! Shows 7:00 & 9:00 Sidney Poitier IS HOMER IN RA&PH NELSON'S Lilies of the Field Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5763 Next — Starting WEDNESDAY! TONY RANDALL BURL IVES EASTMAIN COLOR The Brass Bottle Now! Ends Tuesday "A TREE OF YOUNG LOVE AND DESIRE ROAMING THE BARS THE CAVENES THE PAPAS AND LOTTS AND THE CLANGEROUS CONNIES OF THE KETCHUPWITES DISCOVERY AND MERVEY" THEY LIVE...AND LOVE AS THEY PLEASE Greenwich Village Story Adults Only — 90¢ Varsity THEATRE ...Telephone VI 3-1065 Starts WEDNESDAY... "HOW THE WEST WAS WON" NOW! Ends Wed. . . JOHN MAUREEN WAYNE + O'HARA "McLINTOCK!" IS MCNIFIGENT! TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION* Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE...West on Highway 40 Open 7:00 Starts Dusk Kiddies Under 12 Free TONY RANDALL BURL IVES EASTMAN COLOR The Brass Bottle STUDENTS THEY LIVE...AND LOVE AS THEY PLEASE in Greenwich Village Story Adults Only — 90c Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Starts WEDNESDAY ... "HOW THE WEST WAS WON" BUSINESS DIRECTORY Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 NOW! Ends Wed. . . JOHN MAUREEN WAYNE + OHARA "McLINTOCK!" IS MC NIFICENT! TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION* Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 99 Open 7:00 Starts Dusk Kiddies Under 12 Free BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ___ $0.98 LUBRICATION ___ $1.00 Motor tune-ups, wheel balancing FREE—one quart of oil with each oil and filter change Open 7:00 Starts Dusk Kiddies Under 12 Free - all major brands - PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W 23rd VI 3-9094 When buying diamonds Look for this sign AGS MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY MEMBER OF NATIONAL BRIDAL SERVICES In Lawrence, your Authorized Dealer is Delbert A. Eisele Marks Jewelers 817 Mass. VI 3-4266 FOR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS SEE MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES MALLS SHOPPING CENTER VI 3-1211 COMPLETE SERVICE FOR CHEVYS & OLDS - Small enough to give personal attention. - Big enough to have all the equipment. VI 3-7700 738 N.H. SHIP WINTER CHEVROLET HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds OPEN TO 10 A.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 IDWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PHONE VL 3-1200 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE Roberts 1040 stereo tape recorder plus one handheld and one phone. Mike, Call VI 2-3437. 5-8 Page.11 MICH. ST. BAR-B-Q FOR BAR-B-Q RIBS THAT ARE A TREAT TO EAT. TRY OURS AT 515 MICHIHAN. OPEN FROM 11 A.M. TO 11 30 P.M. 5-8 1957 Imperial, Power steering, brakes, seats, windows, and aerial. Automatic transmission. New 900 x 14 whitewalls. Original condition. By owner. $995. Call VI 2-2582. 5-7 Triumph Cub. Recently rebuilt and in good condition. Excellent cycle for hill climbing, etc. Accept highest bid over $175. Call VI 2-4219. 5-7 Volkswagen rack and cover. Custom tailored in Germany. Simple anchoring device for cover. No tying down necessary. $20 complete. Call VI 3-4588 - 54 Four used General jet air tubelessless week. Call VI 3-3478 after 5 p.m. 5-7 Velvet evening coat. Etched glasses, iceed tea, shebet, burlap. Fabricated pillow. Glass, lapis, history, encyclopedia. Furniture, chairs, davenport, bed, and dresser. VI Call VI 3-0399 1963 VW sunroof. Excellent shape. Call I 2-3147. 5-4 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 1958 TR-3. Silver, fairly cheap. Call VI 3-3990 after 6 p.m. weekdays. 5-4 1958 black and white gord convertible. Power steering and brakes, good condition, original owner. Call VI 3-5003, 1618 Rose Lane. New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500 new pam-ram $-85 Lawrence Outdoor. 1005 Mesh Wedding dress, size 7-8. 1817 La. Upstairs, west apartment, 4 to 6 p.m. Student will sell all guns in collection. 45 auto's, Lugers, 38 revolvers, miniature automatics, Ruger 22's, 410 double abl. 30.06 Deer Heart revolver action. While they last! 22 LR, $6.50 per carton. Call VI 3-1110 after 6 5-7 SPEED EQUIPMENT CHROME SPEED EQUIP WHEELS. BREAKS. Slicks, etc., for sale Great savings after 6 p.m. week days—Saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut St. tt Typewriters, new and used portables, standard typewriters, Royal and Smith Corona portables, Typewriter, adder, rentals and service. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St. Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50 Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely complex mimeograph notes. $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery vt For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3-600-808-0551 FOR RENT One and two bedroom apartments. 1232 La. Call VI 3-4271. 5-12 Bedroom with shower and half-bath. Kitchen privileges if desired. See at: La. 5-6 Married, grad students, faculty. Efficiency apartment from $65 and small house from $70. Available in June. Call now. Santee Aphrodite, 1123 Ind., VI 3-2116. Bachelor Studio Apartment for graduate or older undergraduate men. $1\frac{1}{2}$ blocks from Union. Newly remodeled nicely furnished studio ideal study conditions. A few still available at low summer rates. Singles and doubles. For appointment call VI 3-8534. NEW YORK CLEANERS REPAIRS — LEATHER REFINISHING ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING Delivery Service 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Tops — Glass & Zippers Rear Glasses — Door Glues — Door Panels — Tailor Made Seat Covers at Competitive Prices with sewed double lock stitch. Jack's Seat Covers 545 Minn. VI 3-4242 JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY 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 One and 2 bedroom apartments available now! 101 new units available Aug. 16. Swimming pool, air conditioning, wall-to-wall carpeting, colored appliances, paved, off-street parking. Furnished if desired. Call VI 3-1116 for information. Crescent Heights two bedroom apart- ment. 25th and Red bed- room. Phone VI 2-3711. Single or double room. Furnished, cook- ware included. Paid. Call if 2-9455 or see at 1244 La. University Daily Kansan LOST Brown and white puppy. Mixture, like collie. Might answer to the name Trotski. If found contact Mr. Helms at 1000 Ohio, 5-7 Gold woman's watch. Reward. Call Anne. Room 433, VI 3-9123. 5-4 TYPING *for expert typing, dissertation, thesis, work. Electric typewriter. 5-8* *Professional typewriter.* experienced typist would like to do erm papers. Prompt service, standard ates. Call VI 3-7819. tf Experienced typist would like typing in her home. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Marvin Brown, 1725 Kentucky, VI 2-0210. 5-12 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 typist with electric type- writer available to type terms, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work stands phone. Phone VI 3-8393; Charles Patt Fast, accurate work done on electric equipment. Req. rated rates. Call Bett Vincent. VI 3-514-3000 Experienced secretary would like typing her home. Reasonable rates. Call VT 1188 Experienced tytplist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason- sentations and these, phone VI 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson. Accurate service typist would like typing Prompt expert. Call VI 3-2651, these & iff Experienced typist for the thesis and term work of Dr. Wendy G. Heller, Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0586. Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tt 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 3-7485. tf Milliken's SOS "the best professional service" - general typing service - automatic tuning 24 hr. answering service 1021½ Mass, VI 3-5920, 7 a.m.-11 p.m. - mimeograph & photo-copying How do you save money by spending a lot of it at the Lawrence Book Nook? 1021 Mass. The only thing better than a home cooked meal is Dinner At DUCKS Steaks & Seafoods A Specialty Fraternity Jewelry 11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass. choice of potatoes, zesty Vienna breads & country fresh butter. Sandwiches, too! Your favorite beverage Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Serving crisp tossed salads, Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Professional typing by experienced sec- curity, new electronic typewriter, carbon ribbon, special microphone IV 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 408 West 13th. tf TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, manuscripts and course papers. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8868. tft Secretary will do typing in home. Fast. Legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577. Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2047 Yale, VI 2-1648. MILIKENLS SOS—always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines. It also tape transcription. Office hours- 7 a.m. to 12 p.m. -p1201%212% Phone VI-3-5920. Dressmaking-alterations. Formals and dressmaking. Ola Smith, 93% M1 VI 3-5283 U-Call, we haul. Anything, anytime. V1 3-5888. tf BUSINESS SERVICES Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, $16 Mass. VI 3-1267. ttl L&M CAFE now unnew management We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Our menu includes delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches Your second cup of coffee always free. MISCELLANEOUS Pre-nursery play and learn group has several openings for two and three year olds. May 1 to Aug. 1. Air conditioned home with wading pool. Teacher with M.A. Morning or afternoon, inexpensive. Call VI 2-3749. 5-4 Lube - Wheel Bal. - Brakes FREE! qt. of oil with oil change & filter BOB'S CONOCO 19th & Mass. VI 3-9802 AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS DALE'S BODY SHOP All makes & models frame - body - fender - glass 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 616 W. 9th Open 24 hours except Saturday evening 616 W. 9th 25c delivery VI 3-4720 7,000 Pipes and every smoking accessory "SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS" 727 Mass. VI 3-7164 George's Pipe Shop on shocks, mufflers, tail pipes and installation. CAR OWNERS SAVE UP TO 40% $ $ $ $ $ $ - All makes and models including sports cars - Trained mechanics for quality service - Your satisfaction GUARANTEED Montgomery Wards Monday, May 4, 1964 Auto Service Center 729 N.H. VI 2-1708 $ $ $ $ $ Have a party in the Big Red School House. Good dance floor and piano. Heated. Call VI 3-7453. tf Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign colns, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. tr BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES The Catacombs nite club and Pizza Dien 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 Summer work. Large corporation needs 3 male students for full time work. Car necessary. Apply; Student Union, Room 85A, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Thursday, May 7 Opportunity for male keyboard musician interested in sales demonstrations. Write age and type of instrument and availability. to University Daily Kansan, Box 10. 5-4 WANTED 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 Patronize Kansan Advertisers YELLOW CAB CO. VI 3-6333 24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled RISK'S Shirt Finishing Laundry Wash & Fluff Dry 513 Vt. VI 3-4141 Portraits of Distinction Photographer HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 GB Recording Service and Party Music Recordings Available of Rock Chalk Revue Spring Sing Greek Week Sing 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 One Stop Service Engine Tune Up Generator & Starter Repair ★ Brake Repair ★ Lubrication & Oil Change WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE SKELLY JACK & GUNN'S SKELLY SERVICE VI 3-9271 300 W. 6th VOLKSWAGEN'S WANTED. Cash for your VW, Conzelman Motors, VW Sales, Service, and Parts. 2522 Iown. Hiwley 59 Opportunity for male keyboard musician interested in sales demonstrations. Write giving age, experience, type of instrument. BURGERT'S Shoe Service Service for Shoes Since 1910 1113 Mass. St. VI 3-0691 100 PLANS-A-PARTY When Hallmark Plans-a-Party, you receive the compliments Hallmark - Parker Pens * Stationery * Printing BULLOCK'S 4 E. 7th VI 3-2261 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 For Fast Results READ and USE THE WANT ADS REGULARLY! STUDENTS! SAVE WITH THIS AD!! - Front end aligned • Front wheels balanced, bearings repacked • Steering checked ONLY $6.88 "Front End Special" $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 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 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Monday, May 4, 1964 LBJ Sinks GOP Hopes For House Seats WASHINGTON — (UPI)— Except for outraged cries from the Beagle bloc, Congressional Republicans with a close ear to the ground are a little unhappy at the lack of yelps from the homefolks about President Johnson's performance. For the record they still talk about retrieving some seats in the Senate in the November election and even of gaining control of the House. Privately, some Republicans are forecasting dog days for the GOP on Capitol Hill. DEMOCRATS ARE downright optimistic about the coming Congressional test. They are reluctant to admit how happy they think the vote hunting will be with LBJ at the head of the pack. "It looks so good right now I'm almost afraid to talk about it," said one normally cautious Democratic strategist with a good record for private forecasts on Congressional election results. The Democrats contend that one measure of the Republican distress is the enthusiasm with which the GOP seized on the GOP seized on the White House fiasco in which Johnson showed off Lucy Baines' Beagles by lifting them up by the ears. "Lyndon has grabbed all their issues," one party worker asserted. AND NOBODY ON Capitol Hill seriously thinks the current dog lovers' squawks will carry over into November. Long before then, everybody assumes the agile Johnson will have established as second to none his affection for dogs and probably cats for good measure. And he likely will figure some way to endear himself also to bird watchers and lovers of squirrels. As much as they liked the late President Kennedy, and as shocked as they were at his death, many Democrats now are convinced Johnson's performance to date has been better than Kennedy's. Barring upsets between now and November, they believe, he will help bag more House seats for the party than it now claims and more than it might have expected to win with Kennedy heading the ticket. OFFICIALLY ANYWAY, the GOP soffs at this thinking. "It's true Johnson has bolstered his own position," says House Republican Whip Leslie C. Arends of Illinois. "And he's getting results in the Congress. But I don't think it will have much effect on the Congressional election. Even President Eisenhower wasn't able to do much about electing members of Congress." Rep. Bob Wilson, R-Calif., chairman of the House GOP Campaign Committee, says: "On balance I don't see a great change. I don't think any President ordinarily pulls in a lot of House seats." (There is a record both for and against this contention. Eisenhower in 1962 upset a Democratic reign in both Houses of Congress but two years later the Democrats recovered control and haven't surrendered it since. Yet while Kennedy was edging out Nixon in 1960, Republicans were picking up 22 seats in the House.) "WE EXPECT THAT unless the civil rights issue develops into further demonstrations Johnson will do better in the South than Kennedy would have done," Wilson told a reporter. Official Bulletin Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. Graduate Discussion Group, 7:30 p.m. St. Lawrence Center, 1910 Stratford Rd. "What I have learned as a Catholic at KU." AWS Honors Night, 8:15 p.m., University Theater. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 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. Air Force Recruiting, 10-3-30 p.m. Eberhart will answer questions and take applications for officer training school Varsity Tennis, 2.30 p.m., KU-KSU Varsity emits, 2:30 p.m. Room All rooms in room 1472 Residents Inventory Form, 61 Beginners Inquiry Forum, 7 p.m. St. Lawrence Center, 1915 Strattford Rd. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 pass. Kansas Union Discussion: Quiet Time. Inquirer Classes, 7:30 p.m., Canterbury House. Senior Recital, 8 p.m. Swarthout Hall. Barbara Bolton Howell, pianist. Lawrence Center, 1815 Stratford Rd. Provincial Holy Communion, 9:30 pm. Danforth. One northwestern Republican member who did not want his name used said that's not the way his mail from home has been reading. A hot issue in the northwest is lumber imports, and he called how Republicans were happily braced for "And we may not have as many attractive candidates anxious to run in the South. But in the northeast we feel our chances are a little bit better. So we're not pessimistic about picking up quite a few seats." some fallout when Johnson vetoed a bill to require that outside lumber be labeled. "But I didn't get a single protest about it," he said. Republicans in Congress are especially bitter about what Johnson has done to their all-time favorite issue, which is saving the taxpayers' money. He has practically preempted the field, even turning out lights at the White House. Of course they say that is a phony and they can easily prove that if Johnson spent all of each working day clicking light switches the saving couldn't even be spotted in a federal budget that, year in and year out, with whatever party in power, seems to keep edging up. "The only hope for a real reduction in spending lies with the election of a Republican-controlled House of Representatives where spending starts," said House GOP leader Charles A. Halleck of Indiana. MEMO Take Housemother to Dinner Tonite HOLIDAY INN RESTAURANT Phone in your Classified Ad Advertisement Must Be Brought In With Garments SPRING SPECIAL Another One Hour Martinizing First! ★ 15 DENIER ★ 100% NYLON ★ SEAMLESS ★ FIRST QUALITY ★ KNITTED HEEL 1 PAIR FREE BEAUTIFUL PAIR OF NYLON HOSE FREE, WITH THIS CARD AND ANY DRY CLEANING ORDER OF $2.00 OR MORE. ONE HOUR MARTINIZING 1407 MASSACHUSETTS Across from Junior High School OFFER GOOD THROUGH MAY 8, 1964 REMEMBER MOTHER'S DAY PAY TRIBUTE WITH THE BEAUTY OF FLOWERS SUNDAY, MAY 10 is MOTHER'S DAY SUNDAY, MAY 10 is MOTHER'S DAY – We Wire Flowers Anywhere – (If you place your order early you can save wire costs.) ALLISON Flower AT THOMAS VI 3-3255 941 Mass. © ALLISON AT THOMAS Flower Shop 3.3255 941 Mass. Dailu hansan 61st Year, No. 133 Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, May 5, 1964 Women Receive Honor Awards Screams of surprise and delight echoed through the University Theatre last night as women students received the highest honors of their university careers. Hilda Gibson, Lawrence senior, received the American Association of University Women (AAUW) Award for the outstanding senior woman student. Miss Gibson's selection was announced by Miss Jan Wise, last year's winner, and Miss Emily Taylor, Dean of Women. IMMEDIATELY preceding Miss Gibson's award, the outstanding woman from each living group was announced by Dean Taylor. Tapping for the National Society of Cwens was announced by Kay Lutjen, Des Moines, Ia., sophomore, and president of this year's Cwens. Fifty-one freshmen were called from the audience and escorted to the stage by the red-jumpered 1963-64 Cwens. On the stage, each was presented with a necklace of red and gray ribbon with a single red carnation attached. Selection to Cwens is made in the spring of a woman's freshman year, and she is an active member of the society during her sophomore year. Complete List on Page 12 MRS. JOEL GOLDSTEIN, resident director of the freshman women's residence halls, was named an honorary Cwen at the conclusion of the ceremony. To the lighting of 19 white candles, 19 junior women were called from the audience to be capped by the KU chur chapter of Mortar Board, national senior women's honorary. Hilda Gibson, president of this year's Mortar Board, announced that Pamela Stone, Wichita, was to be president of next year's group. Miss Stone was then capped with a gold-tasseled mortar board, previously worn by Miss Gibson. Anne Shontz, Kansas City, Mo., received a mortar board with a silver tassel, signifying her selection as vice-president of 1964-65 Mortar Board. ACCEPTANCE INTO the honorary organization was climaxed when the black-gowned 1963-64 members "capped" the incoming women. Beth Beamer, Topeka sophomore; Paula Dickens, Newton freshman; and Joan Fowler, Shawnee Mission junior; were selected to receive the AWS Memorial (SMOP) scholarships. The SMOF scholarships, $250 each, are awarded on the basis of scholar- ship, need, and contributions to the campus by the recipient. MONEY FOR THE SCHOLARSHIP fund is raised each year through various projects, such as the library book moving project and the SMOP post office service at Christmas time. New freshman hall counselors were announced during the program, as were the members of the 1964-65 Associated Women Students' (AWS) Fashion Board. Installation of the 1964-65 AWS officers, and the presentation of the AWS House of Representatives were included in the evening's activities. Although the selection of Woodrow Wilson Fellowship Winners, Phi Beta Kappa members, and Direct Exchange winners had been made some time ago, these women were also presented to the audience. Survey Results In News Hassle ROCHESTER, Mich.—(UPI)—Inquires by the student newspaper into the sex lives of men and women attending Oakland University had the campus of this normally quiet Michigan college town in a furor today. Chancellor Durward B. Varner charged "irresponsible journalism," fired the editor of "The Oakland Observer," suspended publication and ordered all copies of the last issue destroyed. Irate parents complained to Varner that publications of the answers to the questionnaires would scar the reputation of every girl attending the school. The ousted editor, Austrian-born Wolf Metzger, countered with a charge of "censorship" and called on the 12-man newspaper staff to resign en masse. At least five did. A six-man committee of faculty members and students was named to take over publication of the campus newspaper and get it in line with administration thinking. And the completed questionnaires remained in Metzger's apartment, with very little likelihood they ever would be printed. A month ago, another observer editor gave out a two-page questionnaire about sex to the 288 students living in the university's three dormitories because he was alarmed by rumors that pregnancy was increasing on the campus. The questionnaires asked about family background of students, their sexual experiences before attending Oakland and while at Oakland and whether the experience, if any, took place on campus. Varner found out about the survey and Metzger's intention to publish it. Metzger said Varner ordered him to refrain from publishing the survey or face suspension from school. ASC Dorm Seat Election Ruling Still Contested Appeal is pending on the case concerning the contested election in the women's large residence halls, Tom Thompson, Atchison third year law student and chief justice of the Student Court, said last night. The court had previously ruled that Jean Borlang (UP), Sierra Guadarrama, Mexico, junior, should be reinstated to her seat on the All Student Council. Beverly Nicks (Vox), Detroit junior, had contested the election in which she lost by 14 votes (200-186) on the grounds that the elections committee had been negligent for not passing out ballots to all voters from her district and for not sufficiently informing students of the election. THE ELECTION had been a special one held the first day of spring elections to fill a seat vacated by the recall of a representative of the district. The normal time for election of representatives is in the fall. The appeal from the previous decision of the Student Court handed down April 22 is based on the allegation that "the verdict is contrary to the weight of evidence," Allen Knought, Topeka second year law student and attorney for Miss Nicks, said. However, Thompson explained, "It is very unlikely that the appeal will be heard this semester." HE SAID THAT the last session this school year of the Student Court as an appellant court is tonight. He also explained that the court needed to have the transcript of the original four hour trial before it is heard. Although the transcript is now being prepared, it will not be ready for tonight. When asked what their actions would be in reference to the circumstances, officials of Vox declined to comment at the present time. Weather Skies will be partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow with scattered thunderstorms tonight. Tonight's low will be in the middle 60's and tomorrow's temperatures will be warmer. Southerly winds are expected to reach as high as 50 miles per hour tonight and tomorrow. A weather bureau spokesman said that the expected high winds are not unusual for this time of year. He said that there has been a fairly strong disturbance from the west which has linked up with and reinforced an existing front which stretches from central Texas north to Iowa. The frontal area includes eastern Kansas. Student Admits Bomb Threat A KU senior admitted to Lawrence Police last night that he had left a note as a joke in the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority house yesterday evening saying that a bomb was hidden in the house set to explode at 11:40 p.m. The note had set off the second bomb scare and police search of the house in less than 24 hours. No bomb was found in either instance. The student, whose name has been withheld by the police and university officials, went before Dean of Men Donald K. Alderson at 9 a.m. this morning. Dean Alderson said that the student will appear before the University Disciplinary Committee this afternoon. (The committee is composed of 6 students and 5 faculty members appointed by the All Student Council and the University Senate.) Dean Alderson said he will chair this afternoon's meeting. "I consider this to be a very serious matter." Dean Alderson said. "When you think of the number of students living in this particular living group and of the number of students living nearby and of the two nights of disruption that this has caused, especially at this time of the year, one can readily see the seriousness of the situation. "We just haven't got time or room for juvenile delinquents," Dean Alderson said. Acting Chief of the Lawrence police department, James R. Collins, said that the student said he had nothing to do with the first bomb scare. He was not held nor charged with any crime because there is no law against bomb scares in the state of Kansas. Collins said. LAWRENCE POLICE are still investigating the first bomb scare. The first scare in the sorority took place at about 1:25 a.m. yesterday when an anonymous caller told a KU operator "There's a bomb in the Kappa Kappa Gamma house set to go off at 1:45 (a.m.)." Collins said. The operator, Miss Darlene Boyd, was unable to be reached for comment. Collins said that the sorority house was evacuated and thoroughly searched by KU and Lawrence policemen before the members of the sorority were allowed to return to their rooms shortly after 2 a.m. Early last night the second scare was touched off when a Kappa Kappa Gamma member discovered the note in the first floor telephone room. According to Collins, about 15 policemen from the KU and Lawrence forces searched the house and had found no sign of a bomb when the KU student returned to the house and admitted that he had left the note. He voluntarily accompanied Lawrence policemen to Lawrence Police Headquarters for questioning. He left the police station at about 12:30 a.m. this morning. The student told police he had heard of the earlier scare and had left the note only as a joke. MRS. Nova Sperry, Kappa Kappa Gamma housemother, said that she was called by Miss Boyd at about 1:25 a.m. yesterday morning and told of the threat. The telephone operator said that she had called the Lawrence Police Department and that they were sending men to investigate. "I DONT SCARE easily." Mrs. Sperry said. "I thought that it was some sort of prank." She said that she nevertheless went upstairs and told Kay Walker, Park Ridge, Ill., junior and house president, about the call. "When the policemen arrived, I didn't let them in immediately." Mrs. Sperry said. "They were very young, and I still thought that it might be a prank. They were wearing guns and badges, but I waited until they showed me their identification cards. They thought it was funny. They were smiling from ear to ear," she said. "When another police car drove up, I decided that it was no prank," Mrs. Sperry said. DOUGLAS COUNTY Attorney Ralph M. King, Jr., suggested last night, Collins said, that Lawrence City Attorney Charles Stough draw up an ordinance for the city under home rule that would apply in future bomb scare incidents. Collins said that the student would probably be charged with disturbing the peace, but that no formal charge has as yet been made. Foreign Aid Funds Don't Meet Need WASHINGTON —(UPI)— The House Foreign Affairs Committee was told today that the administration's $3.4 billion Foreign Aid Program was "simply too little" to meet the need. The charge came from Andrew J. Biemiller, a spokesman for the AFL-CIO. Biemiller urged the committee to boost Johnson's programs for economic development and technical assistance. But the U.S. Chamber of Commerce disagreed with the labor spokesman. John O. Teeter, vice president of the Pfizer Drug Co., said the aid program should be cut by about $400 million. But he emphasized that the chamber does support "effectively administered foreign assistance." Iconoclast Mencken's Works Displayed in Watson Built like a fire hydrant and probably just as tough, Henry Louis Mencken has been the target of such high accolades as "one of the most brilliant personalities in American literature." Several of the works and literary artifacts of Mencken are on display in the main floor of Watson Library. The display, part of one of the major Mencken collections in the world, is the property of Mrs. Elizabeth M. Taylor of Kansas City, who makes the annual Taylor Book Collection awards possible. In addition to her Mencken collection and several other specialized collections, Mrs. Taylor's library includes a broad general selection, principally English literature from the seventeenth century through the twentieth century. THE PORTION ON DISPLAY of Mrs. Taylor's "Menckeniana" includes books, manuscripts, notes, newspaper copy and other miscellaneous materials which attempt to describe the career of Henry L. Mencken. One of his books in the display, "The American Language," served to draw the line between the King's English and English as spoken in American. But more than just making a distinction, the book gave to the American language a dignity and respect it had not had in the hands and eyes of English purists. In the display are several of Mencken's editorials written during his tenure with the Baltimore Sun which serve as examples of his biting wit, wry humor, and notorious iconoclasm. There are several issues of "The Smart Set." ("a magazine of cleverness") and the "American Mercury." two magazines for which he served as editor and literary critic. Also, there are several books about Mencken. During his life (1880-1935) Mencken wrote more than 25 books, in addition to reams of newspaper and magazine copy. The card catalog in Watson lists more than 60 books which were either written about Mencken or by him. AMONG HIS LETTERS is one he wrote to playwright Eugene O'Neill, objecting to O'Neill's Catholic argument against birth control; "... as for the ecclesiastical objections to birth control, they seem to me to be wholly idiotic. There is nothing in Christianity which puts upon anyone the duty to augment human miserv." Several of the books in the display are opened to pages with pictures of One picture, a cartoon titled "The Subconscious Menchen," has mencken bearing a strong, stormy and undeniable resemblance to Mark Tvain. Mencken. In one display case there is a small green tarnished bronze bust of Mencken with strangely oriental eyes. The bust is tilted upward, showing his hair, parted in the middle, as though it were sculptured while Mencken sat looking up from his editor's desk at a reporter or a copy boy who had a question to ask. BUT WHILE THE DISPLAY may describe the career of Mencken, it leaves much to be desired regarding enlightenment for the uninitiated as to the man himself. But no mere display can be expected to give thorough insight into so diversified and energetic a man as Henry L. Mencken. A man who during his 55 year life span wrote books on such subjects as philosophy, drama, politics, humor, ethics and grammar. Mencken was a man who aroused praise, respect and sometimes fierce loyalty among his readers. But on the other side of the coin there were those, like the character Harvey Stone in Ernest Hemingway's book "The Sun Also Rises," who dismissed the Mencken of 1926 as having "written about all the things he knows, and now he's on all the things he doesn't know." In addition to literary criticism, Mencken tried his hand at writing drama, and also verse, the latter, which for some reason, failed to inspire the critics to write rave reviews, but which do serve to show another side of this many talented and dynamic man. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, May 5, 1964 Valuable Gift Rare Books Despite Kansan editorial praise, the senior gift of a rare book collection for the library has not won universal acclaim. “What good are rare books anyway," asked some usually enlightened members of the faculty and the student body. "All they do is sit around and gather dust." THOMAS R. BUCKMAN, director of Watson Library, justified the rare book collection in this wav: The quality of a university is measured by the quality of its library. Students and even faculty members move on, but the fund of knowledge of the library remains. Rare books are the "heart of the university library, the core of its research collection," Buckman said. Acquiring this kind of material fits in with the university's goals of preserving, disseminating, and creating knowledge. SCHOLARS FROM THIS PART of the country frequently use the special collections of the KU library, which has been consulted by mail by the British National Museum and the Vatican Library. Granted that the special collections are valuable to scholars and to the prestige of the university. But how do they benefit the run-of-the-mill KU student or faculty member? Contrary to what most people believe, the special collections department is open to anyone, from freshman to distinguished professor. Now on the top level of the stacks, the department is getting ready to move to new quarters downstairs in June. Consequently, this spring it has been open only in the morning. THE BOOKS MAY NOT be checked out, but any of the books, manuscripts, or maps may be used in the air-conditioned room. It is because the materials are fragile and difficult to replace that they may not be circulated. They are sent out on inter-library loans, however, to as distant places as Australia. A Noble Cause: The rare books the senior class has given the library will be purchased from antiquarian dealers from New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, or abroad. They will probably be chosen to strengthen present collections, such as those on ornithology, 18th century English, Continental, and American imprints, typography, and 19th and 20th century English literature and history. IN A NEWLY PUBLISHED pamphlet, "A Guide to the Collections," Buckman wrote, "The University Library's Department of Special Collections, established little more than ten years ago, offers . . . an unusual range of carefully selected books, manuscripts, and maps for the use of qualified students and scholars. From the beginning these collections . . . have demonstrated their increasing utility in teaching and formal inquiry, and their power to stimulate productive thought. The considerable resources in evidence here . . . will continue to enhance the opportunity for study and intellectual discovery." — Margaret Hughes East-West Rapport Fades on Red Birthday Two weeks ago the United States and Russia agreed to cut back production of uranium for war purposes. The move was hailed as a step toward peace and observers reported that relations between the two countries were growing warmer. Last week, during which communism celebrated another birthday, the United States and Russia were shaking their missiles at one another again. M. R. H. This time it involved U.S. inspection flights over Cuba. Premier Khrushchev said continued U.S. violations of Cuban air space "can have disastrous consequences". Prime Minister Fidel Castro said, "We will defend our sovereignty, whatever it may cost and wherever it may happen." He said he is willing to seek a peaceful solution, but if the Americans want war "There will be war." Foy D. Kohler, U.S. ambassador to Russia, reaffirmed President Johnson's view that this country has the right to continue the plane flights over Cuba because Castro has refused on-site inspection to confirm the withdrawal of Soviet missiles. Kohler said that under the agreement with Premier Khrushchev in 1662, at the time the first Russian rockets were first placed in and then withdrawn from Cuba, the Kremlin agreed with the late President Kennedy that inspection should continue. But Premier Khrushchev was assailing friend as well as foe. The crack in the wall of world communism grows bigger. Last week it was reported that the Russians invited the Red Chinese to attend the May Day celebration in Moscow, then withdrew the invitation. In the meantime Moscow is applying pressure on other Communist parties to agree to a world meeting of Red leaders next fall for a showdown with the Chinese on the issue of tactics for expanding Communism. The other Communist parties, however, are not too keen about the idea. A demonstration in Czechoslovakia marred the May Day celebration by the Communist nations. About 3,000 students battled police in Prague in what, according to diplomats, bordered on open revolt. About 15 leaders of the demonstration were arrested and jailed. But there were other trouble spots around the globe last week. Communist terrorists sank a U.S. aircraft transport in Saigon, South Viet Nam, on Friday and guerrilla attacks continued. Observers say that the situation in South Viet Nam is brighter now than it was six months ago. Lt. Gen. William C. Westmoreland, named to become commander of US forces in Vietnam in August, is determined to fight the Viet Cong guerrillas during the upcoming rainy season, normally a time when government forces are completely ineffective because of their heavy equipment. Fraternal warfare continued to split the Mediterranean island of Cyprus. A Greek Cypriot attack on St. Hilarion, a Turkish Cypriot-held castle overlooking a strategic pass in the Kyrenia mountains, increased the tension between the warring factions. The U. N. peace force, limited in its ability to intercede in the quarrel, could only Cyprus Torn Saigon Terrorized duck the bullets aimed at them and ask the two sides to negotiate a cease-fire treaty. Coalition Restored Souvanna's statement followed a joint British-Soviet declaration demanding the restoration of the coalition government under Souvanna. Those two countries and the U.S. have sharply condemned the coup by rightist officers which paralyzed the government. Prince Souvanna Phouma, premier of the shaky Laoatian coalition government, announced a merger of the country's neutralist and right-wing faction. He expressed hope that the pro-Communist Pathet Lao faction would "follow the same path." Last week the island of Zanzibar united with Tanganyika to form the United Republic of Tanganyika and Zanzibar. Julius K. Nyerere moved to contain the Marxist faction on the island by putting Sheik Aebid Amani Karume in control. Karume is regarded as one of the few uncommitted African nationalists in Zanzibar's former revolutionary government. And Charles de Gaulle is upsetting his Western allies again. France announced that she was withdrawing her officers from NATO naval headquarters. The move, a further step in De Gaulle's program to make his country independent of her allies, is not of strategic importance, but it does show the further weakening of the Atlantic Alliance. Except for bloody race riots in Nashville, Tenn., the nation was relatively quiet last week. The struggle over the civil rights bill continued in the Senate. The debate broke out in a "heated exchange" between Sen. Jacob Javits, (R-N.Y.), and Richard Russell (D-Ga), over the jury trial amendment offered by Sen. Thurston B. Morton, (R-Kv). Sen. Paul H. Douglas, (D-II), cautioned the Senate against amending the bill too much because "it may be erecting obstacles" to final passage of the civil rights bill. It is doubtful that the House would pass the Bill if it were changed greatly. Voting on the amendments is expected to begin this week. We Must Not Fail! etc. Most people's mailbox is cluttered with bills, free samples, giveaways and other such unwelcome nonsense. The mailbox of a newspaper, for the most part, is junked with propaganda. One has to be fascinated with bizarre thoughts and bizarre approaches to open it. This dramatic bit came in the mail yesterday from Whittier College. It is so unexceptional that is exceptional—if you follow. HEADED "STUDENTS FOR NIXON," the blurb is addressed "An Open Letter to the Voters of America." "We call on you for help in a demand of grave responsibility, in a demand for leadership; we call on you as the most informed public in the world, the most intelligent audience produced for a progressive mankind in the history of the world; we call on you from a small private liberal arts college to elect a President from these United States—to elect Richard M. Nixon. "Who are we to make such a request and ask your help? We are the product of the greatest war on earth . . . the babies left by fathers who went to fight . . . cold war period. Ours is a peculiar heritage and one we are proud of . . . "Yet soon, our new voices will be raised... "Let us now join hands . . . etc." Like, this fellow should write editorials for someone—maybe, say, a college paper? George Lincoln Rockwell, who drew a crowd of 2500 when at KU, popped up a week ago harassing civil rights supporters. A student group had gathered at the Abraham Lincoln memorial in Springfield, Ill., with the avowed purpose of keeping a vigil until the Civil Rights bill is passed by the Senate. Rockwell and six of his Storm Troopers, according to a K.C. Star item, distributed racist literature at the memorial and heckled the students. They were arrested by police for demonstrating without a permit. Rockwell said when he was here that getting himself arrested was one of his principal tactics. BOOK REVIEWS I WONDER AS I WANDER, by Langston Hughes (American Century, $2.45; cloth, $4.95). The first volume of the autobiography was entitled "The Big Sea." This second volume is in truth a tale of wandering, a story of the thirties and a dramatic depiction of one man's adventures. Among American Negro writers Langston Hughes looms large. His poetry has been read by two generations; his autobiography, of which this is the second volume, is an important document of the life of a leading literary figure. Hughes takes us to Cuba, Haiti, the Soviet Union, Siberia, Japan, and Spain during the Spanish Civil War. His encounters are with the great and the small of his time, and he chronicles a world then on the way to violent war. Like many Negroes, Langston Hughes was aware of the force of the Communist movement, and he was asked by Arthur Koestler why he did not become a Communist in this time of ferment. For Hughes, communism was too confining, too disciplined, an idea which could control the independence of his thought and expression. No Communist, he studied the movement in Russia, and his wanderings gave him insights into other ideas as well that were so significant in the thirties. NEW IMPROVED CIGARET ADVERTISING CLEANER! FRESHER! LESS IRRITATING! ©1964 HERBLOCK "I'm Feeling A Little Better Already" 1234567890 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Humor and Pathos Seen in Strike By 500 Korean School Children By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst There was something pathetic yet simultaneously humorous in the dispatches from Seoul which told of 500 grade school children demonstrating against a decision reached by their elders. The pathos arises from the fact that they simply were aping the acts of their older brothers and sisters in adopting a means of pressure which has become more and more a way of life in the republic of Korea's fumbling efforts to make itself a self-sustaining democracy. Demonstrations by college students throughout Korea led to the fall of the Syngman Rhee government which admittedly had grown old and corrupt. In these demonstrations which occurred in the spring of 1960, nearly 200 students died, more than 6,000 were injured and 200 maimed. The demonstration didn't get very far because these children were still possessed by a certain amount of awe for authority. When police sternly told them to go back to school, they promptly did so. Within a year, the students were back in the streets again, this time demanding the resignation of the government headed by Premier John M. Chang. The Chang government had proved itself a weak substitute for the Rhee regime. Whatever else the faults of the Rhee government, a tolerance of Communism had not been among them. Under Chang, Communists from Japan and North Korea streamed into the country, reactivating their cells in every district of Seoul, in Pusan, Inchon and other cities. Now once more, the students are in the streets. In May, 1961, after only a year in power, the Chang government fell to a military junta which remained in power until last winter's elections by which junta leader Chung Hee Park switched from his military role to that of civilian president. Already the student demonstrators appear to have destroyed any chance of any early successful conclusion to the long drawout negotiations seeking to normalize relations between South Korea and Japan. Their complaints run all the way from opposition to geisha houses to new charges of corruption within the government. At the root of their discontent is the country's growing economic difficulties and the scarcity of jobs for college graduates who pour out of Korean schools at the rate of more than 30,000 a year. Tuesday, May 5, 1964 Unemployment continues to rise and many of Korea's large and small industries are operating at less than half capacity. Despite continuing heavy United States aid, the government has been unable to cope either with these difficulties or to carry out frequently promised reforms, including an investigation of financial scandals that arose under the previously ruling military junta. In the middle is President Chung Hee Park. Korea's failure to solve its difficulties encourages both violence and a rule far more democratic. Close to President Park is another veteran on the 1961 coup. He is Kim Chong Pil, a former head of secret police whom some suspect of ambitions to become a Korean strong man. Members of six KU fraternities and sororites will be knocking on doors in Lawrence and Baldwin tonight asking for contributions for the Douglas County Multiple Sclerosis Hope Chest. Students to Aid City MS Drive Their interest in the fund drive, according to Jay Strayer, Shawnee Mission senior and coordinator for the Lawrence drive, is caused partially by the fact that "multiple sclerosis strikes people largely in our age group." Patronize Kansan Advertisern See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER Sales - Rentals - Service 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 Strayer, who is president of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, said his fraternity has been working with the annual drive for the past five years. FRATERNITY-SORORITY Jewelry GREEK LETTER LAVALIERS 10K GOLD 18" chain $4.00 Paddle with Greek Letters on 18" chain $3.25 We have these in stock for all K.U. Sororities & Fraternities BRIMAN'S leading jewelers HUGE KKT BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 743 Mass. V1 3-4366 Professor Receives Grant For Study in East Asia Dr. Grant Goodman, associate professor of history and of East Asian studies at the University of Kansas, has received a federal grant to study for 10 months in Japan and the Philippines. Professor Goodman will conduct research under the first "National Defense Education Act-related Fulbright-Hays award" to a KU faculty member. His study will be concerned with pre-World War II relations between Japan and the Philippines, with special attention to cultural and political contacts. The award provides a stipend equal to his KU salary, plus travel to and from the Far East. It was given to him in connection with the existence of an N.D.E.A. Center for East Asian studies. Besides conducting research, Professor Goodman will present a paper at the International Conference of Asian Historians Aug. 30-Sept. 5 in Hong Kong. His paper it titled "A Flood of Immigration': Patterns and Problems of Japanese Migration to the Philippines During the First Four Decades of the 20th Century." Professor Goodman, who joined the KU faculty in 1662, has held two Fulbright awards. One was a graduate scholarship in the Netherlands (1952-53) and the other, a lecture-ship at the University of the Philippines (1959-60). He is the author of "An Experiment in Wartime Intercultural Exchange: Philippine Students in Japan, 1943-45," a monograph published by Cornell (1962), and "Japan in Philippine Politics, 1931-41," published in Studies on Asia by the University of Nebraska Press (1963). Engineers to Hear Wescoe Address Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will address the Mid-Continent Conference of civil engineers at 6 p.m. Saturday in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union to conclude the two-day engineers' conference here Friday and Saturday. The engineers will be given a tour of one of the missile pads in the Atlas Missile complex in Kansas the afternoon before the chancellor's speech. Registration for the convention begins Friday morning in the Kansas Union, followed by presentation of research papers on engineering and a buffet supper in the evening. Saturday morning there will be a business meeting of the Mid-Conti-nent Conference where officers for the next year will be elected. The Man-Miles engineering award and several awards for the research papers presented will be announced following the Saturday night dinner. The University is making dormitory accommodations available to visiting engineers. Law Queen to be PickedSaturday By Tom Moore The Green Hall girl watchers will move from their favorite post Saturday morning to watch the choosing of their queen for the KU School of Law's Fun Day from 16 candidates in bathing suits at 10 a.m. in Fraser theater. Their queen will be crowned "Miss Res Ipsa Loquitur," which translates from Latin as "let the facts speak for themselves." The Law Queen will reign over remaining law activities of the year. The two candidates for president of the student bar will speak following the rites of crowning the queen. They are Bill Howard, Augusta, and Don Culp, Kansas City, both second year law students. The SOB Award will be presented to the professor that the law students think gives the toughest exams, according to Cal Bender, Lawrence second year law student and president of the student bar association. The award will be followed by the traditional senior law student skit. After the skit in Fraser Theater, law students and their dates or dependents will migrate to Charles Oldfather's, professor of law, farm for a picnic, followed by a barn dance and party. Fun Day had originally been meant for just the senior law students when it was begun about 10 years ago. Bender said, but now the whole school participates. Dailiij Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper 111 Flint Hall Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East St. Sl. New York 22. N.Y. Brown University, 19 East St. 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. rounded 1889, became bweekly 1903 NEWS DEPARTMENT Mike Miller ... Managing Editor NEWS DEPARTMENT Mike Miller ... Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Tom Coffman ... Editorial Writer Vinay Kothari and Margaret Hughes ... Assistant Editorial Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Rob Brooks ... Business Manager KEEP COOL! DON'T WORRY ABOUT TAKING YOUR BULKY WINTER CLOTHES HOME THIS SUMMER! Save expense by letting the experts at New York Cleaners store your clothes and furs in cool safety for the summer. Next fall a call or quick stop will bring your heavy clothes to you beautifully cleaned and ready to wear. JUST STOP IN FOR FURTHER INFORMATION OR CALL VI 3-0501 New York Cleaners 926 MASS. New York Cleaners 926 MASS. Page 4 University Dairy Kansan Tuesday, May 5, 1964 White House Reporter Receives Pulitzer Prize for JFK Story NEW YORK—(UPI)—Merriman Smith, United Press International White House reporter, yesterday won a Pulitzer Prize for his coverage of the assassination of President Kennedy. (Stories by Smith were run in the University Daily Kansan beginning with the first dispatches on the day of the assassination.) Smith, 51-year-old veteran White House reporter, won the prize in national reporting "for his outstanding coverage of the assassination." Smith was on the scene for every historic turn of the day of the Kennedy assassination in Dallas, on the plane for the swearing-in of President Johnson, and wrote his prize-winning dispatch in Washington that night for the next day's newspapers. THE 1964 PRIZES, awarded by the trustees of Columbia University, were announced by Columbia President Grayson Kirk. The award for international reporting was awarded jointly to Malcolm W. Browne of the Associated Press and David Halberstam of The New York Times for their individual reporting of the Viet Nam war and the overthrow of the Diem regime. The award for meritorious public service went to the St. Petersburg (Fla.) Times "for its aggressive investigation of the Florida Turpike Authority which disclosed widespread illegal acts and resulted in a major reorganization of the state's read construction program." A SPECIAL CITATION went to the Gannett newspapers for their program, "The Road to Integration." This was cited as a distinguished example of the use of a newspaper group's resources to complement the work of its individual newspapers. The series run by the Gannett papers sought out and reported racial success stories in many cities. Norman C. Miller of the Wall Street Journal won the award for a distinguished example of local general or spot news reporting for a comprehensive account of a multi-million-dollar vegetable oil swindle in New Jersey. THE AWARD FOR local reporting of an investigative or special nature went to James V. Magee, Albert V. Gauzios, and Frederick A. Meyer of The Philadelphia Bulletin. This was for their expose of numbers rackets operations with police collusion in South Philadelphia, resulting in arrests and police department cleanup. The prize for distinguished editorial writing went to Hazel Brannon Smith of The Lexington (Miss). Advertiser "for steadfast adherence to her editorial duties in the face of great pressure and opposition." POWER YOUR PLAY AHSHAWY VANTAGE For Tournament Play Approx. Stringing Cost Tennis ... $9 ASHAWAY ASHAWAY PRO-FECTED AHSAWAY PRO-FECTED For Club Play Approx. Stringing Cost Tennis ... $7 Badminton ... $6 LASTS LONGER STAYS LIVELIER MOISTURE IMMUNE ASHAWAY MULTI-PLY ASHWAY MULTI-PLY For Regular Play Approx. Stringing Cost Tennis ... $5 Badminton ... $4 Mrs. Smith was awarded the editorial writing prize for the whole volume of her work during the year. She purchased the Lexington Advertiser, a weekly, in 1943 and began launching editorial attacks against racketeers, gamblers and political corruption. She has won many awards, including one for an editorial protesting the arrest of a bomb victim. ASHAWAY PRODUCTS, INC., Ashaway, Rhode Island. THE HOME OF a Negro farmer had been fire bombed and when he and his family ran from the house, the farmer was shot at and arrested for supposedly fire bombing his own home. The award for editorial cartooning went to Paul Conrad of The Denver Post—now on the staff of The Los Angeles Times—for his distinctive work during the entire year rather than for any one cartoon. The award for news photography went to Robert H. Jackson of The Dallas Times Herald for his photograph of the slaying of Lee Harvey Oswald by Jack Ruby, taken just as the bullet entered the alleged presidential assassin's body. SMITHS ACCOUNT of what he saw and heard last Nov. 22 was called by Earl J. Johnson, editor and vice president of UPI, "an example of lean and factual news service journalism by a top craftsman reporting and writing with the wind of the world in his face." Johnson added: "It might have been said of Merriman Smith at noon on Nov. 22 that he had been everywhere and seen everything in 22 years as White House reporter for UPI. But his greatest test of professional skill and physical endurance was to come in the next few hours. Red Cross Senior Lifesaving Course Will Be Offered. All those interested report to room 203 Robinson at 4:30 Tuesday, May 5. The course will be open to boys and girls. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 89 65 JR YOUR GRADUATION RING the most respected symbol of your educational achievement. - Preference of weights, stones, styles, and precious metals ORDER YOUR RING NOW ! - 3rd Dimensional Greek Letter Encrusting - Fastest delivery In the Industry R World Finest School Rings 4 WEEK DELIVERY MEN'S MODEL from $29 LADIES' MODEL from $24 the university shop MEN'S APPAREL Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Exciting pump ... as light as it looks! "Barely-There" White Patent! OUTSIDE TRACK $14.95 Also Available Strawberry, White Lightning it's Town & Country Shoes Royal College Shop Royal College Shop 837 Mass. VI 3-4255 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, May 5.1964 Page 5 'Bird' Takes Wing On Campus "The Bird." KU's first campus humor magazine since 1959 made its appearance on campus yesterday. Despite varied reactions the publishers said last night they were "elated" with sales and reactions to the first and only issue this school year. "Except for a few consignments in the large residence halls the first issue of 'The Bird' sold out today (Monday)," Clarke Ellis, Wichita senior and one of the publishers said. "OUR RESPONSE HAS been quite favorable and 'The Bird' will be continued next year. Some of our material was too general to be really humorous and some, such as 'The Bird Awards' left out the majority of students as to understanding of the pun or irony involved," Ellis said. Ellis said there had been a great deal of interest by students who wished to work on "The Bird" next year. The other partners in "The Bird Publishing Company" are: Thomas Woods, Arkansas City junior; William Bradbury, Shawnee Mission junior; Philip Cooper, Prairie Village junior; and John Oakson, Prairie Village senior. CAMPUS HUMOR magazines at KU have had a rather stormy past. In 1858 "The Seur Owl!" a publication of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity, went off the campus with apologies to the administration for the "personable individuals ridiculed and defamed" in the publication. It was replaced by "Squat" which was banned by the ASC in the spring of 1958 because the content was "not suitable for the campus." "THE FOWL" CAME into existence soon afterwards but it too folded within a year. Student opinion on the new magazine also varies. Comments in a 1959 University Daily Kansan article on "The Fowl" ranged from "fair" to "oul" to "flop." PATRICIA REYNOLDS, Des Moines, Iowa, freshman, said, "It's not worth the 40c. I didn't read it thoroughly but I didn't like the ads." Jerald Pullins, Council Grove senior and senior class president, said. "They picked a good cross-section of the campus to give the bird to. KU needs a campus humor magazine, just so they don't lower the level." John Simmons, Hoisington freshman, said, "The cartoons were good but the content was too slanted to campus politics and to upperclass- John E. Stuckey, Pittsburg senior said, "It doesn't show any appreciable talent." David Hutchins, Kansas City, Mo, sophomore, said, "I thought it represented the high educational standards of those who wrote it." Brian Grace, Lawrence senior, said, "It's fine with me, I liked it." Karen Craig, Liberal senior, said, "It's much better than I thought it would be. I liked the Phil Harrison Hillfloppers and the Western Civ evam." John Baumgartner, Tulsa, Okla., senior, said, "Good, but not enough smut." DELLORES TUTTON, Wichita senior, said, "We need a campus humor magazine but perhaps practice will make perfect." Naney Lane, Hoisington senior, said, "The Western Civ exam and the Bird Awards (with a few exceptions) show real talent and humor. It's a fun type magazine and we need it at KU." Thomas Shumaker, Russell junior, said, "Good in places which are far between and bad everywhere else. Most of the Bird Awards are good." Robert Tieszer, McPherson senior said, "Fine, should definitely be continued and expanded next year." Process Changes Sought In Art of Making Potterv Pottery has preserved the story of man for more than 6000 years. In that time man has done much in changing the forms and shapes that he has made on the potter's wheel. Little change has been made in the process, however. But J. Shieldon Carey, professor of ceramic art, has been interested in changing more than shapes and forms. He has worked to change the process. A few years ago he caused excitement among potters with a new process of making tall pots simply by turning the potter's wheel upside down. He pulled the clay shapes by working with the force of gravity instead of against it, as it normally is done. The potter has always used water as a lubricant, which he applies to his bands and to the ball of clay. Prof. Carey has found a synthetic polymer to replace water as the normal lubricant. It is formed from a polymerization of acrylamide. The new lubricant, Saparan NP 20, causes less friction than water and is not absorbed by the clay, allowing the potter to form larger, and thinner-walled pots. Some 75 per cent less liquid is required for lubrication, and it is inexpensive. Prof. Carey knew that brick and tile companies had added a lubricant to their clay for some time to prevent the clay from sticking to the metal forms when the shapes were extruded. Last summer, through the assistance of the ceramic division of the State Geological Survey, Prof. Carey did hundreds of tests with the lubricants used with heavy clay products, and with many other liquids. Separan NP 20 proved to be an excellent lubricant. It is odorless, colorless and non-toxic. The synthetic comes in a powdered form which is soluble in water. Prof. Carey has found that only a one per cent solution is necessary, making the lubricant quite inexpensive. UK | Adverse QUALITY AND STYLE! Why buy ordinary rings when a prize-winning Artcarved costs no more? Starting at $8.00. Artcarved WEDDING BINGS RHAPSODY SET Groom's Ring $35.00 Bride's Ring $32.50 Just one of our 300 PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS AGS Different Styles! Official Bulletin University Lecture, 4 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union, "The Experiment and American Poetry" by Warren and american Poetry—Hans Hennecke, visiting professor, U. of Illinois. Psychology Colloquium, 4:30 p.m., 112 Strong. "Recent Trends in Research in Cardiovascular"—Dr. Norman Ellis. George Peabody College, Nashville, Teen. Marks Jewelers Scholarship Hall Banquet, 6:30 p.m. Big 8 Room, Kansas Union. 817 Mass. MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY AGS Carillon recital. 7 p.m. Albert Gordon Thorpe. The Last Laugh. Fraser Tlighter. Senior Recital. 8 p.m., Swarthout Hall. Malcolm Smith, oboe. Le plque-nique traditionnel du Cercle francais aura lieu leje se lept ma à 17 rue h. 30 chez Mademoiselle Crumeine, 920 rue Missouri. Quelques scenes dramatiques, announce des prix et des bons souvenirs est invite. Vaullex-voix inscribe au bureau 103 Fraser et payer 60 "cents" à la secretaire avant mercredi soi St. Lawrence Center 1915 Stratford Rd. St. Lawrence Evening Prayer 9:30 p.m. Danforth. Inquirer Class, 3:45 p.m., Canterbury House. NATIONAL BRIDAL SERVICE A man is running. He is smiling and holding his hands in front of his chest. Fun is living in Park Plaza You're in luck. We need experienced typists, stenos, Dictaphone operators and other office help to work in the offices of our customers. There's no fee to pay and (best news) the pay is high. P.S. On temporary jobs you can take off a few days now and then to go to the beach. Come apply today. NBS TODAY looking for a summer job? Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence Cheval, 1010, Strufford, Rd. The pioneer temporary help service. Offices coast to coast and Canada. EMPLOYERS OVERLOAD. And at such a modest cost . . . One or Two Bedroom's $75 and $85 Beginners Inquiry Forum, 7 p.m. Beginner's Christian Fellowship, 7.30 Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7.30 Senior Recital, 8 p.m. Swartshout Hall Barbara Bolton Howell, pianist. Western Civ Discussion. 9 p.m. St. Louis University, 1070 N. Washington Ave. Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m. Faculty Committee Kenneth Beasley, director of an election Year by a Semi-academician" "--Dr. Kenneth Beasley, director of the Kansas Legislative Council." TOMORROW Internet Centerbury House. Senior Roster. 8:11 pm. Swartwout Hall. SUN Air Force Recruiting, 10-3-30 p.m. Hawk's Nest, Kansas Union. Sgt. Eberhart will answer questions and take applications for officer training school. These units have been newly decorated—with new dropes, carpets disposals, etc. All Units Air-Conditioned Provincial Furniture Available Ph. VI 2-3416 Opening Day at the KU Religious Art Exhibit in Browsing Room, Kansas Uni PARK PLAZA SOUTH Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, Stratford Rd. No. Chapel, tonight Episcopal Holy Communion, 5:30 p.m. Danforth. Day or Night 1912 W. 25th Advertisement Must Be Brought In With Garments ONE HOUR MARTINIZING Another One Hour Martinizing First! ONE HOUR MARTINIZING THE MOST EXPENSIVE INCOME ★ 15 DENIER ★ 100% NYLON ★ SEAMLESS ★ FIRST QUALITY ★ KNITTED HEEL "MARTINIZING" PAIR BEAUTIFUL PAIR OF NYLON HOSSE FREE, WITH THIS CARD AND ANY DRY CLEANING ORDER OF $2.00 OR MORE. 1407 MASSACHUSETTS Across from Junior High School ONE HOUR MARTINIZING OFFER GOOD THROUGH MAY 8,1964 One hour MARTINIER'S THE MASTER - DRY CLEANING Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, May 5, 1964 Doctor Says Fast Tan Produces Fast Burn There's no sure way to get a fast sun tan without also getting a fast sunburn. At least that's the opinion of Dr. Ralph Canuteson, director of Watkins Memorial Hospital, who believes in moderation when indulging in the sun's ravs. "The way to build up a safe tolerance for the sun to start slowly, about five minutes front and back the first time." Dr. Canuteson said. Although there have been no admitted cases at Watkins this spring Dr. Canuteson said much damage can be done if some caution is not exercised by sunbathers and swimmers. "The sun is more penetrating when reflected by water or sand, which makes a sand bar party more dangerous than a sun deck. "If the person is fair-skinned, or has red tinges in his hair he is also more likely to get a bad burn," Dr. Canuteson said. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS How I learned to stop worrying and love parties Worrying about the high cost of living on campus? Looking for a way to earn extra money? Here's an idea. How 'bout becoming a part-time Tupperware dealer? These wonderful plastic food containers are demonstrated and sold only at home parties. Well, if you do the selling in your spare time you could earn $50 a week or more. And have lots of fun in the bargain! Interested? Ask your campus Financial Aid Director about it and call your local Tupperware distributor,listed in the Yellow Pages under Plastics or Housewares. Or send in this coupon... OR PERFORMANCE ASSIGNMENT GOOD HAKEEeping GUARANTEES MANAGEMENT DEFINED TO COMMIT COMMENTS BY PARENT'S CONTROL UPPERWARE Department C-1, Orlando, Florida Barbara Kibler, Topeka senior, has been named the outstanding senior in the School of Education by the KU chapter of the Student National Education Association. She was awarded $100. SNEA Award to Senior I would like to talk to someone about becoming a part-time Tupperware dealer. 'Address ___ Name_ City___ Diane Karnaze, Kansas City junior, also was awarded $100 for being named the outstanding junior. She was elected recording secretary of the SNEA for the 1964-65 school year. State___ He especially stressed closing the eyes as real damage can be done by direct sun exposure. Other irritating conditions are itchy skin, blistering or peeling and running a fever from too much exposure. "Although lotions and oils may protect the skin somewhat, or help it to heal and stop itching and peeling afterwards the best thing is to go slow until the tan is built up," Dr. Canuteson warned. Both Miss Kibler and Miss Karnaze are elementary education majors. THERE ARE MANY WAYS TO KEEP THINGS COOL Acme ...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 Acme 1 HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE HILLCREST — 1111 MASS. — THE MALLS > Tuesday, May 5,1964 University Daily Kansan Court Asked to Ban 'Under God' Pledge ALBANY, N.Y. — (UPI) — The Court of Appeals, highest legal tribunal in New York state, was asked yesterday to order the phrase "under God" deleted from the pledge to the flag when recited in public schools in the state. Page 7 The suit against the State Education Department was brought by Joseph Lewis, president of the "Freethinkers of America," an organization aimed at maintaining separation of church and state. Martin Scheiman, counsel for Lewis, said the reference to God was just as much a prayer as the 22-word regents prayer prohibited by the U.S. Supreme Court two years ago. JOHN JEHU, representing the Education Department, argued that the pledge is an historical matter and that there is no difference between reciting it as part of a history class or using it as a pledge. Last month, Charles A. Brind, legal counsel to the State Education Department, said pupils in public schools must recite the pledge of allegiance to the flag daily unless they refuse on religious grounds. At that time, Brind said "the purpose of the pledge and salute is not their repetition by rote. The purpose, of course, is to remind the pupils of principles on which our nation is founded, symbolized by the flag." Lewis, a resident of the Westchester County hamlet of Purdy's, was a parent of children attending school when the case first entered the courts seven years ago. Jehu told the court that what it is being asked to do cannot be done because it stems from an act of Congress which changed the verbage of the original pledge to include the phrase in question which was taken from Lincoln's Gettysburg Address. HE NOTED that no compulsion was used in either case and that a child may be excused from reciting the pledge. Chief Judge Charles S. Desmond disagreed, observing that when a child puts up his hand to recite the pledge using the words "under God" he is giving an affirmation of a deity. Desmond said President Lincoln undoubtedly used the phrase "under God" in his historic address as "an affirmation of a diety." He told newsmen that if the Court of Appeals rules against him, he will carry the case to the U.S. Supreme Court. When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Vickers presents FOR MOTHER'S DAY - MAY 10th Lawrence's largest selection of well-chosen gifts of good taste including... Holland Pewter Holland Pewter Swedish crystal bud vases Brass bowls and candlesticks Wooden salad bowls, trays, cheese boards High styled summer jewelry Dansk Imports Decorative accessories from the Orient Colorful place mats Scandinavian Imports Blenko colored glass bottles, vases, etc. Early American copper, ironstone, milk glass Pretty and practical aprons and towels Hummel figurines Your selection will be giftwrapped and packed for mailing with our compliments. Vickers Gift Shop Gift Shop ( Across from the Granada ) VI 3-5585 1023 Mass. Ray Christian proudly presents Fostoria the lively new look in decorating Here is the lively new look in fine crystal . . . the fresh flair of fashion so obviously Fostoria. Now at Ray Christian, we've a complete collection of exquisite patterns to harmonize perfectly with your lovely silver, china and linens . . . Early American, Contemporary, Traditional. Choose luxurious, formal hand-blown crystal, or handsome, hardy hand-molded stemware for everyday. See, too, our large selection of sparkling hand-molded Fostoria gift items and accent pieces. Come see our complete collection . . . we've shown here just a few lovely, lively patterns! CORONATION TAPE BOW TIE DISH CANDY BOX OVAL BOWL WEDDING BOWL G BOWL CUP AND DIAL Above, "Coin Glass" pattern-one of many in our Fostoria collection. Ray Christian THE COLLEGE JEWELER 809 Mass. FOOTED URN VESPA SUGAR BOWL CREAM Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, May 5, 1964 Floyd Manning Sets New Goal; Now Seeks to Pole Vault 16-6 Rv Glen Phillins "I finally made it!" Floyd Manning said he thought as he cleared $16 - 1\frac{3}{4}$ in last weeks dual track meet with Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. The 16-foot mark is only one of several records that has been set by the Jayhawk vaulter during his nine years in the event. Although he has made 16, Manning already has set a new goal—16-6. As though to remind himself, he has the numbers printed on his warm-un shoes. However, marking his shoes is the only "secret" used by Manning. His training program is not marked by any unusual quirks. MANNING eats regular meals in his dormitorius's cafeteria. "The track men don't eat at the training table." Manning explains, "It's too easy to eat too much over there." On the athletic field, he trains by several methods. Primarily, Manning relies on gymnastics to keep himself in shape. In addition, he runs cross country, sprints and lifts weights. His practice methods have changed very little since he first began vaulting in his freshman year in high school. Since that time all of his training has been based on gymnastic practice to keep him fit. Manning began his vaulting in California. He went out for high school track. Originally he planned to be a sprint man, but "I just wasn't fast enough." HE SAYS HE could not imagine himself competing in distance running, so he was left to choose from the field events. "Pole vaulting was the only thing left," he said. According to Manning, it took him three weeks to clear seven feet, which, according to him, "didn't look hard with a stick in your hand." Manning continued vaulting throughout his high school career. When he was a senior in high school Baseball Stars Fall Abruptly By Oscar Fraley By Oscar Fraley UPI Sports Writer NEW YORK —(UPI)— The other side of the baseball hill, once a gently sloping path back to nowhere, suddenly has become a short walk to an abyss. In the old days, the toil-stained veterans could play out the string for an extra five years or more as they gradually slipped down through the minor league network. But today when you've had it, you're a gone goose. Part of the answer is in the fact that with 10-team leagues there are 100 more major league jobs and the "names" hang on a bit longer than in the past. You can add to this the dwindling position of the minor leagues. In their lusty years they needed the falling veterans to fill out their rosters. Now the sole duty of a minor league setup which has been streamlined to the point of emaciation is to prep the young players who may be the big leaguers of tomorrow. A look through the minor league player rosters shows very few former big leaguers who still are in action—and the most amazing of all is 'Big Luscious' Luke Easter. The giant first baseman who was up with Cleveland for six years now is 53 years old. But he's still playing with Rochester of the International League and hopes to compete again next year to round out an even 30 years of baseball competition. Warren Hacker, at 39, still is a relief specialist with Indianapolis after 13 years in the majors. A dozen years ago he won 15 games against nine losses for the Cubs and ran out the string with the Reds, Phillies and White Sox. Singing Mickey McDermott, who won 18 games for the Red Sox in 1953, at 35 is with Hawaii in the Pacific Coast League. YET THOSE three are easy to spot simply because they are among the very few big league names still active in the minors. he cleared 12' 10". However, he felt no compulsion to continue in his sport after high school. "People were vaulting 14 and 15 feet then and that was sky-high to me," he said. His teachers persuaded him to go to junior college. He spent three years in there because an injury sidelined him for one track season and he wanted to use his two years of eligibility. AFTER JUNIOR college, Manning prepared to enter a university. His fame had spread and he was offered several full athletic scholarships. Because of the strength of the KU business school and his desire to major in Business, KU was his choice. Earlier this year he set a new KU indoor vault record of 15-8 $ _{1/2} $ . He currently holds the Big Eight indoor record of 15-8 along with Bill Younger of Missouri. Manning continued to improve his skills. Some of the credit for his increasing vaults go to the improved equipment developed recently. The most important of these developments is the fiberglass pole and the foam landing pit. The once-controversial fiberglass pole has been instrumental in helping Manning to set new marks. He estimates that a fiberglass pole can add "... a foot, more or less, to a man's vault." Another aid to vaulters is the new foam rubber landing pits. Most of the larger schools have now installed the pits for their vaulters and high jumpers. Facts and Fallacies about Jewelry By Ray "I feel a lot better going over into the foam," Manning says. Christian Never tamper with a diamond's setting, even if it's old. 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! FALLACY: CONCLUSION: FACT: Diamonds are our business . . . and whether you wish to have your diamond put in a striking new setting . . . or choose a beautiful new diamond . . . you can rely on our experience. THE NEW landings relieves fatigue on the vaulter's legs according to Manning, and one can continue to vault for a longer time than was possible before. Ray Christian JEWELERS "Besides, you don't get sand in your hair or sawdust in your ears," Manning says. Manning plans to go higher and says there are two reasons that he feels he can do this. (Formerly Gustafson) 809 Mass. VI 3-5432 In his practice sessions for the SIU meet, Manning said he practically cleared 16-5. Also, Manning said, because he was using a new pole in the SIU meet, his grip was lowered five inches to compensate for the stiffness of the pole. When asked about his chances to compete in the upcoming Tokyo olympics Manning said: "Anyway, I sure hope I make the cry-outs." "I already have my tickets," he jokingly added. LOS ANGELES—(UPI)—All-America guard Walt Hazzard of UCLA today was weighing whether to play pro basketball with the Los Angeles Lakers or accept an offer from Phillips Oil Co. which sponsors the perennial AAU champion basketball team. Hazzard Weighs Offers Hazzard was picked by the Lakers yesterday as a territorial choice in the National Basketball Player Draft in New York. "Right now it could go one way or the other," Hazzard said yesterday. "If I went with Phillips, I'd go into an executive training program as well as play basketball." "I have to take the thing which is going to mean the most for my future—not just for a year or two." Hazzard admitted, however, that he would like to play in Los Angeles. "I like the location and the people," he said. "I've lived here four years now and I'd like to stay the rest of my life." The 6-foot, 3-inch Hazzard said, that if he accepted the Laker offer "playing against those big guys would be a tremendous challenge." However, he was confident he could be of value to the Lakers: "With my style of play I feel I could help the Lakers. They seem to have some need for a playmaker who can help set things up. I'm used to being a leader, although I'm not sure how this will fit in their plans. "Fred Schaus is a fine coach, an outstanding coach. I'd be happy to fit in wherever he'd want me to play." With the big parties, honor banquets and steak fries coming up. you will want to always look your best. OX FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN DOWNTOWN PLANT 900 Miss. 740 Vt. BROWN RIDGE Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi K 1 V prosp the s their store the b will l S Tuesday, May 5, 1964 University Daily Kansan --- Page 9 my Los THE ABANDONED TOWN GARDEN CITY Photos by Steve Williams Vinland, Kansas, six miles northeast of Lawrence, once was a prosperous farming community. Today there are but few people and the shell of the town that used to be. The people who once made their whole lives within the bounds of this town, left their homes, stores, and churches for the better jobs and living standards of the big city. Within a few years when the buildings are gone, there will be little trace left of the life they left behind them. JEWELLE'S FARM WINNON AUCKER OCERIES ETAB AND MAIR THOMPSON'S HOUSE Page 10 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, May 5, 1964 Around the Campus J-School Hearst Winner The William Allen White School of Journalism won second over all honors in the April contest of the Fourth Annual Journalism Awards Program of the William Randolph Hearst Foundation. KU students winning awards in the April competition were Gary Noland, Kinsley junior, who received $300 for fourth place; and Roy Miller, Topeka junior, who received $200 for fifth place. Hull Appointed Arizona Dean Dr. Robert Hull, visiting lecturer in orchestra, has been appointed dean of the College of Fine Arts at the University of Arizona effective July 1. Dr. Hull has directed the KU Symphony orchestra while Prof. Robert Baustian has been on leave. This summer Dr. Hull will resume his membership in the resident string quartet of the Taos Chamber Music School in Taos, New Mexico. Dr. Hull, holder of degrees from the Eastman School of Music and the Ph.D. from Cornell University, has taught at Duke and Cornell Universities. He formerly was dean of the School of Fine Arts at Texas Christian University and before coming to KU was music director of the Fort Worth Symphony. Visiting Prof. to Lecture Hans Hennecke, well known as an essayist in Germany and now visiting professor at the University of Illinois, will lecture at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. His subject will be the experiment of tradition in Modern German and American poetry. Jayhawker Applications Applicants will be interviewed by the board at a later date. Details regarding the application and references required may be obtained from Tom Yoe, faculty adviser, 32 Strong Hall. The positions are salaried, each paying $1,000 a year. Previous experience on the Jayhawker is not required if the applicant has successfully filled comparable editorial or business responsibilities, Yoe said. Any full-time student in the University is eligible. Students to Visit Truman About sixty foreign students from here will help former President Harry S. Truman celebrate his 80th birthday in Kansas City, Wednesday. Dean Clark Coan, foreign student adviser, said a student from each foreign nation represented at KU had been invited to the noon party at the Hotel Muehlebach. Professor Named to Peace Corps Dr. William Stein, professor of anthropology, has been named director of the Peace Corps' Central American project. The project will include a fourteen week training period for 25 to 30 trainees in English, Math, Physics, Geology, Drama and many other varied fields. The group will then go to Mexico in December to practice teaching at Mexican universities. The trainees will, after their teacher's training, go to almost every Central American country to teach in Central American universities. Plans for signing the contract for the project are being made for next month. Geographers Go to London Those attending are Thomas R. Smith, professor of geography and meteorology; John Augelli, professor of geography and meteorology and chairman of the Latin American Area program; William Kuchler, professor of geography and meteorology; and Walter Kollmorgen, professor of geography and meteorology. Four professors will be attending the International Geographers Union, a scientific meeting of the leading geographers of the world, late this summer in London. German Day Considered Interest in German instruction in Kansas high schools and colleges has grown to the extent a "German Field Day" may soon become a project of the German department. Dr. J. A. Burzle, head of the Germanic languages and literatures department, said a questionnaire showed unanimous approval of the field day idea and a desire for closer cooperation between high school and college teachers. A committee of the Kansas Modern Language Association is now formulating plans. For Fast Results READ and USE THE WANTADS REGULARLY! Held Over! NOW! ENDS FRIDAY Sidney Poitier WINNER BEST ACTOR AWARD RALPH NELSON'S Lilies of the Field BEST ACTOR SIDNEY POITIER 1963 Berlin Film Festival Shows 7:00 & 9:00 Adults $1.25 — Children 50c Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5783 Next — Starts Sat... ELVIS PRESLEY in "KISSIN' COUSINS" ENDS TONITE — 7:00 & 9:00 RICKS AMERICA'S TARBORES GENTLY IN THE PANTS Greenwich Village Story A DANIELS INTERNATIONAL PAPER Varsity TREATRE ... Telephone V13-1065 Starts WED... "HOW THE WEST WAS WON" LAST 2 DAYS! JOHN MAUREEN WAYNE + OHARA "McLINTOCK!" IS MCNIFICENT! TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION* Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 90 Open 7:00 Starts Dusk Feat. 7:50 Only METRO and CINERAMA HOW THE WEST WAS WON IT'S HERE! THE MIGHTIEST ADVENTURE EVER FILMED! WINNER OF 3 ACADEMY AWARDS "Best story and screenplay written directly for the screens." "Best achievement in film editing." "Best achievement in sound." METRO·GOLDWYN·MAYER and CINERAMA present HOW THE WEST WAS WON STARRING CARROLL BAKER LEE J.COBB HENRY FONDA CAROLYN JONES KARL MALDEN GREGORY PECK GEORGE PEPPARD ROBERT PRESTON DEBBIE REYNOLDS JAMES STEWART ELI WALLACH JOHN WAYNE RICHARD WIDMARK NARRATED BY SPENCER TRACY METROCOLOR® METROCOLOR® ONE SHOW AT 7:30 ONLY - Adults $1.25 - Children 50c Varsity MEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065 STARTS TOMORROW! --by $ \Rightarrow $ ARROW $ ^{\circ} $ Read and Use Kansan Classifieds --by $ \Rightarrow $ ARROW $ ^{\circ} $ Batiste gets an Oxford education Batiste gets an by ▲ Comfort college weave most so er aft whi Comfortable batiste fabric in the college man's favorite oxford weave is sure to be one of the most popular shirts this season on or off the campus. Traditional ivy styling in the handsome Sussex button-down collar...traditional ARROW tailoring for perfect fit and "Sanforized" labeled to ensure lasting fit washing after washing. Crisp, cool white in short sleeves. One Kani $5.00 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 Dallan Kansas Business Office in Flint Hall by 1 page. The desired item is desired. No responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. FOR SALE Priced to sell, 1956 Pontiac. Radio, heater. Call VI 3-3987. 5-11 SPORTS CAR TIRE CLEARANCE. Wide whites, discontinued tread designs, all four ply tubeless, highest quality. Your choice. 560 x 13, 590 x 13, 600 x 15, 590 x 15, 600 x 15 $ each or 15 $ each. Free installation at Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929 Mass. (4 Mercedes high speed safety 640, 650 x 13, Cut to $20 each. 5-11 1952 MG-TD. Good condition, rebuilt engine. CALL VI 3-0540 evenings. 5-11 Robertts 1040 stereo tape recorder plus music. Call MiV TI 2-3437. 5-8 Four used General jet air tubeless tires. Size 7.50 x 14. Only $29. Must sell this week. Call VI 3-3478 after 5 p.m. 5-5 MICH. ST, BAR-B-Q FOR BAR-B-Q RIBS THAT ARE A TREAT TO EAT. TRY OUR AT 515 MICHIHAN. OPEN FROM 11 A.M. TO 11:30 P.M. 5-8 1957 Imperial. Power steering, brakes, seats, windows, and aerial; insulated front glass, near new 900 x 14 whitewalls. Original condition. Buyer. $995. Call VI 2-2585. 5-7 Triumph Cub. Recently rebuilt and in good condition. Excellent cycle for hill climbing, etc. Accept highest bid over $175. Call VI 2-4219. 5-7 1958 black and white Ford convertible. Power steering and brakes, good condition, original owner. Call VI 3-5003, 1618 Rose Lane. Wedding dress, size 7-8. 1817 La. Upstairs, west apartment. 4 to 6 pm. New shipment of Pink typing paper 500 team ~ream-85. Lawrence Outdoor 1005 Males Student will sell all guns in collection. 45 auto's, Lugers, 38 revolvers, miniature automatics, Roger 22's, 410 double blbl. 30 Deer Dew Ehrs, Wincenke 22's lever action. While the last! 22 LR., $60 per carton. Call VI 3-1110 at 5-7 SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS, Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale at great savings after 6 p.m. week day- Saturday and Sunday. 837 Connect tt Typewriters, new, and used portables, standards, Royals, Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter, adder, rentals and service. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. Ship. Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theatе notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery $4.50 western. All new, complete, extremely comprehensive, minimegraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery tl For Fulller Brush Products phone VI 3-8940 after 5 p.m. FOR RENT Bedroom with shower and half-bath. Children privileges if desired. See at: La. 5-6 Furnished air conditioned house for rent. Just south of KU. Two bedroom ranch style. Finished rec. room in basement. Ideal for 4 men. Call VI 2-0142. tf Free room and board for graduate student or mature undergrad in private home in exchange for baby-sitting, doing dishes, and general mother's helper. Summer session, possibility for next year. Call VI 2-0493. 5-11 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. Santee Apartments, 1123 Ind., VI 3-2116. Eaccheler Studio Apartment for graduate or older undergraduate men. 115 blocks from Union. Newly remodeled, nicely decorated studio with ideal study conditions. A few still available at low summer rates. Singles and doubles. For appointment call VI 3-8534. 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 One and 2 bedroom apartments available now! 101 new units available Aug. 15 Swimming pool, air conditioning, wall-to-wall carpetting, colored appliances, paved, off-street parking. Furnished if desired. Call VI 3-1116 for information. Single or double room. Furnished. cook- ing equipment paid. Call 915-2451 or see at 1244 La. Crescent Heights two bedroom apart- ment 25th and Redbud Phone VI 2-3711 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Milliken's SOS "the best professional service" - automatic typing - general typing service automatic typing 24 hr answering services LOST 1021½ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7 a.m.-11 p.m. 24 hr. answering service writings & photos Tuesday, May 5.1964 Brown and white puppy, Mixture, like collie. Might answer to the name Trotski. If found contact Mr. Helms at 1000 Ohio. TYPING EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention on all reports, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate typing at reasonable rates. Call Donna Stewart, VI 3-6621. tff Experienced secretary would like typing. Henderson 2565 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122. 5-21 For expert typing, dissertation, thesis, work. Electric typewriter. 5-8 www.matthews.org Experienced typist would like to do service, service, standard rates. Call VI 3-7819 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 typist would like typing in her home. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Marvin Brown, 1725 Kentucky, VI 2-0210. 5-12 Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work stands. Pattles. Phone VI T-8379. Charles .tf Accurate expert typist would like typing Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. Use Uses Prompt service. Fast, accurate work done on electric motors. Get rated rates. Call Bettie Vincent, VI 3-5140. Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason- sentations, and theses, phone VI 3-7682. Mrs. Frank Gibson. Experienced secretary would like typing for home. Reasonable rates. Call V11 1188. Experienced typist for thesis and term paper. Send resume to Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 8-0585. Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. Patronize Kansan Advertisers LEONARD'S STANDARD SERVICE 9th & Indiana VI 3-9830 RISK'S Shirt Finishing Laundry Wash & Fluff Dry 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 VI 3-6333 YELLOW CAB CO. 24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled JOE'S BAKERY 616 W. 9th Open 24 hours except Saturday evening 5c delivery VI 3-4720 GB Recording Service and Party Music tapes: recorded or duplicated 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. VI 3-7485. tt Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon keyboard. Mail reply to: VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 408 West 13th. tt MILLIKENS SOS—always nstr quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines that tape transcriptions. Office hours 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. 1023-1125 Mac Phone VI 3-5920. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, articles and reports. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. ph. VI 3-8563. tt Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2047 Yale, VI 2-1648. Secretary will do typing in home. Fast. Legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2877. legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2877. records: cut or pressed Dressmaking-aftertations, formalis and dressing-gowns. Ola Smith, 93% Mils VI 3-5283 BUSINESS SERVICES 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. White Sewing Center, 116 Mass. V 3-1267 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 Cut 'n Curl Cut n Curl BEAUTY SALON graduation permanents, sets, latest styles. 843 N.H. ★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT THE NAME FOR SERVICE ★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK ★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED ★ TUNE-UPS ★ MUFFLER SERVICE ★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M. & MCAFE now under new management WE WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. in our restaurant. concious lunches, dlmners, and sandwiches Your second cup of coffee always free ART'S TEXACO 9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897 C Phone in your Classified Ad MAKE YOUR NEXT MOVE Crescent Heights MISCELLANEOUS Page 11 Lawrence Annual Coin Club Show. Community Bldg., May 9 and 10. Public discussions. An exclusive show will buy, sell, or trade. Exhibit of rare foreign and domestic coins. 5-11 Have a party in the Big Red School floor and door and plant Heated. Call VI 3-7453. Completed Swimming Pool CALL VI 2-3711 Mgr's Office, 2428 Redbud, Apt. D New Luxury Addition Opening This Summer . . . Completed Swimming Pool CALL VI 1 2-3711 Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. **f** 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 of Saturday LO 1-7251, K.C., Mo., Sunday through Thursday. THE OAKS Swimming Pool BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES ★ 1 Bedroom ★ 2 Bedrooms HELP WANTED FOR INFORMATION CONTACT Crescent Heights Apts. Mgr. Summer work. Large corporation needs 3 male students for full time work. Car necessary. Apply: Student Union. Room 905A, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday, May 4. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY When buying diamonds Look for this sign AGS ER OF AMAZONIA NATIONAL BRIDAL SERVICE MEMBER OF MBS In Lawrence, your Authorized Dealer is Delbert A. Eisele Marks Jewelers R17 Mass. VI 3-4266 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 VOLKSWAGEN'S WANTED. Cash for your VW. Conzelman Motors, VW Sales, Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa. Hiway 59 interested in sales demonstrations. Write giving age, experience, type of instru- tSo. PLANS-A-PARTY Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing Brake Adj. . . . 98c When Hallmark Plans a-Party, you receive the compliments Hallmark PLANS A-BARTY STUDENTS - Parker Pens * Stationery * Printing --ice cold 6 pacs all kinds 1. BULLOCK'S 4 E. 7th VI 3-2261 7 a.m.-11 p.m HAVING A PARTY? PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Crushed ice, candy Variety of grocery items featuring OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING 616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350 LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY featuring Open-hearth charcoal broiled Steaks Chicken — Shrimp — Sandwiches Ribs Open: 4-Midnight Highway 59 South VI2-9445 Across from Hillcrest Golf Course HAL'S STEAK HOUSE OK AT HONN'S LAUNDRY IT'S Clean— the cleanest laundry in town inspect our facilities, you'll agree Clean— your whole wash — the Honn way Wash 20c Dry 10c Clean your best suits and coats in our coin-on dry clean machine "Laundry Time is Honn Time" 19th & La. FREE VACATION SERVICE - with this ad! Bring in this coupon and get our Registered Mechanic 10 POINT SAFETY CHECK — We will check (1) Cooling System (2) Fan Belts (3) Lights & Signal System (4) Wheel Bearings (5) Brakes (6) Wipers (7) Exhaust system (8) Steering (9) Fuel System and (10) Ignition System. ABSOLUTELY FREE!! Be Careful Be Sure Be safe Before Returning Home This Summer. Call on us TODAY. VI 3-6697 9th Gr. Miss. SANDERS MOTOR CO. Lincoln-Mercury Studebaker Page 12 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, May 5, 1964 World Spotlight Primaries Spur Interest By United Press International Six states and the District of Columbia hold primary elections today with national attention focused on Indiana where Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace attempts once again to "shake the eyeteeth" of civil rights supporters. Elsewhere in the nation, former coach Bud Wilkinson's leap from football to politics, a three-way contest for a Democratic senatorial nomination and a hot "right-to-work" issue was expected to bring a record number of Oklahoma voters to the polls. Other primaries are in Alabama, Ohio, Florida and New Mexico. Over-all, voters nominate candidates for four Senate and 63 House seats and for two governorships in addition to choosing 67 delegates to the Republican national convention and 153 to the Democratic convention. Wallace is entered in Indiana's Democratic presidential primary against Gov. Matthew E. Welsh, who is not too popular with many voters because of tax increases during his term. Wallace hopes to duplicate his strong showing in the Wisconsin primary last month. Welsh, a stand-in for President Johnson, has campaigned vigorously against Wallace, picturing the Alabama governor as a "raist" and one who has solicited support "even from the John Birch Society." In a primary-eve statement, Welsh said "virtually every responsible organization" in Indiana opposed Wallace. Welish is expected to win the Democratic presidential primary. But the size of Wallace's vote will be watched closely, especially now with the civil rights bill pending before the Senate. Wallace said that if he gets a significant vote politicians of both parties will be "sittin, and sweatin," at the national conventions. U.S. Arms Found in Cuba HAVANA—(UPI)—The Cuban government said today a fisherman has found an "enormous shipment" of American arms and explosives in an underwater cache off the North coast of Western Cuba. The statement said the fisherman found the arms, explosives and a large quantity of Cuban banknotes in nine metal boxes and eight waterproof drums tied together underwater near Cayo Las Cubas, a small offshore island. The cache was secured by a rope to a shrub on the island's shore, the statement said. West Ignores Red Protest BERLIN—(UPI)—Western allied officials said today they would ignore a Soviet protest against the closing of a Russian-owned trade center in West Berlin. The center was closed on the ground it was a Soviet attempt to undermine the isolated city's ties to the West. Reds Slam Chinese Policy MOSCOW—(UPI)—Bitter Soviet charges that Peking promotes "yellow supremacy" racial policies plunged Russia and Communist China today into an apparent all-out struggle for influence in Africa and Asia. Negroes Continue Fight In the latest outburst in the Communist world's ideological and political quarrel, the Russians last night denounced the Chinese Reds for trying to keep them out of a coming Afro-Asian meeting on the ground that the Soviet Union is not an Asian country. WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Negro leaders said today they would continue their legal fight against "de facto" segregation in public schools despite a first round setback in the Supreme Court. The high court refused yesterday to hear complaints from Negro parents in Gary, Ind., who challenged school zoning. They said about 97 per cent of the city's 23,000 Negro students attended predominantly Negro schools. But more cases started by the legal defense fund of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) are on the way to the Supreme Court. Reds to Offer Peace Deal LONDON—(UPI)—Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev was reported ready today to offer a peaceful co-existence "deal" to the United States after the U.S. presidential election. Well-informed East European diplomatic sources indicated the deal might amount to a prolonged Big Power East-West truce. There were no indications, however, that Cuba would be included in any Soviet non-interference pledge. The Kremlin, the sources hinted, might pledge non-interference in the American spheres of interest in exchange for maintenance of the "status quo" in Europe. KU Women Receive Awards Recognizing the increasing opportunity and need for educated women in society was stated in the Honor's Night program as being the basic purpose of All Women's Day at KU. The climax of the day was last night at the annual Honors Night Program. Following are the lists of women selected for honors for the 1963-64 school year. Members of Cwens all freshmen are: Members of Cwens, all freshmen, are: Betty Arnold, Hoisington; Jacqueline Babcock, Overland Park; Carol Baker, Bansas City; Mary Ball, Coffeville; Chris Kellogg, Indianapolis; Carolyn Franklin, Ohio; Carolyn Brewster, Prairie Village; Margaret Brown, Prairie Village; Shafon Buchanan, Topcape; Marcha Bunn, Tulsa,uka; Jean Burgart, Desiines, Ia.; Carole Cour, El Dorado; Pierla, Baytown; Bahamas; Crouch, Shawnee Mission; Paula Dickens, Newton; Jareth Donnan, Webster Groves, Mo.; Cheryl Eddy, Centralia; Judith Faust, Memphis, Tenn.; Linda Glina, Manhattan; Patricia Goering, Mound- fort Beach; Topcape, Carol Hardy, Hoisington; Kathryn Hewett, Fort Scott. Glenda Hord, Kansas City; Judith Howell, Hinsdale, Ill.; Phyllis Kasprivich, Overland Park; Karen Kemmerly, Overland Park; Susan Langston, Springfield, Mo.; Moe Barker, Anne Machin, Ottawa; Maria Macleachen, Wichita; Vicki Mathews, Leawood; Katheryn Mize, Salina; Janet Morgan, Katheryn Mize, Salina; Des Moines, Martha Silvan, Kalamara Mich.; Rena Olson, Omaha, Neb.; Kay Orth, El Dorado; Patricia Penny, Emporia; Cecily Pitts, Merrlam; Carol Herbert, Debecca Rogers, Garden City; Harriet Shaffer, Andrea Speer, Kansas City; Bonnie Stenzel, Ness City; Spring Stidham, Park Ridge, Ill.; Linda Tebbe, Memphis, Virginia; Angela Thomas, Maryville; Kathleen Thompson Iola; Mary Weller, Girard; and Barbara Widner, Prairie Village. Members of Mortar Board, all juniors. are: Sharon Anderson, Topeka; Patricia Barnes, Osage City; Barbara Bauerle, Mo.; Nancy Egy, Topeka; Elmir Elliot; Clay Center; Katherine Ferrell, Belle Lester; Joan Topeka; Joan Fowler, Shawnee Mission; John Gibson, Independence; Betty Maleo, Co- -MEMO- Take Housemother to Dinner Tite HOLIDAY INN RESTAURANT Outstanding leaders, past, present, and future, are: zad, Nebly; Sharon Menasco, Wichita; Nebly City; Carmen Menasco, Kansas; Kansas City; Mo. Carmen Stone, Wichita; Kay Walker, Park Ridge, Ill.; Kay Weber, Weber Village; and Julie Winkler, Capey. Barbara Edwards, Daly City, Calif. senior; Lauraine Milberg, Arlington, Va. senior; Alexandra Larsson, Leta Catheat, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Karen Craig, Liberal senior; JoLynne Talbott, Shawnee Mission senior; Cecilia Talmont, Wichita Hills; Wichita senior; Hilda Gibson, Lawrence senior; Janet Marie Johnson, Climarron senior; Susan Cole, St. John senior; Manuel Gustavo Mora, man; Marcia Maechten, Wichita freshman; Frances Louisa Walker, Bethany, Mo. senior; Martha Parmley, Wichita freshman; Marcia Maechten, Wichita freshman; Frances Louisa Walker, Bethany, Mo. senior; Martha Parmley, Wichita freshman; Marcia Maechten, Wichita freshman; Frances Louisa Walker, Bethany, Mo. senior; Martha Parmley Freshman Hall counselors for 1964-65 are: Beverly Brown, Pratt junior; Sara Frandle, Perry junior; Alice Griffith, Lawrence sophomore; Mynna Iddings, Willem sophomore; Nana Maz, Sari. Car, junior; Kay Lutjen, Des Moines, Ia., sophomore; Carol McMahan, Wichita sophomore; Janet Phelps, St. Louis sophomore; Nicole Baldwin, l孝wathie, Kansas City, Mo.; junior; Nancy Razak, Wichita sophomore; Sheila Reynolds, Hutchinson sophomore; Margaret Tietze, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore; Vandenberg, Vandenberg sophomore; and Kathleen Wingert, Leawood junior. Members of the AWS Fashion Board for 1964-65 are: Nancy Egy, Topeka junior, chlairman; Joana Wright, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Lyons sophomore; Fannie Davis, St. Louis; Mo. senior; Nancy Edwards, Pascal Sophomore; Athelson sophomore; Deanna Goodrich, Parsons sophomore; Nan Harrington, AUTO WRECKING NEW and USED PARTS Tires and Glass East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 Prosper Height, Ill., sophomore; Jo Lee, Kansas City, freshman; Sally Martin, Kansas City, freshman; Susan Nash, LaGrange, Ill., freshman; Priscilla Scheldt, Wichita city, Mo., freshman; Priscilla Scheldt, Wichita junior; Norma Schraeder, Wichita junior; Ellie Taylor. Math Teacher Plans African High Schools George Springer, professor of mathematics, will go to Africa this summer to help develop high school courses in mathematics for English-speaking schools in East Central and West Africa. This will be Prof. Springer's second international assignment in developing teaching materials in mathematics. He previously organized an institute for teachers at the Mackenzie University in Sao Paulo, Brazil. The project is financed by the Agency for International Development. Prof. Springer will be working in Entebbe, Uganda, for Education Services, Inc., which holds a contract from AID. He will be there in July and part of August. INSTANT SILENCE STUDY ANYTIME ANYWHERE Sound attenuators as utilized by military and commercial jet aircraft ground crew personnel are the perfect solution. For information write: Berkeley 1, Calif. Academic Aids P.O. Box 969 presents The Classical Film Series THE LAST LAUGH A classic of the German Cinema Directed by F. W. Murnau (1924) * * * Wednesday, May 6 Fraser Theater----7:00 p.m. Admission: $.60 Lawton Tells ASC More Traffic Rules, Officers Necessary Keith Lawton, vice chancellor for operations, told the All Student Council last night that more security officers are needed to control the increasing number of automobiles that lead to traffic congestion on the campus. The ASC had called the special meeting to hear Lawton after several members had complained that the parking permit fee hike was "discriminatory" against students in the large residence halls. In a brief summary, Lawton explained the reasons for the recent increase in parking permit fees from $4 to $10 and further parking restrictions on eight central campus zones until 11:00 p.m. LAWTON SAID THE automobile is not considered a necessity for an education and therefore the "user must pay." Lawton said the philosophy has been to "give as much as long as we can." Increased restrictions have been very slow in coming, but there will eventually have to be more restrictions, before things get out of hand. he said. "This is being done for the protection of the right of the student to get his education, not for driving his automobile everywhere he wishes." Lawton said. THE MAIN REASON for the increased parking permit rates is the real necessity for more security officers to handle the increasing traffic problem, Lawton said. He said the present force was unable to handle the number of traffic violations, and eight additional security officers will be hired. Several council members had suggested a registration fee be charged instead of increasing parking permit fees. The increase in parking permit fees was "chosen as the most even, fair way to spread the cost on a broad basis." Lawton said. CHARGING FOR AUTOMOBILE registration is more of a "captive" situation because the state law requires every car be registered even though the student may not utilize parking facilities, Lawton said. As for restricting central campus zones to faculty members until 11 p.m., Lawton said it only involved eight zones with 281 parking spaces. Lawton said that since there are over 7,000 automobiles registered for students, the removal of 281 parking spaces was not great restriction. In the only other business considered by the council, a controversy developed over five presidential appointments to the Union Operating Board. BOB STEWART, BARTLESVILLE, Okla., junior and student body president, failed in one attempt to receive the necessary two-thirds vote approval by the council on his appointments to the Union Operating Board. A second attempt to call for the vote was frustrated when members of Vox Populi failed to answer a roll call, which fell one member short of a quorum, making the council unable to act. The parliamentary move by Vox council members, in effect, tabled the appointments until the next meeting but it sparked protests from Stewart and University Party members. Stewart said he had not intended to make the appointments last night until he learned that the Union Operating Board was having its last meeting of the year before the next council meeting. "I WANTED THE new members to have the experience or at least one board meeting before next year," Stewart said. Brian Grace, Lawrence senior, said afterwards: "Mr. Stewart has made these appointments at the last moment and has attempted to gain our approval without our full knowledge of the qualifications of these appointees. He also didn't have the qualification sheets with him." Stewart said it was not necessary to have the qualification sheets, since "every one of the people (appointees) have fine qualifications, and have been interviewed. It is not the council's responsibility to pick these people. If they had any objections tonight, they should have made them. "I will make over 100 committee appointments, and I hope the council will accept my integrity and judgment," Stewart said. Grace said the request for a roll call, was a "move to end a special session which normally would not take place and which was not intended for the ratification of committee appointments." Action Secret on Bomb Note The college career of the KU senior who left a "bomb scare" note at the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority house Tuesday night remained a secret today. Local law enforcement officers took no action against Michael Mount, Wichita senior, in connection with the matter. Donald K. Alderson, dean of men and acting chairman of the disciplinary committee, said the senior was given a hearing yesterday. He was scheduled to meet with university officials again today. "It was a long afternoon," Dean Alderson said. The committee deliberated for four and a half hours on the case. "I WILL NOT BE RELEASING the name of the student, or saying what action was taken," the dean said. That is the policy of the disciplinary committee. The dean did, however, say that writing the note was "a very serious act and the disciplinary committee's action shows an awareness of the fact." As to bomb scares in general the dean said, "The university will take a mighty dim view of this in the future." Kay Walker, Park Ridge, Ill. junior and president of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, said they do not plan to press charges against the senior. "It was turned over to the police and the university is taking care of it," Miss Walker said. She said she believed the scare note was merely a "prank." JAMES R. COLLINS, ACTING chief of the Lawrence police, said they would not bring charges against the senior either. "He came in voluntarily," the chief said. "He was one of the boys we were checking on." Mrs. Nova Sperry, Kappa Kappa Gamma housemother, said the sorority had received no more bomb threats. Daily hansan Dean Woodruff, dean of students and chairman of the disciplinary committee, commented on the seriousness of bomb scares at the university. "By their nature they disrupt the operation of the university, its research, study, and classes," he said. 61st Year, No. 134 Wednesday, May 6, 1964 LBJ Assails Opponents Of Civil Rights Measure WASHINGTON —(UPI)— President Johnson today assailed opponents of the Senate civil rights bill who claim the legislation is only a political gimmick. Johnson said those who make this claim "are doing a gross injustice to the basic convictions of a democratic society." The President made the remarks in an address prepared for delivery before the annual meeting here of the influential Advertising Council. The speech started a heavy day for the President, including a 4:30 p.m. (EDT) open-air, televised news conference at the White House. Johnson told the council, which last year donated more than $100 million to public service advertising, that the most dangerous threat to America is public apathy. STRESSING THE HEALTH of the nation's economy, the chief executive said that "almost every day brings more good news about the economy, and many people have been surprised by what this free enterprise system is doing." "I am concerned, however, with some other aspects of America today," the President said. It was in discussing various phases of the economic picture that he mentioned the civil rights bill. Johnson said he did not want Americans to "retreat from their responsibilities," and he said that if citizens burn their energy "on irrelevant and trivial causes—on purposes that serve only their own narrow interests—democracy will inevitably suffer." Skies will be partly cloudy this evening with thundershowers likely tonight, according to the Topeka weather bureau. Tomorrow's weather will be fair and continued mild. Moderate westerly winds will prevail tomorrow. The low tonight will be in the 60's. The high tomorrow will be near 80, the weather bureau said. Weather For that reason, he urged the Advertising Council members to devote themselves this year "as private citizens to specific programs which will raise the quality of life in America." "THE WAR ON POVERTY is going to succeed, for example, only if people like you are in the front lines," Johnson said. "There is hardly a community in this country where poverty does not have some beachhead, and the hardest battles are going to be fought right in your home town." "I can say the same thing about the civil rights legislation now before the Congress," Johnson said. "Those who say this is a political gimmick are doing a gross injustice to the basic convictions of a democratic society; that men cannot live unto themselves alone; that the right kind of democracy is bound together by the ties of neighborliness." Speaking as "one Democrat who can honestly say that some of my best friends are businessmen," Johnson asserted: "Surely enlightened businessmen believe that all members of the public should have an equal chance to vote for public officials and to send their children to good public schools and to contribute their talents to the public good . . . "SURELY ENLIGHTENED businessmen believe that all members of the public should have equal access to facilities open to the public. Surely enlightened businessmen believe that all members of the public should be equally eligible for federal benefits that are financed by the public. "Nine Americans have already died this week in Viet Nam. I do not know if they were white Americans-or colored-or Catholics-or protestant-or Jewish-or if they had any professed religious belief at all. "I do not know if they were from New York—or Georgia—or Puerto Rico—or New Mexico. I do not know how old they were—or what they wanted to do with their lives. "BUT I DO KNOW THIS. I don't want to wake up tomorrow morning wondering if I have done anything to make what they died for come true." For the late afternoon news conference on the spacious south lawn of the White House, Johnson came up with yet another new twist for his frequent meetings with newsmen. He invited them to bring along their wives and children. The kids and the womenfolk will not be allowed to ask questions, however. Johnson's busy schedule before the news session included a ceremony before noon for the award of young American medals for bravery. And he also arranged for the new ambassadors from Rwanda, Mauretania and Panama to present their credentials at half-hour intervals. Third Jayhawker To Be Distributed The third issue of the KU Jay hawker will be available to students at the information booth tomorrow and Friday. Students must show their orange fee receipts for the fall semester in order to receive the edition according to Tonto Mays, Lyons junior and business manager. The third issue, previous issues and the cover may be picked up 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. both days. Mays said the final edition of the Jayhawker would be available in late May. Senate Begins Civil Rights Vote Late Today WASHINGTON—(UPI) The Senate starts voting late today on its first amendments to the civil rights bill. The timing of the long-awaited vote became a critical matter for Senators invited to accompany President Johnson on his second Appalachian inspection tour tomorrow and Friday. Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., told a reporter: "I hope no senators, regardless of their position on this bill, will leave the floor. If the President has invited them I hope they do not accept." THIS WAS the 49th day of debate on the Housepassed bill to ban discrimination in voting, education, employment, unions, public accommodations and use of federal funds. Most senate leaders doubted that voting on jury trial amendments could be finished tonight. Democratic whip Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn., estimated it might continue until Friday. GOP leader Everett M. Dirksen, R-Ill., suggested that if this happened, the final jury trial voting might not come until next week. Mansfield, Dirksen and other leaders scheduled their second bipartisan conference today in an effort to reach agreement on three classes of amendments to the bill. Partial agreement was reached yesterday on technical revisions. First of the jury trial votes was scheduled on a proposal by Sen. Thruston B. Morton, R-Ky., to re strict the jury trial requirement to criminal contempt under the civil rights bill. THE SECOND VOTE WAS to come on an amendment by Sen. John Sherman Cooper, R-Ky. It also would provide for jury trials, but limit them to certain sections of the bill. In the sections dealing with voting, schools and public facilities, jury trials would be permitted only at the discretion of the judge. Then the Senate was expected to pass on a Mansfield-Dirksen amendment as a substitute for Talmadge's broader proposal. The substitute would require a jury trial in any criminal contempt case under the bill if the total penalty exceeded 30 days in jail or $300 fine. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, May 6, 1964 Alabama Demagogue Power Play Governor George Wallace's cleverly plotted power play deserves more attention than it has received to date. Alabama's Democratic delegation is pledged to the Governor and will remain pledged to him until he releases it, thus insuring him a considerable mischief-making potential at Atlantic City. ALSO, ELECTORS will be chosen at the same time. These electors will appear on the ballot, not as rival "slates" pledged to Governor Wallace or President Johnson, but merely as individual names. In effect, there will be two slates — one "loyal" (with the solid backing of Senators Lister Hill and John Sparkman), the other a "rebel" or Wallace group — but electors will not appear as slates, nor will any of them be pledged to any nominee. Conceivably, therefore, Alabama could elect some electors who would support President Johnson and some who would not. In effect this gives Wallace a second line of defense and enhances his mischief-making potential. NOW TURN TO INDIANA. There, as in Wisconsin, Governor Wallace is the amiable, softspoken, courteous, serious, folksy, "underdog" contender. Beyond Indiana is the Maryland primary (May 19). What Wallace hopes to do is roll up a million votes outside the South which will, he calculates, augment the power that derives from control of the Alabama delegation. He has plenty of money. The Alabama Sovereignty Commission has set up the Committee for Fundamental Freedoms which is collecting for him. He is also getting help from the Coordinating Committee for Fundamental American Freedoms, and Birchite support is available. IN INDIANA as in Wisconsin, Wallace is the beneficiary of saturation television coverage. He is "the man in motion," the challenger, the interloper, the newsmaker. Without any conscious bias, the television cameras automatically focus on him and he projects very well. As a result he gets top billing—at no expense to himself. For example, the Huntley-Brinkley report of April 15 devoted a long sequence to Wallace in Indiana: arriving at the airport, the plane-side press conference, entering the Claypool Hotel, conferring with friends and well-wishers, entering Butler University, addressing the students. If television is to concentrate on Wallace as the man in motion, it should provide some background on the other Wallace. Someone—the networks or the opposition—should let Democrats see shots of Wallace defying federal authority at the University of Alabama, Wallace delivering his inaugural address, the cattle prods, the bombed churches, the disgusting Birmingham street scenes. THE LATE JOE McCARTHY was a political incompetent. Most of the money that flowed to him he spent on horses and soy bean margins; he would have had difficulty organizing a teen-age raid on a peanut stand. Wallace, by contrast, is a shrewd, unscrupulous demagogue who knows how to acquire power through exploiting latent social discontents and deep currents of prejudice. He will not make the McCarthy mistakes. The Nation Dailij Hansan 111 Flint Hall University of Kansas student newspaper UniUniversity 4-3646, newsroom UniUniversity 4-3198, business office Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, biweekly 1906, daily 16, June 19, 1912 Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. National School. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturday and Sunday and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. NEWS DEPARTMENT NEWS DEPARTMENT Mike Miller ... Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT True Software Editorial Tom Coffman ... Editorial Writer Vinay Kothar and Margaret Hughes ... Assistant Editorial Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Bob Brooks ... Business Manager The People Say... Editor: With all the commotion over the low morals on the college campus and all the talk about morals that goes on on this campus, I was wondering if you could possibly reprint this article. After all, there is another side to the morals issue, and I think it would be a relief to see something like this in our paper. Maybe if there were more articles like this then there wouldn't have to be so many of those on the low moral standards. This article is from the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Janet Phelps column of the St. Louis Dispatch): What she (the freshman girl) wants when she most needs is a clear code of conduct in sophistication or knowledge of the St. Louis sophomore (Following are excerpts from the column of the letter) world. She wants to do what is right- ment, not just to boys, for youth is naturally idealistic. "THEY TELL HER that a beautiful body is the most desired thing in the world, but for her personal pleasure, for the domination of men, for the acquisition of wealth and ease and for worldly success, she must show what other conclusions she could draw. "But do we tell her that her body is the temple of the living God? Certainly not—what would be the percentage in fact that is the teaching of the Christian region, every high religion teaches that the body is the temple of God. "We ought to tell her also that it is the nature of love to want to make the marriage real for a good, real man, she will rejoice with every step of the wedding march if her shimmering white bridal gown are symbolic of an inner purity." "DO WE TELL her what things in life she has learned, having things without which all the resources must be dust on parched lips? Do we tell her more about ourselves times more important than facts?" By Roy Miller Annual State Sessions Guard Federal Power Increasing responsibilities are facing state governments and failure of states to take needed action results in concentration of power in Washington. REALIZATION of this situation has caused, among other things, a trend toward annual sessions of legislatures. Even quarterly sessions of state legislatures are the ideal set forth by the Model State Constitution. In Kansas, the constitution provides for biennial regular sessions, with budget sessions in alternate years. Frances Sanford Nelson wondered in "Constitutional Change in Kansas" (a pamphlet printed in 1958 by the KU Governmental Research Center) how "infrequent legislative sessions strictly limited in duration can cope with the complexity and the magnitude of the questions that come before them today." "There is found among the legislators a degree of discontent with the present budget session. There are those who would prefer that the legislature meet only biennially. THE SECOND COMMISSION on Revision of the Kansas Constitution, a 10-member commission which reported to the Legislature in 1963, said: With the issues of reapportionment and legislators' remuneration disposed of by past legislation, the question of how often the Kansas Legislature should meet is one of the main problem areas in regard to revision of the Legislative Article of the Kansas Constitution. "The long-run trend in American state government is, however, toward the annual session. The responsibilities of the state governments are increasing, and not diminishing. "THE DANGER IS, as the Kestnbaum Report indicates, that failure of the states to take needed action leads to undue concentration of power in Washington." The Commission called its recommendation on the matter "a compromise between those who would have full-fledged annual sessions and those who would not." THE COMMISSION RECOMMENDED that the constitution be revised so that the budget session may consider legislation other than budgetary matters "upon a resolution adopted by a two-thirds vote of the elected members of each house," which legislation "may be passed by a majority vote by such elected members." The commission added, in making its recommendation: "Incidentally, the proposed change would somewhat reduce the boredom, during the budget session, of those legislators who are not members of the finance committees of either chamber." The present biennial sessions in Kansas, in the minds of some people who would revise the constitution, create difficulty by forcing budgeting for a two-year period. ANOTHER PROBLEM is a flood of last-minute legislation which accompanies most sessions. "Whatever the reason, postponing difficult decisions until the last minute is a common (and forgivable) human trait," according to "Constitutional Change in Kansas." "One of the newest approaches to a solution of this problem takes this into account. It tries to do away with the 'last minute,' insofar as that is possible, by suggesting more frequent sessions of the legislature-perhaps quarterly sessions, "THOSE WHO ADVANCE this plan say that the need for law-making is continuous; why should not the law-making itself be continuous? Furthermore, they claim, frequent short sessions would mean that committee deliberations would be more carefully planned and could easily mean that when legislators do not have an imminent deadline looming ahead they will settle down and work out controversial problems as they arise." Miss Nelson also pointed out that the more frequent sessions "need not take up many more actual legislative days during a two-year period than the present arrangement, particularly when the growing practices of recessing and special sessions are taken into account." ANOTHER recommendation of the Second Commission on revising the Legislative Article would enable special sessions to be called by petition of a majority of the combined membership of the two houses. At present, the governor alone has 'the authority to call special sessions. William H. Cape, associate director of the KU Governmental Research Center and associate professor of political science, wrote in 1958 in "Constitutional Revision in Kansas." "There is increasing sentiment for the proposal that the legislative branch should be authorized to reconvene itself. "SOME OTHER PROCEDURE for calling special sessions would be in addition to the power now granted the governor. It would break the exclusive power of the governor over emergency sessions, but it would not infringe upon his leadership in executive matters. "The additional authority would tend to increase legislative responsibility by making the Legislature more independent of the governor." A woman walking. SHE REMINDED ME OF DORIS. HE'S SOME KIND OF MANIAC. EVERY GIRL REMINDS ME OF DORIS. HE'S GOING TO FOLLOW ME HOME AND KILL ME IN MY SLEEP. WHO'M I KIDDING? THERE IS NO DORIS. A DREAM DORIS-THATS WHO IM PINING FOR! DOES HE KNOW I EVE GOT A POLICE LOCK AND FOUR CHAINS ON THE DOOR? THE REAL DORIS IS A DES-TROYER! A KILLER! WELL, WHAT NOT? THEYRE ALL KILLERS! IVE GOT BARS ON THE WINDOW AND A POLICE WHISTLE BY MY BED. HOW DOES HE EXPECT TO GET AWAY WITH IT? WHY DO I LET THEM DO IT TO ME? EVERY TIME ITS THE SAME. THERE'S NO ONE YOU CAN TRUST. NEVER MIND. HELL GET IN. MEN ALWAYS HAVE THEIR WAY. IF HE WANTS TO KILL ME ILL JUST HAVE TO LET -HIM HAVE HIS WAM AND KILL ME. THAT GIRL BACK THERE. COULD SHE HAVE BEEN THE ONE? COULD SHE HAVE BEEN DIFFERENT? ALL MY LIFE MEN HAVE KILLED ME. ALL EXCEPT GEORGIE. WHY DID I SEND GEORGIE AWAY? WHY DON'T I STOP TORTURING MUSELE? NO ONE DIFFERENT! SHE'S A KILLER TOO! IM GOING HOME AND CALL THE POLICE. FOR A NICEGUY WHY AM I SUCH A VICTIM. THE POLICE WILL COME OVER AND KILL ME. A man walking. 150 walking Woman carrying purse A man walking. Walking A woman walking. IVE GOT BARS ON THE WINDOWS AND A POLICE WHISTLE BY MY BED. HOW DOES HE EXPECT TO GET AWAY WITH IT? A WHY DO I LET THEM DO IT TO ME? EVERY TIME IT'S THE SAME. THERE'S NO ONE AND CAN TRUST CAN TRUST. NEVER MIND. HELL GET IN. MEN ALWAYS HAVE THEIR WALL, IF HE WANTS TO KILL ME ILL JUST HAVE TO LET 'HIM HAVE THEIR WALL AND KILL ME. HIM HAVE HIS WAY AND KILL ME. Jumping A woman walking. Walking Walking walking A woman walking Page 3 SUA Decides to Sponsor Jazz Festival Next Year The Student Union Activities Board decided unanimously last night the Oread Jazz Festival will be held again next year. The decision came after Mike Bush, Glendale, Mo., senior and chairman of the festival's steering committee, showed the board evidence of the notoriety and prestige he felt the festival had earned KU. BUSH CITED articles in the New York Times, Show magazine and a forthcoming article in Downbeat magazine. In addition, he said, news of the festival was carried in several other newspapers throughout the country, and seven radio stations aired portions of the festival's proceedings. "The festival gave KU a terrific boost," Bush said. "Jazzwise, KU is now pretty well known all over Europe, as well as the United States. We even outdid Notre Dame, which has been regarded as the dean of the collegiate jazz festivals." He told the board he had received several complimentary letters from musicians who participated in both the KU and Notre Dame festivals, and felt that by far, the KU festival was superior." RUSH, WHO HAS promoted the jazz festival before three different SUA boards during the past two years, felt since its reputation is established, next year's festival will be of an even higher quality. "No other collegiate jazz festi- val can compare with the prizes we offer, and next year, we'll be flooded with entries from all over the country." He attributed its quality to the pre-festival screening process, which eliminated the poorer University Daily Kansan groups, Notre Dame and some other festivals, he said. accept all entrants and conduct the screening-out process during the festival, which usually lasts several days. SUA PRESIDENT Robert Enberg, McPherson junior, asked about the festival's financial success. Bush said the festival had gone $1,300 in debt. He attributed the deficit to buying too many programs, which cost $800, paying $500 to the department of building and grounds for facilities and services, and the $2,500 bill for the concert by Woody Herman's band. He recommended the festival be held earlier next year, because he felt that the close proximity of spring vacation hurt ticket sales. Bush said signing an expensive big-name band as a drawing card would be unnecessary next year because the festival is already established. Application $ _{s} $ are still being accepted for the chairmanship of next year's festival, Bush said. The deadline for applications is next Tuesday at 5 p.m. "The chairman wouldn't necessarily have to know anything about jazz," he said. "The job requires more of an organization man. Several of the former committee members have an extensive knowledge of jazz, and they could fill the new chairman in and perhaps serve in an advisory capacity." PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS JAY SHOPPE 835 MASS. A BLOUSE FOR MOTHER 3.50 Prize-winning tulips bloom among rows of tiny tucks. New, gently rounded collar. Easy-care all cotton. Flowery pastel hues. Sizes 28 to 38. YES! WELL GIFT WRAP & MAIL IT. Senior Oboist Wins Scholarship Malcolm W. Smith, Lawrence senior majoring in oboe, has been awarded an Elsie and Walter W. Numberg Scholarship for advanced study next year at the Juilliard School of Music in New York City. Smith has been in every major musical organization at KU: the symphony orchestra, concert choir, chorale, band, and Little Symphony. He has been a student of John McEldowney, instructor of wind and percussion. He is a member of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, professional society for men in music, and has been nominated in Pi Kappa Lambda, national honor society in music. Smith has consistently been on the Dean's honor roll and was twice chosen by the faculty to appear on the Fine Arts Honor recital. The scholarship, which Smith won in competitive auditions, covers fees at the privately endowed conservatory, which is among the two or three largest institutions in supplying professional talent to the musical world. Wednesday, May 6, 1964 New members of the KU-Y cabinet will meet tonight to discuss plans for the 1964-65 year. Y Cabinet Meets Today Included in the cabinet meeting will be next year's officers who will be installed at 5:30 p.m. Sunday. The new officers are Lacy Banks, Kansas City junior, and Julie Winkler, Caney junior, co-presidents; Howard Wileox, Lawrence sophomore, and Winnie Frazae, Wichita junior, co-vice-presidents; and Jim Maxwell, Douglas junior, and Mary Barber, Concordia junior, co-secretary-treasurer. Chuck Metzler, Lawrence sophomore, and Mike Ogrosky, Winfield freshman-Y's Jayhawker editors; Rick Solum, Leawood sophomore, and Jim Perkins, Prairie Village freshman-freshman program advisors; Jeanne Hathaway, Louisville, Kv., freshman, and Judy Lister, Ottawa junior-handicapped children chairmen. Co-chairmen of the World University Service, formerly an All Student Council committee, are Jewela Devore, Belleville sophomore, and Robert Sears, Kansas City freshman. Other cabinet members who were recently chosen are: PATSY GOINS. Marysville junior-Model UN steering committee chairman; Kala Musiek, Minneapolis sophomore, and Jarvis Ulbrich, Chicago, Illinois, senior-faculty firesides chairmen; Sheri Heckart, Wichita junior, and Tom Stanion, Pratt freshman-current events discussion group chairmen. Marty Knight, Shawnee Mission junior, and Al Gipson, Kansas City, Missouri, freshman-Ski Club chairmen; and Janet Page, Great Bend junior, and Tom Greer, West Chester, Pennsylvania, junior-adolescent guidance chairmen. Carol Lee Masters, Olathe sophomore, and Art Spears, Kansas City, Kansas, junior-African studies chairmen; Vinita Fishel, Overland Park sophomore, and Donna Naylor, Kansas City, Missouri, freshman-office staff chairmen. Assignment for Wed. Take advantage of the CHICKEN DINNER for $1.55 at the Holiday Inn Restaurant HOUSEMOTHERS — STUDENTS APARTMENT MGRS. & TENANTS Simplify Spring House Cleaning with... PROFESSIONAL RUG CLEANING AND DRY CLEANING DRAPERIES CURTAINS SLIP COVERS RUGS A Stitch in Time for SPRING! New York Cleaners VI 3-0501 926 Mass. Merchants of Good Appearance TAILORING and ALTERATIONS Page 4 University Datry Kansan Wednesday, May 6.1964 World's Fair Attracting International Students "Of the 420 international students enrolled at KU, 125 will be staying for summer school." Clark Coan, International Student Adviser and assistant dean of men, said yesterday. Two-thirds of the foreign students are graduate students. So whether they are enrolled in classes or not, many have to stay around campus to work on research projects or papers, Dean Coan explained. "THE WORLD'S FAIR in New York is drawing many of the foreign students who will be traveling." Dean Coan said. Other international students will be making summer visits to their native countries or taking short trips around the United States, he said. "Approximately 200 of the foreign students will attempt to find work for the summer months," Dean Coan said. "THESE STUDENTS are faced with many of the same problems that face other college students looking for summer work. "One of the major problems is the 5 million unemployed figure in the United States' work force," Dean Coan said. "In the summer, college and high school students are thrown into this force." "We have been cautioned to try to discourage international students from seeking work in New York's Fair, because most of the positions were filled by April," he said. CAMP JOBS, manual labor, resort jobs (Colorado), and work in their scholastic fields are the jobs most commonly found by the foreign students. Two agencies aiding the international students finding work during the summer are the Student Employment Counselor and People-to-People. "The purpose of the Job Placement committee of P-t-P is to place foreign students in summer jobs, and homes if possible," Richard Keeler, special student, Bartlesville, Okla., and co-chairman of the Job Placement committee, said. ABOUT 85 applications have been received by the P-t-P office, and the committee is now trying to match them up with the 40 jobs they have now, Keeler said. "We have been looking for these jobs all over Kansas," he said. "Contacts have been made with Rotary clubs, Kiwanis clubs, Lion's clubs, and Chambers of Commerce. Over the spring vacation P-t-P representatives took press releases home with them, and placed them in their local papers. "This way we reached about 41 towns," Keeler said. "Working through the newspapers and personal contacts by students seemed to be the best way to get results," he continued. "The P-t-P office now has about 40 job openings, and we hope to have 50 in a short time," Keeler continued. 