Daily Hansan
62nd Year, No.1
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
KU Enrollment Skyrocketing
The building is a large, multi-story structure with a flat roof and numerous windows. It appears to be a commercial or institutional building, possibly housing offices or facilities related to education or government. The street in front of the building is busy with cars parked along the sidewalk.
Most Youths Go To College
KU's freshmen are part of a new wave of students which mark the first time in the nation's history when the young people who have chosen to accept the opportunity to enter college are in the majority rather than in the minority.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe called this a "magnificent accomplishment" when he spoke at the new student convocation Sunday in Memorial Stadium.
"It is significant for your generation, of course, but it has, I believe, an ever greater and broader significance," Dr. Wescos said as KU opened its 99th year.
"THAT GREATER significance is for our society. This unprecedented surge toward higher education must inevitably lead to a change in the nature and in the quality of our society."
The chancellor urged the record number of new students to immerse themselves totally in the academic and cultural life of the University.
"For obvious reasons I cannot tell you cuphemistically that you are about to enter upon the freeway toward success," he said at the convocation before the new students were inducted.
NEW BLAKE—An example of KU's growth is the new Blake Hall completed this year at a cost of about $750,000. It will house the departments of sociology, political science, and social work and human relations and the Governmental Research Center.
"We cannot promise that the tolls will always remain the same, but we can promise that the payment of the toll will always provide a fair exchange—a program of the highest possible quality worth the price—and more."
"I CAN, HOWEVER, tell you that you already have entered upon the turnpike that stretches toward that goal. Along the way there are tollgates; by your own resources or by those of your parents and families," he said.
No TCU Tickets Needed by Students
Students will be admitted to the first football game Saturday against Texas Christian University on an unreserved seat basis by showing the printed certificate of registration obtained during enrollment, Monte Johnson, assistant athletic director, said.
Johnson said a printed sheet of instructions will be distributed to the students when they enroll.
Student spouse tickets will be available at the field house upon payment of the spouse fee.
Growth, Pain Accompany New KU Rushing Rules
Sorority-fraternity rush opened this fall with a new twist and some painful experiences.
In August each fraternity for the first time was allowed to pledge up to 75 per cent of the house quota of bledges.
During the open rush, held Aug. 1-8, each man whose admission to KU had been approved was able to sign, upon invitation, ah official pledge card from a fraternity.
rushee's home towns with a total of 263 men pledge.
During the regular rush period, 292 men were pledged.
August pledging took place in the
Donald K. Alderson, dean of men,
said other men would be pledged
throughout the year. The total men's
pledge list of 555 is 64 larger than in
1963.
The new system of rushing was expected to ease the tight housing situation for many rushees. Pros-
(Continued on page 14)
game, the last in a series with the Horned Frogs which began in 1942.
FIGHT TEAM—The KU cheerleaders are practicing for their debut at the TCU football game Saturday. The Jayhawks are expected to win the
1,000 Jump Expected As Housing Overflows
By Kav Jarvis
An anticipated 1,000 jump in enrollment this year is forcing University officials to use every available space for housing.
All men's and freshman women's residence halls have been filled and upperclass women's halls are overflowing. Some upperclass women are even commuting or living in Lawrence homes until space for them can be found in University housing.
Some two person rooms in L. N. Lewis, North Corbin, Gertrude Sellards Pearson, Olin Templin, and Fred Ellsworth Halls are being used to accommodate three persons.
EVEN THE IRONING ROOMS at Margaret Hashinger Hall are being converted into living quarters for two women each.
The ironing rooms, which are located one to a wing in the eight-story residence hall, are planned to provide living spaces for 24 women. Mary Watson, assistant to the dean of women, said no one had thought of using the ironing rooms until this situation came up, but she said they are quite suitable. Each has a large closet, formerly used as a formal closet, cabinets and a sink, and space for bunk beds and desks.
Furniture is now being moved into the former ironing rooms, and ironing facilities have been moved to the lounges that are on each floor.
ALL REGULAR RESIDENCE HALLS are filled and Oread and Hodder Halls have been opened to help with the overflow. Presently 52 men are living in Oread Hall, located just west of Memorial Stadium, and 22 women in Hodder Hall, 1115 Louisiana. Residents of Oread Hall will be served meals in the Joseph R. Pearson Hall dining room.
Space has been made in the freshman residence halls for 11 upperclass women. This, however, as with many of the new housing arrangements, is considered a temporary measure, and it is hoped they will be done away with as vacancies occur in regular housing.
Miss Watson said most of the women realize that the problem was created because they sent in residence hall contracts late and because of fall rush. She said the women are cooperating very well until spaces can be found.
MISS WATSON SAID THE WOMEN who did not pledge during upperclass women's fall rush could not make arrangements for University housing contracts during the summer as other upper-class women did and they were left without housing after rush.
Miss Watson said although no contracts had been signed the University felt an obligation to find housing for them since they
All-University Convocation Planned
An All-University Convocation is scheduled for 9:30 a.m. Monday in Hoch Auditorium. Classes which normally will meet at that time have been cancelled. All other classes will meet as scheduled.
This is the only time scheduled for Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe to address all the students and faculty.
had indicated an intent to attend KU. These 21 women have been housed in L.N.Lewis and Hodder Halls.
Grace Pearson Hall, which housed freshman women for the first time last year, has returned to being used as a men's residence hall and 196 freshman women are now living in Carruth-O'Leary Hall, which last year housed senior women.
THE 10-STORY FRED ELLSWORTH HALL, the campus' newest men's residence hall, has a listed capacity of 670 students. At present, it is accommodating 725 men with four three-man rooms on each wing.
Fred McElhanie, assistant to the dean of men, said 200 additional spaces, including Grace Pearson, Oread, and three-man rooms, are being utilized for men's housing in comparison to 1963 figures and all are full.
He said a total of 160 rooms have been converted to house three roommates in the large men's residence halls.
A REPORTED 480 RESIDENTS are housed at Olin Templin Hall and 464 at Joseph R. Pearson Hall.
A record total of 555 men pledged during men's fall rush.
Marcia Goldstein, assistant to the dean of women, said 973 freshman women have been housed: 196 in Carruth-O'Leary Hall, 357 in Corbin Hall and 420 in Gertrude Sellars Pearson Hall.
Miss Watson said 468 upperclass women have been accommodated in Margaret Hashinger Hall, 464 in L. N. Lewis Hall, and 79 pledged in fall rush.
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
Football Parking
Garage Proposed
A year ago certain members of the Class of'64 in charge of the class funds perceived a need for a $1,500 speaker system for the stadium, a system that gets used at most 15 times a year. In spring semester Vox Populi won a majority of the political offices on the hill on a platform which had as one of its firmest planks the realization of a need for stadium expansion and a pledge to arrange for another new deck of seats, on the students' side this time.
As it is now, persons who live in J. R. Pearson and Carruth-O'Leary Halls, who have had to pay the same $4 (this year $10) every other dorm dweller has had to pay to park his car in the lot adjacent to his dorm, have had dreadful inconvenience—if not injustice—foisted off on them every football day.
Being as concerned for the good of the stadium as any other bright-witted undergraduate, I sense still another need: Where will all our good students, alums and drunkards park their conveyances with all those additional people?
That is, if they are not back in Zone A with their cars before 10 a.m. they have to pay a dollar to park there, just like the rest of the football crowd.
I propose we look into the construction of a parking garage on a site near the stadium, perhaps where Oread Hall now stands, so we would have a clear excuse to get rid of that flimsy old rat trap at the same time. What could be closer than that? Or perhaps at one end of Zone X.
With cars banned from the campus during the day this year and even during most of the night beginning this year, the convenience and value of such a garage is obvious. It could be used all year. Perhaps the students could finance it, or the alums, or the state, or a combination of these. Surely it would not be much more expensive than another deck of seats for the stadium.
A parking station could allow the campus police to close Zone A to public parking entirely, as it should be if dorm residents have already paid to park there.
A parking station could be operated by the university, perhaps through aids and awards as
another source of student employment. The fees charged to park there could be arranged with that idea in mind: that the revenue would go toward maintenance of the establishment and the payment of its student employees.
The structure could be a multiple-storied affair (say five or six) with ramps—or better, elevators to take care of the customers more quickly, similar to the ones you have seen in Kansas City and other large cities. Or it could be an underground thing such as Kansas City has under its municipal auditorium and music hall.
The multiple-story above-ground building is a better idea because it could be planned for the addition of more levels later on without taking more ground space. Expansion for an underground garage would be much more involved, would it not?
Unsightliness could not be a valid objection to a multiple-stored garage. It would be no uglier than that massive, drab monolithic wall that makes up the most recent addition to the stadium. If sightliness is to be a consideration, why not turn some student architects here loose on the problem—and offer a prize or a scholarship for the winning design?
Unquestionably there is need for such a parking garage near the campus. The one serious problem I see immediately is that the streets leading to the stadium are narrow and not good.
Well, that's nothing new. It has been pandemonium on game days and the roads impassable as long as I can remember.
There has been talk in the master plan of the university about tunnels between two or three buildings. How feasible would a tunnel be if it went under, say, Maine Street from Ninth Street to the stadium?
Whatever other disparaging remarks could be aimed at a parking station such as I propose, uselessness for most of the year would not be one of them.
The powers-that-bel or the senior gift committees of the next class or two should look seriously into the matter. — Tom Winston
Welcome Freshman
According to the student handbook issued to all new students by the University, it isn't easy to adjust to college.
However, it doesn't matter how many services and opportunities are offered by the University. the next four years for all freshmen will be different.
No one can obtain the college degree you want except you. Your degree is your responsibility.
IT ISN'T HARD to adjust to the social life in any community.
In the college community adjustment is relatively easy. The hard adjustment comes in learning to study. This is the responsibility of the individual to himself.
Students come and go. When they become
alumni their memories of college days are not the hours they spent studying every semester. Instead they remember their hours of relaxation However, these are memories and nothing else.
When they step away from the halls of ivy into the world of realism they carry with them the results gained from those long hours of study.
In today's world of mass production and quick turnover, an individual's economic situation is very important.
THERE IS ONLY one thing more expensive than a good education in our modern world. That is a bad education.
The latter is paid for over a lifetime.
Welcome to KU. — Jim Langford
The People Say.
One of the main functions of any newspaper is to provide space where its readers can express opinions on any subject.
The University Daily Kansan welcomes all letters on any issue, including its own policies, opinions and coverage. The paper encourages letters on all topics, large or small.
The Kanson policy on letters is:
Any letter which we receive which is in good taste we will try to print as space allows.
This policy, however, does not give the writer license to attack personalities.
All letters must be signed. Names will be withheld only if, in the editor's opinion, the writer's request for anonymity is valid. However, in
Letters will not be cut without permission from the writer, but the Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for style, grammar and punctuation.
all cases the writer's name will be known by the editors.
Letters must be typewritten, double-spaced and on one side of the page. To insure immediate publication letters should be kept as brief as possible.
The University Daily Kansan is your newspaper. It is written, edited and run by students for students. Only through your newspaper can you reach the majority of the student body. Only through its use can you be sure that your opinions will be heard. Jim Langford
GOLDQUARTER HEADWATERS
© 2014 HERBLOCK
"On Ending Violence In The Streets-I Think I'd Cut Out That Part About Small Tactical Nuclear Bombs"
BOOK REVIEWS
THE JOURNALS OF LEWIS AND CLARK, selected and with introduction by John Bakeless (Mentor, 75 cents).
One of the most heroic and significant episodes in American history is told in this selection of the celebrated journals. Meriwether Lewis and William Clark went west on their expedition in 1805, kept separate diaries of their travels into the wilderness, and the journals later were published, to become classics.
This volume was compiled from manuscripts belonging to the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia. Bakeless has written an introduction and included maps of the expedition. The journals begin in North Dakota and describe the rations, the cold, the hunger, the exhaustion, the danger, the Indians, the beauty of the country.
BF
Kipling was an imperialist and a world traveler. He looked at people in all parts of the world, but chiefly in Asia, and his most fascinating stories are those set in India. Among the stories in this volume are titles familiar to readers of an older generation—"Without Benefit of Clergy," "The Man Who Was," "The Man Who Would Be King," "The Strange Ride of Morrowbie Jukes." Roger Burlingame, the historian, has written an introduction.
We don't hear much about Kipling any more. Thirty years ago he was still a vastly popular author, but imperialism is not to our liberal tastes in the sixties. This is a collection of Kipling's short stories, and readers with detachment can enjoy them, keeping in mind that they were written in an era when viewpoints were different from those of today.
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MODERN RULES OF ORDER, by Luther S. Cushing (Crest, 50 cents); OFFICIAL RULES OF CARD GAMES, edited by Albert H. Morehead (Crest, 60 cents) Two handy works for almost all readers. The first was published originally as "Cushing's Manual of Parliamentary Practice," and is a handy and authoritative guide on how to run meetings. The second is a mighty good little book to have around, and it has the new international laws of contract bridge, as well as rules on many other kinds of games.
***
Aft budge year, grant from sumn
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THE MARK OF THE BEAST, AND OTHER STORIES, by Rudyard Kipling (Signet Classics, 50 cents).
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UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom
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Managing Editor
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on back. Leta Catheart, Bob Jones, Greg Swartz, Assistant Managing Editors; Linda Ellis, Feature-Society Editor; Russ Corbitt, Sports Editor.
Jim Langford and Rick Mabbutt ... Co-Editorial Editors
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Page 3
Board of Regents Cut $311,000 From 1966 KU Budget Requests
Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Bv Judv Farrell
After cutting $311,000 from KU's budget request for the 1966 fiscal year, the State Board of Regents granted the University $14,493,400 from the general revenue fund at a summer meeting.
ago our hort g inffer-
KU's original budget request, 16.6 per cent higher than last year's, was for the Graduate School and library, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said in submitting the request.
d at most this With- rlin-
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The KU budget and those for nine other schools on the state system will now be submitted to the governor and the 1966 legislature for approval.
1. 1912.
Press.
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rates:
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versity
Law-
THE BOARD OF REGENTS' first meeting of the 1964-65 school year will be Sept. 18 in Topeka.
Editor
imaging
Editor.
Editors
Lawrence D. Morgan, a Goodland rancher and banker, became chairman of the Board of Regents on July 1. Morgan, whose term expires December 31, 1966, succeeds Henry Bubb, a Topeka banker.
The University was also granted permission to construct permanent walks and steps leading from Lewis, Templin and Hashinger residence halls to service roads at a cost of $15,000.
W. F. Dannenbarger, Concordia radio station owner, was re-elected vice-chairman at the June meeting.
manager
artising
Fisher,
Grazda,
THE KU MEDICAL CENTER was authorized to install a two-way closed circuit television network between Kansas City and the Lawrence campuses. The network will cost $50,000 with $25,000 coming from the National Science Foundation matched with $25,000 from the research overhead fund.
Construction of an athletic guest room in the football stadium, to be built by contributions, also was approved.
Approval of a botanical research
The first holder of the Max Kade distinguished professorship will be Gerhard Storz, minister of education of the Land Wurtemberg-Baden in West Germany the past six years.
German Professor Gets New Honor
Storz is professor of German literature at the University of Tubingen, Germany, but has been on leave for government service. He will return to Tubingen after the KU assignment.
The appointment for 1964-65 carries the regular salary of a professor supplemented by a grant of $4,000 from the Max Kade Foundation, Inc. of New York.
A coincidence is that both Kade 75-year-old head of the foundation and Storz are natives of Schwabisch-Hall in Germany.
laboratory at a cost of $90,000 also was granted. The laboratory will be built on University-owned land and funded by a $5,000 grant from the National Science Foundation and $45,000 from the research overhead fund.
IN OTHER ACTION at the June 26-27 meetings the Board of Regents authorized:
- Repair and improvement program for KU to be payable from the legislative appropriations for special repairs and improvements.
- KU to contract with the Lawrence adult education program for participation of dormitory employees in night school subjects.
- Purchase Kansas Union bonds with a par value of $5,000.
- Establishment of an institute for the teaching of English as a foreign language.
- The KU medical center to accept contributions to build a chapel, subject to the approval of the state architect.
- At the final meeting of the 1963-64 school year on May 26, the Board of Regents approved the borrowing of funds from the KU Endowment Association for use in building a new dormitory. The funds borrowed from the Endowment Association will be repaid from state funds.
- KU to contract with Midwest Weather Service in Kansas City for the teaching of two courses there.
DU's Collect Three Awards In National Competition
A triple sweep of the three national competitions among chapters of the Delta Upsilon social fraternity has been scored by the KU chapter.
The MU chapter won the sweepstakes award as the outstanding DU chapter in the nation in terms of overall program; it won the scholarship cup, emblematic of the highest scholarship among the more than 90 chapters; and it won the pledge education plaque for having the best pledge training program.
THIS IS THE first triple win for the KU chapter and is believed to be the first in Delta Upsilon history.
In scholarship the KU chapter had a grade point average of 1.75 for the 1963-64 year, placing it third among 27 fraternities on the campus, but highest among DU chapters in relation to the all-men's average.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
New Students Introduced To World of Organizations
If enrollment and registration were not confusing enough for new KU students, the SUA introduced them to the large and diversified world of campus organizations on Tuesday night at the SUA Carnival.
All of the major campus groups
University Theatre Schedules Rally
The University Theatre is sponsoring a Theater Rally at 7 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre to give audition instructions and explain international tours and other phases of the theater.
Theater auditions will be at 7 p.m. Monday in the University Theatre for the four upcoming productions, "A Man for All Seasons," "West Side Story," "Peter Pan," and "The Doctor in Spite of Himself."
All students are eligible to audition for any or all of the productions. The theater needs actors, singers, dancers, designers and technicians.
KU Dean Re-elected
Burton W. Marvin, dean of the School of Journalism, has been elected to a second four-year term on the Methodist Commission on Public Relations and Information.
were represented and gave out information to the newcomers in order to familiarize them with the activity opportunities on campus.
Members of the various organizations hawked their wares in the manner of a circus to induce new students to join. About 65 groups were represented at the carnival.
Many newcomers joined the organizations on the spot thus boosting the roles of many groups. Others seemed hesitant to commit themselves and wanted time to think about joining.
Several representatives of the student body organizations were present to answer questions concerning their activities.
Among other activities planned for freshman and transfer students this week are free movies in Fraser Theater tonight at 7 and 9 p.m. and on Friday evening the annual Traditions Rally and Street dance will be held in the Recreation Area of Templin Hall.
Ph.D. Candidate Wins
The 1964 winner of the $500 Lydia J. Roberts essay contest of the American Dietetics Association was Mrs. Betty LaRue Herndon, a Ph.D. degree candidate at KU.
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Page 5
Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
University Daily Kansan
Grad Returns Favor to KU By Aiding Scholarship Fund
Charles E. Winters of Kansas City, received both the bachelor of architecture and the bachelor of science in architectural engineering degrees from KU in August.
Because scholarship funds made possible his education, a KU student began opening the same opportunity for others even as he was being graduated.
Shortly before graduation he wrote the architecture scholarship committee, "I feel it my responsibility as a graduate and recipient of these awards to in turn offer aid to future KU students as much as my position will allow.
"I WOULD LIKE, then to take this opportunity to begin such aid by contributing the enclosed check for $175 to be placed in the Joseph Kellogg scholarship fund."
The architecture department has been able to assist him with scholarships totaling $1,350 from the Tile Council of America and Charles S. Haines, an alumnus who is a partner in the large New York architectural firm.
Winters won a Summerfield scholarship as he graduated from Wyandotte High School in 1955. He justified that honor, the highest recognition KU can confer on entering freshman men, by ranking in the upper one percent of his class throughout his years in the University.
He entered the Army in 1959 and resumed his studies two years ago, but this time with a wife and child.
In letters of appreciation to the Tile Council and Haines, Winters pledged "to return this aid to future students at KU."
The United States space program is a phenomenon often heard and talked about but not so often understood by the non-scientific student.
Air Force Officers To Discuss Space
To help KU students more readily comprehend the scope and aims of the U.S. space program, the American concept of space, and the meaning of astronautics, a lecture by officers of the U.S. Air Force Air University is scheduled for 3:30 p.m., Sept. 30 in Swarthout Recital Hall.
The program, under the direction of Lt. Col. G. E. Hallas, professor of air science, is sponsored by the department of aerospace and the department of air science.
A specialist in science education and a systematic botanist joined the botany department as associate professors this fall.
Associate Professors Added to Department
They are James L. Koevenig, resident consultant to the American Institute of Biological Sciences Curriculum Studies program head-quartered at the University of Colorado, and Andrew Torres, for three years a staff member at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee.
USO Asks Theater Students To Do Real Cool Performance
Five weeks of "real cool" work is the prospect for 17 theater students in the late summer of 1965.
The United Service Organizations and American Educational Theatre Association have invited KU to supply a unit to tour military installations in the Northeast Command—Newfoundland, Greenland and Iceland—Aug. 2-Sept. 5.
The invitation was extended to Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe by Jerome Coray, director of USO shows.
The production will be the musical "Little Mary Sunshine," which will be presented in February in the Experimental Theatre.
Nancy Yunovich, Arkansas City graduate student and assistant instructor, will be the director. The cast and others in the tour group will be chosen in competitive tryouts.
This will be the third KU theater production chosen for a USO tour of military bases. The musical "Brigadon" in 1960 and "The Boy
Friend" in 1963 were taken to the Pacific and Far East areas.
Operations of the USO, which has an official responsibility for the off-duty welfare of members of the U.S. armed forces, are supported by contributions from the American public.
"We are delighted to receive and be able to accept this invitation to supply a USO show," Chancellor Wescoe said.
"It enables us to help the men who are protecting us and at the same time provides 17 of our students valuable professional training," he said.
Conference Slated
The sixtlr annual Rock Products Conference has been set for Dec. 10 and 11. Representatives of the Kansas Limestone Association, State Highway Commission, KU Extension and State Geological Survey planned the program which will include sessions ranging from construction and materials to market trends and public relations.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
Family Life Department Started Here
Food is still one of the main ways to a man's heart, and clothes to a woman's.
But what was formerly the home economics department at KU believes there are other essentials for a happy home life.
Renamed the department of family life, its curriculum offers more than food and clothing courses.
And for both the homemaker and career girl, there is a relatively new course," Woman in Contemporary Culture," a study of women's multiple roles in today's society. This course has usually included several interested males.
For example, there are classes tracing the courtship period from engagement to marriage. After these come the less romantic aspects in such courses as Special Problems in Family Life, I, and II.
These changes indicate that Family Life focuses on a change of direction, according to Prof. Frances Horowitz, acting chairman of the department. Prof. Horowitz, a developmental psychologist, said staff members from disciplines other than home economics will strengthen both the undergraduate areas of emphasis and the graduate research program in cooperation with other departments of the University.
Particular stress has been placed on child development courses, from infant stage to adolescence. Child care and guidance classes, originally for nurses only, provide information to sooth anxious mothers.
Establishment of the Richard Marden Barnes Memorial Student Loan Fund at the University of Kansas was made in August.
Memorial Fund Set for'60 Grad
Richart, son of Dr. and Mrs. Conrad M. Barnes of Seneca, was president of his University graduating class of 1960. Following graduation, he was a member of a three-man team created to establish People-to-People programs at the college level in all 50 states.
He was fatally injured in an automobile accident near Seneca on July 16, 1964.
The fund was established through contributions of friends of the family. It will be used, on a loan basis, to assist worthy students from foreign lands studying at the University, a project in which Richart was much interested during his lifetime.
The memorial fund will be permanent on the records of the Endowment Association and will remain open for further contributions in his memory.
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Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964 University Daily Kansan
29 Page 7
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
KU to Coordinate 8 Laboratories In Perfection of Satellite Radar
The University of Kansas will coordinate a $1,800,000 research project at eight university and government laboratories to perfect radar techniques for one of the first orbiting research laboratory satellites, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration has announced.
Work will begin immediately at several locations in the U.S. and Canada.
The project, one of the largest of its kind ever undertaken at the University, is expected to span three years. It will be directed by Prof. Richard K. Moore of the KU Center for Research, Inc., assisted by Robert Ellermeier, instructor of electrical engineering.
THE KU-DIRECTED research will test many kinds of radar and radiometry equipment, and will make recommendations about how various types could be used aboard a satellite.
Radar and radiometry devices may ride the first manned, orbiting spacecraft around the moon, which may be launched sometime in 1969. The radar can map the surface of the moon before Americans land there, perhaps in 1970.
A main reason for the research, Moore said, is that little is known about how well radar performs at such high altitudes in surveying vast land areas. Only in relatively recent earth satellite flights has radar been taken to altitudes approximating that of the moon probe.
Moore is an authority on highaltitude radar and has served as a consultant to U.S. government agencies in interpreting radar data from earth satellites.
FOUR SENIOR geographers and geologists from KU and at least four geology and geography graduate students will have major roles in the research. David Simonett, associate professor of geography, will be their group leader.
Others include Joe Eagleman, assistant professor of geography, Louis Dellwig, professor of geology, and M. E. Bickford, associate professor of geology.
Of the first year's allocation of almost $600,000 from NASA, more than $230,000 will go for work at the Center for Research on the Lawrence campus of the University.
Other research will be at the Air Force Wright Air Development Center, Dayton, Ohio; Acadia University, Nova Scotia; Ohio State University; the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at California Institute of Technology; the Naval Research Laboratory; the U.S. Army Waterways
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PART OF THE investigation will involve flying "radar laboratory" airplanes from the Wright Air Development Center and Naval Research Laboratory over selected sites in the continental United States and Hawaii to test capabilities of electronic sensing devices. It will be determined from the flights how well various kinds of equipment detect ground moisture, soil and rock types, vegetation, and ground features, such as geological faults and coastline detail.
A second part of the research will be done at KU, where radar, geography, and geology specialists will attempt to match radar theory with performance, and show how an orbiting radar-radiometer laboratory can increase knowledge of the earth's surface and its daily changing moisture, vegetation, and snow cover.
The geographers and geologists will interpret what the radar "sees" as it scans simulated miniature planetary surfaces in KU laboratories. They also will advise how to set up radar experiments over areas of the United States.
ONE TECHNIQUE will be the use of radar color mapping. The geoscientists hope to translate radar signals into colors to represent varying surface features. An article in the July 24 issue of Time magazine explained the success NASA and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers already have had with related radar procedures.
Other radar data will be fed into KU's new IBM 7040 computer, which is to be installed this fall at the University Computation Center. The computer will provide statistical information from radar signals bounced off of rough surfaces.
Enrollment at KU Chosen By 47 State Award Winners
Kenneth R. Gray, Ulysses; Willma Rae Brothers, Wichita; Margaret L Crist, Brewster; William Gene Morton, Hill City; Louise Teresa Barker, Louisburg; Larry David Shannon, Kansas City; Robert Joseph Harrop, Topeka; Donna Jean Slover, Arkansas City; Janice Marie Furnish, Paola; Bryan Kent Marshall, Fredonia.
Robert Louis Satake, Fort Scott;
Carolyn Kay Campbell, Wichita;
Charles C. Yockey, Lyndon; Karen
Jean Schlueter, Wichita; Jo Ann
Shipley, Kansas City
The program, now in its second year, was authorized by the 1963 Legislature. It is administered by the State Department of Public Instruction and provides for the payment of a winner's fees at any Kansas college or university in full up to $500 a year.
Forty-seven of the 200 1964 high school graduates who first qualified as stipend winners in the Kansas State Scholarship Program signified that they would enroll in the University of Kansas.
Charles A. Shoup, Scranton; Robert George Honish, Oakley; Betty May Corkill, Valley Center; Marilyn Sue Moore, Kansas City; Oneita F. Taylor, Kansas City; Barbara Louise Cochrane, Hoisington; Cheryl Sue Milford, Kingman; Judy Lorene Reece, Medicine Lodge; Karen K. Stullken, Lakin; Robert C. Nelson, Herington.
The 47 winners, all freshmen who chose KU are: Marilyn K. Vermillion, Mulvane; Shirley Anne Chegwidden, Sylvan Grove; Anita L. Van Gaasbeck, Nortonville; Richard Edward Bailey, Minneapolis; Robert G. Wittsell, Uniontown; Judith C. Cady, Beloit; Janice M. Brenner, Parsons; Linda Sue Nemeth, Oberlin; Doris Elaine Johnson, Luray; Llona June Marshall, Fort Scott.
Susan M. Saidon, Zurich; H.
Michael Dickerson, Prairie Village;
Sara Ann Bly, Arkansas City;
Nancy Jane Helberg, Phillipsburg;
Glenn Raymond Walker, Brookville;
Dorn Sue Barlow, Haven; Margery Ann Golden, Ottawa; Cheryl Susan Hammerli, Topeka; Dorothy Sloan, Norton; Bonita Ann Holland, Harper; Michael Jack Lowe, Winona; Hugh Robert Bailey, Emporia.
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Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
University Daily Kansan Page 0
Eyewitness Account
Enthusiasm Highlights Democratic Convention
By Linda Ellis (Feature-Society Editor)
From a student's point of view, the Democratic National Convention in Atlantic City was a noisy, hot, crowded conglomeration of people, demonstrations and speeches.
Atlantic City has a flavor all its own, even with the added excitement of a national convention. But to see and hear the public figures of our time in such a setting was a bit awesome.
At a Young Citizens for Johnson rally on the last day of the convention, the city was literally mobbed with teenagers and college students who had come for a specially prepared program of entertainment and speeches. Paul Newman, the venerated actor, was the host and had the task of introducing a number of singing groups and singers to the audience of about 20,000 in the Convention Hall.
IF NOTHING ELSE, the program stirred up a good deal of enthusiasm. The host mace frequent jabs at the Republican nominee, getting a noisy reception for each barb he used.
Both the Johnson girls arrived at the proceedings to accept silver charm bracelets from the national chairman of the Young Citizens for Johnson group. Earl Warren, Jr.
Singer Vic Damone made the blooper of the show when he dedicated the song "Home on the Range" to President Johnson apparently under the impression it was the state song of Texas. Most in the auditorium didn't seem to know or care that it is the state song of Kansas.
AFTER THE SONG a surprise visitor came to speak on his role in the coming campaign. Hubert Humphrey gave a speech that roused the audience to a standing ovation for his words on the election and what it means to the world and our country. He seemed much younger than his pictures show and his vitality was easy to see.
In an off-the-cuff press conference on the balcony of the ocean front
Boeing Grants Go To Six Students
Six business and engineering students have received Boeing Co. scholarships totaling $2,400 for the 1964-65 school year. Each award is a renewal to that school.
Scholarships in engineering will go to Roger T. Baker, Highland, Calif., senior; $500; James A. Lucas, Mapleton senior; $300; John E. Hutson, Kansas City senior; $300; and Frank E. Salber, Russell senior; $300. Hutson and Salber will graduate at the end of the fall semester.
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Beauville Hotel later that afternoon Humphrey already was campaigning. He spoke to individuals in the crowd
He spoke to individuals in the crowd.
When a Kansan asked him if he was going to come to Kansas during the campaign he answered loudly,
"Sure I'm coming to Kansas, I'll be in Wichita to see all my friends down there. I'll see you there."
The tension that one expects at such a large meeting was largely missing except in relation to the comings and goings of the President. It was revealed later that there was an assassination plot afoot by a Puerto Rican laborer and that the President knew about it when he arrived to give his acceptance speech on the last night of the convention.
THE NEW JERSEY State Police
were all over, under, around and
through the crowds of people that stood around the Convention Hall awaiting his arrival. Secret Service guards surrounded the President and they also lined the street. One newsman said he had never seen such a massive protection job and wondered that they could all seem so calm in the face of such an awesome duty.
The only other real source of tension at Atlantic City came from the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party. Stationed directly in front of Convention Hall the group consisted mainly of college students in shorts, jeans and suntan lotion. They each held posters claiming that injustice was being done by the regular Mississippi delegation. Several demonstrators had lived in the South for
most of the summer with the various civil rights groups. It was an organized, polite group.
The demonstrators seemed to be overlooked in the shuffle of passing people, and they just sat there in the sun. One of the group walked around giving out mimeographed literature about a program to be given later in the day by Dick Gregory.
IN THE CENTER of the large circle of students two girls stood at a table making sandwiches and pouring drinks.
It almost seemed planned that the demonstrators were out in front of the memorial to the late John F. Kennedy in order to stir up a normally dull convention. The Democrats appeared to have little to do except get delegates, visitors and
young voters excited about the coming election.
Seeing such a massive meeting in the flesh is an experience that may come once and never again unless one works for one of the leading news media. It was fascinating and informative and just a bit revealing. It is hard to realize that there were about 5,000 delegates to the convention from all over the country.
The big meeting of Democratic bigwigs has been over for almost a month. It was really only a token meeting to convey the party's confidence in its leader, Lyndon B. Johnson, for the next four years. It was messy, expensive, hot and noisy, but never really dull. It was combination circus, carnival and sideshow but it was fun.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
Bobbi Johnson Now Miss U.S.A.
MISS U.S.A.
The new Miss U.S.A. Bobbi Johnson won a host of friends at KU who describe her as "a wonderful girl" and "the real thing."
Bobbi Johnson
And her year's grade point average was 2.2, too.
Barbara Joan (Bobbi) Johnson entered KU as a freshman last fall from Raytown, Mo. Her parents moved to Alexandria, Va., and she attended the American University in Washington, D.C., this summer.
MISS JOHNSON WON the Miss U.S.A. title in July at Miami, Fla., and the right to enter the Miss Universe competition there.
Her transcripts from the high schools at Aberdeen, S.D., and Raytown carried "E" grades exclusively.
On that, plus a really outstanding record in activities, KU awarded her one of the 10 National Science Foundation scholarships made available to exceptional non-resident students interested in science, mathematics or engineering. The scholarship was for $575 for the two semesters. Her interests were mathematics and German.
IT'S NOT SURPRISING that she was the only woman to crack the men's domination of the freshman class election, being chosen class secretary.
Miss Johnson was the 1962 queen of the Kansas City Auto Show and had been school queen at Central High in Aberdeen. As a sophomore she won the South Dakota state mathematics contest and was president of several clubs.
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Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964 University Daily Kansan Page
New Center For Botany To Be Built
Plans for construction of a botanical research center that will emphasize study of Great Plains plants have been announced here.
Ronald L. McGregor, professor and chairman of botany, said a grant of $45,000 from the National Science Foundation plus matching funds from the University will be used for the new facility. The project has been approved by the State Board of Regents.
THE CENTER will provide research room for graduate students and faculty. It will house the 125,000 mounted plant specimens constituting the largest collection of its kind in the Great Plains and a fossil plant collection regarded as the outstanding in the Midwest.
The new building will be located near the three-year-old greenhouse and associated laboratory, on the Bisonte farm west of Highway 59 and 19th Street. The land is owned by the KU Endowment Association.
Prof. McGregor said the new facility will be of concrete block construction and will have about 5,400 square feet of usable space. Fourteen research rooms will be located conveniently around a library and museum area.
Research activities and the museum collections have been centered in Snow Hall. By moving them to the new facility, three large rooms in Snow, a total of about 1,700 square feet, will be freed for undergraduate classroom use.
Plans are being prepared by George M. Beal, professor and director of architectural services, and will be submitted to the state archtect for approval. Bids probably will be let by next December or January, with construction taking place through 1965. Prof. McGregor said.
NEED FOR THE new building resulted from growth in the botany department that has critically crowded current facilities.
When Prof. McGregor became chairman in 1957, the department had a full-time teaching and research faculty of five, and eight or nine graduate students. Today, ten are teaching full-time and 27 graduate students are expecting to study at KU through PnD. degrees
"We have reached the absolute capacity in number of graduate students," Prof. McGregor said. "Even if we had assistantships for new students this fall, we couldn't accept the students because we don't have the space."
The new center will facilitate a continuation and expansion of research at KU that encompasses all plant groups, including fungi, of the Great Plains and south to Mexico.
AS IN THE PAST, KU botanists will continue to emphasize a basic or "pre-applied" approach in their studies. This means they often conduct sub-cellular investigations that reveal how certain plants take in food, how they reproduce and the like. Such findings are necessary, for example, before an applied researcher at an agricultural experiment station can develop a compound to attack a harmful fungus.
The findings may have applications botanists are not seeking directly. Currently, basic research in the KU department may contribute to man's understanding and eventual conquering of cancer. Other basic research is providing new information about heredity.
Essential to the KU research and teaching program in botany are the specimens of plants and fossil materials to be located in the new center. The plant collection, now ranked in the upper group nationally, grew from 29,000 specimens to the present 125,000 in ten years.
The collection, available to citizens of the state, attracts students to the KU department and provides samples to the scientific world. Specimens now are on loan to 25 or 30 schools, including Purdue, Stanford, Harvard and Cornell, and are being used at the Museum of Natural History in Paris.
Savers on Cover
W V W V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V
A sequence series of photos of Gale Sayers breaking 61 yards for a touchdown against Oklahoma appears on the front and inside front cover of "Football at Kansas 1964."
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Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
19291014 212018 012018
Distinguished Professorship Goes to Teichert
A scientist described by eminent geologists as "one of the outstanding men in this country in stratigraphy and paleontology" has been named Regents Distinguished Professor of Geology at KU.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said:
"I have been empowered by the Board of Regents to announce the appointment of Dr. Curt Teichert, a distinguished international geologist now with the United States Geological Survey, to this significant position. His presence at the University of Kansas will maintain and enhance the pre-eminent position in paleontology built at KU, by Emeritus Prof. Raymond C. Moore and his colleagues."
A. C. M.
THE 1963 KANSAS Legislature provided $50,000 to set up the Regents Distinguished Professorships. A second professorship has been filled by a faculty member appointed at Kansas State University.
Prof. Teichert will assist Prof. Moore in a major task of international scholarship begun at the University of Kansas about ten years ago and now more than half completed; the editing of the 24-volume "Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology."
Fourteen volumes of this encyclopedic work have been published to date by the University of Kansas Press and the Geological Society of America.
Dr. Curt Teichert
The task of bringing together the contributions of the world's leading paleontologists has been supported by grants from the National Science Foundation totaling about $14-million. In addition to KU and the Geological Society of America, it is being sponsored by the Palaeontographical Society, the Palaeontological Association (Great
Britain) and the Paleontological Society (U.S.)
PROF. TEICHERT HAS been a major contributors to the "Treatise."
Two years ago the University established a Paleontological Institute to prosecute research in the field and to continue the editing of the "Treatise" and the supplements which will keep it current. Prof. Teichert will continue his own major research efforts through the Institute as well as assisting in the development of graduate programs.
Prof. Teichert is credited with inspiring deep devotion among a number of bright Australian paleontologists and geologists, who feel that he was instrumental in shaping their careers during his
teaching days in Australia; and the opportunity to renew his teaching associations with students is a major reason Prof. Teichert gives for accepting the KU position.
"THE UNIVERSITY of Kansas," he said, in addition, "has one of the world's most distinguished records in paleontology. I am honored to the University and its outstanding faculty of teachers and scientists."
He was born in Königsberg, Germany. After having studied in Munich and Freiburg, he earned his doctorate from the University of Königsburg in 1928. He did post-doctoral work at the U.S. National Museum and in 1931-32 spent 16 months as a geologist with an expedition in northeast Greenland.
In 1533, shortly after the Nazis assumed power, he emigrated from Germany, going first to the University of Copenhagen as a research fellow in paleontology and, in 1937, to Australia, where he taught at the University of Western Australia until 1945, served as assistant chief geologist for the Mines Department of Victoria in 1946-47, and taught at the University of Melbourne from 1947-52.
During the winter of 1951-52 Prof. Teichert came to the United States as a Fulbright traveling scholar, where he was a KU research associate, and lectured extensively to societies and university departments across the nation. He returned to the U.S. in 1953 to serve for one year as professor of geology at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology.
EARLY IN 1954 he joined the U.S. Geological Survey, first as head of the Petroleum Geology Laboratory in Denver until 1958,
as research geologist from 1958-61, and since then as geological adviser in the foreign aid program of the Survey in Pakistan, where
he was principal adviser to the Branch of Stratigraphy and Fuels of the Geological Survey of Pakistan.
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Red Magazine Blasts Professor
Page 13
Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964 University Daily Kansan
The Soviet press has taken some verbal jabs at a political scientist from KU.
"Bourgeois falsifier" is one of the names Roy D. Laird, associate professor of political science, is called in a recent issue of the U.S.S.R. journal, "Problems of the History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union." The writer refers to one of Prof. Laird's publications on Soviet administrative problems in agriculture, a field in which he specializes.
Among other things, Prof. Laird is criticized for saying Khrushchev's decision to invest in the virgin lands was a "wasteful mistake." The KU professor calls the scheme to get food for an increasing population from a marginal agricultural area"at best unpredictable."
The Soviet publication refers specifically to Prof. Laird's article, "Kazakhstan: Russia's Agricultural Crutch," published in the Russian Review in 1961. Co-author is John E. Chappell, who was engaged in studies for a doctorate degree in geography at KU.
Others who take a beating in the Soviet article are Alec Nove, Rose Morgan visiting professor of economics at KU in fall, 1962, now at the University of Glasgow; W. A. Douglas Jackson, University of Washington (Seattle) geographer; Adlai Stevenson; and French and German scholars.
The Soviet article lambasting them is titled "Bourgeois Falsification of the Role of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in the Development of the Virgin Lands."
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Page 14
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
Growth. Pain in Rush Week—
(Continued from page 1)
pective pledges did not obtain residence hall contracts.
Rush week was painful to about 50 members of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity because of reported cases of stomach trouble in the house.
Dr. Ralph Canuteson, University Health Service Director, said 30 men were patients in Watkins Hospital with others being treated in Kansas City, Chanute, Salina, Hutchinson, and Wichita, he said.
The 50 were victims of the illness following a turkey casserole lunch Sept. 10. Only four escaped the illness. They ate elsewhere.
He said none of the boys was in serious condition and most of them would be released by Monday. Sororities opened fall rush Sept. 7 with a dinner meeting of house presidents and rush chairmen at the
home of Emily Taylor, dean of women.
students.
Sororities pledged 79 women.
Mrs. Kala Stroup, assistant to the dean of women, said the pledges were upperclass women and transfer
The fall rush period, she said, enables the sororities to fill any vacancies over the summer.
All sorority pledges from fall rush move into the houses this week.
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---
Grants Hit High in 1963-64; More Being Given
A last quarter surge of nearly $11\%$ million in grants for sponsored research and associated training projects at KU and its Center for Research in Engineering Science brought the total for the fiscal year to nearly $4 million. William J. Argersinger, Jr., associate dean of faculties for research, has announced.
The total does not include research performed at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, which receives almost as much support as the Lawrence campus from federal agencies and private sources.
Grants to KU in the quarter ending June 30 were received for projects in 25 schools, departments, and divisions, ranging from anthropology to zoology.
They include botany, chemical engineering, chemistry, child research, civil engineering, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, comparative biochemistry and physiology, the School of Education, electrical engineering, entomology, geology, Guidance Service, the School of Law, mechanics and aerospace engineering, microbiology, music education, natural history, nuclear engineering, physics, psychology, social work, sociology, and speech and drama.
The total of $3,932,787 in grants received for research and associated training projects in the fiscal year 1563-64 at the Lawrence campus is a new record, Dean Argersinger said.
$397,000 for Health Research
A $397,000 grant by the National Institutes of Health of the U.S. Public Health Service will be used for construction of health research facilities in the proposed new Fraser Hall.
Many more grants have been awarded since the end of the fiscal year. A few of the awards follow.
The Legislature had previously appropriated $1,750,000 from the State Educational Building fund for construction of the 7-story behavioral sciences hall.
Of the federal grant, $362,000 will be for construction and fixed equipment. The remaining $35,000 will be for moveable laboratory fixtures.
IT IS HOPED that new Fraser Hall can be ready for use in September of 1966.
Departments scheduled to use the new hall are psychology, sociology, anthropology and human relations. The grant will permit them to continue and expand research already in progress and to provide for adequate staff facilities.
Research in psychology currently deals with personality formation, individual assessment, intellectual deficit, physical disability and rehabilitation, learning processes, growth and adjustment in childhood, community impacts on human behavior and group functioning.
SOCIOLOGY AND anthropology departments have underway studies on the problems of interrelationship between personality and social and cultural systems.
Health-related research in human relations has evaluated effects of human relations on individuals, and training programs in large organizations.
Three Receive $50,000
The NIH grant is one of 48, totaling nearly $30 million, made to institutions in 24 states on a matching fund basis. Selection of awardees was made by leading nongovernmental scientists, research administrators and others experienced in assessing health research facility needs.
Cellular immunity, tailless amphibians, tiny fossils and compression are research subjects of KU scientists who have received or renewed contracts and grants of more than $50,000.
Cora M. Downs, Summerfield distinguished professor emerita of microbiology, received a $19,377 renewal to an Army Medical contract for her research project titled "The Relation of Virulence and Phase Antigens to Cellular Immunity in Coxiella Infection."
Dr. William E. Duellman, associate professor of zoology and associate
curator of the Museum of Natural History, was granted $12,000 by the National Science Foundation for 26 months of taxonomic research on "Chromosome Characteristics in Some Anuran Amphibians."
H. A. Ireland received an $11,000 grant from the NSF for a nine-month project, "Silurian Microfossils in Europe and Australia."
A $9,900 grant to the KU Center for Research, Inc., will finance one year of a project directed by Nicollaas Willems, associate professor of civil engineering on "Research Initiation — Stability of Compression Members."
Biological Research Aided
Two associate professors of chemistry have received research grants together totaling more than $90,000 for new projects related to basic biological processes.
Richard J. Bearman, a former Guggenheim fellow, received $49,000 from the National Science Foundation for a two-year project dealing with transport properties of liquefied gases at low temperatures and high pressures.
Earl S. Huyser, NSF senior postdoctoral fellow next year at the University of Groningen, The Netherlands, was awarded a new grant of $15,624 from the United States Public Health Service for a study of hydrogen atom transfer reactions. Funds of $13,950 and $13,350 have been allocated tentatively for the second and third years of the project.
Botanist Gets $32,000
A botanist has been granted $22,000 by the National Science Foundation for basic studies of a fungus that lives in the intestinal tract of insects and other arthropods.
Under the three-year award, Robert W. Lichtwurt, associate professor, will conduct "Developmental and Systematic Studies of Trichomycetes." The research is related to work Dr. Lichtwurt has been conducting since March in Japan under NSF sponsorship.
Botanist Traveling in India
A KU botanist, his entomologist wife and their three-month-old daughter are in India for a year of research.
The botanist is Lekh R. Batra
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Their daughter is Mira, who was born in May, less than one month before her mother was granted the Ph.D. in entomology from KU.
Two Get Health Service Grants
Research on antibodies in test tubes and on pattern development in chick embryos has been extended through United States Public Health Service grants totalling $49,277.
Charles A. Leone, professor of zoology, will continue his seven-year study on the effects of radiation on biological defense systems with a $20,528 grant. If antibodies can be
manufactured outside of living tissue they will reinforce the body's capacity to recover from radiation damage. $ ^{10} $ In July Prof. Leone addressed the International Congress for Entomology in London on this work. He has been a speaker at Atomic Energy Commission research seminars in Washington, D.C., and has organized and directed several international scientific conferences.
fessor of comparative biochemistry and physiology, will receive $28,749 for the second year of a six-year program to study the metabolic pathways in early chick embryos. Prof. Wenger and his wife, Eleanor, have spent several years in research on the central nervous systems of chick embryos and nervous disorders. The present program, however, will concentrate on stages of earlier pattern development.
Byron S. Wenger, associate pro-
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Putting together thousands of measurements, Air Force scientists designed this "typical" head. Its purpose? To help provide better protective equipment for Air Force flying personnel.
But the young men working on this project are far from average. As Air Force officers, they are working in a field that requires a high degree of technological insight.
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dertake vital missions of great responsibility.
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Page 16
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
TRADITIONS RALLY and DANCE
FRIDAY, SEPT.18 7:00 to 10:30 p.m.
There will be a car parade at 6:45 p.m. The K.U. cheerleaders are expected to join the parade. Starting point: Corbin-G.S.P.. Destination: Templin, then, Traditions Rally followed by the Dance from 7:00 to 10:30 p.m. Music? Lots of it! Don't miss it!
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& Nov. 4 The Cabinet of Dr.Caligare Dec.16 Duck Soup
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SPORTS
Daily hansan
SPORTS
62nd Year, No.1
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
Tough Schedule Faces KU
48
Frogs Have 3 Starters Back for '64
FORT WORTH, Tex.—(Special)— Coach Abe Martin begins his 12th season as Texas Christian head coach, and the former Horned Frog end star, foresees a top Southwest Conference race again this season.
The Frogs are ticketed for a second-division finish, and it is no secret Martin and staff face many problems before the season opener with Kansas at Lawrence Saturday afternoon.
The Frogs will have 20 of 39 lettermen returning from 1963 — a year that saw the Purples carve out a 4-5-1 record, and a fifth place in the Conference pennant chase. Only three are starters—center Ken Henson, guard Steve Garmon and halfback Jim Fauver. Those three seniors are solid performers, but some more must be found if the Frogs hope to make any noise toward a possible title.
MARTIN HAS BEEN far from pleased with his offense in recent campaigns, and thus, the new DUAL offense was tried last spring. The DUAL will feature both a T-side and POWER side in the same formation; stressing the pass when in open formation; and the run, when closed. Also, there will be some flip-flop of the line; and some strong left and strong right; with occasional flankers and split ends.
"Summing it up, the DUAL offense came about simply because our staff saw it best for the talents available," explained Martin.
Fauver, quick and blessed with exceptional balance, and Larry Bulaich head up the backfield talent. Fauver will operate at the new halfback post; and the 197-pound Bulaich has been converted from halfback to the fullback role, where all-America Tommy Crutcher topped the league the past three seasons.
"THOSE TWO YOUNGSTERS are fine runners, and we felt we needed them in the game at the same time," continued Martin. "Both can run the dive, off-tackle and go wide, giving us a fine one-two punch on offense."
Quarterback seems adequate with letterman Randy Howard and Kent Nix returning from 1963. Howard is a fine runner, ball handler, and owns top experience. Nix has an exceptional arm, and the Corpus Christi junior should have top targets in 1964. Martin plans to start with Howard, but looks for Nix to see equal duty along the 1964 route.
The early problem points to the defense, especially in the secondary, where sophomore talent may have to be stationed. Only Fauver and junior Dan Jones own any experience there. Also at linebacker, where Crutcher was a mainstay along with Clifford Taft and Robert Mangum, there could be another trouble-spot.
"We're far from being a one QB team" he says.
Rounding out the No. 1 backfield will be wingback Bobby Sanders, a converted end. The 167-pound senior is a fine pass receiver, and above-average blocker.
HENSON AND GARMON, two of the finest in the league at their position, anchors the line. Also pegged for duty with the top unit is T-end Larry Perry of Dallas; T-tackle Norman Evans of Donna; T-guard Harvey Reeves of Port Arthur; power tackle Bobby Smith of San Antonio; and power end Joe Ball of Graham. Perry and Ball are junior lettermen, while the rest are lettermen seniors.
CENTER, GUARD, AND end play is solid, especially at end, where the receiving and defensive play could be the best in several seasons.
GALE SAYERS
... KU's all-America halfback
'We'll Be 10-0'
Jack Doubts Guess
"Gale would say we'd be 10-0 even if we suited up the Chi Omega sorority."
That's what Jack Mitchell told sports writers during their Big Eight Skywriters tour here Sept. 1. He was answering questions about Gale Sayers' prediction last spring that KU would go unbeaten this season—and even win a bowl game.
"HE WANTS TO be 10-0 so bad he really thinks we can do it," Mitchell says. "Of course, the odds against a perfect season are fantastic, for any team in the country. Gale is a dedicated boy and he thinks in terms of perfect seasons."
Sayers, KU's (and almost everybody else's) all-America halfback, enters his senior season with 2,042 career rushing yards, placing him ninth on the all-time conference career list.
And he'll open the season within range of Dave Hoppman's league record of 2.562 yards for Iowa State in 1960-1962.
Sayers' 1.125 yards as a sophomore and 917 last year were both good for third in the national rushing race.
SAYERS, A GRADUATE of Omaha Central, Neb., High, holds conference records for longest run from line of scrimmage and most net rushing in a game.
The Kaw Valley Gale's 1,125 figure constitutes the highest sophomore total in Jayhawker history. It is four short of the varsity single-season record held by Wade Stinson, new KU athletic director, who set that mark as a senior in 1950.
Sayers paced KU last season in kickoff returns, punt returns scoring, receiving and kickoff returns.
Jayhawks, Frogs Collide Saturday
There might be plenty of facts and factors to provide basis for the folks who are saying this is the year KU's football team will win the Big Eight Conference championship and more.
But, when the Jayhawkers' schedule and a couple of other cold facts are taken into account, there's considerable basis for saying KU will be lucky to break even and still not sound overly pessimistic.
IT MIGHT BE the early games that will make the difference a game as Saturday, for instance, when the Jayhawks open their 1964 season against Texas Christian.
Kickoff is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. in Memorial Stadium for the game, the last of a series of openers with the Horned Frogs of Fort Worth that started in 1942.
KU opponents will face the huskiest line in Jack Mitchell's seven-year tenure as head coach. With the probable starting line averaging 224 pounds, it will be the heftiest front wall on Mt. Oread since the 1930s.
AT LEAST TWO of the linemen—Mike Shinn and Brian Schweda—are being boomed for all-America honors with the former already an all-Big Eight selection.
As for the KU backfield, there's Gale Sayers. And, from all preseason indications, KU's all-America halfback will have adequate support to comprise one of the best backfields in the nation.
But there are other big lines and other good backfields. And it seems KU will run up against many of them.
Tough foes include Syracuse (there Sept. 26), Wyoming (here Oct. 3), Oklahoma (here Oct. 17), Nebraska (here, Nov. 7) and Missouri (there, Nov. 21).
Almost all of those teams are considered pre-season favorites over KU. Syracuse, Wyoming, Oklahoma and Missouri have been nationally rated in pre-season guess lists.
TEXAS CHRISTIAN, though figured to finish in the second division of the Southwest Conference, will be no pushover. Jayhawker teams have always had trouble with the Horned Frogs of Abe Martin.
In 20 games against TCU, KU has won only three games and tied three.
Coach Mitchell says his squad has the physical potential to be much stronger than the 1962 and 1963 teams, but would have to match both clubs' desire and effort to contend for the conference championship.
THE THREE PROBLEMS the KU coach hoped to solve in pre-season workouts were:
- Finding a No. 1 punter.
- Determining the top sophomore ends from a field of seven prospects.
- Selecting defensive backfield personnel.
"We started last season with a pair of 185-pound guards," Mitchell says. "Now they just aren't big enough.
"Defense is our No.1 problem. Our offense was among the top 12 in the country last year but our defense was only sixth in the Big Eight.
"I THINK OUR linebacking is going to be all right. We worked very hard on it this spring and we have a lot of ability in our seven best linebacking prospects.
"We're afraid we may be a little small in the defensive backfield, though. We have a lot of speed and quickness there, but not too much size."
Pre-season drills opened with Mitchell full of praise for Bob Skahan, a good runner and fair left-handed passing sophomore. But junior Steve Renko is the probable No. 1 quarterback.
"RENKO HAD NEVER played quarterback before last fall," Mitchell said. "He knew no more about how to quarterback than I would know how to put plumbing in a house. Considering that, he did well."
One thing is certain, the Jayhawkers will be much better armored against the run of line injuries that cost them the services of eight important players last year for two to seven-week periods.
KU played the 1963 November stretch thinner than any Mitchell team since his first in 1958.
The pre-season analysis shows guard and tackle stronger than a year ago; center at least equal, despite the loss of all-Big Eight Pete Quatrochi. End cannot be expected to match last year's ability, but several newcomers could make it satisfactory by mid-season.
FRONT-LINE BACKFIELD talent is well-established, even though graduation took last year's alternating starters, Ken Coleman and Armand Baughman.
Page 2
University Daily. Kansan Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
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Page 3
Stinson Stars Despite Injury
Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
RELEASED FROM service in 1947, he enrolled at KU.
Wade Stinson, former KU all-conference halfback and for 14 years an insurance executive in Chicago, opens his first year as Jayhawker athletic director.
Stinson, a 179-pounder in his playing days, earned a letter as reserve halfback in 1949. Playing at all was a courageous feat since he was handicapped by a badly damaged left hand.
Named to the position last Feb. 22 he officially assumed command from A. C. (Dutch) Lonborg on July 1 Lonborg has been named 'Manager of Events' after guiding KU to 38 league championships, four NCAA titles and three conference all-sports crowns.
STINSON WAS GRADUATED from KU with a business degree in 1951. He was right halfback of the most prolific one-season rushing backfield in KU history.
He was hit by a trip flare at Camp Robinson, Little Rock, Ark., and spent two years in Army hospitals undergoing skin, tendon and nerve grafts to rebuild hand and fingers.
Playing in 1950, Stinson rushed for 1.129 net yards, still a varsity record. En route he shot to a conference
mark of 239 net yards against Utah, scoring three touchdowns in the 39-26 Jayhawker victory at Salt Lake City.
That performance remained a league record for 10 seasons until
Stinson Made 5th Jayhawk AD
Wade Stinson is the fifth athletic director in KU history.
First was Dr. F. C. (Phog) Allen, who began in 1920 following a period of "Managers of Athletics." He served until June, 1937, and was succeeded by the late Gwinn Henry.
Henry's regime ran to June, 1942, at which time, Karl Klooz, then University Bursar, was appointed acting director. The late E. C. Quigley was appointed in August, 1943, and served until July, 1950, when A. C. (Dutch) Lonborg took over.
"Managers" in the early days were Will Coleman, 1890-12; R.K. Moody, 1893-1904; U. S. G. Plank, 1904-05; W. C. Landson, 1904-12, and W. O. Hamilton, 1912-20.
Iowa State tailback Dave Hoppman bolted 271 against Kansas State in 1961. KU's Gale Sayers upped that to 283 yards a year later against Oklahoma State.
As a runner, Stinson not only carried exceptional speed and sharp cutting ability, but exploded quickly off the mark and hit with enough power to break tackles at the line or in the shallow secondary.
Oddly, Stinson did not win the conference individual rushing derby that year. Nebraska all-America Bobby Reynolds won that honor with 1,342 yards, still a league record.
RECORDS
But Stinson's total still is second on the all-time league list, ranking as one of only seven One-Grand years by conference ball carriers.
AT LEFT HALF was Charlie Hoag, who netted 940 yards the same season to complete a two-man total of 2,065 as the Jayhawkers of 1950 established a net rusing total of 3,116, a KU record.
His senior season performance earned him a spot in the North-South Shrine game and the Ormand Beach Award, annually voted by squad members to KU's most outstanding player.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
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Thursday. Sept. 17, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
63 67 28
711
Gale Sayers sweeps his left end in last year's game with Missouri in Memorial Stadium. Giving him blocking support from an oncoming Tiger defender are Ron Marsh (67) and Steve Renko (11).
If He Wins Olympic Berth, KU Will Miss Silverberg
Depending on how he fared in last weekend's Olympic Trials at Los Angeles, KU may be without the services of Bill Silverberg when the 1964 cross country season opens.
Silverberg, Jayhawker two-mile ace last spring, earned a berth in the trials in the 3,000-meter steeplechase. He spent the summer working in Los Altos, Calif., and working toward the Olympics.
"HE DEFINITEY HAS a good chance to make the team," Bill Easton, KU track and cross country coach. said in the summer.
Silverberg, a transfer here from Warrenburg, Mo. State College, has only cross country eligibility remaining as a Javawk senior.
And he will not be competing for the KU team this fall if he makes the trip to Tokyo.
EASTON HIMSELF will be missing from the cross country team.
He's going to Tokyo as a group leader for People-to-People.
And the successful coach will likely be among several other Jayhawkers at the Olympic Games. Bill Mills, former KU distance man, has qualified for the marathon.
Al Oerter, 1960 gold medal winner, was a sure bet in the discus. Cliff Cushman, silver winner in 1960, was trying for a berth on the U.S. team last weekend.
AND, TOO, Mr. and Mrs. A. C.
(Dutch) Lonborg will be on hand.
The outgoing athletic director and
his wife were given an expense-paid
trip upon his retirement last spring.
No track coach in the nation has built a more impressive record than Easton. Little wonder so many KU grads will likely be competing for their nation.
Easton, now in his 18th year here,
is the only second coach in history to
guide the same school to NCAA championships in both cross country and track.
Only two other schools, USC and Illinois, ever have put together back to back NCAA track and field championships.
EASTMAN'S COLLEGE coach the late Billy Hayes of Indiana, is the only other to build this double.
Easton's squads also have managed finishes of two seconds, a third and a fourth, ahead of their two title years. His cross country crews have picked off three runner-up spots and three fourths in addition to the 1953 championship.
MARIOWS
No Big Eight school ever has risen so high for so long on the national track scene. Nor has one dominated the conference so thoroughly.
BILL SILVERBERG
.. en route to 2-mile mark
Easton-coached performers have broken three world records — Bill Neider in the shot-put twice and Al Oerter in the discus.
They have finished out of the first division only once in these combined fronts.
THE JAYHAWKERS have won 11 of the last 15 indoor conference meets; 10 of the last outdoor crowns, and 15 of the last 17 cross country meets.
Easton has developed 30 all-Americans and six Olympians.
TCU Roster
T-guard--Harvey Reeves 188, shr; R,
K. Durrell, Lettr. 199, II. in
Center-Ken Henson, 250, sr; Jim Henson Carter, 204, br; Bobby Nelson, 150.
T-tackle-Norman Evans, 224, br;
Russell Kison, Rossy Nixon,
200; Harry Lantz, 206.
T-End-Larry Perry, 175, jr; Charles
Darrell Mott, 169, sr;
Joe Sherrell, 189.
Power guard--Steve Garmon 211,
vice commander Corry J. Jr.
orter William C. Burch Teich 208.
RECORDS
Power tackle—Bobby Smith, 209, spir. 45; Arroyo Copper, 209, phil. 275; Robiny Copper, 209.
Power end—Joe Ball, 199, jr; Doyle
Johnson, 199, 200; Bowers, 219, sw;
Dulce, 198, 200; Nicks, 198
Quartbackback—Randy Howard, 179; st,
Jim Hulse, 174; fr;
Jerry Camganda, 173.
Halfback--Jim Fauver, 185, br; Dan
Jones, 178, jr; James Howard, 190;
Iowa, 164; John O'Brien, 172.
Wingback—Bobby, Sanders, 167, scr;
Craven, John Richards, 175, Batton,
14r; Jr. John Richards, 175.
Fuiback-Larry Bullaich, 197, scr;
Dubose, 199, jr; David Smith, 195.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
Ask any Upperclassman...
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Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SAEETY A EILM
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cold plates or hot meals... cafeteria style
Breakfast — Hawks Nest
Lunch 11:00 - 1:15
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
Depth Big Question At Tackle
KU's probable starting tackles for 1994, Brian Schweda and Fred Elder, likely will be the equal of any tandem they face all season.
The question is how well will the depth be manned behind them? Two of the other three lettermen, Jim Becker and Tommy Thompson, own a long history of leg trouble. The third, Jim Shanks, missed spring practice because of catching duty with the baseball club.
All three could lose their positions in the depth chart to a trio of promising sophomores, Jerry Barnett and Harold Montgomery, both of Wichita, and Jim Nievar, Oklahoma City, Okla.
Although he did not enjoy a banner spring, after reporting late from track, Schweda could be as good as any tackle in the conference, a large order in a circuit loaded with talented veterans.
Now musced to 240, he own size, strength, experience and exceptional footwork. He started all 10 games as a junior last year earning second-team all-league honors. He was an alternate as a sophomore.
How much he improves depends on how he'll compare with such other robust veterans as Larry Kramer, Nebraska; Butch Metcalf, Glen Condren and Ralph Neely, Oklahoma; and Butch Allison, Missouri.
ELDER HAS IMPROVED steadily since his freshman days, moving up through the ranks gradually to claim the vacant starting berth held by the departed Karl Sartore, a year ago. Steut and intelligent, he wrestled heavyweight for the Jayhawkers last winter at 221.
Becker missed considerable action last year because of a calcium deposit in a thigh. Thompson has been hampered for three seasons by a lame knee. Hence, both are questionable. The position sorely needs their experience.
Barnett and Montgomery improved steadily during spring drills to move up to Nos. 2 and 3 behind Schweda at inside tackle. Both are good hitters carrying 210 pounds, but, of course, must prove their ability under fire. They'll be put to the test early with TCU, Syracuse and Wyoming in the first three dates.
Center Looks Good for KU
Graduation has lifted last year's All-Big Eight pivot, Pete Quatrochi. But KU will offset this loss with more depth.
Main reason is prospects are more numerous. Another is that this spot is not likely to be so severely harassed by injury two successive years.
Veterans Buddy Walker and Jim Beecher were sidelined so often Quatrochi played every offensive minute of every game that remained in doubt.
BECKER HAS BEEN returned to tackle. He can be spared because of the emergence of Mike O'Brien, 6-5 Liberal squadman, in spring practice, return of Larry Fairchild from end, and development of two promising sophomores, Larry White and Bob Noe.
Fairchild, 222-pound Salina senior, finished spring practice No. 1. Walker and O'Brien will battle him for that job from the outset of Fall camp. The latter flashed a fine comeback thru April and May after being sidelined two seasons with a lame knee. Walker is a good 185-pound football player as long as his lame knee holds together.
If O'Brien and Walker are hit by further knee miseries, Jim Shanks, lettered junior tackle, can be recalled. He was a center as a freshman two years ago. White and Noe will crowd for playing time from the start.
Under a system instituted by Coach Jack Mitchell last year, all pivots are scheduled to play only offense. Left guards and certain selected specialists will fill two line-backing spots; left halves and full-backs the other two in the standard 5-4.
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Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Big Fullback Gap Left; Hopes on Oelschlager
KU's major football graduation loss was a double lift of Ken Coleman and Armand Baughman at backback.
To reel-in some of the slack from their departure Coach Jack Mitchell switched his most versatile operator, Ron Oelschlager, to that spot in spring practice.
The Marion senior adapted so well he cancelled considerable worry over a position which carried heavy concern heading into warmweather drills. During the same period of play of two holdout sophomores, Dick Bacon and Kent Craft, was impressive enough to derrick this position out of the problem class for 1964.
Renko to Key QB Prospects
There are 12 men listed on KU's 1964 quarterback roster. But the key figure is the same as last year, Steve Renko.
A seasoned back, he had to pass a tremendous test . . . handling a starting role in Big Eight football with one freshman game of experience as man-under. Even the most critical observer would be obliged to say he performed well.
Starting all 10 games, he paused the conference in total offense for two weeks at mid-season, eventually finishing fifth on 799 yards. He handled the ball satisfactorily blocked hard ahead of the sweeps and ran the keeper with the power of a full-back, which he was in his prep days at Wwandotte.
The question this term is how much will the 6-4, 210-pounder be able to improve his passing eye. He opened impressively through the first half the 1963 season, but tailed off through the final five games to the point where KU's offense was virtually land-locked.
The picture is not so bright now. For Craft has been sidelined for the year with a spleen ailment which outcropped over the summer. He was being counted upon for two-way duty in a scrap with Bacon for the alternate berth behind Oelschlager.
Playing behind Coleman and Baughman as a sophomore, the Leavenworth tank proved a capable offensive performer with stout running and satisfactory blocking. Despite his 5-8, 213-pound physique, he is quick off the mark and fleet enough to lead the sweeps. It is likely he'll play only on attack.
THIS DEVELOPMENT will elevate the spot's lone holdover letterman. Bill Gerhards, to No. 3.
Oelschlager and Bacon are scheduled to go both ways. The former will be playing his third backfield spot in as many seasons, having lettered as a sophomore behind Gale Sayers at tailback, then splitting starting duty with Tony Leiker last year at slotback.
THE 195-POUNDER veteran grades out high in running, blocking, linebacking and receiving. As a half-back he could execute the running pass effectively too.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursdoy, Sept.17, 1964
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Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 11
KANSAS
Like a 'Beacon'
MIKE SHINN
KU's all-Big Eight end . . .
Shinn Tops Ends
Mike Shinn, 6-5, 220-pound senior, stands out like a beacon in KU's 1964 end picture.
This is not only because of his size, but because of experience and proven ability.
For the picture behind him cannot be called comforting for Jayhawker fans. Graduation lifted Shinn's 1963 running mate, Jay Roberts. The scholastic shoals engulfed George Worley, rugged sophomore alternate of a year ago. Larry Fairchild, who helped to prop injury-thinned ranks a year ago, has been returned to the position for which he is best suited, center.
ALL THIS LEFT only two other lettermen, senior Bob Robben, Worley's stablemate last year, and Rich Masoner, who earned his "K" as a third-stringer. Veteran Guard Harley Catlin was shifted to the right side in spring drills to add Big Eight football experience if not natural ability for the post.
THESE THREE WILL be obliged to hold the fort until at least a couple of members of a promising passel of sophomores are ready. There is high potential among a seven-man corps, but their development will be complicated by the fact that all, save Jeff Elias, 6-4 former Salina ace, is a convert from another position.
The sturdy Wichitan showed enough aptitude to be counted upon for help from the outset of the season. Robben, always long on defense, can reach league standards by elevating blocking ability abreast of play-busting ability.
