THE ROOTS OF THE PROJECT ARE INVOLVING ALL OF US. WE WISH YOU A FRESH START FOR THIS MARKET REALIZATION. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, an alumnus of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity, turned the first shovel of dirt yesterday in groundbreaking ceremonies for a $160,000 addition to the fraternity house. ATO's Start Work HOUSE STARTED—ATO Chapter President Richard M. Mendick, Shawnee Mission junior, shovels dirt while Chancellor Wescoe eyes approvingly. The addition, a wing joining the south side of the four-story fraternity house at 1537 Tennessee St., will increase the capacity by at least ten men to 92 members. Included in the addition is an enlarged kitchen and enlarged dining room. Daily hansan Additional parking, landscaping and alterations to the existing building will make the addition an integral part of the existing structure. Construction will begin tomorrow, and the addition is expected to be completed by Sept.1. Mike Mendlick, Shawnee Mission senior, and president of the fraternity, and Edwin Lee, president of the building corporation, also participated in the ceremony. The addition is being built on a lot owned by Alpha Tau Omega and once occupied by the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity. The TKE fraternity moved to a new house near the southwest edge of the campus, and the old house was razed this fall. Besides publishing many articles in learned journals, he is author of two books, "A Short History of Opera" (2 volumes), and "A History of Western Music." Monday, March 1, 1965 Frosh Model Senate Passes Bills on Abortion, Succession 62nd Year, No. 89 Musicologist To Lecture During Visit An internationally known scholar in the history of music will spend three days on the KU campus this week as the fourth Humanities Series lecturer this year. When the bell rang for the third annual KU model Senate, 107 freshmen, representing both political parties, came out swinging their legislative fists. By Jim Sullinger Dr. Grout studied musicology under eminent teachers in France and Austria, was university organist at Cornell in 1945-47, was chairman of the music department there for 10 years, and has been Given Foundation Professor of Musicology at Cornell since 1962. Before going there in 1945, he taught at Mills College Harvard, and University of Texas. Persons attending the Tuesday evening lecture may park in Lot Y—a half block south of the KU smokestack—and use a free shuttle bus to Fraser and return. Sponsored by the KU-Y, the model Senate was held last Friday and Saturday in Green Hall. FILIBUSTERS, committees, debate, passage of bills, party affiliation, and the informality of the sessions added to this duplication of the United States Senate. Blake Biles, Hutchinson freshman and Senate president, said the model Senate had two purposes. The first was to give students a better understanding of the political process and show what they can do individually. At 4:30 p.m., Wednesday, he will speak on "Music and Musicology in America and Europe" at a coffee forum arranged by Student Union Activities in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Dr. Donald J. Grout, musicologist at Cornell University, will present the lecture at 8 p.m., Tuesday, on "Music History and Musical Reality," in Fraser Theater. The Faculty Club will give an informal reception after the lecture. Dr. Grout will also speak to a Shakespeare class about "The Music in Shakespeare's Plays" and to four classes in music history. At 2:30 p.m. the same day, Dr. Grout will speak on "Opera in the 20th Century" at a Fine Arts convocation in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and was president of the American Musicalological Society and of the International Musicalological Society. He was born in 1902 in Rock Rapids, Iowa, and received the B.A. degree in philosophy at Syracuse in 1929, the M.A. in music at Harvard in 1932. He held Fullbright and Guggenheim research fellowships to Italy in 1951-52 and a Fullbright teaching fellowship at the University of Utrecht in 1959-60. He received the Archibald T. Davison Medal for Musicology at London in 1962. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Weather Today's weather forecast calls for rain changing to snow with strong northerly winds and near blizzard conditions. Snow up to four inches is expected with much blowing and drifting. Falling temperatures today with a low by morning of 15 to 20. Fred Krebs, Shawnee Mission freshman, and Sandra Arnold, Concordia freshman, were co-chairmen of the steering committee which was responsible for setting up the mock-Senate. "THIS YEAR is a new high for the model Senate," Krebs said. "There was a lot of enthusiasm and I'm pleased with the turnout." The second purpose was to ex- pose them to important national issues. The model Senate consisted of 60 Republican and 47 Democratic members. Participants in attendance aver- FOR THE REPUBLICANS, Bob Swinney, Bartlesville, Okla., was elected majority leader with Steve Sauder, Emporia freshman, and George Carter, Great Bend freshman acting as majority whips. Ronald Young, Dallas, Tex., freshman, was elected Democratic minority leader and Jean Foss, Great Bend freshman, as minority whip. an overwhelming majority of the students passed a bill legalizing abortion within certain limitations. aged around 60 for the two day legislature. A FEDERAL AID to Education Bill was defeated by the Senate when (Continued on page 12) State's High Court Says 'Reapportion' TOPEKA, Kan. —(UPI)— The Kansas Supreme Court today ruled the Kansas Legislature apportionment was unconstitutional. The vote was 4-3. In a majority opinion written by Justice Harold Fatzer, the high court said both houses must be apportioned on the basis of population only. The University Disciplinary Committee sustained the School of Journalism's action against Rick Mabbutt, Shoshone, Idaho senior Friday but changed its description from disciplinary probation to censure. Mabbutt Case Ruled Censure After six hours of deliberation in the Dean of Student's office, the committee, composed of six students and five faculty members made its decision. Mabbutt, former editorial editor of the University Daily Kansan, was censured for an editorial he wrote in January. According to Richard E. Dyson assistant professor of Law and representing Mabbutt, the censure meant that Mabbutt is not on disciplinary probation. The high court ruled that those sections of the Kansas constitution which state that each county must have one representative regardless of population, "are rendered inoperative by the equal protection clause of the 14th amendment of the constitution of the United States". Fatzer wrote that "again, the people, not land or trees or pastures, vote." ALTHOUGH THE court made no indication of when or at what session the legislature must reapportion itself. But it clearly stated it expected reapportionment before April 2, 1966, the deadline for filing for the next legislative elections. Fatzer also wrote the dissenting opinion. The Supreme Court pointed out that Saline County had one representative but is 21.3 times the size of Greeley County, which also has one representative. "Twenty-three seats represent more people than do the 84 smallest counties which control two-thirds of the majority vote in the House of Representatives," the opinion said. The court added that "consideration of area alone provides an insufficient justification for deviations from the equal-population principle." The idea of reshaping the foreign policy of the United States on a more realistic and rational basis needs serious consideration by our policy makers, Prof. Hans Morgenthuas said Friday. Prof. Asks Revamp Of Foreign Policy He is a professor of political science at the University of Chicago and one of the world's leading authorities on international affairs in lecture on "U.S. National Interest in the 60's." "Are we really serious about our policy towards China or is it wise to give up our peripheral containment of it and recognize its dominance in Asia?" Prof. Morgenthau asked. "The sooner we ask ourselves this question, the better it will be for us." THE UNITED STATES' foreign policy had, in the beginning, two main interests: to preserve the security within the western hemisphere, and to maintain the balance of power in Europe. International developments and the growth of Communism necessitated the need for a third interest: to maintain the balance of power in Asia, for it was said that the security of the United States was not only connected with Europe but with Asia as well, Morgenthau said. "THEREFORE, THE U.S. supported China against Japan in 1931 and in order to create a powerful China to counteract Japan," Prof. Morgenthau said. When communism in China made this scheme impossible, the U.S. "turned to Japan and joined them in an attempt to check the growth of China in Asia." The "Open door policy of Asia" was also drawn in order to check the growth of a gigantic Japanese empire in Asia and with the intention of preserving the territorial integrity of China, he said. The same happened in Germany, for after the war, the U.S. turned around to Germany in its struggle against the Soviets, he said. The containment policy in Europe, led to its extension in Asia. The Truman Doctrine's idea of lending assistance to any country threatened by Communism, made the policy an unlimited one. Out of this came a "strange and ineffectual alliance combination" like the Baghdad Pact (later CENTO) and the SEATO. Commenting on this, Prof. Morgenthau said, "The U.S. armed Pakistan to its teeth. Pakistan today is virtually an ally of China. When the U.S. learned about this, it started arming India to counteract Pakistan. If ever there is an anarchy in India, you can be sure the whole of Asia will go communist. "THE IRRATIONALITY of these alliances shows that we are up against an armament race with ourselves and the containment policy is up against self-contradiction," he added. "WE TALK about losing face if we pulled out of South Viet Nam," he continued. "When the French decided to pull out of Algeria and Indochina, they did not lose face but showed wisdom." Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 1, 1965 A Consensus Needed Last week this campus was fortunate to have a speaker whose life has been dedicated to law and order and the peaceful progression of civilization. Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas simply and calmly offered the peoples of the world two alternatives—either a world community based on law and humanitarian ideals or "the greatest racial conflict in history." The real crisis, stripped of any political or ideological disguise, is the age-old suspicion, hostility, and bitterness between the "haves" and the "have-nots" of the world. THE AFFLUENT SOCIETY IS WHITE. The improverished society is black, yellow, and brown, Justice Douglas said. The disparity is impressive. Citing figures, Justice Douglas said that Russia, now a member of the affluent society, has an annual income of $900 a person. Compare this with Red China's income of $80 a person, Justice Douglas said. This disparity is increasing, and "the greatest conflict in history will take place unless this disparity is resolved," Justice Douglas warned. The rich nations are increasing personal income by $60 a year while the income of poor nations is increasing by only $5 a year. The income of the people of India—$1.15 a day—indicates unbelievable misery. THE END RESULT OF THIS OMINOUS trend is a class conflict on a world-wide scale. The development of the atomic bomb, in more understandable terms, has produced an average of 80 tons of explosives for every person in the world. This means total destruction in the event of war. "The prevention of war is our only hope," Justice Douglas said. This can be accomplished only when the world accepts a "rule of law" as an alternative to war in settling disputes. But "there can be no rule of law by unilateral action," Justice Douglas said. There must be a world-wide consensus, a general acceptance of a "rule of law," and the immediate implementation and utilization of procedures for resolving conflicts. THE DILEMMA—POVERTY RECOGNIZES no laws, and the affluent society fears the leveling effect of new laws. The message that Justice Douglas had for Americans is provocative and perplexing. What is needed is a basic shift or softening of the stern laissez-faire philosophy which has received its ultimate expression in this country. The recognition of forces beyond the control of the individual, which is gradually being applied in this nation, must be applied to other peoples of the world. The "haves" in this world must sacrifice part of their abundance to the "have-nots." However distasteful this may sound, it is the only way to erase the tremendous disparity between the rich and the poor on this globe. It is the only way to prevent a world holocaust where the blood of white, black, yellow, and brown will run red. Only when prosperity is more evenly distributed will men listen to the reasoning of law. Only then will a rule of law assure survival. Gary Noland Korea, Japan Patch Disputes UPI Foreign News Analyst By Phil Newsom Off and on for 14 years under United States' urging, the governments of Japan and South Korea have sought to patch over the bitterness left by 35 years of Japanese occupation of the Korean peninsula. STUDENT DEMONSTRATIONS in Seoul forced abandonment of the talks last spring and led to three months of martial law when success seemed near. But old animosities die hard and more than once when agreement seemed near, violent opposition derailed the negotiations. In December the talks were resumed in Tokyo and this month seemed definitely on the track again. In Seoul, high officials of the Korean and Japanese foreign ministries signed a draft treaty on basic relations that was described as the most significant step yet taken toward establishment of formal diplomatic relations. VIOLENT OPPOSITION REmained. In Seoul, riot policemen cracked heads of demonstrators led by former Korean President Posun Yun. In Japan, leftist demonstrators scuffled with police in an attempt to prevent Japanese Foreign Minister Etsusaburo Shiina's departure for Korea. Protest demonstrations also greeted him in Seoul. THE NEW DRAFT TREATY calls for establishment of diplomatic and consular ties without delay and for negotiations on trade and other matters as early as possible. Previous negotiations already had obtained Japanese agreement to extend to Korea $300 million in grants over a 10-year period in settlement of damage claims, and another $200 million in long-term loans. STILL TO BE SETTLED IS disagreement over the so-called Syngman Rhee lines which bans Japanese fishermen from waters within 200 miles of Korea's coast and the status of about half a million Koreans living in Japan. Agreement between its two pro-Western allies is important to the United States because it believes that without it, Korea never can achieve a stable economy. U.S. aid to Korea since the war has amounted to more than $5 billion and the U.S. is trying to reduce it. PARLIAMENTS OF BOTH countries must approve the new treaty and it is assured of stormy going. However, both governments have placed it on their "must" lists and both have solid majorities. Letters... --version when they attempted to overthrow the civilian, popularly-elected government of Venezuela not long ago. This Venezuelan government had none of the faults the SPU gives South Viet Nam's. Yet, the Student Peace Union did not protest against Castro's attempt to forcefully overthrow it. Dear Sir: Daili' Hänsan 111 Flint Hall 111 Ferry Hall UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office University of Kansas student Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1905, daily Jan 16 1912 Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Law rence, Kansas. University of Kansas student newspaper NEWS DEPARTMENT EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Don Black Managing Editor Bobbie Bartelt, Clare Casey, Marshall Caskey, Fred Frailey, Assistant Managing Editors; Judy Farrell, City Editor; Karen Lambert, Feature- Society Editor; Glen Phillips, Sports Editor; Janet Chartier, Telegraph Editor; Harry Krause, Picture Editor. Leta Roth and Gary Noland ... Co-Editorial Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Lom Fusser Business Manager Nancy Holland, Advertising Manager; Ed Vaughn, National Advertising Manager; Dale Reinecker, Classified Advertising Manager; Russ Calkins, Merchandising Manager; Bob Monk, Promotion Manager; Gary Grazda, Circulation Manager. Aldous Huxley once remarked that all he learned from his study of history is that men do not learn from history. One might suppose that after World Wars I and II, we would be weary of slaughter, but, what with the United Nations fading away, the nuclear club growing, and the Vietnamese war escalating, mankind is once more on the brink of repeating its past folly. So it is that Conway, the political expert quoted by Jim Langford in his UDK editorial last Friday, still seems to favor war as a method of settling international disputes despite the fact that three of his near, and presumably dear, relatives were killed in previous wars. So it is that the United States, unable to solve its problems in South Vietnam by military methods is simply intensifying and expanding its military operations rather than looking for a negotiated political solution. It's like the man who is losing his fortune playing roulette, but, as his money dwindles, becomes increasingly convinced that if only he bets more, he can beat the game. Paradoxically, the more he loses, the harder it becomes to convince him that there are surer ways to make money. The capacity to learn, to profit from experience, is a measure of intelligence. It was Aristotle who claimed that man is an intelligent animal. History may yet disprove Aristotle. Charles Hook Lawrence Sophomore THE WAR SOUTH VIET-NAM GOVERNMENTS DIDGIT HERBLOCK 1965 HERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON POST The Falling-Domino Example The People Say... Dear Sir: HISTORY IS FULL OF MEN IN all fields who have devoted their lives to serving others. Often they have undergone great sacrifice and occasionally they have had to suffer martyrdom. Nowadays the Student Peace Union offers us a less taxing version of the path to martyrdom. Its members seem to seek persecution by advocating, not the help, but the BETRAYAL of other people. THIS TIME, the people the SPU would betray in order to keep peace with the Communists are the South Vietnamese. Admittedly there are many repugnant qualities about South Viet Nam; the military dictators, the prisoner-tortures, the coups, the chaos, etc. Thus goes the SPU reasoning, the South Vietnamese deserve to be written off to an even worse despotism than they already have. Surrendering the South Vietnamese to the Viet Cong would perhaps settle the chaos, but it would kill all hope of a government responsible to the people. You never read of any Buddhist "coupe" in Tibet; too many Buddhists have been exterminated. The SPU members think they are unfairly charged with being cowardly and/or pro-Communist, but they have only themselves to blame. Look at their past record: they have continually ignored communist resorts to force, while they have always blasted United States' attempts to counter-act Communists' use of force. Consider these examples: - The SPU did not protest the Soviet introduction of missiles into Cuba, which was not an exactly peaceful act. Only when the United States reacted to protect SPU members' security, among others', did the SPU's anti-war sentiments blossom. - While the SPU was vehemently protesting the Cuban Blockade, Communist China invaded India. However, the SPU managed to ignore the aggression against India, although this aggression certainly threatened peace. - Agents from Cuba used force in the form of terrorism and subversion when they attempted to overthrow the civilian, popularly-elected government of Venezuela not long ago. This Venezuelan government had none of the faults the SPU gives South Viet Nam's. Yet, the Student Peace Union did not protest against Castro's attempt to forcefully overthrow it. - If there ever was a case of naked oppression against a people, it was the building of the Berlin Wall. Still the SPU again did not protest or march. The SPU, therefore, is blatantly guilty of the "doublethink" it accuses the Pentagon of. Would John Garlinghouse and Co. please explain why the SPU ignores Communist acts of force? If it is assumed the SPU is not pro-Communist, could the reason be that demonstrations against Communist actions do not generate the proper amount of controversy and "persecution" for the SPU? Besides leaving, these questions unanswered, John Garlinghouse picked a very weak argument when he implied the Hungarian Freedom Fighters would agree with the SPU because many were Social Democrats. I would like to remind him that the Hungarians had a "negotiation" experience of their own with the Communists-mild, Khrushchev-controlled, Russian Communists. During the height of the Hungarian Revolt, the Russians invited General Pal Mater and other Hungarian leaders to "negotiate." When the leaders arrived at the conference table they were imprisoned and promptly put to death. So, it is just a little doubtful that even the Social Democrat Hungarians would agree with the SPU about the value of negotiations with the Communists. The "Peace" the SPU seeks would rest upon the betrayal of nations we have sworn to protect and its upkeep would eventually demand we choose either all-out nuclear war or total surrender to an enemy which has sworn to bury us. Soon, the nuclear war we all fear would be the only alternative to tyranny. Paul Lindquist Prairie Village senior BOOK REVIEWS THE JUNGLE BOOKS, by Rudyard Kipling (Dell, 50 cents)—A fine gift for the young folks, but not calculated to appeal greatly to college students. Kipling wrote about the Indian boy Mowgli, who lives (this will explain it for the uninitiated) a Tarzan-like existence with his animal friends, is raised by a family of wolves and learns all about jungle life from the bear, the panther and all other available hands. Monday, March 1, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Ten Teams Survive College Bowl Trial Questions in science, literature and history failed to stop 10 teams which survived the first round of KU's College Bowl Competition. WINNING TEAMS of the 40 who entered yesterday's contests are Battenfeld Hall; Joseph R. Pearson No. 1; Joseph R. Pearson No. 2; Templin No. 1; Templin No. 2; Phi Delta Theta; Miller Hall; Kappa Alpha Theta; Carruth-O'Leary; and Sellards Hall. The teams will meet in double elimination contests, in which they must lose twice to be removed from competition, for the next two Sundays. A disputed match between Kappa Kappa Gamma and Hashinger Hall may cause an extra match to be played next week. In the first round match between the teams, the game was awarded to Hashinger when a question answered by the Kappa team was considered wrong. The final competition, which will name the Hill champion and the women's division champion, will be held March 21. THE KAPPA TEAM contested the decision on the grounds that the question actually had two answers, and the team had given one of the correct ones. The Hashinger team continued into the second match, however, and was defeated by Sellards Hall. The college bowl committee will meet Tuesday night to decide if the results of the Kappa-Hashinger match should be changed. The match may be re-played next Sunday. THE HILL champion college bowl team will receive a permanent trophy and the College Bowl traveling trophy. The team will also participate in the Big Eight College Bowl at the University of Nebraska, May 14-16. The women's division champion will also receive a trophy. Chairmen of the College Bowl committees are Bill Cibes, Altamont sophomore; Mary Ruth Lanning, Lawrence junior; Hank Bisbee, Toledo, Ohio, junior; and Terry Hammon, Oswego junior. KU's College Bowl is patterned after a television program featuring college teams from across the nation, TWO PANELS of four students vie for toss-up questions by pushing a buzzer to signify they know the correct answer. A right answer to a toss-up gives the team a chance at a bonus question. Members may answer bonus questions, which may have as many as five parts, after consulting with each other. KU Federal Credit Union Has New Office and Officers Two recent changes have altered the KU Federal Credit Union, according to Prof. James Titus, outgoing president of the group. Its office, located in the Kansas Union for the past year, has been moved to Strong Annex D. Secondly, new officers have been elected for 1965. cialist at Watson Library, chairman of the supervisory committee. New officers are Charles Oldfather, professor of law, president; Miss Evelyn DeGraw, professor of design, vice-president; Mrs. Grace Mullenburg, public relations director of the Geological Survey, secretary; A. V. Kirk, treasurer; Herman Lujan, assistant professor of political science, chairman of the credit committee; and Earl Farley, library systems spe- The KU credit union was formed in 1962 and now has 220 faculty and staff members. It now has nearly $12,000 available for loans to members and their families. Total assets of the union are approximately $43,000. SUA POETRY HOUR Thursday, March 4 DR. RONALD TOBIN will read a Selection of French Poetry 4:30 p.m. Thursday, March 4 Music Room in Kansas Union Free Coffee Free Coffee APPLICATIONS FOR SUA BOARD POSITIONS officers & board Are now available in the Student Union Activities Director's Office (1st floor of Kansas Union) Applications due in by 5:00 p.m. Friday, March 19,1965 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 1, 1965 A SHORT QUIZ (YOU MAY CHEAT BY LOOKING AT YOUR CLOTHES) QUESTION: What happened when the snow melted? ANSWER: You probably got splashed with gritty, grimy slush and water. SEE ACME! At ACME LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS you get your clothes beautifully cleaned and refreshened. Like new again. Call VI 3-5155 now for FREE pick-up and delivery or get a 10 per cent discount for cash and carry dry cleaning service. Downtown, 1111 Mass. ... VI 3-5155 Hillcrest Shopping Center ...VI3-0928 Malls Shopping Center ... VI 3-0898 Acme LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Come in or call today for FREE pick-up & delivery Page 5 University Daily Kansan Argentineans Visit Lawrence After 11,000 Mile Road Trip By Larry Ketchum The truck and its passengers were something out of the ordinary. Carlos Pereyra Iradla, 19, and Jorge Quesada Ocampo, 20, had driven from Buenos Aires, Argentina, to Lawrence as part of a tour of the United States. They left Lawrence Saturday. At 9:30 p.m. last Thursday a light blue pickup truck with an Argentina license arrived at the home of Dr. H. A. Ireland, professor of geology. The two Argentinean students departed from Buenos Aires Dec. 19, covering about 11,000 miles since then. They plan to drive an additional 5,000 miles in the United States before they return home in late April. PEREYRA AND QUESADA met Dr. Ireland in Los Angeles and he invited them to stay in his home when they passed through Lawrence. Pereira is a student at the University of Mar del Plata in agricultural engineering. Quesada studies architecture at the University of La Plate After observing Lawrence and KU for two days, the pair made the following comments. Pereyra said, "We have seen the prettiest girls here in Lawrence." Quesada liked the way all departments and schools at KU are located almost entirely on one campus. From Argentina the travelers drove to La Paz, Bolivia, then up over the Andes at altitudes over 15.000 feet. Roads were generally in bad condition, Pereyra said. On some of them there was only room for one vehicle. After traveling through Peru, the two Argentineans saw the Pacific Ocean for the first time. They would see the Pacific twice more—in Panama and California. ONE OF the most hazardous parts State Officials Here To Discuss Car Tax Questions concerning the state property tax to be levied on KU students with cars in Douglas County for six months of the year will be answered at the All Student Council meeting tomorrow night. By Rosalie Jenkins Monday, March 1, 1965 Some officials of the State Property Valuation Department have accepted an invitation extended by Mike Miner, Lawrence senior and ASC chairman, and Bill Robinson, Great Bend sophomore (Vox—men's large residence halls), to attend tomorrow's council meeting. Miner said all interested students are welcome to attend the meeting at 7 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union and to question the officials on the provisions of the law. He said either Alvin Jones, director of the State Property Valuation Dept., or Louis Carter, Asst. Director and chief counsel for the department will attend, along with Robert McDowell, asst. legal counsel with the department and former chief justice of the KU student court last year. BOTH MINER AND Robinson emphasized these officials are willing to clear up all questions on the tax to clear up an Questions on the tax. Mr. Carter and Mr. Jones told them the personal property tax was not a new law, but it has never been applied to students with cars in a county other than their home county for over six months of the year before. Robinson said he understood that it was "a new interpretation of an old law" which taxes personal property where it is located the greatest length of time. Previously, student cars have been taxed by home counties in a kind of informal agreement among the counties. HOWEVER, MINER noted there is a bill (No. 510) presently in the Kansas House of Representatives which would allow in-state students to pay their property tax to the county "in which the owner of the motor vehicle resided on the first day of January." When asked about the possible double taxation, resulting from such revised procedures, Miner said Jones stated that an in-state student will be taxed twice, but he will not pay twice. He should appeal to the State Tax Appeals Board which will refund his money. Out of state students will still have to pay a county tax here and in their own county "unless they can receive a waiver from their home county," Robinson said. Miner said if a student has not been contacted by a deputy assessor for an estimate on his car, he should probably contact the Douglas County assessor's office in Lawrence. of the journey was the drive from Quito, Ecuador, to Colombia. Bandits prey upon motorists who travel along the highways. Road signs along the way proclaim: "Road Closed—5 p.m. to 6 a.m., Travel At Own Risk." Fortunately, they made it to Colombia without any a.m. "IT IS UP to the individual to be assessed—failure to do this is a misdemeanor with a $50 fine. He stands the chance of losing the untaxed item in a county auction," Robinson explained. In order to cross the Panama Canal their 1960 pickup had to be loaded onto a boat. Once across the canal the journey continued through the Central American nations. On the way through Central America another truck passed the young men. Its wheels threw a rock through the windshield. Pereyra and Quesada drove 1500 miles before the windshield could be replaced in Mexico City. "As a consequence," Pereyra said. "the truck always seemed half full of rain." AFTER BRIEF visits in Mexico City and Acapulco the truck and the students entered the United States at Nogales, Ariz. From there they drove on to Los Angeles, San Francisco, Las Vegas, Denver, and then to Lawrence. From Lawrence, they resumed their journey toward Chicago, Detroit, Niagara Falls, New York City, Washington, D.C., Miami and New Orleans. At New Orleans they and the truck, which belongs to Pereyra's father, a rancher, will board a ship bound for Buenos Aires. History Films Give Insight Films are an integral part of History 131, Recent European History, taught by Professors Charles Sidman and Aldon Bell. First taught last spring, the course offers the student the opportunity to read extensively in books, newspapers and periodicals of the time, and also to see several contemporary films, thus gaining an intimate knowledge of how people saw themselves and what they wrote about themselves. All interested students and faculty are invited to see the films, shown on the following Tuesday nights at 7:30 in 303 Bailey: 2 March—Earth (USSR). 1 Love (USSR). 9 March - Love of Jeanne Ney (Germany). 16 March—Mein Kampf (Sweden). 23 March-History of an Unknown Soldier (France); Triumph of the Will (Germany). 30 March—Guernica; Rehearsal for War in Spain; Arms and the League; Squadron 992. Pantomine Production Features Indian Brave The initiation of a 12-year-old Indian boy into the tribe is the theme of Joseph Golden's children's play, "Johnny Moonbeam and the Silver Arrow," to be presented by the University Children's Theatre this week. Set against a stark decor featuring trees, teepees and table mountains, Johnny has to steal the rain from the Raingod, fire from the Firegod and earth from the Earthgod, in order to be accepted as a full member of his tribe. The striking feature of the play is that the whole story is done in pantomime with the aid of a narrator. Percussion and recorded sound effects add to the magic effect of the play along with its simplicity and symbolism. "THE PLAY WOULD BE a good piece to present at an international conference." Jed Davis, associate professor of speech and drama and director of the Children's Theatre, said. "Here is an example of a boy who obtains all power from the gods, but who gives it back again so that the whole of mankind can benefit from rain, fire and the earth." The KU group touring Eastern Europe last year, put on the play at the end of their tour in London, during the International Children's Theatre Convention. PLAYING JOHNNY MOONBEAM is Steve Grossman, Glencoe, Ill., freshman; the narrator is Burt Eikleberry, Lawrence graduate; the gods are Pat Melody, Miamy, Okla., senior, Kay Habenstein, Columbia, Mo., senior, and Connie Bohann, Leawood junior. The medicine man is Frank Cox. Pleasanton freshman. After the KU performances, at 4:30 Thursday and Friday, and 2:00 Saturday, the cast will give performances at Salina, Wichita, and Kansas City. This is the fifth year the KU Children's Theatre has gone on tour. NOTICE Micki Milliken's Secretarial Service is located at RED DOG INN BLDG. 640 MASS. Phone VI 2-1626 or VI 3-59 Typists and secretaries on duty from 9 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. WE specialize in: Student Papers; Theses; Manuscripts; Copy and all other correspondence. We offer Notary Public Service; Mimeograph, offset printing, photocopy work and Stenorett dictating equipment. ADVANCE APPOINTMENTS GET PREFERRED SERVICE CALL VI2-1626 VI3-5947 PAGE FINA SERVICE announces 24 HOUR SERVICE Lubrication . $1.00 Brake Adjustment . $ .98 COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICI (Tues. thru Sun.) STUDENT SPECIALS! - Automatic Transmission - Complete Tune-up - Engine Overhaul - Wheel Balancing - Front End Alignment - Washing - Free Pick-up & Delivery 1819 W.23rd VI 3-9694 THE CLASSICAL FILM SERIES presents KANAL --- 1956 (Poland) Winner of the Grand Prix at the Cannes Film Festival Wednesday----7:00 p.m. Admission 60c Fraser Theater Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 1, 1965 JANUARY 18 TO FEBRUARY 12 Bruno Scharn GEO CHANN PASPER 72 THE PH THE PR Also on Sale Striking travel posters in full color Greece, Stockholm Denmark, Holland, London Paris, Spain, Moscow Sweden, France, England WE ... Spain ONLY $1.00 Be Su the be some world great Every Price to cho Picas Dali' Van Othe kansas union BOO I Monday, March 1, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 7 RINT SALE DNESDAY, March 3rd re to come in early to see beautiful reproductions of of the world's greatest art and famous painting, posters and the drawing series in full color. Print is Gallery Size,the is pint size. Among those pose from are: so's-"The Matador" & "Seated Acrobat" s-"Sacrament of the Last Supper" Gogh's-"Gypsy Camp" & "Farmer in Field" rs by Degas, Gauguin, Foujita O ONLY $1.00 ONLY $1 KSTORE GALERIE 65E CANNES BERNARD BUFFET G 434 Buffet: Exhibit Poster. Cannes Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 1, 1965 Colorado Golden Buffaloes Are Jayhawks Next Big Job By Glen Phillips Sports Editor KU coach Ted Owens predicts "a real struggle" tonight when the Jayhawks take the floor against the Golden Buffaloes in a decisive contest in the Big Eight conference title race. The 'Buffs have suffered two straight defeats in conference play. The last, to the Kansas State Wildcats Saturday, virtually dropped them from any contention for the title. However, the Colorado squad is still out to knock the Jayhawks off in the race. The Jayhawks, now 8-4 for conference play, will be looking for their third straight victory on the home boards in Allen Field House. Late Points Lead KU To A Big 8 Second The Missouri Tigers performed as had been predicted and came through to take their second straight Big Eight conference indoor track championship Saturday night in Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium. As a sell-out crowd of more than 9,000 looked on, MU, sparked by Robin Lingle, packed away enough points to ease past their nearest competitor, KU. The Tigers totaled 52 points, with the second-place Jayhawks piling up an unexpected 47. Nebraska was third with 26, followed by Oklahoma State 25, Kansas State and Oklahoma 18, Colorado 16, and Iowa State 8. Missouri took six first places. Robin Lingle was both a double-event winner and the only athlete to shatter any records with his performance. He turned in a 2:08.0 in the 1,000-yard run to break his own mark of 2:08.9 set last year and overshadow the mark of 2:11.6 set in 1959 by Cliff Cushman of KU. KU's Herald Hadley fought Lingle for the win in the 1,000 but the pace proved to be too much and Hadley finished ten yards behind the fleet Tiger. The two had previously met in the mile run, where Lingle was also victorious. Lingle took the lead in the ninth lap of the race and successfully fought off a first-place bid by Hadley. Lingle finished with a 4:08.9 and Hadley came in third behind Tom Van Ruden of Oklahoma State. KU was considered to be out of the competition when 12 of the 14 events had been run but the Jayhawks turned in stellar performances in the last two events to grab 10 points while Mizzou took none. KU has dropped the Kansas State Wildcats and the Nebraska Cornhuskers in their early meetings. OWEN'S SAID the 'Buffs are one of the most dangerous shooting teams in the conference. They downed the Jayhawks by two points at Boulder in the first Big Eight meeting between the clubs. "Both clubs have undoubtedly improved," Owens said, "but there is no way we can know how much until tomorrow night... All other things being equal, the home court could make a difference." Walt Wesley will have his work cut out for him as he goes against Chuck Gardner, powerful center for the Buffaloos. Gardner is considered by some to be the second best center in the conference after Wesley. In the earlier meeting between KU and CU at Boulder, Gardner was able to sink 20 points through Wesley's defense. In defensive play, Gardner hauled down more rebounds than Wesley. KU's pivot man needs only 38 points to crack Boozer's total point league record and a "mere" 10 field goals to break Jayhawk Clyde Lovellette's record of 139. Wesley has scored 326 points in 12 conference games for a 27.2 point game average. He has dropped in a total of 536 points in all 23 games for a 23.3 season average. OWENS EXPECTED no particular defensive strategy from the Colorado club. He noted that they often mix a man-to-man with a zone type of defence. The CU squad usually does not press the ball-handlers downcourt although they have done it in some games. Owens said he would probably go with the same starting line-up he has used in the last two games. It includes Lewis and Schichtle at guards, Lochmann and Lopes at forward, and Wesley at pivot. MODEL U.N. APRIL 23 and 24 REGISTRATION MARCH 1, 2, 3 KU-Y OFFICE IN THE KANSAS UNION U.S. Takes Bermuda Soccer Match HAMILTON, Bermuda—(UPI)—The United States soccer team defeated the Bermuda All-Stars 5-1 Thursday in the first of four training games in preparation for American participation in the World Cup tournament. The U.S. takes on Mexico March 7 at Los Angeles in its first cup match. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers TEACHER INTERVIEWS Mr. Melvin Homfeld, Superintendent of the Livermore, California, Public Schools will be interviewing Education majors Tuesday, March 2nd, for positions in Elementary teaching and Departmental teaching in 6th, 7th, and 8th grades in the fields of Foreign Language, Mathematics, Science, and Women's Physical Education. Livermore schools offer excellent teaching conditions, recreation, professional opportunities and school facilities close to San Francisco. TO APPLY: Telephone the Teacher Placement Office, 117 Bailey Hall, UN 4-3624 by 9 a.m. Tuesday, March 2nd for appointment in 117 Bailey Tuesday, March 2nd. Teacher Placement Office 117 Bailey Hall UN 4-3624 OWN A NEW SMITH-CORONA ELECTRIC Portable Typewriter it's easy use our RENTAL OWNERSHIP PLAN HERE'S ALL YOU DO! 1. Select from our stock the type-style and color you wish. 2. Sign a rental agreement and pay the first month's rent. If you continue to rent until rental paid equals purchase price plus small service fee ... We Give You the Typewriter! HERE ARE THE ADVANTAGES: 1. No obligation to buy. 2. Service without charge during the rental period. 3. A new ELECTRIC PORTABLE typewriter in your home without upsetting your budget. OTHER PORTABLES AVAILABLE ON RENTAL-PURCHASE PLAN LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER New Location: 700 Mass. VI 3-3644 WE'RE TYPEWRITER SPECIALISTS VI 3-3644 Monday, March 1, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 9 C Memo Save time with exams coming up by having clothes cleaned at INDEPENDENT INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners 900 Miss. 740 Vt. Call VI 3-4011 for free pick-up and delivery service Page 10 University Dally Kansas Monday, March 1, 1965 A THE EYES OF TEXAS ARE UPON YOU—Pianist Nicholas Fryman, Horton junior and bassist George Puckett, Cabool, Mo., sophomore, audition for Six Flags Campus Revue. KU Talent Auditions For Six Flags Revue KU student singers, dancers, musicians and one ventriloquist auditioned for the Six Flags Campus Revue Friday afternoon in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Charles Mecker, writer, director and producer of the Arlington, Texas, variety show, said that "at least six KU students would be called down to Dallas May 1 for another audition. This is an extremely high percentage from one university." Before auditions are over, Meeker and his staff will have seen 1,000 students from 52 colleges and universities perform. Of these, 150 will be hired for the summer season, from June 14 to Sept. 6. KU students who auditioned are: Parmellee Bates, Bronxville, N.Y., freshman; Andrea Block, St. Joseph, Mo., freshman; Barbara Grimm, Topeka sophomore; Virginia Hoffer, Medicine Lodge sophomore; Barbara Nance, Wichita sophomore; Karen Natowski, Hinsdale, Ill., freshman; Cheri Olsen, Hinsdale, Ill., sophomore, and Mary Beth Weekes, Beatrice, Neh., junior. Also, Kelly Cap, Shaw, AFB, S.C., junior; Melvin Dickson, Dallas, Texas, senior; Ed Ellis, Kansas City sophomore; Martin Grogan, Oberlin freshman; John Meek, Hiawata freshman; Steve Morgan, Wichita freshman; George Puckett, Cabool, Mo., sophomore; Robert Seeley, Shawne Mission sophomore; and Nicholas Fryman, Horton junior. G Get Rid of Winter Grime... Bring your carcoat, topcoat, or all-weather coat to NewYork Cleaners Merchants of Good Appearance 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 ALTERATIONS, REPAIRS, REWEAVING New York Cleaners Merchants of Good Appearance Nasser Travels Granada THEATRE···Telephone VI 3-5788 Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 NOW! 7:00 & 9:00 “NONE BUT THE BRAVE” FRANK SINATRA CLINT WALKER Varsity THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-1065 NOW! ends Wednesday . . M-G-M presents THE STORY OF THE IMMORTAL HANK WILLIAMS Your Cheatin' Heart George HAMILTON · Susan OLIVER Red BUTTONS · Arthur O CONNELL PLUS NAT 'KING' COLE STORY Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 2-1065 Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 NOW! 7:00 & 9:00 “NONE BUT THE BRAVE” FRANK SINATRA CLINT WALKER Varsity THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-1065 NOW! ends Wednesday... M-G-M presents Your Cheatin' Heart George HAMILTON · Susan OLIVER Red BUTTONS · Arthur O CONNELL PLUS NAT 'KING' COLE STORY Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS KISMET $425 ALSO $250 TO 1800 WEDDING RING 62.50 Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. M-G-M presents THE STORY OF THE IMMORTAL HANK WILLIAMS Your Cheatin' Heart George HAMILTON - Susan OLIVER Red BUTTONS - Arthur O'CONNELL Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS KISMET $425 ALSO $250 TO 1800 WEDDING RING 62.50 Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. REPRESENTATIVES of the INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS DIVISION will be on the KU campus March 4. Graduating seniors from the mechanical engineering department are invited to make an appointment for an interview. Please contact your placement office today. CESSNA AIRCRAFT CORPORATION HUTCHINSON, KANSAS Fernandez Acunw Blk New $325.79 02-91 Sirco 2-6 e911d Hinne Calc 1981 re4-64 BMS AIS Wmplnc Pohueln M Tatac M BHS Issta M Srteol TICR FRap Pwtotfov Y CNnsth acth Tsw3- NFSaW ITsc5 19b2- AMGOnC Rw3T Ntv15 OHD WRP WCT NBtN AayBK Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE Fender electric guitar, new price $200, sale price $185, bacock, I 9-25600 for 1120 W, 11th. for 1120 W, 11th. Auction—used bikes, all sizes. Name your own price. Saturday, March 6 1:00 p.m. Blevins Bike Shop at 701 Michigan. 3-5 New post Versalto slide rule. Regular will sell for $25.00. Phone V1. 0749 3-2 Sunbeam toaster (cost $24): for $6. Steam iron: $2, gooseneck lamp: $1. Hot plate: ed: record turntable (new) $7. record turntable, Call VI 3-9175 (after 4:00). 3-3 1959 Gardner 50' x 10' house trailer, good condition. Reasonably priced. Call VI 2-0731 after 5 p.m. 3-8 HI-FI—Save on nationally advertised Hi- fli components. New equipment in factory sealed cartons with factory warranties. Call VI 3-4891. 3-15 BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMIUMS! Occidental Term Life: conversion, Go-Back, Move-Over options. Age 18 = $33.90 = $10,000. Age 20 = $34.40 = $10,000. Age 22 = $34.70 = $10,000. Call Wes Santee at VI 3-216 for details. tf 1961 Triumph TR6, 650 c.c. motorcycle recently overhauled, new tires, paint, accessories. Call Kent Crowley, V1 3-6400. tf Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL V1 2-1901 for free delivery. Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive notes for the Bclass classes. Formerly known as the Thetis Notes. Call VI 3-1428. $4.50. TYPEWRITERS, electrics, manuals, portables; sales, service, rentals, Olympa Hermes, Royal, Smith-Corona, Olivetti, Adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. Students, why throw money away on rent when you can own a 1962 Marlette 10 x 50, modern, two-bedroom mobile home. This home is clean and in excellent condition. For further information CALL RI 8-0973 or RI 8-0916. tf BE THE LEADER OF YOUR PACK: Harley Davidson Sportster K, 750 cc, new chuck, and new brakes and tires. THIS IS NO HONDA. For further information about this beautiful machine CONTACT Monti Belot at VI 3-0700. Fender stracaterac guitar and guitar instrumentation information reason: price-call VI 2-0763. 3-2 CHINA-Nortaki, Mayfair design. New, never used or even removed from packing. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk. M 3-7102. tf PORTABLE STEREO: Admiral's Finest—two carrying units, 1 for turntable and for speaker systems (2 tweeters, and 2 full range woofers) $195 new. Will sell for good offer. CALL: Rusty Calkins at VI 3-5721. tf 1954 Ford-perfect transportation to the city. Call at sell call, $30. Woodbury at VI 3-6400. 3-2 I have a beautiful handmade guitar. This instrument has rose-wood back and sides. spruce top and ebony fingerboard. Martin D-28. Call V-3-2528 evenings. THE STABLES now open every day- Serving steaks, chops, sea food, sand- sand, meat management, new atm- sphere. Party rooms available. Phone v 3-9644 10:41 W 7th. TV tt NEED A B AND? 30 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM, PHONE VI, 2-2100 't' 1960 Alma Mobile Home, 10' x 55', 2 bedroom, automatic washer, carpet, all gas, $500.00 down, assume balance. Ki 2-2514 after 6:00 p.m. and weekends. A third roommate to share modern apartment with two engineering students. Phone VI 2-843 or see apt. 38, The Oaks, 2345 Court, Court. After 1:00 p.m. 3-5 WANTED Roommate to share two bedroom apt. I will pay %3 rent and utilities. Phone VI 3-7032 after 5 weekdays or see apt. 69. The Oaks, 2357 Court Court. 3-1 Need a roommate. Modern apartment two blocks from the Union. Call us or come by. Jack and Loren. VI 3-6116. 1235 Tenn. 2nd floor rear. 3-7 OLD CARS WANTED, top prices paid. Do It today! GI Joe's, 61 Vermont. Washing and ironing done in my home 1131 New Jersey U Phone VI 2-2598. Want girl companion to live in my home. or VI or 3-341 or if please Tennessee. 3-3 ENTERTAINMENT Now you can hear four excellent dance bands on stereo tapes: THE FURYS, THE BLADES. THE RUNABOUTS, THE NOMADS. Call VI 2-1791. (tf ATTENTION PARTY THROWERS: Do you want the Beatles, the Kingsmen, Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL VI 2-1791. tt MISCELLANEOUS Math tutor B.A. degree in math from KU. Experienced in tutoring geometry, algebra, calculus and analytic geometry. Call VI 3-0927. 3-3 BUSY PEOPLE—no time to spare for household cares? For professional cleaning of your home regularly or occasionally CLEANING CLEANING VICE, VI 3-4408. S-10 Tom's Barber Shop, 5 West 14th, Haircuts $1.50 Weekdays, 3 full time Barbers and free parking. 3-2 Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-R qibs that grandina and grandpa can eat, try ours on a per slab. Hours: 11:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-9510 3-31 JR, SR. AND GRADUATE STUDENTS MONEY AVAILABLE ON PERSONAL SECURITY, PHONE, CHUCK ADKINS, BENEFICIAL FINANCE AT VI 3-147- *ARTY TIME?* Building available for PHONENUMBER 13-2995, PHONENUMBER Ralph FREed at VI 3-3995. CHSWIIN BICYCLES -service all makes, parts and accessories, tires $1.46, tubes north and east air, luggage racks on tie downs. SEE BIRDING at 7th and Mice or CALL VI 3-0581. friends coming this weekend? Looking for a place with good food at reasonable prices. HILLCREST AND RESTAURANT. Plenty of free parking. ith and Iowa. ff it's great for a date. Take her bowling at Hiltcrest Bowl. Finest lanes in the state. Also host Sundays and Saturdays also Mon, Tues, and Fri, after 9:00 p.m. Hiltcrest Bowl, 9th and 10th. Rent electric, standard, and portable typewriters. Repair all makes of electric, motor, and other business machines.ern Business Equipment (formerly Business Machines). 15 E. eth. VI 3-0151. tf Ski Aspen 7 days during spring break. Room and board, transportation. Two tickets, instruction and insurance. $128. KU-Y Ski Club. Contact Y office in the Union or Marty Knight. Sign up meeting March 9, 7:30 p.m. at the Forum Room. Loans—buy, sell and trade—guns, fishing equipment, radios, tools, 3-5- items, VI 2-9425. Monday, March 1, 1965 Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon.-thru-Fri. or all day Sat. or Sun. phone VI 3-6231. tf LOST Feb. 11 or 12, 1 pair of black frame men's glasses. Reward for return. Call Lee Whitlock, VI 3-0962. 3-5 Furnished apts—2 blocks from Union Bldg. Remodeled and nicely furnished. Special rates for 6 months or longer. Carried couples preferred. Phone 1-291-3091. Pho-3 FOR RENT Pleasant quiet one bedroom basement apartment. VI C1 3-8344. 3-5 WOODIES are more interesting when you get there the fun way on A BIKE. You have the parts, repairs, wood equipment. Gran Sport Cycle, 9 W-3 14th. VI 3-328. Extra nice roomy apt. in graduate house or graduate or older undergraduate man housed with appliances, utilities paid. Nicely furnished with private bath and kitchen. Call TI 8-3534. We have available one double room and one single for graduate women. Also two single laundry facilities provided. Call VI 2-0168 w come by 1244 Louisiana. PARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30-60 people, jukebox liquid refreshments intended desired. Contact Don at the Gaussdorf for reservations CALL VI 3-1086. For rent, 2 and 3 room apartments. Month rent free for a year's residency. Clean, close to downtown and KU. Reasonable, private baths. VI 2-3784. 3-2 2 room furnished apt. for $45.00—4 room furnished apt. for two at $70.00. Gas and water paid. Close to campus. Phone after 5 p.m. or weekends. VI 3-3913. 3-1 University Daily,Kansan Room for rent=double or single. Ideal entrance. Phone VI 3-0326 5 p.m. Room with refrigerator 1/2 block from campus. Furnished. $27.00 VI 3-2-263. 3-2-8 Rescent Heights and Oaks Apartments— 821 W. 24th, or CALL VI 237-711. 821 W. 24th, or CALL VI 237-711. Female, clothed model. $1 an hour, must be able to model. Anyone of schedules listed: 8:30 to 11:20 a.m., 1:30-4:20 p.m. every day Mon. thru Sat. a.m. For more information contact Drawing and Painting Dept. 325 Strong. UN 4-3935 3-1 HELP WANTED Lovely 3 bedroom house, air conditioned, attached garage, vacant March 8th. Adults, for information call VI 2-3416. Hostess—Attractive lady for evening employment in the New Orleans Room, top wages—Phone VI 2-9465 or VI 3-4747. tlf Discotheque Dancers. Apply now. At the New Orleans Room. Phone VI 2-9466. TYPING 6 years typing experience plus background in proofreading enables me to guarantee accuracy on college papers. New electric typewriter equipped for interchangeable type sets. Mrs. Berndt, 801 Michigan or VI 2-0400. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Secretary wants to type your thesis, dissertation, term paper, etc., on new IBM electric. Fast, accurate, and reasonable. Special symbols available. CALL Mrs. Shirley Gilbert, 934 W. 24th. No. 11, at VI 2-2088. Experienced typist wants typing in home. Rates, prompt service. Phone VI 2-3356. MILKLENS SOS—always first quality typon on LB.M. Carbon ribbon machines. It can handle transcriptions. Office hours—7 a.m. to 12 a.m. p-o-2121| Mass Phone VI 3-5920 Theses only on Royal Electric Pica Type writer CALL MIL, Fulcher at VI 3-0568. Experienced typist. 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Responsible for ALL Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648. Experienced secretary will type term papers, law briefs, theses, etc., for students. Especially familiar with legal and business terms. Fast and accurate. Reasonable rates. Call Marsha Goff at VI 3-2577. tf Former Harvard and U. of Minnesota report on the issues in report and theses. PHONE VI 3-7207. Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. Will do ex ecommerce research and provide carbon ribbon typewriter. Betty Muskut 140 Indian, or call VI 2-0991. tt Term papers. Theses by experienced typist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. ti Will do typing in my home. Accurate reasonale rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at VI 2-0210. tf Experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing. Speak fluently and communicate well in English and languages. Quick and reasonable Electric typewriter. Call VI 8-3978. tt Nypist, experienced with term papers theses and dissertations, will give your course materials and machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6408 Experienced secretary would like typing in her home, with new electric typewriter and secure service. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Lafton at VI 2-1188. Experienced typist wants theses, termpapers, and dissertations to be typed on electric (pica type) typewriter. Please Pat Call Beck at VI 3-5630. tt Experienced typist will do dissertations, manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 II, 3-7485. tt fast service, accurate typing. Done by 'former high school typing teacher. Will be tested on these or these. Experienced. Electric typewriter. CALL Mrs.Marsh at VI 3-8262. CALL Theses or term papers done in my home CALL Mrs. Oxford at VI 2-0673. MRS. MCCARTHY Mrs. MCCARTHY 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 1-8568. CLASSIFIED AD RATES 1 DAY $1.00 3 DAYS $1.50 A B Γ Δ E Z H Θ I K A M 5 DAYS $1.75 Fraternity and Sorority Jewelry $ ^{N} $ - Guards - Kings * Pins - Mugs Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Massachusetts BUSINESS DIRECTORY DIRECTORY - Lavaliers - Crests For the best in — ● dry cleaning ● alterations ● reweaving NewYork Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPERANCES 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center AL LAUTER Balfour Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Fraternity Jewelry Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pei Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING 24 HOUR SERVICE (TUES.-SUN.) - Brake Adjustment . . . 98 - Wheel Alignment - Automatic Transmission - Lubrication . . . . $1.00 Page Fina Service 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694 838 Mass. JIM'S CAFE OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY Register Now For Temporary Assignments - NO FEE - Typists — Stenos General Office and Bookkeepers Milliken's S.O.S. Unlimited Office Opportunities Experienced Only Apply 9:00 - 5:00 p.m. or by appointment 1921 1/2 Mass. VI 3-5928 TRAVEL TIME ALSO - Student & Thesis Typing Automatic Letter Service Telephone Answering Secretarial Service Notary Public ... P.S. They're Professional! Milliken's S.O.S. 1021 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. VI 3-5920 LET MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Reservation! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy ice cold 6 pacs all kinds 616 Vt. OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY Ph. VI 3-0350 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 1, 1965 Model Senate — (Continued from page 1) a motion was made to strike its enacting clause. This was done because the student senators felt that the revenue collected from each state should be in proportion to that state's educational needs. Another piece of legislation passed by the student senate dealt with civil rights. The resolution stated that the senate regrets the necessity of legislation on the matter of civil rights and liberties. The senate recognizes the civil rights movement as a "valid moral plea" and "strongly supports necessary, limited Federal action in the area of civil rights." The resolution was a bipartisan measure which represented the consensus opinion of the student senate. A bill concerning presidential succession was also passed making the Secretary of State vice-president in the event of the president's death or resignation. Official Bulletin Teaching Candidates: Interviews scheduled for this week—March 1-8, by Teachers Appointment Bureau, 117 Ba. Monday, Arizona, Tucson Public Schools, elementary and secondary; Colorado, Denver; Maryland, Tuesday, Michigan, Battle Creek Public Schools, elementary and secondary; Wednesday, New Mexico, Carlsbad Municipal Schools, elementary and secondary; Missouri, Raytown Consol. Dist., elementary and secondary; Saturday, Mississippi K-12, R-7, elementary and secondary; Friday, Illinois, Evanston Township High School, secondary. TODAY Conference on Aging, All Day. Kansas Union. University Lecture, 3:45 p.m. Dr. Curtis Hockefeller Institute. Dyche Auditorium. Graduate Physics Colloquium, 4:30 p.m. Dr. K. Wong. Wong. 155 Malott. Catholic Mass, 5:00 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel. Confessions before and during mass. Basketball, 7:35 p.m. Colorado. Allen Field House. Senior Recital, 8:00 p.m. Alvin Lowrey, trumpet. Swarthout Recital Hall. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW Catholic Mass, 6:45 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Saint Paul's Chapel. Confessions before and during mass. A Ph A Film Series, 12:30 p.m. 324 Malott. On Aging. On Day Kana Conference on Aging, All Day. Kansas Union. Fine Arts Lecture, 2:30 p.m. Donald J. Grout, Cornell U. Swarthout Recital Hall. Christian Science College Organization, 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel Grout, Cornell U. Swarthout Recital Hall. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:00 p.m. Pine Room, Kansas Union. The Nature of God—Paul Steeves. Inquiers Class, 7:30 p.m. Canterbury House, 1116 La. Student Peace Union Open Meeting, 7:30 p.m. Kansas Union. American Society Class-Intensive Engl- ish Gunn, Public Relations. 24N Strong. Wesley Foundation Community Work- site 9:15 p.m. Methodist Center, 1314 Oracle A REMINDER to Lovebirds When you're ready to select your wedding rings . . . remember Artcarved . . . chosen by 50 million Lovebirds since 1850. Over 300 scintillating styles. Artcarved WEDDING RINGS BEACON SET His...$32.50 Hers...$29.50 MARK S JEWELERS Member American Gem Society National Bridal Service 817 Mass. VI3-4266 In other action, the model Senate abolished the House Committee on Un-American Activities. This also had the support of most freshman students at the session. The resolution stated that the committee had more often created fear and suspicion by the use of malicious attacks than it had created useful information. IN FOREIGN AFFAIRS, the mock senate defeated a resolution extending diplomatic recognition to Red China and its admittance in the United Nations. The general opinion among the senators was that Red China should not be given equal status with the rest of the world at this time. A resolution calling for a conference of world powers on Viet Nam was also defeated. Carter said this was done because the senate felt the conflict was between North and South Viet Nam and not such a big problem between the U.S., Russia, and Red China. "OUR MAIN PURPOSE was in amending Republican bills and splitting their vote. We feel our voice should be heard and our votes and opinions should count," Democratic Minority Leader Young said. CHICO'S DRIVE-IN 19th & Mass. Grand Opening was Saturday, February 27,1965 We specialize in: TACO'S of all kinds—20c each or 6 for $1.00 Burritoes of fish, beef, cheese and others. 20c each or 6 for $1.00 Chico's Drive-In 19th &. Mass. Watch for the announcement of our delivery service PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS GLOBE The World's Most Recommended Drycleaning White Stag recommends our Sanitone drycleaning Sportswear by White Stag Sportswear by White Stag and take only us like First IN DECLEANING APPROVED BY SANITONE SERVICE We know and respect fine fabrics and take painstaking care in cleaning them. We use only the Sanitone drycleaning process with the exclusive Soft-Set $ ^{\circledast} $ finish that restores "life" to the fabric while cleaning the garment. Send us your garments—we'll return them looking like "new". Call on us today. a national service FIRST IN DRYCLEANING APPROVED SANITONE SERVICE LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H.-VI 3-3711 Henry W. Lester (Photo by Harry Krause) Avery Recognizes Topekan's Work GOVERNOR AT CONFERENCE—Governor William H. Avery enjoyed his dinner last night in the Kansas Union after presenting the Distinguished Senior Citizen's Award to William J. Burns of Topeka. Avery emphasized in a speech to the Kansas Council on Aging that old age once was a private problem, but today it is a public one. Gov. William H. Avery presented the Distinguished Senior Citizens Award last night to William J. Burns, Topeka, in recognition for his contribution as a senior citizen to others in his age group. The award came at the 15th annual convention of the Council on Aging which will conclude its two-day convention today in the Kansas Union. Burns, 73, retired in 1961 from the Santa Fe Railroad after working for the company for 53 years. Since his retirement Burns has continued as an active citizen and especially in the field of the aging. BURNS IS AREA vice-president of the American Association of Retired Persons, and has charge of eight chapters in Kansas. He organized and is past president of the Topeka chapter. Aside from his work with the AARP, Burns is past president and still active in the Topeka Santa Fe Retired Employees Club. He has worked for both state and federal legislation which concerns the aged. Gov. Avery, the first governor to be a member of the Council on Aging, was in Lawrence long enough to attend the recognition dinner and give his speech. Shortly after finishing his speech, Avery flew to Liberal to be present at the annual Pancake Derby. Daily hansan At the present time there are approximately 250,000 persons in Kansas over the age of 65, Avery said. The federal government has estimated that by 1970 there will be 269,000 persons in that age group. Those 65 and over now comprise 11.1 per cent of the population in Kansas. ONE OF THE BIGGEST problems concerning older people is paying money for facilities they don't use. In discussing this problem, Gov. Avery said he had proposed to the state legislature that a tax credit for homeowners over 70 years of age be allowed. This would help to reduce the load of ad valorem taxes (taxes based on the property's value) of these persons. The bill is currently before the assessment and taxation committee of the House of Representatives. "In that same message, I also pointed out that the enactment of a state school foundation program, which is designed to reduce the ad valorem tax, was another way to try to take certain tax burdens from our older citizens," Gov. Avery said. "I am concerned about the local property tax burden especially as it falls on our older people. The foundation program would provide general relief of about $35 to $36 million, but we should provide further help to this group who have already contributed so much. I recommended a $25 credit toward the ad valorem tax per homeowner of age 70 and over with the credit to be a reduction from school taxes," he said. THIS REDUCTION TO the school fund will be paid back by the state under the school foundation program. The cost of this credit is estimated to total $3.4 million annually. Old age is a relatively new dimension in American life, Avery said. Years ago it was purely a personal problem. Senior citizens lived in the homes of their relatives. Now this area is a public problem for national, state and local government. Kansas is one of the leading states in developing solutions to the problem, the governor said. We have progressed so much that we don't have to depend on the national government for suggestions in this area. 62nd Year, No. 90 LAWRENCF. KANSAS Nine freshman men have been chosen to serve on the Kansas Relays committee to organize the Relays Weekend, April 16 and 17, one of the four top spring athletic events across the country. The storm that dumped 2 inches of snow on the Lawrence area last night is moving eastward. Reports from other sections of Kansas showed that the eastern border of the state received the brunt of the storm, but all roads are open, according to the Highway Patrol. ASC Will Consider Tax New Human Rights Bill Tuesday, March 2, 1965 Officials from the State Property Valuation Department will also be at "THE DEADLINE has been extended to the spring semester of the 1965-66 school year," he explained. By Rosalie Jenkins Weather A revised human rights bill will be among legislation considered by the All Student Council at 7 p.m. today in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. Co-chairmen for KU Relays Weekend are: Bill Flanagan, Scott City junior, and Robert Shenk, Lawrence senior. Acting as advisors are: Ed Elbel, professor of Physical Education, and Millard Easton, head track coach at KU. The weekend is sponsored by the Student Union Activities. Today will be cold with strong northerly winds and a few snow flurries. The expected high will be around 20-25 with a low tonight around 10, according to the Weather Bureau. The committeemen were selected on the basis of character, ability, scholarship and leadership. They will serve on the committee for four years. The nine men are: Terry Gill, Shawnee Mission; Ed Gordon, Fort Scott; Mike Maloney, Hutchinson; Alson Martin, Shawnee Mission; Dave McClain, St. Joseph, Mo.; Larry Peterson, Salina; Tom Rader, Greensburg; Larry Robinson, Iola; and Dennis Taylor, Topeka. Track and field representatives from high schools, small colleges, and large universities and the Big Eight Conference school will enter events in three main divisions. The original human rights bill was not signed by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe because he said the deadline for compliance with its provisions against discrimination in university housing should be extended to Feb. 1966. Bill Robinson, Great Bend sophomore, ASC representative (Vox men's large residence halls) and Committee member, said that this committee, at its meeting last night, voted to comply with the Chancellor's suggestions on the human rights bill. The original bill set Sept. 1965, as the deadline. Chancellor Wescoe also said grammatical errors in the bill caused him to hold back his signature. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high of 30. THE ASC COMMITTEE on Committees decided to recommend Bill No. 7 with these changes to the Council tonight. The Committee on Committees reviews all proposed bills presented at the last ASC meeting and either recommends or disapproves their passage at the next Council meeting. Frosh Help Organize KU Relays the meeting tonight to answer questions about the personal property tax to be levied on student cars by Douglas County. Mike Miner, Lawrence senior and ASC chairman, said either Alvin Jones, director of the department, or Louis Carter, assistant director and chief counsel for this department, will be on hand to answer inquiries from Council members and any other interested students. When asked whether the committee organized at the last meeting to look into the "censure" of Rick Mabbut would make its report, Miner said that its investigation has not been completed. He explained that the committee, composed of three ASC representatives, had waited until the Disciplinary Committee of the University had reviewed Mabbutt's appeal before completing their investigation. "We didn't want to interfere with any action of the Disciplinary Committee," Miner said. "Our primary concern is to see how a similar situation can be prevented and to review the Kansan Board Constitution." Miner explained that ASC Bill No. 5 says that the Kansan Board Constitution and practices should not oppose the policies of the ASC. The two organizations are self-governing except where policy clashes and then ASC policy has priority. Reports on the practicality and possibility of cementing the sidewalk behind Stouffer Place on "Daisy Hill" and also on a resolution to establish an Undergraduate Internship in State Government will be presented. AT THE LAST ASC meeting, T. J. Snyder, Independence senior, (UP fraternities), proposed that the Council write Gov. Avery, urging him to establish such a program in the state government. U.S., Saigon Strike Hit 2 Targets in North SAIGON—(UPP)—More than 160 American and South Vietnamese fighter-bombers and B57 jets hit two targets in North Vietnam Nam today in the biggest strike yet against the north. Moscow radio immediately denounced what it calls a barbarous provocation. An official American spokesman said damage at a North Vietnamese naval base and at a supply denot near the border of Laos was "between 70 and 80 per cent." MOSCOW CLAIMED seven of the planes were shot down and said intense anti-aircraft prevented more devastating attacks against military targets in the north. A U.S. Air Force spokesman, who disclosed today's twin attacks were larger than three previous attacks during February, said at least three of the raiding planes were downed by anti-aircraft fire from Communist positions. The raids were announced as a battalion-sized force of U.S. Marines prepared to land in South Viet Nam to bolster American forces there. It was understood the Marines would take over guard duties at vital U.S. installations such as the air bases where today's strikes were launched. Informed sources estimated the Marine force at between 800 to 1,000. A force of South Vietnamese fighter-bombers attacked the naval base at Quang Khe on the coast of the South China Sea 60 miles north of the border. U.S. jets supported that mission, concentrating on the Communist anti-aircraft batteries. ALL INDICATIONS were that today's bombing attacks were strictly an Air Force show. It would be the first time that planes from carriers of the U.S. 7th Fleet had not participated in the strikes against North Viet Nam although they may have flown reconnaissance missions. A statement by the U.S. Embassy and the Saigon government hinted at further air raids "to make clear to Hanoi that North Viet Nam will be held fully accountable for continuing aggression against South Viet Nam." 1953 (Photo by Tom Moore) SUFFERING SNOW—"As the icy fang and churlish chiding of the winter's wind" blows over Lawrence and Mount Oread, students in the early morning hours curse nature. "These are counselors which feelingly persuade me what I am," Shakespeare said. But these forlorn students are cold and immobile on the corner of 24th and Ridge Court. Shakespeare's words couldn't be further away from these marooned students. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 2, 1965 Little Orphan Annie Little Orphan Annie is stirring up conflict because of her current adventures in a mental institution. Irate readers are writing to newspapers saying the strip is misrepresenting life in general, and mental institutions, in particular. Since when were comic strips supposed to represent life as it really is? Having followed comic strips for a long time, I was always of the opinion the discouraged and worried reader turned to the comics after reading the news and editorial pages, which, these days, could send anyone to a mental institution if they thought about them long enough. If nothing else is funny, the size of the people and their often inane facial expressions is enough to laugh at. Since when did anyone take the Flintstones as a serious commentary on life in the Stone Age? Or since when did Brenda Starr become so realistic as to make journalists pattern themselves after her? It is well known (someone has probably written a master's thesis on this one) that L'il Abner is a social commentary. Me, I read it because it's funny. LIFE HAS become too serious as it is, without dragging comic strips into the area of interpretive and serious dialogue on the state of the human race. I sometimes think people have forgotten how to laugh. At the risk of being called a Pollyanna, I still think there is a great deal to laugh at, including the comic strips. Movies have to conjure impossible plots and characters for the film to be termed a comedy. Have we so lost our sense of humor that we cannot laugh at the real? Many have recently prescribed laughter as a good psychological escape. Can't it be an approach, rather than an escape? The idea of laughter being a medicine has always rather nauseated me, anyway. To ask for a return to the time when life was fun instead of a bore and a trial is perhaps asking too much, but could we not at least approach it? — Leta Roth Language Crisis Faces India As Shastri Attempts Unity By Phil Newsom By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst India's 1961 census disclosed that in the huge sub-continent there are 845 different languages and major dialects. Of this polyglot, Hindi and its dialects are used by something less than half of the population, mainly in the north. Among them all, the single unifying factor has been the English language, an inheritance of years of British colonial rule. Particularly this applied to the civil service. The great diversity of language made hopeless the task of unifying state and national administrations without a common denominator. AND SO IT WAS that the constitution of 1950 directed that English should be the official language for the first 15 years and on Jan.26,1965,should be replaced by Hindi. In 1963 Parliament passed a law saying that non-Hindi speaking states could, if they wished, retain English as an "associate language" for another 10 years. But it failed to appease the fears of millions of Indians who feared loss of their jobs to Hindi speakers or the resentment of those states proud of their own native tongue. Rule by riot not being uncommon among the explosive Indian population, it was not too surprising that on Jan. 26, in the state of Madras in the south mobs began taking to the streets. Madras is a Tamil-speaking state, a language used by about 34 million. THE RIOTERS attacked trains, burned stations and cut telephone lines in an attempt to halt communication. The mobs seized two policemen and burned them alive. Seven persons burned themselves to death in protest suicides. The riots then spread to Mysore and Kerala states where students attacked trains and post offices and stoned Hindi teachers. In Calcutta where Bengali is the principal tongue, student demonstrators smashed windows of bookstalls and burned Hindi books. FOR MILD-mannered Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri the language riots were just one of many burdens but they threatened to have widespread repercussions. Neither the Indian president nor some members of Shastri's cabinet approved of his handling of the situation. The rioting put new strains on the ruling Congress party, already bursting at the seams as result of the loss of former Prime Minister Nehru. Dailij Hänsan 111 Flint Hall 111 Flint Hall UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, trivweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. University of Kansas student newspaper University of Kansas student newspaper January 1988, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daffy 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. Excalibur The greatest of these is a faltering economy unable to feed India's exploding population. Hand in hand are inflation and mounting unemployment. With all of these facing him, Shastri seemed ready to compromise on the language issue. It is a tragedy of India that Nehru left it with a heritage of 17 years of democracy but failed to solve any of its other major problems. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Leta Roth and Gary Noland ... Co-Editorial Editors NEWS DEPARTMENT KERALA is the only Indian state where the Communists ever have held power. They were in office from 1957 to 1959. Don Black ... Managing Editor Bobbie Bartelt, Clare Casey, Marshall Caskey, Fred Frailey, Assistant Managing Editors; Judy Farrell, City Editor; Karen Lambert, Feature- Society Editor; Glen Phillips, Sports Editor; Janet Chartier, Telegraph Editor; Harry Krause, Picture Editor. Editor's note: The following is a reprint from the Carolina Israelite, a bi-monthly newspaper published by Harry Golden, author of Only in America. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Tom Fisher Business Manager Nancy Holland, Advertising Manager; Ed Vaughn, National Advertising Manager; Dale Reinecker, Classified Advertising Manager; Russ Calkins, Merchandising Manager; Bob Monk, Promotion Manager; Gary Grazda, Circulation Manager. In Kerala state elections are scheduled for next month, and the Communists who made political profit out of the food riots of last November seem likely to make further gains out of the language riots. WHEN MORDRED REVOLTED, King Arthur was sorely wounded. He asked Sir Bedivere to take his sword Excalibur to the sea and throw it into the waters. Twice Bedivere went and twice refused to throw away the valued sword, telling Arthur each time he had given the sword to the sea. But Arthur told him he lied and finally true to his trust, Bedivere hurled the sword into the sea and a hand rose above the waves to catch it and shake it. Then Bedivere took the bleeding Arthur to a barge on which sat many ladies clothed in black, among them Arthur's sister, Queen Morgan Le Fay. Arthur told Bedivere the barge would take him to Avalon and there he would recover from his wound and come back to help England when she needed him. In the mid-twentieth century Excalibur became fingers gesturing V for victory and Arthur smoked black cigars and saved England. Harry Golden The Carolina Israelite The People Say... MR. LANGFORD MUST HAVE known that blatantly not describing a women would bring a response from her. I am the "no description, just a girl" that handed Conway a pamphlet in the Union (Langford's "A Slice of Cam-pi"). I thought I'd give a waiting world my description. Dear Sir: I am not a draft dodger. I have close relatives in the service and close friends in Viet Nam, but, it's funny—I can still believe that the Viet Cong is in no way connected to the enemies of World War II who fought my relatives at Guadalcanal. I believe we signed a peace treaty. I and the Student Peace Union that I represent are trying not only to strengthen our own government but fight communism as well. "The more the Americans fight Communism in the way they are fighting it in South Viet Nam, the more they'll spread Communism over the region." Norodam Sihanouk. Cambodia. Conway is to me without description. Is he one of the fellows who fights for his ideals by calling "no-description" girls by dirty names? Perhaps he is one of the "unidentified" counter - picketers who cheer yes when their leader says, "Are we warmongers?" I notice he is in school and not himself in Viet Nam avenging his brother's death. My sympathies go with Conway. He's at the bottom of the same ladder on which all America is sinking into the quicksand. But Conway fails to see the reunited Communist bloc busy at the top of that ladder pulling it apart rung by rung. He also fails to notice that the more we struggle to get up that ladder the less firm it becomes. The more we fight the less there is of South Viet Nam to "liberate." If Conway wishes to have his description known, a Student Peace Union member is willing to debate publicly with him. Christine Bray Kansas City senior Dear Sir: LAST NIGHT I HAD A TERRIBLE dream. I dreamt that I was living in the future, in 1984. I found myself in a discussion with a member of the journalism faculty of a university in a country (unfortunately I don't remember it's name) that regarded itself as the most freedom-loving country in the world. At this university an editor of the students' newspaper was punished for having violated the principles of "responsible journalism" by writing an editorial, which (for the first time in the history of that newspaper) did not express the official opinion of the University. This affair was severe enough to take some disciplinary measures against this ignorer of "journalistic ethics" and "breaker of the code of the profession": he had to drop out of school, lost all his scholarships and honors, and was sent to a student's prison (excuse me I mean: an education camp) for $21_{2}$ years. After some hesitation the chairman of the journalism school of that university received me and I was able to ask him some questions: "What has actually happened?" Dr. Censure, I asked him. "Well," he replied, "something truly incredible. A student dared to express his own opinion in our students' newspaper. We were shocked because we had really believed that such a thing would be impossible today. We had taken numerous measures to prevent exactly that; but it was obviously not enough! What would happen," he added, "when every fool had his own opinion, his own conscience? Chaos, revolution, anarchy, communism would be the result!" "Yes," I admitted, "it would change a lot of things, if there were more of those dangerous individuals with their own ideas!" "I knew you would agree with me," Dr. Censore beamed, satisfied. "Colleges and universities are, after all, the institutions where we want to educate young people which later can help us to manipul . . . err . . . to educate the masses. We only want the happiness and the satisfaction of the people of our country. Even students have a right to this happiness. Controversial editorials in a students' newspaper disturb this harmony; students start to think independently and the more they think the less satisfied they become with the situation they find themselves in; finally they want to change things. This is exactly what we have to prevent." "Surely," I nodded agreeably, "that sounds logical. Now I understand why it is necessary for the sake of the whole student body to censor controversial editorials." "That's not censorship, it is simply responsibility," he replied angrily. "You know that censorship would violate our beloved constitution." "Oh, now I understand," I said happily, "responsibility simply means that journalists should only write what people already know how. Why burden people with knowledge and problems that might confuse them and finally perhaps cause conflicts? He who violates this healthy principle is irresponsible?" "God be praised," he responded, radiant with joy, "finally you have it. But another problem is that students still have to learn how to become responsible. With some it really takes time to adjust them, to make them a happy conforming member of our great happy university family. This is why we sometimes have to force students by some unusual educational measures to become responsible students, and thus, responsible citizens. But I can assure you that more than 99.9 per cent of the student population is responsible in this sense of the word." "How terrible." I said. "Yes, how terrible," he agreed, "that there is still 0.1 per cent of ir-responsible students left who tend to join dangerous liberal organizations like Peace Union and Civil Rights Councils. But we hope to solve this problem soon: some of our most responsible psychologists are trying to discover that these potential revolutionaries experienced some frustrations in their childhood, making it impossible for them to live without using their brains . . . err . . . I mean, without being able to live harmoniously with others. Co it will soon be possible for us to send these students where they belong: to a hospital for mentally ill people." "No," I cried, truly horrified, "please, think this over!" At this moment I awoke, bathed in perspiration. You can imagine how happy I was when I discovered that it was only a dream, and that I lived not in 1984 but in 1965. We have freedom of press, even freedom of the students' press; and certainly no government or university official would ever dare to prevent even the publication of articles he completely disagrees with. Authors of controversial articles are not punished, but bounced for their courage to write some troublesome editorials. Everything is so wonderfully different from the 1984 of my dream. Sincerely yours Volker Meja Frankfurt, Germany Graduate student BOOK REVIEWS THE MENTOR BOOK OF IRISH POETRY, edited by Devin A. Garrity (Mentor, 95 cents)—These must be good times for the Irish. Here we have a compilation of Irish poetry from the 18th century to the present, with modern translations of old Gaelic songs, ballads and myths. Such names as Moore and Synge are here in this anthology, 80 per cent of which has never before been placed in a collection. Garrity is regarded as the leading American publisher of Irish literature, and he feels that the poetry he includes brings out the Irish landscape, weather, wild life, past, destiny and traditions. Tuesday, March 2.1965 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Mary McCarthy (Photo by Harry Krause) KU DEBATERS—Six KU underclassmen will participate in the Heart of America Debate tournament. Debaters pictured left to right are: Jerry Hoskins, Bonner Springs, sophomore; Sharon Mahood, Springfield, Mo., sophomore; Randy Schultz, Overland Park freshman; and Jim Klumpp, Coffeyville freshman. Not pictured, but also representing KU are: Louis Floyd, Topeka sophomore, and Judson Briegel, Kansas City sophomore. Musician Surprises TV Fan With a Visit It's a rare occasion when one's favorite TV star suddenly drops by for a visit. That was the predicament Sunday night of Mrs. Marietta Jackson, Foster Scholarship Hall housemother, when Carl (Doc) Severinsen, lead trumpet player on Johnny Carson's "Touight Show," knocked on her door. "I just couldn't believe it," Mrs. Jackson said. "I had written to him on several occasions because he knows two of my boys, but I didn't receive an answer." Mrs. Jackson was referring to Alvin Lowrey, Winfield senior, and Roy Guenther, Breckinridge, Okla, junior, both residents of Foster Hall and members of the KU Brass Choir She said Severinsen had stopped by to apologize in person for not answering. He was on his way from Emporia where he had just completed a clinic for high school trumpet players and a one night engagement with the Emporia State Teacher's College Band. "He told me that his wife usually does all the correspondence in their family," Mrs. Jackson continued, "but somehow she missed answering my letters." Severin森 stayed only a few minutes since he was due in Paola for a concert last night. He will return to New York for the Tuesday night "Tonight Show." [Picture of a man holding a plant]. Would you like to work in a European resort this summer? PAYING JOBS IN EUROPE Grand Duchy of Luxembourg — Thousands of jobs in Europe, including resort hotel, office, factory, sales, farm, child care and shipboard work are available through the American Student Information Service. Wages can reach $400 a month, and ASIS is giving travel grants up to $390 to the first 5000 applicants. Job and travel grant applications and full details are available in a 36-page illustrated booklet which students may obtain by sending $2 (for the booklet and airmail postage) to Dept. M, ASIS, 22 Ave. de la Liberte, Luxembourg City, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg. But what did they talk about? "Just things in general — his five children and the TV show," Mrs. Jackson said. "He's really a very friendly fellow," she added. Severinsen, a native of Arlington, Ore., has been an NBC staff musician 14 years. He fills in for Skittch Henderson as conductor when Henderson is absent and is known on the "Tonight Show" for his humor. In his off-time from the show, Severinsen teaches trumpet at band clinics in colleges and high schools across the nation. Heart of America KU Debate Teams Chosen Surprised and honored -- that's how the six chosen debaters felt when Donn W. Parson, head debate coach, announced the KU teams for the Heart of America Tournament. By Joyce Outshoorn This tournament, to be held at KU on March 11, 12 and 13, is one of the largest and most important debate tournaments in the country. About 60 colleges from all over will be entering teams. "Mr. Parson never announces his choice until two weeks before a big tournament," she said. SHARON Mahood, Springfield, Mo., sophomore, and the only girl on the team, said that none of the debaters were sure about their chances of being chosen until the last minute. Teams are chosen mainly on a fast record. Miss Mahood, with her debate partner, Jim Klumpp, Coffeyville freshman, has a 65 per cent win and loss record. In the Heart of America tournament they will be competing together for the sixth time. ASKED HOW HE felt about competing against seniors Klumpp said it was a lot rougher than debating in the junior division. Both Miss Mahood and Klumpp felt it was more of a challenge. Miss Mahood added that it was a good way to learn to debate faster. Both Miss Mahood and Klummm have had high school experience. Miss Mahood has had four years, Klumpp three. In his last year in high school Coffeyville was state champion. Louis Floyd, Topeka sophomore, and Judson Briegel, Kansas City sophomore, form the second team for the tournament. They have had high school experience also. Floyd has had four years and Briegl three. They have been debating together since October of last year. Their record is 18 wins, 8 loses. CONSULT A PENGUIN! Next time you're searching for the right answer, the right name, the right date, turn to a Penguin Reference Book. These handy, concise paperbacks cover a wide range of subjects—and take up very little space! Among the titles: FLOYD AGREED that selection was made according to past record. Like Miss Mahood and Klumpp, he did not feel afraid to compete against older people. DICTIONARY OF PSYCHOLOGY. James Drever. New, revised edition, with almost 5,000 terms defined. $1.25 WRITING TECHNICAL REPORTS. Bruce M. Cooper. Invaluable aid for students. 95¢ DICTIONARY OF MODERN HISTORY 1769-1945. A. W. Palmer. Guide to people, events, ideas in all areas of the globe. $1.25 DICTIONARY OF ART AND ARTISTS. P. and L. Murray. Biographies of over 700 artists, plus descriptions of art terms, periods, movements. $1.25 Other Campus Favorites THE MODERN WRITER AND HIS WORLD. G. S. Fraser. English writers from the 1880's to the present. $1.45 BIRTH OF COMMUNIST CHINA. C. P. Fitzgerald. Just published-a fascinating, eye-opening report. $1.25 A SHAKESPEARE COMPANION: 1564-1964. F. E. Halliday. Alphabetical index to Shakespeare's real and fictional world. $2.95 SICK CITIES. Mitchell Gordon. The problems and challenges of today’s urban sprawl. $2.25 "I highly respect juniors and seniors, but they are not unbeatable. You just have to find out how to oppose them," he said. Briegel admitted that at first it had been difficult, but "the challenge makes you work harder." Your college bookstore has an outstanding selection of Penguins for reference, for relaxation—for reading pleasure on and off campus. Stop in today. And be sure to see the popular, new PENGUIN BOOK OF AMERICAN FOLK SONGS. It's complete with over 100 favorite songs, piano arrangements, guitar chords and a quick guitar learning method. All for only $1.95. PENGUIN BOOKS INC 3300 Clipper Mill Road Briegel and Floyd turned in their best performance at the big Iowa State College tournament, where they reached the quarterfinals. Baltimore, Md. 21211 Study in Guadalajara, Mexico PARSON EMPHASIZED the comparative youth of the KU teams—they will be the youngest team there. But he placed a lot of Team members agreed that the Heart of America Tournament would be the roughest this year. The third KU team consists of Randy Schultz, Shawnee Mission freshman, and Jerry Hoskins, Bonner Springs sophomore. They could not be reached for comment. value on past experience, and has confidence in his team. Their most recent success was winning the Mid-South tournament at Arkansas State College, Conway. Ark., last month. The Guadalajara Summer School, a fully accredited University of Arizona program, conducted in cooperation with professors from Stanford Univ., Univ. of California, and Guadalajara, will offer June 29 to August 8, art, folklore, geography, history, language and literature courses. Tuition, board & room is $265. Write Prof. Juan B. Rael, P.O. Box 7227, Stanford, Calif. Foam Soft A classic moccasin now so soft and comfortable you'll hardly know you have it on. Combining soft, soft kidskin leather and a silky-soft foam lining in the exclusive Unimoc ® Construction to make the most comfortable sport shoe you ever wore. ● Bone ● Navy ● Green Trampze Unimoc Foamy $10.95 ARENSBERG'S 819 Mass. VI 3-3470 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 2,1963 BARCELONA - El presidente del Consell de Gobierno, Pablo Sánchez, interviene en una consulta sobre la reforma del Ministerio de Defensa. (Photo by Lacy Banks) WESCOE SIGNS—Joining two universities by an agreement for cultural exchange, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe signs the document that will continue the Junior Year Abroad program. Small World KU. Costa Rica Joined The world is shrinking; people are growing closer as communications advance and KU made a contribution to that process Sunday when it formally acknowledged a five-year cultural exchange program with Costa Rica. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe and Rector Alfaro, on the University of Costa Rica campus, simultaneously signed duplicate documents at 5:30 p.m. An audience of about 110 locked on at KU. The 15-minute program at KU was carried on in Spanish and in English. Assistant Dean Thomas Gale, KU Peace Corps director for Costa Rica, and George R. Waggoner, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, shared the program with Chancellor Wescoe. Assistant Dean Gale spoke in Spanish as he welcomed the audience and introduced his counterparts. Spanish was welcomed as the audience included delegates of a Latin American educational seminar held here. THE AGREEMENT CAN be renewed for five-year periods indefinitely. The copy will be preserved in KU's archives located in Watson Library. "During the life of this program more than 60 KU students . . have enjoyed their junior year abroad at the University of Costa Rica." Chancellor Wescoe said. "The University has completed a successful Peace Corps project there; and visits have been exchanged at the administration level," he said. Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS CELESTE $250 ALSO TO $1800 Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. Foreign Students' Problems Studied at P-t-P Conference About 60 students representing various People-to-People clubs in the Midwest region attended a conference last Saturday in the Kansas Union. ALI HASSAN, undergraduate from India, felt that the way a foreign student is accepted depends not only on his racial and social status but upon the American himself and the environment that he is given for exposure. Many foreign students come here expecting to be fully accepted into the American community. Hassan praised the P-t-P "brother-sister program" because he was able to make a very good American friend. "My American brother was a tremendous help to me and I found no traces of phoniness in him. He recently got married and I was the best man." Lance Burr, Salina senior, president of KU's People-to-People, said the meeting was successful in getting ideas for improvement and owed much of its success to the foreign students who spoke in the morning panel discussion, the first event of the day-long program. The panel discussion concerned the problems that foreign students face adjusting to American college life. The participants included the students and Assistant Dean Clark Coan, advisor for international students. MANY FOREIGN students make it hard for others to communicate with by living in small groups," Hassan said. "This leads to a lot of trouble in communications." "Americans tend to treat the foreign students like a group and their responses are all mechanized in a how-to-treat-a-foreign-student attitude," Walter Bgoya, Tanganyika senior and president of the International Club, said. "The African student that comes here is expected to be the son of a chief, but my father never was." "I DIDN'T KNOW how to get a pop out of a machine either, because I wasn't sure about the operation. I was very shy about talking to Americans and asking them for help because I thought that I would be a bother," Yusuke Kawarbayashi, Japanese graduate student, said. He said if a new foreign student were assigned to an American student to guide him and to help dial the phone or get a pop from a machine, this would be a great help. about what to expect while being a student in America and the formation of an intramural basketball team. The proposals derived in discussion groups were the establishment of a summer program of communicating with the foreign students and informing them more thoroughly THE HIGHLIGHT of the evening half of the program was a dinner where Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe spoke. P-t-P National Director L. P. Cookingham was also present. "One reason why I agree that the People-to-People organization is one of the best is because it is run by those to whom the present belongs and by whom the future is being made." Chancellor Wescoe said. After the dinner, the P-t-P conference delegates were guests of the International Club and the KU P-t-P group for a party in the Kansas Union's Big Eight Room. WARNING Stay away from British Motors There is a possibility of becoming infected with the Sports Car fever! The SP fever will doom you to years of pleasure and excitement. If you are brave and full of red blood, bring that great mass of Detroit Iron in and become infected with a happy little Sports car. WARNING—if you can't stand pleasure,stand away. BRITISH MOTORS 1116 W. 23rd Lawrence, Kans. REPRESENTATIVES of the INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS DIVISION will be on the KU campus March 4. Graduating seniors from the mechanical engineering department are invited to make an appointment for an interview. Please contact your placement office today. CESSNA AIRCRAFT CORPORATION HUTCHINSON, KANSAS Flip Flapjacks Tuesday, March 2, 1965 University Daily Kansan Grace Riggs, a 23-year-old telephone operator, today won the international "Pancake Race" trophy for Liberal against Olney, England. Page 5 Pancake Race Run Mrs. Riggs ran the 415-yard course in 1 minute 7.6 seconds, 4 better than the time turned in by Olmey winner Jennifer Andrews, 17. A transatlantic telephone call compared times and determined the winner. The race in Liberal was run about 12:30 p.m. CST. TOPEKA, Kan. —(UPI)— Reaportionment of the Kansas Legislature will not be done during the Legislature's 1965 session. Gov. William H. Avery said Monday. Legislative Vote Avery met with House and Senate leaders after the Kansas Supreme Court declared the apportionment of the Kansas House of Representatives was unconstitutional. Avery said it was the unanimous conclusion that redistricting should not be done during the current session. The governor said this was because the court stipulated that reapportionment of the House would not have to be accomplished before April 2, 1966, the date candidates must file for election. KU STUDENTS FROM Liberal, Dwight Boring* says... PETER C. MALCOLM Stands to reason that a life insurance policy designed expressly for college men—and sold only to college men—gives you the most benefits for your money when you consider that college men are preferred insurance risks. Call me and I'll fill you In on THE BENEFACTOR, College Life's famous policy, exclusively for college men. *DWIGHT BORING 2020 Harvard Lawrence, Kansas Phone VI 2-0767 representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA ... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men though not contestants in the race, have memories of the "flapjack sprint. Judith Godfrey, Liberal senior, said she did not know how long the race had been going on between Olney and Liberal women, but "at least 10 years or so." REBECCA BERGLUND. Liberal freshman, said, "My folks called me just last night and asked if I was coming home for the race. I'm not, but it is a big deal in Liberal." "The races start about 9 o'clock with a race for the men, and then the women race. The most fun, though, is at the breakfast--watching people devour huge stacks of pancakes." "School is let out and in the morning there is a parade and the race with Olney. There is another race in the afternoon for women from outside Liberal, but it's not the official race," she said. Artcarved Rich in Tradition... Artcarved® wedding rings She's following a great tradition—the name Artcarved assures that! It's the oldest, largest ringmaker in America—has by far the widest choice of exquisite, traditional designs. Do let us show you. They start for as little as $8. Briman's Jewelry Mass. VI 3-4366 A. MONROE SET Groom's Ring ... $32.50 Bride's Ring ... $27.50 B. MOONMIST SET Groom's Ring ... $29.50 Bride's Ring ... $27.50 C. GOLDEN THREAD SET Groom's Ring ... $27.50 Bride's Ring ... $24.50 As seen in BRIDE'S M.C. | A.M.C.V.P. 4X | Amethyst 14K | Alloy "After we finish this set... let's head for 'Charlie's'... Don't call a cab. I want to show you my new wheels-- a new Dodge Coronet." "Who's the guy who keeps waving? My Dodge salesman... good people. Clued me in on all the jazz that comes standard on a Coronet 500." "Like bucket seats, full carpeting, padded dash, console, spinners, backup lights and a wild V8 for kicks... oops, there's my cue..." MARIE LYNN SINGING SALVATORE SCHIRO SOLARIS "Black is the color of my true love's Coronet..." PETER KIRCHNER Iris Reis 1965 Coronet makes your kind of music, and the price won't leave you flat. Dodge Coronet 500 DODGE DIVISION CHRYSLER MOTORS CORPORATION Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 2, 1965 Jayhawks Trample the Buffaloes; Set Stage for Cowboy Clash Here The KU Jayhawks squeaked past Colorado last night, 68-62, in a key conference contest. The victory was a "must" for the Javahawks in their attempt to tie with the Oklahoma State Cowboys for the Big Eight conference crown. It boosted the KU conference record to 9-4 and firmed up their hold on second place. Colorado was the only serious threat to KU's standing but the last three losses have eliminated the Golden Buffaloes from their threatening position. The Buffs jumped to an early lead when they dropped in a basket the first time they gained possession. However, it was a short-lived lead and Jayhawk shooting quickly evened up the contest. For the first 10 or 12 minutes it was a game of small leads and quick scoring efforts. KU failed to capitalize on several free throws in the early portion of the first half while the Buffs pumped them in at every opportunity. With about eight minutes remaining, the Jayhawks held a 22-17 advantage over the Colorado squad. The Buffs went to work on the KU Kent Dobbins, Lawrence junior, paced KU to a 62-58 gymnastic victory over Fort Hays State Friday afternoon in Robinson Gymnasium. Cooper led Fort Hays with 17 points. His teammate Edwin Johnson scored 11. Bob Livesay, Glen Ellyn, Ill., scored five for Kansas. Coach Bob Lockwood commented that Kansas "would have beaten Fort Hays badly if the team had possessed more depth." Livesay and John Krug, Wichita junior, were the only Jayhawks, besides Dobbins, to place at least third in any event. Dobbins scored 41 points, while winning six of the eight events. He placed second and fifth in the other two. Dobbins also provided the winning margin by defeating Fort Hays ace, Gary Cooper, for the all-around title. The score was previously tied at 56 all. lead, though, and wore it away with their heavy shooting. The Jayhawks never recovered from the attack and at the halfway mark the score was 35-34 in favor of the Golden Buffaloes. A quick-hitting Jayhawk squad broke over the narrow Colorado margin in the first minutes of second half play and went on to hang up a lead for KU that the Buffers couldn't overcome for the rest of the evening. The Colorado squad managed to stay close to the Jayhawks and the game was not "cinched" until the final gun. With 2:35 remaining the score stood at 62-60 for the Jayhawks and KU went into a delay game. The Buffers attempted to gain control of the ball by what appeared to be intentional fouling, but they gathered no points from their efforts and KU tallied three from the free throw stripe. On a more successful turnover, Pat Frink of Colorado sank a 20-footer to give the Buffs their final score with 0:28 remaining. Lewis was fouled after the Frink goal and pushed in another two for KU. Wesley followed him later with one more point from the free line. Both teams suffered a loss in the anxious and rough play near the end of the game. KU's Ron Franz fouled out of the contest in the final minutes along with Colorado's Pat Frink. All-American Al Lopes came through for the Javhawks by tallying 20 points for one of his best nights in a long time. Following him un closely was Walt Wesley who put in 19 points including a stuffer from directly under the hoop. For the Golden Buffaloes it was Pat Frink who took the top honors for scoring. He sank 17. Little brother Mike Frink handled third place by racking up 10. Lynn Baker was the second place man with 12 tallies. Wesley fell short of any record-breaking performances in the game. He went into the contest needing only 30 points to crack the individual scoring record for the conference set by Bob Boozer of Kansas State. Wesley also was after the field goal record held by former Jayhawk, Clyde Lovellette. He needed 10 goals to top that record. Wesley only netted 5 of the goals last night. The Jayhawks' final game of the season will be next Saturday afternoon against Oklahoma State in the field house. Tip-off is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. All Student Supplies including "PLAYBOY" 1115 Mass. VI2-0216 Allen's News KU Over Hays In Gym Contest La Granada TNEATRE---Telephone VI 3-5788 La Pizza 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 Offered Monday-Thursday NOW OFFERS YOU A COMPLETE DINNER FROM OUR SPECIAL THEATER MENU AND CHOICE OF SHOW FOR ONLY $2.00 SAVE $.50 - $1.00! NOW! 7:00 & 9:00 "NONE BUT THE BRAVE" FRANK SINATRA CLINT WALKER > "IT'S A MAD, MAD, MAD, MAD WORLD" WITH DOZENS OF STARS Next — ANN-MARGARET "PLEASURE SEEKERS" Now! Ends Wed. . . George Hamilton "YOUR CHEATIN' HEART" and Nat 'King' Cole Story Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065 Starts THURS... It's the biggest entertainment ever to rock the screen — with laughter! Sophomores... Here's what the new 2-year Army ROTC program means to you 2. Completing the 2-year Advanced Course at any school offering the ROTC program. 1. Completing a special 6-week summer camp between your sophomore and junior years. A new Reserve Officer Training Corps program permits selected college sophomores to be commissioned as Army Second Lieutenants in two years. You can do this by: What are the benefits of Army ROTC training? - Management training for success in civilian or military life. - $40 per month pay while attending the Advanced Course, plus uniforms; pay and paid travel for summer camps. - A commission as an Army officer, with all of its accompanying benefits, including higher income, greater opportunity for advancement and officer status. - The personal satisfaction that comes from knowing you're trained to assume leadership responsibilities. - Eligibility for free flight instruction at selected schools leading to a private pilot's license. These benefits will put you a step ahead of other college graduates and will pay off for the rest of your life. You owe it to yourself to investigate these new opportunities. For complete information, see the Professor of Military Science at your school, or send the coupon below. U. S. ARMY ROTC Post Office Box 1040 Westbury, New York 11591 Gentlemen: Please send me information on the 2-year Army ROTC program. I understand that there is no obligation. ARMY ROTC City ___ State___ Zip Code___ I plan to transfer to ___ College or University. C - 165 BSA- Tom Gibsco Bass 3-030 Aucti own | Blevii Sunbe iron: $2. Bc ed: r 9175 1959 ( condi 2-0731 CHINA never ing. F $100. addit the fir JR... S MONE SECUI BENE PART parties Ralph SCHW parts 97c, p tle do or CA Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS University Daily Kansan BSA-1964 250 cc. Good condition—Call Tom Walstrom. VI 3-6400. 3-5 FOR SALE BSA-1964 250 cc, Good condition --Call Tom Wattshell 640 --3-5 Tom Wattshell Bass Guitar and New Kitten Bass amp, Also mike and stand, call V1 3-0305 Fender electric guitar, new price $200, asking $125. Ron Babcock, VI 2-9506, or see at 1120 W. 11th. 3-5 Auction—used bikes, all sizes. Name your own price. Saturday, March 6. 1:00 p.m. Blevins Bike Shop at 701 Michigan. 3-5 New post Versalist slide rule. Regular phone number will sell for $25.00. Phone number 0749 3-2 Tuesday, March 2, 1965 1859 Gardner 50" x 10" house trailer, good price. Only one price, priced. 2-0731 at 5 p.m. 3-8 Sunbeam toaster (cost $24): for $6. Steam iron: $2, gooseneck lamp: $1. Hot plate: $8, manual scale (new) $10. record turntable, Call VI 39175 (after 4:00). 3-3 HI-FI-Save on nationally advertised Hfi components. New equipment in factory sealed cartons with factory warranties. Call VI 3-4891 3-15 BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMIUMS! Occidental Term Life: conversion. Go-Back, and Move-Over options Age. 18 = $33.90 = $10,000. Age 30 = $34.40 = $10,000. Age 22=$34.70= $10,000. Call Wee Santee at V 3-216利 for details. t Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL VI 2-1901 for free delivery. Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive notes, and references for classes. Formerly known as the Theta tts Notes. Call VI I 3-1428. $4.50. TYPEWRITERS, electrics, manuals, por- tas, typesetting, typewriter. Hermes, Royal, Saint-COGNON, Olivett Adding machines, office supplies and presses. Typewriter. 700 Mass., VI. 3-3644. Students, why throw money away on rent when you can own a 1962 Marlette 10 x 50. modern two-bedroom mobile home with small monthly payments. home with a large monthly payment in Excel condition. For further information CALL RI 8-0973 or RI 8-0916. tf BE THE LEADER OF YOUR PACK: Harley Davidson Sportster K. 750 cc, new clutch, and new brakes and tires. THIS IS NO HONDA. For further information about this beautiful machine CONTACT Monti Belot at VI 3-0700. tf Fender stateracoust guitar and guitar stationation — reason price-call -T1 2-0763. 3-2 PORTABLE STEREO: Admiral's Finest—two carrying units, 1 for turntable and 2 for speaker systems (2 tweeters and 2 full range woofer) $195. New. Will sell for good offer. CALL: Rusty Calkins at VI 3-5721. tf NEED A BAND? 30 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM PHONE VI 2-2100. tj THE STABLES now open every day- Serving steaks, chops sea food, sand- mud management, new atmosphere. Party room available. Phone 3-9644, 1401 W. 7th. tl CHINA—Noritaki, Mayfair design. New, never used or even removed from packing. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk. M 3-7102. tf 1954 Ford-perfect transportation to the sandbar, Lone Star. Must sell, call Bob Woodbury at VI 3-6400. 3-2 I have a beautiful handmade guitar. This instrument has rose-wood back and sides, spruce top and ebony fingerboard. It goes with Martin D-28. Call Violin 5282 evenings. V 3-2 1960 Alna Mobile Home, 10' x 55', 2 bedroom, automatic washer, carpet, all gas; $500.00 down, assume balance. KI 2-2514 after 6:00 p.m. and weekends. MISCELLANEOUS BUSY PEOPLE—no time to spare for adventuring of your home regularly or occasion- ing of your work Math tutor B.A. degree in math from KU. Experienced in tutoring geometry, algebra, calculus and analytic geometry. Call Vi 3-0927. 3-3 ally call: PIONEER CLEANING SERVICE VI, 3-4408 3-10 Tom's Barber Shop, 5 West 14th, Hair- and beauty center, 3 full time parking, and free parking. 3-2 Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-Q ribs that grandma and grandpa can eat, try our orders or order an order per slab. Hours: 11:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-9510. 3-31 JR. SR. AND GRADUATE STUDENTS MONEY AVAILABLE ON PERSONAL SUPPORT PHONE CUCK UP BENEFICIAL FINANCE AI, VI 3-8174 1-8174 PARTY TIME? Building available for Ralph Foley at VI 3-3995. PHON: Ralph Foley at VI 3-3995. SCHIWN BICYCLES -service all make parts and accessories, tires $1.46, tubes luggage racks and tie downs SEE Blevle at 7in and Micr or CALL VI 3-0581 Loans--buy, sell and trade--guns, fishing, tools, tools, radios, tools, 4S, 3C, iems. Ims. I 9-24225 Ims. I 9-24225 Friends coming this weekend? Looking for a place with good food at reasonable prices. HILDA RESTAURANT RESTAURANT. Plenty of free parking 8th and Iowa. tt it's great for a date. Take her bowling at Hillcrest Bowl, fine lanes in the state. Play on Sunday and Sun. also Mon, Tues, and Fr. after 9:00 p.m. Hillcrest Bowl, 9th and Iowa. Rent electric, standard, and portable typewriters. Repair all makes of electric typewriters. Train them on the firm Business Equipment (formerly Business Machines), 15 E. 8th, VI 3-0151. Room & board, transportation. Two tickets, instruction and insurance. $128. Room & Club. Contact Y office in the Union or Lady Knight. Sign up meeting March 9, 7:30 p.m. at the Forum Rooms 3-9 Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon.-thru VI or all day Sat. or Sun. Phone VI - 3-6231. tf Attention: All persons interested in self defense training classes utilizing many of same throws and smashes used. Jamie Blow movies, contact Bob McKinley at V3-7102. HELP WANTED Part-time undergraduate electrical assistant, primarily audio work. E.E. or Physics major preferred—apply room 4, Bailey Hall. 3-8 Hostess—Attractive lady for evening employment in the New Orleans Room, top wages—Phone VI 2-9465 or VI 3-4747. tt WANTED Discutheme. Daneers. Apply now. At The New Orleans Room. Phone 9-2465 A third roommate to share modern apartment with two engineering students. Phone VI 2-2585 or see apt. 38, The Coks, 2345 Rsun Court After 1:00 p.m. Washing and troning done in my home Phone VI 2-2598. t OLD CARS WANTED, top prices paid if you can drive it in, we'll consider it. Do it today! GI Joe's, 601 Vermont. tf Want girl companion to live in my home. Call VI 3-8201 or VI 3-3414 or see at 2110 Tennessee. 3-3 ENTERTAINMENT Now you can hear four excellent dance bands on stereo tapes: THE FURYS, THE BLADES, THE RUNABOUTS, THE NOMADS. Call VI 2-1791. tf ATTENTION PARTY THROWERS: Do you want the Beatles, the Kingsmen, Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL I 2-1791. tf 6 years typing experience plus background in proofreading enables me to guarantee accuracy on college papers New electric typewriter equipped for interchangeable type sets. Mrs. Berndt 801 Michigan or VI 2-0400 Experienced typist wants typing in home. Reasonable rates, prompt service. Phone VI 2-3356. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Secretary wants to type your thesis, dissertation term paper, etc., on new IBM electric. Fast, accurate, and reasonable. Special symbols available. CALL Mrs. Shirley Gilbert, 934 W. 24th. Noth. 11, at VI 2-2088. Experienced secretary will type term papers, law briefs, theses, etc., for students. Especially familiar with legal and business terms. Fast and accurate. Reasonable rates. Call Marsha Goff at V13-2577. tf Experienced typist. 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates CALL Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Vale, VI-1-648 Theses only on Royal Electric Pica Typewriter CALL Mills. Fulcher at VI 3-0558 Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. Will do ex- paper research on topics like carbon ribbon typewriter. Betty Muirkat 40 Indian or call VI 2-091. Former Harvard and U. of Minnesota report on the theses. PHONE VI 3-7207. Experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing. Speak and understand languages. Quick and reasonable Electric typewriter. Call VI 8-3976. tf Will do typing in my home. Accurate reasonable rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at VI 2-0210. ferm papers. Theses by experienced yplist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. ti Fynist, experienced with term papers Pupil, who will give you typing immediate attention when machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048 Experienced secretary would like typing in her home, with new electric typewriter and new fast and accurate service. Reasonable salary. Call Mrs. Latt caster at VI 2-1188. Experienced typist will do dissertations manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., V1. 3-7485. tt Experienced typist wants theses, term- papers, and dissertations to be typed on electronic (pica type) typewriter. Please Call Pat Beck at VI 3-5630. tt Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will use of those essays. pertened. Electric typewriter. CALL Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8262. Theses or term papers done in my home. Four years secretarial practice at K.U. CALL Mrs. Oxford at VI 2-0673. tf 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 3-8568 Experienced typist to do termpapers, themes, reports and carbons. Fast and accurate service. Reasonable rates. Call Service 8 mms or 1 p.m. through Sat. V I-3 08755. 3:48-8 Omega Calendar watch. Initials "T.R.S." on back. Reward. Call Tom Stevenson at VI 3-2550. 3-8 LOST Brown leather clutch purse, Saturday night in Rock Chalk Cafe: Reward, contact Sally Slezak at VI 3-1340. 3-4 Feb. 11 or 12. 1 pair of black frame leather. 11 or 12 for return for turn back. 11 V-3.9662. 3-5 FOR RENT Nice cool basement or upstairs apartment for spring semester. Double or single. Ideal for study. Phone Ray Woods at VI 21-1613. 3-8 Single room for graduate student in faculty home close to campus. Phone UN 4- 3230 or VI 2-0261. 3-4 Large 6 room apt. for rent. Close to campus and down town. $70 plus electric bill. 3 bedrooms, many, many closets, etc. Call VI 2-9193. 3-4 Pleasant quiet one bedroom basement apartment. Call VI 3-8344. 3-5 Furnished apts.—2 blocks from Union Bldg. Remodeled and nicely furnished. Special rates for 6 months. Quater. Carried couples preferred. Phone 1-291-391. 3-5 WOODIES are more interesting when you get there the fun way on A BIKE. You get there, parts, repairs, worn equipment Gran Sport Cycle, 9 3-514 VI 3-3228 Extra nice room apt. in graduate house for graduate or older undergraduate man. Occupies campus, utilities paid. Needs furnishings in private bath and kitchen Call VI 3-8343 We have available one double room and one single for graduate women. Also two single laundry facilities provided. Call VI 2-018-6 or come by 1244 Louisiana. PARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30-60 people, juke box, liquid refreshments Contact Don at the Gaslig VI Station for reservations CALL VI 3-1086. #f Room with refrigerator 15 block from camp. camp. V 3-2283. furnished. $27.00 5 $34.99 Room for rent=double or single. Ideal entrance to suite. Phone VI 3-0226 by 5 p.m. on Thursday. Crescent Heights and CALL Apartments— 1821 W. 24th, or CALL V. 2-3711. 1821 W. 24th, or CALL V. 2-3711. Lovely 3 bedroom house, air conditioned, attached garage, vacant March 8th. Adults, for information call VI 2-3416 3.2 CLASSIFIED AD RATES 1 DAY $1.00 3 DAYS $1.50 5 DAYS $1.75 A B R Δ E Z H O I K A M Fraternity and Sorority Jewelry - Kings - Mugs - Pins - Lavaliers - Crests Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Massachusetts 1424 Crescent Road Campus WEST --madras fluting SHEWNUT LACE DRESS Ladybug LADYBUG's most elegant idea... kept LADYBUG-simple by blue cotton chambray denim in a quick fluid curve. The dress is classicism itself, but at the cuffs and around the low neck there's wonderful deep flutting of India madras... great theatre, 5 to 15. $18.00 Business Directory GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established - Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING - Lubrication . . . . $1.00 24 HOUR SERVICE (TUES.-SUN.) - Brake Adjustment . . . . 98 TRAVEL - Wheel Alignment TIME - Automatic Transmission Page Fina Service 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694 LET MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Reservation! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 2, 1965 KU Model UN Building Blocs By Joan McCabe The KU-Y Model United Nations reported approximately 200 persons representing 52 delegations yesterday during their first day of registration according to Edward (Hank) Hibbard, Eureka junior and member of the KU-Y Model U.N. Steering Committee. ANYONE who is interested in the program may register at the KU-Y office this week in the Kansas Union." Hibbard said. Bloc meetings begin Wednesday, March 10. "Each delegation is required to pay a registration fee of $7.00 unless one or more of their delegates is a member of the KU-Y. The fee decreases $1.50 with each KU-Y member, because of this some delegations pay as little as $1.00," he explained. "CAMPUS organizations for international students such as People-to-People and International Club have helped us in this area," he continued. Law Scholarships Available The final program in the All Student Council-sponsored Freshman Leadership series is set for tomorrow night at 7 in the Kansas Union. All freshmen are invited. "There are two reasons for this." Hibbard stated, "it gives the delegates an idea of the attitudes of the people of that country and it provides the international student with an opportunity to express what he feels his country's views are or should be. Leadership Series Closes Tomorrow "There will be five areas from which resolutions will come during the meetings of the General Assembly, April 23-24. Four areas have been chosen by the steering commit- tion of admittance for Red China; the problem of Portugal with its colony, Angola; the Israeli-Arab dispute; and non-payment of fees," Hibbard said. "The most popular blocs so far have been the South American, Western, Sino-Soviet and the Western-Allied Asian," Hibbard said. "There are several blocs still open such as the Arab and African blocs and the individual countries of Mexico, Sweden, Burma, Cambodia, the Philippines, Thailand, Belgium, Greece and New Zealand. All observer nations are also open," he continued. "The Model U.N. has never had any trouble recruiting international students to help with the program," he said. Assst. Dean Robert P., Cobb, Liberal Arts, and Assst. Prof. J. Piekalkiewicz, Political Science department, will speak on how past programs can aid the freshmen in their college career and later life. Bill Robinson, Great Bend sophomore and ASC representative (Vox, men's large residence halls), is in charge of the program tomorrow. Conference on Aging, All Day. Kansas Union. EACH DELEGATION will consist of four persons and it is recommended that one member of the delegation be a native of that particular country. Fine Arts Lecture, 2:30 p.m. Donald J. Cornell, Gormtul W. Swarborn Recital Hall Undergraduate scholarship applications are now being considered by the KU law school, according to James K. Logan, dean of the law school. TODAY Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:00 p.m. past noon. Meet the Union. The Nature of God—Paul Steward. Official Bulletin Student Peace Union Open Meeting. 7:30 p.m. Kansas Union. 7:30 p.m. Danfort Chapel Student Peace Union Open Meeting, 24 West 6th Street Christian Science College Organization. 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel American Society Class-Intensive Engin- gines Gapm Public Relations, 43N, Strong grade average, and score at least 500 points on the law school student entrance test, will obtain financial help Logan added that the law school will make every effort to obtain some form of financial aid to all students needing it. St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center for Education; 7:00, a Study of the Sacrams by Kathleen Schommer; 8:00, Commentators 9:00, Western Civilization Discussion Dean Logan said that all students who have a definite need for financial assistance, have a 2 point Psychology Colloquium, 4:00 p.m. dmr. Edwin S. Shneidman. Strong Auditorium. 933 W. Sixth Ave. Inquiers Class, 7:30 p.m. Canterbury House, 1116 La. tee. The other area will be selected by the delegates," Hibbard commented. Catholic Masses 6:45 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Confections Confession and during pass. Wesley Foundation Community Work- day 9:15 p.m. Methodist Center, 1314 Oregon SUA Coffee Forum, 4:30 p.m. p.m. Donald J. Grout, Big Eight Room, Kansas Union Carillon Recital, 7:00 p.m. Alber Gerken TOMORROW Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Classical Film, 7:00 p.m. "Kanal." Fraser Theater. "THE FOUR areas are considera- Senior Recital. 8:00 p.m. Joan Moee, planist. Swarthout Recital Hall. Teaching Candidates: Interviews scheduled for Wednesday, March 3. New Mexico, Carlsbad Municipal Schools, elementary and secondary; Missouri, Raytown Consolidated Dist. 2, elementary and secondary. SUA POETRY HOUR Thursday, March 4 DR. RONALD TOBIN will read a Selection of French Poetry Music Room in Kansas Union 4:30 p.m. Thursday, March 4 Free Coffee Free Coffee ONE HOUR MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING ONE HOUR MARTINIZING PRICES Suits ...1.20 Pants ...60 Sweaters ...60 Sport Shirts ...60 Sport Coats ...70 Jackets ...75 Top Jackets ...1.35 MEN'S LADIES' Dress (plain) ... 1.20 Skirts ... .60 Sweaters ... .60 Blouses ... .60 Short Coats ... 1.10 Medium Coats ... 1.25 Long Coats ... 1.35 STILL TIME (Before the weekend) at 14th and Mass. across from Central Jr. High New 1-Hour Dry Cleaning No Extra Charge ONE HOUR MARTINIZING . . . the most in quality dry cleaning is in the "PERFECTED" one-hour process . . . by using the newest, most modern equipment, and applying our own spotting techniques, deep-cleaning methods and carefully finishing your garments. ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING ASSURES YOU: ★ Odorless Cleaning Garments Stay Fresh Longer Sanitary Clothes ★ Cleaner, Brighter Garments ★ Gentle, Individual Treatment for Your Fine Fabrics SPECIAL ONE DAY SHIRTSERVICE 25c each 4 for 88¢ 1407 MASS. — FREE PARKING — One hour MARTINIZING the meet in DRY CLEANING SPECIAL ONE DAY SHIRTSERVICE 25c each 4 for 88c 1407 MASS. — FREE PARKING — One Hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING Groups To Hire Unionized Bands By Jacke Thayer Social chairmen of KU living groups have met and decided to comply with a local musician's union's request, asking all living groups to hire only union bands. In a letter to all living group social chairmen Feb. 5, Newton E. Jerome, secretary of Local 512 of the American Federation of Musicians, made his request. Bob Hicks, All Student Council (ASC) social committee chairman and Inter-Fraternity Council member, said the IFC has decided to comply until further information could be obtained. Panhellenic Council members also voted to comply. Social chairmen of the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) met early last week and decided to comply with the request. Karl Zetmeir, Emmett senior and manager of nine non-union bands, said in an interview Tuesday,"He (Jerome) is just trying to force non-union bands to become union. "A college student used to be able to work his way through school playing in a band, but this is impossible with union dues," Zetmeir said. "In order to join, each man in a combo would have to pay $44 for the first year and $14 each year after that. This can cut into a college student's pay pretty heavily." Zetmeir added, "The only benefit we (non-union players) would get from the union is that he (Jerome) would let us work in Lawrence. He is forcing the town and the players into the position of accepting this. According to the state right-to-work law, his method is technically legal, but there's an awfully fine line." Zetmeir was referring to the Kansas statute outlawing union shops allowing only union members to work in a certain area or place of business. The major disadvantage to university living groups, according to Zetmeir, is that "only two or three union bands are available to play the kind of music students want or who will play for living group parties. "There are approximately 50 living groups on the Hill, and their price range for hiring bands is from $80-$150." Zetmeir said. "The minimum for a union band would be $150. If the living groups agree to use only union bands, they will have to 'up' their social budgets." Zetmeir said he feels the union's "threat is an empty one." "It's an example of an organized minority against an unorganized majority," he said. "Jerome says this issue and the placing of KU on the unfair list would not affect the Mancini concert. Mancini has a sizeable contract and is bringing a troupe in. He's too big to let a one-man union call off the concert." "But outside groups from Topeka who would join the union would bring much more money into the local union, and so would the $1\frac{1}{2}$-2 per cent traveling fee the local union would get from members of other locals performing here," Zetmeir said. Zetmeir continued, "The KU living groups have enough union and non-union business that they can tell the union 'we get anyone we want or NO union bands.' I think the union would back down." Until recently, the Red Dog Inn was the only all-union establishment in Lawrence," Zetmeir said. Manager John Brown is a licensed booker for the American Federation of Musicians. Brown said union influence is widespread and Topeka, Hutchinson, Salina, Kansas City, Lawrence and Joplin, Mo., all have locals operating in this general area. Jerome refused to comment until another meeting of the union's "eight-man board of directors" is held. He said, "Everything is really pretty well settled now. We're not looking for any trouble." Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts, said he was not here at the time of the incident in the 1940's. However, he understood the disagreement concerned a union of stagehands. KU did not have its own theater at that time and was performing student productions in a commercial theater without hiring union stagehands. The university was then boycotted by the stagehands and musicians'union. "I don't think the present situation would involve anything of an academic nature," Dean Gorton said. Under the previous boycott, senior recitals, a requirement for graduation in the School of Fine Arts, had to be performed off-campus in the local high school auditorium. "Senior recitals are a required part of our student curriculum, just as tests are. They have no relationship to the status of dance bands performing at a fraternity function," Dean Gorton said. 62nd Year, No.91 Daily hansan Organizations which do discriminate will be expected to eliminate these practices before the spring semester of the 1965-66 school year. LAWRENCF, KANSAS IF ORGANIZATIONS DO NOT comply, this bill gives the ASC the power of disfranchisement, restriction of social activities, denial of participation in student government, or any other action they feel appropriate. George Tannous, Lebanan junior and ASC vice-chairman, said the Chancellor felt this time limit would give these organizations sufficient time to comply. Alvin E. Jones, director of the State Property Valuation Department in Topeka, told the council that personal property will be assessed and taxed where it was located Jan. 1 and not by residence A resolution was passed on this matter to send a letter to all Kansas State Senators and Representatives endorsing a bill to come before the legislature exempting all students from personal property taxes. Human Rights Bill No. 7, sent back by the Chancellor with his corrections, eliminating all discriminatory practices at KU, was passed by the council on a 24 to 4 vote with one abstention. Clause Waived for Sigma Nu; Letter Read At ASC Meeting "THIS IS SOMETHING we've been working on for three years." Willard, a member of Sigma Nu, said. Sigma Nu has always had a clause discriminating on the basis of color. The KU chapter tried twice unsuccessfully to remove this clause at its national convention. Wednesday, March 3, 1965 By Jim Sullinger The forecast for KU today is partly cloudy and continued cold for the rest of this afternoon through Thursday, according to the Weather Bureau. Today's temperature is 28, the predicted low tonight 15, the high tomorrow to be 32, the report said. Weather "There are no strings attached nor other undisclosed limitations on chapter freedom to select members." Fletcher also wrote. Sigma Nu fraternity received word yesterday it had obtained a waiver of its national constitutional clause regarding discrimination by race. Announcement of the waiver came at last night's All Student Council meeting when a letter was read from the fraternity's national secretary. Richard R. Fletcher, national secretary of Sigma Nu, said in the letter, "This waiver means that the Sigma Nu collegiate chapter is hereafter not bound by those sections of the law of the fraternity setting forth membership qualifications based on race, creed, color, or national origin. IN OTHER LEGISLATION, the council passed an amendment to hold regular meetings once a week instead of every two weeks. "We should give every bill a first reading and better consideration," said Hugh Taylor, graduate student representative. "There is too much pressure on us meeting every two weeks." Although this measure will not take effect for two weeks, Mike Miner, Lawrence senior and ASC chairman, called a meeting of the council for next week. Taylor, on a committee to investigate the Rick Mabbutt case, said John Suhler, Cross River, New York, senior and chairman of the Kansan Board, will appear before the council at their next meeting. The following were also passed: - A bill to increase the number on the elections committee from 14 to 15 members. This would provide a co-chairman from the University Party. - An amendment making the Dean of Students the ASC advisor. - An amendment to include one interested person in World University Service as a member of the Campus Chest. - A resolution endorsing a pre-enrollment program for the fall of 1966. Students are asked to submit any suggestions. - A resolution sending a three-member committee to the state legislature inquiring into the feasibility of reciprocal agreements with other states on double taxation. ● A resolution asking the Kansas Union Operating Board to consider the sale of personal items to KU students. ● A resolution asking the Traffic and Safety Committee to expand the four visitors parking spaces in front of Miller and Watkins to the sidewalk on the east side of Lilac. The time limit for visitors would also be extended from 15 minutes to one hour and taken off Friday. - * * * Officials Say Auto Tax To Be Assessed Here KU students who have not been contacted by a county assessor for a tax assessment on their cars should get in touch with the county assessor's office in Lawrence, Kansas Property Valuation Department officials said last night. Alvin Jones, department director, Louis Carter, assistant director and chief counsel for the department, and Robert McDowell, assistant counsel, appeared before the All Student Council (ASC) last night. They were invited by Mike Miner, Lawrence senior and ASC chairman. Carter explained that even if an in-state student has already been assessed by his home county, he must also be assessed by Douglas county if his car was in the county before Jan. 1 and is not merely "property in transit" (temporarily here). The student will not pay two Kansas county taxes, for the Lawrence assessor will then write a letter to the home county advising it that the student's car has been assessed here. Carter said. Carter added that such an assess- THE PROPERTY tax on student cars is based on a law which taxes property where it is located on or before Jan.1, regardless of owner's place of residence, the officials said. Carter added that such an assessment can be removed from the books until November. Both Jones and Carter stated that an out-of-state student can legally be required to pay a property tax here and in his home county. "We hate to see the double tax . . but legally we can't do anything about it," Jones told the Council. Carter mentioned two "landmark cases" involving who and where property might be taxed, and courts ruled that there is no requirement on residence but only on where the property is located. NANCY MEYER, Shawnee Mission junior (UP women's large residence halls) asked about a bill presently in the Kansas House to allow in-state students to pay their property taxes in home counties. Jones replied that there are bills in both houses on this matter but no action has been taken. Both men said they were uncertain whether the bill would go into effect this year or Jan. 1966, if passed. After Jones and Carter appeared the Council passed two resolutions, dealing with property tax bills. Leo Schrey, Leavenworth junior (Vox, men's small residence halls) and Bill Robinson, Great Bend sophomore, (Vox, men's large residence halls) introduced a resolution to send letters to each state legislator and to the other state-supported schools, urging their support on the passage of these bills. Lambda Chi Leaves Vox; Affiliates With UP By Mary Hodson Lambda Chi Alpha social fraternity announced last night it would break with the Vox Populi (Vox) and join the University Party (UIP) THIS ACTION could mean the difference of 140 or more votes, in the coming elections. If all 70 men in Lambda Chi Alpha vote UP, Vox will lose 70 votes and UP will gain 70 more, Sapp said. "We are definitely a changing fraternity since we moved into our new house," John Sapp, Havana, Ill., junior and Lambda Chi Alpha president, said. "We feel there is more opportunity for the men in our house to show their abilities on campus as members of UP." "Lambda Chi Alpha never has been a solid house where campus politics are concerned," Frazier said. "There was always a split in the house for the two parties. For this reason they were not very active in Vox." "I don't think this will hurt our party either way," Jim Frazier, Topeka fifth year pharmacy student and president of Vox, said. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA is not the first fraternity to change its party politics. Last year five Greek organizations dropped out of Vox. They were Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Phi Alpha, Alpha Chi Omega, Tau Kappa Epsilon and Phi Kappa Sigma. "It can be seen that there must definitely be some dissatisfaction in Vox Populi because these Greek organizations left the party last fall." Harry Bretschneider, Kansas City, Mo., senior and secretary-general of UP, said. "We believe UP is the leading party on campus," Sapp said. "Vox doesn't have the excitement it used to have for students." "One of the reasons UP is the leading party is that it has a tightlyknit group of large Greek organizations. Vox is just the opposite with a greater number of smaller Greek groups, many of which were loosely united. It is hard to please these groups even with broader platforms," Sapp said. Vox, the oldest of the two, was started in the fall of 1958, and Lambda Chi Alpha played a key part in its founding. UP became a political party here in the fall of 1960. "ANOTHER REASON for our change is our belief that UP combines the independent and Greek element best." Sapp said. There were many in Lambda Chi Alpha who were closely connected to the Vox party. One of these was Sapp who was formerly a representative from the fraternity district in the All Student Council (ASC). He also was a member of the Vox executive council. "We almost left Vox last spring after Tau Kappa Epsilon and Phi Kappa Sigma left but we had so many Vox people in our house we waited," Sapp said. SAPP SAID he planned to end his work in campus politics and let the freshmen and sophomores in the house take over. They were the ones wanting the change. "We are very glad that Lambda Chi Alpha joined our party," Bretschneider said. "We expect them to be a great benefit to us with their willingness to work." Page 2 University. Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 3, 1965 Good Grief-What Next? In 1759 a literary genius, a Spartan with a pen, in a fit of anger, wrote one of the greatest short stories ever written. Two hundred years later two authors, inspired by the hilarious adventures of "Candide," created their modern day version of Voltaire's simpleton, changed his sex, and appropriately called the contemporary counterpart "Candy." The inspiration and the idea was brilliant, the so-called "masterpiece" and best-seller is sick! VOLTAIRE'S brilliant satire was written in opposition to the optimistic philosophy of the German philosopher Leibnitz, that this world was the "best of all possible worlds." The authors of "Candy" have pirated the technique of a beautiful satire and have prostituted it with over 200 pages of sex commercialism which is supposed to be a satire on various contemporary, provincial attitudes toward sex. The author of "Candide" led his naive, fictitious character of the same name through unbelievable misfortunes to ridicule a popular belief at that time that many evils were really for the best in this "best of all possible worlds." THE AUTHORS OF "CANDY" have dragged a simple, naive character of the same name through all kinds of depraved sexual scenes to ridicule her silly notion that "to give of oneself—fully—is not merely a duty prescribed by an outmoded superstition, it is a beautiful and thrilling privilege!" The outcome is, needless to say, something short of "beautiful." It is getting more difficult these days to tell where art ends and pornography begins. The latter word will probably be dropped from the English language as it is being judged more meaningless every day. AS ONE COLUMNIST, Jenkin Lloyd Jones, put it: "Candy' is the end result of bubble-headed court decisions that have broadened the definition of 'art' to the point where most judges can't tell the difference between a privy and the Parthenon." With the arrival of Candy, that infamous lady of pleasure. Fanny Hill, must step aside. Fanny is now as old-fashioned as last spring's hatwear. Good Grief—What Next? Gary Nolan USSR Feels 'Pinch' in Viet Nam By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst If, in Viet Nam, the Russians find themselves in a squeeze play between the United States and the Red Chinese, it is not the first time. In Viet Nam, the theory is that Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin's first intent on his recent visit to North Viet Nam was to urge a "political settlement" of the Communist-supported war in South Viet Nam. THIS PORTION OF his mission failed because of the Red attacks on American installations and the United States' prompt response. The subsequent swift march of events contained the danger that Russia, even though reluctantly, might become involved in the war itself. WHETHER OR NOT THE stepped up attacks against the Americans were timed to coincide with Kosygin's visit, the results fit in nicely with Red Chinese policy. Either the Russians would have to do something or forfeit their hopes for a new voice in Asia. The Chinese then would be the gainers in the struggle for leadership of world communism. ON THE OTHER HAND, A major factor in the Chinese opposition of the Soviet Union's proclaimed policy of co-existence has been their fear of agreement between the United States and the USSR. As the situation developed in Viet Nam, the Chinese couldn't lose. Other instances come to mind. Back in 1958, during the Mid-east crisis, former Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev first proposed a summit conference in Geneva or "anywhere else" and then agreed to a counter-proposal by President Eisenhower that a big-power meeting be held in the United Nations Security Council. THERE FOLLOWED a secret meeting between Khrushchev and Red Chinese Leader Mao Tse-tung in Peking in which the Chinese vetoed the idea of a meeting which not only would include the United States but the Nationalist Chinese as well. Khrushchev bowed to the Red Chinese and the meeting never was held. THE KHRUSHCHEV-Eisenhower meeting in 1959 engendered the short-lived friendly "spirit of Camp David." After it, Khrushchev once more visited Peking. As Mao Tse-tung trumpeted that war is the "highest form" of the Socialist revolution, Khrushchev declared: "WE, ON OUR PART, must do everything possible to preclude war as a means for settling outstanding questions." Then came the U2 spy plane incident over the Soviet Union and the collapse of the Paris summit conference in May, 1960. REMARKED MAO: "IN THE past certain people, Khrushchev, have described Eisenhower as a person wholly devoted to world peace. I hope these people will be awakened by this incident." THE BOBBY BAKER CASE JORDIAN COMMITTEE TASTE WALLPAPER So it was familiar reading when at the 15th anniversary of the Chinese-Soviet treaty of friendship the Chinese declared co-existence with the United States "out of the question" and demanded "concrete action." Dailij Hansan "Well, That Just About Wraps It Up" triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 mation, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. New service: United Press International, a publisher of titles of semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturday. Work at research and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas 111 Flint Hall University of Kansas student newspaper UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Leta Roth and Gary Noland ... Co-Editorial Editors NEWS DEPARTMENT NEWS DEPARTMENT Don Black ___ Managing Editor Bobbie Bartelt, Clare Casey, Marshall Caskey, Fred Frailey, Assistant Managing Editors; Judy Farrell. City Editor; Karen Lambert, Feature-Society Editor; Glen Phillips, Sports Editor; Janet Chartier, Telegraph Editor; Harry Krause. Picture Editor. University 4-3198, business once. Founded 1898, became biweekly 1904 BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Tom Fisher ... Business Manager Nancy Holland, Advertising Manager; Ed Vaughn, National Advertising Manager; Dale Reinecker, Classified Advertising Manager; Russ Calkins, Merchandising Manager; Bob Monk, Promotion Manager; Gary Grazda, Circulation Manager. BOOK REVIEWS THREE PLAYS BY NOEL COWARD, introduction by Edward Albee (Delta, $1.95); NEW THEATRE IN AMERICA, edited by Edward Parone (Delta, $1.95). Moving from the bright sophisticated comedy of the twenties and early thirties to the lost souls of the sixties is quite a jump. No one tries to achieve it in one volume, but Delta gives us in two new volumes the comedies of Noel Coward (with an introduction by Edward Albee), and a set of plays of our times, so different in mood and theme. The Noel Coward plays truly belong to another age, and this dated quality may endear them to some readers who are tired of the recent realism of Broadway, culminating in a play set in a men's urinal. The Coward plays are "Private Lives," "Hay Fever" and "Blithe Spirit." They seemed pretty shocking at one time; now they're old-fashioned. "Blithe Spirit" is a standard today and provided the basis for the musical called "High Spirits." "Private Lives" is always good, even though one can't quite believe in those Lunt-Fontanne-Tallulah Bankhead people any more. But they're no more aimless than the new heroes, or anti-heroes. In "New Theatre in America" Edward Parone has assembled seven plays. William Hanley, currently represented on Broadway, offers "Mrs. Dally Has a Lover," about a middle-aged woman and her young lover. Lawrence Osgood's play is "The Rook," about a domestic row and a chess game. Harvey Perr's is "Upstairs, Sleeping," concerning a young man and the family that lives below. Ben Maddow's is "In a Cold Hotel," about an aging theater type and his illegitimate son. Howard Sackler's is "The Nine O'Clock Mail," about an American and marital conflict. Lee Kalcheim's is "Match Play," about a youth and his war on his girl, his father and the Army. LeRoi Jones's is "Dutchman," concerning a young Negro and a blonde. It is in the tragic last years that the book achieves its best moments—the Versailles conference, the fight for the treaty and the League of Nations. And Rollins recalls some historical appraisals of Wilson—"... if Wilson was more often a great failure than a great victor, he wore, as he left this world of tragedy, the mantle of the prophets. For, even as he erred, he had moved his nation in the path of the future. His words had revived the American faith in democracy... In the fashions of historiography Woodrow Wilson seems to be "up." He is not riding as high as he was a few years ago when hopes for the United Nations were higher, but he is far from the failure some have labeled him. Those acquainted with the author's "Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Age of Action" will recognize the writing technique employed here. There is the text by Rollins, set in italic type to distinguish it; then the original documents that give such scholarly flavor to the work. Selections are by and large appropriate, the author leaning on histories and biographies as well as contemporary writings. Alfred Rollins has produced a readable book that leans heavily on speeches, letters, official documents and newspaper editorials to tell the story of Wilson. The story begins with 1912, the year of Wilson's ascendancy into national prominence, goes back to review his climb—the presidency at Princeton, the governorship of New Jersey. Then the years of the New Freedom and World War I are treated. "... above all, it was the prophecy of peace that Wilson left to a younger generation." THE FRANCHISE AFFAIR, by Josephine Tey (Dell, 45 cents); POIROT LOSES A CLIENT, by Agatha Christie (Dell, 45 cents); 13 FOR LUCK, by Agatha Christie (Dell, 45 cents); THE THREE COFFINS, by John Carr (Dell, 60 cents)—A group of mysteries that rate almost in the near-classic category. Carr, Christie and Tey are among the most popular practitioners of the detective story; the books are vastly entertaining and probably worth more than many of the widely heralded books that become obscure in a matter of weeks. WOODROW WILSON AND THE NEW AMERICA, by Alfred B. Rollins Jr. (Dell Laurel, 75 cents). The People Say... Dear Editor: RECENTLY A BILL HAS BEEN presented in the Kansas legislature which would, if passed, require that high school teachers of social studies, world history, government, etc. teach about communism. Let me, at this point, assure the reader of this letter that I believe that communism, fascism, nazism, and all other forms of government should be taught about. (I make the distinction between teaching communism and teaching about communism.) The part of the bill with which I take issue is that part which requires the teaching of this form of government. I am sure that we would look on a bill as ridiculous if it required a doctor to give us a shot of penicillin every time we went to his office for a check up. Granted, penicillin is good in the prevention and checking of infection; but the matter of whether or not to use the drug must be left entirely in the hands of the doctor. If we submit ourselves to the judgment and authority of the doctor, we must not disregard his professional opinion or presume that our opinion is worth more than his. The same situation exists in connection with a bill passed by a legislature which would require the presence or absence of instruction in a certain subject matter field. We have delegated to the education profession the authority to educate our children. In granting this authority, we are assuming that this professional educator is more competent in this area than we; therefore, better able to make decisions concerning the education of our children. Therefore, it seems somewhat inconsistent and unethical for us to force one of our unprofessional opinions on a group which we have previously certified to be professionally competent in these matters. The legislature is overstepping its area of authority and responsibility when it dictates to the education profession what it may or may not teach in the classroom. The decision whether or not to teach about communism, genetics, or sex should and must be left in the hands of the professional educator. This educator is specifically trained in this area and it is his and only his job, responsibility, and professional obligation to handle such matters. Sincerely, Mike Hibbard Kansas City, Mo., senior University Daily Kansan Page 3 Wednesday, March 3, 1965 HOLLINGTON HIGH SCHOOL representative. Connie Roeder, Burlington junior; Joy Long, Princeton junior; Denise Burt, Kirkwood, Mo., junior; Cathy Beagle, Boulder, Colo., sophomore; Kathy Sweney, Wichita junior, all candidates for Inter-residence Council representative. Marguerite Davis, Bellarie, Tex., sophomore; Jo Ann Emerick, Murray Hill, N.J., sophomore, both candidates for treasurer. (Fourth row). Susan Menke, Webster Groves, Mo., freshman; Vicki Mathews, Leawood sophomore; Andrea Speer, Kansas City sophomore; Linda Glina, Manhattan sophomore; Susan Lawrence, Bartlesville, Okla., junior, all candidates for senator-at-large. Glenda Hork, Kansas City sophomore; Carol Crouch, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Terry Beach, Hays sophomore; Marcia Bunn, Tulsa, Okla., sophomore, all candidates for Cwens advisor; Cheris Shelton, Edna, Minn., junior; Kathryn Hewett, Fort Scott sophomore; Kathryn Mize, Salina sophomore; and Alice Clovis, Salina sophomore, all candidates for treasurer. HOPEFUL CANDIDATES for AWS elections next week gathered last night in the Kansas Union to plan campaigns. (Left to right), first row—Carolyn Hoke, Prairie Village junior; Carol Jo Weber, Raytown, Mo., junior; Margaret Tietze, Bartlesville, Okla., junior, all candidates for vice-president. Mary Lasley, Mission junior; Ann Peterson, Shawnee Mission junior, candidates for president. (Second row), Susan Hartley, Atwood junior; Jo Lee, Kansas City sophomore; Margaret Brown, Prairie Village sophomore; Jareth Donnain, Webster Groves, Mo., sophomore; Jean Ann Evans, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, all candidates for fashion board representatives; Nancy Gallup, Lawrence freshman; Janice Mendenhall, Wichita freshman, and Deanell Reece, Scandia freshman; Laurie Streib, Lawrence freshman, are candidates for secretary. (Third row), Susan Sorem, Hutchinson sophomore; Janice Sutton, El Dorado junior; Martha Mullen, Kalamazoo, Mich., sophomore; Anne Machin, Ottawa sophomore; Kris Bergman, St. Louis, Mo., junior, all candidates for Panhellenic notarized statement signed by those listing housing facilities with the University declaring non-discriminatory policy. At the time of the demonstration, Neil Stone, Shawnee Mission freshman and president of the CRC, said, "We will give the administration one week and if no definite action is taken, another demonstration will be made." CRC To Discuss Demonstration nior The demonstration staged by the Civil Rights Council (CRC) last week prior to the speech in Hoch Auditorium will be one of the topics for discussion at their 7:30 p.m. meeting in the Cottonwood Room of the Kansas Union. A pamphlet was distributed during the demonstration requesting an end to de facto discriminatory policies of fraternities and sororities. It also asked for a refusal of the University Daily Kansan to accept advertisements from clients who practice discrimination and a Music Room in Union During the week-long interim Stone met with Donald K. Alderson, dean of men. The results of this meeting will be presented tonight. Thursday, March 4 Dr. Ronald Tobin will read a Selection of French Poetry 4:30 p.m. Thursday March 4 SUA POETRY HOUR Free Coffee Free Coffee Defense Loans To be Retired For Teachers College teachers who have participated in the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) loan program, will now be able to benefit from the "Forgiveness Provision," according to Robert Billings, KU Director of Aids and Awards. Before amendments in the law, the forgiveness provision applied only to primary and secondary school teachers. This provision enables one who has received a NDEA loan to have as much as 10% of his loan retired for every year he or she teaches up to five years or a total of 50%. THIS PROVISION is not retroactive. It will take effect in the Fall semester of 1965, Billings said. "If a girl would borrow $1,000 from NDEA, for every year she taught after graduation, $100 and 3% interest would be cancelled." Each year, NDEA loans are granted to about 1,250 KU students for a total of over $900,000 a year. PARKING Another amendment discussed by the Aids and Awards Committee, raised the ceiling for the amount a graduate student may receive from $1.000 to $2.500. Billings said he felt that few, if any, of these loans would be granted. For Your BEST Haircut 8-5 Sat. - 8-6 Mon.-Fri. 4 Chairs Come to PLAZA Barber Shop In Dillon's Plaza 1804 Mass. Business School Council presents Balfour Jeffery President of Kansas Power and Light Speaking on "Opportunities in Kansas" Juniors and Seniors Are Urged to Attend TONIGHT 7:30 p.m., Dyche Auditorium Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 3, 1965 1453 THE RED DOG INN presents FREE T.G.I.F. FRIDAY with THE EGYPTIANS & THE CRABS Friday Night THE EGYPTIANS A cool trio sporting sunglasses short sleeve sport coats, turbans, and out of sight sounds, are back again by popular demand. They will be joined by THE CRABS to present a tremendous show. - COVER $1.00 SATURDAY, ONE NIGHT ONLY "THE DERBY REVUE" DEL MONTES Soulful MARVA Hully Gully C. K. L. TOMMY AND THE FABULOUS DERBIES TOMMY AND THE FABULOUS Direct from: Silver Slipper, Nassau Bahamas, Peppermint Lounge Miami Beach Royal Peacock Club TOMMY AND THE FABULOUS Direct from: Silver Slipper, Nassau Bahamas, Peppermint Lounge Miami Beach Royal Peacock Club DERBIES TWO BIG SHOWS! Monkey Swim Twist Jamaican JKA Cover $1.25 The Dog Mashed Potato Have a Cup Page 5 Wednesday, March 3,1965 University Daily Kansan Spice Spikes Their Brew By Suzy Tichacek Do you drink your coffee black or with spice? Most coffee drinkers prefer cream and sugar for their brew, but many KU students find a little spice adds zest to their morning break. The spice comes free at the Strong Hall coffee bar and is given out willingly by Goldie and Geneva, the ladies at the concession stand. With their smiles and saucy greetings to their customers, these two women add spark to a hurried cup of coffee or mid-morning snack. "We have so much fun with the kids," Geneva Alexander said. "There's a happy medium every day. Very few ever get mad at anything and if they do we talk them out of it. We have a ball," she said with a sparkle in her eye. With about the same students and professors coming to their window each day, these two ladies become well acquainted with their customers. "THE STUDENTS will come back and help scrub the floor just to be with us." Geneva said. "You know they must love us a little bit." Goldie Neis, in charge of all the vending machines in Strong basement, said the students do sometimes get mad at the machines and come to her to complain. "We generally joke around with them and talk them out of being When asked about some of the funny happenings in Strong basement, Goldie got a glint in her eye as she looked at Geneva. mad," Goldie laughed. "It's usually their own mistake or else their coin is at fault." "Well, one day we were going to clean the tables," Geneva began. "Sitting on one of the tables was a student that we knew quite well. As we went down the hall we said 'everyone get away from the tables.' The boy replied, 'I'll be sitting here when you get back,' and he was," Geneva said. "Another time a kid was sitting on a table with his shoes off." Goldie said. "We told him to put his shoes on but he said they were all right. We just picked them up and put them in the trash. Of course we got them out later," she said. "WHEN WE CAME BACK, we each took an arm and a leg and set him on the floor," Geneva grinned. In addition to selling everything from coffee and donuts to fruit, kleenex, and some school supplies, Goldie and Geneva give out change, keep the hall clean, and keep the students from sitting on the tables. With their friendly and jovial attitudes, many students come in the back entrance to the concession stand for a friendly chat. "Our motto is, anyone that comes Pinnings and Engagements Barbara Buller, Clyde sophomore, is pinned to Robert Woodbury, Shawnee Mission sophomore, Phi Delta Theta. Janet Dodge, Shawnee Mission junior, Alpha Delta Pi, is pinned to Brian D. Chipman, Shawnee Mission junior, Tau Kappa Epsilon. Vinita Fishel, Overland Park junior. Delta Gamma, is pinned to Richard Richardson', Lawrence junior, Tau Kappa Epsilon. Mary Ann Fisher, Prairie Village senior, Gamma Phi Beta, is engaged to John Edgar, Prairie Village senior, Lambda Chi Alpha. Linda Lance, Wichita junior, Gamma Phi Beta, is engaged to John Deardorf, graduate student at University of Oklahoma. ONE OF THESE students is Mike Riley, Lawrence freshman, who is "in and out" every day. His main job is to run the cash register but he also helps unpack supplies and serubs the floor. ior, Hashinger, is pinned to Donald Blevins, Wichita senior, Theta Chi. Jeannette Helfrich, Spearville jun- Norma Schraeder, Wichita junior, Kappa Kappa Gamma, is pinned to Fred Lochmann, Wichita junior, Delta Upsilon. Nancy Stanford, Prairie Village junior, Delta Gamma, is pinned to Tuck Tucker, Marion senior, Kappa Sigma. in our back door, comes in and works for free." Goldie said. When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified "Goldie and Geneva get along real well with the students," Riley said, "but once in a while they get a little grouchy," he grinned. "But they've never had an argument between themselves." Candy Thompson, Overland Park junior, Kappa Alpha Theta, is pinned to Ken Holm, Prairie Village junior, Beta Theta Pi. "They both like to tease and joke a lot with the students." Riley said, "and if the kids fight back, they really lay into them." Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS Keepsake Keepsake PETTY $500 ALSO $300 TO 1650 WEDDING RING 25 Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. As one sits casually sipping a cup of coffee and observing these two women, he is very likely to see an unsuspecting customer being drafted into coming around back to help lift a pot of coffee or some other chore. "We very seldom have to move any coffee urns," Geneva said. AFTER BEING THE OBJECTS of some satirical remarks in the last two Rock Chalk Revues, both of the women took the jokes in good humor. "It was all okay." Goldie said, "but I don't cuss in the hall." Goldie has worked for the KU concessions in Strong Hall for five years. Before this job, she worked most of her life in restaurants and ran one in Lawrence for a KU student. She was born in Creighton, Mo., and has one son who is 35 years old. Starting her third year of work at the concession stand, Goldie is a native of Lawrence. Before her present job she worked for the Lawrence High school cafeteria and at the snack bar at the hospital in Lawrence. WeaverS Our 108th Year in the swing of spring . . . sandler of Boston SIMPLICITEE $9.95 SIMPLICITEE Take 'tee' and see how smart this airy Sandler flat can be! And feel . . . there's a foam backed tricot lining inside, to give your flying feet an extra treat. As seen in Seventeen. Black or Red 2nd Floor What Sort of Person Lives at Park Plaza South? (and why you should) You have a choice of many attractive apartments, 1 and 2 bedrooms, central heating and air-conditioning, disposals carpeting, front drapes and a convenient coin operated laundromat. Some people like to study, some like to sit by our swimming pool and think of grades gone by. Whatever you like you'll find Park Plaza South a pleasing home for your college days. A. J. Park Plaza South 1912 W. 25th Call Day or Night: VI 2-3416 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 3, 1965 Musicologist Lectures On Music Study Value The three main reasons for studying music history are to get a better understanding of music; to hear and judge the music of the past with the ears of the past; and to understand the whole of world history better, according to Donald J. Grout, internationally known musicologist. Prof. Grout, a professor of music history at Cornell University, said this in a speech on "Music History and Music Reality" in a humanities lecture last night. "The distinction between reality and history constantly plagues music historians," he said, "or, putting it otherwise, is the music itself not enough?" Prof. Grout will speak at a Student Union Activities (SUA) coffee forum at 4:30 today in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. A HISTORIAN NEVER can give the total picture, Grout pointed out. He has to limit himself to certain periods. For other periods he has to rely on specialists for the evaluation of sources in that period. When choosing his sources, the historian already has decided for him who is historically important. Having chosen his sources, the historian has to consider the most important figures. He must check on the composer's works, and see that the manuscripts he studies represent the composer's final intentions. "He must be able to determine them in terms of sound," Grout said. "Often a work sounds different today, as we do not know exactly how it was originally played." Composers often took a lot for granted, and never wrote down precise instructions. Finally, a music historian has to interpret his facts. He divides the history into style periods, of which the boundaries are vague. They are divided not only in terms of time, but also in terms of the way the composers wrote. "THE DIVERSITY OF STYLES among social groups in a certain period also has to be considered when defining boundaries," Grout said. He used today's situation as example: there is the avant-garde, the regular opera and concert public, and admirers of the Beatles and the like. He believed that historians have not given enough thought to this problem. 5 COACH HOUSE Street For Town and Country THE FASHION WEEK Grout said the concept of music history has changed. "The historians of the Renaissance saw the music of the Middle Ages as barbaric," he said, "and their own music as a distinct improvement." Judy McGhee Kappa Alpha Theta Wear something new for Rock Chalk The idea of progress was generally accepted up through the 19th century. In this century, though, this optimistic concept has changed, and historians now prefer to limit themselves to specific periods and avoid the overall view. 12th & Oread VI 3-6369 THE HISTORY OF MUSIC is seen by some as "developing in phases" or as determined by the total cultural pattern of the time. Marx saw it as determined by the economic and social structure of society. "For instance," Dr. Grout said, "Schubert's music is seen as a product of bourgeois society." THERE ARE ALSO DIFFERENT views on the matter of causality in history. "Not everything is possible at a given time," Grout said, "The composer has to work with the existing resources. But it takes a great composer to produce a great work, not just a typical work." Grout said he hoped general historians would use music history more in the future to complete the true overall picture of the world's history. "History is one whole, no strand of it can be neglected without doing injury to the rest." Aircraft Educator Will Speak Tonight Mitchell has had much experience in the transportation field while working as a training specialist and analyst for several major companies. He has also worked with computers in the armed service and industry. Frank Mitchell, Cessna Aircraft's air age education supervisor, will speak on "The Future of General Aviation" tonight at 7:30 in room 200 of the new engineering building. Mitchell attended the University of Wisconsin and the University of Southern California and graduated from the University of Oklahoma. "The most convenient bank in town" Lawrence National Bank ----established in 1865 we have boosted 15 Rock Chalks and we're "banking" on this one, too. KU © RANDY Lawrence National Bank Your Full Service Bank 7th and Mass. (Member F.D.I.C.) 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That's why people who want to create a good impression have their laundry done at Independent. By the way, are we doing your laundry? INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners 9th St. & Miss. 740 Vermont Call VI 3-4011 for free pick-up and delivery service --- Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 3, 1965 DU Captures Intramural Title By Walter Jayroe Delta Upsilon bombed the Laws 54-36, to capture the KU "A" intramural basketball title in Robinson Annex Tuesday afternoon. The DU's combined good outside shooting and a tight man-to-man defense in subduing the Laws, winners of the "A" Independent championship. The DU's pulled to a 12-7 first quarter lead before erupting with 20 points in the second quarter and a 32-16 halftime lead. The Laws managed to pull as close as 12 points early in the third period, but could not muster enough consistency to reduce the lead further. Darryl Wallace, Dodge City junior, led the DU attack with 19 points. Tom Holland, first-year law student, paced the Laws with nine. The DU victory came on the heels of a close 34-33 victory over Phi Delta Theta Friday night for the Fraternity "A" championship. The Laws had won their title with a decisive 57-36 win over Ellsworth. In another intramural game played Tuesday, Kappa Alpha Psi captured the Fraternity "B" title by downing Beta Theta Pi 40-26. The swift moving Kappa Alpha Psi's were paced by Loyce Bailey, Topea junior, who ripped the nets for 21 points. Parker Young, Colby junior, led the Beta scoring with seven. Kappa Alpha Psi had trimmed Sigma Chi 32-25 in semi-final play Monday with Bailey again leading the way with 15. The Beta five had downed Sigma Phi Epsilon 46-25 to gain the finals. Mike Vineyard, Wymore, Neb. junior, led Beta No. 4 to the Fraternity "C" championship with 12 points in a 48-32 victory over Delta Upsilon No. 2. Duane Lowry, Great Bend sophomore, led Delta Upsilon with 16. Lowry had hit 17 consecutive free throws and a total of 25 points in his team's semi-final victory over SAE No. 3 Monday night. The score was 46-34. Beta No. 4 had defeated Phi Gamma Delta No. 30-20 in their semi-final contest. The Independent "C" title was captured by C.I.F., as they downed the Warriors 38-35. Marvin Lamont, Ottawa sophomore, scored 11 for C.I.F., while Fred Gollier, Ottawa freshman, pasted the Warriors with 10. The Warriors had beaten the Laws 21-36 and C.I.F. had downed the Scroungers 54-25 in gaining the finals. Kappa Alpha Phi will collide with Lawrence for the KU "B" title today at 5.45 in Robinson Gymnasium. Oklahoma State has already climbed at least a tie for the title and can win it outright with a victory in either of its two remaining games. Lawrence dumped Concordia 40-24 in winning the Independent "B" title. Steve Polston, Lawrence junior, and Frank Dressen, Tuscarora Md., special student, led Lawrence with 16 and 14 points respectively. John Spomer, Larned sophomore, hit eight for Concordia. Lawrence had beaten R.O.W.B. 42-37, and Concordia had won from the Ball Hogs 31-26 in semi-final play Monday evening. But if the Cowboys lose to Kansas Saturday at Lawrence and again at Star Player Chooses KU Ronnie Shrader, 6-5', 210-pound, three sport all-state athlete from Harper, Kan., High School has signed a Big Eight letter of intent to enroll at KU next fall, football coach Jack Mitchell said today. Shrader, a tackle, lettered four years in basketball and track in addition to football. He was named to the all-state football team during his junior and senior years. Shrader was listed for all-state basketball honors during his junior year and track awards as a sophomore and junior. Oklahoma next Monday the Jayhawks would gain a tie for the championship. Coach Mitchell said that Ronnie is a prime example of the many outstanding athletes signing with the Jayhawks. "We are most happy that Shrader selected KU for his educational and athletic advancement," Mitchell said. "Ron joins a growing list of the finest high school seniors in the mid-west coming to Kansas," the Jayhawk mentor added. KANSAS CITY Mo. (UPI) -The Big Eight Conference today announced plans for a one-game playoff between Oklahoma State University and Kansas if necessary to determine the league's representative to the National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA basketball playoffs. In that event, Kansas and the Cowboys would play March 10 in Kansas State University's Ahearn Fieldhouse at Manhattan. A B Γ Δ E Z H Θ J K Λ M The KU "C" championship will be decided when Beta Theta Pi No. 4 and C.I.F. tangle at 5 p.m. today. This game will also be played in Robinson Gymnasium. Spring Ball to Begin Shrader's high school football and track coach was Harvey Romans. His basketball coach was Gil Endicott. Harper High is a member of the Southern Kansas League. According to this publisher, many people do not realize how much they could influence others simply by remembering accurately everything they see, hear, or read. Whether in business, at social functions or even in casual conversations with new acquaintances, there are ways in which you can dominate each situation by your ability to remember. (Pd. Adv.) To acquaint the readers of this paper with the easy-to-follow rules for developing skill in remembering anything you choose to remember, the publishers have printed full details of their self-training method in a new book. "Adventures in Memory," which will be mailed free to anyone who requests it. No obligation. Simply send your request to: Memory Studies, 835 Diversey Parkway, Dept. 3243, Chicago, Ill 60614. A postcard will do. A noted publisher in Chicago reports there is a simple technique for acquiring a powerful memory which can pay you real dividends in both business and social advancement and works like magic to give you added poise, necessary self-confidence and greater popularity. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Merl S. Shrader. Ronnie plans to follow pre-law courses at KU. Spring Ball to Begin Jack Mitchell, head football coach at KU, announced Saturday that spring drills would start April 12th. The final practice session will be highlighted by an intra-squad game in Memorial Stadium on Saturday. Why Can't You Remember Big 8 Picks Site for Playoff Please include your Zip Code. Fraternity and Sorority Jewelry Guards Kings Lavaliers Mugs Pins Crests Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Massachusetts Let's talk about engineering, mathematics and science careers in a dynamic, diversified company Campus Interviews Thursday and Friday, March 4 and 5 1 3 4 2 5 Young men of ability can get to the top fast at Boeing. Today, Boeing's business backlog is just under two billion dollars, of which some 60 per cent is in commercial jetliner and helicopter product areas. The remainder is in military programs and government space flight contracts. This gives the company one of the most stable and diversified business bases in the aerospace industry. No matter where your career interests lie — in the commercial jet airliners of the future or in space-flight technology—you can find an opening of genuine opportunity at Boeing. The company's world leadership in the jet transport field is an indication of the calibre of people you'd work with at Boeing. Boeing is now pioneering evolutionary advances in the research, design, development and manufacture of civilian and military aircraft of the future, as well as space programs of such historic importance as America's first moon landing. Gas turbine engines, transport helicopters, marine vehicles and basic research are other areas of Boeing activity. Whether your career interests lie in basic or applied research, design, test, manufacturing or administration, there's a spot where your talents are needed at Boeing. Engineers, mathematicians and scientists at Boeing work in small groups, so initiative and ability get maximum exposure. Boeing encourages participation in the company-paid Graduate Study Program at leading colleges and universities near company installations. We're looking forward to meeting engineering mathematics and science seniors and graduate students during our visit to your campus. Make an appointment now at your placement office. (1) Boeing 727, America's first short-range jetliner. (2) Variable-sweep wing design for the nation's first supersonic commercial jet transport. (3) NASA's Saturn V launch vehicle will power orbital and deep-space flights. (4) Model of lunar orbiter Boeing is building for NASA. (5) Boeing-Vertol 107 transport helicopter with Boeing 707 jetliner. BOEING Equal Opportunity Employer 1. 7 公庙 喜联 Polygonalmente se puede representar a polígonos. 107 2345678901 Page 9 Wednesday, March 3, 1965 University Daily Kansan Miss Lawrence Candidates Begin Competing This Month Miss America for 1965 may be a KU student. Competition for Miss Lawrence-KU will begin March 20, with a parade through downtown Lawrence followed by a judges' tea, John Rouse, of the sponsoring Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce, said. Preliminary judging of 30 KU and Lawrence women will be Thursday night, March 25. Each contestant will model a swim suit and an evening gown, Rouse said. TEN FINALISTS will be selected by the judges to compete in the final contest March 26. Miss Lawrence-KU will be named that night. Two runners-up will be named by the judges. Miss Congeniality will be selected by the 30 participants in the contest. The second phase of the competition is the Miss Kansas Pageant. It will be in Pratt on Labor Day. Miss Kansas will then go to Atlantic City, N.J., for the Miss America Pageant. The local contest is sponsored annually by the Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce. For the first time a Lawrence business firm will sponsor each contestant. SINGLE WOMEN between 18 and 28 years old are eligible for the pageant, according to the rules. Entrants must also have good character and possess poise, personality, intelligence, charm and beauty. They also are required by the rules to give a talent presentation. Contests may be amateurs or professionals in their areas of talent. Twenty-six KU students have filed applications for the contest. They are Kathleen Dole, Wichita junior, Alpha Omicron Pi; Shelia Beaman, Independence, Miss., freshman, Miller Hall, Sharon Feeley, Cimarron junior, Sigma Kappa; Karen Dunaway, Topeka freshman, Corbin; Mary Ann Byler, Wellington sophomore, Lewis Hall; Mary Ann Bolli尼, Ferguson, Mo., sophomore, Delta Delta Delta. Sherry Gillespie, Paola sophomore, Hashinger Hall; Elaire Millett, Lawrence sophomore. Alpha Phi; Irene Zeyel, Abile junior, Pi Beta Phi; Cheryl Costa, Wichita sophomore Kappa Kappa Gamma; Joy Elaine Rutter, Coffeyville junior, Chi Omega; Pat Wise, Oklahoma City, Okla., junior, Alpha Delta Pi. Shirley Williams, Olathe freshman, Gertrude Sellards Pearson; Bonnie Butler, Shawnee Mission junior, Watkins Hall; Parmelee Bates, Bronxville, N.Y., freshman, Gertrude Sellards Pearson; Sandra Fike, St. Louis, Mo., junior, Hashinger Hall. JAYNE SIMON. Wichita freshman, Carruth-O'Leary; Pamela Buck, Wichita freshman, Carruth-O'Leary; Virginia Elliot, Topeka junior, Delta Gamma; Marietta Mundinger, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore, Douthart; Dorothea Davis, Shawnee Mission freshman, Corbin Hall; and Michele Sears, Kansas City senior, Lewis Hall. Alternates are Sharon Lowe, McPherson sophomore, Hashinger Hall; Sally Martin, Pittsburg sophomore, Chi Omega; Elizabeth Cupp, Kansas City freshman, Carruth-O'Leary; and Kathleen McCabe, Shawnee Mission freshman, Carruth-O'Leary. Young Democrats To Elect Officers KU Collegiate Young Democrats will elect officers for the Spring Semester today at 7:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room. Fresh from their recent orientation convention at Topeka, the Young Democrats are looking forward to working more vigorously in this semester. Robert Vancleave, Kansas City, Kan., junior and publicity chairman of the Young Democrats, said. "We are going to create a new post of vice president, who will be in charge of membership. We have about 300 members now but we feel we should have more." Actually the YD's will be electing three vice presidents and two secretaries, instead of the usual one in each category. Vanceleave hopes to contest for the post of one of the three vice presidents. Speaking of plans for this semester, he said, "We are going to try to keep dirty politics out of our organization and concentrate more on non-partisan issues. I personally would like to take part in issues like Civil Rights." Major in action! Minor in price! Olds Jetstar 88 really cuts it, come exam-time. Test it out on action first. This baby can put down 315 horses, eager to go anywhere. Now score it on ride: whip-cream smooth, thanks to four coil springs and other goodies. Now room: stretch yourself in interiors that say Olds is out to win the space race. Now price: Jetstar 88 prices start below 30 models with "low-price" names. Actually, these tests are hardly fair to the other thirty... Olds is in a class by itself! Oldsmobile Division • General Motors Corporation Available at diebolt's 843 Mass. VI 3-0454 diobelt's 843 Mass. VI 3-0454 Are you still wearing those creasy kid slacks? REPARTITION Get into some wised-up Post-Grads that know where a crease should always be and where it should never be, and how to keep things that way The reason is the Koratron fabric of 65% Dacron*/35% cotton. No matter how many times you wash and wearthe trimly tapered Post-Grad slacks, they'll stay completely neat and make the iron obsolete. In tan, clay, black, navy or loden, $6.98 in poplin or gabardine, $7.98 in oxford. At swinging stores. Press-Free Post-Grad slacks by h.i.s Page 10 University Bally Gaolan Wednesday, March 3, 1965 Domestic Peace Corps Plans Outlined to Conference Group By Mary Dunlap J. Glenn Blackburn, special consultant with the Vista program, told approximately 50 persons attending a 2-day Conference on Aging that "The American people are waking up and looking and admitting that we have poverty." Speaking yesterday at a luncheon held in the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union, Prof. Blackburn outlined several of the programs in the Economic Opportunities Act, one of which is Vista (Volunteers in Service to America), also known as the "Domestic Peace Corps." The tall, red-haired professor told the audience, predominantly made up of older persons, educators, and public officials, that "The poverty in most of our communities is hidden from view." HE CITED examples of the extreme poverty that exists within our sight in every town, despite the claims that most citizens make that "it couldn't happen here." He further stated that Americans are now doing something about the people that are in extreme poverty. "We have the beginning of an effective, long-range program," he said, referring to the Economic Opportunities Act, first proposed by President Kennedy and later carried out by President Johnson. The emphasis upon rehabilitation is very great in the several programs now in effect, Prof. Blackburn said. "If we go on simply handing out relief, the burden of poverty will in- Official Bulletin TODAY Catholic Mass: (Ash Wednesday) 7:30 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel. Confessions before and during mass. Mass at 5:00 p.m. at Fraser. Psychology Colloquium, 4:00 p.m. Dr. Edwin S. Shneldman, Strong Auditorium, 623 University of Virginia SUA Coffee Forum, 4:30 p.m. Donald J. Grout. Big Eight Room, Kansas Union. Carillon Recital, 7:00 p.m. Albert Gerken. Classical Film, 7:00 p.m. "Kanal." Frauen Theater. AIAA Meeting, 7:30 p.m. Frank G Mitchell. "Future of Aviation." Refreshments served. 200 New Engineering Bldg Senior Recital. 8:00 p.m. Joan Moege pianist SWarah Boutt Receal Iran bishop of Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danafranc, Chapel TOMORROW Teaching Candidates: Interviews sched- Mexico. Carlsbad Municipal Schools, elementary and secondary; Missouri, Ray- mediated Dist 2, elementary and secondary Catholic Masses 6.45 a.m. and 5.00 p.m. gives a chapel. Confessions before and during mass. Episcopal Holy Communion, 11:45 a.m. Canterbury House, 1116 La. St. Lawrence Student Center: 10:40 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. Theology 102; 7:00 p.m. Theology 101 and Philosophy 71—'Contemporary Philosophical Thought'; 7:15 p.m. Y.C.S., Chairman, Bob Agnew; 8:00 p.m. C.F.M. Combined Meeting. University Lecture, 4:00 p.m. Robert F. Hogan, "Bridging the Gap in English from High School to College." Bailey Auditorium. Children's Theatre, "Johnny Moonbeam the Silver Arrow," 4:30 p.m. Murphy Hall English Proficiency Exam. 7:30 p.m. Sociology Colloquium, 206 Black Friday German Club, 4:30 p.m. Der Deutsche Verein triff sich Denstergam u 4:30 in 502 Fraser. Dr. Charlotte Craig wird eine Rede auf english halten: "Origins of German Fairy Tales." Erfirschungen. Alle sind herzilgel eingeladen. 502 Fraser. Teaching Candidates, Interviews scheduled for Thursday, March 4. Missouri Kirkwood—Dist. R-7, elementary and secondary. Fun Fun Fun PITCHER NIGHT 70¢ Free Peanuts La Pizza 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 ALTHOUGH the relief programs do supply aid at the time, they do not do anything to change the problems that lead to a continuation of the poverty cycle, Prof. Blackburn said. "We want to lead them out of dependence upon aid and relief," he stressed, "we want to bring them to independence. crease," he emphasized. The main role of the programs is to supply aid, but more importantly, it is "to structure the individual out of poverty." "Twelve million children are in poverty today, and most of them will be on the relief rolls tomorrow if we do not help them out of it," he emphasized. The method in which "Vista" aids the poor in a community begins with the community's realization that a problem does exist within the community's limits, Prof. Blackburn explained. Several steps must be taken by the community before it will receive volunteers and advisement from the "Domestic Peace Corps." FIRST, THE community must define its poverty and the extent to which it exists. Secondly, the community decides which solution is the best one for the problem. The community then must organize and agree to co-operate within itself in an effort to accept the responsibility of taking on the problem, Prof. Blackburn said. Speaking of the adult education aspect of the program, he said, "There are several million Americans who cannot write well enough to apply for a job." Prof. Blackburn said. The program also attempts to aid the uneducated to be able to hold a job. The adult who has had the opportunity to attend school, must be taught several means of holding simple tasks, such as working in a home PROF. BLACKBURN then briefly outlined several of the programs that are now available such as the Job Corps, which trains the 16 to 21-year-old who has dropped out of high school. The trainees are taught such things as how to take orders and how to develop self-reliance. He spoke of the Work-Study Program, which enables college students to work on university programs while they are attending school. The student works on the university property or in work that is related to the university, and is thus able to finance his way through college. Prof. Blackburn said, "We have two choices: either we leave people there, and let them exist on monthly relief checks, or we can show the people a better way of life." APPROXIMATELY 9,000 volunteers of vastly varying ages have signed up for Vista, he reported. One-half of them are young, and one-half are old. One of the members of Vista is an 81-year-old schoolteacher. "They are looking for something that will give them something to live for," he said. Granada THEATRE-Telephone VI 3-5788 Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 NOW! 7:00 & 9:00 "NONE BUT THE BRAVE" FRANK SINATRA NEXT — 20 Cinemas New promotion TNG PLEASURE SOCKERS CHINA SCOPE COLOR DELUXE 20 Cinemapro Platinum presents THE PLEASURE SOCKORS ONEMASCOPE COLOR TY DELUXE Vista has often been compared with the Peace Corps, and they are similar in scope. However, while Peace Corps volunteers work abroad, Vista volunteers will work only in the under-developed communities within the United States or its territories. They will serve for one year, instead of two as in the Peace Corps, Prof. Blackburn said. No tests are given to volunteers, but a detailed application form and at least five references are needed. Varsity THEATRE... Telephone VI 3-1065 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065 ENDS TONITE - --- ENDS TONITE — “YOUR CHEATIN' HEART” TOMORROW! Week Days 7:30 only Sat. Mat. 2:00-7:30 Sun. 2:00-5:00-8:00 Adults $1.25—Children 50c EVERYBODY WHO'S EVER BEEN FUNNY IS IN IT! "IT'S A MAD, MAD, MAD, MAD WORLD" April 15 is fast approaching and Uncle Sam will soon be reaching into your pockets, but this year the government won't let him take as much as before. New Tax Deductions Help Some Students The Internal Revenue Act of 1964, retroactive from the first of the year, is designed to increase standard deductions. According to Sherwood W. Newton, associate professor of business administration, the new act provides for a minimum $200 deduction with an additional $100 for each exemption. "For example, if a person earned $900, formerly he would be allowed $10 in deductions," Newton said. "Now, the person earning $900 gets a $200 minimum deduction plus, in the case of a single person, an additional $100 exemption for himself. Newton said that the $600 personal exemption still holds. "Some people are confused and say that the new law makes the personal exemption $700, but this is not true," he said. The "$600 was established by law as the personal exemption and has not been changed." This represents a quantity that a person does not have to have a special qualification to get" newton said that a person has to qualify for the $100 exemption. THE CASE OF married persons filing a joint return is different. "They are allowed a $200 minimum deduction like the single person, but they are then allowed $100 apiece for themselves. This makes $400, or their standard minimum deduction." Newton said that if one spouse is a dependent of his parents, then a joint return cancels his $600 exemption on his parents' form. "Before this act a person could earn up to $660 ($660 personal exemption plus 10% deduction) tax-free," he said. "But now a person can earn up to $900 ($600 plus $200 minimum deduction plus $100 exemption for himself) before being required to pay taxes." Newton said that a married couple could earn $1320 ($600 for each plus 10% deduction) tax-free before the act, but now married couples can earn up to $1600 ($600 for each, plus $400 minimum deduction). Fri. THE SHADOWS Tee Pee After Rock Chalk Dance Sat. THE COMMANCHEROS Smart Smoothie! That’s what you’ll be in this buttery soft kidskin sport casual with the handsewn vamp detailing. A moccasin so soft, so light, Cardigan so comfortable you'll never want to take it off . . . as a matter of fact you'll hardly know you have it on. Black - Red - Navy Green – Boys AAAA to B to 10 naturally, 12.95 oldmaine trotters Royal College Shop 837 Mass. VI 3-4255 Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE 1963 Aureli Healy, 3000 Mark 2, 18.000 miles, red, roll up windows, new tires, new battery, radio, wire wheels, overexcellent condition. VI 2-3673, 3-9 Sylvania portable TV, 21 inch, excellent condition, Minolta autocord double reflex camera, like new. Call VI 2-3155 after 7 p.m. 3-9 Garrad "type A" never used, still in original packaging box, $50.00 - Tape recorder, Akai M6, semi-professional, 4 track stereo for $220.00 -195 Chev. 48, 4 bbl., stick, $275.00 Call Lee Garrett, VI 2-3965 WHAT WILL YOURS BE? Mercedes Benz 190SL Ford Mustang V8, 4 sp. Conv. MG-B Conv. Rambler Wag., OD, Air MG 1100 Sedan Mercury Comet Sta. Wagon, AT & Air Susanbar Alpine, HT Rambler V8, AT, Air MG Midget Conv. Dodge AT, PS, PB, V8 VW Cars Cadillac Fleetwood VW Bus (Truck) (Pop scicle) 250 cc. Classies Classics 1948 MG-TC Roadster 1946 Linc. Cont. Ccav. V-12 1116 W. 23rd Lawrence Jaguar 58-3-4 L Sedan, white, stick plus overdrive, new paint, mechanically perfect, best offer. VI 3-1747 after 7:00 p.m. BSA-1964 250 cc. Good condition—Call Walton Stalmist, VI 3-6400. 3-5 Gibson Bass Guitar and New Kuiotan - 3-0935 Also Mike and stand, call. - 3-8 Fender electric guitar, new price $200. Rockstar bassacoustic, J-2 55600, see at 1120 W. 11th. see at 1120 W. 11th. Auction—used bikes, all sizes. Name your bicycles. Bike Shop at 701 Michigan. 3-5 Blevins Bike Shop at 701 Michigan. 3-5 Sunbeam toaster (cost $24) : for $6. Steam iron: $2, gooseneck lamp: $1. Hot plate: ed; record tumble (new) : V1 76-9175 (after 4:00). Call V1 3-3-9175 (after 4:00). BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMIUMS! Occidental Time Life: conversion. Go-Back, and Move-Over options. Age 18 = $33.90 = $10,000. Age 20 = $34.40 = $10,000. Age 22 = $34.70 = $10,000. Call Wes S安妮 at VI 3-2116 for details. tf HI-FI-Save on nationally advertised Hifi components. New equipment in factory sealed cartons with factory warranties. Call VI 3-4891. 3-15 Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive courses and handouts for thessas. Formerly known as the Thessa's Notes. Call VI 3-1428. $4.50. Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive minimegraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL V1 2-1901 for free delivery TYPEWRITERS, electrics, manuals, portables, computers Hermes, Royal,圣-Corona-Olivetti. Adding machines, office supplies and computers Typewriter, TypeWriters Mass., VI 3-3644 BE THE LEADER OF YOUR PACK: Harley Davidson Sportster K, 750 cc, new clutch, and new brakes and tires. THIS IS NO HONDA. For further information about this beautiful machine CONTACT Monti Belot at VI 3-0700. tf Students, why throw money away on rent when you can own a 1962 Marlette 10 x 50. modern, two-bedroom mobile home This home is clean and in excellent condition. For further information CALL RI 8-0973 or RI 8-0916. tt Fender stracotac guitar and guitar amplifier — good condition — reasonable price—call VI 2-0763. 3-2 PORTABLE STEREO: Admiral's Finest—two carrying units, 1 for turntable and 1 for speaker systems (2 tweeters, and 2 full range woofers) $195 new. Will sell for good offer. CALL: Rusty Calkins at VI 3-5721. CHINA-Noritaki. Mayfair design. New, never used or even removed from packing. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk. M 3-7102. THE STABLES now open every day- Serving steaks, chops, sea food, sand- wiches. New management, new air- monger. New equipment available. Phone vi- 3-9644, 1401 W. 7th. NEED A BAND? 30 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM. PHONE VI 2-2100. t ENTERTAINMENT ATTENTION PARTY THROWERS: Do you want the Beatles, the Kingsmen, Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience Finest references. CALL I 2-1791. tl Patronize Kansan Advertisers math tutor B.A. degree in math from KU. Experienced in tutoring geometry, algebra, calculus and analytic geometry. Call VI 3-0927. 3-3 MISCELLANEOUS Competent student will tutor undergrad date, graduate students in German-$ an hour. Call Sara Paretsky, VI 3-8505 BUSY PEOPLE—no time to spare for household cares? For professional cleaning of your home regularly or occasionally. CLEANING CLEANER SERVI- VICE, VI 3-4408. 3-10 Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-Q ribs that grandma and grandpa can eat, try ours for order, or 5,600 per slab. Hours: 11 a.m. to 11 o.m. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-9510 b-331 IR., SR. AND GRADUATE STUDENTS MONBY AVAILABLE ON PERSONAL SECURITY, PHONE, CHUK ADKINS- BENEFICIAL FINANCE AT VI 3-14-7 *ARTY TIME? Building available for* *phone calls. PHONE* *talked off at VI 3-3895.* CHWINN BICYCLES -service all makes arts and accessories, tire $1.46, tubes pieces, pair, luggage racks and ie downs. BE Bicycle at 7th and Mile - CALI VIL 3.0581 friends coming this weekend? Looking on a place with good food at reasonable prices. HILLGREST BOW RESTAURANT. Plenty of free parking th and Iowa. Loans—buy, sell and 'trade—guns, fishing equipment, golf clubs, radios, tools, and misc. 'tems. VI 2-9425. 3-5 it's great for a date. Take her bowling at Hilcott Bowl. Finest lanes in the state. Also Mon, Tues, and Fr, after 9:00 p.m. Hilcott Bowl. 9th and Iaue. tt Rent electric, standard, and portable typewriters. Repair all makes of electric. Be familiar with modern Business Equipment (formerly Business Machines). 15 E. eight, E 3-0115-01 Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon-thu Fr or all day Sat. or Sun. Phone VI - 3-6231. tf Room Ask Splen 7 days during spring break. Room and board, transportation. Two tickets, instruction and insurance. $128. KU-Y SKI Club. Contact Y office in the Union or Marty Knight. Sign up meeting March 9, 7:30 p.m. at the Forum Room. Attention: All persons interested in self defense training classes utilizing many of their throws and smashes used by Jamie Bond movies, contact Bob Monton at VI 3-7102. HELP WANTED Part-time undergraduate electrical assistant, primarily audio work. E.E. or Physics major preferred—apply room 4, Bailey Hall. 3-8 Hostess—Attractive lady for evening employment in the New Orleans Room, top wages—Phone VI 2-3465 or VI 3-4747, tf Dothecette Dancers. Apply now. At the New Orleans Room. Phone no 2-9455. WANTED A third roommate to share modern apartment with two engineering students. Call Phone T 2-543 or see apt. 38, The Oaks, 2345 Court, Court. After 1:00 p.m. 3-5 OLD CARS WANTED, top prices paid, if you can drive it in, we'll consider it. Do it today! GI Joe's, 601 Vermont. tf Washing and trouting done in my home 1131 New Jersey jersey Phone VT 2-2598 6 years typing experience plus background in proofreading enables me to guarantee accuracy on college papers New electric typewriter equipped for interchangeable type sets. Mrs. Berndt. 801 Michigan or VI 2-6400. tf Want girl companion to live in my home. 3251 or VI 3-3141 or see at Tennessee 3-3 Experienced typist wants typing in home. Rates, prompt service. Phone VI 2-3356 TYPING EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Secretary wants to type your thesis, dissertation term paper, etc., on new IBM electric Fast, accurate, and reasonable. Special symbols available. CALL Mrs. Shirley Gilbert, 334 W. No. 24th, at 11 VI 2-3-5 Theses only on Royal Electric Pica Type writer CALL MIL. Pulcher at VI 3-6551 experienced typist. 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter accurate service. Reasonablenrates. CALL Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale. VfI-2-1648 experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter, Gestetner Duplicator Mrs. McLowney, 2521 Alabama St. Phone 3-8568. Wednesday, March 3, 1965 University Daily Kansan Experienced secretary will type term experience, and be familiar with legal dents. Especially familiar with legal and business terms. Fast and accurate. Re- sponsible rates. Call Marsha Goff at v-3-252 former Harvard and U. of Minnesota report and these: PHONE VI 3-7207 Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. Will do ex ecting research in areas such as carbon ribbon typewriter. Betty Muskrat 40 indian, or call VI 2-0691. ti term papers. Theses by experienced ypist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. ti Experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing. Speaker and native speakers and languages. Quick and reasonable Electric typewriter. Call VI-3976. tr Experienced typist wants theses, termpapers, and dissertations to be typeed on electric (pica type) typewriter. Please Pat Call Beck at VI 3-5630. tf Typhist, experienced with term papers nueses and dissertations; will give you your hands-on experience in the machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Mariane Higley at 408 W. 13th. IV 3-6048 Will do typing in my home. Accurate easonable rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at 71-2-0210. experienced secretary would like typing in her home, with new electric typewriter and accurate service. Reasonable rates. Call Ms. Lancaster at VI 2-1188. Experienced typist will do dissertations manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 RI, VI, 3-7485. tt Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will be required for thesis or these experiences. Electric typewriter. CALL Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8626. CALL Thesees or term papers done in my home office. Please send to: CALL MILL, Oxford at VI 2-0673. K Experienced typist to do termpapers, themes, reports and carbons. Fast and efficient with amenable rates between 8:00 a.m. and 1 p.m. Monday. through Sat. VI 3-08753 3-8 Emery Apts. 1423 Ohio, 12 one bedroom luxury apts, April Irt. $85.00. Featuring w-w carpeting, disposal, range and ovens, refrigerators, furnished or unfurnished. Teachers or graduate students only, no children or pets. VI 3-8190. 3-16 FOR RENT Large sleeping room for men students with refrigerator privileges. Rent single or double. Close to town and Kansas University. $1247_{1/2}$ Kentucky. 3-9 Nice cool basement or upstairs apartment for spring semester. Double or single. Ideal for study. Phone Ray Woods at VI 2-1613. 3-8 Single room for graduate student in fac- culty at campus. Phone UP-3230 or VI 2-0261. 3-4 Large 6 room apt. for rent. Close to campus and down town. $70 plus electric bill. 3 bedrooms, many, many closets, etc. Call VI 2-9193. 3-4 Pleasant quiet one bedroom basement apartment. Call VI 3-8344. 3-5 WOODIES are more interesting when you get there the fun way on A BIKE. You get to repair parts, repairs, woequipment, Gran Sport Cycle, 9 West 14th VI 3-3228, 9 W 3-5 Furnished apts.—2 blocks from Union Bldg. Remodeled and nicely furnished. Unique rates for 6 months or longer. Married couples preferred. 3-5 9 I-2 3919. Extra nice room apt. in graduate house for graduate or older undergraduate man Campus to campus, utilities paid. Nicely furnished in private bath and kitchen call VI 3-8534 PARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30-50 people, jukebox, liquid refreshments and entertainment. Contact Don at the Gaslight Tavern for reservations CALL VI 3-1086. tt We have available one double room and one single for graduate women. Also two children may be housed in laundry facilities provided. Call VI 2-0186 or come by 1244 Louisiana. Room for rent - double or single. Ideal entrance. Phone VI 3-0326 by 5 p.m. Crescent Heights and Aparments— 1821 W. 24th, or CALL I V-27117. 1821 W. 24th, or CALL I V-27117. Lovely 3 bedroom house, air conditioned, attached garage, vacant March 8th Adults, for information call VI 2-3416 2-3 Omega Calendar watch. Initials "T.R.S." Reward. Reward Call Tom Stevenson V 2-5250 LOST Brown leather clutch purse. Saturday Tally Slelek at VI 3-1340. 3-4- Tally Slelek at VI 3-1340. 3-4- seb. 11 or 12, 1 pair of black frame seb. 11 or 12, 1 pair for return c Whitlock, YI 3-0962. 3-5 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Business Directory MUGS 24 OZS. — 35c Louise's Bar 1017 Mass. HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING Across From The High School OPEN 24 HRS. 19th & La. VI 3-9631 BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day Marvin E. McDougal For All Your Insurance Needs 1244 La. VI 2-0186 See or Call Wholesale Diamond Rings Call Robert A. Lange VI 3-1711 VI 3-9694 Tune-up, Body Auto Service 10th & Mass. VI 2-0247 Mobil — Goodyear Lawrence For the best in— ● dry cleaning ● alterations ● reweaving Repair & Repaint, Automatic Trans. Service Wheel Alignment - Brake Adjustment . . . 98 Page Fina Service 1819 W. 23rd 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 Fraternity Jewelry - Automatic Transmission - Wheel Alignment AL LAUTER 24 HOUR SERVICE New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPARATUS. Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals (TUES.-SUN.) Balfour 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 ● Lubrication . . . . $1.00 GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING Milliken's S.O.S. Register Now For Temporary Assignments - NO FEE - Typists - Stenos General Office and Bookkeepers Unlimited Office Opportunities Experienced Only Apply 9:00 - 5:00 p.m. or by appointment 1021 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. VI 3-5920 ALSO - Student & Thesis Typing Automatic Letter Service Telephone Answering Secretarial Service Notary Public ... P.S. They're Professional! Milliken's S.O.S. 1021 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. VI 3-5920 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 3, 1965 Saigon Reports Enemy Reply In Air Strike Against North SAIGON —(UPI) The Saigon government reported today that unidentified enemy aircraft attempted to intercept South Vietnamese fighter-bombers during Tuesday's massive air strike against Communist North Viet Nam. It was the first report of any aerial opposition over North Vietnamese territory. A dispatch distributed by Viet Small Countries Have Vacancies For Model UN Richard J. White, Wakefield, Mass., junior, was elected President of the Assembly for the Model UN, at a meeting of the KU-Y Model UN Steering Committee held last night. Other officers chosen during the session include: Edward (Hank) Hibbard, Eureka junior, parliamentarian; Patsy Goins, Marysville senior, secretary-general; Beverly Barrett, Colby junior, secretary of the assembly; Chuck Colver, Durham, N.C., junior, floor parliamentarian; and Sandra Lessenden, Topeka senior, floor secretary. It was also announced that the first bloc meeting would be held 7:30 p.m., March 11, in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union. The Model UN will be held April 23 and 24. Steering Committee Chairman Patsy Goins said many small underdeveloped countries are still open in the Model UN. Registration will continue throughout this week, and through the first part of next week. Anyone wishing to register may contact the KU-Y office in the Kansas Union. Posters will be placed in various locations around campus listing the delegations which are still open. Each delegation will consist of four persons and is required to pay a registration fee of $7.00, unless one or more of the delegation members belong to the KU-Y, in which case, the fee decreases $1.50 with each KU-Y member. Allen's News All Student Supplies including "PLAYBOY" 1115 Mass. VI 2-0216 Nam Press, the official South Vietnamese news agency, said Vietnamese Skyraider pilots returning from the mission saw "three strange planes coming from the east." THE REPORT quoted the pilots as saying the planes "obviously intended to head off" the Vietnamese aircraft after they had bombed a big North Vietnamese naval installation at Quang Khe on the coast of the South China Sea. "Our larger numbers apparently frightened them off," the report added. The Vietnamese planes were escorted by U.S. F100 jets. North Viet Nam is known to have an air force of at least 25 Soviet-built MIG jet fighters. The government report did not indicate whether the planes seen Tuesday were jets or propellor-powered. There was no confirmation of the report from U.S. military officials. At a briefing Tuesday night, a U.S. Air Force spokesman said there was no indication of North Vietnamese aircraft during the raid of Khang Khe or the American strike of a munitions dump at Xom Bang just north of the border between the two Viet Nams. THE SOVIET Union today termed the attacks "acts of undisguised international banditry." An editorial in the Communist party newspaper Pravda said: "The Soviet government has most unambiguously warned the U.S. government that the latter miscalculated if it believed that aggression against a socialist state would remain unpunished. "The U.S. aggressors have begun a dangerous play with fire." Pravda demanded a "discontinuation of the criminal dirty war in Viet Nam" and said the United States was "on the road of risky and dangerous provocations." WHILE U.S. and Vietnamese intelligence experts assessed the effect of the raids, there were reports of an imminent landing by a battalion-sized force of American Marines in South Vietnam. It was understood that the Leathercnecks would take over security duties at vital U.S. installations, including the big air base at Da Nang—the jumping off point for Tuesday's air strikes. More than 160 U.S. and South Vietnamese planes took part in the one-two aerial punch, the biggest raid yet against the communist north. A U.S. military spokesman said today the final tally of losses showed that five American jet fighters and one South Vietnamese Skyraider were shot down by Communist anti-aircraft fire. ONE U.S. Air Force pilot was reported missing. The five other airmen were rescued within hours of the attack. The missing American was not located despite air rescue missions over the rugged jungle-covered mountains near the 17th parallel. WARNING Stay away from British Motors There is a possibility of becoming infected with the Sports Car fever! The SP fever will doom you to years of pleasure and excitement. If you are brave and full of red blood, bring that great mass of Detroit Iron in and become infected with a happy little Sports car. WARNING—if you can't stand pleasure,stand away. 1116 W.23rd BRITISH MOTORS Lawrence, Kans. THE CLASSICAL FILM SERIES presents Winner of the Grand Prix at the Cannes Film Festival 1956 (Poland) KANAL Wednesday----7:00 p.m. Admission 60c Fraser Theater NOTICE Micki Milliken's Secretarial Service is located at RED DOG INN BLDG. 640 MASS. Phone VI 2-1626 or VI 3-5947 Typists and secretaries on duty from 9 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. WE specialize in: Student Papers; Theses; Manuscripts; Copy and all other correspondence. We offer Notary Public Service; Mimeograph, offset printing, photocopy work and Stenorett dictating equipment. ADVANCE APPOINTMENTS GET PREFERRED SERVICE CALL VI2-1626 VI3-5947 When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified White Stag White Stag It's the country club look! The jacket (10.00) and clubhouse skirt (8.00) are crisp stretch herringbone cotton. Sleeveless mock turtle blouse (3.00) is of knitted stretch cotton. OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 8:30 Calkoun's 1744 MASSACHUSETTS IN DILLON'S PLAZA Calkoun's 1744 MASSACHUSETTS IN DILLON'S FLAZA Daily hansan 62nd Year, No.92 Thursday, March 4, 1965 LAWRENCE, KANSAS --and president of Sigma Na, sua, "We are relieved to get the waiver and hope this will avoid future trouble directed toward the house." World Spotlight --and president of Sigma Na, sua, "We are relieved to get the waiver and hope this will avoid future trouble directed toward the house." Negroes Plan 40-Mile Jaunt SELMA, Ala.—(UPI) Alabama Negroes made plans today for a 40-mile march on the state capital. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. will lead the massed trek scheduled to begin Sunday from Selma to Montgomery. The walk is estimated to take two days. In the capital city, often called the cradle of the Confederacy, the Negroes hope to confer with segregationist Gov. George B. Wallace on the problems of getting Negroes registered to vote in his state. The Rev. James Bevel estimated that 1,000 Negroes wanted to make the march to start after church services but "we hope to cut this number down considerably." The injured included two American servicemen who received "minor scratches." Terrorist Kills 4 in Saigon SAIGON—(UPI)A bomb dropped by a fleeing terrorist exploded in downtown Saigon today, killing four children and wounding a dozen adults. It was the first terrorist bombing here in more than a month. The official government press agency blamed the blast on a Communist terrorist who apparently wanted to hurl the bomb into a bar about 100 yards from the plaza bachelor quarters for U.S. servicemen. LONDON—(UPI)—Communist diplomats said today the increasing conflict over Viet Nam has ruled out a visit by President Lyndon B. Johnson to Moscow at this time. LBJ Moscow Visit Doubtful While the "invitation in principle" to the President to visit Russia is not being withdrawn, the Kremlin leaders feel the presence of the U.S. President in Moscow would not now be a good idea. Pipeline Explosion Kills 10 NATCHITOCHES, La.—(UPI)A natural gas pipeline exploded in a sheet of flames that engulfed as many as six houses today, and police reported at least 10 persons killed. Sheriff Sam James said he feared "five or six more" bodies would be found in the flaming homes at a small settlement about 1.5 miles north of Natchitoches in northwest Louisiana. The 32-inch pipeline, led into a gas pumping station. Authorities said the line was owned either by United Gas Corp. or Tennessee Gas and Transmission Corp. "ALMOST A MAN" by Randolph F. Sadler, instructor in painting, is one of the featured paintings in the KU faculty art show. The exhibition, which is in the Kansas Union, continues through March. Wescoe Lauds Waiver; CRC Mum on Sigma Nu By Jim Sullinger Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe congratulated Sigma Nu fraternity yesterday for obtaining a waiver of the restrictive membership clause in its national constitution. In his statement, the Chancellor said, "This is another example of the progress which can be achieved by thoughtful discussion among people of goodwill. The University can be proud that no fraternity or sorority associated with it has in effect a restrictive constitutum clause." JIM ROBERTS. Chanute junior JIM ROBERTS President of Sigma Nu Roberts said the KU chapter had supported a bill to strike the clause at the last Sigma Nu national convention held every two years. However, this bill failed. He said waiver procedure was started in 1960. A member of the Sigma Nu High Council visited the University on Feb. 8 and recommended the waiver be granted. Roberts also said 40 chapters were granted this waiver by the national council. Jim Johnston, Independence, Mo., senior and president of Inter-Fraternity Council, said, "This is very beneficial for the fraternity system and we're very happy the Sigma Nu chapter did it on its own." Johnston also said the IFC would again make a policy of encouraging Negro students to participate in fraternity rush activities. BOB STEWART, Vancouver, B.C., senior and student body president, praised Sigma Nu for its efforts in obtaining the waiver. "I'm extremely happy that the confidence placed in the Sigma Nus has been justified." Stewart said. "It was their effort and they have certainly earned the trust and confidence placed in them." Neil Stone, Shawnee Mission freshman and CRC president, said his organization had put no demands on the Sigma Nus since last year. PAM SMITH, Kansas City sophomore and CRC secretary, said, "In comparison to other college campuses, they (Sigma Nus) were only 15 years behind the times." "Individual members of the CRC have asked Negro students to participate in Panhellenic rush, but these students do not feel that it is worth their time and money to participate in rush with the odds so highly against them," she said. NEIL STONE President of CRC Students Chill at English Pro As Alums Give Warm Praise By Jacke Thaver "Oh, the agony of it all! It's English Pro time again!" For 28 years, KU students have been bemoaning the English proficiency examination. To every eligible KU upperclassman, that lament becomes a glaring reality tonight at 7:30. Reasons for failure are the same now as they were 28 years ago. Faulty mechanics and sentence structure, lack of coherence and transition between paragraphs are the main causes. Test administrators say a paper can be grammatically perfect but be empty in content. This often causes a paper to be rejected. Students write their essays on one of the ten topics. Most of the topics concern current events. Some consolation may be found in failure percentages, which hit an all-time low of 20 per cent last fall. The previous fall 24 per cent failed, and last spring the percentage was 26. Fred Six, attorney-at-law, class of '56, said, "The exam as I remember it was a worthwhile facet of the liberal arts program. It should be required for any undergraduate degree. The English program should be expanded to give the students more essay expression and general writing activity." Further solace is offered by KU alumni living in the Lawrence area. "No one should be able to graduate without exposure to basic courses in American and English Weather Partly cloudy and continued cold weather is forecast for tonight with a low of 15 to 20. Friday will be fair and not so cold as today's high in the upper 20's. literature and composition. In my opinion, the more English that is required, the better. All that I had was worthwhile and I am grateful for it. It has helped me in my profession and in enjoying the life I live." Six continued. Jack Zimmerman, city editor of the Lawrence Journal-World and a 1552 graduate, said, "I think adequate English education is essential for any profession. Too many people graduate from college who can't handle the language. They don't have as good a grasp of it as they should have." Zimmerman continued, "In our society right now, quite a lot of importance is placed on educating people to shoot rockets, and no glamour is placed on the language the graduate will use the rest of his life. "Many misunderstandings result from not being able to communicate effectively. Our English teachers' job would be a lot easier if our society would realize the importance of English education. I think this failing is pretty widespread." Zimmerman said. Glenn L. Kappelman, Lawrence real estate broker and a 1950 graduate, called English preparation "absolutely essential." Kappelman said, "Most initial business contacts are made by letter and that first impression is very important. In business, job applications, any profession—the matter of communication is most important. In fact, I don't know of anything more important than a good background in English." Dr. Robert Hughes, local physician and 1954 graduate, said, "More emphasis should be put on spelling, composition, letter-writing and general expression. It's necessary to everyone in the medical profession—doctors, secretaries, nurses, etc." CYD's Choose President; Planning State Campaign George A. Groneman, Kansas City junior, yesterday was unanimously elected president of the KU Collegiate Young Democrats for the spring semester. The members also nominated Bradford M. Sumner, Leawood senior, to run for the post of president in the coming election of the state Collegiate Young Democrats. The state election is slated for April 24. Others elected were: Robert Van Cleave, Kansas City junior, executive vice-president; Roger Curtis Kinney, Garden City junior, first vice-president; Alan Joseph, Potwin freshman, second vice-president; Jacqueline Van Eman, Overland Park sophomore, recording secretary; Maxine J. Davidson, Allen junior, correspondence secretary; Stephen Berry Rhudy, Lincoln freshman, program chairman, and Marsha Babicki, Leavenworth junior, treasurer. The Young Democrats are planning a united effort to elect Bradford Sumner as president of the state Collegiate Young Democrats, Joseph said. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 4, 1965 Discrimination In Lawrence, New York or Atlanta people are painfully aware of discrimination in one form or another. This awareness of a social and economic evil sounds almost too simple to discuss. But it isn't. It is not hard to define it, but it is difficult to explain where discrimination, or lack of it, will end. IN SELMA, Alabama, the ridiculous efforts of the sheriff to keep Negroes from becoming registered voters was publicized to the point of absurdity. Martin Luther King's marches are also noted in the press. These examples of discrimination are well known and valid. But the one thing that many Southerners are fighting for is never publicized. They are fighting for the right to choose whom they want to live with and associate with. Is this an absurd demand? In light of what may happen in the future it may not be as ridiculous as it seems. Suppose, for example, that in the next 20 years all, and I do mean all, forms of discrimination are eliminated. THIS WOULD mean discrimination in all public and private establishments would be gone. And, it would lead, supposedly, to a utopia of fair play and equality. But there would be disharmony in this heaven of goodness. Imagine an apartment house owner interviewing a prospective tenant. The owner is white and the customer is a Negro. The owner, harboring no racial prejudice, (because of the education he received in the early part of 1965) talks to the man about renting a six-room apartment. In the course of the conversation the owner discovers that the man enjoys loud parties, has three afghan hounds and five children. He has two stereo record players (with overhead speakers) and his wife likes to move the furniture at odd hours of the morning. The owner is beginning to have his doubts as to the desirability of the man as a tenant. He finds that he just does not like the man. But his hands are tied. He cannot tell the man of his doubts. The progressive elements and humanitarians have released the Negro from the image of the 60's and the owner is compelled to judge the man on the same level as everyone else, even if he doesn't want to do it. HE IS THEREFORE unable to express his dislike for the boisterous activities of the man. His friends, the newspapers and the government would immediately scream discrimination if he did. In other words, if things get progressively "better" for all people in this country there will be no recourse for simply disliking another person. This is a cruel world, we are told, and everyone must take care of himself. But how would it be possible to take care of that right if it becomes unfashionable to simply disapprove of and dislike someone else. Integration is vital for this country's image, economy and conscience. But it is not necessary and possibly undesirable for the equalization process to take from some to give to another. IF THE QUESTION ever comes to the individual right of rejecting another person for his personal appearance, clothes or other factors this country will be in even more trouble. It seems unbelievably optimistic to dream that a sweet-smelling world of love, understanding and mutual friendliness will ever occur in this century. It is human nature to love and to hate. All the laws in the world will not change that. To take away the right of discrimination in all areas of life would bring a bland and boring existence to the world. The right of choice would die hard, but it would die. The challenge of life itself might even become impaired. It seems fair to say that the image of the bitter Southern segregationist will die one day. But desire of many in the South to choose—not just between the white and the Negro, but to choose in all aspects of life—will not. It should not be sluffed off as just an excuse for the vestiges of an evil institution. We should not be so zealous about minority rights as to forget the rights of others. Linda Ellis Balance Shaky in Middle East By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst A basic policy of the United States in the Middle East has been to preserve a balance of military power between Israel and the Arab states as a means of preserving the peace. Of late, however, two developments seemed to threaten both the balance and the peace. These were the stepped up flow of arms from the Soviet Union to the Arabs and the increasing tension between Israel and the Arabs over Israel's diversion of waters from the Jordan River and the Arab's counter-plan to deprive Israel of those waters by diversion plans of their own. Obviously neither the balance of power theory nor the rival plans for diversion of the Jordan provided any solution on the long-standing quarrel between the two groups which remained subject to upset by any sudden jar. AGAINST THIS background, the governments of the United States and West Germany suddenly find themselves thrust into a situation in which neither comes off with any great degree of honor. The Germans especially seem to have fallen into a carefully laid Moscow-Cairo trap triggered by the visit of East German Communist strongman Walter Ulbricht to the United Arab Republic. For the Germans the Ulbricht visit had serious political implications in that it seemed to imply Egyptian recognition of the East German state. The ineptness with which the problem was handled could have serious repercussions against West German Chancellor Ludwig Erhard's government when it comes up for election next September. WEST GERMAN reaction to the visit rested upon the 15-year-old so-called Hallstein doctrine which dictates that West Germany will break diplomatic relations with any government, except the Soviet Union, that recognizes East Germany. The Ulbricht visit, however, involved more than that. It was preceded by a demand from U.A.R. President Gamal Abdel Nasser that West Germany cut off its arms aid to Israel. The alternative would be formal U.A.R. recognition of the East German regime. The West German government capitulated to the blackmail, agreeing to cancel remaining deliveries of $80 million worth of arms promised to Israel in 1961. Whereupon Nasser went right ahead with the Ulbricht visit, including a 21-gun salute upon his arrival. Daili! Hänsan 111 Flint Hall Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. University of Kansas student newspaper Founded, 1899. became hygglyk, 1904. turnover, 1905, and EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Leta Roth and Gary Noland Co-Editorial Editors 111 Flint Hall UNiversity 4-3648, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office University of Kansas student newsname NEWS DEPARTMENT Don Black Managing Editor Bobbie Bartelt, Clare Casey, Marshall Caskey, Fred Frailey, Assistant Managing Editors; Judy Farrell, City Editor; Karen Lambert, Feature-Society Editor; Glen Phillips, Sports Editor; Janet Chartier, Telegraph Editor; Harry Krause, Picture Editor. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Tom Fisher Tom Fisher ... Business Manager Nancy Holland, Advertising Manager; Ed Vaughn, National Advertising Manager; Dale Reinecker, Classified Advertising Manager; Russ Calkins, Merchandising Manager; Bob Monk, Promotion Manager; Gary Grazda, Circulation Manager. N. VIET-NAM S. VIET-NAM ©1965 HERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON POST "It's A Bitter War Brothers Against Brothers, Democrats Against Democrats, Republicans Against Republicans一” BOOK REVIEWS THE PICKWICK PAPERS, by Charles Dickens (Signet Classics, 95 cents). Christmas seems to be the proper time to bring out new paperback editions of Dickens, and this is one of the handsomest copies of them all. Whether another "Pickwick Papers" is needed is another matter, but this edition should be worth your attention. Many readers are prone to dodge Dickens today, and "The Pickwick Papers" frequently is avoided in part because of its girth. Get up off that chair in front of the television set and read something you'll never forget! The book is all about the Pickwick Club and its various adventures over the London and English countryside. Plot? Hardly. Just delightful experiences. And, as a matter of fact, some pertinent commentaries about social conditions, such as prisons and courts of the time. It seems incredible in a way that this masterpiece could have been Dickens' first novel. One of his greatest comic creations, Sam Weller, is on hand, and Pickwick himself is a consistently delightful type. THE PILGRIM'S PROGRESS, by John Bunyan (Signet Classics, 50 cents). A comment appeared recently that no one read "The Pilgrim's Progress" any longer—and maybe never did. Scan the great American biographies and autobiographies, and you find the book occupying a place similar to The Bible. We know it touched one famous American; Theodore Roosevelt obviously had read it, for his allusion to the muckraker in his famous attack on the expose artists of early century would bear this out. The book belongs to another age, an age more pious and moralistic than ours, perhaps. Bunyan was writing a religious allegory, the story of Christian's journey to salvation, and all his troubles along the way—the Slough of Despond, the Delectable Mountains, Doubting Castle, the Palace Beautiful, Vanity Fair, the Celestial City. There. Aren't those names that conjure up pictures you've heard? If you have not read "The Pilgrim's Progress" now's your chance, for here is an attractive new paperback edition. THE CONFIDENCE-MAN, by Herman Melville (Signet Classics, 60 cents). Well, Melville's around again, and the average KU student, who's heard of "Moby Dick" because he saw the Gregory Peck movie, may find this paperback on his English reading list one of these days. The book is somewhat different from the famous Melville works, however, even though the message, once again, is there. What message? Well, the message about human depravity, which if you think about it shows up in most Melville novels. "The Confidence-Man" is set on a Mississippi steamboat, and the protagonist dons a series of impostures to go to work on the hypocritical passengers. Melville, therefore, is once again tearing us inside out to get to that dark side that seems to be—in his view—innate to man. The afterword links the book not only to Melville but to recent works—"The Day of the Locust," "The Hamlet," "Invisible Man." Ferreting out the links should be an interesting task of the uninitiated, and a must for the chaps who find it impossible to read a book merely for enjoyment and understanding. A Si Upo yard chine openi a cha has no "Si: speed canva record free f Thi Frank Age e last n the Atics a S IN THE CAF CURIOUS SEX CUSTOMS IN THE FAR EAST, by Magnus Hirschfeld (Capricorn, $1.45).—Hirschfeld was the founder of the Institute of Sexology in Berlin, and the book is based on his observations while on a world lecture tour. It is not for those who expect pornographic titillation. The author describes married life in Japan, Japanese Geishas, Sing Song girls of China, Chinese polygamy, fertility charms, phallic cults, erotic sects in India, eunuchs of Delhi, and customs of the Sudanese. "Titiation begun said. Mitch the U of the "Th the cr middl world sas." "The cent said. the coation Ameri KU Pla The ical Chalk "The Purpl of It" produ presure urday KUM The will be to stay nurse ssios Page 3 ssics, aper-ies of other Pick it. Get nothing and its ter of which as that of his kwick assics, grim's amer-cupy-amoususion early Aviator Says Jet Age Still Growing in Cradle you've your noral- egory, bubles atains, lestial assics, By Eric Johnson who's e, may days. works, Upon seeing his first airplane, Rudyard Kipling said, "In the flying machine, I see what I believe to be the opening verse of the opening page of a chapter that has no end because it has no limitations." which Con- agonist critical side out o man. recent Man." miniti- a book This point was emphasized by Frank Mitchell, Cessna Aircraft's Air Age education supervisor in a speech last night before the KU chapter of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. "THE POSITION OF general aviation is in the cradle, it hasn't even begun to develop," young Mitchell said. In speaking of general aviation, Mitchell meant all "flying activity in the United States with the exception of the commercial airlines." dirschstitute variationsorno Japa- fertility and "Sixty-one years ago, the high speed flying record was held by the canvasback duck, the high altitude record by the bald eagle. The air was free from airplanes. "The aviation industry is still in the cradle and Kansas is right in the middle of it. Over 70 per cent of the world's airplanes are built in Kansas." Mitchell said. "This industry accounts for 10 per cent of the state's income." Mitchell said. Mitchell expressed optimism for the continued growth of general aviation in the state and throughout America. KU Student Nurses Plan Variety Show The student nurses at the KU Medical Center have their own Rock Chalk Revue called Caduceus Capers. "The Vat and I" or "How to Have Purple Feet and Love Every Minute of It" is the title of the 13th annual production of Caduceus Capers, to be presented at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday in Battenfeld Auditorium at KUMC. The proceeds of Caduceus Capers will be used to send student nurses to state, national and international nursing conventions. "We are the only people in the world who spend more on wants than needs. Personal disposable income (the money that is burning a hole in your pocket) has increased since 1954. Since the major consideration in buying an airplane is cost, we feel that there will be much more of a market for these planes." MITCHELL SAID the fastest growing market in general aviation was the airplane bought for personal pleasure. At the present, most planes are bought for business. They are either privately owned by the small businessman or farmer or owned by a company whose executives use the airplanes. Mitchell gave three ways in which people are being encouraged to take up flying. "Start more people, start them younger, and retain them by making it economically feasible." Asked if he thought a "Volkswagen of airplanes" would be built within the next 10 years. Mitchell said, "No. With breakthroughs in fabrication of airplanes though, we will be able to turn them out in volume as the automobile manufacturers are doing now. When we are able to do this, the price will go down." MITCHELL SAID there has been talk of establishing a state aeronautical authority who would coordinate and assist in making the industry better understood. His position would be financed by the tax collected from aviation gasoline. MITCHELL CONCLUDED by saying the potential market for aircraft of this type is great. "If we could only capture 10 per cent of the available market instead of the three per cent we have now. "New pilots are motivated by early interests and associations, by friends and relatives, and by the excitement offered by flying. Price is still the greatest problem. The average age for new pilots is 31; the average age of a person who buys an airplane is 43, and his average income is $22,500 a year." There is a possibility of becoming infected with the Sports Car fever! The SP fever will doom you to years of pleasure and excitement. If you are brave and full of red blood, bring that great mass of Detroit Iron in and become infected with a happy little Sports car. WARNING Stay away from British Motors WARNING—if you can't stand Thursday, March 4, 1965 University Daily Kansan pleasure,stand away. BRITISH MOTORS 1116 W.23rd In the opinion of the president or the Civil Rights Council, Neil Stone, Shawnee Mission freshman, further demonstrations such as the one staged last week will prove nothing. Lawrence, Kans. CRC To Consider Further Protests "This demonstration did not effectively arouse students and administrative action." Stone continued. "Student action can be interpreted by the number of supporters. Administrative action is termed as an official proclamation in alliance with demands." A special meeting of the CRC has been called for 7:30 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union to consider the proposals of the committee. A meeting for those interested in chaperoning a bus tour this summer sponsored by American Field Service will be held at 7 p.m. tonight in the Kansas Union. Applicants must be 21 years old and U.S. citizens. A three-man committee was organized last night to plan for further action by the CRC with respect to future demonstrations. The committee will be headed by Stone. Chaperones To Meet Officials to Assess Cars March 12 in Union Lobby Students with cars on campus who have not been contacted yet by the Douglas County Assessor's office can register their car March 12, in the main lobby of the Kansas Union. Darwin Rogers, Douglas County assessor, said that two deputy assessors will be there from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Rogers said that the law calls for the payment of this tax to the county in which the car is located on or before Jan. 1. Both in-state and out-of-state students should have their cars assessed if they have not already done so. The out-of-state students will possibly pay a double personal property tax unless their home state grants them a waiver. Rogers said that his office will notify the assessors in the home county of each in-state student who has also been assessed there for payment of the Kansas personal property tax. In-state students will not pay double. "Those students we have already Campus Hideaway 25c OFF on all Pizza (Sale not good on deliveries) Anniversary Sale! 106 North Park FINAL DAY of our 9th Annual VI 3-9111 assessed, should see us if they didn't list their home counties," Rogers added. Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 Ends Friday — “NONE BUT THE BRAVE” Starts Saturday . . . 20th Century Fox The PLEASURE SOCKERS CHINA SCOPE COLOR SHOW DELUXE Changers STANLEY KRAMER PRESENTS “IT'S A MAD, MAD, MAD, MAD WORLD” EVERYBODY WHO'S EVER BEEN FUNNY IS IN IT! FILMED BY ULTRA PANAVISION TECHNICOLOR*/ MELROE UNITED ARTISTS EXACTLY AS SHOWN 1 RESERVED PACIENCE SHOWINGS AT ADVANCED PRICES Hi-fi Adults $1.25 Kiddies 50c Car Radios TV Color TV Antennae starts TONITE. Week Nites 7:30 only Sat. Mat. 2:00—Eve. 7:30 Sun. 2:00-5:00-8:00 Silvertone on Transistors Stereos Prompt Electronic Service Coronado 908 Mass. St. — Lawrence, Kans. Zenith PHONE VI 3-8855 Starts TONITE! Radios --- Bird TV-Radio Service Motorola GE RCA Magnavox Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Philco Airline - We Service All Makes - If you've never bowled before in your life, or if you're a Don Carter 1 BOWL FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY AT THE JAYBOWL FOR A "DATE SPECIAL" "DATE SPECIAL" YOUR DATE GETS TO BOWL EVERY OTHER GAME Open 8 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. Monday - Saturday FREE! (REMEMBER—MOM BOWLS FREE!) 6 p.m. Friday — 6 p.m. Sunday Open 1:00 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. Sunday Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION 8 8 8 8 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 4, 1965 THE RED DOG INN presents FREE T.G.I.F. FRIDAY with THE EGYPTIANS & THE CRABS Friday Night THE EGYPTIANS-A cool trio sporting sunglasses short sleeve sport coats, turbans, and out of sight sounds, are back again by popular demand. They will be joined by THE CRABS to present a tremendous show. COVER $1.00 SATURDAY, ONE NIGHT ONLY "THE DERBY REVUE" Slop The S DEL MONTES The S DEL MONTES Dive Chimmy Fly Pony Ly Gully Rug itchhike Soulful MARVA Hully Gully Cover $1.25 TOMMY AND THE FABULOUS TOMMY AND THE FABULOUS Direct from: Silver Slipper, Nassau Bahamas, Peppermint Lounge Miami Beach Royal Peacock Club DERBIES TWO BIG SHOWS! O Okla units a thing t Jim M at thisence I Iowa S The for the 10 stra ence. H to be p Nebras Sw Beyer day, and dicatin record. Te 'B' Kapj KU int nesday Kapp mural Lawren the war and 27ence tough on son Frank cial sts Geor. more, ior, tu Ku points boards with n ball in CIF 35-29 "C" ti breaki second time l 23 at t Monkey But fourth trol an all how Giffen, the w Richar tossed Swim Twist The Dog Mashed Potato Jamaican JKA Cover $1.25 University Daily Kansan Page 5 O.U. Favored in Big 8 Swimming Oklahoma, with the top two relay units and two outstanding do-everything performers in Jack Hove and Jim Manring, ranks as the favorite at this weekend's Big Eight Conference swimming championships at Iowa State. The favorite's tag is nothing new for the Sooners, winners of the last 10 straight team titles in the conference. However, Oklahoma can expect to be pushed by Iowa State, KU, and Nebraska. Swimming in Iowa State's new Bever Hall pool on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, coaches are predicating that most of the league's records are in leopardy, even after Teams Capture 'B' and 'C' Titles Kappa Alpha Psi and CIF captured KU intramural basketball titles Wednesday in Robinson Gymnasium. Kappa Alpha Psi won the intramural "B" championship downing Lawrence 39-31. The winners led all the way, forging leads of 9-6, 15-14, and 27-20 at the quarter marks. Lawrence was unable to penetrate a tough zone defense and had to rely on some fine outside shooting by Frank Dressen, Tuscarora, Md., special student, to stay in the game. George Harvey, Parsons sophomore, and Loyce Bailey, Topeka junior, turned in fine performances for Kappa Alpha Psi. Harvey scored 16 points and performed well on the boards, while Bailey was credited with numerous assists and stole the ball in several crucial situations. CIF downed Beta Theta Pi No. 4 35-29 in capturing the intramural "C" title. The winners had trouble breaking a full-court press in the second half which saw their half-time lead of 18-13 diminished to 24-23 at the end of the third period. But CIF followed with a solid fourth quarter behind good ball control and some clutch shooting to end all hopes of a Beta victory. Scott Giffen, Prairie Village junior, paced the winners with 14 points, while Richard Adams, Wichita sophomore, tossed in 10 for the losers. the wholesale onslaught of last year when 13 of the 15 marks were shattered. In addition to Hove, who holds the Big Eight's best for the year in the 50 and 100 freestyle, and Manning, who is tops in the 200 individual medley, and the 200 and 500 freestyle, the Sooners have plenty of depth in the sprints, individual medley, back-stroke, breaststroke, and butterfly. Iowa State also has a good pair of relay teams, plus a good sprinter in John Moreland, fine all-events man in Dan McQuillen, and the best of the backstrokers with Neal Armstrong. KU's relay teams rank just a shade behind the Oklahoma and Iowa State crews. Individually, the Jayhawks have Dick Bisbee ranked in the sprints, Don Pennington in the individual medley and distance events, and Bill Johnson in the backstroke. Nebraska's main hopes lie with Mike Jackson, best of the Big Eight in the breaststroke. Dave Frank, individual medley and backstroke. Jon Burchill, butterfly and Taylor Whitlow, distance. B Γ Δ E Z H Θ J K Λ M Fraternity and Sorority Jewelry - Guards - kings - Mugs - Pins - Lavaliers - Crests Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Massachusetts 19th & Massachusetts Chico's Drive-In We specialize in: TACO'S of all kinds - 20c ea. or 6 for $1.00 Burritoes of fish, cheese, beef and others 20c each or 6 for $1.00 Chico's Drive-In Watch for the announcement of our delivery service SUA FRIDAY FLICKS ALL THE YOUNG MEN starring Alan Ladd, Sidney Poitier Plus Laurel & Hardy in "DOUBLE WHOOPEE" Admission 35c FRASER THEATER 7 p.m. & 9:30 p.m. ADVERTISED IN ESQUIRE AS Have a Burnt Ivory* THE RICH CIGAR TONE The strong masculine flavor of this rich cigar tone leather appeals instantly to young-thinking men. Hand-sewn detailing adds the custom touch. 10.5 exclusive with Taylor made TaylorMark SHOP 100 $17.95 to $18.95 Royal College Shop 837 Mass. VI 3-4255 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 4, 1967 Johnny Moonbeam Play To Open for Children Johnny Moonbeam is nearly ready That's what can be said after the cast went through the last rehearsal of "Johnny Moonbeam and the Silver Arrow", which opens at 4:30 p.m. today at Murphy Theatre. TALKING TO Burt Eikleberry, Lawrence graduate student, who fills the only speaking role in the play, that of narrator, said that the only thing to do now is to await the children's reaction. This University Children's Theatre production is about a 12-year-old Indian boy who has to pass three stern tests before being accepted as a full member of the tribe. "There are, of course, differences in acting before children and before adults," he said. "The acting has to be more exciting and vivid. But the main difference already lies in the script, which is more direct. It tries to get the children involved and to hold their attention." Eikleberry said one could not overplay the parts, because the children are used to television and the movies. THERE WERE some reactions last night, not from children, but from 14 Haskell students, who had come to see how their ancestors were portrayed by today's students. They had been invited after James Harrington, theatre designer, had asked them for advice concerning the authenticity of his decor. He adapted the teepees and stylized trees from drawings by contemporary Indian artists. Loretta Iron, Haskell student from Ponca City, Okla., commented after the dress rehearsal that she was struck by the authenticity of the play. "We still have initiation rites in our tribe, and quite a few still believe in various gods, like the Rain-and Firegod in the play." Kay Bluestone, a Sioux from Minnesota, pointed out that the dance of the witch doctor in the play is very like the ceremonies she has seen at home. PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS Waxhide BY WINTHROP RUSTIC HAND-SEWN FRONT WITH THE "HAND-RUBBED" BURNISHED LOOK This exciting rustic leather is perfect for rich hand-sewn styling and your adventurous mood. A pair of shoes. The illustration of, or the term leather, in this ad, describes the uppers only. $16.95 ARENSBERG'S 819 Mass. VI 3-3470 WINTHROP W SHOES TOTAL LOOK G'S WINTHROP SHOES TOTAL LOOK TOTAL LOOK NOTICE ANYTHING? If not, then notice again. That peculiar-looking building below is the PIZZA HUT —Lawrence's newest, differentest (and some say finest) pizza house. If you're at all interested in fine architecture, stop in tonight. On the other hand, if all you want is the best pizza in town—served in a relaxed, friendly atmosphere—you should still drop by. On 23rd St. across from absolutely nothing. You can't miss it. FIRE BRIDGE CAFE EAT IN ... CARRY OUT VI3-3516 PIZZA HUT What Sort of Person Lives at Park Plaza South? (and why you should) You have a choice of many attractive apartments, 1 and 2 bedrooms, central heating and air-conditioning, disposals, carpeting, front drapes and a convenient coin operated laundromat. Some people like to study, some like to sit by our swimming pool and think of grades gone by. Whatever you like you'll find Park Plaza South a pleasing home for your college days. FRED DALTON Park Plaza South 1912 W. 25th Call Day or Night: VI 2-3416 Thursday, March 4, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 7 ROCK CHALK REVUE 416 MAKE AN EVENING OUT OF IT ... TAKE HER TO THE PRAIRIE ROOM FOR OUR CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS OR SHISH KABABS. 5:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. For Reservations Call UN 4-3540 PRAIRIE ROOM Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 4, 1965 Frosh Series Ends Situations Make Leaders The final session of a series of leadership meetings designed for outstanding freshmen closed last night with speeches by Robert Cobb, assistant dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, and Herman Lujan, associate professor of political science. "Leadership is a function of the circumstances that you find yourself in, the nature of the group, and the personal qualities of the leader," Prof. Lujan told the small group of students in the Kansas Union. He divided leadership into two levels—rational and emotional action. USING RATIONAL action demands a technical expert, or an executive type of person, Prof. Lujan said. He must be an organizer of ideas. The emotional action approach demands a leader who is a pace-setter, a well-liked person who must have a grasp of the function of the group and the situation. UP Selecting Spring Nominees Seven or eight University Party All Student Council nominations for the spring election are already filled. Harry Bretschneider, Kansas City, Mo., senior, and UP secretary-general, said last night at a party meeting. Bretschneider also welcomed Lambda Chi Alpha into UP. Lambda Chi Alpha transferred party affiliations from the Vox Populi (VOX) to the UP Tuesday night. Tom Shumaker, Russell senior, added that the party's campaign policies were proceeding satisfactorily at this stage. He plans to have mimeographed pamphlets telling party progress and ideas written for distribution to various living groups. The meeting, which lasted for about an hour, was held in the TKE house. The leader's personality was clearly defined by Prof. Lujan. "He must have a clear concept of his job as leader. The leader must have energy to carry the program through, and he must have a reason to keep on, a cause to justify." Sororities and fraternities whose purpose is to promote brotherhood, end up by not carrying this out because they tend to choose only a particular type of person through their selectiveness. Prof. Luian said. He urged students to interact freely with their faculty, fellow students, and friends, thus becoming familiar with a number of dialogues or ideas. DEAN COBB stressed that "Until one discovers his own identity, he cannot play his role well." "We should strive," he said, "to find a role of our own that is personally satisfying. "Regardless of what little time you may think you have, you have all there is," he added. Bill Robinson, Great Bend sophomore and chairman of the Freshman Leadership Conferences, said that conference members were selected through a competitive program that included the filing of an application and careful screening by a committee. "The Freshman Leadership Conference is aimed at aiding the top freshmen to get an idea of leading, organizing and carrying out ideas in case they should join campus organizations." he said. He said this group will co-ordinate the campus-wide Leadership Day to be held March 20. Leaders of most of the organizations on campus will meet to discuss problems, ideas, and suggestions for more effective leadership. Mrs. Mary Ann Wolfe, VISTA representative, will speak this afternoon at 4 o'clock in the Oread Room of the Union. Mrs. Wolfe evaluates applications from VISTA volunteers. VISTA Talk Todav GLOBE The World's Most Recommended Drycleaning Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers White Stag White Stag recommends our Sanitone drycleaning We know and respect fine fabrics and take painstaking care in cleaning them. We use only the Sanitone drycleaning process with the exclusive Soft-Set® finish that restores "life" to the fabric while cleaning the garment. Send us your garments—we'll return them looking like "new". Call on us today. a national service LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H.-VI -3711 Sportswear by White Stag Rite A Chemicals APPROVED SANITONE SERVICE 7 LAWRENCE La Pizza 807 Vermont VI 3-535 Just Because... KU The Pit Comments every bartender hears at least twice a day: "Why don't I ever get a free one? I'm your best customer!" "Why don't you expand? I had to park two blocks away and I can't find a seat." "Where is everyone?" (Generally asked between noon and 2 p.m.) "The bank must have made a mistake-I know that check is good." "A pitcher? Under my coat? Well, I was just bringing it for a refill." "My date would like a Pepsi, and I'll have a glass of water." (This happens only at extremely busy times.) "Why don't you put in red lights? The blue ones look terrible" "What happened to your blue lights? This red is terrible!" Gee, I left my draft card at home, and I can't seem to find my driver's license. But I promise you I'm eighteen." "Who are those girls in the corner? . . . You don't? Well can't you check their ID's or something?" "Those bartenders keep looking at me--maybe I'd better put my coat over my knees." WEEKDAY SPECIAL — Pitchers 60c Pitchers 60c between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. Mon., March 8 through Thurs., March 11 PIT PICK — This week the Pit Crew honors KATHY DELICH, Fine Arts junior. University Daily Kansan Page 9 Taylor Book Contest Offers $150 To Best Student Book Collectors Prize money of $150 will be given to two undergraduates who have compiled a collection of books with a purpose in mind. First place will receive $100, second, $50: TODAY St. Lawrence Student Center; 4:00 p.m. Theology 102; 7:00 p.m. Theology 101 and Philosophy 71 — "Contemporary Philos- phical Thought." 7:15 p.m. Y.C.S. Chairman Bob Agnew; 8:00 p.m. C.F.M. Combined Meeting. Children's Theatre, "Johnn Moonbear the Silver Arrow," 30 p.m. Murphy Hall Official Bulletin University Lecture, 4:00 p.m. Robert F. Hogan. "Bridging the Gap in English from High School to College." Bailey Auditorium. German Club, 4:30 p.m. Der Deutsche Verein trifft den Donnagerstum u 4:30 in 502 Fraser. Dr. Charlotte Craig wird eine Rede auf english halten: "Origins of German Fairy Tales." Erfrischungen. Alle sind herzilich eingeladen. 502 Fraser. Catholic Mass, 5:00 p.m. St. Lawrence Church. Confessions before and during Mass. English Proficiency Exam. 7:30 p.m. Sociology Colloquium. 7:30 p.m. 206 Bibliography Teaching Candidates, Interviews scheduled for Thursday, March 4. Missouri, Kirkwood—Dist. R-7, elementary and secondary. TOMORROW Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel. Confessions before and during Mass; Sat., 4-5 p.m. and 7-8 p.m. Wesley Foundation Holy Communion 7,145 a.m. Methodist Center, 1314 Oread Ph.D. Examination, Marlin E. Schel, March 5, 3:00 p.m., Child Research Laboratories, 1043 Indiana. Major in speech and drama. Psychology Colloquium 4.00 p.m. BJou, BJou, "Concept Formation in Children." Children's Theatre, "Johnn Moonbeam Silver Arrow," 4:35 p.m. Murphy Hall. Wesley Foundation Evensong, 5:00 p.m. Methodist Center. 1314 Oread. Rock Chalk Revue, 8:30 p.m. Hoch Auditorium. Teaching Candidates, Interview scheduled for Friday, March 5: Illinois, Evanston Township. High School, secondary. Students with a collection of not less than 35 or more than 60 books have until April 16 to enter the ninth annual Taylor Book Collection Competition. The contest is designed to honor the students who have placed time into gathering a small library of his own to meet his needs in a certain field. Anyone interested in entering the contest or wanting further information should contact either Williams or Knightly. THE DIRECTORS of this year's contest are Terrence Williams of the Department of Special Collections and John Knightly, Watson Library Circulation Department. Knightly emphasized that the collections need not be large or expensive to win. The judges will be primarily interested in the entrant's intentions for which the personal library was collected. EACH CONTESTANT must submit a bibliography of their collection and a statement of not more than 400 words on the purpose in making the collection, including some references to the circumstances under which the collection was made. After preliminary judging, which will be made on the basis of the bibliographies and statements, finalists will be asked to bring their collections to the library for final judging The first place winner will automatically compete for the Amy Loveland $1,000 National Award which is sponsored by the Book-of-the-Month Club, The Saturday Review and the Women's National Book Association. The judges will be selected from the KU faculty, Midwestern book dealers and library personnel from the Special Collections Department of the KU library. THE TAYLOR BOOK award is sponsored by Mrs. Elizabeth Taylor, Kansas City, Mo., a book collector. Long interested in general collecting, Mrs. Taylor developed a strong interest in Henry Mencken. Today she owns one of the world's major Mencken collections. Mrs. Taylor started the Taylor Book Award nine years ago to encourage reading and book collecting. "The library conducts this contest to honor the students who have found enjoyment and excitement in book collecting. I think it encourages them to form their own book collections," Knightly said. John S. McNown, Dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, has returned from a 25-day trip to France, Nigeria, Ghana and Senegal in Africa. McNown Tours African Sites He accompanied the advisory committee for Africa of the National Academy of Science, which was seeking ways to stimulate scientific exchanges on problems created by large man-made lakes. To portray the scope of the international efforts in African development, Dean McNown said. "At the Kainji dam in Nigeria we talked to the Italian contractor, to the joint design engineers from England and Holland, to a U.N. group, and to Nigerian government officials. We saw Canadian technicians installing Japanese turbines and U.S. generators." Dean McNown will return to Europe in July when he begins a 14month leave of absence. He will spend a portion of that time in Africa. ROCK CHALK REVUE Dress Rehearsal Performance Tonight, March 4 9:15 p.m. Hoch Auditorium Tickets now on sale in Union or may be purchased at the door (50c Admission) FACTORY SALE Red Wing Pottery TWO SIXTEEN PIECE STARTER SETS FOR THE PRICE OF ONE 10 Pépe THE ROSE LANDER COLLECTION Damask FOR TWO STARTER SETS Bob White . . . . . 17.95 Pe'pe-Damask . . . . 19.95 ALSO BOB WHITE Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. Page 10 University Dally Kansan Thursday, March 4, 1965 Death Causes Traced By Expert on Suicides The person who attempts suicide usually wants to live and to die at the same time, according to Dr Edwin S. Shneidman, project director of the Suicide Prevention Center (SPC) in Los Angeles. Few suicides are insane, Shneidman told a psychology colloquium yesterday. But all who try suicide are disturbed with some acute emotional disorder, and in the process of committing suicide they are simultaneously attracted to and repulsed by death. Raymond C. Jackson has received a third renewal grant from the National Science Foundation for study on the evolution of this species. The $28,600 allocation for three years will enable him to finish the phylogenetic and experimental studies leading to a taxonomic treatment. An example of this ambivalence, Shneidman said, is "like a man seeing his mother-in-law go over the A KU professor of botany is allergic to Haplopappus, but he hasn't let it deter him from seven years research on this member of the Sunflower family. Prof. Jackson has overcome the major occupational hazard of his allergy to Haplopappus by wearing face masks for field work in the Southwest and Mexico and for experimental studies in the KU greenhouse. Allergy Doesn't Stop Research cliff in his new Cadillac." The same thing is seen in suicide, when a person cuts his wrist and then cries for help. MOSCOW—(UPI)—Asian student demonstrators shouting "Down with the murderer Johnson" broke through barricades and a human wall of Soviet policemen today and attacked the U.S. Embassy. "There are three motivations of death." Shneidman said. "They are intentional, when one has a conscious role in his demise; sub-intentional, where one flirts with death and hastens his demise; un-intentional, where one has no conscious role in the subsequent demise." "We consider those we help as patients, not clients," Shneidman said. "We have interviews with them, not conversations. There are no charges for diagnostic and evaluation services." The majority of suicidal deaths come from sub-intentional motivations, he said. This involves living dangerously on the brink of death; being excessive and using alcohol, drugs and tobacco unwisely. "Our purpose is to save lives," he said. "We try through various means to infuse hope into individuals and not only to save lives at the times of the suicide attempts, but to prevent them in the first place. The SPC is presently supported by a grant from the U.S. Public Health Service. Students Protest U.S. Today's attack was in protest against U.S. bombing attacks on military targets in Communist North Viet Nam. Fabulous New Orleans Room Now Presents Discotheque Dancing Discotheque dancing Nightly The dance that's sweeping the nation Nightly Now! PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS FREE DUTCH LUNCH Every Fri. & Sat. 2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Sat. Night, The Talismen Two shows 9:00 p.m. to 12:00 p.m. 23rd and Naismith V12-9465 A. MIN'S SWEATERS BY HIMALAYA GIRL'S SEPARATES BY BOBBIE BROOKS The young bucks of America go clean-white-sock in the Adler stretch of the century: new ShapeX. Kick up your status at Adler's 100th birthday in the first cotton crew ever spiralled around Spandex to absorb all pressure from all ten toes. The first sock to go to any length to please you. So giving it takes on all sizes 9 to 14. ShapeX: in white and 9 great colors. Get Clean-White-Sock through and through. Put all your feet in ShapeX. Stay in shape for just one buck. ADLER THE ADLER COMPANY, CINCINNATI 14, OHIO A DIVISION OF BURLINGTON INDUSTRIES For the finest in Men's Fashions it's diebolt's 843 Mass. VI 3-0454 Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE 1963 Austin Healey, 3000 Mark 2, 18.000 miles, red, roll up windows, new tires, new battery, radio, wire wheels, overdrive, excellent condition. VI 2-3673, 3-9 Sylvania portable TV, 21 inch, excellent condition, Minolta autocord double reflex camera, like new. Call VI 2-3155 after 7 p.m. 3-9 Garrad "type A" never used, still in original packaging box, $50.00 - Tape recorder, Akai M5, semi-professional, 4 track stereo for $220.00-195 Chevy, 48, 4 bbl, stick $275.00. Call Lee Garrett, VI 2-3365. WHAT WILL YOURS BE? HS BE? Mercado Benz 1905L Ford Mustang V8, 4. sp. Conv. MG-B Conv Rambler Wag., OD, Air MG 110 Sedan Mercury Comet Sta. Wagon, AT & Air Susbeam Alpine, HT Rambler V8, AT, Air MG Midget Conv. Dodge AT, PS, PB, V8 VW Camper Cadillac Fleetwood VW Bus (Truck) (Pop scicle) 250 cc * Classics Classics 1948 MG-TC Roadster 1946 Linc. Cont. Ccav. V-12 * * * * 1116 W. 23rd British Motors Lawrence 2.5 Jaguar 58-34 L Sedan, white, stick plus overdrive, new paint, mechanically perfect, best offer. VI 3-1747 after 7:00 p.m. 3-9 BSA Motorelyce1964 250 cc. Good condition—Call Tom Walmstol, VI 36400- 3.50- Bibson Bass Guitar and New Kustom 3-005. Imp. Also mike and stand, earl. 3-005 Fender electric guitar, new price $200, asking $125. Ron Babcock, VI 2-9506, or see at 1120 W. 11th. 3-5 Auction—used bikes, all sizes. Name your own price. Saturday, March 6, 1:00 p.m. Blevins Bike Shop at 701 Michigan. 3-5 1959 Gardner $ 50 \times 10 $ house trailer, good price; excellent price, priced. Call 3- 2-0731 at 5 p.m. HI-FI—Save on nationally advertised HiFi components. New equipment in factory sealed cartons with factory warranties. Call VI 3-4891. 3-15 Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, timemegapaged and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL V1 2-1901 for free delivery. BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMIUMS! Occidental Term Life: conversion, Go-Back, Move-Over options Age 18 = $39.90 =$10,000 Age 20 = $34.40 =$10,000 Age 22 = $34.70 =$10,000 Call Wes Santee at VI 3-216 for details. tf TYPEWRITERS, electrics, manuals, portables; sales, service, rentals, Olympia Hermes, Royal, Smith-Corona, Olivetti. Adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. ti BE THE LEADER OF YOUR PACK: Harley Davidson Sportster K. 750 cc, new clutch, and new brakes and tires. THIS IS NO HONDA. For further information about this beautiful machine CONTACT Monti Belot at VI 3-0700. **tf** Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive text for classes, Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 3-1428. $4.50. Students, why throw money away on rent when you can own a 1962 Marlette 10 x 50. modern, two-bedroom mobile homes with small payment payments. This home is small and in excellent condition. For Further information CALL R 8-0973 or R 8-0916. ff PORTABLE STEREO: Admiral's Finest—two carrying units, 1 for turntable and 1 for speaker systems (2 tweeters, and 2 full range woofers) $195 will sell for good offer. CALL: Rusty Calkins at VI 3-5721. tl CHINA—Noritaki, Mayfair design. New, never used or even removed from packing. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk M. 3-7102. tf THE STABLES now open every day— Serving steaks, chops sea food, sand- sphere management, new atmosphere. Party room available. Phone vi 3-9644 1401 W. 7th. NEED A BAN? 30 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM. PHONE VI 2-2100. tt Thursday, March 4, 1965 University Daily Kansan Stereo-Fantastic Bargain on stereo system Harman Kardon 30-watt amplifier, Garrard changer, electro-voice speakers Must hear to appreciate beautiful tone Call Hank at VI 3-4891 for bargain price. 3-10 5 string, long neck, folk banjo and case. In excellent condition. $50.00. Call Don Reynolds, VI 3-4846. 3-10 ENTERTAINMENT Now you can hear four excellent dance bands on stereo tapes: THE FURYS THE BLADES. THE RUNABOUTS, THE NOMADS. Call VI 2-1791. tf ATTENTION PARTY THROWS: Do you want the Beatles, the Kingmen, Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL VI 2-1791. tt MISCELLANEOUS BUSY PEOPLE—no time to spare for household cares? For professional cleaning of your home regularly or occasionally. CLEANING CREANISE ICE, VI 3-4408. S-10 Competent student will tutor undergraduate, graduate students in German-$3 an hour. Call Sara Paretsky, VI 3-8505. 3-9 Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-Q ribs that grandma and grandpa can eat, try our order, or $2.60 per slab. Hours: 11:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-9510 3-31 IR., SR. AND GRADUATE STUDENTS. MONBY AVAILABLE ON PERSONAL PHONE, PHONE, CHUK ADKINS, BENEFICIAL FINANCE AT VI 3-14- 3-17 PARTY TIME? Building available for phone calls. PHONE: 3-3895. Ralph Fried at VI 3-3895. CHSWINN BICYCLES -service all makes parts and accessories, tire $1.46, tubes and luggage, luggage racks and to downs. See Bieving at 7th and Mielc CALL VI 3-0581. Loans—buy, sell and trade—guns, fishing equipment, golf clubs, radios, tools, and misc. 1 permits. VI 2-9425. 3-5 friends coming this weekend? Looking for a place with good food at reasonable prices. HILLCREST BOWL RESTAURANT. Plenty of free parking 8th and Iowa. It's great for a date. Take her bowling at Crest Bowl. Finest lanes in the state. Sun, June 21. At 9:00 p.m., also Mom, Tues., and Fr. after 9:00 p.m. Crest Bowl, 9th and Iowa. Rent electric, standard, and portable typewriters. Repair all makes of electric, computer, and other business equipment (formerly Business Machines), 15 E. Ethyl, VI 3-0151. tft Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon-thru-Fri, or all day Sat. or Sun. Phone VI - 3-6231. tt Room & board, transportation. Two tickets, instruction and insurance. $128. Room & Club. Contact Y office in the Union or Marty Knight. Sign up meeting March 9, 7:30 p.m. at the Forum Room. Attention: All persons interested in self defense training classes utilizing many of the same throws and smashes used in movies, contact Bob Mort at VI 3-7102. FOR RENT Furnished apts. at 940 Indiana. Off street parking, utilities furnished. Call VI 3-3566. 3-8 Furnished house for rent or lease in Eudora. Prefer three to four boys, 3 bedrooms, wall to wall carpet, fireplace. Available immediately. Phone HA 2-5063. Emery Apts. 1423 Ohio, 12 one bedroom luxury apts. April 1st. $85.00. Featuring w-w carpeting, disposal, range and ovens, refrigerators, furnished or unfurnished. Teachers or graduate students only. no children or pets. VI 3-8190. 3-16 Large sleeping room for men students with refrigerator privileges. Rent single or double. Close to town and Kansas University. $1247 \frac{1}{2}$ Kentucky. 3-9 Nice cool basement or upstairs apartment for spring semester. Double or single. Ideal for study. Phone Ray Woods at VI 2-1613. 3-8 Single room for graduate student in faculty home close to campus. Phone UN 4-3230 or VI 2-0261. 3-4 Large 6 room apt. for rent. Go to campus and down town. $70 plus electric bill. 3 bedrooms, many, many closets, etc: Call VI 2-9193. 3-4 Furnished apts.—2 blocks from Union Bldg. Remodeled and nicely furnished. Special rates for 6 months. longer. Married couples preferred. 3- 5-31 WOODIES are more interesting when you get there the fun way on a BIKE. Equipment, repairs, wore-ons, equipment, Gran Sport Cycle, 9 W-3 14th. VI 3-3238. Extra nice roomy apt. in graduate house (or graduate or older undergraduate man- hattan), utilities paid. Weebly furnished with private bath and kitchen. Call VI 3-8534. Pleasant quiet one bedroom basement apartment. Call VI 3-8344. 3-5 PARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30-60 people, jukebox liquid refreshments and Contact Don at the Gaslight Tavern for reservations or CALL VI 3-1086. We have available one double room and one single for graduate women. Also two laundry facilities provided. Call VI 2-0186 or come by 1244 Louisiana. Room for rent--double or single. Ideal study conditions and private entrance. Phone VI 3-0326 after 5 p.m. tf Crescent Heights and Oak Apartments— 421 W. 24th, or CALL VI 2-3711. See the 821 W. 24th, or CALL VI 2-3711. HELP WANTED Part-time undergraduate electrical assistant, primarily audio work. E.E. or Physles major preferred—apply room 4, Bailey Hall. 3-8 Male–call between 10-12 a.m. Interested primarily in Sophomores but will consid- er Freshmen and Juniors. Phone tor- mentor VI 2-2082. Primarily part of work work. Hostess—Attractive lady for evening employment in the New Orleans Room, top wages—Phone VI 2-9465 or VI 3-4747. tf Discutheme Dancers. Apply now. At the New Orleans Room. Phone VI 2-9465. FLORIDA—Three girls to share driving expenses to Florida (Daytona, Lauder-Lauder, spring break. Leaving Sat. April 3. Returning for classes. VI 2-3155 days. 3-8 WANTED A third roommate to share modern apartment with two engineering students. Phone 1-845-2258 or see apt. 38, The Oaks, 2345 Road Court, Court. After 1:00 p.m. OLD CARS WANTED, top prices paid. If you can drive it in, we'll consider it. Do it today! GI Joe's, 601 Vermont, tf Washing and ironing done in my home 1131 New Jersey 975 Phone VI #-2598. TYPING Experienced typist wants typing in home. Rates, prompt service. Phone: VI 2-3356 6 years typing experience plus background in proofreading enables me to guarantee accuracy on college papers. New electric typewriter equipped for interchangeable type sets. Mrs. Berndt. 801 Michigan or VI 2-0400. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Secretary wants to type your thesis, dissertation, term paper, etc., on new IBM electric. Fast, accurate, and reasonable. Special symbols available. CALL Mrs. Shirley Gilbert, 334 W. 24th N. 10th, at VI 1-2-805. Experienced typist. 8 years experience in these and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. CALL Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale. VII. 2-1648. Theses only on Royal Electric Plea Type writer. CALL MIL, Fulcher at VI 3-0558 experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. accurate work. Reasonable rates. Electrician typewriter, Gestetner Duplicator. Mrs McKeldowney, 2521 Alabama St. Phone Vl -18568 Experienced secretary will type term papers, law briefs, theses, etc., for students. Especially familiar with legal and business terms. Fast and accurate. Reasonable rates. Call Marsha Goff at VI-1-2577. Former Harvard and U. of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports and theses. PHONE VI 3-7207. tt Ferm papers. Theses by experienced typist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tf Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. Will do ex- ective research in the areas of Electric carbon ribbon typewriter. Betty Muskrat 140 Indian, or call V1 2-0091. Will do typing in my home. Accurate reasonable rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at 921-0210. Experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing. Speak and write in English, Quick and reasonable Electric typewriter. Call VI-8-3976. tf Typist, experienced with term papers typing, dissertations, will give you typing imprimible symbols. machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Mar- lene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048 Experienced typist wants theses, termpapers, and dissertations to be typed on electric (pica type) typewriter. Please Pat Call Beck at VI 3-5630. tf Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will use Microsoft typewriter or these Experienced. Electric typewriter. CALL Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8626. Experienced typist will do dissertations manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., VI 3-7485. tf Experienced secretary would like typing in her home, with new electric type-device and accurate service. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. La-caster at VI 1-2188. Theses or term napères done in my home CALL MRS. Oxford at VI 2-0673. kt Experienced typist to do termpapers, themes, reports and carbons. Fast and accurate service. Reasonable rates. Monday through Sat. I V 3-1875 3-8 Omega Calendar watch, Initials "T.R.S." Reward Call Tom Stevenson V-3-2500 LOST Brown leather clutch purse. Saturday fourteen. Sally Sielek at VI 3-1340. 3-4 Feb. 11 or 12. 1 pair of black frame men's glasses. Reward for return. Call Lee Whitlock, VI 3-0962. 3-5 Patronize Kansan Advertisers Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS CAPRI $250 ALSO TO $1800 Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. BUSINESS DIRECTORY See or Call Marvin E. McDougal For All Your Insurance Needs 1244 La. VI 2-0186 Wholesale Diamond Rings Call Robert A. Lange VI 3-1711 GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established - Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING - Lubrication . . . . $1.00 24 HOUR SERVICE (TUES.-SUN.) - Brake Adjustment . . . .98 - Wheel Alignment - Automatic Transmission Page Fina Service 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694 HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy Ice cold 6 pacs—all kinds OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Ph. VI 3-0350 TRAVEL TIME (continued) LET MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Spring Break and Summer Reservations Now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 4, 1965 Building Sites Selected; Dorms to Rise Two new residence halls will soon rise on the corners at 19th and Naismith. J. J. Wilson, director of dormitories, today said bids on a 680-space university structure will be received March 11. Tentative plans call for construction to begin around April 1 on the northwest corner of the intersection. TUESDAY AFTERNOON the Lawrence City Commission gave final approval on an amendment to the high-rise zoning ordinance, thereby giving the go-ahead for the first privately-financed student residence hall. Commissioner Ernest Pulliam was the only dissenter. He said he felt that not enough parking space was required by the amendment. A 10-story, 504-man residence hall will be built on the northeast corner by Allen Bros. and O'Hara, project developers. Their plans can only provide 264 parking spaces of the 315 recommended by the new amendment. They plan to appeal to the commission at its next meeting to obtain approval of their parking plans. Backfire Causes Fire A car fire resulting in $50 damage occurred about 1:40 p.m. yesterday on the service road behind Flint Hall, according to Fred Sanders, Lawrence fire chief. The fire occurred from a carburetor backfire, Sanders said. The car, a 1964 Ford, belongs to Joanna Sutton, Kansas City, Kan., senior. TROPHURSTHISGRAPH DELIVERY INTERNATIONAL WORLDWIDE Owens FLOWER SHOP "Flowers Telegraphed Anywhere" Located Conveniently to K.U. Campus & Lawrence Memorial Hospital — 9th and Indiana — DIAL VI 3-6111 AFTER HOURS CALL VI 3-8035 FREE DELIVERY Gordon Center VI 1-2004 19th & N.Y. OWENS INDIANA WEST 9th Khrushchevs Now Just Plain Folks Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers MOSCOW—(UPI)—Mrs. Nikita Khrushchev describes how she and her husband have fared since his fall from power at the Kremlin: "We are now leading a normal, healthy life like other people." Allen's News All Student Supplies including "PLAYBOY" 1115 Mass. VI 2-0216 the elegance of 14K gold settings $350.00 $200.00 $150.00 the brilliance of fine diamonds These fine diamonds twinkle "like a thousand glistening stars" on your finger. And set in exquisite Jewels of Joy you'll always wear them with pride as beautiful symbols of your heart's first choice. Your KU-ID is your Pass to Credit. BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 743 Mass. VI 3-4366 F The Candlelight Room Opening FRIDAY, March 5th, 4:00 p.m. (Featuring St. Louis' Finest Beverage on Tap) PITCHERS 65c Friday 4:00-5:00 p.m.,8:30-9:30 p.m. - also serving fine food from the Gaslight menu - - soft lights - - intimate atmosphere - m. Saturday 8:30-9:30 p.m OPEN EVERY FRIDAY 4-12 P.M. and EVERY SATURDAY 8-12 Located in the lower floor of the GASLIGHT Churches Conduct Prayer Services Today is World Day of Prayer and is being recognized locally by the United Church Women of Lawrence in a series of four services and a prayer vigil and by the Immanuel Lutheran Church with an evening service. "What Doth the Lord Require" is the theme for this, the 179th annual celebration. Chairman for the United Church Women is Mrs. Dean Harvey. Mrs. O. C. Nation is leading the Lutheran Service. THE INTERDENOMINATIONAL rememberance planned by the church women started this morning with a 10 a.m. service led by the Rev. Claude Griffith of the First Free Methodist Church. A second service at noon was conducted by the Rev. Edwin Price. The traditional service was to be held at 2 p.m. with the Rev. Paul Davis, Plymouth Congregational Church, speaking on this year's theme. The University's Women's Chorale, under the direction of Mrs. Edwin Browne, with Mrs. Thomas Allstock as soloist, was to sing. ALL OF THE SERVICES are being held in the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont Ave. Three of the services will be conducted in the south chapel of the church and the 2 p.m. service will be in the main sanctuary. The last service will be this evening at 7:30. The Rev. C. Garnett Herrine, St. Luke African Methodist Episcopal, will be the speaker with the Rev. John Harris, Ninth Street Baptist Church, as worship leader. Continuing throughout the day will be a prayer vigil which started at 8 this morning and will conclude at 8:30 tonight. It is being held in a small room in the north section of the Congregational Church. All of the churches which are members in the UCW will participate with the time being divided into ten minute segments. A special World Day of Prayer worship service will be held at Immanuel Lutheran Church, 17th and Vermont, at 7:30 tonight. The service will emphasize prayers on behalf of the people of Hong Kong, Macao, Japan, Okinawa, Korea, and Taiwan. The Rev. Daniel DeBlock will conduct the brief service. Women of the congregation will serve as lay readers, ushers and organist. The public is invited to attend any of the services this evening. The public is invited to attend any of the services this evening. Although the Lawrence Catholic Church, 1229 Vermont, is not holding a formal service for the day of prayer, one in a series of Lenten devotions is being held this evening at 7:30. Rock Chalk Opens KIL CAMPUS PARODY—The dancing girls, cowboys and magicians—the fun and farce of campus parody—of the 1965 Rock Chalk Revue had a public showing for the first time last night before a crowd of 750. In the picture above, Electra and Oedipus Rex love their complexes and "grub up" each other. Kristine Bergman, St. Louis, Mo., junior, plays Electra while Dave Nesbitt, Savannah, Ga., senior, portrays Oedipus Rex. The Delta Gamma-Sigma Chi skit is "Oedipus and Electra" or "That Grecian Kid Stuff." Possibilities for a third-night performance are being considered for next year, according to Hoite Caston, Independence graduate student and Revue director. Daily hansan 62nd Year, No. 93 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Friday. March 5. 1965 SCHOOL The Lawrence Post Office building, 645 New Hampshire St., will be given to the Kansas Board of Regents for educational purposes. The KU Extension Service hopes to obtain office space in the building along with a state-wide director of extension services. Extension Hopes for New Home in Old Post Office Rv Harry Krause "The Kansas Board of Regents will acquire the old Lawrence Post Office building," J. W. Harrop, chief of the real property division of the General Services Agency (GSA), said today in a telephone interview. Although plans for the building are not complete, KU's Extension Service is hoping for office space in the building. Harrop continued, "Under the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare's public benefit allowance, the deed to the property will be given outright to the Board of Regents, providing they use the property for educational purposes exclusively." SEVERAL MONTHS ago, the Kansas Board of Regents placed a proposal with the GSA of the Federal Government which suggested that the Lawrence Post Office be given to the state for educational purposes. Today, the building was turned over to the U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, which will give the building to the Board of Regents. Some office space in the building is intended for the use of a statewide director of extension services. This post, however, has not been filled yet. "THE UNIVERSITY Extension Service, which is extremely overcrowded, would like some office space in the building to ease our space problem." Howard Walker, director of extension services, said. The Extension Service now occupies the old Pi Beta Phi sorority house, 1241 Mississippi. They moved there from Fraser Hall, Blake Annex, and Watson Library in 1963. The service still has two departments located outside of its main building. The Bureau of Visual Instruction in Bailey Hall, and the Photo and Graphic Arts Bureau in the basement of Watson Library. University Extension began in 1891 so that the people of the state would have opportunities to hear lectures by professors. The present program which includes correspondence courses, extension classes, an extension library, conferences, institutes, community theatre, and educational films, was organized in 1909. University extension centers are now located in Garden City, Colby, Wichita, and Kansas City. Kappa, Sellards Teams To Have Another Chance When the College Bowl Steering Committee declared the Kappa Kappa Gamma team the winner in a contested early round match with the Hashinger #2 team, they discovered they had to turn back the clock and reschedule a match in the next round which the Hashinger team had already played and won. As a result of the mixup which grew out of a question used in the first round match which had two possible answers, the Sellards team as well as the Kappa Kappa Gamma team will have another chance. Hashinger #2 had defeated the Sellards team in the second round of play, now invalid due to the mistake in the first round. The winner of the Sellards-Kappa Kappa Gamma match will be eligible to continue in the third round of competition which begins at 2:30 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union. This round marks the second part of the tournament, for it will be double elimination as will all the remaining rounds. The earlier matches were single elimination. Weather Saturday will be essentially fair, but don't put away your winter gear because it is still going to be cold. Northerly winds today of 20 to 25 miles per hour lessening tonight will bring temperatures into the 32 to 37 range for today. The low tonight is expected to be around 20. Campus Politics Change Vox Says UP Greek-Aimed Jim Frazier, Topeka fifth year pharmacy student and president of Vox Populi, charged last night that the All Student Council (ASC) was rendered ineffective because of University Party's persistence in identifying with only one segment of the student body. Frazier, speaking before a Vox party meeting, said, "For all practical purposes, UP is identifying with the Greek system now." "Vox, on the other hand, has as its guiding principle better student government—not student government represented by one segment of the campus population," he said. FRAZIER CONTINUED that Vox is interested in honest student government. Referring to a statement made by Roger Wilson, Vox president two years ago, Frazier said the party has not made any deals with anyone trying to influence an election. Marshall Crowther, third year law student and Vox candidate for student body president last year, addressed a few remarks about the forthcoming election on a non-partisan basis. "It is essential that people take an active interest in their student government because the student body as a whole benefits from an effective ASC." CROWTHER FELT that apathy on the students' part contributed to the decline of student government. "The student body must take a positive approach to student government to keep the ASC from standing for 'All Social Climbers,'" he said. Further business concerned the replacing of two seats on the executive council. David Grim, Belton, Mo., senior, was elected the men's large residence hall chairman, and Jacqueline Caesar, St. Louis, Mo., junior, was elected the sorority district chairman. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 5, 1965 Stalemate For more than a week now, the Daily Kansan has devoted considerable space on the editorial page to comments, pro and con, on the Student Peace Union and United States' involvement in South Viet Nam. Discussion is good, and we have attempted to give fair play to both sides. Several letters from SPU supporters have been printed as have letters critical of SPU policies and methods. THE DIALOGUE, WE BELIEVE, has reached a stalemate. It is doubtful whether anyone has been converted to one side or the other. Letters from SPU supporters have tended to be repetitious as have some letters critical of the SPU. Daily Kansan policy is to run all responsible letters if they are of interest and illumination to the readers. In this case, we doubt that a continuation of this dialogue can sustain reader interest. The SPU has had sufficient space to express its views. If the SPU has failed to improve its image, it is through no fault of ours. We feel that a change of subject in letters would be refreshing. IN THE FUTURE, THEN, WE WILL ATTempt to print all letters to the editor, provided the letter is responsible and not a rehash of the same old arguments which have been given adequate play. Today, we hope to wrap up the flood of letters from the SPU and its critics. Advance notice is hereby given that a more careful selection of letters concerning this subject will be exercised by the editors. — Gary Noland The People Say To the Editor: IN REPLY TO PAUL LINDQ- quist's letter in the UDK of Monday, March 1: The Student Peace Union, being a democratically structured group, has a wide field of diverse views. I cannot, therefore, presume to speak for the organization—what follows is merely personal commentary. You see, Paul, there are good reasons for groups such as the SPU to protest largely (not completely, as you seem to believe) against breaches of etiquette by our side in the cold war. Not the least of these is that we claim to have justice on our side. Along with the right to make such claims goes the responsibility for operating within a just framework. This imposes limitations upon us that are not imposed upon the "bad guys." We tell the world that we are for the self determination of all peoples, which brings us to Vietnam again. We are also losing the war. We are losing the war because the people don't care about us or what we stand for. This is not the fault of "Them." This is our own fault. We have had it within our power to help the South Vietnamese build something worth defending. Instead, we have poured in dollars and guns at the top, letting the former filter down—and expressed concern at the indifference or hostility of the people. Like it or not, Paul, it is the people who are deciding this issue. Someone once remarked that we are engaged in a war for the hearts and minds of men. The only way we can hope to win is by enabling the undecided peoples to develop a level whereat they don't want anyone else's system, much less be forced to turn to it in desperation. The other means at our disposal are not what one expects of a proselytizing democracy. They will not work for us. This becomes a complex mixture of idealism and hard shell realism. Still it can be done—if we care, and if we believe. While on the subject of caring and believing, I will freely grant that Hungarian patriots were betrayed, though I am haunted by the notion that they were not betrayed only by Russia. Entanglement in a lost war that prostitutes the principles which we so loudly espouse seems to constitute a still worse betrayal in which we may well yet "bury" ourselves. Alas, Paul, it begins to seem to me that those who seek martyrdom (a healthy symptom?) are those who, with bloody saber in one hand, and tattered-but gloriously-streaming banner in the other, see such a simple solution to the conflicts of a world which is simultaneously on the brink of Utopia and the brink of a self-wrought Hell. Briefly: "No, Paul, there is no Santa Claus." Since print imposes limitations in time and space, I would be more than happy to continue our debate publicly and in person. John Garlinghouse Salina junior Dear Sir: MY COMPILIMENTS TO MR. Paul Lindquist on his comments on the Student Peace Union and the wave of letters that have come in from the SPU supporters. I would like to add the following quote from testimony by Defense Secretary McNamara to the House Armed Services Committee; "Our foreign policy has been consistent over the years. We ourselves have no territorial ambitions anywhere in the world, and we insist that all nations respect the territorial integrity of their neighbors. We do not seek the economic exploitation of any nation. Indeed, since the end of World War II, we have given other nations more than $100 billion of our wealth and substance—an effort unparalleled in the history of mankind. We do not seek to overthrow, overtly or covertly, the legitimate government of any nation, and we are opposed to such attempts by others. In short, we seek a world in which each neighbor is free to develop in its own way, unmolested by its neighbors, free of fear of armed attack from more powerful nations. "Unfortunately the Communist governments do not share our objectives." ("Time", Feb. 26, 1965) He continued to say that it is a costly task to try to help others preserve their freedom but that we have no alternative. Of course none of us wants war, but while willing to support an honorable peace, I can see, as others have said repeatedly, that to cease firing and negotiate while the Viet Cong goes on with its subversion would be to betray South Vietnam. A neutral South Vietnam (with a government including the Communists as did the "neutralized" Laotian government) would not require neutralization of North Vietnam to prevent its endangering of the peace. We would merely be falling back to fight again, another day, in another place, and on Communist terms. In short, unilateral cease fire and negotiations would not insure peace As far as the SPU is concerned, many writers have written complaining about "misunderstanding" of the SPU. Let me remind both the supporters and the organization that neither the editor of the UDK nor the critics of the SPU created the organization's public image. If they want it changed, they will have to change it. PAUL LINDQUIST, IN HIS letter to the UDK on Monday, seems unable to cope with a rational consideration of the Vietnamese situation, U.S. foreign policy, and the state of the world and has escalated the dialogue to the phase of innuendo, accusation, and Kansas City, Kan., sophomore Dear Sir. Ken Reeves slander. Of course, we can too use capital letters: you militarists are BETRAYING the interests of humanity and preparing for a WORLD WAR which would be a CRIME unparalleled in human history. See? But does this sort of thing really serve truth? I think not. Of course, if you insist, we could throw mud pies at each other or just shoot it out . . . Concerning the Vietnamese people, would it be wrong to suggest that we might ask them what their interests are instead of trying to tell them? Those correspondents who have tried reporting that all they really want is peace, that they are not well versed in the subtleties of Marxist-Leninist dogma nor are they close students of the American Constitution. What they do know is a brutal war, and what they do want is that the major powers stop using their villages as a chessboard on which to play their bloody military games. Concerning the SPU, as I see it, it is a group of students who are using their resources—time and money, picket signs and mimeograph machines—to convince the American people that our country should use its resources—propaganda, political pressure, diplomatic statecraft, economic levers—to create a world free of war once and for all, a world where every people can decide its own political destiny, a world where nations of diverse ideology and social structures can live together without having to resort to military force to solve their conflicts, a world where human law replaces the law of the jungle. In this struggle, it is hardly necessary to point out the mistakes, the evils, and the brutality of the communist bloce; our government and our press do quite a good job of that. Concerning the world, the primary question is whether its people will be able to create political, economic, social and ideological substitutes for military methods of dialogue between rival systems. Nuclear war would only destroy both combatants, and the limited war in Vietnam is only ruining the Vietnamese people. The only thing the U.S. Army is defending in Vietnam is the U.S. Army; the only thing it is achieving is hatred of the U.S. Army, both in Vietnam and throughout the third world. If we can not see the difference between democracy and the U.S. Army, how can we expect the emerging people in Vietnam, Asia, Africa, and South America to understand our point, unless our point really is only the point of a bayonet? I always thought it was something more, a lot more. Charles Hook Lawrence sophomore Dailij Ifänsan University of Kansas student newspaper sounded 1890 herausgedehrt 111 Flint Hali UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office University of Kansas student newsman 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 perious. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Leta Roth and Gary Noland Co-Editorial Editors A Slice of Cam-Pi Coming out of the many news stories on Viet Nam these days is one phrase that sticks in my mind. It is the continuing reference to the "17th Parallel." I can remember almost 15 years ago when the big story was the crossing of the "38th Parallel" in Korea. ★ ★ For those of you who are interested, it seems that every war has its humorist. Breaking this down locally, for those of you who read the Kansas City papers, have you ever noticed the resemblance between Bill Vaughan and Will Rogers. ★ ★ ★ NOW, DON'T WORRY, I M NOT FORECASTING doom and the outbreak of war. Actually, due to contrary belief they are using real bullets in Viet Nam. ★ ★ ★ Well, Rock Chalk Revue weekend has finally arrived. To quote a favorite comedian of mine, "Everybody is so happy." The little grapes on my vine of information tell me tickets are very hard to get. Some people say it's too bad they can't get to see it this year. From what I understand it's supposed to be better than ever. The vine also whispers that it's too bad they don't limit the quantity of tickets that one bloc can buy. ★ ★ ★ WHY IS IT WHEN YOU FINALLY COME to believe something, you discover it's not true. Take for instance our little ivy-covered community resting on top of this glorious mound. Those vicious money-hungry people out on the plains are beginning to find more and more ways of putting the squeeze on the college community dollar. Now I really don't have anything against unions. It kinda goes against the grain though when people start telling me who I can hire and who I can't hire. Chances are the majority of union bands are better, according to some type of standard. It's the principle of the thing. The only bad thing about this whole issue is that we, or maybe I should take caution and just say I, have no method of recourse against this illustrious group. ★ ★ ★ I JUST FINISHED READING "CANDY." The satire may be seen, and in all honesty, I don't think I've laughed so hard at any book in my entire life. I wonder if Voltaire knew what he had created when he wrote "Candide." I wonder also where the rumor started that this was patterned after "Candide." Actually though, sports fans, I think the comparison can be seen. I asked someone who had read the book in question what they thought of it. She said, "I've read better." THOUGHT: If they keep writing books like "Candy" who will read the better books when they are written. QUESTION: Will the better books be written if satires on the classics can sell like the story of our sweet little wearisome wanderer? ★ ★ ★ I SAW CONWAY TUESDAY EVENING. I asked him if he had seen the letter in that day's Kansan. He started laughing and couldn't stop. As I left him doubled up on the floor of his pad he choked out something about a letter. ★ ★ ★ On the more serious side, I often wonder why the causes people wave their banners for the hardest, are usually those causes that never make sense to a majority of the people. On the other hand, it seems that those causes the majority do seem to care about remain steady and constant. No one carries a picket sign and people never write letters to the editor about these causes. Could it be that we realize that the things that do matter will always be there after the hullabaloo has drifted away in the breath of a truth-driven wind. ☆ ☆ ☆ Jim's Little Gem: "Men are most apt to believe what they least understand." ☆ ☆ ☆ As A GRAPE ON MY VINE TOLD ME THAT next year a new course, Picket-carrying 65, will be offered. (E a na stude Kans Of terio- perple is as is toi astro- part Jim Langford TO MISS BRAY: The People Say... If astro- cery cann State dioxic read news your ALTHOUGH A REPUBLICAN by party, I believe that, in time of crisis, the people of the United States should unite behind our President; even though I realize this might be considered an unpopular stand by certain segments of the student population. Unlike the members of the S.P.U., President Johnson does not refer to loyal Americans as "warmongers," but he asks only that we place our trust in him in time of crisis, as the vast majority of the U.S. population indicated they would do in the fall elections. Christine, has it ever occurred to you that President Johnson and his advisors are in a better position to judge the situation, to strengthen our own government, to fight communism; than a relatively uninformed student. Wh trolo that in th up. T At place Hind what INI tiny not t In o thing which thy p to ce tears Indeed the pamphlet forced upon me, which accuses the U.S. of condoning atrocity, does make me mad A Karn the dian bodilid divid ronm pre-1 only myst proví that set o envir to. "I think it would make any rea American mad. As I am also angered that you worship the obviously tinged word of Norodam Sihouk—"who long ago decided that the Red Chinese are bound to win in Asia . . ." (Time, February 26, 1965, p. 25)—rather than the word of President Johnson. No Christine, I was neither picketer nor counter-picketer. I have better things to do with my time; such as studying and participating in activities other than getting drunk and fist fighting in the S.P.U.-sponsored Un-Military Eall (Fall, 1963). I feel it would be uneeless to publicly debate the S.P.U.: how can I use fact and reality to dispel the vague, cloud-like contentions of this pacifist group? Yes, Christine, there is a Viet- nam!! Conway Kinard Lawrence resident Friday, March 5.1965 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Astrology A Part of Indian Life By Harinar Krishnan (Editor's Note: Mr. Krishnan is a native of India and is presently a student at KU and a member of the Kansan staff.) By Harihar Krishnan Date of Birth Foretells Pattern of Life Of all the mysteries of the "Mysterious East," the one mystery that perplexes the American mind most is astrology, particularly so when he is told that in a country like India, astrology is an accepted and revered part of life. If my understanding is correct, astrology is grouped along with sorcery and witchcraft as vices that cannot be practiced in the United States, according to the law. Paradoxically, one of the most widely read columns in any of the American newspapers today is one of those your-horoscope-for-this-week. What is the Hindu concept of astrology? Does it assume the theory that since everything is preordained in this life, man might as well give up. The answer is no. **INDIAN philosophy knows no destiny that has the power to do things, not to do things or to undo things. In other words, there is no such thing as, "the moving finger writes," which, "having wrist moves on. All thy piety nor wit shall lure it back to cancel half a line, nor all thy tears wash out a word of it." At this time it will not be out of place to introduce the word, Fate. Hindu astrology does not accept whatever is preordained as Fate. A man's destiny is forged by his Karma, the effect of his actions in the past. This is fundamental in Indian thinking. We all know that the bodily and mental make-up of an individual is determined by his environment, subjective and objective, pre-natal and post-natal. But this is only part of the answer to life's mystery. The complete answer is provided in the concept of Karma, that determines which particular set of influences and what particular environment he shall be subjected to. Whatever be his Karma, the individual will always be a creature bound hand and foot the Indian believes. Essentially the nature of spirit is the same as the nature of a god. This spirit in the illiterate mind gets tangled with ignorance, subjugating completely the other force (the sub-conscious), which Hindu astrology takes into account as the implement necessary to fight what is preordained. Immediately a question raises up. Is life preordained? Yes, it is. The very fact that no two beings are born under the same environmental conditions, is one way of explaining why life is preordained. But this is what the theory of Karma explains. Further explanation in this regard will mean going into an entirely different topic. AT THE HIGHER levels of intellectual and spiritual developments, the sub-conscious assumes greater strength and can be the counteracting force to lessen the effect of unfavorable conditions in the horoscope. In fact it is this counteracting force that the western philosophy calls free-will. Thus the forces of free-will are always combating the forces of destiny and at any given period of life, our actions will always be a resultant of these two forces. Now, going back to the common man it can boldly be said that in his case the free-will will not be strong. All his actions in life can be predicted to an amazing degree of accuracy through his horoscope. Then what about the intellectually advanced? Well, the answer is although there might appear to be variation between the prediction and the actual happening, nevertheless it can be proven that the general pattern as indicated in the horoscope has not changed. THE CYCLE of happy and unhappy periods of life is a continuous one and no matter what the environmental circumstances happen to be, every human being has to experience this process in his individual life the Indian believes. Hindu astrology says that in every individual's life, there occurs the "Sani Dashas" or the three periods of Saturn. This is speaking about the unhappy aspect of life. It is then possible to determine, with the help of horoscope, exactly around what time in an individual's life the three periods of Saturn will intermittently be on the ascendancy. Generally speaking, the first period of Saturn is around the adolescent age, the second around the middle age and the third and the longest one around the old age. The intensity of Saturn's influence varies with individuals depending on the influence of the planets Guru and Sukran. These two planets are the ones which bring wealth and prosperity to the person and are the forces that counteract the forces of Saturn. It is said that anyone born around the time of the noon hour will rise up in a life as a person of great intellect and wisdom. Those born around the midnight hour will attain great wealth and prosperity. It is also said by some astrologers that any woman born in the month of September will be gifted with beauty and charm. Great many statistical evidences are available including those that would be termed as fantastic, all supporting the belief that astrology is a very perfect science. IF THE EXACT time of birth of a baby, correct to the second, can be measured, then it is possible to cast the horoscope of the baby and from this horoscope it will be possible to predict every aspect of the life of the child right from its infancy to the old age. How can planets influence human actions? Again according to the Indian philosophy, the whole universe is governed by the law of nature and the law of morality. In effect, these are only the two aspects of one reality. Law of morality is the sum-total of the experiences of all the beings. A change in one law is accompanied by a change in the other. So, maybe, the universe is manifesting itself in several million forms and proceeding in an ordered line of march towards a goal which is the fruition and fulfillment of its nature. Perhaps all the riddles of life all, was not an absurd could be solved if science were to a dormant part of it sportingly condescend to the level of philosophy and fuse itself into the latter. And when it does that it might discover that astrology, after all, was not an absurd stuff, but only a dormant part of it. KU Wins NU Debate Tourney Robert B. Ward and William H Ward, Wichita freshmen, won the University of Nebraska Debate Tournament at Lincoln, February 27. More than 40 schools from all over the nation were represented at the tourney. The twins defeated the team from St. Olaf College, Northfield, Minnesota, in the final round by a 3-0 decision. The two Wards won the round by successfully debating the negative side of the question, Resolved: That the Federal Government should adopt a national program of public work for the unemployed. Feel like you're an "in-betweener?" A border-liner? Middle folk call you a Beatnik? Beatnik folk call you middle-class? Do the campus lefties/righties claim you're a compromiser? A middle-of-the-roader? And the middlers call you a liberalsymp, or a reactionary? American students think you're a foreign student? Foreign students think you're an American? Do the campus intellectuals think you dull? And the home-folk and townies debunk you as a long-hair? An egghead? Do you think you're clickin' and sparkin', but your professors think that as a student, you leave "... something to be desired?" Do you fall into one or more of the above categories? JOIN!! (another one) THE MARGINAL MEN — A new organization—now forming—for you to feel marginal to—Official memberships—$.50 apiece. Write 1401½ Mass. #1, or call VI 2-0672 SUA SUA FRIDAY FLICKS SUA "ALL THE YOUNG MEN" Starring: Alan Ladd and Sidney Poitier PLUS: Laurel & Hardy in "DOUBLE WHOOPEE" ADMISSION 35c FRASER THEATER 7:00 p.m.-9:30 p.m. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 5, 1965 New Cultures File Aids in Research Forage crops of the world? Adolescent behavior in Russia or India? World trends in suicide cases? For years researchers have felt there must be an easier way to find such information than the long and laborious task of searching through the library index. There is—and the University of Kansas now has it in Dyche Hall. A matching grant from the National Science Foundation has enabled the anthropology department to become a subscriber of the Human Relations Area Files. KEITH OTTERBEIN, assistant professor of anthropology, explained, "This makes KU a depository for a unique type of archive of resource and research materials on the peoples and cultures of the world." The Human Relations Area Files (HRAF) are a new kind of library of the sciences concerned with mankind. HRAF brings information to- Thirty-four schools from 17 states will enter 48 teams in the ninth annual Heart of America Debate Conference March 11-13 at KU. Public Works Topic Of 17-State Debate Southwestern Missouri State College at Springfield will return with several championship-winning debaters in a try for an unprecedented third consecutive first place trophy A new feature will be judging of the final round by three coaches who will prepare extensive written critiques of the speakers. These critiques and a transcript of the final debate will be published. The three critics will be Profs. Anabel Hagood, University of Alabama; Robert Scott, University of Minnesota; and John DeBross, University of Southern California. This year's college debate question is: Resolved, that the federal government should establish a program of public works for the unemployed. Dr. Donald W. Parson, KU debate coach, is the tournament director. There will be four preliminary rounds on Thursday and Friday. The 16 best teams will enter the elimination brackets Saturday. All debates will be in the Kansas Union with the final contest starting at 4 p.m. Saturday. Plaques will be given the 10 outstanding speakers during the conference banquet Friday evening. The selection will be on the basis of speaker ratings during the eight preliminary rounds. gather in an easily accessible format in one place. This is done by duplication of original materials using a strip-microfibon process which reproduces n, l, line drawings, pictures and extensive text materials. THE STRIP-MICROFILM archive will then contain materials from about 3,500 books and journals, many so rare as to be almost unattainable. Students and faculty can now use the files in the anthropology department's quarters in Dyche Hall. When New Fraser Hall is finished about two years from now, they will be moved to the new Behavioral Science Documents Center in that building. Students Crowd New Art Course Introductory courses in art history are being taught this semester in the French and German languages, and student enrollment has far e- led expectations. Mile. Marie-Josephe Dulade-Charpentier, a visiting instructor from Paris, is teaching the French section. Thirty-eight students officially enrolled for the course and about that mar are auditing. Klaus Berg professor of art history, is teaching the German section, and has 14 students enrolled, and 36 auditing. Students are required to use the language in asking questions. "After class," Prof. Berger said, "students may ask questions in English, but this rarely happens." Exams, however, may be written in either English or the foreign language. As in the regular art history course in English, a general survey of the study is presented to students. However, Mile, Dulade-Charpentier emphasizes French artists and Dr. Berger emphasizes the German artists. No extensive knowledge of the language is required, but Marilyn Stokstad, associate professor of art, recommends "the students have at least two years of language preparation." Prof. Berger said students derive at least two benefits from the foreign language instruction: a knowledge of art history and extensive practice in conversational French or German. Students enrolled in the courses have varied backgrounds. French, German, art, history and sociology majors and one student in radiation biophysics are enrolled. NOTICE Micki Milliken's Secretarial Service is located at RED DOG INN BLDG. 640 MASS. Phone VI 2-1626 or VI 3-5947 Typists and secretaries on duty from 9 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. WE specialize in: Student Papers; Theses; Manuscripts; Copy and all other correspondence. We offer Notary Public Service; Mimeograph, offset printing, photocopy work and Stenorett dictating equipment. "The Theater Department has certain obligations to the KU students," Kuhlike said, "and to fulfill these, the Departmnt started the Actor-in-Residence program last fall, when Tom Rea (instructor of speech and drama), was appointed the first actor-in-residence. ADVANCE APPOINTMENTS GET PREFERRED SERVICE THE DEPARTMENT hopes by appointing professional actors as actors-in-residence to raise the general lever of University theater productions. The department also hopes that the drama majors will profit by working together with these professionals. KU's second actor in residence-to-be, William Kuhlkle, said when asked in an interview last night why he had decided to become an actor, that "life is too short to do anything else but that which you really want to do." Kuhike, instructor of speech and drama on leave and whose appointment as KU's second actor in residence becomes official this month, told something about this program and his career. CALL VI2-1626 VI3-5947 Second Actor in Residence Kuhlke Finds Life too Short to Waste Kuhke graduated from Adams State College, Colorado, with majors in English and education. He obtained his Master of Arts from KU in 1959. He started working for his Ph.D. at State University of Iowa. Kuhlke interrupted his studies to teach at KU. He has been here four years, teaching speech and drama. This semester he is working on his dissertation for his Ph.D. KUHLKE is studying Russian language and culture with emphasis on Russian theater. To continue his studies, he is supported by a National Defense foreign language fellowship. Kuhlke hopes to get his Ph.D. in June, after which he will resume teaching. Kuhlke cannot remember when he started acting, probably at the age of five. Acting has always been an extra-curricular activity for Kuhlke, even during his undergraduate years. During his Air Force service years, he decided to make teaching theater his profession. AT KU Kuhkle has, among other plays, acted in "Cyrano de Bergerac," "Don Juan in Hell," "Henry IV," and "The Cave Dwellers." Two weeks ago rehearsals started for "Six Characters in Search of an Author," by Luigi Pirandello. In this play Kuhike plays his first part in his new position of actor-in-residence. He plays the role of the father of six characters who exist only in the imagination of an author. The question posed in the play is what is more real: the imaginary characters or the actors playing them? The play opens March 12. SEA FOODS Steak House CHOICE STEAKS FRIED CHICKEN SEAFOOD BAR-B-Q RIBS OPEN II:AM to 9:PM • SAT. II:AM to ? CLOSED TUESDAY Bring your Rock Chalk date out before or after the show. If you want tempting sandwiches or tantalizing steaks, you'll find Jim's Steak House a pleasurable event. JIM'S STEAK HOUSE 3 Blocks East of Haskell Institute What Sort of Person Lives at Park Plaza South? (and why you should) You have a choice of many attractive apartments, 1 and 2 bedrooms, central heating and air-conditioning disposals, carpeting, front drapes and a convenient coin operated laundromat. Some people like to study,some like to sit by our swimming pool and think of grades gone by. Whatever you like, you'll find Park Plaza South a pleasing home for your college days. 107 Park Plaza South 1912 W. 25th Call Day or Night: VI 2-3416 Page 5 arted of an n in this art in resi- father only in The what arac- ace? University Daily Kansan Tone Varies in Poetry Hour His voice ranging from hushed emotion to spirited humor, Ronald Tobin, associate professor of Romance Languages, read poetry from French masters such as Baudelaire, and Victor Hugo yesterday in the Kansas Union at the second SUA Poetry Hour. 416 Sprawled on the floor, and seated on benches around the Music Room. nearly 80 students braved freezing winds and snow to hear Tobin read, in French, the works of the masters. He described, at some length, the devices used in the rhyming of French poetry, explaining that "each line reproduces totally the sound of its note." BEGINNING with portions from a one-act play by Moliere, entitled "Preciuses Ridicules", Tobin brought laughter from the group as the lines and the short, sharp phrases rolled, one after another. His mood changed to a somber one as he told Jean Racine's tragedy, "Berenice." The tragedy centers around the love story of Titus, newly-chosen emperor of Rome, and his love, Berenice. Titus' father has died, and he becomes emperor—he has all, and yet, he cannot marry Berenice because the Roman people will not accept a foreign queen. "IN HIS TRAGEDIES, poetry so contributed to the tragedy that poetry becomes the flesh and the substance of his work." Tobin said. Often glancing away from the book and over the audience, the slim, smiling professor gravely read the lines of the two lovers. His expression was somber, his voice soft. Turning to the work of Victor Hugo, Tobin named him “a marvelous practitioner of verse.” “Les Chantments” is set against the background of burning buildings in Versailles, as royal troops marched into the city. Hugo sets forth a strong call for union and strength. The strong verses end with the line: "Etre vainqueur c'est peu; mats, etre grands, c'est tout." (English translation: To conquer means little, but to be great means everything.) OF ALBERT SAMAIN'S lyric poetry, Tobin said, "It sounds like KU Director To New York Robert Baustian, Professor of Orchestra, is in New York City for rehearsals of the three performances the opera "Ballad of Baby Doe" that he will conduct for the New York City Center Opera Company. The first performance will be Monday. Baustian, who has since 1957 been both conductor of the KU symphony and a conductor for the summer season of the Santa Fe (N.M.) Opera Company, has probably had more experience with this American opera by Douglas Moore than any other director. He has conducted it at KU, at Santa Fe, and on tour with the Santa Fe company in West Berlin and Belgrade, Yugoslavia. On the European tour he shared the podium with Igor Stravinsky. Baustian before coming to KU was second conductor of the Hessian State Theater in Wiesbaden, Germany. He was the only American conductor on full-time appointment with a European opera company. WARNING Stay away from British Motors There is a possibility of becoming infected with the Sports Car fever! The SP fever will doom you to years of pleasure and excitement. If you are brave and full of red blood, bring that great mass of Detroit Iron in and become infected with a happy little Sports car. WARNING—if you can't stand pleasure,stand away. 1116 W.23rd BRITISH MOTORS You Name It... We've Got the LEVI's You Want! Lawrence, Kans. - Unshrunk Levi's - Corduroy Levi's in 4 Colors - Pre-Shrunk Levi's - Stretch Levi's in 5 Colors - Slim-Fit Levi's in 7 Colors "Come In and Try Some On" LAWRENCE SURPLUS SURPLUS it was made to be put to music. It is personal poetry." Tobin spoke of the extensive correspondence that the poet carried with other authors, such as Anatole France and Andre Gide. 740 Massachusetts "He has none of the epic genius of Victor Hugo," Tobin said, "he is a maker of cameos." In Samain's "Musique Sur L'Eau," the tempo soared as Samain's verses sang of the beauty of nature and water. "He uses sound and rhyme," Tobin said, "for a hallucinating, intoxicating effect." Phone VI 3-3933 The poem, "Vision", explored one of the major themes of French symbolists, the element of escape. In this work, the exotic nature and lure of the far-away rings forcefully. In "Midi", Samain's "soul seemed to bask in the rays of the sun," Tobin said. Tobin also termed Samain as a "magician of sound and color and imagery." Although each of the selections read was in French, without translation, the rolling lyricism and the short staccato of humorous verses were not lost on the non-French-speaking student. The interpretation of mood and depth by the professor transcended the language barrier. SpiritualistLaudsFaith As Healer of All Needs By Lacy Banks The lecturer, Mrs. Naomi Price, is a member of the Board of Lectureship at the Christian Scientist Church of Christ in Boston, Mass. She has been working in the "faith healing" or "understanding healing" mission for 25 years and has traveled throughout the world. The root of all physical and spiritual sicknesses is spiritual, a London Christian Scientist said last night before a 35-member group attending a Christian Science lecture in the Union. THE CHRISTIAN SCIENTIST believes that the cause of all ills, she said, is spiritual. He understands through prayer, faith and understanding that the law of God and the law of good are the greatest forces on earth, she continued. Since she has dedicated her life to the Christian Science mission "as many other people who have also been healed," she told the group about many of her experiences of healing and what is basically meant. and healed through close communion with the "Divine Mind that governs the entire universe and through whose power all are saved." Mrs. Price herself was an invalid, she told the group. She was saved "Once the individual fully acknowledges these points the inevitable result is healing," she said. HEALING IS the sign, the life-like nature of Christian Science, she said. "The basis of our treatment is the realization and belief that spiritual power of God and good meets all human needs. It combats despair, disease and even physical slavery," she continued. "One can even be healed by merely listening to a lecture or a radio," she said. "I have seen this happen to people several times. This faith healing knows no limits. But it requires that one free himself of erring moral thought." Patronize Kansan Advertisers Platinum $9.95 Town & Country Shoes make a game of fun flats Pick your pastime. Whatever it is, there's a Town & Country flat in our collection that's just right for your active or passive pleasure. My Treat Black Red Platinum $9.95 Royal College Shop 837 Mass. VI 3-4255 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 5, 1965 Undisturbed Wildlife Thrives On Reserve Near Lawrence By Bob Curtright The Natural History Wildlife Reservation, near Lawrence, has been totally untouched by man for 17 years. The purpose of the reservation was "to establish a place where native Kansas animals and plants can be observed and studied in their natural, undisturbed native habitat," E. Raymond Hall, director of the Natural History Museum, said. In 1947, Chancellor Deanne W. Malott agreed with Prof. Hall and they suggested to the Board of Regents that the University purchase a tract of land for use as a wild life center. Prof. Hall said, "Natural areas preserving samples of the original flora and fauna in an undisturbed state are almost completely lacking in Kansas, therefore, this place will be more useful as it progresses toward an ecological climax." IN 1948 THE Board of Regents approved the idea and bought 590 acres $6 \frac{1}{2}$ miles northeast of Lawrence. Hall explained that he and his colleagues have learned a great deal from observing the natural changes on the reservation. "One of the most obvious changes was in plant succession," he continued. "In the absence of fire and grazing, the prairie gave way to forest areas." Hall also mentioned that the species of animal on the reservation are constantly changing in number for mysterious reasons. "The plains skunk, the box turtle and the pocket gopher have all disappeared from the reservation and we can't explain why," he said. Other animals such as the bog lemming, the white-tailed deer and the long-tailed chat have also mysteriously appeared. MANY STUDENTS and faculty members are familiar with the reservation through field trips in biology and botany, but "Nobody experiments on the wild life on the reservation itself." Prof. Hall said. Experimentation done in connection with natural history is conducted on an adjoining piece of land the University acquired in 1856 from John D. Rockefeller Jr., Prof. Hall said. D. Rockefeller J.P., Prof. Han said. The Rockefeller Experimental Tract, as it is called, is 160 acres reserved for University-affiliated projects. "Some have no immediate practical applications," Prof. Hall said, "but most are devoted to parasites, carriers of diseases, and agricultural pests because of their economic importance." One project is to revolutionize the biological survey by bringing the fields of biology and engineering together according to Hampton Shirer, associate professor of biochemistry and physiology. PROF, SHIRER, also associate professor of electrical engineering, in collaboration with Henry S. Fitch, director of the reservation, began formulating plans in July 1964 for electronically tracking animals. "Most of our work is still in the preliminary stages because our project is only six months old, but we're now beginning to get the first results." Prof. Shirer said. Shirer explained that the project is based on a central recording facility using modern electronic techniques to study animals in their own environment without disturbing them. "Before this, the only way we had to track animals was to employ live-traps. Their day-to-day range could be found only by correlating when and where they were trapped." Shirer said. He added that accuracy often suffered because the natural environment had to be disturbed to collect the data. "WITH THE new apparatus, however," he explained, "we can attach sensors connected to the central recording facility directly to dormant animals such as hibernating turtles. For more active animals, we can surgically implant a radio transmitter called a telemeter into each one and electronically track his movements." Shirer also said that physiological information such as body temperatures and heartbeat can be obtained from the transmitters. "This way we can tell how the environment effects the animal directly." Prof. Shirer said. "We can find out what things cause his heart to speed up or slow down, such as the sight of a natural enemy or prey." Future plans for the experimental tract include the possibility of radioactive system for tracking animals." Prof. Hall said. Experiments along this line are now being conducted at Oak Ridge, Tenn., he said European Study Trip To View Architecture On June 9 approximatel-20 students will leave New York City for an eight-week tour of France, Italy, and England. The purpose of the trip is to view and study the architectures of Europe. David R. Hermansen, associate professor of architecture, will guide the tour and lecture on the different buildings seen. Six hours of credit in either the history of architecture or humanities will be given to those students on the tour. The group will spend three weeks in Italy—primarily in Florence and Rome. From Italy the students will go on to Paris. Prof. Hermansen said that Paris is the first European city whose architecture "conformed to the needs of the Industrial Revolution." The final two and one half weeks of the tour will be spent in London and western England. Special emphasis will be placed on the great cathedrals in England. Tuition, transportation, and all other expenses for the nonresident student amount to $1,525. Expenses for the resident student are slightly less, Prof. Hermansen said. L Georges Pipe Shop once a year St. Patrick's Day Special 727 Mass. The man who knows the luxury of a fine pipe will want to save this list of selected clay bowl once-a-year specials. Dutch Sweet Clays . . . . . . . . 39 Dutch Churchwarden Clays . . . $1.00 Antique Porcelain Cloisonne . . . $4.95 Doorroker Mystery Pipe . . . . . $1.50 Baronite Deluxe . . . . . . . . $4.95 Delft Blue (Hand Painted) . . . $1.75 Baronite Sherlock Holmes, 2 tone . $4.95 Baronite Sea-Foam Pipe . . . . . $2.50 Delft Blue Folding Shoe Pipe . . $2.50 Folklore Hand Painted Pipe . . . $5.95 Baronite Two-Tone Pipe . . . . $2.95 Dutch Wine Pipe . . . . . . . . $7.95 Ottoman Hookah . . . . . . $8.95 Delft Blue Turkish Water Pipe . . $9.95 Hand Painted Turkish Water Pipe $14.95 'Deputy' to be Discussed William R. Reardon, professor of speech and drama, will present his critical analysis of Rolph Hochhuth's controversial play, "The Deputy," at a supper meeting of the B'nai B'rith Hillel Counselorship. The meeting will be held at 5 p.m. Sunday in the Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive. This play, dealing with the role of the Papacy during the mass extermination of the Jewish population of Europe—specifically the relations between Pope Pius XII and Hitler—has been banned in many parts of Europe and was picketed in New York this year when it opened. When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified YOUR EXCLUSIVE KEEPSAKE DEALER IN LAWRENCE Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 MASS. NAPOLITA JEWELRY NAPDIIT MERGENALIA VALENCIA Exciting New Designs VALENCIA SCANDIA GOLDEN SMOOTH NOVA True artistry is expressed in the brilliant fashion styling of every Keepsake diamond engagement ring. Each setting is a masterpiece of design, reflecting the full brilliance and beauty of the center diamond...a perfect gem of flawless clarity, fine color and meticulous modern cut. Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS The name, Keepsake, in the ring and on the tag is your assurance of fine quality and lasting satisfaction. Your very personal Keepsake is VERONA HOY F awaiting your selection at your Keepsake Jeweler's store. Find him in the yellow pages under "Jewelers." Prices from $100 to $2500. Rings enlarged to show beauty of detail. $Trademark registered. HOW TO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING OR POSITIONING INVESTIGATION GOOD HOMEkeeping GUARANTEES MANAGEMENT IN ASSOCIATION WITH BUSINESS OR GOVERNMENT Please send new 20-page booklet, "How To Plan Your Engagement and Wedding" and new 12-page full color folder, for both only 25¢. Also, send special offer of beautiful 44-page Bride's Book. Name___ Address. City Co KEEPSAKE DIAMOND RINGS, SYRACUSE, N.Y. 13202 Friday, March 5, 1965 University Daily Kansan --- Page 7 THE RED DOG INN presents FREE T.G.I.F. FRIDAY THE EGYPTIANS & THE CRABS Tonight THE EGYPTIANS A cool trio sporting sunglasses, short sleeve sport coats, turbans, and out of sight sounds, are back again by popular demand. They will be joined by THE CRABS to present a tremendous show. COVER $1.00 Saturday, one night only The Derby Revue THE ASTRONAUTS The Del Montes — Soulful Marva — The Fabulous Derbies The Astronauts Wednesday, March 10 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 5. 1965 VISTA Provides Relief to U.S. Poor The Volunteers in Service to America, VISTA, provides an opportunity for young adults to serve in a program to aid the nearly forty million people of the United States who live in poverty conditions. Making this statement at a VISTA seminar yesterday, Mrs. Mary Ann Wolfe, in charge of evaluating applications for volunteers for VISTA, stressed on the dire need for more volunteers. REVEALING some facts about poverty in this country, Mrs. Wolfe said, "The main cause of these unfortunate people's misery is ignorance; ignorance about the facilities that could be made available to them. Here is where the role of the volunteer comes in." VISTA is one of the major anti-poverty programs administered by the President's Office of Economic Opportunity, headquarters for the nationwide war against poverty. VISTA provides trained volunteers to work with people in poverty areas to help break the cycle of poverty. "Working in rural and urban areas across the nation, these volunteers use a wide variety of abilities; from general leadership and organizational abilities to specific skills in education, home management, recreation, neighborhood organization and other fields," Mrs. Wolfe said. MRS. WOLFE worked for more than two years selecting Peace Corps volunteers. Her interest in the problems of poverty was first demonstrated in the Los Angeles Public Housing Authority, where she did slum clearance and interviewing, and later on in volunteer work with hospitalized and underprivileged children in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. She was also the secretary of the Massachusetts Committee on Migrant Workers. Her husband, Dr. Gregory B. Wolfe is Chief of the Office of American Republics in the Bureau of Intelligence and Research, Department of State. Speaking on the training program for volunteers, Mrs. Wolfe said, "VISTA volunteers train for 4-6 Official Bulletin TODAY Catholic Mass, 5:00 p.m. St. Lawrence and during Mass; Saturdays, 4:30 a.m. and 7:30 Mass; Sat. 4:30 a.m. and 7:30 Ph.D. Examination, Marlin E. Schech, March 5. 3:00 p.m., Child Research Laboratories, 1043 Indiana. Major in speech and drama. Psychology Colloquium 4:00 p.m. Psychology Colloquium Dr. Bidault Bijou *Consent, Formation*, by Dr. Bennett Children's Theatre, "Johnson Moonbream Silver Arrow," 4:30 p.m. p.M. Mary Hall. Wesley Foundation Evensong, 5:00 p.m. Methodist Center. 1314 Oread, Hillel Friday Night Services, 7:30 p.m. Highway Community Center, 917 Highland Drive Rock Chalk Revue, 8:30 p.m. Hoch Auditorium. TOMORROW Teaching Candidates Interview sched- ing institution, Township, High School, secondary. Education Lecture, 9:00 a.m. Dr. H. Alan Robinson, University of Chicago. "A New Concept in Remedial Instruction." Bailey Auditorium. Children's Theatre, "Johnny Moonbeam the Silver Arrow," 2:00 p.m. Murphy Hall. Confessions, 4-5:00 p.m., 7-8:00 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel. Rock Chalk Revue, 8:30 p.m. Hoch Auditorium. Catholic Masses: 8:00 a.m. St. Lawren a.m. and 11:00 a.m. Friar Hall, Theatre a.m. and 11:00 a.m. United Campus Christian Fellowship, 9:15 a.m. Study Seminar; 10:45 a.m. Study Seminar; 5:15 p.m. Evening Fellowship, UCCF (Westminster) Center, 1204 Oread Quaker Meeting, 10:30 a.m. Danforth Congress Friends Meeting welcomes visitors. KU Intramural College Bowl, 2:30, 3:15. 4:00 d. m. Kansas Union. Joint Concerti: 3:30 p.m. Sigma Alpha Joint Concerti: 3:30 p.m. Phi Mu Alpha. Swarthout Renaissance Hall. Hiliel Cost Supper, 5:00 p.m. Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive. Dr. William R. Reardon, professor of speech and drama, will speak on Rolph Hochhuth's controversial play. "The Deptty." Sports Speakers, "Venture for Victory." 7:30 p.m., Free Methodist Church, 802 Derr. Tenn., Lawrence. Speakers: Don Odell, Kenny Scholz, Nolen Ellison, former KU basketball player, now asst. coach, Summer high school, Kansas City; and Jeff Simons. Kansas State basketball player (spon- sor) interdenominational Youth for Christ) Newman Forum Lecture, 8:00 p.m. A Bret Waller, curator of KU art museum 'The Meaning of Contemporary Art.' Forum Room, Kansas Union. weeks, and then spend the rest of a year living and working in low income communities to help provide economic opportunity. A VISTA volunteer is provided with a living allowance that will be enough to get by in the community where he serves. A sum of $50 for every month of service is set aside by VISTA to be paid the volunteer at the end of his assignment. "THE MAJOR consideration in selecting volunteers are: matching skills of the applicant with the job to be done; and determining if the applicant has shown the qualities of character and personality which equip him to stay with a job," Mrs. Wolfe said. KU students who are interested in this program should contact VISTA Publicity Chairman Miss Carol Borg, Manhattan junior, or Peace Corps Chairman Miss Donna Hanneman, Junction City junior. Both of them are working to coordinate the efforts of KU-Y, which acts as the information office of VISTA. One of France's leading existentialist philosophers will deliver a lecture at the University of Kansas at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Fraser Auditorium. Existentialist Plans Talk on Myth of God He is M. Gabriel Marcel, who will discuss "The Myth and Death of God in Contemporary Thought." Prof. Marcel has had a long career as teacher, public servant, dramatist, and philosopher. In 1949 he was awarded the Grand Prize for Literature of the French Academy, and in 1955 he received the National Grand Prize of Letters. He was elected a member of the Academy of Moral and Political Science in 1952, and holds the rank of Officer in the French Legion of Honor. In 1949 and 1950 he delivered the Lord Gifford Lectures at the University of Aberdeen, then in 1961 the William James Lectures at Harvard University. Several of his best known philosophical works have been translated into English. They include "Metaphysical Journal," "Homo Viator," "The Mystery of Being," and most recently "The Existential Background of Human Dignity." Corporation Lawyer To Join Law School A new law professor will join the KU law school faculty next semester. He is Arthur H. Travers Jr., who is currently practicing in Chicago with the Meyer, Friedlich, Spiess, Tierney, Brown and Platt firm which is considered to be one of the biggest law firms in Chicago. Travers received his A.B. degree from Grinnell College in Iowa in 1957. He was graduated Phi Beta Kappa and also served as president of the student body. He obtained his L.L.B. degree from Harvard in 1962, graduating Magna Cum Laude. He also served as editor of the Harvard Law Review for two years. Travers has been employed by the Chicago firm since his graduation from Harvard and has specialized in corporate law. Travers will remain employed in Chicago until this summer, when he and his wife plan to move to Lawrence. James K. Logan, Dean of the Law School, said that Travers will teach agency and partnership, corporations and other courses in the business law field which have not yet been determined. Logan said, "The KU law school is very pleased to attract a man such as Travers, who has had various offers from other schools. He has intellectual and personal qualities which promise greatness as a professor." Ford Motor Company is: vitality --they can affect hundreds of jobs and involve millions of dollars. You play in the big leagues—early—at Ford Motor Company. An example: Bob Bowen's experiences in marketing. Robert Bowen B.S.N., Northwestern Univ. M.B.A., Harvard Univ. Critical importance and vigor are fused into this one meaningful word, vitality. What does this mean to you?a graduate about to make the major decision of career selection. By selecting a company with vitality, you'll find more challenging and rewarding work. Ford Motor Company is such a firm. At our Company, you'll have the advantages and resources of a large corporation, along with the high degree of personal responsibility you'd expect in a small one. For our Company is composed of many small management teams, each with responsibility for a specific activity. Activities so vital, Early in Bob's career, he helped prepare comprehensive reviews of our current and planned marketing activities. He also studied special problems in market representation. Later, he was assigned to one of our Product Planning Offices. Here, future vehicle concepts are explored with accompanying financial, marketing and production factors. Market research is conducted to determine trends in customer preferences. Critical data like this led to the design and development of the highly successful Mustang. Maybe vitality is what you've been seeking in a position—and in an employer, too. We also offer the opportunity for early responsibility and the pay that goes with it. See our representative for the complete story when he visits your campus. THERE'S A FUTURE FOR YOU WITH.. Ford MOTOR COMPANY The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan An equal opportunity employer --- Friday, March 5, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 9 KU Faces Cowboys in Season Closer Hank Iba's Oklahoma State Cowboys, already assured of a piece of the Big Eight Conference basketball title, can put all the marbles in one basket Saturday afternoon with a victory over its lone contender, Kansas. The Cowboys set sail for Lawrence with a 10-2 record compared to KU's 9-4 mark and an O-State victory would give the Pokes their first outright crown since joining the league in 1958. The OSU-KU cage rivalry is one of the most colorful in the nation. This is the 62nd game in the series that started in 1926. KU has won 33 and OSU 27. But, State's Henry Iba holds a 28-27 edge over the Jayhawks and his battles with Mr. Oread's Phog Allen are still talked about. Of course, the first time Iba and new KU mentor Ted Owens met they promptly set a new series record! It was State's 68-64, four-overtime win in Gallagher Hall last month. This is the kind of series it is. You don't know what to expect, except you know it's going to be exciting. Wesley Works Well in the Shadow Of Wilt "Big Dipper" Chamberlain By Bill Osthoff International By Bill Osthon United Press International United Press International Big Walt Wesley, the KU 6-foot-11 pivot, is living in the giant shadow of his idol Wilt Chamberlain. Wesley, a junior, wears Wilt's old uniform—No. 13, and has Wilt's old disc jockey radio show on the KU campus. But most important to Jayhawker followers, Wesley is the Big Eight Conference's biggest scoring threat since the "Big Dipper" roamed the Midlands in the "Fifties." Each of the 16,000 passes thrown to the current KU star by coach Ted Owens have paid off handsome dividends. During each Kansas practice session Owens, in his freshman year as Jayhawk mentor, fires Wesley 150 passes. Wesley got off to a respectable start with a better than 19-point average during the first semester but those passes began to show after semester break. evil and ill 'BIG DOE' — KU center Walter Wesley gets his final chance at cracking, the Big Eight individual and field goal scoring records tomorrow when the Jayhawks tangle with the Oklahoma State Cowboys. The 'Big Doe,' as Wesley calls himself on his weekly radio show, has been scoring at a 30-point clip in guiding Kansas to six victories in its last seven starts that have kept alive the Jayhawks' slim hopes for a share of the conference crown. Monte Johnson, KU's assistant athletic director and a former teammate of Chamberlain's, says Wesley "is a better shooter with a softer touch than Wilt but he is not yet the shot-blocker and rebounder Chamberlain was—not yet anyway." His conference pace is 27.0 and he needs just 19 points in his season finale Saturday to set a new Big Eight scoring mark. The old record of 25.9 was set by former K-Stateer Bob Boozer in 1959. Wesley is averaging nine rebounds a contest and blocks between four and five shots per game. "He's playing as well as any center in the country today, bar none," Owens declares. Rival coach Tex Winter of Kansas State remarks "that the first time I saw him I thought it was luck, more. But after seeing him more, he shoots that well against anybody from anywhere on the floor. Phone in your Classified Ad "Why he hit 14 of 19 shots against us in Columbia and finished with 34 points. But the great thing about him in that game is he sat out 15 minutes with foul trouble. The pro scouts are lickin' their chops over him," Vanatta adds. "I've got to go along with Tex. Wesley is tops in the country as far as college centers are concerned. "I feel he's the best college center in the country today." Winter claims. And Missouri coach Bob Vanatta agrees: Chamberlain, who is Wesley's idol, had occasion to see Walt last year when he averaged 10.5 and started only five games as a sophomore. "I think this kid is an outstanding professional prospect because of his size, mobility and shooting," Chamberlain said. Outstanding centers are not unusual to the KU fan, who has cheered not only Chamberlain but others such as: B. H. Born, Clyde Lovellet, Bill Bridges, and Wayne Hightower in the past 12 years. All except Hightower guided the Jayhawkers into the NCAA playoffs and Kansas fans are hoping Wesley will follow suit. CLASSIFIED AD RATES 1 DAY $1.00 3 DAYS $1.50 5 DAYS $1.75 NONE BUT THE BRAVE Granada TREATMENT Telephone VI 3-5788 GOOD LITTLE GIRLS GO WHEN THEY WANT TO BE BAD ? Ends Tonite — "NONE BUT THE BRAVE" Granada THEATRE ... Telephone V13-5788 Starts SAT... WHERE DO GOOD LITTLE GIRLS GO WHEN THEY WANT TO BE BAD? JAN-MARGRET · FRANCHOSA DRIETYNLYCE · MCKAY · TIFFIN THE PLEASURE SEEKERS Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone V13-1065 NOW! Week Nights 7:30 only Sat. Mat. 2:00—Eve. 7:30 Sun. 2:00-5:00-8:00 Adults $1.00—Children 50c “IT'S A MAD, MAD, MAD, MAD WORLD” Ends Tonite — "NONE BUT THE BRAVE" Granada THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5788 Starts SAT... WHEN DO GOOD LITTLE GIRLS GO WHEN THEY WANT TO BE BAD JAN-MARGRET • FRANCIOSA TONY GREENWATER PAMELA LYNLEY • MCKAY • TIFFIN THE PLEASURE SEEKERS ANN-MARGRET · FRANCOSA CORRÉ LYNLEY · MCKAY · TIFFIN THE PLEASURE SEEKERS Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI-3-1065 NOW! Week Nights 7:30 only Sat. Mat. 2:00—Eve. 7:30 Sun. 2:00-5:00-8:00 Adults $1.00—Children 50c “IT'S A MAD, MAD, MAD, MAD WORLD” IIC Varsity THEATR ... Telephone VI3-1065 The Jayhawks are the tallest and hottest thing going in the Big Eight at the moment. Forwards AI Lopes (6-5) and Riney Lochmann (6-6), along with "Wonderful Walt" Wesley (6-11) on the pivot give the Jays the biggest front line in the league. In reserve, there is rugged sophomore Ron Franz (6-7), so the Cowboys again face a distinct height disadvantage. KU guards are crafty Del Lewis (6-1) and David Souchte (6-1). In other games Saturday, Missouri invades Kansas State and Iowa State plays at Colorado. Missouri can clinch at least a tie for third with a victory over Kansas State and Colorado will be out to snap a three-game losing streak against the Cyclones. La Pizza 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 30-Minute Delivery Service Guaranteed! Pizza, Spaghetti Chicken, Ravioli Steaks, Sandwiches Shrimp Hamburgers TRENDING 1. I've been weighing the possibility of becoming a perpetual student. Last week you said you were considering the merits of mink farming. W 2. With graduation drawing near I realized how much more there was for me to learn. You didn't also realize, did you, that when you graduate your dad will cut off your allowance? 3. I must admit the thought did enter my mud. M Has the thought ever entered your mind that you might get a job and make a career for yourself? 4. What about my thirst for knowledge? Just because you work doesn't mean you have to stop learning. A 5. You mean earn while learning? A Right. And you can do it at Equitable. They'll pay 100% of your tuition toward a qualified graduate degree. At the same time, the work is challenging, the pay is good, and I hear you move up fast. A. A. 1941 6. But what do I know about insurance? With your thirst for knowledge, I'm sure you'll be the star of their development program. Make an appointment through your Placement Office to see Equitable's employment representative or write to Edward D. McDougal, Manager, Manpower Development Division for further information. The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United States Home Office: 1285 Ave. of the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10019 ©Equitable 1965 AnEqual Opportunity Employer Page 10 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 5. 1962 World Spotlight English Novelist Near Death ST. JEAN-CAP-FERRAT, France-(UPI)—W. Somerset Maugham, wrinkled and almost blind at 91, remained gravely ill today with congestion of the lungs at his celebrated villa on the French Riviera. But the grand old man of English letters was fighting hard for life. Thursday night, his doctor authorized him to "take a few steps in his room" when his temperature went down. Formosa Vice-President Dies TAIPEI—(UPI)—Chen Cheng, vice-president of Nationalist China, died today. He was 67. Chen was suffering from cancer of the liver. The vice-president, the successor to President Chiang Kai-shek, had been ill and on leave of absence from his duties since last fall. Chen's post, according to the constitution, will be left vacant until the next elections in March of 1966. 'Enforcer' Denied Legal Move NEW YORK—(UPI)—Norman 3X Butler, a Black Muslim "enforceer" charged with homicide in the slaying of Malcolm X, lost a legal move Thursday to get out of jail on a writ of habeas corpus. Butler's lawyer, John Williams, argued before Supreme Court Justice John Mullen that his client had never been linked by testimony or witnesses to the assassination of Malcolm X and should therefore be granted his freedom. Pravda Cries U.S. Contradiction MOSCOW—(UPI)—The Communist party newspaper Pravda Friday accused President Johnson of talking about peace while American forces expand the war in Viet Nam. The military newspaper Red Star said the only solution to the problem lies in peaceful negotiations. "Any other road is dangerous to the cause of world peace and to the United States itself," Red Star warned. Pravda claimed there were "contradictions" in U.S. policy in Southeast Asia. Khanh Decides Against U.N. Talk UNITED NATIONS—(UPI)—Lt. Gen. Nguyen Khanh of South Viet Nam does not plan to press for a meeting of the U.N. Security Council to hear his account of Communist aggression in his nation, informed sources said today. Khanh, deposed as Saiqon's strongman in the latest of a series of counts last month arrived here Tuesday as a roving ambassador. He met for more than an hour Thursday with Secretary General Thant in talks he described as cordial and useful. USIA Pulls Out of Indonesia JAKARTA, Indonesia—(UPI)—U.S. Ambassador Howard P. Jones today formally announced the closing of all U.S. Information Agency services in Indonesia. Foreign Minister Subandrio promised Jones the Indonesian government would "give every assistance" to speed the orderly exit of USIA personnel from the country. Selma March May Be Halted MONTGOMERY, Ala.—(UPI)—A highly placed source in Gov. George C. Wallace's office disclosed today that state troopers will be used, if necessary, to prevent a planned march on the Capitol by Selma Negroes. Dr. Martin Luther King plans to lead the 50-mile march from Selma to Montgomery to confront Wallace and other state officials with voter registration complaints. Estes Now at Leavenworth DALLAS—(UPI)—Federal marshals secretly whisked bankrupt farm tycoon Billie Sol Estes from his Dallas County jail cell today and took him to the federal prison at Leavenworth to begin a 15-year sentence for fraud. Estes was acquitted Wednesday of charges he lied to the Department of Agriculture about his financial worth. But, Estes, 40, must serve a 15-year term for mail fraud and conspiracy. He was convicted at El Paso in March, 1963. The U.S. Supreme Court refused to review the case Monday. Union Director Urges I.D. For All Students' Belongings "All University of Kansas students would be extremely wise to have identification labels put on all their belongings," says Frank Burge, director of the KU Kansas Union. Burge said although most KU students are basically honest, mistakes are bound to occur in a busy atmosphere such as the Kansas Union, which has an average of over 8,000 people through it every day. Burge added although these mistakes usually tend to correct themselves, the process could be sped up greatly if students would take time to label such items as hats, coats and overshoes. The Union is in no way responsible for "lost or stolen" articles, but it does aid victims in any manner it can. Check rooms and racks are also provided for patrons of the Union, and a strict watch is kept on items in these areas. The Union has a definite, deliberate policy which it follows on the handling of lost articles. Burge contends that since a student's first reaction at losing something is to backtrack where he has been, items are kept where they were originally lost for a period of at least 24 hours. In other words, books left at the "Hawks Nest," will be kept there for one day. If the items have not been claimed within that period, they are turned in to the lost and found department. Burge added, that "Union personnel will make every effort to communicate with the owner of lost articles of their identity can be established." Students who have lost items in the Union are requested to contact the information booth, or call UN 4-3467. STABBED BY SHAKESPEARE? MACBETH BABY... IT'S EASIER WITH CLFFS NOTES! Don't stumble through the literary classics. CLIFF'S NOTES will help you make better grades! These study aids give you a clear, concise summary and explanation, chapter by chapter.CLIFF'SNOTES are now being used by high school and college students throughout the United States. There are over 100 different CLIFF'S NOTES covering the literary classics. at your favorite bookstore $1 WORT SICK SCHULE BILD GENE Most college students would also be wise to check into the possibility of insurance for lost or stolen articles Burge said. A check with a reputable Lawrence insurance agency showed that many students' parents have home package policies, which protects students while they away from home. This type of policy costs as little as $10 to $15 a year. or write: BETHANY STATION LINCOLN, NEBRASKA 68505 Cliff's Notes Cliff's Notes Burge said although some articles are actually stolen while they are in the Union, this is the exception, rather than the rule. The percentage of lost articles being turned into the lost and found department is extremely high. Suspected thefts should be reported immediately, however. E. P. Moomau, chief of campus police, said thefts should also be reported to his office as soon as possible. The fact that thefts do occur, is shown by an incident which occurred in the English Room of the Union in early January. Six ladies' purses, containing more than $20 among them, and identification cards, were all stolen. Moomau added that "youths" have been seen prowling around the Union area, and the campus police were doing everything to prevent such occurrences. Graduating engineers & scientists: Join IBM's new computer systems science training program Become a problem-solver and advisor to users of IBM computer systems in areas such as: - real-time control of industrial processes - communications-based information systems - time-shared computer systems - graphic data processing - computer-controlled manufacturing systems - management operating systems - engineering design automation All engineering and scientific disciplines are needed. IBM will give you comprehensive training, both in the classroom and on the job. Openings are available in all principal cities of the U.S. For more information see your placement director, or call the nearest IBM branch office. If you prefer, write to W. G. Williams, IBM Corporation, 1400 Baltimore Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri 64141. IBM DATA PROCESSING DIVISION Page 11 CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE 1963MG 1100 sedan, red. One owner. Must sell, need for Europe. VI 3-5051. 1963 Healy Healy, 3000 Mark 2, 18,000 miles, red, roll up windows, new tires, new battery, radio, wire wheels, overdrive, excellent condition. VI 1-2673- 3. 15 Sylvania portable TV, 21 inch, excellent condition, Minolta autocord double reflex camera, like new. Call VI 2-3155 after 7 p.m. 3-9 University Daily Kansan Garrad "type A" never used, still in original packing box, $50.00 - Tape recorder, Akai M6, semi-professional, 4 track stereo for $220.00 - 195-chev. 48, 4 bbl, sticker. $27.50. Call Lee Garrett, VI 2-3965. 3-9 WHAT WILL YOURS BE? 1956 Mercedes Benz 190SL 1956 Ford Mustang V8, 4 sp. Conv. 1956 MG Falcon 1956 Hambler Sta. Wag., OD, Air. 1956 MG 1100 Sedan 1956 Mercury Comet Sta. Wagon, AT & air. 1956 Sunbeam Alpine, HT 1956 Rambler V8, AT, Air 1956 MG Midget Conv. 1956 Dodge AT, PS, PB, V8 1956 WV conv. 1956 Cadillac Fleetwood 1956 VW Bus (Truck) (Pop scicle) 250 cc. Classics 1948 MG-TC Roadster 1946 Linc. Cont. Co.v. V-12 1116 W. 23rd British Motors Lawrence 2.5 Jaguar 58-3-4 L Sedan, white, stick plus overdrive, new paint, mechanically perfect, best offer, VI 3-1747 after 7:00 p.m. 3-9 BSA Motorcycle-1964 250 cc. Good condition Call Tom Walshmold, VI 36400- 3-505 Bibson Bass Guitar and New Kustom 3-005 Also make it stand, call, 3-8 Fender electric guitar new price $200, alternate Bassboard book, VI 2-9500 see at 1120 W. w1th. www.fender.com Auction — used bikes, all sizes. Name your bike. Call 212-587-6403. Blevins Bike Shop at 701 Michigan. 3-12 1959 Gardner 50" x 10" house trailer, good price, only lightly priced. Call 3- 2-0731 at 5 pm. HI-FI—Save on nationally advertised HiFi components. New equipment in factory sealed cartons with factory warranties. Call VI 3-4891. 3-15 BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMUMS: Occedient Term Life; conversion, Go-Back, and Move-Ove options Age 18 = $39.90 = $10,000. Age 20 = $34.40 = $10,000. Age 22 = $34.70 = $10,000. Call Wes Santee at VI, 31-265 for details. ti Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL V1 2-1901 for free delivery Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive notes, and course classes. Formerly known as the Theta ts Notes. Call V1 3-1428. $4.50. TYPEWRITERS, electrics, manuals, portables; sales, service, rentals. Olympia Hermes, Royal, Smith-Corona, Olivetti. Adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. BE THE LEADER OF YOUR PACK: Harley Davidson Sportster K, 750 cc, new clutch, and new brakes and tires. THIS IS NO HONDA. For further information about this beautiful machine CONTACT Monti Belot at VI 3-0700. tf Students, why throw money away on rent when you can own a 1962 Marlette 10 x 50. modern, two-bedroom mobile home with small monthly payments home is beautiful and in excellent condition For further information CALR 8-0937 or RI-8-0916. tf PORTABLE STEREO: Admiral's Finest—two carrying units, 1 for turntable and 1 for speaker systems (2 tweeters, and 2 full range woofers) $195 new. Will sell for good offer. CALL: Rusty Calkins at VI 3-5721. CHINA—Nortriki, Mayfair design. New, never used or even removed from packing. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk M. 3-7102. THE STABLES now open every day- Serving steaks, chops sea food, sand- sand management, new ambi- sphere. Party rooms available. Phone Vt- 3-9644 10: W. 71h. NEED A BAND? 30 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM. PHONE VI 2-2100. t Stereo-Fantastic Bargain on stereo system. Harman Kardon 30-watt amplifier, Garrard changer, electro-voice speakers. Must hear to appreciate beautiful tone. Call Hank at VI 3-4891 for bargain price. 3-10 5 string, long neck, folk banjo and case. Reynolds, VI 3-4846. Call 3-10 Reynolds, VI 3-4846. ENTERTAINMENT Now you can hear four excellent dance bands on stereo tapes: THE FURYS, THE BLADES. THE RUNABOUTS, THE NOMADS. Call VI 2-1791. ATTENTION PARTY THROWERS: Do you want the Beatles, the Kingmen, Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. finest references. CALL VI 2-1791. tt 6 years typing experience plus background in proofreading enables me to guarantee accuracy on college papers. New electric typewriter equipped for interchangeable type sets. Mrs. Berndt, 801 Michigan or VI 2-0400. tf Experienced typist wants typing in home. Reasonable rates, prompt service. Phone VI 2-3356. tf TYPING EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Secretary wants to type your thesis, dissertation, term paper, etc., on new IBM electric. Fast, accurate, and reasonable. Special symbols available. CALL Mrs. Shirley Gilbert, 934 W. 24th No. 11, at VI 2-854. Theses only on Royal Electric Pica Typewriter. CALL Mrs. Fulcher at VI 3-0558 tf experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter, Gestetter Duplicator. Mrs McEdowney, 2521 Alabama St. Phone Vl-8568 Experienced typist. 8 years experience in these and term papers. Electric type and accurate services. Resumes rates. CALL Ms. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648. experienced secretary will type term papers, law briefs, theses, etc., for students. Especially familiar with legal and business terms. Fast and accurate. Reasonable rates. Call Marsha Goff at VI-2577. tf Former Harvard and U. of Minnesota report on the changes in reports and theses. PHONE VI 3-7207 Term papers, Theses by experienced yplist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tf Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. Will do exe- carbon ribbon typewriter. Betty Muskrat 40 Indian or call VI 2-0991. Will do typing in my home. Accurate reasonable rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at VT 2-0210. experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing. Specialized in engineering and languages. Quick and understandable Electric typewriter. Call VI 2-12-87 Lypist, experienced with term papers heses and dissertations, will give you typing immediate attention with electri- machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048 Experienced secretary would like typing in her home, with new electric typewriter and accurate service. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Lancaster at VI 2-1188. Experienced typist wants theses, term- papers, and dissertations to be typeed on electric (pica type) typewriter. Please Call Pat Beck at VI 3-5630. tt Experienced typist will do dissertations manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 RI. V1. T-3-7485. tt Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will teach typewriter or theses. Experted. Electric typewriter. CALL Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8626. Experienced typist to do termapers, themes, reports and carbons. Fast and reasonable. Reasonable rates. between 8:00 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday through Sat. VI 3-0875. 3-8 Theses or term papers done in my home or office. *ALL Mills, Oxford at V.2-06734* *KILLER, Oxford at V.1-06734* Part-time undergraduate electrical assistant, primarily audio work. E.E. or Physics major preferred—apply room 4, Bailey Hall. 3-8 Male-call between 10-12 a.m. Interested primarily in Sophomores but will consider Freshmen and Juniors. Phone for work. VI 2-2063. Primary part time work. 3-5 HELP WANTED Hostess—Attractive lady for evening employment in the New Orleans Room, top wages—Phone VI 2-9465 or VI 3-4747. tf A third roommate to share modern apartments, two engineering students, and study condos. Phone 192-458 or see al. 38. The Oaks, 2345 Court. Court, aft. 10:00 p.m. 3-5 WANTED FLORIDA—Three girls to drive driving expenses to Florida (Daytona, Lauder堡, Daytona, Lauder break, Leaving Sat. April 3. Returning for classes. I-2 3155 evenings. 3-8 OLD CARS WANTED, top prices paid if you can drive it in, we'll consider it. Do it today! GI Joe's, 601 Vermont. tf Discotheque Dancers. Apply now. At the New Orleans Room. Phone VI 2-9465 Washing and ironing done in my home 1151 New Jersey St. Phone VI 2-2598 LOST Omega Calendar watch. Initials "T.R.S." on back. Reward. Call Tom Stevenson at VI 3-2550. 3-8 Feb. 11 or 12. I pair of black frame glass panels for return for Lee Whitlock, VI 3-0962. 3-5 MISCELLANEOUS BUSY PEOPLE—no time to spare for household cares? For professional cleaning of your home regularly or occasionally. VI 3-4408. CLEANING SERVICIE. VI 3-4408. 3-10 componet student will tutor undergraduate, graduate students in German -85 in hour. Call Sara Paretsky, VI 3-805. 3-9 Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-Q ribs that grandma and grandpa can eat, try ours on a regular order, or $2.60 per slab. Hours: 11:00 am to 11:00 pm. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-8510 3-31 IR., SR. AND GRADUATE STUDENTS MONEY AVAILABLE ON PERSONAL SECURITY, PHONE, CHUK ADKINS- BENEFICIAL FINANCE AT VI 3-84- 1234567890 PARTY TIME? Building available for PHONE, Ralph Frode at VI 3-3995. If SCHWINN BICYCLES - service all makes, parts and accessories, tires $1.46, tubes and baggage, luggage racks and it downs. SEE BEW. at 7th and Micr. or CALL VI 3-0581. Loans—buy, sell and trade—guns, fishing equipment, golf clubs, radios, tools, and misc. items, VI 2-9425. 3-5 friends coming this weekend? Looking for a place with good food at reasonable prices. HILLCREST BOWL RESTAURANT. Plenty of free parking 9th and Iowa. it's great for a date. Take her bowling at illerest Bowl. Finest lanes in the state. See me on Sund, and Sum. Also Mon, Tues, and Fri after 9:00 p.m. illerest Bowl, 9th and Iowa. Skip Aspen 7 days during spring break. Room and board, transportation. Two tickets, instruction and insurance. $128. KU-Y Skip Club. Contact Y office in the Union or Marty Knight. Sign up meeting March 9, 7:30 p.m. at the Forum Room. Rent electric, standard, and portable typewriters. Repair all makes of electric, vacuum, or mechanical business equipment (formerly Business Machines). 15 E. 8th. VI 3-0151. tf Attention: All persons interested in self defense training classes utilizing many of the same throws and smushes used in movies, contact Bob Moffitt at VI 3-7102 Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon.-thu-Fri, or all day Sat. or Sun. Phone VI 3-6231. tf WOODIES are more interesting when you get there the fun way ON A BIKE. You get there the fun way, repairs, woequipment, Gran Sport Cyclery, 9 W-14th. VI 3-3238. FOR RENT Furnished apts. at 940 Indiana. Off street parking, utilities furnished. Call VI 3-3566. 3-8 Furnished house for rent or lease in Eudora. Prefer three to four boys, 3 bedrooms, wall to wall carpet, fireplace, Available immediately. PHA HA 2-5063. Emery Apts. 1423 Ohio, 12 one bedroom luxury apts. April 1st. $85.00. Features w-w carpeting, disposal, range and ovens, refrigerators, furnished or unfurnished. Teachers or graduate students only, no children or pets. VI 3-8190. 3-16 Large sleeping room for men students with refrigerator privileges. Rent single or double. Close to town and Kansas University. 1247½ Kentucky. 3-9 Nice cool basement or upstairs apartment for spring semester. Double or single. Ideal for study. Phone Ray Woods at VI 2-1613. 3-8 Pleasant quiet one bedroom basement apartment. Call VI 3-8344. 3-5 Furnished apts.—2 blocks from Union Bldg. Remodeled and nicely furnished. Quick. Special rates for 6 months or longer; married couples preferred. 3-5 I 2-391-8 WOODIES are more interesting when you get there the fun way on A BIKE. You get there the fun way, repairs, wood equipment Gran Sport Cycle, 9 Wool 14th. VI 3-3238. 3-5 Extra nice roomy apt. in graduate house for graduate or older undergraduate man. campus, utilities paid. Welcome furnished private bathroom and kitchen Call VI 3-8534. We have available one double room and one single for graduate women. Also two single rooms or men. Cooking and laundry rooms. All VI 2-4 or come by 1244 Louisiana. 3-5 ARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30-50 people, jukebox, liquid refreshments and a changing area. Contact Don at the Gaslight Tavern for reservations CALL VI 3-1086. Room for rent -double or single. Ideal entrance. Phone VI 3-0326 after 5 p.m. Crescent Heights and OK Apartments— 1821, W 24th, or CALL IYI V-2-3711. †f (821, W 24th, or CALL IYI V-2-3711. †f TRANSPORTATION Fly to the Bahamas via Daytona Beach and then Lauderdale over Spring Vacation. Expenditure for travel must take two more passengers for $100 each. For further information call VI 3-8544. MUGS 24 OZS. - 35c Louise's Bar 1017 Mass. Southridge Plaza In Apartment Living Discover Quality 2350 Ridge Court VI2-1160 New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCE For the best in - ● dry cleaning ● alterations ● reweaving 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established - Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Fraternity Jewelry AL LAUTER 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 Balfour 24 HOUR SERVICE (TUES.-SUN.) - Brake Adjustment . . . 98 - ● Lubrication . . . . . $1.00 - Wheel Alignment - Automatic Transmission Page Fina Service 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694 Tune-up, Body Repair & Repaint, Automatic Trans. Service Wheel Alignment Lawrence Auto Service 10th & Mass. VI 2-0247 Mobil — Goodyear and DRY CLEANING COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY HONN'S OPEN 24 HRS. Across From The High School JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day 19th & La. VI 3-9631 BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY Register Now For Temporary Assignments Milliken's S.O.S. - NO FEE - Unlimited Office Opportunities Experienced Only Apply 9:00 - 5:00 p.m. or by appointment 211/2 Mass. VI 3-592 Typists - Stenos General Office and Bookkeepers Unlimited Office 1021 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. VI 3-5920 ALSO - Student & Thesis Typing Automatic Letter Service Telephone Answering Secretarial Service Notary Public . P.S. They're Professional! Milliken's S.O.S. 1021 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. HAVING A PARTY? VI 3-5920 We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy Ice cold 6 pacs—all kinds OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. TRAVEL TIME Ph. VI 3-0350 AIRLINES LET MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Spring Break and Summer Reservations Now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 5,1965 Split Foreign Aid Measures Suggested By Sen. Fulbright Chairman J. William Fulbright, D-Ak., of the influential Senate Foreign Relations Committee, introduced his own foreign economic aid bill Thursday. WASHINGTON—(UPI)The perennially embattled foreign aid bill was in its usual hot water today. But this time the trouble may not be as serious as it seems. Fulbright's action was no surprise. He has long urged that economic aid be separated from military assistance. And some administration officials believe that his move may actually help pass President Johnson's $3.38 billion aid package. He urged that Congress break with the custom of combining military and economic aid in a single package, a practice which has prevailed since foreign aid began shortly after World War II. Fulbright had said he would not pilot the full program through the Senate as in the past. But the introduction of his own economic aid bill—a measure which largely parallels the administration recommendations—means that he will now play some part in the expected Senate battle. Now the problem facing President Johnson is to find some way of obtaining Senate passage of a military aid bill. This could be done in two ways: Prevail upon another senator to introduce a strictly military aid bill, or wait until the House passes a combined bill—as expected—and then iron out the differences in a House-Senate conference committee. Two Approaches The administration did not seem too concerned about the problem. Senate Democratic Whip Russell B. Long, La., said, "It's immaterial to me . . . I'm willing to go along with either one of them, combined bill or separate bills." One of the reasons all administrations have packaged military and economic aid is to permit the somewhat unpopular economic program to ride the coattails of military aid. Congress in the past has been much quicker to approve military aid while objecting strongly to some economic aid projects. Leaves Job To Congress Thus far the administration has not introduced any aid bill of its own in either House or Senate. Officials maintain that it is up to Congress to work out the legislation, basing it on what President Johnson recommended in his message to Congress earlier this year. In the House, Chairman Thomas E. Morgan, D-Pa., of the Foreign Affairs Committee, maintains that economic and military aid should be combined. its cost and judge its accomplishments, rather than have its various elements submerged in the programs of the executive departments and agencies," Morgan said. "I DO NOT BELIEVE that military assistance and economic assistance are separate programs. I regard military and economic aid as having the same basic objective and as being part of the same thing." Morgan said. "From the point of view of Congress and the taxpayer, it is better to have Congress look at the foreign aid program as a whole in order to know Morgan's committee is well along in its work on a combined bill while the Senate Foreign Relations Committee's first hearings on the subject will come Tuesday—presumably on Fulbright's bill, unless a military aid bill is introduced before then. UK to Publish Report After Soviets Refuse By K. C. Thaler United Press International LONDON-(UPI)-Russia refused to circulate a controversial report from the International Control Commission (ICC) on Viet Nam to members of the Geneva conference which settled the Indochina war, the Foreign Office announced today. As a result, Britain will make known the contents on its own. The ICC, composed of India, Poland and Canada, reported on Feb. 13 about recent events in Viet Nam to the U.S.S.R. and Britain, who are coachairmen of the 1954 Geneva conference. Details of the report have not yet been publicly disclosed. BUT THE BRITISH Foreign Office said the document consists of a majority report from the Indian and Polish commissioners of the ICC and a minority statement from the Canadian commissioner on what has been happening in Viet Nam. Britain has decided, despite the refusal of the Soviets, to circulate the report to the members of the Geneva conference. It announced today it will release the contents in London as a white paper on March 8. THE RUSSIAN attitude was believed by observers to reflect Moscow's reluctance to commit herself to any initiative in the Viet Nam crisis. Government sources stated that Britain has received no reply to date to diplomatic soundings in Moscow on the prospects of an acceptable peace settlement in Viet Nam. The Soviet Union's reasons for refusing to circulate the documents were not disclosed. THE KREMLIN'S silence strengthened the belief in diplomatic quarters that the Soviet leaders still have not decided on their ultimate strategy in Southeast Asia beyond the general commitment to supply arms to the Hanoi regime in North Viet Nam. British government sources meanwhile reaffirmed determination to stand firmly behind the United States on Viet Nam policy. Le Treteau de Paris Theatre Company will perform two French Plays in the University Theatre March 14, as part of their annual tour of the United States. The productions are George Feydeau's "Feu La Mere De Madame" ("Madame's Late Mother"), and Jules Renard's "Poil de Carotte" ("Red Top"). In the cast for "Feu La Mere de Madame" are Jacques Duby, who played the role of Fincht in the Paris production of "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying," Jacqueline Duc, who performed in the show in its run at the Comedie Française; Francis Aubert, who will mark his second appearance in the U.S.; and Jacqueline Jefford, who began her studies in law, but abandoned them for the stage and study at the Conservatoire National d'Art Dramatique in Paris. THE SET DESIGNER for both of the productions is Andre Levasseur, who began his career with the house of Christian Dior, and since 1956 has become one of the prominent designers for opera, ballet and theatre in both France and England. THE DIRECTOR FOR "Poil de Carotte" is Henri Rollan, who began his association with the French theatre at the age of 17, and in 1948 was named as a "Societaire" in the Comedie-Française Company. His stigements for the Comedie-Française are numerous. Although his teaching and directing occupy too much of his time to allow for an acting career as well, in his earlier French Theater to KU The director for "Feu La Mède Madame" is Jacques Charon, who began his career with the Comedie-Française at the age of 22 and by the age of 26 had been made a "Società" or permanent member of the company. Plane Crash Kills Five in Snow Storm KANSAS CITY, Kan. —(UPI)— A twin-engine airplane crashed in a snow storm at Fairfax Airport today, killing five officials of the Biltmore Mobile Homes Co., of Santa Fe Springs, Calif. Identification of the victims was withheld pending notification of next of kin. The plane, a modified Beechcraft C18, had taken off from Kansas City, Mo., Municipal Airport bound for Albuquerque, N.M. years he appeared in a number of films, including a silent production of "The Three Musketeers." In the cast for "Poil de Carotte" are Miss Jefford; Francis Menzio, who toured the U.S. with the Le Treteau De Paris production of Jean Anoulih's "The Lark;" and Roger Lumont, who first gained prominence in 1963 when he won the Marcel Archard Prize for acting for his performance in John Steinbeck's "Of Mice and Men." TICKETS FOR THIS production may be obtained by calling Murphy Hall box-office. This show is not part of the major bill and will not be covered by KU ID or patron coupons. KU Supplies 10 Lecturers For Seminar A course that may be a "first" in Kansas higher education is being offered through the cooperation of six church-affiliated central Kansas colleges and KU this semester. Twenty-five students are enrolled in the Latin American seminar and will receive credit from their home institutions, Bethany College, Bethel College, Kansas Wesleyan University, McPherson College, Sterling College, and Tabor College. On 15 Mondays evenings during the semester the class meets from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at McPherson College in McPherson. KU is supplying 10 or 11 lecturers, who have been meeting informally for a pre-class dinner with about 15 professors from the cooperating colleges. "The response has been good and the question period often extends long after the seminar officially ends." Prof. Hugh H. Schwartz of the KU economics department and a coordinator of the program, said. The future schedule: Mar. 15, Robert D. Tomasek, political science, "The Politics of Revolutionary Societies," Mar. 22, William W. Stein, anthropology, "Development of Modern Latin American Culture"; Kalman H. Silvert, American Universities Field Service; May 3, Thomas M. Gale, history, "Twentieth Century Latin America;" May 10, Hugh H. Schwartz, economics, "Economic Problems of Latin America." F The Candlelight Room Opening FRIDAY, March 5th, 4:00 p.m. (Featuring St. Louis' Finest Beverage on Tap) PITCHERS Friday 4:00 - 5:00 p.m., 8:30-9:30 p.m. Saturday 8:30-9:30 p.m. - also serving fine food from the Gaslight menu - - soft lights - intimate atmosphere - OPEN EVERY FRIDAY 4-12 P.M. and EVERY SATURDAY 8-12 Located in the lower floor of the GASLIGHT Daily Hansan 62nd Year, No.94 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Monday, March 8, 1965 (AP) (Photo by Harry Krause) MEETING ADJOURNS TO THE HALL—Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe discusses the proposals made by the Civil Rights Council in the hall outside of his office. CRC members pictured include George Unseld (behind the Chancellor), Nate Sims (on Unseld's right), and Walter Bgoya (far right). The three men are CRC co-chairmen. Pam Smith, CRC secretary, stands with her back to the camera. The scene took place this morning at 10:30 a.m. 150 Sit-In-Stand-Out By Wescoe's Office A group of about 150 Civil Rights Council members and sympathizers staged a protest demonstration in Chancellor Clarke W. Wescoe's office today at 10:30 a.m. The group was led by Walter Bgoya, Tanganyika senior; George Unseld, Louisville, Ky., senior, and Nate Sims, residence and standing unknown. The three men are the newly elected co-chairman of the CRC. The election was held last night. The CRC members were protesting "the tacit approval of discrimination in campus housing." Seven demands were presented to the Chancellor: - THAT AN EXECUTIVE order be issued immediately by the Chancellor that fraternities and sororites should immediately abolish racially discriminatory practices. And further, that the University require fraternities and sororites to sign notarized statements that they do not practice racial discrimination. - THAT A BOARD composed of students, faculty, and administrators be established to deal with any complaints against organizations, landlords, etc., that have stated that they do not discriminate on the basis of race, but in fact, still do. - THAT THE ADMINISTRATION sever all ties with, and no longer accord either recognition or approved housing status to, any organization which fails to immediately sign the statement, or which is found by the board to discriminate on the basis of race. - THAT THE UNIVERSITY Housing Office investigate the rental policies of those seeking to register on the approved housing list and screen out those who do discriminate on the basis of race. - THAT THE SCHOOL of Education make public a policy that prohibits the assignment of any student teachers to schools or school districts which do in fact have racially discriminatory assignment policies. And further, that the School of Education prohibit its Teacher Appointment Bureau from letting any Board of Education or school which has racially discriminatory hiring practices from utilizing its services. THAT THE UNIVERSITY Daily Kanan no longer accept advertisements from landlords and/or organizations that practice racial discrimination. - THAT ALL STUDENT Council Bill number seven or comparable legislation be passed by the ASC and immediately signed by the Chancellor. The statement, which was mime-graphed and distributed to CRC members at the meeting, said the demonstrators would "remain in his office until the Chancellor has taken immediate action to include our demands in the policies and regulations of the University. "UPON SUCH ACTION, a pamphlet should be published by the University and a statement sent to the UDK for immediate release," it read. After two and a half hours of discussion and debate in the corridor outside the Chancellor's office the only statement which Chancellor Wescoe has made is that he will not issue an executive order as requested in the first demand of the Civil Rights Council and Interested Students Protest. He has also commented that the University Daily Kansan board will be meeting with the All Student Council to discuss the sixth demand. At a meeting held by the council last night in the Union, Sims suggested that perhaps the Whites in the group couldn't understand the situation because they hadn't been "sat" upon. He added no complaints concerning housing have been lodged in his office during the last two and a half years. Sims' comment brought disorder among the group as members began talking to one another. Some white members suggested that their coworkers be a little less emotional and more rational about the matter. AROUND 9:30 THE MEETING was adjourned, and those attending were invited to the Alpha Phi Alpha house to further discuss the matter. Once the group arrived, Sims took the floor and called for the support of his fraternity brothers in today's demonstration. About this time, Neil Stone, Shawnee Mission freshman, resigned as their president. Immediately after, Carol Borg, Manhattan senior, resigned as vice-president. Both resignations were accepted unanimously. Sims, Bgoya, and Unseld were then elected as tri-heads of the group replacing both the president and vice-president. Only the White officers resigned. Avery Attends Film Comedy, Sees Himself By Jacke Thayer Gov. William H. Avery watched his own performance in "From Topeka with Love" Saturday night at Rock Chalk Revue. The governor, his wife, and two children were members of Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe's party at the Revue. The film, a combination James Bond-Keystone Kops epic, was conceived by Hoite Caston, producer of the Revue. Filming was done in Topeka and at various spots on the KU campus. "This is one of the first years we've had most of the administration in attendance at the Revue, because it didn't conflict with any Big Eight meetings this year," Caston said. "IN ADDITION to Gov. Avery and the Chancellor, the dean of women, dean of men, dean of students, Vice-Chancellor Nichols and Mr. Gunn, administrative assistant to the chancellor, were there," he added. In the film, Mike Robe, Arkansas City junior, plays Agent 007.3 who carries the message to Wescoe. The mysterious black box in the "loaded" attache case is transported from Gov. Avery's office to the Chancellor's office in Strong. But not without many trials and hardships, most of them provided by the Kops and Odd Job, played by Richard Pratt, Olathe junior. Kops were Bob Stewart, Vancouver, B.C., senior; John Nance, Wichita senior; John Stover, Colby sophomore; David Martin, Coffeyville senior; and Tom Shumaker, Russell senior. What was in the box?—congratulatory cigars, with the message, "Budget Approved." THE PROLOGUE to the picture characterized the free-wheeling, side-splitting satire of all the inbetween acts: "Those participating in this motion picture do not necessarily approve, condone, or even understand the philosophies behind this epic," the prologue said. Opening film of the Revue, "La Doll's Vita," featured Hoite Caston as the bewildered and psychologically hazed KU freshman. Other inbetween acts staff members were Dwight Sutton, Wichita senior; Stan Metzger, Ozawiek sophomore; Connie McWilliams, St. Joseph, Mo., freshman; Bridgit O'Leary, Baxter Springs junior; Mike Griffith, Marysville sophomore; Tressa Kern, Kansas City,Mo., senior; Will Price, Wichita sophomore. Glen Bickle, KU traffic policeman, was stage manager. DEAN ACHESON, Western Springs, Ill., sophomore, was master of ceremonies. In an unplanned interval between the closing of the Revue and Tau Kappa Epsilon-Gamma Phi Beta singers, Acheson adlibed and lamented, "They didn't tell me about this part when I tried out!" Miss Kern was responsible for the choreography of the chorus lines and Bob Benson, Kansas City, Mo. senior, composed the original music for the Revue. "Their major purpose is to provide continuity between the various skits, but they are supposed to be subordinate to the skits, Caston said in speaking about the inbetween acts. "Some people thought this year they almost stole the show." "I do think they were the best inbetween acts seen in years," he concluded. Weather The weather bureau predicts clear to partly cloudy weather today through Tuesday, with a high in the upper 40's and a low tonight in the upper 20's. Light and variable winds will become northwesterly 10 to 15 miles per hour this evening. 101 (Photo by Don Black) "YOU CALL THOSE 'DUKES,' DUKE?"—The Duchess of Air-wick keeps a firm hold on her husband, the Duke, in the Alpha Phi-Alpha Kappa Lambda first-place winning Rock Chalk skit. The Duchess is Liz Smith, Salina sophomore, and the Duke is Bruce Bikales, Prairie Village senior. AKL-Alpha Phi Skit Wins Revue By Jacke Thayer Take one part lusty duchess, a pinch of wobbly-kneed duke, add a dash of smooth-talking "Bobby Stewart," and throw in a peasant bombshell—the result? A prize-winning explosion of laughter! "The Spouse That Roared," presented by Alpha Phi-Alpha Kappa Lambda, tested that formula Friday and Saturday nights and won top honors at the 16th annual Rock Chalk Revue. "IT'S A WONDERFUL FEELING!" said Carolyn Power, Kansas City, Mo., senior and co-director of the skit. "I couldn't attempt to calculate how many hours we spent on the skit, but it's been five months—since October 1. "We're especially happy since neither the Alpha Phis or AKL's have entered the Revue before." Co-director with Miss Power was T. J. Snyder, Independence senior. Students, faculty, administration, the All Student Council, the Civil Rights Council and queen contests all got their fair share of lampooning in the skit. The scene was the kingdom of Airwick and the action centered on the selection of a new queen of the ASC—the Airwick Social Climbers. The crusty duchess had held the position for 40 years (since the duke was contest judge), but the peasants were restless. Under the leadership of "Bobby Stewart," the peasants picked their own contestant and transformed her with the aid of the Improved Body Measurements (IBM) machine. The duke's true eye for beauty naturally chose the Machine-Made Maiden as the new queen. BILL SAMPSON, Topeka freshman, was named top male performer for his portrayal of "Bobby Stewart." Other cast members were Elizabeth Smith, Salina sophomore, as the duchess; Bruce Bikales, Prairie Village senior, as the duke; and Lyn Rambo, Kansas City, Mo., senior, as Alice, the transformed peasant. Taking second-place honors was "How the West Was Won or Let's Give It Back to the Indians," presented by Alpha Chi Omega-Sigma Phi Epsilon. The skit also won first-place honors for best scenery, costuming and the most original script. (Continued on page 9) N.Y.C. DEVOTOR MUSIC COMEDY DEVOTORS OF N.Y.C. THE DEVOTOR FESTIVAL (Photo by Harry Krause) NO JOB TOO TOUGH FOR PERCY—Percy Kent, mild-mannered sheriff of Wakarusa Gulch, learns the fat, fierce, Fred is coming to town. Percy was in the second-place winning Rock Chalk skit by Alpha Chi Omega and Sigma Phi Epsilon. The helpful citizen is Art Lorenz, Omaha, Neb., junior, and Percy is John Erickson, North Kansas City, Mo., senior. Percy's friend, Scarlet Ribbons, is Joan Danielson, Leawood junior. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 8, 1965 Rock Chalk Here's to Rock Chalk 1965! That loveable, laughable, satirical parody on life within these hallowed ivv-covered walls. My first vote goes to the films shown between acts. Poking good-natured, but often biting fun at the life of a lowly frosh, and jibing at the super-sophisticated way the state legislature lets our "higher-ups" know how they rate moneywise. What made these films the success that they were—as the audience reaction demonstrated—was the familiarity every member of the audience had with the subjects dealt with. IT WAS JUST PLAIN FUN TO SEE the "powers that be" in Strong Hall participate in the campus spoof. The traffic control booths, some of our run-down architecture, and our "fence-sitters"—each an integral part of campus life—drew their share of the barbs. It is true that the films had the advantages of having the whole campus for scenery, but with casts numbering less than forty and expenses far less than the organization skits, the films were by far the most popular attractions of the evening. These films dealt with those subjects which every KU student knows about and has probably griped about at some time or other. THE IN-BETWEEN-ACTS PRIZES, LE., "free speech" buildings and ground crew, also dealt with subjects which had universal campus appeal—the result was appreciation on the part of the audience. My second vote goes to Hoite Caston, producer of the 1965 Rock Chalk Revue. Bringing to this year's revue much theatrical experience and new ideas, Caston is to be credited with a production which looked more professional, ran more smoothly, and had new innovations. The dancing and costuming of this year's Rock Chalk certainly made the skits and the in-between-acts stand out from what they have been in the past. Only additional practice time could result in this and Caston was at least partly responsible for this. It was also evident that the skids had been polished and re-vamped from performance to performance. MY THIRD VOTE GOES TO THE ALPHA Phi-Alpha Kappa Lambda skit—and not just because they won the prize. The skit "The Spouse that Roared" symbolized best what Rock Chalk should be. Their good-natured jibes at the Airwick Social Climbers (alias ASC), Castle Rights Committee (better known as the CRC) and the Improving Body Measurements machine (IBM) brought laughter and applause from an approving audience. The key was that everyone was familiar with the subjects being satirized. They also satirized the 8th wonder of the world as Chancellor Wescoe's signing the Human Right's Bill, and the Unbelievable Daily Kingdom (alas, UDK)—once again relying on recent campus events and common campus institutions for their subject matter. THE OTHER SKITS HAD GOOD LINES. They also showed the tremendous amount of work that must go into a production like Rock Chalk, but none of the other skits made as good use of campus events to base satire—consequently the audience could not always follow exactly what the joke was. For instance—how many people know that a famous oil company has home offices in Bartlesville, Okla.—(the underprivileged people in Bartlesville referred to in the Kappa Alpha Theta-Kappa Sigma skit). The Sigma Chi's tried to put over the "Hallelujah Chorus" again this year with a different skit and different words . . . fortunately something like that only goes over once. The joke about the Indians who sell cokes at football games got as much appreciation as it deserved — not much, especially being borrowed from senior cheerleaders at the 1964 Senior Day. EACH SKIT HAD ITS HIGH POINTS AND its bloppers, and all had some good lines and some bad ones. Since 1950 when the idea for Rock Chalk originated the theme has been campus satire—and since 1950 the university has grown and changed to meet the needs of added enrollment. Fortunately or unfortunately the changes have resulted in more institutions (if the traffic control booths or the library checkers can be called institutions). And these institutions can be turned into more material for satire in the Rock Chalk Revue. But back to this year—my final votes goes to the Rock Chalk Revue . . . institution and an event. —Bobbetta Bartelt Music Unions KU living groups decided last week to hire only unionized bands for their social events. The decision came as a result of a "request" by the secretary of Local 512 of the American Federation of Musicians. The "request" actually informed the living groups that if they did not hire only union bands, they would be placed on the "unfair list." This means that living groups would be unable to obtain a union band. The union members in the Lawrence area consist of ten bands. It is unfortunate and unfair that KU living groups would have to comply with such demands, just so they can get bands for their parties. The prices demanded by the union bands are often somewhat high and many living groups simply cannot afford them. Where do they get their bands? Few organized houses can afford to spend $150 just for a band. But unless they want to be labeled UNFAIR (the italics were used in the union's letter) they have to hire only union bands, An interesting and very valid point was made in the discussion of college students working their way through school by playing in a band. Unless they pay $44 for the first year and $14 for each year after that, they cannot play for living groups' parties. It would seem obvious that if they are working their way through college, they cannot afford to pay union dues. I DO NOT UNDERSTAND why KU living groups had to submit to pressure from an organized minority in order for them to obtain bands for their parties. Their adopted policy makes it impossible for student non-union bands to be able to make any money playing for student parties. It is unfortunate that labor has become so organized that people in need of money and with a desire to enter the musical field cannot because they cannot afford it. It seems a vicious circle. — Leta Roth The People Say I PRESUME FROM THE TONE of Linda Ellis' editorial, "Discrimination," that she is not a Negro. To the Editor: The outstanding feature of her editorial was that it exhibited an ignorance most unbecoming to one entrusted with editorial responsibilities. In saving, "We should not be so zealous about minority rights as to forget the rights of others," she is using one of the oldest—and weakest—arguments against progress in race relations. She is blithely ignoring certain infringements upon basic rights of certain people for hundreds of years, abuses which continue, scarcely abated, today. She is ignoring the basic fact that legislation on race relations provides legal recourse for those who have been discriminated against on the basis of race, religion, or national origin. NOT on the basis of individual qualifications. (This fact was grossly misrepresented in her parable.) She is ignoring the fact that civil rights legislation carefully protects people against just such abuses as she fears, namely unfounded claims of racial discrimination brought against them. May Miss Ellis' ignorance become informed, may her midwestern viewpoint be enlarged, and may her bad editorial be forgiven. To the Student Bodv: Carol Borg Manhattan senior THE REGISTRAR'S OFFICE have been working on a plan to create a system of pre-enrollment at our University. The All Student Council heartily appreciates their work and, with the Registrar's Office, would appreciate any suggestions with regard to ideas or practices that should be incorporated into this program. Please do feel free to inform the Registrar's Office of any suggestions that you might have on this matter. Thank you. Michael Miner Lawrence senior Chairman of the All Student Council Johnny Moonbeam Throughout the year the University Theatre entertains audiences from the Lawrence area and KU with light, serious and avant-garde productions, but once each semester, the theatre devotes a presentation to children. Although the plays presented in the Children's Theatre Series deal with themes and stories appealing to the age group from five to 12, the productions are no less serious from the dramatic and technical aspects...if anything they are more difficult. Last Thursday, Friday and Saturday afternoons, the Children's Theatre presented its second production this year, "Johnny Moon-beam and the Silver Arrow." THE AUDIENCE WAS NOISY, RESTLESS AND EXPECTANT. But quieted when the house lights dimmed and the narrator, clad in "Davy Crockett" garb with only an umbrella replacing the nusket, strode down the main aisle. Sitting in a pool of silver light, he unwound the tale of daring and excitement about a young Indian boy, Johnny Moonbeam and his quest for the Silver Arrow. Burt Eikleberry, who portrayed the narrator, kept excellent contact with his junior audience by drawing them into the action many times. "Wouldn't you . . ." and "We'll have to . . ." were some of the phrases that caught and held the attention of the children. The story was an old one, one which some of the children were probably familiar with, but the players brought to life the dances and the customs of Indian-lore. THE MEDICINE-MAN (FRANK COX), ANGRY-LOOKING in his bison-headdress, did intricate Indian dances as he told Johnny (Steve Grossman) of the feats he must perform to win the Silver Arrow. Johnny had to steal the pouch of rain that hung from the neck of the Rain God; he had to take the fire from the neck of the Sun God; and finally, Johnny had to steal the maize that swung from the neck of the Earth God. And when he had captured all these, he had to return with them to his village. Tension mounted and the audience grew quieter as Johnny had his first encounter with the vicious Rain God (Connie Bohannon). The costuming of the god was colorful—as were the costumes of all the gods — and the face mask made the god seem even more ferocious. From the audience came cries "Watch out, Johnny," or "Be careful," as the hateful god would sneak up behind the unsuspecting warrior. Encounters such as these carried the action through the meeting and eventual over-powering of each of the adversaries. Finally Johnny had the rain, the fire and the earth all in his possession and was ready to start back to his camp to collect his Silver Arrow. ALL THE TIME THE NARRATOR HAS KEPT the audience informed as to exactly what Johnny is doing. This educational function became more evident through the play as Johnny, on his return to his village with his booty, was accosted by three beggars—one thirsty, one cold, and one starving. After meditation Johnny released the rain, fire and water to each, and returned to his village empty-handed. Through the encounters with the gods, much can be learned about the dance and dress and beliefs of the Indians. So the theatre turned into an educational as well as an entertaining medium. At first, empty hands meant failure, but the moral becomes obvious as the wise medicine man unveils the three beggars as the Rain God, the Fire God (Pat Melody) and the Earth God (Kay Habenstein), each in possession of his element. ALTHOUGH HE DIDN'T RETURN TO THE VILLAGE with his prizes, Johnny demonstrated the virtue of unselfishness in his giving, and consequently he wins the Silver Arrow. The play was short, and with all the action, the players held the attention of the younger audience very well. The bright costumes and fast-moving dances combined with the action of the play and the constant narration held the viewers in rapt attention. The production ended as the actors walked out into the audience greeting and shaking hands with the wide-eyed youngsters. Dailii'Ifänsan 111 Flint Hall UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom University ... 0106, business office University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became onewkly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Vancouver Leta Roth and Gary Noland Co-Editorial Editors NEWS DEPARTMENT Don Black ... Managing Editor Bobbie Bartelt, Clare Casey, Marshall Caskey, Fred Frailey, Assistant Managing Editors; Judy Farrell, City Editor; Karen Lambert, Feature- Society Editor; Glen Phillips, Sports Editor; Janet Chartier, Telegraph Editor; Harry Krause, Picture Editor. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT **Tom Fisher** ... Business Manager **Nancy Holland**, Advertising Manager; Ed Vaughn, National Advertising Manager; Dale Reinecker, Classified Advertising Manager; Russ Calkins, Merchandising Manager; Bob Monk, Promotion Manager; Gary Grazda, Circulation Manager. Monday, March 8. 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Six Win in College Bowl; Sellards Wins Division Sellards Hall, in a rematch growing out of a mix-up in the first round of competition last week, defeated the Kappa Kappa Gamma team to enter yesterday's College Bowl matches, and then went on to defeat Kappa Alpha Theta and Miller Hall to become the women's champion team. The dispute arose over a question with two correct answers last week in the Kappa Kappa Gamma-Hashinger No. 2 match. Hashinger was declared the winner. Hashinger then went on to play Sellards, but lost. WILLIAM CIBES. Altamont senior and chairman of the College Bowl Steering Committee, explained that the committee reviewed the protest issued by the sorority and reversed the decision on the first match thus eliminating Hashinger. The rescheduled match between the Kappas and Sellards ended in victory for Sellards. Cibes added that this was the first year in the four-year history of AWS Polls Open Thurs.; Will Elect 18 Polls for Associated Women Students' (AWS) elections will be open from 9:30 Thursday morning until 6:30 that evening, according to Joan Fowler, Shawnee Mission senior and co-chairman of the election committee. Polls will be set up in each women's living group. Results of the election will be announced Friday morning. This year two new offices were added to the AWS slate, senatorsat-large and a Fashion Board representative. SHERRY WHITCHER, Prairie Village senior and AWS president, said, "In the past, all offices have had too many restrictions and this has limited the number of qualified people. Having two senators-at-large and a Fashion Board representative with no restrictions gives others a chance to petition for these offices." Specific duties of the senators-at large will be determined after the election of the new Senate. The Fashion Board representative will co-ordinate activities of the Senate and Fashion Board. It will be her responsibility to see that the programs of the Senate and board complement one another. Miss Fowler said the addition of Fashion Board representative will be a big help to the Senate and board because the representative will be attending both meetings. In this way, she will know what their activities are. SUCH OFFICES AS PRESIDENT and vice president require specific qualifications to be eligible for the office. A woman must have served in the Senate one semester to run for president. To be eligible for vice president, a woman must have been a member of the House one semester. The Panhellenic representative must be from a social sorority. The Inter-Residence Council representative must live in the University Residence Halls. Twenty-two women form the AWS Senate. Eighteen are elected in the spring, two freshman women are elected in the fall, and there is one liaison from the House of Representatives. The House is composed of one representative from each organized women's living group on campus. They will be elected later this spring, and announced Honors Night. NAMES OF CANDIDATES were placed on the AWS election slate by the slate committee composed of all seniors on the AWS Senate. KU's College Bowl that a trophy for the women's champion team was given. Applications for office were available from AWS representatives in the various living groups. A briefing session was conducted for all women filing an application for office. CIBES EXPRESSED doubt that a woman's team would finish in the top place because of a lack of precedent, but said the final competition, to be held in two weeks, will be a close contest. "Usually the women's teams don't survive the competition like they have this year," he said. The six teams remaining after two weeks of elimination are Joseph R. Pearson No.1 and No.2; Templin No.1; Battenfeld; Sellards; and Miller. The applicants then took a test over the structure, function and purpose of AWS. The committee then drew up the slate from the applications and test results. In case of a tie, the Senate will meet and discuss the candidates. The woman will be elected by a majority vote of the Senate. Cibes said these six teams would be reduced to two in the semi-finals next Sunday. The winner of the final matches the following Sunday will be sent to the University of Nebraska May 14-16 for the Big Eight College Bowl. First round scores in yesterday's competition were: Battenfeld—270, JRP No. 1—260; JRP No. 2—240, Templin No. 2—205; Templin No. 1—250, Phi Delta Theta—150, Sellards—175, Kappa Alpha Theta—60; Miller—155, Carruth-O'Leary—145. SECOND ROUND SCORES were: JRP No. 2—195, Battenfeil—165; JRP No. 1—210, Templin No. 2—195; Templin No. 1—275, Kappa Alpha Theta—95; Phi Delta Theta—240, Carruth-O'Leary—95; Sellants—165, Miller—155. As a result of this round, Templin No. 2, Kappa Alpha Theta, and Carruth-O'Leary were elimina- ted. Third, and final, round scores were: Battenfeld—285, Sellards—140; Miller—175, Phi Delta Theta—120; JRP No. 1—385, Templein No. 1—205; JRP No. 2, with an undefeated record, drew a bye. The Phi Delts were eliminated following this round. Two KU jazz groups and nine other groups from across the country have confirmed that they will appear at the Oread Jazz Festival on March 27. The KU Kicks Eand and the Herb Smith Quartet will represent KU in the nationally-famous jazz festival which will feature headliners Clare Fischer, young West Coast jazz pianist, and Phil Woods, saxophonist from New Hope, Pa. Oread Jazz Festival Invites 11 FOURTEEN GROUPS in all have been selected from tapes mailed to a KU judging committee. As of this date, 11 groups have confirmed that they will appear. These include: The Dave Holcomb Group, Bloomington, Ind., UCLA Jazz Ensemble, Pacific Palisades, Calif., Xavier University Collegians, New Orleans, La. THE OREAD JAZZ Festival will also provide Fischer and Woods their first opportunity to play together. Each group will be judged by a panel of judges including Don DeMicheal, editor of "Down Beat Magazine," John Hammond, of Columbia Records; Dave Baker, jazz musician, and Phil Woods, teacher and jazz musician. The following groups are listed by their leader's name: Nathan Cobb, State College, Pa.; Mitch Farber, Greencastle, Ind.; Dick Youngstein, Kansas City; Jack Gilfoy, Bloomington, Ind.; R. W. Van Doren, St. Paul, Minn., and Brian Trentham, New York City. Prizes awaiting the winning group include: Three $100 scholarships to the Berklee School of Music, Boston, Mass., to the best musician in each of the following groups: reed, bass, and percussion. The Kansas City Jazz Program, March 26 and 28, will invite the winning small and large groups to participate in the closing session of the jazz festival, March 28. THE OUTSTANDING band will receive the Selmer-Benny Goodman Stage Band Award. Several music companies will also award prizes of guitars, snare drums, and cymbals. "Down Beat Magazine" will award one year's subscription to the winning large and small groups. The best musicians in their class will receive engraved plaques. The groups which were selected to enter the Oread Jazz Festival were selected by the Jazz Festival Steering Committee from invitations and applications sent to nearly 1200 universities and colleges in the United States. The groups that were interested in competing in the festival, the only collegiate jazz festival in mid-America, sent back tapes which were judged by the board of judges. When You're In Doubt, Try it Out—Kansas Classifieds MAUPINTOUR Travel Hour Free Admission Every Tuesday — 3:00 to 4:00 AT THE Little Banquet Restaurant ON THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER (West 23rd Street) Informal Showings of Exciting Color Movies on Vacation Spots Throughout the World. This Week's Feature South America ONE HOUR MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING ONE HOUR "MARTINIZING" the most in DRY CLEANING ONE HOUR MARTINIZING PRICES MEN'S Suits ...1.20 Pants ...60 Sweaters ...60 Sport Shirts ...60 Sport Coats ...70 Jackets ...75 Top Jackets ...1.35 LADIES' Dress (plain) ...1.20 Skirts ...60 Sweaters ...60 Blouses ...60 Short Coats ...1.10 Medium Coats ...1.25 Long Coats ...1.35 STILL TIME (Before the weekend) at at 14th and Mass. across from Central Jr. High New 1-Hour Dry Cleaning No Extra Charge ONE HOUR MARTINIZING . . . the most in quality dry cleaning is in the "PERFECTED" one-hour process . . . by using the newest, most modern equipment, and applying our own spotting techniques, deepcleaning methods and carefully finishing your garments, ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING ASSURES YOU! ★ Odorless Cleaning ★ Garments Stay Fresh Longer ★ Sanitary Clothes ★ Cleaner, Brighter Garments SHIRT SERVICE SPECIAL ONE DAY SHIRTSERVICE 25c each 4 for 88c One hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING 1407 MASS. — FREE PARKING — ★ Gentle, Individual Treatment for Your Fine Fabrics One hour MARTINIZING the meet in DRY CLEANING SPECIAL ONE DAY SHIRTSERVICE 25c each 4 for 88c 1407 MASS. — FREE PARKING — One hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEARING Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 8, 1967 LatinAmericaAttends Educational Seminar For the next five weeks, twenty-two Latin American educators will be at KU attending the Sixth Seminar on Higher Education in the Americas. The annual seminar, of which KU Dean George Waggoner is director, is at KU for the third straight year. It started March 1 and will end April 10. It is sponsored by the State Department, the University and the Board of Associated Research Councils. ITS OBJECTIVE IS MORE investigative than decision-making according to Assistant Dean Thomas Gale, KU's Peace Corps director in Costa Rica. The seminar, comprising writers, university professors and administrators, is considering improvements in national and university developments; university reforms; how it can aid national development, and what obligations it has, Assistant Dean Gale said. The delegates, representing 16 Latin American countries, are meeting every morning in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. The conference is divided into four sections with varying titles, Anna Herzfeld, translator and assistant to the director, said. The subjects are: "The University and its Development"; "The University Organization in the United States and Latin America"; "The University Profession and National Development"; "The Role of the University as a Research Center" IT IS HOPED THAT THROUGH this seminar and the sharing of ideas involved, communications can be advanced between all countries of the Americas and the solution of common educational, economic social, and cultural problems can be facilitated. Miss Herzfeld said. It is hoped that the participants will write two papers on the seminar from the points of view of their own experiences and professions, she continued. The two subjects around which these papers will revolve are: 'The Responsibility of the University in National and Regional Development" and "The University's Educational Reform for the Professions". The papers will be published and distributed throughout the Americas to desiring educational and research centers for action resources. Exiles Bombard Soviet Embassy WASHINGTON —(UPI)— Four Cuban exiles, protesting the presence of Russian troops in their homeland, Sunday hurled soft drink bottles filled with a black liquid at the front of the Soviet Embassy. Each threw a bottle at the grey stucco building in downtown Washington. Three of the bottles left smears on the first-floor area of the four-story embassy. The fourth landed on shutters covering a second-floor window. Police arrested the four on charges of interfering with foreign diplomatic property and destroying private property. Lawrence Trees Fight Blight More than 4,500 trees will become guinea pigs this spring in the Lawrence area. Entomologists at KU and in Lawrence are waiting for summer to see whether their experimentation with bidrin, a chemical used for eliminating Dutch elm disease, was successful. Dutch elm disease is a severe disease of elm trees caused by a fungus carried by bark beetles. It begins with a wilting of the younger branches in the upper part of the tree and later the lower branches become affected. In mid-summer, all but a few of the leaves at the branch tips, turn yellow, curl and drop off. "The Dutch elm disease became prevalent in Lawrence in 1959 but it wasn't until the spring of 1963 that bidrin was used to eliminate the disease here," Vernan Cooper, entomologist concerned with Lawrence trees, said. "That year we injected 54 trees with the chemical. We lost one. The next spring we did the same thing to 4,700 and lost several. I think the disease had already started in those." Bidrin is a preventive of Dutch elm disease and can't work if the tree is already affected. This chemical eliminates the bark beetle. Bidrin, when injected, protects the tree for the entire year. Last year the entire elm protection operation cost Lawrence about $12,-000 for 4,700 trees. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Special Reduced Airfares to Europe this summer for Kansas University students, faculty and immediate families. $366.00 Round Trip from New York to Brussels, Belgium. Depart June 23 and return September 10, by Sabena Jet Service. Limited number of seats available on first come, first served basis. For information call Tom P. Rea at UN 4-3831. Chico's Drive-In 19th & Massachusetts We specialize in: TACO'S of all kinds - 20c ea. or 6 for $1.00 Burritoes of fish, cheese, beef and others 20c each or 6 for $1.00 Chico's Drive-In Watch for the announcement of our delivery service This summer adventure through EUROPE TWA has the right tours at the right prices. Would you like to sun-bathe on the Mediterranean? Browse in the Louvre? Live with a family in Spain? Or just roam through Rome? TWA offers you the adventure of your choice, from 14 to 68 days, at a reasonable price. You can visit Europe's historic sights, hear delightful music, watch sparkling drama. Tours also combine sightseeing with college courses at famous universities. You travel with people your own age and meet people of your own age in Europe. Explore the most interesting places in England, France, Spain, Italy and many other countries. All accommodations are reserved in advance. Travel by comfortable motorcoach, or explore out-of-theway towns and villages by bicycle. Wherever you want to go, whatever you want to do, TWA has a tour that suits you perfectly. For further information, mail in the coupon. TWA, Inc., Dept. DK-421, 605 Third Ave., New York, N.Y. 10016 Please rush me full information on your Student Tours to Europe. Name___ Address___ City___ State___Zip code___ My travel agent is:___ Nationwide Worldwide depend on TWA Monday, March 8, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 5 So easy. (IF YOU'D RATHER NOT DO IT YOURSELF.) ACME makes it so easy for you to keep all of your clothes looking the way they must... 25 1234567890 ...for others. Call now. Or come in. Acme PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING' PERIOD HILLCREST - 1111 MASS. THE MALLS Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 8, 1965 THE RED DOG INN presents The ASTRONAUTS (RCA Recording Artists) WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10th ASTRONAUTS ORBIT CAMPUS SURFIN WITH THE ASTRONAUTS COVER $1.75 GO..GO..GO.. EVERYTHING IS A-OK The Astronauts Astronaut albums now available at Kief's Record & Hi-Fi 711 W.23 Monday, March 8, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 7 Academic Freedom No Problem at KU By Harry Krause Elusive and indefinable, faculty academic freedom is no problem at KU. Members of the KU faculty were interviewed concerning their opinions of alleged academic suppression at Wichita State University, and were questioned about possible abuses of academic freedom at KU. LAST WEEK, an assistant professor at Wichita State University, John Mitchell, charged that the administration there had tolerated suppression of academic freedom. Mitchell said his speech referred to suppression of teachers in 1958 at WSU, before it became a state university. The members of the KU faculty interviewed were only aware of newspaper accounts of Mitchell's speech and were unable to comment on any problem at WSU. CHANCELLOR WESCOE issued the following statement concerning WSU and academic freedom: "I have not read any of the speeches or the complete statements made about academic freedom at Wichita State University. My information comes largely from newspaper accounts, and thus I cannot comment on the details of the situation itself. "I can say, however, that the Kansas Board of Regents, under whose authority Wichita State University operates, has adopted one of the finest policy statements on academic freedom of any governing board I know. "I can say, as well, that President Emory Lindquist (of WSU) is a man and an administrator of complete integrity. He undertook the presidency after his selection by a faculty committee from his post as a university professor at Wichita State University. I know his position on academic freedom, and I know he gives complete support, to that essential ingredient of honest and effective university teaching. "Further support for President Lindquist, I understand, has come from a spokesman for the Wichita State University chapter of the American Association of University Professors, an indication of the confidence of that organization in President Lindquist and the University." CHARLES WARRINER, professor of sociology, said, "Since WSU came under the state system, there has been protection of teachers concerning their right to teach as they wish." "As far as KU is concerned, I know of no case of teachers not being able to teach how and what they wanted. The administration has protected teachers fully," he said. Leland Pritchard, professor of economics, said, "Outsiders don't try to influence the KU administration with their political beliefs, because they realize nothing will come of it." The president of the local chapter of the American Association of University Professors, Milton Steinhardt, professor of historical music, said he knows of no cases of academic suppression at KU. "The atmosphere here is extremely healthy," Steinhardt said. JAMES SEAVER, professor of history and past president of the AAUP, said, "Chancellor Wescoe and the administration maintain a complete atmosphere of academic freedom. All involved maintain a constant vigilance to see that no pressure is placed on teachers." Robert E. Nunley, associate chairman of Latin American areas, said that he knew of no abuses of academic freedom at KU. "You either have complete academic freedom, or you don't have it at all," Nunley said. La Pizza 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 Offers GREATEST MENU SELECTION in Lawrence 30-Minute Delivery Service Guaranteed! Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS RIVIERA $400 ALSO $300 TO 975 Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. THE PHILIPPINES —(UPI)— A U.S. court martial today acquitted two American Marines accused in the fatal shooting of a Filippo fisherman inside Subic Bay Naval Base last Dec. 13. GI's Cleared of Murder Charge Acquitted on charges of negligent homicide were Lance Cpl. James B Thomas, 21, of Martins Ferry, Ohio, and Cpl. Jesse A. Edwards, 22, of Sebastropol, Calif. It took the five-man military court only one hour and five minutes to reach the verdict in closed session. Allen's News All Student Supplies including "PLAYBOY" 1115 Mass. VI 2-0216 Last month, an American airman was sentenced to three years at hard labor in the shooting of a Filipino trespasser at Clark Air Force Base. A Clark court martial found Airman Ic. Larry Cole of Ezel, Ky., guilty of unpremeditated murder in the shooting near a restricted area on a base gunnery range. KU Aerohawk Flying Club Meeting Sunflower Room, Union Building 7 p.m., Wednesday, March 10 Aviation Films and Glider Flying Slides by Prof. C. J. Chollasmenos, Asst. Prof. of Mech. & Acrospace (Former European Soaring Champion) All Aviation Enthusiasts Welcome! Bring Your Wives and Dates Refreshments Will Be Served Compliments of Earhart Flying Service The Complete Book Service For the KU Student - PAPERBACKS CLASSICS, technical reference, fiction, biographies best sellers - TRADE BOOKS Children's, sports, art, K.U. Press, travel guides REFERENCE Science dictionaries, foreign language dictionaries science and math handbooks, language records STUDY AIDS Schaum's outlines, language cards, data guides, tutor texts, maps, verbwheels, reprints CORRESPONDENCE STUDY All books used in K.U. correspondence study MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS Subscriptions to all major magazines, many at great savings to the student - RELIGION Bibles, Bible atlases, dictionaries - REQUIRED & RECOMMENDED TEXTS - PAPERBACK STORE IN WATSON LIBRARY Paperbacks, complete line of scholarly editions HOW MANY OF THESE SERVICES HAVE YOU TAKEN ADVANTAGE OF? kansas union BOOKSTORE 4.5 3 健康 10000 次/年 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 8, 1965 Possible Third Show For 1966 Rock Chalk Plans and prospects for future Rock Chalk Revues are already crowding the brain of Hoite Caston, Independence graduate students and producer of this year's Revue. IN THE LONG-RANGE FUTURE. Caston felt the basic structure of the Revue would change. Caston also felt the Revue would lose much of its effect with the audience so far from the facial expressions of the cast. The Revue will probably stay in Hoch, Auditorium, however. One of the biggest problems in recent years has been the ticket shortage for the two-night production. Plans are in the offing to change the Revue to a three-night show, according to Caston. "IF WE COULD GET the English proficiency examination moved back, it would be much simpler. But even by opening our dress rehearsal, an extra 750-800 people got to see the show. We would have to move our production schedule up a day to put on three nights, but we could do it." he added. "Hoch is the only place with the stage, lighting and facilities to put on the show. If we used the field house we would probably move in a portable stage and make several other costly adjustments," Caston said. "Much of the success and longevity of the Revue has been due to the element of competition involved. But the competition has also kept the Revue from expanding." He continued, "What we'd really like to see is an all-campus Revue. The name is now a misnomer. It's not a Revue, but more like a glorified skit." Caston mentioned the Northwestern University campus review as the type of show "culling the best campus talent." "THEY HAVE ALL ORIGINAL music, the best writers from all over the campus and do black-out comedy skits satirizing campus life. It's a talent showcase for the campus and gives more people an opportunity to perform than the house-competition system does." Caston added. The major difficulty in this type of change, according to Caston, is cultivating the proper attitude among participants. "It's very difficult to get people to give time for this kind of sustained effort except where there is control, as in the Greek houses. We would all like to see independents in the Revue on their own merits. But whether or not they could control their cast once they were in is something else. It's a terrific sacrifice and requires much organization and cohesion," he continued. "FOR INSTANCE, our inbetween acts would not have turned out nearly so well if we had not had the cooperation of the Tau Kappa Epsilon and Gamma Phi Beta houses Group pride and pressure is required," he concluded. TODAY Official Bulletin Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Center. Confessions before and during Graduate Physics Colloquium, 4:30 p.m. Dr. Jack Culvahouse, 15 Malott. Student Peace Union, 7:30 p.m. Union Union College, 8:15 p.m.burgers- bromberg, Swaworth Recipe, 8:45 Epicapish Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Teaching Candidates, interviews scheduled for March 8. California, Anaheim Union H.S., secondary; Orange Unified elementary, elementary and secondary; Hemet Valleyuth Schools, elementary and secondary; Los Allos School Dist., elementary. TOMORROW American Society Class, 7 p.m. Speak to Joe McChee, Banking 24 N. String Catholic Mass, 6:45 a.m. and 5 p.m. St. Luke Church. Confessions on death, and during mass. Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7 Intervice Paul Stefens, Pine Room Kansas Union Stevens, Pine Room Kansas Union Christian Science College Organization, 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Inquirers Class, 7:30 p.m. Canterbury House, 1116 La. Lecture. 8 p.m. Gabriel Marcel "The Contemporary Thought." Fraser Theater Business Wives Meeting. 7:30 p.m. There will be a flower arrangement demonstration at Alexander's Flowers, 826 Iowa St. Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Caston felt work on next year's Revue would begin much earlier than this year's efforts. "We'll have a review session of this year's show soon to evaluate our work. Interviews for next year's staff will be coming up soon, also," he added. Curator Says: "NEXT YEAR'S THEME will probably be announced in May. This will avoid leaving staff and theme selection until fall," Caston continued. "I think the Revue is one of the most worthwhile things on campus. It makes me feel good to see those kids on stage who've had no dramatic experience. It's probably the one chance of their lives to do something like this. And the job they do amazes me." Caston felt the added time for writing would improve the overall quality of the show. Modern Art Young at 160 Years By Joan McCabe In the realm of art, anything after 1800 isn't history—it is current events, according to Bret Waller, curator of the Art Museum. Waller spoke to the Newman Forum last night on the subject of "Meaning in Contemporary Art". "To talk about the meaning of contemporary art we must first talk about the nature of meaning in the art of any period," Waller said. "First, we must ask ourselves what we mean by meaning." "Meaning in the visual arts is somewhat different from that in other forms such as literature and music." Waller said. "In literature the basic element is the word, and it is the nature of words to mean, to have specific, limited, dictionary meanings. In music the basic element is the note, or the chord, or the group of notes—none of which have any specific, objective meaning in the sense that a word does. Music does not normally have any kind of literary meaning," he explained. "THE VISUAL ARTS must fall somewhere in between," he said. "In painting the basic element may be said to be the colored shape. This may or may not have a recognizable literary meaning." He asked the audience to "watch the next time you go to a museum, and see how many people go through gallery after gallery looking at nothing but labels." Waller listed four levels of meaning that a painting can have. He used as an example a painting of the Madonna and Child. "ON THE VERY simplest level of meaning, to someone entirely unfamiliar with Western history and Christian teachings, the meaning of this painting would be, simply, woman and baby," he said. "Obviously this does not determine the value of the painting as a work of art. If it did, all paintings of women and children would be equally good," he stated. For the second level of meaning the speaker turned to the Christian viewer who would recognize the painting as representing the Virgin and the Christ Child. "This again has little to do with the painting as art," he continued. According to Waller, "There is a third kind of meaning that results from the personality of the artist as it is reflected in the painting. But even this kind of meaning has little to do with the aesthetic value of the work. If it were the determining factor all paintings by a certain artist would be equally good." THE LAST LEVEL of meaning involves what might be called the "spirit of the age". Waller said, "Every work of art in some way bears the evidence of the time and place of its creation," Waller stated. "This in itself is not a determinant of the value of the painting as art either." "After all of these elements have been peeled away, there is still one very important element left: the meaning based purely and simply upon formal relationships and the formal structure of the painting," Waller said. Jazz Band Such as a fast-action push-button phone that "dials" numbers by a succession of short, musical tones instead of a lengthy sequence of impulses. And beyond the "Touch Calling" phone is a new Electronic Automatic Telephone Exchange developed independently by GT&E scientists. It will make many new telephone services possible. SWEET MUSIC FOR TELEPHONE SWITCHING Add electronics to telephone switching, and some pretty exciting things happen. General Telephone & Electronics Laboratories contributes the basic support to the GT&E family of companies for product innovations such as this.In fact, basic research is our solid base for continued future growth. If research is one of your goals in life, you might want to know more about General Telephone & Electronics. Full information is available from your Campus Placement Director Or write to General Telephone & Electronics Laboratories, 730 Third Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017 GT&E GENERAL TELEPHONE & ELECTRONICS GENERAL SYSTEM GENERAL SYSTEM 730 THIRD AVE., N.Y. 10017 • GT & E SUBSIDIARIES: General Telephone Operating Co. in 33 states • GT & E Laboratories • GT & E International • General Telephone Directory Co. • Automatic Electric • Lankurt Electric • Syvania Electric Monday, March 8, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 9 Rock Chalk — (Continued from page 1) THE SCENE WAS A WESTERN SALOON, where "a portion of your refund has been pledged to support N.D.E.A. Student Loans." The sheriff was killed by a mysterious "Pi Phi" arrow in the saloon just before Fat, Fierce Fred escaped from prison and came back to Wakarusa Gulch. The town needed a new sheriff and anemic Percy "Galore". Kent was the right man for the job. After a fierce brawl and some lively songs from Scarlet Ribbons, "the flower of the West." Fred was "dumped on" by Percy, who turned out to be "superstud." The cast included Richard Danielson, Sioux City, Ia., junior, as the sheriff; Joanie Danielson, Leawood junior, Scarlet Ribbons; John Erickson, North Kansas City, Mo., percy, Percy Kent; Mike Ferrari, Prairie Village sophomore, Indian Side Kick; Mark Condon, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, Fat, Fierce Fred; Cheri Olsen, Hinsdale, Ill., sophomore, Lil (Fred's Gal). WINNING HONORS for their choreography and ensemble singing were the Sigma Chis and Delta Gammas in their skit, "Oedipus and Electra, or Grecian Kid Stuff." Kristine Bergman, St. Louis, Mo., junior, was named top female performer in her role as Electra. Erickson was co-director of the skit with Diane Olsen, Topeka sophomore. The action unfolded at an ancient "friendly, neighborhood psychiatrist's clinic" in Athens. Dr. Sigmund Chi, quack and magician, tricked his star patient, King Oedipus, into signing a contract to stay at the "funny farm." Oedipus' problem? He loved his mother. But Dr. Chi's daughter, Electra, "grubbed" her father. Now you see the plot! Oedipus and Electra fall in love, Dr. Chi gets outfoxed, the patients revolt, and all ends well in a shower of pure corn. Dr. Chi was played by Jack Powell, University City, Mo., senior; Oedipus was David Nesbitt, Overland Park senior; the Assistant was Russell Calkins, Wichita iumier. Co-directors were Lyle A. "Mike" Robe, Jr., Arkansas City junior; and Chris Wolf, Wichita senior. "SAMSON AND DELILAH, OR SURFIN' SAMSON" was presented by Kappa Alpha Theta and Kappa Sigma. Cruel King Herod had been chaining his Dead Sea beachcombers to the pursuit of puritanism. An aged prophet brought Samson to their rescue in a pillar-pushing contest. The cruel king realized the error of his ways, Samson was the hero of the hour and, presumably, the curfews were lifted. Cecily Pitts, Merriam sophomore, played a tempestuous Delilah; Craig Stanccliffe, Topeka junior, was Samson; Fred Young, Wichita senior, was the Prophet; Dan Baker, Topeka sophomore, was King Herod. Directors were Elizabeth Berns, Peabody junior; Leatrice Hirschberg, Topeka junior; Edward Bachofer, Salina senior, and Ernest Yarnevich, Kansas City junior. SUA Going Home or Just Wanting to Go Somewhere? Spring Vacation Charter Bus Express, No changing of buses non-stop service direct to: New York & Philadelphia Round Trip Fare — $44.00 Save—$25.00 Los Angeles and San Francisco Do Not Delay Get Your Reservation Now Buses also going to St. Louis For Reservations and Information contact the SUA Office in the Union Bldg. or Bob Sharp at VI 3-8878 VI2-1200 Deadline for Reservations — Monday, March 22nd ($15.00 deposit) Theatre Curtain Rises This Week On Pirandello's "Six Characters" A theatre within a theatre and a play within a play characterize the University Theatre's fourth major production, opening this week. Luigi Pirandello's "Six Characters in Search of an Author" will play Friday and Saturday, and the weekend of March 18 and 19, in Murphy Theatre. Curtain time is 8:20 pm. The play's setting is a theatre in which a director and his actors are preparing for a rehearsal, when suddenly six people enter. The six unexpected characters, offspring of the imagination of a playwright, are looking for an author to finish their story, because the original playwright had left the script unfinished with their problem unsolved. BECAUSE THE WHOLE play is set in a theatre, KU's production will be staged without decor against the bare walls of the Murphy stage. Costumes will be contemporary, although the play was written in 1921. Asked why the University Theatre had chosen this play for their next major production, Gordon Beck, instructor in speech and drama and director of the play, answered simply, "Because it's good". Pirandello, an Italian, lived from 1867 to 1936. He was a novelist as well as a playwright. In 1934 he was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature. Originally the University Theatre had hoped to have six Yugoslava- vian drama students participating in the play as stagehands, Beck said. Their date of arrival, however, will not coincide with the opening date of the play. BECK ALSO SAID certain scenes of the play would be performed on the University Theatre's Eastern European tour, which begins April 5. The cast is headed by William Kuhlke, KU's second actor-in-residence, who plays Father. Other main characters are the mother, Sharon Scoville, Kansas City, Mo. graduate; the stepdaughter, Gigi Gibson, Independence senior; the son, Edward North, Keokuk, Iowa, freshman; and the director, Richard Kelton, Miami, Okla. junior. g Eignn Bin A gning A Engineering and Physical Science Seniors* GROW with a growing industry... ...the Bell Telephone System The Bell Telephone System is continuing its expansion program to serve a growing nation. Growth in the telephone industry means new jobs, fresh opportunities for promotions, a rewarding career for you. The future is bright for young men who want to advance with a progressive industry. Representatives of the following Bell System companies will be glad to talk with you. They will consider all qualified applicants for employment without regard to race, creed, color, or national origin. - Southwestern Bell Telephone Company builds, maintains and operates telephone and other communications systems throughout its five-state territory. - Bell Laboratories research, development, engineering and design in electronics and communications fields. - Western Electric - manufacturing and supply unit. - Sandia Corporation applied research, development and design for production of atomic weapons. - Long Lines Department of A. T. & T. provides interstate Lang Distance and overseas Telephone Service. Bell System representatives will be on campus March 10 and 11. Sign up for an interview at the placement office. BELL SYSTEM Page 10 University Dally Kaosan Monday, March 8, 1965 444 32 30 FOR T TWO MORE FOR THE RECORD—Towering center Walt Wesley breaks out of a crowd of Cowboys to send another shot whizzing into the basket. Wesley led the Jayhawks with 32 points for the game in a performance that shattered two Big Eight scoring records. The Oklahoma State Cowboys defeated the Jayhawks Saturday, 58-64. Jayhawks Lose Big Eight Bid As Cowboys Go Riding Along The Oklahoma State Cowboys walked past the KU Jayhawks Saturday afternoon and neatly clinched the Big Eight conference basketball championship with a 64-58 victory in Allen Field House. A sparkling second half performance by the Cowboys brought the 'Pokes from a 34-29 half-time deficit to the six-point winning margin. The Cowboys still have to meet the Oklahoma Sooners tonight in Norman, but even a loss there couldn't deny them the title. Kansas was the closest contender for the honor and the Cowpokes would have had to have fallen to both the Jayhawks and the Sooners to assure KU of a piece of the first spot. The victory assured Cowboy coach Hank Iba of his first conference title for Oklahoma State. However, Iba was coach of the undefeated U.S. basketball squad that won the Olympics last October. High point of the KU game was Walt Wesley's record-breaking show. The "Big Doe" pumped in 32 points to shatter both the field goal scoring record set by KU's Clyde Lovelle and the season individual scoring mark set by Bob Boozer of Kansas State Wesley hit 15 field goals, mostly with his now-famous fadeaway shot. He netted the record-breaking fifth goal with 5:54 to go in the first half. Wesley's total for the season was 150, overshadowing the previous mark of 139. With 13:22 remaining in the second half, Wesley dropped in the 19th point of the game to erase the individual scoring mark of 363 set in 1559. Wesley finished the game with enough points to boost the new record to 377 points. KU dropped in the first two points However, the play during the first 10 minutes of the second half was the decisive factor. The Jayhawks could only manage seven points against the attack of the Cowboys that netted 18 counters for the Oklahoma crew. The spurt gave the Cowboys a 47-41 lead. The renewed Cowboy attack failed to daunt Wesley, though, who continued to drop in points for the Jayhawks. The "Big Doe" was responsible for 18 of KU's 24 points in the second half. La Pizza 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 The Cowboys, on the other hand, set a blistering pace from the free throw stripe, especially during the second half. Overall, the 'Pokes dropped in a sizzling 83 per cent. They teamed this with a 20-for-37 performance in the field to down the struggling Jayhawks. Five graduating seniors played their final game against the Cowboys. They include guards Kerry Bolton, Richard Ruggles, and Dave Schichtle; forward Dave Brill and center Jim Gough. The main scoring problem for the Jayhawks came at the free throw stripe. None of the KU five could hit regularly and they managed only a rather chilly 35 per cent from the line. The Jayhawks combined this with a 38 per cent showing from the field to produce their 58 tallies. La Pizza 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 NOW OFFERS YOU A COMPLETE DINNER FROM OUR SPECIAL THEATER MENU AND CHOICE OF SHOW FOR ONLY $2.00 Offered Monday-Thursday SAVE $.50 – $1.00! The Jayhawks hit serious foul trouble early in the game with Riney Lochmann, who played an important part in the early KU surge, drawing his third foul with 2:48 remaining in the first period. With about 45 seconds remaining in the first half, Dave Schichtle drew his third and fourth fouls. His spirited protest got a technical foul call from referee Tom Glennon, who promptly called another technical on With around four minutes remaining in the second half, KU lost two of its starters when Al Lopes and Lochmann both drew their fifth fouls within 20 seconds of each other. coach Ted Owens who protested the first call. Coach Bob Lockwood was pleased with the meet, saying that it was "one of the better meets of the season" for his Jayhawks. He singled out Dobbins' performance in the all-around as outstanding, having beaten Colorado's Bill Padia, one of the top Big Eight performers in this event. B Γ Δ E Z H Θ J K A M Billie Carpenter, Pacific Palisades, Calif., junior, won first on the trampoline against K-State. The Sooners nailed their 11th straight championship with 116 points. Iowa State had 105 and the Jayhawks totaled 71. Others drawing praise from Lockwood were Wayne Shields, Wichita sophomore, in the floor exercise, Manness in the long horse vault, and Bob Livesay, Glen Ellyn, Ill., junior, in the rings. The KU Jayhawks finished third following favored Oklahoma and Iowa State in the Big Eight conference swimming meet this weekend at Iowa State's home pool in Ames. KU will travel to Boulder, Colo. for the Big Eight meet this weekend. Its record for the season remained even at 4-4. Kent Dobbins, Lawrence junior, paced the KU attack with 41 points against K-State and 27 against Colorado. Against K-State, Dobbins won firsts in the floor exercise, high bar, long horse, parallel bars, and tied teammate Bill Manness, Lawrence senior, for honors on the rings. Dobbins won the long horse event in the Colorado competition. He also won the all-around title in both meets. Weekend Upsets KU ★ ★ ★ The Shockers had been assured of the league crown earlier in the day when Bradley had beaten St. Louis at Peoria 94-91. ★ ★ ★ a 15-and-10 for an overall season mark. Kansas University's wrestling team closed out its regular season of competition with a 36-0 loss to Oklahoma University at Norman, Okla., Friday night. The team will return to Norman this weekend for the Big Eight championships. Kansas defeated Kansas State 83-36 and lost to Colorado 47-71 in a triangular gymnastics meet at Manhattan Saturday. Wichita Gains Valley Crown Dobbins finished the regular session competition with 257 points for a 32.1 average per meet, establishing a new KU record for seasonal scoring average. Wichita coach Gary Thompson started his five seniors and the Bulldogs mved ahead, 7-3, in the first three minutes before Thompson sent in the first string. wichita nows stands with 19 victories and seven losses. The Shockers finished 11-3 in conference play. Drake rounded out their record with 6-8 for league play and Wichita, defending Missouri Valley basketball champs, downed Drake, 76-74, in overtime Saturday at Wichita to clinch the Valley title again. Varsity THEATRE ··· Telephone VI 3-1065 NOW! Shown at 7:30 only "IT'S A MAD, MAD, MAD, MAD WORLD" Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 - Mugs - Guards Fraternity and Sorority Jewelry Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Massachusetts Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI3-5788 7:00 & 9:10 20a Cinema Pictures THE PLEASURE SOCKERS ONIMA SCOPE COLOR BY DELUXE - Kings Granada THEATRE----telephone W1-578 - Pins - Lavaliers Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 - Crests Z M O P R T F X Y Q The Classical Film Series Humphrey Bogart - Lauren Bacall in presents The Big Sleep (1946) A fascinating example of the "private-eye" film Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Admission 60c Fraser Theater 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 19M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M 20M University Daily Kansan SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS Page 11 FOR SALE 1963MG 110 sedan, red One owner Must sell, leasing for Europe. V1 3-505I 1963 Austin Healy, 3000 Mark 2. 