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This is just a sampling of our new collection by today's style leader. **CASUAL LOAFER** Brown or Black ... $15.95 **DRESS TIE** Oxford ... $14.95 ARENSBERG'S VI 3-3470 819 Mass University Daily Kansan Page 5 YET THE fact is, no Big Eight miler, save Lingle, has run faster this spring. In the Kansas Relays, he ran a 4:08.7 as Bill Easton's troupe blazed to a new school record of 16:46.3. Trouble was the Jayhawkers could finish no better than third as Missouri, Texas, and four-place Houston all dipped under the former 16:53.1 meet record. Who was talking about a 4:08.7 when Lingle was flying 4:01 and Texas' Richard Romo was hitting 4:02.4 in the same race? Furthermore, no Big Eight sophomore since Wes Santee, has run that fast either in a relay carry or an open race. Santee wrote headlines in 1952 when he gunned down Georgetown with his famous 4:06.7 anchor carry in the four-mile relay at Jayhawk Sophomore Trackman Developing as Runner, Leader Right now you won't find his name many places except the agate summary. But he deserves something better. In his first competitive collegiate mile at the Texas Relays three weeks ago, he ran a 4:11 No. 2 carry which broke apart the four-mile and sent the Jayhawkers rolling to a record 16:57.0. Obscured to all but a few in the storm of Robin Lingle's anchoring thunderbolts for Missouri on the track circuit are the feats of KU's sophomore miler John Donner. He followed that with a third-place 4:15.8 against New Mexico-Abilene Christian in a triangular at Abilene. New Frosh Grid Coach Named Here Wednesday, May 6, 1964 Vere Wellman, Hutchinson High School head football coach, has been named KU freshman coach, Wade Stinson, Jayhawk Athletic Director announced yesterday. "We're exceptionally pleased," Coach Mitchell said, "that Wellman could be released from Hutchinson High School to accept our freshman coaching job. Coach Wellman has been very successful at both Wellington and Hutchinson." Wellman played one year—the 1954 season—at Wichita under KU head football coach Jack Mitchell. "I am looking forward." Coach Wellman said, "to this as the greatest opportunity I've ever had and I've had some good breaks. I am looking forward to working under Jack Mitchell and hope I can learn and contribute from the outset." "No, I'm not surprised to be running those times," admits Donner in a statement somewhat reminiscent of Santee, who never lacked for confidence. Donner said it without a flourish, merely as an honest appraisal. "I expected to be running that well," he continued almost grimly. "I've been working hard for a long time. Its about time now to be doing something. I think I can get down to 4:02 or 4:03 by NCAA time." Drake. Coach Bill Easton said he believes Donner to be a potential leader of the Jayhawk track team. "A team," Coach Easton said, "to be really great, needs its leader—the man who keeps going. "I think Donner has the potential to be such a leader. This year, of course, he is a sophomore and that limits him somewhat." Easton said he believed Donner could well develop into the kind of leader which, in his opinion, is essential to a really great team. Donner will be a key man in this weekend's meet with the Oklahoma Sooners here in Lawrence. Coach Easton said he thought this meet would serve as an indicator for the Jayhawk trackmen as they approach the Big Eight Conference Outdoor Championship meet May 15 and 16 at Stillwater. According to Easton the Jayhawks will face a remarkably toughened and improved league in the championship meet. JACK Fun is living in Park Plaza And at such a modest cost . . . 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ONE HOUR MARTINIZING 1407 MASSACHUSETTS Across from Junior High School OFFER GOOD THROUGH MAY 8, 1964 One hour MARTINZING the most in DRY CLEANING Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, May 6, 1964 TwentyReceive Science Awards For Chemistry Twenty students in the KU department of chemistry received awards recently at the department's annual awards banquet. The first H. P. Cady award of $50 to an outstanding first year graduate student went to Duane Thurman, Wichita. The award was made in honor of the late Professor Cady, a faculty member for 44 years and chairman of the department for more than 20 years. The Ray Q. Brewster award for an outstanding teaching assistant went to William McMahan, Goodwater, Ala. The award includes an all-expense paid trip to the fall American Chemical Society meeting. The A. W. Davidson award of $50, sponsored by Phi Lambda Upson, went to Richard A. Kushner, Superior, Wis., as an outstanding graduate student in chemistry and related sciences. The Phillips Petroleum Co. fellowship of $2,500 for an outstanding graduate student doing research related to the petroleum fields was awarded to Ronald Rynbrandt, Dorr, Mich. The Du Pont teaching fellowship for an outstanding teaching assistant went to Robert Ernst, Deming, N.M., who will receive a stipend of almost $2,000. National Science Foundation cooperative fellowships for 1964-65 were awarded to Richard Kellogg, Arlington; John Shoemaker, Lawton, Okla.; and to Joseph Throop, Wameng. All are graduate students. NSF Open Fellowships for 1964-65 went to Thomas Jenkins, Twinsburg, Ohio; Karl Spear III, Baldwin; and Robert Kobot, Cedar Falls, Iowa. The American Institute of Chemists Medal for the student with the highest grade point average in chemistry went to Dwayne Fisher, Osborne senior. The Alpha Chi Sigma awards for the outstanding undergraduates in chemistry and chemical engineering went to Dwayne Fisher, and to Edwin Nordstrom, Newton senior. Both had straight A grade averages in chemistry. The physical chemistry awards went to Bill Campion, Liberal, and to Alan E. Tonelli, Cicero, Ill. Both are seniors. Douglas Elder, Topeka, and Karl E. Becker Jr., Wichita, received the organic chemistry awards. Both are juniors. The analytical chemistry award went to Charles R. Newton, Grainfield sophomore. General chemistry awards went to four freshmen — Ivan D. Conover, Satanta, and to Marion D. Clark, Larned, chemistry 2; Jimmie D. Doll, Joplin, Mo., chemistry 2a; and to John Shapley, Wichita, chemistry 2H. Official Bulletin Foreign students desiring housing in- teriors should see Dean Coan's office. TODAY SUA Classical Film, 7 p.m., Fraser Theater, "The Last Laugh." Senior Recital. 8 p.m. Swarthout Hall Malcolm Smith, obes. TOMORROW Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 11:40 a.m. 5 p.m., 7:30 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. Ascension Thursday —Holy Day of Obligation Holy Communion, 11:30 a.m. St. Astoria Church, 782-964-4300. Kansas High School Orchestra of 1964. 2:30 p.m., University Theater. Poetry Hour, 4:30 p.m. Music and Browsing Room, Kansas Union. Read your own poem. Five minutes to a poet. Sign up in SUA Office. Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion, 4100 n.m. Pan American Room, Kansas University Le plique-nique traditionnel du Certec français a lieu leil le seul mais à 17 h. 30 chez Mademoiselle Crumeur, 920 rue Missouri. Quelques seines drama-femmes a启蒙 des prêt Pi Delta Phi, election une invité insultée insvui Vauillex-vous inscribe ni bucre la secrétaire avant mercredi soir. Faculty Retirement Dinner. 6:15 p.m. Big 8 Room, Kansas Union. *mosophology* Lecture, 7:30 p.m. *intern* *Strauss and Wagner* 188 *International Problems—Dr. Ernest Haugen* Western Civilization Lecture, 7.30 a.m. Museum of Art Lecture Room, "Art is the 20th Century?"—Gerald Bernstein, Dept of Art History. Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Everyone welcome. Minority Opinion Tape-Discussion, 8 p.m., 305 Kansas Union. College Life, 9 p.m. Forum, Room. Kenny Keeley's current showing at the World's Fair Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth. Required Exams Set for Summer The English Proficiency Examination will be given July 11 at 1 p.m. Students who wish to take the exam and are not enrolling in summer school may sign up for the examination in the registrar's office May 18-22. All students wishing to take the Western Civilization Comprehensive on July 25 must sign up at the registrar's office from June 29 to July 3. NOW! Ends Friday Sidney Poitler Lilies of the Field Shows 7:00 & 9:00 Granada TREATRE...Telephone VI 3-5783 Granada TNEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 Starts SAT... ELVS PRESLEY in "KISSIN' COUSINS" --- Starts TONITE! WINNER OF 3 ACADEMY AWARDS HOW METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER and CINERAMA present HOW THE WEST WAS WON METROCOLOR® WON METROCOLOR® One Show at 7:30 Features at 7:50 Adults $1.25 — Children 50c Women's Fall Rush Resumed --- Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on highway A women's fall rush, the first since 1961, is being planned for next Fall by the Panhellenic Rush Council. There are two reasons for the fall rush period which will be Sept. 9-13, Mrs. Stroup, assistant dean of women, said. Those women who pledge during fall rush will move directly into sorority houses. Women may register for fall rush between May 15 and July 31 with the dean of women. The registration fee is $5. Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 First, the council wants to give sororites an opportunity to fill vacancies in the fall, Mrs. Stroup said. 1. 0 grade point average who in the previous semester failed to meet eligibility requirements. -BUSINESS DIRECTORY- ENDS TONITE! John Wayne "McCLINTOCK" One Show — Starts Dusk Cut n Curl BEAUTY SALON graduation permanents, sets. Starts TOMORROW... "ISLAND OF LOVE" and "PALM SPRINGS WEEKEND" VI 3-5569 latest styles. "We also want to give transfers an opportunity to go through when they get here," she said. The rushing period will be held for women transfer students in good standing with the university and for upperclasswomen with a PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS 843 N.H. 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 LEONARD'S STANDARD SERVICE 9th & Indiana VI 3-9830 7,000 Pipes and every smoking accessory George's Pipe Shop 727 Mass. VI 3-7164 "SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS" Tops -- Glass & Zippers -- Bear Sears -- Headlines -- Door Panels -- Tailor Made Seat Covers at Competitive Prices with sewed double lock stitch. Jack's Seat Covers 545 Minn. VI 3-4242 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY STUDENTS Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. Fraternity Jewelry Balfour Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd FOR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS SEE MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES MALLS SHOPPING CENTER VI 3-1211 COMPLETE SERVICE FOR CHEVYS & OLDS - Small enough to give personal attention 738 N.H. - Big enough to have all the equipment. VI 3-7700 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 A.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 626 IDWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PHONE VL 3-1000 n the meet uring into reg-ay 15 vom- -Classified Ads FOR SALE LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. GOOD SELECTION. OF HANDGUNS, MILITARY VARIANT. OF LARGE JAWM ANNOYS. ALSO REBLUE. EVENINGS. 1026 OHIO VI 2-1214. 5-12 22 cal. Martin lever action saddle rifle. B55, Call VI 2-4216. 5-6 Mobile Home. 1959 kit. Stateliner. 50' x 10'. Two bedrooms, carpeted. air-conditioned, washer, new hot water heater, many extras., north of KU Med Center. Ideal for medical student. 3610 Rainbow Blvd. Call SK 1-0412. 5-12 Wish to sell girls English bicycle by June 1. In excellent condition. Racing light and wicker basket included. Call Barbara. VI 3-2399. 5-12 What kind of car can you buy for $20? A noisy, obnoxious, rusty 1941 Ford Mustang. A frightening drunk wagon. Good tires, battery, and brakes. 840₁: Kentucky after 5 p. 5m. 5-8 1959 blue VW sedan. Whitewall tires. more accessories. Well cared for and clean. By owner. Call VI 2-3103. 5 to 7 p.m. Priced to sell. 1956 Pontiac. Radio, heater. Call VI 3-3387. 5-11 1952 MG-TD. Good condition, rebuilt engine. Call VI 3-0540 evenings. 5-11 SPORTS CAR TIRE CLEARANCE. Wide whites, discontinued tread designs, all four ply tubeless, highest quality. Your choice. 560 x 13, 590 x 13, 600 x 15, 590 x 15, 600 x 15, $150 exchange. Free installation at Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929 Mass. (4 Mercedes high speed safety 640, 650 x 13, Cut to $20 each. 5-11 Roberts i640 stcver tape trecord器 plus microphone and one sounder mike. Cail VI 2-3347 5-8 1957 Imperial. Power steering, brakes, seats, windows, and aerial. Automatic adjustment. New 906 x 14 whitewalls. Original condition. Buyer, $995. Call VI 2-258-5. *7* MICH. ST. BAR-B-Q FOR BAR-B-Q RIBS THAT ARE A TREAT TO EAT. TRY OURS AT 515 MICHIGAN. OPEN FROM 11 A.M. TO 11:30 P.M. Four used General jet air tubelessless two tanks. Call VI 3-3478 after 5 p.m. 5-5 New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500 teams -ream-$8.50 Lawrence Outdoor 1005 Miles 1958 black and white Ford convertible. Power steering and brakes, good condition, original owner. Call VI 3-5003, 1618 Rose Lane. Triumph Cub. Recently rebuilt and in good condition. Excellent cycle for hill climbing, etc. Accept highest bid over $175. Call VI 2-4219. 5-7 Wedding dress, size 7-8. 1817 La. Upstairs, west apartment. 4 to 6 p.m. Student will sell all guns in collection. 45 auto's, Lugers, 38 revolvers, miniature automatics, Ruger 22's, 410 double blbl, 30.06 Deer Hunting action. While they last! 22 LR., $5.50 per carton. Call VI 3-1110 after 6 p.m. SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS, Cheer Slicers, etc., for sale at great savings after 6 p.m. weekdays; Saturday and Sunday. 837 Connect 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 3-3844. St. Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the "Note Book," 450 notes. Free delivery $4.50 on civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive,imegraphosed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3-1904 after 5 p.m. Patronize Kansan Advertiser How do you save money by spending a lot of it at the Lawrence Book Nook? 1021 Mass. --furnished air conditioned house for ent. Just south of KU. Two bedroom anch style. Finished ree. room in base- ment. Ideal for 4 men. Call VI 2-0142. tf When Hallmark Plans-a-Party, you receive the compliments Hallmark 17 PLANS-A-PARTY ● Parker Pens ● Stationery ● Printing BULLOCK'S 4 E. 7th VI 3-2261 Page 7 FOR RENT Emery Apartments available June 1. Efficiency and one bedroom. To see contact Milan Loupal, Apt. 204. Emery or call V1 3-8190. 5-19 Free room and board for graduate student or mature undergrad in private home in exchange for baby-sitting, doing dishes, and general mother's helper. Summer session, possibility for next year. Call VI 2-0493. 5-11 Bedroom with shower and half-bath. Bachon privileges If desired. See at: La. 5-6 and two bedroom apartments. 1232 La. Call VI 3-4271. 5-12 Married, grad students, faculty, Efficiency apartment from $66 and small house from $70. Available in June. Call now. Sante Apartmentts, 1123 Ind., VI 3-2116. Bachelor Studio Apartment for graduate or older undergraduate men. $1_{1/2}$ blocks from one newly developed, newly finished tilted studio. Private parked ideal study conditions. A few still available at low summer rates. Singles and doubles. For appointment call VI 3-8534. Large, homely, attractively furnished, 4 room apartment. Summer rates. Kitchen built-ins and garbage disposal. Utilities paid except for summer months. I 1-3 7677. Will rent for summer months. 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. Payed. Call if 2-8451 or see at 1244 La. Crescent Heights two bedroom apart- ment 25th and Redbelt phone VI 2-3711. LOST Brown and white puppy, Mixture, like collie. Might answer to the name Trotski. If found contact Mr. Helms at 1000 Ohio. 5.7 FOUND Transistor radio. Call VI 3-3697 after 5 p.m. 5-6 Experience secretary would like typing home. Reasonable rates. Call V 3-5138. TYPING EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention on all reports, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate typing at reasonable calls. Call Donna Stewart VI 3-6261. tif Milliken's SOS "the best professional service" - general typing service - automatic typing - 24 hr. answering service **INFRAGRAPHIC & PROTOCOLING** 1021½ *Mass*, M. 3-5920, 7 a.m.-11 p.m. - automatic typing perienced secretary. Call Mrs. Barber. UN 4-3511 or V 3-1406. 5-12 24 hr. answering service graph & photo 60 The only thing better than a home cooked meal is Dinner At DUCKS Steaks & Seafoods A Specialty Experienced secretary would like typing. Hendrick, 2564 Ridge Court. VI 2-0122. 5-21 For expert typing, dissertation, thesis, work. Electronic typewriter. 5-8 work. Electric typewriter. 5-8 STUDENTS! SAVE WITH THIS AD!! Serving crisp tossed solids, choice of potatoes, zesty Experienced typist would like to do 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, VI 2-0210. 5-12 Grance Vienna breads & country fresh Sardinian, too! butter. Sandwiches, too! Your favorite beverage 11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass. Term papers accurately and neatly types on good grade bond paper. Minor corrections, carbon copy, extra first page Call VI 3-0875. 5-2' Let me do your typing for you. Ex- cuse me, Gollum. Me, Robbery. Experienced secretary would like typing in home. Reasonable rates. VT **vt** 1188 Fast. accurate work done on electric loads. Accurate rates. Call Bettie Vincent, VI 3-514-80. Experienced typist with electric type- writer available to type themes, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work stance. Phone VI T-3-8791. Charles "T" Patti. Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason-mentations, themed texts, sentiments and theses, phone VI 3-7652, Mrs. Frank Gibson, tt Accurate expert typist would like typing prompt service. Call V1 3-2851. These Prompt service. Call V1 3-2851. Experienced Typtist-Dissertations, Theses. Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 Rhode Island, VI 3-7485. tf Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (pica type). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0558. Let us prove how we can save you money on all your car needs Shirt Finishing Laundry "Come in Today" $6.88 Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. **tf** Professional: typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon ribbon, special symbols available. Call III 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley. 408 West 13th. tt Secretary will do typing in home. Fast accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577. tt RISK'S Lube - Wheel Bal. - Brakes 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 - Front wheels balanced, "Front End Special" WARDS - Front end aligned 616 W. 9th AUTO SERVICE CENTER FREE! qt. of oil with oil change & filter BOB'S CONOCO JOE'S BAKERY Open 24 hours except Saturday evening 19th & Mass. VI 3-9802 - Steering checked Wash & Fluff Dry 25c delivery VI 3-4720 729 N.H. VI 2-1708 Distinction Bob Blank, Photographer HIXON STUDIO Portraits of 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 THE NAME FOR SERVICE ★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED ★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK TUNE-UPS Wednesday, May 6, 1964 ★ MUFFLER SERVICE ★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M. 9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897 TYPING: Experienced typist. Forme. secretary will type these papers. Term paper rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. Mc- eldowney. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568 Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648 ART'S TEXACO & MCAFE now under new management We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. every Saturday and Sunday, jous lunches, dinners, and sandwiches four second cup of coffee always free. MILIKLENS. SOS—always nrest quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines. also do tape transcriptions. Office house 7, m. to m. p. 122.m-1. Mass foe Phone VI 3-5920 BUSINESS SERVICES University Daily Kansan Dressmaking-alterations, formats and businesses. Ola Smith. 939 1/2 Mati VI 3-5283. Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, $16 Mass. VI 3-1267 MISCELLANEOUS NEW YORK CLEANERS REPAIRS — LEATHER REFINISHING ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 BURGERT'S Shoe Service Service for Shoes Since 1910 1113 Mass. St. VI 3-0691 VI 3-6333 YELLOW CAB CO. AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS DALE'S BODY SHOP All makes & models frame - body - fender - glass VI 3-4732 704 Vermont Artists - Architects Custom Plastics Rafts & Model Boat Supplies George's Hobby Shop 1105 Mass. VI 3-5087 ★ Lubrication & Oil Change BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES One Stop Service Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Colin Mart. 1025 Mass. **tf** VI 3-9271 ★ Engine Tune Up Brake Repair FRATERNITY JEWELRY The Catacombs nite club and Pizza Dome Safe. Modest Investment. Ideal way or 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 300 W. 6th SKELLY SERVICE Seniors, cash your rebate slips before paying, before you leave KU. V 2-0180, W 5-12 SKELLY Experienced typist. Full time. Capable of assuming responsibility. Fast, accurate typing a necessity. Salary open. Write Box 20, 111 Flint Hall. Campus. 5-12 Summer work. Large corporation needs 3 male students for full time work. Car necessary. Apply! Student Union, Room 305A, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Thursday, May 27. 5-7 WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE Generator & Starter Repair a complete line, including, • Lavenders • Guards • Pins • Mugs • Rings • Crests WANTED VOLKSAGEN’S WANTED. Cash for your VW. Conzelman Motors, VW Sales, Service, and Parts 2522 Iowa. Hiwav Interested in sales demonstrations. Write-giving age, experience, type of instructor So. 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 CAR OWNERS SAVE UP TO 40% $ $ $ $ $ $ JACK & GUNN'S All makes and models including sports cars Ray Christian JEWELERS IT'S OK TO OWE RAY 809 Mass. - Trained mechanics for quality service - Your satisfaction GUARANTEED on shocks, mufflers, tail pipes and installation. GB Montgomery Wards Auto Service Center 729 N.H. VI 2-1708 $ $ $ $ $ $ Recording Service and Party Music tapes: recorded or duplicated records: cut or pressed 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 FREE VACATION SERVICE - with this ad! Bring in this coupon and get our Registered Mechanic 10 POINT SAFETY CHECK — We will check (1) Cooling System (2) Fon Belts (3) Lights & Signal System (4) Wheel Bearings (5) Brakes (6) Wipers (7) Exhaust sys- item (4) Wheel bearings (9) Brakes (10) Impellers item (8) Steering (9) Fuel System and (10) Ignition System. ABSOLUTELY FREE!! Be Careful Be Sure Be safe Before Returning Home 9th & Miss. Call on us TODAY. VI 3-6697 Oil & Gas SANDERS MOTOR CO. Lincoln-Mercury Studebaker Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, May 6, 1964 --- World Spotlight Wilkinson Wins Berth OKLAHOMA CITY—(UPI)—Former Oklahoma football coach Bud Wilkinson, in his first political venture, won a November "bowl" berth against one of two Democrats yesterday with the Republican nomination to the U.S. Senate. A controversial "right to work" amendment produced the closest major race of the day. It was defeated. Wilkinson's general election opponent will be decided May 26 in a runoff between incumbent Sen. J. Howard Edmondson and state Sen. Fred Harris of Lawton. Edmondson and Harris eliminated former Gov. Raymond Gary for the two places on the runoff ballot. Wilkinson polled 88,001 votes in the Republican primary against a combined total of 23,757 for his two opponents, with 2,785 of the state's 3,044 precincts reporting. In the Democratic senate primary, with 2,908 precincts in, Edmondson polled 196,831 votes, Harris 177,737 and Gary 163,586. Madame Nhu Seeks Help PARIS—(UPI)—Madame Ngo Dinh Nhu has cabled President Johnson, asking him to prevent the execution of her brother-in-law, Ngo Dinh Can, in Viet Nam, it was reported today. Can was convicted of murder, extortion and misuse of power while his brother, the late President Ngo Dinh Diem, was in power. Madame Nhu, the attractive widow of Diem's brother, said in her cable to Johnson, "It would be lamentable to see your government carry the responsibility of a new crime against the Ngo family." Can sought refuge in the U.S. consulate in Hue, central Viet Nam, but was turned over to the Saigon government for trial. Mme. Nhu said Can was convicted on false accusations, "after the American embassy tricked him and after the American administration betrayed and made martyrs of his brothers, President Ngo Dinh Diem and my husband Ngo Dinh Nhu." Diem and Nhu were killed by rebels in a coup d'etat which Mme Nhu charges was engineered by U.S. agents in South Viet Nam. Students Choose Barry LEXINGTON, Va.—(UPI)—Students at Washington and Lee University, who have been right 8 out of 12 times in choosing the GOP presidential candidate, yesterday picked Barry Goldwater in the 1964 mock Republican Convention. The Arizona senator won the second ballot, far ahead of his nearest rival. New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller. Goldwater had 718 votes to 218 for Rockefeller, 162 for Gov. William Scranton of Pennsylvania, 106 for former Vice-President Richard M. Nixon, and 104 for Henry Cabot Lodge. The students chose Scranton as the GOP vice-presidential nominee. Goldwater later addressed the 1,000 students over a telephone-loudspeaker hookup from Washington. "You have done me one of the greatest honors I have ever experienced," Goldwater said. "I accept with great humility. I hope and pray that this a good omen for July and November." Washington and Lee, located in the Shenandoah Valley, has held mock GOP conventions in each presidential election year since 1908. Career Opportunity in eastern Kansas with Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co. of Milwaukee, Wisconsin Interviewing in 202 Summerfield Hall Thursday, May 7 KANSAS CITY LAWRENCE ATCHISON HIAWATHA SABETHA EMPORIA FRANKFORT MARYSVILLE MANHATTAN TOPEKA INDEPENDENCE OVERLAND PARK PITTSBURG CHANUTE OTTAWA LEAVENWORTH HOLTON PRAIRIE VILLAGE Coffee, Rolls and Movie May 7, 8:00, in Summerfield Hall For Additional Information Call Local District Agent Corlett Cotton in Lawrence National Bank Building - VI 3-1533 Keith Hiesterman Interviewer Trial Judge Clerkship Program To Begin For 25 Law Students The nation's first trial judge clerkship program on a full time resident basis begins this year with 25 second-year KU law students. Five students will begin the program this summer, but most will begin in September when fall term dockets schedule the maximum number of cases. Students will spend two months in residence under the supervision of Kansas and Missouri district judges, assisting in research, drafting orders and performing other duties similar to those of clerks for federal district judges. Students will receive five to six hours academic credit. Summer participants are: Ernest Adelman, Kansas City, Mo., who will work with Judge Richard Knoegisdorf, Kansas City, Mo., who will work with Judge James Frederick, Kansas City, Mo., who will work with Judge Frederick Wolesley, Lyons; James Lawring, Okmulguee, Okla., who will work with Judge Frank Gray, Pittsburgh; James Pitto, Pittsburgh, who will work in Kansas City, Kan. (judge unassigned as yet), and Karen Stewart, Hutchinson, who will work in Kansas City, Kansas City, or Hutchinson. David All. McPherson, who will work with Judge Sam Sturm, McPherson; Thomas Gnetel, Judge Richard C. Jensen, Independence Mo., Bradley Brehm, Fairbury, Neb., who will work in Kansas,assoc.; Paul Cacioppo, Overland Park, who will work in Kansas City, Kan.(judge unassigned as yet), and Gary Dockport, Mo., who will work with Judge Ray Weightman, Maryville,Mo. Robert Collins, Overland Park, who will work in Olathe (judge unassigned as yet); Jay Crotchette, Louisburg, who will work in Ottawa; Gary Marshall Crowther, Salina, who will work with Judge Frank Gray, Lawrence; Don Culp, St. Louis, Mo., who will work with Judge Raymond Carr, Olathe; Timothy Emert, Independence, Kan.; Richard Keen, Kan. (judge unassigned as yet), and David Hederstedt, Salina, who will work in Topeka (judge unassigned as yet). Michael Holland, Russell, who will work Allen Knauff, Allen Knauft, Topeka, who will work in Topeca (judge unassigned as yet); Philip Lorton, Kansas City, Kan., who will work in Kansas City, Kan. (judge unassigned as yet); Roger Lyster, Lincoln, who will work in Topeka (judge unassigned as yet); Philip Stephens, who will work in Olathe; Judge Earl C'Connor, Olathe; R. Morgan Metcalf, El Dorado, who will work with Judge George Reynolds, Eureka, and John Richeson, Leawood, who will work with Judge Robert Miller, Paola Donald Solter, Lawrence, who will work with Judge Howard Kline, Wichita, and Gerald Wilhams, Olathe, who will work with Judge Clayton Brenner, Olathe. D looking for a summer job? You're in luck. We need experienced typists, stenos, Dictaphone operators and other office help to work in the offices of our customers. There's no fee to pay and (best news) the pay is high. P.S. On temporary jobs you can take off a few days now and then to go to the beach. Come apply today. EMPLOYERS OVERLOAD. The pioneer temporary help service. Offices coast to coast and Canada. Europe for Less All Student Trips EUROPE — Cavalier sails June 19 and returns August 6— 11 countries, from $1154.50. Tupenny sails June 30 — 49 days, 15 countries, from $1160. ROUND THE WORLD — 8th annual World tour, 54 days, 16 countries, from $2595. Enjoy all-expense-paid travel with others your own age who share your interests. Special student sailings. Escorted. 15 years experience. Get full details from your local travel agent or write American Youth Abroad, 70 University Sta., Minneapolis, Minn. The Classical Film Series presents THE LAST LAUGH A classic of the German Cinema Directed by F.W. Murnau (1924) * * * Wednesday, May 6 Fraser Theater—7:00 p.m. Admission: $.60 President Travels Into Poverty Area By Merriman Smith UPI White House Reporter President Johnson journeyed on a six-state tour of the poverty-plagued Appalachian area today, talking man-to-man with jobless workers and pledging a new "American revolution" to help their plight. At his first stop of the two-day trip in Cumberland, Md., Johnson sounded the theme of his trip when he pointed to cabinet members accompanying him and declared: "We came because we care." From Maryland, he went to Martinsburg, W. Va., for a brief stop. The schedule then called for a swing into Ohio, Tennessee, North Carolina and Georgia. Five speeches were on the agenda, including a breakfast talk tomorrow to members of the Georgia legislature, but he was expected to make even more. AT CUMBERLAND, JOHNSON quickly sought out the man-on-the-street. He visited a state unemployment office in the Maryland community and talked to the jobless workers there. One of those applying for unemployment compensation was Mrs. Mary Mallow, wife of an unemployed elevator operator, who had with her their three children, aged 6 months, 4 years, and 6 years. At the high school stadium where his helicopter landed, the President was greeted by a turnout of about 8,500. At the Cumberland town square, where he delivered his first speech of the day, an estimated crowd of more than 3,000 heard him declare a war to "free 30 million Americans from the prison of poverty." Johnson stopped briefly at Martinsburg to change from helicopter to his Air Force jet where he was given a warm welcome at the airport. HOME MADE "WELCOME LYNDON" signs were flourished on his arrival at Martinsburg and high school bands played enthusiastically in the Spring sunshine, giving the occasion the air of an old-fashioned political rally. The President's stop in Ohio was at Athens for a speech on the 160th anniversary of Ohio university. From there, his itinerary was Knoxville, Tenn., Rocky Mount, N.C., and Atlanta, Ga., where he will spend the night. In his prepared speech at the county courthouse in Cumberland, the President said Maryland was a state that always had fought for the rights of man, starting with its achievement of self-government in 1638. "AND IF THAT BATTLE takes place on different fronts today than it did 300 years ago, Maryland must help to win it," Johnson said. "Because that same spirit still lives in Maryland today, I come here to ask your help in carrying forward the American revolution. "In many ways today's battles are even more difficult. "Then the enemy was clear. "Today, the enemies which menace our people are more complex. They will not yield simply to guns or force. They take the form of disease and poor schools—of untrained men and chronic unemployment—of exhausted mines and obsolete skills. "We are preparing to fight these enemies. "OUR FIRST OBJECTIVE is to free 30 million Americans from the prison of poverty. We do this for those who are poor. We do it also for those generations who will be condemned to poverty unless our generation provides a way out." Johnson said figures, statistics and pictures did not tell the entire story of poverty in the Appalachian area. The President said, "We will not win our war against poverty until the conscience of the entire nation is aroused. "We WILL NOT SUCCEED until every citizen regards the suffering of neighbors as a call to action," he added. "We will not overcome until every city and town mobilizes its resources to create the true American community, where all are equal in hope and expectation." Lawrence, Kansas 61st Year, No. 135 Thursday, May 7, 1964 Dailu hansan Petitions Seek Reverse Of Suspension Decision "The persons I talked to expected only. 1,000 signatures." Mills said. Petitions asking University reconsideration of the suspension of Michael Mount, Wichita senior, were circulating today. The petition is addressed to no one. Mount is a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. Mills, a fraternity brother, said neither he nor Mount are circulating the petition and emphasized it was not initiated by Phi Gamma Delta members. MILLS SAID THE response to the petition has been greater than expected. The petition is addressed to no one. Mount said last night he was suspended for at least the remainder of the semester for writing a bomb scare note in Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. The disciplinary committee, which made the judgment Tuesday afternoon, declined to announce what action it took. Bill Mills, Topeka senior, said this morning that 1,500 to 2,000 persons have signed petitions asking the suspension be reconsidered. "They felt that if they got this many, that would be all they would want." Mills said the organizers of the petition may give it to the administration because of the large number of people who have signed. Mills and other persons contacted last night and this morning would not divulge names of persons circulating the petition. Rumors that the Panhellenic Council had told sororities not to allow the petition to be signed were scouted today by Kay Weber, Wichita junior and Panhellenic president. "Several people have called me asking if I had told sororities not to sign the petition," she said. "There must have been some misunderstanding. One sorority president called me last night before I knew anything about the petition and asked what should be done. I told her then is was all right for girls to sign them as individuals." EEFORE HE LEFT for Wichita last night, Mount declined to comment on the disciplinary committee decision or the petition started in his Rail Union Strikes Violating Injunction behalf. Bulletin "I'm tired of talking to people." Mount said. "I'm just going back home and I have no immediate plans." PEORIA, Ill. — (UPI)— Firemen and enginemen went on strike against the Toledo, Peoria and Western railroad and a local switching line today in defiance of a federal court order barring walkouts. Firemen and enginemen went on strike against two small but important Illinois railroads today,but the walkout was called off at midmorning. Members of the brotherhood of locomotive firemen and enginemen walked out against the TP&W and the Peoria and Pekin union railroad at 12:01 a.m. CDT, the same time that the nation's railroads put into effect work rules changes that will wine out the jobs of more than 4,000 fire- A spokesman for the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen (BLF&E) said union members would go back to work on the Peoria and Pekin Union (P&PU) and the Toledo, Peoria and Western (TP&W) Railroads. "And when they have a public Student Peace Union Plans Picketing Of ROTC Review Mount, who was enrolled in four courses for 14 hours this semester, said he may petition for reinstatement next month to attend summer school. He had previously been accepted into the School of Law for this fall, but said yesterday he does not know his status there now. The Student Peace Union announced plans last night to picket the "Chancellor's Review," to be held May 15 by the three ROTC units at KU. "For example, when they have military recruiting tables in the Student Union, we have peace tables. When they have a military ball, we have an unmilitary ball." at KU. Reading from a prepared statement, KU-SPU vice-president, Charlie Hook, Topeka freshman, said the specific purpose of the demonstration would be to ask ROTC members "to drop out, to discontinue their personal participation in the war machine, and join us to work for a peaceful world." "IN ORDER TO dramatize these alternatives, the SPU attempts to provide a response to the examples of the military machine on campus," he said. Hook said that the main function of SPU is to provide alternatives to war. WHEN INFORMED of SPU's plan to picket, Midshipman Captain Douglas Pickersgill, Kansas City senior and overall commander of the ROTC units for the review, said, "they've got all the right in the world to do what they want, but they don't have the right to disturb our proceedings. As long as they are orderly and do not interrupt the program, fine. They have the right to be there. demonstration of the military machine on campus, we have a public demonstration." Hook said the picketing of the ROTC would be an appeal to the individual conscience. Reading again from a prepared statement, he said, "SPU calls on individuals to drop the military definition of reality and the self-prediction that there are no alternatives." we feel that we don't have to justify our existence to anyone. This is strictly a student program. We've worked long and hard for this. It's a show from us to the Chancellor. The officers have nothing to do with it. men. Other railroad employees honored picket lines. Humid and warm weather with recurring thunderstorms is expected through Friday. Southerly winds from 25 to 40 miles per hour this afternoon are expected to diminish tonight, becoming strong southerly Friday, the Weather Bureau said. Kappa Kappa Gamma was the victim of two bomb seares Monday. The first occurred shortly after midnight, when the KU switchboard operator was told a bomb would explode in several minutes. The Kappas were routed out of bed and stood outside for almost an hour in trenchcoats and nightgowns while police searched the house. "The SPU is out for a theoretical state, which I'm all for, but right now, the military machine is necessary. Their principles are fine, but their means are questionable." Weather Railroad representatives went to court in Washington Tuesday and obtained a court restraining order prohibiting walkouts because of reported strike votes taken on several lines throughout the country. When asked if the picketing would affect him personally, Pickersgill said, "I pay about as much attention to them as I would a small dog barking at my heels. Right now, I'm more concerned with my studies and graduation." The high this afternoon is expected to range in the upper 80's and the low tonight is expected to be in the middle 60's. The union declined to give any reason for its walkout here, but it was apparently in response to the new work rules. The effects of the isolated action were not immediately determined, but the 236-mile system of the TP&W was at a standstill. The railroad serves as a connection between major eastern and western railroads. Operations on the Peoria and Pekin Union, a terminal line which daily switches 2,000 freight cars for seven major railroads, were also shut down. It was possible that freight cars containing perishable shipments could be tied up. Kuss Esslinger, vice-president on the TP&W, said the entire line was "not operating." The history of the TP&W has frequently been marred by violence. It was the object of the longest railroad strike in history, was the first private corporation taken over by the government in World War II and was the scene of violence, gunfire and bloodshed. E. J. Brasso, superintendent of the P&PU, said, "I don't know what's going on. All I know is I've got a strike on my hands. "I haven't talked to any of our people yet, so I don't know what we're going to do," he said. MOUNT SAID HE heard about this incident from classmates the next day. The Supreme Court has refused to consider union challenges to lower court decisions upholding the award. A BLFE SPOKESMAN said that the Pennsylvania abolished all but 10 per cent of the Firemen's jobs in its Conway yard in what he termed a clear violation of the award's protective provisions. Picketing in Peoria, Ill., also was triggered by misapplication of the award's provisions for elimination of some firemen's jobs, the spokesman said. Meanwhile, the arbitration board charged with interpretation of rail awards reconvened today. The board's job is to make rulings on disputes arising out of the award on eliminating fireman jobs. H. E. Gilbert, head of the Enginemen and Firemen's Union, had said only yesterday in Washington that there would be no strike in view of the injunction. The accounts of what happened late Monday afternoon differ. Mount said yesterday he wrote the note which said, "A bomb in the house is set to go off at 11:25 p.m." as a joke, then tore it in half and put it in an ash tray in a telephone booth of the sorority. He said he had gone to the Kappa house to borrow some notes and forgot about the note he had written after he left. However, Emily Taylor, dean of women, said this morning her original investigation of the matter showed Mount had left the note on a table in the sorority, where it was found intact by two Kappas. Dean Taylor said the two girls asked Mount if he knew who had written the note, and he said no. She said Mount tore the note in half after the girls left and put it in the ash tray, where it was found after police arrived. KU Negroes To Join Rush For the first time in several years, Alpha Phi Alpha and Kappa Alpha Psi, the two Negro fraternities at KU, will participate in the formal summer and fall rush periods. The presidents of both fraternities and Interfraternity Council President James Johnston, Independence, Mo. junior, agreed that this would allow an opportunity for social contact between the races and a formal apparatus for pledging any man going through rush week. Robert Terrel, Jackson, Miss., junior and president of Kappa Alpha Psi, said he felt the major problem in fraternity discrimination is a lack of communication and interaction. "IT HAS ALWAYS been voluntary whether Alpha Phi Alpha and Kappa Alpha Psi participate in the regular rush but this will allow all fraternities to consider all men on their own merits," Johnston expained. "This will give the men and the houses a chance to get better acquainted so that they will be able to judge on merits other than color," Terrel said. ALPHA PHI ALPHA president George Vaughn, Kansas City sophomore, said he agreed that this was an advancement for the Negro fraternities and for the IFC. George Ragsdale, Lawrence senior and chairman of the Civil Rights Council (CRC) could not be reached for comment. Ragsdale had expressed a strong desire at the Human Rights Council (HRC) and the IFC-sponsored, fraternity-sorority discrimination panel last week that the Negro fraternities should encourage Negroes to go through rush at KU. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 7,1964 Too Permissive Changing Student Adding its voice to the recent chorus of articles on the college student, the Daily Texan calls student immaturity "one of the byproducts of education. The more knowledge one has, the more one is exposed to the evils as well as the benefits of that knowledge. We're discovering problems we never knew existed. We haven't learned yet what to do about them." The following opinion that the University of Texas' paper reported is especially notable because of its opposition to the growing plea for academic and social freedom on American campuses. This is the rest of the editorial; STUDENTS MAY BE SMARTER than they used to be, but according to one writer, they may not have the maturity to go with their brains. Fred M. Hechinger, New York Times education writer, rounded up opinions of several experts which seem to indicate today's students might be intellectually superior and emotionally inferior to last generation's. Suicide rates among collegians are rising, more students are getting hooked on drugs, more students are dropping out because of academic battle fatigue. At Columbia College the number of undergraduates seeking professional counsel and psychiatry has tripled in the last ten years. This is but one of a long list of indicators of the rise in student emotional disorder in recent years. Why? Dr. Sutherland Miller Jr., director of Counseling Service at Columbia, says it's partly due to the diminishing influence of family, church, and college faculty. Families aren't as tightly knit, teachers are bogged down with research and "productivity," as Dr. Miller calls it. "GROWING UP is especially difficult in America because, although teenagers have extraordinary privileges in our society, college students enter the new world of adult values — status, wealth, power, and security — and suddenly find themselves at the bottom of the heap," Dr. Miller says. Other experts in the field indicate that colleges should define more explicitly the limits of permissiveness, as students don't know what is right and what isn't. They mistake lack of denial for sanction. What is the answer to student lack of direction? "Dean and college both agree," says Hechinger, "that less permissiveness is part of the answer — even if the college is subject to protests." "Psychologist and psychiatrist also agree that, in the face of facts and realities, better counseling and psychiatric services, far from being signs of "coddling," are a necessity," Hechinger says. Consider Democratic institutions can be made to work only if all concerned do their best to impart knowledge and to encourage rationality. But today, in the world's most powerful democracy, the politicians and their propagandists prefer to make nonsense of democratic procedures by appealing almost exclusively to the ignorance and irrationality of the electors. The political merchandisers appeal only to the weaknesses of voters, never to their potential strength. They make no attempt to educate the masses into becoming fit for self-government; they are content merely to manipulate and exploit them. For this purpose all the resources of psychology and the social sciences are mobilized and set to work. Carefully selected samples of the electorate are given "interviews in depth." Pirases and images aimed at allaying or, if necessary, enhancing these fears, at satisfying these wishes, at least symbolically, are then chosen by the experts, tried out on readers and audiences, changed or improved in the light of the information thus obtained. After which the political campaign is ready for the mass communicators. All that is now needed is money and a candidate who can be coached to look "sincere." Under the new dispensation, political principles and plans for specific action have come to lose most of their importance. The personality of the candidate and the way he is projected by the advertising experts are the things that really matter. In one way or another, as vigorous heman or kindly father, the candidate must be glamorous. He must also be an entertainer who never bores his audience. Inured to television and radio, that audience is accustomed to being distracted and does not like to be asked to concentrate or make a prolonged intellectual effort. All speeches by the entertainer-candidate must therefore be short and snappy. The great issues of the day must be dealt with in five minutes at the most — and preferably (since the audience will be eager to pass on to something a little livelier than inflation or the H-bomb) in sixty seconds flat. The nature of oratory is such that there has always been a tendency among politicians and clergymen to over-simplify complex issues. From a pulpit or a platform even the most conscientious of speakers finds it very difficult to tell the whole truth. The methods now being used to merchandise the political candidate as though he were a deodorant positively guarantee the electorate against ever hearing the truth about anything. — Brave New World Revisited, SPCA Special or I Liked Ike Aldous Huxley, 1958 He did it again. That's twice. President Johnson is bad, bad, bad. It was there on the front page of the Times—double photo spread. Papers get the significant news. The first time wasn't so bad. Maybe he just grabbed the wrong part. I want to be for him—I admire his mind. He has done a good job. Still, he did it twice? I'm smart. I know the second time was significant. No slip-ups. They got photos. I saw them. Right there on page one. Anyone who would do that is bad, bad, bad. Sure glad we got papers. Democratic process you've got to know what the president is doing. I sure know. - Albert Stroon JOE MCNAMARA BARE BONES MILITARY AD REQUEST CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET CHOPPERS © 1964 HERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON POST "Listen, Mac, You Trying To Spoil Our Fun Or Something?" People Say: Power Politicking Threatens ASC Power Politics Tuesday's ASC meeting demonstrated just how low a political party will stoop when it cannot get its way. Over 15, I repeat, over 15 Vox (haul) members failed to show up for the meeting, thus preventing any committee appointments from being enacted. It was a perfect example of power politics, whereby certain members hoped committee appointments would be changed. This act was an interesting political maneuver and, indeed, very effective. But is this responsible student government? Isn't it ironic that Vox, the party which claimed it could do so much for the students, should deliberately prevent any business from being conducted. Surely retaliation is to be expected? Heaven help this university if the student government has reached such a low ebb as to become a pawn for controlling committee appointments. Can Vox now claim the better absentee record? Can they be called the more responsible party? Hardly! Where are we heading? Is this a way to run our student government? Is the ASC, which has no party with a clear-cut majority, always to be at the mercy of Vox in order to get a quorum together so business can be transacted? The proceedings will become a farce (they came close Tuesday evening) and will remain that way until the student body becomes more important than political affiliation. * * Howard Hoffman Cranston, R. I. sophomore (Editor's Note: Vox members were at the meeting, but did not answer the roll call.) IFC Responds While Tom Coffman may have talent as an editorial writer, he is very inept as a reporter. His comments about the panel discussion on discrimination (editorial, "BRITTLE," Monday, May 4), indicate that he neither understood the discussion nor bothered to read the Kansan news account of the discussion (Story entitled "STUDENT PANEL REVIEWS DISCRIMINATION CONFLICT," by Susan Flood. April 30 issue). Coffman first states that he had the "distinct impression" that the IFC is unconcerned about the problem. He apparently attributes this impression to an alleged statement by IFC President Jim Johnston, which Coffman states as, "the IFC should stay out of the area of integration entirely." In the first place, Johnston did not make this statement. Secondly, Coffman failed to note three obvious refutals of this alleged statement: 1) Close work of the IFC with Sigma Nu on study of their discriminatory clause; 2) Johnston's appearance on panels of the type that Coffman served as a member do not seem to point to the fact that the IFC should stay out of integration; 3) As stated in the April 30th news article, the IFC has formulated a committee of seven IFC members to meet with the members of the CRCC, the administration, and Greeks, and to recommend policy and procedure to the IFC, both immediate and future. Coffman did not take the time or initiative to discuss these programs on the panel, so it is really not so surprising that he "forgot" to mention them in his editorial. Coffman again exercised a rather loose and uninformed interpretation of the proceedings of the panel, when he stated."...Johnston pulled out the rush pamphlet and pointed to two pictures of a president of a Negro fraternity sitting down with the white fellows." This picture is, in truth, in reference to a picture of the IFC executive council, of which Art Spears was a member. In opposition to the impression conveyed by Coffman, this picture was not an appeasement, an "undue honor," or anything to imply that the "IFC thinks they've got a tame one." It does show that a Negro, or any other Greek has the opportunity to be an officer of the IFC. Spears' position as secretary of the IFC did call for him to "sit down with the white fellows" and exercise his right and obligation as an officer to conduct IFC leadership. Coffman compares the Greek system to "a hollow and crumblly thing, . . ." only a skeletal form. It seems that the analogy better suits him. He apparently refuses to leave his shell to hear what is really being discussed rather than what he would like to hear. Perhaps Coffman should have stated So In A at the end of his editorial: FIC TION. Facts are to be found in the Kansan article of April 30th. The IFC Civil Rights Committee recognizes the fact that it is not a member of the debate team, and does not wish to carry a running debate with Coffman. It does, however, request that he pay more attention to facts when he determines the policy for editorials against "fraternity discrimination" as he states in the Kansan article of April 30th. IFC Committee on Civil Rights Dailij Hänsan 111 Flint Hall University of Kansas student newspaper UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904 treweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Member Inland Daily Press Association presented by National Advertising Service. 18 East 50 St. New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan.. every afternoon during the University year except Saturday, Wednesday, Thursday and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. University Daily Kansan Schools, Money Industry Seen As Voter Issues Page 3 Industrialization, education and fiscal policies will possibly be the main issues before voters in the upcoming Kansas elections, Kenneth Beasley, director of research for the Kansas legislative council, said. The issue of education is now being crystallized, Beasley said. A foundation program with provisions for junior colleges and technical schools is the major concern in this area, he said. "A lot of people are concerned about industrialization. They're not sure what is going on or what the effects would be," Beasley said yesterday at a Faculty Forum. He said when industrialization is encouraged and brought into the state, certain effects occur which cannot be predetermined. Given any change in the national economy, these areas in Western Kansas might become poor economic areas. Beasley said. prairie. At the present, Beasley explained, small and marginal industries are the most predominate in Kansas, especially in Western Kansas. "The legislators are really concerned about financing of local school districts," Beasley said. Both the foundation program and local school districts require funds, he pointed out. Concerning the fiscal issue, Beasley said. "The fiscal picture for the state is reasonably good." The state has enough money to pay the bills through 1966 with a flat five per cent increase in expenditures. increase in experience. However, Beasley said, this assumes that no new programs will be initiated and every candidate has committed himself to a major program. Beasley said there is an increasing movement in support of an earnings tax for Kansas. This support is centered in the rural areas. Official Bulletin Foreign students desiring housing in Fairhill should see Dean Coan's office. Catholic Masses, 5 p.m., 7.30 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. Rd. ascension Thursday—Holy Day of Obligation. TODAY Le pique-nique traditionnel du Cerulee francais aura lieu jeudi le sept mai à 17 h. 30 cher-Mademoiselle Crumrine, 920 rue Missouri. Quelques scenes dramatiques, announce des prix Pi Delta election. Tout un cas de présentation inscrit au bureau 103 Fesseur et payer 60 "cents" à la secrétaire avant merci merci solr. Philosophy Lecture, 7:30 p.m. 108 Strong. Dr. Erwin Harris. Rockefeller College, Dr. Erwin Harris. Western Civilization Lecture, 7:30 p.m. Museum of Art Lecture Room. "Art is the 20th Century?"—Gerald Bernstein, Dept of Art History. Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Everyone wel- comes. Minority Opinion Tape-Discussion, 8 p.m. 305 Kansas Union. College Life, 9 p.m. Forum, Room. Karolyn Weaver, at 10 a.m., showing the World's Fair. Thursday, May 7, 1964 Lawrobert, open. Baseball, 3 p.m., Quigley Field. KU- CINEMAS. Catholic Masses 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m. Leonardo, 1910 Stratford Rd. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Dunforth TOMORROW Jazz-Drama-Poetry Readings, 8 p. Wesley William Butter and All That. Jazzy Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth. --kansas union BOOKSTORE Jewish Community Center Services, 7:30 p.m. 917 Highland, Refreshments. 2014 Newman Married Couples, 8:30 p.m. St. Lawrence Center, 1910 Stratford Rd. Discussion group for next year. Call Brenda Bowes, VI 3-6263 for babysters. SUA Current Events Forum, 4:30 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union Brain washing—Can American Youth Beat 17°. Richard M. Leonard, Fort Leavant When Hallmark Plans a Party, you receive the compliments Hallmark SUA Film, 7 p.m. 9:30 p.m. Fraser Thater, "That Touch of Mink." 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 JOE'S BAKERY 616 W. 9th Open 24 hours except Saturday evening 25c delivery VI 3-4720 Milliken's SOS "the best professional service" * general typing service* * automatic typing* * 24 hr. answer serving* * mimecograph & photo-copying* $211\%$ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7 a.m.-11 p.m. RISK'S Shirt Finishing Laundry Wash & Fluff Dry 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 YELLOW CAB CO. VI 3-6333 24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled Read and Use Kansan Classifieds MATERNITY WARD MATERNITY WARD Three very important reasons for getting that Mother's Day Gift at Ober's Junior Miss Flowers for MOTHER'S DAY OWENS We wire flowers anywhere in the free world 9th & Ind. VI 3-6111 Ober's Junior Miss Flowers MOTHER'S OWEN GIVE YOUR SPRING AND GRADUATION GUESTS A K.U. SOUVENIR --- Demi-Spoon Sterling Silver KU seal in silver $4.10 Happy Birthday College Mug Navy blue or black with gold trim white with blue trim $3.25 With your initials and year on back $4.95 These and many other souvenirs Page 4 University Dairy Kansan Thursday, May 7, 1964 Writing Courses Changed Changes in the creative writing program aimed at clarification of purpose have been made by the English department. Most changes, effective in the fall semester, are in the beginning courses. The sophomore course "Introduction to Creative Writing" will be replaced by courses in "Narration and Description" and "Poetry Writing." This will provide a clear-cut choice of emphasis for the prospective enrollee. At the junior-senior level "Advanced Composition" is being retitled "Expository Writing" to describe more accurately its aims. "The Short Story" will become "Short Story Writing." A PRIVACY for your valuable papers as well as security. 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It's your opportunity to win a VALUABLE PRIZE — FREE! ---●--- DON'T DELAY — COME IN TODAY CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. 8th and New Hampshire VI3-4321 Open Thursday 'till 8:30 p.m. Downtown — Near Everything CITIES SERVICE 88 Finally! The 3rd Edition of the JAY-HAWKER is available. 8 The JAYHAWKER will be distributed today and Friday, 8:30 to 9:30 at the information booth. Your orange fall semester fee receipt is needed to pick up your Jayhawker Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 7.1964 MRA Plans Program To Orient New Men The Men's Residence Association (MRA) for the first time this fall is presenting a freshman orientation program for students new to the halls. The new program was originated before Spring vacation, Richard Reynolds, Shawnee Mission junior and co-chairman of the orientation program, said. Reynolds said that a single dorm program did not fulfill its purpose of adequately informing the students and rapidly integrating him into campus activities. Therefore, he explained, a new orientation program was thought necessary. ALTHOUGH MOST of the program has been outlined, Wayne Burdick, Overland Park junior and cochairman of the orientation program, said all guest speakers have not as yet been chosen. The new program, Burdick said, would be presented to the students in the form of an entertaining lyceum with a variety of speakers talking on a variety of subjects. For example, a professor might speak on study skills or a campus politician might spell out the methods and the significance of campus politics. The program will cover study skills, organizations, student government, dating and social life, automobile regulations, ROTC programs. Prof. Goodman was the major professor of the late Philip Newmark, who was associate professor of comparative biochemistry and physiology at KU from 1954 until his death in the summer of 1962. The award will be made in honor of the late Prof. Newmark. Jones earned the B.S. and M.S. degrees in chemistry at Tuskegee Institute, Ala., in 1557 and 1959 respectively. He has been at KU since 1959 and he will complete work for the Ph.D. degree late this summer. The first Philip Newmark award for excellence in biochemical research will be awarded May 13 at a special KU lecture. The $100 award will go to Fred Jones Jr., Eutau, Ala., graduate student in microbiology. Research Prize Honors Prof. MAKE YOUR NEXT MOVE Crescent Heights 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 ★ 1 Bedroom ★ 2 Bedrooms ★ Swimming Pool FOR INFORMATION CONTACT Crescent Heights Apts. Mgr. AUTO GLASS INSTALLED TABLE TOPS AUTO GLASS SUDDEN SERVICE East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 Program New Men nerals, campus publications, enrollment procedures, Burdick It is planned to be quick mov- ing, Reynolds explained, and last about an hour and a half. The ori- entation program will be presented at the outset of the school year pos- sibly during orientation week or the first week of classes. A QUESTIONNAIRE will also be reed, Reynolds said, to determine interests. The question- similar to a type used Pearson Hall and will what his inter- Reynolds said, save the new student a direct contance with the most produc- and influential people on cam- But most important, it would the student a feeling of the im- tance of various social and aca- tic endeavors around campus. If the new student can understand the role of the myriad of activities that take place on campus, he will be better able to establish his own role at KU." The PiT Crew INVITES YOU TO TGIF THIS FRIDAY AFTERNOON Our new outdoor patio provides the finest atmosphere for fun at THE SOUTHERN PIT "BEST SANDWICHES IN TOWN" Mon.-Thurs. — Open 2 p.m. to Midnight Fri.-Sat. — Open 11:30 a.m. to Midnight 1834 Mass. VI 3-96¢ AUTO GLASS INSTALLED TABLE TOPS AUTO GLASS SUDDEN SERVICE East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 The PIT Crew INVITES YOU TO TGIF THIS FRIDAY AFTERNOON Our new outdoor patio provides the finest atmosphere for fun at THE SOUTHERN PIT "BEST SANDWICHES IN TOWN" Mon. - Thurs. — Open 2 p.m. to Midni The Pit Crew KU For Over 100 Years, The Round Corner Drug Store Has Been Serving The Campus And Lawrence Residents We Have Built Our Reputation On The Best Products And The Finest Service We stock EVERY pharmaceutical, as well as these fine cosmetic lines: ★ Worth of Paris (exclusive) ★ Dorothy Gray (exclusive) ★ Revlon ★ Prince Matchabelli ★ Max Factor ★ D'orsay Shulton ★ Coty ★ Lanvin ★ Du Barry ★ Lentheric ★ Dana ★ Yardley ★ Ciro And many others . . . stop in and see our selection this weekend! The Round Corner Drug Store W 801 Mass. The Civili tion v Tuesd The 1:00 p on th We leade ter the Tuesc acting ilizat VI 3-0200 --- University Daily Kansan Page 2 Western Civilization Review Set Thursday, May 7,1964 The spring review for the Western Civilization comprehensive examination will be at 7:15 p.m. Monday and Tuesday in Fraser Theater. Western Civilization discussion leaders will review the first semester readings on Monday night and the second semester readings on Tuesday night, David H. Jones, acting director of the Western Civilization program, said. The examination will be given at 1:00 p.m., May 16, in rooms assigned on the IBM cards. Students are asked to bring only their student ID cards and pens for the test, Jones said. SOME OF THE IBM cards were marked 1:30 rather than 1:00, which is the proper time that the examination is scheduled. Students are asked to come at 1:00 rather than 1:30 since they will not be admitted into the test rooms after 1:00 p.m., Jones explained. should check with their discussion leaders or in the Western Civilization office for examination times. Students taking the honors examination will be given their oral examinations during next week. They Honor students will take the written examination at 2 p.m. on May 16. THIS EXAMINATION is required for students who plan to graduate from the following schools: College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Education, School of Chemical Engineering, and the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information. The summer examination will be given at 1 p.m. Saturday, July 25. 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 Patronize Kansan Advertisers WEEKEND DATE SPECIAL! YOUR DATE GETS TO BOWL EVERY OTHER GAME $ FREE $ 6 p.m. FRIDAY – 6 p.m. SUNDAY Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION MOM BOWLS FREE! Vickers presents Gifts Mothers Most Appreciate Treasures from far-away lands. Accessories for the discriminating hostess. High-styled summer jewelry. Gay aprons and towels. Colorful place mats. Exquisite jewel boxes. Reflect your good taste with a well-chosen gift for your mother selected from Lawrence’s largest selection of gifts at . . . Vickers Gift Shop (Across from the Granada) VI 3-5585 1023 Mass. YOUR DATE GETS TO BOWL EVERY OTHER GAME $ FREE $ 6 p.m. FRIDAY — 6 p.m. SUNDAY Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION MOM BOWLS FREE! WEEKEND DATE SPECIAL! YOUR DATE GETS TO BOWL EVERY OTHER GAME $ FREE $ 6 p.m. FRIDAY – 6 p.m. SUNDAY Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION MOM BOWLS FREE! Vickers presents Gifts Mothers Most Appreciate Treasures from far-away lands. Accessories for the discriminating hostess. High-styled summer jewelry. Gay aprons and towels. Colorful place mats. Exquisite jewel boxes. Reflect your good taste with a well-chosen gift for your mother selected from Lawrence's largest selection of gifts at . . . Vickers Gift Shop (Across from the Granada) VI 3-5585 1023 Mass. it's a brighter World with Buskens® CASUALS® SAVENA Perky shoes to match your every mood for summer fun! Pick a shade, pick a style ... the prices make the pickin' easy! MELINDA Royal College Shop 837 Mass. VI 3-4255 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 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! Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION MOM BOWLS FREE ! Vickers Gift Shop Vickers Gift Shop (Across from the Granada) VI 3-5585 1023 Mass. it's a brighter World with Buskens® CASUALS SAVENA Buskens CASUALS SAVENA Sandal Appointments Friday FISH FRY DINNER DATE ALL YOU CAN EAT $1.00 Holiday Inn Restaurant when are 65% and 35% good marks? . Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 7, 1964 Library Site Will Honor Ex-Teacher A long-time English teacher at KU will be memorialized when the William Savage Johnson reading room is opened May 21 in the enlarged and remodeled Watson Library at the University of Kansas. The ceremony naming the reading room of the department of special collections will feature talks by Charlton Hinman, University distinguished professor of English, "The First Quarto of Shakespeare's Richard II," and Mrs. Natalie Calderwood, associate professor of English, "William Savage Johnson: A Portrait." Funds for furnishings and decorations of the reading room have been provided by Mrs. Claudia Pendleton Johnson, a 1908 graduate of KU, in honor of her late husband. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe and Thomas R. Buckman, director of libraries, will participate in the program. WILLIAM SAVAGE JOHNSON taught at Kansas for 34 years and was chairman of the department of English from 1924 to 1940. A teacher and scholar, he made many gifts to the library of rare books and manuscripts in the field of English literature. Mrs. Johnson continued her husband's practice of enriching library collections until more than $10,000 has been given for the purchase of printed and manuscript materials The William Savage Johnson reading room will be the "public eye" for the new ground-floor home for KU's growing collection of rare books. More than 25 special collections of about 75,000 pieces will be kept in the new facilities, which include humidity control for preservation of the books. Display facilities for these prize attractions of the University have been provided through the $2,547 silver anniversary gift of the Class of 1938 of which Maurice Breidenthal, Jr., of Kansas City, was fund chairman. KU'S RARE BOOK collections will be enlarged soon. The class of 1964 has voted to use its gift of more than $3,000 for acquisitions in this area. Miss Alexandra Mason heads the special collections department which attracts visitors and inquires from all over the world. A recent visitor was David Foxon of the British Museum. UPVotesHonor Elects Officers The University Party voted to present an engraved gavel to its outgoing general secretary, Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission senior, and elected a number of officers and chairmen last night. Other officers elected by the general assembly were executive secretary, John Dunn, Hutchinson junior; recording secretary, Nancy Breedalenth, Kansas City junior; and treasurer, Wally Brown, Wichita freshman. UP's new general secretary is Harry Bretschneider, Kansas City, Mo., senior. Living district campaign chairmen ratified were Richard Reynolds, Shawnee Mission junior; William Reese, Hiawatha junior; Judith Sarazan, Shawnee Mission junior; and Thomas Elliott, Shawnee Mission sophomore. Larry Geiger, Mission sophomore, was elected constitution chairman. STUDENTS Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd KU Oboist Gets Five Encores Swarthout Recital Hall was filled last night to hear Malcolm Smith, Lawrence senior, present an hour long program on the oboe accompanied by a pianist, a violinist, a violist, a cellist, and a string orchestra. Smith's three numbers received five encores after the performance. Smith's three numbers were Sonata in A Minor by Telemann, Quartet in F Major by Mozart, and Concerto For Oboe and Strings by Vaughan Williams. Cut'n Curl BEAUTY SALON graduation permanents, sets, latest styles. VI 3-5569 843 N.H. LEONARD'S Standard Service "the best in car care" 706 W. 9th VI 3-9830 Patronize Your 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). Save time, money, storage space and trouble by using ACME'S cold storage. ACME will moth proof all your items free of charge and insure them up to $200.00. Call VI 3-5155 for free pick up. Acme → Acme 1 HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE HILLCREST — 1111 MASS. — THE MALLS M "People can go feet. T coordirn than it more s of the The It was Floyd Big Ei in a Illinois—two the erected Davies Eight Boulder time. 1. --- Thursday, May 7, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 9 Manning Strikes Back At Fiberglas Pole Critics "People will tell you that anybody can go out and catapult over 15 feet. This isn't true. It takes more coordination and timing with glass than it ever did with metal. Possibly more speed and strength too because of the higher grip." The speaker was fuming a little It was KU's veteran pole-vaulter Floyd Manning, who became the Big Eight's first 16-footer Saturday in a dual meet against Southern Illinois. The exact height was $16-1\frac{1}{4}$ —two and a quarter inches above the former all-time league high erected by Oklahoma State's George Davies in 1961. That $15-10\frac{1}{4}$ Big Eight Conference Championship at Boulder, was a world record at the time. metal pole," Manning continued his dissertation on a rare note. "Sometimes these fiberglas poles shatter when they break. They're not supposed to, but they do. Another thing is that new vaulters start by gripping too high and get thrown all over the place on the snap. I've seen a lot of them get flipped back on the runway or down in the box. They don't know where they're going to land. "Its more dangerous than the old "I don't know if any vaulter ever learns how to use it (the fiberglas pole) correctly. Right now I'd say Pennell (John, who holds the world record at $17 - \frac{3}{4}$) is the only one using it to the best of his ability." THE BLOND Oxnard, Calif. native became KU's first 15-footer just 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 a year ago as a junior. Now he's year. And there's much of the season day against Oklahoma and his own added almost a foot to his former remaining. Manning goes into his meet record of 15-0 won't be worth school record of 15-2 in less than a final dual of the spring here Satur- a farthing. A NAME YOU CAN TRUST Day or Night 1912 W. 25th CELESTE CAPRI DARBY Diamond Skull Keepsake A Keepsake engagement ring reflects love's warmth in its perfect center diamond, love's splendor in its superb styling. Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 MASS. Ph. VI 2-3416 Need a Ride? AUTHORITY Read the Classified Ads Advertisement Must Be Brought In With Garments One hour MARTINIZING the most DRY CLEANING wynA ONE HOUR `MARTINIZING` SPRING SPECIAL Another One Hour Martinizing First! ★ 15 DENIER ★ 100% NYLON ★ SEAMLESS ★ FIRST QUALITY ★ KNITTED HEEL BEAUTIFUL PAIR OF NYLON HOSSE FREE, WITH THIS CARD AND ANY DRY CLEANING ORDER OF $2.00 OR MORE. PAIR FREE ONE HOUR MARTINIZING 1407 MASSACHUSETTS Across from Junior High School ONE HOUR MARTINETON The most in DRY CLEANING ONE HOUR MARTINIZER'S OFFER GOOD THROUGH MAY 8,1964 Page 10 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 7,1964 Business School Honors Seniors Four seniors were honored as outstanding students Tuesday at the annual School of Business banquet. Those recognized were: Bruce D. Hall, Coffeyville, who received the Alba Kappa Psi key as the outstanding male graduate; Clyd R. Harms, Aruba, Netherlands Antilles, who was presented the Delta Sigma Pi key as the highest-ranking senior man in the School of Business; Elizabeth E. Dwyer, Wichita, who received the Phi Chi Theta scholarship key as the most outstanding senior woman in the School of Business or the department of economics, and Larry R. Gamble, Pittsburg, who received the Wall Street Journal student achievement award. Dean Joseph McGuire spoke at the banquet on the future of business education, emphasizing KU's role. Wiley Mitchell, associate dean, presented the awards. Last 2 days! Sidney Poitler Lilies of the Field 7:00 & 9:00 Granada THEATR...Telephone VI 3-5724 Starts SATURDAY . . . MGM Presents ELVIS PRESLEY KISSIN' COUSINS Panavision METROCOLOR NOW! WINNER OF 3 ACADEMY AWARDS! NOW! 24 GREAT STARS! HOW THE WEST 3 TOP DIRECTORS! WAS WON METROCOLOR ONE COMPLETE SHOW Box Office Open 6:45 Curtain 7:30 --- Feat. 7:50 Adults $1.25 --- Children 50c Call on us TODAY. Bring in this coupon and get our Registered Mechanic 10 POINT SAFETY CHECK — Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-965 "THE INCREDIBLE MR. LIMPET" Starts TONITE! Troy Donahue Connie Stevens "Palm Springs Weekend" and Robert Preston Tony Randall "I岛 of Love" Open 7:00 --- Starts Dusk FREE VACATION SERVICE - with this ad! Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40 2 Bonus Hits Sat. "AIR PATROL" "BLOOD LUST" ABSOLUTELY FREE!! 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 A.M. EVERY EVENING We will check (1) Cooling System (2) Fan Belts (3) Lights & Signal System (4) Wheel Bearings (5) Brakes (6) Wipers (7) Exhaust system (8) Steering (9) Fuel System and (10) Ignition System. OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350 Be Careful Be Sure Be safe Before Returning Home This Summer. VI 3-6697 9th & Miss. SANDERS MOTOR CO. Lincoln-Mercury Studebaker WHAT'S NEW IN THE MAY ATLANTIC? "The Squeeze on the Liberal University" by J. Douglas Brown: Can the liberal university survive in a climate of bigness, diversity, and visualization? And would values be lost if we succumbed to the concepts of the multiversities? "Liebling, Libel, and the Press": Louis M. Lyons discusses the responsibility of the press, the threat to the computers from libel suits and inadequate training of reporters. "The Computers of Tomorrow": Martin Greenberger analyzes the extent to which computers will reach into our daily lives. PLUS: "The Mad Strangler of Boston" by Erle Stanley Gardner, Tokyo and the Olympics", "People on the Trail of Fear", "A Rough Map of Greece". What happens when an outstanding staff of editors sets out to produce a magazine of the highest academic and culinary knowledge you know when you read The Atlantic. In each issue you'll find fresh new ideas, exciting literary techniques, current affairs and a high order of criticism. Get your copy today. Atlantic ON SAI NC Redman's Weekend Sp. Dress Flats Regularly priced to $7.99 Now $2.99 All Colors REDMAN'S SHOES 815 MASSACHUSETTS REMEMBER MOTHER'S DAY PAY TRIBUTE WITH THE BEAUTY OF FLOWERS SUNDAY, MAY 10 is MOTHER'S DAY HAVE YOU FORGOTTEN???? —We Wire Flowers Anywhere— ALLISON Flower AT THOMAS Shop VI 3-3255 941 Mass. 1953 four clean body chanical c at 1105 La Single fee sale. Also tion. Cal Aging, cseil 1960malt tratry (byoffer. One dine condition removable Danish M reupholst 25th, Apt noon; M tween 2 Furniture frigerato Danish 1 rug, coff Slightly set, bed room suil 8 p.m. LAWREN LECTION WEAPON ALSO R V 1-211 Wish to June 1. light an Barbara. Mobile 1 10'. Two- tioned, many exe- d 3 bl. Ideal fo- Blvd. C What k A nois converti drunk brakes. Priced er. Cal' 1959 bl many clean. I p.m. 1952 M engine. SPORT whites, four ple choice 15. 59 eye Ray Saw 923 Ma 640. 655 MICH RIBS TRY C FROM Roberts all corre mike. 1957 In seats. radio. new 90 tion. B Trium, good climbin $175. Weddirstairs. 1958 b Power tion, o Rose I New al sheets 1005 M Student .45 au- ture a bbl, 30 .22 lev $6.50 p.m. To su furnis minut centra Call V Ohio. Emerg. Efficie conta or ca Page 11 -Classified Ads FOR SALE 1953 four wheel drive Jeep pickup. Solid, clean body, 16" pty tires, perfect mechanical condition, new engine. $600. See at 1105 La. after 7 p.m. 5-13 Single featherweight sewing machine for sale. Also 1960 Vauxhall, excellent condition. Call VI 2-4262. 5-13 Aging, conservative faculty type must sell 1960 Dodge Dart. Four door, automatic transmission. Owner leaving country (by choice). See at 1963 RL. 5-13 One dineette set. 2 years old, excellent condition. Six chairs with matching tablecloths. Two Danish Modern chairs. 2 years old, need reupholstering. $10 each. See at: 25th Ave. and 3rd Street, before Monday, Wednesday, Friday, between 2 and 5 p.m. Furniture and appliances. 9 m. old. Refrigerator, electric stove, kitchen cabinet, gold-plated microwave. 6 m. tall coffee tables, end tables, table lamps. Slightly older: breakfast set, bedroom set, bedroom suite, floor table. 8 p.m. Suite. CALL VI 3-5464 between 6 and 8 p.m. LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. GOOD SELECTION. OF HANDGUNS. MISTER WEAPON. L I Y A N . WINNINGS. 101, WO. REBEU. REBLEUE. EVENINGS. 1026 OHIO. VI-21241. 5-12 Mobile Home. 1559 kit, Stateliner, 50' x 10'. Two bedrooms, carpeted, air-conditioned, washer, new hot water many extras, room located north of KU Med Center. Ideal for medical student. 3610 Rainbow Blyd. Call SK 1-0412. 5-12 Wish to sell girls English bicycle by June 1. In excellent condition. Racing light and wicker basket included. Call Bargara. VI 3-2399. 5-12 What kind of car can you buy for $20? A noisy, obnoxious, rusty, convoiced vehicle. A jalpy and wagon. Good tires, battery, and brakes. 840i; Kentucky after 5 p.m. 5-8 Priced to sell, 1956 Pontiac. Radio, heater. Call VI 3-3987. 5-11 1959 blue VW sedan. Whitewall tires, many accessories. Well cared for and clean. By owner. Call VI 2-3103, 5 to 7 p.m. 5-12 1952 MG-TD. Good condition, rebuilt engine. Call VI 3-0540 evenings. 5-11 SPORTS CAR TIRE CLEARANCE. Wide whites, discontinued tread design, all four ply tubeless, highest quality. Your choice. 560 x 13, 590 x 13, 600 x 15, 590 x 15, 600 x 15 = $15 each plus tax. exchange. Free installation at concession stores. Discount Tire Center 929 Mass. 415 Mercedes high speed safety 640 x 13'. Cut to $20 each. 5-11 MICH ST. BAR-B-Q FOR BAR-B-Q RIBS THAT ARE A TREAT TO EAT. TRY OURS AT 515 MICHIHAN. OPEN FROM 11 A.M. TO 11:30 P.M. 5-8 Triumph Cub. Recently rebuilt and in good condition. Excellent cycle for hill climbing, etc. Accept highest bid over $175. Call VI 2-4219. 5-7 1958 black and white ford convertible. Power steering and brakes, good condition, original owner. Call VI 3-5003, 1618 Rose Lane. 1957 Imperial. Power steering, brakes, seats, windows, and aero tires. radio, cassette, and display glass, near 900 x 14 whitewalls. Original condition. By owner. $995. Call VI 2-2588. 5-7 Wedding dress, size 7-8. 1817 La. Upstairs, west apartment. 4 to 6 pm. New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500 sheets to ream—$8.5. Lawrence Outlook. 1005 Mss. tf Student will sell all guns in collection, 45 auto's, Lugers. 38 revolvers, mini- ature automatics, Ruger 22's, 410A abbl. 30.06 Deer. 30 revolvers 30-20 lever action. While they last! 22 LR. $6.00 per carton. Call VI 3-1110 after 6 p.m. SPEED EQUIPMENT CHROME WHEELS, Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale at great savings after 9 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut tt St Typewriters, new and used portables, standards: electrics. Olympia, Hermes, Olivera Royal and Smith Corona portales. Typewriter, adder. rentals and service. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St. VI 3-3644. st Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete list of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery to $4.50 Western civilization. All new, completely comprehensive, extremely comprehensive. Graphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tt For Fulller Brush Products phone VI 3- 9040 after 5 p.m. FOR RENT To sublet for June, July, and August; furnished two bedroom apartment. Five minute walk from KU library. Modern central air-conditioning, carpeted, pool. Call VI 3-1405 after 4 p.m. or see at 1737 Ohio, Apt. 7. 5-13 Small two bedroom house. furnished or unfurnished. Near KU. Single couple or with small child. Can babysit. 833½ Missouri. 5-13 Emery Apartments available June 1. Efficiency and one bedroom. To see contact Milan Loupal, Apt. 204, Emery or call VI 3-8190. 5-19 Furnished air conditioned house for rent. Just south of KU. Two bedroom ranch style. Finished rec. room in basement. Ideal for 4 men. Call VI 2-0014. tif 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. Santee Academy, 1123 Ind., VI 3-2116. Bachelor Studio Apartment for graduate or older undergraduate men. $1_{1/2}$ blocks from Union, now easily reconnected nicely with institutes like Prairie Prep ideal study conditions. A few still available at low summer rates. Singles and doubles. For appointment call VI 3-8534. Large, homey, attractively furnished, 4 room apartment. For summer months at summer rates. Kitchen built-ins and garbage disposal. Utilities paid except for extra bills. Will rent for 3 room apt. Call VI 3-7677. Will rent for summer months. 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 5-116 for information. Single or double room. Furnished. cook- ing equipment paid. Call 1-8453 or see at 1244 La. Crescent Heights two bedroom apart- mt. Swimming pool. 25th and Red- bud. Phone VI 2-3711. tf Brown and white puppy. Mixture, like collie. Might answer to the name Trotski. If found contact Mr. Helms at 1000 Ohio. 5-7 TYPING experienced secretary would like typing his home. Reasonable rates. Call: 3-5139 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention on all reports, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate typing at reasonable rates. Call Donna Stewart VI 3-6621. tf Let me do your typing for you. Ex- port 4-311 or VI 3-4060. Bess. B-51 UN 4-3311 or VI 3-4060. Experienced secretary would like typing. 2566 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122. H 5-21 3949 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122. H 5-21 For expert typing, dissertation, thesis, work. Electric typewriter. 5-8 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, VI 2-0210. 5-12 Term papers accurately and neatly typed on good grade bond paper. Minor corrections, carbon copy, extra first page. Call VI 3-0875. 5-21 Fast. accurate work done on electric drive drives. Call Bettie Vincent, VI 3-6504. 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 Experienced secretary would like typing in home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 1188 Experienced typist with electric typewriter--fast accurate work with reason- sentations and theses, phone VI 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson. tt Accurate expert typet would like typing prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. these **Prompt service**. Call VI 3-2651. Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon printer. 9 AM to 5 PM. VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley. 408 West 13th. tf Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (plca type). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0558. tt form papers, Thesis, by experienced ypists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tf ★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT THE NAME FOR SERVICE TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, letters. Electric Typewriter. Mrs McEdlowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8686 tf ★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED Secretary will do typing in home. Fast legal terms. Marsha Göhler. VI 3-2577. Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Ms. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1645 ★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK MILKILLENS SOS—always nstr quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines. tape transcriptiones. Office hour 7 a.m. tabe 1 p.m. -12345 Man phone VI 3-5920. Dressmaking-aliterations, formats and gowns. Ola Smith. 939 $1. Massu V 3-5283 Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center. 916 Mass. VI 3-1267 i ★ MUFFLER SERVICE L&M CAFE now under new management WE WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. We have delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches. Your second cup of coffee always free, BUSINESS SERVICES MISCELLANEOUS ★ TUNE-UPS Lawrence Annual Coin Club. Show. Community Bldg., May 9 and 10. Public investors can purchase a coin will buy, sell or trade. Exhibit of rare foreign and domestic coins. 5-11 ★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M. Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. ART'S TEXACO 9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES The Catacombs nite club and Pizza Dien 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. WANTED Thursday, May 7, 1964 Ride to and from KC. Saturdays and or August. See Mrs. Wilson, 10-4 Stouffle University Daily Kansan FRATERNITY A complete line, including, • Lavaliers • Guards • Plins • Mugs • Rings • Crests JEWELRY Ray Christian JEWELERS IT'S OK TO OWE BAY 809 Mass. Seniors. cash - your rebate slips before the office, before you leave JRJ 1-0180 5-12 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 VOLKSAGEN’S WANTED. Cash for your VW. Conzelman Motors, VW Sales Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa. Hiway 59. Contact: (804) 657-7361. Interested in sales demonstrations. Write giving age, experience, type of instru- So. HELP WANTED Experienced typist, Full time. Capable of assuming responsibility. Fast, accurate typing a necessity, Salary open. Write 90x 20, 119 Flint Hall, Campus. 5-12 When buying diamonds Look for this sign MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY AGS MEMBER OF NATIONAS BRIDAS SERVICES In Lawrence, your Authorized Dealer is Delbert A. Eisele Marks Jewelers 817 Mass. VI 3-4266 Room and board in every nice home near campus. For right person interested in wearing with twin headphones (Ages 9, 6, 4.) Call Mrs. Milliken, VI 3-5947. Free room and board for graduate student or mature undergrad in private home in exchange for baby-sitting, doing dishes, and general mother's helper. Summer session, possibility for next year. Call VI 2-0493. 5-11 Summer work. Large corporation needs 3 male students for full time work. Car necessary. Apply: Student Union, Reunion 305A, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Thursday, May 7 KERBY'S DEPENDABLE STATION Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers - Specialists in all makes & models including sports cars "We'll pick up your car and deliver it FREE on any service call." - 'Vett headquarters mobilgas VI 3-9608 9th & Ky. AT HONN'S LAUNDRY IT'S Wheel Bal.- Oil - Wash- Lube Clean the cleanest laundry in town inspect our facilities, you'll agree Clean your whole wash-the Honn way Wash 20c Dry 10c Clean your 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 featuring Open-hearth charcoal broiled Steaks Chicken — Shrimp — Sandwiches Ribs Open: 4-Midnight Highway 59 South V12-947 Across from Hillcrest Golf Course Villain VI 2-9445 Interviews for GENERAL CHAIRMAN of Oread Jazz Festival Tuesday, May 12 Sign up now at SUA office DEADLINE—5 p.m., May 12 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 7, 1964 Psychologist Tells Colloquium Retarded Children Can Learn Two ideas regarding retarded children were presented yesterday at the psychology colloquium by Dr. Norman D. Ellis, professor of experimental psychology at Peabody College in Nashville, Tenn. The first idea Prof. Ellis presented was one aspect of his research seemed to demonstrate that retarded children are actually capable of retaining knowledge just as well as people of normal intelligence. He said this ability to remember was shown when he taught retarded children a task so they could repeat it five times without error. Their performance on a memory test given 30 days later was even a little bet- Contemporary apartments for summer rental or longer. These apartments are completely furnished, have two bedrooms and are air-conditioned. both normal and retarded people learn better when reinforcement was applied one-half second after presentation of stimulus rather than simultaneously. Prof. Ellis warns he has not yet been able to prove the consistency of the reinforcement discovery, but he hopes to establish this needed proof in the future. We are renting to college men, and we will allow four occupants in each apartment. These apartments are within walking distance of campus. ter than a performance of people with normal intelligence, Prof. Ellis said. The second idea was accidentally discovered during his investigations of mentally retarded children. Prof. Ellis said he discovered what may prove to be a general law for reinforcement learning. He discovered to his amazement Rates are from $90 to $105. Call VI 3-8241 during the day, and VI 3-9373 at night. CO STARRING GIG YOUNG • AURDIE FLEISCH Uproarious, Adult Sophisticated Comedy! CARY GRANT DORIS DAY "That Touch of Mink" in Eastman COLOR GIG YOUNG • AUDREY MEADOWS PLUS CARTOON 35c Feature Times: 7 & 9:30 p.m. Fraser Theater FRIDAY FLICKS Crexione Italiana PER Danielle MADE IN ITALY d. BOSTON See our collection of Italian sandals by Danielle Ring cross strap sandal. Nicotine, harness and white . . . . 6.99 SANDAL Slip on sandal in natural white and nicotine . . . . . 5.99 SANDALS Classic strap back thong sandal in nicotine, black, red, yellow turquoise and white 4.99 Step in thong. Nicotine or white 4.99 鞋 McCoy's Shoes A slip on with low cork wedge heel. Rust, harness and white. 5.99 SHOE Slip on thong in natural white, nicotine and harness .5.99 813 Mass. VI 3-2091 ART IN THE 20th CENTURY? Lecture by Mr. Gerald Bernstein 7:30 p.m. Tonight, Art Museum Approved by Western Civ. Program Orange Blossom DIAMOND RINGS Orange Blossom DIAMOND RINGS EMPRESS • PRICES FROM $125 TO $1500 AGS Marks JEWELERS 817 Mass. MEMBER OF AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY MEMBER OF NBS NATIONAL BRIDAL SERVICE 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.) AL/m World Spotlight Truman Celebrates With Senate Visit (Compiled from UPI Dispatches) WASHINGTON—Former President Harry S. Truman paid a nostaglic visit to the Senate today on his 80th birthday and spoke briefly at a Senate session—the first ex-President to do so. The chipper former chief executive was visibly moved by a standing ovation given him by senators and spectators in the gallery. Acknowledging the warm reception given him, Truman said: Truman appeared at a formal session of the Senate under a resolution passed last fall allowing ex-presidents to address a Senate session. "I'm so overcome that I can't take advantage of this rule right now." But after a moment, the former White House resident and one-time senator, his face a healthy-looking pink, said with a smile that the occasion was "one of the greatest things that has ever been done in my lifetime." He called the experience unique and noted "it's never been done before." * * WASHINGTON—The Senate, caught in an eddy of delay on the Civil Rights Bill, agreed today to forego a session tomorrow—its first Saturday off since March 28. Members applauded happily when Democratic Whip Hubert H. Humphrey, Minn., put through the agreement under which the Senate will recess tonight until 10 a.m. Monday. Meanwhile, some Senators were having second thoughts about their decision against imposing the debate gag rule to force southerners to a final vote on the Jury trial issue in the Civil Rights battle. * * LONDON—The Communist Chinese said today they are willing to meet once again with Soviet Communist leaders in an effort to patch up their long and deeply divisive dispute. But the Chinese charged that the Russians are trying to rush them into an immediate meeting and flatly accused the Kremlin of promoting an international Communist summit conference for the sole purpose of "effecting an open split." The Chinese statement rejected this pressure and said bi-lateral Sino-Soviet talks should be postponed for as much as a year. * * CHICAGO-Defiant railroad firemen buckled under a federal court order today and ended their wildcat walkout against the strategic Elgin. Joliet and Eastern railroad in Illinois. But a strike threat by workers on the St. Louis-Southwestern railroad (Cotton Belt) raised the possibility of more trouble on the tracks despite a nationwide rail agreement. U. S. District Court Judge Julius Hoffman issued the temporary restraining order prohibiting members of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen (BLFE) from manning picket lines at the EJ&E's sprawling yards in Joliet, Ill. * * PITTSBURGH—The general conference of the Methodist Church today urged the U.S. government to reexamine its policies toward Red China and Cuba and called for an end to the arms race on grounds that it is suicidal. A sweeping report on church-state relations was presented to the floor but then was ordered back to committee, thus apparently killing it for this session of the general conference which ends today. "It is our judgment that policies of isolation toward mainland China and Cuba should be carefully reexamined to determine whether their continuance will not intensify bitterness, and imprison rather than free the people in those lands from hardships, repression and authoritarian control," the conference said. sparks around the tree A big sign in front of the tree read: "Alderson, we think you're wrong." 61st Year, No. 136 Contacted last night, Alderson said he had no comment to make. No one would say who organized the demonstration. Several students remarked with a grin, that "We just happened to be at the right place at the right time." Dailu hansan MOUNT IS A MEMBER of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, but Gary Gradinger, Leawood junior and Phi Gam President, said the fraternity had nothing to do with the demonstration last night. "I know nothing about it, and this will be frowned upon by all of us," Gradinger said. ABOUT 10:40 P.M., the students assembled in front of a large tree just east of the Information Booth. Two men carried the dummy to the tree, slung a rope over a limb, and hoisted the dummy about seven feet off the ground. Lawrence, Kansas One of the men stepped forward and touched a match to the dummy and ran away as gusts of wind blew sparks around the tree. The demonstration lasted only about 20 minutes. Two KU policemen arrived when it was almost over and one of the policemen told the remaining students to leave. Dean Is Hanged in Effigy In Protest of Suspension Thunderstorms and mostly cloudy skies were predicted for tonight by the Weather Bureau. Winds are expected to be southerly 25 to 40 miles per hour tonight becoming moderate and northerly late tonight and Saturday. The temperature tonight is expected to be 60 degrees. Saturday skies are predicted to be partly cloudy. Weather They quickly dispersed, and the police extinguished the fire. A group of students last night protested the suspension of Michael Mount, Wichita senior, by hanging in effigy Donald K. Alderson, dean of men. Alderson chaired a meeting of the University Disciplinary Committee Tuesday which suspended Mount for writing a bomb scare note in the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. About 1,500 students have signed a petition protesting the suspension. The demonstration last night was attended by about 30 or 40 students who burned a dummy with Alderson's name tacked to it. Friday, May 8, 1964 KU Woman Plays Golf for Fun CONTACTED LAST NIGHT, Bill Mills, Topeka senior, said that approximately 1,500 persons have signed the petition which was circulated after Mount was suspended. Until She Wins. When asked if the petitions would be presented to the administration, Mills said he did not know. The use of petitions asking for University reconsideration of the suspension of Mount is undecided, according to a fraternity brother of the suspended student. TELEFHONED LAST NIGHT, Chancellor Wescoe said he did not know of the petitions and had no comment to make. "That's our problem. This is a different thing, and as far as we know, there is no precedent for this kind of petition." Mills said. Mills said he thought student petitions presented to the administration seldom had any effect, but that since so many students have signed the petitions, this action might be considered. "I just go to play, but she plays better and wins." By Russ Corbitt (Assistant Managing Editor) That is the way Joan Ashley, Chanute junior, compares herself to her sister, Jean, from Phoenix, Ariz., who has several times won the Kansas state golf title and other tournaments. Mrs. Becker retained her title by shooting a par 4 on the first overtime hole, while Miss Ashley had a 5. Mrs. Becker, the defending champion, also carded a 178, and a sudden death playoff was necessary to decide the championship. "I started playing golf when I was about nine But yesterday it was Mrs. Tillie Becker of Topeka that played just a little bit better and won. Miss Ashley finished the 36 holes of medal play in the Kansas Women's Tournament of Champions at the Lawrence Country Club with a score of 178. years old," Joan joked, "but I didn't start playing in tournaments until I was 11 or 12." She is a former Kansas State Junior Champion (under 18 years of age), and has entered many of the top national golf tournaments with her older sister Jean, a graduate of KU. "Jean is the golfer in the family," Joan said. "I just go along to the tournaments with her. I usually manage to qualify for the championship flight, but I never win anything." Jean has won the Broadmoor in Colorado Springs twice, and has been runnerup in the Western Amateur and National Amateur tournaments. The petitions are still circulating, Mills said. The petitions were sent to Greek houses first, and are just now getting round to the large residence halls, he said. Mills said that last night a large number of signatures were coming in from scholarship halls. Mills declined to say who initiated the petitions, but said they were not started by Phi Gamma Delta or himself. She was also a member of the Curtis Cup Team which played the English team two years ago. "We have just become the headquarters for the whole thing," Mills said. Jean is now teaching school in Phoenix, Ariz. but the sisters plan to enter the National Amateur which will be held at Hutchinson this year. "But I will have to lower my handicap if I expect to go," Joan said. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA was the victim of two bomb scares Monday. The first occurred shortly after midnight, when the KU switchboard operator was told a bomb would explode in several minutes. The Kappas were routed out of bed and stood outside for almost an hour while police searched the house. Mount said he heard about this incident from classmates the next day. Lawrence C. Woodruff, dean of students, said the call came shortly after Alderson had been hanged in effigy on campus in protest of the suspension of Michael Mount, Wichita senior. "If the hanging didn't get you at ten, the bomb will get you at two." Explosion Threatened In Alderson's Home A telephone caller threatened a bomb explosion last night in the house of Donald K. Alderson, dean of men. \* \* \* Labor Claims Vote Victory LONDON—(UPI) The opposition Labor Party claimed a smashing victory today in nationwide provincial elections that provided a preview to next fall's general election. The week-long balloting was for control of 390 town and county boroughs throughout England and Wales. The Laborites tallied up a net gain of 245 seats in yesterday's contests, making their total for the week 364. "It's even more than we hoped for," a Labor Party spokesman said this morning. THE LABORITES contended the results strengthened their confidence of beating the ruling Conservative Party in the general election that must be held before the second week of November. Labor, which has been out of office since 1951, is leading in all public opinion polls. "We have won a second straight victory in London," said Labor Party General Secretary Len Williams. Their gains included the key towns of Portsmouth, Reading, Rugby, Darlington, St. Albans, Clitheroe, and Ramsgate for the first time. Following up their victory in the election for the Greater London Council (GLC) last month, the Laborites yesterday took close to threequarters of the 32 London boroughs. THE BOROUGH ELECTIONS in London were significant because the divisions correspond to parliamentary constituencies. Last month Labor won control of the new 100-seat GLC by 64 seats to 36 for the Conservatives. The effigy hanging was at 10:40 p.m. POLICE INVESTIGATED the premises of the Alderson home after the threat. the anonymous male caller said to Alderson about 11:15 p.m., according to a police report. Dean Woodruff condemned the threatening phone call and the effigy hanging as "totally irresponsible" on the part of the students involved "We will not tolerate such threats to life and property." Woodruff said, "whether they be in jest or not." WOODRUFF SAID local authorities are investigating the bomb threat and the campus police are investigating the effigy hanging. The FBI has been advised in connection with the telephone threat. Woodruff said those trying to get Mount reinstated may be harming him because of the publicity which has arisen. "The attention coming from this irresponsibility could prejudice a profession against Mike's (Mount) future study," Woodruff said. Mount had planned to study law after being graduated, according to Woodruff. 24 Senior Men Named to Sachem Twenty-four juniors have been elected to membership in the Sachem Circle of Omicron Delta Kappa, senior men's honorary society. The 24 who will be initiated Sunday: Charles Marvin, Lawrence; George Barissa, Kansas City, Mo.; Karl Becker Jr., Wichita; Philip Smith, Onaga; Arlo Schurle, Green; Michael Milroy, Lawrence; Robert Shenk, Lawrence; William Cibes, Altmont; James S. Gough, Chanute; and James Johnston, Independence, Mo. Arthur Spears, Kansas City; Robert Enberg, McPherson; Charles Lanning, Lawrence; David Martin, Coffeville; John Atkinson, Topeka; Robert Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla.; George Benson, El Dorado; Colin Case, Colby; John Mullcoh, Abilene; M. Scott Linscott, Topeca; John Mays, Lyons; Terry Miller, Baxter Springs; H. Thompson Ritchie, Wichita; and Stephen Klemp, Lawrence. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, May 8, 1964 Financial Problem Many students now attending the University might not be able to get in if they had to start over. U. S. News and World Report points out that applicants are exceeding the space necessary to educate them. High grades and good entrance scores may not be enough for entry any more; Amherst only took one-sixth of its applicants this year and rejected 90 valedictorians. MORE THAN 50 per cent of high school graduates now enter college. The percentage of high school graduates hoping for college education continues to increase, rising even faster than the percentage of the population reaching college age. State universities are limiting the percentage of out-of-state students. What does this cause? Smaller colleges are getting more attention. JUNIOR COLLEGES and community colleges increasingly publicly supported—are getting much more attention. They will serve as filters for the larger four-year institutions, weeding out those who can't make the grade at a big school before those students try (and fail). While college attendance is expanding, a bill now in Congress might help the financially unable to pursue their education if they have the mental ability. a million students at relatively low federal cost. SENATE BILL 2490, sponsored by Sen. Vance Hartke (D., Ind.) presents a program balanced between loans, scholarships and student employment. Hartke says it will provide for more than The bill has four parts: 1) a program of four-year undergraduate scholarships to entering college freshmen. Grants up to $1,000 will be awarded on basis of need, academic promise and high school record. 2) INCREASED student loans would be provided by raising the loan limit of the National Defense Education Act from $1,000 to $1,500 for undergraduates and from $2,000 to $2,500 for graduate students. 3) Loans to full-time students making satisfactory academic progress would be insured. Loans so insured would be limited to $2,000 per academic year to any one borrower, up to $10,000 total. Repayments could be extended for a 10-year period following graduation. 4) A STUDENT work-study program would enhance student employment opportunities while contributing both to the college and the student's education. These would be in the form of research, public service, internships, and assistantships. BOOK REVIEWS \* \* \* Educational opportunities are broadening, but increasingly the intellectually capable will be favored over those merely financially capable. And bills such as Sen. Hartke's, if passed, will allow these students greater opportunity for academic pursuits free from financial worry. The Daily Texan PAINTED VEILS, by James Gibbons Huneker (Premier Classics, 50 cents). Premier has added a book to the series that includes such titles as "The Damnation of Theron Ware," "Main-Travelled Roads" and "Together." It is a little known book, written by a distinguished American critic, and it was published originally in 1920 in a small limited edition for private circulation. One critic viewed the book as "the literary turnstile into the libertine, hard-drinking, wisecracking early 20th-century New York." The book, a short one, is about a beautiful woman who corrupted everything she touched. Van Wyck Brooks wrote the introduction for the novel. - * * * THE MEN WHO ROBBED BRINK'S, told by Specs O'Keele to Bob Considine (Crest, 50 cents). Who is Specs O'Keefe? He is one of the ringleaders in the crime. Who is Bob Considine? He is an old-time Hearst writer who goes for splashy epics like this one. If you don't know what Brink's was, well, you're too young too care. This was what some people like to call the crime of the century, and it is described in entertaining yet documentary fashion in this book. THE BRAIN WATCHERS, by Martin L. Gross (Signet, 75 cents). $$ * * * * $$ This new paperback volume deals with the psychological testing industry and what the author views as its effects on the lives of millions of job-seekers. In writing his story, Gross attempts to trace "brain-watching" historically, from man's curiosity about other men to the monster machines that look into the minds and motivations of many of us today. Martin L. Gross has written for several magazines and studied social science at both CCNY and Columbia University. "The Brain Watchers" must be interpreted as a strong critical blast at what Gross sees as one more invasion of man. Brazil-A Land Of Hope and Despair By Vinay Kothari "OBA." This Portuguese expression has been uttered very often by tourists in Brazil. Meaning: WOW. Brazil, fifth largest country in size, eighth in population and 11th in gross domestic product, comes as a surprise to most non-Brazilians. The country, large as the United States minus Alaska, covers almost half of the South American continent. THE NAME BRAZIL comes from a reddish wood greatly prized by early colonists for dye. The nation, whose shape resembles a third finger diamond ring, has 4,889 miles of coast line on the Atlantic Ocean. Its boundaries include approximately 2,676 miles from north to south and 2,694 miles from east to west. Surrounded by its neighbors — Venezuela, Dutch, British and French Guiana in the North; Uruguay, Argentina and Paraguay in the South; the Atlantic Ocean in the East, and Bolivia, Peru and Colombia in the West — Brazil is added in its natural beauty by the great heavily wooded basin of the Amazon, which rises in the Peruvian Andes and empties into the Atlantic at the Equator. IT IS NOT THE MISSISSIPPI or Ganges waters that provide a facility for navigation in Brazil; it is the Amazon River that is navigable for only 1,700 miles, the extent of its course in Brazilian territory. Brazil has about 30,000 miles of navigable waterways. The Brazil's Niagara is the majestic falls of the Iguassu on the border of Parana, a southern state. Like Niagara, Iguassu is considered one of the natural wonders of the world. The flatness of the ground is reduced in Brazil by the two tallest mountains, Pico da Bandeira, 9,483 feet, and Roraima, 9,433, on the Venezuela-Guillania border. THE REPUBLIC OF BRAZIL, made up of 21 states, five territories, and a federal district, has only three major cities—Brasilia, Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo. All these three cities have characteristics of American cities. They have Chicago's and New York's slums and poverty. They have Kansas City's shacks and Diesel fumes. Their streets, like those of Detroit, are blocked with construction and, at one corner after another, they have shops with automobile tires, seat covers and chrome accessories. they explode for another day. Their streets become busy with noise and traffic. From one end of the city to the other, the ululations of street vendors, hawkers, beggars, and chloric motorists rise to a shrill crescendo." "There is never a time when these cities are really quiet," states Look magazine. "Very like New York and Chicago, there are only those few fleeting moments when the noise level falls down. But again SAO PAULO, BRAZIL'S largest city, already has passed the 3,700,-000 mark and surpassed Buenos Aires as the largest city in South America. The city is the industrial and economic center of Brazil. Brasilia, the capital, has attracted many politicians and foreigners from all over the world. Brasilia is slightly larger than Topeka in population. But the best-known city of Brazil is Rio de Janeiro, the former capital. Known for its seaport and resorts, Rio attracts hundreds of people every year, especially in hot weather. Rio's shadows of the striking monuments and the glare of its brilliant beaches represent a winter picture of Miami, Fla. Covered with beautiful and modern skyscrapers and luxuries, Rio is the home of more than 3,300,000 people. THE WEATHER OF Brazil is neither too cold in winter, nor too hot in summer. The weather is mild in most areas, except in the Amazon Basin. There the weather is hot and wet. It is subtropical in the highlands. The monsoon is only in the south during the months of October and Mav. The worst problem area of Brazil is the region of sugar cane plantations on the northeast coast near the city of Recife. Nature is the most cruel in this seven-state region as big as Venezuela, where one Brazilian in four lives. The climate is very dry. The region doesn't have enough water for fertilization of crops. It rains very rarely there, and when it rains, little moisture remains. Only four out of 100 drops of rain soak into the soil. The land in this area resembles the Arizona desert. Food and water get shorter every day. PEOPLE OF THE northeast are very poor and hard workers. They live with their big families in small huts. They are uneducated and unfed. Despite hard work, they have to worry for each meal. Their chief foods are beans and manioc flour. There are no good facilities available for education and medication. It is not uncommon to find only one or two medical doctors and one or two primary and secondary schools within an area of 200 miles. Four out of 10 babies die before they are a year old. The work is not enough for the people. Poverty in this region is a major cause of alcoholism and laziness. SOMETIMES THIS POVERTY becomes so unbearable that people leave their homes and go to big cities with a hope for a new and better life. People are moving constantly from rural communities to urban communities. They are running away from the hardship of farming and agriculture. Two decades ago, 70 per cent of the working population was in agriculture, but now only 58 per cent. BUT THE URBAN life is better and more prosperous than the rural life. For example, life in Rio is easy and more advanced. The unemployment percentage is very low. People do not have to work hard like northeast farmers and laborers. Cariocas, as the people of Rio are called, are quite different from rural workers. They are singular and exciting. Life for them is not a challenge. Life for them is to enjoy, not to complain. Each carioca lives as well as he can, and doesn't miss what he doesn't have. And work for them is a matter of choice, not a necessity. Look magazine points out that the question of work in Rio depends upon three questions: "Is it a good day for an outing at the beach? How soon is carnival? And is there a futebol game somewhere, either to play in or to watch?" (Traditional carnivals are big events for most Brazilians.) And if answers to these questions are affirmative, Cariocas don't work. This doesn't mean that they don't work at all. They work, when they must. When they do, they work well. THE LIFE OF A BRAZILIAN as a whole is far better than the life of most Asians. Brazil has better economic future for her people. The nation raises beef and a vast quantity of manioc, corn, rice, beans, potatoes, black peppers, etc. Gems are among the resources that make Brazil potentially one of the earth's richest nations. Brazil's principal resources are iron ore, manganese and coal. Nearly a fourth of the world's iron reserves are in the mining state of Minas Gerais, the bulk of it awaiting the miner's pick. Brazil's industrial revolution has been able to transfer her rural economy, specializing in the production of a few tropical agricultural commodities for export, into a recognizable industrial economy. The industry appears to have attained enough size and a sufficient degree of internal diversification to set the nation on the course of self- industry supports about 13 per cent of its people in its chemicals, textiles, steel, and machinery divisions. THE COUNTRY IS ADVANCING so fast in its industrial system that the system already has fulfilled about 70 per cent demand of the nation for industrial equipment, particularly for heavy electrical machinery, machine tools and oil country gear. The nation is considered underdeveloped because of its annual income per capita. The 1962 figure of annual income per capita was equivalent to $380, which is only a seventh of that of the United States and which is not much more than twice the average prevailing in other underdeveloped countries. Brazil is a melting pot of races. Most of the people are mixtures of Indian, Negro and European stock. An average Brazilian has brown skin; but it's not difficult to find some people with white and black skin. History presents a record of descendants of Portuguese colonists, of the Indians they subjugated, and of slaves from Africa, Europe, Japan, and the Middle East have sent their tides of immigrants. Brazilians more or less resemble Asians. They are neither as tall as Americans, nor are they as short as Chinese. The women are beautiful. It's their belief in themselves — as sensual, attractive and, above all, feminine beings—that makes women more beautiful, says Look magazine. Unlike most European and American women, they don't have the desire to compete with men. THE ONLY PORTUGUESE- speaking country in South America, where freedom of worship is guaranteed. Brazil is predominantly Roman Catholic. Religion is not a big issue in Brazil. Despite compulsory and free primary education, illiteracy is high. Facilities for higher education are not as good as in the United States. There are more than 500 universities, including the University of Brazil and three Catholic universities. The United States is not the only nation where military training is compulsory. In Brazil all males between the ages of 18 and 45 are obliged to take six years of military duties, one year of service in the first line and five years in the reserve, under the selective service system. Brazil has the strongest air force in South America, and is equipped with American-built planes. The history of Brazil goes back to the early 16th century when it was actually discovered by Pedro Alvarez Cabral, a Portuguese navigator. Developed as a Portuguese colony, Brazil transferred the seat of government to Rio in 1808. The kingdom then was given to Dom Joao VI. On Sept. 7, 1822, the independence of the country was proclaimed by Pedro I, who was acclaimed emperor Oct. 12, 1822. A revolution that drove away the second emperor, Pedro II, from the throne established Brazil as a republic on Nov. 15, 1889. Since then Brazil has been called the United States of Brazil. Dailij Irfansan UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office 111 Flint Hall wetness of Kansas student newspa University of Kansas student newspaper 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, Unive.sity holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas NEWS DEPARTMENT Mike Miller ... Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Tom Conman Editorial Editor Vinay Kothari and Margaret Hughes Assistant Editorial Editors sustained economic growth. The Bob Brooks Business Manager Editorial Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Page 3 ime. goes was, Bob Editor Editor Editors nager Around the Campus Capt. Gruber to Leave Capt. Richard D. Gruber, professor of naval science and commanding officer of the Naval ROTC unit for the past three years will leave in the first week of June for a new assignment. Captain Gruber will report to Belgrade, Yugoslavia, as the U.S. Naval attache on the staff of the U.S. Ambassador. Captain Gruber was on the staff for U.S. Allied Forces in Southern Europe (Italy) before coming to KU. Mrs. Gruber also will take a language course in preparation for the Yugoslav assignment. Robert Gruber, their son, a freshman, will continue his studies here. The last Peace Corps examination for students who wish to participate in the Peace Corps Senior Year program will be at 8:30 a.m. tomorrow in the Lawrence Post Office. The Senior Year Program is a new program which has been developed for college juniors who wish to begin their Peace Corps training immediately after their junior year, Donna Hanneman, Junction City junior, said. Peace Corps Deadline "The three-phase program includes a summer training session between the applicant's junior and senior years, continued study during the senior year, and a final training session after graduation," Miss Hanneman said. Talk on Brainwashing Brainwashing will be the topic of a talk by Col. Richard M. Leonard at 4:30 p.m.today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. University Daily Kansan Col. Leonard, chief of non-resident instruction at the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, has more than 21 years of experience in the Army. He served in Korea and was an observer for the U.N. in the 1948 Arab-Israel crisis. Now instructing more than 2,400 students, Col. Leonard will discuss, "Brainwashing: Can American Youth Beat It?" KU Winners to Oklahoma Stephenson Hall, winners of KU's College Bowl competition will be traveling to Norman, Okla., this weekend. The second Big Eight College Bowl contest is tomorrow afternoon at the University of Oklahoma. In the three years that there has been a college bowl at KU, Stephenson Hall has won every time. The hall also is defending Big Eight champion. The participants from Stephenson are Woodrow Dale Brownawell, Kansas City senior; James Girard, Wichita sophomore; Gary Gregg, Coldwater freshman; Ronald Jones, St. John senior, and Gerald Duffin, Leavenworth junior. Lawyers to Select Queen Candidates for this year's queen are: Susanne Northcutt, Vernal, Utah, junior; Lorena Peterson, Salina sophomore; Gigi Gibson, Independence junior; Patricia Cram, Larned sophomore; Jolana Wright, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Deborah Galbraith, Wichita sophomore; Janet Starr, Hollywood, Calif., junior; Constance Crum, Manhattan freshman; Margaret Jones, Moultrie, Ga., senior; and Mary Lasley, Shawnee Mission sophomore. Queen candidates for Law Fun Day will be selected at 10 a.m. tomorrow in Fraser Theater. The queen will be crowned Miss Res Ipsa Loquitur (the facts speak for themselves). WASHINGTON — (UPI)— President Johnson is clothes conscious—and the women in his life are glad of it. The President has many preferences concerning the way he wants his wife Lady Bird and his two daughters, Lynda, 20, and Luci. 16 to dress. He likes bright colors—on the First Lady, particularly red. He also prefers the slim line. He does not like full skirts and all the flair he will take is the A-line. JOHNSON ADMIRES THE woman who is well groomed, and he is the first to compliment his wife and daughters when he is especially pleased with the way they look. LBJ Likes Red. Slim Line Dresses For His Women He compliments others on their pretty basic black dresses even though he likes his wife to wear gay colors. The President has a lot to say about what is worn in the Johnson family. When he takes a hand in the shopping, "more money is spent and more clothes will be bought," Mrs. Johnson's press secretary, Mrs. Elizabeth Carpenter, said. Mrs. Johnson wears a size 10 slender. Whenever the President brings home a new outfit for her or a daughter, he likes to see the costume modeled. He is quick to say if he doesn't like it. JOHNSON ONCE ASKED a newswoman, "Why don't you wear that pink lipstick like Jackie (Kennedy)?" By Helen Thomas A couple of weeks ago when he went through a vocational school where about 50 unemployed women were being retrained as cosmetologists, Johnson told them he had "six women at the White House" who needed their expert help. He frequently suggests his wife and girls visit the hairdresser. MRS. JOHNSON TELLS her hairdresser that her husband likes her hair style to be conservative. But once when she had it done in a spectacular evening coiffure with an extra hairpiece, Luci bounced in, took a look and said, "I don't care what Daddy says, you look gorgeous and elegant." Steak Dinner Sunday Nites $1.25 4:30 - 10:30 DINE-A-MITE 630 kc 23rd & La. is ready to serve you air time: 4-12 p.m., Sun.-Fri. KUOK selected sounds for KU students Tues.-Sun. till 4 a.m. at 109 W. 6th St. BOYD'S CAFE on TV Color TV Antennae Prompt Electronic Service Hi-fi Stereos Changer Changers Motorola Airline Radios Transistors Car Radios RCA - We Service All Makes - GE Philco Zenith Silvertone Magnavox Coronado Bird TV-Radio Service PHONE VI 3-8855 908 Mass. St. — Lawrence, Kans. --complete tour of NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR INCLUDED --complete tour of NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR INCLUDED EUROPE 10 countries -35 days Call VI 2-1689 (Henrike Wilhelm) now for your reservations with Adams' Student Tours --- MAYFLOWER Mayflower moves better for free at mayflower.com MAYFLOWER Mayflower moves it better Goods in this van are PROTECTED by the Best-Trained moving men in town! AT LAWRENCE MAYFLOWER 609 MASS. When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified NEW! The finest new men's cologne to hit the market in many years. It combines the freshness of spring with a manly scent that you'll really like. It's styled for men by the finest manufacturer Canoe by Dana Featured This Week At The Round Corner Drug Store 801 Mass. VI 3-0200 Page 4 University Dany Kansan Friday, May 8,1964 Weaver Our 107th Year Great Gift Idea Famous Name Watches at Terrific Savings! LOOK AT THESE FEATURES: Over 40 styles of men's and women's 17,21,25 jewel watches 14K gold cases, ultra-thin models too stainless steel back automatisch, waterproof and shock resistant models included incabloc movements wide choice of bands sweep second hands. Guaranteed by the manufacturers and by Weavers Values from $45.00 to $85.00 2988 10 9 I am not sure what the image is trying to convey. It looks like a sketch of a woman wearing a crop top and skirt. The crop top has floral patterns, while the skirt is black. forecast: forecast: SUN 'N SUMMER JANTZEN views this summer in two parts all the way and we agree — the new two piece knits are the most alluring swim fashions to hit the beaches in years. Pictured, a pretty nylon tricot top over 91% stretch nylon, 9% spandex maillot. Virtually weightless. 17. 95 S-T-R-E-T-C-H into summer with this long lean pant created by White Stag in cool vertical stretch cotton in weathered colors, 8-18 at 9.00 paired with another fabulous stretchable in 100% knitted stretch cotton, S, M, L. 3.00 WE WELCOME STUDENT CHARGE ACCOUNTS Inquire at our 3rd fl. office mood of summer in this no-iron chambray of 65% DacWHITE STAG'S piped blazer captures the carefree cotton 25% cotton WHITE STAG'S piped blazer captures the carefree iron polyester, 35% cotton. Weathered blue or red demin piped in white 10.00 Surfer to match 8.00 12 Dc Gr Page 5 Dandelions Vs. Greeks, B-G Crew University Daily Kansan The dandelions out-waited the Greeks and are over-growing Buildings and Grounds. The Taraxacum ossiciniles, as Dr. Robert Beer, professor of entomology, calls the KU type of dandelion, sprouts every spring with a sea of white stems and usually disappears after three weeks. KU Greeks had planned to dig up dandelions during Greek Week in a contest for the heaviest collection of dandelions. The campaign had been decided upon as aid for ridding the campus of the unsightly rash of dandelions this spring, but the cold weather postponed the March arrival of the dandelions, Jim Johnston, Independence. Mo., junior and president of the IFC, said. The dandelions will disappear by the middle of May, just about the time KU students will begin studying for finals. THE MAIN THING that B&G is doing is to cut the dandelions, although the dandelions make a comeback every 36 hours. the weeds are eventually choked out by the grasses, but as sure as spring occurs each year, the dandelions will return a year from now. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Steak Dinner Sunday Nites $1.25 4:30 - 10:30 DINE-A-MITE 23rd & La. Messages Bill called for midnight snack----after closing Open 24 Hours Holiday Inn Restaurant Friday, May 8,1964 The Castle Tearoom For Your Dining pleasure 1307 Mass. VI 3-1151 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers DAYLIGHT DONUTS ZUMMMMM GOOD 530 W. 23rd St. DAYLIGHT DONUTS 530 W. 23rd St. DAYLIGHT DONUT SHOP Flowers for MOTHER'S DAY OWENS We wire flowers anywhere in the free world 9th & Ind. VI 3-6111 Flowers MOTHER'S OWEI Flowers for MOTHER'S DAY OWENS We wire flowers anywhere in the free world 9th & Ind. VI 3-6111 O for the finest in AUTO REPAIR... bring your car out to 'PETE & DOC' AUTO REPAIR 2309 HASKELL VI 2-2990 Fun is living in Park Plaza JOHN ADAMS 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 1912 W. 25th When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Cole of California terriill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS terrill's presents LAWRENCE, KANSAS the finest selection of swimmer-styled suits and swimwear for spring & summer Cole of California Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, May 8, 1964 Harris Describes World Order Under a world government, many of the potentially volatile international problems of today would disappear, and both revolution and war would be "domesticated," Prof. Errol E. Harris said last night. In his twenty-fourth lecture on war and peace, Prof. Harris discussed eight of the main international problems of today and the effect a world government would have upon them. NATIONS INVOLVED in power politics often attempt to make use of international problems for their own advantage in the cold war, he said. Under a world government this practice would cease. "Under a world government, individual persons, and not sovereign nations, would be subject to international law," Prof. Harris said. "Disputes in courts, therefore, would Contemporary apartments for summer rental or longer. These apartments are completely furnished, have two bedrooms and are air-conditioned. We are renting to college men, and we will allow four occupants in each apartment. These apartments are within walking distance of campus. always be between persons." Rates are from $90 to $105. Call VI 3-8241 during the day, and VI 3-9373 at night. rather than the economic assets they once were, Prof. Harris said. BUT SINCE THE advent of nuclear weapons and long-range missiles, the strategic value of colonies to their mother countries has declined. "Any recalcitrant nation would be faced, not by a disarmed opponent or by a group of law-abiding but powerless states, but by a supranational authority equipped with all the organized power of the other states." Choose Your Point Under a world government, the problems of arms control and disarmament would be finally solved, he said. For once, in the case of a breach by one side of the disarmament agreement, the law-abiding side would not be at a loss. Extra Fine Extra Fine Fine Medium Broad Sine PARKER The present problem of colonialism is mainly because colonies are treated today as $ \mathrm{a_{s}} $ strategic assets Available in PARKER t Ball JOTTER PEN $198 Choose the point that best fits your individual writing style. Parker Jotter with exclusive textured point out-writes, outperforms other ball-pens. Choice of five brilliant barrel colors. Prof. Harris said under a world government, however, imperialism would vanish, and all territories would be members of the world union. GET THE BEST! PARKER! Prof. Harris referred to problems of race relations and human rights as problems of psychology and social conditioning rather than of international politics. KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE Entertainment Guide Funny Girl starring Barbra Streisand on LP Records VI3-6188 925 Mass. The Year's most Uproarious, Adult Sophisticated Comedy! CARY GRANT DORIS DAY "That Touch of Mink" Eastman COLOR "Tha GIG YOUNG·AUDREY MEADOWS Plus Cartoon 35c Feature Times: 7 & 9:30 p.m. Fraser Theater FRIDAY FLICKS for the finest in Steaks its... ★ Charcoal Broiled Steaks ★ Cooked to your taste ★ Service to please you CHUCK WAGON 24th & Iowa VI 3-9844 Special!...for MOTHER'S DAY A Beautiful Free Orchid TO THE FIRST 100 MOTHERS ATTENDING EACH THEATRE SUNDAY Granada TREATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 ENDS TONITE... "Lilies of the Field" Shows at 7:00 & 9:00 TOMORROW! M.G.M Presents ELVIS PRESLEY in two roles for the first time! KI$aIN'COUSINS TOMORROW! IT'S MOUNTAIN SMOOCHIN'... as Elvis joins his mountain kinfolk for a hilarious hoedown! M-G-M Presley's. ELVIS PRESLEY in two roles for the first time! KiSain COUSINS in Panavision and METROCOLOR SATURDAY — Matinee 2:00 Evening 7:00 SATURDAY — Matinee 2:00 Evening 7:00 & 9:00 SUNDAY — Continuous 2:30 - 4:40 - 6:50 - 9:00 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1063 Now Showing! Evenings at 7:30 Only Mat. Sat. & Sun. at 2:00 24 GREAT STARS! 3 TOP DIRECTORS! METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER and CINERAMA present HOW THE WEST WAS WON METROCOLOR® THIS ATTRACTION—ADULTS $1.25—CHILDREN 50 TONITE & SAT... TONITE & SAT... Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on Highway 40 "PALM SPRINGS WEEKEND" and "ISLAND OF LOVE" 2 BONUS FEATURES SAT. "AIR PATROL" & "BLOOD LUST" Starts SUNDAY... A special engagement of "PT 109" starring Cliff Robertson and HENRY FONDA in "SPENCER'S MOUNTAIN" Friday, May 8, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 2 Religious Art and Drama Festival Reaches Peak By Susan Hartley A Festival on Religious Art and Drama, sponsored by the KU Religious Drama Group and the St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, which began with an exhibition on religious art in the Kansas Union, and will end with two evenings of religious drama tonight and tomorrow night. The art exhibition, in the Browsing Room, will run through next week, featuring a set of prints by Kansan artist Robert Hodgell, several paintings by Ann Nunley and a display of sacramental vestaments and vessels belonging to local churches and student religious organizations. fixion" and "The Resurrection," will be presented along with a monologue from the play "Zoo Story" by Edward Albee. The breaks between performances will be filled by a jazz group directed by Herb Smith. A program entitled "W. B. Yeats and all that Jazz" will be presented at 8 p.m. today at the Wesley Foundation, 1314 Oread. Two plays by Yeats, "The Cruci- "A Sleep of Prisoners," by Christopher Fry will be presented at 8 p.m. at Westminster Center, 1204 Oread. The play deals with four prisoners of war imprisoned in a church, and their dreams, which revealed conflicts between their character and their philosophy, threatening their ideas of what life was about. The KU Religious Drama Group, along with the St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center who presented the festival, is an interdenominational group composed of seven student religious associations for the purpose of exploring what the arts have to offer to the church and what the church has to offer the arts. Entertainment Guide ...the more the "MERRIER" at... DIXON'S DRIVE-IN "where food is better" FAST DELIVERY 7 DAYS A WEEK... 2500 W 6th NEW MANAGEMENT SPECIAL AT THE CATACOMBS 7TH & MASS. FREE PITCHER WITH EACH LARGE PIZZA! FRIDAY, MAY 8 AND SATURDAY, MAY 9 Dance to the music of the Clovers "Twist and Shout," "Money," and many others COUPON Free Pitcher with each Large Pizza at the Catacombs Friday May 8 & Saturday May 9 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, May 8, 1964 Protest Fails to Materialize A rally protesting the new KU traffic regulations failed to materialize late yesterday afternoon. Only a few curious students drove by, and all who stopped said they did not know who had circulated the signs for a protest rally to start in Zone N at 4:30. Several members of the All Student Council were stationed at Zone N to suggest to students that a protest rally was not the best way to show their dissatisfaction with the regulations. "THIS SHOULD BE approached through the proper channels if students feel a display of concern is still necessary," Bob Stewart, student body president and Bartlesville, Okla., junior, said. "It would be better to show individual concern by talking to the dean of students or to Vice-Chancellor Lawton. Many of the council members would be glad to explain their understanding of Lawton's explanation at the council meeting Tuesday night." Stewart said. ANOTHER COUNCIL MEMBER, James Cline, Rockford, Ill., junior, said he felt there was still some chance of negotiation with the administration and he did not think a rally was in order. Stewart said he felt the failure of the protest rally to materialize was an "indication that the students are interested in a more responsible approach to the traffic regulation changes." Official Bulletin TODAY Baseball. 3 p.m., Quigley Field. KU-Oklahoma. SUA Current Events Forum, 4:30 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union. "Brainwashing—Can American Youth Beat It?" Richard M. Leonard, Fort Leavenham. SUA Film, 7 p.m., 9:30 p.m., Fraser Theater, "That Touch of Mink." Inleaver Hait Rouen 60 Mrkw Jewish Community Center Services, 7501 N. Canyon Rd. Suite 284 Jazz-Drama-Poetry Readings, 8 p.m. Brown-illustrated by William Yeats and All That Jazz. Newman Married Couples, 8:30 p.m. St. Lawrence Center, 1910 Stratford Rd. North Beach, 125 East Cana da and plan for next call. Call Brenda Bowes. VI 3-6263 for babysitters Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth. St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center Clean-Up Day, 8 a.m.-2 p.m. TOMORROW Peace Corps Examination, 8:30 a.m. U.S. Post Office, 7th and New Hampshire. No pre-registration required. Baseball, 10:30 a.m. KU-Oklahoma U. Intra-Squad Football, 1 p.m. Memorial Stadium Baseball, 10:30 a.m. KU-Oklahoma U Quincy Field Language Proficiency Examination, 1:30 p.m. Latin, 206B, Fraser; German, 119 Fraser; French, 124 Malott; Spanish, 411 Summerfield. Outdoor Track, 3 p.m. KU-Oklahoma U. Memorial Stadium Navy Ring Dance, 8 p.m. Ballroom, Kansas Union. SUNDAY Oread Friends Meeting, 10:30 a.m. Danforth Chapel. SUA Chess Club. 2 p.m. Kansas Union. Carrill Recital. 3 p.m. AlgerenKerkin. Carillon Recital, 3 p.m. Albert Gerken. German Club Picnic, 3-6 p.m. Leavenworth. Meet in front of Fraser Hall at 3. Rides available. Election of officers. All members urged to attend. Students of German, faculty and friends cordially in- University Band Concert, 3:30 p.m. University Theater. Faculty Club Buffet, 5 p.m. Merrell D. Clubh worker MONDAY Faculty Club Duplicate Bridge, 7:30 n.m. KU Dames, 7:30 p.m. Watkins Room, Kansas Union, Dr. Helen Gilles, pediatrician, speaker. Election of officers. All student wives invited. Senior Recital, 8 p.m. Joan Gilson, pianist, Swarthout, Hall. With the big parties, honor banquets and steak fries coming up.you will want to always look your best. @ Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN DOWNTOWN PLANT 900 Miss. 740 Vt. Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi K Europe for Less All Student Trips EUROPE — Cavalier sails June 19 and returns August 6-11 countries, from $1154.50. Tupenny sails June 30—49 days, 15 countries, from $1160. ROUND THE WORLD - 8th annual World tour, 54 days, 16 countries, from $2595. Enjoy all-expense-paid travel with others your own age who share your interests. Special student sailings. Escorted. 15 years experience. Get full details from your local travel agent or write American Youth Abroad, 70 University Sta., Minneapolis, Minn. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers terrill's FEATURES THE FINEST SELECTION OF LADY MANHATTAN SELECTION OF LADY Lady Manhattan COUNTRY COUSINS Here's a Lady Manhattan Country Cousins shirt in a woven shadow stripe of 100% cotton that's bound to be on the "must have" list of busy women everywhere! The ideal companion for suits, skirts, pants, it's meticulously tailored with the kind of good details that generally go with much more expensive shirts. For instance: the Ivy "Tommie" collar, the box pleat front, the yoke back with pleat and hanger loop, the roll sleeves. Never forgetting, of course, the longer shirt tails that stay tucked in, the contour shaping. This could be your most becoming shirt. Why not try it and see? terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS 803 Mass. VI 3-2241 --- Friday, May 8, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 9 This Mother's Day May 10 at the Prairie Room — SMORGASBORD — CHICKEN TETRIZZINI PERCH BAKED HAM HOT VEGETABLES YOUR FAVORITE SALADS ASSORTED ROLLS TASTY DESSERTS CHOICE OF BEVERAGE Only $195 Sunday, May 10 12 to 4 p.m. KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE Page 10 University Daily Kansan Friday, May 8,1964 Jayhawk Sophomore Linemen ToHighlightSpringScrimmage A crop of coming sophomore linemen which Coach Jack Mitchell terms "the best since we've been here" will hold the spotlight in KU's spring football game tomorrow. The big question remaining is how much measureable ability this husky influx will add to next year's varsity. The staff hopes to learn part of the answer in this hot-weather windup. Kickoff is 1 p.m. at Memorial Stadium as football furnishes the centerpiece of an all-sports day. The series baseball finale with Oklahoma leads off at 10:30 a.m.; the ninth KU-OU track and field dual begins at 3 p.m. For the first time in eight years, the football feature will not be a Varsity-Alumni affair. Coach Jack Mitchell has divided his squad evenly, and with such key figures as Gale Sayers and Steve Renko involved in spring sports there is no basis for a favorite. THE PARADE of young linemen has been impressive. As is usual the start was slow for most. But improvement has been marked over the past two weeks. As a matter of fact, Mitchell has high praise for no less than 13 newcomers. Most of these are the large economy size. George Harvey, 245-pound freshman from Parsons, and four sophomore tackles weigh 210 or better. Harvey, who has progressed steadily in a new role as linebacker, has drawn a starting assignment, along with two of the four tackles, Jim Nievar, 215-pounder out of Oklahoma City, and Jerry Barnett, Wichita 210-pounder. "Harvey has good speed, reaction and strength," Mitchell said. "He has tremendous size, and has shown enough agility to be a good line-backing prospect." DAN BAKER, 215-pound Topekan, and Harold Montgomery, Wichita 210-pounder, are included with Nievar and Barnett as good tackle prospects. "These four have done well enough to allow us to move Richard Pratt to tackle," Mitchell explains. "They have good speed, courage and willingness. "Three of our young guards have come well, Bill Wohlford (181-pounder from Geneseo who'll be a starter; Larry White (191, Colby), and Jim Pilch (215, Lawrence). Everyone of them is fast, aggressive and strong." That checklist carries one Saturday strater, Bill Walters of Fort Collins, Colo., plus Larry Dercher, 210, Kansas City; Jeff Elias, 205, Salina; Ken Johnson, 185, Goodland, and Gary Dahlin, 190, Bethel. PROBABLE STARTERS for the Baseball Team To Host Oklahoma This Weekend KU hosts Oklahoma here this weekend in the fourth round of Big Eight baseball play. Today's doubleheader at Quigley Field is scheduled for 1:30 p.m.; tomorrow's single game at 10:30 a.m. Limiting Iowa State to 11 hits and two runs in sweeping a three-game set here last weekend, KU pitchers shrank their collective ERA to 1.62 and pushed their strikeout total to 137 in 111 combined innings of work. Although throwing well against Missouri's runaway league-leaders, all three Sooner pitchers were beaten last weekend as the Tigers pushed their unbeaten conference streak to 10 games. Combined they gave up only 21 hits and three earned runs, but MU prevailed 4-1, 3-1, and 1-0. Chuck Dobson, 6-4, 200-pound Kansas Cityan, is the leader here with 62 strikeouts in just 40%innings. He notched 13 in winning the second game Friday, 2-1, then added two more in a one-inning relief stint Saturday after Chana walked the first batter in the ninth while carrying a 3-0 lead. KU Trackmen Meet Oklahoma The KU track team meets Oklahoma here Saturday in its last outdoor dual meet of the season. Tomorrow's meet will be the ninth outdoor competition for the two teams. The events are scheduled to start at 3 p.m. Coach Bill Easton said the meet will serve as an indicator of the strength of what he termed "a very tough conference." Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Steak Dinner Sunday Nites $1.25 4:30-10:30 DINE-A-MITE 23rd & La. 23rd & La. Bill Walters, left end; Greg Roth, left guard; Larry Fairchild, center; Richard Pratt, right guard; Jerry Barnett, inside tackle; Fred Elder, outside tackle and Bob Robben, right end. Whites will be: Cut n Curl BEAUTY SALON graduation permanent Bob Skahan, quarterback; Gary Duff, left halfback; Dan Miller, right halfback and Ron Oelschlager, fullback. The probable starters for the Blue are: VI 3-5569 843 N.H. Mike Shinn, left end; George Harvey, left guard; Buddy Walker, center; Bill Wohlford, right guard; Brian Schweda, inside tackle; Jim Nievar, outside tackle; and Harley Catlin, right end. Sid Micek, quarterback; Mike Johnson, left halfback; Vernon Dickey, right halfback and Kent Craft, fullback. Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Balfour Mobilgas - 'Vett head- quarters KERBY'S DEPENDABLE STATION "We'll pick up your car and deliver it FREE on any service call." - Specialists in all makes & models includes sports cars Wheel Bal. - Oil - Wash- Lube VI 3-9608 9th & Ky. STUDENTS Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor T-ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd FRATERNITY A. complete line, including. • Lavaliers • Pins • Rings • Guards • Mugs • Crests Ray Christian JEWELERS IT'S OK TO OWE BAY 809 Mam. JEWELRY MAKE YOUR NEXT MOVE Crescent Heights Completed Swimming Pool THE OAKS ★ 1 Bedroom ★ 2 Bedrooms ★ Swimming Pool CALL VI 1-2-3711 Mgr's Office, 2428 Redbud, Apt. D New Luxury Addition Opening This Summer . . . FOR INFORMATION CONTACT Crescent Heights Apts. Mgr. Clean— your whole wash - the Honn way Wash 20c Dry 10c AT HONN'S LAUNDRY IT'S OK Clean your best suits and coats in our coin-on dry clean machine Clean— the cleanest laundry in town inspect our facilities, you'll agree "Laundry Time is Honn Time" 19th & La. DINING PLEASURE AT ITS BEST! HAL'S STEAK HOUSE Bring in this coupon and get our Registered Mechanic 10 POINT SAFETY CHECK — featuring Open-hearth charcoal broiled Steaks Chicken — Shrimp — Sandwiches Ribs We will check (1) Cooling System (2) Fan Belts (3) Lights & Signal System (4) Wheel Bearings (5) Brakes (6) Wipers (7) Exhaust system (8) Steering (9) Fuel System and (10) Ignition System. FREE VACATION SERVICE - with this ad! Be Careful • Be Sure • Be safe • Before Returning Home This Summer HAVING A PARTY? Open: 4-Midnight Highway 59 South VI2-9445 Across from Hillcrest Golf Course VI 3-6697 SANDERS MOTOR CO. Lincoln-Mercury Studebaker Call on us TODAY. 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 ABSOLUTELY FREE!! 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. & OLDS VI 3-7700 MALLS SHOPPING CENTER VI 3-1211 CHEVROLET Big enough to have all the equipment. 738 N.H. SEE MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES SHIP WINTER Domestic & Foreign Steamship Lines Tours & Cruises Everywhere FIRST NATIONAL BANK FOR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS Travel Agency AIR LINES 746 Mass. VI 3-0152 Originality IN FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION especially for you by Alexander's 826 IDWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PREMIUM VL. 3-1900 -Classified Ads- FOR SALE Page 11 1959 Volvo. Rebuilt engine, new tires and battery. Clean. Call VI 3-4050. 5-21 Eico stereo preampl-ampifier combination Garrant record, change top quality in back-up system. Whole system must go. Call Steve Heinz. VI 3-4050 If not there, leave message. 1857 Cheverny $6, 6, stick, good condition, clean $340 cash, Call VI 2-9280 5-12 Single featherweight sewing machine for fine work. Excellent, excellent condition. Call GI 2-42625 5-13 1953 four wheel drive Jeep pickup, Solid clean body, 16" pty tires, perfect mechanical condition, new engine, $600. See at 1105 La. after a 7 pm. 5-13 Aging, conservative faculty type must sell 1960 Dodge Dart. Four door, automatic transmission. Owner leaving course (by choice). See at 1038 KR. 5-13 offer. One dineette set, 2 years old, excellent condition. Six chairs with matching table, bench, and ottoman. Danish Modern chairs, 2 years old, need upholstering. $10 each. See at 635 W. Hornsby St., Boca Raton, FL 33428 noon; Monday, Wednesday, Friday, between 2 and 5 p.m. Furniture and appliances. 9 mo. old. Refrigerator, electric stove, kitchen cabinet, microwave, dishwasher, rug, coffee tables, end tables, table lamps. Slightly older: breakfast set, bedroom room suite, floor lamp, living room suite. Call VI 3-5644 between 6-8 p.m. LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. GOOD SELECTION OF HANDGUNS, MILITARY GUARD, WARMHATS, ALSO REBLUE. EVENINGS, 1026 OHIO, VI I-8-1214. VI 5-12 Mobile Home. 1959 kit, Stateliner. 50" x 10" Two bedrooms, carpeted, air-conditioned, washer, new hot water heater, many extras. Excellent condition Locale Ideal for Medical student. 3610 Rainbow Blyd. Call SK 1-0412. 5-12 What kind of car can you buy for $20? A noisy, obnoxious, rusty 1914 Ford Car. Used in the 1960s. Drunk wagon. Good tires, battery, and brakes. 8401² Kentucky after p. 5.5 m. 5-8 1959 blue VW sedan. Whitewall tires, many accessories. Well cared for and clean. By owner. Call VI 2-3103, 5 to 7 p.m. 5-12 Priced to sell, 1956 Pontiac. Radio, heater. Call VI 3-3987. 5-11 1952 MG-TD. Good condition, rebuilt engine. Call VI 3-0540 evenings. 5-11 SPORTS CAR TIRE CLEARANCE. Wide whites, discontinued tread designs, all four ply tubeless, highest quality. Your choice, 560 x 13, 590 x 13, 600 x 13, 560 x 13, 590 x 13, 590 x 13, 590 x 13, exchange. Free installation at Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929 Mass. (4 Mercedes high speed safety 640, 650 x 13.'s. Cut to $20 each. 5-11 Roberts 1040 stereo tape recorder plus one tape recorder and one sonar mike. Call KJ 2-3437. Wedding dress, size 7-8. 1817 La. Uptairs, west apartment. 4 to 6 p.m. MICH. ST. BAR-B-Q. FOR BAR-B-Q RIBS THAT ARE A TREAT TO EAT. TRY OUR AT 515 MICHIGAN. OPEN FROM 11 A.M. TO 11:30 P.M. 5-8 1958 black and white Ford convertible. Power steering and brakes, good condition, original owner. Call VI 3-5003, 1618 Rose Lane. New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500 cover to ream- $8.95 Lawrence Outlook. 1005 M SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS. Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale at great savings after 6 p.m. week dawntuesday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut tt Typewriter, new and used portables, standards, electrics, Olympia, Hermes, Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter, adder, rentals and service. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St.. VI 3-3644. Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. Western University. Call VI 2-3701. Avery brand. Revised adamantly comprehensive mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per conv. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tt For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3-8040 after 5 p.m. FOR RENT Available June 1. Apartments and sleeping rooms. $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from Union. Off street parking. Call VI 2-1675 or VI 3-0492. 5-14 For the summer. For 2 or 3 men students. Cool, pleasant, basement apartments with hard of hearing, half of hill. Private bath and entrance. CV-51 3-6313. 1103 W. 19th Terrace. VII-54 To sublet for June, July, and August; furnished two bedroom apartment. Five minute walk from KU library. Modern, central air-conditioning, carpeted, pool. Call VI 3-14057 after 4 p.m. or see at 1737 Ohio, Apt. 7. 5-13 Emery Apartments available June 1. Efficiency and one bedroom. To see contact Milan Loupal, Apt. 204. Emery or call VI 3-8190. 5-19 Married, grad students, faculty. Efficiency apartment from $65 and small house from $70. Available in June. Call now. Santee Academy, 1123 Ind., VI 3-2116. One and two bedroom apartments. 1232 La. Call VI 3-4271. 5-12 Bachelor Studio Apartment for graduate or older undergraduate men. 11½ blocks from Union. Newly remodeled nicely furnished rental office ideal study conditions. A few still available at low summer rates. Singles and doubles. For appointment call VI 8-5343. Large, homey, attractively furnished, 4 room apartment. For summer months at summer rates. Kitchen built-ins and garbage disposal spaces paid except when available rent. Will rent. 3 room apt. Call VI 3-7677. Will rent. for summer months. 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 space. On-site aid. Called t -2-9451 or see at 1244 Lah. Crescent Heights two bedroom apart- ment 25th and Red River- Junction, Phone WI $1-871. TYPING Experienced secretary would like typing in home. Reasonable rates. Call if 3-5139. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention on all reports, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate typing at reasonable calls. Call Donna Stewart, VI 3-6621. ff Let me do your typing for you. Ex- press 4-3151 or VI 3-4060. Bait 5-41 4-3151 or VI 3-4060. Bait 5-41 Experienced secretary would like typing. Henderson Ridge, VI 2-0122. 5-21 2969 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122. 5-21 For expert typing, dissertation, thesis, work, job. 925-806-1372. Professional work. Electric typewriter. 5-8 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, VI 2-0210. 5-12 Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term paper thesis, etc. Account work stands. Phone VI 3-8379. Mrs. Charles Patti. Fast. accurate work done on electric motors. Record rates. Call Bettie Vincent. VI-3 51-404 Experience secretary wounded like typing 188 home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 745-263-0900. BURGERT'S Shoe Service Service for Shoes Since 1910 FREE! qt. of oil with oil change & filter BOB'S CONOCO VI 3-0691 19th & Mass. VI 3-9802 Lube - Wheel Bal. - Brakes NEW YORK CLEANERS Milliken's SOS REPAIRS — LEATHER REFINISHING ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING Delivery Service 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 1021% Mass, Mss. 3-5920, 7 a.m.-11 p.m. - general typing service - automatic typing - 24 hr. answering service "the best professional service" How do you save money by spending a lot of it at the Lawrence Book Nook? 1021 Mass. - mimeograph & photo-copying Tops — Glass & Zippers — Accurate expert typist would like typing in her home. Term papers and theses Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. t Tailor Made Seat Covers at Competitive Prices with sewed double lock stitch. Look!s Seat Covers Tops — Glass & Zippers Bear Glasses — Heal Linens Door Panels 545 Minn. VI 3-4242 Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reasonableness of papers; thematics, sentiments and these, 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. Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon pencil, and tape recorder. VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 408 West 13th. Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. Secretary will do typing in home. Fast accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577. tf Experienced Typist—Dissertations. Thees. Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 Rhode Island, Vol 3-7485. tt TYPING: Experimented typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, diaries, memoirs and reviews rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568. Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typrwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648. MILIKENLIS. SOS—always nstr quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines tape, tape transcription. Offe- hours-7 a.m. p.m.-12 noon. $mil.* Phone VI 3-5920. Dressmaking-alterations, formals and Dresses-gowns. Ola Smith. 939% MAI 3-52834 BUSINESS SERVICES YELLOW CAB CO. VI 3-6333 24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS DALE'S BODY SHOP All makes & models frame - body - fender - glass VI 3-4732 704 Vermont Artists-Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics George's Hobby Shop 1105 Mass. VI 3-5087 616 W. 9th Open 24 hours except Saturday evening JOE'S BAKERY 25c delivery VI 3-4720 BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day $ $ $ $ $ $ $ on shocks, mufflers, tail pipes and installation. CAR OWNERS SAVE UP TO 40% - All makes and models including sports cars - Trained mechanics for quality service - Your satisfaction GUARANTEED Friday, May 8, 1964 Montgomery Wards Auto Service Center 729 N.H. VI 2-1708 University Daily Kansan $ $ $ $ $ L&M CAFE now under new management We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Our menu includes delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches Your second cup of coffee always free. Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 161 Mass. VI 3-1287 t MISCELLANEOUS Hunters. Pienic by the airplane! Lawrence Annual Coin Club Show. Community Bldg, May 9 and 10. Public collection. All coins will be available will buy, sell, or trade. Exhibit of rare foreign and domestic coins. 5-11 Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, med to meet demand. Open nights. Amer- co Coin Mint, 1025 S. Washington St. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES The Catacoms nite club and Pizza Dena for 2-3 students to go through college. For information call VI 3-970 Friday or K.C., M.O., Sunda, through Thursday. WANTED Ride to and from K.C. Saturday's and or August. See Mrs. Wilson, 10-4 Stouffer, Seniors, cash your rebate slips before graduation, before you leave KU G-12 KU 12 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 The only thing better than a home cooked meal is Dinner At DUCKS Steaks & Seafoods A Specialty Serving crisp tossed salads, choice of potatoes, zesty Vienna breads & country fresh butter. Sandwiches, too! Your favorite beverage 11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass. Portraits of Distinction LIBRARY Bob Blank, Photographer HIXON STUDIO 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 One Stop Service ★ Engine Tune Up ★ Generator & Starter Repair Brake Repair ★ Lubrication & Oil Change WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE JACK & GUNN'S SKELLY SERVICE 300 W. 6th SKELLY VI 3-9271 GB Recording Service and Party Music records: cut or pressed tapes: recorded or duplicated 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 VOLKSWAGEN'S. WANTED. Cash for your VW. Conzelman Motors, VW Sales, Service, and Parts 2522 Iowa, Hiway 59 Interested in sales demonstrations. Write giving age, experience, type of instruc- So. HELP WANTED Experienced typist. Full time, Capable of assuming responsibility. Fast, accurate typing a necessity. Salary open. Write Box 20, 111 Flint Hall. Campus. 5-12 Room and office for nice students. For right hand interested in helping with well-mannered children. (Ages 9, 6, 4.) Call Mrs. Milliken, VI 3-5947. RISK'S Free room and board for graduate student or mature undergrad in private home in exchange for baby-sitting, doing dishes, and general mother's helper. Summer session, possibility for next year. Call VI 2-0493. 5-11 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 Shirt Finishing Laundry Wash & Fluff Dry When Hallmark Plans a Party, you receive the compliments Hallmark PLANS A PARTY Hallmark TOM'S TRAIN PLANS-A-PARTY BULLOCK'S 4 E. 7th VI 3-2261 ● Parker Pens ● Stationery ● Printing 2. 7,000 Pipes and every smoking accessory George's Pipe Shop 727 Mass. VI 3-7164 "SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS" "Front End Special" STUDENTS! SAVE WITH THIS AD!! - 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 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 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday, May 8, 1964 Kansan Board Names Fall Term Positions Staff positions for the University Daily Kansan for the fall semester of the 1964-65 school year were approved yesterday by the Kansan Board. Roy Miller, Topeka junior, was named managing editor. Bob Phinney, Pratt junior, was named business manager. Co-editorial editors will be Rick Mabbutt, Shoshone, Idaho, junior, and Jim Langford, Wichita junior. OTHERS NAMED TO the news staff were Don Black, Hugoton junior; Leta Cathcart, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Fred Frailey, Sulphur Springs, Tex., sophomore; Bob Jones, Walters, Okla., junior, and Greg Swartz, Overland Park junior, assistant managing editors; Linda Ellis, Penns Grove, N.J., sophomore, feature-society editor, and Russ Corbitt, Chanute senior, sports editor. THOSE NAMED TO to the business staff were John Pepper, Lenexa sophomore, advertising manager; Dick Flood, Lawrence special student, national advertising manager; John Suhler, Cross River, N.Y., junior, classified manager; Tom Fisher, Lawrence junior, promotion manager; Nancy Holland, Lee's Summit, Mo., junior, circulation manager, and Gary Grazda, Bethel junior, merchandising manager. KU-Y Dinner Set Old and new officers in the KU-Y will be recognized and installed at a dinner at 6 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union. The dinner which serves to introduce the old and new officers of the KU-Y will also honor Miss Connie Milliken, program secretary. Tom Moore, executive secretary, said. After three years with the KU-Y Miss Milliken will be going to New York to work on the staff of the National Student YWCA. HERMAN DR PEPPER DIETETS DR PEPPER BOTTLES CO. "INVITE THE NEIGHBORS?" Their Air Force crew was on an open-sea training flight when it was told that one of a two-plane flight of Navy aircraft was forced down 100 miles west of Cubi Point near Manila in the Philippine Islands. A former faculty member and an alumnus of the University of Kansas saved the lives of four airmen in the South China Sea late last month. The rescue aircraft flew to the disabled plane, dropped life rafts, made an open-sea landing, picked up the downed airmen and returned them to their home base. The airmen were in the water less than 10 minutes. They are Maj. Kenneth L. Shook, an assistant professor from 1959 to 1963, and Lt. Jon H. Gojiv. a 1960 Mission business graduate. DRPEPPER BOTTUNG CO - LAWRENCE Step into the greatest shoe experience ever! Soft, light and bursting with fashion, our new california COBBERS Bone "Mocco Crocko" A Fashion First at $9.95 "Tip" — A sure winner with every casual costume Blk. or white kid $9.95 Two KU Alums Rescue4 in South China Sea COBBERS Bone "Mocco Crocko" A Fashion First at $9.95 Tip" — A sure winner with every usual costume Blk. or white kid $9.95 Stop in today and see our entire selection of flats and heels. 819 Mass. ARENSBERG'S Phone VI 3-3470 QUALITY AND STYLE! VK1 ALEPHAN Artcarved® WEDDING RINGS Why buy ordinary rings when a prize-winning Artcarved costs no more? Starting at $8.00. KISMET SET Groom's Ring $32.50 Bride's Ring $27.50 Just one of our 300 Different Styles! Marks Jewelers 817 Mass. MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY MEMBER OF IZAK NATIONAL BRIDAL SERVICE Marks Jewelers One hour MARTINIZING 11hr most - DRY CLEANING ONE HOUR MARTINIZING This moust - DRY CLEANING Advertisement Must Be Brought In With Garments SPRING SPECIAL Another One Hour Martinizing First! ★ 15 DENIER ★ 100% NYLON ★ SEAMLESS ★ FIRST QUALITY ★ KNITTED HEEL 1 PAIR FREE BEAUTIFUL PAIR OF NYLON HOSE FREE, WITH THIS CARD AND ANY DRY CLEANING ORDER OF $2.00 OR MORE. ONE HOUR MARTINIZING 1407 MASSACHUSETTS Across from Junior High School OFFER GOOD THROUGH MAY 8, 1964 ONE HOUR MARTINOWS 11am most in DRY CLEANING YOUNG CHILDREN KU Students Paint Center HARD WORKERS—Painting the steps of the Bess Stone Activity Center as part of a community project are Joel Jon Barr, Topeka junior, and Linda Dueders, Independence, Mo., freshman. The project was completed this weekend through the joint efforts of Theta Chi and Alpha Chi Omega. (Photo by Tom Moore) The Bess Stone Activity Center for retarded children sports a new coat of paint today, thanks to the weekend efforts of the Theta Chi fraternity and the Alpha Chi Omega sorority. AFTER DISCOVERING the project Barr then talked to the Lawrence treasurer Mike Jones who helped obtain all the materials necessary for the repairs Barr was planning. Joel Jon Barr, Topeka junior Theta Chi, said that a month ago the Theta Chi's were looking for a community project when he noticed the center. The center, which is the only one of its kind in Douglas County, was in need of some repairs, Barr said. The center is neither state nor county supported. Barr then contacted the Alpha Chi's who agreed to join the Theta Chi's as a joint project. The actual work began last Thursday night when Barr and two of his fraternity brothers spent much of the night steaming wallpaper off walls of the center that they planned to paint. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, both groups were working on the center. Some were mowing the lawn, others were painting the porch and some of the rooms, and others were plastering holes in the walls. The two groups also cleaned the screens and the basement, they hauled three truck loads of trash out of the basement, Barr said. The group also retiled one of the fireplaces of the center. The work carried over into late Sunday night as well as most of Saturday. THE CENTER, which is two years old, is maintained by the Douglas County Association for Retarded Children, Mrs. John L. Glinka is the past president of the association and present director. The association, founded in May 1956, rented the house at 745 Ohio with the purpose of training severely retarded local people, people who have a IQ of 35 to 50. The house was the first chapter house for the KU Theta Chi's when they were established in 1952. The center is supported by the United Fund and public contributions. It has applied for city and state aid, Mrs. Glinka said. Two registered therapists, who are aided by about 20 to 25 volunteers each week, work with the retarded people who attend the center. THE CENTER HANDLES 16 regular retarded people per day, their ages ranging from $3^{1/2}$ to 64, Mrs. Glinka said. Mrs. Glinka said that the center does not work with retarded children in the age group of 6 to 16 since they are taught in the Lawrence public school's special education classes. Mount, Wichita senior, was suspended by the disciplinary committee last week after admitting he wrote a bomb threat note found at the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority house Monday night. AMONG THE SIGNERS of the petitions, Mills said, were all old and new members of Mortar Board, senior women's honor society, and about 30 old and new members of Sachem, senior men's honor society. The Mortar Board members signed the petitions during an initiation meeting at the home of Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe. IN ANOTHER DEVELOPMENT, two members of Kappa Kappa Gamma denied this morning that they asked Mount that evening if he had written the note. Mills said every member of Sachem contacted about the petition agreed to sign it. 61st Year, No.137 Last Thursday, a member of the Disciplinary Committee said two Kappas saw the note on a table shortly after it was written, asked Mount if he were its author and were told no. Petitions Ask Committee to Reconsider Suspension The petitions contained about 1,400 signatures when handed to the administration, Bill Mills, Topeka senior, said last night. Lawrence. Kansas Martha Yankey and Roxanna The petitions were given to a member of the administration who also serves on the disciplinary committee by a student who has worked in Mount's behalf. Petitions asking that the suspension of Mike Mount be reconsidered by the All Student Council Disciplinary Committee were given to the administration Friday afternoon. LATER FRDIAY, the committee met, but it was not announced whether Mount or the petitions were discussed. Catholic Literature Stuffed in Boxes Monday, May 11, 1964 Catholic literature in the form of pamphlets appeared in University Daily Kansan distribution boxes during the weekend. The staff of the Kansan has not placed these pamphlets in the boxes. Injunction Ends Railroad Strikes U. S. District Judge Alexander Holtzoff, acting at the request of the nation's railroads to quell a series of work stoppages across the country, issued a permanent injunction to prevent strikes by members of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen (BLFE). With some passages underlined in red ink the pamphlets have titles such as "A Short Story of the Popes," and "What Do You Mean . . ." The pamphlets were published by the Religious Information Bureau of the Knights of Columbus. WASHINGTON—(UPI)A federal judge today ordered a halt to wildcat strikes by railroad firemen and warned he would hold union leaders in contempt of court if they led or encouraged such walkouts. Dailu hansan THE FEDERAL judge declared that the courts could not tolerate defiance of an arbitration award dealing with cutbacks in firemen's jobs. He said the ward, handed down under an act of Congress, was now the law of the land. Leaders of the BLFE have declared the walkout against more than a half dozen railroads were unauthorized but were triggered by "extreme" interpretations of the arbitration award. Holtzoff said union members who fail to report to work without a lawful excuse may be fired or considered to have resigned their jobs. A spokesman for H. E. Gilbert, president of the firemen, said after today's ruling: "We hope all the firemen stay on the job until we get this thing settled. We hope the carriers will refrain from extreme application of the award, too." "We devoutly hope there will be complete acceptance of the award and that the railroads will not have to take drastic action that the court indicated is an available remedy." WOLFLE ADDED: "The court's verbal statement made clear that employees who fail to obey the award will be considered as having resigned or are subject to discharge. Holtzoff granted the management request to make permanent a temporary restraining order he granted last week against the firemen's brotherhood to block work stoppages in protests against the award. J. E. Wolfe, chief spokesman for the railroads, said he hoped Holtzoff's ruling would end the walkouts. Gleissner, Wichita sophomores, identified themselves as the two women mentioned then, but gave a different version of the incident. MISS YANKEY said she encountered Mount Monday in the sorority's telephone booth, where he was doodling on pieces of paper. "He showed me the piece of paper with the bomb threat on it and I read it," Miss Yankey said. "I muttered something sarcastic, like, I wonder where this came from?" because we were all sick of bomb threats by that time. "BUT NEVER DID I ask him if he or anyone else had written the note, and never did he say he had not written it. I wasn't expecting to ever find out who wrote it." Miss Gleissner also said she did not inquire of the note's authorship when it was shown to her by Miss Yankey, and therefore received no answer from Mount. "My first reaction was that it was a joke," Miss Gleissner said. "It never occurred to us then that it was a serious thing. We were in a hurry to get to an exam." Officials Probe A Plane Crash SAN FRANCISCO — (UPI) — The recorded screams of a dying man, a powerful revolver containing two empty cartridges and the strange conduct of a former Olympic athlete from the Philippines were the prime clues today in the mysterious crash of an airliner which killed all 44 persons aboard. The screams were recorded at the Oakland airport Thursday morning as ground personnel were relaying landing instructions to the Pacific Air Lines F27 turbo-jet as it neared the end of a flight from Reno, Nev., to San Francisco. AFTER A BRIEF exchange of routine messages, the voice of either the pilot or co-pilot of the ill-fated plane was heard to cry out: "I'm shot. I'm shot, oh my God, help." Just seconds later, the plane lunged into a hill 30 miles east of San Francisco and exploded, scattering bits of the plane and its victims over a quarter-mile area. THE .375 MAGNUM revolver, believed to have been used in the shooting of both the pilot and the co-pilot, was found as authorities began the grim task of sorting the debris. On Saturday, the weapon was traced to Frank Gonzalez, 27, a former Olympic athlete from the Philippines and one of the 44 persons killed in the crash. Investigators said Gonzalez, who had taken out insurance for at least $45,000, had bought the pistol Wednesday—shortly before leaving on the round trip flight to Reno. Although married, Gonzalez had been living apart from his wife, Patricia, for several weeks but the reason for their separation was not revealed. Gonzalez had been living with his brother, James, who described him as "a loner." THEY EMPHASIZED, that while ownership of the gun has been established, Gonzalez has not been accused of firing the shots. CAB officials played the tape recording of the final few minutes of the flight for reporters at the Oakland airport Saturday — but made no comment. James told authorities that Frank had made several gambling trips to Reno, but this was believed to be the first time he had made such a trip by plane. JAMES SAID NEITHER he nor his mother and father, who arrived recently from the Philippines, knew Frank had gone to Reno. The $45,000 insurance policy was made out to the father. The Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), which is conducting a separate investigation of the crash, has steadfastly refused to comment on any matter relating to the fact that one or both pilots of the F27 were shot. LIMA, PERU —(UPI)— Two survivors of an air crash which killed 46 persons were reported out of danger today in a hospital here. A third escaped this mishap unharmed. Crash Survivors Out of Danger The plane, an Argentine military transport, plowed into a coastal sand dune Friday night as it approached for a landing here in heavy fog. Airport officials said the pilot apparently began his approach too low. * * * THE FOUR-ENGINE DC4 was on a flight from Buenos Aires via Antofagasta, Chile. All 49 persons aboard were Latin Americans except for a Spanish nun. Most were Argentines. Weather Showers that began last night will continue through this afternoon and tonight. Skies will become clear tomorrow, and westerly winds will remain moderate. Low temperature tonight will be around 50 degrees. Two of the survivors were children—Jorge Enriquez, 14, who was uninjured, and Graciea Gestaldi, 8, who received a superficial scalp wound and assorted bruises and contusion. THE THIRD survivor, Sgt. Oscar Ahumada, 29, suffered a fracture of the thigh and head cuts. He was a crewman on the transport. Enriquez said he was knocked out on impact and thrown clear of the flaming wreckage. When he came to, he said, he shouted for his two sisters. Both were dead. THE YOUTH THEN found Graciea. He held her throughout the night trying to console her, and along near morning they heard feeble cries for help. They located Ahumada who subsequently lost consciousness. After dawn, Enriquez decided to take Graciela away from the horrible scene. He carried her down to the Pacific Ocean where they were spotted by a Navy rescue helicopter. The youth then led rescuers to Ahumada and the wreckage. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, May 11, 1964 Would-be Friends: Big Favor If one had friends like those of Mike Mount, he would need no enemies. One fellow was so concerned about Mount, the second semester senior suspended by the Disciplinary Committee, that he called Dean Donald K. Alderson to tell him a bomb was going off in his house Thursday night. "If the hanging didn't get you at ten, then the bomb will get you at two." The final stroke of idiocy. Mount had 20 or 30 would-be friends—or joy-seekers—who turned out Thursday night to the effigy hanging of Dean Alderson, who chairs the Disciplinary Board. They attached Mount's name to some good publicity. A friend in need is a friend indeed. Indeed. If those who think that Mount was done an injustice really wanted to do something they could have done almost anything except tuck their heads under their arms and strike out in blind malice. The publicity which the affair has received has almost muddled the real issue—whether the Committee suspension of Mount three weeks before graduation was justified. Of course, there is no way to tell because of the secrecy which clouds in the mind of the student body the function of the Committee. The papers cannot report the meetings of the Committee, and the real facts can never be known or, at least, the facts on which the decisions are based. The ASC could learn from the recent hysteria. Number one, by publishing the facts of the cases and the decisions made students would know in a general sense what to expect from the Committee. At the same time, the Committee—if it acts justly—could avoid mass invalid criticism. The malice of the hanging and capricious threat directed toward Dean Alderson, the Committee's embodiment (at least in the students' mind, even though the students outnumber the faculty 6-5) cannot be justified or condoned. However, it is not difficult to see how the students' temper was provoked by action of a quasi-judicial board which operating in a way seemingly so remote from the student body. Tom Coffman Political Tongue-in-Cheek By Harry Ferguson United Press International WASHINGTON—(UPI)—If you are rearing your boy to be a candidate for President of the United States, by all means start training him immediately to eat his own words. He also should practice the art of telling little white lies with a straight face and in a convincing voice. Talking—or to be more accurate, double-talking—is an occupational disease suffered by almost all politicians. Inevitably, they say things that return to haunt them, and today we have a piece of bad news for the supporters of Henry Cabot Lodge. He is on record as having once said he couldn't be elected President. It happened Sept. 4, 1951, in Paris where Lodge was trying to persuade Dwight D. Eisenhower to run for President. Eisenhower tells about it in his book "Mandate for Change": "Thinking to put him (Lodge) on the defensive at once, I asked: You are well known in politics; Why not run yourself? Without pause, his answer came back; 'Because I cannot be elected.'" EISENHOWER, himself, got his feet tangleled in the sticky taffy of words. In 1952, while he was Supreme Commander of NATO, he issued this statement from Paris: "Under no circumstances will I ask relief from this assignment in order to seek nomination to political office." Two months later he did precisely what he said he would never do. He resigned as NATO commander and came home to run for President. Two words your son should eliminate from his vocabulary immediately are "never" and "forever." Men running for President dwell in an unreal, twilight world where it frequently becomes necessary to ignore or deny the obvious. When President Johnson is questioned about his plans for the 1964 campaign, he says that the Democratic Convention is going to meet in August and nominate a candidate. Then he dismisses the subject and turns to such non-political activity as collaborating with eight-year-old Cathy May Baker of Park Forest, Ill., in keeping the railroads running. IN THIS twilight world, the politicians talk in code. This is the way you translate statements about whether a man is going to run for President: Yes, of course, means yes (Nelson Rockefeller and Barry Goldwater). Maybe means yes (Richard Nixon and Lodge). No means yes but I want you to draft me (Gov. William Scranton). It would be naive to assume that Lodge, Nixon and Scranton are uninterested in the Republican nomination. They are like owners of race horses two days before the Kentucky Derby. They want to be sure that the track is right and the weather favorable before they formally enter the race. Your son should be taught to forget grievances, feuds and insults quickly. In politics Monday's enemy is Tuesday's pal and vice versa. The rival camps of John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson had some harsh things to say about each other when they were fighting for the presidential nomination just before the 1960 Democratic Convention. Then sun pierced the clouds, and two men found hitherto unknown virtues in one another and away they marched together, campaigning in arms, to smite the Republicans. IF YOU WANT the law of averages to run in favor of your son, there are rigid rules to be observed. Years ago, Sidney Hyman, an eminent historian, set forth the qualifications by which presidential candidates are measured. Despite an occasional exception they still are valid: The man must be white. He should be a Protestant (Kennedy was the only exception.) He should have a record of some sort of public service, either civilian or military. The Governor of a state has an excellent chance. He should come from a heavily populated state and preferably one that is politically doubtful (this is a heavy millstone Goldwater is carrying). He shouldn't be too closely identified with any section of American life, such as labor or management. He should have the record of having had a happy family life across the years. This one is vital as Nelson Rockefeller is finding out day by day. Is there anywhere in this broad land a man who has been mentioned either as a Presidential or Vice-Presidential possibility who has uttered an unequivocal no? Diligent research has turned up one—Sen. Joseph Clark, a Pennsylvania Democrat. He was told recently on a television show that he had been mentioned as a Vice-Presidential possibility and was asked to state his views. "MY VIEWS," he said, "are that if nominated I would not run and if elected I would not serve." That is known as "doing a Sherman" because it is what Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman told the Republicans in 1884 when they asked him to run for President. Clark is a rare bird in the chirp, noisy aviary of politics. He violates all the rules by taking the floor frequently and denouncing his colleagues for the aimless, garrulous way in which they transact business. He does not share the belief of many Senators that they are members of the world's greatest deliberative body which enjoys a monopoly on wisdom and truth. He seems to think that too often they act like a gang of adult delinquents. The People Say . . . Labeled Satire You have, I think, been ill-used. Your solution to a very pressing problem is, as far as it goes, a good one and certainly does not deserve the harsh criticism that it received. You are certainly right that the problem of campus morals is a serious one and deserves serious measures. Open Letter to Mr. Franklin: However I do not think you were wise in limiting the test just to girls who have come in after closing hours. The wanton girls who are of a mind can take their sinful pleasure at almost any time. Testing only the late-comer would catch only those who sin late at night and entirely miss those who sin earlier. I am afraid that you too have fallen under the popular misconception that the gate to the primrose path remains securely locked until the magic hour that is called closing. If the problem of campus immorality is to be solved, then all girls must undergo a test to see if they have lost that which rightfully belongs to their husbands. I would suggest frequent surprise virginity tests to be given in the dorms and houses much as bed checks are now made. Housemothers and counselors could be taught to administer the test. Failure to pass could mean only one thing—immediate expulsion. There would be a few unjustly punished, but no price is too great to pay for us to be rid of the wanton women tempting unsuspecting young men away from the paths of pureness. Mr. Franklin, you are right, sex has no place on a college campus, we must fight to abolish it! Prudishly yours, Robert Jameson Toppea graduate student P.S. To critics of my idea I would point out to you that this is what is known as SATIRE (remember your high school literature classes?). I had fun writing it and I hope you have fun reading it. Normally one doesn't label his work as satire, but the reception that unlabeled satire has received in the past in the UDK demands that this be labeled. NUCLEAR BOMB @1964 HERBLACK THE MAYFIELD BOOK "I Was Just Telling Khrushchev, 'Our Differences Are Only Temporary'" Theocratic Party, "In God We Trust" By Dave Pomeroy "It took the Republican Party 16 years to elect a President, but it will not take us that long," said Bishop William R. Rogers, Vice-Presidential candidate of the Theocratic Party. Rogers is the running mate of Bishop Homer A. Tomlinson, Theocratic nominee for President. Both candidates are bishops in the Church of God which was founded by Tomlinson's father in 1903. Tomlinson has headed the church as General Overseer since 1943. The Theocratic Party was organized in the Church of God in Fulton, Mo., on June 2, 1960. Rogers is pastor of that church. He said, "It is very possible for the Theocratic Party to be elected by a 'miracle' this very election. Our biggest trouble is getting on the ballots, but we will break through there soon I am sure." "According to history, democracy has never lasted over two hundred years and it is always followed by theocracy. It is any time now for America to turn from democracy to theocracy without any trouble." "The reason Bishop Tomlinson and I went there in November of 1960 to preach was that we had heard that you could not preach there, but no one bothered us and we preached on the streets for three days. We work by the power of God which men like Castro cannot touch." Rogers said. Rogers was a minor league umpire before he entered the ministry in 1950 in Burlington, in his native North Carolina. He preached in Cuba with Tomlinson. President Theodore Roosevelt appointed Tomlinson head of the military physical fitness program in 1917. Tomlinson rewrote the West Point Military Manual at the Army's request in 1919 and was General Eisenhower's roommate in World War I when both were captains. Tomlinson attended the University of Tennessee. Presidential candidate Tomlinson, 71, is a pastor in Queens Village, N.Y. He "preaches in 22 different languages" and has preached in Russia and Cuba after Castro came to power. The Theocratic Party advocates the union of church and state, but does not believe in a "forced" religion. Under the platform of the Theocratic Party, the United States would become "a holy nation under God." The party also proposes a ten per cent titre for the church and nation which would replace taxes; elimination of racial discrimination; and unlimited production and free enterprise. Reversal of the Supreme Court decision concerning school prayer would be sought by the Theocratic Party which would require Bible reading and prayer in all schools. The nominees have spoken at several colleges. Bishop Rogers expressed a willingness to speak at KU should interest be that great. Dailij 17dnsan 111 Flint Hall 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. Monday, May 11, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 3 USSR Begs Support in Struggle with China MOSCOW —(UPI)— The Soviet Union has called on the world's Communist parties to reject Red China's line and join a voluntary union of equals in which Moscow would renounce its supremacy. In a major policy statement yesterday, the Russians warned that Peking's policies could lead to a new "comintern" with Chinsese Communist Chief Mao Tze-Tung replacing the late Josef Stalin as dictator of the movement. Diplomatic observers said today the Soviet statement, coupled with Peking's weekend rejection of a world conference of Communist parties, indicated that Russia and Red China have dropped all pretense of trying to reconcile their ideological and political differences. THE SOVIET STATEMENT was in the form of an editorial on "ideological unity" in the party newspaper Pravda. More such statements were promised in an apparent response to a series of pronouncements by Peking on the key issues dividing Russia and Red China. These observers predicted a long struggle between the two powers for support from the world's 90-odd Communist parties. Pravda said that those who follow the Moscow line would be part of a "democratic" world Communist movement that would guarantee independence and equality of parties. The newspaper said it would be "a voluntary union of like minded people ... with voluntary discipline." The statement said Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev does not want to be another Stalin who could hire, fire and liquidate Communist leaders throughout the world. Goldwater To Nebraska OMAHA, Neb. — (UPI) — Sen. Barry Goldwater comes to the Cornhusker state today to do primary battle with last-minute write-in campaigns for Richard Nixon and Henry Cabot Lodge. Goldwater is the only Republican presidential candidate whose name appears on the ballot in tomorrow's primary. His supporters claim he has 15 of the state's 16 delegates in his back pocket. THE ARIZONA CONSERVATIVE will speak to Nebraskans on a multi-station statewide television network tonight. Goldwater's midwest campaign managers met here yesterday to map strategy for the final push toward the national convention and all indicated the folks back home were solidly in his camp. Richard G. Kleindienst of Washington, director of field operations for the Goldwater for president committee, told a news conference that Goldwater is the first nationwide candidate to put himself before the people on such a wide scale. The statement accused the Chinese of trying to revive Stalin's "cult or personality" in the person of Mao, with the Chinese leader's ideas as "the summit of Marxist thought." It said this trend was a Chinese attempt to dominate the Communist movement. "THE COMMUNIST MOVEMENT does not believe in prophets and oracles who could think and decide for all as Stalin tried to," Pravda said. Referring to its intentions to renounce its primary role in the movement, Moscow said, "There cannot be relations of hierarchy, domination and subjugation in the world Communist movement which consists of equal and independent parties." Pravda said flatly, "Chinese leadership has declared open ideological and political warfare against the Communist movement." During the iron-handed rule of Stalin, Russia dictated to all Communist parties through the Comintern, the international Communist organization which was dissolved during World War II. Moscow was the unquestioned leader whose needs and desires had primacy. Stalin died in 1953, and three years later Khrushchev began his destalinization campaign and instituted his policy of peaceful coexistence with the west. Feking rejected Khrush- onev's views and adheres to Stalin's "hard line," fostering militancy to achieve world domination. ON SATURDAY. Peking rejected the Kremlin's proposal for a worldwide conference of the Communist parties. Such a meeting would amount to a showdown of the opposing lines, and the Kremlin presumably feels it would have sufficient strength at present to "excommunicate the Chinese." red China said it wanted a global meeting postponed at least four or five years. The Chinese apparently hope the time would enable them to pick up more support, particularly among the Africans and Asians. Laotians Stop Fighting for Hero's Funeral; Moscow, Washington Want Laos Neutral Bv Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst In sleepy and dusty Vientiane, capital of Laos, participants in a government power struggle dropped hostilities long enough to attend an all-day funeral. The normally cheerful and easygoing Laotians would rather at any time observe the playing of the fountain in the city square than concern themselves with crisis. And so it could not be considered unusual that in the midst of grave, new developments official activity should give way to a day of mourning for a national hero. Momentarily freed from house arrest and appearing cheerful was Gunfire Ends Cyprus Lull NICOSIA, Cyprus — (UPI) — Heavy fire in the Kyrenia Mountains and an attack on a British jeep today shattered the weekend lull on Cyprus. A United Nations Peace Force spokesman said Greek Cypriot regular police fired three revolver shots at the U.N. jeep, one passing through the beret of the corporal in command; one perforating the canopy and one hitting the windshield. The Greek Cypriots apologized but were unable to explain the firing. The spokesman said Greek Cypriots opened up heavy fire during the night from the Kyrenia Mountains at the Turkish Cypriot villages of Aghirda and Krina, south of the mountains. Both villages have permanent U.N. posts. The fire was not returned. Turkish Cypriot positions in the mountains east of the Nicosia-Kyrenia road fired into the Greek Cypriot villages of Katodhikomo and Panodhikomo. There were no known casualties The wife you save-may be your own! MOVING? STORING? Get "WIFE INSURANCE" It's a wise policy — protects your wife against moving day worry and "frazzled nerves." Ask about it today; no obligation. GLOBAL TRAVEL LAWRENCE MAYFLOWER 609 MASS. Premier Prince Souvanna Phouma. GEN. KOUPRASITH ABHAY, nominal head of the revolutionary forces which sought first to depose Souvanna Phouma and then to make him a figurehead premier, played a prominent role as son of the deceased. There to pay him homage was Crown Prince Vong Savang, accompanied by Gen. Phoumi Nosavan, right wing commander who did not take part in the coup. The dead man was Kou Abhay, former president of the Royal Council. IN OUTWARDLY QUIET VIENTiane, the only sign of stress was in the patrolling security forces of Gen. Siho Lamphoutacoul, 29-year-old driving force behind the revolutionary committee which demanded reorganization and enlargement of the premier's coalition government. But if the majority of Laotians were able to ignore the new crisis, world capitals could not. Premier Souvanna Phouma remained in office only through the strong representations of Washington. Logically, it was hard to dispute the argument of the revolutionary council. Fearful that new civil war could erupt at any moment, Americans in Vientiane were placed on standby alert. Junta leaders charged that the Communists had hamstrung the effectiveness of the 1962 Geneva accord which established Laotian neutrality, and by use of the veto had destroyed the usefulness of the international control commission set up to enforce that neutrality. IN MOSCOW AND even in Peiping there seemed an obvious desire that the questionable neutrality of Laos should be preserved. But half a loaf was better than none, and so the U.S. sought to preserve what political balance in Laos there was. FROM THE UNITED STATES point of view, Laotian neutrality also had been a disappointment. It had not eliminated Communist Viet Nam forces from Laos, nor had it closed the Ho Chi Minh trail, down which the Communists fed the Communist Viet Cong of South Viet Nam. They demanded a government with unity of action. The key figure was young General Siho Lamphoutacoul. His father had served Kou Abhay, the man now mourned as a national hero. As a boy he had been treated with contempt by Couprasith Abhay, the dead man's son, now his partner in revolution. Siho Lamphoutacoul did not have the retreat to a rich and noble family. For him it was all or nothing, and therein lay the danger of a new explosion in Laos. 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 P PARK PLAZA SOUTH Ph. VI 2-3416 1912 W. 25th Day or Night TO THE SENIOR CLASS OF 64 Service — The Forerunner of Success Want to make a lot of money? You Can't. The only people who make money work in a mint—the rest of us must earn it. And the only way to earn it is to provide a service; we are all paid by the service we render, either in providing people with the goods they desire or the services they need. How do we become more successful? We become successful in direct proportion to the service we render, by giving more than is expected we become more successful. The producer who reaps the largest profit for his movies puts entertainment ahead of money. The waitress who concentrates on giving the best service doesn't need to worry about tips. The salesman who gives full service to a client need harbor no fears of losing that account. Plant that "success seed" with extra service. Use these attitudes; The "I'm Activated" attitude be enthusiastic about the service you are providing. The "You are Important" attitude. People will do more for you when you make them feel important. Have a sincere desire to be of service and you will become more successful than you could ever imagine. FULICO College Master John M. Suder John M. Suder Dan Jansky Gary Nu Delman Page 4 University Dauy Kansan Monday, May 11, 1964 '65 Class Plans Year The class of '65 is planning its senior year while its members are still juniors. According to the new senior class president, John (Tonto) Mays, Lyons junior, the class of 1965 will add a senior council of living group representatives, a service projects committee for service to the University and a special events chairman to coordinate all senior parties. SENIOR DAY HAS already been set for Oct. 17, the date of the University of Oklahoma game here. Mays said over 150 juniors applied for senior class committees. Those selected to serve as chairmen or co-chairmen are: Breakfast, Nancy Egy, Topeka and William Flannagan, Scott City; Ring, Al Bendure, Kansas City, Mo.; Gift, David Martin, Coffeyville; Calendar, Jon Alexiou, Mission; Publicity, Robert Ritter and Robert Burkart, both of Kirkwood, Mo.; Announcements, Gene LaFollette, Overland Park; Regalia, Barry Becker, Leawood; Alumni Relations, John Daniels, Kansas City, Mo.; Hope Award, Fred Slicker, Tulsa, Okla., and Wendy Fisher, Topeka, and Coffees, Winifred Frazeye, Wichita, and Robert Benson, Kansas City, Mo. HEADING THE Senior Events committees will be John McArtor, Webster Groves, Mo. Under him will be committees for: Senior Day, John Pound, Fredonia, and Patricia Koos, Mission; Picnic, John Suhler, Cross River, N.Y., and Brown Lewis, Emporia; Fall Party, Richard M. Miller, Wichita, and Donna Multer, Pueblo; Colo.; Spring Party, Michael Stevens, Hutchinson, and Gloria Farha, Wichita. Karl Becker, Wichita, is the chairman of the Service Projects. CAMBRIDGE, Md. — (UPI) A group of civil rights demonstrators in this racially tense town met briefly early today to sing "freedom" songs. Police reported there was no violence. Police said about 20 persons gathered in the Negro section at midnight to sing and chant such songs as "We Shall Overcome." After about an hour, the demonstrators returned peacefully to their homes. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Righters Gather In Tense Town A National Guard spokesman said there had been no disturbances in the Chesapeake Bay fishing town that was the scene last summer of large-scale riots which forced Gov. Millard J. Tawes to call out the National Guard. The city has been relatively quiet during recent months, but the guard detachment is being reinforced today by 400 troops. The additional soldiers were called in to prevent any incidents when Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace delivers a campaign speech here tonight. ATLANTA—(UPI)—Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, praising the "present reality" of progress in the South, urged the region today to remember the "shortcomings and inequities" of the past as it moves to the future. Lady Bird Lauds South Mrs. Johnson, in remarks prepared for Emory University's honors day convocation, told students they should become master of the "science of human engineering" able to make a "better life for all people." The first lady asked her audience to consider what in the future it could do to improve and revamp the cities of the South; reduce the number of those living in poverty and ignorance; turn "automation from beast into blessing;" and "master the most important art of all — human understanding." MRS. JOHNSON'S one-day visit here followed by 72 hours a tour made by the President who spent two days in Georgia last week at the end of a six-state Applachia tour. The first lady's whirlwind visit in cluded meetings with high school students, ground breaking ceremonies for a new federal auditorium and a meeting with Georgia state legislators. Mrs. Johnson recalled the past contributions to American literature made by southern novelists Thomas Wolfe, William Faulkner and Harper Lee as examples of southerners who enriched the English language. Now, she said, "we need our southern recruits to the ranks of those who ennoble not simply our noble language, but also our traditions of mutual help in the very basic process of living itself." THE SOUTH has made much progress in her lifetime, Mrs. Johnson said, referring to her college days in the depression when Southern farmers, earned an average income of $186 a year. Now, she said, Georgia's per capita income exceeds $1,800. "Still, there are among us people in need." Mrs. Johnson said. "As it was in the 1930's, it is a special duty in the 1960's to finish our personal work as Americans to serve others as this kind land has served us..." For Fast Results READ and USE THE WANT ADS REGULARLY! NOW! 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Campus Hideaway, 106 North Park Guenther Jewelry, 824 Massachusetts Hillcrest Bowl, 9th and Iowa Honn's Laundry, 19th and Louisiana Harvey's Shoe Store, 1300 West 23rd Seyler's Gardenland, 914 West 23rd Raney Drug Stores at Hillcrest, Plaza and 9th and Massachusetts and 9th and Massachusetts ● The GOLDEN CUE 23rd & Naismith Kansas Monday, May 11, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Calcutta, Living Paradox, Shows Both Extremes CALCUTTA, India—(UPI)—All great cities have their contrasts and paradoxes, Calcutta takes them to extremes. India's largest and richest city, it has a population of six million, of whom no fewer than one and a half million are refugees. The hungry and homeless sleep in the streets outside the sub-continent's gayest hotels. Sacred cows contribute to the frequent traffic jams. India's biggest port is in constant danger of being silted up. Calcutta seems less businesslike than Bombay though it does more business; it lacks the stately monumentality of New Delhi though it was the capital of British India until 1912; it outstrikes both those cities in cosmopolitan glitter and abysmal squail. Though it is the most Indian of cities, Calcutta was founded by the British. Job Charnock, of the East India Company, established a settlement on the Ganges River, 85 miles inland from the Bay of Bengal, in 1860. The settlement spread along the east bank and enveloped a village called Kalikatta, still the Bengali name for the city. The cluster of neighborhood hamlets coagulated in to the starting point of British power as it spread through India. Calcutta was the home of Warren Hastings, the site of the "black hole" massacre, the capital of British India from 1834 to 1912. Racers SLACKS Racers SLACKS A-1 ...check these, men! Real pacesetting fashion—trim slim and tailored with the new A-1 pockets and built-in "fit"! In go ahead shades and fabrics that look better after every wash. Only $4.98 to $6.98 at your favorite campus store. A-1 Racers. The British may have felt at home with the humidity, which is twice that of London, but probably not the temperature, which is pleasant during the winter but frequently climbs over 100 during the sauna-like summers. R-1 KOTZIN CO., LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA After the partition of India, and of Bengal into East Pakistan and West Bengal, Calcutta became the capital of West Bengal state. A Baleege of Calcutta resents being classed with its temporary residents, that rootless floating population of refugees from Pakistan and job-seekers from the back country. The proper Calcuttan considers that his city, the birthplace of the Nobel prize-winning poet Rabinbranath Tagore, is still the cultural capital of India. A Calcuttan thinks of himself and his city more or less the same way as a Bostonian thinks of himself and Boston. The present population of Calcutta is genuinely cosmopolitan. It has India's largest population of Westerners, and of Orientals—from Tibet to Tokyo. The number of Westerners is in fact larger today than it was during the days of the British Raj. Many British plantation owners and businessmen closed down after independence in 1947 and went home to England, but came trooping back, as partners, managers or technicians, to this city which has plenty of sunshine and no servant problem. Calcutta office leading the way. Calcutta has two Chinatowns with a total population of about 20,000, whose allegiance is split between Taipei and Peking. Calcutta was the bridgehead for the return of Japanese business to India, with the bank of Japan's Even after nearly two decades of religious strife between Moslems and Hindus, more than one in six residents of Calcutta is a Moslem. The Indian Moslem population numbered one million in the 1961 census, and there is Pakistani Moslem population of 100,000. of office workers, teachers, students, artisans and lawyers. The leadership is provided by professors, barristers and other intellectuals, many of whom are virulently pro-Peking. Several hundred of them were put into protective jail custody after the Sino-Indian border war broke out in 1962. Since their release, they have snatched the leadership of the party back from the anti-Peking, pro-Moscow faction. Calcutta's politics are paradoxical. India's communists claim West Bengal and its Calcutta capital as their stronghold. But unlike such a state as Kerala, where the communists enjoyed a brief spell of power on the votes of farmers and workmen, the Calcutta Communists include a large leavening But however powertui and articulate the Communists in Calcutta claim to be, and despite the number of seats they always get in the metropolitan municipal corporation and the two houses of the state legislature, the Communists have never come close to even a Red-dominated coalition. NOTICE When you go home this summer, why take your heavy winter clothes with you? Both our fine locations offer vault storage for your furs. They will be hung on hangers for the summer in our vaults. We also offer box storage for your sweaters and jackets. You are allowed to do your own packing. We will pick up and deliver. FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN 900 Miss. DOWNTOWN PLANT 740 Vt. Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi K Page 6 University Daily Kansan Mondav. May 11. 1964 Washington Correspondent Speaks at Banquet Personal glimpses into the life of President Johnson, and anecdotes of Washington newsmen were illustrated by Joe Lastelic, Washington correspondent for the Kansas City Star, and President Johnson's press secretary during the 1960 presidential campaign. Speaking at the annual Kansan Board Dinner Saturday night, Lastelic described Johnson as one who, "works hard, drains people of ideas, pays attention to significant details, won't take no for an answer, and surrounds himself with 'can do' people." Before Lastelic spoke to the students, faculty members, and invited guests of the Kansan Board 36 awards were presented to students for work on the University Daily Kansan. "Johnson goes on the assumption that he will lose every election he's in," Lastelic said in response to a question of what might "derail" Johnson in 1964. Then he goes to his office, works for a bar, swims, swim, and eats lunch. "Lunch said," Commenting on a question about Bobby Baker from the audience following his speech, Lastelic said that, "No one can blame anyone but the Senate for what happened to Bobby Baker." First place for the best promotional advertisement went to Don Dugan, Oswego senior. Other awards for promotional advertisements were: Dana Stewart, Hutchinson senior, second place; and Alice Rueschhoff, Hutchinson senior, third place. This assumption seems to make him work harder. Lastelic said. "THE SENATE raised Baker from the time he was 14," he said. "Johnson starts his day about 7 a.m., when he reads his newspapers. MICHAEL BARNES, Hutchinson senior, won the first place for the best institutional advertisement. Second and third places were awarded to Don Dugan, Oswego senior, and Ron Morgan, Neodesha senior. Receiving the award for the best news story of 1963-64 was Gary Noland, Kinsley junior. This story, concerning the recent Edwards-Ecobar The Kansas City Advertising Roundtable in Kansas City made a $25 cash award to Robert Brooks for the best performance on the University Daily Kansan. case in Douglas County court, also won Noland fourth place and $300 in the national William Randolph Hearst writing competition. Bobbetta Bartelt, Frankfurt, Germany, junior, and Linda Ellis, Penns Grove, N.J., junior won second and third places respectively in news writing. The best feature story selected was written by Rose Ellen Osborne, Hutchinson senior. Thomas Coffman, Lyndon junior, and Charles Corcoran, Huntington, N.Y., junior, won second and third places in feature writing. Photography awards were presented to Don Black, Hugoton senior. first place; Roy Inman, Kansas City junior, second; and Charles Corcoran third. Mike Miller, Independence, Mo. senior, was awarded the Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity citation, for the outstanding male graduate. Blaine King, Emporia senior, won first place in the William Allen White Editorial Awards, and Thomas Coffman and Larry Schmidt, Omaha, Neb., graduate student, won second and third places. Roy Miller, Topeka junior, was presented the Theodore Alford Scholarship for $600. Miller won the award last year. MILLER WAS also awarded the Henry Schott Memorial prize for the junior man showing the most promise for future accomplishments in journalism. Jackie Helstrom, Wichita senior, won the $125 Gladys Feld Herzberg Scholarship and the $100 Bertha Shore Scholarship. The Mabel McLaughlin Beck Scholarship for $300 was presented to Leta Carthcart, Kansas City, Mo. junior, and Kay Jarvis, Kansas City, junior. Miller was also named as the outstanding male senior in the News- Editorial sequence. JOANNE SHADE, Overbrook senior, was named the News-Editorial outstanding woman graduate. Robert Brooks, Leawood, and Joanne Zabornik, Kansas City, were KU-Y's Moore Recalls Founding, Highlights of Y The KU-Y is one of the oldest organizations at KU. Established 81 years ago, the YMCA started four years before the YWCA at KU, Tom Moore, executive secretary of the KU-Y, said at the KU-Y recognition dinner last night. The two groups were combined under one constitution in 1956, Moore explained. "THE Y'S HAVE had a long tradition of service at KU." Moore told his audience. He pointed out that Y members ran the first housing and orientation program, used to run concessions for the football games, and established Rock Chalk Revue. Don Dugan was selected to receive the Alpha Delta Sigma advertising award, presented to the outstanding undergraduate student in advertising. Moore said that these innovations were due to five things in the KU-Y organization: (1) the KU-Y has a Christian purpose, (2) the Y has a combination of students, staff, and advisers, (3) the Y pays attention to the needs of students and the need of the community, (4) the Y is willing not to be too "selfish" about things, and (5) the Y has energy and creative thinking. DURING THE DINNER, the new KU-Y cabinet was announced for the coming year and Miss Connie Milliken, program secretary for the KU-Y, was presented with a watch. Wilson LIFE INSURANCE PROGRAMMING For Appointment Call VI 2-2641 R. Keith Liggett, Rep. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. the outstanding advertising graduates, and Robert Bush, Glendale, Mo., and Stephen Hagen, Great Bend, were the outstanding Radio-Television graduates. LEAVING for the SUMMER? 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INSURANCE UP TO $200 VALUE 2% extra for additional value KO LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H.-VI 3-3711 Monday, May 11, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 7 AN OPEN LETTER TO THE YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN OF SOUTHAMPTON'S DEBUTANTE PARTY WE READ A STATEMENT in the Press made by one of the young defendants after the court case involving alleged damages at a debutante party in Southampton, Long Island: "Everyone knows there is too much drinking in this country, but what can you do about it? Everybody knows the morals of this country are going down the drain." WE THE UNDERSIGNED believe we have the answer to the young man's question. We believe it is time our generation stopped self-righteously deploring this state of the nation or irresponsibly contributing to it.The time has come to change it. WE REPRESENT hundreds of young Americans across the nation who have committed their lives to create a new society in America and the world with the global program of Moral Re-Armament. WE ARE IN REVOLT against a society which creates the climate of immaturity and lawlessness that leads to such a debacle and to such a cynical statement. We have got to stop it. WE ARE IN REVOLT against the gutlessness of "good" Americans who lack the courage to explode the corruption existing in all levels of our society, who sit silently while one woman forces God out of our schools, who permit men committed to atheism and anti-God to proceed unchecked, who proclaim one set of standards and live another. WE ARE IN REVOLT against the line of the "new morality" which is forced down our throats by books, magazines, television, films, professors and some churchmen. Sex, violence, lust and godlessness are taking over the nation. When venereal disease among young Americans rises 130% between the years 1956 and 1961, when 13,000,000 children come from broken homes-who is responsible? We are. WHERE ARE THE YOUNG AMERICANS who will pay the price in their own lives to stand up for what is right in the country? Where are the fighting Americans who will cure the hatred, bitterness, impurity and selfishness which divide families, destroy races, deaden youth, split nations? THE FREE WORLD looks to us for leadership. The captive world looks to us to make freedom a reality again. We know that if America fails the world fails. WE ARE OUT TO BUILD A NATION where families teach mankind how to live together,where industry-management and labor-teach the whole world how to work together,where all races,colors and classes learn together with all nations how to lead the whole world forward. We are out to create a force of young Americans more dedicated to building a world that works than any Communist or materialist. We will create an America to whom the whole world will turn and say, "That is the way men are meant to live." WE BELIEVE IN MODERN AMERICA. We believe she will rise to the challenge of the times. We believe she will demonstrate the great reality that free men will accept of their own accord the discipline to be governed by God, so that millions on the earth will never be ruled by tyrants. THE CHALLENGE facing the American youth is not to go backward to the decadence that destroyed the Roman Empire, but to go forward to the revolution of Moral Re-Armament. WE CAN REBUILD THE MODERN WORLD. Let us go forward to absolute moral standards for all men everywhere: absolute honesty, purity, unselfishness and love, not as an end in themselves, but as a means for giving us the energy, the maturity, the responsibility, the clarity that will take humanity forward to the next stage in human evolution. THREE THOUSAND OF US are meeting this summer in a Conference for Tomorrow's America at the Moral Re-Armament Center, Mackinac Island, Michigan, to shoulder that task together. We invite every young American who has the courage and spirit to care for his nation and the future of mankind to join us. WILLIAM WISHARD, Williams College '64 MARY GALLWEY, Manhattanville College'66 S. DOUGLAS CORNELL, St. Albans School'64 STEPHEN RICKERT, Princeton University'65 SUSAN CORNELL, Radcliffe College'63 For further information on the Conference for Tomorrow's America fill out coupon and mail to: Miss Susan Cornell, East Coast Director 112 East 40th St., New York 16, N. Y. Telephone: (212) MO 1-3060 Please send me the brochure of the summer conference sessions: June 25-July 20 and July 23-August 17. NAME___ ADDRESS___ TELEPHONE ___ SCHOOL___. The cost of this advertisement has been donated by a patriotic American Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, May 11, 1964 Jayhawk Athletes Mix Good and Bad KU athletes got a sample of good and bad over the weekend, meeting with success on two fronts while suffering defeat on another. In a doubleheader with Oklahoma Friday, Coach Floyd Temple's varsity baseball team lost their chances for a first place finish in the Big Eight Conference by splitting with the Sooners. The loss was made more bitter for the Jayhawks by the knowledge that Steve Renko, star pitcher and outfielder, will be out of action for the remainder of the season with a ruptured blood vessel in his leg. The leg was injured last week in a series with Iowa State but had not started to trouble Renko until this weekend. Renko was hospitalized with the injury Thursday night. THE SOONERS then proceeded to finish the job of slamming the league's door in the Jayhawks faces as they stomped KU 14-3 in a singleton Saturday. The 1-2 series left the Jayhawks 10-5 in conference games behind the undefeated league-leading Tigers of Missouri. Saturday's baseball game was, however only the beginning of an all-sports day for the Jayhawks. In two others sports-football and track-KU had better luck. IN WINDING up its Spring drills, the Jayhawk football team played an intrasquad game which Coach Jack Mitchell termed "the finest Spring practice we've ever had." As had been expected, Mitchell's yearling crop of linemen—big linemen—showed up well in the game. The Jayhawk White team downed the Blue team 9-6 in a game which turned out to be a defensive battle. And no wonder. The two lines, which average 216 and 213 pounds respectively, were a far cry from the light lines which have characterized KU football for the past several years. MITCHELL SAID that while he was, in general, pleased with his team's performance, he was uneasy about its showing in the ball carrying and kicking departments. "I was very concerned" Mitchell said, "about the fumbles." The Jayhawks did, as a matter of fact fumble the ball eight times. Six of the bobbles came from the Blue team. Following the football scrimmage, Coach Bill Easton's trackmen took the field and defeated Oklahoma 91-54 in the season's wrapup of dual meets. FLOYD MANNING, the Jayhawks' 16-foot pole vaulter, dropped a foot off of last week achievement as he went 15-0. One week before, he smashed the Big Eight record by clearing 16-13⁄4 in a meet with Southern Illinois at Carbondale. Manning could do no better than second this week as he was beaten by the Sooners' Jim Farrell. Oklahoma's star anchorman Anthony Watson was idle this week due to an injury and his absence was felt by the Sooners. PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS MOTION PICTURES JERRY LEWIS SAYS. "Group, do you realize everytime you put your best foot forward there's a leg attached to it? And is that leg covered with some old gunny sack cloth? Dress up, gov! Good looks are an asset." LEWIS do you realize you put your forward there's ached to it? And g covered with gunny sack ss up, gov! are an asset." e, Jerry, good an asset. And good looking be bought for $8.95, there are ny reasons left eing sharp. A-1 made in JERRY LEWIS soon to be seen in "THE PATSY" A JERRY LEWIS PRODUCTION SLACKS We agree, Jerry, good looks are an asset. And when good looking slacks can be bought for $4.50 to $8.95, there are hardly any reasons left for not being sharp. A-1 slacks are made in 7 styles and all the latest fabrics. Ask for A-1's by name at your favorite store or campus shop. Racers-Tapers-PEGGERS-Chargers A-1 A-1 SLACKS A-1 Kotzin Co. 1300 Santee Street, Los Angeles, California 90015 The Jayhawks started off the meet by winning the 440-yard relay and were never behind during the competition. Two Fine 1 Act Plays THE TIGER and THE TYPIST Two Fine Art Plays Contemporary apartments for summer rental or longer. These apartments are completely furnished, have two bedrooms and are air-conditioned. at the Experimental Theatre 8:15 May 14, 15, 16 50c plus ID or $1.00 We are renting to college men, and we will allow four occupants in e ach apartment. These apartments are within walking distance of campus. Rates are from $90 to $105. Call VI 3-8241 during the day, and VI 3-9737 at night. Patronize Kansan Advertisert 1. I've come across a fascinating fact about the population. Do tell. I will do my best. Music 2. There are more females than males in the U.S.A. Where are they all hiding? Two men playing musical instruments. 3. If you really want to find out what's going on with the population you should go see The Demograph. The who? Saxophone 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. It tells you where the girls are? TOM HUGHES I've noticed more people around lately. 2014 6. Tells you how many babies are being born, how fast the population is growing. Stuff like that. Can it explain how come, if there are more females than males, I have so much trouble meeting them? Y Am manag Th that h Leagu a fog. The place dians, fashion first to 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. The more Twins Sox v Amer The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United States Home Office:1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York,N.Y. 10019 $ \circ $1964 IN 9-1, wauk Phila Chica Ro for th 13-7 but frame M of the one-l more each TI Minc with the r to.44 Rog ing u any that ries C It when Mets Angle Leag sooth In with game some Ye New all t and him Al again threening Rod was Monday, May 11, 1964 University Daily Kansan tis for These fur- ts and Page 9 bllge four ment. within s. 5105. day, ertisere ding? me, les much s Fair. For e your manager. States $ \textcircled{c} $1964 BEGIN PROGRAM By United Press International Yankees Near to First American Leaguers who laughed when Yogi Berra was appointed manager of the New York Yankees are crying "help" today. The Berra-led Yankees are riding a five-game winning streak that has carried them into a virtual tie for first place in the American League scarcely a week after they seemed to be wandering about in a fog. The Yankees swept to within 17 percentage points of the firstplace Chicago White Sox Sunday when they beat the Cleveland Indians, 12-2 and 3-2 in 10 innings. The victories completed an old-fashioned Yankee four-game sweep which dropped the Indians from first to fourth place. Ron Hansen hit a three-run homer and J. C. Martin also homered for the White Sox, who have a 12-6 record compared to the Yankees' 13-7 mark. Hoyt Wilhelm shutout the Angels for the last two innings but the victory went to Eddie Fisher, who worked the middle four frames. Dick Simpson and Jim Fregosi homered for the Angels. The White Sox defeated the Los Angeles Angels, 5-3, the Baltimore Orioles defeated the Detroit Tigers, 2-1 and 7-1, the Minnesota Twins downed the Kansas City Athletics, 6-3, and the Boston Red Sox won, 9-4, after a 13-4 loss to the Washington Senators in other American League games. IN THE NATIONAL LEAGUE, Los Angeles routed San Francisco, 9-1, St. Louis whipped New York, 10-1, after a 4-1 setback, Milwaukee won, 11-5 and then lost, 6-5, to Pittsburgh, Cincinnati stopped Philadelphia, 2-0, and Houston scored a 4-1 victory after a 4-3 loss to Chicago. Milt Pappas yielded four hits in 81/3 innings to win his first game of the season and Wally Bunker, pitching for the first time since his one-hit debut, allowed nine hits in the nightcap to complete Baltimore's sweep. Willie Kirkland and Norm Siebern drove in two runs each for the Orioles in the second game. The Twins beat the Athletics for the second straight game as Don Mincher hit a three-run homer and rookie Tony Oliva weighed in with three hits. Camilo Pascual was tagged for 12 hits but hung on for the nine innings to register his third win. Oliva raised his average to .441. Craig Loses—To the Mets Roger Craig can't remember walking under any ladders or breaking any mirrors, yet there's no doubt that the St. Louis righthander carries with him a peculiar curse. In his two years of toil and trouble with the Mets, Craig won just 15 games and lost 46 despite pitching some of the best baseball of his life. Yesterday Craig came back to New York to once and for all sever all ties with his former torturers and teammates, who had handed him most of those 46 defeats. who got too few runs and suffered an all too familiar late-inning malady. It all started three years ago when the newly-minted New York Mets acquired Craig from the Los Angeles Dodgers in the National League expansion pool, and only a soothsayer can tell when it will end. Alas, the merciless Mets did it again, thumping Roger 4-1 with a three-run outburst in the eighth inning which included home runs by Rod Kanehli and Frank Thomas. It was the same old story for Craig, The Mets, however, managed to play more like Roger remembered them in the second game of the double header as the Cards shelled rookie Jerry Hinsley, making his first start in pro ball, and veteran Tom Sturdivant, making his debut as a Met, for 14 hits and a 10-1 victory. POWER YOUR PLAY NEW YORK—(UPI)—It may be turnabout again today for the "sweet and mean" man of the Los Angeles Dodgers. ASHAWAY VANTAGE For Tournament Play Approx. Stringing Cost Tennis . $$$ The six-foot, six-inch righthander is a hot item at the moment after checking the latest Dodger skid with his fourth straight victory. And, to spoon the icing on the cake, it was a six hitter against those not-too-favored Giants. That would be towering Don Drysdale, the same that Manager Walt Alston once referred to as "a sweet pitcher and a mean competitor." Drysdale will tell you with bland innocence, once the fire of battle has faded from his flashing eyes, that he would hardly take a swatter to a fly. But hand him the ball, and you'd better add a few grains of salt. ACTUALLY HE WAS a bit slow getting started this season. He lost his first start to the Cardinals and then, in order, went for no decision against the Reds and piled up those four in a row with a six hit shutout against Houston, THERE ARE all kinds of terms for Drysdale, depending primarily on whether you are "for" him or "agin" him: Those "agin" cuss him as a "head hunter" with a dangerously low boiling point. Crowd the plate, they'll rave, and he'll throw it right at your skull so fast you better start ducking when he winds up. Yet, after a fine season in which he labored in the shadow of fireballing Sandy Koufax, Drysdale looks to be about ready to spring back into the front row. 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He won 25 games against nine defeats, led the league with 232 strikeouts as well as those victories, and earned the Cy Young Award as the pitcher of the year. that skeleton too big for anybody's closet. He just may be shooting right back at 1962, which was the best year of all for the man who is now 27. Like Bob Feller, he was started and coached by his father in "a steady backyard routine." After minor league service, Drysdale caught on at Brooklyn with a 5-5 mark in 1956 and at 21 posted a 17-9 mark in the old Flatbush ballpark which now is an apartment house development. THEN CAME FOUR frantic years when the Dodgers moved to Baghdad-on-the-Pacific. They played in the coliseum, with a left field screen over which you could hit a soft wedge shot, and every time Drysdale wheeled into his delivery he saw Last season he had an overworked 18-17 mark which went virtually unnoticed in the cheering for Koufax' great year. But big Don did post a three-hit shutout against the Yanks in the third game of the World Series to set up Sandy's final closeout heroics. So he took a back seat for the year, or at least one in the second row. This time it may once again be the other way around. KEEP ALERT! SAFE NoDoz TABLETS SAFE AS COFFEE NoDoz keeps you mentally alert with the same safe refresher found in coffee and tea. Yet NoDos is faster, handier, more reliable. Absolutely not habit-forming. THE SAFE WAY to stay alert without harmful stimulants Next time monotony makes you feel drowsy while driving, working or studying. do as millions do . . . perk up with safe, effective NoDoz tablets. Another fine product of Grove Laboratories. When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds livelier lather for really smooth shaves! 1.00 lasting freshness glides on fast, never sticky! 1.00 the original spice-fresh lotion! 1.25 Old Spice SUPER SMOOTH SHAVE Old Spice STICK DEO Old Spice AFTER SHAVE LOTION SHULTON brisk, bracing the original spice-fresh lotion! 1.25 Old Spice...with that crisp, clean masculine aroma! Page 10 University Daily Kansan Monday, May 11, 1964 U.S., West Germany Agree to Link Defense BONN, Germany—(UPI)—Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara and West German officials agreed in weekend meetings to link their defense establishments even more closely, informed sources said today. McNamara scheduled further conferences with West German Defense Minister Kai-Uwe Von Hassel and Chancellor Ludwig Erhard today on this and other defense questions. High on the list was President Official Bulletin TODAY Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. KU Dames, 7.30 p.m. Watkins Room, Kansas Union, Election of officers, Short talk by Dr. Helen Gilles, pediatrician, child care. All student wives are invited. Senior Recital. 8 p.m., Swarthout Hall Joan Gilson, pianist. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth. TOMORROW Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m. La Grave Church, 910 Stratford Rd. Air Force Recruiting, 10 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Hawk's Nest, Kansas University. Sgt. Eberhart will answer questions and applications for Officer Training School. University Senate, 3:30 p.m., Swarthout Hall. Speech-Drama Colloquium, 3:30 p.m. 404 Murphy. "Some Relationships of Communication Effectiveness. An Ex- ploratory Study"—Carl Larson. SNEA, 7:30 p.m., 303 Bayle. Film Strip: "Kansas Centennial." Inquiry, Forum, 7 p.m. St. Lawrence Civic Center will be no Western Civ Discussion. BPOAE Student Panel, 7.30 p.m., Forum on Critical Criticisms from College Experience. Inquier Classes, 7:30 p.m., Canterbury House. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m., Kansas Union "Lord of the Flies—Christian's Approach to Modern Literature."—Paul Sweeps. Graduate Recital, 8 p.m., Swarthout Hall. Sharon Sooter, mezzo-soprano. Episcopa Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m., Danforth. NOW! 7:00 & 9:00 ELVIS feudin' lovin' Swingin' PRESLEY KISAIN' COUSINS PARENSIAN METROCOLOR Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 Next — "THE PINK PANTHER" Wild. Wacky, Wonderful! ELVIS feudin' lovin' Swingin' PRESLEY kiSaiN'CouSINS Performance MetroCOLOR Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 NOW! HOW THE WEST WAS WON IN METRO COLOR EVENINGS AT 7:30 ONLY Adults $1.25 Children 50c Varsity THEATRE ... telephone VI 3-1065 Next ... NOW! HOW THE WEST WAS WON IN METRO COLOR EVENINGS AT 7:30 ONLY Adults $1.25 Children 50c Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Next . . "THE INCREDIBLE MR. LIMPET" NOW! "PT 109" AND "SPENCER'S MOUNTAIN" Sunset LIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway OPEN 7:00 — STARTS DUSK Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Johnson's appeal to the United States' NATO allies for more economic aid to South Viet Nam. McNamara planned to depart late today for Saigon for another inspection trip to check on the progress of the guerrilla war. Vietnamese police disclosed that Communist terrorists were caught Saturday while trying to mine a bridge over which McNamara was scheduled to pass on his way from the airport in Saigon tomorrow. McNamara and Hassel spent the weekend in private talks, reviewing West Germany's annual purchase of $600 million worth of military goods and services from the United States, and planning further joint programs. The sources said these programs would include research, development, and production, including a tank designed for the needs of the next decade. West Germany buys most of its equipment from the United States or manufactures U.S. equipment here under license. This situation is expected to continue. West Germany's payments to the United States for these purchases offset the local costs of maintaining six U.S. army divisions and a nuclear air force in this country. The agreement means that the U.S. forces can stay here to strengthen NATO's shield without draining dollars from the U.S. treasury. Sunset LOVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 49 The German $ _{s} $ have indicated they are willing to continue this arrangement indefinitely. Another topic of discussion was West Germany's attempts to increase the integration of NATO forces, equipment, and supply systems. Fido HORACE Each man has his own place- Your place may be in life insurance sales and sales management. If you want to be in business for yourself, with no ceiling on potential income, you should look into the many advantages offered by a career in life insurance. For full information about getting started now in a dynamic and growing business, stop by our office. Or write for the free booklet, "Career Opportunities". Hoffa On Trial For Fund Fraud Horace knew what he was talking about. Kermit D. Hoffmeier 1722 W. 9th VI 3-5692 CHICAGO — (UPI) — Attorneys at the $20 million pension fraud trial of Teamster President James R. Hoffa hoped to begin their opening arguments today. All that stood in their way was the selection of two alternate jurors whom they expected to be seated by this afternoon. Hoffa and seven associates are charged with fraudulently obtaining the $20 million from Teamster Union Pension Funds and diverting more than $1 million of the amount into their own pockets. All have pleaded innocent. Hoffa is free on bond pending the outcome of the appeal of his jurytampering conviction at Chattanooga, Tenn., last March. He was sentenced to eight years in prison. The government's second attempt of the year to put Hoffa behind bars will be opened with a prosecution argument by Abraham Poerez, a special assistant attorney general. PROVIDENT MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA The courtroom here was under such tight security precautions that defense attorneys called for a mistrial on the grounds the atmosphere was not conducive to a fair trial. KU Police Jeep Burned; State Office Investigates The State Fire Marshal's office and the KU police department are investigating a fire early Saturday morning which damaged a KU police jeep parked behind Hoch Auditorium. E. P. Moomau, KU police chief, said this morning there were no new leads in the investigation. Parts of a glass container have been taken to the state KBI laboratory. A second glass container containing gasoline was found near the jeep. THERE HAS BEEN no estimate of the damage. Moomau said the fire was apparently started with an inflammable liquid in the glass container. Moomau said he did not know if the incident had any connection with the dismissal of Michael Mount, Wichita senior, for writing a bomb scare note in the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Students protested the suspension of Mount by sending petitions to the administration. Thursday night, Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, was hanged in effigy and later received a bomb scare report by telephone. Moomau said the fire was reported by a student who was riding by on a bicycle. The student told police he heard a sound like an inflammable liquid suddenly ignited, and then saw a flash of the fire. -BUSINESS DIRECTORY- Milliken's SOS the best professional service - general typing service - automatic typing - 24 hr. answering service - mimeegraph & photo-conveying graphic & photocopying 1021½ Mass, Ml 3-5920 7 a.m.-11 p.m. 7,000 Pipes and every smoking accessory 727 Mass. VI 3-7164 George's Pipe Shop "SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS" 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER STUDENTS Grease Jobs . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. Balfour 7 a.m.-11 p.m How do you save money by spending a lot of it at the Lawrence Book Nook? 1021 Mass. BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 819 W. 23rd Fraternity Jewelry JIM'S CAFE OPEN 24 hrs. a day 838 Mass. Tops — Glass & Zippers Rear Glasses — Headlines — Panels — 545 Minn. VI 3-4242 Tailor Made Seat Covers with Competitive Prices with sewed double lock stitch. Lockie's Seat Covers COMPLETE SERVICE FOR CHEVYS OLDS 738 N.H. VI 3-7700 - Big enough to have all the equipment. SHIP WINTER - Small enough to give personal attention. 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 AM 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 Cla Originality IN FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION especially for you by Alexander's 826 IOWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PHONE VL 31209 ormals -4752 af conomic W bus 400 mil 1895. C. 30 to 7 964 Vol T 2-259 959 Vo nd batt 953 four lean bo hanical t 1105 ] 1957 Ch clean. $ .m. Eico ste con. Ga ttereo Whole s VI 3-401 Single Sale: Alsion. Ca Aging, cell 196 matic turry (by offer. One di- condition removal Danish euphol 25th, Ap- noon; I ween 2 Furniture frigerate Danish rug, cot Slightly set, be room si p.m. LAWRI LECTIO WEAPO ALSO VI 2-12 1959 b many clean. p.m. Mobile 10'. Tw lioned, many ed 3 b ideal f Blvd. 0 SPORT whites, four p. choice, 15, 590 Ray S Ray S 292 M 640 65 1958 b Power tion, o Rose I Weddin stairs. New & sheet SPEI WHEE at greet Safurd St Typew Oilvet Tbles. Lice Lc IV 3-5 25c FOR SALE Classified Ads of by formals for sale. Sizes 12, 16. Call 8-4752 at 5.30 p.m. 5-13 economical, versatile transportation in a W bus. Student owned. 1963 model. Buses least used used bus. VI 3-7370. 1895. Call Roger Morrison, BUS 3-7370. to 3 on p. 7. 5-12 664 Volkswagen. New, accessories. Call 1-2 2594 after 7:30 p.m. 5-15 959 Volvo. Rebuilt engine, new tires and battery. Clean. Call V3 4-1050. 5-21 957. Chevy. 6, stick. good condition. $440 cash. Call V1. 2-9280. 5-12 11-25 ideo stereo preampl-amplifier combination Garrard 2000 485 1920 720 360 120 Excellent. condition. Whole system must go. Call Steve Heinz. T 3-4050. If not there, leave message. 953 four wheel drive Jeep pickup. Solid, lean body, 16" p 4ty tires, perfect mechanical condition, new engine. $600. See t 1105 La. after 7 p.m. 5-13 Single featherweight sewing machine for engineered furniture, excellent for call VI 2-4262 5-13 Aging, conservative faculty type must elic 1960 Dodge Dart. Four door, auto- transmission, Owner leaving career by choice). See at 106 R.1. Best after. One dineet set, 2 years old, excellent condition. Six chairs with matching table, Danish Modern chairs, 2 years old, need upholstering, $10 each. See at C 635 W. 5th, Apt. 3 Tuesday & Thursday, before ween 2 and 5 p.m. Wednesday, Friday, befteen 2 and 5 p.m. Furniture and appliances. 9 mo. old. Refrigerator, electric stove, kitchen cabinet, microwave, dishwasher, rug, coffee tables, end tables, table lamps, slightly older: breakfast set, bedroom set, bedroom suite, floor lamp, living room suite. Call VI 4-5564 between 6 a.m. 5 p.m. LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. GOOD SELECTION OF HANDGUNS, MILITARY ORIGINAL YARD GARMENTS ALSO REBLUE. EVENINGS, 1026 OHIO, VI-21241. Priced to sell, 1956 Pontiac. Radio, heater. Call VI 3-3987. 5-11 1059 blue VW sedan. Whitewall tires, more accessories. Well cared for and clean. By owner. Call VI 2-3103. 5 to 7 o.m. 5-12 Mobile Home, 1959 kit, Stateliner, 50' x 10'. Two bedrooms, carpeted, air-conditioned, washer, new hot water heater, many extras. Excellent heat in KU Med Center, ideal for Medical student, 3610 Rainbow Blvd. Call SK 1-0412. 5-12 1952 MG-TD. Good condition, rebuilt engine. Call VI 3-0540 evenings. 5-11 SPORTS CAR TIRE CLEARANCE. Wide whites, discontinued tread designs, all four ply tubeless, highest quality, four choice, 560 x 13, 590 x 13, 600 x 15, 590 x 15, 600 x 15, $15 each or exchange. Free installation at Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 329 Mass. (4 Mercedes high speed safety 640, 650 x 13, 's' cut to $20 each. 5-11 Wedding dress, size 7-8. 1817 La. Uphairs, west apartment. 4 to 6 p.m. 1958 black and white Ford convertible. Power steering and brakes, good condition, original owner. Call VI 3-5003, 1618 Rose Lane. New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500 sheets to ream -85. Lawrence Outlook, 106th St. SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS. Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale at great savings after 6 p.m. week day; surburdy and Sunday. 837 Connecticut tt Typewriter, new and used portables, standards, electrics. Olympia, Hermes, Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter, adder, rentals and service Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St. VI 3-3644. JOE'S BAKERY Page 11 JOE'S BAKERY 616 W.9th Open 24 hours except Saturday evening delivery VI 3-4 25c delivery VI 3-4720 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 FOR RENT Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta notes. CV II 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. Complete revised, new, completely revised, extremely complex mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CV II 1-9101 for free delivery. **For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3-1040 after 5 p.m.** Bedroom with shower and half-bath. Kitchen privileges if desired. See at 516 La. tf Available June 1. Apartments and sleeping rooms. $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from Union. Off street parking. Call VI 2-1675 or VI 3-0492. 5-14 For the summer. For 2 or 3 men students. Cool, pleasant, basement apart- ment. Great location with a hill. Private bath and entrance. Call Vi- 3-6313, 1103 W. 19th Terrace. 5-14 To sublet for June, July, and August; furnished two bedroom apartment. Five minute walk from KU library. Modern, central air-conditioning, carpeted, pool. Call VI 3-1007 after 4 p.m. or see at 1737 Ohio, Apt. 7. 5-13 Emery Apartments available June 1. Efficiency and one bedroom. To see contact Milan Loupal, Apt. 204, Emery or call VI 3-8190. 5-19 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. One and two bedroom apartments. 123: La. Call VI 3-4271. 5-1 Bachelor Studio Apartment for graduate or older undergraduate men. $1_{1/2}$ blocks from Union. Newly remodeled, nicely furnished studio ideal study conditions. A few still available at low summer rates. Singles and doubles. For appointment call VI 3-8534. Large, homey, attractively furnished, 4 room apartment. For summer months at summer rates. Kitchen built-ins and cabinets. Dining area with electricity. Also available June Ist. Large 3 room apt. Call VI 3-7677. Will rent for summer months. One and 2 bedroom apartments available now! 101 new units available Aug. 15. Swimming pool, air conditioning, wal-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 toilet and paid. Call if 2-9451 or see at 1244 La. TYPING EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention on all reports, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate typing at reasonable rates. Call Donna Stewart VI 3-6621. ftt Let me do your typing for you. Ex- ample 1-43511 or VI 3-4060. Miss. Bai- UN 4-3511 or VI 3-4060. Artists - Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics George's Hobby Shop 1105 Mass. VI 3-5087 图示:人物动作与摄影技巧 Experienced typist would like to do experience with service, standard rates. CGI VI 3-7819 Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO STUDENTS! SAVE WITH THIS AD!! Bob Blank, Photographer Experienced typist would like typing in her home. Prompt service and reason able rates. Mrs. Marvin Brown, 172 Kentucky, VI 2-0210. 5-1 Experienced secretary would like typing. Standard rate. Mrs. Ethel. Henderson. Term papers accurately and neatly typed on good grade bond paper. Minor corrections, carbon copy, extra first page. Call VI 3-0875. 5-21 Standard rate. Mrs. Efhel, Henderson. 2553 Ridge Court, VI 0-1212. 5-21 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work stands. Phone VI 3-8379. Charles tfp Pattl. Experienced secretary wound like typing in her home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 2188. tt Fast. accurate work done on electric transmission rates. Call Bett Vincent. VI 3-5504. "Front End Special" Accurate expert typist would like typing Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. Usee Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. Usee Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reasonabler paper, newspapers, sertations and theses, phone VI 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson. $6.88 Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (pica type). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0558. All makes & models frame - body - fender - glass Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon pencil, inkpad, paper, printer, VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 408 West 13th. **tt** AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS DALE'S BODYSHOP Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tt Shirt Finishing Laundry Let us prove how we can save you money on all your car needs "Come in Today" RISK'S - Front end aligned - Front wheels balanced, hearing reracked Wash & Fluff Dry FREE! qt. of oil with oil change & filter BOB'S CONOCO Lube - Wheel Bal. - Brakes Secretary will do typing in home. Fast. Clerk will do typing in office. Legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577. Let us prove how we can save TYFING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers reports, etc. Electric Typewriter, Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-858t f Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking 19th & Mass. VI 3-9802 - Steering checked ONLY REAL PET VI 3-4732 704 Vermont WARDS GRANT'S DRIVE-IN Pet Center AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 AUTO SERVICE CENTER 729 N.H. VI 2-1708 Sure Everything in the Pet Field Monday, May 11, 1964 "Come in Today" 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921 GB Recording Service and Party Music records: tapes: recorded or duplicated cut or pressed experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 MILKIENS SOS—always nst quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines tape transcriptions. Off- hours - 7 a.m. p.m. p123-1920 Mass Phone VI 3-5920 MISCELLANEOUS Dressmaking-alterations, formals and gowns. Ola Smith. 939% M1st WI 3-5263 & MCAFE now under new management We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. dinners, lunches, dinners, and sandwiches four second cup of coffee always free BUSINESS SERVICES Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery trented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, $16 Mass. VI 3-1267. t Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. t Lawrence Annual Coin Club Show. Community Bldg., May 9 and 10. Public will be present. All will buy, sell, or trade. Exhibit of rare foreign and domestic coins. 5-11 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. WANTED Ride to and from K.C. Saturdays and/or August. See Mrs. Wilson, 10-4 Stoufau. VI 3-6333 YELLOW CAB CO. 24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled University Daily Kansan BURGERT'S Shoe Service Service for Shoes Since 1910 VI 3-0691 DUCKS The only thing better than a home cooked meal is — Dinner At Steaks & Seafoods A Specialty Serving crisp tossed salads, choice of potatoes, zesty Vienna breads G country fresh butter. Sandwiches, too! Your favorite beverage 11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass. $ $ $ $ $ $ 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 - Your satisfaction GUARANTEED Auto Service Center 729 N.H. VI 2-1708 Montgomery Wards $ $ $ $ $ $ Sonitors, cash your rebate slips before cashout, before you leave KU **5-12** **2-0180** **5-12** VOLKSWAGEN'S WANTED. Cash for your VW. Conzelman Motors, VW Sales, Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway 9 Opportunity for male keyboard mannequins created in sales demonstration. Write giving age, experience, type of instru-tso. HELP WANTED LOST Free room and board for graduate student home in exchange for baby-sitting, doing dishes, and general mother's helper. Possibility for year. Call VI 2-0493. 5-11 Experienced typist. Full time. Capable of assuming responsibility. Fast, accurate typing a necessity. Salary open. Write Box 20, 111 Flint Hall, Campus. 5-13 Room and board in very nice home near campus. For right person interested helping with well-mannered children. visits 9, 6. 4.) Call Mrs. Milliken. IV 3-58 REPAIRS — LEATHER REFINISHING Man's Hamilton wrist watch on campus Thursday morning. Call Byron Miller, VI 3-8454. Reward. 5-13 Arrow Sorinizer Pin (Pi Beta Phi) and two rail pears. If found, return to Anne Shontz, 1612 W. 15th., VI 3-910. 5-13 REPAIRS — LEATHER REFINISHING ALTERATIONS — BE WEAVING NEW YORK CLEANERS ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING Delivery Service 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 --- When Hallmark Plans-a-Party, you receive the compliments Hallmark 21 Hallmark PLANS-A-PARTY BULLOCK'S ● Parker Pens ● Stationery ● Printing 4 E. 7th VI 3-2261 When buying diamonds Look for this sign MEMBER OF NATIONAL BRIDAL SERVICES MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY AGS In Lawrence, your Authorized Dealer is Delbert A. Eisele Marks Jewelers 817 Mass. VI 3-4266 One Stop Service Engine Tune Up Generator & Starter Repair Brake Repair ★ Lubrication & Oil Change WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE JACK & GUNN'S SKELLY SERVICE 300 W. 6th SKELLY FOR VI 3-9271 TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS SEE MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES MALLS SHOPPING CENTER VI 3-1211 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Monday, May 11, 1964 2 World Spotlight Arias Leads in Panama PANAMA CITY, Panama—(UPI)—Former President Arnulfo Arias, a nationalist who favors close relations with the United States, took the lead in election returns today in his bid to regain the presidency. One of the primary tasks facing the winner of yesterday's voting will be to resolve the dispute with the United States over the U.S.-controlled Panama Canal. China Accused of Treason MOSCOW—(UPI)—The Soviet Union accused Red China of treason to communism today in the latest Soviet bid for support of the world's communist parties. The new Kremlin attack followed up yesterday's call to all communist parties to reject Peking's "hard line" and join a voluntary union of equals in which Moscow would renounce its supremacy. Both statements were published in the Soviet Party newspaper Pravda as chapters in a five-part series. The articles apparently are a response to Peking's statements last fall on key issues dividing Russia and Red China in their ideological and political quarrel. Keating Supports Goldwater NEW YORK—(UPI)—Sen. Kenneth B. Keating, R-N.Y., said yesterday he would support Sen. Barry Goldwater as a presidential candidate only if the Arizona Republican liberalized his views. Suspected Slayer Drowns Keating, a staunch supporter of Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller in the latter's campaign to capture the GOP nomination, said Goldwater would have to promise to adopt a liberal party platform and turn away from conservatism before he could get his support. BOISE, Idaho—(UPI)—A suspected slayer of five persons apparently drowned last night during a gunfight with police which climaxed one of the most grisly crimes in Idaho history. The victims included the suspect's three children, his stepdaughter and his former wife. Two were garrotted with lengths of wire, two were shot and one was bludgeoned to death with the butt of a luger pistol. Police identified the suspected slayer as Raymond Reasons, (age unavailable). The victims included his daughters, Pamela, 12, and Patty, 13; his son, Eddie Ray, 14; his step-daughter, Sarah G. Gohman, 20, and his former wife, Estelle, 47. Nazi Crime Trials Continue FRANKFURT, Germany—(UP)—The ex-inmate barber of the Nazi wartime death camp at Auschwitz testified today he watched two of his former Gestapo customers drunkenly hang 12 men. Leon Czekalski of Tomazow, Poland, told a war crimes court that defendants Oswald Kaduk and Wilhelm Boger prepared for the hangings by getting drunk. The former barber said Kaduk and Boger, the two ex-Gestapo guards being tried with 20 other men for helping kill up to 4 million persons at Auschwitz. first forced another inmate to drop the nooses around the doomed men on gallows outside the camp kitchen. "Then Boger and Kaduk moved forward and kicked the chairs from under the victims' feet." Czekalski said. Bombed Office Ready LAUREL, Miss.—(UPI)—Editor-publisher J. W. West of the Laurel Leader-Call, damaged by an explosion yesterday, said today's edition would be published on schedule. The blast shattered the press room, broke all 65 windows on the building's first floor and caused moderate damage to the press. "Someone was apparently trying to put us out of business," said West, who estimated the damage at $2,000. West said a cross was burned in front of the building several weeks ago "But I don't know whether you can connect this or not." He said the newspaper had taken no editorial stands that were particularly controversial. Agency Seeks Moon Trips HOUSTON—(UPI)—The Federal Space Agency can and will promise you the moon. Just don't ask for a specific delivery date. America will spend at least $20 billion and probably a lot more to send two astronauts 240,000 miles to stake out the nation's scientific claim on the moon. A project nicknamed Appollo has the burden of accomplishing this, as a "national goal," before the end of the decade. Awards and scholarships to students and prospective students in architecture at KU were announced Friday at the department's annual banquet. Architecture Awards Presented Guest speaker was Neal Burgess Mitchell Jr., assistant professor of the Harvard Graduate School of Design, Mitchell lectured Thursday in the schools of engineering and architecture. EUGENE GEORGE, chairman of the department of architecture, announced the establishment of a memorial scholarship fund honoring the late George R. Eckel, prominent St. Joseph, Mo. architect, Mrs. Eckel was guest of honor at the dinner. The endowed scholarship fund will be administered by the KU Endowment Association and will make possible an annual award to one or more students in architecture at the university. Recipients will be chosen by the chairman of the department under the provisions governing the new scholarship. The winners of the "Arts of Architecture" display, which has been on exhibit in the union, were also announced at the dinner. Design I-IV: Theodore Larkin, Great Bend senior, and Jerry Clawson, Pordin. Mo. senior. Design V-VIII winners are Ken Wilson, Kansas City. Mo. junior, and Marion Hymer, Merriam senior, Painting and Austrian tissue winners are Kenneth Kahmann, Springfield, Mo. senior, and Julian Ominski, Kansas City, Mo. senior. Scupture winners are Jon Thogmartin, Kansas City, Mo., senior, and Jim Williams, Phillipsburg senior. Drawing winners are Duane Pankratz, Salina freshman, and Richard Obenchain, St. Clair, Pa., sophomore. KU Law School Chooses Queen Debbie Galbraith, Wichita sophmore, was chosen queen of the KU School of Law's Fun Day, Saturday, from 12 candidates. Runner-ups in the two-piece bathing suit contest were Marilyn Veatch, Wichita freshman and Margaret Jones, Moultrie, Ga., senior. Miss Gaibraith was crowned "Miss Res Ipsa Louquit," which translates from Latin as "let the facts speak for themselves." She will reign over remaining law activities for the year. THE FOLLOWING IS a list of other architecture students who were honored at the dinner: Five recipients of Smith, Smith, Haines, Lundberg and Waehler scholarships of $150 to $500 are Stuart Barger, Harrisonville, Mo., graduate student; Bernard Galton, Lawrence junior; William H. Prelogar Jr., Grandview, Mo., junior; Theodore Scott, Manville, N.J., senior, and Charles Winters, Kansas City senior. GOLDWIN GOLDSMITH scho- ships, named after the first chairman of the department of architecture, went to Richard Obenchain, Upper St. Clair, Pa., sophomore; Samuel Love, Pittsburg sophomore; John William Hunzinger, future freshman from McAleren, Okla.; Dennis Wayne, Jacobs, future freshman from Kansas City, Mo.; Robert L. Morrow, future freshman from St. Marys; Glenda Jo Phetteplace, future freshman from Smith Center; and Chester Floyd Willey, future freshman from Caldwell. Sheraton's Campus Representative will give you a free Student ID or Faculty Guest Card. With it you can get low discount rates at all 90 Sheraton Hotels and Motor Inns 'round the world . . even in single rooms! With 2 or 3 in a room, you save even more. And you get fabulous food. Beautiful rooms. Free parking. Let Sheraton teach you a thing or two about relaxing and living it up this summer . . . at Sheratons from Montreal to Mexico City, from Waikiki Beach to New York. For your free ID or Guest Card, and more information, contact; Summer vacation? We'll help you see the world have a great time and save money, too. College Relations Director College Relations Dept., Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington 8, D.C. 90 Sheraton Hotels & Motor Inns NEW SurfStar by Artcarved Breathtaking, beautiful and yours All the surging beauty, the exciting mystery of the sea itself seems captured in this newest engagement ring from Artcarved. See the distinctly new, yet timeless, design of Surf Star at your Artcarved Jeweler. Priced from $180. For more information, plus helpful suggestions on wedding etiquette, send 25¢ for Wedding Guide to J.R. Wood & Sons, Inc., 216 E. 45th Street, New York 17, New York, Department C. *TRADEMARK See Surf Star only at these Authorized Artcarved Jewelers Atchison RUNYAN JEWELERS Arkansas City McDOWELL'S Beloit GREIF JEWELERS Dodge City ROTH JEWELERS Downs WIERENGA JEWELRY El Dorado POND JEWELRY Emporia ROSENBALM JEWELERS STANLEY JEWELERS Fredonia THOMAS JEWELERS Garden City REGAN JEWELRY STORE Goodland MUHLHEIM JEWELRY STORE Great Bend DAWSON JEWELERS, INC. Hiawatha HIAWATHA JEWELERS Hill City HIXON JEWELRY Hoisington WELLMAN F. KOMAREK Kansas City, Mo. HURST'S DIAMOND SHOP, INC Lawrence MARKS JEWELERS Liberal C. F. PATTERSON JEWELERY Lyons SLOOP JEWELRY Manhattan REED & ELLIOTT McPherson BRUNK JEWELERS Norton WORDEN'S JEWELRY Ottawa BOYER'S JEWELRY Plainville IVAN'S JEWELRY Russell LEWIS JEWELRY Scott City ROBERT'S JEWELRY Toneka HESS JEWELERS Washington DITMARS JEWELRY Wellington RILEY JEWELRY CO. Wichita McMULLEN JEWELRY Pre- nior; sen- nsas olar=m turepper upper, John Johnnis mannis rt l R rt l St. a St. fu=u- nuture Campus Active In Summer Too From commencement until the beginning of the academic year in the fall, as many individuals are active on the KU campus as during the fall and winter semesters. "Many of these individuals are here for special summer programs, such as Boys' State, Girls' State, band camp, and various conferences," George B. Smith, vice cancellor and director of the summer session said in an interview this morning. "However a large number of students are expected to come for academic work this summer," he said. "We can expect three groups of students to attend the summer session, in addition to the special summer students involved in research, or the high school teachers who come for additional study," he continued. "This year we have tried to organize the summer school program so that the incoming freshmen can start on a regular college program, especially in the principal courses," Dean Smith explained. According to the 1964 Summer Session Newsletter, principal courses are being offered in almost every department. These are courses such as General Biology I, Introductory Economics 7, and English Composition and Literature. "The three groups of students are incoming freshmen,students speeding up their academic program,and students seeking enrichment by taking additional courses. "Planning of the summer session has been closely co-ordinated with the deans of all operational divisions of the university," Dean Smith said. "An effort is also being made to expand the courses available to juniors and seniors. "It is true that many of these upperclassmen attending summer school don't necessarily hurry their programs to get out of the university in three years, but to get a masters' degree in four," Dean Smith said. "Many students take summer school courses to fill gaps that they don't have time to fill during the year. "For example, there is the engineering student who doesn't have time to take a five-hour language course during the academic year." Dean Smith said. Students can explore areas of interest which they discovered during the year, but found impossible to pursue because of a tight schedule." he continued. "Parallels between summer school and fall enrollments can be drawn." James K. Hitt, registrar, said in an interview this morning. "Last year the summer school enrollment was 4800 credit students by the end of the acceptance period. "This summer we can predict around 5000 students will enroll for credit, and that about 11,000 individuals will be on and off the campus during the summer," he said. "All of the facilities available to the regular winter students will be kept operating for the summer school students. "This includes intramurals, the swimming pool, and the Kansas Union," Dean Smith said. "The institution will be operating full blast this summer," he concluded. "All classes except those meeting in special meeting rooms will be in air-conditioned rooms," Dean Smith said. "There was an increase in enrollment last fall so we can predict an increase for the summer session," Mr. Hitt said. Registration and enrollment will be June 5 and 6, and classes will begin Monday, June 8. The session will end on August 1. The KU Summer Session begins June 4 with the orientation of all new undergraduate students. Fees for the summer session are charged according to the number of hours in which the student is enrolled. A schedule of these fees, and course information is available in the 1964 Summer Session Newsletter, which can be obtained from the Registrar's Office, 122 Strong Hall. Dailu hansan Lawrence, Kansas Wallace, a candidate in Maryland's presidential preference primary next Tuesday, spoke before a whites-only audience of more than 1.500. He was invited to Cambridge by the Dorchester County Business and Citizens Association, an organization formed last summer to combat Negro integration demands. Among those under arrest at the Maryland National Guard Armory in Pikesville, near Baltimore, today was Mrs. Gloria Richardson, chairman of the Cambridge Non-Violent Action Committee and acknowledged leader of the city's integrationist movement. Tuesday, May 12, 1964 Wallace Cambridge Rally Scene of Demonstration Brig. Gen. George C. Gelston, deputy Maryland Adjutant General who has been stationed in Cambridge since last summer, imposed an 11 p.m. curfew and said he would keep his troops in the city at least through today. CAMBRIDGE, Md. — (UPI) Brick-tossing Negroes kept the Maryland Eastern shore fishing town of Cambridge on edge today, while the commander of a National Guard peace-keeping contingent arranged to meet with Negro leaders in hopes of averting a repetition of a riot last night. GELSTON WARNED whites to bypass the Negro section of Cambridge today, describing it as a hazardous area. The outbreaks were triggered when guardsmen in the racially-split town turned away crowds attempting to protest an appearance of Alabama segregationist Gov. George C. Wallace. Brig. Gen. George C. Gelston planned to confer with Negro leaders in the aftermath of a wild Negro street demonstration last night that had to be curbed with tear gas. Chancellor Wescoe Clears Up Rumors on Disiplinary Action Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe made a statement today concerning the action of the Disciplinary Committee on the case of Mike Mount, Wichita senior. Mount left a bomb threat note in the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority house last Monday evening. Mount has been suspended from the university for the rest of the semester. WITH FULL knowledge that the women's living group involved had received a telephoned bomb threat on the previous night, the student disciplined wrote an unmistakable bomb threat note which was noticed Chancellor Wescoe wrote the statement in reply to the petitions, signed by students, asking the committee to reconsider its earlier decision. The University Disciplinary Committee on Friday, May 8, received a number of petitions requesting reconsideration of a matter concerning which it had made a decision earlier in the week. These petitions were forwarded to me. The members of the Disciplinary Committee and I recognize the sincerity and thoughtful compassion of those who signed the petitions. There has been, however, no new evidence presented. The petition, containing about 1400 signatures, was turned over to the administration Friday. These petitions were shown to the University Disciplinary Committee at its meeting Friday. The statement is as follows: The facts are these and they are undisputed: intact by two members of the group in his presence. Although the student had an opportunity to explain the origin and meaning of the note to these members when his attention was called to it, he failed to do so. This is the student's testimony. One of the two members reported the bomb threat to officers of the group who notified the police. The note, torn in half, was found by the police in an ashtray in the room where it had originally been noticed. Later, the student acknowledged that he was the author of the note. All of these facts were presented to the Committee and it was upon these facts that a decision was made. Our procedures indicate no reconsideration of decisions, unless new, hitherto unknown, facts can be presented. Under the circumstances, I do not feel justified in asking the Committee to reconsider. A WORD MAY appropriately be added concerning these petitions. The student in question was not "summarily dismissed" from the University. To the contrary, after careful, thoughtful deliberation, the Committee voted his suspension for the remainder of the current semester. The action was neither summary nor dismissal. The student is eligible to petition to continue his studies as early as the summer session, and he has been so informed. It should be noted also that neither the Committee nor the University has given any prior release about this matter. Any distortion of facts, any releases, have originated elsewhere. I know of no committee that carries a heavier responsibility than the Disciplinary Committee, a joint student-faculty committee established by the University Senate. It performs its duties and carries out its responsibilities in exemplary fashion and at the expense of much energy and many hours. Its decisions are not reached capriciously or after brief discussion. Differences of opinion arise, as they will in any deliberative body, but all decisions represent the consensus of the majority, with due regard to the individual or individuals involved, as well as the campus community. The University is accountable for the lives and safety of more than 12,000 individuals and of the property of those individuals as well as of the state of Kansas. The University cannot and it will not tolerate any threats or action directed against life, safety, or property. The University expects, indeed demands, that each of its members accepts the individual responsibility to protect the University's name, its property, and the welfare and safety of all who live and work within it. Skies will be clearing tonight. It will become fair and warmer Wednesday, the Weather Bureau said. Low temperature tonight will be around 50 degrees. High tomorrow will be from 75 to 80 degrees. Weather furor, finished his speech and left Cambridge shortly after 9 p.m. Five Maryland state troopers were in the car carrying the Alabama governor and carloads of additional troops were posted in front and in back of his car. FIVE GUARDSMEN were injured slightly in the scuffling which erupted when they attempted to drag the demonstrators away last night. Two of the demonstrators were hospitalized; one for a cut leg, the other for tear gas burns. After the first crowd of demonstrators were dispersed without violence, about 200 regrouped and began another street demonstration, which is forbidden under militia law. Wallace spoke at an invitation-only rally at the Cambridge Fire Arena. At the same time, Mrs. Richardson and other integration leaders, including John Lewis, head of the student non-violent coordinating committee, staged a "freedom day" counter-rally five blocks away. More than 400 guardsmen patrolled the streets in "a show of force" to head off possible demonstrations, but to no avail. About 400 demonstrators, led by Mrs. Richardson, swarmed out of the "freedom day" rally, heading for the Fire Arena where Wallace was speaking shortly after 8:30 p.m. EDT. THEY WERE MET by a force of 40 guardmen with bayonets bared and stopped, but only for a time. Wallace, apparently unaware of the As a last measure, Tawes ordered the tear gas bombs fired. The acrid fumes enveloped the demonstrators who were sitting in a massed group on the ground. Several of the Negroes shouted, "don't run, don't run," as the clouds of gas rolled over them. But within seconds demonstrators broke and ran from the scene, coughing and spitting, their eyes streaming. Mrs. Richardson then followed the demonstrators and joined them, linking arms with two companions in the first row. N TOGETHERNESS—Richard and Marilyn Scharine do everything together, including starring in plays. The Typists and The Tigers, which they are currently rehearsing to open Thursday in the Experimental Theatre will be the third in a series of plays in which they have appeared. Experimental Theatre Features Drama Team A KU graduate student and his wife are being featured in an Experimental Theatre production that originally starred Eli Wallach and his wife. Richard and Marilyn Scharine, White Water, Wisconsin, will open in two modern comedies, The Typists and the Tigers, 8:15 p.m. Thursday in the Experimental Theatre. The original presentation of the plays was the highlight of the 1963 season at the Orpheum Theatre off Broadway. The plays had already been introduced to the British Theatre audiences at the British Drama League in 1960. The Typists had been taped for British television and production at the Edinburgh Festival in 1961 in Israel. The KU production is being directed by Patricia Hensley. The Scharines have played opposite each other in other KU plays, including the Diary of Anne Frank and The Adding Machine. Tickets for the production on sale for $1.00 or 50c with a KU ID card can be obtained at the University Box Office for the May 14, 15 and 16 production. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, May 12. 1964 "...no man wore a crown, " except Huey- Bv Mike Miller Louisiana has traditionally been the state of the redneck. A redneck is a mean poor dirt farmer whose only knowledge of the city and city folk is that he doesn't like them. He knows that he is fighting to keep himself and his family fed and clothed while the aristocrat of the city is squandering his money on rich foods and expensive clothes. For more than half a century after the Civil War, the government in Louisiana was run by government from the city. They cooperated with the bankers, the large merchants, the oil and sugar and cotton interests—the affluent benefactors of the status quo. The redneck is unlearned and not particularly interested in becoming learned. This was the political setup when the eight child of a redeck in impoverished Winn Parish, Louisiana, was born. The child was named Huey Pierce Long Jr. And what influence Huey P. Long might have had if he had not been murdered by an angered young doctor when he was 42 years old. They had no interest in the redneck. The redneck was too dumb to vote. All he wants to learn is some way to make his fight with life a little less tedious. And what an influence Huey P. Long was to have, not only on the redneck, but on the people of the United States. Huey Long grew up working in the soil, a task which he hated. He hated both farm work and conformity. After graduation from high school, he peddled a cooking compound throughout north Louisiana, meeting and making friends of many of the farm folk who were to champion him in the years to come. He attended Oklahoma University Law School for one term. Then he completed a three-year law course from Tulane University in eight months. He secured a special examination from the Louisiana Supreme Court and became a lawyer at the age of 21 years. His first 21 years were marked by toil - manual toil on his father's farm in Winn Parish and mental toil buried in stacks of law books. The course of his last 21 years was set when he left the Supreme Court examination. "I come out of that courtroom running for office," he explained. When he was 24, he won his first political office. He became a commissioner on Louisiana's three-man utilities regulatory board, the Railroad Commission. As railroad commissioner, Huey P. Long was something uncomfortably new and strange. He damned "bigness" in all its Louisiana manifestations. During his campaign, he received $500 from an old Winn Parish friend named O. K. Allen. Later, when Long was elected to the United States Senate, O. K. Allen became Long's governor, stooge and general errand boy. He continued to battle bigness in his speeches. He ran for governor in 1924 and he might have won except that a large rainstorm kept thousands of his redneck backers a way from the polls. Their roads washed away. For the next four years, he battled the big businesses with his mouth while he allowed them to line his pockets with their money. In defense of this, he explained that the only way to help the poor people was with money. And the only way to get money was to work with the rich. American Monarch In 1928, Huey P. Long became the most indefatigable campaigneer in the demagically fertile South. He swore, he defamed, he accused for as much as 20 hours a day in the language which the rednecks could best understand. He promised the redneck material things — good roads, lower utility rates, free bridges, free school books. He freely mixed Bible quotations with profanity, but the rednecks understood what he was preaching. He was elected Governor of Louisiana. No rain fell that day. The redneck had come into his own. "EVERY MAN A KING, BUT no man wears a crown." That's what he told them. "King" is a euphemism of what Huey P. Long became in Louisiana. He became a dictator. By the time Huey Long was murdered in 1935, the lives of Louisians had been vastly changed. Miles and miles of good, paved roads reached out to the most remote farms. Sturdy Long-built bridges crossed the swamp country. The children got their free text books. Evidence of Long's work still exists. Thirteen charity hospitals treat millions throughout the state. Public schools provide free text books, free lunches, free transportation and even free pencils and erasers. Although Louisiana's per capita income is fortieth in the nation, its per capita public assistance is third. It leads the nation in old-age assistance and disability assistance and is third in aid to dependent children. Perverted Robin Hood Long soon branched out from Louisiana. His "Share the Wealth" solution to the depression of the 1930's became a nation-wide movement. It called for the limiting of all fortunes to $5,000,000; an annual income minimum of $2,500 and a maximum of $1,800,000; a homestead grant of $6,000 for every family; free education from kindergarten through college; bonuses for veterans; old-age pensions and Long had a simple explanation of where this money came from. He soaked the rich and cut down on the great fortunes. Everybody, rich and poor, got soaked by taxes. Louisiana taxes everything from auto parking to slot machines (even though they are illegal). He didn't soak the rich any more than he did the poor. But the poor folks, the red-necks, didn't care. The per capita tax ranks fourth in the country. an abundance of cheap food through governmental purchase and store of surpluses. O Huey Long must have believed in his program, at first any way. Nothing but a firm devotion to a cause could make a man drive himself the way Huey did. This devotion of helping the poor became a devotion to getting power for Huey P. Long and depended on the poor to supply this power. When he became governor of Louisiana, he gained complete control of the state. He fired all those who did not cooperate with him. He made all his appointive officers sign undated letters of resignation before they were hired. He bought enough of the state legislators to insure the passage of his program. He packed the state courts with his judges. He tore down the old Governor's mansion and built a new one. He used Louisiana State University as his private circus. Yet the poor folk loved him. His ruthless methods were considered wildly comic or wonderfully efficient. Many people knew the score. They didn't care. They were living a better life than they had ever dreamed and didn't particularly care how they got that way. In elections, he went to the people and told them what they were getting at the measly cost of a little democracy. "They will tell you that you've got to tear up Longism in this state. All right, my friends, get a bomb and blow up the new state Capitol. Then go out and tear up the concrete roads I've built. Get your spades and your shovels and scrape the gravel off them roads we graveled and let a rain come in on them. That'll put 'em back like they was before I come. Tear down all the new buildings I've built at the university. And when your child starts to school tomorrow, snatch the free textbooks out of his hands. Then my friends, you'll be rid of Longism in this state—and not before," he told them. U.S. Senator Huey's programs and tactics were not quite so influential when he reached the U.S. Senate. He quickly found that he was not able to ram-rod his programs through the Senate as he had back in Louisiana. Although his avowed goal was the Presidency, he spent much of his time as Senator back in Louisiana. His handpicked errand boy, O. K. Allen, realized who was running things and was quite content to kiss babies and accept gifts for the state. One of his Senate colleagues said, "I don't believe he could get the Lord's Prayer endorsed in this body." Long never ruled the country. He did, however, design the new Louisiana's Governor's mansion after the White House "so I can get used to living in it." But Huey P. Long did rule Louisiana. He ruled it with his secret police, his legislators, his courts, his public officials and with the support of his rednecks. The circumstances surrounding his death were appropriate for Huey Long. in Louisiana. He had been studying in Vienna when the Nazis grabbed power and had seen how a people could be crushed. Furthermore, his father-in-law, a county judge, was an anti-Long man and Huey's legislature was about to gerrymander him out of office. Carl Austin Weiss, a small, law abiding doctor had long disagreed with the political setup Long said, "If he screams, I'll go on the raido and tell 'em he's got nigger blood." Dr. Carl Weiss tried to take his case somewhere. But where? To Huey Long's courts? To Huey Long's legislature? To Huey Long's legislature? To Huev Long? No one knows what passed through the doctor's mind when he stepped from behind a marble pillar in Long's state capitol and fired a bullet into Huey's stomach. No one will ever know, either. An autopsy discovered 78 bullets in Dr. Weiss's body. Long's body guards had been an instant late, but they had been thorough. No one will ever know how far Huey P. Long might have gone in the United States, either. He said he was going to be President. The chances for this occurring in 1936 were slight because the depression had taken a slight turn for the better. This cancelled the effect of his solution, the "Share the Wealth" program. It was suggested, however, that Franklin D. Roosevelt ask Long to run as his vice-president. There are some things which the people of Louisiana will know for a long time. They will know they now have a good public assistance program, a fine school system, miles of good roads, and a much easier life than many did in the 1920's. And they know who to thank for it—Huey P. Long. But the career of Huey P. Long cannot be measured by the miles of highways or the number of dollars in public assistance. These things were paramount to thousands of Louisianaans, but the true meaning of Huey P. Long goes much deeper than material things. The Ends... His regime was the closest thing to a dictatorship that has existed in the nearly 200 years of American independence. Perhaps the most tragic part of Long's dictatorship was his disregard for the court system. The United States was built on a foundation of justice for all men, not just those who agree with the Governor's political views. Long freely admitted his usurpation of freedom. He always told his people that the ends justified the means, however. A monthly assistance check is much easier for a 70-year-old man to see than the ideal of freedom. If Huey Long had not been cut down by the assassin's bullet, it is hard to tell how far his "end justifies the means" theory might have taken him. We won't know, however, because a frustrated doctor applied Long's reasoning pattern when he sought the end of Huey P. Long's reign. SUBSTANDARD HOUSING IN U.S. HEALTH AND WELFARE NEEDS © 1984 HERBLACK SWIMMING POOL MEN'S GYM LADIES GYM $95,000,000.00 HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING NUMBER 3 FOR 169 CONGRESSMEN WORLD'S MOST COSTLY PUBLIC OFFICE BLDG. SUBSTANDARD HOUSING IN U.S. HEALTH NEWS WELFASE NEWS CIM HERRICK PRO WASHINGTON PUBLIC F Eig citati awan and anno Clarg gan assoc "My Friends. We Must Economize On You" CA Dailij Hänsan 111 Flint Hall M cros Com a n cuti day Founded 1895, 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, Unive-sity holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, May 12. 