Shinn was varsity all-conference a year ago, and fully deserved such an accolade. He is a vicious tackler and blocker, stays up against the sweep all the way to the sideline, and sheds tacklers when he tucks away for a forward pass.
Pratt Keys Bright Guard Picture
Measured by experience and proven ability, guard is the strongest spot in KU's 1964 pre-season football outlook.
There are no established aces like end Mike Shinn nor tackle Brian Schweda. But there is veteran depth and a promising sophomore quartet.
Oddly, neither 1963 starter is returning. Larry Ledford was a scholastic casualty at the winter break. Harley Catlin has been shifted to prop the lean end corps.
EVEN WITH THOSE two lifted there are six lettermen, including 264-pound Richard Pratt, who was shuffled from tackle in spring practice. He is expected to establish himself as a lineman of Big Eight caliber early. He probably would have done so a year ago, but broke a wrist in the third game against Wyoming and was in drydock for the season.
Pratt owns good mobility and quickness for his bulk and ranks among the league's strong men in sheer, physical power.
The remaining monogram winners of a year ago are John Garber, George Hormung, Ron Marsh, Greg Roth and Kim Smith.
GARBER, A STURDY 212-pounder, would have reached Big Eight stature a year ago had he not suffered a broken arm in practice at mid-season. Roth can attain the same class by lifting his blocking ability to the caliber of his line-backing. Marsh and Hornung are established, even though mere 185 pounders. Smith is even in weight and not far behind in ability.
Somewhere someone will be obliged to make room for Bill Perry, a hard-striking linebacker who sat out the transfer rule a year ago. The sophomore quartet includes George Harvey, agile 245-pounder
from Parsons; Fred Heidinger, who was a one-man gang against Missouri's freshmen last year with 15 tackles; converted center Bill Wohlford and converted fullback Jim Pilch.
The traffic was even thicker than usual at these two positions during the spring as Coach Jack Mitchell and his staff gave every linebacking hopeful a trial.
"WE FELT LIKE we made quite a bit of progress in linebacking during the spring," Mitchell analyzes. "We are trying to get some of our best football players at these positions."
RECORDS
The left inside post will be handled by the left guards. Specialists will handle the right corner, which also could mean a guard.
Roth, Perry and Harvey finished the spring in that order on the left side. They'll be joined by Garber when autumnal drills open September 1.
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Coming to the University of Kansas for the first time we invite you to trade where your grandparents and parents traded when they went to K.U., at Kansas' oldest jewelers, a background of 92 years.
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Page 12
University Daily Kansah Thursday, Sept 17, 1963
WELCOME TO COLLEGE
This Year PLAN TO TRAVEL With
MAUPINTOUR
Let us handle all your travel arrangements. Contact us for the following services.
Student Tours
Student Cruises
Car Rental & Purchase
Airline Tickets
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Hotel & Resort Reservations
Theater Tickets
Passport & Visa Guidance
Many other travel aids & services
Visit Us For Complete Travel Arrangements Walter Houk - Virginia Zook-Jon Spies-Terri Platz
The Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211
MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE
8:00 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Mon.- Fri.
Sat. till 12 Noon
P. S. Students traveling for Job Interviews, please ask about our Credit Arrangements.
Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 13
WELCOME STUDENTS
to KANSAS UNIVERSITY and LAWRENCE, KANS.
from the Friendliest Stores in town...
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OPEN WEEKDAYS 9 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. CLOSED SUNDAYS
Page 14
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE has all your school needs
BOOKS, OF COURSE
ARTIST BRUSHES,OILS CASEINS,WATER COLORS TEMPERA
ART PAPERS
DRAWING BOARDS
DRAFTING INSTRUMENTS
T-SQUARES
TRIANGLES
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WELCOME NEW STUDENTS
AND YOU SEASONED VETERANS TOO!
SCALES
SLIDE RULES
MODELING TOOLS
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JEWELRY TOOLS
JEWELRY MATERIALS
RINGBOOKS
ZIPPER NOTEBOOKS
BRIEF CASES
COIL BOUND BOOKS
FILLERS
Also visit our new branch in Watson Library for a complete line of scholarly paperbacks from academic publishing houses.
Open Afternoons and Evenings
INDEX CARDS
FILE FOLDERS
THEME BINDERS
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Page 15
Reason for Success Mitchell Makes Shifts
Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964 University Daily Kansan
One reason for Jack Mitchell's coaching success (career record: 64-40-6-.609) is his courage to make quick personnel changes and tactical innovations.
Mitchell introduced the pigeon-toed T at Wichita, an alignment in which both halfbacks face slightly toward center. He came up with a middle linebacker rover at Arkansas.
John Hadl earned all-conference honors at halfback as a 1959 sophomore. Mitchell didn't hesitate in shifting him to quarterback the following spring practice.
HE OPENED LAST season with Steve Renko, even though the sophomore quarterback owned a total of only one freshman game experience at the position. Renko, a Wyandotte High fullback, started all 10 games and led the Big Eight in total offense for two weeks at mid-season before finishing fifth.
Here, last year, he stacked both ends together to create an unbalanced line, introduced the bounce-pass to stop the clock and now and then waved his field goal kicker, Gary Duff, into action for sideline out-of-bounds placements instead of punting.
And after Hadl earned all-America as man under in 1960, Mitchell didn't hesitate to return him to left half for a short period when his 1961 club got off to a slow start.
Mitchell's college degree? Psychology, not juggling.
He was an all-America quarterback at Oklahoma. Mitchell's first coaching job was at Blackwell, Okla., High, guiding that team to a 9-1-1 record after being picked for last place.
He moved to an assistantship at Tulsa in 1950 under Buddy Brothers, then to Texas Tech in the same capacity for two years. He assumed head coach duties at Wichita in 1953.
After two years there, he moved to Arkansas for a three-year term. He was hired on Thanksgiving Day of 1957. Two years ago he was given a lifetime contract which Mitchell describes as "one of the best, if not the best, contract a coach and his staff ever had."
Coach Mitchell...
A. M.
Three Special Dates
5 Games Set Here
KU's special football dates this season are Oct. 3, Band Day; Nov. 7, Homecoming, and Nov. 14, Parents Day.
Texas Christian, Wyoming, Okla-
home, Nebraska and Colorado are
KU's five home football opponents in
1964.
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Page 16
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
the astronauts play at the
KANSAS UNION OPEN HOUSE
September 19,1964
8:00-12:00 P.M.
"DANCE" in the Student Union Ballroom
10:00-11:30 A.M.
RECEPTION - SOUTH LOUNGE
COFFEE, DOUGHNUTS
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3:45-5:00 P.M.
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MOVIE- "LOVER COME BACK"- FORUM ROOM
6:00 P.M. to closing
BOWLING, BILLIARDS,PING PONG IN THE JAYBOWL
Daily Hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
62nd Year, No. 2
Monday, Sept. 21, 1964
$500,000 Bequest Revealed
Regents Inspect KU New Additions Hailed
The Kansas Board of Regents inspected the largest college-operated computer in Kansas and one of the largest in the state Saturday at KU.
They also inspected new Blake Hall, a 6-story classroom building for the social sciences which opens for classes today. The building, erected at a cost of $750,000, contains classrooms and faculty offices for the departments of political science, sociology, human relations, and social work, and the Governmental Research Center. The building replaces an earlier Blake Hall erected on the same site in 1895 and dismantled last year.
The new computer, an IBM 7040-1401, promises to increase the University's capacity for scientific and industrial research service to the state.
As the Regents and KU Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe looked on, the computer raced through various kinds of statistics. Right now, it's busiest with fall semester enrollment statistics concerning the University's more than 13,000 students.
If the right kind of data is fed into it, the computer can predict Kansas population growth, school enrollments, or even stock exchange transactions.
KU researchers in many fields hail the computer's arrival. They
K.U.Hits13,000 Frosh Up 25%
Pushed by a 25 percent increase in new freshmen, KU is headed toward fall semester enrollment of more than 13,054, well beyond previous records.
James K. Hitt, registrar and director of admissions, reported 13,054 students as classwork began this morning for a gain of nearly 10 percent over the 11,971 year ago.
He predicted 500 late enrollments before Oct. 3 when the official fall figures are prepared.
The student body on the main campus at Lawrence is 12,054 and it is here where most of the late enrollments will be made. The KU Medical Center in Kansas City had a preliminary figure of 900. However, the enrollments of about 100 graduate students at the Medical Center were this fall administratively changed to Lawrence, so there are a thousand students in Kansas City, for an increase of 50.
There are 4,006 new students on the Lawrence campus, including 2,502 new freshmen, for a gain of 508 over 1963. The new student test is about 300 above the old mark set in 1946 when World War II veterans flooded the campus.
The 8.148 former students on the Lawrence campus again represent 74 percent of the previous fall's enrollment, indicating a greater persistence factor among students.
There are 7,753 men at Lawrence and 4,401 women, for a ratio of 1.76 to 1. Among the new students, women provide an even greater proportion, the ratio being 1.47 to 1.
Weather
The weather bureau predicts mostly cloudy weather with intermittent light rain and not much change in temperature through tomorrow for the Lawrence area. The low tonight is expected to be near 60.
have lots of work waiting for it. The new computer replaces smaller equipment in the KU Computation Center, which has been expanded twice in two years to serve the University's research needs. Computation by the KU Statistical Service, which maintains University records, and the Computation Center, which concentrates on research, have been combined on the new machine to prevent needless duplication.
The National Science Foundation has given KU a $200,000, three-year grant for support of Computation Center activities, and the U.S. Public Health Service has just awarded a 3-year, $116,668 grant for computer support of health-related research at the University. A variety of investigations are planned at the Lawrence and Kansas City Medical Center campuses of the University.
A massive computer mapping of the deep-buried substructure of Kansas has been started by the State Geological Survey at the University, and the departments of geography, geology, and several departments of the School of Engineering and Architecture. It has been proposed that nationwide geological statistical surveys be centered at KU.
A NATIONAL AERONAUTICS and Space Administration research project investigating radar mapping of the earth and other planets will be coordinated by Professor R. K. Moore of the KU Center for Research, Inc. One of the largest research projects of its kind ever undertaken at KU, the project will rely on the new computer's ability to handle large bodies of statistics.
More will be known about the Kansas lawyer's education, financial status, and the legal fees he charges when a statistical survey is completed by Professor Dan Hopson under sponsorship of the Kansas Bar Association. The computer survey will enable the Association to know more about their membership and to plan, with educators, the best law studies for future lawyers.
Most of the computer's time will be used on University-related research, but KU hopes to expand modestly its research relationships with area industry. An early example is Waddell and Reed, Kansas City investment firm, which will rent time on the computer until its own machine can be installed in about two years.
AS PART OF THE Public Health research project, Professor Robert E. Nunley will do computer studies of population geography. Professor Floyd W. Preston will study ground-water pumping and the rain recharge of soil moisture. Professor Charles F. Weinauw will develop a numerical model of the human blood system, and will cooperate in the ground-water study with Professor Preston.
Earl Farley, KU library systems specialist, will develop the "Kansas Slavic Index" on the computer. The index is an alphabetical listing of key words-in-context of published material on social sciences and the humanities.
Other possibilities for the computer's use are almost endless. Musicians could use the computer to analyze musical scores, for music is at least partially a mathematical discipline.
Linguistic authorities at the University have proposed studies of word frequency in various languages and in the writings of individual authors.
(Continued on page 12)
JEFF SMITH
HOLD 'EM—Cheerleaders and the traditional Jayhawk yell "hold em' as the Horned Frogs neared the goal line late in the football game Saturday afternoon. A fumble recovered by Richard Pratt gave the Jayhawks a 7-3 victory over TCU in the last seconds of the game.
Attitudes Blasted
VOX Opens Political Wars With Charges Against UP
Vox Populi (VOX) leveled a blast at University Party (UP) in its first fall meeting by accusing UP of trying to defeat VOX rather than legislate for good student government.
Greg Turner, Seattle, Wash. 1st year law student, called for an enthusiastic campaign this fall. "Nobody is a nobody in VOX," Turner former vice chairman of the All Student Council (ASC), said. "Every living district, especially the freshman districts, play an important part in the outcome of the election," he said.
Rock Chalk Plans Meeting
An open meeting for all persons interested in Rock Chalk Revue is scheduled at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. At this meeting, suggestions, criticisms and ideas for the revue will be aired.
Hoite Caston, Independence senior and producer of the show scheduled for March 5 and 6 in Hoch Auditorium, said the meeting is open to all persons who wish to participate in the program, as well as to all interested in the content of the show.
"Fractured Flickers," using motion pictures as the vehicle to carry the "message," will be the theme of the revue this year. Interviews for prospective staff members will be held at 7 p.m. Sept. 23-24 in the Union. To be eligible for an interview, persons should submit a personal letter of qualifications and previous experience by 5 p.m. Tuesday in the KU-Y office in the Union or at the meeting that evening in the Pine Room.
All staff members will attend a banquet at 6 p.m., Sept. 25 in the Kansas Union.
Referring to literature handed out by UP at the Activities Carnival, Jim Frazier, Topeka 5th year pharmacy student and VOX president, criticized UP for raising out-of-date issues and challenged them to debate on current and relevant issues.
Thirteen executive council members who had been serving temporary appointive terms during the summer months were formally elected. Jim Frazier, who was elected president last spring, is the remaining member of the council.
Elected were: Jon Alexiou, Mission senior, vice president; Priscilla Osborne, Stockton senior, secretary; Brian Biles, Hutchinson junior, treasurer; Bob Miner, Great Bend sophomore, large men's residence halls chairman; John McArtor, large women's residence halls chairman; Steve Curtis, Kansas City, Mo. junior, small residence halls chairman; Mike Grady, Leawood sophomore, fraternity district chairman; Carol Jo Weber, Raytown, Mo., junior, sorority district chairman; Bonnie Buss, Udall junior, Dee Gerstenberger, Park Park, Ill. senior, Barbara Hoffman, Shawnee junior, and Mike Williams, Wichita senior, members at large.
Wescoe Says Fund Largest In History
By Roy Miller (Managing Editor)
KU has been designated to receive a bequest of more than $500,000—the largest single contribution for scholarships in the University's history, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe announced this morning.
Speaking at the opening convocation in Hoch Auditorium, Dr. Wescoe said the Endowment Association will receive the money from the estate of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Berger of Dallas, Tex. Mr. Berger was a KU alumnus.
"A portion of the income from this substantial fund will be used to provide the Berger Scholarships for undergraduate students," Wescoe said as KU began its 96th year.
"THESE WILL STAND with the Watkins and Summerfield scholarships and will be administered by the University's Committee on Scholarships.
"Additionally, a portion of the income will be used to sustain the Emily V. Berger Graduate Fellowships in Chemistry," he said.
Miss Berger, a KU alumna of 1914,
earned a master's degree in chem-
istry in 1920 and was killed tragically
just before she was to begin work
toward a Ph.D.
Announcement of the bequest was made as the chancellor spoke on changes and developments affecting the University.
"A UNIVERSITY SUCH as ours is an ambivalent creature," he said, "at once proud of the past and steeped in its traditions, yet constantly searching for opportunities to innovate."
Among the changes, opening exercises were piped into the main lounge and cafeteria of the Kansas Union. Last year, Dr. Wescoe said he "suggested that we probably should not deprive those students who had gravitated to the Union of their opportunity to hear these proceedings."
He noted that classrooms in Blake Hall were occupied for the first time today. The building houses the departments of political science, sociology, social work and human relations as well as the Bureau of Governmental Research.
Dr. Wescoe said work on Watson Library is nearly completed and he mentioned Sudler Hall, new outpatient building on the campus of the KU Medical Center in Kansas City.
"THE FORTHCOMING YEAR will bring physical changes of just as significant nature," he said. "In the next twelve-month period, construction to the value of seven million dollars will be started or completed on this campus."
Fitting this category were the following projects listed by Dr. Wescoe:
A new Robinson Gymnasium, a new Fraser Hall, a 976-man residence hall beside Ellsworth Hall, a minor addition to Malot Hall and "a substantial" science building to be built between Summerfield and Malot halls.
"Lastly," he said, "preliminary planning will begin on the massive Humanities Building scheduled for construction immediately beside this auditorium."
AMONG OTHER NEW developments, the chancellor spoke of the Intensive English Center and the University's new IBM 7040-1401 computer system.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Sept. 21, 1964
Hi. Readers
The editorial page of the University Daily Kansan is frequently criticized, seldom praised and little understood by anyone not a member of the UDK staff. Since this is the beginning of a new school year perhaps a brief introduction to this page is in order.
Principally the UDK is the official student publication of the University. However, it also serves as a laboratory paper for students enrolled in the William Allen White School of Journalism. Students majoring in news writing and advertising thus are given an opportunity in a live situation to practice and polish skills learned in the classroom. (Much to the dismay and anguish of faculty members and students who are the occasional victims of the eager, but bungling beginning reporter.)
Similarly the editorial page provides these students with a chance to learn the art of editorial writing. This year the editorial page material will be written and selected by two co-editors—Jim Langford and Rick Mabbott. The burden of writing five editorials a week is ours. In addition we may include material prepared by other students for a class in editorial writing. From time to time, when we run across an article in another publication that strikes us as interesting, informative or expresses our own feelings better than we are able, we may include a reprint of that article. (Reprints most often appear when we editors run
out of fresh ideas or test and term papers fall due.
Generally we will devote most of our attention to topics of campus and local interest. These affect us all more closely and, conceivably, we can know more or can learn more about topics and issues closer to home. However, since fledgling writers feel the need to try their wings, we will plunge oftentimes into a discussion on issues of national and international scope and character. Sometimes objectivity and understanding of these issues suffer from a certain zealousness and lack of information, but we accept, even welcome, constructive criticism and correction of our efforts.
Editorial articles written by members of this staff usually will appear in the upper-left corner of this page. Reprints or work by other writers which reflect our attitude on a subject may occupy the same position. Other opinions and articles will be found in the upper-right corner or the bottom of this page.
This then is the nature of the UDK editorial page. As editors, Jim and I hope during this year to inform you, to make you laugh, to stir you to indignation, but always to make you think. Our efforts are dedicated to the achievement of that goal.
— Rick Mabbutt
Why Johnson Must Be Elected
A healthy, vigorous two-party system is absolutely indispensable to the survival of American democracy. Its proper functioning requires each of the major parties to put forth a man who is unmistakably and unquestionably qualified to be trusted with the incalculably grave and terrible powers of the Presidency.
In the presidential election of 1964, the two-party system has been seriously endangered. One of the great parties, the Democratic, has fulfilled its duty by putting forth a man, Lyndon B. Johnson, who has many flaws and leaves much to be desired, but who is unquestionably as well qualified to be President as any tried and tested leader the Democratic Party now affords.
THE OTHER GREAT PARTY, the Republican, has shirked and betrayed its duty by putting forth a man, Barry Goldwater, who is manifestly unqualified to be President and whose unsuitability for this awesome responsibility becomes clearer with every passing day and with every reckless word he utters.
WE ARE CONFIDENT that Johnson will make a good President because he already is a good President. In the 10 brief months he has held the highest office, he has shown an ability unmatched in this century to bring all the diverse and warring factions of Congress behind the enactment of positive, progressive and needful legislative programs. In his greatest test as Commander-in-Chief the attack on our Navy in the Gulf of Tonkin—he has acted with both the forcefulness and restraint which is required in the man who alone controls the ultimate weapon and bears all the fearful responsibility which that entails.
WE ARE equally confident that Goldwater would not make a good President. He has not even made a good Senator. He has been in the Senate 11 years and not one piece of memorable legislation attaches to his name. He has been in its councils through the most momentous and revolutionary decade in the history of this Republic as we have strained every seam and fabric of our traditional habits and thinking to keep abreast of an age when all the supposed boundaries of man's environment are being broken, gravity defied, space penetrated, the moon reached, the riddle of the human cell being unraveled. Merely to understand, much less to master, this surge and change, heavy with unguessed new treasures of technology to increase man's wealth, has required and will require government entry into areas never before imagined. But Barry Goldwater has managed to live through this whole tremendous
epoch with his face turned squarely to the past, his eyes closed, and his mind preoccupied with one — and only one—idea: somehow to shrink the Government back into the familiar and comfortably small proportions of his Arizona youth. Barry Goldwater has left no mark in the Senate because, as he has truthfully declared, he sought to erase marks rather than to make them: "I have little interest in streamlining government or in making it more efficient, for I mean to reduce its size. I do not undertake to promote welfare, for I propose to extend freedom. My aim is not to pass laws, but to repeal them. It is not to inaugurate new programs, but to cancel old ones. . . ." He is like the Cincinnati kettlemaker who, when first hearing of Kentucky ironmaker William Kelly's use of air to make steel, exclaimed, "I want my iron made in the old way or not at all." His mind is surely not in pace with today's world.
GOLDWATER CHANGES his "convictions" almost as often as his shirt. One day he is for abolishing Social Security, the next day for strengthening it, one day for giving field commanders control over nuclear weapons, the next day for restricting control to the NATO supreme commander. Many of his statements are inherently contradictory nonsense—e.g., to cut all government expenditures, while expanding defense (which already takes more than half of every tax dollar spent)—like advertising a car that is bigger on the inside but smaller on the outside. Some of his statements, if they have any meaning at all, are rather frightening in the subconscious thoughts which seem 'o lie behind them, particularly those concerning his strange love affair with German prowess: "With all due respect to American military leaders, Germany would have won both world wars if she had not been badly led." "I think it was the Germans who originated the modern concept of peace through strenth." This last remark prompted Hamilton Fish Armstrong, editor of Foreign Affairs, to ask The New York Times to clarify whether it was Hitler's or the Kaiser's "peace through strength" that Goldwater had in mind. However, it is always possible that he really had nothing in mind, as when he told reporters who briefly boarded his cruising Sundance. "I've thought for some time that talks with the Red Chinese might be profitable." He later radioed ashore that what he really meant that the U.S. should be ready to threaten the Chinese, telling them that "if they didn't stop, then you would blow up a bridge or show some other sort of force." He finally cleared everything up by adding, "I'm not really recommending this, but it might not be an impossible idea."
GOLDWATER IS A grotesque burlesque of the conservative ne pretends to be. He is a wild man, a stray, an unprincipiled and ruthless political juitisu artist like Joe McCarthy, whose last-ditch defender he remained even when three-fourths of the Senate had voted to condemn their Red-hunting colleague. He still defends McCarthy, well knowing that he imputed treason to General Marshall and to President Eisenhower. He will not condemn the John Birch Society, though knowing that its leader, Robert Welch, has called Eisenhower a Communist agent. Yet, in order to get Eisenhower's vacuous blessing, Goldwater was capable of a tongue-in-cheek erasure of his infamous "extremism" slogan, a statement that was not written in haste but with extreme care, and gone over time and again by Goldwater before he uttered it. These words can, and should, forever symbolize the total fraudulence of his claim to be a true conservation: "Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice, and . . . moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue." That statement deserves to be the "Rum, Romanism and Rebellion" of this election, and Barry Goldwater deserves to be defeated for it alone, no matter how much he tries to clown it away. He knew what he meant by it, and so does every John Birch fanatic and Ku Klux vigilante.
FOR THE GOOD OF THE REPUBLICAN Party, which his candidacy disgraces, we hope that Goldwater is crushingly defeated. It was clear, from poll after poll, that the rank and file of Republican voters overwhelmingly preferred other leaders to Goldwater. It was equally clear that the fanatical Goldwater bias of a majority of convention delegates revealed the capture of the Republican Party by a new breed of so-called "leaders" whose selection had been steam-rollered by extremist, well-heeled types. The men who have most deserved to lead the Republican Party, by virtue of their long, distinguished and responsible service in it, and to the country, have been made to feel unwelcome, hissed and hated in it, as they were repudiated by it. A crushing defeat for Goldwater will drive the fanatic saboteurs of the Republican Party back into the woodwork whence they came. It will provide the opportunity for the party's true leaders to build anew from the wreckage that these heedless, reckless, ill-mannered and arrogant men are sure to leave. Then the two-party system can be restored, and the voter will again have a choice, not a calamity.
—Saturday Evening Post
BAKER CASE DISCLOSURE BANK SENATE PRESTIGE Vernon Baytimore EVE SUN
"We'll Just Stuff This In Here And Appoint A Committee To Watch It"
BOOK REVIEWS
ROXANA, THE FORTUNATE MISTRESS, by Daniel Defoe (Dolphin, $1.25).
Despite the glowing praise of the publishers, you can bet that much of the impulse for publication of this book with the juicy title has been the success of the film "Tom Jones" and the book "Fanny Hill." But don't get your hopes up. Like "Moll Flanders," this book is about a lady no better than she has to be, but it's far from being on the salacious side.
Defoe, however, could not write a dull story. Roxana is a courtesan who starts as a respectable wife but finds herself, at 22, the mother of five children and scarcely equipped to face the rough world (and books like this tell us how rough life was 200 or more years ago). So, she gets herself lined up by men of the court and men of business and has a life that gives meaning to the words "fortunate mistress."
This book appeared in 1724, several years after "Robinson Crusoe." Though comparatively little known, it deserves a reading, and it is consistently readable, even though decidedly is lower than, say, "The Carpetbaggers."
* * *
THE NEW GOLDEN BOUGH, by Sir James Frazer, edited by Theodor H. Gaster (Mentor, $1.25).
This new volume includes the Frazer compilations on magic, taboos, sexual practices, superstition and wizardy of man, from savagery to civilization. There are considerable notes by Gaster. The book is highly recommended for students of mythology, literature, history—the works, in fact.
This is a huge and attractive new paperback, a classic in literature as well as in anthropology. Gaster is an Orientalist and folkorist, and he has abridged the 12-volume work of Sir James Frazer. This volume is considerable itself—832 pages.
* * *
THE FROG KING, AND OTHER TALES OF THE BROTHERS GRIMM (Signet Classics, 75 cents).
Fifty stories are in this attractive paperback volume, and it is likely that adults as well as children will derive enjoyment from them. Rapunzel, Hansel and Gretel, The Brave Little Tailor, Cinderella, Little Red Riding Hood, the Bremen Town Musicians, Tom Thumb, Snow White, Rumpelstiltskin, the Goosegirl, Snow White and Rose Red—all come alive again.
Dailij Hänsan
111 Flint Hall
UUNiversity 4-3646, newsroom
UUNiversity 4-3198, business office
University of Kansas student newspaper
NF
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1612
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
**Roy Miller** Managing Editor
Don Black, Leta Cathcart, Bob Jones, Greg Swartz, Assistant Managing Editors: Linda Ellis, Feature-Society Editor; Russ Corbitt, Sports Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Jim Langford and Rick Mabbutt ... Co-Editorial Editors
**Bob Phinney** ... Business Manager
**John Pepper**, Advertising Manager; **Dick Flood**, National Advertising Manager; **John Suhler**, Classified Advertising Manager; **Tom Fisher** Promotion Manager; **Nancy Holland**, Circulation Manager; **Gary Grazda** Merchandising Manager.
Monday, Sept. 21, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
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Many KU Students Receive Scholarships
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Goodyear Aid
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The University of Kansas has recently been selected to participate in the Goodyear aid-to-education program.
and it is
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This means that two students in the School of Business at KU will receive Goodyear Foundation Scholarships in Business Administration for the 1964-65 school year.
16, 1912,
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The students selected by the honors and awards committee of the School of Business and approved by officials of the Goodyear Foundation are Geoffrey W. Donnan, Webster Groves, Mo. junior, and Charles A. Hurty, Wichita senior. Both are accounting majors.
Editor
Managing
ts Editor
il Editors
Manager
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Wagner Fund Awarded
Heintzelman has attended Rockhurst College and has worked for the Leavenworth county engineer.
H. Robert Heintzelman, Leavenworth senior, will hold the $100 Wagner Scholarship Fund award of the Kansas County Engineers Association this year.
This will be the second year Heintzelman has received the Wagner award.
The annual fund of $200 is divided equally between K-State and KU and is available to juniors and seniors in civil engineering.
Eight more KU students have been designated as honor scholars for the 1964-65 school year, Bob Billings, director of aids and awards, said.
More Honor Scholars Named
Honor Scholarships are earned through Watkins and Summerfield Scholarship competitive examinations in Kansas high schools or through academic achievement at KU.
The financial support may come from other scholarship or endowment funds or gifts.
The eight honor scholars are:
Bruce Bikales, Prairie Village senior;
Don Blevins, Wichita senior;
Mary Ella Kline, Wichita senior;
Sharon Menasco, Wichita senior;
Lynn Payer, Wichita sophomore;
Gary White, Lawrence junior; Joanne Woster, Mission junior; and
Gary Wright, Wichita junior.
Dwayne L. Littee, Moran senior, will hold the Frontier Chemical Company scholarship during the 1964-65 school year.
Litteer is a chemical engineering major and a member of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers.
Chemical Award Given
The Frontier Chemical Company, a division of Vulcan Materials Company, is a producer of agricultural, industrial and specialty chemicals
with its main plant in Wichita.
Pharmacy Student Aided
Darrel G. Steinshouer, a senior in the University of Kansas School of Pharmacy, will receive the $300 Kansas Rexall Club Scholarship for the 1964-65 year.
Pharmacy Foundation Aids 3
Three KU students have been honored by appointment as American Foundation for Pharmaceutical Education scholars for the fall semester in the School of Pharmacy.
Each scholar receives $200 for the payment of fees, books and other educational expenses. He also may borrow $200 more from the matching funds of the School of Pharmacy.
The three are William Dale Brodle, Eureka senior; Duane Douglas Miller, Larned fourth year student. and Fugene Joseph Sparks, Glendora, N.J., senior.
Herbert J. Ellison, chairman of the KU Slavic and Soviet area program, is giving five lectures on "The History of the Communist Party in Russia." The series, filmed this summer at the University of Notre Dame, is produced by the Institute on Communism and Constitutional Democracy at Vanderbilt University.
A KU professor is among scholars on Soviet and Chinese communism who have been chosen to give lectures for a unique college-level television series.
KU Professor To Give Talks
This large-scale program is unique because past efforts have been limited to week-end institutes or shorter, more specialized courses, Prof. Ellison explained.
Purpose of the series is to provide teachers with a broad background for instructing about communism, Prof. Ellison said. Lectures on doctrine, economics and political science, as well as history, are included.
Other lecturers include Alfred Meyer, Harvard University; Karl W. Wittfogel, University of Washington, Seattle; Milorad Dravchkovit, Stanford; W. W. Kulski, Duke; and Gerhart Niemeyer, Notre Dame.
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Two U.S. industrial leaders will speak here this year as Kenneth Aldred Spencer Memorial Lecturers, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe announced today in his opening convocation speech.
Chancellor Announces Two Lecturers
Frederick R. Kappel, chairman and chief executive officer of the American Telephone and Telegraph Co., will speak in Lawrence and Kansas City Nov. 5-6. Simon Ramo, executive vice-president of Thompson Ramo Wooldridge, Inc., and president of Bunker-Ramo Corporation, will speak April 12-13, 1965.
The Spencer Memorial Lectures were founded in 1960 by relatives and friends of Kenneth A.
Spencer, an alumnus of KU and an industrialist, shortly after his death. The income from the memorial is used to bring to Kansas City and KU lecturers and scholars in the fields of engineering, science, and business.
In 1941 Spencer founded the Spencer Chemical Co. He was a founder of the Midwest Research Institute of Kansas City, Mo., and a director of several locally based companies.
The first Spencer Memorial Lecture was delivered in April, 1963, by Sir John Cockroft, a Nobel prize winner for his nuclear research and one of Great Britain's distinguished men of science.
XB70 Plane Makes Maiden Flight
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif., —(UPI)— The revolutionary XB70 "winged missile" made its historic maiden flight today to become the world's first forerunner of future supersonic airliners to take to the sky.
Flames gushed from the undercarriage as the wheels of the XB70 touched the landing strip but were fanned out by the time the big plane came to a stop on the runway.
The triple-sonic six-jet ship, one of the most controversial planes ever built and aviation's heaviest aircraft, swept over the Mojave on a brief but crucial one hour and five minute test hop.
Officials of the Air Force and North American Aviation, builder of the XB70, hailed the successful maiden flight as the first step in the development of future supersonic airliners that will dash across the nation in only 90 minutes.
The "winged missile" swept skyward from nearby Palmdale airport with spectacular jet power, resembling a giant white dragonfly. After performing a series of basic maneuvers in a lofty, circling flight, it landed at this flight test center.
The XB70, designed to streak 2,000 miles an hour and to an altitude of 80,000 feet, demonstrated only part of its speed and altitude potential during the epic maiden flight.
OLD WORLD HOSPITALITY ...
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The Round Corner Drug has been serving Lawrence since 1855, providing Lawrence and, later, the Campus with every pharmaceutical need and sundry item with Quality and complete service our constant goal.
We have based our Reputation on Quality and Service and we strive to keep that Fine Reputation.
Round Corner Drug Store
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MEL FISHER
VI 3-0200
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Monday, Sept. 21, 1964
Fraternities Add 555 Pledges
KU's 24 social fraternities have pledged 555 men during the new August rush period and during Rush Week. Sept. 8-11.
The fraternities pledged 263 men during the August period, while the majority, 292, pledged during Rush Week.
The names of the pledges follow.
ACACIA
Lynn Vernon Krehbiel, Pretty Prairie; Bruce R. Wolhater, Leawood; Larry Albert Donahue, St. Louis, Mo.; Richard Dale Falcones, Wichita; Ailan Oran Howell, Shawnee Mission; Stephen Edwin Chapman, Arkansas; Thomas Thomas Fearnoy, Arkansas, City
Alan Francis Alderson, Prairie Village;
John Charles Bradley, Topeka; Bruce C. Coffey, Winfield; Ronald Gary Decker,
Mission; William Monroe Edwards,
Shawnee Mission; Jason J. Jonathan John-
Russell; Dale Richard, Peterson, Topeka
Shawnee Mission; Edward Ray North, Keokuk, Iowa.
Harry Hoffman Morgan, Wichita;
William Lucas Bruning, Shawnee Mission;
Donald Allen Chubb, Jr., Topека;
John J. Webb III, Lawrence; Ronald Dale Miller, Little River; Robert F. Messman, Wichita.
Charles Allen Joseph, Potwin; Michael Edward Converse, Horton; Larry Allen Robinson, Iola; Michael Ross Hall, Prairie Harriet, Harr Baleombe, Ellis; John David Carter, Eric Hay; Prairie Village; Donald Phillip Gillen, Ellwood; John Robert Leary.
John David Carlson, Kansas City;
Richard Thomas Darnall, Stafford; James Preston Fambrough, Lawrence; Charles Church, Jorsyth Sorkita, Wichita; Stephen Church, Jorsyth Sorkita, Wichita; Viola, Abilene; Stephen Richard Schulz,
Junction City; Thomas Patrick Beatty,
Stephen Lockwood Sauder, Emporia;
Robert William Wilson, Independence,
Mo.
Leawood; Alson Robert Martin, Shawnwe Mission; Charles Michael McCormick, Bartlesville, Okla.; Samuel Richard Mellinger, Emporia; Michael Michaels, Wichita Bruce Wayne Patterson, Larned; Dr. Bruce Patterson, Larned; Jav Carroll Routner, Colby; Randall Bryan Viot, Leawood; Thomas Flynn Edgar, Bartlesville, Okla.; Robert Andrew Edwards, Loomis, Calif.; Boyd Edgar Smith, Grand Island, Nebr.; Max
John Michael Rhoads, Hays; William Roth Sampson, Topeka; Richard Louis Wulf, Humboldt; David Michael Baltzer; Topeka; Martin Anthony TanCreti; Carr Brayer; Brian Fowler; David Topeka; James Paul Harris, Chanute; H. Michael Dickerson, Prairie Village.
Guy William Blakely, Salina; Donald Doval Harper, Ness City; William Fred- Lomberg, Palm Beach; Lewis Flint, Oswatimie; Joe Larabee, Liberal; Richard Stephen Shrent, Kansas City; Mo.; George Mare Myers, El Dorado Raymond Aguilera, Garden City.
ALPHA KAPPA LAMRDA
BETA THETA PI
BETA THETA PI
Rudy Dean Belton, Wamego; Jay Paul Consolver, Wichita; Gail Lee Hablutzel, Clay Center; Joseph Randall Jacobs,
William B. Ludemann, Prairie Village; Derek B. Smith, Worcester; David Booth, Lawrence; Robert Emery Sears, Kansas City; Richard Willis Kessler, Pho. Mo.; Bruce Warren Elkund, Russell
Bruce Allen Levitt, Kansas City, Mo.; John Keith Parkinson, Kansas City, Mo.; John Keith Cunningham, Topeka; James Edwin Rumse, Lawrence; Robert Dale Detter, Haven.
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(Continued on page 5)
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KIEF'S Record & Stereo Mall's Shopping Center VI2-1544
VERY IMPORTANT
STUDENT FOOTBALL TICKET INFORMATION
1. FOR NEW STUDENTS AND TRANSFERS:
(Starting September 21 thru September 25)
(a) Go to the Main Entrance (East) of Allen Field House.
(b) Pick up your IBM card at table in Main Lobby of Allen Field House.
(c) Take IBM card and your Imprinted Certificate of Registration to New Student Ticket Windows where you will make application for your season ticket upon payment of $1.50. (You will be assigned and receive a reserved season ticket for the remainder of the 1964 football season.)
2. FOR FORMER STUDENTS WHO HAVE APPLIED AND PAID FOR THEIR SEASON TICKET:
(Starting September 28 thru October 1)
Pick up your Student Reserved Season Ticket at the North Allen Field House Ticket Window upon presentation of your 1964 Fall Semester Imprinted Certificate of Registration.
3. FOR FORMER STUDENTS WHO HAVE NOT APPLIED FOR SEASON TICKETS: Follow the same instructions for New Students (1 above)
PLEASE READ THE FOLLOWING POINTS CAREFULLY -
- Allen Field House Ticket Office Hours----8:30 A.M. to 12:00 Noon & 1:30 P.M. to 4:00 P.M.
- Group application will be limited to not more than twenty-five (25). If you plan to sit with a friend(s) you should plan to make application with or for the group all at the same time. It should be noted that married students, independent houses or fraternities, etc. can apply in groups if they so desire. Exceptions will be considered to the limit of 25 in the case of exceptionally large pledge classes or classes within men's or women's residence halls.
*Season tickets for student spouses are available at the price of $7.50. Spouse tickets should be applied for at the same time as regular student tickets by filling out the special card at the application tables in the Allen Field House Lobby.
F
- 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.
No single game student tickets will be sold for the 1964 football games so be sure to apply for your season tickets according to the above instructions.
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Fraternities Pledge 555—
(Continued from page 4)
Guy Jackson, Marion; Charles Rayburn
Kreye, Lawrence; Okla.; Ken Gregory
Kreye, Lawrence.
Robert Theodore Becker, Independence, Mo.; Steve Proctor Chinn, Prairie Ville, Mo.; Paul Duncan Bart Ernst Eisfelder, Kansas City, Mo.; Morris McFarland, Shawnee Miss; Bernice Canford, Ballentown, Kansas City, Mo.; Emory Canford, Kansas City, Mo.; James Howard Renier, Overland Park; John Frost Robertson, Thomas Benjamin Swale, Prairie Village.
DELTA SIGMA PHI
Charles Westerly Wright III, Topeka; Robert Scott Swinney, Bartlesville, Oklahoma; Michael Venton Vance, Parsons; Richard George Young, Conway; Ronald George Young, Dallas; Ronald Donald Brenner, Parsons; Robert Kent Montgomery, Springfield, Mo.; James Dennie Anderson, Moline, Ill.; Jerry Arnese Arnese Calgary, Alberta, Canada; Dwight Witherell Wichita, Stephen William Worford, Wichita; Michael Roy Falley, Topeka.
Thomas Walter Irving, Jr., Wichita;
Thomas Joe Johnson, Holcomb; Roger
Allan Lake, Spokane, Wash.; Lawrence
Lawrence Myers, Jr., Topakia; James Donald
Perkins, Prairie Village; Bill Michael
Pitner, Glasco; Randy Richard Senti,
Matt; Richard Shunwood Welzler, Marys-
ville; Wilson G. Weisert Jr., Glendale,
Marys-
DELTA SIGMA PHI
Evan Carl Ruff, Clay Center; Daniel
M. Fish, Overland Park; Severt Andrew
Anderson, Clay Center.
John Donald McPherson, Emporia; John Green Tulsa, Emporia; William Lewis Edelen, Shawnee Mission; Miller Adams, Shawnee Mission; Ronald Edward Hanson, Shawnee Mission; James Charles Marshall, Kirkwood, Mo.; Daniel Bert Chilcoat, Earlville, Okla.
John Alexander Meek, Ihawata Charles Edwin Vachal, Lucas; Robert Stanley Allen Garlick, Littleton, Colin Robert Allen Gustafson, Evanston, Ill. Gregory Howard Peterson, Moline, Ill. R'chard Stoddard Brooks, Kansas City Mo.
Blake Allan Biles, Hutchinson; Lee R. Bittenden, Lawrence; Dani Bouwlae, Columbus; Ted Ellis Coffman, Salina; Erin Bruce, Oklahoma City, OKla.; Richard Brue, Cleveland; Andy Harris, Mission; Robert Scott Harris, Overland Park; Christopher Allen Jeter, Wichita; James David Keen, Shawnee Mission; Thomas Glenn Radner, James Lloyd Roberts, Leawood; Mike Edwin Ryan, Shawnee Mission.
ing
KAPPA SIGMA
Steve Ingram Walsh, Salina; Kent Arthur Whealy, Wellington; Barry Gilbert, Wichita; Richard Lee Curtman, Wichita; David William Omaha, Nebra; Bary G Joseph Asciano; Cherokee; Robert L Hammond, Wichita; Arthur Harvey Baum, Dodge City; John Harris, Richard Roger, Neerel Harris, Lawrence; Richard Lee Stratton, Green River, Wyo.
James Edward Davis, Leawood; David W. Gibson, Kansas City, Mo.; Charles Francis Hays, Lyons; James Harold Horsesy, Ellinwood; Mervin Richard Hundley II, Bartleville, Okla.; Joseph Shakespeare II, Alan Lawry, Lawrance; Robert R. Lloyd, Winnipeg; Michael D. McClanahan, Wichita; R. Stephen Renz, Overland Park.
Robert Alan Schucler. Bartlesville,
Okla.; Randolph Nelson, Smith; Sailing;
Thomas Comstock Tucker, Marion;
William Langley Ware, Jr., Bartlesville,
Okla.; Whitley Austin, Salina; Norrie
Johbert, Trairie Village; Thomas
Denton Brown Village; Ronald
William Albert Zook, Lawrence; Ronald
Ray Cotworth, Shawnee Mission.
Paul Michael Smith, Leawood; Kenneu Dunane Fry, Lyons; Douglas Lee Frieson, Garden City; Michael Middleton Brewer, Stephen Robert Blake, Shawnee Mission; Cunningham Summers III, Hawthorne, N.J.; Michael David Murray, Prairie Village.
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA
Gregory Alan Achenbach, Salina; James Daniel Brouhard, Salina; Bruce Lee Dunbar, St. Joseph, Mo.; John Robert Downah, Prairie Village; Lawrence Paul Echman, Leawood; David Glenn Harrah, Hill Eureka; Robert Lohn, Hill Allis Hill, Eureka; Robert Lohn, Hill Weehan; Randy Lee Jackson, Salina; John William McBurney, Caney.
Stephen Blake Schuyler, Shawnee Mission; James Owen Schwinn, Coffeville; Forrest Raymond Cloud, Prairie Village; Fortress Mountain, Prairie Village; Jerry Sphyron Raider, Prairie Village; John Edward Lewis, Emoria; Gregory S. Pierson, Shawnee Mission; Philip C. Thornson, Goetzinger; Rober Thornton, Goetzinger; Olathe; George Herman Klokn, Prairie Village.
Michael Alfred Denton, Hutchinson;
Daniel Joseph Troup, Kankakee, Ill.; John Byene Troup, Nashville; John Byene Pretz, Rancho Santa Margarita Wayne Hall, Eureka; John Christian Woolk, Russell; Patrick William Michaelais, Ioa; Richey Allen Bolls, Kansas; Daniel Dale Smith, Shawnee Mission; John William Michael Carter, Overland Park.
PHI DELTA THETA
Jay Woodford Allen, Wichita; Stephen J. Blailey, Wichita; John Charlton Blee, Kansas City; Jim Robert Coughenour, Kansas City; Robert Krebbiel Dalton, Wichita; William Fagn Daniels, Shawnee Mission; David awrenre Detar, Joplin, Mo.; Michael Sullivan, Joplin, Scott; Michael Thurl Gravitt, Topcake; James Roy Holliday, Jr., Kansas City
Michael H. Hurtt, Shawnee Mission; Allan Drue Jennings, Kansas City; Joseph William Jeter, Hays; Robert Alan Hawkins, Hawkesville; Jacob Green McCambridge, Kettering; Fredcken McCoy, Jr., Shawnee Mission; Charles Dennis McFall, Concordia; P. Lawrence Peterson, Newton; James C. Smith, Wichita; Lawrence Henry Vogel, opeka. Light Tennessee, Lawrence, Ca. Miller III, Wichita; Steve A. Lightstone, Coffeyville; Robert Samuel Pestinger, Beloit; Jonathan Freeman Phelps, St. Louis; Henry Dickey Russel, Galsesville; Felder William Tilghner, Kansas City; Felding Bruder Stapleon, Fort Scott.
PHI GAMMA DELTA
David C. Acher, Wichita; Leonard Robert Boyd, Jr., Wilbrook; Christopher C. Caldwell, Shawne Mission; Jack Wolver, Veiger campeon; Cobb, Topknot, dida Campeon; Corrett, John Haase, Salina; Steven D. Heck, Lawrence; Curt S. Heinz, Topeka
Stan N. Hubbard, Lawrence; Richard S. Hyter, Hutchinson; John M. Maloney, Wichita; John O. Martin, Salina; Robert S. Welch, Leawood; Purvis, Topekar, David C. Snider, Leawood; Dean A. Sutera, Prairie Village; William D. Trull, Lawrence.
Nevin K. Waters, Wellington; Frank K. Veave, Great Bond, Thomas F. Wobble, Great Bond, David Wichita; Thomas V. Elett, Wichita; Douglas M. Crotty, H. Garden City; Douglas B. Fredredog, Salina; Chester G. Dennis, Tula, Okla.; David L. Marden, Liberal.
Monte J. Clumsky, Liberal; Thomas G. Miller, Paola; William K. Jones, Jr.
Mary B. Mitchell, Mitchell, Lawrence; Patrick B. McKee, Pittsburg; John S. Simmons, Hoisington.
Richard T. Abernathy, Kansas City Mo.; Robert E. Allen, Mission Hills George H. Baldwin, Leawood; Frederick Bea Jr., Denver; Colo.; James H Boyton, Omaha Buhler; Ray N. Conley, Tonganbie Charles E. Ray, Kansas City Mo.
PHI KAPPA PSI
Steven D. Evans, Hutchinson; Robert C. Fleming, Village; Robert E. Fleming, Kansas City; John A. Leawood; Roy L. Frost, Hutchinson; Joseph B. Groner, Overland Park; Virgil H. Harris, Prairie Village; Christopher R. Harris, Marion; Dennis E. House, Goodland
Peter B, Kissell, Bartlesville, Oka.
Bob Wills, Newark, Maloney,
Maloney, Hutchinson; R. L. Mullins,
Leawood; Michael P, Perkins, Prairie
Willey, Hutchinson;
William M. Seull, Pittsburgh
Thomas L. Shaw, Hiawatha; Donald E. Snoddy, Kansas City, Mo.; George T. Spink, Shawnee Mission; Charles H. Thornton, Oklahoma; James H. Thornton, Parsons; Douglas H. Tracy, Wichita; Timothy M. Vaughan, Great Bend; Douglas S. Winn, Leawood.
Roger William Wingert, Shawnee Mission; Emmerich Carl Schulto, Kansas City; Robert Eugene Linder Jr., Hutchinson; John William Smith, Bethel; William Jurisur, Burma; Robert Jay Pottle Jr. River Forest, Bill; Bill Ross Vanlandingham, Kingman
Glemm Dean Anderson, Shawnee Mission; Stephen Wesley Spears, Shawnee Mission; John Nelson McCabe, Evanston, Ill.; Robert Lloyd Jimmers Jr., Hinsenburg, Ill.; Robert Lloyd Dreyer, Texas; Richard Akeeer, Kansas City, Mo.; Samuel Van Eman Buchanan Jr., Chicago, Ill.; John Stephen Lane, Shawnee Mission.
Monday, Sept. 21, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Robert Eugene Mall, Cliff, Center; John Benjamin Rislel IIH, Wichita; John Benjamin Rislel III, Kansas City; Henry Severt Koei City Jr., Kansas City; U. Lowe, Kansas City, Mo.; Jack Lewis Builer, Independence; Richard Morris Stone, Kansas City; Stephen Todd Housh, Kansas City.
Richard Caughli Pierce, Fredonia; Paul Gorman, Kansas City; Richard Davis, Kansas City; Richard Meredith Smith, Lawrence; Steven Louis Brown, Lawrence; Keith Edwin Johnson, Johnson
Lawrence Michael Bader, Shawnee Mission; Ronald Stephen Creary, Quebec Mission; Ronald Stephen Creary, Quebec Mission; Galabear, St. Joseph, Mo.; Thomas Edmund Geraghty, Shawnee Mission; Jim Edward Grabenhorst, Shawnee Mission; James Arce, Hutbell, Teape; Steve Andersen, Pierce
PHI KAPPA THETA
Peter M. McCool, Leavenworth; Stephen Dale McDaniel, Shawnee mine; Steve Vincent Rupp, Topeka; John Robert Strutz, Leavenworth; Sam Eugene Cummings, Leavenworth; Burke Jurtz, Zackary Jr., Wichita; Jerry Eveeck Hertach, Larned.
Thomas Willard Van Slyck, Tucson, Ariz.; Thomas Lee Gibson, Medicine Judge; Herbert (Charles) Bebermeyer, Beverly Hills; Howard Palin,cas City, Mo.; Howard Halpin Swacker, Jr., Kirkwood, Mo.; John David McQueary, Osawatime; Warren Fredrick Edward, Edward J ames swaney, Lee's Summit, Mo.; Alan Craig Wallace, Hill City.
PI KAPPA ALPHA
(Continued on page 6)
S. U.A.
Quarterback Club
will present the
OFFICIAL FOOTBALL GAME FILMS
EACH TUESDAY
following the game
WATCH THE TUESDAY DAILY KANSAN FOR TIME AND PLACE
of every K.U. game
Support Your Jayhawkers
FREE ADMISSION
"BARBER SHOP THE CAMPUS
where the students go.
5 BARBERS NO LONG WAITS Just North of Student Union
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES 6th Edition
All new and revised!
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Nobody knows about it and am I GLAD! I'm not even going to tell you about the new PIZZA house that opened 'cause you'll tell your friends, they'll tell their friends, their friends' friends will tell their friends, and . . . before you know it all 72 seats will be taken, and it'll be so crowded that I won't be able to get anything to eat. But wait, I just remembered I can't eat Pizza . . . I've got an ulcer. Oh well, I still not going to tell you about 'La Pizza" at 807 Vermont.
La Rizza
807 Vermont
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Sept. 21, 1964
Fraternities Pledge 555—
(Continued from page 5)
William F. Shomaker, Kansas City Michael Lyle Gatrost, Vine Grove, Ky. Robert Fechlch, University of Iowa David Pruitt, Overland Park Steve John Yeager, Jr., Shawnee Mission; Mark Charles Paris, Alcison Larry Steven Johnson, Johnson PLAINS, N.J.
Martin Arthur Johnson, Shawnee Mission; Glenn Edward Casebeer, Jr., Kansas City; Henry G. Flack Iola; Donna Gene瑶绍輜, Sally Rosenbaum M. McConas, Concordia; Philip Marcus Silverglatt, Prairie Village; Robert Allan Sturdy, Quincy, III.
SIGNA ALPHA EPSILON
SUGARMA
John Born, Beck, Kansas City, Mo.; Thomas Robert Berryman, Ashland; Alan Corwin Byrn, Lawrence; Mare R. Carlson, Lawrence; Lawrence; James G. Richardson, Richard Lee Gooch, II, Kirksville, Mo.; Bruce Fredrick Landek, Prairie Village; Michael Glen Moroney, Kansas City, Kan.; Robert Mack Shruder, Salina; George Edwin
NAF, Dennis Merrill Taylor, Grand Forks
AFB, N. Dak; Jerry Jerome Turley,
Wichita; Joseph Farrell aacfer
Wichita; Joseph Farrell aacfer
Hilton, K. Kansas; Walford,
K. Kansas; Mo.; Mo.; Kenneth
Welborn, Jr., Lawrence; William George
Cain, III, Justice; II., Thomas Craig
adwidy, William George
Leavood; Lonny R. Bruce, McPherson; William Harry Lee, Topeka
Ronald Lee Wagner, Rock Hill, Mo.; John Karrigan Bork, Hutchinson, Mo.; Michael Edward Nail, Shawnee Mission; Douglas Eugene Markley, Collins, Colo.; Ronald Blaine Crake, Teen; Tenn.; Bowen Neale, Iowa; Iowa, Iowa; Bowen Fayle, Shawnee Mission.
SIGMA CHI
Thomas Rudolph Brunner, Jr., Wichita; Lloyd Dodd little, J.; Shawnee Mission; James Tucker Goor, J.; Kent; Thomas Bradley Dubble, Colo.; Thomas Bingham Johnson, Jr., Kansas City; Charles Walter Keller, Kansas City; Mo.; Richard Gordon Craemer. Herbert Bruce Marshall, Topcka; Stewart James Martin, Coffeville.
David Stanley McClain, St. Joseph,
Mo.; Robert Benton Peugh II, Wichita;
Frederick Pinne III, Prairie Village;
Kent Douglas Powell, Wichita;
Joe Edward Rakaskas, Wichita; Charles
B, Roth, Salma; Frank, Rakaskas
B; David Hayes Waller, Girard, Girard;
Bruce Haynes Waller, Girard; William
Clarke Weseo, Lawrence.
hark Weecker, Lawrence
Arthur O. Wilkinson, Wichita; Jay
it staples
term papers and class notes, photographs, news items, themes, reports.
TIME
it tacks
notes to bulletin board, pennants to wall, shelf paper, drawer linings.
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.
W
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W
party costumes, prom decorations,
school projects, posters, stage sets.
10
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Allen, Wilson, Kansas City; Joseph Edwin McNeill, Wichita; Max Eugene ville; Steve Leroy Olson, Abilene; William L. McElfresh, Osage City; Michael Collins, Sydney City; Michael Jon Seaman, Calif.; Paul Joseph Becker, Wichita
SIGMA NU
Thomas David Martin, Littleton, Colo.; Guy L. Mellor, Webster Grove, Mo.; Gerald Newton Baker, Kirkwood, Mo.; Joseph R. Martin, Lawrence; Richard Hutchin; Franklin Waldo Cox; Pleasanton; Jerry Paul Jaax, Conway Springs.
Bernard Paul Blakey, Kansas City;
Tom Ellis Bowser, Coffeyville; Michael
Larry Boyle, Salina; Thomas James
Boyer, Coffeyville; David Biase,
Omaha, Nebr.; Gary Ray Garrett,
Needeshia; William Raymond Griffith,
Wichita; Philip Rodgers Johnson, Inde-
nance; Crockett Keuley III,
Shawnee; Mission; Robert Freddrick
Manley II, Chanute.
Robert Hugh Gerner, Bartlesville, Okla; William George Brooner, Summit, N.J.; James Maston Alley, Wichita; Tim Leedom, Wichita; Gary Tay Schubb. Coopersburg, Ga.; Kary Sschubb. wood; Eugene Francis Bower, Shawnee Mission; J. C. Hixon, Saint Francis.
Richard Lee Millspaugh, Hutchinson; William Joseph Myers, Kansas City, Mo; Robert James Schumm, Prairie Village; Thomas Van Swearingen, Chillicothe, Mo; William Todd Goldesser, Kirby; Moi, Maike Koster, Monroe; Moines, Ia.; Raymond Louis Thompson, Des Moines, Ia.; William Earl Reno III, Leawood
Robert E. Chalmers, Toppeka; Mark W. Elliott, Shawnee Mission; Steve R. G. Elliott, Shawnee Mission; Steve R.
SIGMA PHI EPSILON
(Continued on page 7)
Modern Dance Classes
Miss Yen-Lu Wong
Member of Royal Academy of Dance Recipient of De Rothschild award to the Martha Graham School for beginning drama student, and others. Call VI 2-9271
Interested in Photography? KAPPA ALPHA MU
National Photojournalism Society will have a
GET ACQUAINTED COFFEE
Wednesday, Sept. 23 7:30 p.m.
Cottonwood Room, Kansas Union
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
CENTER FOR HEALTH CARE
THE
National SecurityAgency is a totally unique organization
... and offers creative research opportunities in
the art and science of sophisticated communication
There is absolutely no other organization like it . . . no other organization doing the same important work, or offering the same wealth of opportunity for imaginative thinkers in the Liberal Arts, as well as the Physical and Engineering Sciences.
The National Security Agency is a major research arm of the Department of Defense, but its influence and responsibilities are far broader. It works closely with many industrial and research institutions; it has special access to scientific information at universities and other Government laboratories; and it enjoys close consulting arrangements with scientists of commanding stature. NSA staff members enjoy all the benefits of Federal employment without the requirements imposed by the Civil Service system.
What does NSA do that warrants this unique stature?
NSA approaches the subject of sophisticated communications from these original standpoints:
1. Creating secure communications systems and equipments unknown anywhere else, and devising special refinements for computers & edp systems that will increase our handling capabilities. This means that Communications Engineers, Computer Design Specialists, Mathematicians, Programmers, and Systems Analysts, all contribute to the design of antennas, transmitters, receivers, and terminal equipment . . . to experiments using new semiconductors, magnetic film, superconductive devices, etc., resulting in new logic circuits and memory units, better high-gain arrays for UHF radio systems, higher-capacity data handling terminal equipment, more effective speech band-width compression . . . and scores of similar advances.
2. By the very nature of "secure" communications, assuring the continuing invulnerability of U.S. communications through cryptologic procedures and techniques. Because cryptology and its cryptographic counterpart are not taught elsewhere, mathematicians, scientists—and all others with appropriate intellectual curiosity—will be taught this challenging new discipline right at NSA. Work in this field may involve specially-designed computers, television, computer-to-computer data links, and edp programming. (Even music, philosophy, or the classes may be useful prerequisites for cryptology.)
3. Translating written data, and presenting the crux of the material in meaningful form. This is the home of the linguistics expert and the languages graduate—enabling the talented graduate to make the most of his or her particular gift, and quickly expand familiarity with other tongues.
LIBERAL ARTS SENIORS: Your POT Application must be mailed before October 14th
tongues.
In all that NSA does, there is seldom any existing precedent. Only NSA pioneers in secure communications on this broad a scale, so only NSA offers the college graduate the best chance to make immediate use of his disciplined thinking . . . without years of post-graduate experience. All these features — together with its well-instrumented laboratories, libraries, and professional staff of specialists in amazingly varied fields—provide a stimulating academic atmosphere for individual accomplishment.
This is most important: To apply for an NSA position, all students EXCEPT Mathe-
mat Engineers and Physicists must take the PROFESSIONAL QUALIFICATION TEST scheduled for Saturday, October 24th. Stop in at your Placement Office and ask for the NSA Professional Qualification Test brochure . . . fill out and mail in the application card enclosed inside . . . and bring to the test the ticket you will receive by mail.
Even if you are not sure of your career interests yet, get the facts on NSA opportunities now.
On-Campus Interviews
for Mathematicians and Engineers will be held later. Consult your Placement Office for dates.
VOLTINORE
MAD
LAUREL
UNIVERSITY OF MD
AHNAPOLIS
PARKWAY
WASHINGTON
U. C.
PUSTON ACRE
ME VERNON
NSA is located in expanding facilities at Fort George G. Meade, Maryland-halfway between the city and its capital portation facilities, the University of Maryland and Johns Hopkins, suburban or rural living (in town living), that the new circumferential bay are completed) . . . and the Cheesapeake Bay resort region.
Monday, Sept. 21, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Sororities Pledge 79 In Renewed Fall Rush
KU sororities pledged the following 79 women in their first Fall Rush since 1961.
ALPHA CHI OMEGA
Janice Kay Gray, Fort Scott; Janet Marie Lloeffener, Liberty, Mo.; Karen Sue McMahon, St. Louis, Mo.; Mary Suzanne Scardello, Overland Park.
Jane Elizabeth Booth, Lawrence,
ALPHA OMICRON PI
(Continued from page 6)
Geist, Kingman, Robert C. Hall, Lea-
carne, Richard E. Stark, John Park;
Park; Gary E. Kostinger, Kingman; Robert
L. Magness, Independence, Mo.; James
Bush, Topcka; Steven W. Moyer,
Leawood
Marilyn Ann Becker, Leavenworth; Kathleen Karen Dole, Wichita; Linda Jay Graham, Pittsburgh; Dyann long, Amy Jay Graham, Murray City; Marigabie Akigale Murphy, Overland Park; Naney Ann Scott, Council Grove; Mary Elsie Tate, Prairie Village.
James R. Thompson, Kansas City, Mo.; Stephen J. Wanaker, Topeka; Terry L. Wilson, Kansas City; David R. Anderson, Sioux City, Iowa; Gary D. Patch, Chattanooga; Joseph C. Conway Springs; Joseph R. Templet, Cherryvale; Peter T. Glaibraht, Wichita.
Frats Pledge—
Charles D. Parden, Hutchinson; Edward A. Samelson, Kansas City, Mo.; William S. Sterling; Richard T. Gilchrist, Killen; Richard T. Gilchrist; Richard A. Sands, Overland Park; Philip Martin Roll, Kansas City, Mo.; Alan K. Stoke, Overland Park.
Daniel R. Aldridge, Olathe; Thomas P. Bashaw, Wichita; William E. Cheatham, Shawnee; Troy G. Cheek, Ulyses; Denis W. Delear, Overland Park; Lloyd D. Dickensheets, Wellington; Ulyses; Ulyses; Dennis W. Jacobs, Kansas City, Mo.; Roger C Kinney, Garden City; John E. Kyees, Shawnee Mission.
Richard I. MacArthur, Shawnee Mission; Jeffrey S. McCall, Uyses; James M. Rerrill, Shawnee Mission; George M. Pohar, Overland Park; Roger A. Plerat, Shawnee Mission; Wayne E. Woodard, Wichita; Lynn E. Lackey, Hutchinson.
Iwin J. Epperson, Jr., Topeka; Kurt
Landry; R. Watson; Kurdian;
Ottawa; Harold E. Ketterer, J.
Wichita; Allen E. Wann, Liberal; George
R. Watson, Watson; Kingman; Donald
G. Robert
Dennis W. Holt, Kansas City; Steve J
ALPHA PHI
Continued on page 9
Nancy Einsel, Wilmore; Sarabeth Jones, Joliet, Ill.; Susan Pierce, Kankakee, Ill.; Diane Kay Steed, Hutchinson; Marilyn Jeanne Weche. Wichita.
CHI OMEGA
DELTA DELTA DELTA
Gall Madelon Elkan, Bartlesville, Oka; Janet Lynet Farber, Leaward; Ann Lynn Gallaler, Wheat Ridge, Colo.; Marnie Mohs, Richmond, Ky.; E. Dianne Ratchford, Prairie Village; Joy Elaune Rutter, Leville; Carol Jane Ullig, Kansas City.
Mary Ann Bollini, Ferguson, Mo.; Barbara Ann Langewalter, Hutchinson; Stephanie Ski Ridgway, Lawrence; Ruth Marie Roberts, Kansas City, Mo.; Sharon Marie Roberts, Silver City, N.M.; Mary Agnes Smith, Wichita; Judy Ann Stiff, Prairie Village.
DELTA GAMMA
Diane Luella Ateberry, Kirksville, Mo.; Rebecca Banyard, South Hutchinson; Jo DeCord, Kearney; Jean Ann Evans, Bartlettsville, Okla.
GAMMA PHI BETA
Marian Carol Allen, Lawrence; Janice Ellen Baum, Dodge City; Mary Ellen Culver, Prairie Village; JoAnn Nadine Gresham, Topica; Katherine Ann Griggs, Parsons; Carmi Jeanne Johnson, Leaisman; City Ann Johnston, Lawrence; Vera Mingos, Lawrence; Mary-Linda Rapelye, Kansas City, Mo; Belinda Ross. Shawne Mission
KAPPA ALPHA THETA
Mary Jane Eckhoff. Leawood; Elizabeth Ann Hall, Topeka; Marianne Hart, Topeka; Hegenbart, Emporia; Jean Koehler, Mo., Sherrill Joyce Whaley, Topeka
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA
Jane Hertz, Joan Chevalier Cheryl
E. Costa, Wiechtar, Joan Adelain Heinovics, Prairie Village; Penelope Payne
Kennard, Hutchinson; Julian Myers,
Overland Park; Karon Noland, Lawrence; Madaline Brown Reed, Kansas
Cheryl Ann Campbell, Kansas City; Kathleen Dodge, Salina; Kathryn Houseworth, Topeka; Barbara Elaine Wescoe, Lawrence; Frost Adèle Rey, Abilene.
PL BETA PHI
Cheryl RAY Acker, Topeca; Judith LAREN, Stacey Barker; Judith LAREN, Jane Anderson, Kansas City; Lynette Ault, Ebson; Patricia Ann Braun, Katherine O'Reilly; Iola Sharon Ann Feile, Cimarron;
Judith Kaye Green, Kansas City; Elizabeth Mesha Haymes, Marshfield Mo.; Marcia Ati Heichen, Dodge City; Elizabeth Nieman, City of Susan Henrietta Jose, Carthage, Mo.; Ann Elizabeth Miller, Shawnee Mission; Carol Luzanne Slocum, Dallas, Tex.
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just call VI 3-0753
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
Tribal Art
AUDUBON $450.00
ALSO $300 TO 975
MERCURY
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ALSO TO $1800
VEGAS $300.00
WEDDING RING 125.00
SORENSON $350.00
WEDDING RING 100.00
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809 MASS.
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Monday, September 21, 1964
ART
MATERIALS
CARDS
HAVE YOU SEEN THE NEW LOOK
HISTORY
MATH
During the summer we completed renovations on the KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE so that we might serve you better We hope you will approve of the changes The KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE has all your school needs Art Supplies, Drafting Equipment, Books (of course), notebooks and still more.
Also visit our new branch in Watson Library for a complete line of scholarly paperbacks from academic publishing houses.
KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE
University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Sorority Celebrates 50th Anniversary
Alpha Chi Omega sorority celebrated the 50th anniversary of its founding at KU on Saturday with activities and entertainment for visiting alumnae.
Visitors to the house were greeted by a display in front of the house
Frats Pledge—
(Continued from page 7)
Friesen, Russell; Fred H. Smith; Russell;
August H. Krueger, III, Hays; Charles L.
Burns, Wichita; Donald H. Evers, St.
Louis, Mo.; William J. Keiter, Parsons;
David D. Roberts, Clarendon Hills, Ill;
Jimmy R. Travis, Mulvane.
Stephen C. Meredith, Shawnee Mission; Jeffrey Willet Hill, Wellington; Jeremy Garriey, John Berkey, Stockton; George Lee, Charles Edward England, Coffeville; James Lester Bartlett, Joplin, Mo.; Daniel McGuire, Richard Bennett, Pittsburgh; Craig Dale Newman, Arkansas City; Peter Edward Bartman, Appleton, Wise; Wayne Lessee, Fike, Flint, Mich.; Robert Ward Russell, Overland Park; Donald B, Calhoun, Rivn
THETA, TAU
John Charles Trewolla, Shawnee Mission; Terry Marvin Love, Shawnee Mission; Danny Diaz, Hays Dietz, Holton; James Steven Burr, Lays; Joseph Lee McKown, Pratt.
TRIANGLE
Michael F. Bower, Shawnee Mission;
James Stuart Craig, Kansas City; Gary
Joseph Woerschler, Kansas City, Mo.
Thomas Keller Frye, Shawnee Mission;
Danny Duane Lockwood, Kansas City;
Clement Voadornik, Kansas City;
E Craig Oursley, Kansas City;
Dudley Thompson, Turner; Robert Bruce
Holmstrom, Kansas City.
Monday, Sept. 21, 1964
of a 1936 Ford and "Alpha Chi Annie" who was dressed in 1930-40 attire. All hostesses in the house were dressed in various period costumes.
Saturday morning Mrs. Albert Haas, chairman of the corporation board, conducted an open discussion concerning plans for the new Alpha Chi Omega house. In the evening, a banquet in honor of the alumnae was held in the Kansas Room at the Union. In addition to the other honored guests, Emily Taylor, dean of women, and Mrs. Harry Wiles attended. Jackie Churchill, president of Phi chapter, introduced the program for the evening. Mrs. Sue Lindeman, national collegiate president, was the speaker for the evening. Her talk was entitled "Phi Phenomenae." This was followed by a skit used by the chapter during rush week. The evening's program concluded with a solo by Leo Borland, Altoona senior, entitled "My Symphony," written and composed especially for Alpha Chi.