18,000 miles, red, roll up windows, new tires, new battery, radio, wire wheels, overdrive, excellent condition. VI 2-3673. 3-9 Sylvania portable TV, 21 inch, excellent condition, Minolta autocord double reflex camera, like new. Call VI 2-3155 after 7 p.m. Garrad "type A" never used, still in original packing box, $20.00-Tape recorder, Akai M6, semi-professional, 4 track stereo for $220.00-1855 Chev. 48, 4 bbl., stick $275.00. Call Lee Garrett, VI 2-3965. Gibson Bass Guitar and New Kustom Bass amp. Also mike and stand, call VI 3-0305. 3-8 Jaguar 58-3-4 L Sedan, white, stick plus overdrive, new paint, mechanically perfect, best offer VI 3-1747 after 7:00 p.m. 3-9 Auction—used bikes, all sizes. Name your own price. Saturday, March 13, 1:00 p.m. Blevins Bike Shop at 701 Michigan. 3-12 1959 Gardner 50' x 10' house trailer, good condition. Reasonably priced. Call VI 2-0731 after 5 p.m. 3-8 HI-FI-Save on nationally advertised HiFi components. New equipment in factory sealed cartons with factory warranties. Call VI 3-4891. 3-15 BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMIUMS! Occidental Term Life: conversion, Go-Back, and Move-Over options. Age 18 = $33.50=10,900. Age 80 = $34.40=10,000. Age 22 = $34.70=10,000. Call Wes Santee at VI 3-2164 for details. tf Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy CALL VI 1-2901 for free delivery Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive notes, and course materials for classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call V 1-3428. $4.50 t TYPEWRITERS, electrics, manuals, portals, computers Hermes, Royal, Santa-Carona, Oliveira. Adding machines, office supplies and equipment, Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Students, why throw money away on rent when you can own a 1962 Marlette 10 x 50, modern two-bedroom mobile home with small monthly payments. Inexcusable in excess condition. For further information CALL RI 8-0973 or RI 8-0916. **tf** BE THE LEADER OF YOUR PACK. Harley Davidson Sportster K, 750 cc, new clutch, and new brakes and tires. THIS IS NO HONDA. For further information about this beautiful machine CONTACT Monti Belot at V1 3-0700. tf PORTABLE STEREO: Admiral's Finest— two carrying units, 1 for turntable and for speaker systems (2 tweeters, and 2 full range woofers) $195 new. Will sell for good offer. CALL: Rusty Calkins at VI 3-5721. THE STABLES now open every day- Serving steaks, chops sea food, sand- sand management, new atmosphere. Party rooms available. Phone: 3-9644, 1401 W.7th. NEED A BAND? 30 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM PHONE VI 2-2100 t CHINA—Noritaki, Mayfair design. New, never used or even removed from packing. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk V 3-7102. tf Stereo-Fantastic Bargain on stereo system. Harman Kardan 30-watt amplifier, Garrard changer, electro-voice speakers for Sennheiser and Shure. Call Hank at v3-4891 for bargain price. 5 string, long neck, folk banjo and case. In excellent condition. $50.00. Call Don Reynolds, VI 3-4846. 3-10 HELP WANTED Part-time undergraduate electrical assistant, primarily audio work. E.E. or Physics major preferred—apply room 4, Bailey Hall. 3-8 Hostess-Attractive lady for evening employment in the New Orleans Room, top wages—Phone VI 2-9465 or VI 3-4747. tl Discotheque Dancers. Apply now. At the New Orleans Room. Phone VI 2-9465. WANTED FLORIDA—Three girls to share driving expenses to Florida (Daytona, Lauder-shaving break. Leave Sat. April 3. Evenings for classes. VI-2-1355 evenings. 3-8 OLD CARS WANTED, top prices paid Do it today! GI Joe's, 61 Vermont, t Washing and ironing done in my home 181 New Jersey Y Phone VI 2-2598 TRANSPORTATION Fly to the Bahamas via Daytona Beach and Fort Lauderdale over Spring Vacation. Experienced commercial pilot can take two more passengers for $100 each. For further information call VI 3-8544 3-11 TYPING 10 years typing experience plus background in proofreading enables me to guarantee accuracy on college papers. New electric typewriter equipped for interchangeable type sets. Mrs. Berndt, 801 Michigan or VI 2-0400. tf Experienced typist wants typing in home. Reasonable rates, prompt service. Phone VI 2-3356. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Secretary wants to type your thesis, dissertation, firm paper, etc., on new IBM electric, fast, accurate, and reasonable. Special symbols available. CALL Mrs. Shirley Libbert, 934 W. Noch 24, at 11, at VI 2-0803 Theses only on Royal Electric Pica Typewriter CALL MIL. Fulcher at VI 3-0588 experienced typist. 8 years experience in heses and term papers. Electric type- writer, fast accurate service. Reasonably paid. ALL Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, tfr -1648. 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-1-8688 experienced secretary will type term papers, law briefs, theses, etc., for students. Especially familiar with legal and business times. Fast and accurate. Reasonable rates. Call Marsha Goff at V1 1-2577 tf Former Harvard and U. of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports and theses. PHONE VI 3-7207. tl term papers. Theses by experienced volist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tl Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. Will do ex carbon ribbon typewriter. Betty Muskrat 140 Indian, or call VI 2-0081. Will do typing in my home. Accurate reasonable rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at I 2-0210. experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing. Speech and mathematics, engineering and languages electric typewriter, Call VI 281-7265. amabilly Vlpst, experienced with term papers Ivyplist, immersive presentations, with give you lving immediate insight into the machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Mar- lene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6045 Experienced secretary would like typing in her home, with new electric typewriter and accurate service. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Latt caster at VI 2-1188. Typing done by experienced secretary for 25c each double spaced page. Call Ethel Henderson, 2565 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122. Experienced typist wants theses, termpapers, and dissertations to be typed on electric (pica type) typewriter. Please Call Pat Beck at VI 3-5630. tt Experienced typist will do dissertations manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I. V. 3-7485. Mrs. Robert Cook, tf Fast service, accurate tying. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will enter data or these files. Portenced. Electric typewriter. CALL Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8262. Theses or term papers done in my home Four years secretarial practice at K.U. CALL Mrs. Oxford at VI 2-0673. ti experienced typist to do termpapers, homes, reports and carbons. Fast and sensitive, responsible rate between 8:00 a.m. am and 1 p.m. Monday brought Sat. VI 3-0875. 3-8 3USY PEOPLE—no time to spare for household care? For professional cleaning of your home regularly or occasionally. HONER CLEANING SERI CE, VI 3-4408. SERI 3-10 Competent student will tutor undergraduate, graduate students in German-$3 an hour. Call Sara Paretsky, VI 3-8505 3-9 Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-Q ribs that grandma and grandpa can eat, try ours on a plate. Or order to one per slab. Hours: 11:00 am - to 11:00 p.m. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-5510. 3-31 MISCELLANEOUS $CHWINN BICYCLES - service all makes parts and accessories, tires $1.46, tubes air racks, luggage racks and downs. See BICWIN at 7th and Mice CALL VI 3-0581 JR. SR. AND GRADUATE STUDENTS MONEY AVAILABLE ON PERSONAL SECURITY. PHONE, CHUCK ADKINS, BENEFICIAL FINANCE AT VI 3-841- 2699 "ARTY TIME? Building available to talk about PHONOS, PHONOTUBES, tafob FREEDOM at VI 3-3995. friends coming this weekend? Looking for a place with good food at reasonable prices. HILLCREST BOWL RESTAURANT. Plenty of free parking th and Iowa. it's great for a date. Take her bowling at Hillcrest Bowl. Finest lanes in the state. Also Mom, Tues., and Fri. after 9:00 pm. Hillcrest Bowl, 9th and Iowa. Rent electric, standard, and portable typewriters. Repair all makes of electric, electronic, computer, or semiconductor business Equipment (formerly Business Machines), 15 E.8th. VI 3-0151. tf Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon-thu-Fri, or all day Sat, or Sun. Phone VI 3-6231. Ski Aspen 7 days during spring break. Room and board, transportation. Two tickets, instruction and insurance. $128. KU-Y Ski Club. Contact Y office in the Union or Marty Knight. Sign up meeting March 9, 7:30 p.m. at the Forum Room. Attention: All persons interested in self defense training classes utilizing many of their arms and smashes used. James Bond movies, contact Bob Monk at VI 3-7120. WOODIES are more interesting when you get there the fun way ON A BIKE. You get there the fun way, repairs, wood equipment. Gran Sport Cyclery, 9 W 3-11 14th. VI 3-3328. FOR RENT Furnished apts, at 940 Indiana Off street utilities furnished. Call IW. 3266. 3-8 Furnished house for rent or lease in Eudora. Prefer three to four boys, 3 bedrooms, wall to wall carpet, fireplace, Available immediately. Phone HA 2-163-3-16 Emery Apts, 1423 Ohio, 12 one bedroom luxury apts, April 1st. $85.00. Featureting w-w carpeting, disposal, range and ovens, refrigerators, furnished or unfurnished. Teachers or graduate students only, no children or pets. VI 3-8190. 3-16 Extra nice roomy apt. in graduate house for graduate or older undergraduate man. furnished with campus, utilities paid. Necely furnished with private bath and kitchen. Call VI 3-8534. Large sleeping room for men students with refrigerator privileges. Rent single or double. Close to town and Kansas University. 1247 $^{1/2}$ Kentucky. 3-9 Nice cool basement or upstairs apartment for spring semester. Double or single. Ideal for study. Phone Ray Woods at VI 2-1613. 3-8 Monday, March 8, 1965 PARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30-50 people, juke box, liquid refreshments and a cell phone. Contact Don at the Gaslight Tavern for reservations CALL VI 3-1086. **tt** Crescent Heights and Oakts Apartments— 1821 W. 24th, or CALL VI 2-3711. 1821 W. 24th, or CALL VI 2-3711. Room for pent–double or single. Ideal for large rooms. Entrance entrance. Phone VI 3-0326 at 5 p.m. Several attractive apartments available within one block of campus. Suitable for men or women. Also bachelor quarters for men. Call VI 3-8413. 3-12 LOST Omega Calendar watch, Initials "T.R.S." Reward. Call Tom Stevenson 3-1-2500 3-8 ENTERTAINMENT Now you can hear four excellent dance bands on stereo tapes: THE FURYS, THE BLADES, THE RUNABOUTS, THE NOMADS. Call VI 2-1791. tf ATTENTION PARTY THROWS: Do you want the Beatles, the Kingsmen, Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL VI 2-1791. tf For Fast Results READ and USE THE WANTADS REGULARLY! See or Call Your Insurance Needs 1244 La. VI 2-0186 Marvin E. McDougal For All Your Insurance Needs 14 LAN VI 2 018 Southridge Plaza Discover Quality In Apartment Living 2350 Ridge Court VI2-1160 BUSINESS DIRECTORY MUGS 24 OZS. — 35c Louise's Bar 1017 Mass. BARBER SHOP For Your BEST Hairent 4 Chairs 4 Chairs 8-6 Mon.-Fri. 8-5 Sat. PLAZA Barber Shop 1804 Mass. VI 2-9462 In Dillon's Plaza Come to Wholesale Diamond Rings Call Robert A. Lange VI 3-1711 838 Mass. JIM'S CAFE OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY - Lubrication . . . . $1.00 24 HOUR SERVICE (TUES.-SUN.) - Brake Adjustment . . . .98 - Wheel Alignment - Automatic Transmission Page Fina Service 1819 W.23rd VI 3-9694 Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals AL LAUTER Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 Tune-up, Body Repair & Repaint, Automatic Trans. Service Wheel Alignment Lawrence Auto Service 10th & Mass. VI 2-0247 Mobil — Goodyear COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING HONN'S Across From The High School OPEN 24 HRS. 19th & La. VI 3-9631 GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING For the best in — New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPERLANDS. - alterations - reweaving 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Register New For Temporary Assignments Milliken's S.O.S. - NO FEE - Typists — Stenos General Office and Bookkeepers Unlimited Office Opportunities Experienced Only Apply 9:00 - 5:00 p.m. or by appointment 11% Mass VI.2 5920 1021½ Mass. VI 3-5920 ● ● ● ● ● — ALSO — Student & Thesis Typing Automatic Letter Service Telephone Answering Secretarial Service Notary Public ... P.S. They're Professional! Milliken's S.O.S. 1021 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. VI 3-5920 HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 8, 1965 ASC, Union Board Checking Hopes of Drugstore in Union By Rosalie Jenkins A resolution to establish a small center in the Kansas Union which would sell drug store necessities was passed by the All Student Council last Tuesday night. The Student Union Operating Board also decided to look into such a possibility at its meeting last week. The ASC resolution was sponsored by Carl Lindquist, Prairie Village senior and ASC representative (UP, college men) and Conrad Wagenknecht, St. Joseph, Mo., senior and ASC representative (UP, professional fraternities and cooperatives). Wagenknecht said that such a resolution must be approved by Chancellor Wescoe and the Board of Regents before going into effect. Although details have not been completed, Wagenknecht said that the resolution provides for the sale of "personal, hygienic items" such as tooth paste, soap, or aspirins. "THESE ARE ITEMS which any student might need in a hurry," Wagenknecht explained. "Such a service has not really been pushed before, but there is a definite need for this," he explained. He stated that such items would be sold at a counter or even in a small shop in the Union separate from the Book Store. If the resolution is approved, Wagenknecht said the service would be run by the Student Union Operating Board. He added that he thought a plan could be worked to give rebate slips or percentage refunds similar to those of the Book Store. "THIS SERVICE IS not meant to be in competition with the merchants. It is primarily for people who need it." Wagenknecht emphasized. Bob Stewart, Vancouver, B.C., student body president and Union Operating Board member, said that the Board discussed such a service and suggested that Frank Burge, Kansas Union director, look into the problem and report on it at the next Board meeting. Stewart said that he was personally in favor of such a service and felt that it was something students needed. "However," he said, "I would hate to see KU's good relations with the Lawrence merchants injured." "AS I UNDERSTAND it, there is a state law which provides that a university may sell only those things which are unique to the students," Stewart stated. He said this means such items as paper, pencils, books and not those things which are used by almost everyone. William Beeeler, manager of Rankins Drug Store and president of the Douglas County Pharmaceutical Association, was asked his opinion on such a service. He said that he could not speak for all the druggists until he talked to all of them but that he, personally, is against the idea. "These are things (tooth paste, soap, etc.) that are available to the students from the local merchants. The University would be going into direct competition with them," he said. Beeler said that his drugstore and some of the others offer a delivery service to anyone who calls in with an order without additional charge. WHEN ASKED IF such a service would damage the business of the local drugstores, Beeler said. "We do depend upon the University for a large amount of our business—it wouldn't have a devastating effect, but it would affect us." Claude Cooper, owner of the Cooper Walgreen Drugstore, agreed with Beeler, saying, "Definitely, our business would suffer. The University is our number one industry in Lawrence." R. M. Raney, owner of the Raney Drugstore chain, said that he did not believe such a service was necessary because the students can be "adequately taken care of" with delivery service. VARIOUS KU STUDENTS were also polled on the proposed drugstore in the Union and generally were in favor of such a service. "I think the University is engaging in enough business now without enlarging it. I don't think it is the intention of the Union to be in all kinds of businesses," Raney stated. - Judy Dale, Topeka junior—"I think it would be very convenient, if the prices of this drugstore would be comparable to those in the drugstores downtown." - Virgil Young, St. Joseph junior and JRP counselor, "I'm in favor of it . . . I've never known anyone here to order if they needed something. It would really be a service to the men without cars." - Jeff Boyer, Leavenworth freshman— "It sounds like a good idea if the prices of this service would be equal or cheaper than the drugstores and supermarkets. However, I don't think the Union prices on books are cheaper or even equal to those in other stores." - Letha Schwiesow, Shawnee Mission senior — "Most colleges have this type of thing with all kinds of little supplies. I think it would be a good idea." - Jane Breckenridge, Louisburg senior—"It could be good, I don't know. The question would be what services the Student Union is supposed to perform. If the items are sold with rebate slips, that would be a good argument for it." - Jim Reuff, Shawnee Mission sophomore—"The service would be very handy. If you start selling these things, it might make the drugstores lower their prices." - Susan Lawrence, Great Bend senior—"When I was a freshman or a sophomore, I'd have been very happy with something like that since I had no car." - Bob Thornburgh, Nortonville graduate law student and part-time pharmacist in Cooper's Walgreen Drugstore—"I'm in favor of this service, the ethics of the pharmacist's profession dictate that whatever helps a person receive the fastest and easiest relief is good." Famous 'Uncle Jimmy Undaunted By Pranks For over 40 years, a statue of a man and boy has kept guard over Green Hall. The inscription on it says "In memory of James Woods Green, 1849-1919. Forty years dean of the School of Law, 1879-1919. The students' counselor and friend." He was affectionately called "Uncle Jimmy." "Uncle Jimmy" was KU's first law professor and first dean of the law school. He was loved not merely by his law students however, as the entire student body was fond of Green. Daniel Chester French, who was sculptor of the statue once said of him that "I have never seen such love for a man as this unless it be in the case of Lincoln." According to legend, the name Uncle Jimmy was given to Green after a court session when a student mentioned that "Uncle Jimmy surely was making a good defense for his client." At that point a voice replied "thank you." The students turned around and there stood Dean Green. THE STATUE PROBABLY has been the scene of more pranks and rivalry than any other spot on camput. It once was a tradition for the engineering students to paint the statue green on St. Patrick's Day. Uncle Jimmy, who was known as the "patron saint of KU football," was also the favorite target of K-State cranksters. In 1929 a series of raids involving thousands of students occurred between the two schools. The week before the football game, K-State invaders painted Uncle Jimmy and the Pioneer in front of Fraser. KU students retaliated with red lacquer on the Manhattan campus. The student shown in the statue with Dean Green is Alfred C. Alford, KU's first war hero. Alford was killed in the Spanish-American War. The statue itself, cost $40,000, only $10,000 less than Green Hall. Its sculptor, French, was one of the foremost artists of his day. His most prominent works are the statue of Lincoln in the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., and the Minuteman in Concord, Mass. KANSAS WEATHER is rough on clothes. Your clothes are exposed to rain, snow, sleet fog, sun, wind, slush, dust, mud and dirt often all in the space of a week. But But No matter what the weather does to your clothes, we can clean them. We also pick-up and deliver your clothes for you. Our Sanitone Service is weather-proof!! I'll put the words in order. "The Man Who Made Men Like Himself." BOTANY'500 $ ^ { \ast } $ recommends our Sanitone drycleaning process I am a man of the rainy day. I hold my umbrella above my head, protecting me from the rain. I walk through the city, feeling the wind in my hair and the rain on my skin. I enjoy the sunny days, and the cool nights. I relax in my suit, enjoying the comfort of the city. I take a moment to reflect on life and the world around me. I love it when the weather changes, and I can choose how to spend my time. LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 1001 New Hampshire VI 3-3711 Daily hansan LAWRENCE. KANSAS 62nd Year, No.95 Tuesday, March 9, 1965 Arrests No Curb on Demonstration DISCRIMINATION EQUALITY FREEDOM 170 (Photo by Harry Krause) SIGN CARRYING PICKETS—Arrested demonstrators were greeted by sympathetic picketers as they were unloaded from buses at the Douglas County Court House parking lot last night. Special Meeting Called ASC to Discuss Sit-ins Discussion of yesterday's civil rights sit-in demonstration is expected to be a major topic of discussion at tonight's special ASC meeting. The special meeting, to be at 7:30, will also consider bills from committees, a report on Traffic and Security, and the University Daily Kansan's advertising policies. The meeting, proposed by Lee Ayres, Park Ridge, Ill., graduate student (UP—unmarried, unorganized), is to allow time for the bills which both UP and Vox representatives have wanted to introduce in the Council. "There is a growing feeling that we are rushing important things through," Ayres said. HE EXPLAINED that in recent meetings bills are introduced but have no time to be read and discussed. The ASC passed a bill to set up weekly meetings at its meeting last Tuesday night, but the bill has not yet been signed by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe. Ayres said he felt that the Council should meet again tonight. The Council is also scheduled to hear a report on the Traffic and Safety committee from its chairman Tom Ruzicka, Leawood junior. MIKE MINER, Lawrence senior and ASC chairman, said he anticipates a discussion of the civil Bulletin Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe announced in a special press conference held at 10 a.m. that the All Student Council Bill No. 7 had been passed and signed by him at 8:15 a.m. It is now being returned to the president of the All Student Council. Many See March Traffic Patrol "It's like Homecoming weekend." This is how Bob Stewart, Vancouver, B.C., senior and student body president, described the steady flow of traffic which streamed past the corner of Jayhawk Boulevard and Lilac Lane during the civil rights demonstration last night. Stewart and Mike Miner, Lawrence senior and chairman of the All Student Council, directed traffic at the corner for over an hour. They were trying to keep the traffic out of the demonstration area during the march. THE ONLY VEHICLES permitted to enter the area were those representing radio and television stations. "We're trying to keep the demonstration orderly." Miner said. The majority of the cars were merely spectators, Stewart said. The demonstrators marched into Lilac Lane in front of Fraser Hall. continued past Watkins Hospital, Blake Hall and the chancellor's residence. The marchers in groups of three paraded past the chancellor's residence and then returned to Jayhawk Boulevard. As cars began to turn into Lilac Lane Stewart planted himself in front of them and explained that he was trying to keep the demonstration as peaceful as possible. "LAWRENCE CITIZENS, KU students and newsmen have all been by to take a look," Stewart said. NEITHER MINER or Stewart wore overcoats, and were constantly moving, stamping their feet, rubbing their hands and smoking cigarettes to keep warm. "I was nearly hit by a Ford a few minutes ago," Stewart said, moving in front of a car. rights sit-in of yesterday at the Council meeting and discussion of the University Daily Kansan's advertising policies as set up under the Kansan Board constitution. The KU police were on the scene but remained in a jeep parked on Lilac Lane. BOB STEWART, Vancouver, B.C. senior and student body president, contacted a few hours after Miner, said that he "believes the question on the demonstration will come up tonight . . . and that there certainly will be some kind of resolution, but I couldn't tell you what it will be." Stewart said that Miner had just brought him the bill at the Sigma Chi house and he had signed it. He said the bill would go to the Chancellor this morning. AT 10 P.M. YESTERDAY, a spokesman at the Wesley Center, said that Stewart and Hugh Taylor, Stoke on Trent, England graduate student (UP, graduate school) had talked to the group there and asked them to negotiate their grievances Gene White, Mission senior, and chairman of the ASC publications board, and John Subler, Cross River, N.Y., senior and president of the Kansan Board, both stated that there is no clause in either the ASC Constitution or the by-laws of the Kansan Board which deal with the kinds of advertising the UDK may receive. SUHLER EXPLAINED the official standing of the Kansan Board on this matter which was passed unanimously at its board meeting on Feb. 24, 1965, with the knowledge of Chancellor Wescoe, Bob Stewart, and Mike Miner. Weather The low tonight is predicted to be about 20 to 25 degrees. Wednesday will be partly cloudy and colder. The weather bureau is predicting variable cloudiness tonight, with the possibility of light rain or snow. It will turn colder tonight with northwesterly winds of 10 to 20 miles an hour. About 57 students resumed civil rights demonstrations in Strong Hall at 8 a.m. today. They sat silently in the corridor outside Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe's office. Lawrence D. Morgan, chairman of the state Board of Regents, said today that Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe of the University of Kansas has the regents' "full support" in his handling of the current protest by Civil Rights groups over racial discrimination by fraternities and sororities. It has been announced that Nate Sims, Pasadena, Calif., senior, and George Unseld, Louisville, Ky., senior, will meet with Chancellor Wescoe this afternoon at 4:30. Sims originally asked Wescoe to speak before the entire group of about 130 demonstrators assembled on the second floor of Strong Hall. The seller Wescoe replied, "I'll meet with two of you." The students marched up to the corridor in pairs from the rotunda after receiving instructions from Nate Sims, Pasadena, Calif., senior, and George Unseld, Louisville, Ky., senior. In an interview this morning, Sims said he expected 600 students to participate in the demonstration today. He offered no conclusions as to what may happen later in the day. Sims said the demonstrators plan to return each day until their demands are met by the Chancellor. He didn't estimate how long this might take. (Continued on page 3) ✩ ✩ ✩ Wescoe States Past Chancellor W. Clarke Weseco issued the following statement last night with regard to the demands of the Civil Rights Council; "1. The University does not sanction discriminatory policies of any kind. The work of this administration to remove the bars that distinguish between students by reason of race or creed is too well known to need further restatement. 2. That there is no mixed fraternity and sorority housing is clear; that this is a matter of express policy is clearly not the case. Rather it seems to me a matter of individual decisions in a situation all of us inherited but out of which we are slowly working our way. 3. Students are assigned to practicing teaching positions on a basis of individual choice and administrative decisions at the local school level. If there have been instances of a student being sent against his will into a racially discriminatory situation, the committee I propose to appoint will investigate. No complaint about this has ever reached me. 4. The Kansan Board and the All Student Council have been investigating the question of Kansan advertising at my request. 5. The University Housing office has no staff for investigation. We depend, naturally, upon any student who feels he has been treated unfairly to report such incidents to our off-campus Housing Committee. There have been only two such complaints in the past three and a half years. 6. I have hoped to sign a proper human rights bill before now, but that hope has been frustrated by the form, not the content, of the bill last presented to me. For previous statements by the Chancellor, see Page 2. I SYMPATHIZE WITH the feelings of those who choose to demonstrate them in this way. I can understand their motive in offering themselves as a sacrifice in what they consider a worthwhile cause, but, I cannot approve their actions, nor do I feel that they are in the best interests of better relations toward which we have been working. These young men and women are not freedom riders through a hostile land where no one will discuss their desires and work with them toward a mutually desired end. Discussions have been continuing since long before many of them entered this institution, and men have been working at the problem since long before many of them were born. Now these young men and women want to stop talking and start acting; but their action may well help build back up a wall other men have been working to take down, stone by stone. WE MUST NEVER stop talking, we must never stop working together, and we must suspect the words of those who would urge us to do otherwise. These young men and women force me to do things I do not wish to do but that I must do to continue the operation of this University. Their unwillingness to listen is one of the most unhappy aspects of this somber situation. I had hoped for better responses from a KU student group. I had hoped we could establish facts; I had hoped that minds were still open to reason. I had hoped we could work together; I hope we still can. Lest anyone be in doubt as to where I stand, let him read my speech to my own fraternity—a plea for brotherhood for all." Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 9, 1965 Chancellor's Statement STATEMENT ON THE SIT-IN DEMONSTRATION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS March 8, 1965 A group of students is being permitted to remain in the hall outside my office so long as they do so in an orderly fashion, without blocking use of the hall, without interfering with classes, and without impeding the normal operations of the University. THIS GROUP OF STUDENTS HAS DEManded that I issue an executive order abolishing covert racially discriminatory practices in fraternities and sororities. As a matter of fact, there is no fraternity or sorority now on this campus which has a racially discriminatory clause in effect in its constitution, and there is no legal reason why a student of any race or religion should not participate in rush or be eligible for acceptance into membership. I have reiterated, in addition, that I will continue to give my full support, and that of the University to any fraternity or sorority to pledge or initiate anyone its active members may wish. An executive order could not do more, and it could harden attitudes and actually impede progress. Orderly evolutionary processes have achieved much on this campus in the past few years. Further progress is possible and will be forthcoming, but only in an atmosphere of reasonable discussion. THE STUDENTS WHO CAME TO ME THIS morning presented me with seven propositions termed by them "demands." In response to those, I have repeated my intention, if it is properly drawn, of signing an All Student Council Bill relating to human rights, which it is my understanding has recently passed the Council. I have further pointed out that the University's housing list will be continued on a non-discriminatory basis; in that regard there have been but two complaints made in the past $ 3 \frac{1}{2} $ years, the period since I originally established the off-campus housing committee. Further, I have offered to review with any group the operating procedures of our practice teaching program and our Teacher Placement Bureau. I reported to the students that the Kansan Board and the All Student Council are reviewing the advertising policies of the University Daily Kansan, and properly so, since it is the student newspaper. IN SHORT, WE APPEAR TO HAVE BUT one area of difference—my publication of an executive order and the establishment of a disclaimer affidavit. A disclaimer affidavit is contrary to the principles of the University and an executive order would be unwise. Finally, there is already an off-campus housing committee; already there is a human relations committee of the All Student Council. Representatives of these committees, with the addition of faculty representatives from the University Senate, will constitute a new committee which I will appoint to consider carefully complaints about discrimination of any kind brought to its attention by any individual or any group, will make a thorough investigation, and will make its recommendations for University action. March 8.1965 March 8,1965 W. Clarke Wescoe Chancellor ★★ 1962 Statement THE POLICY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ON DISCRIMINATORY CLAUSES IN FRATERNITY AND SORORITY CONSTITUTIONS The University of Kansas supports all organized groups on its campus in their efforts to make this a better place in which to live and study. It has supported fraternities and sororities in the past, and will do so in the future, for their positive contributions to the areas of student housing and social adjustment. AS A GENERAL PRINCIPLE, the University upholds the basic human right of individuals or groups to select those with whom they wish to be closely associated. The University believes, however, that discriminatory clauses which remove from consideration for membership persons solely on the basis of their race are not consistent with the principles of our nation, and it is the hope and expectation of the University that these clauses will be removed where they still exist. SUCH ACTION WILL BE OF VALUE ONLY as it comes freely and voluntarily, because the members of these organizations have come to recognize for themselves how prejudice hurts not only those it is practiced against but those who practice it. For this reason the University of Kansas will issue no decrees and will set no deadlines. The progress in this matter shown by fraternities and sororities in the past gives the University confidence that they can work out for themselves solutions which will satisfy not only themselves but the society in which they live. Julv 1.1962 July 1, 1962 W. Clarke Wescoe Chancellor The People Say Dear Sir: HOORAY FOR LINDA ELLISE! Her editorial, "Discrimination," in the March 4 "Daily Kansan" represents an island of sound reasoning in a sea of immature and self-righteous zeal. Miss Ellis obviously possesses what so many on the hill lack—common sense! Observation has led me to believe that some students come to KU searching for some battle flag to wave. They feel it is noble and pious to march, crusade, picket, Daili'i Hänsan 111 Flint Hali 111 Flint Hall UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office Linden 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908. daily Jan. 16, 1912. Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT University of Kansas student newspaper Leta Roth and Gary Noland ... Co-Editorial Editors NEWS DEPARTMENT protest, and preach about bombs, wars, discrimination, and even coffee prices. Besides, there is the fringe benefit of getting one's name in the paper and attracting attention. A crusader can't lose—if he succeeds, he is oh, so noble; if he faixes, he is a martyr. Either way it is a lot easier than abiding by the law and leading a purposeful, though less exciting, life. Bobbie Bartelt, Clare Casey, Marshall Caskey, Fred Frailey, Assistant Managing Editors; Judy Farrell, City Editor; Karen Lambert, Feature Society Editor; Glen Phillips, Sports Editor; Janet Chartier, Telegraph Editor; Harry Krause, Picture Editor. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Tom Fisher Business Manager Nancy Holland, Advertising Manager; Ed Vaughn, National Advertising Manager; Dale Reinecker, Classified Advertising Manager; Russ Calkins, Merchandising Manager; Bob Monk, Promotion Manager; Gary Grazda, Circulation Manager. Perhaps someday the real intellectuals will manage to mold KU into a true harbor of knowledge and enlightenment. Meanwhile, the "gallant" councils, unions, and committees will continue to make it a post-adolescent playground. Roger W. Myers Garnett freshman Editor's note: The editorial page today contains a statement by Chancellor W. Clarke Weseco in regard to the sit-in demonstration by the Civil Rights Council, which began yesterday in front of the Chancellor's office. Below the Chancellor's statement is a 1962 statement by the Chancellor which discriminatory clauses in fraternies and sororites. As of last week when Sigma Nu fraternity received a waiver now no fraternities or sororites with such clauses. But the statement may be of general interest because it expresses the administration's attitude in dealing with the problem in fraternities and sororites. Also on this page is a statement submitted by the CRC and the list of demands which they presented to the Chancellor yesterday. CRC Demands Monday, March 8. from 10:30 a.m. until noon, the CRC and interested students met with Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe to present him with a list of demands. During the course of that meeting, he admitted that racial discrimination probably exists in the Greek system at KU. He cited his previous statements which maintain that he opposes racial discrimination in campus life, and that he will personally support any fraternity or sorority which wishes to pledge a member or members of minority groups. CRC, however, notes that the Chancellor's statements have had no effect on covert racial discrimination, in the KU Greek system. FURTHER, THE CHANCELLOR REVEALED no plan to deal with local chapters which continue covert discriminatory practices, regardless of the policies of the national alumni. He refused to issue an executive order which would compel all off-campus housing (fraternities and sororites included) to sign notarized statements disclaiming discriminatory practices; thereby necessitating a student sit-in protest to be maintained indefinitely. CRC feels that this is necessary because the effects of the Chancellor's inaction are that fraternities and sororites remain segregated, that the administration continues to afford them sanction, use of campus facilities, and financial aid (University hires student help for pre-rush activities, grants use of state-supported dean's offices for rush, etc.), and that the administration continues to recognize as approved housing, units which discriminate. Finally, the chancellor attempted to deal with demands four, five, and six without offering any plans which would definitely bring an end to the discriminatory practices listed in protests three, four, and five. Statement by Civil Rights Council - The fact that covert discriminatory policies continue within the KU fraternity and sorority system-aided by University administrative sanction, state and federal aid, and the use of campus facilities. THE CIVIL RIGHTS COUNCIL & INTERESTED STUDENTS PROTEST: - The fact that the University Daily Kansan accepts advertisements from organizations and landlords who practice racial discrimination. - The fact that the University administration denies status to private off-campus housing which practices racial discrimination but does not apply this same regulation to fraternities and sororities. WE DEMAND: - The fact that the School of Education permits student teachers to be assigned to student teaching positions on the basis of race. And the fact that the Teacher Appointment Bureau allows its services to be utilized by Boards of Education and/or schools who have racially discriminatory hiring policies. - That an executive order be issued immediately by the Chancellor that fraternities and sororities should immediately abolish racially discriminatory practices. And further, that the University require fraternities and sororites to sign notarized statements that they do not practice racial discrimination. - The fact that All Student Council Bill number 7 has been delayed needlessly by the Chancellor. - The fact that the University Housing Office does not through investigation take any steps to end racial discrimination in off-campus housing. - That a board composed of students, faculty, and administrators be established to deal with any complaints against organizations, landlords, etc., that have stated that they do not discriminate on the basis of race, but in fact, still do. - That the administration sever all ties with, and no longer accord either recognition or approved housing status to any organization which fails to immediately sign the statement, or which is found by the board to discriminate on the basis of race. - That the University Housing Office investigate the rental policies of those seeking to register on the approved housing list, and screen out those who do discriminate on the basis of race. - That the School of Education make public a policy that prohibits the assignment of any student teachers to schools or school districts which do in fact have racially discriminatory assignment policies. And further, that the School of Education prohibit its Teacher Appointment Bureau from letting any Board of Education or school which has racially discriminatory hiring practices from utilizing its services. - That the University Daily Kansan no longer accept advertisements from landlords and/or organizations that practice racial discrimination. - That All Student Council Bill number 7 or comparable legislation be passed by the ASC and immediately signed by the Chancellor. A "W essai He CRC cil, at to Actions be a they son, Fo nigh past the BOOK REVIEWS OF GOOD AND EVIL, by Ernest K. Gann (Crest, 75 cents). Ernest K. Gann has changed his setting. It used to be the sky, or the sea, in such popular thrillers as "Twilight for the Gods," "Island in the Sky" and "The High and the Mighty." All good books, unless you're looking for literary quality that will keep a work in the public consciousness for several centuries. [ "Of Good and Evil," an ostentatious-sounding affair, is exciting, dramatic, and limited. It's a story of life in the city, of the police department in San Francisco. Gann gives a minute-by-minute description of police operations. Really what it is is several stories thrown together into a novel. It should be good leisure-time reading for the undemanding. --- University Daily Kansan Page 3 Arrests No Curb— (Continued from page 1) "We will return as long as it's necessary," he said. YESTERDAY AN estimated 110 Civil Rights Council (CRC) demonstrators and sympathizers were arrested, charged with disturbing the peace, and suspended from the University for refusing to leave Chancellor Wescoe's office in Strong Hall when it closed at 5 p.m. For approximately two hours last night, about 400 students marched past the Chancellor's home to protest the arrest and suspension actions. According to university regulations, the suspended students will not be allowed to attend classes until they are reinstated. Donald Alderson, Dean of Men, said. BEFORE THE ARRESTS yesterday, students were told the doors to the chancellor's office would be locked at 5 p.m., according to Pamela Smith, Kansas City sophomore and CRC secretary. She said the group was warned that all students who remained in the office would be subject to arrest. Mike Miner, Lawrence senior and ASC chairman, said this morning legislation will be proposed tonight at the ASC meeting asking that the students be reinstated. He said that anyone representing CRC, who had consent of the Council, would have speaking privileges at tonight's meeting. ting. blice de- bories ding "The doors were locked and campus and Lawrence police were called to arrest us," Miss Smith commented in an interview before CBS television cameras last night at the demonstration. Tuesday, March 9,1965 Police began escorting the students from Strong Hall about 5:25 p.m. The students were loaded in buses and were taken to the Douglas County jail at 6 pm. Another bus load of CRC members and sympathizers were taken to the Lawrence City jail after the county jail was filled. ROBLEE $13.00 The demonstrators were removed from the buses in groups of six and taken into the jails, where they were booked. AN HOUR AND A HALF later, it was announced that the students could be released if they paid a $25 bond. It was stipulated that students who were residents of Douglas County could sign for the bond. The students could also arrange for people from Lawrence to sign the bond for them. We've got it! Students received help from Marvin McKnight, past president of the Lawrence branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). McKnight enlisted the support of two local ministers, Garnett Henning of St. Luke's African Methodist Episcopal church, and the Rev. Harris of the 9th Street Baptist Church. Between 8 and 9 p.m. the students were released from jail in pairs. They then marched to the Wesley Methodist Student Center, 1144 Louisiana, for a meeting to plan further demonstrations. The meeting began in the basement of the center, but had to be moved to the main floor because of the crowd. ABOUT 400 students attended the meeting. The ever popular Penny loafer in ivory waxhide. That's right. We've still got the most popular men's slip-on to ever hit the college scene. Just look around you. Bet most of your friends already have a pair. How about you? M'Coy'S SHOES Sims conducted the meeting. He offered three proposals for further demonstrations: that the group stage an all night vigil in front of Strong Hall, asking Lawrence citizens to supply hot coffee and blankets for the demonstrators; - that the group go home and sleep and resume the demonstration in front of and inside Strong Hall in the morning; that the group stage a march on Chancellor Wescoe's residence for about two hours. THE PROPOSALS WERE discussed and the third adopted. The marchers left the Wesley Foundation, 1144 Louisiana, walking 25 feet apart and 3 abreast. They circled Lilac Lane in a peaceful and orderly fashion. The marchers were prohibited from coming any closer than about 100 feet to the Chancellor's residence. Marchers carried signs reading "Equal Opportunity," "Civil Rights, Not Civil Wrongs," and "Discrimination Hurts." Leaders of the demonstrators stood around the path saying, "We must keep moving. We must not stop." Midway through the march, four loud explosions were heard. These were "cherry bombs," large, illegal firecrackers. "THIS DEMONSTRATION is already a great success," Sims said. He walked with the marchers and gave directions. One of the demonstrators, Chris Hood, Joplin, Mo., senior, said, "Our spirits are very high. Even the news that the students arrested have been suspended hasn't dampened our spirits. "I believe the marchers were more orderly than the spectators," he said. orderly than the spectators, he said. The students arrested yesterday were the second largest group of demonstrators jailed in the nation this year, according to Sims. The largest group demonstrated with Dr. Martin Luther King. AS THEY MARCHED, many of the demonstrators called on spectators to join them. Traffic around the area became heavy as many people came to watch the march. Ad Fraternity Rushes Tonight Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternity, will have a rush smoker tonight featuring Ray Turpin of the advertising department of Modern Handcraft. John Pepper, Lenexa senior, who is in charge of this semester's rush said, "Last semester we had approximately 30 rushees and we were able to take only about 22 of them. This semester we are expecting about 40 rushees, and because a large number of men are graduating we will be able to pledge 27 to 30 men." The purpose of Alpha Delta Sigma, Pepper said, "is to bridge the gap between the classroom and the actual field of advertising. Even though many of our members are advertising majors, we have men from fine arts, business, psychology, and even engineering. All of them have one thing in common-an interest in advertising." John Suhler, Cross River, N.Y., senior and president of the organization said, "We will have several fine programs during the remainder of the semester and we will also sponsor a field trip to the Kansas Color Press. Advertising Day on Campus will be the biggest feature on the remainder of this year's agenda." "I hope the men that we have not been able to contact personally will come anyway, since they are more than welcome," Pepper said. Ford Motor Company is: responsibility 1 Stephen Jaeger B.B.A., Univ. of Pittsburgh A key dimension of any job is the responsibility involved. Graduates who join Ford Motor Company find the opportunity to accept responsibility early in their careers. The earlier the better. However, we know the transition from the academic world to the business world requires training. Scholastic achievements must be complemented by a solid understanding of the practical, day-to-day aspects of the business. That is the most direct route to accomplishment. Stephen Jaeger, of the Ford Division's Milwaukee District Sales Office, is a good example of how it works. His first assignment, in January, 1963, was in the Administrative Department where he had the opportunity to become familiar with procedures and communications between dealerships and the District Office. In four months he moved ahead to the Sales Planning and Analysis Department as an analyst. He studied dealerships in terms of sales history, market penetration and potentials, and model mix. This information was then incorporated into master plans for the District. In March, 1964, he was promoted to Zone Manager—working directly with 19 dealers as a consultant on all phases of their complex operations. This involves such areas as sales, finance, advertising, customer relations and business management. Responsible job? You bet it is—especially for a man not yet 25 years old. Over one million dollars in retail sales, annually, are involved in just one dealership Steve contacts. As a growth company in a growth industry, Ford Motor Company offers an exceptionally wide spectrum of job opportunities. The chances are good that openings exist in your field of interest. See our representative when he visits your campus. We are looking for men who want responsibility and will be ready for it when it comes. THERE'S A FUTURE FOR YOU WITH... Ford MOTOR COMPANY The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan An equal opportunity employer Page 4 University Daily Kansan A A A A A Tuesday, March 9, 1965 ( V , V , V , V ) Grad Student Gets Chance to Test Theory Ed Scheff is one KU student whose interest in the recent election was more than political. This election gave Ed, a graduate student from Queens, New York, a chance to test "the semantic differential as a predictor of voting behavior," the subject of his doctoral dissertation. (He's planning to receive a Ph.D. in Speech in June.) Scheff thinks that the method would eliminate some of the polling errors such as those that led to the Literary Digest's prediction that Alf Landon would win over FDR and the incorrect prediction made by professional pollsters that Thomas Dewey would defeat Harry Truman. Community Studies, Inc., Kansas City, Mo., also became interested in his device and gave him a research grant with which to test it. The "SEMANTIC differential method of polling" is explained by Scheff this way. It may be viewed as a measure of attitude. It rests on the assumption that the voter's attitudes toward the issues and the candidates will, in large part, determine the way he votes. Scheff first had to discover the concepts (issues and candidates) about which the voters would have formed attitudes. His sources of concepts were the campaign statements and platforms of the candidates. He selected the concepts on the basis of their apparent significance to the campaign as judged by how often they were mentioned by various candidates and news commentators on radio and television and in the Kansas City Star editorial and news columns. Other concepts were chosen from those that were contained in or suggested by the speeches and statements made at the two national party conventions. The major concepts that he came up with were: Bobby Baker, John Birch Society and the Americans for More NDEA Grants Set William P. Albrecht, dean of the KU Graduate School, has announced that 24 National Defense Fellowships worth about $125,000 have been allotted for graduate work for each of the next three years. Earlier KU had received 27 new National Defense Fellowships for 1965-66, bringing the total of new fellows to 51. These, with fellows eligible to return from earlier years, will bring the total on campus next year to 95. Nearly one-half million dollars will be involved in the total projects. THE GROUP of 24 fellowships will be spread among botany, English, French, electrical engineering, entomology, mathematics, psychology, sociology and Spanish-Portugese. Some of the fellows have already been selected, Albrecht said. "However, we are bound by a ruling of the National Association of Graduate Schools not to announce their names until April 1," he said. "KU has been receiving fellowships from the NDEA since 1958-59. We have no national figures on this year yet, but we received more than we ever have before. But, of course, more were offered this year." First year fellows will receive stipends of $2,000 plus an allowance of $400 for each dependent. Stipends for the following years will be $2,200 and $2,400. KU will receive institutional funds of $2,500 for each fellow from which his fees and other expenses of the program will be paid. AUTO WRECKING AUTO NEW AND USED PARTS WRECKING Tires and Glass East End of 9th Street V13-0956 Democratic Action (extremism), racial demonstrations (safety in the streets), William E. Miller, Republican Party, Warren E. Hearnes, Ethan Shepley, Hubert H. Humphrey, Lyndon B. Johnson, use of nuclear weapons, federal power, Barry M. Goldwater, and the Democratic Party. THESE CONCEPTS were measured on eleven scales of values: dirty-clean, strong-weak, dangerous-safe, peaceful-warlike, unfair-fair, deep-shallow, active-passive, liberal-conservative, responsible-ir-responsible, foolish-wise, and realistic-unrealistic. Scheff determined some of the scales from other research and the rest of the scales from what seemed appropriate to this campaign. Between the two words on the scale are seven blanks. When the voter marks the blank closest to either end of the scale it indicates that he thinks the concept is very closely related to that end of the scale. If the voter feels that the candidate or issue is quite closely related (but not extremely) he marks the second blank from either end of the scale. A mark in the third blank from either end of the scale means that the candidate or issue is only slightly related (but not really neutral) to one of the terms on the scale. If the voter considers the candidate or issue to be neutral on the scale, both sides of the scale equally associated with the concept, or if he considers the scale completely unrelated to the concept, he will place his checkmark in the middle space. Scheff decided that the best way he could test this method of attitude measurement as a voting predictor was to limit his area of research and try it out in a genuine election situation. So, he chose the Kansas City, Mo., area in which to conduct his study. IT TOOK about 230 hours (equivalent to nearly six work weeks) for Scheff, some graduate student friends in the Speech and other departments, and twelve professional pollsters to conduct the poll. They made two visits to each of 100 registered voters selected at random from the research territory. On the first visit just after the Democratic Party Convention, voters were asked merely to complete the semantic differential described above. The pollsters mentioned nothing about voting. (Scheff comments that the voters present their attitudes more honestly when they don't know their voting intent is being solicited). The pollsters made their second visit on Election Day and again they administered the semantic differential. Afterwards they asked the voter for such information as age, education, income, occupation, religion, political party preference, sources of information on the election, degree of interest in the election, for whom they voted, and why they voted as they did. SCHEFF IS RELIEVED that all of the data is gathered. However, his work is, in a way, just beginning. He's now programming the data for the computer. Only after the mechanical brain processes the information will he know the accuracy of his pollling device. He's hoping also to find some correlation between the reasons people voted as they did and their backgrounds (age, education, etc.). Scheff can already name some advantages of his polling device. It avoids the problems of bias of results that arise from; the voter's reluctance to admit lack of information or opinion, the relatively high percentage of undecided voters, and the voter's reluctance to admit that he has changed his mind after having once committed himself to an opinion. The voter need not commit himself because the semantic differential does not elicit a commitment. The instrument is not likely to obtain answers that the voter thinks the interviewer would like. Furthermore, the test is not easy for the voter to "see through" because it is unlike tests he is likely to have experienced and because there are no right or wrong answers. He feels the main advantage is that it suggests "why" the voter voted as he did. Scheff doesn't plan to use the technique professionally. After he graduates, Scheff, his wife Helene, and their two children will live in a town where Scheff hopes to be on the Speech Department faculty of a university. This is the week to do something about your future! This week the Bell System recruiting team will be on your campus. They're here to talk to people who want to put their educations to work in the fast-growing, fast-moving communications business. Maybe that includes you. We're interested in engineering, business and liberal arts seniors who have done well and who expect to keep on doing well. We want people who are acquiring the habit of success. We can strengthen it. The Bell System is where people find solutions to exciting problems. Bell System companies are equal opportunity employers. If you haven't done so already, you owe it to yourself to find out what the Bell System can offer you. Sign up now at the Placement Office for an appointment with our representatives. This might be the week your future comes into focus. BELL SYSTEM BELL SYSTEM American Telephone and Telegraph Co. and Associated Companies We work in space... Drake and under the sea ... C and over the land . . . 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 to provide the world's finest communications Tuesday, March 9, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 5 THE RED DOG INN presents The ASTRONAUTS (RCA Recording Artists) WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10th ASTRONAUTS ORBIT CAMPUS SURFIN WITH THE ASTRONAUTS COVER $1.75 GO...GO...GO... EVERYTHING IS A-OK The Astronauts Astronaut albums now available at Kief's Record & Hi-Fi 711 W.23 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 9,1965 Scenes of Hawaii Grace Union Room The figures are scrawled or carefully-drawn, the colors are bright, and the scenes warm; the result is a surprising collection of 30 paintings by children from the Hawaiian Islands. The paintings are currently hanging in the Browsing Room of the Kansas Union, on tour from the Honolulu Academy of Arts, sponsored by the Smithsonian Museum. The paintings were done by students from 5 to 18 years of age. Themes of the sea, the islands, and the sun appear again and again. The theme of the Hawaiian way of life runs throughout the exhibit. A PAINTING ENTITLED simply "Valerie . . . age 5" catches the hugeness and the color of an erupting volcano. Large black saucers dance down the side of the great black volcano that forms the center figure. The orange-red sky and drips of orange down the volcano's side, forming a picture of a night of fire. Nixie Ogden, 7, created a gigantic, black spider spinning a bright yellow web. The lines forming the spider's body and legs, are firm and straight. TOURISTS, likely from the U.S., stroll in printed sports shirts, via Arthur Godfrey, in an untitled painting. The tourists are middle-aged, heavy-set, with cameras strung around their necks. Near them strolls a man with surfboard on shoulders. In the foreground is a large trash can, bearing the words, "Help Keep our Streets Clean." Buildings wrapped around a corner is the theme of a painting by J. Gahan, age 16. The rickety buildings seem to lean with the leaning telephone poles, and the hanging wires. A few figures lean against the doors, and a fat woman sits in the shadow of a bar sign. Robert Kuwahara, 10, exhibits two paintings. One depicts surfers just falling from their boards into a crashing, rolling, grey foam. HIS SECOND PAINTING is of a group of birds in blues, browns, reds, oranges, and greens seated in stark, black branches. A painting called "Number 13, Age 15" shows two young girls standing under a breadfruit tree in long gowns, probably on a gentle summer afternoon. One of the girls reaches upward to pick a breadfruit, standing on a Dole pineapple box. In the corner is a black and white sketch of the back of a young boy. Next to this quiet painting is a small watercolor of three fat, triumphant natives with their kill, a wild boar, at their feet. SEVEN-YEAR-OLD Tobias Yeh has drawn a brown and white spotted cow with wide black eyes against a bright, orange background. It has bent knees and a crooked back. The final paintings show finer detail. "Number 27" features a splashing aqua waterfall, with gentle, white swirling water coming from a black rock. Above the pool, is a several-banded rainbow. Three fish, on a slightly-mottled surface, are painted in unusual color combinations. One fish has a combination of a plaid and a striped body in greens, pinks, and browns. THE ASTRID THE MUSICAL SONG The Lettermen Portrait of my love THE LETTERMEN a challenge to KU students and faculty to debate the issue of war in Viet Nam was voiced by the Student Peace Union. If you want the itinerary of their current tour, or if you want information about a personal appearance at your campus- They sing twelve beautiful love songs—Portrait of My Love, Willow Weep for Me, et al.—with a smooth new harmony that makes you feel good all over. There's even a king-size, full color portrait of them included, if you go for that sort of thing. TODAY Write for full information to: LETTERMEN Advertising Department, Capitol Records 1750 N. Vine Street, Hollywood, California Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Courtyard. Confessions before and during mass. American Society Class, 7 p.m., Speak- e to theACHE, American Banking 24 N. Strong Official Bulletin More great Lettermen albums: Introduction to Catholicism, 7:00 p.m.; Study of the Sacrents by Kathleen discussion, 7:00 p.m.; Western Civilization Discussion, 9:00 p.m. St. Lawrence Center. More great Lettermen albums: A SONG FOR YOUNG LOVE ST 1669 ONCE UPON A TIME ST 1711 COLLEGE STANDARDS ST 1829 THE LETTERMEN IN CONCERT ST 1936 A LETTERMEN KIND OF LOVE ST 2013 THE LETTERMEN LOOK AT LOVE ST 2083 SHE CRIED ST 2142 The SPU issued the challenge last night for the debate to be held Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the Kansas Union. No room has been selected. Christian Science College Organization, 7:30 a.m. Denforth Chapel "Issue an immediate call for a world wide conference to which every nation must be invited to consider ways through which the United Nations can resolve its present crisis and be strengthened to become a realistic and powerful expression of mankind's common interest in preventing war and to maintain the peace and freedom from foreign intervention of all peoples everywhere." CHARLES HOOK, SPU president "Seek an agreement between all interested nations to safeguard North and South Viet Nam from outside interference and an internationally guaranteed neutralization of all of South East Asia. IT REQUESTS that the President: "Seek a cease fire in South Viet Nam. The group is also distributing a petition to be signed by students addressed to the President of the United States: Hook said that if there is no one to accept the challenge there will be a lecture on Viet Nam. Questions from the audience will be answered. Inquirers Class, 7:30 p.m. Canterbury House, 1116 La There will be 20 minutes for each side to present its arguments with a 10 minute rebuttal and five minutes for the conclusion. SPU Offers Debate on Viet Nam Business Wives Meeting. 7:30 p.m. There will be a flower arrangement demonstration at Alexander's Flowers, 826, Ivan St. **Lecture.** 8 p.m. Gabriel Marcel, *The Motion of Time*, Contemporary Contemporary Thought; Fraser Theater. said the points to be discussed include: (1) The bombing of North Viet Nam was a serious mistake and should be immediately discontinued. (2) The intervention of the United States government in South Viet Nam has served neither the interests of the Vietnamese people nor the cause of freedom. And (3) warfare *Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7* *Washington University, Pine Ridge, Kansas, USA* *Stuves, Pine Room, Kansas Union* Wesley Foundation, Community Worship 1:15 p.m. Methodist Center, 1314 Broad Capitol RECORDS Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW College Life, 7:15-8:15 p.m. Jack Parr, former 2-time basketball all-American an athlete speak on a personal matters the really matter sense. Sigma Chi House, 143 Turpennes Sq. Religion in History, 7.30 p.m. Panel by Prof. Wm. Gilbert, Prof. John E. Long- gate, Prof. Brian L. McDougall, St. Benedict's College, Kansas Union. Sponsored by History Department. French Club, 4.30 p.m. Mrs. Jacqueline Curtis will discuss the plays which will be presented by the Treteau de Paris. Room 11, Fraser. Classical Film, 7:00 p.m. "The Big Sleep." Fraser, Theater Teaching Candidates, Interview sched- ing for Littleton District No. 6, intermediate Student N.E.A. Meeting, 7:30 p.m. p.m. Carl Knox, Sup't of Schools, Lawrence, "Teacher's Right to Strike." Elections. Kansas, Union. on any side is no longer a useful tool of foreign policy. TURKEY * Engineering and Physical Science Seniors $ ^{*} $ GROW with a growing industry... ...the Bell Telephone System The Bell Telephone System is continuing its expansion program to serve a growing nation. Growth in the telephone industry means new jobs, fresh opportunities for promotions, a rewarding career for you. The future is bright for young men who want to advance with a progressive industry. Representatives of the following Bell System companies will be glad to talk with you. They will consider all qualified applicants for employment without regard to race, creed, color, or national origin. - Southwestern Bell Telephone Company builds, maintains and operates telephone and other communications systems throughout its five-state territory. Bell Laboratories - Bell Laboratories research, development, engineering and design in electronics and communications fields. - Western Electric manufacturing and supply unit. - Sandia Corporation - Sandia Corporation applied research, development and design for production of atomic weapons. - Long Lines Department of A. T. & T. provides interstate Long Distance and overseas Telephone Service. Bell System representatives will be on campus March 10 and 11. Sign up for an interview at the placement office. BELL SYSTEM Page 7 each with a minutes University Daily Kansan one will be stations sered. ing a students the dent: Viet all guard from inter-ation or a which con- nited crisis one a of pre- the in invery- Guitar Player Says Music Her Fun, Security By Jane Larson The small cafe was crowded and the air heavily layered with smoke. From a dim corner one could hear a soft, mellow voice, accompanied by guitar strums. Her selections were varied—now a lively Greek folk song, then a romantic ballad, intermingled with familiar favorites. The cafe is Monteleone's in St. Louis. The singer is Louise (L. C.) Hutcheson, a 5"8" brown-haired, blue-eyed junior from Overland Park. Miss Hutcheson's first appearance "I DON'T PLAY too much professionally," she said, "I would if I had the time but now it's sort of a weekend thing." in Monteleone's was at Christmas, 1963 and she was invited back for a second appearance last summer. At the present time Miss Hutcheson entertains at the Watchamacallit, a dance sponsored by the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH). She has also played at the Vanguard Club, a Kansas City, Mo. coffeehouse. "I try to find good selections of world folk songs," she said, "but WEDNESDAY I'm not too great at figuring out the pronunciation of the foreign songs. SHE PLUCKS FOR PLEASURE-Louise (L. C.) Hutcheson enjoys playing the guitar, both for pleasure and profit. Tuesday, March 9, 1965 "I like to sing some of the more romantic ballads and folk songs that aren't extremely popular," she added, "but when you're performing in public, there are the old stand-bys that everyone likes to hear over and over." "I WRITE SOME of my own songs." Miss Hutcheson commented. Miss Hutcheson has always been interested in singing. In high school she was active in choirs and solo work. "When I got to KU," she said, "I found that with a major in art education I didn't have time to participate in such activities." "At first I took up the ukulele, but it has too many limitations," she said. "You can only progress so far and then there's no place to go except to the guitar." MISS HUTCHESON taught herself to play the guitar. "It's not difficult," she said, "just find a chord book and learn the chords" "My guitar is sort of a security symbol, a security blanket," she said. "I just sit there and pick the chords." However, during final week, Miss Hutcheson finds herself getting rusty. It takes about a week to get your hands back into shape as they become tender so fast that it hurts to play, she said. EVEN THOUGH Miss Hutcheson describes her guitar as her security blanket, she finds that having a guitar at her fingertips does present problems. "It gets to the point where I'd rather play the guitar than study," she said, "It takes a lot of discipline to stay away from the guitar. When I hear a new song I can't wait to get home and try it. And that's bad when you know you should study." WHEN MISS HUTCHESON graduates with her degree in art education, she hopes to teach art in a high school and perhaps be able to work in some singing. Did you ever watch coffee drinkers in action? Coffee Drinkers' Contortions Someday when you have a spare minute, grab a seat in Strong Hall basement and enjoy the sport of "coffee drinker watching." There's the girl who tries to carry three cups of coffee from the snack bar to a table at the end of the hall. Everything is fine at first, but about halfway along the route, heat from the coffee starts penetrating through the paper cups and she gets that "how to be burned gracefully" look on her face. OR AN ANXIOUS young freshman rushes in from the cold up to the snack bar, buys a cup of coffee and starts gulping it down. The first swallow produces some words which cannot be reproduced here. How about the person who spills a cup of coffee on himself? Ever watch him squirm, look around to see how many people saw him, then paste a blase, "oh-well, it doesn't-make any-difference" look on his face? SECRETARIES ALSO get into the act. A secretary in one of the offices is carrying her seventh cup of coffee. Her feet were firmly planted on the floor, suddenly her feet land somewhere across the hall, along with the cup of coffee. No real harm done to her, but oh if she could get her hands on the person who dropped that banana peel. KU Aerohawk Flying Club Meeting Sunflower Room, Union Building 7 p.m., Wednesday, March 10 Aviation Films and Glider Flying Slides by Prof. C. J. Choliasmenos, Asst. Prof. of Mech. & Aerospace (Former European Soaring Champion) All Aviation Enthusiasts Welcome! Bring Your Wives and Dates Refreshments Will Be Served Compliments of Earhart Flying Service LAST DAY SATURDAY Red Wing Pottery FACTORY SALE Damask TWO SIXTEEN PIECE STARTER SETS FOR THE PRICE OF ONE THREE MOST POPULAR PATTERNS RED WING Pépe — Damask Bob White REDwing AS LITTLE AS $17.95 FOR TWO STARTER SETS POTTERY Pépe Dining Furniture Collection Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 9, 1965 Business Honor Roll Shows 65 Martin L. Jones, assistant dean of the business school announced today 65 students on the School of Business Honor Roll for the fall semester. Thirty-two seniors, 12.4 per cent of the class, attained a 2.30 grade point average or better, while 33 juniors, also 12.4 per cent of the class, equaled or exceeded the required 2.20 g.p.a. THREE STUDENTS had a 3.0 grade point average. They are Robert M. Byrne, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Michael S. McGill, Kirkwood, Mo. senior; and Melvin C. O'Connor, Wichita minor. Seniors on the honor roll are: Larry D. Armel, Humboldt; Jon K. Bell, Salina; John A. Benson, Prairie Village; James E. Cannon, Hutchinson; Bruce D. Culley, Salina; John G. Gradinger, Leawood; William G. Gradinger, Shawnee Mission; Janet L. Heck, Lawrence; Richard N. Higgins, Overland Park; Harold E. House, Douglass; Charles A. Hurty, Wichita. ROBERT T. KOETTING, Prairie Village; Richard D. Miller, Kansas City; David F. Mitchell, Lawrence; Glenn E. Quakenbush, Emporia; Allan L. Reynolds, Leavenworth; Hale T. Ritchie, Wichita; Ronald R. Rinacke, Independence, Mo.; Beverly S. Settle, Kansas City; James R. Sharp, Topeka; William M. Smith, Shawnee Mission; John W. Spidell, Mission; Larry L. Steiner, Hiawatha. Dennis W. Teter, Hutchinson; Theodore Tindall, Kansas City; M. Scott Turrentine, Independence, Mo. Dennis F. Waetzig, Topeka; Robert L. Walsh, Los Angeles, Calif.; Lewis S. Ward, Topeka; Thomas L. Woods, Arkansas City; John E. Yorke, Sedan Juniors on the honor roll are; JAMES R. BANZ, Yates Center; Robert L. Boulware, Leawood; Don E. Buckholk, Prairie Village; Douglas M. Chernovetz, St. Joseph, Mo. David E. Dwyer, Joplin, Ma.; David K. Elyea, West Des Moines, Iowa; Robert W. Emerson, Bartlesville, Okla.; Richard E. Flaherty, Lincoln. "It's time spent out of class," one student said in telling why he liked the program. Another student replied, "There's a chance to read out loud." Mary Ann Gallops, Prairie Village; Mark I. Germann. Hiawatha; John J. Gibson, Broadview, Ill.; Scott E. Giffin, Prairie Village; Wayne H. Giles, Arkansas City; Kent C. Howerton, Garnett; Edward A. Kangas, Wichita; James M. Kerr, Sioux City, Iowa; Gary B. Krueger, St. Louis, Mo.; Mosobalaje Labode, Abekcuta, Nigeria; C. W. Lilgendahl, Prairie Village. "Students should come to remedial reading sessions to fulfill needs, not simply because they are required to take part." Dr. H. Alan Robinson explained to a group of about 75 students and teachers Saturday. JON W. MATTHEWS, Ashland; Vicki L. Monsees, Kansas City, Mo.; Virgil R. Ohse, Topeka; Harry K. Phelps, Manhattan; Michael R. Richey; Kenneth D. Snodgrass, Lawrence; Richard B. Solum, Leawood; Carole F. Terry, Ponca City, Okla.; Bruce D. Tobecksen, La Grange Park, Ill.; Leon A. Torkelson, Horton; John D. Trotter, Bartlesville, Okla.; Walter C. Williamson, Wichita. Dr. Robinson, Director of the Reading Conference and Workshop at the University of Chicago, was the second lecturer to speak in a four-part series on special education. "This is a child who had a difficult time learning to read and he wants to read out loud," Robinson said. Ross McKinney, chairman of dept. of civil engineering, and Raymond Loehr, associate professor of civil engineering, will take part in The American Society of Civil Engineers Water Resources Conference in Mobile, Alabama, Wednesday and Thursday. Educator Discusses Reading Class Value KU Professors Attend Water Resource Meet PROF. McKINNEY will serve as chairman for a breakfast meeting for the Engineering Council for Professional Development visitors. At the meeting he will lead the discussion of the accreditation of civil engineering in schools throughout the country. While there, Professor Loehr will act as chairman of the Sanitary Engineering Program which meets on Thursday afternoon. "I like to read out loud because it takes up time," one child said. "Usually we can rehearse one part because we know when we are going to be called on." another commented. At another session, Prof. McKinney will take part in a panel discussion on the role of the engineering "We do not have to figure out the hard words because the teacher gives them to us," another child said. Robinson emphasized several "ills" of present remedial programs. Programs are often too skill-centered, rather than problem or student-centered, he said. A student must have his own particular problems diagnosed before an effective program for him may be set up. "Standardized tests are not enough," the educator said. SUA Going Home or Just Wanting to Go Somewhere? Spring Vacation Charter Bus Express, No changing of buses non-stop service direct to: New York & Philadelphia Round Trip Fare — $44.00 Save—$25.00 Buses also going to St. Louis Los Angeles and San Francisco Do Not Delay Get Your Reservation Now For Reservations and Information contact the SUA Office in the Union Bldg. or Bob Sharp at VI3-8878 VI2-1200 Deadline for Reservations — Monday, March 22nd ($15.00 deposit) ALBERTA masculine ...that's the kind of aroma she likes being close to. The aroma of Old Spice. Crisp, tangy, persuasive. Old Spice . . . unmistakably the after shave lotion for the untamed male. Try it soon . . .she's waiting. 1.25 & 2.00 ...that's the way it is with Old Spice SHULTON Old Spice BITTER SWEET LOTION faculty in teaching professionalism. The session will be directed toward analyzing how faculty attitudes toward teaching affect students in developing professional attitudes. PROF. McKINNEY said, "The student develops the base of professionalism in the university, and if the professors aren't professionally oriented, the students probably won't be after graduation." Are you still wearing those creasy kid slacks? B-RATRON Get into some wised-up Post-Grads that know where a crease should always be and where it should never be, and how to keep things that way. The reason is the Koratron® fabric of 65% Dacron*/35% cotton. No matter how many times you wash and wearthese trimly tapered Post-Grad slacks, they'll stay completely neat and make the iron obsolete. In tan, clay, black, navy or loden, $6.98 in poplin or gabardine, $7.98 in oxford. At swinging stores. Press-Free Post-Grad slacks by h.i.s. *DUPONT'S REG.TM FOR POLYESTER FIBER. Tuesday, March 9.1965 University Daily Kansan Page 9 Big 8 Races Over; 'Pokes on Top Oklahoma State made their second meeting with arch rivals Oklahoma a championship celebration as the Cowboys rolled over the Sooners, 89-66. James King and Fred Molder paced the Cowboy attack with 21 and 20 points respectively. The team managed a respectable 57 per cent shooting from the field. In other action in the Big Eight, the Iowa State Cyclones deprived the Missouri Tigers of a piece of the second place spot when they defeated the Tigers, 78-65, at Ames. The loss kept Missouri from tying KU for second place and dropped the Tigers into a third place tie with Colorado. Both teams have an 8-6 conference record. Also active on the boards last night were the Kansas State Wildcats who met the Nebraska Cornhuskers on the Huskers' own court in Lincoln. K-State played turn-about with the team that defeated them on their home court and downed the Huskers, 79-67. The Oklahoma State squad, which had cinched their title berth Saturday when they defeated the Jayhawks in Allen Field House, jumped to an early 7-0 lead and they never lost the lead again. The Sooners managed to pull within two points with four minutes gone in the first half. However, the Pokes soon pulled away and for the rest of the game there was no doubt who the winner was. Bill Whitlock was high man for Oklahoma with 15. The Sooners hit 37.5 per cent for the outside shooting. In the Missouri contest, MU was tied with the Cyclones at the halfway mark, 39-39. However, for their second half play, the Tigers were able to connect on only 8 of 50 shots from the field. The performance gave the Missourians a frigid 26 per cent from the field. The Cyclones were led by Bob Zeigler and Al Koch who dropped in 29 and 21 points respectively. The team hit 31 of 73 tries from the field for 42 per cent. Top Missouri shooter was George Flamack, who hit 18 points and hauled down 18 rebounds. Dave Fleming led the Cyclones performance on the backboard when he picked off 17. For the Wildcats in Lincoln, it was a close race. The score was tied five times during the first half before the K-Staters managed to pull ahead on a couple of long shots by Dick Barnard, 22-15. The Wildcats had run their lead to 13 points, 40-27, by the time the half rolled around. The Huskers took the court and Jayhawk Athletes Join Protest; Switch from Playing to Sitting The defeat suffered by the Tigers at the hands of Iowa State held the Tigers to the third place tie with Colorado and gave the Cyclones an undisputed fifth place. Kansas State and Nebraska finished the season with identical conference records after the contest last night. Both teams have 5-9 marks for league play and are tied for sixth and seventh place in the ratings. The tall figure in the black suit with a black hat tilted slightly on his head stood in the center of Lilac Lane near the front of Blake Hall. He looked more like he was dressed for a concert than for directing human traffic at a demonstration. The Oklahoma Sooners finished the season with a 3-11 conference mark for an undisputed hold on the cellar spot. "Keep moving. You must keep moving." George Unseld told demonstrators as they marched past the chancellor's house last night. Unseld, Louisville, Ky., senior, is one of the co-chairmen of the Civil Rights Council. The one-time all-Big Eight basketball player was arrested and jailed earlier in the evening in connection with a demonstration in Strong Hall. The 6-7 Unseld led the KU basketball team in scoring and rebounding as a sophomore and junior. He was dropped from this year's team after a disagreement with Coach Ted Owens. Unseld was one of several Negro athletes that participated in yesterday's demonstrations. Sports Briefs NEW YORK—Princeton's Bill Bradley, acclaimed as "the best of the best," led the balloting for Look Magazine's ten-man All-America team, picked by the United States Basketball Writers Association. The All-America selections, made by the writers' nine-man national awards committee representing the eight NCAA districts, were announced Monday in Look. The All-America team is as follows: John Austin, Boston College; Rick Barry, Miami (Fla.); Bill Bradley, Princeton; A.W. Davis, Tennessee; Wayne Estes, Utah State; Gail Goodrich, UCLA; Fred Hetzel, Davidson; Clyde Lee, Vanderbilt; Cazzie Russell, Michigan; Dave Stallworth, Wichita. "With the exception of Oscar Robertson, Bradley probably deserves the rating a majority of experts have accorded him: the greatest all-around player the colleges have yet produced," Look declared. Stallworth won All-America recognition as "the standout of the tough Missouri Valley Conference," although he played only 16 of Wichita's 26 scheduled games, his eligibility having run out on January 30. Estes, accidentally killed on the night of February 8 when he brushed against a high-voltage wire in the dark, was the first player ever voted All-America honors posthumously. The KU Rugby Club begins practice at 4 p.m. this afternoon on the intramural field south of Summerfield. Rugby Club president George Bunting said all Berkholtz led the Wildcats with 19. Simons hit 17 and Smith netted 16. Willie Campbell paced the Huskers with 16 counters and was closely followed by Fred Hare with 15. interested persons are welcome at the practice. pumped in 11 counters to the Wildcats' three. However, with the Nebraska crew within five points, K-State opened up their big guns of Ron Smith, Dennis Berkholtz, Sam Robinson and Jeff Simons for a barrage that swamped the Huskers. The team will practice today tomorrow, and Thursday at the same time on the intramural fields. The Rugby Club hold their first spring game on March 28. The Jayhawk squad will face the University of Missouri at Raleigh team at Lawrence. Jack Paar, former K-State two-time All-America basketball player and Big Eight official, will speak at 7:15 Wednesday night in the College Life series sponsored by the Campus Crusade for Christ. On April 3 the KU Club will play the St. Louis University team at Lawrence. The team will travel to St. Louis on April 17 for a 16-team tournament. The tournament will include a banquet and dance for the players. The next action for the Oklahoma State squad is Friday when they travel to Manhattan for the N.C.A.A. regionals. They finished with a 12-2 conference record. Paar, a member of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, will speak on his experience in college and how he found a more vital personal faith. The meeting will be at the Sigma Chi fraternity house, 1439 Tenn. Nate Sims, Pasadena, Calif., senior a former trackman, is one of the CRC co-chairmen. Walt Wesley, Fort Meyers, Fla., junior, all-Big Eight basketball selection and top conference scorer, was everything but unnoticeable as he moved his 6-11 frame in step with other demonstrators. Al Lopes, Providence, R.I., junior, another member of the Jayhawk basketball team, was another marcher. Gale Sayers, Omaha, Neb. senior and all-America football halfback, was jailed for his participation in the demonstrations in Strong Hall. Other KU athletes spotted among the demonstrators were football players Sims Stokes, Mobile, Ala. junior; Mike Shinn, Topeka senior, and George Harvey, Parsons junior, and former basketball player Pete Townsend. RADNOR, Pa.—Snake hunts have become big business, thanks to TV. And other off-beat and little-known sports events that formerly attracted only limited or regional interest have suddenly become conscious of television—and money, TV Guide magazine has reported. TV Falls Prey To Small Sports In Money Grab Events ranging from horseshoe matches to canoeing and parachute-jumping contests often were worth only a few sticks of type in area newspapers a few years ago. Now, television has spread their fame and the TV rights fees have jumped considerably. Roone Arledge, vice president in charge of sports for ABC television, pointed out that last year the three networks received a form letter from a table-tennis group announcing that it would accept sealed bids at a special place and time for TV coverage of its championship. "Three years ago," said Bill MacPhail, sports vice-president for CBS, "a certain sports group not only offered us its event free, but volunteered to pay the line charges. Today, it is asking $50,000." MacPhail would not identify the event. NOTICE If anyone has information concerning the location of Indian campsites or of people with collections of Indian material (arrowheads, pottery, etc.) from Kansas or Oklahoma, please contact Jim Chism, John May or Jack Schock at the Laboratory of Archaeology, University of Kansas Museum of Natural History. When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Orange Blossom D I A M O N D R I N G S 8 PRELUDE...4 SLENDER SHAFTS OF GOLD SPIRAL UPWARD HOLDING A SINGLE DIAMOND IN SIMPLE ELEGANCE:PRICED FROM $125 MARK'S JEWELERS AGS MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY MEMBER OF AMS NATIONAL BRIDES SERVICES Del Eisele 817 Mass. VI 3-4266 Adventures of James Bomb James Bomb adjusted his morocean shoulder holster, activated the 5.000-watt signal sender hidden in his upper molar, filled his shoes with plastic explosives and left his penthouse to meet his contact, Sylvia. After receiving two traffic tickets for accidently covering the street with an oil-slick and tacks, Bomb arrived at Sylvia's apartment building. Suspecting the elevator cables to be cut, the stairs mined and the desk clerk to be a red agent, Bomb scaled the outside wall to the 25th floor. Quietly shattering a plate glass window, Bomb stepped into the living room and said, "Good evening my dear; have you a band-aid?" Sylvia replied, "Come in James; do you have the documents with you?" "Yes," said Bomb, "somewhere in one of the several hundred secret drawers in my attache case." "We must have them," sobbed Sylvia, "Plan X to improve college wardrobes is set to begin MARCH 17." Bomb, trying desperately to find the right secret button, looked up into Sylvia's eyes, "Why is it called plan X?" he asked, a faint smile crossing his lips. "Why not?" grinned Sylvia. Bomb thought a moment, then said, "Why not call it plan J?" "After you James?" said Sylvia, her heart pounding. "No," said Bomb, after the originator of this fantastic plan J C. PENNEY!" Page 10 University Lally Kansan Tuesday, March 9, 1965 Groups Beginning Plans For International Festival By Lacy Banks The organization wheel for the 12th Annual International Festival is already well greased and ready for rolling according to Prakash Nagori, India sophomore and publicity chairman for the event. The festival will be at 8 p.m. April 17 in Hoch Auditorium. "We have decided that we are going to have a much better program this year," Nagori said. "There will be no fashion show or exhibits; we will concentrate more on stage programs like skits and song fests." THE PROGRAM WAS started by the office of foreign students advisors and is still financed by them, Clarke Coan, assistant dean of men and foreign student advisor, said. "The initial purpose has not changed," Dean Coan continued. "It is to provide Americans with an idea of different cultural activities around the world—their songs and their dances." In the past it has had exhibits and fashion shows along with the evening performances, he said, but it was a lot of extra work and this year the students may do without them. "We ARE GOING to drop the exhibits and fashion show," Nagori said. "We are going to have only stage programs. The large groups that are able will present skits lasting about 15 minutes. Small countries that are unable to stage a full scale skit will present a short in-between-acts skit or musical number." There will be four rehearsals this year, Nagori said. The first tryout will be March 21, Groups wishing to participate are encouraged to come to this initial tryout session and present their skits for acceptance. About out of town guests, Nagori said American families, living in nearby towns, who are hosting foreign students will receive special invitations. The admission is free. "ONE THING that we are lacking." Nagori continued, "is the presentation of an American skit. We would feel that our program would be rather incomplete without one so we are making an appeal for any American group desiring to prepare a skit and to present it at our first tryout meeting." The festival usually draws about from 100 to 1,200 people, Dean Coan said. Last year 1,400 were present, to watch the 75 to 100 foreign students perform their skits. American students in the People-to-People and the International clubs usually participate in the planning. "I'm really searching for as many new ideas as possible." Nagori said. STUDY IN SOUTHERN FRANCE An undergraduate liberal-arts year in Aix-en-Provence FRENCH LANGUAGE & LITERATURE EUROPEAN STUDIES ART & ART HISTORY MEDITERRANEAN STUDIES Classes in English and French satisfying American curriculum requirements. Institute students enrolled at the University of Aix-Marseille, founded in 1409. Students live in French homes. Tuition, trans-Atlantic f a r e s, room and board, about $1,950. "We want to see this year's program the best ever. We know that it will be a pretty one with all the beautiful costumes of bright colors. Institute For American Universities 2 bis, rue du Bon-Pasteur Aix-en-Provenice, France "I THINK THAT this festival is not only a good way of showing American students elements of our culture, but an opportunity for foreign students to share with foreign students also," Jose O. Campo, Filipino graduate student, said. "It is also a good way of unifying foreign students at KU because we work together as a group and we don't care about where each other came from," he continued. "Last year we won first prize for our booth and the African Club won first place for all skits," he continued. "This year we are going to concentrate all our energy on our skit. We are going to have guitar solos, dances and vocal music with about 20 people, including nurses from the medical school in Kansas City." Josiah Brown, Liberia senior and president of the African Club, said the club would decide to do something concerned with singing traditional tribal songs in general but what I won't know until our next meeting this weekend. The Japanese-American Club will present a drama about "harakiri" suicide—a suicide in which one stabs himself in the abdomen in order to La Pizza 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 NOW OFFERS YOU A COMPLETE DINNER FROM OUR SPECIAL THEATER MENU save others, Yusuke Kawarabayashi, Japanese graduate student and president of the club, said. About seven members will participate. AND CHOICE OF SHOW FOR ONLY $2.00 Offered Monday-Thursday SAVE $.50 - $1.00! The officers of the International Festival's committee are: Javier Delapena, Spanish graduate student, general chairman; David Vargas, Costa Rican junior, program chairman; and Nagori, publicity chairman. Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 NOW! Shows 7:00 & 9:00 THE PLEASURE SOCKERS CHINASCORE COLOR BY DELUXE Next — "THE PUMPKIN EATER" Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 NOW! Shown 7:30 only CONTINUOUS | POPULAR PERFORMANCES! | PRICES! STANLEY KRAMER "IT'S A PRESENTS MAD, FRENCH IN ULTRA PANAVISION" TECHNICOLOR" RELEASED FROM UNITED ARTISTS Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS Keepsake Keepsake DIAMOND RING NAPOLI $675 ALSO $400 TO 2250 Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. Keepsake Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. Dick Tracy Sets Scientific Pace WICHITA—(UPI)—Communication gadgets like those in a Dick Tracy comic strip soon will play an important role in public safety communications work, J. R. Alexander, vice president of the mobile communications division of Radio Corporation of America, said Sunday. Alexander described new television micro miniature equipment, new two-way radios and an electronic computer system to give dispatchers emergency information at the flick of a button. A B Γ Δ E Z H Θ I K A M He was addressing the 10th annual seminar of the Kansas Association of Public Safety Communications officers. Fraternity and Sorority Jewelry - Lavaliers - Kings * Pins - Mugs - Crests Ξ Ο Π Σ Τ Φ Χ Ω Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Massachusetts SUA Poetry Hour Thursday, March 11 Roy E. Gridley will read Robert Creeley and Robert Duncan 4:30 p.m. Thursday March 11 Music Room In Kansas Union FREE COFFEE FREE COFFEE Well, the Doores are Opening, but just barely—They've got all of their Hallmark greeting and Contemporary cards, party favors and printing and office supplies uptown, next to Bell's, BUT GOOD GRIEF, GO IN AND SEE THEM ANYWAY. New Address — 927 Mass. We've closed our old shop, 4 East 7th DOORES Printing – Office Supplies [ We've closed our old shop, 4 East 7th DOORES 190 M 190 m 190 n dr Syco ca Gaor co tr Ja ov fe Avo Bl HI sa Ca Bi ma A$ Sa W pl mo Pr pl ou N Tyal Ae q M Bl ha ch IS as M St r ajo th Co RI Po tw fo fo VI Ch ne i $ ad th Th se w sp 34 Ni FI St een Ga Ma 5 l Re Fo gou w su we 19 s i e x W am Pr Ho ple w Di th W 24 Ol H Do W R Pl Fl an t i c t a Fo Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE 1963MG 1100 sedan, red One owner MUST sell, sell for Europe. VI 3-5051 1963 Austin Healy, 3000 Mark 2, 18,000 miles, red, roll up windows, new tires, new battery, radio, wire wheels, overdrive, excellent condition. VI 2-3673. 3-9 Garrad "type A" never used, still in original packing box, $50.00-Tape recorder, Akal M6, semi-professional, 4 track stereo for $220.00-1955 Chev. 48, 4 bbl., stick. $275.00. Call Lee Garrett, VI 2-3965. Sylvania portable TV, 21 inch, excellent condition, Minolta autocord double reflex camera, like new. Call VI 2-3155 after 7 p.m. 3-9 Jaguar 58-3-4 L Sedan, white, stick plus overdrive, new paint, mechanically perfect, best offer. VI 3-1747 after 7:00 p.m. 3-9 Auction—used bikes, all sizes. Name your bikes. Bike Shop at 701 Michigan. 3-12 Blevins Bike Shop at 701 Michigan. 3-12 HI-FI—Save on nationally advertised HiFi components. New equipment in factory sealed cartons with factory warranties. Call VI 3-4891. 3-15 BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMIUMS! Occidental Term Life: conversion, Go-Back, and Move-Over options. Age 18 = $33.90 = $10,000. Age 20 = $34.40 = $10,000. Age 22 = $44.70 = $10,000. Call Was Santee at VI 3-216 for details. tf Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, immei­graphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL V1 2-1901 for free deli­ver. Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive materials and classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 3-1428. $4.50. tt TYPEWRITERS, electrics, manuals, portables; sales, service, rentals, Olympia, Hermes, Royal, Smith-Corona, Olivetti. Adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. tf University Daily Kansan Students, why throw money away on rent when you can own a 1962 Marlette 10 x 50, modern, two-bedroom mobile This home is clean and in excellent condition. For further information CALL RI 8-0973 or RI 8-0916. ff BE THE LEADER OF YOUR PACK: Harley Davidson Sportster K. 750 cc, new clutch, and new brakes and tires. THIS IS NO HONDA. For further information about this beautiful machine CONTACT Monti Belot at VI 3-0700. tt PORTABLE STEREO: Admiral's Finest—two carrying units, 1 for turntable and 1 for speaker systems (2 tweeters, and 2 full range woofers) $195 new. Will sell for good offer. CALL: Rusty Calkins at VI 3-5721. t CHINA-Nortaki, Mayfair design. New, never used or even removed from packing. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk M. 3-7102. THE STABLES now open every day- Serving steaks, chops, sea food, sand- sand management, new air- sphere. Party room available. Phone t- 3-9644. 1401 W. 7th. Phone t NEED A BAND? 30 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM. PHONE V1 2-2100. ti Stereo-Fantastic Bargain on stereo sys- ter, 4GB of RAM, and Garrard changer, electro-voice speakers. Must hear to appreciate beautiful tone. Call Hank at VI 3-4891 for bargain价 prices. 5 string, long neck, folk banjo and case. Reynolds, VI 3-4846. Call 3-10 Reynolds, VI 3-4846. Call 3-10 For guy who can wear 42 long coat—6 good suits (3 winter, 3 summer), white wool sports coat, 6 slacks (3 winter, 3 summer). Owner lost weight, cannot wear. Best offer. Call Tom. VI 3-2682 between 5 and 7 p.m. 3-15 1963 French Renault. 4-speed transmission excellent condition. Call VI 3-6462 3-22 HELP WANTED Wanted—man over 21 for general house and yard work, 2 to 3 mornings a week. Prefer permanent resident. Call VI 3-6850 3-15 Hostess—Attractive lady for evening em- phone/wages—Phone VI 2-9465 or VI 3-4747. u WANTED Discotheque Dancers. Apply now. At the New Orleans Room. Phone 9-24654. Wanted. Someone to play GO. Call VI 2-9227 after 7:00 p.m. tl OLD CARS WANTED, top prices paid. Do it today! GI Joe's, 61 Vermont, t Washing and ironing done in my home 1131 New Jersey Y Phone VI 2-2998. TRANSPORTATION Fly to the Bahamas via Daytona Beach airport and jet a taxi for accommodation. Experienced commercial pilot take two more passengers for $100 each. For further information call VI 3-8544. 6 years typing experience plus background in proofreading enables me to guarantee accuracy on college papers. New electric typewriter equipped for interchangeable type sets. Mrs. Berndt, 801 Michigan or VI 2-0400, tt TYPING Experienced typist wants typing in home. Rates,prompt service. Phone VI 2-3356 Theses only on Royal Electric Pica Typewriter CALL Mills, Fulcher at VI 3-0558 Experienced typist. 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, printer. Resumes. Reasonates. CALL Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI - 16-148. Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate ratewr. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter, Gestetner Duplicator. Mrs McMeldowney, 521 Alabama St. Phone VI 3-8568. Experienced secretary will type term experienced secretary will type term. dents. Especially familiar with legal and ousiness terms. Fast and accurate. Rea rates. Call Marsha Goff at i-1-2577 former Harvard and U. of Minnesota reports of thesees. PHONE VI 3-7207 ferm papers. Theses by experienced ystist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. ti Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. Will do ex- enquiries on carbon ribbon typewriter. Betty Muskult 140 Indian, or call VI 2-0091. tt Will do typing in my home. Accurate reasonable rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at VI 2-0210. tf Experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing. Speak English fluently and languages. Quick and reasonable Electric typewriter. Call VI 8-3976. tf Pypist, experienced, with term papers and dissertations, will give you typing tips and instructions to use a machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Mari- lene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048 Experienced secretary would like typing in her home, with new electric typewriter, faster fast and secure service. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Lancett at VI 2-1188. Experienced typist wants theses, term-papers, and dissertations to be typeed on electric (pica type) typewriter. Please Call Pat Beck at VI 3-5630. tt Typing done by experienced secretary for 25c each double spaced page. Cal Ethel Henderson, 2565 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122. 3-31 Experienced typist will do dissertations, manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., VI 3-7485. Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will type and test these theses. Experienced. Electric typewriter. CALL Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8262. Theses or term papers at in my home CALL MRS. Oxford at VI 2-0673 K t FOR RENT Furnished house for rent or lease in Eudora. Prefer three to four boys, 3 bedrooms, wall to wall carpet, fireplace. Available immediately. Phone HA 21-346 Extra nice roomy apt. in graduate house for graduate or older undergraduate man. Room furnished, tubs, pillows paid. Nice furnished with private bath and kitchen Call VI 3-8534. PARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30-60 people, juke box, liquid refreshments and snacks. Contact Don at the Gaslight Tavern for reservations **if** CALL VI 3-1086. Large sleeping room for men students with refrigerator privileges. Rent single or double. Close to town and Kansas University. 1247½ Kentucky. 3-9 Emery Apts. 1423 Ohio, 12 one bedroom luxury apts, April 1st. $85.00. Featuring w-w carpeting, disposal, range and ovens, refrigerators, furnished or unfurnished. Teachers or graduate students only, no children or pets. VI 3-8190. 3-16 Several attractive apartments available within one block of campus. Suitable for men or women. Also bachelor quarters for men. Call VI 3-8413. 3-12 Crescent Heights and Aparments— 1821 W. 24th, or CALL I V-27311. 1821 W. 24th, or CALL I V-27311. Room for rent=double or single, Ideal entrance, entrance, Phone VI 3-0236 5 p.m. 1310 Kentucky St. 1 large 2 room furnished apt. 1st floor, private bath. See to appreciate. Close to KU and town. For upper classman or employed gentleman. For lower classman or employed apt. 2nd utilities paid for both. Non-smokers. 12:30 to 6:00 p.m. 3-11 Tuesday, March 9; 1965 CAR REPAIR Engine swaps and Transmission change overs. We sell and install speed equipment for drags, jalopes or street. Farmers Garage, 85 Connecticut, U.S. 3-1906. Math tutor B.A. degree in math from KU. Experienced in tutoring geometry, algebra, calculus and analytic geometry. Call VI 3-0927. 3-15 BIERSTUEB: Students favorite dark beverage and students favorite light beverage from older ladies' Sandwich Singer room. "irkinken" German style Party room available. 3-15 MISCELLANEOUS Competent student will tutor undergraduate, graduate students in German—$3 an hour. Call Sara Paretsky, VI 3-8505. 3-9 Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-Q ribs that grandma and grandpa can eat, try ours per order, or $2.60 per slab. Hours: 11:00 to 11:00 p.m. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-9510 3-31 BUSY PEOPLE—no time to spare for household care? For professional cleaning of your house regularly or occasionally. BONER CLEANING SERY ICE, VI 3-4408. 3-10 IR, SR. AND GRADUATE STUDENTS MONEY AVAILABLE ON PERSONAL SECURITY, PHONE, CHUCK ADKINS- BENEFICIAL FINANCE AT VI 3-8174. SCHWINN BICYCLES - service all makes, parts and accessories, tire $1.46, tubes tie downs, SEE BELTING luggage racks and tie downs. SEE BELTING at 7th and Micl or CALL VI 3-0581. PARTY TIME? Building available for PHONE at Ralph Freed at VI 3-3995. friends coming this weekend? Looking for a place with good food at reasonable prices. Find FREE parking RESTAURANT. Plenty of free parking. 9th and Iowa. ff Rent electric, standard, and portable typewriters. Repair all makes of electric. Furnish your office with the newest in business Equipment (formerly Business Machines). 15 E. Bth. VI 3-0151. tfrn it's great for a date. Take her bowling at Hillcrest Bowl. Finest lanes in the state. It also hosts Sunday and Sun. Also Mon, Tues, and Fri. after 8:00 p.m. Hillcrest Bowl, 9th and Iowa. Ski Aspen 7 days during spring break. Room and board, transportation. Two tickets, instruction and insurance. $128. KYU Ski Club. Contact Y office in the University Knight. Sign up meeting March 9, 7:30 p.m. at the Forum Rooms. 3-9 Attention: All persons interested in self defense training classes utilizing many of the same throws and smashes used in movies, contact Bob Mont at VI 3-7102 Need any sewing or mending done? Rea- reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon.-thru-Fri, or all day Sat, or Sun. Phone VI - 3-6231. WOODIES are more interesting when you get there the fun way ON A BIKE. You get there the fun way, repairs, wood equipment. Gran Sport Cyclery, 9 W-14th. VI 3-3328. Now you can hear four excellent dance bands on stereo tapes: THE FURYS, THE BLADES, THE RUNABOUTS, THE NOMADS. Call VI 2-1791. tt ENTERTAINMENT ATTENTION PARTY THROWERS: Do you want the Beatles, the Kingsmen, Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL 9-1791. tt For Fast Results READ and USE THE WANTADS REGULARLY! SEE US . . BEFORE YOU BUY Typewriters New and Used Standards, Electrics and Portables Olympia **•** Royal **•** Hermes Smith Corona **•** Olivette Rental • Sales • Service Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers White Stag It's the country club look! The jacket (10.00) and clubhouse skirt (8.00) are crisp stretch herringbone cotton. Sleeveless mock turtle blouse (3.00) is of knit-ted stretch cotton. OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 8:30 Calkoun's 1744 MASSACHUSETTS IN DILLON'S PLAZA Calhoun's 1744 MASSACHUSETTS IN DILLON'S PLAZA BUSINESS DIRECTORY GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING TRAVEL TIME [Airplane in flight] LET MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Spring Break and Summer Reservations Now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 9.1965 OFFICE OF THE CHANCRILTON CRC's Busy Day... 10:30 A.M. SIT-IN—Student demonstrators entered the Chancellor's office early yesterday morning to protest against housing discrimination. About 150 students were sitting in the hall and in the chancellor's office and keeping rather orderly. Photos by Harry Krause JOHN H. ROBERTS AT 5:30 P.M.—The students did not allow the officials to close the chancellor's office at 5 p.m., were arrested for disturbing the peace and marched into three buses for the trip to the county jail. SPEDDY IN CUSTODY AT 5:50 P.M.-The three buses were kept under surveillance until facilities were ready for the 130 demonstrators arrested. The overflow from the Douglas County jail were taken to the Lawrence jail. THE REALITY OF HISTORY SEEKING BOND AT 7:15 P.M.—Students were paying bonds and being released from their arrest in the evening. Bond was set at $25 with 10 per cent required from out-of-county residents and only signatures from county residents. The image shows a person in a formal uniform, likely a military officer, speaking with an open gesture. The background is indistinct, but appears to be an indoor setting with a window or wall that has a decorative pattern. There are several hands visible, holding papers and possibly other objects, suggesting that the person is actively engaging in an event or presentation. (Photo by Harry Krause) QUIET PLEASE, QUIET—Nathaniel Sims, Pasadena, Calif., senior, asks yesterday's crowd of demonstrators for silence before Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe began his speech and reinstated 114 suspended students. Wescoe Reinstates KU Demonstrators Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe expressed a desire to turn back the clock for exactly 32 hours yesterday before a group of approximately 350 persons outside Strong Hall. Chancellor Wescoe said, "Now to turn back the clock completely. I was the one who placed your suspension in operation and by that same authority I now lift it. Your parents (of arrested demonstrators) were notified this morning of the suspension by telegram. They will be informed once more by telegram that you are reinstated with the understanding that the demonstrations will end." STATEMENTS BY both Chancellor Wescoe and Nate Sims, Pasadena, Calf., senior and spokesman for the Civil Rights Council, brought an end to the sit-in protest which began at 10:30 a.m. Monday outside the chancellor's office. The statements were made following a meeting at the chancellor's home between Chancellor Wescoe, Sims and George Unseld, Louisville, Ky., senior. Both Sims and Unseld are co-chairmen of the council with Walter Bgoya, Ngara, Tanganyika, senior. "YESTERDAY, I told you I was prepared to discuss with you in a logical and fruitful way any problems you wanted to bring to me. We came to an impasse," Chancellor Wescoe said. "I told you that as soon as All Student Council Bill #7 was sent to me I would sign it. This morning I signed it. The Kansan board will meet with the ASC and bring the advertising practices of the University Daily Kansan in line with the University. "I have asked Dean L. C. Woodruff to work on a revision for the housing list statements. It has been drawn and is ready to be put into operation. "I HAVE CONFERRED with the dean of the School of Education and asked that instances of discrimination be reviewed . . . I am assured there are none but we shall clarify this to everyone's concern. "Until further notice we will disperse our protest sit-in demonstration and return tomorrow night at 7:30 p.m. to the Kansas Union for a meeting of the CRC. All participants in the demonstration and other interested persons are requested to be there," Sims told the demonstrators. Chancellor Wescoe also announced today that he does not wish to press charges against the students that were arrested Monday, but the final disposition will be up to the county attorney, James Gunn, Administrative Assistant to the Chancellor, reported today. At a 2:30 meeting tomorrow, a committee made up of students, administration, and faculty, is scheduled to meet to discuss and set up a framework for problems that are to be discussed in the future. The committee will discuss the advertising policies of the Daily Kansan, and will set up the time and agenda of future meetings. Members of the committee are: Charles Warriner, professor of sociology; Jan Seaver, professor of history; Brian Leonard, professor of zoology; L. C. Woodruff, dean of students; Emily Taylor, dean of women; Donald Alderson, dean of men; Bob Stewart, Vancouver, B.C., senior; Mike Miner, Lawrence senior; Art Spears, Kansas City senior; Pam Stone, Wichita senior, and Byron Loudon, Kansas City senior. Ralph King, Douglas County Attorney, said that those arrested yesterday were charged with the violation of a state law, and they will be charged with a misdemeanor in county court. The students' arraignment will be Friday and they can plead guilty of the charges or not guilty. Conviction of the offense would carry a penalty of a fine in a sum not to exceed $100, or imprisonment in the city jail not to exceed three months. A list of those arrested appears on page 12. Daily hansan 62nd Year, No. 96 LAWRENCE. KANSAS Wednesday, March 10, 1965 Council Introduces Bill For Discrimination Board Taylor also proposed an amendment to human rights bill No. 7, dealing with the advertising of the UDK and a resolution requesting the dean of the School of Education to explain the school's policy on civil rights. Such a board would consist of: the dean of women; the dean of men; the dean of students; student body president; All Student Council chairman; two members of the Human Rights Committee and two members of the Civil Rights Council. Taylor explained that the Board "is meant to be on a level with the other top committees in the University, ranking with the Disciplinary Committee." A bill to establish a board to deal with complaints, relating to discrimination at KU was proposed at last night's All Student Council meeting in the Kansas Union. HE NOTED the bill's sponsors contacted people involved with the recent civil rights sit in—CRC members, faculty, and administrators, in their drafting of the bill. THE AMENDMENT would be a revision to section five of Bill No. 7 stating "that the UDK or any other university publication may not accept advertising with regard to accommodations from people The bill sponsored by Hugh Taylor, Stoke on Trent, England, graduate student (UP, graduate school), Bob Stewart, Vancouver, B.C., senior and student body president, Mike Miner, Lawrence senior and ASC chairman, and Harry Bretschneider, Kansas City, Mo., senior. THE BILL also gives the board the power to assess penalties if its rulings or decisions are not complied with in the cases of discrimination that it hears. The major part of the bill states: "believing that the most cherished possession of society is the maintenance of the dignity of the human race. It shall be the purpose of this board to receive, investigate, and recommend action on all complaints in all areas of discrimination." Weather The warming trend will continue tonight and Thursday with partly cloudy skies and a high temperature tomorrow expected to reach the middle 40's. Tonight the low is to be around 20 to 25, the weather bureau said. Bulletin COLUMBIA, Mo. — (UPI)—The Columbia chapter of CORE filed a complaint today with the U.S. Department of Justice charging discrimination in the University of Missouri off-campus housing. It said it would picket the chancellor's office tomorrow if the demands were not met. Chancellor John Schwada said the university has no power to control private individuals to provide off-campus housing even if the university wished to do so. Schwada said the university certified such housing merely as a service to students and parents so minimal help and safety standards are maintained. He said the university does not have to certify off-campus housing and could discontinue the practice as one solution to the problem. who aren't on the university housing list." The resolution to obtain, in writing, a statement from the dean of the School of Education on its student teacher policies was passed unanimously by the Council on a voice vote. This amendment and the bill, establishing a discriminatory board will be major items of business at the ASC meeting next Tuesday night. APPROXIMATELY 20 members of the CRC including Nate Sims, Pasadena, Calif., senior and CRC president, George Unseld, Louisville, Ky., senior, and Walter Bgoyla, Ngara, Tanganyika, senior, were spectators at the meeting. Sims was asked, after the discriminatory board bill was introduced, if this would be satisfactory to the CRC. He said that his group would have to have a meeting to discuss all the aspects of the bill. "If it (the bill) doesn't work out the way it should, appropriate steps will be taken to see that it works," Sims said. Jim Masters, Mission graduate student, said the CRC plans to investigate "where the power would be" on the board. He noted that he thinks there would be "blocks of power" with the faculty and administration on one side and the students on the other. Sims said that the CRC will attend the Committee on Committees meeting at 7 p.m., Sunday, in the Kansas Union. *** ASC Takes Stand On Traffic Hazards In other business conducted by the special All Student Council meeting last night, resolutions were passed starting inquiries on various traffic problems across the campus, and the possibility of bringing the KU cheering section back down to the bleacher seats at the basketball games. Two resolutions were passed dealing with the 11th and Louisiana intersection leading into the Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall complex. One dealt with the repair of steps leading down to the intersection which are uneven and treacherous, and the other with the lack of traffic controls for cars entering the intersection, necessitated by the heavy amount of pedestrian traffic. TRAFFIC PROBLEMS at Joseph R. Pearson Hall were also acted upon by the ASC in a resolution concerned with the blocking of the parking area behind the hall during football games so that the residents of the hall could not get their cars in or out of the parking lot. Russell Cummings, Topeka graduate student (UP-Large Men's Residence Halls) proposed that season parking tickets for the lot be offered to the residents of JRP, and only a specified amount sold to non-residents to solve the problem. A measure recommending that the cheering section be moved closer to the court during basketball games was passed, and will be submitted to the ASC Athletic Seating Board, and the University Athletic Corporation meetings this week for action. A FREE UNIVERSITY F A FREE UNIVERSITY FOR ALL STUDENTS! OR ALL STUDENTS! WATCH, WAIT AND LISTEN-An anxious group of about 350 people listened to Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe as he addressed the Civil (Photo by Harry Krause) Rights Council demonstrators and interested students. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. March 10, 1965 Problem Here Now A sizeable portion of the campus is now involved in a cause only too just, only too long overdue. Most would agree that those involved in the civil rights movement had long been ignored as a mere minority screaming for candy because they had nothing better to do. Before Monday, the issue had been largely hypothetical to a large majority of the students, something that was discussed in the classroom, read about in the newspapers, but not one which concerned us as individuals. IT IS GOOD THAT the issue is no longer an abstract academic question, that it is a potent fact with which we have to deal. A minority has been concerned with these KU problems, but the problems have been largely ignored by the student body. It is good that they no longer can be ignored. Many say that the points demanded by the students are unfair, biased and unreasonable. Others will say that the points are valid and long-needed. Neither side is that right. In the mass hysteria and excitement of a demonstration, someone always draws the hypothetical line with the sword and demands that everyone wholeheartedly accept or reject the program. Name-calling and generalization cloud the goals of both groups, and any kind of effective coordination is blocked by antagonism on both sides. This, as is obvious, will not serve either of the parties concerned. This attitude excludes those most directly involved with the issue here on campus—the CRC, the administration and other interested students. The demonstrators are not to be condemned as radicals and idiots. They know what they want and they went out to get it. The spirit of their protest was measured and sure. The chancellor has given them the opportunity to express their views and has expressed his. There must be some sort of answer. It will not come with hoots, shouts and hisses. It will not come with hatred and prejudice. It can come only through an intelligent and calm discussion of the issues and their possible solutions. The demonstrators say they are tired of waiting. Men are tired of trying to solve a problem that involves ingrained suppositions of a century. The conflict cannot be solved overnight, nor can the University immediately issue the demands that the CRC is making. The enactment of the demands, if they are accepted, will involve many hours of work, time and consideration, as well as many people. The demonstrators say they have been waiting 100 years for the problem to be solved. So have most people. The demonstration has brought the problem to the campus. Everyone now has an obligation to deal with it . . . not with violence, but with intelligence. The University cannot be run by a demonstrating band of students. Neither can the University refuse to give credence to some of the points involved in the statement. LITTLE IS ACCOMPLISHED by force. The Civil War proved that. The Negro was not freed, and the conflict between the North and the South is still raging, only in more sophisticated forms. There are many on this campus, probably a strong majority, who will express their disgust and contempt for the minority that sat outside the Chancellor's office. — Leta Roth Who Can Blame Them? The KU campus has been shaken from its lethargy. This is good. There are those who will sympathize with their cause, but detest their methods. There are those who will delight in the method of the protest, but care little for the cause. The issue at stake in this protest is the fact that there are no mixed fraternities and sororities on this campus. There are now no fraternities or sororities on campus with discriminatory clauses. This is irrelevant as far as the demonstrators are concerned, and it has never been a real issue—only a superficial one. The Negroes know that it was not clauses they were fighting in the past, but prejudices, fears, and traditions among fraternity and sorority undergraduates and alumni. THE ABSENCE OF DISCRIMINATORY clauses is no comfort for the Negroes, nor will this provide any comfort for fraternities and sororities. The issue goes much deeper. It is time for fraternities and sororities, if they wish to survive, to take a serious look at the situation they are in. The pressure, only light now, will continue to grow, and a real crisis will develop unless these institutions do something about this problem. If they do not, eventually there will be a civil rights law that applies to these institutions. Fraternities and sororites yet have the opportunity to prove that they are worthy institutions. THE PROBLEM IS THAT THESE PEOPLE have been listening too long. Their minds have been open to reason, but they see only procrastination. They no longer care to participate in vague discussions which only show how difficult it will be to reach a solution. IN A STATEMENT FOR YESTERDAY'S Daily Kansan, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe noted that discussions have been conducted for several years on this subject. "Now these young men and women want to stop talking and start acting. . . Their unwillingness to listen is one of the most unhappy aspects of this somber situation. I had hoped for better responses from a KU student group. I had hoped we could establish facts; I had hoped that minds were still open to reason. I had hoped we could work together; I hope we still can," Chancellor Wescoe said. THEY FAIL TO UNDERSTAND WHY THE University can place a fraternity on social probation because of social habits which the University does not condone, and yet the University does not take similar action to eliminate subtle and varied forms of discrimination in fraternities. These students have a legitimate complaint. This does not mean there are not two legitimate sides to the issue. But too often, the majority consciously and unwittingly ignores or discards the reasoning of the minority in this matter. They have no desire to negotiate until they stand to gain from negotiations. They will listen when they have something concrete before them. Is this such a deplorable tactic? Who can blame these students when they tire of talking and take to demonstrating? Only those who can find no fault with themselves. — Gary Noland UNHCR ©1965 HERBLOCK Peacekeeping Body BOOK REVIEWS THE PRIVACY INVADERS, by Myron Brenton (Crest, 60 cents). The bookstores are filling up with expose-type books like this one. Myron Brenton had the misfortune of bringing this one to print about the same time that the celebrity writer, Vance Packard, brought out "The Naked Society." A number of critics gave precedence to this over the Packard work. We get here a pretty grim picture, one to which we are contributing, that reveals how there's very little of our lives anymore that isn't being investigated by somebody (the picture is probably overdone, but maybe the time has come to halt some of this stuff). Charge accounts, life insurance policies, loans, jobs in government, jobs in education—all these bring us, according to Brenton, under the eye of a prober. Well, we know that privacy is a relative thing. This book may cause many readers to try to stop the invasions, which if they're as bad as painted by Brenton are a creeping curse of modern-day America. Dailij Hänsan 111 Flint Hall UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. University of Kansas student newspaper rounded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Leta Roth and Gary Noland ... Co-Editorial Editors NEWS DEPARTMENT Don Black ... Managing Editor Bobbie Bartelt, Clare Casey, Marshall Caskey, Fred Frailey, Assistant Managing Editors; Judy Farrell, City Editor; Karen Lambert, Feature-Society Editor; Glen Phillips, Sports Editor; Janet Chartier, Telegraph Editor; Harry Krause, Picture Editor. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT **Tom Fisher** ... Business Manager Nancy Holland, Advertising Manager; Ed Vaughn, National Advertising Manager; Dale Reinecker, Classified Advertising Manager; Russ Calkins, Merchandising Manager; Bob Monk, Promotion Manager; Gary Grazda, Circulation Manager. South Viet Nam Problem Giving Johnson Big Headache By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst Both bear on the risk that the escalation of the U.S. military effort in Viet Nam eventually could lead to a head-on clash with the Red Chinese, with the further possibility that Soviet involvement could lead to a world nuclear war. Two recent events help to illustrate the complexity of the problem facing President Johnson in South Viet Nam. In the one instance, an anti-American demonstration in Moso- THE CHINESE followed it up with a sharp note of protest, and in Peking 400 students staged a protest outside the Soviet Embassy. cow failed to follow the script, and Soviet soldiers and police who finally crushed it broke some Red Chinese heads in the process. The Peking demonstration was the first of its kind since Communist take-over of the China mainland. The succession of events was a special embarrassment to the Soviets since they coincided with the dismal failure of a Moscow "unity" conference originally designed to re-establish Soviet leadership of world communism. FOR THE United States, the over-all effect was of special significance. Obviously it was to United States advantage to forestall if possible joint action by the Soviets and Chinese in Viet Nam. Thus it was possible to question U.S. political wisdom in launching the Feb. 7 U.S. air attack against North Viet Nam at the same time Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin was on a visit to the North Vietnamese capital of Hanoi. MOMENTARILY, at least, it forced the Russians into a position identical with that of the Red Chinese. But the Chinese themselves have made it clear they intend to become the dominant power in Asia and in demanding apologies to the Chinese students injured in the Moscow demonstration they imposed a new set of conditions which the Soviets could not accept. IN EFFECT, the Red Chinese have told the Soviets that coexistence within the Communist world depends upon total surrender to Chinese terms. So long as these two remain locked in their own power struggle neither has the flexibility it needs to carry on large-scale adventures elsewhere. And, for the Soviets, it becomes possible that even a U.S. presence in Viet Nam is preferable to a total Chinese takeover. AWS Women's Day To Introduce Dinners Page 3 Exchange dinners among the women's living groups on the campus will be re-introduced this year as a part of Associated Women Students (AWS) All Women's Day events, according to Mary Lasley, Mission junior and general chairman of the activities. Events will begin April 20 or 21. Miss Lasley said last night a definite date has not been established for the event because of a conflict with the schedule of Greek Week activities. Events will begin April 20 or 21. Women from each house or residence hall will visit another house during the week of events. Exchange dinners used to be an annual affair but were discontinued a few years ago. Honors Night will be April 26. Marcia Heichen, Dodge City junior, is chairman of presentations. The AWS Senate will be installed that evening. Senate elections are Thursday. Mortar Board and Cwens members will be named during the evening. Mortar Board is a national honorary organization for senior women. Cwens is the sophomore honorary organization. THE WINNER or winners of the Scholarship Money's Our Purpose (SMOP) scholarship, outstanding senior woman and outstanding woman from each living group will also be revealed Honors Night. Miss Lasley said a forum discussion is planned for the week. A panel will discuss the problems arising when women combine family and career. CONNIE McCLAIN, Leavenworth sophomore, is chairman of the junior-senior brunch; Jennifer Speer, Wichita freshman, chairman of the exchange dinner; Louise Clovis, Salina sophomore, chairman of All Women's Day events; and Marie McMorris, Leawood sophomore, chairman of the art exhibit, will assist in the planning. Political Scientist To Discuss Russia We have now outgrown the Soviet Institutes as originally conceived. We should begin seeking and forging new intellectual alliance beyond the traditional triad of Political Science, History and Political ideas. Prof. Sharlet is of the view that we must overlap "the Kremlin Wall" which has too long delimited Political Science in the Soviet Area and begin a serious study of "Soviet Society." This would, of course, involve a shift of focus from "decision making" to "policy implementation" and "legal regulation." Robert S. Sharlet, professor of political science at the University of Missouri, is scheduled to argue this position at a discussion at 8 p.m. Friday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The Classical Film Series presents Humphrey Bogart - Lauren Bacall in The Big Sleep (1946) A fascinating example of the "private-eye" film Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Admission 60c Fraser Theater FEATHER LEATHER FROM RISQUÉ FEATHER LEATHER FROM RISQUE HERE'S AN OPEN INVITATION TO BUCKLE UP AND LOOK DELIGHTFUL FROM ANY ANGLE. GRAINED-FOR-TEXTURE FEATHER LEATHER FEELS LIKE A DREAM—BUT WHAT WIDE-AWAKE LOOKS: A STRAP, A SLING AND A SMART LITTLE SET-BACK HEEL. $14.00 Risqué. Red, Navy, Platinum McCoy's SHOES 813 Mass. VI 3-2091 Risqué. $14.00 Red, Navy, Platinum Wednesday, March 10, 1965 University Daily Kansan 813 Mass. Privately Owned Halls Scheduled for Building The corner of Naismith and 19th streets may be occupied by three new dormitories in future years. Yesterday the City Planning Commission of Lawrence changed zoning laws to permit parking space for a dormitory that will, if completed, be privately built and managed. "Permission for constructing parking lots to facilitate 52 percent of the dormitory residents has been given by the commission," Kenneth Thomas, City Planner, said. ALLEN BROTHERS and O'Hara, a Memphis, Tenn., construction company, plans to build a dormitory on the northeast corner of the 19th and Naismith intersection. Thomas said that all obstacles, as far as city ordinances are concerned, have been removed. The University will take bids tomorrow, March 11, for construction of a 680 student capacity dormitory to be built at the 19th and Naismith area, according to J. J. Wilson, director of dormitories. Wilson said the proposed date for beginning construction is April 1. "THIS DORMITORY should be occupied by September, 1966." Wilson stated. A second dormitory to be built at the same site has been approved by the Kansas Board of Regents. 科技观察员 1. I've been weighing the possibility of becoming a perpetual student. Last week you said you were considering the merits of mink farming. H 2. With graduation drawing near I realized how much more there was for me to learn. You didn't also realize, did you, that when you graduate your dad will cut off your allowance? 3. I must admit the thought did enter my mind. Has the thought ever entered your mind that you might get a job and make a career for yourself? M. 4. What about my thirst for knowledge? Just because you work doesn't mean you have to stop learning. W 5. You mean earn while learning? Right. And you can do it at Equitable. They'll pay 100% of your tuition toward a qualified graduate degree. At the same time, the work is challenging, the pay is good, and I hear you move up fast. 2014 6. But what do I know about insurance? With your thirst for knowledge, I'm sure you'll be the star of their development program. Make an appointment through your Placement Office to see Equitable's employment representative on March 12 or write to Edward D. McDougal, Manager, Manpower Development Division for further information. The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United States Home Office: 1285 Ave. of the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10019 ©Equitable 1965 AnEqual Opportunity Employer Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 10, 1965 THE RED DOG INN presents The ASTRONAUTS (RCA Recording Artists) Tonight - Doors Open - 7:00 p.m. ASTRONAUTS ORBIT CAMPUS SURFIN WITH THE ASTRONAUTS COVER $1.75 GO..GO..GO.. EVERYTHING IS A-OK The Astronauts Astronaut albums now available at Kief's Record & Hi-Fi 711 W.23 Wednesday, March 10, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Greek Stand Varies On Integration Plans Demonstrations by the Civil Rights Council (CRC) have produced some reactions by the Greek element on campus. The sororities are keeping relatively quiet until Panhellenic Council releases a statement. "The fraternities are very concerned with the recent demonstrations," James Johnston, Ft. Scott senior and president of the Inter Fraternity Council (IFC), said. At the end of October a committee was set up under the IFC to look into integration in fraternities and come up with some answers if possible. The committee will present its findings to the IFC tomorrow. "In the Beta Sigma Psi Colony no concrete action has been decided upon concerning integrating our fraternity." Dwight Hiesterman, Linn junior and house president, said, "All the KU fraternities will to have the same policies about it. They can't act separately and expect to exist. "There are two angles that must be considered." Richard Mendlick, Shawnee Mission junior and Alpha Tau Omega president, said. "Only two Negroes participated in fraternity rush last year. If Negroes want in fraternities, they should participate more actively in rush. Most fraternities are highly selective in whomever they initiate. In this respect we discriminate against some whites." "Integration involves the men in the house," David Martin, Sigma Chi president, said. "Ninety men must be convinced about someone before he is pledged because one person has the power to eliminate him. "Negroes are within our national organization," Tom Shumaker, Russell senior and Tau Kappa Epsilon president, said. "If the men of our fraternity want to initiate a Negro, they will." "The legislation announced by the All Student Council (ASC) was a direct result of the recent demonstrations by the CRC," John Sapp, Havana, Ill., junior and president of Lambda Chi Alba, said. "The demonstration impressed me because it was an orderly one," Jim Langford, Lawrence senior and Pi Kappa Alpha president, said. "I don't think it accomplished anything. What the demonstrators were asking for comes about with time." John Hope, Kansas City senior and Triangle president, said the fraternity had meetings concerning integration in the fraternity. This occurred in November and December several months before the big demonstrations here. NOTICE If anyone has information concerning the location of Indian campsites or of people with collections of Indian material (arrowheads, pottery, etc.) from Kansas or Oklahoma, please contact Jim Chism, John May or Jack Schock at the Laboratory of Archaeology, University of Kansas Museum of Natural History. Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS PEYTON $375 ALSO $200 TO 1800 Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. pepsake Following in the tradition of the Hoover Commission of Truman's administration, an All Student Council (ASC) committee on evaluation began research last Sunday on the ASC committee system. ASC 'Hoover Committee' Begins Inquiry This committee is more popularly known as the Little Hoover Commission. Appointed by Mike Miner, Lawrence senior and ASC chairman in February, Marshall Crowther, Salina third-year law student and chairman of the Little Hoover Commission, said. "This is an objective non-partisan study of the ASC committees. We want to find out specific committee problems and emphasize programs which are effective." OTHER MEMBERS of this committee are John Benson, Prairie Village senior and Vox Populi member; Janet Anderson, Prairie Village freshman and University Party member; Priscila Osborne, Stockton junior (Vox); and Carl Lindquist, Prairie Village senior (UP). Interviews, which were started last Crowther said he plans to interview all the committee chairmen before spring break. "After this my committee will give a full report to the ASC," he said. The Current Events Committee the Public Relations Board, and the University Events Committee were interviewed Sunday. Sunday, will continue at 2 p.m. every Sunday in the Pan American Room of the Student Union. CROWTHER SAID three basic questions were asked by the Little Hoover Committee. The first dealt with the background of selection of committee members and chairman The second concerned the experiences the different chairmen have had so far and the problems they encountered. The third inquired into any future plans the committees might have. "THE CONCERN of this committee isn't to ascertain the achievements or failures of any campus political party." Crowther said. He said it would be conducted in an objective and non-partisan manner. However, he pointed out that if any differences arise about the committee's conclusion, a minority report would be written. Teachers Plan Summer Institutes Two eight-week summer institutes at KU will enroll 30 secondary school teachers of world history and 40 elementary school teachers of geography in programs financed by funds from the National Defense Education Act. Dates will coincide with the summer session, June 4-August 6. Prof. Ambrose Saricks will direct the institute in world history with Prof. James E. Seaver as associate director. Other history faculty giving full-time to the institute will be Prof. Charles F. Sidman and Prof. Richard T. Chang. Giving part-time will be Profs. Herbert J. Ellison and Charles Stansifer and Thomas F. Smith of the geography department. Prof. Duane S. Knos will be director and Prof. George F. Jenkas associate director of the geography institute. Among the faculty will be Profs. Walter Kollmorgen, Thomas R. Smith and Jacek Romanowski. BROOKLYN Engineering and Physical Science Seniors* GROW with a growing industry... ...the Bell Telephone System The Bell Telephone System is continuing its expansion program to serve a growing nation. Growth in the telephone industry means new jobs, fresh opportunities for promotions, a rewarding career for you. The future is bright for young men who want to advance with a progressive industry. Representatives of the following Bell System companies will be glad to talk with you. They will consider all qualified applicants for employment without regard to race, creed, color, or national origin. - Southwestern Bell Telephone Company builds, maintains and operates telephone and other communications systems throughout its five-state territory. - Bell Laboratories research, development, engineering and design in electronics and communications fields. - Western Electric manufacturing and supply unit. - Sandia Corporation applied research, development and design for production of atomic weapons. - Long Lines Department of A. T. & T. provides interstate Long Distance and overseas Telephone Service. Bell System representatives will be on campus March 10 and 11. Sign up for an interview at the placement office. BELL SYSTEM Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 10, 1965 Folklore Group Plans Meeting For Saturday The Kansas Folklore Society, an organization devoted to the collecting, preserving, and studying of Kansas folklore, plans its ninth annual meeting for Saturday in the Kansas Union, Robert A. Georges, assistant professor of English, announced last night. Highlighting the meeting will be an address by John Messenger, associate professor of folklore, African studies, and anthropology at Indiana University. He will discuss literary versus scientific interpretations of cultural reality in the Aran Islands. Prof. Georges said Prof. Messenger will also speak to the faculty and students in the Department of Anthropology Friday at 3:30 p.m. about the religious acculturation in Nigeria. Both addresses are open to the public. PROF. GEORGES, the editor of the Kansas Folklore Society Quarterly Newsletter for the past two years, said Prof. Messenger did extensive fieldwork among the Anang of Nigeria before being awarded the Ph.D from Northwestern University in 1957. Between 1957 and 1964, Prof. Messenger conducted studies among the Aran Islanders of Eire. In 1964, he became a member of the faculty at Indiana University. Today's meeting was to begin at 10 a.m. with registration and coffee. At 10:30 three members of the society were to read original papers on studies they have completed. THE REST of the program was to be a business meeting at noon with Myra Olstead, assistant professor of English at KU, presiding. The Messenger address at 1:30; and a special folk singing program at 8:30 featuring legends in the oral tradition under the direction of Charles Oldfather, professor of law. Prof. Georges explained that the objectives of the group are: (1) TO COLLECT, to archive, to make available, and to study folklore which has developed or existed in the state of Kansas. This includes tales, legends, sayings, songs, and proverbs. (2) To provide those interested in folklore with opportunities to discuss and share their common interests. (3) To stimulate public opinion to the appreciation of Kansas folklore. (4) To encourage and aid in the preservation of the materials of folk culture. Official Bulletin TODAY French Club, 4:30 p.m. Mrs. Jacqueline Curtius will discuss the plays which will be presented by the Treteau de Paris. Room 11, Fraser. Classical Film, 7:00 p.m. The Big Sleep." Fraser Theater. College Life, 7:15-8:15 p.m. Jack Parr, former 2-time basketball all-American, has a personal faith that really makes sense. Sigma Chi House, 1439 Tennessee Student N.E.A. Meeting, 7:30 p.m. Dr. Carl Knox, Supt of Schools, Lawrence, "Teacher's Right to Strike." Elections. Forum Room, Kansas Union. Religion in History, 7:30 p.m. Panel by Prof. Wm. Gilbert, Prof. John E. Long- gan, Fr. Columban Clinch, St. Benedicts College. Big Eight Room, Kanga Union. Newman Executive Meeting, 8:15 p.m. Chapel Student Center Call if ride is need. Wesley Foundation, Community Work- ship 1:15 p.m. Methodist Center, 1314 Oread Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW Catholic Masses 6.45 a.m. and 5.00 p.m. gives a message. Confessions are and during mass. Teaching Candidates, Interview scheduled for Thursday, March 11: California, Pico Rivero El Rancho Unified District, elementary and secondary; Kansas, Bethel-Washington District, elementary and secondary. Heart of America Debate Tournament, All Day. Kansas Union. Guest Lecture, 3:30 p.m. Prof. John Messenger, Indiana U. "Religious Acculturation in Nigeria." Spooner Auditorium Informal Meeting German Club, 4:30 Informal Meeting German Club, 4.30 p.m. Kansas Union. All are welcome. Illustrated Lecture, 7:30 p.m. Dr. Gordon W. Hewes, U. of Colo. "Ancient Hunters, Fisherman and Farmers of Sudanese Nubiz." 306 Kansas Union. Ethics and Society Lecture, 8:00 p.m. Brandt Library, Yale U. Forum Room, King James Jilton Inaugural Lecture, 8:00 p.m. Big Eight Room, Kansas Union. Max Kade Distinguished Prof. Gerhardt Storz. "Friedrich Schiller in Unserer Zeit." UNIVERSITY THEATRE PRESENTS Sunday, March 14-8:20 p.m. Played in French --- Tickets $2.40, $1.80, $1.20 Group Rates Available LE TRÉTEAU DE PARIS presents in French FEU LA MÈRE DE MADAME POIL DE CAROTTE BY BOGICER FEYDEAU BY VINCENT RENARD This Show Is Not On The Season Coupon or KU ID For Reservations Call UN 4-3982 - Murphy Hall Box Office ELECTRONS SURFACE HEARTLYS IMAGE GOING OUR WAY? If you're mapping out your career destination, Ling-Temco-Vought offers a wide choice of exciting and challenging routes to your personalized goal. Here at LTV, young, alert engineers are "going places" in the fields of aircraft, missiles, space, mobile surface vehicles, weapons systems, ground and airborne communications, electronics, and range services. Supporting these activities is an excellent engineering climate providing the opportunity to contribute and professional advancement which is a direct function of the contribution. Assignments are diversified and stimulating in such areas as aerodynamics avionics and instrumentation dynamics systems design propulsion stress analysis communications design telemetry and tracking reconnaissance systems amplifier and computer design . electromagnetic interference control . technical administration ... among others. In addition to a rewarding professional environment, LTV offers engineers the opportunity to earn advanced degrees through company-financed graduate education programs. Before selecting your industrial home, investigate the career avenues available with Ling-Temco-Vought. Get complete details from your Placement Office, then schedule an appointment with our representative. Or write College Relations Office, Ling-Temco-Vought, P. O. Box 5907, Dallas, Texas 75222. LTV is an equal opportunity employer. CAMPUS INTERVIEWS Wednesday & Thursday, March 24 & 25 LTV LING - TEMCO - VOUGHT, INC. LTV DIVISIONS AND SUBSIDIARIES LTV ALTEC • LTV ASTRONAUTICS • LTV CONTINENTAL ELECTRONICS • LTV LING ELECTRONICS • LTV MICHIGAN • LTV MILITARY ELECTRONICS • LTV RANGE SYSTEMS • LTV RESEARCH CENTER • LTV TEMCO AEROSYSTEMS • LTV UNIVERSITY • LTV VOUGHT AERONAUTICS • KENTRON HAWAII LTD. Wednesday, March 10, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 7 PRAIRIE ROOM The Prairie Room serves the best in Charcoal Broiled Steaks, Shish Kababs, and Seafood. 11:00-2:00 5:00-9:00 Reservations UN 4-3540 KANSAS UNION CAFETERIA A wide selection of food for a good meal. 11:00-1:20 5:00-6:35 HAWK'S NEST 7:00-10:00 The Hawk's Nest offers good food throughout the day whether you want a full meal, a snack, or a refreshing drink. CATERING SERVICE Tailored to your personal needs. Call us for your appointment. UN 4-3509 KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 10, 1965 BUSINESS DIRECTORY JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY Wholesale Diamond Rings Call Robert A. Lange VI 3-1711 Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals AL LAUTER 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 Fun Fun Fun PITCHER NIGHT 70¢ Free Peanuts La Pizza Balfour 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING Milliken's S.O.S. Register Now For Temporary Assignments — NO FEE — Typists — Stenos General Office and Bookkeepers Unlimited Office Opportunities Experienced Only Apply 9:00 - 5:00 p.m. or by appointment 021½ Mass. VI 3-5920 - ALSO - Student & Thesis Typing Automatic Letter Service Telephone Answering Secretarial Service Notary Public ... P.S. They're Professional! Milliken's S.O.S. 1021 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. VI 3-5920 SUA Poetry Hour Thursday, March 11 Roy E. Gridley will read Robert Creeley and Robert Duncan 4:30 p.m. Thursday March 11 Tune-up, Body Music Room In Kansas Union Repair & Repaint, Automatic Trans. Service Wheel Alignment FREE COFFEE FREE COFFEE Southridge Plaza Lawrence Auto Service 10th & Mass. VI 2-0247 Mobil — Goodyear Discover Quality In Apartment Living MUGS 24 OZS.—35c Louise's Bar 1017 Mass. 2350 Ridge Court VI2-1160 See or Call See or Call Marvin E. McDougal For All Your Insurance Needs 1244 La. VI 2-0186 For Your BEST Haircut ● 4 Chairs ● 8-6 Mon.-Fri. ● 8-5 Sat. Come to PLAZA Barber Shop 1804 Mass. VI 2-9462 In Dillon's Plaza New York Cleaners Merchants of GOD APPERANCE For the best in — ● dry cleaning ● alterations ● reweaving 26 Mass. 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING OPEN 24 HRS. Across From The High School 19th & La. VI 3-9631 Town & Country Shoes Town & Country Shoes are the suitiest! They're the perfect shoes for town, travel or trodding anywhere your favorite suit goes. Platinum Kid $14.95 Platinum Kid $14.95 Platinum Kid $14.95 Platinum Kid $14.95 Royal College Shop 837 Mass. VI 3-4255 Page 9 Assistant Track Mentor to Top Spot at Oregon State KU's assistant track coach Robert Timmons has announced that he is leaving his position at KU to become head track coach at Oregon State University. Timmons said his appointment to Oregon State will become effective on April 19, immediately following the Kansas Relays weekend. For Timmons, the appointment represents a fine opportunity. He noted that Oregon State is an outstanding school for track. "I believe they are in one of the finest track conferences in the nation, too," Timmons went on. Timmons said he was not leaving KU because he did not enjoy the school. "I want everyone to know that any job opportunities that have come to me have come because of the chance I had to work here at KU. I have great respect for Coach Easton and I have enjoyed working in his organization," he said. Timmons had no comment as to the fate of his running prodigy, Jim Ryun. Ryun, outstanding high school miler from Wichita East, was coached by Timmons during his high school career and he remained Cole of California OFF LIMITS military smartness in a two-piece middy of Helanca nylon and spandex knit. Red, Delft Blue, Brown, Black, or Navy. 8-16 $22.00 terri's LAWRENCE, KANSAS terri LAWRENCE. Wednesday, March 10, 1965 $ ^{9} $University Daily Kansan --- in Lawrence during the summer to train under the guidance of his high school coach who had moved to KU. Jayhawk coach Bill Easton said, "Of course, we are sorry he is leaving us. He is a fine young coach and that is why we brought him here in the first place." Easton concluded, "He is a very capable coach. We extend to him our congratulations and best wishes from all the Jayhawks." "I feel this position is just a stepping stone to finer jobs. Most of our assistant coaches here move on to better positions but he is just a little ahead of schedule. They usually stay here two years." Easton continued. Guess who set a new Oklahoma Federation prep record of 6.3 seconds in the 60-yd. dash recently? A Midwest City, Okla., lad named Rip Van Winkle. SEE US... BEFORE YOU BUY Olympia ● Royal ● Hermes Smith Corona ● Olivette Typewriters New and Used Standards, Electrics and Portables Rental ● Sales ● Service Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 Study in Guadalajara, Mexico The Guadalajara Summer School, a fully accredited University of Arizona program, conducted in cooperation with professors from Stanford Univ., Univ. of California, and Guadalajara, will offer June 29 to August 8, art, folklore, geography, history, language and literature courses. Tuition, board & room is $265. Write Prof. Juan B. Rael, P.O. Box 7227, Stanford, Calif. PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS Do You Need Park Plaza South? 1967 If you want a choice of attractive 1 or 2 bedroom apartments with central heating and air-conditioning, disposals, carpeting, front drapes and a convenient coin operated laundromat, You Need Park Plaza South! Don't forget, there's a swimming pool. Park Plaza South 1912 W. 25th Call Day or Night VI 2-3416 10 UNIVERSITY THEATRE presents Luigi Pirandello's "SIX CHARACTERS IN SEARCH OF AN AUTHOR" Friday & Saturday — March 12-13 Friday & Saturday — March 19-20 Curtain 8:20 p.m. *** Tickets: $2.40, $1.80, $1.20 KU ID Redeemable At Box Office For Reservations Call UN 4-3982 Murphy Hall Box Office Page 10 University Dally Kansan Wednesday, March 10, 1965 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Representative Tells Legislature To Reapportion Itself-Or Else TOPEKA —(UPI)— The Kansas Legislature was warned Tuesday to reapportion itself during the current session or face the consequences. Rep. Thomas Van Cleave (D-Kansas City), told the House State Affairs Committee that failure to reapportion during the 1965 general session might lead to a citizens' suit declaring unconstitutional all bills passed during the current session. This would include Gov. William H. Avery's $60.9 million in tax bills. Or the Kansas Supreme Court, which ruled the apportionment of the House of Representatives was unconstitutional, could direct the legislature to return for a special session, Van Cleave said. If the House does not reaportion itself until a special session in March and the court does not hand down its decision whether the legislature is constitutional until April, "We may all have to run at large," he said. Van Cleave pointed out that a special session would cost $8,000 a day or $80,000 for 10 days. Rep. Jerry Griffith, D-Wichita, who with Van Cleave is a co-sponsor of the resolu- Speaker Says God Non-Existent The non-existence of God was alleged by Gabriel Marcel, leading French existentialist philosopher, when speaking on "The Myth and Death of God in Contemporary Thought" in Hoch Auditorium last night. M. Marcel, a representative of the Christian existentialist school of philosophy, traced the idea of the nonexistence of God back to Friedrich Nietzsche, nineteenth-century German philosopher. NIETZSCHE CANNOT BE regarded as an atheist, M. Marcel pointed out; this would be oversimplifying the matter as he never explicitly denied God's existence. We may look back at the period of man's complete belief with melancholy, M. Marcel said, but we cannot return to it. Allen's News All Student Supplies including "PLAYBOY" 1115 Mass. VI 2-0216 tion urging the Legislature to re-pportion itself during the present session, said a special session for redistricting would be "a waste of money." M. MARCEL concluded that it can be said that God is not dead, but that He does form an aging image. Granada TREATRE...telephone VI 3-5780 807 Vermont La Pizza NOW OFFERS YOU A COMPLETE DINNER FROM OUR SPECIAL THEATER MENU > VI 3-5353 AND CHOICE OF SHOW FOR ONLY $2.00 NOW! Shows 7:00 & 9:00 Offered Monday-Thursday SAVE $.50 - $1.00! 20 CINEMA-FOX presents THE PLEASURE SEEKERS COLOR BY DELUXE CINEMASCOPE NEXT ... ANNE BANCROFT PETER FINCH and JAMES MASON The Pumpkin Eater Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 NOW! At 7:30 Only STANLEY KRAMER "IT'S A MAD, MAD, MAD, MAD WORLD" VO VO VO VO SUNGLE SUNGLE SUNGLE DO YOU NEED HAIR SPRAY? (or shampoo, hand lotion, makeup?) You can save your dollars at Duckwall's. Variety, convenience, courtesy, everyday low prices. Shop Duckwall's and save. Duckwall's VARIETY STORES Appearing Tonight-RED DOG INN THE FABULOUS ASTRONAUTS EVERYTHING IS A-OK! RECIA VICTOR THE ASTRONAUTS RECORDED LIVE AT THE CLUB BAJA Surfer Sounds GO...GO...GO!!! THE ASTRONAUTS RCA VICTOR DANBURGH THE RECORDING SPECIAL $2.77 an album Go with the Astronauts as they perform 12 swinging numbers that include "Hey Sugarfoot," "Almost Grown" and others. TARGET NEW on RCA VICTOR ASTRONAUTS ORBIT KAMPUS Recorded Live at The Tulagi in Boulder, Colorado. A blast all the way! "Live" recording by The Astronauts. 12 hot tunes like Roll Over Beethoven, Good Golly Miss Molly. SPECIAL $2.77 an album KIEF'S Record & Hi-fi MALLS SHOPPING CENTER C CLASSIFIEDS Page 11 FOR SALE 1963MG 1100 sedan, red. One owner Must sell, leaving for Europe. VI 3-505 Auction—used bikes, all sizes. Name your bicycle. Bike Blevins Bike Shop at 701 Michigan. 3-12 Blevins Bike Shop at 701 Michigan. 3-12 HI-F1-Save on nationally advertised Hifi components. New equipment in factory sealed cartons with factory warranties. Call VI 3-4891. 3-15 BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMIUMS! Occidental Term Life: conversion, Go-Back, and Move-Over options. Age 18 = $33.90 = $10,100. Age 30 = $34.40 = $10,100. Age 22 = $34.70 = $10,000. Call Wes Santee at VI 3-2164 for details. tf Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive minimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL V1 2-190 for free delivery TYEPYWRITERS, electrics, manuals, portables; sales, service, rentals, Olympia Hermes, Royal, Smith-Corona, Olivetti Adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive lecture notes for classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 3-1428. $4.50. tft BE THE LEADER OF YOUR PACK Harley Davidson Sportster K, 750 cc, new clutch, and new brakes and tires. THIS IS NO HONDA. For further information about this beautiful machine CONTACT Monti Belot at VI 3-0700. tf Students, why throw money away on rent when you can own a 1962 Mariette 10 x 50, modern two-bedroom mobile home. Small monthly payments. Home is in excellent condition. For further information CALL RI 8-0973 or RI 8-0916. tt CHINA-Noritaki, Mayfair design. New, never used or even removed from packing. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk V. 3-1712. THE STABLES now open every day- Serving steaks, chops sea food, sand- matter, equipment, new at- mosphere. Party rooms available. Phone VI 3-9644, 140 W. 7th. H NEED A BAND? 30 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM. PHONE VI 2-2100. tl Stereo-Fantastic Bargain on stereo, sys- teric amplifier, microphone, Garrard changer, electro-voice speakers. Must hear to appreciate beautiful tone. Call Hank at VI 3-4891 for bargain price. 5 string, long neck, folk banjo and case. Reynolds, VI 3-4846. Call 3-10 Reynolds, VI 3-4846. Call 3-10 For guy who can wear 42 long coat-6 good suits (3 winter, 3 summer), wool sports coat, 6 slacks (3 winter, 3 summer). Owner lost weight, cannot wear. Best offer. Call Tom. VI 3-2682 between 5 and 7 p.m. 3-15 1963 French Renault. 4-speed transmission excellent condition. Call VI 3-6462. 3-22 Buy the perfect all-round guitar. For travis picking, blue-grass, blues, or folk; for back and sides, spruce ebony fingerboard. Like D-28. VI 3-5282 swnings. FOR RENT Furnished house for rent or lease in Eudora. Prefer three to four boys, 3 bedrooms, wall to wall carpet, fireplace. Available immediately. Phone HA 2-5063. Emery Apts. .1423 Ohio, 12 one bedroom luxury apts, April 1st. $55.00. Featuring w- w carpeting, disposal, range and ovens, refrigerators, furnished or unfurnished. Teachers or graduate students only, no children or pets. VI 3-8190. 3-16 Extra nice roomy apt. in graduate house for graduate or older undergraduate man furnished with utilities paid. Nicely furnished with private bath and kitchen. Call VI 3-8534. PARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30-60 people, jukebox liquid refreshments heated Contact Don at the Gaslight Tavern for reservations CALL VI 3-1086 tt Room for rent -double or single, ideal room. Entrance entrance Phone VI 3-0326 5 p.m. Several attractive apartments available within one block of campus. Suitable for men or women. Also bachelor quarters for men. Call VI 3-8413. 3-11 Cressent Heights and Aparments— 1821, W. 24th, or CALL V. 2-3711. 1821, W. 24th, or CALL V. 2-3711. 1510 Kentucky St. 1 large 2 room furnished apt. 1st floor, private bath. See to appreciate. Close to KU and town. For upper classman or employed gentleman. Room paid for finished apt. 2nd utilities paid for both. Non-smokers. 12:30 to 6:00 p.m. TRANSPORTATION Fly to the Bahamas via Daytona Beach and fort Lauderdale over Spring Vacation. Get your car ready to take two more passengers for $100 each. For further information call VI 3-8544. LOST Lost—set of keys with half dollar at- tachment. Frank R. Adams, 644. Ellsworth, 3-16 Wanted—man over 21 for general house and yard work, 2 to 3 mornings a week. Prefer permanent resident. Call VI 3-6850. 3-15 HELP WANTED. Hostess--Attractive lady for evening employment in the New Orleans Room, top wages—Phone VI 2-9465 or VI 3-4747. tf Dissotheque. Dancers. Apply now. At the New Orleans Room. Phone VI 2-9465. Wanted—someone to tutor me in educational statistics I. 5 to 6 hours a week. Time and fee arranged. Call Joe Moreno. VI 2-1977. 3-12 WANTED Wanted. Someone to play GO. Call v. 2-9227 after 7:00 p.m. OLD CARS WANTED. top prices paid. Do It today! GI Joe's, 601 Vermont, *tt* Fashing and troning done in my home Reasonason 1131 New Jersey Philip VI 8-2598. TYPING 5 years typing experience plus background in proofreading enables me to guarantee accuracy on college papers. New electric typewriter equipped for interchangeable type sets. Mrs. Berndt, 801 Michigan or VI 2-0400, tf Typing done by experienced secretary for 25c each double spaced page. Call Ethel Henderson, 2565 Ridge Court, VI 2-012. 3-31 Wednesday, March 10. 1965 University Daily Kansan Experienced typist wants typing in home. rates, prompt service. Phone: V i 2-3356 Experienced typist. 8 years experience in houses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. CALL Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, tlf-1648. Theses only on Royal Electric Pica Typewriter. CALL Mrs. Fulcher at V1 3-0558 tf 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 V1-8568 Experienced secretary will type term papers, law briefs, theses, etc., for students. Especially familiar with legal and business terms. Fast and accurate. Reasonable rates. Call Marsha Goff at VI 3-2577. Former Harvard and U. of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports and theses. PHONE VI 3-7207. tt term papers. Theses by experience typist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. f Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. Will do ex-10 papers, report writing, thesis writing, carbon ribbon typewriter. Betts Muskrat 140 Indian, or call V1-2-0981. Experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing. Speaking in English and familiar with languages. Quick and reasonable Electric typewriter. Call VI 8-3976. tf Will do typing in my home. Accurate reasonable rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at VI 2-0210. Experienced typist wants theses, term-papers, and dissertations to be typed on electric (pica type) typewriter. Please Pat Call Beck at VI 3-5630. tt Experienced secretary would like typing in her home, with new electric typesetting, fax and secure service. Reasonable rates. Call Ms. Lance at VI 2-1188. Typist, experienced with term papers theses and dissertations, will give you the opportunity to work on a machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Mar- lene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048 Experienced typist will do dissertations, manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 VI, RI 3-7485. tf Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will write essays or theses. Perlized. Electric typewriter. CALL Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8262. Theses or term papers done in my home CALL M. Oxford at VI 2-0673, u CALL M. Oxford at VI 2-0673, u ENTERTAINMENT Now you can hear four excellent dance bands on stereo tapes: THE FURYS, THE BLADES, THE RUNABOUTS, THE NOMADS. Call VI 2-1791. tf ATTENTION PARTY THROWERS: Do you want the Beatles, the Kingmen, Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL I 2-1791. tt MISCELLANEOUS Rare "Fells domestica" hybrid from a cross of Alleyus and Thailandia varieties. Potty-trained and looking for a home. Gratis. VI 3-0974. 3-12 Math tutor B.A. degree in math from KU. Experienced in tutoring geometry, algebra, calculus and analytic geometry. Call VI 3-0927. 3-15 BIERSTUBE: Students favorite dark beverage and students favorite light beverage from older Colorado Sandwiches. Song available. Trinket* German party sound. Available 3-15 BUSY PEOPLE—no time to spare for household care? For professional cleaning of call: PIONER CLEANING occasionally. VI 3-4408. S-13-0 Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-Q ribs that grandma and grandpa can eat, try our restaurant's menu order to 10 p.m. on per slab. Hours: 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-9510. 3-31 SR. SR. AND GRADUATE STUDENTS. MONEY AVAILABLE ON PERSONAL EXPENSE HOURS 3EFICIAL FINANCE AT VI 3-8174. 3-17 PARTY TIME? Building available for PHONE? Phones: PHONE Ralph Frohld at ST 1-3995. Friends coming this weekend? Looking for a place with good food at reasonable prices. HILLCREST HILL RESTAURANT. Plenty of free parking. th and Iowa. $CHWINN BICYCLES - service all makes, parts and accessories, tire $1.46, tubes and luggage, luggage racks and die downs. SEE BELTs at 7in and Mich. or CALL VI 3-0581. it's great for a date. Take her bowling at Hillcrest Bowl. Finest lanes in the state. Visit Hillcrest and Sandy also Mon, Tues, and Fri after 9:00 p.m. Hillcrest Bowl. 9th and Iowa. tt Rent electric, standard, and portable typewriters. Repair all makes of electric, mechanical, and computer business equipment (formerly Business Machines), E 15. E 8th, VI 3-0151. Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:30 p.m. Mon.-thu-Fri; or all day Sat. or Sun. Phone VI 3-6231. **tt** Attention: All persons interested in self- defense training classes utilizing many of the same throws and smashes used in movies, contact Bob Morton vi IT 3-7102 WOODIES are more interesting when you get there the fun way ON A BIKE. equipment, Gran Sport Cyclery, 9 W-31 4th, VI 3-3238. ARENSBERG'S 819 Mass. VI 3-3470 $14.95 ● Blue Patent ● Black Patent $13.95 add joyce® to your life! ● Black Patent ● Black Leather ● Navy Leather ● Red Leather ● Bone Leather The shimmer of spring is reflected in every patent-perfect line of our new Joyces! Stunning silhouettes dramatized by jet-black . on important little heels... with subtle detail. And with Joyce's famed supple ease In every light cushioned step! Page 12 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 10, 1965 US Marine Killed After Cong Defeat SAIGON—(UPI)—Communist forces killed a U.S. Marine officer and wounded another today in a slashing jungle ambush only 20 miles from the site of a major Viet Cong defeat 24 hours earlier. An American military spokesman said 28 Vietnamese troops were believed killed or wounded when the guerrillas sprung a wellplanned trap on a battalion of Vietnamese marines in a truck convoy 295 miles northwest of Saigon. The U.S. Marine casualties were accompanying the convoy as advisers, the spokesman said, and were not part of the 3,500-man Marine force which has taken up positions around the Da Nang air base. The wounded American Marine was taken to the U.S. army field hospital in the coastal city of Nha Trang for treatment of a bullet wound in the right side of his face. Army doctors said the wound was not serious. THE BATTALION of Vietnamese marines, about 800 men, was traveling between Bong Son and Hoai and in Binh Dinh Province when the guerrillas cut loose late in the afternoon with a withering fusilade of automatic weapons and small arms fire. Four Vietnamese Skyraider fighter-bombers aided in driving off the Communist ambushers but a military spokesman in reviewing fighting in Binh Dinh Province credited B57 strikes for much of the success. "The use of American Air Force jets has turned the coin of pessimism," he said. "Binh Dinh went through a rather tense period early in February, but as the month ended and March began the situation overall became much better." THE AMBUSH was the latest in a series of guerrilla actions in which hard-core Viet Cong units have attempted to capture key highways in Binh Dinh Province and cut South Viet Nam in two. The Communists have seized almost all of the government-protected hamlets in at least one Binh Dinh district. But a Viet Cong raid Tuesday on the nearby U.S. Army Special Forces camp at Kannack was a dismal failure. American troops fighting side-by-side with mountain tribesmen recruited from the countryside killed more than 100 guerrillas and left the valley stronghold strewn with Communist dead. FIVE AMERICANS were wounded, one seriously, in the Kanack fighting. Vietnamese losses totaled 33 killed and 30 wounded. The battle took place only 20 miles southwest of today's ambush. The Marines at Da Nang today began establishing a ring of guard positions around the 25-mile base perimeter. One group of Marines marched through a Vietnamese village and up into the hills surrounding Da Nang, Vietnamese peasants stood silently along the road as the Marines marched past. Fraternity and Sorority Jewelry • Guards • Kings • Lavaliers • Mugs • Pins • Crests Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Massachusetts Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Massachusetts HEROHAWK FLYING CLUB Aerohawk Flying Club Meeting Sunflower Room, Union Building Tonight, 7 p.m. Aviation Films and Glider Flying Slides by Prof. C. J. Choliasmenos, Asst. Prof. of Mech. & Aerospace (Former European Soaring Champion) All Aviation Enthusiasts Welcome! Bring Your Wives and Dates Refreshments Will Be Served List of Those Who Were Arrested Monday Compliments of Earhart Flying Service Janiece Salisbury, Lawrence freshman; Bonnie Brown, Lawrence freshman; Clark C. Riggins Jr., Denver, Colo. freshman; Kenneth E. Richards Jr., Miami, Okla., junior; Margorie A. French, St. Louis, Mo., senior; Anna Marie Schmid, Switzerland graduate student; Daniel R. Pugh, senior; Linda Lee Cook, Sedalia, Mo., senior; Judith A. Clark, Lawrence housewife; Myron Mr. McRoy, Leavenworthcream; Rihanna Morgan, Kansas Guy, Kan., freshman; Elene B. Cox, St. Louis, Mo., freshman; John H. Fishel, London, England, freshman; Louise E. Hollowell, Leavenworth senior; Minnie A. McMillan, Dalton junior; James C. Merritt, Jonnir Jr., Wichita freshman; Elizabeth Apfel, Boston, Mass., junior; Martha S. Knight, Shawnee Mission senior; Linda Bickham, Wichita freshman; Alice O. Williams, Pratt freshman; Larry J. Smith, Longview, Tex. JESSE FREEE, Kansas City, Kan, freshman; Paula Warren, Ellwood seni- tor; Joyce F. Garlinghouse, Kansas City, Kan, junior; John N. Garlinghouse, Sall- nard City, Kan; Brianham, Kansas City, Kan, sophomore; Eileen Wilcox, Craig, Colo., senior. David Fractenberg, assistant instructor of speech and drama; Herbert A. Smith, Mn., and Mary K. Smith, Mn.; Murhead, Lawrence senior; Pamela C. Smith, Kansas City, Kan.; sophomore; Leila Fein, Fifth Grade; sophomore; Louise Fink, Sixth Grade; Ozarkie sophomore; Donna Jones, Seattle, Wash., freshman. more; Michele Sue Sears, Kansas City. Kan.. senior; Jon E. Gillman, Topeka sophomore. Prentice Townsend, Topeka sophomore; Paul Seau, Hattiesburg, Miss., freshman; Carolyn Buford, Kansas City, Kan., junior; Lorette Estelle, Lawrence sopho- Michael Shinn, Topeka junior; Neil Stone, Shawnee Mission freshman; Nathaniel Sims, Pasadena, Calif., senior; Norma Jean Norman, Topeka freshman, Brenda Joyce Kidd, La Marques, Tex., junior; Anita Louise Brown, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Patricia A. Alexander, Junction City sophomore; Concivillevail Goodson, Lawrence junior; Rose Marie Thierry, Kansas City, Kan., junior. ELAINE CORDELIA TAYLOR, Kansas City, Kan., junior; Volker Meja, Lawrence graduate student; Geraldine J. Maddocks, Craig, Colo., freshman; Carol Borg, Manhattan junior; Rosaale Yoder, Harper junior. Joy Elias, New York, N.Y., graduate student; Arthur Spears, Kansas City, Kan.; senior; Ebenezer Ewanga, Konye University; Lauren Ferraea, Erla Leone senior; Letta Papadopoulou, graduate student; Douglas Ruhe, Wilmette, Ill., junior. PAUL LERNER, Brooklyn, N.Y., graduate student; Janet Coleman, Minneapolis, Minn., freshman; Steven Gugler, Abilene junior; Judy Hellerstein, Denver, Colo., senior; Thomas Coffman, Lyndon senior; Elbert Rinkel, Scott City. Frederic Richard Mabbutt, Shoshone Idaho, senior. George Unseld, Louisville, KY., senior; Connie Marie Hercey, Lawrence sophomore; Arthur Martin Harkins, Ottawa Hays graduate student; Jay Oliver Sax, New York, N.Y.; junior; Margaret Glaser; Kansas City, Mo. sophomore; Karl C. Bruder, Emporia sophomore; David B. Stevens, Denver, Colo., freshman; Durtis Henry Thomas, Hempstead, Tex., freshman. Gary F. Ballard, Omaha, Neb., freshman; Kenneth R. Walker, Lawrence freshman; Barbara N. McAlpin, Nashville, Tenn., sophomore; Joyce Laime Wilburn, Lawrence sophomore; Peggy H. Smith, Garden City junior; James V. Chism, Anthony graduate student; John Greene, Duncan, Okla., freshman WILLIAM HAROLD Edwards, Chickasha, Okla., freshman; Bobby Gene Hudspeth, Lubbock, Tex., freshman; Lee Grant Dosier, Kansas City junior; Robert Earl Terrell, Jackson, Miss., senior; Adrian Reuben Clark, Kansas City freshman; George Ragsdale, Lawrence senior; George Schroff, Kansas City freshman; Patricia J, Nalls, Tulsa, Okla. sophomore; Bessie Meador, Kansas City senior. Joseph Vernon Sears Jr., Kansas City, Kan., freshman; Clement Swiftik, Parsons sophomore; Walter Bgyoja, Tanganyika senior; Carol Frances Klinknett, lawrence housewife; Laurence James, James LaCharles, Lawrence; Thomas B. Woodward, Lawrence Episcopal priest; Carl Larry Taylor, Washington, D.C., freshman. Alonda Jeanne Howard, Lawrence freshman; Eugene Williams, Kansas City junior; Frances Henrietta Bums, Kansas City junior; Daniel Miller, Kansas City; Daniel Miller, Lawrence; Gale Sayers, Omaha, Neb.; senior; Mrs. Marianna Cooke, Lawrence housewife; Ken'ana Clark, Deborah Wisler, Emperor senior; Deborah F. Masters, Calro, Egypt, junior. Jay SHOPPE DOWNTOWN 835 MASS For 13 years... (or 26 semesters) The Jay Shoppe has catered to the KU co-ed To celebrate our 13th anniversary we will give away 1960S WEDDING DRESS Women's Wedding Dress with floral pattern on the blouse and a high-waisted skirt. “3” $13 "3" $13 gift certificates March 11, 12 & 13 one each day Register Now! We are also offering a host of $13.00 specials. -suits - dresses - sports outfits Regularly to $18.00 See our "Storefull" of new spring campus fashions this weekend. id B. Durtis fresh- Daily hansan fresh- wrence Nash- Elaine Gary H. Vesy N. John thicka- Hud- ; Lee Robert Adrlhman; Jan- sandro Qkla, as City s Cly, Par- angan- knett, knett, twence Taylor awrence is City Hous- Kan- Marl- Ken- James Ishaf H LAWRENCF, KANSAS Thursday, March 11, 1965 62nd Year, No. 97 CRC Leaders Disagree; 'Cause' Gains Support A split appeared last night between officers of the Civil Rights Council over what was to be demanded of the Chancellor. The split, between Walter Bgoya, Tanganyika senior and one of the three chairmen of the CRC; and George Unseld, Louisville, Ky., senior; and Nate Sims, Pasadena, Calif, senior, occurred at the regular meeting of the CRC. King Still Firm County Attorney Ralph King Jr. said today he has not diverted from his plans to prosecute tomorrow morning the 110 students arrested Monday for disturbing the peace. Bgoya insisted that the CRC demand the Chancellor to issue an executive order for fraternities and sororites to abolish racial discrimination. Sims and Unseld said they were now engaged in "fruitful discussion" with the Chancellor and that he had said that he would not issue an executive order. THE SPLIT was resolved, for the moment, when a motion was introduced to give support to the officers realizing that these "differences of opinion" did exist and to allow them to continue discussion in a meeting with the Chancellor tomorrow. These differences would then be further discussed by the CRC at a meeting today at 7:30 p.m. The meeting began with a recapitulation of what had taken place today in the meeting between the CRC and the Committee on Human Relations, appointed by Chancellor Weese, yesterday. The Human Relations Committee was set up to review complaints of racial discrimination. It is composed of faculty, administration, and student leaders. The CRC meets with the committee in an ex officio capacity. The question was raised from the floor whether this discussion was getting anywhere. Unseld said, "I feel in my own heart and soul that we are making progress." SIMS, spokesman for the group today, said, "I personally feel that we have received positive action from the university, from the Chancellor. But now, I do not want you to read me wrong when I say we have received positive action and we can sit down now and see what happens. No, I'm saying this, we will ask for all seven demands and we will proceed until we get them." ★ ★ ★ ★ Ad Policy Goes to Civil Rights Board Rv Nancy Scott Advertising policies of the University Daily Kansan (UDK) are being discussed this afternoon by the committee set up by Cancellor W. Clarke Wesco to study demands by the Civil Rights Council (CRC). Members of the Kansan staff, journalism faculty and students were to meet with the newly-formed Committee on Human Relations and the CRC. The CRC presented their demand to Chancellor Wescoe during a sit-in demonstration protesting discrimination at KU Monday morning. IT DEMANDED that the Kansan no longer accept advertisements from landlords and/or organizations that practice racial discrimination. Laurence Woodruff, dean of students, said the committee will determine the procedures, time and agenda of future meetings. They also hope to set a framework of the problems and form a framework under which the committee will operate. Feb. 22, Burton Marvin, Dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, reported a request to the Kansan Business Committee by Richard L. Burke, assistant professor of human relations, representing Lawrence Congress of Racial Equality, and David H. Jones, assistant professor of philosophy, representing the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). THEY ASKED that the UDK explicitly state at the time advertisements are accepted that no housing advertisements will be accepted from persons or firms which are known to have discriminatory rental policies. Also included was a request that when discrimination has been proven to the satisfaction of the UDK in any specific case further advertising by such persons or firms will be refused. John Suhler, Cross River, N.Y. Pam Smith, Kansas City sophomore and secretary of CRC said, "A grievance committee has been set up, which is definitely something more than we have ever obtained at this university. Never before has a formal committee been set up, and I think that this is certainly a major accomplishment." (Continued on page 14) The president of the Washburn University NAACP was at the meeting last night to give support to the KU group and to try and find some support for some of Washburn's civil rights activities. Bill Hartzog, Topeka junior and president of the Washburn group, said, "I wish we could get some students from KU to appear in Topeka tomorrow. I could guarantee them a chance to testify before the Senate fair practices committee." MARVIN McKnight, past president of the Lawrence NAACP, announced that he had had a conversation with Sam Jackson who is the NAACP attorney for this part of the state. "He told me that I could share with you this information. Today he has had a confer- (Continued on page 14) Weather The weather bureau predicts mostly cloudy conditions tonight and Friday. The low tonight will be around 30 degrees. CRC LEADERS discussed tactics at their meeting last night in the Kansas Union. Officers and "interested advisers" are (left to right): Nate (Photo by Lacy Banks) Sims, president; Pam Smith, secretary, and Rev. Thomas B. Woodward, Episcopal KU chaplain. Brian T. Roe & John M. Sullivan (Photo by Lacy Banks) RUSS CUMMINGS AND LARRY BAST University Party Presidential and Vice-Presidential Choices Cummings, Bast To Run For UP By Rosalie Jenkins University Party opened its spring election campaign last night, nominating Russ Cummings, Topeka graduate student, for student body president and Larry Bast, Topeka junior, for student body vice-president at a general assembly meeting in the Kansas Union. In his acceptance speech, Cummings said that he intended to support the policies of UP to the best of his ability. BAST AGREED with the ideas of Cummings on the importance of student government and said "I feel that student government will be faced, in the next few months and coming year, with even more problems." Before the candidates were selected, Harry Bretschneider, Kansas City graduate student and UP secretary-general, presented a policy statement to the UP members in the audience. "The way I see it, UP has traditionally been a party of progress and leadership. I feel we have succeeded in making student government a more important aspect of student life." Cummins stated. He included the following policies for the coming campaign: - "To continue a policy of clean, positive campaigning on our merits and nothing else." - "Continue to act in a manner which is beneficial to KU students as a whole." - "TO PROVIDE, through the All Student Council, expanding student services and programs to meet the needs of an expanding student body." "To cooperate with any opposing political party in securing the best interests of the students of the University of Kansas." Cummings is currently UP ASC representative for the men's large residence halls and is the Templin Hall president. He is also a graduate student in engineering with a 2.33 GPA in graduate school and a teaching assistant in engineering. His other activities include: present chairman of the ASC constitution committee. Men's Residence Hall Association representative, member of the ASC public relations committee, UP advisory board, Big Eight Student Government conference delegate, UP General Assembly representative. Cummings was on the Dean's honor roll (senior year), and is a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers and the National Society of Professional Engineers. BOB STEWART, Vancouver, B.C., senior and student body president, also addressed the group. He replied to a statement made by Vox Populi, in their meeting last week which stated that UP was Greek-oriented. Larry Bast is editor of the Jayhawk and a member of Owl Society. He has a GPA of 1.9. Other acities include ASC representative from the fraternity district 1963-64, freshman class president, Dean's honor roll, and past Greek co-chairman of UP. "We are not Greek oriented nor, by the same token, are we independent-oriented. Our policy is that a party doesn't get anywhere in playing living groups against each other. We select the best from all groups and factions on the campus," Stewart said. Jim Frazier, Topeka fifth year pharmacy student and Vox president, was contacted after the UP nominating meeting last night and asked for comments on the UP candidates and policies. "I'd say that both are outstanding men on campus, but I would question their qualifications for seeking the offices." he said. He commented on UP's policy statements on the expansion of student government and student services. When told of Stewart's statement on UP, Frazier rested the Vox charge of last week that UP identifies with one segment of the campus. He said he believes UP gets Greek houses in the party with promises of additional ASC representatives from their houses and additional ASC committee members. BRETSCHNEIDER SAID that UP will announce its ten candidates from the schools to ASC next Sunday night. Frazier said that Vox will announce its presidential and vicepresidential candidates, along with the party platform, at its meeting next Tuesday night. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 11, 1965 הבעיה האחרונה היא שכל תדפיות הטרנספורמציה מעבירות את הפעולה. CRC Split The administration was shaken Monday and Tuesday by the magnitude of civil rights demonstrations on campus. The Civil Rights Council, the organization responsible for the demonstrations, is just now feeling the impact of its action. The demonstrators made a strong impression and instilled fresh enthusiasm for action in administrators, faculty sympathizers, and students. Now the panic has set in. "Will we get what we asked for?" they ask suspiciously. This was evident in the CRC meeting last night, which attracted about 250 students and some faculty members. THERE WAS DISSESION WITHIN THE ranks and within the leadership on what the next move should be. The movement has reached such proportions that leadership now has to contend with a more militant group of followers. The issue concerned the procedure to be followed in negotiations with the administration. CRC leaders, meeting with Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe yesterday, agreed to negotiate so-called simpler or less controversial demands before discussing the CRC demand that fraternities and sororites be required to sign a statement that they do not discriminate. MANY CRC MEMBERS FELT THIS PROCEDURE was a tactical delay on the part of the administration. They felt that their first demand concerning fraternities and sororities should be considered before negotiations are continued. Walter Bgoya, Tanganyika senior and one of the leaders, proposed that this issue be taken up first, and that if the administration would not respond satisfactorily, demonstrations should resume. This view apparently was discarded, although a motion to vote on it was tabled. The other leaders contended that they should act in good faith on the procedure already agreed to. A vote of confidence was taken to support this position and to try to maintain unity. Several times throughout the meeting, these leaders rose to plead for support of themselves as leaders. It will probably be impossible to ward off future demonstrations unless the administration takes immediate action on some of the demands. CRC members want tangible evidence that they can win by negotiating. If some demands are not met within a matter of days, it is quite possible that some of the more action-oriented members will force a resumption of the sit-in demonstration. The administration is in the position of trying to appease the CRC, without acting too hastily. This is a delicate position because too much delay, discussion, and hesitation, will provoke another demonstration. If negotiations are not as fruitful as some CRC members think they should be, the split within the ranks and leadership of the CRC may widen, resulting in chaos. Gary Noland FORT KNOX ©1965 HERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON POST Gaullefinger Free Lance Publication Misinterprets Laird Wilcox (Editor's note: Dwight Payton's Kansas Free Lance recently carried an article commenting on Laird Wilcox, Lawrence sophomore and publisher of the Kansas Free Press. The Free Lance is a conservative publication while the Free Press reflects a very liberal tone. Wilcox, who has been under attack from such right-wing organizations as the Minutemen, felt he was misinterpreted by Payton. Below is Payton's article and a letter which Wilcox sent to Payton.) "The liberals are in a majority on almost every college and university faculty. The federal government is literally oozing with soft, mushy liberals. Even the churches are by and large a haven for liberals of various kinds. But what are they doing? They're writing non-committal book reviews . . . smearing leftists . . . writing poetry . . . sending their annual dollar to one hundred and one liberal causes. The liberal professors take their freshman students and in the course of six weeks destroy everything they believe in. They ridicule patriotism, Mother, J. Edgar Hoover and something called God . . . And then what do the liberal professors do? Absolutely nothing. They leave their students sitting up in the air with nothing to hold on to." SOUND LIKE THE VENOM OF A BED-ROCK, hard-core right winger? Perhaps, but these are the words of Laird Wilcox, editor of Kansas' most radical left-wing publication, the Kansas Free Press. (Yes, he is on the other side of John McCormally.) "The Kansas Free Press is a newsletter dedicated to controversy and the evolution of meaningful dialogue in matters of current political and social concern" edited by Wilcox and fellow students at the University of Kansas, Lawrence. It is published monthly and sells for $3.00 per year to students and $5.00 for non-students. WHY DOES WILCOX CRITICIZE HIS FELLOW liberals, who "have a virtual monopoly on the press, the government, the schools?" Because they refuse to use their power to "bring all the changes so desperately necessary in our society." One such necessary change would be a federal law guaranteeing an income to everyone, regardless of whether he was employed. The Free Press leads page one of the current issue with a report of picketing by the KU Student Peace Union in front of the Armed Forces Building in Kansas City against the "illegal, immoral and inhuman presence" of U.S. military in Viet Nam. Then follows the first of the usual several articles on the activities of the right wing in Kansas, which the KFP, properly appalled, seems to find synonymous with the John Birch Society. The report is entitled "Birch Leader of Conservative Party of Kansas Speaks to Hostile Audience at KU." THE NEWSLETTER DEVOTES MUCH ATTENTION to civil rights activities. One article in this issue reports that the Kansas State Industrial Reformatory in Hutchinson is the only place in Kansas where Negroes can study barbering. A piece in a previous number argued that: "What Negroes must have is what Bayard Rustin has already called for—an economic Master plan (which) cannot be accomplished, as Rustin candidly admits, within the limits of 'free' enterprise. . . Only in this way can Martin Luther King's prophecy come true, that in freeing themselves American Negroes will also be freeing the whites." In accord with its dedication to uncensored free expression (with, perhaps, the exception of right wing hate-mongering) the KFP started a fund-raising project to aid in defense of Henry Haldeman of Girard, Kansas, publisher of the world famous Little Blue Books, who was sentenced to 18 months imprisonment in an obscenity trial in Topeka a year and a half ago. Haldeman's conviction was overturned in a district court two weeks ago. He wrote in thanks for the aid: "Without the money solicited on my behalf by the Kansas Free Press . . . I would have gone to prison." ADDING SPICE TO THE LATEST ISSUE IS A first-person account championing the student "revolt" in Berkeley by a former KU student now doing graduate work in California, an article in which President Johnson's Poverty Program is attacked for being niggersly, a rather tame article on the inevitability, necessity and virtue of deficit spending, which could have been written out of any college text on economics, and an appeal by the United Auto Workers for 10.000 "citizen lobbyist(s)" to write letters to Congress on cue from the UAW. Oh! and a note that that "long-time advocate of extremist causes." Dwight Payton, gave a speech in the public library in Johnson County January 18. Dear Mr. Payton: - * * * I SHOULD LIKE TO thank you for your fairness in your article on the Kansas Free Press in the February 20 issue of the Free Lance. As an avid reader of several right-wing publications such as National Review, The Freeman, American Opinion, The Thunderbolt, Christian Economics, and perhaps two dozen others, such objectivity isn't expected. I should like to correct a few minor items however, since they tend to misrepresent my views. First, although you don't actually say it you imply that I advocate a federal law guaranteeing an income to everyone, regardless of whether he was employed. This isn't true. A few issues back the KFP carried an item in Conrad Creitz's "Economic Notes" column that Dr. Louis Fein, a Palo Alto, California, industrial research consultant advocated studies to determine whether or not this might be feasible. Dr. Fein also proposed studies to determine who, if anyone, should be paid for not working. My own position is that we need extensive legislation along the lines of the Manpower Training and Development Act, extensive public works conservation projects, and federal aid in developing more private cooperative enterprises such as they have in Sweden and Western Europe. Rather than provide everyone with income whether they work or not I would advocate action to provide income through employment. SECOND. YOU SAY that "the KFP . . . seems to find (the right-wing) synonymous with the John Birch Society." I'm not quite sure what you mean here. Of course, nearly all JBS members would call themselves conservatives. I realize, and I think I've made this clear, that not all conservatives are JBS members. Some are simply economic darwinists (libertarians), some are more interested in race (Nazis', National States Righters, etc.), many are simply business people who feel threatened by the public interest as represented through the local, state, and federal governments. As I'm sure you're aware, it simply isn't possible to lump all leftists and or all rightists together. There is as great a difference between the White Americans Party and the Freedom School as there is between the Progressive Labor Organization and the Socialist Party/Social Democratic Federation. THIRD, YOU STATE. "In accord with its dedication to uncensored free expression (with, perhaps, the exception of right wing hate mongering) . . . " Here you're implying that I'm against free expression for right wing hate mongers. This simply isn't true. While chairman of the Minority Opinions Forum at the University of Kansas last year I invited and took full responsibility for George Lincoln Rockwell, the American Nazi. I defended his right to speak and I continue to do so today (even though I was harrassed and my life was threatened for it). I am every bit as opposed to the House Un-American Activities Committee investigating the John Birch Society or The Minutemen as I am to their investigating Women Strike for Peace or the Student Committee For Travel to Cuba. In other words, my dedication to free expression isn't limited to organizations on the left but on the right as well. To close, let me say that I appreciate your overall fairness in dealing with the Kansas Free Press. I do think you missed the boat on a few things, however, and I hope you will print this letter in order to correct any misunderstanding that may have arisen. Yours very truly: EARTH M. WOOTH THE KANSAS FREE PRESS The People Say... AS A SPOKESMAN FOR THE Civil Rights Council, I find it necessary to clarify our position in regard to the administration's role in the recent events that have taken place at the University of Kansas. Our protest must not in any manner be construed as a personal attack on any of the University administrators, especially Chancellor W. Clarke Wessec. Indeed, such an attack would be inappropriate and unjust for the Chancellor has distinguished himself as a champion and upholder of the principles of human rights and dignity. These are the principles upon which the United States was founded and these are the same principles that have given the United States its respected role in the community of nations. Therefore, the CRC views the recent events as only an opportunity for the Chancellor to further the implementation of the principles that he has advocated and upheld thus far. The demonstration was called off yesterday because the trust and respect we have for our Chancellor was guarantee enough that significant concrete steps would be forthcoming. After negotiations this morning with the Chancellor and an administrative body selected by him, the CRC expects that the administration will rise to the occasion and once again assert its leadership in the field of human rights by meeting all of our requests. Walter Bgoya Tanganyika senior Co-chairman of protest movement Dailij Transan 111 Flint Hall University of Kansas student newspaper *1University 4-3646, newsroom UNIVERSITY *4-135* BULLETIN weekly 1964 twelfth year 1908 daily jan. 16 1912 triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Member Inland Daily Press Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. N.Y. service: United Press internet $3.50 semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Leta Roth and Gary Noland ... Co-Editorial Editors Thursday, March 11, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Drama Group Will Perform In Europe Six KU drama students and their instructor will leave for Czechoslovakia, April 5—to be the first American group to that country under the international Cultural Exchange program with Eastern European countries. The students, who will present scenes from four plays, are Sylvia Groth, Maryville, N.D., graduate student; Richard Caskey, Overland Park sophomore; Gigi Gibson, Independence senior; Theora Weddingfield, Norfolk, Neb.; senior; Steve Callahan, Independence graduate student, and Bill Bowersock, Shawnee Mission sophomore. Gordon Beck, instructor of Speech and drama, mentioned that the costs of the tour, which includes seven countries besides Czechoslovakia, will be paid for by the United States State Department. Last year was the first time a KU group toured Eastern Europe. They visited Poland, Rumania and Yugoslavia, but not Czechoslovakia. THIS YEAR THE students will present scenes from Moliere the "Tartuffe," Murray Schisgal's "Luv," Krzlev's "In Agony," Wallace Johnson's "What Did You Learn in School Today?" and Pirandello's "Six Characters in Search of an Author." They will also do several improvisation exercises and perform some scenes from American musicals. "Originally we had planned to spend only a week in Czechoslovakia," Beck said, "but now we will be staying a week in Prague, the capital, and a week in Bratislava." The students will also visit Madrid, Spain; Rome and Trieste, Italy; Zagreb, Yugoslavia; Warsaw, Poland; Vienna, Austria; Paris and London. In addition, the KU group received an invitation to perform for a student group in Utrecht, the Netherlands, and an invitation to record in Cologne, Germany. In Madrid, Rome, Paris and London, the students will be the guests of the International Theatre Institute, an organization attached to the United Nations Economic, Social and Cultural Organization. Folklore Group Meet Planned for Saturday The Kansas Folklore Society will hold its ninth annual meeting Saturday in the Kansas Union instead of Wednesday, as reported in yesterday's Daily Kansan. The meeting will begin at 10 a.m. with registration and coffee. At 10:30, three papers will be read on folklore. The business meeting will be at noon, and the special guest speaker, John Messenger, will speak at 1:30. A folk singing program will be held at 8:30. Official Bulletin TODAY Heart of America Debate Tournament. All Day, Kansas Union. German Club, 4:30 p.m. Informal meeting. All are welcome, Kansas Union. tors Illustrated Lecture, 7.30 p.m. Dr. Gordon W. Hewes, U. of Colo. "Ancient Hunters, Fisherman and Farmers of Sudanese Nubia." 306 Kansas Union. Ethics and Society Lecture, 8:00 p.m. Kansas Union Inaugural Lecture, 8:00 p.m. Big Eight Room, Kansas Union. Max Kade Distinguished Prof. Gerhardt Storz. "Friedrich Schiller in Unser Zeit." TOMORROW Teaching Candidates: Interviews scheduled for Friday, March 12. Nebraska, Wichita Falls Mid-Western Univ., Texas, Wichita Falls Mid-Western Univ., college, 106 Bailey; California, Roland Heights School District K-9, 117 Bailey. Day, Kansas Union. Lecture, 3:30 p.m. John Messenger, narrator in *Night at the Museum* duration in Nigel Spencer'sarium Friday Flicks, 7:00 and 9:30 p.m Fraser Theater. of Missouri, Forum Room, Kansas Union. University, Theatre, 8:20 p.m. "Six Cities," in Concerts & Dance. www.missouri.edu Film Series, 7.30 p.m. "Lady With A Dog" Hoch Auditorium. Regional Newman Convention. Fort contact the Student Center, VI 2-0357. NEA Criticizes Teacher Strikes Strikes should not be available to teachers or members in the school system, according to the Education Policy Committee of the National Education Association (NEA), Dr. Carl Knox, Lawrence superintendent of schools said last night at a meeting of the KU chapter of the Student National Education Association. The NEA Policy Committee feels that teachers should be free of ties with any economic segment of our society, Knox said, since they are serving children of parents from all segments. Also, Knox said, unions might have a mistrust for management and the unity of the teaching profession. School supervisors would not be permitted to join unions, which would disrupt the teamwork for necessary communications and tend to reduce the efficient learning operation. THE NEA EDUCATION Policy Committee believes that internal problems should be dissolved through professional negotiation, Knox said. Three years ago, Knox said, the Kansas State Teachers Association (KSTA), appointed a committee to investigate professional negotiation. They have established a set of principles and proposals that are designed for teachers. He pointed out that it enables them to reach suitable agreements and to establish appropriate channels to negotiate with when normal channels fail. THESE PRINCIPLES and proposals are designed for teachers and school boards to use in communicating on common terms. Knox said. This program has been adopted by the KSTA and commended to local associations. The Kansas Association of School Boards has approved this for publication for its members. IF THIS APPROACH does not work, Knox said, the state board of education or some other government agency should intervene so as not to hinder the educational process. "Strikes place the child's education in jeopardy," Knox said. Newly elected NEA officers include: Rosemary Barfield, Leavenworth junior, president; Joanna Shrader, Great Bend junior, first vice president; Larry Stice, Oswego junior, second vice president; Connie Gilbert, Kansas City, Kan.,Junior, secretary; and Sherry Long, Humboldt sophomore, treasurer. AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION TABLE TOPS AUTO GLASS Sudden Service East End of 9th St. VI 3-4416 Fraternity and Sorority Jewelry A B Γ Δ E Z H Θ I K A M - Guards - Mugs - Kings - Pins - Lavaliers * Crests Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" N O H P N T Y X Q 809 Massachusetts KANSAS WEATHER IS UNPREDICTABLE This weekend should be nice,but you just can't count on it. One thing you can count on though, is the quality service at Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners. No matter what else the new day may bring, it will bring the Lawrence Laundry man to pick-up or deliver your clothes. You can make book on it! STANLEY KUBRICK BOTANY'500 $ ^ { \ast } $ recommends our Sanitone drycleaning process 1024 LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 1001 New Hampshire VI 3-3711 called the final call of how to make a connection with a service called bulk2 bulk2 bulk2 bulk2 bulk2 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday. March 11, 1965 A woman stands beside a car, holding a book. Two people are visible in the car's windows. In weather like this, accidents are bound to happen. But it's reassuring to know that Independent is there on hand to help you out. INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners 9th St. & Miss. 740 Vermont Call VI 3-4011 for free pick-up and delivery service Jet Lost as U.S. Bombs Cong Page 5 SAIGON — (UPI) — U.S. Air Force jet bombers and fighter bombers carried out secret bombing missions against the Communists today. One B57 twin-jet was lost while dropping napalm on Viet Cong troops 390 miles northeast of Saigon in another attack. South Vietnamese fighter bombers and the B57's hit Communist targets inside South Viet Nam while a force of between 15 and 20 F100 fighter-bombers roared off from Da Nang to hit unannounced targets, believed to be Communist supply lines in Laos. The pilot and co-pilot of the downed B57 apparently parachuted to safety but were not found. It was the first B57 lost in action against the Communists. Five other B57 pilots on the same raid said there was no ground fire in the area. Transport planes dropped parachute flares over the crash scene tonight to light up the scene for searchers. Fighter-bombers and U.S. helicopters bristling with rockets and machine guns protected search parties which reached the wreckage. Although today's was the first B57 lost in combat one crashed when they were sent to Viet Nam last August during the Tonkin crisis and several were damaged in a Communist mortar attack on Da Nang—where the F100's took off today or their mystery raid. In Washington today, reports were the United States is likely to send more ground force units to South Viet Nam to join the two Marine battalions just disembarked there, it was learned today. The F100 Supersabre jets roared off the Da Nang runways in midmorning and returned about noon. Today's raids from Da Nang were carried out against a backdrop of strife in the port city. WHEN POLICE refused, the crowd attacked. Police were unable to control the mob and the ranger battalion was called in about midnight. Shortly afterward the wife of the civilian arrived at the police station backed by a large crowd which demanded his release. This information coincides with a reported substantial buildup in North Vietnamese regular army battalions now fighting alongside Viet Cong guerrillas in South Vietnam Nam. Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara told Congress that this year's bill for U.S. military aid in South Viet Nam had gone up an additional $50 million. He said President Johnson was transferting that amount to the military program for economic aid funds. Police said the riots began Wednesday night after officers detained a civilian who had accused an army sergeant of being a Communist agent. A search of the soldier produced no evidence. The expected new troops assignment was disclosed following these other developments in Washington on the Viet Nam situation: Vietnamese rangers opened fire with rifles early this morning when a mob attacked police in front of a station house. The crowd dispersed in the early hours today. The Pentagon reported that reconnaissance photographs taken after the 160-plane raid on two Communist bases in North Viet Nam nine days ago showed better than 70 per cent success was achieved in destroying or seriously damaging installations. History, Society Tied to Religion Father Columban of the history department at St. Benedict's College in Atchison, stated it has been said "religion is the key to history. Today, as we realize the tremendous influence of the conscience on us this has required a new and wider meaning. Three historians, two of them KU professors, discussed religion in connection with history at a meeting of the History Club at 7:30 last night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. "FAITH MOVES beyond the world of man and introduces him to a higher realm of reality," he continued, "it introduces an element of spiritual freedom which may have a transforming nature on man's destiny and experiences. An intimate relationship in the study of a culture is seen between the faith and social achievements. "The French Revolution went from a period of great religion to irreligion to no religion and back to religion again." he commented. WILLIAM GILBERT, professor of history at KU, said, "I agree as to the impact of religion in society. Both are in the forefront of contemporary thought and both are bound to affect one another if one looks at religion from a historical point of view." "This points out that history is not an end in itself. The goal of history is not found in history, it is beyond it. Man is both in and beyond history. This proves that men are not completely shaped by it," Gilbert said. "From the historical point of view religion can be seen as an attempt to give some kind of meaning to human life," he said, "if the religious interpretation is to be of any value, the tremendous multiplicity of events must be considered. It has been stated that the earliest philosophy of history is found in the Old Testament." "By 1700 the influence of religion on human thought and actions ceased to be a matter of any historical significance. Before this time the role of religion was very considerable." Longhurst said. "In the realm of historical action and throughout the Middle Ages and into the 6th century religion in the realm of action played a tremendous role." "ST. AUGUSTINE HAD a very detailed knowledge of the purposes of the Almighty and there has been in the last few decades a revival of the Christian view of history. Interpreters have not felt as well informed on the feelings of the Almighty, however," Gilbert said. "I do not think it is important as a force any longer," he said. JOHN LONGHURST, professor of history at KU, did not particularly stress the importance of religion in history. ginning of Christianity is one of the most powerful forces in history. They were obscured and yet had tremendous impact on the world. "It should be possible to say that a Christian outlook on history should be of somewhat the same value," he said. "It should bring to light factors in the past which otherwise would not be as clear. "IF THIS IS TRUE then the life and activities of a lot of humble and unknown people are important in a look at the past," he said. "The be- "THE AGE OF martyrs has pretty well disappeared. People are still very much interested but they no longer act with reference to the divinity," he said. Thursday, March 11, 1965 University Daily Kansan P- Yugoslav Drama Students Visit KU Six students and one faculty member from Yugoslavia arrived in Lawrence last night. They will be guests of the KU drama department for the next three weeks. The students will be housed in university dormitories and hosted by six KU students who will leave for an East European tour about April 1. The Yugoslav students will demonstrate the scenes and preparatory exercises used in their drama school. Meet Clarence W. "Tad" Gould... "Tad" is your Southwestern Life College Representative on the campus. He's helping young men plan now for a better life tomorrow. YOUR FRIEND FOR LIFE He has a special plan. Its name — the INSURED CAREER PLAN. It's a young-man plan, a new-idea plan created by one of the nation's leading life insurance companies especially for, and only for, men college seniors and graduate students. "Tad" Gould is an easy person to talk with, and what he has to tell you about the INSURED CAREER PLAN can make a lot of difference in your future. Talk with him. There's never any obligation. SL Southwestern Life INSURANCE COMPANY • DALLAS • SINCE 1903 ADDRESS • TELEPHONE NO. Student Union Activities, Current Events Forum presents C.R.C.: C.R.C. A Panel Discussion of our PURPOSE Sunflower Room, Student Union Friday, 7:30 p. m. Question Period Will Follow Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday. March 11, 1965 Joan Baez Woman Of Multiple Facets By Terry Joslin Will success spoil Joan Bacz? This is not the title of a new musical comedy. Joan Baez is the social-protesting folk singer who makes in excess of $100,000 a year, who doesn't believe in paying income tax for defense, and who recently sang at rallies of the free speech movement at Berkeley. Calif. She is also suing three record companies for $125,000, according to the Associated Press, for their release of an album taken from seven-year-old tape recordings made when she Klan Plans Rally In Arkansas Town HAMBURG, Ark. — (UPI) — A rally of the Ku Klux Klan will be held in Hamburg Saturday night, according to Houston P. Morris of Monroe, La., Imperial wizard of the original Ku Klux Klan of America. Morris said Wednesday the rally will be held on private property about two blocks from the Ashley County courthouse. He said the rally would be for all interested persons in Ashley county and anyone can attend. He said no picture taking would be allowed. Morris said the Klan is now operating in five southeast Arkansas counties but added it was not a policy of the Klan to divulge its membership strength in any area. The national headquarters of the original KKK are at Monroe and Morris, as its imperial wizard, is the national chairman. "The rally is not a recruiting program by any means," he said. "I'll admit that it does help some. We'll pass out some literature but we consider it to be a Christian gathering. Every man who joins has to swear he is a Christian." The Klan has not been active in Arkansas for years. was 17 and "an immature and inexperienced singer and guitarist." The album in question, "Joan Baez in San Francisco," describes her: "She continues to record infrequently, to appear when she really wishes to, and to live quite modestly in the Big Sur-Carmel region of California." THIS SAME album jacket says Joan Baez is "a voice lifted against violence and wrongdoing the world over." Joan Bace also has a signal distinction among folk singers. Joining the ranks of such individuals as Aleksei Kosygin, Barry Goldwater, and Ara Parseghian, she made the cover of Time magazine. Joan Baez is well known for taking off her shoes and singing such old English ballads as "Barbara Allen" and "House Carpenter." She also sings Bob Dylan type protest songs like "With God on Our Side" and "What have They Done to the Rain." On the "San Francisco" album she adds to her depth by singing "Young Blood," a song recorded most notably by the "Coasters." Some students on this campus were asked their opinions of Joan Baez's action. "Only $125,000!" Jim Nickum, Wichita senior. said. "IVE NEVER heard of her, but I'm all for her if she jets the jack." Rich Baker, Savannah, Mo., senior, said. It may be noted that Joan Baez "wishes to" appear at the University of Missouri later this year, where she is scheduled to give a concert. C Phone in your Classified Ad More Ask for Awards More KU students will be competing for fewer scholarships for the coming academic year, according to Robert Billings, director of Aids and Awards. "We will probably have more than 2,000 applications to deal with before the year is over," Billings said. "At the present time we are dealing with 1,482—nearly 1,500." Billings explained that 500-600 scholarships will be applied for on a renewal basis at the end of the school year. There will be no substantial increase in the $175,000 fund for institutionally-awarded scholarships to cover this 15 per cent increase in applications, Billings said. "The number of scholarships awarded for the coming year will have to be reduced because of the General scholarships from the university cover tuition and fee expenses. increase in tuition and fees,"Billings added. A total of 442 men and 411 women have applied for scholarship hall awards, according to the Aids and Awards office. Approximately 450 spaces will be available. Billings said the number of available rooms each year in the scholarship hall system has not varied appreciably for the past five years. Nearly all of the scholarship hall applicants also applied for general scholarships. In addition, 553 persons applied for only general scholarships. Seventy-six Summerfield, Watkins and honor scholarships were awarded earlier this year. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers SEE US... BEFORE YOU BUY Typewriters New and Used Standards, Electrics and Portables Olympia Royal Hermes Smith Corona Olivette Rental Sales Service Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 WHEN IT'S COLD OUTSIDE COME INSIDE at DIXON'S OUR NEWLY DECORATED DINING ROOM WITH HANDY ORDER PHONES, AND A WIDE SELECTION OF FINE FOODS, HAS SOMETHING SPECIAL TO SUIT EVERYONE'S TASTE. DIXON'S DRIVE-IN 700 W.6th VI 3-744 Official Kansas University Ring Order now for Graduation Available in yellow gold . . 10 dwt., 10 k. Choice of three stones. Red-synthetic ruby, Blue-Blue spinel, Black onyx. Ladies' size ring also available. Drop in to see samples on display. 3NAL 85 VANEAS UNIVERSITY 1865 UNIVERSITY 65 PRICES BEGINNING AT $30.50 kansas UNION BOOKSTORE Thursday, March 11. 1965 University Daily Kansap Page 7 THE THE RED DOG INN presents The Kiraxuds THE ASTRONAUTS again FRIDAY NIGHT 7:00 P.M. HELD OVER BY POPULAR DEMAND, THE ASTRONAUTS HAVE CONSENTED TO PLAY AGAIN FRIDAY NIGHT. 7:00 P.M. COVER $1.50 SAT. NIGHT SAT. NIGHT STEVE ELLIS and his STARFIRES from Minneapolis, Minnesota The Number ONE band at the University of Minnesota DOORS OPEN 7:00 P. M. COVER $1.00 FREE T.G.I.F. with the Astronauts 3:00 PM. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 11, 1965 Foreign Service Recruiting: Benefits Include Adventure Have you been bitten by the travel bug and caught yourself dreaming about faraway lands? If so, here is a chance to fulfill your wishes. The U.S. Foreign Service Department is now recruiting people for its program. Explaining the program yesterday Frank V. Ortiz Jr., of the U.S. State Department, said, "This is an opportunity where you can be of great service to your country. There are many advantages and disadvantages that you might have to face while serving in a foreign country, but the experience you will gain, will outweigh all these factors. "It is a service that affords you a chance to represent your country in the international world. It develops an international outlook in you because you are constantly dealing Ortiz currently serves in the State Department as officer in charge of Spanish affairs. THE STATE DEPARTMENT will conduct an entrance examination on May 1 in Lawrence. Application forms can be obtained from Clifford Ketzel, associate professor of political science. The deadline for filing applications is March 15. He served in the American embassies at Cairo, Egypt, Mexico City, Mexico, and Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. with many types of people in different parts of the world," he continued. Commenting on the various responsibilities of the officers in the foreign service, Ortiz said, "Our primary responsibility is to preserve the security of our country and our people. We have to negotiate agreements with other nations; help set up military bases in allied countries whose security is threatened by communist countries; keep contacts with the leading political figures in the nation where we are stationed; screen applications of foreign nationals who plan to come to our country; look after Americans abroad; and help promote U.S. trade. "We need people who are well educated and are trained specialists to handle such difficult assignments." OFFICERS IN THE Foreign Service serve for a term of two years in one country and are then eligible for two months of home leave, Ortiz explained. During their stay abroad, the government pays them, apart from basic salary, foreign allowance, house rent allowance, children's educational allowance and entertainment allowance. Richwine Appointed ROTC Commander 图 2-17 KU's professor of naval science, Capt. Robert H. Eslinger Jr., has announced the appointment and promotion of 19 student midshipmen to officer positions in the battalion of midshipmen for the spring semester. The appointments were effective Feb. 15, 1965. The new commanding officer of the 150 man organization is midshipman Cmdr. Dave Richwine, Overland Park senior, member of the varsity swimming team and Phi Delta Theta fraternity. He will graduate in June with a B.A. degree in political science, at which time he will be commissioned a second lieutenant in the U.S. Marine Corps. The second-in-command will be midshipman Lt. Cmdr. Jay Henderson, Mission senior, majoring in psychology. Henderson will be commissioned an ensign in the U.S. Navy upon graduation in June. Richwine will have a staff of eight senior midshipmen to assist him in directing and planning the activities of the battalion for the spring semester. Staff members include: One of the main disadvantages in the foreign service is the sudden adjustment to a new environment, Ortiz said. "You will have to stay in the new place for a length of time, whether you like it or not," Ortiz said. "After you have served in the Foreign Service for a number of years, you are classified as a foreigner anywhere, even in your own country," he added. "BUT WHEN YOU sit down to think back about being chased by a lion in Tanzania or what was it like singing Christmas carols to the Emperor of Ethiopia, you get the satisfaction that you have been able to gain an experience which even the most money could not have bought for you," Ortiz said. 