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Eight KU Alumni To Receive Award Eight alumni of KU will receive citations for distinguished service awarded jointly by the university and its Alumni Association, it was announced today by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe and Eugene W. Morgan of Kansas City, president of the association. The eight alumni are: Bernard Bloch, New Haven, Conn., professor of linguistics and chairman of the department of India and Far Eastern languages at Yale University; Dr. Cora M. Downs, Lawrence, emerita Summerfield distinguished professor of microbiology; M. Wren Gabel, Rochester, N.Y., executive vice-president of the Eastman Kodak Co.; Frank Jirik, San Jose, Costa Rica, founder and president of the Kativo Paint and Plastic Co.; Frank L. Snell, Phoenix, Ariz., head of a law firm and civic leader; Charles E. Spahr, Cleveland, O., president of the Standard Oil Company (Ohio); Frank A. Theis, Kansas City, Mo., grain company president and civic leader; and Donald M. Tyler, Bartlesville, Okla., philanthropist and former cement company executive. All but Bloch will be present to receive their citations during the 92nd annual Commencement exercises in Memorial Stadium June 1. James A. Bell, chief of the Time Magazine bureau in Bonn, Germany, whose citation was voted in 1963, will be present and receive his citation at the same time. Gabel, a native of Larned, has been with the Eastman company since earning a chemical engineering degree from KU in 1931. After a few years of experimental work, Gabel undertook managerial assignments, becoming general manager in 1960 and executive vice-president last fall. He also is a member of the board of directors. Bloch has been director of graduate studies in linguistics at Yale for 12 years. He has been prominent in the Linguistic Society of America and was its president in 1953 and for 25 years he has been editor of "Language," the journal of the society. Among his books are studies of Japanese and the "Outline of Linguistic Analysis." of which he was co-author. Dr. Downs has been the world's authority on tularemia (rabbit fever), and has done much research in rickettsia-caused diseases such as typhus fever, "Q" fever and Rocky Mountain spotted fever. Her most spectacular contribution to science has been her part with KU associates in perfecting fluorescent antibody techniques as a routine laboratory Phoenix. He has headed several divisions of the United Fund campaigns and now is president of the Phoenix Fine Arts Association and chairman of the board of the Arizona National Livestock Show. tool for the rapid identification of certain disease organisms. Jirik, after brief employment as a chemist with the United Fruit Company, started a small paint factory in Costa Rica. This enterprise has become one of the important industries in the nation. Jirik also holds appointment as professor in the University of Costa Rica and is a member of the Central American Institute for Technological Research and of the Tropical Science Center. In 1939 Spahr joined Standard Oil (Ohio), becoming vice-president for transportation in 1951, executive vice-president in 1955, and president in 1957. Since 1961 he has been a director of the National Petroleum Council. Chinese Refugees Enter Russia As Pravda Hurls New Volley Since 1918 Theis has been with what is now the Simonds-Shields-Theis Grain Co., which has elevator capacity of nearly 10,000,000 bushels. He was president 1935-64 and since January has been chairman of the board. He is also president of the Strattton-Theis Grain Co. in St. Joseph. Mo., with elevator capacity of 3,100,000 bushels. He is known for service on the Kansas City Board of Park Commissioners since 1950 and president of that board since 1954. MOSCOW—(UPI) — Refugees are crossing into Soviet territory from Communist China at the rate of 1,200 a month to escape Chinese persecution, diplomatic sources said today. The sources said the refugees are Mongol-Turkic people who are seeking asylum in the Soviet Republic of Kazakhstan, which borders China's Sinkiang province and contains people of the same racial background. The Peking persecution is both racial and economic, the sources said. THE DISCLOSURE came amid continuing attacks on Communist China's policies in the Soviet press. Pravda, the Communist Party newspaper, charged today that Peking's "Chinafied Marxism" is a contradictory policy that even includes petit bourgeois ideas. The views China is trying to get the world's Communist parties to adopt. Pravda said, are "an odd mixture of retrograde dogmatism and obvious revisionism, but the glaring gap is between high-sounding revolutionary phrases and practical deeds of the Chinese leaders." cues the Soviets of cowardice and selling out to the capitalists because they seek to extend communism through economic competition and other peaceful means. This is one of the chief points of contention between the two communist powers. China proclaims a militant revolutionary policy and ac- What Pravda was saying today is that the Chinese, for all their revolutionary slogans, have done little that is revolutionary. Tyler is chairman of the board of the Union National Bank in Bartlesville, and for many years has been active in philanthropy. "THE INCESSANT change of positions, the ideological and political vaccinations of the Chinese leaders, clearly reveal the petit bourgeois nature of their views." Pravda said. The newspaper, in the last of The newspaper, in the last of three extensive attacks on Peking, made these other points: Snell is now senior member of a law firm with 21 members. He is director of several business firms and is chairman of the executive committee of the Arizona Public Service Company. He is secretary of the Arizona Tax Research Association and of the Good Samaritan Hospital in - The Chinese leaders want control over the Communist movement, and aim "their ideological spears not against imperialism and colonialism but against the world Communist movement." - Their domestic policies have been failures, from the "great leap forward" to the commune system. The reports on the refugee flights reached diplomats here from travelers returning from Soviet Central Asia. Asia. The diplomatic sources said the refugees cross the border ragged and famished and are resettled in Soviet collective and state farms with their ethnic kinsmen. Chinese --border guards occasionally try to prevent the flights but the border is too long and sparsely guarded to stop very many. SOME DIPLOMATS suggested that the Chinese may be deliberately permitting the escapes to rid Sinkiang of its Moslem tribesmen and open the way to more Chinese colonization. Predicting Showers on Brides-to-be Showers of good wishes and thoughtful gifts are an American tradition. Vickers Gift Shop is the traditional place in Lawrence to select shower gifts that are "just right" -pretty, practical and unique. Gift-wrapped with our compliments. Reflect your good taste with a gift from Vickers Gift Shop. Sinkiang originally had a population of about 5 million, most of it Uigars, Kazakhs, and Khrighizians. Since the Communist seizure of power, official policy has been to send Chinese to the province, and its Chinese population has expanded from about 300,000 to more than 2 million. Vickers Gift Shop (Across from the Granada) VI 3-5585 1023 Mass. The P. B. O. A. E. Lectures Present: "Constructive Criticism From Our College Experience" Panel Discussion By - Sandra Bornholdt, Joy Bullis, Don Igelsrud, Kenneth Leone, Cordell Meeks, Breon Mitchell, Jay Roberts, Frank Thompson, and Mrs. Susan Whitley Peters. 7:30 p.m. Today Forum Room Kansas Union Designed for a Perfect Match DELAVAN Keepsake INTERLOCKING RING SETS Keepsake's famous hidden lock keeps engagement and wedding ring together for more beauty on your finger. The famous Keepsake certificate guarantees perfect quality. GREENE DARBY Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELERY" 809 Mass. Keepnake Keepnake Keepsake INTERLOCKING RING SETS Keep safe Keep safe Keep sake Keep sake KREUJAKE KREUJNAKE Page 4 University Dairy Kansan Tuesday, May 12, 1964 Around the Campus Three Initiated in Debate Society Three KU sophomores have been initiated recently into Delta Sigma Rho-Tau Kappa Alpha, recently merged national honorary forensic society. Members must have at least sophomore standing, be in the upper 25 per cent of their graduating class, and be proficient in college forensics. The new members are Margaret Miller, Red Wing, Minn., Walter S. Bliss III, Omaha, Neb, and Melvin O'Connor, Wichita. General to Speak Brig. Gen. Kenneth J. Hodson, assistant Judge Advocate General of the Army, will speak at the joint ROTC commissioning exercises on the 30th anniversary of his own commissioning at KU. The exercises for 63 men will be at 11 a.m. June 1 in Swarthout Hall. Fourteen men will be commissioned into the Air Force, three into the Marines, 28 into the Army and 18 into the Navy. Gen. Hodson was an Army ROTC student from 1930-34 and attended the KU School of Law, earning both the A.B. and LL.B. degrees in 1937. English Professor Gets Award Arthur H. Nethercot, visiting professor of English, has received a $500 award from the Friends of Literature, Chicago, for the best nonfiction work last year in the Chicago area. His prize-winning book was a biography, "The Last Four Lives of Annie Besant," published earlier in England and this year by the University of Chicago Press. The book describes 40 years in the life of the English champion of Indian education and home rule, and of a number of other causes. It is Prof. Nethercot's second work on Mrs. Besant, the other work "The First Five Lives of Annie Besant," was published in 1960. Prof. Nethercot is visiting this semester from Northwestern University, where he has the title of Franklyn Bliss Snyder Professor of English. He was presented the award earlier in Chicago. Education Grant Received The U.S. Office of Education, Department of Health, Education and Welfare, has granted KU $29,000 to train teachers of children who have serious speech or hearing defects. KU shared the total $1.3 million that was given to 71 universities and colleges in the nation. Institutions will use the money during the academic year 1964-65 beginning in September to provide scholarships, fellowships, traineeships and to meet part of the cost of training the new teachers. Each institution will select the teachers to receive the grants. Wichita State University received $17,000 from the grant. Student Recitals Sharon Tebbenkamp Sooter, Salisbury, Mo., graduate student, will give the second in a series of student recitals that are being held in Swarthout Recital Hall this week. Mrs. Sooter, mezzo-soprano, has won the district Metropolitan Opera Auditions twice. Wednesday evening Julia Varner, Kansas City, Mo., senior, will give a piano recital and Thursday evening, soprano Diana Osterhout, Topeka senior, will present the final recital of the week. Students Give PBOAE Talk A panel of ten students will present the Philosophical Basis of Absolutely Everything Lecture at 7:30 tonight in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. They will discuss their college experience and attempt to make constructive criticism for other students. The students have been chosen because of their diverse interests. Those participating will be Sandra Bornholdt, LaCrosse senior; Joy Bullis, Davenport, Iowa, junior; Don Igelsrud, Minneapolis, Minn., senior; Kenneth Leone, Alexandria, Va., sophomore; Cordell Meeks, Kansas City senior; Trudy Meserve, Abilene senior; Breon Mitchell, Salina senior; Jay Roberts, Venita Park, Mo., senior; Frank Thompson, Lawrence senior, and Mrs. Susan Whitley Peters, Lawrence senior. IFC to Try August Open Rush The Interfraternity Council is experimenting with a new rush program for next fall, which means an "open season" on all prospective pledges during August. The new program, which permits fraternities to pledge men during August, was approved by the IFC in December. Another change resulting from the new program is that two days of open rush, instead of one, will be conducted during Rush Week in September. (Open rush is a period during which rushes may be pledged.) JIM JOHNSTON, Independence, Mo, junior and IFC president, described the new rush procedures as an "expansion program to get more students through rush and in the fraternity system." Each fraternity in the summer will be able to pledge up to 75 per cent of the number which it intends to pledge for the Fall semester. The quotas are decided by the IFC based pledging figures for each fraternity during the past five years, Johnston said. A pledge in August is binding; if a student breaks it, he cannot pledge another fraternity for one semester. The signature of the rush chairman, the pledge, and the pledge's parents will be a binding obligation, Johnston said. JOHNSTON SAID if new members are pledged before Rush Week, the fraternities will not have to worry about losing them to other houses. "We think it will mean that more houses will be full by September," Johnston said. The new system also gives the student more time to decide on a fraternity, Johnston said: "The rushee will have all of August and rush week to make up his mind." BUT WHILE THE new program may give the rushee more time to think the matter over, Johnston said it will mean stepped-up summer rush programs for the fraternities, more money for rush parties, and more pressure on rush chairmen. In telephone interviews with two fraternity rush chairmen last night, both men agreed the new system will touch off strong competition among the fraternities during the summer. For Fast Results READ and USE THE WANT ADS REGULARLY! Contemporary apartments for summer rental or longer. These apartments are completely furnished, have two bedrooms and are air-conditioned. We are renting to college men, and we will allow four occupants in each apartment. These apartments are within walking distance of campus. AUTO WRECKING NEW and USED PARTS Rates are from $90 to $105. Call VI 3-8241 during the day, and VI 3-9373 at night. Tires and Glass East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 The P. B.O. A.E. Lectures Present: "Constructive Criticism From Our College Experience" Panel Discussion By - Sandra Bornholdt, Joy Bullis, Don Igelsrud, Kenneth Leone, Cordell Meeks, Breon Mitchell, Jay Roberts, Frank Thompson, and Mrs. Susan Whitley Peters. 7.30 p.m. Today Forum Room Kansas Union Carl Berentz, Leavenworth sophomore and Alpha KappaLambda rush chairman, said, "We'll have to start a new summer rush program. You can't rush the way you did two or three years ago. "During June and July, we will have to make more contacts with a smaller number of men so you can approach them during August, instead of contacting a large number of men. "EVERY FRATERNITY is going to be gunning harder than ever the minute school's over." Berentz said, Scott Linscott, Toneka junior and Sigma Chi rush chairman, said. "The total rush program will be accelerated—more parties and more contact with rushees. With the new program, it is absolutely necessary that we get to these boys early. Rush will be very much more competitive." Both men said they hoped to have their quotas for August filled before rush week. Johnston said the new program is experimental and there are not many schools using it. "I think that most houses favor if or, if not, they are taking a wait and see attitude," Johnston said. We cordially invite you to come in and see our collection of over 90 patterns of fine china, among these are . . . SOVEREIGN This new Royal Doulton design reflects the elegance of the Regency Period. White enhances the regal gold decoration, combining formal elegance with classic artistry. Come in and see why this and other Royal Doulton dinnerware has made fine bone china a treasured possession in our finest homes. 4VENNA Deriving its inspiration from classic renaissance ornament—this new Royal Doulton arrival heralds the return to more colorful dinnerware in harmony with today's traditional home furnishings. Edged in lustrous gold this tastefully designed bone china is really something to see. You'll enjoy a visit with us to see our entire selection of finest china. Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. Page 5 Anti-Poverty Bill to Undergo Cuts University Daily Kansan WASHINGTON — (UPI)— President Johnson's anti-poverty bill went on the congressional operating table today. Democrats prescribed a light hand on the scalpel, but Republicans said major surgery was needed. The House Education and Labor Committee, which started consideration of the $962 million measure nearly two months ago, scheduled closed sessions to write finished legislation for submission to the House. The job was expected to take a week or longer. The bill, as it now stands, is a sweeping design to provide a job corps and work-study and work-training programs for poor youths, to finance local anti-poverty projects, to establish a corps of volunteers to help fight poverty, and to make new money available for marginal small business and farm operators. They ended their discussions yesterday with apparent agreement on all disputed points except the roie that parochial and private schools should play in the local anti-poverty programs. The Democrats described their agreed changes as "strengthening amendments." These included provision for women as well as young men in the job corps, allocation of some of the anti-poverty funds on a state-by-state basis, and imposition of some guidelines for the director to follow in operating the programs. AFTER SIX WEEKS of public hearings, the 19 Democratic members of the committee held their own private caucus for two weeks to discuss proposed changes in the bill. The Democratic changes would eliminate only one section of the bill—federal credit guarantees for new business enterprises—and retain all other sections of the Johnson bill. Specifically, it would centralize anti-poverty authority under Peace Corps Director Sargent Shriver, a proposal that is at the core of Republican opposition. THE COMMITTEE'S 12 Republicans, chafing because they were left out of the closed discussions on changes, had their "day" yesterday with Shriver, Johnson's choice to head the "war on poverty." Although one GOP member called the two-hour closed meeting a "draw," another told UPI that Shriver seemed to oppose many of the changes, including state-by-state allocations, reported being offered by the Democrats. On the other hand, Shriver gave no indication of favor to a substitute bill offered by Rep. Peter PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS QUALITY AND STYLE! MK I AMERICA Artcarved $ ^{ \circ} $ WEDDING RINGS A WEDDING RINGS Why buy ordinary rings when a prize-winning Carteau costs no more? Starting at $8.00. CONTEMPORA SET Groom's Ring $37.50 Bride's Ring $35.00 Just one of our 300 Different Styles! Marks Jewelers Marks Jewelers 817 Mass. MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY AGS H. B. Frelinghuysen, R-N.J., that would put primary responsibility for anti-poverty work in the hands of states and local units of government. time of dav." Frelinghuyssen told newsmen after the meeting that "I have no indication that my bill is going to get the 1985 NATIONAL BRIDAL SERVICE Frelinghuvsen said his main objection was to setting up a new federal agency to administer the program. Shriver and the Republicans clashed several times on this issue in the closed meeting, with neither side giving ground. Professor to Attend Seminar Dr. John R. Willingham, associate professor and director of freshman-sophomore English, has been selected as one of 15 college and university teachers to attend a faculty seminar June 25-July 30 at Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio. The interdisciplinary program is sponsored by the Church Society for College Work, a private foundation that furthers work of the Episcopal Church on campuses. 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 JET LIGHTNING SERVICE HILLCREST - 1111 MASS. THE MALLS Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, May 12, 196 Senators Keep Talking On Licorice WASHINGTON—(UPI)—The civil rights debate has put a dent in Sen. Clinton P. Anderson's licorice supply. The New Mexico Democrat, a diabetic, keeps licorice in his chamber desk to eat on doctor's orders. It is not unusual for colleagues to raid the supply, but raiding activity has increased considerably since the civil rights debate began. Sen, George L. Smathers, D-Fla, who has been seen prowling in the Official Bulletin TODAY Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. Inquiry, Forum, 7 p.m. St. Lawrence Civic there will be no Western Civ Discussion. SNEA, 7:30 p.m., 303. Bailey, Film Strin' "Kansas Contenial." BPOA Student Panel, 7.30 p.m. Forum on the Academic Congrats, from College. Engage Inquirer Classes, 7:30 p.m., Canterbury House. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m., Kansas Union. "Lord of the Flies—Christian's Approach to Modern Literature."—Paul Steeves. Graduate Recital, 8 p.m., Swarthout Hall Sharon Sodder mezzo-sonoro 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 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Hawk's Nest, Kansas University. Sgt. Burwell will answer questions and take applications for Officer Training School. Inquirer Class, 3:45 p.m., Canterbury House. University Lecture, 4 p.m., 411 Summerfield. "Bivalent Sulfur in the Preservation of Food Goodman." Dept. of Biochemistry. Columbia U. College of Physicians and Surgeons. Carillon Recital, 7 p.m. Albert Gerken. Senior Recital, 7 p.m. Fraser Theater, The General. Kappa Aliza Mu, photojournalism so- caper of the newspaper Union. Last meeting of the school year. Senior Recital, 8 p.m., Swarthout Hall. Julia Varner, pianist. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth. Phone in your Classified Ad Cash Register LIVING COSTS? TAX DEDUCTIONS? MONEY ON HAND? THE SUMMING UP is easiest with a ThriftiCheck PERSONAL CHECKING ACCOUNT and there's more savings every day paying personal and household bills with low-cost, convenient Thrift- Checks. Douglas County State Bank 9th and Kentucky vicinity of Anderson's desk, confesses to staging raids for "quick energy" when debate duties interfere with his meal schedule. HOW MANY OTHER members of the southern forces are guilty of licorice-pilfering is not known, but the innocence of Sen. Olin D. Johnston, D-S.C., has been established. He manfully endures hunger pangs, crediting the debate for new success in his weight-losing program. Sen. B. Everett Jordan, D-N.C., is also trying to reduce but the debate has yet to bolster his effort. He has missed few meals though Mrs. Jordan is reported to have complained of the uncertainty in her kitchen timetable. Supporters of the southern talkathon have floor assignments to carry out, speeches to prepare and deliver, topics to research, strategy meetings to attend and more mail than usual to answer. All this has many behind-the-scenes impacts on their lives. A SURVEY OF their aides turned up reports that Sens, Richard B. Russell, D-Ga, and Allen J. Ellender, D-Da., become rather grouchy during talkkons." Senator Russell is more demanding," an aide reported. "Because of his tight schedule, he insists that all office work be done right the first time." SEN. A. WILLIS ROBERTSON, D-Va., suffered a shoulder separation while taking exercises during the debate's early days but vowed that the injury would not interfere with his debating. He removed his arm from its sling to wave for emphasis during a floor speech. Such actions may make an operation necessary but Robertson says it won't be performed until the filibuster ends. An aide of Sen. Spessard L. Holland, D-Fla., says he is "keyed up, bouncy like a football player during a big game. He avoids social functions. He goes to bed early each night to be rested and energetic the next day." J. Strom Thurmond, D-S.C., maintains his program of isometric exercises. Thurmond has stocked up on throat lozenges and vitamins to help him through the filibuster. Sen. Sam J. Ervin, D-N-C., gets massages every day or two and Sen. Several southerners have developed minor voice problems and at least one, Smathers, has aching feet. Such troubles are sure to get much worse before they get better. FRATERNITY-SORORITY Jewelry GREEK LETTER LAVALIERS 10K GOLD 18" chain $4.00 Paddle with Greek Letters on 18" chain $3.25 We have these in BRIMAN'S leading jewelers We have these in stock for all K.U. Sororities & Fraternities VI 3-4366 743 Mass. NOTICE When you go home this summer,why take your heavy winter clothes with you? Both our fine locations offer vault storage for your furs. They will be hung on hangers for the summer in our vaults. We also offer box storage for your sweaters and jackets. You are allowed to do your own packing. We will pick up and deliver. FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN 900 Miss. DOWNTOWN PLANT 740 Vt. DOG Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi K F I M (Ta offic step Hue of I Secure Tuesday, May 12, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 7 Earl Long Protege Leads Louisiana BATON ROUGE, La. —(UPI)—John J. McKeithen, the country lawyer who learned his politics from the late Gov. Earl K. Long, took over as governor of Louisiana today. McKeithen and Lt. Gov. C. C. (Taddy) Aycock were sworn into office at noon on the state capitol steps, within sight of the tomb of Huey P. Long, the famous "Kingfish" of Louisiana politics. State Judge James E. Bolin of the Second Court of Appeals administered the oaths. THE 45-YEAR-OLD McKeithen, whose simple campaign plea of "Won't you help me?" was answered by one of the biggest political upsets in recent state history, is the third man to win election as governor while serving on the Public Service Commission. Both outgoing Gov. Jimmie H. Davis, who is forbidden by law from succeeding himself, and Huey Long were elected to the state's top post while serving in the same post on the commission. The ceremonies on the capitol steps climaxed a long hard fight by McKeithen to win the governorship. He survived a gruelling first primary campaign to win a runoff spot against former New Orleans Mayor Delesseps S. Morrison, the top vote getter in the Dec. 7 primary election. Morrison's hopes for a victory in the Jan. 11 runoff quickly vanished when McKeithen interjected the racial issue into the campaign. McKEITHEN THEN was forced to take to the stump when he encountered stiff oposition from Republican challenger Charlton Lvons. McKeithen has made it plain he intends to initiate an aggressive program to capture new industrial plants for the state. A special lunch honoring visiting industrial executives was scheduled later today. McKEITHEN HAS pledged himself to clean up state government and bring a new image to Louisiana. To carry out this mission, McKeithen threw his full support to reform legislation advocated by business and governmental research organizations. His victory marked the return of the Earl Long machine to power. His major backers included Mrs. Blanche Long, widow of the fiery late governor. The legislature, which opened a 30-day session yesterday, is expected to be one of the most reform-minded in history. Although he is not a racist, McKeithen has promised to resist desegregation with all legal means at his disposal. He also has said he wants to talk with the state's Negro leaders in an attempt to avoid any open clashes over civil rights. No Upsets Expected in Today's Primaries Rv United Press International By United Press International Nebraska and West Virginia hold presidential primaries today but the results in each state are a foregone conclusion. New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, who was in Oregon campaigning hard for that state's Friday primary, was the only GOP presidential contender on the West Virginia ballot. In Nebraska, Sen. Barry M. Goldwater (R-Ariz.) was unopposed but made an 11th hour sortie into the state Monday to fend off write-in support for former Vice-President Richard M. Nixon and Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge. Wallace was campaigning for Maryland's May 19 primary against favorite son candidate Sen. Daniel B. Brewster (D-Md.), a stand-in for President Johnson. THE ONLY OTHER presidential primary activity was in Maryland where an appearance by segregationist Gov. George C. Wallace of Alabama in racially tense Cambridge triggered a wild street demonstration. National Guard troops used tear gas to quell about 200 brick-throwing Negroes. Nebraska Republicans were to choose six of their 16 GOP national convention delegates today with the other 10 to be selected later at the state party convention. West Virginiaans were to vote for 14 delegates. In neither state were the delegates bound by the outcome of the presidential preference ballot ing. GOLDWATER BACKERS in Nebraska predicted their man would get five of the six delegates to be elected and all ten of those to be chosen later at the state party convention. The last-minute write-in campaign for Nixon was sparked by Hastings, Neb., publisher Fred Seaton, who served as Secretary of the Interior during the Eisenhower administration. Seaton said a letter campaign, launched by Nixon backers after the 1960 Republican presidential nominee "non-political" appearance at Omaha Thursday night, had brought an "absolutely fantastic" response. THE RHODE ISLAND Republican state convention also was to be held today. Goldwater backers predicted that the Arizona senator would get four national convention delegates; four would go to Rockefeller, four to Lodge and two to Nixon. Going into the primaries in West Virginia and Nebraska and the state convention in Rhode Island, the latest standings in the UPI count of delegates already selected showed Goldwater far ahead with 285; Lodge with 44; Nixon with 8; Rockefeller with 5 and Gov. William W. Scranton with 61, all from his state of Pennsylvania. The only active campaigner left for Friday's Oregon primary was Rockefeller but he faced a serious write-in effort by supporters of Lodge for the state's 18 delegate votes. The P. B. O. A. E. Lectures Present: "Constructive Criticism From Our College Experience" Panel Discussion By - Sandra Bornholdt, Joy Bullis, Don Igslrud, Kenneth Leone, Cordell Meeks, Breon Mitchell, Jay Roberts, Frank Thompson, and Mrs. Susan Whitley Peters. 7.30 p.m. Today Forum Room Kansas Union ATTENTION NIGHT OWLS ALLEN'S INVITES YOU to enjoy quality service and food till Midnight, Monday through Thursday. The perfect retreat for that late evening study break. VI 3-5000 ALLEN'S 1404 W.23rd St. How sweet it is! White Sweet Kid by Town & Country Shoes JIMINY AAAA to B to 10 $13.95 Royal College Shop 837 Mass. VI 3-4255 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, May 12. 1964 Carruth-O'Leary May Be Co-ed in Fall Carruth and O'Leary and Grace Pearson Hall are the only dormitories which may possibly change occupants this fall, J. J. Wilson, director of the dormitories, said this morning. "Grace Pearson Hall will house men this fall (as a regular men's dormitorv)" Wilson said. C&O is the only dormitory which has any other possibilities of changing, he said. Among the three possibilities for C&O, Wilson said the following are the main ones under consideration: all senior women; half senior women and half freshman women; or half senior women and half men. THE DECISION will depend on fall enrollment and the applications for housing, he said. All other dormitories are scheduled to continue as they are now. Although Hashinger Hall is equipped to house both men and women, only a freak rush of applications would make it necessary. KU had such a rush with freshman women several years ago. It then became necessary to put three freshman women to a room, he said. Some of the reactions to the possible changes of C&O by some senior women canvassed and several dormitory men were; Civil Rights Bill Called 'No Help' WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, D-N.Y., said today the House-passed civil rights measure was a "do nothing" bill for the Negro in the North. In an interview with United Press International the Negro Congressman said northern Negroes had been demonstrating in protest against situations not covered by the civil rights bill now before the Senate. He said the demonstrations, especially in the North, would continue —bill or no bill. Powell said most northern states already have laws similar to the provisions in the bill. He noted that 34 states and Washington, D.C., had laws preventing discrimination in public accommodations, such as restaurants and movies. The veteran legislator called the northern demonstrations exhibits of "frustration based on hopelessness" He said Negroes have been demonstration outside the South against so-called de facto segregation, slum housing and lack of jobs. Fowell's proposed solutions for the three main points of discontent: De facto segregation: more demonstrations. Housing: "Honest, municipal gov- ernment." Jobs: Retraining and education bills in his house committee on education and labor. Fowell also said that "rising new leaders in the North are dissatisfied with the slow progress under the old leaders." He added that perhaps the slow progress could not have been avoided. While saying passage of the civil rights bill would not stop demonstrations, Powell said it would "stop Martin Luther King and the Southern crowd." He apparently meant that the bill would answer many of the complaints of Southern Negroes led by King's Southern Christian Leadership Conference. THE TIGER and THE TYPIST Two Fine 1 Act Plays at the Experimental Theatre 8:15 May 14, 15, 16 50c plus ID or $1.00 “Putting freshman and senior women together is not a good idea. It defeats the whole idea of separating freshman women (from upper class women). Probably a lot of people will change their minds about living there at C&O if it is co-ed, but I don't think I will (want to live in a coed dormitory),” Janice Young, Kansas City junior, said this morning. "I DON'T think senior women and freshman women living together is a good thing. There wouldn't be enough transition between the two classes. I'm against a co-eed hall mainly because it would be inconvenient for all concerned." Judy Phipps, Independence junior, said this morning. "That's good (the coed hall idea). I think it is quite a test of this conservative Kansas atmosphere. I'm for it." Gerald Lock, Louisbury junior said this morning. "Well, speaking for myself, I think it's O.K. (the coed hall idea)," Gary Wilmoth, Wichita sophomore said. "I think it's a great idea (the coed hall idea). It makes for a lot better atmosphere," Kenneth Wendel, Hoisington senior, said. Dormitories are often co-educational during summer school semester, but this would be the first co-ed dormitory during the fall and spring semesters in several years. "I THINK ITS a good idea (the coed hall idea). I lived in C&O for 3 years and it's a good place. It was set up for co-education ("living")." Chester (Joe) Isom, Kansas City, Mo., senior said. Wilson said these are just possibilities, and the decision will be made when more of the applications are in and a more definite idea of the fall enrollment is reached. Stephenson College Bowl Team Defeated For First Time In Big Eight Tournament The answer: the basic metabolism of a cricket regulates the sound pitch. "Why does a cricket's chirping go up in pitch in warm weather?" But this was not part of the knowledge that Stephenson Hall, winners of KU's College Bowl competition, took to the Big Eight College Bowl contest in Norman, Okla., with them last weekend. 2nd Oldest Member In Congress Dies WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Clarence Cannon, powerful chairman of the House Appropriations Committee and second oldest member of Congress, died unexpectedly today. He was 85. The Missouri Democrat, a member of the house for 41 years, died at 4:15 a.m. EDT at Washington Hospital Center. Death was attributed to congestive failure, defined medically as a complication of progressing heart disease. In spite of his advanced age—second only to that of his 86-year-old Senate counterpart Sen. Carl Hayden, D-N.M., chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee—Cannon maintained a full schedule. He was at work on up to the end of last week. Cannon was one of the most powerful members of Congress as head of the committee which must pass first on all spending bills to come before Congress. After working Saturday, he complained of feeling ill the next day. The hospital said he was admitted at 11:25 a.m. EDT Sunday. The veteran Congressman, considered one of the leading authorities on the workings of the House and author of several expert publications on the subject, apparently did not appear in serious condition. He sent word yesterday to Rep. George H. Mahon, D-Tex., ranking Democratic member of the appropriations committee, to take charge of a small pending appropriations bill. Stephenson lost to the University of Colorado by 120 points in the second round of the three round tournament after defeating the University of Oklahoma 180 to 95. Several questions which the Stephenson Hall team did answer correctly centered on literature topics, such as the author of the "white man's burden" (Kipling) and the inn the pilgrims stopped at in Canterbury Tales (Tabard Inn). James Girard, Wichita sophomore, and a member of the team, said a major problem was the use of many questions from the College Bowl manual which contains sample questions of the G.E. College Bowl national competitions. "This made somewhat of a farce out of answering the questions," Girard said. "Actually the questions were easier than those used in the Big Eight competition last year or those used this year at KU." Another participant, Ronald Jones, St. John senior, felt that it was in poor taste to use the manual sample questions, but that many of the areas were wide open and covered almost every topic. Other team members were Woodrow Dale Brownwell, Kansas City senior; Gary Gregg, Coldwater freshman, and Gerald Duffin, Leavenworth junior. Stephenson was the defending Big Eight champion and has won the KU College Bowl all three years it has been held here. Four years ago the KU College Bowl team participated in the televised GE College Bowl quiz show in New York City. They defeated the University of Chicago to win a $1500 scholarship, but lost to Smith College for Women, Northampton, Mass., by five points. A week later a dummy with a College Bowl sign was hanged in effigy in front of Watson Library. James E. Seaver, professor of history and director of the Western Civilization program who is presently on leave, was the coach for the 1360 national team. Using the title "the team from Athens-on-the-Kaw" the contestants for the televised program were selected by oral and written examinations from 150 students. In 1961 the KU College Bowl team helped prepare the University of Oklahoma for the national competition. In 1961 they did the same by hosting a warm-up match with Grinnell College, Grinnell, Iowa. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers = The P. B. O. A. E. Leclares Present: "Constructive Criticism From Our College Experience" Panel Discussion By Sandra Bornholdt, Joy Bullis, Don Igelsrud, Kenneth Leone, Cordell Meeks, Breon Mitchell, Jay Roberts, Frank Thompson, and Mrs. Susan Whitley Peters. $ \mathcal{B}_{y} $ - 7:30 p.m. Today Forum Room Kansas Union WOULDN'T YOU KNOW...IT'S Jacqueline Straps make the most carefree casuals! Delightful open styles, beautifully made in Italy. Have fun . . choose both styles with Antiqued Coffee Cream calf straps, the thong also in White. Cushioned insoles and little wedge heels mean real comfort. Finessa by Jacqueline as featured in Vogue. VI 3-3470 $8.95 ARENSBERG'S 819 Mass. Summer Band Camp Expected To Bring 1,200 Students to KU Those green bleachers the buildings and grounds crew have been erecting this past week north of Malott Hall, between Hoch Auditorium and Hayworth Hall, are not for graduation exercises, as some students have supposed. The bleachers and the adjoining platform will be the scene of a concert each Sunday evening during June and July by young musicians attending the annual Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Russell Wiley, professor of band and camp director, started the program 27 years ago with less than 20 campers enrolled. This summer he anticipates having over 1200 campers to participate in the camp's nine divisions. NO LONGER confined to music and art alone, the camp now offers programs in science, journalism, speech and engineering, as well as theater, dance, art and music. The music camp is divided into junior high and senior high divisions and accounts for the greatest number of campers. Over 700 campers will split up to form four bands, four choirs, and two orchestras. During the six-week PushtheButton Strain the Heart CHICAGO —(UPI) Automation is causing nervousness, heart strain and exhaustion in the men who push the buttons on modern machinery, according to an industrial expert. Dr. Rolf R. Coermann, head of the biotechnology department at West Germany's Max Planck Institute for Industrial Physiology, said the adverse effects of automation are just now starting to show up. "It is no longer a source of surprise for us to find that the heart rate is higher for the man who operates a bank of machinery by a flick of a button on a control panel than for the man who does heavy physical work." Coermann said. He reported to a Chicago medical school audience yesterday on the results of a study of young control panel operators in West Germany. "Work demanding a high degree of continual mental alertness with respect to production puts a greater strain on the heart than heavy physical labor," he said. After a three-year technical training period in automation skills and five years "on the job," the workers displayed a "marked nervousness and slowing down of reaction time." The men tested worked mainly in coal mines, steel works and post offices, Coermann said. "A chief indicator in the measurement on the effect of his work on the pushbutton man is the heart rate, and in the studies it has been shown that if the average rate increases above a certain limit, there is a decrease in actual productivity and an onset of prolonged exhaustion." he added. Coermann said in many cases it was found that persons appearing to be doing relatively simple work are actually victims of "physiological systems overload." "The need for continuing attention and vigilance, the need for continuing mental alertness, appear to increase the heart rate substantially," he said. This problem, Coermann said, is beginning to be of concern to the managers of the factories who are beginning to recognize it. See Us See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS Sales — Rentals — Service LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 Many of the music campers, Prof. Wiley said, eventually turn up in his KU concert and marching bands during the school year. camp, the young musicians will be guided by the professional batons of 11 guest conductors, one of whom is Sol Caston, conductor of the Denver Symphony. LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER ONCE REFERRED TO as "the greatest public relations medium the university has," by former chancellor Franklin Murphy, the music and art camp is a growing institution. "The camp is not a local affair anymore," Prof. Wiley said, "half the campers come from outside of Kansas." Last summer, 35 states were represented, and Prof. Wiley predicts there will be campers from 44 states this year. Taking its present rate of growth into consideration, the camp may someday attract more high school age musicians than the green bleachers can hold. BUT PROF. WILEY and university officials have had the foresight to plan ahead for the anticipated increase. Plans have been already drawn up for a $250,000 amphitheater to be located west of Potter Lake. "The location is ideal," Prof. Wiley said. "The audience can be seated on the hill opposite the amphitheater, on the other side of the lake." No definite date has been scheduled for construction of the proposed amphitheater, Prof. Wiley said. "The only thing that remains is to raise the $250,000." Page 9 Campu WEST 1424 Crescent Rd. blue or red on white — 5 to 15 — $30. Lang Lang Here is Dégagé ... the newest thing in high-fashion swimwear From ... 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Purple, Blue. 8-16 *nylon Dégage? terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS Page 10 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, May 12, 19 Pi Kappa Alpha Victorious In Hill Intramural Bowling Bv Glen Phillips Five members of the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity totaled 6,020 pins Saturday and Sunday to walk away with first honors in the men's championship bowling tournament in the Jay Bowl of the Kansas Union. Competition was between eight teams that had finished first in their leagues and four teams remaining among the leagues which had the highest averages. One team, Sigma Phi Epsilon, was forced to drop from the tourney Sunday when they failed to have enough bowlers appear. According to Bascom Fearing, director of activities in the Jay Bowl, competition this year was especially rough. The teams fought right up to the last game. In one of the leagues there was a tie for top position that had to be bowled off before the tournament. THE PIKE TEAM was a favorite after taking second place in the campus tournament in late April. A team known as the Alchemists finished first in the campus competition. However, the team that had defeated the Pikes earlier was only able to end up tenth in the field. The Pike team which finally emerged victorious in the play did not finish first in their league. They entered the tournament as one of the four teams with the highest averages. Bill Ryan, Wichita freshman, turned in an impressive performance during this semester. He chalked up records for both the high single Colt Pitching Stuns Foes NEW YORK —(UPI)— It's a lot easier to hit oil in Texas than it is to hit that Houston pitching. The first-place San Francisco Giants discovered that sad fact last night when Dick Farrell beat them, 4-1, to record his fourth victory for the Houston Colts in five decisions. The Colts are something of a paradox. Their hitting is treated as a joke in rival National League dugouts, but no one does any laughing about their pitching. Farrell, one of the Colt pitchers who has profited from Deal's theories, gave up 10 hits last night but worked his way out of repeated jams so that the Giants could only score once off him in the fourth on Willie McCovey's double, Tom Haller's single and a double play ball. The St. Louis Cardinals edged the Philadelphia Phillies, 3-2, and the Cincinnati Reds beat the Pittsburgh Pirates, 7-6, in the only other NL games scheduled. game and the high three-game series. Ryan also had the highest individual average in the leagues. However, league rules prohibit one person from claiming trophies for both honors. Therefore, Ryan was awarded the trophy for a high three-game series. Ken Wilke, Topeka junior, was given the high game trophy for a game of 276. RYAN ALSO was awarded a trophy for carrying the highest average over the semester of bowling. His winning mark was 197. Following close on Ryan's heels was Dick Schafer, Beloit junior, with an average of 196. Both of the marks top the old Jay Bowl record for individuals of 194. All the official league play has ended. The games for the tournament were rolled specially on Saturday and Sunday. Each team rolled a three game series on each of the days. Individual handicap was figured on the basis of $ \frac{3}{4} $ of 200 and the individuals were totaled for the team handicap Tigers Move Toward Win In Baseball The magic number stood at two today in order for the unbeaten Missouri Tigers to notch their third straight Big Eight Conference baseball championship. Oklahoma (8-7) took two of three from the Jayhawks (10-5) here and all but mathematically eliminated second place KU. KU must win all six of its remaining games, including a three game set from Missouri May 19 and 20, and the Tigers must lose all six for the Javahawks to win the crown. Sophomore Chuck Dobson hurled a two-hit 7-0 shutout and Jim Shanks homered to lead KU to a victory in Friday's opening game of a doubleheader. The Sooners tagged three home runs to notch a come-from-behind 8-5 victory in the nightcap. They exploded for 10 runs in the fourth inning Saturday enroute to a 14-3 win. Key hits in the inning were home runs by John Kern and Tom Lindsey. Carl Morton scattered five hits to pick up the win. Any combination of Missouri (13-0) victories or Iowa State (7-4) losses totaling two over the final six games of the season and the Tigers will present Coach John "Hi" Simmons with his 10th conference title in 25 seasons at Missouri. Missouri swept a three game series from fifth place Oklahoma State (3-7) last weekend at Columbia. Tiger pitching limited the Cowboys to only one run and eight hits in the three games. Missouri hitters responded by clubbing 40 hits, including eight home runs. Clean — the cleanest laundry in town inspect our facilities, you'll agree AT HONN'S LAUNDRY IT'S STANDING TEAM NAME (inc. top) 1 Pi Kappa Alpha 5957 2 Keglers 5957 3 Troops 5925 4 Phi Delta Theta 5884 5 Sandbaggers 5868 6 Navy Gold 5813 7 Orcilla 5783 8 Playboys 5689 9 Navy Blue 5682 10 Alchemists 5515 11 Tau Kappa Epsilon 5466 12 Sigma Phi Epsilon 3264 Clean — your whole wash — the Honn way Wash 20c Dry 10c Open-hearth charcoal broiled Steaks Chicken — Shrimp — Sandwiches featuring DINING PLEASURE AT ITS BEST! Clean your best suits and coats in our coin-on dry clean machine HAL'S STEAK HOUSE OK "Laundry Time is Honn Time” 19th & La. Washington has been the scene of some historical foul-ups but this one was the grand-daddy of them all. It all happened during the seventh inning of a game in which Washington outlasted Baltimore, 6-4, last night. That's where all the fun began. Ken Hunt, afraid the ball would be caught, held second for all he was worth. Don Blasingame, who figured the ball would not be caught, came tearing into second from first. Ribs And Daniels, only doing what any hustling pitcher should, legged it like mad for first. The Senators filled the bases with one out and the score tied, 3-all. Bennie Daniels lofted a soft fly to shallow center and Don Lock scored from third as the ball dropped safely among three converging Orioles. Baseball Mess Tops the List Across from Hillcrest Golf Course V1 2-9445 Baltimore center-fielder Jackie Brandt finally picked up the ball, charged in toward second base to see what he could salvage, and was somewhat bewildered to discover both Hunt and Blasingame standing on the bag. Open:4-Midnight Highway 59 South Brandt committed a boner by stepping on the bag first, forcing Hunt, who pulled the original boner by not at least moving off the bag. Brandt could have retired the side by tagging Hunt first and then stepping on the bag to force Blasingame for an inning-ending double play. As it was, a run scored, Hunt was forced and Daniels was safe on a fielder's choice. BUT THE big surprise is the Yankees. Last season in 20 games they had belted 30. This time they've dropped 14 to a total of 16. Mickey Mantle is even with his 1963 pace with four but Elston Howard is down from six to one; Joe Pepitone from five to two; Tom Tresh from four to two and Maris from three to two. Cleveland is up seven to 25; Washington and Chicago each up three to 26 and 14 respectively, and Boston up 1 to 19. Three American League clubs have tailed off compared with the same number of games last year. Los Angeles is down nine to 12 and Baltimore down 12 to a total of 13. MAYS SWATTED 11 homers in his first 21 games and jumped far in front of Babe Ruth's 1927 home run pace of 60 in 154 games and ahead of the pace Roger Maris set with his 61 in 162 games in 1961. It took Ruth 34 games to belt 11 and Maris needed 40 games for that number. Minnesota's 25 homer increase over a 23-game span when compared with last season is almost matched in ratio by the Kansas City A's. Over 21 games they have upped their output from 10 last year to 31 for an increase of 21. Big Frank Howard with 10 in 25 games and Rocky Colavito with nine in 21 games also are both ahead of the big two. Howard is two in front of Ruth and seven ahead of Maris. Colavito with nine in 21 games is three ahead of Ruth and six on top of Maris. The Chicago Cubs, sparked by Home Run production is up appreciably in both major leagues today and the sweetest shillelaghs are being swung by wondrous Willie Mays and the Minnesota Twins. By Oscar Fraley UPI Sports Writer Based on the exact number of games each team has played compared with last season, the American League is 22 ahead of the 1963 pace with 212 homers while the Nationals are 25 ahead with 185. Those Twins are driving riva pitchers nutty the way they're teeing off on the ball. Last season in their first 23 games the Twins had only 17 homers. This time, in 23 games, they have those 42 which lead both leagues with a power plant sparked by Jimmie Hall, rookie Tony Oliva, Bob Allison and Harmon Killebrew. Home Runs on Increase Minnesota, it appears, is a dead cinch with 42 walloped already in the first seventy of the season to smash the Yankee team record of 240 in 1961. Fun is living in Park Plaza Jumping Man 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 Billy Williams seven homers, lead the National League home run parade with 25 in 20 games, up 12 over the same span last season. Pittsburgh and the Giants both have hit 22, both up four. The Pirates needed 24 games. Mays with his 11 and Willie McCovey with six lead the Giant attack which clubbed that many in 21 games. The Phils are up six with 21 in 21 games; Houston up five with 12 in 26 games; the Dodgers up three with 18 in 25 games; St. Louis up one with 19 in 25 games, and Cincinnati exactly even with 17 in 24 games. Both the Braves and the Mets dropped off five in 24 games, Milwaukee down to a total of 18 and the Mets' 11 homers being the most impoverished in the majors. And who cares about records anyway. But as Casey Stengel might say: you can't win 'em all or even come close or hit home runs or anything hardly when you're limping along like one time in Kankakee and you don't have fellers like Mays and Mantle and Howard and Colavitio and Hall and Oliva or good rookies or nuthin'. CLASSIFIEDS Bring Quick Results NOW! Shows 7:00 - 9:00 ELVI'S feudin' PRESLEY lovin' Swingin' KiSaIN'COUSINS HAM DRESSER ELVIS PRESLEY feudin' lovin' Swingin' KiSaiN'CouSiNS Panavision METRO COLOR Granada TREATURE...Telephone W3-5783 The COLLEGE KID WORKING FOR HIS DEGREE IN FELONY! "THE PINK PANTHER" SOON! Granada TREATME...Telephone VI 3-533 MEET 3 ACADEMY AWARDS HOW THE WEST WAS WON NOW! ONE COMPLETE SHOW Open 6:45 Starts 7:30 Adults $1.25 Children 50c Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Next... "THE INCREDIBALE MR. LIMPET" OPEN 7:00 STARTS DUSK Ends Tonite "PT 109" and 'SPENCER'S MOUNTAIN' Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40 STARTS WED... Lee Remick James Garner "WHEELER DEALERS" PLUS Ricardo Montalban "LOVE IS A BALL" Classified Ads FOR SALE 1953 Bruce. $50. Call Don Senti. VI 3-18 6866 buick. 1111 W. 11th. VI 3-18 Little used Harmony guitar. Call VI 3- 6060. Ask for Sherry. 5-18 1958 Morris Minor, New motor, transmission, tires. $200. Underwood typewriter, $20. About 3,000 books. 1539 Tenn., VI 3-7787. 5-18 Formals for sale. Sizes 12, 16. Call VI 3-4752 after 5:30 p.m. 5-13 21" console TV, RCA, real good shape. Vi 3 C-14917 after 6 p.m. tf Economical, versatile transportation in a VW bus. Student owned 1963 model. Bestest used bus equipment $1885. Call Roger Morrison. VI 3-7370. 4:30 to 7 p.m. 5-13 1959 Volvo. Rebuilt engine. new tires and battery. Clean. Call VI 3-4050. 5-21 1964 Volkswagen. New, accessories. Call I 2-2594 after 7.30 p.m. 5-15 Eico stereo preamplifier combination. Garrard record changer, top quality Whole system must go. Call Steve Heinz, VI 3-4050. If not there, leave message. 1957 Chevy. 6, stick, good condition. clean. $340 cash. Call VI 2-9280 after 6 p.m. 5-12 1953 four wheel drive Jeep pickup. Solid, clean body. 16" p tires, perfect mechanical condition, new engine. $600. See at 1105 La. after a p. 7m. 5-13 Single featherweight sewing machine for construction. Call V1 2-4262. 5-13 Aging, conservative faculty type must sell 1960 Dodge Dart. Four door, automatic transmission. Owner leaving course (by see). Select at 1038 I.R. 5-13 offer. One dinette set, 2 years old, excellent condition. Six chairs with matching table, wooden base. Danish Modern chairs, 2 years old, need reupholstering, $10 each. See at 635 W. M. Avenue noon; Monday, Wednesday, Friday, between 2 and 5 p.m. Furniture and appliances. 9 m. old. Refrigerator, electric stove, kitchen cabinets, refrigerator, coffee tables, end tables, table lamps. Slightly older: breakfast set, bedroom set, bedroom suite, floor lamp, living suite. Call VI 3-5544 between 6-15 8 p.m. Mobile Home. 1959 kit, Stateliner. 50' x 10'. Two bedrooms, carpeted, air-conditioned, washer, new hot water heater, refrigerator. 3 blocks north of KU Med Center. Ideal for medical student. 3610 Rainbow Blvd. Call SK 1-0412. 5-12 LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. GOOD SELECTION OF HANDGUNS, MILITARY GUARDS, WARNERS AND ALSO REBLUE. EVENINGS, 1026 OHIO, VI 2-1241. 1959 yellow VW sedan. Whitewall tires, many accessories. Well cared for and clean. By owner. Call VI 2-3103. 5 to 7 p.m. 5-12 Wedding dress, size 7-8. 1817 La. Uptairs, west apartment. 4 to 6 p.m. 1958 black and white Ford convertible. Power steering and brakes, good condition, original owner. Call VI 3-5003, 1618 Rose Lane. New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500 sheets to ream-$8. Lawrence Outdoor Store. SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS, Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale at great savings after 6 p.m. weekdays; surday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut tt Typewriter, new and used portables, standards, electrics. Olympia, Hermes. Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter, adder, rentals and service. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St. VI 3-9644 tt Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta notes. Copy I 2-901 Free delivery $4.25. Infill delivery. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive immegegraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Copy VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tt For Fulmer Brush Products phone VI 3-1904 after 5 p.m. FOR RENT To KU men. Two room modern furnished apartment. Outside entrance. Bills paid. In the rooms. No drinks. smoking. See first house south of campus at 1614 Indiana. 5-18 Efficiency apartment. 2 large rooms. Private entrance and bath. $30 per month. Bills paid. Also, large newly redone sleeping room. $17.50 per month. New kitchen. New bathroom. $5 per month. Available June 1. Call VI 3-7830 or VI 3-0298. 5-18 Comfortable sunny, 4 room apartment for couple, kitchen, study room. Room closets, air-conditioning, private bath. Available June 4. Call II 3-3536 or VI 3-5882 Private furnished apartments for KU men with single beds, showers, all utilities paid. For 1, 2, or 3 men. Available summer and fall. Two furnished houses KU men. UItles paid. InA campus. Summer rates. Inquire at 1005 Miss. VI. IM 3-4349. 5-18 New garage apartment for 2 men or couple. Available immediately. Also a video studio apartments for men, a near campus. For appointment VI 3-8534. VI 5-18 Now renting new Ridge House Cabana Units. Swimming pool, carpet, air-conditioning. 1 bedroom furnished or un fitted. College suite. University. Ready for occupancy in August. Contact Mr. Osborne now for this fall V 3-11463 2403 Cedarwood. Patronize Kansan Advertisert Luxurious duplex. Central air-conditioning, close to shopping and University. Wall-to-wall carpet, all electric kitchen, swimming pool. Absolutely the finest 2 bedroom units. Contact Mr. Osborne now. VI 3-1116, 2403 Cadarwood. tf Moving to Kansas City? Then dig these brand new beautiful apartments in the Prairie Village-Overland Park area. 1 and 2 bedrooms, wall-to-wall carpet, drapes, central air-conditioning. Hotpoint kitchens. 150 square feet. One mile west of Antioch Rd. on 95th Street. The Alex Bascom Co., TU 8-3128 or TU 8-5252. 5-21 For two men students. Two basement rooms at 1520 W. 22nd Terrace, V 3-8674 5-18 at 1520 W. 22nd Terrace, V 3-8674 5-18 Bedroom with shower and half-bath. Bachen privileges if desired. See at 514. If Available June 1. Apartments and sleeping rooms. $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from Union. Off street parking. Call VI 2-1675 or VI 3-0492. 5-14 For the summer. For 2 or 3 men students. Cool, pleasant, basement apartments. Wide entrance to hill. Bath and entrance. Call Vi 3-6313. 1103 W. 19th Terrace. 5-14 To submit for June, July, and August; furnished two bedroom apartment. Five minute walk from KU library. Modern, central air-conditioning, carpeted, pool. Call VI 3-4007 after 4 p.m. or see at 1737 Ohio, Apt. 7. 5-13 Emery Apartments available June 1 Efficiency and one bedroom. To se contact Milan Loupal, Apt. 204, Emery or call VI 3-8190. 5-1 Married, grad students, faculty. Efficiency apartment from $65 and small house from $70. Available in June. Call now. Sante Apartmentes, 1123 Ind., VI 3-2116. One and two bedroom apartments. 1232 La. Call VI 3-4271. 5-12 Bachelor Studio Apartment for graduate or older undergraduate men. 115 blocks from Union. Newly remodeled, nicely furnished apartment ideal study conditions. A few still available at low summer rates. Singles and doubles. For appointment call VI 3-8534 Large, homey, attractively furnished, 4 room apartment. For summer months at summer rates. Kitchen built-ins and garbage disposal. Kitchen available June 1st. Large 3 room apt. Call VI 3-7677. Will rent for summer months. **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 3-1116 for information. Single or double room. Furnished. cook- ing table. Payed. paid. Call if 2-5451 or see at 1244 La. Crescent two heights 1 second bedroom apart- phone. Phone VI 2-3711. Page 11 TYPING Experience secretary would like typing Reasonable rates. Call V 3-5139. Let me do your typing for you. Ex- 14:45:31 or I Call Mrs. Bailey. B 4:31:01 V 3:14:00 Experienced secretary to typing. Wendy Henderickson 2365 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122. 5-21 Cut n Curl BEAUTY SALON latest styles. VI 3-5569 843 N.H. graduation permanents, sets, EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention on all reports, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate typing at reasonable calls. Call Donna Stewart. VI 3-6.621. t LEONARD'S STANDARD SERVICE Experienced typist would like to do service, 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, VI 2-0210. 5-12 9th & Indiana VI 3-9830 Term papers accurately and neatly typed on good grade bond paper. Minor corrections, carbon copy, extra first page. Call VI 3-0875. 5-21 ★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT Experienced typist with electric type- writer available to type themes, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work stands phone. Phone VI 3-8397. Charles tf Pattl THE NAME FOR SERVICE ★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK Experienced secretary would like typing from home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 1188. Fast, accurate work done on electric batteries and reduces rates. Call Bett Vincent, VI 3-504-3800. Experienced typist with electric typewriter--fast accurate work with reasoners, paper, thematics, sertations and theses, phone VI 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson. Accurate expert typist would like typing prompt service. Call V1-36813-7250 Prompt service. Call V1-36813-7250 Experienced typist for thesis and term paper. Send resume to Mrs. Fulcher, 103 Misslissippi, VI 3-0585. ★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED Experienced Typist—Dissertations, Theses, Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 Rhode Island. VI 3-7485. tf Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon pen. Compass book, VIII 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 408 West 13th. tf Term papers. Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tt Secretary will do typing in home. Fast. With legal terms, Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers reports, etc. Electronic Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568. ★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M. ART'S TEXACO 9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897 RISK'S ★ MUFFLER SERVICE Shirt Finishing Laundry 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 YELLOW CAB CO. 24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled VI 3-6333 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, May 12, 1964 JOE'S BAKERY ★ TUNE-UPS 616 W. 9th Open 24 hours except Saturday evening delivery VI 3-4720 MEMBER AMERICAM GEM SOCIETY AGS In Lawrence, your Authorized Dealer is Delbert A. Eisele When buying diamonds Look for this sign experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typerwritter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Ms. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648. MEMBER OF ACS NATIONAL BRIDAL SERVICES Marks Jewelers 817 Mass. VI 3-4266 MILIKENLIS SOS—always nstr quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines. machines t a m e t tape transcriptions. Office hours: 7 a.m. to 12 p.m. -1021%! Man Phone VI-3-5920 GB Recording Service and Party Music Dressmaking-alterations, formats and gowns. Ola Smith. 939 1/2 Mastri V 3-5263 Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. BUSINESS SERVICES & MCAF new under new management We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday, June 18th, three hour lunches, dinners, and sandwiches four second cup of coffee always free tapes: recorded or duplicated Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. tf MISCELLANEOUS The Catacombs nite club and Pizza Dien 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 records: cut or pressed WANTED BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Responsible driver to take car to Wisconsin. Transportation free and date is flexible. Call Prof. Appel at VI 2-4185, evenings. 5-18 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 Ride to and from K.C. Saturdays and/or August. See Mrs. Wilson, 10-4 Stournley. Milliken's SOS "the best professional service" - general typing serve * automatic typing automatic typing 24 hr answering service 24 h.m. online service ● mimegraph & photo-copying 1021½ Mass, VI 3-5920, 7 a.m.-11 p.m. KERBY'S DEPENDABLE STATION - 'Vett head-quarters - Specialists in all makes & models including sports cars "We'll pick up your car and deliver it FREE on any service call." Mobilgas Wheel Bal. - Oil - Wash- Lube VI 3-9608 9th & Ky. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd Seniors, cash your rebate slips before paying. Before you leave KU. V 2-0180 5-12 Grease Jobs . $1.00 VOLKSWAGEN'S WANTED. Car for your VW, Conzelman Motors, VW Sales, Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway 59 Opportunity for male keyboard mannequin in sales demonstrations. Write giving age, experience, type of instru- so. STUDENTS HELP WANTED Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. LOST Experienced typist. Full time. Capable of assuming responsibility. Fast, accurate typing a necessity. Salary open. Written resume. 1 Flint Hall Campus. 6-12 Room and board in very nice home near campus. For right person interested in helping with well-mannered children. (Ages 9, 6, 4.) Call Mrs. Milliken. VI 3-5947. **tf** Patronize Your Lost April 28. Yellow gold, round faced, Lady Elig watch. Call Sylvia, U 4-3-20. Kansan Advertisers Arrow Sorority Pin (PI Beta Phi). Gold with white enameled tail and two raised pearls. If found, return to Anne Shontz, 612. W 15th., VI 3-3910. 5-13 - Parker Pens - Stationery - Printing Hallmark Cards When you care enough to send the very best 4 E. 7th VI 3-2261 BULLOCK'S Just West of Post Office 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 ★ 1 Bedroom ★ 2 Bedrooms ★ Swimming Pool FOR INFORMATION CONTACT Crescent Heights Apts. Mgr. Bring in this coupon and get our Registered Mechanic 10 POINT SAFETY CHECK — FREE VACATION SERVICE - with this ad! We will check (1) Cooling System (2) Fan Belts (3) Lights & Signal System (4) Wheel Bearings (5) Brakes (6) Wipers (7) Exhaust system (8) Steering (9) Fuel System and (10) Ignition System. ABSOLUTELY FREE!! Be Coreful Be Sure Be safe Before Returning Home This Summer. Call on us TODAY. VI 3-6697 SANDERS MOTOR CO. Lincoln-Mercury Studebaker HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy Ice cold 6 pacs—all kinds OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Ph. VI 3-0350 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, May 12, 1964 McNamara's Visit to Viet Nam No Picnic SAIGON, South Viet Nam—(UPI) —Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara, guarded by nearly 1,500 police and troops because of a Communist threat to kill him, today pledged U.S. aid to Viet Nam "for however long it is required" to win the guerrilla war. McNamara arrived from West Germany for a two-day assessment of the war against the Viet Cong. He immediately began talks with the U.S. diplomatic and military chiefs here. Vietnamese police Saturday uncovered a plot to blow up a bridge along McNamara's route into town from the airport. But today, his motorcade avoided that route and took side streets to reach the U.S. embassy without incident. THREE SUSPECTS caught laying wires near the bridge were arrested Saturday but other members of the Terrorist group were believed still at large. Because of the threat, unprecedented security precautions were ordered. A battalion of about 450 battle-ready Vietnamese paratroopers reinforced 1,000 Vietnamese policemen around the airport and routes into town. McNamara, who visited here in March, said on arrival: "As you know, I have been meeting during the past two years every 30 to 60 days with the U.S. ambassador to South Viet Nam and with the commander of the military assistance forces here. This is another of those regular meetings." THE AMBASSADOR, Henry Cabot Lodge, and the military chief, Gen. Paul D. Harkins, met McNamara at the airport. "We will review the progress in achieving the program we agreed upon and laid out during my last visit in March." McNamara added. "We will consider what additional action, if any, is required to fulfill the commitment of my government Rusk Calls on Allies To Help Isolate Cuba He called on America's allies to isolate Cuba "politically, economically, militarily, socially and spiritually." THE HAGUE —(UPI)— Secretary of State Dean Rusk warned today that a second Cuban crises, as dangerous as that in 1962, could erupt if Cuba shoots down an American reconnaissance plane. He also appealed to them to help shore up the beleaguered south Viet Nam regime with non-military aid in the form of hospitals, medical teams and help for farmers. RUSK WAS the first speaker when the council began a sweeping world to the South Vietnamese government, to provide whatever economic assistance and military training and logistical support is required in whatever form it is required, for however long it is required, to ensure defeat of the Communists." Robles Leading In Panama Race As McNamara drove into town, extra precautions were taken to supplement the normal strict security. PANAMA CITY —(UPI)— Government candidate Marco Robles, campaigning on a platform of political independence from the United States, today widened his lead over ex-president Arnulfo Arias in Panama's tight presidential race. With nearly 50 per cent of the ballots already tallied, Robles led Arias by a 15,000 vote margin—87,290 to 72,391. A third presidential candidate, Juan A. Galindo, who has already conceded defeat, polled 30,-997 votes. "He's a madman," Robles said of Arias. "He can't stand the idea of defeat." DESPITE ROBLES' campaign pledge to "free our foreign relations from traditional (U.S.) fetters," the government candidate—former interior (police) and justice minister in the outgoing administration of President Roberto F. Chiari—was not expected to take any extreme stand in negotiations. Robles' edge was notable in that Arias' principal voting strength, in the city, was included in the early returns. Robles was conceded to be stronger politically in the interior. Robles shrugged off Arias' victory claims. Like Chiari, he is pledged to a peaceful re-negotiation with the United States of treaties relating to the joint relations of the two countries. Robles was, however, pledged to set about on an aggressive program of land reform. IT SEEMED CERTAIN, however, that Arias would challenge the election outcome and perhaps delay official proclamation of a winner. His followers stoutly maintained Arias was being "robbed" of certain triumph but quoted no election returns to support their allegations. Morning newspapers appeared with paid advertisements in which the camps of both Robles and Arias claimed their man was "President-Elect." MCNAMARA AND LODGE conferred privately at the embassy, after which the secretary was briefed formally at the headquarters of the U.S. military assistance command on the progress of plans approved by President Johnson for winning the anti-Communist war. If Arias does lose, it would be the first time in three starts that he had hailed to win the presidency. He did not finish either of the two terms in which he was elected, however—the Army ousted him in 1941 and again in 1951. policy review at the start of its three-day spring session here. Rusk said Cuban Premier Fidel Castro may show less restraint than the Soviets in interfering with American air reconnaissance over Cuba He warned a "very serious situation" would develop if an American plane were shot down. EARLIER, ADDRESSING a formal opening session of the council, Rusk warned the communists are spreading their expansionist efforts to other parts of the world besides Europe. He said the free world must be ready to wipe out aggression wherever it is threatened. Defense Department Spokesman Arthur Sylvester said there was "an intensive discussion" on the 12-point program, but declined to give any details. He also declined to say whether any "substantive change" had been noted since McNamara's last visit here in March. In his speech to the first working session, Rusk delivered his expected appeal to America's allies to curb trade with Cuba and to help bolster embattled South Viet Nam with non-military aid. BRITISH FOREIGN Secretary R. A. Butler, who spoke after him, replied that Britain shares this view too, but that the British government believes there are differences of methods by which it should be carried out. On Viet Nam, Rusk said the United States would like other NATO members to make their contributions to shoring up the country's administration by providing non-military aid in the form of hospitals, medical teams and help for farmers. Johnson Signs Bill On Pesticide Use Sylvester called the meetings "an audit of those recommendations which Secretary McNamara and General (Maxwell D.) Taylor (chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff) made to the President and which the President accepted in March." WASHINGTON — (UPI) — President Johnson signed into law today a bill to provide tighter government control over use of pesticides. "By closing loopholes which permitted pesticides to be sold before they were fully tested, this bill safeguards the health and lives of all Americans," he said. The new law ended the procedure under which manufacturers could market a pesticide even though it had not obtained government clearance. In a White House ceremony, Johnson said the government's concern "must always be the health of every American." Observers said the security measures were the most thorough ever ordered for a visiting official. Plain-clothes guards mingled with the uniformed men and with the crowds. Johnson said he was "sorry that one voice that spoke so eloquently" for such legislation was stilled—that of author Rachel Carson. Her book "The Silent Spring" stimulated a drive for the safeguards. She died last month. Those who supported the bill argued that a questionable killer could be on the market for several months before a court decision was reached on its safety. The President used a number of pens, as usual, to sign the bill and gave the first one to Sen. Abraham Ribicoff, D-Conn., a chief sponsor of the measure. "Abe, I want you to have the L in Lyndon," Johnson said after using the pen to sign the first initial of his name. "You have been waiting for this a long day, I know." THE PLOT TO BLOW up the bridge was the latest in an increasingly bold series of terrorist attacks in and around Saigon. On May 2, terrorists exploded a bomb against the side of a U.S. aircraft carrier docked in Saigon harbor. Then they threw a grenade into a crowd that gathered to look at the partially submerged ship. American servicemen and their dependents were subjected to bombing attacks earlier this spring. Bombs set off at a softball game and in a U.S. movie theater claimed many casualties. of Staff, who arrived yesterday, he will remain in Viet Nam until tomorrow. McNamara is making his second inspection trip here in two months. Accompanied by Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, chairman of the Joint Chiefs THE U.S. IS HEAVILY COMMITTED in South Viet Nam, with 15,000 troops serving as advisers to the Vietnamese army and an aid expenditure of 1.5 million a day. McNamara and Secretary of State Dean Rusk have been trying to get the United States' European allies to share some of the burden of non-military aid to Viet Nam. Rusk planned to ask the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NA-TO) members for such help durnig their three-day foreign ministers' meeting opening in the Haag today. McNamara discussed the issue over the weekend with West German officials before his flight here. He was assured that the West Germans are "sympathetic" to these American pleas. But a German government spokesman said the form in which the other NATO partners would share U.S. responsibilities in Viet Nam must still be discussed. Jarvenpaa, Finland Becomes Sister City of Lawrence Mayor Owens will respond on behalf of Lawrence by presenting Mayor Pyykko a silver key to the city. The momento can be worn by the Finnish mayor. Lawrence and Jarvenpaa, Finland—where KU and the University of Colorado will hold their second cooperative Russian language institute this summer — will become "sister cities" today. Presentation will be by Prof. Herbert J. Ellison, chairman of the KU Slavic and Soviet area program. Last summer he accompanied the group of 40 students from KU and other schools, who engaged in intensive language study in Jarvenpaa. The new relationship will be formally established at the afternoon meeting of the Lawrence City Commission when Mayor James Owens receives an emblem of the Finnish city from Mayor Einar Pyvkko. MAYOR PYYKKO asked Ellison to present the emblem, a white lyre centered on a bright blue banner. The lyre was chosen as the emblem of Jarvenpaa, because of the nearby residence of the composer Jan Sibelius. Mayor Owens said a letter would be written to Mayor Pykko, extending him an invitation to visit Lawrence. Referring to the Finnish city officials, Mayor Owens said, "We are proud of the fact that they went to the trouble to establish this relationship." He said the Lawrence City Commission "will be glad to do whatever we can within the realm of our authority." OTHER U.S. CITIES that have participated in sister city relationships have held exchange visits of community leaders and industrialists, and have sponsored longer exchanges of high school students. Jarvenpaa has a population of about 12,000 and is located near Helsinki. Like Lawrence, it is growing rapidly. Mayor Pykkko has been described in a popular Finnish magazine as one of the country's outstanding urban administrators. The community, near the Soviet border, is the home of a number of Russian refugees who fled their country in the early 1940's. Through the generosity of Mayor Pyykko and his commission, the Russian-language institute participants were provided modern facilities which this summer will be expanded to include an entire school building. The Classical Film Series presents Buster Keaton in THE GENERAL (One of the great comedies of all times) Wednesday, May 13 Fraser Theater—7 p.m. Admission:$.60 Egyptian Workers Cheer Khrushchev ASWAN, U.A.R. — (UPI)— Thousands of cheering Egyptian laborers mobbed visiting Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev today when he symbolically completed the first stage of the Aswan dam by dropping a stone into the river Nile. "Stay back—he's an old man' Russian security men shouted as workers poured across Khrushchev's path. The surge of dust-covered workers snapped police cordons and engulfed the Premier's motorcade near the site of the Russian-financed dam—the Kremlin's biggest foreign aid project. Khrushchev appeared unruffled, and he seemed to be enjoying the pandemonium despite the uproar and temperatures that hit 108 degrees at noon. THE SOVIET leader and President Gamal Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic flew in from Cairo aboard a jet airliner for three days of ceremonies at the billion-dollar dam. Later Khrushchev and Nasser drove into the city of Aswan. The local government hurriedly sent for more security men to line the route of the motorcade as the two men stopped off to visit a compound where Russians working on the dam live. The recreation center of the compound includes a swimming pool a theater and a library. They were surrounded by a strong guard, but the security measures fell to pieces when streams of Egyptian workers poured down from granite cliffs. THRONGS of cheering Egyptians and members of the Soviet community greeted the two leaders at the airport. Khrushchev raised his hat and waved, and dutifully kissed a baby brought to him by a Russian woman. "We have simply got to bring in more men to cope with this," one police officer said. "I have never seen anything like it in my life." Khrushechev and Nasser were driven to the dam site where they boarded the river steamer Ramses and were joined by Yemeni president Mohammad Salal. Hundreds of Soviet engineers working on the dam and thousands of Egyptian workers cheered as the leaders participated in the stone-dropping ceremony. The stones heralded the sealing of the final 120-yard gap of the dam's upstream coffer dam for diversion of the Nile's course. As the stones splashed, huge tugs loaded with tons of granite rushed into the gap and began closing it. The entire operation was expected to take two days. Then Khrushchev and Nasser shook hands before going on to the river's west bank to inspect the six completed tunnels that will carry the Nile's waters into a new channel. The diversion will give Egypt vastly more electric power and land to cultivate. KHRUSHCHEV looked proud and pleased as he dropped his stone into the river. The hydroelectric and irrigation project is the biggest single item in the Soviet foreign aid program—an undertaking the Kremlin accepted after the United States backed out. Nasser's stone was inscribed, "On May 13, 1964, in the name of God, this stone is thrown marking the closure of the river Nile channel." Khrushchev's stone had no inscription. Trucks blew their horns and tugs sounded their sirens in honor of the leaders, but work on the dam paused only briefly. An estimated 3,500 special troops police and security officers were flown to Aswan to provide protection for Khrushchev during his three-day stay, the most rigorous part of his 16-day visit to the U.A.R. An additional 7,200 service personnel joined the city's 120,000 inhabitants to look after the dignitaries. AFTER THE stone-dropping ceremony this morning, Khrushchev had only a visit with the 3,000 Soviet engineers working on the dam before retiring to the air conditioned new Catarat hotel to escape the intense heat. The Communist leader will make the major speech of his Egyptian visit tomorrow. He and Nasser will push a button to dynamite a sand barrier on the eastern river bank, diverting the Nile through a mile-long canal and giving man control of the river's course for the first time in history. The actual sealing of the final gap of the Coffer dam is scheduled for Saturday. This will dry up the river bed and permit the start of work on the dam itself. Soviet - built transport planes normally used to ferry Egyptian troops to trouble spots in Yemen were used to rush extra supplies and food from Cairo to Aswan for Khrushchev's visit. The cargo included three limousines. Khrushchev arrived in Egypt last Saturday for his first good will tour in Africa. Since then he has been making anti-western speeches in support of Arab causes, bringing cheers from the throngs that have greeted him wherever he has gone. Skies are expected to be sunny tomorrow with strong southerly winds, the Topeka Weather Bureau said. The low tonight is expected to be 48 degrees. The high tomorrow is expected to be in the 80's. Weather Daily hansan Lawrence, Kansas 61st Year. No. 139 Wednesday, May 13, 1964 Schrey, after the meeting, said the disciplinary committee should publish its "decision and the reasons for There was little discussion of the resolution which directs memorandums to the University Senate and the University Disciplinary committee, expressing the council's feeling on the matter. ASC Resolution Requests Disciplinary Acts Publicized THE COMMITTEE is composed of six students and five faculty members appointed by the ASC and the University Senate. By Gary Noland The All Student Council, in its last session this semester, passed a resolution requesting that the University Disciplinary Committee make public all its actions, but withhold the names of students involved. The resolution was introduced by Leo Schrey Jr., Leavenworth sophomore, who said that because of recent controversy over the disciplinary committee's policy, he felt there was a need for this action. A student member of the disciplinary committee, contacted after the meeting, said the committee's present policy is to not publicize any of the committee's proceedings. the decision so people can see what will happen if they are guilty of the same offense." Schrey said the resolution was not because of the disciplinary committee's suspension of Michael Mount, Wichita senior, for writing a bomb scare note, but said that this case clarified the need for publicizing the committee's actions. THE DISCIPLINARY COMMITTEE has been the object of considerable student criticism following the suspension of Mount last Wednesday. Yesterday, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe publicly issued the facts on which the committee deliberated in response to student petitions protesting the suspension. Schrey said there is "apparently a lack of communications between the students and the disciplinary committee. More communication might eliminate controversies that develop." he said. In other business, Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., junior and student body president, appointed 155 persons to 25 executive committees. They were all approved by the council- COMMENTING ON THE number NATO Foreign Ministers Meet to Update Policies U. S.-proposed multilateral nuclear force. At yesterday's opening session, Secretary of State Dean Rusk warned that NATO must adapt to new forms and areas of Communist aggression if the security of the free world is to be maintained. Stikker, who has been NATO's chief executive since 1961, feels that West Germany and other European countries should have more command posts in the military hierarchy. He also recommends that the NATO standing group, made up of senior American, British and French officers, should move from Washington to Paris. THE HAGUE—(UPI)—The NATO Foreign Ministers turned their attention today to proposals for reorganizing their 15-year-old alliance to fit the nuclear age. Outgoing NATO Secretary General Dirk U. Stikker of the Netherlands was expected to tell the Ministers the Alliance should be revamped to give Europeans a larger share of commands now held by Americans. Stikker, who is retiring for health reasons in August, was making a secret report this morning to a closed council sessions attended only by the 15 Foreign Ministers and two aides for each. The council is holding a three-day stock-taking conference on problems facing the Alliance and the differences dividing the members. The main breach has been between Washington and Paris over President Charles de Gaulle's rejection of the The Secretary General is known to feel that the standing group, which is NATO's highest military planning authority, should be located closer to the permanent council, which is the Alliance's chief political authority with headquarters in Paris. of people that applied for committees. Stewart said: "I was happy that we had 140 people to turn down, but it is regrettable that these people were qualified and interested. "I plan to appoint some of these people to ex-officio positions and use them on new committees. Also I plan to send a list of their names to other organizations where they may be needed." "The applications are a fine indication of student interest, and I think that this year we've had overwhelming interest in committee positions." IN OTHER BUSINESS, the council heard financial reports from the following committees and organizations: student health, association of university residence hall, people-topeople, engineering school council business school council, Alpha Phi Omega, and the student bar association. A proposal several weeks ago to establish this committee had touched off a lengthy debate as to whether this program would be acceptable to professors and instructors who would receive anonymous student criticism. with very little discussion, the council passed an amendment establishing a student-teacher evaluation committee under the auspices of the student advisory board. The council also passed a resolution directing the student opinion poll committee to conduct a poll to measure student reaction to the 1983 KU Homecoming theme. The resolution was introduced by Jim Cline, Rockford, Ill., junior, who said there was some "dissatisfaction with the Homecoming theme." The 1963 theme was "To the Stars Through Difficulty," and "Higher Education—the Road to the Future." ANOTHER RESOLUTION passed by the council last night is designed to create a temporary disciplinary committee to function during the summer session. Gary Walker, Wichita sophomore, introduced the resolution. Walker said that Donald Alderson, dean of men, had indicated that there was a need for such a committee because of increased enrollments during the summer session. In other business, the council approved changes in student health insurance rates for next year. The rates for full coverage for single students went from $26.60 to $32.00; the rate dropped for married students from $169.50 to $160.45. KU Students Cite Attitude as Academic Problem By Nancy Schroeter Four KU students slammed department attitudes, criticized testing methods, slapped Greek living, and ridiculed organized activities last night at the Student Union Activities' student forum. "Constructive Criticism from College Experience" was the subject of the SUA "Philosophical Bases of Absolutely Everything (P.B.O.A.E.)" panel which consisted of four students: Kenneth Leone, Alexandria, Va., sophomore; Joy Bullis, Davenport, Iowa; junior; Donald Igelsrud, Minneapolis, Minn.; senior, and Mrs. Susan Peters, Lawrence senior. He criticized the attitude by saying that some departments convey the spirit of only wanting to "weed out" students. This type of attitude does not motivate the students and "the student soon feels that the system has control of him." Leone said that motivation and inspiration are what count for undergraduate students and that the crux of academic problems at KU is attitude. "IMPERSONAL AND mechanical" attitudes on the part of some faculty do not give students any inspiration. Leone said. During the question and answer period, Leone said that the dislike some faculty members exhibit towards students who are in their class, but not majoring in their subject, creates a lack of motivation. Leone added that the student may be taught many things in a good course, such as physics, besides the regular course material. Leone said there should be a change in these attitudes but said that this change can not come from the students themselves because "idol learning" has drawn them away from any real purpose in their education. Igselrud, another panel member, said that the effects of testing at KU puts the student under pressure to study for a test and learn primarily only what the test demands. Concentrating his comment on the science field because he is majoring in the biological sciences, Igselrud said that it was easy to complete science courses by just learning definitions. As a result, he felt that the student did not learn anything valuable other than a set of facts. *TESTS SHOULD BE DESIGNED to differentiate between important concepts of courses and little facts.* Igelsrud stated. Two different methods of testing were proposed by Igelrsud to solve the problem: (1) a multiple choice test covering a wide range of subject areas, and/or (2) a teacher could give 2- or 3-hour exams of an essay type during the semester making them "shotgun" tests. The third member of the panel, Miss Bullis, began by saying the Greek system is "trivial" citing her one year of Greek living. (3) "Another area in which the yawn-provoking trivia of the Greek system dangerously afflicts the best interests of society is in the case of institutionalized prejudice to be found in the fraternities and sororites." (2) "The Greek system stifles spontaneity and lively spirit of intellectual inquiry." (4) Final criticism was leveled at the Society of Pachacamac which Miss Bullis described as a subrosa political organization interested in promoting the interests of the fraternity system. "In promoting the interests of the fraternity system the organization exerts its influence in seeing that the major portion of campus positions are filled by those loyal to the Greek system. While coercion is not used, means of influence and persuasion have been employed to keep the Greek minority in power," Miss Bullis stated. Asked what the exact activities of the Society of Pachacama are, Miss Bullis commented that the organization was extremely influential in politics and in choosing the officers of the bigger campus organizations. "In my opinion, *as long as fraternities and sororites use the In talking about discrimination in the Greek system Miss Bullis said that it is illegal at KU for any campus organization to discriminate in its membership. CAMPUS ACTIVITIES were discussed by Mrs. Peters who said that often activities are a "let's play" game. For example, she said that People-to-People could be called "let's play international understanding," the Student Peace Union—"let's play angry rebel," the All Student Council—"let's play politics," and the Associated Women Students—"let's play career girl." facilities of the University as they do in rush activities, they should be forbidden to discriminate against racial minorities," Miss Bullis said. The University does not have much faith in their scholarly pursuits when activities are emphasized so much, Mrs. Peters said. The attitude of the University is: "Anything that is worth doing spontaneously can be done 10 times better organized," Mrs. Peters commented. Mrs. Peters pointed out that she was not against campus activities but "I'm against the University regulating activities." Activities. Mrs. Peters concluded, would be done just as well if they were done spontaneously. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, May 13. 1964 Press Conferences Green Grass Since his ear pulling and beer drinking escapades before the press last month, the President is evidently trying to renew his image with the nation's newsmen and their readership. Veteran newsman Clark Mollenhoff discussed this "social" aspect of Washington news coverage in his lecture here on April 30. He discussed the dangers involved when a reporter accepts favors from politicians. Once, after he and his wife had attended a dinner at the White House, she turned to him and said, "Wasn't that great?" He agreed with her, but added, "As soon as I start to feel that I have to be invited back — I'm dead." HOW TRUE HIS WORDS ring. Although there is notning really wrong with a press conference on the White House lawn, where the newsmen are urged to bring their families, it just does not seem like the proper atmosphere for doing business. Would a police reporter take his wife to a bank holdup? Or would it sound logical for a journalist to take his family along when he got an interview with labor racketeer? No, not only because of the unsavory aspects of reporting these stories, but also because getting the news is a full time job and there is just no time to turn that job into a family picnic. The whole idea of associating with the President and other top politicians on a social level increases a Washington reporter's feeling of status and prestige. Anything which he might do to jeopardize this newly acquired position will not be pleasing to him. HE GRANTS A VISITING correspondent a private interview and treats him like a king, then he leans over and gives him "the real story" on what Russian plans are. The pressures may be applied in Cuba, Viet Nam and the Congo, but the newsmen will write that these actions do not really mean anything. Khrushchev really wants to live and let live. He told them so, while swimming nude in his private pool. How much more direct can you get it? President Johnson is not the only politician to utilize flattery as a device to gain favors from the press. Nikita Khrushchev is also skilled in manipulating the Western Press. Johnson's lawn party may have been a big hit with the ladies and children, but we hope the newsmen will not let it affect their news judgment. And if the President picks someone up by his ears again, while drinking beer, the press should report it anyway — the public has a right to know these things. Daily Texan—Jon Van Daili'i Fihsan 111 Flint Hall Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas NEWS DEPARTMENT Managing Editor Bv Mike Miller Uncertain American Support Threatens Vietnam Victory EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Ten years ago last Thursday—May 7, 1954-Communist troops took the remains of a French outpost called Dien Bien Phu. Mike Miller "PUBLIC SUPPORT for what the U.S. is doing to keep South Vietnam from being taken over by the Communists continues to slip away. It is uncertain, uneasy, and getting more so. This task is the basis of many of America's diplomatic headaches today. This ended the Indo-China war. It also ended the reign of French military power in Vietnam. Roscoe Drummond warned last week that the war in Vietnam can be lost in the U.S. "This means that President Johnson faces the prospect of having no adequate backing among the American people for the measures he may find necessary to take unless we are to let the Communists unhinge the Vietnamese gate which could lead to Communist domination of all Southeast Asia." Meanwhile, Secretary of State Dean Rusk left for Europe to urge NATO allies to contribute more to the fight against the Communist guerrillas in South Vietnam. SUBSTITUTION of one western power for another created a temporary stalemate between South Vietnam and North Vietnam, which had been abandoned to the victorious Communists. After a while, however, the Communists resumed the initiative with guerrilla incursions into South Vietnam. The U.S. inherited the French role of damming the Communist tide in Southeast Asia. SECRETARY OF DEFENSE Robert McNamara is planning to visit Saigon again next week. This will be his second visit to Vietnam in the last two months. There is speculation that he may use this visit to announce a tougher U.S. stance in South Vietnam, possibly entailing evacuation of American dependents. The U.S. now has more than 16,000 military men in South Vietnam and an estimated 1,800 dependents in Saigon. The collapse of French military power produced a vacuum into which the U.S. moved. Editorial Editor The military junta ruling South Vietnam last week eliminated the last trace of the Ngo Dinh Diem government by executing Diem's younger brother in Saigon. He was the last important member of the powerful Ngo Dinh family remaining in Vietnam. day Kothari and Margaret Hughes ... Assistant Editorial Editors THE PRESIDENT got his blood pressure up last week, however, over GOP charges that his anti-poverty program was a "cruel hoax." The President was making his inspection tour of conditions in the northern sections of Georgia as part of his poverty tour of the Appalachian states. He got big receptions from crowds on his tour, particularly in Knoxville, Tenn. In another foreign policy situation, the Defense Department said it doubts the report that Russia took home the top-grade antiaircraft missiles she installed in Cuba and left Fidel Castro with second-class weapons to back up his On President Johnson's much criticized practice of picking up his beagle dogs by the ears, Truman snapped, "That's the way to lift them. Did you ever have any hounds? The President did it twice for you guys. What are you hollering about?" As well as backing from Harry Truman, President Johnson got a clean bill of health from his doctors. Johnson suffered a heart attack in 1955, but the White House said Johnson's latest electrocardiograph examination showed a normal result. threats against U.S. surveillance flights. Dien Bien Phu's was not the only anniversary last week. Former President Harry S. Truman celebrated his 80th birthday by visiting Washington. Typically, he had comments on most subjects. Secretary of Defense McNamara said the U.S. will continue to fly aerial reconnaissance missions over Cuba whether or not the Russians turn over to Cuba the antiaircraft missile batteries they installed. He stressed the need of the flights in the absence of on-site inspections. While the U.S. was wondering about Cuba, Russian Premier Nikita Khrushchev made his first visit to Africa. He received a tumultuous welcome from Egyptians and was embraced by President Gamal Abdel Nasser. The 17-day state visit to the United Arab Republic is expected to be a propaganda offensive for the Soviet brand of communism in Africa, seeking to minimize the inroads made by Red China. He told the Knoxville audience that men of "timid faith and narrow vision" wanted to put "for sale" signs on the Tennessee Valley Authority. It was Sen. Barry Gold-water who once said a "for sale" sign should be posted on the TVA. - * * * As he toured the depressed areas, he pounded on rostrums and whacked his fists together exhorting thousands of fellow citizens to join the anti-poverty army. E. Welsh, Wallace's vote was short of the Wisconsin total. Tom Coffman ANOTHER THORN in Johnson's side, Gov. George Wallace of Alabama, didn't fare as well in last week's Indiana presidential primary as he did in the Wisconsin primary last month. Although he pulled a heavy protest vote against Johnson's stand-in, Gov. Matthew AT LAST COUNT, Goldwater has 265 of the needed 655 first-tally convention votes. Gov. Nelson Rocketeller picked up his first four committed votes in the District of Columbia primary. The Supreme Court last week refused to review two racial rulings. This means the two rulings made by lower courts will stand. In one action, the court rejected contentions by Negro children in Gary, Ind., that their constitutional rights are violated by a school system requiring them to serve their residential area and which they said resulted in segregation in fact. Goldwater has another backer, John M. Bailey, Democratic national chairman, said he would like to see Goldwater selected as the Republican candidate for President. When asked how he thought President Johnson would do against Goldwater in the presidential election, Bailey said, "Do you think we can be that lucky?" Wallace called the 32 per cent of the vote which he garnered a moral victory against the "liberals in Washington." Wallace is entered in the primaries to give those who are protesting the civil rights bill a chance to record themselves. In other primaries, Robert Taft Jr. and former Oklahoma football coach Bud Wilkinson scored landslide victories in their attempts to reach the U.S. Senate. Taft won the right to face Sen. Stephen Young, who won the Democratic primary, although John Glenn pulled about one third of the Democratic votes. An ear injury forced Glenn out of the race more than a month ago. Former Oklahoma governor Raymond Gary was defeated in his bid to meet Wilkinson in the generals. Sen. Barry Goldwater picked up Indiana's 32 convention votes in his race for the Republican nomination. He also won the 12 votes from Wyoming. *** The other upheld contentions by Negro children in Jacksonville, Fla., that they have a right to entire school systems operated on a nonracial basis, including the assignment of teachers, principals and other personnel. TRAGEDY PLAYED a part in last week's news. A tornado swept through a portion of Michigan killing more than a dozen people and causing extensive property damage. In what resembled a scene from a late television movie, a passenger on a Pacific Airlines plane shot and killed the crew of the plane. The plane crashed, killing 44 people. WHEN DORIS GAVE ME THE ULTIMATUM THAT WE EITHER GET ENGAGED OR WE BREAK UP I NEARLY WENT CRAZY. - I TOLD DORIS GETTING ENGAGED, FOR ME, WAS A TRAP THAT ID COME TO HATE HER IF SHE MADE ME GIVE UP MY FREEDOM. TERRIBLE! AFTER WE'D BEEN EU- GAGED THREE YEARS AND DORIG GAVE ME THE ULTIMATUM THAT WE EITHER GET MARRIED OR WE BREAK UP I NEARLY WENT OUT OF MY MIND. U S E T I ASKED DORIS WHY NOW THAT I HAD BEGIN TO GROW AS A PERSON BE Cause OF BEING ENGAGED DID SHE HAVE TO LIMIT MY FURTHER DEVELOPMENT BY MAKING ME MARRY HER? J A man in a suit. I TOLD DORIG BEING MARRIED WAS THE MOST INSPIRING EX- PERIENCE IN MY LIFE- WHY SPOIL IT WITH A KID? --- LITTLE LEROU IS FOUR NOW THE MOST ADORABLE CHILD IN THE WORLD, UESTERDAM DORIS GAVE ME AN ULTI MATUM ABOUT HAVING A SECOND KID AND MOVING TO THE SUBURBS. ON OUR SECOND ANNIVERSARY WHEN DORIS GAVE ME THE ULTIMATUM ABOUT THE BABY I NEARLY WENT OUT THE WINDOW. @MARY KITER ILL ARGUE. ILL SCREAM. EVENTUALLY WE'LL DO IT. sio wi is - FORTY YEARS OLD DOING WELL IN THE MARKET SUCCESS- FUL IN MY CAREER, ACTIVE IN MY COM- MUNITY, POLITICALLY AWARE AND AFTER ALL THIS, WHAT AM I? DAGWOOD BUMSTEAD. TUXEDO Wednesday, May 13, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 3 JFK Assassination Investigation Nears End WASHINGTON — (UPI) — With a mountain of detail piling up in its files, the Warren Commission is approaching the end of its exhaustive investigation of the assassination of President Kennedy. Unless some unforeseen development demands expanded investigation, the seven-man commission expects to finish sometime within the next two months. The purpose of most commissions appointed by the President is to develop information which can be used as the basis for changing government procedures, he explained. But at this point, even commission members are not sure what will happen to their report after it is submitted to President Johnson. A JUSTICE Department lawyer said the report of the commission which investigated Pearl Harbor under the chairmanship of Supreme Court Justice Owen J. Roberts had no legal status in the sense that it can not be used as proof in any court case. "This is certainly part of the purpose of the Warren Commission, as it was of the Roberts Commission," he said. "But both of these reports are aimed much more at the public than is the case with most presidential commissions." The commission that investigated the Pearl Harbor disaster would be the closest thing to a precedent for this commission, a staff member said. Whether there will be any changes in the procedures for protecting a President as a result of the commission's report is problematical. BY JAN. 29, about two months after the commission began its work, the FBI had submitted more than 250 investigative reports containing more than 10,800 pages. Since that time, it has turned over several thousand more pages containing specific information requested by the commission. Physical evidence, such as a windshield from the car in which Kennedy was riding, and displays, such as a detailed scale model of the assassination area, also were turned over to the commission by the FBI. When it was created, the commission announced that it planned to cover: Secret Service agents told the commission about the specific steps taken in advance of Kennedy's fatal visit to Dallas Nov. 22. THE COMMISSION'S investigation has ranged far beyond the protection given to the President. - Every detail of Oswald's activities on Nov. 22. - The life and background of Oswald, with an attempt to assess his ideas and psychology. - Secret Service witnesses also included four men who were riding in the presidential motorcade when Kennedy was shot. - Oswald's career in the marine corps and his stay in the Soviet Union. - The murder of Oswald in the Dallas police station and all aspects of how it could have occurred. - The story of Jack Ruby, the night club owner who shot Oswald to death before a startled television audience. - The procedures to protect Kennedy, the performances of the Secret Service, the FBI, the Dallas police, and possible influence of hate movements and extremist organizations in the Texas area. The commission has covered all of these areas except the role played by Ruby, which was intentionally left to the last so there would be no conflict with the night club owner's trial in Dallas. DETAILS OF Oswald's activities on Nov. 22 were related by the youth with whom he rode to work, persons who worked with him at the Texas Book Depository, eyewitnesses who saw a gun protruding from a sixth floor window in the depository building, a bus driver and a cab driver who had Oswald as a passenger shortly after the shooting, and Dallas police who investigated the slaying of patrolman J. D. Tippitt. Oswald's life story and his background were related by his widow, Marina Oswald; his mother, Marguerite Oswald, and his brother, Robert L. Oswald. The commission has asked for a return appearance by Oswald's Russian-born widow. A spokesman said the commission wanted the widow, who was described as a "very cooperative witness," to answer questions about "several additional points" that had come up since her British Fear Nasser's Actions; Goal Thought to Be Port of Aden By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst Since the days of the Romans the port of Aden at the tip of the Arabian peninsula has been a trading link between Asia and Europe. Today, in the hands of the British it is a strategic military base guaranteeing the flow of oil from the Persian gulf and the site of an oil refinery capable of processing five million tons of oil per year. It also is a plum ardently desired by President Gamal Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic. In recent weeks have occurred events which in British eyes are not mere coincidence. But with all the effort, Yemeni republican forces and the Egyptians still were able to control only Yemen's cities. Desert tribesmen still rallied to the deposed monarchy. In neighboring Yemen, where for more than a year his troops have been deeply involved, Nasser told cheering tribesmen: "WE SWEAR BY GOD to expel Britain from all parts of the Arab world. We shall shed blood and sacrifice souls. . ." For Nasser the time was approaching when either he had to win in And in the south Arabian federation, of which Aden is a part, the tribesmen whom Britain has been battling for a century suddenly were striking with modern arms, mortars and automatic weapons. The weapons could only come from outside sources, and the British were convinced they came from the United Arab Republic via the Republic of Yemen. IN YEMEN, NASSER has tied up close to 40,000 of his armed forces, a third of his military strength. An operation undertaken to protect the new Republic of Yemen after the overthrow of the monarchy and at first expected to be of short duration, had turned out to be a quagmire, costly to the Egyptian economy and unpopular at home. As usual in the tangled affairs of the Middle East, the ramifications spread far beyond the desolate volcanic rock and the barren mountains and sand which make up the Aden protectorate and the sultanates, emirates and sheikdoms composing the South Arabian Federation. Contributing to rising British anger were reports, later denied, that the decapitated heads of two slain British soldiers had been paraded in the Yemenite capital of Taiz. Yemen or get out with resulting damage to his aspirations for Arab unity. Despite the difficulty involved there were certain advantages for Nasser. A victory in Yemen would go a long way toward eventual control of the Red Sea and would lead directly into the oil rich sheikdoms of the South Arabian Federation. In the British he had a natural target for his favorite themes against colonialism and imperialists, doubly so since the area involved once was held by Yemen and still is claimed by the Yemen government. in xemen, it was noteworthy that Nasser did not attack Saudi Arabia which has supported the deposed monarchy. New discussions with Saudi Arabia are pending and success there would contribute to success in Yemen. Britain's troubles in Aden may be just beginning. Going Home? (or elsewhere?) We have the luggage you need! - Foot Lockers—5 sizes - Large Trunks—3 sizes - Car Bags - Duffel Bags - AWOL Bags - Ladies' cases - Men's 2-suiters - B-4 Bags — FREE DELIVERY IN TOWN — Lawrence Surplus VI 3-3933 first appearance. from the Russians, papers and information about Oswald's activities On at least two occasions, the commission requested, and received behind the Iron Curtain. 740 Mass. When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified The weather will never be better Now is the time to pick out your swimwear at ferrill's and get set to enjoy warm weather and cool water! HIGH SPIRITED... All-American look of wide marine stripes on silky Helanca nylon and spandex knit. Bib front two-piecer scooped out in back, with snug-fitting boy shorts. In pastel and classic colors. 8-16 $20.00 Cole of California terriill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS 803 Mass. VI 3-2241 Page 4 University Dany Kansan Wednesday, May 13, 1964 Open Tomorrow Around the Campus Engineers Elect Officers The School of Engineering has announced the results of the election for next year's Engineering Council. The officers are: President, Phil Wilkes, Shawnee Mission senior; Vice-president, Stephen Hartung, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Secretary-Treasurer, Joe Bowman, Shawnee mission sophomore; Senior Representative, Charles Mosley, Kansas City senior; Junior Representative, Barry Barnes, Mission sophomore; Sophomore Representative, Rich Andrews, Kansas City freshman. Religion of the Russian middle ages will be discussed at the Russian Club at 8 p.m. tonight in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. Russian Club Meets Tonight Michael Klimenko, assistant professor of Slavic languages and literature, will talk on "Some Religious Characters of Old Russia." The talk will be in English, Rodger Lee Findlay, Prairie Village senior and president of the club, said. "This will be the last Russian Club meeting for this semester," Findlay said. Prof. Klimenko was born in Ukraine, educated in Germany, and has been at KU for three years, Findlay said. Communications Studied Have you ever wondered why it just doesn't do any good to talk to some people? The answer to that "why" is one of the reasons Carl Griffin, Boise, Idaho, graduate student, is studying inter-personal relationships for his doctoral dissertation. "There is a great deal of work being done on this campus on communication," Griffin said. Not only are psychologists and sociologists interested in the problems of communications, writers in mathematics and telecommunications are studying it, Griffin said. In order to discern what attitudes, feeling, and acts are related to communicative function and dysfunction, Griffin will examine 100 Lawrence husband-wife and boss-secretary pairs, he told the Speech and Drama Research Colloquium yesterday. Griffin is a National Defense Education Act Fellow in speech and drama and a Ph.D. candidate in speech communication. He said his research should be finished by the end of the summer. Ten Midshipmen Honored Ten midshipmen from the KU Naval ROTC unit received awards for excellence in a special ceremony at the Navy Spring Review last weekend. The Chicago Tribune award to the outstanding midshipman of each class, based on military achievement, scholastic attainment and character, went to: James D. Hubbard, Cedar Vale senior; Dennis E. Pankratz, Marion sophomore, and Howell D. Johnson, Junction City freshman. The General Dynamics award for the senior midshipman who displays greatest interest in, and aptitude for, a Navy career, and one who demonstrates academic excellence, was awarded to Robert E. Borton, Cleveland Heights, Ohio, senior. The two outstanding senior midshipmen who received the U.S. Naval Institute award are Neil F. Wood, Topeka, and J. B. Strayer, Shawnee Mission. Paul W. Adelgren, Mission junior, was awarded the Reserve Officers Association Medal as the junior midshipman with outstanding over-all aptitude for service and a 3.0 grade point average in Naval Science for the past year. Richard H. Griffin, Bartlesville, Okla., senior, received the Julius Horowitt award as the senior midshipman with the best military bearing. The Marine Corps Gazette award to the outstanding senior midshipman, who will be commissioned in the Marine Corps, went to Douglas W. Pickersgill, Kansas City, Mo. Frank C. Riley, Leawood freshman, received the Captain's Trophy as the outstanding member of the Naval ROTC rifle team. Change of School Forms Any student desiring to change schools for the summer or fall semester should notify the registrar's office in 122 Strong Hall to fill out a request form. This will save delays during enrollment. 'Typists', 'Tiger' Satirize Society "Off-Broadway may never be the same again. Someone has come along who is original enough and witty enough to make even the avant-garde seem faintly old-fashioned." So wrote Walter Kerr, drama critic for the New York Herald Tribune, when "The Typists" and "The Tiger" made their debuts in 1963. The two plays, directed by Patricia Hensley, Lawrence graduate student, open at 8:15 tomorrow night in the Experimental Theatre. IN THE TWO PLAYS, dramatist Murray Schisgal satirizes both society and the theater of the absurd. "Shisgal plays his joke not only on society but on each one of us. We're not allowed to simply laugh at the misfortunes of 'the other guy'; we're forced to laugh at ourselves too," Miss Hensley said. "And we have to laugh when his characters mouth the same cliches in a humorous manner that other absurdist authors have expounded seriously," she continued. THROUGH THE use of realistic characters, with whom the audience does not find much difficulty in identifying with, Schisgal forces them to scrutinize the finer details of the communication-conformity problem that exists in society today. Miss Henslev said. "We are made to realize that the problem lies with each of us as individuals and not with them," she said. "The Typists," through the use of humorous dialogue, trivial incidents and common, cliche ridden language, stresses the point that life can be a rut, and for most people it is. "The Tiger" attempts to show that the lack of communication between people exists because the individual himself doesn't know what it is that he wishes to communicate. Miss Hensley explained. But throughout both the two-character plays runs a thread of humanism and humor. And when Brass Choir Welcomed Praised by Indonesians When the KU Brass Choir arrived in Djakarta, Indonesia, April 6, they were warmly received by Indonesian university students and American government personnel. "Even though signs advertised the Afro-Asian Conference 'for the crushing of imperialism and neocolonialism' and 'for building the world anew,' we felt absolutely no expression of dislike in any of our contests," Kenneth Bloomquist, director of the choir, said in a letter received at KU. THE TOUR BEGAN in Djakarta with a clinic and concert at the University of Indonesia and an evening concert for the public. The group dined at the Hotel Indonesia and were treated to all the unfamiliar conveniences, including hamburgers and milk shakes. Emmy Awards Face Trouble HOLLYWOOD—(UPI) —The Emmy Awards, scheduled to be telecast May 25, today faced a wide-open revolt following a withdrawal of recognition by one network and a boycott by the news department of another. The rebellion was sparked yesterday by Fred Friendly, a new president of CBS News and for years the boss of the "CBS Reports" series. He branded the awards as "unprofessional, unrealistic and unfair" and said his division would not participate in the ceremonies. Later in the day, Thomas Moore, president of ABC-TV, announced his network's withdrawal of recognition of the awards "as presently constituted." As of last night, the CBS entertainment department had not decided publicly whether to join its news division in the boycott. The Emmy show, television's equivalent of the Academy awards, is to be broadcast on NBC-TV, which said last night the program would go on. An NBC-TV spokesman said his network considered the dispute a matter for the television academy, and that NBC nominees would be delighted with any awards they can win. After a two-day bus ride, the choir reached Surabaya, a city on the opposite end of the island of Java. From here they travelled to Malang, Jogjakarta, Magelang, Surakarta, Samarang, Bandang, Bogor, and back to Djakarta. During 20 days in Indonesia, the choir visited every university there, played 25 performances, including workshops and performances and three radio shows. They were invited to numerous receptions, concerts and social functions, and were entertained by the diplomatic colony in Djakarta. Everywhere the choir went, they met people. Out of a population of 103 million, 67 million are estimated to live on the island of Java. These people seemed so tremendously interested in America and Americans, Bloomquist said. Mr. Howard Jones, the American ambassador to Indonesia, praised the choir and stressed the importance of its work. Contemporary apartments for summer rental or longer. These apartments are completely furnished, have two bedrooms and are air-conditioned. We are renting to college men, and we will allow four occupants in e ach apartment. These apartments are within walking distance of campus. Europe for Less All Student Trips Rates are from $90 to $105. Call VI 3-8241 during the day, and VI 3-9373 at night. EUROPE — Cavalier sails June 19 and returns August 6 - 11 countries, from $1154.50. Tupenny sails June 30 - 49 days, 15 countries, from $1160. ROUND THE WORLD - 8th annual World tour, 54 days, 16 countries, from $2595. you go to see them. two things, as drama critic Kerr said, will happen: "you begin laughing, and light dawns." Enjoy all-expense-paid travel with others your own age who share your interests. Special student sailings. Escorted. 15 years experience. Get full details from your local travel agent or write American Youth Abroad, 70 University Sta., Minneapolis, Minn. THE Jay SHOPPE 835 MASS. rose marie reid The new swimshift silhouette! Strapless, until time to let tuckaway straps come out for a swim. Designed with innerfit that outmodes a conventional bra. In Helanca $ ^{\circ}$ nylon knit, "Bain de Soleil" 8-14,20.00. State for 5 Years Page 8 'Hawaiian Style' Lives "Bimeby"—a loose contraction of "by and by"—generally sums up the Hawaiian attitude of "What's the rush?" fostered by years of relatively isolated life in a land that eternally will suffer from spring fever. HONOLULU —(UPI)— Rather than the official "The Life of the Land is Preserved in Righteousness," Hawaii might well use the pidgin-English "bimeby" as its motto. ALTHOUGH IT HAS been five years since President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the bill passed by Congress granting statehood to Hawaii, the ways of mid-Pacific islands in many ways is no more a "typical" American state today than it was a hundred years ago. There is still a "Hawaiian style" of life. Not the ukulele strumming-under-the-palm-tree life envisioned by thousands of mainland tourists, but a life at least surface informality in which bermuda shorts is the uniform and "bimeby" the password. IN A LAND in which natural disaster has been common, a tidal wave or volcanic eruption is more likely to be viewed as a tourist attraction than a threat to life and property. During two major tidal wave alerts last summer, Hawaiian authorities faced a bigger problem from spectators flocking to the beaches than from the waves, which turned out to be minor. 50th-staters also appear to have their own way of attacking labor problems. During the past year Honolulu has been hit with major construction, hotel, transportation and newspaper strikes, but it's often difficult to distinguish between a picket line and a company party During the 42-day strike against the city's two major dailies, ukulele bands played and several state legislators provided coffee and donuts while barefoot picketers in muu-mus or shorts marched in front of the news building. RESIDENTS OF HAWAII have a long string of Hawaiian weeds they find simpler and more expressive than their English equivalents. There is no north, south, east or west on Oahu. Instead, persons travel mauka (to the mountains), maki (to the sea), ewa (toward the town of Ewa), or koko head (toward a landmark at one end of the island). In Hawaii, a girl is a "wahine," a boy is a "kane," a white person is referred to as a "haole" in much the same way a person from Japan would be termed an Oriental, and anything that is ended or finished is "paul." In addition to true Hawaiian words used by almost everyone, pidgin-English still has a large following in the islands. Along with "bimeby" goes "Where you been go, bruddhah?" (the pidgin equivalent of "Where have you been, brother?"), and "No can" (the local version of "I cannot"). Journalists Abroad Hindered By Censors BACK IN HONOLULU stands perhaps the only university in the country attended regularly by girls in muu-muuus and boys wearing bermuda shorts. WASHINGTON — (UPI) There is a trend around the world to relax censorship and give the American foreign correspondent more freedom in what he writes. But in many nations he must walk warily lest he step into a hidden booby trap that will blow him clear out of the country. By Harry Ferguson The general conception of a censor is that he is a man with a thick blue pencil who takes a reporter's copy and strikes out words, sentences and paragraphs. But there are other factors that impede the free flow of news into the United States: - The threat to punish a reporter after the fact. He is allowed to send a story and then the axe falls. There has been no censorship in Russia since 1961—except on news pictures, news films and tape recordings—but seven correspondents either have been expelled or denied re-entry after leaving the country. One of them was Frank Bourgholtzer of the National Broadcasting Co. Moscow didn't like a television documentary that NEC showed in the United University Lecture, 4 p.m., 411 Summerfield. "Bivalent Sulfur in the Preservative of Biochemistry," Dept. of Biochemistry, Columbia U. College of Physicians and Surgeons. Official Bulletin TODAY Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Strattford Rd. Carillon Recital, 7 p.m. Albert Gerken. SUA Classical, 11 p.m., 7 p.m., Fraser Treasure, 8 p.m. University Daily Kansan Kappa Alpha Mu, photojournalism so- cause of the war. Union Last meeting of the school year. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth. TOMORROW Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. States. Bourgholtzer had no part in the show, but being in Moscow and within the Kremlin's reach he was the man punished. Mathematics Staff Seminar, 3.30 p.m. John Strong, R. Burhin, Wreath Protective Surgeon, D. Burhin Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion. 440-265-3788, Pan American Room. Kansas U.S.A. Philosophy Lecture. 7:30 p.m., 108 Organizational Organization. *Dr. Errol Harris*. - The confusion that results when a large number of reporters try to file their stories on a limited communications system. That is what is happening in Cyprus today. There is no censorship, but the local cable and telegraph personnel cannot cope efficiently with the thousands of words they are asked to transmit daily. Senior Recital, 8 p.m., Swarthout Hall. Julia Varner, pianist. Holy Communion, 11:30 a.m., St. Anselm's Chapel, Canterbury House. Senior Recital. 8 p.m. Swarthout Hall. Oysterhout, soprano; Woodwind Dinnetter. Minority Opinions Tape-Discussion, 8 Palm 306 Kansas Union. "Operation Kansas" Christian Science Organization, 7:30 Pastor Danforth Chapel. Everyone welcome Christian Family Movement (CFM), 8 p.m. St. Lawrence Center, 1915 Stratford "The Tiger," "The Typist," 8:15 p.m. "Experimental Theater" Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth. A couple miles makai of the university is Waikiki. Frequently termed "the jungle" because of its dense accumulation of new highrise apartment buildings, palm trees, old houses, hotels and night spots, Waikiki and its cluttered beach are the world-famous attractions that draw mainland haoles by the tens of thousands each year. BECAUSE THE STATE has but one major university, sports enthusiasm is directed toward high school athletics. In Honolulu, a game between Roosevelt and McKinley high schools or a Punahou-Kameheamehue contest will draw 28,000 fans. A revolution or any abrupt national upheaval frequently causes censorship to be clamped on where none existed previously. Soon after President Joao Goulart of Brazil was overthrown, three army captains walked into the Rio De Janeiro bureau of United Press International and announced they had come to "collaborate" and to prevent the sending of any "suspect military news or alarming reports." Four of them have been working in shifts ever since, but so far they have cut nothing out of the file of copy. One of them is looking over the shoulder of bureau Chief Denny Davis when he filed the foregoing information for this dispatch. The Brazilian captain labors under a considerable handicap because he neither speaks nor reads English, the language in which Davis was communicating with the United States. The United States has a blueprint drawn for instantaneous censorship in event of war. Even though there is no peacetime censorship, the pentagon takes a fling occasionally at deciding what reporters shall write and not write. The most recent case was when Fidel Castro cut off the water supply at Guantanamo Naval Base. Washington reporters were flown to Guantanamo and then told that their copy would have to be reviewed for security reasons. It was a one-sided controversy, because the only way a reporter could get his story back to the United States was to file it over Navy communications. Naturally, the Navy won. Polynesians and Orientals make up the largest percentage of the population, led by the Japanese who account for close to one-third of all the people in the state. In the newspapers, the biggest continuing story appears to be the periodic escapes from the Koolau Boys Home on Oahu. One observer suggested the state install a traffic light on the highway next to the home to prevent possible injury to boys dashing across the road to freedom. THE ABOLITION of prior censorship by Russia was a giant gain for freedom of information. In the old days, the post of Moscow correspondent had to be listed as the most frustrating job in journalism. Wednesday, May 13, 1964 And bimeby Hawaii might just do that. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS KU Committee to Tout Peace Corps at Fairs Distributing information about the Peace Corps throughout the state of Kansas will be the objective of the KU Peace Corps Committee during the summer months. John Sapp, Astoria, Ill., sophomore and chairman of the KU Peace Corps' Off-Campus Committee, outlined his committee's plans in an interview last night. "OUR FIRST project will be to prepare a booth for the State Fair at Topeka." Sapp said. "The KU Peace Corps Committee sponsored such a booth last year with great success. This year we hope to have the services not only of members of the KU committee, but also of some Peace Corps volunteers who have returned to Topeka." Working in the fair booth will be members of Sapp's Off-Campus Peace Corps Committee, and members of the Peace Corps Counseling Service. "In addition to having a booth at the Topeka Fair, we are planning to have booths at some of the state's other large fairs," Sapp said. "We have found out that there will be over 100 county fairs in Kansas this summer, so we will try to get space in as many as possible, taking into consideration population Church Disclaims Pamphlet Stuffing The religious material placed in Kansas distribution boxes last week end was not distributed by the Catholic church. The original pamphlet was printed by the Knights of Columbus, a Catholic men's lay organization, but the anti-Catholic chart stapled in the back of the pamphlet was not. Passages in the pamphlet were underlined in red ink. This was not done by the publishers of the book. A story carried in Monday's Daily Kansan suggested that the literature was distributed by the Catholic church. of the area and location with respect to other fairs." "Our committee has written to civic groups, for example Lions and Optimists, all over the state to make them aware that members of our group are willing to make speeches during the summer. LAST YEAR, THE group was primarily concerned with reaching high school students with the Peace Corps information. This year it will concentrate on older groups, Sapp explained. "There are about seven or eight members of the Peace Corps Speakers' Bureau, and four members of the Off-Campus Committee located over the state." The Peace Corps operates under a fund from the University which pays the transportation costs for the students speakers. "Our job this summer will involve more spreading of information than actual recruiting for the Peace Corps." Sapp said. The summer will also give the Off-Campus Committee time to plan for a proposed conference next fall with other Kansas colleges and universities. "Over the summer, we will be working with Kansas State at Pittsburg to plan such a conference," Sapp said. THE TIGER and THE TYPIST Two Fine 1 Act Plays at the Experimental Theatre 8:15 May 14, 15, 16 50c plus ID or $1.00 The Classical Film Series presents Buster Keaton in THE GENERAL (One of the great comedies of all times) Wednesday, May 13 Fraser Theater—7 p.m. Admission: $.60 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, May 13, 1964 1964 KANSAS Commonwealth Theaters Granada — Varsity — Sunset Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners 1001 New Hampshire Douglas Co. State Bank 9th & Kentucky Montgomery Ward and Company 825 Massachusetts KU Football Sche Sept. 19 T.C.U. ------ Sept. 26 Syracuse ------ Oct. 3 WYOMING ----- BAND DAY *Oct. 10 Iowa State ----- *Oct. 17 OKLAHOMA ----- *Oct. 24 Oklahoma State ----- *Oct. 31 Kansas State ----- *Nov. 7 NEBRASKA ----- HOMECOMING *Nov. 14 COLORADO ----- PARENT'S DAY *Nov. 21 Missouri ----- *Nov. 21 Missouri ----- * CONFERENCE GAM PENNEY'S ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY 830 Massachusetts Wednesday, May 13, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 7 AS FOOTBALL I Schedule 1964 LAWRENCE e --- Syracuse NG--------LAWRENCE ate ---- Ames OMA----LAWRENCE ma State ----- Stillwater State - - - - - Manhattan SKA----LAWRENCE NG ADO - --- LAWRENCE AY i - --- Columbia NFERENCE GAMES Haddock Ford Your Ford Dealer 714 Vermont Lawrence Sanitary and Ice Cream Company K.U.'s Favorite Since 1920 Lawrence National Bank 647 Massachusetts Acme Laundry and Dry Cleaners 3 Convenient Locations Duckwall's VARIETY STORES 945 Massachusetts Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. May 13. 1964 Goldwater. Rockefeller Win By United Press International By United Press International New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller and Sen. Barry Goldwater won expected victories yesterday in presidential preference primaries in West Virginia and Nebraska but it was probable that only Goldwater picked up all-important GOP convention delegate votes. Sen. Barry Goldwater wrapped up his third presidential primary victory, but the big news of yesterday's Nebraska vote was a 32 per cent write-in performance by Richard M. Nixon. BUT THE RESULTS of the presidential "popularity contest" were not binding on the 14 West Virginia national convention delegates chosen, more than half of whom were expected to be uncommitted with the rest going to Goldwater. Rockefeller swept to an impressive "moral victory" in West Virginia's primary, surpassing the expectations of his backers by capturing about 70 per cent of the total GOP vote cast in a state generally considered more favorable to Goldwater. Rockefeller backers hoped, however, that their man's showing in the presidential preference vote—where he was unopposed — would swing some of the uncommitted delegates behind him. Goldwater, the only man whose name was on the Nebraska Republican presidential primary ballot, polled almost exactly the 50 per cent of the vote which campaign manager Richard L. Herman said he had expected. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge picked up 16 per cent of the GOP vote, far ahead of New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller and four other write-in candidates. ★★ GOP Hopefuls Continue Push PORTLAND, Ore. — (UPI)—New York Gov. Nelson Rocketfeller interrupted his final push for Friday's Oregon primary today for half a day of campaigning in northern California. In New York Sen. Barry Goldwater issued a plea for Republican Party unity and assailed the Johnson administration at a mass rally in jam-packed Madison Square Garden last night. Rockefeller was to leave early today for a speech at Humboldt State College in Arcata, two visits with editors in Eureka, and a noon speech at, a public reception in a Eureka hotel before resuming his Oregon campaign for the Republican presidential nomination. Goldwater, in the meantime, said; "I do not say that the Republican Party must do it my way or I won't play," he told more than 18,000 cheering supporters. "I want to find ways that we can work together—as a team." ABSENT from the rally were New York's two senators, Jacob Javits and Kenneth Keating. Javits has indicated he might not support the Republican candidate for President if Goldwater gets the nomination. "I'm not interested in defeating any Republicans in 1964," Goldwater said. "I'm interested in defeating Lyndon Baines Johnson." The Arizonian's 45-minute speech was interrupted 108 times by applause from the audience which included supporters from New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Connecticut and other nearby states. Goldwater appeared to be overwhelmed by his reception and the 10-minute standing ovation which greeted him and his wife as they entered the Garden. IN REMARKS prepared for delivery at Humboldt State, Rockefeller said, "I want to keep the United States in the United Nations and the United Nations in the United States." Rockefeller, who faces Goldwater in California's June 2 primary, said "here in California a vital and dramatic battle for control of the Republican Party is joined. "At stake, is whether the Republican Party shall remain a party of progress, moderation and responsibility or whether it shall become a party of narrow radical extremism." Rockefeller reiterated his support of civil rights legislation and the need for "selective federal assistance for education without impairment of state and local control." WITH 1,916 OF the state's 2,148 precincts counted, the GOP primary vote was: Goldwater, 60,931; Nixon, 38,763; Lodge, 20,001; and Rockefeller, 3,000. The vote did not commit any of Nebraska's 16 votes to the Republican presidential nominating convention. But Goldwater men were hopeful of picking up most of the six delegates who were elected in yesterday's voting and the 10 additional delegates who will be chosen at the state Republican convention June 1. The Nixon votes piled up in the wake of a last minute write-in campaign which included Fred M. Seaton, former secretary of the Interior in the Eisenhower cabinet, among its leaders. IT WAS BY ALL odds Nixon's strongest show by in any primary to date. Last week, the former vicepresident made a speaking appearance in Omaha and told a news conference he was available to take on the Republican presidential nomination if the delegates want him. Although Rockefeller ran unopposed, his support was greater than expected among traditionally conservative West Virginia Republicans. Sen. Barry Goldwater was not entered in the primary and write-in votes are prohibited, thus preventing a test of strength among Rockefeller, Goldwater and other Republican presidential possibilities. Unofficial returs from 1,076 of 2,- 664 precincts gave Rockefeller 37,941 votes for president. ROCKEFELLER'S WEST Virginia campaign manager, Mal Guthrie of Charleston, said he expected to win "the support of a significant number of West Virginia delegates to the Republican convention." Goldwater supporters noted that the preference vote in Nebraska did not mean that Nixon—or anyone else but Goldwater—had captured any convention delegates and they predicted that supporters of the Arizona senator would win five of the six delegate races. The other 10 Nebraska delegates will be chosen at the state Republican convention. They also are expected to go to Goldwater. Perhaps the only real setback of the day for Goldwater forces came at the Rhode Island Republican state convention where an uncommitted slate of 14 national convention delegates was chosen. The slate is headed by Gov. John H. Chafee, not generally considered a Goldwater backer In addition, Rhode Island Republicans voted to bind the delegates under the unit rule, which means that all must vote for the candidate decided upon by the majority. As of today, the latest standings in the UPI count of delegates already selected shows: Goldwater 287; Lodge 44, Nixon 8, Rockefeller 5 and Pennsylvania Gov. William W. Scranton 61, all from his state. Oregon Polls Show Lodge Slipping PORTLAND, Ore. — (UPI) — Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge's support among Oregon Republicans today seemed to be slipping enough to buoy hopes of rival GOP presidential possibilities. Opinion polls published this week showed Lodge still with a commanding but shrinking lead over the field of five competitors entered in the regon Republican presidential primary Friday. In a poll published today, the Portland Oregonian gave Lodge 36 per cent of the GOP vote, down from 40 per cent last month. He was followed by Rockefeller at 22 per cent, Goldwater 16 and Nixon 13. Three per cent were divided between Scranton and Mrs. Smith and 10 per cent were listed as undecided. The Harris poll published Monday by the Washington Post and Times Herald indicated the Lodge vote at 40 per cent, Nixon 22, Rockefeller 19 and Goldwater 14. BALTIMORE —(UPI)— Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace took his presidential primary campaign back to Baltimore today apparently unruffled by a heckling at the University of Maryland. Maryland Collegians Fail To Shake Wallace Wallace, who is running against Sen. Daniel B. Brewster, D-Md., in next Tuesday's primary, planned to spend the day answering phone calls from voters and being interviewed by radio newsmen. He was scheduled to speak off-campus to students at Frostburg, Md., State College at 7 p.m. EDT. ADDRESSING University of Maryland students last night at College Park, the segregationist governor overcame spirited heckling with sarcastic and sometimes humorous remarks. A crowd of about 8,500 turned out for Wallace's appearance, sponsored by two student organizations. Before the address, Brewster and Sen. William E. Proxmire, D-Wis., spoke for the Civil Rights Bill at a campus rally held in a light rain. Wallace, who got heavy applause before the evening was over, replied to his hecklers with such remarks as "If you folks don't get quiet, you're never going to get promoted to the second grade." At one point, he said: "I always heard that the hallmark of a liberal was a willingness to hear the other side, listen to me and then if you don't agree, we'll agree to disagree agreeably." WALLACE DREW howls of laughter with a slip of the tongue when he defended the "system that you are guilty until proven innocent." The governor was accompanied to the speaker's platform in Cole Field Assignment for Wednesday Take advantage of the CHICKEN DINNER for $1.55 at the Holiday Inn Restaurant House by Alabama's seven congressmen, a delegation of ministers from Alabama and representatives of his state's Polish, Italian, Greek, Jewish and German ethnic groups. Asked why no Negro Alabaman was present, Wallace said several volunteered to accompany him but did not come "because we were afraid that they would get hit on the head with some of these signs which say 'God is love.'" He referred to about 100 anti-Wallace signs throughout the audience. In a question and answer period, the governor denied that he was anti-Negro. He said he had never made a remark against anyone because of his race. WALLACE answered another question by saying schools were segregated in his state only because "an overwhelming majority of the people in Alabama want them segregated." Brewster, a stand-in for President Johnson in the primary, urged some 3,500 students at the earlier outdoor rally to "extend a courteous and calm approach to any guest in our state no matter who he may be." Brewster and Proxmire were interrupted throughout their speeches by a small band of hecklers waving a large Confederate flag. The proWallace hecklers shouted "long live George" and sang "Dixie." See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER Sales — Rentals — Service 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 Have you visited the NEW branch of the Kansas Union Book Store in Watson Library Complete line of scholarly paperbacks from academic publishing houses Assorted paper supplies and writing materials Open afternoons and evenings Located on basement level under main entrance. Page 9 MAK TEAM Charles Twiss (left) and Tyce Smith work out in preparation for the high jump at the Big Eight Conference Outdoor meet this weekend. Both Twiss and Smith are figured to be threats to win the event as Coach Bill Easton's team tries to repeat their last year's league victory. Jayhawk Distance Specialist Predicts Kansas-Mizzou Clash Rv Glen Phillips "I think I will win it, and I hope that KU will 1-2-3 the three-mile with Silverburg and Acevedo." These are some of the thoughts of John Lawson, one of KU's top distance men, concerning the upcoming Big 8 track meet in Stillwater. Lawson feels that this year, the meet will essentially be a duel between the Jayhawks and the Missouri Tigers. Missouri defeated KU in the Big 8 indoor meet. However, several events which made Missouri strong in indoor competition are not included in outdoor competition. MU's Robin Lingle is a big threat since MU is trying to shatter the Jayhawk's monoply in the three-mile. However, because Lingle is doubling in the mile, Lawson says he feels that he should beat the MU star without much trouble. THE SPUNKY little Jayhawk runner has the most important part of the make-up of any distance runner by his judgment—determination. He feels that a person must really want to run. According to Lawson, one's parents can't force him into running and one cannot fake it—the only way to make a good runner is to be determined to be a good runner. This determination according to Lawson is the secret of his training. And it is a simple training program—determination and running. He runs cross country. He runs sprints. He runs distance and sprints alternately. He runs all the time to keep in shape. Although he has not vaulted for more than a year, Lawson feels that he could clear eleven feet . . . right now. "I am just in better shape now," he says. His best height earlier had been 10" 8". He says his main fault in vaulting was lack of speed—speed which he has developed since he has been running regularly. Running has always been the most important single thing in his training. Ever since he first began to seriously run distance when he was a sophomore at Wyandotte high school in Kansas City, Kansas, Lawson has relied on his running, along with occasional weight-lifting, to develop himself. After entering high school he began to train in earnest for distance running. His efforts were somewhat hampered when he tried to practice Wednesday, May 13, 1964 University Daily Kansar HE HAD wanted to run distances earlier. In junior high, the school only had a one-mile cross country track but he found this insufficient for training. Therefore, he went out for track and developed for himself what must be one of the strangest backgrounds ever for a distance runner. LAWSON BECAME a pole vaulter. It turned out to be a rather good decision, because even though vaulting was his second choice, he did so well in it he finished second in the event in a city-wide junior high school meet. m town where he had to dodge cars and wait for traffic lights, but he continued to work himself into shape. FINALLY HE came to KU on a track scholarship. In the fall he runs with the cross country team and he finished third in the Big 8 competition this year. Then, later in the year, he begins track practice. Because Lawson feels that it is easier for him to continue running for the entire year than to let himself get out of shape over the summer and have to re-train for fall cross country, he constantly strives to keep himself in shape. Even after the track season is over in the spring, Lawson continues to keep himself in shape over the summer with a training schedule that includes several cross country runs each week. His strenuous schedule does not seem irregular to him. He explains it this way. "The man who does not go out for cross country and keep himself up just doesn't have a chance against those runners that train all the time." Lawson has some set long-range plans for the Olympic competition. He says that he would like to go to Tokyo but that he would be satisfied just to make it to the try-outs. "Making the try-outs places a man pretty high in the standings anyway." His real goal is the 1968 Olympics. "This is the time to start thinking about it, though," he says. He plans to continue training for that goal. In 1968 Lawson figures that he will be nearest his peak running condition which usually comes for distance men when they are 24-26 years old. Meanwhile, he keeps on training. He'll keep on working until he feels that he isn't improving anymore and "... then maybe I had better hang it up." 