Several alums stayed overnight in the chapter house and the weekend reunion ended with brunch Sunday morning. The weekend included the usual reminiscing which goes along with any reunion—such as the time which Mrs. Lindeman remembered when Alpha Chi's forced and prodded two cows up onto one of the balconies as part of their homecoming decorations that year.
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Teachers to Discuss Reading Problems
Seven methods of attacking the never-solved problem of how best to teach children to read will be considered at the eighth annual Conference on Reading Oct. 24 at the University of Kansas.
Dr. Delores Durkin of Teachers College, Columbia University, will be the guest lecturer for the program conducted by KU for the Kansas Council for the International Reading Association. Several hundred teachers will attend.
Dr. Durkin's lectures will deal with "can and should pre-first grade children be taught to read?" and the use of phonics.
Group discussions on recent trends in the teaching of reading will consider these seven methods: The Roman-augmented alphabet,
the linguistic approach, teaching of reading in the non-graded school, the language-experience approach, grouping in the intermediate grades, reading as a team-teaching effort, and the Montessorian approach.
Miss Floy Utz of the Topeka public schools is president of the Kansas Council of the International Reading Association, and will preside.
PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS
ENGLISH
MORY DICK
MORY DICK
MORY DICK
MORY DICK
MORY DICK
MORY DICK
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THIS WEEK YOU'LL BE BUYING BOOKS
And the most convenient way to pay for them—and all your campus bills— is with a check from your own account at the First National Bank. You don't have to worry about carrying around a lot of cash and you have a legal receipt for every expenditure. Lawrence merchants readily accept checks drawn on a local bank like the First and you can verify the up-to-the-minute balance of your account faster than with an out-of-town bank. When you open your Economy checking account at the First, you receive 50 free personalized checks and the cost is only ten cents per check paid, no minimum balance required.
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8th AND MASSACHUSETTS • LAWRENCE, KANSAS • VI 3-0152
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Sept. 17, 1964
I will provide a detailed description of the image based on its visual content.
The image is a grayscale photograph featuring a dense, chaotic pattern of intertwined lines and shapes. The lines are irregularly shaped and vary in thickness, creating a sense of movement and turbulence across the canvas. The background is filled with similar chaotic patterns, suggesting that the image could be part of a larger scene or a document with complex text or graphics.
Given the lack of color information, it is impossible to determine what the actual subject matter is. However, the visual complexity suggests that it could be a form of digital artwork, a graphic novel cover, or a scientific illustration.
To proceed with a specific question about this image, please specify the task or topic you wish to ask. For example, "What type of media is represented in this grayscale image?" or "How does the visual style reflect the subject matter?"
Please note that without additional context, no definitive answer can be provided regarding the nature of the image.
ONE CHANCE-KU fans got only one opportunity to do the touchdown wave, but fortunately it was enough, as the Jayhawks managed to make it stand up for a 7-3 victory over TCU Saturday.
JACKIE MURRAY
HE'S HAPPY—Something on the field spurred Larry Colburn, Lawrence junior and KU cheerleader, to this expressionable pose. Behind Colburn is the KU Jayhawk mascot. (Photos by Steve Williams)
COACH HOUSE
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PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS
ROCK CHALK REVUE
Questions—Suggestions-Criticisms
Open Discussion For All Interested Parties
Tuesday, September 22, 7:30 p.m. — Student Union, Pine Room
STAFF INTERVIEWS September 23-24
Bring a personal letter stating position wanted and experience to KU-Y office in the Union by 5:00 p.m. Tuesday or to the open meeting that evening.
'Breaks Even Out'
Monday, Sept. 21, 1964 University Daily Kansar
Page 11
Fumble Preserves KU Victory
By Russ Corbitt (Sports Editor)
"We got some breaks and so did they. Our's came late in the game, but our fumbles were just as important to them."
That's how KU Coach Jack Mitchell summed up his team's narrow escape with a 7-3 win over Texas Christian University here Sunday. The game marked the last of a series of opening games between the two teams which began in 1942, and as Mitchell said, "The breaks in the series were bound to even out, because there have been quite a few that have gone against us."
THE "LATE BREAK" Mitchell referred to was 264 lb. Dick Pratt's
recovery of a TCU fumble on the KU one-yard line with 20 seconds remaining in the game. KU Quarterback Steve Renko ran the clock out on one play, and preserved the Jayhawk victory.
KU ALSO HAD its trouble holding on to the ball at key moments, as Mitchell noted. After Bruce Alford, TCU sophomore place kicker, narrowed the score to 7-3 with a field goal in the second quarter, KU
"John (Garber) hit Howard (TCU quarterback) and jarred the ball loose enough for me to grab it," Pratt said, beaming with his ever-present smile as he talked with reporters. "It was just there and I grabbed it."
moved the ball to the TCU six-yard line before a stray pitchout cost the Jayhawks possession and a possible touchdown. In the third quarter Mitchell's charges moved to the TCU 21 before fumbling the ball away.
All the scoring came in the second quarter, as KU tallied its seven points in the series of downs prior to TCU's drive for the field goal. Willie Ray Smith swept right end for the final six yards and the six-pointer. Gary Duff converted for the extra point.
THE BIG PLAY in KU's touchdown drive came as a result of the lateral game which the Jayhawks had worked on intensively during practice. Renko handed off to Gale
Sayers, who, after picking up five yards, pitched back to Renko. The KU quarterback then displayed his high school fullback ability by reeling off a 45-yard jaunt to the TCU 14-yard line.
A third period lateral play went to the extreme, as Renko handed off to Sayers, with laterals to Gerhart and then back to Renko. The play covered 12 yards.
Mitchell and the Jayhawks are now looking ahead to the trip to Syracuse this Saturday. KU upset the Orange here last year, and the highly-ranked eastern team has been broadcasting its desires for revenge. Boston College upset Syracuse, 21-14, Saturday.
69 65 72 60 88
LINE CHARGE—The KU offensive line got the jump on the TCU defense in this play, shot immediately after the snap from center. Jayhawks
shown are (56) Jim Becker, (60) George Harvey, (88) Sandy Buda, (69) Bill Wohlford, and (11) Steve Renko. (Photo by Steve Williams)
STUDENTS Grease Jobs... $1.00 Brake Adj... 98c
Automotive Service
Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel
Balancing & Alignment
7 a.m. - 11 p.m.
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694
LAWRENCE DANCE STUDIO
Director—Nancy Elaine Anderson
CONTINUOUS ENROLLMENT
Ballet
Adult Courses in Ballet, Toe, Adagio, Jazz. School Age Courses in Ballet, Tap, Acrobatics, Boy's Tumbling.
COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING
OPEN 24 HRS.
HONN'S
Across From The High School 19th & La. VI 3-9631
Student, Union Activities
announces
A New Series of Outstanding Films From all over the World
THE CLASSICAL FILM SERIES
Sept.23 A Day in the Country (1938) France L'Atlante(1934)France
Sept. 30 II Grido (1957) Italy
Oct. 7 On the Bowery (1956) U.S.A.
The Ouiet One (1948) U.S.A.
Oct. 14 Gate of Hell (1954) Japan
Oct. 21 The Gold Rush (1925) U.S.A.
Nov. 4 The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920) Germany
Oct. 28 Vivre Sa Vie (1962) France
Dec. 2 The End of St. Petersburg (1927) U.S.S.R.
Nov. 11 Les Dames du Bois de Boulogne (1944) France
Nov.18 Freaks (1932) U.S.A.
Dec. 9 Music Room (1959) India
Jan. 6 Robin Hood (1922) U.S.A.
Dec. 16 Duck Soup (1933) U.S.A.
SHOWN IN FRASER THEATER 7:00 P.M.
Single Admission — 60c Season Tickets — $5.00 now on sale at the Kansas Union Save $2.80
19th St. Garage
Automatic transmission repair
Automatic transmission
overhauls
tune-ups
brake service
carburetor work
Behind Fina Service Station at 19th & Mass.
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Open
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CLASSIFIEDS
FOR SALE
9-21
1956 Chevy Bel-Air; 4-dr.; auto.; radio;
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I 2-3838 after 5 p.m.
9-23
1958 Dodge 4 dr., radio and htr. Auto,
trans, and power steering. Good second
car. Good tires. New motor. CALL VI 3-
0131.
9-25
Walnut finish spinet piano for sale by Mid-States Piano Co. 317 E. Walnut, Walnut, MI 48092 may arrange most attractive purchase. May be seen locally. Write immediately.
Attention engineering students: complete set of engineering drawing equipment— mechanical pencil具 eic —$25 to $30 ware for $17.50, CALL VI 2-0759 after 6 p.m. 9-25
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL VI 2-1901 for free delivery
TYPEWRITERS, electronics, manuals, portables; sales, service, rentals. Olympia, Hermes, Royal, Smith-Corona, Olivett, Adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass., VI 3-3644. tf
Siamese Kittens -Purred Seal Point,
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after 5 p.m. or on weekends.
9-25
2 bedroom house trailer for sale or rent.
VI 3-3364 after 5 p.m. on or off ends.
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1958 Dodge, 2-dr., hardtop, pwr, steering,
air cond. Torque-Flight-V 8, Black and
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VI 2-1527 after 6 p.m. or on weekends. tf
Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive classes and summaries. Revised for classes. Currently only available. Notes, Call VI 3-1428. Free delivery. $4.50.
Term papers. Theses by experienced typist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tf
TYPING
Accurate typing done on electric typewriter. Familiar with the four accredited K.U. thesis forms. CALL Pat Beck at VI 3-5830. tf
Experienced typist. Former secretary will be responsible for accurate work. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter, Gestetner Duplicator. Mrs. Hauger, 2521 Alabama St. Phone 9-8568.
Babbysitter for one child, 2 years old. Call Carol Ann Coburn, VI 2-0422. 9-25
HELP WANTED
Part time—Immediately. Mornings or aft-
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Citizens Ambulance Service, 1104 W. 4th,
CALL VI 3-7733. 9-25
Part Time—to fit your schedule. Call on
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VI 3-8376 after 6:30 p.m. 9-25
Wanted to hire: combo or bootenanny
way Leavenworth, Ks. 1525 S 9-28
way Leavenworth, Ks. 1525 S 9-28
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BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
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per week. Must have car. Call 913-381-
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9-23
TRANSPORTATION
Want in car pool from Topeka daily. Call Leon Torkelson UN 4-3915 or CE 2-98-207
MISCELLANEOUS
BAR-B-Q—For Bar-B-Q ribs and chickens that are a treat to eat, try ours at 515 Michigan St. Hours: 11:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday,
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Board and Room available at 1225 Oread.
LARGE SINGLE ROOM for rent to young first house off campus. See at Indiana.
9-23
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Monday, Sept. 21, 1964
Russians Say U.S. Sank Ships, Americans Report the Opposite
MOSCOW, —(UPI)— The official Soviet Tass News Agency said today it was reported that U.S. warships fired on five unidentified ships in last Friday's Gulf of Tonkin incident and "three of them were sunk."
Tass carried the report in a statement warning that American interference in Viet Nam "may lead to very dangerous consequences, the entire responsibility for which will rest with the United States."
The official Soviet agency did not give any source for its report.
U. S. authorities, in describing the incident, have never said any ships were hit or sunk in the incident off the Vietnamese coast Friday night.
"Another military incident took place in the Gulf of Tonkin on Sept. 18." Tass said. Two United States
destroyers, which were in international waters, opened fire on ships they had not identified.
"A statement issued by Defense Secretary (Robert J. McNamara on Sept. 19 admits that the unidentified ships had taken no hostile actions whatever and the United States destroyers opened fire only conjecturing that the above mentioned ships allegedly had hostile intentions
"The world public remembers only too well," Tass said, "that similar events in the Tonkin Gulf were used by the U.S. Armed Forces as a pretext for piratic actions against the shore facilities and inhabited localities (of South Viet Nam) in August this year.
Regents Survey—
"Therefore, the report about the incident in the Tonkin Gulf has
(Continued from page 1)
In dozens of ways, the role of the University of Kansas in computer- age research is becoming increasingly important. New industrial and scientific research now can be done in Kansas that previously never would have been considered, said Professor Richard Hetherington, director of the KU Computation Center.
THE COMPUTER'S CAPACITY for intricate problem-solving is awesome. Its inner mechanics, however, are relatively simple in theory.
A computer isn't an electronic "brain," as many people term it, Dr. Hetherington said. A computer cannot think or reason the way a human does.
KU's new machine uses a simple binary counting system of ones and zeroes, as compared to a decimal system of numbers which uses zero to nine. A digit can be indicated by an on-off switch; on is a "one," and off is a "zero." The ones and zeroes are added or subtracted in a twinkling, over and over again, to arrive at an answer. Multiplication or division is done by repeated additions or subtractions.
The new computer will require just 16 millionths of a second to add any pair of ten-digit numbers. It will add 66,000 ten-digit numbers a second.
INTERNATIONAL Business Machines Corporation supplied at the equipment. Most of it is provided at 40 percent of the usual commercial rental rate.
This is the second time in two years the University has expanded its computer research services. The smaller 1620 computer now doing
physics research was originally installed in 1962 to replace a smaller machine in the Computation Center. It has been linked to the physics department's Van de Graaff accelerator for speedy analysis of nuclear research data and control of the project's progress.
The new machine is installed in its own suite of air-conditioned rooms on the first floor of Summerfield Hall, center of business and economics teaching at KU.
In addition to space for the computer and its auxiliary equipment, there are offices, classrooms, and a small library related to computer technology.
APPROXIMATELY 40 PERCENT of all KU computer projects are related to student research work, Dr. Hetherington said. There may be an expansion in courses taught in computer usage.
Experienced computer operators assist researchers in handling data processing at the Computation Center. In the first few months of its operation, the new computer will be operated on a double shift.
The smaller computer moved from the Computation Center had been working up to 18 hours a day, seven days a week. Allowing time for maintenance, that approached the maximum usage. The new computer is expected to be scheduled just as heavily within a few months.
Stride's the Secret
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Man O'Waa, one of horse racing's greatest champions, covered an average of 27 feet with each stride.
caused anxiety and apprehensions lest this is a pretext for new aggressive actions in that area."
U. S. Defense Secretary McNamara told a Washington news conference Saturday that two U.S. destroyers fired on four threatening but unidentified vessels Friday in the latest Tonkin Gulf incident.
McNamara said the night-time incident 32 miles off Communist North Viet Nam ended when the approaching vessels disappeared from the U.S. destroyers' radar screens. The marauders never got close enough to attack the American warships, the U.S. Defense secretary added.
The Pentagon has refused to speculate whether the vessels spotted by the radar as they were approaching the U.S. warships were Soviet-built North Vietnamese PT boats. These were the type of torpedo boats that attacked U.S. destroyers in the Tonkin Gulf on Aug. 2 and 4. The United States retaliated for the earlier attacks with air strikes at North Vietnamese coast bases.
In Washington, the Defense Department today said it had nothing to add to McNamara's statement of last Saturday.
The Tass report today said "The provocative actions of the American military in the Gulf of Tonkin are emphatically denounced in the authoritative circles of the Soviet Union."
Tass said it was reported from Hanoi that the North Vietnamese government "regards the new incident as an attempt to find an excuse for launching an aggression against the Democratic Republic of North Viet Nam."
The Soviet statement added:
"One thing is clear — whether or not the events at the shore of the Democratic Republic of North Viet Nam were premeditated provocation or were due to irresponsible actions of American militarists who consider themselves entitled to open fire when and where it pleases them — the government of the United States is fully responsible for the possible consequences of such incidents."
Tass reiterated a previous Soviet statement that patrolling of the gulf of Tonkin by U.S. warships is "totally unjustified and constitutes an open hostile act toward the states of that area." is demanded anew that such patrols be halted.
In a separate commentary Tass said U.S. intervention in South Viet Nam has "whipped up war hysteria . . . and appears to be wrecking the nerves of the American crews" of the 7th fleet.
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Level Picked Extension Manager
Dale A. Level is the new manager of the Kansas City Extension Center and also will hold appointment as associate professor of speech.
Harold E. Collins has joined the Center staff as extension representative, replacing Evan D. Vernon, who becomes manager of KU's Northwest Kansas Center at Colby.
Prof. Level succeeds N. Webster Rickhoff as manager of the center. The latter organized the Kansas City Extension Center in 1945 and managed it until his retirement last spring.
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DOWNTOWN
The Town Shop
the university shop
ON THE HILL
ON SEPTEMBER 23RD & 24TH Entertainment History Will Be Made...
THRU THE MIRACLE OF ELECTRONOVISION
An ELECTRONOVISION Production
ALEXANDER H. COHEN.Presents
RICHARD
BURTON
in JOHN GIELGUDS Production of
HAMLET
A
EXACTLY AS PERFORMED ON BROADWAY WITH THE ALL STAR NEW YORK CAST!
4 PERFORMANCES ONLY! TICKETS NOW ON SALE
MAT. 2 PM EVES. 8 PM - ALL SEATS $2
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BOX OFFICE OR ORDER BY MAIL SEND CHECK OR M.O.—SPECIFY PERFORMANCE, INCLUDE SELF ADDRESSED STAMPED ENvelope.
NO RESERVED SEATS—ONLY CAPACITY SOLD!
VARSITY ART Attractions
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Matinees 2:00 p.m.
Evenings 8:00 p.m.
Oread Festival Botched; Magazine Editorial Says
Bv Bill Lynch
The Oread Jazz Festival, hei
last April 25 at KU, has come under
fire from Downbeat Magazine for
failing to deliver its major-prizes.
In an editorial in its Oct. 8 issue, the country's leading jazz periodical describes the confusion over the top awards as a "botch," although conceding that other colleges sponsoring festivals have similar problems.
Michael Maher, associate professor of zoology, the faculty advisor to the OJF, called the editorial "unfair," claiming it gives a "onesided picture" by ignoring the other prizes.
The winning small group, the Bill Farmer Quartet, was given a playing tour of Europe with transportation to and from the Continent provided by the University Program of People-to-People, Inc., and a two-week engagement at Jazzland, a feature of the Louisiana Pavilion at the New York World's Fair.
The Jazzland engagement would have paid each of the four musicians $250 a week, somewhat above scale of the American Federation of Musicians.
The Farmer Quartet had relied on the $2000 in wages to handle living and travel costs while in Europe
However, the New York engagement was a last-minute development and no contract was secured, so the group had no recourse when the date was cancelled.
The faculty advisor for the Festival, Prof. Michael Maher, told the
Kansan this morning that the failure to have a contract signed was mostly due to naivete on the part of the committee. He also said the festival organizers should have been more skeptical of the wages offered, in view of the current state of jazz nightclubs.
The Downbeat editorial also blamed People-to-People for backing out of an earlier commitment to help set up engagements in Europe.
"It seems incomprehensible." Downbeat says, "That a student was left in charge of making European bookings for a jazz group." The "student" referred to is Philip Jacka, a graduate student in architecture who handled much of the pre-festival promotion and who
handled negotiations with the directors of Jazzland. The magazine also criticizes the festival for accepting room and board as compensation for jobs in Europe rather than cash, although Prof. Maher said that one of the European dates was on a cash basis.
Prof. Maher contends that the Farmer group was not cheated out of anything that they had been offered before they entered the festival and that, in fact, they did receive quite a lot. The group received smaller prizes and after the festival was paid $75 for an appearance at a Kansas City Jazz Concert.
Asked if there would be a festival this year, Prof. Maher said there would, although he thinks that the Downbeat article may have discouraged some potential entries around the country. He said that there will not be a European trip offered, but that the festival will be organized in much the same manner. He regrets that the magazine has "damned the whole festival" for one mistake, because, he said, it was a big success on the whole.
Downbeat Magazine is one of the most widely read magazines which covers the field of jazz.
The editorial was mainly directed at the idea that big prizes were not needed at collegiate jazz festivals. The magazine went on to say that these festivals were well enough established that prizes were not needed to attract a large number of entries.
Daily Hansan
62nd Year, No.3
KU, K-State Rivals For New Water Lab
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
KU is busy trying to secure location here of a new water resources laboratory, according to William J. Argersinger, associate dean of faculties for research.
Reason for the effort stems from the fact that both KU and Kansas State University are being considered for location of the laboratory. KU officials feel they have a strong case for which Dean Arger-singer gives these reasons:
- The State Geological Survey, long interested in water problems, has its headquarters on the campus. The U.S. Geological Survey also has an office here, and between them, the two surveys have the nation's largest ground-water research program underway in Kansas.
Tuesday, Sept. 22, 1964
- An extensive research program is already underway in the Environmental Health Laboratory at the Nuclear Reactor Center, and in the
- The University already has a Water Resources Institute, made up of faculty authorities on water law, conservation, control, and public health.
School of Engineering and Architecture
- The State Biological Survey, by law a part of the University, could make use of findings on water and water pollution.
- The KU Medical Center is involved in related research, and its personnel would be available for consultation.
- A variety of water problems are close to Lawrence. These include water treatment and use in the metropolitan areas of Kansas City and Topeka, flood control, ground water supplies, irrigation, and agricultural pollution.
Despite the difference of opinion between KU and Kansas State over the location of the laboratory, talks between the two have been "amiable," Dean Argersinger said.
"Regardless of which institution is selected by the U.S. Public Health Service—if one or the other is there undoubtedly would be close cooperation between water authorities on both campuses," he concluded.
Federal Jury Indicts Nine For Cuba Trip
Acting Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach said two of seven men indicted—Lee Levi Laub, 25, and Phillip Abbott Luce, 27, both of New York—were still awaiting trial on similar charges brought last year in connection with a trip to Cuba in 1963.
None of those named in the indictment made the trip to Cuba this year. But they were charged with conspiring "to induce, recruit, and arrange" for others to go in violation of state department regulation which require a specially validated passport for such travels.
WASHINGTON—(UPI)A federal grand jury indicted nine persons today on charges of conspiring to organize and promote a trip of 84 Americans to Cuba this summer in violation of state department restrictions.
Others named in today's indictment, returned in Brooklyn, N.Y. were:
Roger Jay Taus, 25, and Ellen Irene Shallit, 21, both of New York City; Albert Lasatar Maher, 22, Cambridge, Mass.; Christian Lee Raisner, 24, San Francisco; Martin Albrecht Nicolaus, 23, Waltham, Mass.; Michael David Brown, 22, Ann Arbor, Mich.; and Patricia Ann Sopiak, 24, New Boston, Mich.
The indictment said the seven men and two women named had formed a committee to promote travel to Cuba and set themselves up as regional representatives in various parts of the country to promote the trip.
MISS SHALLIT traveled to Cuba in 1963, and was named as a co-conspirator but not as a defendant in an indictment returned Sept. 27. 1963 in connection with that trin.
To promote the trip, the indictment said, the committee spoke at meetings in Detroit, at the University of Connecticut, and the University of Rhode Island and held interviews at Ann Arbor, Mich., New York City, San Francisco and Long Island, N.Y.
Maximum penalty for conviction on the charges would be five years in prison and $10,000 fine.
Some Students Just Can't Win
The first day of classes always produces a number of confused persons who can't find the right room or building and are late arriving for a class.
One girl looking for her Family Life course mistook the abbreviation in the enrollment schedule for Fraser for the abbreviation of Flint Hall.
When she arrived at Flint she quickly found what she thought was her assigned room. However, when she opened the door she found there were no desks, no other students, and no teacher.
It was a broom closet.
Officials Clear Up Rumors On Food Poisoning
Rumors have been circulating connecting the food poisoning of the 31 Phi Kappa Psi's and the recent typhoid shots given to the members of the KU football team. The typhoid shots were given as a protection against food poisoning, it was said.
KU officials today issued a statement which endeavored to clear up some of the rumors.
The statement followed a report in a Lawrence newspaper which said the sick men may have been stricken with a type of food poisoning against which typhoid shots are used as a protective measure.
A report issued from the office of James Gunn, administrative assistant to the chancellor said, "the vaccination of students . . . who do traveling . . . is normal procedure."
"Members of the varsity football team who received inoculations Saturday following the game with Texas Christian were completing their regular series of inoculations."
"The typhoid-paratyphoid vaccine is given to them every year, customarily at a time when they will have a relatively quiet period following in which to recover from any reaction."
The food poisoning was acquired at a fraternity luncheon, and was traced by the State Board of Health and the Student Health Service as coming from a turkey casserole.
The casserole, according to the report, contained staphylococcus and salmonella bacteria.
Weather
On the first day of autumn, the weather bureau predicts intermittent rain and thundershowers ending tomorrow morning with partly cloudy weather tomorrow. There will be little change in temperature with a low of 60 expected and easterly winds of 15 miles per hour.
Gladys Pounds Atlantic Coast
CAPE HATTERAS, N.C.—(UPI)—Erratic Hurricane Gladys pounded the Atlantic coastline from the Carolinas to New Jersey with heavy seas and gales today on a slow northwestward course.
Precautions were urged as far north as Long Island for the storm, fourth hurricane of the season.
Manteo, N.C., was buffeted by wind gusts up to 65 miles an hour and minor flooding was reported on Norfolk, Va., waterfront streets by the sidelash of the king-size howler, located about 210 miles east of Cape Hatteras. It was moving toward the northwest at a sluggish 6 mph after virtually stalling for several hours.
Highest winds were estimated at 85 mph with gales whipping the ocean and coastline 400 miles to the north and 250 miles to the south.
"All interests along the coast from Hatteras northward to Long Island should keep informed so that they may take necessary precautions if hurricane warnings become necessary later today or tonight." the Washington weather bureau said.
Tides of 3 to 4 feet above normal were forecast from Cape Hatteras to Cape May, N.J., and for the lower Chesapeake Bay.
This raised the prospects of flooding for some areas and residents of islands and low-lying areas along the North Carolina coast were urged to evacuate while they could.
SCHOOLS ALONG a 60-mile stretch of North Carolina's outer banks north of Oregon Inlet were closed. The public school at Kitty Hawk was designated as a disaster shelter in case one was needed.
U. S. 158, the main north-south route along the outer banks, was washed by sea water in the Kitty Hawk area, but the highway was still open.
The big Oregon Inlet fishing fleet took safe harbor at Manteo and Wanchese.
Most North Carolina coastal residents, weather-wise in the way of storms, took little notice of Gladys, believing that the storm would bypass them. The tourist season normally ends with the Labor Day weekend and about the only visitors along the strip of barrier beaches that compose the outer banks were sports fishermen.
Water about one foot deep coursed into waterfront streets in Norfolk. There was some sandbagging and some cars stalled and had to be left in the water.
The highest wind recorded by mid-morning in Norfolk was 42 miles an hour. Rain squalls were expected to begin after noon.
THE VAST navy complex in the Norfolk area went on hurricane alert "Condition Two." All men on liberty were recalled to their ships and all vessels were prepared for quick departure to safer waters. All airplanes which could not be safely stored in hangars were ready to be flown inland if necessary.
The navy sent five ships to the Norfolk Naval Shipyard and others went to pre-assigned hurricane anchorage in Hampton Roads harbor to ride out the storm.
Gale warnings were flying from Wilmington, N.C., to Provincetown, Mass., and small craft were urged to remain in port all along the east coast until winds and heavy seas subsided.
"Increasing tides and winds will cause damaging beach erosion and considerable flooding of the low-lying coastal areas," said a late advisory on the season's seventh tropical storm.
At 7 a.m. Gladys was centered near latitude 34.5 north, longitude 71.8 west, or about 225 miles east-southeast of Cape Hatteras.
Winds of 100 miles an hour extended out 50 miles mainly to the north of the hurricane's center. Gales ranged 400 miles to the north and 250 miles to the south.
Wind gusts of 65 mph were reported at Mante $ \sigma $ , N.C., during the morning.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Sept. 22, 1964
Bookstore Refunds
Education Investment
During the past several days this writer has heard a number of students voicing complaints and questions about a statement printed on the back of the cash register tapes from the Kansas Union Book Store.
This statement reads: "A portion of your refund has been pledged to support N.D.E.A. Student Loans."
The questioning students wanted to know by whose authority the money had been pledged and why. Some felt it to be a high-handed and arbitrary action.
Actually the program, unanimously recommended by the All Student Council and passed by the executive committee of the Memorial Corporation, benefits a great many KU students who find the cost of a college education burdensome.
Last spring the decision was made to reduce Kansas Union Book Store refunds from eight to five per cent during the next four years. This reduction of three per cent amounts to about $22,500 annually. This money will be used to pay a loan that matches federal money made available to KU through provisions of 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.
At the time the decision to cut the refunds was made, Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students and chairman of the executive committee of the Memorial Corporation said, "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."
This program puts the students in the position of investing in their own education. The plan seems to be a wise investment for KU and the future.
Ho-Hum, Campaign Boring
Thank heavens, the presidential campaign of 1964 has only six more weeks to go.
It's not the excitement that's killing us, but the utter boredom of watching what appears to be a terribly one-sided contest.
If the polls are right—or even nearly so—Barry Goldwater simply has no chance of beating Lyndon Johnson in November. Of course the polls could be wrong. They have been before. But this time the popularity gap between the two candidates is so wide that—barring some unexpected earth-shaking development—it probably can't be closed.
In a way, this is unfortunate. The nomination of Barry Goldwater at San Francisco was expected to bring new vitality to a Republican party said to have been dominated by the effeet Easterners.
Furthermore, Barry is a cardcarrying conservative while LBJ, despite the family wealth, is at least an off-and-on liberal. The President is self-described as a "prudent progressive."
So here we had all the makings of a true test between two widely divergent philosophies. This is something the conservatives have long demanded on the theory that they have actually been disenfranchised in recent presidential elections when Republican candidates differed only in degree from their Democratic adversaries.
But look at what has happened. Goldwater, the conservative, is now being called a radical. And Johnson, the liberal, is getting unprecedented support from the usually conservative business community.
Confusing, isn't it?
I suspect that what we are witnessing is a triumph for the long, almost unbeatable "peace and prosperity" theme.
President Johnson has everything going for him. The gross national product continues to grow, corporations report record earnings, workers are getting fat contract settlements and the elderly foresee comprehensive medical care provided by a paternalistic government.
The other major factor favoring Johnson is that we are no longer a conservative people in the sense that so many Goldwater admirers believe we are.
It is all very well to denounce the onrush of socialism. I have done so myself in the years when it seemed possible to curb the growth of big government and the federal controls which now directly affect the lives of every individual.
Yet most of the reforms advocated by Norman Thomas, oft the Socialist's candidate for president, and the first Sen. Robert LaFollette, have long since been incorporated in the platforms of both major political parties.
So we are not about to sell any elements of TVA or repeal the welfare state. States' rights is still a slogan but becomes meaningless when those proclaiming their fealty to this cause invade Washington looking for federal grants.
On the question of which party can best secure the peace, the conclusions are not so easily determinable. Goldwater is right in saying that we are at war in Vietnam. Yet our involvement there began under a Republican administration.
President Johnson is understandably uncomfortable a b o u t Vietnam. His sensitivity over Cuba was shown when he struck from his remarks in Miami any mention of that unhappy island.
Sharp criticisms can and should be made of our foreign policy. But the challenger must offer constructive alternatives to those policies if he is to be believed.
Thus far in the campaign, the mood of the country seems to be that although the Kennedy administration flubbed the chance to clobber Castro and found no solution to South Vietnam, this is not the time to let a new man experiment with world tensions.
Part of Barry Goldwater's difficulties arise from an accumulated record of loose remarks and intemperate actions.
He was doing well at San Francisco until his now famous phrases on extremism first offended and then drove away badly needed support from the so-called Republican moderates.
These hurts have never been healed, though Eisenhower, Nixon, Gov. Scranton and Nelson Rockefeller are going through the motions of party loyalty. But others, notably Sen. Kenneth Keating of New York and Michigan's George Romney have yet to endorse the Goldwater-Miller ticket.
Other than a few friendly steps at the GOP summit conference at Hershey, the Senator from Arizona has pursued the lonely road. This is a Goldwater campaign and is being waged according to Barry's dictates. Make no mistake about that!
Barry Goldwater seems strangely unconcerned over these defections which might have been avoided by making the slightest concessions in language at the Republican convention.
Quite apart from the unenthusiasm for Goldwater shown by many Republican politicians, the Senator is drawing criticism for his advocacy of a voluntary social security system.
The Goldwater theory is that every citizen should have the right to choose a retirement plan which best suits his individual needs through a choice of savings, securities, private insurance or social security.
At first thought, this sounds good. But the economic facts indicate that any substantial withdrawal of citizens from the social security system would ultimately plunge the system into bankruptcy. "Should this happen," says economist Sylvia Porter, "the cost to the American economy would be incalculable."
Nor is Sen. Goldwater on better ground in proposing an automatic five per cent cut in individual and corporate income taxes in each of the next five years.
For it is impossible to foretell what the national needs may be during this period. And the plan would cut taxes even in an inflationary swing when restraint is needed.
This is a strange doctrine from a man who voted against the 1964 tax reduction and the 1962 investment tax credit for new equipment purchases.
These are some of the reasons why many normally oriented conservatives view Sen. Goldwater's program as "too radical."
Others think his off-the-cuff statements on world affairs reveal both a shocking lack of knowledge and an impetuosity which might needlessly involve the United States in world conflict.
Meanwhile, President Johnson is basking under the warm sunshine of newspaper endorsements and the mass defection of Republican business and financial leaders to the Democratic ticket.
I believe that Barry Goldwater would be a more responsible President than is indicated by his campaign. But the doubts continue to linger and this is what troubles the American people.
Business tycoons appear untroubled by the progressive capture of local and state governments by the unions. They find in Johnson a President sympathetic to their views and eager to hear their problems.
Unlike John F. Kennedy, often unjustly maligned as the "enemy" of business, Lyndon Johnson has much of the business community convinced that he is a defender of free enterprise and fully understands the need for a prosperous economy.
The next six weeks will generate a good deal of nonsense on both sides and presumably considerable acrimony as this campaign progresses.
In a word, they see no good reason to "change the management."
I doubt that very many votes will be changed but it is in the American tradition to listen to the dialogue and hear out the debate.
To most of us. Election Day will come as a decided relief to the tedium.
JOHN S. KNIGHT
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BOOK REVIEWS
Jane Austen is not for readers of this hurly-burly world, but for anyone who wants to be taken back into the rural English countryside, when it took days to get from Northamptonshire to Portsmouth, when acting out plays could be a preoccupation of the young people, when being properly married was the greatest aim in life for a girl, a book like "Mansfield Park" may be just the ticket.
MANSFIELD PARK, by Jane Austen (Signet Classics, 50 cents).
It is more serious in tone—almost grim for Jane Austen—than the other novels. Fanny Price is not of good family; she is a kind of Cinderella, though her bad stepstisters have become cousins, and the evil stepmother is a busybody aunt. Fanny gets the good prince, too, though he seems to be coming to her on the rebound after an unfortunate affair with a woman of little principle.
The style, the charm, the wit, the perception of this provincial writer are as pronounced in this book as in the other novels.
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Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York
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$3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon
during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University
holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Law-
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THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF COOKING, edited by William I. Kaufman (Dell, $2.95, in four-volume boxed set)—A classy-looking, exciting set of books that give more than 1,000 recipes, from 69 nations. The recipes are adapted to American kitchens. Kaufman has broken this down into recipes of (1) the Far East and Near East, (2) Italy, France and Spain; (3) Northern Europe and the British Isles, and (4) the Caribbean and Latin America.
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GREAT TEAMS OF PRO FOOTBALL, by Robert Smith (Dell, 60 cents)—A compilation of players, plays and games. There are eight pages of pictures from pro ball. Smith goes back to offer stories and portraits of celebrated names of the past.
***
TYPEE. by Herman Melville (Signet Classics, 60 cents).
Another American classic, of interest on two levels, is out in a new volume, with a cover that looks like a Gauguin. "Typee" was Melville's first book, a story of four months among primitive South Sea islanders. It is a story of adventure but also an indictment of civilization. The author minces no words in showing what happens when these peoples are corrupted by the influences of "civilized" men.
He describes Polynesian tribal life, includes adventure and excitement, lore of the sea, and perhaps a bit of imagination, even though the story ostensibly is true throughout.
DailijIfdhsan
111 Flint Hall
UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom
UNiversity 4-3198, business office
University of Kansas student newspaper
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Managing Editor
NEWS DEPARTMENT
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Roy Miller Managing Editor
Don Black, Leta Cathcart, Bob Jones, Greg Swartz, Assistant Managing Editors; Linda Ellis, Feature-Society Editor; Russ Corbitt, Sports Editor.
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Bob Phinney Business Manager
John Pepper, Advertising Manager; Dick Flood, National Advertising Manager; John Suhler, Classified Advertising Manager; Tom Fisher,
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Page 3
Tuesday, Sept. 22, 1964 University Daily Kansan
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NEVADA TEST SITE, Nev.—(UPI)—Rescuers worked around the clock Tuesday to free four men trapped nearly a third of a mile underground for three days.
A crew of 35 employees of the Atomic Energy Commission hoped to lift the four men to safety sometime today from their underground prison.
Republican Presidential nominee Barry Goldwater was scheduled to speak to the Legionnaires tomorrow.
The victims, employees of an AEC support contractor, were trapped in a cavern 1,800 feet beneath the surface Saturday night when a cable snapped. One other man was killed and three were injured in the mishap.
DALLAS—(UPI)—The American Legion, its brassy but colorful 46th annual parade behind it, gathered its 22,000 delegates for some serious business today, including an address by Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara.
Legionnaires Open Convention
Yesterday's parade was a drum-beating, horn-tooting affair, complete with pretty girls and a flyover of two B58 jet bombers leading a squadron of smaller planes.
Johnson to Speak to Union
WASHINGTON -(UPI)—President Johnson took his election year theme of peace and prosperity today to the convention of the 1.1 million member United Steelworkers Union in Atlantic City.
The trip began a big week of political-flavored speech-making by the President as he steps up the tempo of his campaign. The steel-workers were prepared to give him a rousing welcome and their formal endorsement.
Pope Cites Historic Hour
VATICAN CITY — (UPI)— The Ecumenical Council Tuesday touches what is likely to be high water mark.
"The historic hour," as Pope Paul VI has called it, is the vote on collegiality facing the Bishops.
The proposal states that "by order of the Lord" the Bishops of the Roman Catholic Church, together with the pontiff as their head, form an Apostolic College in the same way that the original apostles composed such a body around Christ.
Communist Forces Retreat
VIENTIANE, Laos — (UFI) — ProCommunist Pathet Lao forces have withdrawn from Tha Vieng, the latest village to fall to right wing troops pushing into Communist-held territory northeast of Vientiane, military sources said today.
Advancing right wing troops are now within 25 miles of the Pathet Lao town and provincial capital of Xieng Khouang, the sources said. They have been moving along route four about 100 miles northeast of the capital for the past week.
Charges Against Miller Lashed
TULSA, Okla.—(UPI)—GOP presidential nominee Barry Goldwater campaigned in the southwest for peace and against communism today. He said he is backing his Republican running mate fully against conflict of interest charges.
The Arizona senator was known to feel that there is nothing wrong with the private business activities of Rep. William Miller, the GOP vice-presidential nominee from New York.
Goldwater's campaign plane flew through rain-filled skies into Tulsa. The candidate spoke to an enthusiastic civic auditorium crowd estimated at 8,000 persons.
that the Johnson administration has "hundreds of lives and hundreds of lies," to answer for in the Viet Nam war.
His motorcade into downtown Tulaa stopped at one point so the senator could shake hands with a cluster of Sigma Chi fraternity brothers from the University of Tulsa.
In his formal speech he charged
"We'll sing for brother Barry," the boys chanted as the grinning Goldwater, a Sigma Chi himself, moved off in the rain.
Groups of supporters lined the motorcade route at intervals. Outside the auditorium two competing teen-age groups, one for Goldwater and the other for President Johnson, tried to outdo each other with their
John S. Macauley joins the full-time faculty of the Kansas School of Religion this month as acting assistant professor of religion with sponsorship by the Episcopal Church.
The Kansas School of Religion, a non-denominational school supported by several churches, is affiliated with the University of Kansas. Its faculty and credits are approved by the University and its courses apply toward KU degrees.
School of Religion Names Episcopal Minister to Staff
Professor Macauley, a native of Wichita, has held Episcopal pastorates in Marysville, Blue Rapids and Winfield. For the past three years he has studied at Cambridge University in England.
Professor Macauley is the Kansas School of Religion's third full-time faculty member and the second added in two years.
After graduation from Wichita High School North, Professor Macauley earned the bachelor of arts degree from Wichita University in 1950 and the bachelor of divinity degree from the Epsicopal Theological School, Cambridge, Mass., in 1953. He was ordained a deacon and priest the same year.
shouts, Goldwater shook hands with several of the pro-Barry boys.
Goldwater was said to believe that vice-presidential candidate Miller's contact with the Lockport Felt Co. in his hometown was completely innocent and extended only to the fact that Miller's law firm had represented this and some related firms.
The senator was ready to speak out publicly with a full endorsement of Miller's activities later today.
The GOP candidate also was said to believe that:
- Newly published reports fully support his contention that President Johnson has given the NATO supreme commander and lesser military chiefs permission to use tactical nuclear weapons in a real emergency. Goldwater was cheered by a report in a news magazine asserting that such authority has been given by the White House and the chief executive's contention to the contrary will not hold up.
- The latest weekly Goldwater poll shows that 6 per cent of the Republicans who had "defected" from the GOP have now returned. The candidate now expects the opinion polls to turn up in his favor. He believes this will be spurred by voters' distrust of the Johnson administration.
Goldwater's conviction that some military commanders have been given authority to use nuclear weapons without waiting for direct word from the President was said to be based on his personal talks with military individuals involved.
Goldwater's view was said to be that he is not critical of this.
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ROCK CHALK REVUE
Open Discussion For All Interested Parties
Questions—Suggestions-Criticisms
This Evening, September 22, 7:30 p.m. Student Union, Pine Room
STAFF INTERVIEWS September 23-24
Bring a personal letter stating position wanted and experience to KU-Y office in the Union by 5:00 p.m. today or to the open meeting this evening.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Sept. 22, 1964
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Page 5
Sellards Hall Posts Top Grade Average
r. d
5
Seillards Women's Scholarship Hall had the highest undergraduate grade point average at the University of Kansas for the spring 1964 semester.
Sellards' 2.17 was .02 grade points below the 2.19 g.p.a. that Douthart Women's Scholarship Hall recorded for highest honors during the spring 1963 semester.
The other women's scholarship halls had the next highest grades last semester, which were higher than the all university average of 1.49, the all women's average of 1.66, and the all men's average of 1.39.
Pi Beta Phi headed the list of averages for sororities with a 1.99 grade point average. The all-sorority average was 1.80.
Douthart was second with 2.15; Miller, third with 2.10, and Watkins, fourth with 2.00. The all-women's scholarship halls g.p.a. was 2.10.
Other sorority grade averages were:
Kappa Alpha Theta, 1.93; Gamma
Phi Beta, 1.88; Alpha Chi Omega,
1.85; Kappa Kappa Gamma, 1.84;
Alpha Delta Pi, 1.80; Delta Delta
Delta, 1.80; Chi Omega, 1.75; Alpha
Omicron Pi, 1.73; Delta Gamma, 1.69;
Alpha Phi, 1.68, and Sigma Kappa,
1.55.
KUOK Planning For Improved Radio Reception
Listener's of KU's campus radio station, KUOK, will notice improved reception and more professional programming when the station returns to the air Monday, Sept. 28.
This semester's station manager, Karen Layland, Paola senior, said the improved reception was the result of efforts by KUKO chief engineer John Trewolla, a Shawnee Mission freshman, to improve the station's transmitting equipment.
Trewolla is working on a new type transmitter which he hopes to install in several more dormitories and organized houses.
"KUOK will be a more professional sounding radio station because of cartridge tape equipment which was installed this summer," said KUOK production manager, Larry Miller, Kansas City, Mo. senior
Miller said this equipment is used by commercial radio stations to eliminate "dead air" between different parts of a program.
Along with these improvements will be a more aggressive news policy under the direction of KUOK news director, Tom Rosenbaum, Shawnee Mission junior.
University Daily Kansan
Rosenbaum said the station would attempt to cover all campus news events with newsmen giving first hand reports.
OF THE women's residence halls, Carrush-O'Leary had the highest average with a 1.73. Gertrude Sellards Pearson's 1.50 was second. Other women's residence halls g.p.a.'s were Grace Pearson, 1.49; Corbin, 1.43; Hashinger, 1.42, and Lewis, 1.37. The all-women's residence hall average was 1.44.
Among the men's scholarship halls, Pearson had the highest g.p.a. 2.01. Battenfeld was second with 2.00, followed by Foster and Stephenson, both with 1.97, and Jolliffe with 1.88. The all-men's schoiarship hall average was 1.97.
Beta Theta Pi's 1.89 was the highest grade average among the fraternities. Delta Tau Delta was second with 1.75.
Other fraternity averages were:
Delta Upsilon, 1.73; Phi Delta Theta, 1.72; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 1.59; Alpha Tau Omega, 1.58; Phi Gamma Delta, 1.51; Sigma Nu, 1.51; Alpha KappaLambda, 1.47; Sigma Phi Epsilon, 1.47; Phi Kappa Tau, 1.46; Acacia, 1.43; Sigma Chi, 1.42; Phi Kappa Theta, 1.37, and Phi Kappa Psi, 1.36.
ALSO, TRIANGLE, 1.36; Kappa Sigma, 1.35; Delta Chi, 1.31;Lambda Chi Alpha, 1.32; Theta Tau, 1.29; Phi Kappa Sigma, 1.28; Theta Chi, 1.27; Tau Kappa Epsilon, 1.24; Pi Kappa Alpha, 1.23; Delta Sigma Phi, 1.11; Alpha Phi Alpha, 1.09, and Kappa Alpha Psi, 90.
The all-fraternity average was 1.46
Of the three men's residence halls, Templin ranked first with a 1.37. Ellsworth and Joseph R. Pearson both had a 1.21. The average for the men's residence halls was 1.32.
The All University average last spring was .06 above the fall 1963 semester, but .02 below the 1963 spring semester.
Delinquency Seminar Set
About 100 law enforcement officers, juvenile judges, educators, and social workers are expected to attend the Third Annual Seminar on the Prevention and Control of Juvenile Delinquency to be held in the Kansas Union September 24-25.
The keynote address, "The Adolescent and His Need for Control," will be given by Dr. Nick J. Clarelli, staff psychologist of the Topeka State Hospital, at 9:30 Thursday morning in the Forum Room.
The remainder of the seminar will be spent in committee discussions of cases and recommendations.
Sponsors of the seminar are the Kansas Peace Officers' Training School, the Governmental Research Center, the University Extension, and the Kansas Peace Officer Association.
The statewide attendance for these sessions has increased from 43 in 1962, to 67 last year.
S. U.A.
will show the
Quarterback Club
Tuesday, September 22
T. C.U. GAME FILM
Stewart Plans Speech On State of University
Jayhawk Room
Free Admission
Kansas Union
in the
8:00 p.m.
Support Your Jayhawkers
Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla. senior and student body president, will deliver the annual State of the University address to the All Student Council (ASC) at its first fall meeting next Tuesday. In the address he will present his plans and recommendations for the coming year.
Stewart will also announce the names of the five faculty advisors to the ASC and appoint the members of the Student Court.
Citizens to Discuss Courts
Leading citizens of Kansas who are not lawyers will discuss the scope and effect of the possible changes of the courts during the "Citizens Conference on Modernization of Kansas Courts," Sept. 24-26. The idea for this conference arose from the statement made by Henry R. Luce, editor-in-chief of "Time," who said, "justice is too serious a matter to leave to the professionals of the bench and bar."
ministration, selection and tenure of judges, judicial retirement, discipline and removal, courts of limited and special jurisdiction, and action programs for improvement.
DANCE TO
Speakers for the session include:
David Prager, district judge at Topeka; Glenn R. Winters, executive director, American Judicature Society, Chicago; John F. Healy, judicial administrator of the state of Colorado; Allen Levinthal, assistant director, Judicature Society, and Elmo B. Hunter.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Sept. 22, 1964
KU Anticipated Baby "Boom"
The surge of new students which hit the University of Kansas campus Monday for the fall term came as no surprise to the administration, James K. Hitt, registrar, said.
The increased enrollment is part of a wave of new students that had been expected and should continue for several years.
A record 13,054 students enrolled Sept. 16-18. This is a 10 per cent increase over the fall 1963 enrollment of 11,971.
Nearly 500 late enrollments are predicted by the registrar's office before final enrollment figures are calculated Oct. 3.
The 2,502-member freshman class, 25 per cent larger than last year's freshman class, owes its size to the post-war baby boom. Hitt said.
THIS GROUP, born in 1946 after
Schools Help Cut Most Students' Marriage Rate
College, according to authorities in Washington, D.C., has a strange effect on women. It makes them stop, look and listen before they get married.
Surveying current marriage trends, the Population Reference Bureau in Washington has issued a statement containing the fact that this year there will be about 1.8 million marriages in the United States.
Some 20,000 girls were married last June, and the majority of them were teenagers. The boys they married were only slightly older.
The bureau has advice for worried parents who hope their daughter will not plunge into marriage before they have a chance to see the world: Get her into college fast!
On the average, a college career delays a girl's marriage about four years. The PRB emphasizes the world average, but the statistics are conclusive.
Other intriguing, isolated and sometimes paradoxical facts relating to college graduates and their marriages were cited:
- Approximately 596,300 students made up the college class of 1964. Approximately 38 per cent were women.
- Women received almost 40 per cent of the bachelor's degrees and first professional degrees, and a third of the masters degrees, but only 11 per cent of the doctoral degrees.
- Marriage has been firmly woven into the fabric of campus life ever since the first GI invaded college campuses after World War II. The mothers and fathers of today's graduates would have been expelled from most colleges a generation ago had they been married while in school. Today, undergraduate marriages in major colleges are taboo only in the armed services academies.
- Almost one-fourth of all students who graduated in 1964 were already married. An army of children and babes-in-arms attended graduation ceremonies for pop and mom or both.
- Four out of five of the married graduates were men. The scarcity of women reflects in part the fact that many coeds who marry drop out of college to bolster the family income, often making it possible for their husbands to graduate.
Perhaps one of the most revealing sets of figures the PRB found determines the worth of enough of an education. The bureau found the most frequent age at marriage for women college graduates is 22 years, for high school graduates 18 years and for women who did not attend high school 14-16 years.
Among married women, a larger proportion of college graduates have jobs, according to the Eureau of the Census. In 1960 42 per cent of the married college graduates were employed and only 32 per cent of the high school graduates had jobs.
most soldiers returned from World War II, has been cramming classrooms since it began its education 13 years ago.
Tangible evidence of this can be seen in any town, Hitt said, as most communities had to expand their elementary and high school facilities to accommodate the group as it moved through the educational system.
"This is the class," he said, "which has either occupied new buildings or had split shifts throughout its education."
Besides the increased college-age population, Hitt said the enrollment jump resulted from a post-war emphasis on higher education and even longer education.
OVER 50 per cent of the collegeage people in Kansas are attending college, he said, since World War II advanced technology requires a college education. A greater percentage of college-age people are in college in the United States than at any other time, Hitt said.
Coupled with this is the tendency for students to stay in college longer. Fewer students are dropping out of college and more are staying in to attend graduate school, Hitt said.
nearly three-fourths of students previously enrolled at KU returned this year, also a record number, indicating a greater persistence factor among KU students.
DESPITE THE increased enrollment, classroom space is adequate at KU. Hitt said building plans
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would probably not have to be revised or speeded up as the increase had been foreseen and accounted for in previous construction.
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The bulging enrollment will show where the University did not plan adequately, he said, and then construction plans might have to be revised.
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Every scheduled class had a place to meet for the first day of class Monday, Hitt said, and office space had been provided for every faculty member.
Ends Tonite
"THE LONGEST DAY"
Tomorrow —
"CHILD WOMAN"
and
'SPLENDOR IN THE GRASS'
Pharmacist Is New Instructor
Ronald J. Koehn, a Lawrence pharmacist, has been appointed to the new post of clinical instructor in pharmacy at KU.
He will supervise the prescription laboratory work of senior students in the School of Pharmacy. The new position is part-time and Koehn will continue his professional work.
Dean Duane G. Wenzel of the School of Pharmacy said the use of a practicing pharmacist in this course would more closely relate the teaching and course work to its practice in the community pharmacy.
Acacia Chooses VOX Affiliation
Acacia fraternity voted to affiliate with Vox Populi (VOX) last night, it was announced by Ron Peden, Danville senior and Acacia president.
we telt membership in VOX would be an asset to our fraternity image, Peden said. We also had several individuals who were very active in the party. Their opinions carried a lot of weight in the voting.
The Acacia fraternity had been affiliated with VOX several years ago but had dropped out of the party due to internal problems. Since that time they had been unaffiliated.
KU
WELCOME TO YOUR NEW HOME
Soon your friends, interests, and business dealings, as well as your belongings, will be here in Lawrence. The First National Bank urges you to consider the advantages of also having a Lawrence banking connection. Lawrence merchants readily accept a check from a local bank like the First. It is quicker to verify the status of a local account than an out-of-town account. And, you don't have to keep a lot of cash on hand. No minimum balance is required with an Economy checking account and you get 50 free personalized checks. See us today and save time and money during your stay at K.U.
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CLASSIFIEDS
Page 7
FOR SALE
Westinghouse Front Load Automatic
Westinghouse after $55. CALL 9-28
3-2454 after 5:30 p.m.
2 Registered German Shepherd dogs; one
pure white, reasonably priced. Contact
Henry Brecheisen, Phone TU 3-6507,
Wellsville. 9-28
Iron bed, complete wooden bed, complete mohair sofa and chair. Heavy oak davertow, full size, and extra springs. Fully wired with TV and internet. 9-24 1640 N.H. or CALL VI 3-1836.
Apartment Sized Furniture: gas stove, cooks fine, $23. Revolving book-stand, espresso cup, $24. Bed frame with springs and innerspring mattress (excellent condition), $47.50. Chair with upholstery, $48.50 height, $8. Oak swivel chair, $12. Small bullet, black mahogany finish, $42. Antique carved oak chest, mahogany var. $92. CALL VI 3-1249 or UN 3058.
10 speed racing bicycle for sale-$60.
Call VI 3-2890, ask for Dave.
9-28
9-28
USED TIRES! USED TIRES! Prices slashed to clear-ALL SIZES, small 13" slabs to clear-4" at half RAY Stoneback's Discount Center, 923-931 Mass. St. 10-19
AM-FM Radios at LOW DISCOUNT
PRICES G.E. with AFC cut to $28.00.
929-931 Mass. St. (G.E. Stereo Twinband)
Multiplex - $99.94).
10-19
Sunbeam Collegeiate Electric Blanket—
reg. list $24.95. Special early offer only
$15.00-Layaway Now. Ray Stoneback's.
929-931 Mass. St. 10-19
TAPE RECORDERS—at low discount prices! As low as $15.00—$5.00 per month at Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. St.
10-19
HAIR DRYERS! Dominion, General
Ray Stoneback's 929-931 Mass. St., 10-19
Ray Stoneback's 929-931 Mass. St., 10-19
USED TV'S—COME N' GET £M $5.00
each on as is sets. Delivered $6.00.
Working sets $29.94 at Ray Stoneback's,
$29.91 Mass. St.
10-19
15 speed Schwinn Superior Bicycle, like
New 132$ and New $80.
CALL VI 3-1208.
9-28
1963 Honda Scrambler motorcycle. Prime
CALL 91 V 3-1562. can be seen at 1308 A
9-28
1956 Chev Bel-Air- 4-dr.; auto; condition; GI
VI 2-3383 after 5 p. m.
GV 2-3238
Attention engineering students: complete set of engineering drawing equipment— mechanical pencils etc.-$25 10 weeks or $17.50 CALL I.V. 2-0759 after 6 p.m. 9-25
1958 Dodge 4 dr., radio and htf. Auto,
trans., and power steering. Good second
car. Good tires. New motor. CALL VI 3-
0131. 9-25
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extensively comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL V1 2-1801 for free delivery.
TYPEWRITERS, electrics, manuals, portables; sales, service, rentals. Olympia, Hermes, Royal, Smith-Corona, Olivett. Adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass., VI 3-3644. tf
1958 Dogge, 2-dr., hardtop, pwr. steering, air cond. Tortor-Flight-V 8, Black and white, original owner. CALL Bob Hess at VI 2-1527 after 6 p.m. or on weekends. tf
Slamee Kittens~Furredbear Seal Point,
after 5 p.m. or on weekends.
a-25%
Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive notes and tutorials for biology classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes, Call VI 3-1428. Free delivery. $4.50.
TYPING
Typing wanted. Former high school teacher will type reports and theses. Experienced. Electric typewriter. Fast service. CALL Mars. Marsh at VI 3-5826.
Term papers. Theses by experienced typist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tf
Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter, Gestetner Duplicator. Mrs. McEdowney, 2521 Alabama St. Phone VI 3-8568. tf
Accurate typing done on electric typewriter. Familiar with the four accredited K.U. thesis forms. CALL Pat Beck at VI 3-5630. tf
HELP WANTED
University Daily Kansan
Part time—Immediately. Mornings or afternoons or nights. Free housing—uniforms and laundry of uniforms—workman's comp. ins; and other benefits. Citizens Ambulance Service. 1104 W. 4th, CALL VI 3-7733. 9-25
Babysitter for one child, 2 years old. Call
Carol Ann Coburn, VI 2-0422. 9-25
Attractive Hostess for employment in New Orleans Room. PHONE VI- 28473. 4743.
ATTENTION COLLEGE MEN AND WOMEN: Help Wanted at La Pizza 807 Vermont—Busbies, Waitresses, Delivery boys, Cooks, and a Hostess-Cashier. Apply in person from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. Ask for Paul. 9-24
Part Time—to fit your schedule. Call on
9:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
VI 3-8376 after 6:30 p.m.
9-25
Wanted to hire: combo or hootenanny band for sale in 1525 S. Haworth, Savoyworth, KY q-28
Washing and ironing done in my home.
1311 New Jersey Street
Phone: VI 2-2598.
WANTED
Ride 7.30 a.m. from Stouffer Bldg. 20,
Contact Mike Getter at VI 3-4744 9-24
Roommate for 2nd year graduate student,
Nice apartment. Private entrance. Close to campus. See at 1102 W. 19th Terr. 9-28
Commuters who are interested in form-
ing a car pool between Kansas Cit-
(johnson County) and Lawrence, PHONI
James Mulloy at HE 2-3465. 9-2
Sandwich Route Salesman on the hill,
9-12 p.m. Sunday through Thursday, $25
per week. Must have car. Call 913-381-
0481 after 6 p.m.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Want in car pool from Topeka daily. Call Leen Teckelson UN 4-3915 or CE 2-9563.
TRANSPORTATION
BAR-B-Q—For Bar-B-Q ribs and chickens that are a treat to eat, try ours at 515 Michigan St. Hours: 11:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday,
MISCELLANEOUS
Will Baby Sit in my home for 2 or 3
in- yard, in-cold-
phone VI 3-6768 9-25
Haircut special—weekdays: men's haircuts $1.50, children's haircuts $1.25, 3 full-time barbers. Tom's 14th St. Barber Shop. 9-28
Tuesday, Sept. 22, 1964
FOR RENT
Single Room for senior or graduate
bath, close to campus. C
3-13-145
9-23
FOR RENT—ROOMS for men close to town and K.U. Linens furnished. Private entrance PHONE VI 3-6283. 9-25 Board and Room available at 1252 Oread.
LARGE SINGLE ROOM for rent to young man. First house off campus. See at 1616 Indiana. 9-23
Quiet—well-furnished room, with refrigerator and cooking facilities. 10 min. to reception. Foyer is serviceable, rent to responsible student. CALL VI 3-6696 after 5 p.m. 9-28
A nicely furnished 4 room house. Prokert
appointment—VI 3-0411.
9-28
MORE JOBS BETTER PRODUCTS LOWER PRICES Advertising works for you!
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19th St. Garage
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Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
VERY IMPORTANT
1. FOR NEW STUDENTS AND TRANSFERS:
STUDENT FOOTBALL TICKET INFORMATION
(Starting September 21 thru September 25)
(a) Go to the Main Entrance (East) of Allen Field House.
(b) Pick up your IBM card at table in Main Lobby of Allen Field House.
(c) Take IBM card and your Imprinted Certificate of Registration to New Student Ticket Windows where you will make application for your season ticket upon payment of $1.50. (You will be assigned and receive a reserved season ticket for the remainder of the 1964 football season.)
2. FOR FORMER STUDENTS WHO HAVE APPLIED AND PAID FOR THEIR SEASON TICKET:
(Starting September 28 thru October 1)
Pick up your Student Reserved Season Ticket at the North Allen Field House Ticket Window upon presentation of your 1964 Fall Semester Imprinted Certificate of Registration.
3. FOR FORMER STUDENTS WHO HAVE NOT APPLIED FOR SEASON TICKETS: Follow the same instructions for New Students (1 above)
PLEASE READ THE FOLLOWING POINTS CAREFULLY -
- Allen Field House Ticket Office Hours—8:30 A.M. to 12:00 Noon & 1:30 P.M. to 4:00 P.M.
- Group application will be limited to not more than twenty-five (25). If you plan to sit with a friend(s) you should plan to make application with or for the group all at the same time. It should be noted that married students, independent houses or fraternities, etc. can apply in groups if they so desire. Exceptions will be considered to the limit of 25 in the case of exceptionally large pledge classes or classes within men's or women's residence halls.
- Season tickets for student spouses are available at the price of $7.50. Spouse tickets should be applied for at the same time as regular student tickets by filling out the special card at the application tables in the Allen Field House Lobby.
*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.
*No single game student tickets will be sold for the 1964 football games so be sure to apply for your season tickets according to the above instructions.
1
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Sept. 22, 1964
Impressive Nebraska Showing May Indicate Possible Repeat
Nebraska, on the strength of the best opening day offensive show by a Big Eight conference team in 11 years, took a commanding lead in the conference's rushing and total offense race, and appears headed right where it left off last season in the statistical columns.
The defending national and Big Eight ground-gaining champions and the best total offense team in the league last year rolled to 385 yards rushing and 116 passing, 501 total, to take leads of over 169 yards in both divisions. Last year Nebraska averaged 262.4 yards per game rushing and 347.4 total offense.
THE CORNHUSKERS also took the lead in the defensive statistics, yielding only 72 rushing yards to South Dakota en route to a 56-0 romp. The losers failed to complete a pass against Nebraska.
Iowa State took the runner-up spot in offensive rushing, while Missouri, behind a tremendous day from Quarterback Gary Lane, grabbed the second spot in total offense and the top position in passing.
KU earned third place in rushing offense with 188 yards and fifth in total offense with 258 yards. The Jayhawks completed only three of
nine passing attempts, netting 70 yards and seventh place in the conference rankings. KU is fourth in rushing defense, as the heavy line limited TCU to 159 yards on the ground.
MISSOURI'S GARY LANE, defending Big Eight conference total offence champion, gained over a quarter of his last season's entire passing and total offense figure in Saturday's opener against California.
The Tiger junior recorded the best game of his career, hitting on 11 passes for 223 yards and running for 14 more to push his total offense output to a lofty 237. Last year, he had 710 passing yards and 1,010 total.
Shinn to Undergo Operation; Lost for Remainder of Season
Mike Shinn, veteran Jayhawk left end who had been touted as a possible all-American candidate this season, will sit out the remaining nine games on the 1964 schedule.
Shinn reported to the KU Medical Center in Kansas City yesterday for an examination of his knee which he injured last spring and reinjured this summer. He played in Saturday's opener against TCU, but his knee again gave him trouble.
The examination revealed that surgery was needed, and Shinn has been admitted to the medical center. A request will be filed with the Big Eight conference to allow Shinn to complete his third season of varsity eligibility during the 1965 KU campaign.
COACH JACK MITCHELL adjusted to the feared problem by moving Bob Robben, a two-year letterman, from his right end position to Shinn's left end spot. Sophomore Bill Walters, who backed up Robben in the TCU game Saturday, is scheduled to start at the right end position in this Saturday's encounter at Syracuse.
Backing the starting unit will be sophomore Sandy Buda at right end and junior George Hornung at left end. Jeff Elias, a high school all-state selection at Salina and a transfer from Miami, Florida University, will become eligible as a sophomore after KU's first three games.
Iowa State's Tom Vaughn, one of the top national rushers last year, jumped off to the conference lead in ground gaining with 81 yards.
Grabbing the runner-up spot to Vaughn in rushing was KU Quarterback Steve Renko, who picked up 69 yards on the gound. Renko also completed two passes for 54 yards, earning him third place in the conference total offense rankings.
The Jayhawk Sports Car Club will hold its first meeting at 8 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Memberships will be accepted, car plaques will be available, and racing films will be shown.
KU Sports Car Club Plans Films Tonight
Refreshments will be served.
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Western Flyer*
Complete selection of bicycles including 10 speed racers
Batteries Special
Save $.40 on 9 volt transistor radio Save $ .15 on flashlight battery
Western Auto
820 Mass. VI 3-5006
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
SUA Membership Meeting
Would You Like To Help Plan A Dance, A Concert, A Jazz Forum Or A Carnival?-
SEE YOU AT THE MEETING
Freshmen Are Especially Encouraged To Attend.
7:30 WEDNESDAY UNION BALLROOM
62r
I I
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
62nd Year. No. 4
Wednesday, Sept. 23, 1964
Reds Cut Down U.S. Planes In Viet Nam Jungle War
SAIGON, South Viet Nam, — (UPI) Two American-piloted Skyraider fighter-bombers were shot down today by Communist ground fire during a battle in the jungle southwest of Saigon.
An American military spokesman said one U.S. pilot was missing and feared killed or captured.
The spokesman said both planes were "destroyed" when they crashed near two small outposts they were helping to defend from Communist attackers. The outposts, manned by South Vietnamese forces, were located in the Mekong delta near the district capital of Hieu Le.
The first plane went down shortly after midnight. It disappeared into the northern fringes of the Communist Viet Cong's famous "U Minh" jungle stronghold on the far western coast of South Vietnam, a point about 135 miles southwest of Saigon.
The second plane crashed less than half an hour later. But the American pilot managed to guide it to what the spokesman called a "controlled crash landing." Both the American and his Vietnamese copilot escaped before the plane burst into flames.
THE SPOKESMAN said the Vietnamese co-pilot aboard the first plane to crash was rescued by government forces. But the American pilot could not be located. Both had parachuted from the crippled aircraft before it crashed into the thickly-forested swamplands surrounding the outposts.
(In Washington, the Air Force identified the missing American pilot as Lt. George E. Flynn III, husband of Mrs. Betty S. Flynn and son of Mr. and Mrs. John B. Flynn, all of New Orleans. La.
(The Air Force said Flynn was an
Council to Vote On IFPC Fate
A plan to abolish the Interfraternity Pledge Council will be voted on tomorrow night by members of the Interfraternity Council at the group's first fall meeting at 7:20 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
If the Pledge Council is eliminated by vote of the IFC, representatives from pledge classes will be allowed to sit on the regular Interfraternity Council, said Jim Johnston, Independence, Mo. senior and IFC president.
The IFPC is made up of representatives from the pledge classes of KU's 27 social fraternities and serves as a link between the pledges and the IFC.
Three members of the IFC Judicial Board will also be elected at the meeting tomorrow, Johnston said. The IFC is composed of the presidents and one member from each fraternity at KU.
instructor pilot on night alert. After his plane went down, his parachute was spotted when another plane dropped flares. A spokesman said rescue helicopters were unable to enter the area "because of severe hostile action by superior ground forces."
Mrs. George Flynn of New Orleans said the Defense Department notified her that her husband was the missing pilot. She said she was told Flynn was missing and an intensive search for him was underway.
The A-1E Skyraiders carry Vietnamese air force markings, and carry one American and one Vietnamese on combat missions.
During the plane incidents, the Communist guerrillas pressed their attacks on the outposts. They also shelled the district capital, killing 18 government soldiers and wounding 12 in the overall assault.
In another battle near Saigon.
Viet Cong rebels died by the dozen when they vainly tried to storm another government outpost and then attempted to drag away their dead from the barbed wire.
AN AMERICAN military spokesman said that when the sun came up over Luong Phu outpost, 40 miles south of Saigon in the Mekong River delta, it revealed 37 Communist dead and 26 abandoned weapons.
An observation plane radioed that most of the dead were hung on the barbed wire around the heavily entrenched fort.
An estimated 400 to 500 Viet Cong attacked the 50-man garrison at 2 a.m. They broke off the action at first light.
A U.S. spokesman reported that an American army officer was wounded last night when the Communists shelled with mortars an outpost at Phuoc Tien, 340 miles north of Saigon.
Rock Chalk Changes Considered by Staff
Several proposed changes are being considered by this year's Rock Chalk Revue staff.
Hoite Caston, Independence senior and Rock Chalk Revue producer, said last night at a meeting in the Kansas Union. Additional awards are being planned in addition to the regular trophies for first and second place. These will include prizes for the outstanding male and female performer, ensemble singing, choreography, scenery, costumes and script.
ANOTHER CHANGE from past Revues is the doubling of the KU-Y rebate to each group for production expenses from $150 to $300. Because of this change, it has been proposed that each group be required to submit a budget to the staff. This has not been a requirement in past years.