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ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING ASSURES YOU: ★ ★ Odorless Cleaning ★ ★ Garments Stay Fresh Longer ★ Sanitary Clothes ★ Cleaner, Brighter Garments ★ Gentle, Individual Treatment for Your Fine Fabrics One hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEARING SHIRT SERVICE SPECIAL ONE DAY SHIRTSERVICE 25c each 4 for 88c One hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING 1407 MASS. — FREE PARKING — SPECIAL ONE DAY SHIRTSERVICE 25c each 4 for 88c 1407 MASS. — FREE PARKING — One Hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING Thursday, March 11, 1965 University Daily Kansa Page 9 Jayhawk Fencers to NCAA Meet Next One of the most active athletic teams at KU this semester has been the four squad fencing team. Although the intercollegiate fencing season has ended, KU fencers will go to the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) national championships at Detroit University, March 19 and 20. Tim Mitchell, Salina senior and captain of the fencing team, will represent the sabre squad. Mike Munson, Salina junior and Esem-El Shafey, Prague, Czechoslovakia, junior, will represent the mens' foil and epee squad respectively. KU WILL HOST AN unclassified sabre tournament and women's foil open March 27. There will be a women's team meet at Wichita, April 10. Two weeks later there will be a four weapon meet in Wichita. These tournaments will prepare teams for the Kansas Divisional Championships which will be held here May 1. The first four place winners in each weapon become qualified to go to the nationals this summer. KU Coeds Capture Rifle Team Honors The KU Women's Rifle Team coped high honors in the women's division at the National Rifle Association sectional held at Laramie, Wyoming recently. Members of the team were presented first place medals by Professor Henry A. Shenk, Kansas University physical education director. Members of the team are Melba Moore, team captain, Grenola sophomore; Judi Zook, Kansas City freshman; Geraldine Rinker, Lawrence sophomore; and Carol Mesigh, Toppea sophomore. KU's distaff sharpshooters are members of the university rifle team which is coached by Sergeant Humphrey Jones, Army ROTC staff member. The Big Eight rifle matches will be held at KU on April 2 and 3. The team has competed in three tournaments since semester break, including a triangular meet against Illinois University and Iowa State University, and a competition against the Air Force Academy. In the triangular meet KU lost 23 to 4 to the Illinois University team. But, the Kansas team beat Iowa State University 22-5. Dave Truxel, Vicksburg, Mich., junior and El Shafey, fencing sabre and epee respectively, did outstanding jobs in the tournament, John Dillard, assistant instructor of physical education and fencing coach, said. THREE WEEKS AGO the team traveled to Colorado Springs, Colo., to meet the Air Force Academy fencing team. The KU team lost 24 to 3. "Truxel and William Dorzab, Kansas City sophomore, really distinguished themselves in the Air Force meet." Dillard said. "Dorzab is just a beginning fencer but he has shown a lot of talent and has a very promising future. Jucos Will Tangle COLUMBIA, Mo. — (UPI)— Six teams from Missouri, three from Kentucky and one from Kansas clash today in the Region 16 Junior College Basketball Tournament at the University of Missouri. The winner will advance to the National Junior College Tournament at Hutchinson, Kan., later in the month. Moberly, Mo., Junior College is the pre-tournament favorite with a 23-3 won-lost mark, although Highland, Kan., 21-1, has the best record. Other highly rated teams are Linsey-Wilson of Columbia, Ky., which defeated Moberly 75-73 earlier this season, and Southwest Baptist of Bolivar, Mo., last year's champion. A problem for Moberly will be replacing Guard Rodney Jones, who sprained an ankle Monday night and will not play in the tournament. What's For You At FIRST NATIONAL BANK FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Massachusetts Much more than just the time of day. There's a convenient, efficient checking account for you. When you pay by check, you a have a permanent receipt; every penny is accounted for. Stop in today and start enjoying your own checking account. "The Air Force cadets and Illinois University team are more experienced than us." Dillard stated. "These two teams are among the top in the nation." FENCING IS A varsity sport at these two schools and it isn't at KU and the Illinois team has had men on the Olympic fencing team. Both schools have had All American fencers. "Although our budget and program are limited, we do a lot with what we have," Dillard explained. Last Saturday two men went to Stillwater, Okla., to fence competitors from seven colleges. Munson, foil squad captain, took first place in foil. Steve Wells, Salina senior, took first place in epee. Then he switched over to foil and took third place. "This shows that once you have mastered one weapon in fencing, the other weapons come easily," Dillard said. Cover Girl Styles For the New Exciting Look Red or Platinum 8.99 Patronize Kansan Advertisers GORDON'S SHOE CENTER 815 Mass. COACH HOUSE Cookery For Town and Country 12th and Oread VI 3-6369 JENNA HARRIS Ginger Kamberg Alpha Phi Picnic season ahead! Be ready with stretch jeans and a madras wind breaker. SPECIAL REDUCED AIR FARES to EUROPE for Kansas University Students. Faculty and members of immediate families $356.00 Round Trip from New York to Brussels, Belgium Depart June 23 & Return Sept.10 by Sabena Jet Service Limited number of seats available on first come,first served basis. For further information call TOM P. REA at UN4-3831 Page 10 University Dally Neesan Thursday, March 11, 1965 Walt Stands Tall In All-Big 8 Team KANSAS CITY, Mo.—(UPI)—Mighty Walt Wesley, Kansas' record scoring machine, dominated the 1965 All-Big Eight Conference basketball team announced Thursday by United Press International. Wesley, a 6-foot-11 pivot who shattered two league scoring marks, was the lone unanimous choice in all-star ballots cast by sportswriters and sportsbroadcasters in the conference area. THE JAYHAWK junior also was a near unanimous choice as the league's Player of the Year. Oklahoma State coach Hank Iba, who guided the U.S. Olympic basketball team to a world championship at the Tokyo games last fall, was voted Coach of the Year. Iba's veteran Cowboys, who finished 12-2 in the conference and 19-6 for the season, enter the NCAA Midwest Regional at Manhattan Friday night against University of Houston. IT WAS OKLAHOMA STATE'S first Big Eight basketball championship since joining the conference in 1958. Missouri coach Bob Vanatta and Ted Owens of Kansas deadlocked for second in coaching honors. Others besides Wesley named to the all-star squad were Colorado's Chuck Gardner and Pat Frink, Oklahoma State's Jim King and George Flamank of Missouri. Frink was the only sophomore on the squad while Wesley and Gardner are juniors. Flamank and King are both seniors. Wesley set a new Big Eight scoring mark of 377 points in a single season and established a field goal record with 150 baskets from the floor. THE OLD SCORING record of 363 points was set by former Kansas State star Bob Boozer in 1959. Ex-Kansan Clyde Lovellette established the former field goal mark of 339 in 1951. As a team the all-star squad stood 6-foot-6 and averaged 14.4 points per contest. Wesley's 26.9 average was followed by Gardner's 16.4 mark, Frink at 15.0. King at 13.9 and Flamanker's 12.6. Flamank was the loop's top rebounder with an average of 12.1 grabs per contest while King was regarded as one of the conference's top defensive stalwarts. LARRY HAWK, Oklahoma State's veteran guard and two-time all-conference selection, failed to land a third consecutive all-star birth by a narrow margin in favor of Flamank. Hawk and Oklahoma pivot Jim Gatewood were solid second team choices along with Missouri guard Gary Garner. Other second team berths went to Hawk's teammate Gary Hassmann and Bob Ziegler of Iowa State. All except Ziegler, a junior, are seniors on the second squad. Ziegler's 19.3 average, second only to Wesley in league competition, topped the second team scorers who averaged 74.5 per game. Hassmann edged Missouri's Ned Monsees and Iowa State's Al Koch for second team honors. New Sound Track SOUND OF MUSIC starring JULIE ANDREWS Bell Music Co. 925 Mass. St. VI 3-2644 Fair Housing Bill Pressures Realtors tunity to rent, purchase and finance homes for themselves,would put pressure on developers and real estate agencies to deal fairly with Negro home buyers. TOPEKA — (UPI) — Carl Glatt, executive director of the Kansas Civil Rights Commission, said Wednesday that a bill aimed at providing Negroes and other minority groups with equal opport- agency received from a white minister who attempted to buy a lot at the Pomona Reservoir. He said the developer said they had not received a Veterans Administration approval on the loan. Glatt mentioned a letter his If you've never bowled before in your life, or if you're a Don Carter BOWL FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY AT THE JAYBOWL FOR A "DATE SPECIAL" YOUR DATE GETS TO BOWL EVERY OTHER GAME FREE! (REMEMBER—MOM BOWLS FREE!) 6 p.m. Friday — 6 p.m. Sunday Open 8 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. Monday - Saturday Open 1:00 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. Sunday Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION Athletic man running Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS THINK EPIC FOR A VARIETY OF ENTERTAINMENT Godfrey Cambridge Them Cotton Pickin' Days Is Over Recorded Live At the hungry I FLM 13102/FLS 15102: Godfrey Cambridge Them Cotton Pickin' Days Is Over Recorded Live at the hungry I THINK EPIC FOR A VARIETY OF ENTERTAINMENT THINK EPIC FOR A VARIETY OF ENTERTAINMENT Godfrey Cambridge Them Cotton Pickin' Days Is Over Recorded Live at the hungry I FLM 13102/FLS 15102* Godfrey Cambridge Them Cotton Pickin' Days Is Over Recorded Live at the hungry I Glenn Miller Time—1965 The WORLD FAMOUS Glenn Miller Orchestra DIRECTED BY Ray McKinley Bobby Hackett LN 24133/BN 26133* Glenn Miller Time—1965 The Glenn Miller Orchestra Directed by Ray McKinley Starring Bobby Hackett Randy Sparks Presents The Back Porch Majority LN 24134/BN 26134* Randy Sparks Presents the Back Porch Majority Live From Ledbetter's Ray McKinney Bobby Hanker no die bue Bandy Sparks Presents The Back Porch Majority LN 24134/BN 26134 Randy Sparks Presents the Back Porch Majority Live From Ledbetter JIM HARRISON THE BANJO MUSIC BOAT --- determine the average surface tension of water. n-ot idot a- Around the Campus Prof. James E. Seaver of the KU history faculty will be the speaker for the 50th anniversary meeting of the Great Bend Kiwanis Club on March 18. He will give his illustrated talk on "Archeology and the Bible," which was made earlier this year on the Humanities lecture series. Principal speaker at the noon luncheon will be Lt. Col. John A. (Shorty) Powers, USAF (Ret.), former public affairs officer for Project Mercury and now a special consultant to Field Enterprises Educational Corporation. His topic will be "The Space Age Challenge to Education." The second phase in the University Theatre's attempt to instigate a repertory company on-campus will go into effect when Luigi Pirandello's "Six Characters in Search of an Author" opens tomorrow at 8:20 p.m., and continues March 13, 19 and 20. "Six Characters" To Open To Talk Bible, Archeology Playing the leading role will be William Kuhlke, instructor of speech and drama. Appearing with him will be a son and a daughter, Kevin and Karen Sue. To be added to the cast, upon their arrival, will be six Yugoslavian drama students, who will be guests of the University for approximately thirty days during March and April. Subjects of the seminar include materials management, material control system, fabrication-control of material in process, distribution of material, self-sufficient production lines, configuration management, engineering control system and automatic assembly instructions. Representatives from KU will attend the third annual Industrial Engineering Seminar in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Saturday. Engineering Profs to Seminar Attending will be Dr. Robert Gatts, professor of mechanical engineering; E. G. Linquist, associate professor of mechanical engineering; William Barr, associate professor of mechanical engineering, and William Revland, assistant professor of mechanical engineering. The purpose of the seminar is to foster a better understanding between industrial engineers and colleges and universities teaching industrial engineering, and to develop in the students an understanding and enthusiasm for the industrial engineering field. Professors to Present Recital Richard Angeletti and the University String Quartet will be featured in a music program Sunday sponsored by the KU School of Fine Arts. The recital will be at 3:30 p.m. in Swarthout Hail of Murphy Hall. Angeletti is an associate professor of piano at KU. The Quartet is composed of violinists Raymond Cerf, professor of stringed instruments; Paul Todd, assistant professor of music theory; Karel Blaas, associate professor of music theory and string instruments, and cellist Raymond Stuhl, associate professor of string instruments. The program will consist of Mozart's Quartet in E Flat, K.428, Piston's Quartet No. 1 and the Trout Quintet, Op. 114 by Schubert. ADVENTURES OF JAMES BOMB As we left James Bomb last time he had just asked Sylvia, his beautiful contact, if plan X (the plan to improve college drubbes) could be changed to plan J, in honor of J. C. PENNEY, the originator of the plan. As we rejoin our hero he says, "Sylvia my dear, my finger seems to be stuck in the lock of my attach case." Sylvia, tears streaming down her face, screams. "James don't twist the lock to the left. The MARCH 17th plans will be blown to bits—not to mention us." Bomb, flashing an icy glare at her replies, "I've been to spy school graduated 007th in my class. I believe I know better than to do a stupid thing like that." BOOM! SMASH! SPLATTER! From atop the chandelier, Sylvia smiles down at Bomb, who is busy brushing steel shrapnel from between his ears, and asks, "Did you save Plan J?" Bomb, smiling with invincible teeth, replies, "Certainly, I have a micro-film record of it stored in my upper molar, next to the signal sender." Sylvia, falling off the chandelier, says, "How wonderful, James!" Bomb, watching her fall, replies, "It was rather clever of me. This plan of PENNEY'S for MARCH 17th is just too big to take any chances with." Will he use the movie projector hidden in his class ring to show the MARCH 17th PENNEY'S plan to Sylvia? Does Bomb have the right film hidden in his molar? Be alert for the next exciting episode of James Bomb. Student Gets Biochemistry Study Grant An undergraduate student has won the Philip Newmark memorial award for excellence in biochemical research in competition with graduate and medical students at KU. He is Thomas J. McGivern, Highland Park, ill., senior. He will receive a $100 cash award from a fund memorializing the late Prof. Newmark, a biochemistry teacher who died in 1962. His name also will be inscribed on a permanent plaque now in Haworth Hall and to be moved to the new life science building. McGivern has held residence scholarships in Pearson Hall while at KU and has consistently earned a place on the honor roll of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. He is a participant in the undergraduate research program, sponsored by the National Science Foundation, working with Robert T. Hersh, an associate professor of biochemistry. University faculty here and at the Medical Center in Kansas City nominated three other students for the award-John E. Butler, Rice Lake, Wis., graduate student; Barbara K. Joyce, Grandview, Mo., graduate student, and Shirley Su, graduate student in biochemistry at the Medical Center. JOB OPPORTUNITIES The award will be presented in a program Monday at 3:45 p.m. in Dyche Auditorium, Morris Soodak of Brandeis University will give a lecture and Dwight F. Mulford, professor of biochemistry at the Medical Center, will make the presentation. COLLEGE STUDENTS. Looking For Vacation Employment? Dude Ranches, Mountain Resorts & Hotels, For Inf. Write Rocky Mtn. P.O. Box 87, Kearney, Neb. Send Self Stamped Envelope. Thursday, March 11, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 11 When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified P. always has trouble getting his car rolling on cold mornings. But Pete has ideas. He goes through this at 7 a.m. every day. Actually, he should have checked with us. We can show Pete, and you too, how to get started when the frost forms... with better remedies than Pete's.aper too. Good rope doesn't just grow on trees, you know, 三角形 FRITZ CO. Service out of the weather 8th & New Hampshire Phone VI 3-4321 CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE Downtown — Near Everything SUA FRIDAY FLICKS ADVISE and CONSENT starring Henry Fonda Charles Laughton Admission 35c FRASER THEATER 7 p.m. & 9:30 p.m. Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 11, 1965 Engineers' Fancy Turns to Festivity Throughout history, festivals have been an important part of spring. So it is this year in the School of Engineering. Two spring "festivals" will be held this year—Engineering Day and the Engineering Exposition. Engineering Day will be March 19. Richard Andrews, Kansas City sophomore, said the purpose of Engineering Day is "to get up spirit in the School of Engineering." The day will be marked by much festivity. "St. Patrick" will be chosen to represent the school for the Guns, Girls Comprise FBI Myth Guns, girls and glamour—are these all in a day's work for an FBI man? John Nielsen, Kansas City, Mo. special agent for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, refuted these familiar stereotypes vested day. Nielsen, speaking to 50 law students about job opportunities with the FBI, yesterday told what a person going into FBI work could expect. THE JOB OF the special agent of today is a far cry from the television shows portraying Eliot Ness, Nielsen said. The job can involve many kinds of assignments as FBI agents can be called upon to investigate 175 types of cases ranging from bank robbing to violations against federal statutes protecting migratory birds. The job also entails a great amount of paper work, because written reports must be made on each assignment the agent is given. THE FIRST TRAINING period for men going into investigation work lasts 14 weeks. After this training, they are required to take periodic two-week refresher courses. Pay continues during this time. At present there are about 6.300 special agents employed by the FBI Nielsen said. FBI work is safe, Nielsen said. It is highly unusual for an agent to be shot or killed while on duty he said The agency, headed by J. Edgar Hoover, is currently expanding its operation and the need for more agents is constantly increasing, he added. Men with strong backgrounds in science or foreign languages have excellent opportunities with the FBI Although most agents employed by the FBI have either a degree in law or accounting, exceptions to this rule are often made. Nielsen said. Each agent has a $10,000 life insurance policy which costs him only about $10 to $15 yearly. The agents' salaries range from a starting point of slightly more than $8,000 a year to $16,000. day. Saint Patrick is the patron saint of engineers. Penal Deficiencies Told by Menninger Nielsen said the agency had made no policy changes despite criticism aimed at it following the reports of the Warren Commission investigating the Kennedy assassination. TOPEKA, Kan. — (UPI) Dr. Karl Menninger Wednesday called Kansas' penal system "antiquated, deplorable and disgraceful" and asked for a study of the system. In past years, "St. Patrick" (generally a senior student) has been rolled down Jayhawk Boulevard in a wheelbarrow. Andrews said that the honored student will tentatively enjoy the same ride this year. Menninger, of Menninger's Foundation in Topeka, testified before the State Affairs Committee in support of a resolution asking for a complete study of the state's penal system. THREE ENGINEERING QUEEN candidates will be introduced by "St. Patrick" in front of Marvin Hall, the destination of the wheelbarrow ride. In the evening, an Engineering Dance will be held at the National Guard Armory. At the dance, "St. Patrick" will crown the elected queen. He called the present system a "waste of manpower" and "an expense to the state." "Not all of the inmates in our prisons are vicious criminals . . among them are men who have technically violated the law," Menninger said. He called the present pardon and parole board "inadequately staffed" and said some people in prison should not be there at all. Two days will be devoted to the Engineering Exposition-April 16-17. This year will mark the 45th anniversary of the Exposition. Several exhibits are already registered to be shown at the exposition in the new engineering building, according to Samuel Love, Pittsburgh junior and publicity director. ONE OF THE exhibits slated to be shown is one called "Moon Olympics" presented by Sigma Gamma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, and the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. A system for this exhibit is now being developed that will reduce the weight of a man to one-sixth his normal weight. "This will enable a man to jump over very high walls, run faster, etc." Love said. KU's 10.000 volt nuclear reactor will be demonstrated. Two wind tunnels will be demonstrated. One, called a "supersonic wind tunnel," will have air traveling at four times the speed of sound. Love said that at least 25 more exhibits are expected to take part in the Engineering Exposition. Manufacturing companies, students, and faculty are all eligible to enter exhibits. ON SATURDAY NIGHT, April 17, a banquet will be held in the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union. Awards for the three outstanding exhibits will be given during the banquet. Dr. Charles Kimball, president of Midwest Research Institute, will be the principal speaker. During the two day exposition, which occurs at the same time as the KU Relays, 20,000 visitors are expected to view the Engineering Exposition, according to Love. High school students will come from Topeka, Kansas City, possibly Wichita, and other Kansas cities, Love said. TOPEKA—(UPI)A bill was introduced Wednesday to require labels be placed on cigarette packages warning that smoking is a health hazard. Bill Requiring Warning To Smokers Introduced The Senate Public Welfare Committee introduced the bill. It would require cigarette manufacturers to place a warning in boldface lettering that would read: "Warning. Cigarette Smoking contributes substantially to mortality from certain specific diseases and to the overall death rate." The bill also provides that anyone selling a package of cigarettes without the label is liable to fines ranging from $100 to $1,000. The Public Welfare Committee also introduced a bill that would repea a law authorizing sterilization of certain inmates in some state institutions. Sen. Claude Bell, R-McDonald, chairman of the committee, said repealing the statute was being sought because it has not been used for years. He said the old law has been used on some former inmates at Winfield State Hospital and Training Center and at the State Penitentiary. A board established by the old law had to approve sterilizing any inmate, Bell said. Other bills introduced would: —Require railings on all patients' beds in nursing homes. —Provide $126,000 for operating seven state agencies during the remainder of the fiscal year. 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AUTHENTIC NATURAL LINE ORIGINAL >>>>>> + <<<<< Handstamm KNEES KAFTEN HANDTUMP Ross DISNEY KENSWEAR 811 Mass. VI 3-3160 ALEXANDER GRANT JAMES HALDON THEIR FATHERS UNIVERSITY THEATRE presents Luigi Pirandello's "SIX CHARACTERS IN SEARCH OF AN AUTHOR" \* \* \* \* Friday & Saturday March 12-13 Friday & Saturday March 19-20 Curtain 8:20 p.m. - * * * Tickets: $2.40, $1.80, $1.20 KU ID Redeemable At Box Office For Reservations Call UN 4-3982 Murphy Hall Box Office At Demonstrations Page 13 Latins Not Surprised Students use bulletins and microphones to publicize their actions. The epidemic of student protests sweeping this nation is a familiar spectre in Latin American countries, a group of Latin American professors agreed in an interview last night. There are, however, various differences between the two movements. THE LATIN AMERICAN is more political-minded than the average American student, Director Campos said. Many protests concern political problems and issues, as well as university problems. ON MANY LATIN AMERICAN campuses a larger proportion of the student body participates in protest movements than in the United States. In El Salvador, as many as 25 per cent of the university students may participate in a protest, according to Director Manuel Guillermo Campos of the Salvadoran Government's Superior Normal School. There is much organization involved also, he continued. Of course this amount varies according to the university and the country, he said. The Latin American students have a larger arsenal of protest weapons than students in the U.S., the professors agreed. The strike is very popular and in many cases an effective protest tool, Rector Alfonso Martinez, of Ecuador's University of Guayaquil, said. Strikes take place when students are in disagreement with some class or examination. They refuse to attend classes until their demands for change are met, Rector Martinez said. THE DURATION of the strikes varies; most of them last about three days, but some may last several weeks, he said. "Students in Ecuador see their protest movements as working with various civic tools that strive to improve the country," he said. Student demonstrations and strikes in Latin American countries are much older than American student protest movements, according to Father Jaime Heraclio Amadeo, director of studies at the Catholic University in Cordoba, Argentina. "Parents find it difficult to maintain authority in these cases because of the students' initiative and nationalistic fervor." he added Student demonstrations on American campuses are much quieter and more orderly than those in some Latin American countries, he said. University Daily Kansan Students were first granted voice in university affairs in 1918 during the reform of the University of Cordoba, he said. LATIN AMERICAN DEMONSTRATIONS are not extremely dangerous, but they are very noisy and more intense. There is, however, a greater repercussion because of the influence of the universities. An effect is felt throughout the nation, Campos said. AT THAT TIME they were given votes on the university council which determines the university policy, he continued. This practice spread throughout South America, and since, students have had an active part in the election of chancellors and presidents of the universities, and the deans and professors of the various colleges, Father Amadeo said. Thus, students have felt a deep obligation to be active and responsible to the school. Argentine students don't march like the students do here, he said. They participate in strikes, as in neighboring countries and the strikes may last for weeks. Father Amadeo said. According to Father Amadeo, when the students dramatize their opposition to something, they enter a building, lock to doors and hold it for a day or two until their demands are fulfilled. The group is usually a very active one but only a small part of the student body, he said. ANOTHER PROTEST TOOL that Argentine students employ is occupation of a university building to show seriousness behind a cause. AT THE UNIVERSITY of Euenos Aires, which has about 70,000 students, a protest group may be as small as 500, he continued. Sometimes they win; sometimes they lose, he said. At the University of Costa Rica students have two votes and two representatives on the university council which manages the affairs of the school, Dean Fernando Montero Gei, of the University of Costa Rica, said. "WE DO NOT HAVE an army so we depend upon our students to lead and to protect our country as they are the leaders of tomorrow," he said. "We are a very poor country and we feel it is very important to teach our students to demonstrate their responsibilities for the future." Do You Need Park Plaza South? Auckland News and Mail Thursday, March 11, 1965 If you want a choice of attractive 1 or 2 bedroom apartments with central heating and air-conditioning, disposals, carpeting, front drapes and a convenient coin operated laundromat, You Need Park Plaza South! Don't forget, there's a swimming pool. Park Plaza South 1912 W. 25th Tau Beta Pi Marks 50th Year Call Day or Night VI 2.3416 The 50th anniversary of Kansas Alpha chapter of Tau Beta Pi, national honorary engineering society, will be celebrated in connection with the KU Engineering Exposition and Kansas Relays April 17. Secretary-emeritus Red Matthews of the national fraternity will be the speaker for the 50th anniversary initiation of new members following the Kansas Relays in the afternoon. Matthews was present at the installation of Kansas Alpha at KU Dec. 17, 1914. Invitations to the observance have been sent to about 1,500 Tau Beta Pi alumni, according to Frank L. Scamman, chapter secretary and anniversary chairman, Tarkio, Mo., senior. NOTICE If anyone has information concerning the location of Indian campsites or of people with collections of Indian material (arrowheads, pottery, etc.) from Kansas or Oklahoma, please contact Jim Chism, John May or Jack Schock at the Laboratory of Archaeology, University of Kansas Museum of Natural History. 1965 JAYHAWKER SECOND EDITION AVAILABLE FRIDAY, MONDAY, MARCH 12, 15 WEST ROTUNDA STRONG HALL 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Also permanent receipts, covers, first editions available. Cash purchases only at Jayhawker business office, Kansas Union 3-5 p.m. weekdays. JD 6 1014 01 02 03 Page 14 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 11, 1965 Ad Policy - (Continued from page 1) senior and chairman of the Kansan Board, governing body of the Daily Kansan, said the present Kansan policy does not allow discriminatory phrasing in advertisements. Suhler also said that in the Feb. 22 meeting of the Kansan Business Committee it was also decided that from a legal standpoint the Kansan does not feel it can police the housing situation as NAACP and CORE desire. TUESDAY NIGHT Hugh Taylor, Stoke on Trent, England, graduate student, proposed an amendment to All Student Council (ASC) bill No. 7. A revision to section five of the bill stated "that the UDK or any other university publication may not accept advertising with regard to accommodations from people who are not on the university housing list." Shuler said the Kansan Board members have been asked by ASC to attend their next meeting to discuss the amendment. YESTERDAY afternoon the Kansan Board accepted a motion to meet as a board with the ASC before Tuesday. Suhler also said that the Kansan Board does not feel it can assume the responsibilities and obligations which the ASC bill and amendment would require it to assume on economic, moral and professional grounds. CRC- (Continued from page 1) ence with the attorney general of the state of Kansas who assured him he will use whatever influence he, the attorney general, has with the county attorney of Douglas County in an effort to get him to drop the charges which are now pending" McKnight said that he would have an answer by noon today. McKnight said that if the charges were not dropped, then Jackson would have four attorneys in court on Friday to represent the arrested demonstrators. Unseld read the following telegram from James Farmer, the national director of CORE. "Student efforts to protect fellow students from the indignities of racial discrimination in housing and fraternities are to be commended. An injustice to one, is truly an injustice to all." Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI3-5788 NOW! Shows 7:00 & 9:00 20 Century Fox Broadcasts THE PLEASURE SOCKERS COLOR BY DELUXE CINEMASCOPE Granada THEATRE...telephone VI 3-5788 Granada THEATRE --- telephone VI3-5728 NOW! Shows 7:00 & 9:00 20 Century Fox presents THE PLEASURE SOCKERS COLOR BY DELLUXE CINEMASCOPE NEXT... ANNE BANCROFT PETER FINCH and JAMES MASON The Pumpkin Eater Varsity THEATRE --- telephone VI3-1065 NOW! At 7:30 Only STANLEY RHAMER "ITS MAD, MAD, MAD, MAD WORLD" BIG TALENTSHOW" TECHNICOLOR" UNITED ARTISTS 20 Century Fox presents THE PLEASURE SOCKERS COLOR BY DELUXE CINEMASCOPE NEXT . . . ANNE BANCROFT PETER FINCH and JAMES MASON The Pumpkin Eater Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065 CRC Slates Panel Talk To Explain Stand, Events Four Civil Rights Council (CRC) members will participate in a panel discussion Friday in an effort to explain the CRC organization and the events that have taken place here this week. The meeting will be in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union at 7:30 p.m. Jim Russell, Coffeyville junior and Student Union Activities Board member, said the panel was formed in an effort to explain the facts that surround the CRC and the various positions the organization has taken on discriminatory measures on campus. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Following the discussion will be a question and answer period in which students are invited to ask any questions. The panel will also explain and elaborate the seven clauses and demands that the CRC made earlier this week. CORE Delays MU Sit-in COLUMBIA, Mo. — (UPI) — A scheduled protest against alleged discrimination in off-campus housing at the University of Missouri was called off today, pending a larger demonstration later. James Rollins, chairman of the Columbia chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) said he Yearbook Section To Be Distributed ence he, the attorney general, has 1965 Jayhawker yearbook will be distributed tomorrow and Monday in the rotunda of Strong Hall, according to Bob Burkhart, business manager. Cash purchases of either the entire book or individual sections may be made at the Jayhawker business office in the Kansas Union during business hours, 3-5 p.m. weekdays, he said. postponed the demonstration in order to mobilize for the larger program, tentatively set for next Wednesday. The larger plan, he said, will be a sit-in at the office of University Chancellor John Schwada. Today's demonstration was to have been picketing in the hallway outside Schwada's office. Columbia CORE yesterday filed a complaint with the U.S. Department of Justice, charging discrimination in off-campus housing. The original schedule also had called for demonstrations each Tuesday and Thursday until action is taken to end the alleged discrimination. Neil Stone, Shawnee Mission freshman and former president of CRC, and another KU student left early this morning in a Jaguar sedan for the University of Missouri at Columbia. They plan to participate in the CORE demonstrations there, and may carry a sign saying, "KU CRC Supports MU CORE." --- Diamond Bridal Sets Smart new Tailored Styling by Feature INTERLOCKING RINGS Do not twist or turn BUDGET TERMS Fashionright simplicity Keynote of new diamond ring styling the set 200.00 The charm of this intriguing design makes it irresistible the set 200.00 The 6 radiant diamonds seem to twine into a lover's-knot the set 250.00 Fash Your KU-ID is your Pass to Credit. BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 743 Mass. 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For further information CALL RI 8-9973 or RI 8-9916 ¶¶ CHINA-Nortiaki, Mayfair design. New, never used or even removed from packing. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk M 3-7102. ti PORABLE STEREO. AUDIO AND VIDEO for speaker systems (2 tweeters, and 2 full range woofters) $135 new. Will offer. OFFER: CALL, Rusty Calkins at u 3-5721. NEED A BAND? 30 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM PHONE VI 2-2100 t THE STABLES now open every day- Serving steaks, chops, sea food, sand- sand management, new asphere. Party room available. Phone VI 3-9644, 1401 W 7th. 1963 French Renault, 4-speed transmission, bucket seats, radio and heater. In excellent condition. Call VI 3-6462. 3-22 For guy who can wear 42 long coat-6 good suits (3 winter, 3 summer), wool sports coat, 6 slacks (3 winter, 3 summer). Owner lost weight, cannot wear. Best offer. Call Tom, VI 3-2682 after 5:00 p.m. One owner 1963 Dodge Dart, take over payments with small equity to owner. Bought on Monday 2834 after 5:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday and day Sat. and Sunday. 3-17 Buy the perfect all-round guitar. For travis picking, blue-grass, blues, or folk, choose back and sides, spruce ebony fingerboard, Like D-28. VI 3-528 sevenings. Garrard "type A" never used, still in original packing box, $50.00 - Tape recorder, Akai M6, semi-professional, 4 track stereo for $220.00 - 1953 Chev. V8 4 bbl, stick, $275.00. Call Lee Garrett, VI 2-3965. 3-17 Furnished house for rent or lease in Eudora. Prefer three to four boys, 3 bedrooms, wall to wall carpet, fireplace. Available immediately. Phone HA 2-506-4189 FOR RENT Emery Apts, 1423 Ohio, 12 one bedroom luxury apts, April 1st. $35.00. Featuring w-w carpeting, disposal, range and ovens, refrigerators, furnished or unfurnished. Teachers or graduate students only, no children or pets. 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PHONE Ralph Freed at VI 3-3995. tt SCHWINN BICYCLES -service all makes arts and accessories, tires $1.46, tuber 7fc, luggage, luggage racks and downs, SEE Bicymin at 7th and Mici or CALI V1 3-0581 it's great for a date. Take her bowling at Hillcrest Bowl. Finest lanes in the state, and it's also the best one. Also Mon, Tues, and Frl after 9:00 p.m. Hillcrest Bowl. 9th and Iowa. tt Rent electric, standard, and portable typewriters. Repair all makes of electric equipment. Own or learnern Business Equipment (formerly Business Machines), 15 E.8th, VI 3-0151, ff Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon-thru-Fri, or all day Sat, or Sun Phone VI 3-6231. tt Attention: All persons interested in scll intense training classes utilizing many of the same throws and smashes used in movies, contact Bob Mont at VI 3-7102 WOODIES are more interesting when you get there the fun way ON A BIKE. You get there in parts, repairs, womens equipment. 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Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Page 16 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 11, 1965 --- World Spotlight Phone Call Embarrasses Shah LIVERPOOL, England-(UPI)-Telephone company officials here tried to impress the visiting Shah of Iran Wednesday. They visited the Shah to test out some of their new equipment. The Shah chose to call the Iranian Embassy in London. All the circuits were busy. Still busy. A second call was made. The third call was completed—to a wrong number. The Shah settled for a call to a pre-recorded, anonymous voice. He got the correct time of day. Officials of the automatic telephone and electric company were embarrassed about the whole affair. As was the Shah of Iran. Redistricting Bill Questioned HUTCHINSON—(UPI)—The Hutchinson News said in an editorial today that the new Kansas reapportionment law "is a sadly tarnished monument" to the Legislature's attitude toward a basic responsibility. Viet Nam Aid Rises $50 Million The News said the law will be tested in the federal courts. Three executives of the News brought the suits which led to outlawing present congressional and legislative districts in Kansas. WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara told Congress today that this year's bill for U.S. military aid in South Viet Nam had gone up an additional $50 million. McNamara said that President Johnson was transferring $50 million previously earmarked for economic aid to the military program because of sharply rising costs of the Viet Nam war. Negroes, Clergy Stage All-Night Vigil in Selma SELMA, Ala.—(UPI)—About 400 Negroes and white clergymen from 30 states staged an all-night prayer vigil and stood their ground early today in a cold drizzle of rain. The marathon demonstration, before a police line, began shortly after dark Wednesday night for the Rev. James Reeb, a white clergyman of Boston whose severe beating during racial demonstrations two nights ago sparked nationwide protests. Professor Hurt In Auto Crash Gurcharan S. Tahim, 26, visiting associate professor of electrical engineering, was critically injured Tuesday night when the car he was driving sideswiped two bridge pillars about one mile east of the Bonner Springs exit on the Kansas Turnpike. His condition remained critical this morning. Prof. Tahim was taken to St Margaret's hospital, Kansas City. Attendants at the hospital said he suffered massive chest injuries, possible nerve control damage, head injuries, collapsed lung and partially collapsed lung. Prof. Tahim came to KU at the beginning of the spring semester. An Indian citizen, he has been in this country several years. He received his doctoral degree in electrical engineering from the University of Illinois in January. Group Takes SPU Challenge By Harry Krause "Is there anyone in the audience who wishes to debate?" With this question, Charles Hook, Lawrence sophomore and president of the Student Peace Union, initiated what was to be an open two-hour discussion on United States policy in Viet Nam. A SURPRISE VISITOR to last night's discussion in Dyche Auditorium was Frank Ortiz, from the European bureau of United States State Department. Ortiz was at KU to recruit students for the foreign service. He spoke briefly toward the end of the discussion with a group of 65 students and faculty members. The SPU had issued a challenge Monday for anyone interested to debate the topic: "Resolved: that the United States should remain in Viet Nam." No one answered Hook's challenge last night, but Brian Turner, Warrenburg, N.Y., graduate student, announced that a group he had organized would accept the challenge at a later date. SPU agreed, and the debate was scheduled for 8 p.m., March 19, at a place to be determined later. TURNER HAD been circulating a statement on campus this week asking for persons to join him in accepting SPU's challenge. Hook said, "If these people do not feel that they are qualified to debate without a lot of preparation, why do they write so vehemently in the University Daily Kansan?" Hook proceeded to outline both personal and SPU beliefs on the Viet Nam situation. He said, "There is a common bond between the United States and the Soviet Union in opposing war, because neither of them wants a nuclear holocaust. "GUERRILLA WARFARE in South Viet Nam will not be victorious for the United States unless the people there support us, and they don't. Cuba and Viet Nam are to foreign policy what the 1929 stock market crash was to economic policy. Hook was repeatedly questioned by the audience about facts and historical evidence, and he had an answer for most questions. Students continually asked him what U.S. policy in Viet Nam should be. He answered, "Negotiate, or get out." "WE SUPPORT dictators who say they are anti-communist, give them aid, and they, in turn, oppress the people." Hook criticized the former Dier regime, saying, "It was not democratic, opposed religious freedom, was nepotistic, and allowed no expression of differing political opinion. Those who differed were sent to reeducation camps." those, 30 per cent joined the Viet Cong. They did not work for the betterment of the people economically, and also violated rules of the Geneva agreement, which stated that elections were to be held in 1956, and no more than 700 troops were to be allowed in the area." REEB LAY NEAR DEATH in a Birmingham hospital. Three white men have been arrested on both state and federal charges in connection with the attack. HE CONTINUED, "The Viet Cong as they exist today were founded in 1960, and the leadership then as now was communistic. They realized what the people wanted and promised it to them—religious freedom and a neutral South Viet Nam." Contrasting this with United States policy, Hook said, "The United States says, you try something and we'll shoot you." He especially noted General Maxwell Taylor's plan to utilize shrapnel bombs to wipe out resisting villages. "This," Hook said, "is like shooting unemployed workers in the Depression of 1929." The demonstrators bivouacked in the street during the night, huddled against the chill in blankets and bed rolls. When dawn broke today the demonstrators sang "Ain't Nobody Going to Turn Us 'Round." At this point, Charles Ortiz, of the State Department, said "The war in Viet Nam is a war of national liberation and a civil war." ORTIZ CONTINUFED. "The Viet Cong is a type of formulated terrorist activity organized to bring down the existing government." Later they sang the "Star Spangled Banner" while Public Safety Director Wilson Baker and other officers took their standing position before their ragged line. Hook interjected, "The government of Viet Nam consists of the mayor of Saigon, and possibly not even that." PIPING HOT PIZZA Eat In . . . Carry Out VI 3-3516 Allow 20 Minutes for phone orders PIZZA HUT A DARK HEROINE IN THE MIDDLE OF A RIVER PIPING HOT PIZZA Eat In... Carry Out VI 3-3516 Allow 20 Minutes for phone orders PIZZA HUT THE ATMOSPHERE WAS friendly, however, between police and demonstrators. When the crowd sang a verse that started "God Bless Mr. Baker," the top police official of the city walked over to the Rev. Ralph Abernathy and said with a grin, "Does this mean you are going to call off the demonstrations?" "Oh no." Abernathy replied. You get so much more for your life insurance dollars from College Life's famous policy, THE BENEFACTOR, because College Life insures only college men and college men are preferred risks. Let me tell you more. $ \textcircled{9} $ The Negro leader told a reporter that Baker had been "a decent southern police official" throughout the trouble here. Abernathy, using a football cheerlead-type megaphone, prayed: "We have tried to witness for thee. Take our feeble efforts and make them perfect. . . Dwight Boring* says... T. J. ROBERTS *DWIGHT BORING 2020 Harvard Lawrence, Kansas Phone V1 2-0767 representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA ... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men "Bless those who oppose us. . . "Help Governor George Wallace to know he is the governor of all the people. "Help the state troopers to lay aside their billy clubs and tear gas." John Doar, assistant U.S. attorney general and head of the Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department, was one of the observers Wednesday night as the prayer vigil demonstration began. KU The Pit FRIDAY SPECIAL: Jumbo Bar-b-que Beef or Ham Sandwiches 35c (Reg. 50c) Dear Mom. You won't believe what happened to me this week! As you know, I've been studying awfully hard all year, and I'm glad you and Dad understood that my grades would have been better if all my teachers hadn't had it in for me from the beginning. Anyway, as I was saying, yesterday I went out with some friends and we went to a place named the Southern Pit B-B-Que (they just called it the "Pit"). Mom, it is the strangest restaurant you ever saw! Their service must be terrible, because hardly anybody was eating. They just sat around drinking and waiting for their food. I guess. 1 think some of them got tired of waiting and just got up and left without even eating. I noticed one group that sat there for three hours and never did get any food. When they left they were so mad they could hardly walk! They kept bumping into chairs and stuff. About eleven o'clock this guy came in that almost everybody seemed to know, but it kind of puzzled me, because some people called him George and others called him Mac. He must be mentally retarded, because while everybody else was carrying on these real philosophic conversations, he just sat at the counter and read the "Weekly Reader" (you know Mom, that newspaper we used to get in grade school). Pretty soon three of his friends came in and they sat in a corner, drank out of big bottles and played Old Maid or something. Well, that's all for now. Mom I'm getting hungry for some barb-que. Your loving son, Delbert P. S. Their bar-b-que is the best I've ever tasted! PIT PICK—This week the Pit Crew honors Andrea (Andy) Smith, Fine Arts senior. NEXT WEEK'S Pit Crew column will be in the Tuesday UDK. IDK Takes Amendment Stand Opposition by the Kansan Board to acceptance of an amendment to ASC bill No. 7 is being discussed today by the University Committee on Human Relations. The statement setting forth the Kansan Board's position was presented yesterday to the Human Relations Committee which is studying charges of discriminia tory practices brought before it. THE STATEMENT by the board which is the student governing body of the University Daily Kansan (UDK) said, "On legal and professional grounds and with the possibility in mind of setting a dangerous precedent, we emphatically oppose the acceptance by the University Daily Kansan of the responsibility and obligation which lumn the proposed legislation would require us to assume." The Kansan Board passed the resolution unanimously. "It HAS LONG BEEN a traditional and ethical principle that newspapers determine and implement their own policies concerning advertising, editorial and news coverage," the Kansan Board statement said. "We are, in addition, a training ground for professional journalists. Here we develop and practice a sense of duty and of right. As journalists, we must preserve these professional standards and insure that no outside influence will restrict us in determination of our policies." Present policy of the Kansan Board refuses to allow the newspaper to include in its advertising any phrases suggesting racial discrimination. The Board said it intends to adhere to the policy. The statement now under discussion by the Committee on Human Relations also said, "We feel, however, that the legal and economic risk involved in the first section of the amendment would be too great for the Kansan to undertake in refusing to accept advertising on the basis of accusation short of charges affirmed by conviction in court. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe asked that the Kansan Board and the ASC discuss their differences together. The Board met yester-day and a meeting has been scheduled for next Monday evening. Daily hansan 62nd Year, No.98 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Friday, March 12, 1965 CRC Meeting Focuses On Negotiations, Kansan Bv Eric Johnson An attempt to clarify the standing of the officers of the Civil Rights Council was made last night in regard to negotiation going on between the CRC and the Committee on Human Relations, said Douglas Ruhe, Wilmette, Ill. junior and an active member of CRC. The clarification came after a split *** IRC Enforces Housing Rule The Inter-Residence Council (IRC) adopted a proposal yesterday afternoon to reinforce the effectiveness of the anti-discriminatory clause contained in the stipulations for approved housing by the Dean of Women's office. The plan was presented to the IRC by an ad hoc committee of students from Lewis Women's Residence Hall. THE COMMITTEE proposed that each landlady on the approved housing list be visited by a team of three upperclass women. The teams will be composed of women who are members of the Inter-Residence Association (IRA). They will be selected by applications to the IRC. The report to IRC said, "The object of this visit will be to emphasize adherence to and compliance with the clause on discrimination which they have already signed, and to inform them that all students have been strongly urged to report any and all violations and that such reports are subject to immediate action by the University." A briefing session will be held with a member of the ad hoc Lewis committee and a member of the Dean of Women's staff. At the session, women will receive a portfolio containing all information pertaining to their visits. It will include policies of the University regarding off-campus housing, policies of the State of Kansas and rules of Associated Women Students. AT PRESENT a member of the staff of the Dean of Women's office visits each landlady listed on the approved housing list for undergraduate women. In the report to IRC, the committee said the concerns expressed by women students might best be answered if students stressed the importance of the agreements made with the Dean of Women's office and the University. appeared between Walter Bgoya, Tanzania senior and one of the three chairmen of CRC; and the other two chairmen of CRC, George Unseld, Louisville, Ky. senior; and Nate Sims, Pasadena, Calif. senior at the CRC meeting on Wednesday over the path to be followed in securing the CRC demands. "I have been given the difficult task of explaining the consensus of opinion of our leaders. What is meant by negotiation? I don't think this is clear," said Ruhe. "WHEN WE were sitting in Strong Hall, we were waiting for the chancellor to meet our seven demands. We decided, (our leaders), to discuss these grievances with the chancellor and hammer out what the solutions are going to be." Ruhe said. "I want to make it clear that we may shift gears and once again demonstrate for action," he continued." Weather The weather bureau predicts mostly cloudy tonight and tomorrow with a possibility of light rain. Low tonight is to be in the middle 30's. "We know what your feelings are, you are chafed, but if there is no concrete action by the committee by next Wednesday, we may have to call a shift and once again begin protesting." Yesterday, in a meeting between the CRC and the Committee on Human Relations, a statement of university policy was drafted and accepted. The statement, signed by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe read: "IN THE LIGHT of recent events on the University of Kansas campus, I deem it appropriate to issue the following statement prepared by the recently appointed University Committee on Human Relations. A REAFFIRMATION OF PRINCIPLES "The University of Kansas, recognizing essential human dignity and the equality of all men, is dedicated to the principle that all benefits, privileges, and opportunities afforded by the University shall be accorded each person—student, faculty member, or employee—according to his own individual merits, accomplishments, and needs, and that no rights or benefits shall be denied to Mr. Wilson said that the new dormitory will consist of 10 floors, but it has not been decided who its occupants will be—men or women students. (Continued on page 12) Tentative Selection Given on Low Bids Work is scheduled to begin on April 1 and the University hopes to have the hall ready for use in September of 1966. - Norris Brothers of Lawrence, heating and plumbing work. $429,300 - Kenny's of Hutchinson, electrical work—$182,949 - Vollmer Construction Company of Wichita, general contractor—$1,-572.900 The apparent low bidders for construction of the new university residence hall at 19th and Naismith have been tentatively selected, according to J. J. Wilson, director of dormitories. Wilson said that their selection is not definite, but it appears that their bids were the lowest ones at an open meeting in the state purchasing director's office in Topeka yesterday afternoon. TOTAL COST FOR construction of the 680 person dormitory is set at $2,185,149. The specific firms with the low bids were: Wilson said that about 150 people were present yesterday in Topeka when the bids were read. He said there were five general contracting bids, four heating and plumbing bids, and four electrical bids. HE ALSO NOTED that the University plans to construct another hall in this same general area (south of the field house), to be ready by September of 1967. Asked about further hall construction, Wilson said that there are no definite plans drawn up but such construction is assumed. "We have tentative plans for building halls in 1968 and 1969. We plan construction in parallel with the increasing enrollment," he explained. THE PLANS AND specifications for the present hall were drawn up a month ago and the presentation of bids was set for yesterday. The bids were open and public, followed the usual state procedure on such bidding." Wilson said. Although dormitory construction plans are fairly definite, the plans for tearing down Fraser Hall, including the acceptance of bids are not scheduled for several months yet, according to R. Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor of operations. Later Date Set In Arraignment Of Civil Righters The arraignment of the 110 KU students charged with disturbing the peace.Monday afternoon in the KU civil rights demonstrations has been postponed until April 2 at 10:30 a.m. The students arrived in Douglas county court at 10 this morning while the judge and attorneys for both sides deliberated. At 10:40, attorney Charles S. Scott, NAACP legal defense lawyer from Topeka, told the group of the postponement and gave the names of five other attorneys acting on their behalf. THE ATTORNEYS ARE SAMUEL Jackson, president of the Topeka NAACP and member of the state legal redress team; Chester Royce Lewis, Wichita attorney, another member of the state legal redress team; P. A. Townsend, whose son, Pete Townsend, was among those arrested, Topeka; Fred Phelps, Topeka, and George Walters, Kansas City. Addressing the full courtroom, Scott said, "We tried to arrange this arraignment to precede spring vacation and we were fortunate to do so. "Now for the benefit of you who are familiar with the term 'arraignment,'" he continued, "it is the assembly where one pleads guilty or not guilty and we will plead not guilty." SCOTT SAID HE HAD NOT YET conferred with the other attorneys and he was acting as "errand boy" this morning. He sought this morning's postponement so that the attorneys for the defense could get their strategy organized, he said. The maximum penalty for this charge is a $100 fine or a period in jail not to exceed 30 days. The prosecution attorneys, Ralph King Jr., county attorney, and Glenn Young, assistant county attorney, agreed to the postponement. THIS MORNING's postponement of the arraignment came despite efforts to have the charges dropped by County Attorney King. Two members of Vox Populi, Leo Shrey, Leavenworth junior and ASC representative from the men's small residence halls, and Bill Robinson, Great Bend sophomore and representative from the men's large residence halls, presented King with the request which was drawn up last night at a Vox meeting. The request, in the form of a letter, asked that charges be dropped since Chancellor Wescoe has notified King that disciplinary action by the University has been dropped, and that KU has no intention of preferring charges against the students. Schrey and Robinson wrote that they realized state law has apparently been violated, but since the University is dropping charges, further action would prevent resolving the demonstration. New AWS Officers Chosen By Women Heavy voting in women's residence groups throughout the campus Thursday has resulted in the election of 18 new Associated Womens' Students officers. Ann Peterson, Shawnee Mission junior, is the 1965-66 president. Runner-up is Mary Lasley, Mission junior. Vice-president is Carol Jo Weber, Raytown, Mo., junior. Runner-up is Margaret Tietze, Bartlesville, Okla., junior. Nancy Gallup, Lawrence freshman, is the new secretary. Runner-up is Deanell Reece, Scandia freshman. ELECTED TREASURER was Kathryn Mize, Salina sophomore. Runner-up is Kathryn Hewett, Ft. Scott sophomore. Cwens Advisor is Marcia Bunn, Tulsa, Okla., sophomore. Her runner-up is Glenda Hord, Kansas City sophomore. Fashion Board Representative is Susan Hartley, Atwood junior. Runner-up is Margaret Brown, Prairie Village sophomore. New Inter-Residence Council Representative is Joy Long, Princeton junior. Runner-up is Catherine Beagle, Boulder, Colo., sophomore. KRISTINE BERGMAN, Overland Park junior, was elected Panhellenic Representative. Her runner-up is Anne Machin, Ottawa sophomore. Susan Menke, Webster Groves, Mo., freshman, was elected Senator. Runner-up is Susan Lawrence, Bartlesville, Okla., junior. The runners-up in each category will head sub-committees in the organization. Every woman at KU automatically becomes a member of AWS, which is the principle governing body of women students on campus. The organization is made of a House of Representatives and a Senate. The House is composed of one representative from every womens' living group. REPRESENTATIVES FORM a key link between the various living groups. The AWS Senate acts as the legislative body which governs women students. Girls in each living group voted at the polls in each residence hall by signing their name, address, student number, and ballot number before receiving a ballot. --- Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 12, 1965 --- ASC Strikes Again The ASC has proposed two amendments, one of which would force the University Daily Kansan to accept advertising from only those renters who are on the University housing list. The other amendment states that the Kansan cannot accept advertising containing discriminatory phrasing from any group or organization. The second amendment has been a part of Kansan policy for some time. We fully intend to adhere to the policy in the future. Perhaps the ASC would save itself a great deal of trouble if they bothered to do research on a proposal before they presented it to the council. The Kansan, although sympathetic with the demands of the CRC, emphatically protests the attempt by the ASC to dictate the policy of the University Daily Kansan. IT HAS LONG BEEN A TRADITION and ethical practice for a newspaper to govern itself, to determine and implement its own policy. This includes not only news and editorial policy, but advertising policy as well. This principle would be grossly violated if the Kansan were forced to submit to the amendment presently before the ASC. Drawn to the logical extreme, the ASC also could attempt to dictate news and editorial policy. This sort of relationship between the student newspaper and the political body of the university is repulsive. If the minds of the ASC members can project this far, consider the possibility of this situation in a large city. I cannot imagine, by any stretch of the imagination, how the city council would have the audacity to attempt to govern any part of the metropolitan newspaper. It is preposterous! As a training ground for professional journalists, the School of Journalism teaches students to develop and practice professional and ethical standards. If we are to preserve these standards, we can allow no outside influence, including the ASC, to restrict the Kansan in its determination of Kansan policy in any department of the newspaper. — Leta Roth The People Say Dear Sir: AS I SAT IN THE WARM SUN-light of a recent balmy day contemplating the hidden mysteries of nature and the universe, a grizzled old man hobbled up to me, brushed off a spot of the ground, and sat down beside me. In the course of our conversation, he told me a story in which your readers might be interested. "Far back in the olden days to the west of the shining seas there was a beautiful country with fields of waving grain, sparkling brooks, and a happy people. This contented land was bordered by huge forests from which the people gathered wood for their fires and building material. But the forests were inhabited by tigers, and the tigers were the types which multiplied at a phenomenal rate. Soon it became unsafe for the people to venture into the forests, and hard times sat in. Finally a grand meeting was called, and the people assembled to discuss what they should do. It so happened that from among the people there arose a short, bearded man of slight build but with an exceptionally loud voice. So loud, in fact, that he was able to persuade the populace that they should take paper and pens into the forest and negotiate a treaty with the tigers, even against the advice of the nation's elders. Upon the appointed day, the people went forth to negotiate with the tigers. The tigers are now very content in the beautiful country beyond the shining seas." Dear Editor. Sincerely, Brian B. Turner, Warrensburg, N.Y. graduate student CONGRADS YOU KU PUPILS over yer recent victory with them that set-ins you had at Strong hall. Twas with great interest I watched on the TV you all get 'ginnish' hailed (no pum intended) out and sent down the sherriffs office. That must be some perience, huh. Looks like ole Chancellor Wesco finally come round Heres hopin' that them negotiations goes well and all. We here at KSU just deplore discriminations in our Greek houses. And I mean DEPLORE! Yes siree. Our Greek majority Student Senate deplores it. Fact is they deplore it so bad that they table any motion that comes up concernin' the matter. Say now that I think of it ole Jimmy McCain thats our president sorta like you alls chancellor, but not quite. Anyway, he deplores it, too. He jests sets around his office all day deplorin it unless he's signin some contract for one of them unemployed right wing speakers to appear, or makin apologies all over the place bout them damn few liberal professors that make them terrible scenes or rite nasty columns about our community and its lack of culture or something. Dont you all fret none we done already got rid of them. Cant have none of them pinkies runnin round here, shucks no that jest wouldnt be right (again no pun intended). Well you all have to excuse me I gotta go study some more. Jest thought Id let ya know hows I feel. Golly you sure do know how to raise a ruckus. Like I said I gotta go now. Gee whiz. May the good Lawd bless you all, Lawd bless you all. Jim Davis, K-State junior To the Editor: I WOULD LIKE TO VOICE some ideas that Bobetta Bartelt seems to have overlooked in her editorial on Rock Chalk. Firstly, I do not deny her the right to her opinions. But I think that she needs to be informed about the efforts of the Rock Chalk staff and participants in the skits, especially before she editorializes on them. Secondly, I think she failed to give proper recognition where it is truly deserved, to the students in the skits. She failed to mention the fact that the skit participants are also students carrying a full load on the hill, that these students no doubt sacrificed free time as well as study time to produce the skits that almost everyone (apparently with the exception of Miss Bartelt) enjoyed, or that these students aren't paid for this service as the staff members are. To my way of thinking Miss Baret's editorial, although a free expression of opinion, is in no way characteristic of public opinion of Rock Chalk Revue. The 10,000 people that filled Hoch Auditorium on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights seem to be a more accurate indication, at least more so than that of a person who fails to see where recognition is deserved. As a participant in the Sigma Chi-Delta Gamma skit, may I take this opportunity to congratulate and recognize all the other students in the four skits who made the 1965 Rock Chalk Revue the fine production that it was. Rusty Calkins Wichita senior DailiYfansan IT MUST SEEM TRITE TO REiterate arguments and haggle old positions so far that ideology comes to replace the vacuum of thought that frustration surely generates amongst the weary contenders for justice. But some things are true; they are disputed when the sanctimonious atmosphere of fear and privilege that enshrine their opposites as social idols are ever so slightly reviled by the muddy suggestion that the King is embarrassingly naked. 111 Flint Hall The argument is wrong-headed and distorts the character of the problem by goring the opponent on the horns of a false, and, in this case, ironically hypocritical, dilemma. You suborn your principle, it is unctuously proposed, by requesting the Greeks to lose the right of "choice of association" in the process of guaranteeing membership to some Negroes. To the editor: I persist in the belief that Chancellor Wescoe is not insincere or evil, but it is difficult to understand his dismay that people should question the "constant" "American" assumption that "rights should not be taken from some and given to others." The real question is and remains, whose rights are being taken from whom? What has precedence? Do fraternities and sororites have the right to hide their certain practice of racial discrimination behind the right to choose whomever they wish? If so, then the demonstrations of the last few days call into question not simply the covert racial policies of fraternities and sororities but the whole meaning of their existence. Everyone who is not morally browbeaten by the system knows it; the Chancellor should know it. 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. 111 Fifth Avenue UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office University of Kansas student newspaper EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Leta Roth and Gary Noland ... Co-Editorial Editors The burden of proof in the dispute between the CRC and Chancellor Wescoe falls, then, on the Greeks. Some way must be found to establish a judiciously or by executive test that the rush system does not discriminate by race. If the Greeks have to alter their system to do it, let them pay the price. They do not exist from eternity and their privileges are mutable by law and principle. David A. Lee A. Lee Lawrence graduate student SUKARNO U.S.I.S. LIBRARIES © 2015 HEPBLOCK THE MAJOR UNION POST "Me Strong Man" A Slice of Cam-Pi The problem is now supposed to be out in the open. I can't believe this. I can't believe that the year and a half I've been on this campus, racial discrimination has been the undercurrent of hostility and unrest that it is being made out to be. The problem has been out in the open. It's in the open all over the country. If the problem was not in the open last year, where did all the news about CRC come from about this time a year ago. I SAW A SIGN during the demonstrations, as a matter of fact, I saw a lot of them that said, "Racial Discrimination Exists at KU." You're darn tootin' it does. Not only does it exist at KU, it exists all over the country. It has existed since time began. The prevalent question in my mind is, did the demonstrations accomplish anything? I don't think so. I CANNOT BELIEVE that what two days of demonstrations brought about, a visit to the Chancellor's office by the officers of the CRC could not accomplish. Sure, if I may use the term, "negotiations" are under way. It sounds as though we have reached a cease fire and the terms of surrender are being discussed. The basic fight is one of attitude. An intelligent means of com- batting this attitude would accomplish more than all the sit-ins and demonstrations one group could service in a lifetime. The demonstrators were orderly. Accolades for that The administration, and Chancellor Wescoe especially, deserve the highest amount of praise. THEY HANDLED the sit-ins very logically and with great tact. One of these days people will learn that the administration of any body has a purpose. If you want to accomplish something, work with the administration, don't fight them. If nothing else, maybe now, part of the problem can be solved and a few intelligent steps forward can be taken. - * * * ON THE LIGHTER SIDE, one of the more interesting aspects of the first two days of the week were the journalism students who were either working as correspondents for different news media or those who were working for themselves. - * * * THE PSYCHOSEXUAL MAKE-UP OF SNOOPY: A body of men met in Europe last week to discuss the comics as a social force in America. Now certain comic strips are known for their supposedly social and political commentary of the American scene. Good grief—if this neo-Freudian kick is carried too far I'm going to get a neuroris just worrying about what shoe goes on first in the morning. Jim's Little Gem: "It is easy for men to talk one thing and think another." Jim Langford Brotherhood (Editor's note: The following is an excerpt from a speech by Chancellor Wescoe, printed in the December 1962 issue of Palm, the fraternity magazine of Alpha Tau Omega.) "IF OUR FOUNDERS WERE TO WRITE a constitution today, I fervently believe that they would want ours to be truly an international brotherhood acknowledging the dignity of all men. I believe just as fervently that we would be fulfilling their basic concept, their greatest dream, if we had members principled as they were and we are, encompassing all American men who are committed to what we are committed and stretching to the lands of the eastern hemisphere across the broad Pacific." KU Student Helps Make Laws KU students who are holding down part-time jobs might consider the plight of Benjamin G. Morris, Quinter second year law student. Morris said that his main job in the Dominican Republic was to defend U.S. policy and possibly to help affect a change in it. Morris feels that "the only cure for the evils which exist in all social government is through the government itself" DURING THIS TERM in the legislature, Morris has been involved in the re-apportionment issue and he feels the resulting action has been un-constitutional. He feels that the rural areas have been left without Morris, when he is not attending classes at law school, spends most of his time in Topeka where he is serving his first term as a Kansas State Representative. At 25 years of age, Morris is the third youngest representative. He was elected as a Democrat from Gove county which has a population of 4,439. After the closing of the training school, Morris was offered the job as special assistant to the President of the Dominican Republic and served in this capacity for two and one-half years before coming back to the United States and school. KU Hosts Dance Meet About 100 students from Kansas and Missouri are expected for the third annual High School Dance Symposium March 27 at KU. MORRIS FIRST BECAME interested in politics during the 1960 campaign, but only as a casual observer. Shortly after, however, he went to Costa Rica on a KU language exchange program. While there he became the administrative director to a political training school which later closed. Morris majored in political science in his undergraduate work. Master classes on dance techniques and classes in dance composition comprise the program which is being arranged by Tau Sigma, honorary dance fraternity. a proper voice in the government. An example of this action is Morris' home area, Gove county, which currently has one representative. If the current apportionment bill is passed by the Senate, there will be only one representative for a total of five counties in the Gove county area. on any gifts in excess of $3,000 and the other is a tax on legacies and estates. Morris said that he felt the two bills would supply nearly as much revenue as the sales tax bill but they were aimed more directly at the high-income levels. Friday, March 12, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 3 When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified MORRIS is also opposed to the proposed sales tax bill. He said that the bill will impose too much hardship on the lower income bracket. He is currently co-sponsoring two tax measures. One of these is a tax Morris is also serving on the agriculture, public utilities, municipalities and judicial apportionment committees besides being enrolled in five hours of law classes. Morris added that he was driving to Topeka daily but he was afraid to estimate the cost involved. The Modern Book Forum presents The Egoist v e ', - - t, e o n Dr. Walter Meserve and his discussion of by Bonaventura Tecchi "Modern Man's Spirituality and Morality" 4:30 Tuesday March 16 Forum Room, Kansas Union Free Coffee Campus Hideaway PIZZA AND SPAGHETTI SPECIALISTS SHRIMP UNUSUAL SANDWICHES We Absolutely Deliver 106 North Park Phone VI 3-9111 SUA FRIDAY FLICKS SUA ADVISE and CONSENT Henry Fonda Charles Laughton ADMISSION 35c FRASER THEATER 7:00 p.m.-9:30 p.m. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 12, 1965 THE RED DOG INN presents The Astronauts THE ASTRONAUTS again FRIDAY NIGHT 7:00 P.M. HELD OVER BY POPULAR DEMAND, THE ASTRONAUTS HAVE CONSENTED TO PLAY AGAIN FRIDAY NIGHT. 7:00 P.M. COVER $1.50 SAT. NIGHT SAT.NIGHT STEVE ELLIS and his STARFIRES from Minneapolis, Minnesota The Number ONE band at the University of Minnesota DOORS OPEN 7:00 P.M. COVER $1.00 FREE T.G.I.F. with the Astronauts 3:00 PM. Friday, March 12, 1965 University Daily Kansan When You're In Doubt, Try it Out-Kansan Classifieds Around the Campus Page 5 The International Club will sponsor a party tomorrow night at 8:30 p.m. at the Pizza Hut, 1606 W. 23rd St. A bus for club members will leave the Kansas Union at 8:30 p.m. for the Pizza Hut. There will be free refreshments for members of the International Club. International Club To Meet The use of folklore in China will be discussed at the all university lecture at 7:30 p.m., Monday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. John O. Dalke, McPherson junior, has been promoted to group commander of the Air Force ROTC with the rank of Cadet Colonel. ROTC Names Cadet Colonel "Love in Christian Marriage" will be the theme of the Cana Conference at 8:00 p.m. tonight in the St. Lawrence Student Center Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. The lecture will be given by Father William Finnerty, director of Catholic Charities for the Archdiocese in Kansas. Wolfram Eberhard, professor of sociology at the University of California, will be the speaker. Chinese Folklore Talk Set The conference is designed primarily for engaged couples or those who are planning for marriage. Edgar B. Wickberg, associate professor of history, and member of the East Asia Committee, said the event is sponsored by the East Asian Committee, the departments of sociology and anthropology and the Campus Folklore Society. Priest to Discuss Marriage Dalke was formerly the executive officer. Promotion is designed to give cadets experience as potential commissioned officers in the Air Force, the AFROTC headquarters announced. Student Union Activities, Current Events Forum present C. R.C.: A Panel Discussion of our PURPOSE Sunflower Room, Kansas Union Friday, 7:30 p.m. Question Period Will Follow IF YOU DON'T LIKE TO EAT IN YOUR CAR. TO EAT IN YOUR CAR . . . . . COME ON INSIDE AT DIXON'S DIXON'S Wide Selection of Sandwiches and Soft Drinks. Reasonable Prices. Convenient Finger-tip Ordering From Each Table. Prompt, Courteous Service. Year-round Air Conditioning. COME ON OUT—LET'S GET ACQUAINTED! DIXON'S DRIVE-IN 2500 West 6th VI3-7446 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 12, 1965 Conard to Receive KU Matrix Honor High school students from throughout the state will be visiting KU March 20th. The students are invited by Theta Sigma Phi, women's journalism fraternity, and are being sent by their high schools as the outstanding girls participating in journalistic activities. A program has been planned for the high school students. They will visit the School of Journalism and several members of the journalism faculty will speak to them. JANE M. SCHUBER Virginia Conard THE DAY'S activities will end with the annual dinner of Theta Sigma Phi in the Kansas Union. Mrs. Virginia Conard, co-publisher and co-editor of the Kiowa County Signal, Greensburg, will be the speaker at the dinner. She is the wife of John Conard, chairman of the Kansas House Ways and Means Committee. A graduate of KU, Mrs. Conard will speak on "It Happens Every Wednesday." Mrs. Conard was an instructor here from 1948 to 1949. She was a secretary and an administrative assistant to the Marshall Plan in Paris, France, from 1949 to 1954, and then served with the State One For The Road! 1964 Jacquar, XKE, Hardtop ... $4.725 1964 M G B, Red Pirelli tires ... 2.395 1964 M G B, Hardtop, Black ... 2.695 1964 Sunbeam Alpine, Hardtop ... 1.855 1962 M G Midget, White ... 1.955 1962 V W Station Wagon ... $1.295 1962 Morris Mini Cooper (HOT) ... 995 1962 Porsche, 1600 Normal ... 1,200 1965 Mustang, Convert, 4 sp. $2,959 1965 Rambler, V-Bird, Air Conditioner 750 1965 Cadillac Fleetwood 995 1965 Ford 4-dr. Hardtop, Big Window 495 1962 Honda, 250 CC., real clean ... $ 450 ** * * ** We will trade for most anything — especially if it doesn't eat. BRITISH MOTORS 1116 W. 23rd Lawrence, Kan La Pizza 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 Department in Washington, D.C., from 1954 to 1955. 30-Minute Delivery Service Guaranteed! Several journalism awards have been earned by Mrs. Conard. She won third place in editorial writing twice, in 1961 and 1964, from the National Federation of Press Women. The Kansas Press Association and the Kansas Press Women have awarded her first place in editorial writing, photography, column writing, editing a weekly newspaper, and newspaper publicity in past years. SHE RECEIVED the Woman Journalist of the Year Award in 1963 from the Theta Sigma Phi chapter at Kansas State University. For the years 1960, 1961, and 1963, she received the Parent-Teacher Association News Media Award for writings in the field of education. Pizza, Spaghetti Chicken,Ravioli Steaks,Sandwiches Shrimp Hamburgers Mrs. Conard is currently vicepresident of the Kansas Press Women, and is a member of the Kansas Press Association and the National Federation of Press Women. Cole of California CHECKMATE 49'er checks on a two-piece suit with camisole bra and snappy little trunks. 100% cotton from Cole's Golddigger Collection in pastel and classic colors. 8-16 $17.00 terri LAWRENCE. erri LAWRENCE. terriill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS 17 Debate Teams Compete With KU BOW TIE BATHING SUIT Great secrecy surrounds the Kansas Union as the competitors in the Heart of America Debate Tournament enter the fifth rounds this morning, without knowing how they have performed in the previous four rounds. The 48 teams, representing 34 schools from 17 states, have been debating whether the Federal Government should provide a program of work for the unemployed, but only tonight will they know if they have reached the elimination rounds. Donn W. Parson, Kansas Debate coach and in charge of the organization of the three-day tournament, said, "We have hidden the tabulating room. Not even I know how the teams are faring." The elimination round or quarter-final, will be held at 11 a.m. tomorrow. The semi-final is to be at 2 p.m. and the final at 3:45 p.m. The KU Chamber Music Series will present The Danzi Woodwind Quintet at Amsterdam on Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall at 8 p.m. Holland Woodwind Quintet At KU on American Debut The Quintet from Amsterdam began its activities in 1958 with an impact-making Holland Festival concert. The success was so great that a special repeat performance was at once arranged. In one performance the Danzi Quintet proved to belong to the first-class chamber groups of the world. Concerts followed all over Europe and in 1960 a first sensationally successful appearance in Israel was made. This unusual ensemble of musicians considered to be "the finest wind-group in the world" is outstanding not only for its technical perfection but for its unique programs that include music from the classic and romantic to the avant garde repertoire. From the light-hearted work of earlier composers to the fantastically difficult abstractions of such composers as Stockhausen, well-known in Europe but seldom heard here, there are no technical difficulties whatsoever for the Danzis. Founder of the group is the flutist Frans Vester who chose to call the ensemble the Danzi Quintet in honor of the Mannheim composer Franz Danzi (1763-1826). The artists were all but one (the English bassoonist, Brian Pollard) born in Holland. Students of the Amsterdam Conservatory, they are all now first chairmen of the famous Amsterdam Concertgebouw Orchestra and the Netherlands Opera Orchestra. an oldmaine trotter is a work of art! Cardigan As seen in Harper's Bazaar You'll love this buttery soft kidskin sport casual with the handsewn vamp detailing and the silky-soft foam back lining. A moccasin so soft and so comfortable you'll hardly know you have it on. Black, Brown, Bone, Red, Navy, Green NATURALLY $12.95 oldmaine trotters Royal College Shop 837 Mass. VI 3-4255 Ol JOHNSON Cardigan Friday, March 12, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 7 No, clothes don't make the man, but they do reflect his personality. Keep your clothes looking their best send them to Independent. INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9TH & MISSISSIPPI 740 VERMONT Call VI3-4011 for Free Pickup and Delivery Service Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 12, 1965 'America Needs Policy Change' Ry Harihar Krishnan In the wake of the present international situation, does America need to implement changes in its foreign policy? Professors in the political science department stated their feelings on this question. Prof. Herman Luian said, "One of the tragic factors in the American foreign policy has been the attempt to apply her concept of morality to international affairs. "We have this absolute concept of morality and ethics, which formed the basis of the Truman Doctrine and the Dulles Theory; but we have not realized that if there is a kind of morality in this world, it certainly is not this kind of homespun morality," Prof. Lujan said. Prof. Roy D. Laird said, "The basic fault in the U.S. foreign policy lies in the realm of its failure to understand that there is a world wide revolution; that the people of Asia, Africa, and Latin America are determined to enjoy the economic and political fruits of the twentieth century. "The prime impetus has, therefore, passed from Moscow, London, and Washington," Prof. Laird said. "It now rests in Calcutta, Buenos Aires and so on. The basis of this world wide revolution is agrarian and we have failed to recognize this. "The outcome of the Southeast Asian situation." Prof. Laird said, "will not be determined in the capitals, but in the Villages. We must revive our revolutionary spirit and begin to identify ourselves with the greater majority. This is the only way to continue positively in international affairs." Prof. Laird continued, "We should be more careful in picking dictators in different countries. We were right in our original plan to pick Castro. Batista was no longer a viable leader in Cuba. But later on, for a variety of reasons, most of them through our own faults, Castro came to feel that extreme antagonism towards the U.S. Unless changes are made in our policy, there are going to be more Viet Nams and Cubas," he said. Prof. Laird went on to say that a withdrawal or a change in the character of the present American and European ownership of extractive industries, must be effected. "If we continue in the predominance of ownership of these industries, combined with the growing poverty of the masses, communism will have a ready made revolutionary situation." Asked what he felt about the present American policy, Prof. Klaus Pringsheim said, "As a result of the popularity which President Johnson has come to enjoy with the majority of the people, and the unanimous support he has been receiving lately from the Senate, it has become increasingly difficult to give criticisms on the government policies. By disagreeing with the stated policies, you either become a sort of a maverick, or possibly a disloyal person," he said. "I feel the majority of the opinion leaders in the country are not exercising the function of constructive criticism of the government policies for the fear that they might become unpopular." Prof. Fringsheim said. "A few weeks ago, some people did raise their voices, whereupon the President became extremely upset thinking that they were trying to twist his arm," he said. "Following this, each senator, one after the other, started lending his support to Johnson's policy of escalation in Viet Nam. "The recent publication in one of the New York papers by Hanson Baldwin on the escalation policy, I feel, was a government instigated one." Prof. Pringsheim said. "Baldwin was asked by the government to publish this. Criticism of the U.S. policy is not possible. You cannot say anything, when you have a popular President," he said. Prof. Pringsheim continued, "I have serious doubts about the decision that was made in the South Viet Nam issue. I will certainly applaud Allen's News All Student Supplies including "PLAYBOY" 1115 Mass. VI 2-0216 if the plan is successful, but in my heart I have definite doubts. Limited escalation of the Viet Nam war cannot lead to a victory either for the South Vietnamese or for the American forces. Yet, this is the policy." The professors were asked to comment on what they felt about introducing changes in the foreign policy. Prof. Lujan remarked, "Our policy in Europe should be to keep pushing the economic integration and at the same time maintain the military dominance. We got to be the England of the twentieth century. "If we abdicate," Prof. Lujan said, "then France would come up, Germany would then follow, then Italy and so on. NATO is the only weapon that gives us a legitimate diplomatic entry into Europe. "As regards France," Prof. Lujan said, "we have to make up our mind and recognize its political maturity. If she thinks she has the answer for the world problems, then we have to start thinking of ways of making a tool out of her. "We have also to realize that, in many areas of international politics, we are still teenagers," he said. "We don't have the knowledge of world situation, as much as the British or the French." Prof. Laird said, "Our trump card is the European Common Market. As regards the Berlin question, we have to realize that we cannot afford a German unification. We have always to be aware of the possibilities of a renewed German aggression. Our military presence in West Germany should be to keep a check on such a possibility, while at the same time keeping a watch on the Russians," he said. Prof. Pringsheim said, "I have no quarrel with the policy of alliance with the like minded nations and the NATO powers, except that at the present time, it seems that NATO alliance is in the process of being destroyed. The reason, I believe, is because it has become necessary. "The eagerness of France and Germany to continue their relationships with the U.S. has abated." he said. "They don't need us any more, except to provide them with the nuclear umbrella. De Gaulle wants to kick Americans out of Europe and create an European system in which France will be dominant. "I am afraid there is very little we can do about this," Prof. Fringesheim said, "except to be gracious about the inevitable change that is taking place. We can no longer play a dominant role in Europe. There is no use being bitter about France's dealing with Red China. We have to deal with these issues with utmost patience." On the question of African policy, Prof. Laird said, "We must make our disapproval of the South African regime more stringent, and start promoting the growth of a unification scheme in Africa." GANT Prof. Laird continued, "If you feel that South Africa can threaten us with their diamonds, you are wrong. We have enough supply of our own and we also have the know how of making synthetic diamonds. "If we don't take a strong stand on the South African issue," he said. "I am afraid, we will soon witness a blood bath there. I hope the last think we ever do is to support the Pretoria government. The time bomb of South Africa is ticking fast and it is going to explode." Prof. Lujan is of the opinion that the short range policy in Africa should be for its stability and the long range, to make it a world power. STRIPED OXFORD Prof. Pringsheim feels that the U.S. should continue its present policy in Africa, that of non-involvement. "We have always kept out of Africa and this is what we should continue to do." STIPPED OXFORD For when it sizzles—a half sleeve Gant shirt in classic batiste oxford stripings. Meticulously tailored in the typical Gant tradition ... with softly flared button-down collar. As regards Asian policy, Prof. Lujan said, "The U.S. should recognize Red China. We should start diplomatic relations with her and also start trade relations. We should also think of the possibility of lending aid to her, particularly wheat. This is what they need most," he said. Discussing India going communist, Prof. Lujan said, "India will never become a communist nation. But at the same time we also have to recognize her need to maintain a socialistic democracy." S6.50 the university shop About the Kashmir question, he said, "We should try to negotiate for a joint administration by the Indians and the Pakistani. Under no circumstances should we reduce the economic aid program to India, because this is vital." German Lit Scholar At Humanities Series An internationally-recognized literature scholar, who won an all-university award as "best teacher" at Indiana University, will present a Humanities Series lecture here Tuesday. Dr. Henry H. H. Remak, professor of comparative and German literatures, will speak on "The Controversy in Comparative Literature" at 8 p.m. in Fraser Theater. The Faculty Club will give an informal reception following the lecture. Lecture-goers may park in Lot Y—a half block south of the KU smokestack—and use a free shuttle bus to Fraser Hall and return. AT 4:30 P.M. Monday, Dr. Remak will speak at a coffee-forum in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union, sponsored by Student Union Activities. His topic is "The Impact of Nationalism and Cosmopolitics on Comparative Literature." During his visit to the KU campus, the Indiana scholar will speak to classes in German, French, and English literature, and will have luncheon on Monday with members of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) executive committee; he has been an AAUP leader and served on the national council. After a luncheon on Tuesday with staff members of the department of Germanic languages and literatures, he will discuss the Indiana program for the training of teachers. AFTER EARLY EDUCATION in Germany and France, he received the M.A. at Indiana in philology and literature in 1937 and the Ph.D. at Chicago in German literature in 1947. He has been on the Indiana University staff since 1939 except for service in World War II. He was visiting professor at Middlebury College, at the University of Lille, France, on a Fulbright fellowship, and at the University of Wisconsin. He has lectured in Europe at the universities in Lyons, Aix-Marseille, and Bordeaux, and in America at Illinois, Texas, Wisconsin, Hope College, and Marian College. He has several times been acting chairman of comparative and German literatures at Indiana. In the Modern Language Association, he has been chairman of German and comparative literature sections and has presented several papers at MLA national meetings. He has been editor of the Yearbook of Comparative and General Literatures and has been on the executive councils of the International Comparative Literature Association and of the International Association of University Professors and Lecturers. Ling their best W C Do You Need Park Plaza South? Fi awa ship begi men which Ford If you want a choice of attractive 1 or 2 bedroom apartments with central heating and air-conditioning, disposals carpeting, front drapes and a convenient coin operated laundromat, You Need Park Plaza South! Don't forget, there's a swimming pool. Park Plaza South 1912 W. 25th Call Day or Night VI 2-3416 Page 9 an will KU turn. brum dent Cos- peak have on of been part s the re 7 and en on World river- persity layons, Texas, times res at man of presented of the seen on feature Pro- trac- part- Wilson Fellowships Given to 15 Seniors ating osals, and a Park ated 3416 Fifteen KU seniors have been awarded Woodrow Wilson Fellowships for a year's graduate study beginning next fall. Nine others received honorable mention from the Wilson Foundation, which is supported by a $25 million Ford grant. Robert P. Cobb, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, noted. "Although there are fewer KU Fellows this year than last year—last year's total was 19—there were also fewer KU finalists in the competition. Last year we had 30 finalists and this year there were 24." "Traditionally, we have always done well in the Big Eight. Last year we had more Woodrow Wilson Fellows than the other Big Eight schools combined," he concluded. THIS YEAR'S KU figures have not yet been fully analyzed and compared with national figures, according to Cobb. Wilson Fellows include B. George Barisas, Kansas City, Mo., chemistry, German and mathematics. Barisas is also a Rhodes scholar. Anthony E. Bengel. Independence, Mo., history and philosophy. DAN E. DAVIDSON, Wichita, Slavic Area Studies, Russian, German, humanities (Russian literature specialty); Mildenstein for Neodesha, Spanish; Gwendaloyn F. Feller, Opuska, social psychology; William C. Getz, Newton, history, Spanish. DAVID H. KLASSEN, Newton, sociology, American civilization; Arthur B. Murray, John A. McCulloh, John M. McCulloh, Abilene, medieval history, English; Terry A. Miller, Baxter Miller, law officer is also winner of this year's Paul B. Lawson Award as the outstanding senior. SHARON E. NELSON, Larned, German, education; Lee M. M. Peters, Glenside, Iowa; John M. Peters, Glenside, Iowa; Mission, Slavic Area Studies, Russian, humanities; Philip H. Stone, Onaga, English; Whitehead, Pratt, English; Pratt is also owner of a Danforth Foundation Award. RECEIVING HONORABLE mention were Peter H. Argerwinger, Lawrence, American history; Robert A Beyerlein, American history; William Boulder, import, Iowa history; William J. Cles Jr., Altamont, political science; Barbara Ericsson, Lawrence, philosophy; Margaret H. Hoccker, Lawrence, English; Margaret H. Hoccker, anthropology; Judith A. North, Clinton Iowa Spanish; Margarete E. Stolzenbach, Lawrence, French. University Daily Kansan 1965 JAYHAWKER SECOND EDITION AVAILABLE FRIDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 15, 16, WEST ROTUNDA STRONG HALL 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Also permanent receipts, covers, first editions available. Cash purchases only at Jayhawker business office, Kansas Union 3-5 p.m. weekdays. Six University of Kansas women have been pledged to social sororities during informal rush this spring. Sororities Pledge 6 in Informal Rush Monica U. Gilbert, Omaha, Neb., freshman, has pledged Alpha Omicron Pi. Joanne Stevens, Wichita freshman, and Virginia A. Appleton, Topeka freshman, both pledged Delta Gamma. Pledged to Pi Beta Phi were Cheryl Sue Milford, Kingman freshman, and Sandra J. Johnsen, Highland Park, Ill.. freshman. Pledging Alpha Gamma Delta, reinstated KU sorority, was Sharon F. Taylor, Shawnee Mission sophomore. Friday, March 12, 1965 International Orchestra To Perform Thursday The KU Concert Course will present the Hague Philharmonic at 8:20 p.m. Thursday in Hoch Auditorium. Founded in 1904 the orchestra has known four regular conductors, Peter van Anrooy, Frits Schurman and the present conductor. Willem van Otterloo who assumed the post in 1949. THE ORCHESTRA has established an international reputation with it tours of Europe and its first U.S. tour in 1962-63. Reviews of their U.S. tour were unanimous in their praise. When van Otterloo was not on the podium his place has been taken by such giants as Toscanini, Richard Strauss, Stravinsky, Bruno Walter, Monteux, Mengelberg, Stokowski, Munch, and Bernstein. When Van Otterlover was not on the most of the major European orchestras as a guest. Argentina music critics twice elected him the "best conductor of the year." FOR THEIR LAWRENCE program they have selected the Second Symphony of Leon Ortel, the Fire Bird Suite of Stravinsky, and Brahms' Symphony No.2. Free shuttle bus service is available from the parking lot North of Allen Field House to Hoch and return. Tickets are available at the Murphy Hall Box Office and the Bell Music Co. '65 CHEVROLET These great performers are the lowest priced models at our One-Stop Shopping Center PM-117 CM-434 'Top to bottom: Chevy II 100, Corvair 500, Chèvelle 300, Cheverlot Biscayne. All 2-door models.' That luxurious Biscayne is as roomy as many expensive cars,has color-keyed interiors, plush vinyls,fine fabrics, full deep-twist carpeting. Each of these beauties is the lowest priced in its line. But the ride doesn't show it. Or the interior. Or the performance. Chevelle, America's favorite intermediate-size car, has clean new styling wide doors, roomy, tasteful interiors and Chevrolet easy-care features. Chevy II got a lot smarter for '65 but stayed sensible! Still family-size, easy to handle, economical, and the lowest priced Chevrolet you can buy. Or get a sporty rear-engine hardtop in a Corvair Sport Coupe or Sport Sedan for fun in the months ahead. Chevrolet, Chevelle and.Chevy II are available with the Turbo-Thrift Six for fuel economy, quick warmups, quiet idling. It's light, efficient, smooth and spirited. Corvair's air-cooled rear-mounted Turbo-Air Six delivers the best balance and traction for this size car. So be practical. Only you will know. Because it sure won't show! discover the difference Drive something really new-discover the difference at your Chevrolet dealer's Chevrolet Chevelle Chevy II Corvair Corvette CHEVROLET Page 10 University Dally Kansan Friday, March 12, 1965 Wichita, OSU Favored In NCAA Region Play MANHATTAN, Kan.—(UPI)—Wichita and Oklahoma State carry the favorite roles into tonight's opening round games of the National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA Midwest regional basketball tournament. Southern Methodist defeated Texas 80-78 in a Southwest Conference playoff while Houston, an at large entry, popped Notre Dame 99-98 in a first-round game Monday night at Lubbock, Tex. WICHITA and Oklahoma State were both automatic qualifiers for the Midwest battle because of respective championships in the Missouri Valley and Big Eight. The regional is figured to be a defensive battle-the bread and butter in both Wichita and Oklahoma State attacks. The winners of tonight's games clash Saturday night for the title and the trip to the finals next weekend at Portland, Ore. Oklahoma State, coached by veteran Hank Iba, maintains the best overall mark among the four clubs with a 19-5 slate. Wichita is 19-7, Houston 19-8 and SMU 16-9. Wichita faces Southern Methodist University in the tipoff game and Oklahoma State tangles with the University of Houston in the nightcap. THE SHOCKERS presented rookie coach Gary Thompson with a Valley championship on the strength of an 11-3 mark, but Wichita was only average during the second semester following the departure of all-America Dave Stallworth. Stallworth, however, was around long enough to guide the Shocks to a 14-2 season mark and an 8-0 Valley record with his 25.0 average. Stallworth's collegiate eligibility terminated with the end of the first semester and the Shocks also lost 6-foot-10 center Nate Bowman because of grades. Kelly Pete, Dave Leach and sophomore Jamie Thompson have picked up much of the slack in Stallworth's loss. The Shocks lost the Midwest finals a year ago to Kansas State. Southern Methodist is led by 6-foot-7 Carroll Hooser. The Mustangs, who finished with Texas at 10-4 in the Southwest, are rated above average in both size and DETROIT —(UPI)— Fourteen new National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) indoor track records will be set tonight and Saturday in the indoor championships at Cobo Arena. That's how many events some 360 athletes from 84 schools will be competing in during the two-day affair—the first NCAA national indoor meet ever held. But, the meet isn't the only new thing at Cobo Arena. A new $30,000 indoor track has been laid for the event. First NCAA Indoor Scheduled for Detroit The new boards should get a workout under the flying feet of the likes of Notre Dame's Bill Clark, Tracy Smith of Oregon State, Chris Johnson of Southern California and Missouri's Robin Lingle. Johnson and Lingle are expected to finish 1-2 or 2-1 in the mile. Johnson has run it in 4:06.6 while Lingle's winning time in the Big Eight meet was 4:08.9. The winning proposal was submitted by Larry Sukut, Ellsworth, S.D., junior, and president of the KU A.I.A.A. The KU chapter of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics received a $100 prize in the Bendix Corporation's annual Student Branch Competition. Bendix Gives $100 The funds will be used for the production of a short movie depicting aerospace engineering. It will be shown in connection with such things as the high school visitation program and engineering expositions. speed. Texas Tech was the conference champion but withdrew from the playoffs because it used an ineligible player in many of its season games. IBA, who coached the U.S. Olympic basketball team to a world championship at Tokyo last fall, has a veteran Cowboy team. The Pokes are led by 5-foot-5 Jim King, a do-everything forward who hits 57 per cent from the field. Gene Johnson, a 6-foot-7 center, and guards Gary Hassmann and Larry Hawk add experience to the cowboys' strength. The Pokes won the Big Eight with a 12-2 markthree full games better than runner up and pre-season pick Kansas. Houston lacks size but plays an aggressive game and often utilizes a full-court press. Leary Lentz, a 6-foot-6 sophomore center, has performed well for the Cougars this year and Wayne Ballard is the club's top outside shooter. KU will be entered in eight of 10 weight classes in the annual Big Eight Wrestling Championships to be held at Norman, Okla., today and tomorrow. Sports Briefs Track coach Bill Easton will enter Herald Hadley in the two mile run and the KU mile relay team of Ron Suggs, Bob Hanson, Lowell Paul and Doug Dienelt in the N.C.A.A. Indoor Track Championships to be held in Detroit, Mich., today and tomorrow. Fred Hare, the sensational 6-1 sophomore from Omaha, led Nebraska's basketball team in scoring for 1964-65 with 380 points and a 15.2 average. Coach Easton will be a featured guest speaker during the N.C.A.A. Meet Clinic. Hadley took second place in the 1,000 yard run and third place in the mile run during the recent Big Eight Conference Meet in Kansas City. The KU relay team won first place among all Big Eight schools. The Omaha Tech grad hit 156 field goals to break Albert Maxey's 1558-59 field goal record for a sophomore. Maxey hit 144. Hare fell short of Maxey's sophomore scoring record of 384 by only four points. Other records rewritten in 1964-65 were team field goals in a regulation game (38 against Purdue), team points in a regulation game (96 against Purdue) and points by both teams in a regulation game at home (181 against Purdue). The Iowa State basketball squad held its usual season-end voting Wednesday and named Bob Ziegler and Al Koch as the most valuable players. - * * Ziegler is the highest scoring Cyclone among conference scorers and finished second to Walter Wesley of KU in the Big Eight scoring race with 270 points. Koch ranks next to All-American Gary Thompson in total season scoring for one year with 446. He was named all-Big Eight and All-District forward this year, and was third in loop scoring behind Wesley and Ziegler. Bob Vander Wilt, senior from Spencer, was elected captain for the past year. Jim King, Oklahoma State; Walter Wesley, KU; Gene West, Drake; Lou Hudson, Minnesota; and Lou Dampier, Kentucky, were selected as the Cyclone all-opponent team. Nebraska's freshman basketball team has broken its team scoring record for the second year in a row. The young Huskers scored 687 points (63 more than last year) for an 85.9 average for eight games. They were 3-5 for the season, 0-4 against Big Eight competition. Three of those four losses were by one or two points. Tom Baack, 6-5 forward from Ft. Wayne, Ind., was the scoring leader with 154 points and a 19.3 average. His 97 points in the last half of the season edged Stuart Lantz, 6-3 guard from Uniontown, Pa., who gathered 147 points for an 18.4 average. SECOND ANNUAL ST. PAT'S PARTY YOUR FAVORITE GREEN BEVERAGE 25c DANCING SATURDAY MARCH 13th Open at 12 noon Bring a date and help us celebrate! THE STABLES Best Actress Award at the Cannes Film Festival. ANNE BANCROFT - FINCH and JAMES MASON The Pumpkin Eater Extra! "Keep America Singing" Barbershop Quartette Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065 Ends Saturday ... "IT'S A MAD, MAD, MAD, MAD WORLD" Starts SUNDAY ... 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Call Wes Santee at VI 3-216 for details. tf Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL I V 1-2100 for free delivery. Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive notes, used for classes. Formerly known as the Thette Notes. Call VI 3-1428. $4.50. Students, why throw money away on rent when you can own a 1962 Marlette 10 x 50, modern two-bedroom mobile small monthly payments. This home is in excellent condition. For Further information CALL 8-0973 or RI 8-0916. ff TYPEWRITERS, electries, manuals, portables; sales, service, rentals, Olympia, Hermes, Royal, Smith-Corona, Olivetti. Adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. VI 3-3644. tf BE THE LEADER OF YOUR PACK: Harley Davidson Sportster K, 750 cc, new clutch, and new brakes and tires. THIS IS NO HONDA. For further information about this beautiful machine CONTACT Montl Belot at VI 3-0700. PORTABLE STEREO: Admiral's Finest— two carrying units, 1 for turntable and 1 for speaker systems (2 tweeters, and 2 full range woofers) $195 new. Will sell for good offer. CALL: Rusty Calkins at VI 3-5721. CHINA-Nortikai, Mayfair design. New, never used or even removed from packing. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk. M 3-7102. tf NEED A BAND? 30 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM. PHONE VI 2-2100. tl THE STABLES now open every day—Serving steaks, chops, sea food, sandwiches, snacks, new amusement sphere. Party rooms available. Phone VI-3-9644, 1401 W. 7th. Ht 1963 French Renault, 4-speed transmis- sion system for a four-wheel drive excellent condition. Call VI 3-6462, 3-22 For guy who can wear 42 long coat—6 good suits (3 winter, 3 summer), white wool sports coat, 6 slacks (3 winter, 3 summer). Owner lost weight, cannot wear. Best offer. Call Tom. VI 3-2682 after 5:00 p.m. 3-15 One owner 1963 Dodge Dart, take over payments with small equity to owner. 5:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday and all day Sat. and Sunday. 3-17 Buy the perfect all-round guitar. For travies picking, blue-grass, blues, or folk, pick up a back and sides, spruce, slony fingerboard, Like D-28. VI 3-528 evenings. Garrard "type A" never used, still in original packing box, $50.00-Tape recorder, Akai M6, semi-professional, 4 track stereo for $220.00-1955 Chev. V8 4 bbl, stick. $275.00. Call Lee Garrett, VI 2-3965. "Great Books of the Western World." *renowned* opened *latest* *rest sell*. VI 3-805. **2-18** 1956 Olds, 88; actual mileage, 31.000; cream color, black interior, rear speaker system, white wall tires. $350.00—excellent condition. 3-18 1957 Buick 4-door station wagon, radio remote, black vinyl rear door panel, white sidewalls, iden tion U 4-527-3, 3-1f ENTERTAINMENT ATTENTION PARTY THROWS: Do you want the Beatles, the Kingsmen, Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience Finest references. CALL V 1-2791. ti Now you can hear a variety of excellent dance bands on stereo demo tapes, including the Fabulous Blades, the Norse Women, union and non-union call VI 2-1791. Fly to the Bahamas via Daytona Beach and arrive Lauderdale over Spring Vacation. Explore Expeditions with take two more passengers for $100 each. For further information call VI 3-8544 TRANSPORTATION WANTED Wanted—someone to tutor me in edu- ational statistics I. 5 to 6 hours a week. Time and fee arranged. Call Joe Morcno. VI 2-1977. OLD CARS WANTED, top prices paid, for 18th birthday party. Do it today! GI Joe's, 610 Vermont. Wanted Someone to play GO. Call TI 2-9227 after 7:00 p.m. tf Washing and ironing done in my home 1131 New Jersey St. Phone VI B-2598. TYPING Experienced typist wants typing in home. Reasonable rates, prompt service. Phone VI 2-3354. tf 6 years typing experience plus back- guarantee accuracy on college papers. New electric typewriter equipped for participation with Mrs. Bernd 801 Michigan or VI F-2-0400. Typing done by experienced secretary for 25c each double spaced page. Call Ethel Henderson, 2565 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122. 3-31 Experienced typist. 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. ALL Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Vail. Ti 2-1648. Experienced secretary will type term papers, law briefs, theses, etc., for students. Especially familiar with legal and business terms. Fast and accurate. Reasonable rates. Call Marsha Goff at VI 3-2577. Theses only on Royal Electric Pica typewriter. CALL Mrs. Fulcher at VI 3-0558 tt experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. Gestetner Duplicator. Mrs McEldowney, 2521 Alabama St. Phone V-1-8568. University Daily Kansan Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. Will do exertion in design of a new carbon ribbon typewriter. Betty Muskrat 140 Indian, or call VI 2-0091. t Former Harvard and U. of Minnesota report on the investigation of reports and theses. PHONE VI 3-7207. Term papers, Theses by experienced cypist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. t ii Will do typing in my home. Accurate reasonable rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at VI 2-0210. tt Experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing. Speaking and language skills and languages. Quick and reasonable Electric typewriter. Call VI 2-8967. tr Typist, experienced with term papers theses and dissertations, will give you an assignment on a machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048 Experienced typist wants theses, term-papers, and dissertations to be typed on electric (pica type) typewriter. Please Call Pat CatBeh at VI 3-5630. tf Experienced typist will do dissertations manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 RI, VI, 3-7485. tf Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will be interviewed on these tests. Experienced. Electric typewriter. CALL Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8264. Theses or term papers done in my home K. K. CALLM, Oxford at VI 2-0673. BIERSTUBE: Students favorite dark beverage and students favorite light beverage from golden Colorado. Sandwiches from Southern Germany. German dinner. Party room available. 3-15 MISCELLANEOUS Rare "Felis domestica" hybrid from a gross of Alleyus and Thailandia varieties. Potty-trained and looking for a home. Gratis. VI 3-0974. 3-12 Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-Q ribs that grandma and grandpa can eat, try ours on a plate or order to peel per slab. Hours: 11:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-9510 3-31 IR, SR. AND GRADUATE STUDENTS MONEY AVAILABLE ON PERSONAL SECURITY. PHONE, CHUCK ADKINS, BENEFICIAL FINANCE AT VI 3-147- 147 Math tutor B.A. degree in math from KU. Experienced in tutoring geometry, algebra, calculus and analytic geometry. Call VI 3-0927. 3-15 SCHINW BICYCLES -service all makes, parts and accessories, tires $1.46, tuber luggage racks and tide downs SEE Blewins at 7th and Mick or CALL V1 35-081 Friends coming this weekend? Looking for a place with good food at reasonable prices. HILLCREST BOWL RESTAURANT. Plenty of free parking 9th and Iowa. PARTY TIME? Building available for parties, dances, and meetings. PHONE Ralph Freed at VI 3-3995. tt it's great for a date. Take her bowling at Hillcrest Bowl. Finest lanes in the state, and Sun. Also Mon, Tues, and Fri. after 9:00 p.m. Hillcrest Bowl 9th and Iowa rr Rent electric, standard, and portable typewriters. Repair all makes of electric, gasoline, or diesel business machines.ern Business Equipment (formerly Business Machines). 15 E. 8th. E. 3-0151, tf Latin student of 5 years wishes to tutor Latin. $1.50 hr. Contact Louise Conley at VI 3-9123. 3-17 Attention: All persons interested in self defense training classes utilizing many of the same shovels and smushes used in firearms and movies, contact Bob Monk at VI 3-7102. Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon.-thru-Fri, or all day Sat. or sun. Phone VI 3-6231. tf WOODIES are more interesting when you get there the fun way ON A BIKE, with parts, repairs, womens equipment. Gran Sport Cyclery, 9 Worst 14th. VI 3-3283 9-3 11- Page 11 Furnished house for rent or lease in Eudora. Prefer three to four boys, 3 bedrooms, wall to wall carpet, fireplace. Available immediately. Phone HA 2-5063. FOR RENT Apartment at 1232 Louisiana for couple or single. Modern. Call VI 3-4217. 3-18 room, kitchen, laundry rooms and kitchenette. $^1_2$ block from Union. 1st floor, parking VI 3-7955. tt Extra nice roomy apt. in graduate house for graduate or older undergraduate man. In school to campus, utilities paid. Nice furnishings. Private bath and kitchen. Call VI 3-8534. Emery Apts, 1423 Ohio, 12 one bedroom luxury apts, April 1st, $85.00. Featuring w-w carpeting, disposal, range and ovens refrigerators, furnished or unfurnished. Teachers or graduate students only, no children or pets. VI 3-8190. 3-16 PARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30-50 people, jukebox, liquid refreshments and coffee. Contact Don at the Gault light Tavern for reservations on CALL VI 3-1086. **tf** Room for rent—double or single. Ideal study conditions and private entrance. Phone VI 3-0326 after 5 p.m. tf Several attractive apartments available within one block of campus. Suitable for men or women. Also bachelor quarters for men. Call VI 3-8413. 3-12 Crescent Heights and Oaks Apartments at 1821 W. 24th, or CALL VI 2-3711. ft. Lost—set of keys with half dollar attac- tions. Frank R. Adams, 647 Elsworth. 3-16 LOST HELP WANTED Wanted—man over 21 for general house and yard work, 2 to 3 mornings a week. Prefer permanent resident. Call VI 3-6850. 3a-15 Friday, March 12, 1965 CLASSIFIEDS Bring Quick Results BUSINESS DIRECTORY INSTRUMENT REPAIR SERVICE: CALL MAYHUGH at VI3-4430 1910 W. 23rd Street JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY Southridge Plaza 2350 Ridge Court VI2-1160 Discover Quality In Apartment Living 24 HOUR SERVICE (TUES. THRU SUN.) - Wheel Alignment - Lubrication . . . . $1.00 - Brake Adjustment . . . 98 - Automatic Transmission New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD AFFEARANCE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694 Across From The High School and DRY CLEANING HONN'S Lawrence Auto Service 19th & La. VI 3-9631 OPEN 24 HRS. COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY 10th & Mass. VI 2-0247 Mobil — Goodyear MUGS 24 OZS. — 35c 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 6th & Michigan VI 2-9598 Open 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Daily 7:30 to 9 Sunday Louise's Bar 1017 Mass. - Wash and Polish - DX Products Complete Car Care DX Servicenter - Firestone Tires - Mufflers & Pipes Tune-up, Body Repair & Repaint, Automatic Trans. Service Wheel Alignment - dry cleaning - alterations - reweaving For the best in — - Brake Service ASK ABOUT THE DX TRIAL BOND GUARANTEE - Tune Ups Drive-In Pet Center GRANT'S Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 FREE PARKING Complete Center under one roof Register Now For Temporary Assignments - NO FEE - Typists - Stenos General Office and Bookkeepers Milliken's S.O.S. Experienced Only Apply 9:00 - 5:00 p.m. or by appointment 1/25 MBJU-3 5028 1021 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. VI 3-5920 Unlimited Office Opportunities ALSO - Student & Thesis Typing Automatic Letter Service Telephone Answering Secretarial Service Notary Public ... P.S. They're Professional! Milliken's S.O.S. 1021 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. VI 3-5920 HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds OPEN TO 10 A.M. EVERY EVENING OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350 TRAVEL TIME LET CARRION MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Spring Break and Summer Reservations Now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 12, 1965 CRC Meeting - (Continued from page 1) anyone by reason of race or creed Furthermore, the University is pledged to the establishment of procedures necessary to ensure that no violation of these principles shall ever be present in its affairs, and in keeping with the proud heritage of Kansas as a free state, the University of Kansas will lead the way in promoting equality of opportunity in every form." After the statement was read Pam Smith, Kansas City sophomore and secretary of CRC, revealed four amendments that the CRC committee had requested be made. The amendments changed the statement from a "Reaffirmation of Principles" to a statement of principles and changed more of the wording. THE "ESTABLISHMENT of procedures" clause was changed to "the establishment of legislative, regulatory, and persuasive procedures." The section, "... opportunities afforded by the University," was changed to read, "... opportunities afforded by the associated sectors of the University community." The CRC also requested that the section reading, "... shall ever be present in its affairs," be changed to "... shall ever be present in all its affairs." "The establishment of procedures has never been made before. This is what the CRC is after," Ruhe said. He gave this as an example of where progress had been made in the talks Mildred Dickeman, assistant professor of anthropology and an "interested adviser" to the CRC, spoke in an effort to show that gains had been made by the negotiation. "I think that they did so partly (speaking of the university committee's action in approving the CRC's four amendments), so we will have some sort of good faith in their intentions." "I DON'T STOP remembering that the demonstrations did occur and may have to be made again. I realize that we have the weapon and can use it, but we should give the negotiations a chance. If we have not made progress, well, you know where we can be next Thursday," Prof. Dickeman said. Official Bulletin TODAY Heart of America Debate Tournament, All Day, Kansas Union. Guest Lecture, 3:30 p.m. John Henselman in "Ninja." Spoken Audience Friday Flies, 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. Fencer Theater Film Series, 7.30 p.m. "Lady With A Dog." Hoch Auditorium. Pre-Cana Series Lecture, 8:00 p.m. "Love in Christian Marriage," Fr. William Finney, Kansas City, Kan., Student Center, Stratford Rd. Lecture, 8:00 p.m. Robert Sharlet, U. of Missouri, "Beyond the Institute and Over the Kremlin Wall: Kremlinologists and Comparatists." Room Forum, Kansas Union. University Theatre, 8:20 p.m. "Six Characters in Search of an Author." Regional Newman Convention, Fort Hire, Buffalo, NY. Vl 3-0357 the Student Center. VI 3-0357 Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. SATURDAY Peace Corps Test. 8:30 a.m. Downtown Phoenix, Phoenix, Arizona streets. No pre-registration necessary. Kansas Folklore Society, All Day. Kansas Union, Prof. John Messenger will lecture at 1:30 p.m. in the English Room, Kansas Union. Heart of America Debate Tournament, All Day. Kansas Union. University Theatre, 8:20 p.m. "Six Characters in Search of an Author." SUNDAY United Campus Christian Fellowship 9:15 a.m. Study Seminar; 10:45 a.m. Morning Worship; 5:15 p.m. Evening Fellowship. UCCF (Westminster), 1204 Quaker Meeting, 10:30 a.m. Danforth Chapel. Oread Friends meeting welcomes KU Intramural Bowl, 2:30, 3:15 and 4:00 p.m. Kansas Union. Carillon Recital, 3:00 p.m. Albert Gerken. Newman Forum, 8:00 p.m. Robert Woody, Kansas Union, Chardin". Forum Room: Kansas Union French Plays, 8:20 p.m. Le Treatain de Paris Theater Company. University Theatre. NEXT WEEK Teaching Candidates: Interviews scheduled for the Week of March 15-19 by Teachers Appointed Neighboring Public Schools, elementary and secondary. 117 Ba.; Mar. 16–California, Fresno State College, college. 117 Ba.; Mar. 18–Kansas, Wichita State College. 117 Ba.; Mar. 17 and 18–Missouri, Kansas City Public Schools, elementary and secondary. 117 Ba.; Mar. 19–Wisconsin, Whitewater School, college. 117 Ba., Kansas, Winfield Public Schools, specified field open. 117 Ba. Another topic discussed by the committee yesterday was the policy of the University Daily Karsan with regard to acceptance of advertising from groups which practice racial discrimination. At last night's CRC meeting there was discussion as to what had been done about the alleged problem; this was the CRC's sixth demand. THE KANSAN BOARD'S statement said "we oppose the acceptance by the University Daily Kansan of the responsibility and obligation which the proposed legislation (an amendment to ASC Bill No. 7) would require us to assume." In Ruhe's opening statement, he said, "Our reaction and that of the University committee was one of anger." Prof, Dickeman said, "Dean Woodruff and his committee did not want to dispute that there had been advertising from discriminatory groups accepted—he wanted proof." "There are people on the committee who feel that the Kansan Board's statement was disgusting and not legally tenable. I think we are getting to the Kansan Board." REV. THOMAS B. Woodward, Episcopal KU chaplain and another adviser of the CRC, said, "We must have evidence to present. We cannot expect the Chancellor or anyone else to act on hearsay evidence. We will present documented evidence." Nate Sims, a co-president of CRC, announced that a sub-committee had been set up to gather this evidence. The committee members are: Bert Injured Man Still In Poor Condition The condition of Gureharan S. Tahim, 26, visiting associate professor of electrical engineering from India, was reported as poor by hospital authorities today. Tahim wss critically injured Tuesday night in an auto accident near Bonner Springs, Authorities of the St. Margaret's hospital, Kansas City, said Tahim had a poor night. He was reported to be suffering massive chest injuries, possible nerve control damage, head injuries, collapsed lung and a partially collapsed lung. Rinkel, Scott City; Rick Mabbutt, Shoshone, Idaho, senior; and Carol Borg, Manhattan junior. Mabbutt said that the committee was to "gather evidence on alleged discrimination in fraternal and private housing." "We have gotten some. We have a good start," he said. Sims discussed the trial of the 110 demonstrators who were arrested Wednesday evening and asked them to be sure and appear in court today. The arrested students agreed to accept the legal counsel of five NAACP lawyers from Topeka who have agreed to defend them. The profs get tougher so the students work harder and the grades are about the same. The all-University of Kansas grade average for the fall semester was 1.41 (on a scale of C is 1.0, B is 2.0), according to the report released today by the registrar's office. The average was 1.43 in each of the previous two fall semesters and the .62 decline is not considered significant Fall GPA Takes .02 Fall The all-men's scholarship hall average bucked the trend of slight declines by zooming to 2.03, better than all B grades, up from 1.93 a year ago. However the highest average among living groups was the 2.05 of the women's scholarship halls. The all-sorority average also rose slightly to 1.81 from 1.79. The all- fraternity average remained a fraternity average remained at 1.41. Other grade-point averages: all- women, 1.57; all-men, 1.30; all- men's residence hall, 1.17; all fresh- men, 1.16; all-freshman women, 1.32; all-freshman men, 1.04; all upper- class women's residence hall, 1.42. KU Junior Wins $750 Standard Oil Award Clarence White, Eudora junior majoring in mechanical engineering, has won a $750 scholarship for next year from the Standard Oil Company of California. The scholarship, won in competition among junior students in mechanical engineering, is granted to the junior designated by the mechanical engineering faculty on a basis of academic promise and need. ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES for Seniors and Graduates in MECHANICAL, AERONAUTICAL, CHEMICAL, ELECTRICAL, and METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING ENGINEERING MECHANICS APPLIED MATHEMATICS PHYSICS and ENGINEERING PHYSICS CAMPUS INTERVIEWS MONDAY, MAR. 22 Appointments should be made in advance through your College Placement Office Pratt & Whitney Aircraft An Equal Opportunity Employer SPECIALISTS IN POWER...POWER FOR PROPULSION—POWER FOR AUXILIARY SYSTEMS. CURRENT UTILIZATIONS INCLUDE AIRCRAFT, MISSILES, SPACE VEHICLES, MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS THE FAMILY OF DAVID MAYNARD UNIVERSITY THEATRE presents Luigi Pirandello's "SIX CHARACTERS IN SEARCH OF AN AUTHOR" - * * * Friday & Saturday - March 12-13 Friday & Saturday - March 19-20 Curtain 8:20 p.m. - * * * Tickets: $2.40, $1.80, $1.20 KU ID Redeemable At Box Office For Reservations Call UN 4-3982 Murphy Hall Box Office we "DEMAND" FREEDOM (BUT NOT OF THE PRESS) CENSORED ASC UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN —Drawn by Dick Flood "Us campus politicians have a great deal of power." Council Group Asks Recognition of UHRC The All Student Council Committee on Committees and Legislation recommended last night the withdrawal of a bill to establish a discriminations board and instead, recognize the present University Human Relations Committee (UHRC). The recommendation will be made to the ASC at its meeting tomorrow. Byron Loudon, Kansas City senior, in expressing the view of the committee, said the proposed board and UHRC were similar in their basic purposes of investigating all discriminatory practices. IN REPRESENTING the opinion of the Civil Rights Council, Nate Sims, Pasadena, Calif, senior, and CRC co-president, endorsed this recommendation. In place of the bill, the committee recommended that the UHRC be recognized to arbitrate complaints of discrimination. This will also be brought before the ASC. The committee also supported an amendment to Human Rights Bill No. 7 which would restrict advertising in the University Daily Kansan. The amendment would prohibit the UDK's including phrases in ads which suggest racial discrimination, and accepting advertisements of housing not listed on the University housing list. THE COMMITTEE also decided to advocate two other amendments be added to this at the ASC meeting. These would prohibit the UDK or any other student publication from accepting advertisements which the UHRC feels are discriminatory. It would also require these publications carry a format on their masthead stating that the accommodations, services, and goods advertised are offered to all students regardless of race, religion, or national origin. Sims said the CRC was satisfied by the progress made by the ASC committee and felt they were taking positive steps. JOHN SUHLER, Cross River, N.Y., senior and Kansan Board chairman, said, "It seems to me this is unnecessary legislation. The section on accommodations is already covered in the section concerning all advertisements. It's just repetitious. "This is a difficult and detailed matter. However, we are resolved on one thing: the ASC has delegated the authority to the Kansan Board to govern all policies of the UDK," Suhler said. "Generally, the Kansan board has felt the ASC has ulterior motives," he said. "They seem to be trying to establish who has authority over the UDK. Daily hansan 62nd Year. No. 99 The story is simple. A man, returning home at 4 a.m. from a costume ball, is ridiculed by his wife for putting on airs. The argument develops as he turns the conversation towards comparing her less-endowed figure to that of a beautiful model he saw at the ball. During the bickering, every subject that has been a sore point between them in their short marriage life comes to the front. Suddenly, they are interrupted by a messenger who tells them that the wife's mother is dead. Barnyards And Boudoir Plays Shown Monday, March 15, 1965 LAWRENCE. KANSAS The second play, "Feu la Mere de Madame," or "Madame's Late Mother," appeared to be a bedroom farce, but in reality it was a bitter ridicule of marriage. As Feydeau himself said, "In all the calamities that strike the world, the foolish equal the horrible." The University Theatre stage went from barnyard to boudoir last night as Le Treteau de Paris presented two one-act plays in their original French versions direct from Paris. Feydeau showed, through his young couple, that people create their own private hells by their dealings with others. The productions, "Poil de Carotte" by Jules Renard and "Feu la Mere de Madame" by Georges Feydeau, were given as a part of the seventh college and university tour in America under the auspices of L'Association Française D'Action Artistique of the French governmen. "Poil de Carotte," or "Carrot Top," is a psychological drama combining equal parts of comedy and tragedy in the personages of a tyrannical mother, an indifferent father, a misunderstood son, and an out-spoken maid. Bound together by a common sorrow, the couple forget their differences. But, they soon discover that the messenger has come to the wrong house and that her mother is not dead after all. Then the insults start again. The hacknied arguments are resumed as the curtain falls. This area's weather forecast is clear to partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow with increasing cool temperatures. The low for tonight is predicted to be between 25 and 30. The high tomorrow is predicted to be in the middle 40s, the weather bureau reported. Weather 'Selma Wall' Down To Register Voters SELMA, Ala.—(UPI)—City police today removed a 30-foot long wooden barricade called the "Selma Wall," put up to stop hundreds of white and Negro civil rights demonstrators from marching on the county courthouse. "Today is voter registration day. If they want to go down and register, they can," said Public Safety Commissioner Wilson Baker. Baker pointed out Dallas County is under a federal court order to speed up the registration process. THE BARRICADES WERE removed at 7 a.m., EST, after the demonstrators had maintained another all-night vigil they first took up last Wednesday at a point on Sylvan Street in a Negro housing area. About 100 demonstrators, some of them wrapped in colorful quilts, were still standing in the line when the barricades were taken down. A cheer went up when the wooden planks were removed. All through the night at least 100 whites and Negroes were on the line, changing shifts and singing or listening to speakers. During the night most of the highway patrol cars were removed. The demonstration on Sylvan Street began as a prayer vigil and protest in the fatal beating of the Rev. James Reeb, a 38-year-old white Unitarian minister, attacked by whites last Tuesday night. DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. was to return to Selma today to lead a memorial service for Reeb who had come to Alabama in support of King's voter registration drive. There was no immediate indication that the removal of the barriers signaled the end of the vigil in its 109th hour. Negro leaders fell to arguing about their next move, a march on the registrar's office at the courthouse. "We will move as a body," said Hosea Williams, an official of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC). "We will move in the group that has stood here together since this began." SOMEONE IN THE CROWD asked Williams who he was and what authority he had. Williams identified himself as an official from the SCLC and added, "I'm as close as you can get to being Dr. King without being Dr. King." At Montgomery, a federal court hearing resumes today on Negroes' attempts to get an injunction against state officials who prohibited them from staging a march from Selma to Montgomery. At least 28 witnesses were scheduled to be heard. RUMORS THAT TROOPER commander Al Lingo had been fired touched off discussion in both the Negro and white communities of Selma. Petitions were circulated in downtown Selma demanding that Lingo be kept on the job. Lingo was in command when troopers broke up a planned "freedom walk to Montgomery" last Sunday with clubs and tear gas. The rumor that Lingo was out was greeted enthusiastically in the Negro community and by white demonstrators who have come here from across the nation. Tensions apparently eased when Mayor Joseph Smitherman and Dallas County Sheriff Jim Clark announced Sunday afternoon that Negroes had been granted permission to hold the memorial service for the Rev. James Reeb in the city's stadium. (See related story on page 9) West Civ Positions Sought After by 60 Applicants About 30 graduate students were interviewed this past weekend for some 16 teaching positions in the western civilization department. Professor James E. Seaver, director of the department, said last night that another 30 students have submitted their transcripts since they could not come to the interviews. It is from this field of 60 applicants that next year's 16 vacancies will be filled, Prof. Seaver said. Seaver said. "Our process of interviewing and the qualifications that we see have not changed since the program's inception in 1945. Because of the broad nature of the program we expect the students applying to have a rather broad coverage of courses in liberal arts—courses in history, economics, political science, philosophy, sociology and psychology." department they come from." Prof. "Many of our instructors have come from the School of Engineering, the English department or the chemistry department," he said, "but their breadth of readings gave them a broad educational background and that's what we look for. The bulk of our applicants and instructors, however, come from the departments of philosophy, history, political science and sociology." Concerning the instructors' obligations, Prof. Seaver said they are expected to prepare and to direct eight discussion sessions a week, and to administer examinations. The 35-member staff also assists in the comprehensive examinations. "I THINK THAT a very good element of the program," Prof. Seaver said, "is that it gives graduate students an opportunity to earn money through instructing and thus helps them to continue their study. "Our aim," Prof. Seaver said, "is to acquaint students with the major problems of life in the 20th Century through an understanding of the philosophical, sociological and political influences on history for the last 500 years." Most schools in the United States have some kind of a general orientation program of this type, Prof. Seaver said, to form and to assign a basic group of readings common to most students. Some teach it as a history of civilization, while others present it as a background to history, he said. OUR PROGRAM at KU is more oriented toward philosophy," Prof. Seaver said, "It does not put an emphasis on dates and facts like many other universities. Two other differences between our program and other's are that we have discussion groups and students here have to do more work on their own. "These discussion groups are a great advantage." Prof. Seaver continued, "Because students learn better this way." He added, "We strive to influence controversies and arguments and thus to stimulate thought, not to make up the students' minds for them. I think that they learn more and better this way than by hearing people talk about it. CONCERNING changes in the program, Prof. Seaver said, "A "Lecturers usually have a tendency to overwhelm the students' independent thinking," Professor Seaver continued, "We don't aim to propagandize for a specific religious or political point of view; we want to inspire the students to make up their own minds. . . to open new windows in various directions to pursue their education." few of the readings may be changed but basically the program will remain the same, for next year. However, the year after next we may have some significant innovations." He did not know at the moment what they would be. As for the complaint by students of too much reading for too little credit, Prof. Seaver said he felt that the amount of reading for western civilization has been equal to that of any other course offering the same amount of credit. "We give less credit for juniors and seniors on the comprehensive," he continued, "because we want to discourage students' postponing the test and because students having encountered the same material in other courses will have an unfair advantage on undergraduates." Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 15, 1965 UDK Under Fire A movement is under way which, if successful, will undermine freedom of the press on this campus. The persons behind this movement have no such purpose in mind, but their demands, if fully realized, will have just this effect. The Civil Rights Council has demanded "That the University Daily Kansan no longer accept advertisements from landlords and/or organizations that practice racial discrimination." The All Student Council, at a special meeting called at the height of the sit-in demonstration, introduced legislation complying with the CRC demand. The CRC demand and the proposed ASC legislation to be voted on Tuesday night is a violation of the principle of freedom of the press, even though the target is the advertising columns of the Daily Kansan rather than the news columns. Advertising is a form of free speech. The freedom to advertise is as essential in a free society as is the freedom of speech and freedom of peaceful assembly which was so dramatically illustrated last week. True restrictions have been placed upon all our freedoms to prevent abuses, but these restrictions have been minimal in order to provide the utmost freedom. Passage of the ASC legislation controlling the content of advertising in the Daily Kansan will be A majority of students are discriminated against when the Daily Kansan is forced to deny advertising on the basis of some committee's decision or according to some "approved housing list." The student would be denied the opportunity to read where he may seek accommodations. This amounts to an infringement upon the rights of the majority by a minority. a denial to advertisers of their freedom of expression and will also be a denial of the public right to know. If the ASC, under pressure from organizations like the CRC, can successfully dictate the content of the Daily Kansan's advertising columns, it could conceivably dictate the content of the news columns by denying us the right to cover news of organizations who allegedly practice discrimination. If we are compelled to deny our advertising columns to fraternities and sororites because they have been found to discriminate, we can also be compelled to deny news space to the Interfraternity Council, Greek Week activities, intramural sports, and so on. We hope that the ASC, sitting in general assembly, will disregard the pressure from the CRC and consider all aspects of the proposed legislation before them. Gary Noland Guest Editorial Dear Sir: HAVING WRITTEN TO THE UDK LAST WEEK rather severely castigating you for what seemed to me remarkably thoughtless editorializing, I now feel obligated to congratulate you for your editorial commentary of the past two days which seems by contrast quite adequately, and even intensively, well thought out. By way of minor criticism, I would like to point out that Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe's administration policy statements should be reported as news, not as UDK editorial policy. If they were published as guest editors, they should have been so labeled. Gary Noland's critical analysis of the current administration policy statement was well taken and to the point. Apparently the CRC demand that is causing the most difficulty, and as far as I can see the only one that cannot be immediately granted as stated, is the one that insists that fraternities and sororites sign a non-discrimination affidavit or disclaimer. The application of most such affidavits being extremely distasteful as well as ludicrous as to their efficacy, I like Chancellor Wescow, would not like to see their further proliferation. Just as it would be distasteful and absurd to require affidavits or disclaimers as a condition of employment for the Chancellor or Deans, so would it be to require them of organizations not under complete and detailed control of the administration as a condition of affiliation with the University. In order to institute such a policy, it would seem preferable, rather than an affidavit, to make a simple policy statement that unless each fraternity and sorority desegregates to the satisfaction of a committee to be composed of, for example, the Chancellor, the Deans of Students, Men, and Women, five faculty members to be chosen by the Faculty Senate, and five students to be chosen by the ASC and CRC, the offending organization would be deprived of all relationships with the University and all privileges derived therefrom. PROBABLY A CLAUSE WOULD HAVE TO BE inserted that unless a significant majority, say two-thirds or three-fourths of the organizations, complied with the regulations, the entire Greek system as a recognized institution of the University would have to be abandoned. This both in recognition of the realities of the situation and to preclude the complaint by the organizations that many might choose to accept the sanctions rather than comply, thus gaining an "advantage" in recruiting membership. Reasonable time limits would have to be established for the initiation of the investigations and again for the imposition of sanctions, but not in terms of "by the end of this decade" as seemed to be the case with the passage of Bill No. 7. THE BASIC REASONING by which people claim such measures unfair seems to run along the lines that fraternities and sororites are private institutions because they are privately financed, thus giving them the right to freely choose whomever they wish to associate with according to whatever criteria they may choose to apply. I think it can be clearly demonstrated, however, that private financial support is not alone an adequate criterion for determining the private or public nature of the institution. That the Greek organizations are institutions of the University can be seen by the quantity and nature of their activities and prerogatives, a few of which are cited above and some of which are contributive to the general University community. Their relationship is somewhat similar to that of the trial lawyer to the court; he is neither paid by it nor pays dues to it, nor is he personally a part of the organization of any particular court, but is nonetheless regarded as an officer of the court in which he tries his case and is accorded the special responsibilities and privileges that go with the position. The unfairness of the present situation lies in the fact that Negro and other minority group members of the student population are denied participation in this aspect of University life without regard for any individual qualities or qualifications they may possess. I WOULD ALSO LIKE TO CRITICIZE THE amendment to Bill No. 7 with regard to UDK advertising policy proposed by Hugh Taylor, and the position taken by John Suhler, chairman of the Kansan Board with regard to that policy. Mr. Taylor's amendment has the merit of simplicity, but seems to lose much to achieve that merit. It has the effect, however small in scope, of closing the University society off from the rest of the world. The effect of Mr. Taylor's amendment is to say to potential advertisers, "If we haven't actively and affirmatively approved of you, we won't do business with you." I think what is desired is to say, in effect, "If the students to whom you are advertising the sale of this commodity or service are discriminated on the basis of race, creed, or color, we won't do business with you," and I think the best way to say it is to do so simply and directly. The demonstrations were not held to demand the power to make a general, overall approval of any persons or organizations, but rather to demand the power to make a specific disapproval of a particular practice, ethnic prejudice, which is reprehensible to most of us and damaging to all of us. It would be much easier and simpler to say that we are going to eliminate prejudicial practices in the University community, and, in order to be certain that we do not in any way support such practices, we will confine our contacts and interactions to the University community. IN TIMES OF HEIGHTENED CONFLICT, THE easiest solution looks most attractive, but it is not always the best solution in the long run. Mr. Suhler has said that the administration of such a policy would be expensive, immoral, and unprofessional. I think he is wrong on each count. The policy would have to be stated to advertisers, which would be simple. Machinery would have to be set up to receive, record, and transmit complaints of violations, which would be simple. And machinery would have to be set up to judge the validity of the complaints, which would be feasible, as I am sure a committee could be found to serve. Eventually, as the practice of non-discrimination becomes accepted, and perhaps somewhat habitual, complaints will presumably decrease in number and the committee could be disbanded, and cases referred to the Student Court. In the initial phases such a policy would probably be somewhat difficult to administer, and would probably require considerable effort but it would be well to remember that a considerable effort has already been expended to create such a policy. When the policy becomes established, respect for it will almost certainly reduce the number of attempted violations, and ease the problem of administering it considerably. ADVERTISING GOODS TO THE GENERAL public, then systematically insulting certain would-be customers because of their race or color or religion is not an exercise of freedom of the press, but an abusive practice. Professionalism demands operation within a certain code of ethics, one of the primary canons of which in this case is to safeguard the freedom of the press, which, by the way, can only be done by the exercise thereof. I submit that to lure people into a situation of embarrassment and insult is not an exercise of freedom of the press, and that to continue to foster and materially support such an abuse is not safeguarding freedom of the press. If such a practice is to be considered an exercise of freedom of the press, the UDK has already suppressed that freedom by not allowing discriminatory phrasing in advertisements and not printing stories involving libelous actions. Larry Hammond Overland, Mo., senior KU Civil Rights Ill-advised demonstrations now seem to have given way to rational discussion on the campus of the University of Kansas in Lawrence. After two days of confusion, more moderate civil rights leadership has ended sit-ins by a small minority of the student body that was disrupting the orderly conduct of university business. And the administration, for its part, has reinstated the 100-odd demonstrators previously suspended. Thus the road should lie open to an intelligent review of university policy with respect to any alleged racial discrimination that the KU authorities, in fact, have the power to correct. As we see it, the recent student demonstrations at Lawrence raise two main questions. One concerns the way in which they were conducted. The other has to do with certain of the purposes for which they were organized. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe had a standing offer to talk over any grievances the students might want to bring to his attention. Instead, leaders of the campus civil rights council at first chose to present him with a series of demands for immediate action, backed by the threat of mass demonstrations. In effect, Dr. Wescoe refused to move under such duress. And when the demonstrators finally had to be ejected from his office by force, he ordered their suspension. We think the chancellor was right in both courses. KU has a clear responsibility to its student body, its faculty and the people of the state of Kansas. It could not tolerate incipient mob rule. Experience on other campuses around the country has shown the damage that may ensue when situations of this kind are allowed to get out of hand. The chancellor seems to us to have acted with wisdom and discretion. To say as much, however, does not dispose of the basic issue raised by the demonstrators. That issue involves alleged discrimination against Negro students. Here, it seems essential to distinguish between what an enlightened university administration may—and may not—reasonably be expected to do. Several of the demands made upon Dr. Wescoe concerned allegations of racial discrimination in teacher-placement, student-teaching assignments, approved off-campus housing and the student paper's advertising policy. Those are clearly matters within the competence of the administration to influence. Indeed, the chancellor could show that they had already been taken under review for determination of the facts. But evidently the primary grievance advanced by the civil rights council had to do with charges of discriminatory practices on the part of fraternities and sororities. Here it is particularly necessary to be realistic. Broadly speaking, a purely social organization should possess the right to prescribe any qualifications for membership it desires, no matter how absurd or unjust these may appear. But fraternities and sororities on the campus of a public university, like KU, fall into a special category. Their operation is licensed by the institution. If they exclude candidates solely on grounds of race, therefore, it is assumed that such a practice must be at least tacitly condoned by the university authorities. Chancellor Wescoe has made it plain that his administration is not in sympathy with any procedure of that kind. There is no reason whatever to doubt his sincerity. Apparently no chapter of a national society on the KU campus today is required by its charter to enforce racial discrimination. And the chancellor on Monday signed an All Student Council bill which further spells out this prohibition. Nevertheless, the available evidence strongly indicates that Negro students are systematically kept out of white fraternities and sororities, in practice. Probably the key demand made on Dr. Wescoe was to bar from all university functions hereafter any fraternity or sorority held to practice "covert" discrimination. This strikes us as a proposal to enter a domain that is not susceptible to university regulation, either directly or by delegation. It is one thing to insist, as the university has done, that there be no blanket charter discrimination. It is quite another to try to compel a fraternity or sorority, in substance, to accept any particular Negro candidate or candidates against the will of its existing membership, as a matter of principle. The right of freedom of association at the social level is far too important to every human being, regardless of race, to risk such an infringement. We, too, hope for a time when the white KU fraternities and sororities will cease to employ back-door discrimination against otherwise eligible Negro colleagues. But that time will not be hastened—it may only be deferred—by demands and demonstrations for administrative action. Here is a place for sound education of the fraternity and sorority students in race relations, so that they will come around of their own volition. Meanwhile, it seems to us, the university can make a positive contribution by continuing to provide the most attractive possible environment for students of all races outside the fraternity-sorority system—and to keep open normal communication with all responsible segments of the student population. — Reprinted from the Kansas City Star March 11, 1965 DailijIfänsan 111 Flint Hall UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office University of Kansas student newspaper Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Leta Roth and Gary-Noland ... Co-Editorial Editors I I T B Monday. March 15, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Legislature Passes EducationFundBill and against not be institutions of the will, the provide traces formal opu- Star 3. 1912. Press v York n rates: mermoon leviey l Law- TOPEKA, Kan. — (UPI) The House of Representatives unanimously passed, on emergency basis, a bill that would provide $7.2 million for the Kansas educational building fund for fiscal 1966-67. The bill was approved by the Senate earlier. It will be sent to Gov. William H. Avery for his signature. The House vote was 100 to 0. Editors The bill, sponsored on the floor by Rep. John Conard, R-Greensburg, provides for construction at eight institutions. The bill gives the Board of Regents the authority to transfer funds from one project to another within the state system. However, Conard said he did not anticipate any transfers unless it would facilitate construction of the projects. CONARD SAID the appropriation measure was placed on the emergency basis because the federal higher education facilities fund required a direct commitment from the state before allocating funds at its meeting today. Expenditures for KU, Kansas State, Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia and Kansas State College of Pittsburgh will be supplemented by federal matching funds. He said the provision was included in the bill because federal funds are sometimes delayed: NONE OF THE funds will be expended before July of this year. Under the bill, Kansas State University will receive $1,662,000 in fiscal 1966, including $250,000 for replacement of boilers, $382,000 for chemistry laboratory building and $1,030,000 for a biological science building. KANSAS STATE WILL receive $1,436,667 in fiscal 1967 for completion of the biological science building. KU will receive $1,050,000 in fiscal 1966 including $450,000 to replace Robinson Gymnasium, $450,000 for construction of a biological science building and $150,000 for an addition to Malott Hall. KU ALSO will receive an additional $976.964 in fiscal 1967 for completion of the biological science building and $86.533 for Malott Hall Attention Seniors The senior class plans to hold a party next Saturday night at the Red Dog Inn from 7 to 12:30 a.m. Admission is free to seniors, but an underclass date will be charged $1. The "Dimensions" from Kansas City will provide the music. The party is only for seniors, but underclassmen may attend if they are accompanied by a senior. Seniors received a letter last week giving further details on the party but were not informed of the date or the time. ThreeGI's Shot By Edgy Patrol SAIGON — (UPI) — U.S. Marine Corps officers "stomped the line" around the big American air base at Da Nang today, emphasizing safety procedures. One Marine was killed and two others seriously wounded Sunday night in a tragic case of "shooting at shadows." The casualties were the first since the 3,500-man Marine expeditionary force dug in to protect the base against Communist infiltrators. The Marines were shot by an edgy buddy as they were returning from a patrol to investigate noises. The Marine took his comrades for communist intruders and opened fire with his M14 automatic rifle. These funds will be equaled by federal matching monev. One of the wounded men died early today. A second was in critical condition following abdominal surgery and a massive transfusion involving 26 pints of blood. The third received a superficial head wound. Capt. H. J. Morgan of Colorado Springs, Colo., commander of the unit to which all four men were assigned, said he will crack down on safety violators. Morgan is a native of Atwood, Kan., and a veteran of 12 years in the Marines. Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia will receive $400,000 in fiscal 1966 for construction and equipping a science unit. The college will receive another $540,000 in fiscal 1967. Kansas State College at Pittsburg will receive $30,000 in fiscal 1966 and $580,000 in fiscal 1967 for classroom buildings. THE KU Medical Center will receive $67,750 for remodeling a building. The Board of Regents will receive $50,000 in both 1966 and 1967 for planning, including drafting of preliminary drawings and specifications, future buildings at state educational institutions. (See Related Story — Page 7) Other state institutions receiving money will be Fort Hays State College and the School for the Deaf. SAIGON—(UPI)—More than 100 U.S. fighter bombers yesterday blasted a huge Communist ammunition supply area in North Viet Nam only 100 miles from Hanoi, North Viet Nam's capital. U.S. Planes Hit Red Ammo Dump The planes-most of them from U.S. Navy aircraft carriers - flew deep into North Vietnamese territory to hammer the Phu Qui ammunition dump with bombs and rockets. The 100-square mile Communist arms and supply area is 180 miles north of the border. A U.S. spokesman said the raid was the most successful the United States has had. There was an unconfirmed report that one Navy propeller-driven plane crashed in the sea near its carrier. In Washington, informed government sources confirmed that one Navy plane was lost, and said the pilot was missing. The Phu Qui ammunition dump is in the foothills of North Viet Nam about 40 miles from the Laoian border. The strike was the third against North Viet Nam this month - a 160- plane raid March 2, and a joint American-South Vietnamnamese raid Sunday against Communist-held off- shore islands. The spokesman called today's raid "the most remunerative target we've had." He said the Air Force planes which helped carry out the mission were "based in Southeast Asia" but would not disclose where. Earlier, U.S. officials here had described the raid as retaliation for continuing acts of sabotage and terrorism by Communist forces in South Viet Nam. B Γ Δ E Z H Θ I K A M It followed by less than 24-hours the U.S.-supported assault on Tiger Island, a major Communist base just north of the 17th Parallel. Twenty-six South Vietnamese fighter-bombers took part in that raid. Fraternity and Sorority Jewelry - Lavaliers - Guards - Kines - Mugs N Ε Ο Π Ρ Σ Τ Υ Φ Χ Ψ Ω - Pins - Crests Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" R A NEW PROGRAM OF INTEREST TO MEN It isn't easy to become an officer in the United States Army. Only the best young men are selected The training and course of study are demanding But if you can qualify—and you should find out if you can—you will receive training which will put you a step ahead of other college graduates. Army ROTC training will give you experience that most college graduates do not get—in leading and managing other men, in organizational techniques, in self-discipline and in speaking on your feet. This kind of experience will pay off in everything you do the rest of your life. Army ROTC has a new program designed specifically for outstanding men who already have two years of college, and plan to continue their college work. During your junior and senior years in this program, you will receive $40 per month. Want to find out more about the program? Simply send in the coupon below, or see the Professor of Military Science if you are now attending an ROTC college. There's no obligation—except the one you owe to yourself. If you're good enough to be an Army Officer, don't settle for less ARMY ROTC Box 1040, Westbury, New York 11591 Gentlemen: Please send me information on the new 2-Year Army ROTC Program. I am now a student at ___. 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VI 3-0895 Acme laundry and dry cleaners 1-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE Come in or call today for FREE pick-up and delivery Monday, March 15. 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Music, Art Camp to Open 28th Session By Robert Stevens The pitter-patter of 2,700 feet will accompany the University Campaile this summer as the twenty-eighth session of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp gets underway. This year over 1,350 junior and senior high students representing most of the 50 states and a few foreign countries will be attending, according to Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and camp director. Eight divisions will be offered this summer. They are: senior high music, are, science and math, theatre, speech, junior high music, ballet and journalism. The engineering division which has been held in summers past will not be continued this year, Prof. Wiley said. "We hope to pick it up again next year, but we are unable to hold it this summer." The largest share of the campers will arrive on the campus Sunday, June 20, and stay six weeks. The junior high music division is only two weeks long and will not begin until July 4. The first camp was started in 1935 with 17 members. They met for six weeks and the camp cost $66 "We started from nothing and have built it into a quarter of a million dollar business annually," Wiley said. Today the cost for six weeks is $325 and the two weeks junior high camp costs $80. "In the second summer we started an orchestra. We held concerts in Hoch in the afternoon, Wiley continued. "We first branched out by trying art in 1950. We tried it for one summer and it did not go. I smarted under this considerably and proposed to the art people to join hands with me and have a division director to promote their end of it," Prof. Wiley went on. "Their success soon proved this was a good move." The name of the camp was changed to the present Midwestern Music and Art Camp in 1955. "The camp director said, "Then we branched to other fields. It has been worked out under the same format of the art division. We have expanded into the many divisions which make us unique." Theatre came next. Ballet was added in 1953 followed by science and math, and speech. Engineering was added next and the last division begun was journalism, which is in its third year. Gerald M. Carney, associate professor of music education, has been associate director of the camp since 1938. While Prof. Wiley conducts the concert bands, Prof. Carney conducts the concert orchestra. The camp superviser is C. Herbert Duncan, band director at Normandy High School, St. Louis. George Neaderiser and Richard Brummett are assistant directors. Cmdr. Charles Brendler, eminent conductor (retired) of the United States Navy Band, will be in the camp for the entire six weeks. He will be in charge of the symphonic band and serve as guest conductor with the concert band and symphony orchestra. He will also conduct sectional rehearsals of the various wind sections. Clayton H. Krehbiel, professor of choral music and music education, will conduct the choirs. The senior high music camp will offer training in two bands, two choirs, and a full symphony orchestra. In addition to these major musical organizations the camp offers private study, music theory, and work with small ensembles. The choirs will present a concert each Sunday afternoon in Murphy Hall. The bands will give a concert each Sunday evening on special stands built between Hoch Auditorium and Haworth Hall. Kenneth Bloomquist, assistant director of the KU band, will also serve as part-time director of the symphonic band. Wilmer Linkugel, associate professor of speech and drama and director of the speech division, expects about 30 campers in his division. Classes will be held in communication theory, argumentation and debate theory, and interpretation theory to help acquaint the students with the various aspects of oral communication. Since the first year, the camp has brought in special guest conductors for each of the concerts. The 220 campers which are expected in the art division will be able to study in the areas of crafts, painting, design, and drawing. Camp director is Marjorie Whitney, professor of design. Arvid Jacobson, associate professor of design, will be associate director. today up The campers in the speech division will be involved in a debate tournament and will have a chance to do some work in the radio and television laboratory. Daily classes for intermediate and advanced students will include: classic ballet, graduated toe work, partnering (adagio-Pas de Deux), character dancing, terminology and choreography, history of ballet and ballet French. Larry Long, choreographer and balletmaster with Ruth Page's Chicago Opera Ballet during the past four seasons, will serve as assistant director. Daily classes in classical ballet as well as in folk dancing of many nations will be set up for beginning students who have never had any work in ballet. Terminology and history of ballet also will be taught. Around 40 students will take part in this year's theatre division, according to Jed Davis, associated professor of speech and drama. The campers will produce "Lilium" by Ferenc Molnar which is the basis for the musical "Carousel". This year's art camp will have courses such as: oil painting, sculpture, weaving, cartooning, print workshop, natural drawing, jewelry, and art survey. Besides working on the main theatre production the campers will be attending classes in acting, makeup, and rehearsal and performance. Others may enroll in a technical theatre course which offers scene design, construction, lighting, and sound. Mrs. Marguerite M. Reed, choreographer, ballet mistress and first dancer of the Tulsa Opera Ballet company since 1949, will be the director of the ballet division. La Pizza 807 Vermont VI 3-597 Areas of study will be chemistry, sociology, physics, mathematics, micro-biology, physiology, radiation biophysics, and zoology. This will be the tenth anniversary for the science and mathematics division. During the first week the 100 campers will have a period of orientation in eight fields. For the last five weeks each participant will enroll in two intensive courses in the field of his selection. Dr. Delbert Shankel, associate professor of microbiology is the camp director. Offers GREATEST MENU SELECTION in Lawrence 30-Minute Delivery Service Guaranteed! Approximately 350 students in the sixth, seventh, and eighth grades will participate in the fifth year of the junior high music division. They will organize a band, an orchestra, and a chorus. Guest conductors will include Cmdr. Brendler (retired); Richard Brummett, director of instrumental music, Winfield, Kan., Junior High School, band; Loren Crawford, director of string orchestra, Pasco, Wash., Public Schools, orchestra; and James Hardy, director of choral music. Robinson Junior High School, Wichita, chorus. MAN-POWER AEROSOL DEODORANT Old Spice (Continued on page 9) GOT A MAN'S JOB TO DO? Get it done right. Get MAN-POWER . . . the new power-packed aerosol deodorant! MAN-POWER'S got the stepped-up penetration power, the 24-hour staying power a man needs. Goes on fast . . . never sticky . . . dries in seconds. Try it! 1.00 BY THE MAKERS OF OLD SPICE | SHULTON C Abington Book Shop, Phone in your Classified Ad New York Times Sunday Edition which generally arrives by Tuesday, noon. Inc. 1237 Oread, Carries the English, French, and German weeklies are also stocked. Hours: 10-10 Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. VI2-1007 1965 JAYHAWKER SECOND EDITION AVAILABLE MONDAY, TUESDAY, MARCH 15, 16 WEST ROTUNDA STRONG HALL 8:30 a.m.- 4:30 p.m. Also permanent receipts, covers, first editions available. Cash purchases only at Jayhawker business office, Kansas Union 3-5 p.m. weekdays. Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 15, 1965 "Cool-Head" a person (usually male) who is worldly,suave,dashing and debonair. . . He Knows he must always be at his best so he sends his shirts to Independent. INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners 9th St. & Miss. 740 Vermont Call V. 3-4011 for free pick-up and delivery service University Daily Kansan Page 7 MILFORD AND PASQUALL LATEST WINNER'S GAMES (Photo by Harry Krause) HEART OF AMERICA DEBATE WINNERS-Shown receiving the trophy for winning the debate tournament at KU last weekend are, left to right, Paul Thomas, Newton (on left), Jim Riley, Wellington (on right) both seniors at Washburn University. Prof. Charles Fulcher, debate coach at Washburn, is making the award. Washburn Debaters Win Midwest Contest Washburn University of Topeka won the ninth annual Heart of America Debate Tournament, held here this weekend, when they beat Wayne State University 2-1 in the finals. The Washburn team, consisting of Jim Riley and Paul Thomas, argued the affirmative side on the topic "Resolved: that the Federal Government should establish a program of work for the unemployed." Sandra Purnell and David Ling, of Wayne State, argued the negative. Fire in Union Excites Few Students walking or driving through the pouring rain Saturday night were undoubtedly surprised to see smoke pouring from the roof of the Kansas Union, flashing red lights, and firemen clambering onto the roof. A small fire broke out at 9:10 p.m. under a section of the roof when grease on a grill in the Prairie Room ignited. Flames shot up a chimney to the third floor and caused approximately $300 damage to the ceiling and the roof tiles. Quick thinking by Dan Peterson, senior, and Gail Weber, McCune senior, both employees of the Kansas Union, prevented the spread of the fire to other parts of the Union. AFTER RECEIVING a telephone call reporting smoke from the roof, Peterson ran up to the third floor, and noticed that the Elizabeth Watkins Room was filled with smoke. He then immediately went to the main desk in the lobby of the first floor, and informed Weber, who turned in the alarm. Peterson then grabbed the keys to the third floor, and opened up several doors, enabling firemen to get to the scene of the fire. Two trucks from the Lawrence Fire Department were sent to the Kansas Union Building. By 9:30 p.m. the fire was out. "The smoke was so heavy in there (Watkins Room) that I couldn't tell how extensive the fire was," commented Peterson. Guests attending a lecture, students watching television, and other students in the building were, for the main part, unaware of the fire. The Fire Department arrived so quickly that the majority of them did not even see the helmeted firemen. CITY FIRE CHIEF Sanders described the fire as starting in the sub-basement (Prairie Room), and "going up the pipes to the roof." He estimated damages at $300. At 9:35 p.m. the smoke had cleared from the third floor, and the fire was extinguished. Hanging tiles, and pieces of insulation were almost the only evidences left of the fire. Monday, March 15, 1965 Although the smoke had been concentrated in the Elizabeth Watkins Room, no apparent damage to the room or its fixtures and furniture was noted. Third in the tournament, which attracted 48 teams from 34 colleges, was the team from North East Oklahoma State College, and fourth, last year's winner, was South West Missouri State College. THE TOP 10 SPEAKERS were announced on Friday, the second-day of the three-day tournament. They were judged on their performance in the preliminary rounds. The two speakers from Washburn, Riley and Thomas, who were later to win the entire tournament, won first and second place, respectively. After the preliminary rounds Thursday and Friday, the top 16 teams were announced which were to compete in the elimination rounds. KU's best ranked pair, Sharon Mahood, Springfield, Mo., sophomore, and Jim Klumpp, Coffey-ville freshman, just missed the elimination rounds. They had a 5-3 record in the preliminaries, the same as the 16th team to go into the elimination rounds, but they had less points. Donn W. Parson, Kansas debate coach, when asked how he felt about KU's performance, said he was pleased with the results. "Our teams were the youngest there, and I feel very satisfied with our performance." Johnson to Discuss Voting Plan Congress, Nation Hear Message cept when delivering his annual State of the Union message or speaking on matters of grave national emergency. WASHINGTON — (UPD) President Johnson goes before Congress and the nation tonight to outline the voting rights measure he hopes will correct "a deep and very unjust flaw in American democracy." The Chief Executive accepted an invitation from congressional leaders to make an extraordinary appearance before a joint session of the House and Senate at 8 p.m. CST. Major television and radio networks plan live coverage of the event. Johnson's decision to take his case to Congress and the nation underscored the gravity with which he views the current civil rights crisis in Alabama. It is unusual for a president to address Congress personally ex- The proposals, hammered out by Atty. Gen. Nicholas DeB. Katzenbach and Senate leaders of both parties during the past week, would affect immediately 500 counties in the South where Negroes have been denied the right to ball.at. Part of a stiff federal program to outlaw discrimination against voter registrants in any state, the Johnson bill will propose tough penalties on state and local officials who attempt to block registration Top administration officials said today the bill has this central purpose: To get rid of all subjective tests used in some states to keep Negroes from voting. The new law would retain present age and residency requirements as determined by the states. Convicted felons, if not pardoned, and persons confined to mental institutions or declared by courts to be mentally incompetent also would be disqualified. Literacy tests used against some residents and not against others would be outlawed. JOB OPPORTUNITIES COLLEGE STUDENTS, Looking For Vacation Employment? Dude Ranches, Mountain Resorts & Hotels, For Inf. Write Rocky Mtn. P.O. Box 87, Kearney, Neb. Send Self Stamped Envelope. The Classical Film Series presents Le Million [1931] France A swift and witty comedy directed by Rene Clair Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Admission 60c Fraser Theater KAYNAN UNIVERSITY THEATRE presents Luigi Pirandello's "SIX CHARACTERS IN SEARCH OF AN AUTHOR" \* \* \* \* Friday & Saturday March 12-13 Friday & Saturday March 19-20 Curtain 8:20 p.m. *** Tickets: $2.40, $1.80, $1.20 KU ID Redeemable At Box Office For Reservations Call UN 4-3982 Murphy Hall Box Office Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 15, 1965 Wichita Edges by Cowpokes To Cinch Spot in NCAA Finals Wichita University downed the Oklahoma State Cowboys Saturday, 54-16, to capture the top spot in the N.C.A. regional play-offs. The Shockers turned the tables on the Cowboys and utilized a ball control game to hold the lead against the 'Pokes. This same sort of strategy had become almost a trademark for the Oklahoma State squad as they romped through the Big Eight teams for their first conference championship. The victory, which will send the Shockers to the N.C.A.A. finals competition, was sweet for the WSU squad. They made it to the semifinal competition last year but were edged from the finals by Kansas State's Wildcats. Wyandotte Wins Again, Wraps Up 2nd AA Title The performance, before a record crowd for a Class AA title game, rounded out the season for the Bulldogs with 24 victories and no losses. In addition, it was the eighth Wyan-dotte crown in 11 years and their ninth in class AA competition. Wyandotte high school of Kansas City continued their domination of Kansas basketball Saturday when they defeated McPherson in Allen Field House for the Bulldogs' second class AA championship in as many years. McPherson appeared to give the Bulldogs some trouble early in the game as they leaped to a 6-0 lead less than two minutes into the first quarter. Wyandotte appeared to overcome their early shooting and rebounding difficulties, though, and managed to capture a 10-9 lead with 2:27 remaining in the first quarter. Wyandotte only lost the lead two times after that. Both deficits were in the second quarter. Although the Bulldogs were on the right side of the score for the rest of the contest, the game wasn't really "in the bag" until the final gun. The Shockers were working against some strong odds as they went into the competition. They had lost All-American Dave Stallworth at the end of first semester when his eligibility ran out. In addition, Nate Bowman, 6-10 center, was dropped from the squad because of difficulties in the scholastic department. M. U. picked up five points for Lingle's victory and earned its other points on Gene Crewe's third-place finish in the shot-put; Earl Denny's fourth in the broad jump; Charlie Brown's fourth in the 60 and Steve Herndon's fourth in the high jump. Hadley finished far ahead of the pack in the two-mile run and dashed across the line with an 8:56.4 time. Central Snares N.A.I.A.Crown The swift-striking Central Ohio State squad flattened Oklahoma Baptist in the N.A.I.A. basketball championships Saturday in Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium. The Marauders breezed to their victory behind a hot 63 per cent shooting for the first half. Hayden of Topeka rolled over Wichita East, 62-49, to nail down third spot in the standings. Morgan State set an American mile relay record of 3:15.6 before a capacity crowd of 9.553 in Cobo arena. The previous record of 3:16 was set in 1957 by Villanova. The Shockers pulled a surprising switch from their usual active offense and went into a deliberate game style and seemed content to play catch until the sure shot opened up for them. Wichita, which had had trouble from the free throw stripe in Friday night's game, used the line to their advantage all during Saturday's contest. Free throws were especially useful in the stretch as the Shockers continued to capitalize on fouls by the Cowboys as the Pokes tried to gain possession of the ball. A crowd of 8,500 watched the Central Ohio team become the first undefeated team to win this national championship for small colleges. KU had one man finishing first in an event. Herald Hadley was first in the two mile run. Charlie Greene of Nebraska was responsible for the only other Big Eight first place show. He ran the 60-yard dash in :06.1. for KU by placing sixth in the all-around title. Dobbins racked up 21.5 points out of KU's final total. He placed sixth in the high bar, seventh in the floor exercises, eighth in the long horse, and tied for eighth on the trampoline. Dobbins also placed tenth on the parallel bars and the rings. Iowa State's gymnasts dethroned Nebraska as Big Eight conference champions with a winning total of 178.5 points. Host Colorado was runner-up with 126 points and defending champion Nebraska captured third with 112 points. KU placed fourth in the Big Eight championship gymnastic meet held Friday and Saturday in Boulder, Colo. KU accumulated 30.5 points behind Iowa State, Nebraska, and Colorado. Jayhawks Take Fourth in Big 8 Gym Missouri totaled 14 points for the meet. Finishing second behind the Tigers was a second Big Eight school, Oklahoma State, with 11 points. Kentucky State finished third followed by KU in fifth. The Missouri Tigers, with Robin Lingle finishing first in the 1,000-yard run, captured top honors in the first N.C.A.A. indoor track championship Saturday in Detroit. Three teams in the Big Eight did not compete. Kansas State took fifth place with one point. Missouri, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State did not appear at the meet. Kent Dobbins was high point man After leading the field for most of the race, Lingle broke the tape at 2:09.9. His performance was 1.7 seconds short of the American record set in 1955 by Pittsburgh's Arnold Sowell. MU Tops In Indoor Track Read and Use Kansan Classifieds JAMES BOMB Coming Wednesday announces the 1st part of the J. C. Penney plan to improve college wardrobes. I EVERYBODY DOES IT! (well, almost everybody) They let their laundry pile up. Everything goes into one big pile (usually in the corner) that grows and grows and Grows and Grows. After all, Nobody Likes to do laundry. Except US!! Free pick-up and service delivery LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 1001 New Hampshire VI 3-3711 Page 9 Couples Hear Priest Point Out Realities, Problems of Marriage By Joan McCabe In a speech at the first of six meetings in a Cana Conference, Father William Finnerty, director of Catholic Charities in the Archdiocese of Kansas, warned the audience of some of the pitfalls of marriage. The Cana Conference for engaged couples and those planning for marriage, is held at 8 p.m. on Friday nights at the St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center chapel at 1910 Stratford Road. The title of the conference is derived from the Biblical account of a marriage at Cana of Gallilee when Christ helped an embarrassed bridegroom by changing water into wine so there would be enough for all of the guests. FRIDAY NIGHT Father Finnerty told the group that often in his counseling experience with married couples he finds himself asking, "How in God's world did these two people get together? Day after day you see the most unbelievable combinations," he continued. One of the major factors contributing toward divorce is that "sometimes after two or three years or even less the couple find that they haven't a thing in common." Father said. Because of this, he stressed that there should be much more discussion before marriage of all aspects of it. "Marriage should be a way of becoming a more complete person. This completeness should be evident in all of the little things which the husband and wife do for one another. Marriage is a vocation; it is a call to perfection," the speaker commented. He stressed that too little emphasis is put on the importance of the marriage relationship today. "The HUSBAND should consider his wife as "my means of perfection, whether she has burned the toast or forgotten to plug in the coffee pot. The more perfect you help your partner to be, the more perfect you yourself will become," Father explained. "The married couple should view their relationship as the joy of heaven, far too many see it only as a living hell." Father stated. "It is one thing to speak about love and quite another to be loving in all situations." "God created male and female and gave them certain distinctive traits. Somehow the roles have gotten all mixed up. Often the wife assumes much of the authority of the husband, who in turn becomes a mousy little creature who is barely human anymore." Father continued. ANOTHER FACTOR which contributes to unhappiness in some marriages is that "the average human being will not allow himself to Law Book Awards Won by 15 Students The KU school of law has announced the fall semester 1964 American Jurisprudence Award winners. These are awards received by the highest ranking class member of each individual course offered in the law school. Earl B. Shurtz, professor of law, said that the winners will receive one volume of a multi-volume law encyclopedia. The volume received by the student will be the one most related to the course from which it was won. In other words, if a student ranked first in a class in agency and partnership, he would receive the volume concerned with agencies and partnerships. The choice of winners is entirely up to the discretion of his professor. THE AWARDS are presented by the Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company, who are publishers of the volumes presented. The awards are presented to all class winners of all law schools which are accredited by the American Association of Law Schools. There are more than 100 accredited schools. The Lawyers Co-operative is one of the largest law book publishing companies in the country. Miss Hazel Anderson, law librarian, said each volume received by the students would be valued at more than $20. THE WINNERS ARE: Terry J. Music Camp— (Continued from page 5) The director of the journalism division is John Knowles, assistant professor of journalism. Other instructors for the camp session will be James Dykes, professor of journalism; Calder M. Pickett, professor of journalism; and Darrell Holt, assistant professor of speech and drama. (Continued from page 5) A new addition to this division will be a class in photography. As in the past two summers the students will spend some time gaining actual newspaper experience in the news-editorial and advertising departments of the Summer Session Kansan. Classes scheduled for this summer include: newswriting, feature and editorial writing, camp newspaper staff work (the camp will publish three issues of the Kansan Kamper, exclusively a camp newspaper), radio and television production, advertising and business, and creative writing. Wuester, Centralia second year student; Robert I. Guenthner, Augusta first year student; Alan Lee Roff, Winfield first year student; Thomas M. VanCleave, Kansas City second year student; Richard F. Haitbrink, Salina second year student; Mrs. Karen I. Johnson, Kansas City third year law student; Michael Holland, Russell third year law student, and John Richeson, Leawood third year law student, "AFTER MARRIAGE, reality becomes extremely clear and often very difficult to cope with," Father explained. OTHER WINNERS are: Wayne Wallace, Wichita third year law student; Richard L. Zinn, Wichita second year law student; James Whittier, Mission Hills first year law student; John Light, Lawrence first year law student; Donald F. Martin, Kansas City first year law student; Charles Menghini, Pittsburg third year law student, and Edmund Michael Boyle. Shawnee Mission third year law student. become aware of shortcomings in the other person before marriage. Everything is very phony. The couple rarely see one another as they really are," he said. "COMMUNICATION is most important to a marriage." Father commented in conclusion. "You must share with one another until you can say things in ways that you know the other person will understand and until you can tell when they do not understand. "Finally, remember that there is a great deal of difference in acceptance and approval. There may be things about the other person which you do not approve, but you must be able to accept them and the other person as he or she is. A mutual exchange of attitudes and feelings at the present is the most important aspect of your relationship," he concluded. "ATTENTION Juniors Sophomores T. W.A. T. W.A. is looking for a sophomore or junior man for a summer personnel trainee position in the Kansas City area. Men who feel that they are interested and qualified should come to Room 202 Summerfield Hall to sign for an interview time and pick up a T.W.A. Employment Application before March 18. Interviews: Thursday afternoon, March 18, in Room 202 Summerfield. An Equal Opportunity Employer Monday, March 15, 1965 University Daily Kansan Demonstrators March In Sympathy for Selma Approximately 200 students, Lawrence citizens and children marched down the streets of Lawrence Sunday afternoon in a quiet demonstration in sympathy of the present voter-registration drive in Selma, Alabama. In pairs, the long line of Negro and white demonstrators walked quietly from Ninth Street and Massachusetts to the City Courthouse. When the marchers reached the courthouse, they congregated around the steps to hear Rev. Garrett Henning of St. Lukes AME Church, who delivered the devotional. He outlined the reasons for the sympathy march. "We are here to indicate in this community our support of the efforts being made by our brothers in Selma," he said. He explained that the death of Rev. James J. Reeb of Boston in Selma last week was the main reason for the march. An inter-faith service was planned for Sunday, at 1:00 p.m. at St. John's Catholic Church. Part of the purpose of the service was to raise funds to send students into the area of Jonesboro, La., to rebuild churches. Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS COPA $400 ALSO $250 TO 1975 WEDDING RING 50 Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. KEEPSAKE DIAMOND RINGS Ad Must Be Brought In With Garments NOW... EXECUTIVE SHIRT SERVICE 25c EACH OFFER GOOD THROUGH MARCH 19, 1965 25c EACH NC LIMIT TROUSERS, SKIRTS PLAIN SWEATERS CAREFULLY DRY CLEANED AND BEAUTIFULLY PRESSED 49c EACH Men's Beautifully Laundered DRESS SHIRTS Men's or Ladies' 2 Piece 4 for 88c Tues., Wed., Thurs. ONLY SUITS EACH $100 One hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANERS ONE HOUR MARTINIZING 1407 Massachusetts (Across from Junior High School) THESE SPECIALS NOT GOOD ON SATURDAY ONE HOUR MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING Page 10. University Daily Kassan Monday, March 15, 1965 1960 (Photo by Harry Krause) JOSEPH R. PEARSON #1 TEAM—Pictured from left to right are: Tom Winston, Dallas, Texas, senior; Mike McDaniel, Wichita junior; Jim Nickum, Wichita senior; and Tony Bengal, Independence senior. Art by KU Instructors On Exhibit in the Union The group of paintings hanging in the southern lobby of the Kansas Union immediately strikes the eye of the passer-by, with its lively and dramatic tones. The 15 abstract paintings are the efforts of several KU art instructors, and will be exhibited through March 31. "The Ridge," an oil by Raymond J. Eastwood, professor of drawing and painting, features silhouettes of drifted sand dunes . . . soft, swirled brown tones are accentuated by sudden, sharp edges of darker brown, all against a blue sky. The peaks rise sharply to the skyline. Randall Sadler, instructor of drawing and painting, has created a lively piece of work, entitled "Almost a Man." This painting suggests a movement from chaos to maturity, with the sweeping lines of multicolored shapes, especially the large black lines. Small dribbles of red-orange paint suggest pain and a wounded soul. ANOTHER CANVAS by Sadler is entitled "A Matter of Time-Why Not?" The heliotrope cloud that extends across the upper portion of the canvas suddenly develops long tentacles . . . suggesting the aftermath or the possibility of a great but creeping force. Like a scene from the wasland of a science fiction movie, the center figure rises out of the white background, many-colored and mysterious. "Still Life," by Nick D. Vaccaro, professor of drawing and painting, features bold red patterns and straight, strong lines upon a white Official Bulletin Foreign Students: Sign up today in the People-to-People office, Kansas Union, for the trip to Abblene and the Elsen- Museum-Library and western town. TODAY Graduate Physics Colloquium. 4:30 p.m. 155 Mallot. "Spin Lattice Relaxation" 155 Mallot. S.U.A.'s Coffee Forum, 4:30 p.m. Prof. Michael J. Sweeney, University Univ. Komp Room, Kansas Univ. Lecture. 7:30 p.m. Wolfram Eberhard. Usage of Use of Folklore in U.S. Forum Room Student Peace Union Open Meeting, 7:30 p.m. Kansas Union. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW Catholic Masses 6:45 a.m. and 5 p.m. Saturday Confessions before and during mass A. Ph.A Film Series, 12:30 p.m. 324 Malet American Society Class (Intensive Eng- lish Center), 7 p.m. Speaker: Charles Warriner, Sociology in American. 24N Strong. Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7. "The Nature of God." Paul Steeves Christian Science College Organization, 5 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Everyone invited. background. The lines are varied in their appearance, despite the apparent straightness and simplicity of the bright red lines. Inquiers Class, 7:30 p.m. Canterbury House, 1116 La. SWIRLS OF BLUE spirals rise and surround "The Blue Circle Machine," by John Talleur, professor of drawing and painting. The colored woodcut brings to mind a mythical, magical machine, operating all alone in the still of an evening. Humanities Lecture, 8 p.m. Prof. Henry H. H. Remak, Fraser Theater. Dwight Burnham, professor of drawing and painting, has woven soft strands of pastels into a pattern of line, yet, the soft forms of pink and beige lend "Faith" a rainbow-like effect. These forms give the soft effect of clouds and of zephyrs in a gentle breeze. "Sidetrack VII," done in oils and pigment, by Robert Wright, instructor of drawing and painting, startles the viewer with its massive strokes of red. The red forces are beside softer tones of lavender and pale tones. Solid panels of green-grey and one solid line of black give the painting a foundation of solidity, which wars with the slashes of red and lavender. Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Wesley Foundation Community Worship 215 p.m. Methodist Center, 1314 Gread. PROF. VACCARO adds another note to the exhibit with his "Portal." A red-brown pillar and line of a wall stretch before a satiny-blue sky. The painting is largely sky, broken only by the solid, heavy lines of the pillar and the wall. College Bowl Holds Finals This Sunday Two Joseph R. Pearson Residence Hall College Bowl teams will compete Sunday afternoon for the KU College Bowl championship as a result of yesterday afternoon's semi-final activity. JRP team No. 2 defeated Templin team No.1, 295 to 240, thus gaining entrance to the finals. JRP TEAM NO. 1, undefeated in College Bowl activity, beat JRP team No. 2, 365 to 295. The latter's record is five wins and one loss. Templin defeated Miller Scholarship Hall and Sellards Scholarship Hall 215 to 135 and 330 to 140, respectively, before being eliminated yesterday in the double elimination tournament. Members of JRP No. 1 team are Tom Winston, Dallas, Texas, senior; Mike McDaniel, Wichita junior; Jim Nickum, Wichita senior, and Tony Bengel, Independence senior. MEMBERS OF THE JRP team No. 2 are Terry Joslin, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Robert Baruch, University City, Mo., junior; Larry L. Hopkins, Lincoln freshman, and John S. Caldwell, Dallas, Texas, freshman. The moderator for the finals March 21, will be Professor Eldon Fields, of the political science department. Fall GPA's Show Women Topping List Listed below are the general standings of the KU undergraduates for the fall semester, 1964 as compiled by the Office of the Registrar: All University ... 1.41 All Women ... 1.57 All Women Scholarship Hall ... 2.05 All Sorority ... 1.81 All Women Residence Hall ... 1.36 All Upper-Class Women Residence Hall ... 1.42 All Freshman Women Residence Hall ... 1.31 All Men ... 1.30 All Men Scholarship Hall ... 2.03 Fraternity ... 1.41 All Men Residence Hall ... 1.17 Freshman ... 1.16 Freshman Women ... 1.32 Upper-class Women ... 1.70 Freshman Men ... 1.04 PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS The Modern Book Forum presents Dr. Walter Meserve and his discussion of The Egoist by Bonaventura Tecchi "Modern Man's Spirituality and Morality" 4:30 Tuesday March 16 Forum Room, Kansas Union Free Coffee 1962. (Photo by Harry Krause) JOSEPH R. PEARSON #2 TEAM—Pictured from left to right are: John S. Caldwell, Dallas, Texas, freshman; Larry L. Hopkins, Lincoln freshman; Robert Baruch, University City, Mo., junior; and Terry Joslin, Kansas City, Mo., junior. Clocks Exhibit The Spooner-Thayer Museum of Art is featuring a collection of 16th to 19th century timepieces. About 50 items are on display, and the timepieces consist of four types: Chain weight, wound, water, and sundial. The collection was given to the museum in 1952 by Dr. Maurice L. Jones. Articles reflect the period styles of architecture, and were collected from both Europe and the Orient. The exhibit will continue through the semester. MAD AT MELVILLE? IT'S A LOT EASIER WITH CLIFF'S NOTES! WHALE Don't stumble through the literary classics. CLIFF'S NOTES will help you make better grades! These study aids give you a clear, concise summary and explanation, chapter by chapter.CLIFF'SNOTES are now being used by high school and college students throughout the United States. There are over 100 different CLIFF'S NOTES covering the literary classics. $1 TEXAS AUTOMOBILE INSTITUTE CHIPER BROOK at your favorite bookstore or write: BETHANY STATION LINCOLN, NEBRASKA 68505 Cliff's Notes Last 2 Days... Granada THEATRE···telephone VI 3-708 ANNE BANCROFT PETER FINCH *&* JAMES MASON The Pumpkin Eater Starts WEDNESDAY M.G.M presents MARGARET RUTHERFORD MURDER AHOY Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Last 2 Days! Paul Newman in "THE OUTRAGE" WEDNESDAY ONLY! AN EVENING WITH DR. SIGMUND FREUD For adults only The boldly penetrating drama of the man who tore away the world's mask of sexual innocence! "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST!" N.Y. Times JOHN HUSTON'S PRODUCTION OF FREUD "HIS LIFE, HIS LOVES, HIS SECRET PASSION" MONTGOMERY CLIFT SUSANNAH YORK LARRY PARKS SUSAN KOHNER Shows at 7:00 & 9:00 Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS University Daily Kansan FOR SALE Nikon F photomic, 1.4f, 50 mm, lens, like new $440 camera, will SI for $250. See at apt. 69. The Oaks, SI 3-7032. 3-19 1955 Ford 6 cylinder, standard transmission, radio and heater, good transportation, fuel economy as well as low payable, $100.00 Benson s Ae Soes. 1902 Harper, phone VI 3-1626. 3-19 HI-r1 - Save on nationally advertised Hi-fi components. New equipment in factory sealed cartons with factory warranties. Call VI 3-4891. 3-15 BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMIUMS! Occidental Time Life: conversion. Go-Back, and Move-Over options. Age 18 = $33.90 = $10,000. Age 20 = $34.40 = $10,000. Age 22 = $34.70 = $10,000. Call Wes Santee at VI 31-2116 for details. tf Western Civilization notes. 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Experienced secretary will type term papers, law briefs, theses, etc. for students. Especially familiar with legal and business terms. Fast and accurate. Reasonable rates. Call Marsha Goff at VI-12577. Former Harvard and U. of Minnesota report on these. PHONE VI 3-7207 term papers. Theses by experienced ystist. Phone VI 3-6299 after five. t Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. Will do ex ects on new academic journals or carbon ribbon typewriter. Betty Muktak 40 Indian, or call VI 2-0901. t Will do typing in my home. Accurate reasonable rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at VI 2-0210. tf Experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing. Speak and communicate well and languages. Quick and reasonable Electric typewriter. Call VI - 3976. tr Cypist, experienced with term papers theses and dissertations, will give your typing immediate attention with electric machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Mar- lene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048 Experienced typist wants theses, term-papers, and dissertations to be typed on electric (pica type) typewriter. Please Call Pat Beck at VI 3-5630. tt Experienced secretary would like typing in her home, with new electric typesetting, and accurate service. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Lancett at VI 2-1188. Experienced typist will do dissertations manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., VI, 3-7485. tf Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will be tested on typewriters or these Experienced. Electric typewriter. CALL Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8262. MISCELLANEOUS Monday, March 15, 1965 Math tutor B.A. degree in math from KU. Experienced in tutoring geometry, algebra, calculus and analytic geometry. Call VI 3-0927. 3-15 Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-Q ribs that grandma and grandpa can eat, try ourrons per order, or $2.60 per slab. Hours: 11:00 to 11:00 p.m. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-9510. 3-31 CHSWINN BICYCLES-service all makes parts, and accessories, $1.46, tuber 7fc, pedals, pair, luggage racks and backpacks, SEE BICYcles at 7tn and Miech at 7tn. LOS ANGELES $0.585 BIRSTUBE: Students favorite dark beverage and students favorite light beverage from older men's ware. Sandwiches. Singen uni trinken" German party Room available. 3-15 JR, SR. AND GRADUATE STUDENTS MONEY AVAILABLE ON PERSONAL SECURITY. PHONE, CHUCK ADKINS- BENEFICIAL FINANCE AT VI 3-841 friends coming this weekend? Looking for a place with good food at reasonable prices. THE HILLCREST BOWL RESTAURANT. Plenty of free parking th and Iowa Rent electric, standard, and portable typewriters. Repair all makes of electric, business, and farm machinery. Own business Equipment (formerly Business Machines). 15 E.8th. VI 3-0151. tf PARTY TIME? Building available for parties, dances, and meetings. PHONE Ralph Freed at VI 3-3995. tf it's great for a date. Take her bowling at *Tullens Crest Bowl*. Finest lanes in the state. Visit the **Sat**, **Sat**, and *Sun*. Also, Mon., Tue., and Fri. 9:00 p.m. at *Tullens Crest Bowl*, 9th and 10th. Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon.-Thu-Fri, or all day Sat, or Sun Phone VI 3-6231 Latin student of 5 years wishes to tutor Latin. $1.50 hr. Contact Louise Conley at VI 3-9123. 3-17 Attention: All persons interested in self defense training classes utilizing many of brows and smashes used in James Bond movies, contact Bob Monk VI *ST 71-302* FOR RENT Apartment, modern and furnished. 3 rooms and kitchenette. $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from Union. 1st floor, parking. VI 3-7955. tf Apartment at 1232 Louisiana for couple or single. Modern. Call VI 3-4217. 3-18 Furnished house for rent or lease in Eudora. Prefer three to four boys, 3 bedrooms, wall to wall carpet, fireplace, Available immediately. Phone HA 2-5063. Emery Apts, 1423 Ohio, 12 one bedroom luxury apts, April 1st, $85.00. Featuring w-w carpeting, disposal, range and ovens, refrigerators, furnished or unfurnished. Teachers or graduate students only, no children or pets. VI 3-8190. 3-16 PARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30-60 people, jugke box, liquid refreshments and supplies. Contact Don at the Gaslight Tavern for reservations on CALL VI 3-1086. **tf** LOST Phone VI 3-0326 after 5 p.m. tf Crescent Heights and Oaks Apartments—Luxury two-bedroom apartments. See at 1821 W. 24th, or CALL I V 2-3711. tf CAR REPAIR Lost—set of keys with half dollar attached to key ring, $5 reward, contact Frank R. Adams, 647 Ellsworth. 3-16 Engine swaps and Transmission change overs. We sell and install speed equip- ments, we install speed equip- ments for drags, we lopies or street, Farmers Garage, 837 Connecticut, I 3-2906. Tune up-Engine rebuilding-Complete general mechanic work (guaranteed work). Most reasonable prices in town. Open 7 evenings a week. Free estimates on all parts and labor. Farmers Garage. 837 Connectue, VI 3-2906. ti CLASSIFIED AD RATES 1 DAY $1.00 3 DAYS $1.50 5 DAYS $1.75 - DX Products Complete Car Care - Firestone Tires - Mufflers & Pipes - Tune Ups - Brake Service - Wash and Polish ASK ABOUT THE DX TRIAL BOND GUARANTEE DX Servicenter 6th & Michigan VI 2-9598 Open 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Daily 7:30 to 9 Sunday -Business Directory- Open 7-11:00 Sun, thru Thurs. 7-2:00 a.m. F, Sat. & Sat. Marvin E. McDougal For All - Complete Auto Servicing See or Call SERVICE YOU CAN TRUST! Your Insurance Needs 1244 La. VI 2-0186 - Dependable Cars If we don't have what you want— we'll call it! Wagner's Texaco 23rd & La. VI 3-0138 Tune-up, Body Repair & Repaint, Automatic Trans. Service Wheel Alignment Lawrence 10th & Mass. VI 2-0247 Mobil — Goodyear Auto Service For Your BEST Haircut Sailor - 4 Chairs - 8-6 Mon.-Fri. Come to - 8-5 Sat. PLAZA Barber Shop 1804 Mass. VI 2-9462 In Dillon's Plaza 24 OZS. - 35c MUGS OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY Louise's Bar 1017 Mass. Robert A. Lange VI 3-1711 838 Mass. JIM'S CAFE Wholesale Diamond Rings Call 24 HOUR SERVICE (TUES, THRU SUN.) - Brake Adjustment . . . 98 - Lubrication . . . . $1.00 - Automatic Transmission 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694 Page Fina Service Discover Quality - Wheel Alignment Southridge Plaza In Apartment Living 2350 Ridge Court VI2-1160 and DRY CLEANING COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY OPEN 24 HRS. HONN'S Across From The High School 19th & La. VI 3-9631 For the best in — NewYork Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPERANCE For the best in — ● dry cleaning ● alterations ● reweaving 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established - Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages China gute cookies Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 15, 1965 HELP-KU Campaign Nears $20.000 Goal By Jacke Thayer Nearly $16,000 has come from approximately 1,000 donors thus far in Lawrence's annual HELP-KU drive, according to Todd Seymour, assistant secretary of the Greater University Fund (GUF). The drive, first conducted in 1961 by Lawrence citizens, began Jan. 28 this year. Odd Williams, Lawrence state legislator, is chairman. FUNDS COLLECTED in this year's drive are already in use, according to Seymour. As of Feb. 1, 705 students had borrowed from the cumulative fund, and another 75 have borrowed from the $15,000 collected since that time. "Before the drive is over, we hope to get donations from a little under 1400 people and collect a total of nearly $20,000." Sevmour said. Originally the drive was scheduled to end March 15, but "that will not be possible," according to Seymour. Usually the drive lasts approximately two months. "Our best year by far for collecting the biggest amount was 1963 when we got $19,000." Seymour added. THE DRIVE is broken into several collecting units—campus, professional, business and residential areas are all covered and some telephone solicitation is used, according to Seymour. "During the last five years, Lawrence residents have contributed $85,000 to the loan fund through this program and we hope to bring that total to over $90,000 before the end of this year." Sevourm said. The average amount of student loans from the fund during the past four years has been $191.10. The small loan was for $50 and on a very short-term basis, Seymour said. THE GREATER UNIVERSITY Fund, "right arm" of the Endowment Association, helps with work of the HELP-KU Fund in Lawrence and promotes donations of all amounts, which provide immediately available funds for loans, scholarships, fellowships and educational facilities. SEYMOUR said there were somewhat similar programs for KU conducted in other counties, but not on K.C.'s Festival Has 8 Hours of 'Non-Stop' Jazz The smooth, sweet, and hot sounds of twenty-two jazz groups will echo for eight straight hours during the second annual Kansas City Jazz Festival March 28. The festival will be held from 3 to 11 p.m. in the Municipal Auditorium. While one group is setting up, another will be playing during the eight hours billed as "Non-Stop Jazz." Over 200 musicians, with the 22 groups are expected to participate. A record crowd of local and regional jazz fans is expected to gather in the city's Municipal Auditorium to enjoy the continuous music. The winning group from KU's Oread Jazz Festival, to be held the day before, will be one of the featured groups at the Kansas City Jazz Festival. Last year the winning group, the West Texas State group, was invited to the Festival, where it played with noted jazzman, Woody Herman. ONE OF Kansas City's 25 disc jockeys will introduce each of the groups, which will include the talents of Count Basie and his orchestra, Dick "Mr. Trumpet" Ruebesch, and his Dixieland band from Milwaukee, and the Oread Jazz Festival headliner, Claire Fischer, outstanding pianist from the West Coast region. TICKETS MAY now be obtained by writing to the Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, or by buying them at the Auditorium Ticket Office on the day of the concert. Some of the groups expected to appear include: The UMKC Drummers, the Mike Ning Trio, the Kansas City Kicks Band, composed of a group of musicians who have formerly played with big name bands across the nation, and Don Rice and the Omaha Jazz Lab Band. the same scale, and not always for loan purposes. "I have not heard of anything comparable to this program at other schools. Oklahoma University has a local program but it is far removed from this (type of drive)," Seymour added. IRVIN YOUUNBERG, executive secretary of the Endowment Association, commented. "This type of program is unique to Lawrence and KU. I know of no other school where the citizens of the local city give the school so much support to help out the students. They don't do it in Columbia (Mo. — University of Missouri), Norman (Okla. — University of Oklahoma), Lincoln (Nebr.)—University of Nebraska), or Manhattan (Kansas State University). One For The Road! "KU students often don't realize what a big help this program is," Youngberg concluded. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS 1964 Jaguar, XKE, Hardtop $4,725 1964 M G B, Red Pirelli tires 2,395 1964 M G B, Hardtop, Black 2,695 1964 Sunbeam Alpine, Hardtop 1,858 1964 W G Hidget, White 1,445 1964 W V Carriageable $1,235 1964 V W Station Wagon 995 1964 Morris Mini Cooper (HOT) 995 1964 Porsche, 1600 Normal 1,200 1960 Mustang, Convert., 4 sp. $2,995 1968 Rambler, V-8, Air Cond. 750 1958 Cadillac Fleetwood 995 1958 Front 4 dr. Hardtop, Big Engine 495 1962 Honda, 250 CC., real clean ... $ 450 We will trade for most anything — especially if it doesn't eat. BRITISH MOTORS 1116 W. 23rd Lawrence, Kan MAUPINTOUR Travel Hour Free Admission Every Tuesday — 3:00 to 4:00 AT THE Little Banquet Restaurant ON THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER (West 23rd Street) Informal Showings of Exciting Color Movies on Vacation Spots Throughout the World. This Week's Feature Scandinavia and Ireland Ford Motor Company is: development Toby Y. Kahr B.S., Columbia University The road to management is a two-way street at Ford Motor Company. On one side of the street, the college graduate brings to us his talents, abilities and ambitions. Then it is up to us to ensure that he realizes his full potential. In addition, there are frequent reviews and analyses of individual performance in which promotions, salary increases and developmental moves are planned. These programs are so important that each division and staff has a special section responsible for administering them. One of the people who helps oversee these programs is Toby Kahr. His experience is also an example of how a college graduate benefits from these programs. There are several methods we use in guiding his development. One method is periodic evaluations. These reviews measure performance and—more importantly—chart the best route for an employee to pursue in developing his capabilities. These performance reviews are prepared at least once a year by the employee's immediate supervisor, reviewed by higher management and discussed with the employe. In 1963, Toby completed our College Graduate Program. During these first two years, he gained a depth of experience in Company policies involving all aspects of employee relations. Currently he supervises the Personnel Planning and Training Section of our Steel Division. In essence, Toby is helping to implement the program that led to his own career development. Programs such as these are intended to make certain that your performance at Ford Motor Company will be recognized and will determine how fast you'll move ahead. The development of future managerial material is one of our fundamental goals. See our representative when he visits your campus. Something good may develop for you. THERE'S A FUTURE FOR YOU WITH... Ford The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan MOTOR COMPANY An equal opportunity employer KU Professor Was Costa Rican President By Lacy Banks A visiting KU professor has had the distinction of being a national president, a prolific author and a university professor — all at the same time. He is Visiting Professor Ablardo Bonilla, a former honorary president of Costa Rica. Prof. Bonilla is presently teaching four advanced Spanish courses, three literary and one conversational, at KU. In an interview last night, Prof. Bonilla reminisced his ten-day experience of June, 1960 when he was President of Costa Rica. Already vice-president of the republic 1958-62, Prof. Bonilla was president on the Costa Rica chapter of the Congress of Philosophers. Costa Rica hosted the Inter-American Convention of this organization and Mario Echandi, national president, took a leave of absence so that Prof. Bonilla could host the convention as national president. Latin American leaders often do this to show honor and respect to their professors. Prof. Bonilla's honor lasted for ten days, and although he passed no extensive legislation, he "accepted and carried out his obligation in a warm spirit of gratitude." "The President needed rest," Professor Bonilla said. "He was overworked so he called me and gave me the charge. The main problem that I had was being the national President and a professor at the same time. "I am not a politician," he continued. "I am a teacher above anything else, but that obligation was an honor to the Congress of Philosophy and to myself. I had to accept it." THE CONGRESS of Philosophy is an inter-American organization, Professor Bonilla said. It has two main aims: to establish an American not European philosophy; and to analyze various elements of the philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead, English philosopher and mathematician. The inter-American congress comprises 21 Latin-American Countries, he said. Prof. Bonilla has written five books, including a novel. For his literary and educational achievements he won the highest Spanish award for achievement that one could win — the "Grand Cross of Alfonso X. 'the wise.'" Alfonso was a 13th century Spanish king who did much to develop Spanish prose. PROF. BONILLA'S BOOKS are, "History and Anthology of Costa Rican Literature"; "Philosophy of Law"; "Conscience, Truth and Beauty"; the "Crises of Humanism," and his novel "The Cloudy Valley." Commenting on the first book, Seymour Menton, professor of romance languages, said, "This book is considered by many as the best on the history of Costa Rican literature. It is the only book of its kind that has been written since 1927." The 64 year-old visiting professor was born and educated in Costa Rica. He received his doctorate from the Law School of the University of Costa Rica. He has been a professor of Spanish literature for 24 years. "KU STUDENTS attending the University of Costa Rica on the junior-year-abroad program considered Prof. Bonilla the best teacher at the University," Professor Menton said. Commenting on American students, Professor Bonilla said, (Continued on page 3) Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 62nd Year, No.100 Ad Policies Amendment Goes Before ASC Tonight Amendments to Human Rights Bill No. 7 will be among legislation discussed by the All Student Council at its meeting tonight. The amendments concern advertising policies in University publications. Mike Miner, Lawrence senior and ASC chairman, and Bob Stewart, Vancouver, B.C., senior and student body president, said yesterday they had been working on additions to the bill. Stewart said the additions will be introduced as a substitution to the present amendment. The ASC could then vote on the bill tonight, he said, as the amendment would already be on the floor. MINER LISTED THE PROPOSED substitutions: - No student publication shall accept advertising which includes references to discrimination in its content. - A student publication shall carry a statement saying that all "goods, accommodations and services advertised are offered to students of all creeds, color, and national origins." - No publication shall accept advertising for accommodations, goods or services unless they are offered equally to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. - The final provision states that the University Human Relations Committee, composed of students, faculty, and administrators, shall hear all cases involving discrimination and shall lay down binding decisions. GEORGE TANNOUS, Lebanon junior and vice-chairman of ASC and chairman of the Committee on Committees, said that his committee will recommend that the Council defeat a bill to establish a Discriminatory Board. Tannous said the recommendation will be made because the Human Relations Committee (UHRC) established by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, is presently fulfilling the duties and purposes of the proposed ASC Board. Miner and Stewart repeated this idea and added that such a Board would only be a duplication of the present UHRC. Miner explained that the amendment endorsing the UHRC is to be attached to Bill No. 7 "to define its powers properly." STEWART NOTED THAT in drawing up the new amendments he and Miner had contacted the various groups for their opinion. These groups included the CRC, Kansan Board and UHRC. "I'm sure that all the parties involved know what the bill is and have expressed their opinion one way or another." Stewart said. Tannous said he hopes that any of the legislation which is passed will be satisfactory to all people concerned. He expressed his own desire to hear any further discussion on the pros and cons of the (Continued on page 8) Temperatures will drop into the low 20's tonight. Tomorrow's expected high is in the upper 30's, the Topeka Weather Bureau predicted. Skies will be overcast with strong shifting winds. Weather THE BIRD MARCH WINDS—Spring breezes have hit KU at last, and the best solution to the problem of windy days is kite-flying. But, putting a kite together is a problem in higher mathematics for some KU women. Bill Manners, Glen Head, N.Y., (Photo by Harry Krause) senior (center) assists Sue Ramberg, Palatine, Ill., junior; Joan Olson, Omaha, Neb., junior; and Tirsh Wulf, Morton Grove, Ill., junior, with the construction of their kite. Johnson Proposes Voting Rights Bill WASHINGTON—(UPI)President Johnson today swung the full weight of the federal government behind a drive to make good the promise of equality—unkept for a century—given the American Negro. In an often eloquent address before an extraordinary joint session of Congress Monday night, Johnson told the lawmakers and the nation that "the time of justice has now come. No force can hold it back." Even as he spoke, a small band of pickets paced in front of the White House, as they have for a week, singing and chanting slogans urging federal intervention in Alabama. JOHNSON URGED Congress to work days, nights and weekends to pass a voting rights bill which would guarantee "the dignity of man and the destiny of democracy." "There is no cause of self-satisfaction in the long denial of equal rights of millions of Americans. "There is no cause for pride in what happened in Selma. "BUT there is cause for hope and for faith in our democracy in what is happening here tonight." Johnson said, "The real hero of this struggle is the American Negro. "His actions and protests—his courage to risk safety and even life—have awakened the conscience of the nation," Johnson said. "His demonstrations have been designed to call attention to injustice, to provoke change and stir reform. He has called upon us to make good the promise of America." Chancellor OK's Change UHRC Lists Ad Rule Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said this morning that he has just received from the University Human Relations Committee (UHRC) its recommendations relating to the matter of commercial advertising in student publications. The basic recommendation is that "all student publications will henceforth reject for publication commercial advertisements for housing, goods, services, and employment opportunities that are not available to all students on the basis of their individual merits. "Since student publications are directly responsible to the All Student Council," the Chancellor said, "I am transmitting the Committee's recommendations to that Council for its consideration of appropriate legislation, with my request that legislation embodying the recommendations be passed as soon as possible. "PERSONALLY, I find the recommendations forthright and appropriate. It is my understanding that the Council has under discussion an amendment to its Bill No. 7, on Human Rights, which is concerned with this matter. When the Council convenes this evening, it will have my letter and the Committee's recommendations before it." The recommendations of the University Human Relations Committee are as follows: In keeping with the principle of the University of Kansas that no rights or benefits shall be denied to anyone by reason of race or creed, the University Human Relations Committee recommends that the following policy be adopted by all student publications and implemented without delay; ALL STUDENT publications will henceforth reject for publication commercial advertisements for housing, goods, services, and employment opportunities that are not available to all students on the basis of their individual merits. The implementation of this policy will require the following steps: This policy will be announced by the student newspaper and made a part of the permanent format of all student publications which accept advertising. Commercial advertisers will be informed of the policy at the time of the placement of the advertisement with the publication. (Continued on page 8) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 16, 1965 0.15 0.9 Thank You, Lawrence A unique program of University fund-raising was begun in 1961 by the Help-KU fund drive. The program is aimed at the Lawrence residents, who so far, have contributed $85,000 to KU student loans. According to Irvin Youngberg, the executive secretary of the Endowment Association, it is one of the few programs of its kind in the Big 8. Lawrence residents are to be commended and thanked for their overwhelming financial support of KU. Approximately 1,780 students have borrowed from this fund since it began. UNIVERSITY COMMUNITIES, according to some, are supposed to be antagonistic toward the university students. The example of Lawrence residents certainly brings to light the fallacy in this judgment. The University and the students owe a great deal of thanks to those who have contributed to this fund. KU students have an unusual advantage in going to school in a community which is as vitally interested in the students as are the Lawrence residents. Leta Roth The People Say "HEY! WHAT'S THIS? WHAT'S goin' on here? I don't understand. Why ya' doin' all this? What for? What's the reason? Huh!" "Oh" "We have stopped asking and we are demanding!" Well. "Oh," that makes much sense. It's wonderful national coverage. The only coverage. Now if a guy went to KU he could dig out some old DAILY KANSANS and discover an article all about integrationalists demanding Chancellor Wescow to sign a paper. But if a guy went to KU chances are he wouldn't have a reason to do so, because he wouldn't have learned, yet, about the demonstration until he switched on the television—national coverage—at the end of the day! Well, congratulations on the national coverage. "We have stopped asking and we are demanding." Just maybe nobody will ever know what the purpose really was. That would be the most fortunate possibility for a conclusion. Sort a' face saving. MY God! What would people think if they knew that the demonstration was, basically, to force a person to sign a paper? Would not people think that the integrational problem in Kansas is a few hundred years behind that of Alabama? Would not people think that Kansas integrationalists have no conception, whatsoever, of the fact that all the papers have been signed, and that the remainder of the Negro's fight for freedom must be won with guts? Would not people think that, indeed, the Kansas integrationalist is a little bit YELLOW, sitting in front of an office? Well, now come on, when you really get to the point, isn't it rather trite to continue all this soul searching? Is there really anything left to talk about? It's all done, isn't it? The talking, I mean. The decisions have been made. They're not hard. All that's left is work. What about the Firebird? What about the boys in Selma? Wonder what they think? I'll bet there're some guys who'll just swear up and down that papers with ink on them aren't bullet proof! Well, let's start all over again. First, hope that people will think the recent demonstration was noble, (don't snicker) Second, try to find a noble purpose for the next one (like for support of the one in Alabama, for instance). Third, organize the next one, so it will be more than just a show (like the cameramen wanted). H. S. Dreher Salina junior To the Editor: I WRITE FROM BEYOND THE campus scene and from an admittedly prejudiced point of view on the subject of social fraternities and sororities. Though I am a white, anglo-saxon protestant with some college experience, I have never understood why anyone would want to belong to a social fraternity or sorority. Too many of their members seem to feel that belonging to such a group establishes, recognizes, or proclaims their superiority and privilege. This "better-than" attitude has long been a poison in the community of man, and is in fact the very basis of the white segregationalist's position. I question whether a civil rights campus movement which seeks in any way to extend the influence of an attitude of "superiority by virtue of belonging" is actually in keeping with long range goals in civil rights. I submit that rather than clamoring to become a part of such groups, civil rights advocates might better work toward the abolishment of such groups from the campus scene. Sincerely, Martha D. Hazeltine Overland Park, Kan. Sincerely. Dear Sir: I want to clarify a few erroneous points reported in the article concerning the SPU challenge for debate in the Thursday, 11 March, UDK. First, the debating team which I organized did not accept the SPU challenge—we challenged anyone (including SPU members) to debate the topic: "Resolved: that the United States should remain in Viet Nam." To the best of my knowledge, SPU did not accept the challenge at that time, and I left my telephone number so that they or anyone else might contact me. In reply to Hook's statement, "If these people do not feel that they are qualified to debate without a lot of preparation, why do they write so vehemently in the University Daily Kansan?", I must say that Mr. Hook has a genius for distorting the truth, using hypothesis for fact, and resorting to "argumentum ad hominem" for lack of logic. Our group was very well prepared for debate, but the 24-hour notice of challenge from the SPU made prior commitments inescapable for members of our team. Moreover, none of our people have written anything to the UDK. I would ask Mr. Hook how many weeks he has been preparing for this debate, but I already know. Sincerely. Sincerely, Brian B. Turner Warrensburg, N.Y. Graduate student Dear Sir. WRITING IN ANSWER TO Miss Leta Roth's editorial, 'A.S.C. Strikes Again,' I suppose that I should entitle this letter, 'Leta Roth Smears Again.' Nothing is more amusing to an outsider than to observe journalistic solidarity, as back to back they ward off all measures which they deem interference, in the sacred name of what Miss Roth calls journalistic ethics, or as the Kansan Board more realistically phrases it, 'legal and economic risks.' In turning to the substance of Miss Roth's editorial, it should be pointed out that there was only one amendment on this issue brought before the A.S.C., and that those who phrased it were well aware that the second part was already Kansan policy. In fact, it was copied verbatim from a statement of Kansan policy, the intent being not to belittle the efforts of the Kansan Board, but rather to recognize the steps that they had so far taken, and to incorporate such steps into the A.S.C. Bill Book. As such, Miss Roth's statements about the A.S.C. bothering to do research etc., would seem to be petty and unnecessary, though interestingly indicative of the state of her mind. In defense of the Kansan's right to accept no dictation with regard to advertising policy, Miss Roth is forced into a blantant and unnecessary reductio ad absurdem, when she states that the logical conclusion of this action would be the dictation of news and editorial policy. She further compounds this error by citing the example of a City Council trying to control a metropolitan newspaper—but she appears dubious that the collective minds of the A.S.C. will be able to project this far. Speaking personally, though I feel able to so project, I completely fail to see the relevancy of her example. The connection between a City Council and the metropolitan newspaper is at best a tenuous one, the connection between the U.D.K. and the A.S.C. is stated quite clearly on Page 48 of the A.S.C. Bills and Constitution, and is also appended to the Kansan Board's own Constitution: "The Kansan Board is hereby authorized to govern its activities through its own Constitution, provided that such activities shall not infringe upon the established policy of the All Student Council in the protection of Student rights." It is in the protection of such Student rights that the amendment was introduced, and the issue deserves more serious consideration than merely attempting to bury it under a mass of verbiage couched in terms of an infringement of journalistic ethics, or still worse by claiming that there are economic risks involved. "Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers," is a phrase which by its very nature ought to apply to all readers of the U.D.K., thus sparing students the embarrassment of complying with this adage, only to be rejected on the basis of the colour of their skins. Hughes 14-70 Stoke-on-Trent, England Graduate student Sincerely. Hugh Taylor Dailij Hänsan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889 became weekly 1904 truweekly 1905 111 Flint Hall UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16. 1912 Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Leta Roth and Gary Noland Co-Editorial Editors LOW LOW PRICES PISTOLS AND GUNS OF ALL KINDS SPECIAL IMPORT MINIMUM GUN CONTROL BILL GUN LOBBY ONLY $12 TAXES A HOME THE LITTLE EQUALIZER © 1935 THE RELOCK THE WASHINGTON POST "Don't Point That Thing At Me!" BOOK REVIEWS MEMOIRS BY HARRY S. TRUMAN, consisting of YEAR OF DECISIONS: 1945, and YEARS OF TRIAL AND HOPE: 1946-1952 (Signet, $1.25 each, or boxed $2.50). As we go into the 20th anniversary of Harry Truman's becoming President, just as World War II was entering its last weeks, it is fitting that handsome paperback editions of his autobiography be published. The two books appeared first in 1945, and University students will note with interest that Dean Francis Heller of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences played a key role in working with Truman on the books. Truman's role in history remains a matter of debate; the man himself was extremely conscious of how he would be rated, and historical sensitivity runs throughout this work. Those whose minds are made up and won't be confused with the facts, those who have been brought up to hate Truman and don't care to hear the other side, likely won't care for the "Memoirs"—if they'll read them, indeed. The approach is highly personal, and chatty, in the Truman vein. Truman never thrust aside his folksy Missouri background, or his cockiness. The latter, as a matter of fact, comes through in many cases. Truman was sure he was right, and he doesn't care who disagrees. It is curious, in a way, that one volume encompasses one year (though it also has the early background on the man), and that another takes in the sweeping events of 1946-52. We are provided a first-hand view of coming into the Presidency, the disputes with Ickes and Wallace, the Potsdam conference, the decision to drop the atomic bombs on Japan, the iron curtain speech of Churchill, the Truman Doctrine and the Marshall Plan, postwar communism witch-hunting, 1948 and the celebrated victory over Dewey, the Korean War and the firing of MacArthur. This is important, vital history. Its literary form is never significant, and even Truman fans may become impatient with the man, and his occasional arrogance. But, like him or not, Truman participated in some of the critical events of American history, and his place in history—about which he talked so much himself—is going to be an important one.—CMP ASSASSINATION!, by Ben Abro (Crest, 50 cents); SYLVIA, by E. V. Cunningham (Crest, 50 cents); BLACK AMBER, by Phyllis A. Whitney (Crest, 50 cents). A threeseam of books attuned to the sixties. "Assassination" is a suspense story whose author, says the publisher, is still not known to the company. It's all about a plot to murder one of the powerful leaders of Europe. Very Hitchcockish. "Sylvia" is the current movie designed to exploit the dubious charms of Carroll Baker. It isn't a murder mystery but it is a mystery, about a private detective hired to see if a rich man's fiancee is all he hopes her to be. "Black Amber" is by a writer who has achieved previously in the field of suspense. She sends her heroine to Istanbul, a city of many mysteries, and to an exotic villa on the Bosporus. There the fun begins. * * * THE BLACK OBELISK, by Erich Maria Remarque (Crest, 75 cents). Remarque has returned to the world of "The Road Eack," his thirties successor to "All Quiet on the Western Front," for the setting and era of "The Black Obelisk." The time is the twenties, the setting is Germany getting ready for the coming of Nazism. The mood is lighter than that in the Remarque novels of recent years, and it may suggest the impact that Brecht, particularly with "The Threepenny Opera," had on young German intellectuals of that period. His people are desperate and lost, but they are able to look at themselves with some understanding. The story, unfortunately, is told in the first person and present tense. This gets pretty cumbersome after awhile. KU Professor Was - Page 3 二 角 University Daily Kansar "Students here have more time to study. Almost all Latin American students have to work, but on the average, American students can and do devote more time to study. American students are also more disciplined than Latin American students." (Continued from page 1) PROFESSOR BONILLA is very optimistic about his own future as well as that of his country. "I am presently working on two books that I hope will be finished in six years," he said. They are: "Science and Beauty" and the "Spanish American Culture." "I have great hope for the future of Latin American countries, their education, their economy," he continued. Foreign Students: Sign up today in the People-to-People office, Kansas Union, on the trip to Abilene and the Eisenhower Museum-Library and western town. American students also have better facilities with which to study, he said. For instance, the University of Costa Rica has about 5,000 students and its library has only about 100 thousand books. In contrast, KU has over 1 million books, he said. He said that the need for the cultures of the United States and Official Bulletin Graduate Foreign Students: Those who are leaving for home this summer and who are interested in applying for a June Seminar in Williamsburg, Va. should see the Office of the Dean of Students, 228 Strong. TODAY American Society Class (Intensive English Center), 7 p.m. Speaker; Charles Warriner, Sociology in America. 24N Strong. Commentators Meeting, 7:00 p.m. St Lawrence Student Center. Inquiers Class, 7:30 p.m. Canterbury House, 1116 La. TOMORROW Humanities Lecture, 8 p.m. Prof. Henry H. H. Remak, Fraser Theater. Wesley Foundation Morning Prayer. 7:15 a.m. 8:20 a.m. Methodist Center, 1314 Oread 1314 Oread Spanish Club "Ateno." 4:30 p.m. 11 Fraser, D. Damcach, Univ. of the Andes, "Jose Asuncion Silva, a modern poet." Carillon Recital, 7:00 p.m. Albert Classical Film, 7:00 p.m. "Le Million." Fraser Theater. Timely Topics, 7.00 p.m. "Christianity in Argentina" Lawrence, Student Center; Amada, Lawrence, Student Center Sigma XI Lecture. 7:30 p.m. Dr. Mice- field, Stanford Univ. 411 Summer- field. Fine Arts Honor Recital, 8:00 p.m. Swarthorat Recital Hall. Latin American countries to understand each other is very important in this age of political competition Geology Lecture; 8:15 p.m. Dr. Lewis M., Univ. Cline, of Wisconsin 426 Lindley. ..., cline, Univ. of Wisconsin, 426 Lindley. tulled for Wed., March 17, by Teacher's Appointment Bureau; Missouri, Kansas Schools, elementary and secondy, 117 Ba. This understanding would do much to build strong cultural defenses against any foreign threats to the freedom of this hemisphere, he said. Prof. Domingo Ricart, Spanish instructor and last year's KU director of junior-year-abroad program in Costa Rica, said, "Prof. Bonilla is the outstanding figure in humanities at the University of Costa Rica." AS FOR KU "I am enjoying my stay here," he said. Prof. Bonilla will be here only this semester. He will return to Costa Rica in June. "It took a lot of persuasion to get him here," he said. "But the University of Costa Rica was so gracious to lend him to us; we are were fortunate with his presence. Many Americans believe that it is a favor to the foreign professors to bring them to our country; but here, we are receiving the treat," Ricart said. Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS VERONA $300 ALSO TO $1650 Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. "I THNK THE close relation between KU and the University of Costa Rica is a very good thing." Prof. Bonilla concluded. "I have already met many of the KU students who have participated in the junior-year-abroad program, some of them were in my classes. Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. AUTO WRECKING NEW AND USED PARTS Tires and Glass East End of 9th Street VI3-0956 One For The Road! 1964 Jaguar, XKE, Hardtop ... $4,725 1964 M G B, Red Pirelli tires ... 2,395 1964 M G B, Hardtop, Black ... 2,695 1964 Sunbeam Alpine, Hardtop ... 1,895 1964 Midget, White ... 1,045 1962 V W Carrier ibis ... $1,295 1962 V W Station Wagon ... 1965 Morris Mini Cooper (HOT) ... 995 1965 Porsche, 1600 Normal ... 1,200 *** 1965 Mustang, Convert, 4 sp. ... $2,995 1968 Rambler, V-Bir, Air-Cord ... 750 1969 Cadillac Fleetwood ... 995 1969 Ford 4-dr. Hardtop, Big ... 495 *** 1962 Honda, 250 CC., real clean ... $ 450 We will trade for most anything especially if it doesn't eat. *** BRITISH MOTORS 1116 W. 23rd Lawrence, Kan IN PERSON Peter, Paul and Mary TOM PERRY UNIVERSITY THEATRE Saturday, March 20 Municipal Arena Kansas City, Mo. 8:30 P. M. SEATS NOW SELLING at ADDITORIUM BOOFXOFFICE Tickets $25.00 or 150 tickets to Municipal Auditorium Boxoffice, enclose stamped-addressed envelope. presents Luigi Pirandello's "SIX CHARACTERS IN SEARCH OF AN AUTHOR" - * * * - * * * Friday & Saturday March 12-13 Friday & Saturday March 19-20 Curtain 8:20 p.m. Tickets: $2.40, $1.80, $1.20 KU ID Redeemable At Box Office For Reservations Call UN 4-3982 Murphy Hall Box Office Audiotronics • Stereo • Hi-Fi • Tuners • Speakers • Changers • Amplifiers 928 Mass. VL 3-8500 KU The Pit St. Patrick's Day at the Southern Pit Join in the Newest KU tradition. Follow the crowd to the Pit on St. Patrick's Day. GREEN BEVERAGE Southern Pit Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 16, 1965 When You're In Doubt, Try It Out--Kansan Classified Professor Prefers Honesty To 'Grapevine' Pans, Praise An award-winning professor from Indiana University has found a way to communicate with his students. Henry H. H, Remak, a visiting Humanities lecturer, will speak on "The Controversy in Comparative Literature" at 8 p.m. tonight in Fraser Auditorium. Remak gave his views yesterday concerning an Indiana University practive of having students evaluate their professors. "You're going to have student evaluation whether you like it or not," Remak said. "This is what I call the trickle down or grapevine method." "IT IS APPALLING to note that this is sometimes the only way a teacher is evaluated," he said. Speaking for the German department at the University of Indiana, Remak said evaluation sheets were passed out to students on a voluntary basis. "We make sure this is done anonymously," he said. "WE LEARN A lot and find students are very fair," he said. "The main value is to the individual teacher. It's between him and his own conscience." Remak said that these sheets are kept by a student until grades are in and then they are turned over to the teacher. Remak said he received about a 60 to 70 per cent response from students who are asked to participate. "I am suspicious of a teacher who doesn't want to know what students feel about him," he said. THESE EVALUATION sheets never go to a higher authority, Remak said. The only case where this might be done is when honor students are asked to comment on instructors after graduation. Concerning student-teacher relations, Remak said that because of university expansion and more students, something must be done in the area of student-teacher cooperation. "In my department, each teacher must see every student once a semester. There is a necessity for more informal relation and more intellectual fun." he said. REMAK SAID that too much importance was placed on grades. "Students are studying harder than ever before, but they are given no chance to use free time for reading or discussing," he said. In discussing both research and classroom work, Remak said the administration usually decides on the time spent on each. "Research must be an important factor in teaching, however, teachers must find a way to carry it over into classroom work," he said. FEDERAL AID to education was another topic which Remak believed was important for the American educational system. "Many people fear federal control. However, safeguards against federal control can be set up," he said. Remak suggested the federal government encourage schools to meet certain standards at which time monetary assistance would be given. SPECIAL ISSUE! THE YOUNG STARS IN SPORT! SPORT MAGAZINE SPORT Tony Conigliaro Ron Hunt Dean Chance Jerry Lucas Charlie Taylor Ron Ellis Cassius Clay Randy Matson Rico Carty Jack Nicklaus Bill Bradley Pete Gogolak Don Schollander Every month, enjoy a bigger, better, more action-packed SPORT! Get more in-depth profiles, exclusive interviews and thrilling color photographs. April SPORT 19TH YEAR AS FIRST MAGAZINE FOR SPORTS...NOW ON SALE! SPORT DENVER, CO. - LOS ANGELES JIM SCHNEIDER BARRY BURKE RONALD HOLMES PETER GRAHAM WILLIAM MAYNARD MICHAEL TURNER ROBIN MAYNARD BRANDON WILSON STEVE KLEIN JERRY BRUNO SAMMY CARET RICKIE RICE JOEY RICE KENNY REID HAL LEWIS MARK PETERSON COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY TIM WILSON LOS ANGELES ANGELS ALEXANDRA MARKLE JOSEPH ALFRED GREGORY MARK SMITH JOHNSON MARK SMITH JOHNSON MARK SMITH JOHNSON MARK SMITH JOHNSON MARK SMITH JOHNSON MARK SMITH JOHNSON MARK SMITH JOHNSON MARK SMITH JOHNSON MARK SMITH JOHNSON MARK SMITH JOHNSON MARK SMITH JOHNSON MARK SMITH JOHNSON MARK SMITH JOHNSON MARK SMITH JOHNSON MARK SMITH JOHNSON MARK SMITH JOHNSON MARK SMITH JOHNSON MARK SMITH JOHNSON SPORT Campu WEST Lang for festive times, for fabulous places... tier upon tier of soft, supple rayon crepe that shapes the new tunic silhouette, sans sleeves. Blue, peach, black, 5 to 15 sizes $36 The Modern Book Forum presents 1424 Crescent Road Dr. Walter Meserve and his discussion of The Egoist by Bonaventura Tecchi "Modern Man's Spirituality and Morality" 4:30 Tuesday March16 Forum Room, Kansas Union Free Coffee Graduating engineers & scientists: Join IBM's new computer systems science training program Become a problem-solver and advisor to users of IBM computer systems in areas such as: - real-time control of industrial processes - communications-based information systems - time-shared computer systems - graphic data processing - computer-controlled manufacturing systems - management operating systems - engineering design automation All engineering and scientific disciplines are needed. IBM will give you comprehensive training, both in the classroom and on the job. Openings are available in all principal cities of the U.S. For more information see your placement director or call the nearest IBM branch office. If you prefer, write to W. M. Taylor, IBM Corporation, 20800 Center Ridge Road, Cleveland, Ohio 44116. IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer. IBM DATA PROCESSING DIVISION --- Tuesday, March 16, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Patronize Kansan Advertisers Wyandotte's Allen Most Valuable Man LAWRENCE—(UPI)—Unanimous choices Lucius Allen of Kansas City Wyandotte and Jim McMullen of Topeka Hayden led the Class AA high school all-tournament basketball team which was announced today. Allen, a 6-foot-2 senior forward. was named the most valuable player in the state tournament which saw Wyandotte nail down its second consecutive championship Saturday night. Rounding out the first team, chosen by sports writers and broadcasters covering the tournament, were Don Nelson of Wyandotte, Tom Pyle of runner-up McPherson and Doug Jackson of Shawnee Mission West. Second team choices were John KU football coach Jack Mitchell announced yesterday that John Zook, all-state football player from Larned, has signed a Big Eight letter of intent to attend KU. The '6'4", 210-pound lad played offensive fullback and defensive end. Zook is a 17-year-old senior at Larned high school. He is an A- student. Zook is also an outstanding basketball player. He was recently named to the Class A all-tournament team. He averaged about 18 points a game in the tournament. During the regular season, he averaged 24.3 points at center. Mitchell Signs All-State Player from Larned Mitchell said Zook would play both football and basketball at KU. Moonaw of Coffeyville; Ulysses Stokes of Wichita East; Ron White of Pittsburg; Jaye Ediger of Hutchinson and Gerald Arbogast of Wyandotte. WICHITA, Kan. —(UPI)— Jim Ryun, Wichita East High School track sensation, announced Monday his intention to enroll at Oregon State University next fall. Oregon Gets Ryum Ryun, America's only sub fourminute high school miler and a member of the U.S. Olympic squad last fall, is in his senior year at East. A Wake up Service for Pennies a Day MILLIKIN'S S.O.S. SERVICE Student Typing & Editing Complete Mailing Program Economical Mimeographing 1021 1/2 MASS. VI3-5920 Letterheads printed,1,000/$12.00 Lowest Rate in Town Executive Type Mailing A. S. BENNIE College Men need a Specialist to help them get the most for their insurance dollars. That's because college men's insurance requirements differ from those of non-college men. I specialize in life Insurance for college men, with College Life's famous policy, THE BENEFACTOR, designed expressly for college men. And since college men are preferred risks, The Benefactor is priced to sell exclusively to college men. Like to know more? Call me. No obligation, of course. *DWIGHT BORING World, ready or not the Senior Class is on the move again. This time it's Saturday March 20, 7-12 p.m. at the RED DOG INN for the SENIOR CLASS PARTY. 2020 Harvard Lawrence, Kansas Phone VI 2-0767 representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA Dwight Boring* says... ... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men Playing the music for Seniors to move by will be THE DIMENSIONS. During inter mission Jackson Powell will entertain with a Woody Allen Monologue. Admission: Seniors—Free (very reasonable) Seniors' Dates—$1.00 (reasonable) 65 Beverages: Your Favorite—(very reasonable) Set Ups—(reasonable) Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 16, 1965 Soviet Scholar Says Experts Must Break Intellectual Wall The concept of 'Kremlin Wall' has too long delimited political science in the Soviet Area. Professor Robert S. Sharlet, University of Missouri political science professor, made this comment last Friday in his talk: "Beyond the Institute and Over the Kremlin Wall: Kremlinologists and Comparatists." In his plea, Prof. Sharlet said, "Kremlinologists must break away from narrow confines and should begin seeking and forging new intellectual alliances beyond the traditional triad of political science, history and political ideas." PROF. SHARLET studied at the Juridical Faculty of Moscow University last year as an American exchange scholar. He received his graduate training in the Department of Political Science and the Russian and East European Institute of Indiana University. Kremlinologists have been confining themselves to the narrow field of Soviet ideology and decision-making process, in trying to explain the Soviet society, he said. "We must overlap the 'Kremlin Wall' and begin a serious study of IN HIS DENOUNCEMENT of the communication media in the U.S., which according to him exposed its ignorance of the Soviet system, during and after Khrushchev's fall. Prof. Sharlet said, "These so called 'Soviet experts' based their evidence from the 'typographical errors' in Pravda and from interviews at the glittering cocktail parties in various embassies." the 'Soviet society' itself.' There has to be a shift from the study of 'decision making' to the study of 'policy implementation' and 'legal regulation,' he said. Explaining his theory, Prof. Sharlet said, "The Kremlinologists have tended to take one single institution like the Communist party, from its beginning to the modern day, and later use this to come to the conclusion that this is the decision-making system in the Soviet Union. Their knowledge of the Soviet System has come up only to the 19th century. "Later they started using some of the rules of the Communist party, several rules of the Soviet Constitution and from this decided that this is the structure and function of the modern Soviet society. But again they have come up only up to the 1880's." IN THE MODERN approach, he said, it is essential to start from the bottom, that is to go directly into the Soviet Society itself and then work up to the 'State' and the 'Party.' "When we begin to study the 'policy implementation,' that is the 'Society,' we have a great wealth of materials that are not only readily available but are also verifiable," he said. Prof. Sharlet continued, "The 'State' apparatus and the 'implementation policy' are observable and verifiable. In fact, the Soviet government is using various methods to popularize them." The rise of Stalin brought a halt to the process of the withering away of the state, Prof. Sharlet said. Prof. Sharlet added that Stalin knew that once the industrialization of Russia was achieved, the withering away of the state would once again begin. On Cultural Exchange Yugoslavian Actors Visit Campus KU will be the home of six Yugoslav drama students and their instructor for the next month. The group, three men and three women, arrived here late Wednesday night after a 20-hour journey by air from Belgrade. Predacl Bajetic, instructor at the Theatre Academy of Belgrade, said the group was here as part of the Eastern European Cultural Exchange program through the State Department. "It's all very official," he said, "but we regard ourselves as being here on a friendly basis." BAJCETIC SAID the first contact with KU was made through the International Theatre Institute, an organization affiliated with UNESCO. The visiting students are all studying at the Theatre Academy of Belgrade, one of the three state theatre schools in Yugoslavia. The oldest of the students, Petar Kralj, 24, from Belgrade, has finished his training and only has to pass his examinations before being a fully fledged professional. OTHERS IN THE group are 21-year-old Slobodan Djuric from Bos- na, a third-year student, dark-haired Jelisaveta Sablic from Belgrade, and Neda Spasojevic from Montenegro, also a third-year student. The two students in their final year are Zafir Hadzimanov and red-haired, Zdravka Krstulovic. All the students have done "gymnasium," the European equivalent to high school and two years of college. After this training they went to the Theatre Academy which has a four-year course. HIS ACADEMY HAS several branches such as drama, dance, and decorative art. The students concentrate on the Yugoslav repertoire the first two years and then go on to the Russian, American and other international repertoire. AT KU THE GROUP is staying at Hashinger and Eldsworth. A B Γ Δ E Z H θ J K Λ M Fraternity and Sorority Jewelry $ ^{N} $ - Guards - Mugs - Kings * Pins Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" - Lavaliers - Crests 809 Massachusetts Frederick Whitehead, Pratt senior, plans to study for a Ph.D. in English at either the University of California at Berkeley or the University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. A KU senior is one of 104 national winners of Danforth fellowships, which are probably one of the nation's most valuable awards. "I was quite surprised with the award. It's a great honor and I certainly had not expected it," Whitehead said. Last week Whitehead was announced as being one of 15 KU seniors who had won Woodrow Wilson fellowships. These fellowships are for one year of graduate study. The Danforth fellowships provide both tuition and living expenses for four years of graduate study. Whitehead is the ninth KU senior to receive a Danforth fellowship in the past five years. Does Whitehead have any special "trick" he uses in studying? He says he uses the usual study method. He reads the assignments and then reviews. The 104 national winners were chosen from 1265 candidates nominated by more than 500 colleges. They are awarded on the basis of "intellectual promise, personality congenial to the classroom, integrity, genuine interest in religion, and high potential for effective college teaching." The Danforth Fellowship program was established in 1951. These 104 national winners jom 474 others now in graduate study Two hundred and sixty-six more are already teaching in 130 colleges in the United States and 21 institutions abroad. Danforth fellows are nominated by liaison officers appointed by the president of each accredited college. A Reading Committee reviews the applications and selects candidates to be interviewed. The final KU Senior Is Danforth Winner La Pizza 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 NOW OFFERS YOU A COMPLETE DINNER FROM OUR SPECIAL THEATER MENU AND CHOICE OF SHOW FOR ONLY $2.00 Offered Monday-Thursday SAVE $.50 - $1.00! Thursday March 18 Dr. Jack Brooking Will read Poetry of 4:30 p.m. Thursday Tennessee Williams Music Room In Kansas Union Free Coffee Free Coffee SUA Poetry Hour selection is made by the Advisory Council to the program. Abington Book Shop, Inc. 1237 Oread, Carries the 1 New York Times Sunday Edition which generally arrives by Tuesday, noon. English, French, and German weeklies are also stocked. Hours: 10-10 Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. VI2-1007 ENDS TONIGHT Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5784 ANNE BANCROFT PETER FINCH and JAMES MASON The Pumpkin Eater Starts TOMORROW! M-G-M presents MARGARET RUTHERFORD MURDER AHOY VARSITY AR Attractions ENDS TONITE "THE OUTRAGE" E VARSITY ARTRACTIONS WEDNESDAY ONLY AN EVENING WITH DR.SIGMUND FREUD For adults only The boldly penetrating drama of the man who tore away the world's mask of sexual innocence! "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST!" N.Y. Times JOHN HUSTONS PRODUCTIONS FREUD "HIS LIFE, HIS LOVES. HIS SECRET PASSION" MONTGOMERY CLIFT SUSANNAH YORK LARRY PARKS SUSAN KOHNER Shows 7:00 & 9:00 $1.00 ATT you Bob Kin in Find Now dan clud men call Lost tach Frai SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE 1964 Honda. c-100. $175.00. Good condition. See at 1341 Ohio, Apt. D. 3-22 famly cencel a of Gibson guitar, J-50 model, adjustable bridge, clear plastic upper pick guard, bead, neck full resonant sound, hard neck, neck included. Call: 3-22 Smith, VI 2-3343. W D ES, ION" Tires—1000 x 14 white sidewalls. Two sets. One set is Atlas snow tires, which will go for $5 apiece. The second set is $26 (apiece) Riverside white sidewalls. They will go for $15 apiece. the other of 4) is $49. Call Bob Monk-VI 3-7102 (tf Stereo component system. Dynaco stero preamp, two dynaco 50-watt power amps, stephens speakers, garrard changer. All perfect. Call VI 3-4891. 3-22 1955 Ford 6 cylinder, standard transmission, radio and heater, good transportation, ample storage, pendable, $100.00 Benson's Auto Sales, 1902 Harper, phone VI 3-1626, 3-19 Nikon F photomic, 1.4f, 50 mm, lens, like new $49 camera, will sell for $250. See at apt. 649, The Oaks, I 3-7032. 3-19 BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMIUMS! Occidental Term Life: conversion, Go-Back, and Move-Over options. Age 18 = $33.90 =$10,000. Age 20 = $34.40 =$10,000. Age 22 = $34.70 =$10,000. Call Wes S安妮 at VI 3-216 for details. tf Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive text, materials needed for classes. Formerly known as the Thiets Notes. Call VI 3-1428. $4.50. Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL V1 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, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. tt BE THE LEADER OF YOUR PACK: Harley Davidson Sportster K. 750 cc, new clutch, and new brakes and tires. THIS IS NO HONDA. For further information about this beautiful machine CONTACT Moni Belot at VI 3-0700. Students, why throw money away on rent when you can own a 1962 Marlette 10 x 50, modern, two-bedroom mobile home. This home is clean and in excellent condition. For further information CALL RI 8-973 or RI 8-9916. if PORTABLE STEREO: Admiral's Finest— two carrying units, 1 for turntable and 1 for speaker systems (2 tweeters, and 2 full range woofers) $195 new. Will sell for good offer. CALL: Rusty Calkins at VI 3-7521. THE STABLES now open every day- Serving steaks, chops, sea food, sand- sandwiches, management, new atm shops. Party rooms available. Phone vi 3-9644 140 W. 7th. Ht NEED A BAND? 30 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM. PHONE V1 2-2100 u 1963 French Renault, 4-speed transmis- sion with an excellent condition. Call VI 3-6462 3-22 CHINA-Noritaki, Mayfair design. New, never used or even removed from pack- ing. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk V 3-7102. tt Buy the perfect all-round guitar. For travails picking, blue-grass, blues, or folk, back and sides, spruce top, ebony fingerboard. Like D-28, V3-16, evenings. Garrard "type A" never used, still in original packing box, $50.00 - Tape recorder, Akal M6, semi-professional 4 track stereo for $220.00 -195 Chev. V8 4 bbl, stick. $275.00. Call Lee Garratt, VI 2-3965. 3-17 One owner 1963 Dodge Dart. take over payments with small equity to owner. Monday thru Friday VI 3-12am 5:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday and day sat. Sunday. 3-17 "Great Books of the Western World." latest edition must sell. VI 3-8505. 3-18 1956 Olds, 88; actual mileage, 31.000; Cream color, black interior, rear speaker system, white wall tires. $350.00—excellent condition. VI 3-1174. 3-22 Now you can hear a variety of excellent King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL 1-2791. ti 1957 Buick 4-door station wagon, radio and heater, power steering, power brakes, white sidewalls, call UN 4-3427. 3-16 ENTERTAINMENT ATTENTION PARTY THROWERS: Do you want the Beatles, the Kingsmen, Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL VI 2-1791. tt Now you can hear a variety of excellent dance bands on stereo demo tapes, including the Fabulous Blades, the Norse Kings, the Jay's, union and non-union, call VI 2-1791 LOST Lost—set of keys with half dollar atr Frank R. Adams, 647 Eldsworth, 3-16 TYPING Page 7 6 years typing experience plus background in proofreading enables me to guarantee accuracy on college papers. New electric typewriter equipped for interchangeable type sets. Mrs. Berndt, 801 Michigan or VI 2-0400. tt Experienced typist wants typing in home. Reasonable rates, prompt service. Phone VI 2-3356. tf Typing done by experienced secretary for 25c each double spaced page. Call Ethel Henderson, 2565 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122. 3-31 experienced typist. 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electrie typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable ALL Mts. Barlow, 2407 Yale, H. 2-1648 experienced typist. Former secretary win type theses, term papers, reports, etc. accurate work. Restenable rates. Electric typewriter, Gestaton Duplicator. Mrs McEldowney, 2521 Alabama St. Phone V) - 3-8568. Theses only on Royal Electric Pica Typewriter. CALL Mrs. Fulcher at VI 3-0558. tf Experienced secretary will type term papers, law briefs, theses, etc., for students. Especially familiar with legal and business terms. Fast and accurate. Reasonable rates. Call Marsha Goff at VI 1-2577. Former Harvard and U. of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports and theses. PHONE VI 3-7207. tt term papers, Theses by experienced yplist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. ti Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. Will do exertions at states. Electric carbon ribbon typewriter. Muskrukt 40 Indian, or call VI 2-0091. Will do typing in my home. Accurate reasonable rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at V1 2-0210. Tuesday, March 16, 1965 Experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing. Speak and english engineering and languages. Quick and usable Electric typewriter. Call VI 81-37620. Typist, experienced with term papers those and dissertations, will give you a copy of your paper and machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Mariene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048 Experienced secretary would like typing in her home, with new electric typewriter and new fast and accurate service. Reasonable fees. Call Mrs. Lattecaster at VI 2-1188. Experienced typist wants theses, termpapers, and dissertations to be typeed on electric (pica type) typewriter. Please Call Pat Beck AT vi 3-5630. tf Experienced typist will do dissertations manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., V1. 3-7485. tt Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will be tested on theses. Experienced. Electric typewriter. CALL Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8262. Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-R qibs that grandma and grandpa can eat. try ours on a table in order, or of 50 per slab. Hours: 11:40 am to 11:00 pm. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-9510 3-31 MISCELLANEOUS *ARTY TIME?* Building available for rentance? Changes on TV 3-3995. Albany Floor: VI 3-3995 IR., SR. AND GRADUATE STUDENTS MONFY AVAILABLE ON PERSONAL SECURITY, PHONE, CHUCK ADKINS- BENEFIICAL FINANCE AT VI 3-8174 It's great for a date. Take her bowling at Crest Bowl. Fittest lanes in the state. Play on a turf field or also Mon., Tues., and Fr. after 9:00 pm. Hillcrest Bowl, 9th and Iowa. tff CHWINN BICYCLES - service all makes arts and accessories, tires $1.46, tubes air and luggage, pair, luggage racks and lee dows. SEB Bjlnrk at 7th and Mclt CALI VI 3.0581 friends coming this weekend? Looking for a place with good food at reasonable prices. HILLCREST BOWL RESTAURANT Plenty of free parking th and Iowa Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 pm Mon.-Thru-Fri, or all day Sat. or Sun. Phone VI 3-6231. tf Latin student of 5 years wishes to tutor Latin. $1.50 hr. Contact Louise Conley at VI 3-9123. 3-17 Rent electric, standard, and portable typewriters. Repair all makes of electric, manual, and automatic business equipment (formerly Business Machines), 15 E. 8th, VI 3-0151. Attention: All persons interested in self-defense training classes utilizing many of the same throws and smashes used in James B. movie, contact Bob Monk at 3-7102 POSITIONS WANTED Wanted — ironing — shirts, men's pants, 'adies' blouses, skirts, dresses a specialty. VI 3-4715. 3-22 I will do ironing in my home. Satisfaction guaranteed. 10 cents per article. VI 3-0838. 3-22 FOR RENT Apartment at 1232 Louisiana for couple or single. Modern. Call 913-4-3217. 3-18 Furnished house for rent or lease in Eudora. Prefer three to four boys, 3 bedrooms, wall to wall carpet, fireplace. Available immediately. PHA H2-6083 Emery Apts. 1423 Ohio, 12 one bedroom luxury apts. April 1st. $85.00. Featured w-w carpetting, disposal, range and ovens, refrigerators, furnished or unfurnished. Teachers or graduate students only, no children or pets. VI 3-1890. 3-16 PARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30-60 people, juke box, liquid refreshments and cell phone. Contact Don at the Gaslight Tavern for reservations CALL VI 3-1086. **tf** Room for rent - double or single. Ideal entrance. Entrance entrance. Phone VI 3-0326 5 p.m. CAR REPAIR Engine swaps and Transmission change overs. We sell and install speed equip- ment for drills for drags, jacplains or street. Farmers Garage, 88 Connecticut, VI 3-2060. Tune up—Engine rebuilding—Complete general mechanic work (guaranteed work). Most reasonable prices in town. Open 7 evenings a week. Free estimates on all parts and labor. Farmers Garage, 837 Connecticut, VI 3-2906. Wanted. Someone to play GO. Call VI 2-9227 after 7:00 p.m. WANTED Young working girl would like another girl to share her two-bedroom apartment. Her share would be $50 month, plus 1/2 utilities. Call VI 3-2988 after 5:00 p.m. Apartment available starting June 1. 3-22 OLD CARS WANTED, top prices paid. If you can drive it in, we'll consider it. Do it today! CI Joe's, 601 Vermont. ff Washing and ironing done in my home New Jersey 1131 New Jersey St. Phone VI · Z-2598 CLASSIFIED AD RATES 1 DAY $1.00 3 DAYS $1.50 5 DAYS $1.75 "ATTENTION" Juniors Sophomores T. W.A. T. W.A. is looking for a sophomore or junior man for a summer personnel trainee position in the Kansas City area. Men who feel that they are interested and qualified should come to Room 202 Summerfield Hall to sign for an interview time and pick up a T.W.A. Employment Application before March 18. Interviews: Thursday afternoon, March 18, in Room 202 Summerfield. An Equal Opportunity Employer University Daily Kansan LOOK FOR 1903 1905 We are here since FREEMAN FREEMAN Hand-Sewn THE GOLDEN CREST Black Hand sewn vamps are fashioned by master craftsmans in the art as they swiftly detail the guantone stitch. The vamp is leather lined, the sole genuine leather and the heel rubber. The price Right A B & 8 I2 & 13 & 14 II 7 the Price I 13 & 14; D 6 I2 & 13 & 14 E 6 I2/12 Size 13 $16.95 antique Brown Royal College Shop 837 Mass. BUSINESS DIRECTORY VI 3-4255 24 HOUR SERVICE (TUES. THRU SUN.) - Lubrication . . . . $1.00 - Brake Adjustment . . . .98 - Wheel Alignment - Automatic Transmission Page Fina Service 1819 W.23rd VI 3-9694 INSTRUMENT REPAIR SERVICE: CALL MAYHUGH at VI3-4430 1910 W.23rd Street GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established - Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 TRAVEL TIME Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING --- LET MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Spring Break and Summer Reservations Now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 16, 1965 SPU Plans Week-long Vigil; Hopes ROTC Men Will Quit By Joan McCabe A round-the-clock vigil by the Student Peace Union (SPU) will begin at 7 a.m. Monday in front of the Military Science Building. Tentative plans are for the vigil to continue for one week with each shift involving one to two persons and lasting two hours, with the exception of the first shift which will be two and one-half hours in length. The vigil will have a three-fold purpose, Charles Hook, Lawrence sophomore and president of the SPU, said. First, the reason for holding the vigil at the Military Science Building is that the group hopes to convince members of the Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) to "drop out," he said. They also seek to draw attention and interest to both their group and the Vietnamese situation. Lastly, an official statement of the SPU and a petition will be presented. The petition is to be sent to President Lyndon B. Johnson and reads as follows: *BECAUSE WE* believe that the war in South Viet Nam is serving neither the best interests of the Vietnamese people nor the cause of democracy; "Because we believe expansion of that war will pose a grave threat to world peace and the survival of mankind; "Because we believe all peoples of the earth, including both Americans and non-Americans, ought to have the right to shape their own destiny and their own way; "WE HEREBY REQUEST that you (the president) immediately halt all military action directed against the government and people of North Viet Nam; "That you seek a cease-fire in South Viet Nam; "That you seek an agreement between all interested nations to safeguard North and South Viet Nam from outside interference and internationally guaranteed neutralization for all of Southeast Asia; and "That you issue an immediate call for a worldwide conference to which every nation must be invited to consider ways through which the United Nations can resolve its present crisis and be strengthened to become a realistic and powerful expression of mankind's common interest in preventing war and to maintain the peace and freedom from foreign intervention of all peoples everywhere." Copies of the petition will be attached to the official statement with space provided for student signatures. Musical Events Include Recital. Philharmonic For music lovers this will be an exciting week, as the Hague Philharmonic Orchestra will play here on Thursday, and an Honors recital is scheduled for Wednesday. The Hague Philharmonic, with its regular conductor, Willem van Otterloo, is scheduled to play at 8 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. Ad Policies - This famous Dutch orchestra of 102 members was founded in 1904, and is performing under the patronage of Queen Juliana of the Netherlands. The orchestra is visiting America for the second time, their first tour here being in 1962-63. (Continued from page 1) Bill No. 7 Amendment before the Council votes on it. in the parking lot ordinances and/or additions to traffic procedures on the campus. Miner said the ASC will also hear a further report from Tom Ruzicka, Leawood junior and Traffic and Safety committee chairman, on the various changes RUZICKA APPEARED LAST week also, but Council members wished an additional report. There will also be reports from all groups to which the ASC alibs funds. UHRC— (Continued from page 1) All allegations of violation of this policy will be presented in writing to the University Human Relations Committee for hearing and adjudication. In the event that violations of this policy are established by the University Human Relations Committee, the commercial advertisers, and the student publication will be notified by the Committee and the advertisement discontinued at once. THE PROGRAM FOR Thursday features Brahms Second Symphony, Stravinsky's Firebird Suite, and contemporary composer Leon Orthhel's Second Symphony. Tickets are available at Murphy Box Office and Bell Music Co. As the concert is part of KU's concert course, students will be admitted on their KU-ID cards. Tomorrow, the School of Fine Arts will present this semester's honor recital at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. Performing will be Linda Judd, Arkansas City junior, cellist; Roger Rundle, Clay Center junior, pianist; Patricia Wise, Oklahoma City, Okla., junior, soprano; Joseph Weigand, Emporia senior, clarinetist; and Ineta Williams, Wichita senior, soprano. THOMAS GORTON, Dean of the School of Fine Arts, said the five performers for the Honors recital are chosen on their performance in the previous semester, and are voted on by faculty members of the school. Princeton Professor to Give Lecture The head of the philosophy department at Princeton University will give the annual Ernest H. Lindley memorial lecture at KU Thursday. Prof. Stuart Hampshire will lecture on "Freedom of Mind" at 4:30 p.m. in Dyche Auditorium. The Lindley lectureship is financed by a fund memorializing the late KU chancellor who served from 1520 to 1539. Chancellor Lindley had taught psychology and philosophy. Patronize Kansan Advertisers Exclusive at Ober's 821 Mass. VI 3-1951 if she doesn't give it to you... — get it yourself! JADE EAST® JADE EAST A MAN'S Cologne JADE EAST AFTER SHAVE Cologne, 6 oz., $4.50 After Shave, 6 oz., $3.50 Deodorant Stick, $1.75 Buddha Cologne Gift Package, 12 oz., $8.50 Spray Cologne, $3.50 Buddha Soap Gift Set, $4.00 Cologne, 4 oz., $3.00 After Shave, 4 oz., $2.50 SWANK, NEW YORK - SOLE DISTRIBUTOR 65c ANNUAL St. PAT'S BLAST GREEN PITCHERS 11-12 A.M. & 5-6 P.M. In 1964 we pumped 124 gallons 1 Free Keg if we break that record MILWAUKEE GASLIGHT TAVERN U.S. Jets Prepare For Viet Strikes By United Press International The commander of the U.S. 7th Fleet said today American war planes are poised to bomb North Viet Nam on a once-a-day basis. The Communist capital of Hanoi was reported bracing for air raids. A traveler just back from a trip to Hanoi said today children have been taken out of the city. He said workers were digging a city-wide network of bomb shelters and slit trenches. Some citizens were digging foxholes in the yards of their homes. In Saigon police broke up a news conference called by the Cao Dai religious sect to announce still another plan to make peace with the Viet Cong. It was the fourth attempt in less than a month in Saigon to organize a peace movement. MEANWHILE seventeen hundred persons demonstrated today in favor of the Communist Viet Cong Tuesday in Binh Minh Province 300 miles north of Saigon. Government troops broke it up by shooting and killing one agitator and arresting 100. The Binh Minh demonstration occurred in the village of Phu My 25 miles northwest of the provincial capital of Qui Nhon. It was here a military spokesman said B57 jet bomber strikes had broken the back of a Viet Cong offensive. U. S. ADMINISTRATION officials believe that the continuing U.S. and South Vietnamese air raids have destroyed about 10 per cent of the weapons and ammunition potential of Communist North Viet Nam. But, though the destruction visited on the Reds appears quite substantial, U.S. officials feel they are using only a small part of the power available to them. They regard the stepped-up American effort in Viet Nam as an extremely limited and controlled application of pressure on the Hanoi government. The objective of this U.S. power, as well as its application, is being carefully restricted. There is no effort to destroy North Viet Nam or even to overthrow its Communist government. The United States simply wants to force Hanoi to stop its "aggression" in the South. SOME WASHINGTON policy-makers believe that a word from Hanoi would stop about 75 per cent of the guerrilla activity against the South Vietnamese government almost immediately. This aspect of American policy became clear Tuesday when it was learned that the United States will send additional helicopter companies to South Viet Nam and that the Navy has already begun active patrolling of the Vietnamese coast. The additional companies, containing about 25 helicopters each, will be added to U.S. forces already operating approximately 400 'copters in South Viet Nam. THE FLEET COMMANDER, Vice Adm. Paul R. Blackburn, briefed newsmen on the air strike policy at a news conference aboard the aircraft carrier Ranger in the South China Sea. "Some of my more eager friends say we ought to hit twice a day," Blackburn said. "But I'm an old man, so I'd say once a day." The anti-Communist war in South Viet Nam centered today in the Mekong River Delta. ONE U.S. NAVY officer-adviser was killed and two American enlisted men wounded Tuesday night in a land and river battle with the Viet Cong 70 miles southwest of Saigon. A U.S. military spokesman said the clash broke out near the village of Hoa Hong along a Mekong tributary when a battalion of Vietnamese rangers and a fleet of river boats tried to pin down a company of Communist guerrillas. PRIOR TO WASHINGTON'S decision to begin active patrolling, the U.S. Navy had been helping the South Vietnamese Navy in its efforts to stop coastal traffic in weapons and ammunition. THE CAO DAI is a 40-year-old religious sect which claims three million members but probably has one million. It has a history of armed rebellion against previous Vietnamese governments but at present it supplies many anti-Communist fighting men to the army. EARLIER peace plans got a chill reception from the government. One plan launched by Saigon professional men called for an immediate cease-fire. Three of its leaders have been condemned to exile in North Viet Nam as soon as the government decides how to send them there. Its peace plan calls for withdrawal of all Communists from South Viet Nam, imposition of a U.S. military cordon to prevent infiltration until peace is restored and eventual withdrawal of American troops. Officials said the sponsor of the plan had been arrested. In Australia the Sydney Mirror quoted former South Vietnamese Premier Nguyen Xuan Oanh as saying three Vietnamese intellectuals who organized a previous peace campaign had been pushed out of a plane without parachutes over North Viet Nam last Monday. No major action was reported today on the military front but the commander of the U.S. 7th Fleet told newsmen American planes were poised to bomb the north on a once-a-day basis. The Communist capital of Hanoi was reported bracing for air raids. Daily Hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 62nd Year, No. 101 ASC Approves Bill Banning Discrimination in Advertising Wednesday, March 17, 1965 The amendment gives the University Human Relations Committee (UHRC) the power to consider and judge complaints concerning discrimination in advertising. MIKE MINER, Lawrence senior and ASC chairman, began the meeting by announcing that the Chancellor had signed ASC Bill No. 7 on human rights. Miner also read a letter from the Chancellor urging the council to pass the then proposed amendment to Bill No. 7. By Rosalie Jenkins and Jim Sullinger It would also require all student publications to carry a statement in their format that all goods, accommodations and services advertised are offered without regard to race, creed, or national origin. The All Student Council (ASC) passed an amendment to Human Rights Bill No. 7 last night to prohibit discriminatory advertising in any student publication. The Council voted in favor of the amendment in a 15 to 9 roll call vote with 6 members abstaining. Ten Council members were not present for the vote. The Civil Rights Council (CRC) had incorporated a similar provision in their seven demands presented to the Chancellor during last week's demonstrations. The Council then invoked the special parliamentary procedure of going into a committee of the THE AMENDMENT TO Bill No. 7 on human rights called for all student publications not to accept commercial advertising for employment, accommodations, goods or services unless it is offered to all students regardless of color, creed or national origin. The University Daily Kansas and all student publications would also be prohibited from accepting advertising which included any phrase suggesting racial discrimination. The weather bureau has issued a cold wave warning for tonight. Skies are predicted to be partly cloudy with low temperatures of 15 to 20 degrees. Tomorrow should be partly cloudy and continued cold. Winds will be northerly tonight from 25 to 30 miles per hour. Weather whole to allow discussion with Kansan Board members. Stating a need for a freer exchange, Bob Stewart, Vancouver, B.C., senior and student body president, requested a closed meeting. However, a motion to keep it open was passed instead. Before actual questioning began, Roy Miller, Topeka senior and ASC representative, (UP, Journalism) read a statement of policy which the Kenson Board, governing body of the UDK, passed yesterday afternoon. THE STATEMENT SAID the Board feels it should have been consulted by the ASC in their proposed amendment. "We feel that we have been passed over," Miller said. "If the ASC passes the legislation, it will do so hastily and it will be legislation that has not been discussed fully." Miller also read a letter from John Pepper, Lenexa junior and former UDK advertising manager, who wrote that he felt an obligation to secure equal rights for every man and also an obligation to the publishing field. "Such legislation would set a dangerous precedent," Pepper's letter said. He said that the legislation would put control of the paper in the hands of the politicians instead of in the hands of the journalists. PEPPER ADDED THAT he couldn't support the amendment because the decision on the paper's advertising policy is being decided by a group of students and not by the Kansas Board, journalists, or even a court of law. After Pepper's letter was presented. Stewart asked for the floor to clarify some points. "The UDK is empowered to run its own business with the rule that it shall not infringe upon the policy of the ASC. . . . The ASC doesn't dictate how they run their business. This amendment is a statement of our policy," Stewart said. "THIS PAPER IS the official organ of the University of Kansas and, thus, of its students . . . anything in that paper must be offered to all students in the University. The ASC must make the policy for all the students in the University." Stewart said. Don Black, Hugoton senior and managing editor of the Kansan, then answered questions from the council. "We feel the Kansan Board and the All Student Council should take more time in considering this amendment. This is the first time we have actually seen you except for your leaders," Black said. He noted that the Kansan, while being an organ of the University is also an organ of the journalism school and is supposed to follow certain ethics. BLACK ALSO explained that if an advertiser who is refused the use of the UDK pages decides to sue on the grounds of unfair business practices, the student who handled the ad will be the one sued. He stated that the Kansan is an organ of the University, the University is under the state, and a state cannot be sued. The student is the one open to a lawsuit. After Black's statements, Miner read a letter from Charles H. Oldfather, law professor, on the legality of suits in alleged advertising discrimination by a paper against its customers. Miner said that Oldfather gave his opinion at the request of the UHRC and ASC. Oldfather wrote that the courts have ruled in such cases that a paper is free to decide its own advertising policy and is not oen to suit. THE ASC THEN dissolved the committee of the whole on a motion from the floor. Jonn Suhler, Cross River, N.Y. senior and Kansan Board chairman, presented an explanation of the Kansan Board policy and then answered questions. "The entire problem, as it has been stated and restated, is that we have not been approached to discuss the ramifications of this amendment except in talking to the UHRC and to the student body president. . . I don't feel that this is sufficient inquiry." Suhler said. Suhler asked that the ASC meet with the Kansan Board "to discuss in detail what we feel are the obligations of a journalist." He said that Chancellor Wescoe had expressed "his opinion to me that the Kansan Board and the ASC get together." SUHLER WAS ASKED if the Kansen Board would draft the provisions into its own policies if the ASC bill was not passed. Suhler said that he could not guarantee such policies but that the (Continued on page 16) Mary Jane O'Connor THE NEW REGULATIONS—Nancy Holland, Lee's Summit, Mo., senior and advertising manager, explains to her staff the provisions of the new All Student Council measure preventing discrimination in the Kansan's advertising. University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 17, 1965 Disinformation ASC Meeting Confusion, hostility, charges, and suspicion marred the actions of the All Student Council last night. No one, I feel sure, felt very pure in mind or spirit when the first of the demands by the Civil Rights Council was passed by the ASC. This applies not only to ASC members, but to other persons who had occasion to speak at the meeting—the student body president and members of the Kansan Board, which includes myself. The issue involving advertising content of student publications is of special concern to those of who work daily on the student newspaper, so these remarks can be taken for what they are worth. FIRST, I THINK IT IS NECESSARY to examine the reasons for the hostility between the Kansan Board and the ASC. No one can deny that this hostility does not exist. Both parties are at fault. When ASC legislation was first proposed last week, Kansan Board sentiment was automatic. This legislation was viewed as an unethical attempt by politicians to interfere with the policies of the newspaper. It was viewed as a hasty, ill-considered, expedient appeasement to the demands of an effective pressure group. It was viewed as a violation of freedom of the press. It was viewed as a violation of the rights of advertisers. Each of these reasons is justifiable, although in an attempt to defend our position, there has been some exaggeration. Exaggeration was obvious in a cartoon on the front page of the Daily Kansan, which satirized the ASC. ASC HOSTILITY TOWARD THE KANSAN Board also was automatic when the Daily Kansan took the position of opposing the legislation. The ASC defended its position by claiming that this was no attempt to take over the Daily Kansan, that there is no inherent right of advertisers that is being violated, that freedom of the press is not being violated, and that the legislation has been discussed quite sufficiently. Each of these reasons is justifiable, but exaggeration also has been employed to defend the legislation. A feeling of righteousness and indignation existed on both sides at last night's meeting of the ASC. The atmosphere was extremely unhealthy for the passage of legislation. The Kausan Board suggested tabling the legislation until both sides had a chance to sit down and discuss the legislation and all its ramifications. BOB STEWART, STUDENT BODY PRESIDENT, strongly opposed this suggestion. He argued that the legislation had been thoroughly discussed, and that it was now time for action. He argued that it was the responsibility of the ASC to solve this problem. He scoffed at the suggestion of John Suhler, Kansan Board chairman, that neither the Kansan Board nor the ASC has had the opportunity to exchange views on the subject. As far as Stewart was concerned, further delay and negotiations could not be fruitful. Stewart's attitude and the speeches he delivered did nothing to lessen hostility. He claimed that the Kansan Board had had sufficient opportunity to express its opinion. He blamed the Kansan Board for failing to establish communications with the ASC. This, like much of what he said, was slightly exaggerated. Both the Kansan Board and the ASC had made feeble efforts to get together before last night's meeting. Both parties involved are to blame for the failure to schedule discussions. BUT ONE WRONG DOES NOT CANCEL out another wrong, which is what happened last night. Both the Kansan Board and the ASC have been under pressure the past week. Hostility between the two sides prevented a sincere effort to establish communications. The ASC has felt that the Kansan Board would not listen to them, and the Kansan Board has felt that the ASC would not listen to them. The Kansan Board also was accused by Stewart of exaggerating the charge that this was legislation under pressure. When a student council member suggested that they had all been under pressure from the administration, the Kansan Board, student leaders, and the CRC, Stewart replied that this was a personal insult to himself. I find it difficult to deny that there has not been considerable pressure from all these sources. And I submit that this is not the healthiest atmosphere for the enactment of legislation. The vote on the legislation was 15 for, nine against, and six abstentions. Although the vote was lopsided in terms of those for and against, the six abstentions indicate that there were some doubts and misgivings on the part of the Council members. If the issue had been sufficiently debated maybe these people could have come to some conclusions. THE REGRETABLE THING ABOUT LAST night's meeting was the hostile atmosphere in which business was conducted. There were sincere persons on both sides who felt the need for more discussion, but these persons lost. Stewart, in his arguments last night, emphasized the right of the ASC to enact such legislation. No one from the Kansan Board questions this right. The Kansan Board Constitution clearly states that the ASC has only delegated its authority over the Daily Kansan to the Kansan Board. The Kansan Board feels only that this is not the way the problem should be solved. Some on the Kansan Board feel that the CRC, through the ASC, is using the Daily Kansan as a tool to pressure persons who discriminate. This may be an excellent way to accomplish desired ends in the eyes of some people. But some of us who work on the Daily Kansan do not feel this way.I feel that a newspaper should have the right to accept any advertisements that are, on the face of the advertisement,not repugnant to the average person in the community,and that the newspaper should feel obligated to accept such advertisements.The newspaper also has the right to refuse advertisements that are obviously in bad taste. IN THE CASE WE ARE CONCERNED WITH, the argument seems to run that certain housing advertisements are in bad taste because certain people have been refused accommodations because of the color of their skin. But the advertisement itself is not in bad taste. It only becomes so when a person answers the advertisement and is discriminated against. And this is the only person who then feels the advertisement is in bad taste. Other people may not like the practices of the advertiser, but the advertisement itself is not distasteful. I do not feel that a newspaper should refuse an otherwise acceptable advertisement just because the newspaper does not agree with the views or practices of the advertiser. A responsible newspaperman never refuses to publish an otherwise acceptable letter to the editor just because the editor does not agree with the views of the person who wrote the letter. Persons have told me that this parallel is inaccurate. I must be blind. I cannot see it, I cannot understand how we claim to be broadening the scope of freedom and communication while restricting both. For this reason, as well as others, I disagree with the concept and intention of the ASC legislation, which will undoubtedly be signed very soon by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe. East German Records Hide Nazis I might add that this editorial is my personal opinion and observation, and should not be construed as the policy or opinion of the Kansan Board. Gary Noland By Phil Newsom When in 1948 the Russians withdrew from the Allied Control Council in Germany and in effect set up two Germanies, there remained in the Soviet Zone all the micro-filmed records of the Nazi party. All West German and Allied attempts to attain copies of these records since have failed. UPI Foreign News Analyst This capsule recall of history is necessary because it bears on current West German deliberations over extension of the statute of limitations on war crimes beyond the May 8 expiration date. Refusal of the East German Communist regime to turn over the old Nazi records not only has been a major obstacle in the way of ferreting out war criminals, it also has been a weapon used by the Communists in attempts to discredit the West German Federal Republic. The tactic has been to wait until some judge, police official or any other person has risen to a place of responsibility in the new republic and then suddenly expose him as a one-time Nazi. This in turn is used as so-called evidence that the West German government harbors ex-Nazi and war criminals. SELMA, ALA SEGREGATIONIST CHURCH ERMON THE MEANING OF LENT KEY TWO THINGS WITH FRIEND MARK ©1965 HERBIDER THE WASHINGTON POST "We Don't Want Any Outside Agitators" BOOK REVIEWS KNICKERBOCKER'S HISTORY OF NEW YORK, by Washington Irving (Capricorn, $1.95). One of the early and greatest classics of our literature is this mock history of more than 100 years ago. It helped to establish the reputation of Irving and to set him in his place as one of our top literary figures, as well as funniest men. Surely such a book inspired many travesties that followed. Irving offers us a burlesque history of the Dutch settlement of the New World and a set of names and incidents that have become part of our tradition. These include the settlement of New York, the story of the Peter Stuyvesant, the reign of Wouter Van Twiller, and the reign of William the Testy. The paperback, an extremely attractive and durable-looking one, appears to have been printed from 19th century plates, a factor which adds to the charm of the thing. $$ *** $$ THE RELIGIONS OF THE OPPRESSED, by Vittorio Lanternari (Mentor, 75 cents). An Italian professor of religion offers in this paperback a discussion of little-known religions, particularly those of people long held in subjugation by the world's major powers. Some of these are known in at least a general sense; most of them present insights unfamiliar to most readers. The author describes such religions as the separatist churches of the Bantu, the prophetic cults of the Congo, the Kitawala (Jehovah's Witnesses) in central and southern Africa, the Ghost Dancers and Peyote cult of the American Indians, the Ras Tafari of Jamaica, the Zions of northeast Brazil, the cargo cults of Melanesia, the Maori Hau Hau, and the Cao Dai of Viet Nam. The anthropologist particularly will find this book of interest, but any student of contemporary society will find something here as well. *** THE MERCHANT OF VENICE, by Shakespeare (Signet Classics, 50 cents)Another in an attractive series of paperback Shakespeare. There are a special introduction to the play, a discussion of Shakespearean times and his life, a note on sources, dramatic criticism and detailed footnotes. If you don't know the plot this is no place to give it to you. DailijTränsan 111 Flint Hall UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3188, business office University of Kansas student newspaper counded 1889, became biweekly 1304, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Nebraska EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Leta Roth and Gary Noland ... Co-Editorial Editors DISPOSITIONS DEPARTMENT NEWS DEPARTMENT Don Black ... Managing Editor Bobbie Bartelt, Clare Casey, Marshall Caskey, Fred Frailey, Assistant Managing Editors; Judy Farrell, City Editor; Karen Lambert, Feature-Society Editor; Glen Phillips, Sports Editor; Janet Chartier, Telegraph Editor; Harry Krause, Picture Editor. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT **Tom Fisher** ... Business Manager *Nancy Holland, Advertising Manager; Ed Vaughn, National Advertising Manager; Dale Reinecker, Classified Advertising Manager; Russ Calkins, Merchandising Manager; Bob Monk, Promotion Manager; Gary Grazda, Circulation Manager.* Wednesday, March 17, 1965 University Daily Kansan Discrimination Announcement Made by IFC Page 3 A formal statement concerning discrimination has been adopted as official policy by the Inter-Fraternity Council (IFC), according to Charles Lanning, Lawrence senior and secretary of the organization. "We believe that any chapter collegiate at the University of Kansas has the right and privilege to decide for themselves what shall constitute their membership and to oppose the pressure of external groups to influence their decisions in this field. "The statement was not formulated in response to the recent demonstrations by the Civil Rights Council." Lanning stated. "Work began with the establishment of a Membership Committee in October." "We also feel that both alumni groups and chapter collegiate should be properly informed by the IFC about the growing issue of membership, and an attempt should be made to liberalize the feelings on this matter. The six member committee consisted of Fred Embriry, Mission Hills senior and chairman; David Hall, Coffeyville sophomore; Michael Hurt, Kansas City sophomore; Pat McGrath, Prairie Village junior; Ronald Pullins, Council Grove sophomore and Jon Hope, Kansas City junior. The official statement of policy reads as follows: Jackson M. Hibler, St. Joseph, Mo., senior majoring in business administration, has been awarded the Solon E. Summerfield Senior Award in Business Administration. Senior Named Winner Of Summerfield Prize "The IFC supports the rushing and pledging of any man a member fraternity desires." Joseph W. McGuire, dean of the Business School, made the official presentation to Hibler yesterday at the school's Honors Coffee. The award has a cash stipend of $150 and is presented each semester to the senior who has completed the Junior Business Core the preceding semester and earned the highest g.p.a. in the required courses. ager using kins, azda, Fine Arts Recital Date Postponed The KU School of Fine Arts Faculty recital of Richard Gayhart, organist, originally scheduled to be given Sunday, March 21, in Hoch auditorium, has been postponed. A new date will be announced later. 1 2 Why do these gentlemen buy RUSSIAN LEATHER after shave lotion? 1 e. ELEGANT DIFFERENCE LOE DIEK ELEGANT LEATHER ELEGANT LEATHER Number 1 enjoys the manly fragrance. Number 2 is a collector of distinctive containers. IMPERIAL DEL ORO For Men presents its fragrances of the world in hand-decorated 22 karat gold flasks. From $2.50 to $17.00. the University Shop 1420 Crescent Rd. VI 3-4633 Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS AUDUBON $450 ALSO $300 TO 975 Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. Diamond Ring When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds M M Ae Ae Sha Sha Men of the Campus You should shop Duckwall's for your toiletry needs. You will find low prices, friendly people and quality products. If you want toiletry supplies, shop Duckwall's. Duckwall's VARIETY STORES 10th and Mass. VI 3-2025 Reopening Under NEW MANAGEMENT THE FLAMINGO CLUB Offering a relaxed atmosphere - Tropical Decor - Air-Conditioned - Padded Booths - Indirect Lighting - Ample Parking Facilities Featuring this Friday night 8:30-12:00 the students' favorite female vocalist ANN BREWER FLAMES and the Cover $1.00 per person CAROLYN RUSSELL Elm Street 1mi Kaw River Bridge FLAMINGO CLUB Bill Deay, new owner and ex-bass man of the Furys will go all out to please you! Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 17, 1965 Rev. King Leads New March; Demands Official Apologies MONTGOMERY, Ala. —(UPI)— Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., said he would lead a march on the court-house today and demand another official apology for an attack upon civil rights demonstrators by mounted officers. The march, scheduled for early afternoon, was also to promote Negro voter registration. A similar protest march was to be staged simultaneously at Selma, 40 miles away ABOUT 30 CLERGYMEN went to the Capitol for a prayer vigil Tuesday night but were not allowed on the steps. They vowed to spend the night on the sidewalk, when they were encircled by state troopers. "They wouldn't let us on the steps, so I guess praying on the sidewalk all night is equal to one prayer on the steps," said one minister. However, the group reached agreement with police shortly before the vigil broke up about 4 a.m. EST after five hours and 45 minutes and was allowed on the bottom steps where they knelt and recited the Lord's Prayer. THEN THEY WERE escorted by police to a Catholic Church about six blocks away and dispersed. During the long vigil on the sidewalk, the clergymen sang folk songs, religious hymns and the anthem of the movement, "We Shall Overcome." Mounted deputies and state troopers, apparently because of a "mixup in signals," raced among 60 demonstrators Tuesday night, swinging ropes, clubs and canes. At least 14 persons were hurt, apparently none seriously. land, who ordered the horsemen into action, said "we are all sorry that the thing happened as it did." Crossland said he told the horsemen to disperse about 100 demonstrators who had broken from the main group and darted across a street blocked by police. "They were encouraging the others to break the line," said Crosland, adding that the mounted officers "were not supposed to charge the main body of demonstrators." King, who came here from a voter registration campaign in Selma, told 750 persons at a mass meeting Tuesday night that "we must march on the courthouse . . . so this kind of action will never be repeated in Montgomery." POLICE HAVE no right "to use billy clubs and horses on human beings as if they were wayward animals," said King. The Marginal Men, an organization appealing to all "in-betweeners" and "border-liners" recently bought an advertisement in the University Daily Kansas. The advertisement told of the new organization which was forming and gave instruction on how to join. An appeal was made to all persons who felt that somewhere in society they were a middle-of-the-roader. Anyone fitting into this category, the ad said, was eligible to join at a cost of $5.0. A new campus organization designed to fit the needs of all "marginal students" has met with limited success. JAMES $I_r$ - MASTERS $r$ - Mission graduate student and originator of the Marginal Men, said that to date only six memberships have been sold. He went on to add that "although the idea was set up merely as a gag, the advertisement was a sociological catch all, as every one is marginal to something or other." Masters was primarily interested in seeing what type of response such an advertisement would bring. A B Γ Δ E Z H Θ J K A M CIRCUIT SOLICITOR David Cros- Orange Blossom DIAMOND RINGS MONACO FROM $100 AT THESE FINE STORES The response of about 25 phone calls which Masters received was varied. One caller was seeking advice on how to get along with his girl. KANSAS Arkansas City, McDowell's Jewelry Coffeyville, Wall Jewelers Emporia, Stanley Jewelry Inc. Garden City, Patterson's Hays, Kuhn's Jewelers Hays, Vernon Jewelers Hutchinson, Torrence Jewelers Junction City, Flower Jewelers Lawrence, Marks Jewelers Liberal, Collins Diamond Jewelers Lyons, Sloop Jewelry Newton, Hankins Jewelers Pittsburg, Benelli's Jrs. Russell, Kuhn's Jewelers Sallina, Vernon Jewelers Topeka, Mace's Jewelers Wichita, Wehling Jewelry Co. 'Marginal Men' Organize League MISSOURI Kansas City, Gale Grossman Jlr., Country Club Plaza try Club Plaza Kansas City, Jaccard's-Downtown-Ward Parkway Sedalia, Bichsel Warrensburg, Highland's Gift & Jewelry Mexico, Pilcher Jewelry Co. Fulton, Taylor's Jewelry Fraternity and Sorority Jewelry Guards Rings Lavaliers Mugs Pins Crests Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Massachusetts OKLAHOMA Enid, Morgan's Diamond Shop Ray Christian ELECTRONICS CIRCUIT WIRELESS ROLLBACK GOING OUR WAY? If you're mapping out your career destination, Ling-Temco-Vought offers a wide choice of exciting and challenging routes to your personalized goal. Here at LTV, young, alert engineers are "going places" in the fields of aircraft, missiles, space, mobile surface vehicles, weapons systems, ground and airborne communications, electronics, and range services. Supporting these activities is an excellent engineering climate providing the opportunity to contribute and professional advancement which is a direct function of the contribution. Assignments are diversified and stimulating in such areas as: aerodynamics avionics and instrumentation dynamics systems design propulsion stress analysis communications design telemetry and tracking reconnaissance systems amplifier and computer design • electromagnetic interference control • technical administration ... among others. In addition to a rewarding professional environment, LTV offers engineers the opportunity to earn advanced degrees through company financed graduate education programs. Before selecting your industrial home, investigate the career avenues available with Ling-Temco-Vought. Get complete details from your Placement Office, then schedule an appointment with our representative. Or write College Relations Office, Ling-Temco-Vought, P. O. Box 5907, Dallas, Texas 75222. LTV is an equal opportunity employer. CAMPUS INTERVIEWS Wednesday & Thursday, March 24 & 25 LTV LING-TEMCO-VOUGHT, INC. LTV DIVISIONS AND SUBSIDIARIES LTV ALTEC LTV LASTRONAUTICS LTV CONTINENTAL ELECTRONICS LTV LING ELECTRONICS LTV MICHIGAN LTV MILITARY ELECTRONICS LTV LANGE SYSTEMS LTV RESEARCH CENTER LTV TEMCO AEROSYSTEMS LTV UNIVERSITY LTV VOUGHT AERONUTICS KENTRAN HAILL, IMT. --- 79462 1000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 Wednesday, March 17, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 5 sond a SHE CAN'T DECIDE WHICH FOUNTAIN SPECIAL SHE LIKES BEST! There are so many at the HAWK'S NEST KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 17, 1965 Pareciente competitivo Literario Yale Vocalists Return to KU For Third Visit Take 25 students and faculty members, add songs and the Russian language, stir in United States atmosphere and world tours, brew with spontaneity, and you have the Yale Russian Chorus. Organized in 1954 by Denis Mickiewicz, then a Yale student, the chorus will perform a number of classical, folk, and contemporary works, in Russian, English, and other modern languages. The group, sponsored by the KU-Y, will make their third appearance in Hoch Auditorium at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 23. Last year at KU, the group dined with and serenaded various sororities on campus, and the same activity is planned for this year, according to Bruce Cochener, Topeka junior, and chairman of the KU-Y committee bringing the chorus here. All tickets for the performance are reserved and cost $1.50, available from living groups and the KU-Y office. Jimmy Johnson SHOW TO THE DANCE BOW IT'S GREAT TO BE 'IN' A1 Tapers. AUTHENTIC IVY SLACKS Jerry Tennys Send to: Jim in a new family from JERRY TENYS PRODUCTION IT'S GREAT TO BE 'IN' Tapers. AUTHENTIC IVY SLACKS from the star of the family film A JERRY LEWIS PRODUCTION. A.J. Kotzin Co., Los Angeles, Calif. IT'S GREAT TO BE 'IN' A1 Tapers. AUTHENTIC IVY SLACKS A.1 Kozin Co. Los Angeles, Calif. Downtown Furniture "House of Bargains" (Across from Weavers) VI 3-5368 Danish Modern Divan and Chair Loose cushion; brown with gray stripe. reg. $149.00 Now $99.00 SAVE----$50.00 4 CUP AUTOMATIC BREWMASTER • IDEAL FOR INSTANT COFFEE OR TEA • SAFE TO USE • USE ON THE TABLE BEAUTIFUL PATTERNED CERAMIC PITCHER BOILS IN A FEW MINUTES $1.00 AMAZING VALUE! WITH CORD & PLUG 7-Pc. WATER AND BEVERAGE SET STUNNING CUT CRYSTAL DESIGN Tints of Amethyst Sapphire Emerald and Ruby DURABLE CUT CRYSTAL PLASTIC 6 BIG 12-Oz. Tumblers BIG 48-Oz. Pitcher $1.00 FOR THE COMPLETE SET Danish Sectional Divan Beautiful decorator colors - Black, Red, Orange, Green. reg. $149.00 SAVE----$50.00 Now $99.00 RED HOT SPECIALS Ashtray一Magazine Stand Now only $1.95 Brass Magazine Rack Now only $1.00 GOOD USED MERCHANDISE 21” Console TV, works good . . $29.00 Automatic Washer . $39.00 21" Console TV . $39.00 Westinghouse-Stack Unit, Washer and Dryer Ideal for apartment or trailer $99.00 Liberal Time Payment Arrangements Downtown Furniture Page 7 Study of Comparative Literature Clarifies Current Foreign Ideas Wednesday, March 17, 1965 University Daily Kansan Comparing texts which are not closely related, but which deal with comparable ideas and topics will be fruitful to students and professors and lead to an appreciation of literature. Professor Henry Remak, guest humanities lecturer, expressed this view last night. Prof. Remak was the fifth guest lecturer in the series this year. He is an award-winning professor from Indiana University. He said French comparative literature puts importance on history and Student Singers Hoot and Holler Over KUOK Want to meet someone new and exciting? Hoot and Holler serves just that purpose. Hoot and Holler is a 60 minute radio program sponsored jointly by Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) and KUOK, KU radio station. Each Wednesday night the broadcast begins at six o'clock from one of the residence halls on campus. The initial performance was at Ellsworth, men's residence hall, two weeks ago. Last week KUOK broadcasted from Lewis, women's residence hall. THE PROGRAM is presented by emateur entertainers. Some of the students sing folk songs. Others entertain their own fashion. Students attending Hoot and Holler also are invited to join in the singing. The bootenanny was set up to serve various functions. Larry Seibel, Russell sophomore and public relations chairman for AURH and chairman of KUOK publicity, said the purpose of the program was to present a KUOK service to the campus. Hoot and Holler also was designed to bring together members of the residence halls and to get more and better participation and enthusiasm in residence hall activities, according to Seibel. NANCY McARTHUR. Shawnee Mission junior, said, "We (AURH members) are trying to get across the idea that it is a residence hall and not a dormitory. A dormitory is where you eat and sleep. A residence hall is where you live and participate." Pat Burke, Kansas City junior, and Dorothy May, Mission senior, are moderators for Hoot and Holler. As advertised in MODERN BRIDE, BRIDE'S MAGAZINE, BRIDE & HOME ArtCarved® DREAM WEDDING RINGS As advertised in MODERN BRIDE, BRIDE'S MAGAZINE, BRIDE & HOME ArtCarved® DREAM WEDDING RINGS “Over 300 styles to choose from” Marks Jewelers $17 Mass. VI 3-4266 influences. American comparative literature tends toward criticism. THE FRENCH VIEW is that Europe has long been cut up into nations, Remak said. Comparative literature has been bi-national and only now is becoming more "organic" and achieving a "one-necess." Prof. Remak attributed this difference to the training of comparists. He said French comparators are homogeneous. Most of them are trained at the Sorbonne, centered in Paris. The United States, however, has been a country of immigrants who had the international interest before the idea of national comparative literature developed. AMERICAN COLLEGES are more varied. The scholars are less national. Prof. Remak said Americans have "currents of thinking." Prof. Remak pointed out that Walleck says comparative literature is simply a study of all literature. Remak does not see how such a model can be realized. He believes there is too much to read and study to do so in one lifetime. The study of comparative literature is increasing in many colleges and universities, "Texts of comparative literature have mushroomed. There is so much to learn about even one period that a comparative study can never do enough." HE SUGGESTED that literature be taught by period or topic rather than under course headings of French literature, German literature or English literature. One French university had a course, "The Child in 18th Century Novels." The university also had courses in comparison of views and emotions. They offered courses comparing the humor in literature of a certain period, man on trial in contemporary novels and the provincial novel in Spain, Italy and France. The danger, Prof. Remak said, is that efforts will be too scattered. Comparatists will need to concentrate on a period or level or topic. we have something on - Gipp DuPree 1901 a bleeding madras sport jacket by VARSITY TOWN, a must in every college man's wardrobe at 37.50 for the "Traditional Look," "NATURALLY it's ----- diebolt's 843 Mass. CENSORED The Minority Opinions Forum Presents Professors John Mitchell AND Morton Olson, Ph.D. Who Will Discuss The Question: Is There Freedom Of Speech on Our Campuses? At 4:30 in The Jayhawk Room Of The Kansas Union, Thursday, March 18 CENSORED Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. March 17, 1965 A Diving Board Baghdad Offers Is there anyone in the market for a reinforced concrete diving board? If so, Al Hikma University in Baghdad, Iraq, has one for you. In a senior course called Engineering Projects at Al Hikma, students are required to design and build a model of some structure of their own conception. Basil Kattula, Baghdad, Iraq, graduate student in civil engineering and a graduate of Al Hikma, said that two of his classmates designed and built a full scale model of the diving board. "THE COURSE was the idea of Professor R. S. Bekovich. We were supposed to make only a scale model of our projects, but Professor Bekovich told them to build a full-sized one. Kattula said. "This had never been done in Baghdad," Kattula said, "and it was not known if it would work." Nevertheless, the two students, Mowaffa Simani and Ali Al-Qaragouli set out to do it under the supervision of Prof. Bekovik. The diving board is 20 feet long and weighs over two tons. The base of the diving board is studded with 23 rods of reinforced steel set in concrete and tapers to "business" end where only four rods were needed. Al Hikma University is staffed by American professors and sponsored by American Jesuit Priests. Study in Guadalajara, Mexico The Guadalajara Summer School, a fully accredited University of Arizona program, conducted in cooperation with professors from Stanford Univ., Univ. of California, and Guadalajara, will offer June 29 to August 8, art, folklore, geography, history, language and literature courses. Tuition, board & room is $265. Write Prof. Juan B. Rael, P.O. Box 7227, Stanford, Calif. Sigma P1 Sigma, physics honor society, will present a talk on nuclear reactor controls tomorrow night at 8 p.m. in room 155, Malott Hall. Physics Honor Society Presents Nuclear Talk Writer Quentin Reynolds Dies at 62 WASHINGTON—(UPI) Newspaperman and author Quentin Reynolds died today at Travis Air Force Base, Calif., it was reported here. Reynolds, 62, who has been living in New York, had been in the Philippines writing a biography of Philippine President Diosdado Macapagal when he contracted pneumonia. He was flown to Travis on an Air force plane but died there early today of complications, a spokesman for the Labor Department said. Reynolds was a brother of Assist- and Secretary of Labor James Reynolds. A Wake up Service for Pennies a Day MILLIKIN'S S.O.S. SERVICE Student Typing & Editing Complete Mailing Program Economical Mimeography 1021 $ \frac{1}{2} $ MASS. V13-5920 Letterheads printed, 1,000/$12.00 Lowest Rate in Town Executive Type Mailing MUSIC AND EDUCATION JERRY AND THE DIMENSIONS DIMENSIONS T. G.I.F. FREE March 19 THE RED DOG INN Friday Night - $1.00 Cover Doors Open - 7:00 p.m. Wed., March 24 - The Trashmen . . . . Surf Bird Coming attractions Page 9 Two WSU Professors to Speak On Campus Academic Freedom Is a university one of the few remaining strongholds of the freedoms that have been guaranteed to all Americans, or has the influence of censorship found its way into the campus? Two men, who have had firsthand experience with academic freedom are Professors John Mitchell and Morton Olson, formerly on the faculty at Wichita State University. Early in March, Mitchell leveled charges at WSU, stating that teachers were not able to teach as they wanted to. The controversy resulting from his charges caused, among other things, the resignation of Mitchell and one of his sympathetic fellow-professors at WSU, Morton Olson; effective at the end of this semester. BOTH PROFESSORS will be guest speakers at the KU Minority Opinion Forum, at 4:30 tomorrow afternoon in the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. Following the lecture, there will be a question and answer period, during which students are invited to ask questions Mitchell, who formerly taught at Park College, Stevens College, and at Missouri Penitentiary as a case worker, was invited to speak at Egghead Week, by a student at WSU. Egghead Week is marked by speeches by faculty members on topics of their choice. After considering the matter for two weeks, Mitchell decided to speak on academic freedom. He originally planned to speak on the existence of academic freedom, using several quotes by noted men of politics and history. After speaking with many people, he found that there was "no academic freedom." IN THE SPEECH, he cited a 1958 case at WSU in which several WSU faculty members of the economics department were discharged because of their opposition to a right-to-work bill, which was sponsored by several business interests. In a Kansas City Star interview on March 4, Mitchell recalled a portion of his speech, in which he said, "The State University of Wichita is obviously an institution imbedded in the society of its time. Given this fact, there can be no question of its subservience to the prevailing shib-leboths of prairie protestism, the chamber of commerce, and the real estate boards." Wednesday, March 17, 1965 University Daily Kansan MITCHELL HAS ADMITTED that he has some socialistic ideas, and, the sociology professor was not permitted to teach freshman and sophomore classes because of his ideas. He was at WSU on a temporary one year basis, but Emory Lindquist, President of WSU, has stated that Mitchell will not be brought back at the end of this semester. Mitchell concluded his speech by urging students to transfer to another institution, saying, "transfer out, for your intellect will be crippled in an institution dedicated to the local power elite." Olson, professor of economics, joined Mitchell in his attack against the administration. Olson was notified by WSU that he would not be put on permanent status. The Classical Film Series presents Le Million [1931] France A swift and witty comedy directed by Rene Clair Wednesday — 7:00 p.m. Admission 60c Fraser Theater Read and Use Kansan Classifieds Hear the 1965 MASTERWORK the SOLID STATE --- TOMATO - 30-watt transistorized pre-amp amplifier 恭喜 - Garrard AT-6 changer - Magnetic pick-up (with Diamond - Hand rubbed, oil-walnut Stylus) - $ 6 \frac{1}{2} " $ , and $ 3\frac{1}{2}" $ speaker & electronic crossover in each enclosure - Pre-set inputs for tuner and tape deck enclosure KIEF'S Record & Stereo VI 2-1544 Open 10 to 10 Weekdays Mall's Shopping Center Admission: Seniors-Free (very cheap) Seniors' Dates-$1.00(cheap) Dear SENIORS: Despite the fact that the Senior Class treasurer is now living in splendid luxury in South America, there will be a SENIOR CLASS PARTY. Be at the Red Dog Inn Saturday, March 20, 7-12 p.m. and help spend what little the treasurer left behind. Music THE DIMENSIONS Intermission Entertainment JACKSON POWELL No Cover No Minimum Beverages: Your Favorite一(cheap) Set Ups一(cheap) Page 10 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 17, 1965 Construction Operations Begin On KU Medical Center Chapel Construction was begun yesterday on a non-sectarian chapel at the Kansas University Medical Center (KUMC). Mrs. Kenneth A. Spencer donated $10,000 which her husband a KU graduate left in his will to the medical center for the chapel. The chapel is a one story colonial building of red brick. Its capacity is 100 people. The chapel has 60 permanent seats with additional space for wheel chairs, stretchers and folding chairs. "THE NON SECTARIAN chapel will include compartments to meet all sacramental needs," Miss Helen Simms, director of information at KUMC, said. "Adjacent to the sanctuary will be a study room for the use of visiting clergy of all faiths." Read and Use Kansan Classifieds The interior and exterior of the chapel is free of any specific religious symbols. The simple altar is being designed so that it can have a tabernacle put on top of it for the Catholic religion, a container for scrolls for the Jewish faith, and a cross for Protestants. A planning committee was set up to decide what would be appropriate for the non-sectarian chapel. Three of the men on the committee represented the Catholic, Protestant and Jewish faiths. They were the Reverends George Mundiger and Norbert Licktieg, and Rabbi Jassee, Robert Jenks, the chief architect of the chapel was also on this committee. THE CHAPEL, which is 26 feet wide and 48 feet long, faces on Rainbow Boulevard and is immediately south of the Clendening Medical Library building. There will be an all weather connecting length which will join the chapel with the medical center's "C" building. "I believe this is the best location for the chapel," Rev. Mundiger said. "Patients can get inside easily because there are no stairs leading up to the building." All medical center personnel, patients, their families, students and staff will use the chapel. "The INSEID is paneled extensively with wood," Rev. Mundiger said. "There are plenty of large windows which will make the chapel bright and cheerful because natural light will come in." Construction will probably be finished Aug. 15 and it should be ready for use in early September. Kenneth Spencer was a native of Kansas and a graduate of KU in 1926. In 1943 he was cited by the Alumni Association for distinguished service. He died at the age of 58 in 1960. He was the founder and chairman of the board of the Spencer Chemical Company. Since his death the company has been under Gulf Chemical Company. He was one of the five leading men in founding the Midwest Research Institute. ROBERT B. SMITH AND ELIZABETH WILSON Weejuns are a way of life! (and, casually speaking, you find them everywhere.) 1 America's most wanted casual — Bass Weejuns! Wear them, and how else can you feel but right. You've a choice this season too. For men, Weejuns in classic smooth leathers or dashing Scotch Grains. And — for the ladies — a striking Scotch Grain collection of wardrobe-sparking Spring colors. At your shoe store! Bass OUTDOOR FOOTWEAR Only Bass Makes Weejuns® (G. H. BASS & CO., 153 Main St., Wilton, Me.) WEEJUNS $ ^{*} $ by Bass OUTDOOR FOOTWAR FOR MEN... and WOMEN FOR MEN $15.95 FOR WOMEN $12.95 *T.M. Reg. Now Exclusively at ARENSBERG'S 819 Mass. VI 3-3470 Greatest thing to hit campuses since co-eds FARAH® Slacks with FaraPress™ Never Need Ironing They're ironing while they're drying™ The luxury look is yours in permanent press, permanent color slacks of this masterful double-plied, yarn-dyed weave. Styled for wear on campus and off, and made to always look neat. Master Ply by FARAH only $798 FARAH MANUFACTURING CO., INC. • EL PASO, TEXAS T sour tary in t dies N ODL+C IV BEEM CAN 叹号/句号 Newspapers in Classrooms To be Subject for Workshop By Robert Stevens Prof. Knowles said the workshop is intended to present information to show that the newspaper plays an important role in a representative and democratic government such as ours. The use of the American newspaper in the classroom will be the subject of a workshop here this summer. The workshop is to serve as a source of information for elementary teachers and secondary teachers in the language arts and social studies areas. It is designed to bring these teachers information about newspapers that will help them to carry out the objectives of their specific courses such as world history, English, journalism, and government. The camp director will be John H. Knowles, assistant professor of journalism. It will be from June 13 until June 25. THE CAMP is being sponsored by the school of education, the school of journalism and the Kansas Press Association. The objectives of the workshop have been broken down into four areas. They are general education, social studies, language arts, and journalism. THOSE OBJECTIVES for the general education are: 1. The development of mass media as a tool for democracy. 2. The status of the mass media in our representative or limited democracy. 3. The job the newspaper is doing. 4. What the newspaper's job should be now to continue better its historic role. 1. To understand the necessity of the newspaper as a tool in social studies education. - 5 What news is for newspapers. - 6 How to find news in a democracy. 2. The necessity of being well educated in social studies to make the newspaper most useful. THE OBJECTIVES for social studies teachers are: 1. The development of written language by studying newspapers. 3. How the newspaper should improve to be more effective in a democracy. 4. What the reader can do to help the newspaper improve. THE LANGUAGE art instructors will study: - 2. The relationship of newspaper writing to all forms of writing, particularly the essay. - 3. The value for good composition of the kinds of writing found in newspapers. THE WORKSHOP is to enable journalism teachers to better understand: 1. The rewards to the individual in news-editorial work. - 2. The way in which the news-paperman makes democracy work. Wednesday, March 17, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 13 When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified 3. The value of the journalist's job from student to professional publications. CALDER M. PICKETT, professor of journalism; Oscar M. Haugh, professor of education; John McCormally, editor of The Hutchinson News; Rich Clarkson, photo editor of the Topeka Capital-Journal; Instructors for the courses to be given include: Prof. Knowles; Burton W. Marvin, dean of the school of journalism; Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the school of education; Thomas C. Rythe, assistant professor of journalism and director of KU printing services; Alvin McCoy, Pulitzer Prize winning writer of The Kansas City Star; Charles G. Pearson, an editorial writer for the Wichita Eagle and Beacon; Elmer Beth, professor of journalism; Frances Grinstead, associate professor of journalism; James Dykes, professor of journalism: Lelon R. Capps, associate professor of education; and Alvin H. Schild, professor of education. Ross DISNEY MENS WEAR at Available Exclusively I love a man in Van Heusen "417" Maria Mancini SUA POETRY HOUR Thursday, March 18 811 Massachusetts Dr. Jack Brooking will read the V-Taper-for the lean trim look. poetry It's wild, the way his long, lean good looks come on strong in that "V-Tapered" fit. Anyone can tell he's top man on my scene when he steps out in the stepped-up styling of authentic Button-Downs or smooth Snap-Tabs. And the added attraction of Van Heusen spring fabrics and colors make him my favorite distraction. VAN HEUSEN' younger by design of Tennessee Williams FROM THE 417 COLLECTION DAVID HILLISM 4:30 p.m. Thursday Music Room in Kansas Union Free Free Coffee Coffee Breathtaking Beauty in Diamond Design the classic Solitaire in tailored styling matchless values BY Feature $150 $150 $200 $250 $160 CREDIT TERMS Wedding ring interlocks into engagement ring to stay in perfect position... no shifting... no turning... Your KU-ID is Your Pass to CREDIT BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 743 Mass. VI 3-4366 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 17, 1965 Stones Can Deceive Geology Survey Says Sandstones-whether impressive masses in Zion National Park, strata in the rim of the Grand Canyon, or cross-bedded ledges on the banks of the Wakarusa in Douglas County, Kansas-are not always what they seem, according to a recent report issued by the State Geological Survey at KU. Internal Structures of "Homogeneous" Sandstones, Kansas Geological Survey Bulletin 175 Part 1, is based on analyses by x-ray pictures of 316 samples from 61 rock formations in seven states. In recent years, many geologists have focused attention on the understanding of sedimentary structures, in the interest of science and economic application. Recurring questions include those relating to the origin and significance of sandstones that appear to be structureless and homogeneous. Did the sediments develop in special environments? Was the material itself uniform? Did burrowing organisms play a part? Or What? The author of the report—W. Kenneth Hamblin, now of Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, formerly of KU, and a summertime staff member of the Kansas Geological Survey-attempted to find some of the answers by radiographic techniques. Using this x-ray method, the same as is used in the medical laboratory, he was able to obtain such detailed information as subtle variations in composition, texture, or fabric, which may be completely invisible to the human eye. We've got it! MIDDLE SCHOOL We've got it! That's right. We've still got the most popular men's slip-on to ever hit the college scene. Just look around you. Bet most of your friends already have a pair. How about you? ROBLEE $13.00 Cheyenne II Ivory Waxhide M'Coy's SHOES 813 Mass. VI 3-2091 ROBLEE $13.00 Cheyenne II Ivory Waxhide McCoy's SHOES 813 Mass. VI 3-2091 Quill' Magazine Returns to KU After a semester of dormancy, Kansas University's literary magazine, The Quill, is now in operation. Under the leadership of the editor-in-chief, Bill Knief, Mission freshman, a new staff has been organized with Edwin Eigner, assistant professor of English, as the advisor. "The failure of the magazine in past years has been due to the lack of advertising," Jay Vandervelde, Emporia freshman who is the managing editor of the magazine, said. Separate poetry and prose boards comprise the judging panel. Entries may be fiction or non-fiction. All KU students and any other creative writer may deposit their submissions at the English department in Fraser Hall. Several manuscripts have been submitted. Plans are to publish an issue before spring-break. If the response is favorable, a second issue will follow. The annual District Speech and Drama Festival for high schools will be at KU this Saturday. This competition, sponsored by the Kansas State High School Activities. will attract 47 schools with 500 students. All will be from the eastern third of the state. KU Hosts Speech, Drama Group THE SCHOOLS WILL compete in extemporaneous speaking, informative speaking, original oration, one-act plays, duet acting, humorous and dramatic readings, and the interpretation of prose and poetry. Events for the Festival are scheduled to start at 8 a.m. Saturday in Murphy Hall. Chico's Drive-In 19th & Massachusetts We specialize in: TACO'S of all kinds - 20c ea. or 6 for $1.00 Burritoes of fish, cheese, beef and others 20c each or 6 for $1.00 Chico's Drive-In Watch for the announcement of our delivery service JAMES BOMB ANNOUNCES THE J. C. PENNEY PLAN TO IMPROVE AND BUILD YOUR COLLEGE WARDROBE FLEXIBLE TIE 2. For classes, dates or job interviews the New FORTREL polyester, pima cotton or dacron shirt is perfect. In long or short sleeves; white and solid colors, it's the backbone of a KU man's wardrobe reg. $3.98 ea. NOW 3 for $10.00 830 Mass. 1. Towncraft Dress Shirts reg. $3.25 and $2.50 ea. NOW 2 for $5.00 Tapered for the KU man on the go. A personalized selection of snap, button and plain collars in white, stripes and pastel colors that invite you to buy now at this big saving price. PLEASE DO NOT CLIP THIS IMAGE. IT IS VERTICAL AND WILL RESULT IN A JUMP. DO NOT CROP THE LINE. PENNEY'S B V N 1,57 toda VI 3-4114 Page 13 Wednesday, March 17.1965 University Daily Kansan Myriad Accomplishments of Saint Bring Renown in Many Countries Not everyone could have lived 1,578 years ago and still be famous today. But then not everybody was born in France in the fifth century, taken captive by Irish marauders at the age of 16, and changed the religious beliefs of one country within a lifetime. Who was this person whose spirit has filled so much of the lives of Irish people and others throughout the world? It was St. Patrick, of course. IF IT HADNT been for his St. Patrick's tradition, we would never have drunk green beer, seen a shamrock or had an excuse to pinch anyone on March 17. These are customs all regularly observed on St. Patrick's Day. It is not known exactly when the color green became characteristic of the day on the American scene, but it was probably started by the Irish in New York. KU students started one St. Pat's tradition. That is the one of having a St. Patrick's Day party and parade to celebrate the traditional patron saint whom they claim for engineering. Engineering students will begin their parade at 3:30 p.m. Friday in front of the Kansas Union and will proceed to Marvin Hall. The parade will be led not only by a student dressed as St. Patrick but supposedly by St. Patrick in spirit as well. During the ceremonies in front of Marvin Hall, five finalists for the Engineering School queen will be presented. St. Patrick was born in 387 and lived a peaceful life until he was taken as a slave to the Emerald Island. After living there and learning about the people and their customs, he escaped to his homeland and studied in a monastery until he became an ordained priest. He was called to Rome by Pope Celestine I. While St. Patrick had been in slavery he had come in contact with the Druid religion that dominated Ireland at that time. Tradition has it that the patron saint on his second trip to the Emerald Isle converted the chieftains to the Catholic religion. Their followers soon changed from their old pagan beliefs. Since that time Ireland has always been Catholic. The shamrock, a green plant, is another Irish sign associated with St. Patrick's day. It is symbolic of how God can be three persons in one. This points up the Christian belief in the trinity. ST. PATRICK was sent back to Ireland, the land he knew so well, because the Pope wanted a closer relationship between the two countries. THE ST. PATRICK celebration will be completed with a dance Friday night at 8 p.m. in the National Guard Armory where the queen will be announced. No one knows where the traditional pinching came into the holiday picture. It has been traditional to wear green on St. Patrick's for years, and if one doesn't wear green, he might be pinched, no matter whether the pincher is Irish or not. Official Bulletin A miracle St. Patrick is traditionally claimed to have performed is casting out all the snakes from the Emerald Isle. Graduate Foreign Students: Those who are interested in applying for a June Seminar in Williamsburg, Va., the Office of the Dean of Students, 228 Strong. TODAY Spanish Club "Ateno." 4:30 p.m. 11 Fraser, Dr. Cam牵牛, Univ of the Andes, "Jose Asuncion Silva, a modern poet." Carillon, Recital. 7:00 p.m. Albert Timely Topics 7:00 p.m. "Christianity in America" 12:30 p.m. amanda lawrence Student Center. lawrence Student Center. Classical Film, 7:00 p.m. "Le Million." Fraser Thater. Sigma XI Lecture, 7:30 p.m. Dr. Mlir Mildred, Stanford Univ. 411 Summer- field. Fine Arts Honor Recital, 8:00 p.m. Swarthout Recital Hall. Lungoy Lecture, 8:15 p.m. Dr. Lewis M. Cline, Univ. of Wisconsin, 426 Lindley. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Dunford Church TOMORROW Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. St. Lawrence Student Center. Confessions of the Saints. Mathematics Colloquium, 3:30 p.m. Dr. Nicholas Rashevsky, Univ. of Chicago, 4 Student Teachers Meeting, 3:30 p.m. 303 Bailey. Episcopal Holy Communion, 11:35 a.m. Canterbury House, 1116 La. Minority Opinions Forum, 4:30 p.m. Asst. Profs. John Mitchell and Morton Brown. There Freedom of Speech on our Campus? J- ayhawk Room, Kansas Union. German Club Informal Kaffeeundes, 446 Hawk's Nest, Kansas Union. All are invited. S.U.A. Poetry Hour, 4:30 p.m. Dr. Jack Brooking Music Room Kansas Union Wesley Foundation Evensong, 5:00 p.m. Methodist Center, 1314 Oread. KU Section-American Chemical Society, 7:30 p.m. 122 Malott. Dr. R. Srinivasa Rao, Pharmacy, 8:45 p.m. 5:30 p.m. Eldridz Hotel, Call UN 4-3568 for reservations, Lecture Phone. C. F.M. Group No. 1, 8:00 p.m. Chairman Terry Smart, VI 3-8526; Group No. 2, 8:30 p.m. Chairman Alex Boyle, VI 3-0288. St. Lawrence: Student Center. University Concert Course, 8:20 p.m. Hague Philharmonic. Hoch Auditorium. Epicaphal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Teaching Candidates: Interviews scheduled for Thurs., Mar. 18, by Tachas Appoint. Bureau: Missouri, Kansas Cltv Public Schools, elementary and second-117 Ba.; Kansas, Wichita Coll. Schools, elementary and secondary, 117 Ba. IN PERSON Peter, Paul and Mary Saturday, March 20 Municipal Arena Kansas City, Mo. 8:30 P. M. SEATS NOW SELLING at ADVENTURE BOXOFFICE Tickets $2.95, 3.50 and more orders to Municipal Auditorium Boxoffice, enclose stamped-addressed envelope. Join IBM's new computer systems science training program Why: become a problem-solver and advisor to users of IBM computer systems in areas such as: Who: graduating engineers and scientists in all disciplines. - real-time control of industrial processes - communications-based information systems - time-shared computer systems - graphic data processing - computer-controlled manufacturing systems - management operating systems - engineering design automation When: as soon as you graduate, IBM will give you comprehensive training, both in the classroom and on the job. How: see your placement director, visit the nearest IBM branch office, or write to W. G. Williams, IBM Corporation, 1400 Baltimore Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri 64141. Where: in all principal cities of the U.S. IBM DATA PROCESSING DIVISION ADVERTISED IN ESQUIRE AS Have a Burnt Ivory THE RICH CIGAR TONE The strong masculine flavor of this rich cigar tone leather appeals instantly to young-thinking men. Hand-sewn detailing adds the custom touch. MIDI-HEEL LOAKE M. SMITH'S BOOTS exclusive with Taylor made Taylor Made BHOE MEN'S SHOE $17.95 to $18.95 Royal College Shop 837 Mass. VI 3-4255 Page 14 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 17, 1965 Owens Makes Good Showing Against Tough Opening Odds Coach Ted Owens, in his first season as director of Jayhawk basketball, has given Kansas its best campaign in four years. During the season just ended Kansas won 17 while losing only eight games. The Jayhawks finished second in the Big Eight Conference with a 915 mark. Not since 1961 when KU won 17 and lost eight (10-4 in the league) have the fans in Allen Field House had so much to cheer about and the picture promises to get even brighter next year. The 1964-65 season started with the unexpected loss of three outstanding players who had been counted upon to rank the Jayhawks as Big Eight favorites. George Unseld, 6-7 all-league center and the club's top scorer and rebounder over the past two years, quit the squad late in November. Steve Renko, 6-4 forward, decided to forego basketball in order to concentrate on baseball for the remainder of the year. Wayne Loving, lettered junior guard, also left the scene. Sooners Begin Spring Practice NORMAN—(UPI)—More than 90 candidates were expected to report to coach Gomer Jones today to begin Oklahoma University's spring football practice. Jones will have 18 lettermen available from the 1964 team that finished 6-4-1 and lost to Florida State in the Gator Bowl but some have been excused to participate in other spring sports. The Sooners will get in 20 days of practice, winding up spring drills with the annual varsity-alumni game April 24. Despite the presence of 18 lettermen, inexperience will be a problem for the Sooners. Lack of experience will be particularly evident at tackle, end and in the backfield. Four offensive and defensive tackles, the top three defensive ends and three starting offensive backs were among those lost to graduation. The loss of three players meant that Coach Owens had only two returning starters and eight lettermen instead of 11. Guards Dave Schichtle and Del Lewis were the only returning regulars. The top six scorers of 1964-65 should all be on hand next season as the group includes five juniors and one sophomore. Wesley, Lopes, Lewis, Lochmann, Franz, and Chana, in that order led the Jayhawks' attack during the past schedule. Wesley broke the conference total point scoring record of Bob Boozer by scoring 377 points in 14 games. He also cracked the conference field goal record held by Clyde Lovellette. Wesley scored 150 field goals in league play. The future of KU basketball is brighter now than at any time in the past five years and the coaching staff of Owens, Sam Miranda and Bob Mulcahy promise to give the Jayhawks a return to national prominence. However, player losses were soon forgotten when KU hopes soared as the Jayhawks won the Annual Big Eight Conference pre-season tourney at Kansas City. Optimism returned to "the Hill" with names like Walt Wesley, 6-11 junior center; Riney Lochmann, 6-5 forward; Ron Franz, 6-5 forward; Al Lopes, 6-5 Junior College All-American who spelled a guard spot and steady reserves like Jim Gough, 6-8 center; Kerry Bolton; Fred Chana; David Brill; Larry Norris; Pat Davis and Dick Rugges. Mulcahy Takes Tennis As Gibbens Bows Out Denzel Gibbens, Athletic Ticket Manager and Varsity Tennis Coach at KU for the past eight years, has resigned his position to accept appointment with Inn Operations Corporation of Topeka, effective April 1st. The announcement regarding Gibbens was made by Wade R. Stinson, Athletic Director. Mr. Nick Roach of Topeka, presently employed by the State Auditor's Office, has accepted an appointment to the KU staff succeeding Gibbens. Fun Fun Fun PITCHER NIGHT 70¢ Free Peanuts La Pizza 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 Mulcahy, an outstanding tennis player, began his coaching career as an assistant at Eastern Kentucky in 1955. A native of Lexington, Ky., Mulcahy compiled a winning high school record before moving into the collegiate ranks. Coach effective immediately. Mulcahy, 33, joined the Jayhawk staff last spring as freshman basketball coach. His 1965 Kansas Varsity Tennis team are the defending Big Eight Conference champions. EYE OPENER Bob Muleahy, a member of the KU Basketball coaching staff, has been named head Varsity Tennis Shoes — 2nd Floor Whee Heel, wow style! This clever Sandler is all cut out for fashion show . . just the little shoe to walk (or dance) you any place in airy grace. Black patent. 901 Mass. $12.95 VI 3-6360 Weaver Abington Book Shop, Inc. 1237 Oread, Carries the New York Times Sunday Edition which generally arrives by Tuesday, noon. English, French, and German weeklies are also stocked. Hours: 10-10 Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. V12-1007 Our 108th Year Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Starts TONIGHT! M.G.M presents MARGARET RUTHERFORD Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5780 Starts TONIGHT! M-G-M presents MARGARET RUTHERFORD MURDER AHOY Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5780 Starts TONIGHT! M.G.M presents MARGARET RUTHERFORD MURDER AHOY Varsity THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-1065 TONIGHT ONLY! AN EVENING WITH DR. SIGMUND FREUD The boldly penetrating drama of the man who tore away the world's mask of sexual innocence! "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST!" N.Y. Times JOHN HUSTONS PRODUCTION OF FREUD "HIS LIFE, HIS LOVES, HIS SECRET PASSION" Shows at 7:00 & 9:00 Starts TOMORROW! TAMI SHOW TECHAGE AWARDS MUSIC INTERNATIONAL Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone V1 3-1065 TONIGHT ONLY! TAMISHOW TEENAGE AWARDS MUSIC INTERNATIONAL M Plaz en When I Grow Up I Want To Live At PARK PLAZA SOUTH (you should now) My daddy won't let me live at Park Plaza South yet. He says I'm not old enough.I wish I could. I like the idea of having central air-conditioning and heating, the yard mowed for me, swimming in the private swimming pool, carpeting, garbage disposal, coin-operated laundromat, front drapes and a choice of one or two bedroom apartments. Why don't you live there for me? You'll like Park Plaza South. Park Plaza South 1912 W. 25th Call Day or Night: VI 2-3416 --- ... 21. 14 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE 416 '60 VW, excellent condition with radio, sunroof, white wall tires and less than 100 miles on a rebuilt engine, call VI 2-3489, 3-19 BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMIUMS! Occidental Term Life: conversion, Go-Back, and Move-Over options. Age 18 = $33.90= $10.00, Age 20 = $34.40= $10.00, Age 22 = $34.70= $10.00, Call Wes Santee at VI 3-2116 for details, if Nikon F photomic, 1.4f, 50 mm, lons, like new $440 camera, will sell for $250. See at apt. 640 The Oaks, VI 3-7032. 3-19 Stereo component system. Dynaco stereo preamp, two dynaco 50-watt power amps, stephens speakers, garrard changer. All perfect. Call VI 3-4891. 3 22 Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised. extremely comprehensive immeigeated and bound for $4.25 per copy CALL V1 2-1901 for free delivery. 1955 Ford 6 cylinder, standard transmission, radio, and heater, good transportation. GPS, CD-ROM, Bluetooth, hand-pendable, $100.00 Benson's Auto Sales. 1902 Harper, phone VI 3-1826. 3-19 Printed Biology notes. 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive notes for classes. Formerly known as the Thete Notes Call VI 3-1428. $1.45. ff Gibson guitar, J-50 model, adjustable bridge, clear plastic upper pick guard, neck strap, full resonant sound case, neck strap included. Neel Smith. VI 2-3343. 3-22 1964 Honda, c-100, $175.00. Good condition. See at 1341 Ohio, Apt. D. 3-22 One owner 1963 Dodge Dart. take over payments with small equity to owner. 2:53 p.m. Monday thru Friday and all day Sat. and Sunday. 3-17 1957 Buick 4-door station wagon, radio and heater, power steering, power brakes, white sidewalls, call UN 4-3427. 3-16 1956 Olds, 88; actual mileage, 31.000; cream color, black interior, rear speaker system, white wall tires. $350.00—excellent condition. VI 3-1174. 3-22 "Great Books of the Western World." Complete set unopened, latest edition. must sell. VI 3-8505. 3-18 Now you can hear a variety of excellent King. Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES Years of experience Finest references, CALL V 1-2781. tf Garrard "type A" never used, still in original packing box, $50.00-Tape recorder, Akal M6, semi-professional, 4 track stereo for $220.00—1955 Chev. V8 4 bbl, tbl. $275.00. Call Lee Garrett, VI 2-3965. 3-17 1963 French Renault. 4-speed transaxi- tion. Call VI 3-6462. 3-22 excellent condition. Call VI 3-6462. 3-22 TYPEWRITERS electrics, manuals, tables; sales, service, rentals, Olympia Hermes, Royal, Smith-Corona, Olivett Adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Tyre-writer, 700 Mass. VI 3-3644 ff Tires—1000 x 14 white sidewalls. Two sets. One set is Atlas snow tires, will go for $5 apiece. The second set is $26 (apiece) Riverside white sidewalls. They will go for $15 apiece. The set (of 4) is $4. Call Bob Monk-VI -3 1702¹ tf BE THE LEADER OF YOUR PACK- Harley Davidson Sportster K 750 cc new clutch, and new brakes and tires. THIS IS NO HONDA For further information about this beautiful machine CONTACT Melilot at VI 3-0700 ff Students, why throw money away on rent when you can own a 1962 Marlette 10 x 50, modern two-bedroom mobile home. This home is clean and in excellent condition. For further information CALI RI 8-0973 or RI 8-0916. tf PORTABLE STEREO: Admiral's Finest— two carrying units, 1 for turntable and for speaker systems (2 tweeters, and 2 full range woofers) $195 new. Will sell for good offer. CALL: Rusty Callins at VI 3-5721. CHINA-Noritaki. Mayfair design. New never used or even removed from packaging. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk V3-7102. THE STABLES now open every day- Serving steaks, chops sea food, sand- sand and agement, new atmosphere. Party rooms available. Phone t: 3-9644 1W 4017 W. NEED A BAND? 30 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM. PHONE VI 2-2100 * HELP WANTED MEN wanting summer or full time work. SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAMS available for all. WHY BORROW MONEY. Earnings well above average. AHTILETS DESIABLE. Apply 3:30 p.m., Sunflower Room. 3-23 POSITIONS WANTED Wanted — ironing — shirts, men's pants, cups, skirts, dresses a special 3-22 I 3-471-7 I will do ironing in my home. Satisfaction guaranteed 10 cents per artice. VI 3-0838. 3-22 TYPING 8 years typing experience plus background in proofreading enables me to guarantee accuracy on college papers. New electric typewriter equipped for interchangeable type sets. Mrs. Berndt, 801 Michigan or VI 2-0400. tf experienced typist wants typing in home. rates, prompt service. Phone VI 2-3356. Typing done by experienced secretary for 256 each double spaced page. Cal Ethel Henderson, 2565 Ridge Court, VI 20122. 3-3 experienced typist. 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. ALL Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, I-26148. Theses only on Royal Electric Pica Typewriter CALL Mills, Fulcher at VI 3-0588 Experienced typist. Former secretary will work with staff in job duties of Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter, Gestetner Duplicator. Mrs. Downey, 2521 Alabama St. Phone: 1-8508 term papers. Theses by experienced vpist Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tf Expert typist fully qualified to do term appers, reports, and theses. Will do exer- cises on carbon ribbon typewriter. Betty Muskrau *40 Indian, or call V1 2-0091.* tt Experienced secretary will type term papers, law briefs, theses, etc., for students. Especially familiar with legal and business terms. Fast and accurate. Reasonable rates. Call Marsha Goff at VJ 3-2577. tf Former Harvard and U. of Minnesota report and these: PHONE VI 3-7207. Experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing. Speak well in English and languages. Quick and reasonable Electric typewriter Call VI I-3976. tf Will do xping in my home Accurate reasonable rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at VI 2-0210. Experienced typist wants theses, termpapers, and dissertations to be typed on electric (pica type) typewriter. Please Call Pat Beck at VI 3-5630. tt Typhist, experienced with term papers theses and dissertations, will give you your first hands-on experience in a machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marcene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048 Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will type for or these answers. Electric typewriter. CALL Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8262. CALL Expert typing on thesis, dissertations, dissertations typewriter. Call 3-23 Mishler, VI 3-1029 Experienced typist will do dissertations, manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., VI, 3-7485. tf Apartment at 1232 Louisiana for couple or single. Modern. Call VI 3-4271. 3-19 FOR RENT engine swaps and Transmission change overs. We sell and install speed equipments for drags, for drapes or street. Farmers Garage, 837 Connecticut, VI 3-2906. Pune up—Engine rebuilding—Complete general mechanic work (guaranteed work). Most reasonable prices in town Open 7 evenings a week. Free estimates on all parts and labor. Farmers Garage. 837 Connecticut, VI 3-2906. ti Room for rent - double or single. Ideal entrance. Entrance. Phone VI 3-0326 5 p.m. Phone VII 3-0328 Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-Q ribs that grandma and grandpa can eat, try our orders, or order of 40 per slab. Hours: 11:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-9510 CAR REPAIR IR., SR. AND GRADUATE STUDENTS MONEY AVAILABLE ON PERSONAL SECURITY PHONE, CHUCK ADKINS, BENEFICIAL FINANCE AT VI 3-84- 126 MISCELLANEOUS $CHWINN BICYCLES - service all makes parts and accessories, tires $1.46, tubes tc, pedals $1.46, seat, luggage racks and tools $2.00, BP brimnz at 7th and Miel CALT V3-10581 **ARTY TIME?** Building available for phoneline calls **PHONE** 1308 Abbfied at VI 3-3995. friends coming this weekend? Looking or a place with good food at reasonable prices. WITH THE FIRST BEST RESTAURANT. Plenty of free parking th and Iowa. tt it's great for a date. Take her bowling at Hilcrest Bowl. Finest lanes in the state. Also Mon, Tues, and Sun. also Mon, Tues, and Fr. after 9:00 p.m. Hilcrest Bowl. 9th and Iowa. Page 15 Latin student of 5 years wishes to tutor Latin. $1.50 hr. Contact Louise Conley at VI 3-9123. 3-17 Rent electric, standard, and portable typesetors. Repair all makes of electric, standard, and portable business equipment (formerly Business Machines), 15 E. 8th. VI 3-0151. tf Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon.-thu-Fri, or all dav Sat. or Sun. Phone VI 3-6231. tf Attention: All persons interested in self defense training classes utilizing many of the arms and smashes used in films. Bond movies, contact Bob Mount. vii VI ~ 7128 Wanted-30 girls with Senior keys, to date 30 Yale University graduates and faculty with the Yale Russian chorus. CONTU KY O office. 3-23 WANTED Young working girl would like another girl to share her two-bedroom apartment. Her share would be $50 month, plus 1/2 utilities. Call VI 3-3988 after 5:00 p.m. Apartment available starting June 1. 3-22 Wanted. Someone to play GO. Call VI 2-9227 after 7:00 p.m. tf ATTENTION PARTY THROWERS: Do you want the Beatles, the Kingsmen, Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL VI 2-1791. tt OLD CARS WANTED, top prices paid. Do it today! 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CALLING FOR more deliberation on the proposal, Jacke Thayer, Ellsworth sophomore and representative from small women's dormitories (UP), said, "I don't think most of us are knwledgeable enough to vote on this bill tonight." "I have no quarrel with the spirit of this bill." Miss Thayer said, "but I do have a quarrel with the political and long-run intentions of this bill and the methods being used to pass it." "Pressure is being put on us by the leaders of this council, the administration, the Civil Rights Council, and the School of Journalism," Miss Thayer said. "I, for one, am not about to vote on this situation to appease them." "This was not politically motivated," Stewart said. "There is always pressure, but as far as political pressure goes, just look at the non-partisan vote." THEO COUNCIL MEMBERS voting for the amendment were: Janet Anderson (UP), Prairie Village freshman; Bill Garrison (UP), freshman; Sull Cummings (UP), Topeka graduate student; Gary Giltstrap (Vox), Galena fith-year pharmacy student; Miriam Kangas (UP), Wichita sophomore; Mary Ruth Lanning (UP), Lawrence junior. Charles Preston (Vox), Lawrence senior; Jim Prager (Vox), Atchison sophomore; Jon Putnam (UP), Leawood junior; Bill Robinson (Vox), Great Bend sophomore; Leo Schrey (Vox), Leavenworth junior. Nancy Sturgis (Vox), St. Louis, Mo., junior; Hugh Taylor (UP), Stoke-on-Trent, England, graduate student; George Tannous (UP), Lebanon senior; and Doug Walker (Vox), Belle Mead, N.J., sophomore. MEMBERS WHO VOTED against the amendment were: Lee Ayres (UP), Park Anderson (OK), Jeffrey S. son (Vox), Prairie Village senior; Ted Dickey (Vox), Louisville, Ky.; junior; Mike McNally (Vox), Bartlesville, Okla.; sophomore; Roy Miller (UP), Topkach Ray Myers (UP), Dodge City fifty-year engineering student; Deanell R雪ce (UP), Lawrence Snyder (UP), Independence senior; and Lu Surface (Vox), Lawrence freshman. FIGHTER TIMEGRAPH STUDIO FND STREETLORD WOOD SMITH Owens FLOWER SHOP "Flowers Telegraphed Anywhere" Located Conveniently to K.U. Campus & Lawrence Memorial Hospital — 9th and Indiana — DIAL VI 3-6111 AFTER HOURS CALL VI 3-2016 FREE DELIVERY Garden Center VI 3-2004 19th & N.Y. INDIANA WEST 9th Deadlines Near in Aids, Awards Deadlines are fast approaching in the Aids and Awards office. Robert Billings, director of Aids and Awards, warns students to make notations of the following dates, or they may be "out in the cold" when loan awards are made. Students who plan to apply for loans to finance their travels on the KU Summer Language Institutes should make application before April 15. Billings said. "Participants in other special summer programs of the University should also apply before April 15." Billings added. The loan application deadline for the regular KU summer session and junior year abroad program is May 1. "All applications for loans and arrangements must be made before the students leave the country. They should contact me before May 1," Billings said. BENNY HARRISON Songs of Life and Love Glenn Yarbrough "Come Share My Life" is not a casual invitation, for anyone who has heard Glenn sing knows that his performances are an accurate reflection of the man he is, the life he lives and the music he loves. The 12 songs he has selected for this new Dynagroove album have special meaning for him. They will for you too, once you've heard "Love Come A-Trickin' Down," "No One to Talk My Troubles To," "When Summer Ends," and "The Warm and Gentle Girls." You'll enjoy every minute of this music that mir- RCA VICTOR rors a man. The most trusted name in sound COME SHARE MY LIFE GLENN YARBROUGH Award Attention Seniors: A mistake was made in the Senior Party announcement on page 9. It is now believed that all of the class officers are living in splendid luxury in South America. But, the SENIOR CLASS Party is still set for the RED DOG INN Saturday, March 20, 7-12 p.m. Hear-The DIMENSIONS Drink--BEvERages(your favorite) Seniors-Free Seniors' Dates-$1.00 Daily hansan LAWRENCF. KANSAS 62nd Year, No. 102 Thursday, March 18, 1965 DONALD BROWN AND JOHN HOLMES (Photo by Lacy Banks) LEO SCHREY (LEFT) AND BILL ROBINSON Vox Populi Presidential and Vice-Presidential Candidates Schrey and Robinson To Head Vox Ticket Vox Populi opened its spring election campaign last night, nominating Leo Schrey, Leavenworth junior, for student body president, and Bill Robinson, Great Bend sophomore, for student body vice-president at a meeting in the Kansas Union. "Bill and I aren't running on what we've done, but we want to show you what we can do," he said. In accepting the nomination, Schrey, pointing to the party's history, said, "Vox has been responsible for some of the most valuable legislation passed by the ASC. AFTER THE candidates were announced, Jim Frazier, Topeka fifth-year pharmacy student and Vox president, presented a policy statement to Vox members. Frazier said in the statement that Vox stands for equal representation for all groups, a clean campaign, and dynamic leadership for the campus. Schrey is currently Vox ASC representative for men's small residence halls and is living at Battenfeld Hall. Holding a 1.9 GPA, his other activities include: ASC Committee on Committees and Legislation, Vox legislative chairman, Association of University Residence Halls representative, ASC Elections Committee, and Young Republicans and SUA Robinson is the ASC representative from the large men's residence halls and also a member of the ASC Committee on Committees and Legislation. His GPA is 1.2 Other activities include the Ellsworth Hall Executive Committee, Model United Nations and the Young Republicans. HE IS ALSO campus coordinator for the Big Eight Student Government Association and Associated Student Governments of America. Promising a clean campaign, Schrey said, "We're not going to go out and make derogatory statements about the opposition." In another speech before Vox members, Mike Grady, Leawood sophomore and Vox fraternity district chairman, said that the Greek vote would not be hurt by the running of the two independent candidates from Vox. "This list of candidates represents a new change that we call the new dimension," he said. "Ws have made no effort at partisan appeasement in our selection of student body president and vicepresident." HARRY BRETCHNEIDFR, Kansas City senior and secretary-general of UP, said this morning, "I think that both UP and Vox candidates are fine men. They've done a good job in student government. University Party revealed its candidates for All Student Council (ASC) representatives from the various schools last night at a business meeting in the Kansas Union. UP Names Candidates "I'm very glad that both parties are going to strive for clean campaigns this year," he said. "It will give the voters the opportunity to decide on the merits of each candidate." Janice K. Gray, Fort Scott sophomore, fine arts; Mark Kirkpatrick, The candidates are Jerry Raeder, Prairie Village junior, engineering; Ken Kneebone, Neodesha senior, pharmacy; Judy Farrrell, Topeka junior, journalism; Mary Lynn Mangan, Dodge City junior, college women, and Dave Trotter, Bartlesville, Okla., junior, business. Nickerson sophomore, college men; Elaine Rinkel, Scott City junior; education; Mohammed Younus, Indian graduate student, graduate school; and Mike Sizemore, Newton first year law student, law school. Harry Bretschneider, Kansas City senior and secretary-general of UP, said this morning he thinks the UP platform will be announced Sunday night. UP presidential and vice-presidential candidates Russ Cummings, Topeka graduate student, and Larry Bast, Topeka junior, were announced last week. Two Cosmonauts Orbit; One Takes Space Walk MOSCOW — (UPI) — A Soviet cosmonaut left his space ship for 20 minutes today while orbiting the earth. He turned a jubilant somersault before returning safely to the craft. The two-man mission, Voskhod Sunrise II, was a giant step in Soviet efforts to land a man on the moon and it left the United States far behind in space achievements. THE TASS NEWS agency reported that Lt. Col. Alexei Leonov, 30. "stepped out of the cabin of Voskhod II into outer space at 11:30 a.m. (3:30 a.m. EST) and moved up to five meters, 16 ft. 5 in. away from the ship." Leonov "carried out a series of planned experiments and returned safely to the ship." Tass said. The agency said Leonov was "feeling fine outside the ship and after his return." The other cosmonaut, Col. Pavel Belvaye, 39 stayed inside. THE FEAT WAS accomplished during the ship's second orbit around the earth while it was travelling at a speed of 17,500 miles per hour. Leoniv was equipped "in a special spacesuit with an autonomous life support system," Tass said. Space experts said the mission was a forerunner to an eventual docking operation with another spaceship. Such a rendezvous in space, creating an orbiting launching pad, would have to precede any flights to the moon or beyond. Both the United States and the Soviet Union have been pointing their space programs toward the rendezvous feat. There was some speculation that the Russians might be planning to launch a second spaceship today to link up with Voskhod II. IN BOCHUM, Germany, a spokesman for the West German Institute for Satellite and Space Research said its radio monitors indicated that a second Russian ship may be in orbit. Voskhod II was launched at 10 a.m. (2 a.m. EST) today and Leonov made his venture into outer space about 90 minutes later. Tass said Leonov's work outside and the return to the ship were "transmitted to the earth by means of the ship's television system and observed by a network of ground stations." VOSKHOD II was making an orbit every 90 minutes on an egg-shaped course that sent it 397 miles away from earth at the farthest point. The closest it came to earth was 108 miles. Tass gave no details on how Leonov left the ship, but scientific sources said he used an air lock and was protected against the vacuum of space and its absolute zero temperatures by his pressure suit. To get back, it was reported, he could have pulled himself hand over hand on a two-line or possibly have used a rocket pack for propulsion. During his space stroll Leonov took pictures with his movie camera and "conducted visual observations of the earth and outer space" Tass said. Exceed Demands CRC Happy on Talks The Civil Rights Council (CRC) heard a report last night on the progress being made toward meeting of its demands by the University Human Rights Council. Mildred Dickeman, assistant professor of anthropology, said she felt the UHRC had made further progress. "I think you can see the All Student Council (ASC) bill has surpassed the CRC's recommendations. It has been expanded to include not only the Kansan, but all student publications, which exceeds CRC's demands," Prof. Dickeman said. PROF. DICKEMAN, a member of the CRC contingent of the UHRC, also said the housing demand of the CRC had been expanded to include on campus as well as off campus housing. "We were aware of discrimination in on campus housing and we thought is should be under the same umbrella." Prof. Dickeman also read a faculty resolution signed by 149 members of the faculty and staff of KU. The resolution supported the statement of policy formulated by the UHRC. It also supported the right of students to "press for this principle (the statement of policy) by persuasion and peaceful demonstration." Pamela Smith, Kansas City sophomore and secretary of CRC, announced that because of "personal reasons" she would be withdrawing from school for the rest of the semester. She said she would go to the South to help with "voter registration and whatever else needed to be done on a voluntary basis." Weather Unseasonably cold tonight through tomorrow is predicted by the weather bureau. It will be partly cloudy with northerly winds 20 to 30 miles per hour diminishing tonight. The low tonight will be around 10. Marjorie French, St. Louis senior, was elected the new CRC secretary. It was not known whether she would take Miss Smith's place on the UHRC. PROF. DICKEMAN ALSO lodged a criticism against the University Daily Kansan. Speaking of the CRC demonstrations and the negotiations now in progress with the UHRC, she said, "You haven't pursued an opportunity for total coverage of an important campus event." "There has never been any background coverage or history of the CRC or racial problems on the campus in the past. I think the purpose of a daily paper is to convey to the students the complexities and work to be done." BETTY JOHNSON, BARBARA SCHUBERT and ELISE ROBERTS (Photo by Don Black) FIVE KU COEDS are in contention for Queen of Engineering Day. They are (left to right): Janice Klusener, Lucas junior; Barbara McCoy, Leawood sophomore; Linda Bahr, Annandale, Va., junior; Beth Beamer, Topeka junior; and Kathleen Strayer, Mission Hills sophomore. One of the candidates will be crowned tomorrow night at the Engineering Dance in the National Guard Armory. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 18, 1965 Good Old St. Pat The Irish came out in full force yesterday to honor their favorite hero, St. Patrick. As a matter of fact, almost everyone was Irish yesterday, even the English. Everyone seems to forget that Harold Harefoot, King of the English, died on March 17th in 1040, or that The Corn Law Rhymer, Ebenezer Elliott, was born on March 17th, 1781. But somehow, a French monk, who helped alleviate the ancient Druid religions of Ireland, was vaulted into international and long-lasting fame. New Yorkers parade in honor of him, people wear the "green" for him, and little old ladies tell stories about how they came over from Ireland during the potato famine. The Germans forget their gipes against the French and the French don't hate the Poles on St. Pat's Day. Everyone is Irish on March 17th. If you claim to be anything else, you are labeled as un-American. It's rather amazing that nationalities, so dear to some coat-of-arms-type people, are obliterated on St. Patrick's Day and everyone becomes Irish. I wish people could forget other grievances and differences as easily as they forget nationality differences. I wonder, though, whether St. Patrick knew what he started, with all the green beer, sham-rocks, etc.? — Leta Roth Guest Editorial I am a member of the Kansan Board and I don't know which way to turn. I want to do everything in my power to support the battle for equal rights. But I, and the other members of the Kansan Board have been entrusted with the job of directing the policy of a daily newspaper—the University Daily Kansan. I cannot take either of these matters lightly. On one hand I have the obligation to myself and to my fellow man that is inherent in the battle for man's dignity and freedom. On the other hand, I have an obligation to the ethics of newspaper publishing. I must fight any outside effort to control what may go into the paper and what may not. I must fight any minority group that attempts to dictate (by force) the policy of a newspaper. I must fight to keep control of the newspaper in the hands of journalists and out of the hands of politicians. Even though I personally believe that the cause is a just one, I cannot support this type of censorship. This is the type that leads to control of the news. This is the type that sets students up as judges deciding whether or not a person's beliefs are good enough to be made public. In other words, by opposing the beliefs of the CRC an advertiser would automatically have his right to advertise in the UDK censored. Who would decide this? Not the staff of the Kansan, not the Kansan Board, not any journalist and especially not a court of law. A committee of students would be established to sit in judgment and to decide who was "pure enough of mind to advertise." This I cannot support. I must also fight a group that tries to use a newspaper to force its beliefs on people that disagree with it. In this case, the CRC is attempting to use the Kansan to gain a lever over people who disagree with them. By controlling the advertising of the UDK they hope to force these businesses that are alleged to be discriminating, to accept a policy dictated by the CRC. I cannot condone any group (in this case, a minority group) that will stoop to forcing a newspaper to fight its battles for it. Another reason that I cannot support this irresponsible action is that it would set a dangerous precedent. If the ASC is allowed to direct what will and what will not be printed in the students' newspaper then there is no reason in the world that the ASC and the party in power cannot say, "Stop printing bad things about our party and, in fact, stop putting anything in the paper about the other party at all." A newspaper, must for the sake of its readers, be in the hands of journalists, not politicians. I only wish that this matter was as simple as it appeared at first glance, but it is not. — John Pepper, Lenexa senior The People Say Dear Sir: There are many different kinds of shoes. There are even many different kinds of tennis shoes. Red tennis shoes are the best. I wear red tennis shoes. After all, who wants to wear black and white striped tennis shoes? People might think they are escaped convicts and no self-respecting tennis shoe wearer would want that to happen. Besides, they'd just get all messy in the mud. Red tennies, as we wearers like to call them, don't get muddy—they just get mad and turn redder. What about the excitement that red tennies arouse? True, we wearers must take care—especially us blondes. Big blue tennies are the chief offenders—they like to crush. But they're about the only trouble-makers, except the worms crawling out of the ground; they think they've found a couple of red bananas. Worms are easy to get round, though. I also wear red tennies because they fit my feet, if I buy them the right size. Incidentally, always buy shoes the right size or else they won't fit. It saves a lot of foot-to-foot combat and reduces the cases of frustrated toes. In all honesty, I suppose I should confess that the main reason I wear red tennies is that they're the swiftest things I've found for chasing pickled elephants down side streets—but that's another story. Frances Bartlett Kansas City, Mo., junior Open Letter to B. B. Turner: In case our public statement to the UDK was not official enough, SPU regrets that no one accepted our challenge and is pleased to accept yours. You mentioned this Friday evening in the Union as the time and place; a representative of SPU will be there. Open Letter to B. B. Turner: May I take this opportunity to concur with your conviction that arguments directed against individuals or groups instead of against other arguments are morally and logically wrong, perhaps just as wrong as dropping bombs on people instead of using a rational foreign policy to create and support democratic alternatives to totalitarian social systems. (Query: is there such a thing as an *ad hominem war*?) Perhaps one might even conclude, to use your poetic allegory, that the military tigers and the political hawks who exhort and direct them ought to climb into their helicopters and go back home where they belong. But, if this policy were to be followed, there would be a grave risk that the area might be overrun by the people who live there. Charles Hook SPU Field Secretary I WISH TO SPEAK OUT ON behalf of the UDK, which has recently come in for a lot of adverse criticism. Cowardly, hypocritical, craven, dishonest, self-righteous—these are only a few of the milder epithets bestowed on the student newspaper. Such rash charges do not deserve refutation. I want to deal in more concrete matters, matters touching more directly upon the heart of journalism—accuracy. Dear Sir: Your story on the Gabriel Marcel lecture last week ("Speaker Says God Non-Existent") drew violent reactions against the UDK from some of my friends. (I add at once that these friends are, like Marcel, Roman Catholics, and are therefore prejudiced as well as being morbidly sensitive.) They asserted that you failed to report anything that Marcel did say and that you reported only what Marcel did not say. I, of course, replied by insisting on the freedom of the press and on your well known policy of independence. This did not satisfy my hypercritical friends, however, who seemed to think it monstrous that you should report the exact opposite of what in fact occurred. I think it must be conceded that your story was not accurate in every detail. This does not necessarily mean, however, that your story was completely without merit. You spelled every proper name correctly (and Nietzsche is a very hard name); you abbreviated Monsieur with marvellous and consistent accuracy; you got the location of the lecture right (which, incidentally, proves that the reporter was actually present at the lecture or at least knew someone who was present because the lecture was originally scheduled for Fraser and was switched to Hoch only at the last moment); you included several correct facts about the speaker (I think it is important to distinguish true from false facts)—that he was a Christian, French, existentialist philosopher; and you almost got the title of the lecture right: You said it was "The Myth and Death of God, etc." whereas in fact the title was "The Myth of the Death of God, etc." That was just a harmless little verbal slip, however, which no one could hold against a harassed reporter struggling in the depths of Christian atheism. Sincerely, Dennis Quinn Assoc. Prof., English Dailij Mansan 111 Flint Hall University of Kansas student newspaper UNiversity 4-3846, newsroom University 4-3198, business once Founded 1889, became bweekly on 1912 loved less, became biweekly 1904 triweekly 1908, daily Jan 12. Member Island Press Association represented by Collegiate Press. Repres- ented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mall subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Press award in Lawrence afternoon at University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. JAMES J. REEB SELMA, ALABAMA ©1965 HERBLOCK @1965 HERBLOEK THE WASHINGTON POST A. D. 1965 The People Say... Dear Editor: CONGRATULATIONS TO BRIAN Turner! He certainly does tell a fine parable! (UDK, Fri, March 12) Having been an avid outdoorsman since about age three, his letter on tigers and forests, etc., was a refreshing change from all the heavy politics that have been discussed in these columns recently. In the course of my outdoor pursuits, I have developed an interest in wildlife management. On this basis, I feel compelled to offer a few words on principles of tiger management. One of the near-universal tenets of wildlife management that Brian overlooks in his amusing parable is the tendency of a specie to thrive when its habitat is good, and to either stop multiplying or starve itself out when the habitat is unsuitable. Perhaps Brian's tigers thrived so well because the people took too little interest in the actual condition of the forest, turning to it only when it suited their own convenience, and thereby allowing the forest to become an ideal place for tigers to live and multiply. Perhaps the people doomed themselves by their own conceit, stupidity, and shortsightedness. In any case, that sure was a fine story. Brian, and since I am concerned with the control of tigers, why don't we get together and discuss the nature of tigers and of forests, sometime. (Snort, bearded, and) Sincerely, John Garlinghouse Salina junior Gentlemen: THE TIME HAS FINALLY come! The March 16th edition of the UDK was the biggest snub of a fellow Jawhawk that I have ever seen. I opened the paper to the so called "sports page" and what headlines did I see? There were three separate articles, each concerning high school athletes, of whom only one has proven himself outside of high school competition. Who cares about the all-stater from Larned or the all-stater from Wyandotte? We might when they have proven themselves in collegiate competition, but not until then. In the meantime let's give recognition where it is truly deserved. Last Saturday afternoon a KU senior performed on national T.V. He was Herald Hadley from Shallow Water. With thousands of people looking on Herald ran 22 times around a wood track. These were 22 important laps because he was competing in the NCAA Indoor track championships, the National Championships! Herald won this race and proceeded to set a Kansas school record, an all time Big Eight record and a national meet record in the process. This might not seem like much to some people, but to those of us who respect the endless hours and literally hundreds of miles spent preparing for such an event, it is vitally important this hard work and effort be publically recognized. A track man is not paid the way some of the collegiate "jocks" are paid. Their only reward is the satisfaction that comes from a job well done, and sometimes from a little piece of metal. Therefore I believe that when a fellow Jayhawk wins a national championship, his school paper should carry an appropriate article relating this in detail to the student body. The UDK has not done this and it is high time that they did. In closing I only wish to say, "Congratulations, Herald, on a job well done." Bob Boyd Houston, Texas, senior BOOK REVIEWS THE GREAT TREASURY RAID, by Philip M. Stern (Signet, 75 cents). Here, in the midst of income tax time, one may feel particularly impelled to read this book that first appeared a year ago. It is quite an expose of taxation abuses, and there is likely to be considerable indignation from the folks who read this low-priced volume. Stern's contention is that every year about $40 billion in potential tax funds never reaches the Treasury because of loopholes in the tax laws. Some are accidental; some are by design. He mentions a businessman who earned $20 million and didn't pay a penny on tax. He talks about the oil depletion allowance, which he says hasn't been touched since it was passed in the twenties. touched since it was passed in the lives of Stern would tax all income—even fringe benefits. He favors a major overhaul of our laws to correct what he views as inequities. Page 3 Computers Solve Problems For Geologists, Engineers Scientists of varied disciplines have solved many of their problems with computers. Now geologists and engineers are using computers to solve their problems too. Other areas of study come into play with geological and engineering problems, according to William W. Hambleton, associate director of the Kansas Geological Survey. Hambleton illustrated how economics, geology, and the computer work to solve problems essentially geological. It has been discovered that this mineral makes good acoustical material, and is also a good liquid clarifying agent. Clarifying agents are used to clear impurities from such liquids as cooking oil and water used in swimming pools. IN WESTERN AND central Kansas there are thousands of tons of volcanic ash. "Previously, the only use for this mineral was as an abrasive in a commercial cleanser," Hambleton said. Geologists have discovered other uses for volcanic ash. Children Crushed During Viet Attack The computer and economies are used to solve the problems of developing the ash beds economically and transporting the mineral to other parts of the United States, according to Hambleton. THE COMPUTER PROJECT now in operation at KU is a cooperative DA NANG, Viet Nam — (UPI)—South Vietnamese war planes killed between 20 and 30 school children Tuesday in an attack on a Communist military post seven miles south of Da Nang, it was disclosed today. A spokesman for the Vietnamese army here said the boys and girls were crushed or suffocated when the ceiling of a cave where they had taken shelter from the planes caved in. He said the schoolmaster was using the same building as the Viet Cong military post and as a school. THE SPOKESMAN blamed their deaths on the schoolmaster, whom he described as an officer of the Communist Viet Cong rebels. A spokesman said a Vietnamese observation plane was fired upon as it flew over the village to make a landing at Da Nang. Thursday, March 18, 1965 University Daily Kansai COACH HOUSE VI 3-6369 12th and Oread 1972 effort between the Kansas Geological Survey and the Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering. In discussing the joint project, Hambleton said, "The Geological Survey and the Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineerhave found a common interest. The problems we are dealing with are concerned with analysis of systems with many variables, and engineers are uniquely qualified to deal with these problems." Ginger Kamberg Alpha Phi Picnic season ahead! Be ready with stretch jeans and a madras wind breaker. ONE COOPERATIVE PROJECT was recently made possible by a $52,000 agreement involving the Kansas Geological Survey and the Petroleum Information Corporation of Denver. "The purpose of the project is to convert basic information on about 25,000 selected exploratory gas and oil wells in Kansas to punch cards and magnetic tapes. When the project is completed the Geological Survey will have records on many wells in Kansas and adjoining states readily available for use in industry and scientific research," Hambleton said. Hambleton has already received inquiries about the use of computers for geological purposes. One of the most recent inquiries was from a geologist in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Last summer a seminar was conducted at KU by the Geological Survey, the U.S. Bureau of Mines, and the Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering. At the seminar, the possibility of the U.S. Bureau of Mines and KU working together in the area of economic analysis was discussed. ANOTHER SEMINAR with the U.S. Bureau of Mines will be held at KU this coming summer. Kevin Jones, assistant professor of petroleum engineering, and Floyd Preston, associate professor of petroleum engineering, De-Min Wu, assistant professor of economics, Dr. John Harbaugh of Stanford University, and Dr. John Griffiths of Pennsylvania State University will participate in the seminar, as well as staff from the Kansas Geological Survey. Nominations for Undergraduate Research Participation Awards are being received until March 31 by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Study Award Nominations Due be nominated by faculty members who are willing to supervise their nominees' research. Assistant Dean Robert P. Cobb announced today that students should The program is supported by grants from the Kansas Heart Association, the National Science Foundation and miscellaneous funds. SUA Oread Jazz Festival Deadline For Block Ticket Sales Friday, March 19th For Information Call Sara Jo Fry — VI 3-8022 A man holding a barrel. EVERYBODY DOES IT! (well, almost everybody) They let their laundry pile up. Everything goes into one big pile (usually in the corner) that grows and grows and Grows and Grows. After all, Nobody Likes to do laundry. Except US!! Free pick-up and service delivery LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 1001 New Hampshire VI 3-3711 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 18, 1965 25 Apply to Aid CORE in Jonesboro, La. The Lawrence branch of the Congress on Racial Equality (CORE) has received 25 applications for service in Jonesboro and Bogolusa, Louisiana, during spring vacation. The group of KU students and Lawrence residents will be sponsored by Lawrence CORE and will help with the civil rights efforts there, according to Geraldine Maddocks, Craig, Cole, freshman and chairman of public relations for Lawrence CORE. "A training institute will be held this Sunday for all of the persons who have applied; a time and place has not been set." Miss Maddocks said. JONESBORO HAS BEEN a civil rights project area since late in 1963. Ronnie Moore and Mike Lesser, who are members of the Lawrence CORE and will be conducting the training institutes, entered the town two years ago to start a voter registration campaign. These efforts ultimately brought the burning of two Negro churches last January 17. Both churches had been used as headquarters for civil rights activities. Fraternity and Sorority Jewelry A B Γ Δ E Z H O J K A M - Guards - Rings - Pins Mugs - Lavaliers - Crests Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Massachusetts ΧΥΩ ΤΣ Ε Π Ο Ρ Μ Ν Ψ Ω Τ Σ Ε Π Ο Ρ Μ Ν Date Special! Date Special! Date Special! 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 Have fun and SAVE at the Jaybowl this weekend. Your date gets to bowl every other game FREE! 6 p.m. Friday—6 p.m. Sunday (Remember—Mom Bowls Free on Weekends) Open 8:00 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. Monday—Saturday Open 1 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. Sunday Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified GOOD GRIEF, we finally got the mess cleaned up and now we're having a GRAND OPENING. It's Saturday, March 20th, but you can register for the free prizes beginning Thursday night. There'll be goodies to eat and drink Saturday and all of our Office supplies, stationery, Hallmark greeting and contemporary cards and party stuff. So, Good Grief, come on down for the fun. New Location — 927 Mass. SNOOPY DOORES Printing - Office Supplies KU-Y Presents the YALE RUSSIAN CHORUS MARCH 23,1965 HOCH AUDITORIUM 8:00 P.M. Reserved Seats-$1.50 at KU-Y Office and at door Thursday, March 18, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 3 SENIORS SATURDAY GRADUATE MARCH 20 THE WORLD BETTER BE READY SATURDAY, MARCH 20 THE RED DOG INN From 7-12 p.m. Dance to THE DIMENSIONS 65 Admission: Seniors-FREE (very cheap) Seniors' Dates $1.00 (cheap) BEvERages: Your Favorite - (very reasonable) Set Ups - (reasonable) PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 18, 1965 Hurt, Hedrick Win Top Honors Among Kansas Sportswriters SALISBURY, N.C. — (UPI) — Bob Hurt, sports editor of the Topeka Capital-Journal, and Tom Hedrick, of radio station KANU in Lawrence, today were named the outstanding sportswriter and sportscaster, respectively, in Kansas in 1964. The announcement was made by the National Sportcasters and Sportswriters Award program. Winners were selected by writers and broadcasters in Kansas in the sixth annual sweepstakes to name the top sports reporters in the nation. Mitchell Announces El Dorado Signing Coach Jack Mitchell announced today that Bobby Douglass, All-State and All-Akansas Valley football player, has signed a Big Eight letter of intent to attend KU. Douglass, who stands 6-foot-3 and weighs 198, played offensive quarterback and linebacker. He was a unanimous choice for the All-State squad. A senior at El Dorado High School, Douglass was coached by Harold Bryan. Douglass is also active in basketball, baseball, and track. He has never been out of action with a serious injury. University of Oklahoma wrestling coach Tommy Evans said seven Sooners will compete in the NCAA tournament at Laramie, Wyo., March 25-27. Hurt and Hedrick were invited to come to Salisbury April 5-6 to accept their awards and join other state winners from across the nation IN. PERSON Peter, Paul and Mary Saturday, March 20 Municipal Arena Kansas City, Mo. 8:30 P. M. SEATS NOW SELLING at UDPI DUTCH BOOZIE Ticket $2.3, 3.50. 4. Mail orders to Municipal Auditorium Boxoffice, enclose stamped-addressed envelope. Graduating engineers & scientists: Join IBM's new computer systems science training program Become a problem-solver and advisor to users of IBM computer systems in areas such as: - real-time control of industrial processes - communications-based information systems - time-shared computer systems - graphic data processing - computer-controlled manufacturing systems - management operating systems - engineering design automation - management operating systems All engineering and scientific disciplines are needed. IBM will give you comprehensive training, both in the classroom and on the job. Openings are available in all principal cities of the U.S. IBM For more information see your placement director or call the nearest W. M. Taylor, IBM Corporation, 20800 Center Ridge Road, Cleveland, Ohio 44116. IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer. IBM DATA PROCESSING DIVISION Acoustic Luxe Here's Your Own Portable Record Player Cut on dotted lines, fold down sides . . and presto, you have a paper miniature of the beautiful La Scala stereophonic hi-fi record changer and twin speakers. But to really appreciate the full-sized La Scala, come to Audiotronics today and check these exclusive features: - Oiled walnut finish (fits any decor) - 36 watt peak output (for your largest parties) - Auxiliary speakers (one for each room?) - SOUND----2 woofers, 2 tweeters - Guaranteed for one year by Lesa of America Corp. Only $139.95 Only $149.95 with dust cover, $149.95 AUDIOIRONICS RADIO TV PARTS-PA SYSTEMS-HIGH FIDELITY 928 Mass. VI 3-8500 Thursday, March 18, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 7 No, clothes don't make the man, but they do reflect his personality. Keep your clothes looking their best send them to Independent. INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9TH & MISSISSIPPI 740 VERMONT - Call VI3-4011 for Free Pickup and Delivery Service - Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 18, 1963 Students Curious, Not Ready to 'GO' The ad read. "Wanted: Someone to play GO. Call VI 2-9227 after 7:00 p.m." What is "GO?" In this case, it means more than the word that follows "gnu" in Webster's Dictionary, but it is as little known as a blue gnu, to students at KU. Several coeds had differing opinions about what GO could be, Tanya Lance. St. Joseph, Mo., sophomore, said, "I've played a card game like GO, and it was lots of fun." Kay Habenstein, Columbia, Mo., junior, said, "Isn't it some type of a handball game?" "It MUST BE SOME type of an intellectual game," Emily Green, Kansas City junior, said. Sally Moffit, Oskaloosa junior, read the ad, and said, "Golf was the first thing that came to my mind." "It's some kind of a game—either a card game or a game played with physical activity of some type," said Carol Pishny, Blue Rapids sophomore. Graeme Blasdel, Belle Plaine junior, explained that he placed the ad in hopes of finding someone who can play the ancient Japanese game of "GO" with him. "GO," HE SAID, is a game similar to chess, in that "stones" or small button-like beads are advanced on a board with lines on it in order to capture territory. The game originated in the court of a Chinese emperor, and was somehow taken to Japan, where it has been played for centuries. It is quite new to the United States, however. Blasdel became interested in the game after reading about it in a book at the bookstore where he is employed. He, the owner of the bookstore and another student who is employed at the store have played several games, but Blasdel is looking for someone who has had more experience with the game than he has, so that he can get some hints on bettering his game. "THERE ARE MANY little things that the book doesn't explain," he said, "things that a person who has played before could help with." He reported that of the people answering the ad, he still has not found the experienced player that he needs. Most of the people who have called are curious about finding out what the ad meant. "Not many people on the hill are too interested in learning to play," he continued. Charles Hook, Student Peace Union president, slashed his wrist and added his blood to the notices covering a bulletin board in the Military Science Building yesterday afternoon. If there is a "GO" player in the audience, please go to your telephone and get a game going with Graeme Blasdell. VI 2-9227. SPU President Scatters Blood Hook, Lawrence sophomore, said, "The action was purely spontaneous and an individual gesture. I decided to do this after reading the story in the University Daily Kansan concerning three Vietnamese intellectuals who were reported to have been pushed out of a plane without any parachutes over North Vietnam." Hook stated that he cut his wrist several times with a single edge razor blade being careful to miss the artery. Hook gave as his reason for the action, "Perhaps if some of these Reserve Officer Training Corps members who are being taught how to think, act, fight and die have to walk past someone's blood it will make them stop training for militarism." Voted Yes Ray Myers (UP), Dodge City fifth-year engineering student, did not vote against the ASC amendment on student publication advertising, as is stated in Wednesday's edition, but voted in favor of it. Writer to Speak Robert Hutchinson, editor, poet, and short story writer, will give a reading of his poetry at 3:30 p.m. March 26 in the Kansas Union. It's O.K. to Owe RAY Hutchinson was an undergraduate at KU and a Summerfield Scholar, receiving a B.A. in 1947 with honors in English. AN ODE HICKORY DICKORY DOCK CRAM LECTURE CLOCK SKOITS ARE FLYIN BOIDS ARE CHOIPIN SPRING HAS SPRUNG BLOODS A FRYIN BLOODS A FRYIN NEED SOME WHEELS TO CATCH A GAL HEALY SPRITE OR MGB I WONDER WHICH IS RIGHT FOR ME? British Motors KU Orchestra and Band Will Tour High Schools The University Symphony Orchestra and the Concert Band will be going on a four-day tour Monday. On the tour, the orchestra and the band will give 10 combined concerts at high schools in the Kansas City area. They will visit the Shawnee Mission high schools, Wyandotte and schools in Kansas City, and Kansas City, Mo. Accompanying the 140 band members and the 75 orchestra members are Russell Wiley, professor of band, Kenneth Bloomquist, director of the marching band, and Robert Baus- Gemini Outlook Poor CAPE KENNEDY—(UPI)—Officials said today the long-range weather forecast for America's attempt to orbit two Gemini astronauts next Tuesday "looks less than desirable in the launch area." Official Bulletin S. U.A. Poetry Hour, 4:30 p.m. Dr. Jack Brooking Music Room Kansas University TODAY **Maturity Opinions Forum**, 4:30 p.m. Asst. Profs. John Mitchell and Morton Gloon of Wichita Univ. is There Free- eple with Campus? **Corpus**? Jayhawk Roppi, Kansas Univ. Student Teachers Meeting, 3:30 p.m. 203 Bailey. Mathematics Colloquium, 3:30 p.m. Dr. Ruschevsky, Univ. of Chicago, 8 Strong. German Club Informal Kaffescunde. 445, Hawk's Nest, Kansas Union. All are invited. Pre-Cana Discussion, 8:00 p.m. "Christian Behavior in Courtship and Marriage." Fr. James Downey, St. Lawrence Student Center. 10th Annual Driver Education Workshop. All Day. Kansas Union. University Concert Course, 8:20 p.m. Hague Philharmonic. Hoch Auditorium. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. C.F.M. Group No. 1. 8:00 p.m. Chairman Terry Smart, VI 3-8526; Group No. 2. 8:30 p.m. Chairman Alex Boyle, VI 3- 6288. St. Lawrence Student Center. TOMORROW Friday Flicks, 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. Fraser Theater. Wesley Foundation Evensong 5:00 p.m. Methodist Center, 1314 Orcad. Film Series, 7:30 p.m. "Pride and Prejudice" Hoop, Auditorium University Theatre, 8:20 p.m. "Six Characters in Search of an Author." KU Section-American Chemical Society, 7:30 p.m. 122 Malcolm. Dr. R. Spinelli, 8:30 p.m. 605 Malcolm. Dr. R. Spinelli, 5:30 p.m. Eldrison Hotel, Call UN 4-3586 for reservations, Lecture public Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Confessions before mass. St Saint Thomas, Coptic. Coptic. tian, professor of orchestra and the conductor of the University Symphony Orchestra. GOOD PIZZA MEN ARE MADE NOT BORN. AND IT ISN'T EASY TO MAKE ONE. LIKE LUIGI HERE, LUIGI WORKED His WAYTHU THE ISTITUTO PIZZA DA ROMA BY MOON-LIGHTING FOR THE CHECKER GONSOLA CO. ON THE 2:30 A.M. SHIFT—WHICH IN ROME IS THE RUSH HOUR. SUCH DEDICATION IS TYPICAL OF PIZZA HUT EMPLOYEES. —ONLY ONE MORE GOOD REASON WHY YOU FIND THE BEST PIZZA IN TOWN AT The band will be choosing their pieces from about 30 works, among which are works of Tschaikowsky, Rimski-Korsakov, Wagner and Sousa. The orchestra will play works of Rimski-Korsakov, Respighi and Schumann. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth. Chapel. Teaching Candidates: Interviews scheduled for Fri. March 19. by Teachers Appoint. Bureau: Kansas, Winfield Public Schools, specific fields open. 117 Ba. Wisconsin, Whitewater Bd. of Regents of State College, college 117 Ba. The tour is the annual trip the orchestra and the band do each year. Last year only the band went. HOW TO COME UP THE HARD WAY... Members of the orchestra and the band will be staying at homes of Kansas City high school students during the tour. THE PIZZA HUT VENICE A Wake up Service for Pennies a Day MILLIKIN'S S.O.S. SERVICE Student Typing & Editing Complete Mailing Program Economical Mimeographing 1021 $ \frac{1}{2} $ MASS. VI3-5920 Letterheads printed, 1,000/ $12.00 Lowest Rate in Town Executive Type Mailing Wind Orders, Go Fly a Kite! By Karen Lambert (Feature-Society Editor) March roars in like a lion, or at least it's supposed to. March's blustery, generally irritating winds have loudly announced their entrance on Mount Oread. The roaring elements are providing an irresistible invitation to enjoy a traditional March sport, kite flying. It's a truism that in order to fly a kite, one must have wind. Now that the elements are cooperating, it's possible to devote space to an article on the salubrious, aesthetic and pleasurable aspects of kite flying. The sport connected with spring velocities is just plain fun. What other sport (except Kick the Can or a good game of marbles) can conjure up memories of a happy, carefree childhood when the world was rosy and life was just a bowl of cherries? EVERYONE NEEDS TO let their hair down once in a while and forget about being mature college students. What better way to do it than guide a kite as it soars in loops and zags in a brisk breeze? Is there anything more picturesque that a gay red kite floating against a blue sky, with it's flowing tail twisting abandonedly in the wind? And for auditory satisfaction, what more scintillating sound is there than the electric snaps and crackles of a kite being tossed in the breeze? For physical exercise, kite flying demands a certain amount of stamina and it's great for building up leg and lung power. For the would-be track star, kite-flying offers all the exercise anyone in his right mind would want. Running up hill and down dale, over puddles and into trees, provides plenty of opportunity to exercise lungs and legs. SO KITE FLYING sounds pretty appealing, doesn't it? Only one problem—putting the thing together so all these salubrious, aesthetic and pleasurable aspects can be enjoyed. The best tactic in assembling kites is to adopt an attitude of prayerful resignation. Also allow about five hours for comprehension of the simple instructions, and maybe seven or eight to assemble the thing. Actually, all that is necessary to assemble a kite is the educational background of a mechanical engineer and the patience of Job. (Ready-made kites are available on the market, but it just wouldn't do to fudge.) IF YOU'RE LUCKY enough to come up with a ship shape kite, either through a miracle or several hours at hard labor, select an isolated spot on a hill and blast off. And if you're lucky enough to get it off the ground, forget all your lessons in manners, dignity and decorum and have a good time. And don't pull a Ben Franklin stunt with the key and the lightning. It isn't written in history books, but he almost got electrocuted! WASHINGTON—(UPI) —The Defense Department is working overtime to "scuttle and discredit" a billion-dollar military pay raise bill, according to the Armed Forces journal. The independent service publication said Wednesday that "top Defense Department officials are working out details for a concerted drive in demolishing" the bill, proposed by Chairman L. Mendel Rivers, D-S.C., of the House Armed Services Committee. Military Pay Increase Fought By Big Brass It said the Pentagon favors a more moderate "skimmed-milk" increase. OPPORTUNITIES FOR CAREER POSITIONS WITH PAN AMERICAN PETROLEUM CORP. Subsidiary of Standard Oil Co. (Indiana) Thursday, March 18, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 9 When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Wednesday, March 24, 1965 Interviews to be held on Campus for the Following Positions: GEOPHYSICS - Opportunities for students with Bachelor's or advanced degrees in Geophysics; Math, Physics, Engineering (with some geology background) and Geology (with physics or math background). Summer employment opportunities also available. Thursday, March 25, 1965 Check with Mr. I. N. Bowman, Business Placement Burcau for accounting interview appointments. Check with Dr. William Merrill, Chairman, Geology Department, for geophysics interview appointments. ACCOUNTING—Opportunities for students with Bachelor's or Advanced degrees in Accounting or who have 20 hours of accounting as a minor. Equal Opportunity Employer the young man who stripes his ties wears CRICKETEER suits the young man who stripes his ties wears CRICKETEER® suits He instantly recognizes the Cricketeer way in traditional suits. Neat (Fall-look) herringbone patterns for Summer, in "shirtweight," a no-weight blend of Dacron* polyester and cotton that's always cool, calm, clean-cut. Colored in the new "great light way." Cricketeer tailored, naturally, along leaner lines. 55.00 University Shop See our collection of authentic rep stripe ties. 2.50 AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION TABLE TOPS AUTO GLASS Sudden Service East End of 9th St. VI 3-4416 starring JULIE ANDREWS New Sound Track SOUND OF MUSIC Bell Music Co. 925 Mass. VI 3-2644 P e When I Grow Up I Want To Live At PARK PLAZA SOUTH (you should now) I like the idea of having central air-conditioning and heating, the yard mowed for me, swimming in the private swimming pool, carpeting, garbage disposal, coin-operated laundromat, front drapes and a choice of one or two bedroom apartments. Why don't you live there for me? You'll like Park Plaza South. My daddy won't let me live at Park Plaza South yet. He says I'm not old enough. I wish I could. Park Plaza South 1912 W. 25th Call Day or Night: VI 2-3416 Page 10 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 18, 1963 Ducks Better Scat, Spring Fling Ahead Gather some aerial firework displays, add a whistle, and Spring Fling is under way. The second annual Spring Fling celebration at KU, sponsored by the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH), will officially open with the Spring Fling Salute fireworks display from Memorial Stadium grounds on Wednesday, according to Larry Seibel, Russell sophomore. The ducks are kept in unlocker cages outside the residence halls. Women's ducks cannot be duck-napped until 10 minutes after the halls open each morning, and napping must stop at the women's halls 10 minutes prior to closing. A duck cannot be taken if a woman is within two feet of the duck's cage, but if it is left unguarded, any residence hall student may steal the duck. Spring Fling ducks, an idea which originated last year at this time, will again be the official symbol of the five-day round of activities. Each of the 17 halls must guard a duck against "duck-napping" by a competing hall. Seibel said residence halls can expect to contend with duck-nappers until races begin on Saturday. Friday night residence ball students will be at the Red Dog Inn for a dance featuring the Fabulous Flippers. Only persons with tickets may attend the dance. Tickets can be purchased from AURH members. A skill driving contest called Gymkhana will be held Saturday in Templin Hall parking lot for small or foreign make cars. Lewis Hall parking lot will host volleyball games on Saturday. The teams will consist of five men and Race Fight Closes Integrated School CLEVELAND, Ohio - (UPI) -- Fighting between white and Negro students today closed Collinwood High School. All available police rushed to the area to break up the fighting. A police helicopter reported as many as 700 to 800 students were parading around the school. Bills Bungled Your Budget? four women, Floors of the women's halls are matched with floors of the men's residence halls. Scholarship halls are considered as one floor. Seibel said the games will begin at nine o'clock. You need a checking account at Douglas County State Bank. Save time and footwork. A cancelled check is your proof of payment, it shows where every cent goes. Come see us today. There will be a picnic lunch and dance at Potter's Lake at Saturday noon. Michael Blodgett, Topea freshman, said the event will be in Allen Field House if the weather is bad. Elaine Rinkle, Scott City junior and general chairman of Spring Fling, said afternoon activities at the lake include a marathon race, a pie-eating contest, an egg toss, a "bod" race and other group games. The traditional duck race among the residence halls will be at Potter Lake also. Douglas County State Bank 9th and Kentucky On Sunday, AURH will sponsor a Recognition Banquet for all officers and AURH members in Lewis Hall. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will be guest speaker. Sunday evening, Musical Moments will be staged at seven o'clock in the University Theatre. The sing is sponsored by Inter-Residence Council in cooperation with AURH. Each hall will be represented by its singing group. Awards will be presented after the sing to the winning halls. Trophys will be awarded to the men's floor and the women's floor accumulating the most points competing in the events. A large trophy will go to the residence hall winning the duck race. Seibel said this year's affair will have more than 3,000 students, or over one-quarter of the University, participating. New — This Saturday THE RENEGADES Tee Pee King Farouk Dies After Meal ROME — (UPI) — Former King Farouk of Egypt, the pudgy pleasure-lover who went into exile with a personal fortune estimated at $250 million, collapsed in a Rome餐厅 early today and died a few minutes later. He had $155 in his pockets. Farouk was 45 years old and weighed more than 250 pounds. Accompanied by an unidentified woman companion, the last thing he did was to finish a lavish dinner of oysters and lamb in the luxurious restaurant Ile de France. Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS V Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS AUDUBON $450 ALSO $300 TO 975 Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. SUA FRIDAY FLICKS Requiem for a Heavyweight starring Anthony Quinn Jackie Gleason Patronize Your Kanson Advertisers "Perils of Pauline" PLUS Admission 35c FRASER THEATER 7 p.m. & 9:30 p.m. La Pizza 807 Vermont VI 3-5355 La Just Because... Abington Book Shop, Inc. 1237 Oread 1 The Words — Jean-Paul Sartre The Dover Series of Classical Recordings Situations — Jean-Paul Sartre Hours: 10-10 Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. $2.00 VI2-1007 Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 ENDS FRIDAY... Margaret Rutherford "MURDER AHOY" Starts Saturday... 20th James Stewart Dear Brygite Fred Nakamura production COLOR BY DELIKE CINEMASCOPE Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone V13-1065 Starts TONIGHT! THE FIRST ANNUAL THE FIRST ANNUAL TAMI I SHOW STATES AWARDS MUSIC INTERNATIONAL STARRING THE BEACH BOYS CHUCK BERRY JAMES BROWN & THE FLAMES THE BARBARIANS MARVIN GAYE GERRY AND THE PACEMAKERS LESLEY GORE ✩ JAN AND DEAN BILLY J. KRAMER & THE DAKOTAS SMOKEY ROBINSON AND THE MIRACLES THE SUPREMES THE ROLLING STONES University Daily Kansan Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE '60 VW, excellent condition with radio, sunroof, white wall tires and less than 100 miles on a rebuilt engine, call VI 2-3489. 3-19 BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMIUMS! Occidental Term Life: conversion, Go-Back, and Move-Ove options. Age 18 = $33.90 = $10.00, Age 20 = $34.40 = $10.00, Age 22 = $34.70 = $10.00, Call Wes Santee at VI 3-2116 for details, tf 1955 Ford 6 cylinder, standard transmission, radio and heater, good transportation, automatic transmission, pendable, $100.00 Benson's Auto Sales, 1902 Harper, phone VI 3-1626, 3-19 Nikon F photomic, 1.4f, 50 mm, lons, like new $440 camera, will sell for $250. See at apt. 63. The Oaks, VI 3-7032. 3-19 Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive immeimegraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL V1 2-1901 or free delivery. KERS DEAN Printed Biology notes. 76 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive notes, supplemented for classes. Formally known as the Thetis *Nets*. Call VI 3-1428 1.450. Stereo component system. Dynaco stereo preamp, two dynaco 50-watt power amps, stephens speakers, garrard changer. All perfect. Call VI 3-4891. 3 22 1964 Honda, c-100, $175.00. Good condition. See at 1341 Ohio, Apt. D. 3-22 Gibson guitar, J-50 model, adjustable bridge, clear plastic upper pick guard, beautiful full resonant sound back, neck clamp included. Call Kerry VI, SI 2-3343. 3-22 1956 Olds, 88; actual mileage, 31.000; cream color, black interior, rear speaker system, white wall tires. $350.00—excellent condition. VI 3-1174. 3-22 "Great Books of the Western World." "The latest editions must sell. VI 3-8505. 3-18 Now you can hear a variety of excellent King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL 91-2781. tf 1963 French Renault, 4-speed transmission, bucket seats, radio and heater. Ir excellent condition. Call VI 3-6462. 3-22 Tires--800 x 14 white sidewalls. Two sets. One set is Atlas snow tires, which will go for $5 apiece. The second ret is $26 (apiece) Riverside white sidewalls. They will go for $15 apiece. The set (of 4) is $4. Call Bob Monk-VI -3 7102 t BE THE LEADER OF YCUR PACK* Harley Davidson Sportster K 750 cc. new clutch, and new brakes and tires. THIS IS NO HONDA. For further information about this beautiful machine CONTACT Monti Belot at VI 3-0700. tf TYPEWRITERS, electricss, manuals, portables; sales, service, rentals. Olympa Hermes. Royal, Smith-Corona, Olivetti. Adding machines, office supplies and equipment Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. tt Students, why throw money away on rent when you can own a 1962 Marlette 10 x 50. modern two-bedroom mobile home with small kitchen and laundry room in excellent condition For further information CALL RI 8-0973 or RI 8-0916 tt PORFABLE STEREO: Admiral's Finest—two carrying units, 1 for turntable; and 1 for speaker systems (2 tweeters, and 2 full range woofers) $195 new. Will sell for good offer. CALL: Rusty Callins at VI #-5721. tl CHINA—Nortakti, Mayfair design. New, never used or even removed from back-ing. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk V 3-7102. tf THE STABLES now open every day- Serving steaks, chops sea food, sand- sand, programm, new in- spheres. Party rooms available. Phone vi 3-9644, 14W. 7th W. NEED A BAND? 30 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM. PHONE VI 2-2100 g Volkswagen 1364—excellent running condition—serviced at proper intervals—$1500.00 or best offer—cash. VI 2-2168. 3.24 16 mm, role film movie camera; GE portable cable light; 3 police radios; AAA battery charger; tunable or crystal receive; (2) Motorola walk-talki (low band), (3) high band converter. Call Gary Grazda, VI 2-4100. My name and phone number I'm not in. '59 Austin Healy: less than 5000 miles on new engine, mechanically perfect, aes- pleasing. See after 5:20 p.m. 1319 Mary or call Charles Reagan at U 4-3004. 3-24 1864 MG midget, B.R. Green, wire wheels, hardtop. Am-Fm radio, very low mileage. Sacrifice. Call VI 3-8367, ask for John. 3-24 For sale: 1957 Morgan sports roadster California motorcar. Call CE 3-6950 in Topeka. 3-24 1963 Healy Healy 3000 Mark II, red, 19,000 miles, convertible, roll up windows, overdrive, new tires, excellent condition. VI 2-3673. 3-24 FOUND TYPING Girl's glasses, found Friday night, March 12. in front of Strong Hall.Call VI 2-9269. 3-22 6 years typing experience plus background in proofreading enables me to guarantee accuracy on college papers. New electric typewriter equipped for interchangeable type sets. Mrs. Berndt, 801 Michigan or VI 2-0400. tf experienced typist wants typing in home. rates, prompt service. Phone VI 2-3356. Typing done by experienced secretary for 25c each double spaced page. Call Ethel Henderson, 2565 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122. 3-31 Experienced typist, 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. CALL Ms. Barlow, 2407 Yale, V 1-2648. Former teacher will give prompt and careful attention to typing your term papers and reports. 4 years experience call VI 3-3829. Theses only on Royal Electric Pica Type cALL CWr. Mulfir. Fulcher at VI 3-0558 Thursday, March 18, 1965 experienced typist. Former secretary wili expertise in job duties. Accurate work. Usecure work. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter, Gestetner Duplicator. Mrs kunowney, 2521 Alabama St. Phone 1-8563 Experienced secretary will type term papers, law briefs, theses, etc., for students. Especially familiar with legal and business terms. Fast and accurate. Reasonable rates. Call Marsha Goff at VI 3-2577. tf Former Harvard and U. of Minnesota report on the success of a new report and theses. PHONE VI 3-7207. ferm papers, Theses by experienced yplist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tt Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. Will do ex eXpert reports. Can also type in carbon ribbon typewriter. Betty Muskrat 40 Indian, or call VI 2-0091. ti Will do typing in my home. Accurate reasonaise rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at VI 2-0210. tt Experienced, accurate typist with degree in n English Education wants typing. Speak and communicate in French and languages. Quick and reasonable electric typewriter. Call VI-8-3967. tr Typhlist, experienced with term papers hesses and dissertations, will give you the opportunity to work on a machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048 Experienced secretary would like typing in her home, with new electric typesetter and electronic account service. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Lanter at VI 2-1188. tf Experienced typist wants theses, termpapers, and dissertations to be typed on electric (pica type) typewriter. Please Call Pat Beck at VI 3-5630. tt Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will be interviewed on these forms pertened. Electric typewriter. CALL Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8262. CALL Expert typing on the thesis, dissertations, papers, and typewriter. Call 3-231 Misher, V 3-10293 Experienced typist will do dissertations, manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 RI. VI. 3-7485. tf Math tutor B.A. degree in math from KU. Experienced in tutoring geometry, algebra, calculus and analytic geometry. Call VI 3-0927. 3-24 CHWINN BICYCLES - service all makes schannels and accessories, tire $1.46, tuber cables, luggage racks and luggage accessories SEE Blinks at 7th and Micl CALL VI 3-0581 Alterations and mending of men's and women's clothing. Sewing of all kinds. Phone VI 3-5136 after 7:00 p.m. or before 9:30 a.m. 3-24 Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-R qibs that grandma and grandpa can eat, try ours on a dinner order or on a per slab. Hours: 11:00 am to 11:00 p.m. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-9510 3-31 MISCELLANEOUS *ARTY TIME?* Building available for albums. *PHONO* albums. *RALF* albums. *GA ST* 91-3-3895. it's great for a date. Take her bowling at Crestbowl Brew. Finest lanes in the state. Join us at Crestbowl Brew, also Mon, Tues, and Fri after 9:00 pm Crestbowl Brew, 9th and Iowa. tt attends coming this weekend? Looking for a place with good food at reasonable prices. HUCREST RESTAURANT. Plenty of free parking ith and Iowa. tt Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon-thru-Fri or all dav Sat. or Sun. Phone VI 3-6231 Rent electric, standard, and portable typewriters. Repair all makes of electric typewriters. Utilize the firm's own Business Equipment (formerly Business Machines), 15 E. 9th, VI 3-0151, tf Attention: All persons interested in self defense training classes utilizing many of James lows and smashes used by James Bond movies, contact Bob Monk at VI 7-7102. WANTED Roommate wanted. Want girl to share two bedroom home with working girl or KU student. Call VI 3-3414 or VI 3-9201. 2110 Tenn. 3-24 Young working girl would like another girl to share her two-bedroom apartment. Her share would be $50 month, plus 1/2 utilities. Call VI 3-3988 after 5:00 p.m. Apartment available starting June 1. 3-22 Wanted-30 girls with Senior keys, to date 30 Yale University graduates and faculty with the Yale Russian chorus. Contact KU Y office. 3-23 Wanted. Someone to play GO. Call VI 2-9227 after 7:00 p.m. tt OLD CARS WANTED, top prices paid. Do it today! JG Joe's G1. 0v11 Vermont. ENTERTAINMENT Washing and ironing done in my home 1313 New Jersey St. phone VI I-2598. ATTENTION PARTY THROWERS: Do you want the Beatles, the Kingsmen. Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL VI 2-1791. tf Now you can hear a variety of excellent dance bands on stereo demo tapes, including the Fabulous Blades, the Norsemen, *Buckley*; union and non-union *call* VI 2-1791. Prescription sunglasses in vicinity of Malott or Summerfield March 15. Revard, call Richard Wier at VI 3-1711. 3-24 LOST Lost pair of women's glasses. Color. Reward offered. VI 3-2778. 3-22 Single sleeping room for one man in an apartment. Call VI 3-6723. 3-24 Married, Graduate Students. Faculty-2 bedroom apts. $85.00, 1 available now; 5 bedroom apts. $95.00, 1 available now. Also sleeping rooms. Call for brochure. VI 3-2116, Santee Apts., 1123 Indiana, tf Apartment at 1232 Louisiana for couple or single. Modern. Call M 3-4271. 3-19 PARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30-60 people, juke box, liquid refreshments and desired. Contact Don at the Gaslight TV Ticket for reservations at CALL VI 3-1086. CAR REPAIR Engine swaps and Transmission change avers. We sell and install speed equip- ment and engines for drags, jippies or street cars and trucks Garage, 837 Connecticut, VI 3-2906. Pune un- Engine rebuilding- Complete general mechanic work- guaranteed work). Most reasonable prices in town Open 7 evenings a week. Free estimates on all parts and labor. Farmers Garage. 337 Connecticut, VI 3-2906. tf HELP WANTED MEN wanting summer or full time work. SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAMS available for all. WHY BORROW MONEY. Earnings well above average. AHTLETS DESIRABLE. Apply 3:30 p.m., Sunflower Room. 3-23 POSITIONS WANTED Wanted — ironing — shirts, men's pants, ladies' blouses, skirts, dresses a specialty. VI 3-471f. 3-22 CI I will do ironing in my home. Satisfaction guaranteed. 10 cents per article. 3-22 3-0838 Phone in your assified Ad BUSINESS DIRECTORY See or Call Marvin E. McDougal For All Your Insurance Needs 1244 La. VI 2-0186 Prompt Electronic Servic- TV Color TV Antennae on Hi-fi Stereos Changers We Service All Makes - RCA Radios Transistors Car Radios Motorola Airline GE Zenith Silvertone Philco PHONE VI 3-8855 Magnavox Coronado Bird TV-Radio Service 908 Mass. St. — Lawrence, Kans. —— 24 HOUR SERVICE (TUES. THRU SUN.) - Lubrication . . . . $1.00 - Brake Adjustment . . . . 98 - Wheel Alignment - Automatic Transmission Page Fina Service 1819 W.23rd VI 3-9694 For Your BEST Haircut JETPILLOW - 8-6 Mon.-Fri. - 4 Chairs 8-5 Sat. PLAZA Barber Shop 1804 Mass. VI 2-9462 Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Come to GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING Wholesale Diamond Rings Call - Complete Auto Servicing SERVICE YOU CAN TRUST! - Dependable Cars Robert A. Lange VI 3-1711 If we don't have what you want— we'll get it! Open 7-11:00 Sun. thru Thurs. 7-2:00 a.m. Fri. & Sat. Wagner's Texaco 23rd & La. VI 3-0138 REPAIR SERVICE CALL MAYHUGH at VI3-4430 1910 W. 23rd Street INSTRUMENT HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy Ice cold 6 pacs — all kinds OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350 TRAVEL TIME 图为一架正在起飞的飞机。 LET MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Spring Break and Summer Reservations Now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 --- Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 18, 1965 Beer Bill Now In State Senate PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS TOPEKA, Kan. —(UPI) - A bill prohibiting persons under 21 years of age from buying beer containing more than 3.2 per cent alcohol was introduced in the Senate Wednesday. Under present statutes 18-year-olds can buy any cereal malt beverage classified as beer. When You're In Doubt, Try it Out—Kansan Classifieds ARE YOU A SERVICE STATION "FLIRT"? Who changed your oil last time? Where did you buy gas this week? Do you run from one station to another—really "Nobody's Customer?" When the chips are down and you need especially dependable service, you'll find that regular patronage at a good, dependable service station will be to your advantage. Ask anyone who trades with us. Then come in . . . let's talk it over. CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. Service out of the weather 8th & New Hampshire Phone VI 3-4321 CITIES SERVICE Downtown — Near Everything Convenient Services For You The Student — TYPEWRITER RENTALS Standard & Portables 2.00 wk. 6.50 mo. Electric Portables 3.00 wk. 10.50 mo. IBM Electric 4.00 wk. 15.00 mo. MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS Includes all major magazines, many at great savings to the student. -XEROX COPIES A new service - 10c per copy kansas union BOOKSTORE LAWRENCE Sanitary ALL STAR VITAMIN D HOMOGENIZED ONE NALF CALLS FOR: FOR A QUICK DELIGHTFUL DESSERT Variety Vibrant! ICE CREAM LAWRENCE Sanitary ALL STAR Grade A VITAMIN D PASTEURIZED HOMOGENIZED Milk FLAVOR CONTROLLED BY O4h and PROCESS FOR U.S. P. UNITE OF VITAMIN D AGRIVISED LEGOSTEER, AMOID PER QUART FOR MILK BUTTERMILK CHOCOLATE MILK MILK AND MALT WHEYPROCESS SOUR CREAM BUTTER 202 West 6th Street VI 3-5511 DO YOU RECOGNIZE THIS? Why of course you do! This is a milk carton of the largest and oldest dairy in Douglas County. It signifies the BEST dairy products you can buy. So the next time you see this carton, pick it up and give it a try. You'll be pleasantly surprised. This Carton Guarantees . . . - Top Flavor - Highest Quality - Freshness - Dependability LAWRENCE SANITARY MILK AND ICE CREAM COMPANY 102 --including a $100,000 bequest from the late Kenneth A. Spencer, a KU graduate and founder of Spencer Chemical Co. MED CENTER CHAPEL—Construction began this week on a non-sectarian chapel at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City. The red-brick, colonial chapel is financed by private donations, Daily Hansan Friday, March 19, 1965 62nd Year, No.103 LAWRENCE. KANSAS WSU Professors Charge Lack of Academic Freedom By Mary Dunlap A lack of academic freedom which endangers the intellect of the student prevails in Kansas, two Wichita State University professors told the KU Minority Forum yesterday. "In ten years, half a dozen members of the faculty (at WSU) have been discharged or resigned in protest because of reasons involving academic freedom," Morton Ohlson said. John Mitchell, professor of sociology and Morton Ohlson, professor of economics, cited incidents at WSU during their terms there which they feel indicate a lack of freedom and courage, and which show "cant and hypocrisy." MITCHELL, WHO IN a February 22 speech at WSU charged that university with being "a business asset to the power elite," said the current problems in Kansas are "certainly not a lack of vigilance toward subversives." Prof. Ohlson said he asked the president of WSU what the aims and philosophies of the business school were that he would not conform to. He said he received no reply from the president. Mitchell brought laughter and applause from the audience as he said, "My topic today is What's the Matter with Kansas?" He then cited a portion of Willian Allen White's famous Pulitzer prize winning editorial, "What's the Matter with Kansas?" MITCHELL SAID, "Usually one doesn't hear of Gene Debs and the "Appeal to Reason" of sockless Jerry Simpson, and Mary Ellen Leuse, or that native son of Wichita, Earl Browder, for many years the executive secretary of the American Communist Party. "One need not," Mitchell said, "mention these things. But then, dowagers need not wear choked collars. Yet, they do hide wrinkles in a cored neck. "This institution (WSU) has, for example, 'balanced its economics department,' Mitchell said. "Prior to its entry into the state system, it was a notorious fact that the economics department was staffed by 10 economists, 2 trained economists and 3 competent economists." MITCHELL THEN REFERRED to the "sound men" in Wichita who perceived the "imbalanced economics department" at WSU, and "one might almost say with an eye single to their interests, they acted," Mitchell said. "I do not say that they acted rudely or ostentatiously or even obviously. I only say that there was a singularly series of events that served their interests willy-nilly," he added. When Arthus Wichman, George L. Lewis and Jack Robertson were exiled, Mitchell said, Kansas 'felt they were purified.' Mitchell, in the same speech at WSU, warned students to transfer to another school because their intellect might "be crippled in an institution dedicated to the power elite." Ohlson said that in May, 1963, the chairman of the WSU economics department resigned because he felt the department was receiving unfair treatment. Ohlson said a non-economist was appointed to the new chairmanship. "THE NEW NON-ECONOMIST dean then began to lay the ground-work to eliminate the two non-tenured members, of which I was one" Ohlson said. Later, he said, the department concluded that economics as a social science could not survive in the College of Business Administration, and the non-economist dean resigned. In December, the new dean of the economics department told Ohlson that he would not be re-hired for the coming year. "When I pressed him for a reason," Ohlson said, "he would only say that I did not feel myself to be 'a part of the family' as demonstrated by the fact that I had failed to post office hours." "WHAT'S THE MATTER with Kansas?" Mitchell said. "We have given every answer but one. What's the matter with Kansas. . . Why, hell, man, it's a lack of freedom. It's a lack of courage. It's a lack of everything that goes to make human life." Both Olhson and Mitchell have resigned from the faculty of WSU. Their resignation becomes effective at the end of this semester. MOSCOW — (UPI)— The Soviet Union announced its two-man space-ship landed safely today after an epochal flight in which a cosmonaut left his vehicle and returned for the first time. Red Spaceship Back On Earth The official Tass news agency said Col. Pavel Belyayev, 39, commander of Voskhod Sunrise II, and Lt. Col. Alexei A. Leonov, 30, who braved the hazards of absolute zero to walk in space, landed safely at 12:02 p.m. (4:02 a.m. EST) after a flight of 26 hours and two minutes. THE ANNOUNCEMENT ended hours of silence by the Kremlin and growing feeling of uneasiness. The Russians had not given any progress reports on the flight of the space bus since 5:30 a.m. (9:20 p.m. EST) Thursday after Voskhod II had completed its 13th orbit. The official text of the Tass announcement said, Voskhod II landed in the area of Perm, west of the Urals. Perm, once called Molotov, is about 700 miles northeast of Moscow. Tass said Col. Belyayev used manual controls to land the space craft. It said both he and Leonov "feel well" and that the scientific program which gave the Soviet Union a giant lead in the space race had been "fully accomplished." THE TWO COSMONAUTS were blasted into orbit—the highest yet achieved by man—from the Bak-honur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, about 800 miles southeast of Moscow in Central Asia. The spaceship soared to an altitude of 307 miles above the earth and then moved in an elliptical, or egg-shaped, orbit, down to 107.9 miles. The official announcement came four hours and nine minutes after unofficial sources informed UPI of the safe landing. But the lack of an official announcement had prompted uneasiness and brought speculation something might have happened. Weather Fair weather with not quite so cold temperatures is predicted through tomorrow by the weather bureau. Tonight's low will be between 10 and 12 degrees. THE TIME OF the landing indicated the Russians had orbited the earth 16 or 17 times. Soviet cosmonauts had done this before but this flight made history when Leonov crawled through an air chamber to the outside of the craft and returned safely. He clung to a handrail for about 10 minutes, testing the effects of the -459 degree temperature and the effect of weightlessness on his well-being. Then, dangling at the end of a 16-foot lifeline, he performed somersaults and other maneuvers to demonstrate his control. Russians hailed the move as demonstration of great things to come—the building of a platform in space, the repair of spacecraft damaged by meteorites, and the linking up of two spacecraft while orbiting the earth. All would be preliminaries to the landing on the moon. THE FLIGHT WAS considered a tremendous leap forward by the Soviet Union in the space race with the United States which plans to send a two-man Gemini spacecraft on a four-orbit flight next Tuesday. During the night, Leonov and Belyavev "slept in turns, rested, breakfasted and felt well," the Tass news agency reported in a report late Thursday. Tass said reports from Voskhod at that time indicated that all systems were functioning normally and that the craft "proceeded exactly in accordance with the program." MOSCOW RADIO broadcast a report on Soviet space efforts by Lev Landau, the Russian académician. He called attention to the protected cabin of the Voskhod ship and the special space suits worn by the two cosmonauts. Landau said the flight was strictly in pursuit of scientific goals-not a bid for sensationalism. IN A TASS interview, the "chief designer of Soviet spaceships" said; "We do not set any record aims before the crew. The main thing is to take reasonable risks and achieve the required results. "As sailors departing on a long ocean voyage should be able to swim, to keep an water, so cosmonauts must be good at swimming in the stellar oceans." Bulletin LONDON —(UPI)— Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko bowed out of any Viet Nam peace efforts today and said the United States must negotiate directly with Communist North Viet Nam after ending "its aggression." Gromyko, ending four days of policy talks with Prime Minister Harold Wilson and Foreign Secretary Michael Stewart, told a news conference the end of American "aggression" must be the first step towards possible peace developments. His statement came after a force of 130 U.S. jet fighter-bombers hit military targets in North Viet Nam today while the Communist nation and Red China were observing their annual "hate America" days. Gromyko castigated the United States as "invaders" who have no business to be in South Viet Nam. Spring's Delights Arrive at Last, Escorted by Wintry, Dismal Blast By Harry Krause Arriving on the trail of long wintry night comes Spring at KU, glorious rebirth of Nature's might. Dismal cold of Winter's snow grey chatter gives way long last to easy sidewalk patter. At first you put your overcoats away eager to wear your colorful clothing array. But when March and April winds start blowing, the sky clouds over, it's still snowing! Finally, the clear cold air loses its chill, You'll say to each other, "Winter's nice but I've had my fill." The girls start appearing in blouses and shorts, and Lawyers on steps resume comments with cohorts. The best part of Spring with which most students agree is that short eight day period which sets them all free. I'm speaking at last of that joyous procrastination, which can only be dull-wonderful guiltless vacation. After returning by various state freeways, we come upon tradition-filled KU Relays. Athletes in glory perform at their best while others who planned it take a well-earned rest. This is the Spring of University equality, when a man may be judged, not by skin, but by quality. Beauty and truth are furthered the more when the Greeks crown their queen with pomp and parties galore. Independents on campus have been planning to bring the second edition of newly traditional Spring Fling. Ducks, water fights, and sports cars are here and those who are brave have nothing to fear. Studies and exams keep students on the run, but this is education, it isn't all fun. And those who look back on their mistakes and regret it will have all of this summer to remorse and forget it. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 19. 1965 Guest Editorial It may be a trite way of putting it, but the Civil Rights Council has bitten the hand that has been feeding it. Whether willfully or not, the CRC has drawn the administration and All Student Council into the battle of whether the University Daily Kansan shall accept certain advertising which is found to be discriminatory. Let it be said here that this writer does not favor allegedly discriminatory advertising. What concerns me is that the Civil Rights Council has made it look (willfully or unwillfully) like the Kansan is against integration. WITH NO RISK OF OVERSTATEMENT, it may be said that the University Daily Kansan put the CRC "on the map." Without crusading Kansan editorials and investigative Kansan news reports, the Civil Rights Council would still be in the somewhat obscure position it occupied before 1960 and possibly even later than then. The Kansan has been a leader in the civil rights movement on the University of Kansas campus. The facts support this statement. In 1959, a series of Kansan editorials pointed to the discriminatory way in which a University housing list was prepared. At that time, separate lists of landlords willing to rent to KU students were kept for Negro and white students. When the practice was called to the attention of the administration it was immediately discontinued. - In October of 1960, the Kansan's attention was called to its own practices. It was discovered that the Kansan was printing advertisements which promoted discrimination in housing. The governing board of the Kansan unanimously resolved to ban such advertisements. - In 1962, the Kansan became concerned with the discriminatory renters on the University housing list and urged the discontinuance of this practice. On Nov. 8, 1962, Chancellor Wescoe announced that discriminatory landlords would no longer be listed on the University housing list. - In 1963, the Kansan Board voted to ban the use of phrases suggesting discrimination in advertisements. - All during this period the Kansan has been militant in securing the rights of all KU students to patronize Lawrence businesses. - All during this period the Kansan has sought to have discriminatory clauses removed from fraternity and sorority charters. - Of late, the Kansan has been critical—to say the least—of undue delay on the part of the All Student Council to draft and enact civil rights legislation. Further, it must be pointed out that on March 27,1962,it was announced that the Kansan had won the National Brotherhood Mass Media award for editorials. This marked the first time that the award sponsored by the National Conference of Christians and Jews had been awarded to a student publication. - * * That should set the Kansan's record straight. But further comment is necessary to interpret the amendments passed Tuesday by the ASC which regard Daily Kansan advertising. In some apparently last-minute amendments, the word "commercial" was inserted before advertising in all references. ARE THE MEMBERS OF THE CIVIL Rights Council aware that this word destroys what must have been one of their goals? Had the word "commercial" not been used, it is conceivable that the amendments would have been interpreted to mean that no Greek organization could advertise in any student publication. From their list of demands, it is to be interpreted that the Civil Rights Council believes fraternities and sororities practice discrimination. Thus, advertising of these organizations could not be justified under the original forms of the amendments. Maybe the administration, All Student Council and Civil Rights Council should re-examine their stands. Do they know what they want? And have they been aware of the University Daily Kansan's role in the KU Civil Rights Movement? Roy Miller The People Say. Dear Sir: YOU INDEED DESERVE TO BE congratulated for your editorial entitled "ASC Meeting" which appeared in the Wednesday, March 17. 1965 issue of the Kansan. Throughout the last several days of controversy and confusion several editorials and articles have appeared in several local and nearby newspapers, none of which have exhibited the clarity of thought and intent which you have displayed in your editorial. Your reporting of the events of the Council meeting last Tuesday night is accurate and valid. Few people were unaffected by Miss Thayer's comments — neither were Mr. Stewart's arguments left unneeded. By combining an editorial with a succinct effort to report the actions precluding it, you have produced the first truly objective position published in the last two weeks (concerning the recent ASC action, that is). Although you state your opinion and make your position quite obvious, you do not thrust your words down the throat of readers; neither do you attempt to locate the final situs of guilt on any one single group or action. OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES SEAL ...EVERY AMERICAN CITIZEN MUST HAVE AN EQUAL RIGHT TO VOTE. THERE IS NO REASON WHICH CAN EXCUSE THE DENIAL OF THAT RIGHT ... HERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON POST Perhaps the real tragedy of the entire situation does not lie in the fact that the Kansan is now somewhat restricted in its advertising policy, rather in the fact that the rift — certainly it can be called nothing less — was allowed to exist and increase by otherwise responsible members and representatives of the ASC, the Kansan Board, and the Administration. The editorial represents (I hope) a new outlook and approach to the existing situation. After such an excellent — although belated — attempt to clearly present the situation, I would consider it a blunt injustice to those concerned if efforts to analyze the situation and insure that nothing similar shall arise again should now be dropped. My thanks for a genuinely effective stand on a generally misunderstood and exaggerated situation. Literacy Test Bill Robinson ASC Representative Great Bend sophomore Sir: "SPEAKER SAYS GOD NON- Existent." blurts the headline, and the story bears out the head. Unfortunately, both are untrue. What kind of idiot would be able to conceive of a Christian existentialist asserting that God is nonexistent? Answer; A UDK reporter. We come forward to vindicate M. Marcel's very high reputation. No, students. M. Marcel did not kill God. A UDK reporter did. Evan Charles Richards Kansas City, junior A Slice of Cam-Pi It has always been my contention that the life of a college student was a happy one. I'm beginning to think that my contention was wrong. Joe College used to be the perfect picture of a hedonist in a sweater with average grades and a helluva lust for anything that might come his way. The picture has changed somewhat, but I wonder if it's for the better. Reed Harris, director of the USIA information-center service was quoted in Newsweek on campus rebellions. "Protests show that students are thinking, are questioning traditional attitudes," he said. Chancellor Wescoe was quoted in the same issue as being, "encouraged by the awakening of students we have seen in recent years." I shall not try to correlate either statement to anything. However, permit me one questioning thought. How much rational thinking is involved when a student smears his blood on a bulletin board? \* \* \* I remember distinctly ole Ferdinand LaCruce from my early college days down South. Now there was a character. His friends called him Ferdy. Ferdy could get more out of one day of college than anyone I have seen since. Upon seeing Ferdy strolling across campus it was only natural to cry out, "Ferdy, where you heading guy?" Ferdy was always going someplace. He would reply, "I'm going to my arc-wielding class, and then there's a guest lecturer at Memorial Hall speaking on 'Kumquat growing in Southern California.'" "Where you going after that?" his questioner would question. "There's a panel discussion on the economics of Mesopotamia in the Student Center, a film on the life of Frank Buck, then I pick up Grinelda, (that was his girl) and we're going to the art exhibit and then go look at flowers in the Botanical Gardens." That was Ferdy. Always going somewhere and doing something. It's a shame he didn't have time to question traditional attitudes. - * * Other words of wisdom: I understand some of our local dry cleaning establishments are now worried about their Freedom of the press. Jim's Little Gem: "God grants liberty only to those who love it, and are always ready to guard and defend it." — Jim Langord BOOK REVIEWS NEW AMERICAN PLAYS, edited by Robert W. Corrigan (Mermaid Dramabooks, $1.95); THREE PLAYS, by Elmer Rice (Mermaid Dramabooks, $1.75); THE BRIG, by Kenneth H. Brown (Spotlight Dramabooks, $1.75). And still the paperback people throw the play collections at us. This one stretches from naturalistic drama of the twenties to the experimental things being done today, by people whose names you aren't likely to recognize. Elmer Rice was once one of the great names of the theater. He seems antiquated today. Once he was an experimenter, when he did plays like "The Adding Machine," and he gave us sharp social comment with "Street Scene." "Dream Girl" is entertaining, but little more. Yet this man must be studied to get a true picture of the drama in this country. Now as for "The Brig," this is the Living Theatre production that has occasioned considerable comment—a brutal, bitter, shocking drama. The names you'll find in the collection of new American plays are Anna Marie Barlow, Kenneth Cameron, Claude Fredericks, Dennis Jasudowicz, Alfred Levinson, Charles L. Mee Jr., Lawrence Osgood, James L. Rosenberg, Deric L. Washburn and Lorees Yerby. Anthologies of 1990 may list these as figures in a class with O'Neill—or possibly Elmer Rice. Daili'Ifänsan 111 Flint Hall UUniversity 4-3648, newsroom UUniversity 4-3198, business officer University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Leta Roth and Gary Noland ... Co-Editorial Editors NEWS DEPARTMENT **Don Black** ... Managing Editor Bobbie Bartelt, Clare Casey, Marshall Caskey, Fred Frailey, Assistant Managing Editors; Judy Farrell, City Editor; Karen Lambert, Feature- Society Editor; Glen Phillips, Sports Editor; Janet Chartier, Telegraph Editor; Harry Krause, Picture Editor. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Tom Fisher ... Business Manager Nancy Holland, Advertising Manager; Ed Vaughn, National Advertising Manager; Dale Reinecker, Classified Advertising Manager; Russ Calkins, Merchandising Manager: Bob Monk, Promotion Manager; Gary Grazda, Circulation Manager. Friday, March 19, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Legislature May Cut Education Requirements A bill to lower the number of hours a teacher must have to receive a teaching certificate in Kansas was placed before the state House of Representatives yesterday. The bill, introduced by Rep. Wayne Angle (R) of Ottawa, will reduce the number of education hours needed for a teaching certificate from 20 hours to 12 hours for secondary teachers and from 24 hours to 15 hours for elementary teachers. "THIS IS NOT the proper way to approach the professional problem if one exists," Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the KU school of education, said. "The requirements of a teacher should be studied in view of the kind of preparation needed to perform the job well. This may mean even more courses of education," he said. Rep. Angle stated the reduction of required hours is not a very drastic step. "It is just a question whether the teaching profession wants to lean toward the legislature or not," he said. The bill states that the Kansas State Board of Education shall emphasize academic and subject matter preparation and that the requirement of courses of the education content shall not exceed 12 hours for secondary teachers and 15 hours for elementary teachers, according to Rep. Angle. This does not mean the specific college can not require more hours for a degree in education. Angle said. THE LEGISLATOR said as far as he can see, this will limit the number of hours from 18 to 15 for elementary teachers and from 14 to 12 for secondary teachers. The other courses now classified as education will not be included in the new bill. Dean Anderson said if this is what the representative has in mind there is no need for the bill. It will only confuse the situation and raise all types of interpretations. "I see no need in raising a bill which leaves all kinds of questions, thereafter." Dean Anderson said. 'IF THIS BILL is passed it will necessitate us renumbering our courses. Such courses as psychology and method teaching of art, music, physical education and math will have to come under those fields instead of the school of education," he said. There is an academic council which looks at this question annually and makes their recommendations, Dean Anderson pointed out. It is because of the recommendations of this council that the school of education has already added more liberal art courses to its curriculum, he concluded. Summerfield Award Given Jackson Hibler, St. Joseph, Mo., senior, was named yesterday as the current recipient of the Solon E. Summerfield Senior Award in Business Administration. L. Martin Jones, assistant dean of the School of Business, announced the selection, which was made by the Honors and Awards Committee. The award, an annual event designed to recognize and honor outstanding scholastic achievement in business administration and to encourage capable students to excel in their fields, is made possible through a gift to KU from the Solon E. Summerfield Foundation. The $150 award is presented each semester to the Business senior who has completed the Junior Core in the preceding semester and who has the highest grade average in the required courses through the junior year. KU Team to Research Meet A husband-wife team from KU are invited participants to a conference to review research done on the reservation culture of the Sioux Indians of South Dakota. Murray L. Wax, associate professor of sociology, and Rosalie H. Wax will speak during the meeting March 19-21 at the University of Chicago. The conference is financed by the Wennar-Gran Foundation. The Waxes will present their study of "Dropout of American Indians at the Secondary Level," a project supported by the U.S. Office of Education. A portion of the study titled "Formal Education in an American Indian Community" has been published as a supplement to source book "Social Problems." SUA BRIDGE TOURNAMENT MASTER POINT 1:30 P.M. SUNDAY, MARCH 21 KANSAS UNION SUA FRIDAY SUA FLICKS Requiem for a Heavyweight Anthony Quinn Jackie Gleason PLUS "Perils of Pauline" ADMISSION 35c FRASER THEATER 7:00 p.m.-9:30 p.m. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 19, 1965 I RED DOG INN PRESENTS . . . Bad News . . . THE TRASHMEN ... King of the Surf . . . . . . Surfin' Bird . . . ... Bird Dance Beat ... ONE NIGHT ONLY Ishpa Me Wed., March 24, 7:00 p.m.-11:00 p.m. Cover $1.00 The Beatles. JERRY AND THE DIMENSIONS THE RED DOG INN T. G.I.F. FREE March 19 Friday Night - $1.00 Cover Doors Open-7:00 p.m. Coming attractions Friday, March 26 The Moon Rakers Friday, March 19. 1965 --- University Daily Kansan Spanish Professor Reveals Spirit of Homeland Page 5 Bv Lacv Banks A painting was used by a visiting Spanish professor last evening to lecture about the spirit of Spain. Guillermo Diez-Plaja, from Barcelona and a visiting professor at the University of New York in Buffalo, referred to "Maids of Honor" by Diego Rodriguez Velazquez as one of the greatest realistic paintings ever. Velazquez, 17th century Spanish painter, finished the work in 1556. Speaking to about 110 people, Prof. Diez-Plaja described the characters of the picture projected on a screen from a color slide. The painting shows Velazquez making a portrait of the king and queen of Spain; they were reflected in a mirror behind Valezquez. The painting included the queen's maids of honor. "THIS PICTURE BEGUILES the true relations that existed between the king and queen at that time," Prof. Diez-Plaja said. "They were rarely seen together. "The characters in the play, however," he continued, "seemingly possess a pathetic Castillian fervor. Castilla (a Spanish province) was the cradle of many famous Spanish writers of sentimental fervor. The famous religious 'mystical' writers came from here," Prof. Diez-Plaja said. Prof. Diez-Plaja then explained the lives of the other characters and their influence on the Spanish history. "My first book was completed when I was 19." Prof. Diez-Plaia said in an interview preceding his speech. "Since, I have written on the average of two works a year. The writings naturally concern literature, theater and esthetical problems of art." Prof. Diez-Plaja is the director of the Barcelona Theatrical Institute, and the foreign editor of a KU magazine, "Modern Drama." He is the author of over 50 works including essays, criticisms and textbooks.. MANY OF HIS books have also sold in South America, he said. "The majority of my works are didactic," he said. "My main preoccupation is to explain esthetical problems to the public; I am fundamentally an educator." Prof. Diez-Flaja has been at the University of New York since last September. He returns to Barcelona this May. At NYU, he is teaching literature courses to doctorate candidates. "The system of work in your graduate school here is very different from that of home," he said. "Here the average graduate course is small, the students are closer to the professors and the professors know the students better." The United States offers a very interesting educational picture for investigators and teachers, Prof. Diez-Plaja continued. "I always tell my students that in order to understand Spanish, they have to learn English," he said. AS FAR AS high school students are concerned, he believes that the American student has better advantages in the long run. He said the Spanish students know more facts than American students at the same stage, but American students know more about the practical application of education. The universities in America, with their massive campuses, the visiting professor continued, are isolated entities. In Barcelona, the students live in the cities among families. Campuses are more conducive for studying and they are educational instruments in themselves for communal living. Prof. Diez-Plaja said. As for the Spanish theaters of today, Prof. Diez-Plaja said that there are two types of theaters in Spain—one for the aristocratic minorities and one for all classes of people. He said that in Barcelona there are 22 theaters that present plays twice a day; one in the day, the other at night. THE HIGH-CLASS theaters are universal in their production appeal, Prof. Diez-Plaja said. They give productions from all over the world and by such authors as Ibsen, Unesco and Tennessee Williams. "Many of the popular theater runs plays for 100 days sometimes," he continued. "Here in America, some shows on Broadway run for years. Of course, the populations of the cities affect this. Barcelona has two million citizens; New York has eight million." The theater in Spain is more popular than in any other European country, Prof. Diez-Plaja said. However, nationally, it comes third place to football and the movie theater, he concluded. CHICO'S DRIVE-IN EEEE 11AM GOOD Mexican Food! 19TH 1 MON SAT. 20-MON OPEN 11:00 AM - 12:00 AM M-F th 11:00 AM - 12:00 AM Fri. G-Sat. Attention Serbo-Croatian Majors! The Furys will play at the Dine-A-Mite 8:00 to 12:00 Friday and Saturday It's New At DIXON'S Blue-Water $ ^{ \textcircled{8}} $ SHRIMP STEAK Lots of Tiny Shrimp nestled together, Deep Fried till they are Extra Good. Served on a Hot Toasted Bun with our Special Seafood Sauce and Lettuce. Try One Soon! Dixon's Drive-In 2500 W.6th VI3-7446 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 19, 1965 Beauty Pageants Take Work What makes a beauty pageant? It is pretty girls, lights, glamour, excitement, tears and triumph. But the real story of a beauty pageant is untold hours spent by civic minded men and women preparing each minute detail. The Miss Lawrence-KU pageant will be held on March 26, but the planning and work began January 12th. On that day the Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce selected Dick Randolph to be the chairman of the 1965 Miss Lawrence-KU pageant. At the same time the subchairmen were also selected. THESE MEN were immediately Over $2.3 Million Paid For Painting LONDON —(UPI)— A Rembrandt painting was sold today to a Los Angeles art foundation for a near world record price of $2,234,000 at an auction at Christie's art sales rooms in London. faced with a problem. How to finance the $900 cost of the program. They also had to find a location for the contest, design and print programs, select the girls, and gain public support for the contest. Randolph and his sub-chairmen decided to sell sponsorships of the various contestants to local merchants. The merchants rallied behind the Miss Lawrence-KU pageant, and within a week and a half the necessary money had been raised. The pageant was only 61 days away and obstacles still loomed in their way. The girls had not been selected; the judges had not been contacted; the location had not been found, and the publicity had not been started. EACH OF the sub-chairmen attacked a different problem. John Rouse, the entries chairman, went right to work selecting 30 girls in Lawrence to compete for the title Miss Lawrence-KU. Rouse went to the local merchants, and to Miss Emily Taylor. KU dean of women, for help. By March all of the girls had been selected and most of them had been photographed for the program. About this same time, Charles Bratton had contacted five local people to act as judges for this year's pageant. Win Grantham has secured the Lawrence High Auditorium as the location. Also, at this same time, Dick Randolph, Charles Bratton and Cathy Bergstrom, last year's Miss Lawrence-KU, had been going from civic groups, to sororities, to local meetings and even to the city council session to inform people about the pageant and to ask their support in making this year's the best ever. A PARADE through downtown Lawrence was planned. The Junior Chamber of Commerce have secured convertibles for the 30 girls, and a marching band was secured. The parade will be held at 10:00 p.m., Saturday, March 20th. The judges' tea will also be held the same day in the Hotel Eldridge. Today all that remains is the pretty girls, the lights, the glamour, the excitement, the tears, and the triumph. GOOD GRIEF, we finally got the mess cleaned up and now we're having a GRAND OPENING. It's Saturday, March 20th, but you can register for the free prizes beginning Thursday night. There'll be goodies to eat and drink Saturday and all of our Office supplies, stationery, Hallmark greeting and contemporary cards and party stuff. So, Good Grief, come on down for the fun. When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified New Location — 927 Mass. VOTE John H. Emick SNOOPY For Your City Commissioner Tuesday, March 23 DOORES Printing - Office Supplies WHERE CAN YOU SEE THE FOUR RENEGADES* FOR ONLY A BUCK AND A HALF? At the Lawrence Barberhawk's SIXTH ANNUAL PARADE OF QUARTETS Saturday, March 20, 1965 8:00 p.m. High School Auditorium, Lawrence, Kansas ALSO FEATURING: THE FABULOUS KIPPERS Kansas City Quartet THE AQUA-TONES, Lawrence, Kansas International Medalists, Sweet Adelines, 1962,'63,'64 THE RIP-CHORDS, Topeka, Kansas One of the Fine Young Quartets in the Central States District SPEBSQSA THE LAWRENCE CHAPTER SWEET ADELINE CHORUS Current Region 7 Medalist Chorus AND THE LAWRENCE BARBERHAWK CHORUS The Renegades are, of course, current second place International Medalists, SPEBSQSA, from Chicago, Ill. Friday, March 19, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 7 Summer Project Unites East and West on Island Bv Lacv Banks Lacy Banks is a Kansas City senior at KU. He is majoring in French and Spanish and he is copresident of the KU-Y. After graduation this spring Lacy will start working for the Kansas City Star. He hopes to become a lawyer. Part of my participation in YMCA work camp in East Asia last summer was an adventurous two weeks on Yellow Mud Island, one of Hong Kong's uninhabited islands. My group of eight Americans and nine Chinese students were to build a toolshed for a future YMCA camp. We were to accomplish in two weeks what men for well over four centuries have failed to do: try to merge East and West through mutual understanding. The building of the tool shed was of subordinate importance—one of the many tools in a laboratory where an important human relations experiment was to take place. The work hours came in the frying heat of the day. To everyone the heat was a problem, but to me it was more special. Being a Negro, I was already the most outstanding one in the group; I would occasionally joke, because I stood out the most. The sun gave the group's darkhorse a tan. Not only was the heat a bother, but the water as well. THE LACK OF FRESH, clean water required us to boil it for purification. But instead of boiling it the night before so that it would be cool, our cook, an elder from a nearby village, always boiled it at breakfast time. During the first two days, we concentrated on getting adjusted to our new environment and to each other. The cool nights, the open landscape, the pine scented fresh air, the beautiful scenery and the wonderful beach where we often swam, were assets to the attractiveness of the camp. We were in the thick of the anopheles mosquito area, but our mosquito nets and medical pills kept us free of malaria. Our daily stays in the village lasted about three and a half hours. As soon as we arrived, we would struggle through the dense narrow streets until we approached the school, there to hear lectures on such hairy subjects as "The Political History of China" or "Comparison of Eastern and Western Cultures." WHEN WE returned to the island, we would swim, have dinner, then prepare to better acquaint ourselves with each other through the philosophy-of-life discussions where a Chinese and an American student each gave a general presentation of his family, his personal history and views on various subjects. However, there were problems in really getting personal with each other. Such problems were: 1. LANGUAGE DIFFICULTY—The Americans speak English much better than the Chinese but we spoke no Chinese. The Chinese in trying to satisfy our communication often were unable to express themselves and this became frustrating to both parties. The TOWN CRIER Features Supplementary Textbook Reading Material Paperback Books, Magazines, Newspapers Greeting Cards, Gifts Hours: 8:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. Hours: 8:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. DAILY—Including Sunday 912 Mass. KNITTERS KNIT NOW! BERNAT Scandia the homespun bulky-knit may be used to cut an embroidery pattern BERNAT Scandia the homepun bulky knit DIY SUPPLIES TO LAST OF RECREATION FURNISHINGS Lawrence's Longest Knitting Department Featuring BERNAT YARNS TERRILL'S 803 Massachusetts 2. REFUSAL TO COMMUNICATE—The Chinese students elected not to talk about themselves many times. Their families and their political views were too personal because of pride and fear. Their family histories were considered sacred and their political views were feared to endanger their possibilities of coming to America some day. 3. POLARIZATION or Separation—During the second week the groups occasionally separated because of nationalistic influences and frustrating communications. The inequality of language skills caused some of us Americans to be suspicious of the Chinese because they, finding English problematic, often spoke Chinese around us. If we wanted to say something about them, we had to talk privately. They could say what they wanted right in front of us and we wouldn't know the difference until we would look up and see them laughing and looking at us. lege student, and I were the only Americans who could speak foreign languages, so we tried to counter-communicate by speaking and joking in Spanish around the Chinese. They would often look at us rather puzzled, then at one another and walk away. That eventually brought about a compromise between the two groups to talk only in English whenever we were in public. Dave McMahill, a Dartmouth Col- Although we did not succeed 100 per cent in merging the East and West,we brought them closer together. DURING OUR last night on the island, we had a program where each team (8) gave a 10-minute program that included a skit, song and game. Much tension was alleviated that night, as most teams gave skits that poked fun at many of the problems that we had while on the island. We found ourselves laughing at our own deeds and those of each other. When we laughed at them, our past actions were no longer harmful and tension-provoking. We learned much about each other, not merely as Americans and Chinese, but as individuals. We realized many of our differences and grew to understand them rather than just tolerating them. This was not meant to be a two-week crash program. It was part of a worldwide and timeless movement. We all benefited from what we accomplished. If all we accomplished was the establishment of a few friendships and the realization of a few differences, we achieved more human treasure than all the conquering armies of King David. The YMCA is doing much to bring young men from all parts of the world closer together; to make them understand differences, values and similarities; to accept several challenges in a world of dreadful and delightful possibilities. That, I feel, is good. Where there are friendship armaments, there need not be military. This is the moc that's so soft it beats going bare-foot. Squashy KIDSKIN outside, SOFT FOAM LINING inside. Its vamp details are hand-sewn, and it comes in spring's zingiest color combinations. Black, Brown, Red, Bone, Navy Blue and Green AAAA to B $12.95 Cardigan naturally, oldmaine trotters Royal College Shop 837 Mass VI 3-4255 837 Mass. VI 3-4255 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 19, 196 CRC Explains Activities, Future Plans for Civil Rights Purposes, aims and background of the KU Civil Rights Council were outlined at a press conference lasight by CRC leaders. Nate Sims, Pasadena, Calif., senior, and co-chairman of the CRC, keynoted the conference by saying, "We have accused of prejudging the issues and jumping to conclusions." Instead, Sims said, the council's role is now one of hearing charges and collecting evidence. MILDRED DICKEMAN, assistant professor of anthropology and CRC member, explained the current role further. "We are part of the joint committee negotiating CRC demands. Half of this committee is composed of CRC representatives and the other half is the University Human Relations Committee, appointed by Chancellor Wescoe." Miss Dickeman said. "We (CRC) don't vote in the UHRC. We just meet with them in joint session to discuss the CRC demands and evidences. The UHRC arrives at policy decisions and recommends them to the chancellor," Miss Dickeman said. Referring to the meetings thus far, Miss Dickeman said, "They have been 'meetings of the mind,' with very little formal voting. I think this is good evidence of the communication we've got going. It's good." CRC REPRESENTATIVES to the joint committee are Walter Bgoya, Tanganyika senior; James Masters, Mission graduate student; Pamela Smith, Kansas City sophomore; George Unseld, Louisville, Ky., senior; Douglas Ruhe, Wilmette, Ill. junior; Sims and George Ragsdale, Kansas City senior. MEMBERS OF THE UHRC are Donald Alderson, dean of men; A. Byron Leonard, professor of zoology; Byron C. Loudon, Kansas City senior; Michael Miner, Lawrence senior and chairman of the All Student Council; James Seaver, director of the western civilization program; Arthur Spears, Kansas City senior; Pamela Stone, Wichita senior; Bob Stewart, Vancouver, B.C., senior and president of the student body; Emily Taylor, dean of women; Charles Warriner, professor of sociology, and Laurence Woodruff, dean of students The KU council has been operating for "about eight years," according to Miss Smith, former secretary of the UHRC. During that time, Sims said the group had worked "through all possible channels for amelioration of this situation. "We have signed petitions . . . had rallies, pickets, demonstrations. What is the result of all this? Discrimination still exists. It appears we must increase our participation in order to bring about change." Sims said. "We needed the recognition for our cause. We felt we must protest dramatically to bring these problems to the attention of university officials . . . so that KU can be a leading university in these areas, too. Now that we have that recognition, we've 'shifted gears' and are ready to sit down and solve these problems," Sims said. WITH REFERENCE TO fraternities and sororites, Sims said, "We don't want to abolish the Greek system. . Many of us are Greeks, too. We are not denying the right of the fraternity system to choose their members, but we are appealing for undergraduate control. This would extend to them the freedom to choose as they see fit without alumni or outside pressure. We feel the university must make a commitment to support individual fraternities and sororities, who don't want alumni pressure. There are universities in the U.S. who have carried out these practices. National chapters want to be affiliated with the university since it's their only source of new members." Sims said. "Local autonomy -- chapter control -- could be a reasonable solution, from the CRC's point of view," Sims said. With reference to other on- and off-campus housing Sims said, "This is currently being discussed by the UHRC and the joint committee. We're hearing evidence on this and the school of Education teaching assignments now." Miss Dickeman emphasized that recommendations will be issued by the UHRC on all CRC demands. AT THE PRESENT TIME, the CRC leaders estimate that the American Negro campus population is roughly two per cent of the student body. "But this does not include any of the foreign students or others who are discriminated against racially," Sims said. Sims said that his fraternity, Alpha Phi Alpha, has pledged 7 to 10 Caucasians at the local chapter in the past 15 years. At least one of these has been initiated, according to Sims. "WE HAVE NEVER had discriminatory clauses in our constitutions. The Negro fraternities were formed as the Jewish and Catholic fraternities were formed; because we weren't accepted in other fraternities. My own fraternity has been interracial since 1945," Sims said. Sims said the highest percentage of interracial local chapters is in California. "It was one of the leading states in achieving local autonomy and making arrangements with alumni to relieve pressure." Sims said. Another development involving the local CRC is the recent formation of a Kansas Collegiate Civil Rights Council (KCCRC). CRC LEADERS SAY the idea for such a group has been "kicked around since last spring." But substantive developments came within the past few weeks. Representatives from six schools met in Topeka last Saturday to formulate KCCRC. Four were present from KU, five from K-State, three from Washburn University, one from the College of Emporia and Kansas State Teachers College, and two from Kansas State Teachers College at Pittsburg. Style Show Scheduled A new Y-shaped ramp and circular seating arrangement will assure everyone of an excellent view at the scholarship style show, Tuesday, 8 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom. KCCRC's purpose is to correlate civil rights actions on campuses throughout the state and to mutually learn from each other's experience. This year's show, entitled "The American Flair," will raise funds to provide scholarships for KU coeds. This is the sixth annual year for the project sponsored by the University Women's Club. "This spring the University Women's Club has awarded five scholarships from the funds raised by previous style shows," Mrs. Jean Hetherington said. THE 1965 SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS are Charlotte Quist, Bridgeport junior; Betty Arnold, Hoisington sophomore; Valerie Smasal, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Mary Ann Sutherland, Prescott sophomore, and Ineta Williams, Wichita senior. The first University Women's Club scholarship was in 1915 from the funds derived from a variety of projects. This precedent continued through the early 1950's when the small successful style shows within campus boundaries were staged. MISS SMITH SAID KCCRC discussed four problem areas: (1) housing, (2) Greek letter organizations, (3) publications and student teaching assignments, and (4) general organization of a state civil rights board. A member of the state legislature, Bob Harter, discussed the fair housing bill currently being prepared in the state senate. He told KCCRC how the legislature felt about the recent KU demonstration and suggested letter-writing and phone calls to enlist legislative support for the bill. Temporary officers of KCCRC are Bill Hartzog, chairman, Washburn NAACP leader and president of the Washburn chapter of the Methodist Student Movement; and Ragsdale, vice-chairman. Other schools are expected to attend the next meeting of KCCRC, scheduled for later this month. Abington Book Shop, Inc. 1237 Oread In 1959 the University Women's Club and Newcomers Club combined to present the first benefit style show with proceeds furnishing the scholarship for a woman student. The event has enlarged to be the club's major scholarship fund source. Since 1957 the KU Endowment Association has supervised the scholarships. In 1958 there were two scholarships and by 1963, four were given. The Dover Series of Classical Recordings $2.00 The Words — Jean-Paul Sartre Situations — Jean-Paul Sartre Hours: 10-10 Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. AN ODE VI2-1007 BLOODS A FRYIN SKOITS ARE FLYIN HICKORY DICKORY DOCK CRAM LECTURE CLOCK BOIDS ARE CHOIPIN SPRING HAS SPRUNG BLOODS A ERYIN BLOODS A PRTYN NEED SOME WHEELS TO CATCH A GAL HEALY SPRITE OR MGB I WONDER WHICH IS RIGHT FOR ME? British Motors Mother Searches Son The following is a letter received by the chancellor from Mrs. Georgia Dinger: A worried mother has requested the assistance of the student body in locating her son who was seen for the last time August 24. 1964. 617 SW 13th Ave. Fort Lauderdale, Fla. March 11, 1965 Office of the President University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Dear Sir: ON AUGUST 23, 1964 my son and three of his friends went to Bimini in the Bahamas for a brief vacation before returning to school. On the following night, my son was seen for the last time. I have been trying to locate my eighteen-year-old boy for the past seven months. Recently I was informed that earlier on the evening of August 24, he was seen by some boys who attend the University of Kansas. My only hope is that one of the boys might remember seeing him and could possibly be able to shed some light as to what happened that night. SINCE I AM deeply troubled, would you print a small item in your college newspaper asking that the boy or boy contact me? There is a chance that one of the boys might be coming to Florida for the spring recess. If so, I would appreciate any information which would help piece together the unsolved puzzle in my mind. I sincerely appreciate any assistance that you can give my request. Sincerely. Sincereiy. Mrs. Georgia Dinger It appeared that legislators were leaning toward a proposal to extend the statute of limitations on war crimes for only another four years. BONN—(UPI)—A plan to extend prosecution of Nazi war criminals for an indefinite period lost some support in the West German Parliament Thursday night. Nazis May Be Hunted 4 More Years A parliamentary committee is studying the question, pending full debate in the Bundestag next week. The present 20 years statute expires May 8. pedwin. The Educated SLIP-ON from Pedwin The Campus, a straight A casual that looks equally great with cut-offs, tapered chinos, or dress suits. This smooth moccasin vamp slip-on is available in cordo brown. $13.00 A 813 Mass. VI 3-2091 M'Coy's SHOES A Th in the with a The d match held $ Th Big 8 versit Th televi elimin J. panel D which T wind uled A the d proje moti finan M prese sity ' M Thea K a nat safety Cent Fras F It w veni in th W mem com of M facu Wise 20th shop. Frid Theatre Film Prijuq Pretian riage." Studer Vini Uni Chara Chara Epis Danfo 10th shop, Disc Dist All D Uni Chara Cat Lawre a.m. Satur Befor Qua Chap comes Uni 9:15 Morn ning Oread Col Can Gerke Tea uled ers / Mo State Univ secon Calif ondal Page 9 Friday, March 19, 1965 University Daily Kansan Around the Campus College Bowl into Finals The final round of KU's College Bowl will be at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. The two remaining contending teams are Joseph R. Pearson #1 with a record of 5-0 and Joseph R. Pearson #2 with a record of 4-1. The double elimination tournament will be concluded after the first match if JRP #1 wins. If JRP #2 wins, a second match will also be held Sunday. The tournament is based on quick recall of facts, similar to the television version of College Bowl. A total of 38 teams have been eliminated since the tournament started four weeks ago. The intra-residence hall battle winner will represent KU at the Big 8 College Bowl championship to be held May 14-16 at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln. J. Eldon Fields, professor of political science, will moderate the panels. Dean Heads Driver Ed Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the KU school of education, heads a national project aimed at improving the quality of driver and safety education in the high schools. Anderson is chairman of the planning and steering committee of the driver and safety education teacher preparation and certification project of the National Commission on Safety Education. The Automotive Safety Foundation and the U.S. Bureau of Public Roads are financing the project. The KU Chamber Music Series presentation of the Danzi Woodwind Quintet originally scheduled for March 15 has been rescheduled at 8:00 p.m., Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall. Dean Anderson is serving a three-year term on the commission, which is part of the National Education Association. Mary Curtis-Verna, appearing on the KU Concert Course, will present her program at 3:30 p.m., Sunday, April 25 in the University Theatre and not on April 20 as previously announced. Mass Moved From Fraser Music Dates Changed Mass for Catholic students on campus will be held in Murphy Theatre at 9:30 and 11 a.m. Sunday. Father Brendan Downey of the St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, said, "The move was necessary because the balcony in Fraser, where we were holding services, has been removed." Father Downey continued, "We are very happy about the change. It will be less convenient for some of our students and more convenient for others. We expect to have more than our usual 700-800 in these new and more pleasant surroundings." Speech Prof to Symposium William A. Conboy, chairman of the speech and drama department of KU, will be a participant in an international symposium on communication theory and research March 24-27 at the University of Missouri at Kansas City, Dr. Frank E. X. Dance, former KU faculty member now at the Milwaukee branch of the University of Wisconsin, is among those who will give papers. Official Bulletin TODAY Friday Flicks, 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. Fraser Theater. 10th Annual Driver Education Work- shop 10th Day, Kansas Union Film Series, 7:30 p.m. "Pride and Prejudice." Hoch, Auditorium. Pre-Cana Discussion, 8:00 p.m. "Christian Behavior in Courtship and Marriage." Dr. James Downey, St. Lawrence Student Center. University Theatre, 8:20 p.m. "Six Characters in Search of an Author." 10th Annual Driver Education Work- shop. All Day. Kansas Union. SATURDAY Epicopal Evening Prayer, 9.33 p.m. Danfork Chapel. District Speech and Drama Festival. All Day. Kansas Union. University Theatre, 8:20 p.m. "Six Characters in Search of an Author." SUNDAY Catholic Mass Schedule: 8:00 a.m. St. Lawrence Chapel; 9:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. at the Café; 12:00 p.m. on Saturday; 4-5 and 7-8 p.m. Weekdays: Before, or during scheduled masses. Quaker Meeting, 10:30 a.m. Danforth College Friends Meeting welcomes visitors United Campus Christian Fellowship, 9:15 a.m.-Study seminar, 10:45 a.m. -Morning worship, 5:15 p.m.-Sunday evening fellowship, U.C.C.F. Center, 1204 College Basketball 2:30 p.m. Kansas Union. Carillon Recital, 3:00 p.m. Albert Berkshire. NEXT WEEK Teaching Candidates: Interviews scheduled for week of March 22-26 by Teachme. Monday, Michigan, Big Rapids Ferris State College, college, 106 B.A.; Missouri, University City Public schools, elem. and secondary, Pan American, Union bldg.; California, Wasco High School dist., secondary only, 117 B.A. Tuesday, Missouri, Kansas City Center School Dist. No. 58, elementary only, 117 Ba; Missouri, Kansas City Center School Dist. No. 58, secondary only, 106 Ba. schools, elem. and secondary, 117 Ba. Schools, elem. and secondary, 117 Bd. Schools, elem. and secondary, 117 Ba. Thursday, Missouri. Independence Schools, elem, and secondary. 117 Ba. IN PERSON Peter, Paul and Mary IN PERSON Peter, Paul and Mary Saturday, March 20 Municipal Arena Kansas City, Mo. 8:30 P. M. SEATS NOW SELLING at AUDITORIUM BOXOFFICE Ticket Office, New York, to Municipal Auditorium Boxoffice, enclose stamped-addressed envelope. ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES for Seniors and Graduates in MECHANICAL, AERONAUTICAL, CHEMICAL, ELECTRICAL, and METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING ENGINEERING MECHANICS APPLIED MATHEMATICS PHYSICS and ENGINEERING PHYSICS CAMPUS INTERVIEWS MONDAY, MAR. 22 Appointments should be made In advance through your College Placement Office Pratt & Whitney Aircraft DIVISION OF UNITED AIRCRAFT CORP. An Equal Opportunity Employer SPECIALISTS IN POWER...POWER FOR PROPULSION—POWER FOR AUXILIARY SYSTEMS. CURRENT UTILIZATIONS INCLUDE AIRCRAFT, MISSILES, SPACE VEHICLES, MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS. Plaz eno When I Grow Up I Want To Live At PARK PLAZA SOUTH (you should now) My daddy won't let me live at Park Plaza South yet. He says I'm not old enough. I wish I could. I like the idea of having central air-conditioning and heating, the yard mowed for me, swimming in the private swimming pool, carpeting, garbage disposal, coin-operated laundromat, front drapes and a choice of one or two bedroom apartments. Why don't you live there for me? You'll like Park Plaza South. Park Plaza South 1912 W. 25th Call Day or Night: VI 2-3416 Page 10 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 19. 1965 Jayhawk Thinclads Travel West For K-State Indoor Invitational A total of 23 athletes will represent KU at the Ninth Annual Kansas State Invitational Indoor Relays to be held this Saturday in Ahearn Fieldhouse. The afternoon session will begin at 1 p.m., and the evening program will start at 7 p.m. Herald Hadley, the NCAA champion two-miler and captain of the Jayhawk track squad, is expecting stiff competition from Big Eight champion Dave Wighton of Colorado and Conrad Nightengale of host K-State. The KU traveling squad: Steve Ashurst, 100, 220; Mike Burdick, PV; KU Signs Two All-Staters Two more all-state football players have signed Big Eight letters of intent to enroll at KU. Coach Jack Mitchell announced today that Steve Miller of Phoenix, Ariz., and James M. Hunt of Pawhauska, Okla., have jointed the growing list of outstanding athletes headed for the Jayhawks. Miller, 6-1, 210 pounds, was a three year varsity backfield starter at Arcadia High School in Phoenix where he earned all-city, all-division, all-state, and all-America honors. In addition to football Miller is rated as a top-notch track prospect. Hunt, an Oklahoma all-state football player for coach Alvin Duke, is a three sport athlete having also lettered in baseball and basketball. The 18 year old all-conference tackle-fullback is 6-foot, 190 pounds. Hunt found time to earn state honor society awards in the classroom with a B plus average. Bill Chambers, HH; Jose Contreras, 2M; Art Cortez, BJ, HJ; Doug Dienelt, 100, 220; John Donner, 880; Herald Hadley, 2M; Bob Hanson, 220, 440; Ken Holm, 880; M; Chuck Lanning, 440; John Lawson, 880; M; Phil Manuel, PV; Glenn Martin, BJ; Gene McGaugh, SP; Lowell Paul, 440, 880; Dwight Peck, 220, 440; Bill Perry, SP; Gary Schwartz, SP; Tyce Smith, HJ; Steve Straight, HJ; Ron Suggs, 100, 220, 440; and Tom Yergovich, 880, M. NORMAN—(UPI)—The first session of spring football practice at the University of Oklahoma, called off Tuesday because of rain, was scheduled today, weather permitting. Rain Cancels OU Practice sessions will wind up with the annual varsity-alumni game April 24. First full-scale scrimmage was set for March 26. Oklahoma State's senior forward Gary Hassmann, who was a Rhodes Scholarship finalist in December, has been awarded one of six NCAA Post-Graduate Scholarships. OSU athletic director and basketball coach Henry Iba was informed of the award by Walter Byers, Executive Director of the NCAA. NCAA Grant to Hassmann of OSU Hassmann, who had the best scoring average on OSU's Big Eight Conference championship club this season, will receive $1.000 for postgraduate study at the university or professional school of his choice. The 6-3, 190-pound native of Anchorage, Ky., has charted his course of study in the pre-med field. STYLE SHOW SCHOLARSHIP BENEFIT sponsored by University Women's Club Tues., March 23 8:00 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom Prairie Room will be open Hassmann is president of the OSU senior class and started all but two games for OSU's varsity this season which had a 20-7 record and was NCAA Regional runnerup to Wichita. He missed the two games in the Vanderbilt tournament while in the Rhodes competition. La Pizza VI 3-5353 807 Vermont 30-Minute Delivery Service Guaranteed! Pizza, Spaghetti Chicken, Ravioli Steaks, Sandwiches Shrimp Hamburgers Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 Granada THEATRE···Telephone VI3-5788 Ends Tonite — "MURDER AHOY" Starts SATURDAY... 20 James Stewart Dear Brigitte *Fred Kohlmar production* Starts SATURDAY... James Stewart Dear Brigitte Granada THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-578B Ends Tonite — "MURDER AHOY" Starts SATURDAY... James Stewart Dear Brigitte A Fred Kohlman production FABIAN·GLYNISJOHNS CINDY CAROL-BILLY MUMY JOHN WILLIAMS-JACKKRUSCHEN EDWYNN Henry Koster Hal Kantor COLOR DELIKE CINEMASCOPE Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 ENDS SATURDAY — T-A-M-I Teenage Musical International Starts SUNDAY — JERRY LEWIS as THE PATSY (A Jerry Lewis Production) BY GRAVEN MA BALIN · EVERETT SLOANE · PHIL HARRIS BENEAN WYNN · PETER LORRE · JOHN CARRADINE Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40 Fri. - Sat. - Sun. — "SPENCER'S MOUNTAIN" and "P.T. 109" Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 ENDS SATURDAY — T-A-M-I Teenage Musical International JERRY LEWIS as THE PATSY (A Jerry Lewis Production) TECHNICOLOR Or serve IMA BALIN • EVERETT SLOANE • PHIL HARRIS ROBENAN WYNN • PETER LORRE • JOHN CARRADINE Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40 Fri. - Sat. - Sun. — "SPENCER'S MOUNTAIN" and "P.T. 109" JERRY LEWIS as THE PATSY (A Jerry Lewis Production) TECHNICOLOR! © starring BNA BALIN • EVERETT SLOANE • PHIL HARRIS BORENAN WYNN • PETER LORRE • JOHN CARRADINE Take a Spring Jazz Break! k.c. JAZZ WEEK 65 COUNT BASIE plus 24 JAZZ GROUPS in 8-HOUR SPECTACULAR Sunday Aft. - Eve. March 28, Kansas City, Missouri Municipal Auditorium KENNETH E. HARRIS 65 JAZZ ALL OVER TOWN COMBOS BANDS SOLO ARTISTS in Clubs, Restaurants, Hotels and EVEN the Department Stores! ★ TORCHLIGHT PARADE—Fri. Eve. Mar. 26 ★ TAIL-GATE JAZZ BANDWAGONS Roam the City—Sat. Mar. 27 ★ DIXIELAND MARCHING BANDS in Shopping Areas—Thurs. Mar. 25 Get A Gang Together . . . Everybody's swinging in K.C. MAR.24-28 For information, write or call: The Mayor, City Hall Kansas City, Missouri SU OSU two season was ichi- the n the SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE 1959 Gardner 50'x10' house trailer, good condition. Reasonably priced. Call V1 2-0731. 4-15 '60 VW, excellent condition with radio, sunroof, white wall tires and less than 100 miles on a rebuilt engine, call VI 2-3489. 3-19 BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMIUMS! Occidental Term Life: conversion, Go-Back, and Move-Over options. Age 18 = $33.90 = $10.00. Age 20 = $34.40 = $10.00. Age 22 = $34.70 = $10.00. Call Wes Santee at VI 3-2116 for details. tf 1955 Ford 6 cylinder, standard transmission, radio and heater, good transportation, battery backup, 100% payable, $100.00 Benson's Auto Sales. 1902 Harper, phone VI 3-1626. 3-19 Nikon F photomic, 1.4f, 50 mm, 1ons, like new $440 camera, will sell for $250. See at apt. 69. The Oaks, VI 3-7032. 3-19 Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extensively comprehensive mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL VI 1-2001 for free delivery Printed Biology notes, 76 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive text for all classes. Formerly known as the Thetis Notes, Call VI 3-1428, $4.50. Stereo component system. Dynaco stereo preamp, two dynaco 50-watt power amps, stephens speakers, garnard changer. All perfect. Call VI 3-4891. 3-22 1964 Honda, c-100, $175.00. Good condition. See at 1341 Ohio, Apt. D. 3-22 Gibson guitar, J-50 model, adjustable bridge, clear plastic upper pick guard, earpiece, neck resonant sound, cue, neck strap included. Call Neel Smith, VI 2-3343. 3-22 1956 Olds, 88; actual mileage, 31.000; cream color, black interior, rear speaker system, white wall tires. $350.00—excellent condition. VI 3-1174. 3-22 1963 French Renault, 4-speed transmission, bucket seats, radio and heater. Ir excellent condition. Call VI 3-6462. 3-22 Now you can hear a variety of excellent King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL 2-1791. ti TYPEWRITERS, electrites, manuals, portables, sales, service, rent's, Olympia, Hermes, Royal, Smith-Corona, Olivetti, Adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. tf Tires--800 x 14 white sidewalls. Two sets. One set is Atlas snow tires, which will go for $5 apiece. The second set is $26 (apiece) Riverside white sidewalls. They will go for $15 apiece. The set (of 4) is $4. Call Bob Monk-VI -3 7102 Students, why throw money away on rent when you can own a 1962 Marlette 10 x 50, modern, two-bedroom mobile home This home is clean and in excellent condition. For further information CALL RI 8-0973 or RI 8-0916 tf BE THE LEADER OF YCUR PACK: Harley Davidson Sportster K, 750 cc, new clutch, and new brakes and tires. THIS IS NO HONDA. For further information about this beautiful machine CONTACT Monti Belot at VI 3-0700. tf PORTABLE STEREO: Admiral's Finest— two carrying units, 1 for turntable and 1 for speaker systems (2 tweeters, and 2 full range woofers) $195 new. Will sell for good offer. CALL: Rusty Calkins at VI 3-5721. CHINA-Nortaki, Mayfair design. New, never used or even removed from back- g. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk VI 3-7102. THE STABLES now open every day- Scriving steaks, chops sea food, sand- sphere management, new atmo- sphere. Party room available. Phone t- 3-9644, 1401 W. 71th. NEED A BAND? 30 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM PHONE VI 2-2100 Volkwagen 1964 - excellent running condition - serviced at proper intervals - $1500.00 or best offer-cash. VI 2-2168. 3-24 16 mm. role film movie camera; GE portable cable light; 3 police radios (1); the Motorola walk-talki (low band), (3) high band cover. Call Gary Grada, VI 2-910-8. I'm not in. **tf** '59 Austin Healy: less than 5000 miles on new engine, mechanically perfect, assembling pleasing. See after 5:30 p.m. 1319 Vermont or call Charles Reagan at U 4-3004. 3-24 1964 MG midget, B.R. Green, wire wheels, hardtop. Am-Fm radio, very low mileage. Sacrifice. Call VI 3-8367, ask for John. 3-24 For sale: 1657 Morgan sports roadster motorocar for motors Call CE 3-6950 in Topeka 3-24 1963 Healy Healty 3000 Mark II, red, 19.000 miles, convertible, roll up windows, overdrive, new tires, excellent condition. VI 2-3673. 3-24 FOUND Girl's glasses, found Friday night. March 12. in front of Strong Hall. Call VI 2-9269. 3-22 TYPING 1 years typing experience plus back- guarantee accuracy on college papers. New electric typewriter equipped for electronic Michigan or VI 2-0400. 801 Michigan or VI 2-0400. Experienced typist wants typing in home. rates, prompt service. Phone: VI 2-3356. Typing done by experienced secretary for 25c each double spaced page. Call Ethel Henderson, 2565 Ridge Court, VI 2-0122. 3-31 *experienced typist.* 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. CALL Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI-21643. Former teacher will give prompt and careful attention to typing your term papers and reports. 4 years experience, call VI 3-3829. tf These are only on Royal Electric Pica Type writer CALL Mm. Fulcher at VI 3-0588 Experienced typist. Former secretary will assist with document preparation. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter, Gestetner Duplicator. Mrs bowney, 2521 Alabama St. Phone 38568 Experienced secretary will type term papers, law briefs, theses, etc., for students. Especially familiar with legal and business terms. Fast and accurate. Reasonable rates. Call Marsha Goff at VI-2-5777 tf Former Harvard and U. of Minnesota report on the use of report and theses. PHONE VI 3-7207. Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. Will do exertions on computer-based research for carbon ribbon typewriter. Betty Muskraut 40 Indian; or call IJ 2-0091. t term papers. Theses by experienced typist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tf Will do typing in my home. Accurate reasonable rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at VI 2-0210. Experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing. Speak well and be a good communicator and languages. Quick and reasonable. Electric typewriter. Call VI 2-3976. tt Typist, experienced with term papers theses and dissertations, will give you access to a wide variety of machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048. Experienced secretary would like typing in her home, with new electric typewriter and secure service. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Lamb at VI 2-1188. Experienced typist wants theses, term-papers, and dissertations to be typesed on electric (pica type) typewriter. Please Call Pat Beck at VI 3-5630. tf Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will be assessed on these tests. pertened. Electric typewriter. CALL Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8262. CALL Expert typing on thesis, dissertations, texts, typewriters. Typewriter. Call 3-23 Mishler, VI 3-1029 Experienced typist will do dissertations experiments. Experience in writing electric typewriter with carbon ribbon special symbols. Prompt service and room service. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 vol. 3-7485. WANTED Roommate wanted. Want girl to share two bedroom home with working girl or KU student. Call VI 3-3414 or VI 3-9201. 2110 Tenn. Young working girl would like another girl to share her two-bedroom apartment. Her share would be $50 month, plus 1/2 utilities. Call VI 3-3988 after 5:00 p.m. Apartment available starting June 1. 3-22 Wanted—30 girls with Senior keys, to date 30 Yale University graduates and faculty with the Yale Russian chorus. Contact KU Y office. 3-23 Wanted. Someone to play GO. Call VI 2-9227 after 7:00 p.m. tf Washing and ironing done in my home 1131 New Jersey Thu. 8:2-2998 OLD CARS WANTED, top prices paid. Do it today! Gi Joe's G6, 101 Vermont. Male waiter wanted to wait at the new Flamingo Club. For further information call Bill Deay, VI 3-2825 after 5:30 p.m. 3-25 MEN wanting summer or full time work. SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAMS available for all. WHY BORROW MONEY. Earnings well above average. ATHLETES DESIRABLE. Apply 3:30 p.m., Sunflower Room. 3-23 HELP WANTED POSITIONS WANTED Wanted — ironing — shirts, men's pants, skirts, skirt dresses a dresses 3-127 V 3-417-6 I will do ironing in my home. Satisface- guaranteed. 10 cents per article. 3-0838 3-22 Spring clearance reduced 10-50% dermatics, Revlon, Studio Girl, cosmetics. Elsie's Beauty Shop, three blocks north of the Union on Mississippi. II 3-6109. IV 3-625 MISCELLANEOUS Alterations and mending of men's and women's clothing. Sewing of all kinds. Phone VI 3-5136 after 7:00 p.m. or before 9:30 a.m. 3-24 Complete beauty service Elswick Beauty Shop. 942 Mississippi, VI 3-6109. 3-25 Math tutor B.A. degree in math from KU. Experienced in tutoring geometry, algebra, calculus and analytic geometry. Call VI 3-0927. 3-24 Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-Q ribs that grandma and grandpa can eat, try ours on order or order to 11:00 a.m. per slab. Hours: 11:00 a.m to 11:00 p.m. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-9510 3-31 PARTY TIMF? Building available for PHONE Ralph Froehre *af* 713-3895. $CHWINN BICYCLES - service all makes, parts and accessories, tires $1.46, tubes 97c, pedals $2 each pair, luggage racks and tools, seats at 7n and Micr w CALL V I-3-0851 it's great for a date. Take her bowling at Hillcrest Bowl. Finest lanes in the state. Try it on Tuesday, March 3. Also Mon, Tues, and Frie after 9:00 p.m. Hillcrest Bowl, 9th and Iowa. tt friends coming this weekend? Looking for a place with good food at reasonable prices. HILLCREST BOW RESTAURANT. Plenty of free parking 9th and Iowa. **tt** sent electric, standard, and portable ypewriters. Repair all makes of electric. turn off batteries. Own business Equipment (formerly Business Machines), 15. F. 8th. V 3-0151. tl Attention: All persons interested in self defense training classes utilizing many of his knives and smashes used in James Bond movies, contact Bob Mitten it VI ~ 7102. Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon.-thr-Fri. or all dav Sat. or Sun. Phone VI 3-6231. tf ENTERTAINMENT ATTENTION PARTY THROWERS: Do you want the Beatles, the Kingsmen, Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL VI 2-1791. tf Now you can hear a variety of excellent dance bands on stereo demo tapes, including the Fabulous Blades, the Norseman, the Union; union and non-union tff VI 2-1791. LOST Prescription sunglasses in vicinity of Malott or Summerfield March 15. Reward, call Richard Wier at VI 3-1711. 3-24 Lost pair of women's glasses. Color. Reward offered, VI 3-2779. 3-22 FOR RENT Furnished apartment between downtown and KU. Private bath, utilities paid. $59.00. Chance to reduce rent by light housekeeping. VI 2-3784. 3-25 Married, Graduate Students, Faculty-2 bedroom apts, $85.00, 1 available now: 5 night apartments. Also sleeping rooms. Call for brochure, VI 3-2163, Santee Apts., 1123 Indiana, tf Single sleeping room for one man in an apartment. Call VI 3-6723. 3-24 Page 11 PARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30- 50 people, jukebox, liquid refreshments and refreshments. Contact Don at the Gaslight Tavern for reservations CALL VI 3-1086. tu Apartment at 1232 Louisiana for couple or single. Modern. Call VI 3-4271. 3-19 Engine swaps and Transmission change overs. We sell and install speed equip-ment for drums for drags, jippies or street. Farmers Garage, 837 Connecticut, VI 3-2906. CAR REPAIR Fune up-Engine rebuilding-Complete general mechanic work (guaranteed work). Most reasonable prices in town Open 7 evenings a week. Free estimates on all parts and labor. Farmers Garage 137 Connecticut, VI 3-2906. tj Patronize Kansan Advertisers 24 HOUR SERVICE (TUES. THRU SUN.) - Brake Adjustment . . . 98 - ● Lubrication . . . . $1.00 - Wheel Alignment Friday, March 19, 1965 - Automatic Transmission MUGS 24 OZS. — 35c University Daily Kansan Page Fina Service In Apartment Living Louise's Bar 1017 Mass. 2350 Ridge Court VI2-1160 1819 W.23rd HONN'S Discover Quality Southridge Plaza COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING VI 3-9694 Across From The High School OPEN 24 HRS. 19th & La. VI 3-9631 Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Fraternity Jewelry AL LAUTER 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 Balfour Complete Car Care - DX Products One-Stop Service - Firestone Tires - Mufflers & Pipes - Brake Service - Tune Ups Experienced mechanics - Wash and Polish Montgomery Ward Auto Service 729 N.H. VI 2-1708 DX Servicenter ASK ABOUT THE DX TRIAL BOND GUARANTEE Guaranteed Parts 6th & Michigan VI 2-9598 Open 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Daily 7:30 to 9 Sunday Bring Auto Problems To Us. Tune-up, Body For the best in — ● dry cleaning ● alterations ● reweaving Auto Service Repair & Repaint, Automatic Trans. Service Wheel Alignment Lawrence 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 NewYork Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPLIANCES 10th & Mass. VI 2-0247 Mobil — Goodyear Instrument Repair Music Mayhugh VI 3-4430 1910 W. 23rd HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy Ice cold 6 pacs — all kinds OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350 TRAVEL TIME --- LET MAUPINTOUR Make Your Spring Break and Summer Reservations Now! TRAVEL SERVICE Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Page 12 Friday, March 19, 1965 World Spotlight Debt Recall Solution Posed Rep. Richard L. Roudebush, R-Ind., said earlier this month that the United States could solve the problem of its dwindling gold reserves by calling in the debts owed by European countries. He claimed that if President Johnson insisted on European nations paying their debts "we would not have to ship a single ounce on balance and, in truth, the gold outflow could be reversed overnight." U.S. Jets Cause Big Blow Up SAIGON, South Viet Nam—(UPI)—A force of 130 American jet fighters and bombers blasted supply depots in Communist North Viet Nam today. The commander of the U.S. Air Force in South Viet Nam estimated destruction at "80 to 90 per cent." Maj. Gen. Joseph Moore told a news conference that approximately 60 U.S. Air Force planes and between 60 and 70 Navy aircraft participated in strikes against Bien Son supply depot about 35 miles north of Vinh in North Viet Nam. All American planes returned safely. Sukarno Upsets Foreign Oil JAKARTA, Indonesia—(UPI)—President Sukarno today placed all foreign-owned oil companies in Indonesia under government control. Sukarno's action affects three American firms-Stanvac, Caltex and Pan American. It also applies to the British and Dutch owned Shell Oil Co. These firms provide the Indonesian government with an estimated annual foreign exchange earning of $125 million. Astronauts to Build Prestige CAPE KENNEDY—(UPI)—Two U.S. astronauts and a moon probe, badly upstaged by a Russian who does somersaults in space, will try to save a little national face in a cosmic doubleheader starting Sunday. The astronauts, John W. Young and Virgil I. Grissom, planned to take part today in a workout of the worldwide, 15-station network that will follow their three-orbit course through the sky next Tuesday. The United States plans no somersaults and no television pictures. The astronauts are to sit still, manipulate some controls and get down at the end of three orbits. Capistrano Awaits Swallows SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO, Calif.—(UPI)—Thousands of swal- lows were expected to arrive at this picturesque Franciscan mission, upholding a 188-year-old tradition for punctuality. Observers Thursday night reported that there was "not a sign of the swallows" Thursday. Sometimes scout swallows arrive as much as a day or two in advance of the main party. By tradition, the small gray birds with the forked tails arrive at the mission San Juan Capistrano March 19, build and repair nests within its sheltered walls and under its eaves, bear their young and then head south for Central America on Oct. 23, the day of San Juan. OPPORTUNITIES FOR CAREER POSITIONS WITH PAN AMERICAN PETROLEUM CORP. Subsidiary of Standard Oil Co. (Indiana) Interviews to be held on Campus for the Following Positions: Wednesday, March 24, 1965 ACCOUNTING—Opportunities for students with Bachelor's or advanced degrees in Accounting or who have 20 hours of Accounting as a minor. Thursday, March 25, 1965 GEOPHYSICS—Opportunities for students with Bachelor's or advanced degrees in Geophysics; Math, Physics, Engineering (with some geology background) and Geology (with physics or math background). Summer employment opportunities also available. Check with Mr. I. N. Bowman, Business Placement Bureau for accounting interview appointments. Check with Dr. William Merrill, Chairman, Geology Department, for geophysics interview appointments. Equal Opportunity Employer Slavic Experts Will Meet at KU Preparations are underway for the holding of the 1965 Midwest Slavic Area Conference at KU. The Conference will be held on April 9 and 10 in the Kansas Union. Over 150 scholars and experts in the field of Soviet and Slavic Area Studies are expected to attend. "It is the first time such a conference will have been held in Lawrence and this is indeed a great honor for us," Herbert J. Ellison, chairman of the department of Soviet and Slavic Area Studies, said. MIDWEST SLAVIC Area Studies is a branch of the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies. Every year experts in this field hold a conference where they present papers and hold discussions in the field of Russian and other East European affairs. One of the highlights of this year's conference will be the participation by two of Germany's most distinguished scholars in the field. They are Dr. Richard Lowenthal of The Free University in Berlin and Professor Maximilian Braun of Gotingen University. Dr. Ellison said, "Prof. Braun is one of the most distinguished schol are in the field of Russian literature and Dr. Lowenthal is among the world's very few living specialists on International Communism." PROF. BRAUN will speak on "Dostoevsky: Artist or Philosopher" and Dr. Lowenthal's discussion will be on "World Communism and the Sino-SovietSplit." KU will be represented by Prof. Roy D. Laird, associate professor of political science, and by Prof. Harry Shaffer, associate professor of economics. This is the new symbol of style leadership... WINTHROP SHOES W . We make it a habit to bring you quality, value and smart style. That's why we're so proud to present part of our new collection from today's style, quality and value leader...WINTHROP. TUXEDO SHOE - Black Grain - Brown Grain - Tan Grain 19.95 14.95 819 Mass. ARENSBERG'S VI 3-3470 J. C J.R.P. No.1 Wins College Bowl Title Fluttering hearts. Flushed faces. Sweaty palms. All the familiar agonies of College Bowl were present yesterday as the Joseph R. Pearson #1 team defeated Joseph R. Pearson #2 team in the final round of intramural College Bowl. The close match, with each team leading at various times, ended with a score of 200-175. As a result of this victory, JRP #1 will represent KU in the Big Eight College Bowl competition in Lincoln, Neb., on May 14-16, William Cibes, Altamont senior and chairman of the College Bowl Steering Committee, said last night. Members of the winning team were Thomas L. Winston, Dallas, Texas, senior; Michael E. McDaniel, Wichita junior; James E. Niokum, Wichita senior; and Anthony E. Bengel, Independence senior. After the match, Cibes presented the winning team with both a permanent trophy and a traveling trophy, the latter a reproduction of Rodin's "The Thinker." JRP is the second hall to have possession of this trophy. Stephenson Scholarship Hall won it the past three years. Cibes explained that KU had a College Bowl team that competed in national competition in 1959, but that it was chosen through all-campus try-out sessions preceding the matches. The original team consisted of both men and women and appeared on the nationally televised edition of College Bowl. CIBES ADDED that Frank (Bucky) Thompson initiated College Bowl on an intramural level in 1961. Thompson, a 1964 graduate, served as the Steering Committee chairman for its first two years and boosted the activity to the position of prominence that it now occupies. "We were one of the first in the Big Eight schools to have a college bowl team as a regular activity," Cibes said. He explained that after KU formed its team, others in the Big Eight picked up the idea and established the Big Eight competition. Spring, Ducks Mix For Festival Fling What is the best way to duck-nap a duck? This will be the question foremost in the minds of most hall residents as the Spring Fling opens officially at 12:20 Wednesday. The kick-off will come in the form of a fireworks display in Memorial Stadium. John Hill, Waverly sophomore, said five huge sky rockets will be ignited in the stadium and shot over the middle of campus. From then until 8:10 a.m. Saturday "duck-napping" will become a legal sport on campus. Ducks were distributed over the weekend to the dormitories participating in Spring Fling. They must be kept in the cages provided, on the hall grounds and at ground level. THE CAGES may not be locked and may only be fastened with the latch on the cage. The duck-nappers may not take the duck by physical violence. No duck may be taken when a personal guard is within two feet of the duck cage. To avoid conflict with university regulations, no ducks may be duck-napped from women's halls from 10 minutes before closing until 7:10 a.m. the next morning. The ducks should not be picked up or handled unless necessary. If ransom, such as a food exchange, is requested to insure early return of a duck, the agreement between the halls concerned must be approved by Wayne Graham. Independence, Mo., senior. If no duck crosses the finish line within 20 minutes after the start of the race, the judges will determine the official winner. The first events in Spring Fling will be exchange dinners on Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday nights. The pairings are designed so a floor of one large residence hall will be paired with the members of another floor or a small residence hall. Friday night there will be a Spring Fling dance at the Red Dog Inn featuring the Flippers. SATURDAY MORNING, the testivities will be carried on atop Daisy Hill. They will include Volleyball and a sports car gymkhana. The volleyball teams will be composed of 5 boys and four girls from the hall pairings. The gymkhana is a test of driving skills as the small cars maneuver around a complicated course racing for the best time. At noon, the activities will move to Potter Lake for a picnic. Residents not wishing to eat at the lake will be served lunch at either Templin or Joseph R. Pearson Halls. Saturday afternoon will feature such contests as the "bod race," egg race and the pie eating contest. Also a surprise marathon race will be held. A recognition banquet will be held at 12:30 Sunday afternoon in Lewis Hall. This will be attended by all Association of University Residence Halls representatives, and the executive committees of each residence hall. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will be the speaker. That evening the annual Spring Fling Sing will be in Murphy Hall. At this time prizes for the winners in the competition will be announced. Daily hansan He said the gas which he described as "non-lethal" was not used by American military forces but had been given to the South Vietnamese for use by their own troops. HE SAID the gas being used could be dispensed by helicopters but there were other ways of employing it. The spokesman said the gas being used "disables temporarily, making the enemy incapable of fighting." He said it was similar to the use of gas for riot control. 62nd Year, No.104 "It is used in tactical situations in which the Viet Cong intermingle or take refuge among non-combatants," he said. LAWRENCF, KANSAS "THERE HAS been gas used against the Viet Cong a couple of times. It produces vomiting." U.S. Non-Fatal Gas Used by Viets; Armed Fighters Downed in North TOPEKA — (UPI)— The Senate Committee on assessment and taxation today recommended for passage a bill proposing to raise the Kansas Sales Tax from $2 \frac{1}{2}$ to $3 \frac{1}{2}$ cents on the dollar. Bulletin SAIGON—(UPI)—American military headquarters disclosed today that South Vietnamese troops have used nausea-producing gas provided by the United States against Communist guerrillas in Vietnam Nam. Monday, March 22, 1965 A spokesman made the disclosure at a news briefing. At the same time he reported that eight U.S. Air Force F105 fighter-bombers flew an armed reconnaissance mission over North Viet Nam today. One plane was reported shot down but the pilot was rescued. Responding to questions from newsmen about reports that gas was being used against the Viet Cong, the spokesman said: "Rather than use artillery or aerial strikes, the Vietnamese troops have and use a type of tear gas." HE SAID THE object of the gas was to "make the enemy incapable of fighting" without killing civilians among whom the guerrillas often hide. "Americans have not used it but the Vietnamese employ it," he said. The spokesman said the gas was provided through the regular military aid program to South Viet Nam. He said it was similar to the type of tear gas used in riot control —"the type of tear gas which induces vomiting." FULL DETAILS were not immediately available on today's air action. Reliable military sources said future air attacks against North Viet Nam may include raids on the capital of Hanoi and railroads linking it with Communist China. In the ground war, about 1.000 Vietnamese troops were airlifted into action today against a heavy concentration of Communist forces only 10 miles from the big American air base at Da Nang. De Gaulle's Power Slips PARIS—(UPI)—Returns from municipal elections today gave a big boost to Gaston Defferre, the Marseilles mayor who wants to run for president against Charles de Gaulle. De Gaulle's supporters suffered a bitter setback when they failed to win control of the Paris City Council. Sunday's voting was a run-off of the first round of balloting held last Sunday. THE GAULLIST UNION for the New Republic (UNR) lost one of the top political prizes in France by winning only 39 out of 90 City Council seats compared with the 48 it had confidently expected. In Marseilles, Mayor Defferre, 54, claimed a "smarting" personal defeat of De Gaule when his combined Socialist-Center parties ticket took 41 out of 63 city council seats in the big Mediterranean port city. The Communists won the other 22 and the Gaullists failed to win any. "WHAT IS POSSIBLE in Marseille also is possible on a national scale," declared Defferre, who was assured of re-election as mayor. He is one of the few French politicians who really believes he can win this year's presidential election even if Dae Gaulle runs again. "It has been shown at Marseilles that it is possible to beat the UNR and De Gaulle without an alliance with the Communists," Deferre said. DEFFERRE'S PRESTIGE and image, however, suffered somewhat. He won re-election only through extreme rightist votes. The Paris and Marseilles races were the key contests in the voting. Weather The weather bureau predicts a return to cold weather tonight with increasing cloudiness. Winds will shift to a northerly 15 to 25 miles per hour bringing a low tonight in the mid 20's. Tomorrow will be cloudy and cold. CARLA HUBBARD IT'S BEEN A LONG WINTER—These three bathers (?) will be participating in the women's scholarship fashion show Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom. There will be a cover (Photo by Harry Krause) charge of $1.00 for the show. From left to right are Nancy Egy, Topeka senior; Karla Hoelzel, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Sally Ann Martin, Tulsa, Okla., sophomore. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 22,1965 Aim of Education College students have been dissected, grouped, graphed and analyzed ever since statistical surveys were discovered. We have been labeled everything from the "beat" generation to the reincarnated "lost" generation. We are damned because we demonstrate and are concerned, pitied because of the college pressure for success and congratulated for the same reasons we are damned. The national limelight, once focused on the eastern "name" schools, has now diffused to include almost all colleges. KU got its share of the attention last week with the demonstrations. Berkeley has been in the limelight for some time with its many student protests. Adults have always viewed colleges as the repository of the hope and anxiety of the future. At one and the same time, they have chided us because we are children and pitied us because we are old before our time. But they have realized, despite all our faults, imaginary or real, that we are those who will build on a world they have helped to develop. The "beats" protest that they had nothing to do with the present world. The college image of the girl with the flip hair-do is assumed to have the attitude that her hair-do suggests. THE STATISTICIANS graph how we feel about everything from God to the war in Viet Nam. They picture us as harriedly poring over books in the wee hours of the morning and as discharging our frustrations and tensions by dancing the "frog" at the nearest discotheque. As the images multiply, many lose sight of the real purpose of the University . . . the education of the mind. The public becomes so immersed in our frustrations, our causes and our latest fads that they forget our function here. The classical conception of education was limited to the study of the classical subjects, available only to the elite. In a drastic swing, American education shifted to the theory that everyone should be educated to the maximum of his ability. As a result of Sputnik, increased emphasis was placed on technological study. The emerging theory is to educate and develop the mind, not the whole person. And so the purpose of education, and American education in particular, still remains an enigma. Alfred North Whitehead, professor at Harvard University, says: "The justification for a university is that it preserves the connection between knowledge and the zest of life, by uniting the young and the old in the imaginative consideration of learning. The university imparts information, but it imparts it imaginatively. . . . A university which fails in this respect has no reason for existence. . . A fact is no longer a bare fact: it is invested with all its possibilities. It is no longer a burden on the memory: it is energizing as the poet of our dreams, and as the architect of our purposes." IT BECOMES A STIMULATING link between the world of the Middle Ages and the world of the atom. It regenerates the ideas of the ancients for use in the ages to come. The causes, the protests, the frustrations are all a part of the education. The mind revolts at the idea of sterilizing the facts, the ideas to the point where they are no longer useful. The protests, if they are valid, are merely a way of utilizing the concepts learned in a classroom, in a discussion. There is a real and present danger that the cause is not valid, that is merely a cause without a purpose. This is when demonstrations become meaningless. The merit of a cause, a bull session, a meditative walk has to be judged on the basis of how it serves the individual. A university is not an aggregate personality of crazes and causes, it is 11,000 minds seeking the answer of truth. — Leta Roth NATO Celebrates Anniversary The North Atlantic Treaty Organization will have completed its 15th year next month. With five years left before the treaty is due for renegotiation it is beginning to show signs of weakness. There is a chance the NATO alliance will be abandoned when the question of renegotiation comes up in 1969. If it is abandoned, it will simply be because the world has outgrown the original provisions. The NATO treaty was conceived and signed in a period that bears little resemblance to the world today. WORLD WAR II had left Europe weak and defenseless. The Soviet power was taking over in all of the Eastern European states where its troops still remained, and the threat to Western Europe seemed real and immediate. The United States for the first time in its history came face to face with the fact that its future well-being was closely tied-up with the security of governments other than its own. If Europe were to fall to the Communists, it would be left without allies, in an almost undefensible position. Europe needed the protection of the United States, the United States found it in its own best interest to guarantee Europe that defense. The North Atlantic Treaty, signed in April, 1949, was a simple multilateral defense treaty. The 12 signatory powers promised to supply military personnel and equipment to a NATO force which would be under the direction of a central headquarters and a supreme commander. THE ORIGINAL members included the United States and Canada in the Western Hemisphere; Britain, France, Holland, Belgium, Iceland, Norway, Denmark, Portugal, and Italy in Europe. Greece, Turkey and Germany joined later. However, even in 1949, when the need for such an alliance seemed almost overwhelming, there were many doubts as to the advisability of the NATO organization. Those who feared the Soviet power most were not absolutely convinced this was the way to deal with the threat. They were concerned about the possibility of such a Western alliance splitting Europe into Eastern and Western Blocks that could never be reconfiled. After the war there was a genuine hope in Europe that the continent could regain at least the degree of unity it had maintained throughout history. Sovereign nations with changing shades of alliance, they felt, should not be replaced by two distinct power blocks. European leaders found it expedient to keep Europe, especially Germany, separated; but the European people longed for reunification. THERE WAS also a fear in Europe that the NATO alliance would bring on the war it was formed to prevent. It was inevitable that the Russians denounce the alliance as aggression aimed as starting a third world war. With the Russian protests against having American nuclear power established almost on their borders, Europeans thought there might be a chance the Soviet power would try to push even further into Europe, or attempt to eliminate the American power from Europe altogether. Dailij Hänsan 111 Flint Hall 111 Flint Hall UNiversity 4-3648, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. There was also some bitterness over the fact that the NATO treaty called for an established military force to which every nation had to contribute. In 1949, rearmament in Europe could only be viewed as an extremely costly operation for nations which needed everything they had to recover from the war. Leta Roth and Gary Noland Co-Editorial Editors NEWS DEPARTMENT Don Black ... Managing Editor Bobbie Bartelt, Clare Casey, Marshall Caskey, Fred Frailey, Assistant Managing Editors; Judy Farrell, City Editor; Karen Lambert, Feature- Society Editor; Glen Phillips, Sports Editor; Janet Chartier, Telegraph Editor; Harry Krause, Picture Editor. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Tom Fisher Business Manager Nancy Holland, Advertising Manager; Ed Vaughn, National Advertising Manager; Dale Reinecker, Classified Advertising Manager; Russ Calkins, Merchandising Manager; Bob Monk, Promotion Manager; Gary Grazda, Circulation Manager. And there were those who were convinced that the NATO treaty was completely unnecessary. The most well-organized group with this opinion was the Bevanite wing of the British Labor Party. It asserted that the rearmarm program was the result of a superficial analysis of the international situation, that the world was not immediately endangered by Russia, that the Russians were still too weak from the wounds inflicted by the war to start another; that the peoples of both Eastern and Western Europe were primarily concerned with recuperation; and that by putting first emphasis on arms the Americans would irritate tensions and divert the West from long-time basic reforms which alone could win the ultimate victory over Communism. —Jackie Helstrom ©1965 HERBLOCK Out Of The Cocoon Education Locked In Pressure Cooker Does education reach its highest level of perfection when students scramble constantly for higher test scores and better grades? Does academic excellence require that students be subjected to the kinds of pressure now found in the "most highly selective" colleges? Will the students who survive these pressures and who conform to the demands of their professors become the adults who will lead the nation and advance the culture? For a time this was all to the good, particularly in colleges that previously had asked too little of students. But, as the trend continued, the competitive pressures became overwhelming for many. Students began to rebel. Cheating increased (a recent study of ninety-nine campuses reports that half the students questioned admitted to having engaged in some form of academic dishonesty). In this mad scramble for the symbols of learning, has something been lost from the academic world? Have students lost the opportunity for quiet contemplation? Are they being denied the time for reading good books that are not assigned by a professor-for leisurely discussion of the things that matter most, whether or not they fit neatly into a required course of study? Has "higher standards" come to mean better grades and test scores rather than greater depth of understanding? Perhaps the answer to all these questions is "yes." Perhaps the widespread complaints from students come only from those who should not have entered college in the first place or who chose the wrong college. Perhaps the frequent reports of increased neurosis among students reflect only better diagnosis and a greater willingness of the young people of this generation to seek psychological help when they need it. Perhaps the higher suicide rates among students are misleading. Perhaps the increased technical knowledge makes a heavier load essential. But there is enough room for uncertainty to justify a close examination. Not long ago we shared the view of many educators that college standards were too low—that students were devoting too little energy to intellectual endeavor. When colleges found it difficult to attract enough students to fill their dormitories and classrooms they were understandably reluctant to risk further attrition by raising standards. But a dramatic change has occurred within the past decade. The shortage of space resulting from the vast increase in numbers of students desiring college education has made it easy for colleges to push standards steadily upward. Professors have responded by making heavier assignments and grading more ruthlessly. It has become harder to get into college and harder to survive after being admitted. We would welcome the views of our readers-students, parents, and professors. We shall print as many letters as our space permits and, if the volume of mail is large, we shall offer a summary of responses. — Reprinted from Saturday Review BOOK REVIEWS DIVINE GRACE AND MAN, by Peter Fransen (Mentor, 75 cents). The author is professor of theology at the Society of Jesus Philosophical and Theological College in Belgium and formerly taught at Fordham. The book is based on lectures given in several cities before lay audiences. Fransen is trying in this work to treat the evangelical concept of God by eliminating what he views as the metaphysical vocabulary which clouds many discussions, and he uses modern psychology to treat divine grace in the individual. University Daily Kansan Page 3 Monday, March 22, 1965 Gemini Launch Ready When Weather Shifts dents Does kinds ' Will o the d the CAPE KENNEDY - (UPI)—A sudden reversal in the trend of the whimsical weather today gave America a good chance to launch its first but "runner up" two-man flight into space within 24 hours or so. dos the whoose the neurosis illing- biologicalmong knowledge or un- college ener- to at- s they raising e past case in asy for reive ruth- survive es that did com- many. study of restored stenity (resty). nothing oppor- time for for lei- for lei- ndards" greater parents, permits mary of A pair of medically certified astronauts named John W. Young and Virgil I. Grissom, a converted war rocket named Titan-2 and a 1955-model spaceship whose name was in dispute awaited an official okay to start the three-orbit voyage at 9 a.m. EST Tuesday. view 5 cents). us Philat- taught at cities be- he evan- the meta- he uses THE CRUCIAL "go-no-go" decision was in the hands of Christopher C. Kraft Jr., mission director for the inaugural manned flight, already 17 months behind schedule in the nation's $1.35 billion Project Gemini. Heavy Guard Lines Route Of Marchers ENROUTE FROM SELMA TO MONTGOMERY, Ala. —(UPI)— With airplanes sweeping overhead and U.S. Army troops standing by, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and 300 civil rights demonstrators trooped down Jefferson Davis Highway today on the second leg of their historic march to Montgomery. The marchers stepped off promptly at 9 a.m. EST after spending a chilly night camped in a cow pasture. TODAY'S ASSIGNMENT is a particularly tough one—to cover 17 $ \frac{1}{2} $ miles over narrow, steep-shouldered road through Big Creek Swamp. March leaders said they must make up the distance lost Sunday because of a late start. The marchers made only eight miles Sunday. Before setting out, the ranks of the marchers were trimmed from 500 to 300 persons, in accordance with the order of the federal judge who approved the march. The order specified only 300 persons could march at one time along sections of U.S. 80 where the roadway narrows to two lanes. A BIG GROAN went up from the demonstrators when the Rev. Andrew Young told them that some would have to drop out. "Now don't get nervous because you can get back in the march when we get to the four lane again near Montgomery" Young explained. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS If the word is "go," the seven-hour final countdown will begin at 2 a.m. EST Tuesday. GANT BATISTE OXFORD HUGGER BATISTE OXFORD HUGGER A surprise switch evident in the spaceport's bad weather behavior starched the U.S. spirits that wilted in the shadow of Russia' upstaging performance by Cosmonauts Alexei Leonov and Pavel Belyayev four days ago. FEDERAL SPACE agency officials said early today a weather forecast called for broken clouds at 8,000 feet at Cape Kennedy Tuesday—a considerable improvement over the gloomy clouds at 2,000 feet predicted just a few hours earlier. Cool, crisp batiste oxford in a short sleeved button-down with trim tapered-body. It makes a handsome shirt for summer wearing. 6. 50 "That would be great. . it's very good," said one agency spokesman. At 8000 feet, clouds are acceptable. But if they descend and remain below 5000 feet, a delay is certain. Weather in the main and secondary landing areas in the western Atlantic Ocean remained good through late Sunday. But that, too was subject to instant and often unexpected change. the university shop Janice Klusener, Lucas junior, was named queen of the KU School of Engineering's annual St. Patrick's Day dance Friday night. Queen Reigns Miss Lusener will reign over the Engineering Exposition April 16 and 17 and during the Kansas Relays. Portraits of Distinction - Passports - Applications Fast Service Please: Call for appointment HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Owner 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 This card saves you money at Sheraton SHERATON HOTELS STUDENT IDENTIFICATION DATE AND EXPIRY DATE (MTH, YYYY) NAME: COLOUR: HOUSENAME THIS CARD MAY BE PRESENTED AT TIME OF REGISTRATION Here's how to get yours: Dear Sheraton: Send me an application for a free Sheraton student ID card for room rate discounts at Sheratons all over the world. State Send to COLLEGE RELATIONS DIRECTOR, Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D. C. 2008 City. 95 Sheraton Hotels & Motor Inns A message of importance to sophomore men If you've got what it takes to be an Army Officer you may qualify for this new on-campus training program A new Army ROTC program starts this coming Summer for sophomore men who apply prior to May 1-only 3,000 applicants to be accepted 45 If you're a sophomore now attending one of the 247 colleges and universities that offer Army Officer training-or you plan to transfer to one of these schools next Fall—you may qualify for the new two-year Army ROTC program. This new program-designed especially for college men who have not taken Army ROTC during their first two years-will commence with six weeks of field training this coming Summer, beginning June 14. Then you'll have on-campus training during your junior year . . . six additional weeks at camp during the following Summer . . . and more on-campus training during your senior year. Even flight training is offered at some schools. ROTC training is really a process of learning to organize and direct others to be a leader. Consider how important this ability can be to you throughout life; yet, to acquire it you will spend relatively little time in the ROTC classroom. You'll obtain valuable junior management experience . . . a fuller and richer campus life . . . extra spending money ($40 per month during your junior and senior school years, and even more during Summer training) . . . and, when you graduate, an Army Officer's commission as Second Lieutenant. Then you'll normally spend two interesting years on active duty, often abroad with opportunities for travel. Talk to the Professor of Military Science on your campus about this opportunity. Ask him to describe this new short program in detail. Or send in the coupon below for complete information. There's no obligation involved, and you'll not be subjected to any "hard sell" recruiting effort. The kind of men the Army wants can decide for themselves if this new opportunity is right for them. If you're good enough to be an Army Officer, don't settle for less. Sign up now for Army ROTC. Send in this coupon for more information on this new two-year on-campus Army Officer training program. U.S. Army ROTC, Post Office Box 1040, Westbury, New York 11591 Please send me complete information on the new two-year Army ROTC program. I understand there is no obiliation involved. is no obligation involved. Name___Campus Address___ College or University___ City___ State___ Zip Code___ I expect to complete my sophomore year on___196___ While I am not now attending a school that offers Army ROTC training, I am planning to attend the following ARMY ROTC school that does next Fall: College or University; 034123 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 22, 1965 RED DOG INN Presents THE TRASHMEN X ONE NIGHT ONLY Surfin' Bird "The Bird, The Bird, The Bird is the Word, PAPA-PAPA-OO-MOW-MOW" WEDNESDAY March 24,1965 Doors Open at 7:00 p.m. Cover $1.00 F University Daily Kansan Page 5 French Flyer Speaks to P-t-P An expert on France will speak to the KU People-to-People American Students Abroad program, at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas Union. Major Pierre Vincendon, of the French Marine Air Borne, will speak to KU students going abroad this summer on a People-to-People travel project. Major Vincendon is currently a student at the Combined Arms and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Leavenworth, Kans., Bruce Warren, P-t-P publicity chairman, said. Major Vincendon was born in Vichy, France. He has lived in the Bordeaux area and was educated at the University of Bordeaux and the French Military Academy at Saint Cyr before entering the French Marine Airborne, Warren said. HE HAS SERVED in Indo-China, Greenland, Algeria, Cyprus, Africa, and at the Suez Canal during the 1956 crisis, Warren continued. He will discuss and show a film about his native country in the Tuesday night program. Refreshments (French pastry) will be served after his talk and a question and discussion session with French exchange students will conclude the program. Warren said. The purpose of the ASA, Lance Burr, Salina senior and People-to-People president, said, is to enable American students to travel abroad as student ambassadors promoting international understanding on personal bases. About 35 KU students are participating in the program this year, Burr said. There will be some 600 going from the United States, he continued. THERE ARE TWO parts of this program according to Burr. One part is called the "home stay" mission when the American participants live with three families in three different countries for one week each, Burr said. At the orientation program in Washington, Burr said, the students are briefed on what to expect and how to respond in the specific countries they are visiting, by officials of the U. S. State Department. "THE ORIENTATION in Washington lasts about three days," he said. "There are also other orientation programs held in London, Brussels, and Berlin for students going to England, France and Germany respectively. "The entire program usually lasts about a month." Burr continued. "We require that the participants have 10 hours of a foreign language or a foreign language fluency. We are not very strict in this area because we feel that we would limit the number of participants too much." Burr said. We want the students to have a feel for the language and for the people, to be in good academic standing with the university, to be sincere in their purposes of giving a good image of an American, and last but not least, they must be members of the KU People-to-People program, Burr said. THE COST, according to Burr, is $349. This includes the transportation from New York to the foreign countries and the expenses for the orientation programs. SUA SPECIAL FILM SERIES presents Olivia De Havilland in THE SNAKE PIT "Brilliant, unforgettable story of a woman's insanity" "Best Actress of the Year" —N.Y. Times 7 p.m., Tuesday, March 23 Fraser Theater Admission $.50 KU Professor Will Lecture on Physics Robert J. Friauf, professor of physics at KU, will be visiting lecturer at Oklahoma Baptist University, Shawnee, Okla., on April 15-16. His visit will be sponsored by the American Institute of Physics and the American Association of Physics Teachers. Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS COPA $400 ALSO $250 TO 1975 Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS COPA $400 ALSO $250 TO 1975 Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. KU-Y Presents the YALE RUSSIAN CHORUS MARCH 23,1965 HOCH AUDITORIUM 8:00 P.M. Reserved Seats-$1.50 at KU-Y Office and at door Page 6 21.1796 45.36 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 22,1965 Read This Arrow 1. Acme starches your shirts the way you choose. 2. Acme returns shirts on hangers if you wish. 3. Acme mends torn seams and rips. 4. Acme inspects all garments. 5. Acme replaces buttons. It Points To ACME'S Personalized Service Only ACME Has More Than Two Locations Downtown, 1111 Mass. ... VI 3-5155 Hillcrest Shopping Center ... VI 3-0928 Malls Shopping Center ... VI 3-0895 Acme laundry and dry cleaners 1-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE Come in or call today for FREE pick-up and delivery Page 7 Law Professor Farms, Sings Directs. Gives Blood as Hobbies Versatility appears to be the key word in summarizing the talents of Charles H. Oldfather, professor of law. By E. C. Ballweg Oldfather, who graduated from Harvard law school in 1948, is currently teaching commercial law courses at KU. He also teaches a course in insurance. While teaching may be dominant in Oldfather's life, it by no means overshadows his various other duties and talents. He also serves as chairman of the KU Athletic Board, chairman of the Red Cross Blood Program Committee, president of the KU Federal Credit Union and if that wasn't enough he often provides entertainment as a folk singer at various occasions around the Lawrence area. OLDFATHER WAS APPOINTED chairman of the Athletic Board by Monday, March 22,1965 University Daily Kansan Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe after he was elected by the KU faculty as a board member. The Athletic Board, which is composed of six faculty members, six alumni, three students, the dean of students, the comptroller of the university and the athletic director, is a large financial operation. Oldfather said "Even though it is a separate corporation, it is however, an integral part of the university itself, and is directly responsible to the Chancellor. You might say that I am in the chancellor's office for the purpose of the Athletic Board." "Oldfather, who is a member of the Douglas County Red Cross Board, said that the blood donation program is one of the major operations of the Red Cross. He is directly responsible to the Red Cross Board for the success of the blood donation program in Douglas Coun- oday up 'U.S.A.' Portrays Early Era In Experimental Theatre ty. He added somewhat shyly that "I am almost a three gallon man in blood donations." Oldfather will serve as a delegate to the Red Cross national convention held in early May. THE KU FEDERAL Credit Union, for which Oldfather serves as president, is a lending institution associated with the university. All employees of KU are eligible to join it, and upon joining, to borrow from it. John Dos Passos" "U.S.A." will be presented in Murphy Hall's Experimental Theatre March 25-27 and March 30-April 3. Events of an earlier era in America will brighten the stage of the Experimental Theatre this week. Perhaps Oldfather's most rewarding talent is his folk singing ability. He said that he has learned a great deal just from being a ballad singer. "I've sung at all sorts of affairs" he said, "and in this way I have learned much of various organizations. A free meal and information which one can learn by listening and talking to all sorts of people is more than enough reward." The director of the play, Ann Glaze, Higginsville, Miss., graduate student, described the play which author John Dos Passos adapted from a triology of works-"42nd Parallel," "1919," and "The Big Money." "PASSOS USES four distinct styles of presentation in the play she said. First, he uses a "headline technique" which requires the actors to shout such headlines as "TITANIC SINKS!" Secondly, he uses the illustrated lecture technique where actors perform monologues, telling the story of such persons of the period as Rudolph Valentino and the Wright Brothers. Thirdly, the playwright incorporates naturalistic scenes. And fourth—one character's story runs throughout the entire production." The director summarized her description of the play as "a collage of people, places, and events of the period from 1900 to 1930." MISS GLAZE said scenery would be sparse for the production and there will be no properties. "The stage will essentially be hung with black drapes. A backdrop, representative of the era, will be used," she said. "Music from a 1920's musical comedy will be played throughout the play." Miss Glaze said. The cast for "U.S.A." consists of Clifford Niven, Prairie Village sophomore; Mary Lynn Shea, Merriam senior; Mary Lou Groom, Arlington, Va., freshman; Karin Gold, Overland Park senior; Don Ferguson, Manhattan Beach, Calif., senior; and Bruce Levitt, Kansas City, Mo., freshman. Richard Gibson, Highland Park Ill., graduate student, is the assistant director. In the last few years, Oldfather has become actively interested in the passage of the Uniform Commercial Code by the Kansas legislature. The code would pull together most of the areas of law dealing with commercial transactions. It would make all rules dealing with commercial transactions in all states the same. The code has been passed in 29 other states. OLDFATHER BECAME interested in folk singing from his father. He didn't start playing the guitar until he served in the Navy. Oldfather also sings in the Episcopal Church choir and has sung with various other choral groups. Professor Oldfather has seven children, ranging from the second grade to a college graduate. The Oldfather family makes its home on a farm south of Lawrence. The TOWN CRIER The TOWN CRIER Features Supplementary Textbook Reading Material Paperback Books, Magazines, Newspapers Greeting Cards, Gifts Hours: 8:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. DAY - Including Sunday The Classical Film Series The Strange Passion presents Directed by Luis Bunuel who also did Un Chien Andalou and Viridiana (1953) Mexico Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Adm. 60c Fraser Theater MAUPINTOUR Travel Hour Free Admission Every Tuesday — 3:00 to 4:00 AT THE Little Banquet Restaurant ON THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER (West 23rd Street) Informal Showings of Exciting Color Movies on Vacation Spots Throughout the World. This Week's Feature Canada and Alaska We've got it! CITY HOSPITAL That's right. We've still got the most popular men's slip-on to ever hit the college scene Just look around you.Bet most of your friends already have a pair. How about you? ROBLEE $13.00 Cheyenne II Ivory Waxhide 813 Mass. M.Coy's SHOES VI 3-2091 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 22,1965 Fred "Cool-Head" a person (usually male) who is worldly, suave, dashing and debonair . . . He Knows he must always be at his best so he sends his shirts to Independent. INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners 9th St. & Miss. 740 Vermont Call V. 3-4011 for free pick-up and delivery service Monday, March 22,1965 University Daily Kansan Page 9 Jayhawk Road Shooting Tops Home Court Performances If Kansas' Ted Owens is heard suggesting that the Jayhawks play all their games on the road next year, think nothing of it—the rhythmic bounce of the ball hasn't gotten to him. He is just thinking about a couple statistics released by the Big Eight Conference office that show the Jayhawkers not only shot better from the field and the free throw line on the road this past season but they also had practically no home-court advantage. At home during the past Conference season, KU shot a good 41.4 per cent from the field and 62 per cent from the line. On the road, however, the Jayhawkers hit 44.2 and 69.3. Their road field goal mark was the best in the conference. As for the home court advantage, Owen's club probably has the lowest of any university with a winning record in the country, a paltry 0.43—less than half a point a game—well under the conference average of 6.93, which is one of the lowest, if not the lowest, advantages in the nation. Almost in the same boat with Owens is Kansas State's Tex Winter. The Wildcats could find the bucket only 38.3 per cent of the time in the friendly confines of Ahearn Field House, but on the road hit at a 42.6 clip. From the charity stripe, Kansas State was 65.3 per cent at home, but was second in the conference on the road with a fine 71.0 percentage. However, the Wildcats still enjoyed a home-court advantage of over 11 points, the biggest in the Big Eight. On a conference basis, a quick summary shows that the home team's average winning margin was only 3.5 points, compared with over five last year. The home towners also outbounded the visitors by three and committed 2.4 fewer fouls. In individual rebounding, Missouri's board-hitting duo just reversed places. Ned Monsees took over at the top with an 11.8 average. George Flamank was second with 10.8. Still in third was Jim King of Oklahoma State with his 10.6 average. King, as he did during the conference season, paced the field goal (53.7) and free throw (82.0) shooters. He was the only player to be ranked in all four individual categories for the entire season. Still on top in scoring was Walter Wesley of Kansas, with a 23.5 average. Second and third went to Iowa State again, but Al Koch (17.8) slipped ahead of Bob Ziegler (16.0). Taking an unlikely reversal was the free throw shooting percentage, where the visitors hit a better percentage. The difference this year was 1.1 per cent. Last year, the visitors had a .2 pad. From the field, the home team had the advantage by .6 per cent, compared with 2.3 last year. Oklahoma State Scholars Head Big Eight All-Academic Quintet Three Big Eight Conference basketball players who made the wire services all-Conference teams have also been named to the all-Big Eight academic first team, including one who was a second-team academic all-American last year. A look at the team and individual statistics for all games, compared with just conference games, shows but three major changes. Oklahoma State won the team defense, field shooting and free throw shooting. Oklahoma replaced Missouri as the team offense leader, 72.9 to 70.7, and Nebraska was the best in rebound percentage with a 52.6 mark. The returne from the national list is Oklahoma State's Gary Hass- The KU Jayhawks seemed to be stuck in third place as they participated in the annual running of the Kansas State Invitational Indoor track meet Saturday. 3rd Troubles KU At K-State Indoor The Jayhawks managed third place in three of the four relay events that composed the university division and formed the basis for awarding points. KU placed in the sprint, distance and 2-mile relays. Oklahoma State won this division with 17 points. In the college-university division, Glen Martin and Tom Yergovich placed third, in the broad jump and the mile, respectively. Mike Burdick tied for fourth in the pole vault and Gary Schwartz was fifth in the shot put. Herald Hadley, Jayhawk distance ace, ran in a relay instead of an individual event. La Pizza 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 Offers GREATEST MENU SELECTION in Lawrence 30-Minute Delivery Service Guaranteed! mann, a pre-medicine major with a straight "A" average for the second semester last year. He was a Rhodes Scholar finalist this year, forcing him out of two games when interviewing for the honor and probably costing him the scoring leadership for the Cowboys. With Hassmann at guard is Iowa State's Al Koch, often called the best driver in the Conference. The number two scorer for the Pokes the past two years, Hassman finished with a 12.6 average for the season. The only one to outscore him, Jim King, is also a member of this year's all-academic team. The All-academic team includes: F—Chuck Gardner, Colorado, 3.6 in mathematics; F—Jim King, Oklahoma State, 3.2 in education; C—Roy Smith, Kansas State, 3.57 in chemistry; G—Gary Hassmann, Oklahoma State, 4.0 in pre-medicine; G—Al Koch, Iowa State, 3.2 in geology Holding down the forward spot opposite King was Colorado's Chuck Gardner. she won't? By George, she will! a very persuasive fragrance for men let Francis sporting goods 731 Massachusetts replace your softball equipment you'll swing in style with our winning brands Cologne, After Shave, Talc, Deodorant, Soap Bar, Gift Sets Caryl Richards, New York with our winning brands - bats hard hitters by Louisville Slugger and Hanna from 1.70 to 3.25, team price - softballs name brands by MacGregor, Rawlings, Dudley, and Worth from 1.25 to 2.50, team price - masks softball face protection at 3.95, team price Jumping Basketball Player Jumping Basketball Player "EVERYTHING FOR THE OUTDOORSMAN" it's White Stag the active look for active girls Long, leggy stretch cotton Southampton pants in pastel plaids ... color-matched to Nassau Vee knitted stretch cotton pullover. Each is accented with white trim. shirt $4.00 pants $10.00 OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 8:30 Calkouni's 1744 MASSACHUSETTS IN DILLON'S PLAZA Calhoun's 1744 MASSACHUSETTS IN DILLON'S PLAZA Page 10 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 22, 1965 CORE Holds Class For KU Volunteers Rv Harry Krause A field training session was held yesterday for 30 KU volunteers who are participating in CORE projects in Louisiana during spring vacation. Mike Lesser, CORE field secretary, outlined procedures for voter registration and listed the various dangers to participants in the program. He gave demonstrations of non-violent defensive techniques, and described the community life volunteers might expect. The volunteers are planning to leave Lawrence either April 2 or April 3. They will go to Monroe or Baton Rouge, La., where they will be divided into groups and then go to Jonesboro, Bogalusa, and other Louisiana communities. Lesser said that CORE's original purpose in Southern integration had changed somewhat. "At first, we were interested mainly in Negro voter registration and desegregation of public facilities. This has been broadened to now include the organization of Negro communities so they have a vehicle for expressing and enforcing demands that will change the economical, educational, and political status of Louisiana," he said. He continued, "CORE projects are now oriented toward this community organization which is aimed to fulfill the individual needs of each community." Lesser said that there is a certain amount of danger involved in all of these projects. He reported that CORE workers have been arrested for disturbing the peace, resisting arrest, vagrancy, loitering, and criminal anarchy. "In all these cases, the charges have been concocted and have been subject to reversal by the federal courts." Lesser said. Lesser gave an analysis of the Louisiana voter registration form and told the volunteers how to assist Negroes filling them out. He said that the requirements for filling out the forms correctly varied from parish to parish (parishes in Louisiana are equivalent to counties in Kansas) and sometimes from day to day. He said that the forms were very ambiguous and illustrated his point by giving an example. One of the questions on the form asked the applicant to indicate his mother's maiden name and occupation. "What the voter registrar wants is your mother's maiden name and your occupation. If you give your mother's occupation, you are disqualified." Lesser said. Volunteers acted out various civil rights activities and Lesser played the role of what he called "the typical Southern sheriff." Some of the volunteers formed a picket line and Lesser and two "deputy sheriffs" subjected the pickets to what he termed "harassment." This included pushing, shoving, verbal attacking, and questioning. Later, a volunteer demonstrated to the group the best method of protecting one's body while undergoing beatings. Protection of the face, kidneys, groin, and neck were demonstrated. Volunteers were told that they only have to provide law officers with their name, age, and address. He said that other information should come from the CORE lawyers retained by the organization. Lesser told the volunteers that they might be jailed and described Southern jails as "rotten, with sparse meals, beatings by white prisoners, and filthy conditions." Corbin Cook Forgets Food, Incites Alarm charges," he said, "are tipped off by the law officers and beat up the civil rights workers in their cells." NON-VIOLENT RESISTANCE-KU students and Lawrence citizens bound for Jonesboro, La., to reconstruct a church learned techniques of non-violent resistance yesterday. The Jonesboro project is sponsored by the Lawrence branch of CORE, which held the first training session yesterday. Lesser described the Negro community in Jonesboro, where the workers will help rebuild two Negro churches burned down in January, as a very religious area, with high emphasis on proper behavior and discipline. He said that contact with the white people of the area would be antagonistic, at best. The smell of roasted bat dogs filled the air as about 20 girls were evacuated from Corbin Hall South on Saturday night. The volunteers will be housed in Negro homes in Jonesboro, and, according to Lesser, will receive some protection from violent elements. Assistant Fire Chief, O. D. Brubaker, ordered the trucks home when he found out the cause of the alarm. With sirens screaming and lights flashing, a pumper and a hook and ladder truck from the Lawrence Fire Department answered an alarm at Corbin at 11:15 p.m. "A cook in the basement left a pan of hot dogs on the stove and forgot them while watching television. There was lots of smoke, but no fire," he said. Brubaker said there was no damage to the women's residence hall. Official Bulletin KU Bahai Club. 8 p.m. Jean Randazzo will speak on "Politics." Kansas Union. Number Music Series. 8 p.m. Dani Z windwind Quintet. Swarthout Reital Hall. Physics Colloquium, 4:30 p.m. Dr. Paul Levy, Brookhaven Nat. Lab., 155 Malott. Student Peace Union Open Meeting, 7:30 p.m. Kansas Union TODAY Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m. and 5 p.m. Sainthood. Confessions before and during mass. Education Lecture, 9 am. Dr. Albert J Mazurkiewiez, Lehigh U., Kansas University (Photo by Harry Krause) Inquirers Class, 7:30 p.m. Canterbury House, 1116 La. Anthropology Colloquium. 1:30 p.m. Creean, K-Matee Univ. 502F D雍 Hall. Physics Colloquium, 4:30 p.m. Dr. Cesare Buceli. 15 Malot. American Society Class-Intensive Engi- nance American Foreign Relations 42N Strong. Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7 Inter Campus, Kansas Union. The Nature of God1. Christian Science College Organization, 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Lesser said that white male civil rights workers receive the worst treatment in Southern jails. "The whites who are jailed for charges such as drunkenness and other University Women's Club-University Newcomers, 8 p.m. Scholarship Style Newcomers, 8 p.m. Sas Union. The Prairie Room in the Union will remain open for the show. massachusetts Casual Dress. A.I.A.A. Meeting 7:30 m. C J coach meeting meeting KU Business Wives. 7:30 p.m., 1007 Massachusetts, Casual Dress. Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. A man lies on his back with his head on the floor. He appears to be in a state of distress or pain. Members of the KU volunteer group will be selected later this week for the Louisiana project. Wesley Foundation Community Wor- orld 6:15 p.m. Methodist Center, 1314 Orgad Teaching Candidates: Interviews scheduled for Tuesday, March 23; Missouri, Kansas City Center School Dist. No. 58, elementary only, 117 Ba.; Missouri, Kansas City Center School Dist. No. 58, secondary only, 106 Ba. Granada THEATRE--telephone W1 81-5788 NOW! 7:00 & 9:00 20 James Stewart Dear Brigitte COLOR BY DELUXE CINEMASCO Fred Kohlman Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Last 2 Days ... JERRY LEWIS "THE PATSEY" Starts WEDNESDAY... Ingmar Bergman's THE MAGICIAN "IS IT EROTICISM YOU ARE AFTER OR ARE YOU FOR RABELAISIAN HUMOR? Then get those servant girls when they drink the fake love-potions and start going after the lads." -N.Y, Times A B Γ Δ E Z H I K A M INGMAR Bergman's THE MAGICIAN Fraternity and Sorority Jewelry - Guards - Mugs - Rings * Pins - Lavaliers - Crests Ray Christian THE COLLEGE JEWELER 809 Massachusetts N O M O P N T Y Φ Χ Ρ Q ATTENTION STUDENTS Leave your heavy winter coats with New York Cleaners this spring break. We'll keep them in our cold storage locker for the rest of the semester and all summer too. Your winter coat will be fresh for your return in the fall. 926 Mass. New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCE BUSINESS DIRECTORY GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING Wholesale Diamond Rings Call Robert A. Lange VI 3-1711 Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER 4 Chairs 8-6 Mon.-Fri. 8-5 Sat. BARBER SHOP For Your BEST Haircut Come to PLAZA Barber Shop 1804 Mass. VI 2-9462 In Dillon's Plaza HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING OPEN 24 HRS. Across From The High School 19th & La. VI 3-9631 New York Cleaners Merchant of GOD APPERANCE. For the best in — ● dry cleaning ● alterations ● reweaving 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 --- SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS Page 11 FOR SALE 1959 Gardner 50'x10' house trailer, good condition. Reasonably priced. Call V1 2- 0731. 4-15 BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMIUMS! Occidental Term Life: conversion, Go-Back, and Move-Over options. Age 18 = $33.90 = $10.00. Age 20 = $34.40 = $10.00. Age 22 = $34.70 = $10.00. Call Wes Santee at VI 3-2164 for details. tf Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL V1 2-1901 for free delivery. Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outline of lectures, comprehensive notes, used for classes. Formerly known as the Thief Notes Call VI 3-1428. **4.50** Stereo component system. Dynaco stereo preamp, two dynaco 50-watt power amps, stephens speakers, garrard changer. All perfect. Call VI 3-4891. 3-22 1964 Honda, c-100, $175.00. Good condition. See at 1341 Ohio, Apt. D. 3-22 Gibson guitar, J-50 model, adjustable bridge, clear plastic upper pick guard, beauty neck, full resonant sound head, bead neck strap included. Call 32-226 Smith, VI 2-3343. 1956 Olds, 88; actual mileage, 31.000; cream color, black interior, rear speaker system, white wall tires. $350.00—excellent condition. VI 3-1174. 3-22 1963 French Renault, 4-speed transmission, bucket seats, radio and heater. Ir excellent condition. Call VI 3-6462. 3-22 Now you can hear a variety of excellent King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL VI 1-2791. tt Tires—1000 x 14 white sidewalls. Two sets. One set is Atlas snow tires, which will go for $5 apiece. The second set is $28 (apiece) Riverside white sidewalls. They will go for $15 apiece. The set of 4) is $4. Call Bob Monk-VI 3-1702 tf TYPEWRITERS, electrics, manuals, portables, sales, service, rentals. Olympia Hornes, Royal, Smith-Corona, Olivetti Adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. BE THE LEADER OF YCUR PACK: Harley Davidson Sportster K, 750 cc, new clutch, and new brakes and tires. THIS IS NO HONDA. For further information about this beautiful machine CONTACT Monti Belot at VI 3-0700. tf Students, why throw money away on rent when you can own a 1962 Marlette 10 x 50. modern two-bedroom mobile home with small room apartment home with small room apartment in excellent condition. For further information CALL Rl 8-0973 or Rl 8-0916. tf PORTABLE STEREO: Admiral's Finest-- two carrying units, 1 for turntables and 1 for speaker systems (2 tweeters, and 2 full range woofers) $195 new. Will sell for good offer. CALL: Rusty Calkins at VI 3-5721. CHINA-Nortiaki, Mayfair design. New, never used or even removed from back- tag. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk VI. 3-7102. NEED A BAND ? 30 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM. PHONE VI 2-2100 t THE STABLES now open every day- Serving steaks, chops, sea food, sand- wiches. New management, new atmo- bility. New kitchen available. Phone t- :39644, 1401 W.7th. 16 mm. role film movie camera; GI portable cable light; 3 police radios; 4 remote controls; tunable or crystal receive; (2) Motorola walk-talki (low band), (3) high band converter. Call Gary Grazia, VI 2-810. name and phone number I'm not in. **tf** Volkswagen 1964—excellent running condition—serviced at proper intervals—$1500.00 or best offer—cash. VI 2-2168 3-24 '59 Austin Healy: less than 5000 miles on new engine, mechanically perfect, aes-1319 vermont or call Charles peagan at U 4-3004. 1964 MG midget, B.R. Green, wire wheels, hardtop. Am-Fm radio, very low mileage. Sacrifice. Call VI 3-8367, ask for John. 3-24 1963 Healy Healey 3000 Mark II, red, 19.000 miles, convertible, roll up windows, overdrive, new tires, excellent condition. VI 2-3673. 3-24 For sale: 1557 Morgan sports roadster Call CE: 3-6950 in Topeka. Call CE: 3-6950 in Topeka. 1961 TR 3-roadster. Top running condi- tion. Body, top, toenail boot. VI 3-8853 3-26 Harmon Kardon model A-300, 30 watt stereo amplifier. Call VI 3-4891. 3-26 Zentith stereophonic high fidelity for sale Portable, two-speaker, micro-touch needle, two-level stand including album- ing rack, and a touch screen. months ago. Need cash now, so will sell to highest price within 2 weeks. Call Rita I 3-2847 after 10:30 p.m. tf FOUND Girl's glasses, found Friday night. March 12, in front of Strong Hall. Call VI 2-9269. 3-22 TYPING 6 years typing experience plus background in proofreading enables me to guarantee accuracy on college papers. New electric typewriter equipped for interchangeable type sets. Mrs. Berndt, 801 Michigan or VI 2-0400. if Experienced typist wants typing in home. Reasonable rates, prompt service. Phone VI 2-3356. tf University Daily Kansan Experienced typist. 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Elective type-writer, fast accurate services. Reasonable. ALL Mts. Barlow, 2407 Yale. VI 2-1648. Former teacher will give prompt and careful attention to typing your term papers and reports. 4 years experience, call VI 3-3829. tf Theses only on Royal Electric Pica Type writer CALL Mills, Fulcher at VI 8-c581. Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate rate. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter, Gestetner Dupilator Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Alabama St. Phone VI 3-8568. tf Experienced secretary will type term papers, law briefs, theses, etc., for students. Prepare for courtroom and public service terms. Fast and accurate. Reasonable rate. Call Marsha Goff at VI 3-2577. Former Harvard and U. of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports, and theses. PHONE VI 3-7207. tf Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. Will do ex- or paper on computer software for carbon ribbon typewriter. Betty Muskrat, 140 Indian, or call VI 2-0091. tf Term papers. Theses by experienced typist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tf Experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing. Speak and language knowledge and enjoy reasonable Electric typewriter. Call 2-3976. tf Will do typing in my home. Accurate, reasonable rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at VI 2-0210. tf Typist, experienced with term papers, theses, and dissertations, will give your machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marie Lenhicy at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048. tsf Experienced secretary would like typing in her home, with new electric typesetter, free fast and accurate service. Reasonable salary. Call Ms. Lancaster at VI 2-1188. Experienced typist wants theses, termpapers, and dissertations to be typeed on electric (pica type) typewriter. Please Call Pat Beck at VI 3-5630. tf Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will experience reports or theses. Experienced. Electric typewriter. CALL Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8262. Expert typing on thesis, dissertations, journals, typewriter. Call 3-231 Misher, S 1-30293 Experienced typist will do dissertations, manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon, special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., VI 3-7485. tf Now you can hear a variety of excellent dance bands on stereo demo tapes, including the Fabulous Blades, the Norsemen's Kings; union and non-union call VI 2-1751. ENTERTAINMENT ATTENTION PARTY THROWERS; Do you want the Beatles, the Kingsmen. Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL VI 2-1791. tf ost pair of women's glasses, Color, Mineral, 12-2799, IW. 3-2779, AU. 3-22 iw. Reward offered, VI 3-2779 Roommate wanted. Want girl to share two bedroom home with working girl or KU student. Call VI 3-3414 or VI 3-9201. 2110 Tenn. LOST Prescription sunglasses in vicinity of Malott or Summerfield March 15. Reward, call Richard Wier at VI 3-1711. WANTED Wanted--30 girls with Senior keys, to date 30 Yale University graduates and faculty with the Yale Russian chorus. CONTU KY U office. 3-23 Vanted. Someone to play GO. Call VI- -5227 after 7:00 p.m. vi OLD CARS WANTED, top prices paid to us today! GJ Joe's, $1.01 Vermont tl Washing and ironing done in my home 1031 New Jersey Jersey Phone VI 8-8598. Furnished apartment between downtown and KU. Private bath, utilities paid. $59.00. Chance to reduce rent by light housekeeping. VI 2-3784. 3-25 FOR RENT Married, Graduate Students, Faculty-2 bedroom apts, $5.00, 1 available now; 5 available in August. keeping rooms. Call for more. VI 3-218, Santee Apts, 1123 Indiana, tt PARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30-50 people, jukebox, liquid refreshments, Gleason Theater, Contact Don at the Gaslight Tavern for reservations CALL VI 3-1086. tU Single sleeping room for one man in an apartment. Call VI 3-6723. 3-24 Male waiter wanted to wait at the new Flamingo Club. For further information call Bill Deay, VI 3-2825 after 5:30 pm 3-25 HELP WANTED MEN wanting summer or full time work. SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAMS available for all. WHY BORROW MONEY. Earnings well above average. ATHLETES DESIRABLE. Apply 3:30 p.m., Sunflower Room. 3-23 I will do ironing in my home. Satisfac- tion guaranteed. 10 cents per article. 3-0838 3-22 POSITIONS WANTED Wanted — ironing — shirts, men's pants, ladies' bouses, skirts, dresses a specially. VI 3-4715. 3-22 Engine swaps and Transmission change swers. We sell and install speed equip- ments for drums for drags, jipples or street. Fanschers Garage, 837 Connecticut, VI 3-2906. Monday, March 22, 1965 CAR REPAIR Fune up-Engine rebuilding-Complete general mechanic work (guaranteed work). Most reasonable prices in town Open 7 evenings a week. Free estimates on all parts and labor. Farmers Garage. 437 Connecticut, VI 3-2906. tf MISCELLANEOUS Spring clearance reduced 10-50% dermeties, Revlon, Studio Girl, cosmetics. Elsie's Beauty Shop, three blocks north of the union on Mississippi. 1942-3 M-16, 3019-2 Complete beauty service Elswick Beauty Shop. 942 Mississippi, VI 3-6109. 3-25 Alterations and mending of men's and women's clothing. Sewing of all kinds. Phone VI 3-5136 after 7:00 p.m. or before 9:30 a.m. 3-24 Math tutor B.A. degree in math from KU. Experienced in tutoring geometry, algebra, calculus and analytic geometry. Call VI 3-0927. 3-24 Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-Q ribs that grandma and grandpa can eat, try ours on a plate. Hours: 11 a.m. to 11 o.p. p.m. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-9510. 3-31 CHWINN BICYCLES -service all makes parts and accessories, $tires 1.46, tubes Nc, pedals, shoes, luggage racks and sure fit bags See BEHINZ at 7th and Micr CALI V1 3-0881 Friends coming this weekend? Looking for a place with good food at reasonable prices. HILLOUR RESTAURANT. PLenty of free parking st and Iowa. tt *PARTY TIME? Building available for parties, dances, and meetings. PHONE Ralph Freed at VI 3-3995.* tt Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m Mon.-thru-Fri, or all dav Sat. or Sun. Phone VI 3-6231 it's great for a date. Take her bowling at Hillcrest Bowl. Finest lanes in the state. Also Mon, Tues, and Frl after 9:00 p.m. Hillcrest Bowl. 9th and Iowa. To rent electric, standard, and portable desk chairs with standard, and portable typewriters. Modern Business Equipment (formerly Business Machines), 15 E.ighth, VI 3-0151. ti BUSY PEOPLE—No time to spare for household cares? Have a professional in your home regularly or occasionally Call Pioneer Cleaning Service 3-4408 4-13 Attention: All persons interested in self defense training classes utilizing many of the same throws and smashes used in movies, contact Bob Moffitt at VI - 7102. CLASSIFIEDS Bring Quick Results Business Directory MUGS 24 OZS. — 35c Louise's Bar 1017 Mass. Southridge Plaza Discover Quality In Apartment Living 2350 Ridge Court VI2-1160 SERVICE YOU CAN TRUST! - Complete Auto Servicing Open 7-11:00 Sun, thru Thurs. 7-2:00 a.m. Fri. & Sat. - Dependable Cars If we don't have what you want— we'll call it! Wagner's Texaco 23rd & Lo. VI 3-0138 One-Stop Service Experienced Bring Auto Problems To Us. mechanics Guaranteed Parts Montgomery Ward Auto Service 729 N.H. VI 2-1708 Complete Car Care Mufflers & Pipes - DX Products - Tune Ups - Brake Service - Firestone Tires - Wash and Polish ASK ABOUT THE DX ASK ABOUT THE DX TRIAL BOND GUARANTEE DX Servicenter 6th & Michigan VI 2-9598 Open 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Daily 7:30 to 9 Sunday See or Call Marvin E. McDougal For All Your Insurance Needs 1244 La. VI 2-0186 Tune-up, Body Repair & Repaint, Automatic Trans. Service Wheel Alignment Auto Service Lawrence 10th & Mass. VI 2-0247 Mobil — Goodyear (TUES. THRU SUN.) 24 HOUR SERVICE - Brake Adjustment . . . .98 - Lubrication . . . . $1.00 - Wheel Alignment - Automatic Transmission Page Fina Service 1819 W.23rd VI 3-9694 Complete one stop service Open 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. BRIDGE STANDARD SERVICE ART NEASE STANDARD 601 Mass. VI 3-9897 MAKE YOUR NEXT MOVE Crescent Heights Completed Swimming Pool CALL VI 2-3711 Mgr's Office, 2428 Redbud, Apt. D New Luxury Addition Opening This Summer . . . THE OAKS 1 Bedroom 2 Bedrooms 2 bedrooms Swimming Pool FOR INFORMATION CONTACT Crescent Heights Apts. Mgr. HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds 616 Vt. OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY Ph. VI 3-0350 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 22,1965 WE CONGRATULATE THE Association of University Resident Halls on its 2nd Annual Spring Fling March 24-28 Ping Fling Ray Christian Jewelers "It's Okay To Owe Ray" 809 Mass. VI 3-5432 Independent Laundry and Dry Cleaners 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS 704 Vermont 9th & Mississippi VI 3-4011 Lawrence Laundry & Dry Cleaners 10th and Mass. VI 3-3711 Acme Laundry & Dry Cleaners 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-0928 Malls Shopping Center VI 3-0895 Spring Fling is starting off with a bang this year! Listen for the Spring Fling Salute shortly after the 12:20 whistle Wednesday the 24th. ASC Ad Policy Bill Sent to Chancellor The bill banning alleged discrimination in the advertising of all student publications has been sent to Chancellor Wescoe, according to Mike Miner, Lawrence senior and All Student Council chairman. Miner said that he did not know if the chancellor has signed it. "I have not received a letter yet from the chancellor on the bill," Miner explained. Chancellor Wescoe could not be reached on this matter last night since he is out of town. The bill, passed by a 15-9 vote at the ASC meeting last Tuesday night, states that no publication shall accept advertising for employment, accommodations, goods, or services unless these are offered to all students regardless of race, creed or national origin. THE BILL also requires that all student publications carry a statement in their format that its advertisements for employment, accommodations, goods, or services are offered to all students. Miner said that the ASC will not have a meeting tonight. A bill calling for a meeting every week instead of the present every other week was passed by the Council several weeks ago. It is not in effect vet since Chancellor Wescoe has not signed it, Miner said. Miner also was asked about a recent ASC resolution, asking that the dean of the education school send a letter to the ASC, explaining the school's policy on civil rights regarding the procedure for student teacher placement. Miner said that the school is preparing a statement for the ASC, but has not completed it. FRANK BURGE, director of the Kansas Union, was also contacted about an ASC resolution to allow the Union to sell necessary drug items like toothpaste to students. Burge said that he is presently looking into the proposal. He said that he received the ASC resolution and has asked the ASC for a list of the specific items which would be sold in such a drugstore at the Union. "I am taking the proposal under the proper advisement." Burge explained. He noted that such a system is quite complicated. Miner was asked about further developments in the KU traffic situation which were mentioned in a report to ASC by Tom Ruzicka, Leawood junior and chairman of the ASC traffic and safety committee, last Tuesday night. MINER SAID that Ruzieka would present the ASC recommendations and proposals to the University Traffic committee. The recommendations include: - More parking space for the Watkins and Sellards scholarship halls. - Expansion of the time limit for parking in front of these halls Ruzicka, at last week's meeting, was also asked about the parking accommodations for residents in McCollum Hall, currently under construction on Daisy Hill. Vox Gains Support; ASC Powers Equal Two All Student Council representatives and University Party members have, in the last few days, announced plans to support Leo Schrey and Bill Robinson who head the Vox Populi ticket. Larry Geiger, Mission junior and ASC men's large dormitory representative, made a complete switch in party affiliation. Geiger lives in Joseph R. Pearson Hall. Geiger's change in affiliation will alter the balance of power on the council from 21-19 representatives in favor of UP to a 20-20 tie. UP has held at least technical control of the council vote since last fall's election which gave UP two more council representatives than Vox. Miss Jacke Thayer, Ellsworth sophomore, who lives in Sellards Scholarship Hall, said she would not break with UP and plans to support the UP candidates with the exception of the top two. Miss Thayer is an ASC representative from the small women's dormitory district. Geiger also switched from Vox to UP in 1964. EXPLAINING HIS CHANGE, Geiger said. "The primary reason for my switch is that I feel Leo Schrey and Bill Robinson are the most qualified candidates." "I came to this conclusion," he said, "after working with Leo and Bill and their opponents on the ASC this year." "I think that these two independents can do more for JRP, the independents, and all students that can their opponents." Geiger said. COMMENTING ON HER decision to endorse the top of the Vox ticket, Miss Thayer said, "I represent the women's scholarship halls, and Leo lives in a scholarship hall. It is one of the first times in recent history that a scholarship man has run for student body president." Sales Tax Exemption Passes Kansas House TOPEKA—(UPI)—A bill exempting out-of-state customers from paying sales tax went to the Kansas House after Senate approval on a 27-10 vote Monday. Under the bill, non-residents of Kansas would not have to pay sales tax on showing proof of residence. Goods purchased in Kansas and delivered out of the state would automatically be exempt under Interstate Commerce regulations. The measure also drops pesticides from the list of taxable items when sold for commercial use. However, it rejects the exemptions on ink and print, requiring publishers to pay the sales tax. Proponents contend the bill would boost Kansas business. Only two Republicans, Robert Bennett of Prairie Village and Norman E. Gaar of Westwood, were among the 10 senators who voted against it. Daily hansan 62nd Year, No.105 LAWRENCF, KANSAS Tuesday, March 23, 1965 Grissom, Young Down After Tri-Orbital Flight FLASH America's astronaut "twins" — Virgil I. Grissom and John W. Young—whipped around earth today in the world's first proven demonstration of spacecraft steering in orbit. CAPE KENNEDY—(UFI)—The two-man Gemini space capsule splashed into the Atlantic at about 1:20 p.m. CST after a three-orbit flight that established historic firsts in space maneuverability. Their flight, the first by a twowoman U.S. spacecraft, began at 9:24 a.m. EST after a nearly flawless countdown. It was the first of 10 Gemini training flights looking toward the landing of Americans on the moon later this decade. At 10:57 a.m. EST while flying over Texas the astronauts made space history by firing small propulsion jets to change the shape of their orbital path. According to U.S. officials, this switch in orbits never had been accomplished before—despite Soviet claims to the contrary. The countdown was almost perfect. At one point it became necessary to tighten a fitting when a leak developed in a rocket oxidizer line. This accomplished, the launch came off only 24 minutes later than scheduled. Building up speed as it rose, the spacecraft went into orbit over Bermuda at a speed of about 17.-500 miles an hour. The initial flight path ranged from a low point of 100 miles, exactly as planned, to a THE TWO-MAN GEMINI 3 capsule rose from Pad 19 at this spaceport and belched reddish brown smoke from its twin engines generating 430,000 pounds of thrust. It rose into the sky on a pink column of flame and faded to a bright star-like point as Gemini hurtled toward orbit. high point of 142 miles, eight miles under the pre-planned orbit. THE WORD FROM both spacecraft and pilots was that they were in "excellent" condition. Underscoring this, Grissom and Young were given the "go ahead" for a second orbit only 51 minutes after liftoff. Ground controllers were set for conclusion of the three-orbit flight in the Atlantic sometime after 2:07 p.m. EST. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) billed the Grissom-Young mission as the first aboard a spacecraft capable of changing orbits in space. Col. Pavel I. Belayavev, chief pilot in last week's flight by Russia's Voskhod 2 spacecraft, contended that the Soviet ship also was maneuverable in space. BUT U.S. trackers detected no proof of this, either for Voskhod 2, according to U.S. intelligence, was steerable to a limited extent but only during its descent into the atmosphere for a landing. This is a far cry from forcing a spacecraft, hurting at 17,500 miles an hour, to change its orbital path in flight. Gemini 3 accomplished this. Over Texas, Grissom used his on-board rockets to force the capsule from a path ranging from 100 to 148 miles in altitude to a new path ranging from 97 to 105 miles. Officials proclaimed this a "truly historic maneuver." Occasional snow with a low near 10 is expected tonight. Tomorrow will be cold with a high temperature in the mid 20's according to the Topeka Weather Bureau. Skies will be cloudy with snow continuing to fall. Winds will be northerly, 15 to 20 miles an hour. Weather IF ALL GOES as planned, the pioneering U.S. astronauts will descend into the Atlantic about 70 miles northeast of Grand Turk Island in the British West Indies about 4 hours and 50 minutes after liftoff. Fifty minutes after liftoff, while the spacecraft was darting over the Indian Ocean, ground control reported that the "data on both pilots is excellent." One minute later, nearly 40 minutes before completion of the first orbit, the controllers gave the astronauts a "go" for a second orbit. The radio call name for the 7-,000-pound cabin is Molly Brown, picked by Grissom from the Broadway musical, "The Unsinkable Molly Brown," in memory of the unhappy fact that his first space flight, a downrange rocket hop in 1961, ended in the sinking of his capsule. JUST 17 SECONDS after liftoff astronaut L. Gordon Cooper, who made a 22-orbit Mercury flight in 1963, messaging the Gemini pilots from ground control that "You're on your way, Molly Brown." To Cooper's later assurances that Gemini-3 was successfully launched in orbit, Grissom replied; "Yea, man . . . oh, man . . ." It was a textbook countdown. From the start the pilots were pronounced in "great" condition. Spacecraft and rocket were "go." But there was a moment of tension when it appeared a leak in an oxidizer aboard the rocket might cause trouble. It was spotted at 8:25 a.m. EST and repaired at 8:30 a.m. As the 7,000-pound spacecraft went into orbit, President Johnson was watching on television at the White House and Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey was listening (Continued on page 10) Through Sleet and Snow... SPU Protest Vigil Continues By Joan McCabe Despite cold winds and snow, the round-the-clock vigil by the Student Peace Union outside the Military Science Building went into its second day this morning. There are three reasons for the demonstration according to Charles Hook, Glen Head, N.Y., sophomore and president of the SPU. The SPU seeks negotiation of the war in Viet Nam, the resignation of Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) cadets, and that President Johnson consider a petition sent by the group asking him to safeguard Viet Nam and strengthen the United Nations. ROTC members do not believe that there will be any resignations. HOWARD FOSTER. Cedar Vale sophomore and member of the Naval ROTC, said, "I see no point in the demonstration. I don't believe any midshipmen will resign." "I disagree with their views but I suppose they have as much right as anyone to say what they feel." Charles Mosley, Air Force ROTC member and Kansas City senior, said. "I am definitely opposed to such displays of 'rational thinking' as the wrist-slashing last week however." he continued. Mosley said the ROTC members are "just ignoring the demonstrators and the SPU is not changing our minds because at least 99 (Continued on page 10) KANSAS UNIVERSITY STUDENT PEACE UNION END THE WAR SPU PROTESTORS—Several members of the Student Peace Union braved the cold winds last night to protest the U.S. position in Viet Nam. Members of the organization plan to maintain a constant vigil at the Military Science building until Friday night. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 23.1965 The Time Is Now The time is now for this campus, with its present, intensified concern for civil rights, to deal not only with the tangible aspects of discrimination and racial prejudices, but to recognize and deal with the more elusive fears and myths that haunt us—even after legislation. The administration, the faculty, the All Student Council, and student leaders can comply with the demands of the Civil Rights Council. Machinery can be organized to ostracize and castigate individuals and organizations practicing blatant discrimination. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN CAN refuse space to advertisers found to discriminate. The University can deny recognition to fraternities and sororities found to discriminate on racial grounds. The ASC can pass more bills as a gesture of good faith. A host of other measures can be implemented to make conditions unpleasant and embarrassing for those who practice racial discrimination. Steps such as these may even satisfy the demands of the CRC. These superficialities will give us pride. We will congratulate ourselves on our liberal and humanitarian attempts to deal with the problem. But unless we do more, we would be acting like a doctor who recognizes the outward symptoms of a serious illness, but who hesitates to employ surgery to remove the cancer. Kobert Penn Warren, writing in the March 23 issue of Look magazine, states a formula that we know only too well. He says: "In the South, the Negro is recognized, but his rights are not. "In the North, the rights of the Negro are recognized, but he is not. "If, in the North, the Negro's rights are recognized, they are recognized only in the legal sense; the shadow of a 'human right' rarely clouds the issue," the author continues. Here on Mt. Oread, this ugly situation confronts us. We seem to be dealing with it in the typical pattern. Committees have been appointed, ASC bills have been passed, more bills will be passed, petitions have been signed. We are going to assure the Negro student every legal right to which he is entitled. Are we going to recognize his human rights? What is needed now is a new approach to a frustrating problem. The Negro is no less to blame. He needs to explore fresh approaches to racial barriers if he hopes to gain the human dignity to which he has every right. THE NEGRO STUDENT AND THE WHITE student need to confront each other in normal social intercourse to meet head-on the prejudices with which both are afflicted. Along the same line, what, may I ask, do the faculty members who signed a petition supporting the right to protest peacefully for civil rights hope to accomplish? Here was an opportunity for the faculty to originate new programs to increase contact between Negroes and whites and get at the root of the problem, instead of hitchhiking along with the CRC. The faculty could accomplish in other ways much more than it will by circulating a petition. With indignation so aroused and dramatized, it may be foolish to suggest alternatives. It seems more foolish, however, to let this opportunity slip away. WE HAVE FALLEN TO BICKERING among ourselves over trivial specifics and general platitudes. Let us get at the problem. We have a People-to-People program on this campus, the purpose of which is to increase contact and social intercourse between the American student and the foreign student. What we need more drastically is an effective program of a similar nature to bring Negroes and whites together in a friendly, social atmosphere. Only by mixing together and understanding each other will the Negro and the white begin to recognize the real nature of his prejudices and fears. We are evading the issue when we square off at the negotiating tables, or face each other with pickets in hand. We can negotiate and protest for legal rights, but not for human rights and human dignity. WHY NOT USE "MORAL SUASION" TO bring not only the leadership, but the average students of both races together? Let us begin tearing down the personal ghetto which confine white and black alike. Let us set an example for the outside world. We can have no pride until this is accomplished. The responsibility for inaugurating such a program rests with the administration, the faculty, and the students. A fresh, original approach, I hope, will come from one of these sources. Gary Noland The People Say To The Editor: I WITNESSED THE CRC DEMonstrations in Strong Hall and before Chancellor Wesoe's residence. Each time I come in contact with one of these demonstrations I wonder just exactly what it accomplishes. Each time someone carries a picket sign, some amount of antagonism is created. That night as I watched, I heard leerogatory comments directed toward the demonstrators as they asked the spectators to keep the sidewalks clear. I also witnessed some of the disorganization present in CRC when Pam Smith was reprimanded by one of the co-chairmen for allowing a newsman to interview her. Neither of these actions is right. Each time I see picket signs and sit-ins, I ask myself why. I can find no answer, for each time I try, my mind goes back to one of the most persecuted peoples in history; the Christians. The Negro today has a long uphill fight, but at least he is not thrown to the lions or crucified because he is black. The early Christians, on the other hand, were. I might even venture to say that the Christians had it a little bit tougher than the Negroes of today. Yet for some strange reason, Jesus Christ didn't carry a picket sign. In fact, he was so behind the times, he didn't even have sit-ins. For some ridiculous reason, he thought that the way to equality was not through legislation or executive orders, but through men's minds and hearts. So all silly foolish Jesus did was to go out and talk to people, and to show them that to be a Christian was a fine thing. Well, the funniest thing happened. After a while, the people Well, anybody knows that this type of thing won't work for the civil rights movement. Everybody knows that to get on the good side of the white people and to gain equal rights through their respect you've got to picket and sit-in and demonstrate and riot and bomb the Black Muslims and march on Washington and boycott and sing freedom songs and get arrested. Just plain talking won't do any good. that persecuted them found out that they really didn't have anything to hate, and miraculously, being a Christian got to be a pretty normal thing. It was even fun sometimes. PORTRAIT IN BROWNSTONE, by Louis Auchincloss (Dell, 75 cents). BOOK REVIEWS Auchinloss, with "The Rector of Justin," has achieved considerable standing and popularity, and this is a novel he had published in 1962. It is the story of Ida Hartley, a woman of around 60, wife of a New York financier, who recalls her life. She takes the reader back to the turn of the century, treats her marriage, her friendships, and particularly her relationship with a cousin, Geraldine. An especially effective portrait is that of the husband—a tough hero who knows where he's going and make no apologies. The book is best in its telling of the past, and some readers may be reminded of Henry James and Edith Wharton. Others will find that the book's touches are much more those of the soap opera of yesterday's radio. I've got this wild idea though. I think that the majority of the American people are ready for and want equal rights and an end to discrimination. But every time there is another demonstration, it gives some extreme group a good excuse for another hate session. I think that if the Negro people stopped their sit-ins and picket lines and simply got down to the business of letting people know and understand how they can be just as fine a people as any other, that these groups would find that they didn't have anything to hate anymore. Without anything pushing the people, the people couldn't push back. Right now the huge middle section of the people isn't doing anything, but as long as the minority on one side pushes hard, so will the minority on the other side. A new law or an executive order can't change an attitude, but good will and understanding can. Christ made it without a picket sign or an executive order, so why can't the Negro? Greg Sipe San Lorenzo, Calif. junior TITLE COMMEMORATING THE ACTION AT MONTGOMERY ALABAMA, MARCH 1965, WHEN LAW OFFICERS AGAIN FEARLESSLY LASHED AND CLUBBED UNARMED MEN AND WOMEN ADMINISTRATION OF GOV. GEORGE WALLACE HERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON POST Faculty Acts to End Conflict in Viet Nam Dear Colleagues: The following notice is to inform you of action being planned by University of Michigan faculty members in an effort to achieve an end to the war in Viet Nam, including an immediate cease-fire and an unyielding effort to reach a negotiated settlement. - Participating faculty members will suspend all classes and other scheduled activities on Wednesday, March 24 and will, instead, conduct a day-long school to discuss the moral and logical necessity of the policy advocated. - Civic and religious organizations are being requested to hold one hour sessions of prayer and discussion for which a faculty member will be made available as a resource person. - A large advertisement analagous to one presented by the faculty of Michigan State University will be placed, prior to this date, in appropriate newspapers. - A steering committee will prepare an agenda of activities for further direct action adequate to the protest of a policy which kills needlessly, threatens escalation into world war, and violates international law. - Requests for similar activities are being made to colleagues at other Universities, colleges and professional organizations. - The group will send a faculty delegation to Washington on April 8th and 9th to join delegations from other Universities in a direct appeal to executive and congressional leaders. We also pledge full support for the student march to Washington on April 17th. The faculty group sincerely regrets that the urgency of this issue and the current lack of responsiveness to responsible world opinion make it necessary to put aside normal duties in order to focus our total attention to the promotion of viable alternatives to the present policy. The condition in Viet Nam is so serious that any less direct effort would be hard to justify in good conscience. All plans are subject to change by the steering committee. t your participation, sympathy and support. Contact: We request your participa For information Prof. William Gamson Department of Sociology The University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Michigan To contribute money Roger Lind, Treasurer 702 Sunset Road Ann Arbor, Michigan Sincerely, Marc Pilisuk, Ph.D. Publicity Chairman for STOP (The University of Mich. Committee to Stop the War in Viet Nam) Dailij Hänsan 111 Flint Hall UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office University of Kansas student newspaper University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily 1908, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Leta Roth and Gary Noland Co-Editorial Editors Tuesday, March 23. 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Politics Featured in Latin Seminar The Director of Studies of the American Universities Field Staff, Prof. Kalman H. Silvert, will give a series of lectures on Latin American politics at KU during the next eight days. Prof. Silvert, a professor of political science at Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H., has had an avid interest in political science and Latin America ever since his undergraduate years at the University of Pennsylvania where he received his doctorate in 1948. The lecture series m which Prof. Silvert will speak while at KU is the Latin American Studies Seminar. It is open to all students and will meet every day this week and next Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. in 207 Blake Hall. THE THEME of the lectures is Sculpture Club Plans Meeting "The Relationship between Sculpture and Architecture" will be the topic of a discussion sponsored by the Sculpture Club at 7:30 p.m. to tomorrow night in the Sculpture Studio in Bailey Annex. The discussion will be conducted by Bernard Frazier, sculptor in residence, and Eugene George, chairman of the department of architecture. The discussion will be of particular interest to sculpture students or those interested in the field. tors "Comparative Developmental Politics of Latin America." Prof. Silvert is the third of four lecturers to come to KU this year on the American Universities Field Staff (AUFS) program. The purpose of AUFS is to do academic reporting on underdeveloped countries, Prof. Silvert said. It is an American organization of 14 staff members who are experts in the study of underdeveloped countries. The experts give four reports a year to each of its 12 member universities, he continued. KU is a member. The organization is financed by its member universities and various foundation grants, Prof. Silvert said. Prof. Silvert has done intensive research on Latin America. During a conversation last night, he did not accredit his deep interest in Latin America to any specific reason, but he said, "The more involved I get in the work, the more I want to know about it." Prof. Silvert's first major research in Latin America was in Chile, 1947-48, as a recipient of a Penfield Traveling Scholarship. As he became more identified with Central American affairs, he participated in three field trips and made an intensive study of Guatemalan society with emphasis on political structure. This was the basis for his two volume work, "A Study in Government; Guatemala." He is author of "The Conflict Society: Reaction and Revolution in Latin America," "Chili Yesterday and Today," "The Politics of Development" and "The Expectant People: Nationalism and Development." He is also editor of an AUFS staff-written book, "Freedom and Development," to be completed in 1965. Commenting on the political and social atmosphere of Latin America, Prof. Silvert said, "I think things are more peaceful now than they used to be. The people are more responsible. They are determined to improve living conditions now that they realize that development is a difficult thing." Another reason that Prof. Silvert gave for Latin Americans' increasing interest in peace and improvement is that they have already seen the result of Cuba and they don't want to pay that type of a price. They favor democracy. Speaking on Prof. Silvert's mission here, KU Associate Professor Robert Nunley, associate chairman for the Latin American area, said Prof. Silvert will lecture in a very general nature on the politics of Latin America, and that he would visit classes filling in for regular professors. "Each lecture will last for about two hours," he said. "The purpose of the seminar is not to crusade for any specific action as such, but to inform the students and to stimulate them to think." Prof. Silvert is a brilliant and internationally known expert on Latin American affairs." Prof. Nunley said. "This seminar promises to be a very concentrated study of the political structure of Latin America." Audiotronics - Stereo - Hi-Fi - Tuners - Speakers - Changers - Amplifiers 928 Mass. VI 3-8500 A HEARTFELT "THANK YOU" from MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR., the Negroes of Selma, Alabama, and the SCLC staff. We are deeply touched and grateful for the warm sympathy expressed in all parts of the nation on behalf of our struggle. The spirit of human decency was crushed by shame on Sunday, March 7th, when Alabama state troopers brutalized unarmed Selma Negroes. But it rose again when hundreds of clergymen and laymen of every race and faith sped to Alabama within a few hours to face potential violence at our side. One, Rev. James Reeb has already died, a martyr. We will continue and will win because not only we, but all America need this victory for justice. We are at the peak of our determination and spirit but at the bottom of our resources to meet the multitude of organizing expenses, aid to injured, aid to those suffering reprisals, and to maintain our full time staff of 32 who furnish the non-violent leadership and experience. Meeting manifold responsibilities is complex even with the SCLC staff veterans of Montgomery, Ala., Birmingham, Ala. and St. Augustine, Fla. Your contribution, large or small, will be a message of unity and a pillar of strength. SOUTHERN CHRISTIAN LEADERSHIP CONFERENCE (SCLC) A nonsectarian and non-profit agency 334 Auburn Ave., N.E., Atlanta, Ga. 30303 Martin Luther King, Jr., Pres. Ralph Abernathy, Treas. 304 Paid for by concerned KU students. Martin Luther King, Jr. SCLC-334 Auburn Ave., N.E., Atlanta, Ga. 30303 I am pleased to contribute $... towards the struggle for human dignity. CITY STATE ZIP Please keep me informed of your continued program. (Make checks payable to SCLC) NAME ADDRESS ojf OREAD JAZZ FESTIVAL The Best In Collegiate Jazz From Across The Nation With Nine Groups From New York To California From St. Paul To New Orleans Semi-finals 10 a.m.-5 p.m.—Union Ballroom Finals 8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium Special Bonus Clare Fischer Trio appearing with Phil Woods During the Evening Concert $1.50 with KU-ID, $1.75 without Tickets on sale at Union, Bell's, College Royal Shop & Ober's A Whole Day of Jazz This SATURDAY, March 27 Page 4 --- University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 23, 1965 Students With Travel Bug Begin Getting the Needle The time has come for all students bound for adventure in foreign lands to make sure everything is in order for their trip. No, it isn't time to pack suitcases but it is time to obtain shots and a passport. "There are about 350 students going abroad this summer either in sponsored groups or privately," Thomas Gale said. Gale is temporarily taking over the duties of Dean Francis Heller who is teaching at Vienna University in Austria. TO TRAVEL ABROAD, a person needs the necessary shots which take four weeks to complete. For this reason the staff at Watkins Hospital urges the student to start his shots before time runs out. To enter Europe a student needs smallpox, tetanus, polio, and injections of typhoid and paratyphoid. For those going to the Orient typhus, cholera, and yellow fever are also required for entry. Whether all these shots are needed varies with the individual. A student may have had a small pox shot within the last three years in which case he would usually not need another. THE UNITED STATES Public Health Service and the World Health Organization have set standard requirements for shots for foreign travelers. Watkins Hospital is designated as one of the federal public health centers for immunization. The pamphlet which the student is given after receiving his shots should be carefully guarded. This pamphlet, which has been signed by a doctor and includes the federal stamp, is the traveler's health passport. THIS CERTIFICATE is needed to re-enter the United States and enter other countries. If the record is lost the student must apply to where he originally got his shots for another certificate or be revaccinated. "We want to stress the protection that the shots provide," a Watkins Hospital nurse said. "You never know when or where an epidemic will break out. Last summer there were 300 cases of typhoid in Aberdeen, Scotland." BEFORE A STUDENT can leave the country, he must have a passport. The student should obtain a passport application as soon as possible and all the necessary information. First Anniversary Store Notes Service The book store extension in the basement of Watson Library will celebrate its first anniversary on Friday. The store, operated during the hours when most students use the library, is located just inside the basement entrance. James Stoner, director of the Kansas Union Book Store, pointed out that the book store is an extension of the main book store and many books on display there are not on display in the Kansas Union. "We also extend the hours so the student may find certain supplies which we make available," he continued. MANAGER OF THE STORE is Lyle Hampton, Leavenworth graduate student. The biggest purchase by students, he said, is recommended readings. Many students find they can buy material which is required reading in classes at the store and avoid standing in lines and waiting for the material in the library. Hampton said there is very little overlap with the Union Book Store in matters of stock. The store offers a large selection of new titles and some periodicals. "Many of our books are from university presses, such as Cambridge, Harvard, or Nebraska, and a wide variety of good topics are available," he said. The extension also carries some school supplies, including papers, pencils, pens, theme binders, and blue books. THE STORE also offers the College Outline Series and the Modern Library Series. "People should start applying for passports by April 1," Mrs. Lucille E. Allison, clerk of the district court, said. "It takes seven to ten days for the passport to be processed and much longer when the rush period starts." PASSPORT APPLICATIONS should be mailed in by May 15 at the latest for those leaving the United States in June. The deadline for obtaining visas is April. Students may obtain an application for a passport in the district clerk's office of the Lawrence court house or of their hometown. However, not all clerks of the district courts are authorized to handle passport applications. Some questions asked on the application are the parent's name, the mother's maiden name, date and place of birth, when and where the departure is taking place, and the proposed destination. WITH THIS INFORMATION two lightweight, dull finished photographs, two and a half inches square must accompany the application. It is advisable to have six on hand especially if a visa is wanted. "There must also be a certified copy of a birth certificate with the application." Mrs. Allison said. "This may be obtained from the Bureau of Vital Statistics in the capital of the state the student was born in." "THIS IS THE ONLY acceptable proof of birth," she continued. "Registrations of birth will not do." The cost for a certified copy of a birth certificate varies between states. In Kansas the cost is $2. The passport fee is $11. If a student waits until the last minute $2 extra is assessed for special handling. TOPEKA, Kan. — (UPI)— Parimutuel betting is off and running in the Kansas Legislature but it appears likely to falter at the wire. Horse, Dog Bets Seeking to Win Legislative Race Kansas City Democrats, who introduced the concurrent resolution to allow betting at horse and dog tracks, were elated at the 13-6 surprise victory it received in the House State Affair Committee Monday. REP. THOMAS Van Cleave (D-Kansas City), said he believes on the basis of the vote, the measure has a "good chance" of gaining the 84 votes necessary for passage. Legalized gambling measures have hit the Legislature before without success. The last effort got 70 votes, just 14 short of passage. Religious groups, which feel it would bring criminal elements into the state, were expected to put up strong opposition. THE REV. ROY Holloman, Baptist evangelist minister, led a fight against the measure before the House committee along with other religious leaders. He was expected to increase lobbyist pressure in an effort to stifle it. John Bower (R-McLouth), the only legislator to testify against it in committee, said it would be a "sad day when Kansas went into the gambling business to raise revenues." He expressed doubt the measure could muster the necessary votes. HOUSE SPEAKER Clyde Hill (R-Yates Center), said it will take its place on the already crowded calendar. but would not have preference. Supporters have failed to estimate the extent of revenue the state could expect, but statistics from other states indicate it could amount to from $2 million to $10 million annually. Some rural legislators favor the bill in the hope it will aid county fairs. Urban legislators feel the bill would provide more revenue, serve as a tourist attraction and boost local economy. 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My Treat pretty soft! the plush, brushed casual --- Tuesday, March 23, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Hill Folklore Reflects Fact, Fantasy, Folly Bv Bob Curtright Blood . . . guts . . . gore? Tales of mayhem on the KU campus that would rival the best of Poe? Yes. That, and commonly accepted beliefs which would raise skeptical eyebrows on a witch doctor, are factors ingrained in our college heritage, according to Daniel Barnes, assistant instructor of English. Barnes, a member of the Kansas Folkcore Society, has been collecting folklore and campus beliefs from students in his English classes for the past three years in an effort to determine the resemblance they bear to the campus folk tradition in general and the characteristics peculiar to their adaptation by KU students. "FOLKLORISTS HAVE long recognized that the college campus offers a relatively extensive source of tales, jokes, and songs because the students represent wide areas of geographical, social, and ethnic distribution." Earnes said. "But the college campus is also a source of folklore of a very special nature, a type which surrounds the institutions and members of the college community itself." One of the most prevalent of folk beliefs here is one attached to Fraser Hall. "Tradition has it that Horace Greeley made his 'Go West, young man, go West'" speech from the steps of Fraser, "Barnes said." BARNES ADDED that this was an interesting claim and one which is contradicted by nothing less than historical fact. "First," he said, "Bartlett tells us it was not Greeley, but John Babson Dane Soule, who first 'wrote' those words in 1851, 21 years before Fraser was built. Secondly, Greeley himself died in 1872, the year construction of Fraser was begun." All this is really beside the point, Barnes said, adding that the effect of this widespread belief is simply to enhance the traditional value of the most traditional symbol on campus. BARNES QUICKLY added that KU folk tradition is not limited to revered and ivy-covered walls, Summerfield and Murphy Halls are two good examples, he said. "The story goes that when Summerfield was being constructed, someone made a mistake and the glass wall — which should have been built on the north side—ended up on the south." He said that another informant told him that Summerfield was originally designed for downtown New York City. Murphy Hall, a somewhat revolutionary concept in architectural design, supposedly has 18 square feet of dead space in it that wasn't in the plans, he said. "They just had to put in an extra wall." "Beliefs are not restricted to campus buildings, either. Some of our most colorful folk traditions have grown up around statues and monuments, to the extent that they have gained common ritual acceptance." HE SAID MANY students also believe that different sections of Murphy were designed by three, and in some versions, five different people. "This would account for the confusion in the design of the building. "A VARIANT OF THIS BELIEF—one from a young man—is that if you kiss your girl at midnight under the campanile while the bells are striking, you will be married in a year's time." For example, a girl becomes an official KU coed when she is kissed under the campanile, he said. Barnes attributed this belief to an old but effective KU tradition for the campus males. Barnes said that the single most widespread belief in this category surrounds the statue of the pioneer east of Fraser Hall. "Tradition has it that the pioneer throws a load of dirt over his shoulder every time a chaste coed graduates from KU," he said. "In other versions, he throws dirt over his shoulder whenever such a coed walks past him." Barnes added that this is the most universal of all campus traditions and that the linking with the pioneer statue was a clever adaptation of this belief to distinctively local surroundings. Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS CAPRI $250 ALSO TO $1800 Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. "ONE SPECIES of the folklore which is found in great abundance here, is the horror story," he said. "The motif of the pickled hand is one of the most popular and gruesome examples." BARNES CON CLUDED that such tales had significant functional implications. In this case, it was to discourage students from staying in the dormitory or fraternity house over the holidays. In a sorority initiation the pledge was blindfolded and told to shake the hand of a dead man. The actives thrust a pickled hand they had stolen from the laboratory into her hand. They ran out of the room and locked the door. In the morning they found their sister with snow-white hair, nibbling on the hand. feet were just scraping the top of the car. THIS, AND variations where the parked couple is attacked by escaped madmen all seem to point to the functional implication of "no parking." Barnes said. "This tale is told here with slight, but significant, modifications." Barnes said. "The girls become medical students playing tricks on a roommate or three nursing students and a classmate." and the pickled hand clutching his throat. "There is much to be learned from a careful examination of the KU folklore, for the tales seem to follow a three step movement: interdiction, violation of interdiction, and consequence. In the most repeated version, a group of medical students places the hand on the door knob of the room of a medical student who wasn't going home for vacation. When they returned, they found the student's body, with white hair Other tales concerning girls who attempted to stay in dorms over the holidays and who met strange and gruesome ends are for the same functional purpose, he said. "Several prominent tales have to do with the almost universal phenomenon of 'parking', " he added. There were two people parked along a dark road. They were both drinking and when the boy had to relieve himself, he left the car and disappeared behind a nearby tree. After several minutes the girl began to worry because he hadn't returned. She heard a light tapping sound on the roof, so she got out to look for him. When she got out, she noticed something in the dark hanging above the car from the tree. It was her boyfriend and his "The interdiction is implicated: Don't stay in the dorms over vacation, and don't park. In each case, the interdiction is violated, for the people do stay over vacation and the people do park. "The consequence takes the form of something gruesome as a warning to discourage further violations," he added. "And the elaborate attempts at establishing some sort of credibility, not only by localizing the setting, but also by adapting the tale to fit minute particulars, all speak for a high degree of assimilation and strong tradition for KU folklore." Win a Honda just for being born TO THE FACE OF HAPPINESS Your own birth date may have already won you a Honda in Parker Pen's Birthday Sweepstakes! For example, if your birth date is December 1st, 1942, your entry is 12-1-42. Just fill in the coupon below—take it to your Parker Dealer for his signature—and then send it to us. And you might as well know this: you winners have your choice of Hondas . . . the powerful C-110, or the deluxe CA-102. Congratulations! New Compact Jotter. First girl-size ball pen made for girl-size hands. Uses the big 80,000-word Jotter refill. $1.98. PEN T-Ball Jotter. 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World Spotlight Marchers Begin Third Phase LOWNDESBORO, Ala.—(UPI)Three-hundred "freedom marchers," without the leadership of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., head across eerie Big Swamp today on the third leg of a civil rights hike from Selma to Montgomery. The marchers, at the halfway point in their 50-mile walk to dramatize voter registration grievances, were scheduled to strike camp in a pasture on the edge of the swamp around 8 a.m. CST. King was to leave the group to fly to Cleveland, Ohio, for a speaking engagement. He plans to rejoin the march Wednesday morning. Last Ranger Alters Course PASADENA, Calif.—(UPI)—America's ninth and last Ranger spacecraft obeyed a radio command from earth today and altered its course to the moon slightly for a hoped-for photo bull's-eye, scientists reported. The command, issued at 5:54 a.m. EST, activated a small rocket motor aboard the spacecraft and changed Ranger 9's pitch and roll in space at 7:00 a.m. EST. Scientists delayed the command to 7:03 a.m. EST for greater accuracy. The mid-course maneuver put Ranger 9 on a "bull's-eye" course for the moon's Alphonsus crater so the spacecraft could take television close up photographs of it. Warplanes Fire on North Again SAIGON—(UPI)—U.S. and South Vietnamese warplanes bombed and strafed military installations and convoys in Communist North Viet Nam today. It was the third attack against the Communist north this week. Military spokesmen said eight Vietnamese air force A1H Skyraiders, protected by U.S. Air Force jet interceptor fighters, attacked the Ba Dinh radar station nine miles north of the border's demilitarized zone and left it ablaze. A Vietnamese announcement made no mention of an American pilot aboard one of the eight Skyraiders, but an American military spokesman said U.S. Air Force Capt. John R. Walters of Phoenix, Ariz., was aboard one plane. Kennedy First Up Mt. Kennedy WHITEHORSE, Yukon Territory—(UPI)—Robert F. Kennedy, the senator turned mountain climber, began his personal pilgrimage up 13,900-foot Mt. Kennedy today. It was an effort to be the first person to climb the Canadian peak named in honor of his brother, the late President John F. Kennedy. Weather conditions were excellent when the senator's party reached the 8,500-foot base camp Monday afternoon by RCAF helicopter at 4:15 p.m. The temperature was 20 above at the base camp and about 10 above at the summit, but the mild weather was blamed for two recent snowslides that swept down in the area. KUPanhellenic Lists Officers Jill Newberg, Carmel, Ind., junior, Pi Beta Phi, was selected president of Panhellenic Association for the coming year. Panhellenic is the governing body of Greek social sororities at KU. Miss Newberg succeeds Kay Weber. Wichita senior, Alpha Omicron Pi, in the office. Official turn-over of office was March 16 at Panhellenic orientation. Other Panhellenic officers include: Tucky March, Tulsa, Okla., junior, Kappa Kappa Gamma, vice-president; Sally Hart, Independence, Miss., junior, Alpha Phi, secretary; and Mary Jane Epp, Tribune junior, Kappa Alpha Theta, treasurer. Council chairmen for the coming year are Judy Hodge, Raytown, Mo., junior; Gamma Phi Beta, rush; Cheri Kaufman, Halstead junior, Alpha Delta Pi, standards; Mary Lynne Mangan, Dodge City junior, Chi Omega, pledge trainer; Susan Hartley, Atwood junior, Alpha Chi Omega, social; and Elizabeth Haymes, Marshfield, Mo., junior, Sigma Kappa, scholarship. FAST ACTING! SAFE NoDoz ™ KEEP ALERT TABLETS 10 TABLETS NoDoz SAFE AS COFFEE THE SAFE WAY to stay alert without harmful stimulants NoDoz™ keeps you mentally alert with the same safe refresher found in coffee. Yet NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. Absolutely not habit-forming. Next time monotony Another fine product of Grove Laboratories. Should freshmen use it, too? (They'd probably let it go to their heads) But then, wouldn't any man? If he suddenly found all those starry-eyed gals looking at him? So, if you think you can handle it, go ahead, use SHORT CUT! It'll tame the wildest crew cut, brush cut, any cut; give it more body, more life. Keep it under control. And make you look great! Try it (if you dare!) . . . Old Spice SHORT CUT Hair Groom by Shulton . . . tube or jar, only.50 plus tax. it, go name the any cut; Keep it you look . . Old Old Spice SHORT CUT Attention: housemothers students apartment managers & tenants Spring Clean at New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCE draperies curtains slip covers rugs 926 MASS. VI 3-0501 alterations, repairs, reweaving Spring Clean at New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPERANCE 926 MASS. Vi 2.0501 Tuesday, March 23, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 7 Around the Campus N 1234567890 Theater Group Has Tryouts Tryouts for the Experimental Theatre's next production. "The Play's the Thing," by Ferenc Molnar, have been scheduled this week. The tryouts, open to all university students, will be held at 3:30- 5 p.m. and 7:00-10 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday in the Experimental Theatre. The production, to be directed by Bela Kiralyfalvi, Lawrence graduate student, will be performed in the Experimental Theatre May 13 through 15 and May 18 through 22. KU Collegiate Young Republicans (CYR) are sponsoring a talk by James E. Woodson, an attorney from Topeka. Woodson will discuss the future of the Republican Party with special emphasis on the Negro Republican's place in the party and the country. The talk will be at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. GOP Future Is CYR Topic Following the talk, the executive committee of the KU CYR will hold a business meeting to discuss plans for the forthcoming State Convention at Wichita, Friday and Saturday. Dennis W. Teter, Hutchinson senior, has been selected as the outstanding senior accounting major at KU. He will receive official recognition at the April 1-2 meeting of the Kansas City Chapter of the Financial Executives Institute (FEI). KU Senior Receives Recognition L. Martin Jones, assistant dean of the School of Business, said that Teter was selected by the Honors and Awards Committee on the basis of his grades, which is 2.70 overall and 2.80 in accounting. Frosh Group to Tour Campanile A tour to the top of the Campanile will be conducted tomorrow evening by the KU-Y Freshman Discussion group. Only a limited number of spaces are open for this tour, so interested students must sign up in the KU-Y office in the Kansas Union. The tour will begin at 6:30 and will enable the students to see the carillon and view. The tour is one of a series planned by the Freshman Discussion group which allows freshman students to visit the lesser known spots on campus, Larry Friesen, Clay Center freshman and chairman of the group said. A statewide seminar on legislation on Federal programs in the humanities has been set tentatively for April 19 at KU. KU to Host Humanities Seminar Dean William P. Albrecht of the Graduate School, said the program will be designed for political and cultural leaders of the state as well as educators. Legislation is pending in Congress for the creation of a National Humanities Foundation, which would be charged with encouraging progress in non-scientific fields as the National Science Foundation has done in its area. The newspaper still remembered by most World War I veterans, The Stars and Stripes, is discussed in the current Journalism Quarterly by a KU professor. Professor Studies WWI Newspaper Calder M. Pickett, professor of journalism, is author of "A Paper for the Doughbags; Stars and Stripes in World War I." The article is based on the complete files of the soldiers' newspaper in the William Allen White Historical Center in Flint Hall. Senior Receives ROTC Award Jack W. Kaine, Wamego senior and fourth-year student in Army ROTC, was given the Distinguished Military Student Award this morning, according to Sgt. Maj. William H. Harden. The award, presented by Gen. Kermit Davis, 16th Corps commander, is given on a competitive basis according to academic excellence as well as outstanding work in ROTC. Harden said. Kaine, the sixth Distinguished Military Student this year, will compete for Distinguished Graduate standing. If he wins; he will be eligible for a regular Army commission, Harden added. KU 'Thumber' Has Purpose With only $100 in his pocket a KU senior will take a hitchhiking trip with a purpose this summer. By Larry Ketchum John Wasko, Kansas City senior, wants to view those areas of the United States where there is a press- ing need for social work. Wasko says he will make the trip as inexpensively as possible. He plans to hitch-hike and use any other type of transportation that does not cost much money. "During past summers, I've had to work in order to go to school," he said. Wasko will graduate in June. THE SOCILOGY MAJOR has had the idea for quite some time but he says he has not had time until now. Wasko will begin his travels shortly after graduation and will continue traveling for as long as he can. The eastern coast and part of the southern states are of most interest to him, and most of his time will be spent observing slum areas of the larger cities. rest of society. They are so isolated that they are almost a sub-culture," Wasko commented. "I think one big problem is that people in the slum sections of large cities lack communication with the IN ORDER TO SUPPORT himself during the summer Wasko plans to work at any jobs he can find. "I would like to see and feel, as nearly as I can, how the poor of America live. I couldn't do that if I took a lot of money—besides, I don't have a lot of money." Wasko said. Sometime in the future Wasko plans to attend graduate school and continue his studies of sociology. He would like to either return to KU or go to Columbia University in New York City. Indian Lecture Slated The audience for Murray L. Wax's lecture at the University of Minnesota Thursday will hear just a "first installment." AUTO WRECKING The lecture by Wax is one of 10 in a series at the Minnesota Training Center. NEW AND USED PARTS Tires and Glass East End of 9th Street VI3-0956 WEEJUNS* by Bass OUTDOOR FOOTWEAR FOR MEN... Bass OUTDOOR FOOTWEAR and WOMEN FOR MEN 15.95 FOR WOMEN 12.95 *T.M. Reg. 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Too PORTLAND, Ore.—(UPI)—UCLA has its sights set on an unprecedented third straight NCAA basketball title—and there probably were few around today who would discount its chances. Not as long as coach Johnny Wooden has "reserve" Kenny Washington around, anyway. Wooden's pressure-proof Bruins handed Michigan a 91-80 beating in the finals of this year's tourney Saturday night to become the fifth team ever to win two NCAA crowns back-to-back since the tournament began in 1939. Washington, a junior, provided the spark—just as he did against Duke in the final a year ago. THE BIG man in the victory, of course, was senior Gail Goodrich, the 6-1 bundle of energy who ran the Wolverines dizzy and scored 42 points. Although Goodrich said he "knew we were going to win" after the game was three minutes old. Michigan had the edge at the start. The giant trio of Cazzie Russell, Bill Buntin and Oliver Darden dominated the boards and the Big Ten team had a 20-13 lead midway in the first half. That’s when Washington came off the bench, hit five field goals and Outstanding Swimmers to Meet At Iowa State for NCAA Titles AMES, Iowa—There are going to be more than 300 of the nation's greatest collegiate swimmers in action at Iowa State this week—everyone a champion or about to become one. There will be a few of the best—Yale freshman Don Schollander, for instance—who are not varsity eligibles this year, but for the most part all the good collegiate swimmers will be on hand Thursday, Friday and Saturday for the 42nd annual NCAA swimming and diving championships. Last year at Yale 71 men scored points. This week 48 of those same point winners, including men who won a total of 15 of the 17 titles, will be back in action. Not one of the events returns less than three place winners from last year and two of them—the 200-year breast stroke and the three meter diving—have all six place winners back. It might appear that hopes of any newcomers breaking into the elite list of point winners would be dim. For two reasons this isn't so. The first reason, a might simple one, is that the rules committee upped the placings from six to 12 for this year. Twice as many men as before will be in action. The other reason, almost as simple, is that a lot of fine newcomers are going to be taking cuts at the veterans. Just one for instance will illustrate the point: Gary Dilley of Michigan State is one of the newcomers who broke the world record in the Olympic 200 backstroke and has already shown that he is faster than the pack in the 100-yard back stroke event. Dilley is only one of many new men who will be upsetting the veterans. But when names like Roy Saari, Southern California; Steve Clark, Yale; Fred Schmidt, Indiana; Dick Gilbert, Indiana; Dick McGaag, Southern Cal.; Bill Craig, Southern Cal.; Bob Bennett, Southern Cal.; Walt Richardson, Minnesota, keep popping up among the winners fans know that the "old hands" aren't planning to abdicate. Nearly a score of Olympic veterans, dozens and dozens of conference champions are all on hand. The men who are not champions have had to meet championship standards just the same. The rules committee set up marks that not five years back were world marks—and have turned Lapchick Bows Out on Win By Fred McMane (UPI Sports Writer) NEW YORK — Few men really have the opportunity to bow out of a sport the way they lived the game, but Joe Lapchick was one of the fortunate ones. During his 20 years as head basketball coach at St. John's University and nine seasons as chief mentor of the New York Knickerbockers, the name of the game was always "desire" to Coach Lapchick. CYR Plans Trip To State Convention KU's delegates at this year's Collegeiate Young Republicans' State Convention are expected to outnumber all other delegations. A group of 32 men and women will represent KU's 600 CYRs at the convention to be on Friday and Saturday at the Lassen Hotel in Wichita. The State Convention Committee decides on the number of delegates every club can send. This is based on the strength of membership in each club. Comenting on this, Topeka Sophomore Bill Porter, President of the KU CYR, said, "Our club has the largest number of members in the state and therefore, we are allowed to send 32 delegates to this convention." Porter is the only candidate announced by the KU CYR for the State election. He will be contesting for the post of one of the vice-chairmen. down any swimmer who failed to equal the pre-meet standards. The experts have been surprised at the size of the field (300) in view of those rugged qualifying marks. Probably the greatest tribute to this teaching occurred Saturday when his St. John's team defeated Villanova 55-51 to capture the National Invitation Tournament. Using the sixth place times in the 1964 meet at Yale as standards, this amazing fact is revealed: at least six men have already bettered those marks in every event. The total runs as high as 32 in some events. This, mind you, before these great performers have faced the pressure of the big one to be held in the Beyer Hall pool this week. THIS WAS the fourth NIT title for the Redmen under Laochick It was Lapchick who brought out the desire. Few men in basketball history are as skilled at getting a team up for a game as Lapchick, and he made the Redmen want to win the NT. HOWEVER, the NIT was like a shot of penicillin to the Redmen. Sonny Dove, a sophomore sensation who hadn't played a good game since the Holiday Festival, and Kenny McIntyre, a senior backcourt man who experienced hot and cold shooting shots, suddenly went berserk against a strong Boston College squad in the opening round and the Redmen routed the Eagles 114-92. Dove scored 23 points and cleared both backboards while McIntyre tossed in 42 points. On a strict man-for-man basis, St. John's wasn't the best team in the tournament. After their victory in the Holiday Festival, the Johnnies were a floundering club until the start of the NIT. They finished the regular season only 17-8 and were unseeded in the tourney. That opening victory provided the Redmen with all the necessary momentum. They took second-seeded New Mexico 61-54 in the quarterfinals and dumped Army 67-60 in the semis. Villanova was a slight favorite to take the final game, but the Johnnies wanted this one for Lapchick. SAVE SAVE SAVE on Levi's Sta-Prest cotton slacks. Bring this ad in for $1.00 off on each pair you buy. No Limit RossDISNEY MENS WEAR Kirsten's 925 Iowa VI 2-0562 men's wear 811 Massachusetts Washington's performance was sorely-needed — because UCLA' number-two star, senior Keitl Erickson, was hobbled by a pulleler leg muscle and was used sparingly propelled UCLA to a 47-34 halftime lead that stood up. A year ago against Duke he scored 26 in the title game. He had 17 Saturday night WOODEN said he thought "players of Michigan's size would get tired and our press would get to them." Goodrich said he didn't worry about Michigan's early lead because he felt they "couldn't continue hitting that well." Bradley, who got 12 points in the last four minutes, said he thought he was shooting for a team instead of an individual mark when his coach and teammates urged him to continue firing. Just a little earlier he had waved off a teammates' feed pass with a grin. Both teams were hot—UCLA hit .569 and Michigan. 516 from the field. Russell led Michigan with 28 points. UCLA had 34 rebounds to 33 for Michigan. Bradley broke Oscar Robertson's one-game NCAA tourney record of 56 by scoring 58 points in the Tigers' 118-82 third place win over Wichita. Although Wooden loses Goodrich and Erickson—he has five of his "big seven" back for next year—Freddie Goss, Edgar Lacey, Mike Lynn, Doug McIntosh—and Washington. A record Oregon crowd of 13,204 also saw a fabulous final performance by Princeton's Bill Bradley. And Wooden had lost three starters from his 1964 title team—Walt Hazzard, Fred Hirsch and Fred Slaughter. UCLA, 58-2 for two seasons, set a record of 400 points in four NCAA tournament games, 41 higher than its own mark last year. TJ's newest items are now on deck . . . in five exclusive Paket Boat plaids! Of Galey & Lord Tarpoon Cloth, Scotch-gard finish . . . with oxford shirts and tops. Sizes 3-15. - * * BRADLEY also broke the fivegame NCAA mark of 160 with a total of 177. The former was held by Jerry West of West Virginia and Hal Lear of Temple. Bill Bradley of Princeton was named the outstanding player of the 1965 NCAA basketball tournament Sunday and also was named to the tournament's all-star team along with Gail Goodrich, Edgar Lacy and Kenny Washington of UCLA and Cazzie Russell of Michigan. Graduating engineers & scientists: Join IBM's new computer systems science training program Become a problem-solver and advisor to users of IBM computer systems in areas such as: - real-time control of industrial processes - communications-based information systems - time-shared computer systems - graphic data processing - computer-controlled manufacturing systems - management operating systems - engineering design automation All engineering and scientific disciplines are needed. IBM will give you comprehensive training, both in the classroom and on the job. Openings are available in all principal cities of the U.S. For more information see your placement director, or call the nearest IBM branch office. If you prefer, write to W.G. Williams, IBM Corporation, 1400 Baltimore Avenue Kansas City, Missouri 64141. IBM DATA PROCESSING DIVISION Page 10 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 23, 1965 Noted Print Exhibit Coming to Museum Rv Harry Krause A superlative collection of 50 prints will be shown at Spooner- Thayer Museum of Art from March 26 to April 19. The showing is under the auspices of the Smithsonian Institution and the prints were selected from the Rosenwald Collection in the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. The Saturday Review magazine termed the Rosenwald Collection as "America's greatest gallery of prints." According to Mike Stoughton, a museum official, the prints were chosen to present for the collector or professional art historian, and especially for the student and general public, an educational survey of the achievements in the history of printmaking. Ranging from a Crucifixion by Schongauer (1440-1491) to the romantic scenes of Lepere's nineteenth century, the show features the works of three of the greatest printmakers in art-Durer, Rembrandt, and Whistler. Noted especially for his accurate and delicate drawing, the German artist. Albrecht Durer (1471-1528), is represented by ten prints. Included in these are the "Prodigial Son," "The Large Fortune," and "The Little Horse," all known for delineation of character and profuse and literal detail. The last example in particular, according to Stoughton, is an engraving that could serve as a lesson in fully conceived anatomy within perfectly controlled perspective. Migrant Worker Included in the seven Rembrandt van Rijn (1606-1669) etchings are a landscape, "Christ Carried to the Tomb," and two self-portraits which show the fantasy of costume and lighting of his work of the 1630's. The National Gallery of Art terms these works proof of Rembrandt's mastery of creating tonal quality in this graphic medium. Exhibition circulated by Smithsonian Institute . . Ragged Peasant by Rembrandt . . James A. McNeil Whistler's capabilities for expression and tonal composition are presented in five prints. Among these are the lithograph "The Sisters," and "Amsterdam from the Tolhuis," an etching from 1863. Complementing the works of these three masters are prints by other Dutch, Italian and French artists. The museum will have an open house Friday, from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m., and refreshments will be served in the main gallery. Grissom, Young— (Continued from page 1) to the rapid-fire sequence of broadcast events at the cape. "The capsule is in orbit," Haryen said. "He's in excellent shape at this point—over Bermuda." The word that Gemini-3 had achieved its planned flight path was relayed by Paul Haney, a NASA official who was acting as "the voice of Gemini" at the Cape Kennedy control center. AT THAT MOMENT the craft was hurting through space at about 17,500 miles an hour. Everything had gone according to plan. The first and second stages of the Titan 2 rocket had fallen away, leaving the little cabin on its own. Aboard the aircraft carrier Intrepid in the recovery area, a "mighty cheer went up" as crew members listened to the loud- speaker's report of the launch Gemini-3 passed its initial hurdles safely—the moment after launch when aerodynamic forces would tear it to pieces if it was vulnerable, the moment when it would fail to go in orbit if its speed were too little—and soared serenely into an orbit carrying it some 150 miles high at the outset. As the Gemini-3, in constant touch with ground stations, raced eastward, the word came that Grissom, the chief pilot, was in "excellent shape." the pilots came without harm through the heavy "G forces of launching. Within 20 minutes after liftoff he had been hard at work. He twisted a handle which started an experiment to see whether sea urchin eggs can be fertilized and grow under space conditions. Spring is the time when a woman thinks of all the exasperating, knee-paralyzing, dirty work of cleaning house. Spring must be the time of house cleaning because all the daughters return home from college. Women look forward to the restful, relaxing time of spring vacation, but mother has different ideas. No thoughts of love for her daughter. MOTHERS FORGET about spring house cleaning at college. After all, the residence hall or sorority house is a second home, or is it the first? Anyway, any place you live needs cleaning and what better time than spring. If spring house cleaning is an obsession, start with the closets. Haven't you noticed all the dirt and dust on the closet floor? What about those run-down shoes! They've travelled many miles across campus since September. By Nancy Scott "In the spring a young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love," but not a woman's! Open the desk drawer. There is the Harry Belafonte concert program, the unused ticket to the KU-K-State basketball game, an invitation for mother's weekend (she never saw it), magic markers that don't work, old letters from home that say nothing more than "study hard and have fun" and post cards marked with last semesters' final grades (if they haven't been thrown out already). Spring Means KU Cleans LATE MARCH snows left the windows so speckled no one can see out or in. Window washing also is a part of spring house cleaning, and many supplies are on the market today to assist window washing. Spray bottles are so handy, just a press of the button, wipe of the hand and it's done. Old newspapers fit the college budget, they are free, for wiping the windows. Besides, no lint and no streaks remain. The faithful rag also comes in handy. Then there is the tried and true method of the water hose, hot soap and the squeegee. Ever stop to think of all the dust walls can accumulate in one year, especially concrete block walls? Most of the walls on campus are constructed of the blocks, and each and every little bump and hole is full of dirt. Hot water and a sponge provide the best medicine for the infested walls. DUSTING AND polishing furniture is the final step in spring housecleaning. Removing soft drink bottle stains from a desk can prove an exasperating experience. It is even more difficult when cigarette ashes are mixed in. Now this really hasn't been an exhausting job. Well, it wouldn't have been if the radio wasn't blaring with the Beatles. Who can resist the jerk, Col. Max Pitney, commander of the Army ROTC unit here, said the staff plans to ignore the demonstration. SPU Protest— dignify the military establishment," the statement read. The group plans to continue their demonstrations until Friday, at which time they will decide whether to continue the vigil. TOPEKA — (UPI) — Kansas House members moved rapidly to question the legality of the one-cent sales tax increase approved Monday by the Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee. Sales Tax Boost Stirs House Debate The vigil is being kept by from one to three pickets at a time, and shifts run from one to three hours. THE GROUP is displaying signs reading: "Negotiate not Escalate;" "No Expansion of the War in Viet Nam;" "Stop Escalation in Viet Nam;" "Bread Wins Friends, Napalm Wins Enemies;" "End the War in Viet Nam" and "Reprisal Begets Reprisal." Most of the reaction centered on an amendment which excepted private clubs from paying the sales tax on recreation and amusement. (Continued from page 1) per cent of us know what we are doing and feel that we are right." the amendment would require the $3\frac{1}{2}$-cent tax on bowling, golf, tennis, swimming, skating, pool, billiards, dancing and other recreation, but private clubs would be exempt. Last week a statement was issued to all ROTC cadets in the Army Instructor Group reminding them "that the members of the Student Peace Union who gather in the vicinity of the Military Science Building are exercising a privilege which is guaranteed them by virtue of the existence of a militarily strong nation which has deterred the Communistically inspired nations from overtly denying them this right. "NO UNGENTLEMANLY conduct on the part of the students of the Reserve Officers Training Corps will be condoned. Students will conduct themselves with decorum and will even if the polish does dry and stain the furniture and the water dries on the windows and does leave water spots? Tennyson may be wrong, maybe a young man's fancy doesn't turn to thoughts of love. They, too, must do some spring cleaning. That automobile certainly needs attention. La Pizza Enough time is spent in the car to call it a home, so why not clean it. The oil needs changing, axle needs greasing, seats need to be removed and cleaned, snow tires need to be replaced by regular treads and the body really does need washing. 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 CLEANING ON the campus is taking place, too. Woodwork, radiators and hallways in Strong Hall are being painted. Trees along Jayhawk Boulevard have been trimmed in Suggestions Asked for Fink Award Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe has announced an anonymous committee is now accepting nominations for the H. Bernard Fink Award for excellence in teaching. time for spring budding. With sunny warm days hopefully on the way the buildings and grounds men are sure to put their spring cleaning into full swing. NOW OFFERS YOU A COMPLETE DINNER FROM OUR SPECIAL THEATER MENU In a letter to all academic deans, the Chancellor said the committee has asked him to request the deans to submit nominations for the award by April 23. "YOU WILL RECALL that there are certain provisions to be considered, to wit; Spring certainly is not a time for love, no matter what Tennyson says. Spring is the time for cleaning house. You don't think so? Wait until you drive in the drive-way at home next week. Mothers do. Most housecleaning at KU, however, it not a spring job. It is a preprush week job for sorority women and fraternity men. It is a betweensemester job of residence and scholarship halls. Then, of course, opening of the campus comes in the fall. All the dirt and grime gathered in the summer must disappear before students return. - that the award be primarily associated with instruction at the undergraduate level; - that the award normally be made to faculty members at the assistant and associate professor rank and normally to persons under age 50; - that the award be limited to faculty members on the Lawrence campus who have given a minimum of three years of service to the University." THE CHANCELOR requested the nominations to be addressed to the Chancellor's Office. From there, they will be delivered to the committee. The letter also said it was necessary to file only one copy of the nomination. The letter said students should feel free to submit nominations also. > The award is offered to the teacher, selected by the committee, who both challenges the mind and strengthens the character of his students. The award, $1,000, is provided by H. Bernerd Fink of Topeka, a KU alumnus. AND CHOICE OF SHOW FOR ONLY $2.00 Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5784 NOW! 7:00 9:00 Dear Brigitte "EXQUISITE SAVE $.50 - $1.00! ... bewitching." -N.Y. Times Offered Monday-Thursday --- ENDS TONIGHT 7:00 & 9:00 JERRY LEWIS in "The Patsv" ... superb." -N.Y. Post "UNFORGETTABLE VARSITY ARTAttractions `MIRACULOUS` ...a masterpiece." —The New Yorker STARTS "REMARKABLE movie and director."-Saturday Review TOMORROW! SHEER MAGIC SHEER MAGIC ... casts film spell." —N.Y. Daily Mirror FASCINATING ... lively and beautiful." —Newsweek "It seems nothing short of miraculous when the warring human checks and balances that contribute to any collective art mesh perfectly, producing a masterpiece . . . This sometimes happens, generally because of the overpowering talents of one person . . . Ingmar Bergman is one of those rare beings . . he is fascinated by the visual image, and he goes after it with cool, hardheaded, stunningly sensitive camerawork; an impeccable, deceptively simple sense of design; lighting, and mood; and a command over his actors that forces them . . . deeply into their roles . . . All of Bergman's skills are on view in his new film, 'The Magician,' which, all in all, is a superb motion picture." --- The New Yorker Form secre and THE MAGICIAN Tern typis --- Ingmar Bergman's THE MAGICIAN Open 6:45 — Shows at 7:00 & 9:00 Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS 6 years typing experience plus background in proofreading enables me to guarantee accuracy on college papers. New electric typewriter equipped for interchangeable type sets. Mrs. Berndt, 801 Michigan or VI 2-0400. tf atsy" TYPING Experienced typist wants typing in home. Reasonable rates, prompt service. Phone (312) 555-7890. 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 Former teacher will give prompt and careful attention to typing your term papers and reports. 4 years experience call VI 3-3829. ti Experienced typist. 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable. ALL Mts. Barlow, 2407 Yale. VI 2-1648. Experienced secretary will type term papers, law briefs, theses, etc., for students. Especially familiar with legal and business terms. Fast and accurate. Reasonable rate. Call Marsha Goff at VI 3-2577. ff Former Harvard and U. of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports, and theses. PHONE VI 3-7267. tt Theses only on Royal Electric Pica Type writer CALL Mll. Fulcher at VI 3-0588 Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. Will do ex- or paper writing for Carbon ribbon typewriter. Betty Muskrat, 140 Indian, or call VI 2-0091. tt Term papers, Theses by experienced typist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tf Experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing. Speak English and foreign languages and languages. Quick and reasonable Electric typewriter. Call VI 2-3967. tt Will do typing in my home. Accurate, reasonable rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at VI 2-0210. tf Typist, experienced with term papers, theses, and dissertations, will give your course a thorough understanding of the machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marcene Higley at 408 W. 13th VI 3-6048. ftt Experienced typist wants theses, term-papers, and dissertations to be typed on electric (pica type) writerpaper. Please Call Pat Beck at VI 3-5630. tt Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will be tested for reports or classes. Preferred. Electric typewriter *L* Mrs Marsh at VI 3-8262. tt Experienced secretary would like typing in her home, with new electric typesetting, free fast and accurate service. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs.兰特勒 at VI 2-1188. Expert typing on thesis, dissertations, themes, etc. Electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Mishler, VI 3-1029. 3-23 WANTED Experienced typist will do dissertations, manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon, special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., V 3-7485. tf Austrian exchange teacher looks for travelling companion to the west of the city in June Write to Dr. Josef Bauer, Fort Hays Kansas State College, Kans. 3-29 Working girl needs roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment. Call VI 3-3988 after five. 3-25 Wanted-30 girls with Senior keys, to date 30 Yale University graduates and faculty with the Yale Russian chorus. Contact KU Y office. 3-23 Roommate wanted. Want girl to share two bedroom home with working girl or KU student. Call VI 3-3414 or VI 3-9201. 2110 Tenn. 3-24 OLD CARS WANTED, top prices paid Do it today! GI Joe's, 60% Vermont, t Wanted. Someone to play GO. Call TI 2-9227 after 7:00 p.m. tf Washing and ironing done in my home 1131 New Jersey U Phone VI $-2598 ENTERTAINMENT ATTENTION PARTY THROWERS: Do you want the Beatles, the Kingsmen, Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL VI 2-1791. tf Now you can hear a variety of excellent dance bands on stereo demo tapes, including the abulous Blades, the Norse Inhaling the Furys; union and non-union taff VI 12-1731 LOST Prescription sunglasses in vicinity of Maatt or Summerfield March 15. Reward. call Richard Wier at VI 3-1711. FOREIGN CAR BODY SHOP: For competent workmanship, expert estimates, attention and evening. 1:00 pm-9:30 am 1:08 E. 12th. East end of R's 23's Garage. MISCELLANEOUS Spring clearance reduced 10-50% dermatics. Revlon, Studio Girl, cosmetics. Elswell Beauty Shop, three blocks north of Union on Mississippi. M42-3 9-3619. Complete beauty service. Eiswick Beauty Shop. 942 Mississippi. VI 3-6109. 3-25 Alterations and mending of men's and women's clothing. Sewing of all kinds. Phone VI 3-5136 after 7:00 p.m. or before 9:30 a.m. 3-24 Math tutor B.A. degree in math from KU. Experienced in tutoring geometry, algebra, calculus and analytic geometry. Call VI 3-0927. 3-24 Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-Q ribs that grandma and grandpa can eat. try our orders, or order an extra per slab. Hours: 11 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-9510 3-31 *PARTY TIME?* Building available for phonographs PHONA khalef Freed at 'a' 3-8995. GCHWINN BICYCLES - service all makes parts and accessories, tires $1.46, tubes and luggage, luggage racks and le downs, SEE Bike repairs at 7th and Miel CALL VI 3-0581 it's great for a date. Take her bowling at Illerest Bowl. Finest lanes in the state. Don't miss the game, also Mon., Tues., and Fri after 9:00 p.m. Illerest Bowl, 9th and Iowa. friends coming this weekend? Looking or a place with good food at reasonable HILLCREST BOWL BESTAURANT. Plenty of free parking th and Iowa. Tuesday, March 23.1965 University Daily Kansan Rent electric, standard, and portable equipment for business and standard, and portable typewriter. Modern Business Equipment (formerly Business Machines). 15 E. 8th. V-31-0151 Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon-thru-Fri or all daw Sat. or Sun. Phone VI 3-6231. tfj Attention: All persons interested in self defense training classes utilizing many of James Bond movies and smashes used by James Bond movie, contact Bob Monk tl vi TI - 7102. BUSY PEOPLE—No time to spare for household cares? Have a professional cleaner in your home regularly or occa- tively Call Pioneer Cleaning Service 3-4408 4-13 FOR RENT Furnished 3 room apt. Private bath, all utilities paid except electricity, $80.00 per month. 1343 Tenn. Phone after 5:00 vm. VI 3-6103. 3-29 Apartment for rent for 3 or 4 boys, furnished. VI 3-2281. tf Large 5 room unfurnished 2nd floor apt. 9th and Indiana $65.00 Call 3- 1124 1124 Large 1st floor 6 room unfurnished apt. Large 2nd floor 6 room unfurnished apt. $75.00. Call VI 2-1124. 3-29 Furnished apartment between downtown and KU. Private bath, utilities paid. $59.00. Chance to reduce rent by light housekeeping. VI 2-3784 or VI 1-381. 3-25 Married, Graduate Students, Faculty-2 bedroom apts. $85.00, 1 available now; 5 bathrooms. Call for room. Alas, sleeping rooms. Call for brochure, VI 3-211. Santee Apts., 1123 Indiana, tf Single sleeping room for one man in an apartment. Call VI 3-6723. 3-24 PARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30-60 people, jukebox, liquid refreshments finished. Contact Don at the host CALL VI 3-1086. For reservations of u Male waiter wanted to wait at the new Flamingo Club. For further information call Bill Deay, VI 3-2825 after 5:30 p.m. 3-25 Engine swaps and Transmission change avers. We sell and install speed equip- ments for trucks for drags opplies or street. Farmers Garage, 837 Connecticut, VI 3-2906. HELP WANTED CAR REPAIR MEN wanting summer or full time work. Can work from home for all. WHY BORROW MONEY Earnings well above average ATHLETES DESIRABLE Apply 3:30 p.m., Sun, Saturday. Pune up-Engine rebuilding-Complete general mechanic work (guaranteed work). Most reasonable prices in town. Open 7 evenings a week. Free estimate on all parts and labor. Farmers Garage 437 Connecticut, VI 3-2906. $^{tt}$ Stereo component system. Dynaco stereo preamp, two dynaco 50-watt power amps, stephens speakers, garnard changer. All perfect. Call VI 3-4891. 3-22 FOR SALE BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMIUMS! Occidental Term Life: conversion Age.18=$33.90=$10.00 Age.20=$10.00 Age.10.00. Age.22=$34.70=$10.00. Call War $10.000, Age 22 = $34.70 = $10.000, Call Wei Sanute et VI 3-2116 for details. tt 1059 Gardner 50'x10' house trailer, good condition. Reasonably priced. Call V1 2- 0731. 4-15 Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, nimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL V1 2-1901 for free delivery *Printed Biology notes.* *n* pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive lecture notes, for the Thettrs. Classes. Formerly known as the Thteft Notes. Call VI 3-1428. $4.50. CHINA-Noritaki, Mayfair design. New, never used or even removed from packing. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk, M3-71-102. Tires—800 x 14 white sidewalls. Two sets. One set is Atlas snow tires, which will go for $5 apiece. The second set is $26 (apiece) Riverside white sidewalls. They will go for $15 apiece. The set (of 4) is $4. Call Bob Monk-VI -3 1702 tlf BE THE LEADER OF YCUR PACK: Harley Davidson Sportster K, 750 cc, new clutch, and new brakes and tires. THIS IS NO HONDA. For further information about this beautiful machine CONTACT Monti Belot at VI 3-0700. tf Now you can hear a variety of excellent King. Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL 8-1791. tt Students, why throw money away on cent when you can own a 1962 Marlette (0 x 50, modern, two-bedroom mobile home, new style). This home is clean and in excellent condition. For further information CALL AI 8-0973 or RI AI 8-0916 ff PORTABLE STEREO: Admiral's Finest—two carrying units, 1 for turntables and 1 for speaker systems (2 tweeters, and 2 full range woofer) $195. new. Will sell for good offer. CALL: Rusty Callins at VI 3-5721. Volkswagen 1964—excellent running condition—serviced at proper intervals—$1500.00 or best offer—cash. VI 2-2168. 3-24 THE STABLES now open every day—Serving steaks, chops sea food, saud- ces, party meals, management, new at- pology. Party rooms available. Phone V1- 1-9644, 10 W. 7th. Ht. vi 16 mm, role film movie camera; GE portable cable light; 3 police radios (1); Mobilo walki-talki (low band), (3) high band converter. Call Gary Grazda, V2-8104-1 name and phone number I'm not in. tf '59 Austin Healy: less than 5000 miles on new engine, mechanically perfect, asses pleasing. See after 5:30 pm at 1319 Vermont or call Charles Reagan 3-24 AT 4-UN 30402. NEED A BAND? 30 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM. PHONE VI 2-2100. 1964 MG midget, B.R. Green, wire wheels, hardtop, Am-Fm radio, very low mileage. Sacrifice. Call VI 3-8367, ask for John. 3-24 For sale: 1,575 Morgan spouses roadster Car or truck: 3-185 McKinney street 3-12-34 1963 Austin Healy 3000 Mark II, red, 19,000 miles, convertible, roll up windows, overdrive, new tires, excellent condition. VI 2-3673. 3-24 1961 TR-3 roadster Top running condi- tions body, top, tonneau boo- fiol. VI 3-8853 3-26 Harmon Kardon model A-300, 30 watt stereo amplifier. Call VI C1 3-4891. 3-26 Phonographs—final cut on all 1964 models—all famous brands reduced to clear save on Magnavox, General Electric or Motorola at Ray Stoneback's, 929-431 Mass. Zenith stereophonic high fidelity for sale. Portable, two-speaker, micro-touch needle, two-level level including album- tapes, and a stand-alone speaker. months ago. Need cash now, so will sell to highest price within 2 weeks. Call Rita. V 3-1847 after 10:30 p.m. tf Porsche 1600N, normal chrome wheels, perfect paint and interior, am-shortwave radio, sunroof. This is one of the best type 356 A's available. $1,500. VI 2-32- 3-29 500 premium tires—famous brands for less than off brands—Get our deal before you buy—Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. St. 4-28 1964 Volkswagen, red, with sunroof, AM-FM radio, deluxe interior, whitewalls, many extras; call Mike Lemoine at VI 3-5770. 3-29 short wave AM-FM used radio $2.50 Ray Stoneback's. 3-29 G.E. stereo phono, repossessed—sold n stores; Beyer, 929-931 Mass St. Stonehawk's, 929-931 Mass St. TR-3. 1957. $635.00. WI 2-1020. Westchester. 60 Volkswagen, perfect condition, radio, sueroft, w/w tires, and new engine. Must sell this week. Also HFI system components and costs, cheap, V-3-29 3489 Transistor radios—new low prices! G.E $8.22, Motorola 10.0M, AM-FM F24. Radio headquarters (80 models in stock). Ry Stonebacks' s, 929-391 Mass. 4-28 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers SUA SPECIAL FILM SERIES presents Olivia De Havilland in THE SNAKE PIT "Brilliant, unforgettable story "Brilliant, unforgettable sto of a woman's insanity" "Best Actress of the Year" —N.Y.Times. —N.Y. Times 7 p.m., Tuesday, March 23 Fraser Theater Admission $.50 HICKORY DICKORY DOCK CRAM LECTURE CLOCK BOIDS ARE CHOIPIN SKOITS ARE FLYIN AN ODE SPRING HAS SPRUNG BLOODS A FRYIN BLOODS A FRYIN NEED SOME WHEELS HEALY SPRITE OR MGB TO CATCH A GAL IS RIGHT FOR ME? British Motors Business Directory Music Instrument Repair Drive-In Pet Center 1910 W.23rd Mayhugh VI 3-4430 GRANT'S Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING 24 HOUR SERVICE (TUES. THRU SUN.) - Lubrication . . . $1.00 - Brake Adjustment . . . .98 - Wheel Alignment - Automatic Transmission Page Fina Service 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 23. 1965 Law School to Give Doctorates Bv Ernie Ballweg Future graduates of the KU school of law will earn a different degree than that conferred on past graduates. Included among the action taken at the end of last week by the Kansas Board of Regents was changing of the LLB. (bachelor of law) degree administered by the school to J.D. (jurist doctor). James K. Logan, dean of the law school, said that the action taken by the regents was at the request of the KU Enrollment Shows Seven Per Cent Gain Official spring semester enrollment at KU is 12,643, up 894 or 7.6 per cent over 1964, James K. Hitt, registrar and director of admissions, reported today. There are 11,434 registered on the Lawrence campus, a gain of 857, and 1,209 at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, up 37. More than half the gain is in the freshman class,up 487 to 2,657. OTHER CLASSES AT Lawrence are: sophomore, 1,909; up 103; juniors, 1,956; down 61; senior and fifthyear, 2,318; up 167; specials and Intensive English Center, 192, up 47; graduate and law, 2,402; up 154. The proportion of men to women in the University is 1.78 to 1 as compared to 1.86 to 1 a year ago. This spring one undergraduate in the honors program is enrolled for 28 credit hours and another for 26. Some students would consider this enough for two semesters of fulltime study. ENROLMENT BY SCHOOLS in the University is: College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, 5,196, up 565; Graduate School, 2,474, up 115; School of Education, 1,295, up 119; School of Engineering and Architecture, 1,185, up 29; School of Medicine, 911, up 14; School of Fine Arts, 604, down nine; School of Business, 504, down 38; School of Law, 219, up 46; School of Pharmacy, 138, up six; School of Journalism, 121, up 20. The 21 per cent growth in the School of Law is the greatest among the 10 schools. Official Bulletin TODAY Physics Colloquium, 4:30 p.m. Dr Cesare Buceli, U of Pa., 155 Malott. American Society Class-Intensive Eng- lance American Foreign Relations. 48M Strong American Foreign Relations. 48M Strong Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7 pledge. Kansas Union. The Nature of God." Inquiers Class, 7:30 p.m. Canterbury House, 1116 La. KU Business Wives. 7:30 p.m., 1007 Massachusetts, Casual Dress. Christian Science College Organization 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. A.I.A.A. Meeting, 7:30 p.m. C. J. Chollasmenos, 200 New Engineering. University Women's Club-University Newcomers Fashion Show, 8 p.m. Scholarship Style Show—"Americlem Flair." Ballroom, Kansas Union. The Prairie Room in the Union will remain open for the show. Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Wesley Foundation Community Worship 9.15 p.m. Methodist Center, 1314 Iroad TOMORROW Catholic Masses. 6:45 a.m. and 5 p.m. Chapel. Chapel. Confessions before and during mass. Wesley Foundation Morning Prayer, 7:00 p.m. Methodist Center, 1314 Oread University Lecture, 4:00 p.m. Prof. Jerome Jackson U. of Ill. Forum Room, Kansas Union. French Club, 4:30 p.m. Le Cœur France-ais se ruire mermaired: le 24 Mars a 4 heures et demie dans la salle du conference du Musee d'Art (Spooner). Mademoiselle Dulade-Chaponte ou une musee de l'art obsolite in 'L'Art français du XVII siecle" sur Classical Film, 7:00 p.m. "This Strange Passion." Fraser Theater. Carillon Recital, 7:00 p.m. Albert Gerken. Timely Topics, 7.00 p.m. St. Lawrence Student Center, "The Emerging Layman" by James J. Donahue, Kansas City, lay theologian. College Life, 7:15 p.m. Iverson Vermont School to be Chester McCalley, biblical scholar. Senior Recital. 8:00 p.m. Carol Busch, soprano. Swartwhout Recital Hall. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Dantorth Chapel. law school faculty. He added that the faculty was "quile pleased with the change, which was a more descriptive degree for the amount of work required." DEAN LOGAN EXPLAINED that in the last 50 years, the amount of work required for a law degree has increased greatly. Students must now have a bachelor's degree before most law schools will even admit them. It is therefore not normal to award a second bachelor's degree for three years of advanced professional work to those who already hold one bachelor's degree. Dean Logan said that by this action, "KU is merely joining a movement which all progressive law schools are taking. The trend among law schools, especially in the Midwest, has been to change to the J.D. degree." Certain federal government agencies have demonstrated a marked discrimination, both in salaries and in rank, against holders of the LLB. degree, even though the basic curriculum for both degrees is essentially identical. Dean Logan cited this as another reason for the change. DEAN LOGAN SAID that there would be no change of the law school curriculum to accommodate the change in degrees. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Other reasons given for the change by the law school faculty in a resolution to the Board of Regents included the fact that "both the Association of American Law Schools' Committee on Graduate Instruction and the American Bar Association had recommended the adoption of the J.D. degree as the first professional degree in law for those schools which require a bachelor's degree for admission. These two associations are the two accrediting agencies for law schools in the United States." The resolution added that within the past year all of the law schools in Kansas and Missouri, with whom KU must compete for law students, have adopted the J.D. degree, except Washington University in St. Louis, which is reportedly in the process of changing degrees. dents who might have gone to schools where the more attractive degree was offered. DEAN LOGAN SAID that without the change to the J.D. degree, it was conceivable that KU might have lost some of the superior law stu- Another item included in the resolution by the faculty was the fact that upon learning of the decision of Washburn University, Topeka, to award the J.D. degree, the students of the KU law school circulated petitions requesting the faculty and administration of the KU school of law to adopt the J.D. degree. Virtually every student in law school signed one of these petitions, Dean Logan said. Don Culp, Bridgetown, Mo., third year law student and president of the Student Bar Association, said, "Everybody is quite happy with the decision to change to the J.D. degree. "Most students feel that the 90 hour curriculum and thesis which we write more than justify the change to the doctor's degree," he said. Charles H. Oldfather, professor of law, said, "The change is a beneficial one, as the J.D. degree is more in step with this day and age." KU Young Republicans Meeting TONIGHT Forum Room, Kansas Union 7:30 Speaker James E. Woodson National Negro Republican Leader - Those planning to attend the convention should attend this meeting. Dwight Boring* says... F. W. H. B. Q. Where can a college man get the most for his life insurance dollars? A. From College Life Insurance Company's famous policy, THE BENEFACTORI Q. How come? A. Only college men are Insured by College Life and college men are preferred risks. Call me and I'll give you a fill-in on all nine of The Benefactor's big benefits. No obligation, of course. *DWIGHT BORING 2020 Harvard Lawrence, Kansas Phone VI 2-0767 representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA Thursday, March 25 ... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men SUA POETRY HOUR Dennis Quinn will read Robert Browning 4:30 p.m., Music Room in Kansas Union Friday, March 26 Robert Hutchinson will read his own poetry 3:30 p.m., Forum Room in Kansas Union Free Coffee Free Coffee Applause, Encores Salute Yale Chorus By Lacy Banks An enthusiastic reception and a demand for three encores greeted the Yale Russian Chorus last night in their third annual concert at KU. "We drew more people than we ever had," Bruce Cochener, Topeka junior and KU-Y chairman, said. "There were about 500 people here tonight and for the first time the KU-Y broke even financially." The program is designed to pay for itself, Cochener continued, and this time it did. The concert, sponsored by the KU-Y, is hoped to "give KU students and faculty members a chance to hear and to understand the culture and thinking of another people as represented by their music." Cochener continued. THE PROGRAM LAST night consisted of liturgical, soldier, and folk songs of Russia. The concert also included two songs that were considered special in the chorus' repertoire. The first, Mozart's "Ave Verum," a religious number, was first performed by the chorus in 1962 in Berlin. At the time, a young East German boy had been fatally shot by East German guards as he tried to escape across the Berlin Wall. The boy died about 50 yards from the American sector of the West German gate. "We felt that a gesture of American sympathy needed to be expressed. We gave a memorial service for him and sang this song there," Daniel Gsovski, conductor of the chorus, said, explaining the chorus' attachment to the song. The other special non-Russian song was a sea shanty translated: "The Sailors of Groix." This song, performed on their first European tour in 1962, Gsovski said, won the $1500 first prize for male choruses at the Festival de Chant Choral, in Lille, France. It was sponsored by the Television-Francaise. THE YALE RUSSIAN Chorus started in 1953, Thomas Holahan, Yale first year graduate student in philosophy, said in a KU-Y discussion preceding the concert. "It evolved from the Yale Russian Club. One day a club member was asked to talk about Russia." Holahan said. "The student, instead of talking about Russia, suggested that the group sing Russian folk songs. "The group enjoyed the song fest so much that Denis Mickiewicz, then a Yale graduate student of music, found good support in starting the Yale Russian Chorus." Holahan said. Since 1953 the group has traveled to Russia during the summers of 1958-60, 1962 and 1964. Holahan said. The concerts the group gives in Russia are of a very informal nature, Frank Abrams, second-year student of the Yale Law School and a chorus member, said. He explained that this prevented being under rigid restrictions by the Russian government. "THIS TYPE OF an arrangement facilitated cultural exchange," Conductor Gsovski said. "Conversations resulting from the informal gatherings on the street corners of Russia often led to house invitations to talk on different subjects for hours." According to Abrams, the chorus would assemble on a specific street corner of a Russian city and begin singing American folk songs while curious people would gather. "Then we would sing Russian Cossack folk songs," Abrams said. "These songs are lively with shouts and stomps. Russians really like these sings. After the crowd had gathered, we would sing other Russian and American folk music. (See photo on page 10.) Daily Hansan THE MOST complete series of the moon ever taken will aid future moon flights to the lunar surface. Scientists at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) which controlled the Ranger flight, said many small craters never viewed before were seen on the floor of Alphonsus. Also it showed what appeared as a jagged crack on the floor of the crater. "It was go from launch to impact, on schedule," a JPL technician exclaimed. The first picture to be flashed on home screens in stereooption fashion appeared to be clear. It showed a large crater and two smaller At the last few seconds before impact the screen showed numerous craters in great detail. The pictures appeared to viewers to "come up and hit you in the face." THEATER OF THE FALLS The weather bureau issued an occasional snow warning for tonight with precipitation ending tomorrow morning. NEW PLAY—A battered, paint-smeared replica of the American flag is the backdrop for this rehearsal scene from U.S.A., an upcoming Experimental Theatre play by John Dos Passos, depicting people and events from 1900 to 1920. Pictured left to right are: Karin Gold, Overland Park senior; Mary Lynn Shea, Merrigan senior; Mary Lou Groom, Arlington, Va., freshman; Don Ferguson, Manhattan Beach, Calif., senior; Kip Niven, Prairie Village sophomore, and Bruce Levitt, Kansas City freshman. The play runs March 25-27 and March 30-April 3. Weather LAWRENCE, KANSAS 62nd Year, No. 106 It will be cloudy and cold through tomorrow with northeast-ly winds 10 to 20 miles per hour. The low tonight is expected to be 10 to 15, the weather bureau predicted. Ranger 9 Moon Probe Sends Live Lunar Pictures to Earth THE SNAPSHOTS, including histories first for "live" television, flashed 245,500 miles through space and ended the Ranger project in America's moon exploration. Further probes will be made by successors to Ranger. A battery of television cameras aboard the spacecraft sent back to earth a series of pictures of the lunar crater Alphonsus for about 20 minutes before the last of the Rangers crashed to destruction with pin-point accuracy 8:08 a.m. (CST). PASADENA, Calif. — (UPI) Ranger 9, blazing a trail through outer space for astronauts to follow, flashed live pictures of an arid lunar crater to American televiewers today before crashing on the moon at 5,971 miles an hour. Wednesday, March 24, 1965 craters toward the lower bottom of the picture. Crater Alphonsus was in the lower left hand corner. More than 500 square miles of the highlands of the moon were covered by the first sequence of pictures, with the field gradually narrowing as Ranger raced in to impact. SCIENTISTS AT JPL described the pictures as of "excellent quality" and scanning well. The lunar views, sent back by six RCA television cameras in the rocket's nose, alternated between sharp definition and a lighter and slightly fuzzy picture. A cheer went up in the control room at the laboratory when it was announced the pictures were coming through after a 45-second warmup mode. Scientists said all camera systems were operating. OTHER PICTURES flashed on television included crater Ptolemaeus, 85 miles in diameter; Alphonsus' floor, 55 miles in diameter; and crater Alpertragius, 55 miles in diameter. Scientists said the pictures were better than could be obtained from earth under any conditions. Millions of Americans throughout the country had a ringside seat to history-in-the-making as American science and the major networks brought them a television spectacular with their morning toast and coffee for the second consecutive dav. TUESDAY IT was the historic two-man Gemini space flight of astronauts Virgil I. Gus Grissom and John W. Young. The one-two triumphs added new laurels to America's space program, but were only pioneering steps in a continuing effort to explore and survey the lunar landscape for a safe spacecraft landing site by 1970. Camera crews from ABC, CBS and NBC television networks were on hand at JPL to bring the historic television coverage to viewers all over the nation. JPL SCIENTISTS made a terminal correction to position Ranger 9's six RCA television cameras for the best possible photos of the lunar crater. So accurate was the flight path of the last Ranger in the $270 million program, that only a minute mid-course correction was required Tuesday. The correction, by radio signal, altered Ranger 9's course so that it was calculated to impact only four miles off its "bullseye"—just northeast of the moon's Alphonsus crater. - * * * ABOARD THE AIRCRAFT CARRIER INTREPID—(UPI)—Astronauts Virgil I. Grissom and John W. Young, the pioneering Gemini pilots who put new life into America's man-in-space program, headed home today to a welcome from a proud nation. Astronauts, Capsule Coming Back to U.S. With them on this 40,000-ton fighting ship was the scorched Gemini-3 capsule that carried them on a near-perfect three-orbit ride through space Tuesday and cleared the way for a four-day Gemini flight in about three months. The two space pilots, one of whom had a brief bout with seasickness in their bobbing "Molly Brown" spaceship after landing in the Atlantic, were declared in fine physical condition. BOTH PILOTS were up early today after a good night's sleep. Their schedule called for a lengthy series of technical reviews of their four hour and 54-minute journey. Dr. R. G. McIver, an Air Force physician who flew in the helicopter that lifted Grissom and Young from the capsule to the carrier, said both astronauts appeared in good shape immediately after the flight. That diagnosis was later confirmed by Dr. E. R. Geiger and other physicians who examined them Tuesday night. It was disclosed that one of the pilots, not identified, became seasick before being hoisted aloft by the helicopter. He quickly recovered and ate a hardy dinner on the Intrepid. The astronauts examined their spaceship Tuesday night on the hanger deck of the vessel. As scores of sailors ganged around, Grissom and Young studied intensely the seared heat shield that had protected them from the 1,700-degree reentry heat. The capsule, the American flag painted on its side partially blistered from the fiery return from space, appeared in good condition. Later Tuesday night the pilots received telephone calls from their wives. AHEAD OF THEM lay the acclaim of the nation—in a news conference at Cape Kennedy, Fla., Thursday and a personal meeting with President Lyndon B. Johnson at the White House Friday. And behind them now was a near-perfect space voyage that put the United States back in business in the manned space race after a 22-month lapse by demonstrating the value of the two-man Gemini spaceship. "We are ready to proceed with the Gemini program," was the way Charles Mathews, Gemini program manager, summed up the result of the Grissom-Young flight, the first by a two-man U.S. spacecraft. NEXT STEP is a four-day voyage in late June or early July and, after that, a seven-day trip later this year in which U.S. astronauts will partially match last week's Soviet efforts by opening the hatch of their craft and taking a peek around space. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 24.1965 Bread or Might? It was announced yesterday that the U.S. has begun to use non-lethal gas in the Viet Nam war. The gas temporarily paralyzes its victims, making them incapable to fight. The morning's papers were crammed with rebuffs, criticisms and hand-slapping about the U.S. action. Both Communist and non-Communist nations chorused their resentment and horror. We are not fighting in Viet Nam because we want to conquer it. We are not fighting because we are warmongers and want to cause a full-scale war. These reasons sound obvious, but there are some who would dispute them. WE ARE FIGHTING in Viet Nam because we are trying to protect a people and a nation from a form of government which we consider wrong. We have been in Viet Nam for about ten years. The government in power at that time asked the United States for assistance. We are giving it. We are now continuing to honor the pledge we gave them at that time. There has been loud criticism about the fact that the United States is still there. There is the argument that the government which was in power then is not in power any longer. Some say we should leave because of the danger of escalating the war to an unstoppable point. It would seem that the reasons given are built on an expedient basis. Should the U.S. leave simply because it is now more convenient and safer to leave than it is to stay? Should we leave because there is a danger that the Communist nations will withdraw a truce that is, at its best. highly unstable? WE CANNOT OPERATE our foreign policy in a cloud of uncertainty as to who is going to get mad at us next. We have made a commitment to the people of South Viet Nam. We cannot back out now simply because it is expedient that we do so. The United States is also in Viet Nam for selfprotection. Asia is in the balance. If South Viet Nam falls, it is an educated guess that the rest of Asia will soon follow if we do not take some kind of action. We cannot stand by and watch the whole of Asia become Communist, if we value our survival as a democratic nation. There is the argument that we should give them bread rather than armies. Bread would not stop infiltration across the border from the north. Bread would not win the war for South Viet Nam. It is an empty gesture if the might and honor of a nation does not back it up. We cannot feed them if they are not alive. The argument for withdrawal would be a return to the isolationist theory that was prevalent in the United States following World War I. We cannot leave Viet Nam. We have made a commitment and for our own sakes, if for nothing else, we will have to stay. We are not sacrificing American lives for political ends, we are sacrificing them for the survival of a principle upon which our country was founded. - Leta Roth The People Say. To The Editor: AFTER READING THE ARTICLE entitled "SPU President Scatters Blood" (UDK, Thursday, March 18). I decided the prerequisites necessary to belong to the SPU were to be immature and obnoxious. Many of the articles that I have read in the UDK (including letters to the editor written by SPU exponents) substantiate this, i.e. plans of picking the Military Science Building and sending a petition to President Johnson, etc. It is a true shame that this small nucleus of college students on our campus, including many who have not yet attained the voting age, are so eager to attack the policies set forth by the elected leaders of our country, especially policies which involve the use of our Armed Forces. The only terms the Communists are used to listening to at the conference table are their own. When peaceful persuasion is fruitless in the subversion of free governments, Communist actions will include coercion, terrorism and guerrilla warfare to gain control of a free country. Being the leading nation in the world, the United States, in order to uphold all the ideals that we stand for, must use its military strength as the backbone of its foreign policy to answer the challenge of Communist aggression in places as Korea and South Viet Nam. Remember, it is the men of our Armed Forces who pray most of all for peace, as they will bear the deepest wounds and scars of war. The cadets, midshipmen and personnel of the ROTC Instructor Groups do not formulate the foreign policy of our country, so why should they be the recipients of the childish acts by such groups as the SPU. In case the SPU does not know, the role of our Armed Forces is to guard our country and to preserve the way of life that we all have learned to love. In my mind, to keep the United States strong and at peace, during times when military weakness in the face of Communist aggression could result in overt war or the surrendering of our principles and freedom, is not wrong. I am sure that if those dedicated workers of the SPU spent their time more effectively in such worthwhile endeavors as studying to further the educational needs of our country, and less time in getting their names in print, they too would be contributing to a patriotic cause much as the members of our Armed Forces have done since 1776. Bernard E. Stalmann Jr. Ligonier, Pa.. graduate student Sir: Last week I heard an ABC news report and I have just finished reading the latest issue of "Newsweek" (March 22, 1965, p. 48) about recent demonstrations on campus concerning racial discrimination in fraternities and sororites. It depresses me to find this is still so pertinent on campus—I can recall this was discussed when I attended the university. It seems quite obvious to me that the time has come in which the usual sensitivities of various Greek organizations have been tolerated long enough. The events in Selma, the consequent nation wide demonstrations and protests, etc., indicate the hand writing on the wall. The University of Kansas has no place in partnership in any system granting university benefits to housing arrangements that discriminate. Now I realize I am "out of touch" with current campus affairs and do not know the explicit demands of students involved in the demonstrations, nor do I mean to imply that the degree of any discrimination involved here is of the same magnitude as Selma. However I am currently a Woodrow Wilson Teaching Intern at a Negro college and am undergoing an education that, among other things, is teaching me the results and meaning of systematic discrimination. To think that the University of Kansas—students or administration—could in any way support the existence of any degree of discrimination through policies on fraternities and sororities is particularly repugnant to me and a negation of the liberal education offered by the university. I urge both students and administration to derive a final solution that assures an end to any discrimination that may exist in Greek organizations on campus. I would also hope that charges resulting in the arrests be dropped. David Earl Sutherland Class of 1961 Norfolk, Va. Sir: Dailij Yfänsan UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom 111 Flint Hall Your newspaper could be more exciting if you adequately reported KU track wins. For instance, two years ago when the KU track team won the Outdoor Big Eight, the UDK put in something to this effect. "It seems incredible, but KU won the Big Eight." University of Kansas student newspaper Then, last week-end when newspapers all over the United States reported fully the exciting National Collegiate Athletics Association in Detroit, Mich., the UDK, our University newspaper, reported inadequately this event in a pint-size article on one of the last pages. Where were you, sports staff? KU looked great in that meet! You're missing a bet, buddies. UNiversity 4-3198. business office Member inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York. 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. The KU mile relay team came in fifth but broke the KU school record by running 3:17.4. But you, apparently not thinking it important enough, didn't even mention the relay team in your article. Also, Herald Hadley, former KU Cross-Country Captain won, yes, won the two mile race in National competition and through that race, is now an All American. Where were you gentlemen? EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Leta Roth and Gary Noland Co-Editorial Editors These men represented KU, but did KU, represented by the University Daily Kansan, give the KU track team the necessary backing? No! You used as your heading, "MU Tops In Indoor Track" and stuck it in the back. Why don't you begin printing for the students of KU instead of for yourselves? Dede LaGree Oklahoma junior Connie Bohannon Leawood junior © 1953 HAYDEN BLOCK THE WASHINGTON POST BOOK REVIEWS CITIZEN TOUSSAINT, by Ralph Korngold (Hill and Wang, $2.25). One of the most exciting and celebrated episodes in the history of the western hemisphere was the Haitian rebellion led by Gen. Toussaint Louverture. Toussaint is the subject of this two-decades-old biography by Ralph Korngold. As we consider the significance of the black-white relationships in the world today this book has even more importance than it had in 1944. Toussaint was likely a true genius, one of the great leaders his race has produced. His story is not just that of rebellion, for Korngold provides the background of this amazing man. Toussaint was a slave for 47 of his 59 years. The years of slavery, the background of piracy as a Caribbean way of life, the way this man developed into leadership are detailed well. The insurrection helped to set the stage for the United States purchase of Louisiana, Korngold believes. Resistance movements like that of Toussaint helped make the hemisphere free of European influence. Henry Adams wrote that it was necessary to subdue rebellion for the French to succeed. Toussaint won his battle, and perhaps this representative of the Negro race helped the American people develop their nation. * * * THE SENTIMENTAL YEARS: 1836-1860, by E. Douglas Branch (American Century, $2.45). Social histories have been the delightful branch of historiography in recent years. Away with the dry political, and even the military, histories. We are coming to understand more about man through the heretofore insignificant things he has done than through the mighty things that used to occupy most of the pages in history books. This book is scarcely a new history, however, it dating to 1934. E. Douglas Branch has chosen the 25 years between Jackson's leaving the presidency and Lincoln's entering it for the scope of his story. The Civil War brought a rude awakening from the quiet years America had known. It was the Age of Progress, when there was still some optimism carried over from the Enlightenment, but it also was the romantic age of Emerson and Thoreau. Much of our literature, most of our fine arts, were still of the sentimental variety. Realism was decades away. Greek statues, Gothic buildings, success stories, temperance movements, massive landscapes, sweet poetry—these were the stuff of the times. Illustrations and newspaper-magazine cartoons of the age help to give us a picture of what it must have been like to live in those pleasant days. Many readers-not just the history students-will want to spend time with this book. * * * HENRY JAMES AND THE JACOBITES, by Maxwell Geismar (American Century, $2.95). This book, it should be noted, is not for the James cultists. Henry James has been riding high in literary criticism; Maxwell Geismar is trying to shoot him down. Seldom does a literary work (one recalls Van Wyck Brocks writing of Mark Twain) try to shatter a figure in quite this way. The reputation of James, it would seem, is like a house of cards. Geismar would tip it over. Even the major novels aren't worth the time or attention they get—"The Ambassadors," "The Golden Bowl." "The Wings of the Dove." James even had a dirty mind, we are told, in "The Psychology of the Keyhole." It would seem that if Henry James is really a key figure that the reputation should be able to withstand the attacks, and Geismar is a literary critic of enough stature that his views deserve attention. Brooks Atkinson, at the time of the big controversy over the book, lined himself up with Geismar, commenting that he agrees that James is not a major writer but merely a major entertainer. The cultists might think this over. Page 3 Club Gives Spring Scholarships At Red, White, Blue Fashion Show Five KU women received the 1965 spring scholarships from the University Women's Club at the Scholarship Benefit fashion show last night. Navy, white and red dominated the fashion scene at the annual Show last night before a capacity crowd in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Recipients of the scholarships were Charlotte Almquist, Bridgeport junior; Betty Arnold, Hoisington sophomore; Valerie Smasal Kansas City, Mo., junior; Mary Ann Sutherland, Prescott sophomore; and Ineta Williams, Wichita senior. Elizabethan paper dolls decorated the tables. A Y-SHAPED RAMP covered with green and pink provided the walkway for the 39 models. Theme for the program was the American Flair. Mrs. Betty Broat, 2041 Barker, was narrator for the show. IN THE OPENING DIVISION, Everywhere with Elegance, Mrs. Paul Hilpman, 2531 Belle Crest, chose a gold tweed three-piece wool suit for her first ensemble. The suit had three-quarter length sleeves. A black bubble hat and black kid gloves accented the costume. University Daily Kansan A FEMININE PINK and white fitted cotton dress was the next selection. Ruffles around the wrists and neck of the dress emphasized the femininity of the dress. A pale pink hair bow and white heels completed the costume. the is a tion. ook, that The Members of the KU Associated Women Students' Fashion Board modeled swim suits in the Water Wise category. Nancy Egy, Topeka senior, wore a navy, red and white nautical Aline beach jacket. The two-piece nautical swim suit featured a white pleated skirt. A TWO-PIECE WHITE and red-and-white polk-a-dotted suit was modeled by Deanna Goodrich, Parsons junior. The white shorts were trimmed in black. The red-and- white polk-a-dotted top was occented by a buckle in the back. A white pleated skirt topped by a blue blouse featuring white sail boats was modeled in the children's division. A sun dress of flowered print cotton was worn by Mrs. Robert Lockwood, Jr., 709 Alabama. Bold shades of blue, yellow, red and lavender were featured in the dress. MRS. J.W. TWENTE, 934 Indiana modeled a brown and white striped fitted dress of whip cream. Black patent shoes and white button earrings completed her costume. Linda Krogh, 1117 Highland Drive, representing the teenagers, chose a floor length evening gown of turquoise and white for the American Flair at Sundown division. The turquoise controlled skirt featured a satin bow in the back to accent the empire waist-line of the gown. Rolled straps and the bucked bodice brightened the evening dress. Miss Krogh wore formal white gloves. A CHALK WHITE BEADED bodice and sky blue floor length skirt was the selection of Mrs. Robert Bussell, 933 Ohio, in the evening attire division. The bodice had a low rounded back. Mrs. B.G. Barr, 1605 Crescent Road, chose a bold flower print evening gown. Rinestone on the gown glittered beneath the lights as she turned on the ramp. Black trim complemented the black background of the dress. HICKORY DICKORY DOCK AN ODE CRAM LECTURE CLOCK BOIDS ARE CHOIPIN SKOITS ARE FLYIN SPRING HAS SPRUNG BLOODS A FRYIN BLOODS A FRYIN NEED SOME WHEELS TO CATCH A GAL HEALY SPRITE OR MGB I WONDER WHICH IS RIGHT FOR ME? British Motors Wednesday, March 24, 1965 Two special seminars will be conducted today and tomorrow by the School of Engineering and Architecture. The guest lecturer will be Dr. C. C. Hsiao of the University of Minnesota. Professor to Lecture on Solids The topics of the two seminars at 3:30 in the Engineering building will be "Viscoelastic Constitutive Equation and Viscoelastic Stress Anlyses," and "The Theory of strength of Oriented Solids." the young man who buttons down his collars wears CRICKETEER sportcoats JOHN BURTON This Cricketeer look harks back to days when sports cars were longer, the Twenties roaring. Up-dated now in slim ticking stripes, wider blazer stripes or certified checks, all drawn on clean white backgrounds. Essential for the summer Circuit, Cricketeer tailored in Dacron* polyester and worsted to keep the trim, natural lines in shape. $39.50 Authentic button down shirts in solids and stripes, from $5.00 to $6.95 the university shop SUA POETRY HOUR Thursday, March 25 Dennis Quinn Will Read Robert Browning 4:30 p.m., Music Room in Kansas Union Friday, March 26 Robert Hutchinson Will Read His Own Poetry Free Coffee 3:30 p.m., Forum Room in Kansas Union Free Coffee Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 24,1965 Roscoe G. Simpson Honored For 'La Dolce Vita' Approach By Jacke Thayer Roscoe rides again! Yes, it's once again "Roscoe G. Simpson week" at KU. The so-called "Roscoe G. Simpson Foundation of North America" sponsors the annual celebration. KU rites this year were initiated by Jan Parkinson, Prairie Village junior and leader of the local group. Although the event has been associated with the Tau Kappa Epsilon house, Parkinson said it is not a house function. "We're just sort of unofficial ambassadors for Roscoe on campus," he said. THE ELUSIVE and mysterious Roscoe had his heyday "from about the turn of the century until 1920," Parkinson said. "Roscoe was a rather flamboyant character in his day." Parkinson continued. "He is perhaps best-known for his invention of sunglasses. At one time, he was fairly well-to-do—something of a philanthropist." But Roscoe's good days came to an end, according to Parkinson. "You might say that philanthropically he invested unwisely. A series of bad investments made him a pauser." he added. PARKINSON SAID NO one knew exactly when Roscoe was morn, but he died in bad financial straits in 1929. This is the third year for the KU celebration, according to Parkinson. And why was Roscoe singled out for special honors? "It sort of came to me in a mad frenzy one night about 2:00 a.m. when I had two tests the next day," Parkinson said. "Roscoe seemed to represent the kind of person our society has sort of 'lost touch' with. He was a take-it-as-it-comes, easy-going fellow and didn't get too excited about things," he continued. PARKINSON SAID HE FELT Roscoe's whole philosophy was best summed up by a statement he made in 1918: "It's better to be rich and healthy than poor and sick." Ins week's festivities began Sunday night with a "banquet of sorts," for the board of governors. This board includes Parkinson, chairman; Dan Foster, Great Bend senior, executive vice-chairman; Glen Barnard, Oswego junior, secretary; Ed Sanders, Oswego junior, treasurer; and James King, Hutchinson junior. The big event of the week, according to Parkinson, will be the Governor's Ball Friday night. A "by invitation only" affair, the week's queen will be crowned sometime during the evening. Tonight, Parkinson said, the board will hold a progress meeting to decide if the publicity has been effective thus far, and to determine other activities for the week. "The queen will be chosen before Friday by the board of governors. Names have been submitted to them, and they pick the queen on whatever standards they feel will best express the spirit of the occasion," Parkinson said. Fraternity and Sorority Jewelry ABΓΔEZHΘJKAM Queen candidates are Nancy Beck Independence, Mo., freshman; Philanne "Toppy" Yould, Salina senior; Brook Manning, Joplin, Mo., senior; and Jan Withers, Mission freshman. Facility and Sorority Jewelry Guards Rings Lavaliers Mugs Pins Crests Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Massachusetts Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" Fun Fun Fun PITCHER NIGHT 70¢ Free Peanuts La Pizza 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 Exclusive at Ober's 821 Mass. VI 3-1951 if she doesn't give it to you... — get it yourself! JADE EAST® JADE EAST A MAN'S COLOGNE JADE EAST AFTER SHAVE Cologne, 6 oz., $4.50 After Shave, 6 oz., $3.50 Deodorant Stick, $1.75 Buddha Cologne Gift Package, 12 oz., $8.50 Spray Cologne, $3.50 Buddha Soap Gift Set, $4.00 Cologne, 4 oz., $3.00 After Shave, 4 oz., $2.50 SWANK, NEW YORK - SOLE DISTRIBUTOR UNIVERSITY EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE SERIES presents JOHN DOS PASSOS' --- MARCH 25,26,27 "U. S. A." MARCH 30, 31, APRIL 1,2,3 Tickets: $1.50 - .75 with KU ID Wednesday, March 24, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 3 THE RED DOG INN Presents THE TRASHMEN ONE NIGHT ONLY MATTY SCHUTZ, JOHN SCHUTZ AND BENNY SCHUTZ Surfin' Bird "The Bird, The Bird, The Bird is the Word. PAPA-PAPA-OO-MOW-MOW" WEDNESDAY March 24,1965 Doors Open at 7:00 p.m. Cover $1.00 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 24, 1965 Wool Suits Foil Spring Weather By AWS Fashion Board Members For the month of March and for the swing into spring, nothing could be more appropriate than a transi- tional wool suit. Because of the unpredictable weather, a spring wool suit or dress is a must in every coed's wardrobe. GLOVES ADD A finishing touch to every costume and should always be worn at social events. A hat is usually optional. Thus a spring outfit is completed. Much of it seems familiar, yet there is something distinctive and new. The costume is slightly European in its appeal with simple lines, unusual shoes and patterned stockings. It is sure to catch the eye of many within the next few weeks. KU Women Attend AWS Convention Wool dresses in vivid or pastel colors or prints are also good choices for transitional wear. Both suits and dresses feature simple, flaired A-lines this season. Chelsea collars of white lace are often worn with wool dresses. Nine KU coeds, accompanied by Emily Taylor, Dean of Women, and Karlene Howell, assistant to the dean of women, are attending the national Associated Women Students (AWS) convention in Salt Lake City, Utah, this week. White and pastel woolens have been especially popular this season. A suit of light weight wool can be appropriate for church or campus cultural activities. It can be dressed up with a cowel neckline crepe blouse for dinner parties, or dressed down with a pink "nothing" blouse for informal dates. As accessories for a pastel dress, one might wear a pair of patterned stockings in a light color. Low-heeled shoes in pastel colors, often featuring cut-outs, flowers and bows as decoration, make the pastel wool outfit complete. A DOUBLE-BREASTED suit in white wool fits many occasions with a flair such as church, a concert or a trip to the city. THOSE ATTENDING ARE: Cathy Beagle, Boulder, Colo., sophomore; Cindy Hardin, Lincoln, Neb., freshman; Susan Hartley, Atwood junior; Kathy Hewett, Fort Scott sophomore; Mary Lasley, Mission junior; Sue Menke, Webster Groves, Mo., freshman; Ann Peterson, Shawnee Mission junior; DeanNee Reece, Scandia freshman; and Carol Jo Weber, Raytown, Mo., junior. Sherry Whitcher, Prairie Village senior and past president of AWS, said all the delegates will participate in panel discussions. New Earring Fad! All 6 Pair 250 plus 10% tax 六 ways to look exotic Heavenly, colorful drops slip on in seconds. Typical set includes colorful ceramics, glass, antique metal, etc. You get 6 pair of earring drops plus your choice of "piereed look", screw-type holders or 14-karat gold pierced ear wire . . . all for $2.50. (Or 12 different pair and wire for $4.00.) Colors and styles of drops may vary. Add 10% Federal Tax. Postpaid. MAIL THIS CONVENIENT COUPON TODAY! The Play Time 283 Broadway, Arlington, Mass. Please send me earrings at Pliered-ear wires. Pierced-look holders. NAME. CITY ___ ZONE ___ STATE___ ADDRESS THOM ALL DECKED OUT FOR SPRING—Dee Goodrich, Parsons junior, and Helen Bush, Lyons junior, model spring suits of lightweight wool. Miss Goodrich wears a shocking pink suit with a matching silk blouse. Miss Bush models a double breasted white wool highlighted with brass buttons on sleeves and front panel. Pinnings and Engagements Ann Allsbury, Wichita sophomore, Delta Gamma, is pinned to John Carnahan, Wichita sophomore, Sigma Nu. Linda Bahr, Annandale, Va., junior, Delta Delta Delta, is pinned to Roy Rawlings, Kansas City, Kan., junior, Sigma Chi. Bobbetta Bartelt, Frankfurt, Germany, senior, Hashinger, is engaged to William Gochis, LaCrosse. Wis. Betty Ennis, Kansas City, Mo.. senior, Gamma Phi Beta, is pinned to Rod Wessel, Kansas City, Kan.. junior, Delta Chi. ta, is pinned to Jeff Ellis, Casper, Wyo., junior, Sigma Chi. Donna Johnson, Leavenworth senior, Hashinger, is engaged to John DuBois, Leavenworth junior, Delta Chi. Carol Lynne Byington, Western Springs, Ill. junior, Delta Delta Deli- Cheryl McCool, Clinton, Iowa. senior, Hashinger, is engaged to Harold Miller, Lancaster, Pa., grad student THE CAMPUS "BARBER SHOP" 5 barbers NO LONG WAITS HAIRCUTS $1.75 JUST NORTH OF UNION Ford Motor Company is: perspective PETER H. Carl Marcuevi B.S.M.E., Wayne State Uni. M.S.M.E., Wayne State Uni. At Ford Motor Company, perspective results from the necessary training, background and further education a college graduate needs to obtain the advancement he wants. Perspective, in a painting, is the illusion of depth. With us there's no illusion. Perspective at our Company often starts with the two-year College Graduate Program. While in the Program, a graduate progresses through a series of developmental moves. He becomes familiar with our business. Takes on ever-increasing amounts of responsibility. And accelerates according to his own application and ability. We want him to succeed. Because the greater his success, the greater ours will be. One recent graduate, Carl Marcucci, typifies this success story. Since joining us in 1960, Carl has gained wide experience in our Quality Control Office. For example: He put together a coordinated program to test a new engine . . . served as a liaison between one of our foundries and our manufacturing plants . . . and represented us with vendors who supply our manufacturing plants. In addition, through our Employee Continuing Education Plan, Carl furthered his academic accomplishments by earning his Master's Degree. Carl presently is taking a seminar course to qualify as a registered professional engineer. This added knowledge and the many work situations he encountered have greatly enlarged Carl's perspective. Make him better able to reach the right decisions in his current job—Section Supervisor of a Quality Control Department with 52 people under him. This is not an isolated case. Many college graduates have grown just as rapidly. If you want a future as big as you'd like it to be, see our representative when he visits your campus. THERE'S A FUTURE FOR YOU WITH... Ford The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan MOTOR COMPANY An equal opportunity employer Page 7 Commencement Committee Staff Prepares For 1965 Graduation By Jacke Thayer Working almost as hard as KU's degree-seeking seniors is the committee planning Commencement activities. Wednesday, March 24, 1965 University Daily Kansan Henry Shenk, professor of physical education, heads the committee of six faculty members and two students. Their work started about March 1, although much of the preliminary planning had already been done by the Alumni Association which is responsible for all alumni activities during Commencement weekend. This year's Commencement will be essentially "the same as last year in general pattern," according to Raymond Nichols, vice-chancellor and committee member. Much of the work is done at the sub-committee level, according to Nichols. "WE HAVE COMMITTEES for the reception, the All-University supper, printing and lots of other things," Nichols said. things, Nichols said. The committee does run into several problems each year, Nichols said. "Probably our biggest problem is getting students to read the senior reminder to get acquainted with the Commencement rules and regulations. It is important for every senior to read this. We always have a few who don't know where to pick up their caps and gowns at the last minute," Nichols said. He pointed out that attendance regulations are also listed in the reminder. mind. THE REMINDERS are placed in different spots on the campus and available to everyone, according to Nichols. They will also be distributed at the Senior Class Coffee which will be late in April, according to John "Tonto" Mays, Lyons class president. One of the biggest problems facing committees of the future, Nichols said, is the actual mechanics of staging the Commencement. "As classes get larger and larger each year, it will become even more difficult to get everyone seated so they can see the platform. The ceremony may also have to be shortened." Nichols commented. "In the past," he said, "the graduating seniors have all marched across the platform to shake the hand of the chancellor or dean, but as the class grows, it may make the ceremony run too late in the evening to continue this practice." A THIRD PROBLEM involves the All-University Commencement Supper, at which the Chancellor traditionally gives his "State of the University" address. The Alumni Association has been accepting advance reservations for this public dinner this year. "In past years, it has always been crowded and last year we had to open the Kansas Room to accommodate more people." Mrs. Mildred Clodfetter of the Alumni office, said. Official Bulletin TODAY University Lecture. 4:00 p.m. Prof. Jones, Jessica. U. of. Ilf. Forum. Room Kansas Union. French Club, 4:30 p.m. Le Cerulee Francais se ruire mercié premérié. Le 24 marxs 4 heures et demie dans la salle du conference du Musee d'Art (Spooner). Madamoisse D'Arnaud. Dame des Mains. Illustrée il litre de diapositives, sur "L'Art français, du XVII siècle." Classical Film, 7:00 p.m. "This Strange Passion," Fraser Theater. Carillon Recital, 7:00 p.m. Albert Gorken Timely Topics, 7.00 p.m. St. Lawrence Student Center, "The Emerging Layman" by James J. Donahue, Kansas City, lay theologian. College Life, 7.15 p.m. 1921 Vermont. Speakale will be Chester M. bib- scholar. Senior Recital, 8:00 p.m. Carol Busch, rogano. Swarthout R cital Hall. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Episcopal Holy Communion, 11:35 a.m. Canterbury House, 1116 La. Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m. and 5 p.m. before and during mass. Confessions before and during mass. S. U.A. Poetry Hour, 4:30 p.m. Dr. Dennis Quinn. Music Room, Kansas Union. Deutscher Verein, 4:30 p.m. Bieh Eight Renaissance Union. German Olympics. Refreshments. YCS. 7:15 p.m. St. Lawrence Student Center. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Dantorth Chapel. Teaching Candidates: Interviews scheduled for Thurs., Mar. 25, Missouri, Independence Schools, elementary and secondary, 117 Bailey. Nichols added, "It has grown so large that it is difficult to find a place to serve that many people. In the future it may have to be changed, abandoned, or the attendance may be limited." Activities already scheduled for the weekend are listed below; Baccalaureate will be at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, June 6, in Memorial Stadium or Allen Field House, in case of rain, and Commencement will be at 7 p.m. Monday, June 7, in the Stadium or the Field House. ALUMNI ACTIVITIES will open at 10 a.m. Saturday, June 5, with registration in the Kansas Union. Each of the reunion classes will have headquarters in the Union and rooms in KU residence halls will be available for reunion participants unable to find accommodations in area motels or hotels. Parents of graduating seniors may also stay in the residence halls, according to the Alumni office. Activities are being planned by the Gold Medal Club, persons who were graduated from KU in 1914 or earlier; the class of 1915, class of 1925, class of 1940 and class of 1955. Weekend events also will include annual meetings of Mortar Board, Phi Beta Kappa, Alumni Association board of directors and the Endowment Association board of trustees. There also will be a Department of Design open house and a School of Pharmacy reception. GOLD MEDAL CLUB members will attend a luncheon Sunday, June 6, in the Union. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will speak, and persons who previously have not received 50-year pins will get them at the luncheon. The 50th anniversary reunion of the KU class of 1915 will open with a dinner at 6:30 p.m. June 5 in the Union, and there also will be a luncheon at 11:30 a.m. in the Union, June 6. Class members will receive 50-year pins at the June 5 event. Tentative plans for reunion activities for the class of 1925 include a dinner and a luncheon. The class of 1940 will have a 25-year reunion, and will have a party and a luncheon. Latin Educators Praise Seminar Latin American representatives attending the Seminar on Higher Education in the Americas emphasize the personal aspects rather than the technical as the main value. Twenty-four representatives from 17 Latin American countries are discussing the role of contemporary universities in national economic, cultural and social development during the six-week session which ends April 11. They feel that the lectures and papers of the seminar provide knowledge and areas of development, but more important is the mutual role of universities in international understanding. "THIS CAN BUILD the bridge between universities in two continents, and will show that the common bases, although different problems and solutions, can result in a program for development of the 'whole' university policy and leadership in many areas." Sven Zethelius Penalosa, professor of chemistry, National University of Bogota, Colombia, said. The director of the cultural department of the University of Chuquisaca, Bolivia, Marcel Vargas Vacaflor, said: "Often what is put on paper cannot be put into practice for us," Prof. Vargas said, "but both areas can learn much they can adapt to their own use." ONE WHO is particularly interested in the technical parts of the seminar is Enrique Romero Zozaya, who is presently technical secretary of the National Association of Universities, and is from Mexico City. Dr. Romero was "pleasantly surprised at the liberal mind and way of doing things in an American university." LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners To Do Your Best It Helps To Look Your Best. To keep your clothes looking sharp, let Lawrence Laundry and dry Cleaners handle your needs. Our Sanitone service is recommend- ed by White Stag, "Botany" 500, McGregor, Haggar and Worsted-Tex, to name only a few. et Free Pick-up and Delivery Service 1001 New Hampshire VI 3-3711 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 24,1965 BRIMAN'S Leading Jewelers 743 Massachusetts VI 3-4366 Bell's Music Co. 925 Massachusetts VI 3-2644 Sandy's Drive-In 2120 West 9th VI 2-2930 Millikin's SOS "Student Typing" 10211/2 Massachusetts VI 3-5920 La Pizza "Delivery Service" 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 Douglas County Bank 9th and Kentucky VI 3-7474 Pizza Hut 1606 West 23rd VI 3-3516 Association of University Residence Halls The Town Shop 839 Massachusetts VI 3-5755 Dixon's Drive-In 2500 West 6th VI 3-7446 on the First National Bank 746 Massachusetts VI 3-0153 Congratulations from each of us to the Second Annual AURH Spring Fling March 26-28 Weaver's Men's and Boys' Store 901 Massachusetts VI 3-6360 Tony's Imported Car Service 1 Block North of 23rd and Harper Rd. Wednesday, March 24,1965 University Daily Kansan Page 9 THE FLIPPERS --- DANCE at the Red Dog Inn, 7-12, 26th GYMKHANA, 8:30 a.m., 27th DUCK RACE, 3:00 p.m., 27th BANQUET, 12:30 p.m., 28th IRC SPRING SING, 7:00 p.m., 28th Lawrence Sanitary Milk and Ice Cream Co. "Faithful Service Since 1920" 202 West Sixth VI 3-5511 ALEXANDER'S 826 Iowa VI 2-1320 Pharon-Miller Automotive Service 1 Block West of Sunset Drive-In VI 3-9107 Earl's Pizza Palace 729 Massachusetts VI 3-0753 M&M Office Supply 710 Massachusetts VI 3-0763 Jayhawk Cafe 1340 Ohio VI 3-9347 Campus Shoppe 1144 Indiana VI 3-3034 Griff's Burger Bar 1618 West 23rd VI 3-9347 Gaslight Tavern 1241 Oread VI 3-1806 Lawrence National Bank 647 Massachusetts VI 3-2110 Shaw's Auto Service 612 North 2nd VI 3-8943 DIEBOLT'S 843 Massachusetts VI 3-0454 Page 10 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 24, 1965 POPULAR GROUP—The Yale Russian Chorus is shown during their appearance last night in Hoch Auditorium where it was called back for three encores by an enthusiastic KU audience. (See related story on page one.) A. H. SMITH Dennis Moffatt sought a job with responsibility [Image of three men in a professional setting, two men seated at a desk with papers, one standing beside them.] He found it at Western Electric Dennis Moffatt, B.A., Coe College, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, '57, joined Western Electric in 1961 after two years of graduate work at the State University of Iowa and two years with the Army. Most important to Dennis was the fact that WE offered him the chance to move ahead . . . fast. Dennis started at Western Electric's Hawthorne Works in Chicago as a Staff Trainee in Industrial Relations. After only a year with the Company and the completion of one of WE's training programs for college graduates, Dennis became a Personnel Placement Analyst. Advancing rapidly, Dennis was If you, like Dennis Moffatt, want a career with a company that will recognize your skills and abilities, and have the qualifications we seek — let's talk! Opportunities for fast-moving careers exist now for liberal arts, physical science and business majors, and for electrical, mechanical and industrial engineers. Get the Western Electric Career Opportunities booklet from your Placement Officer. And be sure to arrange for an interview when the Bell System recruiting team visits your campus. recently promoted to Section Chief, Employment and Placement, Systems Equipment Engineering. Western Electric MANUFACTURING AND SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM MICHAEL BUFFET AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER ADVERTISED IN ESQUIRE Principal manufacturing locations in 13 cities. Operating centers in many of these same cities plus 36 others throughout the U.S. Engineering Research Center, Princeton, N.J., Teletype公司, Skokie, Illinois, Little Rock, Ark. General Headquarters, New York City Have a Burnt Ivory AS THE RICH CIGAR TONE The strong masculine flavor of this rich cigar tone leather appeals instantly to young-thinking men. Hand-sewn detailing adds the custom touch. A exclusive with Taylor made Taylor Made SHOP $17.95 to $18.95 Royal College Shop 837 Mass. V1 3-4255 Wednesday, March 24.1965 University Daily Kansan Page 11 QUESTION: WHICH OF THESE LINES IS THE MOST IMPORTANT? ANSWER: THE ONLY IMPORTANT LINE IS THE ONE THAT LEADS TO DELICIOUS FOOD AND FINE SERVICE AT THE UNION CAFETERIA KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE I I I Page 12 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 24,1965 When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Jazz Swings Out on Mount Oread As Eleven Groups Convene Here Eleven jazz ensembles, including two groups from KU, will join evening headliners Clare Fischer, West Coast jazz pianist, and Phil Woods, saxophonist from New Hope, Penn., in a series of concerts. Concerts begin at 10:00 a.m. Saturday, and culminate in the jazz contest finals and special program at 8:00 p.m. THE HERB SMITH Quartet will be one of the bands representing KU at the festival. Smith, Memphis, Tenn., senior, was the only musician from KU competing in the Festival last year. He was then playing with the Midwestern Jazz Quintet, from the Kansas City Conservatory of Music. The KU Kicks Band, organized in late October by Kevin Condon, Kansas City sophomore., and Jim Bowman, Raytown, Mo., junior, will be the second entry from KU. The sounds of American jazz, from the rocky coasts of the Atlantic, to the Gulf of Mexico, from the California coast to the heart of the United States, will be reflected on the campus Saturday at the second annual Oread Jazz Festival. Fisher and Woods will be playing together Saturday for the first time. THE SEMIFINALS will begin at 10:00 A.M. Saturday in the Kansas Union Ballroom, and will continue until 5:00 P.M. Each group will be judged by a panel of judges that includes: Don DeMicheal, editor of Down Beat Magazine; John Hammond, of Columbia Records; Dave Baker, jazz musician and Phil Woods, teacher and jazz musician. At 8:00 P.M. the finals of the Oread Festival will be in Hoch Auditorium. At this time, Clare Fischer and Phil Woods will present a special program. NOTICE Non-partisan ASC candidate and class officer applications will be available at the Dean of Students Office beginning on March 26. Applications must be completed as directed by ASC Bill #2 and returned to the Dean's office no later than March 31. ASC ELECTIONS COMMITTEE Your Easter Jay SHOPPE DOWNTOWN 835 MASS Suit Jane Compton $26.00 3 pc. Suit, plain Chanel Jacket with braid trim and sheath Skirt. Matching shell blouse with mitered front. Fabric, 75% Rayon, 25% Acetate Colors, Copen Blue, Coffee Bean, Banana, and Black Sizes, 8 to 18 ojf OREAD JAZZ FESTIVAL The Best In Collegiate Jazz From Across The Nation With Nine Groups From New York To California From St. Paul To New Orleans Semi-finals 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Union Ballroom Finals 8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium Special Bonus Clare Fischer Trio appearing with Phil Woods During the Evening Concert $1.50 with KU-ID, $1.75 without Tickets on sale at Union, Bell's, College Royal Shop & Ober's A Whole Day of Jazz This SATURDAY, March 27 Wednesday, March 24,1965 University Daily Kansan Page 13 New NBA Records—Chamberlain on Top Again NEW YORK—(UPD)—Wilt Chamberlain, who has been in the National Basketball Association six years, finished the regular season on Sunday with a new record and his sixth straight scoring title, official statistics revealed today. Chamberlain, shunted to Philadelphia in mid-season from the lowly San Francisco Warriors, led the league in scoring with 2,534 points for an average of 34.7 per game He also set the record for most consecutive games played without a disqualification with 464. His string began Oct. 24, 1959. The 7-foot-1 76er also led the league in field goal percentage with 510 per cent and was second in re-bounds with 22.9 per game. OTHER individual marks were set Jayhawk Fencers Flex Weapons For NCAA Competition in Detroit KU sent a team to the NCAA Fencing competition last weekend in Detroit. The meet included 40 schools, each represented by a three-man squad. The meet, which went on both Friday and Saturday, featured competition with all three fencing weapons - Sabre, Foil, and Epee. Esam El' Shafy, Prague, Czechoslovakia, junior and Jayhawk competitor in the epe division, was a semifinalist for the Fencer of the Year award at the meet. All the fencers submit a ballot with the names of three men in each weapon who they would like to see as fencer of the year. From these ballots the five fencers receiving the most votes are chosen as the semi-finalists. From the five top candidates, the coaches at the meet choose the Fencer of the Year. El'Shafy was ranked 14th in the epee division of the tournament. The fencers who finish in the first six positions in the competition are named All-Americans. Other Jayhawk fencers at the meet were Mike Munson, Salina junior, who fenced the foil, and Tim Mitchell, Salina senior, who fenced the sabre. Mitchell is team captain. team in the Big Eight is Iowa State, he said. Most of the teams which KU faces during the season are from the Big Ten conference. All the schools in this conference have active fencing programs. Group May Try Rule Switching KNITTERS KNIT NOW! Mitchell explained the KU squad was not given a rating in Big Eight competition because there were not enough opponents active in the conference to hold a championship meet. The only other active fencing However, Foster said about 90 per cent of the replies to 15,000 questionnaires sent out by the committee favored the present rule and about 90 per cent thought conditions around the nation were better. The major point under discussion was a request by coaches to change the bench behavior rule which prohibits them leaving the bench during play, or talking to officials. CHICAGO — (UPI) — The Basketball Rules Committee met Tuesday to decide whether to change the current set of regulations for next year, but Chairman Bud Foster of Wisconsin didn't anticipate any major alteration. BERNAT Scandia the homespun bulky knit very thick to hold or allowing extension Lawrence's Longest Knitting Department Featuring BERNAT YARNS TERRILL'S 803 Massachusetts Open Thursday Evening Until 8:30 The Classical Film Series presents The Strange Passion (1953) Mexico (1953) Mexico Directed by Luis Bunuel who also did Un Chien Andalou and Viridiana Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Adm. 60c Fraser Theater by John Kerr of Philadelphia for most consecutive games played with 834; Oscar Robertson of Cincinnati for most assists per game with an 11.5 average; and Bailey Howell of Baltimore for most personal fouls with 345. The Boston Celtics wiped out their record of 60 victories with a total of 62 triumphs for the season against only 18 defeats; and the Detroit Pistons tied the Philadelphia record for most players averaging in double figures with seven. San Francisco wiped out several long-standing records in the loss column. The Warriors dropped an all-time high of 63 games while setting the records for the longest losing streak with 17 straight and most losses at home with 25. LARRY COSTELLO of Philadelphia led the league in free throw percentage with .887 and Boston's Bill Russell led in rebounds with 24.1 per game. Jerry West of Los Angeles trailed Chamberlain in scoring with 30.4. Single-game leaders were Robertson in free throws with 22 twice and in assists with 20 against New York; Chamberlain in points with 63 against Philadelphia when he played for the Warriors and Russell in rebounds with 49 against Detroit. League scoring increased to 110.6 per game from last year's 110.0; field goal accuracy dropped to 426 from .433; free throw percentage fell from .722 to .720; and personal fouls declined from 26.8 to 25.9. A travel agent 1. Counting your riches? That'a a laugh. 2. How so? A man in a suit and tie is holding a book while talking to another man in a plaid jacket. 3. I thought you were loaded. I have exactly a dollar thirty-two and three pages of green stamps. The way I figure it,I can hardly afford to wake up tomorrow morning. A I'll just use a simple sketch of two people talking. 4. Call your dad. He always comes through. Not since he found out about that pair of elephant tusks I bought for $198.50. T 5. Didn't you tell him tusks were in?² He told me I'd have to demonstrate a more sensible attitude toward money before he'd shell out anything above the subsistence level. BASEN 6. That's no problem. Next time you get some dough, get yourself a Living Insurance policy from Equitable. It's one of the most sensible things you can do with your money. It guarantees security for your family, builds cash values you can always use, and by getting it now, when you're young, you pay less. I'll do it! But don't tell dad about my new stuffed alligator. For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable. For information about career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, or write to Edward D. McDougal, Manager, Manpower Development Division. The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United States Home Office; 1285 Ave. of the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10019 © Equitable 1965 AnEqual Opportunity Employer Page 14 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 24, 1965 Model UN Seeks Answers to World's Questions By Rosalie Jenkins Will Red China be recognized? Can Russia and other countries behind in their dues payments in the United Nations finally be made to pay? The answers to these questions may be locally decided at the sixth annual KU Model UN, April 23, and 24. Between 95 and 100 nations will be represented at the Model UN this year, according to Patty Goins, Marysville senior, chairman of the Model UN steering committee and UN Secretary-General. She said that the third meeting of all the various blocs of nations is set for tonight at 7:30 in both the Kansas Union and Blake Hall, THE NATIONS in a particular bloc use these meetings for a planning session of their strategy and for resolutions they wish to make in the General Assembly. Miss Goins said that there will be eight resolutions for the Assembly to consider. The Steering Committee selects from those presented to it by the countries. She said that four of the resolutions will come from four specific areas which are: Arab-Israeli struggle, Chinese representation, the dues in arrears dispute, and the Portuguese colonial policy question. Miss Goins noted that the selection of these resolutions is being conducted in a new way. In the past, the Steering Committee made up the resolutions. THIS YEAR, she said that four committees composed of one member from each delegation will meet April 15 to decide upon resolutions from one of the four areas. Each delegation consists of four members and, thus, each representative will be on one of the four resolution committees. Miss Goins said that these four committees will then turn in their resolutions to the Steering Committee which will select one from each area to be taken up in the Model UN. "If they want to amend these resolutions on the floor, they can," she said. The other four resolutions are selected on a "wild card," Miss Goins stated. This means that a delegate may turn in a resolution on any subject to the Steering Committee. The committee will pick four of these for consideration. MISS GOINS said that there are eight blocs in the UN. They are the Western, Soviet, Arab, African, Latin American, non-aligned European, western-aligned Asian, and non-aligned Asian. There are also a number of observer nations usch as Red China, Switzerland, and West Germany. She said that even though it is late, there are still some small countries such as in the African Bloc which don't have any delegates. "If anyone is still interested, there are a few countries which are open," she said. Miss Goins also said that this year's Model UN has another innovation which will be an award for "the most authentic delegation." Details on this award have not yet been decided upon. "THIS AWARD is for the delegation which truly represents its country's interests and not U.S. interests," she explained. Asked for her evaluation of the Model UN as experience, Miss Goias said: "It depends on how much research the students do for how educational it is. . . If you learn nothing else, you learn parliamentary procedure. If you listen to the debates, you can learn a lot." "From my observations, we have a really good turnout of foreign students," she said. Miss Goins was also asked about any increase in foreign students in the Model UN. FOR THE FIRST time this year any number of foreign students can be in one delegation. In the past, each delegation was allowed only one foreign student representative, she stated. Members of the delegations signed up the first week in March. They were asked to fill out a questionnaire on their country which contained questions on its military and economic policy. They are also given a bibliography of where they can find important information of their country in the Watson Library. Membership in the Soviet delegation was reserved to students in a political science course—Soviet Policies and Problems—taught by Roy Laird, associate professor of political science. Membership in the U.S. delegation was reserved to students in the political science course entitled American Foreign Policy, taught by Clifford Ketzel, associate professor of political science. THESE PROFESSORS are also advisers to their respective delegations and to the steering committee. Prof. Laird explained why the Soviet and U.S. delegations are composed of political science students. He said that, since these two countries are the most powerful in the world today, it is important that they have adequate representation. "These two delegations should be assured of people who do have a knowledge of the policies of their country," he emphasized. Both advisers were asked about the possibility for the admission of Features The TOWN CRIER Features Supplementary Textbook Reading Material Paperback Books, Magazines, Newspapers Greeting Cards, Gifts Hours: 8:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. Granada THEATRE···Telephone VI 1-3-5788 912 Mass. Hours: 8:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. DAILY—Including Sunday Red China this year into the KU UN. Dear Brigitte Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 NOW! shows 7:00-9:00 Dear Brigitte NEXT — GLENN HENRY FORD FONDA THE ROUNDERS in PANAVISION® and METROCOLOR VARSITY ART Attractions Starts TONITE! 7:00 & 9:00 You'll Gasp! AT THE OCCULT, EERIE EXPERIENCE INTO THE SUPERNATURAL... Ingmar Bergman's THE MAGICIAN VARSITY ART Attractions Starts TONITE! 7:00 & 9:00 You'll Gasp! AT THE OCCULT, EERIE EXPERIENCE INTO THE SUPERNATURAL ... Ingmar Bergman's THE MAGICIAN Ingmar Bergman's THE MAGICIAN What Sort of Person Lives at Park Plaza South? (and why you should) You have a choice of many attractive apartments, 1 and 2 bedrooms central heating and air-conditioning disposals, carpeting, front drapes and a convenient coin operated laundromat. "IF IT RUNS true to the form of past UNs, the Red China question will be rejected again . . . but each UN is getting closer to letting China in, particularly with France's recognition of China," Prof. Ketzel said. Some people like to study, some like to sit by our swimming pool and think of grades gone by. Whatever you like, you'll find Park Plaza South a pleasing home for your college days. BETTY JOHNSON Park Plaza South "In the real UN, the vote has been getting closer and closer. In our Model UN, the vote will probably reflect this reality," Prof. Laird stated. Prof. Ketzel was asked if he thought there had been any basic ideological changes in the UN sessions here. He said that there had been no drastic changes. "Students try to reflect the views of their country and not to innovate new policies," he said. 1912 W. 25th Call Day o Night: VI 2-3416 Study in Guadalajara, Mexico The Guadalajara Summer School, a fully accredited University of Arizona program, conducted in cooperation with professors from Stanford Univ. Univ. of California, and Guadalajara, will offer June 29 to August 8, art, folklore, geography, history, language and literature courses. Tuition, board & room is $265. Write Prof. Juan B. Rael, P.O. Box 7227, Stanford, Calif. Business Directory 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 For the best in — ● dry cleaning ● alterations ● reweaving NewYork Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPERANCE Expe Reasc VI 2. GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Expe these write rates 2-164 Established - Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING Form secre and Wholesale Diamond Rings Call Robert A. Lange VI 3-1711 Page 15 17.043 ory SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS Micki's office continues guaranteed typing service by professional secretaries. Call VI 1-2628 or VI 3-5947 or bring papers to Red Dog Inn Building. tt 6 years typing experience plus background in proofreading enables me to guarantee accuracy on college papers. New electric typewriter equipped for interchangeable type sets. Mrs. Berndt, 801 Michigan or VI 2-0400. tf TYPING Experienced typist. 5 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reconnaissance. ALL Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Vale. VI 2-1648. Former teacher will give prompt and careful attention to typing your term papers and reports. 4 years experience, call VI 3-3829. tf Experienced typist wants typing in home Responsible rate, prompt service. Phone: 2-323-6789 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 Experienced secretary will type term papers, law briefs, theses, etc., for student use. Prepare and submit business terms. Fast and accurate. Reasonable rate. Call Marsha戈夫 at VI 3-2577. Theses only on Royal Electric Pica Type writer. CALL MRS. Fulcher at VI 3-0588. Former Harvard and U. of Minnesota and theses, PHONE VI 3-7257, and thesex. Term papers. Theses by experienced typist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tt Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. Will do excerpts from articles in technical journals or carbon ribbon type-writer. Betty Muskraut, 140 Indian, or call VI 2-0991. tf Will do typing in my home. Accurate, reasonable rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at VI 2-0210. tf Experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing. Speaking and language skills and languages. Quick and reasonable. Electric typewriter. Call VI 2-3976. tf Experienced secretary would like typing in her home, with new electric typeset service. Faster fast and accurate service. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Lamert at VI 2-1188. Experienced typist wants theses, term-papers, and dissertations to be typeed on electric (pica type) writerwriter. Please Call Pat Beck at VI 3-5630. tf Typist, experienced with term papers, theses, and dissertations, will give coursework in writing for a cultric machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048. tfr Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Recommended reports or those experienced. Electric typewriter. CALL Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8262. WANTED Experienced typist will do dissertations, manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon, special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I. I-37485. tt Working girl needs roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment. Call VI 3-3988 after five. 3-29 Austrian exchange teacher looks for travelling companion to the west of the city in June. Write to Dr. Joseph Fort Hays Kansas State College, Hays, Kans. Roommate wanted. Want girl to share two bedroom home with working girl or KU student, Call VI 3-3414 or VI 3-9201. 2110 Tenn. 3-24 Wanted. Someone to play GO. Call VI 2-9227 after 7:00 p.m. tr Washing and ironing done in my home 1131 New Jersey Phone VI $-2598 OLD CARS WANTED, top prices paid. If you can drive it in, we'll consider it. Do it today! GI Joe's, 601 Vermont, t ENTERTAINMENT Now you can hear a variety of excellent dance bands on stereo demo tapes, including the abulous Blades, the Norsemen, the buryrs, union and non-union til VI 2-1791. ATTENTION PARTY THROWERS: Do you want the Beattles, the Kingsmen, Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL VI 2-1791. ti Prescription sunglasses in vicinity of Maitt or Summerfield March 15. Reward. call Richard Wler at VI 3-1711. 3-24 LOST Lost—personal and KU identification. Reward for return to Judith Jackson, Lewis Hall. 3-30 FOREIGN CAR BODY SHOP: For competent workmanship, expert estimates, afterterm and evening. 1:00 pm -8:00 pm. 1008 E. 12th. East end of R-36 Garage. MISCELLANEOUS Spring clearance reduced 10-50% demetics. Revlon, Studio Girl, cosmetics. Elswick Beauty Shop three blocks north Union on Mississippi. 942-3-25 M-3 1-609. Complete beauty service. Elswick Beauty Shop. 942 Mississippi. VI 3-6109. 3-25 $CHWINN BICYCLES - service all makes parts and accessories, tires $1.46, tubes tc, pedals baffle, pair, luggage racks and MICR call VI $2.00, hibit at 7tn and Micr call CALL VI 3-0581 Alterations and mending of men's and women's clothing. Sewing of all kinds. Phone VI 3-5136 after 7:00 p.m. or before 9:30 a.m. 3-24 Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-Q ribs that grandma and grandpa can eat, try ours on a per slab. Hours: 11:00 am to 11:00 p.m. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-9510 3-31 Math tutor B.A. degree in math from KU. Experienced in tutoring geometry, algebra, calculus and analytic geometry. Call VI 3-0927. 3-24 friends coming this weekend? Looking for a place with good food at reasonable prices. HILLGREEST BOK RESTAURANT. Plenty of free parking. th and Iowa. tt it's great for a date. Take her bowling at Hillcrest Bowl. Finest lanes in the state. Go to Hillcrest Bowl and also Mon, Tues, and Fri after 9:00 p.m. Hillcrest Bowl, 9th and Iowa. *ARTY TIME?* Building available for PHONOS. Alphabetic PHONOS. Phonics. Ralph Freed at: VI 3-3995. Rent electric, standard, and portable typewriters. Repair all makes of electric, power, and electronic business machines.ern Business Equipment (formerly Business Machines). 15. F. 8th, V. 3-0115. tf Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Thru-Fri-or all dav Sat. or Sun. Phone VI 3-6231. tt Attention: All persons interested in self defense training classes utilizing many of the same throws and smashes used in movies, contact Bob Moffit at VI 3-7102. BUSY PEOPLE—No time to spare for household cares? Have a professional in your home regularly or occasionally Call Pioneer Cleaning Service 3-1408 4-13 Mieki's new secretarial and typing service offers professional work to faculty, students and businessmen. Call for appointment. VI 2-1626 or VI 3-5947. tf FOR RENT Must sublease Stouffer Place apt. beginning April 1st. Fully furnished in last week to campus. Five miles walk to Murphy. Rent is $65 a month. Call VI 3-2524. Furnished 3 room apt. Private bath, all utilities paid except electricity, $80.00 per month. 1343 Tenn. Phone after 5:00 p.m. VI 3-6103. 3-29 Apartment for rent for 3 or 4 boys, furnished. VI 3-2281. tf Large 5 room unfurnished 2nd floor apt. Near 9th and Indiana. $65.00. Call VI 2- 1124. 3-29 Large 1st floor 6 room unfurnished apt. 75.00 call VI 2-1124. DOWNSTEP 75.00 call VI 2-1124. PARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30-60 people, juke box, liquid refreshments, food served. Contact Don at the Gauldlight Tavern for reservations at CALL VI 3-1086. University Daily Kansan Furnished apartment between downtown and KU. Private bath, utilities paid. $59.00 Chance to reduce rent by light housekeeping. VI 2-3784 or VI 3-8181. 3-25 Married, Graduate Students, Faculty-2, bedroom apts, $85.00, 1 available now; 5 available now. Also sleeping rooms. Call for brochure, V 3-2116, Santee Apts., 1123 Indiana, tf Single sleeping room for one man in an apartment. Call VI 3-6723. 3-2 1963 Tempest LeMans sport coupe, 326. V-8, automatic. Console shift, silver, call Ron Freedman, VI 3-1061. 3-26 Why deny yourself prestige, beauty, and efficiency? Be the proud owner of a 1953 phone with everything. New transmission, battery. 2. New phones. $13-30 Call VI 2-2176 at 7:00 p.m. FOR SALE For Sale—14 inch Motorola TV $30.00. cars and stands included V-31 4385. V-32 4385. Khramar Ghia, 1956, perfect for school Broad ear Good condition. Call 3-1747 BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMIUMS! Occidental Term Life: conversion, Go-Back, and Move-Ove options. Age 18 = $33.90 = $10.00. Age 20 = $34.40 = $10.00. Age 22 = $34.70 = $10.00. Call Wes Santee at VI 3-216 for details. tf Now you can hear a variety of excellent king. Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL VI 1-8791. tt Wednesday, March 24, 1965 1959 Gardner 50'x10" house trailer, good condition. Reasonably priced. Call VI 2-0731. 4-15 Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, nimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL V1 2-1901 for free delivery. CHINA-Noritaki, Mayfair design. New, never used or even removed from backing. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk, M 3-7102; tf Students, why throw money away on rent when you can own a 1962 Marlette 10 x 50, modern, two-bedroom mobile home with small monthly payments. payments. For further information in CALL condition. For further information INSTALL RI 8-0973 or RI 8-0916. tt THE STABLES now open every day—Serving steaks, chops, sea food, saud- phere, equipment, new air- sphere. Party rooms available. Phone VI- 3-9644, 140 W. 7th. H Tires--800 x 14 white sidewalls. Two sets. One set is Atlas snow tires, which will go for $5 apice. The second set is $26 (apiece) Riverside white sidewalls. They will go for $15 apice. The set (of 4) is $4. Call Bob Monk-VI -3 7102 t PORTABLE STEREO: Admiral's Finest— two carrying units, 1 for turntable and 2 for speaker systems (2 tweeters, 2 full range woofers) $195 new. Will sell for good offer. CALL: Rusty Callins at VI 3-5721. tf Volkswagen 1964—excellent running condition—serviced at proper intervals—$1500.00 or best offer—cash. VI 2-2168. NEED A BAND? 30 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM. PHONE V1 2-1200. t Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive notes, and materials for the classes. Formerly known as the Teff Notes. Call VI 3-1428. £4.50. TYPEWRITERS, electrics, manuals, portables; sales, service, rentals. Olympia. Hermes, Royal. Smith-Corona. Olivetti. Adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Tyrewriter, 700 Mass. VI 3-3644. tf '59 Austin Healy: less than 5000 miles on new engine, mechanically perfect, aesthetically pleasing. See after 5:30 p.m. at University or call Charles Reagan 3-24 U 4N-3004. BE THE LEADER OF YCUR PACK: Harley Davidson Sportster K, 750 cc, new clutch, and new brakes and tires. THIS IS NO HONDA. For further information about this beautiful machine CONTACT Monti Belot at VI 3-0700. **tf** For sale: 1557 Morgan sports roadster. Call CE 3-6950 in Topeka. Call CE 3-6950 in Topeka. 1963 Austen Healy 3000 Mark II, red, 1900 miles, convertible, roll up windows, overdrive, new tires, excellent condition. VI 2-3673. 3-24 Harmon Kardon model A-300, 30 watt stereo amplifier. Call VI 3-4891. 3-26 Zenith stereophonic high fidelity for sale. Portable, two-speaker, micro-touch needle, two-level stand including album- during nights and early months ago. New cash now, will sell to highest price within 2 weeks. Call Rita, VI 3-2847 after 10:30 p.m. 16 mm. role film movie camera, portable cine light; 3 police radios (1); Motorola walki-kali (low band), (2) high band walki-kali (low band), (3) high band Call Gary Grazda, V-2 9100 Leave your name and phone number if I'm not in. Porsche 1600N, normal chrome wheels, perfect paint and interior, am-shortwave radio, sunroof. This is one of the best type 356 A's available. $1,500. VI 2-5489. 500 premium tires—famous brands for less than off brands—Get our deal before you buy—Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. St. 4-28 1964 Volkswagen, red, with sunroof, AMF- M radio, deluxe interior, whitewalls, many extras; call Mike Lemoine at VI 3-5770. 3-29 Phonographs—final cut on all 1964 models—all famous brands reduced to clear save on Magnavox, General Electric motor at Ray Stoneback's, 923-341 Mass. G.E. stereo phono, repossessed—sold new $69.95, now $40.00 new warranty Ray Lee, repossessed—sold new 50 Volkswagen, perfect condition, radio, unroof, w/w tires, and new engine, supply sell this week. Also HIFI system components and records, cheap 489. 3-28 hort wave AM-FM used radio, $25.00 tay Stoneback's. 3-29 Transistor radios—low low prices! G.E. $8.22, Motorola $10.00, AM-FM $24. Radio headquarters (80 models in stock). Ray Stoneback's, 929-313 Mass. 4-28 HELP WANTED Male waiter wanted to wait at the new Flamingo Club. For further information call Bill Deay, VI 3-2825 after 5:30 p.m. 3-25 Business Directory HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING OPEN 24 HRS. 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VI 3-0138 Open 7-11:00 Sun. thru Thurs. 7-2:00 a.m. Fri. & Sat. Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Auto Service XL2-1708 MUGS 729 N.H. VI 2-1708 24 OZS. - 35c - DX Products Firestone Tires Louise's Bar 1017 Mass. Complete Car Care - Mufflers & Pipes - Tune Ups - Wash and Polish One-Stop Service - Brake Service Bring Auto Problems To Us. ASK ABOUT THE DX TRIAL BOND GUARANTEE Montgomery Ward DX Servicenter Experienced mechanics 6th & Michigan VI 2-9598 Guaranteed Parts Open 7 a.m. to 10 p.m.Daily 7:30 to 9 Sunday Complete — one stop service Open 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. STANDARD BRIDGE STANDARD SERVICE ART NEASE 601 Mass. VI 3-9897 Page 16 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 24, 1965 Republican Stresses Worth of Negro Vote The Republican Party is in bad shape according to James E. Woodson, an attorney and former vice-chairman of the Kansas Republican State Committee. In his talk yesterday at the meeting of the KU Collegiate Young Republicans, Woodson spoke on the "Future of the Republican Party with special emphasis on the role of the Negro Republicans." By Harhar Krishnan Today only one out of every four Americans considers himself a Republican compared to 38 per cent in 1940 and 30 per cent in 1960, Woodson said. WOODSON WAS A delegate to the 1964 Republican National Convention at San Francisco, where he seconded the nomination of Michigan Governor George Romney for President. In recent months he has worked as a founder and member of the Executive Board of the National Negro Republican Assembly. Speaking on the 1964 election, Woodson said that the principle cause of the disastrous defeat of the Goldwater organization was based on their assumption that the old Democratic coalition formed by Franklin D. Roosevelt was disintegrating and that the new conservative consensus had the potential strength to replace it. "Senator Goldwater, the popular head of the conservative movement, was the logical candidate for a successful appeal to the potential conservative majority." Woodson said. The only problem, he said, was that all their assumptions were proved wrong. "In their passion for purity they neglected the fundamental law of political leadership, the need to respect the complexities and diversities of a great national party," Woodson said. "As one journalist wrote, their campaign was one of the most inept and unprofessional campaigns in the American political history," he said. THE MOST SERIOUS flaw in the Goldwater campaign, Woodson continued, was the supposition that the Negro vote could be written off. "The Republican Party had held strong Negro support for 30 years after Roosevelt's victory in 1932," Woodson said. "In 1964, under Goldwater-Miller, the Republican share of the nonwhite presidential vote dropped to 6 per cent compared to that of 39 per cent during the Eisenhower regime." Speaking on the importance of the Negro vote, Woodson said, "The four states of Arkansas, Florida, Tennessee and Virginia clearly would have gone Republican had it not been for the Negro vote. Why this change? I will state that all polls and political experts agree that Senator Goldwater's position on Civil Rights alienated more voters than did his position on any other domestic issue," he said. In maintaining the white backlash strategy the Republican leadership gradually excluded all Negroes from leadership and from policy making positions, Woodson said. "The minorities division was dissolved and the Goldwater-Miller-Burch campaign proceeded without any significant Negro participation." The Goldwater-Miller 6 per cent not only doomed Republican hopes for Presidential victory, Woodson said, but also was fatal to many local Republicans who went down under straight ticket Democratic voting. Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS RIVIERA $400 ALSO $300 TO 975 Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS Owens FLOWER SHOP "Flowers Telegraphed Anywhere" Located Conveniently to K.U. Campus & Lawrence Memorial Hospital — 9th and Indiana — DIAL VI 3-6111 AFTER HOURS CALL VI 3-5238 FREE DELIVERY Garden Center VI 3-2004 13th & N.Y. INDIANA WEST 9th Owens FLOWER SHOP "Flowers Telegraphed Anywhere" Located Conveniently to K.U. Campus & Lawrence Memorial Hospital — 9th and Indiana — DIAL VI 3-6111 AFTER HOURS CALL VI 3-6858 FREE DELIVERY Garden Center VI 3-2004 19th & N.Y. INDIANA WEST 9th MIGHTY-MAC Presents the Knit shirt with the HENLEY look, $5.00 oyster/navy small medium navy/red large new MIGHTY-MAC Base-Man at $16.95 natural navy tan burgundy diebolt's 843 Mass. MIGHTY-MAC Presents the Knit shirt with the HENLEY look, $5.00 oyster/navy small navy/red medium large new MIGHTY-MAC Base-Man at $16.95 natural navy tan burgundy diebolt's 843 Mass. oyster/navy small navy/red medium large new MIGHTY-MAC Base-Man at $16.95 natural navy tan burgundy diebolt's 843 Mass. Campus Politicos Believe in Sophistication By Jim Sullinger With the announcement of Vox and UP platforms this week,political campaigning at KU is in full tilt as the top candidates for each party practice sophisticated politics. Hand-shaking and extra-vigorous campaign speeches are passe. Projecting the image of an intelligent, earnest, hard-working politician whose only interest is better student government is the concern of the political candidates. The candidates, announced last week, are Russ Cummings, Topeka graduate student, who heads the University Party (UP) ticket, and Leo Schrey, Leavenworth junior, who will top the Vox ballot. The vice-presidential candidates are Bill Robinson, Great Bend sophomore (Vox), and Larry Bast, Topeka junior (UP). ONE OBSERVATION expressed by all of these candidates is that running for their offices will be a lot of hard work. Scheyre said he would probably spend from 50 to 60 hours a week campaigning. Concerning his schoolwork, Scheyre said, "It's hard to keep up from day to day. Spring break is really going to be nice." He thought that campaigning was enjoyable and said meeting people was the most exciting part. As to his reason for getting into politics, Schrey said. "Basically, I felt student government could do a lot and I wanted to do it." SCHREY IS studying business administration and plans to go into government work after graduation. Cummings said that most of his time on the campaign trail would be spent meeting students, holding discussions, going to UP meetings, going to dinners and keeping up with campus problems. "I would actively spend from six to eight hours a day on campaigning," he said. "However, every waking moment is involved." Cummings is studying for his M.S. in civil engineering, "EACH PERSON HOPES in his career to have an opportunity to contribute to something he believes in," he said. "I think a lot of KU, the students, and its potential." Cummings' running-mate, Larry Bast, said the most challenging part of campaigning would be trying to get solid Vox members to realize the UP ticket offers them more. Bast graduated from Topeka West high school in 1962 and he is presently the editor of the Jayhawker book. At the height of the election, Bast said he would be at a lunch or dinner for a speech every day and at meetings every evening. His future plans include going through the graduate business administration program and finally ending up in advertising or public relations. so. Things have been going smoothly so far." BAST'S OPPONENT, on the other hand, Bill Robinson, plans to go to law school. He is presently in personnel administration. "It's a lot of work meeting people and listening to them," he said. "It can be enjoyable if you make it Robinson said that in talking to students he found a greater interest than he expected for the short time the campaign has been running. EXPLAINING HIS KIND of campaigning, Robinson said, "First, I keep a large supply of clean shirts. Secondly, I try to maintain a conscious effort to stay on my toes when answering questions. I go from room to room in dormitories but try not to bring politics up on campus." He said the most frequently asked question has been, "Why should we vote for you and Leo." The question, "Why are you running," has also been asked frequently, according to Robinson. ★ ★ ★ ★ Rights Stressed In Party Stands KU's two political parties added momentum last night to the spring all-school elections with announcements of platforms and candidates. Vox Populi party revealed its 1965 platform and candidates for eight of the ten school seats. University Party, which announced its full slate last week, unveiled its platform last night. Vox candidates, and the schools they will run from, are: Ron Peden, Danville senior, engineering; Jon Hope, Kansas City junior, business; Don Gutteridge, Pittsburg first-year law student, law; John Pepper, Lenexa junior, journalism; Spring Stidham, Parkridge, Ill., sophomore, college women; Mike Vineyard, Wymore, Nebr., junior, college men; Jeanette Helfrich, Spearville junior, fine arts; Dan Vossman, Beloit senior, pharmacy. Texts of Platforms on Pages 5 and 8 THE CANDIDATES FROM the education and graduate schools will be announced later as interviews on these candidates have not been completed. Student rights and student opinions were the major issues stressed in the platforms of both parties. Vox advocated the formation of a state and community affairs committee to inform students of civic issues concerning them, and to make state legislators aware of student opinion on the issues. The committee would work through personal correspondence and interviews. THE UP PLANK dealing with student rights proposes a student committee procedural act to be applied by All Student Council regulatory committees in determining policies and administering discipline. The act would guarantee individuals and groups a notice and hearing before authorized bodies for alleged violation of University regulations. It would allow them the counsel of an authorized law student, and would permit appeal to the Student Court for violation of prescribed procedures. (Continued on page 6) 62nd Year, No.107 Wescoe to Ink Ad Policy Bill Daily Hansan Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe was to sign an amendment to All Student Council Bill 7, prohibiting discrimination in the advertising in student publications, later this afternoon. The legislation prohibits the use of advertising in student publications of employment, goods, accommodations, or services that are not available to all students, regardless of race, religion or national origin. The amendment passed at an ASC meeting last Tuesday, also states that any advertising which discriminates in any way against a student due to race, creed, or color, will not be published in student publications. Chancellor Wescoe reported that he was pleased to sign the bill. It will be mailed to Mike Miner later this evening. The University Committee on Human Relations, meanwhile, was to meet this afternoon, and may vote on a recommendation to Dr. Wescoe on university housing list policy. Weather Snow is forecast through tonight with an accumulation of not more than four inches. Friday will be cloudy and continued cold. Stolen Ducks, Intrigue Mark Wild Spring Fling Exuberance Brunt of the eastern campus attack was shared by Miller and Watkins scholarship halls. Between 20 and 40 raiders from men's dorms made their first try for Miller's duck about 8:45. Spring Fling ducks were temporarily retrieved by the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) last late night after duck raiders caused havoc and damage on both sides of Mt. Oread. "WE WERE WARNED about three or four minutes before the attack came," Cathy Waldron, Mankato junior, said. "We rushed outside to protect the duck. The boys started squirting shaving cream and throwing water bombs." The marauders also tried to The warning came from Battenfeld Hall social chairman, Jerry Cochran, Harper sophomore. "The people were down here trying to get our duck, then someone in the group suggested they go to Miller." Cochran said. He then called a warning to Miller Hall. "The first time they came up, I was sitting on the duck's cage, but they took it anyway. Since this was illegal, they brought it back later." Barbara Phillips, Harrisonville. Mo. soophomore, said. steal Watkins' duck during the first round. The duck was saved, but not without "casualties." One raider sprayed Miller's housemother, Mrs. Carl Carter, with shaving cream. Two girls, Paula Tangeman, Newton freshman, and Janet Torkelson, Horton freshman, received minor injuries in the melee. Minor injuries were sustained by several other girls. THE RAIDERS returned about a half hour later for another try at the two ducks, according to Miller and Watkins girls. "The second time we were prepared for them," Miss Waldron said. "We had a fire extinguisher and we used it." "I couldn't believe they were beating and stomping on us like Meanwhile, Ellsworth Hall started the festivities early on Daisy Hill. They lured the Templin Hall guard away from his cage by having him paged. Two Ellsworth residents were ready and volunteered to take over the duck guard. While the regular guard answered his page, the two aliens safely absconded with the fowl. WATKINS' DUCK, Sniktaw, was saved in the fray, along with Miller's Marmaduke. that," Melodie Jones, Kansas City freshman, said. Late in the afternoon Lewis Hall residents got into the spirit and safely guided the Hashinger Hall duck into their cage. AFTER SEVERAL illegal seizures (because force was used), Templin residents were able to capture the Lewis duck. After a heavy bombardment of the area with water balloons, the guard was drenched. Another girl appeared (Continued on page 6) LAWRENCE, KANSAS Thursday, March 25,1965 --- World Spotlight Marchers Finish 50-Mile Walk MONTGOMERY, Ala.—(UPI)—Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. climaxed one of the most unique racial pilgrimages in American history today, leading thousands of followers toward a grievance demonstration at the spot where Jefferson Davis was inaugurated president of the Confederacy. Dramatizing voter registration procedures and other "injustices" to Negroes in Alabama, King and his group began marching the final three miles of a 50-mile hike from Selma to Montgomery at mid-morning. The marchers left the St. Jude Catholic school and hospital complex, where they camped Wednesday night, under tight guard by National Guardsmen and Army military policemen. City police cordoned off 104 streets along the route through residential and business districts to the Capitol. U.S. Says China Makes Threats SAIGON—(UPI)American authorities said today Communist China's announced willingness to send military forces to South Viet Nam was more of a threat than a promise. Officially, neither the U.S. Embassy here nor the South Vietnamese government was prepared to make an immediate comment on the Peking statement. But U.S. analysts said China's position and Wednesday's threat by the Viet Cong to bring in "millions" of Asians to fight American troops both had an "iffy quality." The Viet Cong call for help was regarded as an attempt to legitimize infiltration and arms smuggling and help rally international support for the Communist cause. Astronauts Cheered at Site CAPE KENNEDY—(UPI)—Space twins Virgil I. (Gus) Grissom and John W. Young returned today to the site of their spectacular vault into orbit to receive the accolades of a grateful nation. The beaming astronauts, greeted with kisses from their wives, landed in separate planes on the Cape's VIP landing strip exactly 48 hours and four minutes after their near-perfect three-orbit space flight began just a short distance away at launch pad 19. As the astronauts climbed from their planes, an Air Force band struck up the theme song of the musical show "The Unsinkable Molly Brown" in honor of their Gemini-3 spaceship, affectionately nicknamed "Molly Brown." Scientists Study Moon Shots PASADENA, Calif.—(UPI)—Scientists today began a hard-nosed study of lunar terrain photos obtained by three Ranger spacecraft to decide whether the moon's highlands or lowlands provide the best manned landing site. Rangers 7 and 8 photographed the lunar lowlands—the Sea of Tranquility and Mare Cognitum or Known Sea. Wednesday's Ranger 9 snapped pictures of the highlands—the crater Alphonsus. The ninth and last of the Rangers was the most successful in the $270 million program. The pile of 17,500 photographs returned by the three Rangers is providing earth-bound scientists with more moon information in the past year than astronomers—starting with Copernicus, Galileo and Sir Isaac Newton—have in all recorded history. --- Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 25, 1965 Nonlethal Gas From reading the papers and listening to pacifists, one might think the United States government is participating in the premeditated "gassing" of hundreds of Vietnamese. So-called "gas war" protests have burst forth from just about everywhere. A 50-year-old prejudice still prevents governments from using more humanitarian methods of warfare. When it was first disclosed that the U.S. was providing a nonlethal gas to the South Vietnamese troops, the loudest outcries of horror came from U.S. citizens. The reaction elsewhere was mostly hostile too, except for a few sensible remarks from three British newspapers. Britain's biggest daily, The Mirror, asked this question: "Which is the lesser evil? "The bomb which makes mincemeat of a man or the gas which knocks him out with distressing but not lasting discomfort for the afternoon? "Death at noon—or sickness?" Daily Mail commentator Bernard Levin said: "What the Americans have done is to take in public the first halting step toward something that has eluded mankind since mankind existed—a war that does not kill." Warfare without killing is almost unimaginable. But if we come to accept new techniques of warfare, mankind may yet survive. If we learn to accept a "war that does not kill," maybe we can then learn to accept a world without war. — Gary Noland Guest Editorial How Long, O Lord, How Long? "For a long time we have been told, occasionally by men of the highest office, that you cannot legislate changes in the human heart. You can; we have. Because laws, enforced, compel changes in human conduct. New conduct develops new habits, and new habits develop new attitudes, since man to live within himself, must justify his conduct to himself. Action does change feelings, an old lesson of history, an old principle, I believe, of psychology. never, or psychology. "In this lies the seed of the ultimate triumph for human justice and for the true equality, mutual recognition and respect." — Eric Sevareid November 26,1963 At the heated climax of the long summer of 1963—the monumental "March on Washington"—more than a hundred thousand Negroes were moved to cry, "How long, O Lord, How long?" At the time that appeal seemed to me a sign that the most patient, most enduring race in American society had finally lost faith in the white man. They seemed to be saying that no longer would they be content with the words of promise so often proved to be empty; no longer would they believe the white man's laws would be enforced, for they too had so often been merely crumbs thrown by a troubled national conscience. Today, nearly two years after that August day in Washington, the Negro at the University of Kansas might well be driven to ask. "How long?" TWO WEEKS AGO A BRAVE AND VOCAL minority made a stand, and as a result it appeared that the University was ready to take some long overdue steps to remedy a bad situation. A committee was established to formulate "... legislative, regulatory, and persuasive procedures" to assure "equality of opportunity in every form." By the end of last week it seemed that progress had indeed been made. The chancellor had signed ASC Bill #7, the political football of the year; and despite an almost paranoiac effort from Flint Hall, encouraged the adoption of an amendment to that bill restraining campus publications from doing business with segregationist advertisers. There also seemed to be a serious effort underway in the housing office to expunge from the approved listings all landlords who practice discrimination and to screen new applicants more closely. Those who were negotiating for the Civil Rights Council had the feeling last Friday that all of their gievances would be settled shortly after the holidays, including the touchy Greek question. But then the Board of Regents got into the act. IN THEIR MEETING ON FRIDAY,THE REGents heard Chancellor Wescoe's interpretation of the civil rights movement, commended his conduct of the recent demonstrations, and reiterated a nice-sounding policy of equality. The Board then proceeded, not to encourage Dr. Wescoe to continue his "fruitful" talks with the CRC, but to negate his power to act by decreeing that they, not the chancellor, would investigate and rule on fraternities and other off-campus housing. This decision constitutes a full turnabout from the Regents' stated policy of leaving such matters to individual administrators. A Regents investigating committee will be appointed and will doubtless spend months compiling data that can be in the end little more than trimming for the evidence already in the hands of the CRC and UHRC members. Only when they have made their own study will the gentlemen in Topeka again consider the matter. Have no doubt that by the time a ruling is made by the Regents the snow will again be deep and the birds will again be South. It is not beyond speculation that we may even have a man on the moon, as well. FROM THIS RADICAL SHIFT OF RESPONSIBILITY it seems evident that the Administration's decision to place the fraternity-sorority issue at the bottom of UHRC's agenda was a crafty piece of strategy, indeed. The chancellor seems to have decided that the financial and political pressures on this item would be too great for his shoulders alone, and that the bureaucratic machinery in Topeka could delay the question for months. However, Dr. Wescoe, who has just returned from sunny Florida, still looks good. He made a lot of promises built around a very liberal-sounding statement of principles. But now the Board of Regents, through Mr. Bubb's resolution, has taken the case out of his hands, and it seems that even the publications amendment and the stricter housing practices are useless because the Administration no longer has the power to define discrimination, and furthermore has been ordered by the Regents to continue to deal with Greeks and realtors at the pre-demonstration level. WHAT ALL THIS MEANS IS THAT A HUNDred and ten people went to jail for nothing; administration officials, faculty members and students have wasted a lot of time at the bargaining table; and the UDK can continue to tout the virtues of wall-to-wall segregation in its advertising columns. The only tangible result has been ASC Bill #7, the least controversial of the demands. Something is drastically wrong on this campus, and anyone willing to look around and think for himself knows it. We had only hoped that the chancellor would take the first steps in creating a climate in which fear and prejudice would wilt with time. It now seems that he has succeeded only in further insulating those who thrive in this atmosphere. The People Say. long. O Lord, how long? William D. Lynch Jr. Washington, D.C., sophomore How long, O Lord, how long? DEAR LEMONS, I HAVE BEEN A FAIRLY COMPLACTENT member of the University student body for 3 years, but due to the events and editorials (see Larry Hammond's letter to the editors, page 2, UDK March 15), I feel compelled to take a stand. Let me state at the onset that due to the present ASC (All Student Council) policy on civil rights I feel that I am no longer represented by them. I challenge the ASC to bring civil Dear Editors: rights legislation and proposed censorship of the UDK advertising policy to the vote of the entire student body. I feel that these policies are approaching a "tyranny of the minority." Hammond's remarks on sororities and fraternities imply that there be established a set of "laws" by which we "must" choose our friends and living companions. I feel that the ASC or the CRC or the UHRC, definitely minority groups, have no right to choose which advertisers can make their appeal to the general student body through the UDK. They (the civil rights people) seem to want to fight segregation by segregating against it. Do the UDK staff, the fraternities, the sororites and the students, who feel as I do, have no civil rights? Jerome M. Hughs Bucklin senior PRO-FILIBUSTER RULES COMMITTEE U.S. SENATE CIVIL RIGHTS VOTER REGISTRATION BILLS © 1965 HERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON POST "Don't Be Getting Any Ideas That YOU Have A Right To Vote" The People Say... Dear Sir, I HAVE ATTENDED KU FOR the past four years and have had to restrain myself innumerable times from writing letters to the UDK concerning one issue or another. I'm afraid I must now lift this self-imposed interdict to answer the letter of Mr. Greg Sipe. His arguments verge on the vapid while his Christology is comparable to that of a little old lady who teaches Sunday School at First Middle Class. Dear Sir: Furthermore, I would ask you what nice platitudes "silly and foolish Jesus" was using when he stormed into the Temple (not the Chancellor's office), overtured the tables (which I don't recall happening in Strong) and drove out the money lenders (Dr. Wescoe's secretarial help was not lashed, even once)? I would agree, Mr. Sipe, that the Bible records no instances of Christ carrying a picket sign. He also is not on record as preferring brand X over all others, getting five more miles per gallon with a gasoline having Superpush, etc. The point is that Christ didn't do any of these things because they are relatively modern innovations. But, contrary to what you would have us believe, Christ did express himself forcefully within his cultural setting. "So all silly and foolish Jesus did was to go out and talk to people and show them that to be a Christian was a fine thing," is probably the most ridiculous sentence in Tuesday's UDK. Mr. Sipe, I would recommend that you read Matthew 10:34-35 where Christ states that "I have not come to bring peace on earth, but a sword. I have come to set a man against his father and a daughter against her mother . . ." If you will examine the scriptures closely, you might abandon some of your flippant attitudes and discover that Jesus was somewhat more of a fighter than you imagine. I would further suggest that you ] carefully consider the parables of this man who never fought and only went about talking to people. I would refer you to The Parables of Jesus by Joachim Jeremias as a study aid. Jeremiays says that "The parables are not—at any rate primarily—literacy productions, nor is it their object to lay down general maxims ('no one would crucify a teacher who told pleasant stories to enforce prudential morality'), but each of them was uttered in an actual situation of the life of Jesus, in a particular and often unforeseen crisis . . . they were predominantly concerned with a situation of conflict, they correct, reprove, attack: for the greater part, though not exclusively, the parables are weapons of warfare." So, Mr. Sipe, I would agree that "Christ made it without a picket sign" just as readily as I would agree that the Negro will make it without turning over any tables in the Temple. For goodness sake, realize that there is a slightly different setting today than there was at the time of Christ. I commend to your thoughts the idea that today Christ just might be seen on a picket line, expressing the gospel of love in a contemporary setting, using contemporary methods. R. J. Smith West Plains, Mo., senior To the Editor: I THOROUGHLY ENJOYED the penetrating analysis of early Christian history made by Mr. Sipe in Tuesday's "The People Say . . ." Aside from a few untoward references to Jesus, I find his approach to the American Dilemma disturbingly significant and significantly timely, or something. Writing in his unusual and imaginative style, Mr. Sipe has presented us with several intriguing insights that will, no doubt, open a broad avenue for scholarly investigation. John G. Jewell John G. Jewen Philadelphia, Pa., freshman Dailij Hänsan 111 Flint Hall UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office University of Kansas student newspaper University of Kansas student newspaper February 1989 became biweekly 1904 trivweekly 1989 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. 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. Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. OR national origin EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Leta Roth and Gary Noland Co-Editorial Editors New KU Publication Stresses Literature. Cultural Events Page 3 KU will soon have another addition—a magazine for undergraduates by undergraduates. The new publication, "University Review" is to be a quarterly publication devoted to book reviews, upcoming cultural events on the Hill, articles on current events and other student work such as poetry, according to Bill Panning, Ellinwood senior and one of the editors of the new magazine. 9 the **aris-** in e- fer-* arurb-* arb-* g in gly in sev-* will-* te for hman KU is one of eight U.S. institutions chosen to sponsor a unique program to discuss foreign policy with citizens and community groups. Western Kansas will be the target of this intensive program. Profs to Explain Policy , 1912. Press. York rates: ernoon versity Law- adver- without The purpose of the magazine is to give undergraduates a place in which to publish their work, and to provide the opportunity to share knowledge. Panning said. "We have not yet defined clearly what our editorial policy will be." Panning said, but added that in the first issue an article would appear declaring the policy and the reasons for putting out the magazine. "We will encourage letters coming in to Two professors of political science, Walter Dandelius, a Rhodes Scholar, and Clifford Ketzel, formerly with the State Department, and four U.S. State Department experts on foreign policy will conduct a week-long se- us, and encourage discussion in general," he said. The magazine will carry a regular "Letters to the Editor" section. Editors ries of community meetings in Western Kansas starting March 28. University Daily Kansan As to content of the first issue Panning said, 'We're to have an article on the Soviet economy, two book reviews, an article on Pornography and Censorship', an editorial proclaiming our policy and purpose, and some poetry by students." Cooperating in this program with University of Kansas Extension and political science department and the U.S. State Department are 61 private and junior colleges, high schools, churches, agricultural groups, chambers of commerce, University Extension Centers, women's and service clubs, newspapers and radio and television stations. Official Bulletin Deutscher Verein, 4:30 p.m. Big Eight Room, Kamas Union, German Olympias Hall, 791 N. 56th Street, New York, NY 10022 TODAY YCS, 7:15 p.m. St. Lawrence Student Center Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW Catholic Masses: 6:45 a.m. and 5 p.m. before and during mass. Confessions before and during mass. Wesley Foundation Holy Communion, 7:00-7:20 a.m. Methodist Center, 1314 High School Art Conference, All Day. Campus-wide. Museum of Art Reception, 3:00 p.m. Oakland Museum. Master Prints from the National Gallery. Poetry Readings, 3.30 p.m. Robt B. Butchinson, KU '47. Fort Wayne, Kansas Friday Flicks, 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. Fraser Theater. Pre-Cana Panel Discussion, 8:00 p.m. St. Lawrence College. *St. Law- rance* Student Center. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Teaching Candidates: Interview scheduled for Friday, March 26: Virginia. Arlington County Public Schools, elementary and secondary, 117 Ba. Otner people working with Panning on the magazine are Fred Whitehead, Pratt senior; Steve Munzer, Salina junior; Gary Walker, Wichita senior; Hugh Taylor, England graduate; Bib Cibles, Altamont junior, and Phil Smith, Onaga senior. SAVE SAVE SAVE on Lee Leesure Slacks! Bring this ad in for $1.00 off on each pair you buy. No Limit No Limit Ross DISNEY MENS WEAR Commenting on a rumor the magazine would later become allied with the Honors Program, Aldon Bell. assistant professor of history and faculty adviser to the magazine, said, "Hopefully this will happen next year. The College Office has the plan to put out an Honors Program paper resembling the 'University Review,' and hope to combine the two." 811 Massachusetts CLARENCE BEAMAN Clarence—our no. 1 man on our gas island-is particularly well known to our regular customers. They know that Clarence has been with us for 15 years and has long since built a reputation for friendly, dependable, efficient service. Men like Clarence aren't easy to find—but they make the difference among service stations and we're proud of the fact that, like Clarence, 5 of our 10 employees have been with us for 15 years or more. If you're in need of a service station home, why not stop by and meet the "Men Who Know How?" Could be the best thing you ever did for your car. △ FRITZ CO. Service out of the weather 8th & New Hampshire Phone VI 3-4321 CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 La Pizza Downtown — Near Everything Thursday, March 25, 1965 Just Because... CYD Candidate Withdraws Name Brad Sumner, Leawood senior, has withdrawn his name from consideration for state chairman of the Collegeate Young Democrats. Summer, when questioned Tuesday night, would say only, "I have withdrawn from the race for state chairman. I have nothing further to add at this time." George Groneman, Kansas City, Kan., junior, and president of the KU Young Democrats also declined to comment on Sumner's resignation. Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS NAPOLI $675 ALSO $400 TO 2250 Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS Keepsake SUA FRIDAY FLICKS LONELY ARE THE BRAVE starring Kirk Douglas PLUS "Perils of Pauline" Admission 35c FRASER THEATER 7 p.m. & 9:30 p.m. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 25,1965 THE RED DOG INN PRESENTS The MOONRAKERS Saturday March 27,7-12 P.M. COVER $1.00 per person Friday: THE FLIPPERS A.U.R.H. SPRING FLING-TICKETS ONLY FREE T.G.I.F. with the FLIPPERS 3-5 P.M. 图所示为两种不同类型的电池,左侧为锂离子电池,右侧为磷酸铁锂电池。 Thursday, March 25, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 3 UP Platform STUDENT RIGHTS Consistent with University Party's past tensions and student concern, we propose A. The Student Committee Procedural Act. To recognize the concepts of due process of law to be applied by the ASC and committees in date-mining policies and administering discipline. For example, To permit the ASC Social Committee to empower bodies within the organized living districts; to hear and determine cases for violations of social regulations; to give the ASC Social Committee appellate authority. B. Social Regulation of student living districts. 1. The right of individuals and groups to a notice and a hearing before authorized regulatory bodies for alleged violation of University regulations. 2. The right to the counsel of an anion, his student and the right of his student. 3. The right of appeal to the Student Court for violation of prescribed promise C. Information about student rights. A. Library drive-up depositary. To work for construction of a drive-up-bound door of Watson Library for the purpose of eliminating traffic congestion and illegal parking on Jayhawk Boulevard and for the convenience of students. C. information about student rights. The procedures described in the comprehensive description of students' rights, the procedures involved in student, faculty and administrative policy determination and adjudication, and the effect of such policies on students and students. EXPANSION OF STUDENT FACILITIES AND SERVICES Being concerned about the effective- ment of students, University Party proposes: - Increase tuition. B. Student minimum wage. Realizing that the present low student wage does not enable the University to secure an adequate number of student employees or to give the student sufficient payment for his work, to have the ASC initiate an effort by the student bodies of all state-supported schools to seek legislative action setting a fair minimum student wage in keeping with the needs of both the school and the student. C. Traffic control. To pledge University Party's utmost efforts both in lowering permit charges on zone parking and in eliminating con- trols in the Elsworth and McCollium parking areas. Tau Sigma, modern dance fraternity, will sponsor a dance symposium on Saturday from 9-12 a.m. and 1-2:30 p.m. in Robinson Gymnasium. D. Student action regarding state and local government. 1. To pass an ASC resolution recommending an amendment to the current Kansas law regarding out-of-state property tax on vehicles in order to grant an exemption from such a law for out-of-student students. 2. To propose a student, faculty, administration committee to establish a county commission and to establish county commissions the chief function of such a committee being to research and present this information and provide these bases for the clarification of KU interests. 1. To have ASC publish a brochure on students' government to be sent to new schools. E. New Student orientation. 2. To hold a forum during orientation week conducted by the president and vice-president of the student body and by other campus political leaders to explain the importance and significance of the campus political process. Tau Sigma to Present 2 Dance Symposiums Classes in technique and composition will be conducted by Miss Elizabeth Sherbon, instructor of physical education, and members of Tau Sigma. There will be two divisions, beginning and advanced. Fraternity and Sorority Jewelrv A B Γ Δ E Z H Θ J K A M - Guards - Mugs Rings Pins - Lavaliers - Crests ΖΟΠΡΥΦ ΧΘ Ray Christian THE COLLEGE JEWELER 809 Massachusetts PIZZAHUT REJOICE! SPRING IS HERE! WELL...SPRING WAS HERE. AS THE PRETTY LITTLE SNOWFLAKES DESCEND, LUIGI-WHEN WE ISN'T OUT SHOVELING THEM-SITS IN FRONT OF OUR BIG PIZZA OVENS AND DREAMS OF WARM, SUNNY ITALY. SO DO THE REST OF US. IF YOU FEEL THE SAME URGE, STOP BY. YOUR PIPING HOT, DELICIOUS PIZZA CAN TAKE YOU BACK TO ITALY IN A HURRY. IT'S AS UNIQUE AMONG PIZZAS AS THE SNOWFLAKES. CARRY OUT? PHONE V13-3516 SUA POETRY HOUR Friday March 26 ROBERT HUTCHINSON will read his own poetry 3:30 p.m. — Forum Room Kansas Union Free Coffee Free Coffee UNIVERSITY EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE SERIES presents JOHN DOS PASSOS' MARCH 25,26,27 "U. S.A." MARCH 30,31,APRIL 1,2,3 Tickets: $1.50 — .75 with KU ID Page 6 University Daily Kansan Rights Stressed - (Continued from page 1) In a plank dealing with civil rights, Vox pledged unconditional support of the University Human Relations Committee, saying that the party will work to give the UHRC any power necessary to carry out its work, and to make it the final arbiter of all disputes in the area of civil rights. VOX ADDED that it will encourage students who feel they have been discriminated against to take complaints to the committee. The party will further work, the platform said, to see that action is taken to investigate discriminatory practices in the community as well as at the University. Both parties offered specific proposals for expanding University facilities. UP stated it would work for the construction of a drive-up book depository at the rear of Watson Library to eliminate traffic congestion and illegal parking on Jayhawk Boulevard. Vox stated it would work with the Kansas Union Bookstore to enable students leaving the University to obtain their allotted bookstore rebates. The TOWN CRIER The TOWN CRIER Features Supplementary Textbook Reading Material Paperback Books, Magazines, Newspapers Greeting Cards, Gifts Hours: 8:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. DAILY—Including Sunday 912 Mass. Bronzeware Temperature Tara Silver Sculpture Lark Tapestry Silver Sculpture Lark We have your favorite sterling pattern...as featured in Reed & Barton's MASTER OF THE LETTERS SILVER OPINION COMPETITION See the complete Reed & Barton line now as well as those of other famed silversmiths at MEMBER AGS AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY MEMBER AGS AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY Marks JEWELERS 817 Mass. VI 3-4266 Rose Cascade The Diamond Francis I Classic Rose Hampton Court Ducks — (Continued from page 1) and volunteered to relieve the assigned guard. Unfortunately for Lewis, the new guard was not a resident, but a girl friend of a Templeinite and she turned the duck over to the boys When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified During the evening Templin and Ellsworth, with the captured ducks, successfully held off minor attacks. Meanwhile, a front door window glass was broken at Ellsworth Hall. A special 1 p.m. AURH meeting was held today to make a final decision concerning the ducks. Cindy Culbert, Larned sophomore and AURH representative, said, "We're concerned about how this will make the AURH appear across the state. It was a very small group that caused all this damage and ruined everyone's fun. It's a shame their actions are hurting all of us." ojf MISS LAWRENCE-KU PAGEANT ALL NEW IN 1965 Tickets Available At The Kansas Union and at the door MINISTER Miss Lawrence-KU of 1964 CATHY BERGSTROM Tickets Available At The Kansas Union and at the door Tickets $1.00 8:00 P.M. TOMORROW NIGHT FRIDAY MARCH 26 LAWRENCE HIGH AUDITORIUM Thursday, March 25, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 7 F. W. H. Stepping out with that special guy this weekend? Give him the very best impression — send your clothes to Independent now . . . for the best results then! INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners 9th St. & Miss. 740 Vermont Call Vk 3-4011 for free pick-up and delivery service Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 25,1965 Vox Platform KU AND KANSAS Vox Populi recognizes the need to establish better communication between students and their community and state, not only to inform students about issues but also to make智育ators aware of student opinion on such issues. Therefore: (1) State Popul will work to establish a State and Community Affairs Committee to serve as a link between students and their state and local governments. (2) Vox Populi will work to see that the Student Opinion Poll is used more frequently to secure student views on civic issues, and that (3) The State and Community Affairs Committee expresses student opinion in legislators and administrators three times as personal correspondence and interviews. (4) Examples of issues that the committee would be concerned with would include automobile taxation in college counties, state minimum wage laws, minimum age for beer and hunting and mating, quaring all local government offices to be open. [Bills concerning all these subjects are now before the state legislature.] CIVIL RIGHTS Vox Populi pledges its unconditional support of the University Human Relations Committee, since it is a common meeting ground for all groups to air their grievances. for all the Vox Popul will work to give this committee any power necessary to control its work, and to make it the leader of all disputes in the civil rights area. Greece Related To Space Travel Tuesday was a day of space travel. But that night a KU professor of aeronautical engineering chose to speak on his homeland, Greece, rather than on outer space. C. J. Cholliasmenos, assistant professor of mechanics and aeronautical engineering, began his lecture to the KU Chapter of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics by relating space travel to ancient Greece. "I feel strange talking about ancient Greece on the day of a flight into outer space." Choliasmenos said. "In ancient Greece, a mythological father and son team invented the airplane. The son, Icarus, flew too close to the sun and the wax, holding his crudely-made wings together, melted. Icarus drowned in the sea." Choliasmenos noted that the early Greeks talked about metallic spheres in which they might fly to the moon. The KU professor started a return journey to his home last summer. Instead of flying by airplane he took a steamship from New York. A man holding a pipe and reading a book. Bills Bungled Your Budget? You need a checking account at Douglas County State Bank. Save time and footwork. A cancelled check is your proof of payment, it shows where every cent goes. Come see us today. (2) Vox Populi will encourage all students who feel they have been discriminated against to take their complaints before this committee. (3) Vox Populi will further work to see that action is taken to investigate the discriminatory practices of the community as well as of the university. Douglas County State Bank 9th and Kentucky CLASS ACTIVITIES Vox Populi realizes that the significance of class activities has declined in recent years because of the increasing diversity of classes, which often make classes more meaningful again: 1) Vox Populi will work to create a system of voluntary fee payment for classes. 2) Populi will develop a new show, so that class officers may have funds for worthwhile projects. FAIR CAMPAIGN PRACTICES (2) Vox Populi will work to see that a delegate of the Board of Class Oversee is seated in the Council. Sub-titled Council, so that each class may be assured recognition on the ASC. Vox Populi believes that KU student government has too long suffered the costs of party oriented and student-didactic campaigning, that much can be done to raise the level of maturity of campus politics by securing agreement between the petition parties on campaign plans and will be necessary to establish a Fair Campaign Practices Committee. (1) The Fair Campaign Practices Committee would be composed of members of each political party and one faculty member (acting as chairman). (2) It would meet to discuss matters relating to campaigns and elections that any member of the committee should wish to bring before it. (3) Results of the committee's work would be made public. BREVENDS uld be made public. BOOKSTORE REFUNDS BOOKSTORE Vox Populi responds that students leaving a school have often been unable to receive their allotted bookstore refunds. Vox Populi will work with the Kansas Union Bookstore to allow these students to receive their refunds by leaving their receipts in a central depository to be held until they become valid. Perfectly Matched- Artcarved® M.K.I Artcarved B M.K.I Artcarved Artcarved® You're right for each other... and so right to choose Artcarved—the finest name in wedding rings since 1850. No other rings have the detailing, the ageless grace . . . the superb-finished touch of the master goldsmith. Yet they cost no more than ordinary rings. Prices from $8. WEDDING RINGS A. ORACLE SET Groom's Ring $39.50 Bride's Ring $39.50 B. GOLDEN THREAD SET Groom's Ring $27.50 Bride's Ring $24.50 Rings enlarged to show detail. Your KU ID is your pass to credit BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 743 Mass PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS VI 3-4366 PETER SMITH BLAST OFF TIME — March 26th & 27th — 8:30 p.m. - 12:00 with Ann Brewer & The Flames At The New Exciting Flamingo 1st right across river bridge to end of Street, then right. $1.00 per person IT'S REALLY GOOD Dixon's Famous Cheese Cake TRY SOME SOON DIXON'S 2500 W. 6th VI 3-7446 What Sort of Person Lives at Park Plaza South? (and why you should) You have a choice of many attractive apartments, 1 and 2 bedrooms central heating and air-conditioning disposals, carpeting, front drapes and a convenient coin operated laundromat. Some people like to study, some like to sit by our swimming pool and think of grades gone by. Whatever you like, you'll find Park Plaza South a pleasing home for your college days. 10 1912 W. 25th Park Plaza South N U the of t trac will puse ing Call Day o Night: VI 2-3416 Thursday, March 25, 1965 University Daily Kansan Naval ROTC Program Passed Page 9 University officials yesterday gave the green light for the introduction of the two-year Naval ROTC Contract Program on the Campus. KU will now join the 52 college campuses around the nation participating in the new program. The program is open to male sophomores in good standing in any accredited college, university, or junior college. Students who apply and are accepted may enroll in any of the colleges having Naval ROTC units, subject to acceptance by the college. Students accepted into the two year program will be required to attend a six-week summer training session. It will consist of academic instruction, laboratory drill and physical education. Applicants will receive $78 per month while attending this session. tween the students' junior and senior years. As a member of this program, the individual will receive, commencing at the beginning of his junior year, $40 per month retainer pay for the two academic years he will be in the program. A summer cruise is required be- Upon graduation, the student would agree to accept a commission, if offered, into the Navy or Marine Corps Reserve, and serve on active duty for a period of not less than three years. May 1, 1965, is the deadline for receiving applications. David Leonard, Lawrence freshman and SPU member, said the group mailed petitions to the President Monday, containing about 70 signatures. He said more will be sent later. SPU Keeps Picketing in Snow Steven Cromwell, Chicago junior and SPU member, said that the picketing will end Saturday morning. About 15 or 16 members work alternating two hour shifts around the clock. Accompanied by continued cold weather and falling light snow this morning, the Student Peace Union demonstrators continued to picket the Military Science building. The SPU members are circulating an appeal to the KU students to sign petitions to President Johnson, asking that the U.S. "immediately halt all military action directed against the government and people of North Viet Nam." HD Prompt Electronic Service TV Color TV Antennae on 6 Hi-fi Stereos Changers - We Service All Makes - Radios Transistors Car Radios RCA Motorola Airline GE Zenith Silvertone Philco Magnavox Coronado Bird TV-Radio Service PHONE VI 3-8855 908 Mass. St. - Lawrence, Kans. A New LP Record sing PETER, PAUL & MARY "A Song Will Rise" On Mono and Stereo Records Bell Music Co. 925 Mass. VI 3-2644 tomorrow's concept in a business case today! Jettache' tomorrow's concept in a business case today! Jettache' Now only $19'95 • 5 Year Guarantee. • Sesamee Combination Lock. • Legal Size Polio Sections. • Hooney, Rugged, Lightweight. • Elegant Plaid Fabric Interior. • Scuff-resistant Grained Exterior. • 3 Popular Executive Colors. Charcoal, Olive, or Metallic Bronze. AVAILABLE AT THE kansas union BOOKSTORE KU The Pit WEEKEND SPECIAL Double Hamburger (1/2-lb. lean ground beef) and French Fries 60c Friday & Saturday Only On these beautiful spring days, as the temperature soars into the twenties and the first robin stands with his feet frozen to the ground, a student's thoughts naturally turn to indoor sports, such as the Southern Pit. How, you ask, can the Southern Pit be considered a sport? Elementary, dear reader. Although it masquerades as a business, the most broad-minded junior in Summerfield would deny such stature to the Pit, and despite widespread assumption to the contrary, Uncle Dick's Bar-B-Que Bazaar is not a charitable institution. What, then remains but to call it a sport, a thoroughly enjoyable pastime in which the muscles which activate the elbow are slowly strengthened, and the body thrives on a delightful diet of tender, tangy bar-b-que and light golden suds. We urge you to improve your health and general well-being, and thence the welfare of your country, by embarking on the Pit Crew Training Program Today! **TOPS AT KU** -The best selling records at Kief's Record & Hi-Fi this week are "Peaches 'n' Cream" (45) by the Ikettes and The Temptations "My Girl" album (LP). PIT PICK—This week the Pit Crew honors Shari Davis, Lawrence senior. Page 10 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 25, 1965 PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS NO ENTRY KU Has 'Facelifting'; Smokestack Included Several Buildings and Grounds employees have taken to the sky. Perched high on the sides of the smokestacks of the university power plant, and working on a scaffold on the front face of Bailey Hall, the men can be seen daily, despite weather and winds. Harry M. Buchholz, superintendent of the KU physical plant, said the men are repairing cracks on the sides of the smokestack and removing weak gutting from the top of Bailey. Wood in the guttering has deteriorated and is being replaced, Buchholz said. The cracks on the smokestack are being plastered. Buildings and grounds workmen have also been preparing for spring in other ways during the past few weeks. "The cold weather just puts the work back inside," Buchholz said. The heating system of the university has had to be changed over Work on the two structures will continue for several days, Buchholz said. from gas to oil, a switch made every year. During the spring and summer seasons landscaping is another large job for buildings and grounds, Bucholz said. Temporary help is hired in the summer to care for lawns, trees, and flowers of the campus. Plans are already being made for landscaping the new dormitory that will be built at 19th and Naismith Streets, Bucholz said. Construction of the dormitory will probably begin the first part of April, according to J. J. Wilson, director of dormitories. Buildings and grounds are also preparing air-conditioning for the warmer seasons to come. Air-conditioning will be turned on April 15, according to Buchholz. Russia Launches Ship With No Men Aboard MOSCOW — (UPI)— The Soviet Union today launched an unmanned Cosmos satellite, the Soviet news agency Tass announced. How About Going Bowling? BOWLING MEANS FUN. Come to the Jaybowl! Fun for you and your friends. Your date gets to bowl every other game FREE! 6 p.m. Friday—6 p.m. Sunday (Remember-Mom Bowls FREE) © BECW.INC. Open 8:00 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. Monday—Saturday Open 1 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. Sunday Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION It's O.K. to owe RAY Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 LAST 2 DAYS — James Stewart Dear Brigitte Starts SATURDAY — METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER presents GLENN HENRY FORD FONDa The ROUNDERS GO STARRING SUE ANE LANGDON HOLIDAY WILLS IN PANAVISION* and METROCOLOR VARSITY ART Attractions TONIGHT & FRIDAY Ingmar Bergman's THE MAGICIAN Shows at 7:00 & 9:00 NEXT — A very special agent with an eye for women! CODE 7 ... VICTIM 5 TECHNICOLOR® TECHNISCOPE® A COLUMBIA RELEASE PLUS EXTRA BONUS! Return showing of "DR. STRANGELOVE" Starts SATURDAY — METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER presents GLENN HENRY FORD FONDA THE ROUNDERS COSTARING SUE ANE LANGDON HOLIDAY WILLS AND CHILL IN PANAVISION® AND METROCOLOR VARSITY ART Attractions TONIGHT & FRIDAY Ingmar Bergman's THE MAGICIAN Shows at 7:00 & 9:00 VARSITY ART Attractions TONIGHT & FRIDAY Ingmar Bergman's THE MAGICIAN Shows at 7:00 & 9:00 NEXT — A very special agent with an eye for women! CODE 7... VICTIM 5 TECHNICOLOR* TECHNISCOPE* A COLUMBIA RELEASE PLUS EXTRA BONUS! Return showing of "DR. STRANGELOVE" A very special agent with an eye for women! CODE 7 VICTIM 5 TECHNICOLOR* A COLUMBIA RELEASE TECHNISCOPE* PLUS EXTRA BONUS! Return showing of "DR. STRANGELOVE" LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners To Do Your Best It Helps To Look Your Best. To keep your clothes looking sharp, let Lawrence Laundry and dry Cleaners handle your needs. Our Sanitone service is recommended by White Stag, "Botany" 500, McGregor, Haggar and Worsted-Tex, to name only a few. it e Free Pick-up and Delivery Service 1001 New Hampshire VI 3-3711 Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS TYPING Micki's office continues guaranteed typing service by professional secretaries. Call VI 1-2626 or VI 3-5947 or bring papers to Red Dog Inn Building. tf Experienced typist wants typing in home. rates, prompt service. Phone: VI 2-3356 Experienced typist. 5 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric type- writer, fast accurate service. Responsible CALLs MARR. Bidart, 2407 Yale. VI P-12648. 6 years typing experience plus background in proofreading enables me to guarantee accuracy on college papers New electric typewriter equipped for interchangeable type sets. Mrs. Berndt, 801 Michigan or VI 2-0400. if University Daily Kansam Former teacher will give prompt and careful attention to typing your term papers and reports. 4 years experience, call VI 3-3829. tf Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. Gestetner Duplicator Mrs. McEdowney, 2521 Alabama St. Phone VI 3-8568. tf Theses only on Royal Electric Pica Type writer. CALL MRS. Fulcher at VI 3-6581. Experienced secretary will type term papers, law briefs, theses, etc., throughout the country and business times. Fast and accurate. Reasonable rate. Call Marsha Goff at VI 3-2577 Former Harvard and U. of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports, and theses. PHONE VI 3-7207. tf Term papers, Theses by experienced typist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tf Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses, in a cellen't work environment. Sales. Electrician, rubber typewriter. Betty Muskrau, 140 Indian, or call VI 2-0991. tf Will do typing in my home. Accurate, reasonable rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at VI 2-0210. tf Experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing critical languages. Receives speaking, languages. Quick and reasonable. Electric typewriter, Call VI 2-3976. tt Typist, experienced with term papers, theses, and dissertations; with typist- ing equipment; with electronic machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W.13th. VI 3-6048. tkf Experienced typist wants theses, term-papers, and dissertations to be typeed on electric (pica type) writerprint. Please Call Pat Beck at VI 3-5630. tf Experienced secretary would like typing in her home, with new electric writer, or faxing. Fast accu- rate at VI. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Langer at VI 2-1188. Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher, type all assignments or tasks. Ex- required. Electric typewriter. CALL MRS. Marsh at V3-8262. tf Experienced typist will do dissertations, manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon, special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I. V-37-4855. tf FOR RENT Must sublease Stouffer Place apt. beginning April 1st. Fully furnished in last building to usaseo & campus. Five month lease on usaseo. Rent is $85 a month. Call VI 3-2524. 3 room nicely furnished, newly decorated apartment near campus. Private entrance and bathrooms. Utilities paid included. $55.00, available now. VI 3-7830 I or VI 3-0298 Furnished 3 room apt. Private bath, all utilities paid except electricity. $80.00 per month. 1343 Tenn. Phone after 5:00 p.m. VI 3-6103. 3-29 Apartment for rent for 3 or 4 boys, furnished. VI 3-2281. tf Large 5 room unfurnished 2nd floor apt Near 9th and Indiana. $65.00. Call V1 2- 1124. 3-29 Large 1st floor 6 room unfurnished apt 2158 East 13th Ave UU and down $75.00. Call VI 2-1124. 3-29 Furnished apartment between downtown and KU. Private bath, utilities paid. $59.00. Chance to reduce rent by light housekeeping. VI 2-3784 or VI 3-8181. 3-25 Married, Graduate Students, Faculty-2, bedroom apts, $85.00, 1 available now; 5 also sleeping rooms. Call for brochure. VI 3-2149, Santee Apts. 1123 Indiana, tf PARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30-60 people, juke box, liquid refreshments, food and beverage. Contact Don at the Gaslight Tavern for reservations or CALL VI 3-1086. HELP WANTED Male waiter wanted to wait at the new Flamingo Club. For further information call Bill Deey, VI 3-2825 after 5:30 p.m. 9:25 164 Corvair Spyder coupe, metallic blue, 4-speed, white walls, heavy duty suspension, posttraction, Lucas lights, history warranty. Call V1 2-3103 evenings. 1963 Austin Healey 3000 Mark II Deluxe Roadster. Clean interior and excellent mechanically. Wire wheels, hardtop, multiband radio, five good tires plus two snow. Must sell, best offer. VI 2-0123 after 7:00 p.m. 3-29 FOR SALE SAVE SAVE SAVE Just $2,300.00 buys a 64 Barracuda, automatic transmission, radio and heater, 273 cubic in. V-8. Fully equipped, under factory warranty, low mileage. Must sell at once. Call VI 1-1972 for information. 3-31 SPINET PIANO, walnut finish, for sale by Mid-States Piano Co., 317 E. Walnut Springfield, Missouri. Party with good credit may arrange most attractive purchase. May be seen locally. Write immediately. 3-2 1963 Tempest LeMans sport coupe, 326, 328, 329. Call Reif Freedman V I-3 1061. 3-59 Why deny yourself prestige, beauty, amo efficiency? Be the proud owner of a 1953 HP computer. Create new trans mission. battery. 2 charge. $1300. Call VI 2-2176 at 7:00 p.m. BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMIUMS! Occidental Term Life: conversion, Go-Back, and Move-Over options. Age 18 = $33.90 = $10.00, Age 20 = $34.40 = $10.00, Age 22 = $34.70 = $10.00, Call Wes Santee at VI 3-2116 for details. tf Now you can hear a variety of excellent king. Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL VI 2-1791. tf 1559 Gardner 50'x10' house trailer, good condition. Reasonably priced. Call VI 2- 0731. 4-15 Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, nummegraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL V1 2-1901 or free delivery. Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive for classes. Formerly known the Theta Tts. Call VI M 3-1428. $4.50. Tires--800 x 14 white sidewalls. Two sets. One set is Atlas snow tires, which will go for $5 apiece. The second set is $26 (apiece) Riverside white sidewalls. They will go for $15 apiece. The set (of 4) is $4. Call Bob Monk-VI 3-7102' tlf TYPEWRITERS, electrics, manuals, portables, sales, service, rentals. Olympia, Hermes, Royal, Smith-Corona, Olivetti. Adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Tyrewriter, 700 Mass. VI 3-3644. BE THE LEADER OF YCUR PACK: Harley Davidson Sportster K, 750 cc, new clutch, and new brakes and tires. THIS IS NO HONDA. For further information about this beautiful machine CONTACT Monti Belot at VI 3-0700. tf Students, why throw money away on rent when you can own a 1962 Marlette 10 x 50, modern, two-bedroom mobile home. This home is clean and in excellent condition. For Further information CALL R 8-0973 or R 8-0916 tf PORTABLE STEREO: Admiral's Finest— two carrying units, 1 for turntable and 1 or speaker systems (2 tweeters, 2 full range woofers) $195. Will sell or good offer. CALL: Rusty Callins at VI 3-5721. tt CHINA-Noritakti, Mayfail design. New, never used or even removed from pack- ing. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk M. 3-7102. THE STABLES now open every day—Serving steaks, chops sea food, sandwiches, party management, new atmosphere. Party menu available. Phone 3-9644, 1401 W.7th. tf 16 mm. role film movie camera; GI portable eine light; 3 police radios: (1) Halliercaster's crx 1, 30-50 mg. base unit; or crystal or receive, (2) Motorola walki-talki (low band), (3) high band converter. Call Gary Grazda, VI 2-9100. Leave your name and phone number if I'm not in. tt Harmon Kardon model A-300, 30 watt stereo amplifier. Call VI 3-4891. 3-26 Zenith stereophonic high fidelity for sale. Portable, two-speaker, micro-touch needle, two-level stand including album- record, $150 or $250 months ago. Net cash now so will sell to highest price within 2 weeks. Call Rita I. 3-2847 after 10:30 p.m.. tf NEED A BAND? 3 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM PHONE VI 2-2100. 500 premium tires—famous brands for less than off brands—Get our deal before you buy—Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. St. 4-28 Phonographs-final cut on all 1964 models—all famous brands reduced to clear images on Magnavox, General Electric and Motorola at Rocky Stone Bay. **929-931 Mass.** 4-28 Porsche 1600N, normal chrome wheels, perfect paint and interior, am-shortwave radio, sunroof. This is one of the type 356 A's available. $1,500. VI - 2489- 32. G.E. stereo phono, repossessed—sold new digital sound recorder Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass St. 3-29 '60 Volkswagen, perfect condition, radio, wroof, w/ tires, and new engine. Must sell this week. Also HIFI system components and records, cheap. 3489. 3-29 TR-3, 1857, $695.00, VI 2-1020, 2235 Westchester, 3-29 short wave AM-FM used radio. $25.00 Ray Stoneback's. 3-29 Transistor radios - low prices! G.E. $8.22, Motorola $10.00, AM-FM $24.24. Radio headquarters (80 models in stock). Ray Stoneback's (929-931) Mass. 4-28 WANTED Working girl needs roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment. Call VI 3-3988 after five. 3-29 Austrian exchange teacher looks for travelling companion to the west of the GF in June. Write to D. Denosel, Felt Hall Kansas State College, Hays, Kans. Wanted. Someone to play GO. Call TF 2-9227 after 7:00 p.m. Thursday, March 25, 1965 OLD CAKS WANTED, top prices paid. If you can drive it in, we'll consider it. Do it today! GI Joe's, 801 Vermont. tf ENTERTAINMENT Washing and ironing done in my home reasonable rates. 1131 New Jersey Su phone VI R-2598. ATTENTION PARTY THROWERS: Do you want the Beatles, the Kingsmen, Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL VI 2-1791. tf Now you can hear a variety of excellent dance bands on stereo demo tapes, including the abulous Blades, the Norse, the bursy; union and non-union, tt VI 1-27191. Lost—personal and KU identification. Reward for return to Judith Jackson, Lewis Hall. 3-30 LOST Spring clearance reduced 10-50% dermatics, Revlon, Studio Girl, cosmetics. Elswa Beauty Shop, three blocks north of the Union on Mississippi 942 Mile 3-1609 3-125 MISCELLANEOUS FOREIGN CAR BODY SHOP: For competent workmanship, expert estimates, afternoon and evening, 1 100 p.m. to midnight. 1008 E. 12th. East end of Ray's Garage. 3-26 Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-Q ribs that grandma and grandpa can eat, try ours or our slab. Hours: 11 a.m.o on order to 10 p.m. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-9510 3-31 Complete beauty service. Elswick Beauty Shop. 942 Mississippi, VI 3-6109. 3-25 $CHWINN BICYCLES--service all makes parts and accessories, tire $1.46, tube tire, blower, luggage racks and downs. SEE BLEE racks at 7in and Mii r CALL VI 3-0581. Friends coming this weekend? Looking for a place with good food at reasonable prices. HILTON RESSTAUANT. Plenty of free parking 9th and Iowa. tt it's great for a date. Take her bowling at Hillcrest Bowl. Finest lanes in the state. Also Mon, Tues, and Fr. after 9:00 p.m. Hillcrest Bowl, 9th and Iowa. Rent electric, standard, and portable typewriters. Repair all makes of electric, mechanical, or modern Business Equipment (formerly Business Machines), 15 E. Bth. 9, V-3115-011. Attention: All persons interested in self defense training classes utilizing many of the bowls and smashes used in VI JI - 7102, movie contact Bob Moffit BUSY PEOPLE—No time to spare for household cares? Have a professional cleaner in your home regularly or occasionally. Call Pioneer Cleaning Service 3-4408 4-13 Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:30 p.m. Mon-thru-Fri, or all dav Sat. or Sun. Phone VI 3-6231. tf Micki's new secretarial and typing service offers professional work to faculty, students and businessmen. Call for appointment. VI 2-1626 or IV 3-5947. tf CLASSIFIEDS Bring Quick Results CHICO'S DRIVE-IN EEE MAH GOOD 19th MAS SI. ZO-MAR Mexican Food! OPEN 11:AM-12:00PM M-M-th 11:AM-100AM F_{N_1}$ BUSINESS DIRECTORY 24 HOUR SERVICE (TUES. THRU SUN.) - Lubrication . . . . $1.00 - Brake Adjustment . . . 98 - Wheel Alignment - Automatic Transmission Page Fina Service 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694 SERVICE YOU CAN TRUST! - Complete Auto Servicing Open 7-11: 00 Sun. thru Thurs. 7-2-00 a.m. Fri. & Sat. If we don't have what you want— we'll call it! Wagner's Texaco 23rd & La. VI 3-0138 - Dependable Cars Wholesale Diamond Rings Call Robert A. Lange VI 3-1711 VI 3-4430 1910 W. 23rd Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING Drive-In Pet Center GRANT'S Music Instrument Repair FREE PARKING 8-6 Mon.-Fri. Hair Salon For Your BEST Haircut Mayhugh 4 Chairs 8-5 Sat. Come to PLAZA Barber Shop 1804 Mass. VI 2-9462 In Dillon's Plaza In Dillon's Plaza Staf-O-Life Health & Diet Store - Vegetarian - Arabic - Indian - Oriental 17 W. 9th VI 2-2771 Hours: Mon, 2-6 Thurs, 10-7:30 Tues., Wed., Fri., Sat. 10-6 HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 25, 1965 CRC Says KU Can Guide State View in Race Area Many of the attitudes which exist in Kansas are formed and changed by actions taken at KU, according to statements made by Bert Rinkel, Scott City, at a meeting of the Civil Rights Council (CRC) last night. "Racial feelings among sorority and fraternity members here are directly related to the power structure in our state. This is one of the reasons why racial problems still exist in our society," Rinkel said. He was reporting to the group on the findings of the CRC with regard to racial discrimination in the Greek system. Runkel was outlining a few of the points which will be presented by the CRC to the University Human Relations Committee in the future. He pointed to five ways in which integration can be accomplished within the Greek system or other effective action can be taken to end discrimination in this area. "THEIR CAN BE forced integration; open rush with the first 20 or more persons to sign being accepted; and encouragement by the university community toward local autonomy of the chapter. Cross Afire Seen Outside Apartment A burning wooden cross was found outside the apartment house of Walter Bgoya, co-president of the CRC. Tuesday night. Bgoya, Tanzania senior, was taking a shower last night at about 12:30, in the apartment he shares with Charles Hook, Glen Head, N.Y., sophomore and Student Peace Union president, when a neighbor from the apartment above called and told Bgoya there was a fire outside. The neighbor was P. Suryanarayana, visiting assistant math professor. Together they went to look. They found the burning cross outside Bogya's window made of wood and covered with cloth. No one was seen outside. "Integration can be accomplished slowly over a number of years or the Greeks can be ordered off the campus altogether," he continued. KU Negotiates Medical Plan On the KU campus Rinkel suggested that "we establish undergraduate control within the house, do away with the 'blackball' system and establish instead a ruling that a two-thirds majority is necessary to reject a person." MEMBERS OF THE group who were arrested during the sit-in demonstrations at the office of the chancellor were given an opportunity to sign statements which would allow them to be represented by attorneys representing the CRC. Preliminary negotiations between KU and the Blue Cross and Blue Shield were begun yesterday over the cost of next year's premiums. mittee, said that another meeting would probably be necessary before any decisions could be reached. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, student health director and coordinator for the All Student Council Health Com- Dr. Canuteson said that the cost of the 1963-64 Blue Cross-Blue Shield program was reviewed in order to establish the probable premium costs for next year. THE CAMPUS "BARBER SHOP" 5 barbers NO LONG WAITS HAIRCUTS $1.75 JUST NORTH OF UNION STUDENTS OVER 21 Carload to City Hall by 5:00 p.m. Friday, March 26th for registration. Please vote in City Election Patronize Kansan Advertisert April 6th. I will appreciate your support. John John H. Emick H. Emick For Your City Commissioner AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION TABLE TOPS AUTO GLASS Sudden Service East End of 9th St. VI 3-4416 COMPARE! COMPARE! OUR NEW NEW OUR NEW NEW ArtCarved® Dream Diamond Rings Behold PATRICIAN-proud pure, daringly different. It's but one of the ultra new Dream Diamonds by ArtCarved, From $150. Marks Jewelers 817 Mass. VI 3-4266 OREAD JAZZ FESTIVAL (Saturday, March 27) PRESENTS A JAZZ FORUM featuring HERB SMITH QUARTET TONIGHT FREE Hashinger Hall 8:00 p.m. Ellsworth Hall 9:15 p.m. nws wtiWS H nRI OlyS ... Daily Hansan 62nd Year, No. 108 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Friday, March 26, 1965 Alabama Klansmen Arrested In Slaying of Rights Worker WASHINGTON — (UPI)—President Johnson announced today that four Ku Klux Klansmen in Birmingham, Ala., have been arrested in concession with the death of Mrs. Viola Greggo Liuzzo. Johnson made the announcement before television cameras in the East Room of the White House. He was flanked by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover and Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach moments after he had received astronauts Virgil I. Grissom and John W. Young in the same room. THE IDENTITIES of the four Klan members according to the President and Hoover are: Eugene Thomas, 43, Bessemer, Ala.; William Orville Eaton, 41, Bessemer; Gary Thomas Rowe, 31, Birmingham, and Collye Leroy Wilkins Jr., 21, Fairfield, Ala. He called the sniper shooting of Mrs. Liuzzo "a stain on our American society." "Due to the very fast and efficient work of the FBI," Johnson said at 12:40 p.m. EST, "... arrests were made a few minutes ago of four Ku Klux Klan members in Birmingham, Ala., charging them with conspiracy to violate the civil rights of the murdered woman." MRS. LIUZOZ, mother of five, was shot by a sniper Thursday night about 10 o'clock while driving from Montgomery to Selma with some of the participants in the Selma-Montgomery civil rights march. Johnson said the four would be arraigned immediately and brought to trial. He said all were members of the United Klans of America, Inc., Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. Mrs. Liuzoo, Johnson said, was "murdered by the enemies of justice." He issued what he called an "appeal and a warning" to all Klan members; "Get out of this KKK now and return to a decent society before it is too late." Fling Excitement Goes Afoul; Ducks Recalled Until Race Too much enthusiasm by ducknappers and no cooperation from the weatherman resulted in the recall of Soring. Fling ducks last night. "Weather was turning for the worse and enthusiasm of all the participants was so great that we thought with these two factors it was necessary to call in the ducks," Elaine Rinkel, Scott City junior and Spring Fling committee chairman, said. THERE WILL STILL be a duck race at 3 p.m. Saturday. "Each hall may pick up its duck at Templin Hall Saturday morning for the duck race." Miss Rinkel said. "We didn't have any real trouble. The weather was very bad and very hard on everybody. We thought it in the best interests of everybody to pull the ducks in," Rardin said. Ron Rardin, Leawood senior and chairman of the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH), which sponsors the event, said. "The whole purpose in having duck stealing and putting out ducks in the first place was to build enthusiasm in the halls. But, we created too much enthusiasm. TO PREVENT THE have of Wednesday night the AURH had established certain rules and regulations at a meeting yesterday afternoon. A duck patrol was provided, made up of Spring Fling committee members. They would patrol the area of the halls to keep the movement of the duck-nappers under control. SPU Protest Called to Halt The round-the-clock vigil by the Student Peace Union in front of the Military Science building was ended today after 100 hours. The decision to end the vigil was made at a special meeting of SPU at noon today on the picket line. A triple purpose was listed for the vigil by CharlesHook, Glen Head, N.Y., sophomore and president of SPU. The group seeks negotiation of the war in Viet Nam, the resignation of Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) cadets, and signatures from the student body on a petition to be sent to President Johnson requesting that he safeguard Viet Nam and strengthen the United Nations, Hook said. Petitions with approximately 70 signatures were sent to the President earlier this week, according to David Leonard, Lawrence freshman and member of SPU. Also all residence halls were asked to keep their duck cages at least ten feet away from any glass to reduce danger of breakage. WATER BALLOONS were legalized as both offensive and defensive weapons as long as they only contained water. "If there is ice on the pond (Potter Lake) we might turn the race into a walking duck race inside Allen Field House," Miss Rinkel said. The ducks were returned to the participating residence halls late yesterday afternoon. Immediately Ellsworth Hall's residents, in the spirit of Spring Fling, captured Grace Pearson Hall's duck to add to their collection. WATKINS HALL was first attacked by water balloons at 6 p.m. The duck was taken when the guard went inside to don dry clothes. It was returned because of the physical force used in its acquisition physical force used in its acquisition. In the meantime Watkins residents, thinking members of Joseph R. Pearson Hall, who were their dinner guests, swiped the duck held one boy cavite in the store room. TO RETALIATE JRP residents seized Glenda Phetteplace, Smith Center freshman, and Carol Cornelius, Kansas City freshman, both Watkins residents. A small ban of Templinites marched on Jollife Hall in order to get the four ducks that the hall held. Besides their own they held ducks from Sellards, Stephenson and Battenfeld. The dorms finally came to an agreement and all of the prisoners were released. WHEN THEY SAW they could not get the ducks without physical violence they dispersed. The boys heaved balloons at the area of the cage for about 10 minutes. At 9 p.m. about 40 JRP residents moved on Watkins and Miller. In summing up the activities of the night, Rardin said. "Tonight nothing serious did happen but we had threats of it happening. Any thing we had tonight did no damage and we wanted to keep it this way." IN THE MEANTIME the activities on Daisy Hill were relatively quiet with only a few isolated attacks. A few eggs were reportedly thrown at Watkins but no damage was done. Weather Miss Rinkel stressed "Duck-napping is great fun but the greater part of the fun is yet to come in the activities planned." The weather bureau predicts clouds and snow flurries tonight. Northwest winds tonight will be up to 20 miles per hour. It will be warmer tonight and tomorrow, with a low tonight of 20. LAST NIGHT concluded the last of three nights with exchange dinners between the living groups. Many of the dinners were followed by hour dances. Tonight a dance will be held, for couples only, at The Red Dog Inn featuring the Flippers. Tickets are $2.50 and still may be purchased through hall chairmen. Saturday morning the activities will be carried on in Allen Field House or on Daisy Hill. A Gymkhana is planned for the Templin parking lot at 8:30 a.m. Coed volleyball is set for 9 a.m. AT NOON A PICNIC lunch will be served in the field house. Residents not eating there may eat in Templin or JRP. All of the other dormitories will not serve lunch. Saturday afternoon will include the marathon which is a surprise entailing an old tradition, the bod race, and a pie eating contest. UHRC Studies Teacher Policy Student teacher placement and a recent Board of Regents policy statement were yesterday discussed at a meeting of the University Human Relations Committee. The committee met in closed session and with representatives of the Civil Rights Council, according to Laurence Woodruff, dean of students. CHANCELLOR W. CLARKE Wescoe attended part of the session to explain and comment on Friday's Board of Regents policy statement concerning discrimination. Woodruff said the teacher placement discussions were still in the "hearing evidence" stage and a statement would be issued by the UHRC at a later date. "It (the resolution) provides an opportunity for everyone to be heard. Quite properly, it provides for a policy which will cover every institution of higher education under the jurisdiction of the board." Wescoe said. "It makes the discussion of our University Human Relations Committee exceedingly important for they will, in line with the last statement of the resolution, determine the facts on this campus for the board," he concluded. THE BOARD OF REGENTS resolution, introduced by Henry Bubb of Topeka and John W. Eberhardt, Wichita, follows: "In accordance with its historic policy the Board of Regents will continue to prohibit discrimination on the basis of race, religion or national origins within institutions under its control; will uphold the responsible exercise of the rights of academic freedom, freedom of speech, freedom of association, peaceful assembly and petition; and will expect its institutional officers actively to defend them." "The board expects its institutional authorities by any legal or disciplinary means necessary to preserve the peace and safety of all persons on institutional property and actively to prevent any interference with or disruption of educational functions. "The only new question before the board is that which has been raised to what, if any, policy it should adopt regarding student organizations housed in their own units not on state or campus property. "THE BOARD DIRECTS its chairman to appoint a committee to study this question in depth and report its findings and recommendations. Until such time as this report is made, the institutions will continue such relations as they now have with these groups. "Further, each institution will be expected to assist the committee in ascertaining facts and practices by whatever means necessary." L. D. Morgan, Goodland, board chairman, did not immediately name the committee of regents, but said he would shortly. ★★★ Rights Policy is Law The All Student Council passed the amendment at its last meeting, Mar. 16, with a 15 to 9 roll call vote. An amendment to the Human Rights Bill, which prohibits discriminatory advertising in student publications, went into effect yesterday as Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe signed the legislation. The amendment calls for all student publications not to accept commercial advertising for employment, accommodations, goods or services unless they are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. It also gave the University Human Relations Committee (UHRC) the Miner said, "I thought it (the amendment) was a wise action by the council and I'm very happy the Chancellor concurred." power to judge all complaints of advertising discrimination. Atter the signing, Chancellor Wescoe sent the amendment to Mike Miner, Lawrence senior and ASC chairman. OJF Goes "One More Time" Miner also said the amendment became effective as soon as it was signed. A type of American music, developed from ragtime by introduction of eccentric noises and Negro melodies, and now characterized by melodious themes, feverish or subtly syncopated rhythms, and varied orchestral coloring. Enforcement will not be the job of the ASC, but all complaints will be referred to the UHRC. "It will be their decision whether the complaint is valid or not," said Miner. What is it? Jazz. And Jazz at KU will be blowing all day tomorrow in the Kansas Union. THE OREAD JAZZ FESTIVAL, in its second year, will feature eight collegiate groups, including two from KU: The Herb Smith Quartet and the 16-piece KU Kicks Band. The festival has groups from University of Missouri at Kansas City, Macalester College in St. Paul, Minn., Indiana University, Depauw University, UCLA, and Xavier appearing. Formed to bring the best of collegiate jazz to KU, the festival has received a national prominence. This year's judges include Phil Woods, an East Coast alto sax player; John Hammond, director of talent acquisition for Columbia records; Dan DeMichaels, editor of Downbeat magazine; and Claire Fischer, a West Coast pianist. THE GROUPS WILL be competing for prizes and scholarships from various instrument manufacturers and Berklee College, in Boston. Mass. The winning groups will give performances in the Kansas City Jazz Festival. Last year, Herb Smith, Memphis senior, was selected as the festi- vail's best reed player for his performances on alto sax. TICKETS FOR THE festival are $1.50 and are available at the Kansas Union, Strong Hall, from various merchants in Lawrence. J Photo by Harry Krause COOL NOTES—Altoist Herbie Smith wailed it cool last night as his group visited residence halls to promote the Oread Jazz Festival which will begin tomorrow. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 26, 1965 Quack, Quack! Duck-napping entered the realm of a very dangerous sport last night as the residence halls fought for possession of each other's quackers. AURH became alarmed and collected all of the ducks. Nasty comments about the intelligence of those involved in duck-napping have been made. The more intellectual among us seem to feel that messing around with ducks is below their sophisticated dignity. In short, they think it's a bunch of tripe. After all, they say, it doesn't further the educational realm of college life. This attitude is snobbish. Duck-napping is certainly not any worse than a chariot race. In fact, I think it would be more fun. Of course duck-napping is trivial. It's supposed to be. It's not going to shape our young impressionable minds with profound and serious thoughts, but it is a great way to spend an evening if you don't want to study. I DO THINK some people took the sport a little too seriously last night. It is kind of bad when a housemother gets sprayed with shaving cream. That's going a bit far. I cannot understand the idea that college students continually have to have some great and noble cause in order to be valid students. Ducknapping, goldfish swallowing and flagpole sitting have a valid place in college life. Being an optimist, I can't see that the world situation is so bad that students can't have some fun without long-nosed intellectuals morbidly forecasting our doom as thinking persons. — Leta Roth The People Say.. Editor: AFTER HAVING READ THE varied opinions expressed in The People Say with reference to the recent CRC demonstrations, it seems to me that there are some widely held misconceptions which ought to be dispelled. In attempting to do this I regret that I do not have the skill to couch my thoughts in the subtle and satirical phraseology which has characterized many of your recent letters. I shall have to try, as best I can, to resort to a straightforward presentation of the facts as I see them. Misconception number one: "Demonstrations don't accomplish anything; they simply stir up resentment and harden resistance." The fact is that the purpose of a demonstration is not to solve a problem, but to create a climate favorable to the solution of a problem. This climate can range from outrage at the audacity of the demonstrators to a deep feeling of guilt on the part of those responsible for the conditions causing the demonstration. Actually, the specific reason of a concerned individual is not important. What is important is that he is aware and is concerned that some solution be achieved. Whether for or against, he can no longer ignore the fact that a problem exists, and whether as a businessman he says—"we must solve this problem or I'll go broke," or whether as a Christian liberal he says—"let's solve this problem because it is the right thing to do." doesn't really matter. What is important is that he wants a solution to the problem as much as the person who is carrying a sign or sitting in a hallway. The proof of the efficacy of this technique is abundant. Would the Civil Rights Act of 1964 be the law of the land if the March on Washington last summer had not so aroused the nation that the lawmakers could not resist the overwhelming tide of public opinion to find some solution to problems which prompted the March? Would the Congress now be feverishly working a Voting Rights Bill if the Negroes in Selma had not taken to the streets? Closer to home. Would the UHRC be currently negotiating with the CRC if the sit-in in Strong Hall had not occurred? The answers to these questions, I submit, are abundantly clear. Misconception number two: "The way to change a person's behavior is to change his mind, his heart, and his ideas; not by legislation, executive order, picket signs, demonstrations, etc." The fact is, the way to change a person's attitude is to change his behavior in such a manner that a change of attitude may result. To illustrate this I cite the example of the desegregation of the Armed Forces of the United States. Prior to the President's order to completely integrate the Armed Forces, a majority of the members of these forces were convinced that segregation was a good thing, primarily because that was all they had known, and if left alone, probably would have continued this practice indefinitely. Having been ordered to change their behavior, the opportunity to change their attitudes was opened to them as a result of the new contacts with Negroes on an equal basis. When their stereotyped ideas were exposed to the light of truth, in most cases, they disappeared. Today it is an accepted fact that integration of the Armed Forces was a good thing. People's attitudes were changed because their behavior was changed. Misconception number three: "The Negro needs to get on the good side of the white people and gain their respect and then the white people will be glad to give them their equal rights." The fact is that most Negroes couldn't care less whether or not they "get on the good side of white people," and the only respect they want is the respect for the dignity of human rights which they feel is obligatory on the part of every other human being. The Negro in America is a citizen when he is born and thereby entitled to all the rights of citizenship from that instant. Unfortunately, it seems to be the contention of a great many people that the Negro alone must exhibit some special qualities to gain "the respect of the white people," before they are willing to give him what in fact is and has been from the moment of his birth, rightfully his. This is the most repugnant notion in the whole specious structure which has been erected by people like Mr. Sipe to justify their inability to face up to a basically simple truth: That in the year 1965 in the United States of America there is absolutely no justification—no matter how you try to rationalize to the contrary—for the denial of the full participation of the Negro in all areas of American life. COSMONAUT TWINS COSMONAUT TWINS THE GEMINI BOYS ©1965 HERBLOCK THE GEMINI BOYS 65 HERBLOCK Marvin W. McKnight Supervisor Language Laboratorv "You Know How It Is With American Kids They Drive Before They Start Walking" Dailij Hänsan University of Kansas student newspaper !IUniversity 3-3648. newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904. trweckley 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Rep- tition. Mail subscription rates: 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University day. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or na- EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Leta Roth and Gary Noland Co-Editorial Edit Deloitte Noland Co-Editorial Editors JESSE DEPARTMENT NEWS DEPARTMENT Don Black ... Managing Editor Bobbie Bartelt, Clare Casey, Marshall Caskey, Fred Frailey, Assistant Managing Editors; Judy Farrell, City Editor; Karen Lambert, Feature-Society Editor; Glen Phillips, Sports Editor; Janet Chartier, Telegraph Editor; Harry Krause, Picture Editor. Our Baffled Youth BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Tom Fisher ... Business Manager Nancy Holland, Advertising Manager; Ed Vaughn, National Advertising Manager; Dale Reinecker, Classified Advertising Manager; Russ Calkins, Merchandising Manager; Bob Monk, Promotion Manager; Gary Grazda, Circulation Manager. American youth is confused. It cannot get the point of what American life is all about. A tragic example is a lad named Barney, who was haled before the Council of Elders again last week for admonitory lecturing on the American way. Several years ago Barney was at a state university, majoring happily in football weekend, fraternity science and the philosophy of the convertible coupe. One day the Russians placed a piece of metal in orbit around the earth, and Barney was summoned before the Council of Elders. "You are letting America down," the elders said. "How do you think this country can survive if you are content to loaf while Russians spin metal through the ionosphere?" The chastened Barney quit his fraternity, started hissing the football team and grew wan and spooky as he mastered the conjugation of Greek verbs, the melting point of vanadium, the categorical imperative and the far outposts of biochemistry. In no time at all, he was back before the elders. "Look at yourself," they said. "You are a colorless drone. What this country needs is not a mass of young bookworms, but well-rounded mature citizens who know how to live the well-balanced life. Along with your studies, you must learn how to relax and get more out of living." Accordingly, when Easter recess came Barney obediently went to Fort Lauderdale and had a wonderful time tearing up the town. That summer he went to the Newport jazz festival and tore up Newport. "Barney," said the great elder, "you have to understand that these violent outbursts are sick and antisocial. What this country needs is young people who will leave college prepared to fit into society and make a positive constructive contribution. For a year Barney studied American society and prepared himself to fit in. He bought an Ivy League wardrobe, insured himself heavily and started angling for a job that would allow him to retire at 45 with a comfortable annuity. Whenever politics was discussed, he said that politics was not up his alley, and whenever anybody made a slighting remark about the government he made a note of it in his diary against the possibility that he might someday be interrogated by the FBI. While free speech was all right in its place, the great elder went on. Mao was distinctly outside the American mainstream. "Stay between Norman Thomas and Barry Goldwater," he advised. "Find something typically American and get committed to it. This country needs a youth that is more vitally committed." Depressed but still loyal, Barney transferred to the University of California where he grew a beard, began speaking well of Mao Tsetung and agitating for free speech. In six weeks he was back before the council. Last week, still in his beard, Barney took part in a civil rights sit-in protesting in a generalized way against the theory that people who want to vote ought to be clubbed by the police. His appearance before the elders was more argumentative than usual. "When we urged you to have the courage to be different," the great elder explained with infinite patience, "we did not mean the courage to be terribly different." While it was certainly unjust to club persons for wanting to vote, the elders explained, the American way was to rely on the law. By engaging in a sit-in, Barney had violated the law. In its way, sitting-in was as dangerous to American life as the beating of people who wanted to vote and, indeed, the punishment was usually more severe. "It won't do, Barney," the elders told him. "You're too cautious, too conformist, too security-minded. What America needs is youth with the courage to be different." For the first time in all his hearings, Barney spoke. "I must be growing up." he said, "for I think I understand. You are saying that sitting-in is just as bad as blowing up Sunday schools." "Ah," said the great elder with infinite sadness, "when you are truly grown up you will learn not to give such emotional interpretations to the wisdom of your elders." He paused a moment. "Why don't you get committed to something that people don't care about so much?" he suggested. "That's the kind of commitment this country expects of its youth." — Reprinted from The Kansas City Star NC BOOK REVIEWS THE REINS OF POWER, by Bernard Schwarz (American Century, $1.75). Without pretending to do an all-encompassing job on the Constitutional history of the United States, Bernard Schwartz has provided for the Hill and Wang series on American history an illuminating essay. It is a small book, with interesting perceptions. Schwartz gives somewhat more background on the legalistic backgrounds of the American system and less discussion of developments. To him, English constitutional history is highly important, but not merely because of the platitudinous name of John Locke. Sir Edward Coke, he feels, may be even more significant, for Coke's views were not academic speculation but the law of the land, and as a judge himself he handed down important pronouncements on the law. Beyond this early phase, which Schwartz calls "Seedtime," the predictable history unfolds—the Revolution, the fight over the Constitution, the decisions of Marshall, the disputes over state rights, the Civil War, the days when Congress was supreme after the war, the early 20th century power of the Supreme Court, the revolution of the thirties, and such recent decisions as Baker v. Carr on legislative apportionment. him- inself etire tressed, body of it inter- ious youth city of Tseefore " the in the went y be- "Find untry rights peoplerance vote, w. By tting- e who more just be g that you are perpre- "Why about of its Star century, The Con- tz has story an options. galistic develop- portant. Locke. Coke's and as on the me," the the Con- rights, the war, the tution of ligislative North Radar Areas Bombed; One Near Chinese Mainland SAIGON —(UPI)— U.S. Navy warplanes bombed four North Vietnamese radar installations today, including one on an island 75 miles south of the Chinese Communist mainland. It was the deepest penetration of the air war. ONE OF THE radar installations was located on Bach Long Vy Island in the Gulf of Tonkin. It is about midway between the North Vietnamese coast and the Communist Chinese island of Hainan. Bach Long Vy is 90 miles off the coast and 140 miles east of Hanoi, the North Vietnamese capital. A spokesman said two of the more than 40 carrier-based pet fighter-bombers in the mission "ditched" in the South China Sea on the return flight, but both pilots were rescued. A third plane, a propeller-powered Skyraider, made a crash landing at the American air base at Da Nang. The pilot was not injured. The other targets were at Ha Tinh, Cap Mui Ron and Vinh Son. Vinh Son is the northernmost of the three--about 160 miles south of Hanoi. It has been raided previously. The four Communist radar stations were destroyed or heavily damaged, the spokesman said. In Saigon, the World Health Organization (WHO), an adjunct of the United Nations, said a bubonic plague outbreak was reported in the capital city and seven other areas of the country. The disease was a major killer in Europe during the Middle Ages, but the development of a serum has reduced the danger of epidemic in modern times. All of the 28,000 American troops in South Viet Nam are immunized against the disease. A SPIKESMAN for WHO said there were 19 confirmed cases of the plague and three deaths during the period from Feb. 28 to March 18. Two of the deaths were reported in Saigon and the third in Binh Dinh Province, an area 300 miles northeast of the capital. The other confirmed cases were in Darlac, Kien Hoa, Pleiku, Nha Trang, Bien Hoa and Long Khanh Provinces. A report was filed by WHO authorities here to the organization. s western Pacific regional office in Manila. In Manila, Dr. C. H. Yen, a WHO consultant on communicable diseases, were Vietnamese authorities were apparently able to cope with the situation without any emergency assistance. "I THINK the local health authorities are trying to combat the disease." Yen said. "They have merely reported to us and have not asked for emergency help. Apparently they can handle it locally." Yen said the situation could not be called an epidemic "because epidemic means the disease has no boundaries and spreads everywhere." Eubonic plague became known as the "black death" during a 14th century epidemic which killed an estimated 25 million persons in Europe. A Hong Kong epidemic in 1899 produced a 95 per cent mortality rate. The symptoms include prostration, delirium and extreme fever, sometimes as high as 107 degrees. The disease is transmitted to humans by fleas from infested rats. Except 6 p.m. Sat. — 4 p.m. Sun. HOT DONUTS 8-12 Deliveries over $1.00 Open 24 Hours 8:00-12:00 p.m. Donuts Rolls Milk Sandwiches Bread Ice Cream Friday, March 26, 1965 University Daily Kansan Pa. JOE'S BAKERY 616 W. 9th VI 3-4720 When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified h.i.s NATURAL SLACKS At The University Shop SUA FRIDAY SUA FLICKS "LONELY ARE THE BRAVE" Starring: Kirk Douglas PLUS "Perils of Pauline" ADMISSION 35c FRASER THEATER 7:00 p.m.-9:30 p.m. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 26, 1965 Browning's Poems Draw Crowd In the relaxed atmosphere characteristic of the SUA Poetry Hour, Dennis Quinn, associate professor of English, read selected works of Robert Browning to faculty and students. The group, estimated at 150, overflowed the Music Room of the Kansas Union as they clustered around Quinn. The few who arrived early took the existing chairs while others lined the walls. Many sat at cross-legged attention on the floor. "I chose to read Browning because he is a great representer of virtues and vices," Quinn said. He explained that today these virtues and vices are less admired and hated than in Browning's time. He added that Browning had strong feelings, convictions, and beliefs, and that, "Whatever you may say about Browning, you cannot charge him with timidity, weakness, triviality, whining self-pity, or faint-heartedness." QUINN speculated that these are our vices. "We tend to admire weaklings and losers," he said. Quinn's first selection was "The Pied Piper of Hamelin." "This narrative poem shows Browning's power to convey the happenings of events," he said. Citing "How They Brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix" as a better-known example, Quinn added that Browning's love of high spirits and hatred for niggardiness becomes readily apparent. "THE PIED PIPER" the familiar tale of the colorful wanderer who rids the town of Hamelin in rats only to be doublecrossed by the town's elders over his just payment for services rendered. He spirits away the children in retaliation and is never seen again. Quinn also called Browning a great love poet—the greatest since Donne who came 200 years earlier. He used as an example "Porphyria's Lover," a monologue of a man who "Another cause for the failure of love is man's refusal to act on his opportunities." Quinn explained that for Browning, there was no second chance. To show this facet, Quinn read "Youth and Art," the story of a woman who reminisces about such a lost chance. Quinn said that in this poem, "Browning presents the insane but common error of those who would attempt to hold on to love to render it static--a state rather than an act." strangles his love to rid her from "pride and vainer ties." pieces, are examples of Browning's happier love poetry, he said. "Even here, however, it is acknowledged that the breathless joys of meeting and union must ultimately end with the pain of parting," Quinn explained. "IN BROWNING," he said, "love is against great odds and frequently is unsuccessful because of man's condition and his refusal to accept his finite condition." HE OFFERED "Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came" as an example that the hope and courage Browning admired was that which arose in the face of adversity at its worst. "The story, one concerning a young candidate for knighthood who reaches his goal (the Dark Tower) only after many hideous adventures, clearly shows Browning's talent for the grotesque and the ugly," he added. Quinn rounded out the hour with "Epilogue to Asolando" a short piece considered appropriate to be Browning's own epitaph. KU Invites Top Students To Summer Honor Study "Meeting at Night" and "Parting at Morning," two much shorter Bright, prospective freshmen are being invited to attend KU's Summer Honors Institute, according to Robert P. Cobb, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. "We expect from 30 to 35 prospects to attend the session." Dean Cobb said. The institute will be in session from June 10 to August 7. "The program is open to students who are eligible for the College Honors program. Summerfield and Watkins finalists and National Merit semifinalists automatically qualify," Cobb said. Other interested students should ask their counselors to forward test data and a letter of recommendation. Applications are due April 15. The program was established about five years ago. Cobb said applicants would be selected sometime between the deadline date and May 1. COBB EMPHASIZED that the program is open to all qualified students, regardless of their fall plans. "However, we have found that most of Program participants will take honors courses in English, philosophy, and biology or political science—a full schedule of eight semester hours' credit. them usually do plan to continue at KU," he added. IN ADDITION, weekly dinner-discussion groups will be held with selected members of the faculty. The full range of social, musical and theatrical events during the summer session will also be included in the program. Cobb said a limited number of partial scholarships will be available, with preference for students who have received scholarship awards at KU for 1965-66. Lindley is Geology Home Lindley Hall, home of rock collectors, salt experts and glacier watchers, is as unique as its geologist occupants. By Irvana Keagy Lindley also belongs to the astronomy, the chemical and petroleum engineering, the geography and the meteorology departments. The basement, a maze of crates, huge, discolored bottles, and instruments and tools of every design, reflects an orderliness all its own. One member of the basement crew BUT THE building's interior makes it even more unusual. is Dr. Louis F. Dellwig. His office is camoufaged among the crates and tools, his paper-stacked desk cramped by huge shelves and cabinets of mineralogy and salt books. Maps hang from every inch of available wall space. On the first floor are found several offices and labs. One belongs to Norman Plummer, who has done most of his work in ceramics. His office is orderly with respect to his work, yet his desk and window sill are display cases for colorful bricks, ceramic ashtrays, and rocks. You Name It... We've Got the Levi's You Want! - Unshrunk Levi's - Pre-Shrunk Levi's - Corduroy Levi's in 4 Colors - Stretch Levi's in 5 Colors - Slim-Fit Levi's in 7 Colors "Come In and Try Some On" LAWRENCE SURPLUS 740 Mass. VI 3-3933 UNIVERSITY EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE SERIES presents JOHN DOS PASSOS' "U. S. A." MARCH 25,26,27 MARCH 30,31,APRIL 1,2,3 Tickets: $1.50 — .75 with KU ID Ir L The Festival all pa is alm prese Audi "I type this last the show ed a ity." Aft session man sophia imprforei the V have omis A in e 50th ma ters first 1915 S 33 University Daily Kansan Page 3 International Show Features Lions. Ribbons and Suicides "I am very optimistic about the type of show that will be presented this year," he said in an interview last night. "All of the groups, through the presentation of their skits, have shown they are very much concerned about giving a show of high quality." The twelfth annual International Festival, where, contrary to Kipling, all parts of the world meet together, is almost ready for its program to be presented at 8 p.m., April 17, in Hoch Auditorium. After its first tryout and practice sessions this week, program chairman David Vargas, Costa Rican sophomore, said he was very much impressed with the response of the foreign students, who will make up the program. Vargas said he expected some 90 foreign students to work in this year's program. Its aim, he said, is to present to Americans slices of foreign cultures through their arts, music, dance and drama. VARGAS SAID that many people have expressed concern about the omission of the exhibits and the Prakash Nagori, Indian sophomore and publicity chairman of the program, said the festival committee had excluded the exhibits and fashion shows because they had involved too much work. THE ARAB-AMERICAN Club will present Arabian dances through the aid of professional dancers. The dances will be varied, Vargas said. A group of German students will Friday, March 26, 1965 "We are doing fewer things this year," Nagori said, "but we are going to do them much better. We will have more time and energy to exert in less areas." fashion show that were part of the program last year, but he felt that overall the show will be better. The Chinese Club will present a Chinese traditional folk dance called the Lion Dance, Vargas said. In this dance, he explained, two dancers perform under a huge lion costume; their feet are the lion's feet and they move about in different manners making the lion seem alive. "THIS DANCE is about 2,000 years old." Adrian Fung, Hong Kong graduate student and president of the Chinese Club, said. "We usually perform it around our New Year holiday. There are many different steps that one could use to perform this dance; it takes from five to ten minutes to perform." present a series of folk songs with a dramatic background of students socializing after a day of class work, Vargas said. The Chinese Club hopes to do a very traditional "ribbon dance". Fung said. Two dancers, using brightly colored ribbons twelve feet long, wave the ribbons in the air as they dance but they must not let the ribbons touch the floor. Fung said. Earth Science Group Celebrates 50 Years "I am not sure at the moment," Fung said, "but we would very much like to have Chinese music to accompany us in our two dances and possibly a folk song. We will try to get some." An honorary national fraternity in earth sciences will celebrate its 50th anniversary here Monday. Sigma Gamma Epsilon has 57 chapters in the United States, but the first chapter was founded at KU in 1915. The national convention will run for three days next week. After chapter reports on Tuesday, two field trips are planned for Wednesday--one will deal with the cyclothemic deposits of Kansas and the other with Pleistocene geology of northeastern Kansas. THE JAPANESE-American Club will present a suicide drama called Hara Kari, Yusuke Kawarabayashi, Japanese graduate student and president of the Japanese-American Club, said. The play is speechless so actions are patomimed. Vargas said. Wednesday there will be a banquet for fraternity members, Dr. David B. Kitts, associate professor of geology at Oklahoma University, will be the guest speaker. Two of the founders of Sigma Gamma Epsilon will accept a plaque honoring the fraternity's golden anniversary. THE TWO ORIGINAL founders who will accept the plaque at the banquet are Clark B. Carpenter of Golden, Colorado and Glen L. Allen of Miami, Florida. The two men, along with seven other fellow students, founded the Alpha chapter of Sigma Gamma Epsilon on March 31, 1915. The Alpha chapter has a unique method of obtaining funds for field trips, guest lecturers, and social events. Members of the chapter maintain a coffee bar in Lindley Hall. This is the primary source of revenue for the chapter and proceeds from the enterprise average five dollars a day, according to Hank Bowers, president of the Alpha chapter. "We will also have some dances and songs from Latin American groups," Vargas said. "The Filipinos will present a folk dance where a dancer steps in and out of two large bamboo rods clapped together. The African Club will dramatize a ritual where an African chief is being installed, Vargas said. "American groups will be expected to provide skits for our in-between acts entertainment." Vargas said. "Any individuals wishing to tell jokes, perform dances or anything else will have a chance to try out at 7 p.m., March 30, in Hoch." Tau Sigma, honorary dance fraternity, will be having one of its major events of the year this week, when about a 100 high school students from 15 high schools are coming up to participate in a dance symposium. KU Dance Group Sponsors High School Symposium The symposium, to be held from 9 to 12 a.m. and I to 2:30 p.m. in Robinson Hall, is the third of its kind held at KU. It was first held in 1963, when only three schools came to KU. Miss Elizabeth Sherbon, instructor of physical education and faculty adviser to the dance group, said that in the morning Tau Sigma would give a short class on dance notation and technique. After the lunch, there will be a dance composition class and short performances to be given by each of the high schools. Tau Sigma will then perform some of the numbers it did for the January show. ALTHOUGH THE DANCE symposium is a comparatively new venture, Tau Sigma itself is already an old KU organization. It was founded in 1921 and it gave its first show, which was to become an annual even in 1925. It had a varied program with dances set to classical music. Throughout the thirties Tau Sigma continued to hold its annual show. In 1933 the group held its first modern dance classes and also gave tapdancing lessons. Another feature of the club's activity was the social dance classes it held for university students. Tau Sigma has helped with various performances of the theatre and the university orchestra. ALTHOUGH TAU SIGMA was originally a sorority, it has been a coed group ever since 1939. Today Tau Sigma has nine men and 29 women members. Members are chosen by tryouts in the fall semester. Some of the other activities of Tau Sigma this year have been the annual recital in Hoch in January, movies in the dance classes on the various forms of modern dance and participation in University Theatre productions. A spring banquet is scheduled for April. One of the most exciting of the things done by Tau Sigma was a live television appearance two weeks ago. They performed some of their dances from their January show. The performance on television was part of Washburn University's program over channel 13 two weeks ago. Ranger Finds Area For Space Landing WASHINGTON — (UPI)— Ranger 9 found two and possibly three spots for the America's Apollo spaceship and its two-man crew to land on the moon. The information was relayed to President Johnson and the cabinet Thursday by James E. Webb, head of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. 6-HOUR Photo Finishing Fast Color Service By Eastman Kodak "Our only business is photography" A HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Owner 721 Mass. V1 3-0330 SUA ojf DIANON OREAD JAZZ FESTIVAL A WHOLE DAY OF JAZZ TOMORROW, MARCH 27 Semi-finals 10 a.m.-5 p.m. — Union Ballroom Finals 8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium The Best In Collegiate Jazz From Across The Nation With Nine Groups From New York To California From St. Paul To New Orleans Special Bonus Clare Fischer Trio appearing with Phil Woods During the Evening Concert $1.50 with KU-ID, $1.75 without Tickets on sale at Union, Bell's, College Royal Shop, Ober's & Kief's Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 26, 1965 Sebring Race Tight sleek red cars of Ferrari, facing their toughest competition in years, have swallowed a bitter pill even before the start of Saturday's 12-hour endurance race. The Ferraris, only co-favorite this year along with the multitude of Ford Products, rolled out for qualifying runs and night practice with two of their nine cars no longer in the running for world championship points. The blow came at technical inspection Tuesday. Two of the prototypes—one of them a main contender — were disqualified from running in the prototype class because their ground clearance did not meet international standards. This put them in the sports car class — which runs here for fun, not for points. The pill is particularly bitter for Ferrari because it puts two of his cars in the very class that he refused, officially, to run against. None of the nine Ferraris here were entered directly from the factory because Ferrari was miffed over race promotors allowing the sports car class—mostly fast hybrid American cars —to run. Two streaking white cars from the Texas plains unveiled a secret weapon to further plague the beleaguered racers of Ferrari, seeking their fifth consecutive victory in Saturday's 12-hours of Sebring. The Ferraris, already beset by Ford and technical problems now must cope with the Chaparralrs, a pair of high bred racers which Thursday drove this 2.5-mile airport course faster than any car before them. The lead Chaparral, driven by its builder-designer, Jim Hall of Midland, Texas, turned in a lap of 2:57.6 — roughly 105 miles an hour and about eight seconds faster than the competition course record. Hall's partner, Hap Sharp, took the second Chaparral around only a mile an hour slower, qualifying it second. Both Chevy-powered cars carry an automatic transmission — apparently the first successful device of its kind in road racing history. But no one will say where the transmission was built, who designed it or even how many gears it has. Pierce Award Fixed Rules Let Coaches Talk Now CHICAGO —(UPI)— Basketball coaches can consult with officials next year, the Rules Committee announced today, but if it's an unjustified protest, it will cost the coach a time out. Robin Lingle, Missouri's distance ace, was the relays' outstanding award winner last year. He will return to this year's classic. The committee made three rules changes, effective next season. It allowed the consultation with officials for the first time in the only major change. A coach can obtain the conference, while the clock is stopped and the ball dead, by requesting it at the scorer's table. The scorer will signal the officials to come to the table and they will confer with both coaches. ANOTHER change will allow a team to call time out only in the first four seconds bringing the ball up the court after an out-of-bounds play, or in the first eight seconds after a basket or free throw. If the coach requesting the conference is correct, there will be no time out. If he's overruled, his team will be charged a time out. The outstanding competitor of the 40th annual Kansas Relays will receive the first Don Pierce Memorial Award, it was announced late Wednesday by the KU Relays Committee The old rule allowed a team to call time out at any time during the 10 seconds allowed to bring the ball across the center line. Bill Easton, University of Kansas track coach, often referred to Pierce as "Mr. Jayhawk." The third change will designate a third space along the foul lanes on Easton credited Pierce, more than any other journalist, with building the relays, promoting Kansas track and grooming the 30 All-Americans at the University in the past 18 years. Pierce is the late director of sports information at Kansas. He was fatally injured in a New Year's Eve automobile accident. Princeton Named Best NEW YORK —(UPI)— Princeton, Ivy League champion and third in the NCAA major college tournament at Portland, Ore., was named the best major college team in the Eastern College Athletic Conference Thursday. OU, OSU Track Teams Travel Oklahoma and Oklahoma State face major competition in outdoor track meets on the road this weekend. By United Press International Oklahoma will go to Tempe, Ariz., for a triangular meet with Arizona State and California. The Sooners will stay over until Tuesday night to run an outdoor dual with Arizona at Tucson. Tuesday night Oklahoma State, which lost an outdoor meet to New Mexico at Stillwater three weeks ago, goes to Fayetteville Saturday for the 14th annual Arkansas Relays. both sides of the basket, which will be given to the defensive team during free throws. Under the old rule only two spaces were designated on each side with the defensive team getting the inside, the offensive team the No. 2 spaces on each side. They will retain these positions under the new rule. HD BLAST OFF TIME -March 26th & 27th -8:30 p.m. - 12:00 with I Ann Brewer & The Flames At The New Exciting Flamingo 1st right across river bridge to end of Street, then right. $1.00 per person ARE YOU REALLY HUNGRY? TRY THE BIG $ 1 / 2 $ -pound fresh ground beef - grilled to perfection - dressed with a generous topping of ripe tomato, crisp lettuce, and creamy Kraft mayonnaise. THIS DELICIOUS COMBINATION only 79c D DIXON'S DRIVE-IN 2500 W.6th Quality Food Service Friday, March 26, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 7 Association of University Halls' Spring Fling March 26-28 TONIGHT — (Friday) The FLIPPERS at the RED DOG 7-12 p.m. TOMORROW (Saturday) Games and Activities From 9 a.m.-5 p.m. plus DUCK RACE SUNDAY — Recognition Banquet with CHANCELLOR WESCOE 12:30 p.m. SPRING SING "MUSICAL MOMENTS" University Theatre — 7-9 p.m. SPONSORED BY Maupintour Travel Associates Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Kansas Union Bookstore Kansas Union Sub-basement UN 4-3236 Kansas Union Concessions Kansas Union UN 4-3277 Red Dog Inn 728 Mass. VI 2-9581 Blevins Honda Sales and Service 701 Michigan VI 3-0581 Honda presents the 1965 Academy Awards TV Show Monday, April 5, ABC TV A Duck With A Bow Wearing Big Eyes And A Spoty Hat Standing Next To A Flower Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 26, 1965 THE RED DOG INN PRESENTS The MOONRAKERS Saturday March 27, 7-12 P.M. COVER $1.00 per person Tonight: THE FLIP PERS A.U.R.H. SPRING FLING-TICKETS ONLY FREE T.G.I.F. with the FLIPPERS This Afternoon 3-5 P.M. Friday, March 26.1965 University Daily Kansan Page 9 Around the Campus Education of Retarded Lloyd M. Dunn, professor of special education at George Peabody College in Tennessee, will speak on the "New Approaches to the Education of the Mentally Retarded and Slow Learning Children" Monday. This special education expert is the co-editor of the new experimental edition of the Peabody Language Kit, a series of lessons with materials to be used to stimulate or further develop the language abilities of the culturally deprived, slow learning or mentally retarded children. Dunn, who holds the title of "fellow," which is the highest honor bestowed on a member in the American Association on Mental Deficiency, is scheduled to speak at 7:30 p.m. in 303 Bailey Hall. As a member of President John F. Kennedy's special committee on mental retardation, he studied recommendations for a national plan for the mentally retarded. In the past two years Dunn has also visited and reported on programs for exceptional children in England, Spain, Russia and Africa. KU Navy Engineer Honored A KU Engineering and Naval ROTC student, James Dean Hubbard, Cedar Vale, is one of 15 college students among 52 colleges and universities having Naval ROTC units selected to receive the Engineering Award given by the Society of American Military Engineers. The award is given in recognition of meritorious academic achievement of engineering students to stress the important contribution engineering makes to national security. The final selections for the award, "The Society ROTC Gold Medal With Key Replica," are made by a board of qualified engineers appointed by the Chief of the Bureau of Naval Personnel. He is the Operations Officer of the Naval ROTC Battalion of Midshipmen. Upon being graduated in the spring, he will be commissioned in the Navy and will be ordered to active duty. Students Study Japan The Japanese-American Club will have an informal panel discussion on "Japan in the Eyes of Young Americans" at 8 p.m. Saturday in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. The panel discussion leaders will be Charles Berg, Leawood sophomore; John Sloboda, Linden, N.J., sophomore, and two graduate students: John Featherstone and Mrs. J. B. Tiedeman. All of the panel discussion leaders have been to the islands of Japan at some time and will present their impressions of Japan, said Yusuke Kamarabayashi, graduate student from Kyoto, Japan, and president of the Japanese-American Club. The public is invited. KU-Y Elects Officers Jim Perkins, Prairie Village sophomore, and Vinita Fishel, Overland Park junior, were elected the 1965-66 officers of the KU-Y last night. Other officers are Joy Chatlain, Shawnee Mission sophomore, and Jerry Cochran, Harper sophomore, co-vice-presidents; Pat Goering, Moundridge sophomore, and Byron Miller, Greensburg junior, co-secretaries-treasurers. Campus Hideaway Campus Hideaway - Pizza - Spaghetti - Unusual Sandwiches Campus Hideaway - Pizza - Spaghetti - Unusual Sandwiches WE ABSOLUTELY DELIVER 106 North Park VI 3-9111 Courses Now Open to Aid Study There are two courses in the School of Education which are offered to help the student to improve himself that are now open for enrollment. A course in speed reading and another in improving study skills are designed to help the student do better in his home work. enrollments will be accepted until the beginning of the spring vacation. Anyone wishing to join either or both classes may do so in Room 102 in Bailey Hall. Both courses are now open for enrollment for the second half of this semester. The reading course will start on March 29 and meet every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday for six weeks. The study course will hold its first session on March 30 and meet for five weeks on every Tuesday and Thursday. RICHARD E. SHORES, director of the reading and study clinic, said In explaining the function of the rapid reading clinic, Prof. Shores said, "College students become involved with the intensive reading needed in class work and this carried over into regular reading. "We try to give them help in reading light material much more rapidly." This is done by two machines, Shores said. One is the tachistoscope used to broaden the perceptive and tries to teach the student to become a phrase reader. THE OTHER IS the accelerator ojf Hear the 1965 MASTERWORK the SOLID STATE --- VIEWING - 30-watt transistorized pre-amp amplifier - Garrard AT-6 changer - Magnetic pick-up (with Diamond Stylus) - 2 full range speakers & electronic crossover in each enclosure - Hand rubbed, oiled-walnut - Pre-set inputs for tuner and tape deck enclosure KIEF'S KIEF'S Record & Stereo VI 2-1544 Open 10 to 10 Weekdays machine which forces the reader to keep reading a certain speed and does not allow him to go back over what he has read. Mall's Shopping Center The Speed Reading Association reading book is also used to measure both speed and comprehension. The study skills course is designed primarily for freshmen who have difficulty in their school work. The course teaches the student intensive reading, note taking, and review. Patronize Kansan Advertisert 1... 1... $ 1_{\mathrm{S}}... $ $ 1_{\mathrm{ST}}. $ Why Save at First National? 1. Convenience — located at 746 Mass., right downtown. 2. Friendliest Service courteous personnel help make your banking pleasant. 3. Security----88 years of service since 1877. I FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE ORGANIZED BY THE LAWRENCE BANK OF ON AND TENNESSEE ST. 620-738-5151 Page 10 University Daily Kansan Friday. March 26. 1965 State CYR Meeting Begins; Two From KU Seek Offices The names of the delegates and alternates who will represent KU at the Collegeiate Young Republicans State Convention at Wichita, were announced by Topeka sophomore William Edgar Porter, president of KU CYR. Over 120 delegates from the state of Kansas are expected at this convention which begins today. A NEW COMMITTEE, the "Draft Miner for Chairman Committee," has been formed under the leadership of John Sharp, Macon, Ga., junior, and Cynthia Cornwell, Lawrence junior. Both Sharp and Miss Cornwell are among the team of delegates announced by Porter. The purpose of the committee, Sharp explained, is to persuade KU's Robert Nelson Miner, Great Bend junior, to enter the race for CYR State Chairman. "I BELIEVE BOB Miner can provide the leadership." Sharp continued, "necessary to help local clubs explain Republican ideas to today's college students. This is not an attempt to create a liberal-conservative division. Bob Miner will represent and be acceptable to both wings of the party." According to Sharp, Miner's past political record well qualifies him for the post of the chairman. Sharp said Miner is a former Field Representative and Washington Assistant to Congressman Robert Dole; that he is the editor of the KU CYR Scene, a monthly newsletter, and that he was a member of McDill Boyd's campaign staff in the last Kansas Republican gubernatorial primary campaign. SHARP CONTINUED that his committee will seek to inform the state convention delegates of Miner's past political record. A highlight of this year's convention will be a beauty contest, "Collegiate Young Republican Queen." KU's representative at this contest will be last year's SUACarnival Queen, Paula Bruckner, Emoria Junior. Delegates: William Edgar Porter, Topeka junior; Gordon Gipp Dupree, Oklahoma City, freshman; Brian Lewis Biles, Hutchinson, junior; Rudy Dean Belton, Wamego freshman; Charles L. Frickey, Oberlin senior; Samuel Dean Evans, Salina senior; Frederick John Pinne, Prairie Village freshman; John Francis McGee, Independence sophomore; Steven Joe Friesen, Russel sophomore; Elizabeth E. Schmidt, Wilmette, Ill,freshman; Robert Nelson Miner, Great Bend junior. The following is the list of KU's delegates and alternates to the convention: Official Bulletin TODAY High School Art Conference, All Day Campus-wide. Museum of Art Reception, 3:00 p.m. Cairo Museum of Master Prints from the National Gallery Poetry Readings, 3:30 p.m. Robt B. Butchinson, KU '47, Fort Worth, Kansas Friday Flicks, 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. Fraser, Theater. Pre-Cana Panel Discussion, 8:00 p.m. Pre-Cana Panel Discussion, "Marriage." St. Lawrence, Sludepee Center. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Tau Sigma High School Dance Symposium, All day. Undergraduate Research Reports, All Morning. 409 Summerfield. Oread Jazz Festival, 8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium SUNDAY United Campus Christian Fellowship, 9:15 a.m. Study Seminar; 10:45 a.m. Morning Worship; 5:15 p.m. Sunday Evening fellowship, UCCF Center, 1204 Quaker Meeting, 10:30 a.m. Danforth Chapel, Oread Friends Meeting welcomes Catholic Mass Schedule, St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road, 8:00 a.m.; Murphy Hall, 9:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. Carillon Recital, 3:00 p.m. Albert University Symphony, 3:30 p.m. University Theatre. Newman Forum Lecture, 8:00 p.m. Prof. Herman D. Lujan, "Pope John and The Nations." Forum Room, Kansas Ulton. Teaching Candidates: Interviews scheduled for Week of March 29-April 2; March 30 (Tues.) Michigan, Kalamazoo, Public Schools; March 31-60 Aba. Marry 30 (Tues.) California, Los Angeles City School Dist., elementary and secondary, 117 Ba. NEXT WEEK John Sharp, Macon, Ga. junior; Lester P. Jeter, Wichita senior; Ronald M. Zink, Topeka graduate student; Robert Emery Sears, Kansas City sophomore; Paula Bruckner, Emporia junior; Richard A. White, Prairie Village junior; Lester Kahler, junior; Tom Haler, Leawood junior; Janice M. Brenner, Parsons freshman; Terry Hoit; Lawrie Kathleen Cena, Newton junior; Stephen L. Sauder, Em- poria freshman; Lloyd D. Dickens sheets, Wellington freshman; Francis E. Linde, Wichita sophomore. Christopher A. Jeter, Wichita freshman; Bruce Albert Curtman, Wichita freshman; Arthur H. Baum, Dodge City freshman; Kent Arthur Whealy, Wellington freshman; and Cynthia Cornwell, Lawrence junior. ALTERNATES: Marian Eileen Bills, Clifton junior; William L. McElfresh, Osage City freshman; John Bryan, Jr.; John Homer Hedge, Kansas City junior; Kathleen E. Powell, Garnett junior; Hank Boot, Lawrence freshman; Jerry Lynn Bean, Abilene freshman; Dennis M. Holmes, Robins, Ga., junior; Beverly June Barrett, Colby senior; Wayne E. Woodard, Derby freshman; Dana Frankhauser; Duane Wesley Drake, Alden sophomore; Delvin Derwood Huff, Kansas city freshman; and Randolph H. Butts, Wichita senior. President to Honor U.S. Space "Twins" WASHINGTON—(UPI)—"Twin" spacemen Virgil I. Grissom and John W. Young flew here today to receive medals, congratulations and thanks from the President and honors from Congress and the capital. The astronauts flew with their families from Florida for the first of a series of tributes which will include a ticker tape parade in New York on Monday and a civic reception in Chicago on Tuesday. THEY ARE BEING honored for piloting the world's first fully maneuverable manned spacecraft on a nearly flawless three-orbit flight on Tuesday. Their flight inaugurated the two-year Gemini flight program which will lead into Project Apollo to put men on the moon in 1969. Faculty Promotions The Kansas Board of Regents recently approved promotions of the following KU faculty members: TO PROFESSOR—M. P. Bauleke, associate professor of metallurgy and materials engr.; Richard H. Benson, associate professor of geology; Dengsei, associate professor of architecture; Jack Weidling, associate professor of speech and drama. Albert W. Burgstahler, associate professor of chemistry George W. Byers, associate professor of entomology; Jed Davis, associate professor of speech and drama; Herbert J. Ellison, associate professor of history. Robert Green, associate professor of drawing and painting; John Grumm, associate professor of political science; Reynold T. Iwamoto, associate professor of chemistry; Norman Jacobs, associate professor of sociology. James A. Peoples Jr., associate professor of geology; Floyd Presston, associate professor of earth sciences; George W. Worth, associate professor of English; Y. S. Yu, associate professor of mechanical aerospace engineering; Clayton Killipman, associate professor of philosophy. Robert W. Lightwardt, associate professor of botany; Raymond Loehr, associate professor of mechanics and aerospace engineering; Paul J. Zinn, associate professor of mathematics; Frank C. Nellick, associate professor of English. TO ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR—Ross Armstrong, assistant professor of education; Robert H. Bussell, assistant professor of microbiology; Benjamin C. assistant professor of chemistry; William A. Clemens, assistant professor of zoology. James A. Clifton, assistant professor of anthropology; Harvey Doelmand, assistant professor of electrical engineering; Larry Heeb, assistant professor of physical education Richard G. Hetherington, assistant professor of mathematics Charles Himmelnerg, assistant professor of mathematics; Kevin Jones, assistant professor of chemical and petroleum engr.; J. Knox Jones, assistant professor of zoology; Stuart Levine, assistant professor of English. Felix Moos, assistant professor of anthropology; James Neelley, assistant professor of speech and drama; J. T. Pfeffer, assistant professor of civil engineering; Herald Regler, assistant professor of education. Dorothy Thelander, assistant professor of romance languages; Alton Thomas, assistant professor of architecture; Ronald W. Tobin, assistant professor of romance languages; Freed W. Vick, assistant professor of mathematics; V. Wolfe, assistant professor of botany; Gerhard Zuther, assistant professor of English. William Scott, assistant professor of English; Juliet Shaffer, assistant professor of psychology of Charles E. Skalman; Robert F. Squier, assistant professor of psychology. Charles Stansfer, assistant professor of history; Milo Stuckey, assistant professor of sociology; G. Swift, assistant professor of chemical and petroleum engr. TO ASSISTANT PROFESSOR J. Earl Anderson, instructor in geology; William Kuhle, instructor in speech and drama; Robert Neely, instructor in romance languages; Robert Stephenson, instructor in architecture; Fred Stephenson, instructor in architecture; John R. Williams, instructor in romance languages. **IU ARBARIAN II:** Susan Bonnet, TOPEKA-(UPI)-Bills increasing the state sales and income taxes were passed by the Senate Thursday under emergency procedures. TO LIBRARIAN II: Susan Bonnet Robert Gaylor and Mary Kerby. Higher Taxes Pass Senate The new tax on personal income would be increased by sums ranging from 63 per cent of the amount of the present tax in the lowest bracket to 18 per cent of the amount paid in the top bracket. The increase is expected to bring the state an estimated $15 million in additional revenue. A bill to increase the income tax one percent in all brackets was approved 24-15. The sales tax bill is a key element in Gov. William H. Avery's financial plans. The 40 per cent sales tax increase is expected to raise an estimated $36.1 million in additional revenue. The money is earmarked for the school foundation finance plan, provided the foundation plan passes. Some lawmakers have said Granada THEATRE...telephone VI 3-5788 Ends Tonite — "DEAR BRIGITTE" Starts Saturday ... IT'S THE WILD WEST AT ITS WACKIEST! PASCAL HUMPHREY --- METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER presents GLENN FORD FONDA THE ROUNDERS COSTARING SUE ANE LANGDON HOLIDAY WILLS IN PANASION* and METROCOLOR E Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 ENDS SATURDAY — Ingmar Bergman's THE MAGICIAN Starts SUNDAY — A very special agent with an eye for women! CODE 7... VICTIM 5 TECHNICAL **TECHNICOLOR** A COLUMBIA RELEASE **TECHNICOPE** PLUS! For those who missed it or wish to see it again! PETER SELLERS "Dr. Strangelove" Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40 NO LONG WAITS HAIRCUTS $1.75 JUST NORTH OF UNION THE CAMPUS BARBER SHOP" 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 Tonite & Saturday — "4 FOR TEXAS" "OCEAN'S 11" Sun.-Mon.-Tues — “PINK PANTHER” “POCKETFUL OF MIRACLES” 30-Minute Delivery Service Guaranteed! After a Republican caucus Wednesday night Republican leaders announced they had enough votes to get the bills through the Senate. the foundation plan depended upon the sales tax bill. 5 barbers La Pizza THE NEW TAX on personal income would be increased from 66 per cent in the lowest bracket to 18 per cent in the top bracket. The income tax increase is expected to bring the state an estimated $15 million in additional revenue. Only one Democrat voted for either bill. He was Sen. Charles B. Joseph, D-Potwin, who voted for both bills. Pizza, Spaghetti Chicken, Ravioli Steaks,Sandwiches Shrimp Hamburgers BUSINESS DIRECTORY Fraternity Jewelry Balfour Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER 24 HOUR SERVICE (TUES. THRU SUN.) - Lubrication . . . . $1.00 - Brake Adjustment . . . 98 - Wheel Alignment - Automatic Transmission Page Fina Service 1819 W.23rd VI 3-9694 Southridge Plaza Discover Quality In Apartment Living 2350 Ridge Court VI2-1160 Tune-up, Body Repair & Repaint, Automatic Trans. Service Wheel Alignment Lawrence Auto Service 10th & Mass. VI 2-0247 Mobil — Goodyear University Daily Kansan Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. TYPING Micki's office continues guaranteed typing service by professional secretaries. Call VI 1-2626 or VI 3-5497 or bring papers to Red Dog Inn Building. 0247 Experienced typist wants typing in home. Reasonable rates, prompt service. Phone VI 2-3356. tf 6 years typing experience plus background in proofreading enables me to guarantee accuracy on college papers. New electric typewriter equipped for interchangeable type sets. Mrs. Berndt, 801 Michigan or VI 2-0400. tf Experienced typist. 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric type writer, fast accurate service. WORKS ON CALL MRS. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648. Former teacher will give prompt and careful attention to typing your term papers and reports. 4 years experience, call VI 3-3829. 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 Theses only on Royal Electric Pica Type- writer. CALL Mrs. Fulcher at VI 3-6588. Experienced secretary will type term papers, law briefs, theses, etc., for students. Especially familiar with legal and business terms. Fast and accurate. Reasonable rate. Call Marsha Goff at VI 3-2577 ff Former Harvard and U. of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports, and theses. PHONE VI 3-7207. tt Friday, March 26, 1965 Term papers. Theses by experienced typist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tf Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. A certificate can be obtained rates. Electric carbon ribbon typewriter. Betty Muskrat. 140 Indian, or call VI 2-0991. t Will do typing in my home. Accurate, reasonable rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at VI 2-0210. tf Experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing. Special education skills and languages. Quick and reasonable. Electric typewriter. Call VI 2-3976. tt Typist, experienced with term papers, theses, and dissertations; and experience working with electric machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W.13th. VI 3-6048. tfr Experienced secretary would like typing in her home, with new electric type writer. Excellent rate. Fast and accurate Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Lancet at VI 2-1188. Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. He types and reports on reports of Experiential Electric typewriter. CALL Ms. Marsh at V 3-8262. tf Experienced typist wants theses, term-papers, and dissertations to be typeed on electric (pica type) writerprint. Please Call Pat Beck at VI 3-5630. tf Experienced typist will do dissertations, manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon, special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I.J. V-3 74855. tt FOR RENT Must sublease Stouffer Place apt. beginning April 1st. Fully furnished in last week, walk to campus. Five months walk to Murphy. Rent is $85 a month. Call VI 3-2524. 3 room nicely furnished, newly decorated apartment, near campus. Private house with utilities paid including phone, $55.00, available now, VI 3-7830 or VI 3-0288. Apartment for rent for 3 or 4 boys, furnished. VI 3-2281. Furnished 3 room apt. Private bath, all utilities paid except electricity. $80.00 per month. 1343 Tenn. Phone after 5:00 pm. VI 3-6103. 3-29 Large 5 room unfurnished 2nd floor apt 1124. 3rd and Indiana $65.00. Car V-32 1124. Large 1st floor 6 room unfurnished apt 1200 sq ft. UP and downstream $75.00. Call VI TZ-1-124. 3-29 Married. Graduate Students, Faculty-2 bedroom apts. $85.00. I available now; 5 roomless. Also sleeping rooms. Call for brochure. VI 3-2118. Santee Apts., 1123 Indiana. tf PARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30-60 people, jukie box, liquid refreshments and snacks. Contact Don at the Gaillot Tavern for reservations on CALL VI 3-1086. MISCELLANEOUS FOREIGN CAR BODY SHOP: For competent workmanship, expert estimates, and evening. 1:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m. 1008 E. 12th. East end of Mar-326 Garage. PARTY TIME! Building available for Ralph Freed at VI 3-3995. PHONE: Ralph Freed at VI 3-3995. Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-Q ribs that grandma and grandpa can eat, try ours at Bar-B-Q. Hours: 11:00 a.m. to 11:09 p.m. per slab. Hours: 11:00 a.m. to 11:09 p.m. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-9510. 3-3' CHSWINN BICYCLES -service all makes, parts and accessories, tires $1.46, tubes and luggage racks and it downs SEE Blinds at 7th and Micc or CALL VI VI-0581. Friends coming this weekend? Looking for a place with good food at reasonable prices. HILLGREST BOWL RESTAURANT. Plenty of free parking 9th and Iowa. it's great for a date. Take her bowling at Hillcrest Bowl. Finest lanes in the state. Call the office on (714) 260-3299 or also Mon, Tues, and Fr, after 9:00 p.m. Hillcrest Bowl, 9th and Iowa. tt Rent electric, standard, and portable typewriters. Repair all makes of electric, electronic, and computer business equipment (formerly Business Machines). 1E. 5.8th. V-31-0151 Attention: All persons interested in self defense training classes utilizing many of bowls and smashes used by James Bond movies, contact Bob Monk at VI - 7102. Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon.-Thru-Fri, or all dav Sat. or Sun. Phone VI 3-6231. BUSY PEOPLE—No time to spare for household cares? Have a professional in your home regularly or overseeably. Call Pioneer Cleaning Service 3-4408 4-13 Micki's new secretarial and typing service offers professional work to faculty, students and businessmen. Call for appointment. VI 2-1626 or VI 3-5947. ttf FOR SALE 1964 Corvair Spyder coupe, metallic blue, a-speed, white walls, heavy duty suspension, posttraction, Lucas lights, 7-303 warranty warranty. CV Call VI 2-303 sevenings. 