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 Missouri Favored in Meet Day or Night STILLWATER, Okla. — (UPI) — The University of Missouri Tigers roar onto Oklahoma State's Lewis Field Friday as favorites in the classy field competing in the two-day, 36th annual Big Eight Conference track meet. Missouri, the 1964 conference indoor king and 1963 outdoor runnerup to KU, will be threatened, however, by KU and possibly Oklahoma in the rush to humble several glittering league records. The most savage assault is expect- ced to be launched against the 15-10'4 pole vault mark set in 1961 by OSU's George Davies. KU's Floyd Manning, last year's winner at 15 feet, will pace a half-dozen conference vaulters who have cleared 15 feet or better. Manning holds the year's best collegiate vault of 16-13', but will be challenged by Missouri's Bill Younger, Oklahoma's Jim Farrell and OSU's Preston Holsinger. Oklahoma's hopes will be pinned on ailing Anthony Watson. The Living Sound of GREAT FOLK MUSIC ON 20TH CENTURY-FOX RECORDS THE MAGIC OF MAYO MUIR A refreshing new voice in folk music. Mayo Muir sings a wide span of folk songs in her first entire album. TFM 3122 (TFS 4122) LOGAN ENGLISH sings the WOODY GUITRIE songbar LOGAN ENGLISH SINGS THE WOODY GUITRIE SONG BAG Logan English plays and sings a host of the best songs made fa- mous by Woody Guitrie TFM 3126 (TFS 4126) INTRODUCING THE WELL-ROUNDED DICK GLASS. The record de- but of one of the most versatile new folk artists on the current scene. TFM 3136 (TFS 4136) For the Authentic Sound in Folk Guitars— GRETSCH The finest name in folk guitars, Gretsch now offers you a chance to become a recording star. Win a 20th Century-Fox Records con- tract in the Gretsch Folk Guitar Contest. Mail your best folk recording or tape of minimum 2-minutes length to Gretsch Con- test, P. O. Box 1234, New York 17, N. Y. Contest void in areas where prohibited. Dairy Queen MALT'n SHAKE SALE Thursday Only May 14 YOUR FAVORITE FLAVOR ONLY 19¢ RELAX!...take a SHAKE BREAK at Dairy Queen famous for that "Country Fresh Flavor" 1835 Mass. Street The Music Muse Mus The Magic Magic Muse LOGAN ENGLISH sings the WOODY GUTHRIE songbag LOGAN ENGINEER ships the WOODY GUYTHRIE songbag RKSNA Dairy Queen MALT'm SHAKE SALE Thursday Only May 14 YOUR FAVORITE FLAVOR ONLY 19¢ RELAX!...take a SHAKE BREAK at © 1943 Dairy Queen Mab. Dvr. Co. Dairy Queen famous for that "Country Fresh Flavor" 1835 Mass. Street Page 10 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, May 13, 1964 World's Fair Hosts Huge Wax Museum NEW YORK—(UPI)The 4,000-year-old art of wax sculpture will be represented by a million dollar waxworks museum at the New York World's Fair. It's nice to know that the art of wax sculpture, invented by the ancient Egyptians as part of their elaborate funerary arrangements, is undergoing a considerable revival right now after a decline for half a century that threatened to extinguish it. Fifty years ago there were 300 waxworks museums scattered around the United States, miniatures of the famous Madame Tussaud's establishment in London. BUT BY THE time the Seattle world's fair opened in 1962, there wasn't a single wax works left in the United States. There only were wax sculptors working in Hollywood making dummies for the most dangerous stunt scenes in films. Since wax museums with life-like sculptures of famous personalities from the Bible, history, literature, the underworld and contemporary politics always have been immensely popular at big fairs, the Seattle fair people had to turn to Europe for a wax museum. They found one in the Musee Procopiu in Paris and the financial backers in Lou and Manny Walter of Los Angeles. THE WALTER brothers had made money in electronics components in California and undertook the $250,-000 waxworks museum for the Seattle fair as a lark. But on the eve of the fair, Tudor Procopius died. With a $250,000 commitment on their hands, the Walter brothers had to learn in a hurry to complete the museum and run it themselves. They learned so well that the museum was a huge attraction and earned a big profit. So now they are putting on a $1 million waxworks show for New York fair. It will include the star attraction of the Seattle fair, the amazing reproduction in wax sculpture of Leonardo da Vinci's "The Last Supper" by Katherine Stubergh, regarded as about the best wax sculptor in this country. IT WAS THE only American- V ELRING'S GIFTS for the BRIDE— All prices in wedding and shower gifts 924 Mass. (across from O'Dell's-Bell's) ELRING'S GIFTS for the BRIDE— All prices in wedding and shower gifts 924 Mass. (across from O'Dell's-Bell's) made work in the wax museum at the Seattle fair—but was definitely the hit of the show. The Walters' Seattle show stirred up so much interest that about 40 new waxworks museums have been set up in various cities of the United States since then. The Walters' waxworks show in Flushing Meadow will be peoped by some of the celebrities who have been star attractions in waxworks museum over the years — Cardinal Richelieu, Marie Antoinette, Chopin and George Sand. Daniel in the Lions' Den, Moses and the Ten Commandments, the Madonna and Child, Joan of Arc at the Stake and Lady Godiva. But there also will be more recent attractions — the last five presidents of the United States, famous figures like Prime Minister Ben Gurion of Israel, the late Pope John and Pope Paul and a scaresome family of monsters and villains to the theatre and the world of mythology Patronize Kansan Advertisert NOW! Shows 7:00 - 9:00 ELVIN faudin lowin swingin' PRESLEY KiSaIN COUSINS Granada TREATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 NOW! DAVID NIVEN • PETER SELLERS ROBERT WAGNER • CAPUCINE. THE PINK PANTHER CLAUDIA CARDINALE TECHNICOLOR TECHNIMALS • LIMITED ARTISTS LEONARD'S STANDARD SERVICE BUSINESS DIRECTORY Held Over! 2nd Big Week! HOW THE TEST WAS WON METROCOLOR ONE SHOW EACH EVENING Open 6:45 - Starts 7:30 Adults $1.25 - Children 50c Next ... 'THE INCREDIBLE MR. LIMPET' Starts TONITE! The Biggest Deal in Town! M.G.M. presents A MARTIN RANSHEFF PRODUCTION STATES LEE REMICK · GARNER THE WHEELER DEALERS PANVISSION of METRO COLOR PLUS: "LOVE IS A BALL" Sunset LOVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway # 9th & Indiana VI 3-9830 Varsitu THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 REAL PET Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking Cut 'n Curl BEAUTY SALON OPEN 7:00 — STARTS DUSK Cut 'n Curl BEAUTY SALON graduation permanents, sets, latest styles. 3-5569 843 N.N. 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 中国船舶集团 GRANT'S DRIVE-IN Pet Center Sure—Everything in the Pet Field 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921 Portraits of Distinction SUNSHINE TRAINING Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Bring in this coupon and get our Registered Mechanic 10 POINT SAFETY CHECK — HIXON STUDIO FREE VACATION SERVICE - with this ad! We will check (1) Cooling System (2) Fan Belts (3) Lights & Signal System (4) Wheel Bearings (5) Brakes (6) Wipers (7) Exhaust system (8) Steering (9) Fuel System and (10) Ignition System. ABSOLUTELY FREE!! Call on us TODAY. Be Careful Be Sure Be safe Before Returning Home This Summer. 838 Mass. Travel Agency AIR LINES FIRST NATIONAL BANK JIM'S CAFE VI 3-6697 SANDERS MOTOR CO. Lincoln-Mercury Studebaker Domestic & Foreign Steamship Lines Tours & Cruises Everywhere OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY VI 3-0152 746 Mass. COMPLETE SERVICE FOR CHEVYS for OLDS 738 N.H. - Small enough to give personal attention. - Big enough to have all the equipment. VI 3-7700 SHIP WINTER 7,000 Pipes and every smoking accessory CHEVROLET "SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS" George's Pipe Shop 727 Mass. VI 3-7164 "SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS!" 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 STUDENTS Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd Fraternity Jewelry FOR Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS SEE MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Balfour MALLS SHOPPING CENTER VI 3-1211 Originality IN FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION originally for you by Alexander's 826 IDWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS FOR PROMOTIVE DELIVERY PHONE TL. 3-4090 Very $66 per after Must Good Call S 1953 6866 Little 6060. Form 3-475 1964 VI 2 Econ VW 9,400 $1895 4:30 1959 and 1 Elicion. steree. Whol VI 3 1953 clear chan at 11 Agin sell mati try offer CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE Very nice 3 bedroom home $500 down, will buy will buy Call V11 2-5- after 4:30 p.m. 1-5-19 Must sell 1964 Volvo before May 31. Call San Diego, WI 2-4112 after 5 p.m. 5-19 1953 Buick. $50. Call Don Santl. VI- 3- 6886 buteck. 1111 W. 11th. VI- 1-8 Little used Harmony guitar. Call VI 3- 6666. Ask for Sherry. 5-18 1958 Morris Minor. New motor, transmission, tires. $200. Underwood typewriter. $20. About 3,000 books. 1539 Tenn. VI. 3-7787. 5-18 Formals for sale. Sizes 12, 16. Call VI 3-4752 after 5:30 p.m. 5-13 21" console TV, RCA, real good shape. TV I 2-4197 after 6 p.m. tf 24 Economical, versatile transportation in a VW bus. Student owned 1963 model. The nearest used bus company $185. Calm Roger Morrison, BI 3-7370; 4:30 to 7 p.m. 1964 Volkswagen. new, accessories. Call I 2-2594 after 7:30 p.m. 5-15 1959 Volvo. Rebuilt engine, new tires and battery. Call. Sie 3-4505. 5-21 Eico stereo preamplifier, combination Garrard record player, combination Excellent condition. Whole system must go. Call Steve Heinz, VI 3-4050. If not there, leave message. 1953 four wheel drive Jeep pickup. Solid, clean body, 16" ply tires, perfect mechanical condition, new engine. $600. See at 1105 La. after 7 p.m. 5-13 Single featherweight sewing machine for carbon fiber fabrics, excellent coil- cal. Cali V1 2-4262 5-13 Aging, conservative faculty type must sell 1960 Dodge Dart. Four door, automatic transmission. Owner leaving course by choice). See at 1036 R.I. Best offer. One dinette set, 2 years old, excellent condition. Six chairs with matching table, cushions. Danish Modern chairs, 2 years old, need reupholstering. $10 each. See at 635 W. 25th, April, 4th & Thursday, for details. Wednesday, Friday, between 2 and 5 p.m. 1958 black and white ford convertible. Power steering and brakes, good condition, original owner, Call VI 3-5003, 1618 Rose Lane. Furniture and appliances. 9 mo. old. Refrigerator, electric stove, kitchen cabinets, microwave, refrigerator, rug, coffee tables, end tables, table lamps. Slightly older: breakfast set, bedroom set, bedroom suite. Door lamp, living room suite. Call VI 3-5546 between 6-5 10 p.m. Wedding dress, size 7-8. 1817 La. Upstairs, west apartment. 4 to 6 p.m. SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS. Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale at great savings after 6 p.m. week sunday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut St. New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500 ream- $8.5 Lawrence Outdoor 1005 M * Typewriter, new and used portables, standards, electrics. Olympia, Hermes, Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter, adder, rentals and service. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St.. VI 3-3644. Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50 Western俭装. Call VI 2-3701. Excellent and extensive, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tt For Further Brush Products phone VI 3-9040 after 5 p.m. tt FOR RENT Summer sublet; 4 room apartment. 2 bedrooms, bathroom. 2 bedrooms, storage and refrigerator. First floor, private entrance. Utilities paid except electricity. $55. Call Vi. 3-103 Room for rent. Mahogany panelled room with private entrance and private full suite $327 Tenn. Rent $45 per month. Off street parking. Call IY 3-5046 evenings. 5-19 Rooms for men. Extremely modern, remed- ided both coffee and refrigerator available. Cooled for summer, all new rooms furnished by Union and Union Mississippi, VI 2-0298. 5-19 To KU men. Two room modern furnished apartment. Outside entrance. Bills smoking in the rooms. No drinking at smoking. See first house south of campus at 1616 Indiana. Efficiency apartment, 2 large rooms. Private entrance and bath. $30 per month. Bills paid. Also, large newly redone sleeproom suite with 154 square feet on campus. New garage. $5 per month. Available June 1. Call VI 3-7830 or VI 3-0298. Comfortable, sunny, 4 room apartment for couple. Kitchen, living room, bed-air conditioning, air-conditioning, private bath. Available June 4, call VI 3-3565 or VI 3-5863. Private furnished apartments for KU men with single beds, showers, all utilities paid. For 1, 2, or 3 men, Available for 3 KU men, Utilities paid. All near campus. Summer rates. Inquire at 1005 Miss. VI. 3-4349. 5-18 Bedroom with shower and half-bath Kitchen privileges if desired. See at 516 La. ti New garage apartment for 2 men or couple. Available immediately. Also a studio studio apartments for men near campus. For appointment call VI 3-8534. 5-18 Now renting new Ridge House Cabana Units. Swimming pool, carpet, air-conditioning, I bedroom furnished or unfurnished Clubhouse. Ready for occupancy in August. Contact Mr. Osborne for this fall. V 3-1116. 2403 Cedarwood. tf Luxurious duplex. Central air-conditioning, close to shopping and University. Wall-to-wall carpet, all electric kitchen, swimming pool. Absolutely the finest 2 bedroom units. Contact Mr. Osborne now. VI 3-1116, 2403 Cedarwood. tf moving to Kansas City? Then dig these brand new beautiful apartments in the Prairie Village-Overland Park area. 1 and 2 bedrooms, wall-to-wall carpet, drapes, central air-conditioning. On the road to Denver. From $115. One mile west of Antioch Rd. on 95th Street. The Alex Bascom Co., TU 8-3128 or TU 8-5252. 5-21 Available room 1. Apartments and sleeping rooms. $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from Union. Off street parking. Call VI 2-1675 or VI 3-0492. 5-14 For two men students. Two basement at 1520 W. 22nd Terrace, VI 3-8674, 5-18 at 1520 W. 22nd Terrace, VI 3-8674, 5-18 For the summer. For 2 or 3 men students. Cool, pleasant, basement apartments. Hall. Private bath and entrance. Call Vi 3-6313. 1103 W. 19th Terrace. 5-14 To sublet for June, July, and August; furnished two bedroom apartment. Five minute walk from KU library, Modern, central air-conditioning, carpeted, pool. Call VI 3-4007 after 4 p.m. or see at 1737 Ohio, Apt. 7. 5-13 Emery Apartments available June 1. Efficiency and one bedroom. To see contact Milan Loupal, Apt. 204. Emery or call VI 3-8190. 5-19 Bachelor Studio Apartment for graduate or older undergraduate men. $1_{2}$ blocks from Union. New remodeled nicely furnished studio with central part ideal study conditions. A few still available at low summer rates. Singles and doubles. For appointment call VI 3-8534. Married, grad students, faculty. Efficiency apartment from $65 and small house from $70. Available in June. Call now. Santee Apartments, 1123 Ind., VI 3-2116. Large, honey, attractively furnished, 4 room apartment. For summer months at summer rates. Kitchen built-ins and garbage disposal. Free parking available June 1st. Large 3 room apt. Call VI 3-7677. Will rent for summer months. 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, kitchen. See also paid. Call t 3-9451 or see at 1244 La. Crescent Heights two bedroom apart- rent. Phone VI 2-3711. TYPING Experienced secretary like typing. 2566 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122 5-21 849 Rue du Rhône, VI 2-0122 5-21 Experience secretary would like typing home. Reasonable rates. Call 123- 3-5139. P. 4120 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention on all reports, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate typing at reasonable rates. Call Donna Stewart, VI 3-6621. tf Experienced typist would like to do their job in the service, standa rates. Call VI 3-7819 24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled BURGERT'S Shoe Service VI 3-6333 YELLOW CAB CO. Service for Shoes Since 1910 FREE! qt. of oil with oil change & filter BOB'S CONOCO 1113 Mass. St. Lube - Wheel Bal. - Brakes Term papers accurately and neatly typed on good grade bond paper. Minor corrections, carbon copy, extra first page. Call VI 3-0875. 5-21 VI 3-0691 19th & Mass. VI 3-9802 Experienced typist with electric typewriter, available to type themes, term thesis, etc. Accurate work standards and rates. Phone VI 3-8397. Charles Pattl. NEW YORK CLEANERS Accurate expert typist would like typing in her home. Term papers and theses. Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. tt experienced secretary would like typing in home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 1188 Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reasoners, papers, themes, dissertations and theses, phone VI 3-1682"frs. Frank Gibson. Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon keyboard. VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Mariage) Hillegay. 408 West 18th **tt** Term papers. Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tt Fast. accurate work done on electric drives. Call Betti Vincent. VI 3-5041. REPAIRS — LEATHER REFINISHING ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING Delivery Service Experienced typist for thesis and term work on various subjects. Reqs: Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0588 Experienced Typlist—Dissertations. Thees, Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 7000 Rhode Island. VI 3-7485. tt TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, research papers, and course notes rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8686 tf Secretary will do typing in home. Fast. Legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577. legal terms. Delivery Service 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typrwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648 MILLIKENS SOS—always nstr quality typing on LB.M. Carbon ribbon machines. he also拉 tape transcriptions. Office phone 71-5920. 1 p.m. 12pm.-1021% Mati- phone VI-3-5920 BUSINESS SERVICES Dressmaking-aiterations, *formals* and gowns. Ola Smith. 939% M1 VI 3-5283 L&M CAFE now under new management WE WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. and will have a menu of delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches Your second cup of coffee always free JOE'S BAKERY Open 24 hours except Saturday evening 616 W. 9th 25c delivery VI 3-4720 Milliken's SOS "the best professional service" Page 11 - general typing service - automatic typing - automatic typing 24 hr. answering service - general typing service - automatic typing 1021½ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7 a.m.-11 p.m. - 24 hr. answering service The only thing better than a home cooked meal is Dinner At DUCKS Steaks & Seafoods A Specialty Serving crisp tossed salads, choice of potatoes, zesty Wednesday, May 13, 1964 butter. Sandwiches, toast Your favorite beverage Vienna breads & country fresh butter, Sandwiches, tool serving crisp tossed salads, choice of meats in country fresh 11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass. $ $ $ $ $ $ Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery brented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 116 Mass. VI 3-1267 t on shocks, mufflers, tail pines and installation. CAR OWNERS SAVE UP TO 40% Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign colns, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coln Mart. 1025 Mass. 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. - Trained mechanics for quality service MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES - All makes and models including sports cars WANTED Side wanted to KU Medical Center Mom- ege 5 p.m. Call VI 2-3148. 8-19 Responsible driver to take car to Wisconsin. Transportation free and date is flexible. Call Prof. Appel at VI 2-4185, evenings. 5-18 - Your satisfaction GUARANTEED VOLKSWAGEN'S WANTED. Cash for your VW. Conzelman Motors, VW Sales Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa. Hiway 5 Opportunity for sales. Key for sales in les demonstrations. Write giving age, experience, type of instru- So. Mortgagemery Wards Auto Service Center 729 N.H. VI 2-1708 Ride to and from K.C. Saturdays and/or August, See Mrs. Wilson, 10-4 Stout $ $ $ $ $ RISK'S Montgomery Wards Shirt Finishing Laundry Wash & Fluff Dry 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 University Daily Kausan All makes & models frame - body - fender - glass AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS DALE'S BODY SHOP VI 3-4732 704 Vermont George's Hobby Shop 1105 Mass. VI 3-5087 Artists - Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics How do you save money by spending a lot of it at the Lawrence Book Nook? 1021 Mass. One Stop Service Generator & Starter Repair Engine Tune Up Brake Repair ★ Lubrication & Oil Change WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE SKELLY SERVICE JACK & GUNN'S SKELLY 300 W. 6th GB records: cut or pressed Seniors, cash your rebate bilges before before you leave KU. TI 2-0180, 5-19 Recording Service and Party Music 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 HELP WANTED tapes: recorded or duplicated Room and board in very nice home near campus. For right person interested in attending with well-mannered children (Ages 9, 6, 4) Call Mrs. Milliken VI-3547. LOST White gold woman's watch. "Toni" engraved on back. Lost on west side of campus. Reward. Call VI 3-9123, Room 202. 5-19 Lost April 28. Yellow gold, round faced, Lady Elgin watch. Call Sylvia, UN 4-3801. Sylvia PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS --- Hallmark Cards When you care enough to send the very best - Parker Pens - Stationery - Printing BULLOCK'S 4 E. 7th VI 3-2261 Just West of Post Office JEWELRY FRATERNITY A complete line, including, • Lavaliers • Pins • Rings Ray Christian JEWELERS IT'S OK TO OWE BAY 800-649-2100 STUDENTS! SAVE WITH THIS AD!! "Front End Special" - Front end aligned • Front wheels balanced, bearings repacked • Steering checked ONLY $6.98 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 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 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, May 13, 1964 ASC Approves Committee Appointments The following committee appointments were approved by the All Student Council last night. TRADITIONS COMMITTEE: Albert Lemoine, Leawood junior, chairman; David Allen, Bucklin freshman; L. T Hayden,仲恩公斯, Lawrence senior; Mike McNally, Bartlesville, Okla., freshman; James Praeger, Atchison freshman. CONVOCATIONS AND LECTURES: Larry Meeker, Garden City freshman, chairman; Cindy Martindell, Hutchinson Lorry Kanago, Great Bend sophomore. **STUDENT OPINION POLL:** Jack Kille, Jr., Ottawa junior, chairman; Steve Muner, Salina sophomore; Fred Brown, Shawnee Mission freshman; Terry Turpen, Omaha, Neb. sophomore; Rick Schaeffer, Beloit junior. PUBLICATIONS; Gene White, Arkansas City junior, chairman; Dave Hutchins, Kansas City sophomore; Fred Frailey, Suluhor Sorings. Tex., sophomore. STUDENT FACULTY UNIVERSITY instructor and chairman; Kelley Cupp, Lucas junior; Robert Lange, Shawne Mission boyfriend; M. Curtis Dickenson, Dallas. Tux junior. CAMPUS CHEST: Frank Kearney, Shawne Mission junior, chairman; Robert Xidris, Wichita sophomore; Frank Kearney, Shawne Mission junior, Susan Langston, Springfield, Mo., freshman; Paul Bock, Dodge City freshman; Decreed Lucas, Chanute freshman; Karen Kearney, Sophomore; Larry Selbel, Russell freshman; John Speald, Shawne Mission junior. CALENDAR COMMITTEE: Walter Derrington, Kansas City sophomore, chairman, Fat Hyland, Washington, carrier, Kat Mathiasmier, Arkansas City sophomore. Larry Butcher, Kansas City senior; Harry Baum, Wathena sophomore; Al Mages, Ottawa junior; Frances Bartell, Kansas City sophomore; Hank Hibbard, Eureka city sophomore; Judy Phipps, Wichtiaville; William Wallace, Sophomore; Donna Brinley, Shawnee Mississippi freshman; Ward Johnson, Tulsa, Okla. junior; Joan Gilpin, Iola freshman. Sharon Dowd, Des Moines, Iowa saintmort John Edgar, Prairie Village freshman John Edgar, Prairie Village junior; William Hurt, Sedalia, Mo. freshman; Diane Weirauch, Wichita freshman; Mason McIntire, Oregon, Mo. freshman SOCIAL COMMITTEE: Bob Hicks, Kansas city sophomore, chairman; Larry Bast, Topeka sophomore; Myrna Iddings, Wichita junior; Don Huber, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Marcia Allen, Overlandville sophomore; Dick Miller, Kansas City junior. STUDENT UNION OPERATING BOARD: Jim Johnston, Independence, Mo. junior; Gene LaFollette, Overland Park junior; Charley Whitman, Shawnee mission senior; Bill Reese, Hiawata junior; John McArtier, Groves, Mo., junior. HUMAN RIGHTS COMMITTEE: Art Spears, Kansas City junior; Bill Cibes, Kansas City junior; Scott Linscot, Topeka City freshman; Scott Linscot, Topeka junior; Greg Turner, Seattle, Wash.; senior; John Daniels, Kansas City junior; Art Douville, Overland Park sophomore. HOSTING AND HOSPITALITY: Frank Sierra, Leawood sophomore, chairman; Kimberly Martha (Muff) Yankee, Wichita sophomore; Dave Hall, Coffeville freshman; Kevin Pound, Fredonia junior; Margo Van Antwerp, Plymouth, Mich., junior; Peggy Smith Garden City sophomore; Dana Indal, indall faculty; Jay Lutgen, Des Moines, Iowa sophomore. CURRENT EVENTS: Jacqueline Thayne Boyle, North Carolina; Lauren Luhmann, Glendale, Mo. sophomore; Dave Thompson, Topeka junior; Terry McDaniel, Texas; Jean Hardy, Hollinsington freshman. STATEWIDE COUNCIL: Gary Walker, Wichita, sophomore, chairman; Pat Krowe, sophomore, Pat Krowe, Wichita sophomore; John Smith, Atchison junior; Lawrie Cieva, Newton sophomore; Eric Petersen, Poughkeepsie sophomore; Judy Hodge, Raytown, Mo. sophomore. COMMENCEMENT: Julianne Mielson, Ellis junior, chairman; Kent Miller, Lawrence graduate student; Ernie Rosenthal. Kansas City sonomore. EXECUTIVE COMPTROLLER: Fred Embry, Mission Hills Junior. FLIGHT CO-ORDINATOR: John Benson Prairie, Village junior DISCIPLINARY: Brian Grace, Law nence, senior; John McCulloh, Abilene Johnson Remains Silent On Election Year Status WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Is anyone still confused about whether Lyndon B. Johnson has already begun his 1964 campaign for the presidency? At one news conference after another, the President is asked how soon he will announce his candidacy, or whether something he has said doesn't indicate he is a candidate. THE ANSWERS add up the same: He won't announce, and he won't admit he's running, until the last possible minute before delegates elect a nominee at the Democratic national convention that begins in Atlantic City Aug. 24. But Johnson cannot be accused of deception. He has made abundantly clear what his intentions are, over a number of weeks, not only through deeds—such as "non-political" Appalachia tours—but also through words. Pressing forward his civil rights and poverty programs in a talk to Georgia legislators in Atlanta last Friday, Johnson emphasized the nation is no longer divided between north and south but is united. "I would not be here, I would not be looking forward to November, were this not true," the first southerner to occupy the White House in 100 years declared. "And I am looking forward to November." JOHNSON DIDN'T have to draw pictures of the executive mansion to show what he is looking forward to in November. And when he has talked about how "we" will decide upon a vice-presidential running mate when the time comes, at the August convention, he hasn't pretended that the "we" was anything but the editorial one that is used instead of "T". When he says that he is enjoying his job and would like to stay on, he hasn't expected anyone to think that he is referring to the next few months, rather than the next four or eight years. Why, then, doesn't Johnson just come out and say what is obvious—that he wants and expects to be the Democratic candidate for President this year? An announcement is only a formality. But Johnson considers it an important formality at this juncture, with the Senate bogged down in debate over a civil rights bill he insists upon having passed, and at least a half-dozen other "must" administration measures pending. The President doesn't want to create any more of a partisan image than he has to, with Republican support needed for the civil rights bill and the other legislation. JOHNSON HAS KEPT his tongue in cheek on this score. In Atlantic City's convention hall, where he expects to be nominated in three months, he told New Jersey Democrats: "I don't want to be partisan. I don't want to be political. I am President of all the people—Democrats and Republicans. Therefore I just want to say that I hope that whatever candidate of whatever party is chosen in this hall will be successful in November." junior; Gigi Gibson, Independence junior; John Alexiou, Mission juniper; Dave Martin, Coffeyville junior; Max Eberhart, Great Bend first year law. PUBLIC RELATIONS: Jon Waller, Sedalia, Mo. senior, chairman; Sandi Fike, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore; Barb Wille, Park Ridge, Il.; freshman, Rust Gustafson, Lawrence freshman; Ernie Chambers, Johita sophomore; Hobson Babson, Johita sophomore; Claudia Shawnee Mission sophomore; Doug Walker, Belle Mead, N.J., freshman. Charles Sawnders, Lawrence freshman; Howard Hoffman, Cranston, R.I., sophomore; Roxy Jones, Muncie sophomore; Merley Bennett, Ashland junior; Russ Bernard, Topanga junior; Shawne Mission sophomore; Janet Laird, Kansas City freshman. FRESHMAN LEADERSHIP: George Brenner, Princeton junior, chairman; Michele Sheppard, Kansas City freshman; Lyle Lutton, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore; David Sylvan, Mission sophomore; Mike McGinnis, Huntingdon freshman; Holsington freshman; Mary Turtle, Prairie Village freshman; Jackie Van Eman, Overland Park freshman; Mike Hurt, City City freshman. PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE: Exam El-Shala- rpeo; copmopem; Kay Orth, El Dorado freshman. **STUDENT HEALTH:** Tom Fisher, Lawrence sophomore, chairman; Larry Gerrity, vice president; Kristen Clay Center junior; Paula Dickens, Newton freshman; Stephen Wolf, Quinter freshman; Kyle Stolz, Quinter more; Susan Jose, Carthage, Mo., freshman; Kenneth Smith, Kansas City juni- ment; Bronski Anson, City junior; Jim Triggs, Oklahoma Sara Crites, Great Bend freshman. TRAFFIC AND SAFETY: Tom Ruzicka, Lakewood, Wellington, Dewla, Rolla, Mo, junior; Dee Gerstenberger, Park Forest, Ill., junior; William Davison, University of Chicago; Frank Jacobson, Delavan sophomore. STUDENT FACULTY ORIENTATION: Beth Beamer, Topeka sophomore; Tucky March, Tulsa, Okla., sophomore; Nancy Meyer, Shawna Mission sophomore. FILM SERIES: Scott Colby, Wichita sophomore, chairman; Christie Kennard, Shawnee Mission freshman; Richard Caskey, Overland Park freshman. LABOR COMMITTEE: Robert Crosier, Lawrence junior, chairman; Marc Rucker, Burdett junior; Dick Ladesich, Kansas City Freshman. DEPARTMENTAL SECRETARIES: Jane O'Connor, public relations; Ken Robb, mission junior; department of student welfare; junior, department of student activities. COMMITTEE ON COMMITTES AND ANNOUNCEMENTS Trent, England, graduate student; Roy Miller; Topeka, junior; Brian Grace, Scheyre Shrey; Leavenworth, sophomore FINANCE AUDITING COMMITTEE: Ray Myers, Dodge City senior; John Benson, Prairie Village junior; Gary Gilstrap, Galena senior. ELECTIONS COMMITTEE: Ray Edwards, Bethesda, Md., junior; chairman; Dick King, Kansas City sophomore; Mary Ruth Lanning, Lawrence sophomore; Sara Crites, Great Bend freshman; Judy Bernhardt, Lawrence freshman ATHLETIC SEATING BOARD: Jim Cimino, head basketball chairman; T. J Snyder, Independence junior graham; Graham, Lawrence first year law; Jean Lavergne, Sierra Guadalrama, Mex., junil. CONSTITUTIONAL COMMITTEE: Jane Lefebure, Prairie Village junior, chairman; Norma Sharp, Arkansas City junior; Linda Tebe, Memphis, Tenn., freshman; Cordell Meeks, Kansas City senior; Hays freshman; Mary Beth Gast, Paola SECRETARIAL COMMITTEE; Sandee sophomore; Jane Lefebure, Prairie Vil-Garvey, St. Louis, Mo., senior; Sharon lage junior; Jackie Caesar, St. Louis, Anderson, Topeka junior; Terry Beach. Moe, sophomore. DID YOU GET DID YOU GET A NEW JOB? A. RAISE? ENGAGED? MARRIED? Then it's high time you put your personal finances on a businesslike basis with a low-cost ThriftiCheck PERSONAL CHECKING ACCOUNT No minimum balance. Checks personalized free. Douglas Co.State Bank 9th & Kentucky He's Back Roger Brown sings Folk Songs Dine-a-Mite Wednesday & Thursday 9:30-?? (NO COVER CHARGE) The wife you save-may be your own! MOVING? STORING? Get "WIFE INSURANCE" GREECE It's a wise policy — protects your wife against moving day worry and "frazzled nerves." Ask about it today; no obligation. LAWRENCE MAYFLOWER 609 MASS. SHEAFFER'S MK GUAG For smooth, easy writing...there's no substitute for a true fountain pen SHEAFFER'S NEW IMPERIAL FOUNTAIN PEN. The point's the reason! 14k gold, precision-ground in the style you prefer (extra fine to extra broad). - Gold-filled clip and band. - Famous White Dot quality. - Innerspring clip to prevent loss. $1250 matching pencil, $5 other pens from $5 SHEAPPINS Craftsmanship in bling KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE Paola e Vill- Louis, Dailu hansan Lawrence, Kansas 61st Year. No. 140 Union Refunds To Be Reduced Thursday, May 14, 1964 Student Union Book Store refunds will be reduced during the next four years to make possible $550,000 additional loan funds to KU students. The reduction begins with the next period. The money freed, as a result of the reduction, will be used to pay a loan to match federal funds in the National Defense Education Act loan program. Congress recently increased the maximum amount of money each school may use from $250,000 to $800,000. One-ninth of this money must be supplied by the participating school. The Book Store will attempt to make refunds of 5 percent compared to the present rate of 8 percent. The use of the refund money to match federal funds has the unanimous approval of the All Student Council which passed a resolution on March 31 recommending this step to the executive committee. THE EXECUTIVE committee of the Union Memorial Corporation yesterday authorized Frank Burge, Union director, to sign a four-year, no-interest note with the Endowment Association which will make available KU's share of $90,000 for full participation. It was estimated the refund reduction would free about $22,500 a year for repayment of the endowment loan. "THROUGH EFFICIENT management and careful operation," Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students and chairman of the executive committee, said, "we expect to continue the refund at 5 percent during the four years required to pay off the loan. "Members of the executive committee of the Memorial Corporation voted unanimously to use part of the patronage refund for this purpose, and we are pleased that the Kansas Union can be the means by which students will receive in this way not only the $22,500 a year they ordinarily would have had returned in refunds but approximately $900,000 in loans next year," Dean Woodruff said. "KU has been assured of a major source of student aid next year," said Robert Billings, director of aids and awards. "This year we passed the $2 million mark in student aids of all kinds — scholarships, short-term loans, and long-term loans. Next year we will exceed $2.25 million, and no competent and needy will have to postpone an education because of inadequate funds," he said. Since the first NDEA loan funds were received by KU in 1959, 2,228 students have received almost $2 million in long-term loans, about $1.8 million of it in Federal funds, about $200,000 in private matching funds, largely from the KU Endowment Association. Only 1.7 percent of the installment repayments are currently past due. The Memorial Corporation owns the building, leases the land from the University, and is responsible for its operation. THE LOANS OF UP to $1,000 a year for a maximum of $5,000 are repayable at the rate of 10 percent a year after graduation, with interest of three percent one year after graduation. Borrowers who go into public school teaching are forgiven 10 percent of the loan for each year of teaching, up to a total of 50 percent. The directors of the corporation include members of the University administration, student body president and vice-president, chairman of Student Union Activities, and alumni. OWLS WERE IN A TREE—Sophomore initiates into the Owl Society, a junior men's honorary society, were perched in a tree near the Information Booth this morning until a campus policeman ordered them out. The Owls said they were told they must have the permission of the dean of men, Donald K. Alderson, Clark Mandigo II. Kansas City sophomore and speaker for the Owls, said he has talked with Dean Alderson concerning the ousting of the Owls from the tree and that permission had not been granted. The Owls "hooting" the praises of their new membership from campus trees has been an annual event for many years. For related story, see page 10. (Photo by Tom Moore) Fingerprints Found On Police Jeep Bomb Police have some fingerprints of the person who may be responsible for the burning of a KU Traffic and Security jeep Saturday night. Lloyd Davies, deputy state fire marshall and a Lawrence resident, said that fingerprints besides those of the KU police have been found on the glass container used to throw a flammable liquid into the KU police jeep. Davies said the glass and the unidentified fingerprints have been turned over to the Kansas Bureau of Investigation for identification. E. P. Moomau, chief of the Traffic and Security Office, said the damage to the jeep was only minor since the man driving the jeep had only gone into the office for a minute and discovered the fire in the jeep when he returned. He said the man quickly got an extinguisher from the office and put out the fire. This was the second such "bomb" throwing. (Bomb refers here to a bottle of flammable liquid in a glass container.) MOOMAU SAID that part of the jeep seat was burned, but the real damage was to a radio cable. The first "bombing" took place early Wednesday morning at 12:40 (May 6) when a flaming "bomb" was thrown from a car at the traffic control station at 13th and Jayhawk Boulevard, Moomau said. The "bomb" broke in front of the booth, supposedly having bounced off the control station before breaking. The Lawrence Fire Department put out the fire before any damage was done. Moomau said that the jeep that was partly burned was one of the older model patrol cars and was not equipped with door locks. YD's Eye 'Paper Club' Move By Lee Stone Will the KU Young Democrats use "paper clubs" to influence the Collegeate Young Democrats State convention this weekend? The club's secretary and its collegiate council representative disagree. Paper clubs are clubs organized by an active club in counties where no active club exists. The membership dues of the inactive club are paid by the active club. So are its dues to the state organization. This amounts to at least $23 and nets the active club a minimum of three votes at the convention. CAN YOU EXPECT the allegiance of such a club in a showdown vote? "Naturally you would expect it, but there is no guarantee," Brad Sumner, Leawood junior and YD collegiate council representative, said. To my knowledge, KU has no Previously, Jacke Thayer, Ellsworth freshman and the YD's secretary, said, the KU club's influence at the convention depended upon "how many paper clubs we can get in." "FORT HAYS AND K-State control the gavel and are planning to elect their own slate of officers," Miss Thaver said. support from paper clubs." Sumner said. The KU club is presenting only one candidate to the convention. Rain and thunderstorms are predicted for late tonight and tomorrow by the Topeka Weather Station. The low tonight will be 55 degrees and the high tomorrow will be 80 degrees. Showers are also predicted for late Saturday night. Weather "The treasurership is a powerful job. He (the treasurer) is the only one who can withdraw money, and he must approve all projects of the club," the secretary said. Sumner, who is running for State collegiate council treasurer. "KU ISN'T organizing any paper clubs because it can't afford them," Sumner said. He believes the convention credentials committee would very likely disqualify the votes of such clubs. "The function of the credentials committee is to check into the qualifications of each club," Sumner said. In order for a club to qualify before the credentials committee, it must have had at least one representative at a collegiate council meeting during the previous year; it must be recognized as an active member by the committee, and it (Continued on page 12) Council Member Changes to VOX By Gary Noland An All Student Council member said last night that he has switched political affiliation from University Party to Vox Populi. Bill Panning, Ellinwood junior, said he has disassociated himself from UP because he was told that he was "no longer welcome in the party caucus." "AS FAR AS THE PARTY was concerned, there was no move to expel him (Panning) from the caucus. Any ideas along these lines were purely his own," Bretschneider said. Panning's switch to Vox now gives Vox a two-seat majority on the ASC. This is the same marginal majority that UP had just after the spring election, but since then, UP has lost two council seats to Vox, one of which was successfully contested by Vox in a trial after the elections. Before Panning left the UP party, both campus political parties were tied with 19 seats each on the council. Vox now has 20 seats, UP has 18, and Walter Bgoya, Tanganyika junior, is an unaffiliated council member. Panning said last night that UP "assumed after the election of ASC officers, that I had not voted for the UP candidates for chairman and vice-chairmän." (He did not say whether or not this assumption was warranted or not.) "I CONSIDER MYSELF rather independent of party politics." Panning said. "I vote the way I feel instead of the way the party tells me." "I was going to resign from the council altogether, until I was approached by Vox. "My joining Vox does not mean I will vote straight down the party line. I will vote how I feel," Panning said. In the council's elections for ASC officers, Mike Miner, Lawrence junior, the Vox candidate for ASC chairman, was elected by a narrow one-vote margin over the UP candidate, Hugh Taylor, Stoke-on-Trent, England, graduate student. In the race for vice-chairman of the council, Gary Walker, Wichita sophomore, the Vox candidate, was chosen by the newly elected chairman after the voting ended in a tie. Tom Shumaker, Russell junior, was the UP candidate for ASC vice-chairman. Wescoe Music Makers To Perform in Concert The fifth annual Pops Concert will be at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium, James S. Ralston, assistant instructor of choral music and one of the organizers of the Pops Concert, said. Also accompanying the students on his guitar will be Charles Oldfather, professor of law, but will be at a different time than the administrators. He said this year's Pops Concert will feature a number by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe; Emily Taylor, dean of women; George B. Smith, vice chancellor of institutional planning; Raymond Nichols, vice chancellor of finance; James R. Surface, vice chancellor and dean of faculties; and Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts. School of the Arts Chancellor Wescoe and his group will play Haydn's 'Toy Symphony' on toy instruments in accompaniment with the KU orchestra. The KU Orchestra, the Chamber Choir, and the Concert Choir will team up to produce some light music, meaning mostly fun music and spiritual features, Ralston said. Admission into Hoch Sunday will be a $1 donation, Ralston said. Tickets may be obtained at the Information Booth, from many music students, or at Hoch Sunday. Ralston said root beer and pretzels will be served free by faculty to visitors who will be seated around tables on the main floor of Hoch. The choir will be on risers on the stage and the orchestra will be in the orchestra pit in front of the stage. Robert Hull, visiting lecturer of fine arts, will conduct the music groups. Ralston said. Don Grant, Kansas City senior, will direct both choirs in two numbers that he wrote, Ralston said. The Pops Concert will also play a new arrangement by the Lawrence High School choir director, Wayne Nelson. The Pops Concert will be from 3:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m., Ralston said. Proceeds from the concert will go to the music scholarship fund. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 14, 1964 Truman Legend In April 1945, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt took a vacation to Warm Springs, Ga., to renew his strength after the strain of the Yalta Conference and of a hard presidential campaign. The renewal of this strength that characterized his public life never came. On April 12, 1945, Roosevelt suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and died within a few hours. The nation was shocked by the death of its leader. The shock of many people was compounded, however, when they remembered Roosevelt's vice-president, the next President of the United States. The man was a former small-time Missouri politician and senator who became Roosevelt's running mate in 1944 because the other three contenders had made too many enemies in the Democratic party. FROM THE TIME that Harry S. Truman assumed the Presidency, he was never again an unknown. Unlike many well-educated Presidents, Harry S. Truman can claim only William Christman High School in Independence, Mo., for an alma mater. Some people like Truman. Some people dislike him. One thing is certain, however, they all know he is around. Truman was not born to wealth as was Roosevelt. His father, John Truman, was a livestock dealer who brought his family to Missouri from Kentucky. The Truman family was living in Lamar, Mo., in 1884, when the first of their three children was born. WITH A MILITARY CAREER forgotten, Truman started to work as a timekeeper for a railway construction gang. Later he became a bookkeeper for the Union National Bank in Kansas City. After a rather uneventful high school career at William Chrisman, Truman received an appointment to the United States Military Academy at West Point, but poor eyesight caused his rejection. When he was 22, Truman returned to his father's farm and for more than 10 years lived the rural life. He joined the Missouri National Guard in 1905. When the United States declared war on the Central powers in 1917, the 33-year-old farmer was sworn in as a first lieutenant. He was later promoted to the rank of captain. A quiet, bespectacled officer, "Farmer Truman" proved a born leader, able to maintain discipline in a battery which had a rather fearsome reputation as "a hard-boiled bunch of Kansas City Irish." He won the esteem of his men. AFTER THE WAR, he married Bess Wallace, a hometown girl he had admired since his days in the Presbyterian Sunday School. He started a haberdashery in Kansas City after his discharge from the Army, but this proved a failure within two years. He could have filed a petition for bankruptcy, but that course was not consistent with Truman's personality. A failure as a businessman, Truman became a politician in 1922. He was elected to one of the three judgeships of the Jackson County Court, actually the county commission. During this term and an ensuing term as presiding judge, he was backed by James Pendergast, the leader of the corrupt Jackson county machine. Truman was able to overcome the stigma of Pendergast's support with his personal integrity, however. RE-ELECTED IN 1940, he became concerned with evidence that defense contracts were being given almost exclusively to corporations represented in the War Department's Construction Advisory Board. He became chairman of a Senate subcommittee to investigate contracts under the National Defense program. This "Truman Committee" revealed shocking conditions in expenditures for army camps and the waste of $100 million. Conducting his committee without fear or favor inevitably made him powerful enemies, but his efficiency and inflexible honesty enhanced his In 1934, he was elected to the United States Senate. He supported the Roosevelt administration generally, especially its social program and its efforts to build up the armed forces. He became chairman of the Interstate Commerce subcommittee which drafted the Civil Aeronautics Act. reputation as a public servant. This reputation continued with him through his seven years as President. After serving as vice-president for 83 days, Harry S. Truman became the 32nd President of the United States. He took the reins of the country at a vital time in its history. Less than a month after he took office, Germany surrendered and ended the European phase of World War II. In August, he gave orders for dropping the atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. THESE BOMBS killed more than 100,000 people. Truman made this decision rather than face the loss of at least 500,000 U.S. and Japanese soldiers with a ground attack on the Island. This was the forerunner of many distasteful but necessary decisions which Truman was forced to make in his tenure of office. He has said that he never had any regrets about his decision. Although Truman possessed few of the qualifications that are considered necessary for the Presidency, he did possess one characteristic which was essential for this crucial time in world history. This quality was intestinal fortitude—in Truman's case, guts. In 1947, at a joint session of Congress, he outlined an aid program aimed at preventing the spread of Communism in Europe and Asia. To initiate his program, subsequently known as the Truman doctrine, he requested an appropriation of $40 million to help Greece and Turkey, which were threatened by Communist neighbors. THIS MOVE set the tone for Truman's strong foreign policy: an attempt to check the spread of communism after World War II. When Truman was nominated by the Democratic party in 1948, many people conceded that he hadn't done a bad job in his three years in the White House. It was just a shame he didn't have a chance to beat Thomas Dewey, the Republican nominee. The public opinion polls all showed Dewey by a landslide. Everybody thought Dewey was going to win—everybody, that is, except Harry S. Truman. He made a cross-country tour, campaigned hard. But it was still a foregone conclusion that Thomas Dewey would be the next President of the United States. When the votes were counted, however, Truman was still President, in what has been ranked as perhaps the greatest political upset in history. Truman was now President on his own and wasted no time in putting in his own policies. He announced his "Fair Deal" policy in his State of the Union speech in January 1949. This was based on the principle that promoting the general welfare is a major function of the government. He called for a wide range of social services, including medical insurance, low-rent public housing, and federal aid to schools. In 1952, he ordered the secretary of commerce to seize the steel industry, but this action was ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. This marked the end of his "Fair Deal" measures for which he had worked so hard for three and a half years. Most people do not think of Harry S. Truman for his wisdom and courage in his foreign and domestic policies, however. He is remembered for his personality. He kept running feuds with a variety of people. At one time, he made a scathing reference to columnist Drew Pearson's ancestry when Pearson said his daughter Margaret couldn't sing. WHEN THE FREE WORLD was threatened with the North Korean assault on June 25,1950, he met the situation with wisdom and courage. He urged the continuance of his foreign policy as morally right and the best insurance against communist enslavement. But that is the kind of man Truman is. When he believes something he's going to say it, image or no image. The death of Roosevelt came at a very inopportune time, but it did enable Harry S. Truman to hold a position he would never have been able to attain otherwise. Truman is a man who lacks formal education, experience and some of the more polite social graces. He does not lack courage, however. The United States and the free world are the better for it. -Mike Miller U.S. PUBLIC SCHOOLS RELIGION FREEDOM EDUCATION POLITICS RELIGION ©1964 H.F.K. LOCK @1948 ACKLOSS THE WASHINGTON POST "I'll Get You In There If It Kills You" The People Say... Peace Approach I should like to find out what Midshipman Captain Douglas Pickersgill means when he questions the means employed by the Student Peace Union. Perhaps he is questioning the means which we employ in the local situation. If this is so, these means seem to be similar to those employed by the military; consisting of sponsoring a recruiting table in the union, distributing pamphlets, sponsoring movies and lectures, and organizing public demonstrations. Since these means seem to be so similar, I must conclude that Mr. Pickersgill is questioning the means suggested by the SPU to establish world peace. The SPU seeks to insure world peace through justice and international law. On the other hand, the military claims to seek the same ends and plans to achieve them through the threat of war and weapons of mass destruction. It would seem that, in the quest for international peace and justice, it is the means employed by the military machine which need to be questioned. Sincerelv. Sincerely, Carl Bangs III President of KU-SPU Prairie Village soph. - * * SPU Drivel Once again the SPU, waving the banner of World Peace, sallies forth to do battle with their archfoes—the men of the University ROTC Units. If this scruffy looking group of attention-grabbers realized how much they suffer by comparison with the men they attempt to disparage, I'm sure that they would think twice before picketing the Chancellor's Review. R Do these people really believe what they print on signs that read, "Military men are paid killers" and other equally inane drive? Do they honestly believe that servicemen enjoy killing, if kill they must in defense of their country's policies? How ridiculous! Like the policemen who guard our citizens from the lawless element within our nation, yet who hope and pray that they will never have to shoot another man, so it is with the servicemen who guard our nation from its enemies. E Mei are For the most part, the pickets I saw at the Union were a disreputable looking lot. A tour of duty in the service might do wonders for them, though I have grave doubts that they could meet the physical—or mental—minimum standards of any of the military services. Perhaps that is what really has them so upset. MY FIRST REACTION to the news that the SPU was picketing at the Student Union last tail was the thought that freedom of speech is a wonderful blessing enjoyed only by citizens in a democratic land. A half hour later, my 9 year old daughter, who happened to pass by the Union, came to me a bit upset and asked, "Daddy, men in the service aren't really paid killers, are they?" At that point, my opinion of those so-called idealists who confuse impudent slander with idealistic slogan was rather low, indeed. Freedom of expression by an individual or group is an undeniable right of democratic citizenship. But, does that right extend to the voicing of irresponsible and utterly false accusations? I think not! J. E. McEnearney Graduate Student Dailij Mänsan 111 Flint Hall Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas NEWS DEPARTMENT Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Tom Coffman ... Editorial Editor Vinay Kothari and Margaret Hughes ... Assistant Editorial Editors University Daily Kansan Page 3 Residence Halls Elect For MRA Elections for representatives to the Men's Residence Association (MRA) are being conducted today. Half of the representatives are elected each spring and the other half in the fall, Ernie Rosenthal, Kansas City sophomore, said. The polls will be in all of the large men's residence halls. Residents of the three halls may vote until 5:30 p.m. "It was felt by the council (of the MRA) that the old constitution was deficient in many ways," he explained. He said that copies of the old and new constitution had been posted on the bulletin boards on all the wings of the residence halls. For every 100 residents, a residence hall gets one representative to the MRA, Rosenthal said. In the elections today, three representatives are being selected from Joseph R. Pearson and Templin, whose representation is five members each. Ellsworth is having elections for the MRA representatives for the first time and will be electing seven men. A NEW CONSTITUTION for MRA will also be voted upon during the election period. Essential said. The candidates from the halls are, from Ellsworth—Carl Struby, Leawood freshman; Abdullah Elomran, Saudi Arabian, freshman; Robert D. Xidis, Wichita sophomore; William Hurt, Sedalia, Mo., freshman; Brent Porter, Halfway, Mo., junior; George H. Herrelson, Jr., Galena junior; Don Swartz, Overland Park sophomore; William Hildebrand, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; John Hill, Waverly freshman; David A. Beal, Pittsburg freshman; Richard E. Steffee, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Larry Seibel, Russell freshman. Russell Rosen, Shawnee Mission sophomore; George Barisas, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Douglas Walker, Belle Mead, N.J., freshman; S. J. Baker, Mission junior. TEMPLIN — ERIC Litsy, Belleville, Ill. sophomore; Barry Carroll, Overland Park freshman; Walter Binder, Leavenworth sophomore; Joseph R. Pearson — Floyd T. Greer, Chester, Staen, junior; William Huffaker, Topea sophomore; Thomas Strahan, Raytown, Mo., senior; John Cooper, Wichita freshman. City-School Seminar Begins Thursday, May 14, 1964 The seminar was called by the American Association of School Administrators and the International City Managers' Association as a pioneering venture to examine problems and to further intergovernmental cooperation. Key speaker is Roderick F. McPhee, assistant professor of education in the Graduate School of Education at Harvard University. He will speak at 9 a.m. Friday on "Common Elements in the Preparation Programs of School Superintendents and City Managers." Nearly 60 school superintendents, city managers and university professors selected from a 10-state Midwest area will discuss "Realities of Intergovernmental Relations" today through Saturday in a seminar conducted by KU. The seminar is the second in a series of three. The first was held at Syracuse University in September, 1963, and the third will be held later on the West Coast. Participants will give attention to conflicts between schools and agencies of local governments, to ways of strengthening popular control of local government and to development of cooperation between city managers and school superintendents. Held here on the campus. Seminar hosts are Ethan P. Allen, chairman of the KU department of political science, and Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the School of Education. Officers were elected last night at the second meeting of the Alumni Interfraternity Council in the Kansas Union. IFC Alums Choose Officers The organization was recently established to promote the general welfare and development of the KU fraternity system and the University of Kansas. They elected as officers Dale S. Helmers, Sigma Alpha Epsilon from Kansas City, Mo., president; Thomas J. Alexander, Phi Kappa Sigma from Kansas City, Mo., vice-president; Gene Kean, Delta Sigma Phi from Lawrence, secretary; Bob Cladliffe, Phi Gamma Delta from Lawrence, treasurer; Mike Phi, Delta Theta from Lawrence, Eugene Volgt, Delta Upsilon from Topeka and Larry Winn Jr., Phi Kappa Fsi from Shawnee Mission, members-at-large. During the evening the group of approximately 35 men established committees to consider and investigate the taxes which Greek houses are required to pay by the state, the system of open rush during the summer months and the problems connected with publishing information on the fraternity system for parents of potential fraternity members. DINING PLEASURE AT ITS BEST! 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The local bus service is relatively new and students fought for years to get it. When it was discontinued in 1957, students complained until it was renewed. THIS WAS NO new complaint, for even in the days when horse drawn cabs hauled students up the hill the students wanted trolleys. Two plans to get such transportation were tried and failed. In 1898 the Board of Regents gave its permission for an electric street car company to skirt the campus but this plan did not materialize because of lack of funds. Plans were made in 1903 for a streetcar line that would go south on Mississippi Street, turn west near the present stadium, then go south again, tunneling under Mount Oread near Marvin Hall. The route would then circle back toward the city. IT WAS, HOWEVER, realized this route was actually a nonresidential area and the company was planning a real estate development along the line. If the plan had gone through, it would have stopped the University's westward expansion. Attempts to get streetcar service were finally successful after downtown Lawrence got it. The April 1910 Daily Kansan carried this story: "The first streetcar of the Lawrence system to scale Mount Oread reached the summit at 2:30 this afternoon. The line is now completed The route of the streetcar ran north and south between Bailey Hall and Robinson Gymnasium. to the loop at the gymnasium." STREETCAR SERVICE continued until it was replaced by busses in the fall of 1933. As far back as 1923 a car ban was being proposed for KU. In that year the Kansas legislature passed a bill stating that driving of cars by students on the campus was a misdemeanor. The punishment for such an offense was a jail sentence from 10 to 30 days or a fine from $100 to $300 or both. The law stated that students were not allowed to drive cars at all while enrolled in the University. At another time in KU history the Student Council had jurisdiction over traffic offenders and passed laws to protect student pedestrians from speeders. The scope of the traffic problem has widened since 1936 when there were only 200 cars on campus. At this time the traffic regulations stated that the speed limit was 20 miles an hour and cars were not permitted to stop to let persons out on Jayhawk Boulevard. The policy of pay parking was not introduced at KU until 1957 when an estimated 7.000 cars were registered with the campus police. This resulted in the parking lot in back of the Kansas Union. 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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! o h h t e p d l t s, n e University Daily Kansan Page 5 Student of 1914 to Get Degree George P. Marsh of St. Louis, retired president of the AAA Automobile Club of Missouri, always wanted a college degree. He left KU in 1914 just two credit hours short of that goal. But when the 50-year reunion of his class convenes June 1, Marsh will "walk down the hill" with almost 2,500 other KU students who will be graduates during the 1964 Commencement exercises. IT HAPPENED. this way: Earlier this year he wrote the After studying Marsh's problem, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences decided to award him two hours military credit for his service in World War I. University asking to enroll in correspondence study, hoping to earn two hours credit before his class reunion. So Marsh will do a cap and gown and receive his sheepskin with the group that is 50 years his junior. Many of his "former" classmates will watch as he makes the long walk Final Week is Coming-Work! down Mount Oread to Memorial Stadium. In about a week everyone will start screaming about final exams. Reminder. Your books will start looking bigger and thicker. Your typewriter will break down and you will run out of pep pills. Instructors will start pulling out the old clichés about how you should have studied all semester and the final will not help your grade . even if you ace it. out of pep talk. Everyone screams about final week . . . during final week. But why not try something new . . . why not panic a week early. Be ahead of your friends. even if you don't Your roommate will start rubbing it in about his good grades to make you feel bad. You will. For example, instead of staying up all night to study for that chem- "Only those who have had the experience of missing for a half a century can know and appreciate how much I will value this action by the University and appreciate at last the award of a degree by one's school." Marsh said in a recent letter to the University. SEATTLE, Wash. — (UPI) — Ever since Napoleon's retreat from Moscow the theory has persisted that rapid thawing of frozen human flesh is dangerous. Doctor Suggests Faster Thawing to Mills, who has treated hundreds of frostbite victims in the northern state, contended at a Mountain Rescue Association convention here that the conventional method of gradually thawing might even cause more damage than the original freezing. But an Alaska physician, Dr. William J. Mills of Anchorage, has challenged that 151-year-old idea. DR. MILLS, WHO conducted a study program for the Office of Naval Research, says the best treatment for frostbite is to stick the "bitten" limb in warm water. However, he warned against thawing a frozen limb if there is danger of refreezezing. This, he said, would cause even more serious injury and almost certainly would result in amputation. During his college days, Marsh was managing editor of the University Kansan student newspaper when it became the University Daily Kansan (in 1912) and later became its editor. "Shorty," as he was nicknamed at KU, also was a member of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism society and Pi Kappa Alpha social fraternity. He said the temperature of water used for thawing was important. If the water is too warm it can cause serious damage. About the best temperature, he explained, was 107 degrees—"comfortably warm—like a bath." Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion, 4:30 p.m., Pan American Room, Kansas TODAY Official Bulletin Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. Philosophy Lecture. 30 p.m. Organization: "Dr. Errol Harris." FOR A TIME Marsh was city editor of the now-defunct St. Louis Times. He later became director of public relations, secretary, vice-president and president of the Automobile Club of Missouri, from which he retired in 1961 after 32 years of service. Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel. Everyone well- Be an early warrior, too. Don't wait till the night before a term paper is due to write it. Do it tonight! istry final the night before you have it why not do it tonight. Get your bloodshot eyes early. Senior Recital, 8 p.m. Swartout Hall. Diane Osterhout, soprano; Woodwind Minority Opinions Tape-Discussion, 8 Barnard 406 Kansas Union. "Operation Granite" "The Tiger," "The Typist," 8:15 p.m. Experimental Theater. Christian Family Movement (CFM), 8 pm., St. Lawrence Center, 1915 Stratford TOMORROW He has served on the AAA board of directors, the Automobile Club of Missouri board of directors, the President's National Highway Safety Conference, and numerous national AAA committees. Experimental Friend Episcopic Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m. St. This is not final week . . . true. It is panic week. So if you have not been hitting your books all semester try it now or even better try reading some of them. You will be ahead of the game. Incidentally, you might even pass some of your final exams. SUA Current Events Forum, 4:30 p.m. Forum Room. "The Presidential Image and the Candidates"—John C. Grumman andarl Nehrling, profs. of political science. BOTC Chancellor's Review, 3:30 p.m. Intramural Field. Mathematics colloquium, 4:30 p.m. 103 Strong Hall. "Convexity and Norm Interpolation in Function Algebras" - Thomas M. Creese, U. of Calif., Berke- SUA Film, 7 p.m., 9:30 p.m., Fraser Theater, "Can Can." Jewish Community Center services. 7:30 p.m. The Tiger": "The Typist", 8:15 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Fri. "The Theatrical Theater" "The Typist," 8:15 p.m. Experimental Theater Experimental Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Daphnia. Penny-a-Pound Flight over Lawrence Area A Erhart's Flying Service 1/2 Mile N. of TeePee --- Municipal Airport Sunday, May 17, 9 a.m. till dark Each passenger pays .01c for each pound they weigh Minimum $1.00 Incorporated When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds RESERVE NOW and save $ $ NEW Cabana Apartment Units NOW RENTING! - SWIMMING POOL - AIR-CONDITIONED - WALL TO WALL CARPETING - NEW APPLIANCES - PAVED PARKING - SOME FURNISHED RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT FOR FALL NOW! PHONE VI3-1116 FOR DETAILS Ridge House R. 24th & Ridge Court Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 14, 1964 Three UN Operations To End in Late June UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.—(UPI) —Worrisome days for the United Nations will begin late in June when three major peace keeping operations are scheduled to end within a week. The three-month period set up by the Security Council for the operation in Cyprus, where 7,000 men from seven countries were sent on a peace effort, ends June 27. The four-year Congo operation, which saw upwards of 20,000 men from 23 countries in action under the U.N. flag at its peak, is definitely scheduled to end on June 30. The end of the 12-month Yemen peace operation currently is planned for July 4. the future of all three countries is ominously in doubt. Secretary General Thant already has warned the 11 members of the Security Council to think what should be done next in Cyprus—a clear indication he is not optimistic that U.N. efforts will bring peace between the Greek and Turkish Cypriots in the three-month limit stipulated by the council. At the insistence of Russia and others, the council ruled that the Cyprus operation cannot be extended beyond June 27—three months from the day the U.N. force there became operational—without further action by it. Thant, reviewing the situation in Cyprus — where sporadic fighting continues despite efforts of the overmatched U.N. force to interpose itself between combatants—told the council on May 2: Patronize Kansan Advertiser Facts and Fallacies about Jewelry By Ray Christian RANDOLPH The Security Council in the predawn hours of July 13, 1960, authorized a U.N. force to restore order and maintain the territorial integrity of the two-week old republic of the (former Belgian) Congo. Two days later, the first U.N. troops arrived at Leopoldville. Last year, the General Assembly voted to end the Congo operation on June 30 of this year. Thant gradually phased the force down to less than 5,000 men. FALLACY: It's better to have a diamond with the largest "surface," even if it's thin. "It is obviously important that members of the Security Council should begin even now to devote their attention to the future situation in Cyprus as it may affect UNFICYP (the U.N. force)." A diamond which is too thin will often "leak" light and consequently will lack fire and brilliance which are so characteristic of this most precious gem. Experts call a too-thin diamond a "fish-eye." The finest diamonds are those with perfect "make" or cutting, neither too thick nor too thin. Through "thick and thin," our reputation as fine jewelers has always meant reliability in the purchase of a diamond ring or other fine jewelry. CONCLUSION: FACT: Ray Christian JEWELERS (Formerly Gustafson) 809 Mass. VI 3-5432 Contemporary apartments for summer rental or longer. These apartments are completely furnished, have two bedrooms and are air-conditioned. KU will be host Friday to five Algerian deputies, the first delegation of parliament members from the young North African republic to visit North America. They are on a three-week goodwill tour of the United States and Canada. Five Algerians to Tour KU We are renting to college men, and we will allow four occupants in e ach apartment. These apartments are within walking distance of campus. The deputies and their party, including interpreters and officials of the Algerian embassy in Washington, D.C., and a representative of People-to-People, will be shown the major points of interest on campus and will be Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe's guest at lunch, along with other members of the University and two of the three Douglas county state legislators. One deputy is a woman, Mme. Fatime Khemisti, widow of Foreign Minister Mohammed Khemisti who was killed by an assassin a year ago. Her first husband, with whom she served in the guerrilla forces as a soldier and nurse, died in battle. After lunch the delegation will visit the farm of State Representative John H. Vogel before returning to Kansas City. Rates are from $90 to $105. Call VI 3-8241 during the day, and VI 3-9373 at night. The other deputies are Abdelkader Ammar-Mouhoub, a member of the committee on internal affairs and national defense of the National Assembly; Omar Ouamrane, a member of the National Council on the Algerian Revolution, both military leaders during Algeria's seven-year war of independence; Father Alfred Berenguer, a Catholic priest who was wounded at Cassino, Italy, while the chaplain of a Free French unit; and Dr. Leon-Paul Durand, a medical doctor who served as chief surgeon of a Free French regiment during World War II. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers NOTICE When you go home this summer, why take your heavy winter clothes with you? Both our fine locations offer vault storage for your furs. They will be hung on hangers for the summer in our vaults. We also offer box storage for your sweaters and jackets. You are allowed to do your own packing. We will pick up and deliver. FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN 900 Miss. DOWNTOWN PLANT 740 Vt. TEDDY TREVOR Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi K Page 7 Around the Campus Debators Have Advantage E. C. Buehler, professor of speech and drama, who retires from the faculty next month, says 39 years of coaching debate and teaching speech has certain advantages. On the eve of his 70th birthday, Prof. Buehler noted three things at the annual speech and drama department honors dinner. A debate has never been hung in effigy. The speech and drama honor dinner has never been picketed. He has never been bothered by tickets for campus traffic and parking violations; he rides a taxi. KU Receives Music Grant Genevieve Hargiss, assistant professor of music education, has received a $15.076 grant from the Office of Education Cooperative Research Branch. Prof. Hargiss will work on the experimental development of the self-instructional materials in basic music theory. The work is designed to help non-music major students preparing to be elementary teachers. The grant is for five semesters of research, beginning in September, and provides for a graduate student research assistant. The department is now taking applications for the research assistant position. KU Wins AIAA Awards Three students in aerospace engineering have won prizes totaling $250 in research paper competitions sponsored by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. John Kirkpatrick, Sunnyvale, Calif., senior, won a $100 second place award for a paper describing the Gem III flight simulator being developed here for the Office of Naval Research. Faculty Senate Elects Eugene Barron, Emporia graduate student, and Ronald Mumaw, Leawood senior, won $75 awards. Barron's paper was on a computer technique for stress analysis being developed for a company in Wisconsin. Mumaw's paper investigated the performance of a radar airplane tracking system. Paul W. Gilles, professor of chemistry, and George W. Bradshaw, professor of civil engineering, have been elected to 3-year terms on the advisory committee of the Faculty Senate. A. B. Leonard, professor of zoology, was chosen for a 1-year term, replacing David Paretsky, professor of microbiology, who will be on leave next year. George L. Anderson, professor of history, was re-elected to the Senate's committee on committees. Edwin R. Elbel, professor of physical education, and Frank C. Foley, professor of geology, were re-elected representatives to the Senate's athletic board. Geological History Issued The Kansas Geological Survey here has issued a 317-page geologic history of Kansas by Daniel F. Merriam, research associate of the survey. The book is a comprehensive story on the building of Kansas, from the crystalline Precambrian foundation through 600 million years of deposition resulting in layer upon layer of mineral-laden sedimentary rocks. It is a reference volume not only for geologists but for anyone wanting to know about the Kansas earth and the geologic events that produced present-day landscape, including the fertile soils and the underlying mineral resources. The Chicago Tribune award for outstanding military and scholastic achievement will go to Kenneth McCoin, Akron, Ohio, senior, Douglas Pickersgill, Kansas City, Mo., senior, and Eldon Franklin, Overland Park senior. ROTC to Make Awards Nine cadets and midshipmen from the Army, Navy, and Air Force ROTC units will be honored tomorrow during the Chancellor's Review of the services. Gold medals for outstanding military appearance and bearing given by the Kansas Society of the Sons and Daughters of the American Revolution will go to Edward McBride, Lawrence sophomore, David Richwine, Overland Park junior, and Tyson Travis, Lawrence freshman. Awards for outstanding achievement in the study of military, naval and air science given by the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States will go to Jerry Pullins, Council Grove senior, Lewis Felton, Fort Scott junior, and Palmer Smith, Medicine Lodge senior. America To Be Analyzed Two KU international students have been selected to attend the annual Williamsburg International Assembly June 7-10 in Williamsburg, Va. The program is one of several in the United States for graduate level international students who are ready to return to their home countries. Ayseli Usluata, Istanbul, Turkey, graduate student, and Nilofer Ahmed, Karachi, Pakistan, graduate student, will attend the assembly. A representative from KU has attended the assembly each year since its beginning eight years ago. The purpose is to encourage a frank and personal analysis of the significant political, socio-economic and cultural aspects of America. The theme this year is "America: The First New Nation." University Daily Kansan CorpsHasRoom For'64 Seniors Thursday, May 14, 1964 KU graduating seniors still have an opportunity to get into Peace Corps summer training programs, according to Dr. Clark Coan, assistant dean of men and campus Peace Corps liaison. Interested seniors can get a Peace Corps volunteer questionnaire from the post office or from Dean Coan. It should be completed and mailed to the Director of Recruiting, Peace Corps, Washington, D.C. 20525, as soon as possible. Dean Coan said 117 students at KU have applied to the Peace Corps since the beginning of the 1963-64 academic year. Thirty-two former KU students are now serving and five others have completed the two-year tours. According to Dean Coan the need for volunteers who can teach English, science and mathematics is great. There are opportunities for liberal arts graduates to teach in secondary schools and in colleges and universities in Africa, Asia and Latin America. In the non-teaching areas, there are opportunities in community action programs, especially in Latin America. DONALD J. SMITH LIFE INSURANCE PROGRAMMING For Appointment Call VI 2-2641 R. Keith Liggett, Rep. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified "Breezy" White or Platinum Kid AAA to B $9.95 flat fun a la nude by Town & Country Shoes Royal College Shop VI 3-4255 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 14, 1964 Sophomore Discus Thrower Seeks to Reach Personal Goal If there is such a thing as a disgruntled, KU rookie discus thrower Gary, Schwartz fits the label. He'll go into the 36th Big Eight Outdoor track and field meet at Stillwater this weekend with the two best marks among league competitors, 168-6$ _{3}$ $ _{4}$ and 168-5$ _{2}$ . Yet those are far below the goal of 185-0 he set for himself ahead of the season. "I still think I can get it before the year's over," Schwartz remarked grimly. "My form is coming around now. It is more grooved. I have more speed and control. All season I've been having to slow down to maintain control. I still haven't got it so I can go all out. "One of my problems is relaxation. In high school (at Wessington Springs, S.D.) where he threw the high school disc 190-7) I seldom had competition. I never worried then. Now, of course, I'm throwing against a lot of good boys. I don't relax and try to throw too hard. Yes, I was plenty nervous before my first big meet at the Texas Relays. (He barely was out of the money at 164-0.) "I DON'T know what is worse, having no confidence, or knowing that you can do better and not doing it." Actually, the 204-pound Jayhawker sophomore needs not lack for confidence. His peak throw of the year has been exceeded by only two other sophomores in Big Eight history. KU's two-time Olympic champion, Al Oerter, reached 184-102 in '56; Oklahoma's Mike Lindsay 175-8. Missouri's 1960 Olympic bronze-medalist, Dick Cochran, showed a sophomore best of 167-11%. On the form chart, Schwartz's tightest competitor will be Oklahoma veteran Rich Inman, who owns a 165-5 for the spring. His career high, erected last year, is 166-7½. Inman was third last year at Manhattan on 157-8½. Only other returning 1963 point-winner is Missouri's Bob Neumann, who was fourth at 156-6½. He ranks fourth on the pre-meet form chart at 157-7, a half-inch behind Colorado's Tom Galbos. Close-up are Neumann's stablemate, Gene Crews, at 155-1½, and Nebraska's Roland Johnson, 153-11. IF SCHWARTZ can win, he'll be the first sophomore to bring down this blue ribbon since Oerter set a meet record of 183-5 at Manhattan in 1956. The defending champions, who surprised the field a year ago, don't figure to have enough ammunition to head off Missouri this trip, as the Tigers draw a bead on their first Outdoor team title since 1951. They edged KU by 10 lengths for the Indoor crown and may reach 125 points under the 10-8-6-4-2-1 Outdoor scoring system. The Jayhawks also hope to get a point or two with Schwartz in the shot put. They'll need those plus cancellation of forecast blanks in three other events and a four-man placement in the three-mile, to make a hard run at the Tigers. SOME OF THE story will be told in Friday's prelims. Finals are Saturday. Going into the spring meeting at Stillwater this weekend, KU leads the Big Eight all-sports parade with 23 points, six ahead of second-place Colorado. The Jayhawkers probably can nail the all-round title . . . third in the regime of retiring Athletic Director Dutch Lonborg . . . by finishing in the first division of track, tennis Society feature King 16 K feature King 15 K THE NEWEST Diamond Rings BY Feature BY Feature A daring design concept enhances the artful simplicity of this magnificent set. Both rings $175.00 The Set Your KU ID is your pass to credit. Open an account in just 3 minutes. HAVING A PARTY? and golf. Then they must fight the final battle in baseball against Missouri's awesome league leaders here Tuesday and Wednesday. The solitaire seems to float in air in this masterfully created set. Both rings $225.00 The Set Feature Ring Co., world's largest manufacturer of diamond ring mountings. Choice of 14K white or yellow gold. Rings and diamonds enlarged to show detail. BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 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 743 Mass. VI 3-4366 LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350 A 4.1 Aramco A 14K I Accarved B 14K I Accarved Rings enlarged to show detail. MODERN AS TOMORROW Artcarved® WEDDING RINGS Our fresh, new exciting Artcarved ring styles express today's demand for designs of graceful simplicity and textured elegance. Many designs to choose from. Each one of flawless beauty. From $8.00. A. FALKLAND SET Groom's Ring $19.50 Bride's Ring $17.50 B. TARTAN SET Groom's Ring $35.00 Bride's Ring $32.50 Rings enlarged to show detail. Open an account in just three minutes. Your KU I.D. is pass to credit. MODERN AS TOMORROW Artcarved® WEDDING RINGS Artcarved® WEDDING RINGS BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 743 Mass. VI 3-4366 ©SCW.1NC Announcing a sale on DANA SOLID COLOGNES 1/2 price through this week. All of the favorite scents - Tabu, Ambush, 20 Carats. Stop in and see our sale selection. Round Corner Drug Store VI 3-0200 801 Mass. “Open till 9:30 every night” p e t t h R o M O R ... J I H B t t t t H B I O ... Page 9 Provincial Border Threatens Conflict Among Communists By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analys UPI Foreign News Analyst A key area of potential conflict between the Soviet Union and Red China is the border which divides the U.S.S.R.'s Kazakhstan Republic and Sinkiang, the huge province which is the wild west of China. Clashes between frontier guards have been frequent. Latest reports from Moscow say Moslem tribesmen are fleeing Sinkiang into Kazakhstan at the rate of 1,200 a month. THE CHINESE HAVE accused the Russians of kidnapping thousands of Turkic-speaking Uigar, Kazakh and Khirghizian tribesmen from across the Sinkiang border. On their side, the Russians have accused the Chinese of systematically persecuting minority populations. Two reasons make the area a favorite subject of speculation among those who see the possibility of future armed conflict between the two Communist giants. One is that a huge segment of the Kazakhstan Republic is shown on present-day Chinese maps as properly belonging to China. ery belonging. The Russians got it in 1864 through the treaty of Chuguchak, one of those "unjust" treaties by which the Red Chinese accuse western powers of carving up imperialist China. A SECOND IS THAT Nomadic Moslem tribesmen inhabit both sides of the border, traditionally flowing back and forth depending on pres- Architects to Take KU License Exam The License Exam for Architectural Registration will be given here June 2-5 to about 80 persons from Kansas and neighboring states. The questions on the exam were prepared in part by the faculty of the school of engineering and architecture in cooperation with the National Council of Architectural Registration Boards. Most of those taking the exam have degrees in architecture, or at least seven years practical experience. Upon successful completion of the exam, the candidates may call themselves architects and may practice as architects. University Daily Kansan PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS NA Ethan Smith can show you how to get an accurate estimate on your move sures from either the Russians or the Chinese. Languages are identical and related to that of Turkey. Developed by experts, the North American Van Lines method of estimating is "Quality Controlled" for accuracy. Our men have been trained to use this system, so if you are moving across town or cross-country, call for a FREE estimate. There is no obligation. Fifteen years ago when the Red Chinese took over the China mainland, Russia easily could have seized Sinkiang Province, a vast area of more than 700,000 square miles composed of desert, towering mountains, howling winds, forests, some rich valleys and important minerals. Ethan Smith Moving & Storage 808 Penn. VI 3-0380 Instead, the late Josef Stalin made a deal in which the Russians were to share in exploitation of Sinkiang's resources which include both uranium and oil. IN RETURN, THE Chinese agreed to allow the Uigurs, Kazakhs and others in China to use the Russian language employed by their kinsmen just over the boundary in the Soviet Union. RECENT CHINESE broadcasts have hinted that large units of the Red Chinese army have been moved into the province. Modern farms run by army personnel were credited with boosting the province's grain output by 20 per cent in 1963 over 1962. The broadcasts reported the reclamation of 100,000 acres of wasteland and irrigation facilities extended to another 150,000 acres. Consumer goods produced in Sinkiang also were reported on the upswing. Russian consulates were closed. The tribesmen were told they would have to learn to write all over again, this time in the Latin alphabet. By 1958 things were changing. The Chinese halted construction of a trans-Sinkiang highway which would have given the Russians greater access to the province. YOUR NORTH AMERICAN VAN LINES AGENT Sinkiang also is the center of a vast resettlement program. The Chinese population there is reported to have jumped from 300,000 to more than 2,000,000 since the Communists took over. NORTH AMERICAN VAN LINES 401-234-8765 www.northamericanvanlines.com Sinkiang's future is more promising than its present. Meanwhile, the Chinese are taking out insurance. NEW MANAGEMENT SPECIAL FREE PITCHER with every large pizza at the Thursday, May 14, 1964 CATACOMBS 7th & Mass. DANCE TO THE "WILD" CLOVERS 7:30 to 12 p.m. Fri. & Sat. OPEN 5:30 FRIDAYS & SATURDAYS CYR to Elect New Officers The election of Collegiate Young Republican officers will take place at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. A nominations committee met Monday night to select a slate of candidates, Bill Porter, Topeka freshman and third vice-chairman of the CYR, said. A man is smiling and holding his heart. 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 P PARK PLAZA SOUTH Ph. VI 2-3416 Day or Night 1912 W. 25th Have you visited the NEW branch of the Kansas Union Book Store in Watson Library Complete line of scholarly paperbacks from academic publishing houses Assorted paper supplies and writing materials Open afternoons and evenings Located on basement level under main entrance. Page 10 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 14, 1964 AURH Chooses Officers; President Calls for Unity The Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) last night elected Ernie Rosenthal, Kansas City sophomore, chairman for next year. Rosenthal said he was looking forward to closer unity and more cooperation between the residence halls next year. "I'd like to see more activities . . . where people in one hall meet the people in another," Rosenthal, who is also president of the Men's Residence Hall Association, said. Exchange dinners between officers of the residence halls and between Greeks and independents was suggested by Rosenthal as a means to develop closer relationships and cooperation. Other officers elected are Ronald Rardin, Leawood junior, vicechairman; Ellen Jenks, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, secretary; and Brent Porter, Halfway, Mo., junior, treasurer. AT HONN'S LAUNDRY IT'S Clean the cleanest laundry in town inspect our facilities, you'll agree Clean — your whole wash - the Honn way Wash 20c Dry 10c The spring Western Civilization examination will begin at 1 p.m. Saturday. Clean your best suits and coats in our coin-op dry clean machine Western Civ. Test Set for Saturday "Laundry Time is Honn Time” 19th & La. Echoing from a tree top in front of the Information Booth on Jayhawk Blvd. this morning, came the call of the new members of the Owl Society, junior men's honorary. Honor students have been taking the oral part of the examination during this week, but they will also be taking the written part of the examination Saturday starting at 2 p.m., according to David Jones, acting director of Western Civilization program. "Owl Society, junior men, moot, hoot." Sophomores taking the examination can receive four hours credit, depending on the grade they earn; juniors and seniors can receive a possible two hours credit. The Owl Society elected the new members from the sophomore class in April, on the basis of scholarship, campus activities, and leadership. The new members were not notified of their election until last week, last year's president said this morning. Owl Society Hoots in Trees The next examinations will be offered Saturday, July 25, during summer school. FRANK SHIRLEY SINATRA MAC LAINE MAURICE CHEVALIER LOUIS JOURDAN COLA PRESENTE CAN'CAN COLOR by DE LUXE FRANK SHIRLEY SINATRA MACLAINE MAURICE CHEVALIER LOUIS JOURDAN Can 'n Can COLOR by DE LUXE PLUS CARTOON 35c Feature Times: 7 & 9:30 p.m. Fraser Theater FRIDAY FLICKS The 20 men chosen have a cumulative grade point average of 2.56. New members include: Bob Woody, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore; Clay Blair, Joplin, Mo., sophomore; Dan Householder, Wichita junior; Tom Jones, Kansas City sophomore; Terry Oldham, Kansas City sophomore; Jeff Nichols, Stockton sophomore; Bill Eastep, Wichita sophomore; Jerry Hammon, Sterling junior; Steve Munzer, Salina sophomore; Gary Walker, Wichita sophomore; Tom Elliott, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Jack Allen, Wichita sophomore; Larry Bast, Topeka sophomore; Henry "Hank" Bisbee, Toledo, Ohio, sophomore; Bob Winn, Leawood sophomore; Mike Vineyard, Wymore, Neb., sophomore; Darryl Wallace, Dodge City sophomore; Pat McGrath, Prairie Village sophomore; Jim Gossett, Lindale, Mo., sophomore; and George Pro, Leawood sophomore. WEEKEND DATE SPECIAL ! YOUR DATE GETS TO BOWL EVERY OTHER GAME $ FREE $ 6 p.m. FRIDAY — 6 p.m. SUNDAY MU Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION MOM BOWLS FREE ! NOTICE! KU COLLEGIATE YOUNG RE PUBLICANS Election of 1964-1965 Officers -7:30 TONIGHT- Jayhawk Room - Kansas Union AUTO WRECKING NEW and USED PARTS Tires and Glass East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 Last 2 days! Elvis Presley "KISSIN' COUSINS" Shows 7:00 & 9:00 BREAKFAST PREVUE! 6:30 a.m. Sat.! You only live once... so see The Pink Panther twice! Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5298 BLAKE EDWARDS PRODUCTION DAVID NIVEN • PETER SELLERS ROBERT WAGNER • CAPUCINE THE PINK PANTHERS CLAUDIA CARDINALE AS THE PRODUCER Starts SATURDAY . . . HOW THE WEST WAS WON Now Showing! Evenings 7:30 Only Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:00 Varsity TNEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065 NOW! -- Lee Remick James Garner "Wheeler Dealers" and "Love Is A Ball" Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on highway 90 OPEN 7:00 — STARTS DUSK FREE IDDIE PLAYGROUND -Classified Ads FOR SALE Two Blue Streak tires, 800/820x15" on reversed 15" Mercury rims; Goodyear Stock Car Specials, less than 500 miles gone, treads compounded for paved tracks, $90 value for $70. Call VI 2-3778 evenings and weekends. tf Very nice 3 bedroom home $500 down, will buy will buy Call VI 3 after 4:30 p.m. 5-19 1956 AUSTIN HEALY, 2 overhaul, rack. 8675. VI 2-2038. luggage. 2 Must sell 1964 Volvo before May 31. Good condition, whitewalls, reasonable. Call Sandy, VI 2-4112 after 5 p.m. 5-19 Little used Harmony guitar. Call VI 3-600. Ask for Sherry. 5-18 1953 Buick, $50. Call Don Senti, VI 3-18 6866忽mes. 1111 W. 11th. I 3-18 1958 Morris Minor. New motor, transmission, tires. $200. Underwood typewriter. $20. About 3,000 books. 1539 Tenn. V1. 3-7787. 5-18 21" console TV, RCA, real good shape, VI 3-4197 6 after 6 p.m. tt 1964 Volkswagen. new accessories. Call I 2-2594 after 7:30 p.m. 5-15 1959 Volvo. Rebuilt engine, new tires and battery. Clean. Call VI 3-4050. 5-21 Eico stereo preampl-ampifier combination. Garrard record change option, which automatically condition. Whole system must go. Call Steve Heinz I: 3-4050. If not there, leave message. One dineette set, 2 years old, excelent condition. Six chairs with matching table, removal of floor. Two modern chairs, 2 years old, need reupholstering. $10 each. See at 635 W. 25th Apt., Monday, Friday, Tuesday, between 2 and 5 p.m. 1958 black and white Ford convertible. Power steering and brakes, good condition, original owner. Call VI 3-5003, 1618 Rose Lane. Wedding dress, size 7-8. 1817 La. Upstairs, west apartment. 4 to 6 p.m. SPEED EQUIPMENT CHROME WHEELS, Cheater Slicks, etc. for sale at great savings after 6 p.m. sunday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut St. tt New shipment of Pink typing paper 500 team -- $8.59 Lawrence Outreach 1005 MES Typewriter, new and used portables, standards, electronics. Olympia, Hermes, Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter, adder, rentals and service. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St. VI 3-3644. For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 8- 9040 after 5 p.m. tf Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as notes. Copy and civilization delivery. $4.50 completely revised, extremely comprehensive. comminegraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Copy VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf FOR RENT To male senior, graduate student, or faculty member. Single room with pri. rooms 64 and 64. Air-conditioned. Call ViI 3-1425 mornings or evenings. 1026 Colonial Ct. 5-18 Summer sublet; 4 room apartment; 2 bedrooms, kitchen living room, garage. First floor, private entrance. Utilities paid except electricity. $5. Call VI. 5-19-10 Room for rent. Mahogany panellied room with private entrance and private fur bed. 1227 Tenn. Park. $25 per par. Off street parking. Call VI 3-5046 evenings. 5-19 Rooms for men. Extremely modern, remodeled bed, coffee and refrigerator cabinets. Cobble summits, all furnished, near KU and Union. 15-19 Mississippi, VI I-02989. 5-19 To KU men. Two room modern furnished apartment. Outside entrance. Bills paid. Also see rooms. No drinking at 1616 Indiana. House first house south of campus at 1616 Indiana. Efficiency apartment, 2 large rooms. Private entrance and bath. $30 per month. Bills paid. Also, large newly redone sleeping room. $17.50 per month. New campus. New garage. $5 per month. Available June 1. Call VI 3-7830 or VI 3-0298. 5-18 Bedroom with shower and half-bath. Kitchen privileges if desired. See at 516 La. tf REAL PET Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking Page 11 GRANT'S DRIVE-IN Pet Center Sure-Everything in the Pet Field Comfortable, sunny, 4 room apartment for couple. Kitchen, living room, bedroom and study room. Roomy closets, air-conditioning, private bath. Available June 4th. Call VI 3-3356 or VI 3-5863. 5-18 Private furnished apartments for KU men with single beds, showers, all utilities paid. For 1, 2, or 3 men. Available for 3 Ku men. Furnished houses for 3 Ku men. Utilities required. All campus. Summer rates. Inquire at 1005 Miss. VI. 3-4349. 5-18 New garage apartment for 2 men or couple. Available immediately. Also, a new rice studio apartments for men. In campus. For appointment to VI 3-18534. Now renting new Ridge House Cabana Units. Swimming pool, carpet, air-conditioning, 1 bedroom furnished or un furnished. College shopping and University. Ready for catering inquest. Contact Mr. Osborne now for this fall. VI 3-1146, 2403 Cedarwood. tf Luxurious duplex. Central air-conditioning, close to shopping and University. Wall-to-wall carpet, all electric kitchen, swimming pool. Absolutely the finest 2 bedroom units. Contact Mr. Osborne now. VI 3-1116, 4203 Caledar wood. tf Moving to Kansas City? Then dig these brand new beautiful apartments in the Prairie Village-Overland Park area. 1 and 2 bedrooms, wall-to-wall carpet, drapes, central air-conditioning, Hotpoint kitchenette. $315. One mile west of Antioch Rd. on 95th Street. The Alex Bascom Co., TU 8-3128 or TU 8-5252. 5-21 For two men students. Two basement rooms with kitchen and shower. Inquire at 1520 W. 22nd Terrace, VI 3-8673. 5-18 Available room. $1_{2}$ apartments and sleeping rooms. $1_{2}$ block from Union. Off street parking. Call VI 2-1675 or VI 3-0492. 5-14 For the summer. For 2 or 3 men students. Cool, pleasant. basement apartments. Front yard hill. Private bath and entrance. Call VI 3-6313. 1103 W. 19th Terrace. 5-14 Emery Apartments available June 1. Efficiency and one bedroom. To see contact Milan Loupal, Apt. 204, Emery or call VI 3-8190. 5-19 Married, grad students, faculty. Efficiency apartment from $65 and small house from $70. Available in June. Call now. Santee Academy, 1123 Ind., VI. 3-211ff Bachelor Studio Apartment for graduate or older undergraduate men. $1_{12}$ blocks from Union. Newly remodeled nicely furnished studio ideal study conditions. A few still available at low summer rates. Singles and doubles. For appointment call VI 3-8534. 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921 Large, homey, attractively furnished, 4 room apartment. For summer months at summer rates. Kitchen built-ins and storage units. Electricity. Also available June Ist. Large 3 room apt. Call VI 3-7677. Will rent for summer months. 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 3-1116 for information. Single or double room. Furnished. cook- ing. Kitchen. Call. Call 2-9451 or see at 1244 La. FRATERNITY JEWELRY A complete line, including, • Lavailers • Guards • Pins • Mugs • Rings • Crests Ray Christian JEWELERS IT'S OK TO OWE BAY 809 Mass. Milliken's SOS Crescent Heights two bedroom apart- rent. 25th and Redbud. Phone VI 3-2711. "the best professional service" 1021 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass., VI 3-592, 7 a.m.-U p.m. TYPING Experienced secretary would like typhing in home. Reasonable rates. Call 3-5199. 24 hr. answering service - general typing service STUDENTS - general typing service - automatic typing Experienced secretary would like typing 2565 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122 H-521 Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term thesis, and other work areas and rates. Phone VI T-8379. Mr. Charles Patti. tt EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention on all reports, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate typing at reasonable rates. Call Donna Stewart VI 3-6621. tf Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing Form papers accurately and neatly typed on good grade bond paper. Minor corrections, carbon copy, extra first page. Call VI 3-0875. 5-21 Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Fast, accurate work done on electric charge and capacitor rates. Call Bett Vincent, VI 3-5540. Accurate expert typist would like typing these prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reasonabler papers, themes, applications and theses, phone VI 3-7652 Mrs. Frank Gibson. Experienced secretary would like typing home. Reasonable rates. Call VT at 1188 7 a.m.-11 p.m Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (plca 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 printer. 9:30 a.m. VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley. 408 West 13th. **tt** Experienced Typist—Dissertations. The- experiential typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt 1000 Rhode Island. VI 3-7485. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd Secretary will do typing in home. Fast. Signed legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers and conference presentations, rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568 Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Ms. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1644. MILIKENIKS SOS—always nstr quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines We also do tape transcription. Office phone 021-5920 m tm 12 p.m. -1023. *Mal- phone VI 3-5920* BUSINESS SERVICES Dressmaking-aiterations, formulas and kowns. Ola Smith, 939% M1 V-3=528 25c delivery JOE'S BAKERY 616 W. 9th Open 24 hours except Saturday evening 616 W. 9th VI 3-4720 AGS MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY When buying diamonds Look for this sign In Lawrence, your Authorized Dealer is Delbert A. Eisele Marks Jewelers X12466 Thursday, May 14, 1964 MEMBER OF AHS NATIONAL BRIDAS SERVICES 817 Mass. VI 3-4266 GB G Recording Service and Party Music tapes: recorded or duplicated records: cut or pressed University Daily Kansan 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 L&M CAFE now under new management We are open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. On Sundays, we serve brunch and lunches, dinners, and sandwiches. Your second cup of coffee always free indent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery is granted for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, $16 Mass. VI 3-1287. Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coln Mart. 1025 Mass. ti MISCELLANEOUS WANTED BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Responsible driver to take car to Wisconsin. Transportation free and date is flexible. Call Prof. Appel at VI 2-4185, evenings. 5-18 The Catacombs nite club and Pizza Dien 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. Ride wanted to KU Medical Center Monday and Friday. Arrive approx. 8:30 a.m. leave 5 p.m. Call VI 2-3148. 5-19 VOLKSWAGEN'S WANTED. Cash for your VW. Conzelman Motors, VW Sales Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa. Hiwav 50 Opportunity for male keeper in sales determinations. Write giving age, type of instru- ti- Seniors, cash your rebate slips before VII 2-0180, before you leave KU 5-19 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers graduation permanents, sets, Cut n Curl BEAUTY SALON graduation permeants latest styles. VI 3-5569 843 N.H. LEONARD'S STANDARD SERVICE 9th & Indiana VI 3-9830 Shirt Finishing Laundry Wash & Fluff Dry 613 Vt VI. 3-4141 RISK'S 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 YELLOW CAB CO. VI 3-6333 24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled THE NAME FOR SERVICE ★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK ★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED ★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT ★ MUFFLER SERVICE ★ TUNE-UPS ★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M. ART'S TEXACO 9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897 HELP WANTED Pleasant responsible young lady to do light house work, plan and prepare three meals a day, and care for semi-invalid lady and family for entire summer. K. R. Eckert, K. R. Eckert, and board, write Mrs. Harold E. Mauk, 6925 Glenwood, Shawnee Mission, K. 5-18 College men needed for next fall, jobs in Bison's Dixon's Dixon's Bison's in, 2500 W- 6th, VI 3-7446 5-20 LOST Lost April 28. Yellow gold, round faced, Lady Eligin watch. Call Sylvia. U 3-14-38. PATRONIZE YOUR • ADVERTISERS • White girl woman's watch. "Toni" engraved on back. Lost on west side of campus. Reward. Call VI 3-9123, Room 202. 5-19 100 ● Parker Pens ● Stationery ● Printing Hallmark Cards When you care enough to send the very best BULLOCK'S 4 E. 7th VI 3-2261 Just West of Post Office KERBY'S DEPENDABLE mobilgas - 'Vett head- quarters - 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 ★1 Bedroom ★2 Bedrooms 2 Bedrooms Swimming Pool FOR INFORMATION CONTACT Crescent Heights Arts, Mar. Crescent Heights Apts. Mgr. FREE VACATION SERVICE - with this ad! Bring in this coupon and get our Registered Mechanic 10 POINT SAFETY CHECK — We will check (1) Cooling System (2) Fan Belts (3) Lights & Signal System (4) Wheel Bearings (5) Brakes (6) Wipers (7) Exhaust system (8) Steering (9) Fuel System and (10) Ignition System. ABSOLUTELY FREE!! Be Careful • Be Sure • Be safe • Before Returning Home This Summer. Call on us TODAY. VI 3-6697 SANDERS MOTOR CO. Lincoln-Mercury Studebaker Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 14.1964 Young Democrats Eye Move - (Continued from page 1) must present a notarized list of at least 15 dues paying members, Sumner said. THE CREDENTIALS committee is controlled by men from three schools which are presenting candidates for chairman of the Collegiate Young Democrats. Sumner said. The schools are Kansas State University, Washburn University, and Wichita University. Because the organization of paper clubs "has been a practice for many years," Sumner believes it was reason of the YD's chairman, Tom Smith, in putting the three schools on the credentials committee. As such, "they can regulate each other," Sumner said. "KU is expected to have the maximum number of votes—twelve—at the coming convention. A club is allowed three votes for its first 15 members and one more for each additional fifty members. Sumner said. THE TOTAL NUMBER of votes at the conventions is usually about "70 to 75 at least," Miss Thayer said. "K-State and Fort Hays have always had this alliance and have always been against KU," Miss Thaver said. MISS THAYER expected the combined voting strength of the two schools to be 20 to 24 votes. Both Miss Thayer and Sumner agreed that KU and Wichita University have traditionally had a similar alliance. Sumner said, however, that the alliance has not been effective in the past because the KU club had not been fully active until this past year. "THE MAIN PURPOSE is to elect officers," Miss Thaver said. The twelve KU delegates to the convention are: Max Logan, Holiday senior and chairman of the delegation; Mike Rogers, Hutchinson junior and president of the KU club; Brad Sumner, Leawood junior and collegiate council representative; Jacke Thayer, Ellsworth freshman and secretary; and R. J. Smith, West Plains, Mo., sophomore and The Question Is Not: "Do You Need A Personal Checking Account?" The Question Is: "Which One Is Best for You?" A REGULAR or a ThriftiCheck PERSONAL CHECKING ACCOUNT Let us help you decide. We have both. DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK Library Committee Appointed 9th & Kentucky treasurer. Mike Miner, Lawrence junior and chairman of the All Student Council, has made the following appointments to the library committee: Barry Bennington, Cheney 1st year law student; Marsha Babicki, Topeka sophomore and vice-president; George Groneman, Kansas City sophomore; Steve Powell, Mission sophomore; Bob Van Cleave, Kansas City sophomore; Don Williams, Great Bend junior; and Judy Withroder, Hutchinson junior. George Tannous, Beshmezeeen El Koura, Lebanon junior, chairman; Raymond Nieder, Butler, Mo., sophomore; Miriam Kangas, Wichita freshman; and Mary Traylor, Emporia freshman. The function of the library committee is to compile past examinations for most courses, which will be placed in the library. 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 JET LIGHTNING SERVICE HILLCREST — 1111 MASS. — THE MALLS udent com- unior, biriam man. xami- KU Students Plan Community Service By Bobbie Bartelt A move to put college students into community service is one of the several goals sought by a group of KU students. Bill Manning, Wichita junior, is the instigator of this idea for what he terms a "college program to draw students into community service. "The idea has been successfully worked out on several other campuses throughout the United States, namely Harvard University, the University of North Carolina, and Northwestern," Manning said in an interview yesterday. INTERVIEWED WITH Manning were Frank Munday, Denver. Colo., sophomore, and Jack Croughen, Novato, Calif., senior. Also active in the group's planning activities are Mike Miner, Lawrence junior, and Brian Grace, Lawrence senior. "We are hoping to get a general breakthrough between the campus and the community." Munday said. "Students live in Lawrence most of the year, and can be considered 'citizens in good standing,'" Croughen said. THE GROUP stressed the idea that students working on community projects would not be outsiders coming into the community. "The idea of a program of this nature is to orient more activity toward the students," said Manning, who transferred here this semester from Harvard University. OUR IDEA would make students aware of problems in civic affairs and work in a program of this type would give them insights that would be valuable when they leave the college, Manning stated. "This program would also benefit the community as well as the student. "Students will get an idea of the scope of problems and what can be done to solve these problems," Manning said. "THE GROUPS IS currently approaching the administration with our program, and we are seeking an adviser." Manning continued. The group has already been considering ideas for a summer pilot project, and have consulted with several Lawrence groups for advice and support. This program would include working in Lawrence courts, conducting summer interviews and surveys for the Lawrence Human Rights Commission, starting an enrichments program, and initiating additional recreational programs in the city. IN EXPLAINING the purpose for each of these ideas Manning stressed the role that each would play in the student's life following graduation from college. "We would propose a plan to work through the Lawrence courts to help especially young people coming through the courts. "It would also be advantageous to deal with some of the problems that send the young people to the courts in the first place," Manning said. "AFTER TALKING TO the Lawrence Human Rights Commission it is possible that we would work during the summer making interviews and surveys in connection with equal job opportunities in Lawrence." Manning said. "An idea for working and counseling with high school drop-outs has also been suggested," he continued. Enrichment programs for pre-high school students to encourage reading and interest in education was another suggestion for a summer pilot project. "FINALLY WE have considered possibilities for some sort of recreation program." Manning said. "This would include regular playground operation and possibly a swimming program worked out in connection with Robinson gymnaisum and/or private pools," he said. Manning and his group, after studying the successful projects on other campuses and in other communities, went on to suggest possible courses of action for the future. Lawrence, Kansas Daily hansan Friday, May 15, 1964 Viet Cong Kill 54 Rangers In Ambush Near Saigon SAIGON, South Viet Nam—(UPI)—Communist Viet Cong guerrillas ambushed a government ranger force almost on the doorstep of Saigon and killed at least 54 men, it was announced today. A U.S. army major serving as an adviser to the rangers was wounded in both legs. The Vietnamese also had 26 wounded and 10 missing in the humiliating defeat which occurred yesterday. It came only a day after Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara ended a visit here in which he predicted a very long war before the communists are defeated. THE BODIES of only three Communist rebels were found afterwards at the ambush 25 miles north of Saigon. But a Vietnamese commander estimated that 100 Reds were killed, mainly by government artillery fire. The American major was shot through both legs, but was reported in good condition at the U.S. Navy hospital in Saigon. Six Vietnamese T28 planes later bombed and strafed a nearby Viet Cong concentration which was assumed to be part of the ambush force. Reliable American sources said the Red guerrillas lured two Vietnamese ranger companies into a trap and wiped out half of them in a vicious two-hour battle. ONE AMERICAN source said the rangers pulled back their badly-mauled force and the Reds broke off the engagement by "mutual consent." The sources said the ambush was set by four to eight Viet Cong companies, numbering at least 300 men. They baited the trap shortly after midnight with simultaneous attacks on five outposts clustered near Provincial Highway 16 between the district headquarters of Tan Uyen and Phu Giao. The outpost defenders fought for two hours in the eerie light of parachute flares dropped to illuminate by U.S. Air Force C123 planes circling overhead. The government ranger companies set off on foot at dawn on a relief expedition, marching directly into the Viet Cong trap. The communists opened fire from both sides of the road on which the rangers were moving, cutting them down in the initial surprise and pouring in a continuous rain of bullets and shells as the battle raged on for two hours. YD's Vie for State Positions By Lee Stone It will be a game of wait and see at the Collegiate Young Democrats' state convention tonight in Topeka. Three voting blocks of near equal strength will vie for a dominant position at the convention by waiting to see who makes a deal first. ALL THREE BLOCKS of active YD clubs are composed of clubs that are traditionally friendly to each other, George Groneman, Kansas City sophomore and delegate to the convention, said. Furthermore, all three are supporting a candidate for the chairmanship of the state club, and each candidate seriously wants the office, he said. The voting blocks are composed of Washburn University and Emporia State Teacher's College with several smaller clubs; Kansas State University and Fort Hays State College with other small clubs; and, KU and Wichita University together with Ottawa University and Baker University. Groneman said. "It seems the convention will be deadlocked until one of the three groups gives in to one of the other two." Groneman said. "WHEN THIS HAPPENS the two groups that band together will con- Books Full of Issue ATLANTA — Ten years ago Sunday the Supreme Court of the United States struck down the enforced segregation of public schools and thus set in motion a social revolution that has become the No.1 domestic crisis in the nation. Integration 10 Years Old Bv Al Kuettner The generation soon will be half finished, and the litigation has filled hundreds of law books, logjammed scores of courts and established a whole new concept of human rights in the Unites States. When Eugene Cook, then and now attorney general of Georgia, heard the news, he sighed that "this means a generation of litigation." IN THE DECADE since the Supreme Court ruled that "separate but equal" schools could no "Which group gives in first will undoubtedly get the vice-chairmanship and probably a few other offices. In other words, it will come out second best. But, it will still have a controlling voice in the state club." Groneman said. "The interesting thing about the struggle is that all the clubs are trying to wait until the last minute to give in and each candidate is afraid that each of the other two candidates will try to make a deal between themselves. Of the 17 states and the District of Columbia which required segregated classes 10 years ago, only Mississippi has made no start toward the transition ordered by the high court. Even in Mississippi the federal courts have directed that the long put-off step in public schools be taken this September. longer be constitutionally tolerated in public education, school segregation barriers have fallen in all but one state. United Press International trol the convention—or two-thirds of the vote. The other group will be left out in the cold and won't get anything (offices and appointments)," Groneman said. "BUT, THEY ARE all hoping that it will be themselves who will make the deal." Groneman said. Asked if he agreed with Groneman's analysis of the events that would occur at the convention tonight, Mike Rogers, Hutchinson junior and president of the KU Young Democrats said, "Till put my stamp on it." Of the 6,141 school districts in the previously segregated states, 1,159 have made at least a token start toward school desegregation, according to the Southern Education Reporting Service, a private fact-finding agency. There now are 316.524 negroes attending schools in newly deseg- CIVIL RIGHTS GROUPS, including the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) which initiated the original school cases, are far from satisfied with the results of the court victory. Twenty-five new districts, including three in Mississippi, are scheduled to take the desegregation step in the fall. regated districts, almost one out of 10 of the negro children in the southern area. On this 10th anniversary of the ruling the NAACP plans to intensify both its efforts toward major new gains in school desegregation and toward speeding up the pace at which the transition has moved so far. Brad Summer, Leawood junior and collegiate council representative of the YD's, added a few more observations to Groneman's. (Continued on page 12) "To my knowledge, there are no slates of officers formed yet. This will probably take place, if at all, tonight at the convention. And, this will leave quite a bit of room for politicking." Sumner said. SUMNER IS RUNNING for State Collegiate Council treasurer, and is said to have the support of the Wichita-KU candidate for chairman of the Collegiate Young Democrats, Dave Berkowitz, a Wichita University student. The YD's president explained how KU came to support Berkowitz. "At first some of the girls wanted to support John Taylor," Rogers said. Taylor, a Kansas State student, had a good personality, Rogers said. But, Taylor's support faded. Then, after the KU club had had its election of officers in April the Weather Weather this weekend will be marked with variable cloudiness and mild temperatures through tomorrow. Thunderstorms may be expected Saturday afternoon or evening. Low tonight will be in the 50's with a high tomorrow in the 80's, the Weather Bureau said today. two other candidates for chairman, Berkowitz and Richard Williams, a Washburn student, visited the KU chapter on the same night. FOUR ELECTIVE OFFICES and three appointive offices in the state organization are the targets the fifteen active college clubs are shooting for, Groneman said. "Then, at the April meeting, a motion was made to send a committed delegation supporting Berkowitz to the convention," Rogers said. "WILLIAMS AND BERKOWITZ both catered to KU for the support of their candidacies, but neither of the hopefuls could come to an agreement between themselves. KU was consequently forced to choose between the two." CYR's Elect New Officers "We feel our support went to the best qualified candidate for the state chairman." Rogers said. The elective offices are the chairman, two vice-chairmen, secretary and treasurer. The appointive offices are parliamentarian, and representative to the executive council of the state Young Democrats. ✩ ✩ ✩ Other officers elected: Bill Porter, Topeka freshman, was elected chairman of the KU Collegeiate Young Republicans last night. Other oncers include Pris Osborne, Stockton junior, first vice-chairman; Gipp DuPree, Oklahoma City, Okla., freshman, second vice-chairman; Brian Biles, Hutchinson sophomore, third vice-chairman; Susan Hartley, Atwood sophomore, secretary, and Chuck Frickey, Oberlin sophomore, treasurer. All the elected officers were on the nominating slate drawn up by the outgoing officers. There were no nominations from the floor, and all officers were elected unanimously. Porter said the main duty next year will be "to make and hold interest before the election." A membership drive will be held before November, he said. For the past two summers, Porter has worked with the Kansas Republican State Committee, and he plans to do so again this summer. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, May 15, 1964 Contemporary Scene: Homosexuality (Editor's note: The following article was written by Robert Lindner, the author of "Must You Conform?" "The Fifty-Minute Hour," "Rebel Without a Cause," and "Prescription for Rebellion." The article was first published in Crux, an editorial news sheet sponsored by six campus church groups.) Many people believe that since the close of World War I, at least sex attitudes and behavior reveal a radical and progressive change. Among the examples they usually employ to document this belief they offer the homosexual and what they describe as a novel and more healthy social disposition toward him. No longer a pariah, a despised and castoff subman whose sexual proclivities are to be regarded with disgust and whose person is to be avoided, he is, so these enthusiasts tell us "accepted, tolerated and understood." I, FOR ONE, DO not believe that we are in the midst of or have even begun to have a sexual revolution. The evidence that confronts me daily is all to the contrary. Despite the open sale of contraceptives, and the Bikini bathing suit, I and most of my colleagues in psychoanalysis still find the situation as regards sex repressive. Fundamental attitudes seem not to have altered significantly, certainly not since the middle of the nineteenth century. The same fears persist and the same fictions prevail. For us and for all others who deal intimately with people, the popularization of sex and the appearance of liberalism in attitude and behavior represent little more than flourishing defenses, reaction formations, rationalizations, denials, against deeply embedded conflicts between the erotic instincts and the imperatives of a sex-denying culture. WITH RESPECT TO homosexuality, I again differ from those who celebrate an era of sexual enlightenment. My difference . . . is founded on the observation that when the veneer of our contemporary system of defenses against the age-old conflict over sex is stripped away, there is to be discovered the same hostility for the invert and his way of life and the same abhorrence of him as a person that have been traditional in Western society. That we now employ such terms as "sick" or "maladjusted" to the homosexual appears to me to make little difference so far as basic attitudes and feelings are concerned. As a matter of fact I suggest that precisely these designations reveal the ugly truth of our actual animus toward homosexuals and the sham of modern social-sexual pretensions . . . THE DEFINITION OF homosexuality which appears most satisfactory . . . is the one which . . . considers homosexuality a term applicable only to those individuals who more or less chronically feel an urgent sexual desire toward and a sexual responsiveness to members of their own sex, and who seek gratification of this desire predominantly with members of their own sex. Now, this is a definition which covers, as far as one can see, all the available psychological, biological, and social facts available to us about homosexuality. It avoids confusing degree of fulfillment with degree of desire . . . It concentrates on those who harbor intrasex desires but eliminates those who obtain gratification of less specific sexuality through intrasex activity . . . It places inversion in the perspective where it belongs; as an attitude basic to the personality where in it resides, as a compulsion with all the urgency and driving energy that account for its persistence despite the obvious disadvantages of homosexuality as a way of life. OF ALL THE ACTIVITIES of human beings those connected with the exercise of the sexual apparatus have been subject to the most intensive efforts at regulation. . Historically it is to be noted that the government of the erotic life is among the primary requisites for the establishment of human communities and that the chief business of most if not all of the agencies that dominate the collections of men we call societies is the control of the sexual instincts... Various societies have had varying attitudes toward sex, ranging from almost unlimited permissiveness to absolute, uncompromising dominance over the functions and apparatus involved. Our own Western Christian Civilization (Toynbee's designation), basing itself on Judaic morality has tended toward the repressive side. It has stigmatized the erotic component of human nature as base and had traditionally regarded everything connected with the sexual instincts with abhorrence. PERHAPS EVEN MORE than any previous great civilization, it can be viewed as sex-denying. As it crystallized into its present sociopolitical form it increased its regulatory demands over the erotic life, constraining it in ever-narrowing channels. Prohibition after prohibition has been piled upon that aspect of existence, culminating in the present tragic crisis wherein the instincts of men are in perpetual conflict with the imperatives of their society... It is in the framework of the foregoing that homosexuality becomes understandable and its genetics clear. Given this picture of a sex-rejective, sex-repressive society, inversion must be, and I am personally convinced after intensive study of the problem and experience with homosexuals that it is a pattern of sex orientation adopted by certain individuals as their solution to the conflict between the urgency of the sexual instincts and the repressive efforts brought to bear upon sexual expression by the reigning sex morality. The condition is, then, in essence, a reaction of nonconformity, a rebellion of the personality that seeks to find, and discovers a way in which to obtain expression for the confined erotic drives. The People Say . . . The Great Mid-Road Editor: After so much talk in the form of letters, laws, and pickets, for the down-trodden minorities, and against the nasty white, middle-class, Protestant, a tiny peep may be allowed in print in favor of that controversial ethnic. There is something in the white middle-class, Protestant creed that makes our position hard to defend verbally, against the onslaught of left and right wing fire. We do not speak out often—perhaps not often enough for our own good. We know that the best way is to listen. Just because we are not out yelling slogans for peace, or carrying banners for equality, does not mean we don't care about the basic freedoms of our country. We have long been the backbone of this country. Who minds the store while the Liberals picket and the Conservatives talk? The middle path on which we walk, is often mistaken for indecision and lethargy. It need not be. There is some good in both sides of any argument—even if it comes from the American Socialists or the John Birchers. We listen. Lately, much of the U.S. minority groups and backers have followed the lead of the McCarthy era—“if you aren't with us, you must be against us.” We, of the white, middle-class Protestants know where the power lies in this country. We know who is doing most of the work, while others have time to march and sing. While some try to win a point by heckling, pestering, badgering, and yelling at fellow Americans, we win our daily battles through sheer hard work. There is little reason for us to be attacked on the ground we are white or middle-class or Protestant; just as we believe there is no reason to attack any ethnic group on the grounds of its race, economic status, or regligion. We listen. And when the time is ripe, we move. We listen, but we are waiting to hear something. Sincerely, Constance Tanis Palos Park, Ill. soph. Steven Butler Cedar Rapids, Iowa soph. Dailij Hansan 111 Flint Hall University of Kansas student newspaper UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom. UNiversity 4-3198, business office Founded 1889, became bweekley 1904. University of Virginia Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East St. St., New York 2N, United States. International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except holidays, holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. Mike Miller ... Managing Editor Russ Corbitt, Jackie Helstrom, Willis Henson, James Henson, Charles Akers, Managing Editors; Fred Frailey, City Editor; Lutea Catcain, Society Editor; Marshall Caskey, Scottie Skelton; Charles Corcoran, Figure Editor. NEWS DEPARTMENT EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT EDITORIAL Writer Tom Coffman ... Editorial Writer Writing Hughes ... Assistant Editorial Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Bob Brooks ... Business Manager Joanne Zabornik, Advertising Mgr; Mike Barnes, National Advertising Mgr; Walt Webb, Circulation Mgr; Baker Hare, Marketing Mgr; Mgr; Ken Costich, Promotion Mgr; Dana Stewart, Merchandising Mgr; FILIBUSTER SENATE ©1964 HERBLOCK ©1964 HERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON POST "They're Still Circling Around ———" BOOK REVIEWS DECISION-MAKING IN THE WHITE HOUSE: THE OLIVE BRANCH OR THE ARROWS, by Theodore C. Sorensen (Columbia University Press, $3.50). Apart from the fact that this is an exceptionally readable and sensible approach to the task of the presidency (and that is reason enough for reading this little book), there are two other reasons for regarding it as a volume worth reading and owning. The first is that the president who inspired the author is dead. The second is that the author has left government service, at least for the time being, and his services thereby are temporarily lost to the American people. The book is based on the Gino Speranza Lectures for 1963, delivered at Columbia University April 18 and May 9 of last year. The late President Kennedy wrote the foreword for Sorensen. The brief Kennedy administration was full of important decisions: Cuba, Berlin, the Deep South, taxation, steel, and unimportant decisions, as well, that may have significance not known at the time. For any matter could arise at a presidential press conference, and at one time Kennedy had to study a list of famous Indian chiefs to select a name for a nuclear submarine. The choice, Red Cloud, frightened the Navy, for the name had foreign policy implications. IN THOUGHTFUL AND UNDERSTANDING pages Sorensen considers the task of decision-making, the political questions surrounding the job, the role of the cabinet, the role of special advisers, the need to both accept and reject advice, the special settings in which decisions must be made. Sorensen took his lead from the Cardozo lectures on the judicial process, delivered 42 years before the Sorensen lectures. He asks how the president must choose, in time of crisis, between the olive branch of peace and the arrows, both of which are in the talons of the eagle on the presidential seal. DECISION-MAKING IS AN ART, Sorensen says, not a science, an art requiring judgment more than calculation. He comments that the one quality which characterizes issues brought before the president is that of conflict. He makes special note of the 1962 Cuban crisis, of the delay and the agonizing decision involved, a decision never as simple as the answers offered to all questions today by some aspirants for the presidency. He considers the many unofficial sources that shape decisions—the press, books, visitors, friends, pressure groups, and White House mail. Sorensen notes that Kennedy had to judge whether nuclear testing should be resumed, whether to take military action in the Congo, whether the quarantine of Cuba would bring Soviet reprisal. He observes that political motivations must underscore many decisions, and that the person who cries "Politics!" does not understand the nature of the presidency. * * * MYTHS OF THE GREEKS AND ROMANS, by Michael Grant (Mentor, 95 cents). In this work a noted classical scholar shows the impact mythology has had on creative minds through the centuries. This makes such a book of value not only to the student of classical literature but to the student of ideas, of history and anthropology. Out to the student of interest, or for research purposes. Excellent photographs of great works of art accompany the text. Grant uses the stories of Oedipus, Antigone, Dionysus, Prometheus, the Argonautica, Orpheus and Eurydice, to name a few, to trace the origin of myths and their developments in subsequent ages. The themes have constantly been restated; note the use by Eugene O'Neill and even John Updike of classical tales. University Daily Kansan Exhibit Stirs JFK Memories Page 3 WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Fresh memories of President John F. Kennedy will be stirred this month by a traveling exhibit of his papers and momentos. The late president's personal secretary, Mrs. Evelyn Lincoln, has been busily gathering together nostalgic items for the exhibit which opens in New York, May 26. Mrs. Kennedy is expected to attend a reception May 25 launching the display. SOME OF the best photographs of the President, his favorite ship models and the cocoanut on which he scribbled an SOS when his PT-109 boat was rammed by a Japanese destroyer are included. There also are notes Kennedy made during the Cuban missile crisis, a draft of his inaugural address and letters he wrote as a child. The exhibit will be taken to Philadelphia, Baltimore, Pittsburgh and Cincinnati in June; St. Louis, Kansas City, Minneapolis, Milwaukee, and Chicago in July; Detroit, Cleveland, Buffalo, Boston and Charleston, W.Va., in August; Atlanta, Miami, Birmingham, New Orleans and Houston in Advertising Women Elect New Officers Karen Craig, Liberal senior, was elected president of Gamma Alpha Chi, national professional fraternity for women in advertising for the 1964-65 year. Other officers: Susan Hartley, Atwood sophomore, program co-ordinator; Susan Kidwell, Garden City junior, vicepresident; Susan Brown, Kansas City, Kansas sophomore, secretary; Margaret Ann (Peggy) Elrod, Maryville, Tenn., junior, treasurer; and Karen Bates, Augusta junior, and Sondra Chance, Frankfort junior, historians. September; and San Diego, Los Angeles and San Francisco in October. An exhibit of sorts is already on display in Mrs. Lincoln's office next to the White House. An eyecatcher is the extra rocking chair that used to be in her office in the west wing of the White House. Mrs. Lincoln has been recording verbal interviews with Fred Holburn, a former Kennedy aide. The taped interviews are for the memorial library. At first she found it difficult to talk about those happier days—now she racks her brain for little anecdotes she knows will delight future generations. THE PICTURES ON the walls of Mrs. Lincoln's office are reminders of happier days. There is one of Kennedy in a carefree moment walking on the sand at Cape Cod. It shows him wearing slacks and T-shirt and carrying a sports jacket. Another shows him on the stoop outside his office with John John by his side. In another picture Caroline Kennedy has her arm around her father as they watched a performance by the Scottish Black Watch Regiment on the south lawn. The mail still is heavy. There are many requests for pictures. "I think the American people like to have a hero," said Mrs. Lincoln, "and Kennedy had appeal, especially for teen-agers." She is frequently asked whether she will write a book about her boss. So far she's been saying no. But she thinks hat a chapter should be added to Kennedy's book "Profiles in Courage"—about him. As gay as the graduate herself are Gifts from Ober's Junior Miss JACK ROGER Fun is living in Park Plaza And at such a modest cost . . . One or Two Bedrooms $75 and $85 These units have been newly decorated — with new drapes, carpets disposals, etc. All Units Air-Conditioned Provincial Furniture Available PARK PARK PLAZA SOUTH Ph. 