The maximum length of each skit has been increased from 18 to 20 minutes for actual performance, with a one minute extra allowance. After 21 minutes, the skit will lose judging points.
In-between act entertainment at this year's Revue will feature comic films made on campus. The use of film will tie in with this year's theme. "Fractured Flickers."
THE STAFF PLANS to supervise script writing more closely this semester, Caston said. Meetings with script writers, submission of two rough scripts instead of one, and detailed staff criticism will aid in quality control of scripts, he said.
This year script committees will be responsible for script and list recordings of popular dance ideas.
Caston said a "scenery construction school" will be held to teach
the basics of scenery construction He said this innovation has been proposed to help groups without experience in Rock Chalk Revue.
Extension of time for skit production and doubling of group rebates are the only official changes this year, Caston said. He added that the other innovations would "probably be made official soon."
There will be a meeting at 2:30 p.m. Sunday in the Union. Preference cards for pairing of living groups to enter skits will be given to two representatives from each living group interested in entering the Revue.
INTERVIEWS ARE BEING held for those interested in positions on the Rock Chalk staff. Selections will be made tomorrow night.
Fall Fee Payments Due Next Week
The registrar's office has announced the following schedule for fee payments: A-D, Monday, September 28; E-I, Tuesday, September 29; J-M, Wednesday, September 30; N-S, Thursday, October 1; T-Z. Friday, October 2.
The payments are due at the business office, 121 Strong, no later than 12 p.m., October 3.
Students unable to come at any of these times should pay fees on Saturday, October 3.
Business office hours are 8:00-11:45 and 1:00-4:45 weekdays and 8:00-11:45 Saturday.
Students must bring their KUID and certificate of registration.
Labor Cancels G.M. Contract
DETROIT—(UPI)—The United Auto Workers Union today formally cancelled its contract with General Motors Corp. effective at 10 a.m. Friday, setting the stage for two days of marathon negotiations leading to a new contract or a strike by 350,000 workers.
GM vice-president Louis G. Seaton said, "We received notice (this morning) of contract termination Friday at 10 a.m. It is our intention to use the remaining hours to resolve our difficulties and arrive at a peaceful settlement which we believe is possible."
The union had told the company informally Monday afternoon it would go on strike Friday if a settlement was not reached. Today's action made that official.
THREE HOURS BEFORE the negotiations began, GM announced it was holding the line on 1965 car prices, despite the likelihood it will sign the costliest labor contract in automotive history.
UAW president Walter P. Reuther was unavailable for immediate comment on the GM action. Other union officials also declined to comment, but pointed out that Reuther had said the current contracts being negotiated were non-inflationary and the industry should even cut its car prices.
Seaton gave reporters a run-down on the talks. He said the main economic issues were "pretty well staked out" by earlier UAW settlements with Chrysler Corp. and the Ford Motor Co.
HE SAID THE UAW AND GM still had to resolve non-economic issues such as working conditions as well as literally thousands of local demands at the 126 GM plants. The deadline for solving the local issues is Friday, Oct. 3.
GM, which produces more than half of all American automobiles and is the nation's biggest industrial giant, was the first of the four U.S. automakers to announce list prices. Ford, Chrysler and American Motors were expected to follow suit shortly and announce that prices would remain the same as for the 1964 models.
GM makes Chevrolet, Buick, Oldsmobile, Pontiac and Cadillac cars. Last year, the firm had record profits of $1.59 billion and in the first half of this year, profits of $1.1 billion were reported.
In calendar 1964, GM has already turned out 2.9 million cars, or 55 per cent of the American market.
THE CHRYSLER and Ford contracts have already been called, the richest in industry history.
Auto prices have held the line since the last price increase announced in the fall of 1958 on 1959 models.
Gladys Spares Cities In Northwest Swerve
KITTY HAWK, N.C. —(UPI)—Hurricane Gladys spared the big cities of the Northeast Atlantic seaboard today from its 85 mile an hour fury by taking a turn to the northeast.
"The center is expected to pass between 75 and 100 miles southeast of Nantucket after midnight tonight," forecasters said in a midday advisory.
This would put the storm, the season's fourth hurricane and potentially the most devastating because of its giant size, well away from the U.S. mainland.
Coastal areas of New Jersey and Long Island were expected to feel the side effects—pounding surf and wind-whipped tides—during the day but the threat of Gladys smashing inland diminished by the hour.
In her wake, 3,000 persons remained isolated on fabled North Carolina Outer Banks but there were no immediate reports of casualties. Sand and debris covered the only highway along the narrow islands off the North Carolina coast.
A hurricane watch from the $v_{14}$ ginia capes northward to western
Long Island was discontinued at 10 a.m. It remained in effect for the eastern portion of Long Island and gale warnings remained up from Cape May, N.J., to Eastport, Me.
Gladys was located at midday about 230 miles southeast of Atlantic City, N.J., near latitude 37.0 north, longitude 71.4 west. It was moving toward the north-northeast at 11 mph. Its forward speed was expected to increase considerably during the afternoon and tonight.
Winds of 45 to 55 mph were anticipated along the southeastern New England coast as the storm headed toward the North Atlantic.
Emergency crews moved onto the Outer Banks today to restore the roads smashed by the storm late yesterday and last night. Ferry service was expected to be restored by nightfall.
WINDS BEGAN decreasing south of the Virginia Capes. The little village of Hatteras, N.C., buffeted by the sidelash of the storm, reported that winds had fallen early today to 15 to 20 miles an hour.
Law Student Seeks Rugby Enthusiasts
Needed: At least 30 rugged individuals who are interested in learning to play rugby.
Bv Glen Phillips
George Bunting, Kansas City, Kan. first-year law student, with friends at colleges in this area, is trying to organize a team and eventually develop a rugby circuit among schools in the Midwest.
Bunting describes the rough European game as great for persons who want to keep in shape without buying a lot of equipment. About the only things you need are football shoes, someone with a rugby ball and the desire to play.
THE GAME IS A cross between football and soccer. Players move
the ball downfield by kicking it, dribbling it with their feet, or picking it up and carrying it. When they pick up the ball they are fair game for tacklers on the other team. There is no blocking allowed for the ball carrier as in football.
The game is divided into two 40-minute halves with a five-minute rest period between halves. Play
Weather
The weather bureau predicts a low temperature tonight from 45 to 50 with fair weather through tomorrow.
is continuous without timeouts. It is played on a regular football field.
There are 15 men on a team, divided roughly into two groups called the scrum and the backfield. These divisions correspond to the line and backfield in football.
Backfield players do most of the running in rugby. Scoring is by a touchdown over the goal line, a drop-kick through the uprights, or by place-kick through the uprights on a penalty.
BUNTING, A June graduate of Dartmouth, played rugby for three years on the school squad. He took the Dartmouth second team to
There will be a short organizational meeting tonight in Rooms 305 A and B of the Kansas Union, Bunting said.
Nassau last spring while the 91st team was touring Europe under People-to-People sanction. The Dartmouth team is rated as the best team on the East Coast.
Bunting recommended the game highly both for keeping in condition and for the good sportsmanship it develops. No matter how rough-and-tumble the contest may have been, there are no hard feelings at the end. In fact, the host team usually has a keg or two of beer for all the players, he said.
Wind-driven tides from Gladys battered the sand dune barriers and piled sand and debris on the highway along the Outer Banks, isolating residents of several small villages. Highway crews began moving into the area today to try to assess the damage.
The Washington weather bureau located the center of Gladys at 8 am. EST (9 a.m. EDT) near latitude 36.6 north, longitude 71.9 west. Some flooding of low-lying coastal areas was anticipated during high tide periods and heavy surf continued to pound a long stretch of coastline as Gladys churned northward.
The storm's forward speed increased from about 4 mph to 8 mph during the night and forecasters said there would be "considerable increase in forward motion" later today.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Sept. 23, 1964
The Unorthodox Poet
On the evening of June 23,1964,Dr. Arvid Leroy Shulenberger was killed in an auto accident on a lonely Kansas road,and with him died a short lived era at KU.
From the time that Prof. Shulenberger joined the English staff in 1951 to his untimely death, his uniqueness never wore off.
In the words of three of his colleagues —
"AN I.Q. BEYOND MEASURE, a linguist and above all a person. Vigorous in the pursuit of truth. Vicious to scoundrels. A student of literature in depth. All in all, my friend."
Franklyn Nelick, Assoc. Prof.of English "ONE OF THE CLEAREST MINDS I have ever known. He had a great power to see through confusion and complication. He was able to see what was essential in anything. He saw through subterfuge and was rarely deceived by doubletalk and anything phony."
— Dennis Quinn, Asst. Prof. of English "AS A POET," he was first rate. He wrote with a kind of ease unlike most American poets whose works are strained and seem to thrive desperately to convey their message. An outdoorsman. An
affinity with the soil. A Midwesterner. An American proud of being an American.
of being an American.
A. Carroll Edwards, Prof. of English
"A. Carroll Edwards, Prof. of English "HE MADE A UNIQUELY deep impression on the hundreds and thousands of students who sat in his classes. He felt that the most meaningful scholarship was in dialogue rather than print. He punctured pretensions and pet notions in a friendly sort of way. He was always challenging people. Even if you were right all along, he felt it was good for you to have re-examined your notions."
George Worth, Chr., Dept. of English
Ironically, last semester KU's FM radio station KANU taped Dr. Shulenberger's English 82: Shakespeare Rapid Reading Course as part of its celebration of the 400th anniversary of the poet's birth. It is being continued now as a memorial to the professor on Thursday evenings at 10 p.m.
Thus, the opportunity remains for KU's family to savor the greatness of the man, if only fleetingly.
For those of us who knew him, the opportunity to be and do in his ideal besets us.
Co-Perambulation
Walking across the campus this fall, so far one thing is extremely noticeable. Men and women are not, I repeat, are not walking together. This is bad. They should be walking together.
Since we live in a society where the male species is expected eventually to cohabit with a member of the female species, in the majority of cases at least, something must be done. Nothing drastic, of course, but something sane, sensible and workable.
The answer of course is as always right under our nose. Its name is IBM 7040-1401. For those of you who are uninformed this is the University's new computer system.
Our not unique but sensible plan proceeds.
WHEN A NEW STUDENT receives an application for enrollment he would also receive a questionnaire. This also applies to members of our fairer sex.
The questionnaire would ask the following questions. A physical description of the subject is of course of prime importance.
The subject's political and religious beliefs, attitudes toward minority and majority groups, goals, and important ideals. The subject's ideal of a perfect mate stressing the qualities this mate should possess.
Then, when all this highly important information is finally gathered together, Mr. IBM 7040-1401 can go to work. Our University computer system can separate, analyze and reassemble
these facts and with a blinking of lights, the rolling of drums and the blaring of trumpets everyone on campus will be mated with the person most ideally suited for their companionship.
Think of all the havoc this would eliminate especially around the freshman women's dorms when the new crop of lovelies moved in every year.
THE INDIVIDUAL WOULD receive a slip of paper with the name and telephone number of his and her ideally suited companion.
Think of all the wear and tear this would save the fathers of our KU females. Especially those unsuspecting fathers who bring their daughters to school that one chaotic weekend at the beginning of every school year.
Can you imagine the wild and woolly thoughts that run violently through Daddy's head as he pulls up in front of the dorms and 300 members of the male sex descend upon his pride and joy. Remember, Daddy was once a boy too.
Anyway, Mr. 7040-1401 would solve all the mental anguish that our male-female society creates.
But, until this becomes a reality and we must exist under our present system of boy-girl relationships, let's try to solve this problem without the help of mechanization.
Men! Women! Unite!
Men! Women! Co-perambulate. Please.
Please.
Jim Langford.
An Editor's Reflection
In Monday's Kansan we ran a reprint on the editorial page from the Saturday Evening Post. This editorial was a rarity because of one essential fact.
The press as we know it, ninety-nine per cent of the time is an objective press.
It is not common for a newspaper or a news magazine or any type of magazine for that matter to editorialize on the attributes of a national candidate and support him wholeheartedly. Neither is it very common for these media of the communications industry to completely tear down a national candidate.
Where a national election is concerned, it is
refreshing to see members of the press come out in print in full support of one candidate. It makes no difference who the candidate is.
However, because certain publications have found it necessary to fully support one candidate, this aspect of the presidential campaign is a little frightening to say the least.
It is my opinion that our country and our way of life are in serious condition when one of our national candidates is either extremely well-liked or hated with vehement passion.
And the press is reflecting very ably such a situation.
Party Quotes
Editor's Note: The following quotes are taken from the 1961 Guide to Conventions and Elections. This handbook, published by Dahl, was prepared by the Columbia Broadcasting System's News Staff.
DEMOCRATS
"The Democrats would rather make a Speech than a Dollar. They cultivated their voices instead of their finances. You give a Democrat a high hat and a frock coat and put him on the speakers list and he would turn down the chairmanship of the board of a big corporation. . ."—Will Rogers
"I never said all Democrats were saloon-keepers. What I said was that all saloon-keepers are Democrats."—Horace Greeley
tor all and special privileges for none. .”—Adlai Stevenson
"I am a Democrat because I believe that the Democratic Party has been faithful to the people as a whole, and to the root concept of equal rights
REPUBLICANS
"It is a party of one idea; but that is a noble idea—an idea that fills and expands all generous souls; the idea of equality—the equality of all men before human tribunals and human laws."—William H. Seward
"The Republican Party is the first party that was not founded on some compromise with the devil. It is the first party of pure, square, honest principles; the first one."—Robert G. Ingersoll
ATLANTA CITY
SITE OF DEM. CONVENTION
ATLANTIC CITY
SITE OF DEM. CONVENTION
GOLDWATER
CONSERVATIVE
TIDE STORM
GOLDWATER CONSERVATIVE TIDE
"Looks Like Quite A Storm Brewing Up"
BOOK REVIEWS
THE PICKWICK PAPERS, by Charles Dickens (Dell Laurel, 95 cents).
Considering that this was a first novel, it may be said that here is one of the greatest first novels ever written. Beyond that, "The Pickwick Papers" would hold up well even if it had been written late in Dickens' career. It is full of comic incident; it has characters who are among the most memorable in literature; it has a rich depiction of life in England almost 150 years ago.
Many do not read Dickens any longer, and a book of almost 1.000 pages is likely to frighten university students. Please don't be driven away; there isn't a dull moment in this story. Whether "The Pickwick Papers" is a novel is another matter, for it is mainly about the Pickwick Club and their various ramblings about England.
Lovable as is Mr. Pickwick, it is the loquacious Sam Weller, Pickwick's servant, who may be the best character in the book. These are but two of the many to be found in this panoramic comedy.
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, by John Masefield (Premier, 60 cents).
A new book written for the Shakespeare year by the poet laureate of England is this semi-biography and introduction to the works of Shakespeare. It is slight but handy and marked by the warmth of the distinguished Masefield.
There is a brief biographical sketch of the man whose name still stirs such controversy. In addition, Masefield offers discussions of the poetry and the plays, plus an essay on plays attributed to Shakespeare.
**
THE DAY OF THE TRIFFIDS, by John Wyndham (Crest, 50 cents); ONCE UPON A DREADFUL TIME, edited by Alfred Hitchcock (Dell, 50 cents).
Science fiction and horror are riding high right now, and here are two books likely to have a wide audience. John Wyndham's "The Day of the Trifids" has a certain status as a science fiction masterpiece, a rather ghastly tale of vegetable creatures that rage about the planet, causing all kinds of trouble. It is an interesting tale that seems almost common place in this wild world of today.
In the other book, Alfred Hitchcock, who is as famous as a movie star, has selected 16 stories from crime fiction of today. For the most part names of the writers will ring few bells; even with aficionados of this kind of stuff.
Dailij1fänsan
111 Flint Hall
UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom
UNiversity 4-3198, business office
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1899, 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 Lawrensy, Kansas
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Roy Miller Managing Editor Dan Buck, Leta Catcath, Bob Jones, Greg Swartz, Assistant Managing Editors; Linda Ellis, Feature-Society Editor; Russ Corbitt, Sports Editor; Steve Williams, Photo Editor.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Jim Langford and Rick Mabbutt
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Jim Langford and Rick Malbourn BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Jim Langford and Rick Mabbut Co-Editorial Editors
Bob Phinney Business Manager John Pepper, Advertising Manager; Dick Flood, National Advertising Manager; John Subler, Classified Advertising Manager; Tom Fisher, Promotion Manager; Nancy Holland, Circulation Manager; Gary Grazda, Merchandising Manager.
Wednesday, Sept. 23, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page
Congress Setting Education Record
rel, 95
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1,000 driven Pick out the
Weller.
e book.
comedy.
cents). e poet to the by the
WASHINGTON — (CPS)— The 88th Congress, scheduled to adjourn early in October, is setting a new record for education legislation.
some still versions ofuted to
rest, 50 Alfred
and here
udham's
fiction
hat rage
restering
today.
Building on its 1963 legislative accomplishments which caused President Johnson to dub it the "Education Congress," the 88th Congress this summer passed two more bills with major implications for education.
a movie the most cionados
16. 1912.
rate Press.
New York
ion rates:
afternoon
University
at Law-
Managing Editor
Managing
Arts Editor;
al Editors
The two summer bills are the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964, which embodies the first legislative steps in the President's "War on Poverty," and the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Still awaiting final action is a series of expansion to the six-year-old National Defense Education Act.
THE ECONOMIC Opportunity Act contains provisions for a work-study financial aid program for needy college students, massive remedial education programs, and a domestic peace corps to be known as VISTA — Volunteers in Service to America.
s Manager
advertising
m Fisher,
ry Grazda,
Specific remedial education programs are provided in the Job Corps programs for high school drop-outs and draft rejects and in the adult basic education program for illiterate adults. Salary subsidies will also be provided for 200,000 part-time or full-time 16 to 21 year-old workers to enable them to continue their education.
The 870-plus million work-study program provides federal subsidies of up to 90 per cent of the salaries of students working in newly created part-time jobs on or off campus. This program will aid an estimated 140,000 students a year.
Additional forms of remedial aid, such as tutoring, may be supported as part of a local "community action program," for which the Act provides federal financial and technical assistance.
IT IS EXPECTED that some VISTA volunteers will staff and administer some of the anti-poverty remedial education programs. In addition to those already mentioned, VISTA volunteers may aid in the education of children of Indians and migrant workers.
The education provisions of the new Civil Rights Act deal with desegregating public school facilities. The Act authorizes the U.S. Office of Education to provide technical and financial assistance to local school systems that are desegregating. It also mandates the Office of Education to conduct a survey on the progress of school desegregation.
In addition, the Civil Rights Act gives the Attorney General the power to bring suits for the desegregation of public schools, upon receipt of complaints from individual citizens. Finally, the Act authorizes any federal agency to withhold funds from segregated institutions and programs, educational and otherwise.
Douglas GOP's Open Office
The Douglas County Republican Central Committee held open house for the official opening of Republican Campaign Headquarters in the Eldridge Hotel from 9:30 to 11 a.m. yesterday.
Approximately two hundred persons attended the gathering.
Douglas County Central Committee Chairman J. D. King's challenge that Lawrence would get a greater per cent of registered Republican voters to the polls on November 3 than any other first class city in Kansas was accepted by C. Y. Thomas, Johnson County Republican chairman, on behalf of Overland Park and Prairie Village.
LAWRENCE DANCE STUDIO
VI 3-8484
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IN AUGUST, the House and Senate passed differing versions of an NDEA extension bill. The House Rules Committee is currently delaying the conference needed to rectify the discrepancies in the bills, but is expected to act before Congress adjourns.
Both versions of the bill agree on increasing total funds for the college student loan program and the size of individual loans. They also agree on dropping the $800,000 ceiling on loans to single institutions, on increasing the number of graduate fellowships, and on extending public school teachers' "g forgiveness" of up to 50 per cent of their loans to teachers in private schools and all colleges.
The House bill, generally more conservative than the Senate bill, provides funds for remedial reading equipment, world maps, and globes. The Senate bill seeks, as did the original House bill, to extend the scope of NDEA to cover English, history, and geography.
Kuoy Ski Club
open meeting
free movie: Ski Country USA
Sept. 23, Wed 7:30 p.m.
Forum Room
Union
beginners!
Welcome!
MATTHEW B. CUNNINGHAM
DRIVE IN TO THE FIRST WHILE YOU'RE GETTING SETTLED
Before school starts, you can open a checking account quickly and easily at the First's handy Motor Bank, 9th and Tennessee, at the foot of Mount Oread. Drive-in banking is only one of the conveniences enjoyed by students who have local checking accounts at the First. Lawrence merchants readily accept First National checks and it's easier for you to check your current balance than with an out-of-town bank. You can make deposits by mail and at the drive-in or downtown banks. You don't have to run all over town to pay bills and your cancelled checks are a record of where your money is going. Economy checking accounts are tailor-made for students: no minimum balance is required; costs only ten cents per check paid; and you receive 50 personalized checks free. Drive or walk, but come to the First.
1st
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8th AND MASSACHUSETTS • LAWRENCE, KANSAS • VI 3-0162
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Sept. 23, 1964
Peace Corps Begins Making Year's Plans
KU's Peace Corps Committee, one of the first created in the nation, has begun its plans for the 1964-65 school year.
The committee was started in the spring of 1962 by interested students. Since that time nearly eighty such committees have formed throughout the nation.
One of this year's co-chairmen, Donna Hanneman, Junction City senior, said, "The committee's purpose is to heighten interest in the Peace Corps and to provide information about it." The other cochairman is John Sapp, Astoria, Ill. junior.
mor.
"Everyone thinks they know about
Grants to Help In Two Areas
New equipment to go with new undergraduate teaching methods will be bought with two grants from the National Science Foundation.
The chemistry department received $5,000 and the botany department, $3,480, for "undergraduate instructional scientific equipment" programs. Under terms of the grants, KU will provide matching funds.
THE AWARDS FOLLOW announcement last May that KU would receive $46,850 from the NSF, to be matched by the University, for equipment in physics, electrical engineering and anthropology.
The main pieces the chemistry department will buy are automatic, one-pan analytical balances, for use by students in freshman chemistry courses. The balances will enable the students to weigh as fast and as accurately as more advanced researchers. In the process, more laboratory time will be freed.
Two ovens and smaller pieces of equipment also will be bought.
The purchases are part of a year-old program to revamp freshman chemistry laboratory sessions. The program, directed by Clark E. Bricker, professor of chemistry, provides students with more laboratory time, in smaller groups and with guidance of senior faculty members.
Court Updating Session Opens
Possible improvements of Kansas courts will be the main topic at the "Citizens Conference on the Moderization of Kansas Courts" in the Kansas Union tomorrow through Saturday.
Following a dinner at 6:30 p.m. David Prager, district judge from Topeka, will give an address on "The Administration of Justice in Kansas Today." Panel discussions will follow, dealing with the topic of Kansas courts and judges in the Kansas Bar Association event.
A general assembly will open Friday's program with several addresses given by men in the judicial field. Panel discussions concerning different phases of courts and jurisdiction will continue throughout the day.
On Saturday, the conference will close with a final general assembly and reports from each of the discussion teams. The conference will then be evaluated.
About 150 Kansas citizens who are not members of the legal profession will be participating in the conference.
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Wed , Thursday, Friday & Saturday
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the Peace Corps but very few people know what it really is," she said. "You don't have to be a teacher or engineer to be needed. Almost 70 per cent of the volunteers are liberal arts graduates."
She also said, "The Peace Corps is not a financial hardship; not many people in these professions can save $1600 in two years."
$1600 in two years.
Last summer the research subcommittee prepared a bulletin called "Preparing for the Peace Corps at KU." The pamphlet lists qualifications for volunteers and courses offered at KU of special interest to possible volunteers.
VI 2-2771—700 Mass.—Room 211
The speakers' committee has also begun work. By mid-October speakers will be available to speak at living groups. A 28-minute film, "Mission of Discovery," will be shown by the speakers. Three recently returned volunteers will aid committee members at these talks.
Peace Corps' recruiting team made up of returned volunteers and Washington staff members, will also be available for speaking the first week of second semester.
A project which was begun by students and Lawrence citizens last year will be finished this semester. Almost 800 books were collected in a door-to-door campaign. These will be sent to English-speaking countries where Peace Corps teams are now stationed.
Door on 7th Street
"The newsletter put out by the committee helps to relate the Peace Corps committee to KU," Miss Haneman said. It will be published once or twice a semester. Coverage will include the activities of volunteers who graduated from KU.
Due to the increased interest in a committee of this type in many other universities, an office has been set up in Washington to aid beginning groups. Nearly 250 committees are expected to form by 1967.
Member Meeting On Tap Tonight
To introduce its activities and executive officers, Student Union Activities will hold a membership meeting at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union ballroom.
The meeting will have special appeal to freshmen, Bob Enberg, Wichita senior and SUA president, said. The entire program of the organization, which centers its activities on the Student Union, will be explained.
explained. Executive board members of SUA will also explain the different areas within the organization and interested students will be given an opportunity to talk to each board member.
the meeting, the only open meeting held by SUA during the year, is to encourage students to sign up to work in the various areas of SUA, Enberg said.
First Berger Money Given
Four Watkins Scholars have been named Watkins-Berger scholars for this year.
They are the first recipients of scholarships financed through the Arthur Berger Scholarship fund announced by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe Monday.
The scholarship fund for women, the Emily V. Berger Scholarship Fund named in honor of Berger's sister, is being allocated by the Elizabeth M. Watkins Fund Committee. The recipients are thus being called Watkins-Berger Scholars.
Those named as Watkins-Berger Scholars are Letha M. Schwiesow, Shawnee Mission junior; Judith DeSpain, Wichita senior; Evelyn T. Fearirrg, Lawrence senior, and Linda Ruth Musser, Mission senior.
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Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Only until Friday September 25:
1965 Jayhawker Magazine Yearbook
Subscriptions on Sale at Reduced Price of
$6.00
Orders taken at Jayhawker Office
Basement of Student Union 2:00-5:00 p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 23, 1964 University Daily Kansan
New England Outlook
Page 5
Demos Make Inroads in GOP States
BOSTON — (UPI) — Fremont,
Blaime, Hughes, Landon, Willkie,
Dewey and Nixon—these were the
men nominated for president by the
Republican Party who never made
the White House. They all carried
Vermont.
Vermont, haven for harried urbanites and stronghold of laconic yankee humor, is the only state of the 50 which has never voted Democratic in a presidential election.
Democrats, who hold three of the four governorships and four of the five Senate seats up for election this November in New England, would like to give President Johnson a triumph which eluded even Franklin D. Roosevelt—a Democratic sweep of all six states in the region.
BESIDES CARRYING Vermont, this also would entail victories in Maine, which has not voted Democratic since the Bull Moose movement split the GOP vote in 1912, and in New Hampshire, which last sucumbed to the lure of a Democrat when Roosevelt ran for a fourth term in 1944.
Throughout the region the big issue in national and state contests is Barry Goldwater and his controversial opinions. Several Republican incumbents and office-seekers are playing down their political affiliation and avoiding taking a stand alongside the GOP presidential nominee.
There seems to be little doubt among political observers that the three southern New England states—Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts, where Democratic rule has strengthened steadily in recent years—will support Johnson.
many NEWSPAPERS which usually or always have supported Republicans have endorsed Johnson.
The three northern states have shown fissures in their rock-ribbed Republicanism of late. Politicians there, including many prominent Republicans, feel yankee uneasiness about Goldwater's views, especially on foreign policy. This may lead many to cast their first Democratic vote or to decide they cannot vote in
[ ]
Extension Site May Take Time
Acquisition of the present Lawrence post office building, if it happens at all, may take months, Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor for operations, said yesterday.
The Board of Regents announced Saturday they will look into possible acquisition of the building, located at 645 New Hampshire St., for use as an extension center for KU and for the state.
The University had been notified by the State Surplus Property Agency that the post office would be placed on the surplus list as a result of the construction of a new post office building at 7th and Vermont streets.
streets:
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe proposed the regents' inquiry into the matter, with the hope that securing the building would make it possible for the University to transfer some of its extension services there and relieve crowded conditions in the Extension Building north of the Kansas Union.
In addition, the old post office building would probably house a state-wide director of extension services, Lawton said, "This office does not now exist," he continued, "but when it is established, the director will coordinate extension activities of all state agencies, with the exception of Agricultural Extension at Kansas State University.
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good conscience for either presidential candidate.
Vermont, which has sent an internationalist like George D. Aiken to the U.S. Senate since 1940, has shown signs of political ownerness. It elected its first Democratic congressman in 106 years' in 1958 only to turn him out two years later. Then in 1962 it elected its first Democratic governor in 109 years.
Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Pa. VI 3-2921
DEMOCRATIC GOV. Philip H. Hoff, a lawyer whose father was a Republican state legislator in Massachusetts, is running for re-election against Republican Lt. Gov. Ralph A. Foote. Republican Sen. Winston L. Prouty, who is not as well known in Vermont as Aiken, is seeking re-election against Democrat Frederick J. Fayette, a respected attorney.
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In Maine, popular Democratic Sen.
Edmund S. Muskie is running for re-election against conservative GOP congressman Clifford G. McIntire.
Congressman Stanley Tupper, who was New England campaign manager for New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller's bid for the presidential nomination, is an example of the liberal Republicans in Maine who have repudiated Goldwater.
NEW HAMPSHIRE'S first Democratic governor in 40 years, John W. King, riding a crest of popularity resulting from his approval of legislation creating the only state sweepstakes in the nation, faces the same Republican he beat in 1962, former state legislator John Pillsbury.
In Connecticut, many top Republicans are too "liberal" to accept Goldwater's philosophy. Even state chairman A. Searle Pinney has made
Automatic transmission repair
overhauls
tune-ups
brake service
carburetor work
"BARBER SHOP THE CAMPUS
19th St. Garage
where the students go.
5 BARBERS NO LONG WAITS Just North of Student Union
If you miss one or more of the following questions, then you need the prize ... a free copy of our 48 page booklet,
"Clothesmanship" which answers practically every clothing question anyone can think of. If you score $100\%$, then you are a master of Clothesmanship and don't need the book...but you are invited to inspect our new selection of Fall clothing. We think you will approve.
You Can Only Win by Losing
Presents a Most Unusual Quiz from CRICKETEER $ ^{\circledR} $
1. Where does camel hair come from? ...
2. What does "drop" mean in men's suits? ...
The Town Shop and The University Shop
3. What are patch pockets? ...
4. What's the fashionable width of ties now? ...
5. What is a British Warm? ...
6. What is Cricketeer? ...
ANSWERS
LITTLESMANSHIP
1. Actually the hair from the underside of a camel, wool like in texture.
2. The difference between the size of the coat and the hair size of the trousers.
3. Flat caps attached to the outside of a coat
4. $2^{1/8}$ to $2^{9}$
5. Double-braided,
6. Brand name for young men's natural shoulder clothing
Behind Fina Service Station at 19th & Mass.
no secret of his displeasure with the Arizona senator. And Goldwater forces have not been helped by the penchant of their local chieftain, John Lupton, to make statements often deemed less than tactful.
Democratic Sen. Thomas J. Dodd is given a substantial edge over his GOP opponent, former Gov. John D. Lodge. There is also some thought that the Democrats will take all of the Connecticut's six seats in the House. They now hold five of them.
THE Town Shop BOWNTOWN
THE University Shop DN THE HILL
ON THE HILL
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ADVERTISED IN ESQUIRE
AS
Have a Burnt Ivory
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The strong masculine flavor of this rich cigar tone leather appeals instantly to young-thinking men. Hand-sewn detailing adds the custom touch.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Sept. 23, 1964
Fall Intramural Entries Due Monday
The deadline for all entries in the fall intramural program has been set at 4 p.m. Monday, according to Robert H. Lockwood, director of men's intramurals.
The fall program will include team competition in touch football, and singles and doubles competition in badminton, golf, handball, tennis and horseshoes.
An intramural managers meeting will be held at 4 p.m. Tuesday in room 202, Robinson Gymnasium, and information concerning the fall program will be discussed.
THE TOUCH football competition is scheduled to begin on Oct. 1, and the other sports will begin later. "A" and "B" competition will be held in the fraternity and independent touch football. Each organization is limited to one "A" team, but may enter two or more "B" teams.
Entry blanks have been sent to various living groups, but additional blanks may be obtained in the Intramural Office, room 107, Robinson. A fee of 25 cents for each man will be required.
Each player must also sign or have on file with the Intramural Office his medical permit to participate in intramural athletics. The cars are available in the Intramural Office for new students, transfers, or students who have not previously participated in intramurals at KU.
Players need only sign the permits, and the intramural department
'Name Any Weight'
NEW YORK —(UPI)— Georges Carpentier of France fought in all eight major weight divisions during his boxing career.
Invitations Extended For Track Tryouts
Richard Pratt Named Lineman of the Week
Any students interested in participating in varsity cross country or spring track are invited to see Coach Bill Easton in his office, room 10, at Allen Field House, or at Memorial Stadium after 2:30 p.m.
will forward the cards to the Student Health Service for its approval. Those who already have permits on file from previous participation need not sign new cards.
A program to acquaint freshmen with leadership techniques and student government
ASC Freshman Leadership Program
It was learned this morning that Richard Pratt, KU's 264 lb. junior guard, has been named Big Eight Lineman of the Week by a panel of sportswriters who covered the Big Eight games last week.
George Brenner . . . . . VI 2-9100
For information contact
Bruce Cook . . . . . . VI 3-6960
Andrea Speer . . . . . VI 3-3910
Andrea Speer . . . . . . VI 3-3910
Pratt was credited with one unassisted tackle, six assists, and was responsible for another TCU fumble.
Dave Lutton . . . . . . VI 2-1200
Mary Tate . . . . . . VI 3-6060
Jackie van Eman . . . . . VI 2-2420
David Sylvan . . . . . . VI 3-7404
Mike Hurt . . . . . . . VI 3-6866
Betty Arnold . . . . . . VI 3-7070
Mike Grady . . . . . . VI 3-7370
EARL'S
PIZZA
PALACE
A MERE
10c
will pay the delivery and bring EARL'S PIZZA man running direct to you with your favorite
HOT PIZZA
from the ovens of
Earl's Pizza Palace
just call VI 3-0753
THE CLASSICAL FILM SERIES presents
A DAY IN THE COUNTRY (Jean Renoir)
L'ATLANTE
(Jean Vigo)
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23
FRASER THEATER . . 7 p.m.
ADMISSION 60c
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
USSR Farm Scholar To Speak Tonight
"The problem of agriculture in the Soviet Union has not yet been solved," said Carl Zoerb, distinguished scholar in the field of Soviet agricultural and peasant affairs.
The virgin lands of Russia will be the topic of Zoerb's lecture tonight at 7:30 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. His talk, sponsored by the Slavic and Soviet Area Program, the Department of Economics and the Department of Political Science, will compare the agricultural conditions of Canada and Russia.
In 1930 Zoerb was one of the few specialists employed by the Soviet government to set up an agricultural program in the Soviet Union. According to Zoerb he worked on a minor "Peace Corps" to introduce modern practices in farming and especially animal husbandry.
While working in Russia, Zoerb worked on state farms called "sovkhozy" which were set up as model farms. Although the collective farms are more numerous and important, Zoerb said the state farms were increasing at a faster rate.
Although originally from Wisconsin, Zoerb now lives in Munich, Germany, where he is employed by Radio Free Europe as a chief analyst of Soviet bloc agriculture. As an economist and agronomist, Zoerb has taught in American universities and is a former fellow of the Harvard Russian Research Center.
Fine Arts School Receives Mention
The School of Fine Arts received second place honorable mention in the 1964 award competition of the National Federation of Music Clubs competition for the performance and promotion of American music.
KU's entry was built around its annual spring symposium for unpublished American music. KU also earned the second place award in the state or municipal college or university division in 1963, the first year of the competition.
Official Bulletin
WEDNESDAY. SEPT. 23
WEDNESDAY, 14
German grammar in exam, Sat.
Oct. 3, 9:30 AM in 110 Fraser. Candidates must register in 306 Fraser by Saturday noon, Sept. 26.
TODAY
CATHOLIC MASS, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
NEWMAN CLUB Executive Committee,
Lawrence Center, 1915
Stratford Road.
CLASSICAL FILM, 7 p.m., Dyche Auditorium
SUA MEMBERSHIP meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Kansas Union
CARL ZOERB, Radio Free Europe,
7:30 p.m., Big Eagle Kansas Union.
CATHOLIC MASSES; 6:45 a.m., 5 p. m.
Road Catholic, Church Chapel, 1910 Strat-
ford Road.
COLLEGE FACULTY, 4:30 p.m., Bailey Auditorium.
ROBERT W GREAVES, London. 8:30 p.m.
Kansas Union. Kansas Union.
Wilton, Georgia.
CHRISTIAN FAMILY Movement, 8-30
Paulson Middle School
Center, 1915 Stratford Rd.
Zoerb became interested in foreign agricultural affairs when he was a student at the University of Wisconsin. "I was one of the few agricultural students who took good advanced courses in English and was greatly impressed with the writings of Turgenev," he said. In this author's writings, Zoerb felt a good picture was shown of the liberated and the indentured serf and of how much needed to be done in these lands.
In 1959, Zoerb accompanied Premier Nikita Khrushchev on his tour of the United States. While observing America, Zoerb said Khrushchev commented on how much America had helped the Soviet Union agricultural program.
London Historian To Give Lecture
Robert W. Greaves, professor of modern history at the University of London, will give a lecture entitled "The Whig Century" at 8 p.m. Thursday, in the Jayhawk room of the Union. The lecture is sponsored by the department of history and the history club.
Aldon Bell, assistant professor of history and sponsor of the History Club, is having open house from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m., Thursday at his residence. 1645 Crescent Road, for all interested history majors, those considering history as a major, and faculty members.
Alum Buys Paper
A former University of Kansas student has purchased the Altoona Record-Times, Altoona, Kan.
Elsie May Pinkston, new owner of the weekly newspaper, attended KU, Lamar Institute of Technology, and the University of Pennsylvania, studying psychology and creative writing. She was employed in Philadelphia for three years, and since then has been working in Fredonia.
Modern Dance Classes
by
Miss Yen-Lu Wong
— Member of Royal Academy of Dance
—Recipient of De Rothschild award to the Martha Graham School for beginning drama student, and others.
Call
VI 2-9271
Interested in Photography? KAPPA ALPHA MU
National Photojournalism Society will have a
Cottonwood Room, Kansas Union
Wednesday, Sept. 23
7:30 p.m.
GET ACQUAINTED COFFEE
Speaker Talks On Strategy
Democratic Congressional candidates will try to associate their opponents with Senator Goldwater and themselves with President Johnson, Mike Harder, political science professor at Wichita State University, said last night.
"Goldwater's poor showing in public opinion polls has made this strategy possible," Prof. Harder explained.
Professor Harder addressed a meeting of the Douglas County Young Democrats at the Douglas County Democratic Headquarters.
"The rumor that Goldwater is Jewish may cost him needed support in areas such as rural Oklahoma. Religious prejudice such as this almost cost President Kennedy the 1960 election," Harder said.
Patronize Kansan Advertisert
HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING
Across From The High School
OPEN 24 HRS.
19th & La. VI 3-9631
Granada
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5786
NOW! Ends Friday... Peter Sellers Elke Sommer
"A Shot in the Dark"
Shows 7:00 & 9:00
Starts SATURDAY...
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RICHARD BURTON
AVA GARDNER
DEBORAH KERR
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SPECIAL DISCOUNT
AT MATINEES
K.U. STUDENTS
AND FACULTY
ON I.D. CARDS
Matinees 2:00
Evenings 8:00
TODAY & THURS. —
Carroll Baker "STATION 6-SAHARA"
Starts Friday...
Richard Burton's "HAMLET"
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on highway 40
--roommate for 2nd year graduate student.
Nice apartment. Private entrance. Close to
campus. See at 1102 W. 19th Terr. 9-28
Wednesday, Sept. 23, 1964
NOW! Ends Friday "CHILD WOMAN"
and "Splendor in the Grass"
Open 6:45, Starts 7:15
--roommate for 2nd year graduate student.
Nice apartment. Private entrance. Close to
campus. See at 1102 W. 19th Terr. 9-28
STUDENTS
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Brake Adj. . . 9P
Automotive Service
Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel
Balancing & Alignment
7 a.m. - 11 p.m.
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
PINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR SALE
Westinghouse Front Load Automati
1-3244 after 5.30 p.m.
3-2344 after 5.30 p.m.
2 Registered German Shepherd dogs; one pure white, reasonably priced. Contact Henry Breecheisen, Phone TU 3-6507, Wellsville. 9-28
Iron bed, complete wooden bed, complete moihair sofa and chair. Heavy oak emport, carpet. Moisture spring a room dresser with mirror. Se-9-24 16:40 NH: or CALL VI 3-1836.
10 speed racing bicycle for sale—$60.
Call VT 3-289. ask for Dave. 9-28
AM-FM Radios at LOW DISCOUNT PRICES G.E. with AFC cut to $28.00.
1-993-931 Mass. St. (G.E. Stereo Twinbass)
Multiplex - $99.94). 10-19
Apartment Sized Furniture: gas stove, cooks fine, $23, Revolving book-stand, 6 x 8 ft. bed frame with springs and innerspring mattress (excellent condition), $47.50. Bed frame with springs and height, $8. Oak swivel chair, $12. Small buffet, black mahogany finish, $4. Antique carved oak chest, mahogany vari-
tions, $92. CALL VI 3-1429 or UNIT 7038
USED TIRES! USED TIRES! Prices slashed to clear—ALL SIZES, small 13" and 15" Hundreds of 14" at half center. 929-931, Mass. Sd. 10-19
Sunbeam Collegiate Electric Blanket—reg. list $24.95. Special early offer only $15.00—Layaway Now, Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. St. 10-19
TAPE RECORDERS—at low discount prices! As low as $15.00—$5.00 per month at Ray Stoneback's. 929-931 Mass. St. 10.10
HAIR DRYERS!? Dominion, General
Mission Rocky Backs' s. 929-931 Mass. St. 19-19
USED TV'S—COME 'N' GET $E 5.00 each on as is sets. Delivered $6.00.
Working sets $29.94 at Ray Stoneback's.
929-931 Mass. St. 10-19
15 speed Schwind Superior Bicycle, like
$80, CALL VI 3-1208.
9-28
9-28
1631 Honda Scrambler motorcycle. Prime
CALL WI 3-9562 you can be seen at 10:38
9-28
WI CALL WI 3-9562
Attention engineering students: complete set of engineering drawing equipment, calibration pencils and pencil pens site—$25 to $30 worth for $17.50. CALL VI 2-0759 on p. 6. p.m. - 9:25
1956 Chevy Bel-Air; 4-dr; auto; radio;
3-2333 at 5 p.m.
9-25
3-2333 at 5 p.m.
TYPEWRITERS, electronics, manuals, portables; sales, service, rentals. Olympia, Hermes, Royal, Smith-Corona, Olivetti, Adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass., VI 3-3644. tf
1958 Dodge 4 dr., radio and htr. Auto, trans., and power steering. Good second car. Good tires. New motor. CALL VI 3-0131. 9-25
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, minimegraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL VI 1-290 for free delivery.
Slamese Kittens—Purebred Seal Point,
pan broken, lovable size. Call VI 2-1742
after 5 p.m. or on weekends. 9-25
1958 Dodge, 2-dr., hardtop, pwr. steering,
air cond. Torture-Flight-V 8, Black and
white, original owner. CALL Bob Hess at
VI 2-1527 after 6 p.m. or on weekends. ft
Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlineings and references. Revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 3-1428. Freely available. $150.
PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS: Smith- Corona "Silent," and Olympia "Deluxe" (German Made). Reasonably priced and in excellent condition. CALL VI 2-3518, 9-29
1960 TR-3 Roadster, new engine, wire wheels, in excellent condition throughout. CALL Chuck Lilgendahl at VI 3-
4050. 9-25
1956 Ford V-8 Convertible, black and white. $175. See at 1131 Ohio at around 6:00 p.m. 9-29
TYPING
Term papers, Theses by experienced
*volunt* Phone VI 3-6296 after five. *tf*
Typing wanted. Former high school teacher will type reports and theses. Experienced. Electric typewriter. Fast service. CALL Mrs. Marsh at V 3-8268.
Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc.
Accurate rate. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter, Gestetner Duplicator. -Mrs.
McEldowney, 2521 Alabama St. Phone VI 3-8686
tf
Accurate typing done on electric type-
writer. Familiar with the four accredited
K.U. thesis forms. CALL Pat Beck at VI
3-5630.
HELP WANTED
ATTENTION COLLEGE MEN AND
NOMEN: Help Wanted at La Pizza 807
terriment—Busbuses, Waitresses, Delivery
boys, Cooks, and a Hostess-Cashier.
Apply in person from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m.
ask for Paul.
Two KU men needed to work 3 nights each week. Contact Tom Dixon—Dixon's Drive In, 2400 W. 6th or phone VI 3-7446. 9-29
Babytatter for one child, 2 years old. Call
Carol Ann Coburn, VI 2-0422.
Attractive Hostess for employment in New Orleans Room. PHONE VI 9-28743
Part Time - to fit your schedule. Call or
visit www.bestparttime.com 1-800-525-3761,
Vi 8-3876 after 6:30 p.m.
9-25
Part time—Immediately. Mornings or afternoons or nights. Free housing—uniforms and laundry of uniforms—workman's comp. ins—and other benefits.
Citizens Ambulance Service, 1104 W. 4th,
CALL VI 3-7733. 9-25
Washing and ironing done lm my home.
Phone VI. 2-2598. I131 New Jersey ST.
Phone VI. 2-2598.
WANTED
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
TRANSPORTATION
Sandwich Route Salesman on the hill,
9-12 p.m., Sunday through Thursday, $25
per week. Must have car. Call 913-281-
0481 after 6 p.m.
9-23
Ride 7-30 a.m. to Stouffer Bldg. 20. Contact Mike Getter at VI 3-4734. 9-26
Want in car pool from Topeka daily Call Leon Torkelson UN 4-3915 or CE 2-954
Commuters who are interested in forming a car pool between Kansas City (Johnson County) and Lawrence, PHONE James Mulloy at HE 2-3465. 9-28
Bargain Transportation for sale. 1955
Buick Special, fully equipped, excellent
condition. Owned by one family. Low
mileage for this vehicle. Call A BARGAIN at $298, CALL
Bruce Warren at VI 3-6400, after 5:00
pm, or on weekends.
9-29
MISCELLANEOUS
Will Baby Sit in my home for 2 or 3
in- yard, reward phone. VI 3-6763 9-28
BAR-B-Q- For Bar-B-Q ribs and chickens that are a treat to eat, try ours at 515 Michigan St. Hours: 11:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday.
Haircut special--weekdays; men's hairc-
cuts $1.50, children's haircuts $1.25.
Full-time barbers. Tom's 14th St. Barber-
Shop. 9-28
FOR RENT
Single Room for senior or graduate students' bath, close to campus. M-13-1425. 0-22S
FOR RENT—ROOMS for men close to
town and K.U. Linens furnished. Private
entrance. PHONE I 3-6833. 9-25
Board and Room available at 1225 Oread.
LARGE SINGLE ROOM for rent to young
resident house off campus. See at:
Indiana.
9-2$
Quiet—well-furnished room, with re-
frigator and cooking facilities. 10 min.
for entrance. 20 min. for res-
ponsible. rent to responsible Res-
taurant. CALL VI 3-6966 after 5 p.m. 9-28$
A nicely furnished 4 room house. Prefer
appointment - VI 3-0411
9-28
Lovely Furnished Apartment For Graduate Student or Faculty: 2 rooms, private studio/garage for graduate/units includes - No Pets. Call VI 31-1299, or see at 1633 Vermont. *9-299*
Apartment for rent: 3 rooms, ground
floor, furnished, private entrance, car-
port. Married couple or one grandma.
SEE at 646 W. 23rd or CALL 9-
3-625
LOST
Small. Friendly, black and white females
please CALL V1 2-4154. Reward. 9-25
FOUND
Found set of, 5 keys. Owner may have
seen, SEE Mrs. Hickinson at 923 Maine. 9-24
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Sept. 23, 1964
Representatives of AUFS To Visit KU This Year
E. A. Bayne, expert on Italy, Iran and Israel, will be here Nov. 2-11. A writer and political observer for nearly 20 years, he has been closely associated with the economic and social developments of these areas
Four representatives of the American Universities Field Staff (AUFS) will be visiting lecturers during this academic year.
Another expert on Latin America, James W. Rowe, will be here April 19-28. He has had experience in government and several years' association with cultural exchange activities. In 1961 Rowe began two years of residence in Brazil and Argentina, reporting on political affairs. KU is one of the founding members of the AUFS, a non-profit corporation which supports a professional staff abroad to report on world affairs. Each staff member spends about 18 months in a specific foreign area, then returns for 10-day engagements at each member institution. Staff members lecture, conduct seminars, and consult with interested students and professors.
Charles F. Gallagher, the second representative, will be here Nov. 30-Dec. 9. He has studied the Arab world since 1551, and has reported on it for the AUFS since 1956.
Kalman H. Silvert, AUFS director of studies, is scheduled to be here March 22-31. A professor of political science at Dartmouth College, he has spent much time in Latin America.
Group Sells Discs
A sale of records will be held Thursday from 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. in front of Robinson gymnasium. The sale is sponsored by Tau Sigma, an honorary dance fraternity.
At this sidewalk sale, 45 rpm records, which were used for demonstration, will be sold for 19 cents each or three for 50 cents.
The money from the sale will go toward expenses for the annual Tau Sigma dance concert which will be held in January.
Position Added At Art Museum
One new position and three staff members have been added to the KU Museum of Art.
Bret Waller joined the staff in July as curator of the museum. Waller has been director of the Citadel Museum, Charleston, S.C., and studied museum operations in Norway. He received his master's degree from KU.
Micheal Stoughton has joined the staff in the new position of registrar of the museum. He also handles all public relations work. Stoughton is in charge of shipments, loans and keeping track of museum property.
Stoughton graduated from KU last spring and was curator of the Wichita Art Museum during the summer. He is working toward a master's degree in museology.
Miss Sally Schultz has joined the museum staff as assistant to the director and secretary to the staff.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
A group of KU Young Republicans will leave for Wichita tonight to attend a rally for Sen. Barry Goldwater at 7:30 a.m. Thursday, at the Forum, a public auditorium.
Students Plan to See Barry in Wichita
Goldwater will speak at the rally after attending a $100 a plate breakfast at the Broadview
Hotel.
Senator Frank Carlson will introduce Goldwater at the rally, and Representative William H. Avery, Republican candidate for governor, will introduce him at the breakfast.
EXPO CENTRE
FILMING FROM AROUND THE WORLD
THE SCIENCE ADVENTURE FILM SERIES (in color)
ADMISSION FREE!
Currently being shown at the New York World's Fair
DUST OR DESTINY? Science Looks at the Question Does God Exist?
8 p.m. Friday Dyche Auditorium
Reuben McCornack - Student Body President 1963-64 Gary Jouvenat - Student Chairman - VI 3-9562 Film available for showing in dorms, fraternities and sororities Sponsored by K.U. Student & Local Businessmen
SUA Membership Meeting
Would You Like To Help Plan A Dance,A Concert, A Jazz Forum Or A Carnival? -
SEE YOU AT THE MEETING
Freshmen Are Especially Encouraged To Attend.
7:30 WEDNESDAY UNION BALLROOM
Two KU Freshmen Selected Scholars By LBJ Committee
Two KU freshmen are among 121 of the nation's 1964 high school graduates to be named "Presidential Scholars" by Lyndon B. Johnson on a visit to Washington last spring.
Johnson on a visit to Washington last spring Alice Kathleen Cox of Wellington and Everett Keith Rowson of Kansas City, Mo., received bronze medallions from the President on June 10 while such famous figures as poet Ogden Nash, columnist Walter Lippman and actress Helen Hayes looked on.
THE HONORARY AWARD program began in March when the President appointed a Commission on Presidential Scholars to select from among thousands those who would best represent "ail youth of high academic ability." The honorees were then sent surprise invitations to the White House for a full day of programs, interviews and receptions.
casual.
Before attending a picnic and entertainment program on the White House lawn, Johnson told the scholars, "I believe the destiny of your generation, and your nation, is a rendezvous with excellence."
Rowson, who also holds a National Science Foundation Scholarship, said, "We were so overwhelmed to meet such people as Dean Rusk and Alan B. Shepard. We even had a discussion of the Supreme Court with Chief Justice Earl Warren. Everyone was so nice, so casual."
A RECEPTION IN the Blue Room of the White House was attended by other well-known people such as physicist Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, author Robert Penn Warren and publisher Alfred A. Knopf. "The only one I recognized right off was Stan Musial," Miss Cox said.
Donald Mark Essmiller of Great Bend was the only other Kansan besides Alice to be named a scholar. He presently attends Kansas State University.
State University.
LIKE ROWSON, MISS COX maintained an A average in high school, and she holds a National Merit Scholarship and a KU Honor Scholarship.
"The whole thing has been unbelievable," she said. "Since you cannot apply for this award, it's a complete surprise to everyone." She and Keith had both heard of the President's plan to "recognize the most precious resource of the United States—the brain power of its young people," but neither one had a thought of winning.
Miss Cox plans to major in micro-biology at KU, while Rowson hopes to win a degree in mathematics.
Senators Confident Vote Will Pass Bill
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., said today he was "reasonably confident" the Senate would break a stalemate by approving a non-binding declaration on legislative reapportionment.
The carefully hedged victory statement came as the Senate headed toward a crucial vote on a mild substitute designed to end the squabble over the Supreme Court's "one man, one vote" ruling.
Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen, Ill., had indicated that he would attempt to kill the milder proposal before the key vote. But there were indications he might drop this plan and settle for a single vote on the substitute.
Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield abandoned support of the Dirksen amendment yesterday to co-sponsor the milder plan as a move to end the stalemate.
Dirksen was chief architect of the plan calling for a mandatory freeze on reapportionment compliance
Prospects for adjournment also were improved when Sen. Wayne L. Mose, D-Ore., said in advance he would not filibuster against the Mansfield compromise rider even though he opposed any such legislation.
Morse also is a leading critic of the Foreign Aid Bill to which the proposal would be attached. However, he said he would not try to delay action unduly.
Jacka Not Criticized
Phillip Jacka, Lawrence graduate student, was incorrectly identified in Tuesday's Kansan as a student criticized by a Downbeat magazine editorial about the Oread Jazz Festival. Jacka was not the student intended to be criticized.
The Oregon Democrat said it would "do the Senate as much harm as the Supreme Court" if it adopted a reapportionment rider. He said it would be an "evil day when Congress begins to advise any branch of the judicial system."
Sen, Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., who sponsored a similar compromise which failed last week, announced support of the new plan.
Sen. Frank J. Lausche, D-Ohio, also said the states needed some help from Congress to gain a chance to deal with their own reapportionment problems
EAN ME THUOT, Viet Nam — (UPI)—Six American servicemen were being held hostage in their own camp today by the mountain tribesmen they have been training to fight the Communists.
U.S. Hostages InOwnCamp
U. S. officers at Ban Me Thuot, headquarters of the Vietnamese 23rd Army Division, said the hostages were Col. John Freund, deputy senior adviser to the Vietnamese Army Second Corps, plus a captain and four enlisted men.
Also being held hostage in an increasingly dangerous blowup of tribal unrest were 40 Vietnamese special forces soldiers. The camp commander, a Vietnamese lieutenant named Chu, was last seen tied to the camp flagpole.
The camp is 25 miles west of Ban Me Thuot, which is 160 miles northeast of Saigon in the central highlands.
THE CAMP IS at Ban Sar Pa just off highway 14, the main transport route through the central highlands.
It is one of five camps which revolted Sunday against their Vietnamese officers and American advisers.
Daily Hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
62nd Year, No. 5
Wichita Appearance Nets $50,000 for GOP Effort
State GOP chairman Oliver Hughes of Wichita said 500 paying customers turned out for the steak and eggs breakfast which was spiced with 15 minutes of Goldwater speaking.
WICHITA, Kan. — (UPI)— Sen.
Barry Goldwater's appearance at a
$100-a-plate breakfast dumped
$50,000 into the party treasury.
U. S. Sens, James Pearson and Frank Carlson, Gov. John Anderson, gubernatorial candidate William Avery, and U.S. Reps. Garner Shriver and Robert Dole, shared the head table with Goldwater and his wife Peggy at the breakfast and at a later speaking engagement at the Forum.
Avery introduced Goldwater at the breakfast and Carlson did the honors at the free public rally.
AT THE BREAKFAST Goldwater said it was a pleasure to visit "the greatest Republican state in the union."
He congratulated Kansas Republicans on having put Republicans in
all congressional, senatorial and statehouse positions.
Goldwater called his present campaign stumping "very encouraging" in light of the fact that he started out knowing he was the underdog.
Goldwater said, "We are going to win this election and the Republican party will come out a stronger and more unified party."
Goldwater said the subject of peace and foreign policy was the overriding issue of the 1964 presidential campaign.
He said the United States is at war in Viet Nam-"and the President isn't levelling with us."
Goldwater said the prime domestic issue was morality in government.
Goldwater said issue was morality in government. Citing the Bobby Eaker case, Goldwater said, "The Democrats have swept so much dirt under the rug they have to walk uphill."
He quipped, "You know what a Baker's dozen is these days? It means they give you 13 and you have to kick back two."
In his speech before 6,000 cheering
Twenty-Three Women Vie For American Royal Queen
KU's candidate for queen of the American Royal will be selected Friday when 23 women representing campus living groups compete before judges at 6:30 p.m. in the John Stuart Curry Room of the Kansas Union.
The 23 semi-finalists, selected Monday and Tuesday by their living groups, will appear before a panel of judges from the Lawrence area. Modeling cocktail dresses, the candidates will be judged on personal beauty, poise, grooming, and educational and social background. Individual interviews will enable
Individual interviews will enable judges to meet and evaluate each candidate.
The American Royal, an annual event featuring livestock exhibitions, horse shows and a coronation ball, will be held in Kansas City Oct. 8 to 11.
Only women from Big Eight or land-grant colleges may participate in the competition for queen. Activities scheduled for the finalists in Kansas City include a luncheon, a party at the Saddle and Sirinlo Club, and the Coronation Ball.
Candidates from KU and their living groups are: Christi Kannard, Prairie Village sophomore, Hodder
Hall; Connie Roeder; Burlington junior, Miller; Carol Baker, Kansas City sophomore, Douthart; Jareth Donnan, St. Louis sophomore, Sellards; Christine Ligush, Fort Worth, Texas, sophomore, Watkins; Peggy Smith, Garden City junior, Hashinger; Priscilla Osborn, Stockton senior, Hashinger; Judy Purr, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Karla Hoelzel, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Lewis; Beth Elsham, Leawood sophomore, Lewis; and Sandy Flynn, Leawood junior, Lewis.
Jean DeGrand, St. Louis senior,
Alpha Chi Omega; Ellie Taylor, Paola
senior, Alpha Delta Pi; Janelle
Heese, Pender, Nebr., junior, Alpha
Omicron Pi; Patty Koos, Mission
senior, Alpha Phi; Melinda Cole,
Miami, Okla., senior, Chi Omega;
Deborah Galbraith, Wichita junior,
Delta Delta Delta; Elizabeth Linde,
Wichita sophomore, Delta Gamma;
Constance Myers, Newton sophomore,
Gamma Phi Beta; Katheen
Strayer, Shawnee Mission sophomore,
Gamma Phi Beta; Kathleen
Frick, Lawrence junior, Kappa
Kappa Gamma; Ann Peterson,
Shawnee Mission junior, Pbeta
Phi; and Karen Stumpff, Shawnee
sophomore, Sigma Kappa.
supporters, Goldwater laughed at charges that he is a warmonger.
"WE ARE PEACEMONGERS."
Goldwater said to wild appease.
He said, "All down through history war has come to the weak.
"Only the strong can keep peace—not belligerent strength but prudent strength.
"The weaker we get the greater the temptation to our enemies to attack us," the Arizona senator added.
He attacked the administration once more over the phasing out of America's manned bomber program.
Goldwater said that unless Defense Secy, Robert McNamara radically changes his position in the near future "by the mid-1970's the United States will be using Hertz rent-a-bomber."
On his arrival in Wichita last night, Goldwater told about 500 supporters: "We promise you a victory. I am growing more sure of this every day."
SPEAKING TO a group of his backers in Fort Worth yesterday, Goldwater charged the President had wrongly used tax data of the internal revenue service to pressure campaign contributions from two unidentified Texans.
"I have a letter I'm now investigating, written to two Texas men, touching on income tax irregularities in their returns, irregularities which were being corrected, which were threatened to be used by the President unless these men contributed to his campaign effort," Goldwater said.
He said two members of Congress, also unidentified, were told in effect that "if they did not vote for the (anti-) poverty bill," they would lose government contracts in their districts.
A CROWD OF 17,000 cheered at Dallas, a Republican oasis in Texas, as he denounced the administration handling of the Viet Nam war in general and Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara in particular.
When he charged that administration officials have no backbone, the crowd erupted in a mighty cheer.
Weather
Sweater-weather temperatures are predicted by the weather bureau for tonight with lows dipping into the 40s. Generally fair weather is expected tomorrow with temperatures remaining cool.
Big Russian Harvest Flops Despite Boasts, Expert Says
Contrary to the numerous reports from the Kremlin concerning the good harvest expected this year in Russia, Mr. Carl Zoerb, Russian agricultural expert, said last night that Soviet leaders are worried about future production.
In his lecture at the Kansas Union, Zoerb made a comparison of the virgin lands of Russia and a similar land area in Canada. These areas were found to be analogous because they both lie in semi-arid climatic zones, have about the same latitude, and both are short of adequate heat in the growing season of the wheat crops.
Zoerb explained that the virgin lands in Russia were plowed up for farming to solve the agricultural problems. Over the ten years they have been in production, however, the Russians have had only one bumper crop and the rest either
have been average or dismal failures. Total crop land was expanded by 30 per cent in the USSR but the only good harvest was in 1956.
According to the original plan, Zoerb continued, the virgin land plan was supposed to increase the grain output by five to six bushels per acre. Instead regression has persisted. Another reason for this failure is the decrease of fallowing in Russia.
In the comparison, the Canadian land showed much better production and a continual increase over the Russian land. Zoerb attributed this to several factors: since wheat is the only crop raised on the land, the monoculture tends to drain the soil of fertility, wide variations in production are due to the dry land farming, the administrators of Russia blame the farm managers and the farm managers blame their failure on a lack of machinery and poor incentive for labor.
Possible solutions for the Russian problem are fertilization and irrigation—both plans are impractical in the virgin lands area.
In conclusion, Zoebr said the production of the virgin lands is much below that of the area in Canada and cannot be expected to reach the same level in the next decade or ever. Politically the virgin land program was successful and the one bumper crop helped Khruschev retain power. In Zoebr's estimation this land area needs an immediate change in production plans or it will eventually revert back into grass lands.
Zoerb is on a home leave from Munich, Germany, where he works for Radio Free Europe as a chief analyst of Soviet bloc agriculture.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Sept. 24. 1964
Once Again To A Freshman
Dear Freshman:
In entering college you have no doubt been looking forward to four years of immersion in the knowledge process, in which your mental horizons will be broadened, your parochial background will feel the cool breeze of social, cultural and ideological diversity, and in which you will become an individual well-educated and well-prepared for your role as community participant and good citizen.
Forget it
Unless you are one of the rare ones, unless you are either so equipped that college will not cripple you or so cynical that you are unburdened by the illusion of Academe, these four years will be more dull grey markers on the road to comfortable mediocrity. And the sooner you realize it, the better off you will be.
Your four years will be spent in the company of little minds on both sides of the classroom lectern. You will be scribbling notes in the company of "students" whose capacity for questioning and inquiry ends with the material on a final examination, and whose world is bounded by clothes, sportscars, the football games and a shallow, mechanistic obsession with sex.
Your comrades are the Takers—the generation spawned by prosperity and complacency, for whom obligations do not exist, commitment is a joke, and concern for others a waste of time.
Their lives revolve around themselves, defined as narrowly as possible, and their universe, which ends with what they can possess. The thrill of dissent, the sparks of intellectual challenge, the lust for inquiry, is absent—because it cannot be hung from a wall, worn, driven, or shown off at a dance.
Your teachers are a breed of men too often forced to an obsession with the trivial. Plagued
by the need to publish for the sake of publishing, untutored in the responsibility of offering value in what they write, the guardians of your minds are themselves men who delight in artificial constructs, in clever word games, in artful presentation of buncombe swathed in the mystical jargon of verbiage.
The classroom, for many of them, is a way-station between the library and the faculty club, a whistlestop where they cast their artificial pearls. Discussion and critical inquiry are a bore, a nuisance, and an interruption of the almighty syllabus.
And yet . . . somewhere in this desert of Summer Proms, Pep Rallies, Kampus Karnivals, Greek Weeks, Fall Proms, final papers, Fiji Island Romps, Winter Proms, mid-term examinations . . .
... somewhere a teacher will strike sparks in your mind ... somewhere you will stay up all night and probe your own motives and goals with a friend ... somewhere the myriad injustices of the world will set your soul on fire with indignation ...
And somewhere you will read a book you have not read before, and wonder at a new though fully phrased by an extraordinary thinker, and you will in spite of yourself be driven to question what you have believed all your life, and you will search . . .
And before you plunge back into the inanities of American college life you may perceive what education is about and see why men spend their lives teaching others.
May those moments in the arid wasteland you are now entering be many.
(Copyright 1964, USSPA)
Sincerely,
Hoopla In Britain
By Phil Newsom
UPI Foreign News Analyst
LONDON —(UPI)— Britons, whose respect for tradition includes a generally restrained approach to politics, are getting an introduction to political whoop-la, American style.
Labor Party leader Harold Wilson gave the country a taste of it at Wembly at the party's national rally kicking off a campaign which will end in general elections Oct.15.
It could have been the Democrats in Atlantic City or the Republicans in San Francisco.
Spectator seats rose tier on tier to the cavernous roof of huge Empire Pool.
Spotlights played upon the stage where African dancers performed and Humphrey Lyttelton's band played a blues number entitled "Thirteen Wasted Years."
IN THE EYE OF THIS POLITICAL hurricane stood the round and slightly crumpled figure of Wilson who hopes after the elections to take over the prime minister's job from his Conservative opponent Sir Alex Douglas Home.
What this country needs, he boomed over the auditorium loudspeaker system, is a government of men with "fire in their bellies and humanity in their hearts."
Remarked London's Sunday Observer".. " an unashamed imitation of an American convention."
Wilson's speech it described as "presidential style." But if British newspapers could compare the rally and Wilson's style to U.S. politics, there remain important differences.
**IN BRITAIN, a candidate "stands" for office. He does not "run."**
And those two words alone mark a sharp contrast.
For by tradition, the British candidate avoids personal slurs against his opponent.
Sir Alec set the stage for the Conservative campaign by saying:
"I shall not indulge in personalities, nor do I challenge in any way the sincerity of the Socialist leaders."
But then the dig: "But their manifesto is a menu without prices. . ."
British political analysts say it was Winston Churchill's violation of this unwritten rule of fair play which helped cost him the election in 1945.
Churchill, the hero, lost and was replaced by Attlee at the Potsdam Conference of allied war leaders.
CHURCHILL HAD JUST LED his country through its greatest war. But he inculded in personal attacks against Labor leaders Clement (now Earl) Attlee and Ernest Bevin.
How Britons are to react to Wilson's new campaign techniques will have to await the final proof of election day. Probing the new technique, this was the comment of The Financial Times of London:
Party Quotes
"Labor has stood for many things in the past but never quite gaiey."
"PRESIDENT JOHNSON looks his worst when attempting to echo the Kennedy style, and a song called "Hello Harold" could also have a hollow sound."
Comparing it again to the American style, the newspaper concluded:
Editor's Note: The following quotes are taken from the 1961 Guide to Conventions and Elections. This handbook, published by Dell, was prepared by the Colurabia Broadcasting System's News staff.
Democrats
"The Democratic Party has a vested interest in depression at home and war abroad. Its leaders are always troubadours of trouble; crooners of catastrophe. Public confusion on vital issues is Democratic weather. A Democratic President is doomed to proceed to his goals like a squid, squirting darkness all about him."—Clare Booth Luce
"The Democratic Party is like a mule. It has
neither pride of ancestry nor hope of posterity."
—Ignatius Donnelly
"The Democratic Party is like a man riding backwards in a carriage. He never sees a thing until it has gone by."—Benjamin F. Butler
Republicans
"The trouble with the Republican Party is that it has not had a new idea for thirty years."—Woodrow Wilson
GOLDWATER
64
SCRRANTON
Huntsy
BALTIMORE EVE. 20
"Hut, 2. 3, 4 . . . Right, Moderates, Right . . . "
BOOK REVIEWS
THE RIDER ON THE WHITE HORSE, AND SELECTED STORIES, by Theodor Storm (Signet Classics, 75 cents).
Here, for the first time in English, is a collection of the writings of Theodor Storm. The writer was particularly influenced by folk tales and by stories of the supernatural, and these themes are important in this collection.
Storm became one of the most respected of German authors in the 19th century, but is relatively unknown in this country. This is difficult to understand, for his short novels have fascination, frequently of an eerie quality.
$$
* * * *
$$
THE WARDEN, by Anthony Trollope (Signet Classics, 50 cents).