1963 Austin Healey 3000 Mark II Deluxe Roadster. Clean interior and excellent mechanically. Wire wheels, hardtop, multiband radio, five good tires plus two snow. Must sell, best offer. VI 2-0123 after 7:00 p.m. 3-29 SAVE SAVE SAVE JUST $2.300.00 buys '64 BARRAUC, automatic transmission radio and heater, 273 cubic in. V-8. Fully equipped, under factory warranty, low mileage. Must sell at once. Call VI 2-1972 for information. 3-31 1963 Tempest LcMans sport coupe, 326. 1965 Tempest LcMans speed car, 326. call Ron Freedman, VI 3-1061. 3-26 Why deny yourself prestige, beauty, and efficiency? Be the proud owner of a 1953 Honda, a classic model in this mission, battery, 2 tires $135.00. Call VI 2-2176 after 7:00 p.m. 3-30 BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMIUMS! Occidental Term Life: conversion, Go-Back, and Move-Over options. Age 18 = $33.90 = $10.00. Age 20 = $34.40 = $10.00. Age 22 = $34.70 = $10.00. Call Wes S安妮 at VI 3-2164 for details. tf 1959 Gardner 50'x10' house trailer, good condition. Reasonably priced CCall 4-15 Tires—800 x 14 white sidewalls. Two sets. One set is Atlas snow tires, which will go for $5 apiece. The second set is $26 (apiece) Riverside white sidewalls. They will go for $15 apiece. The set (of 4) is $4. Call Bob Monk-VI 3-7102 Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, nimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL V1 2-1901 for free delivery. Printed Biology notes, m pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive notes and classes. Formerly known as the Thetis Notes. Call VI 3-1428. $f.50$. Mayfair miniature tape recorder. 33¢, and charger included. $39.00. I-2-2504-4-1 charger included. Webcor HI-FI tape recorder, electric, good condition. Will carry largest reels. 3-speeds. Call John Carnahan at VI 2- 1763. 4-1 TYPEWRITERS, electronics, manuals, portables. Royal, Royal-Sinica, Olivetti, adding machines, office supplies and 70 class Typewriter, Typewriter, 70 kit. VI 3-3644 THE STABLES now open every day—serving steaks, chops, sea food, sandwiches, management, new atmosphere. Party equipment available. Phone VI v1-1644, 1401 W. 7th. *students, why throw money away on ent when you can own a 1962 Marlette x 0 50, modern, two-bedroom mobile home with small monthly payments. forent with annual excelling condition. For Further information叫uI 8-0973 or RI 8-0916. tf CHINA-Nortaki, Mayfair design. New, never used or even removed from packing. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller Bob Monk, M 3-7102. 16 mm. role film movie camera; GE portable ee light; 3 police radios (1); Mobilo walki-talki (low band), (2) Motorola walki-talki (low band), (3) high band converter, Call Gary Grazda, V2 i-9100, name and phone number I'm not in. tf Zenith stereophonic high fidelity for sale. Portable, two-speaker, micro-touch needle, two-level stand including album- holders. Fuse case for $150 and Nest cash no card so will sell to highest price within 2 weeks. Call Rita. VI 3-2847 at 10:30 p.m. tf Porsche 1600N, normal chrome wheels, perfect paint and interior, am-shortwave radio, sunroof. This is one of the type 356 A's available. $1,500 VI 2-389 3-429 NEED A BAND? 30 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM. PHONE VI 2-2100. t 600 premium tires—famous brands for less than off brands—Get our deal before you buy—Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. 4-28 Phonographs—final cut on all 1964 models—all famous brands reduced to clear or Magnavox, General Electric and Motorola at Rocky Stone Bay. 929-931 Mass. 4-28 Harmon Kardon model A-300, 30 watt stereo amplifier. Call VI 3-4891. 3-26 G.E. stereo phono, repossessed—sold new digital reels; 929-931 Mass St. stoneback's, 929-931 Mass St. 3-29 TR-3, 1957, $695.00. VI 2-1020, 2235 Westchester. 3-29 Short wave AM-FM used radio, $25.00 Rocky Stoneback's...3-29 '60 Volkswagen, perfect condition, radio, sunroof, w/w tires, and new engine. Just sell this week. Also HIF system components and records, cheap. V1 23-3489. Transistor radios—new low prices! G.E. $8.22, Motorola $10.00, AM-FM $24. Radio headquarters (80 models in stock). Ray Stoneback's, 929-319 Mass. 4-28 WANTED Working girl needs roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment. Call VI 3-3988 after five. 3-29 Austrian exchange teacher looks for travelling companion to the west of the state in June. Write to Dr. Jesse Fort Fait Hays Kansas State College, Hays, Kans. 3-29 Wanted. Someone to play GO. Call TI 2-9227 after 7:00 p.m. tf OLD CARS WANTED, top prices paid. DO IT today! GI Joe's Joe, 61 Vermont, t www.oldcarswanted.com Washing and ironing done in my home 1151 New Jersey U. phone V1 B-2598 ENTERTAINMENT ATTENTION PARTY THROWERS; Do you want the Beatles, the Kingsmen, Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL VI 2-1791. tt Now you can hear a variety of excellent dance bands on stereo demo tapes, including the Fabulous Blades, the Nose or the Tabulous Blades; union and non-union, call VI 2-1791 Lost—personal and KU identification. Reward for return to Judith Jackson, Lewis Hall. 3-30 LOST AD CLASSIFIED RATES 1 DAY $1.00 3 DAYS $1.50 5 DAYS $1.75 Business Directory- GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established - Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING MUGS 24 OZS. — 35c Louise's Bar 1017 Mass. New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPERANCE. For the best in — - dry cleaning - alterations - reweaving 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 V1 2-1626 or V1 3-5947 - 1910 W. 23rd Mayhugh "Micki's" VI 3-4430 Secretarial Service Red Dog Bldg. 642 Mass. Complete — one stop service 601 Mass. VI 3-9897 Music Instrument Repair VI 2-1626 or VI 3-5947 All kinds of typing & secretarial services ASK ABOUT THE DX Guaranteed to Please Appointments Preferred BRIDGE STANDARD SERVICE ART NEASE - DX Products Complete Car Care - Firestone Tires Open 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. - Brake Service - Tune Ups - Mufflers & Pipes ASK ABOUT THE DX TRIAL BOND GUARANTEE - Wash and Polish 6th & Michigan VI 2-9598 DX Servicenter STANDARD Open 7 a.m. to 10 p.m.Daily 7:30 to 9 Sunday Health & Diet Store Staf-O-Life Arabic - Indian - Vegetarian - Oriental 17 W. 9th VI 2-277 Hours: Mon. 2-6 Thurs. 10-7:30 Tues., Wed., Fri. Sat. 10-6 17 W. 9th VI2-2771 One-Stop Service Bring Auto Problems To Us. Experienced mechanics Guaranteed Parts Montgomery Ward Auto Service 729 N.H. VI 2-1708 HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy Ice cold 6 pacs — all kinds OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 26, 1965 Professorship Given To Engineering Dean Dr. John S. McNown, who requested to be relieved of the deanship of the University of Kansas School of Engineering and Architecture, has accepted the Albert P. Learned distinguished professorship in engineering, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe announced today. Dean McNown will leave administrative duties June 30 and begin the Learned professorship on July 1. His actual filling of research and teaching duties will await his return from a sabbatical leave, during which he will travel to Europe and Africa to study engineering education and its relationship to the economic development of Africa. Dr. William P. Smith, a member of the electrical engineering faculty for 15 years and chairman of the department, will become dean July 1. The Albert P. Learned distinguished professorship in engineering was established in 1960 by Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Learned of Bartlesville, Okla., in honor of his brother, upon the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of Albert Learned's graduation from the University of Kansas. THE INCOME FROM the endowment of $100,000 will augment a professorial salary offered by the University. "Although we are sorry to lose Dean McNown's services as an administrator, we are delighted that we can welcome him back as a distinguished professor." Among Dean McNown's special distinctions are the American Society of Civil Engineers' prizes for scholarly effort, including the J. C. Stephens award in 1946, the Research Program Prize in 1949, and the Croes medal in 1955. He was one of the first engineers to receive a Fulbright Research Fellowship under which he studied in France. A SIGNIFICANT PART of an engineer's work includes his consultantships, and Dean McNown has served as a consultant to the Sandia Corporation, manufacturer and tester of nuclear devices, the National Science Foundation, the Ford Foundation, the Bell Telephone Laboratories, the U.S. Bureau of Public Roads, and two divisions of the U.S. Engineering Department. His technical contributions to the field of engineering include the study of wave disturbances which affect ships moored in harbors. One of his colleagues once noted that John S. McNown has the distinction of building a model of the world's worst harbor, for his research. Among his other technical contributions, he has done basic studies of the principles and applications of flow at junctions which is now being applied to the design of hydro-electric power plants and of filling systems for navigation locks. Another important part of his technical contribution to engineering includes his study of fall velocities of sediment in rivers and basins. Orchestra Starts Series The KU symphony orchestra leads off Sunday in a schedule of four campus musical events next week with a concert in the University Theatre at 3:30 p.m. Prof. Robert Baustian will conduct. Earlier this month he conducted three performances by the New York City Opera Company of Douglas Moore's "Ballad of Baby Doe." of Douglas Moore's *Ballad of Birds*. The scheduled program is: "Scherherzade" by Rimski-Korsakov, Concerto for Four French Horns and Orchestra by Schumann, and The Pines of Rome, by Respighi. Mrs. Kathleen Craig Schmidt, pianist, will appear in graduate recital at 8 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall. She received the bachelor of music education degree summa cum laude from Boston University in 1963 and received the Alumni award for scholarship. At KU her teachers have been emeritus Prof. Jan Chiapuso, Richard Angeletti and Roy H. Johnson. Don't Forget Don't Forget Miss Lawrence-KU Pageant Tonight at 8:00 MISS B Tickets on sale at the Kansas Union and at the door. Only $1.00 Lawrence High Auditorium Brass Choir Makes Hit On Far Eastern Tour "It was an ideal presentation, next to perfect." "It is the KU brass choir. The evaluation is the Embassy's report of the choir's visit to Ceylon last year. The quotation is from a report to the Congress by the Advisory Committee on the Arts concerned with the State Department's cultural presentations program. "It was small enough to handle comfortable, certainly loud enough to be heard, popular enough to be enjoyed, attractive enough to be loved," the Ceylonese report continues. "It was everything we needed and a few things we only dreamed about. A valiant bunch of troopers!" There were 17 KU musicians, plus the director, Prof. Kenneth G. Bloomquist and Mrs. Bloomquist. IN A 3-MONTH PERIOD last spring the choir visited 35 cities in Ceylon, Laos, Malaysia, Indonesia, Australia, and the Ryukyu. The 58 concerts had a combined audience of 124,000. The musicians conducted 14 workshops and clinics, appeared for radio and television broadcasts, and participated in many impromptu "iam" sessions. The report to the Congress said the choir did "credit to the American one-night stand tradition" of barnstorming. In Ceylon, using a small, ancient bus, the choir travelled 1,000 miles for 12 concerts;* covered more ground, reached more people, and visited more remote places than had any other attraction from any other country." A thousand students attended an impromptu "jam" session at the university in Surabaya, Indonesia, then a more than capacity crowd of 2.500 attended the formal evening concert. Last week on a few hours notice Professor Bloomquist rallied the musicians, made the 165-mile trip and played an evening concert course engagement at Hesston College, whose original attraction had suddenly cancelled. THIS YEAR the choir has changed a bit in personnel but not in tradition. There have been other off-campus concert engagements this year, but on a better schedule than in Southeast Asia and Heston. China To Be Study Topic "The Chinese Dilemma" will be the topic of the 17th Annual Topeka Institute of International Relations which will be opened at 7:30 p.m. Sunday by Dr. Roy Menninger, General Chairman, at Washburn University. Speakers for the event this year will be Robert W. Barnett, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Far Eastern Affairs and a career diplomat in the State Department; Hon. Alvin Hamilton, former member of the Canadian Parliament; Stanley Spector, chairman of the department of Chinese and Japanese at Washington University, St. Louis; and George M. Beckmann, associate dean of faculties and professor of history at KU. Dr. Menninger stated that the institute "is dedicated to a belief in the importance of promoting active and vigorous discussion of critical international issues of our time. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers COACH HOUSE Clothes For Town, and Country Carol Nelson Gamma Phi Beta Calico and Jute Casual and Cute 12th & Oread VI 3-6369 What Sort of Person Lives at Park Plaza South? (and why you should) V You have a choice of many attractive apartments,1 and 2 bedrooms central heating and air-conditioning disposals, carpeting, front drapes and a convenient coin operated laundromat. Some people like to study,some like to sit by our swimming pool and think of grades gone by. Whatever you like, you'll find Park Plaza South a pleasing home for your college days. M. H. SMITH --- Park Plaza South 1912 W. 25th Call Day o Night: VI 2-3416 KU Unveils Details For New Fraser KU today revealed the details of new Fraser Hall, which is expected to go under construction in June on a site just east of old Fraser. New Fraser Hall will be seven stories tall. Its red roof will rise higher than old Fraser's familiar towers, and the new building, like old Fraser, will have twin towers. They will reach a height of 127 feet above ground level. The top of new Fraser's flagpoles will be 147 feet above the ground, compared with 124 feet for old Fraser. The site of new Fraser will be within fifty feet of the old building and a few feet closer to Danforth Chapel. The new building, with 96,000 new square feet, will have more than twice as much research, teaching, and office space as old Fraser, with 41,000 net square feet. New Fraser will provide 29 classrooms, and departmental offices, faculty offices, and laboratories for psychology, anthropology, and sociology. 16 When the master plan for the east end of the campus is completed, with the construction of new Fraser and the razing of old Fraser, the view of the campus and its red roofs will be more splendid than ever before from every aspect, and the campus will acquire a new open and spacious appearance." The new building location will involve a minor reorientation of the main pedestrian walkway from Alumni Place and the Tennessee street student residential area, as well as the west half of Lilac Lane. The east leg of Lilac Lane will become a two-way street, with a new diagonal connection to Jayhawk Boulevard connecting across from the Jimmy Green statue and cutting through Lilac Lane just south of Danforth Chapel. An enlarged turnaround will be constructed at Watkins Hospital to coordinate with the new one already in place at Blake. The west leg of Lilac Lane will be closed, torn up, and landscaped. "THE PLANS for new Fraser Hall," Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said today, "provide a remarkable combination of the traditional and the functional. New Fraser and nearby Blake Hall have been designed with great care because they will represent for many the physical image of the University. They will occupy the crowning location on a magnificent campus site." It is planned so all classrooms will be on the first two floors and easily accessible. Elevators will provide access to offices and laboratories on upper floors. As many of the original lilacs on Lilac Lane as possible will be preserved and protected. After construction, new supplementary plantings will be made to renew the hedge. The Pioneer Statute which stands in the center of the Lilac Lane oval will be moved to a new location directly south, to a lawn and walkway area between New Fraser and Blake. Completion of construction is expected about Jan. 1, 1967. As announced earlier, the recommendation of the state architect is that old Fraser be abandoned when construction of the new building begins and that it be razed as soon as possible thereafter. Architects of the new building are James C. Canole, state architect; T. R. Griest of Topeka, the design consultant; and Brown and Slemmons of Topeka, working drawings. Estimated cost of the structure is $2.2 million, with $1,750,000 having been appropriated from the state educational building fund and $450,000 in grants from the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation. Daily hansan Each year, the contestants elect a girl whom they feel was the most congenial during the competition. This year's Miss Congeniality is Miss Mary Ann Bollini, Ferguson, Mo., sophomore. She received a $25 gift certificate. LAWRENCE, KANSAS THE CONTESTS first runner-up was Parmelee Bates, Bronxville, N.Y., freshman, representing Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall. The second runner-up was Cheryl Costa, Wichita sophomore, representing Kappa Kappa Gamma. 62nd Year, No.109 THE NEW BUILDING. Charles Bratton, a Lawrence businessman and judges chairman, said the 10 semi-finalists who were selected Thursday night, were judged in four categories: talent, personality, evening gown, and Miss Bates received a $50 scholarship from Pepsi Cola and a $25 gift certificate. As second runner-up, Miss Costa was awarded a $50 scholarship. NEW FRASER—Construction will begin in June on a 7-story $2.2 million building to replace old Fraser Hall. This view of the model building is Her victory will give Miss Wise the chance to compete in the Miss Kansas contest at Pratt, July 8-15. She also received $125 in scholarships, an evening gown, a set of luggage, a travel suit, a swim suit, shoes and a handbag. Monday, March 29, 1965 Pat Wise Chosen over 30 As Miss Lawrence-KU The weather bureau predicts cloudy skies will clear for tomorrow with fair weather and warmer temperatures. Low temperatures are predicted to be in the mid 20's tonight. Weather Miss Wise was chosen from a field of 30 girls representing campus housing groups before a crowd of 700 in the Lawrence High School Auditorium. One contestant was from Lawrence High School. By Eric Johnson Miss Wise represented the Alpha Delta Pi sorority and was sponsored by Rusty's IGA food store. Patricia Ann Wise, Oklahoma City, Okla., junior, was named Miss Lawrence-KU, 1965, Friday night at the annual beauty pageant. from the northwest. The new building will be just east of the present Fraser. swimming suit. From this group, five finalists are selected. IN THE TALENT phase, Miss Wise, a music education major with a minor in voice, sang an aria from Verdi's "La Traviata." Her accompanist was Miss Janice K. Gray, Fort Scott sophomore. In the personality competition, each of the five finalists was required to answer two questions. One was of a light nature and one more serious. MISS COSTA sang "As Long as He Needs Me" from the Broadway show, "Oliver," for her talent portion of the contest. representing Chi Omega; Bambi Palamata Ann Buck, Wichita freshman, representing Carruth-O'Leary; Candy Williams, Lawrence High School senior; Irene Zey, Abilene junior, representing Pi Beta Phi; and Patricia Wise, Oklahoma City, Okla., junior, representing Alpha Delta Pi. The ten finalists were: Parmelee Bates, Bronxville, N.Y., freshman representing Gertrude Sellards Pearson; Karen Dunaway, Topeka freshman, representing Corbin; Sherry Lee Gillespie, Paola sophomore, representing Hashinger; Elaine Milett, Topeca sophomore, representing Alpha Phi; Cheryl Costa, Wichita sophomore, representing Kappa Kappa Gamma; Joy Elaine Rutter, Coffeyville junior, FROM THIS GROUP, the five finalists were selected by the judges. The judges this year were: Don Scheid, assistant dean of the School of Fine Arts; Lewin Goff, director of the University Theatre; Carolyn Parkinson Gough, Miss Lawrence—KU and Miss Kansas in 1961; Jack Mitchell, head KU football coach; and John Crown, a Lawrence businessman. In the evening gown competition, the girls were judged on grace and general appearance. Beauty, figure, posture, poise, grace and personality were the criteria in the swim suit segment. The contest is sponsored every year by the Lawrence Junior The contest is sponsored every year by the Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce. Jazz Festival Topped By KU Kicks Band By Mary Dunlap The KU Kicks Band was chosen as the winning band of the Oread Jazz Festival and performed with three other groups at the closing session Saturday evening. THREE SMALL GROUPS, The Good Thing Quartet from DePauw University. The Group, from Macalestu College, St. Paul, Minn., and The Indiana University Sextet were chosen as finalists in the small group division and were invited to play in the evening performance. Awarded $100 scholarships to the Berklee School of Music in Boston, Mass., were Charles Sigley, Ness City junior and lead altoist with the KU Kicks Band; Robert Romerein, director and pianist with The Group; and Walter Payton, Jr., bass player with the Xavier University Collegians. The KU Kicks Band, led by Kevin Condon, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, and Jim Bowman, Raytown, Mo., junior, and the Indiana University Jazz Sextet were invited to play at yesterday's Kansas City Jazz Festival. THE INDIANA UNIVERSITY Sextet was given a surprise award, a trip to the Newport Jazz Festival. The sextet also was awarded the Selmer-Benny Goodman award for the outstanding small band in the Festival. The outstanding soloist awards went to Indiana University's leader and altoist, James Greene, Brian Trentham, trombonist with The Good Thing Quartet, and Maxwell Swanson, flutist with The Group. Two drummers, Dave Campbell of The Group, and Douglas Dean of the UCLA Jazz Ensemble, were awarded special prizes also. THE EVENING'S PERFORMANCE was kicked off by the sounds of the Indiana University Jazz Sextet's "Honestly." Approximately 600 jazz fans listened as the alto and tenor saxes of James Greene and Gary Campbell played a musical game of tag, stopped by a solo by Campbell. Mitch Farber's Good Thing Quartet, reformed out of the Mitch Farber Sextet which appeared at the Festival last year, then played "Yesterday's Gone." IN AN ORIGINAL composition, "Rather Bass," The Group brought a fresh concept of jazz to the evening. Max Swanson, flutist, added the light touches to the piece. The KU Kicks Band closed the collegiate jazz portion of the program with the big, brassy sound of "Summertime," an arrangement of the original Cole Porter tune. "A combination of a saxophone solo and Jim Bowman's piano, played an original arrangement of "I'll Remember April." The Kicks Band, formed in October of last year, is made up of students from KU who enjoy playing and learning jazz numbers. CLARE FISCHER, called by many critics the hottest young jazz pianist in America, soloed and teamed up with Phil Woods in a combination of numbers to entertain the audience while the judges made their decision. Phil Woods, saxophonist, clarinetist, composer and arranger, joined Fischer in the first program the two have played together. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 29, 1965 Party Platforms A University Daily Kansan headline last week read "Rights Stressed in Party Stands." The story below the headline pertained to the platforms and candidates for the spring election. Well, if student rights were stressed in the two platforms of the political parties, they were stressed in the vague and noncontroversial manner which is in keeping with the tradition of political platforms. One of the more significant issues on campus is the status of fraternities and sororities, and racial discrimination within these institutions. This issue was neatly side-stepped by the politicians who seem unwilling to assume any leadership in this area. THE UNIVERSITY PARTY PLATFORM comes out for "student rights," but there is no mention of the civil rights issue or racial discrimination. There does seem to be some effort on the part of UP to deal with the much-criticized (and rightly so) University Disciplinary Committee. One section of the platform would provide the right of counsel, the right of cross-examination, and the right of appeal to the Student Court for students charged with violating prescribed procedures of conduct. THE VOX POPULI PLATFORM SUFFERS from the same weakness. There is, at least, direct mention of civil rights in the platform, which illustrates some awareness of the problem. But this is nothing more than a "rubber stamp okay" on the steps the administration has taken. Vox very boldly pledges its "unconditional support of the University Human Relations Committee," recognizing this committee as the "only possible common meeting ground for all groups to air their grievances." The UP platform is good in this respect, but the politicians could have "stuck their necks" out a little farther and tried to deal with more specific problems, instead of evading some of the issues. It looks like the Vox platform plank dealing with civil rights was thrown together over a casual cup of coffee at the Holiday Inn, if that is where they still congregate. Vox advocates such noble proposals as; - "Vox Populi will encourage all students - "Vox Populi will further work to see that action is taken to investigate the discriminatory practices of the community as well as the university." who feel they have been discriminated against to take their complaints before this committee. ALL THIS SOUNDS REAL GOOD—that is about all one can say for such statements which no one can really disagree with. Yes, Vox, we are all for motherhood, the flag, and apple (or blueberry) pie. Actually both UP and Vox platforms may contain some proposals which should be commended. However, these proposals will probably take years to accomplish, if at all, or they are of little interest to the average student. But I guess they sound good for party platforms. It is a sad commentary on student politicians when they praise the actions of the administration and the Civil Rights Council for taking action on specific issues, and yet they fail to have the courage to assume leadership and initiate significant programs when they have the opportunity. If the student voter is supposed to vote on issues in the spring election,why not give him some strong issues on which he can vote.The politicians have given us no burning issues to vote on this spring,and I do not think this is because there are no burning issues. THE ISSUE WHICH HAD THIS CAMPUS in the spotlight a few weeks ago is still with us, and it will not disappear by ignoring it. Both political parties realized this when they were drawing up their platforms. One party politely skipped around the issue, and the other party made a complete farce of it. It seems that the main interest of both parties is to avoid controversy so as to not upset the equilibrium of political representation on the All Student Council. Maybe it is time for a third party to stand up and speak out forcefully on the issues. This might stir the present parties out of the apathy which seems to prevail. If student government doesn't mean anything, as most students think today, it is because student government lacks leadership and inspiration. The popularity contest held each semester is getting to be a little dull. Gary Noland Viet Nam War Enters New Phase By Charles Corddry The war in Viet Nam has entered a new and possibly climactic phase. Its original dimensions as a guerrilla war staged by the Viet Cong and an anti-guerrilla campaign fought by U.S.-aided government forces are expanding almost geometrically. North Viet Nam is charged in a U.S. white paper with aggression against the south "as real as that of an invading army." U. S. Marine battalions have been landed in South Viet Nam. U.S. Air Force and Navy planes have been waging a bombing campaign against guerrilla forces in the south and selected targets in the north. American involvement now has gone far beyond this country's original goal of simply arming and training South Vietnamese forces to put down Red insurgency. There are now 27,000 Americans involved in the war. Well over half are U.S. army troops assigned to train South Vietnamese forces both in counter insurgency and more conventional tactics involved in brush-fire wars. It is likely that more ground units will be sent to Viet Nam. And U.S. navy patrols may be ordered into action against sea-borne infiltrations of men and weapons from north to South Viet Nam. All this is a far cry from Oct. 2, 1963, when the White House issued a statement saying that Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara and Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, then chairman of the joint chiefs of staff and now ambassador to Saigon, believed "the major part of the United States military task in Viet Nam can be completed by the end of 1965." It said there might be a continuing need for U.S. training personnel but that this would be limited. cy. But the fact remains that it was not the original U.S.intention to commit organized military units to the struggle. The reverse has happened. There were 16,000 Americans in Viet Nam at the time. Now an additional 11,-000 have been sent in with the end not yet in sight. When U.S. jets were thrown into the fight, Washington said the decision represented a change in tactics and equipment but not in poli- Plainly, this now has been done, using lethal aerial weapons whose effectiveness in this kind of war is still to be fully measured. VOTING DISCRIMINATION EQUAL RIGHTS THE WASHINGTON POST Jericho, U.S.A. Dating Problems P-t-P, Foreign Students The purpose of this article is simple and yet vital. My purpose is to underscore the role the People-to-People organization plays on campus, stressing mainly its relationship with foreign students. I do not however, mean to say that P-t-P is only for foreign students. In fact, among its aims is the propagation of acquaintance between American students and foreign students. I use here the term foreign students merely to make a distinction between students from the United States and those coming from foreign countries. I do not imply here any of the connotations carried by the word, "foreign," at all. FOREIGN STUDENTS HAVE BEEN CONSCIOUS of the existence of P-t-P on campus through its tours, parties, vacation placements, and meetings. However, it is disappointing to say, few have understood the true nature of P-t-P. Indeed, I understand why. Being a foreign student myself, I took the same point of view many foreign students take, only to be enlightened lately of its real nature. I wish, therefore, to pass this enlightenment on to my fellow foreign students. Some foreign students want to meet people. This is an understatement. What's more lovely than meeting people of the opposite sex? To put it bluntly, foreign students, being as human as normal American students, would naturally want to meet members of the opposite sex. This endeavor is not as easy as it seems to be. The competition is stiff and American students who have had a lot of training on the "How's and When's of Dating" provide this competition. A foreign student, therefore, steps aside and tries to master the art before he gets into the arena. Friends, sometimes, come in handy and pointers come in, in bunches. But the real test of the pudding is in the eating. More often than not, the foreign student finds out that generalities do not stand. Consequently, he realizes that his training is insufficient and his knowledge, short. The situation existing in this club, where the ratio of boys to girls is usually 4 to 1, is understandable. It boils down to the social customs of this country. Knowing vaguely American dating practices, no one would go to a party stag and let the party decide his or her fate for the evening. This is aggravated by the fact that the ratio of male to female foreign students is 5 to 1. In this case, the International Club fails him, the P-t-P presents tempting, greener grass. MOREOVER, HE NEEDS ADEQUATE ACQUAINTANCEfacilitating means. Organizations that would give him this opportunity to meet people are sought for. He turns therefore to the International Club or to the P-t-P. To his disappointment and sometimes disgust, there are not enough chances given him at the International Club. In other words, the International Club's pastures are not green enough. I do not mean to blame here the officers of the International Club. I know that they have done their job and did and are doing their level best. I I THE BROTHER-SISTER PROGRAM OR LATELY, the "Contact committee" is not bad at all. Imagine, one boy one girl, just what one needs! English in Action with a curvaceous blonde for an English tutor is not a bad idea. He, therefore, looks forward to a kissing cousin in one of these programs. Also, P-t-P sponsors "Happy Hours" which were discontinued this year because they turned out to be more unhappy than happy, again due to the conflicting perspectives participants take. There is only one point that I want to make clear at this junction. The P-t-P can only provide means and ways by and through which foreign students and American students can meet and share the bliss of some moments. THE P-T-P IS NOT A "DATING BUREAU" that can supervise the activities of its members and foreign students with paternal intents. It can only acquaint the latter with American society but it cannot, with its powers and set-up, assure a harmonious romantic relationship for every foreign student. This is beyond its capacity. It can only help establish a friendly relationship. Anything that goes beyond that is already out of its reach. As a trite expression goes, "every person is an individual" and I add, it depends on each person what he chooses to make out of an acquaintance which P-t-P or any organization helps to establish. To think, therefore, that P-t-P can be an Ann Landers to every foreign student is childish. Heart problems are personal in nature and the organization cannot, even if it dares to, delve deeper into them. LASTLY, A PIECE OF ADVICE FROM A BATTLE weary foreign student is in order. It takes what Americans call "guts" to meet a girl and it takes more than that to ask a girl out. An individual's personality steps in most of the time. The P-t-P cannot give anyone a push or boost anyone's ego so he could take a girl out. To be redundant, hopefully, be emphatic, it can only provide the rendezvous. The individual takes over from here. Any ulterior motives one has is not the organization's concern. —Jose T. Ocampo Dailij Hänsan 111 Flint Hall 111 Fruit Hall UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office University of Kansas student newspaper University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889; became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, da 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. Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Leta Roth and Gary Noland ... Co-Editorial Editors Page 3 University Daily Kansan service inal in- but it mantic city. It it goes goes, person or any P can prob- en if it po ry for meet idiual's anyone To be endez- ves one 16, 1912. e Press. w York noun rates: domenoon university at Law- adver- without Humanities Lecture Features Eminent Harvard Professor 1 Editors A Harvard professor whose eloquence as a speaker matches his eminence as a scholar will present the next Humanities Series lecture at KU Tuesday evening. Dr. Roman Jakobson will speak on "The Quest for the Essence of Language" at 8 p.m. in Fraser Theater, and a reception by the Faculty Club will follow. He is the Samuel Hazzard Cross Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures and General Linguistics at Harvard and Institute professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is an international authority in philology, linguistics, and phonology and has published and lectured widely in Europe and the United States. He has received honorary degrees from Harvard, Cambridge, Chicago, Oslo, Uppsala, and Michigan universities. Those who attend the Humanities lecture on Tuesday may park in Zone Y—a half block south of the KU smokestack--and there board a free shuttle bus to Fraser Hall and return. Miner Withdraws; CYRs Pick Porter The visiting scholar was born in Moscow, Russia, in 1896, and received the A. B. at Lazarev Institute KU's Collegiate Young Republicans (CYR), returned home from their state convention at Wichita with all but one of the state honors which they had set out to win. William Edgar Porter, Topeka sophomore and president of the KU CYR, was elected first vice-chairman of the Kansas State CYR. The title of Kansas CYR Queen went to Washburn University's Joan Cameron. The choice was made on the basis of photographs submitted to Congressman Gerald Ford, minority leader of the U.S. House of Representatives. Other victories for KU CYR are Brian Lewis Biles, Hutchinson junior, convention chairman, and Elizabeth E. Schmidt, Wilmette, Ill., freshman, women's chairman. The nomination of Gordonipp Dupree, Oklahoma City, Okla., freshman, for the post of administrative assistant to the state chairman, still remains to be confirmed. A "Draft Miner for State Chairman" committee had been organized under the leadership of KU's delegate, John Sharp, Macon, Ga. junior, to put up the candidacy of KU's Robert Nelson Miner, Great Bend junior, for the post of state chairman against Kent Hilliard, Washburn University junior who was running for re-election. Tulling the election. Miner withdrew from the election, however, after he had been nominated by Sharp. Official Bulletin TODAY Spanish Club, 4:30 p.m. Forum Room, 911 W. Washington Blvd., Suite 200, on "La Vida Intellectual en America" 1st Student Peace Union Open Meeting, 7:30 p.m. Kansas University Graduate Recital, 8:00 p.m. Kathleen Schmidt, pianist. Swarthout Recital Hall. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. of Oriental Languages in Moscow in 1914 and the A. M. at Moscow University in 1918. He was awarded the Ph.D. degree at Prague University, Czechoslavakia, in 1930. TOMORROW Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Masses with water. Con- fessions before, and after mass. Latin American Studies Seminar, 3:30 p.m. 2021 Blake **Lecture:** 4:00 p.m. Dr. Klaus Mehlner, Aachen, Germany. Forum Room, Kansas Upsilon College Inquirers Class, 7:30 p.m. Canterbury House, 1116 La. lumbia, where, in 1946, he became the T. G. Masaryk Professor of Linguistics. Since 1949 he has been on the Harvard faculty and since 1957 Institute professor at M.I.T. In 1933, he was appointed assistant professor at Masaryk University in Brno, Czechoslovakia, and in 1937 was promoted there to associate professor of Russian philology and Old Czech literature. In 1939-41, he was visiting lecturer at the Universities of Copenhagen, Oslo, and Uppsala; in 1942 he began a four-year term as professor of linguistics at Ecole Libre des Hautes Etudes in New York. House of Christian Science College Organization, 7:30 p.m., Danfort Chapel. He is a member of the Norwegian, Serbian, Polish, Netherlands, and Irish Academies of Sciences; the Royal Danish Academy of Science and Letters; the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; the Mediaeval Academy; and the Finno-Ugric Society (Helsinki). Humanities Lecture, 8:00 p.m. Dr. Roman Jakobson, Harvard U. Fraser Joseph Jackson Monday, March 29, 1965 Senior Recital, 8:00 p.m. Judith Nelson, soprano. Swarthout Recital Hall. Lecture, 8:00 p.m. Dr. Albert Sonnenne- Princeton U. Forum Room, Kansas Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m. "U.S.A." Murphy Hall. AT THE SAME time, he was visiting professor of Linguistics at Co- Wesley Foundation Community Wor- iored 9:15 p.m. Methodist Center, 1314 Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Teaching Candidates: Interviews scheduled for Tuesday, March 30: Michigan. Kalamazoo Public Schools, elementary and secondary, 106 Ba. California, Los Angeles City School Dist., elementary and secondary, 117 Ba. He has been vice president of the Linguistic Society of America and of the International Committee of Slavists, and he is an honorary member of the Association Phonetique Internationale. A. H. masculine ...that's the kind of aroma she likes being close to. The aroma of Old Spice. Crisp, tangy, persuasive. Old Spice . . unmistakably the after shave lotion for the untamed male. Try it soon . . she's waiting. 1.25 & 2.00 ...that's the way it is with Old Spice Old Spice AFTER SWAP LOTION SHULTON Norma Sharp To Give Recital Norma Sharp, Arkansas City senior, will give her senior recital at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Swarthout Recital Hall. Miss Sharp is majoring in voice. She will be accompanied by Richard Reitzel, Waterville sophomore. Smiley face On Campus with Max Shulman (By the author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!", "Dobie Gillis," etc.) IS EUROPE? cuss Modern European History covers the history of Strictly defined, Modern European History covers the history of Europe from January 1, 1964, to the present. However, in order to provide employment for more teachers, the course has been moved back to the Age of Pericles, or the Renaissance, as it is better known as. College life is such a busy one, what with learning the Maxixe; attending public executions, and walking our cheetahs, that perforce we find ourselves sometimes neglecting our studies. Therefore this column, normally a vehicle for innocent tomfoolery, will occasionally forego levity to offer a quick survey course in one of the learned disciplines. Today, for an opener, we will discuss Modern European History. It is better known as The single most important fact to remember about Modern European History is the emergence of Prussia. As we all know, Prussia was originally called Russia. The "P" was purchased from Persia in 1874 for $24 and Manhattan Island. This later became known as Guy Fawkes Day. Persia without a "P" was of course called Ersia. This so embarrassed the natives that they changed the name of the country to Iran. This led to a rash of name changing. Mesopotamia became Iraq, Schleswig-Holstein became Saxe-Coburg, Bosnia-Herzegovina became Cleveland. There was even talk about changing the name of stable old England, but it was forgotten when the little princes escaped from the Tower and invented James Watt. This later became known as the Missouri Compromise. G Only last week he invented the German short-haired pointer. Meanwhile Johann Gutenberg was quietly inventing the printing press, for which we may all be grateful, believe you me. Why grateful? I'll tell you why: Because without Gutenberg's invention you would not have this newspaper to read and you might never learn that Personna Stainless Steel Razor Blades are now available in two varieties—the regular double-edge blade we have all come to know and love, and the new Personna Injector Blade. Users of injector razors have grown morose in recent years, even sullen, and who can blame them? How would you feel if you were denied the speed and comfort and durability and truth and beauty of Personna Stainless Steel shaving? Not very jolly, I'll wager! But injector shavers may now rejoice—indeed all shavers may—for whether you remove your whiskers regularly or injectorily, there is a Personna blade for you—a Personna Stainless Steel Blade which will give you more luxury shaves than Beep-Beep or any other brand you might name. If by chance you don't agree, the makers of Personna will gladly buy you a pack of any brand you think is better. buy you a pack of any Yes, friends, we may all be grateful to Johann Gutenberg for inventing the means to spread this great news about Personna. The next time you're in Frankfurt-am-Main, why don't you drop in and say thanks to Mr. Guttenberg? He is elderly—408 years last birthday—but still active in his laboratory. Only last week he invented the German short-haired pointer. But I digress. Returning to Modern European History, let us now examine that ever-popular favorite, France. France, as we all know, is divided into several Departments. There is the Police Department, the Fire Department, the Gas and Water Department, and the Bureau of Weights and Measures. There is also Madame Pompadour, but that is a dirty story and is taught only to graduate students. Finally we take up Italy—the newest European nation. Italy did not become a unified state until 1848 when Garibaldi, Cavour, and Victor Emmanuel threw three coins in the Trevi Fountain. This lovely gesture so enchanted all of Europe that Metternich traded Parma to Talleyrand for Mad Ludwig of Bavaria. Then everybody waaltzed till dawn and then, tired but happy, they started the Thirty Years War. This later became known as Pitt the Younger. Space does not permit me to tell you any more about Modern European History. Aren't you glad? * * * $ \textcircled{c} $1965, Max Schulman And aren't you glad you tried Personna® Blades? You'll be even gladder when you try the perfect companion to Personna; new Burma Shave®. It soaks rings around any other lather! Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 29, 1965 Eggs, Pie Flung at Fling; Lake Became Duck Soup By Robert Stevens Ducks that would not cross the finish line, lakeings, eggs thrown all over people, pie in the face, and people falling in mud were all part of Spring Fling. Spring Fling, sponsored by the Association of University Residence Halls, AURH, was held last weekend. SATURDAY MORNING the volley ball games were played and the gymkhana were run. Grand champions in the volleyball competition were Battenfeld Hall and the sixth floor of Lewis Hall. The gymkhana was set up on a course in the parking lot of Templin Hall. Winners in the women's division were Susan Griffiths, Chanute senior, large cars; and Pamela Latshew, Kansas City, Mo., senior, small cars. The men's division winner in small cars was Fred Samuelson Wichita senior. Dee Gerstenberger, Park Forrest, Ill., senior won the large car division. ROBERT HENRY, El Dorado freshman ran the course in 3:17 while the winning time was 3:00 in his division. He drove a Model A. At noon a picnic was held in Allen Field House. Afternoon activities, moved to Potter Lake, and began by a special ten minute concert on the Campanile by Albert Gerken, University carillonneur. A four section marathon race was the first event of the afternoon. A "baton", actually a cardboard barrel, was issued to each team of four couples and each pair had to carry it 40 yards. Winning pairings were Jollife Hall and fifth floor of Hashinger Hall. The second place went to sixth floor Lewis and Battenfeld. The next event was the pie eating contest with Dennis Colombo. Brooklyn freshman, taking honors by eating the full pie in 43 seconds. The girls champion was Jane Bellman, Randolph sophomore in one minute 13 seconds. THE LAST OF the games was the egg toss. The object in this race is to toss an egg back and forth between couples and to see who can get the farthest distance from each other. Winners were Carol Thomas. Wichita junior and Larry Lay, Kansas City, Mo., junior. The duck race climaxed the day's activities. The ducks refused to cross the finish line and the Ellsworth Hill duck named Candy was declared the winner after 20 minutes. The best over-all men's division winners in Spring Fling was fourth floor of Ellsworth Hall. The corresponding trophy for the women went to sixth floor of Lewis. LAST NIGHT the Spring Sing entitled "Musical Moments" was held. It was sponsored by the Inter-Residence Association. The singing group selected as the best was the Templin Small Ensemble, directed by Melvin Dickson, Dallas, Texas, senior. A tie was run-off by a three legged race between fourth floor Ellsworth and Battenfeld for the men's division championship. The TOWN CRIER The TOWN CRIER Features Supplementary Textbook Reading Material Paperback Books, Magazines, Newspapers Greeting Cards, Gifts Hours: 8:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. DAILY—Including Sunday 912 Mass. Other winners in the Spring Sing competition were the Watkins and Pearson, mixed ensemble; Sellards, women's small ensemble; The Voices of Templin, men's large ensemble and Lewis, women's large ensemble. Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS AUDUBON $450 ALSO $300 TO 975 Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. Orange Blossom DIAMOND RINGS Orange Blossom DIAMOND RINGS MONACO FROM $100 AT THESE FINE STORES Arkansas City, McDowell's Jewelry Coffeyville, Wall Jewelers Emporia, Stanley Jewelry Inc. Garden City, Patterson's Hays, Kuhn's Jewelers Hays, Vernon Jewelers Hutchinson, Torrence Jewelers Junction City, Flower Jewelers Lawrence, Marks Jewelers Liberal, Collins Diamond Jewelers Lyons, Sloop Jewelry Newton, Hankins Jewelers Pittsburg, Benelli's Jrs. Russell, Kuhn's Jewelers Salina, Vernon Jewelers Topeka, Mace's Jewelers Wichita, Wehling Jewelry Co. KANSAS MISSOURI Kansas City, Gale Grossman Jlr., Country Club Plaza Kansas City, Jaccard's-Downtown-Ward Parkway Sedalia, Bichsel's Warrensburg, Highland's Gift & Jewelry Mexico, Pilehler Jewelry Co. Fulton, Taylor's Jewelry OKLAHOMA Enid, Morgan's Diamond Shop Asian Library Growth Leads Field at Watson The East Asian Library is one of the fastest growing sections of Watson Library, according to John L. Glinka, acting associate director of Watson Library. Karl Lo, librarian of the East Asian library section, said that in an average year over 4,000 volumes are added to this section. Although this year, he said, 5,000 volumes have already been added with still three months left in the school fiscal year. The library, which has doubled in size in the last few years, is currently ranked 25th in size in the United States and Canada among East Asian collections, according to Lo. Although the remodeling has not been completed in this section, it is hoped that it will be finished by the end of this semester. THE EAST ASIAN library section was recently moved to the northwest portion of the basement where the Kansas Room was formerly located. The biggest aim of the move is to provide more reader space. A reading room will be provided for about 50 people in the front of the section. Included in the reading room will be newspapers, magazines, other periodicals and reference books from the Far East. the library now houses 22,000 volumes in the stacks at the rear of their area. In describing the purpose of the East Asian library section. Lo said, it is primarily to complement the courses taught in the East Asian studies area. 1. Now that graduation's getting close, have you given any thought to the kind of work you'd like to do? TOM SMITH I want to work for The Good of Mankind. 2. I might have suspected. I'll probably grow a beard. 3. Is it required? It helps. And I'll certainly need a pair of sandals. A globe is on the desk. A man and woman holding a globe. 4. What do you expect to earn? All I ask is the satisfaction of knowing I'm helping to Build a Better World. ALEXANDER GIBBON 5. I'll be doing much the same thing. I've also lined up a job that affects society in a positive way. And if I do good, I'll move up, and my decisions will be even more important in the scheme of things. But where's your beard? What about sandals? SUSZU 6. You don't need them in Equitable's development program. All you need is an appetite for challenge and responsibility, and the desire to do the best possible job. The pay is tops, too. You know, I'm afraid a beard would itch—could you get me an interview with Equitable? For complete information about career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, or write to Edward D. McDougal, Manager, Manpower Development Division. The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United States Home Office; 1285 Ave. of the Americas, New York, N. Y. 10019 © Equitable 1965 AnEqual Opportunity Employer Monday, March 29, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 5 No, clothes don't make the man, but they do reflect his personality. Keep your clothes looking their best - send them to Independent. INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9TH & MISSISSIPPI 740 VERMONT - Call VI 3-4011 for Free Pickup and Delivery Service - --- Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 29,1965 Class Board Established A Board of Class Officers, composed of the officers from each class was established last Wednesday night at a meeting of class officers in the Kansas Union. The purpose of the board is to discuss and offer solutions to the problems involved in having successful and efficient class government, according to Richard Wintermote, executive secretary of the KU Alumni Association and Board of Class Officers chairman. Class Outfitters Chairman He said four subcommittees of about five board members each was formed last week which will report on possible action in four problem areas of class government at the Board's next meeting. Wednesday night at 7 p.m. in the Union. - Elections—"Many students don't know how to go about running for class office even though they are interested in it." - Organization - "This involves how an organization, if it is to be an active organization, could be structured as to committees and representatives." - Financial—"This committee is discussing how the classes, other than the senior class, can finance themselves." - Activities and Projects—"This deals with what each class would like to do during the year in the form of social entertainment and service to the University." Winternote said that the board was formed on a permanent basis, with the support of the Alumni office, "at the request and encouragement of the officers and other interested people." HE SAID THAT the board, after the four committees report their recommendations Wednesday, cannot actually put them into effect but "they could adopt them as resolutions." He noted that he thought a possible resolution of the board would be to have a voluntary dues system for the other three classes like that of the Senior class. In order for a class to have a dues system, they would have to make arrangements with the registrar and University Business Office for their cooperation. Wintermote explained. He said that this is what the senior class did when they initiated their voluntary fee payment. The senior dues are paid at enrollment through a University system of class fee cards. SAYING THAT CLASS finances were the biggest problem in effective class organization, Wintermote listed a "lack of organization and lack of continuity" as other problems which the board would consider. "There is no continuity through the four years of a class; the officers change, nothing holds the classes together," he said. He was asked if the board would exist next year. "We will make an effort to call the officers together and, probably, they will all be interested." Winternote said. Wintermote also stated his idea of the importance and significance of the board: It causes all of us to sit down and think about the problem (class organization). It gives us the opportunity to bring people together who have had experience in class government . . . to help the classes and students in future years." AN OFFICER of each class was contacted about ideas on the board, even though the board and officers have only had a formative meeting. Tonto Mays, Lyons senior and senior class president, said he believed the board would "lend continuity and sense of direction to the new class officers." LARRY BAST. Topeka junior and junior class vice-president, said that he thought the board offers "a forum to throw out problems and come out with new ideas to start next year with." Don Hunter, Abilene sophomore and sophomore class president, emphasized the help which such a board could be to class officers. Tom Rader, Greensburg freshman and freshman class president, said, "I think the board has as good or better possibilities as any organization on campus. It has a lot of high interest, it has the support of the Alumni Association." MAUPINTOUR Travel Hour Every Tuesday — 3:00 to 4:00 Free Admission AT THE Little Banquet Restaurant ON THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER (West 23rd Street) Informal Showings of Exciting Color Movies on Vacation Spots Throughout the World. This Week's Feature Caribbean Cruise & Holiday in South America FAST ACTING! SAFE NoDoz KEEP ALERT TABLETS 15 TABLETS NoDoz SAFE AS COFFEE THE SAFE WAY to stay alert without harmful stimulants NoDoz™ keeps you mentally alert with the same safe refresher found in coffee. Yet NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. Absolutely not habit-forming. Next time monotony makes you feel drowsy while studying, working or driving, do as millions do...perk up with safe, effective NoDoz Keep Alert Tablets. Another fine product of Grove Laboratories. A message of importance to sophomore men If you've got what it takes to be an Army Officer; you may qualify for this new on-campus training program A new Army ROTC program starts this coming Summer for sophomore men who apply prior to May 1—only 3,000 applicants to be accepted 5 If you're a sophomore now attending one of the 247 colleges and universities that offer Army Officer training-or you plan to transfer to one of these schools next Fall-you may qualify for the new two-year Army ROTC program. This new program-designed especially for college men who have not taken Army ROTC during their first two years-will commence with six weeks of field training this coming Summer, beginning June 14. Then you'll have on-campus training during your junior year . . . six additional weeks at camp during the following Summer . . . and more on-campus training during your senior year. Even flight training is offered at some schools. ROTC training is really a process of learning to organize and direct others to be a leader. Consider how important this ability can be to you throughout life; yet, to acquire it you will spend relatively little time in the ROTC classroom. You'll obtain valuable junior management experience .a fuller and richer campus life . extra spending money ($40 per month during your junior and senior school years, and even more during Summer training) .and, when you graduate, an Army Officer's commission as Second Lieutenant. Then you'll normally spend two interesting years on active duty, often abroad with opportunities for travel. Talk to the Professor of Military Science on your campus about this opportunity. Ask him to describe this new short program in detail. Or send in the coupon below for complete information. There's no obligation involved, and you'll not be subjected to any "hard sell" recruiting effort. The kind of men the Army wants can decide for themselves if this new opportunity is right for them. If you're good enough to be an Army Officer, don't settle for less. Sign up now for Army ROTC. Send in this coupon for more Information on this new two-year on-campus Army Officer training program, U.S. Army ROTC, Post Office Box 1040, Westbury, New York 11591 Please send me complete information on the new two-year Army ROTC program. I understand there is no obligation involved. Name___Campus Address___ College or University___ City___ State___ Zip Code___ I expect to complete my sophomore year on___196___ While I am not now attending a school that offers Army ROTC training, I am planning to attend the following ARMY ROTC school that does next Fall: College or University: ___ ___ C-365 Monday, March 29, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 7 DID YOU KNOW? ONLY ACME HAS MORE THAN TWO LOCATIONS THERE IS ONE NEAR YOU (See Below for the ACME Nearest You.) ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaning is Convenience and Personalized Service Downtown, 1111 Massachusetts VI 3-5155 Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-0928 Malls Shopping Center VI 3-0895 Acme laundry and dry cleaners Come in or call today for FREE pick-up 1-HOUR JET PERSONALIZED LIGHTNING SERVICE Come in or call today for FREE pick-up and delivery Page 8 --- University Daily Kansan Monday, March 29, 1965 31 Sports Briefs Southern California stormed through the ranks Saturday at Ames and wrapped up the NCAA swimming title behind the second straight triple-crown performance by Roy Saari. The Trojans toppled Indiana 285 to $ 278 \frac{1}{2} $ to capture the event as Saari chopped more than nine seconds off the collegiate and American records in the 1,650-yard free-style. Southern California had to wait for the final event to clinch their claim to the title. In the 400-yard freestyle event, the Trojan team finished ahead of the Indiana squad as Yale won the event with a record-breaking time of 3:07.2. Eight American and nine NCAA records were shattered at the meet. It was the second victory this year for the Jayhawks and was the first loss in three matches this year for the Wildcats. KU downed the Kansas State Wildcat tennis team 7-0 in straight sets Saturday in the first meeting this season between the two teams. In singles competition: Jim Burns defeated Kraus, 6-1, 6-3; Lance Burr defeated Smith, 6-0, 6-1; John Grantham defeated Millis, 6-1, 6-2; Barry McGrath defeated Hauber, 6-4, 8-6; and John Guyot defeated Hastings, 6-1, 6-4. In doubles competition: Burns- Burr defeated Kraus-Hauber, 6-4, 6-4; and Grantham-McGrath defeated Smith-Millis, 6-2, 6-3. A speedy white Chaparral, piloted by its Texas-millionaire owner Jim Hall, streaked to a surprise victory Saturday in the Sebring 12-hour endurance run. The Chaparral, with a revolutionary automatic transmission, put an end to the reign of the sleek Ferraris who had captured this endurance crown for the past four years. The best Ferrari could do this year was third. The winners covered 197 laps and averaged 84.723 miles per hour. The old record of 214 laps and 92.334 miles per hour held on because of a driving rainstorm that slowed the racers considerably. A Ford GT prototype, which won the Daytona continental race at 2,000 kilometers only a month ago, finished second. David Piper of London and Tony Maggs of Pretoria, South Africa, drove their green Ferrari to third position. There were six accidents in the race. Four drivers and two spectators were taken to hospitals but none were seriously hurt. Iowa State battled stiff odds Saturday and managed a come-back to defeat the defending champions, A bachelor's guide to marriage Corey Ford offers a few hints "marriage counselors may have overlooked." Find out the one thing to murmur when your wife (tardy) asks if you've been waiting long or your husband (lost) drives 50 miles before asking directions . . . in April Reader's Digest. Also— Who shall be the judge? A doctor describes his moral struggle--should he deliver this baby girl who would never dance or run?—and tells how his decision was sustained 17 years later...in the April Reader's Digest, with more than 40 other features now on sale. Oklahoma State. 87-86, to capture the National Collegiate Athletic Association wrestling title. After Friday night's semifinal round, the Cyclones trailed the Cowpokes by 22 points. However, they came back Saturday with six consolation victories to move into the lead for the final round. Oklahoma State's heavyweight Russ Weiner lost a slim 4-3 meeting with Jim Nance of Syracuse and the loss knocked out OSU's last chance for victory. Iowa State's winning points came in the 177-pound match when Tom Peckham scored a 5-3 decision over the Cowboy's Bill Harlow, sending the Cyclones ahead, 87-82, with two events to go. Two men-Bill Bradley of Princeon and Gail Goodrich of U.C.L.A. were named to share the Helms Athletic Foundation player-of-the-year award for college basketball. They head the 36-man Helms All-American team. The team includes Walt Wesley of KU and Dave Stallworth of Wichita. IT'S GREAT TO BE 'IN' A-1 Racers. SLIM CONTINENTAL SLACKS Sand in star for a new family film A JERN LEWIS PRODUCTION A.1 Kotzn Co., Los Angeles, Calif. Ryun Runs 4:07.2 In First Meet Jim Ryun, outstanding miler from Wichita East, opened his final season of high school competition Saturday night in the State High School Indoor meet at Ahearn Fieldhouse in Manhattan and ran a 4:07.2 mile to break the class AA mark. Ryun, who was with the U.S. Olympic team in 1964, easily ran down the old AA record of 4:21.6 He just missed breaking the fieldhouse mark at Manhattan of 4:07.0 set in 1963 by John Camien of Emporia State. Wichita East slipped by Wyandotte of Kansas City, 38-37, to capture the meet honors. Ryun's spectacular performance shared the spotlight with the work of his teammate, J. W. Johnson. Johnson, a junior sprinter, won the 60-yard dash and low hurdles. He was a very close second in the high hurdles behind Ralph Taylor of Wyandotte. JOHNSON tied the record in the 60-yard. He set new marks in the hurdles and was personally responsible for 14 of East's points. Ryun was not really satisfied with his performance. "I was too far off the pace for the first half," he noted. Still, Ryun managed a very respectable 2:06 for the first half of his record-setting show. Although he had hoped to break Camien's record for the fieldhouse, Ryun said he was happy with the race. It was just slow for a "Ryun mile." SATURDAY'S meet was the first indoor competition for Ryun since running the two-mile late in 1964. All of his work since then has been outdoors. He cited poor weather as a factor hurting all the team because it limited their practice, especially sprinting. Competition in the AA class did not steal the show at Saturday night's meet, though, as the races for the winners of other divisions were as tight as the AA. In class A Hays and Medicine Lodge tied with 18 points each. In class B, Kinsley knocked off Centralia, 13-10. In class BB the champion was Republic over Belpre-Trousdale. SUA Henry Mancini Concert Block Ticket Sales end March 31 Don't be left out. Get your tickets in your living group TODAY! A prince of the guitar has arrived in the musical world: John Williams...God has laid a finger on his brow, and it will not be long before his name becomes a byword in England and abroad, thus contributing to the spiritual domain of his country. ANDRÉS SEGOVIA In "Columbia Records Presents John Williams," this extraordinary virtuoso performs works of Bach, Albéniz, Tárrega, Turina, Ponce and Sagreras. And in a brand-new album, "Virtuoso Music for Guitar," you will hear more of his amazing artistry. Add both of these Columbia Masterworks Lp's to your collection. THE SOUND OF GENIUS ON COI UMBIA RECORDS Columbia Records presents John Williams ML 6008/MS 6608* Virtuoso Music for Guitar JOHN WILLIAMS Paganini Falk Villa-Lobos Granados Castelnuovo Tedesco Dodgson ML 6096/MS 6696' University Daily Kansan Page 9 Candy and Her 13 Friends Have A "Ducky" Good Time The week had been hectic. Candy, along with 13 of her friends had been selected to visit KU. When they first arrived, they were greeted with warm affection but later were tossed around and even sprayed with water. They were snatched from their homes in front of the scholarship and residence halls. SATURDAY, CONFUSION set in again. Candy was taken from her cage and at the sound of a gun was tossed into Potter Lake. THE OTHER SEVEN FRIENDS cruised around the bridge to socialize, completely unaware of any observers. About three-fourths of the way across the pond, Candy and her friends decided to reverse direction—the had seen enough of Potter lake. Just as they turned around they were met by the duck patrol—two people in a canoe. Rather than collide with any canoe, Candy and her friends once again turned around, Candy had never seen so many people. They were all shouting — some were shouting for her. Candy and six of her friends decided to forge ahead and take a swim to investigate this strange pond. Hud and Willy decided to swim along with Emily while Sid, Archie, and Fanny brought up the rear. Each of Candy's friends would take turn leading the group. Sid was out in front for quite some time while Hud and his pal decided to inspect some of the spectators. Monday, March 29, 1965 BACK AT THE BRIDGE, the sociizing seven were encountering some trouble. Thor, a Great Dane, La Pizza 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 Offers GREATEST MENU SELECTION in Lawrence 30-Minute Delivery Service Guaranteed! What you can do with an hour a day Discover what a Supreme Court justice, the president of Du Pont, and others have done with the 45 full working days per year that you add to your life when you set aside just one hour a day . in an article in April Reader's Digest. Also— was cavorting around on the shore barking and looking ferocious. But the biggest threat came from Hoss, an oversized St. Bernard. One of Candy's friends stepped bravely out of the water and almost became Hoss's dinner. Don't Blame the Ghetto a Negro looks at the Negro Problem After the confusion had settled down, Candy and her companions floated down the pond once again. Again they reversed directions and again the duck patrol was on their tails. After 20 minutes of splashing, frolicking, and diving the patrol came after them with more determination. One person brought out a net to spoil all the fun. After a struggle all of Candy's friends were captured and put back in their cages but Candy would not give up so easily. For nearly 45 minutes she managed to evade the duck patrol with her clever maneuvers. Alas, she was caught. An ex-Harlem resident tells how he "escaped" . . . how he got good jobs. .. and why he believes others can, too. In the April issue of the Reader's Digest, with more than 40 other rewarding features, now on sale. CANDY WAS FEELING RATHER sad until someone announced she was the winner. Winner of what? The Spring Fling duck race. She was the duck that had come the closest to the finish line and had been the most active. The week wasn't a total loss after all for her and for the boys from Ellsworth Hall, whom she represented. The Douglas County Red Cross Bloodmobile will visit the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity house Wednesday at the request of Steve Matthews, Lawrence senior and chapter president. SAE's Donate Again to Blood Drive It will be the Bloodmobile's second trip to the fraternity. The SAE's donated 40 pints of blood on Dec. 15, in what the Douglas County Red Cross called its most successful fraternity house drive. Fraternity and Sorority Jewelry A B Γ Δ E Z H Θ J K A M - Guards - Rings * Pins Mugs - Lavaliers - Crests Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Massachusetts N E O P R T F X Q Matthews made the request for the second visit after lining up 30 volunteers. Portraits of Distinction Passports - Applications Fast Service Please: Call for appointment P HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Owner 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 GLOBE The World's Most Recommended Drycleaning HAGGAR Slacks* recommends our Sanitone drycleaning process *They say: "Regular Sanitone drycleanings are recommended for keeping the smart shape and fine texture of HAGGAR Slacks." Our knowledge of fabrics, our advanced Sanitone drycleaning process and our meticulous shaping and pressing keep that "like new" look in the garment. For the best drycleaning in town, call on us today. Faint in DRYCLEANING SANITONE SERVICE LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 1001 New Hampshire VI3-3711 FIND IN DEVICELANDING APPLIED SANITONE SERVICE Page 10 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 29, 1965 MISS MARY JOAN CROSBY WINNING SMILE—Miss Pat Wise, Oklahoma City, Okla., junior, was crowned Miss Lawrence—KU at the annual pageant Friday night. Beauty Queen Plans to Sing For Career Because her mother wanted her to sing in the church chair, Pat Wise, Oklahoma City junior, took voice lessons and used them with good effect Friday night in winning the Miss Lawrence—KU Pageant. For the talent portion of the annual competition, Miss Wise sang the "Siempre Libera" from Verdi's "La Traviata." "I chose this work because it would appeal to the audience more; it is easily understood because the emotions involved are easily recognizable." Miss Wise said. Miss Wise is a music education major, and is minoring in music voice. She plans to work for a master's degree in music education and, perhaps have a professional vocal career. If she does not sing professionally, Miss Wise plans to teach choral music in secondary education. This summer, besides competing in the Miss Kansas pageant in July, Miss Wise hopes to work as an apprentice artist for the Santa Fe Opera Company in New Mexico. Her major vocal-theatrical appearance so far has been her starring role as Anita in the KU theatre production of "West Side Story." Research Awards Given to Students Undergraduate students involved in research were awarded for their efforts Saturday. 12 KU students presented reports on their research before a panel of three judges and William Green, executive director of the Kansas Heart Association. The reports are sponsored by the Kansas Heart Association each year. This is the fourth year the association has sponsored the undergraduate research reports program. Three prizes and nine presentations were awarded to the participants. FIRST PRIZE to Maxwell T. Sanford, Kansas City, Mo., junior. Sanford has been engaged in a satellite tracking project which has included building a telescope station on the top of Lindley Hall. He received $60 from the Kansas Heart Association. Rex Bare, Wichita senior, placed second with a report on his research project "The Food Habits of the Red-Tailed Hawk in Eastern Kansas." Bare was awarded $30 from the association. Douglas Dedo, Birmingham. Mich., senior, placed third with a report on his research project in connection with time-lapse photography. He was presented $20. PRESENTATIONS OF $10 each went to the other participants in the program: William B. Kerfoot, Lawrence junior; Wilson C. Kerfoot, Lawrence junior; John H. Fitch, Lawrence junior; Sue A. Tomlinson, Newton junior; Gary Hamilton, Ge- HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING OPEN 24 HRS. Across From The High School 19th & La. VI 3-9631 Haircut For Your BEST Haircut - 4 Chairs - 8-6 Mon.-Fri. - 8-5 Sat. Come to PLAZA Barber Shop 1804 Mass. VI 2-9462 In Dillon's Plaza SUA SUA ALL UNIVERSITY neseo senior; Ronald Carlock, Wichita senior; Thomas Payne, Salina junior; Jimmie Doll, Joplin, Mo. sophomore; and Terry A. Miller, Baxter Springs senior. TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT TROPHIES Date: Wednesday, March 31, 1965 Time: 6:30 p.m.; Place: Union Ballroom 1st and 2nd place in Men's & Women's Singles & Doubles To Register: Call Don Miller—VI 2-2188-6-10 p.m. or sign up in the Jaybowl NOW! Shows 7:00 & 9:00 The reports given Saturday morning in Summerfield Hall ranged from research on sand dunes of Idaho to hydrogen bonding in alcohols. Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 GLENN HENRY FORD FONDa The ROUNDERS --- Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone V13-1065 TONITE & TUES... CODE 7... VICTIM 5 TECHNISCOPE* Plus — "DR. STRANGFLOVE" Sunset LIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 19 OPEN FULL-TIME! Open 6:30 --- Starts 7:00 TONITE & TUES. Peter Sellers in "THE PINK PANTHER" Plus. 2 KU Profs. Win Grants Plus "POCKETFUL OF MIRACLES" Award of Guggenheim fellowships to two KU faculty members was announced today. Dr. David B. Beard, professor of physics, received a $7,000 grant to do research at Imperial College in London. Dr. Milton Steinhardt, chairman of the Department of Music History and Literature, received his second Guggenheim award, $6,500 for study which will include work in Vienna and Brussels. When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified White Stag White Stag's tailoring achieves the long, lean look in these Clubhouse South- hampton pants of trim stretch herringbone $800 cotton ----------- OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 8.00 It has the look and comfort of White Stag! Diamond Dot roll-sleeve cotton tops skirts and pants with equal ease. $ 5^{00} Calhoun's 1744 MASSACHUSETTS IN DILLON'S PLAZA The Classical film Series presents Day of Wrath (1943 Denmark) A masterwork of the Danish cinema directed by Carl Dreyer Wednesday-7:00 p.m. Admission 60c Fraser Theater University Daily Kansan Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS Monday, March 29, 1965 17 Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. TYPING Mielk's office continues guaranteed typing service by professional secretaries. Call VI 2-1626 or VI 3-5947 or bring papers to Red Dog Inn Building. t Experienced typist wanta typing in home, rates, prompt service. Pimp If V1 2-3356. 6 years typing experience plus background in proofreading enables me to guarantee accuracy on college papers. New electric typewriter equipped for interchangeable type sets. Mrs. Berndt, 801 Michigan or VI 2-0400. tf Experienced typist. 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric type writer, fast accurate service. Req's: CALL MRS. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648. Former teacher will give prompt and careful attention to typing your term papers and reports. 4 years experience, call VI 3-8829. tf Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate rate. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter, Gestetner Duplicator Mrs McEdowney, 2521 Alabama St. Phone VI 3-8568. Theses only on Royal Electric Pica Type writer. CALL MRS. Fulcher at VI 3-0583. Experienced secretary will type term papers, law briefs, theses, etc. for clients on business and business terms. Fast and accurate. Reasonable rate. Call Marsha Göhf at VI 3-2571. Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. Will do excellent work at request by Betsy Proviter. Betty Muskrat, 140 Indian, or call VI 2-0901, tf Term papers. Theses by experienced typist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tf Former Harvard and U. of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports, and theses. PHONE VI 3-7207. tf Will do typing in my home. Accurate, reasonable rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at VI 2-0210. tf Experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing. Special toys, games and language skills. Quick and reasonable Electric typewriter. Call VI 2-3967. tt Twpist, experienced with term papers, theses, and dissertations, will give typed, structured reports of his electric machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048. tuf Experienced typist wants theses, term-papers, and dissertations to be typed on electric (pica type) typwriter. Please Pat Call Beck at VI 3-5630. tt Experienced secretary would like typing in her home, with new electric type, computer fastest and accurate service. Reasonable rate. Call Mrs. Lancecaster at VI 2-1188. Fast service, accurate tying. Done by former high school typing teacher, reports or tests for advanced Electric copwriter. CALL MRS. Marsh at VI 3-8262. tf Experienced typist will do dissertations, manuscript, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon, special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I.J. VI 3-7485. tf FOR RENT Must sublease Stroffer Place an beginning April 1st. Fully furnished in last building closest to campus. Five minute Call VI 3-2524. Rent is $65 a minute. 3-30 Furnished 3 room apt. Private bath, all utilities paid, excent electricity. $80.00 per month. 1343 Tenn. Phone after 5:00 p.m. VI 3-6103. 3-29 Large 1st floor 6 room unfurnished apt 820.745.110 UUW and downsides $75.00 Call VI 2-1124 3-29 Married, Graduate Students. Faculty-2- bedroom ants. $85.00. 1 available now; 5 available in the room. Call for brochure. VI 3-2116, Santee Apts. 1123 Indiana, tl Apartment for rent for 3 or 4 boys, furnished. VI 3-2281. tf Large 5 room unfurnished 2nd floor apt Near 9th and Indiana. $65.00. Call VI 1124. 3-29 PARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30-60 people, like box, liquid refreshments furnished desired Contact Don at the CALL VI 3-1086 for reservations ENTERTAINMENT ATTENTION PARTY THROWERS: Do you want the Beatles, the Kingsmen, Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Rav Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL VI 2-1791. tf Now you can hear a variety of excellent dance bands on stereo demo tapes, in men, and abusive Blades, the Non-men, the Funs; union and non-union tt call VI 2-1791. MISCELLANEOUS BAR-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-Q ribs that grandma and grandpa can eat, try ours. Or order them to a slab. Hours: 11:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-9510 3-31 *ARTY TIME? Building available for phone inquiries. PHONE: taphtpfreed at: VI 3-3985. CHSWINN BICYCLES - service all makes. parts and accessories. tire $1.46, tubes tic, pedals, seats, bikings, luggage racks and micro. See BIRLING at 7th and MICT or CALL VI 3-0581. Friends coming this weekend? Looking for a place with good food at reasonable prices. HI FLORES RESTAURANT. Plenty of free parking. 9th and Iowa. tt it's great for a date. Take her bowling at Hillcrest Bowl. Finest lanes in the state and the district. Also Mon, Tues, and Fr. after 9:00 p.m. Hillcrest Bowl, 9th and Iowa. Rent electric, standard, and portable typewriters. Repair all makes of electric, motor, and battery machines onern Business Equipment (formerly Business Machines), 15 E. 8th, M 3-0151, tf Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon.-thru-Fri, or all dav Sat, or Sun. Phone VI 3-6231. tf BUSY PEOPLE—No time to spare for household cares? Have a professional cleaner in your home regularly or oca-cure Call Pioneer Cleaning SI V 3-4081 4-13 Micki's new secretarial and typing service offers professional work to faculty, students and businessmen. Call for appointment. VI 2-1626 or VI 3-5947. ft WANTED Austrian exchange teacher looks for travelling companion to the west of the country in June. Write to Dustin Jones, Fort Hays Kansas State College, Hays, Kans. 3-29 Working girl needs roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment. Call VI 3-3988 after five. 3-29 OLD CARS WANTED, top prizes paid Do it today! GI Joe's, 601 Vermont; t t Washing and ironing done in my home IBM phone I-8-ES98. 1151 New Jersey St. Phone VI - E-ES98. FOR SALE 1961 TR-3 roadster, top running condition, excellent body and top, tonneau and boot. Call VI 3-8853. 4-13 1946 Corvair Spyder coupe, metallic blue, 4-speed, white walls, heavy duty sus- pression, posttraction, Lucas lights, mixtures, factory warranty, Call VI 2-3103 evenings. Phonographs—final cut on all 1964 models—all famous brands reduced to clear saw on Magnavox, General Electric and Motorola at Rock Stoneback's, 8/25. 4-28 1963 Austin Healy 3000 Mark II Deluxe Roadster. Clean interior and excellent mechanically. Wire wheels, hardtop, multiband radio, five good tires plus two snow. Must sell, best offer VI 2-0123 after 7:00 p.m. 3-29 SAVE SAVE SAVE Just $2,300.00 buys a '64 Barracura, automatic transmission, radio and heater, 273 cubic in. V-8. Fully equipped, under factory warranty, low milkage. Must sell at once. Call VI 2-1972 for information. 3-31 BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMIUMS! Occidental Time Life: conversion, Go-Back, and Move-Over options. Age 18 = $33.90 = $10.00, Age 20 = $34.40 = $10.00, Age 22 = $34.70 = $10.00, Call Wes S安臣 at VI 3-2164 for details. tf Why deny yourself prestige, beauty, and efficiency? Be the proud owner of a 1953 BMW car with a 2008 V8 transmission, mission, battery, 2 tires new. $135.00. Call VI 2-2176 after 7:00 p.m. 3-30 1963 Tempest LeMans sport coupe, 326. V-8, automatic. Console shift, silver, call Ron Freedman, VI 3-1061. 3-26 Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, minimegraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL V1 2-1901 *for free delivery* Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive notes. Revised for all classes. Formerly called The Theta Notes. Call VI 3-1428. $4.50. Firewood - 800 x 14 white sidewalls. Two sets. One set is Atlas snow tires, which will go for $5 apiece. The second set is $26 (apiece) Riverside white sidewalls. They will go for $15 apiece. The set (of 4) is $4. Call Bob Monk-VI - 37102 tiles 1959 Gardner 50'x10" house trailer, good condition. Reasonably priced. Call VI 2-0731. 4-15 Nebecor HI-FI tape recorder, electric, good condition. Will carry largest reels. i-speeds. Call John Carnahan at VI 2- 1763. 4-1 Mayfair miniature tape recorder. $3 \frac{1}{4}$ and $7 \frac{1}{2}$ L.P.S. 5 inch reels. Battery Recharger included. $39.00. VI 2-2504. 4 TR-3, 1957, $695.00. VI 2-1020. 2235 Westchester. 3-28 TYPEWRITERS, electronics, manuals, por- tameters, Royal, Skipper-Sigma, Olivetti. Adding machines, office supplies and machines. Typewriter, 70 ff. Mass., VI 3-3644 Students, why throw money away on rent when you can own a 1962 Marlette x 50, modern, two-bedroom mobile house with small monthly payments. This home is clean and in excellent condition. For Further information call RI 8-0973 or RI 8-0916. tt CHINA-Noritaki, Mayfair design. New, never used or even removed from packing. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk. M 3-7102. tf THE STABLES now open every day—Serving steaks, chops sea food, sandwich, farm management, new atmosphere. New equipment available. Phone Vt-3-9644, 1401 W. 7th. NEED A BAND ? 3 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM. PHONE VI 2-2100. 6 mm, role film movie camera; GE portable e light; 3 police radios (1); Mobilitec remote video recorder; unable or crystal receive. (2) Motorola walki-talki (low band), (3) high band converter. Call Gary Grada, VI 2-1080 ['m not in.'] tt 500 premium tires—famous brands for less than off brands—Get our deal before you buy—Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. St. 4-28 Zenith stereophone high fidelity for sale. Portable, two-speaker, micro-touch needle, two-level stand including album- holders. Purchased for $150 only on select dates as last stock so will to highest price within 2 weeks. Call Rita VI 3-2847 after 10:30 pm. Porsche 1600N, normal chrome wheels, perfect paint and interior, am-shortwave radio, sunroof. This is one of the type 356 A's available. $1,500. VI 2-3489 G.E. stereo phono, repossessed—sold new camera equipment. 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Ph.VI 3-0350 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 29,1965 Touring Musicians End Four-Day Trip Hard work—but fun too, that was the comment of members of the KU Symphony Orchestra and the Concert Band when they returned from their four-day tour of nine Kansas City high schools. The tour members left last Monday in four buses. A huge moving van carried all the luggage. Accompanying the 140 band members and the 75 orchestra members were Russell Wiley, professor of band, Kenneth Bloomquist, director of the marching band, and Robert Baustian, professor of orchestra. PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS BECKY ROGERS, Garden City sophomore and one of the violinists in the orchestra, said, "The whole tour was very tiring, because of the schedule. We often slept on the buses. Still, we had a good time and I thought we got better each time we played." MISS SWAIN also told of the informal basketball game the boys of the band played at one of the high schools. "We were not getting very much exercise," she said, "So when we saw a great big gymnasium with basketball equipment and a trampoline, we made good use of it all." It ended up with the boys of the band playing a game against the Parkhill High students. Results of the match are unknown. Estimates of the score vary. Among the music played by the orchestra and the band were works by Tschaikowsky, Respighi, Schumann, Wagner, and Rimski-Korsakov. One of the most popular pieces proved to be the last movement of Tschaikowsky's Fourth Symphony, as played by the band, Sylvia Swain, Lees Summit, Mo., senior, said. The traveling on the tour was not without mishap. On the second day, the tour members left Lees Summit to go to Parkhill High School. The roads were so sleety, however, that it was decided to let the orchestra members, who were playing first, go into the first two buses. The buses left, but the traffic in the right lane was so slow that the buses could only proceed at a snail's pace. The result was that the two other buses with the band members passed them in the other lane and arrived at Parkhill long before the orchestra buses. The war the Reds can't win "Religion is rooted deep in human nature"—suppression won't eradicate it. Still the Russian 3-pronged antireligious campaign goes on. Find out how it works (especially the 3rd prong "to turn youth to atheism") . . . in April Reader's Digest. Also— Here are the facts you should know before you're asked to come in and explain your return. What to do if your tax return is questioned Get April Reader's Digest with more than 40 features, now on sale! DARRYL GRAHAM Sir Knight MEN'S FORMAL RENTALS SPRING FORMAL? Sir Knight offers a full selection of styles and sizes designed to dress and fit you perfectly for that special occasion. ROYAL MASTER CLEANERS 842 Mass. VI 3-9594 UNIVERSITY EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE SERIES presents JOHN DOS PASSOS' "U. S. A." MARCH 25, 26, 27 MARCH 30,31,APRIL 1,2,3 Tickets: $1.50 - .75 with KU ID Critics Castigate New Fraser Hall Design By Harry Krause and Larry Ketchum New Fraser Hall, slated to replace existing Fraser Hall early in 1967, has raised considerable architectural controversy on campus and in the Lawrence area. Forty copies of a petition asking for a rejection of the plans for New Fraser Hall began circulating on campus this morning. The petitions are being circulated by Walter M. Hull, assistant instructor in English and Ruth Hull, teaching assistant in German. The petition states, in part, that the plans for New Fraser should be rejected on the ground that it tended to "further the trend of de-beautification already manifested in such buildings as New Blake Hall." In an attempt to determine feelings, interviews were conducted last night with administration, faculty members, architects, and students. CHANCELLOR WESCOE said, "I like new Fraser Hall. It gives a good representation of the University, and the twin towers are visible in the distance as are the towers of old Fraser Hall. I suggest that those who are not happy with the design submit drawings for open criticism, showing what they think the building should look like." James R. Surface, vice chancellor and dean of faculties, said, "It looks to me like it (the new building) would be an attractive building." He continued, "It's a lot easier to be critical than to come up with a design." Surface said that the state architect, James C. Canole, was responsible for the final design, but sometimes private companies are called in to aid in structural designs. Canole said new Fraser meets "IT GAINS a classic feeling in view of modern functions and preserves the character of the east campus." Canole said. the criteria set forth concerning the style and character of the structure. The state architect when asked whether he would have come up with the same design if given free reign, replied, "This is an idealistic situation. Almost all architects have to design what their clients want. A few, like Frank Lloyd Wright, did not do this. If the form of the building were entirely up to me, I would have treated the exterior somewhat differently." Keith Lawton, vice chancellor for operations, would not comment for the press last night, but in a statement released early yesterday he said, "The possibility of creating a building completely unrelated to the past was discarded." He continued, "Almost every member of the public who commented on the problem urged that new Fraser retain a resemblance to the old building." HARRY COMPTON, assistant professor of architecture, said, "In being philosophically consistent, the University ought to begin plans to construct a large open sewer near the KU Medical Center. It would be a similarly remarkable combination of tradition and function and as effective a mockery of public health as this is of the public taste." Compton added, "I know of no member of the KU faculty who was consulted on the matter of design." Miss Rosemary Marzolf, assistant professor of art history, said that if her comments on new Fraser were printed, she would run the reporter out of town. Robert Guenther, associate professor of architecture, said, "It would be naive to evaluate that thing. It becomes a monument to bureaucracy. I question what it says to our culture and to us as modern beings. I could challenge the people responsible for it to give a reason for it. I think the people responsible for it should come out and tell what it does and is. I would want them to talk about scale, proportion, orientation in terms of what it does for our culture. Take the roof off of it and it looks like one of those hotels in a "Monopoly" game." Lawrence architects Gregory Gleason, Robertson and Ericson. Maurice Keys, and Richard Peters refused to comment on the new building. ARCHITECTURAL STUDENTS questioned were unanimous in expressing their disfavor with the proposed building. Ron Davidow, Shawnee Mission third-year architecture student, said, "New Fraser and Blake, not to (Continued on page 8) Vandalism Closes Red Schoolhouse The Red Schoolhouse has been closed to the public because of vandalism which occurred last Sunday morning, according to Gayle Mott, owner of the schoolhouse. The vandalism at the Red Schoolhouse probably occurred between 12:10 and 12:30 a.m. the sheriff's office said. The vandalism is still under investigation. Mott said Beta Tau, an independent house for men, left the schoolhouse at 12:10 a.m. Sunday. Mott arrived at 12:20 a.m. and found the piano smashed, the antique stove wrecked, splintered benches, broken windows and general destruction. Mott estimated the damage at $100 to $200. After discussion with Davis, Mott attributed the damage to "vandals" not Beta Tau. Mott originally thought the boys had a wild party and he called the sheriff to report the damage. He then called the Beta Tau house and talked to Paul Davis, West Des Moines, Ia., freshman. Mott says he is unaware of the union-non-union band difficulty and is "an innocent bystander." Mott mentioned that the Blades (non-union band who played for Beta Tau) had their cars vandalized the previous week. Mott said he has never before had any trouble at the schoolhouse and thinks this is a "spite job," involving union and non-union bands. He felt "somebody was casing the party," since apparently those involved in the party were not there when the damage occurred. Karl Zetmeir, Emmett senior and manager of the Blades, said, "I recommend the March 3 issue of the UDK. We had nothing to do with the vandalism." Zetmeir was referring to the front page article of the UDK which stated that University living groups have been asked to hire union bands. Mancini Concert Rates Late Night All university women will have late night permission till 2 a.m. on the night of the Mancini concert, April 24, Joan Fowler, chairman of the AWS Standards Board, announced today. Miss Fowler, Shawnee Mission senior, said the late night permission would not cost anything, as did late permission given on the night of the Belafonte concert last fall. Tickets for the concert are being offered for bloe sales until tomorrow. The group with the largest number of participating ticket buyers will be given first choice of the bloc seats for the concert, Bill Frick, Ft. Scott junior, said. Frick is president of the Student Union Activities Board. General ticket sales will begin on April 14 at 9 a.m. in the Information Booth, the Kansas Union, and Bell's Music Store. Ticket prices will be $2.25 and $1.75. Some tickets may be available at the door. The concert will be in Allen Field House. The stage will be situated in a raised platform, and at least onehalf of the field house will be used for seating, providing about 9000 seats for the performance. Kansas Housing Bill Loses in Close Vote TOPEKA—(UPI)—What a Senate committee admired as "an eloquent appeal" by Negro Sen. George Haley, R-Kansas City, today failed to save the proposed fair housing bill for Kansas. The measure went down to a 6-5 defeat in the Federal and State Affairs Committee after nearly an hour of discussion. Although the committee voted only to table the bill, for all practical purposes it was considered dead. Another vote was considered unlikely. SEN. NORMAN E. Gaar, R-Westwood, made the motion to table the legislation because he said it "takes away the civil rights of a huge group of people . . . and gives the rights to a minority group." He said the bill had a historical analogy with the English Star Chamber and "would allow the Civil Rights Commission unbridled power to come into a financial institution and in effect dictate a decision which ought to be a private decision." "This bill in effect is telling our citizens they no longer have any civil rights," he said, "and it holds up private decisions by financial institutions." Daily hansan 62nd Year, No.110 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Suicide Squadron Bombs U.S. Embassy in Saigon The blast tore the northeast corner of the embassy building, smashed most of the first floor and broke nearly every window. Weather SAIGON —(UPI)— A Viet Cong suicide squadron fought police and U.S. Marine guards today and bombed the U.S. Embassy with 200 to 250 pounds of TNT, inflicting heavy loss of life. Massive retaliation against the Hanoi regime seemed a certainty. Tuesday, March 30, 1965 The thunderous explosion killed at least two Americans and 15 Vietnamese and wounded 150 others. Several of the terrorists were blown to bits. Dupty U.S. Ambassador U. Alexis Johnson emerged from the rubble with blood streaming down his face. THE DEAD IN THE embassy attack included two Americans—a woman killed in the explosion and a man who died later in the U.S. Navy Hospital in Saigon. The embassy itself was a mass of rubble from the bomb which broke windows for hundreds of yards around and tore a gaping hole in a concrete sidewalk. LESS THAN FOUR hours later, 40 U.S. and South Vietnamese bombers destroyed a North Vietnamese air base at Dong Hoi, 65 miles north of the border, in the first attack on an enemy air base of the Vietnamese war. It was not in retaliation for the embassy bombing, officials said, but contribution is expected to be swift. President Johnson was informed immediately. He was to discuss the attack today with Secretary of State Dean Rusk Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara and Ambassador Maxwell D. Taylor, who flew to Washington this weekend to discuss the course of the war. There was heavier loss of life in previous terrorist attacks against Americans in Viet Nam. But the attack on the embassy—described as murder—was a direct affront to the United States. Overnight low will be in the lower 30's according to the Topeka Weather Bureau. Winds will be southerly 10 to 20 miles an hour. Wednesday will be warmer. A high in the middle 50's is predicted for tomorrow with clear skies. The explosion sent a fireball and a 300-foot pillar of smoke shooting high above the roof of the six story structure. Heavy steel grills on the windows were blown back through the walls and across rooms. The consular section was destroyed. Tiles from buildings many yards away were tossed like confetti. THE DEAD AND wounded lay in tangled heans in the wreckage. More than 100 injured were taken to Saigon Hospital and more than 50 to the American Navy hospital. At least 20 Americans were reported so badly wounded they were being flown to Clark Air Base in the Philippines. Despite his injuries, Deputy Ambassador Johnson met immediately with top civilian and military aides to discuss retaliation. In a statement he said the bombing was another example of the Viet Cong's readiness to attack civilians. The Vietnamese government called the attack an act of savagery—not an act of war, but an act of murder. AT THE SAME time it announced today's air raid. Vice Marshal Nguyen Cao Ky, commander of the Vietnamese air force, said the raid had been planned for some time and was not in retaliation for the embassy bombing. The explosion leveled a small outbuilding on the embassy grounds, trapping its occupants in a pile of rubble. HEAVY STEEL BARS on the windows of the consular section were blown into the working area. Outside, steel streetcar tracks were twisted like corkscrews. Tiles on the roofs of buildings blocks away were peeled off and scattered. Two banks accross the street from the embassy were damaged. A cafe across the street was heavily damaged and most of the 15 persons there were either killed or injured. Group Revisions ASC Plans Change Three amendments to Bill #3, which deals with ASC executive committees, will be presented. The first asks the ASC Finance and Auditing committee to hold a seminar for treasurers of ASC committees and ASC-sponsored organizations on "proper ASC financing procedures." Amendments revamping the organization of the All Student Council or changing phrases in the constitution of the Associated Students of the University will be discussed at tonight's meeting of the council. BOB STEWART, Vancouver, B.C. senior, and student body president, said the bill would help impress financial officers of such organizations with responsibility for procedure. "There has been a great deal of controversy over fiscal affairs in student government . . . in trying to keep track of funds," Stewart said. Under the second amendment to Bill #3 Departmental Secretaries would be in charge of interviewing prospective members for committees which are within their particular department. The third amendment to Bill #3 provides that the term for chairmen of ASC committees will run for a full year beginning the last day of the spring semester. Stewart explained the reason for this amendment is to keep the student government running smoothly in the closing hours of the school year. The present bill states that the Kansas Board is authorized "to govern its activities through its own Constitution" as long as it does not infringe upon ASC policy. The amendment would substitute "Constitution and Bills of the ASC" for the general term "policy." The Council is also expected to consider an amendment to Bill #5 which deals with the relationship between the ASC and the Kansan Board, the governing board of the UDK. Stewart said that the amendment would clarify the wording of the bill. "What is that nebulous term—'council policy?' All we're doing, in essence, is defining our student policy by changing it to the 'Constitution and bills.'" he explained. The Council will also consider several amendments to Bill #- which are concerned with how ASC legislation will be submitted for consideration by the Council. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 30, 1965 The Piggy Bank Well, they did it again. I had hoped they would profit from the mistake made on Blake Hall. But no, they wreaked the same destruction on new Fraser. The building that is to be built an abomination of good taste and good architecture. It has been called a prison, a piggy bank, a mortuary and a camel with two sick humps. They all fit. The two towers, adequately labeled bird cages, look like an afterthought. Perhaps a committee member did not attend a meeting and didn't get his recommendations in until after the plans had been drawn up. I am surprised that the nostalgic pressure could have been so great that the University felt it had to retain those two towers at the expense of the rest of the building. The towers on old Fraser are graceful and meaningful. They look nothing short of ridiculous on the new building. In miniature, the building strongly reminds me of a piggy bank. There is just enough space between the towers for a slot to drop the money through. THE TOWERS have been called the symbol of the University. Apparently, tears come to the eyes of the alumni when they see the twin towers and the flags. If the towers on new Fraser are a symbol of KU, then KU is in bad shape. If the building is supposed to be modern, fine. Then make it modern and don't stick those stupid towers on top as an appeasement. If it is supposed to be in the tradition of old Fraser, then make the rest of the building conform to the towers. But the combination is abominable. As it is now, the only function, aesthetic or otherwise, that the towers serve is to hold up the flagpoles. KU campus architecture is notorious. We have outdone ourselves with Fraser. It is a square box with a lot of little slots called windows. Many buildings, in the modern style, are being built on campuses all over the United States. The University of Hawaii is an outstanding example. I do wish KU could sufficiently break with the nostalgic tradition of the towers to build Fraser so that it looks either modern or traditional. As it is now, it doesn't look like either. It gives the strong impression of indecision, as if the architect or the University couldn't decide what the building was supposed to look like. There is only one good thing you can say about the new Fraser. It harmonizes with Blake. And I'm not at all sure that is a compliment. I sincerely hope there is a possibility that the plans for the new building could be reviewed. — Leta Roth Arab Break With Germany Could Affect Egypt's Economy By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst UPI Foreign News Analyst As a new era dawns for relations between West Germany and Israel, Western diplomacy seeks to assess the effort on the man who started it all. When President Gamal Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic successfully used his blackjack tactics to force suspension of West German arms shipments to Israel, an end result he could not have wished for would be establishment of formal diplomatic relations between West Germany and Israel, his greatest enemy. Yet that is close to becoming reality. It also brought about a not wholly successful test of his claim to leadership of the Arab world. Agree To Withdrawal At an Arab League meeting summoned in Cairo by Nasser, 10 of 13 members agreed to withdraw their ambassadors from Bonn in the event West Germany went ahead with plans to establish its formal link with Israel. But there were dissenters. Expressing doubts were Tunisia, Morocco and Libva. Al Ahram, an authoritative Cairo newspaper, predicted that Yemen, Iraq, Algeria, Kuwait and Sudan would go along with Nasser a step further. This would be a formal break with Bonn and recognition of Communist East Germany. Reason For Caution Tunisian President Habib Bourguiba especially counselled caution against an act that would hurt the Arab states more than it would West Germany. There was good reason for the caution and it appeared that Nasser soon might learn, as has the United States in its efforts to isolate Red China and Cuba, that even friends disappear when the dollar is involved. Tunisia has close economic ties to West Germany. A West German training and equipment program is contributing $20 million to Sudan's frontier forces. ECONOMIC COOPERATION TO HIGHER LIVING STANDARDS MILITARY Escalation in Asia © W. HEBBLOCK “Or We Can Take That One To The Grocery Department” (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14) (15) (16) (17) (18) (19) (20) (21) (22) (23) (24) (25) (26) (27) (28) (29) (30) (31) (32) (33) (34) (35) (36) (37) (38) (39) (40) (41) (42) (43) (44) (45) (46) (47) (48) (49) (50) (51) (52) (53) (54) (55) (56) (57) (58) (59) (60) (61) (62) (63) (64) (65) (66) (67) (68) (69) (70) (71) (72) (73) (74) (75) (76) (77) (78) (79) (80) (81) (82) (83) (84) (85) (86) (87) (88) (89) (90) (91) (92) (93) (94) (95) (96) (97) (98) (99) (100) A West German veto in the European Common Market seriously could damage the Western aid program for Algeria. Egypt itself could be seriously damaged. West German trade with Egypt accounts for less than one half of one per cent of the West German total but West Germany accounts for nearly 10 per cent of Egyptian foreign trade. More than any other Western nation, West Germany is involved in Egypt's economic development planning. So it appeared that despite Nasser's early boasts and threats there would be serious second thoughts. Second Thoughts But regardless of the ultimate effect upon Nasser and the Arab states, ripples of the affair were extending beyond the Middle East. For Communist East Germany's strongman, Walter Ulbricht, whose visit to Cairo touched off the affair, there was a chance for respectability that would come through diplomatic recognition of his puppet regime. For the West Germans there was growing doubt about the effectiveness of the Hallstein policy which for 15 years has dictated a diplomatic break with any capital except Moscow that recognized the East Germans. If Cairo could blackmail them with a threat of recognition of the Ulbricht regime, so could others. Among the Western powers in general there was growing concern that Nasser, having worked himself into an unpleasant pocket, might be forced to shift to an even closer tie with the Communists. University of Kansas student newspaper UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom. Dailij Hansan 111 Flint Hall UNiversity 4-3198, business once Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904 triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Member Inland Daily Press Association represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East St. 50. New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press Interna- tional University, for a semester or $ 5 year. Published in Lawrence, Kan. every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, weekends, holidays, postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students required to color, creed, or national origin. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Leta Roth and Gary Noland Co-Editorial Editors The People Say... To the editor: THAT SPRING FLING IS again off to a ringing start this year is evident from the sounding of the clanging cowbell below my window, this being the signal for one and all participate in the favorite undergraduate water sport at KU this spring; drenching the gallant duck watcher. The only equipment necessary to participate in this popular sport is a water balloon or a bucket filled with water—and, of course, a certain level of moronic intelligence. It cannot be denied, however, that this game does possess certain laudable attributes. It is indeed heartening to watch the courageous manner in which those guarding the duck resist attempts to force them to abandon their duty. Despite the freezing temperatures, they heroically stay at their posts even when deluged with pails of water, becoming, after repeated attacks, walking icicles. Duck snatching also promotes ingenuity and encourages group spirit and solidarity. One hall displayed the former by wiring its duck cage so that anyone touching it was reminded of the commandment "Thou shalt not steal thy neighbor's duck." This means of allowing rambunctious undergraduates an opportunity to release steam is undoubtedly also encouraged by the administration, who probably finds this preferable to such embarrassing incidents as the recent civil rights demonstrations. It is unfortunate that duck snatching does not encourage academic effort either on the part of the snatchers, the defenders, or the non-participants, the latter of whom occasionally display an unsportsmanlike irritation when the bedlam going on outside their window interrupts their concentration on such mundane things as writing papers or studying for tests. It is more to the point that AURH has provided, although perhaps unwittingly, an unequalled opportunity for social psychology students to study mob psychology. Mike Ogrosky Winfield sophomore March 24, 1965 Editor: AFTER READING THE REplies addressed to me in "The People Say," it has become necessary for me to restate and clarify my position, for it is obvious that those who disagree have missed my point. First, the purpose of my letter was to question the value of the demonstration, particularly the series here at KU. At no time have I said that demonstrations accomplish nothing. I do believe, however, that any demonstration antagonizes and spawns additional hate among those extreme groups strongly opposed to the civil rights movement. For this reason the demonstrations can be harmful to its own cause, but I do not condemn the function of the demonstration when it is needed. Prejudice is an unreasonable thing, founded on ignorance. In order to break down prejudice, it is necessary to remove the ignorance by creating a situation of understanding between the parties involved. In order to facilitate this condition of understanding, the parties must be in a position to come in contact and communicate with each other. In the situation such as exists in the South, no contact or communication exists between the races. Here the demonstration is necessary to secure those basic rights which will enable the Negro people to achieve communication and contact. From this point, the Negro should work WITHIN the framework of the society toward an end to prejudice through understanding. In a situation such as exists at the University of Kansas and in my home state of California, where the Negro is an accepted part of society and not a separate entity, the conditions of contact and communication already exist, although the Negro is still a victim of prejudice and discrimination. It is here, where the Negro should be working from within, that the demonstration begins to take on a negative value, for it is through the demonstration that the Negro is again identified as a group, and automatically becomes a separate entity once more. I will cite an example of what I think should and can be done successfully along this line. About 10 years ago, Lawrence theaters practiced discrimination through segregated seating policies. This practice is non-existent today not because of demonstrations, but because Negro religious leaders talked with the theater managers and convinced them that they should discontinue such policy. Neither group was antagonized nor became belligerent. Secondly, I did not have anything to say about changing a person's behavior. A person behaves according to his attitudes, and these cannot be changed by force or decree. Man has a peculiar quality of individuality, and his irrational behavior is a direct result of his attitudes. Unfortunately, the human race is not a pack of howling dogs which may be trained to salivate en masse at the flashing of a light. As a matter of fact, the idea of forcing or ordering a person to do something has a tendency to cause rebellion, especially when such an order does not closely correspond to an attitude. It seems to me that something along that line happened back in 1776. Finally, there is the question of prejudice itself. The only true and valid way to deal with a man is as an individual; not as black or white or American or Soviet. I believe in this, and try to deal with men as individuals. I will be the first to admit, however, that I am somewhat prejudiced toward the Negro race, but it is only by communicating my ideas with others in a rational manner that I may hope to understand my problem and eventually overcome it. It is only when individual prejudice such as mine, however large or small it may be, is overcome, that true equality among all people may be achieved. It is for this reason that I have resorted to writing, for I have hope that this problem will be solved through rational discussion leading to mutual understanding. It grieves me, however, when antagonism, however small, is created by demonstrations of questionable value; when the same thing might have been accomplished by reasonable discussion. It also grieves me that people like Mr. McKnight, who does not know me and has never met me, accuses me of being one who erects a specious structure to justify my "inability to face up to a basically simple truth." This is slander, and is, Mr. McKnight, a perfect example of irrational prejudice. Greg Sipe San Lorenzo, Calif., junior Dear Sir: FROM MONDAY THROUGH Friday afternoon of last week, for five continuous days and night. 15 of our Kansas University students maintained a protest vigil against the war in Viet Nam. Despite the fact that our students did not succeed in one objective: e.g., to induce the resignation of students from the ROTC program so as to give substance to the growing public disenchantment with the U.S. foreign "policy" in Viet Nam, their labor did not go unnoticed. I trust that I speak for the majority of non-participating Kansas University students when I say that their demonstration was a success. It was a success in that it pointed up the mounting public disillusion with the failure of the U.S. program in Viet Nam. The now classic protest engaged in by 3,000 students and 200 professors at the University of Michigan was, doubtless, a more powerful gesture. There, indeed a student in the ROTC program (the son of a military officer) did resign as a symbol of the increasing awareness that something is wrong in Viet Nam. But we must not think any the less of our own voice of protestation if it was on a smaller scale. By undergoing such weather conditions as low as 5 above zero for most of the time, our students have suffered in a small way for all of us so as to bring out the suffering in another part of the world for which all of us are responsible. These Kansas University Peace Union students have been the real voice of Kansas; I have only been a spectator. Robert E. Allinson New Haven, Conn. Graduate fellow Page 3 Children's Theatre Makes State Tour Eight cast members, a backstage crew, and a director have been touring Salina, Topeka and Kansas City, Mo., the past two weeks to show the children of the University Children's Theatre the latest play. The play, "Johnny Moonbeam and the Silver Arrow," was performed at KU about a month ago and has had considerable success on the tour, according to Jed Davis, associate professor of Speech and Drama and director of the Children's Theatre. Tuesday, March 30, 1965 University Daily Kansan He said the children were very attentive throughout the performance, although they were excited about the fighting in the play. "Their reaction was rather surprising," Davis said, "I did not know how they would take the play—I had never done anything like this play before—and I was surprised they could absorb the conflict in the play." The play represents an Indian boy, who, in order to be initiated into the tribe, has to pass three stern tests: he has to steal fire, water and corn from their respective gods. He succeeds in doing this, but returns the power back to them so that the whole of mankind can profit of these gifts. Burt Eikleberry, Lawrence graduate, who plays the part of the narrator, agreed the show had been a success. The cast gave two performances in both Salina and Topeka, and five in Kansas City. He mentioned that in the Kansas City Music Hall the audience had reached about 2,000 several times. Prof. Davis mentioned the theatres were not completely filled each time, and he ascribed this to the title of the play, which is not as attractive as, for instance, "Peter Pan." About playing before these audiences, Eikleberry said. "Each audience is different. Each time we gave the show, it was a different show." For instance, in Kansas City one audience clapped after each of Johnny Moonbeam's fights with the gods. One crowd yelled. Before one performance in Kansas City, a teacher had given an introduction to the play. She had said the play was about Indians. When Eikleberry opened the play by entering in his backwoodsman outfit, one little girl on the front row indignantly cried out, "But that's not an Indian." At the same show, Steve Grossman, Glencoe, Ill., freshman, playing the part of Johnny Moonbeam, lost his wig in the middle of his fight with the Fire god. In another show, his tomahawk fell off the stage, but it was retrieved by a little boy in the front. Eikleberry also mentioned that in one of the Kansas City papers the show had been advertised as "Johnny Moonbeam and the Silver Spoon." Curtain time was given as 10 instead of 1:30 in the afternoon. It did not hurt attendance that afternoon, though. The cast will go to Wichita this weekend to give their last performances of the show. Students of life and affairs in Russia and eastern Europe will meet at KU April 9-10 for the 1965 Midwest Slavic Conference. Slavic Conference Scheduled in April Two conference lectures, 16 papers and several panel discussions will form the two-day program. Lecturers will be Prof. Maximilan Braun of Goettingem University, Germany, on "Dostoevsky: Artist or Philosopher," and Prof. Richard Lowenthal, Free University of Berlin, on "State Relations and Party Relations in the Sino-Soviet Dispute." The two lectures will be open to the public at 8 p.m., Friday, April 9, in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Professor Lowenthal was an international journalist before concentrating on scholarly work. Since 1961 he has filled the chair of international relations at the Free University of Berlin, and is now on leave to serve with the Research Institute of Communist Affairs at Columbia University. Dr. Herbert J. Ellison, chairman of the Slavic and Soviet Area Studies program at KU, is conference chairman. Is God interested in or involved with individual people? Popular opinion says no, the Bible says yes. Which is right? But that's not true! or is it? Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship encourages you to make your opinion an informed one—from both sides. Bible exposition tonight at 7:00 in the Pine Room of the Union. Modern Orient Becomes Panel Topic Professor George Totten, associate professor of political science at the University of Rhode Island, and Professor Lucien Bianco, head of the department of economics and social science at the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes in Paris are visiting KU to conduct a panel discussion. KU to conduct a panel discussion. The discussion on "Radicalism in Modern China and Japan" will be at 7:30 p.m. today in Dveche Auditorium. The panel is being sponsored by KU's East Asian Committee and Department of Political Science. TIGERS FOR SALE Yes, Stanley Pontiac-Cadillac now has the latest TIGERS from the jungles of Detroit. The new Wide-Track Tigers GTO, LeMans, and Tempest. These cars are every bit as exciting and beautiful as their African counterparts. We cordially invite you to come in and test drive a 1965 Pontiac-designated as Car of the Year by Motor Trend Magazine. SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY Stanley Pontiac-Cadillac 1040 Vermont VI3-5200 UNIVERSITY EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE SERIES presents JOHN DOS PASSOS' --- MARCH 25,26,27 "U. S. A." MARCH 30,31,APRIL 1,2,3 Tickets: $1.50 — .75 with KU ID 0112 JUICY FRESH & SOFT Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 30, 1965 Chilean Students Say Quakes Change Economy, Landscape By Lacy Banks A common but most unwanted visitor in Chile is the earthquake, two KU Chilean students agreed in an interview last night. The students, Luis F. Lema, junior in mechanical engineering, and Gloria Macchiavello, graduate student in education, said that the fear of earthquakes is common in Chile because they are so unpredictable and very destructive when they do come. Lema, who lives in Potrerillos, located in the north of Chile, said that the Sunday earthquake was the tenth since 1906. There are many "shakes" or "shocks" that don't develop into an earthquake but they shake the earth enough to frighten people and to cause minor damage. "THE SHOCKS USUALLY last for a few seconds," he said. "You can't see them but you feel the vibrations. If you are in a house you might see lamps (hanging lamps) swing slightly or if the shocks are more intense the walls may shake or windows may shatter." The worst modern earthquake that Chile has had, according to Lema, occurred in 1939. During that quake an entire city, Chillan, of about 50,-000 people, was destroyed. The 1960 quake was the last major one that Chile had before Sunday. Lema said the 1960 quake in which about 5,700 people were killed and thousands of homes destroyed is still effecting the Chilean economy somewhat. "AFTER THAT EARTHQUAKE, the government raised the taxes throughout the nation in order to reconstruct from the damage suffered," he said. "Many foreign countries, especially the United States, helped by sending money, doctors, clothes, portable hospitals and schools," he continued Lema lived about 400 miles from the center of the 1960 quake but people in the region still felt the vibrations of it and experienced after shocks. Gloria Macchiavello, of Santiago, the capital of Chile, said that the 1960 quake produced geographical changes that the Sunday quake didn't. "IN THE 1960 quake," she said, "a complete port disappeared. The shapes of some shores were also changed. In many instances, what once were peninsulas became islands. Another strange event was the sinking of a ten-mile stretch of land that separated the ocean from a hill; now that hill stands beside the ocean." Both of the students agreed that the Sunday quake was not so major as the 1960 one and that taxes are not bound to rise. One source of help that can be expected is from the students, Miss Macchiavello said. During the 1960 quake, thousands of university students rushed to the aid of the disaster-struck. IN SANTIAGO, students of the University of Chile organized into groups and went through the city from door to door soliciting money and clothes for the quake victims, she said. "Students are very sensitive about things like this," she said, "but what surprised me was the active willingness of the people to contribute. The drive was very successful." The poor people living in slums are the worst hit by quakes, the two students agreed. Their houses are poorly constructed so that the slightest tremor may cause them to collapse. Miss Macchiavello said. Judith Nelson To Give Recital MANY OF THE POOR people are forced to build and to live on hills or slopes so that shocks or quakes can easily cause them to slide, Lema said. Miss Judith Nelson, Lawrence senior, will present a voice concert at 8:00 this evening in Swarthout Recital Hall. Miss Nelson is a soprano and is majoring in voice. She has held the Houston Music Scholarship and won awards sponsored by the Federated Music Clubs. However, this situation is improving because of new government financed housing projects for people in the slum areas and the lower economic stratum, Miss Macchiavello said. Presently, only about three per cent of all housing in Chile is in slum condition. Speaking on the precautions for earthquake harms, Miss Macchiavello said she was taught to stay indoors and to lie under the frame of a door. Many people, especially those who have well-constructed houses follow this rule, she said. MISS MACCHIAVELLO SAID the door frame is the strongest and therefore safest part of a house if it should collapse. If one runs outside, he stands the chance of falling into a fissure (cracks in the earth's surface caused by quakes) but it would be more difficult for an entire house to be swallowed in one, she said. Lema said architects build with earthquakes in mind. Buildings in Chile are quite lower than those in the U.S. and have very broad bases. LEMA SAID HIS region, the northern part of the nation, seldom experiences earthquakes; they usually occur in the central and southern areas. Santiago is in the central region of the country. Despite this quake-prone region there is a great migration of people from the rural areas to the urban district of Santiago, Lema said. At present, about 30 per cent of the country's population lives around Santiago, he continued. This wouldn't decrease injuries if a major quake struck Santiago. Most of the nation's industry is located there, he said. THE GOVERNMENT is trying to counter this movement, Miss Macchiavello said. A government-sponsored organization, the Cooperation for National Economic development, has been exploring the problem and has been encouraging industries to start in new locations, she said. This has been done with the fishing industry, Lema said. Commenting on the conditions of their families, the students said they were doing well. The quake was too far from their homes to do damage. Something NEW in birth control What are the new plastic or stainless-steel IUCD's like? Do they work? Read why only one inexpensive procedure is necessary, and why a leading doctor says IUCD's rank "in the very top range of contraceptive reliability" . . . in April Reader's Digest. Also— On the contrary See if you agree with Sidney J. Harris that sex is NOT just a "natural activity"... and if you can recognize yourself in his brief portrait of a 20th Century Man. You'll find both articles, along with more than 40 other features, in April Reader's Digest now on sale. A. C. Your VOTE For R. H. "Dick" Raney For City Commissioner Will Be Appreciated ALL UNIVERSITY SUA TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT SUA When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Date: Wednesday, March 31, 1965 Time: 6:30 p.m.; Place: Union Ballroom TROPHIES 1st and 2nd place in Men's Singles & Doubles, and Women's Singles To Register: Call Don Miller—VI 2-2188—6-10 p.m. or sign up in the Jaybowl Greatest thing to hit campuses since co-eds FARAH® Slacks with FaraPress™ Never Need Ironing They're ironing while they're drying™ The luxury look is yours in permanent press, permanent color slacks of this masterful double-plied, yarn-dyed weave. Styled for wear on campus and off, and made to always look neat. Master Ply by FARAH only $798 FARAH MANUFACTURING CO., INC. • EL PASO, TEXAS Page 8 Alumni Gather Across U.S. For Round of Spring Meets By Jacke Thayer Spring has come—and with it, a rash of spring alumni meetings for Vince Bilotta, field secretary for the KU Alumni Association. The 54 Kansas alumni chapters and the 54 chapters outside Kansas keep Bilotta busy during the fall and spring. Between March 30 and April 28, 27 meetings have been scheduled throughout the U.S. and Bilotta plans to attend 22 of them. "Most of the clubs hold meetings once a year, others do not hold them as often—perhaps once every other year." Bilotta said. "Others only meet when they get the opportunity." BILOTTA SAID the KU office notifies alumni groups when he or another representative will be in a particular geographic area. "Often they will get a meeting together then, but it might be the only formal meeting they ever have," he said. "If we're going to be in a bowl game, or have basketball or football games in a certain city, it gives us a good opportunity to cover the area." "Sometimes groups write to us, asking for a representative at their meetings," Bilotta said. "But normally we can't afford to go to the meetings if we have no plans to be in those areas of the country." ALREADY, THE KU office is making tentative plans for next fall. The program for each of these meetings varies, Bilotta said. "We generally try to have a speaker from the campus with us who gives information about the campus and university programs in general, ACCOMPANYING Bilotta on the first round of spring alumni jaunts will be Donald Alderson, dean of men. and who also talks about his own field," he said. "If you have a local president who is interested in football, your program will be more athletically-oriented." he said. "If he is interested in the rare book collection in Watson Library, obviously the program will be more academically-oriented." Attendance at local meetings also varies widely, Bilotta said. KU students are encouraged to attend the meetings when they are at home, according to Bilotta. Attendance at local meetings also varies widely. Bilotta said. Tuesday. March 30, 1965 University Daily Kansan The new direction of educating the retarded child was outlined last night by Dr. Lloyd Dunn, from Peabody College in Nashville, Tenn., who has done extensive research in the education of the mentally retarded. The education of the educable mentally retarded child should be carried out in a new direction. TRAINING should center on the psycho-motor development as well as mental education. Retarded Discussed "We need to take a fresh look at a training of intellect," Dr. Dunn said. IQ scores are far from constant. Preschool years are a particularly formidable period. Others, besides the natural mothers, can produce environment more conducive to intellect, Dr. Dunn said. He is among 12 students named to the SUA Board following interviews conducted during the last part of February and the first of March. The students will coordinate and organize committees for the various activities which SUA sponsors throughout the year. All art exhibits, tournaments, special guests, lecturers, and other special events sponsored by SUA are under the direction of these students. OTHERS NAMED to the executive positions on the Board were: vice president, Rick Harrington, Terre Haute, Ind., junior; secretary, Mary Lucinda (C.C.) Waller, Girard sophomore; and treasurer, Philip (Pat) McGrath, Prairie Village sophomore. Special Education The following people have been named chairmen of eight key committees on the SUA Board. Nick Brocker, Prairie Village sophomore, has been announced the new chairman of the arts and exhibits committee, which supervises all exhibits feared in the Union Building. George W. (Bill) Frick, Ft. Scott unior, has been named president of he Student Union Activities Board. The third area of study should be in language development, according to Dr. Dunn. Language development can be divided into three sub-divisions. They include method of communication, instrument for thought, and orienting reflect. MANY OF THE educational methods for the mentally retarded have not advanced since the days around the turn of this century when it was believed that residence schools were rehabilitation centers, according to Dr. Dunn. Karen Miller, Omaha, Neb., junior, is the new head of the dance committee. Dr. Dunn: NUMEROUS STUDIES along this line have concluded the following, according to Dr. Dunn: 1. retarded children as a group make as much progress in regular HEAD OF THE hospitality committee is Linda Tebbe, Memphis, Tenn., sophomore. The hospitality committee extends all courtesies to visiting guests. Official Bulletin Lecture, 4.00 p.m. Dr. Klaus Mehnerl, Aachen, Germany. Forum Room, Kansas TODAY Latin American Studies Seminar, 3:30 p.m. 201. Blake.. Uponlonal Festival Rehearsal, 7:00 International Festival Senior Recital, 8:00 p.m. Judith Nelson, spontano, Swarthout Recital Hall. Wesley Foundation Community Worship, 9:15 p.m. Methodist Center, 1314 Lecture, 8:00 p.m. dm. Albert Sonnenfeld Princeton U. Forum Room, Kansas State University p.m. Hoch Auditorium. Inquiers Cater, 7:30 p.m. Canterbury ... Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m. "U.S.A." Murphy Hall. Clinical Science College Organization 2010-04-06 Downtown Chapel Humanities Lecture, 8:00 p.m. Dr. Roman Jakobson, Harvard U. Fraser Young Christian Students, 8:15 p.m. St. Lawrence Student Center, Chairman, Mr. Lawrence "LOCAL CLUBS have no specific membership lists." he said, "because the meetings are open to all alumni in that area and we send notices to all of them. Friends of the University are also invited to attend." Catholic Massen, 6:45 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. before breakfast. Contains before and after mass. Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Oregon Kansas Hi-Y Youth in Government, All Day Kansas Union. SUA Table Tennis Tournament 6.30 SUA Table Tennis Tournament 6.30 Singles and Doubles. Women's singles. Lawrence has no alumni association, Bilotta said, but local alumni work directly through University bureaus, as in the case of the HELP-KU fund (aided by the Greater University Fund). Wesley Foundation Morning Prayer, 7 o'clock a.m. Methodist Center, 138 Oread TOMORROW Lecture. 7:00 p.m. St. Lawrence Student Center. Fr. Joseph Dillon, "The Meaning of Sin According to Biblical Theology." Richard Warner, Lawrence sopho- Carillon Recital, 7:00 p.m. Albert Gerken. classes as they do in special classes. 2. even when the mental retardate enters special classes at the age of six, there is no difference. "The primary function of our association is to stimulate interest," Bilotta said, "not to raise funds." 3. CHILDREN with lower IQ's do better with special education. classes as they do in special classes. prano. Swarthout Recital Hall. Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m. 4. special class retardates in metropolitan schools make greater significant changes when they are trained by teachers with proper supervision. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Classical Film, '700 p.m. Day of wrath.' Fraser Theater. 50- minute performance. Narma, Sharp, 50. SUA Board Officers Named 6. RETARDEES in special classes are superior in social adjustment. 5. special class retarates do not work up to their expectancy. 7. retardees in regular classes seem to be subjected to more inferiority, as do the poorer students in special classes. 8. special class retardees are superior in brainstorming and productive thinking. Fraternity and Sorority Jewelry A B Γ Δ E Z H Θ J K A M - Guards - Mugs - Rings Pins - Lavaliers - Crests Ray Ray Christian THE COLLEGE JOURNAL THE COLLEGE JEWELER 809 Massachusetts CATHERDAY BAR N O I P S T Y Φ X Ω Dominique PATEK For 20th Century Individualists! RINGS ENLARGED PATRICIAN For love's sake any girl would accept even an ordinary engagement ring—squat-looking, uninspiring. But, in her heart, she hopes for an extraordinary ring which will compel the admiration of all. new ArtCarved® DREAM DIAMOND RINGS See Dream Diamond Rings only at these Authorized ArtCarved Jewelers ArtCarved Dream Diamond Rings are extraordinary. Shunning the excessive metal and gingerbread of ordinary rings they delight the modern eye. Pure in form, elegantly sculptured, they express the taste of our time. Keep this ad for comparison! See our new styles at your ArtCarved jeweler before you decide. Each from $150. For free illustrated folder write to ArtCarved, Dept. C, 216 East 45th Street, New York, N. Y. 10017. Kansas — Arkansas City — McDOWELL'S Beloit — GREIF JEWELERS Chanute — JACK'S JEWELRY Dodge City — ROTH JEWELERS El Dorado — POND JEWELRY Emporia — ROSEBNALM JEWELERS Emporia — STANLEY JEWELERS Garden City — REGAN JEWELRY STORE Goodland — MUHLHEIM JEWELRY STORE Great Bend — DAWSON JEWELERS, INC. Hiwatha — LYLE POTTS JEWELER Hill City — HIXON JEWELRY Hoisinaton — WELLMAN F. KOMAREK Lawrence — MARKS JEWELERS Liberal C. F. PATTerson JEWELRY Manhattan — REED & ELLIOTT McPherson — BRUNK JEWELERS Norton — WORDEN'S JEWELRY Ottawa — BOYER'S JEWELRY Phillipsburg — LUNBERRY JEWELRY Plainville — IVAN'S JEWELRY Russell — LEWIS JEWELRY Scott City — ROBERT'S JEWELRY Topeka — ESCHMANN JEWELERS Topeka — HESS JEWELERS Washington — DITMARS JEWELRY Wichita — WEHINING JEWELRY CO more, will head the entertainment committee, Jennifer Speer, Wichita freshman, is the new forums chairman. Dave Wase, Oswego sophomore, is the new recreation chairman La Bruce Warren, Emporia sophomore, is the new special events the new recreation chairman. Rounding out the officers is Dale Sprague, McPherson sophomore, who will serve as public relations chairman for the coming year. La Pizza 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 > NOW OFFERS YOU A COMPLETE DINNER FROM OUR SPECIAL THEATER MENU AND CHOICE OF SHOW FOR ONLY $2.00 Offered Monday-Thursday SAVE $.50 - $1.00! Granada THE ATTRE · telephone VI 3-5286 NOW! 7:00 & 9:00 METRO GOLDWYN MAYER presents GLENN HENRY FORD FONDa The ROUNdeRS --- ENDS TONITE "CODE 7, VICTIM 5" Plus "DR. STRANGELOVE" Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI-3-1065 Starts TOMORROW! TWO LAUGH HITS ON ONE HILARIOUS PROGRAM! PETER SELLERS "HOME OF THE PETER SELLERS" AND LEARNING THAT WORKS WITH EVERY STEIN THIS CHAPMAN NEAKONT 41 STREET THE AMOUNTUS GENERAL COLOR GLORY TO PETER SELLERS! PRESENTED BY The Wrong Arm of the Law YOUR BIDS WHEN WE BORE FROM LAUCHING! --- Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40 Starts 7:00 7:00 Ends Tonight — “THE PINK PANTHER” “POCKETFUL OF MIRACLES” Starts Wednesday "McHALE'S NAVY" Plus—"TAGGART" Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 30, 1965 CONGRATULATIONS to Miss Pat Wise THE MISS IS THERE TO BE AN ATTENDING WINNER IN THE NATIONAL BOWING MEET. SHE HAS A CROWN, AND IS READY FOR THE FINAL. Miss Lawrence-KU of 1965 From the following Lawrence Merchants Gordon's Shoe Center 815 Massachusetts Stevenson Oldsmobile 1008 West 23rd Allen's Drive-In 1404 West 23rd Lawrence Launderers and Dry Cleaners 1001 New Hampshire Lawrence Sanitary Milk & Ice Cream Co. 202 West 6th Downtown Furniture 900 Massachusetts Lawrence Building & Loan Assoc. 800 Massachusetts Douglas County State Bank 9th & Kentucky The Hotel Eldridge 7th & Massachusetts British Motors 1116 West 23rd Sandy's Drive-In 2120 West 9th Acme Laundry and Dry Cleaners 1111 Massachusetts 925 Iowa 711 West 23rd Jim Clark Motors 623 Massachusetts Rusty's Food Centers 23rd & Louisiana Independent Laundry and Dry Cleaners 740 Vermont 900 Mississippi Raney's Drug Stores 909 Massachusetts 925 Iowa 1800 Massachusetts 19 without 8 Tuesday, March 30, 1965 University Daily Kansan --- SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS Page 7 Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all student without regard to color, creed, or national origin. 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Find out how it works (especially the 3rd prong "to turn youth to atheism"). . . in April Reader's Digest. Also— What to do if your tax return is questioned Here are the facts you should know before you're asked to come in and explain your return. Get April Reader's Digest, with more than 40 features, now on sale! Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS CALAIS $200 ALSO TO $575 Available only at Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. Diamond ring Business Directory GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING Mayhugh Music Instrument Repair VI 3-4430 1910 W.23rd ● Lubrication . . . . . $1.00 24 HOUR SERVICE (TUES. THRU SUN.) - Brake Adjustment . . . 98 - Wheel Alignment - Automatic Transmission Page Fina Service 1819 W.23rd VI 3-9694 Staf-O-Life Health & Diet Store - Vegetarian - Arabic - Indian - Oriental TRAVEL TIME 17 W. 9th VI 2-2771 Hours: Mon. 2-6 Thurs. 10-7:30 Tues., Wed., Fri, Sat. 10-6 图示为一架客机。 LET MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Reservations Now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 30, 1965 Students Pack to Vacate. B and G Will "Move In" By Jim Sullinger With a great sigh of relief accompanied by "Thank heavens, its here," and "I think I'll cut my history lecture", a long awaited spring vacation will begin Saturday at noon. Although most students will be trying their best to forget about classes and homework, university officials will be on the job preparing for the remainder of the semester or catching up on the first half. Among the busiest departments will be Buildings and Grounds. Harry Buchholz, superintendent of the physical plant, said crews will start a big clean up operation over the break. "We'll get into areas we can't normally get into while classes are going on," said Buchholz. Projects he pointed to will be concerned with street markings, installation of new gate operators in X zone, and a lot of painting. ANOTHER department undertaking a big clean-up campaign is the office of dormitories. When students return April 10 and 11, they should find the floor in their rooms cleaned and waxed and everything looking spotless. "We have a week to do a lot of good cleaning," said Ernie Pulliam, housing manager of dormitories. Keith L. Nithear, business office comptroller, said his office would be getting their accounts into good condition. He said state auditors will be here March 31 to check university finances. "Business will go on pretty much as usual," he said. The university financial year will end March 31, according to Nitcher. THE LIBRARY will be open during the spring vacation. However, their will be no extended night hours or Sunday opening. "This will not be an idle period at all," said John Glinka, acting assistant director. "There will be a lot of students who stay on and use the library." Critics Castigate- Richard Wintermote, executive secretary of the alumni association, said. "We'll be busier than most." (Continued from page 1) mention some of the other modern buildings on the hill make my whole architectural education superfluous. Architecture is the art of creating both functional and Med. Center Doctor Wins $30,000 Grant Dr. Harry H. White, a neurologist at the KU Medical Center (KUMC), has been named one of 25 scholars in the United States and Canada in academic medicine to receive grants totaling $30,000 for his teaching and research work. The 31-year old physician will receive the grants from the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation in New York at the rate of $6,000 a year. The appointment will become effective July 1. Dean C. Arden Miller, director of KUMC, nominated Dr. White to participate in intensive interviewing sessions with 74 other nominees for the grants. "Six committees of laymen held the three day interviews all over the country," Dr. White said. "There were 12 doctors in my group. All of us and the interviewers ate together, toured and went to meetings. We were not judged on our medical skills, but were selected primarily on our potential," he said. Dr. White received his bachelor's degree from KU in 1955 and a doctor of medicine degree in 1958. He joined the faculty of KUMC last year as an instructor and will become an assistant professor July 1, 1965. Dr. White's research deals with genetically determined diseases of the nervous system and errors in metabolism. He said he is trying to determine what enzymatic basis of inherited diseases are in the nervous system. "I have a special project in this field," he said. "I am interested in 'PKU', which is a disease of the nervous system found in very young children, and those who are not treated early for it become mentally retarded. If they are placed on a special diet, they can grow up with a normal mentality. There is a cure for the disease." The money Dr. White will receive from the award will be used in any way deemed necessary by him and the administration to continue his research. He will also continue to take care of patients and teach classes. Markle Scholars were first selected in 1948 to relieve the faculty shortage in medical schools by giving support to young teachers and researchers early in their careers. The total number awarded in 85 medical schools is now 406. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, Dean Miller and many others have been Markle Scholars. Since 1953 six doctors from KUMC have been awarded this honor. esthetic space for people and the new buildings do not even come close to creating meaningful spaces for learning." He continued, "In the school of architecture we learn that proportion, scale, balance, unity and dominance are part of the grammar used in creating good buildings. New Fraser has none of these characteristics; it has little unity because the twin towers are not an integral part of the design, in fact, they look tacked on. The state architect's greatest achievement has been in making Blake Hall look beautiful relative to new Fraser. He said that 70,000 copies of "KU Today", a university newsletter, would be mailed to all alumni and parents of students over vacation. "WHY DO the administration and alumni refuse to use the KU school of architecture to either create or advise in the planning and building of this campus? Do they not trust the faculty and students of architecture and consider them competent?" Davidow asked. "THIS WILL be no vacation for us," he said. "We have five class reunions that are taking an awful lot of work." Audiotronics • Stereo • Hi-Fi • Tuners • Speakers • Changers • Amplifiers 928 Mass. VI 3-8500 This is a time when faculty members can do research or read that book they've been promising themselves they would read. From this point, they will begin thinking of commencement and final week. Overtaken by Joy Sneer if you must at the poet who found sudden joy in a field of daffodils . . . But don't miss reading what a psychologist has discovered about the reasons for such moments in normal, healthy individuals. You'll find it in the April issue of Reader's Digest, along with: Italy's amazing space watchers Read how they have radio tapes indicating that more than one Soviet astronaut has died a lonely death in space, victimized by faulty space technology. Read and Use Kansan Classifieds Both articles-plus more than 40 other features—are in April Reader's Digest now on sale. JOHN EMICK For City Commissioner April 6th MUSIC MAGAZINE JANUARY 1963 LITTLE EARL AND THE FABULOUS CONTINENTALS One Night Only, Thurs., April 1 8:00-11:00 APRIL FOOL'S DANCE - TEE PEE - Council Refuses CORE Requests The All Student Council refused last night to grant permission to the Lawrence branch of the Congress of Racial Equality to establish a booth on campus to solicit funds for the organization's trip next week to Jonesboro, La. The group, which plans to rebuild a burned church in Jonesboro, is about $850 short of funds, according to Carol Borg, Manhattan senior, and CORE member. Miss Borg presented the request to the Council, adding that she had been instructed by Dean Laurence C. Woodruff, ASC adviser, to obtain the Council's permission for CORE's fund solicitation. Mike Miner, Topeka senior, and ASC chairman, said he thought approval for proposed fund-raising drives should come from the University Events committee. The ASC had no jurisdiction in the area, Miner said. AFTER DEBATE on where approval of fund-raising drives must come from, other than that for the Campus Chest which is covered in the ASC bill book, the Council voted to send the request to the University Events committee. "I really appreciate that the Council has taken so much time to tie its responsibilities into a neat package of red tape," Miss Borg told the Council after the vote. Miss Borg and Mike Willard, Ft. Scott sophomore and ASC member, (Vox—fraternity) then left the meeting to check on permission for the drive. Willard returned and told the Council that he had called Dean Woodruff on the matter. Willard said Dean Woodruff placed jurisdiction with the ASC and not with the University Events committee since it was a "money drive" and not a "money-making drive." A RESOLUTION, submitted by Hugh Taylor, Stoke-on-Trent, England, graduate student (UP—graduate school) was defeated when it failed to receive the necessary two-thirds vote. After the vote, Miss Borg received about four dollars in donations from several ASC members. In other business the Council passed resolutions stating: - That the ASC chairman send letters to the seven Kansas legislators, and Congressmen Gerald Ford and John McCormick, and the postmaster general asking support of a House bill proposing a commemorative postage stamp honoring KU's centennial. - That the Traffic and Safety committee investigate possibilities with university officials of increasing motorcycle parking space on campus. - That the ASC elections committee authorize a spring primary if necessary in the coming elections. - That a "roving poll watcher" from each party be at each polling place to insure correct election procedure in spring elections. - That the administration and architect on New Fraser Hall be asked to reconsider the building's design and consult with the KU architectural department. A resolution which proposed establishment of an ASC committee to meet with the newly formed Class Officers Board to discuss the possibility of establishing a voluntary fee payment for all classes was defeated. The Council passed three amendments to Bill #3 dealing with ASC executive committees. ✩ ✩ ✩ ASC Bill and Petitions Criticize Fraser Plans An All Student Council resolution and many petitions have added to the criticism of the planned new Fraser Hall. The ASC adopted a resolution criticizing the plans for new Fraser Hall last night. IT WILL REQUEST the officials to reconsider the current plans and revise them to better fit the image of KU. It will also suggest that James Canole, state architect, consult with KU's department of architecture on the design of new Fraser. The resolution will inform the Board of Regents, the university administration, and the architects involved "of our concern, dismay and alarm at the current design for the building." The new structure, to be completed in 1967, was designed by Canole, T. R. Greist, of Topeka, design consultant; and Brown and Slemmons. Topeka, who did the working drawings. Details of the new hall were announced Monday. Since then they have met with much criticism by professors of architecture, architectural students and the student body. MRS. JOANN HULL, teaching assistant in German, and Walter Hull, assistant instructor of English, MRS. HULL SAID, "Reaction (to the petition) has been favorable. Eighty petitions are out." Mrs. Hull said she would like to collect the petitions Friday so they could be sent to the Chancellor and the Board of Regents before spring vacation. IN A PRESS RELEASE Monday, Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor for operations, said, "The possibility of creating a building completely unrelated to the past was discarded. Almost every member of the public who commented on the problem urged that new Fraser retain a resemblance to the old building." started circulating a petition yesterday against the acceptance of the new Fraser Hall plans. "The state architect is our employee. We pay him and he should serve us." Mrs. Hull commented. David Hermansen, associate professor of architecture, said of the building, "I think it's probably the most abominable pile of masonry since the pyramids of Egypt. You couldn't stretch the word of architecture to include that building. If a sophomore submitted the building as a project, he would flunk," Hermansen said. Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS U.S. Suffers Heavy Toll AsGuerrillasDownAirlift Wednesday, March 31, 1965 SAIGON — (UPI) — Communist Viet Cong guerrillas today shot down three U.S. helicopters flying Vietnamese soldiers into a major battle only 30 miles from the big American air base at Da Nang. Two U.S. Marines were killed and 16 other Americans injured. THE TOLL IN the helicopter assault today was one of the heaviest American casualty tolls in a single action. Death of the two Marines and a U.S. Navy pilot announced today by the Pentagon brought the toll of American combat dead in Viet Nam to 316. U. S. and South Vietnamese planes struck again in North Viet Nam, hitting the Hanoi regime's air defenses for the second consecutive day. The raids were carried out despite increasingly tough statements by Communist China. The three downed helicopters crashed within a 50-minute period while flying Vietnamese troops into the guerrilla stronghold for a search operation aimed at reducing the Red threat to Da Nang, some 350 miles northeast of Saigon. MAJ. GEN. JOSEPH Moore, commander of U.S. Air Forces in South Viet Nam, said today's air strike was directed against Communist air bases on the North Vietnamese mainland and radar installations on coastal islands in the South China Sea. Military sources said the continuing raids are reducing North Viet Nam's ability to ward off future strikes to a shambles. Nearly 40 American and Vietnamese planes obliterated a North Vietnamese airbase Tuesday. PEKING RADIO reported today it had shot down a U.S. drone reconnaissance plane over the Communist mainland and said it was "watching with close attention the military provocations of the U.S. imperialists." It said Tuesday U.S. jets strafed two Chinese fishing boats and hinted at possible reprisal. The weather will be fair and warmer tonight with a low temperature between 35 and 40 degrees. Tomorrow's weather will bring increasing cloudiness, the weather bureau predicted. TODAY'S RAID apparently was not in retaliation for Tuesday's terrorist bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Saigon. Weather An American military spokesman at Da Nang said the two Marines were aboard an H34 troop carrier brought down by ground fire 35 miles southeast of the base. THE GOVERNMENT-sponsored protest was held just 24 hours after a Viet Cong terror squad exploded a huge bomb at the embassy, killing two Americans and 15 Vietnamese. Fifty-two Americans and 109 Vietnamese were injured. The airlift was described as a search-and-destroy operation involving Vietnamese infantry, paratroopers and M113 armored vehicles. The Da Nang base, 365 miles northeast of Saigon, is the jumping off point for American and Vietnamese air strikes against North Viet Nam. In Washington, the State Department said Tuesday night its casualty figures showed two Americans and 11 Vietnamese killed and 183 persons injured, 54 of them Americans. Forty-two of the injured were reported in serious In Saigon itself, 2000 Vietnamese staged a rally to protest Tuesday's terrorist attack on the U.S. Embassy which killed at least 17 persons and wounded 183. condition, among them were seven Americans. It was almost business as usual today at the shattered five-story embassy building a few blocks away. "We're operating under full steam—normal capacity," an embassy spokesman said. "OF COURSE, WE'RE not using the whole first floor where the consular section was," he added. "And I don't know when we'll have glass in the windows." Workmen swarmed over the building making temporary repairs. He said telephone and electric service was fully restored. Almost every embassy employe (Photo by Don Black) HIGH WORK — Workmen perch precariously atop the 250-foot KU smokestack as they work to complete repairs on one of Mt. Oread's highest points. reporting for work today carried marks of Tuesday's blast. Many wore slings on their arms. Some had their heads swathed in bandages covering cuts sustained from fliving glass. President Johnson announced Tuesday he was asking Congress for money to build a new embassy as "one more symbol of our solidarity with the people of Viet Nam." Johnson said the bombing was "a wanton act of ruthlessness." ADMINISTRATION officials said the bombing would result in increased U.S. air strikes on military installations in North Viet Nam and stepped-up offensives against Communist guerrillas in South Viet Nam. Observers here said some type of massive retaliation seemed certain. North Viet Nam was waiting for the expected reprisal. The official North Vietnamese news agency said the target "may even be Hanoi," the capital. REPORTS FROM Washington, however, said the President has ruled out for the time being any American air raids on Hanoi. President Johnson is grimly determined to press even more fiercely the battle against the Viet Nam Reds. But he has ruled out for now any single spectacle stroke in retaliation for the bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Saigon. The Chief Executive said Tuesday that the terror bombing of the embassy — "this wanton act of ruthlessness" — only reinforced American determination to "continue and to strengthen" aid to South Vietnam. Johnson planned to confer today or Thursday with his ambassador to South Viet Nam, Nam. Maxwell D. Taylor. He has not seen Taylor since the general arrived from Saigon for consultations Sunday. THE PRESIDENT'S FAILURE to meet with Taylor during the past hectic two days puzzled diplomatic observers. But officials contended that no significance should be read into it. They claimed that Johnson wanted Taylor to complete his talks with Secretary of State Dean Rusk, Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara and other top officials before coming to the White House for a talk with the President. Taylor, a former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, conferred late Tuesday with Rusk and was on the secretary's schedule again this morning. Dixie Congressmen Support Klan Probe WASHINGTON—(UPI)—South- WASHINGTON—(UP) U.S. ern members of the House Committee on Un-American Activities were confident today the panel's investigation of the Ku Klux Klan would draw strong support throughout the South. Rep. John Buchanan, R-Ala., said the Klan represents only a "very small group of people in Alabama and the investigation will show the world what a tiny minority they are." Persons in his district have felt for a long time the Klan may be responsible for those "who preach violence and hate" in Alabama, Buchanan said. The "over-whelming majority" of Alabamans are for the inquiry, he added. Committee Chairman Edwin E. Willis, D-La., who announced the investigation Tuesday, said it may be weeks or months before public hearings are held. He said a subcommittee probably will hold these hearings after staff members finish their investigation and closed hearings are held. Buchanan said he would be happy to serve on the subcommittee, adding that he did not expect to suffer politically for participating in the investigation. Rep. William M. Tuck-D-Va., a former Virginia governor and second ranking member of the committee, said he supported the investigation. He called the Klan a "crackpot" group composed of "rednecks." In announcing the inquiry, Willis said the preliminary investigation of the hooded order indicated that Klanism is incompatible with Americanism." Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 31, 1965 Letters Condemn Fraser Image Guard Towers- Dear Sir: --- MY CONGRATULATIONS to T. R. Griest of Topeka! He has managed to combine, in one building, all the worst features of modern architecture and has capped it with a red roof. And then he obviously had an afterthought, which he placed conveniently out of the way atop the pretty red roof. Two afterthoughts, that is. Granted that KU students have been somewhat unruly lately, I hardly think it necessary to provide future buildings with guard towers suitable for searchlights and machine guns. With all due respect to the desire for a reasonably uniform theme for new university buildings and to the very understandable desire to perpetuate the twin towers of the present Fraser, I suggest that this design be sent back for revision. If this is the best that the state architect's office can do I believe KU would profit, esthetically at least, by allowing KU architecture students to design the new building. At least they have some imagination. As Chancellor Wescoe stated, the new Fraser and Blake will provide for many visitors "the physical image of the university." With this as an image, how can KU hope to be considered a great institution? Unless, of course, those guard towers indicate planned transformation into a penal institution. Jack D. Salmon, Elkhart graduate student Open Letter- An open letter to Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe: I am sure that any one of KU's architect students could provide a better solution to the problem of a new Fraser than that monstrosity pictured in the UDK. And I'm not the only one that's laughing. I plead with you to give the students of KU something to look at and take pride in. I hate to think of them saying to their parents, "Yes, unfortunately, that is the new Fraser!" And for those of us who live near and must pass this new building daily. I'm sure I voice a common opinion when I say that it is atrocious. I ask you to please take action against it. Sincerely, Lois Adams, Miller Hall Norris Dam - To the Editor: I MUST ADMIT THAT ON first impression New Fraser struck me as a combination of Old Fraser, a new County Court House and Fort Knox. However, upon reflection I decided it had a closer relative; paging through the Goodman brothers' Communitas I found the culprit (p. 114), captioned, "severely decorative functionalism" . . . a power plant on the Norris Dam. Maybe that's the image they have. Thank you, Bill Manning, Wichita junior SAMSUNG MEDIA CORPORATION NEW FRASER—Construction will begin in June on a 7-story $2.2 million building to replace old Fraser Hall. This view of the model building is from the northwest. The new building will be just east of the present Fraser. We Asked for It If one can judge from the letters which appear on this page or by the petition now circulating, campus opinion is decidedly against the new Fraser. It should be. There is one point, however, that should be considered. In some measure, we asked for it. When the plans for razing Fraser were first announced, a furor resulted that would make one think that motherhood or apple pie had been attacked. A great wave of nostalgia swept the campus and the teary-eyed alums who remembered the twin towers of old Fraser pleaded that the towers be a part of the new building. SOMEONE YELLED LOUDLY enough. There they are, the two towers. I hope the alums and the students are happy. It is true that the towers could have been better arranged as to lend themselves to the aesthetic beauty of the building. It is unfortunate that an architect or the administration should be so intimidated by public opinion that they sacrifice beauty for its appeasement. The architect's professional integrity has seemingly been prostrated for the sake of public opinion. The architect has the obligation to create a building that is in conformity to good taste and architectural creativity. He does not have the obligation to pander to the whimsical and often-changing ideas of the public. In some cases, he has an obligation not to pacify such tastes. Often they are not worth considering. The wish that the new Fraser could somehow incorporate the old Fraser is understandable, but the combination which has resulted is a desecration of both the architect's and the public's integrity. - Leta Roth Fraser Contradicts Basic Tenets Attention: Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe Dear Sir: THERE HAVE BEEN TIMES during my brief sojourn at this institution when I thought University policy was somehow inexplicably, diametrically opposed to the very theories and teachings that the various departments of the University were trying to foster. However, nowhere, at no time, has there been so thorough a desecration of the most basic tenets taught by one of his University's departments as is the desecration of our Department of Architecture, and its very foundations, by this abortive design effort called "new Fraser." Its very design criteria, "sheer mass bulk and volume for mass bulk and volume's sake alone," are not even slightly sympathetic to the scale of its surrounding buildings. Watkins will be dwarfed; Blake Hall will be greatly diminished; Danforth Chapel will be visually obliterated. Even mighty Watson will become insignificant. This is not to condemn all seven-story buildings, for I do sincerely believe a solution could be found that would house just as many students without destroying its whole basis for being. Not only is the architecture bad, but also the placement of Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper University 4-3646, newsroom 111 Flint Hall University 4-3198, business office Founded 1889, became bweekly 1904. trifweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Memorial Service Associated Collage Press. Repres- ented by National Advertising Service. 18 East 50 Sf., New York 22, N.Y. News service, 365 Sf. for subscription rates; $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturday, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University camp are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Leta Roth and Gary Lee Harvey and Cary Noland ... Co-Editorial Editors the building. The only changes achieved by removing the pioneer statue and replacing it with this building would be the destruction of: the green mall to new Blake; the vista between the Chancellor's Residence and the central campus; the landscape transition from institutional campus to residential campus; the intimate scale of the health center; and the general aesthetic spacing of all surrounding buildings. All the precious balance of scale and proportion that our landscape department has painstakingly achieved over the past four decades will be as nothing when this awkward behemoth takes over its site. Maybe I'm wrongly prejudging the basic tenets of the University: maybe the whole purpose of this University's policy is to negatively inspire the student to rise out of his environment. Bill Prelogar, Grandview, Mo., senior. Department of Architecture Protest Petition- Dear Sir: THE CHANCELLOR is quoted in the Daily Kansan (Monday, March 29, 1965) as saying, "The plans for new Fraser Hall provide a remarkable combination of the traditional and the functional. New Fraser and nearby Blake Hall have been designed with great care because they will represent for many the physical image of the University. They will occupy the crowning location on a magnificent campus site." We must agree with the Chancellor in his remarks about the location—it is certainly one of the most prominent on the campus. We agree also that the buildings occupying this location will "represent the physical image of the University," since the architecture of a university is a vital (and inevitable) part of the university's role as the reflection of and molder of the aesthetic tastes of the community which it serves. Moreover, we agree that the combination of the traditional and the functional to which the Chancellor refers is indeed remarkable — so remarkable in fact, that we cannot let our horror of it go unexpressed. We realize that the task of harmoniously uniting past and present in an architectural design is a very difficult one, requiring that a delicate balance be achieved. Therefore, we cannot condemn an architect for failing to accomplish this. We do, however, condemn the insistence upon building this failure, a failure which we feel is a violation of, rather than a continuation of the tradition represented by old Fraser. We certainly do not hope that the plans are a move toward the establishment of a new tradition and above all, we feel that they are not the valid realization of the aesthetic ideals of the people of Kansas. Because we hold these opinions, and because we believe that others share them with us, we are circulating a petition for the consideration and signature of interested people. We hope to collect signatures in sufficient number to warrant the presentation of the petition to the Chancellor and the Board of Regents. The petition reads as follows: "We, the undersigned students, faculty and friends of the University, respectfully request that the current plan for New Fraser Hall be rejected on the grounds that it tends to further the trend of de-beautification already manifested in such buildings as New Blake Hall. Further, we submit that the present design does not meet even the minimum aesthetic requirement of architecture and, rather than preserving the character of Old Fraser Hall, distorts and perverts it." Thank you. Walter M. Hull, Lawrence Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Graduate Student and Assistant Instructor, Intensive English Center Ruth Hull. Lawrence, Kansas Graduate Student and Teaching Assistant, German Department Wednesday, March 31, 1965 University Daily Kansan When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds Page 3 idents, Uni- that Traser ounds trend eady ags as r, we design imum archi- pre- f Old per- and r, Center Two Cheering Squads To Lead Fans in Fall The squads will consist of one composed of eight men and another team of eight girls which will do pom pom routines. Mike Lemoine, Leawood senior, and chairman of the ASC traditions committee, said that the two units will practice separately but they will probably travel as one unit. KU sports fans will be treated by two separate cheerleading squads next fall. The change, according to Lemoine, was brought about because of a definite lack of interest by men to become cheerleaders. Lemoine said "The present system did not offer enough for either the boys or the girls." The new system is designed to revive interest for male cheerleaders, according to Lemoine. He said that many KU males considered the present system as too effeminate. Lemoine explained that with the new system, the men would be responsible for leading most of the cheers. He added that there would be more acrobatics by the male cheerleaders. Lemoine said that most of the present cheers would probably be changed to chants. He added that although nothing definite has been worked out, the KU Rock Chalk yell will probably remain the same with both cheerleading units leading it. The present costumes, he said, would probably remain the same. He said that with the new system, the units will probably alternate with the boys leading the short, chantlike cheers, and the girls doing the pom pom routines while being accompanied by the KU band. The TOWN CRIER Features Features Supplementary Textbook Reading Material Paperback Books, Magazines, Newspapers Greeting Cards, Gifts Hours: 8:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. DAILY—Including Sunday 912 Mass. SUA FRIDAY FLICKS starring "War Lover" Steve McQueen Robert Wagner PLUS Charlie Chaplin in "Caught In a Cabaret" Admission 35c 7 p.m. & 9:30 p.m. FRASER THEATER UNIVERSITY EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE SERIES presents JOHN DOS PASSOS' "U. S. A." MARCH 25,26,27 MARCH 30, 31, APRIL 1,2,3 Tickets: $1.50 - .75 with KU ID Page : University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 31, 1965 Linguist Says Modern Thought Should Use Language as Tool The importance and enormous part which language has to play not only in linguistics but in present day logic and philosophy was stressed by Roman Jakobson in his lecture "The Quest for the Essence of Language." Professor Jakobson, professor of linguistics and Slavie literature at Harvard and an institute professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, spoke last night at the sixth lecture in the humanities series. IN HIS LECTURE, Prof. Jakobson referred to the studies of an American, Charles Peirce, when he said, "I know of no scholar of such a wide scope of discoveries in so many fields." "It is necessary to understand the relationship between the various types of signs and find the structural differences in the types of signs to understand language." "Peirce was not afraid to attempt this despite the spirit of the late 19th century and to call the attention of his contemporaries to the great achievements of Medieval theories of language and signs. He showed that his theories were a continuation of ancient Greek philosophy of language," Prof. Jakobson said. Jakobson defined language as a "tool or an instrument of communication. The question of how it works is one which only now begins to gain our attention. Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5783 NOW! ENDS FRI. — 7:00 & 9:00 GLENN FORD FONDA THE ROUNDERS in PANAVISION® and METROCOLOR Starts SAT. "HUSH...HUSH, SWEET, CHARLOTTE" Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 NOW! ENDS FRI. — 7:00 & 9:00 GLENN FORD FONDA THE ROUNDERS in PANAVISION® and METROCOLOR Starts SAT. "HUSH...HUSH. SWEET CHARLOTTE" VARSITY ART Attractions Starts TONITE... One Complete Show at 7:00 TWO LAUCH HITS ON ONE HILARIOUS PROGRAM! PETER SELLERS THE AMOROUS GENERAL PETER SELLERS! Krung Arm of Law YOUR BIDES WILL BE BORS FROM LAUGHING! Sunset LOVE IN THEATRE - West on Highway 41 TONITE — open 6:30, starts 7:00 "McHALE'S NAVY" "TAGGART" VARSITY ART Attractions VARSITY ART Attractions Starts TONITE... One Complete Show at 7:00 TWO LAUCH HITS ON ONE HILARIOUS PROGRAM! PETER SELLERS LUNCH OF HILLARIOUS COMEDY AND FUN THE COMPLEX HEARTSTREET THE ANDOUS GENERAL DOLLY GLOOM OF PETER SELLERS! New York, NY 10003 Wrong Arm of the Law Your sides are BORE FROM LAUCHING! "IT CAN BE SAID that language has an iconic character, if syntactical rules are analyzed they can be defined as a diagram," Prof. Jakobson said. "There is still a higher degree of grammatical nature. In Russian ka means little andvod means water but vodka does not mean a little water." "EVERY SIGN has two parts; the signifier and the signified," he said, "The signifier is perceptible sounds; the idea behind the sounds is the signified." - "The signified is not always perceptible, but it is translatable. The relationship between these two parts has been discussed for centuries. Plato contended that there was an intrinsic relationship between the two, sound and meaning," Prof. Jakobson said. an index to prove that a human being was on the island. Another example would be the statement that if there is smoke you know there is fire," he said. Sunset LOVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 44 "Many say that the relationship between the two is arbitrary, there is no intrinsic similarity whatsoever," Prof. Jakobson said. "According to Peirce there are three types of relationships, the index, the icon and the symbol. The foot-step seen by Robinson Crusoe is "This has played an important role in the life of our language and the history of our words. This can be seen in emotional language and poetry," Prof. Jakobson said. "There is a question as to wether the roots are related. There is a similarity of two words in sound which gives a feeling of similarity in meaning," he said. JOHN EMICK For City Commissioner April 6th THIS COULD BE THE DIFFERENCE! A "safety-check" of your car before you start on your vacation is just good, common sense. Drive down to Fritz Co. the checkup is FREE. We want you to return safe and sound. ❌ FRITZ CO. Service out of the weather 8th & New Hampshire Phone VI 3-4321 CITIES SERVICE Downtown — Near Everything CITIES SERVICE Hear the 1965 MASTERWORK the SOLID STATE --- --- Cooking amplifier - Garrard AT-6 changer - Magnetic pick-up (with Diamond Stylus) - Hand rubbed, oiled-walnut - Pre-set inputs for tuner and tape deck enclosure - 2 full range speakers & - 30-watt transistorized pre-amn electronic crossover in each enclosure KIEF'S Record & Stereo VI 2-1544 Open 10 to 8 Weekdays Mall's Shopping Center Wednesday, March 31, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Yugoslav and KU Students Present Native Plays Six Yugoslavian students will present a program tonight designed to present some examples of Yugoslavian drama and six KU students will give a performance tomorrow of the scenes they will be doing on the Eastern European tour. The six Yugoslavian students, here on a cultural exchange with their instructor, Predacj Bajcetic, will give their show at 8 tonight at the University Theatre. The six KU students who are going on a tour of eastern Europe next week with their instructor, Gordon Beck, instructor of speech and drama, will give their show at 8 tomorrow night at the University Theatre. THE YUGOSLAVIAN students, from the Academy of Theatre, Film, Radio and Television, will be playing their scenes in the original language, Serbo-Croatian, but William Kuhlik, KU's actor in Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the School of Education, has been named to receive the Outstanding Achievement Award of the University of Minnesota, according to notification by Dr. O. Meredith Wilson, president of UM. KU Dean Gets Minnesota Honor The award, voted by the University regents upon recommendation of the faculty committee on honors and the administrative committee of the senate, is reserved for former students "who have attained high eminence and distinction." The honor will be bestowed at the annual meeting of the Education residence, will give an introduction to each scene. One of the highlights of the program will be a revival of a four-hundred year old play. It is a farce by Nikola Maljeskovic, and will be performed in full by the students in Belgrade this summer. The sketch tonight will be the first performance of this play seen by any audience for 400 years. The farce was the first of its kind written in the Serbo-Croatian language. TODAY Official Bulletin Author," by Luigi Pirandello, the table scene from "Tartupe or the Hypocrite," by Moliere, and three scenes from other plays. tury comedy, and two scenes from two national romantic comedies, also nineteenth century works. Kansas Hi-Y Youth in Government, All Day. Kansas Union. SUA Table Tennis Tournament, 6:30 p.m. Ballroom, Kansas Union. Men's Singles and Doubles. Formally a lecture. Lawrence Student Center. Fr. Joseph Dillon. "The Meaning of Sin According to Biblical Theology." The first of these will be a scene from "What Did You Learn at School Today," a contemporary work by Wallace Johnson. THE OTHER Yugoslav students performing are Neda Spasojevic, Jelisaveta Sablic, and Zdravka Krstulovic. Carillon Recital, 7:00 p.m. Albert Gerken. The performance will end with an exercise called "An Invocation Against Sleeplessness," and a Montenegran dirge, as improvised by the peasants there. Classical Film, 7:00 p.m. "Day of wrath." Fraser Theater. One of these, "Stanoje Glabas," by Dura Jaksic, is about a national hero in the liberation struggle with the Turks. The plot involves a turkish Pasha that desires the girl of the hero for his harem. The other play, "Maksim Crnojevic," by Laza Kostic, is set in Venice. It is a tragedy in which a girl falls in love with the enemy of her brother, the hero of the play. The hero, Maksim, kills his foe. The selected scene portrays the girl and the wife of the slain man. The wife blames the girl for the death of her husband. The KU Eastern European tour members will present scenes from "Six Characters in Search of an The second scene will be from "Luv." Murray Schisgall's current Broadway success which stresses the comic element in love. The chosen scene takes place on Manhattan Bridge, where at least two people are contemplating suicide. THE MOVEMENT exercises will include some fencing done by the male members of the group. Petar Kralj, Slobodan Djuric, and Zafir Hazimanov. The Yugoslavian program will start with a traditional address by the Renaissance writer Drzic. It was written in 1550. This will be followed by demonstrations of movement, diction, and voice training exercises. Classical Fine Arts p. 12. wash with Theater. p. 14. College Life, 7:15 p.m. 1921 Vermont St. Speaker will be John Petrehn. Recital, 8:00 p.m. Norma Sharp, soprano. Swarthout Recital Hall. Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m. "Music in the Theatre." Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. The last scene is taken from a Yugoslavian play, "In Agony," by Miroslav Krieza. It is a portrait of the ruined society in the Yugoslavian part of the ruined Habsburg Empire after World War I. Taking part in the scenes and also going on the European tour are Teddy Weddingfeld, Norfolk, Neb., senior; Sylvia Groth, Mayville, N.D., graduate student; Gigi Gibson, Chicago, Ill.; senior; Richard Caskey, Overland Park sophomore; Steve Callahan, Independence graduate, and Bill Bowersock, Shawnee Mission sophomore. Scenes of the plays that will be presented include portions of "A Liar and an Archil," by Jovan Sterede Popovic, a nineteenth cen- TOMORROW Catholic Masses 145 p.m. pastorate Church Student Center, Co- fessions before and during mass. Epicopalac Holy Communion, 11:35 a.m. Canterbury House, 1116 La. A.A.C./T.T.A.A. Kansas Union. All Day. Area Principals Meeting, All Day, Kansas Union. German Club Informal Meeting, 4:30 p.m. Hawk's Nest, Kansas Union. All are invited. Wesley Foundation Evensong, 5:00 p.m. Methodist Center, 1314 Oread. Scientology Colloquium, 7:30 p.m. 206 Blake. Christian Family Movement, 8:00 p.m. Group 1, Chairman Bill Kackley, VI 2- 0750; 8:30 p.m. Group 2, Chairman Don Yonke VI 2-0830. Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m. "U.S.A." Murphy Hall. Epicopalac Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Who shall be the judge? Alumni Association, April 30, in Minneapolis, Minn. A doctor describes his moral struggle—should he deliver this baby girl who would never dance or run?—and tells how his decision was sustained 17 years later... in the April Reader's Digest, with more than 40 other features now on sale. Corey Ford offers a few hints "marriage counselors may have overlooked." THE MINNESOTA announcement sites Dean Anderson "because he has demonstrated outstanding achievement and leadership on a community, state, national and international level." Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Find out the one thing to murmur when your wife (tardy) asks if you've been waiting long or your husband (lost) drives 50 miles before asking directions . . . in April Reader's Digest. Also— Dean Anderson earned B.S., M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Minnesota He joined the KU faculty in 1948 and became dean of the School of Education in 1952. A bachelor's guide to marriage THE DIAMOND RING YOU CAN BUY WITH CONFIDENCE VAIL. $300 ALSO $200, $100 SABINE $280 WEDDING RING 125 TIMPANE $450. ALBO $350 TO $75 CAPRI $250. ALBO TO $1800 VAIL $300 ALBO TO $1800 RIVIERA $400 ALBO $300 TO $75 BORENSON $400 WEDDING RING 125 Keepsake Keepsake CALLO $175 WEDDING RING 42.50 Rings enlarged to show detail. DIAMOND RINGS BY Keepsake® STUDENT ACCOUNTS COLLEGE TERMS SABINE $280 WEDDING RING 12B Keep safe Keep safe Keepsake Keepsake Keepsake Keepsake CALLO $175 WEDDING RING 42.50 Rings enlarged to show detail Trade black flag. Keepsake Keepsake CALLO $175 WEDDING RING 42,50 Bings enlarged to show dataD Trade-Mark B p. DIAMOND RINGS BY Keepsake ... fine color ... flawless ... meticulously cut ... the center diamond of every lovely Keepsake engagement ring is guaranteed perfect (or replacement assured). Look for the Keepsake name in the ring and on the tag. Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. VI 3-5432 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 31, 1965 New Russian Leaders to Fall By 1970, Soviet Expert Says By Harihar Krishnan It is quite likely that the new Russian leaders will find themselves out of power by 1970, Klaus Mehnert, an authority on Soviet affairs said here yesterday. here yesterday: The elimination of Khrushchev from the leadership of the Soviet machinery has not resulted in the elimination of Khrushchevism, Mehnert said, instead the leaders could be called "Khrushchevites minus Khrushchev." MEHNERT, WHO SPOKE on "The Soviet Union Since the Fall of Khrushehev," is the director of the Institute of Political Science at the University of Aachen (Germany). He was born in Russia. He was born in Russia. "The reasons for the fall of Khrushchev were more personal then political." Mehnert said. the people, who were closest to him, whom he had designated as his heirs, felt they were no longer with him. His humor and his erratic ways of handling things, that had endeared him to us, were not the right actions according to the rest of the Soviet leadership," he said. THE FAULT of Khrushchev was that he continued to make more and more decisions on his own, without consulting the rest of the party chiefs. He started addressing a greater and greater audience of common people to such an extent that he created resentment among the higher authorities of the presidium. Mehnert explained. "When the question regarding his proposed visit to West Germany came up, Khrushchev did not discuss this in the committee. Instead of sending his Foreign Minister Gromkyo to study the situation, he sent his son-in-law Azhubev," Mehnert said. "His agricultural policies with which he had always identified himself also proved to be a failure." Mehnert said. "THE WITHDRAWAL from Cuba certainly made the people of Russia happy," Mehnert said, "but the people close to him felt it was an adventurer's policy." The deterioration of the relationships with China was greatly due to Khrushchev's personal antagonism towards her. The stories about his youth, which he was very fond of telling people, were based on anti-Chinese principles. Everytime he told them, he made China very unhappy, Mehnert said. In an attempt to put an end to the conflict with China once and for all, What you can do with an hour a day Discover what a Supreme Court justice, the president of Du Pont, and others have done with the 45 full working days per year that you add to your life when you set aside just one hour a day . in an article in April Reader's Digest. Also— Don't Blame the Ghetto a Negro looks at the Negro Problem An ex-Harlem resident tells how he "escaped" . . . how he got good jobs . . . and why he believes others can, too. In the April issue of the Reader's Digest, with more than 40 other rewarding features, now on sale. Khrushhev tried to call a conference of 26 communist nations on December 15,1964. This was also his chance to excommunicate China from the communist world. "BY OCTOBER, IT was clear that only 11 of the 26 nations would accept the invitation. This was a big blow to the Soviet prestige, and the Soviet leaders could not let such things go any longer," Mehnitn said. Khrushchevism was not the invention of Khrushchev, Mehnert explained. "It was the result of the development of the Russian life on the whole. Khrushchev recognized that changes in the Russian society were beginning to show up. HE ALSO RECOGNIZED that foreign policy changes had to be made. Confrontation of any sort with outside nations, he felt, had to be avoided even at the expense of losing face. The new leaders have not attempted to make any fundamental or spectacular changes in these Khrushchevism factors. In the domestic policies as related to industry, Mehnert said. Khrushchev had hesitatingly started a policy based on the Lieberman theory, which said that planned economy would cease to work when goods produced were not scarce. AS REGARDS FOREIGN affairs also, there have not been any spectacular changes made in the Khrushchev policy. Those who expected a complete change in the new Soviet regime's attitude towards China, have been disappointed. "The new leadership is using a very calm and unprovocative approach towards China. There has not been any change in policy towards other nations either, Mehnert said. Nations like India, Yugoslavia are getting the same treatment as they did during the time of Khrushchev. All the "sins" that China complained Khrushchev committed are being committed by the new leaders also. THE PRO CHINESE group in the Communist world is growing stronger. Mehnert said. One of the strongest weapons the Chinese are using against Russia is the "color" issue. "They try to convince the Afro-Asian nations that the Russians are 'whites' like the other 'imperialists.' As regards Viet Nam, the possibility of a full scale participation by the Soviet Union cannot be ignored. offering Kansas City's wedding gowns from 59. 95 finest selection of bridesmaid dresses from 25. 95 selected one-of-a-style gowns for parties,and all formal occasions from 25.95 FANTASY CIRCLE 4626 Nicholes Parkway PL 3-1610 Open Mondays and Thursdays Till Nine Talks Postpone Printers' Strike UPI—A threatened strike by printers and several other unions against seven major New York City daily newspapers was postponed early today at the end of nearly 12 hours of negotiations at city hall. Mayor Robert F. Wagner, who was instrumental in ending a 114-day strike against the city's newspapers in 1962-63, said in a statement issued at 4 a.m. EST he had obtained an agreement that the unions would give 24-hour prior notice before calling a strike. The talks between representatives of the New York City Publishers Association and officials of the International Typographical Union (ITU) were scheduled to resume later today. Both sides issued conflicting statements as to the status of the talks. THE MAYOR, who had returned from a White House dinner party to take a hand in the negotiations, said he would be "available at any time of the day or night." A strike had been set for 2 a.m. today, but Wagner got one-hour extensions from both the printers and the photoengravers to keep the talks going. The two-year contracts of 10 separate newspaper unions expired at midnight. The city hall session began about 4 p.m. Tuesday. Bertram A. Powers, president of the ITU's Local 6, said progress had been made in the talks with the publishers. The printers had been offered a weekly increase of $10.50 over a two-year period. They had demanded $15 on a one-year contract, which Powers said was a "negotiable figure." Special Reduced Air Fares To EUROPE KU Students, Faculty and immediate family Fly Air France-Non-Stop Jet $356.00 Round Trip from New York to Paris Depart New York June 15 Return from Paris August 17 To be contacted about details and other information mail coupon to: Air France 1125 Grand, Rm.810 K.C.6, Mo. Yes, I'm interested in KU Tour Address ... Phone ... JAMES DAVIS LITTLE EARL AND THE FABULOUS CONTINENTALS One Night Only, Thurs., April 1 8:00-11:00 APRIL FOOL'S DANCE - TEE PEE - Wednesday, March 31, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 7 A Stepping out with that special guy this weekend? Give him the very best impression send your clothes to Independent now . . . for the best results then! INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners 9th St. & Miss. 740 Vermont Call V. 3-4011 for free pick-up and delivery service Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 31, 1965 --- Deans, Placement Officials Foresee Many Jobs By Eric Johnson Deans and placement officials of the University's various schools have painted a pleasant picture for KU June graduates. In almost every school, the number of jobs surpasses the number of graduates available to fill them. Mrs. Kathleen Olsen, placement secretary for the School of Business, said, "With the giants of industry, oil, electrical, and others, there is quite a scramble for graduates. "We will have 64 graduates in June with master's degrees in business or accounting. Their starting salaries will range from $600 to $730 a month. The average for our graduates is about $660, this is a little higher than the national average," she said. "THEER IS competition for the top students. People who graduate with undergraduate degrees in business and accounting can expect to make about $550 a month. Accounting graduates make about $10 a month less," Mrs. Olsen said. Duane G. Wenzel, dean of the School of Pharmacy, said, "Prospects are excellent, and we have a lot more openings than we can fill. There is a larger demand from industry and teaching than ever before." He said that as with other schools, students who graduate with advanced degrees have better opportunities for jobs. "Increased standards have made the pharmacist more than a counter of pills and a pourier of liquids. He is sometimes the doctor's right hand man." "SOME OF OUR graduates are going into hospital pharmacy, retail pharmacy, or writing for related journals. The importance of pharmacy is far greater than in the past. We have many requests for people; our greatest problem is to find students to train so they can fill these positions." Dean Wenzel said. The School of Pharmacy now offers degrees in pharmacology, pharmacognosy, and pharmaceutical chemistry. They have a Ph.D. program in the latter and hope to expand. Wenzel said. James K. Logan, dean of the School of Law, said the prospects for graduates in the law school were good. "Opportunities are excellent and salaries keep going up. We felt last year we could have placed twice as many students as we did," he said. Associate Dean William A. Kelly, who is placement director for the School of Law, said, "The demand for lawyers in government, industry and private law practice exceeds the number we have coming out of law school." "COMPENSATION FOR the lawyer will vary tremendously, however, the trend is toward higher compensation. A lawyer may go into private practice, he may find a partner and go into a small town, or into government work. Compensation can range from quite low to $9,000 or $9,200 a year," Kelly said. Associate Dean Kelly commented that students from this campus like to go into private practice. Fun Fun Fun For this reason, they weren't filling the government jobs, or positions in small towns. "We need lawyers in small towns in western and central Kansas." He said a young lawyer usually must start himself. PITCHER NIGHT 70¢ Free Peanuts La Pizza 807 Vermont VI 3-5353 The School of Engineering ranks high in the number of graduates seeking jobs. Many jobs are available too. Associate Dean Albert S. Palmerlee, who is the placement officer for the School of Engineering, said, "During the fall semester, October, November, and December, we had approximately 130 companies who interviewed our graduates. We had about 80 who graduated." "INTERVIEWING in the spring semester starts shortly after classes begin. We will have almost as many companies interviewing in the spring as in the fall. We are looking forward to from 200 to 300 graduates." Palmerlee said. In relation to salaries which could be expected by engineering graduates, Palmerlee said, "I would guess from the feedback that I have gotten from people who have been employed, the average is about $630 a month. This is up about $30 from last year." "We get numerous phone calls and letters from companies who don't feel it advisable to send interviewers to Lawrence, but who offer to send planes to pick them up to interview them." "There is a heavy demand for engineers with advanced degrees. Actually a larger percentage of our bachelor degrees are going on to graduate school, and this cuts down the number who are available to take jobs immediately," Palmerlee said. PALMERLEE SAID in a national study he had read, salaries for engineers with master's degrees were about $50 higher than those of the bachelor degree holders. The level for the holder of a doctor's degree was about $200 to $250 above the master's. Palmerlee concluded by saying, "We wish we had more graduates available to accept the jobs that are available to them. There are about 35,000 engineering graduates each year—there is a demand for 70,000—and it looks like that at no time in the 1960's will the number of graduates exceed 40,000. There are numerous job opportunities and the salaries are improved, the prospects are good for the future." One of the largest placement bureaus on campus belongs to the School of Education. Herold Regier, assistant professor of education and director of teacher placement, echoed the findings of the other schools. "The bachelor's degree candidates," he said, "are finding opportunities probably as great this year as ever before, with as many or more opportunities in the following fields: elementary education, special teaching, remedial reading, foreign languages and English." "AS ONE school board member said, 'We find it a lot easier to hire a superintendent for our district than it is to hire an English or foreign language teacher,'" Prof. Regier remarked. "The general pattern of salaries is from $100 to $200 higher than last year," Regier said. "The salaries are ranging from $4,200 to $5,600. Most of our people have taken jobs for $5,000 or $5,100. This pattern is primarily set by the Kansas City area schools," he said. "We have had more recruiters on campus this year than before. Tomorrow for the first time we have recruiters from the Arlington, Va., schools. This week we have had 12 recruiters, from Wasco, Calif., to Arlington, Va., and as far north as Kodiak, Alaska," Prof. Regier said. Prof. Regier said the School of Education anticipated having about 550 bachelor's degree candidates this year with about 40 master's and between 25 and 50 doctoral candidates. "THEERE IS a greater demand for teachers with advanced degrees. We are getting many listings for PhD. people. Their salaries range from $7,600 to $9,600 for the nine month academic year," Regier said. "At the doctoral level, colleges are reporting more vacancies than ever before. These vacancies are in the fields of English, mathematics, physics, engineering and education," Regier said. CORRECTION! The SUA Table Tennis Tournament Advertisement that ran in the Kansan Monday March 29, should have read... TROPHIES 1st & 2nd place in Men's Singles & Doubles and Women's Singles. Smart Smoothie! That's what you'll be in this buttery soft kidskin sport casual with the handsewn vamp detailing. A moccasin so soft, so light, Cardigan so comfortable you'll never want to take it off . . . as a matter of fact you'll hardly know you have it on. Black - Red - Navy Brown-Boys AAAA to B to 10 naturally, 12.95 oldmaine trotters Royal College Shop 837 Mass. VI 3-4255 KU The Pit Friday Special Buy 2 pitchers at reg. price, get 1 Free Pitcher All Day Friday, April ? "Marijuana Rise for Collegians," "Emporia State C of E Students Investigated for Narcotics Addiction." These have been recent headlines in area newspapers. Large universities singled out have been Colorado, Wisconsin and Harvard. Why, you ask, has this evil habit not taken hold at KU? Because of that shining bulwark against wrongdoing, the Southern Pit. It is said one of the main reasons for turning to narcotics is to escape boredom, to seek excitement. As all of you who have patronized the Pit will readily attest, boredom cannot exist on this campus as long as the Palace of Enjoyment extends its unequaled hospitality. During an evening at the Pit ennui vanishes, optimism replaces pessimism, and the faithful are once again ready to face life's severest trials with a smile on their lips and a gleam in their eye. B be sure to get a generous supply of Pit Crew fortitude this week, for the Southern Pit will be CLOSED April 10th through April 10th Open again Monday, April 11th PIT PICK — This week the Fit Crew honors Bonnie Ward, Hashinger Hall. Wednesday, March 31, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 9 Protesters to Walk To Alabama School Several weeks ago, a Negro youth was struck by a deputy who went to the school to chase away two civil rights workers trying to get students to join in a demonstration. SELMA, Ala.—(UPI)—Negro leaders said about 200 persons would march on a rural Alabama school today to protest the refusal of the principal to allow students to participate in civil rights demonstrations. HE ALSO URGED continuation of the bus boycott in Selma and announced boycott leaflets would be passed out and picketing would start downtown. "There's going to be boycotting in Alabama until we get our rights," he said. "We've got a new slogan: 'We ain't buying in Alabama until we can vote in Alabama.'" The city of Selma and the local bus line have filed a damage suit against Bevel and other civil rights leaders for launching the bus boycott. The protest was to be staged at Camden in Wilcox County, one of the black soil belt counties where Negroes are conducting voter registration campaigns. Camden is 35 miles from Selma. A SPOKESMAN for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), headed by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., said the school involved was Camden Academy, a Negro institution. At Selma, the Rev. James T. Bevel told a mass meeting Tuesday night "the greatest boycott ever is in store for Alabama." He urged Negroes to "go without that Sunday frock, or go barefoot if you have to before you spend a penny." About 400 civil rights demonstrators marched on the Capitol in Montgomery Tuesday to protest the slaying of Mrs. Viola Liuzzo, a white civil rights worker, on an Alabama highway last Thursday night. The Queen of the 40th annual KU Relays will be selected this afternoon. Judging is in the Kansas Union at 3:30 p.m. Kansas Relays Queen to be Chosen Today Twenty-one women have been entered in the contest by their living groups on the campus. Two attendants will be named to reign with the queen over the Kansas Relays April 16 and 17. Relays Abb, Philip P. "Pat" McGrath, Prairie Village junior and Kansas Relays Queen chairman, said the contestants will be judged on beauty, personality and poise. THE QUEEN will open the Engineering Exposition Friday, April 16, according to McGrath. Saturday, April 17, the queen will ride in the relays parade through downtown Lawrence. That afternoon the queen and her attendants will be presented flowers and bracelets by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe during the relays. Saturday night she will reign over the relays dance. THE 21 CANDIDATES are; Becky Rogers, Garden City sophomore, Watkins Hall; Nancy Harrington, St. Louis, Mo., Kappa Alpha Theta; Margery Golden, Ottawa freshman, Sellars Hall; and Jane Larson, Scotch Plains, N.J., junior, Alpha Delta Pi. Others are: Sue Sandon, Zurich freshman, Douthart Hall; Donna Gaeddert, Hutchinson junior, Pi Beta Phi; Danielle Goering, Mound- If You Like Good BBQ Beef Try DIXON'S Extra Flavorful BBQ Beef Served on a toasted bun loaded with sauce and fresh crisp lettuce. Try It Soon! 2500 W.6th DIXON'S VI 3-7446 The Classical film Series presents Day of Wrath (1943 Denmark) A masterwork of the Danish cinema directed by Carl Dreyer Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Admission 60c Fraser Theater ridge junior, Miller Hall; Sharron Walton, Olathe junior, Alpha Phi. OTHER CANDIDATES are: Kathryn Rueb, Tulsa, Okla., sophomore, Lewis Hall; Susan Ramberg, Palatine, Ill., junior, Lewis Hall; Beverly Sayre, Summit, N.J., sophomore, Lewis Hall; and Donna Naylor, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, Alpha Chi Omega. Others are: Jeaneane Officer, Robinson freshman, Hashinger Hall; Helon "Dee Dee" Deanne LaGree, Altus, Okla., junior, Hashinger Hall; Elaine Rinkel, Scott City junior, Hashinger Hall; and Pat Lukens, Wichita sophomore, Alpha Gamma Delta. Others are: Nancy Williams, Olathe junior, Alpha Omicron Pi; Sibyl Brewster, Hutehinson sophomore, Chi Omega; Deborah Galbraith, Wichita senior, Delta Delta Delta; Vicki DeBord, Kearney, Neb., junior, Delta Gamma; and Susan Beilse, Shawnee Mission junior, Kappa Kappa Gamma SUA All University SUA TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT 1st & 2nd Place TROPHIES in Men's Singles & Doubles, Women's Singles Come Play Today 6:30 p.m. Union Ballroom TIGERS FOR SALE Yes, Stanley Pontiac-Cadillac now has the latest TIGERS from the jungles of Detroit. The new Wide-Track Tigers GTO, LeMans, and Tempest. These cars are every bit as exciting and beautiful as their African counterparts. We cordially invite you to come in and test drive a 1965 Pontiac-designated as Car of the Year by Motor Trend Magazine. SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY Stanley Pontiac-Cadillac 1040 Vermont VI 3-5200 1. 下列句子中,语意通顺且符合语境的一项是( )。 Page 10 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 31, 1965 Coed 'Takes Cue' for Tourney Bv Suzy Tichacek After having played billiards for only three years, Betty Jo Hember, Shawnee Mission senior, will try for a billiard crown in the National Intercollegiate Billiard Championships A field of 12, including two repeat contenders, will enter the national finals held Friday, Saturday and Sunday at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. Over 12,000 students throughout the nation representing 160 colleges and universities entered preliminary competition leading to campus and regional tournaments to select finalists. The Association of College Unions and the Billiard Congress of America co-sponsor the annual event for both men students and co-eds. Miss Member won the KU women's tournament and then went onto the regional tournament, held this year at Kansas State University. She won the regional tournament for the third year. "I just keep trying," Miss Hember said. THERE ARE three other contenders for the national title in the co-ed pocket billiards division. These girls represent the University of New Mexico, the University of Texas, and Washington State University. Miss Hember said she became interested in billiards when she was a freshman. "I was at a bowling tournament at the time," she said, "when I met one of the competitors who was the national intercollegiate billiards champion. She took another girl and I to play billiards." Miss Hember is now student teaching at three schools in the Kansas City area. She teaches physical education to elementary and senior high students. "With having to prepare my lessons each day," Miss Member said, "I don't have enough time to practice." WHEN ASKED if she was excited about the tournament she replied, "Oh yes! But I don't consider myself good enough to be playing in a national tournament-I just haven't played that long." Referee Named for Big 8 Meet "Concerned isn't quite the word for how I feel," Miss Hember said. "Worried is more appropriate." LINCOLN, Neb.—Ward Haylett, former Kansas State University track and field coach for 35 years and one of the outstanding figures in his profession during his colorful career, has been named referee of the 1965 Big Eight Outdoor Track and Field Championships. The 37th annual outdoor carnival will be held at the University of Nebraska's Memorial Stadium on May 14 and 15. Coach Frank Sevigne made the announcement of Haylett's selection on behalf of the Big Eight Conference track coaches. Now retired, Haylett coached his favorite sport for 47 years, spending 35 of these as Kansas State track coach. He began coaching K-State squads in 1928 when he was appointed the school's first full time track coach. Following the billiards tournament, Miss Hember will travel to Portland, Ore., April 10, for the Inter Collegiate Bowling Finals. Her average in bowling is 180 and she is the only competitor who has been at the national finals four years in a row. Ward was assistant coach of the U.S. Olympic team in 1948; he has been a member of the U.S. Olympic Track and Field committee three times; he has made numerous trips abroad with troupes of U.S. track stars, the latest a January, 1962, trip to New Zealand; and in 1957 he was named to the Helms Hall of Fame for his contributions to track. TRENDING Your VOTE For R. H. "Dick" Raney For City Commissioner Will Be Appreciated COMPARE! 1.5ct Diamond Ring OUR NEW NEW ArtCarved® Dream Diamond Rings Behold CATHEDRAL - slender, pure, impressively different! It's but one of the ultra new Dream Diamonds by ArtCarped. From $150. Read and Use Kansan Classifieds Marks Jewelers AGS 817 Mass. MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY VI 3-4266 Risqué. Risqué. M.Coy's SHOES PUNCTUATED WITH THE NEW COMMA HEEL. THIS MELLOW-LEATHERED RISQUE PROMISES TO BE THE MOST ELEGANT SHOE IN YOUR WARDROBE. Sailor Boy Blue Calf or Black Patent $12.99 813 Mass. VI 3-2091 On the Town in CRICKETEER $ ^{\circ} $ You know the haunts, know where to find the cool sounds, waiters know your name. The attire for all after-hours spots: Cricketeer's 2-button side vented sharkskin. It's trimmer, shorter. No breast pocket to hamper your style. New lighter shades in solids and glens. know our ide ast CRICKETEER MAGNA CLASSIC SHARKSKIN, 59. 50 University Shop The Flamingo PRESENTS THE SENSATIONS The Kansas City Band that has appeared with: CHUCK BERRY JERRY LEE LEWIS THE COASTERS JAN & DEAN Friday and Saturday April 2nd & 3rd 9th & Walnut Lawrence North For Reservations Phone VI 3-2825 VI 3-9800 p Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Triumph, 1957 TR-3 roadster. Call VI 21020 or see at 2235 Westchester. 4-14 1 late model Remington typewriter. Good condition. $25.00. VI 3-6400. 4-1 1950 DeSoto, real good transportation. $100.00; 1949 DeSoto, clean, runs good. $100.00. Benson's Auto Sales, 1902 Harper, VI 3-1626. 4-1 1964 Camara Spyder coupe, metallic blue, 4-speed, white walls, heavy duty sus- sibilities, posttraction, Lucas lights, factory warranty. Call VI 2-3103 evenings. 1961 TR-3 roadster, top running condition, excellent body and top, tonneau and boot. Call VI 3-8853. 4-13 Phonographs—final cut on all 1964 models—all famous brands reduced to clear save on Magnavox, General Electric or Motorola at Rockestone's, 928-919 Mass. 4-28 SAVE SAVE SAVE Just $2.300.00 buys a '64 Barracuda, automatic transmission, radio and heater, 273 cuble in. V-8 Fully equipped, under factory warranty, low mileage. Must sell at once. Call VI 2-1972 for information. 3-31 BEFORE YOU BUY, CHECK OUR PREMIUMS! Occidental Term Life: conversion, Go-Back, and Move-Over options. Age 18 = $33.90 = $10.00, Age 20 = $34.40 = $10.00, Age 22 = $34.70 = $10.00, Call West Santee at VI 3-216 for details. tt 1959 Gardner 50'x10' house trailer, good condition. Reasonably priced. Call V-145-7860 Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. CALL V1 2-1001 or free delivery. Printed Biology notes, 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures, comprehensive notes for used for classes. Formerly known as the Teff Notes. Call VI 3-1428. $4.50. Webor HL-FI tape recorder, electric, good condition. Will carry largest reels. 3-speeds. Call John Carnahan at VI 2- 7673. 4-1 Mayfair miniature* tape recorder. 33$\frac{1}{4}$ and 71$\frac{1}{2}$ L.P.S. 5 inch reels. Battery Recharge included. $39.00. VI 2-2504. 1-44 Tires—800 x 14 white sidewalls, Two sets. One set is Atlas snow tires, which will go for $15 apice. The second set is $26 (apiece) Riverside white sidewalls. They will go for $15 apice. The set of (4) is $40. Call Bob Monk-VI 3-7102 tfl Students, why throw money away on rent when you can own a 1962 Marlette 10 x 50, modern, two-bedroom mobile home, small room apartment. This home is beautiful and in excellent condition. For further information CALL RI 8-0973 or RI 8-0916. tt TYPEWRITERS, electrics, manuals, portables; sales, service, rentals. Olympia. Hermes, Royal, Smith-Corona, Olivetti. Adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. tf THE STABLES now open every day- Serving steaks, chops sea food, saud- dess ice cream, accommodation, new am- sphere. Party rooms available. Phone VI- 3-9644 140 W. 7th. tf NEED A BAND? 30 PLUS TO CHOOSE FROM. PHONE VI 2-2100. t CHINA-Nortakti, Mayfair design. New never used or even removed from packing. Retail value for 8 place setting is $100. This set is an 8-place setting with additions to 12. Cost is $75. Will sell to the first caller. Bob Monk V. 3-7102. 500 premium tires—famous brands for less than off brands—Get our deal before you buy—Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. St. 4-28 Zenith stereophonic high fidelity for sale. Portable, two-speaker, micro-touch needle, two-level stand including album- record storage. $150 or months ago. New cash no, so will sell to highest price within 2 weeks. Call Rita. T 3-2847 after 10:30 p.m. Transistor radios - low new prices! G.E $8.22, Motorola $10.00, AM-FM $24. Radio headquarters (80 models in stock). Ray Stoneback's, 929-319 Mass. 4-28 1963 Healy Healy 3000 Mark 2, deluxe model, red, convertible, roll up windows, overdrive, new tires, new battery, excellent condition, 19,000 miles, VI 2-4-8 MG-tf, 1954, good condition. Call VI 3-1286 after 5.30 p.m. 4-15 1956 Kharman Ghia. good tires, radio, good condition, need buyer. VI 3-14-8 1960 Hillman convertible, $350.00; Wollensak 1440 tape reorder-stereo, $125.00; Tucsonuner, $40.00; Garrard Chambers $30.00; 16 inch portable TV, $50.00; VI 3-4196 1965 Plymouth Sports Fury loaded with extras. 2,500 miles. Full factory warranty. Private owner. VI 2-9205. Save $1,000. 4-1 HELP WANTED Male student who is interested in earning part time money. Job will not hinder completion of course. Formation call David P. Gibson. IV 3-0321 or after 6 p.m. VI 2-0298. 4-15 WANTED OLD CARS WANTED, top prices paid to Do it today! GI Joe's GG, 101 Vermont, tr n Wednesday, March 31, 1965 University Daily Kanson Washing and ironing done in my home Washington and 131 New Jersey St. Phone: VI - 8-2998. Ride to New York City and return during spring break. Will share driving and expenses. Please contact Dennis at V1 2-9100, room number 439. 4-1 2 KU students want 2 upperclassmen to share house 2 blocks from campus. Private room and full use of house. $22.50 plus share of utilities. VI 2-2769. 4-15 TYPING Experienced typist wants typing in home. Reasonable rates, prompt service. Phone VI 2-3356. tf Micki's office continues guaranteed typing service by professional secretaries. Call II 1-6264 or VI 3-5947 or bring papers to Red Dog Inn Building. tf Experienced typist. 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Resonance rates. ALL Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Vale. Ytl. 2-1648. Former teacher will give prompt and careful attention to typing your term papers and reports. 4 years experience. call VI 3-3829. tt Theses only on Royal Electric Pica Typewriter. CALL MLL. Fulcher at VI 3-0558. 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 Typing done—good clean work—corrections done—call VI 3-7349. 3-31 Experienced secretary will type term papers, law briefs thesis, textbooks and business terms. Fast and accurate. Reasonable rate. Call Marsha Goff at VI 3-2577. Former Harvard and U. of Minnesota report on the theses, PHONE VI 3-7207. Term papers, Theses by experienced typist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. tf Expert typist fully qualified to do term papers, reports, and theses. Will do ex-tenuation for technical documents on carbon ribbon typewriter. Betty Muskrat, 140 Indian, or call VI 2-0091. tf Will do typing in my home. Accurate, reasonable rates, and quick efficient service. CALL Mrs. Marvin Brown at VI 2-0210. tf Experienced, accurate typist with degree in English Education wants typing. Speaking and languages. Quick and reasonable. Electric typewriter. Call VI 2-3976. tf Typist, experienced with term papers, theses, and dissertations, will give your students access to a machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marie Hingley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048. tjf Experienced secretary would like typing in her home, with new electric typesetting service. Reasonable rates. Call Ms. Lancett at VI 2-1188. Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will report supports or theses. Experienced. Electric typewriter. CALL Ms. Marsh at VI 3-8262. Bar-B-Q: If you want Bar-B-R qibs that barna and grandpa can eat, try our restaurants on the left or to the right, per slab. Hours: 11:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Tues. thru Sat. VI 2-9510 3-31 Experienced typist wants theses, term-papers, and dissertations to be typed on electric (pica type) typewriter. Please Call Pat Beck at VI 3-5630. tf Experienced typist will do dissertations, manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon, special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I. VI 3-7485. tf Friends coming this weekend? Looking for a place with good food at reasonable prices. RESTAURANT. Plenty of free parking. 9th and Iowa. ff Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon.-thu-Fri. or all dav Sat. or Sun. Phone VI 3-6231. tf it's great for a date. Take her bowling at Hilcress Bowl. Finest lanes in the state. Also Mon., Tues, and Fr. after 9:00 p.m. Hilcress Bowl, 9th and Iowa. **tf** BUSY PEOPLE—No time to spare for household cares? Have a professional cleaner in your home regularly or Occu- liance Call Pioneer Cleaning Service VI 3-408-3 MISCELLANEOUS Rent electric, standard, and portable typewriters. Repair all makes of electric, hard-wired and typewrites of modern Business Equipment (including Business Machines), 15 E. bth. VI 3-0151. Micki's new secretarial and typing service offers professional work to faculty, students and businessmen. Call for appointment. VI 2-1626 or VI 3-5947. ftt PARTY TIME? Building available for parties, dances, and meetings. PHONE Ralph Freed at VI 3-3995. tf apartment for rent for 3 or 4 boys, furnished. VI 3-2281. tf FOR RENT Married, Graduate Students, Faculty-2 bedroom apts. $85.00, 1 available now; 5 room apartments. Also sleeping rooms. Call for brochure V 3-1216, Santee Apts., 1123 Indiana, tt PARTY ROOM: Accommodations for 30-60 people, jukebox, liquid refreshments, kitchen equipment. Contact Don at the Gaslight Tavern for reservations CALL VI 3-1086. tt ENTERTAINMENT ATTENTION PARTY THROWERS: Do you want the Beatles, the Kingsmen, Bobby Bland, James Brown, Freddy King, Ray Charles; you can get them all in the BLADES. Years of experience. Finest references. CALL VI 2-1791. tt Now you can hear a variety of excellent dance bands on stereo demo tapes, including the Fabulous Blades, the Norsemen, and union and non-uniont call VI 2-1791. CLASSIFIEDS Bring Quick Results HOTEL BUSINESS DIRECTORY For Your BEST Haircut 4 Chairs 8-6 Mon.-Fri. - 8-5 Sat. PLAZA Barber Shop Come to 1804 Mass. In Dillon's Plaza 1804 Mass. VI 2-9462 NewYork Cleaners Merchants of GOOD INTERIORS. 926 Mass. For the best in — VI 3-0501 HONN'S - dry cleaning * alterations * reweaving COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING Across From The High School OPEN 24 HRS. 19th & La. VI 3-9631 Wholesale Diamond Rings Call Robert A. Lange VI 3-1711 JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY Lawrence Auto Service Repair & Repaint, Automatic Trans. Service Wheel Alignment Tune-up, Body 10th & Mass. VI 2-0247 Mobil — Goodyear Fraternity Jewelry 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Balfour MUGS 24 OZS. — 35c Louise's Bar 1017 Mass. Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals "Micki's" Secretarial Service Red Dog Bldg. 642 Mass. VI 2-1626 or VI 3-5947 VI 2-1626 or VI 3-5947 All kinds of typing & secretarial services Guaranteed to Please Appointments Preferred Complete Car Care Firestone Tires - Mufflers & Pipes GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center - DX Products - Tune Ups - Brake Service FREE PARKING - Wash and Polish Complete Center under one roof 24 HOUR SERVICE (TUES. THRU SUN.) 7:30 to 9 Sunday Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Open 7 a.m. to 10 p.m.Daily ASK ABOUT THE DX TRIAL BOND GUARANTEE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694 ● Lubrication . . . . $1.00 - Wheel Alignment - Page Fina Service - Brake Adjustment . . . .98 6th & Michigan VI 2-9598 - Automatic Transmission DX Servicenter Southridge Plaza Discover Quality In Apartment Living 2350 Ridge Court VI2-1160 - Dependable Cars SERVICE YOU CAN TRUST! - Complete Auto Servicing Wagner's Texaco If we don't have what you want— we'll get it! Open 7-11: 00 Sun. thru Thurs. 7-2: 00 a.m. Fri. & Sat. 23rd & La. VI 3-0138 Complete — one stop service Open 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. STANDARD BRIDGE STANDARD SERVICE ART NEASE 601 Mass. VI 3-9897 One-Stop Service Bring Auto Problems To Us. Experienced mechanics Guaranteed Parts Montgomery Ward Auto Service 729 N.H. VI 2-1708 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 31, 1965 THE RED DOG INN PRESENTS Thursday, April 1st: Pre-Spring Break Blast with the FABULOUS FLIPPERS. DOORS OPEN AT 6:30 Friday: "THE ROYALS" ONE NIGHT ONLY Saturday, April 3 THE SOUL KING AND HIS INVINCIBLES DOORS OPEN AT 7:00 P.M. FRIDAY FREE T. G. I. F. The Red Dog Inn will be closed on Fri. & Sat., April 9th & 10th because of Spring Break. We will open again on Friday, March 16,1965