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"I can't say what effect this will have on enrollment, faculty and course expansion but at least we'll have less crowded conditions for our work." Prof. Allen said. Earl A. Nehring, assistant professor of political science, also stressed the crowded conditions of the annexes. "It also happens that Blake will be air-conditioned." "A big disadvantage over here is being subject to the weather conditions which seen in," Nehring said. BUT A POLITICAL science major, Nancy Lane, Hoisington senior, feels more sentimental about what the students call "The Barracks." "There is a more homey, informal atmosphere about the annexes which a modern structure never seems to have." Miss Lane said. "The weather has never bothered me in my many Professors Plan London Confab Three members of the department of geography and meteorology will participate in the International Geographical Congress in London in July. John P. Augelli, professor of geography and meteorology, who has been appointed to the U.S. National Commission for the International Geographical Union, will participate in symposia on colonization and geography of the Tropics held in connection with the congress. Thomas R. Smith, professor of geography and meteorology, will attend the congress as a member of the official United States delegation. He will participate in the symposium on historical cartography. A. W. Kuchler, professor of geography and meteorology, will serve as co-chairman of the congress' section on biogeology. Later he will attend the International Botanical Congress in Edinburgh where he will serve as co-chairman of the Symposium on Vegetation Mapping. QUALITY AND STYLE! 9K1 ARGENTI Artcarved® WEDDING RINGS Why buy ordinary rings when a prize no more starting at Artcarved® WEDDING RINGS Why buy ordinary rings when a prize-winning Artcarved costs no more? Starting at $8.00. STELLA SET Groom's Ring ... $29.50 Bride's Ring ... $27.50 Just one of our 300 Different Styles! Marks Jewelers 817 Mass. MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY MEMBER OF IGS NATIONAL BRIDAL SERVICE AGS Marks Jewelers 817 Mass. MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY MEMBER OF UAS NATIONAL BRIDAS SERVICE 1465 for the finest in AUTO REPAIR... bring your car out to 'PETE & DOC' AUTO REPAIR 2309 HASKELL VI 2-2990 PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS Have you visited the NEW branch of the Kansas Union Book Store in Watson Library Complete line of scholarly paperbacks from academic publishing houses Assorted paper supplies and writing materials Open afternoons and evenings Located on basement level under main entrance. T Have you visited the NEW branch of the Kansas Union Book Store in Watson Library Complete line of scholarly paperbacks from academic publishing houses Assorted paper supplies and writing materials Open afternoons and evenings Located on basement level under main entrance. University Daily Kansan Men's Dorm Reps Chosen Page 5 Templin and Ellsworth Halls yesterday voted on a new Men's Residence Association constitution and elected 10 council members. The election in Joseph R. Pearson Hall was postponed until Tuesday. The ballots in the constitutional election in Templin and Ellsworth will not be counted until JRP votes. George Tannous, Lebanon junior and elections committee chairman, said. ELL S W O R T H RE PRESENTA T I V E S—Brent Porter, Halfway, Mo. junior; Abdullah Elomran, Saudi Arabia freshman; Donald Swartz, Overland Park sophomore; William Hildebrand, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Larry Seibel, Russell freshman; William Hurt, Sedalia, Mo., freshman, and Robert Xidis, Wichita sophomore. Friday, May 15, 1964 TEMPLIN REPRESENTATIVES—Barry Carroll, Overland Park freshman; Walter Binder, Leavenworth sophomore, and George Barisas, Kansas City, Mo., senior. TODAY Official Bulletin Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. SUA Current Events Forum, 4:30 p.m. Forum Room. "The Presidential Image and the Candidates"—John C. Grumm and Hard Nehring, profs. of political science. Mathematics collocquim, 4:30 p.m., 103 Strong Hall. "Convexity and Norm Interpolation in Function Algebras"—Mr. Thomas M. Chusek, U. of Calif., Berke- SUA Film, 7 p.m., 9:30 p.m., Fraser Theater, "Can Can." Jewish Community Center services, 7:30 p.m., 917 Highland Dr. Refreshments. "The Tiger," "The Typist," 8:15 p.m., Experimental Theater. Episcopic Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth. TOMORROW Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stradford Rd. Vigil of Pentecost. Day of partial ab- bate and fast. Confessions: 4-5 and 7-8 n. m. Western Civ Examination, 1 p.m. Rooms to be assigned "ine Tiger," "The Typist," 8:15 p.m. Experimental Theater. SUNDAY Catholic Masses 8 a.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Masses 9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Fraser Theater. Dread Friends Meeting. 10:30 a.m. to the Quaker meeting for worship. SUA Chess Club, 2 p.m., Kansas Union Carillon Recital, 3 p.m., Albm. Gerlb SUA Chess Club. 2 p.m., Khinsa Carillon Recital, m. alba Gaken, Pops Concert, 3:30 p.m. Hoeh Auditorium. University Concert Choir-Symphony YCS, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Center, 1915 Strafford Rd. ELRING'S GIFTS for the BRIDE — All prices in wedding and shower gifts 924 Mass. (across from O'Dell's-Bell's) Newman Club, 6:30 p.m. Forum Room, King's Row made for the program for next year. X Flowers for all Occasions at OWENS We wire flowers anywhere in the free world 9th & Ind. VI 3-6111 When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified DAYLIGHT DONUTS 530 W. 23rd St. DAYLIGHT DONUT SHOP NOTICE When you go home this summer,why take your heavy winter clothes with you? Both our fine locations offer vault storage for your furs. They will be hung on hangers for the summer in our vaults. We also offer box storage for your sweaters and jackets. You are allowed to do your own packing. We will pick up and deliver. FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN 900 Miss. DOWNTOWN PLANT 740 Vt. Fox Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi K Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, May 15, 1964 Harris Advocates World Government If mankind has a future, it is because some form of world government will eventually be adopted. This was the conclusion drawn by Errol E. Harris, professor of philosophy, in the twenty-fifth and final lecture of his series on war and peace. "My object in this course of lectures has been to try and demonstrate that if civilized man is to survive . . . no practical alternative is open to him other than the establishment of world order under a single effective authority which would supersede the present plurality of nation-states." The professor outlined three requirements which would precede the "solution" of world order. THE FIRST REQUIREMENT would be a public statement by the chief world powers that the aim of their foreign policies in the immediate future would be to move steadily towards world government, and a declaration that they will avoid acts of mutual provocation. The second requirement would be the strengthening of the United Nations "through consistent support by the main powers, who should make a point of acting in all possible instances through the U.N. and not independently of it." Much valuable experience could be gained this way before attempting the more difficult task of world union. Other "obvious" regional groupings the professor cited were: Africa, south and east Asia, China, either by itself or with others, and Australia. Prof. Harris cited four possible solutions to the problem of establishing world order. The first one is the growth of one world power to the stage where it can impose his hegemony on all the rest. But the professor added that no power could succeed in doing this without resorting to force. The professor referred to this as the "imperialist solution" and said although it would be a form of world government, it would be an undesirable one. The second solution was described as the U.N. reform pattern, which seeks "the ultimate means of peace preservation through modifying the charter of the United Nations." But this plan, the professor said, The Castle Tearoom For Your Dining pleasure 1307 Mass. VI 3-1151 The professor referred to the third solution of the "nuclear pattern." "evades the issue of world government." But the nuclear pattern falls short of world government, "only because it takes this to be temporarily unattainable." In no way related to nuclear weapons, this plan would federate all democratic states with the open invitation to others to join when they are willing to subscribe to the aims and principles of the union and abide by the articles of the constitution. Appointments Friday FISH FRY DINNER DATE All You Can Eat $1.00 Holiday Inn Restaurant ENTERTAINME Penny-a-Pound Flight over Lawrence Area C-1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789 Erhart's Flying Service 1/2 Mile N. of TeePee Municipal Airport Sunday, May 17, 9 a.m. till dark Each passenger pays .01c for each pound they weigh Minimum $1.00 forthe Stea for the fine Steam ★ Charcoal Brewed ★ Cooked to your t ★ Service to CHUCK 24th & Iowa ...the more the "MERRIER" at... DIXON'S DRIVE-IN "where food is better" ...FAST DELIVERY 7 DAYS A WEEK... 2500 W 6th HERMAN "7,6,5,4,3-" DR PEPPER AITOTIC DR PEPPER BOTTLING CO. LAWRENCE New Recording! Robert Goulet VI 3-2644 starring Manhattan Towers Bell's 925 Mass. COMM LVE "Sraig" FRIDAY Friday, May 15, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 7 NT GUIDE- f forest in mains its... Global Brined Steaks d to y r taste e to p se you WAGON VI 3-9844 PLACES TO GO! THINGS TO DO! FRANK SINATRA SHIRLEY MACLAINE MAURICE CHEVALIER LOUIS JOURDAN AT LAST YOU CAN SEE IT! The entertainment event of the year! COMPLETE INTACT! All The Great Songs! All The Great Stars! All The Great Fun! 20th Anniversary presents Cake Portraits CAN·CAN with JULIET POWSE COLOR by DE LUXE JACK CUMMINGS WALTER LANG DOROTHY KINGSLY & CHARLES LEDERER Plus Cartoon 35c Feature Times: 7 & 9:30 p.m. Fraser Theater FRIDAY FLICKS L "S AY ONCE AGAIN!! THE MMANCHEROS VE AND IN COLOR AT THE TEEPEE raight from Rosemary's Lounge in K.C." ONLY! From 8:30 to 12:00 NEW MANAGEMENT SPECIAL with every large pizza at the FREE PITCHER CATACOMBS 7th & Mass. DANCE TO THE "WILD" CLOVERS 7:30 to 12 p.m. Fri. & Sat. OPEN 5:30 FRIDAYS & SATURDAYS When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Set Your Alarm for the Crack of Dawn! 12 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Set Your Alarm for the Crack of Dawn! HAVE WE FLIPPED OUR LID? Sure! Hasn't everybody? Just for kicks, stumble on down and join the rest of us crazy people! We'll have a bail! COME IN YOUR PAJAMAS AND ROBE AND GET IN FREE! BREAKFAST PREVUE Free BREAKFAST—6 a.m. SHOW at 6:30—OUT at 8:30 COME IN YOUR PAJAMAS AND ROBE AND GET IN FREE! You only live once... so see The Pink Panther twice! DA VINCI IN CITY TOMORROW! DAVID NIVEN PETER SELLERS ROBERT WAGNER CAPUCINE in "THE PINK PANTHERS" and with CLAUDIA CARDINALE TECHNICOLOR* TECHNIRAMA* Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 STARTS SATURDAY! Breakfast Prevue 6:30 a.m. Mat. 2:00; Eve. 7:00 & 9:00 Sun. Cont. 2:30 - 4:40 - 6:50 - 9:00 ENDS TONITE — Elvis Presley in "KISSIN' COUSINS" A Mighty Film Adventure! "HOW THE WEST WAS WON" Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone V1.3-1065 HURRY! ENDS SOON! Evenings at 7:30 only Mat. Sat. & Sun. at 2:00 Adults $1.25 — Children 50c SOON: DON KNOTTS in "The Incredible Mr. Limpet" TONITE & SATURDAY "Wheeler Dealers" & "Love Is A Ball" Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40 2 Bonus Hits Saturday Only "FIREBRAND" — and "A FAREWELL TO ARMS" THIS PICTURE IS FOR ADULTS ONLY SUN. - MON. - TUES. JACK SHIRLEY LEMMON MacLAINE IN BILLY WILDER'S IRMA LA DOUCE THIS PICTURE IS FOR ADULTS ONLY TECHNICOLOR' PANAVISION' RELEASED THIS UNITED ARTIST Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, May 15, 1964 Jayhawkers Face Tough Competition Unusual pressure is upon the KU track and baseball teams this weekend. Coach Bill Easton's varsity trackmen face what Easton has termed the roughest league competition in years at the Big Eight Conference outdoor track meet at Stillwater, Okla., today and tomorrow. The Missouri Tigers are favored and will be depending heavily on their star middle distance man and miler, Robin Lingle. CHARLES MOORE, 6-3 Des Moines, Ia., outfielder who saw his first hit wiped out by the rare batting-out-of-turn ruling last Saturday, will draw his first starting assignment today as KU opens its final Big Eight road series at Colorado A featured event in the meet will be the pole vault which will feature a dual between Floyd Manning of KU, who became the holder of this year's collegiate vault mark two weeks ago in a dual meet with Southern Illinois at Carbondale, and Jim Farrell of Oklahoma. KU must rely upon the three-mile in one-two-three order. Bill Silverberg, Paul Acevedo and John Lawson are the KU runners in that event. in track, KU is expected to make things rough for Mizzou as are the Oklahoma Sooners. The Sooners will place their hopes in recently injured sprinter-hurdler Anthony Watson. rarrall, however, has cleared 15- $9 \frac{1}{2}$, and will be anything but a pushover in the pole vault. THE JAYHAWKER baseball team goes into this semifinal series with their 10-5 second-place standing at stake. Close up are Iowa State (7-4) which hosts last place Kansas State (3-9), and Oklahoma (8-7), which is at Oklahoma State (3-7). Manning cleared 16-1¾ in his record-breaking effort. The Jayhawkers came home Tuesday and Wednesday to close the season against Missouri's 13-0 league-leaders. The Jayhawks beat the defending champs 5-2 earlier this season, and have posted a 14-2 record overall. The KU tennis team hopes to break through Oklahoma State's domination for its first Big Eight tennis crown since 1948. Scheduled for a first-division finish, the KU golf team is expected to battle with Colorado for third place in the conference. NA Ethan Smith can show you how to get an accurate estimate on your move Developed by experts, the North American Van Lines method of estimating is "Quality Controlled" for accuracy. Our men have been trained to use this system, so if you are moving across town or cross-country, call for a FREE estimate. There is no obligation. Ethan Smith Moving & Storage 808 Penn. V1 3-0380 YOUR NORTH AMERICAN VAN LINES AGENT NORTH AMERICAN VAN LINES glamorous Wallace Sterling ... starts your married life right! Come in and see our selection of traditional or contemporary patterns—your choice will always be in perfect taste for the life ahead. Wallace ... only sterling with "Third Dimension Beauty," sculptured on front, back and sides! USE OUR BRIDAL REGISTRY Come in and choose your Wallace pattern. Then register it with us. As friends and relatives select wedding presents, we will be able to guide their choice according to your wishes. We will also be happy to help you choose complementary patterns in fine china and crystal. Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 MASS. glamorous Wallace Sterling . . . starts your married life right! Come in and see our selection of traditional or contemporary patterns—your choice will always be in perfect taste for the life ahead. Wallace . . . only sterling with "Third Dimension Beauty," sculptured on front, back and sides! USE OUR BRIDAL REGISTRY Come in and choose your Wallace pattern. Then register it with us. As friends and relatives select wedding presents, we will be able to guide their choice according to your wishes. We will also be happy to help you choose complementary patterns in fine china and crystal. Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" que Ray Christian CHEVY II 1068 MOBIL ECONOMY RUN CHEVY II 1068 We'd like to say some nice things about America's young adult drivers And we think we've got good reason! Last January, we selected twenty 18- and 19-year-old young men and women through the Junior Achievement program to drive our team of Chevolets in the Mobil Economy Run, April 3-9. It was the first time any company had relied entirely on drivers with limited experience in this exacting competition. We brought these young adults—most of them college students, some from the business world—to Arcadia, California, in late February. For six weeks, our expert teachers trained them in the skills of economy driving. We were going against the grain. It takes high proficiency to win the Mobil Economy Run. Competition is tough. Why did we rely Then, on April 3, they set off on the Run, 3,243 miles from Los Angeles to New York. on drivers with such limited experience? Chevrolet wanted to give the Chevy Teen Team a chance to prove in front of the nation that they and the 6.5 million licensed drivers in their age bracket are safe, same people behind the wheel. We felt the Run offered a splendid chance. The Corvair, Chevy IIs, Chevelles and Chevrolets driven by the Chevy Teen Team in the Mobil Economy Run did remarkably well compared with the class winners in overall miles-per-gallon figures. The final results are a tribute to the high degree of driving skill displayed by the Chevy Teen Team representing the youth of America. No wonder we're proud of America's young adult drivers. We couldn't have a better reason. CHEVROLET The Cars Everyone Can Drive Economically Don Culp Named Friday, May 15, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 9 Law President Elected Don Culp, Kansas City, Mo., second year law student, has been elected president of the Law School. Culp also will serve as president of the Student Bar Association, which governs the social activity of the school. The vice-president, treasurer, secretary and a representative from each class to the SBA will be elected next fall. Culp named three students to represent KU at the national meeting of the American Law Student Association Aug. 8-13 in New York. They are Steve Chambers, Kansas City, Mo., first year law student; George Blackwood, Topeka second year law student, and Arthur Piculell, Lawrence second year law student. Prompt Electronic Service TV Color TV Antennae on Hi-fi Stereos Changers Radios Transistors Car Radios - We Service All Makes - RCA GE Motorola Zenith Silvertone Airline Philco Magnavox Coronado Bird TV-Radio Service PHONE VI 3-8855 908 Mass. St. — Lawrence, Kans. —— Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Keepsake Keepsake Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS TREASURED ABOVE ALL OTHER GIFTS RINGY AURORA CARNEY MARQUELIEN Karen Neils MARQUISE Nothing expresses your sentiments as beautifully as Keepsake's perfect center diamond . a rare gem whose brilliance is furthered enhanced by superb fashion styling. Choose from our fine selection of modern and traditional styles. KREUZEN Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 MASS. PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS 803 Mass. VI 3-2241 PICK OUT YOUR SUIT WHILE OUR GREAT SELECTION LASTS. THIS WEEKEND WILL BE A WONDERFUL TIME! Cole of California CURACAO... paisley on the rampage in a fluid blouson dégagé. Soft “Ban-Lon” jersev* - over spare paisley on the rampage in a fluid blouson dégagé. Soft "Ban-Lon" jersey* eased over spare little trunks of Helanca nylon and spandex knit. Purple, Blue. 916 26. 00 *nylon Cole of California --- FRENCH PASS... soft and silky caress of Caprolan nylon in a dégagé blouson dropped over sparest mio trunks. Royal paisley print burning with color in gem-smash hues of Pink Ruby or Summer Jade. 8-16 24.00 --- We feature the largest and finest swimwear selection in this area Cole of California is known as the best in and out of the water! terrii's LAWRENCE, KANSAS 803 MASS. VI 3-2241 'S KANSAS Page 10 University Daily Kansan Friday, May 15, 1964 Rocky's Machine No Help Against Barry By Harry Ferguson WASHINGTON—(UPI) —There is an old saying that in war the Lord is on the side of the biggest battalions, but it is doubtful whether Nelson Rockefeller would agree. He has a staff that is organized like Supreme Allied Headquarters in World War II and there is hardly a patch of soil anywhere in the country that some Rockefeller partisan has not trod in search of votes and delegates. Money and men help presidential aspirants, but they don't guarantee victory. Sen. Margaret Chase Smith did fine in the Illinois primary on a total expenditure of $85. Rockefeller headquarters here estimates the governor spent $90,000 in the New Hampshire primary alone. And lost. John A. Wells, campaign director in the Rockefeller headquarters in New York, is a generalisimo commanding a far-flung army. He has a communications man, a press man, a TV-radio man, a finance man, a contact man and a man in charge of state organizations. He has Janet Tortellotte heading women's groups and Jackie Robinson heading special committees. It is a big machine, well oiled with dollars, but the public opinion polls consistently indicate that the Rockefeller Rolls-Royce is going to have to pick up speed if it is going to wind up in San Francisco a winner. When a person is asked to explain Rockefeller's problem, the glib answer is that his divorce and remarriage is too heavy a load for him to carry. UNDOURTEDLY HIS private life is a factor, but each passing day indicates there is another big boulder blocking his path to the nomination—Barry Goldwater. The senator has been building up his own organization, and almost every day brings a news release from his Washington headquarters announcing the appointment of another man or woman. But Goldwater can build 24 hours a day and still not match the Rockefeller organization in size and financial resources. Whether Goldwater was aware Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Photography Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 of it or not, he began running for president in 1954. That was the year he was elected for the first of two terms he has served as chairman of the Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee. It is a job that calls for travel to all parts of the country, and it provided a political education for the senator. The odd fact about Goldwater is that in the public opinion polls his popularity seems to be on a slow but gradual decline. THAT IS A PROBLEM he can postpone worrying about His target for today is convention delegates pledged to stay with him for at least the first ballot. He needs 655 of them and some political prognosticators believe he already has 524, although there is a little bit of counting chickens before they are hatched in those estimates. What is running heavily in Goldwater's favor is the unwillingness or inability of his opponents to form any sort of coalition that can deny him the nomination on the first ballot. Once the first round of balloting is over, many delegates will feel that they have discharged their Presidential Image To Be Discussed Two political science professors, John Grumm and Earl Nehring, will discuss "The Presidential Image and the Candidates" at 4:30 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. This will be the last of the Current Events Forum series this year. 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 ★ 1 Bedroom ★ 2 Bedrooms ★ Swimming Pool FOR INFORMATION CONTACT Crescent Heights Apts. Mgr. Travel Agency AIR LINES FIRST NATIONAL BANK Domestic & Foreign Steamship Lines Tours & Cruises Everywhere ing and worrying in the Goldwater, Rockefeller and Nixon camps. VI 3-0152 746 Mass. 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 Who knows but what all this will be settled in some San Francisco hotel suite that will earn immortality already won by Room 404 in Chicago's Blackstone Hotel? OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 615 W. 47th St. Pkwy. WI 50259 616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350 obligations to their man and will start looking over the fence in search of greener pastures. ning for president and is devoting his time to working for the Democratic administration in Saigon? BUT THE PROBLEM of Rockefeller and Richard M. Nixon is how do you go about forming a stop-Goldwater coalition with a man who has not announced he is run- Henry Cabot Lodge may not win the nomination, but the day he breaks silence about whether he is coming home to run there is going to be some frantic scurry- 7,000 Pipes and every smoking accessory George's Pipe Shop 727 Mass. VI 3-7164 "SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS" 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. Brake Adj. . . . 98c Grease Jobs . . $1.00 PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals JIM'S CAFE STUDENTS 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Balfour - 'Vett head- quarters Fraternity Jewelry KERBY'S DEPENDABLE STATION COMPLETE SERVICE FOR CHEVYS & OLDS - Small enough to give personal attention Specialists in all makes & models including sports cars "We'll pick up your car and deliver it FREE on any service call." Mobilgas - Big enough to have all the equipment. VI 3-7700 Wheel Bal. - Oil - Wash- Lube VI 3-9608 9th & Ky. SHIP WINTER 738 N.H. A complete line, including, • Lavaliers • Guards • Pins • Mugs • Rings • Crests FRATERNITY JEWELRY CHEVROLET Ray Christian JEWELERS ITS OK TO OWE BAY 809 Mass. FOR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS SEE MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES MALLS SHOPPING CENTER VI 3-1211 DINING PLEASURE AT ITS BEST! HAL'S STEAK HOUSE featuring Open-hearth charcoal broiled Steaks Chicken — Shrimp — Sandwiches Ribs OK Open:4-Midnight Highway 59 South VI2-9445 Across from Hillcrest Golf Course AT HONN'S LAUNDRY IT'S Clean- the cleanest laundry in town inspect our facilities,you'll agree Clean your whole wash the Honn way Wash 20c Dry 10c Clean your best suits and coats in our coin-op dry clean machine "Laundry Time is Honn Time" 19th & La. FREE VACATION SERVICE - with this ad! Bring in this coupon and get our Registered Mechanic 10.POINT SAFETY CHECK — We will check (1) Cooling System (2) Fan Belts (3) Lights & Signal System (4) Wheel Bearings (5) Brakes (6) Wipers (7) Exhaust system (8) Steering (9) Fuel System and (10) Ignition System. Be Careful • Be Sure • Be safe • Before Returning Home This Summer. ... Call on us TODAY. VI 3-6697 SANDERS MOTOR CO. Lincoln-Mercury Studebaker Originality IN FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION specialty for you by Alexander's 826 IDWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PRICE VT 3-1000 -Classified Ads FOR SALE 3 1859 blue VW sedan. Whitewall tires, many accessories. Well cared for and clean. By owner. Call VI 2-3103, 5 to 7 p.m. 1959 Chevy convertible. Stick, posttraction, new fires, new top. Excellent condition. Need money, must sell. Call VI 3- 9562. 5-21 1860, blue Falcon. Excellent condition. 33,500 miles. 4-door sedan, automatic. Original owner. $750. Call Dr. Batra, VI 3-6331. evenings. 5-21 22 caliber lever action saddle model rifle. $45. CVI 1-24216. 5-15 Curtains to stouffer Place windows. Call VI 2-2783. 5-15 Two Blue Streak tires, 800/820x15" on electric vehicles. Stock Car Specials, less than 500 miles gone, treads compounded for paved roads. Call Viola 2-377 exchanges, if weeks. 1956 AUSTIN HEALY, 2 new overhaul, good bike wheels, wheel tires, 8076, VT2-2038, 5-21 Very nice 3 bedroom home $500 down. If you will buy will call V11 4-29 after 4:30 p.m. 5-19 Must sell 160 Volvo before May 31. Call Sandy, VI 2-4112 after 5 p.m. 5-21 Little used Harmony guitar. Call VI 3-6060. Ask for Sherry. 5-18 1953 Bukie, $50. Call Don Senti, VI 3-18 6886 anikle. 1111 W. 11th. I 5-18 1958 Morris Minor. New motor, transmission, tires. $20. Underwood typewriter. $20. About 3,000 books. 1539 Tenn., VI. 3-7787. 5-18 21" console TV. RCA, real good shape. Call VI 2-4197 after 6 p.m. 1964 Volkswagen. New, accessories. Call I 2-2594 after 7:30 p.m. 5-15 1959 Volvo. Rebuilt engine, new tires and battery. Call.蒸 V3-4605. 5-21 One dinette set, 2 years old, excellent condition. Six chairs with matching table, rug. Two wooden Danish Modern chairs, 2 years old, need reupholstering. $10 each. See at 635 W. Lakewood. Thursday bedtime; noon; Monday, Wednesday, Friday, between 2 and 5 p.m. Wedding dress, size 7-8. 1817 La. Upstairs, west apartment. 4 to 6 p.m. 1958 black and white foid convertible. Power steering and brakes, good condition, original owner. Call VI 3-5003, 1618 Rose Lane. New shipment of Pink typing paper, 500 ream- $8.5 Lawrence Outdoor, 1005 M * SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS, Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale at great savings after 6 p.m. work week surday and Sunday. 8:37 Connecticut St. tf Typewriter, new and used portables, Computer typesetting, Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter, adder, rentals and servi- ence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St. Itf 3-3844 For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3- 9040 after 5 p.m. tf Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes in the military; free delivery. Call VI 31701 Free delivery $4.50 Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, timemaphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery tt FOR RENT Furnished apartment for rent. Come to 1400 La. Also, rooms for girls, adjoining campus. 5-21 Sleeping and study rooms for male students and centrally located. La. VI 3-4890 5-19 Will have some rental property available Next to south KU. Inquire... 3-2923 5-21 To male senior, graduate student, or faculty member. Single room with pri. chair. Air-conditioned. Call Vi 3-1425 mornings or evenings. 1026 Colonial Ct. 5-18 Summer sublet; 4 room apartment. 2 bedrooms, kitchen, living room, private bathroom. First floor, private entrance. Utilities paid except electricity. $55. Call VI 2-9271. Bedroom with shower and half-bath. Kitchen privileges if desired. See at 5f Laundry. BURGERT'S Service for Shoes Since 1910 Shoe Service 1113 Mass. St. VI 3-0691 YELLOW CAB CO. VI 3-6333 24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled Room for rent. Mahogany panellined room with private entrance and private full bedroom. 627 Term. Rent $35 per month. Off street parking. Call VI 3-5046. 5-19 Rooms for men. Extremely modern, remodeled bath, coffee and refrigerator furnished in summer, all furnished, furniture, near KU and Union. 15-19 Mississippi, V 2-0289. 15-19 To KU men. Two room modern furnished apartment. Outside entrance. Bills rooms. See rooms. No drinking smoking. See house south of campus at 1616 Indiana. 5-18 Efficiency apartment, 2 large rooms. Private entrance and bath. $30 per month. Bills paid. Also, large newly redone room. $54 per month. 2 blocks from campus. New garage. $5 per month Available Jun. 1 Call VI 3-7830 or VI 3-0298. Comfortable, sunny. 4 room apartment room. Bedroom, study room. Rooney closets, air-conditioning, private bath. Available June 4th. Call VI 3-3536 or VI 3-518 3-5 Private furnished apartments for KU men with single beds, showers, all utilities paid. For 1, 2, or 3 men. Available summer and fall furnished houses. All campus. Utility rates. All campus. Summer rates. Inquire at 1005 Miss., VI 3-4349. 5-18 New garage apartment for 2 men or couple. Available immediately. Also a new nice studio apartments for men. An old campus. For appointment call V3-8534. Now renting new Ridge House Cabana Units. Swimming pool, carpet, air-conditioned, 1 bedroom furnished or unconditioned. Close to shopping and Uni-Illinois campus. Contact Mr. Osborne now for this fall. VI 3-1146. 2403 Cedarwood. tf Moving to Kansas City? Then dig these brand new beautiful apartments in the Prairie Village-Overland Park area. 1 and 2 bedrooms, wall-to-wall carpet, drapes, central air-conditioning, Hotpoint kitchens, kitchenettes, and more. One mile west of Antioch Rd., on 95th Street. The Alex Bascom Co., TU 8-3128 or TU 8-5252. Luxurious duplex. Central air-conditioning, close to shopping and University. Wall-to-wall carpet, all electric kitchen, swimming pool. Absolutely the finest 2 bedroom units. Contact Mr. Osborne now. VI 3-1116, 4403 Cedarwood. ff For two men students. Two basement rooms with kitchen and shower. Inquire at 1520 W. 22nd Terrace, V. 3-8673. 5-18 Emery Apartments available June 1. Emery will hold one bedroom. To contact Milkland Legal, Apt. 204, Emery or call VI 3-8190. 5-19 Married, grad students, faculty. Efficiency apartment from $63 and small house from $70. Available in June. Call now. Santee Apartments, 1123 Ind., VI 3-216. Bachelor Studio Apartment for graduate or older undergraduate men. 115 blocks from Union. Newly remodeled, nicely furnished studio. Ideal study conditions. A few still available at low summer rates. Singles and doubles. For appointment call VI 3-8534. Single or double room. Furnished. cook- paid. Call 2-8451 or see at 1244 La. 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. NEW YORK CLEANERS REPAIRS — LEATHER REFINISHING ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING Delivery Service 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Delivery Service RISK'S large, homey, attractively furnished, 4 room apartment. For summer months at summer rates. Kitchen built-ins and cupboards. Bathroom. Electricity. Also available June Ist. Large 3 room apt. Call VI 3-7677. Will rent for summer months. FREE! qt. of oil with oil change & filter BOB'S CONOCO Lube - Wheel Bal. - Brakes 19th & Mass. VI 3-9802 Shirt Finishing Laundry Wash & Fluff Dry TYPING 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 The only thing better than a home cooked meal is Dinner At experience secretary would like typing experience secretary. Reasonable rates. Call Yi 1-5139. Crescent Heights two bedroom apart- ent. Phone VI 2-3711. For expert typing, dissertation, thesis, work in English, 900. Professional work Electric typewriter. g21 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention on all reports, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate typing at reasonable rates. Call Donna Stewart, VI 3-6621. tfi Experienced secretary would like typing. 2568 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122 H-521 2569 Term papers accurately and neatly typed on good grade bond paper. Minor corrections, carbon copy, extra first page. Call VI 3-0875. 5-21 DUCKS A Specialty Steaks & Seafoods A Specialty Fast, accurate work done on electric drives. Call Bett Vincent, VI 3-5504. experienced secretary would like typing for home. Reasonable rates. V If 1188 Serving crisp tossed salads, choice of potatoes, zesty Steaks & Seafoods Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason- sentations and theses, phone VI 3-7652 Mrs. Frank Gibson. Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (plica type). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi. VI 3-0558. butter. Sandwiches, too Your favorite beverage Vienna breads & country fresh butter, Sandwiches, too! Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tt choice of potatoes, zesty Vienna breads fz country fresh typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon Carriage II 3-6080 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley. 408 West 13th ff 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. Secretary will do typing in home. Fast Familiar with Fiddle family! 11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass. Secretary will do typing in home. Fast legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577. AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS DALE'S BODY SHOP All makes & models frame - body - fender - glass VI 3-4732 704 Vermont Artists - Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics George's Hobby Shop 1105 Mass. VI 3-5087 Open 24 hours except Saturday evening JOE'S BAKERY 616 W. 9th 25c delivery VI 3-4720 "the best professional service" 24 hr. answering service Friday, May 15, 1964 Milliken's SOS - mimeograph & photo-copying 1021½ Mass, M. 3-5920, 7 a.m., 11 p.m. - general typing service $ $ $ $ $ $ - automatic typing CAR OWNERS SAVE UP TO 40% on shocks, mufflers, tall pines and installation. - All makes and models including sports cars - Trained mechanics for quality service - Your satisfaction GUARANTEED University Daily Kansan Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648. Auto Service Center 729 N.H. VI 2-1708 L&M CAFE now under new management We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Each week, we host delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches Your second cup of coffee always free. BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, books, and reports; Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8868, ttl MILLIKENS SOS—always nstr quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines. also do 7 tape transcriptions. Office room 7, m. 10 p. 122. i.mm-3124. Phone VI 3-5920 $ $ $ $ $ Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. open nights. American Colm Mart. 1025 Mass. Dressmaking-alterations, *formals* and gowns. Ola Smith, 939% MIL VI 3-5283 Montgomery Wards Bent 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 The Catacombs nite club and Pizza Dinner for 2-3 students to go to through college. For information call VI 3-9703 Friday or Saturday, K.C. Mo., Sunday, through Thursday. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES MISCELLANEOUS WANTED Offer - A home and salary for student interested in being in central K.C. area near Art Gallery, Cooking and caring for school age children. June 15 to Aug. 15. Write: Mr. Nathan Stark, 4500 Rockhill Terrace, Kansas City, City. 6401-59-14 Summer students. Need reliable sitter 3 evening a week, 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. Steady For information call VI 2-0306. 5-21 Responsible driver to take car to Wisconsin. Transportation free and date is flexible. Call Prof. Appel at VI 2-4185, evenings. 5-18 How do you save money by spending a lot of it at the Lawrence Book Nook? 1021 Mass. Tops — Glass & Zippers — Tops — Glass & Zippers — Rear Glasses — Headlines — Door Panels — Page 11 Tailor Made Seat Covers at Competitive Prices with sewed double lock stitch. Lock/Loaf Seat Covers 545 Minn. VI 3-4242 GB Recording Service and Party Music tapes: recorded or duplicated records: cut or pressed 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 THE NAME FOR SERVICE ★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT ★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK ★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED ★ MUFFLER SERVICE ART'S TEXACO ★ TUNE-UPS 9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897 ★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M. Ride wanted to 10 KU Medical Center Monday evening, approx. 8:30 a.m. Please have 5 p.m. call VI-23-1234. VOLKSWAGEN'S WANTED. Cash for your VW, Conzelman Motors, VW Sales, Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa, Hiway 95 opportunity for male keyboard musician interested in sales demonstrations. Will giving age, experience, type of matrue-So. Seniors, cash your robate slips before you leave, before you leave KU: 9-2-0180 5-19 HELP WANTED LOST College men needed for next fall jobs Boston'sibon's in, 2500 W. 6th VI 3-7446 5-29 Pleasant responsible young lady to do light house work, plan and prepare three meals a day, and care for semi-invalid lady and family for entire summer in KA. Write Mrs. Harold E. Mauk, 6935 Glenwood, Shawnee Mission, Miss. 5-18 One navy blue "H.I.S." jacket, Brand new. Taken by accident from chair in Strong basement. Last Friday around 11:30 a.m. Call VI 2-3014. 5-21 White gold woman's watch. "Toni" engraved on back. Lost on west side of campus. Reward. Call VI 3-9123, Room 302. 5-19 Room and board in very nice home near campus. For right person interested in working with well-mannered children. (Ages 9, 6, 4) CALL Mrs. Miliken, VI-15947. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers graduation permanents, sets, VI 3-5569 Cut n Curl BEAUTY SALON 843 N.H. Hallmark Cards When you care enough to send the w ● Parker Pens ● Stationery ● Printing 4 E. 7th VI 3-2261 BULLOCK'S Just West of Post Office ★ Engine Tune Up One Stop Service Generator & Starter Repair Broke Repair ★ Lubrication & Oil Change WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE JACK & GUNN'S SKELLY SERVICE 300 W. 6th SKELLY VI 3-9271 STUDENTS! SAVE WITH THIS AD!! "Front End Special" - Front end aligned * Front wheels balanced, bearings repacked * Steering checked ONLY $6.88 $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 Page 12 University Daily Kansas Friday, May 15, 1964 Decade Since Ruling- (Continued from page 1) Negro leaders argue that the negro child's continuing lag behind white pupils, and resultant inability to compete for jobs, is due largely to the segregated pattern of education. In Atlanta, which will enter its fifth year of desegregation in the fall, school authorities acknowledge that negro children who will graduate this spring from segregated elementary schools to integrated high schools will be from one to three years behind their white classmates. THE FEDERAL COURTS and local authorities currently are being hit from all sides with the demand from racial groups that all restrictions be taken off interracial public school attendance immediately. The attack hits at the heart of a long-standing concept that local school boards should have the right to assign punis as they see fit. The racial groups make these complaints about the school situation: - Segregated classes still prevail through most of the deep south. - A number of states have enmeshed court orders in a web of subfurtery or tokenism, making school integration a window dressing that involves only a few negroes in white schools. - Court-approved stairstep plans for desegregation by which school boards have been allowed to ease into the transition one grade per year have evaded the Supreme Court's order that desegregation must be done with "deliberate speed." - Pupil assignment methods have served to perpetuate negro ghettos, north and south, with predominantly negro schools still located in predominantly negro neighborhoods. In recent months, the school integration battle has spread from southern classrooms to school yards in states that were not even involved in the 1954 Supreme Court decision. The word "de facto segregation" has become a part of the language of the social revolution. Cities like Cleveland and New York have had bitter racial battles over efforts by negroes to eliminate the neighborhood school practices. BUSING SCHOOL CHILDREN from one part of towns to others has embittered non-southern whites, while in Dixie, school boards are under increasing attack for alleged foot-dragging on integration. "If we could put as much emphasis on education as we have to put on integration, we would be much further along," said a school administrator in Atlanta. The transition that has come about since May 17, 1954, date of the public school decision, can be divided into stages. IN THE SPRING of 1955 the court handed down its directive of "deliberate speed." It served as a sort of speedometer for future decisions. In the spring of 1964, the court argued and prepared a decision of how fast deliberate speed should be. In the years between, all branches of the federal court almost became the administrators of school admission policies. Decisions steadily broadened acceptable desegregation rules and increased the Round Corner Drug Store 801 Mass. VI 3-0200 OPEN TILL 9:30 EVERY NIGHT tow of negro pupils into formerly all-white schools. Just a touch of your finger and you are exquisitely refreshed in a cloud of your favorite Dana fragrance. refreshing! Dana SPRAY COLOGNES in seven exquisite fragrances... TABU Ambush 20 CARATS PLATINE EMIR VOODOO LAVENDER three full ounces 3 plus tax The Virginia plan of "massive resistance" to integration fell, but a "freedom of choice" law took its place and a private school plan has prospered in Prince Edward County until this day. It has served as a go-ahead signal for other southern areas to use similar programs, but that whole concept is now under legal attack again Some states, like South Carolina and Georgia, made the first steps toward desegregated schools with surprising ease. Arkansas, which had started the transition even before the supreme court acted, had some of the worst trouble at Central High School in Little Rock. International Club To Elect Officers Spring elections for the International Club will be at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. MAYFLOWER Mayflower moves it better The free customer care Candidates for president are Javed Chak, Rawalpindi, Pakistan, senior, and Ali Hassan, Hyderabad, India, sophomore; for vice-president: George Tannous, Beshmezeen El Koura, Lebanon, junior; for treasurer: Luis Wacheng, San Jose, Costa Rica, freshman, and for secretary: Janet Evans, Wichita junior. MAYFLOWER Mayflower moves it better Goods in this van are PROTECTED by the Best-Trained moving men in town! AT LAWRENCE MAYFLOWER 609 MASS. Read and Use Kansan Classifieds END-OF-SEMESTER SPECIALS SUMMER SPORTCOATS | | Reg. | Now | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Cotton Seersucker by H.I.S. | 18.95 | 15.95 | | Genuine India Madras by H.I.S. | 19.95 | 16.95 | | Oxford Weave (Lt. Blue & Gold) | 25.00 | 19.95 | | Oxford Weave (Blazer Stripes) | 25.00 | 19.95 | One Group SUMMER SUITS Tan Poplin 65% Dacron 35% Cotton Reg. Now 32.50 26.95 45.00 35.95 One Group SHORT-SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS (Stripes & Tabs) Reg. 5.00 to 6.95 Now $1.00 OFF SPRING JACKETS (mostly un-lined) | | Reg. | Now | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Nylon Ski Parkas | 7.98 | 4.95 | | Seersucker, Parkas | 8.95 | 5.95 | | Dacron-Cotton by Zero King | 13.95 | 9.95 | | Laminated Knit (lined) | 17.95 | 11.95 | | Dacron-Cotton by Zero King | 19.95 | 14.95 | RENTAL WHITE DINNER JACKETS (Used — Not all sizes available) Reg. 32.50 Now 14.95 THE Town Shop DOWNTOWN THE Town Shop DOWNTOWN THE University Shop ON THE HILL KU Track Team Takes Big Eight A surprising Jayhawk track team swept by the field in the Big Eight Conference outdoor track meet at Stillwater Saturday to give Coach Bill Easton his 11th league title in 13 years here. The Missouri Tigers, favored by many to grab the crown, finished third in the meet as the Nebraska Cornhuskers took second. KU's winning total was 126 points. Nebraska had 105 and the Tigers grabsb 86. THE JAYHAWKS WON only two firsts in the meet, but came through as a balanced team. Tom Purma won the javelin throw with a toss of 224-1, while Tonnie Coane came through in the half-mile with a clocking of 1:51.1. Statistics on page 10 KU's depth showed up in five events—the half mile, the three-mile, discus, triple jump and high jump. THE JAYHAWKS came up with 12 points in the half, with Coane's winning effort coupled with Lowell Paul's fifth place finish. KU then scored 14 points in the triple jump and 18 in both the javelin and the three-mile. The team failed to win the three-mile, but made up for the missing glory by taking second, third and fourth in that event. John Lawson, Bill Silverberg and Paul Acevedo chased Mizzou's sensational Robin Lingle over the distance. Easton termed the team's victory a balanced one and commended the Jayhawks both in running and field events. "It was a team victory all right," Paston said. "It came out pretty close to the way we had it doped out. We're real proud of all our individual winners, but it was the overall team which won the meet. The win came over very tough competition, too. The conditions were excellent." EASTON SAID HE thought the Nebraska team to be surprising. "We were surprised," he said "about how strong Nebraska showed up. We were especially surprised since Missouri handled them so easily last week. "Missouri showed up well. They won six first places. You don't win the meet on firsts, though, its everybody—every member of the squad—doing his best and that's what happened. "We got 63 points in the running events and 63 points in the field events. That's how evenly it broke down," Easton said. EASTON POINTED out that the overall theme of his team is balance and depth. "That's always been our theme—one of group balance—that's what pays off," he said. Floyd Manning of KU failed to set an expected record in the pole vault. Manning, this year's top collegiate vaulter with a 16-1-3/4 effort, with Preston Holsinger of Oklahoma and Jim Farrell of Oklahoma. Manning was given second in the event on the grounds of fewer misses. He shared the second position with Farrell. Johnson Seeks More Funds For War in South Viet Nam WASHINGTON —(UPI)— President Johnson asked Congress today for an additional $125 million in economic and military aid to advance the anti-communist war in Viet Nam; "The Viet Cong guerrillas, under orders from their communist masters in the North, have intensified terrorist actions against the peaceful people of South Viet Nam." Johnson said in a special message to Congress. "This increased terrorism requires increased response," he said. Johnson said this was one of "two major changes" which prompted his request to add the $125 million for Viet Nam to the $3.4 billion foreign aid program he already had submitted to Congress for the 1965 fiscal year, starting July 1. THE OTHER CHANGE, he said, was that "a new government under Prime Minister Khanh has come to power, bringing new energy and leadership and new hope for effective action." Dailu hansan 61st Year, No. 142 Lawrence, Kansas Monday, May 18, 1964 Enthusiasm for the group was at its peak in Australia, he said, where the audiences were particularly responsive to the jazz part of the choir's program, performed by a jazz quintet composed of choir members. QUITE A FEW of the Indonesians were interested in obtaining autographs and addresses of chair members, Bloomquist said. Many 'penal' relationships were established, and several of the chair members had mail waiting for them when they returned. But wherever they went, the choir had a "fantastic reception," Bloomquist said. The people in all the countries were extremely receptive to western music, and extremely curious about college and amateur musicians. Brass Choir Comes Home From Three Month Tour "Glad to be home," was the sentiment expressed by the members of the KU Brass Choir, who finished their 97-day, 36,000 mile tour of the Far East yesterday. He referred to Indonesia as "probably the most friendly country of any we visited." The tour, which began Feb. 12, took the choir and its director, Kenneth Bloomquist, through six countries where they played a total of 85 concerts. Towards the end of the tour, the choir members began to feel a little tired, Bloomquist said, "until we got to the cool climate of Australia, where the food, sanitation and length of concerts were more familiar to us." "THERE WAS no difficulty in their comprehending our music. They seemed to be highly exposed "They were tremendously interested in America and Americans, and they seemed to know a lot about us." THE LENGTH of concerts in some countries, especially Indonesia, Bloomquist pointed out, would be as much as three or four hours. to western music. But the concept of American music to foreign audiences is extremely limited and narrow, confined to what they hear on the radio, usually our more commercial music," he said. The choir encountered no hostility, Bloomquist added, not even in Indonesia, where anti-American sentiments are reported to be rather strong. "This was one of the most interesting and surprising elements of the tour; the complete disassociation between culture and politics. We played concerts in colleges and areas that were reputed to have strong communist parties, but never once did we have an incident of any kind," he said. IN LAOS, the choir played a concert at a teachers training school inside communist territory without any incident. Any possible hostility was avoided when the choir cancelled their scheduled appearances in Viet Nam in the middle of March. The cancellation was prompted by a reported threat to kill two Americans a day. Other than minor illnesses, such as colds, only two members of the choir were injured during the tour. Charles Snodgrass, Clay Center senior, was unable to play his trumpet for a few days as a result of accidentally being struck in the mouth with an elephant pick when he dismounted an elephant. David Boyd, Leavenworth sophomore, played his drums for two days in pain, because of badly sunburned feet, while the group performed in Ceylon. BLOOMQUIST emphasized the great amount of interaction that took place between choir members and local musicians. The interaction was quite closely knit, and even more closely knit between jazz sympathizers, particularly in Malaysia. ONE OF THE MOST popular facets of the choir's concerts were the arrangements of local and native folk songs in western harmony, Bloomquist said. Mrs. Bloomquist, who was vocal soloist and chaperon, sang folk songs in six different languages during the tour. While in Laos, the choir was reported to have played before the largest audience ever assembled in the city of Vientiane. Present in the audience was the country's leader, Souvanna Phouna. Tri-Service Review Picketed by SPU Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe reviewed the KU corps of ROTC cadets Friday afternoon, undaunted by the presence of ten Student Peace Union picketers. While approving of the picketers' exercising their right of free expression, the chancellor thanked the cadets for accepting the responsibility for preserving freedoms. "In a free society such as ours," Dr. Wescoue said, "some believe in accepting responsibility for the freedom of others. It is fitting and prop- YD Convention Elects KU Treasurer By Lee Stone The KU Young Democrats' candidate for treasurer of the state-wide collegiate organization was elected at a convention in Topeka Saturday, but their choice for chairman was defeated. The new treasurer is Brad Sumner, Leawood junior. John Taylor, Kansas State junior, was elected chairman. Other new officers are Mithra Fontana, Wichita University, first vice-chairman; Bill Klotz, Ft. Hays, second vice-chairman; Vinnie Johnsmeyer, Kansas State, secretary. Officially, the winning candidate, John Taylor, was elected unanimously. Actually, a previous deal between KU and Kansas State and one vote made the difference. GEORGE GRONEMAN, Kansas City sophomore, was appointed research chairman of the parent organization, the Young Democrats, which convened simultaneously with the Collegiate Young Democrats. The defeat of KU's choice for chairman, Dave Berkowitz, Wichita University junior, centered on the convention's decision not to seat a delegation from Sacred Heart College, Wichita. A third candidate for the office, Richard Williamson, Washburn University freshman, was also defeated. MIKE ROGERS, Hutchinson junior and KU-YD president, explained the deal. The three collegiate factions each led by a different school came to the convention with near-equal voting strength. Each faction had a candidate for chairman. The leading schools were KU, Washburn, and Kansas State. THAT IS where the Sacred Heart College hassel started. The Kansas State group had 31 votes and the KU group had 30 or 33 votes depending on whether or not Sacred Heart was seated. Obviously the convention was headed for deadlock since no faction would command a majority. In order to avoid a deadlock, the club leaders of the Kansas State and KU delegations agreed that which ever faction brought the least votes to the convention would support the other's candidate, Rogers said. Max Logan, KU graduate student, delegation chairman, and member of the credentials committee, the committee which decides if a club can be seated, told the story. "They had a perfect case," Logan said. The Sacred Heart delegation had been approved twice by the credentials committee, the night before. Also, Sacred Heart had been judged "active" in the convention the year before, Logan said. "Quite frankly, the deciding factor was the seating of the Sacred Heart delegation," Logan said. er that some are willing to give their service, indeed their lives, to defend democracy.' BUT. THE CRITICAL point was that Sacred Heart had not been assigned an advisor by the school administration. The school did not want to recognize a Democratic club when no Republican club had been formed at the school. Logan said. Therefore, Sacred Heart took its request for admission to the convention floor. Logan said. However, it was reported that a Republican club had, indeed, been formed at Sacred Heart, although recently, "This indicated they hadn't really tried to get recognition," Logan said. The floor was filled with nearly a hundred delegates. Fifteen or more delegation chairmen nodded and made signs to each other. A FRAIL, pleasant looking girl, whose face was framed with dark hair, sat near the front. She was Beverly Kriedler, chairman of the Sacred Heart delegation. "Our school does not want political organizations on the campus," Miss Kriedler said. "No dues can be paid to any club," she said. Asked if the Young Democrate's constitution required recognition from the schools where clubs were organized, Miss Kriedler said, "No, it's not actually in the constitution, but it's a long-standing practice." The convention voted, however, in opposition to KU and the other supporters of Sacred Heart. The support KU needed to elect Berkowitz was now lost. With this question settled, John Taylor was the new chairman, following John Smith, Fort Hays senior, in the office. In other business, the parent club, the Young Democrats, adopted resolutions supporting the following measures. - Free text books for Kansas schools. - Higher salaries for teachers and more classroom space. THE REVIEW took place on the intramural fields across from Allen Field House as a large number of spectators looked on. The picketers stood quietly in a line at the north end of the area, to the west and slightly behind the reviewing stand. - A commendation to the Parent Teacher's Association and the State Teachers Association for their support of federal aid to public schools. - To adjust school district boundaries so that de facto segregation of races does not occur. - A recommendation to Democratic senators to pass the civil rights bill without crippling amendments. - The repeal of the Kansas right to work legislation by popular vote. - Home rule for Washington, D.C. - A federal act providing for medical care for the aged. - The sale of liquor by the drink to establish a basis for the enforcement of law relating to liquor, and to provide a source of revenue for schools. "I need a tranquilizer." Beth Hogan, publicity chairman for the convention said. She had learned that the news wire services had sent the convention's resolution "commending" the PTA and KTA "condemnning" them to Kansas newspapers. Charles Hook, Topeca freshman and SPU vice-president, who earlier had referred to the review as a "public demonstration of the military machine on campus," said his group was pointing out that there are ways to obtain peace other than military force. The SPU members held signs saying "War Is the All-Time Loser," "Silence Is Assent" and "The Only Defense Is Peace." Counter-picketing the SPU was Phillip Kelso, Newton junior, who carried a sign reading, "Ban the Ban, Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death." Kelso, who stood behind the other picketers most of the day, said he was picketing because "one side of the picture is not enough." DURING THE 45-minute review, nine cadets were honored for their achievements. They were Kenneth McCoin, Akron, Ohio; senior; Douglas Pickersgill, Kansas City, Mo; senior; Eldon Franklin, Overland Park senior; Edward McBride, Lawrence sophomore; David Richwine, Overland Park junior; Tyson Travis, Lawrence freshman; Jerry Pullins, Council Grove senior; Lewis Fulton, Fort Scott junior, and Palmer Smith, Medicine Lodge senior. The review Friday was much in contrast to a similar one May 13 at Syracuse University in New York. At that time, Chancellor William Tolley bounded off the reviewing stand and struck a picketer with his umbrella after the demonstrators ignored warnings to stay off the grass. Weather Fair skies and warm temperatures will continue tonight and tomorrow, with a chance for some scattered thunderstorms tonight. The low tonight will be in the middle 60's. High tomorrow will be around 90. Winds tomorrow will be southerly from 15-25 miles per hour, the weather bureau said. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, May 18, 1964 Answering Charges Civil Rights Bill By Robert S. Boyd The civil rights bill now grinding through Congress has given rise to widespread fears and misunderstandings. Congressional mail shows that many whites-Northern as well as Southern-believe the bill will take away some of their rights for the benefit of Negroes. An intensive publicity campaign by anti-civil rights forces, partly aimed at earlier, more drastic versions of the bill now in the Senate, has added to these fears. The questions that follow are among the most common in the minds of many citizens. Each question is based on a charge made in a newspaper ad, brochure or statement put out by opponents of the bill, notably the co-ordinating committee for fundamental American freedoms and its legal expert, Mississippi lawyer John Satterfield, a former president of the American Bar Association. The committee gets most of its money from Mississippi. The replies represent the position of the Department of Justice. The explanatory material that follows is based on interviews with Satterfield and civil rights experts in the Justice Department. Q. Will the civil rights bill destroy your right to sell or rent your home to whom you please? A. No. The bill will have no effect on discrimination in private housing. Explanation. The President apparently already has the power to ban racial discrimination in housing by executive order. By such a "stroke of the pen," President John F. Kennedy 18 months ago forbade discrimination by apartment house owners and real estate developers who get Federal financing. This order has not yet been tested in the courts. President Johnson might, if he wished, extend the order to cover private homes with FHA or VA insured mortgages. The Justice Department says the civil rights bill adds nothing to this existing Presidential power. In fact, a sentence in the bill specifically denies that it applies to Government-insured home loans. Opponents of the bill admit it has no direct effect on private housing. But they argue it would indirectly uphold the President's claim of authority to issue executive orders in this field. Q. Will the bill cost you your job, your seniority or your promotion to make way for a Negro? A. With one exception, no. The bill forbids racial discrimination on the job, but grants Negroes no special privileges. Explanation: White fears of being displaced by Negroes stem from the "equal employment opportunity" section of the bill. This section requires companies and unions to treat workers of both races on the same basis. But no "preference" is granted either race. There is no requirement that a company or a union take on a certain number of Negroes to achieve a racial "mix" or "balance." All that is required is that an employer, or a union, not turn down an otherwise qualified man because he is a Negro. Passing over a white man to give preference to a Negro is banned, just as is the reverse. The exception arises in the ease of seniority—where separate white and Negro unions or separate seniority lists have been maintained. During the process of merging the locals, a worker who was No. 75 on the all-white list, for example, might find himself No. 82 on the combined list. Q. Will the bill permit you to be sent to jail without a trial by jury? A. Yes, if you disobey a Federal court order directing you to comply with the law. Explanation: With minor exceptions, the civil rights bill creates no new crimes for which you can be fined or jailed. But it does set forth certain discriminatory acts for which a Federal judge-after a trial—can order you to cease. Then, if you don't cease, the judge can slap you in jail without a trial by jury. Your "crime" would not be violating the Civil Rights Act. It would be contempt of court. But the result is the same— you're in jail. The Justice Department points out that there never has been a right of trial by jury for criminal contempt of court. So the bill is not taking away any right you already have. In fact, certain new safeguards are added. If you defy a court order enforcing the voting rights or public accommodations sections of the bill, you can't be jailed for more than 45 days or fined more than $300 without a jury trial. For disobeying a court order involving the other parts of the bill, such as the fair employment section, you can be jailed indefinitely for contempt. Q. Will the bill let you be questioned, in a secret "star chamber" proceeding, with a jail sentence hanging over you if you reveal what happened? If the commission thinks the testimony might embarrass or incriminate someone, it can hold the hearing behind closed doors. Unauthorized disclosure of the proceedings can be punished by a $1000 fine or a year in jail. Explanation: The bill authorizes the Civil Rights Commission to hold hearings to investigate complaints of discrimination. A. Yes, but it's not as bad as it sounds. The Justice Department says this provision is not meant to hurt anybody—just to protect people from premature or unfair disclosure of unsubstantiated charges. The secret hearings are only to gather information, since the commission has no power to make anybody do anything. Congressional investigating committees hold such closeddoor hearings frequently. Q. Will the bill force doctors, lawyers, barbers and small businessmen to serve Negroes even if they aren't engaged in "interstate commerce?" A. It depends where your business is located. Sometimes the answer is yes; sometimes no. Explanation: If you live in a community where there is a local law actually on the book requiring racial segregation, the new Federal law will apply to every business and professional man. If you serve white people in such a town, you will have to serve Negroes too. In other communities, the rules are different. You will have to serve all races if your place of business is located "on the premises" of an establishment, such as a hotel or theater, covered by the bill. You will also be covered if your place of business, such as a department store, contains a restaurant or lunch counter covered by the bill. But you are not required to serve Negroes just because your store or office is located in the same building, or the same shopping center, with a covered establishment. A doctor or lawyer could have an office in a hotel, or upstairs over a restaurant, without coming under the law. Q. Will the bill permit discrimination against you if you don't believe in God? A. Yes. Explanation: An amendment added by the House permits an employer to refuse to hire an atheist—even if he is otherwise qualified. This amendment was added over the objections of the bill's sponsors. A Justice Department spokesman called it "foolish." Q. Will the bill control the selection of members and guests of private clubs? Explanation: Bona fide private clubs do not come under the provisions of this bill. There are two exceptions: A. In most cases, no. If the club is not really "private" but allows anybody to join for payment of a small fee, such as the Playboy clubs, it cannot discriminate against Negroes. If a private club is located on the premises of a covered business, such as a country club connected to a public hotel, and offers its facilities to white guests of the hotel, it must also serve Negro guests. Baltimore Sun GIRLBUSTER U.S. SENATE DIDM HERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON FIRM "Please Stop Please Let Me Up" Ode to Caps and Gowns Trouping Down Th' Hill Gimme that degree, I wanna go, go, go! Fed up with teachers, bleachers, class notes, campus votes, test tubes, classroom rubes, final exams, fine art hams, text books, book nooks, and faculty schnooks. Wanna go to work, wife, mother or dog; gimme a paycheck, uniform, get me out of this smog. Through with learning. Wanna do, did, does, get it done. Wanna earn, not learn. Enough o' these ideas. Wanna put me down to some practice, pleeuz. Gotta get me out to meet 'em and greet 'em. And tell 'em and sell 'em. They don't care 'bout Pliny and Winnie. They want pounds and gallons and lumber feet. Know how to build and pave a street. Thought and told are through; bought and sold are new. Thinkers are out; computers are in. Figure the wage with a new kind of gauge, forget the trends, intellectual bends. Run, don't walk, down the venerable Hill. Too many bennies, late-study pills. Think? Becomes a sphinx. Egypt is done; drive is our fun. Books we'll condense and let 'em be, propped in a row above the TV. Why books when we got TV? And a degree. Let them fix the plot, follow it through. Ugh, heap Injun, he's a schmoo. Operas of course, but soap and horse. Culture? Well, sure, but not a big dose. Time's short; we've got to cut close. Maybe at sixty, think and reflect. And decide on the ways that better all men. Service to men? Customers first. India, China, spots on the sun. No import now; life has begun India, China, spots on the sun! Does the other matter? Darn tootin' it does. It matters as much as a good home and love. Free choice is the arrow; the intellect the bow. to be used as best and as right as we know. Got to think, chug-a-lug, think, chug-a-lug, think, chug-a-lug, to serve ourselves and the guy next doors and the Guy up above. Kansan Editorial of May 25,1953 Dailij Hänsan 111 Flint Hall UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, Founded 1895, became on weekday 1904, trineweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. NEWS DEPARTMENT Mike Miller ... Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Tom Conman Vinay Kothari and Margaret Hughes ... Assistant Editorial Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Bob Brooks ... Business Manager University Daily Kansan Monday, May 18, 1964 Page 3 BOOK REVIEWS A PICTORIAL HISTORY OF WESTERN ART, by Erwin O. Christensen (Mentor, 95 cents). A beautiful paperback, from cover through the last page, is now available for anyone interested in art, and there is a growing band of devotees. Erwin O. Christensen did a history of western art for Mentor several years ago, and this is an excellent accompanying volume. There are nearly 400 photographs and illustrations, not merely paintings but sculpture, pottery, architecture and so on. The paperback is an original, a fact which gives it special interest. Christensen ranges from the Egyptian tombs and Grecian sculptors through the Italian Renaissance and up to the structures of Frank Lloyd Wright. The author is director of publications of the American Association of Museums. PRESIDENTIAL POWER, by Richard E. Neustadt (Signet, 60 cents). It is of interest that Christensen shows the relationship of great art to political, religious and social events. These relationships help to make the book even more meaningful. * * * Books sometimes become part of current events. "Presidential Power" did. It was widely discussed as having bearing on the concept of the presidency held by the late President Kennedy, and Neustadt was special consultant to Kennedy in the days before Kennedy succeeded President Eisenhower. Neustadt, head of the department of government at Columbia College, holds that the American presidency is no place for a political amateur. He analyzes the celebrated 100 days of Franklin D. Roosevelt, treats crises in the Truman administration (the Marshall plan, the Korean War, the McArthur affair and the steel seizure, notably), and in the Eisenhower administration (particularly the Little Rock crisis). Besides being significant the book is readable and meaningful as we examine the performance of a new president and consider those others who would like to be the man in the White House. * * * Usually known only as great playwright and discerning essayist, George Bernard Shaw also wrote short stories. Most of these are from his early years, and they provide illumination into this amazing man. Excellent woodcuts are by Sam Salant. TALES, by George Bernard Shaw (Capricorn, $1.45). The stories include "Aerial Football: the New Game," "The Emperor and the Little Girl," "The Miraculous Revenge," "The Theatre of the Future," "A Dressing Room Secret," "Don Giovanni Explains," "Beauty's Duty," "Still After the Doll's House," "The Domesticity of Franklin Barnabas," "Death of an Old Revolutionary Hero," "The Serenade," "A Sunday on the Surrey Hills" and "Cannonfodder." In today's dramatic civil rights movement it is enlightening to return to the spiritual ancestors of Martin Luther King and Roy Wilkins and read their history-making writings. This excellent paperback makes such a return possible. THE ABOLITIONISTS, by Louis Ruchames (Capricorn, $1.65). * * * Louis Ruchames has included works by the key figure of abolitionism in America. These include the noted pioneer Benjamin Lundy; the Massachusetts fire-eater, William Lloyd Garrison, editor of The Liberator; the New England Anti-Slavery Society; the Quaker poet. John Greenleaf Whittier; a novelist, Lydia M. Child; Gerrit Smith; Elijah P. Lovejoy, the martyr of Alton, Ill.; Angelina E. Grimke, the lady from South Carolina; Theodore Weld and James G. Birney, and the celebrated writer and orator, Wendell Phillips. C. J. LIFE INSURANCE PROGRAMMING For Appointment Call VI 2-2641 R. Keith Liggett, Rep. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. KU Pershing Rifles Win Drill Honors tending the seventh annual regimental drill meet at the University of Wichita. First place for Exhibition squad drill and second place for exhibition individual drill was awarded to Company E-7 of the Pershing Rifles from KU recently. The military honor group was at- Individual awards went to Kent McCain, Akron, Ohio, senior, first place in drill-down for advanced cadets; John Straham, Salina, for the high individual score in the regimental rifle match, and Thomas Hewitt, Topeka freshman, who placed third in freshman cadet drill-down. LEAVING for the SUMMER? It's much easier for you to Travel Light and it's much easier on your hard-to-pack, bulky winter clothes to have them Cleaned with gentle SANITONE Care - Moth-proofed Free! - Stored in our safe refrigerated, Fire, Moth and Theft-Proof vault - Returned to you in the fall freshly pressed, ready to wear. Why haul heavy closet-filling winter clothes back and forth. Store them in a large box at Lawrence Laundry and keep them safe and SANITONE Clean All this service . . only $3.95 per box. Plus regular cleaning charges. K FREE... INSURANCE UP TO $200 VALUE 2% extra for additional value RO LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H.-VI 3-3711 Page 4 University Datry Kansan Monday. May 18, 1964 KU Hosts 5 Algerian Deputies On U.S.-Canada Good-Will Tour Seeing the only American university they will see on their three-week goodwill tour, five Algerian Deputies visited KU Fridav. Being first delegation of Parliament members from the young North African republic to visit North America, the group was escorted by two representatives from People-to-People from Kansas City. They arrived on the campus around 11 a.m. and Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe invited the delegation to tour the University. WITH THEIR TRANSLATOR, A Toumayan from the State Department, the delegation with Chancellor Wescoe and the People-to-People representatives got on the KU bus and started their tour. Photographers from the United States Information Agency accompanied the group. As Chancellor Wescoe explained what the various buildings on the campus were used for, the translator relayed the information in French to the Algerians. The bus reached the World War II Memorial Campanile and the delegation requested that the bus stop so that they could have a moment of silence for the war dead. After the tour resumed the group made two more stops: at Murphy Hall and Lewis. During the stop at Murphy, the Chancellor showed the delegation the University Theatre and Swarthout Recital Hall. Music greeted the Algerian delegation as they entered Swarthout Recital Hall. The delegates were very pleased and watched in silence as Jo Archer, Ottawa senior, finished the piece she was playing. When she finished the delegates applauded. Miss Archer remarked that she was in the middle of her piano lesson when the delegation arrived and had no idea who they were. AS THE GROUP CONTINUED to Lewis the counsel of the Algerian embassy in Washington, Mohammond Aberkane, remarked that the delegation thought the campus was Student Gets Research Grant The first Philip Newmark award for excellence in biochemical research will be awarded May 13 at a special lecture here. The $100 award will go to Fred Jones Jr., a graduate student in microbiology. Lecturing for the event will be Irving Goodman of the department of biochemistry of the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons. He will speak on "Bivalent Sulfur in the Preservation of Life" at 4 p.m. in 411 Summerfield Hall. Goodman was the major professor of the late Philip Newmark, who was associate professor of comparative biochemistry and physiology at KU from 1954 until his death in the summer of 1962. The award will be made in honor of the late Prof. Newmark. Jones earned the B.S. and M.S. degrees in chemistry at Tuskegee Institute, Ala., in 1957 and 1959 respectively. He has been at KU since 1959 and he will complete work for the Ph.D. degree at KU late this summer. Contemporary apartments for summer rental or longer. These apartments are completely furnished, have two bedrooms and are air-conditioned. We are renting to college men, and we will allow four occupants in each apartment. These apartments are within walking distance of campus. Rates are from $90 to $105. Call VI 3-8241 during the day, and VI 3-9373 at night. very beautiful and were impressed with the facilities of the University. He also said that the delegation felt that the possibilities that existed for education here were great. After seeing the facilities of Lewis the delegation traveled to the Museum of art and the museum of natural history for two more stops. KU is larger than any university in Algeria, the head of the delegation remarked, although there are approximately 6,000 students attending one university in Algeria. He also said that from their observations the group would take ideas from America back to Algeria. One Deputy was a woman, Mme. Fatime Khemisti, widow of Foreign Minister Mohammed Khemiisti who was killed by an assassin a year ago. Her first husband, with whom she served in the guerrilla forces as a soldier and nurse, died in battle. The other Deputies are Abdelkader Ammar-Mouhoub, head of the delegation; Omar Ouamrane, a member of the National Council on the Algerian Revolution, both military leaders during Algeria's seven-year War of Independence; Father Alfred Berenguer, a Catholic priest who was wounded at Cassino, Italy, while the Chaplain of a Free French unit; and Dr. Leon-Paul Durand, a medical doctor who served as chief surgeon of a Free French regiment during World War II. Masters Candidates Display Design Work Exhibits by the 1964 candidates for the masters degree of Fine Arts in the department of design will be on display from Wednesday until June 2. The exhibits will constitute a graduate art show which is part of the requirement for the master's degree. The show will consist of 11 exhibits from assistant instructors of design in the fields of commercial art, industrial design, sculpture, design, and weaving. Richard Branham, Lawrence graduate student and assistant instructor of design, said. Branham, whose exhibit will be industrial design, said the following graduate students will show exhibits: Tonya S. Rhodes, Lawrence graduate student exhibiting weaving; Judy Philgreen, Lawrence graduate student exhibiting commercial art; Suzanne Adams, Lawrence graduate student exhibiting design; Charles Walker, Lawrence graduate exhibiting commercial art; Jon Henderson, Stanberry, Mo., graduate exhibiting commercial art. When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds Both our fine locations will be honored to serve you during the summer session. We pick up and deliver. FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN 900 Miss. DOWNTOWN PLANT 740 Vt. TREK Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi K --- Monday, May 18, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 5 COACH HOUSE 12th & Oread annual summer CLOSE-OUT SALE 25% off 40% off 50% off entire stock not included! WE'RE GOING ON VACATION TOO... SEE YOU AGAIN NEXT FALL! Go home in style . . . stock up and dress up for summer at sensational savings! Don't miss these tremendous reductions! DRESSES and SETS many of our top makers' styles . . . all wanted styles, colors and fabrics! 1234567890 M PANTS and SHORTS all newest styles, fabrics . . in every length! Not all styles in all sizes. BLOUSES and SHIRTS large selection of dressy and tailored types. .by some of America's most famous makers. 1234567890 W SALE ALL SALES FINAL! ACCESSORIES large group of wanted accessories for nowthrough-Summer styles and fabrics. MANY, MANY OTHER ITEMS FROM EVERY DEPARTMENT! BE EARLY! Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, May 18, 1964 Congressmen, Johnson Engage in 'Light' Battle WASHINGTON — (UPI) — For every 100-watt bulb President Johnson turns off at one end of Pennsylvania Avenue, Congress at the other end currently is turning on bigger ones by the dozens. Johnson has claimed (somewhat optimistically, it would appear) to be saving $2,000 to $2,500 a month by blacking out un-needed lights at the White House, in places like closets and rooms not in use at the moment. He says he is trying to set an example. The lawmakers meantime say all they are trying to do is light the House's new Rayburn Building, and also to crank up its new elevators, escalators, and subway cars to the Capitol building. BY THE END of the year the Congressional light bill as a result will be up by $340,000 annually for a new total of around $118,000 a month. Johnson couldn't save that kind of money even if he put the White House on candles. Actually Congress has been on a lighting spree for several years, installing for the first time brilliant new fixtures in the traditionally gloomy areaways halls and public rooms of the Capitol. The current step-up reflects mainly the immensity of the new, new House office building, into which Congressional underlings already are moving and which after Jan. 1 will provide work space for 169 of the 435 House members. WHEN (SOME MEMBERS say "if ever") the Rayburn Building is finished it will have cost $86.4 million. Recent testimony shows that there is more to the story: - "Maintenance" of the building will run more than $2 million a year. (That covers 284 extra cleaners, carpenters, electricians, bulb-changers and janitors, and a muscle-rubber for the new lady House members' gym. It does not cover 24 new police and 14 additional mailmen—nor the bigger light bills.) Building a block-long underground railroad to the Capitol building (supposed to be running before the end of the year) will have cost an additional $7.7 million. - Remodeling existing "old" and "new" House office buildings to make their two-room suites comparable to the three-room suites in the Rayburn Building will cost maybe $8 million to $10 million per building, although there are no hard figures on this. - With new and expanded quarters, the members will have space to hire bigger staffs. Currently they get by with 3,186 helpers at a cost of $21 million a year. So it's regrettable but not altogether surprising that Rep. Odin Langen (R-Minn.), has been getting mail from misinformed tax- Seniors Prepare for Graduation At Senior Parties, Breakfast Seniors have more than finals to anticipate during the remainder of the semester. Scheduled activities include a "Last Blast" barn party, a "Last Gasp" senior paper, a peace-pipe smoking senior breakfast, Baccalau-ate and Commencement. First, this week seniors must pick up cap and gown receipts at the Business Office. Seniors who have not paid their senior fee must pay a year-end fee of $4.50 before they get their receipt. A "LAST BLAST" party is planned for 1 p.m. May 30, the Saturday after finals, at the Big Barn. Hamburgers \* \* \* Senior Paper Calls for Ads Students wishing to run classified advertisements in the senior paper about their senior friends, or nonfriends as the case may be, should contact Steve (Scoop) Clark this week. Clark, Coffeyville senior, is editor of "The Last Gasp," the senior newspaper which will be given out at the senior breakfast on the morning of commencement. "There's no fee for an ad in the classified section, and the topics or persons advertised is wide open, as long as it's not libelous." Clark said. "I WILL ALSO welcome contributions to the "Remember When" section, which is in the same general humor category." Clark stressed the fact that most of the senior newspapers in the past have been strictly informational regarding commencement procedures and class activities. "Although this paper will contain the necessary straight information we also hope to add senior humor and make this a souvenir paper which the seniors will both enjoy and want to keep. "USUALLY THE paper has been put together at the last minute." Clark said. "This year we started kicking around ideas in February and have been planning special tricks all semester." Although Clark would not give out many "tricks," he indicated that a few humorous overtones would be included in a four year chronological history of the class of '64. A special cartoon spread by Mike Smith, Bartlesville, Okla., senior, will depict a topic of senior interest. CLARK ALSO said the makeup and format would be quite different than in past years and the eight-page newspaper will have a new masthead. One of the big improvements this year is the fact that advertising solicited by John Anderson, Prairie Village senior, will almost pay for the paper. In past years, the majority of the cost has been absorbed by senior class funds. and beverages will be free. The price for non-senior dates is $1.50. Sunday activities include checking out caps and gowns from 3-5 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. Seniors will need to know their height, head measurement and the school from which they will be graduated. The All-University Commencement Supper at 4:30 May 31 in the Union Ballroom requires advance payment and advance registration in the Alumni Office, 127 Strong. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will deliver his "State of the University" message and will award life-time alumni memberships. At 7 that night graduates will assemble either in front of Strong Hall or the Field House, depending on the weather, for the Baccalaureate Services at 7:30 in Memorial Stadium. GRADUATION DAY begins at 7:45 am. Monday in the ballroom with the traditional Senior Breakfast. Students will wear caps and gowns. According to Sandra Garvey, St. Louis, Mo., senior and co-chairman for the Breakfast committee, the event will feature the smoking of the corncob peace-pipe, led by Chancell- lor Wescoe. Jay Cook, Webster Groves, Mo., senior, will be master of ceremonies for the special program and Richard Winternote, alumni secretary and senior sponsor, will outline commencement procedures. At 10:45 a.m. Army, Navy and Air Force graduates will report to Murphy Hall for military commissioning ceremonies at 11 a.m. after which there will be a reception in the Union. A university reception for graduates and guests will be from 3:00-4:30 in the Union. Graduates should not wear caps and gowns. Preparation for the walk down the hill begins at 6:35 p.m. in front of Strong Hall or in the Field House, depending upon the weather. Caps and gowns are required. Nothing should be carried. Commencement will be held at 7 p.m. in Memorial Stadium unless weather forces it into the Field House. The last official activity for the seniors of the class of 1964 will be to check in their caps and gowns and pick up their diplomas. payers complaining about the $500 million" new Rayburn building. Around Capitol Hill such misinformation is generally blamed on the press. Fun is living in Park Plaza REP. TOM STEED (D-Okla.) says the fact is that Congress remains the biggest bargain in town. If we got it free, Steed contends, each voter would save about 5 cents of every $1,000 he antes up to the Internal Revenue Service. 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 Weekly from the Soviet Union In English or in Spanish P MOSCOW NEWS PARK PLAZA SOUTH Steed, as chairman of an appropriations subcommittee handling Congressional funds, recently maneuvered through the House a $173.7 million bill covering House expenses and joint expenses of House and Senate in the 12 months to start July 1. The Senate now is adding to this about $31 million for purely senatorial items. All aspects of Soviet life. Full statements of the Soviet government. Ph. VI 2-3416 1912 W. 25th In a hearing transcript published as background for the bill Steed said he had seen too many "distorted and misleading" stories about the new Rayburn Building, and he wanted all the facts spread on the record. Patronize Kansan Advertisers discussed "off the record"—they just about were, too. Day or Night The Rayburn Building emerges as the costliest office building to date, although the far-larger Pentagon if built now would cost more. Steed said square foot construction costs of the Rayburn Building compared favorably to that of any similar structure. Except for the swimming pool — cost and other details of which were One year subscription—$2.00 air-mail Imported Publications and Products 1 Union Square, N.Y.C. 3 INVESTIGATION 101.900 THE PREMIER The Peseta is local currency in Spain. So is this. TRAVELERS CHQUE 804 383 568 Shilton Fox Bank of America KINGSTON, MASS. 01219 USA MAX POPULATION: 280,000 CHARTERED BY: GEORGIE J. BELL TOWNSHIP OF KINGSTON NUMBER OF DOLLARS: 20 SIGNATURES: Shilton Fox A.G.F. *8000-0001-804 383-56811* Toledo, Spain-or Toledo, Ohio-Bank of America Travelers Cheques are as good as cash the world over. And safer than cash to carry-because they come with a money-back guarantee which assures prompt replacement of lost or stolen cheques anywhere in the world. Ask for them by name at your bank-BANK OF AMERICA TRAVELERS CHEQUES. Page 2 World Spotlight University Dally Kansas The emotional flag issue shattered the fraternal atmosphere of the legionnaires, meeting when Pearson plumped for a maple leaf design to replace the red ensign as the national flag. The Prime Minister was drowned out repeatedly by shouting and catcalls. Pearson Booed in Canada WINNIPEG, Man.—(UPI)—Nearly 2,000 members of the Royal Canadian legionnaires and their wives booed, jeered and cheered Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson last night in his strongest speech to date on a new flag for Canada. Legion President Judge C. C. Sparling told Pearson he was sorry that "many have not learned the first rules of courtesy," but Pearson said opposing views had been stated in a "sincere and upright manner." Johnson Cuts Government Jobs WASHINGTON—(UPI)President Johnson has cut 8,655 jobs off the federal employment ceilings he had set for the end of the current fiscal year on June 30. The White House said yesterday that the cutback, coupled with a reduction of 6.526 jobs announced on March 9, means that 15,191 federal positions will be lopped off Johnson's January budget estimate of 2,512,400 civilian employees at the end of the fiscal year. Congress Slashes Agency Funds WASHINGTON—(UPI)—The House Appropriations Committee today ordered major cuts in President Johnson's budget for the U.S. space program, civilian defense and urban renewal. It also recommended a reduction of 1,500 employees in the Federal Aviation Agency along with a big money slash. Aviation Agency along with eight Overall, the House group took $925 million out of President Johnson's proposed budget for 25 independent government agencies. The new total came to $13.3 billion. Teenagers War in England MARGATE, England—(UPI)—Reinforced police squads patrolled the streets today to put down any new violence between rival teenage gangs which turned this seaside resort into a weekend battlefield. "The teenagers are nothing but undisciplined hooligans," said Norman Fowler, assistant chief constable of Kent. "Some of them are really vicious." More than 2,000 teenagers, including many girls, stormed into Margate on motor scooters and motorcycles for the Whitsun (Pente-cost) weekend, and raised the roof. Margate is 73 miles southeast of London. Cyprus Greeks Face UN Demand to Release Turks NICOSIA, Cyprus—(UPI)—President Archbishop Makarios today faced a showdown with the United Nations over its demands that Greek Cypriots release 32 Turkish Cypriot hostages. The U.N. demand may be too late for many of the hostages. Greek Cyripti and International Red Cross sources said they believed at least 14 have been killed. This report could not be confirmed officially. Lt. Gen. Prem Singh Gyani, commander of the U.N. Peace Force, yesterday gave Makarios until Wednesday to obtain release of the hostages. Makarios is the leader of the Greek Cypriot community on the stifte-torn Mediterranean island. Gyani's demand brought Makarios the most serious showdown he has had so far with the United Nations. It also put him in a difficult position with his own Greek Cypriot followers. The hostages were seized last week in retaliation for the slaying a week ago of two Greek Army officers who entered the Turkish Cypriot sector of Famagusta. U. N. sources said Makarios' response would be a test of his sincerity and of his control over Greek Cypriot irregulars. The archbishop has denounced the seizing of hostages as "a revolting criminal action which I unreservedly condemn." Gyani's demand came in the form of a statement last night that Galo Plaza, new political representative of U.N. Secretary General Thant, would call on Makarios before leaving for New York Wednesday. It was not clear what action the United Nations force would take if the Greek Cypriots refuse to hand over the hostages. "It is hoped that after this interview Plaza will be in a position to inform Thant the hostages have been released," Gyani said. U. N. officials were concerned that if the slaying of a considerable number of the hostages is confirmed, Turkish Cyprots may seek swift vengeance and set off a new round of violence. German Students Jeer at Soviets BERLIN—(UPI)—Communist police backed up by two water cannons dispersed an unruly crowd of booing East German youths last night in front of the Soviet embassy in East Berlin, about 300 yards from the Communist wall. The youths jeered and hooted for 45 minutes before being dispersed by about 150 policemen. Later some youths publicly criticized the wall. No arrests were reported. West Berlin Police who sifted reports on the incident said it appeared to be spontaneous and to have little political significance. They said the youths, part of 500- 100 young men and women brought to East Berlin for a massive Communist rally, gathered near the anti- THEY APPARENTLY booed outside the Soviet embassy in order to vent their resentment of the police action. After police dispersed the crowd, the youths scattered in small groups down Unter Den Linden Avenue and the neighboring Friedrichstrasse and many engaged in animated conversations past midnight. A few visiting West German youths were among them. Loud criticisms of the Communist wall were heard, despite the presence of police. "West Germans can cross the wall to us but we cannot cross the wall Pope Announces Secretariat As Link to Non-Christians VATICAN CITY — (UPI) — Pope Paul VI has taken another step toward increasing the Vatican's influence in world affairs by forming a new body to promote closer links with non-Christian religions. The new body will act as liaison between the Vatican and Moslems, Hindus, Buddhists, Shintoists and others whose religions are not based on the divinity of Jesus Christ. It will explore common problems with leaders of these faiths. The pontif named Paolo Cardinal Marella, for many years an apostolic delegate in Japan, as head of the new organization. The special secretariat was seen as another step in Pope Paul's effort to make the Roman Catholic Church universally influential. Since he became leader of the world's half billion Catholics, Pope Paul has fostered policies of ecumenism instigated by his predecessor, Pope John XIII, The Pope announced the special secretariat during a Pentecost service in St. Peter's Basilica yesterday. He said the move was part of "the effort the church makes to come closer, even in simple human contacts, to those belonging to other religions." The Pope said details of the secretariat's plans and purposes would be made known this week. He said the secretariat would have a similar structure to that of the secretariat for promoting Christian unity. The later body, charged with liaison with non-Catholic Christians, has brought representatives of Protestant and other denominations into the ecumenical council as observers and widened the exchanges between the Vatican and other faiths. The pontiff first mentioned the idea of a secretariat for relations with non-Christians eight months ago in a document on the ecumenical council. He then called for the establishment of such a group "at an opportune time." It was not immediately known if the establishment of the new secretariat now meant non-Christian religions would be invited to send observers to the third session of the ecumenical council which opens in September. Vatican sources said it was a definite possibility. "He's right," said another one. "Why can't we?" to West Berlin," one youth was heard to say, "Why not?" Addressing priests and seminarians in the Basilica, the Pope said "Catholic" in its truest sense meant that "every class distinction is transformed into full social solidarity, every nationalism is enlisted in the welfare of the world community, every racism is condemned." The mood of the youths was not ugly, and they did not appear bent on storming the wall. EARLIER, 320,000 youths waving Communist banners marched through East Berlin and passed before East German Communist party leader Walter Ulbricht in a four-hour parade staged by the Communist Free German Youth Organization, according to the East German news service ADN. KEEP ALERT! SAFE NoDoz TABLETS Next time monotony makes you feel drowsy while driving, working or studying, do as millions do . . . perk up with safe, effective NoDoz tablets. Another fine product of Grove Laboratories. The rally of youth from throughout East Germany coincided with a three-day weekend occasioned by the religious holiday of Pentecost today. Christians celebrate Pentecost as the day the Holy Spirit descended on Christ's apostles after his death. THE SAFE WAY to stay alert without harmful stimulants West Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt dared the Communists in a radio speech last night to open the wall and let the youths visit the West. BRANDT'S SPEECH was recorded in the United States during his current visit. NoDoz keeps you mentally alert with the same safe refresher found in coffee and tea. Yet NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. Absolutely not habit-forming. - MEMO - Take Housemother to Dinner Tonite HOLIDAY INN RESTAURANT MEN! In plastic! Old Spice DEODORANT Here's deodorant protection YOU CAN TRUST Old Spice Stick Deodorant...fastest,neatest way to all day,every day protection! It's the active deodorant for active men...absolutely dependable. Glides on smoothly speedily...dries in record time. Old Spice Stick Deodorant most convenient,most economical deodorant money can buy.1.00 plus tax. Old Spice STICK DEODORANT SHULTON Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, May 18, 1964 Kong Le Flees Communist Army VIENTIANE, Laos—(UPI)—Laos's shaky truce and coalition government crumbled today under a Communist onslaught in the key plain of Jars that sent Neutralist Military Leader Gen. Kong Le fleeing to the hills. Neutralist Premier Souvanna Phouma appealed to the British and Soviet envoys to do everything possible to stop the two-pronged offensive by the Communist Pathet Lao. Britain and Russia are co-chairmen of the 1962 Geneva Conference which established the coalition government. The Patnet Lao sweep on the strategic plain in Central Laos dealt the coup de grace to the two-year-old cease-fire and virtually ended all hope for an early settlement of the political crisis. (THE WEEK-END SUCCESSES of the Pathet Lao brought a top-level review of U.S. policy on Iaos by American officials in Washington. Yesterday, Secretary of State Dean Rusk met with diplomatic representatives of a dozen countries involved with the tiny, southeast Asian kingdom.) The Pathet Lao attacks coincided with stepped-up Communist guerrilla activity in neighboring South Viet Nam, putting pro-western forces on the defensive in key parts of Southeast Asia as the rainy season begins Radio-TV Cites 19 Top Students Awards for service in radio and television were made to four broadcasters, two faculty members and 19 students at KU last Friday. Robert Schmidt, general manager of KAYS and KAYS-TV, Hays, was named broadcaster of the year. Jean Glenn of WDAF, Kansas City, Mo., and Rush Evans, program director of WIBW-TV, Topeka, received performance awards. Bill Leeds, news director of WDAF and Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information were made associate members of Alpha Epsilon Rho, national honorary radio-TV fraternity. The first Richard Harkness Award for Excellence in Broadcast Journalism was given to Larry Schmidt, Omaha, Neb., graduate student. The award was made in honor of Harkness, a KU graduate and recipient of the Alumni Association distinguished service citation in 1960. Michael Bush, Glendale, Mo., and Stephan Hagen, Great Bend, were named outstanding seniors in radio-TV-film through journalism. James Porter, Kansas City, was named outstanding senior majoring in radio-TV-film through speech. John Nance, Wichita junior, received the Kansas Association of Radio Broadcasters scholarship. Karen Layland, Paola junior, received the alumni scholarship. Miss Layland also received an outstanding merit award in continuity writing. Other awards for outstanding merit went to: Lance Hayes, Burrton graduate student, best student film; John Nance, Wichita junior, best TV directing; Michael Bush, Glendale, Mo., senior, KUOK (student radio station) management; Gene Boomer, Kansas City graduate student, TV directing; Jane Turk, Greencastle, Ind., graduate, music scoring: "This is KU", Gary Bender, Ulysses graduate student, sports reporting; Terry Shockley, Rock Island, Ill., graduate student, sports reporting; Fax Robertson, Atchison senior, radio sales; Stephen Williams, Old Chatam, N.Y., senior, jazz festival radio network; Bill Lynch, Salina freshman, jazz festival gaslit remotes; Allen Kubik, Caldwell senior, jazz festival; Pete Wellington, Kansas City. Mo., junior, radio management, KUOK; Penny Gover, Lawrence sophomore, traffic —KUOK, writing—KFKU, KANU; Brad Berentz, Leavenworth sophomore, television crew work; David Pomeroy, Overland Park senior, film and TV crew work; Cheryl McCool, Clinton, Iowa, junior, music programming; Hoite Caston, Independence graduate student, film performance. Informed observers in Vientiane believed the Pathet Lao offensive was the Communists' final reply to the union of neutralist and rightist forces achieved after the bloodless right-wing coup April 19. The Pathet Lao, reported aided by troops from Communist North Viet Nam, opened their offensive Saturday morning. Yesterday the Reds overran Kong Le's headquarters village of Muong Phan, 100 miles North of Vientiane. VIENTIANE ITSELF was threatened as other Pathet Lao forces moved to isolate the capital. The Canadian and Indian members of the International Control Commission (ICC), set up by the Geneva conference to patrol the 1962 cease-fire, escaped from Muong Phan by helicopter as communists shelled the village. The Polish ICC member had refused to go to Muong Phan. The ICC said all of the Plain of Jars appeared to be controlled by the Pathet Lao. The plain is 100 miles North of Vientiane and is considered the gateway to the rest of the country. Kong Le's whereabouts were unknown. The Canadian and Indian ICC members said he fled after the rout of his badly-outnumbered neutralist forces. It was considered likely that Kong Le was trying to reach the headquarters of Gen. Veng Now, a leader of the Anti-Communist Meo tribesmen in the hills south of the Plain. There is a landing strip at Veng's headquarters. GEORGE WEIN Presents the 11th Annual... NEWPORT JAZZ FESTIVAL'64 THURSDAY · FRIDAY · SATURDAY · SUNDAY · JULY 2-3-4-5 the meaning of jazz 4 MAJOR EVENING CONCERTS Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. at 8:30 Sunday at 6:00 AFTERNOON CONCERTS Friday & Saturday at 2:00 featuring the Greatest Names in Jazz • SPECIAL GROUP RATES • EVENING CONCERTS All seats Reserved $3.50, 4.50, 5.50 AFTERNOON CONCERTS All General Admission $2.00 Box Seat Information on Request For Tickets and Program Information: NEWPORT JAZZ FESTIVAL NEWPORT, RHODE ISLAND — On Mail Orders, add 25 cents s NEW YORK—(UPI) —Dominick Tucci's mother described him as "adventuresome" after the 12-year-old eluded his parents and security police at the World's Fair for 11 days and 10 nights. Fair 'Phantom' Found DOMINICK SET OUT for the fair rom his home in Port Washington. Was he afraid? They telephoned his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Benito Tucci. The boy's much relieved mother said he is "adventursome, but not a bad boy." Dominick said he had planned to stay the entire summer at the fair] But his mother had other plans for him. Dominick's springtime odyssey ended yesterday when a concessionaire who had seen his picture in a newspaper spotted him at one of the pavilions and alerted police. Dominick sneaked onto the fairgrounds May 6 and remained there until Sunday — after defying the best efforts of his parents and police to find him even though they knew he was there. "There's nothing to be afraid of," he said. "The fair is crawling with cops." THE 4-FOOT, 8-INCH, 80-pound youngster, who had become known to police as "The Phantom of the Fair," spent four nights in the dark and empty Continental Insurance Co. pavilion, and other nights in the Coca Cola, African and Johnson's Wax pavilions. In fact, he may prove to be one of the few fairgoers who left the grounds with as much money as he had when he arrived. HIS ABILITY TO LIVE off the land, so to speak, allowed the blond seventh grader to eat well, sleep comfortably and acquire enough spending money to occupy his waking hours. in suburban Long Island, on May 6 after his parents told him they would not visit the fair until next fall. He used the last of his money for train fare. How did Dominick live during the 11 days and 10 nights he spent on the fairgrounds? She brought a clean set of clothing for him, then hustled him home. For money, he spent the pre-dawn hours each day retrieving coins thrown into wishing-well fountains. "Sometimes I got as much as five dollars," he said. "I ate hamburgers and had sodas, except last Friday I had Chow Mein." BALDWIN Art THEATER Art "MARRIAGE OF FIGARO" (French) Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, May 19, 20, 21 7:30 P.M. Free Coffee Fine Music GEM THEATRE BALDWIN, KANSAS KINGSMEN • "Louie, Louie" KINGSMEN • "Money" "Louie, Louie" • KINGSMEN "Louie, Louie" • KINGSMEN KINGSMEN • "Louie, Louie" KINGSMEN • "Money" Live and In Person at: The "Inn Keeper" has made special arrangements for additional tables, chairs, and extension speakers to fill the Tee Pee and the patio with the tremendous sounds of the Kingsmen. TEE PEE - MAY 19 TUESDAY STARTS AT 7:00 DOORS OPEN AT 6:00 WH SA —A gove that start anno las posts weel bord nam Th Thu Saig troo THE Com or o 15,00 nam Vl Amo pati to c rain seas into van tact T a V sam Saiq gov A coor the Viet miss Page 9 m May 6 m they til next money ring the pent on e-dawn coins muntains. as five burgers Friday aid of," ing with anned to the fairr plans pound known of the nee dark insurance is in the Johnson's clothing home. Weekend's Action in Viet Nam Indicates Viet Cong Offensive SAIGON, South Viet Nam—(UPI) A series of hit-and-run attacks on government forces indicated today that the Communist Viet Cong has started a rainy season offensive. The South Viet Nam government announced that Communist guerrillas attacked five government outposts and sank a landing craft in weekend action near the Cambodian border, leaving as many as 46 Vietnamese soldiers dead or missing. THERE WERE NO reports of Viet Cong losses in the weekend attacks, or casualties among the more than 15,000 U.S. advisers aiding the Vietnamese in the guerrilla war. The synchronized attacks followed Thursday's Communist ambush near Saigon in which 54 government troops were killed. Vietnamese officials and their American advisers have been anticipating stepped-up guerrilla activities to coincide with the beginning of the rainy season. During the four-month season, heavy rains turn rice paddies into seas of mud which give an advantage to the kind of hit-and-run tactics used by the Viet Cong. The other Communist action sank a Vietnamese craft in a river in the same area, about 50 miles west of Saigon. At least nine and possibly 19 government troops were killed. A battalion of Viet Cong launched coordinated raids before dawn on the five outposts Saturday, killing 17 Vietnamese soldiers and leaving 10 missing. THE GOVERNMENT LAUNCHED a pursuit operation after the raids, but the relief force was unable to find any trace of the attackers. U. S. advisers at the government stronghold of Tan An said the Viet Cong may have slipped across the border from neutral Cambodia. The raided villages are only four miles from Cambodian territory. Monday, May 18, 1964 University Daily Kansan South Viet Nam and Cambodia have exchanged charges over alleged border violations and a Cambodian complaint on the matter will be taken up tomorrow by the United Nations Security Council in New York. The Cambodian government in Phnom Penh today denied reports that it cooperated with the Viet Cong and permitted guerrillas to cross the border for refuge from pursuing Vietnamese forces. The attacks took place on a string of posts centered around the town and airstrip of Moc Hoa. A U.S. spokesman at Tan An said there were no government casualties in Moc Hoa and two of the other outposts, indicating these strikes might have been diversionary to draw attention from the two villages that were hit the hardest. CAMBODIAN SOURCES also claimed that 50 "Free Cambodia" rebels coming from South Viet Nam attacked a provincial border outpost at Prey Khmuthon a week ago and killed one Cambodian. The Viet Cong attacks Saturday started shortly after midnight with simultaneous assaults on two posts. Then the Reds pulled back and hit the other posts one by one. The fighting continued until dawn when the guerrillas slipped away. The losses occurred at Binh Thanh Thon where the government lost 15 dead, 17 wounded and 10 missing; and at Chua Noi where the Viet Cong killed 2 soldiers, wounded 6, and carried off a quantity of weapons. THE LANDING CRAFT, 50 feet long and large enough to carry a small tank, was sunk by an explosion about 14 hours after the raids on the villages. Vice Premier Nguyen Xuan Oahn announced in Saigon he had postponed his trip to Washington because of Defense Secretary Robert McNamara's visit to Viet Nam last week. Schedule For Finals Final examinations will be given according to the following schedule. Exams begin Saturday and run through Friday of next week. Any-one wishing further information should consult an official schedule in the front of the schedule of classes for this semester. 7:30 MWF sequence, 3:10-5:00, Monday, May 25; 7:30 TTS sequence, 3:10-5:00, Tuesday, May 26; 8:30 MWF sequence, 9:40-11:30, Saturday, May 23; 8:30 TTS sequence, 9:40- 11:30 Wednesday, May 27; 9:30 MWF sequence, 9:40-11:30, Monday, May 25; 9:30 TTS sequence, 1:00-2:50 Wednesday, May 27; 10:30 MWF sequence, 9:40-11:30, Tuesday, May 26 10:30 TTS sequence, 3:10-5:00 Wednesday, May 27; 11:30 MWF sequence, 7:30-9:20, Wednesday, May 27; 11:30 TTS sequence, 7:30-9:20 Thursday, May 28; 12:30 MWF sequence, 3:10-5:00, Thursday, May 28; 12:30 TTS sequence, 3:10-5:00, Saturday, May 23; 1:30 MWF sequence, 7:30-9:20, Tuesday, May 26. 1:30 TTS sequence, 1:00-2:50, Tuesday, May 26; 2:30 MWF sequence, 1:00-2:50, Monday, May 25; 2:30 TTS sequence, 9:40-11:30, Thursday, May 28; 3:30 MWF sequence, 1:00- 2:50, Saturday, May 23; 3:30 TTS sequence, 1:00-2:50, Thursday, May 28; 4:30 MWF sequence, 7:30-9:20. Friday, May 29; 4:30 TTS sequence; 9:40-11:30. Friday, May 29. French 1 and 2, German A, B, 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5, Spanish 1 and 2, all sections, 7:30-9:20, Saturday, May 23; General Biology, Zoology 2; Physiology 2, all sections, 7:30-9:20; Monday, May 23. Oanh said most of the matters he wanted to discuss with American officials had been settled during McNamara's visit. He said there had been a thorough discussion of the new U.S. aid program. Chemistry, 1, 2, 2a and 3, all sections, 3:10-5:00, Tuesday, May 26 (5:10-7:00 for students who have 7:30 TTS exams at 3:10-5:00, Tuesday, May 26; English 1, 1a, all section, 1:00-2:50, Friday, May 22; Physics 3, 4, 5, 6 and 116, all sections, 3:10-5:00, Saturday, May 23 (5:10-7:00 for students who have 12:30 TTS exams at 3:10-5:00, Saturday, May 23); Business Administration 40 and 41, all sections, 3:10-5:00, Monday, May 25 (5:10-7:00 for students who have 7:30 MWF exams at 3:10-5:00, Monday, May 25). Engineering Mechanics 1, 12, 16, 48, 49, 55, 57, all sections, 1:00-2:50. Friday, May 22 (3:10-5:00 for students who have English exams at 1:00-2:50, Friday, May 22) Geography 6, all sections, 3:10-5:00 Wednesday, May 27 (5:10-7:00 for students who have 10:30 TTS exams at 3:10-5:00, Wednesday, May 27) Psychology I, all sections, 3:10-5:00. Thursday, May 28 (5:10-7:00 for students who have 12:30 MWF exams at 3:10-5:00, Thursday, May 28). To counter the stepped-up Communist activity, the United States has promised increased aid to the South Vietnamese government. In addition to having 15,000 men in the country, the United States is contributing $1.5 million a day in military and economic help toward overcoming the Communists. AN AMERICAN OFFICER who escaped from pursuing guerrillas after being wounded in the ambush Thursday said the Viet Cong opened up on the government force with machine guns, mortars and rifles. He said the government troops tried to break through, but the Red fire was too heavy. "You could see the people all around you getting hit," said 1st Lt. William D. Richter, 25, of Seattle, in a hospital yesterday. Richter was hit in both legs as he tried to flee. He said he probably would be dead but for Army Capt, Donald F. Van Ynde, 26, of Chicago, who stuck with him and helped him escape. The Schools of Engineering and Law have elected their officers for the 1964-65 school year. Two KU Schools Elect New Officers Don Culp, a second year law student, was elected president of the Law School. He will also serve as president of the Student Bar Association, which governs the social activity of the school. F - R - E - E The other members of the law school council will be elected next fall. JAZZ LAB BAND CONCERT Phil Wilkes, Shawnee Mission senior, was elected president. Tomorrow Night Union Ballroom 7 p.m. Stephen Hartung, Kansas City, Mo., junior, was elected vice-president. The School of Engineering announced the results of the election for next year's Engineering Council. Joseph Bowman, Shawnee Mission sophomore, was elected secretary-treasurer. Sponsored By SUA & Musicians Union, Local 512 Frank (Barry) Barnes, Mission sophomore, will serve as junior representative to the council. Charles Mosley, Kansas City senior, is the senior representative to the council. Rich Andrews, Kansas City freshman, will serve as the sophomore representative. 电话 Phone in your Classified Ad In Maryland Heavy Vote Expected BALTIMORE —(UPI)— Predictions of a heavy voter turnout in tomorrow's Maryland primary spurred Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace and Sen. Daniel B. Brewer, D-Md., today in their final hours of campaigning. Wallace, who has based his campaign on an attack on the administration's civil rights bill, was to make his final campaign appearance tonight in the National Guard army at Glen Burnie. DEMOCRATIC LEADERS have estimated that the segregationist governor will get about 25 per cent of the vote. Other observers have predicted he will receive as much as 40 per cent. Wallace has said he would view his campaign successful if he received 5 per cent of the Democratic vote. THE REPUBLICAN contest has been overshadowed by the bitter debate between Brewster and Wallace. over civil rights versus states rights. GOP supporters will vote for an uninstructed delegation to the Republican national convention. It was estimated that more than 500,000 votes would be cast in the hotly contested election that has brought many liberal Democratic senators into the state from nearby Washington to aid Brewster's campaign. A forecast of warm and fair weather throughout the state tomorrow was expected to help bring out the voters. Brewster, President Johnson's stand-in in the battle for Maryland's 48 delegates to the Democratic national convention, and he was completely confident of winning, and the only question was by how big a margin. Parading through the narrow streets at the head of a marching band, Kennedy evoked his brother's memory before one crowd of 2,000 by saying "I am here because I felt he would have wanted me to be here." YOUNG. SEN. EDWARD M. Kennedy, D-Mass., last night stumped through the Polish and Italian sections of South Baltimore in support of Brewster. He told voters that Wallace opposed everything his brother, the late President John F. Kennedy, "stood for and lived for." Regardless of the outcome of Tuesday's voting, convention delegates will be committed to a candidate only on the first ballot. Several waitress supporters rowed-net- ley Kennedy through the crowded winery Toronto, Thomas Bond asking, "Sen. Kennedy, who are in you for putting a white man in jail for choosing his customers at the bar-restaurant on the corner?" At each place he appeared, cheering thrugs nearly mobbed him. Kennedy responded, in a style reminiscent of his brother, by smiling broadly, shaking hands and waving. Kennedy, ignoring the pickets, later appeared at a union rally with Sen. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii, and United Steel Workers President The wife you save-may be your own! MOVING? STORING? Get "WIFE INSURANCE" TEXAS ACADEMY OF SCIENCES It's a wise policy — protects your wife against moving day worry and "frazzled nerves." Ask about it today; no obligation. LAWRENCE MAYFLOWER 609 MASS. David J. McDonald, who told 2,000 workers that "a vote for Wallace is a vote for all the forces of hate which are at large in America today." But this pastime has not always been socially acceptable. The march of time has brought a change in customs. Sunbathing Evolves Here It appears the spring sun has finally overcome the Mount Oread winds and rains. And with the appearance of Ole Sol come increased interest and participation in one of the favorite campus sports (no, not beaver shooting)—sumbathing. The first time the young virgins would expose themselves to the rays of the sun would be on their wedding day. In ancient times, the young maidens were kept underground in caves so their bodies would be illly white—a sign of purity. So when the Sun God calls, the campus is besieged by loyal subjects who spread their blankets and bare themselves (to sunbathe, of course). But today is is the golden bronze body that attracts the admiration of the opposite sex. The fair-complexioned man or woman is considered to be anemic and unhealthy. Many students will spend the next two weeks studying for finals surrounded by an aroma of baby oil, cocoa butter, suntan lotion and burned motor oil. International Club Elects Fall Officers Ali Hassan, Hyderabad, India, sophomore, was elected president of the International Club Saturday night during the Club's spring elections. Other officers for the 1964 fall semester are; George Tannous, Beshmezeen El Koura, Lebanon, junior, vice-president; Janet Evans, Wichita junior, secretary; Mohammed Jamal Abouali, Nablus, Jordan, graduate student, treasurer (re-elected); and Norma Repuyan, Junction City senior, social chairman. The International Club representative to the ASC will be appointed in the fall. Ethan Smith can show you NA how to get an accurate estimate on your move Developed by experts, the North American Van Lines method of estimating is "Quality Controlled" for accuracy. Our men have been trained to use this system, so if you are moving across town or cross-country, call for a FREE estimate. There is no obligation. Ethan Smith Moving & Storage 808 Penn. VI 3-0380 YOUR NORTH AMERICAN VAN LINES AGENT NORTH AMERICAN VAN LINES CARRIERS FOR MOVING AND TRANSPORTATION Page 10 University Daily Kansan Monday.May 18,1964 Yogi 'Retires' Again By Milton Richman UPI Sports Writer Yogi Berra "retired" today . . again. Berra, who insisted he was all through playing last November, then hedged a bit recently, put his mask and mitt back on yesterday for the first time since being named Yankee manager. It was only for pre-game batting practice but the Yankees promptly got the message. They went out and had their best day of the year by knocking over the Kansas City A's twice, 11-9 and 8-0, to climb within 10 percentage points of the first-place Chicago White Sox. "I'm finally beginning to enjoy managing," Berra grinned when it was all over. The reasons are perfectly obvious. MICKEY MANTLE and Tom Tresh each homered in the opener, Mantle raising his average to a startling 577 against left-handers in the process, and Whitey Ford fashioned a four-hitter in the finale for his fourth victory in five decisions. Joe Pepitone, most impressive of all, hammered a pair of homers and two singles in the nightcap as well as a triple in the first game. He now has connected safely in 10 of his last 15 at bats to boost his average from .116 to .295. Southpaws Hank Aguirre and Mickey Lolich of the Tigers knocked the Indians out of first place with 3-1 and 4-1 victories; Juan Pizarro posted his fourth straight win for the White Sox in a 3-2 triumph over the Senators; the Angels overturned the Orioles, 9-4, and the Red Sox beat the Twins in their opener, 6-2, but lost the second game, 6-5. Big-Eight Track Statistics Shot put-1, Bob Neuman, Mo. 56-9.2. Gene Crews, Mo. 55-9.3, Jim Beltzer, Burt Johnson, Okta, 58-1.5, Tom Galbos, Col. 51-8. G. Schwartz, Kansas, 51-3₂. 440-relay—I Colorado (Cheskin, Morrison, Old record 40.7 by Oklahoma in 1962. 2 Nebraska. 40.5. 3. Oklahoma. 40.6. 4. Iowa. 5. Iowa State. 42. 6. Indiana. 21. 1 Javelin-1, Tom Purma, Kan, 224-1 2. L. Mohr, Kan, 203-1. 3. B. Berline, Okla, 209-9. 4. And Kohs, St. 198-12¹, 6. Bill Nowell, Ma, 195-10¹. 6. Bill Nowell, Ma, 195-10¹. Mile run- 1, Robin Lingle, M. 4:05.9 Chardon Charles Coburn, M. 4:06.7 Von Moner St. 4:06.7, 4:06.7, 4:06. Donner, Kan. 4:06.7, 5. Herald Hadley, Kan. 4:10.7, 6. Dave Wighton, Col. Broad jump-1, Victor Brooks, Neb. 24-73-, 2. Anthony Watson, Neb. 24-73-, 4. Brian Hines, Neb. Hines, Kan. 23-51-, 5. Vincent Johnson, 23-43-, 6. Juries Jessifers, Neb. 24-73-. 100-yard dash—1, Lynn Headley, Neb. 9.5.2, Anthony Wentka, Okla. 9.6.3, Bob Janson, Kan. 9.7.4, Alexander Bokai, Kt. 9.8.5, Frank Deremer, Okla. 9.8.6, Reston Bagley, Okla. 9.9. High jump—1, record Laverty, Okla. $6-8_2$ , tussle set by Bob Lang, Mo. 1956, 2, Ross Tunnel, Mo. $6-6_1$ , 3, Tye Smith, Kan. $7-6_2$ , 4, Tye Smith, Kan. $6-6_1$ , 5, Jack Craner, Neb. $6-4_6$, John Nunley, Okla. $6-4$. Last five places awarded on fewest misses. 229-yard dash—1, Kent McCloughan, Dale Alexander, Kan St. 215.4, Dick Burns, Colo. 218.8, Suggs, Kan, disqualified. Dale Alexander, Kan St. 215.4, Anthony Watson, Oklia serrated. High hurdles - 1, Jim Miller, Col., 14.0, tries record set by Ketch Gardner, Neb. 1958, and Rex Stucker, Kan St., 1961. 2, Norm Johnston, Iowa St., 19.3, 3. Preston Groff Mo., 14.5, New Bill Chambers, Kan., 14.8, Mike Hewitt, Oklau. 15.0. 320-yard intermediate hurdles—1, Jim Miller, Col., 36.4 new record, Old record, 36.5 set by Miller, Col., 1663. 2, Ron Piers, or, 37.3. 3, Lyman Hewitt, Neb., 76.4. 4, Michael McBride, St., 37.8. 5, Johnston, Iowa St., 39.1. 6, Mike Hewitt, Ola., 40.0. 880-yard run -1, Tonie Coane, Kan. 1:51.1, 2, Dave Perry, Okla St, 1:51.6 ATTENTION COLLEGE STUDENTS! Next semester attend the UNIVERSITY OF THE SEVEN SEAS sailing from New York City October 19, 1964, aboard the transatlantic liner m.v. SEVEN SEAS. A non-profit institution incorporated under the laws of the State of California. - Visit 21 fabulous cities. - Internationally oriented curriculum. - 108-day odyssey around the world. - Rates from $1590.- Tuition fee only $500. - Cruise #2 sails Feb. 11, 1965 from San Diego. Calif., for 120 days. - Holland-America Line - general passenger agents for Europe Canada Line. For more detailed information call us today. MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 3. John Perry, Okla. St., 151:8. 4. Walter Mizell, Okla., 152:4. 5. Lowell Paul, Kan., 152:5. 6. Larry Ray, Mo., 153:6. Drius - I, Jumbo, Okla., 187:8. Diseus--1, Inman, Okla., 167-8, 2 Galbos, Col. 165-5½, 3 Schwartz, Kan. 163-7, 4 Neuman, Mo. 159-0, 5 Johnson, Nob. 152-3½, 6 Crows, Mo. 153-3½ 404-yard dash—Crooks, Neb., 47. 2. Gobo, Neb, 47. 4. 3, Wright, Kan., 47. 4. 4, Strand, 49. 8. 5, Miller, Okla. St. "Three mile run-1," Lingle, Mbo. 14. 26. 9 4. Three mile run - 1, tugging 38. 4.50:38, Kan., 14:40.0. 2. Lawson, Kan., 14:40.0. 3. Silverberg, Kan., 14:48.0. 4. Acevedo, Kan., 14:54.8. 5. Toomey, Neb., 15:03. 6. McCoy, 13:04.4. Triple-jump — 1, Brooks, Neb. 47-7, new record. Old record 47-5 set by Bill Chambers, Kan, in Friday's preliminaries. 2, Bill Chambers, Kan., 47-5, 3, Miller, Okla. St., 46-0, 5, Von Ruden, Okla. St., 45-10, 6, Miller, Col., 45-73. Mire relay—1. Neb. (Strand, McCloughan, Gebo, Crooks),'3. 10:9. 4. Skail St., 3. 11:1. 3. Col., 3. 12:4. 4. Mo., 3. 15:9. 5. Col., 3. 16:3. 6. Kan., 3. 19:2. Pole vault—1, Holsinger, Okla. St., 15-8, 2. Tie, Farrell, OKla., and Manning, Kan. 15-8. 4. Younger, Mo., 15-6. 5. Baller, Okla. St., 15-0. 6. Fanuchi, Kan., 14-6. First three places decided on number of misses. NOW! Shows at 7:00 & 9:00 DAVID NIVEN • PETER SELLERS ROBERT WAGNER • CAPUCINE. THE PINK PANTHER CLAUDIA CARDINALE The Jayhawk tennis team Saturday swept three of five singles matches and both doubles tilts to win the Big Eight Conference championship meet at Stillwater. Jayhawks Win Big-Eight Tennis Title Granada TREATURE...Telephone VI 3-5793 SOON — LAW MING'S FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE BY JAMES BOND SEAN CONNERY AS JAMES BOND The KU courtmen rolled up a total of 19 points to grab the league title—their first since 1948. Oklahoma finished second in the competition with 13 points. Oklahoma State was next, with seven. Iowa State won fourth with three points. Colorado, Missouri and Nebraska wound up with two and Kansas State got one point. Last 2 Days! HOW THE WEST WAS WON Shown at 7:30 Only Starts WEDNESDAY DON KNOTTS in "THE INCREDIBLE MR. LIMPET" Richards, OU, 6-2, -8-10, 6-1 Ridgway, OU, 7-5, -8-10, OU, def. McGrath, KU, 3-6, 7-5, 6-3 Varsity NEGATRE ---- Telephone VI 3-905 Jim Burns, St. Joseph junior, won the No. 1 singles title by beating O-State's Bob McKenna, 6-1, 6-0. He then teamed up with Lance Burr to also grab the doubles title. Singles No. 1 Finals-Burns, KU, def. Mc-Kenna, OSU, 6-1; 2 Finals-Folz, OSU, def. Burr, KU, 5-7, 6-4, 6-2. No. 3 Finals-Lysaught, KU, def. Geyman, OSU, 6-1, 6-2. No. 4 Finals-Grantham, KU, def. Singles TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION RELEASE THUR 10AM ARTISTS Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Nighway 49 MONITE & TUES... JACK SHIRLEY LEMMON McLAINE THIS PICTURE IS FOR ADULTS ONLY BILLY WILDER'S IRMA LA DOUCE No. 1 Semifinals—Burns-Burr, KU, defeated Hillary-Weed, CU, 6-4; 7-5; Latham-McSpadden, OU, def. Foltz-McKenna, OSU, 6-2; 6-4. Doubles 1 Finals—Burns-Burr, KU. def. Latham-Mcobadden, 6-4, 2-6. OPEN 7:00 — STARTS DUSK No. 2 Semifinals—Geyman-McSpadden, OU, defeated Smith-Bork, KSU, 6-3, 6-1; Grantham-McGrath, KU, def. Sanko- Woods, NU. 6-4. 6-2. -BUSINESS DIRECTORY- Milliken's SOS No. 2 Finals—Grantham-McGrath, KU, Geyman-McSpadden, UO. 2-6, 7- 8-6. **one best professional service** * general typing service* * automatic typing* * 24 hr. answering service* * mimeograph & photo-copying* 21% Mass. V1 3-502, 7 m.-11 p.m. 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 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. BREAKFAST OUB SPECIALTY Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups,Trophies,Medals OPEN 24 hrs. a day Fraternity Jewelry 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Balfour STUDENTS How do you save money by spending a lot of it at the Lawrence Book Nook? 1021 Mass. Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd 7 a.m.-11 p.m Tops -- Glass & Zippers Rear Glasses -- Hood Glasses Door Panels -- Tailor Made Seat Covers at Competitive Prices with wider interior stitch. Jack's Seat Covers 545 Minn. VI 3-4242 FIRST NATIONAL BANK Travel Agency AIR LINES Domestic & Foreign Steamship Lines Tours & Cruises Everywhere VI 3-0152 746 Mass. COMPLETE SERVICE FOR CHEVYS & OLDS VI 3-7700 Big enough to have all the equipment. 738 N.H. - Small enough to give personal attention. 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 FOR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS SEE MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES MALLS SHOPPING CENTER VI 3-1211 Originality IN FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION especially for you by Alexander's 836 IDWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PHONE VI. 2-1000 Guns semeer Slide ammechan vate Must ASR- rard Empi 1139. 1959 many clear p.m. Two reve Stocl gone trac even Mus Good Ca 21" Call 1959 and S P WH at g Satu St. New shee 1005 le def. def. de- 7-5; -Mc- dden, 6-1; anko- 5 FOR SALE —Classified Ads- Guns and ammo for sale. Big end-off- semester cash sale. Everything goes: Slide rules, rifles, shot guns, pistols, ammo, grenades. This is your last chance (and mine). Call VI 3-1110 (private party). tf Must sell one Stromberg-Carlson model ASR-850 stereo amplifier and one Gar- lamp A changer with base Empire 108 stereo cartridge. Call VI 5-21139. 1962 Pontiac Grand Prix. White w/blue interior, bucket seats, automatic, full power, leather seatback, perfect alignment. Originally $4,950. Ask- ing $2,300. Call VI 3-5030. 5-21 1959 blue VW sedan. Whitewall tires, many accessories. Well cared for and clean. By owner. Call VI 2-3103, 5 to 7 p.m. 5-20 1859 Chevy convertible, Stick, posttraction, new tires, new top. Excellent condition. Need money, must sell. Call VI 3- 9562. 5-21 1860 black Falcon. Excellent condition. 35,300 miles. 4-door sedan, automatic. Original owner. $750. Call Dr. Batra. VI 3-6391. evenings. 5-21 Two Blue Streak tires, $80/820x15" on reversed 15" Mercury rims; Goodyear Stock Car Specials, less than 500 miles gone, treads compounded for paved tracks. $90 value for $70. Call VI 2-3778 evenings and weekends. tt 1956 AUSTIN HEALY, iowa overhaul, back, 876, VII, 2-2038. bkg, 876, VII, 2-2038. Very nice 3 bedroom home $500 down, will buy will buy Call VI 51-2 after 4.30 p.m. 5-19 Must sell 1960 Volvo before May 31. Must sell 2014 Volvo after May 31. Call Sandy, VI 2-4112 after 5 p.m. 5-21 1953 Buick. $50. Call Don Senti, VI 3-18 6 anytime. 1111 W. 11th. I 3-88 Little used Harmony guitar. Call VI 3- 6060. Ask for Sherry. 5-18 1958 Morris Minor. New motor, transmission, tires. $200. Underwood typewriter. $20. About 3,000 books. 1539 Tenn. Vl. 3-7787. 5-18 1959 Volvo. Rebuilt engine, new tires and battery. Clean. Call VI 3-4050. 5-21 21" console TV, RCA, real good shape. VII 3-1497 2 after 6 p.m. tt One dinette set, 2 years old, excellent condition. Six chairs with matching tables. Two upholstered chairs and Danish Modern chairs, 2 years old, need reupholstering, $10 each. See at 635 W. 25th Apt., April, or Thursday, for prices. Wednesday, Friday, between 2 and 5 p.m. Wedding dress, size 7-8. 1817 La. Upstairs, west apartment. 4 to 6 p.m. SPEED EQUIPMENT -- CHROME WHEELS. Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale at great savings after 6 p.m. week day sunday and Sunday. 837 Inc. Connecticut tt New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500 sheets to ream—$ .85. Lawrence Outlook. 1005 M a. tf Typewriters, new and used portables, standards, electricity. Olympia, Hermes, Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter, adder, rentals and service. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St. VI 3-3644. Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for classes. Formerly known for teaching the history of Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive immeigraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf For Forller Brush Products phone VI 8- 9040 after 5 p.m. tf FOR RENT Three room furnished apartment for 1 or 2 adults. Attractive, completely pri- erable. Rent on每月租电线 electricity. Call VI 3-2813 weekends or after 12 p.m. weekdays. 5-21 Five furnished three room apartments with baths. All utilities paid, except water. Attendance waived at 5 pm. During day, call VI 3-5182. Moody Apartments, 1343 Tenn. Furnished apartment for rent. Come to campus. Also, rooms for girls. joinadults. 5-21 Sleeping and study rooms for male student La. VI 3-4890 5-19 Will have some rental property available Next to south KU Inquire 5-21 3-2923 To male senior, graduate student, or faculty member. Single room with pri. suite and bathroom. 64 Air-conditioned. Call Vi. 3-14-25 mornings or evenings. 1026 Colonial Ct. 5-18 Summer sublet; 4 room apartment. 2 bedrooms. Kitchen, living room, private bathroom. First floor, private entrance. Utilities paid except electricity. $55. Call US 1-29271 Bedroom with shower and half-bath. Bench privileges if desired. See at 5th Lift. Single or double room. Furnished, cook- ing space. In the main hall. Call t E-9451 or see at 1244 La. Room for rent. Mahogany panelled room with private entrance and private full 7-Day Room. Parking $35 per month. Off street parking. Call VI 3-5046 evenings. 5-19 Rooms for men. Extremely modern, remodeled bath, coffee and refrigerator with large summer, all new furniture, near KU and Union. 1-14 Mississippi, VI 2-0298. 5-19 To KU men. Two room modern furnished apartment. Outside entrance. Bills for room. Five high rooms. No drinking or smoking. See first house south of campus at 1616 Indiana. 5-18 Efficiency apartment; 2 large rooms. Private entrance and bath. $30 per month Bills paid. Also, large newly redon sleeping room. $17.50 per month. 2 block campus. New garage. $5 per month Available June 1. Call VI 3-7830 or V-1 3-0298. Comfortable, sunny, 4 room apartment room and study room. Room closets, air-conditioning, private bath. Available June 4. Call VI 3-3556 or VI 3-5843. Private furnished apartments for KU men with single beds, showers, all utilities paid. For 1, 2 or 3 men. Available summer rates in furnished houses for KU men. Utilities in all campus. Summer rates. Inquire at 1005 Miss. VI 3-4349. 5-18 New garage apartment for 2 men or couple. Available immediately. Also, a new nice studio apartments for men. A nice campus. For appointment VI 3-8534. Now renting new Ridge House Cabana Units. Swimming pool, carpet, air-conditioning, 1 bedroom furnished or unfurnished. Close to shopping and UNI. Ready for new build. Contact Mr. Osborne now for this fall. V I-311-6403 2403 Cedarwood. ff Luxurious duplex. Central air-conditioning, close to shopping and University. Wall-to-wall carpet, all electric kitchen, swimming pool. Absolutely the finest 2 bedroom units. Contact Mr. Osborne now. VI 3-1116, 4230 Cedarwood. tt Moving to Kansas City? Then dig these brand new beautiful apartments in the Prairie Village-Overland Park area. 1 and 2 bedrooms, wall-to-wall carpet, drapes, central air-conditioning, Hotpoint kitchen, Swimming, tennis, Sauna From 15.50 to $399.00 Street. The Alex Bacon Co., TU 8-3128 or TU 8-5252. 5-21 For two men students. Two basement rooms with kitchen and shower. Inquire at 1520 W. 22nd Terrace, I-3 6-873. 5-18 Emery Apartment available June I. E. contact the bedroom. To contact Milan Loupal, Acu. 204, Emery or call I-3 8-190. 5-19 Married, grad students, faculty. Efficiency apartment from $65 and small house from $70. Available in June. Call now. Santee Apartments, 1123 Ind., VI 3-2116. Bachelor Studio Apartment for graduate or older undergraduate men. $1_{1/2}$ blocks from Union. Newly remodeled nicely furnished ideal study conditions. A few still available at low summer calls. Singles and doubles. For appointment call VI 3-8543. 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 desired. Desired CV VI 3-1116 for information Crescent Heights two bedroom apart- ment 25th and Redd- nd. Phone VI 2-3711. YELLOW CAB CO. VI 3-6333 24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled George's Hobby Shop 1105 Mass. VI 3-5087 Artists - Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics 25c delivery TYPING Large, homey, attractively furnished, 4 room apartment. For summer months at summer rates. Kitchen built-ins and garbage disposal. Utilities paid except water. Balances June 1st. Largest 3 room apt. Call VI 3-7677. Will rent for summer months. tt JOE'S BAKERY 616 W. 9th Open 24 hours except Saturday evening Experience secretary would like typing Reasonable rates. Call Y 3-519. For expert typing, dissertation, thesis, work. Electric typewriter. 5-21 809. Professor Crawford. 5-21 Experienced secretary would like typing. Henderson, Henderson 2565 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122 5-21 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention on all reports, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate typing at reasonable rates. Call Donna Stewart. VI 3-6261. ttf 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 typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term paper thesis, etc. Accurate work standards. Phone VI 3-8397. Charles Patti. BANKING Fast, accurate work done on electric datasets and rated rates. Call Bet Vincent, VI 3-5140. experienced secretary would like typing her home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 188 Accurate expert typet would like typing these prompts. Call VI 3-2651. Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reasoners, paper makers, themed insertations and theses, phone VI 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson, phones VI HIXON STUDIO Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (pica type). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0558. *#* Portraits of Distinction Bob Blank, Photographer Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. ttf Access to library. New electric typewriter, carbon ribbon, special symbols available. Call 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles Manson. Experienced Typist—Dissertations, Theses, Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon from Dr. Robert Frome and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook 2000 Rhode Island, Vi 3-7485. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type the papers, term papers, reports, journals, and rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568 t RISK'S Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow. 2047 Yale. VI 2-1648 Wash & Fluff Dry Shirt Finishing Laundry All makes & models frame - body - fender - glass AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS DALE'S BODY SHOP 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 VI 3-4732 704 Vermont The only thing better than a home cooked meal is Dinner At DUCKS Steaks & Seafoods A Specialty Monday, May 18, 1964 Serving crisp tossed salads, choice of potatoes, zesty Vienna breads & country fresh butter. Sandwiches, too! Your favorite beverage 11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass. Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar with MILKILLENS SOS—always first quantity typing on LB.M. Carbon ribbon machines. We also do tape transcriptions. Office phone to m. to m. 12p.