This is the first of Trollope's Barsetshire novels, and this volume is based on the London edition of 1855. Geoffrey Tillotson of the University of London has written the afterword.
The story concerns a battle of wits between two men of the cloth—the warden of the title, the Rev. Septimus Harding, director of a charity home, and the Rev. Theophilus Grantly. It is a charming and comfortable kind of story, which the editor regards as a variation of the David and Goliath tale.
* * *
ARK OF EMPIRE: THE AMERICAN FRONTIER, 1784-1803, by Dale Van Every (Mentor, 75 cents).
Frontier history has been told entertainingly and wisely by Dale Van Every, who also has written novels of early America. "Ark of Empire" is the third volume which Van Every is calling "The Frontier People of America." It is the story of the battle in the West when Indians, allied with British and Spanish, nearly kept the American people from conquering the new land.
The American Revolution had ended in 1783, the year before the start of this particular history, but the people of the former 13 colonies were a straggly confederation as yet unequipped to handle many problems. Van Every describes the movement of farm peoples over the Wilderness Road of Daniel Boone and into the Ohio country. The culminating year of this history is 1803, when Jefferson purchased the Louisiana territory and assured American control of its own continental limits.
Van Every writes like a novelist, but his scholarship is always evident. This book is likely to appeal to the growing audience of enthusiasts about early American history.
DailijTransan
111 Flint Hall
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Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press.
Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York
22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates:
$3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon
during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University
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NEWS DEPARTMENT
**Roy Miller** Managing Editor
Lyn Black, Leta Cathcart, Bob Jones, Greg Swartz, Assistant Managing Editors; Linda Ellis, Feature-Society Editor; Russ Corbitt, Sports Editor;
Steve Williams. Photo Editor.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Jim Langford and Rick Mabbutt
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bob Phinney...Business Manager
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Promotion Manager; Nancy Holland, Circulation Manager; Gary Grazda,
Merchandising Manager.
Page
First Business Dean Prints Early Accounts of B-School
By Suellen McKinley
The early years of the KU School of Business were not what may be termed "normal" in today's sense of the word.
A recounting of these years from 1824-1947, during which occurred a major depression and a World War, entitled "Four Chapters in the School of Business," was completed last spring by Frank T. Stockton, dean emeritus of the Business School.
THE FIRST of the "Four Chapters" explains the evolution of the school from the Department of Economics. The other three chapters deal with the men with whom Dean Stockton worked and their contributions to the school, the state, and the nation.
In his history of the school's beginnings, Dean Stockton emphasizes the stature and the sense of purpose brought to the school by the faculty through their publications, public service, special activities, and military and related service. He chooses this emphasis rather than concentrating on curriculum, enrollment, and other internal mechanics.
"I am trying to make clear what I think was a dynamic period," Dean Stockton said yesterday while speaking of the history.
The book was published May 19, after two years of research and writing by Dean Stockton. The history is one of 125 publications written by him on the business school and a wide range of other subjects.
"It covers only the time of my deanship in the School of Business." Stockton said. "I have plans for some more publications dealing with the Extension and the Business School at Kansas University."
STOCKTON SAID such historical material should be useful in connection with the coming 100th anniversary of the university.
Edward G. Nelson, KU Director of the Center for Research in Business, says in the forward of the history:
"No one other than Dean Stockton is better qualified to report on the achievements of the faculty during these exciting years. He has followed the careers of these men with the affection that is so characteristically his. Now the time has come to make known his observations of the faculty that served the nation and the state under his long and effective administration."
"My checkered career" is the way Dean Stockton describes his life's work in many fields of study. "I've been sort of inclined not to stick to one area."
HE RECEIVED his A.B. in 1907 from Allegheny College, Meadville, Pa., where his major fields of study were classical languages and history. "I'm one of very few business school deans in the country that had four years of Greek," Stockton said.
While attending Allegheny College he played football, basketball, and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. In 1911 he received a Ph.D. in Political Economy from Johns Hopkins University.
BEFORE COMING to KU, Dean Stockton taught at the University of Rochester, Rochester, N.Y., Indiana University, Bloomington, Ind., and served as dean of the College of Arts and Sciences and the head of the Department of Economics at the University of South Dakota, Vermillion, S.D.
At KU he was the first dean of the School of Business from 1924-1947 and dean of the University Extension and Professor of Economies from 1947-1953.
Dean Stockton retired from adminstration in 1953 to become director of Special Projects, University Extension, and Professor of Economics.
Dean Stockton has worked on many programs in field varying from a Kansas Conference on Aging to taxation and marketing.
"THE ONE THING of which I am proudest is the program I developed at the U.S. Penitentiary at Leavenworth for providing instruction to inmates in college credit courses," Dean Stockton said.
Last March he received an award for the Kansas Citizens Council on Aging honoring him as a "Distinguished Older Citizen." At the present, he is serving as a labor arbitrator.
His history is available at the Summerfield Center for Research in Business.
Mitchell Equals Mark For Coaching Tenure
Jack Mitchell, who once gave the Jayhawkers nightmares as an All-America quarterback at Aklahoma, will equal the longest head coaching tenure in KU football history when he completes this, his seventh season.
This will pull him abreast Dr. A.R. (B. Rert) Kennedy, who piloted the most successful long-term era in KU history (53-9-4) from 1904-1910. The 88-year-old dentist now is in semi-retirement here.
Bethany Park Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
University Daily Kansan
A NEW CONGREGATION IN LAWRENCE
Meeting in Centennial School 22nd and Louisiana
Ride The High Country
SUA Friday Flicks
starring Randolph Scott and Joel McCrea
★ PLUS ★
Knight Of The Trail
(A William S. Hart Short)
Admission 35c Fraser Theater — 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Coming: Oct.2 Tea House of August Moon
Pedwin's Campus Collection
Choctaw
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Many other patterns in Pedwin slip-ons and ties to choose from — 10.99 to 12.99
M.Coy's
SHOES
813 Mass.
VI 3-2091
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Sept. 24, 1964
DOWN arrow
Discovery!
It's called "personal attention" (and it's made the student number obsolete). For proof, send your laundry to INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY next time. You'll find INDEPENDENT takes extra care with every garment to assure your complete satisfaction. But don't take our word for it. See for yourself. Call our plant for convenient pick-up and delivery today VI 3-4011
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Page 5
Church Groups Plan Schedule
By Cheryl McCool
With school underway for another year, new students and upper classmen may wonder how they are going to keep up with their religious training.
There are many religious organizations on campus and in Lawrence that offer religious experience to students and faculty members of many faiths.
What follows is a roundup of religious groups and various activities that will be offered to the student during the coming year.
The United Student Fellowship affiliated with the Plymouth Congregational Church, will meet 5 p.m. Sunday, at the Prof. Walter J. Meserve, 1657 Wellington Road
The United Student Fellowship
Meetings will be held every Sunday from 5 to 7 p.m. in the student room of the Plymouth Congregational Church or in the home of one of Campus Ministering Group sponsors Dinner will be served each week.
Phil Harrison is president of the organization. Elections will be held in the near future to elect a new slate of officers.
Eniscopal Church
Faculty and graduate students will meet at 7:30 p.m., each Sunday, at the Canterbury House. Discussion groups are planned.
Choir class will meet 7:30 p.m. every Tuesday at the Canterbury House. A Holy Communion Service will be held at 9:30 p.m. Tuesday and at 11:30 a.m. Thursday in Danforth Chapel. Evening prayer is held 9:30 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday in the chapel.
The Canterbury Association, sponsored by the Episcopal faith, is directed by the Rev. Thomas Woodward. Meetings are held at 5 p.m. Sunday in the Canterbury House, 1116 Louisiana Street. An evening supper and prayer program are planned for each meeting. Tom Tatlock, senior Warden, will preside at the meeting.
Members of the Canterbury Asso-
ation do volunteer work for the Duskell Institute and for Douglas County Center for Retarded Children.
The Friends Oread Society is sponsored by the Society of Friends and is directed by Mrs. Tom Moore. services are held at 10:30 a.m. Sunays in Danforth Chapel.
Lutheran Church
University Daily Kansan
Gamma Delta of the Immanuel
Autheran Church meets at 5:30 p.m.
very Sunday at the church on 17th
and Vermont. At 5:30 p.m. Sunday,
at annual Freshman and new student
banquet will be held at the
burch.
Janet Schwartzberg is president of Jamma Delta. The Rev. Daniel Deelock is leader of the group.
Chapel services are held at 4:30 pm. every Wednesday in Danforth Chapel for half an hour.
Appropriations were made in August for a new Lutheran Center for Students and Faculty by the District of Churches of which the Immunatei Lutheran Church is a member. The center will be located at 15th and Iowa streets. Groundbreaking will be in November. The date will be announced later.
Trinity Lutheran Church
A pizza party will be held at 5 omp. Sunday, by the Lutheran Student Organization of the American Lutheran Church in the Trinity Lutheran Church. The group sponsor is Rev. Johnson.
The group meets every Sunday in the church at 5 p.m. A program council acts as coordinators of the Sunday evening activities. Members of the council are Drake Bunde, John Henriksen, Lorie Kanago, and Connie Sabel.
Catholic Church
A lecture series is sponsored by the Newman Club of the Catholic Church on Monday through Thursday at 9:30 p.m. at St. Mark's Catholic Student Center. The discussion is based on the Western Civilization text from the Catholic point of view.
The club will have a dinner and social the first Friday in October. Frank Motley is the president of Newman Club.
Methodist Church
ALMOST SET
FOR COLLEGE
The Wesley Foundation, sponsored by the Methodist Church, has its center located at 1314 Oread. The advisor for the group is the Rev. Don Hull.
A supper will be served which costs 45 cents from 5 to 7 p.m. each Sunday evening. The program Sunday following the dinner will be the short comedy of "The Last Word." a play based on the end of the world.
Stress, Strain Topic
Communion is served at the center at 7 a.m. to 7:20 a.m. on Fridays, with worship on Monday and Wednesday at 7:50 a.m. on Tuesday at 3:15 a.m. and at 5 p.m. Thursday here will be an evening.
ThriftiCheck PERSONAL CHECKING ACCOUNT
At 9:30 Sunday morning there will be Bible study of the Book of Mark. A study will also be conducted on Kierkegaard, the Danish theologian.
Almost. She just doesn't have a
But Big Sister has - to keep a record of college expenses, to pay away-from-home bills safely, to have money at hand when needed without risking losable cash. And her name is printed on each ThriftiCheck FREE.
Sister says, "ThriftiChecks don't cost more, they save more in money orders alone. They're just a few pennies each and there's no minimum balance to keep up."
A new system of equations for solving certain stress and strain problems, developed by a distinguished Polish engineer while a visiting professor here, has been published by the International Union of Theoretical and Applied Mechanies.
We welcome "Big Sister" accounts!
Douglas County State Bank
9th and Kentucky
VI 3-7474
Thursday, Sept. 24, 1964
League Records Fall
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio—(UPI) —Howard Komives, who led the nation in scoring with a 36.7 per game average, broke 24 Bowling Green and Mid-American Conference basketball records during the 1963-64 season
Good Night's Work
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Tony Galento, former heavyweight challenger, knocked out three men in one night at Detroit on Aug. 6, 1931.
He stopped Frankie Kits in one sound. Joe Brian in one and Paul Thierman in three.
ASC Freshman Leadership Program
A program to acquaint freshmen with leadership techniques and student government
For information contact
George Brenner . VI 2-9100
Bruce Cook . VI 3-6960
Andrea Speer . VI 3-3910
Dave Lutton . VI 2-1200
Mary Tate . VI 3-6060
Jackie van Eman . VI 2-2420
David Sylvan . VI 3-7404
Mike Hurt . VI 3-6866
Betty Arnold . VI 3-7070
Mike Grady . VI 3-7370
Mike Grady . . . . . . VI 3-7370
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, Sept. 24, 1964
Yanks Jump Four Games Ahead
(By United Press International)
(By United Press International)
The massacre of Lake Erie is over and the American League pennant race has gone up in the smoke of New York Yankee firepower.
It's all over except for the popping of the champagne corks in the Yankee clubhouse because the defending champions have rocketed into a four-game lead over both the Baltimore Orioles and the Chicago White Sox.
The Yankees have 10 games to play but their magic pennant-climbing number is down to six—meaning that any combination of Yankee victories and losses by either opponent totaling six will end the race.
PHRASED MORE simply in view of the Yankees' current nine-game whirlwind streak, the Yankees will win the pennant merely by winning six of their remaining 10 games.
The Yankees moved to the threshold of their fifth straight flag and first under Yogi Berra when they swept a twi-night doubleheader from the Cleveland Indians, 4-3
in 11 innings and 6-4 last night. Their second straight doubleheader sweep enables the Yankees to pick up a game and a half on the Orioles, who lost to the Detroit Tigers, 10-3, and a half game on the White Sox, who scored a 2-1 win over the Los Angeles Angels.
The Yankees completed their mission of whipping the Indians four in a row in Cleveland with Elston Howard's 11th-inning homer breaking up the opener and a tattoo of four singles sparking a decisive three-run fifth-inning rally in the second game.
THE WHITE SOX pulled out their victory over the Angels when they scored an unearned run in the ninth inning against 19-game winner Dean Chance, appearing in a rare relief role.
In the National League, Cincinnati topped Philadelphia, 6-4. New York edged St. Louis, 2-1, San Francisco downed Houston, 4-1, Chicago drubbed Los Angeles, 9-6, and Pittsburgh whipped Milwaukee, 7-4.
ARE THE PHILADELPHIA
Phillies faltering or fainting?
Five Returning Veterans Form Nucleus of Cross Country Team
With five returnees from last year's Big Eight championship cross country team, Jayhawk coach Bill Easton is looking forward to another banner year for the KU team.
Harold Hadley, John Lawson, Tom Yergovich, Ken Holm and John Donner are returning to form the nucleus of the 1964 cross country edition. About a dozen freshmen are fighting it out for the remaining starting spots in the upcoming meets.
"They're a responsible team and are coming along real well," said Easton, who is making a habit of producing championship cross country and track teams at KU.
"OUR TOUGHEST meets will be the ones against Chicago Track Club and Drake," Easton said. The Jayhawks defeated both teams last year, and are meeting them on consecutive Saturdays this season.
Easton will conduct time trials Saturday morning, and is still inviting anyone interested to try out for the cross country team.
Four dual meets and four team meets are on tap for Easton's cross country charges. The schedule:
Oct. 3—Southern Illinois at Carbondale; Oct. 10—Chicago Track Club at Lawrence; Oct. 7—Drake at Des Moines; Oct. 23-Oklahoma at Lawrence; Oct. 31—State Federation Meet at Manhattan; Nov. 7- Big Eight Conference Meet at Manhattan; Nov. 13-Central Collegiate Meet at Chicago; and Nov. 23-NCAA Meet at East Lansing, Mich.
That's the big question in the suddenly-revived National League race today with the Cincinnati Reds back within striking range of first place but with the Phillies still enjoying a $3\frac{1}{2}$-game lead.
The question is not whether the Reds can keep winning but whether the Phillies can start winning again.
The Reds bounced smartly back into long-shot contention last night when their 6-4 victory completed a three-game sweep of the Phillies and dealt them their fifth loss in their last six games. The Reds, meanwhile, have won four straight and seven out of nine.
But pennants are won on the playing field, not in accounting departments, and the gallant Reds certainly played the part of the "hot club" in hammering out their victory last night. Vada Pinson hit two homers—one breaking a 1-1 tie in the sixth and the other snapping a 3-3 tie and boosting the Reds into a 6-3 lead in the seventh.
Supporting the Reds' hopes is the fact that they play five of their last 10 games with the last-
place New York Mets and also have two face-to-face meetings with the Phillies. Against this reasonably optimistic outlook is the simple mathematical fact that five Philadelphia victories in their final nine games would mean the Reds would have to win nine out of 10 to tie for the flag and create a playoff.
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Thursday, Sept. 24, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
KANSAS
Richard Pratt
The 264 lb. junior guard, who is also an accomplished musician, was yesterday named Big Eight Lineman of the Week by sportswriters covering the Big Eight games Saturday.
Smiling Richard Pratt Changes on the Field
One of the few times Richard Pratt trades his congenial smile for a vicious scowl is when he is charging his opponent on the football field. Texas Christian University discovered that Saturday.
Pratt gave an outstanding performance in the KU line all afternoon, but gained national attention for his part in the next to last play of the game. With 30 seconds remaining, the giant guard pounced on a TCU fumble on the KU one-yard line to preserve the Jayhawks' 7-3 victory.
Playing opposite TCU's 245 lb. center, Ken Henson, Pratt opened several holes for the KU offense, and bolstered the defense with one unassisted tackle, six assists, and was responsible for another TCU fumble.
Oklahoma halfback Lance Rentzel, who caught John Hammond's game-winning 90-yard touchdown pass in the Sooners' 13-3 victory over Maryland, was named Big Eight Back of the Week.
With his teammates trailing 3-0 on a fourth-quarter field goal, Rentzel teamed with Hammon for the big play in the final five minutes of the game.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, Sept. 24, 1964
CORRECTION
FIRST CONCERT—The ten members of the Good Time Singers will present the first of the Student Union Activities concert series of the year. Tickets for the show Oct. 3 go on sale Monday.
The group recently finished a television pilot film, "The Big Hoot," and have been recording for Capitol records. The group was formed to appear on the Andy Williams Show.
SUA Presents Folk Singers
The Good Time Singers—a tenmember folk-singing group featured on the Andy Williams television shows—will appear at 8:30 p.m. Oct. 3 in Hoch Auditorium as the first SUA-sponsored concert of the school year.
The group was formed in 1963 by Tom Drake, a teacher by day and folk-singer by night in Los Angeles. Learning that Andy Williams wanted a group of ten singers to appear regularly on his variety show, Drake rounded up nine friends and began rehearsals.
One week later the group was auditioned and hired by Williams.
Since then the Good Time Singers have appeared on ABC-TV's "Hootenanny," made a West Coast concert tour and headlined the "Troubadour Club" in Los Angeles.
The group has also completed a television pilot film, based on folk- music, called "The Big Hoot."
KU Theater Schedules 6 Plays
Tickets for the concert will go on sale Monday at the Information Booth, the Kansas Union and Bell's Music Co. Prices are $.75, $1.00 and $1.25.
Tickets will not be sold in blocks.
The University of Kansas Theater will present six major productions in the 1964-65 season and five in the Experimental series.
The first production of the Major Theater Series will be Robert Bolt's "A Man for all Seasons," Oct. 16, 17, 23, 24. Leonard Bernstein's "West Side Story," will follow, Nov. 6, 8, 9, 10, 13 featuring a guest professional choreographer.
"Peter Pan," by James M. Barrie, will be presented Dec. 3-5. This play, also in the Children's Series, will be done for children in the afternoons and adults in the evenings. It will also be performed at the Music Hall in Kansas City, in Wichita and Topeka, as has been the custom with the children's plays in recent years.
"Six Characters in Search of an Author," by Luigi Pirandello will be the fourth play of the Major Series, scheduled for Feb. 10-13. "Mother Courage" by Bertolt Brecht will be given March 12, 13, 19, 20 and "The Marriage of Figaro," by Mozart will close the Series, April 16, 17, 23, 24.
Three short plays by the Pole
KU has been asked to supply an USO touring group in August, 1965, for five weeks at military bases in Iceland. Greenland and Newfoundland, Meredith Willson's "Music Man" will be rehearsed and presented on the campus in June and July before the tour.
Stawomir Mrozek, "Strip Tease," "At Sea," and "Charles," will open the Experimental Series Oct. 29-31. This will be followed by Moliere's "A Doctor in Spite of Himself," Dec. 9-12 and 15-18. "Little Mary Sunshine," a musical "spoof" by Rick Besoyan, will be produced Feb. 18-20, and 23-27. "Spoon River Anthology," by Edgar Lee Masters, is scheduled for March 25-27, 30-31, and April 1-3. An original play to be announced will be presented May 13-15 and 18-22.
A second play in the Children's Series completes the schedule for the season. "Johnny Moonbeam and the Silver Arrow," by Joseph Golden will be produced on the campus March 4-6 and will be continued on tour. This play was presented at the International Children's Theater Conference in London last May by the touring group of KU theater students.
KU Plans Prizes For Design Show
Approximately $1,000 in prize money will be given in the 11th annual Kansas Designer Craftsmen show Oct. 18-Nov. 14. Entry blanks must be submitted to University Extension by Oct. 1 and the works entered by Oct. 4.
Eligible artists are those who have lived in Kansas at least one year and residents of Greater Kansas City.
Mediums accepted are; cast, thrown and handbuilt ceramics, metal work, silversmithing, jewelry, enameling, furniture; sculpture in stone, wood, metal and fired clay; stained glass and mosaics; woven fabrics, upholstery, drapery, rugs, wall hangings, fashion fabrics, household linen, and printed textiles.
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Aid Program Helps Foot College Bill
WASHINGTON—(CPS)A major source of student financial aid a work-study program was passed by Congress this summer and is scheduled to go into operation this fall. When in full swing it will help up to 150,000 students a year pay their college bills.
The work-study program was passed as part of the Administration's $947.5 million anti-poverty bill, the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964. It provides federal grants to institutions of higher education for on and off-campus student employment programs during the school year and vacation periods.
Thursday, Sept. 24, 1964
The federal program will pay up to 90 per cent of the cost of the programs for two years and 75 per cent thereafter. All but 5 per cent of the federal funds must be used for student salaries. The rest may be used for administrative expenses.
A TOTAL OF $72.5 million has been requested to run the program this fiscal and academic year. Action on the appropriation is expected toward the end of September. 125 institutions have already expressed interest in the program.
Two Grants Boost KU Drug Research
Both graduate and undergraduate employment will be supported by the program. Average undergraduate earnings are estimated at $500 during the school year and double that if summer employment is offered. Estimated graduate earnings under the program would be twice the undergraduate figure.
The search for drugs potentially useful in mental health and for the treatment of cancer is continuing here under United States Public Health Service support.
Continuation grants of $11,160 and 99,390 have been awarded to KU or projects directed, respectively, by Edward E. Smissman, University distinguished professor, and Mathias P. Mertes, associate professor. Both are in the department of pharmaceutical chemistry.
Prof. Smissman's project is on plant compounds, called pyrones, in an effort to synthesize depressants which do not have harmful side-effects. Prof. Mertes hopes to develop an anti-cancer agent in his project.
There are no restrictions on the kinds of on-campus jobs that may be supported. They may range from "raking yards to tutoring," according to James Allen of the Office of Education's work-study task force. Off-campus jobs, however, must be related to the student's academic program or long-range vocational goal or else must be in the public interest, he said.
A LARGE NUMBER of off-campus jobs are expected to be related to other anti-poverty programs. The Job Corps and Community Action Programs of the anti-poverty Act are two areas where work-study student employment is anticipated. No work may involve facilities used for sectarian instruction or religious worship.
Students employed under the program may work a maximum of 15 hours a week while in classes but may work 40 hours during the summer.
Although the work-study program will be coordinated with the National Defense Student Loan Program (NDEA), which last year helped support an estimated 265,000 students, it will be harder to qualify for aid under the work-study program. Students who get aid under the work-study program will have to be from low-income families. Great emphasis will be given to recruiting and aiding students who without the program could not afford to attend college.
The work-study program is expected to attract fewer institutions than the NDEA loan program. Government officials explain this is because not as many colleges and universities have enough eligible students to make participation worth-while.
Europeans Appreciated KU Players
Thirteen KU theater students, touring to Strobl, Austria; this summer, found European audiences appreciative of the Jayhawk's "professional" ability.
Generally audience reaction to the KU players was more favorable than that given European students.
Tom P. Rea, instructor in drama and director of the troupe, attributed this to the fact that European university students receive less supervision and instruction than the American collegians.
Most European universities do not have an organized theater department, leaving students to their own initiative, Rea said. Another difference is the demand for shows of political or social significance in Europe.
At the International University Theater Student Festival, in its 15th year at Erlangen, Germany, the KU students witnessed and participated in what Rae described as "a bloody critique . . . kind of like a little United Nations, a beneficial and very exciting experience."
THE STUDENTS had the opportunity to study at the University of Vienna, which has a summer session at Strobel, to perform in several international drama festivals, and to judge representative work of other countries.
Leaders in the speech and drama department at KU believe students should have opportunities in international theater because of the rich variety of training available.
REA DOUBTS THAT any other American University has provided its drama students so many international opportunities over the past two or three years.
The group performed two one-act plays: Albee's "The Zoo Story," and "The Tiger" by Schisgall; scenes from "A Taste of Honey" by Delaney and Kopit's "Oh, Dad, Poor Dad" and 45 minutes of "Songs from the American Musical Theater" at Utrecht, Holland, and the Reinhardt Seminar at Salsburg, Germany, as well as at Strobl and Erlangen.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, Sept. 24. 1964
Sex Education Begins at Home, Reports State Medical Society
The Illinois State Medical Society reports that the appalling number of teenage pregnancies, criminal abortions and venereal disease victims presents a valid basis for this concern.
CHICAGO — (UPI) Here's help for parents concerned about the sex attitudes—and activities—of teen-agers.
It adds that "sex education, like charity, begins at home."
The society suggests that parents face up to the responsibility of such education. There is evidence that parents either ignore their roles as sex educators or that they are not sufficiently informed to fulfill it.
"It has become commonplace," the society said, "for parents to shrug off the responsibility of sex education by asserting that their children know more about the subject than they do.
"THIS IS SELDOM the case; and when it is the case, it can easily be corrected with helpful booklets available from local church groups, medical societies or other expert organizations."
What should you tell your children?
It takes a whole book to answer that question, according to the Child Study Association of America, New York, the parent education organization which has been counseling families since 1888.
The book, "What to Tell You
Children about Sex." will be published early in October (Duell, Sloan and Pearce). It will be available in bookstores or from the association. 9 E. 89th St., New York, N.Y.
IN CONVENIENT QUESTION and answer form, written simply and plainly, the book covers the whole range of sex questions teenagers and other youngsters will ask. The areas covered include conception, birth, growth, pre-adolescent and young adult sexual discovery.
"Sooner or later every parent finds himself face-to-face with the problem of sex education. We try to answer the many questions of the growing child—but when these questions deal with sex, reproduction and the feelings of the adolescent, we find ourselves bewildered.
Dr. Milton I. Levine, internationally known authority on sex education, says in the forward:
"MOST MODERN PARENTS realize the almost vital importance of adequate sex education. They are aware of its influence on the child's normal development, his later adjustment to the opposite sex, and his ultimate happiness. Unfortunately, most of us are products of a generation where sex talk was taboo."
The Illinois society, meanwhile, suggested that parents who are uncomfortable about discussing sex
College Smokers Help Create Pipe Shortage
Have you noticed something different about the men on campus this fall? Oh, they are still wearing the same type clothes, but have you noticed that more college men are smoking pipes?
Since the Surgeon General's report on cigarette smoking, in April of this year, the demand for pipes has outstripped the capacity of the pipe manufacturers.
"This is the only business I know of where you can't keep your stock up," said George Wilson, proprietor of a Lawrence pipe shop. Wilson remarked that he orders "by the dozens" in hopes that at least he will get a partial order.
The bigger companies have cut back their variety of pipe shapes, to keep with the limited supply of briar. They are making only the more popular shapes. The popular shapes include special "campus" and "debonier" pipes for college men.
WILSON SAID YOU have to "fight to get merchandise." One major company withdrew nine lines of
pipes in a recent communique to retailers.
Wilson's shop carries pipes, cigarettes, cigars, tobacco and other smoking accessories and is frequented by college men.
Of course with the supply being limited and the demand high, the logical conclusion is higher prices. One company raised its prices 20 per cent.
THE SMOKING scare also caused the introduction of petite, jeweled pipes, in hopes to appeal to the ladies, but that trend was just a flash in the pan, Wilson remarked. Little cigars were brought to the market and lasted for a while before dying out, he added. The little cigars were the size of cigarettes.
matters with their children ask themselves if their sex attitudes are completely mature or if they themselves have lingering doubts, fears and guilt. The society added that "sex education . . . when woven into the moral fabric of your children at an early age and fortified with parental love and understanding, will yield a superior material that is highly resistant to illicit sexual temptations."
The situation is not limited to the Lawrence area, or the state. The entire nation is short of pipes. The Europeans are smoking more, too, and imports are on the decrease. At least the Continentals and the Americans share one thing—the pipe shortage.
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P-to-P Program Lags No More
In 1961, a group of KU students, working from an idea initiated in 1956 by former President Eisenhower, gave birth to the campus People-to-People program. Now there are 106 collegiate chapters of People-to-People and several universities have pending charters.
By Joyce Neaderhiser
8. 00 er mo.
After its initial boost, the KU P-to-P program lagged somewhat in student interest—but it lags no more. Using the suggestions of last year's International and American members, the 1964-65 committee, under the direction of chairman Lance Burr, Salina senior, has made significant improvements.
A major change described by Lance Burr is the new "Contact Committee." The main idea of "Contact" is to assure that there are ample opportunities, particularly at Thursday night gatherings in the various living groups, for International and U.S. students to mix informally.
"Contact" takes the place of the former Brother-Sister and Happy Hour programs which often created the situation of a pseudo one-hour friendship. Heading this committee are Ann Peterson, Kansas City junior, and Jim Pitts, Wichita senior.
All students are urged to attend an initial "Contact," a membership meeting at 7:30 p.m., September 29, in the Union ballroom. The agenda for this meeting consists of fifteen minutes of officer comments followed by an informal social hour to give American students a chance to meet KU's 440 International students.
ALSO CONCERNED with informal gatherings, in the form of parties and tours, is the Hospitality committee under the leadership of José O'Campo, Philippines graduate student, and Karen Indall, Ottawa senior. So far trips are planned to Swope Park Zoo and Nelson Art Gallery in Kansas City, Eisenhower Museum in Abilene, a large farm and various industries.
An estimated 500 persons are expected to participate in the Student Abroad Program as compared to 340 students who participated last year. There are two parts to this flight program under the direction of Jean LuRay, France, who works with P-to-P in Brussels. Both groups will depart June 18, 19, and 20 and return August 26, 27, and 28.
One part of the flight program will feature three week-long home stays in various parts of Europe. The other part will consist of students who wish to tour Europe entirely on their own. Dale Sprague, McPherson sophomore, is in charge of KU's Student Abroad Program.
In future years it is planned that job placement will also be a part of the Student Abroad program. American students will assist International students in finding summer employment in the U.S. and International students will help them find employment in countries abroad.
Other KU officers of P-to-P are: Frank Bangs, Wichita senior, and Helen Nott, Evanston, Ill., senior, co-vice-chairman; Trakash Nagor, India junior, treasurer; Priscilla Osborn, Stockton senior, secretary; Terry Arthur, Manhattan junior, publicity chairman; Joyce Palmer, Shawnee Mission senior, membership chairman; and Marsha Mochtelt, Wichita senior, English-in-action committee chairman.
University Daily Kansan
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p. 253
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trans., power steering. Good second
car. Good tires. New motor. CALL VI 3-
0131. 9-25
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per call. CALL VI 2-1901 for free delivery,
TYPEWRITERS, electrics, manuals, portables, sales, service, rentals, Olympia, Hermes, Royal, Smith-Corona, Olivetti, Adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass., VI 1-3644.
1958 Dodge, 2-dr., hardtop, pwr steering, air cond. Tortor-Flight-V 8. Black and white, original owner. CALL Bob Hess at VI 2-1527 after 6 p.m. on weekends. tf
Siamese kittens =Purebred Seal Point,
kittens on weekends 1-9
after 5 p.m. or on weekends 9-25
PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS. Smith- Corona "Silent," and Olympia "Deluxe" (German Made), Reasonably prized and in excellent condition. CALL VI 2-3518. 9-29
Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, chapters, and supplements for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes, Call VI 3-1428. Free delivery. $4.99.
1960 TR-3 Roadster, new engine, wire wheels, in excellent condition through-out. CALL Chuck Lilgendahl at VI 3-4050. 9-25
1956 Ford V-8 Convertible, black and
Ford V-8 Convertible, black and
6:00 p.m. 9-23
5-string long neck BANJO, ode models
Call VI 2-1328
9-30
MG Midget, 1962, white with soft top and Tonneau. Like new for $1195. CALL VI 2-1880 after 3:00 p.m. 9-30
Fender Bassman Amplifier and Showman Amplifier. Both in excellent condition. Perfect for the new band. Phone Solly at VI 3-3016. 9-30
FOUND
Found set of 5 keys. Owner may have
signed a SEE Mrs. Hinkinson at 923 Meshin - 9-24
Freshman or Sophomore Girl to
child with 2 hours per day. WALK VI 2-1258, 9-28
HELP WANTED
ATTENTION COLLEGE MEN AND WOMEN: Help Wanted at La Pizza 807 Vermont—Busboys, Waitresses, Delivery boys, Cooks, and a Hostess-Cashier. Apply in person from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. Ask for Paul. 9-24
Room and Board provided for girl to
call and Be provided per day, 5 days a week
CALL 1-3784-8900 9-30
Two KU men needed to work 3 nights each week. Contact Tom Dixon—Dixon's Drive-In, 2400 W. 6th or phone VI 3-7446. 9.9b
BabySister for one child, 2 years old. Call Carol Ann Coburn, VI 2-0422.
Part time—Immediately. Mornings or after-
ternoons or nights. Free housing—u-
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man's comp. ins—and other benefits.
Citizens Ambulance Service. 1104 W. 4th,
CALL VI 3-7733. 9-25
Part Time—to fit your schedule. Call on-
stablished customers. Av. $1.80 hr. Phone
vi 3-8376 after 6:30 p.m. 9-25
Attractive Hostess for employment in New Orleans Room. PHONE VI . 2-8743 4745
Wanted to hire: hire-comp or hootenanny
way, Leavenworth, Ks.
3-28
WANTED
Washing and dressed done in my home,
seasonal VI, 1313 New Jersey State
SPA VI, 2-2508.
TRANSPORTATION
coordinate for 2nd year graduate student.
or coach at WC or o campus. See at 1102 W. 19th. Tern - 9-28.
Ride 7:30 a.m. from Stouffer Bldg. 20.
apt. No. 5 to 8th and Massachusetts.
Contact Mike Getter at VI 3-4734. 9-24
Car Pool from Overland Park to K.U.
Classes: Monday-Wednesday 9:30 to 2:30;
Tuesday-Thursday 9:30 to 3:30; Friday
9:30 to 1:30. Leave Overland Park 8:30
am. only. Must return by 3:30 MT.
and by 4:30 FAILL. CALL NI 8-3728.
9:28
Commuters who are interested in forming a car pool between Kansas City (Johnson County) and Lawrence, PHONE James Mulloy at HE 2-3465. 9-28
Car Pool Wanted: Leave Kansas City.
Kan. 7:15 a.m., return 4:30 p.m., Monday
through Friday. Call after 6:00 p.m. FA.
14817 at Kansas City. 9-28.
Bargain Transportation for sale. 1855
Buick Special, fully equipped, excellent
condition. Owned by one family. Low
mileage or less. 4100-3400.
Calls A BARGAIN at $298. CALL
Bruce Warren at VI 3-6400. after 5:00
pm. or on weekends. 9-29
MISCELLANEOUS
Yes! Now you can get cash for your
REBATE SLIPS. Call VI 1-2791. 10-22
WILL DO DRAFTING-all types See
UN DO Room 214, Lindley H
DO 4-5328
BAR-B-Q--For Bar-B-Q ribs and chickens that are a treat to cat, try ours at 515 Michigan St. Hours: 11:00 a.m. 11:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday
Will Baby Sit in my home for 2 or 3$
phone VI 3-6755 in yard, yard
Haircut special—weekdays: men's haircues $1.50, children's haircues $1.25, full-time barbers. Tom's 14th St. Barber Shop. 9-28
FOR RENT
FOR RENT - ROOMS for men close to town and K.U. Linens furnished. Private entrance. PHONE I.V. 3-6283. 9-25 Board and Room available at 1225 Org
Quiet—well-furnished room, with re-
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walk to K.U. entrance. Entrance to
responsible student.
Mid. VI 8-3606 after 5 p.m. 9-28
A nicely furnished 4 room house. Prefer
appointment—VI 3-0411, 9-258
Lovely Furnished Apartment For Graduate Student or Faculty? 2 rooms, private property. Grade $450, garages $750 (utilities included). No Pets. Call VI 3-1209, or see at 1633 Vermont. 9-29
Apartment for rent: 3 rooms, ground
floor, furnished, private entrance, casi-
port. Married couple or one guardian.
SEE at c464 W. 23 d or CALL V1
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Small, friendly, black and white females dog named Raintree. If any information please CALL VI 2-4154. Reward. 9-25
TYPING
Term papers. Theses by experienced typist, Phone VI 3-6296 after five. If Typing wanted. Former high school teacher will type reports and theses. Experienced Electric typewriter service. CALL Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8262.
Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc.
Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Gestetner Duplicator. Mrs.
McEldowney. 2521 Alabama St. Phone VI
3-8568. tf
Accurate typing done on electric typewriter. Familiar with the four aceredited KU. thesis forms. CALL Pat Book at VI 3-6530. tf
Expert typist fully qualified to do terma papers, reports, and theses. Will do excellent work at reasonable rates. Electrically compatible printer. Betty Muskraft, 140 Indian, or call VI 2-0091.
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Sept. 24, 1964
Band Begins Drills For Game Shows
The KU football band is busy preparing for performances at home games and trips to the KU-Okla-homa State game at Stillwater and the KU-Kansas State game at Manhattan.
Two big jobs face the KU band this year, Russell Wiley, director of the band, said. Eighty-four high school bands have to be organized for the annual Band Day ceremonies and the KU band will prepare to perform for the homecoming fans in the KU-Nebraska game.
The KU-Wyoming game on October 3 is also Band Day. A parade of the bands will march in downtown Lawrence following a route south on Massachusetts St. between Central and South Parks beginning at 9 a.m.
At half-time the bands will mass on the field in a formation spelling "Band Day - 1964." With Wiley conducting, they will play "Ol' Man River," "Jeannie With the Light Brown Hair" and "America the Beautiful."
Numbers and formations for the Homecoming game are not complete, Wiley said, but the Nebraska band will also perform. The Colorado band will join the KU band in playing at the KU-Colorado game.
A new drum major, Dennis Tuggle, Cimarron sophomore, has been added to the band. Tuggle drew spectator applause when he made his first appearance at the KU-TCU game. Last year he played the trombone in the band.
The purpose of the 118 member band is to entertain and therefore the band does not play any music deeper than Broadway show tunes, Wiley said. "We try to play music fitting to the occasion," he said.
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ALL THIS for
Helena first learned about KU when the 1963 Colorado University-KU cooperative summer language institute was held in her town. Townspeople told her the students were interested in meeting some younger "natives."
Students Recruit While Abroad
Helena Laaksonen's presence at KU proves the students of the summer language institute in Jarvenpaa, Finland to be good recruiters as well as students.
$12.00 plus batteries $1.50
One afternoon she showed up at the school where the students were studying and said, "Well, here I am." This was the beginning of disputes and friendships as all the students tried to convince her to attend their universities.
Helena applied at KU first because the application deadline came first. After she was accepted at KU she never applied at CU.
"It's not so hard to leave home when you already know so many people," Helena said. She also met students at last summer's institute.
She had planned to attend an American university for some time. When she was in high school an American Field Service student from Montana stayed at her home.She has also studied English for seven years.
When Helena returns to Finland she will study at the University of Helsinki for about six years. Upon completion, she will receive a degree somewhat comparable to our masters degree called a candidate.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
German graduate reading exam, Sat., Oct. 3, 9:30 a.m., in 110 Fraser. Candidates must register in 306 Fraser by Saturday noon, Sept. 26.
CATHOLIC MASS, 5 p.m., St. Law-
rence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
COLLEGE FACULTY, 4:30 p.m., Bailey
Auditorium
ROBERT W. GREAVES, London, 8:30
W. Bickhill, Kansas Union,
"The Whig Century."
CHRISTIAN FAMILY Movement, 8:30 p.m., St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1915 Stratford Rd.
CATHOLIC MASSES: 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m.
sacrineance Catholic Chapel, 1910 Strat-
rall Road
POPULAR FILM SERIES, 7 p.m., Fraser Theater.
SCIENCE FILM, 7 p.m., Dyche Auditorium.
"WHATCHAMACALLIT," 9 p.m., Templin Hall.
Campus Police Increases Number of Patrolmen
Better watch out. The man in the blue suit with his parking ticket book is coming around more frequently than ever.
To cope with the increased flood of cars and the inherent parking problems, the campus police force has been increased by five new men, bringing this year's staff total to 25 policemen.
In an effort to cope with the campus car problem, the closed campus policy has been extended from 3:30 until 4:45 p.m. In addition, zones D, G, H, L, Q, R, T, and V are restricted to staff or faculty members, with zone registration in effect until 11 p.m. on week days.
FACULTY OR STAFF with zone permits and students with zone permits may park in zones D, G, L, R, or V after 3:30 p.m. and in zones H, Q, or T after 4:45 p.m.
In all other lots, except residence halls, tickets will be given for unauthorized parking from 7:30 a.m. until 3:30 p.m. on weekdays and 7:30 a.m. until noon on Saturdays.
In the residence hall lots, zone parking restrictions are enforced 24 hours a day from Monday until Saturday noon.
VICE CHANCELLOR Keith Lawton, in charge of operations and the physical plant, said the reason for extending the controlled parking hours was the crowded conditions in the central campus areas during the afternoons and evenings.
One note of encouragement is that Zone X (below the Kansas Union) can be used from 5:30 p.m. until 7:30 a.m. free of charge.
Zone O will be free to students from 3:30 p.m. until 7:30 a.m.
Director's Assistant
Bill J. Reynolds, former superintendent of schools at Alta Vista and the Riley County High School, has been appointed assistant director of admissions.
Reynolds, who has been in residence at KU the past 16 months while working for the doctor of education degree, succeeds Carl G. Fahrbach Jr., who has filled the position since 1956. The latter left for a similar position at Wichita State University where the incumbent registrar and director of admissions retires next year.
Reynolds earned a B.S. degree at Kansas State University in 1954. After a year of teaching at Frankfort High School, he served two years in the U.S. Army, leaving as a first lieutenant of infantry.
For Free Information on Prohibition Party Call VI 2-4571
THE
MANHOLE
K
Located in the cellar of the GASLIGHT 2 doors north of the Student Union (Ladies welcome)
Prices straight from the days of the Great Depression
Hot Dogs
15c
King Size Sandwiches served on Rye or white bread
Ham and Cheese 35c
Corned Beef 55c
and Swiss
Pastrami 65c
7:30 to 8:30 Bottled Malted Beverage only 20c
J A
Judge Takes Aim At State Courts
By Susan Tichacek
The Kansas judicial system is inadequate, antiquated, and poorly run according to David Prager, Topeka District Judge, who spoke last night at the "Citizen's Conference on the Modernization of the Kansas Courts."
The purpose of the conference was to gather citizens of Kansas to explore the Kansas judicial system. Prager emphasized that lawyers and judges alone could not give Kansas the reform which is needed in its judicial system.
IN ORDER TO accomplish this purpose a yardstick was needed for the evaluation, Prager said. According to a code established by the Joint Committee for the Effective Administration of Justice, justice is effective when it is administered without delay, by competent judges selected through non-political methods. Also these men must be adequately compensated with security of tenure and subject to an expeditious method of removal.
Rules of procedure should be simple and efficient, he said.
The modern court should be simple in structure, business-like, with methods to equalize the workload. Prager said.
The Kansas court system meets these qualifications, Prager said.
Another inadequacy of the Kansas system is that the judges are selected on a partisan basis, and judges in courts of limited jurisdiction do not have to be qualified lawyers, Prager said.
ALTHOUGH SPEED is important in court cases, they must be decided justly and equitably. According to national standards, court cases should be disposed of within six months, he said. In the past ten years, Kansas district courts have failed to dispose of 9,000 cases ready for judicial determination."
"How can any judge be expected to administer justice fairly and accurately without knowledge of the basic principles of law and equity?" Prager questioned.
Prager also showed figures demonstrating inadequate pay of Kansas judges. Kansas ranks 40th among the 50 states in salaries paid to Supreme Court and district court judges.
IN THE CASE OF inadequate judges, Prager said, their removal is difficult and requires a long time. There is no system of disciplining in Kansas.
In mentioning further weaknesses of the Kansas court system Prager said the system is not operating in a modern fashion. It is not unified and the Supreme Court is not at the head of the system. There is an insufficient number of judges in one area and not enough in another.
Prager continued to say that the Kansas court system was not business-like because there is no court administrator, no uniform procedures for analyzing budgets, no procedure for the purchase of supplies.
PRAGER POINTED out one good point of the court system Kansas does have a new code of civil procedure which places Kansas in the "space age" in this field.
Following Prager's address the 150 participants of the conference divided into six groups for further discussions. More talks and panel discussions will be held today and tomorrow.
Daily hansan
62nd Year, No. 6
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Friday, Sept. 25, 1964
GM Workers on Strike As Auto Talks Collapse
DETROIT — (UPI)— The United Auto Workers union (UAW) and General Motors Corp. today failed to reach agreement on a new three year contract and the union called a strike by more than 260,000 workers at 89 GM plants across the country.
The union left on the job nearly 90,000 workers at 41 plants that produce either key defense parts
The strike includes some 8,026 employees at four General Motors plants in this area. The plants are Delco Battery at Olathe; Buick-Oldsmobile-Pontiac, Kansas City, Kan.; Chevrolet and Fisher, Kansas City, Mo.
The walkout included 85 employees of a parts warehouse at Lenexa, Kan.
or vital components for auto firms in the first "selective strike" in auto-labor history.
The GM strike came after the union had already won 54 cent an hour contracts from Ford and Chrysler and was triggered by non-economic issues.
OFFICIAL WORD of the strike came 30 minutes after the 10 a.m. EST deadline.
UAW president Walter Reuther said it was with "a great sense of sadness we have to announce we were unable to reach a settlement with GM," the world's biggest and richest manufacturing company.
The red-haired union leader told a jammed news conference that a strike was called because GM was "unwilling to meet" the standards of
deceency demanded by workers. The major stumbling blocks were production standards and union representation—regarded as non-economic problems.
Rock Chalk Revue Adds Nineteen New Members
AS THE 10 A.M. deadline passed with no word from the bargaining room, thousands of workers went out at GM plants across the nation. The word came quickly.
WILL PRICE, Wichita sophomore,
is in-between acts chairman. Serving
on the staff are Stan Metzger,
Nineteen new members of the Rock Chalk Revue production and business staffs were announced by Hoite Caston, Independence graduate student and producer, last night.
California said three plants employing 7,200 were shut down. Texas said 2,800 were out at the Arlington GM plant. Cleveland reported 1,800 out at two Fisher Body plants. St. Louis said 7,000 walked out at 10 a.m. Several thousand walked out in the New York area.
Michael Milroy, Lawrence senior, is chairman of the advisory staff. Assisting him are Cliff Brisbois Jr., Leawood graduate student; Bob Benson, senior; Donna Mitchell, Lawrence freshman, and Teddi Kern, Kansas City, Mo. senior.
Ozawkie sophomore; Connie Mc- Williams, freshman, and Mike Griffith, Marysville sophomore.
Serving on the production staff are Paula Bruckner, Emporia junior, assistant producer; William Boulaure, Leawood junior, house manager; Glenn Bickle, stage manager; Terry Post, Wichita sophomore, assistant stage manager.
Music director for the Revue is Dick Wright, Lawrence graduate student.
Dan Wanamaker, Salina senior, is house liaison chairman. Serving on the committee are Larry Mellinger, Wichita sophomore, Dick Doores, Lawrence freshman, and Tim Vaughn, freshman.
Helen Nott, Evanston, Ill. senior and Carole Terry, Ponca City, Okla junior, are production staff secretaries.
Members of the business staff are Tom Ritchie, Wichita junior, controller; Martha Stout, La Grange. Ill. junior, assistant controller; Mike Vineyard, Wymore, Neb. junior, assistant business manager;
Program and layout editor is Susan Lawrence, Bartlesville, Okla. junior. Her assistants are Curt Heinz, freshman, Tom Shortlidge, Park Ridge, Ill. junior, Dick Shindler, junior, and Jim Stevens, sophomore. Lavonne Gregg, junior, is program copy editor.
From the Back of the Line The Situation Looks Confusing
Lines.
By Judy Farrell
To get food. To change classes. To catch buses. To pay fees. To buy books. To drop courses. To get football tickets.
The 1964-65 school year is a week old, and to KU's 13,000 students, life on the Hill has suddenly become a series of lines.
For KU is crowded. The 700-acre campus is bulging with more students than ever before in its 98-year history.
THOUGH KU has almost doubled its size in the past 10 years, from 7,603 in 1954 to more than 13,000, the impact of the increasing student population did not hit the sprawling campus until this year.
Fall enrollment brought a ten per cent increase in the size of the student body and the first of many lines that the KU student will face nearly every day of his college career.
There were lines in the Kansas Union Ballroom during enrollment. Winding around the ballroom balcony was a lengthy line of students enrolling in the Western Civilization program, calculation their course load and contemplating that first long weekend with 1984.
Hundreds swarmed the Kansas Union Book Store, eyeing thousands of books searching for a two-b-ythree inch card reading "This
book required for Political Science 55."
Lines behind the cash registers seemed almost endless to the students staggering under an eye-level high load of books. The clicking of the cash register keys and the ring of the cash drawer were punctuated by groans when the register's window flashed a total exceeding the student's careful estimates by as much as $20.
The lines in front of the office of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and departments, such as mathematics and English, continued through today. Students queued up all week to drop courses and change sections.
After the third day of post-enrollment class changes, staffers in the College office relaxed Wednesday by jokingly suggesting innovations in KU's program - allowing two years of high school mathematics to substitute for Entomology or exempting a student with a year of junior high school French from sociology.
Weather
Clear skies and slightly warmer temperatures are forecast for the Lawrence area through the weekend. Temperatures will range in the 80s, accompanied by light winds. The low tonight will be in the 68s.
OTHER NEW students had minor problems adjusting to the campus. For Barbara Conard, Emporia junior and a transfer from Doan College in Nebraska, it was KU's unique abbreviations that stumped her.
For Becky Bauer, a freshman from Highland, a Kansas town of 750 people, KU is "new, exciting and strange." A biology lecture of 160 which is larger than her entire high school, and the vastness and variety of the campus, left her "completely floored" during her week at KU.
Mistaking the SU abbreviation on her class card for the Student Union, Barbara spent a few bewildering moments searching the third floor of the Union for her English class, until someone suggested she try Summerfield Hall.
A student's day that began with a line for breakfast, often ends with a line for dinner. Residence Halls are completely filled, with a last-minute rush in enrollments forcing many students to triple-up in what were once double rooms.
Because the school year is only a week old, the line situation is at its extreme.
In the next few days at least two more lines face KU students — the line for fee payment and for football tickets.
Then, perhaps, the snake-like lines that wind about the halls and buildings of the Hill, will somehow disappear — until February.
Publicity chairman is Ron Pullins,
Council Grove sophomore. His assistants are Richard Schaeffer, Beloin senior; Jane Larson, Scotch Plains, N.J. junior; Gary Gregg, Coldwater sophomore, Jane Paddleford, freshman and Linda Graham sophomore.
There will be a dinner for new staff members at 5:30 today in the Kansas Union.
John Pound, Fredonia senior, is sales committee manager and Ted Haggart, Salina sophomore, is his assistant. Committee members are John Vratil, Larned sophomore; Allen Schueler, Jim Keen, freshman and Pat McGrath, Junior.
Political Groups Set ASC Goals
Providing the student body with good student government is the goal of both University Party (UP) and Vox Populi (VOX) for the coming year.
Reuther said the company did not respond the way they should have in light of earlier agreements with Ford and Chrysler. Tht union sought to make these agreements a pattern for the GM contract. GM said it was willing to match the economic benefits of the other contracts but the two sides never did resolve what Reuther called a "broad question of working conditions."
In their party meetings last night, leaders in both parties urged their members to work hard to make student government successful in its service to the university.
Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla. senior and student body president, guaranteed UP an "administration they can be proud of with a record they will be proud to run on."
Harry Bretschneider, Kansas City, Mo. senior and UP general secretary, urged his party to "take the mickey mouse out of campus politics" and establish an "expanding student government for an expanding student body."
"GM CAN RESUME production any time they want," Reuther said, "if they want to sit down and provide the respect and dignity" for the workers.
GM Vice President Louis G. Seaton said the strike against his firm was completely unnecessary and unjustified."
He warned that if the strike is prolonged it will "have serious consequences for our employees, and their families, for our plant communities and for the public and the economy at large."
Reuther said that "nothing would have made us more happy" than to be able to announce an agreement. But he said "things looked hopeless" at about 7 a.m. EST today. He said the union's executive board will meet tonight to review the situation.
Reuther said that there were at least a half-dozen of these non-economic issues which still had to be solved including the matter of union committeemen paid by the company to handle worker grievances at GM plants.
HE SAID GM "made every effort" to settle the non-economic issues. But he accused the union of making demands which would have restricted GM's management responsibility and therefore "we are not prepared to accede to such unsound demands."
SEATON said that in the last 16 years "our differences have been composed at the bargaining table in five successive negotiations." He said it was "difficult to understand" why the union broke off negotiations and went on strike "because substantial progress towards resolution of our difference has been made at the bargaining table."
The GM vice president noted that the union had admitted the firm's economic offer "was satisfactory and equivalent to those upon which agreements with our competitors were based."
THE STRIKE followed more than 24 hours of continuous negotiations, During much of the night, Seaton, Reuther, and their two aides, UAW Vice President Leonard Woodcock and GM Labor Relations Director Earl Bramblett, were closed in a private meeting to try and resolve the impasse. They failed.
The union had made two attempts yesterday to get third party intervention. First, the UAW asked for a three member board of arbitration. Then it asked for Chief Federal Mediator William E. Simkin to join the negotiations to offer the government's services.
GM turned down both proposals. The two sides then headed down the road toward this morning's strike.
反:
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Sept. 25, 1964
Editorial Policy
This morning's mail brought a letter reprinted below from Kenneth Reeves who questions the editorial policy of the University Daily Kansan.
It must be explained that the Daily Kansan does not support either Senator Barry Goldwater or President Lyndon B. Johnson in this election. The University administration does not consider endorsement of political candidates, other than campus politics, a proper function of a student newspaper. For this reason the Daily Kansan cannot make a declaration of support for either candidate.
HOWEVER, THE EDITORIAL FUNCTION of a newspaper is a varied one. Chiefly, editorial pages should explain the news to its readers and supply background information so they can better understand and judge events and issues of the day.
It is, or so it seems to me, the duty and obligation of an editorial page to make judgments on issues and to exert moral influence on its readers.
COMPLETE OBJECTIVITY is the duty of the news pages. The editorial page, sensing its dedication to the best interest of society, must take sides on issues, where it clearly appears that such issues affect the readers of that paper. There are few issues of great importance that can or should command neutrality. Taken in this light it is both proper and desirable that a newspaper, on its editorial pages, crusade and work for that which it believes to be for the most good of the most people.
PERSONALLY, BOTH CO-EDITORS of the Daily Kansan editorial page are of an independent but liberal political persuasion. Guided by our beliefs, hopefully based on knowledge, and by our conceptions of what constitutes the better good for America and the world, we are inclined to support President Johnson. Consequently, articles of opinion, reflecting similar attitudes naturally will be given more emphasis. However, we feel the need to scrutinize clearly and judge fairly opinions contrary to our own. Be assured that other opinions are sought and carefully considered. We do believe, however, that attitudes expressed by others should try to maintain the same standards of accurate information and logical presentation that we strive to apply to our own work.
I WOULD LIKE TO SUGGEST to reader Reeves and other interested writers on any future issue that they purchase and read a copy of Stuart Chase's excellent book, Guide to Straight Thinking. Careful attention to Mr. Chase's book should alleviate the mental fog and the senseless jumble of half-baked truths, false accusations and flights of confused oratory that predominate thinking, talking and writing during our election year.
With this in mind, all readers' opinions, whatever their philosophy, will be valuable contributions to the editorial page, and will be welcome. Dick Menkott
The People Say.
Dear Sir:
Last semester we learned, much to our indignation, that the cost of a parking sticker was to be raised from $4.00 per year to $10.00 per year—an increase that such indigen students as ourselves could ill afford—for the purpose of increasing the campus police force allegedly necessitated by the growing number of automobiles on campus.
The last few evenings we have seen the results of this increase. There seems to be a plethora of policemen swarming over the hill. The situation is ludicrous. For example, on the corner of Jayhawk Blvd, and Sunflower Road Monday evening at about 5 p.m. there were no less than three officers: one was directing traffic; the others were watching him. Tuesday evening at the same corner there were four officers, three of which were spectators. We suppose that these tyopolicemen are learning the subtleties of the art of traffic direction so that they will someday be able to coordinate their arm-waving and whistle-blowing, yet we can but wonder how these officers amuse themselves during the rest of the day. Even after they become accomplished traffic directors and ticket writers, will they fulfill a useful and necessary function? Was it really necessary for the police force to increase its ranks?
Yours truly,
Jones M. Welsh
Graduate Student
D Heyward Brock
Graduate Student
Dear Sir:
As a transfer student, I don't know whether you print letters to the editor or not, but printed or
not, I cannot repress the urge to comment on your use of the Saturday Evening Post's endorsement of President Johnson's candidacy for President.
The article praises President Johnson's use of restraint in the Gulf of Tonkin incident. It did not mention various other instances of restraint during the Kennedy-Johnson administration. It was also restraint on the part of the President that allowed the neutralization of Laos without communist concessions, allowed the construction of a wall of shame in Berlin, betrayed young Cubans and Americans on the beaches of the Bay of Pigs, and continues to allow Americans to die daily in South Viet Nam where they are supposedly not fighting. It was this sort of forcefulness with restraint that allowed the U.S. to gain a commanding position in the October missile crises of 1962. Did these actions further the cause of freedom? They did not, nor did they help U.S. prestige!
The article criticizes Senator Goldwater for changing positions in some matters but ignores the fact that the President's positions on Public Accommodations, Fair Employment Practices, and Right to Work Laws are exactly opposite the way he stood when he represented the people of Texas in the Senate. He said that public accommodations were not constitutional when in the Senate, but now finds himself supporting and enforcing them. If he can do so when he previously felt that to do so was contrary to the constitution of the United States, Senator Goldwater would have no problem doing so—indeed he has vowed to so vigorously. He also has promised to use his personal influence to discourage violence in the streets. It is interesting to note that it was the same civil rights leaders who supported the civil rights proposals who, according to Time Magazine, harangued the people of Harlem until they took to the streets to try to solve their problems with Molotov cocktails, stones, and looting.
Finally, the article which the UDK has reprinted resorts to methods which do nothing for the name of journalism. The statement that "Goldwater is a grotesque burlesque of the conservative he pretends to be. He is a wild man, a stray, an unprincipled and ruthless political jujitsu artist like Joe McCarthy . . ." does little to speak for honesty or justice in this campaign. It does not argue issues nor does it attack the philosophy of the opposition candidate. It merely attacks him as a man. It is strange that this is all right when dealing with Senator Goldwater, but it is dirty politics to question the President's strange accumulation of wealth or his association with his Senate protege, Bobby Baker.
Senate protege, Dobby Beecher I hope that if the University Daily Kansan must continue to support this man, that they will at least do so on a higher plain. No one can question the UDK's right to endorse him for personal or philosophical reasons, but those of us who share the Senator's view would at least appreciate seeing our side aired. It is certainly the duty of the press to air both sides. You have only aired one.
Thank you.
Sincerelv.
Party Quotes
Kenneth W. Reeves III Templin (613)
"If the Republicans stop telling lies about us, we will stop telling the truth about them."—Adlai E. Stevenson
Editor's Note: The following quotes are taken from the 196' Guide to Conventions and Elections. This handbook, published by Dell, was prepared by the Columbia Broadcasting System's news staff.
"Republicans are for both the man and the dollar, but in the case of conflict the man before the dollar."—Abraham Lincoln
"I am a Republican, because I share our Party's deep-lying trust in what free men can do—a fundamental trust in the nature and capability of individual human beings."—Dwight D. Eisenhower
"If you shoot a Republican out of season, the fine will be ten dollars and costs."—Oldtime saying in Mississippi
Sen. Kenneth B. Keating, New York Republican, charging that his opponent Robert Kennedy is affiliated with Bronx Democratic leader, Charles Buckley and other party "bossess": "This is the biggest act to hit our state since the Beatles, I call it 'Bobby, Buckley and the Bosses.'"
Rep. Otis G. Pike, New York Democrat, nominating Rep. Samuel S. Stratton for U.S. senator at the New York State Democratic Convention: "Time after time we have managed to snatch defeat from the jaws of almost certain victory. Our party in this state has been, is and will be sick, sick, sick until we make some changes."
GOLDPARTY RALLY
BARRY
DIAMOND
BIRTHERS
KKK
TRADITIONAL REPURCHASE
© 1964 HERBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
"This Latest Recruit A Man In The Mainswamp Of American Thinking "
BOOK REVIEWS
When "The Crisis of the Old Order" appeared almost eight years ago, it was greeted with cheers from most critics but some rather decided boos from others. Without question it was as critical a view of the American scene that led to the depression and the emergence of Franklin D. Roosevelt as had appeared.
THE AGE OF ROOSEVELT: THE CRISIS OF THE OLD ORDER, 1919-1933, by Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. (Sentry, $2.65).
But the scholarship, as well as the narrative and style, seem today above reproach. It is an expert, fascinating tale, and though Schlesinger is an FDR partisan the book is likely to offend only the rabid right.
It is not a biography of Roosevelt, though Schlesinger does offer a detailed biographical sketch. It is much more than that. The entire political scene of America in the twenties and early thirties is examined.
Hoover and the other Republican presidents do not come off easily, but they are not unfairly treated. Best for many readers will be the absorbing examination of the roaring twenties and the business civilization of the United States that helped to make the depression era possible.
K F
In The New Yorker he was for years one of the most discerning and cutting viewers of our society. Many recall his best-known parody, the expert take-off of Henry Luce written in the style of Time magazine. He parodied others, too: Hemingway, Marquand, Sinclair Lewis, Aldous Huxley.
The title could convey the feelings of some readers that Wolcott Gibbs is no longer around to stick pins in things and entertain us with his acid observations about the American theater. "More in Sorrow" is a compilation of Gibbs' writing: short stories, sketches, and parodies.
* * * *
He wrote, as well, some of the most delightful fiction to appear in The New Yorker. This is the substance of "More in Sorrow," which has a tribute by Gibbs' friend, the veteran New Yorker editor, E.B. White.
MORE IN SORROW, by Wolcott Gibbs (Sentry, $1.95).
Dailij Yfänsan
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. 1912
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16. 1912
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press.
Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York
22, N.Y. News service: United Press International, Mail subscription rates:
$3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Roy Miller ... Managing Editor
Don Black, Leta Cathcart, Bob Jones, Greg Swartz. Assistant Managing Editors; Linda Ellis, Feature-Society Editor; Russ Corbitt, Sports Editor;
Steve Williams, Photo Editor.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Jim Langford and Rick Mabbutt ... Co-Editorial Editors
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bob Phinney...Business Manager
John Pepper, Advertising Manager; Dick Flood, National Advertising Manager; John Suhler, Classified Advertising Manager; Tom Fisher,
Promotion Manager; Nancy Holland, Circulation Manager; Gary Grazda,
Merchandising Manager.
Page 3
Kansas Youth Cheer Barry's Wichita Rally
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This was the scene as Senator Barry Goldwater addressed a capacity crowd at a Republican rally at Wichita yesterday morning.
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Fourteen KU Young Republicans attended the rally. Bob Stewart, president of the KU student body; Jim Frazier, president of Vox Populi; and Bill Porter, chairman of the KU Young Republicans, were among the group.
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The audience also included a dozen Wichita State University students with LBJ signs who stood at the rear of the auditorium. The jean clad, bearded students said as they entered the building an elderly lady tried to tear down one of their signs with her cane. During Goldwater's speech a large LBJ sign was torn in half by young Goldwater supporters. They said the young democrats kept blocking their view of the stage with the sign.
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Three Negroes were present in the audience. One of the Negroes was Michael Shook, secretary of the Young Republicans at Butler College. Shook said, "I was displeased with the attacks on the Supreme Court in Goldwater's speech. They were an indirect attack on civil rights. I intend to support the local Republican candidates, however I don't plan to support Goldwater. He will get no Negro support in Kansas."
Manager
vertising
Fisher,
Grazda,
More than one third of the audience were young people of high school and college age.
Inunderous applause echoed throughout the building whenever Senator Goldwater lashed out at the Johnson administration. Goldwater said, "President Johnson has so much power the democrats don't know why to vote for him or plug him in." He said, "The democrats have wishbones where their backbones should be."
Goldwater addressed 450 paying guests at a $100 a plate breakfast before coming to the rally.
Frances Willard Day To Be Monday
Monday is Frances Willard Day in Kansas, and by law KU is expected to devote "one quarter of the school day . . . for instruction and appropriate exercises relative to the history and benefits of the prohibitionary amendment to the Constitution and the prohibitionary laws of the State of Kansas."
Don't get your hopes up—it won't happen. The Kansas law, passed in 1915 and never repealed, is not observed any more.
James K. Logan, dean of the school of law, said yesterday there are many laws in the statute books which have been allowed to die of disuse. He referred to laws like prohibiting the eating of snakes and requiring householders to do spring house cleaning.
The Kansas law proclaiming Frances Willard Day and its observance requires "every public school in the state" to devote one-quarter of "September 28, or the school day in each year nearest to the said date," to this recognition.
Official Bulletin
German graduate reading exam, Sat.
Oct. 3, 9:30 a.m., in 110 Fraser. Candidates must register in 306 Fraser by Saturday noon, Sept. 26.
CATHOLIC MASS, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
POPULAR FILM SERIES, 7 p.m., Fra-
sc leader.
SCIENCE FILM, 7 p.m., Dyche Audi-
tory.
"WHATCHAMACALLIT," 9 p.m., Templin Hall.
Harlem Lawyer Speaks Tuesday
TOMORROW
CATHOLIC MASSES: 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m.
St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. Confessions: 4-5, 7-8
CATHOLIC MASSES, 8 a.m., St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. 9:30 and 11 a.m., Fraser Theater.
William Stringfellow, lawyer, author, and theologian, will speak on "Race and Reconciliation" Tuesday in the Kansas Union.
A lawyer and civil rights leader, Stringfellow has been a guest speaker at several Race and Religion conferences in the United States.
STRINGFELLOW attended Bates college, the London School of Economics, and Harvard Law School before he began to practice law at the East Harlem Protestant Parish. The Harlem Parish is a cooperative unit composed of doctors, lawyers, clergymen and social workers combined to work for the underprivileged.
Stringfellow is considered to be an outstanding Episcopalian lay theologian. Kay Barth, a German theologian, once said that Stringfellow was the most impressive thing he saw on a visit to America.
Stringfellow's work with the Ecumenical movement in the Church has taken him to 19 countries in Asia, Europe, and the Caribbean area. In this country he has spoken at 19 seminaries and schools of religion which represented 10 different denominations.
STRINGFELLOWS position and action in the civil rights movement was described by Father Thomas Woodard of KU's Canterbury Association as "... unorthodox." In a speech before the national conference of Religion and Race Stringfellow said of religion's role in the civil rights problem, "... too little, too late, and too lily-white."
Stringfellow will be on campus to attend the Law and Society Institute on "Religion, Education and the Law."
The open forum to be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Big Eight room of the Kansas Union is sponsored by the KU-Y and the Canterbury Association.
DELIVERIES:
Daily Till 1:00 a.m.
Weekends Till 3:00 a.m.
La Pizza
807 Vermont VI 3-5353
Friday, Sept. 25, 1964
GANT
SHIRTMAKERS
Madras
Madras
Imported-from-India bleeding madras. All hand-picked by Gant. Bold, bright distinctive—they keep adding character with each washing.
THE Town Shop BOWNTOWN
DOWNTOWN
University Shop
ON THE HILL
SUA
SUA FRIDAY FLICKS
RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY
Starring Randolph Scott and Joel McC plus KNIGHT OF THE TRAIL (A William S. Hart Short)
FRASER AUDITORIUM 7:00 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.
Admission 35c
Coming October 2 TEA HOUSE OF AUGUST MOON
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Friday, Sept. 25, 1964
You'll get an A for appearance-When you have your clothes laundered at Independent Laundry
M. C. HENRY
BROOKLYN
INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners
9th & Mississippi
VI 3-4011
740 Vermont
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Friday, Sept. 25, 1964
University. Daily Kansan
Page 5
Around the Campus KU Pianist Praised
Mrs. Angelica Morales von Sauer, professor of piano, earned critical praise of the highest order for two recitals given this summer in Mexico City, where she also conducted master classes at the National University.
Hal Hall, critic for the English-language Daily News of Mexico City, had great praise for Mrs. von Sauer, concluding the review of her Chopin recital, Aug. 24, with "And Mexico has a monument in Miss Morales, one of a handful of the truly great pianists of our times."