-m12l 05a-Ma-Phone VI 3-5920. Dressmaking-alterations, *formals* and gowns. Ola Smith, 939½ *masc* VI 3-5283 BUSINESS SERVICES L&M CAFE now under new management We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. and we are ready to host numerous lunches, dinners, and sandwiches Your second cup of coffee always free. Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery frented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, $16 Mass. M 3-1267 t MISCELLANEOUS WANTED Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. **t** Offer—A home and salary for student interested in being in central K.C. area near Art Gallery, Cooking and caring for school age children. June 15 to Aug. 15. Write: Mr. Nathan Stark. 4500 Rockhill Terrace, Kansas City, City. 6410-519. 4-15 Summer students. Need reliable sitter 3 Saturday call VI 2-0306. S-21 For information call VI 2-0306. S-21 Ride wanted to KU Medical Center Mon- teau leave 5 p.m. Call VI 2-3148. 8-19 leave 5 p.m. Call VI 2-3148. BURGERT'S Shoe Service VOLKSWAGEN'S WANTED. Cash for your VW, Conzelman Motors, VW Sales Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa. Hiwav $40 support in sales demonstrations. Interested in sales demonstrations. Write giving age, experience, type of instruc- So. CAR OWNERS SAVE UP TO 40% on shocks, mufflers, tail pines and installation. Service for Shoes Since 1910 1113 Mass. St. VI 3-0691 Lube - Wheel Bal. - Brakes - Trained mechanics for quality service NEW YORK CLEANERS REPAIRS — LEATHER REFINISHING ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING Delivery Service 226 Mass. VI 3-0501 - All makes and models including sports cars 19th & Mass. VI 3-9802 tapes: recorded or duplicated 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Recording Service and Party Music GB Montgomery Wards Auto Service Center 729 N.H. VI 2-1708 FREE! qt. of oil with oil change & filter BOB'S CONOCO University Daily Kansan $ $ $ $ $ records: cut or pressed - Your satisfaction GUARANTEED 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 THE NAME FOR SERVICE ★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT Page 11 ★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK ★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED ART'S TEXACO 9th & Mississippi V1 3-9897 ★ MUFFLER SERVICE ★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M. Responsible driver to take car to Wisc- consin. Transportation free and date is flexible. Call Prof. Appel at VI 2-4185, evenings. 5-18 ★ TUNE--UPS HELP WANTED Seniors, cash your rebate slips before inbound, before you leave KU V 2-0180 5-19 Pleasant responsible young lady to do light house work, plan and prepare three meals a day, and care for semi-invalid lady and family for entire summer in K. Rowsley Park. In office and board, write Mrs. Harold E. Mauk, 6935 Glenwood, Shawnee Mission, K. 5-18 LOST College men needed for next fall, jobs Boston's Ibison's in 2500 W. 6th, VI 3-7446. 5-29 Room and board in very nice home near campus. For right person interested in living with well-mannered children (Agnes, 9, 6, 4). Call Mrs. Milliken, VI 3-5947. One navy blue "H.I.S." jacket. Brand new. Taken by accident from chair in Strong basement. Last Friday around 11:30 a.m. Call VI 2-3014. 5-21 --- Lost May 14, Pink gold, leather strap, Jaeger-LeCoulte ladies wrist watch. Be- come and Strong Halls Roar, Call VI 3-3243 or UN 4-3821, or come to 127 Strong. Hallmark Cards When you care enough to send the very best - Parker Pens - Stationery - Printing 4 E. 7th VI 3-2261 BULLOCK'S Just West of Post Office MEMBER OF NOSS NATIONAL BRIDAL SERVICES When buying diamonds Look for this sign MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY AGS In Lawrence, your Authorized Dealer is Delbert A. Eisele Marks Jewelers 817 Mass. VI 3-4266 ★ Engine Tune Up One Stop Service ★ Generator & Starter Repair Brake Repair JACK & GUNN'S WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE SKELLY SERVICE 300 W. 6th STUDENTS! SAVE WITH THIS AD!! "Front End Special" SKELLY VI 3-9271 - 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 Page 12 University Daily Karsan Monday, May 18, 1964 Laos Policy Examined By Top U.S. Officials WASHINGTON — (UPI) — U.S. policy in Laos was being given deep soul-searching thought today by administration officials concerned about new communist attacks in the Southeast Asian troublespot. American officials said some major decisions might have to be made soon. There was a feeling in high quarters that the latest Red attacks might be the "last straw"—that the Communists could not be permitted to keep on violating the Laotian truce. Secretary of State Dean Rusk summoned to conferences at the State Department yesterday diplomats from a dozen countries with special interest in Laos. Included were Russia and Britain, co-chairmen of the Laotian peacekeeping machinery; India, Canada and Poland, members of the International Control Commission (ICC) to police ceasefire violations, and members of the eight-nation Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO). All of the diplomats were urged to use their influence to stop the latest round of fighting. Nations maintaining diplomatic relations with Red China were urged by Rusk to make representations in Peking. The new Laotian crisis brought additional headaches to top U.S. officials already working on plans to step up economic and military aid for South Viet Nam's war against Red guerrillas. President Johnson is expected to send a special request to Congress this week for additional funds to expand the aid program in Viet Nam. He conferred with top aides over the weekend on the proposals. Communist-held portions of Laos have been a route through which supplies and men have been sent by the Reds to the guerrillas fighting in South Viet Nam. Over the past two years, the Russians have appeared to U.S. diplomats to have genuinely been trying to uphold 1961 and 1962 accords to neutralize Laos. But their influence over the Laotian Communists and North Viet Nam, which is more sympathetic to Red China, is believed to be minimal. U. S. Officials strongly doubt that Laotian Communists would have launched their latest attacks without being egged on and supported by North Viet Nam. Just what the United States might do about these North Vietnamese activities apparently is undecided, and officials will give few clues on their thinking. They indicated there was no present idea of major U.S. military intervention. U. S. officials said they were unable yet to assess the scope of the latest Communist attacks in Laos. They appeared to be attempts to retake territory in the area of the Plain of Jars which the Communists had held jointly with the neutralists before 1962. The attacks also could be an attempt by the Communists to warn neutralist Premier Souvanna Phou- Official Bulletin Non-Summer School students may now enroll in English Proficiency Exam in 130 Strong Foreign Students: You are reminded that you must have a permit to have summer employment. See the Foreign Student Advisor's Office. Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910, Stratford Rd. ma against making agreements with the right wing. Varsity Band Spring Concert, 8 p.m. Swarthout Hall. University Lecture, 7:30 p.m., Sunflower Room, Kansas Union. "Bolsheism-A Betrayal of the idea of the Russian Intelligence."—N. P. Polotkarz-81. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Dantouth. TOMORROW The Plain of Jars often is called "strategic," but its importance may be more symbolic than military. It is the headquarters of Souvanna Phouma's neutralist faction, and if neutralist troops are routed from this area it could be a considerable blow to his political power in the capital, Vientiane. Souvanna Phouma is the man the United States has counted on to maintain the neutralist coalition formula. Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Church, 1910 Stratford Rd. Air Force Recruiting 10-3-30 p.m. Hawk's Nest, Kansas Union, Sgt. Eric Roehl, University of application for Officers Training School, Baseball, 3 p.m., Quigley Field, KU- Missouri U. College Faculty Meeting, 4:30 p.m., 303 College Faculty Meeting, 4:30 p.m., 303 Bailey. U. S. officials long have been aware that if the Communists in Laos ever decided to take a major push to gobble up the whole country, they could do so unless the western powers intervened. But it is not yet evident that Communist forces have this large a design, officials here said. Inquiry Forum, p.m. St. Lawrence Will be in Western City, discussion tonight. Episcopal Holy Communion, 9.30 p.m. Danforth. Inquirer Classes, 7:30 p.m., Canterbury House. American officials said they had no confirmation of a report over the weekend that Communist Chinese as well as North Vietnamese troops had been seen in Laos. U.N. 'Transient Says Goldwater LOS ANGELES — (UPI) — Sen. Barry Goldwater said today the U.S. should reconsider its commitments to the United Nations if Red China is admitted to the world body. He characterized the U.N. as "a transient majority of transient nations" in a speech prepared for a civic group lunch. Goldwater faces a head-on clash with New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, winner of last Friday's Oregon primary, in California's biggest-in-the-nation Presidential Primary June 2. "But should the Red Chinese now attempt, in effect, to shoot their way in—while still in open defiance of the U.N.'s own resolution condemning their aggression in Korea—then we should be forced to reconsider our continuing commitments to the U.N." "It may well be too late to draw the line on U.N. memberships by the Communist regimes of Europe," he said. "So long as we treat the U.N. as a sacred cow, immutable and untouchable, it will continue to fall short of its goal," he said. Illinois Teachers Picket; 21,000 Students Stay Home EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill.—(UPI)Elementary and secondary school teachers planned to boycott classes today in a dispute over wages. More than 21,000 students will be affected. A spokesman for local 1220 of the American Federation of Teachers said picket lines would be set up at 35 schools before the start of classes. Union President Clyde Reynolds said the teachers are seeking salary increases from $300 to $900 a year for instructors with 30 hours college credit beyond a master's degree. He said East St. Louis teachers have not had a salary increase in four years. School board officials and an attorney for the teachers union scheduled a meeting at City Hall in an attempt to settle the dispute. But Reynolds urged parents to keep their children home today. Rex Carr, attorney for the teachers union, said he would be the only teachers' representative at the meeting. Carr said he would summon members of the teachers salary committee only if there was some indication of "give and take" at the meeting. Thomas P. O'Donnell, attorney for the Board of Education, said the School Board had offered $100 more a year for attendance officers and $200 a year for all certified personnel. "This certainly is not the end of the matter as far as teachers' raises are concerned," the Rev. William L. Lahey, school board president said. "The board has definitely made known to the teachers that this is merely a first step toward increased pay." RESERVE NOW and save $ $ NEW Cabana Apartment Units NOW RENTING! - SWIMMING POOL - AIR-CONDITIONED - WALL TO WALL CARPETING - NEW APPLIANCES - PAVED PARKING - SOME FURNISHED RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT FOR FALL NOW! PHONE VI3-1116 FOR DETAILS Ridge House 24th & Ridge Court O Ridge House ages. each art of peking hours each- the would he was said officers union dispute. chers' presi s that Daily hansan Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, May 19, 1964 61st Year, No. 143 Caston said other advantages to announcing a general theme early are: more time for revision and polishing without consuming any more study time; to allow the new staff to interview with specific ideas to offer on advertising, programs, publicity, Rock Chalk Theme in'65 Is 'Fractured Flickers' "Fractured Flickers," using motion pictures as the vehicle to carry the "message," will be the theme of next year's Rock Chalk Revue. ye's Rock Chalk Hoite Caston, Independence senior and the new producer of the revue, announced the theme at the Rock Chalk recognition dinner for this year's staff last Sunday night. "Rock Chalk has improved each year but this will be another experiment to see if more can be done. We don't want to preserve a status quo with good, but used, ideas only." "THE MAIN ADVANTAGE will be that individuals can start thinking and looking for possible ideas, without committing their skit to a particular movie. We will accept no definite movie titles or house pairings until a deadline date to be set next fall." Caston said. A lengthy discussion of the pros and cons of announcing the theme early preceded Caston's suggestion of "Fractured Flickers." It was accepted by the old staff. production and in-between segments to fit around the general theme, and to generate more interest among all living groups by suggesting early thought on a general theme. "It would be a definite disadvantage to work with any particular movie in mind or plan details such as music because of duplications arising. The specific topics and pairings should not be considered until the fall deadlines," Caston advised. "WE ARE NOT SETTING a precedent by this decision; we are simply trying to give the students an advantage of time to think about ideas to improve the quality of their re-ve." Caston said he did not foresee any problem of professional help or advice during the summer. He stressed that he trusted the integrity of interested students and the belief that satisfactions comes from using their own material and creative work." Caston said several of the ideas for next year had been agreed upon by Bill Henry, Leawood sophomore and business manager, and by the KU-Y executive board. These include a closer coordination with the participating groups and more detailed hints in the director's guide on writing and constructing a skit. Jayhawker Queen Selected Patricia Kendall, Holton senior, has been chosen queen of the 1964 Javhawker. Miss Kendall and her four attendants, chosen from candidates from each KU living group, were selected by Eugene W. Morgan of Kansas City, Mo., who is president of the KU Alumni Association. Miss Kendall's attendants are: Nan Johnson, Caldwell junior, Beth Beamer, Topeka sophomore, Carol Jo Weber, Raytown, Mo., sophomore, and Johnita Dallam, Shawnee Mission freshman. ber of Kappa Kappa Gamma twice. She also was honor initiate of her pledge class, and she has held several offices in the sorority. A feature section will be devoted to the queen and her attendants in the commencement issue of The Jayhawker, which will be issued approximately May 25. Miss Kendall has been attendant to the Homecoming Queen, a "Hilltopper" in The Jayhawker, and she has been named outstanding mem- She has been treasurer of Mortar Board, senior women's honorary group, treasurer of Cwens, sophomore women's honorary group, and she was one of four nominees for the American Association of University Women outstanding KU senior woman award. Caston will be a graduate student in Radio-Television and has had courses and experience in writing and directing. He toured the Far East last summer with the University production of "The Boyfriend" and was a director of this year's winning skit. Also she has been active in the KU-Y executive committee, the Frosh Hawk executive board, and she has held several editorial positions on The Jayhawker. Miss Kendall has been chairman of the Associated Women Students board of standards and treasurer of AWS. She also has held several positions with the Intercollegiate AWS group. "We plan to have the staff more available to advise and assist the groups in writing and producing their skit, and to work more extensively with the in-between portion of the show." KU's Betas Ranked First Beta Theta Pi fraternity at KU has been named a summa cum laude chapter for 1962-63 scholastic achievement by the National Interfraternity Conference. In a release received by Dean of Men Donald K. Alderson, the NIC listed 11 national fraternity chapters with percentages of $30\%$ or more above the all men's averages on their campuses. This year, Beta at KU ranked first of these 11 with a $39.75\%$, after having been included in this list for the last two years. Dean Alderson said the scholastic report represented 3,038 chapters of 60 national social fraternities at 283 institutions. "This is a fine achievement for Beta Theta Pi and for the University." Dean Alderson said. Lowell Wood, Wichita senior and past president of the KU chapter, said the fraternity had been informed of their national ranking and were "very pleased with the results of our scholastic efforts." Weather Clear to partly cloudy skies are forecast for tonight and tomorrow, with a chance for late afternoon or nighttime showers. Winds will be 10 to 20 miles per hour tonight and tomorrow and temperatures will remain warm. The low tonight will be near 65 degrees, and the high tomorrow in the upper 80's. Intelligentsia Ready for Finals By Nancy Schroeter Finals. Oh, finals. With a grade average of 2.49 in mechanical engineering, Harry Gibson, Kansas City senior, said that he plays ping-pong. "My roommate and I have our own ping-pong tournament during final week," Gibson said. He also said that he did not make extensive outlines to prepare for studying but only reviewed his notes and textbooks. The time is soon coming of study, study, study. But what do the more intelligent of our group do during final week? Do they study or do they play? And just how do they prepare for finals? "I GO HOME and study awfully hard." Mary Baumgartner, Overland Park senior, explained. With 2.7 overall grade point average, Miss Baumgartner, a German major, said that she often cut out her class notes and organized them to relax and avoid studying. Frank (Bucky) Thompson, Lawrence senior, has a different approach to final week: "I sleep about 12 hours a night." A Summerfield scholar with a 2.88 grade point average, Thompson said that, when it came to studying, if a student did not know the material by final week, he might as well forget it. Thompson usually studies by going back over his notes before the final. "Mainly I just read over notes and that's just about it," Bruce Hall, Coffeyville senior, said. With a 2.85 overall grade average, Hall finds that he usually studies during final week. The exception: This coming final week, Hall said that he planned to go to the movies because he was a "big fan of James Bond." Besides studying students somehow seem to find time to relax during final week. Most students play bridge, go to movies, talk, take part in sports, and go out on dates. Strange things happen to some students during final week. One junior recalled the first time she faced final week. The student said that after studying so hard for two days she and her roommates went out of the dormitory screaming and rolled in the snow. Others have read magazines, played records, watched TV, gone to the sand-bar, taken naps, learned how to smoke, and packed to go home during final week to relieve their minds of the burden of studying. WANDERING AROUND in residence halls and Greek houses also seems to be quite a common way to relax. Some students "just vegetate' after a long session of studying. Castro On Alert For New Revolt MIAMI—(UPI)—Tension gripped Cuba today and Premier Fidel Castro's military guard was up to ward off a possible new attempt to overthrow his Communist regime. One woman student said that her final week was spent eating oranges. Last final week she reported that she ate three dozen. An announcement was expected anytime that Cuban exile leader Manuel Ray, reported to be considered by Castro as possibly his most dangerous enemy, had arrived in his homeland to take charge of anti-Castro operations by his Cuban revolutionary junta (JURE). Ray has promised to return to Cuba by tomorrow, the 62nd anniversary of the island's independence from Spain. Castro was apparently anxiously waiting for some sign of Ray, and possibly another exile leader, Eloy Gutierrez Menoyo, who was at the helm of an anti-Castro plot called "Plan Omega." The Communist controlled island was on a maximum alert with troop and tank movements reported by newly arrived refugees and also government radio network messages monitored here by UPI. Dispatches from Havana also revealed a state of military mo- Cuban industry minister Ernesto (Che) Guevara also disclosed the Castro regime is ready militarily. He said "something" was expected from the exiles, but gave assurances over Havana radio that "we know how to handle it." Guevara's admission was accompanied by a new warning from the Soviet ambassador in Havana, Alexander Alexiev, that "the imperialists are mistaken if they believe they are going to act with impunity against Cuba." Alexiev, in a statement broadcast over Havana radio, reiterated Moscow's pledge to "stand by" Castro. Cambodia Dispute Charged to U.S. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.—(UPI)—Russia charged today that the United States sent the military forces of South Viet Nam into action against Cambodia. Soviet Ambassador Nikolai T. Fedorenko made the charge in opposing an invitation to Viet Nam to participate in a Security Council debate on Cambodian charges of aggression by it and the United States. The council overrode the Soviet objections by a 9-2 vote, Russia and Czechoslovakia voting against an invitation to Viet Nam, which is not a U.N. member. "It is the American militarists who are guiding all the operations of the South Vietnamese troops and sent them against the Cambodian people," Fedorenko said. He was supported by Cambodian Ambassador Voeunsai Som who said Americans participated in raids by Vietnamese armored forces against villages near the frontier of Cambodia and Viet Nam. Dispatches from Viet Nam indicated that the Vietnamese troops were in hot pursuit of Communist Viet Cong guerrillas seeking sanctuary across the border. U. S. Ambassador Charles W. Yost denied American officers accompanied a Vietnamese armored force in a border raid last week. "Investigation has shown that no American personnel crossed into Cambodian territory," Yost told the Security Council. "Although an American adviser was accompanying the Viet forces on May 7 and 8, he was not in the group which crossed into Cambodian territory." Teachers in 2 Cities Strike for More Pay Bulletin SALT LAKE CITY—(UPI)—Utah's public school teachers voted overwhelmingly today to end their two-day walkout and return to their classrooms tomorrow. Utah's 11,000 public school teachers took their strike into its second day today under threat of court action. In East St. Louis, Ill., high school seniors picketed their striking teachers. Both the Utah and East St. Louis teachers stayed away from their classrooms to back up demands for higher salaries. The Utah Attorney General asked a district judge to issue an injunction against the striking teachers. The teachers, meanwhile, scheduled a mass meeting in Salt Lake City at 10 a.m. MST (1 p.m. EDT). In the Mississippi river town of East St. Louis, high school seniors due to graduate next week matched teachers' picket lines with their own. They carried signs reading "exams, now, pickets later." Final examinations are scheduled for Thursday and Friday and many seniors were afraid the stuike might delay their graduation. The student pickets reported for classes after marching around the high schools. More than two thirds of East St. Louis' teachers joined the strike which began yesterday.The walkout gave more than 18,000 youngsters a holiday from classes. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, May 19, 1964 Peaceful Existence SPU Freedom Friday was a peaceful day. The sun was warm, a soft wind, strange for Kansas, was blowing and the weekend was ahead. Friday afternoon, the "Chancellor's Review" was held of KU's three ROTC units. To the right of the reviewing stand, a line of students, small in number, but large in ideals stood with picket signs. The Student Peace Union (SPU) was picketing the ROTC review. Essentially their appeal is ban ROTC. The only good military force is one that is non-existent. It was a peaceful day for a peaceful demonstration. In South Viet Nam, it's the time of the rainy season. Our "advisors" go to class and instruct the soldiers of Viet Nam. Their object is slightly different however. They are teaching the art of fighting and how to kill or be killed. The title of the course is "Modern Guerrilla Warfare. 1964." Basically the course is not new. It's being taught in Armed Forces Bases around the world. The theme of the course is survival. Repugnant, isn't it? To think of teaching civilized man how to kill. And for what? To protect the idea of our democracy that has been paid for many times over by the lives of our forefathers, and by members of the military today? Let's not get sentimental. To keep the right of freedom inherent so that we can picket without fear of arrest? That's ridiculous. We're not protecting anything by teaching men how to kill. That never accomplishes anything. It just helps to keep the status quo. We should instead, teach civilized man how to carry picket signs, and how to promote his ideals of peace the world over. The military is a waste of time and money. Mothers and wives have cried in privacy, publicly, and in freedom because of our war-mongering. I imagine they can say it wasn't worth it. Or can they? I salute the SPU! Ban the American flag! World-wide peace is the important thing. Especially since we haven't been working to protect what peace we do possess. May mothers and wives never shed another tear. Our freedom isn't worth it. Thank you Mr. McNamara. Friday was a peaceful day. -Jim Langford The People Say Defends SPU Certain letter to you have made it necessary for me to defend the SPU. The accusations are that the goals of SPU cannot be realized and that if they were to be realized, they would lead to national danger. The issues at hand are these. Does the state have more right to exist than the individual, or, is the reverse true? And, can nuclear weapons, in the final analysis, protect the lives and property of the people in the state? In the current world military arrangement it is ridiculous to think that, in event of war, there will be any life left which the state can protect. It is at this point that the current productions of nuclear weapons for "defensive" reasons have really outlived their purpose. Now, whether the SPU can change this situation or not does not matter. In the same manner, just because an individual does not have the power to appeal to the Law to protect his rights, it does not mean that he does not have them. Specifically then, the state does not have the right to engage in military programs which in their very nature have the capacity to destroy all life in the belligerent countries in case of disagreement. The SPU, then, is composed of individuals who realize that the individual$_{s}$ in the state, separately, or, in the aggregate, have the right to life which is being threatened. They must point out the folly of these well-meaning programs which would do the reverse of what they set out to do. Individuals could quite legally sue the state for such warlike activities, but, then, there is no court that has yet fully realized that states are ridiculous and selfish. Hopefully, states will become obsolete and be replaced by one supreme state—the people of the world. Walter S. Bgoya Tanganyika junior Review Sickening To a disinterested observer, the military review Friday afternoon took on the appearance of fine young bodies being inspected to make sure they were good enough to do battle, or, if you wish, some high-grade meat being inspected before slaughter. In any case, it is directly in the centuries-old and half-civilized tradition of regarding groups of men as war machines, waiting to be ordered to do the dirty work of those heads of state who cannot adapt their thinking and action to the present, but who continue to think and act in terms of the past. To one who has caught the vision of a more free society even than that visualized by the Constitution-makers, and who thinks that men can overcome their barbaric traditions and live in self-respect, the review was a rather sickening reminder that there is a tremendous amount of work to be done to realize this goal. There are better paths through future history than the military one to the goal of free, individually-oriented society, paths that involve less pain for humanity, and that have more relevance to the goal. But these alternative paths will never be used if the leaders of governments do not begin shaking themselves out of this centuries-old rut of militarism and individual oppression. Since the men of government in this country are still influenced at least a little bit by public opinion, it is this country that has the capacity to take the first step. And, however ineffective their methods may be, that is what the SPU was really trying to do Friday—to influence public opinion away from tradition and toward reasonable action. Kent Andrews Abilene freshman MORE AND BIGGER NUCLEAR BOMBS! LEMAY © 2014 HERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON D.C. CITY COUNTY ARCHIVE "Precisely, General——In This Space Age. It's Not Enough To Be Able To Destroy Only One Planet" Dailij Mhhsan 111 Flint Hall Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas BOOK REVIEWS THE ORDEAL OF POWER, by Emmet John Hughes (Dell, 75 cents). This is the book that has caused so much controversy because Emmet John Hughes, who wrote speeches for Eisenhower, gives an inside view of the Eisenhower administration that is scarcely the view of a court partisan. For that reason it will be talked about for some time. There have, as a matter of fact, been official and semi-official contradictions of some of the Hughes commentaries. Nixon, especially, gets his lumps: Hughes obviously has no love for the vicepresident. Sherman Adams is treated in harsh words. His ultimate view of Eisenhower, though he liked and respected him, is that Eisenhower failed to live up to his potential or his promise. Yet he also comments on the man who succeeded Eisenhower, who had failed (or had not tried), as Eisenhower had failed, to stop the onrushing McCarthy. It is likely that Hughes, in his picture of Eisenhower, is neither as good as the Democrats paint him nor as bad as the Republicans say. Constitution Commission Favors Short Ballot By Roy Miller When the Douglas County voter attempts to exercise his voting privilege in August and November, he will be confronted with the names of candidates running for more than 25 state, county and congressional offices. And, it is because of this profusion of choice that the increasing trend is toward the short ballot, especially at the state level, where the long ballot also obstructs effective administration. In view of such a lengthy ballot—which in November will include three proposed constitutional amendments—it's no wonder that many voters leave the polls in a perplexed frame of mind. THE SECOND COMMISSION on Revision of the Kansas Constitution proposed that "In state elections only the governor, the lieutenant governor and the attorney general be popularly chosen instead of nine state officers as now." The commission notes that the proposal does not "go as far toward the so-called short ballot as recent studies and recent trends in our state constitutions agree to advise . . " Only the governor remains popularly elected in the constitutions of Alaska, Hawaii, New Jersey, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. BEHIND THIS MOVEMENT toward the short ballot, there is an effort to make the governor the chief executive in reality as well as in name. "The executive department of most states is splintered, with administrative powers divided among elected officials at all levels of government and specialized, independent boards and agencies. Frances Sanford Nelson wrote in "Constitutional Change in Kansas:" "Too often the governor finds that the role he plays is that of observer rather than that of chief executive, and the people, as they view this maze of executive activity, are seldom able to decide whom to hold responsible for successes or failures in administration." WILLIAM H. CAPE, associate professor of political science, commented on this multiple executive in "Constitutional Revision in Kansas" by stating: The fact that a multiple executive is common in most states reflects the early day distrust of a single executive. "The fact that those executive officers are elected indicates that they are to enjoy a degree of independence from the chief executive "Because several state officials are elected, it means that they may feel a greater responsibility directly to the voters rather than to the chief executive. "The indirect' loyalty of the constitutional officers to the governor would take on additional significance if the minority party should consistently win one or more of the 'cabinet' positions." THE SECOND COMMISSION on Revision of the Constitution proposed joint election of the governor and lieutenant governor and pointed to the national system and the constitutions of a few other states. "This provision should serve to avoid the confusion resulting when the two top officials are of differing partisan beliefs—a confusion compounded should the problem of succession arise in mid-term," the commission stated in its report. The duties of the lieutenant governor would be defined by statute, but he would remain as presiding officer of the Senate. A majority of the commission preferred to leave the attorney general an elective position. "The example of the national government is in point," the commission stated. "The chief executive, it is said, needs a thorough cooperation from the attorney general's office." IN ADDITION TO cutting the number of elective state officials, the commission proposed an amendment on the executive article which would lengthen terms from two to four years. The commission cited a majority of states' constitutions providing for four-year terms. "The Council of State Governments, the National Municipal League and other groups dedicated to improving government back the four-year term on the ground that a shorter time does not allow a fair test of the chief executive's policies and programs," the commission's report stated. "While the short ballot is aimed to fix responsibility upon the governor somewhat more than in the past, and so to make more effective the voter's task of assessing the responsibility, yet our concern is also to guard against the possible abuse of executive power. "ACCORDINGLY, three safeguards are contemplated: - Popular election of attorney general. - A state comptroller general to be chosen by, and responsible to, the Legislature. - A bar against two successive gubernatorial terms. The commission would make election of state officers in midpresidential-term elections "in order to stress more largely the state issues as such." University Daily Kansan Page 3 Vocal Concerts Raising $1,600 To Send Student to Hong Kong By Jackie Helstrom (Assistant Managing Editor) It takes a lot of incentive to make someone work hard enough to earn money so they can have the opportunity to work some more. Banks has been chosen to take part in a project, sponsored by the National Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA) and the West Central Area YMCA, that includes a summer workshop and seminar in Hong Kong, British Crown Colony. But Lacy Banks, Kansas City senior, has found that incentive—a trip to Hong Kong. HE IS RAISING the $1,600 necessary for expenses by presenting a series of vocal concerts. Up to now he has given one here, at the Wesley Foundation, and one in Kansas City at Summer high school from which he was graduated. From these concerts and private contributions he already has collected over $1,000; he expects to have the rest by the end of the month. The workshop-seminar in which Banks was chosen to participate will include ten students from nine different schools across the United States. The other schools from which participants were selected are the University of Pennsylvania, Dartmouth university, West Point Military Academy, University of Nebraska, Iowa State university, University of Illinois, University of Washington, and McPherson College. THE PROGRAM they will follow will include six weeks in Hong Kong for a workshop and seminar and one and a half weeks each in Manila and Tokyo for additional seminars. The workshops in Hong Kong, Banks said, would probably resemble the work being done by the Peace Corps in other areas of Asia in both projects and living conditions of the participating students. Hong Kong is a city plagued by the problem of overpopulation because of the constant flow of refugees out of Communist China. BANKS SAID the British government at present is in the process of building large housing complexes to take these people off the streets. Each house will hold 5,000 people by putting families of five to seven people in $12_{1/2}$ x $10_{1/2}$ cubicles. The construction of these houses is to be the main project for Bank's group. In addition to the building, the students will also help out as instructors for the classes in methods of modern living, which the British government is holding on the roofs of these housing projects. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS ACADEMIC YEAR IN EUROPE "THE HOUSING accommodations may not sound very good by our standards," Banks commented, "but they are better than sleeping on the rocks or in the sewers." The seminars will give the students a chance to exchange views, philosophies and ideas on world problems with students from the East. Our living conditions, while we are there, may not be much better, he added. He said that he has heard from others who have gone in the past that the housing was not too good and the food was worse. For American College Students Sept.-June $1650 (Total) Distinguished Faculty, Tranf-Credits "ALTHOUGH Hong Kong is a British Crown Colony and one of He said he felt the opportunity of discussing world problems with them would give him a greater insight into the difference between the East and the West. "I have always tried to communicate across racial and cultural barriers, and am sure that this experience will do much to broaden my knowledge of living conditions in the world as well," he said. the few British colonies that has not pressed for its independence, the people there are Chinese," Banks said. SUMMER COURSE For Beginners In German July 6 - August 29 College Credit $400 FRENCH YEAR IN GENEVA Special Course And University Study Banks also said that the trip would probably offer him one other valuable reward; the chance to pick up some of those bargains in hand tailored suits that you always hear are available in Hong Kong. GERMAN YEAR in Neckar Valley Castle—near Heidelberg Also For Beginners in German Wigbert Holle of the University of Bonn, Germany, has been con ferring since Wednesday with officials about KU's new Junior Year Program at his school. Write To Schiller College 7121 Kleiningersheim/Neckar Germany Or U.S. Office 425 Laurel Highland Park, Illinois The German educator, head of the Office for Foreign Students and Foreign Affairs at Bonn, also is meeting KU students chosen for next year's Junior Year program and direct exchange students. Tuesday, May 19, 1964 Holle is recognized as a leading German university official in foreign student work. The University of Bonn now enrolls 1,555 foreign students in a total enrollment of 12,604, the highest percentage of foreign students among German universities. Talks on Exchange FLESH EATERS Contemporary apartments for summer rental or longer. These apartments are completely furnished, have two bedrooms and are air-conditioned. WATCH THIS SPOT We are renting to college men, and we will allow four occupants in e a c h apartment. These apartments are within walking distance of campus. Rates are from $90 to $105. Call VI 3-8241 during the day, and VI 3-9373 at night. Patronize Kansan Advertisers NOTICE Both our fine locations wish to thank you for your steady patronage for the past year. We wish you the best of luck for the summer, and we hope to see you all again in September. FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN 900 Miss. DOWNTOWN PLANT 740 Vt. Scooter Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi K Page 4 University Dauy Kansan Tuesday, May 19, 1964 Laos Crisis Same in 1962 By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst It was about this time in 1962 when the United States found itself in the midst of a crisis which led it to assign troops to the defense of Thailand and powerful units of the Gulf of Siam. FROM VIENTIANE, capital of Laos, comes word that the myth of neutrality for that sad little country has been exploded with the route of the forces of Gen. Kong Le, himself a sad, colorless little figure who also once believed in neutralism. And so it can be assumed that more than the question of military and economic reinforcement of South Viet Nam occupied President Johnson and his chief advisers in their weekend talks which followed the return of Defense Secretary Robert McNamara from Saigon. Laotian dispatches tell of Kong Le's neutralist forces being routed from the Plain of Jars under heavy attack by Communist-led Pathet Lao and Viet Minh forces and Kong Le himself seeking sanctuary among anti-Communist Mao tribesmen in nearby mountains to the northeast. A similar situation may already be here. These events bear a marked resemblance to the crisis of 1962. Kong Le's forces have been estimated at 7,000 men armed with American weapons. In May of 1962, Pathet Lao and Viet Minh forces broke a cease-fire with an attack on the northern town of Nam Tha. FIVE THOUSAND royalist forces fled in panic with their officers in the vanguard and without even bothering to inform the American advisers assigned to them. It left the Communists an open road to the Mekong River and to the border with Thailand. The two-pronged attack which overran Kong Le's headquarters now is said to have given the Communists the entire Plain of Jars and control of the Tran Ninh plateau which traditionally is the invasion route for the whole of Indochina. It further opens their way to the capture of the Mekong River town of Paksane which would have the twin effect of posing a new threat to Thailand and cutting Laos in two. It further would isolate the remaining bulk of the Laotian army in the south and could lead to the fall of Vientiane, the administrative capital of Laos. So for the United States another moment of truth could be in the making. NA Ethan Smith can show you how to get an accurate estimate on your move Developed by experts, the North American Van Lines method of estimating is "Quality Controlled" for accuracy. Our men have been trained to use this system, so if you are moving across town or cross-country, call for a FREE estimate. There is no obligation. Ethan Smith Moving & Storage 808 Penn. VI 3-0380 YOUR NORTH AMERICAN VAN LINES AGENT NORTH AMERICAN VAN LINES Three Promoted Delbert Shankel, assistant professor of microbiology, and William Gilbert, professor of history, have been elected to the administrative committee of the College. William B. Bass, assistant professor of anthropology, was elected College faculty secretary. USO-Sponsored Musical to Tour in Europe The University Theatre is making plans to take a United Service Organization (USO) tour to Europe from September through October. A musical, which has not yet been determined, will be used on the tour. There will be a meeting for students interested in participating in the musical and who will be enrolled in summer school at 7 p.m. tonight in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall. Students who cannot attend the meeting should call the Theatre office. 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 Tuesday, May 19, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Daily Newsmen Schedule Local Reporting Seminar Editors and reporters on 21 daily newspapers in Central, South Central, and Western Kansas have been invited by the William Allen White Foundation at KU to participate in a seminar on local government reporting at Hutchinson May 23-24. Dr. James W. Drury, professor of political science at KU and an authority on local government, will give the keynote talk at 9 a.m. May 23 on "Knowing and Understanding Your Community." In the afternoon session, three local government officials will speak on "Our Biggest Problem in Dealing with the Press," and discussion with editors and reporters will follow. The officials are Marvin M. Cox of Kingman, a Kingman County commissioner; Milton N. Martin, Hutchinson city clerk; and H. M. Tomlinson of Wichita, Sedgwick County sherrif. Dr. Drury will moderate discussions of problem cases in local government and will summarize the Head Theocrat To Stop Here Bishop Homer A. Tomlinson, Presidential candidate for the Theocratic Party, will be in Lawrence Wednesday as part of his nationwide election campaign tour. Tomlinson will be at the Lawrence bus station at three o'clock to answer questions and distribute campaign material, he stated in a letter. "I speak mainly at bus stations because I feel I reach more people that way," the 71-year-old General Overseer of The Church of God said. His running mate, Bishop W. R. Rogers of Fulton, Mo., will accompany Tomlinson to Kansas City, but will go to St. Joseph, Mo., when Tomlinson makes his Kansas swing to Lawrence and Topeka. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers I ELRING'S GIFTS for the BRIDE— BIRDS All prices in wedding and shower gifts 924 Mass. (across from O'Dell's-bell') proceedings of the seminar in the late afternoon. Burton W. Marvin, director of the William Allen White Foundation and dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information at KU, will preside. The Hutchinson News will be local host at the seminar, which will be held in the Hotel Baker. "This is the first of a continuous series of seminars that the William Allen White Foundation plans to sponsor to bring to Kansas journalists a service already offered to practitioners in such fields as medicine and pharmacy." Dean Marvin said in announcing the seminar, "There is a need expressed by journalists for updating in subject matter and in techniques." SANDY'S Messages Bill called for midnight snack — after closing Open 24 Hours Holiday Inn Restaurant THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE-IN O HAVE YOU TRIED SANDY'S FISH-ON-A-BUN? We believe it's what's up front that really counts and SANDY'S got it all the way. Quality. Service. What else is there? ACROSS FROM HILLCREST Irish Dance THE DIAMOND RING YOU CAN BUY WITH CONFIDENCE TIMPAN TIMPANE VAIL TIMPANE SABINE CAPRI VAIL RIVIERA BORENSON linnae statae bibita bona excidio M Keepake Keepsake Keepaike Keepaike Keepsake Keepsake CALLO DIAMOND RINGS BY Keepsake . . fine color . . . flawless . . . meticulously cut . . the center diamond of every lovely Keepsake engagement ring is guaranteed perfect. Look for the Keepsake name in the ring and on the tag. Ray Christian Ray "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Massachusetts Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, May 19, 1964 THE QUESTION: ARE YOU INTERESTED? EUROPE NEXT SUMMER,1965 $248.00* New York to Europe, Round Trip by Jet. This is a possibility, in fact, a probability! This low transportation cost from New York to Europe and return to New York will probably be possible for the summer of 1965. If so, it will be available only for the exclusive use of University of Kansas faculty and students and/or immediate families. (Immediate family is defined as spouse, children, or parents living in same household with KU faculty member or student. Household may be one's permanent residence and does not need to be one's campus residence.) Transportation proposed will be by charter jet of one of the trans-Atlantic certificated, scheduled or supplemental airlines. Dates proposed will be for a departure from New York between June 10th and June 15th to a European gateway such as Brussels, with a return from the same gateway city between August 20th and August 25th to New York. *The proposed transportation cost of $248 is approximate and is to include the estimated pro rata jet charter fare, roundtrip from New York to Europe, and is also to include a nominal administrative fee estimate per person. Should costs be less, a pro rata refund will be made to each participant at time of flight's departure. The proposed pro rata charter jet fare is based on present airline tariffs and will be subject to adjustment should charter tariffs fluctuate in 1965. This announcement is for the purpose of securing a show of interest to determine whether there will be a sufficient number of KU faculty and students (including immediate family) who may want to join together for roundtrip charter jet transportation to Europe for the summer of 1965. This announcement is not to be construed as a notice of firm charter plans or availability, or as an offer of reservations for any definite charter. IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN POSSIBLE CHARTER JET TRANSPORTATION TO EUROPE FOR THE SUMMER OF 1965, PLEASE PHONE MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE AT VIKING 3-1211 OR BRING OR MAIL THE COUPON BELOW TO MAUPINTOUR. THOSE REGISTERING THEIR INTEREST AT THIS TIME WILL BE GIVEN FIRST NOTICE OF CHARTER PLANS IF AND WHEN THEY BECOME FIRM. Please Note: This announcement is published by Maupintour Travel Service as a service to KU faculty and students and is not for the general public, and is in accordance with the CAB Regulation No. ER-400, Part 295 effective April 18, 1964 which is, in part, also incorporated within the IATA rules. Copies of this Regulation are available on request from the Bureau of Economic Regulation, Civil Aeronautics Board, Washington, D. C. Maupintour may act as travel agent for the charterer, but CAB rules prohibit any travel agent from acting as sponsor or as the charterer. Maupintour Travel Service, as a travel agent, is permitted by the new CAB rules to handle the sale of air transportation to individual members of the chartering group, to engage in the administration of charter flights on behalf of the charterer, and to assist the charterer in the formation of the charter group including the placement of announcements in publications of the chartering group. Mail Coupon Today or Phone Viking 3-1211 ! SHOULD ANY ORGANIZATION, ASSOCIATION, SCHOOL, FRATERNAL GROUP, BUSINESS OR INDUSTRIAL ENTITY, OR CLUB WISH TO HAVE THEIR OWN CHARTER GROUP TO EUROPE, OFFICIALS OF INTERESTED MEMBERS OF SAME ARE INVITED TO CONTACT MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE, THE MALLS, 711 WEST 23RD STREET, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FOR DETAILED INFORMATION. Charter flight groups are economically feasible for as few as 50 participants and can be arranged for any time of the year and for any length of stay abroad. To: Walter Houk, Maupintour Travel Service, The Malls, Lawrence, Kansas I will be a member of the KU faculty or student body for the 1964/1965 academic year and I am interested in the possibilities of participating in an exclusive KU jet charter to Europe for the summer of 1965. In addition to myself, there would be ... (number of immediate family). In due course, should a KU charter jet flight become a reality, I understand you will give me first notice at my address below. My Name Faculty Member Student Address ... City ... State My Phone is ... Page 7 KU Woman Attracted By Peace Corps Ideal The more people care, the more they are alive, is one philosophy that attracted Donna Hanneman, Junction City junior, to an interest in the Peace Corps. Miss Hanneman's interest was rewarded last week with her selection to participate in the Peace Corps Intern Program in Washington this summer. The Peace Corps in Washington sends invitations to 40 universities in the U.S. to nominate one student from their campus, and from the 40, 20 are selected. THIS IS THE first year KU will have had a participant in the program. "We will be training with Peace Corps officials, Congressmen, and other Washington officials, Miss Hanneman said. "One requirement for students in this program is that they return to their campuses the following fall," she said. "The purpose of the program is to orient the participant in all aspects of Peace Corps work. "We are really training for work that we will be doing on our campuses when we return in the fall, such as stimulating interest in the Peace Corps, etc." Miss Hanneman explained. MISS HANNEMAN IS the 1964-65 chairman of the On-Campus Peace Corps Committee at KU. Her interest in the Peace Corps developed with the idea itself. "The concept of self-help was perhaps one of the most important features. "The idea of individual development extends itself the country development through the Peace Corps," she said. "Self-development is the process of changes in living," she continued. Miss Hanneman is majoring in Russian, Slavic Area Studies, and mathematics. Following her graduation, Miss Hanneman expressed an interest in studying abroad for a year. "Id like to spend a year in either Munich, Germany, or Helsinki, Finland studying Russian, and then enter the Peace Corps as a volunteer," she said. Miss Hanneman's sister, Janet, a 1958 KU graduate, recently returned to the U.S. after serving with the Peace Corps in Pakistan. Janet Hanneman visited as a Peace Corps recruiter during Peace Corps week in March. Unlike her sister, Donna indicated that she would like to serve in Turkey or Iran as a teacher. President of Cwens for next year is Marcia Bunn, Tulsa, Okla., freshman. Cwens Choose '64-'65 Officers During orientation week Cwens, an honorary society for sophomore women, help freshman women move into Corbin and Gertrude Sellards Pearson halls. The Cwens also plan a buffet for all freshman women the Friday of orientation week, Carol McMahan, Wichita sophomore and Cwen adviser, said. During the summer months, Cwens has encouraged its members to have parties for freshman women who are planning to attend KU next fall. These parties will be Cwen sponsored and held in the various home towns of the Cwens, Miss McMahan explained. The Cwens are also planning to change the twopiece uniform they now wear to a red A-line jumper for next year. Other new officers are: Phyllis Kasprovich, Overland Park freshman, vice-president; Glenda K. Hord, Kansas City freshman, secretary; Carol Ann Crouch, Shawnee Mission freshman, treasurer; Jareth Donnan, Webster Groves, Mo. freshman, social chairman; Linda Gilna, Manhattan freshman, "Tide" editor-historian; Andrea Speers, Kansas City freshman, ritual chairman, and Carol Ann McMahan, Wichita sophomore, Cwen adviser. University Daily Kansan A jazz band composed of musicians from the Kansas City-Topeka-Lawrence area will perform in concert featuring compositions and arrangements by local and nationally known jazz musicians at 7 p.m. tonight in the Ball room of the Kansas Union. Jazz Performers To Play on Campus TRAVELER'S CHECK LIST CLIP & SAVE Ober's 100% Polyester Shirt 5.00 65% Kodel Polyester & 35% Cotton Shirt 5.00 The concert will feature several arrangements by Topeka trumpeter Buddy Brown, who will also be playing with the band. Dick Wright, the group's leader and emcee, said yesterday. American Tourister Attache Case 27.95 Other arrangements and compositions will be Westcoast jazzman Lennie Nihaus, trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie, and students at the Berklee School of Music. Two Suiter 43.95 Three Suiter 45.95 Astro Jet 34.95 Jazz solo work will be done by Clyde Bysum, tenor sax, Lawrence; Jack Zimmerman, trombone, Lawrence. a former member of the Gene Krupa band of the late forties; Don Wright, also sax, Topeka; and Buddy Brown, trumpet, Topeka. The concert will be open to the public without charge. 55% Dacron Polyester & 45% Wool from 50.00 Other Traveling Suits from 39.50 Passport Cases from 5.95 Dacron & Cotton Shirts 1.95 AUTO WRECKING NEW and USED PARTS Ober's Tires and Glass East End of 9th Street VI3-0956 821 Mass. VI 3-1951 "Serving Lawrence Since 1896" Tuesday.May 19.1964 Senior Gals. Time's Wastin' Senior women, arise! It's senior clutch time. Here's a check list. - Have you been lavaliered, pinned or engaged within the last four years? By the way, junior women, get a head start. are in good shape. If the answer to the fifth question is affirmative, you'd better get going. There isn't much time left, you know. There are only three weeks until you are out in the heartless world, you know. - Have you made yourself available for blind dates within the same period? - Have you dated more than one boy at a time and never been caught? - Are you presently lavaliered, pinned or engaged? - Do you often get cold chills, the shakes and insomnia? If the answers to the first four questions are in the affirmative, you WATCH THIS SPOT FLESH EATERS F - R - E - E JAZZ LAB BAND CONCERT Tomorrow Night Union Ballroom 7 p.m. Sponsored By SUA & Musicians Union, Local 512 TENGE KUNG FU ALEXANDER L. TOWNSEND I [Name] PETER T. LEBURY GODFREY CAMBRIDGE IS HERE IN A HILARIOUS NEW ALBUM! Here's Godfrey Cambridge Ready or not... With wickedly pungent satire and wit, Cambridge hits the funny bone—and more! He dramatizes vital issues... he brilliantly uncovers "moments of truth" of the fads and foibles of our times...he comments, with disarming innocence, on the after-effects of the Negro revolt. Godfrey Cambridge is uproarious. Godfrey Cambridge is a name to remember. "Ready or Not. Here's Godfrey Cambridge" is an album to own. FLM 13101 EPIC RECORDS ® "EPIC", Marca Reg. T.M. PRINTED IN U.S.A. Page 8 University Daily Kansar Tuesday, May 19, 1964 Departments, Schools Give Year-End Awards Awards and rewards for outstanding work in various departments and honorary organizations were given out recently in banquets, parties and dinners. THIRTEEN COLLEGE SENIORS and graduate students, some from KU, have received scholarships to the School of Law for 1964-65. Most of the awards cover University fees for the academic year. KU students who will receive scholarships in the fall are: Two students will enter the Law School summer session on scholarships. They are James Edward Lyons, Kansas City senior, and Alan Lee Roff, Winfield senior. Kay Ellen Consolver, Wichita senior. She will receive the Class of 1937 scholarship. Joseph D'Arcy McGrath, Prairie Village senior. He will receive a Law School scholarship. *** PRESENTATION OF THE FIRST L. A. Calkins Memorial award will feature the public meeting of the KU Entomology Club this evening at 8 p.m. in 324 Malott. The recipient will be William B. Kerfoot, Lawrence sophomore who plans to major in entomology. A 1962 honor graduate of Lawrence High School and since an honor student at KU, he is the son of Mrs. Marguerite Kerfoot Baumgartel, an instructor in art education, who has been in India this semester. The Calkins Memorial fund was created by friends and colleagues after the death two years ago of Mr. Calkins of Iola, who was assistant state entomologist. Income from the fund provides a $50 prize to an outstanding undergraduate student in entomology. ** THE ECONOMICS DEPARTMENT has honored three of its major with prizes and scholarships for the coming year. Miss Betty Dwyer, graduating Wichita senior, received the Dominic Gagliardo prize of $50 in recognition of her superior achievement. Dudley Dean Allen, Lawrence junior, is the recipient of the John Ise scholarship of $500. Karl E. Becker Jr., Wichita junior, received the A. J. Boynton scholarship of $200 for the coming school year. Official Bulletin Foreign Students on the exchange visitors visa (J-1) should apply immediately for extension if you intend to be at KU in the fall. TODAY Non-Summer School students may now exam in 130 Strong English Proficiency Exam in 130 Strong College Faculty Meeting, 4:30 p.m., 303 Bailey. Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. There will be no Western CV. discussion tonight. no Western CV dissection. Inquirer Classes, 7:30 p.m., Canterbury Hall. 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 10-3-2013 Hawk's Nest, Kansas S. T. Sakoff and his questions and applications for Officers Training School. Varsity Baseball, 3 p.m., Quigley Field. K Inquiner Classes, 3:45 p.m., Canterbury House. Psychology Colloquium, 4:30 p.m., 9 Strong. "Alternation in Pre-School Children"—Dr. Richard Bogartz, State U. of Iowa Carillon Recital, 7 p.m. Albert Gerken. SUA Classical Film, 7 p.m., Fraser Theater. "The Birth of a Nation" (1915) Senator, 7 p.m. Swartwout Hall. Senior Recital, 8 p.m., Swarthout Hall Jo Archer, pianist. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth. See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS Sales — Rentals — Service LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 The students recognized for outstanding work in senior level design courses are Roberta Smith, Okaloska; Sally Ford, Tulsa, Okla.; Jane Lutton, Bartlesville, Okla.; George Wilson, Kansas City, Mo.; and Barbara Braming, Oak Park, Ill. and art education at an awards banquet last week. LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER The outstanding students in junior level design courses are Susan Ebel, Topeka; Wayne Hohl, Wichita; Richard Schindler, Kansas City, Mo.; Linda Brown, Kansas City, Mo.; Jan Betts, Washington, D.C.; Linda Musser, Shawnee Mission; and Linda Brown, Shawnee Mission. The outstanding students in the sophomore level design courses are Tom Shortlidge, Park Ridge, Ill.; Susan Lawrence, Bartlesville, Okla.; Patricia Arnold, Colorado Springs, Colo.; and Anna Mount, Springfield, Pa. The outstanding students in freshman level design courses: Karen Kennedy, Glendale, Mo.; Alice McBride, Prairie Village; David Graves, Media, Pa.; Charles Martinson, Mission; Ardis Moore, Independence, Mo.; Barbara Murchison, Lawrence; Sherry Knox, Omaha, Neb., and Patricia Reynolds, Des Moines, Iowa. Cecilia Heinie, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, won the Maude Ellsworth scholarship in the field of art education. Breon Mitchell, Salina senior, and Richard Janke, Winfield senior, were named the outstanding students in the field of history of art. TWO RETIRING FACULTY members and 35 students were honored Saturday at a dinner given by the department of zoology. Miss Mary E. Larson, associate professor of zoology and for 42 years a member of the KU faculty, and Mrs. Ruth E. McNair, associate professor of biology and 33 years at KU, were presented monetary gifts for travel. Bound volumes of letters from former students, friends and colleagues also were given to the two honorees. PAY BILLS WHEREVER YOU WISH Ye Ade Wishing Well? Among the 35 students recognized for academic achievement were: Howard D. Engleman, Salina sophomore, and Shelley Boyd Pearce, a Topeka freshman, received awards as the outstanding students in elementary zoology for the spring, 1963, and fall, 1963, semesters, respectively. WITH AN EASY-TO-USE ThriftiCheck PERSONAL CHECKING ACCOUNT ★ A few dollars and a few minutes opens your account ★ Checks personalized FREE ★ Economical — costs less than money orders ★ NO minimum balance Dorothy Kelly May, Lawrence special student, received the senior ★ ★ ATTENTION COLLEGE STUDENTS! Next semester attend the UNIVERSITY OF THE SEVEN SEAS sailing from New York City October 19, 1964, aboard the transatlantic liner m.v. SEVEN SEAS. Douglas County State Bank 9th & Kentucky SAMSUNG ★ ★ NO charge for deposits ★ NO monthly service charge University of the Pacific Station, Dillon Beach, Calif., was presented to Rex Powell, Lawrence senior. 108-day odyssey around the world. Visit 21 fabulous cities. Internationally oriented curriculum. A non-profit institution incorporated under the laws of the State of California. Rates from $1590.—Tuition fee only $500. Cruise #2 sails Feb. 11, 1965 from San Diego, Calif., for 120 days. Holland-America Line—general passenger agents for Europe Canada Line. For more detailed information call us today. MAUPINTOUR ASSOCIATES AUMPINTOUR ASSOCIATES Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 academic honors award. A National Science Foundation summer fellowship to study at the Fun is living in Park Plaza A man jumps and laughs. 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 The Classical Film Series presents THE BIRTH OF A NATION (unsurpassed spectacle) Directed by D. W. Griffith in 1915 - * * Wednesday, May 20 Fraser Theater—7 p.m. Admission Free Tuesday, May 19, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 9 An Open Letter to Jayhawkers WHAT ABOUT BOOKS? We realize you don't appreciate being reminded that finals are coming, but since final time is also used book buying time we thought we should discuss our policy for buying and selling used and new books. Used Books-What Can I Sell? How Much Can I Get? At each buy back period we are able to buy only those texts the teaching staff has indicated will be used again next semester. With this commitment we are able to offer 50% of the publisher's current list price for the title. We then sell the book for 75% of the current list price. For example, if the book lists for $4.00 new, we buy it back for $2.00 and resell it for $3.00. Our major problem is how many to buy. If we overbuy on used books it usually represents a loss to us. If we can't sell them to another store for the same price we paid for them or sell them to a wholesaler at the regular market wholesale price we must write them off as a total loss. Our used book policy stated simply in figures is as follows: Let's take a book which sells for $5.00 new and $3.75 used.
You paid For New Book $5.00We buy backCurrent Patron refundTotal you get back
$2.50 or 50%.40 or 8%$2.90 or 58%
For Used Book $3.75$2.50 or 66 2/3%.30 or 8%$2.80 or 74 2/3%
What About Books No Longer Used at KU? During this same period (final exams) we arrange to have a buyer from a used book wholesale jobber on duty who will make an offer on most books no longer being used at KU. The best offer he can make on good current books is about $25\%$ of the current list price. He must pay the transportation costs to his warehouse, his warehouse overhead and take the chance on selling these books to some other store at $45\%$ of the current list price. The extra $5\%$ allowed the stores is for freight costs which actually means the store pays him the same price, $50\%$ list, that it pays the students for used books. What Do Other Book Stores Do? The buying back at 50% and selling at 75% of current list price is the policy in most college stores. This policy has worked successfully in a large number of college stores and makes for economical and easier means of exchange in used books. What Are Old Books Worth? We indicated above that the book jobber can pay a top price of about 25% of current list price. This is for a book that has considerable use across the country and is not likely to be revised in the near future. An old edition is almost worthless, while a book that is in the process of being revised has some value. The jobber will make an offer on some of these, but the student must decide if the book is worth more to him than the jobber. Many students feel their books are worth more to them for their personal library than the amount either the store or the jobber can offer. This he must decide for himself. Even though we like to get all the used books we can in order to offer them to the next group of students at a saving, we have great respect for those students who keep their books to build a personal library. New Books We would like to point out that we have no control over publishers and their decisions to bring out new editions, or the price they set on textbooks. The publisher sets the price on a textbook and then allows us a 20% discount from this list price. In other words a book we buy new and sell for $4.00 costs us $3.20. With respect to the decisions to change texts being used on the campus, we firmly believe the faculty honestly and sincerely tries to select the best available text for their courses and that they take all factors into consideration when they do so. The faculty would be dilatory in their duty and obligations to you if they did not keep up with changing facts and developments in the selection of textbooks. We hope our explanations have been clear, that the book situation is now better understood and that we have given enough information to help you decide whether or not you will want to sell your used books. Your Kansas Union Book Store is a self supporting profit sharing division of the Kansas Union. It is the desire of your Union through its Book Store division to continue to offer you your books and supplies at a savings as long as it is economically sound to do so. The following chart showing how each dollar of income of the Book Store is divided and how it is used is based on the actual percentage figures appearing in the annual financial report. From Each Dollar Income: Paid to Manufacturers ... 72.7c Operating Expenses ... 18.3c Patronage Refund to Customers ... 8.0c Reserve for Emergency & Expansion ... 1.0c Total ... 100 cents Net Income ... 0. kansas union BOOKSTORE Page 10 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, May 19, 1964 Jayhawks, Minus Renko, Face Undefeated Mizzou Steve Renko, the KU baseball team's versatile pitcher-outfielder, will not be able to play in the series with the league-leading Missouri Tigers here today and tomorrow, according to Dean Nesmith, Jayhawk trainer. Renko has been listed as a doubtful prospect for the series since he ruptured a blood vessel in his leg against Iowa State three weeks ago. The injury cost the Jayhawks the Assistant Coach Chosen Here Bob Timmons, head coach of Wichita East high school, has been named assistant track coach here. Timmons, 39, will succeed Dean Brittenham, who resigned his position here to become head track coach at Occidental College after serving two years as assistant to Bill Easton. Timmons, whose team won the state championship this year and in the process broke two national records at the Class AA meet at Manhattan last weekend, graduated from KU in 1950 with a bachelor's degree in physical education and a master's degree in education. Timmons is also serving as crosscountry and swimming coach at Wichita. Coach Dick Harp To be Honored Friends and former players will honor Dick Harp, resigned KU basketball coach, with a banquet at the Kansas Union May 27. Tickets for the banquet may be purchased at the athletic office in Allen Field House. Phone in your Classified Ad C use of Renko against Oklahoma last week and the Colorado series the past weekend. the Tigers, who have already inched the Big Eight Conference championship, will be trying for an undefeated season as they go into the series here. The Bengals boast a 16-0 league record and are presently riding the crest of an 18-game winning streak. Mizzou has swept aside all competition since dropping a 3-1 contest to Baylor, March 28. The team's overall record is 19-3. Never in his 25-year baseball tenure at MU has Coach John "Hi" Simmons had the high quality pitching that this current staff has delivered. His top trio and No. 1 reliever have given up less than one earned run each game—and the staff's composite yield is 0.83. In the Tuesday double-header it'll be Keith Weber (7-1 and 0.71) and Dennis Musgraves (5-1 and 0.41) going for Missouri-with lefty Jack Stroud (6-1 and 1.23) working the Wednesday nine-inning game. Backstopping this rotation is Jim Nelson (11-0 and 0.71), a reliever unneeded in MU's last 11 games. The series will see, however, the Big Eight's hardest hitters in the Jayhawks, led by centerfielder Steve eureu FRATERNITY-SORORITY Jewelry GREEK LETTER LAVALIERS .10K GOLD 18" chain $4.00 Paddle with Greek Letters on 18" chain $3.25 We have these in stock for all K.U. Sororities & Fraternities BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 743 Marr VL 2 4366 BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 743 Mass. V1 3-4366 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 DINING PLEASURE AT ITS BEST! HAL'S STEAK HOUSE featuring Open-hearth charcoal broiled Steaks Chicken — Shrimp — Sandwiches Ribs OK Open: 4-Midnight Highway 59 South VI 2-9445 Across from Hillcrest Golf Course AT HONN'S LAUNDRY IT'S Clean the cleanest laundry in town inspect our facilities, you'll agree Clean — your whole wash — the Honn way Wash 20c Dry 10c McGreevy at 417. With the loss of Renko, KU will rely on Chuck Dobson, Fred Chana and possibly John Higgins to do the throwing. But Renko's loss will be felt. He was a full-fledged regular in all three departments. Moreover, he he's been a standout on the baseball team by anyone's standards and has approached greatness in the other two. He has managed to compile this enviable record while only a Sophomore. Cleanyour best suits and coats in our coin-on dry clean machine The injury marked the only sour note in his career this year at KU as he became a three-sport athlete with the Jayhawks. "Laundry Time is Hoon Time" 19th & La. NOW! Shows 7:00 - 9:00 DAVID NIVEN PETER SELLERS ROBERT WAGNER CAPUCINE. THE PINK PANTHER and CLAUDIA CARDINALE with TECHNICOLOR" TECHNIRAMA" Released by THE UNITED ARTISTS Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5783 9 SATURDAY — "Dr. No" returns in "From Russia with Love" Ends Tonite! HOW THE WEST WAS WON At 7:30 Only Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065 TOMORROW! I'm the I’m the Incredible Incredible Mr. Limpet! Mr. Limpet! . Regarding Renko's injury, baseball coach Floyd Temple emphasized his versatility. The story of a man who turned into a fish! MR. Limpett Starting DON KNOTTS CAROLE COOK ANDREW DUGGAN·JACK WESTON Shows at 7:00 & 9:00 The Incredible Mr.Limpet ENDS TONITE! Jack Lemmon Shirley McLaine "Irma La Douce" "Renko's loss," Temple said, "is two men, a pitcher and an outfielder." Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on highway 45 TOMORROW! Connie Francis "Where The Boys Are" plus "Hootenanny Hoot" The 6-4, 215-pound son of former KU Orange Bowl tackle Steve Sr. is unbeaten in five pitching starts and boasts an 0.99 earned run average. In the meantime, he's swung a bat which has produced a .350 average—second high on the club—with two home runs and 10 runs batted in. His double duty on the baseball field is typical of the jobs Renko has faced since coming to KU. With only one game's experience in his freshman year at quarterback, Renko was handed that position by grid coach Jack Mitchell last Fall. He strated every one of the season's 10 games, led the Big Eight Conference total offense race for two weeks at mid-season, and finally wound up fifth with 799 yards. SORRY: Because of an automobile accident in northern Iowa, the KINGSMEN will not be able to appear tonight at the Tee Pee. While you may have lost the opportunity to hear one of the top groups today, the Tee Pee may have lost all it has put into the promotion of the KINGSMEN, including these ads and the posters. However, there is a good POSSIBILITY that the KINGSMEN will be able to appear tomorrow from 4-8:30, prior to an appearance in K.C. Notices will be posted in your living groups Our sincerest apologies about tonight. C TEE PEE 1959 I Good. 2-3327 I 1963 milea Small slide weigt sauce bank. pict 3-129 dain chest Call Beau gown deam 5584. Fi-Fi watt watt 3/4 to two 340 1957 three 1957 slide shade vate Gumse ASR ibri Emp 1139 1962 power powr ing 1959 man tion tion 1962 manu- craft ing 1969 manu- craft ing 1960 Orga 3/4 1965 reach reach Musl Call 'call' 1965 reach reach One con- nec Dan Dane Zusu twose 1968 Pont Ros Sta she 1968 SPI Wit Gi St Tyr Ole Ile VI Prout in la con We ple inc cor For 904 Forton 764 Lafur $38 sur atted ebball enkeno With in his enkeno grid He sason's nfer- weeks d up Classified Ads FOR SALE 1559 Ford 2 door, V-8, stick, factory air 1559 Ford 2 door, $85, 115 Tenn. Cal. $2- 3537 1963 Honda. 150 cc. Like new. Low mileage. $400. Call VI 2-0419. Page 11 Small antiques. Glass salts, toothpick holders. Ink wells, baskets, pencil lights, wainscapes, walliners and Wallow sashes, napkin rings, iron elephant bank. Valentines, used postals, before 1911 ones, from the Library. Lark feeder. Several small ones. Cali VI 3-1297 for directions to house. 5-21 1956 Ford, Standard shift, Interceptor engine, overdrive. N.S.U. motorcycle, 2 50 c.c. Both in A-1 mechanical condition. Call VI 2-3374 after 6 p.m. 5-21 Drop leaf table and four chairs. Reasonable. Call VI 2-9360. 5-21 Electric stove, 9 months old. Kitchen cabinet, Small, breakfast set. Bedroom, Small, Breakfast R-ra-war table and Chest of Drawers. Large study table. Call VI 3-5564. 5-21 Hi-Fi components, Stromberg-Carlson 30 watt amp. Electro-voice speaker and enclosure. Garrard changer. Call VI 3-5564. 5-21 Beautiful white floor length wedding bedding Size 10 Leather reasonable. Call VI 2-1405. 5-21 3q-ton Servel air-conditioner. 3 speed record player and stand. One speaker. Two sports car snow tires. Call VI 2- 2470 after 5 p.m. 5-21 Guns and ammo for sale. Big end-off- semester cash sale. Everything goes; Slide rules, rifles, shot guns, pistols, ammo, grenades. This is your last chance (and mine). Call VI 3-1110 (private party). tt 1957 Ford wagon. Must sell before school ends. Make an offer. Call VI 3-0651. 5-21 Must sell one Stromberg-Carlson model ASR-880 stereo amplifier and one Garrard type A changer with base type 108 stereo cartridge. Call VI 2-1139 1962 Pontiac Paint. White w/blue interior, bucket seat seats, automatic, full leather upholstery, perfect edition. Originally $4,550. Ask for Selling $2,300. Call VI 3-5030. 5-21 1959 blue VW sedan. Whitewall tires, more accessories. Well cared for and clean. By owner. Call VI 2-3103, 5 to 7 p.m. 5-20 University Daily Kansan 1959 Chevy convertible. Stick. postition, new tires, new top. Excellent condition. Need money, must sell. Call VI 3- 9562. 5-21 1980 blue Falcon. Excellent condition. 35,300 miles. 4-door sedan, automatic. Original owner. $750. Call Dr. Batra, VI 3-6331. evenings. 5-21 Two Blue Streak tires, 800/820x15" or 800/820x16" tire. Stock Car Specials, less than 500 miles gone, treats compounded for PV evenings and weekends. Call VI 2-371 evenings and weekends. If Must sell 1960 Volvo before May 31. Good condition, whitewalls, reasonable. Call Sandy, VI 2-4112 after 5 p.m. 5-21 1956 AUSTIN HEALY, new overhaul, good bike. 6765, VI 2-2038. Very nice 3 bedroom room. $500 down, will buy it will buy Call VI 9 4:30 p.m. 5:19 - 1-9 21" console TV, RCA, real good shape, VI 3-4197 after 6 p.m. tf 1859 Volvo. Rebuilt engine, new tires and battery. Clean. Call VI 3-4050. 5-21 One dinette set, 2 years old, excellent condition. Six chairs with backrests. $40. Also two Danish Modern chairs, 2 years old, need reupholstering. $10 each. See at 635 W. Zion and Friday, for Monday, Wednesday, Friday, between 2 and 5 p.m. Wedding dress, size 7-8. 1817 La. Uppairs, west apartement. 4 to 6 p.m. 1958 black and white gord convertible. Power steering and brakes, good condition. original owner. Call VI 3-5003, 1618 Rose Lane. New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500 new ream-$8.5 Lawrence Outlook. 1006 M * SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS. Cheater Slicers, etc., for sale at great savings after 9 p.m. week day saturday and Sunday. 837 Connecti tt Typewriter, new and used portables, standards, electrics. Olympia. Hermes. Olivetti. Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter, adder, rentals and service. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St.. VI 3-644. Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta notes. Cell vii-2412 notes. Cell viii-2412 notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, commimegraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Copy VI 2-190 for free delivery. tf For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3- 9040 after 5 p.m. tf FOR RENT For rent to reliable couple. Furnished with room for income. Call VISA: 7645 5-21 Large 2 room apartments, attractively furnished, close to KU and downtown. $38 per month. Also 1 room apt, co-op summer. $25 per month. Call VI 3-6692 f-5616 Furnished apartment for 3 KU men. Shower, twin beds. Completely private. Each winter. Close to KU. Furnished apartment for 2 KU men. Shower, twin beds. Completely private. Call. Close to KU. Utilities paid. Kitchen- alive Apartment with bath. Utilities paid. Private entrance. For summer. $35. Clos- to KU. Inquire at 1005 Miss. VI 3-4349 Furnished house for 3 KU men. Utilities Close to campus. Call VI 3-4349. 5-21 Comfortable furnished apartments 1 block north of Corbin. Cool, quiet house. Call VI 3-6158 for appointment after 4 p.m. or at noon. 5-21 Furnished apartments just $ \frac{1}{2} $ block cast of Phi Delta Theta. Private entrances for Phi Delta Theta. Private entrances 1609 Tenn. Terr. Call VI 3-6158 for appointment at noon or after 4 p.m. Furnished apartments with utilities paid information call VI 3-3566. 5-21 Very neat small house, attractively furnished, shower bath, cool in summer, close to KU and downtown. $39.00 per month. Call VI 3-6966 or VI 2-9314. 5-21 Three room furnished apartment for 1 or 2 adults. Attractive, completely pri- vile. Fully-equipped per month electricity. Call VI 3-3913 weekends or after 12 p.m. weekdays. 5-21 Five furnished three room apartments with baths. All utilities paid except water. Room 16 after 5 p.m. During day, call VI 3-5182. Moody Apartments, 1343 Tenn. 5-20 Furnished apartment for rent. Come to campus. Also, rooms for girls, adjac- 5-21 Sleeping and study rooms for male students. Located and centrally located. La. VI 3-4890 5-19 Will have some rental property available Next to south KuU. Inquire 3-3293 5-21 Summer sublet; 4 room apartment. 2 bedroom kitchen and living room. 2 bedroom kitchen. Include bed, refrigerator. First floor, private entrance. Utilities paid except electricity. $55. Call VI 2-919-4830 Bedroom with shower and half-bath: chen privileges if desired. See at 51 La. Single or double room. Furnished, cook- ing area. Please call ahead. Call 2-9451 or see at 1244 La. Room for rent. Mahogany panelled room with private entrance and private full 1327 Teem. Parking $35 per month. Off street parking. Call VI 3-0404. Off-5:19 Rooms for men. Extremely modern, remodeled bath, coffee and refrigerator furniture, summer, all new furniture, near KU, and Union. 4-10 Mississippi, VI 2-0298. 5-19 Now renting new Ridge House Cabana Units. Swimming pool, carpet, air-conditioning, 1 bedroom furnished or unconditioned. Close to shopping and University. Ready for occupancy in August. Oasis Oil Co. (oasis.co.) this fall. VU Ail116, 2403 Codarwood. Luxurious duplex. Central air-conditioning, close to shopping and University. Wall-to-wall carpet at the entrance. Almostly the finest 2 bedroom units. Contact Mr. Osborne now. VI 3-1146, 2403 Cedarwood. tt Moving to Kansas City? Then dig these rooms. Great for the Prairie Village-Overland Park area. 1 and 2 bedrooms, wall-to-wall carpet, drapes, central air-conditioning. Hopper doors. From $115. One mile west of Antioch Rd. on 95th Street. The Alex Bascom Co., TU 8-3128 or TU 8-3252. 5-21 available. Implemnts Inc. Emery Apartments available June 1. Efficiency and one bedroom. To see contact Milan Loulap, Apt. 204, Emery or call VI 3-8190. 5-19 Bachelor Studio Apartment for graduate or older undergraduate men. $1_{1/2}$ blocks from Union University, newly redeveloped and well equipped university parking park ideal study conditions. A few still available at low summer rates. Singles and doubles. For appointment call VI 3-8534. Married, grad students, faculty. Efficiency apartment from $65 and small house from $70. Available in June. Call now. Santee学院, 1123 Ind., VI 3-2116. 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. Cut n Curl BEAUTY SALON VI 3-5569 KERBY'S DEPENDABLE STATION latest styles. graduation permanents, sets, Mobiligas 843 N.H. - 'Vett head- Crescent Heights two bedroom apartn s. st. Phone VI 2-3711. Large, homey, attractively furnished, 4 room apartment. For summer months at summer rates. Kitchen built-ins and garbage disposal. Disposal available June 1st. Except 3 room apt. Call VI 3-7677. Will rent for summer months. TYPING Experienced secretary would like typing. Standard rate. Mrs. Ethel Henderson. 2565 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122. 5-21 Experience secretary would like typing 3-5198. House. Reasonable rates. Call Vf 3-5198. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention on all reports, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate typing at reasonable rates. Call Donna Stewart. VI 3-6621. tf 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 typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work stands behind. Phone VI 3-8379. Charles patti. For expert typing, dissertation, thesis, work. Electric typewriter. 5-21 Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reason- sentations and these, phone VI 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson. Fast. accurate work done on electric batteries and charge rates. Call Bett Vincent, VI 3-5504. - Specialists in all makes & models includes sports cars experienced secretary would like typing home. Reasonable rates. Call Vt 1188 Accurate expert typist would like typing the prompt. Call VI 3-2851. Prompt Call: Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (plica type). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-0558. quarters "We'll pick up your car and deliver it FREE on any service call." Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. ff Telephone: 3-6296 for secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon ribbon, special symbols available. Call VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. with Charles Moore, 608 West 91th Street. Experienced Typist—Dissertations, Theses, Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon, letterpress, Fritz Cook, and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 Rhode Island VI 3-7485. ff 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 VI 3-9608 Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typrwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648 Wheel Bal. - Oil - Wash- Lube 9th & Ky. Milliken's SOS Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. VI 3-2577 MILLIKENS SOS—always nst quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines. We also do tape transcription. VI 3-104 m. tape. II p.m.-1021% Mass Phone VI 3-5920. "the best professional service" 24 br. answering service - automatic typing 24 h. answering service mimegraph & photo-copying 1021½ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7 a.m.-11 p.m. AGS MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY When buying diamonds Look for this sign In Lawrence, your Authorized Dealer is Delbert A. Eisele MEMBER OF NAS Tuesday, May 19, 1964 NATIONAL BRIDAL SERVICE Marks Jewelers BUSINESS SERVICES L&M CAFE now under new management We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. We have full service lunches, clocious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches Your second cup of coffee always free. dressmaking-alterations, formats and gowns. Ola Smith, 93% M1 VI 3-5283 GB Recording Service and Party Music Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coln Mart. 1025 Mass. **tt** WANTED 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. ltt MISCELLANEOUS tapes: recorded or duplicated Offer—A home and salary for student interested in being in central K.C. area near Art Gallery, Cooking and caring for school age children. June 15 to Aug. 15. Write: Mr. Nathan Stark. 4500 Rockhill Terrace, Kansas City, Mo. 64110. 5-19 817 Mass. records: cut or pressed Summer students, need reliable sitter 3 For information call VI 2-0306. 5-21 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 VOLKSWAGEN' S WANTED. Cash for vour VW. Conzelman Motors, VW Sales Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa. Hiway 58 Interested in sales demonstrations. Write giving age, experience, type of instru- So. Ride wanted to KU Medical Center Mon- leave a 5. p.m. Call VI 2-3148. 8-19 Seniors, cash your rebate slips before before, before you leave KU VI 2-0180 5-19 LEONARD'S STANDARD SERVICE 9th & Indiana VI 3-9830 Shirt Finishing Laundry VI 3-4266 Wash & Fluff Dry RISK'S 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 VI 3-6333 24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled YELLOW CAB CO. 616 W. 9th Open 24 hours except Saturday evening c delivery VI 3-4720 JOE'S BAKERY 616 W. 9th 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 HELP WANTED Wanted—experienced or trainee adjuster for Kansas City area. Good opportunity and excellent benefits. College graduate. Write and give resume of background to Rockville, NY. Apply to Hartford Fire Insurance Group, 800 Insurance Exchange Building, Kansas City 5, Missouri. 5-21 Young men and women needed in all 50 positions. Opportunity to travel. For information on where to apply mail $2.00 to Beggs and Howe University, Bessack, P.O. Box 309, Springfield, Oregon. 5-21 College men needed for next fall jobs available NOW. Contact Dixon's Drive In, 2500 W. 6th, VI 3-7446. 5-20 Room and board in very nice home near campus. Interested in working with well-payners (Ages 9, 6, 4.) Call Mrs. Milliken, VI 3-5947. LOST TRANSPORTATION one navy blue "H.I.S." jacket. Brand new. Taken by accident from chair in Strong basement. Last Friday around VI 3-2841. Call Vi 3-2841. Lost May 14. Pink glove, leather stop, Jager-LeCoultre ladies wrist watch. Between Green and Strong Halls. Reward. Call VI 3-3243 or UN 4-3821, or come to 127 Strong. Riders wanted to and from downtown K.C., M. via hwy. 10. During summer. Leave Lawrence 7:15 a.m. Leave K.C. 6 p.m. Call Mike, VI 3-1238. 5-21 --- - Parker Pens * Stationery * Printing Hallmark Cards When you care enough to send the very best 4 E. 7th VI 3-2261 E 7th VI 3-2261 BULLOCK'S --- Brake Adj. . . . 98c Grease Jobs . . $1.00 STUDENTS 7 a.m.-11 p.m. Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd MAKE YOUR NEXT MOVE Crescent Heights Completed Swimming Pool CALL VI 2-3711 Mgr's Office, 2428 Redbud, Apt. D New Luxury Addition Opening This Summer . . . THE OAKS 1 Bedroom 1 Bedroom 2 Bedrooms Swimming Pool FOR INFORMATION CONTACT Crescent Heights Apts. Mgr. FREE VACATION SERVICE - with this ad! Bring in this coupon and get our Registered Mechanic 10 POINT SAFETY CHECK 10 POINT SAFETY CHECK We will check (1) Cooling System (2) Fan Belts (3) Lights & Signal System (4) Wheel Bearings (5) Brakes (6) Wipers (7) Exhaust system (8) Steering (9) Fuel System and (10) Ignition System. ABSOLUTELY FREE!!! Be Careful • Be Sure • Be safe • Before Returning Home Call on us TODAY. V1 3-6697 SANDERS MOTOR CO. Lincoln-Mercury Studebaker Page 12 University Daily Kansas Tuesday, May 19, 1964 Slavic Area Program To Give Scholarships Scholarship funds are still available for qualified students who wish to study in the ten-week summer Russian and Polish program at KU. Students, according to Herbert J. Ellison, chairman of the Slavic and Soviet area studies at KU, are to be in good standing in an accredited college or university. He said that scholarships are based on academic achievement and financial need. The program will begin June 8 and run until August 14 and will be located in Ellsworth Hall. It is sponsored by the Universities of Kansas and Colorado with the aid of a grant from the National Defense Education Act. Courses to be offered and the college credit to be given for each are: beginning Polish or Russian (10 hours); intermediate or advanced Russian or Polish (7 hours) and area courses (3 hours). An area course usually supplements the other courses. Area courses to be offered are: history of central Europe with an emphasis on Poland, taught by S. Harrison Thomson, director of the center for Slavic and East European Studies at the University of Colorado and director of the KU summer language program; and imperial Russia and the Soviet Union, which will be taught by Prof. Ellison. Expenses for the program include $260 for board and room for ten weeks, and $65.50 for resident tuition or $165.50 for non-resident. Students enrolled in the program will live in Ellsworth Hall with a regulation that students must speak the language they are studying at all times. Prof. Ellison said about 60 to 70 students are expected to participate in the program. Retired KU Professor Dies in South Carolina Louis E. Sisson, 92, retired KU professor, died in Bennettsville, S.C., May 12 after a brief illness. He was a member of the KU English faculty for 40 years, rising from instructor to full professor during his career. After his retirement in 1944, he lived for 15 years in Fort Wayne, Ind., then moved to South Carolina in 1960. A native of Hamilton, N.Y., Professor Sisson was the son of a Colgate University professor. He was a graduate of Stanford University and received his masters degree from Harvard. Burial was in the Northport, Mich., cemetery Saturday. QUALITY AND STYLE! MK | MILLEDYE Sixteen teachers will participate in the program, ten from the University of Colorado and six from KU. Prof. Ellison said applications have been received from as far away as New York and North Carolina. The program is in its second year. It alternates between KU and the University of Colorado. Artcarved $ ^{o} $ WEDDING RINGS Why buy ordinary rings when a prize-winning Artcarved costs no more? Starting at $8.00. Swedish Classic Film INFINITE SET Groom's Ring ... $25.00 Bride's Ring ... $22.50 The Swedish film, "Miss Julie," based on the drama by August Strindberg, will be shown tonight at 7:30 in room 3. Bailey Hall. The film, with English subtitles, is about a Count's daughter who becomes involved with her father's valet. Just one of our 300 Different Styles! The play was written in 1888 and rates as an international masterpiece of naturalistic drama, according to Bjorn Hammarberg, visiting assistant professor of Germanic Languages and Literature. The new funds will be combined with a continuing project grant of $35,000 this year from the National Institute of Mental Health. Both institutions are agencies of the U.S. Public Health Service. CO-DIRECTOR OF the new grant is Dr. Howard V. Bair, superintendent of the Parsons State Hospital and Training Center. Dr. Bill Locke, research associate at Parsons, is program coordinator. A PRINCIPAL basis of support for the bureau's activities is a one-year-old federal program grant totaling more than $2 million over a seven-year period. Marks Jewelers The bureau's work focuses in general on studies related to language behavior and social adjustment in children. This includes studies of retarded and socially disturbed children, and also of normal children, for comparative purposes. The renewal support includes $81,-267 for the year beginning this July. Amounts increasing to $88,643 are allocated for the four succeeding years. Marks Jewelers 817 Mass. MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY MEMBER OF 1/5 NATIONAL GRIDAS SERVICE The work is based at the Parsons State Hospital and Training Center, at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, and in Lawrence. A new laboratory has just been completed at the Medical Center, and another one soon will be under construction. AGS The grant, awarded through the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Blindness, will provide for 16 trainees in research related to communicative disorders in children. KU has received federal renewal support totaling $426,000 for five years. The money will facilitate an expanding research training program directed by Prof. Richard L. Schieflebusch, director of the Bureau of Child Research. WATCH THIS SPOT The renewal funds continue a pattern of increased federal support for the two-year-old research training program. Total support for the first "The increased renewal grant is an expression of our expanding research program and our arrangements with Parsons State Hospital and Training Center, and the KU Medical Center setting." Dr. Schiefelbush said. EARN $2000 OR MORE THIS SUMMER Federal Support to Aid in Child Research FLESH EATERS Selling Christmas Cards. "As the over-all work of the bureau expands, our training program also expands," he explained. It's easy . . . I've done it Call me and I'll put you in business. two years initially was $91,000, but this was enlarged to $111,000 through supplemental grants. Santa Claus Ask for Sweeney VI 3-4711 5 to 7 p.m. MEMBER OF Reserve NOW and save $ $$ NEW Cabana Apartment Units NOW RENTING! • SWIMMING POOL • AIR-CONDITIONED • WALL TO WALL CARPETING • NEW APPLIANCES • PAVED PARKING • SOME FURNISHED RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT FOR FALL NOW! PHONE VI3-1116 FOR DETAILS Ridge House Coca-Cola Ridge House 24th & Ridge Court KU's 2,000 Grads Attend Late Details Before Final Walk Reunions, dinners, and annual meetings, will be a part of KU's ninety-second annual commencement from May 30 through June 1. Approximately 2,000 students will participate in commencement by walking down the "hill" from the World War II Memorial Campanile to Memorial Stadium at 7 p.m. June 1. COMMENCEMENT MARKS the end of college activities for many seniors. Details which seniors must complete before graduation include obtaining their caps and gowns. By presenting a cap and gown receipt, seniors can check out their caps and gowns between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. May 30 or 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. May 31 in Robinson Gym, not Hoch Auditorium as was previously announced. SENIORS CAN ALSO participate in the All-University Commencement Supper, Baccalaureate Services, the Class of '64 Breakfast, and the University Reception. The All-University Commencement Supper features Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe's "State of the University" address at 4:30 p.m., May 31 in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union. Graduates, parents and alumni are invited and advance purchase of tickets is required. Tickets may be obtained at the Alumni Association Office, 127 Strong. On June 1, seniors may attend the Class of '64 Breakfast at 8 a.m. in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union and also the University Reception for graduating seniors, parents and alumni from 3 to 4:30 p.m. in the main lounge of the Kansas Union. Baccalaureate services will be held at 7:30 p.m. May 31 in the Memorial Stadium. Rev. Dr. Franklin Clark Fry, president of the Lutheran Church of America will be the speaker and the music will be by the KU Commencement Band, Carillon, and Concert Choir. SEVEN REUNIONS are included in commencement week activities, Richard Wintermote of the Alumni Association, said. Five of these reunions occur every year which are: the Gold Medal Club, the 50 year class, the 40 year class, the 25 year class and the 10 year class. The Gold Medal Club includes all alumni who have attended or graduated from the University before 1914, Wintermote said. The annual meeting will be held on Sunday, May 31, in the Kansas Union. The class of '14 which is the 50 year class will have their "Gold Medal Pinning Dinner" at 6:30 p.m., May 30 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Chancellor and Mrs. W. Clarke Wescoe will handle the ceremonies at the dinner. Winternote said the class of '24 hopes to have 100 per cent of the class in the alumni association before commencement week. He said the class would probably do it because it had been working for it all year. Two other groups which will be having reunions during commencement week are the '23-'28 Glee Clubs and the Modern Choir of '30's. Wintermote said that the two groups meet every few years during commencement week. REUNION HEADQUARTERS for information on various group's activities will be; Gold Medal Club, South Lobby, Kansas Union Gold Medal Club, South Bend, Class of '14. Music Room, Kansas Union '23-28 Glee Clubs, Hotel Eldridge Class of '24, South Lobby, Kansas Union Class of "39, Trophy Room, Kansas Union Modern Choir of '30's. To be announced. Class of 54. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union During commencement week the annual meeting of Mortar Board and Phi Beta Kappa will also be held. Mortar Board will meet for a luncheon at 12:30 p.m., May 30 in the Watkins Room of the Kansas Union and Phi Beta Kappa will meet at 2:30 p.m., June 1 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. ★ ★ ★ Tassels Distinguish Grads Graduates from the different schools in the University wear different colored tassels on their caps, and the same colors are used by the respective departments in all universities, according to Frank Owen, assistant comptroller. "There is a national code regarding the makeup of academic regalia." Owen said. "The colors of the tassels are dictated by that." OWEN SAID he is not familiar with the reasoning behind the selecting of the various colors for the respective schools. "I have heard the expression "Man of Purple" applied to a member of the law profession," Owen said, "but that is the only connection I am familiar with." The colors the respective graduates will be wearing down the hill will be: Law, purple; college of liberal arts and sciences, white; education, light blue; journalism, cardinal; business, drab; graduate school. black. Medicine, green; pharmacy, olive; fine arts, brown; engineering orange; nursing, peach; and divinity, red. Daily hansan Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, May 20, 1964 Bogus Issue of Free Press Discredited by Wilcox, Long By Susan Flood A forged issue of the Kansas Free Press, a liberal student newsletter, is in limited circulation in Lawrence, according to its editors. LAIRD M. WILCOX, Lawrence freshman and Free Press editor, said the forged issue was "an attempt to make us appear much, much farther left than we are." But the state attorney general's office and the Kansas Bureau of Investigation in Topeka said yesterday they will not investigate for prosecution for criminal libel. An article reconciling Christianity and communism and purportedly written by Long, is the most radical of the faked pieces. Wilcox said he first learned of the bogus issue when Steve Long. Mission senior, received a letter from Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, dated April 24. The Chancellor's letter said he had received by mail a copy of the March 16 Free Press, which included in the biographical date that Long "lives in a scholarship apartment in the Chancellor's home." Dr. Wescoe said he hoped this inaccuracy would be corrected in any further issue. (Long lived in the chancellor's b a s e m e n t apartment first semester but moved into an apartment in January.) Wilcox said when he saw the Chancellor's copy he knew it was going to cause "a great deal of personal agitation." Wilcox said there were many factual inaccuracies in the biographical data about the supposed "authors," but they are not defamatory. "It is evident whoever did this was acquainted with both left and right-wing jargon and how to slant an article," he said. "Their frame of reference must have included a wide range of reading matter." WILCOX LISTED these differences in the two issues: - The forged issue bears the same Two Students Arraigned On Jeep-Burning Charge By Charles Corcoran Two KU students, both varsity swimmers, have been arested and charged with the burning of a campus police vehicle. is police Jeremy Wingate Higgins, Lawrence sophomore, and Michael N. Calwell, Bonner Springs senior, were arraigned this morning at 11:15 am. in the Douglas County Court of Judge Charles C. Rankin. They were charged with setting fire or causing to burn, or counsel or to procure the burning of a 1960 University of Kansas police jeep. According to Ralph M. King, Jr., county attorney, "It's a felony and it's serious." Bond was set for each of the accused at $1500. They were in the process of making bond at 11:45 a.m. this morning, King said. "If convicted of the offense, the penalty can be one to three years in the (state) penitentiary." King said. Both accused asked for a preliminary hearing which was granted and set for June 5th. Senators Disagree On Maryland Vote BALTIMORE, Md. — (UPI)—Sen Daniel Brewster, D-Md., said today the closeness of the Maryland presidential primary would have no effect on the civil rights bill now before the Senate. He predicted its enactment by June 15. enburemer defeated Alabama Gov. George Wallace in the primary balloting yesterday to hold Maryland's 48 first ballot convention votes for President Johnson. The last edition of the 64 Jayhawker will be distributed next Tuesday and Wednesday in the Information Booth. President Obama. But the showing by Wallace, who polled 42 per cent of the Democratic votes cast, was certain to cause some concern among Senate civil rights backers. John (Tonto) Mays, Lyons junior and business manager, said a limited supply of the Commencement issue will be available in the Jayhawker office Monday for those who can not pick them up later. WITH 1,443 of 1,461 precincts reporting, Brewster polled 250,171 votes to 196,468 for Wallace. It was the best showing by far for the segregationist governor who brought his battle against the civil See Related Story on Page 9 Final Jayhawker To Be Distributed rights bill to the North by entering primaries in Wisconsin, Indiana and Maryland. "We set out to protect our Democratic delegation for President Johnson and we succeeded." Brewster said. "In any battle there is no substitute for victory but you can't get all the votes. We did get more than the other man." "I don't think the vote will have any effect on the Senate of the United States," Brewster said. "I predict that by June 15 we will have a civil rights bill." WALLACE maintained that although he lost the popular vote, he won the convention delegates by the unit vote system. However, a check showed that Brewster wound up with 99 unit votes to 72 for Wallace. The leader of Southern forces in the Senate, Richard B. Russell of Georgia, said he interpreted the results as evidence of increasing sentiment against the civil rights bill. "It is finally getting through the people of this country just what the politicians are threatening to do with their form of government in their bid for minority bloe votes," Russell said. SEN. JOHN J. Sparkman, D-Ala., said he felt Maryland had cast "a tremendous protest against the so-called civil rights bill." Wallace ran heaviest where expected, on Maryland's eastern shore. He wound up carrying 17 counties while Brewster took six and Baltimore city. date as the original, March 16, and is also identified as issue No. 7, but is identical in format and general makeup to issue No. 4. - The four pages of the forgery do not compare at all in content of the two-page original. - The forged issue contains a long article reprinted verbatim from issue No. 2 and written by Wilcox's wife, Eileen; a reworded answer to a letter in issue No. 4; a forged advertisement from Abington Book Shop; quotations without comment by Fidel Castro and Mao Tse-tung; a column resembling in format a regular feature, "News You Didn't See in the Press," and the article on Christianity and communism. THE FREE PRESS is not connected with the university. Close examination also suggests that the paper is different in quality, is blue rather than yellow, and the typewriter used on the forged issue has a different length spacing between lines. Another angle is an April 20 broadcast by KLWN station manager Ardin Booth. Booth quoted the article on Christianity and communism on a program of different opinions. Laird and Wilcox heard about the broadcast from friends and went to talk to Booth. He let them see the transcript of the program, which referred to Long as "an honor student" and then made a comment to the effect that the space Long occupied at the University might better be used by someone who had more constructive ideas for the good of society. BOOTH ADMITTED this reference but said he did not mention the student's name or his residence in the chancellor's basement. He said he was acting on good faith in thinking the issue was a legitimate one and these were Long's views. Booth said one copy of the forged issue was brought to him by a local man, whom he would not identify. Booth said another copy arrived shortly after this at his home and was accompanied by a note asking for donations to the Free Press. He said he assumed at the time that the second copy had come from the editors. "I received several calls from persons who had seen the alleged bogus issue and were quite upset with its contents," Booth said. "The only person I showed the issue to was Henry Bubb, chairman of the State Board of Regents, to ask his advice about quoting from it on my program. He did not advise me either way but I thought he ought to see the nature of writing in a University publication." BOOTH SAID that after Wilcox and Long came to see him after his broadcast, he wrote another note to Henry Bubb explaining the problem of two issues. Booth said the most likely possibility is that the issue was forged. "This is what I believe from talking with Wilcox and Long," he said. "Although I am known to be a conservative I highly respect other people's right to have an opinion." Wilcox then retained Richard Dyson, assistant professor of law, as attorney for the Free Press. Dyson said yesterday the forged issue constitutes a criminal libel, which is a misdemeanor and punish- (Continued on page 12) Weather Studying for finals will be difficult with fair skies and warm temperatures that are predicted by the weather bureau. Students will be lured from their desks tonight by clear skies and a low of 65. And sunbathers will wask in 90 degree highs tomorrow. Adding the icing to the weather picture will be the mild 5-15 mile per hour winds. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, May 20, 1964 Cut in Bookstore Rebate Decision Helps Students The decision to reduce Kansas Union Book Store refunds from eight to five per cent during the next four years is an action that will benefit a good many KU students who find that the cost of getting a college education is hard to bear. The refund reduction amounts to about $22,500 annually and will be used to pay a loan to match federal money which is made available to the University under the National Defense Education Act. Congress recently increased the maximum amount of money that each school may use from $250,000 to $800,000. One-ninth of this money must be supplied by the participating school. The $90,000 freed by the refund reduction over the four-year period will insure KU's full participation in the federal loan program. "Members of the executive committee of the Memorial Corporation voted unanimously to use part of the patronage refund for this purpose, and we are pleased that the Kansas Union can be the means by which students will receive in this way not only the $22,500 a year they ordinarily would have returned in refunds, but approximately $900,000 in loans next year," Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students and chairman of the executive committee, said. "KU has been assured of a major source of student aid next year." Robert Billings, director of aids and awards, added. The decision also had a significant side aspect apart from the obtaining of badly-needed money for student loans. On March 21, the All Student Council passed unanimously a resolution recommending the step to the executive committee which includes administration officials, the student body president and vice-president, the chairman of Student Union Activities, and alumni. It is praiseworthy that the members of the ASC recommended the refund money be used to expand the opportunities for education at KU, rather than for some other less valuable purpose. Notice the situation at Kansas State. During the past several months KS students have been under pressure to raise money through increased activity fees to help finance an expanding athletic program. The members of the ASC are to be commended for making a wise choice in goals and values that can only increase the opportunities for higher education. All concerned with the refund decision have contributed to the stature and future of the University. Rick Mabbutt The Mythical Rights Bill As the Senate's civil rights debate goes into its tenth week, it is obvious that supporters and opponents of the rights bill are not talking about the same kind of bill at all. Proponents are discussing the bill actually before the Senate. The opponents, for purposes of fright propaganda, have in effect drafted a mythical bill that they oppose. It has the following provisions: 1. The Federal Government and not the states will now fix voting qualifications. (The real bill only says states cannot enforce racial discrimination against voters.) 2. Public schools must be brought into a racial balance. (The real bill specifically rejects that idea.) 3. Employers must hire from minority groups by quotas. (The real bill only says an employer cannot refuse to hire an applicant solely because of his race or religion.) 4. The Federal Government can deny all aid to any state that affronts the purpose of the bill. (The actual bill permits denial of aid to projects—not to states—that create racial discrimination.) 5. Hotel, restaurant and entertainment operators must admit any ill-behaved, ill-dressed citizen who seeks entrance. (Nonsense; the bill only says the operators cannot refuse entrance solely because of race or religion.) 6. The Government is authorized to tell homeowners to whom they must sell their homes. (The bill does not even discuss such housing matters.) 7. Private clubs must admit Negroes (or Mexicans, Catholics, Protestants, Indians, Jews, etc.) (The actual bill exempts private clubs.) 8. The Attorney General will be a dictator. (The bill allows him to go to court to seek enforcement of the law.) 9. Well, then, federal judges will be dictators. (They are empowered to issue injunctions to enforce the law, which is hardly unusual.) 10. Jury trial will be denied in rights cases. (The issue does not come up in the present bill, since it provides only for civil actions. Jury trial is not today required even for criminal contempt cases, but the bill may be amended to permit it.) 11. Enforcement of the rights bill requires federal police everywhere. (The bill requires no police anywhere; largely, it leaves enforcement up to court action by those aggrieved.) 12. It shall be illegal to discuss segregation, or to express discriminatory thoughts. (The bill prohibits anyone from threatening or coercing others to disobey the law, which is a far cry from denial of free speech and press.) In short, the whole picture of the rights bill drawn by Southern propagandists is one of a terrible tyranny being forced upon a majority of Americans in the name of a minority. We are asked to believe that this is the sort of horrendous plot for which the House voted by an overwhelming 290 to 130. How silly can propagandists get? The answer to that question seems to be that they will be as silly as necessary to avoid any honest discussion of the facts of the civil rights case. Fearing facts, they insist upon constant repetition of hokum. That is the content of their mythical bill. BOOK REVIEWS THE ESSENTIAL PLOTINUS, translated and with introduction by Elmer O'Brien (Mentor, 75 cents). Here is an examination, along with the writings themselves of a philosopher regarded as the father of western mysticism. He was Plotinus, third century pagan. This is the first English translation to be based on recent research and the newest critical editions of the Greek original. O'Brien's commentaries and his introduction provide a worthwhile guide to the philosopher. ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA, by Shakespeare; MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING, by Shakespeare (both Signet Classies, 50 cents each). - * * * These are new editions, with the sharpest looking covers appearing on paperbacks these days. Barbara Everett of Newnham College, Cambridge, did the introduction for "Antony and Cleopatra"; David L. Stevenson of Hunter College did it for "Much Ado About Nothing." Among paperback Shakespearea now available these should occupy a high place. University of Kansas student newspaper UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS UNIVERSITY OF 4-218, business office 111 Flint Hall Daili Hansan Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904. Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. Mail subscription. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the university even假期, holidays and University假期 holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. NEWS DEPARTMENT Mike Miller ... Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Tom Coffman Editorial Writer Vinay Kothari and Margaret Hughes Assistant, Editorial Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Bob Brooks ... Business Manager U.S. SENATE INVESTIGATION DARK MISTER © HERB LACK "You May Question The Servants Only. After All, This Is A Gentlemen's Club" The People Say . . . College 'Mooners' Editor: As befits the attitude of all young aspiring intellectuals, we endeavor to cultivate the important prerequisite to enlightenment, the "open mind." With that premise it is stimulating to encounter new challenges in this ideology; one is kept constantly on his toes with all the new and exciting developments of our age. One of the most discussed topics of today, as every collegian knows so well, is sex. The student is ever aware of the subject of sex and has unlimited access to sources of knowledge relevant to it. Occasionally, one has a "unique" experience which by its "uniqueness" acts as a challenge to comprehension. Recently, we have been so challenged; and far from adopting an indignant attitude of protestation, wish to learn and, if possible, benefit from our experience: It seems that there is a custom—although practiced, we surmised, by a small minority—indulged in by youthful gentlemen who become, to use the vulgar, but expressive, cliché, "hot and bothered." This daring practice we witnessed seems to consist of projecting one's bared posterior from the window of an automobile. (We believe there exists some incredible term like "mooning" for this practice.) We felt a bit dubious, upon observation of this phenomenon, and were even more concerned to learn that such things were evidently looked on with tolerance by our contemporaries. (We certainly did not make the assumption that our observance was the first of its kind in the fair city of Lawrence.) We could not help but liken our evident lack of open-mindedness to the story of the unfortunate young woman in New York who recently was stabbed to death in the presence of not just a few bystanders who exhibited the ultimate of "open-mindedness." Of course, this tale is an extreme and cannot be compared in nature. The comparison, however, lies in the attitude of the onlookers. What could exemplify more completely the open-minded attitude of our nation's people? Yet there seemed more significance in the fact that the local law enforcement officers had never received such items of interest. Indecent exposure? . . . Oh well, we must remember to be tolerant, we must avoid the stigma attached to "getting involved," we must be open-minded and attempt to understand; and somehow condescend to ignore what the hell is our generation coming to. A couple of intellectually aspired co-eds. - * * Editor: Student Service In relation to the interview presented to the Daily Kansan by our group working on community services, I thought that excerpts from the Congressional Hearings on the National Service Corps presented by a particular student program might be news-worthy for interested KU students. "... Phillips Brooks House (Harvard) has seen the development of effective volunteering over the past 50 years. It has developed from the basic stages of basketball coaching and hospital visiting to the work which students are doing today: leading groups of youngsters with a high degree of involvement and skill, supplementing the therapeutic work of psychologists, engaging in programs to change the outlooks of those in depressed areas, regarding society and education, and basic rehabilitation in prisons and reform schools. "... On the basis of its past work in the field, PEH feels that the amount of responsibility and effectiveness which can be attributed to the volunteer has been underestimated in volunteer organizations throughout the U.S. With a well-designed chain of responsibility which emphasizes the educational aspect to the worker as well as the actual performance in the field, the number of programs which can be effectively initiated is indeed impressive." The statement then goes on to summarize PBH programs which are listed as: General Hospitals Committee, Mental Hospitals Committee, Undergraduate Teachers Committee, Prisons Committee, Social Service Committee (youth programs), Tutors Committee, Reading Enrichments Committee and Campus Blood Drive Committee. All of these programs and a great many others can be started in the Lawrence and Kansas City areas, especially with the enthusiastic response from community groups which we have received. Thank you for your attention. ou for your attentive Sincerely yours Bill Manning Wednesday. May 20.1964 University Daily Kansan Page 3 By Phil Newsom U.S. Increases Its Aid To Rebel Communists By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst In the United States-Romanian trade talks now underway in Washington, the Romanians have let it be known specifically that they are interested in buying a complete synthetic rubber plant and equipment for their petro-chemical industry. Less specific has been the interest of both sides in reaching, further, more far-reaching agreement on the political and cultural level, including closer diplomatic relations. From the United States' standpoint, it is part of a continuing program to break down the once-closest-knit structure of world communism and to take advantage of rising nationalism within the Soviet bloc expressing itself in increasing independence of Moscow. A PROGRAM OF economic aid to Yugoslavia helped the Tito regime to survive after Tito's excommunication by Stalin in 1948. Although some evidences of mounting Romanian dissatisfaction with Moscow's dictatorship were apparent as long as four years ago, they have become the most obvious within the last year or so. Eight years ago similar aid was extended to Poland after Wladislaum Gomulka's defiance of Khrushchev in 1956. Internally, the Romanians abolished the Russian-language institute and the Russian language as required teaching in Romanian schools. OUTWARDLY, THE signs were even more visible. A year ago in June, Romanian President Gheorghi-Dej was conspicuously absent from a Communist bloc summit meeting in East Berlin to discuss Soviet-Chinese differences. Romania restored diplomatic relations with Albania, ostracized by the Soviet Union for its support of Red China. Romanian newspapers began publishing both sides of the dispute. In late April, a Romanian Communist party statement, in effect, told both the Chinese and the Soviets to clean their houses and flatly declared for the independence of every Communist party and country to manage its own affairs. THESE WERE SOME of the evidences for which the United States waited before initiating moves which could place Romania in the same category as Poland and Yugoslavia and perhaps set off a chain reaction of negotiations with others among the satellites. Perhaps the greatest sign of Romanian independence of Moscow was its refusal to cooperate with "Comecon," the Moscow-sponsored organization which was to link Communist economies, assigning to each those goods which they could produce the best and cheapest and which would have relegated Romania primarily to a position as supplier of raw materials. Romania is rich in oil, natural gas, coal, iron, manganese, bauxite, salt, wood and agricultural produce and she resists the status of backward country. Against Khrushchev's wishes she pressed ahead with the huge Galati steel mill, part of which is being built with the aid of western concerns. Last year she signed with Yugoslavia an agreement for joint construction of an $800 million hydro-electric and navigation project at the Danube river's iron gate. For this show of independence, the United States now is considering a reward. Cellist to Perform KU Senior Recital The KU School of Fine Arts will present Jane Yust, cellist, in recital at 8:00 p.m. Thursday in Swarthout Recital hall. Miss Yust, Wichita senior, attended the University of Arkansas where she studied with Robert Collins. In the summer of 1963 she was granted a full scholarship to Tanglewood. She is a student of Prof. Raymond Stuhl. For her program she has selected "Concerto in C Minor" by J. C. Bach, "Sonata, Op. 5, No. 2" by Beethoven, and "Sonata, Op. 40" by Shostakovich. Jan Chiapusso, professor emeritus of piano, will be the assisting pianist. WATCH THIS SPOT FLESH EATERS 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 Students, according to Herbert J. Ellison, chairman of the Slavic and Soviet area studies at KU, are to be in good standing in an accredited college or university. He said that scholarships are based on academic achievement and financial need. The program will begin June 8 and run until August 14 and will be located in Ellsworth Hall. It is sponsored by the universities of Kansas and Colorado with the aid of a grant from the National Defense Education Act. Scholarship funds are still available for qualified students who wish to study in the ten-week intensive summer Russian and Polish program at KU. Prof. Ellison said about 60 to 70 students are expected to participate in the program. Prof. Ellison said applications have been received from as far away as New York and North Carolina. Sixteen teachers will participate in the program, ten from the University of Colorado and six from KU. The program is in its second year. It alternates between KU and the University of Colorado. the language they are studying at all times. Courses to be offered and the college credit to be given for each are beginning Polish or Russian (10) PARK PLAZA SOUTH Russian Scholarships Available Area courses to be offered are: history of central Europe with an emphasis on Poland, taught by S. Harrison Thomson, director of the center for Slavic and East European Studies at the University of Colorado and director of the KU summer language program; and imperial Russia and the Soviet Union, which will be taught by Prof. Ellison. 1912 W. 25th Expenses for the program include $260 for board and room for ten weeks, and $65.50 for resident tuition, or $165.50 for non-resident tuition. Ph. VI 2-3416 Day or Night Assignment for Wednesday Take advantage of the CHICKEN DINNER for $1.55 at the Holiday Inn Restaurant Students enrolled in the program will live in Ellsworth Hall with a regulation that students must speak hours); intermediate or advanced Russian or Polish (7 hours) and area courses (3 hours). An area course usually supplements the other courses. WOULDN'T YOU KNOW...IT'S Jacqueline. $13.95 $12.95 "fashionable match- ing bags." $10.95 The brightest new white fashions... come in patent leather uppers! And they come on a variety of heel heights, In a wide selection of the latest styles. Designed to look beautiful with every summer outfit . . . everywhere you go. Shown are just three of our great collection. Come see them all. As seen in Glamour. $10.95 to $13.95 819 Mass. ARENSBERG'S Phone VI 3-3470 Page 4 University Dauy Kansan Wednesday, May 20, 1964 Ruby Remains Mentally Upset In Solitary Cell DALLAS —(UPI)— Jack Ruby, convicted killer of President Kennedy's assassin, is being treated with medicine in his solitary jail cell but the only improvement seems to be an increased appetite, his brother said yesterday. The brother, Sam Ruby, said that Dr. William Beavers, a psychiatrist hired by the Ruby family to treat the killer of accused assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, has been seeing Ruby in his cell for about two weeks. Sam Ruby said Beavers cannot do the job he would like to do treating Jack Ruby in his maximum security jail cell. "He needs to be in some hospital where psychiatrists or attendants can give him medicine." The disclosure came after reports leaked out that court-appointed psychiatrist Dr. Robert Stubblefield told Dist. Judge Joe B. Brown Ruby has a mental illness that could be treated. BROWN, WHO presided at Ruby's trial and must rule on a request for a sanity hearing for the once-pudgy former night club operator, said yesterday it was his understanding Ruby was being treated with "happy pills or something." "Things so far seem to indicate a sanity hearing," Brown said. Sam said he visited Jack Sunday and saw no improvement in his mental condition. He said Ruby was still having delusions that Jews were being killed because of him, some of them right there in jail. Ruby still bears scars on his bald head from an apparent suicide attempt several weeks ago in his cell. Jailers said he apparently rammed his head into the cell wall. Dist. Atty. Henry Wade, who prosecuted Ruby, said "It's my understanding that Ruby needs some kind of treatment. He's been under a strain, sitting up there knowing he has been sentenced to the electric chair." ENJOY CHECKBOOK MONEY CONVENIENCE ICE GOLD DRINKS WITH AN EASY-TO-USE ThriftiCheck® PERSONAL CHECKING ACCOUNT ★ A few dollars and a few minutes opens your account ★ Checks personalized FREI ★ Economical — costs less than money orders ★ NO minimum balance ★ NO charge for deposits ★ NO monthly service charge DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK 9th & Kentucky ENJOY CHECKBOOK MONEY CONVENIENCE ICE GOLD DRINKS JACK EARSON KU Works To Be Shown In Kansas City Art Show Twelve artists connected with the KU drawing and painting department had 14 pieces admitted to the 14th Mid-America Annual Show sponsored by the Nelson Gallery of Art-Atkins Museum in Kansas City, Mo. This is $17\frac{1}{2}$ per cent of the 80 pieces chosen from more than a thousand entries from the 8-state area of Missouri, Kansas, Iowa, Arkansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Colorado and New Mexico. The jury for the show, which runs through June 7, was Seymour Lipton, sculptor, New York; Gordon Smith, director of the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, N.Y.; and Jane Wade, Marlborough-Gerson Gallery, New York, N.Y. Thomas P. Coleman, KU alumnus and former instructor, won a prize for his etching, "Cropduster." Clark Rickert, also an alumnus, earned a prize for an oil painting, "Totem." Twelve other works were accepted from these KU artists; Prof. Nick D. Vaccaro, chairman of the department; Randall F. Sadler, instructor; John Brewer and Curtis Rhodes, assistant instructors; and these students: Mrs. JoAnn Bernofsky, Lawrence senior; Gregg N. Blasdel, Lawrence senior; Thomas J. Brand, Lawrence sophomore; Terry J. Gierlach, Lawrence graduate student; Conley, Wichita junior; and John Moore, a former student. N F F DIRECTORS Theodore Bikel Clarence Cooper Ronnie Gilbert Alan Lomax Jean Ritchie Mike Seeger Peter Yarrow George Wein Chairman NEWPORT FOLK FESTIVAL THURS. • FRI. • SAT. • SUN. JULY 23-24-25-26 Freebody Park • NEWPORT, R.I. Tickets: $3, $4, $5 On Mail Orders, add 25 cents Evening concerts will be augmented by morning and afternoon panels and workshops. Special group rates can be arranged in advance now. For Tickets and Program Information: Newport Folk Festival, Newport, R.I. NOTICE Both our fine locations wish to thank you for your steady patronage for the past year. We wish you the best of luck for the summer, and we hope to see you all again in September. FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN DOWNTOWN PLANT 900 Miss. 740 Vt. DOGS Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi K University Daily Kansan Page 5 KU 'Broadside' Sheet Scores Coup With Exclusive Creeley Poem "Broadside Poems," an unofficial, unsponsored, independent, nonprofit, occasional poetry sheet, has scored an exclusive. The latest issue features a poem by poet Robert Creeley, titled "Distance," which has never before been published. "Because Creeley is already an established poet with a wide audience, this issue of Broadside poems may well become a collector's item after a short period of time," Terrence Williams, editor-in-chief and publisher of the penny-a-sheet publication, said. Creeley's collected verse, "For Love," was a leading contender for the 1962 National Book Award, Reviewing it for the "Saturday Review," critic Dudley Fitts said, "At its concentrated best the sting of this poetry is indelible." Seven other volumes of Creeley's work have been published, including "The Whip" (1857), "A Form of Women" (1959), and a single novel, "The Island" (1964), which Williams referred to as "a roman à clef describing Creeley's life in Mallorca, Spain." VOC Robert Creeley Foreign Students: Turn in the forms found on the last pages of the May issue of the International Campus Newsletter. 228 Strong Hall. Official Bulletin Friday is last day for non-summer 13 English Proficiency Exam. 130 Strong. 18 English Proficiency Exam. 130 Strong. TODAY Psychology Colloquium, 4:30 p.m., 9 Strong. "Alternation in Pre-School Children"—Dr. Richard Bogartz, State U. of Iowa. Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. Carillon Recital, 7 p.m. Albert Gernken. SUA Classical Film, 7 p.m. Fraser Theater. The Belfast of a Nation, (H15) Some Memoirs, 8 p.m. Swarthout Hall. The chantist TOMORROW Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth. Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. Holy Communion, 11:30 a.m., St. Ansheim's Chanel. Danforth. Graduate Faculty Meeting, 4 p.m. Dyche Auditorium. Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion, 4:30 p.m., Pan American Rm., Union. Opening of the William Savage Johnson Memorial Reading Room. 8 p.m. Department of Special Collections, Watson Library. Senior Recital. 8 p.m., Swarthout Hall. Jane Yust, cellist. Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel. Everyone welcome. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth. FLESH EATERS WATCH THIS SPOT In Europe he was editor of "Fragmente" (Freiberg in Breisgau, Germany) and was associated with "Vou" (Tokyo, Japan)—both literary publications. Born in New England, Creeley joined the American Field Service after studying at Harvard. He served in India and Burma. After the war Creeley, with his wife and three children, moved to Aix-en-Provence. BURGERT'S Shoe Service Service for Shoes Since 1910 1113 Mass. St. VI 3-0691 Creeley later moved to Banabulf, Mallorca, Spain, where he started the Divers Press, which Williams said, "printed a number of excellent volumes of contemporary poetry." NOW! Shows 7:00 & 9:00 DAVID NIVEN PETER SELLERS in "The Pink Panther" Granada THEATRE...Telephone W3-5760 Granada TREATHE...Telephone VP 3-5780 While in Mallorca, in 1554, he became editor of the "Black Mountain Review," which Williams referred to as "possibly the most important 'little magazine' to appear in recent years." Starts SAT... JAMES BOND IS BACK! IAN FLEMING'S FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE STARRING SEAN CONNERY AS JAMES BOND DANIELA BIANCHI TECHNICOLOR ECM PRODUCTIONS LTD Report UNITED ARTISTS Starts SAT... JAMES BOND IS BACK! In 1555, Creley was invited to teach writing at Black Mountain College. More recently, he has been teaching at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque. FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE STARRING SEAN CUNNERY AS JAMES BOND TECHNICOLOR LCM PRODUCTIONS LTD UNITED ARTISTS --- Starts TONITE! [ ] FAMILY FUN — ABOUT THE MAN WHO TURNED INTO A FISH! The Incredible Mr. Limpet with DON KNOTTS Shows at 7:00 & 900 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1045 Coming Sunday... "South Pacific" KU Student Dies Starts TONITE! 2 Joyous Fun Hits! ROMANCE HITS A HIGH SEA METRO CINEMAS present FOLLOW THE BOYS by PANAVISIONS & METROCOLOR The hottest sound around M-G-M presents HOOTENANNY Hear 15 Folk-Song! Greats sing the Hoftenanny Hits! Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on highway 98 OPEN 7:00 - STARTS DUSK FREE KIDDIE PLAYGROUND Funeral services were held yesterday in St. Joseph, Mo., for William Monty, 23. St. Joseph, Mo., senior, who died of cancer Sunday in a St. Joseph hospital. Yesterday, the Sigma Nu fraternity held a memorial dinner and a memorial chapter meeting for Monty, who was a fraternity brother. About four weeks ago, the Sigma Nu's donated 30 pints of blood for Monty who was then in critical condition in a St. Joseph hospital. See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS Sales - Rentals - Service LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 Patronize Kansan Advertisers Town & Country Shoes Town & Country Shoes ELEGANT It's the OPEN SEASON on White Iridescent Patent by Town & Country Shoes BO PEEP Royal College Shop 837 Mass. VI 3-4255 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, May 20,1964 Around the Campus Pharmacy Student Awarded Clinton N. Corder, Oberlin fifth year student in the School of Pharmacy, has received a national award in the Lunsford Richardson Pharmacy award competition. Corder received the $100 third prize in the national undergraduate research competition. The University also will receive a matching $100 in recognition of Corder's award. Corder's research was on "Reduction of Barbiturates under Hydroboration Conditions." An honor roll student, Corder is a member of the American Pharmaceutical Association, and he has held a George Guy Hall Memorial Scholarship in pharmacy. He has participated in the National Science Foundation undergraduate research program. Great Bend Senior Honored Marjorie Leek, a graduating high school senior from Great Bend, has been awarded the $500 Charles and Helen Hulme scholarship to attend KU next year. The award is provided by Charles and Helen Hulme of Great Bend, and is given annually to an outstanding graduate of Great Bend High School. The award is for the freshman year. She was a Watkins scholarship nominee, and National Merit scholarship finalist, a semi-finalist for the American Abroad program for the American Field Service, and recipient of the Optimist Good Citizen award. Business Awards Given Scholarships in the School of Business have been awarded for next term. Geoffrey W. Donnan, Webster Groves, Mo., junior, has been awarded the $500 Goodyear Foundation scholarship in business administration. Two students have received Elizabeth M. Hoyt scholarships. They are Shivandra K. Thakkar, Bombay, India, senior, who received a $450 award, and Larry E. Nokes, Garnett freshman, who received a $500 award. Melvin C. O'Connor, Wichita sophomore, received the $250 Kansas Savings and Loan League scholarship. Richard E. Flaherty, Lincoln sophomore, received the $500 Kansas Association of Finance Companies fellowship. Dennis W. Whisker, La Grange Park, Ill., received the $200 Continental Oil Company scholarship. Raymond G. Young, Winfield junior, received the $300 Paul Landis scholarship in business. Danforth Workers Named Two faculty members have been appointed Danforth associates for the 1964-66 academic years. Bruce A. Linton, professor of speech and journalism, and William J. York, associate professor of education, will participate with their wives in the program aimed at heightening the quality of faculty-student relations. Danforth Foundation of St. Louis is the sponsor. The appointees and their wives will attend summer conferences at Camp Miniwanca, Mich., where they will be oriented in the objectives of the program. Danforth associates work to establish closer relations with students through informal visits, often in their homes. They also are encouraged to initiate faculty conversations on educational and religious perspectives of teaching. Danforth Foundation selects as associates persons who are highly respected as teacher-scholars, who possess a religious interest, who have demonstrated a concern for the personal dimension of education, and who have shown a talent for creative personal relations with students. History Club Elects Pi Alpha Theta, the history honor society, elected officers for next term yesterday. They are Lee Peters, Prairie Village junior, president; and Fred Whitehead, Pratt sophomore, secretary-treasurer. Eighteen students were initiated into the honor society. Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION SEE AD IN THURSDAY PAPER SANDY'S THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE-IN O HAVE YOU TRIED SANDY'S FISH-ON-A-BUN? We believe it's what's up front that really counts and SANDY'S got it all the way. Quality.Service. What else is there? O PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS Creazione Italiana PER Danielle MADE IN ITALY di BOSTON You must see our collection of Danielle Italian made sandals. Softest leathers, many colors, sizes to 11 PENNY HEELS A T strap sandal on a stacked heel. Bone or nicotine brown. S, N and M widths. 10.99 SANDAL The ring strap in white, harness and brown. S,N and M widths. 6.99 HAWKEN A fold over strap in softest calf. Natural, white and nicotine. N and M widths. 5.99 MANY OTHER STYLES NOT ILLUSTRATED TO CHOOSE FROM. 4.99 to 8.99 McCoy's Shoes Slip-on with low cork wedge heel. White, harness and nicotine 5.99 44 A step-in thong sandal. White or nicotine brown. 4.99 Strap back thong sandal in nicotine, black, red, turquoise, yellow and white. 4.99 M A slip-on thong sandal in red, white, rust and nicotine. 