Mrs. von Sauer grew up in Mexico. She has concertized widely there and in Europe as well as the U.S. She is the widow of the late Emil von Sauer, Austrian pianist and teacher.
Carillon Recital Set
Albert C. Gerkin, Carillonneur, will present a Carillon Recital at 3:00 p.m. Sunday.
The program will include the following selections: "Toccata for Carillon" by Ernest van Nieuwenhove, "Sonatina for Carillon" by Wouter Paap, excerpts from the "Repertorium" of Joannes de Gruytters, "Passacaglia, Chorale and Fugue for Carillon" by J. B. Franssen, "Theme and Variations for Carillon" by Gustav Nees, and "Prelude and Fugue for Carillon" by Jacques A. Maassen.
Gerkin will also give regular Carillon recitals at 7 p.m. Wednesdays and 12:45 p.m. on Sundays prior to home football games.
The KU Carillon bells are housed inside the World War II Memorial Campanile.
This fund, established in 1945 and supported by an estate approximating $29,300, is designed to assist those students to enter, or who now attend KU.
Four KU students will receive financial aid for the 1964-65 school year from the Josephine Fuller Student Fund.
Fuller Student Award
The recipients, all attending KU, are:
Michael Carnahan, Wichita senior; John P. Hastings, Topeka sophomore; Sharon Menasco, Wichita senior, and R. James Rhodes, Derby sophomore.
Kenneth B. Armitage, associate professor of zoology, has received a $14,048 research grant from the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare.
Armitage Receives Grant
The grant, covering a project entitled "Some Annual Physiological Cycles of a Crayfish," is a second year continuation and will be effective until August. 1966.
The research program involves an 18-month study examining the role of daylight as a timing mechanism for determining the physiological cycles of crayfish. He is being assisted by two graduate students: Arthur L. Buikema, Beecher, Ill., and Norman J. Willems, Reedley, Calif. The graduate assistants will continue working on the project while Armitage is on sabbatical leave during the spring semester.
Series on Japan
Dr. Klaus H. Pringsheim, professor of political science, will present an 8-week series of lectures on the culture of Japan, beginning Oct. 1 in Kansas City, Mo.
The special course, being offered by the University of Missouri at Kansas City division for continuing education, will give enrollees an opportunity to study Japan through lectures, slides and discussions with Japanese students.
Dr. Pringsheim, who lived in Japan for more than 10 years, formerly taught Japanese at the Army Language School in Monterey, Calif. He also worked at General McArthur's Occupation Headquarters in Tokyo immediately after the war.
The course will be held at 7:30 p.m. on Thursdays in Room 209 of the Fine Arts Building on the UMKC campus.
Russian Author Discussed
The discussion of the writings by Russian author, Dostoevski, will open the Newman Forum Lecture at KU Monday night.
Dr. Bernard Hall, staff psychiatrist at the Menninger Institute in Topeka, will discuss the writings in the light of new insights into the nature of man and the human predicament.
The lecture will be held at 8 p.m. in the Forum of the Kansas Union.
THE CURRENT Newman Forum Series with the theme "The Twentieth Century Quest for Meaning" is to examine some of the most influential contributions to contemporary thought and their relations to the traditional Christian view of the significance of human life and endeavor.
Other speakers and their subjects are:
Oct. 11—"Bertrand Russell," by Paul Hasvold, assistant professor of philosophy.
John, please come back. I'll forgive you this once for not taking me to La Pizza.
807 Vermont
Steaks, Pizza,
Ravioli, Spaghetti
Hamburgers, Shrimp.
La Pizza 807 Vermont
Rain Encloses Girl in Small Puddled World
Most students grumbled about the rain. They tucked up falling hairdos and walked cautiously around sidewalk puddles while closed umbrellas banged their legs or balanced on their books.
But in the secluded driveway behind Bailey Annex, one KU coed stopped beside a long puddle which may have been 3 to 4 inches deep. Her hair was straight and she carried no umbrella.
She glanced behind her and, without hesitation, took off her brown
NO ONE was watching, she thought, and she smiled as she scuffed her feet through the brown water and made rippling circles with a pointed toe.
She walked straight through—careful not to splash the water on her plaid wrap-around skirt. But in that short walk, the campus with its enrollment cards, ball point pens and outline series seemed as far away as the clouds that had brought the rain and then departed.
Once on the other side, she blotted! O
her dripping feet on the dry pavement on the street and melted into the stream of umbrella-laden students on Jayhawk Boulevard.
Makes Up for Others
HARTFORD, Conn.—(UPI) —Although the odds on a golfer shooting a hole in one is over 8,000 to 1, pro George Bayer has turned the trick seven times during his career. Bayer's latest ace was in the third round of the 1963 Insurance City Open.
THE OLD FAMILY
PLAN YOUR BUDGET AS CAREFULLY AS YOU PLAN YOUR CLASS SCHEDULE
Having your own checking account at the First National is a great aid in budgeting and paying campus bills. When you pay by check, you have a legal receipt of payment. Lawrence merchants accept checks from a local bank more readily. You won't have to write a letter or make a long distance phone call to check on the balance of your account. You can pay bills right from your desk without running all over town. The First has planned for the busy student by providing handy Bank-by-Mail envelopes and a Drive-in bank, 9th and Tennessee, at the foot of Mount Oread. Take advantage of the convenience of a checking account at the First and receive 50 free personalized checks.
1st L B
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE
8th AND MASSACHUSETTS • LAWRENCE, KANSAS • VI 3-0152
2.
DRIVE-IN BANK AT 9th AND TENNESSEE ST.
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday, Sept. 25.1964
Weaver Our 107th Year
open a student charge account . inquire 3rd floor
KIP WATER
WATER
PUMPKIN
WINTER
MACE
CUMIN
SHU-MAK-UP DEMONSTRATION
you've heard about it, now see it demonstrated in our store Saturday, by sales representative Alberta Jones. Shu-Mak-up color-coats leathers and fabrics for an exciting new wardrobe look all the time. 24 colors 1.25 ea. Conditioner for recoloring 50c Ist fl. 10:00-3:30 Saturday
FASHION 1950s
EVERYONE'S SOCK HAPPY
above the knee, at the knee or just below the knee. Fun colors signs and solids. By Bonnie Doon, sizes 9-11. dark colors, and light ones too, in textures, de 1st fl. $1.50 to $3.00
1. The suit is a classic three-piece suit with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a black shirt, a white vest, and a black tie.
2. This suit has a more relaxed fit, with the sleeves slightly looser than the trousers. It also includes a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
3. The suit is a slim-fit suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are not as loose as in the first suit.
4. This suit has a more formal look, with a tailored blazer and a knee-length trouser. It also features a belt and a bow tie.
5. The suit is a long-sleeved suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
6. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
7. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are more relaxed than the first suit.
8. This suit has a more formal look, with a tailored blazer and a knee-length trouser. It also features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
9. The suit is a long-sleeved suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
10. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
11. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
12. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
13. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
14. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
15. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
16. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
17. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
18. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
19. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
20. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
21. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
22. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
23. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
24. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
25. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
26. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
27. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
28. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
29. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
30. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
31. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
32. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
33. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
34. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
35. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
36. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
37. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
38. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
39. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
40. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
41. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
42. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
43. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
44. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
45. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
46. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
47. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
48. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
49. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
50. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
51. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
52. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
53. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
54. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
55. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
56. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
57. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
58. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
59. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
60. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
61. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
62. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
63. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
64. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
65. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
66. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
67. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
68. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
69. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
70. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
71. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
72. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
73. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
74. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
75. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
76. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
77. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
78. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
79. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
80. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
81. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
82. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
83. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
84. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
85. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
86. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
87. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
88. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
89. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
90. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
91. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
92. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
93. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
94. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
95. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
96. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
97. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
98. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
99. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
100. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
101. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
102. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
103. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
104. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
105. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
106. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
107. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
108. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
109. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
110. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
111. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
112. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
113. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
114. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
115. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
116. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
117. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
118. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
119. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
120. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
121. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
122. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
123. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
124. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
125. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
126. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
127. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
128. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
129. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
130. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
131. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
132. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
133. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
134. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
135. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
136. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
137. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
138. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
139. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
140. This suit has a more casual look, with a fitted waist and a tapered collar. It features a button-down shirt and a bow tie.
141. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
142. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
143. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
144. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
145. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
146. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
147. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
148. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
149. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
150. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
151. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
152. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
153. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
154. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
155. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
156. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
157. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
158. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
159. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
160. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
161. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
162. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
163. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
164. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
165. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
166. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
167. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
168. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
169. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
170. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
171. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
172. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
173. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
174. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
175. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
176. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
177. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
178. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
179. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
180. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
181. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
182. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
183. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
184. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
185. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
186. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
187. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
188. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
189. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
190. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
191. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
192. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
193. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
194. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
195. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
196. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
197. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
198. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
199. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
200. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
201. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
202. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
203. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
204. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
205. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
206. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
207. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
208. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
209. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
210. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
211. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
212. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
213. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
214. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
215. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
216. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
217. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
218. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
219. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
220. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
221. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
222. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
223. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
224. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
225. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
226. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
227. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
228. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
229. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
230. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
231. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
232. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
233. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
234. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
235. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
236. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
237. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
238. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
239. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
240. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
241. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
242. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
243. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
244. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
245. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
246. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
247. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
248. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
249. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
250. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
251. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
252. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
253. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
254. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
255. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
256. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
257. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
258. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
259. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
260. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
261. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
262. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
263. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
264. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
265. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
266. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
267. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
268. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
269. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
270. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
271. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
272. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
273. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
274. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
275. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
276. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
277. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
278. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
279. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
280. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
281. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
282. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
283. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
284. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
285. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
286. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
287. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
288. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
289. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
290. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
291. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
292. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
293. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
294. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
295. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
296. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
297. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
298. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
299. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
200. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
201. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
202. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
203. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
204. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
205. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
206. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
207. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
208. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
209. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
210. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
211. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
212. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
213. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
214. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
215. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
216. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie, but the sleeves are looser than the first suit.
217. The suit is a wide-leg suit with a straight leg cut. It has a black vest and a black tie
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University Daily Kansan
Page 7
In Viet Nam Ambush Officer Slain, Civilian Killed
The officer slain today was the first American to die in the jungle war here since Sept. 10, when Capt. Richard T. Lynch, Paoli, Pa., was killed by Communist automatic weapons fire during an antiguerrilla sweep with Vietnamese army forces 15 miles south of Saigon.
TODAY'S AMBUSH BROUGHT to 194 the American death toll in Vietnamese fighting since massive U.S. military aid started in 1961.
Another 89 have died in non-battle incidents, bringing the over-all American death toll to 283.
The foreign aid official, assigned to the U.S. Agency for International Development (AID), was given first aid treatment in the U.S. Air Force dispensary at Tan Son Hut airport on the outskirts of Saigon.
The U.S. military spokesman also disclosed that another U.S. Army soldier was wounded yesterday when Communist Viet Cong guerrillas poured mortar fire into the Soui Da Special Forces camp in Tay Ninh Province, 45 miles northwest of Saigon.
A MEMBER of the Vietnamese special forces was killed in the same bombardment.
Other military activity included stiff fighting by the Communists and South Viet Nam's army, navy and air force.
The Reds ambushed a company of government militia in Tay Ninh Province yesterday. The defense ministry said the Reds killed 11 militiamen in the ensuing fight.
Meanwhile, U.S. Army Col. John Freund worked today to head off open warfare between dissident mountain tribesmen and loyalist troops guarding a divisional headquarters of the Vietnamese army.
Two militiamen were missing in the action and another was wounded.
FREUND WAS using a radio instead of smoke signals. But the situation was uncomfortably close to one of those classic confrontations between restive apaches and outnumbered cavalrymen in the old west.
His job was to talk the dissident tribesmen at Fort Bon Sar Pa into releasing their Vietnamese hostages and get back to the job of fighting the Communist Viet Cong guerrillas.
Henry VIII Play Begins Year's Theater
"Thought provoking but humorous," "not a sober play or historical pageant," "very warm, very human," were phrases chosen by Jack Brooking, associate professor of speech and drama, to describe the mood of the first production in the major theater series, "A Man for All Seasons."
The play, by Robert Bolt, portrays the conflict which arose between Sir Thomas More, chancellor of England, and King Henry VIII when More refused to sanction Henry's divorce from Catherine of Aragon. Henry, who preferred the favors of Anne Boleyn (the woman he wished to marry) to the Church's approval, flouted Church laws and rewarded his Chancellor by chopping his head off.
BROOKING, who directs the production, calls it a tough play with difficult characterizations. "The important point is that it deals with
human qualities, especially integrity," he said.
The play has a quality of universality, Brooking said. "All men face challenges which can be avoided, proving the man has no courage, or confronted no matter what the consequence might be. How he faces his challenge is the measure of each man.
"Seeing More grapple with his challenge and accepting it is not an isolated historical event, but an attempt to demonstrate that men in every era must face life and wrestle with it," Brooking said.
The setting will be reminiscent of Elizabethan staging when simple, spare props were necessary for quick scene changes, Brooking said. He said lighting would be very important for dramatic effects.
BURT EIKLEBERRY, Lawrence graduate student, is assistant director.
Playing lead parts in the production are Tom Rea, senior actor in residence, Sir Thomas More; Dennis Dalen, Lawrence graduate student, Common Man; Vince Angotti, Independence, Mo. graduate student, Cromwell; Tom Behm, Wheeling, Ill. graduate student, Norfolk; Nancy Vumovich, Arkansas City graduate student, Alice; Gigi Gibson, Independence, Mo. senior, Margaret, and Joe Kaough, Houston, Tex. graduate student, Rich.
Columbus, hurry back and show me the way to La Pizza, 807 Vermont.
Performances are scheduled for Oct. 16, 17, 23 and 24. Tickets will go on sale Oct. 9 at Murphy box office. Students must present cards of registration to purchase tickets.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Friday, Sept. 25, 1964
KU
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ART
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HAVE YOU SEEN THE NEW LOOK
BEST BOOKS
During the summer we completed renovations on the KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE so that we might serve you better We hope you will approve of the changes The KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE has all your school needs Art Supplies, Drafting Equipment, Books (of course), notebooks and still more.
Also visit our new branch in Watson Library for a complete line of scholarly paperbacks from academic publishing houses.
NOTE BOOKS
KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE
Friday, Sept. 25, 1964
University Daily Kansan Page 9
KANSAS
38
Dick Bacon
For Syracuse Game KU Outlook Dark By Russ Corbitt
By Russ Corbitt (Sports Editor)
All the factors seem to indicate a bad day for the KU Jayhawks at Syracuse Saturday. But the way things have gone in the three previous matchings of the two teams, the unexpected may have a better chance of occurring than the expected.
Coach Jack Mitchell will lead his Jayhawks into the contest minus three of his top players. Injuries to fullbacks Ron Oelschlager and Bill Gerhards have moved sophomore Dick Bacon up to the starting backfield slot. John Garber will take over the spot on defense, and may get the call on offense sometime during the day, even though he owns no gametime experience at the offensive position. End Mike Shinn is also lost for the season.
MITCHELL devoted his team's last practice yesterday primarily to passing and punting. He said his team is "hurting physically" but is not discounting the possibility of a second consecutive victory over the Orangemen.
"We could play better than we did last week and still lose," Mitchell said. "It's difficult to compete against Syracuse when you're at your best," he said, "and we are not at our best. Gerhards is still questionable. He may play, but Bacon will start on offense." Game-time is 11:30 a.m. Lawrence time.
Oelschlager to Help on Broadcast
The KU-Syracuse game may be heard on the KU Sports Network beginning at 11:15 a.m. tomorrow.
Play-by-play description will be by Tom Hedrick with color by Ron Oelschlager, KU fullback, who is sidelined with a fractured wrist. Stations carrying the game in the Lawrence area include KANU, KLWN, KMBC, KOFO and KTOP-FM.
The fact that KU has won its only game this season and Syracuse was defeated in its only outing does not give the Jayhawks the advantage it implies. A fumble with 30 seconds remaining in the game gave KU its 7-3 win over TCU, and Syracuse fell to Boston College 21-14. in the last two seconds.
THESE RESULTS are the reverse of the circumstances which preceded KU's 10-0 upset of the Orangemen last year. Nationally ranked Syracuse rolled over Boston College, 35-21, in its opener, and KU lost another squeaker to TCU, 10-6. But the small, inexperienced Jayhawk line held Syracuse scoreless while the Crimson and Blue backs rolled for 209 yards rushing. Syracuse is not likely to forget that.
KU's small inexperienced 1963 line is back with more experience and more size. One of the biggest lines Mitchell has ever had at KU will take the field at Archbold Stadium Saturday, but Syracuse coach Ben Schwartzwalder will have his usual band of huge easterners who have been picked in the "top ten" in most national pre-season polls.
The only game in the series between the two teams which did not go down to the wire was the opener at Syracuse in 1959. Although Mitchell's sophomore-dominated club dropped a 35-21 scoring contest to the team that eventually won the national championship, KU held a 7-6 halftime lead and a 15-12 edge in the third period. It was in this game that sophomore John Hadl registered his 97-yard kickoff return.
Playing before a sell-out crowd at Lawrence and a national television audience in 1960, KU struck for a touchdown with the game only two minutes old. But Syracuse, then ranked No.1 in the nation, fought back in the second half for a 14-7 victory.
Rugby Club Opens Work
The KU Rugby Club held its organizational meeting Wednesday evening, with 20 people attending, according to George Bunting, Kansas City, Kan. first-year law student.
Bunting, a former player on the Dartmouth team, said the KU team has a game scheduled in a few weeks with a team in Kansas as City.
p. m. every day until Oct. 1 on the field east of Allen Field House, or to call Bunting at VI 3-0077.
Anyone interested in the sport is invited to attend practices at 4
Lawrence Blades, assistant professor of law and also a former Dartmouth player, will be advisor to the club.
Graduate Grant Held
The $1575 Boeing Company graduate fellowship in engineering is held by Gary Ray Muller, Ellinwood, in the 1964-65 academic year.
Best Pizza in Lawrence, one block south of police station. 807 Vermont La Pizza
Eva, I found a spot at 807 Vermont that makes better pixza than Mussolini.
Adolf
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Friday, Sept. 25, 1964
Phils Lose Ground in National Race
Phils Los Reds, Cards Push Leader As Bucs Win
(By United Press International)
The Philadelphia Phillies may not be lost because they hesitated but they sure have created a free-for-all.
First it was the Cincinnati Reds who barged back into the National League pennant race and now it's the St. Louis Cardinals who have moved back into a position which must be reckoned with.
Things were getting pretty sticky for the Phillies 24 hours ago but today they know the meaning of the old refrain that "three's a crowd."
THAT'S BECAUSE it's getting mighty crowded up around first place in the N.L. with both the Reds and the Cardinals pressing in behind the Phillies and creating all sorts of mathematical combinations that could "rob" the Phillies of their first flag since 1950.
The Phillies had an opportunity to restore their lead to four games when they played the Milwaukee Braves last night while the Reds were idle. It was the kind of opportunity to which the New York Yankees would have responded by slaughtering somebody 18-0, but, alas, the Phillies blew a 5-3 decision to the Milwaukee Braves.
That enabled the Reds to move up within three games of the Phillies while they sat around their hotel rooms and also provided the Cardinals with the chance to cut their first-place deficit to only $3 \frac{1}{2}$ games by sweeping a doubleheader from the Pittsburgh Pirates 4-2 and 4-0.
And now all at once the two fast-flying pursuers are counting their blessings—the chance to get at the front-runners face to face before the season is over. The Reds have two games left to play with the Phillies and the Cardinals have three. If nothing else, this means the Phillies can't back in. They've got to beat their closest pursuers or blow the flag.
THE PHILLIES dropped their fourth straight game and sixth in their last seven outings in a fashion that has become typical in recent days—they hit too little and too late.
Two triples by Joe Torre — the first in the second inning and the second in the eighth — drove in three of the runs that created a 5-0 Milwaukee lead and negated a desperation three-run Philadelphia rally in the last of the eighth. The losing pitcher was Jim Bunning, the veteran who so often had been the Phillies' "stopper" this season. Wade Blasingame went 7 1/3 innings to pick up his seventh win of the season.
BOB GIBSON scattered nine hits and struck out 11 to raise his season total to a club record of 232 for the Cardinals in the first game and Ray Sadecki came back in the nightcap with a five-hitter and 10 strikeouts to raise his record to 19-10. Curt Flood had five hits and Lou Brock and Mike Shannon homered to lead the Cardinals' offense during the doubleheader.
Ron Santo's ninth-inning sacrifice fly climaxed a two-run rally and gave the Chicago Cubs a 4-3 victory over Los Angeles.
35
JIM NANCE Syracuse fullback...
Big Eight Roundup
I-State Boss Worried
(By United Press International)
The Kansas State Wildcats held their first contact yesterday since the Wisconsin game Saturday and other Big Eight teams worked a polishing techniques while Iowa State Coach Clay Stapleton complained of "very poor practices back to back."
At Manhattan, the Wildcats scrimmaged with equal time given to offense and defense.
At Ames, Coach Stapleton said his team would have to be in a better frame of mind if it hopes to stay in the game with Oklahoma State tomorrow.
OKLAHOMA STATE worked out in sweatclothes at Stillwater yesterday, rehearsing all phases of the game, particularly offense. Coach Phil Cutchin said Cyclone linebackers John Berrington and Mike Cox are "two of the best . . . we'll face."
At Lincoln, Coach Bob Devaney and his staff refined plans for platoon football because "we were afraid other teams would be able to take advantage of us if we didn't go to the two platoons."
The Missouri Tigers rambled through plays and practice kickoffs at Columbia, but there was no scrimmage, and the top three passers had trouble hitting receivers.
AT NORMAN, the Oklahoma team polished its offense for an hour in a final workout in preparation for the Southern California game.
faloes' lineup for the home opener against Oregon State. He said Bill Sabatino was moved into the No. 1 defensive tackle slot in place of two-year-letterman Tom Lund, who injured his ankle in Colorado's 21-0 loss last week to Southern California.
Expressing concern over the growing list of key injuries, KU Coach Jack Mitchell said, "Mike Shinn, Ron Oelschlager and now Bill Gerhards are out with injuries. When we meet Syracuse we're going to need every good player we have, and those three are fine football players."
Colorado Coach Eddie Crowder announced one change in the Buf-
Gerhards, the No. 1 fullback, was still listed in questionable condition and will not start at Syvacuse.
The burden of the fullback duties fell on sophomore Dick Bacon and senior John Garber, whose real position is guard.
Orange Given Nod to Down Jayhawkers
By Milton Richman (UPI Sports Writer)
Pickin' the weekend winners, or there must be oil under the yard of dirt the way those 22 young fellows fight over it on fourth down.
THE EAST
Texas, Ohio State and Alabama look like the top choices this week when everyone should find out exactly how good Boston College figures to be this year.
Army over Boston College—The Cadets have heard only one thing all week: BC upset Syracuse last Saturday.
Syracuse over Kansas—The Orange bounces back
Navy or William and Mary—With or without injured Roger Staubach. Columbia over Colgate—Archie Roberts gets the Lions off right.
Brown over Lafayette—Tuss McLaughry may have the Ivy League's most improved team this season.
THE MIDWEST
Northwestern over Indiana~Tom Myers makes the difference, but it helps when someone's there to catch his passes.
Michigan over the Air Force— This one also could go the other wav.
Wisconsin over Notre Dame—The Badgers put the first blot on the Irish record.
Nebraska over Minnesota - The Cornhuskers show their power to a national TV audience.
Also: Iowa over Idaho, Missouri over Utah, Purdue over Ohio U., Cincinnati over Dayton and Miami (O.) over Marshall.
Pocahontas, let's meet at La Pizza, 807 Vermont, till your father likes me better.
John
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Friday, Sept. 25, 1964
University Daily Kansan
Page 11
Spain Remains Good Locale For Filming Western Flicks
MADRID—(UPI) The six shooters are blazing in the dusty streets of the Spanish frontier.
The mortally wounded cowboys have been toppling from their saddles, and the saloons have been doing a rearing trade ever since late 1961.
That's when the first Western movie was made in Spain.
IT WAS "The Savage Guns," a Spanish-North American co-production, starring Richard Basehart and Spanish actress Paquita Rico, previously best known for her roles in Spanish folklore films.
"The Savage Guns" was no great shakes artistically, but it made money. And so, decades after Tom Mix flickered across the world's screens, Spain's moviemakers discovered the Western.
THE NHE first Spanish spoof of the Western, "Torrejon City," was put in the cans. (Torrejon is the village on Madrid's outskirts where the giant U.S.-Spanish air base is located.)
Soon after "The Savage Guns" was filmed, another producer made "Zorro's Revenge."
These three Westernes were released in 1963. In the Spanish releases list of the following year there were nine Westernes, including one following the classic Hollywood cowboy pattern but based in Venezuela.
Another spoof of Westerns, "The Fearsome Sheriff," starring Italian comedian Walter Chiari, was on the list, as was a Spanish treatment of the Negro problem in the U.S. plopped down into a rip-roarin' Western setting.
THE 1965 releases list will bulge with Spanish-made Westerns. So far this year some 18 Westerns have been completed and another six are being shot, including the most ambitious Spanish Western yet.
This is "Joaquin Murrieta," the tale of a Mexican gunman called a bandit by some and a fighter for justice by others. The film stars actors of fame and caliber.
MOST OF THE Westernes made in Spain have had anything but star-studded casts from the international point of view. The usual starring lineup has consisted of several middling-to-well-known local actors, along with little-known American names to give a greater feeling of authenticity to the production, while keeping the budget down.
The budgets generally oscillate between seven million pesetas ($116,-666) and ten million pesetas ($166,-666).
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Spain lends itself admirably to the filming of Westerns. Many parts of the rugged sunbaked country south of the Pyrenees are remarkably similar to the magnificent vistas of the U.S. Southwest made so familiar to the world on the wide screen. In the far south, in Andalusia, the bare, tumbling terrain is even dotted with cactus.
Absentee Voting Laws Spelled Out
New arrivals in Kansas who do not meet Kansas residency requirements for voting may cast their ballot for President and Vice-President this fall upon meeting certain conditions.
Richard L. Stauber, research associate for the Governmental Research Center at KU, yesterday outlined the following laws and procedure:
"Any U.S. citizen who was a citizen of another state immediately before moving to Kansas . . . and who meets all the qualifications for voting in Kansas except the residency and registration requirements, may vote for presidential and vicepresidential candidates (and only for these offices) at the next general election in Kansas if:
- "for at least 45 days before the general election, he has lived in the Kansas township or ward in which he is going to vote." That is, if he has lived here since September 19, 1964.
- "and if, not earlier than October 9, 1964, and not later than noon, November 2, 1964, he applies for an affidavit (which swears that he meets the above qualifications), from the county clerk in his Kansas county, fills out the affidavit in the presence of the clerk, and files the affidavit with the clerk." The county clerk's office in Douglas County is on the first floor of the Court House at 11th Street and Massachusetts.
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all major brands
Wed, Thursday, Friday & Saturday
10:00 - 6:00
Natural Vitamins Vegetarian Foods Healthful Candles Cold Pressed Oils Garbanzos
Stone Ground Flours
Food Supplement
Mung Beans
Organic Cosmetics
Milk Substitutes
VI 2-2771----700 Mass.—Room 211
Door on 7th Street
FOR RENT
FOR RENT - ROOMS for men close to town and K.U. Linens furnished. Private entrance. PHONE VI 3-6283. 9-25
Dawn and Joan available at 1235 Orn
Board and Room available at 1225 Oread. 8-25
Quiet—well-furnished room, with refrigerator and cooking facilities. 10 min. charge. rent. responible. rent. to respondei student. CALL VI 3-6696 after 5 p.m. 9-28
A nicely furnished 4 room house. Prefer a couple. No drinking or pets. CALL for appointment—VI 3-0411. 9-28
Lovely Furnished Apartment For Graduate Student or Faculty? 2 rooms, private office, garage, garage (utilities included). No Pets. Call VI 3-1299, or see at 1633 Vermont.
Apartment for rent: 3 rooms, ground floor, furnished, private entrance, carparked couple or one graduate student. SEE at 646 W. 23rd or CALL VI-92-3-6255.
LOST
Small, friendly, black and white female
passenger. Please CALL V1 2-4154. Reward - 9-25
Please CALL V1 2-4154. Reward - 9-25
TYPING
Term papers. Theses by experienced
typist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. ff
Typing wanted. Former high school
teacher will type reports and theses.
Experienced. Electric typewriter. Fast
service. CALL Mrs. Marsh at III 8262.
Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, etc.
Accurate workman, Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter, Gestetner Duplicator. Mrs.
McEdowney, 2521 Alabama St. Phone VI
3-8568. tf
Accurate typing done on electric typewriter. Familiar with the four accredited K.U. thesis forms. CALL Pat Beck at VI 3-5630. tf
Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. Will do excellent work at reasonable rates. Electr. Computer-Based Boost Miserfruit. 140 Indian, or call VI 2-0091.
WANTED
Washing and ironing done in my home.
Phone: VI 2-2508. 1131 New Jersey St.
Ft.
Phone: VI 2-2508.
Roommate for 2nd year graduate student.
Attendance to campus. See at 1102 W. 19th. Torn: 9-28
Graduate Student to share 4 room apt,
$35 per month plus electricity. Newly
decorated. SEE after 6 p.m. David
Leavengood, 740 La. 10-1
TRANSPORTATION
car Pool from Overland Park to K.U.
Classes: Monday-Wednesday 9:30 to 12:30;
Tuesday-Thursday 9:30 to 12:30; Friday
9:30 to 12:30. Leave Overland Park 8:30
am. only. Must return by 3:30 MTW,
and by 4:30 Friday. CALL NI B-7278
Car Pool-Prairie Village and
Pool-30. 30. Phone RA 2-0793.
Jennies Jones. 9-29
Car Pool Wanted; Leave Kansas City,
Kan. 7:15 a.m., return 4:30 p.m., Monday
through Friday, Call after 6:00 p.m. FA
1-6817 at Kansas City. 9-28
Commuters who are interested in forming a car pool between Kansas City (Johnson County) and Lawrence, PHONE James Mulloy at HE 2-3465. 9-28
MISCELLANEOUS
Bargain Transportation for sale. 1955
Buick Special, fully equipped, excellent condition. Owned by one family. Low mileage. Lease to lot. A BARGAIN at $298, CALL Bruce Warren at VI 3-6400, after 5:00 p.m., or on weekdays. 9-29
WILL DO DRAFTING-- all types. See
WILL DO DRIFTING 214, Lindley 9.8
U ON 4-3428
BAR-B-Q—For Bar-B-Q ribs and chickens that are a treat to cat, try ours at 515 Michigan St. Hours: 11:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday.
Yes! Now you can get cash for your
REBATE SLIPS. Call VI 2-1791. 10-22
Will Baby Sit in my home for 2 or 3
weeks in -in yard, refer 9-28
Phone VI 3-6763
Haircut special—weekdays: men's hairc-
airs $1.50, children's hairstuds $1.25,
3 full-time barbers. Tom's 14th St. Barber
Shop.
9-28
Wanted—BRIDGE PLAYERS, little 'ex-
perience needed. The Lawrence Bridge
is next the Event Room 10am.
p.m. at the Holiday Inn. For more
information call VI 2-0565. **Friday**
tf
FOR SALE
Must sell Garrard Type A automatic turntable with base and cartridge. One Electro Voice Aristocrat I speaker system. Must see to appreciate. CALL VI 2-1195.
Purebred German Shepherd $20
each. 7 males, 1 female. CALL VI 3-5641
Purebred German Shepherd $20
each. 7 males, 1 female. CALL VI 3-5641
1939 Indian 500 CC Twin. Good condition, can
have minor scratches. $295. CALL BILL C
M-1 V-73222. M-10 L-10
beautiful German Shepherds, registered,
yr. old and have had all permanent
hots. Excellent temperament, leash
rained and very good with children.
reasonable to right home. Phone KI 2-
559 in Eudora. 10-23
I. Refrigerator, apt. size stove, large study table, complete mohlair sofa and chair. Heavy oak davernport, full size with extra springs, 3-drawer dresser with mirror. See at 1640 N.H. or CALL VI 3-1836.
10 speed racing bicycle for sale—$80.
Call VI 3-8289, ask for Dave. 9-28
Westinghouse Front Load Automatic Washer. Good condition. $35. CALL VI 3-2454 after 5:30 p.m. 9-28
2 Registered German Shepherd dogs; one pure white, reasonably priced. Contact Henry Breechelsen, Phone TU 3-6507, Wellsville. 9-28
Apartment Sized Furniture; gas stove,
cooks fine, $23. Revolving book-stand.
$13.50. Metal typing table, $3.25. Singled-
bed frame with springs and innerspring
mattress (excellent condition), $47.50.
Table with folio bookshelves,
beige cloth with leaves, $12. Small
height, black mahogany finish, $42. Antique
carved oak chest, mahogany van-
nished, $92. CALL VI 3-2429 or UN 4-
3058.
USED TIRES! USED TIRES! Prices:
slashed to clear--ALL SIZES, small 13.
less than half of UU's for Ray
Stoneback's Discount Tire Center,
929-831 Mass. St.
AM-FM Radios at LOW DISCOUNT PRICES. G.E. with AFC cut to $28.00.
929-931 Mass, St. (G.E. Stereo Twinwiring Multiplex - $99.94). 10-19
Sunbeam Collegiate Electric Blanket—reg. list $24.95. Special early offer only $15.00—Layaway Now. Ray Stoneback's 929-931 Mass. St. 10-19
CAPE RECORDERS—at low discount
prices! As low as $15.00—$3.00 per month
it Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. St.
10-199.
HAIR DRYERS! Dominion, General Mills
Rocky Stoneback's. 929-331 Mass. St. 10-19
15 speed Schwinn Superior Bicycle, like
$80, CALL I V 3-1208.
$132—328
USED TVS- COME 'N' GET $E $5.00 each on as is sets. Delivered $6.00. Working sets $29.94 at Ray Stoneback's 929-931 Mass. St. 10-19.
1635 Honda Scoramber motorcycle. Prime Call 811 W-3-9652 can be seen at 1308-9-28
CALL WI 3-9652
1956 Chevy Bel-Air; 4-dr. auto.; radio;
2-3-3833 at 5 p.m. 9-25
Attention engineering students: complete
set of engineering drawing equipment
using CAD software to $20 to $30 worth
of mechanical pencils for $17.50. CALL VI 2-0759 after 6 w. m.
a. 25
1958 Dodge 4 dr., radio and htr. Auto, trans, and power steering. Good second car. Good tires. New motor. CALL VI 3-0131. 9-25
TYPEWRITERS, electronics, manuals, portables, sales, service, rentals, Olympia, Hermes, Royal, Smith-Corona, Olivetti, Adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter, 735-Mass., VI 3-3644. tf
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive,imecographed and bound for $4.25 per copy.CALL VI 2-1901 for free delivery
1958 Dodge, 2-dr., hardtop, steering,
air cond. Torture-Flight V-8, Black and
white, original owner. CALL Bob Hess at
VI 2-1527 after 6 p.m. or on weekends t
Printed Biology, notes. 70 pages. complete outlining of collections. Recommend for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 3-1428. Free delivery. $14.95.
Slaincee Kittens - Pureredbear Seal Point.
(2) 5 p.m., or on weekends. 9-25
after 5 p.m., or on weekends.
PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS: Smith- Corona "Silent," and Olympia "Deluxe" (German Made). Reasonably priced and excellent condition. CALL VI 2-3518, 9-29
960 TR-3 Roadster, new engine, wire wheels, in excellent condition through-out. CALL Chuck Lilgendahl at VI 3-1050. 9-25
956 Ford V-8 Convertible, black and
white. See at 1131 Ohio at
9:29
lestring long neck BANJO, ode model.
COL VI 2-1328. 9-30
MG Midget, 1962, white with soft top
cap, leather. $115.
V2-1/880 to 3.00 p.m. 9-30
Fender Bassman Amplifier and Show-
man Amplifier. Both in excellent condi-
tion. Perfect for the new band. Phone
Solly at VI 3-2016. 9-30
FOUND
Found set of 5 keys. Owner may have
seen the system. SEP H., Hinickson at 923 Main, 9-24
JINSHENG B. 1997 YUCHANG
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Friday. Sept. 25, 1964
White KU Student Harassed In South
"The white college student who was in Mississippi this summer had to make himself inconspicuous. He was harassed and insulted by many southern whites," Tom Coffman, Lyndon senior, said.
Coffman, a student in the School of Journalism, traveled on a grant he received from the Readers Digest. Tom wrote several articles for the New Republic and another for the Kansas City Star.
Coffman said he was refused hotel rooms and was followed several times because he was driving a car with an out-of-state license plate. "I could not imagine how the Negro must be affected," Coffman said.
Coffman met an eighteen-year-old Negro boy who was a high school drop-out. The boy seemed apathetic and inarticulate. After the youth joined the civil rights movement and was arrested and beaten, he began to take pride in himself. He began to stand up for his rights as a human being. Coffman said.
"The Negro finds his dignity," Coffman said, "when he stands for what he believes in and not being what the white man believes he should be. Shame develops when a Negro hides to keep from being beaten or killed when the man could become a dynamic personality."
Tom visited the headquarters of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). SNCC was the back-bone of the movement in Mississippi. Coffman said.
The organization started in 1961 with a sit-in in North Carolina. SNCC supplied three hundred volunteers, most of which were college students, a few professors and sociologists.
Coffman said spokesmen for SNCC told him they were turning down many applicants because of the murder of three workers in Philadelphia, Miss., and because many were amateurs.
"The project went under the name of the Council of Federated Organizations, of which SNCC was the guts," Coffman said. The other members were the Southern Christian Leadership Conference led by Dr. Martin Luther King, Congress of Racial Equality, and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. The National Council of Churches supported the civil rights program.
Coffman said the summer Mississippi project was patterned after local demonstrations. This was the first time that Mississippi had any intensive demonstrations.
"Mississippi had always been treated as an impossible state to work in. The attitude was that if Mississippi could be cracked it would prove to the South that integration, Negro advancement, and equal rights could work." Coffman said.
Coffman said there was some distortion in the nature of untruthful propaganda. The Southern white could not accept the fact that police brutality actually existed, Coffman said.
He said the southerner didn't actually know what was going on. A parent-child relationship exists between the two races, where the child has no rights.
The shift to equal rights represents too much a change to the existing fraternity of white men, Coffman said.
Coffman said that in the south, the white man is aware of his class and beyond the class there is the caste system. This extends into economics, voting rights, property rights, and sexual frustrations.
"The biggest problem is that people refer to the Negro problem as a white southern problem and it is not," Coffman said.
Seminar Rejects Bumstead As American Father Image
"We must get rid of the caricature of Dagwood Bumstead as the American father," Dr. Nick J. Colarelli, senior staff psychologist of the Topeka State Hospital, said yesterday morning in the keynote of the Third Annual Seminar on Juvenile Delinquency Prevention and Control held in the Kansas Union.
Colarelli told the statewide audience of law enforcement officers, juvenile judges, educators, and social workers that the major cause of juvenile delinquency was the home environment, and in particular, the lack of authority and disinterest of some fathers.
"There has been a reaction against the Victorian father," he said, "but perhaps an over-reaction."
COLARELLI said delinquency should not be considered as either an illness or a crime, but both.
A judge should not be given only the choice of putting an offender either in jail or under the care of an expert,
A delinquent with a psychological problem should also bear the responsibility for his actions in the same manner as a criminal. This forced acceptance of responsibility can be helpful in psychological treatment.
After Colarelli's speech, a panel discussion with Malcolm G. Copeland, juvenile judge, Topeka; Pauline B. Flynn, child welfare consultant, Chanute; R. K. House, marshal, Dodge City; and Erle Volkland, high school principal, Topeka; set down the problems for consideration.
THE SEMINAR participants then
Today the seminar will consider two other cases prepared by Lattimore. The committees will be composed of one or more representatives from each of the separate disciplines.
separated into groups according to their professions to consider one of three actual cases prepared by Hal Lattimore, department of law and psychiatry, Menninger Foundation, Topeka.
The final summary will be presented at 4 p.m. tomorrow. A written report will be sent to all the participants and to the legislature for possible legislative action on the recommendations.
James S. Kline, coordinator of police training in KU's Governmental Research Center, was in charge of this year's seminar.
The KU Governmental Research Center has sponsored this seminar for the past three years.
This year's edition of the KU student directory should be available for purchase by the last week in October, according to James E. Gunn, administrative assistant to the chancellor for university relations.
Student Directory Grows to New Size
Gunn said yesterday publication of the directory will be handled this year by the University instead of by the Student Publications Committee of the All Student Body as was the case last year.
Price of the Student Directory will be $.50, and may be purchased from the Kansas Union bookstore, library bookstore, and the Information Booth, on' Jayhawk Blyd.
In addition to new management, the directory will have a new size—the size of the Lawrence telephone directory. As in the past, the directory will contain division and departmental offices, student organizations, and a directory of faculty and students.
Groups Plan Activities
As a result of lack of space in yesterday's Kansan issue, the list of church schedules for the coming year could not be printed in full. Here are the remaining churches and their schedules.
This year the Jewish community fellowship B'nai Brith Hillel, will have Dr. Robert Sokal as its faculty advisor.
Jewish Community
Services will be 7:30 p.m. each Friday at the Jewish Community Center at 917 Highland Drive. These services are conducted by students and faculty.
Meetings are held at the Hillel House at the Jewish Community Center at 7:30 p.m. every other Sunday. There will be a get-acquainted service at 7:30 p.m., Friday. Following the service there will be an Oneg Shabbat.
At 5 p.m., October 4, the Hilli will have its first dinner meeting at the center. Election of officers for the coming semester will be held.
The Interfraternity Council voted last night to allow the pledge classes of KU's 27 social fraternities to send one representative to IFC meetings. The Interfraternity Pledge Council, which had functioned as a separate organization, was eliminated by the IFC last spring.
IFC Gives Pledges Mute Seats
The Breezy Fellowship of the Nazarene Church will be held at 6:30 p.m. Friday, at the home of Mr. Frank Rice, 2418 Ohio. The affair will be a barbecue.
Nazarene Church
The Leahona Fellowship, sponsored by the Reorganized Latted Day Saints, will have a Cost Supper at 5 p.m. Sunday at the Reorganized Latter Day Saints Center.
Later Dav Saints
Law Class Elects Heads
Sunday classes for college students meet in the center at 9:45 a.m. at 1900 University Dr.
Last night's action clarifies the status of fraternity $ ^{e} $ledge classes at KU by giving representatives the opportunity to observe IFC meetings. No voting or speaking privileges will be given to the pledge representatives, however.
Fraternity pledge classes may appoint a permanent representative or alternating delegates.
The Westminster Campus Christian Fellowship, formerly Westminster Fellowship of the Presbyterian Church, has merged with the Christian Church. The sponsor is the Rev Maynard H. Strothman. The UCCF Westminster Center is located at 1204 Oread.
Presbyterian Church
Officers were elected yesterday for the first year law class.
The Sunday evening program starts at 5:15 with a dinner. A program of planned activities follows the dinner.
IFC Judiciary Council members were elected at last night's meeting, held in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. They are Gary Gradinger, Prairie Village senior; Bob Hicks, Kansas City, Mo., junior; and Richard Burke, Dodge City senior.
Worship services are at 10:45 a.m. each Sunday at the center. Following the service is a coffee period at 11:45 a.m.
The UCCF will sponsor five ecumenical discussions starting Oct. 5. Thereafter they will meet once a week for eight weeks which will include five study courses.
WELCOME KANSAS UNIVERSITY STUDENTS
Linda Pfizer is president of UCCF and Dennis Pankrap is vice-president.
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
946 Vermont St.
Lyndon, I know that I'll get criticized — but I can't stop talking about La Pizza, 807 Vermont.
Jack Duncan, Raytown, Mo., was elected president. Charles Alphin, Lawrence, was elected vice president and the secretary-treasurer is Sylvia Meridith Appel, Wichita. Representing the class on the student bar association will be Robert I. Guenther, Augusta, who was elected student bar representative.
Each Sunday, Church Bus From
Hubert
Residence Halls & Methodist Student Center
For 11:00 Worship Service
WeaverS
Our 107th Year
STUDENT LAMPS
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DANISH MODERN STUDY Lamp only $3.29
DANISH MODERN
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cleverly designed lamp that permits maximum transmission of light without glare.
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Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
--doing a good job and has been effective since almost the turn of the century. So it slipped once, this was a matter of circumstances."
Monday, Sept. 28, 1964
62nd Year, No.7
Warren Report Reveals Lee Oswald Acted Alone
By Merriman Smith
WASHINGTON, —(UIP)— The judgment for history is that Lee Harvey Oswald, a rebellious frustrated Marxist fanatic, murdered John F. Kennedy in Dallas 10 months and 5 days ago "acting alone and without advice or assistane."
There is no evidence that he was part of any conspiracy, either foreign or domestic. There also is no evidence that the emotional climate in the Texas city had anything to do with his irrational act. The motives of the 24-year-old Oswald, who pumped three shots at the young president from the sixth floor of a Dallas office building, are obscure. But they appear linked to a broken home, an indifferent mother and an unsatisfactory marriage.
One consequence of the day of horror has been a tightening of Presidential security procedures.
But much more needs to be done to protect Lyndon B. Johnson and future occupants of the White House from potential assassins.
These are the conclusions of "the President's commission on the assassination of John F. Kennedy," otherwise known as the Warren Commission. It was set up by Johnson immediately after the Nov. 22, 1963, tragedy to "evaluate all the facts and circumstances surrounding the assassination."
The 888-page report was made public last night after painstaking investigation. The inquiry involved most branches of government and even reached overseas into Russia where Oswald lived for a while and where he met the girl who was to become his wife.
The report conceded that in view of Oswald's subsequent death at the hands of Dallas nightclub owner
★ ★
Students Satisfied
The Warren Commission Report on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy was received with satisfaction and relief by KU students yesterday following 10 months of rumors, discussion and speculation.
The report with its implication of the guilt of Lee Harvey Oswald and its criticism of the Federal Bureau of Investigation gained immediate acceptance among most KU students.
"It's almost what I'd expected to hear," said Joan Olson, Omaha, Neb. junior. "It seems logical. I'm glad the wrap-up is finally complete."
"It was generally what I'd expected," said Chuck Turpen, Salina junior. "I had decided long ago that he (Oswald) was guilty."
"The conclusions drawn pertaining to Oswald and the fact that he was not in collusion with anybody were probably true, considering the evidence," said Daniel Householder, Wichita senior.
"I was surprised to find that so much responsibility had been placed on the FBI," Householder said. "I was also surprised the FBI had as much information as they had on Oswald."
Householder said the FBI had interviewed Oswald 17 days before the assassination, and had been keeping watch on his activities since his return from Russia. Householder said the Commission stated this material should have been given to the Secret Service.
"The report was good in that it will strengthen not only the FBI, but the Secret Service," Householder said. "The Secret Service has been
The Commission's criticism of the FBI's inability to work with officials in Dallas will probably cause some controversy, Bill Kerfoot, Lawrence junior, said.
"Some people might feel the Commission report will clear the reputation of the city, Dallas," said Connie Church, Dallas, Tex., junior. "But the city cannot be held responsible its reputation didn't have to be cleared."
"The assassination itself was so baffling that I guess we'll have to accept the conclusion that Oswald did it alone," said Lacy Banks, Kansas City senior. "Sometimes I think there is some missing evidence. Nevertheless it happened."
Calling the report thorough and excellently done, Gary Walker, Wichita junior, said he didn't agree with foreign criticism that the assassination was a cover-up job. Many Europeans had considered the assassination part of a Communist plot to take over the United States.
"I think it got as close to the root of the matter as could be done," Walker said.
Citizens Take First Steps To Draft Judicial Reforms
"There may be some refuting of the report," said Jim Tschechtelin, Prairie Village senior. "A lot of people would like to think it was Communist instigated. They point it out as an example of infiltration or moral decline in our country. While this might be possible, you can't automatically point to the assassination and draw this conclusion from it."
The first step in reforming the Kansas judicial system since the original state constitution was first written was taken last week.
Jack Ruby it was impossible to say categorically that no one else was involved in the assassination. But it added:
The conclusion of the "Citizens Conference on Modernization of the Kansas Courts," was only the first process to update and streamline the Kansas judicial system. About 150 citizens met in the Kansas Union Thursday, Friday, and Saturday to discuss various phases of the outmoded court system.
"If there is any such evidence it has been beyond reach of all the investigative agencies and resources of the United States and has not come to the attention of this commission."
Members of the committee for drafting include David Prager, Topeka District Judge; John E. Blake, Kansas City lawyer; James Logan, Dean of the KU Law School; Philip H. Lewis, Topeka attorney; and Fred Six, Lawrence attorney.
Following the conference, a committee was formed to draft a bill which will eventually be submitted to the people to be voted on.
AFTER SEVERAL addresses by distinguished men of the law profession, the conferees held panel discussions. Saturday at the final general assembly a summary statement of suggested reforms was accepted by the conference members.
The report failed to convince the assassin's mother, Mrs. Marguerite Oswald. She continued to insist "there is no proof" her son killed Kennedy. And a Communist youth publication said in Moscow that the assassination was the result of a right-wing reactionary coup.
After a bill has been drafted, it will be presented to the Kansas Judicial Council for approval. Following their approval the bill will be presented to the state legislature and submitted to the citizens of Kansas to be voted on.
As for the actual events in Dallas last Nov. 22-24, there were no real surprises in this fascinating, heavily documented report written for the ages.
In essence, this is the U.S. government's verdict on what the report called "a cruel and shocking act of violence directed against a man, a family, a nation, and against all mankind."
And it declared that two days later when Ruby fatally wounded Oswald in the basement of the Dallas jail, he did so acting alone and not as part of any conspiracy. It said the two men had never known each other.
The seven-man commission, headed by Chief Justice Earl Warren, found that Oswald shot Kennedy and Texas Gov. John B. Connally Jr. from a sixth floor window in the southeast corner of the Texas School Book Depository.
It said that approximately 45 minutes later, Oswald gunned down policeman J. D. Tippit near the intersection of 10th and Patton streets, and ran off muttering either "poor damn cop," or "poor dumb cop."
The commission addressed itself to two questions—the "what" and the "why" of Nov. 22. The "what" was Oswald's guilt, and it was stated in the report in these words;
On the basis of the evidence the commission has found that Lee Harvey Oswald (1) owned and possessed the rifle used to kill President Kennedy and wound Governor Connally, (2) brought this rifle into the depository building on the morning of the assassination, (3) was present, at the time of the assassination, at the window from which the shots were fired, (4) killed Dallas police officer J. D. Tippit in an apparent attempt to escape, (5) resisted arrest by drawing a fully loaded pistol and attempting to shoot another police officer, (6) lied to the police after his arrest concerning substantive matters.
(7) attempted, in April, 1963, to kill Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker, and (8) possessed the capability with a rifle which would have enabled him to commit the assassination.
"On the basis of these findings the commission has concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald was the assassin of President Kennedy."
It reached two basic conclusions. The first was that Oswald, a strange, psychotic personality, had the capability of killing a prominent man such as the President to take out a grudge against a society that he felt had frustrated him at every turn.
Having decided Oswald's guilt, the commission set out to find the "why" of the killing.
The second was that there were deficiencies and laps in the organizations set up to protect the President of the United States.
Weather
The weather bureau forecast calls for fair and warmer weather tonight and tomorrow. The low tonight will be near 50 following a predicted daytime high in the lower 70's.
Wendy
Mimi Frink
Photo by Don Black
KU Queen Entrant To 'Royal' Chosen
Her first visit to the American Royal Horse and Livestock Show will be doubly exciting for Mimi Frink. Lawrence junior.
When she visits the Royal for the first time, Oct. 8 to 11, Mimi will be KU's entrant in the competition for queen of the event, held each year in Kansas City.
Mimi, representing Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, was selected from among 23 candidates from women's living groups at a dinner and competition held Friday night in the Kansas Union.
Besides visiting the American Royal shows and exhibits, Mimi will attend a luncheon, a party at the Saddle and Sirloin Club and the Coronation Ball. Anticipating the event as a "marvelous experience," Mimi said Saturday she was both honored and happy to represent KU.
Formal judging of the contestants,
representing land-grant or Big Eight
colleges, is scheduled for Oct. 8.
Candidates will wear floor-length
white formals and be judged on personal beauty, poise, personality,
grooming, talent and educational and social background.
The American Royal queen and two princesses will be crowned at a Coronation Ball the night of Oct. 10. The remaining candidates will be honored as Ladies of Her Majesty's Royal Court.
Mimi was a runner-up to the SUA Carnival queen in 1963. In 1962 she was Miss Lawrence and fourth runner-up to Miss Kansas in the Miss Universe contest.
She is a member of Angel Flight and of a newly-formed honorary theatre group.
The first four projects of a master plan for campus development expected to prepare the campus for a 20,000 student enrollment in the early 1970's have been completed
By Glen Phillips
Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor in charge of operations, said that two more buildings are in the architectural planning stage and construction is slated to begin soon.
Building Plan Meets Growing Enrollment
The master plan, which was introduced early in 1962, is the latest step in a construction boom that has lasted for about 15 years and will continue for another 10.
The present major construction flurry on campus began about 1950. It was brought about by the tremendous enrollment increases after World War II when thousands of GI's returned to school on the GI Bill and enrollment at KU jumped to almost 10,000 in the late forties.
In 1950 the enrollment figures began to taper off, but the economical situation was sufficiently improved that the state legislature could begin to make allotments for construction to catch up with the inflated student counts.
The present plan was instituted in late 1961 to provide a flexible guide for use of the land and facilities available to the university.
in developing a complex of multi-purpose classrooms centrally located on campus. Rooms in the complex will be used for English, social science and humanities courses. This would make it possible for the undergraduate who must take courses in all these fields to get to classes with the minimum amount of travel.
Lawton said that the planners were primarily interested in getting full use from the area along Jayhawk Blvd.
Administrators now are interested
The specialized buildings such as Malott and the Engineering building are placed around the perimeter of the campus. Students who have declared major interests generally spend most of their time in the building devoted to that major, Lawton pointed out. Therefore, when a student declares a major he will move off the hill away from the general class area, he said.
The completed parts of the project are:
- The laboratory addition to Dyche Hall (8840,060).
- The $1.8 million additions to *Nation Library*.
- The new Blake Hall which houses the departments of sociology, social work, political science, human relations and the Governmental Research Center ($720,000).
- Appropriations and architectural plans have been made for:
- The Engineering building finished a year ago ($1.9 million).
New Fraser Hall, to be located immediately east of old Fraser.
A new gymnasium, to be east of Naismith Drive from Allen Field House.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday, Sept. 28, 1964
Hoopla
Amateurs vs. Pros
By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst
LONDON-On Oct. 19, out of some 35 million voters eligible, it is expected that between 25 and 26 million Britons actually will cast ballots in national elections.
But so close is the outcome expected to be in the race between the Conservatives led by Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home and the Laborites led by Harold Wilson, some analysts are saying that as few as 125,000 votes in the right places could decide the winner.
The result is that political forecasters on both sides are reduced to mathematical tricks showing how a switch of one per cent or less here and there could give either a 25 or 30 seat majority necessary to govern safely.
The changes in the two views were becoming apparent as early as 1945.
Back of it lies a gradual melding of political viewpoints formerly at great odds—the Conservatives in all-out defense of capitalism and Labor in all-out opposition, founded on a demand for public ownership.
In that campaign year, Winston Churchill said "There is a broadening field for state ownership and enterprise"—a remark which sounded as if it came out of a Labor's book.
In the same year, Labor party spokesman Herbert Morrison said "A case can be made for private enterprise in appropriate fields."
In this campaign year the extreme voice of left-wing Labor, demanding ever-increasing nationalization of industry at home and neutrality abroad, has been silenced.
Both parties, for example, claim credit for Britain's socialistic national health service, a cradle-to-the-grave service far more extensive than any U.S. politician has dared to propose.
In its years in power between 1945 and 1951. Labor nationalized the steel and coal industries, trucking, the power industries and the railroads.
The Conservatives, committed to free enterprise, denationalized steel and the trucking industry upon their return to power in 1951 but retained and even expanded the government hold elsewhere.
In much the same manner as would be employed by the Laborites, the Conservative government has used its power to bring new industry to the north of England, notably the automotive industry.
Lancashire, hard hit by the decline of the textile industry, has been re-vitalized with the arrival of new industry and an emphasis on the more expensive textiles, leaving the cheaper goods to Hong Kong and elsewhere.
The differences between the two parties boil down then largely to a question of detail and which can inspire in the British voter the greatest trust.
On this score, the heaviest responsibility falls upon the two leaders—a contest between what the London Sunday Times called "The studied and skillful amateurism" of Douglas-Home, and the "complete professionalism without adornment or concealment" of Wilson.
HOW TO FEEL LIKE A GREAT WORKER THROUGH POSITIVE THINKING
LATIN AMERICA
© 1964 HERB STOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
On Tour
Presidential Elections In Retrospect
(Editor's Note: This is the first article of a series on American elections reprinted from the "Atlanta Constitution." The articles were prepared for presentation by Wilmer D. Jones, professor of history at the University of Georgia.)
It should be noted at the outset that the story of the American elections is a highly complex one, and in the early period is even more so because there was no uniform system for selecting and voting for candidates. It was left to the states to decide who would vote, and how the presidential electors would be chosen.
THE STORY BEGINS in September, 1788, when the Congress of the Confederation passed a resolution decreeing that the electors of the president and vice-president should be appointed on the first Wednesday in January, that they should meet in their states and cast their votes the first Wednesday in February, and that the new Congress should meet the first Wednesday in March and announce the result. Thereafter nature was left to take its course.
The leaders in the various states were unanimous in the opinion that Washington should be made president, and the feeling was that the vice-president should, therefore, come from a northern state. Many thought that John Adams, who held no office where his services were needed, would be a logical choice. Beyond the understandings reached among various state leaders, there were no nominations of candidates at the election of 1789.
AN EVEN MORE perplexing question arose—how should the electors be chosen? The time was short, and decisions had to be made quickly by the state governments. In 5 of the 11 states participating (North Carolina and Rhode Island had not yet accepted the constitution) the electors were chosen by the state legislatures, and in the others the
systems were such that there was little popular participation in the choosing of the electors. Even if there had been a direct election of the electors by the voters at this time, only about 25 per cent of the people would have cast ballots, for the franchise was still highly restricted in most states.
DURING THE NEXT FOUR years the parties became somewhat more disciplined and effective, and each worked in the states to secure electors of 1800. The decisive victory in this respect was won by Aaron Burr, who utilized the Society of St. Tammany to secure a Republican legislature in New York. Thus, when the same four candidates were nominated in 1800 as in 1796, the result was just the
opposite. By carrying the South, New York and most of Pennsylvania's vote, Jefferson and Burr defeated Adams and Pinckney, but because the Republican electors had cast their two votes along strict party lines, Jefferson and Burr ended with the same number of votes.
This deadlock threw the election into the House of Representatives, where, after considerable balloting, Jefferson finally was victorious. It was obvious, however, that this same situation was likely to occur again and again in the future unless a constitutional amendment were adopted to change the voting procedure of the electors. Congress, therefore, finally drew up the 12th Amendment which required that the electors distinguish between their presidential and vice-presidential votes, and it was quickly adopted by the states.
THE ELECTION OF 1804 was almost uncontested. The Republicans at their caucus nominated Jefferson and George Clinton of New York, but the Federalists held no caucus and decided to "leave the arena free for the Democrats to squabble in." The result was that the Republicans carried all of the states except Connecticut, Delaware and two votes in Maryland.
The revolt against the "Virginia Dynasty" which had begun in 1808 reached full flower in 1812. The New York machine had now fallen into the hands of De Witt Clinton, who was determined to have the presidency for himself. Therefore, when the Republican caucus nominated Madison and Elbridge Gerry of Massachusetts, the New Yorkers nominated Clinton, and a Federalist named Jared Ingersoll of Pennsylvania was given second place on the ticket. The result was a sectional election. Madison
carried the South, plus Pennsylvania and Ohio, while New York and the New England states supported Clinton in his losing effort.
THE FEDERALIST PARTY, which had been dying since 1804, passed almost out of existence after the 1812 election, and the Virginia Dynasty continued to dominate the Republican Party. Madison put the whole weight of the administration behind James Monroe, and he was reluctantly accepted, together with Daniel D. Tompkins of New York, at a congressional caucus. The Federalists offered no slate, but some of the leaders indicated a preference for Rufus King of New York. The result was another lop-sided victory for the Republicans, as King carried only Massachusetts, Connecticut and Delaware. If there were practically no opposition to Monroe in 1816, there was none at all in the election of 1820. At that time he won a victory of 231-1, the odd vote being cast for John Quincy Adams by an elector who may have been guided by a desire that Washington should be the only unanimously elected candidate, by his dislike of Monroe, or both.
By 1822 there was a widespread dissatisfaction with the congressional caucus system of nomination which had permitted Jefferson and Madison to designate their successors to the presidency.
IN HIS ELECTORAL VOTE Andrew Jackson led Adams 99-84, and he probably also defeated Adams in the popular vote, but it was a different story in the House of Representatives. Adams carried all of the New England states, New York, Maryland, Louisiana, Kentucky, Missouri and Ohio. Thereafter the Jackson forces charged that Adams had purchased Clay's support in Kentucky and Ohio by promising to make him Secretary of State, and, when Adams actually gave Clay that position in his cabinet, Andrew Jackson was determined to defeat the makers of that "corrupt bargain" at the next election. With the election of 1828, the "Jackson Era" in American history was to open.
In the election of 1828 there were still no parties as such, and both candidates, John Adams and Andrew Jackson, were Republicans. But by this time the party was fairly well divided between the "Adams Men" and the "Jackson Men." It proved to be an unequal contest. Jackson's popularity as a victorious general enabled him to beat Adams decisively both in the popular and electoral vote.
(Continued Sept. 30)
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University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Some Fun Is Free If You Look For It
By Suellen McKinley
o by crea-
lams titio-
nkson
the
gain"
the
kisson
was to
The decision of what to do for entertainment might best be made by deciding to do whatever is free.
At the University of Kansas, there are a number of activities that cost only a student's time.
here and dams Re- the provided and need to season'sener-dams popular
spaper m
an
Many free activities are sponsored by the Student Union Activities organization. In the area of Arts and Exhibits, the SUA holds three or four art forums a year. These forums include a talk by an instructor of art or art history and a question and answer period.
1904,
1912
asocia-
Rep.
N.Y.
N.Y.
naterna.
$ 3 a
ched in
Satur.
dialidays,
d class
28.
Also included in SUA is the Designer-Craftsman Show, at which is displayed the art work of students and faculty.
Editor
, Bob
assistant
Ellis,
Russ
Seasonal activities at the Kansas Union include after-game receptions for football fans, and a gift wrapping demonstration as the Christmas season approaches.
The SUA Hospitality committee sponsors several television parties featuring closed-circuit programs during the year.
ENT
Among the forums offered by the SUA, the Featured Speakers series that brought Madame Nhu's father to the University a year ago, will offer KU students a chance this year to hear Associate Justice William O. Douglas speak.
Editors
NT
manager
Manag-
vertis-
Classi-
Tom
manager;
1 Man-
ndising
The Last Lecture series is based on the topic, "If this was your last lecture, what would you say to humanity?" This and other forums on poetry, modern books, jazz and classical music, current events, minority opinion, films, and humanities, are also sponsored by the SUA.
For those who miss the hometown excitement of election night, there is the Election Night Party in November at the Kansas Union with television sets, open telephone lines to Kansas City, and discussions of the turn of events by political science professors.
As part of the SUA's Recreation Program, the Quarterback Club shows narrated films of the previous Saturday's football game. The Chess Club and Bridge Club tournaments are also part of the SUA Recreation program.
The KU-Y takes a controversial subject and some humorous debaters for a free evening's entertainment at an English-Style Debate. Members of the audience express their opinions by changing sides in the room as often as their minds are changed by the debaters.
For women students, membership in the AWS (Associated Women Students) is free and entitles them to a number of things including student-faculty coffees, fashion shows, and for seniors, a key to their living place.
The Art Museum in Spooner Hall will have on display five or six major exhibitions this year in addition to a fine collection of art displayed the year around. The first exhibition this year, still life from the collection of Oscar Salzer, will open Oct. 4. Receptions are held on Sunday afternoons with the special exhibitions.
Dyche Hall, which houses the Museum of Natural History, provides another opportunity for hours of free browsing.
Not to be left out is the "any-number-can-play" activity in tramural sports. You sign up with your living group and prepare to meet your fellow student on the football
field, and the basketball or volleyball courts. Those not athetically inclined are always welcome to the spectator section.
Official Bulletin
Students with the courage to try out might find that being a member of one of the KU music groups or theatrical presentations might suit them.
TODAY
CATHOLIC MASS. 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM, 4:30 p.m.
1000 SQM NITRATE OF CO2
Bi. Cr. Mg. Nitrate - F. Carbonol.
The cost of living is going up everywhere, but at KU some of the "best things in life" are still free.
One cannot visit Israel without gaining a profound appreciation of the ambition, industry, and ability of the Jews of Israel as they work at the task of trying to make a success of the new nation.
NEWMAN FORUM Lecture, 8 p.m.
Forum Room, Kansas Union. "Dostoevsk'i—Dr Bernard Hall, staff psychiatrist,
Mennin Institute, Topeka.
He was there to participate in a religious workshop held in Jerusalem, conducted by the Department of Hebraic Studies of New York University. One of 15 professors selected to participate, Dean Moore spent the summer listening to lecturers and traveling around the country.
This was the feeling William J. Moore, Dean of the KU School of Religion, gained from a stay in the country this summer.
CHILD DEVELOPMENT Movie, 7:30
p.m. 426 Lindley Hall.
Dean Observes Work In Israel
"I have been in Palestine before, but I never had quite such a wonderful opportunity to study as I did this summer." Dean Moore said.
TOMORROW
"I was impressed with the great strides made in the development of the country in the four years since I have been there. New cities have been built from scratch and there have been improvements in the development of agriculture and industry," he said.
Travel was under the direction of Menashe Harel, professor of historical geography at the Hebrew University. The group visited archeological sites and places of importance in ancient and modern Israel.
The fifty workshop lecturers included ex-Prime Minister Ben Gurion, President Shazzar, Justice of the Supreme Court Silberg, and Speaker of the House Knessat, as well as professors from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv.
He said he felt that although the nation has its back to the sea and is living in the face of danger, the masses of the people are not overwhelmed by it.
OPEN FORUM, 2 p.m. Big Eight Room,
Kunming University, Reconciliation
Institute, Stuart Street, Kunming
CATHOLIC INQUIRY Forum, 7 p.m.
St. Lawrence Center, 1915 Stratford Rd.
QUACK CLUB Clinic, 6:30 p.m., Robinson Pool. DEVELOPMENT Movie, 7:30
p.m., 428 Lindley Hall
CATHOLIC MASSES. 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m.
St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford.
WESTERN CIV. Discussion, 9 p.m.
Lawrence Center, 1915 Stratford Rd.
"There is a dead seriousness and intensity about Jewish life and they live confidently. They know what they want and they know they are going to get it," he said.
QUACK CLUB Clinics 6:30 p.m. Ko-
soo soo, Seoul
CHILD DEVELOPMENT Movie, 7:30
Five KU drama students who toured Europe this summer said Europeans regard the November election in this country as a "choice of the lesser of two evils."
Europeans
The group found no Europeans who wanted Senator Goldwater to win, but they only considered President Johnson as "okay."
Sylvia Groth, Mayville, N.C. graduate; Jo Anne Smith, Wellington senior; Bill Bowersock, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Stanley R. (Rick) Friesen, Prairie Village senior, and Thomas Winston, Dallas. Tex. graduate, spent three months touring Europe and playing for student audiences.
The group also attended a summer session at the University of Vienna at Strobl. Austria.
ASIDE FROM theater experience, the KU troupe members felt they gained a new insight into the people.
They found that European students were more aware of the world around them, and are following the political campaign with avid interest.
In connection with the Goldwater-Johnson presidential race, the group found no one who wanted Goldwater to win.
"To Europeans, the election is a choice of the lesser of two evils." Miss Smith said. "Johnson is o.k. but they are very, very much afraid of Goldwater. They are afraid he could lead us into war, and Europeans do not want any more war."
"They are not worried about the threat of Communism," she said, "but they are very dependent upon us for support, and are afraid Goldwater withdrew this support."
"THERE IS almost unanimous reverence, devotion, awe and grief for Kennedy." Miss Groth said. "And to a man, everyone I talked to expressed the belief that there was some sort of conspiracy connected with his assassination. No one could explain it, and they specifically blame communists, rightists, leftists or anyone, but they cannot accept the fact that it was the work of one man."
"There were a few problems because of the language barrier," Miss Smith said. "But this really only contributed mystery. They couldn't understand all the subtleties, but you knew by their smiles that they were enjoying it."
The students described European audiences as marvelous, tremendously enthusiastic and well informed about the theater.
Performing in Utrecht, Holland was the most satisfying experience for the group, because language was not a problem.
"The audience screamed and yelled their appreciation," Bowersock said. "It was the greatest audience I ever played for."
Jay
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IN AUSTRIA the troupe performed for Susan Nicoletti, regarded as one of the greatest European actresses. Winston said she is as famous in Europe as Helen Hayes is in America. They performed 13 musical comedy numbers for Miss Nicoletti. Three weeks later Miss Nicoletti and a group of European actors performed for the KU students.
Comparing American and European audiences, the students found that European students were more informed and appreciative, but did not mind booing and hissing if a performance was bad.
"EUROPEANS THINK that musical comedy comes naturally to Americans, and that we are just being ourselves when we perform it." Bowersock said.
Watching Austrian versions of "Annie Get Your Gun" and "West Side Story" were amusing for the KU students, Miss Groth said, because of the language problems.
The students found the Europeans prefer plays that have social significance, rather than the psychological dramas of playwrights like Americans Arthur Miller and Tennessee Williams.
AS AMERICAN student actors, the KU students were a curiosity, Bowersock said. Miss Groth explained that there are no universities in Europe where students can earn degrees in theater and receive a liberal arts education at the same time.
Friesen summed up the group's experience as "valuable because we worked before audiences who didn't expect anything and audiences who demanded a lot. And all of up gained a new insight into Europeans and their way of life."
"We were well received because we were students," Miss Smith said. "A European student has a great deal of prestige. He is respected by adults and is expected to lead his country," she added.
Microwave TV Planned Between KU. Med Center
Education via a microwave TV installation will hopefully be used between KU and the Kansas City Medical Center this spring.
The closed circuit television will enable students here to view courses or lectures at the Center and viceversa. In this way, students taking specialized courses will not have to commute back and forth.
Presently under construction, the television equipment consists of a 210-foot relay station near Bonner Springs and specialized equipment it both schools.
The two-way circuit was made possible by a $25,000 grant to the Medical Center from the National Fund for Medical Education.
The estimated cost of construction and first year of operation is $50,000. Advanced chemistry and statistics will be the first courses taught.
Future hopes are that eventually simultaneous two-way communication will be possible.
The Medical Center, a pioneer in TV teaching, had in 1949 the first permanent installation of closed circuit television in the world.
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, Sept. 28, 1964
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Little Does Big Job
Monday, Sept. 28, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Syracuse Gains Sweet Revenge
By Russ Corbitt (Sports Editor)
SYRACUSE, N.Y. —(Special)—A Syracuse sophomore named Little looked mighty big to the KU Javhawks Saturday.
Floyd Little, highly-touted Syracuse halfback, left little doubt as to his ability on the football field, as he rambled over the KU defenders for five touchdowns. Little's 30 points paced the Orangemen to a 38-6 romp over the Jayhawks, the worst defeat tasted
by KU since the 43-0 Oklahoma game in 1958.
Following outstanding blocking by his teammates, the sophomore speedster picked up 159 yards on the ground on 16 carries, caught two passes for 47 yards, and returned two kickoffs for 48 yards. Little opened his scoring spree with a run of 15 yards for Syracuse's second touchdown, and followed with T.D. runs of 1, 55, 3 and 19 yards.
THE ORANGEMEN, who were upset by Boston College last weekend and still remembered the 10-0 upset handed them by KU last year, showed they meant business from the opening kickoff. Quarterback Wally Mahle rolled out for 15 yards on the first play from scrimmage, and directed Syracuse down the field on 13 plays for a 77-yard touchdown drive. A pass for the extra points was incomplete.
Reds Overcome Phillies
(By United Press International)
The Cincinnati Reds would have "gladly settled for second place" a week ago, according to Frank Robinson, but the only thing they'll settle for now is another crack at the New York Yankees in the World Series.
The Reds, staging one of baseball's greatest comebacks, are moving toward a possible rematch with the Yankees, and Robinson relishes the thought.
A WEEK AGO today, the Phillies held a 61% game lead over the Reds and the St. Louis Cardinals. Then Gene Mauch's crew hit the skids. When the Phils dropped their seventh straight, 14-8, to the Milwaukee Braves yesterday, they fell to second place, a game back of Cincinnati and only a half-game ahead of the Cardinals.
"This is a mighty funny game," added Robinson. "We had our hearts set on finishing no worse than second last Monday. Now we'd sure be unhappy with that."
The Reds, with Robinson driving in two runs with a double, caught the Phillies in yesterday's opener at New York and pulled a game ahead by winning the nightcap behind the five-hit pitching of Joey Jay (11-11). The first game victory went to Jim O'Toole (17-7) with help from Sammy Ellis.
THE PHILLIES. meanwhile, closed out their home schedule with one of their saddest performances. Milaukee pounded Jim Bunning (18-7) and four successors for 22 hits, Lee Maye showing the way with four singles and a double.
It mattered little that Johnny Callison hit three homers and drove in four runs for the Phillies, who now have lost 10 of their last 12 while the Reds have put together a 12-1 streak. Callison hit one homer off Tony Cloninger (18-14) and two off reliever Chi Chi Olivo.
The Cardinals retained their pennant hopes by winning their fifth straight over the Pirates, 5-0, the
Intramural Managers To Meet Tomorrow
A meeting of all intramural managers will be held at 4 p.m. tomorrow in room 202 of Robinson Gymnasium. Rules of the fall intramural sports will be discussed.
Chicago Cubs knocked San Francisco 41/2 games off the pace with a 4-1 and 4-2 sweep, and the Houston Colts posted a 1-0, 12 inning victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers.
NEW YORK—(UPI)—Dick Sisler was so hoarse he could hardly talk but nothing in the world was going to keep him from making that phone call.
With the second quarter only three minutes old. Little ran the score to 12-0 with his 15-yard jaunt. The touchdown was set up by a 37-yard pass from Rich King to Little. Again the pass attempt for the extra points failed.
Cuping his hands around the mouthpiece so that he might be heard better, he said to the party on the other end:
Another second-quarter Syracuse touchdown was set up by KU quarterback Bob Skahan's fumble on his own 18-yard line. Little carried the final yard for the score, and again the pass on the conversion attempt failed.
"I'm not saying for sure yet we're going to win, but I'll guarantee you this club won't choke up."
THE JAYHAWKS, who had been pushed all over the field in the first half, came back on the field for the third quarter and looked like they might be able to make up the 18-point first-half deficit.
Sisler was talking to Freddie Hutchinson, the man he's filling in for as manager of the Cincinnati Reds.
Thirteen plays after the second-half kickoff, the Jayhawks had covered 65 yards and earned their first touchdown of the day, as Quarterback Steve Renko went over from the one-yard line. Unfortunately, it was also their last. Gary Duff's kick for the extra point was blocked.
"We still have a tough week ahead of us and we're not spending our World Series money yet," he said. "But we're not going to blow it. At least I hope not. I hope the manager doesn't foul one up. I don't believe that will happen, either," he laughed, nervously reaching for a cigarettes.
Syracuse, apparently insulted by the gall of the Kansas visitors to score on them, roared back. Two
minutes and three plays after Mike Johnson's kickoff, Little scampered 55 yards over and through the KU defense for his 18th point of the day. A kick by Roger Smith ran the Syracuse lead to 25-6.
But Little was still not content, and added two more six-pointers to the Orangemen's score before the afternoon ended.
KU'S OLD nemesis, the fumble, was again a hampering factor. Losing possession of five of six fumbles not only cost the Jayhawks scoring opportunities, but also presented Syracuse with several easy tallies.
Coach Jack Mitehell, bemoaning his team's sound defeat, termed the effort, "by far the poorest defensive performance in my seven years at Kansas."
years in Texas. Mitchell said several defensive changes, involving both personnel and tactics, will be made before Saturday's game with Wyoming in Lawrence.
KU's backfield, already hampered by injuries, suffered another blow at Syracuse when Willie Ray Smith, junior halfback, reinjured his right knee. Smith may be lost for the remainder of the season.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Sept. 28, 1964
Young KU Politicians Plan For Elections
KU Collegiate Young Republicans, CYR, and Collegiate Young Democrats are entering a period of intense political activity which will last until election day.
Members of the KU CYR Club will have booths in every large dormitory and representatives in all organized houses this week as part of their membership drive.
The KU CYD Club will meet 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Assistant Professor George W. Brown of the KU political science department will be the guest speaker. Volunteers will be sought at the meeting to help poll Douglas County precincts and to register voters. The meeting will be open to all interested persons, and membership cards will be sold.
Congressman William H. Avery, candidate for governor; Congressman Robert F. Ellsworth; and Robert C. Londerholm, candidate for attorney general, will be present at an informal coffee session 9 a.m. Saturday
at the Eldridge Hotel. All KU CYR members are invited to attend and meet the candidates.
Following the coffee, the male members of the CYR Club will put up pole cards and yard signs in Lawrence. The women will work on projects at the Douglas County Republican Headquarters and help decorate for the Traditional Fall Party to be held that afternoon. Projects will end by 11:30 a.m.
The Traditional Fall Party will be held from 4 to 6 p.m. at the Shanty, 644 Mass. Membership cards will be sold at the door.
THE COLLEGIATE YOUNG Democrats, CYD, are also planning functions. CYD will attend a barbeque at 6 p.m. Oct. 10 at the Douglas County 4-H Fairgrounds at which Harry Wiles, Democratic candidate for governor, will speak. Several students will drive cars in a car caravan which will accompany Wiles to several towns in the county prior to the barbeque.
Student Court Functions As Judicial Branch of ASC
Robert O. McDowell, Lawrence third year law student, will be placed in nomination for chief justice of the student court by James K. Logan, dean of the Law School. The nomination will go before the ASC in its first meeting tomorrow.
The first session of the student court will be Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the court room of Green Hall. Appeals of cases from last spring will be heard then.
The primary function of the student court in recent years has been to rule on appeals of traffic tickets.
But in the past, the court has decided election disputes, interpreted the ASC Constitution, and arbitrated disagreements between student organizations.
The most controversial recent decision was made last fall when the court decided that, because of constitutional grounds, parking tickets are invalid unless the policeman signs his name.
The student court consists of a chief justice and six associate jus-
Are there any limits in the teaching of religion in public schools in Kansas?
AFTER SPENDING CHRISTMAS with their American "families," they will travel together, probably in the East.
This visit is being handled by Loyd and Susan Keperly, Peace Corps volunteers who recently taught at the National Women's Teachers University. Susan taught the girls English. Loyd, a 1959 graduate of KU, taught physical education and was a Red Cross organizer.
"IT TURNED OUT to be the best propaganda for the United States. They all returned full of enthusiasm and ideas," Susan said.
The program was started last year when interested students asked Susan and Loyd how they could go to America. Eighteen girls came here then.
Most of the psychology majors are interested in guidance counseling. Since this is not offered at the two teaching colleges in Colombia, they must study here. All have applied for the ten scholarships the U.S. offers in Colombia.
ities similar to the U.S. Supreme Court.
If religion is taught, how and when should it be taught—and who should teach it—clergy or regular teachers?
Religion, Schools Topic of Seminar
The chief justice is nominated by the Dean of the Law School, with the approval of the ASC.
Since all the girls are studying either English education or psychology, they will visit schools. Many will attend sixth grade classes where the students are studying Latin America.
He then appoints six associate justices, three prosecuting and three defense attorneys, who must be approved by the ASC.
Thirty-eight Colombian students from the National Women's Teachers University in Bogota, Colombia, are looking for American homes this Christmas.
CLASSES IN Bogota will end November 28. Shortly after that the girls will board a special plane for Miami. From there they will take buses to the homes where they have invitations.
To what extent should the government support parochial or private schools?
Students Plan American Xmas
These are some of the controversial questions which will be discussed and answered at the third annual University of Kansas School of Law and Society Institute here. Sept. 29-30.
Dr. Franklin Littell, noted in the field of theological history and a professor at the Chicago Theological Seminary, will give the opening address at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday.
The topic of the two-day seminar is "Religion, Education and the Law." This is one of several programs offered by the KU law school at which professionals and the layman discuss common problems.
Robert C. Casad, associate professor of law, will speak on the teaching of religion in primary and secondary public schools. Casad will explain how far teachers may go in teaching religion.
In the afternoon session Dr. Everett Kircher will talk about educational issues of religion in the schools. Kircher, a professor of education at Ohio State University, will tell the group if it is feasible to use the Bible in the teaching of moral or literary values. Official prayer in the schools has been outlawed by the Supreme Court, but other readings of scripture may be possible.
On Sept. 30, discussion will entail public support of private or parochial schools. Dr. George La Noue, of the Teachers College at Columbia University, will speak on financial support to church or church related schools.
GREAT ACTION SLACKS
Join the actives in the greatest of agile, trim-tapered casual slacks by Caper Casuals. They retain their crisp, clean look from classroom to intramural field . . . and back. Thanks to "DACRON*" POLYESTER, they look better and wear more comfortably. From 5.95.
CaPeR Casuals of "DACRON®" and Cotton Slacks shown 65% "DACRON" polyester 35% cotton SMITH BROTHERS MANUFACTURING COMPANY CARTHAGE, MQ.
Confusion has arisen concerning payment of optional fees, Robert J. Burkhart. Kirkwood, Mo., senior, and member of the Jayhawker staff said today.
New Optional Fee Payment Confusing
All students are urged to take advantage of the influenza shots now being given free at Watkins, Hospital.
58
The student is given a small dose now, to which there is no serious reaction. The immunization builds
Burkhar said fee payments for the Jayhawker Yearbook are to be paid in B115 of the Kansas Union; 1965 senior class dues at the Alumni Association Office, 127 Strong Hall; and Blue Cross-Blue Shield in the lobby of Strong Hall. The latter payment may be made only at fee payment time.
Students Urged To Take Free Influenza Vaccine
Changes or errors on the student fee card — picked up by presenting the KU-ID in the basement of Strong Hall — must be taken care of by the Registrar's Office, room 122 Strong Hall. Changes should be made before going to the cashier's window to make payment.
Seniors who did not enclose their blue fee card at enrollment may also pay their fees at 127 Strong Hall during the fee payment period. Additional cards have been made up and are available in the Alumni Office. Fees for 1964-65 seniors are $10.
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
NOW! Shows 7:00-9:00
Richard Burton Ava Gardner Deborah Kerr Sue Lyon
THE NIGHT OF THE GUANA
Varsity
THEATRE ··· Telephone V13-1065
NOW! Shows 7:00-9:00
One woman and five longing desperate men!
CARROLL BAKER in
"STATION 6 SAHARA"
EXTRA! TUES. NITE!
SNEAK PREVUE
The story —
By the Author of
"From Here To Eternity"
Sunset IN THEATRE • West on Highway, 60
S
TONITE & TUES...
Peter Sellers Elke Sommer
"A SHOT IN THE DARK"
Plus William Inge's
"TWO FOR THE SEE SAW"
Open 6:45 — Starts 7:15
up in 10 days and then gradually increases.
If there is evidence of an epidemic anywhere, students are advised to get a second shot because of the diverse origins of university students.
In places such as military camps and universities the chance of contact with these diseases is greater.
DR. R. I. CANUTESON, director of Watkins Hospital, always advises the second influenza shot as a precautionary measure. He urges students to keep up their immunizations against all diseases which can be prevented by vaccinations, such as tetanus, small pox, typhoid, and polio.
ALTHOUGH there is no charge for the influenza shots, they are supported by the student's health fee and special service charges.
When a student is first admitted to KU his record is reviewed to determine the status of his vaccination program. He is then advised to bring it up to date.
All vaccinations are given to the football and basketball teams and other groups who travel as routine procedure.
1960s
Weejuns are a way of life!
(and remember, only Bass makes Weeiuns)
WOMEN
Golden Harvest Grail
Green Grain
$12.95
Traditional as the Big Game Weejuns! With comfortable, attractive elegance, poised, easy-does-it styling and hand-sewn moccasin toe — in classic smooth leather, or new, dashing Scotch Grain. That's Weejuns, by Bass of course!
ARENSBERG'S
819 Mass.
VI 3-3470
Monday, Sept. 28, 1964
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
HELP WANTED
Sandwich Routeman, 9 to 12 p.m. Sunday through Thursday. Must have a car. CALL Max Walters, Collect 913-381-0481, after 6:00 p.m.
9-30
Freshman or Sophomore Girl to do 2 hours per day, VAL1, VI 2-1258, 9-28
Room and Board provided for girl her
weekly phone call per day, 5 days a week.
Call VI 2-3784
1-93
Two KU men needed to work 3 nights each week. Contact Tom Dixon-Dixon's Drive-In, 2400 W. 6th or phone VI 3-7446. 9-29
Attractive Hostess for employment in New Orleans Room PHONE VI 9-284743.
Part Time—to fit your schedule. Call on
91-387-6352 for a 1.50 hr. phone.
VI 3-8376 after 6:30 p.m. P-25
Wanted to hire: combo or hootenanny
roadway, Leavenworth, Ks. 9-28
way, Leavenworth, Ks.
FOR RENT
Coach Light 1000—We have one luxury 2 bedroom apt. with patio. Graduate student or Staff member only. CALL VI 2-2349. I V-38155, 1000 W. 24th. tt
Sleeping Room for Men. Large single room, Extra lounge room for two with single beds. Rent cheap. Close to K.U. and Town. SEE at 12471% Kentucky. 10-29
Quiet—well-furnished room, with refrigerator and cooking facilities. 10 min.
breakfast rent. CAMERAS on reasonable rent to responsible student.
CALL VI 3-6696 by 5 p.m. 9-28
A nicely furnished 4 room house. Prefer
appointment- VI-30142 pets. CALL
9-28
Apartment for rent: 3 rooms, groum
floor, furnished, private entrance, cafe.
Married couple or one graduate
student SEE at 646 W. 23rd or CALL
3-6255. 9-29
TYPING
Experienced Secretary with new IBM,
wants typing. CALL VI 2-2088. 10-2^2
Experienced accurate typist with degree in English Education will type theses, paper, typewriter themes. Quick service, electric paper writer, reasonable rate CALL VI 2-3976
Term papers, Theses by experienced typist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. ff Typing wanted. Former high school teacher will type reports and theses. Experienced. Electric typewriter. Fast service. CALL Mrs. Marsh at III 8-3262.
Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter, Gestetner Duplicator. Mrs. McEdowney, 2521 Alabama St. Phone VI 3-8568. tf
Accurate typing done on electric typewriter. Familiar with the four accredited KU. thesis forms. CALL Pat Beck at VI 3-5630. tf
Expert typist fully qualified to do term
papers, reports, and theses. Will do exe-
cution on paper or hardcopy of documents.
Expert ribbon typewriter. Betty Muskra-
140 Indian, or call VI 2-0091. t
WANTED
Child Care in my home, 1621 W. 20th Terrace, Plenty of room and time for children. Reasonable rates. CALL for Mars. Carylon Dallas at VI 3-6130. 10-2
Need female roommate to share large, private apartment. Very close to campus and downtown. CALL VI 2-9193 after 5:00 p.m. for information. 9-30
Washing and troning done in my home.
Phone VI 2-2598. I131 New Jersey St.
Phone VI 2-2598.
Roommate for 2nd year graduate student.
Attendance at campus. See at 1102 W. 19th Tern. 9-28
Graduate Student to share 4 room apt.
$35 per month plus electricity. Newly
decorated. SEE after 6 p.m. David
Leavengood, 740 La. 10-1
TRANSPORTATION
Want ride to Murphy Hall from 2115 RJ.
Mon, through Fri, 8:00 to 5:00. CALL VI
3-0589, after 5:00 p.m. 10-2
Car Pool from Overland Park to K.U.
Classes: Monday-Wednesday 9:30 to 12:30;
Tuesday-Thursday 9:30 to 3:30; Friday
9:30 to 1:30. Leave Overland Park 8:30
am, only. Must return by 3:30 MTVW
and by 4:30 FALL. CALL NI 8-3728.
San Pool-Prairie Village and K.U.
Sarasota 30. Phone RA 2-0783
Geneva Jens. 9-29
Car Pool Wanted: Leave Kansas City,
Kan., 7:15 a.m., return 4:30 p.m., Monday
through Friday, Call after 6:00 p.m. FA
1-6817 at Kansas City.
9-28
Commuters who are interested in forming a car pool between Kansas City (Johnson County) and Lawrence, PHONE James Mulloy at HE 2-3465. 9-28
Bargain Transportation for sale. 195
Buick Special, fully equipped, excellen
condition. Owned by one family. Lov
mileage, or less. $350 per car.
A BARGAIN at $298. CALI
Bruce Warren at VI 3-6400, after 5:0
pm., or on weekends. 9-2
MISCELLANEOUS
Yes! You can you get cash for your
REBATE SLIPS. CALL VI 2-1791. 10-22
WILL DO DRAFTING—all types. See
HARRISON in Room 214, Lindsey H.
or "UN 4-3428."
BAR-B-Q—For Bar-B-Q ribs and chickens that are a treat to eat, try ours at 515 Michigan St. Hours: 11:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday.
Will Baby Sit in my home for 2 or 3
Phone VI 3-67463
yard, in yard.
Phone VI 3-67463
9-28
Haircut special—weekdays: men's haircars
$1.50, children's haircars $1.25, 3 full-time barbers. Tom's 14th St. Barber Shop.
9-28
Wanted—BRIDGE PLAYERS, little experience needed. The Lawrence Bridge Event is on the 5th p.m., at the Holiday Inn. For more information call VI 2-0565. Friday t
FOUND
Attention Laurie! I found your glasses.
Call Rhino at VI 3-7102.
9-28
FOR SALE
1959 WV 55-60 h.p. VW engine. 32 mpg.
900, CALL VI 3-5069. For sale by owner,
800, CALL VI 3-5069. For sale by owner.
Big Smith Corona 400 electric typewriter with carbon, ribbon. Perfect for every occasion. Over $500 new in sacrifice for $375. Contact Susanna Gilbert at VI 2-1546. 10-2
Bartimore Ukulele and Electric Hook-up,
used only 8 times. Unit cost new-$14.100.
Purchased May. Need money—
travel $30 even CALL Bob Monk at
9-3102
1963 Volkswagon with Sun-Roof. Ex-
condition. Call VI 2-3316 or
2-0572
GUYS: Attract the girls! Five beautifully marked kittens to be given away. Have a kitten in your apartment. You'll be irresistible! CALL VI 3-4565. 10-2
1959 Cushman Eagle Deluxe motor scooter excellent condition. $250. CALL 2-1177
Freshman Leadership Program
A program to acquaint freshmen with leadership techniques and student government
Bruce Cook . . . . . . VI 3-6960
ASC
Andrea Speer . . . . . VI 3-3910
Dave Lutton . . . . . . VI 2-1200
George Brenner . . . . . VI 2-9100
Mary Tate . . . . . VI 3-6060
Jackie van Eman . . . . . VI 2-2420
1959 Indian 500 CC Twin, Good condition,
$12.95, CALL Bill Cormier
V: 31-75221
10-1
10-1
Must sell Garrard Type A automatic turbitable with base and cartridge. One Electro Voice Aristocrat I speaker system. Must see to appreciate. CALL VI 2-101-8
For information contact
Beautiful German Shepherds, registered,
1 yr. old and have had all permanent
shots. Excellent temperament, leash
trained and very good with children.
Reasonable to right home. Phone KI 2-
2559 in Eudora.
David Sylvan . . . . . . VI 3-7404
1960 Volkswagen, dark green, excellent
3-2659. Private owner $695. CALL-
9-28
Purebred German Shepherd puppies, $20
each. 7 males, 1 female. CALL VI. 3-5681.
JOHN BENZELBERG
6" Refrigerator, apt. size stove, large study table, complete moihair sofa and chair. Heavy oak davenport, full size with extra springs, 3-drawer dresser with mirror. See at 1640 N.H. or CALL VI 3-1836. 9-28
Westinghouse Front Load Automatic
Washing Machine at $35. CALL
3-2454 after 5:30 p.m.
9-28
Mike Hurt . . . . . . . VI 3-6866
Betty Arnold . . . . . . VI 3-7070
1981 Corvair 900 Mönza, black, automatic
four-speed gearshift
at 4:30 p.m. C43肝 V 3-56581 10-2
1988 MGA—white with black top, white
CALL I 1-2-3891 at 6:00 p.m.
B-30
2 Registered German Shepherd dogs; one pure white, reasonably priced. Contact Henry Brecheisen, Phone TU 3-6507, Wellsville. 9-28
Motorcycle — Trilumph Tiger Cub. Recent
installed and bored $309 **10-**
2-0367 **10-**
Mike Grady . . . . . . VI 3-7370
Apartment Sized Furniture: gas stove, cooks fine, $23. Revolving book-stool, bed frame with springs and innerspring mattress (excellent condition), $47.50. Bed frame height, $8. Oak swivel chair, $12. Small buffet, black mahogany finish, $42. Antique carved oak chest, mahogany.寇 $29. CALL VI 3-1249 or UNI 4-3058.
u speed racing bicycle for sale-$60.
Call VI 3-2890, ask for Dave.
9-28
AM-FM Radios at LOW DISCOUNT
PRICES G.E. with AFC cut to $28.00.
G.E. with Hoy Stores
929-331 Mass. St. (G.E. Stero Twinning
Multiplex - $99.94). 10-19
USED TIRES! USED TIRES! Prices slashed to clear- ALL SIZES, small 13" Rav Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929-931 Mass. St.
5-string long neck BANJO, ode model.
CALL VI 2-1328. 9-30
Sunbeam Collegiate Electric Blanket—reg. list $24.95. Special early offer only$15.00-Layaway Now. Ray Stoneback's. 929-931 Mass. St. 10-19
HAIR DRYER1S! Dominion, General
Rocky Stoneback's, 929-931, Mass. St., 10-10
TAPE RECORDERS—at low discount prices! As low as $15.00-$5.00 per month at Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. St.
10:19
USED TVS—COME 'N' GET $EM $5.00 each on as is sets. Delivered $6.00.
Working sets $29.94 at Ray Stoneback's.
$29-31 Mass. St. 10-19
15 speed Schwinn Superior Bicycle, like
$80, CALL I, 3-1208.
9-28
1963 Honda Scrambler motorcycle. Prime
CALL 811-3-9662 Can be seen at 1308
9-28
W1 V 3-9662
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL VI 2-1901 for free delivery.
TYPEWRITERS, electrics, manuals, port-
boards. Royal, Royal-Smirona, Olivet.
Adding machines, office supplies and
hardware. Typewriter. Typewriter.
Mass. VI 3-3644. 78 ft
1958 Dodge, 2-dr., hardtop, pwr, steering air cond, Torque-Flight V-8. Black and white, original owner. CALL Boss Hesat VI 2-1527 after 6 p.m. or on weekends. tf
Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lecture content, course materials, and course materials. Rarely for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes, Call VI 3-1428. Free delivery. $149.95
PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS: Smith- Corona "Silent," and Olympia "Deluxe" (German Made). Reasonably priced and in excellent condition. CALL VI 2-3518 9-29
1956 Ford V-8 Convertible, black and
6.00 p.m. 7.52 See at 1131 Ohio at
9-29
MG Midget, 1962, white with soft top and Tonneau. Like new for $1195. CALL VI 2-1880 after 3:00 p.m. 9-30
Fender Bassman Amplifier and Showman Amplifier. Both in excellent condition. Perfect for the new band. Phone Solly at VI 3-3016. 9-30
Automotive Service
Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel
Balancing & Alignment
7 a.m. - 11 p.m.
FINA SERVICE
PAGE CREIGHTON
CLASSIFIEDS Bring Quick Results
Grease Jobs . . . $1.00
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694
STUDENTS
Health and Diet Store
Wed., Thursday, Friday & Saturday
10.00 - 12.00
Staf-O-life
10:00 - 6:00
Vegetarian Foods
Natural Vitamins
VI 3-8484
Healthful Candies Cold Pressed Oils
Mung Beans Organic Cosmetics
Garbanzos
LAWRENCE DANCE STUDIO
Adult Courses in Ballet, Toe, Adagio,
Jazz. School Age Courses in Ballet, Tap,
Food Supplement
Director-
Nancy Elaine Anderson
Miling Beans Organic Cosmetics Milk Substitutes
Stone Ground Flours
Acrobatics, Boy's Tumbling
VI 2-2771—700 Mass.—Room 211
CONTINUOUS ENROLLMENT
Door on 7th Street
Carob
Ballet
STUDENTS
BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ___ $.98
LUBRICATION $1.00
Motor tune-ups, wheel balancing
FREE—one quart of oil with each oil and filter change
Complete Center
FREE PARKING
oil and litter change
— all major brands —
under one roof
PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE
GRANT'S
1218 Conn. Pet Pa. VI 3-2921
Established — Experienced
1819 W 23rd VI 3-9694
HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING
HONN'S
OPEN 24 HRS.
19th & La.
Across From The High School
VI 3-9631
Film and Talk Planned for Club
The KU Marketing Club's first fall meeting will feature guest speaker Tom Hedrick of the Kansas City Chiefs' broadcasting team and the KU sports network.
Hedrick's subject will be "Promotion of Major League Sports." Also on the program is a film, "Kansas City Chiefs" 1963 Highlights.
The meeting will be at 7:20 p.m. Wednesday, in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
INSTANT MILDNESS
YELLO BOLE
yours with
A.
Aristocrat, Billiard Shape, $5.95 and $6.95
No matter what you smoke you'll like Yello-Bole. The new formula, honey lining insures Instant Mildness; protects the imported briar bowl—so completely, it's guaranteed against burn out for life. Why not change your smoking habits the easy way — the Yello-Bole way. $2.50 to $6.95.
Spartan $2.50
Checker $3.50
Thorn $4.95
Official Pipes New York World's Fair
Free Booklet tells how to smoke a pipe;
shows shapes, write: YELLO-BOLE
PIPES, INC. N, Y 22, N, Y, Dept. 100.
By the markers of KAYWOODIE
By the makers of KAYWOODIE
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Monday, Sept. 28, 1964
SOMETHING NEW!
from the
KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE MEAL TICKETS
$12.25 worth of tickets for ONLY
$12.00
Convenient for ...
Full Meal Service
Snacks
Coffee Breaks
Good for food in...
Cafeteria
Hawks Nest
Prairie Room
Hawklet
Catering Department
Now on sale at Kansas Union Business Office
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
62nd Year, No.8
Tuesday, Sept. 29, 1964
Stewart to Go to Washington
Robert B. Stewart, Vancouver,
British Columbia, senior and All
Student Body President, will represent
KU at a reception with President Lyndon B. Johnson in Washington Saturday.
Stewart was selected by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe to represent KU at a White House meeting of student leaders from colleges and universities throughout the country.
In a letter addressed to Chancellor Wescoe, President Johnson said, "I would like to invite the college student . . . who, while maintaining a good academic record, has also shown special qualities of character, leadership, and interest in college and public affairs."
"I HAVE a great interest in the young leaders who are emerging in our colleges and would like to get to know them and their thinking as much as I can," the President said.
Johnson will address the group at the reception where campus leaders will also be presented to Mrs. Johnson. Robert S. McNamara, Secretary of Defense, Willard Wirtz, Secretary of Labor, and Adlai Stevenson, United States Ambassador to the United Nations, will also speak to the students.
Lynda Bird Johnson, the President's 20-year-old daughter, will be hostess at a buffet dinner and entertainment following the speeches.
The letter continued, "Would you be good enough to select this student? I would also like to request that you consider this letter an invitation to the White House for the young man or woman and that you will so inform the student."
"Please inform me by telegram at the earliest possible time the name and address of the student you designate."
"My family and I look forward with particular pleasure to this occasion and I warmly appreciate your cooperation, Sincerely, Lyndon B. Johnson."
BOB STEWART was chosen, the Chancellor said today, because the letter from the President indicated that the student body president of a school might be a qualified representative.
"I'm fond of Bob personally and he will be an excellent representative for the student body," Wescoe said.
The President's letter suggested that the student selected "might be the president of the student body, of the senior class. . . or a person who holds no high student office."
The letter asking the Chancellor to select a representative from KU will be read at tonight's ASC meeting.
AS STUDENT Body President, Stewart will formally open the ASC meeting at 7 p.m. today in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union with a "State of the University" address.
The address is the result of his analysis of the position, problems and prospects of the University.
Mike Miner, Lawrence senior and ASC chairman, said a report to be given by the ASC treasurer at tonight's meeting "will find us somewhat in debt."
The fate of Stewart's Washington trip hinges on the ASC finances, Miner said. If the ASC is in debt Stewart has said he will not make the trip, although Chancellor Wescoe has said the invitation opportunity should not be turned down. University funds can be used to send Stewart to Washington, Wescoe said.
Cline will explain the problems which faced the seating committee, and the sections now reserved for students. The seating committee also has discussed plans for future student seating problems, and planned for the increase in the student body expected in the next few years.
Jim Cline, Rockford, Ill. junior, and Chairman of the Athletic Seating Board, will report on the football seating program at tonight's meeting.
The ASC will also accept the resignations and vote on replacement for five council members, and fill vacancies in ASC committees.
Bob Stewart, as a senior from Vancouver, British Columbia, may be the first foreign student to hold the position of All Student Body President.
Actually, Stewart has lived in Bartlesville, Okla., until this past summer when his parents moved to the Canadian city.
Official Clears Fees Confusion
A correction concerning optional fee payments, as reported in yesterday's Kansan, has been issued by the Registrar's Office.
Students who filled out and enclosed optional fee cards for the Jayhawk yearbook, senior dues, or Blue Cross-Blue Shield at the time of enrollment will find these fees added to their regular tuition fees when they pay them this week at the Business Office, 121 Strong Hall.
Students who did not fill out the optional fee cards at the time of enrollment, but who now desire to pay for the Jayhawker or senior dues may do so at the following places: Jayhawker, B115 of the Kansas Union; and senior dues, Alumni Association Office. 127 Strong Hall.
Blue Cross-Blue Shield optional fees will still be paid at the Business Office at the time of paying tuition.
Senior Fees
Seniors, who did not pay their senior fees at enrollment may pay them at fee payment through noon Saturday in 127 Strong Hall.
Seniors who paid senior fees last year will be charged $5.50 instead of $10.
Replacement of Robinson Annex Next Step of Master Building Plan
By Glen Phillips
The next project scheduled to go to the architects according to the master plan for campus development is a large biological sciences building to be erected between Sumerfield and Malott Halls where Robinson annex now stands.
Following this, the university plan to construct a major classroom building on the site now occupied by Robinson gym and Haworth Hall. These buildings are now classed as obsolete by administrators and they are occupying prime space in the center of the campus.
"WHEN ROBINSON was built it was ideally located," Keith Lawton, vice-cancellor in charge of operations explained. It was on the edge of campus and quite away from things. University growth has moved it into an awkward spot at the center of campus.
Haworth Hall, originally constructed as a geology building, was built with an eye toward its central location and campus growth but it outlived its usefulness. It has become obsolete. Clumsy additions have been added but now even they are inadequate.
Lawton said that the construction of this $2.5 to $3 million facility to house the departments of English and modern foreign languages would act in a large part to complete the present plan to have a complex of multi-purpose classrooms near the center of campus for use by all the undergraduates.
The next step in the master plan
is addition to several existing buildings to increase their capacity.
FIRST ON the list is an addition to Lindley Hall to house geology and chemical engineering students, Then there will be two floors added to the west (physics) wing of Malott Hall bringing it to seven stories. There will also be an addition to Watkins Memorial Hospital.
Replacement of the temporary barracks-type structures behind Strong Hall with a permanent building will be the next project. These buildings remain in constant use despite the addition of classroom space all over the University.
Plans call for the erection of an art and architecture building west of Naismith Road near the new engineering building. This new building and all the new engineering complex will be connected with the new Lindley annex by a pedestrian tunnel running under Naismith Road.
Also, there will be construction of facilities for physical plant services southwest of the intersection of 15th and Iowa streets on land owned by the University.
IN THE FUTURE there is a possibility that a second laboratory building for work in the life sciences will be erected near the present site of the buildings and grounds area.
The present structures of Marvin and Green halls have been marked for complete renovation to make them more practical.
Lawton explained that when these plans have been completed the academic physical plant of the University will be equipped to handle student enrollments of over 20,000.
Around the central part of the campus there will be a grouping of multi-purpose classrooms, library facilities and administrative offices. That section of the University used most by the undergraduate liberal arts students will be closely grouped for the student's convenience.
Radiating from this central core will be the more specialized buildings for business, science, engineering, and other subjects. The average student will only have to make jaunts from his major class area to the general class area on top of the bill—easily accomplished in the 10-minute passing period.
PRESERVATION of the natural beauty of the campus has been a guidepost for the planners. They have tried to maintain somewhat of the traditional look of the University while still not sacrificing the educational efficiency of the structure to design.
Buildings are being planned to preserve the natural march of brick-red roofs across the hill, Lawton noted. Even buildings being built on the side of Mt. Oread are flat-roofed to maintain the traditional view of campus from vantage points off the hill.
Weather
The forecast is for generally fair and a little warmer temperatures through Wednesday. Southern winds of 10-15 miles per hour are expected. Expected low tonight is 45-50 degrees.
GM-UAW Seek To Speed Talks
DETROIT—(UPI)—General Motors and the United Auto Workers Union sought to speed up local negotiations at 124 plants in an effort to settle a five-day strike by more than 250,000 workers.
The strike was triggered Friday when the union and company failed to reach agreement on about six key non-economic issues in a national three-year contract.
But both UAW president, Walter P. Reuther, and General Motors vice-president, Louis G. Seaton, agreed yesterday that labor peace would not be restored to the world's largest manufacturer until some 17,000 local issues are settled.
THE UNION AND company have reached plant level agreements at six of its 130 bargaining units.
"Local matters are the key to making progress here," Reuther said. "We are trying to set up effective liaison between the national and local bargaining committees. If a roadblock appears in local negotiations, we want to be able to move effectively to eliminate the roadblock."
There should be little difficulty in reaching economic agreement. The UAW already has signed record contracts with Ford and Chrysler that have been valued at 54-cents an hour for every worker over the next three years. GM already has agreed to match the Ford-Chrysler package.
NEGOTIATIONS CONTINUED on non-economic issues and following an afternoon session yesterday, both Reuther and Seaton reported some progress had been made.
"We did resolve a couple of things," Seaton said. "We're taking them as they come and some of the things pulled off the table this afternoon could have been difficult if they stayed on it."
Reuther added, "I think we made some progress—nothing earthshaking—but we did get into matter of substance and made some encouraging progress."
The Silent Comedian Harpo Marx Dies at 70
HOLLYWOOD—(UPI)—Harpo Marx, the madcap mute of the famed performing Marx brothers, died last night after undergoing heart surgery. He was 70.
The zany, horn-honking comedian, beloved for his outrageous blond wig and eye-popping lear, was the harum-scarum member of the troupe which conquered vaudeville in the '20s, Broadway and the movies.
Harpo, whose real name was Arthur, entered Mt. Sinai Hospital Saturday and was operated on Monday morning. After apparently making a strong recovery his condition worsened and he died at 10:30 p.m.
It was Harpo's silent anties that most frequently embroiled the brothers in hilarious escapades with the forces of law and order in such films as "Horsefeathers," "A Night at the Opera," "Duck Soup," and "Animal Crackers." And it was Harpo's mastery of the harp which generally saved the day.
At his side when death came were his wife, Susan, and two of his sons. He is survived by three sons, William, Alexander and James; a daughter, Minnie, and his brothers, Groucho, Zeppo and Gummo.
THE FIFTH Marx brother, Chico, died three years ago in Hollywood.
During the past decade, Harpo Marx lived quietly, making occasional appearances with symphony orchestras while his brother, Groucho, continued in entertainment as a television star.
Groucho and Zeppo were told of the death by brother Gummo. None of the three surviving brothers was able to comment on their loss.
Harpo, who never spoke during the three decades of the family comedy act, made his last public appearance Aug. 16 at a testimonial for Palm Springs Police Chief Gus Kettman. It was only the second time the diminutive star had stepped out of character to speak in public.
HARPO'S CONTRIBUTION to the Marx brothers' brand of comedy was a battered opera hat, baggy pants and an improbable frock coat, from which he pulled a bulbous auto horn, live animals, mannequin legs and a wild assortment of junk.
He was born Nov. 23, 1893, in New York City, the second son of Sam Marx, an immigrant Jewish tailor. His mother was the talented musician, Minna Schoenberg, the sister of comedian Al Shean of the celebrated vaudeville team, Gallagher and Shean.
---
Harpo was given his name by monologist Art Fischer during a vaudeville turn in Peoria, Ill. He first traveled with his brothers as one of the "Six Musical Mascots," consisting of the four eldest boys, their mother and an aunt. Later their name was changed to "The Four Nightingales."
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Sept. 29, 1964
A Historian Look at Past Elections
(Editor's Note: This is the second article in a series on the history of American elections done for the "Atlanta Constitution" by Wilbur D. Jones, professor of history at the University of Georgia.)
Jackson ran again in 1832, an election which is remembered for the appearance of the first nominating conventions. Jackson's forces were usually called "Democratic Republicans" at this time, but the second of the words of the title was gradually dropped thereafter. Henry Clay's party was called the "national Republicans." Although Clay came from Kentucky, and Jackson from Tennessee, there was no question as to which was the candidate of the West. Save for Kentucky, all of the Western states supported Jackson, and Clay was left with Massachusetts and a few states which had once been Federalist.
LIKE JEFFERSON, once he had served his two terms, Jackson did his best to influence the selection of his party's candidates thereafter. His choice in 1836 was Martin Van Buren, a veteran New York politician and member of the Albany Regency, a political machine which had aided Jackson in that pivotal state. His activities provoked a reaction. The elements all over the country who opposed "King Andrew" joined together to form the Whig Party, so-named because the Whigs in Britain had been the traditional opponents of the King. But this does not mean the Whigs were the party of the common man by any means. Actually they considered themselves to be the gentlemen of the nation as opposed to the "rabble" who supported Jackson. Because they were scattered all over the country in sections which had conflicting economic interests, the Whigs in 1836 were unable to agree on either a candidate or a platform, and they simply ran "favorite sons" in a number of states in the hope of preventing Van Buren's getting a majority of the electoral vote,
and thus throwing the election into the House. Van Buren won easily, but for the only time in American history, the vice-presidential contest was decided by the Senate.
"THE RICH WE HAVE ALWAYS with us," a Whig leader wrote, and this is a fitting introduction to the election of 1840. How could they enlist the votes of the poor to the cause? It was finally decided to nominate a general who had never taken a stand on any of the issues of the day, and therefore would have made no enemies. Gen. William Henry Harrison, a veteran of the War of 1812, filled the bill, and this Virginia-born resident of Ohio was teamed with John Tyler, another Virginian. His Virginia ancestry was played down, and Harrison was presented to the nation as a simple, Ohio-farmer, "log cabin" candidate; whereas Van Buren, who had been born in poverty, was condemned as an aristocrat by the Whig Party which represented that element in American life. The tactic was eminently successful. Van Buren carried only a few Southern states and New Hampshire.
East, while Clay carried some of the Southern states and New England.
Harrison died in office, and hence was not available for a repeat performance in 1844, so the Whigs turned to the most eminent man in their party, Henry Clay of Kentucky, and gave him Sen. Theodore Frelinghuysen of New Jersey as a running mate. The Democrats, on the other hand, reached a deadlock in their convention, and finally decided upon the first "dark horse" in American political history, James K. Polk of North Carolina. Silas Wright of New York was given second place on the ticket to conciliate the disappointed members of that state, who had wanted to back Van Buren again. The resultant victory for Polk was not a sectional one. He received votes in the South, West and
HAVING HAD THEIR MOST eminent statesman beaten by a "dark horse" in 1844, the Whigs in 1848 reverted to the tactic they had used so successfully in 1840 and nominated a general. This was Zachary Taylor, fresh from the Mexican War, then in its end phase. Taylor was born in Virginia, and a resident of Louisiana, so balance was given to the ticket by nominating Millard Fillmore of New York as vice-president. The Democrats this time went West for their presidential candidate, Lewis Cass of Michigan, and gave him Gen. William O. Butler of Kentucky as a running mate. It was a fairly close fight, with the two contestants securing votes in all sections, but Taylor carried New York and Pennsylvania and they gave him a comfortable margin of victory.
Like Harrison, Taylor died in office, and the Whigs had to seek elsewhere for a winning candidate in 1852. Having twice won with generals, they selected another Mexican War veteran, Gen. Winfield Scott, to carry the party's banner in the election. As Scott was from New Jersey, William A. Graham of North Carolina was given second place on the ticket. At their convention the Democrats reached another deadlock, and on the 49th ballot they finally selected another "dark horse," Franklin Pierce of New Hampshire, as their presidential candidate. William R. King of Alabama was given second place on the ticket.
THE DEMOCRATS HAD reunited their forces and were in fighting trim. The result was the most decisive victory since 1820. Of the 31 states participating in the election, Scott carried only Massachusetts, Vermont, Kentucky and Tennessee. On the basis of his electorial victory, Pierce, a colorless candidate, emerges as one of the few truly national presidents ever elected.
EXTREMISTS FOR LIBERTY
"I Understand You Provide Accommodations For Radicals"
The election of 1812 shattered the Whig Party, and in its place a new—and frankly sectional—Republican Party emerged, and drew widespread support in the North from the slavery issue. The Whigs, a party which was national in its outlook, put up Millard Fillmore and Andred J. Donelson in 1856, but by that time they had become the third party in strength. The Republican Party nominated John C. Fremont of California, and William L. Dayton of New Jersey was selected over Abraham Lincoln for second place. The Democrats, once the party of movement and radicalism, chose the conservative James Buchanan of Pennsylvania, and gave the second place to John C. Breckenridge of Kentucky.
Buchanan went on to capture the vote of the slave states, as well as Pennsylvania, and a number of the Midwestern states. Fremont carried only 11 of the 31 states involved, but among these were New York with 35 votes, Ohio with 23 and Massachusetts with 13. His support was wholly limited to New England, New York, and several Midwestern states. The Whigs carried only Maryland.
THE ELECTION OF 1856 was merely the prelude to the dissolution of the national parties in the election of 1860. Abraham Lincoln of Illinois and Hannibal Hamlin of Maine were offered by the Republicans. The Democratic Party split. Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois and Herschel V. Johnson of Georgia became the candidates of one group, while the Southern group nominated John C. Breckinridge of Kentucky and Joseph Lane of Oregon. What remained of the Whig Party nominated John Bell of Tennessee, and Edward Everett of Massachusetts.
Based on the returns the split in the Democratic Party did not much affect the outcome of the election. The fact was that Lincoln carried New York, Ohio and Pennsylvania, which gave him 85 of his 180 electoral votes, and to them he added the states of the Midwest, Far West and New England. Douglas carried only Missouri and part of New Jersey; Bell, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Virginia, and Breckinridge, Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Texas. The result of the 1860 election was that the South was virtually isolated politically.
The triumphant Republicans after the war employed the Whig tactic of placing generals in nomination. Thus Ulysses S. Grant of Ohio became their candidate in 1868, and Schuyler Colfax of Indiana was added as his running mate. The Democrats wooed the large state vote by putting up Horatio Seymour of New York, and gave a military aspect to their ticket by giving the second place to Gen Francis P. Blair Jr. of Missouri. As the election was held under Reconstruction conditions, Seymour carried only Georgia and Louisiana in the South, and hence his victories in New York and New Jersey did not bring victory.
POLITICAL LIFE WAS approaching normalcy again by the election of 1876, and a stiff battle was in prospect. Rutherford B. Hayes of Ohio, another general, and William A. Wheeler of New York received the nominations of the Republican Party. The Democratic Party, hoping to secure the electoral vote of that state, placed Samuel J. Tilden of New York in nomination, with Thomas A. Hendricks of Indiana
as candidate for vice-president. The Democrats' strategy worked; they carried both New York and Indiana, as well as New Jersey and a few other states to add to the "Solid South," and they seemed to have won the contest, but the Republicans contested the returns in South Carolina, Florida and Louisiana.
This "disputed election" has never been interpreted to everyone's satisfaction, but the consensus is that Hayes was the only American to become President with a minority in both popular and electoral vote (though he was given a one-vote edge).
This questionable defeat might have been expected to hearten the Democrats. In 1880 they nominated a professional soldier, Winfield S. Hancock of the large state of Pennsylvania, and William H. English of Indiana, which they had carried in 1876. The Republicans faced a deadlock, and turned to a "dark horse," James A. Garfield of Ohio. Chester A. Arthur, nominee of the powerful Conkling political machine of New York, which was disappointed that Grant had not again been nominated was offered as vice-president.
New York had proved almost the key to success in 1876, and the Democrats returned there for their nominee in 1884, selecting the reform governor, Grover Cleveland for first place, and Thomas A. Hendricks, who had been Tilden's running mate in 1876, for the second. The Republicans nominated James G. Blaine of Maine, one of the few candidates of doubtful personal integrity ever to be nominated by a major party, for president, and John A. Logan of Illinois for vice-president.
CANDIDATES Hancock and English proved to be severe disappointments, as they did not even carry their home states, and added only California, Nevada and New Jersey to the South and the Border States. The states with the large electoral votes—New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois and Ohio—all went Republican.
For the first time since 1856 the Democrats were triumphant. Cleveland not only carried the South and the Border States, but added Connecticut, Indiana, New York and New Jersey.
W N
(Continued Wed., Sept. 30)
Daili'i'fänsan
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World Spotlight
Page 3
JACKSON, Miss.—(UPI)—Mayor Allen Thompson of Jackson, Miss., yesterday put a $1,000 price on the heads of nightriding bombers in the Mississippi capital.
Mayor of Jackson Offers Reward
Calling upon the people to "work together" to end such violence, Thompson said "we are at the real crossroads (leading) to unbridled lawlessness."
An automobile belonging to a retired Negro educator was bombed Sunday night. A newspaper office and a barbershop previously had been bombed in Jackson.
Thompson told Jackson citizens if the terrorism isn't stopped "you will wonder, night and day, whether you are on the (bombers') list."
ARICA, Chile—(UPI)—The French anti-aircraft cruiser Colbert waited here today to pick up President Charles de Gaulle for a two-day rest cruise at the midpoint of his 10-nation South American tour.
De Gaulle Plans Short Rest
Chilean police were searching for a French hero-turned-terrorist who was believed to be in this country gunning for De Gaulle.
The 73-year-old French leader was flying in from Cochabamba, Bolivia, the fifth country he has visited so far in the tour.
Crane Hits Loaded Bus
LIVERPOOL, England—(UPI)—The boom of a mobile crane ripped through the top deck of a double-decker bus today, breaking windows and hurling passengers from their seats.
First report said at least 20 passengers, including some school children, were injured.
Officials said some of the injured were believed in serious condition. They said between 50 and 60 passengers were aboard the bus at the time of the accident.
Barry Slams FBI Response
EN ROUTE WITH GOLDWATER—(UPI)—Sen. Barry M. Goldwater today sharply criticized President Johnson's response to the FBI report on big city riots. He pledged that if elected he would bring the "full persuasive powers of the presidency" to bear on the problem.
The GOP presidential nominee made the statement in remarks prepared for the first back-platform speech—at Marietta, Ohio—of a five-day, whistle stop tour through Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. He was scheduled to arrive in Marietta at 8 a.m.
Cremation OK'd by Council
VATICAN CITY—(UPI)—The Vatican today made public an order greatly relaxing the Catholic ban on cremation.
The new provisions, which actually were distributed to the church hierarchy more than a year ago, open the way for cremation when not motivated by "hate against the Catholic religion or against the church."
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Tuesday, Sept. 29, 1964 University Daily Kansan
When the Good Time Singers step on stage Friday night at Hoch Auditorium, KU students will have the opportunity to appraise one of the fastest-rising folk-singing groups in the country.
Although the Singers gained nation-wide exposure on the Andy Williams variety shows, many students are unfamiliar with them, said Jim Winkler, Kansas City junior and concert chairman.
Tickets for the two-hour concert, the first SUA offering of the year, went on sale today at the Information Booth, the Kansas Union and Bell's Music Co. Prices are seventy-five cents, $1.00 and $1.25.
The Singers—seven guys and three girls—will appear at 8:30 p.m. Friday in a Student Union Activities concert.
The group has crammed twelve appearances on the Andy Williams TV show, a night-club engagement and a television pilot film into the 13 months they have been performing together.
'Good Time' Set By Ten Singers Friday Night
"I've heard their album and they're a fine group," Winkler said. "They're new, but they'll go a long way. They've got good harmony and a good sound."
Chairmen of concert activities are Tom McBride, Topeka sophomore, tickets; Henry Jameson, Abilene junior, publicity; and Tom Sullivan, Wichita sophomore, arrangements.
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A noted publisher in Chicago reports there is a simple technique of rapid reading which should enable you to double your reading speed and yet retain much more. Most people do not realize how much they could increase their pleasure, success and income by reading faster and more accurately.
According to this publisher, anyone, regardless of his present reading skill, can use this simple technique to improve his reading ability to a remarkable degree. Whether reading stories, books, technical matter, it becomes possible to read sentences at a glance and entire pages in seconds with this method.
To acquaint the readers of this newspaper with the easy-to-follow rules for developing rapid reading skill, the company has printed full details of its interesting self-training method in a new book, "Adventures in Reading Improvement" mailed free to anyone who requests it. No obligation. Simply send your request to: Reading. 835 Diversity Parkway, Dept. 3246, Chicago, Ill. 60614. A postcard will do.
FRESHMAN NEWS NOTE
Student Union Activities will present the first of its Fall Concerts Saturday, October 3rd at 8:30 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. The GOOD TIME SINGERS, Capitol Record artists and stars of the Andy Williams Show, will present a fabulous assortment of folk music for your enjoyment. Plan now to see this first show.
THE GOOD TIME SINGERS SAT., OCT. 3
Tickets now available at the Information Booth the Union and Bell's Music Store
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University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Sept. 29, 1964
Red China Blasts U.S. Pursuit Right
TOKYO, —(UPI)— Communist China today condemned President Johnson's reported decision to allow U.S. planes to enter Communist territory if they are in "hot pursuit" of Communist aircraft that have attacked U.S. Naval patrols off Viet Nam.
The Peking People's Daily, in an editorial transmitted by the New China News Agency and monitored in Tokyo, charged that the plan was a means of expanding the war in Vict Nam.
At the same time, Assistant Secretary of State William P. Bundy told a Tokyo audience that an expansion of the war may be forced on the United States by the Communists.
"Expansion of the war outside South Viet Nam, while not a course we want to seek, could be forced upon us by the increased external pressures of the Communists, including a rising scale of infiltration," he told the Research Institute of Japan.
WASHINGTON REPORTS last weekend said President Johnson included Communist China's territory as well as that of North Vietnam in his "hot pursuit" doctrine. The reports said the aim of the decision was to deny Communist pilots a privileged sanctuary from which to attack U.S. Naval craft.
"No amount of sophistry and subterfuge. . . can prevent the world from seeing that the doctrine of 'hot pursuit' is nothing other than the doctrine of deliberate encroachment on the sovereignty of other
Louis, had a pizza at 807 Vt. and almost lost my head over it.
Marie Antoinette
countries and the mounting of open aggression," Peking said.
"The rule of Nguyen Khanh is fast tottering. . . The U.S. imperialists are hasty scheming for excuses to extend the war," it added.
Bundy rejected neutralization for South Viet Nam as a solution to its Guerrilla war.
That, he said, "would simply be a step towards a Communist takeover, at the Communists themselves know in pushing it as an interim course for South Viet Nam."
BUNDY MADE these other points:
—If South Viet Nam falls to the Communists, "then the rest of Southeast Asia will be in grave danger of progressively disappearing behind the iron curtain."
—Negotiations with Peking on Southeast Asia would be pointless "as long as Peking and Hanoi (North Viet Nam) disregard the agreements they signed in 1954 and 1962 on Viet Nam and Laos."
The United States does not believe the Soviet Union has abandoned its expansionist aims, "certainly not to the point where in the foreseeable future she could be relied upon to play a constructive role in assisting other nations to defend themselves against Communist China."
SANTA FE, N.M.—(UPI)—St. John's College in Santa Fe will be as unique in education circles when it opens Oct. 10 as its new location.
College Called "Colony"
That's because the Santa Fe college will be officially referred to as a "colony" by the school's officials. As such, it will operate completely free from its mother facility, the 180-year-old St. John's College at Annapolis, Md.
But as a so-called colony, the new college will retain the curriculum and the administrative control from its mother school.
THE CURRICULUM at St. John's will definitely be unique. There will be no departments, no divisions, and not even a business administration course. Students won't have a major or minor course of study either.
Besides all that, no vocational or teacher training will be taught, and no pre-med, pre-law or required athletics will be offered students.
What the school will have is an intense four-year course in great books plus a tough science requirement for graduation.
Delila, I'll meet you at La Pizza, 807 Vt., right after I get a haircut.
Sampson
The great books, chosen over a period of nearly 40 years, will range from Homer through Tolstoi. Philosophy books will cover Plato to Jung. Mathematics will include Euclid up to Labachevski, and sciences will be studied from Hippocrates through Einstein.
IN SORT, the new college, with a basic curriculum of literature, philosophy, history, mathematics and natural sciences, will offer strict liberal arts for its students. The school's aim, officials say, is to prepare its students with the tools for future learning. What the student does with this vast storehouse of knowledge is strictly up to the student.
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Tutorials will be held in languages, mathematics, music and other liberal arts subjects. The first tutors will come this year on loan from Annapolis. Eventually, however, the western colony is expected to foster its own educators.
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Page 5
Anthropologist Spends Summer Excavating at Iranian Mound
William M. Bass, associate professor of anthropology, compares the Hasanlu, Iran, excavation site on which he worked this summer, with the KU campus.
The big difference is the KU camput is livelier. The site of the Hasanlu excavation is a mound 70 feet high
In excavation is a mound.
Describing the site, Dr. Bass said,
"The mound is much like the one
KU is built on, Mount Oread. The
are around it is flat with mountains
rising in the distance."
"The area reminds me of Western Kansas because it is dry, and irrational agriculture is used extensively." Dr. Bass said.
Dr. Bass continued, "The mound was a result of one city being built on top of another. These cities were made from mud and dirt. The inhabitants mixed dirt and water to build the huts and the city walls. These were baked by the sun but they did not last for any great length of time and finally collapsed."
"More huts were built over the fallen village and new city walls went up. Now these villages are being uncovered but the work is slow."
"If the archeologist dug for another one thousand years, the work wouldn't be completed. Excavation was started seven years ago."
Ambassador's Daughter Has Lived Around World
Washington, D.C., Paris, Rome Greece, Saigon, Africa, Massachusetts, Cameroun, and Lawrence Kan.
It sounds like a travel logue but it's actually a list of the places where Jennifer Barrows lived before coming to KU.
Her father is a foreign service officer and is now ambassador to the African Republic of Cameroun. Ambassador Leland J. Barrows is also a KU Alumni Distinguished Service Citee, in addition to having received several citations for his diplomatic work in Saigon.
BUT MISS BARROWS has no present plans for foreign service work. She is attending KU because she feels, "You should study in your own country before you go off to another country." Her brother, Leland Barrows, however, is taking his masters in African studies at UCLA. Miss Barrows isn't a stranger to American schools. She took her ninth and senior years of high school via correspondence courses from the University of Nebraska, and spent her sophomore year at Northfield School for Girls in Massachusetts.
During the 12 and a half years she spent in other countries, all the schools she attended but one were American community schools taught in the American fashion.
Miss Barrows also kept up on her native country through American
Missionaries, tourists, official state department visitors, performers, newspapers and Peace Corps representatives.
She said the Peace Corps in Cameroun was well received and has been requested to send more teachers.
SHE FOUND THE people there interested in the United States, especially the civil rights issue. "Racial problems are everywhere. The United States is such a big nation that it stands out more."
Returning to America was not a big adjustment. "I haven't been brought up in any one place so its just like another home," she said.
Just in case Jennifer longs for a talk about her "foster" home, she has a friend at KU who is a foreign exchange student from Cameroun.
Ambassador and Mrs. Barrows visited friends in Lawrence while Jennifer enrolled at KU. They will see friends and relatives in Kansas and Colorado before going to Washington for a course at the foreign service institute, and then to Cameroun.
Martha, the pizza at 807 Vermont was so tender, I didn't even need my false teeth.
DR. BASS' job is the examination of skeletal remains found in the excavation. To explain the purpose of the physical anthropologist, Dr. Bass said, "It is my job to relate the human population with the culture."
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When the famous Golden Bowl was uncovered in 1958 in Hasanlu, Dr. Bass was asked to examine the skeletal remains found with the bowl.
The Golden Bowl was found in the basement of a palace clutched in the hands of a soldier and two other soldiers were lying beside him.
THE ARCHEOLOGISTS surmised the soldiers had been running along the roof of the palace after it caught fire. The roof collapsed and the soldiers plunged to their deaths.
Explaining his investigation of the skeletal remains of the soldiers, Dr. Bass said, "It was my duty to determine whether the skeletons belonged to Hasanlu soldiers or to looters of another race."
"I have the first eight-one skeletons dug from the site and now eighty-three that were excavated this summer are being sent here to the anthropology department.
"I will take the skeletal measurements of these skeletons and determine if the soldiers were from Hasanlu. As the result of a primary analysis I feel that the three soldiers, who were carrying the Golden Bowl, were members of the Hasanlu population."
THE GOLDEN Bowl is now on loan from the Archeological Museum of Teheran. It will be included in a display called "7,000 years of Iranian Art" which can be seen Oct. 9 to Nov. 22 at the Nelson Gallery of Art, Kansas City.
University Daily Kansan
Eve, never mind those apples,
I'll take you to La Pizza at
807 Vermont.
Adam
Tuesday, Sept. 29, 1964
CAPITOL RECORDS
ARTISTS
ANDY WILLIAMS
TV SERIES
THE GOOD TIME SINGERS
Saturday, Oct. 3
Hoch Auditorium
8:30 p.m.
Tickets now available at the Information Booth,
the Union and Bell's Music Store
$.75 $1.00 $1.25
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
What Is It?
Students from all backgrounds discussing informally Purpose of life
1. Purpose of life.
2. Does Faith Make Sense?
Where Is It?
This week the Tau Kappa Epsilon House corner of Iowa at 19th
When?
8:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.
For Whom?
You and your friends Hear: Karl Dennison, former Student Body President, Arizona State U.
Refreshments
For Transportation Call VI2-4372 or VI3-8607
SPONSORED BY CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Sept. 29, 1964
BELLLL HOWEELL
Greeks Get Ahead In Alumni Survey
Bv Linda Ellis
By Linda Ellis
(Feature-Society Editor)
(Editor's note: This is first in a series about the advantages of fraternity and sorority living.)
The long dispute about the relative worth of belonging to college fraternities and sororities has been given some new fuel to the fire in the form of a survey.
A two year research project recently completed offers new evidence that experience and education provided in college Greek organizations may develop valuable leadership and personality traits according to the Stewart Howe Alumni Service.
The company, located in Lawrence, is 34 years old and provides alumni relations, public relations, and fund raising counsel to many of these organizations.
The research project showed that three out of four of the chief executive officers of the nation's 750 largest corporations who have attended college at an institution where men's college fraternities exist are members of one of those fraternities. It also showed that 70 per cent of the senators and about 40 per cent of the representatives in the 88th Congress are members of college fraternities.
The corporation executive survey utilized the biographical information on the current presidents and chairmen of the boards of the nation's 500 largest industrial firms and 50 each of the largest banking, insurance, merchandising, transportation and utility companies compiled in 1963 by Fortune Magazine.
The significance of these figures becomes apparent when it is considered that college fraternity members constitute only about 20 per cent of the student enrollment of the 424 institutions of higher learning where Greek-letter societies are represented and that alumni members of such organizations—of all ages—make up less than one per cent of the total U.S. population.
Top executives who are fraternity members belong to a total of 54 different national Greek-letter groups, according to the research findings. The majority are alumni of less than 100 of the 424 institutions where fraternity chapters exist.
Some interesting revelations of the study:
- Only about 80 per cent of the top executives attended college.
- Among those who have had college preparation, 60 per cent attended the Big Ten Conference universities, the eight Ivy League schools, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University and the University of California.
- Yale University produced nearly twice as many of the top executives as any other single institution.
lives as any other single institution.
Of the nation's 350 tax-supported institutions granting four-year college degrees, the 10 having the largest representation of top executives are in order of magnitude: the universities of Michigan, Illinois, California, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Ohio State, Texas, the U.S. Naval Academy, Purdue, and Missouri. KU ranks 11th in the survey.
The executives who are alumni of Kansas University are; Kenneth Adams (Sigma Chi), chmn, Phillips Petroleum Co.; Frances Budinger (Phi Kappa Theta), pres., Franklin Life Insurance Co.; J. Mark Hiebert (no fraternity), chmn, Sterling Drug Co.; Emerson Higdon (no fraternity), pres., The Maytag Co.; Benjamin Holland (no fraternity), chmn, Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Co.; Stanley Learned (Phi Delta Theta), pres, Phillips Petroleum Co.; Dean McGee (Theta Tau), pres, Kerr-McGee Oil Inc.; Charles Spahr (Alpha Kappa Lambda), pres, Standard Oil of Ohio; and Lyndsone Stone (Beta Theta Pi), pres, Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Co.
In the study revealing that 70 per cent of the senators and about 40 per cent of the representatives in the 88th Congress are members of college social fraternities, sororities or similar groups, the Republicans have a higher number of fraternity men in Congress than the Democrats, in percentages.
The U.S. presidents who were college men are: Rutherford B. Haves, Theodore Roosevelt, James Garfield, Woodrow Wilson, William Howard Taft, Calvin Coolidge, Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, William McKinley, Grover Cleveland, Chester Arthur and Benjamin Harrison.
In addition to the contributions that fraternities and sororites make toward the individual betterment of their members, they also provide practical values to the universities and colleges.
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
Next: Practical values of Greek living.
To these two young men, these new discoveries are somewhat of a shock. This would be to you too if you were in their position; that of coming from a society of many of today's modern conveniences to discover that suddenly even more advances have been made and were already common to another society.
The mission is located 350 miles up river from his home town. It is a four day trip by motor boat. Joe taught these two grades, with a combined total of twenty-five students, the following subjects: geography, history, English, nature study, arithmetic, personal hygiene, and ethics. While not teaching school, he was the house master for the mission.
Joe, who is 22 years old, and Mike, who is 23 years old, have had six years of Chinese and nine years of English education.
Joe has taught school in a backward area of Malaysia before attending KU. He taught third and fourth grade at an Episcopal mission for one year.
"The climate here is terrible; the trees are losing their leaves," Joe says.
Unusual Season Changes Surprise Malay Brothers
Bv Tom Moore
Joe and Mike SimChaiLim, freshmen from Malaysia, are finding many new and exciting things at KU. It seems that the climate in Joe's part of Malaysia never changes other than a heavy rainy season between November and February.
Joe and Mike are not, as one might think from their introduction here, from the wilds of a jungle where people still live in the Stone Age. Their home town in Malaysia has telephones, small British and Japanese cars, radios, airplanes, mailboxes, street lights, and fireplugs.
The climate is not the only difference in environment that the Sim-ChaiLim brothers are experiencing. In the three weeks that Joe and Mike have been in the United States (they flew directly to Kansas from Malaysia) they have made many new and exciting discoveries. Among the many things that they are seeing for the first time are: television, bowling, and big cars.
The mission is a boarding school, except the students cook their own food which they buy from the mission and wash their clothes in the
river. Joe worked with the students as well as taught them. For his services during that year he was paid $50 per month. The students he taught were from the Makiang tribe.
Women Authors Prove Versatile
The Makiang tribe is a primitive group living in the jungle near the mission. They wear loin clothes and hunt with blow guns. When the tribe sends its children to live at the mission, the children usually adopt the conventional pants and shirts. These children are very poor and all three of their meals each day consist of rice.
When asked what things Joe and Mike find the most different at KU than in Malaysia, Joe said it is much easier to eat food with chop sticks than with a knife and a fork. Mike said that drinking milk at each meal was also taking some adjustment. Both Joe and Mike miss their regular diet of rice and fish, but they do like the food they are getting in the dormitories. Joe lives in Grace Pearson Hall and Mike lives in Ellsworth Hall.
A survey of Library of Congress listings for Barnard College graduates shows that nearly 2,000 books have been written by 640 Barnard authors in the last 75 years. The college made the survey in connection with observance of its 75th anniversary.
Mike and Joe think the students at KU are very friendly. One new discovery that they know about and eagerly await is snow. Can you imagine seeing雪for the first time at your age? They can't either.
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Women write all kinds of books.
Subjects included treatises on industrial problems, guidebooks to almost everywhere, "how to" publications in a myriad of fields as well as the expected novels and juveniles.
NOTICE: La Pizza Delivers
Steaks — Pizzas
Hamburgers — Shrimp
Ravioli — Spaghetti
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Grease Jobs . . $1.00
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Live folk singing group starting Thursday at 8:30
Jazz Group Featuring Herbie Smith every Tuesday at 8:30
Luggage No Key To Personality
—(UPI)— Once, it was by their luggage the hotel people usually knew them. But no longer.
NO COVER- NO INCREASE IN PRICE gaslight
Victor Giles of New York's Governor Clinton Hotel says luggage no longer is a key to the affluence of its owner.
But, said Giles, there's always the exception — the eccentric who is well endowed but doesn't believe anything more durable than a cardboard box is necessary for his travels.
Now, just about everyone has good-looking matched luggage, said Giles. He figures it is because of "ready availability of luggage at moderate prices" and the increase in travel in general.
Food expenditures in 1963 took a little less that 19 per cent of personal disposable income.
Steaks, Pizza,
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University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
Tuesday, Sept. 29, 1964
HELP WANTED
k" w"
Sandwich Routeman, 9 to 12 p.m. Sunday through Thursday. Must have a car. CALL Max Walters, Collect 913-381-0481; after 6:00 p.m. 9-30
Room and Board provided for girl to
visit every day, 5 days a week.
Call V1 2-3784 9-30
FOR RENT
Two KU men needed to work 3 nights each week. Contact Tom Dixon-Dixon's Drive-In, 2400 W. 6th or phone VI 3-7446. 9-29
Coach Light 1000—We have one luxury
2 bedroom apt. with patio. Graduate
student or Staff member only. CALL VI
z-2349. VI 3-8815. 1000 W. 24th. tf
Sleeping Room for Men. Large single room. Extra lounge room for two with single beds. Rent cheap. Close to K.U. and Town. SEE at 12471². Kentucky. 10-29
TYPING
Experienced secretary with Electronic type-
tice. CALL WI 2-1561 10-26
Experienced accurate typist with degree in English Education will type theses, term papers and thesis themes. Quick service rates for paperwriter, reasonable rates. GALLI I-2-3976. tf
Apartment for rent: 3 rooms, ground floor, furnished, private entrance, carport. Married couple or one grandmother SEE at 646 W. 23rd or CALL VI 3-6855.
Experienced Secretary with new IBM,
wants typing. CALL VI 2-2088. 10-23
Term papers, Theses by experienced typist. Phone VI 3-6296 after fif. tf
Typing wanted. Former high school teacher will type reports and theses. Experienced. Electric typewriter. Fast service. CALL Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8262.
Experienced typist. Former secretary will apply theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate rate, Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter, Gestetner Duplicator. Mrs McEdowney, 2521 Alabama St. Phone VI 3-8568.
Accurate typing done on electric typewriter. Familiar with the four accredited KU. thesis forms. CALL Pat Beck at VI 3-5630. tf
Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses, in a cellent wibbon ribbon typewriter. Betty Muskrat, 140 Indian, or call VI 2-0991. tf
WANTED
Need female roommate to share large, private apartment. Very close to campus and downtown. CALL VI 2-9193 after 5:00 p.m. for information. 9-30
Washing and ironing done in my home
1131 New Jersey
Phone VI 2-2598. **tt**
Graduate Student to share 4 room apt.
$35 per month plus electricity. Newly
redecorated. SEE after 6 p.m. David
Leavengood. 740 La. 10-1
TRANSPORTATION
Car Pool from Overland Park to K.U.
Classes: Monday-Wednesday 9:30 to 12:30;
Tuesday-Thursday 9:30 to 1:30; Friday
9:30 to 12:30. Leave Overland Park 8:30
am. only. Must return by 3:30 MTTW,
and by 4:30 FALL. CALL NI 8:30-
12:30.
Ride wanted to and from KU from Prairie Village. Or in a car pool to commute daily. CALL EN 2-7152. 10-5
Car Pool-Prairie Village and KU
Cars 3, 36. Phone RA 2-0793
Gemini Jenss. 9-28
MISCELLANEOUS
BAR-B-Q—For Bar-B-Q ribs and chickens that are a treat to eat, try ours at 515 Michigan St. Hours: 11:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday
WILL DO DRAPTING—all types. See
guidelines in Room 214, Book II.
un. GN 4-3287. 9-28
Yes! You can you get cash for your REBATE SLIPS. Call VI 2-1791. 10-22
Will Bill Sit in my home for 2 or 3
phone VI 3-6783 - in yard, reference
9-288
Wanted—BRIDGE PLAYERS, little experience needed. The Lawrence Children's Center is opening at 7:00 p.m. at the Holiday Inn. For more information call V1 2-0585. Friday t
Haircut special—weekdays: men's haircuts $1.50, children's haircuts $1.25, 3 full-time barbers. Tom's 14th St. Barber
9-28
THE KANSAS FREE PRESS is Kansas'
fighting liberal news letter. Coverage
against the Republican party,
etc., $2.00 per year (Students, $2.00)
14!ow New York, Lawrence, Kansas, 10-5
Fairly strong student of Japanese game with strong oppo-
nent. Phone VI - 2-4114
FOR SALE
Special Offer to New Subscribers! Six month subscription to the New Republic, $12.95; The Kansas Free Press, 1401!'s New York, Lawrence, Kansas. 10-5
Slimearm Kittens $10.00 Gas range 20
12.00 BUNTY $75.00 CALL VI 2-1646. 10
12.00 BUNTY $75.00 CALL VI 2-1646. 10
Roberts 770 Stereo Tape Recorder. Less than 20 hours use. Save over $100.00.
Also Webcore stereo tape deck. $65. CALL Larry Cole at VI 3-3251. 10-1
Bargain Transportation for sale. 1955 Buick Special, fully equipped, excellent condition. Owned by one family. Low mileage for this vehicle. Seller's Choice. A BARGAIN at $298. CALL Bruce Warren at VI 3-6400, 5:00 pm. or on weekdays. 9-29
Big Smith Corona 400 electric typewriter with carbon, ribbon Perfect for these work post over $500 new; saxophone over $37; Contact Suzanne Gill-102
959 VW, 55-60 hp. VW engine, 32 mpg.
900 CALL VI 3-5069. For sale by own.
10-2
Baritone Ukulele and Electric Hook-up,
used only 8 times. Unit cost new $41.50.
Purchased May 20. Need money—for
$30 even. CALL Bob Monk at VI-
37109
1963 Volkswagen with Sun-Roof. Ex-
condition. Call VI 2-3316 or
2-0372
GUYS: Attract the girl! Five beautifully marked kittens to be given away. Have a kitten in your apartment. You'll be irresistible! CALL VI 3-4565. 10-2
1959 Cushman Eagle Deluxe motor scooter
excellent condition. $250. CHOICE
-1127 10-2
Motorcycle—Triumph Tiger Cub. Recem-
tained and bored $300. CALL
-2-0367 10-2
1958 MGA-white with black top, wire
capacity. 34 x 27 x 22 in.
CALL: E 2-3971 after 6:00 p.m. 9-30
1961 Corvair 900 Monza, black, automatic
after 4:30 p.m. CALL VI 3-5659. 10-2
1981 Corvair 900 Monza, black, automatic
Purebred German Shepherd $20
each. 7 males, 1 female. CALL VI 3-10-
10-11
Must sell Garrard Type A automatic turntable with base and cartridge. One Electro Voice Aristocrat I speaker system. Must see to appreciate. CALL VI 2-430-896-1721.
Abe, I'll debate and argue on any subject but the quality of the pizza at 807 Vermont.
Stephen
1959 Indian 500 CC Twin, Good condition,
Mint V: 31-7522. CALL Bill 10-Mint
Mint V: 31-7522.
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center
Complete Center under one roof
Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Pa. VI 3-2921
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Beautiful German Shepherds, registered,
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ENROLLMENT
LAWRENCE DANCE STUDIO
Apartment Sized Furniture: gas stove, cooks fine, $23. Revolving book-stand, bed frame with springs and innerspring mattress (excellent condition), $47.50. bed frame height, $8. Oak swivel chair, $12. Small buffet, black mahogany finish, $42. Antique carved oak chest, mahogany衣柜, $92. CALL VI 3-2429 or UNI 4-3048.
HONN'S
COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING
Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive notes and lab assignments for biology classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes, Call VI 3-1428. Freely delivery. $4.50.
Adult Courses in Ballet, Toe, Adagio, Jazz. School Age Courses in Ballet, Tap, Acrobatics, Boy's Tumbling.
OPEN 24 HRS.
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AM-FM Radios at LOW DISCOUNT PRICES. G.E. with AFC cut to $28.00.
Sony's Hearing Aid Store. 929-931 Mass St. (G.E. Stereo Twinning Multiplex - $99.94). 10-19
USED TIRES! USED TIRES! Prices slashed to clear—ALL SIZES, small 13" and 15" Hundreds of 14" at half center. onbeak's discount Tire Center. 99-901, 10-93
5-string long neck BANJO, ode model.
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Sunbeam Collegiate Electric Blanket—reg. list $24.95. Special early offer only $15.00—Layaway Now, Ray Stoneback's. 929-831 Mass. St. 10-19
TAFE RECORDERS—at low discount prices! As low as $15.00-$5.00 per month at Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. St.
10-19
HAIR DRYERS! Dominion, General Electric, Sumbeam as low as $10.99 at Ray Stoneback's, 929-391 Mass. St. 10-19
USED TV'S—COME 'N' GET £5.00
each on as is sets. Delivered $6.00.
Working sets $29.94 at Ray Stoneback's,
929-931 Mass. St. 10-19
1956 Ford V-8 Convertible, black and
dark green. See at 1131 Ohio at
6:00 p.m.
9-29
western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL V1 2-1491 for free delivery.
TYPEWRITERS, electrics, manuals, portables; sales, service, rentals, Olympia, Hermes, Royal, Smith-Corona, Olivetti, Adding machines, equipment supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass., VI 3-3644.
PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS: Smith- Corona "Silent," and Olympia "Deluxe" (German Made). Reasonably priced and an excellent condition. CALL VI 2-3518, 9-20
1958 Dodge, 2-dr., hardtop, pwr. steering,
air con, Torture-Flight-V 8, Black and
white, original owner, CALL Bob Hess at
V1 21527 after 6 p.m. on weekends.
MG Midget, 1962, white with soft top
sleeves. Bottom: 3-5 inch. MG
2-1880 after 3:00 p.m. 9-30
Fender Bassman Amplifier and Show-
man amplifier. Both in excellent condi-
tion. Perfect for the new band. Phone
Sally at VI 3-3016. 9-30
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Sept. 29, 1964
Commission Probed Rumors
By Merriman Smith
WASHINGTON — (UPI) The Warren Commission, in its exhaustive examination of the assassination of President Kennedy, had to sift through thousands of unsubstantiated reports and rumors.
One of the more persistent items of speculation was that since the assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, spent more than two and a half years in the Soviet Union he must have been a Russian spy and/or Communist agent assigned to murder the chief executive.
The killer was widely reported to have a mysterious source of funds; that he brought $5,000 into this country from Mexico a little more than a month before he cut down Kennedy with rifle fire.
TV to Air Report
NEW YORK — (UPI)— Special news commentary programs discussing the Warren Commission's report on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy will be presented Sunday evening by the three major television networks.
A spokesman for the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) said CBS will go on the air at 3 p.m. with a two hour program on the report scheduled to be released by the White House at 4:30 p.m.
The first 90 minutes of the show, the spokesman said, will deal with background and an investigation of the questions the Warren Commission sought to answer. The last 30 minutes will deal with the report itself.
The National Broadcasting Co. (NBC) said its hour-long special program would be broadcast from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. and would blend the findings of the commission with background clips and commentary.
The American Broadcasting Co.
(ABC) will present a half-hour special program on the report from 5:30 to 6 p.m.
An ABC spokesman said the program will deal mainly with the report itself.
There were theories—which grew into "inside" gossip—that the weak-chinned, 24-year-old ex-Marine was in some way connected with either the FBI or the CIA.
ACCORDING TO the commission,
the unromantic truth was that Oswald,
a forlorn, wretched man with
a tortured mind, was none of these
things.
True, he was in the Soviet Union from Oct. 16, 1959, until June 2, 1962. He married a Russian girl, Marina. He tried to renounce his U.S. citizenship, but he never really went through with it. True, he applied for visas to take his family back to Russia in 1963.
Despite his defection to the Soviet Union and his later entreaties, the overriding fact was that nobody wanted Oswald—the Russians, the Cubans, the Mexicans, the Communists, the Socialists or for that matter, his Russian wife whose beautifully sad eyes he blackened with his fists when the mood moved him.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
QUACK CLUB Clinic, 6:30 p.m., Robinson Pool.
CATHOLIC MASS. 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
CATHOLIC INQUIRY, Forum, m. 15;
CHILD DEVELOPMENT, Movie, 730;
CHILD DEVELOPMENT
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION.
7:30 p.m. Danfort Chapel.
WESTERN CIV. Discussion, 9 p.m.
Lawrence Cent. 1915 Stratford Rd.
CATHOLIC MASSES. 6:45 a.m. .5 p.m.
St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford.
AWS INTRODUCTION TO FRESHMAN
CLASSICAL FILM, 7 p.m., Dyche
Auditorium.
K.U. MARKETING CLUB, 7:20 p.m.
Forum Room, Union, Tom Hedrick, K.U.
Sports Network and K.C. Chiefs' broad-
camp "Promotion of Major League
Sports."
CHILD DEVELOPMENT Movie, 7:30 p.m., 426 Lindy Hall.
Pocachontas, let's meet at La Pizza, 807 Vermont, till your father likes me better.
John
THE RUSSIANS naturally encouraged the defection of anyone from the West and coddled such turncoats until they could determine whether a defector could be useful from the standpoint of propaganda or what information he might have.
Oswald turned out to be virtually worthless to the Russians on both counts. They gave him a job in a Minsk factory but his work was shoddy.
When Oswald applied for exit visas for himself, his Russian wife and their first baby, permission was granted in five and a half months—fast, but not unprecedented. In fact, the Oswalds could have left Russia much sooner than they did, but they were held up until Oswald received state department permission to re-enter his native country.
The commission said, "There is no evidence that Oswald had any working relationship with the Soviet government or Soviet intelligence."
ALSO, THE Russians never would have permitted Oswald to marry a Soviet girl and take her to the
Friends, Looking at the menu from a conservative point of view-La Pizza at 807 Vt. has the greatest food selection in town.
United States if they had planned to use him as an agent. Marina's lack of English and her husband's known status as a defector would have made both of them impossibly spotlighted to undertake secret intelligence work.
Barry
As for Oswald having assassinated Kennedy on Soviet assignment, Secretary of State Dean Rusk said this was so much "madness."
"I have not seen or heard of any scrap of evidence indicating the Soviet Union had any desire to eliminate President Kennedy nor in any way participated in any such events," the secretary testified. "... It would be an act of rashness and madness for Soviet leaders to undertake such an action as an active policy."
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62nd Year, No.9
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Wednesday, Sept. 30, 1964
Homecoming Theme Chosen; Harry Belafonte to Perform
"The Greatest Show on Earth" has been chosen as the theme for the KU homecoming weekend Nov. 6-7, which will feature a performance by entertainer Harry Belafonte.
Belafonte and company will appear at 8 p.m. Saturday at Allen Field House for a performance in the round.
Tickets for the show will go on sale Oct. 19 at Bell's Music Store, the Information Booth, and the Kansas Union ticket center.
BLOCK ORDERS MUST be made by Oct. 14. This year no blind drawings for blocks will be held. The blocks will be reserved according to the percentage of tickets sold in each house.
A hundred per cent of the house will be twice the number of men as registered in the dean of men's office. Each living group will be limited to three times the number of men registered.
Richard Wintermote, alumni secretary and general chairman of the homecoming committee, said committee chairmen and student associate chairmen had selected the
theme because it should provide residence halls and houses with a broad, stimulating motif for their traditional decorations, which can include elements of the circus, carnival, or midway.
This year's theme is a reverse of ion, and Robert N. Enberg, McHe 1963 homecoming theme, "High-Pherson senior, union activities. er Education—the Road to the Future."
"LAST YEAR WAS a departure because the theme had always been of a light, airy nature." Wintermote said. "I think it is fairly well known that some students were unhappy with the theme because they were limited in the type of decorations they could have."
"Even the half-time ceremony and
Weather
The weather forecast is for generally fair and mild temperatures through Thursday. The weather bureau said the low temperature tonight will be 50 degrees.
crowning of the queen will be new and fresh," Wintermote said, "and it will carry out the greatest show theme. Many new ideas are coming out of the Homecoming committees and many more are to come. I think students, faculty, and alumni will be pleased with the happy blend of innovation and tradition being brought to this occasion."
The homecoming weekend will include a variety of entertainment in addition to the Belfonte performance and the KU-Nebraska football game Saturday.
A FRESHMAN-VARSITY basketball game will be played Friday evening. Nov. 6, followed by a first night performance of the University Theatre production, "West Side Story."
Student LDs will not be honored at the Friday performance of "West Side Story." There will be no Saturday performance because of the Belafonte concert.
Also scheduled for Friday evening is a concert by the Japan Philharmonic Symphony in Hoch Auditorium.
Housing Construction to Continue As Enrollment Growth Anticipated
Bv Glen Phillips
Construction of new University residence halls to accommodate the tremendous influx of students at KU will be in full swing for the next few years.
The latest addition to the University family of living units is the new 976-man, T-shaped residence hall being erected next to Ellsworth Hall. Construction has already reached the seventh floor of the ten-floor building.
THE FIRST UNIVERSITY effort to provide housing for students was the construction of the building now known as North Corbin Hall. This unit was begun in 1923 and put into service in 1925.
Construction of Corbin was also the last University housing project until just before World War II.
J. J. Wilson, dormitory director, said the next student housing units built for the University were the scholarship halls. These buildings were not financed by University or state funds of any kind. Benefactors of the University paid in full for these houses. They were built, furnished, and equipped and then turned over to KU officials for use as rentree units for scholarship students.
The first hall in this series was Watkins Hall built in the late thirties It was followed by Miller, Battenfeld, Foster, Jolliffe, Stephenson, Pearson, Sellards and Douthart. The last four scholarship halls were built after World War II. Foster and Jolliffe were purchased used and turned over to the University.
IN 1951 the University again ventured into the construction of student housing. They erected a building immediately adjacent to Corbin Hall and called it North College Hall. Sometimes later these two units were consolidated and became known as Corbin.
The next housing units, put into service in 1855, were Gertrude Sellards Pearson, and Carruth and CLeary.
In the spring and fall of 1954 respectively, Joseph R. Pearson and Olin Templin Halls were opened. In 1960 Luther N. Lewis Hall began operation and it was followed in 1962 by Margaret Hashinger Hall. Fred Ellsworth Hall was opened by the University in 1963.
The newest structure on campus - the T-shaped residence hall now being built - is scheduled to begin operation in the fall term of 1965. It will have a capacity of almost 1,000 students.
THE TOTAL AUTHORIZED cost for the structure is $3,800,000 which includes all fixtures and equipment.
Wilson said the University will be building to meet its needs from year to year. The building program for KU is geared to keep up with the student increase and not to exceed it.
Plans have already been approved by the Board of Regents for construction of two new residence halls with construction slated to begin in
1966 and 1967. These new units will be located on the tract of land south of Allen Field House near the intersection of 19th Street and Naism Road.
Plans for these units provide for housing about 650 students. On this tract of land there is presently enough space for the two approved structures and perhaps for a third unit, plans for which have not yet been approved by the Board of Regents. Present University policy does not call for building any residence halls west of Iowa Street.
Plans now call for Oread Hall, the Barracks-type structure west of the stadium to be closed and torn down next spring.
MILLIE'S
NEW RESIDENCE HALL—Construction on the new ten-floor residence hall next to Ellsworth Hall has reached the seventh floor. When completed, the T-shaped hall will house 976 students. It is scheduled to begin operations in the fall term of 1965. (Photo by Steve Williams.)
Stewart Criticizes ASC Expenses
Criticizing the deficit spending which has left the All Student Council heavily in debt, Bob Stewart, student body president, said last night he would "stop student government when the money alloted it is gone."
In the annual State of the University address to the ASC, Stewart, Vancouver, British Columbia, senior, strongly urged fiscal responsibility from the council. "I will not tolerate laxness on this matter," he said.
"Student government will not be as effective this year as it was in the past because we must bear the burden of others' irresponsibility," he said. He proposed that the $500 to $700 deficit be apportioned equally among each of the groups which receive money from the ASC; and recommended that the ASC office phone be taken out of it continues to be used for anonymous long distance phone calls.
M. JOE MAYER
STEWART SPEAKS - Student Body President Bob Stewart emphasizes a point at his State of the University address last night. (Photo by Steve Williams.)
Other legislation suggested by Stewart included establishing an official Student Travel Advisory Board to co-ordinate the travel programs of the ASC, SUA, and P-to-P; separating the Blood Bank from the Student Health Committee; holding a retreat after fall elections to acquaint new ASC members with the council and their responsibilities; and appointing a chaplain for the ASC.
THE REPRESENTATIVES
THE REPRESENTATIVES on the ASC have a moral responsibility to the students in their districts to keep them informed of the issues before the ASC," Stewart said. He urged a program be set up whereby ASC members would visit the living groups weekly, presenting a 5-minute discussion of the two main issues currently before the council and the facts behind them.
Stewart recommended sending a delegation to the newly organized Association of Student Governments of the United States of America to observe proceedings and consider affiliation for KU.
IN OTHER BUSINESS, Jim Cline, Rockford, Ill., junior and chairman of the ASC Athletic Board, said even seniors can complain about sitting near the goal line this year. The senior section begins at the north 40 yard line and extends almost to the 10 yard line and extends almost to the 10 yard line, nearly filling five sections.
Of the 6,000 advance reserved seat tickets sold to students last spring, 3,780 were assigned section for seniors, graduate students, law students, students at the Medical Center, and their spouses. The band is allotted 188 seats and the pep clubs 300 seats in the section, too. It is estimated that 750 spouse tickets were sold.
The junior section extends from the 10 yard line to approximately 5 yards behind the goal; the sophomore section from there
to 10 yards behind the end zone, and the freshman section nearly to the center of the horseshoe.
THE SEATS WERE NOT chosen on a first come first serve basis this year, Cline reported. They were placed in a box according to their classification and drawn out. Both block seats and individual seats were assigned at the same time, he said.
To attempt to solve the problem of students sitting in seats other than those reserved for them, the ushers are now uniformed and have been instructed to actually usher students to their seats.
The practice of selling or giving away student tickets to non-ticket holders is another problem. "It isn't known how much money is lost by the University every year through this practice" Cline said. "Since a part of each student's fees go to sup-
[Image of a man and woman]
ASC LISTENS = Two ASC members listen pensively as Bob Stewart delivers his address. (Photo by Steve Williams)
of each student's fees go to help port the program, the students are indirectly cheating themselves."
CLINE SAID CHANCELLOR Wescoe, who is a member of the University Athletic Seating Board, has expressed concern over the problem of drinking at football games.
The concession stands are another problem. Hugh Taylor, Stoke-on-Trent, England, graduate student, said. "They undoubtedly serve the weakest cokes in the world. Perhaps this is responsible for the drinking problem," he said.
(Cont. on page 12)
1
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Sept. 30, 1964
Behind the Berlin Wall
A concrete wall runs through Berlin today. It stretches for 28 miles separating two and a quarter million West Berliners from family, friends, and fellow Berliners.
Yesterday the government of the East Berlin made another "concession" to the West concerning the Wall. According to the new agreement, West Berliners will be able to obtain passes from the East German authorities, to visit relatives in the East sector during certain specified periods.
The West Berliners, however, must conduct these visits in the East sector, on the "other" side of the Wall.
TO THOSE WHO SEE THE WALL with its concrete blocks and barbed wire wrapping, the importance of this "concession" becomes clear. Prior to this agreement, West Berliners could see relatives from the East side only on Sundays, when the Communist guards permit the East Germans to stand a distance from the Wall and wave to those on the other side. Platforms and stands have been constructed on the West side so the people can stand about two feet above the wall and look down into the East side, and hope to catch a glimpse of a relative or friend.
On all other days of the week, East Berliners are not permitted near the Wall, or, if they are in the vicinity, they are not permitted to show any signs of recognition to anyone on the Western side. The penalty for disobedience is death.
I visited Berlin this summer, and was near the Wall on Sunday. Women, mostly elderly, stand on the small wooden platforms and wave handkerchiefs over the wall. Often their faces are streaked with tears.
The men cluster in small groups on the pavement in front of the Wall, and talk quietly, yet sternly, or merely stare at the wall. They wait for the women, who have the privilege of openly displaying emotion.
The new "concession" will make it possible for the people of the two sides to be together, but it will not make the partings easier, nor will it remove the barrier, first physical, now emotional, that separates the Berliners.
THE "CONCESSION" OF THE East German government shows once again their intent in building the Wall in the first place. It is the "physical ideology" erected by the government, "for" the East Berlin people. It is strong, it is rigid, and it is inescapable, just as the political procedures of the Communists are strong, rigid, and inescapable.
The "concession" seems also to show that the East Germans are not afraid of keeping the West out, but of keeping the East in.
But the people will keep meeting. They will meet on the East side, or their gazes will meet over the barbed wire, and as long as they keep meeting, a part of the East will be "getting out"
The concrete wall that runs through Berlin today could grow higher and longer, and be more rigidly patrolled, but it is only physical, and time has a way of proving that the physical are not the lasting things.
— Bobbetta Bartelt
Elections in Review
Editor's note: This is the third article in a series on the history of American Constitution" by Wilbur D. Jones, professor of history at the University of Georgia.
The Republicans had won with Grant, Hayes and Garfield, all of whom had been generals, and had lost when led by Blaine, a founder of their party, so they reverted in 1888 to their former tactic and chose Benjamin Harrison, another Civil War general, and a grandson of William Henry Harrison. Furthermore, he was from Ohio, a pivotal state. Levi P. Morton of Indiana was made his running mate. The Democrats, of course, nominated Cleveland for a second term, and made Allen G. Thurman of Ohio, that rich source of Republican candidates, their vice-presidential selection.
AS IT TURNED OUT Thurman did not carry Ohio, and Indiana, having no vice-presidential nominee on the Democratic ticket, went Republican. Cleveland was too busy to campaign in New York, and, according to one account, certain of the New York party bosses withheld support from Cleveland in exchange for Republican support for a Democratic governor of
that state. Be this as it may, Cleveland lost Indiana and New York, and with them, the election.
The Republicans nominated Harrison again in 1892, but this time they turned to New York for a vice-presidential candidate Whitlaw Reid. The Democrats placed their trust in Cleveland for a third time, and gave him Adlai E. Stevenson of Illinois as a running mate. Cleveland this time added New York and Illinois to his Solid South, as well as some other states, and he gave Harrison a good drubbing. Harrison had been a disappointment as president, and a depression fell the year of the election to add to his difficulties.
FOR THE ELECTION of 1896 the Democrats tried a new approach which was to cost them dearly. Instead of seeking a popular New York candidate, the convention (the only one which was ever stamped, according to some observers) committed itself to William Jennings Bryan, the "silver-tongued" orator, whose demand for the free coinage of silver appealed to the debtor classes, but was
strongly opposed by the monied interests. Bryan came from Nebraska; the vice-presidential candidate Arthur Sewell came from Maine. Together the states had 14 electoral votes, and the hope, then, was that the farmers and the working classes in other states would provide enough votes, along with the Solid South, to win the contest. The Republicans chose William McKinley of Ohio and Garret A. Hobart of New Jersey.
Bryan made a spirited fight of it, but McKinley carried all of the large states, and won easily. Democratic strength in this election was drawn from the Solid South and the Far West.
Dailiü 17änsan
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Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16. 1912.
1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press.
Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York
22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates:
$3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon
during the University year except Saturday and Sundays, University
holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence,
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The Republican convention of 1900 naturally nominated McKinley for the second term, and the interest centered upon the selection of the vice-president. T. C. Platt, a New York political boss, had found Theodore Roosevelt, the governor of the state, to be rather uncooperative, and he was anxious to push him out of New York politics. With the aid of M. S. Quay, a Pennsylvania political figure, Platt managed to have Roosevelt nominated for the vice-presidency, despite his lack of enthusiasm for the position. Bryan, a magnetic figure, had built up such a following among the Democrats that they were quite ready to nominate him again. Adlai E. Stevenson, who had served in that capacity under Cleveland, was nominated for vice-president. Bryan ran even more poorly than in 1896, and even lost such states as Kansas, Nebraska and Wyoming.
Roy Miller Managing Editor
Don Black, Leta Cathcart, Bob Jones, Greg Swartz, Assistant Managing Editors: Linda Ellis, Feature-Society Editor; Russ Corbitt, Sports Editor;
Steve Williams, Photo Editor
NEWS DEPARTMENT
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Jim Langford and Rick Mabbutt Co-Editorial Editors
Bob Phinney Business Manager
John Pepper, Advertising Manager; Dick Flood, National Advertising Manager; John Suhler, Classified Advertising Manager; Tom Fisher, Promotion Manager; Nancy Holland, Circulation Manager; Gary Grazda, Merchandising Manager.
In 1904 Roosevelt was nominated by the Republicans without hesitation, and Charles W. Fairbanks was advanced as his running mate. After two defeats under the banner of Bryan, the Democrats tried to make peace with the Eastern business interests, and nominated Alton B. Parker, a New York judge, and Henry G. Davis, the wealthiest man in West Virginia.
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"And We're Casting YOU Off"
BOOK REVIEWS
THE PROFESSIONAL: LYNDON B. JOHNSON, by William S. White (Crest, 60 cents).
Among campaign biographies this one isn't too bad. It has been greeted largely by catcalls from the press, with the exception of the friendly John Cauley of the Kansas City Star, who likes most politicians and seldom writes an angry word about anyone.
As one thinks back to the terrible days of last November he may realize that a lush and overdone book about President Johnson by William S. White should not be too surprising. White, though saddened by the death of John Kennedy, was cheered that his long-time friend Lyndon B. Johnson would be in the White House. White admires Johnson greatly; this is obvious in this short biography.
White does know Johnson well, better than most columnists know the President. The acquaintance qualifies him for the job; passing years may show us that this flamboyant book may be, after all, a good picture of the man to whom we are almost too close to evaluate well today.
* * *
THE AGE OF PERMANENT REVOLUTION:A TROTSKY ANTHOLOGY. edited by Isaac Deutscher (Dell Laurel, 95 cents).
Now comes another excellent collection to enrich our understanding of the rise of communism. Trotsky was one of the leaders in the Russian Revolution; he broke with Stalin over the question of extension of Marxism, and died at the hands of an assassin in 1940.
Isaac Deutscher has selected excerpts from both speeches and writings of this significant figure. He attempts to show through the writings the man Trotsky, the philosopher, theorist, revolutionary, and writer.
Trotsky discusses the proletariat and the revolution, Lenin and the Bolsheviks, terrorism, the United States, the Far East, the Moscow trials, the future of the Soviet Union, and his vision of the future.
The People Say...
B
O
Editor:
Because the current presidential election reflects such sharply divided partisan views about the two candidates, many of the important issues in the campaign have been largely ignored. Instead the personal attacks on the candidates have greatly overshadowed what should be an important and constructive debate on the major problems confronting the country.
One of the ultimate results of the campaign could be a reorientation of political beliefs along liberal and conservative viewpoints rather than traditional Republican and Democratic party lines. The results of the election in the South and such states as New York and Pennsylvania will indicate whether or not this will occur. Is such a change desirable or would it just merely reflect the current trend of political thought in the United States?
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The election also shows the growing influence of the mass media in
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reporting and trying to influence political beliefs of the electorate. Consequently, there exists in this campaign an urgent need for the mass media to delineate distinctly between objective reporting of the campaign and editorial comment concerning the candidates and the issues. A preponderance of editorial comment toward a candidate should not be reflected in the leading news stories concerning the campaign.
Progress can only be achieved through an objective and thoughtful discussion of the issues; the next five weeks will indicate whether or not an objective debate on the issues can be achieved. Such a debate will be beneficial regardless of who wins. "With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right . . ." let the American people conduct this campaign with dignity and fairness.
John R. Toland Iola junior
Page 3
British Students Speculate On Fall Parliament Election
By Janet Chartier
Great Britain, like the United States, is experiencing the dilemmas and excitement of an election year.
And Englishmen, like Americans, are making predictions, discussing candidates, and arguing over principles.
England has a multi-party system. The three parties of most importance are the Conservatives or Tories, the Socialists or Labour party, and the Liberals.
IN 1714 THE Conservatives and Whigs crystallized as parties vied for prime minister for the first time. By the 1860's the Whigs had become Liberals. This Liberal party later split into the present-day Liberal and Conservative parties.
Wednesday, Sept. 30, 1964 University Daily Kansan
The Labour party was formed in the 1890's from the Fabian Society, whose members included George Bernard Shaw, playwright, and H.
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The Conservatives have a majority of about a hundred in the present parliament and have been in office for three terms, since 1951. A party has never before controlled Parliament for such a long time.
UNIVERSITY GOOFS—English at KU is a changing language. For instance, on several of the zone signs, the University has changed registered to registared. Maybe this is progress?
Anand Chitnis, graduate student from Birmingham, England, also thinks a conservative win would be dangerous. "The Socialists have put an cohesive front for eighteen months. If they lose again the party may split. A party can take only so many defeats," he said.
"IT WILL BE A great tragedy for Great Britain if the Tories are elected again," said Hugh Taylor, graduate student from Stoke on Trent, England. "This would endanger the two party system. Fewer and fewer socialists will have had any experience in government."
Issues are not so important in the British election as they are in the United States. All parties are striving for the same things, mainly peace and prosperity.
EACH OF THESE parties fights for better housing and education in its own way; however, if the Socialists are elected this year they will not get rid of the "better" schools as they have threatened because Britain is already short of schools. Tavlor said.
He further speculated that housing could be called an issue.
"Britain had the same baby boom as the U.S. We have hundreds of slums dating back to the 19th century and a phenomenal number of houses were knocked down by Hitler," he said.
Taylor described the main issue as the "clash of personalities of the Prime Ministers." The people vote for the party whose leader would be the best Prime Minister.
THE NEXT PRIME Minister will most likely be either Sir Alec Douglas-Home, present Prime Minister and former foreign secretary, or Harold Wilson, leader of the Labour party, holder of three first-class degrees (similar to a Phi Beta Kappa honor), and the youngest member of Parliament in 150 years.
Socialism, conservatism, and liberalism do not mean the same thing in Britain as they do to Americans.
"English socialism is peculiarly English," said Taylor. "It began with a belief in public ownership and a revolt against laissez-faire liberalism. It has been modified to government control of essential things." he said.
He also cited the possibility of an even split of votes between Conservatives and Socialists. Then balance of power would be held by the liberals. The head of the party, with a few more representatives, would be invited by the Queen to form a new government. He would then discuss this with the head of the other large party.
Trevor Waters, graduate student from London, agrees with this. "There is nothing particularly conservative about the Conservative party. The nationalization of industry is not disagreeable to them," he said.
"UNTIL RECENTLY I was fairly certain the Socialists would win. But the Tories had a good summer and they may float back into office," said Taylor.
"Things will go on much as before, whoever wins," Chitnis said.
Waters didn't think this probable. He termed the liberals "unimportant in contemporary British politics." The party has about two million followers and only 7 of 630 seats in the present Parliament.
Absent KU Speaker Wires His Regrets
William Stringfellow who was scheduled to speak at 2 p.m. yesterday in the Big Eight room of the Kansas Union was unable to appear because of illness. His regrets were wired to Father Thomas Woodward, Episcopalian chaplain.
Stringfellow, lawyer, author, and theologian, was to have spoken on "Race and Reconciliation," in conjunction with the Law and Society Institute on "Religion, Education and the Law."
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Nations to Be Compared
Clinton Rossiter, Cornell professor and noted author, will compare the United States when it was a new nation to the new nations of India, Israel, and Indonesia in a speech Friday.
Rossiter will speak at 4:00 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. His topic is entitled "The United States as a New Nation, 1776-1840—any lessons for India, Israel, or Indonesia?"
The lecture, sponsored by the department of history and political science, is one of several Rossiter will be giving while he is in the Midwest. Saturday he will be the guest speaker at a conference in Topeka.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Sept. 30, 1964
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Wednesday, Sept. 30, 1964 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Experts Discuss Religious Teaching
By Cheryl McCool
Should religion be taught in public schools and how can this be accomplished?
Educators, religious leaders of the various faiths, and law experts tried to answer this question. They discussed the merits of having primary and secondary teachers trained to teach religion from an objective view point.
This was the subject of the third annual Law and Society Institute sponsored by the KU School of Law, September 29 and 30. It was sponsored by the Kansas School of Religion Project, Religious Freedom and Public Affairs, National Conference of Christians and Jews, and the University Extension.
"From the view of the professional educator, to teach religion properly the teacher shouldn't discuss either side of a religious controversy in such a way as to show one side as being correct. Ideally the teacher presents both sides of the case objectively.
EVERETT KIRCHER, professor of education at the University of Kansas. said:
"Parents don't want their children to hear the wrong side." Prof. Kircher said. "They spent years trying to teach their children the right values of life. They don't want the child to hear views that are equally right from other sincere and intelligent people. The educator might be teaching the child how to think, and the parents don't want this. Every community has some subject it doesn't want discussed and often they should. Some subjects are to be fought about, not thought about."
PROF. KIRCHER SAID he felt that there were two main forces that prevented universities from turning out teachers who were capable of teaching religion in school.
"The first reason is that the secular professor in the university doesn't feel that there is such a thing as the religion scholar who can be trusted to be objective. The secular scholar believes that anyone who teaches religion does so to gain adherence to his own personal beliefs. The only way to dispel this belief would be for the university to hire some genuine religion scholars and in this way the image may be changed." Prof. Kirchner said.
"The second force is that the public is interested in schools teaching religion, but only when the schools express the parents' beliefs," he said.
ERNEST E. BAYLES, professor of education at KU, said:
"The basic reason for the lack of religious discussion in public schools is that we do not understand democracy and the democratic education theory. Historians and political scientists are not willing to define
democracy well enough to get a clear view of democratic educational procedure."
The panel was asked where the responsibility of teaching religion rested, with the community or the educators. The question produced some differing opinions.
PROF. BAYLES said he thought the initiative belonged to the teacher.
"We as professional educators have the obligation to fit the student for the highest development of citizenry. If it can be done in a decent way, the community will go along," he said.
Prof. Bayles' view was opposed by Prof. Kircher and Dr. Marion McGhehey, executive secretary of the Kansas Board of Education. Both thought that the responsibility should belong to the community's board of education. The only other alternative would be for the state to make religion a required subject in the schools.
RICHARD DYSON, assistant professor of law at KU, said the chief opposition seems to come from within the churches themselves. He said it is here that biases and attitudes clash with the community as a whole. Comments were made against religion being taught in the primary schools. Most of the panel members
Official Bulletin
GERMAN GRADUATE Reading Exam.
Sat, Oct. 3, 9:30 a.m., 110, Fraser.
Sat. Oct. 3, 9:30 a.m., 110 Fraser.
FOREIGN STUDENTS interested in a United Nations Dinner? Saturday, Oct. 24. Chanute. See Dean Coh If interested.
CATHOLIC MASS, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
CARILLON RECITAL, 7 p.m., Albert Corken
INTRODUCTION TO AWS for freshmen, 7 p.m., Kansas Union.
CLASSICAL FILM, 7 p.m., Dycho Adelitaum
INQUIRY FORUM, 7 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1915
KU. MARKETING CLUB, 7:20 p.m.
Room Forum, Kansas Union, "Promotion of major league sports"—Tom Hedrick.
CHILD DEVELOPMENT Movie, 7:30
WESTERN CIV. Discussion, 9 p.m. St.
Lawrence Center, 1915 Stratford Rd.
TOMORROW
CATHOLIC MASSES, 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m.
St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford.
CHEMISTRY COLLOQUIUM. 4 p.m.
121 Malott, "Long Term Protective Anti-
Malaria"—Dr. Edward F. Elfanger,
Parke-Davis Research Lab.
QUACK CLUB CLINIC, 6:30 p.m. Robinson Pool.
KU-Y MEMBERSHIP MEETING, 7:30
n.m. Kansas Union.
KU AMATEUR RADIO CLUB, 7:30 p.m. Basement of red-roofed farmhouse west of Templein. Demonstration of club equipment.
SPU, 7:30 p.m., Pan American Room,
Kansas Union.
CHRISTIAN FAMILY MOVEMENT, 8 p.m. St. Lawrence Center, 1910 Stratford Road. Group 1, All Catholic married couples welcome.
SOCIOLOGY COLLOQUIUM, 8 p.m.
206 Blake Hall.
FRESHMAN NEWS NOTE
Student Union Activities will present the first of its Fall Concerts Saturday, October 3rd at 8:30 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. The GOOD TIME SINGERS, Capitol Record artists and stars of the Andy Williams Show, will present a fabulous assortment of folk music for your enjoyment. Plan now to see this first show.
THE GOOD TIME SINGERS SAT., OCT. 3
"There was a Supreme Court case a while ago," Prof. Casad said, "that did deal with the question of a baccalaureate. Because of some technicalities of the case, there was no decision."
Tickets now available at the Information Booth, the Union and Bell's Music Store
would serve secular educational purposes as well."
Certain religious holidays and ceremonies are observed by public schools. These occasions are not in strict alliance with some religious beliefs. The panel was asked if such occasions, such as Christmas and Baccalaurate, were legal.
Prof. Dyson added: "The American public should be honest with themselves. The Supreme Court has been trying to do this in their recent rulings about religion in public schools. Schools should not establish religious holidays. We should measure our honesty by those who do not observe Christmas as a religious holiday."
ROBERT C. CASAD, professor of law at KU, said:
who voiced an opinion said that young children were too vulnerable. The school would not be able to teach religion without teaching faith. They said this was a duty that belongs to the churches
"Special programs such as Christmas and Baccalaureate are within the law. It would depend on how such Christmas programs are presented. If it is stricty to allow students to perform and entertain, it is all right. However the schools could choose some other program that
Tomorrow "Public Support of Church-related Schools" will be discussed by Dr. George La Noue, Teachers College of Columbia University.
2013
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A
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For example, does your man's fiscal policy square with your philosophy on the matter?
I hope not. I never could handle money.
A boy and a girl sitting on the bench. They are wrapped in blankets.
4. Then now do you expect to go out into the world, support a wife, raise children, and be a two-car family?
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Sept. 30, 199
KU Car Boom Hitting; 8.171 Cars Registered
The post war baby boom seems to have brought the post war car boom with it to KU.
So far, there are 8,171 automobiles registered with the KU traffic department.
This means that 8,171 cars could be crowding the campus' main streets and parking lots.
Before the fall of 1962, traffic restrictions were minimal. It was almost impossible to cross the street at "banzai" which started at 20 minutes after every hour. Parking was only for a fortunate few.
IN JANUARY 1962, the legislature approved the idea of control points to cut down the daytime crush of traffic.
KU was to finance the construction and provide the added manpower. KU's only traffic fee was the $4.00 parking registration fee and the money collected in fines.
Due to the lack of money, the control booth system could operate only by assigning most of the campus policemen to traffic duty during the day and cutting the night patrol.
"WE WERE ROBBING our night staff for traffic control." explained Vice-Chancellor Keith Lawton in charge of operations.
Instead of operating the booths from 7:00 p.m. until 4:30 p.m., as the legislature had planned, the booths could operate only until 3:30 p.m. because of the lack of men, he said.
The mass of traffic was kept off the campus for nine hours, but the familiar jam was only postponed until 3:30.
Teachers could not get to the lab
facilities of Malott, Snow or Summerfield because of the student cars parked there at night.
TO COMBAT THESE problems, this year the registration fee was raised to $10.00, parking restrictions were extended until 11:00 p.m. on lots in the central area, and cars were not permitted on campus until 4:30 p.m.
Since only drivers were affected by the new laws, it was felt they should be the ones who should finance their own control.
"The legislature and the board of regents believes in the policy of 'the user pays'" explained Lawton.
Apparently the new traffic laws are working as they were planned.
THERE HAS BEEN a lot of complaint about the six dollar increase in registration fee.
Lawton explained that the eight new policemen that had been hired with the fee increase also provide the benefit of adequate night coverage of the campus.
The new parking hours are not causing a rash of tickets as some people predicted. The lines outside of the traffic and security office window are no greater than last year.
E. P. Moomau, KU police chief,
said, "We are very happy the way
the new parking laws are working
out so far."
Dostoyevsky Discussed
"The psychiatrist can never take the place of the literary critic in analyzing literature."
Court's Agenda Set
This observation was made by Dr. Bernard Hall, of Menninger Foundation in Topeka, as he discussed the works of Feodor Dostoyevsky. He presented his lecture as part of the Newman Club Forum, "The Twentieth Century Quest for Meaning," in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
The agenda of the first session of the student court will concern traffic ticket appeals filed last spring, this summer, or this fall.
Good Time Singers
Dr. Hall said that Dostoyevsky was always contemplating sin and the solution of sin. Dostoyevsky included biographical data from his own life in his stories, he said.
Dr. Hall said that many critics have studied Dostoyevsky to see if he was an atheist or a believer of God. "Dostoyevsky suffered an inner torment trying to decide if God existed, but I think he was a believer. He had some periods where he swayed back and forth trying to conclude whether God existed."
Dr. Hall said that a record kept by Dostoyevsky was found in 1879 in which he stated that he planned to write a volume on the life of Jesus Christ. Dostoyevsky died before he could undertake this task.
Dr. Hall said the greatest influence on the life of Dostoyevsky was the death of his mother and a few years later the murder of his father. Dostoyevsky suffered from an Oedipus complex and had thought of killing his father and when the actual murder occurred it gave rise to deep seated feelings of guilt, Dr. Hall said. This in turn brought on epileptic fits in the opinion of some historians although others disagree on this point, he explained.
"Dostoyevsky was able to create characters who came alive," Dr. Hall said. "This is why Dostoyevsky is so important from the clinical point of view," he explained.
The court will meet in the court room of Green Hall at 7:00 tonight instead of 7:30 which had been previously reported.
The Good Time Singers will appear at 8:30 p.m. Saturday in Hoch Auditorium rather than Friday as was reported in yesterday's Kansan.
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Page 7
KU Forms Needed For Draft Boards
Forms must be filled out and the draft board is interested in every man over 18 years of age.
Any KU man with a question concerning selective service regulations could clear up the problem by consulting James K. Hitt, director of admissions and registrar.
For KU men that time of year has come again.
Since coming to KU in 1940, it has been Hitt's responsibility to keep up to date on the selective service and answer student questions. Hitt said yesterday that he enjoys this part of his job because it keeps him in contact with the students.
EVERY CASE is different. Hitt said, thus the student who isn't sure should take the time to find out.
said, thus the student who isn't sure should take the time to find out. The registrar pointed out several general principles of the selective service law—both old and new:
As soon as the individual male reaches his 18th birthday he must register with a selective service board. It doesn't make any difference where he registers since the information will be sent to his home board where it will be kept permanently.
As soon as the local board assigns the registrant a number, he is sent a classification questionnaire which will be the basis of classification.
Only those classified 1-A are inducted. Most college students, if they keep their course work up and their draft board notified, need not worry about being inducted before they complete their education, Hitt said
College students are not given physical examinations at age 18. The government feels these individuals are in general above average physically and mentally and it hopes to save money in this way.
THE CHANGE was inspired by the government's poverty and manpower conservation programs. Now, those who are not up to selective service expectations, either mentally or physically, will be in line for rehabilitation programs. Approximately one-half of those examined are unfit for duty, Hitt said. To the government this represents a tremendous waste of manpower.
In the past the individual was given a physical examination only when induction was near. Since July 1, 1664, this policy has been changed and most are given physical examinations soon after their 18th birthday.
Hitt urged students to keep their draft boards informed of their activities. The University helps by sending local boards an information card filled out at registration time.
LHS to Teach Adults In Business, English
Two adult education courses, business education and English for Spanish speaking students, will be offered in the evenings at Lawrence High School this fall.
The business education classes will be held in a newly constructed data processing unit at the high school, which is designed especially to train students for immediate jobs or part time work in college.
E. J. Logsdon, director of adult education at the high school said that KU students would not be given credit for the evening classes.
"But we believe the training can be of great value to them. Several of the courses are filled already and others are growing, but we'll also have the evening classes this spring," Logsdon said.
The new business unit, containing classrooms for programmed
There will be an all-membership meeting of the KU-Y at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Big Eight room of the Kansas Union.
KU-Y to Have Meeting
All program chairmen will be present to inform students about their programs.
The meeting is open to all students.
typing, secretarial training, trade and industry and distributive education classrooms, was officially opened last Tuesday.
The English classes taught in Spanish are offered to KU Students from Latin America and their wives, or others wishing to enroll.
The classes will be held from 7:30 to 10 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday evenings, beginning a week from today. The enrollment fee is $30 per semester.
The program was organized by Robert E. Nunley, associate chairman of Latin American area at KU, and E.J. Logadon. Miss Ana Herzfeld, KU graduate student and Spanish instructor, will teach the classes.
"This could be one of the best extra-curricular programs offered by the University for wives and husbands," Nunley said. "We often have wives of Latin American graduate students who arrive here knowing nobody and speaking little or no English. Now they'll have the opportunity to learn."
Nunley asked all students who may know an interested party to inform them or the Latin American office at VI3-0016. In the event the class fills, another section will be added.
Greek Value to Campuses Cited
(Editor's note: This is the second article in a two-part series concerning the advantages of sorority-fraternity living.)
By Linda Ellis (Feature-Society Editor)
In addition to the contributions that fraternities make toward the individual betterment of their members, they also provide many practical values to universities and colleges, according to the Stewart S. Howe Alumni Service.
- Fraternities and sororities are
Howe, who is founder and president of the service, has outlined several of the most practical values provided by national fraternities and sororities:
- By providing attractive housing for a significant portion of the student body, they save the school the cost of building and operating more dormitories. A school's limited capital funds or borrowing credit can thus be used, instead, for other campus buildings. As a tax-supported institution, the taxpayers' load is lightened insofar as self-sufficient groups provide housing for their members.
effective volunteer recruiting agencies that attract desirable students to the institution. Without their efforts, most private schools would have to spend thousands more dollars every year to make themselves well known and attractive to many desired students.
- The U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare recently completed a study of the growing number of students who leave college without being graduated. The study revealed that "fraternity and sorority membership was clearly associated with 'a persistence to graduate'" Institutions with no recognized fraternities or sororites had a lower rate of graduation than schools with them. Schools with national fraternities had higher "persistence" rates than those with only local groups. And members of fraternities and sororites at the same institutions had better persistence records than non-members.
- College and university administrators find it easier to maintain student discipline among fraternity and sorority members, than among non-members. They can use the
local chapter undergraduate and alumni officers, and the national officers, as tools to control and inspire the 50 to 100 members of each group. They can also enlist the help of local fraternity alumni "advisers" in supervising their respective groups. Without these means of control, the school would have to hire more "proctors" to live in residence halls, and expand student disciplinary staffs. The results would not be dependable.
- Organized student groups—the healthiest are the fraternities and sororities on each campus—give color and spirit to student life, making the university more than a drab institution, and inspiring loyalty to it. College and university administrators are, on occasion, eager to secure student cooperation, or a generous turn-out for a university event, or a demonstration of support for some project. The administrators know that the only effective way to stir action and get a good response from the student body is to enlist the cooperation of the fraternities and sororities.
(Next: Independent Living.)
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A LA MODE (Stan Vanderbeek) and
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- IMPORTANT -
KU YOUNG DEMOCRAT MEETING
Dr. George Brown, Professor of Political Science, speaks on Goldwater's critique of American Foreign Policy: or, Why I'm Going to Vote for Lyndon Johnson.
Forum Room—Student Union
Thursday, Oct.1, 7:30 p.m.
All interested persons and members are urged to attend.
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Sept. 30, 1964
GOOD TIMES ARE HERE AGAIN!
CAPITOL RECORDS ARTISTS
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STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES PRESENTS
The GOOD TIME SINGERS
Saturday, October 3, 8:30 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
Get in the swing of things! Bring your date to the Fall Season's first big show The Good Time Singers
Tickets are now available at the Information Booth, the Union, and Bell's Music Store
All Seats Reserved
$.75 $1.00 $1.25
Wednesday, Sept. 30, 1964
University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Chancellor Takes Time To Teach Western Civ
"It is an educational experience for me," Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said in discussing his role as a classroom teacher.
The busy KU head man takes time out from a hectic schedule to teach a Western Civilization discussion group each Monday.
Chancellor Wescoe, now in his third year of teaching the course, said he missed teaching during his first two years as chancellor. Thus, in the fall of 1962 he stepped back into the classroom.
"I didn't want to be stuck behind a desk all of the time," he said.
As a classroom teacher, Chancellor Wescoe says he gets a feeling of what the students are thinking. He does not want to be remote from the student.
Wescoe taught pharmacology at Cornell for three years and in 1951 came to the KU School of Medicine as professor of pharmacology and experimental medicine. During his eight years as Dean of the School of Medicine he continued his teaching
The chancellor has strong convictions about the value of KU's Western Civilization program.
Administrators Go to Conclave
Four KU administrators heade west yesterday and today to attend a meeting of the American Council on Education at San Francisco, James R. Surface, vice chancellor and dean of faculties, said yesterday.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, a member of the council's board of directors, left last night to be on hand for a meeting today.
Leaving for San Francisco today were Surface; William J. Argersinger, associate dean of finance and research; and James K. Hitt, director of admissions and registrar.
Hitt will not represent the University, but will attend as president of the American Association of College Registrars and Admissions Officers.
"Self-study—the best possible experience for the student—combined with an interchange of ideas between fellow students," is a partial explanation of the study's importance, he said. The chancellor termed the course as one "in which the student learns broad thinking, organization of thoughts, and how we got where we are now."
His off-campus schedule sometimes makes it impossible to meet his discussion group. At these times, Ambrose Saricks, professor of history, takes his place.
Med Center Expanding
An addition to the Out Patients Clinic of the KU Medical Center, to be officially opened November 29, has enlarged the Clinic's capacity by 70 per cent.
This addition is a step toward accommodating the increasing number of medical students. It will provide more area for offices, libraries, consultation room, and generally expand all clinic facilities.
The Out Patient Clinic takes care of those not needing hospitalization and provides free care for the needy.
The addition, costing $11 1/4 - 1/2 million, half of which are federal funds, is being unofficially used while furniture is arriving.
A non-denominational chapel which will go into use November 1 at the center is being built as a memorial to Kenneth Spencer, founder of the Spencer Chemical Co., by his wife.
Seating 40 people, the chapel will be connected to the center building. The connecting corridor will provide offices for chaplains who work in conjunction with the hospital.
The chapel's completion is expected before the end of the school year.
Prohibition Party Moves To Form KU Association
KU students are being offered the chance to participate in a party other than the two major parties this election year. The Prohibition Party of Kansas has started a movement to contact all students interested in forming a Young Prohibition Association at KU.
Reverend Rolland E. Fisher, state chairman and vice-chairman of the national executive committee of the Prohibition Party, said, "If the party is needed anywhere, it is needed on college and high school campuses. Some young people are thinking seriously about the problem of liquor."
To solicit members, the party has placed advertisements locally.
Professor E. Harold Munn of Hillsdale, Mich., is the Prohibitionist candidate for president. He has run for six offices from mayor to vicepresident on the Prohibition ticket,
Election of officers will be on the agenda of the first meeting of the India club.
His running mate, Reverend Mark R. Shaw, is from Melrose, Mass. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, honor society, and Delta Sigma Rho, speech honor society.
India Club to Meet
The meeting is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Forum Room of the Union.
One section of the state party platform that concerns KU is the statement. "Teachers must be selected on the basis of high moral character."
Rev. Fisher said, "The Kansas Prohibition Party is about as strong as any in the nation. Election laws have been so severe on minor parties in other states it has been difficult to get our slates of candidates on the ballots."
Pharmacy Student Gets Weibley Scholarship
James R. Miller, Baldwin senior, has been awarded the William D. Weibley Scholarship for the 1964- 65 academic year.
The award covers all fees for the year and was set up through the estate of the late William D. Weibley of WaKeeney.
This is the third year that Milter has received the scholarship.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Sept. 30, 1964
Six Intramural Football Games Open Fall Program Tomorrow
The fall intramural program will officially open tomorrow afternoon with six touch football games scheduled. The other sports, involving singles and doubles competition, will begin Monday.
At the managers meeting yesterday, drawings were conducted to place touch football teams in the various divisions.
The schedule for this afternoon matches the following Fraternity "B" teams: Sigma Chi vs. Delta Upsilon #2, field #2; Phi Gamma Delta #1 vs. Theta Chi, field #3; and Delta Chi vs. Sigma Phi Epsilon, field #4. Friday's games will be in Independent"A" play, pitting Ellsworth vs. Templin, field #2; JRP vs. Spectre, field #3 and Misfits vs. Oaks, field #4.
Entries in the other sports unofficially number; tennis, 128 singles, 36 doubles; handball, 70 singles, 18 doubles; badminton, 69 singles, 15 doubles; horseshoes, 29 singles, four doubles; and golf, 80.
COMPETITION in football will consist of single-round league play, with the top teams in each division advancing to the league finals. Winners of the fraternity and independent leagues will meet
Soccer Coach, Players Needed
Tryouts for the KU soccer team will be held at 4 p.m. tomorrow at the lower intramural field, according to Henry Shenk, professor of physical education. All veteran players or persons interested in learning the sport are invited to attend the practice.
The team also needs a new coach, Shenk said. Tom Hedrick, radio sports director and instructor of journalism, handled the coaching duties last year, but will be unable to guide the team this season.
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each other for the hill championship.
Single elimination tournament play will be held in the other sports. Brackets for the singles and doubles tournaments in each sport will be posted outside the intramural office in Robinson Gymnasium. It will be up to the players to schedule their matches and report the results to the office.
Fraternity "A"
The drawings resulted in the following football divisions:
Division II—Phi Gamma Delta, Alpha Tau Omega, Kappa Sigma, Phi Kappa Psi and Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Division I—Beta Theta Pi, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Phi Kappa Theta, Delta Upsilon and Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Division III—Sigma Chi, Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Nu, Delta Tau Delta and Lambda Chi Alpha.
Fraternity "B"
Division I—Beta Theta Pi #1,
Phi Kappa Tau, Triangle, Phi
Kappa Psi, Delta Sigma Phi and
Pi Kappa Alpha.
Division II—Sigma Chi, Phi Gamma Delta #1, Delta Chi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Theta Chi and Delta Upsilon.
Division III—Delta Tau Delta,
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Dr. Forest C. (Phog) Allen, former KU basketball coach and presently a practicing osteopath in Lawrence, is reported to be somewhat improved after suffering two broken ribs in a fall at his home early last Thursday morning.
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Page 11
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1961 Corvair 900 Monza, black, automobile
after 4.30 p.m. VC 3-5659 10-2
Purebred German Shepherd $20
each. 7 males, 1 female. CALL VI 3-5081.
CALL VI 3-5081.
Must sell Garrard Type A automatic turntable with base and cartridge. One Electro Voice Aristocrat I speaker system. Must see to appreciate CALL V1 2-1139.
1959 Indian 500 CC Twin, Good condition,
inc. $205, CALL BILL Miller
M 3-7222
Beautiful German Shepherds, registered,
1 yr. old and have had all permanent
shots. Excellent temperament, leash
trained and very good with children.
Reasonable to right home. Phone KI 2-
2559 in Eudora.
Apartment Sized Furniture: gas stone cooks fine. $23. Revolution: gas island, sand bath. $15. Revolution: gas 325. Bed frame with springs and innerspring mattress (excellent condition), $47.50. Bathroom mat frame with height, $8. Oak swivel chair, $12. Small buffet, black mahogany finish, $42. Antique carved oak chest,马哈吉庄, $92. CALL VI 31-4298 or UNI 4-3048.
Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive course material for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes, Call VI 3-1428. Free delivery. $4.50.
AM-FM Radios at LOW DISCOUNT PRICES G.E. with AFC cut to $28.00.
$28-931 Mass St. G.E. Steer Stonebent
Multiplex-$99.94) 10-19
USED TIRES! USED TIRES! Prices slashed to clear—ALL SIZES, small 13" and 15" Hundreds of 14" at half center, 102-931, Mass. S, 10-19
5-string long neck BANJO, ode model.
Call VI 2-1328. 9-30
Sunbeam Collegiate Electric Blanket—reg. list $24.95. Special early offer only $15.00—Layaway Now, Ray Stoneback's. 929-931 Mass. St. 10-19
TAPE RECORDERS—at low discount prices! As low as $15.00-$5.00 per month at Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. St.
10-19
HAIR DRYERS! Dominion, General. $189.
Rocky Stoneback's, 329-931 Mass. St. 10-19
USED TV'S—COME 'N' GET $E'M 5.00
each on as is sets. Delivered $6.00.
Working sets $29.94 at Ray Stoneback's.
929-931 Mass. St.
10-19
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extensively comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL VI 2-1901 for free delivery.
MG Midtet, 1962, white with soft top
MG Midtet, $115, for $115,
V 2-1880 to 3.00 p.m.
9-30
TYPEWRITERS, electries, manuals, port-
tables; sales, service, rentals, Olympia,
Hermes, Royal, Snith-Corona, Olivetti,
Adding machines, office supplies and
equipment. Lawrence Typewriter, 735
Mass., VI 3-3644. t
1958 Dodge, 2-dr., hardtop, pwr. steering,
air cond, Torture-Flight-V 8, Black and
white, original owner. CALL Bob Hess at
V1 2-1527 f. 6 p.m. on weekends. tf
Fender Bassman Amplifier and Show-
man Amplifier. Both in excellent condi-
tion. Perfect for the new band. Phone
Solly at VI 3-3016. 9-30
LOST
Lost Brown key case with keys—reward.
CALL VI 2-3288. 10-5
MISCELLANEOUS
Let us do your out of print book searching. New and used books—literary periodicals. Open Mon, through Sat. 10:30 am, to 5:00 p.m., and evenings Mon, through Fri. 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.
Abington Book Shop, 10151₂ Mass. ff
Yes! Now you can get cash for your
REBATE SLIPS. Call V1 2-1791. 10-22
BAR-B-Q—For Bar-B-Q ribs and chickens that are a treat to eat, try ours at 515 Michigan St. Hours: 11:00 am to 11:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday 0-30
Wanted—BRIDGE PLAYERS, little experience needed. The Lawrence Bridge play at the Evans Event Center at the Holiday Inn. For more information call VI 2-0565. Friday tt
THE KANSAS FREE PRESS is Kansas' fighting liberal newsletter. Coverage on the latest political news, $2.00 per year (Students; $2.00), 1401 New York, Lawrence, Kansas, 10-5
People-to-People Football Forum Oct. 1.
7:30 p.m., open to all Foreign Students to explain the game of football. Football Players as guest speakers. 10-1
Fairly strong student of Japanese game
opponent, strong strong opponent,
phone VI 2-4414.
HELP WANTED
Sandwich Routeman, 9 to 12 p.m. Sunday
through Thursday. Must have a car.
CALL Walters, Collect 913-381-0431,
after 6:00 p.m. 9-30
Room and Board provided for girl to
play 4 hours a day, 5 days a week.
Cali V I 2-3784 9-30
FOR RENT
Coach Light 1000—We have one luxury
2 bedroom apt, with patio. Graduate
student or Staff member only. CALL VI
3-2349. VI 3-8815. 1000 W. 24th. tf
Sleeping Room for Men. Large single room. Extra lounge room for two with single beds. Rent cheap. Close to K.U. and Town. SEE at 1247$^{1}$ UK. 10-23
Very nice apt, for men close to campus.
See at 1102 W. 19th Terr. 10-6
1, 2 and 3 room nicely furnished apts.
1, 2 and 3 rooms equally rentable, require rent. CALL VI 2-1695. 10-6
One block from campus - modern furnished apartment, two rooms, ideal for friends or married couple. 2-4136 or SEE anytime at 517-B West 14th St. B
Selling - Buying Need Help
For best results, use the University Daily Kansan Classified Page
Phone Ext. 376
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES 6th Edition
All new and revised!
To be first on the delivery list
$4.25
Call VI 2-1901 — Now!
FREE DELIVERY
$4.25
19th St. Garage
Automatic transmission repair overhauls tune-ups brake service carburetor work
Behind Fina Service Station at 19th & Mass.
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center
Established - Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
FREE PARKING
Complete Center under one roof
STUDENTS
Automotive Service
Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel
Balancing & Alignment
7 a.m. - 11 p.m.
STUDENTS
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694
livelier lather for really smooth shaves!
1.00
Old Spice
SUPER
SMOOTH SHAVE
for really smooth shaves!
1.00
lasting freshness
glides on fast,
never sticky! 1.00
spice-fresh lotion! 1.25
Old Spice
SUPER
SWOOTH SHAVE
Old S
STICK DEO
Old Spice
AFTER SHAVE LOTION
SHULTON
lasting freshness
glides on fast,
never sticky! 1.00
Old S
STICK DEO
Old Spice
AFTER SHAVE LOTION
brisk, bracing
the original
spice-fresh lotion! 1.25
Old Spice...with that crisp, clean masculine aroma!
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Sept. 30, 1964
Stewart Criticizes—
(Cont. from page 1)
In interviews following the meeting, members split along party lines over the source of the deficit.
"I think it was a political stab at the past administration," Cline said.
THE PAST ADMINISTRATION, headed by Reuben McCornack, Abilene senior, was controlled by Vox Populi. University Party, with Stewart heading the ticket, ended Vox's seven-year hold on the student body presidency, in last spring's elections.
Cline, a member of Vox, said Stewart should have pointed out some of the merits of the previous administration.
The ten per cent increase in KU's student body should alleviate the situation somewhat, Cline said, as the ASC will receive a proportional increase in funds from student activity fees.
"Last year's debts came not only from executive spending," Cline said, "but from spending from the council members themselves for things like paper and phone calls."
WE'RE NOT EXACTLY sure yet how much the deficit is," Ray Myers, Dodge City senior and ASC treasurer, said. "We can't determine where the money was spent. It seems like somebody should have been keeping an eye on it—if only out of curiosity."
Myers said $250 of ASC funds which had been loaned to the Radio Production Center last year had not been accounted for. Since the Center is now under University control, the funds may have been returned to the ASC during the summer and spent since then he said.
A complete accounting of the ASC books and funds, to be completed by the middle of next week, should reveal the actual status of the ASC budget, Myers, a UP member, said.
IN OTHER BUSINESS, the ASC appropriated funds to send Stewart to Washington, D.C., this weekend. Since the council is so heavily in debt, the University will reimburse them for the amount of the trip.
Appointments were made to five ASC seats whose occupants had either moved from their districts or not returned to KU. They were: Jim Prager, Atchison sophomore, men's small residence halls district; Ginger Thiemer, Colby sophomore, women's small residence halls district; Dave Lutton, Bartlesville, Okla., junior, men's large residence hall district; George Brenner, Princeton senior, men's large residence hall district; and Bob Hicks, Kansas City, Mo., junior, fraternity district, Prager, Theimer and Hicks are affiliated with Vox Populi, and Lutton and Brenner with University Party.
Pharmacy Faculty Having Active Week of Meetings
The faculty of the KU Pharmacy School is having a busy schedule of meetings and conventions this week.
The Fifteenth Bi-Annual Pharmacy Extension convened Monday at Salina beginning the 6-day convention which will meet at Hays and Wichita, before it is concluded here.
Attending the conference from KU are Duwane Wenzel, professor of pharmacy and dean of the School of Pharmacy; Edward Smissman, professor of pharmacy; Raymond Hoppenen, professor of pharmacy; and Robert Wiley, assistant professor of pharmacy.
THE PURPOSE OF the meetings is to discuss four major topics: drug interactions, drugs and the reproduction cycle, some current concepts in allergy, and drugs for intestinal parasites.
The program will conclude in Lawrence with an open house of the Pharmacy School and laboratory demonstrations of chemical preparation of drugs, preparation of drugs into suitable dosage form, and testing on animals.
This extension trip is sponsored by the KU School of Pharmacy, the Kansas Pharmaceutical Association, the Kansas State Board of Pharmacy, and the University Extension.
The Pharmacy Advisory Council, which meets twice a year, will convene here Sunday. The 13 members attending are outstanding pharmacists elected to membership.
The Wichita Academy of Pharmacists, attended by Dr. Wenzel, Dr. Hopponen, and Dr. Wiley yesterday, is a group of Wichita pharmacists oriented toward keeping up to date in their practice.
C
JAMA KING
She's jumping for joy at making FROSH HAWKS and over the navy skirt that she found here for $10.00
COACH HOUSE
Chairs for Tennis and Gymnastics
12th & Oread
VI 3-6369
College Life
What Is It?
Students from all backgrounds discussing informally
1. Purpose of life.
2. Does Faith Make Sense?
Where Is It? This week the Tau Kappa Epsilon House corner of Iowa at 19th
When?
8:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.
Oct.1
For Whom?
You and your friends
Hear: Karl Dennison, former Student
Body President, Arizona State U.
Refreshments
For Transportation Call VI2-4372 or VI3-8607
SPONSORED BY CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST
PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS
ISRO
FILMING FROM AROUND THE WORLD
THE SCIENCE ADVENTURE FILM SERIES (in color)
ADMISSION FREE!
Currently being shown at the New York World's Fair
PRIOR CLAIM Is Man An Inventor or A Discoverer?
Due to overcapacity crowds there will be two showings Friday
7:00 & 8:30 p.m. — Friday, Oct.2 — Forum Room (Union)
1. What is the probability that a randomly selected student is female?
2. What is the probability that a randomly selected student is male?
Reuben McCornack - Student Body President 1963-64 Gary Jouvenat - Student Chairman - VI 3-9562 Film available for showing in dorms, fraternities and sororities Sponsored by K.U. Students & Local Businessmen