5.99 813 Mass. VI 3-2091 Wednesday, May 20, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 7 THE QUESTION: ARE YOU INTERESTED? EUROPE NEXT SUMMER,1965 $248.00* New York to Europe, Round Trip by Jet. This is a possibility, in fact, a probability! This low transportation cost from New York to Europe and return to New York will probably be possible for the summer of 1965. If so, it will be available only for the exclusive use of University of Kansas faculty and students and/or immediate families. (Immediate family is defined as spouse, children, or parents living in same household with KU faculty member or student. Household may be one's permanent residence and does not need to be one's campus residence.) Transportation proposed will be by charter jet of one of the trans-Atlantic certificated, scheduled or supplemental airlines. Dates proposed will be for a departure from New York between June 10th and June 15th to a European gateway such as Brussels, with a return from the same gateway city between August 20th and August 25th to New York. *The proposed transportation cost of $248 is approximate and is to include the estimated pro rata jet charter fare, roundtrip from New York to Europe, and is also to include a nominal administrative fee estimate per person. Should costs be less, a pro rata refund will be made to each participant at time of flight's departure. The proposed pro rata charter jet fare is based on present airline tariffs and will be subject to adjustment should charter tariffs fluctuate in 1965. This announcement is for the purpose of securing a show of interest to determine whether there will be a sufficient number of KU faculty and students (including immediate family) who may want to join together for roundtrip charter jet transportation to Europe for the summer of 1965. This announcement is not to be construed as a notice of firm charter plans or availability, or as an offer of reservations for any definite charter. IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN POSSIBLE CHARTER JET TRANSPORTATION TO EUROPE FOR THE SUMMER OF 1965, PLEASE PHONE MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE AT VIKING 3-1211 OR BRING OR MAIL THE COUPON BELOW TO MAUPINTOUR. THOSE REGISTERING THEIR INTEREST AT THIS TIME WILL BE GIVEN FIRST NOTICE OF CHARTER PLANS IF AND WHEN THEY BECOME FIRM. Please Note: This announcement is published by Maupintour Travel Service as a service to KU faculty and students and is not for the general public, and is in accordance with the CAB Regulation No. ER-400. Part 295 effective April 18, 1964 which is, in part, also incorporated within the IATA rules. Copies of this Regulation are available on request from the Bureau of Economic Regulation, Civil Aeronautics Board, Washington, D. C. Maupintour may act as travel agent for the charterer, but CAB rules prohibit any travel agent from acting as sponsor or as the charterer. Maupintour Travel Service, as a travel agent, is permitted by the new CAB rules to handle the sale of air transportation to individual members of the chartering group, to engage in the administration of charter flights on behalf of the charterer, and to assist the charterer in the formation of the charter group including the placement of announcements in publications of the chartering group. SHOULD ANY ORGANIZATION, ASSOCIATION, SCHOOL, FRATERNAL GROUP, BUSINESS OR INDUSTRIAL ENTITY, OR CLUB WISH TO HAVE THEIR OWN CHARTER GROUP TO EUROPE, OFFICIALS OF INTERESTED MEMBERS OF SAME ARE INVITED TO CONTACT MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE, THE MALLS, 711 WEST 23RD STREET, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FOR DETAILED INFORMATION. Charter flight groups are economically feasible for as few as 50 participants and can be arranged for any time of the year and for any length of stay abroad. Mail Coupon Today or Phone Viking 3-1211 ! To: Walter Houk, Maupintour Travel Service, The Malls, Lawrence, Kansas I will be a member of the KU faculty or student body for the 1964/1965 academic year and I am interested in the possibilities of participating in an exclusive KU jet charter to Europe for the summer of 1965. In addition to myself, there would be ... (number of immediate family). In due course, should a KU charter jet flight become a reality, I understand you will give me first notice at my address below. My Name Faculty Member Student Address ... City State My Phone is ... Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, May 20, 1964 "Spirit of Lindbergh" Lingers On It was thirty-seven years ago today that Capt. Charles A. Lindbergh walked out into the mist of a chilly morning and took a car to Curtiss field, New York, where his plane, the Spirit of St. Louis, waited for him in the hangar. It was 3 o'clock in the morning when he arrived at the hangar, and the light rain soon turned into a downpour. The slim boyish-looking 25 year old flyer noting the weather, said, "If this keeps up it's all off for today, I guess." While he was watching mechanics check his plane a telephone call from the International Wireless company brought the good news that skies were clear over Nova Scotia and there was a light easterly wind. Lindbergh, then an unknown aviator, was preparing to take off in a bid for the $25,000 prize posted by Raymond Orteig, New York hotel owner, for a non-stop flight from New York to Paris. After his plane had been thoroughly inspected by mechanics it was towed by truck from Curtiss field to nearby Roosevelt field and fueled for the long flight. "I'll see you in Paris," said Commander Richard Byrd, wishing the young flyer good luck. "When I get into the cockpit," answered Lindbergh slowly, "it is like getting into a death chamber and if I get out in Paris it will be like a pardon from the governor." When he took off at 7:15 eastern daylight-saving time, the 448 gallons of gasoline in the tanks made his ship so heavy that the young man narrowly avoided a crash at the start of his long flight. From that time on the progress of his flight was reported in bulllets from cities and ships along his route, just as were the recent flights of astronauts John Glenn, Walter Schirra and Gus Grissom. About $ 33_{1/2} $ hours later, a silver monoplane shot out of the darkness over Le Bourget field, the Paris airport, and headed into a circle for landing without faltering once in direction. Charles Lindbergh retired to rest after the exhaustion of his long ordeal at the controls of his ship, and awoke some hours later to discover that "the entire world knew him. After being made a Knight of the Legion of Honor by the French President, and acquiring undying popularity because of the unassuming manner and friendly smile, Lindbergh returned to the United States by boat to be given the greatest ovation ever accorded a hero up to that time. "Lindbergh's real test," said Roger W. Babson, financial expert who urged President Coolidge to appoint the young flier head of aviation, "was not in crossing the Atlantic, but will come when he has to choose between the fabulous offers of movies and vaudeville concerns and a much smaller salary in constructive work." So You Still Want to Smoke "I wanna buy a pack of cigarettes." "You wanna what?" "I wanna buy a pack of cigarettes!" "Why?" "Why! Because I want to, that's why. Don't you sell cigarettes here?" "Yeah, we sell them, but don't you ever read?" **why.** Don't you sell cigarettes here? "Yeah, we sell them, but don't "No, I'm going to college to rest up from high school." "Don't you know that smoking causes cancer?" "What are you, a refugee from the Surgeon General's office?" "Look, they've proved smoking causes cancer, right" "So what! I like to smoke, right now I'm out of cigarettes, and if you don't mind, could I have a pack." "No, you'll have to pay for them." "That sounds like a sporting proposition." "No, just a statement of fact." "Okay." "What kind." "Well, they come in a red and white pack and they're toasted." "Why do you smoke those?" "Well, I'll tell you. For one thing they're not filtered. For another, ever since I was a little kid I've always had this thing for toast. I grubtoast. Every morning for breakfast. I have a cigarette and toast. Smoking is like eating toast all day." "You're kidding "You're right." "You're kidding me." "You're right." "Okay, here you go." "Thank you." "Thank you." "You're welcome, and remember what I said about cancer." "For you, anything. By the way, do you have any matches?" "Could I have some, no, wait a minute, I'll rephrase that. Could I buy some?" Lindbergh successfully met all tests, remaining always kind, friendly, and unassuming, even after the brutal slaying of his young son seven years after the triumphal flight. "No." "You're welcome, anything for the Surgeon General." "Thank you." Lindbergh's flight in 1927 no longer seems so magnificent because of the strides made since that time, but the courage he showed in a time of doubt about the worth of airplanes for commercial use will cause him to retain a special place in the hearts of Americans. Engagements Kay Cash, Fairview, Ohio, senior, Pi Beta Phi, to William F. Dawson, Kansas City, Mo., senior. Carol Horseman, Shawnee Mission sophomore, Hashinger Hall, to Larry Geiger, Shawnee Mission sophomore, Joseph R. Pearson Hall. Pinnings Wilma Sue Slater, Holton sophomore, Miller Hall, to Thomas E Hood, Lotawana, Mo., junior, Stephenson Hall. Judy Keller, Winfield sophomore, Miller Hall, to Larry Hatetebeg, Winfield sophomore at Wichita University. Corrine Wilkes Hurt, Waynesboro, Va., junior at the University of North Carolina, to Nick T. Newberry, Jr., Omaha, Neb., senior, Theta Chi. The wedding date is August 22. Connie Clendonon, Mission senior, Gamma Phi Beta, to John Oakson, Leawood senior, Alpha Tau Omega. Mary Kay Morton, Leavenworth sophomore, Delta Delta Delta, to Richard Duwe, Lucas senior, Alpha Kappa Lambda. Lee Bright, Genesco, Ill., freshman, Kappa Alpha Theta, to Danny McCue, St. Joseph, Mo., senior, Theta Chi. Constance Tanis, Palos Park, Ill. sophomore, to Steven L. Butler, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, sophomore. Twila Eaton, Dodge City sophomore, Gamma Phi Beta, to Darryl Wallace, Dodge City sophomore, Delta Upsilon. Sandra Bornholt, LaCrosse senior, Gamma Phi Beta, to Jay Cook, Webster Groves senior, Kappa Psi. Marilyn Hahn, Leawood junior, Gamma Phi Beta, to Sam Bruner, Shawnee Mission senior, Phi Delta Theta. ANYONE FOR SUMMER SCHOOL? If so we have a complete selection of the latest and finest ARTIST'S SUPPLIES. Everything from TRANSFER TYPE to KNEEDED ERASERS. Carter's Stationery 1025 Mass. Patronize Your Konsan Advertisers Jay SHOPPE DOWNTOWN 835 MASS. NEW Bobbie Brooks SWIM LOOKS Three cheers... for our color-sectioned, one-piece maillot. Scooped neckline; on-deck buttons; barely- there back. Double-knit stretch nylon. Smooth? The only ripples are in the water. Sizes 5-15. $16 LAST CHANCE SPECIAL (Last chance, that is, for us to advertise in the U.D.K.) SHORT SLEEVE SWEAT SHIRTS $1.00 Lots of Colors One Group of SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS, Pastels and Stripes, $1.19 3 for $5.00 LOTS AND LOTS OF BERMUDA SHORTS Sizes 29-38 $1.99 LAWRENCE SURPLUS (Remember us for Luggage) 740 Mass. VI 3-3933 24 Wednesday. May 20, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 9 Southern Senators Hail Wallace's Feat WASHINGTON —(UPI)— Southern senators today hailed Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace's strong showing in the Maryland primary as a grass roots protest against the civil rights bill, but they were uncertain how it would affect senate action on the measure. Supporters of the bill brushed aside Wallace's feat. Senate Democratic whip Hubert H. Humphrey, Minn., floor manager for the bill, said. "For a few days there will be a lot of talk about it, but Senators are going to vote on the basis of their present judgments about the bill. Their minds are pretty well made up." Sen. Richard B. Russell, D-Ga. leader of the southern foes of the bill, said he hoped Wallace's showing would strengthen his hand, but he added: "The Senate is usually the last place in the government to get the drift of American public opinion." Russell interpreted the primary results as evidence of increasing popular sentiment against the bill. "It is finally seeping through to the people of this country just what the politicians are threatening to do to their form of government in their bid for minority-bloc votes," he said. BREWSTER SAID in Baltimore that Wallace's showing would have no effect on the Senate's civil rights battle. He predicted enactment of the bill by June 15. Before the Maryland balloting yesterday, Humphrey had predicted Wallace would get more than 35 per cent of the vote. Wallace got about 42 per cent of the vote in opposing President Johnson's stand-in, Sen. Daniel B. Brewster, D-Md. Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr., D-N.C., said he thought the Wallace showing would "have a tendency to prevent a stamped" for a Senate vote to halt the southern anti-civil rights talkathon "but to what extent I don't know." ERVIN SAID Wallace's showing "clearly shows the tremendous opposition to the civil rights bill in the country and to further centralization of government in Washington." Sen. John J. Sparkman, D-Ala also saw the Wallace vote as a protest against the civil rights bill. He said the Alabama governor's showing "is bound to have some long-range effect." The House-passed bill, now in its 59th day of debate in the Senate. outlaws racial discrimination in voting, education, employment, public accommodations and in the use of federal funds. The Wallace showing was almost certain to be among the topics today at a conference of Republican Senators to discuss the fair employment provision of the "package" of bipartisan amendments to the rights bill. Sen. Norris Cotton, R-N.H., also expressed concern over the job discrimination section. He said he would like to see it eliminated or applied only to employers with more than 100 employs. Dirksen told newsmen after the first GOP meeting yesterday that he thought things went pretty well. There were some ominous comments, but Dirksen professed himself untroubled by them. SENATE REPUBLICAN Leader Everett M. Dirksen, Ill., a resourceful legislative salesman, was attempting to sell his GOP colleagues on the equal job opportunity proposals at the conference, the second such session on the compromise package. Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, RIowa, chairman of the Senate GOP policy committee, complained that the fair employment amendments, drafted by leaders in both parties with the help of Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, "don't reach the meat of this thing." Generally, however, Dirksen hailed the lack of critical "flak" at the harmonious session. Sen. Frank Carlson, R-Kan., was another Senator who expressed hope that the package of amendments to the House-approved bill can win general approval. "I think they are treating the symptoms rather than the disease," Hickenlooper said. Dirksen made it clear that there would be no decisive action this month. He pointed out that the Senate will be in recess over the Memorial Day weekend. Democrats have emphasized that Republicans do not want a cloture vote before the June 2 California primary. The Republicans are said to fear it might embarrass Sen. Barry M. Goldwater, R-Ariz. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS IF MONEY IS A PROBLEM... You can budget expense down to the last pfenning when you open a Student Checking Account. Money in the bank can't be lost, stolen or misplaced and it's available the moment you need it at the point of your pen. A checking account furnishes you with an accurate record of college expense. Perhaps it's time to stop in and become acquainted. 1st FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE 8th AND MASSACHUSETTS • LAWRENCE, KANSAS • VI 3-0162 DRIVE-IN BANK AT 9th AND TENNESSEE ST. MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOT INSURANCE CORPORATION This is Your Life, Potter Lake From Beach to Mudhole to Peace By Jackie Helstrom (Assistant Managing Editor) Freshmen eat watermelon near it at their first party during orientation; ducks race in it; every now and then someone gets thrown into it. Potter Lake is as much a part of KU life as is the classroom or the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union. It is a subject for art classes, and It is a subject for art a laboratory for science classes. In the winter it is covered by sprawling beginners, and graceful figure skaters as its frozen surface turns it into an ice skating rink. IN THE SPRING it becomes the site of peaceful hours of studying between classes. It is the place for long hours of meditation, where troubles can disappear. IT CAME INTO existence in 1910, and since then has gathered around itself a history of triumph and tragedy that hardly seems in tune with its placid peacefulness. Its beginning is perhaps the most contradictory element in the lake's history. It was not planned as a haven for the dreamers, wanting to waste an hour, or even as a project to beautify the campus. The original purpose of the lake was completely practical. It was built in 1910 to provide the campus with a reservoir of water in case of fire. Potter Lake was designed as safety precaution. AT THAT FIRST regatta, the strange history of the lake began. During the dedication proceedings in honor of Sen. T. M. Potter, a former member of the Board of Regents for whom the lake was being named, what was thought to be a whale was sighted out in the middle of the small inland body of water. However, as soon as the lake was completed, it began to take on a function as a part of student life. The 1911 graduation regatta was held on the lake instead of on the Kaw River, the traditional location. A boat that set out to investigate the creature capsized before it was near enough to see whatever it was that had been there. The object disappeared from sight, never to be seen again. The phenomena has never been explained. THE TRAGEDY of Potter Lake also began early in its history. Even before the lake was finished it claimed its first drowning victim. A group of students were taking a midnight swim; one of them went down. The drowning of six students in 1921 led to a safety movement in 1924 which turned the lake into a bathing beach in the middle of campus. To go with the demanded lifeguards needed for safety, a pier, springboards and dressing rooms were built around the lake. But in 1927 swimming in the lake was banned by an official decree of the University and the campus resort was turned into the quiet spot it is today. Perhaps the strangest sight ever seen around Potter happened one night in 1959 when the lake went up in flames. Vandals had poured oil on the water and then set it afire. The fish with which the zoology department had kept the lake well stocked, were miraculously saved from this ordeal, but they did not find Potter a happy sanctuary much longer. Last year for some reason which no one has yet been able to discover, all the fish died. About 1,000 of them floated to the surface, belly-up, killed by suffocation. These are the secrets of Potter Lake. It is today a fishless body of water, no longer needed to fight fires, in which swimming and water sports are forbidden, but it still remains an important part of student life at KU. Contemporary apartments for summer rental or longer. These apartments are completely furnished, have two bedrooms and ore air-conditioned. We are renting to college men, and we will allow four occupants in each apartment. These apartments are within walking distance of campus. Rates are from $90 to $105. Call VI 3-8241 during the day, and VI 3-9373 at night. BIG DOUGH LIGHT WORK SUMMER WORK SWIM-GOLF-RELAX DURING DAYTIME $ Work 5 hours in cool of evening. Opportunity to earn $1000 FOR THE SUMMER. Many EXTRA INCENTIVES. We offer steady employment for the full summer and still leave your days free for summer vacationing. For further information and to arrange personal interview, call or write Mr.E.T.Herbranson, Personnel Director, Suite 502, Merchants Produce Bank Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. HA1-5343 Page 10 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, May 20, 1964 Jayhawks Lose 2 ToUnbeatenTigers The Big Eight champion Missouri Tigers baseball team kept alive its undefeated league record by sweeping a doubleheader from KU yesterday at Quigley Field. Mizzou employed powerful pitching and defensive play to defeat KU 2-1 and 2-0 in the twinbill. KU 2-1 and 2-0 in the twelfth. Bengal pitcher Keith Weber drove in both his team's runs in the fourth inning of the first game with a single which scored John Sevcik and Dan Rudanovich. The Jayhawks threatened to upset the Tiger victory, however, in the last inning of the opener when Sterling Coward hit a single and scored when Mike DerManuel also hit a one-bagger with two outs. DerManuel then advanced to third on a hit and an error, but was left on base when Keith Kimerer hit into a force play. The Tigers employed extra base hits to effect their victory in the second game. Rudanovich led off with a double in the fifth and tallied on a triple by Bob Robben. Robben, himself, then scored on a wild pitch by Fred Chana. The Tigers now boast a 21-3 overall record and an 18-0 record for conference play. They are riding the crest of a 20-game winning streak going into today's game with the Jayhawks. KU was pushed into fourth place by yesterday's losses. The team now is 16-10 overall and 11-9 in league competition. Final Games Approach In Hill Intramural Playoffs Bv Glen Phillips The intramural softball playoff game for the hill championship tomorrow afternoon will finish up this year's schedule of spring intramural sports. The games to determine the winners in the "A" and "B" division of fraternity and independent teams will be played this afternoon. In the fraternity "A" league, Sigma Alpha Epsilon will meet Beta Theta Pi. Phi Gamma Delta will challenge the members of Alpha Kappa Lambda for honors in the fraternity "B" competition. For the championship in Independent "A" the Fossils will meet the Delta Functions. Navy will battle the SCROCS for the Independent "B" title. All of the other spring intramurals, have finished their season. Hill champion in badminton was the Beta team. The winning team members were John Atkinson, Topeka junior; John Grantham, Topeka sophomore; Barry McGrath, Topeka junior; and Steve Stotts, Prairie Village senior. In intramural golf Sigma Chi came out on top. Richard Morris, Wichita freshman, was medalist for the nine holes with a low score of 34. His Phi Kappa Psi took top honors in hill tennis. Bill Terry, Hutchinson freshman; Charles Killian, Junction City junior; James Cook, Webster Groves, Mo. senior; and Mel Bolton, Topeka junior, led the Phi Psi's to victory. How do you save money by spending a lot of it at the Lawrence Book Nook? 1021 Mass. Tops — Glass & Zippers Bear Glasses — Heat gllines Door Panels — Tailor Made Seat Covers at Competitive Prices with sewed double lock stitch. Jack's Seat Covers 545 Minn. VI 3-4242 The only thing better than a home cooked meal is Dinner At DUCKS Steaks & Seafoods A Specialty Serving crisp tossed salads, choice of potatoes, zesty Vienna breads & country fresh butter. Sandwiches, too! Your favorite beverage 11-9:30 Daily 814 Mass. teammates were John Benz, Bartlesville, Okla. senior; Henry Jameson, Abilene sophomore; and Tom Wash, Bartlesville, Okla. senior. Winning performances in the intramural swimming team were turned in by the Phi Gamma Delta team. Four men from Alpha Tau Omega tossed their way into the hill top spot for horseshoes. Team members were Bob Barker, Chanute junior; John Oakson, Leawood senior; Jim Gough, Chanute junior; and Tom Foster, Lawrence junior. Ace competitors in the handball competition was an independent team called the Spoilers. Team members include Bill Bliss, Omaha, Neb. sophomore; Lance Burr, Salina junior; Keith Kimerer, Kansas City senior; and R. J. Moutrie, St. Louis, Mo. senior. Cut 'n Curl BEAUTY SALON Cut n Curl BEAUTY SALON graduation permanents, sets. VI 3-5569 843 N.H. latest styles. Floyd Manning To Participate In Cal. Relays Floyd Manning, KU's star pole vaulter, will compete in the California Relays in Modesto Saturday night. 9th & Indiana night. Manning, who vaulted 16-13/4 in a dual meet against Southern Illinois at Carbondale is the second best performance in the country this year. The mark Manning set has been beaten only by LaSalle's John Ulses with a vault of 16-3. LEONARD'S STANDARD SERVICE 9th & Indiana VI.3-8820 VI 3-9830 HAND INSTALLATION In addition to Manning, Al Oter, former KU discus thrower, who shattered his own world discus mark earlier this year with a throw of 206-6, will also compete in the meet. Orter presently lives in New York. Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 One other Kansan will compete in the California meet. He is Jim Ryun, the 16-year-old miler from Wichita East High who ran 4:06.4 last Saturday to erase the national high school record. Ryun will face some of the strongest competition in the country when he enters the mile run. Five men who have run the distance in under four minutes will be participating in the meet. The field is led by Tom O'Hara from Loyola of Chicago and Dyrol Burleson, former NCAA champion from Oregon. REAL PET Shopping Center Under One Roof — Free Parking REAL PET Missouri's Robin Lingle, the big Eight Conference's leading middle distance and distance man, will also participate in the California meet. WATCH THIS SPOT FLESH EATERS GRANT'S DRIVE-IN Pet Center Sure—Everything in the Pet Field 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921 JOE'S BAKERY 616 W. 9th Open 24 hours except Saturday evening 25c delivery VI 3-4720 STUDENTS Milliken's SOS "the best professional service" - general typing service - automatic typing - general typing service 24 hr. answering service 1021½ Mass, VI 3-5920, 7 a.m.-11 p.m. mimegraph & photo-copying 19211k Mass. V-3,528-2. 7 a.m.-11 p.m. Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Fraternity Jewelry Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. Badges, Rings, Navelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUB SPECIALTY Balfour JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. 7,000 Pipes and every smoking accessory George's Pipe Shop 727 Mass. VI 3-7164 "SMOKING IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS" A complete line, including. • Lavailors • Guards • Pins • Mugs • Rings • Crests FRATERNITY JEWELRY Domestic & Foreign Steamship Lines Tours & Cruises Everywhere Ray Christian JEWELERS IT'S OK TO OWE RAY 809 Mass. Travel Agency AIR LINES FIRST NATIONAL BANK VI 3-0152 746 Mass. COMPLETE SERVICE FOR CHEVYS OLDs & OLDS - Small enough to give personal attention. - Big enough to have all the equipment. VI 3-7700 738 N.H. SHIP WINTER CHEVROLET FREE VACATION SERVICE - with this ad! Bring in this coupon and get our Registered Mechanic 10.POINT SAFETY CHECK — We will check (1) Cooling System (2) Fon Belts (3) Lights & Signal System (4) Wheel Bearings (5) Brakes (6) Wipers (7) Exhaust system (8) Steering (9) Fuel System and (10) Ignition System. ABSOLUTELY FREE!! Be Careful Be Sure Be safe Before Returning Home This Summer. Call on us TODAY. VI 3-6697 SANDERS MOTOR CO. Lincoln-Mercury Studebaker 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 0 OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350 Originality IN FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION especially for you Alexander's 826 IOWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS FOR FORGOTT DELIVERY PHONE VI. 3-1000 Classified Ads FOR SALE Used band equipment for sale. I have: Call Callens Lowen, VI 3-7102. 5-2 1959 Jaguar XK150 Roadster $1,600, Cali 3-5086 or see at 13-6 Sloan St. $1,400 1980 Zundapp motorcycle 250 c.c. Cal. 1984 3-3596 after 5:30 p.m. 5:25. Elmwood. DUCATI 125cc Bronco motorcycle, 1963 model, used for transportation to and from class only, 125 mg, less than 700 actual miles. In excellent condition Must sell because of graduation. Best offer over $275. CALL VII 2-9145. t Your fraternity needs a LIMOUSINE Swish black 1948 Chrysler, has led a saga of student activism, ascorting the Pakistan ambassador Jump seats, chauffeour window. Run well. (Perhaps you have seen it around) BEST OFFER 829 Miss. Lisa 3506. BEST OFFER 829 Miss. Lisa 3506. 1955 MG-TF 1500, very good condition has everything, Call Larry Miller, J.R.P VI 3-7415. 5-21 1959 Ford 2 door, V-8, slick, factory alr. condition. $850, 115 Tens Cal. 6-237 2-3327 1963 Honda. 150 cc. Like new. Low mileage. $400. Call VI 2-0419. Small antiques. Glass salts, toothpick holders, Ink wells, baskets, paper trays, napkin rings, iron VW saucers, napkin rings, iron elephant bank, Valentines, Usd postal boxes, before Christmas frame, Several small ones. Call VI 3-1297 for directions to house. 5-21 1956 Ford, Standard shift,Interceptor engine, overdrive. N.S.U. motorcycle. 2 50 c.c. Both in A-1 mechanical condition.Call VI 2-3374 after 6 p.m. 5-21 Drop leaf table and four chairs. Reasonable. Call VI 2-9360. 5-21 Electric stove, 9 months old. Kitchen cabinet. Small breakfast set. Bedroom set. comp. Roll-n-way bed. 20 item. Chair. Drawers. Large study desk. CIP VIII 3-5543. Beautiful white floor length wedding gown with matching veil. Size 10. Very reasonable. Call VI 2-1405. 5-21 Hi-Fi components. Stromberg-Carlson 30 watt amp. Electro-voice speaker and enclosure. Garrard changer. Call VI 3-5564. 5-21 1957 Ford wagon. Must sell before school ends. Make an offer. Call VI 3-0651- 5-21 $ _{32} $-ton Servel air-conditioner. 3 speed record player and stand. One speaker. Two sports car snow tires. Call VI 2-3470 after 5 p.m. 5-21 Guns and ammo for sale. Big end-of- semester cash sale. Everything goes; Slide rules, rifles, shot guns, pistols, ammo, grenades. This is your last chance (and mine). Call VI 3-1110 (private party). tf 1962 Pontiac Paint. White w/blue interior, bucket seat, automatic, full power, factory sound, perfect for performance, typically $490. Must sell. $2,300. Call VI 3-5030. 5-21 Must sell one Stromberg-Carlson model ASR-880 stereo amplifier and one Gear-type A changer with base II Empire 108 stereo cartridge. Gall VI 2-1139. 5-20 1059 blue VW sedan. Whitewall tires, many accessories. Well cared for and clean. By owner. Call VI 2-3103, 5 to 7 p.m. 5-20 1960 white Falcon. Excellent condition. 33,500 miles. 4-door sedan, automatic. Original owner. $750. Call Dr. Batra, VI 3-6391, evenings. 5-21 1959 Chevy convertible, Stick, positration, new tires, new top. Excellent condition. Need money, must sell. Call VI 3- 9562. 5-21 Two Blue Streak tires, $80,820x15" on reversed 15" Mercury rims; Goodyear Stock Car Specials, less than 500 miles gone, treads compounded for paved tracks. $80 value for $70. Call VI 2-3778 evenings and weekends. tf 1956 AUSTIN HEALY, new overhaul. rack. 665, $71. IV-2-2058. lug. 2-521 Must sell 360 Volvo before May 31, 2024. Call Sandy, VI 2-4112 after 5 p.m. 5-21 21" console TV. RCA, real good shape. Call V 2-1497 6 after p. 6m. tf 1959 Volvo. Rebuilt engine, new tires and battery. Clean. Call VI 3-4050. 5-21 One dinette set, 2 years old, excellent condition. Six chairs with matching table. Three dressers. Danish Modern chairs, 2 years old, need reupholstering. $10 each. See at C635 W. Mallard Ave. & Thursday, between noon, Monday, Wednesday, Friday, between 2 and 5 p.m. 1958 black and white Ford convertible. Power steering and brakes, good condition, original owner. Call VI 3-5003, 1618 Rose Lane. New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500 items to ream--$85. Lawrence Outlook, 1963 $ SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS, Cheater Slacks, etc., for sale great savings after $8.37 week day Saturday and Sunday. 8137 Connecticut St. Typewriter, new and used portables. standards. electrics. Olympia. Hermes. Olivetti. Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter. adder. rentals and service. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St. VI 3-3844. Wedding dress, size 7-8. 1817 La. Upstairs, west apartment. 4 to 6 p.m. intended biology notes; 70 pages, complete training of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all uses. Formerly known as the Thata Institution, 1874-1974 western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, almecgraphed and bound for $4.25 per call. Call VI 2-1904 for free delivery. tf 'or Fuller Brush Products phone VI 5-040 after 5 p.m. tf FOR RENT Do KU men. Two room modern furnished basement apartment. Outside en suite bathroom or smoking room, drinking or smoking See first house out of campus at 1616 Indiana. 5-21 Just across from Lindley, newly furnished apartment to share with one roommate. Separate rooms, parking Apt. 4, Campus Apartments, 1420 Crescent Rd. 5-21 Air-conditioned, furnished sixplex apt. 2 rooms, private, centrally located, available August. Call VI 3-2380. 5-21 For rent to reliable couple. Furnished room, with room for income. Call VIII. 76485 5-21 Large 2 room apartments, attractivel furnished, close to KU and downtown $8 per month. Also 1 room apt., cool ammer. $25 per month. Call VI 316-592- 6-12 Furnished apartment for 3 KU men Shower, twin beds. Completely private. Kitchen with sink. Each winter. Close to KU. Furnished apartment for 2 KU men. Shower, twin beds. Completely private. Fall. Close to KU. Utilities paid. Kitchen- Apartment with bath. Utilities paid. Private entrance. For summer. $25. Close to KU. Inquire at 1005 Miss., VI 3-21 5-21 Furnished house for 3 KU mem. Utilities Close to campus. Call VI T-34-4399. 5-21 Comfortable furnished apartments 1 block north of Corbin. Cool, quiet house. Call VI 3-6158 for appointment after 4 p.m. or at noon. 5-21 Furnished apartments just 1/2 block east courts, entrances and baths. First floor or walk- inament. 1609 Tennessee. Terr. Call VI 3-6158 for appointment at noon or after 4 p.m. Furnished apartments with utilities paid information call VI 3-3566. 5-21 Very neat small house, attractively furnished, shower bath, cool in summer, close to KU and downtown $39.00 per month. Call VI 3-6696 or VI 2-9314. 5-21 Three room furnished apartment for 4 or 2 adults. Attractive, completely pri- lorized home with monthly electricity. Call VI 3-3913 weekends or after 1 p.m. weekdays. 5-21 Five furnished three room apartments with baths. All utilities paid except water. Call室 3-5180 after 5 p.m. During day, call VI 3-5182 Moody Apartments, 1343 Tenn. 5-120 Furnished apartment for rent. Come to Also, rooms for girls, adjoin campus. 5-21 Will have some rental property available Next to south KU. Inquire 3-3293 5-21 Bedroom with shower and half-bath. Bathen privileges if desired. See at 515 La. Single or double room. Furnished, cook- ing, kitchen. Payable. Call if -9453 or see at 1244 La. Now renting new Ridge House Cabana Jnits. Swimming pool, carpet, air-conditioning, 1 bedroom furnished or unfitted to shopping and recreation in August. Ready for this fall. Contact Mr. Osborne now for this fall. V 3-1146, 2403 Cedarwood. tt Luxurious duplex. Central air-conditioning, close to shopping and University. Wall-to-wall carpet. all electric kitchen, swimming pool. Absolutely the finest 2 bedroom units. Contact Mr. Osborne now. VI 3-1116. 2403 Cedarwood. tf Married, grad students, faculty, Efficiency apartment from $65 and small house from $70. Available in June. Call now Santee Apartments, 1123 Ind., VI 3-2116. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Shirt Finishing Laundry AUTO BODY SPECIALISTS DALE'S BODY SHOP RISK'S 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 All makes & models frame - body - fender - glass VI 3-4732 704 Vermont Artists - Architects Crafts & Model Building Supplies Custom Plastics Moving to Kansas City? Then dig these brand new beautiful apartments in the Prairie Village-Overland Park area. 1 and 2 bedrooms, wall-to-wall carpet, drapes, ceiling air-conditioning, Hotpoint空调 on canopy, one mile west of Antioch Rd. on 95th Street. The Alex Bascom CO., TU 8-3128 or TU 8-5252. 5-21 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. Large, homey, attractively furnished, 4 room apartment. For summer months at summer rates. Kitchen built-ins and large disposal space. Electricity available June 1st. Large 3 room apt. Call VI 3-7677. Will rent for summer months. Experienced secretary would like typing his home. Reasonable rates. Call 7 3-5193. Bachelor Studio Apartment for graduate or older undergraduate men. $1_{1/2}$ blocks 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 8-8534. Crescent Heights two bedroom apart- bed. Phone VI 2-3711. TYPING For expert typing, dissertation, thesis, work. Electric typewriter. 5-21 Experienced secretary would like typing. 2568 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122 5-21 2569 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122 5-21 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention on all reports, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate typing at reasonable rates. Call Donna Stewart VI 3-6261. Term papers accurately and neatly typed on good grade bond paper. Minor corrections, carbon copy, extra first page. Call VI 3-0875. 5-21 George's Hobby Shop 1105 Mass. VI 3-5087 Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type terms, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work standards. Phone VI 3-8579; Mrs. Charles Pattel. Fast, accurate work done on electric motors and rated rates. Call Bettie Vincent, VI 3-5504. experienced secretary wound like typing her home. Reasonable rates. VI of 1188 Accurate expert ttypist would like typing the prompt service. Call VI i-3-26513. These prompt service. Call VI i-3-26513. Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reasoned papers, thematic sentiments 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. ff. Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. **tf** Professional typing by experienced secretary, New electric typewriter, carbon printers, fax machines VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley. 408 West 13th. tt Experienced Typist—Dissertations, Theses, Manuscripts, and Term Papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 Rhode Island. VI 3-1748. tt Secretary will do typing in home. Fast. legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577 NEW YORK CLEANERS REPAIRS — LEATHER REFINISHING ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING Delivery Service 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 19th & Mass. VI 3-9802 FREE! qt. of oil with oil change & filter BOB'S CONOCO Lube - Wheel Bal. - Brakes CAR OWNERS SAVE UP TO 40% on shocks, mufflers, tail pines and installation. - All makes and models including sports cars - pipes and installation. - Trained mechanics for quality service - Your satisfaction GUARANTEED Wednesday, May 20,1964 Montgomery Wards Auto Service Center 729 N.H. VI 2-1708 $ $ $ $ $ secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. Mc- Eldowney. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8681. TYPING: Experienced typist. Forme Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typhwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648 MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality typing on LB.M. Carbon ribbon machines. tape transcriptions. Office hours: 7 a.m. to 12 p.m. $12-14! Mat- phone VI 3-5920 BUSINESS SERVICES Dressmaking-alterations, formats and gowns Ola Smith, 939½ Mast V 3-18582 L&M CAFE now under new management We WILL be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Our kitchen is always delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches. Your second cup of coffee always free Rent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery frented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. V-31-1267. t MISCELLANEOUS WANTED Wanted to buy; 1952 or 53 Ford, slick. Bought at 5 p.m. on 4-21. Larry McGinn. A5-21 To Rent: a 3 or 4 room apartment for 10 persons. Price is $2,500 per month, or after 5 p.m. at VI 341-521-5-21 39335, or after 5 p.m. at VI 341-521-5-21 No place to stop your bike this summer! (lightweight) wanted. Call VI 2-3972, 5-21 (lightweight) wanted. Call VI 2-3972, 5-21 Summer students, need reliable attacher 3 For information call VT 2-0306. 5-21 VOLKSAWEN'G` WANTED. Cash for your VW. Conzelman Motors, VW Sales Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa. Hiway 50 Opportunity for male keyboard musician interested in sales demonstrations. Writing age, experience, type of instru- so. HELP WANTED Kansas City Summer Job. Ag. or Landscape Architect Student not afraid of large projects. Work on new apartment project. Both design and field work. Reply by letter stating age, College, or笔下姓名 to Alex Bascom. Co., 9451 Valentine Lake, Overland Park, Kansas. TU 8-5252. P-5-21 College men needed for next fall jobs Dixon's Dixon's Dinon's in 2500 W, 61h, VI 3-7446 5-20 YELLOW CAB CO. University Daily Kansan VI 3-6333 24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled GB Recording Service and Party Music tapes: recorded or duplicated records: cut or pressed 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 THE NAME FOR SERVICE ★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT ★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK ★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED ★ MUFFLER SERVICE ART'S TEXACO ★ TUNE-UPS 9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897 Page 13 ★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M. Wanted—experienced or trainee adjunctor for Kansas City area. Good opportunity to work with the community. Write and give resume of background or arrange appointment. Russell Smith, Jr., Insurance Group, 800 W. Insurance Exchange Building, Kansas City 5-23 Missouri. Young men and women needed in all travel. For information on where to apply mail $2.00 to Beggs and Howe and apply to P.O. Box 389, Springfield, Oregon. 5-21 LOST Room and board in very nice home near camps. For right person interested in helping with well-mannered children, 9, 6, 4). Call Mrs. Miliken, VI 35497. One navy blue "H.I.S." jacket. Brand new. Taken by accident from chair in Strong basement. Last Friday around 11:30 a.m. Call VI 2-3014. 5-21 Riders wanted to and from downtown K.C., Mo. via Hwy. 10. During summer. Leave Lawrence 7:15 a.m. Leave K.C. 6 p.m. Call Mike, VI 3-1238. 5-21 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Lost May 14. Pink gold, leather strap. Jaeger-LeCoultre ladies wrist watch. Be- **Cali Cil I** 3-3243 or UN 4-3821, or come (o-127 Strong). **5-21** SUMMER SALES—National Co. is inter- viewing now with the company to earn $2,900 during summer months. Write or call Fine Arts Co. 912 E. 63, Kansas City, Mo. EM 3-641- SUMMER SALES MANAGER — Fine Arts Co. needs direct sales mgr, for college program. Earn $3,000-$5,000 during summer months. For interviews write or call Fine Arts, 912 E. 63, Kansas City, Mo. EM 3-6433. 5-21 PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS - Parker Pens * Stationery * Printing Hallmark Cards When you care enough to send the very best 4 E. 7th VI 3-2261 BULLOCK'S Just West of Post Office 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 STUDENTS! SAVE WITH THIS AD!! "Front End Special" - Front end aligned • Front wheels balanced, bearings repacked • Steering checked ONLY € 9.99 $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 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, May 20, 1964 Bomb Found in Oslo Intended for Nikita OSLO, Norway — (UPI) — Police today sought an unidentified man who placed a home-made bomb outside the residence where Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev will stay during his scheduled official visit to Norway late this month. Authorities issued an appeal to the public for clues to the identity and whereabouts of the man who scaled a wall around Bygdoey Konsgaard, one of King Olav's summer residences near Oslo, early yesterday morning. A watchman discovered the man placing a four-pound explosive charge near the residence. The suspect fled into the darkness, accompanied by a dog. The charge had been set for detonation. "WE BELIEVE this bomb scare was the attempt of an insane person to perform an act of wanton destruction." Lars Labs Beau Lund, head of the Oslo police crime section, said last night. Lund brushed off questions about a possible plot by extremists to force Khrushchev to call off his visit to Norway. The Foreign Ministry, apparently taking a serious view of the incident, summoned Soviet Ambassador Nikolai M. Lunkov to inform him of the bombing attempt. Lunkov had inspected the Royal Estate only last week with a delegation of top Soviet security officials to make sure arrangements for Khrushchev's visit were satisfactory. Khrushchev canceled a visit to Scandinavia in 1959 because of an anti-Soviet campaign allegedly launched by the press in Norway, Sweden and Denmark. THERE WERE some signs of public opposition in Norway to the Soviet Premier's visit scheduled June 29-July 4 but political observers said it was highly unlikely he would call off his Scandinavian tour. Library to Open Johnson Room able by up to one year in jail or a fine or $1,000. "THE LEGAL status of this type of publication is not clear but the forged issue was a malicious defamation." Dyson said. (Continued from page 1) The new reading room for special collections of Watson Library will be publically opened Thursday evening. FERGUSON is out of town this week, but KBI Director Logan Samford confirmed that his office would not investigate. "Unless more information is discovered I would not say this case is criminal libel," Samford said in a telephone interview. "We asked the Kansas Bureau of Investigation in Topeka to investigate for us but they finally said they had declined to prosecute." Dyson said. "It is my understanding that Attorney General William Ferguson felt it paralleled the New York Times case of criticism of public officials. Dyson said the case is not forgery or anything else except possibly a federal mail fraud. "I cannot see how this would carry over into a private case." "I see it as my responsibility as a book seller to make all views available, although this doesn't mean I necessarily approve or disapprove of the reading matter I carry." Fowler said. "I feel that only by intelligent investigation can we understand and combat it if this is our wish." He suggested the next step would be to discuss the case with the county attorney. Wilcox said last night he did not know whether this would be worthwhile since the case eventually would go back to the KBI. Fowler said most of the Soviet and Peking books usually are purchased by students who renounce or disapprove these views as class assignments. The room will be named in honor of William Savage Johnson, who during his life gave many valuable books to the library's collection, according to William Forth, associate director of Watson Library. Forged Issue of Kansas Free Press— Long said last night the article attributed to him does not express his views on the relation between Christianity and communism. "IT IS NOT my purpose to convert anyone to anything by making these available when they are also available elsewhere in the United John Fowler, owner of the Abington Book Shop, also said the advertisement in the forged issue, which listed only Marxist-Lenin titles, was not representative of his views. States." he said. Prof. Johnson was a professor of English at KU. "Following Prof. Johnson's death, his widow, Mrs. Claudia Pendleton Johnson, has continued to buy books for the library in his memory," Dr. Forth said. "I DO NOT THINK a good Christian should become a communist or that a good communist should join the Christian church unless their individual purposes are to subvert the other organization." Long said. Fowler said he had noticed a drop-off in business in the last month but did not know if it could be attributed to the advertisement listing Communist texts in the forged issue. "MRS. JOHNSON has furnished the reading room." he continued. OR MORE THIS SUMMER Selling Christmas Cards. Santa Claus EARN $2000 Included in the special collections are rare books and manuscripts, and rare book collections. It's easy . . . I've done it Call me and I'll put you in business, The dedication program will be at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Watson Library. Ask for Sweeney VI 3-4711 5 to 7 p.m. Participating in the program will be Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe; Thomas R. Buckman, director of Watson Library; Charlton Hinman, University distinguished professor of English; and Mrs. Natalie Calderwood, associate professor of English. Prof. Hinman will speak on "The First Quarto of Shakespeare's Richard II," and Mrs. Calderwood will discuss "William Savage Johnson—a Portrait." Dr. Forth said. A reception will follow the dedication. NORTH AMERICAN VAN LINES YOUR NORTH AMERICAN VAN LINES AGENT NA Ethan Smith can show you Ethan Smith Moving & Storage 808 Penn. VI 3-0380 Developed by experts, the North American Van Lines method of estimating is "Quality Controlled" for accuracy. Our men have been trained to use this system, so if you are moving across town or cross-country, call for a FREE estimate. There is no obligation. how to get an accurate estimate on your move RESERVE NOW and save $ $ $ NEW Cabana Apartment Units NOW RENTING! • SWIMMING POOL • AIR-CONDITIONED • WALL TO WALL CARPETING • NEW APPLIANCES • PAVED PARKING • SOME FURNISHED RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT FOR FALL NOW! PHONE VI3-1116 FOR DETAILS Ridge House e 24th & Ridge Court JOHN HOLLINGTON Cigarettes Unwanted; Packages in Vogue Bv Charles Corcoran "How many have you guys got?" "How many have you got? You tell me first and I'll.. ." "Hold on a minute. Whoa! You tell me first.. ." Thursday, May 21, 1964 And so it goes. A contest sponsored by a national cigarette manufacturing firm has as its top prize a stereophonic phonograph . . . all the two KU living groups entered in the competition have to do is submit the largest number of the manufacturer's cigarette packages that they can beg, borrow or . . . scrouge up. All that representatives from either of the competing groups will say is that "We have over 12,000 packages." Dan Vossman, Beloit junior, a member of Phi Kappa Theta fraternity, said that he had no choice in not disclosing the exact number of packages his group had gathered. The contest ends at noon today, but until then "Mum's the word," for both groups. The contest was to have closed last week, but when one group discovered that the other had more packages, members of the first group hustled to find more than the second group. Eric Petersen, Poughkeepsie, N.Y., senior, a resident of Joseph R. Pearson Hall, said just that. His group's tally is classified and will remain so until what is supposed to be the final whistle, noon today. But one never can tell who may find out what about who and the race will start all over again. That was just the beginning! The second group discovered what the first group was up to, and it sent members out to dig up a few more packages. . . But then the first group discovered what the second group had found out and . . . well, you can guess how the contest has escalated. Shown above, left to right, Wayne Burdick, Overland Park junior, Richard Reynolds, Shawnee Mission junior, and, behind Reynolds, Carl Lindquist, Prairie Village junior, all residents of JRP. Lawrence, Kansas Daily hansan 61st Year, No. 145 Stevenson Vows U.S. Aid To SE Asian Countries UNITED NATIONS. N.Y.- (UPI) Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson said today that the United States "cannot stand by while Southeast Asia is overrun by armed aggression." shall weary of the burden of support that we are rendering these people—it can only be due to ignorance of the strength and conviction of the American people." "As long as the peoples of that area are determined to preserve their own independence and ask for our help in preserving it," Stevenson told the security council, "we will extend it "And if anyone has the illusion that my government will abandon the people of Viet Nam — or that we STEVENSON ADDRESSED the Security Council against a background of accelerating crisis in Laos where Communist troops have won control of the north-central portion of the country, and of increasing criticism of U.S. strategy in South Viet Nam where 129 Americans have died in combat against Communist guerrillas. Phi Gams Awarded Campus Chest Prize The men of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity won a trophy for collecting the highest amount of money per capita for the 1964 KU Campus Chest. The Phi Gams collected more than $290, about $3.50 from each member in the house, John Pound, Fredonia junior and chairman of Campus Chest said. This year Campus Chest held a contest between different types of living groups based on the amount of money raised per capita. The winner of the men's large residence halls was Joseph R. Pearson Hall and of the women's large residence halls was Carruth and O'Leary Hall. women's scholarship halls in which Sellards Hall won. A third classification was fraternities and men's scholarship halls in which Phi Gamma Delta collected the most. Phi Gamma Delta was also the group collecting the largest total amount. The fourth was sororities and The 1964 Campus Chest collected more than $1,300. Half of this amount or about $650 will go to the Glenn Cunningham Boy's Ranch near Augusta, Pound said. The remainder will be divided among World University Service, Foreign Student Service, and the All Student Council John F. Kennedy Memorial Fund. Kansan's Last Issue This is the last issue of the University Daily Kansan for the 1963-64 school year. The Kansan will resume regular publication in the fall. He said the United States felt the threat was "the same in Viet Nam today as it was in Greece in 1947 and in Korea in 1950." He rejected demands by Russia, Communist China and France for a reconvening of the Geneva conferences of 1954 and 1962 which set up the present arrangements in the former French Indochina and guaranteed the neutrality of the newly created countries. "THEER IS no need for another such conference." Stevenson said, "Another Geneva conference, if it reached any agreement at all, would prove no more effective than the agreements we already have. "What is needed is not more conferences, what is imperative is to carry out, to respect and honor the agreements we already made. If the parties will do in good faith what they promised to do in Laos and Viet Nam, whether in good faith or not, there will be no danger to the integrity of Cambodia; there will be peace in southeast Asia and another threat of international security will be removed." Stevenson said there is fighting in Viet Nam today only because the political settlement reached at Geneva in 1954 "has been deliberately and flagrantly and systematically violated." "The same disregard for the political settlement reached at Geneva has been demonstrated—by the same parties—in Laos," he said. "Violation has been followed by a period of quiet—and then another violation... "Mr. President, the long crisis in Southeast Asia has taken a turn for the worse . . . my government takes a very grave view of these events. Those who are responsible have set foot upon an exceedingly dangerous path." Democratic Victory Expected For the moment a Republican professor of political science has conceded the 1964 presidential election to the Democrats. "At the moment, I don't see why the Republicans should win, but then, lots of things can happen," Earl Nehring, associate professor of political science, said. BECAUSE REPUBLICANS could waste a potentially good candidate on a hopeless race, the professor believes Richard Nixon would be a good standard bearer for the Republican Party in 1964. Nixon, who is an experienced politician with proven ability, would be capable of running for president but without doing the party "any irreparable damage." "Regardless of who wins in California, my guess is that the convention will nominate either Nixon or Scranton," the professor said. "If Rockefeller wins in California, I think Scranton's chances may improve rapidly. If Goldwater wins, Nixon would seem to remain the logical compromise choice," Prof. Nehring said. ASKED IF A Goldwater nomination were possible, Prof. Nehring said, "No, I don't think he'll be nominated, and, for the sake of the party, I hope he won't be nominated." "I think Goldwater (his popularity) is a product of several things. Maybe you can call it the right man in the right place at the right time," Professor Nehring said. The professor examined several reasons for Goldwater's influence in among conservative Republicans. (Continued on page 8) ★ ★ ★ Nixon Seen as Nominee Rv Lee Stone Richard Milhaus Nixon will be the Republican Party candidate for president, predicts a Democratic political science professor. After weighing the chances of Republican candidates to win the nomination for the office of president, John G. Grumm, associate professor of political science concluded that he favors Nixon." "HE (NIXON) obviously wants it. He's being doing everything he can get it without being a candidate for it." Prof. Grumm said of Nixon's "I suppose that leaves Nixon." Weather Temperatures will be around 90 degrees tomorrow with the low tonight expected to be in the upper 60's, the Weather Bureau said. Skies are expected to remain fair with 10 to 25 mile an hour southerly winds through Friday. alleged play for the Republican nomination. "The thing about Nixon," Prof Grumm continued, "is that he's got the situation sized up pretty well. He's trying to appeal now, in a more or less subtle way, for the votes of Goldwater's delegates to the convention. In recent speeches I think he's been putting on a conservative front." ON ROCKEFELLLER'S candidacy. Prof. Grumm said: "Winning in California won't do him enough good. Rockefeller's only function in California is a 'stop Goldwater' function. Maybe he doesn't conceive it that way, but that's what the practical effect of his candidacy is." Lodge, the professor says, is the "least qualified" of all the Republican candidates. Most of the successful presidents have held elective office for many years before being elected to the presidency. Lodge, the professor feels, should get more public experience before trying for the chief executive's office. Prof. Grumm noted that Goldwater has more committed delegates to the San Francisco convention than the other candidates, but said, "If Goldwater wins in California, I don't think there will be any stopping him. If he doesn't win in California, he's through." The professor feels that William Scranton, Pennsylvania governor and another alleged presidential candidate, would be the best Republican choice for the nomination. "He seems to have a lot on the ball," Prof. Grumm said. On the convention, Prof. Grumm said, "Every vote that is not a Gold-water vote on the first ballot is a moderate vote." The outcome of the convention depends upon how someone like Nixon can mobilize the votes of moderates and conservatives. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 21, 1964 Looking Back Editor's Farewell Seniors, it's almost over. A week from Monday, we will walk down the long hill for the last time as undergraduates. We will soon be snatched from the womb of undergraduate life. The cold, cruel world awaits. It is unsophisticated—uncollegiate if you will to feel a bit nostalgic about the last four years. This is our last chance to view these years objectively, however. Soon we will join the great society of tall tale tellers, the alumni. Amid the strain of pre-final cramming, we have a lot to remember. Some remember the riot after the football team romped a highly favored Missouri team when we were freshmen. And the local pubs which were so badly damaged they couldn't open that night. For others, it will be the English pro, the Western Civ., term papers, hour exams, finals. Others will remember the Friday afternoons at the local tavern. Still others can look back on their campus activities and the many friends they picked up in their four year removal from reality. For many others, it will be the nights at the sandbar, talking in Zone O, or raising Hell at one of the dancing establishments. Some of us might even remember some of the things we have learned in the last four years. Not only from text books and lectures, but from working with people. No one can boast they got the most out of their education at the University of Kansas without including a little credit to non-academic human relations. For others of us, memories will focus on our work on the University Daily Kansan. Many have criticized, most of the rest have damned our little daily effort. Those of us who have been closely associated with it can only hope that our mistakes have not been too embarrassing. We will also hope that some of our bald editorial statements might have stirred a little thought, provided a little entertainment, and most of all added something to the college careers of our readers. Now, as our undergraduate careers draw to a close, we are able to give the last four years a quick skim. We are about to break and go our separate ways—graduate school, army, marriage and some hardy soles, to work. We may still gripe at lousy grades, lousy professors, lousy administration, and yes, perhaps even a lousy student paper, but when all is evaluated, it's been kicks. -Mike Miller The People Say Thanks Editor: Now that the school year is coming to a close and the SUA Minority Opinions Forum has presented its last event until the fall semester, I would like to take this opportunity to express my appreciation to the following: To the UDK staff for their excellent cooperation in covering the forum's events; to Prof. Clifford Ketzel for the fine cooperation he has given as faculty adviser; to Chancellor Wescoe for his firm stand in behalf of academic freedom and freedom of speech; to Katherine Geile in the SUA office and the Kansas Union staff for their help in coordinating and making available the union's facilities; and, finally, to Lee Byrd, Jim Masters, Dave Michener, and Bert Rinkel for their assistance during the Rockwell visit. All of these people played an important part in helping to make this the best year for the forum yet. Let us hope that it can go on championing the cause of freedom of speech for many years to come. Laird M. Wilcox Chairman, SUA Minority Opinions Forum Praises Editor: Before graduating I must take this opportunity to write one last letter to the UDK. I cannot think of anything occurring lately, more worthy of praise than the Chancellor's Review of the Reserve Officer Training Corps last Friday. It was most thrilling for me to stand on the sidelines and watch the men, many with whom I have studied these past four years, pass in review. The Chancellor's words were well deserved by these men who have accepted the responsibility of leadership in the free world to preserve the freedom that most of us have known since birth. After having completed 21 hours of Naval and military science as a non-ROTC student, I can say from experience that the major emphasis in these classes was on keeping the peace and preventing war, through understanding of our way of life, a technical skill in a chosen field, and the methods used by the enemy of the U.S. within and without to subvert and destroy our government. I have carefully weighed the evidence on the side of those who believe in standing by with a picket sign for peace while the reality about them points to their folly, and have decided to cast my lot with those who choose the officers' corps of the United States as a career. Again to all those who took part in the service review, I salute you, for because of you and those before you and those who will come after you, I and my family will rest in PEACE tonight. Wallace D. Johnson, Jr. Jamaica, New York, senior Surprised Editor: As an Israeli and an interested party in the problem of the Middle East, I read in great interest the summary of the Model UN which was held on May 2nd. It is very surprising that the resolution proposed by Brazil that "peace keeping forces should be sent to Israel" passed through, specially when reading the preceding paragraph "the Arab bloc walked out of the General Assembly, leaving with a declaration of war against Israel." It seems that the peace keeping forces should be sent to the Arab countries, to prevent them from preparing the war against Israel. Regarding the problem of the Arab refugees, let me quote Mr. Emil Ghoury, secretary of the Palestine Arab Higher Committee who wrote in the Beirut "Telegraph," September 6, 1948: "The fact that there are these refugees is the direct consequence of the action of the Arab States in opposing partition of Palestine and the Jewish State. The Arab States agreed upon this policy unanimously, and they must now share in the solution of the problem." The State of Israel had expressed its agreement to pay compensation to the Arab refugees, but on the condition that they be resettled in the Arab countries which are more than a hundred times bigger than Israel. Not to mention the property of the Jews who were compelled to leave their homes in the Arab countries after the establishment of Israel. Their property is much larger than that which is claimed by the Arabs. But it seems that the Arabs really do not seek any resolution for the problem. I hope that the preceding explanation will help some to understand the problems which were aroused in the Model UN. Ada Pelleg Tel Aviv, Israel Answers Editor: In answer to Miss Tanis and Mr. Butler; your argument seems to head in all directions from the "middle." But who are you? Let's see if you can be described: You are white, middle-class, and Protestant, facts which mean little to anyone except the white, middle-class. Protestant extremists who frantically clutch at themselves in incoherent efforts to "stay pure." No one is attacking you for your color, economic status, or creed but many attack those of you, and I suggest rightly so, who would sanctify these qualities beyond all reason. You must have been evolved earlier than your fellow human contemporaries for you have already advanced to the physical state characterized by lack of hearing, sight, and empathy—as you say, "we are waiting to hear something." What a blissful, ivory tower existence you must enjoy. I don't mean to appear frantic, but surely there is much in this world to hear! Like all animals, human beings learn sensitivity to those aspects of life which are relevant to their survival and thus you "hear" the rumblings of inter-racial marriage or the muffled creaking of communist subversion. That you choose to describe yourselves as white, middle-class, Protestants goes a long way toward clarifying where your loyalties, (and your fears), lie. If you were to describe yourselves as human beings in a world of brothers what then might you hear in this world full of sounds both of joy and of pain? Jack Klinknett Prairie Village junior JAMES CROW PUBLIC SCHOOL © HERBLOCK HERBLOCK First appeared May, 1962 Ten. "I'm Eight; I Was Born On The Day Of The Supreme Court Decision" Graduation You're graduating. In the age of great challenge, you go out into the world—to spread your enlightenment across the face of this earth, to hawk your knowledge in the marketplace. You did get a degree. You did learn. The two are synonymous. Or are they? There must be an overlap there somewhere. Good luck, best wishes. Tom Coffman University of Kansas student newspaper Dailij Ii汉萨an 111 Flint Hall UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegeiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas NEWS DEPARTMENT Mike Miller ... Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Tom Coffman Editorial Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Bob Brooks ... Business Manager College Summer Life What do college kids do in the summer? Bright kids, clean kids looking for excitement and work between semesters. Some follow the golden harvest north across the belly of the land. Others, maturing scientists, work in industry trying out their new and half-learned skills. Some lay down their books, pick up hammers and shovels, and breathe sweat and dust in the boiling sun. A few lose the summer lolling on the lip of Daddy's pool and racing their aquamarine Jaguars on asphalt strips in the moonlight. And, some migrate to the Golden Gate Bridge, disappear among the sleepy buildings, and emerge as beatniks sipping Chianti and philosophizing. More try the Mexican summer—its Hispano-Indian allure—and acquire a perspective that persists in its influence. For some, the salt air and a languid vessel or a screaming jet to the old world. And for still more thirsting for the excitement of the shimmering city far from Pumpkin Center will come the experience of being faceless and unseen, and, when summer is over to forget the cruelties of the city canyon, to remember only the shimmering dream. Then will come the end of a desperate summer affair that never would have worked anyway. And so summer comes on. Lee Stone University Daily Kansan Page 3 LENS LIGHT SOURCE CORNER REFLECTOR LOUD SPEAKER AMPLIFIER (NASA DRAWING) Thursday, May 21, 1964 SPACE AGE COMMUNICATIONS—Light conversation would be a cinch with this gadget. Disclosed last month by the National Aeronautics and Space Agency, it is called a "retrometer" and allows communications on a beam of ordinary light. It was devised to fill the communications gap caused by radio blackout during the re-entry of a space vehicle or during space rendezvous. NASA Reveals New System Transmits Voice With Light The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) announced last month the invention of a new system of voice communications transmitted on a beam of light. The NASA pamphlet describing the device in detail says it differs from prior systems in that the originating station requires no power other than that of the human voice, and called it a simple means of transmitting speech on a beam of ordinary light. The device, called a "retrometer," was invented at NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia. The pamphlet announcing the invention was printed under NASA's technology utilization program "for the rapid dissemination of information . . . on technological developments . . . which appear to be useful for general industrial application." During the investigation of optical methods that might be applied to communications between ground and a re-entry vehicle during the radio-blackout period, and between rendezvousing space vehicles, Numa E. Thomas, of the Langley Research Center devised the novel communications system, NASA said. "This system appears to have applications other than in space, and indeed could be used for applications other than in space, and indeed could be used for applications other than voice," the agency said. WITH A FOCUSED light beam, a special arrangement of mirrors and a photo-cell amplifier and speaker, one may communicate with another person as far away as the light from the "retrometer" can be seen. The device is suggested for use in ship to ship, ship to shore, air to ground and space to ground communications. It could be used at conventions to give someone in the back of the hall a chance to be heard. NASA suggested it could be used also on construction sites instead of radios where electric interference is high, in steel mills where the noise level is high, and in baseball and football games where bulky communication equipment is nearly useless. The device is so easy to build that practically any high school student with a mechanical or scientific bent can put a retrometer together, with little special equipment. THIS IS THE WAY it works: First, there is a light source, with a means of focusing the light into a narrow beam. For short distances, a good flashlight might do. Next, there is a corner reflector which consists of mirrors. There are two rigid mirrors and a flexible, light-reflecting surface that acts like a speaker diaphragm. The corner mirrors reflect the light to its source. The diaphragm is the microphone. All the speaker does is pick up the light beam with the corner mirror and speak into the diaphragm portion. From there on, the principle is the same as in a telephone receiver or radio speaker. The current vibrates the speaker diaphragm and the speaker's voice is heard. THE MODULATED BEAM is returned to its source by the mirrors. It is collected by a photocell, which converts it into electrical current. His voice modulates, or shakes, the light beam by causing the diaphragm to vibrate. meter have not been fully explored, but it has decided to offer the invention for commercial manufacture, royalty free. NASA holds the patent on the device, but warns that patents on similar devices of earlier origin may be in effect. In order to have two-way communications, it would be necessary to have two retrometers. But even at the present stage of development, the device can be made small and portable. In its present form, the retrometer system consists of a battery case, the source-receiver unit and the corner reflector unit. NASA states that the major performance characteristics of the retro- WHILE ITS USE may be limited by smoke or fog, even a small amount of light getting through will carry the voice signal, NASA said. Circulating publicity and information about People-to-People will be the job of KU's People-to-People this summer. Publicity, Hospitality Head P-t-P Summer Plans Lance Burr, Salina junior and chairman of the P-t-P executive committee, described the summer plans of the group in an interview last night. "Members will be working on feature layouts for newspapers in cities in Kansas, such as Topeka and Kansas City," Burr said. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. Seventy foreign students applied for jobs through the People-to-People Job Placement Service this semester, and Burr said that 50 jobs are available. "Since not all the students will accept the jobs that are available, we anticipate having little trouble getting those jobs who want them," Burr said. "THESE LAYOUTS WILL include pictures and articles explaining the People-to-People organization and aims." he said. "I will be speaking to various groups throughout the state this summer, explaining People-to-People, and looking for possible jobs for the Placement Service's files," he said. LOOKING AHEAD to the fall, Burr said that plans were already being made for meeting the new foreign students as they come to KU in August. R. Keith Liggett, Rep. BOYD'S CAFE LIFE INSURANCE PROGRAMMING For Appointment Call VI 2-2641 C. R. B. at 109 W.6th St. is ready to serve you Tues.-Sun. till 4 a.m. "Voters to be used next fall, and plans for the Activities Carnival are to be made this summer," Burr said. September 30 will be the membership meeting for People-to-People next semester. "We are also planning a more intensive membership drive for People-to-People next year. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers QUALITY AND STYLEI Artcarved Why buy ordinary rings when a prize-winning Artecved cost no more? Starting at $8.00. JASMINE SET Groom's Ring $29.50 Bride's Ring $27.50 Just one of our 300 Different Styles! Different Styles! Marks Jewelers Marks Jewelers 817 Mass. MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY MEMBER OF 1946 NATIONAL BRIDAL SERVI for the finest in AUTO REPAIR ... bring your car out to 'PETE & DOC' AUTO REPAIR 2309 HASKELL VI 2-2990 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 21, 1964 MASS HABITATION—Residence halls are criticized and corrected in these models by architecture design students. The models represent basic living units, each housing four students, as an attempt to avoid an institutional character. Architects Replan KU By Hal Cordry As more and more students move into University residence halls, criticisms of these mass-habitation complexes are also on the rise. For example, many believe that it is impossible for a student to retain his personal identity in our huge residence halls. At the same time, the environment is not thought to be conducive to study. In an effort to determine possible solutions to these problems, Robert F. Asbury, associate professor of architecture, and Robert N. Allsopp, instructor of architecture, initiated a project in their design classes in which "greater consideration to human habitation and environment in a mass society" would be given. THE PROJECT called for the grouping of a thousand students into basic living units, each housing four students. Every four of these basic units share common lounges and recreational space. Only eating facilities and larger group activity areas are centralized. The site for the project, the block north of the Kansas Union, was chosen for its adjacency to the hub of campus activity. "The architectural students' designs," said Allsopp, "indicate attempts to avoid the institutional character of the present housing and to provide a greater opportunity for personal identification with the physical and social environment while still retaining a sense of the larger student community. In some of the designs, each student is provided with a small but private study and sleeping area. In others, more attention has been given to small-group living where a few students share a common studio and bedroom. Most of the designs provide for private outdoor study and sitting areas on balconies, roof terraces, and patios or gardens. Free Press Offers Reward for 'Bogus' The Kansas Free Press is offering a $25 reward for information leading to the persons responsible for the "bogus" March 16 issue of the publication. Laird M. Wilcox, Lawrence freshman and editor of the student liberal newsletter, said they were hoping for legal investigation even though the Kansas Bureau of Investigation had dropped the case. The KBI office in Topeka said they did not think there was a case of criminal libel in regard to an article appearing in the "bogus" issue which attempts to reconcile Christianity with communism. The article is purported to be written by Steve Long, Mission senior. 630 kc KUOK air time: 4-12 p.m., Sun.-Fri. selected sounds for KU students Long and Wilcox have said the views and articles in the limited circulation "bogus" issue are not their own. Read and Use Kansan Classifieds The Crew KU The Pit Crew INVITES YOU TO TGIF THIS FRIDAY AFTERNOON After your finals, relax and enjoy yourself at THE SOUTHERN PIT "BEST SANDWICHES IN TOWN" Mon. - Thurs. — Open 2 p.m. to Midnight Fri. - Sat. — Open 11:30 a.m. to Midnight 1834 Mass. VI 3-9669 The Book Buyer will be here from May 22 through May 28 Please come to our lower level entrance 8-5 weekdays, till 1:30 Sat. - We are paying the patronage refund period 34 now through December 1964. - period 33 valid through June 1964. kansas union BOOKSTORE Thursday, May 21, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Tigers Beat KU in Last League Game By Roy Miller Missouri became the first team since 1936 to finish the league baseball season with an undefeated record when the Tigers beat KU, 4-3, here yesterday. The Big Eight champions, who extended their victory streak to 21, finished the scheduled season with a 22-3 mark for overall competition and a 19-0 conference record. The only other league teams to finish with unbeaten records were Oklahoma (7-0) in 1935 and Iowa State (7-0) in 1936. TRAILING 4-2 in the ninth inning, the Jayhawks threatened when Stirling Coward's infield hit scored Charles Moore with two outs. With a baserun- ner on second, Dick Fanning fouled out to Gary Woods, the Tiger's first baseman. John Seveik singled in Dave Harvey and Woods in the first inning for MU's first runs. A sacrifice fly by Dan Rudanovich scored Jim Seveik in the third inning. Jack Stroud, the winning pitcher, hit a double to score Mike Strode in the sixth inning. STROUD, WHO WENT eight and one-third innings, allowed six hits, struck out 10 and gave up six walks. Coward's hit in the ninth came off Dennis Nelson, who entered the game after Stroud gave up a walk and a hit. The Tigers collected nine hits off four Jayhawk pitchers, the biggest being a triple by Jim Estes in the ninth inning. KU finished fourth in the league standings, same as its 1963 finish, with an 11-10 mark and a 16-11 record for all games. Contemporary apartments for summer rental or longer. These apartments are completely furnished, have two bedrooms and are air-conditioned. But Paid Minimum Salaries We are renting to college men, and we will allow four occupants in e a c h apartment. These apartments are within walking distance of campus. Players Give Maximum Showing Rates are from $90 to $105. Call VI 3-8241 during the day, and VI 3-9373 at night. By United Press International Sometimes the guys who are paid the least are the ones who produce the most. That was precisely the case last night when John Kennedy of the Washington Senators and Dalton Jones of the Boston Red Sox, a pair of bench-warmers who are working for approximately the $7,000-a-year minimum, both came up with maximum performances. Kennedy, given a chance at shortstop only because regular Ed Brinkman had slumped to 157, blasted two homers and a single to drive in three runs and pace the Senators to a 10-3 triumph over the Detroit Tigers. JONES EARNED HIS letter with the Red Sox in similar fashion. Named to the starting line-up largely because of his pinch three-run double in the ninth inning the night before, the rookie second baseman drove in the tying run with a key seventh inning double and set up the winning one in Boston's 4-3 victory over the Los Angeles Angels. The 22-year-old Kennedy started Washington's 12-hit attack with his first homer of the game in the opening inning off loser Ed Rakow (0-3), hit his second circuit in the fifth at the expense of Julio Navarro and then singled home another run during a five-run seventh after homers by Bill Freehan and George Thomas had narrowed the Tigers' deficit to 5-3. Southpaw Claude Osteen scored his third win in seven decisions with help from Tom Cheney in the seventh. JONES, WHO BEAT the Angels, 4-3, Tuesday with a pinch double off Don Lee, picked on Bob Lee last night with the Red Sox trailing 3-2 in the seventh. He drilled a double with runners on first and second to tie the score and moved Roman Mejias to third, from where Mejias scored the winning run on Ed Bressoud's infield hit. Jack Lamabe limited the Angels to six hits during the seven innings he worked and gained his fourth victory when Dick Radatz hurled scoreless ball over the last two innings. Harmon Killebrew crashed a pair of 400-foot homers to power the Minnesota Twins to a 7-4 win over the New York Yankees and the Baltimore Orioles downed the Kansas City A's, 8-3, in the only other American League games scheduled. THE PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES regained first place in the National League with a 7-2 win over the San Francisco Giants, the St. Louis Cardinals nipped the Chicago Cubs. 1-0, the Pittsburgh Pirates defeated the Houston Colts, 4-3, the Milwaukee Braves racked up the Cincinnati Reds, 7-3, and the Los Angeles Dodgers downed the New York Mets, 4-1. Killebrew's 10th and 11th homers of the season plus Rookie Tony Oliva's eight raised the Twins' home run total to 61 in 32 games in their assault of the all-time record of 240 set by the Yankees in 1961. Ralph Terry, who never got past the first inning and suffered his third defeat in four decisions, served up Oliva's homer and Killebrew's first of the game. Killebrew also connect-ed off reliever Steve Hamilton in the eighth. Camilo Pascual brought his record to 5-2 by striking out nine and giving up eight hits, including a ninth inning homer by Johnny Blanchard. Milt Pappas held the A's to five hits and breezed to his third victory when the Orioles erupted for five runs in the fifth inning off loser Diego Segui and reliever Jack Aker. Boog Powell's seventh homer capped the rally. Willie Kirkland had three of Baltimore's 13 hits. Brooks Robinson drove in three runs and Luis Aparicio stole three bases. And at such a modest cost . . . One or Two Bedrooms $75 and $85 Fun is living in Park Plaza These units have been newly decorated — with new drapes, carpets disposals, etc. All Units Air-Conditioned Provincial Furniture Available 9th & Ind. VI 3-6111 PARK PLAZA SOUTH PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Flowers for all Occasions at OWENS 1912 W. 25th We wire flowers anywhere in the free world Rose - * * Ph. VI 2-3416 Day or Night SWIM-GOLF-RELAX DURING DAYTIME SUMMER WORK BIG DOUGH LIGHT WORK $ Work 5 hours in cool of evening. Opportunity to earn $1000 FOR THE SUMMER. Many EXTRA INCENTIVES. We offer steady employment for the full summer and still leave your days free for summer vacationing. For further information and to arrange personal interview, call or write Mr. E. T. Herbranson, Personnel Director, Suite 502, Merchants Produce Bank Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. HA 1-5343 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 21, 1964 Ex-KU Football Coach Dies J. V. Sikes, former KU head football coach, died yesterday in Commerce, Texas. Sikes died of a heart attack at the age of 59. He was the head football coach here from 1948-54, before going to East Texas State College. His KU record was 35-25. SIKES WAS A three-letter man while attending college at Texas A&M, and the University of Georgia. He was an All-Southwest Conference player, and he played in the 1927 East-West Shrine game. After serving in the Navy during World War II, Sikes coached for 11 years at the University of Georgia. While at Georgia he was end coach for teams that played in Rose, Sugar and Orange Bowl games. M. E. C. M. A. J. V. Sikes Player Sought by KU To Stay in Hometown LOUISVILLE, Ky.—(UPI)—Westley Unseld, a 6-foot-8, 235-pound high school all-America basketball player, said today that he will sign an athletic grant-in-aid with his hometown school, the University of Louisville. Unseld, reportedly sought by more than 100 colleges, said he chose Louisville because "I want to play in the Missouri Valley Conference and because my parents wanted me close to home where they could see me play quite a bit." The University of Kentucky had hoped to make Unseld the first Negro varsity athlete in the Southeastern Conference and had gone so far as to poll other conference schools as to what housing arrangements and schedule changes could be made to accommodate such a step. Unseld revealed Monday that he had narrowed his choice to Louisville and Kansas University, where his brother, George, is a basketball star. Kansas officials thought they had the inside track with the talented giant not only because his brother is there, but also because his high school coach, Bob Mulcahy, has been hired as an assistant coach at Kansas. Sikes came to KU from Georgia. Sikes came to KU from Georgia. He returned to East Texas State in 1954, and coached the East Texas team to a 71-34-4 record. Sikes was stricken while playing on the East Texas State college golf course, and he died an hour later in a Commerce, Texas hospital. Sikes is survived by his wife. Funeral services are pending. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS EARN $2000 OR MORE THIS SUMMER 1 Selling Christmas Cards. It's easy . . . I've done it Call me and I'll put you in business. Ask for Sweeney VI 3-4711 5 to 7 p.m. Ober's TRAVELER'S CHECK LIST CLIP & SAVE 100% Polyester Shirt 5.00 65% Kodel Polyester & 35% Cotton Shirt 5.00 American Tourister Attache Case 27.95 Two Suiter 43.95 Three Suiter 45.95 Astro Jet 34.95 55% Dacron Polyester & 45% Wool from 50.00 Other Traveling Suits from 39.50 Passport Cases from 5.95 Dacron & Cotton Shirts 1.95 Ober's 821 Mass. VI3-1951 "Serving Lawrence Since 1896" Read and Use Kansan Classifieds Good-bye! We hope you have a very,very good summer. Sardy's HAMBURGERS - SHAKES Thursday, May 21, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 7 CONGRATULATIONS Big Eight Champs! These Merchants Salute The Fine Performance By The 1964 KU Track Team. JIM CLARK MOTORS DODGE CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH 623 Mass. VI 3-3055 WEAVER'S DEPARTMENT STORE MEYER'S DAIRY 710 W. Sixth VI3-1911 901 Mass. VI 3-6360 HILLCREST BOWL AND RESTAURANT LAWRENCE SANITARY MILK & ICE CREAM COMPANY "Serving KU Since 1920" HATFIELD-JACKSON OIL CO. Lawrence Auto Service representing 1011 North 3rd Goodyear Tires & Mobil Petroleum Products 1040 Vermont VI3-5200 STANLEY PONTIAC CADILLAC LOGAN-MOORE LUMBER CO. "Quality Service and Satisfaction Kiln Dried Lumber 1515 W. 6th VI 3-6911 NORRIS BROTHERS INC. VI 3-0931 Plumbing- Heating-Air-Conditioning Electrical LAWRENCE READY MIX "QUALITY CONCRETE" 430 Maple VI 3-1688 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 21, 1964 Big Eight SANDBAR "DROPPINGS"—Art students create in new form. Campus Artists Bring Creativity to Sandbar By Susan Flood A group of art students and friends have been creating "droppings" at "happenings" in "environments." Some sort of explanation may be in order for non-dwellers of third floor Strong Hall. IN THE TERMS OF AN existent but anonymous are instructor: "Droppings can be seen as a method, a faith, a cult, a point of view, a hoax. It is all of these and none of these. Droppings are impermanent and offend those of taste. "Droppings help art to regain its place by stripping it of all the tinsels, laurals and buskins in which it has been decked. Once art, through droppings, is disemcumbered, it will doubtless begin again to function—to dance and yell like a madman, which is its function, and stop putting on pretentious airs." Well, then, a rotted frame of a wagon, with wheels planted in sand, an orange metal door horizontal across the upright beam, with two red and white Coca-Cola signs at either end and decked and hung with scraps of cloth, metal, art materials and other "junk" is a "dropping." NOW THEN FOR A "happening" and an "environment." From a book published by the Smolin Gallery in New York: "The term 'environment' refers to an art form that fills an entire space surrounding the visitor and consisting of any materials whatsoever, including lights, sounds, and color . . ." From the same book, a "happening" is: "... an art form related to theatre, in that it is performed in a given time and space. Its structure and content are a logical extension of "environments." Now what was it they said in laymen's terms? Well, some art enthusiasts have been going to the sandbars (environments) and have had unplanned projects (happenings) when they created an art form (a dropping). THEIR PURPOSE was in the words of the anonymous art instructor "to eliminate the notion that art is a special thing in a special place; to unrestrict ourselves from a model and room walls and to expose ourselves to the mobility of conflicting, distracting concepts." But this isn't all. The art students may have a "happening" of a Drop Grand Prix with man-powered racing cars to Lone Star Lake (environment) and a Drop Hop semi-dance there this weekend. WEEKEND DATE SPECIAL! "The conservative element has not felt it has had a voice in the political arena since New Deal days, and conservatives have been looking - for someone (to lead them) since Taft died in '54." Prof. Nehring said. (Continued from page 1) WILLIAM KNOWLAND was a logical choice for a leader of conservatives, the professor said. But, Knowland, who had sought to be a conservative leader, had the bad fortune to not be re-elected to the senate. Then, Goldwater moved in, Prof. Nehring said. Another contributing factor to Goldwater's popularity is his personal appeal. "Goldwater worked into the picture as an attractive personality and as an articulate personality," Prof. Nehring said. PROF. NEHRING DOES NOT believe, as some do, that the Arizona senator is an extremist in conservative sheep's wool. YOUR DATE GETS TO BOWL EVERY OTHER GAME $ FREE $ 6 p.m. FRIDAY — 6 p.m. SUNDAY Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION MOM BOWLS FREE ! Demo Victory "If you look at all of Goldwater's statements in a particular area, he seems to have espoused a traditional kind of conservative approach," Prof. Nehring said. Also, "Goldwater has been built up by the press in many ways as the outstanding conservative spokesman. As the net result, you have the whole country turning toward him. He has become so identified with conservatism per se that he has, in effect, become Mr. Conservative." Prof. Nehring said. Although Nelson Rockefeller, New York governor, has often been identified as the leader of the liberal wing of the Republican Party. Prof. Nehring denies that this is the case. "ROCKEFELLER IS not a spokesman for anybody," the professor said. He believes a Republican liberal might support either Scranton, Lodge, or Rockefeller. "If he (Rockefeller) wins in California, he'll have considerable influence on the nomination and the platform, but I don't anticipate that he will be nominated," Prof. Nehring said. Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION MOM BOWLS FREE! "Lodge appears likely to go down in history books as the short-lived phenomenon of the 1964 nomination. The only thing he seems to have going for him is the opinion polls which show he has considerable popularity," Prof. Nehring said. Good looks built in ...not added on FLORSHEIM Polished Calf uppers Before they leave the factory Florsheim Shoes are given wax to bring out the natural beauty of premium upper leather. Florsheims will take, and keep, a high shine because the finish is in the leather, not on it. ARENSBERG'S VI 3-3470 819 Mass. Set the pace at Graduation Time with "The Pacer." Smooth, clean lines spell success for the man in the achievement spotlight. $23.95 Read and Use Kansan Classifieds SIXTH ANNIVERSARY OPEN HOUSE BRITISH MOTORS BMC-RAMBLER OUR NEW LOCATION MAY TWENTY-THIRD, NINE A.M. TO NINE P.M. MAY TWENTY-FOURTH, TWELVE NOON TO SIX P.M. ELEVEN SIXTEEN WEST TWENTY-THIRD STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS --- THIS COUPON IS WORTH $50.00 ON ALL USED CARS WITH PRICE STICKERS ON THE WINDOWS. (also MG Midgets & Sprites) GOOD UNTIL MAY 30 ONE TO A CAR British Motors 704 Vermont St., Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, May 21, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 9 Dear Students: Ray Christian Jewelers would like to take this opportunity to say "Thank You" for your patronage during the school year. Have a good summer, and we will be looking forward to seeing you next fall. Sincerely Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 MASS. Page 10 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 21, 1964 College Board Asks For Reading Period By Rogers Worthington A "reading period," which would take place immediately following Christmas vacation and extend to the end of the semester, has been proposed to the faculty and administration by the College Intermediary Board. The reading period, which B. George Barisas, Kansas City senior and board chairman, referred to as "one of the coming things in progressive education," is already in use at several Eastern schools. UNDER THE PLAN, Barisas said, an objective examination would be given just before Christmas vacation. After the exam, all formal course work would end. During the period following the vacation, students would be required to do several weeks of outside reading designed to bring together all the material covered in the first part of the course. During this period instructors would be in their offices during class hours in order that students may consult with them. AT THE END OF the semester, a comprehensive final would be given, in which the student would demonstrate his comprehension of the material read during the reading period, and the material's relativity to the formal part of the course. Barisas said the main object to the plan is whether or not it would be applicable to all departments. He pointed out that a reading period is not similar to a stop week "We don't want it to wind up as a long stop week. We want it to be a fresh, vital, and different way of attacking the material of a course." UNLIKE A STOP week, the reading period would not require the fall semester to begin earlier, or the spring semester to end later. There would be no need to delete vacation days. But instructors would be required to concentrate the objective material of their courses for presentation in a shorter period of time. Barisas said that he and other members of the College Intermediary Board got the idea for a reading period from "The Grinnell Report," a widely publicized and much discussed document by Harold R. Bowen, Grinell's president, who advocated progressive changes in educational policy. "THIS REPORT has been the genesis for many of our ideas," Barisas said. The proposal, submitted earlier in the semester, is still under consideration by the Administration Committee, which functions as a steering committee for the faculty. The College Intermediary Board, which Barisas said "has no real power . . . except through the logic of its recommendations," serves as a liaison between the student body and the administration and faculty. Social Workers Receive Awards Two graduate women in the department of social work have been given outstanding student awards for the 1963-64 year. Mrs. Barbara Pomeroy, Muncie, received the outstanding student award of the Topeka chapter of the National Association of Social Workers. The prize was $25 and a plaque. Miss Shirley Patterson, Topeka, was given the Ursula Lewis award, a book prize established in honor of the associate professor in the department who died in 1958. Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity has announced that it has purchased a house at 1209 Ohio street, and will take an active role as a KU social fraternity this fall. Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity To Begin Formal Rush The fraternity was active until 1954 when they became inactive because of a lack of members. Bob Weinstein, newly elected secretary of the group, said this was due to a "lack of pledging and not enough hard rushing." The national organization has financed the new house that the men will move into this coming fall. The members of the executive board for the coming year are: president, Mervyn Schwedt, Kansas City, Mo., junior; vice-president, Mike Davis, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; secretary, Bob Weinstein, Shawnee Mission freshman, and treasurer, Howard Hoffman, Cranston, R.I., sophomore. To Discuss Venoms The use of venom in the study of nerve conduction will be discussed at 4 p.m. Monday, May 25, in 124 Malott Hall. Dr. Philip Rosenberg, assistant professor of neurology at Columbia University, will give the lecture. for the finest in Steaks its... ★ Charcoal Broiled Steaks ★ Cooked to your taste ★ Service to please you CHUCK WAGON I VI 3-9844 ELRING'S GIFTS for the BRIDE— 24th & Iowa All prices in wedding and shower gifts 924 Mass. (across from O'Dell's-Bell's) ATTENTION RABBLE-ROUSERS YOU JUST LOST SOMETHING TO GRIPE ABOUT! The FOURTH and FINAL Issue of the '64 Jayhawker Will Be Distributed Next Tuesday and Wednesday, May 26-27 at the Information Booth, 8:30 to 4:30. Last Chance This Year to Purchase or Pick up Your JAYHAWKER— ES BE THERE! W lead they south cide in o of o Se Hun ate now cess hou End to Filibuster in Sight; Senate Shortens Sessions WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Senate leaders, indicating confidence that they will be able to choke off the southern Civil Rights filibuster, decided today to cut back floor sessions in order to tackle a growing backlog of other legislation. Senate Democratic Whip Hubert Humphrey announced that the Senate would meet at noon (EDT) from now until the Memorial Holiday recess to give committees an extra two hours to work each morning. This underscored the new feeling on the part of Humphrey, floor manager of the Civil Rights bill, and other supporters that they may be within reach of the necessary two-thirds vote to invoke cloture—the senate gag rule on debate. UNTIL THIS WEEK, the Senate had been meeting at 10 a.m. each day. This left little time for committee meetings because Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., has refused to go along with the required unanimous consent to allow such meetings while floor sessions are going on. The Civil Rights leaders in the Senate now believe they can halt the debate and enact a bill before the Republican National Convention opens July 13. Humphrey said in announcing continuation of the noon meeting time that committee chairmen should take advantage of the extra time next week to "proceed with urgent business." They do not believe that the Presidential Primary showings made by Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace in Maryland and other states can halt or greatly alter the measure. SENATE LEADERS declined to pinpoint just how many votes they now have for cloture—the gag rule under which each member would be limited to one hour of debate on the measure and all its amendments. Page 11 But there is mounting evidence that they can now see a combination of additional votes for cloture and absenteeism—if it is needed—to produce the required two-thirds majority required to gag debate. GOP leader Eworett M. Dirksen, Ill., perhaps gave the tipped when he said after yesterday's Republican conference on the controversial employment section of the bill: "I am not deeply concerned about cloture." With Sen, Clair Engle, D-Calif, likely to be absent because of illness, a maximum of 66 votes will be needed if all other senators are on hand when the cloture vote is taken. REPUBLICAN SENATORS planned to resume their Civil Rights review tomorrow at what Dirksen advertised as a "refining" session. Senate leaders hoped to offer next week a bipartisan package of amendments to the House-passed bill. The present likelihood is that the controversial jury trial amendment will be incorporated into the bi-partisan package. A substitute jury trial amendment by Dirkksen and Democratic leader Mike Mansfield, Mont., has been pending for weeks, along with southern amendments on the issue. The Dirksen-Mansfield substitute would require a jury trial in any criminal contempt case under the Civil Rights Bill which involved a penalty of over 30 days in jail or $300 fine. TO AVOID TROUBLE on the closure vote, the leaders may have to incorporate in the package something a little more attractive to those concerned about the jury trial protection. Sen. Abraham Ribicoff, D-Conn., told the Senate yesterday that Wallace's strong showing in the Maryland primary proved that "a lot of Americans in the North as well as in the South" did not believe in Civil Rights for Negroes. After other Senators had quarreled and differed over the meaning of Wallace's heavy vote, Ribicoff drew praise from a member of his colleagues with some blunt, solemn comments on civil rights, certain "illusions" and the country's future. He said Wallace had scored a significant victory by appealing to the "barest instincts" of the voters in Maryland—where he won 43 per cent of the Democratic vote—as well as of the people in Wisconsin and Indiana. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers AUTO GLASS INSTALLED TABLE TOPS AUTO GLASS SUDDEN SERVICE East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 HERMAN'S "THOUGHT FOR THE YEAR" DROPOUTS JUST DON'T MEASURE UP?" DR PEPPER BOTTLER. LAWRENCE KANSAS REJECTS -RNY- KINGSMEN - ON - LP's and 45 Bell's 925 Mass. VI 3-2644 Bell's Thursday, May 21, 1964 University Daily Kansan A BIG THANK YOU! Jay SHOPPE DOWNTOWN 835 Mass. To students and faculty at KU for your valued patronage of the past school year. Best wishes for an enjoyable summer season. Best Wishes STEAKS ___ CHICKEN BAR-B-QUE RIBS ___ CHOPS DELICIOUS SEAFOODS After graduation, stop by for the finest in foods. 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Ph.VI 3-0350 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 21, 1964 TODAY Official Bulletin Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion, 4:30 p.m. Pan American Rm., Union Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Church, 1020 Stradford, Fd. Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. Bristol Postal, 8 p.m. Swarathout Hall. Senior Recital, 8 p.m., Swarthout Hall. Jane Yust. cellist. Jane YEE, ceim. Yeast, 7:30 p.m., English Room, Kansas Milton Union. Julie "Strindberg—with English subtilties, 7:30 p.m. Rm. 3. Bailey Hall." sion Memorial Reading Room, 8 o.m. Memorial Library of Special Collections, Watson Library Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m., Danfort Chapel. Everyone wel- comes. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth. TOMORROW Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. Community & Municipal Services: 7:30 p.m. i991 and Dr. Deere Services. Epsipceal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. www.epsipceal.org SATURDAY SATURDAY Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m. Lakewood Rd. Referee Rd. Confessions: 4-5 and 7-8 p.m. SUNDAY Catholic Masses 8 a.m. St. Lawrence Cape Cod Rd. 9:30 and 11 m. Fraser Theatler Oread, Friends, 10:30 a.m. Danforth Eureka, Friends to the Quaker meet- lum ARL WORSHIR MONDAY Catholic Masses 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Road Rd. Richardt Rd. Ougnams Church May 30, Pharmacy Lecture, 4 p.m. 124 Malott Hall. "Use of Venoms in the Study of Nerve Conduction"—Dr. Phillip Rosenberg, astt. prof. of neurology, Columbia Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth. (regularly through May 29). WEDNESDAY SATURDAY Dick Harp Dinner, 7 p.m., Kansas Union. Cap and Gown Pick-up, begins at 10 a.m. Hoch Auditorium. See senior re- lationship. Alumni Registration Opens, 10 a.m. Lounge, Union. Carillon Recital, 11:50 a.m., Albert Gerken. (also at 9:15 p.m.) Mortar Board Luncheon, 12:30 p.m. Watkins Room. Union. Welcoming Dinner for those not in special groups, 6:30 p.m., Kansas Rm., Union. Fred Ellsworth—"Our Amazing Chancellors." SUNDAY Oread Friends, 10.30 a.m., Danforth. How to be an extra-fine writer! GET THE NEW BIC“FINE POINT” —ONLY 25¢! This is really fine writing. Until today, only a spider could spin such a fine line. Now BIC invents a new "Fine Point" pen that writes sharper, clearer, thinner lines. BIC "Fine Point" with "Diamite" Ball Point is guaranteed* to write first time every time because it's tooled of the hardest metal made by man. BIC is the world's finest writing instrument; BIC never skips, BIC never clogs, BIC never smears. What a pair of pen pals: thin-writing BIC "Fine Point" with orange barrel, only 25c; standard line BIC Medium Point "Crystal." just 19c. Both available with blue, black, green or red ink. Made in the U.S.A. *For replacement send pen to: WATERMAN-BIC PEN CORP. MILFORD, CONN. F-25 FINE PT. BIC U.S.A. BiC Bus Tour of Campus, 10 a.m., Union. (also at 2 p.m.) Everyone welcome to Quaker meeting for worship. Open House. 2-4 p.m. Department of Design, Third Floor West. Strong Hall. Open House, 2.4 p.m., Museum of Art. Images: 23 Interpretations. John Suhler, Cross River, N.Y., junior, was named president yesterday of the Kansan Board, the student organization that governs operations of the University Daily Kansan. Kansan Board for UDK Names President Kay Jarvis, Kansas City junior, is secretary and the new members of the board are: Fredrick Mabbutt Shoshone, Idaho, junior; Jame Langford, Wichita junior; Fred Frailey, Sulphur Springs, Tex, sophomore; Russell Corbitt, Chanute senior; Robert Phinney, Pratt junior; John Pepper, Lenexa sophomore; Nancy Holland, Lee's Summit, Mo., sophomore; Karen Craig, Liberal sophomore: Richard Flood, Lawrence graduate student. Patronize Your 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 Acme 1 HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE HILLCREST — 1111 MASS. — THE MALLS Craig. Flood. Thursday, May 21, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page 13 Bible Congratulations GRADUATES ©scw,INC. A DEGREE IN SCHOOL THE NEW YORKER Maria Teresa JENNIFER LARSON PRAIRIE ROOM CAFETERIA HAWKS NEST CATERING SERVICE KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE Page 14 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 21, 1964 Paris Remains Refuge for Unsatisfied Americans PARIS —(UPI)— It does not matter of which generation, Americans come to Paris to escape personal problems or conformity at home, or to seek a freer and more cultural atmosphere. Such was the agreement reached last week at a round-table discussion at the American Students and Artists Center. It brought together a unique group for the first and probably last time—the last of the "lost generation" of Americans in Paris in the 1820's and leaders of the post-war American colony here. THE "THEN" GROUP consisted of Dada artist Man Ray, composer Virgil Thomson, New Yorker magazine columnist Janet Flanner and Maria Jolas, who edited a literary magazine in Paris. The "now" representatives were writers James Jones and William Gardner Smith and artist John Levee. Excerpts from the discussion: Excerpts from the discussion: JAMES JONES "I plan to stay here indefinitely because there is no question of morality. You don't have to be moral or immoral. Being separated from America is very good for me. I tend to be overly critical of the United States when I am there. "In Paris I have a certain nostalgia for America which allows me to be more magnanimous about it. I like America better here than there . . . I was astounded to see that an artist here is not considered a slob, that they named a boulevard after Victor Hugo." Man Ray—"I came to Paris in 1919 because in New York I was refused exhibitions and was considered a joker. I was warmly welcomed here . . . I resent that label 'lost generation.' Why do they remember if we are lost." JOHN LEVEE—"The sameness of the reason for our two generations coming to Paris indicates a repressive constrictive nature in America. I have been here 15 years. Gertrude Stein said, 'America is my country but Paris is my home.' "It's the difference between a Protestant Puritan society and a BERNARDO Classic sandal elegance by Bernardo I hang around in case Paris reproduces that magic period again." TEE The classic strap back thong in harness, black,and white 7.99 EVA MK2 MEZ EVA William Gardner Smith—"In the twenties a magnet pulled Americans to Paris. We now come here for negative reasons. I came because of politics (McCarthyism) and race." 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VIRGIL THOMSON—"The term 'lost generation' began when Ernest Hemingway heard a hotel owner complain that his auto mechanic lost four years' training because of the war and was a lost generation. In Hemingway's cagey, self-advertising mind, he used it as a motto in a book. We never were lost in a spiritual or ethical sense. "I came here because France was the center then of music, painting and cooking. In America, now instruction in the arts may be better than here, and Paris is the most expensive city in Europe. IT'S HOT! IT'S FREE! IT'S SIMPLE! NOTHING TO BUY -- NO JINGLES TO WRITE 14,124 PRIZES -- WORTH $250,000 IT'S CITIES SERVICE "WORLD OF PRIZES" Just drive in to our station and pick up your "INSTANT WINNER DIP CARD" No waiting to learn if you are a winner! 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Hiawatha HIAWATHA JEWELERS Hill City HIXON JEWELRY Hoisington WELLMAN F. KOMAREK Kansas City, Mo. HURST'S DIAMOND SHOP, INC Lawrence MARKS JEWELERS Liberal C. F. PATTerson JEWELRY Lyons SLOOP JEWELRY Manhattan REED & ELLIOTT McPherson BRUNK JEWELERS Norton WORDEN'S JEWELRY Ottawa BOYER'S JEWELRY Plainville IVAN'S JEWELRY Russell LEWIS JEWELRY Scott City ROBERT'S JEWELRY Topeka HESS JEWELERS Washington DITMARS JEWELRY Wellington RILEY JEWELRY CO. Wichita McMULLEN JEWELRY WEHLING JEWELRY CO. Page 15 California Professor Named Head Of KU Physics Department A theoretical physicist now teaching at the University of California at Davis, will be the new chairman of the physics department, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe announced today. Prof. David B. Beard, 41, brings special interests in theory, particularly in field theory, in space physics; and experience in nuclear research and in research leading toward the production of controlled thermonuclear power. Beard replaces Prof. J. D. Stranathan who, after serving as chairman for the past 23 years, will retire from administrative duties to return to teaching. "I FEEL fortunate in joining the fine physics faculty at the University of Kansas at a time when a large and exciting expansion of their physics program is being planned," Beard said. "There will be many new opportunities in preparing a large, modern center of research and graduate training in physics which I am very happy to help create." Beard earned his bachelor of science in chemistry at Hamilton College, New York, in 1943, did graduate study in physics in 1943-44 at the California Institute of Technology, and received his Ph.D. in theoretical physics in 1950 at Cornell University, where he did his dissertation on meson theory of nuclear forces under nuclear pioneer Hans Bethe and worked as a research assistant in nuclear theory under a prominent physicist and educator, Phillin Morrison. Beard taught physics at Catholic University of America and the University of Connecticut until joining the University of California, Davis, in 1953, where he has taught and Two Professors Given Danforth Two faculty members have been appointed Danforth associates for the 1964-66 academic years. Bruce A. Linton, professor of speech and journalism, and William J. York, associate professor of education, will participate with their wives in the program aimed at heightening the quality of faculty-student relations. Danforth Foundation of St. Louis is the sponsor. The appointees and their wives will attend summer conferences at Camp Miniwanca, Mich., where they will be oriented in the objectives of the program. Danforth associates work to establish closer relations with students through informal visits, often in their homes. performed his research since, with the exception of a two-year period from 1956-58 when he served as a staff scientist for the Lockheed Aircraft Corp. at Palo Alto. FROM 1954-57. Beard worked as a summer research associate with Edward Teller on Project Sherwood, the effort to achieve controlled thermonuclear power at the University of California Radiation Laboratory, Livermore. He was a summer research participant at Oak Ridge National Laboratory and held an NAS-NRC senior post-doctoral fellowship at Goddard Space Flight Center, NASA, Greenbelt, Md. Thursday, May 21, 1964 University Daily Kansan He is a consultant for the Theoretical Division of the Goddard Space Flight Center, for the Physics Division of the Sandia Corp., and for the Lockheed Aircraft Corp. His research papers have been published in a variety of publications: Review of Scientific Instruments, American Scientist, Nucleonics Magazine, Journal of Nuclear Energy, Physics of Fluids, Journal of Geophysical Research, Astrophysical Journal, and Reviews of Geophysics. Two 1963 articles indicate the scope of his research, "Interplanetary Magnetic Fields as a Cause of Comet Tails" with M. P. Nakada in Nature and "Quantitative Nuclear Evaporation Theory and the Nuclear Potential" with Alden McLellan in Physical Review. He and his wife have four children, two sons, 16 and 13, and two daughters, 10 and 7. Orange Blossom DIAMOND RINGS RHAPSODY • PRICES FROM $125 TO $1500 AGS Marks JEWELERS 817 Mass. AGS MEMBER OF AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY MEMBER OF NBS NATIONAL BRIDAL SERVICE Lang Lang Lang stripes go more places, do more things ... dress you for a pool party, a moonlight swim, or a quick sun tan. Pink, blue or gold cotton in 5 to 15 sizes $20.00 CAMPUS WEST 1424 CRESCENT ROAD 100% ...the more the "MERRIER"at... DIXON'S DRIVE-IN "where food is better" ...FAST DELIVERY 7 DAYS A WEEK... 2500 W 6th Page 16 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 21, 1984 CONGRATULATIONS TO THE G Victor McNeil Owens Floral & Garden Center 15th & N.Y. VI3-2004 ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners 1111 Mass. Hillcrest The Mall PENNEY'S ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY 691 I han An the the uat suc 830 Mass. VI 3-4114 If a man empies his purse into his hand, no man can take it away from him. An investment in knowledge always pays the best interest. These Lawrence merchants extend their heartiest congratulations to the graduating class of 1964, with best wishes for success in the future. Douglas County State Bank 9th & Kentucky VI 3-7474 Lawrence Launderers and Dry Cleaners 10th & N.H. VI 3-3711 Vincent’s Trading Post 704 Mass. VI 3-2012 Terrill’s Department Store 803 Mass. VI 3-2241 First National Bank 746 Mass. Motor Bank 9th & Tenn. VI 3-0152 Kansas Union Food Service • Hawk’s Nest • Cafeteria • Prairie Room Page 18 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 21, 1964 Sweatshirts - Students' Security Blankets? By Jackie Helfstrom (Assistant Managing Editor) (Assistant Managing What is a sweatshirt? It is warmth; it is comfort; it is relaxa- tion. It is the college student's Linus blanket. The sweatshirt is the natural attire of the American college student, and most of them would find it hard to dress properly without one. Every student has one, most have several. There is the traditional dark blue for everyday all over grungy wear and there are sweatshirts for special occasions. OCCASIONS FOR WINTER there are long sleeved sweatshirts; for summer short sleeved sweatshirts. For sandbar parties and woodsies there are dark colored sweatshirts that won't get dirty easily. For afternoon or for study breaks or even for those long evenings of study there are lighter colored, less heavy duty sweatshirts. It is not even inconceivable that the well dressed co-ed would have a sweatshirt died-to-match every pair of slacks she owns, including her cut-off jeans. And during final week, it is rare if you see anyone in anything but a sweatshirt. MANY ORGANIZATIONS have their own sweatshirts which they Race Car Damaged COVENTRY, England — UPI) — A gust of wind has put a $28,000 dent in Britain's super-jet race car, the Rover-B.R.M. The revolutionary 160-mile-an-hour car was not even being driven when the accident happened. It was on a trailer in France being brought home after tests at Le Mans when wind blew the car and trailer into a tree. It was only when the car was back here that mechanics found that the entire body must be rebuilt. "The shock wave went right through," an official said. "The engine, tank and frame were all damaged." I think so. pass out or try to sell to every new member as soon as they can capture them. When someone pledges a social sorority or fraternity, his first gift from his new sisters or brothers is a sweatshirt with the Greek letters. senior class, what reward does their scholastic achievement bring them? A senior class sweatshirt. The first thing a freshman on any campus does is run right down to wherever the university sweatshirts are sold and buy one or two. Or, if a student lives in one of the residence halls while they are in school, on the day they move in they are greeted at the door by a display of the hall sweatshirts that are on sale. A LOW COST ThriftiCheck PERSONAL CHECKING ACCOUNT for the easiest, safest, most economical bill paying? LISTEN: No minimum balance is required; your name is printed on each check FREE; cancelled checks prove payment. THEN, WHEN they finally reach that extra special organization of the HURRY: Start saving every day by paying bills with economical ThriftChecks Even to non-conformists the sweatshirt is important. They do not refuse to conform by not wearing sweatshirts at all, they simply have their own custom made with the appropriate comments and pictures drawn on the front, to express their feelings toward society. And what happens if anyone ever gets tired of a sweatshirt? He doesn't simply throw it away and wear something else. He varies it somehow. He either cuts off the sleeves, cuts out the neck, or simply turns it inside and lets the fuzz get all over everybody else for a change. WHERE? DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK 9th & Kentucky MAYFLOWER Mayflower moves it better for free assistance call Goods in this van are PROTECTED by the Best-Trained moving men in town! AT LAWRENCE MAYFLOWER 609 MASS. COLLEGE STUDENTS: male National organization specializing in community work will employ five college students for summer work. Pleasant outside work. Work locally for travel to Lake of Ozarks or other resort areas. $85 weekly Interviews will be held at Crystal Room of the State Hotel, 12th and Wyandotte, Kansas City, Mo., Thursday, May 28 at 7 p.m. If not available at this time write Mr. Edward Haas at State Hotel for appointment. Appointments Friday FISH FRY DINNER DATE ALL YOU CAN EAT $1.00 Holiday Inn Restaurant RISK'S Shirt Finishing Laundry Wash & Fluff Dry 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 The Castle Tearoom For Your Dining pleasure 1307 Mass. VI 3-1151 LEONARD'S STANDARD SERVICE 9th & Indiana VI 3-9830 Our Congratulations to ALL KU GRADUATES AND HAPPY VACATION TO THE UNDER GRADS! SEE YOU IN SEPTEMBER! Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 Starts SATURDAY . . . Now! Ends Friday "The Pink Panther" Shows at 7:00 & 9:00 A JAMES BOND IS BACK! IAN FLEMING'S FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE STARRING SEAN CONNERY AS JAMES BOND M[ introduction] DANIELA BIANGHI TECHNOLOGY Sun. Cont, 2:30 - 4:40 - 6:50 - 9:00 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 NOW! Ends Saturday 'The Incredible Mr. Limpet' Mat. Sat. 2:00 Evenings 7:00 & 9:00 SUNDAY — SOUTH PACIFIC COLOR BY DELUXE Continuous Sunday From 2:30 Weekdays 7:30 Only—Reg. Prices NOW! Ends Saturday — "WHERE THE BOYS ARE" and "HOOTENANNY HOOT" 2 Bonus Feat. Sat. Nite Only "THE PASSWORD IS COURAGE" & "MARILYN" Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 69 SUN.-MON.-TUES. Please Don't Bring the Kiddies BEHIND THIS MEMBRANE.. you will be driven to a point...midway between LIFE and DEATH! Starts At Dusk 90c THE FLESH EATERS Plus 2nd Feature The only people who will not be STERILIZED with FEAR are those among you who are already DEAD! C 1957 and 7922 Abir Useven next War Mon Mon may May 1960 Mike Elm er" NIELA ANCHI STS :00 9:00 mpet' Classified Ads 2015 FOR SALE HOOT" YN" TUES. 1957 Chev. 2-dr. V-8 automatic, Looks runs well. Call Curt Patterson, V. 702 5-21 Abington Book Shop Clearance Sale. Used books reduced up to 50%. Open evening 6-9, all day Sat. 10151 Mass. next to the Varsity Theater. 5-21 S be lose DEAD! Wanut finish Spinet piano for sale by Monett Music. May Meet Party with good credit may arrange most attractive purchase. May be seen locally. Write immediately 21 Used band equipment for sale. I have used band equipment for sale. I have gell Call Denis Leviens. VI 3-7102. 5-21 VI 159 Jaguar XK150 Roadster $1,600. Call VI 3-5088 or see at 13-60 Stouffer phones 5-21 5-21 1960 Zundapp motorcycle 250 c.c. Call Elmwood. 3-3596 after 5:30 p.m. Ellwood. DUCATI 125ec Bronco motorcycle, 1963 model, used for transportation to and from class only, 125 mpg, less than 700 actual miles. In excellent condition. Must sell because of graduation. Best offer over $275. CALL VI 2-9154. tt Your fraternity needs a LIMOUSINE? Swish black 1948 Chrysler, has led a campus tour of the Museum, according to the Pakistan ambassador. Jump seats, chauffer window. Runns well. (Perhaps you have seen it around.) BEST OFFER: $23 Miss. 5-21 3506. 1955 MG-TF 1500, very good condition. 1956 Caller. Call Ralph Miller, Locker 3-7-115 1-521 1959 Ford 2 door, V-8, stick, factory air. Good condition. $850. 1115 Tenn. Call VI 2-3327. 5-21 1963 Honda. 150 cc. Like new. Low mileage. $400. Call VI 2-0419. tf Small antiques. Glass salts, toothpick holders. Ink wells, baskets, paper weights. Wooden wine and wine glass, napkin rings, iron elephant bank. Valentines. Used postals, before 1911. oars, pearl necklaces. Large salt boxes. Small squalene small ones. Call U 3-1297 for directions to house. 5-21 1956 Ford. Standard shift. Interceptor engine, overdrive. N.S.U. motorcycle. 2 50 c.c. Both in A-1 mechanical condition. Call VI 2-3374 to 6 p.m. 5-21 Electric stove, 9 months old. Kitchen cabinet. Small breakfast set. Bedroom set compartment. Roll-a-way table. Drawers. Large study tables. Call VI 3-5864. 5-21 Drop leaf table and four chairs. Reasonable. Call VI 2-9360. 5-21 1857 Ford wagon. Must sell before school ends. Make an offer. Call VI 3-0651. 5-21 Hi-Fi components, Stromberg-Carlson 30 watt amp. Electro-voice speaker and enclosure. Garrard changer. Call VI 3-5564. 5-21 34-foot Servel air-conditioner. 3 speed record player and stand. One speaker. Two sports car snow tires. Call VI 2-3470 after 5 p.m. 5-21 Beautiful white floor length wedding bedding. Size 10 in Wide. reasonable. Call VI 2-1405. 5-21 Guns and ammo for sale. Big end-of- semester cash sale. Everything goes; Slide rules, rifles, shot guns, pistols, ammo, grenades. This is your last chance (and mine). Call VI 3-1110 (private party). tf 1962 Pontiac Prix. White w/blue interior, bucket seat(s), automatic, full leather, instrumented, perfect in design. Originally $4,950. Askin' $2,300. Call VI 3-5030. 5-21 1959 Chevy convertible, Stick, positration, new tires, new top. Excellent condition. Need money, must sell. Call VI 3- 9562. 5-21 1960 blue Falcon. Excellent condition. 33,500 miles. 4-door sedan, automatic. Original owner. $750. Call Dr. Batra, VI 3-6391. evenings. 5-21 Two Blue Streak tires, 800/820x15" on reversed 15" Mercury rims; Goodyear Stock Car Specials, less than 500 miles gone, treads compounded for paved tracks. $90 value for $70. Call VI 2-3778 evenings and weekends. tf 1956 AUSTIN HEALY. iowa overhaul. rack. 8675. VI 2-2038. Must sell sell VI Volvo before May 31. Call Sandy, VI 2-4112 after 5 p.m. 5-21 21" console TV, RCA, real good shape. Call VI 2-419-7 after 6 p.m. 1959 Volvo. Rebuilt engine, new tires and battery. Clean. Call Vi 3-4050. 5-21 One dinette set, 2 years old, excellent condition. Six chairs with high-backed table. 84$ Auctioneer. Danish Modern chairs, 2 years old, need reupholstering. $10 each. See at 635 W. Louis Street. Thursday, between noon; Monday, Wednesday, Friday, between 2 and 5 p.m. 1958 black and white Ford convertible. Power steering and brakes. good condition, original owner. Call VI 3-5003, 1618 Rose Lane. New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500 too, ream -85 Lawrence Outdoor. 1905 **M** SPEED EQUIPMENT — CHROME WHEELS. Cheater Slicks, etc., for sale at great savings after 6 p.m. week days Sunday and Sunday. 837 Connecticut Typewriters, new and used portables, standards, electrics, Olympia, Hermes, Olivettle. Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter, adder, rentals and service. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St. VI 3-3644. tt Wedding dress, size 7-8. 1817 La. Upstairs, west apartement. 4 to 6 p.m. FOR RENT Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all new notes. Mail CV1-2-3701 Free delivery. $4.50 Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, nimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tt For Fuller Brush Products phone VI 3- 3040 after 5 p.m. tt To rent to men students for summer or fall, Basement Room, shower, kitchen, private entrance, utilities paid, 1520 W 22nd Nerd, Call VI 3-8673 or VI 3-8821 For rent for summer; cool, pleasantly furnished basement apt. in new house, situated distance of campus, must be matched students VI 3-6313, 1103 W. 19th Terr. Rooms for graduate women. Kitchen facilities, near campus. Call VI 2-1689. 5-213 For rent or sale; two bedroom home with recreation room and garage. Located in south Lawrence. Call VI 3-5393. 5-21 To KU men. Two room modern furnished basement apartment. Outside end window. Warm interior drinking or smoking. See first house south of campus at 1616 Indiana. 5-21 Large, cool, furnished apartment; 2 or 3 boys. Call 3-2281. 5-21 Just across from Lindley, newly furnished apartment to share with one of our neighbors. Separate room, vate parking. Apt. 4. Campus Apartment, 1420 Crescent Rd. 5-21 Air-conditioned, furnished sixplex apt., 3 rooms, private, centrally located, available August. Call VI 3-2380. 5-21 For rent to reliable couple. Furnished with room for income. Call V517 6745. 5-21 Large 2 room apartments, attractively furnished, close to KU and downtown. $38 per month. Also 1 room apt., cool summer. $25 per month. Call VI 36-696-521 Furnished apartment for 3 KU men. Shower, twin beds. Completely private. Kitchen, bathroom. Enclosed each winter. Close to KU. Furnished apartment for 2 KU men. Shower, twin beds. Enclosed each winter. Close to KU. Utilities paid. Kitchen-cement Apartment with bath. Utilities paid. Private entrance. For summer, $25 Cause to KU. Inquire at 1065 Miss, VI 3-14-2015 5-21 Furnished house for 3 KU men. Utilities Close to campus. Call VI 3-4349. 5-21 Comfortable furnished apartments 1 block north of Corbin. Cool, quiet house. Call VI 3-6158 for appointment after 4 p.m. or at noon. 5-21 Furnished apartments just $ \mathbf{l}_{2} $ block cas of Pni Delta Theta. Private entrance and baths. First floor or walk-out base ment. 1609 Tenn. Terr. Call VI 3-6155 for appointment at noon or after 4 p.m. 5-2 Furnished apartments with utilities paid information call VI 3-3566 5-21 Very neat small house, attractively furnished, shower bath, cool in summer, close to KU and downtown. $39.00 per month. Call VI 3-6966 or I 2-9314. 5-21 Three room furnished apartment for 1 or 2 rooms. Attractive, completely priced, with a 40-minute electricity. Call VI 3-3913 weekends or after 12 p.m. weekdays. 5-21 Furnished apartment for rent. Come to Also, rooms for girls, adjuncts campus. 5-21 Will have some rental property available Next to south KU. Inquire - 3-3293 - 5-21 Bedroom with shower and half-bath. Bathroom privileges if desired. See at 55-14. La. Single or double room. Furnished, cook- ware provided and paid. Call 2-9451 or see at 1244 Lae. Call t Luxurious duplex. Central air-conditioning, close to shopping and University. Wall-to-wall carpet, all electric kitchen, swimming pool. Absolutely the finest 2 bedroom units. Contact Mr. Osborne now. VI 3-1116, 4243 Cedarwood. tf Now renting new Ridge House Cabana Units. Swimming pool, carpet, air-conditioning, 1 bedroom furnished or unfurnished, 1 bedroom shopping and dining. Ready for ocean play in August. Contact Mr. Osborne now for this fall. VI 3-1164, 2403 Cedarwood. tf Bachelor Studio Apartment for graduate or older undergraduate men. 1½ blocks from Union, only few remodeled buildings,fillitttle parking ideal study conditions. A few still available at low summer rates. Singles and doubles. For appointment call VI 3-8534. Moving to Kansas City? Then dig these brand new beautiful apartments in the Prairie Village-Overland Park area. 1 and 2 bedrooms, wall-to-wall carpet, drapes, central air-conditioning, hottope. From $115 One mile west of Antioch Rd. on 95th Street. The Alex Bascom Co., TU 8-3128 or TU 8-5252. 5-21 Married, grad students, faculty. Efficiency apartment from $65 and small house from $70. Available in June. Call now. Santee Apartments, 1123 Ind., VI 3-2116. Crescent Heights two bedroom apart- bed. Phone VI 2-3711. Large, homey, attractively furnished, 4 room apartment. For summer months at summer rates. Kitchen built-ins and garbage disposal paid. Already paid except on the last available June start. 3 room apt. Call Vi 3-7677. Will rent for summer months. 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. Experienced secretary would like typing home. Reasonable rates. Call Vt 3-5189 For expert typing, dissertation, thesis, work. Electric typewriter. 5-21 TYPING Experienced secretary would like typing. Hendel 2565 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122. 5-21 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Immediate attention on all reports, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate typing at reasonable rates. Call Donna Stewart. VI 3-6621. tf 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 typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term and thesis, etc. Accessory work stands and rates. Phone VI 1-83199. Mrs. Charles Patti. Fast. accurate work done on electri d rates. Call Bett Vincent, VI 3-5504. Experienced typist with electric typewriter—fast accurate work with reasonable papers, papers, themes and theses, phone VI 3-7652. Mrs. Frank Gibson. Accurate expert typist would like typing Accurate expert typist would like typing Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. Experienced typist for thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter (pica type). Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Mississippi, VI 3-#558. ºº Term papers, Thesis, by experienced typists. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon printer. Marlene 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 408 West 13th. **tf** Experienced Typtist –Dissertations, Theses, Manuscripts and Writing with carbon ribbon and special symbols available. Prompt Recognition of Photos by Cool Coop 2000 Rhode Island, VI 3-7485 Secretary will do typing in home. Fast legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577. TYPING: Experimented typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, articles, research resumes. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568 t Patronize Kansan Advertisers YELLOW CAB CO. VI 3-6333 24 Hr. Service Radio Controlled STUDENTS Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. Brake Adj. . . . 98c Grease Jobs . . $1.00 PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd GB Recording Service and Party Music tapes: recorded or duplicated records: cut or pressed 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 Thursday, May 21, 1964 MILKIKEN SOS—always nstr quality typing on LB.M. Carbon ribbon machines. On the tape transcriptions. Office hours—7 a.m. p1. p2. p121/1241 MacPhone VI 3-5920 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, formats and dressmakers'owns. Ola Smith, 93% M&M V 3-128 L&M CAFE now under new management We meet you open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Our first lunches are delicious lunches, dinners, and sandwiches Your second cup of coffee always free, ent a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, $16 Mass. VI 3-1267. t MISCELLANEOUS Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign colns, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. ti WANTED Riders to and from downtown K.C., Mo. via turnpike, Monday through Friday at Lawrence at approximately 6:30 a.m. Leave K.C. at 5:21. Phone VI 2-9355. Graduate student destres air-conditioned July July July July Rybnbrandt, U 4-3045 5-21 Wanted ride to New York anytime between June 1 and June 5. Will share expenses. Please call VI 3-6696. 5-21 Vanted to buy: 1952 or 35 Ford, stiek. Vanted to buy: 5 p.m. and ask-5 marc McGinn. marc McGinn. No place to store your bike this summer? I'll rent your bicycle. Man's or woman's (lightweight) wanted. Call VI 2-3972. 5-21 To Rent; 3 or 4 room apartment for June only. Call Mrs. Branden at UN 4-3935, or after 5 p.m. at VI 3-4292. 5-21 Summer students. Need reliable sitter 3 For information call VI 2-6306. 5-21 For information call VI 2-6306. 5-21 VOLKSWAGEN' WANTED. Cash for your VW. Conzelman Motors, VW Sales Service, and Parts. 2522 Iowa. Hiway 50 Opportunity for male keyboard musician located in sales demonstrations. Wk giving age, experience, type of instrument. So. HELP WANTED Kansas City Summer Job, Ag. or Landscape Architect Student not afraid of new apartment project. Both design and field work. Reply by letter stating age, current job title to Alex Bassin, Co. 9451 Valentine Lane, Overland Park, Kansas. TU 8-5252. Attention College Men. Local company needs fulltime men for summer employment. Several locations in Kansas available. Above average income. For per- sonal expenses, work at KC at 9:10 a.m. 9:100, Thursday, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday, 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. 5-21 JOE'S BAKERY 616 W. 9th Open 24 hours except Saturday evening 25c delivery VI 3-4720 KERBY'S DEPENDABLE STATION - 'Vett headquarters Mobilgas - 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. THE NAME FOR SERVICE ★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT ★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK ★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED University Daily Kansan Page 19 ART'S TEXACO 9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897 ★ MUFFLER SERVICE ★ TUNE-UPS ★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M. Wanted—experienced or trainee adjuster for Kansas City area. Good opportunity to work with a team Write and give resume of background to arrange appointment. Russell Smith, Jr., Hartford Exchange Insurance Group, 800 Incustre Excuse Building, Kansas 5. Missouri 5-21 Young men and women needed in all 50 states. Opportunity to earn and travel. For information on where to apply mail $2.00 to Beggs and Howe Employment Research, P.O. Box 585, Springfield, Oregon. LOST One navy blue "H.I.S." jacket. Brand new. Taken by accident from chair in Strong basement. Last Friday around 11:30 a.m. Cali VI 2-3014. 5-21 Room and board in very nice home near campus. For right person interested in being with well-mannered children (Aspen, 9, 6, 4). Call Mrs. Milliken VI 3-5847. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Riders wanted to and from downtown K.C., Mo. via Hwy. 10. During summer, Leave Lawrence 7:15 a.m. Leave K.C. 6 p.m. Call Mike, VI 3-1238. 5-21 Lost May 14. Pink gold, leather strap, Jaeger-LeCoultre ladies wrist watch. Be- reen Green and White Halls. Re- call VI345 or UN 4-3821, or come to 127 Strong. 5-21 SUMMER SALES—National Co. is interviewing now through June 15 for men interested in sales or management months. Write or call Fine Arts Co. 912 E. 63, Kansas City, Mo. ME 3-6433. SUMMER SALES MANAGER — Fine Arts Co. needs direct sales mgr, for college program. Earn $3,000-$5,000 during summer months. For interviews write or call Fine Arts, 912 E. 63, Kansas City, Mo. EM 3-6433. 5-21 PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Hallmark Cards When you care enough to send the very best - Parker Pens * Stationery * Printing 4 E. 7th BULLOCK'S VI 3-2261 Just West of Post Office AGS When buying diamonds Look for this sign MIMBER OF ABS MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY NATIONAL BRIDAL SERVICE In Lawrence, your Authorized Dealer is Delbert A. Eisele Marks Jewelers 817 Mass. VI 3-4266 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 2 Bedrooms 1 Bedroom 2 Bedrooms Swimming Pool FOR INFORMATION CONTACT Crescent Heights Apts. Mgr. Page 20 University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 21, 1964 Joe Louis Celebrates Fiftieth Birthday NEW YORK—(UPI)—The first 20 years didn't count for Joe Louis and, at 50, he insisted today that he wouldn't like the last 30 over, either. the immortal Brown Bomber of the ring said in his slow, sotto voce manner that birthdays were nice but he hoped there would be another 50. Yet there is no happiness in the big man about those early years after he was born in a cabin in an Alabama cotton patch and, as for the later years in which he won the heavyweight championship of the world, retired undefeated and tried a comeback unsuccessfully, he shrugs them off, too. JOE IS DEEPLY in hock to Uncle Sam for income taxes. The figure isn't known but it's more than $1 million. "Iimagine," he said softly, "If I had been fighting in these days of closed circuit television. Imagine how much I might owe the man." So Joe shuffles down the years with his usual bland manner. But he's willing to talk, in his quiet manner, and his observations are of keen interest. They include his feelings that: - Sonny Liston is the best fighter in the world. - Cassius Clay, who beat Liston for the heavyweight title, is "by no comparison" as good a fighter as Billy Conn. - That Listen will win back the title "if he gets a chance." - There "definitely" should be a Federal Boxing Commissioner. - That boxing isn't really in as bad a shape as most people believe. Louis, looking fit at 235 compared with the 214 he weighed when Rocky Marciano ended his comeback in October of 1951, rubbed his thin black moustache as he pondered his answers. "Clay is a good enough fighter," he said, "But it's unfortunate that he's a member of the Black Muslims. A champion should represent all sects, not just one." He personally, never has been approached by the Black Muslim sect, Louis averred with an amused look. JOE, WHO IS a five handicap golfer and lives in Los Angeles, said that he was doing "nothing much now" since helping Liston get in shape for the Clay fight. "I think he was in shape but he got whipped when his left arm was hurt," Joe insisted. "No matter, he's still the best fighter in the world today and I definitely think NA Ethan Smith can show you how to get an accurate estimate on your move he'll win back the title if he gets a chance." The only thing wrong with boxing, said Louis, is that it needs a "few more" Jack Dempseys, Gene Tunneys, Ray Robinsons and Rocky Marcianos. Developed by experts, the North American Van Lines method of estimating is "Quality Controlled" for accuracy. Our men have been trained to use this system, so if you are moving across town or cross-country, call for a FREE estimate. There is no obligation. Ethan Smith Moving & Storage 808 Penn. V1 3-0380 ON HAND AT HIS party were such as New York Giant football ace Frank Gifford, former middleweight champion turned actor Rocky Graziano and boxers Skeeter McClure, Emile Griffith and Jose Torres. YOUR NORTH AMERICAN VAN LINES AGENT NORTH AMERICAN VAN LINES TOWING & TRANSPORTATION MOTORS VOLLEYBALLS RIDE ON RAILWAYS "You recognize me standing up?" Graziano quipped. The staff of the KU Arnold Air Society has been announced by the area commander, Cadet Col. Craig E. McComb, Prairie Village junior. Arnold Air Society Chooses New Staff The members are: Cadet Lt. Col. Brewster B. Snyder, Leavenworth junior, executive officer; Cadet Maj. Kenneth C. Leone, Alexandria, Va., sophomore, administrative officer; Cadet Maj. Irwin J. Epperson, Topeka sophomore, operations officer; and Cadet Major L. David Lutton, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, information officer. The Arnold Air Society is a nation-wide professional honorary society of Air Force ROTC cadets The area commanded by the staff is composed of seven colleges and universities in the Midwest, including KU. Lt. Col. G. E. Hallas, professor of Air Science at KU, is the USAF area adviser. KSU Student Senate Doubles Athletic Share MANHATTAN—(UPI)—The Kansas State University Student Senate have doubled the athletic department's share of the student activities fee. The student body gave the athletic department an $83,000 cut of the $287,000 budget for 1964-65. The athletic department, seeking to beef up the university football program, had asked for $100,000. Last year the department received $44,000. The Student Union was allocated $82,000 and $70,000 was approved for student publications. H. B. (Bebe) Lee, athletic director, said the requested increase would go towards additional scholarships, the hiring of another coach and improved training tables. The Student Senate's action must be approved by university President James A. McCain. Money for the student fee budget comes from yearly assessments of $33 per student. When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds NOTICE Both our fine locations wish to thank you for your steady patronage for the past year. We wish you the best of luck for the summer, and we hope to see you all again in September. FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN DOWNTOWN PLANT 900 Miss. 740 Vt. Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi K