Daily hansan Monday, Feb. 4, 1957 LAWRENCE, KANSAS THE DREAMER'S REPRESENTATION (Daily Kansan photo by Ralph Butler) SPECTATORS SPECTACULAR—This candid shot of Saturday's basketball game crowd shows four degrees of enthusiasm exhibited about ten minutes before the end of the game when KU tied the score after trailing Iowa State all evening. 54th Year, No. 77 Enrollment May Hit 8,300, Up 764 From Last Year The enrollment for the spring semester is expected to reach 8,300, an increase of 764 students over a year ago, according to James K. Hitt, registrar and director of admissions. This is a decrease of 456 students, 6 per cent, from the fall semester as compared to a normal 10 per cent drop. During the three-day enrollment period, 8,005 students registered but 200 to 250 late enrollees were expected. There are now 7,345 students on the KU campus and 750 students at the Kansas University Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan. Undergraduate students enrolling at KU for the first time number 175. The student body now includes 5,210 men, an increase of 501 over last year and 2,135 women, 262 more than last year. Four Positions Open On K-Book Staff Persons who want positions on the 1957 K-Book datebook and handbook staff should apply before Monday, Feb. 11 to Homer Paris, Kansas City, Mo., junior, 1621 Edgehill. Positions open are editor, assistant editor, business manager, and assistant business manager. Set In 20's,'Of Thee I Sing' Starts Tonight John P. Wintergreen runs for president on a platform of love at 8 p.m. today, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday in Fraser Theater. Wintergreen is one of the chief characters in the musical comedy, "Of Thee I Sing," to be presented by the University Theatre and KU Light Opera Guild. Taken from the book by the same name, "Of Thee I Sing" scored as a hit in 1931 and won the Pulitzer Prize for its satire on politics, conventions and the 2-party system. It was written by George S. Kaufman and Morril Ryskind. In the 1952 election year the production was revived on Broadway. Music and lyrics are by George and Ira Gershwin. "The setting for the play is in the 1920's," said Dr. Jack T. Brooking, assistant professor of speech and drama. "We have tried to capture the mood of those days in both costumes and makeup, from the heavy makeup to the rosy knees." The audience will find itself not only watching a play, but in the midst of it, as cast members roam the aisles during a convention scene. Another unusual feature will be a movie within the play. Begun by Bruce D. Dillman, Independence graduate student, the film was finished by John D. Branigan, Kansas City, Mo., senior. The movie, a news-reel scene on the election returns, was shot on campus. Donald B. Farrar, Kansas City Mo, junior, stars in the role of John P. Wintergreen, the presidential candidate. Beverly A. Runkle, Pittsburgh, and Sara Jo Pursley, Coffeyville, juniors, play the feminine leads as Diana Devereau and Mary Turner. Alexander Throttlebottom, the vicepresidential candidate whom no one knows, is portrayed by Dale J. Bellerose, Lawrence sophomore. Cloudy southeast, decreasing cloudiness west and north today. Generally partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday. Colder south and extreme west today. Warmer east and south central Tuesday. Weather Dormitory Fees Boosted To $310 Bv JOHN BATTIN (Assistant Managing Editor of The Daily Kansan) (Assistant Managing Editor of The Daily Kansas) If you plan to come to Kansas University next September, plan to pay more for your education. Also, plan to find buildings on campus not quite as nice as University officials want them. Gals—Want Work As A Secretary? Jayhawk secretaries do such jobs as typing, filing, selling Jayhawkers and Jayhawker subscriptions. Entries for the annual Jayhawker queen contest will be received until 6 p.m. Wednesday, George Blackburn, Joplin, Mo., junior and editor of the yearbook, said today. A limit of two pictures from organized houses may be submitted at the Jayhawker office in the Student Union. Students not living in an organized house may submit entries also. Blackburn said. Queen Entries Due Wednesday Secretarial positions are open on the Jayhawker for the spring semester. Girls who wish to work on the annual can get further information at the Jayhawker office in the Student Union, or by calling Jere Glover, Salina junior, at. VI 3-5800. The Jayhawker staff will choose ten finalists and their pictures will be sent to a judge whose name cannot be revealed, but who is a "connoisseur of beauty," according to Blackburn. The winner will be announced in the final issue of the Jayhawker. Members of Mortar Board and Sachem, senior honorary groups, are asked to have their pictures taken at the Estes Studios no later than Feb. 10. These individual photos will also be used as senior pictures. Murphy To Speak In Topeka Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will speak on "Educational Problems Facing Kansas" at the Eggs and Issues Breakfast Club at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday at the Hotel Kansan in Topeka. The Board of Regents increased dormitory board and room rates from $292.50 to $310 a semester effective September, 1957. These rates apply to Carruth-O'Leary, Gertrude Sellards Pearson, Corbin, North College and Grace Pearson halls. Second Fee Increase It was the second fee increase in a month. The Board of Regents had raised incidental fees $14 in December for resident students and $34 for non-resident students. Instead of paying $66, resident students will pay $70, and non-resident students will pay $165 instead of $131. Similar increases affected Kansas State College dormitory fees. Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, said in an interview Saturday that the incidental fee increase didn't help the KU operating budget for 1958 at all. Kansas University officials requested $12,950,760 for 1958. Gov. George Docking proposed to the Legislature a budget of $12,205,365, a cut of $745,395. "The Regents increased the fees." Mr. Nichols said, "but the governor cut the request by that amount. It means the student pays more for his education." "Competition over the country is keener than it was," Mr. Nichols said. "If salary differentials increase, competition with Big Ten and other schools will cause us to lose ground." Gov. Docking did not allow certain capital improvements University officials requested. The projects requested were to widen West Campus streets, build walks and drives by the music and dramatic arts building at 16th and Naismith Drive, improve walks and drives by the engineering buildings, install a freight elevator in Strong Hall, and rewire the elevator system in Malot Hall. The $10,000 request to buy art pieces was cut out of the current budget, Mr. Nichols said. Gov. Docking proposed $30,000 to repair the stone work on Spooner-Thayer Art Museum, but he cut the $10,000 request to buy books for Watson Library out of the operating budget. Blame These 400 For Those High Curves In The College Four hundred students, including 44 who made straight A's, have been named to the fall semester honor roll of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. ___ Freshmen led the list with 112 students, followed by 107 sophomores, 91 seniors, 81 juniors and 7 special students. Students who earned straight A's are: John E. Beam, Ottawa junior; Marilyn R. Bell, McPherson freshman; Robert G. Billings, Russell sophomore; Mary H. Clark, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Eugene G. Coombs, Wichita senior; Jessie A. Cramer, Cincinnati, Ohio; freshman; John J. Crittenden, Wichita sophomore; Jane E. Crow, Topeka freshman; Gilbert Cuthberthson, Leavenworth sophomore; Diana Dicks, Glendale, Mo., freshman. Roger T. Douglass, Mullinville freshman; Johnita Forssberg, Logan senior; Jerry E. Goss, Stafford senior; Alice K. Gould, Kansas City, Mo. freshman; Phyllis C. Haines, Wellington senior; Ruth L. Harder, Soldier senior; Kenneth A. Harris, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Roger L. Hartman, Lyons senior; Beverly A. Harvey, Wichita senior; Dianne P. Hays, Kansas City, Kan., junior; Brenda Johnson, Atchison freshman Donna R. Jasper, Dighton junior; Jack O. Jevons, Wakefield senior; Ester A. Lasater, Wichita, sophomore; Megan S. Lloyd, Hutchinson junior; Janice K. McElhany, Lawrence sophomore; Frank G. McKnight, Lawrence senior; Donald M. Megil, Lawrence junior; Virginia G. Miller, Wichita junior; Frederick B. Misse, Highland junior; David A. Ontjes, Stafford sophomore. Ronald H. Pine, Kansas City, Mo. freshman; Edwin D. Rathbun, Great Bend junior; Eileen A. Rhodes, Topeka freshman; Max R. Ridings, Kansas City, Mo., special student; Kenneth W. Rock, Abilene freshman; John B. Runnels, Lyons seni- nor; Mary F. Schwartz, Manhattan freshman; Richard L. Speers, Houston, Tex., freshman; Vera C. Stough, Lawrence junior; Carole J. Stucky, Bogota, Colombia junior; Annette Templin, St. John grad; Gayle Tiffany, Lawrence sophomore; Victor E. Viola, Abilene senior. Others on the honor roll are; Richard W. Adam, Emporia sophomore; Helen C. Adler, Fredonia sophomore; Judith A. Aliken Sunflower freshman; Cesar Albert Monterey, Calif., freshman; Judith Allen, Lawrence freshman; M Elaine Anderson, Kansas City, Mo. junior; Marianne Anderson, Lawrence senior; Ruth A. Anderson, Hutchinson junior; Walter C. Ashcraft, Ashland sophomore; Donna L. Ashley, Chanute freshman. Helju Aulik, Holdrege, Neb., senior; Carolyn L. Bailey, Scranton junior; Virginia L. Baker, Wichita freshman; David A. Ball, Kansas City, Kan., senior; Barbara A. Barnes, Mission sophomore; Dora L. Barnes, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Rozanne Marie Barry, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Joanne Beal, Lawrence junior; Dale J. Bellerose, Lawrence sophomore; Kay M. Benjamin, Garnett freshman. Judith A. Berg, Wichita junior; Don H. Berkley, Tescott senior; Carol A. Berry, Riverside, Calif., freshman; Earl D. Bevan, Pittsburg freshman; Marcia R. Bierlein, Pittsburg sophomore; George L. Blackburn, Joplin, Mo., junior; Sandra K. Blankenhip, Great Bend sophomore; Barbara J. Booker, Augusta sophomore; John L. Bourret, Mission sophomore; Don R. Bowen, Salina sophomore. Robert E. Boyer, Wichita junior; Kathryn Braden, Hutchinson senior; Ana M. Breedlove, Guatemala junior; Dale M. Brethower, Nevis, Minn., sophomore; William P. Brigden, Topeka juan; Georganne Brown, Junction City freshman; Mary J. Brown, Tulsa, Okla., sophomore; Menzie H. Brown, Hiawatha senior; Peggy J. Brown, Topeka junior; Richard L. Brownrigg, Kansas City, Kan., senior. Thomas L. Bryan, Topeka senior; Clarence S. Buller, Peabody senior; Elizabeth Burke, Kansas City, Kan; juniper; John S. Callahan, Independence freshman; Janet Louise Cameron, Clay Center freshman; Elbert M. Caple, Colwich freshman; Karen M. Carlson, Ellinwood junior; Murray J. Casey, Chanute junior; Rochelle Cashdan, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Maurice R. Cashman, Powhattan senior. Robert T. Cook, Leavenworth junior; Herbert A. Cooper, Ft Worth, Tex., freshman; Janice J. Cornell, Salina freshman; Lee A. Crawford, Bartlesville, Okla., freshman; Beverly K. Cronkite, St. Joseph, Mo., freshman; Sharon J. Croy, Lawrence junior; John E. Crump, Lawrence special student; Mary J. Curtis, Great Bend senior; Michael P. Cusack, Joplin, Mo., sophomore; John C. Davis, Neodesha freshman. James W. Cederberg, Herndon freshman; Beverly Cobb, Mission sohomore; Floyd M. Colip, Almena senior; Harold L. Compton, Larned senior; Julian R. Comer, Kansas City, Mo., junior. Patricia L. Dawson, Emporia freshman; Richard G. Dede, Shaker Heights, Ohio senior; Nancy J. Delap, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Ferruh Demirmen, Bursa, Turkey sophomore; Spencer E. Dickson, Topeka freshman; Beverly Doig, Independence, Mo., junior; Carol A. Douglass, Newton sophomore; Janet I. Douthitt, Augusta freshman; Dorothy C. Drake, Webster Groves, Mo., freshman; Sharron R. Dye, Wichita sophomore. Ivan R. Eastwood, Summerfield freshman; Sharon K. Edgar, Mission freshman; Jerry A. Eichorn, Lawrence freshman; Kathleen A. Elsenbise, Wichita senior; Marilyn M. Coffelt, Lawrence senior; Mary B. Emison, Muncie junior; Gretchen Engler, Hutchinson sophomore; Donna M. Esslinger, Clifton sophomore; Carolyn J. Eubank, Pratt sophomore; Mary A. Evans, Lawrence junior. Fred H. Faas, Mission sophomore; Phyllis D. Fahrenbach, Belleville sophomore; Sandra S. Falkenstien, Lawrence junior; Linda L. Farmer, Pratt sophomore; Willis M. Fisher, Lawrence special student; Kathleen A. Fiske, Cheyenne, Wyo., sophomore; Howard D. Fleetwood, Halstead senior; Norman L. Ford, Osage City senior; James G. Foreman, Ok- (Cont'd on page 12.) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 4, 1957 Oerter And Nieder— --can be measured. In other work, from art to ditch digging, there is no real measuring stick for the best performance. Such a judgement, in fields other than athletics, is speculative and must be, for the most part, subjective. Another Pat On The Back The two men who last brought world honors to the University were victims of time when it came to them in turn being honored for their performances by the University. Al Oerter and Bill Nieder, after great showings in the Olympic games at Melbourne, slipped into Lawrence during the quiet of school breaks and were met with hardly a pat on the back. Nieder returned home during Christmas vacation and Oerter returned during the break between semesters. Both deserve the University's congratulations. Oerter set an Olympic record in winning the discus and Nieder finished second in the shot put. An athlete is one of the few whose performance In track and field events the culmination of years of work to approach perfection can be measured with a stopwatch or a tapemeasure—neither lie, play favorites, or make any allowances. The performance is either good or bad. In the case of Nieder and Oerter the performances were more than good. It's difficult to be really good at anything—and it's very difficult to be one of the world's best. Letters 'Slanted' Review MacKinlay Kantor's "Andersonville" was published 18 months ago, so reviews appearing now should be well considered and say something significant about the book. However, Ray Wingerson's review in the University Daily Kansan Jan.14 does not live up to this expectation. It goes along with the bulls of reviews that have greeted the book with exaggerated praise ever since its publication. —Jerry Thomas Why was "Andersonville" accepted so uncritically? Maybe because of the book cover's assurance that MacKinlay Kantor had studied the historical sources for 25 years! These memoirs contributed to the falsification of Civil War history for generations to come—evidently including ours. Critical historians have long doubted the thoroughness of MacKinlay Kantor's research and in the spring of 1956 one of them, William B. Hesseltine, professor at the University of Wisconsin, wrote a crushing review of "Andersonville," appearing in the Georgia Review. The essence of Mr. Hesseltine's review was that MacKinlay Kanort did not consult any of the critical histories of the Civil War prisons (e.g. by himself), but blindly trusted the court records of the Andersonville trial (1865) and soldiers' memoirs. Dailu Transan UNIVERSITY In addition he ordered the raions and treatment in the Northern prisons to be lowered to those of the South, with the result that prisoners' mortality almost reached that of Southern prisons. The North had prisons almost as terrible as those in the South. Union Secretary of War Stanton for a while stopped exchange of prisoners for the double reason of keeping his own soldiers from surrendering and of draining the resources of the Confederacy. University of Kansas student newspaper 1904, trivelyweek, 1908, daily, Jan. 16, 18, 19 Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 251, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association: Associated Collegiate Press: Represented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York. N. Y. service; United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every after semester. University year-end Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT Kent Thomas ... Managing Editor John Battin, Fleecia Ann Fenberg, Bob Lyle, Betty Jean Stanford, Assistant Managing Editors; Jim Banman, City Attorney, Michael Ahmerman, Assistant City Editors; Hiroshi Shionozaki, Telegraph Editor; Mary Beth Noyes, Delbert Haley, Assistant Telegraph Editor; Dick Brown, Sports Editor; George Anthan, Assistant Sports Editor; Marilyn Mermis, Sister Editor Pat Swanson, Assistant Society Editor; John Eaton, Picture Editor. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Jerry Powers, Title EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Jerry Dawson Editorial Editor Jerry Thomas, Jim Tice, Associate Editors. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Dale Bowers...Business Manager Dave Dickey, Advertising Manager; John Hedley, National Advertising Manager; Herold Metz, Classified Advertising Manager; Conboy Brown, Circulation Manager. But such facts don't disturb MacKinlay Kantor. His easy reading style leads the reader through all the terrible cruelties of prison life in Andersonville without any perspective. The book is anti-Southern even to the traditional generalizations on Southern character, aiming at confirming Northern feelings of superiority and righteousness. The centennial years of the Civil War are near. Romantic histories and novels are sure to flood the innocent public already facing racial and sectional bitterness. General respect of historical truth and the wish of warning against the dangers of MacKinlay Kantor's "Andersonville" led me to write this protest against Mr. Wingerson's review. Sigurd Rambusoh Carhus, Denmark graduate student (Editor's note: Mr. Hesseltine, a professor of history and social sciences, has written several works on the South, including "Lincoln and the War Governors" and "Confederate Leaders in the New South." This places him in the arbitrary position of being a scholar of the South. Mr. Wingerson, on the other hand, is a junior in journalism. To compare his review with that of Prof. Hesseltine is just plain silly.) Coffee In Library? Editor: It happens that we who have signed this letter have to stay in the library for some reason or another. We agree that the library is a nice place. We believe that some minor changes can make it more comfortable. 1. How about keeping one of the rooms open until 11:00 p.m. We have no urgent desire to change the time of checking books, hence one librarian would be enough to keep the room open until 11 p.m. A 1 hour increase in the library time table, as described above, would not burden the budget too much, we assume. 2. It is boring to study for any length of time. Some students like to drink coffee. At present these people go to the Student Union where they can easily waste the whole afternoon or evening. Isn't it possible to accommodate them with a corner in the basement or on the third floor of Watson Library where a student can have a cup of coffee and a short chat away from disturbing those who are studying? If it is possible to do something about both or either of these situations, can we hope for such a thing in the near future, and if not, why not? Alfred Slater. Two Cents' Worth Our apologies to the Student Union Hawks Nest. Hired Slater, Kansas City, Mo. Helmut Reischle, Lawrence Mohamed Kazem, Cairo, Egypt Meenakshi Tyagarajan Mylapore, India Hee Chung, Seoul, Korea All are graduate students We were under the impression that no one likes the coffee served in that trysting place. We were so convinced that we took a poll hoping to bolster our conviction. Bust? Editor: ton, "Do you like the coffee served in the Hawk's Nest?" Alas! The best laid polls of mice and men, etc. etc. Eleven expressed whole-hearted satisfaction with the coffee, and the remaining 16 described it as "adequate." "sufficient," and "all right," though Of the 34 people polled, only 7 shouted a hearty "No!" to the ques- Couldn't we get up a movement to have the bust in the Student Union Music Room rolled over to A some agreed it had to be "doctored." i.e. cream and sugar. One male volunteered that he doesn't like Perry Como. Dawson Our good friend Eldro has transferred to the University from a small school in Manhattan, and said he had some trouble during enrollment. "What was your trouble, our good friend Eilred?" we asked. "I am color-blind," he averred, "and thus was nonplussed when told to get a pink slip to enroll early, a green slip on which to register, a yellow slip on which to register my car, and a white slip on which to place my class schedule." "It doesn't matter how you played the game," we surmised, "but only if you won or lost." Fighting our way through the mass of students clutching early enrollment cards in their grubby little meathooks, we finally found ourselves at the "rest of the alphabet" table, where a lone coil in charge of handing out IBM cards was calmly pruning her nails. "Pick a card, any card," she grunted, scraping a pile of pruned nails into an ashtray. Sure enough, lined up behind us was the entire cast of "Of Thee I Sing," many, many athletes, plus a minority of students who have part time jobs or some other petty excuse of enrolling early. "But don't you want to see my early enrollment card?" we asked. "Oh, no," she yawned, "you MUST have one. Everyone does, you know." We see that over 400 students are on the College honor roll. Guess we had a pretty good thing two years ago. Ad book. Jerry Dawson Ad booki. the Museum of Art? After all, it is a work of art. Then too, the face part is rather homely, and looking at it detracts from the enjoyment of the music. And as the subject is still alive, he is not a proper object of worship. Wouldn't a bust of someone as dead as Poe be more suitable? Or if we have to have a live bust, wouldn't Ferde Grofe' be more appropriate? He is far more popular than anyone else in the Music Room. George Herman Instructor of English SAM DONAHUE Formerly Billy May Band ORCHESTRA Sat., Feb. 9 - Dance 9 to 1 Advance $1.75 Box Office $2.00 PLA-MOR, KANSAS CITY, MO. 3142 Main - VA 1-7844 8 When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Section. Open Thursdays 'Till 8:30 V1-3 4833 835 Mass. Jay SHOPPE Sale! FINAL REDUCTIONS Party Dresses 1/2 Price Sizes 5-7-8-9-10-11-12-13 Sweaters 1/2 Price Wool & Fur Blends—Orlons Sport Belts 1.00 Volvers To -2.98 Cotton Blouses 3.00 Values To 7.98 Wool Skirts 1/2 Price See Our 1.00, 2.00 and 3.00 Bargain Tables VETERANS JOIN YOUR UVO • SPEAKERS • DINNERS • BENEFIT ACTIVITIES • VETS INFO SERVICE • REVELRY FOR INFORMATION: SEE REPRESENTATIVE IN UVO OFFICE ROOM 1014 STUDENT UNION JOIN YOUR uvo university veterans organization VETERANS GENERAL MEETING TONIGHT 7:30 Student Union All Veterans Welcome UNIVERSITY VETERANS ORGANIZATION Bai Spr The band a 18 with land P Front travel appear play a 20 at S 21 at S 22 at will Norton Rusband Miss of per Webs with wists西斯 orchestruct The nual the Ur band at the Mo. The bers, 1 A n has i s averag e el car equipr e able a as 48. light ' KL To Mall consist a voca cordin Golder Ricl Night dance Tick at the Union The Studen men's Bob chairm Other --- 1234567890 Band, Orchestra Spring Tour Set The spring tour of the University band and orchestra will open March 18 with a morning conect at Highland Park High School, Topeka. From there the organizations will travel to Abilene for an evening appearance. On March 19 they will play at Russell and Colby; March 20 at St. Francis and Norton; March 21 at Stockton and Beloit, and March 22 at Minneapolis. Overnight stops will be made at Abilene, Colby, Norton and Beloit. The orchestra will present its annual spring concert March 24 at the University. March 26 will be the band and orchestra's concert date at the Music Hall in Kansas City, Mo. Russell L. Wiley, director of the band and orchestra, has chosen Miss Charmaine Asher, instructor of percussion, and Sue Gewinner, Webster Groves, Mo. to be soloists with the orchestra. Band soloists will be Edward Masters, assistant professor of band and orchestra, and Paul Wallace, instructor of music education. The concert band has 130 members, the orchestra 70. A modern high priced car today has more light bulbs than the average American home. One model car has 37 bulbs as standard equipment and with all the available accessories, may have as many as 48. The average home has 22 light bulbs. Page 3 KU Is Represented At N.Y.Music Festival For Fifth Year The University will be represented for the fifth year on the 18th annual American Music Festival sponsored by radio station WNYC in New York. KU has been invited each year since the festival was enlarged beyond the Atlantic seaboard. Three compositions by faculty members of the School of Fine Arts will be heard on a tape-recorded program prepared by the University radio stations KFKU-KANU. The New York broadcast is scheduled for 5 p. m. Wednesday, Feb. 13. Students To Assist The program will be opened with a composition by George Green Jr. instructor of music theory. Entitled "Thou Qbq Aloft Full Dazzling," the piece was written for the KU chapter of Sigma Alpha Iota, honorary music fraternity, and was performed by the chapter chorus in December. Assisting artists are Ann and Sue Markwell of Gashland, Mo., pianists, and Richard Chatelain of Fairbury, Neb., percussionist. They are juniors. Roy Sudlow's "Ecologue for Orchestra" will be played by the Southwestern Symposium Orchestra of the University of Texas. Mr. Sudlow is an assistant instructor of music theory. "Ecologue for Orchestra" was first played in 1955 at the Eastman School of Music and last spring at the Southwestern Symposium of Contemporary Music, where it won an award. KU Night Clubbers To Dance To Music Of Richard Maltby Richard Maltyb and his orchestra will play for the annual KU Night Club Party Saturday in the Student Union Ballroom. The dance will be from 8 p.m. to midnight. Malby's popular recording group consists of a 16-piece orchestra and a vocalist. Among his recent hit recordings is "The Man With The Golden Arm." Tickets are on sale for the dance at the ticket booth in the Student Union. They are $2.50 a couple. The dance will be sponsored by Student Union Activities and men's scholarship halls. Robert Downey, Kansas City, Mo. junior, and Dale Gerboth, Council Grove junior, ticket sales; Robert Hedrick, Leavenworth freshman, and Robert Plain, Garnett junior, publicity; Betty Seltsam, Topeka junior, and Phil Heinschel, Smith Center sophomore, refreshments; Nancy Becraft, Newton junior, chap-erones, and Trudy Youngberg, Lawrence sophomore, and Ron Groening, Kansas City, Mo., junior, decorations. Bob Crist, Scott City junior, is chairman of the Night Club Party. Other committees are headed by You Can't Win The "Dirty Clothes Battle" Let Us Fight Your Laundry Bouts! Come in and see us at our New Location----913 New Hampshire GRAVITT'S AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY A choral work, "Hodie Christus Natus Est." is the contribution of Laurel E. Anderson, professor of organ and theory. It will be performed by the KU A Cappella Choir with an ensemble of women's voices, a trumpet trio and the composer at the organ. The conductor is Clayton Krehbiel, assistant professor of music education. KU Choir To Perform Prof. Anderson dedicated the composition to the A Cappella Choir and its founder, D. N. Swarthout. 8 Journalists On Honor Roll Five seniors and three juniors have been named to the fall semester honor roll of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information. Jere Glover, Salina junior, made a straight-A average. Others on the honor roll are Margaret Armstrong, Westfield, N. J., Barbara Bell, McPherson, James G. Bannan, North Newton, William B. Harmon, Topeka, and Dee Richards, Lawrence, all seniors, and James G. Hohn, Marysville, and Dona Seacat, Emporia, juniors. Those listed comprise the top 10 per cent scholastically in the school. Grade point averages ran from 2.47 up. : Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. BIRD TV-Kadio Service 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 WARNER BROS. PRESENT HENRY FONDA' VERA MILES in ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S The Wrong Man BEE HENRY ANTHONY GROSSI Directed by ALFRED HITCHCOCKS COMING SOON VARSITY HERE'S THE ONE YOU'VE BEEN WAITING FOR the university shop's SALE ANNUAL WINTER Now In Progress Suits Topcoats Shoes Sportcoats Socks Jackets 331/3%Off Examples: $55.00 Suit Now $36.67 55.00 Topcoat Now 33.33 35.00 Sportcoat Now 23.33 Wool Sportshirts Gloves Dress Shirts Ties Mufflers Corduroy Cotton Sportshirts 1/2 Price Wool Slacks Summer Slacks 20% Off Examples: $ 9.95 Slacks Now $ 7.96 12.95 Slacks Now 10.36 Wool Sweaters Cashmere Sweaters 25% Off V-neck and Crew-neck 50c BARGAIN TABLE Values to $3.95 Now 50c Ea. or 3 for $1.25 AND HERE'S SOMETHING NEW! $1.00 BARGAIN TABLE Values to $7.95 Now $1 Ea. or 3 for $2.50 Slight Charge for Alterations $2.00 BARGAIN TABLE Values to $10.95 Now $2 Ea. or 3 for $5.00 the university shop 1420 Crescent Rd. Across from Lindley Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday. Feb. 4. 1957 At K.U. It's the Student Union Book Store Art & Engineering Supplies ARTIST BRUSHES OILS, TRI-TEC CASEINS, WATER COLORS, TEMPERA ART PAPERS DRAWING BOARDS DRAFTING INSTRUMENTS T-SQUARES TRIANGLES CURVES SCALES SLIDE RULES MODELING and SCULPTURING Tools JEWELRY-MAKING TOOLS & Materials For All Your Needs! Stationery Everybody Wants A THE JAYBOOK KU STUDENT C. Suzur, First Sem. Jay Book The Latest In Coil Notebooks Supplies RINGBOOKS ZIPPER NOTEBOOKS BRIEF CASES COIL BOUND BOOKS FILLERS PADS INDEX CARDS FILE FOLDERS THEME BINDERS FILING SUPPLIES TYPING PAPER MIMEO PAPER DUPLICATOR PAPER ENVELOPEs PENCILS ERASERS PAPER CLIPS SCOTCH TAPE STAPLERS RULERS Use the Bookateria for Books New & Used, Self Selection - No Lines FREE BOOK COVERS and BLOTTERS Medical & Biological Supplies STUDENT Union Book Store Typewriters New & Used Sales & Rentals Page 3 Meeting Set To Decide Kansan Neutrality Issue Members of the Kansan Board, governing body of the University Daily Kansan, will meet probably next week with Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy to decide whether students editors may take sides in state and national politics, Kent R. Thomas, chairman, said today. The Board of Regents gave the decision back to Chancellor Murphy and the Kansan Board Jan. 18. Before, full agreement could not be reached in a meeting here; it was decided editors could takes sides on campus politics. 4. The Kansan Board passed, Dec. 4, an amendment to their constitution to allow editors to take sides in politics on and off the campus. Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information said taking sides would not be permitted because of previous political trouble students had. Chancellor Murphy said he believed editors could discuss issues but not candidates. "There is a genuine problem," Dean Marvin said, "as to where responsibility and authority Revue Auditions Wednesday Auditions for between skit acts for Rock Chalk Revue will be Wednesday from 3 to 5 p.m. in Strong Auditorium. A master of ceremonies and six acts of any kind will be chosen from the auditions. The acts may be any type with any number of participants. Any student may try out. Those who will not be able to audition at the regular time may call Vera Stough at VI 3-560 to arrange for another time. Florida's Seminole Indians have exchanged their old dugout canoes for swift, modern air boats, says the National Geographic Society. Propeller-driven by an old automobile engine mounted above a shallow-draft scow, an air boat can float in two inches of water and skim through the swamps at 30 to 40 miles an hour. should lie and as to how they can be shared by the Kansan Board and the school. The Kansan is a laboratory, and therefore the school has a laboratory responsibility." Oscar Stauffer, Topeka publisher and member of the Board of Regents, said he believed the Kansas Board would "get in trouble" if it "lent itself to violent partisan politics." Official Bulletin Items for the official Bulletin must be brought to the Public Relations office. 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin material to theulty. Kaliman Nefsen should include name, place, date, and time of function. Undergraduate mathematics seminar, 4 p.m., 203 Strong. Lecture by Prof. G. Gspringer. "The Number 30." All interested students invited to attend. TODAY KU cabinet meeting, 6:45 p.m. at Miss Johnson's home, 1644 Stratford Rd. All cabinet members please attend as picture for Jayhawk will be taken. TUESDAY Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Museum. Verdi: "La Laurea de Desertio." KU Presbyterian Women's Supper, 1:30-7:30 p.m., Westminster House. THURSDAY World University Service, 4 p.m., 306A siesta Union. All representatives be County correspondents' meeting, 4 p.m. Pine Room, Student Union, Jim Bedford, journalism instructor, will speak. KU-Y all-member meeting, 7.30 p.m. Jim Bedroom, Student Union, Philippe: Dr. Franklyn C. Nelik, "Last Lecture." Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Art Museum. Verdi: "La Forza del Destino." FRIDAY William Bonney (Billy the Kid), one of the most famous of the Old West's gummen, was born in New York City. University Daily Kansan The following firms will interview students today through Friday in 111 Marvin. Students wishing to be interviewed are asked to sign the schedules in 111 Marvin. Firms Schedule Job Interviews Monday Fisher Governor Co.; Bendix Aviation Corp.; Indiana, Spencer Chemical Corp., and Civil Aeronautics Administration, Kansas City. Tuesday — Columbia-Southern Chemical Co.; Convair, Ft. Worth, Texas and Remington-Rand Co. Wednesday - Remington-Rand Co.; Esso Engineering and Research; Iowa State Highway Commission; Proctor and Gamble Co., and Columbia-Southern Chemical Co. Thursday Corn Products; U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, and Gulf Oil Corp. Friday - Mason and Hangar Co. and Gulf Oil Corp. Business School Job interviews for School of Business students will be held during the next two weeks by the companies listed below. Interview schedules may be signed in 214 Strong. ...Today — Cargill, Inc., and Colgate-Palmolive Co. Tuesday — Proctor and Gamble. Wednesday — Owens-Corning Fiberglass; Haskins and Sells, accounting, and Arthur Young and Co., accounting internees. Friday - Hailmark Cards, (women only); Sears, Roebuck and Co., and Pennsylvania Railroad. Thursday — Montgomery Ward and Travelers Insurance. Feb. 11 - Fleming Co.; RoyalLiverpool Insurance Group, and Internal Revenue Service. Feb. 12 - General Electric Co., Caterpillar Tractor, and F. J. Fisher, insurance. Feb. 13 - Caterpillar Tractor and Carter Oil Co. Feb. 14 - General Electric Co. Feb. 15 - UARCO, Inc., and Fleming Co., (summer employment). Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. Monday, Feb. 4, 1957 Trophies will be awarded to the four winners in the annual duplicate bridge tournament, sponsored by Student Union Activities, Wednesday, Feb. 13, in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union. SUA Bridge Champs To Get Trophies Students and faculty are eligible to enter the tournament, according to Lawrence Bodle, Plattsburg. Mo. senior and director of the tournament. To enter, players must sign a list at the information desk in the Student Union. A New Semester Is Here V Time To Start A thrifti-check Personalized Checking Account Book of 20 personalized checks----$1.50 Special Attention at To Student Accounts Douglas County State Bank "The Bank of Friendly Service" 900 Mass. — VI 3-7474 Member FDIC SALE Clearance FEBRUARY SALE Clearance FEBRUARY SALE Clearance 25% off February 4 thru 9 25% off Slacks Lissner Champion Suits and Sportshirts Shirts Cohen Capps Marlboro Jayson Arrow Sweaters Wash Slacks, Suede Jackets, Esquire Socks Paris Belts, $ \frac{3}{4} $ Length Suburban Coats Mike Nichols 1342 Ohio Jantzen Rugby The College Shop Charlie Hoag First Door South Jayhawk Cafe Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 4, 1957 Jayhawkers Stand Alone Kansas rests firmly atop the Big Seven basketball standings today and it looks as though the Jayhawkers may have finally realized the greatness forecast for them. Saturday night's 75-64 decision over Iowa State, the only team to beat them this year, was a convincing demonstration that Coach Dick Harp's Jayhawkers had loosed the shackles previously applied by the Cyclones. The game was much closer than the score indicates with the Cyclones holding leads up to 11 points most of the way until the Jayhawkers finally went in front to stay when Wilt Chamberlain hit a 10-foot jump shot with five minutes to go, giving Kansas a 61-59 lead. The Cyclones hit a red hot 50 per cent from the field in the first half to 27 per cent for Kansas but led only 38-31. Gary Thompson, great little 5-10 sharpshooter and center Don Medsker did the damage for Iowa State in the first hall with 13 and 12 points respectively. Gene Elstun with 10 points and Ron Loneski with 9 points paced the first half scoring for Kansas as the Iowa State zone defense effectively limited Wilt to four points. As in their battle at Ames earlier this season, the Cyclones moved 6-8 Medsker in front of Wilt and alternated 6-5 John Crawford and 6-7 Chuck Vogt behind him. Iowa State employed a full court zone press sporadically throughout the first half and it bothered the Javhawkers considerably. Iowa State began running a little more in the last half but as their hot shooting pace fell off, Kansas climbed back into the game. Loneski's hook shot with 11 minutes to go gave the Jayhawkers their first tie at 49-49 since the early minutes of the game. The savage play of Chamberlain marked the second half action. Wilt ripped in 15 points and pulled down 16 of his 24 rebounds in the last 20 minutes. With the score tied at 53-53 he saved four sure points in less than 30 seconds when he blocked two layup attempts in a row, sprawling to the court after the last block. Iowa State hung on grimly, however, and led 57-56 with 7:30 to go when in a span of four seconds the Cyclones lost both centers, Medsker and John Krocheski on fouls. Before the game was over Iowa State was destined to lose four of the five big men who formed Wilt's picket at various times daring the evening. The 7-0 Jayhawker sophomore hit 11 of 20 free throw chances provided by the isostling Cyclone defense. It was strictly a team victory for the Jayhawkers. The return of Loneski to action bolstered the squad tremendously. He dumped in 19 points and dragged in 12 rebounds in an outstanding performance. Gene Elstun and Maurice King gave the "So You're Going" "So You're Going" to EUROPE THIS SUMMER! Choose a CLARA LAUGHLIN TOUR Seven delightful small-membership tours for COLLEGE GIRLS ONLY. Excellent itineraries and accommodations — select membership. Departures June 11, 17, 21, 26, 28 and July 3. Priced from $1675.00 Special "TOWN & COUNTRY" COLLEGE TOUR departing June 28. under direction of Society of Art and Design to organize pictures of the tour and its members will appear in a Fall '57 issue of the magazine. ADULT TOUR June 11 S.S. LIBERTE —(Daily Kansan photo by Ralph Butler) Book early! Descriptive folder and full information on request. TOM MAUPIN Travel Service 1236 Massachusetts Phone VI 3-1211 Travel Service KANSAS 13 HEY, LOOK WHAT I GOT—Ron Loneski (33) goes high to drag down one of the 12 rebounds he recovered during the game. Gene Elstun (12) and Wilt Chamberlain (13) move in to lend a hand on the play. Jayhawkers fine outside jump shooting to go with the tandem post supplied by Chamberlain and Loneski utes to go, dropped in 5 of 7 free throw chances and played a fine floor game. Kansas built its final margin in the last two minutes. Holding only a 64-62 lead with 2:06 left, the Jayhawkers exploded for 11 points in the next two minutes while holding The Box Score: Kansas(75) FG FT F Elstun 5 6-7 3 Loneski 6 7-10 1 Chm'bln 4 11-20 4 Parker 2 0-1 5 Hollgrn 4 1 Hollgrn 0 1-0 $billings 0 5-7 1 Totals 21 33-18 50 Iowa State (64) FG FT G Crawford 2 1-3 3 Davis 1 0-0 5 Vogt 3 3-3 5 Medsker 4 4-4 5 Kroch'ki 1 3-4 5 Thomp'sn 7 1-1 3 Frahm 6 2-0 3 Galcal 0 0-0 3 Gronau 0 0-0 0 Totals 20 24-33 29 Totals 20 24-33 29 VALENTINE PORTRAIT SPECIAL 1 - 8x10 Portrait In Beautiful Natural Grain Wood Frame For That Special One. A Regular $10.50 Value. $5.95 A Perfect Valentine Gift. A Regular $8.00 Value. 1 - 8x10 Portrait $3.95 2 - 5x7 Portraits Perfect Gifts At A Tremendous Saving. A Regular $7.00 Value. Reprint from any negative in our files made before Jan. 1, 1957 previously ordered from and delivered. Offer expires Feb. 9, 1957. $3.50 Harp gave credit for the win to the whole team but singled out the seniors for the greatest effort in their three years at KU. "We put out more effort in this game than we have all year," he said. HIXON STUDIO The Jayhawkers used no different strategy in the second half, Harp said. "However, great credit should go to Bob Billings who came in when we had them on the hook and tore them apart. Ron (Loneski) also played a great game for us," he said. "It was our great sustaining effort that won the game. We simply did things better than they did," Jawhawk Coach Dick Harp said. The Kansas and Iowa State teams, both strangely subdued after the Jayhawkers 75-64 victory, differed greatly in their opinions as to what led to the Cyclone collapse. The Jayhawkers could see no turning point in the game—they believed they simply did their job better than their opponents. The Cyclones were unanimous in their belief that if their big men had not fouled out in the final period the ball game would have had a different ending. KU, Iowa State Differ On Cause Of Collapse 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Maurice King, who pumped in three important jump shots for Kansas in the closing minutes, thought the difference lay in the Jayhawkers refusing to play Iowa State's game. "They played about the same way as they did before. We had them figured when they beat us 39-37 at Ames but we just ddn't do our job." After playing the first full game of his college career, Ron Loneski said he felt pretty good although he got tired toward the end. "Of course, it was a real tough game," he added. All the Jayhawkers were full of praise for Gary Thompson who almost stole the game for the Cyclones. Thompson hit 21 points, tops for the game despite the defensive efforts of King. Iowa State Coach Bill Stranigan traced the Cyclones downfall to the departure of centers Medsker and Krocheksi. "Your big men must play and when they left we lost our poise and the game. I had to move Crawford to center and he is not familiar with our offense from that position," he said. Strannigan said Loneski made a great difference in the game. He lauded Wilt's defensive play as, "un-doubtedly the way in which he hurts you most." "We had planned to run more tonight than we have previously. Mavbe we ran too much in the last half but it worked so well in the first period we were afraid to stop," Stranigan said. Gary Thompson said flatly, "The difference was our big men fouling out. It changed the game completely and put us on the defense immediately." Architects To Meet At KU Feb. 13-14 "Industrial Forces and the Architect" will be the theme of the fourth annual Architects' Conference Feb. 13 and 14 at the University. More than 150 architects from Kansas, Nebraska, Missuori, Oklahoma and Arkansas are expected to attend. The Architects' Conference is sponsored by the Kansas City and Kansas chapters of the American Institute of Architects, and the KU department of architecture and University Extension. The Wrong Man WB WARNER BROS. PRESENT HENRY FONDA- VERA MILES In ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S The Wrong Man also starring ANTHONY QUINTY Directed by ALFPED HITCHCOCK COMING SOON VARSITY Town & Country Shoes ...come out, come out, wherever you are and go walking in these marvelous walk-on-air wonders. They're favorites in comfort and style. America's Best Fashion Shoe Value, Bucks 8.95 Corkette 9.95 Sizes 4 A's to B's 3½ to 11 Bucks 8.95 Corkette 9.95 Sizes 4 A's to B's 3½ to 11 Royal College Shop A bird is flying. It has long, thin legs and a long tail. The wings are wide and slightly raised. The bird is holding a flower in its beak. The flower has petals that are colorful and vary in shape and size. The bird's head is rounded with a small black eye. The bird's beak is dark brown with white markings. The bird's body is black with white feathers on its back and neck. The bird's legs are brown with white ticks. The bird is standing on a branch that is attached to a tree. The branch is green with brown tips. The tree is tall with many branches. Royal College Shop Monday, Feb. 4, 1957 University Dally Kansan 100 Three New Track Marks Set As Kansas Wins First Indoor Kansas, despite the ineligibilities of two top prospects, showed its usual strength in both the track and field events in defeating Oklahoma, 763-271 Friday in Allen Field House. Three records were broken in the meet which saw some of the best individual performances turned in by participants who were ineligible because of scholastic work. Jerry McNeal, two-miler and Jan Howell, miler, broke records for KU while Phil Frazier of the Sooners broke the 60-yard high hurdle mark. The high spot of the meet, however, was an exhibition event. Charles Tidwell, promising track prospect who has been declared ineligible because of grades, won the exhibition running of the 60-yard dash in 0:6.1 after being given a handicap of five vards. Kent Floerke of KU won the high jump with a leap of 6-1/2 but ineligible Bob Cannon, in an exhibition jump stole the show. Cannon cleared 6-7%, over a half foot higher than Floerke. Broad Jump -1. Mastin (KU), 23-71%; Floater (KU), 23-11%; Brunton Mile-1. Jan Howell (KU); 2. Bernie Gay (KU); 3. Jerry McNeal (KU). Time —4.179 (New meet record. Old record 4.223. Bob Karnes (KU, 1950). (OU). 22-614. 60-Yard Dash 1. John Pellow (OU); 60-Yard Dash 2. John Pellow (OU); 3. David Freeman (UK); Kune, Time: ... 66.5 Pole Vault—I, Tama Tams (KU), 13- 8, Pole Volleyball—I, Perez Potts (KU), and Carl Cox (OU). 440-Yard Dash—1, Louis Stirup (KU); 300-Yard Dash—2, 3 Glen Chowins (OU), Tong—10p, 60-Yard High Hurdles—1. Phil Frazier (OU); 2. Dave Freeman (KU); 3. Jim Lempel (OU); Time—97.5. (New meet record. Old record .07.6 by Jim Smith (OU), 1951). Two-Mile—1. Jerry McNeal (KU); Verlyn Schmidt (KU); 3. Barry Craw- tage; Time—3:28. (New meet record. Old record, 9:28.7 by AI Frame (KU) 1956). 880-Yard Run—1| Gary Parr (OU); 160-Anzen (KEN) Hai Long (KU) Time: 1:56.1 High Jump=1. -Kent Floerke (KU) 6-12; -OU (KU) 0-1-3; -a 1-3; Taylor Tovl (OU) 5-11-3; 60-Vard Low Hurdles—1. Dave Free- ner (QU). Timphee (KU); 5. Phil Frazier (QU). Timphee (KU) Shot Put—I A尔Oerter (KU) 52-3³¹; Shot Put—I A尔Oerter (OU) 50-8³¹; 3. Dan Erwin (OU) 49,7₂³¹; Mile Relay—1 Kansas (Larry Stroup, Kilouk, Louis Stroup, Ray Watt); Time—3/24 Jerry McNeal finishes strong after setting a meet record of 9:18 in the two mile. Bobby Nicholson, not running to place, is jogging along to his right. Timers at the left seem to be urging him on. —(Daily Kansan photo by Jim Sledd) NAYM him on. Oklahoma's Mighty Tankers SplashByJayhawkers,63-23 Defending Big Seven swimming champion, Oklahoma, won every event to easily splash past KU's touring swim team 63-23 Saturday afternoon. The Jayhawkers, making their opening debut in the young season, were simply outclassed. Kansas hopes to get back on the win trail when they, host Emporia State Wednesday. The results: 200-Yard Freestyle—1. Farrell, (O); 2. Milledge (K); 3. Peterson (K). Time: 2:12.5. 400-Yard Medley Relay-I. Oklahoma (Janovy, Thatcher, Dyson, Rowland); 2. Kansas. Time: 4:113. (New event. New pool and school record.) 50.-Yard Freestyle-1. Wilcox (O); 2. Crow (O); 3. Edwards (K). Time: 24.2. 200-Yard Butterfly—1. Thatcher (O); 2. Dyson (O); 3. Cleverenger (K). Time: 2:26.0. (New event, New pool school record.) One-meter diving-1. Griffis (O), 209.2 points; 2. Browder (O), 181.9; 3. Matthews (K), 177.7. 100-Yard Freestyle—1. Crow (O); 2. Edwards (K); 3. Milledge (K) Time: 55.6. 200-Yard Backstroke-1. Janovy (O); 2. Freudenthal (K); 3. Ryberg (K). Time: 2:28.0. Saturday's results: 440-Yard Freestyle-1. Rowland (O); 2. Hill (K); 3. Peterson (K) Time: 5.04.7. IM Cage Results, Schedules 200-Yard Breaststroke—1. Dyason (O); 2. Clevenger (K); 3. Drowatski (K). Time: 2:34.5. 400-Yard Freestyle Relay—1. Oklahoma (Janovy, Wilcox, Crow, Farrell); 2. Kansas. Time: 3:40.1. Games today: Fraternity C—Delta Chi 43, Phi Delt 28; Phi Gam 32, Sigma Pi 28; Phi Delt 26, Delta Chi 20; DU 40, ATO 13; Sigma Chi 25, Beta 17; DU 2, Delta Chi 0; SAE 2, ATO 0. Fraternity A—AKL vs. Beta. 4:15 p.m.; Phi Delt vs. Sigs. 5:15 p.m.; Kappa Sig vs. Sigma Nu. 6:15 p.m.; Phi Psi vs. Phi Gam. 7:15 p.m. Fraternity B—Phi Kappa vs. Acacia, 7:30 p.m. east; Kappa Sig vs. Delts, 7:30 p.m. west. Fraternity C—Phi Gam vs. DU, 4:15 p.m. east. New Oread Hall Directors Named Forrest W. Gifford, Lawrence senior, and Mrs. Gifford are the new resident directors of Oread Hall, a University dormitory for 160 men. They were appointed at the end of first semester finals. The Giffords were co-directors of the Lawrence High Teen Town last summer. A 1949 graduate in education from Washburn University, Gifford taught mathematics and coached at Kirwin and Centralia before coming to KU. Mrs. Gifford, who received a B.S. degree in 1952 from Southwest Oklahoma State College, has taught in the junior high schools at Kanopolis and Topeka. Jerry Bush, Nebraska basketball coach, was an All-American basketball player at St. John's College in 1937 and 1938. Nebraska basketball coach, Jerry Bush, is in his third year as head coach of the Cornhuskers. Independent C—Army vs. Navy, 4:15 p.m. west; RHM vs. 69'ers, 6:00 p.m. east; Hoopoes vs. Knots, 6:00 p.m. west; Cats vs. Navy, 6:45 p.m. east; Liahona vs. McCook, 6:45 p.m. west. Baseball Meeting There will be a meeting of all prospects for the varsity baseball squad Tuesday at 4:00 p. m. in the K Room of the Field House. Freshman prospects will meet later. Jim Buchanan's 821 points in three years is a Nebraska basketball career record. The tallest man on Nebraska's basketball team is 6-8 sophomore Ron Parsons. Have a WORLD of FUN! Travel with SITA Unbelievable Low Cost Europe 60 Days from $525 Orient 43-65 Days from $998 Many tours include college credit. Also low-cost trips to Mexico $169 up, South America $699 up, Hawaii Study Tours $282 up and Around the World $1398 up. ASK YOUR TRAVEL AGENT BL SITA ASK YOUR TRAVEL AGENT 332 S. Michigan Ave. Chicago 4. HA 7-2557 your future is NO at CONVAIR FORT WORTH Exceptional care is exercised to make certain that each new employee is assigned to the job for which he is best qualified, depending upon his interests and education. College graduates are permitted to further their education at either TCU or SMU at company expense, provided their grades are average or better. Personal recognition and advancement, based strictly on merit, provide an incentive for rapid professional growth. In short, it is a policy of long standing at CONVAIR- PORT WORTH to emphasize the importance of the individual. Personal Interviews ON CAMPUS Tuesday, February 5 A major project here is the B-58 long-range supersonic bomber. Convair is responsible for all systems development as well as the air-frame of this newest all-jet bomber. In addition, within the aircraft industry, Convair, Fort Worth, has a commanding lead in the field of nuclear research and the design and development of nuclear powered aircraft. Convair has the greatest diversity of aircraft projects in the country - to offer you the unlimited career you seek. DISCUSS THESE AREAS OF WORK with engineers from our Engineering Department - The Convair engineering department is a real "engineers" engineering department - imaginative, energetic, explorative. You will discover top-notch engineering facilities, excellent working atmosphere, salary, personal job advantages, opportunities for continuing education. For Personal Interview Appointment Consult Your Placement Office . C-V CONVAIR FORT WORTH FORT WORTH, TEXAS GD GLOBAL DYNAMICS A Division of General Dynamics Corporation University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 4, 1957 J Oh No! Sports Writer Now Slams KU's Wilt The thing I see wrong with the KU team is Chamberlain, he's not playing as well as he is capable of playing, Jeremiah Tax, staff writer for Sports Illustrated Magazine, said before the KU-Iowa State game Saturday. "I saw the film of the Iowa State game that KU lost. What impressed me was that Chamberlain just stood around most of the time and didn't put out what he was able. The other four players did a very good job. I thought King was terrific. He stuck to Thompson like flypaper," Mr. Tax said. Admits He's Valuable Mr. Tax said he thought the attitude of the other four players has been that they would play as hard as possible and somehow the big boy would do something to win the game. "I wonder what the shock is like to those boys when he doesn't come through," he added. "I'm not saying that he isn't valuable to the team. The fact that he is out there is a big factor. But he hasn't been doing as much for the team as he can." Mr. Tax said. Mr. Tax was covering Saturday's game for the Sports Illustrated weekly round-up of basketball games. He said he didn't know if the KU game would be used as the lead article or not. "I think Chamberlain was under other pressure besides just the pressure of the game. He knows there are 17,000 pairs of eyes on him, and he doesn't want to do anything to attract any more attention to himself. In practice Thursday he seemed to be a different boy. He did things I had never seen him do in a game or on film." "I think Chamberlain will change in that respect later in the season, and in seasons to come. I also think he plays better at home because he realizes that a lot of the fans are his friends. They sure weren't friendly at Iowa State," the writer said. Mr. Tax said the biggest story he had seen on the campus during the weekend was the track meet Friday. That Tidwell is a terrific runner, he said. He looked like he was just getting started at 60 yards, he added. There is also a good angle in the fact that Tidwell is Chamberlain's roommate — together they would make a great two-man track team, he commented. Believes Wilt Will Change Mr. Tax couldn't be reached for comment after the game. (Related story, "Jay hawkers Stand Alone." Pare Six.) Student Elected National Secretary Robert E. Pope, Wichita graduate student, was elected national secretary and a member of the executive council of Theta Tau, national professional engineering fraternity, at a convention in Columbus, Ohio. Jamison Vawter, class of '16, is delegate at large of the fraternity. He is a faculty member at the University of Illinois, Urbana. More than 500,000 men per year are acquiring a reserve obligation under the Reserve Forces Act of 1955. Foreign Students Honor Allaway The International Club met Sunday night to give tribute to the departing general secretary of KU-Y (YMCA-YWCA), William H. Allaway. Mohamed Kazem, Cairo, Egypt graduate student, and Mollie M. Stamper, Hutchinson junior, representing the International Club and KU-Y's International Commission respectively, expressed their gratitude to Mr. Allaway for his efforts to further international friendship He is leaving the campus soon to study in Colorado. A film, "Science at Work," featuring government mining research laboratories of Canada, was shown by Harold Zender, Canadian graduate student. It was an introduction to the activities of Canada's national film board. Zender gave a short talk on documentary film production in his country. A dance and refreshments followed. ___ Bill Johnson holds the Nebraska basketball single game scoring record with 34 points. WARNER BROS. PRESENT HENRY FONDA VERA MILES in ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S The Wrong Man www.warnerbros.com Directed by ALFRED HITCHCOCK COMING SOON VARSITY VARSITY Bendix Will be on campus FEBRUARY-4, 1957 for placement interviews in the following areas: AIRCRAFT ENGINE CONTROLS GUIDED MISSILES—COMPLETE DEVELOPMENT AIRCRAFT LANDING GEAR AUTOMOTIVE COMPONENTS MECHANICAL ELECTRONIC AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERS CIVIL METALLURGICAL Bendix Products Division, Bendix Aviation Corporation South Bend, Indiana Alumnus Given Award In Physics Elias Burstein, a University alumnus with the Naval Research Laboratory, has been awarded the Washington Academy of Sciences' annual award for scientific achievement in the physical sciences for 1956. ductors, a problem in solid state physics. Although Mr. Burstein earned the master's degree in chemistry from KU in 1941, his work has since shifted to physics. The award is recognition of his study of impurity levels and effective electron masses in semi-con- Dartmouth College's 1956 football record of five wins, three losses and one tie was the best grid record in seven years for the Big Green. A On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "Barefoot Boy With Cheek," etc.) THE DRESS PARADE What will the American college student wear this spring? Gather round, you rascals, and light a good Philip Morris Cigarette, and puff that rich, natural tobacco, and possess your souls in sweet content, and listen. As we know, college fashions have always been casual. This spring, however, they have become makeshift. The object is to look madly improvised, daily spur-of-the-moment! For example, girls, try a peasant skirt with a dinner jacket. Or matador pants with a bridal veil. Or Bermuda shorts with bronze breastplates. Be rakish! Be impromptu! Be devil-take-the-hindmost! And, men, you be the same. Try an opera cape with sweat pants. Or a letter-sweater with kilts. Or a strait-jacket with hip boots. Be bold! Be daring! Be a tourist attraction! W. MAYOR Rock and Roll is Giving way to the Minuet But all is not innovation in college fashions this spring. In fact, one of the highlights of the season turns time backward in its flight. I refer to the comeback of the powdered wig. This charming accoutrement, too long neglected, has already caught on with style-conscious students all over the country. On hundreds of campuses rock-and-roll is giving way to the minuet, and patriotic undergraduates are dumping British tea into the nearest harbor. This, of course, does not sit well with old King George. For that matter, a lot of our own people are steamed up too, and there has even been some talk of revolution. But I hardly think it will come to that. I mean, how can we break with the mother country when we are dependent on her for so many things — linsey-woolsey, minie balls, taper snuffers, and all like that? She, on the other hand, relies on us for turkeys, Philip Morris, Cinemascope, and other valuable exports. So I say, if Molly Pitcher and those other Bryn Mawr hotheads will calm down, we may yet find an amicable solution for our differences. But let not our British cousins mistake this willingness to negotiate for weakness. If fight we must, then fight we will! Paul Revere is saddled up, the rude bridge arches the flood, and the ROTC is ready! But I digress. We were smoking a Philip Morris Cigarette - O, darlin' cigarette! O, happy smoke! O, firm! O, fresh! O, fragrant! O, long-size! O, regular! O, get some! - and talking of new spring fashions, let us turn now to the season's most striking new feature: pneumatic underdrawers. These inflatable rubber garments make every chair an easy chair. Think how welcome they will be when you sit through a long lecture! They are not, however, without certain dangers. Last week, for example, Rimbaud Sigafoos, a University of Pittsburgh sophomore, fell out of an 18th story window in the Tower of Learning. Thanks to his pneumatic underdrawers, he suffered no injury when he struck the sidewalk, but the poor fellow is still bouncing and it is feared that he will starve to death. $ \textcircled{c} $Max Shulman, 1957 Fashions come, fashions go, but year after year the Philip Morris Company, sponsors of this column, bring you the tastiest, pleasest cigarette your money can buy - Philip Morris, of corris! Page 9 55 Members Initiated By Scientific Society The KU chapter of Sigma Xi, national honorary scientific society recently initiated 55 students, faculty members and former students Ten were elected to full membership in the society, 10 were promoted from associate members to full membership and 35 became associate members. Sigma Xi encourages original investigation in pure and applied science. Charles K. Bayne, geologist for the State Geological Survey; William S. Brinigar, Wichita graduate student; Paul A. Cantor, Brooklyn, N.Y., graduate student; Maurice D. Huling, 2247 Massachusetts, Lawrence; Earl W. Lathrop, Lawrence graduate student; Ryvichi Matsuda, research associate; Halsey W. Miller Jr., Woodbury, N.J., graduate student; J. S. Moure, visiting professor of entomology; Norris S. Nahman, instructor of electrical engineering, and Robert Sommer of Stroudsburg, Pa. New Sigma Xi members: David K. Brice, Sulphur Springs, Tex; George R. Cole, Bloom graduate student; Muriel G. Dahlgard, Gainesville, Fla.; John A. Durden Jr., Phoenix, Ariz., graduate student; Preston Hunter, 2231 Leanard, Lawrence; Ivan D. Janosky, Los Angeles; Charles L. Kramer, Leavenworth graduate student; William E. Parker, Sharon, Mass.; W. G. Reed, Hays, and Jerry Wackerle, Chetopa. The following graduate students are new associate members: Those promoted to full membership: Stanton M. Ball, Grandview, Mo; Donald L. Burdick, Kansas City, Mo; K. Douglas Carlson, Redlands, Calif.; Albert Casey, Austin, Tex; E. David Cater, San Antonio, San Antonio, Tex; George R. Cronin, Bellaire, Ohio; William D. Hoffman, Kanopolis; Robert R. Ireland, Topeka; Donald D. Jackson, South Benda, Ind; Samir A. Khabbaz, Lawrence. Warren A. Knarr; Parsons; Dwight J. Laughlin, Lawrence; James M. Leitnaker; Baldwin; Irwin Lewis, Bronz, N.Y.; Leslie E. Mack, Russell-ville, Ark.; Edwin J. Martin, Kansas City, Mo.; Edward H. Mealy, Boston, Dean A. McManus, Dallas Tex.: Harold J. McNamara, Turner; Frank A. Newby Jr., Columbus Riley C. Nichols, Wellsville; Charlotte E. Outland, Birmingham, Ala.; Charles B. Parisek, Rockaway, N.J.; Edward J. Peltier, New London, Conn.; Ernest R. Plante, Hinesburg, Vt.; Frank D. Popp, Trumblu, Conn.; Richard M. Proctor, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada; Jimmy D. Reynolds, Hazard, Ky. Patricia Reynolds, Takoma Park, Md.; Angelo Santoro, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Joseph H. Scherrer, Chicago; Doyle B. Simpson, Morris, Okla. Ivan M. Watkins, Salina, and John Yang. Eudora. Aldo Vigliano, 1423 Ohio, Lawrence, is also a new associate member. Graduate To Speak On Nuclear Energy Joseph R. Wilson, of Westinghouse Gas Turbine Division, Kansas City, Mo., will address the Institute of Aeronautical Science at 11 a.m. Tuesday in the Aeronautical Hut. Mr. Wilson, a 1947 KU graduate, will talk on the "Basic Concepts in the Application of Nuclear Energy." The public is invited. Dean Addresses Methodists Over 100 persons attended the supper-meeting and worship service at 5:30 p. m. Sunday in the Methodist Student Center, 1314 Oread. Dean George R. Waggoner of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences spoke on, "Is Morality Enough?" WARNER BROS. PRESENT HENRY FONDA·VERA MILES in ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S The Wrong Man The Warner Attention Guards' Directed by ALFRED HITCHCOCK COMING SOON VARSITY University, Daily, Kansan The Wrong Man Warner Bros. The International Geophysical Year is the subject of an exhibit in Watson Library. VARSITY Because the launching of several artificial earth satellites is one of the most spectacular events of this geophysical year Watson Library has exhibited a display on the history of rockets. Rocket Exhibit In Library Illustrated in the display is an engine, created by Hero of Alexandra, which has since been developed into our modern rocket. It consists of a ball and a kettle placed on a fire. Also shown are the books published by the Smithsonian Institution describing the ascent of the first liquid-fuel rocket in 1926. Wayne F. Helgesen, Omaha a graduating senior, has received the $25 first prize for an advertising campaign project prepared as a class project for the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information. John W. Switzer, Kansas City, Mo., graduate student, received $15 for second place. Advertising Students Get Cash Awards The awards were given by the Spencer Chemical Co.The class work was under the direction of James E. Dykes, assistant professor of journalism. Franklyn C. Nelick, assistant professor of English, will be the first speaker in the "Last Lecture" series, sponsored by the KU-Y, at its all membership meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union. 'Last Lecture' Series Begins Tonight The "Last Lectures" are the supposed final lectures by University professors if it were their last appearance before a student body. Will Rogers, the cowboy philosopher, was married at Rogers, Ark. Residence Hall Awards To 11 Eight University students and three incoming students have been awarded women's residence hall scholarships. The students moved into Douthart, Miller and Sellards Halls last week. If they remain qualified, they may hold the scholarships until they complete college work. The University operates the scholarship halls on a cooperative basis in which the women share all household duties and costs. This provides room and board at a saving of about $300 a year over charges for comparable accommodations. The KU students receiving scholarships are Sandra Ackerman, Leavenworth freshman, Douthart Hall; Lois A. Ely, Edina, Mo. junior, Miller Hall; Lois French, Topeka freshman, Miller Hall; Hulda M. Goodson, Knox, City, Mo. junior, Sellards Hall; Lucy E. Luff, Independence, Mo. freshman, Miller Hall; Carolyn A. McNally, Lamar, Mo. sophomore, Douthart Hall; Cynthia K. Roberts, Clifton freshman, Sellards Hall, and Rilla M. Vickrey, Independence, Mo. freshman, Miller Hall. Publisher's Son Heads K.C. Kansan The new students are Annette Moore of Kansas City, Mo., Miller Hall; Margaret Owens of Parsons, and Charlotte I. Painter, Kansas City, Mo., Douthart Hall. John H. Stauffer, editor of the Newton Kansan, will succeed W. A. Bailey, who retired Saturday, as editor and manager of the Kansas City, Kansan. His appointment was effective today. Mr. Stauffer is a 1949 graduate of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information and a former managing editor of the University Daily Kansan. He is a son of Oscar S. Stauffer, president of Stauffer Publications, Inc. and a member of the Kansas Board of Regents. He is also a director and treasurer of Stauffer Publications, Inc. Mr. Bailey had been associated with the Kansas City Kansan for 36 years. There are about 466,000 oil wells in the United States located in 27 states. Monday. Feb. 4. 1957 Foreign Students Plan Trip A field trip for foreign students, to see Kansas City industrial area and to visit former President Harry S. Truman, is tentatively set for March 1. Ex-Dean Accepts Wichita U. Post Dr. Margaret Habein, former dean of women at the University, will become dean of the Fairmount College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Wichita University. Sept. 1. Dr. Habein resigned her position at the University in 1952 to become dean of instruction and student services at Rochester University in New York. She had been dean of women at the University since 1946. She received her A.B. degree from Carleton College, Northfield, Minn., and her master's and doctorate degrees from KU. She is a sister of Mrs. Robert Calderwood, assistant professor of English. Tyler, Tex., Columbus, Ohio, and Newark, N. Y., are the largest rosegrowing centers in the United States. William Butler, assistant dean of men, said, "We give this temporary date in advance so foreign students can schedule this field trip in their date book. We will send them an official invitation as soon as the date is definite." The trip will be the second sponsored by the University in the 1956-57 school year. The first trip took foreign students to Neodesha in December. Prof To Chicago Meeting Dr. Karl Edwards, associate professor of education, will attend the meeting of the Association for Student Teaching Friday and Saturday, Feb. 15 and 16 in Chicago. He is chairman of the bulletin publications committee and will make a report to the executive committee. 1205 YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 CO Hallmark CONTEMPORARY CARDS Hallmark CONTEMPORARY CARDS Gay cards with a sophisticated air. Smartly styled, Hallmark Contemporary Cards are a new concept in modern humor. And there are special designs for weddings, anniversaries, birthdays and congratulations. Come in today and see our new collection of Hallmark Contemporary Cards. MOGGER WOLF BOSSER WOLF 1107 Mass. WWWWWWWWWW OF THEE ISING A RAZZLE-DAZZLE MUSICAL COMEDY by Kaughman and Ryskind music by Gershwin Presented By THE KANSAS UNIVERSITY THEATRE and LIGHT OPERA GUILD FRASER THEATRE 8:00 FEBRUARY 4,5,6 and 8 Students: Don't miss this musical satire of Presidential elections done up in "Roaring 20's" style. Your I.D. card will reserve you a seat at the Ticket Center, Kansas Memorial Union. (240) name $ name1 $ name2 $ ... $ n Page 10 University Daily Kansas Monday. Feb. 4. 1957 New Student Loan Fund Established At University The establishment of the John E. Selig Student Loan Fund at the University has been announced by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. The fund was created by a gift of $1,600 to the Endowment Association from Mr. and Mrs. August L. Selig of Houston, Tex., in memory of Mr. Selig's father who was in the food merchandising business in Lawrence for many years. Mr. Selig attended KU in 1893 and 1894. He died in April of 1950. All five of his children are graduates: John in the class of 1924, Delo in 1929, Hope (Mrs. F. H. Biewener) in 1924, Frances (Mrs. Clifford Wilbur) in 1918, and August in 1920. in expressing gratitude for the gift Chancellor Murphy said, "Many factors—among them high prices, a growing enrollment, increasing demands of the classroom on the time of our students, and in the past several years, the dry weather and consequent reduced incomes of the families of many of our students--make student loan funds one of the greatest needs for which the University must look to its friends and alumni, and we are especially grateful to have the fund in memory of Mr. Selig available for helping deserving students at the beginning of the spring semester." Loans will be made from the fund to worthy students who are approved by the University loan fund committee. The amounts of loans and the conditions on which they are to be granted are to be at the discretion of the committee. KU Gets Research Grant The Air Research and Development Command has awarded an additional $1,1950 to the University of Kansas to expand research in progress at Ladd Air Force Base, Alaska Jerome P. Schmidt, Atchison, graduate student, is doing research on the incidence of upper respiratory disease among the military population in Alaska. His investigations of influenza, streptococcus and common cold infections have been made at Ladd AFB, but now will be taken to other air bases in the area. Three To Attend Education Parley Three University faculty members will participate in the 39th annual meeting of the Council of Administration Thursday, Friday and Saturday in Wichita. Dean Kenenth E. Anderson of the School of Education will be chairman of the meeting of administrators of North Central Association High Schools. Dean Anderson also will be a member of a college section panel, "A State-Wide Approach to the Problems Facing Higher Education." E. A. McFarland, director of the Lawrence center of University Extension, will preside at meetings of the Kansas Adult Education Association. Dr. Alfred H. Moore, assistant professor of education, will address the Kansas Society for Exceptional Children on "Special Education and Its Meaning to School Administrators." Biochemistry Head On Sabbatical Leave Dr. Russell C. Mills, professor of biochemistry, will do research in the department of physiological chemistry at the University of Minnesota during the coming year. Dr. Mills took a sabbatical leave from KU to accept the appointment and he and his family left two weeks ago for Minneapolis. Dr. Dwight J. Mulford, professor of biochemistry, will act as department chairman during Dr. Mills' absence. Dr. E. L. Treece, professor of bacteriology, who is directing the project for the University, said the new amount brings to $6,944 the total for the 10-month contract. Schmidt will complete his work in August. The rppect was originated by Dr. Theodore Metcalf, former associate professor of bacteriology at KU, now at the University of New Hampshire. He remains as an adviser on the project. Bacteriology GrantBoosted A 3-year-grant allowing $15,875 each year has been made by the Public Health Service for research in the University department of bacteriology. Dr. David Paretsky, associate professor of bacteriology, and Dr. Cora Downs, professor of bacteriology, will conduct investigations on the relationship of the parasite rickettsial organism and the host. The rickettsiae are minute bacteria which cause such disease in man as Rocky Mountain spotted fever, typhus and rickettsial pox. The scientists will study the organism which causes rickettsial pox, attempting to discover how it causes the infection and how it alters the host in causing infection. The laboratory host will be an embryonated chick egg. The new project is a continuation of studies supported for the past three years by the University. Chemists Renew Work On Cancer Of the 258 Popes, only one. Nicholas Breakseare, was born in England. He reigned as Adrian IV from 1154 to 1159 A.D. University pharmaceutical chemists are beginning a new attack on cancer—by way of substances that cause cancer. They will make variations of the artificial sex hormone, diethyl stillbestrol, which may induce cancer in certain susceptible individuals, but has been used successfully to treat cancer in other persons. The chemists hope to improve the activity of the hormone by changing its chemical makeup. Some research to find drugs suitable for treating cancer has been conducted for several years in KU laboratories directed by Dr. Joseph H. Burckhalter, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry. Nearly 200 final products were submitted recently for testing by the National Institutes of Health. The KU research is being supported by Parke, Davis and Co. of Detroit, which makes an annual grant to be used at Dr. Burckhalter's discretion. The 1956-57 grant of $6,000 provides fellowships for John Durden, of Phoenix, Ariz., who is working on the cancer project; William Brinigar of Wichita, and Robert Leib of Lawrence, who are preparing drugs for treating amebiasis, or amebic dysentery. All are graduate students. Engineering Prof To Illinois Post Dr. Hubert E. Rissser, assistant professor of mining and metallurgical engineering, will become a mineral economist for the Illinois State Geological Survey, July 1. Dr. Risser, a teacher at KU for seven years, earned both M.S. and Ph.D. degrees here. The latter, received last June, was in economics and his research concerned the economics of the coal industry, which is a major factor in the economy of Illinois. Before coming to the University, he was a mine superintendent for the Alabama By-Products Corp., an engineer for the National Safety Council, and during World War II was a major in the Army Corps of Engineers. Faculty Pianist A Convention Soloist Marian Jersild, assistant professor of piano, will be a soloist on the program of the American Music Session of the Music Teachers National Association convention Monday, Feb. 11 in Chicago. A former University faculty member, Katharine Mulky Warne, is the composer of one of Miss Jersild's selections, "Loneliness," from "Suite in Three Moods." Miss Jersild will also play 'Sonatina' by Kent Kennan. One large steel company burns enough petroleum fuel in one year to heat a five-room house for 380 centuries. Campus WEST see our new Lang spring collection Campus WEST COME IN AND MAKE YOUR OWN SELECTIONS. Mr. Robert Gutzmer, California Representative, will be at Campus West the entire day Tuesday, February 5th with the entire line. Caffeine, a stimulant, can be altered so that it may become useful as a tranquilizing drug, Joseph H. Burkhalter, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry, believes. Caffeine Seen As Useful Drug Dr. Burckhalter is conducting a Public Health Service project in which compounds are being prepared for testing as a side in treating hypertension and heart ailments. Among these compounds are those made from Caffeine derivatives. Dr. Peltier's study concerned how droplets of fat entering the blood stream from broken bones can be dangerous. The work was done at the University of Minnesota, prior to his recent appointment to the staff of the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. $1,000 Award To KU Doctor The announcement was made Jan. 30 at the academy's annual meeting in Chicago. The award is supported by Kappa Delta sorority, which sponsors a benefit program for crippled children. Guidance Bureau To Test Navajos Dr. Leonard Peltier, new chief of orthopedic surgery in the School of Medicine, is the recipient of a $1,000 annual award made by the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons for outstanding research. Developing a test for measuring the social development of Navajo students is the current project of the University in fulfillment of a contract with the Bureau of Indian Affairs. The project, to be carried out by Dr. E. Gordon Collier, director of the guidance bureau, and Cecil L. Williams, a research assistant, will measure social skills and attitudes to see how the Navajo students are adjusting to the white culture. Testing subjects will be the adolescent and young adult Navajos enrolled at Sherman Institute, Riverside, Calif., Sherman Institute one of the off-reservation boarding schools in the special Navajo program, has a five-year curriculum planned to give the Navajos an education to help them earn a livelihood. Rochester, N. Y., was once called the Four City because of its milling industry, but is now known as the Flower City because of its many beautiful public gardens. The sparkling story of eager young beauties in search of money ...men ...and marriage! 4 Girls in Town IN CINEMASCOPE Technicolor GÉORGE NADER • JULIE ADAMS MARIANNE COOK•ELSA MARTINELLI GIA SCALA • SYDNEY CHAPLIN GRANT WILLIAMS • JOHN GAVIN Color Cartoon—News NOW Ends Wednesday Mat. Tuesday 2 p.m. GRANADA GRANADA The National Heart Institute of Public Health Service has renewed its grant to KU to continue the project, which Dr. Burckhalter has administered for three years. Amount of the renewal is $8,145. Research assistants on the project are Cecil Caldwell of Walnut Grove, Miss, and Dale Dill of Yates Center, graduate students. The official head of the Roman religion was the pontifex maximus, president of the college of pontifices, who regulated all religious matters. His powers were great in politics because of his influence in the auguries. Heart Of America PREMIERE SHOWING ALAN VIRGINIA EDMOND LADD·MAYO·O'BRIEN THE BIG LAND IN WARNERCOLOR A JAGUAR PRODUCTION - PRESENTED BY WARNER BROS. News—Cartoon—Sports TODAY Open 6:45 — Show 7:00 p.m. Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS ALAN VIRGINIA EDMOND LADD·MAYO·O'BRIEN THE BIG LAND WARNERCOLOR Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAVEN NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS ELIA KAZAN'S production of TENNESSEE WILLIAMS' boldest story! baby doll FROM WARNER BROS. STARRING KARL MALDEN • CARROLL BAKER News — Color Cartoon Regular Adult Admission Adults Only NOW Ends Wednesday Open 6:45 — Show Starts 7:00 Feat. at 7:15 — 9:20 VARSIT. babydoll VARSITY Monday. Feb. 4, 1957 University Daily Kansar Page 11 The Library 71. 325 WHERE MORE PEOPLE DO MORE BUYING AND SELLING! PATRONIZE YOUR • ADVERTISERS • WANT AD TRANSPORTATION TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. Call us at Rose Gleesman the First National Bank for information on curations, rentries and reservations. 8th & Mass. Phone VI 3-0152. tt SLIDE RULE. Post Versalog with leather case and instruction book. Bought it new and it's like new. Also biology dissecting kit. Ph. VI 3-5239. 2-8 RIDE to Topeka Naval Reserve Station Tennessee VI 3-3268) 2-6 REFRIGERATOR, Servel, apartment size, good condition. Call VI 3-3584. 2-6 RIDE. Want in car pool from Topeka 8 to 2 on Tuesday and Thursday and 11 to 4 Monday, Wednesday, Friday. Phone Topeka 5-3059. 2-6 TYPIST, experienced in theses, term papers, reports. Fast and accurate, student rates. Mrs. Betty Veqist. 1935 Barker A. Phone VI 3-2001. If 25 words day days day, or less 50c 75c $1.00 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted the bill is under oading that the will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansas Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention: fast accurate service Mrs. Glinka 1191 Tenn. Phi V 3-1240. tt LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary singers. Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas-complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete set of water bottles. Sure we have alligators, fish, turtles, chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Phone and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. FOR SALE BEVERAGES- All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Plastic, party supplies Ice Plant, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 3-0350 TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's' and women's' clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6571. 1106 La. tf TIME. LIFE & Sports Illustrated magazines. Special students' prices of 1¢ reg. sub. rate. Prompt service, buy now pay later, call VI 3-0124. tf KUOK will play any musical selection you want. If we don't have it we'll substitute a tune. Call extension 312 then dial 630. EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf MISCELLANEOUS --- MUSIC TEAMS WARNER BROS. PRESENT HENRY FONDA·VERA MILES in ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S The Wrong Man *note omg antspam antispam queries. Detected by ALPRED HITCHHOOG* **COMING SOON** VARSITY weH V FOUND LADIES WRIST WATCH found on the 17th of January in the rotunda at Strong Hall. Vicki Ann Voth, 1434 Alumni Place. Ph. VI 3-8505. 2-8 CLASS RING from Hogan High with initials MOC. Owner may have ring by paying for this ad. Ph. VI 3-3944. 2-6 FOR RENT ROOM FOR BOYS with or without board. Doubles & singles, twin beds, linen-covered, close to campus and available immediately. Call VI 3-1572, 1138 Miss. MARRIED STUDENTS save money or rent. Two bedroom modern home for $1,294 of selling price can be leased on VI 3-2775 very economical costs. 2-4 ROOM-Large, comfortable, for men students, single or double, with twin beds. Linens furnished. Large closet and garage. Call VI 3-6731. 2-8 ROOM Single or double in new house, nicely furnished. Share bath with a graduate student. Call Dick Krimming- er, VI 3-5200. 2-6 EFFICIENCY APARTMENT. Furnished three room. Close to town and bus line. Ph. VI 3-4069. 2-8 ROOM next to bath, with TV-and linenes furnished and breakfast served. Located in private home, a ride to the hill every day. Boy or girl single. Ph. V2-8 6184. TWO ROOM APARTMENT nicely furnished. Private entrance. Adults. No drinking. Utilities paid. Close to bus and KU. 1017 New Hampshire. Ph. VI 3-4638. SLEEPING ROOM for girls. Phone VI 3- 5175. 2-6 ROOM well furnished, large single. Light cooking privileges for male student. Very close to campus. Reasonable rent. VI 3-6696. 2-6 ROOM AND BOARD for one student. $50.00 per month. Call VI 3-4385. 2-8 FURNISHED APARTMENTS 3 and 4 rooms with private bath. Close to campus. Also need a couple middle aged 60 or so care for apartment house. 3-9792. 2-8 FURNISHED APARTMENT for students. Three rooms plus private bath and kitchen. See at 615 Louisiana or call VI 3-8540. 2-8 SUNSET HILLS home. Two bedrooms completely furnished with attached garage. Rent reasonable. Phone for appointment. VI 3-8782 or VI 3-4767. 2-8 WHY WALK FARTHER, men? We have rooms, single and double, only half floors, individually furnished. Comfortable reasonably priced. Bed linens launched. 1218 Miss. Ph. VI 3-8691. laundering 2-8 BOOK'S For gifts and for your own library, Art, Architecture, Cook Books, Childrens Books, Modern Library THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 East 23rd VI 3-7377 We rent nationwide trailers any size, anywhere, anytime CROFT TRAILER RENTAL CO. BOOM half a block from campus, very large for male student fir nise house, telephone and laundry privileges. Reasonable rent. Ph. 3-6696. 2-6 ARE YOU LOOKING for a fine new two bedroom apartment? Yes. It's new. Has new automatic washer, electric range and refrigerator. Other furnishings of 0618 Available Feb. 15. Phone VI 3-7855 or KU. No 402 mornings. 2-8 Parties, Pinnings, Weddings Job Application Photos Gene's Photo Service 2144 Ohio - VI 3-0933 Gene Smoyer tf LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY for JR, Sr. Graduate Students up to $500.00 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. 8331' Mass. Phone VI 3-8074 for 1 day service A Brand New Semester A Clean Slate Too [Pictured is a man wearing a long, dark coat with a plaid inner lining, and a wide-brimmed hat. The coat appears to be made of heavy wool or cashmere, and the inner lining is tartan.] Let clean clothes from Lawrence start this term for you Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners Call VI 3-3711 you'll be glad you did You can start the semester with the cleanest clothes possible, thanks to our exclusive APPROVED SANITONE SERVICE service 100 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 4, 1957 Blame These 400 For Those High Curves In The College (Cont'd from page 1.) lahoma City, Okla., freshman; Alan D. Forker, Liberal freshman. Alice B. Forssberg, Logan freshman; Gregory G. Fouts, Overland Park senior; Blossom M. Frakes, Lawrence freshman; Marie M. Francis, Mission freshman; Rosalie Freeman, Tonganoxie freshman; Ruwal H. Freese, Topea junior; Marcia S. Fullmer, Mission junior; John A. Garrett, Pittsburg sophomore; George C. Gastl, Shawnee freshman; Verne D. Gauby, Marysville sophomore. Gail A. Gerling, Mission sophomore; Carol F. Gibbs, Geneva, Ill.; junior; Trudy A. Gier, McPherson freshman; Bruce D. Gill, Mission senior; James L. Gilliland, Lawrence sophomore; Richard A. Goldsby, Kansas City, Mo; senior; Abraham J. Gorelick, Kansas City, Kan., junior; Kenton C. Granger, Ottawa sophomore; David T. Graves, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore; Marilyn S. Gresser, Topeka freshman. Roy E. Gridley, Lawrence senior Lynne E. Griselmie, Liberal senior Ruth D. Guy, Hutchinson junior; Delmont C. Hadley, Topeka senior; Elinor A. Hadley, Kansas City, Mo, freshman; William F. Hahn, Scotch Plains, N. J., sophomore; Betty L. Hailey, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Eldon L. Haines, Wellington senior; Marcia J. Hall, Coffeyville sophomore; Thomas W. Hampton, Salina senior. Joseph F. Hanna, Dighton sophomore; Ivol E. Hansen, Harlan, Iowa freshman; Paul A. Hansen, Wamego junior; Frances F. Hara, Hilo, Hawaii sophomore; Marjorie A. Harmon, La Harpe junior; Jon E. Harrison, Oswego junior; Rodney L. Hartung, Junction City freshman; Clarence M. Hayman, Lawrence senior; Judith A. Heller, Pittsburg sophomore; David L. Hemsell, Bartlesville, Okaia., freshman Charles E. Hennig, Ottawa sophomore; Marilyn F. Rening, Ottawa freshman; Kenneth F. Herrick, Lemay, Mo., fre herman; Jerrad J. Hertzler, Newton senior; Jane A. Heyle, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Virginia E. Hill, Kansas City, Mo.; senior; Stephen M. Hill, Lawrence sophomore; F. Blaine Hollinger, Russell senior; Elina Holst, Topka senior; Nancy F. Iront, Uniontown freshman. Robert L. Hooper, Logan freshman; Elizabeth E. Hoover, Lawrence junior; Donald R. Hopkins, Kansas City, Kan.; junior; Robert F. House, Wichita junior; Judith A. Hulse, Topeka sophomore; Judith H. Hunt, Lawrence senior; Carolyn J. Huntley, Washington junior; Pamela H. Hutchinson, Arkansas City senior; Kenneth L. Irby, FT. Scott junior; Karlan K. Ison, Overland Park freshman. Joyce E. Isaacson, Macksville sophomore; Janet K. Jackson, Lawrence freshman; Deborah L. James, Eureka junior; Sandra J. James, Wichita junior; Sherri R. James, Emporia freshman; Joann M. Jersilow, Brooklyn, N. Y., senior; Alfred E. Johnson, Ellsworth senior; David Johnson, McPherson freshman; Howard M. Johnson, Topeka sophomore; Lance F. Johnson, Wymore, Nebr., freshman. Lee Ann Johnston, Topeka senior; Morris A. Johnson, Caldwell freshman; Noel M. Johnson, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Edward L. Jones, Lawrence senior; Eunice H. Jones, Sabetha sophomore; Kay W. Jones, Overland Park, sophomore; Loretta L. Jones, Arrington sophomore; Charles R. Kelley, Overland Park freshman; Diana G. Kenoyer, Hugoton junior; Claude R. Kenyon, Bogue senior; Janice M. Kibler, Topeka senior. Lynn H. Kindred, Emporia sophomore; Gayle J. Kinemond, Bushton sophomore; Jacqueline King, WARNER BROS. PRESENT HENRY FONDA·VERA MILES In ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S The Wrong Man WB from strong American Guards Directed by ALFRED HITCHCOCK COMING SOON VARSITY Searcy, Ark., special student; Jerry A. Kirkland, Herington junior; Joyce B. Klemp, Leavenworth junior; Evelyn L. Komarek, Ellinwood freshman; Robert M. Krisko, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Haven C. Krueger, Wichita special student; Margaret A. Kurt, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Mary J. Laird, Holly Springs, Miss., junior. Fatricia A. Laird, Abilene freshman; Gwendolyn S. Lawson, Alconquain, Ill., sophomore; Donald T. Lee, Neodesha senior; Marilyn J. Leidig, Lenora senior; Stanley A. Lehman, Abilene freshman; Richard D. Lewis, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore; Loren A. Lockwood, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Neal J. Logan, Garden City sophomore; Frederick Luedders, Ludel sophomore; Zvi H. Luft, Tel Aviv, Israel senior. Karen Jo Lumm, Wichita freshman; Billy L. Maddix, St. Joseph, Mo., senior; Melisande E. Magers, Mission sophomore; James P. Mall, Atchison freshman; Carol J. Marble, Springfield, Ill., sophomore; Erin G. Mareus, Lawrence senior; Larry G. Markel, Great Bend sophomore; Newton C. McCluggage, Lawrence junior; Larry G. McCully, Wichita sophomore; Edward D. McElvain, Bartlesville, Okla., freshman. Robert P. M. Gee, Olathe junior; H. Vyrl MFcadden, Hanston sophomore; Mary A. McGrew, Wellington senior; Katharine H. McGuire, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Warren K. McNabney, Coffeyville junior; Jesse M. McNellis, Deerfield senior; Jacquelyn K. Miller, Leavenworth freshman; Judith E. Miller, Ft. Scott freshman; Karen R. Miller, Horton sophomore; Lynn H. Miller, DodgeCity sophomore. Donna M. Minear, Downs sophomore; William L. Mitchell, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Mary A. Mize, Salina freshman; Leslie R. Monroe, Lyons freshman; L. Kay Morgan, Wichita freshman; Bob Morris, Washington freshman; Elaine Morrison, Ft. Scott junior; Sandra M. J. Moruzi, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Marilyn M. Mull, Chanute freshman; William N. Mullins, Kansas City, Kan., freshman. Marimea Olson, Topeka senior; Carol A. Owen, Topeka freshman; Sandra S. Owens, Kansas City, Kan. freshman; Barbara A. Panzer, Lincoln freshman; Nancy Parker, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore; Leonard F. Parkinson, Scott City sophomore; Kent W. Patterson, FT. Scott sophomore; Carolyn K. Pearson, Kansas City, Kan.; senior; David E. Pellett, Topeka freshman; Polly Peppercorn, Lawrence junior. Wilber L. Murray, Hutchinson senior; Gary J. Myers, Ft. Scott; senior; Mary N. Newsm, Topeka sophomore; Ray L. Nichols, Lawrence freshman; Robert E. Nichols, Stillwell junior; Harriet Nigg, Whitewater freshman; Joanne M. Novak, Webster Groves, Mo., freshman; Donna E. Oates, Sharon Springs sophomore; Altricia Roene Ogden, Neodesha sophomore; Richard V. Ohmart. Scott C校 junirow Barbara A. Pesnell, Abilene sophomore; Joseph T. Pinckard, Hinsdale, Ill., sophomore; Raymond E. Pippen, Lawrence freshman; Charles E. Platz, Hutchinson sophomore; Gary L. Lorter, Columbus senior; Nancy R. Pounds, Chicago sophomore; Arthur L. Queen, Lawrence junior; Arlan B. Ramsay, Dodge City sophomore; Linda Rankin, Denver, Colo., sophomore; Marilyn S. Reeder, Topeka junior. John L. Reese, Newton senior; Henry L. Regier, Kansas City, Kan. senior; Dolores J. Reifel, Overland Park junior; Carl E. Reiner, Prairie Village sophomore; Karen K. Resner, Russell freshman; Michael G. Reynolds, Hiawatha sophomore; Allen H. Richards, Lawrence junior; Kent D. Richert, Wichita sophomore; Fred J. Ritter, Junction City freshman; Joseph W. Robb, Lawrence junior. Cynthia K. Roberts, Clifton freshman; Gabriel A. Rodriguez, Kansas City, Kan., senior; George N. Roe, Atchison freshman; Sharon L. Rooney, Dodge City senior; Mary Jo Rouse, Wichita senior; Diane S. Sandberg, Wichita junior; V. D. Sandford, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore; Suzanne Sawyer, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Mark Saylor, Topeka sophomore; Robert N. Schimke, Leavenworth senior. Jo E. Schmidt, Kirkwood, Mo. freshman; Carol A. Schowengerdt, Kansas City, Mo. senior; Arthur M. Scott, Pittsburg freshman; Douglas A. Scott, Ottawa sophomore; Laurian Seeber; New York sophomore; Kenneth J. Sells, Kansas City, Kan., freshman; Carolyn Settle, Kansas City, Kan., senior; James L. Shaff, Garden City special student; Darwin E. Sharp, Ottawa sophomore; Dennis L. Sharp, Oakley junior. Marilyn O. Shaw, Galena freshman; William F. Sheldon, Salina freshman; Rita M. Shoup, Wellington senior; Gary G. Sick, Russell senior; Calvin D. Siebert, Martion junior; Carroll S. Simpson, Holden, Mo. junior; Roberta S. Smith, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Stuart A. Smith, Lawrence freshman; Helen M. Smoyer, Lawrence senior; Carolyn J. Sorem, Concordia freshman. Marcel G. Spaulding, Lawrence senior; Robert J. Spohn, Fredonia freshman; Mary J. Staggs, Wichita freshman; Julia E. Stanford, Concordia freshman; Scott Stanley, Kansas City, Kan., freshman; Samuel E. Stayton, Lawrence senior; Rosemary M. Stebbins, Ellis freshman; Sharon F. Steele, Colby junior; Charles M. Stiles, Caldwell freshman; Kerstin B. Stone, Holton sophomore. Sharon S. Stout, Wichita sophomore; Patsy L. Straub, Chicago sophomore; John M. Studer, Cincinnati, Ohio freshman; Sue Suran, Hays freshman; Patricia M. Swanson, Newton sophomore; Mary A. Swedlund, Salina senior; Rhoda M. Taylor, Topeka junior; Betty H. Thomas, Mission sophomore; John C. Thompson, St. Joseph, Mo., sophomore; Jane A. Thorne, Paola sophomore. Margaret A. Throm, Overland Park junior; Judith J. Tice, Summerfield senior; Loren D. Tompkins. Kansas City, Kan., freshman; Terry A. Travis, Merriam sophomore; Ann C. Underwood, Emporia sophomore; Sue B. Underwood, Buffalo, N. Y.; senior; Thomas W. Van Dyke, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Clinton D. Vermillion, Goodland junior; Grace C. Walter, Cos Cob, Conn., senior; Lawrence E. Walter, Lewis junior. Patricia A. Walters, Wichita sophomore; Maryann Ward; McPherson freshman; Shirley A. Ward, Salina junior; Virginia L. Ward, Hays senior; Jack W. Weinrich, Lenexa senior; Lauren K. Welch, Pawnee Rock senior; Barbara A. Werbe, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Patricia A. Whitley, Abilene freshman; Mignonne L. Wiens, Hutchinson freshman; Sarah E. Wilen, Manhattan sophomore. Theodore C. Wilkinson, I Lawrence special student; Annette M. Willis, Wichita freshman; Barbara L. Wilson, Wilmington, Del., sophomore; Freddie E. Wilson, Bucyrus junior; Glee E. Wilson, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore; James A. Wilson, Baldwin senior; Mary L. Winchester, Hutchinson junior; Dorothy Wohlgemauh, Cummings sophomore; Roger L. Wood, Wichita senior; Robert W. Woodruff, Cedarvale sophomore. Paul E. Woodward, Baldwin senior; Diane Worthington, Wichita senior; Jack A. Wortman, Chanute junior; Linda M. Wright, Lyons sophomore; Ralph L. Wright, Paola sophomore; Robert L. Yale Jr., St. Joseph, Mo., sophomore; Joy A. Yeo, Manhattan junior; Eleanor M. Youngberg, Lawrence sophomore; Mary K. Zettl, Girard freshman; John F. Zoellner, Tonganoxie junior. 9 TV THE MODERN TREND IS TO LIVE BETTER ELECTRICALLY Next week — National Electric Week — marks the 110th anniversary of the birth of Thomas Alva Edison, the one-time newsboy who brought electricity out of the laboratory and into practical use for the benefit of mankind. Now is a good time to add to your staff of electrical servants that make living safer, healthier and more enjoyable. See the modern electric appliances your dealer is offering during National Electrical Week. LIVE BETTER ELECTRICALLY HANSAS POWER AND LIGHT COMPANY HANSAS POWER and LIGHT COMPANY NATIONAL ELECTRIC WEEK Feb. 10-16 LAWRENCE To Look The Sharpest Be The Smartest Give Your Clothes INDEPENDENT Care INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS 740 Vt. VI 3-4011 1903 Mass. K G F O B Daily Hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 54th Year, No.78 Tuesday, Feb. 5, 1957 Group Pictures For Jayhawker Begin Monday Campus organization pictures for the Jayhawkers will be taken Monday, Wednesday and Thursday, Feb. 11, 13 and 14. Pictures will be taken in the Student Union Ballroom. "Students in these organizations are urged to be on time to have their pictures taken. No schedule changes on the students' part will be possible," George Blackburn, Joplin, Mo., junior and Jayhawker editor, said Monday. The schedule for pictures: Feb. 11 — 10 p.m., American Pharmaceutical Assn.; 10:25 p.m. Delta Sigma Pi; 8:30 p.m., Campus Chest; 8:55 p.m., Jay Janes; 9:20 p.m, Red Peppers; 7:45 p.m., home town correspondents; 8:05 p.m. country club chairman. Feb. 13—6:45 p.m., KuKu Club; 7:10 p.m., AWS (House members); 7:35 p.m., Pershing Rifles; 8 p.m. Scabbard and Blade; 8:25 p.m., Navy freshmen; 8:50 p.m., Navy soph- mores; 9:15 p.m., Navy juniors; 9:40 p.m, Navy seniors; 10:25 p.m, Sigma Tau; 10:30 p.m, Tau Beta Pi. Feb. 14 — 6:45 p.m., Quack Club; 7:10 p.m., POGO; 7:35 p.m., Jayhawker House representatives; 8 p.m., Jayhawker secretaries; 8:25 p.m., A K Psi; 8:50 p.m., University Players; 9:15 p.m., Froshaws; 9:40 p.m., Owl Society; 10:05 p.m., IFPC; 10:30 p. m. IFC. Clinic Aid In Reading Skills Students with academic difficulties receive help in improving their reading ability and general study methods through the Reading and Study Skills Laboratory. The purpose of the program is "to help the student help himself," said Henry P. Smith, director of the clinic and professor of education. "We have no magic to offer but we attempt to teach the student how to take better notes, get the most out of class attendance, study for and take different examinations and read various kinds of material for fullest comprehension." The classes meet for an hour two or three times a week for a six or nine-week period. There is no outside preparation. Two sections will open on Monday, Feb. 18 and two will open March 5. For the average student who wishes to improve his reading speed, classes in rapid reading are offered. Under this plan the individual is able to start at an appropriate speed and progress at his own rate. Any students interested should go to the Reading and Study Skills Laboratory office .102 Bailey, from 2 to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. But What Happened To The Beginning? Several coeds met in the Hawk's Nest recently for a cup of coffee, and they were discussing the things they had done between semesters. One coed had done some reading and said to the others, "I've almost finished 'The End of the Affair'," referring to the well-known book. Another coed, with a note of disbelief in her voice answered, "That's fine, but didn't you read the beginning?" W —(Dally Kansan photo) DONT FENCE ME IN—This barbed wire exhibit found on the first floor of Strong Hall, shows various types of fencing used from the late 1870's to the present. An advertisement, printed in 1877, shows the multiple uses of barbed wire which appealed to railway companies because of its "floodproof, sparkproof, long lasting" wire. The advertisement adds that "over 150 railway companies use it. It is lighter per rod than any other wire made from the same sized wires, and it has more barbs per rod." Let The Welkin Ring For 'Of Thee I Sing' By TOM SAWYER (Of the Daily Kansan Staff) The University Theatre came of age Monday when its godfather, the Light Opera Guild, helped it into its first pair of long pants. And long they were as "Of Thee I Sing" ran its near 3-hour course in Fraser Theater. The splashy, bombastic and kaleidoscopic 1928 political satire was energetically reincarnated by a talented army of 107 musicians, singers, dancers and actors who displayed what proved to be a superhuman stamina. The Kaufman-Ryskind story tells of John P. Wintergreens fight for the U. S. presidency on a platform of love. In the course of the election he jilts vampish Diana Devereaux and weds the more wholesome Mary Turner. France champions the spurned Diana's cause because she is an "illegitimate" relative of Napoleon. War seems imminent but diplomatic relations are re-established when the insignificant vice president, Alexander Throttlebottom, woos and wins the French damsel. Donald Farrar, Kansas City, Mo, junior, as the president was flamboyant, forceful and a very pleasing tenor. His spouse Mary, winsomely done by Sara Jo Pursley, Coffeyville junior, was a glittering picture of charm and radiance as her silvery voice penetrated the entire theater. More versatility was required of Beverly Runkle, Pittsburg junior, as a Diana whose earthy contralto contributed greatly in tracing her decline from a lady to a nymph of the pavement. But perhaps the great audience favorite of the evening was Dale Bellerose, Lawrence sophomore, as Throttlebottom. He did no singing as he pattered his way in and out of the story, but if his acting talents as an ignored and confused politician are indicative then his vocalizing would certainly have been welcome. Gershwin score was executed in sparkling manner by the orchestra under the affluent baton of Gerald M. Carney, associate professor of music education. Noteworthy in major supporting roles were John Husar, Chicago sophomore; Roger Stanton, Marysville freshman; Henry Walling Independence senior; Claude Kean, Olathe junior; Jack Jordan, DeSoto freshman, and Marvin Carlson, Wichita senior. Other recommendations were the most comprehensive and melodious singing of Bruce Loganbill, Newton graduate student, as the French ambassador, and the precision and grace of a dancing sextet. The The untimeliness of "Of Thee I Sing" probably explains its ultimate failure when revived on Broadway in 1952. The humor is dated, mores after the recent elections, and the inserted dialogue did little to soften old puns. Good use was made of a comic newsreel film produced at the University by John Branigan, Kansas City, Mo., senior. However, what portions of the musical that couldn't be crammed onto the stage and the film overflowed, a la Olsen and Johnson, into the audience. All the above was somehow quite monumentally and smoothly coordinated by stage manager Kenneth Baker, Helmetta, N. J., freshman, and his staff. Original minds were seen at work in the clever stage settings of Virgil Godfrey, assistant professor of speech and drama, and the story and intricate lighting design of E. Arthur Kean, instructor of speech and drama. And technical orchids must most assuredly go to Loid Quaid, Norman, Okla., graduate student, who designed and executed several dozens of radiant and glittering costumes of the roaring twenties. KU, A&M Tickets On Sale To Feb. 12 Tickets will probably be available for the Kansas-Oklahoma A&M game Feb. 12 until the day of the game, Earl Falkenstien, athletic business manager, said today. They are on sale at Allen Field House and the Student Union ticket office. Sales are going well. Mr. Falkenstien said, but a sellout is not expected. KU has averaged more than 14,500 fans a game this year, with three of the games being sellouts. Want To Learn How To Drive? University students and faculty members wanting to learn how to drive or sharpen their driving habits are given the opportunity with the voluntary driver's education course offered by the Safety Center of University Extension. The course is usually taken in 10 lessons, at $2.50 a lesson, and is given by two KU students, Maurice Colvin, Kansas City, and Jim Swenson, Lawrence, seniors. Upon completion of the course a certificate is given which helps the person obtain a state driver's license. The program will be offered the remainder of this semester and will become a year-round course. Registration can be made at any time and there is no deadline or minimum number of people who can enroll. Bailey Sets Film Show Films from the television program, "You Are There," will be presented by the department of visual instruction at 4 p.m. Wednesday in 3 Bailey. The films are "Dr. Pinel Unchaina the Insane," the story of treatment of the insane and "First Major Test of Penicillin," the story of the preparations made to test the new "wonder drug" on wounded soldiers in World War II. Both films are 27 minutes long and are narrated by Walter Cronkite news commentator. Attendance Bill Up For Vote By Student Council The All Student Council will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Parlor A of the Student Union to vote on two bills. One bill concerns ASC meeting attendance. The bill would provide for the removal from office of members if a prescribed number of meetings are missed. The other bill proposes the establishment of a leadership training program for the president of each University organization. Phyllis Carter, Lawrence senior will report on the International Relations conference held at Texas A&M College in December. A committee will report on plans for obtaining activity tickets for wives of married students The council will consider approving various appointments to the Student Court. BSU To Lend Helping Hand Members of the Baptist Student Union voted Friday and Saturday to help local Southern Baptist churches in a city-wide census and to organize a missions program for presentation in churches at a mid-winter retreat. Speakers during the retreat were the Rev. Richard Dayringer, state BSU pastor-advisor, and the Rev. L. William Crews, Southern Baptist missionary at Haskell Institute. Following the Saturday meetings, the group had a chili supper at the home of Student Director Charles Beck, instructor in electrical engineering, and attended the KU-Iowa State basketball game. Weather Partly cloudy west considerable cloudiness east tonight and Wednesday. Intermittent drizzle continuing southeast tonight and extreme east and south Wednesday. A little warmer south central and east Wednesday. Low tonight 15 northwest to 32 southeast. 45 On School Of Fine Arts Honor Roll; 2 Make All A's The School of Fine Arts has listed 45 students on the dean's honor roll for the fall semester. The number is the top 10 per cent of the students enrolled in the school. Two students made all "A's." They are William A. Henry, Parkville, Mo., sophomore, and Sharon Tripp, Lawrence senior. Others on the honor roll: Bill Albright, Buhler sophomore; Lavena Brown, Colby freshman; Carol Brumfield, Lewis senior; Marlan Carlson, Wayne, Neb., sophomore; Carolyn Craft, Junction city senior; Robert Deines Russell junior; Roger Dow, Waipahu Hawaii senior; Mary Dozier, Lyndon freshman; Sandra Falwell, Kansas City, Kan., junior; Richard Fanolio, Kansas City, Mo., senior. John P. Feighner, Wellsville, sophomore; Jayne Ferrin, Topeka juniper; Weston George, Wichita senior; Sue Gewinner, Webster notti, Franklin Square, N. Y., senior. Joanne Halderson, Bartlesville, Okla., freshman; James Hamil, Mission junior; Sandra Harding, Lawrence freshman; Alan Harris, Lawrence junior; Annette Hasbrook, Ill., senior. Sara Jane Hopkins, Boonville, Mo., sophomore; Robert Johnson, Hutchinson senior. Dorothy Lackey Matfield Green sophomore; David Laney, Lawrence sophomore; Joanna Lord, Shawnee junior; Vernon Miller, Wichita senior. Barbara Mulvany, West Springs, Ill., senior; Loretta Nauman, Alton freshman; Edward Nichols, Lawrence senior; Penelope O'Daniel, Kansas City, Kan., freshman; Lucy Remple, Lawrence junior. Carole Riedmiller, Glasco freshman; Raymond Roberts, Kingman senior; Beverly Runkle, Pittsburg junior; Sara Simpson, Salina sophomore; Judith Temple, Cape Girardeau. Mo., junior. Suzanne Thompson, Des. Moines, Iowa, freshman; Mary Warren, Muskogee, Okla., sophomore. Joyce Watters, Salina freshman; Jo Wiens, Belle Plaine sophomore; Judith Wolverton, Topeka sophomore; Connie Wynkoop, Wichita senior; Mary Lou Yowell, McPherson sophomore. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 5, 1957 Ike Statement 'Unwise' Too? It seems paradoxical that President Eisenhower should, with one hand, flay Secretary of Defense Wilson for making a "very unwise statement" about the National Guard, while with the other hand patting the back of Secretary of State Dulles, who has made statements which may be recorded as the greatest diplomatic blunders in the history of the United States. Mr. Eisenhower made the comment at a press conference when asked about Mr. Wilson's statement that some of those who enlisted in the guard during the Korean war "dodged the draft." At the same press conference the President defended John Foster Dulles, vehemently denying that Mr. Dulles had ever taken any action that he had not approved in advance. Politically, perhaps the President's comment is a "very unwise statement" itself and could have twofold effect on the Republican Party. An investigation by Democrats may well be launched to force Secretary Wilson to admit that he made an unwise statement and an apology requested. If this occurs (and it is probable that it will) other embarrassing questions may be asked which could lead to the purging by Democrats of Mr. Wilson similar to that by Republicans of Dean Acheson some years ago. Should Secretary Wilson be forced to admit that he made a "very unwise statement," the painful question "but Mr. Wilson, do you think that the secretary of defense can afford to make unwise statements?" may be posed by some merciless Democratic inquisitors. Mr. Eisenhower's rebuke is certain to add fuel to the coming conflagration being prepared for Mr. Wilson. The resignation and retirement of Secretary Wilson will come as no surprise to many observers of the political scene. Coupled with the praise and support of such things as Mr. Dulles' statement about "massive retaliation" and his slam at our British and French allies in the Near East, the President's comments seem at least contradictory. It may lead to serious difficulty for the GOP in the immediate future. Of a more grave nature, it may damage our position internationally in the delicate balance in the Near East and elsewhere, since the term "mas-sive retaliation" is now used in many places to describe United States foreign policy. The President's support of Mr. Dulles' statements make it seem more than ever an endorsement by the American people of what much of the rest of the world regards as alarming policy. Indeed, Mr. Eisenhower's comment may have been a "very unwise statement." Value Of English Reasserted- —Jim Tice A Modern Tower Of Babel? Are our universities building a modern day tower of Babel? A university is failing its students if it provides them only with the technical skills needed to create a livelihood. "College students should take a course in English so that they'll be able to speak a language different than their own"-it has been said. Recently a survey among 13,000 college graduates in the employ of one of the nation's largest corporations was conducted on the most valuable course to study in the pursuit of higher education. The winner? You can guess, but don't believe it?—English was voted the most valuable course. A subject on which Chancellor Murphy is always willing to speak is what it takes to become a truly educated person. Chancellor Murphy believes that a basic need of a truly educated man is competency in English, both written and spoken. "A person may turn in a learned and factually correct technical paper," he said recently, "but if it is not written in such a manner that it shows that the student knows good English, it cannot be satisfactory." Few could disagree that English is one of the most immediately practical and profitable subjects offered by institutions of higher learning. Practical knowledge of English and proficiency in its use are vital to communication. We are in danger of building a present day tower of Babel. Any economic or scientific gains our nation may make in future years are in jeopardy if Americans lose their ability to communicate intelligently with one another and the rest of the world. Both educators and students who realize that the value of English must be reasserted and do something about it are to be commended. —Jim Tice "The birds have been nesting for two winters in the top of a greenhouse pine tree," Blitch said. "We have let them fly around among the bougainvillaea and banana plants, but we do not like them eating and killing the white orchids." (Picture on Page 8.) The average rainfall in Texas ranges from more than 55 inches in the extreme east to less than 10 inches in the west. Beethoven's 'Freshest Work' There is some controversy among reviewers as to whether this movement is an experience of pleasure or pain. The most we shall enter into this controversy is to say the Fourth Movement is certainly a thunderstorm. The Fifth Movement is a shepherd's song of glad and grateful feelings after the storm. In this hymn of gratitude everything is happy. Next we are led to a joyous peasants' reunion where there is dancing and laughter. The dancing is moderate at first, but becomes animated, noisy, furious, with the arrival of mountaineers in their heavy sabots (Movement No. 3). Thunder in the distance causes the dancers to flee. Movement No. 4 is the musical account of the thunderstorm and tempest. YELLOW SPRINGS, Ohio — (IP) — Five courses are being taught by two methods this year at Antioeh College in an attempt to establish which is the more effective method of teaching. The controlled study has been made possible by a $12,-500 grant received from the Fund for the Advancement of Education. Lecture, Reading Methods Under Study The five courses will be selected in different areas of the curriculum, but mainly at the advanced level. Each course will be taught by the same professor to two groups of students, one in each division. One group will use the lecture-discussion method. For the second group the course will be designed chiefly as a reading course, involving less teaching time. 'Mom' And 'Dad' Eat Orchids "Mom" and "Dad" have been accused of killing white orchids in a crime which has been baffling University greenhouse authorities for weeks. A man lies on his back in the grass of the wooded environs of Vienna. His eyes are lifted upward, his ears intent. He is fascinated by the myriad vayring hues of light and sound. "Return To Nature" The work begins cheerfully with a remarkable landscape and moves to a scene by a brook. Shepherds appear in the fields and move nonchalantly, playing their pipes, which are heard near and far. The scene by the brook (Movement No. 2) is one of contemplation. Peasant's Reunion The music he heard and saw in that Viennese woods became the now famous "Pastoral Eymphony" (No. 6, Opus 68). The year is 1808; the man, Ludwig van Beethoven. The dead orchids were discovered by Harold Blitch, landscape foreman, who described the crime as an "inside job." S BIRD TV-Radio Service But the white orchid killers will not be tried for their crime because "Mom" and "Dad" are two "defenseless" redbirds. As a penalty, the birds will be exiled from their winter home, the greenhouse. 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 The science of tree moving had its inception more than 3,500 years ago when Egyptians and their neighbors traded in exotic trees, according to Davey tree researchers. Lust For Light Today on a remarkable hi-fi long playing record (RCA Victor, $3.98) the late Arturo Toscani and the NBC Symphony Orchestra bring to music lovers the genius Beethoven's masterpiece. This is perhaps Beethoven's freshest work and may be enjoyed as background or studied carefully for full meanings. Jim Tice Beethoven sincerely loved nature. "I love a tree more than a man," he is supposed to have said. In this "return to nature" Beethoven's apparent devout spirit would lend us to believe that it was profound, but naive, inclination of his soul toward a mystic, medieval God which is expressed in his symphony. Beethoven was slightly self-conscious about his music which he described as "more an expression of feeling than portraiture." There exists a passion for comprehension, just as there exists a passion for music. The passion is rather common in children, but it gets lost in most people later on. Corn's Studio of Beauty 23 W. 9th For that new semester look fessor. Visit Corn's Studio of Beauty to try their personalized coed hairstling. The change will show - on even the grouchiest professor. —Albert Einstein Daily Transan UNIVERSITY New classes have just begun - time again for a girl to worry about making a good first impression. And what better eyestopper could she have - than soft, lustrous hair. University of Kansas student newspaper 1904, trivexion 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1812 1908, trivexion 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1812 Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 251, news room February 275, hordes off Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Association press covered by National Advertising Service. 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. News service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holliday hours: Monday through Thursday as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan. post office under act of *arch 3, 1879*. NEWS DEPARTMENT Kent Thomas Managing Editor John Battin, Fleecia Ann Fenberg, Bob Lyle Bett, Jean Stanford, Assistant Manager, Nancy Harmon, LeRoy Zimmerman, Assistant City Editors; Hireslon Shilozone, Telegraph Editor; Mary Beth Noyes, Delbert Haley, Assistant Telegraph Editors; Dick Brown, Sports Editor; George Anthan, Assistant Sports Editor; Marilyn Mermis, Sports Editor; Pat Swanson, Assistant Society Editor; John Eaton, Picture Editor. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Jerry Dawson Editorial Editor Jerry Thomas, Jim Tice, Associate Editors. Dale Bowers Business Manager Dave Dickey, Advertising Manager; John Hedley, National Advertising Manager; Harold Metz, Classified Advertising Manager; Conboy Brown, Circulation Manager. 1055 BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Date, Req. New and Different Olive & Black Striped Ivy Twills Fresh Shipment Just in----$4.95 141215345678901123456789011234567890112345678901123456789011234567890112345678901123456789011234567890112345678901123456789 Stop in and replenish your supply of polished cotton Ivy Slacks $4.95 Desert Tan - Black - Suntan Lawrence Surplus Your Friendly Army and Navy Stores 740 Mass. — 935 Mass. University Daily Kansan Fourteen KU Seniors Get Army Commissions Page 3 Fourteen graduating seniors were commissioned Army second lieutenants in ceremonies Jan. 24 at the University. Col. Ralph J. Hanchin, professor of military science, administered the oath to 13 men who received reserve commissions and to one Howard G. Whatley, Lawrence, who accepted a commission in the regular Army. Whatley, one of four designated will report to Ft. Eustis, Va. Two of the other distinguished military graduates, Billy B. Crow, Logan, and Terry J. Strong, Kansas City, Kan., will report to Ft. Belvoir, Va. Other officers and their assignments are: Harold E. Gascoigne, Topeka, Charles E. Periman, Lawrence, and David L. Rose, Pittsburg, who will report to Aberdeen Providing Grounds, Md. Richard A. Breidenthal, Kansas City, Kan. and Gary R. Welch, Hutchinson, Ft. Sill, Okla. Robert Neighbor, Lawrence, Howard B. Browning, Kansas City, Mo., and Harold E. Quellhorst, Paola, Ft. Belvoir, Va. Philip K. Rubin, Kansas City, Mo., Flt. Bliss, Tex. and Joseph A Reardon, Kansas City, Mo., Ft Benning, Ga. Hans H. Traver, Oberlin, is a veteran and is not required to go on active duty. Senior Pictures Due By Feb.28 All senior pictures for the Jayhawker must be taken by Feb. 28. Sachem and Mortar Board pictures must be taken by Sunday, Feb. 10. The photos, to be taken at Estes Studios, will cost $2.85 for two proofs and $3.80 for four. This includes the cost of putting the photo in the annual. Students are to call Estes for an appointment to have their pictures taken. An information card concerning students activities and other information will be filled out at the time the photo is taken. Square Dancing At Faculty Club University Faculty Club will meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the main lounge of the Club for a square dancing session. Mr. and Mrs. Pat Beedles of Baldwin, call the dances. Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Haines are hosts. Nominations Open In UVO The University Veterans Organization nominated officers Monday. The nominations will remain open until the next meeting, Feb. 18. when the elections will be held. Nominations were Norman Blessman, La Cygne sophomore, president; John Kiefer, Independence, Mo., and Richard Roehm, St. Petersburg, Fla., sophomores, vice president; James Herron, Cimarron junior, and Henry Adler, Fredonia freshman, secretary and Joseph Jordan, Kansas City sophomore, treasurer. Grad Nominated For Top Honors Dr. Max D. Moody, who received the Ph.D. degree in bacteriology at KU in 1954, has been nominated as one of the 10 outstanding young men of the year in the federal government. Dr. Moody is with the U. S. Communicable Disease Center, Atlanta, Ga. He and another bacteriologist were nominated because of their joint development of a way to reduce the time required for identifying bacteria from as long as two weeks to less than an hour. Winners of the contest, sponsored by the Washington, D. C., Jaycees, will be announced Thursday, Feb. 14. More than 250 different types of soil are found in Texas. WARNER BROS. PRESENT HENRY FONDA' VERA MILES In ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S The Wrong Man WRING ANTHONY QUARED Directed by ALFRED HITCHCOCK COMING SOON ARSITY V Ford Authorized Remanufactured REMANUFACTURED WITH SOUND BLOCK GOLD LINE Engines NO VALVE PORT WELDS OR REPAIRS For Ford Owners who want a Remanufactured Engine of highest quality. Remanufactured to the high standards of Ford Motor Company specifications using all new pistons, rings, gaskets, exhaust valves, intake valve guides, timing gears, bearings, remanufactured connecting rods and ground crankshafts. Plus these extras -- --- - All 1946-53 truck engines built with rotating stellite - Blocks Sonoflux tested to be free of cracks. - No valve port welds or repairs. - All 1948-53 truck engines built with rotating steering exhaust valves. - New Special Warranty -- 6000 miles or 6 months. NO DOWN PAYMENT -- LOW MONTHLY TERMS MORGAN-MACK Your Ford Dealer In Lawrence VI 3-3500 714 Vermont Tuesday, Feb. 5, 1957 Applications Due For Scholarship Applications for a full tuition scholarship at the University of Chicago Law School for the 1957 fall semester must be turned in by Friday, said Francis H. Heller, professor of political science and chairman of the selection committee. Applications should be given to Prof. Heller, Strong Annex B. The scholarship, which is awarded to an outstanding university student, is part of the National Honor Scholarships program at Chicago University. The University has been participating in the program for several years. Cash value of the initial award is $738, the cost of one year's tuition, with the three year scholarship equivalent to $2,214. To be eligible, applicants must receive a bachelor's degree this spring or summer and must take the Law School Admission test this month. A faculty committee will screen the applicants before selecting the recipient. PIPE SALE Factory close out of discontinued lines Your choice of 3 dozen shapes with push or screw bit for 98c George's Shop 727 Mass. Ropes made from the hair of Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers—They are Loyal Supporters. cows or horses are called mecates. OLDMAINE Trotters HANDS-DEW YORK ORIGINALS Sale of OLDMAINE Trollers american number A1 moccasin 2.68 Pair In Bucko Only HITCHING POST Reg. 10.95 Values 7.90 to 8.90 Colors Grey Cocoa Black Blue SOFT AND FLEXIBLE SAGLESS RICKED ARCH TRIUMPHANT Sizes 3 to 10 AAAA to B Royal College Shop Royal College Shop 837 Mass. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 5, 1957 KU Swimmers Need Victory Wednesday To Even Mark The Kansas University swimming team returns to action Wednesday when they meet the Emporia State Hornets at 4 p.m. in Lawrence. The Jayhawkers succumbed to defending Big Seven champion Oklahoma in their opening meet Saturday afternoon in Norman. Did as Well as Possible Student coach Charles Edwards said he thought the team did as well as could be expected against the mighty Oklahomaans. In addition to winning the Big Seven title, the Sooners also finished third in the NCAA meet last year. "We still have lots of room for improvement," said Edwards, "but our times were good for the opening match. Some of our boys are inexperienced, but I expect them to improve in the next few outings." The Jayhawkers have seven lettermen returning to this year's tank squad. One of these, John Poort, a Topeka junior who specializes in the free style and distance events, is out with appendicitis and won't be available until the latter part of the season. Six Other Lettermen Other returning lettermen include Edwards, who swims the freestyle and sprint events; Tom Clevenger, breast stroke; Frank Frudenthal, back stroke; Droste Millage, sprints; John Drowatky, free style and breast stroke; and Bill Matthews, the squad's letterman diver. New members who have showed promise of becoming point winners are Bob Peterson in the distance races, Steve Hill in the sprints, John Ryberg, backstroke, and Buzz Ashcraft in the diving events. Edwards said he expects Oklahoma to repeat as the conference champion this year. "Iowa State is always tough," he said, "and should finish in the runner-up spot. Nebraska, K-State, Colorado, and Kansas will battle it out for the remaining places." Missouri does not compete in Big Seven swimming. Following the Emporia State dual the Jayhawkers remaining schedule is as follows: Feb. 8 — K-State—Here Feb. 9 — Ft. Hays—There Feb. 16 — Colorado—Here Feb. 20 — K-State—There Feb. 23 — Iowa State—There Feb. 26 — Emporia State—There March 2 — Nebraska—Here March 7, 8, 9 — Big Seven Confer Pin Season In Full Swing; Campus Tourney March 18 The bowlers got back into the swing of things at the Jay Bowl in the Student Union Monday night. Bascom C. Fearing, Recreation Manager, said that all but two of the leagues which bowled in the fall semester are in action again this semester. 11 Leagues Bowling About 11 leagues, each made up of six four-man or woman teams are the backbone of the KU bowling program. A Classic league, composed of the best men bowlers on the campus, previously bowled at 5 p.m. Friday but according to Fearing, it may not be continued this semester due to a lack of two teams. The Classic league is scratch and has five-man teams. A Mixed league bowls every Sunday night and according to Fearing, there are still a few openings. Bowling at KU is by no means limited to league play. According to Bob Chapman, chairman of the men's bowling committee, three home and home matches are being planned with Kansas State, Ottawa University and either the universities of Oklahoma or Iowa. Tournament March 18 Both a men's and women's team would take part in this series with the possibility of either a single or doubles squad also participating. Chapman said a campus tournament will begin March 18 for male faculty members, students and university employees. Trophies will be awarded in the singles, doubles and team events. The tournament will be handicap. During the months of December, January, February and March, the women bowlers participate in the Pennsylvania State College's telegraphic tournament. Results from this tourney are sent in to a central headquarters and standings are printed and mailed to all participating schools. Student chairman of intranural bowling besides Chapman are Barbara Barnhill and Linda Jennings, co-chairmen of the women's bowling committee. The breakdown of leagues and when they bowl is as follows: Monday—Blue, 6:15 p.m. and Rock, 8:30 p.m. Tuesday—Sunset (women), 6:15 pm and Chalk, 8:30 pm Wednesday - Hilltop, 4 p.m., Prairie, 6:15 p.m. and Jay, 8:30 p.m. Thursday—Oread (women), 4 p.m. Twilight, 6:15 p.m. and Hawk, 8:30 p.m. Jayhawkers Cut Tarheel Margin NEW YORK —(UP) —The North Carolina Tarheels topped the United Press college basketball ratings today for the third straight week, but put their 16-0 record on the line at Maryland tonight and face what could be a rugged game at home against Duke Saturday night. The runnerup Kansas Jayhawks cut North Carolina's first-place margin from 44 to 31 points in the ratings by scoring a 75-64 revenge triumph over Iowa State's last Saturday night and have only one game this week. North Carolina received 24 first-place votes and a total of 338 points from the 35 leading coaches who rate the teams for the United Press. Kansas (13-1) drew nine first-place votes and 307 points after whipping Iowa State. Bradley Player Is Reinstated PEORIA, Ill. — (UP) — Bobby Joe Mason, dropped from the Bradley University basketball team last season because of academic difficulties, will rejoin the squad next Monday. However, on the same day the Braves will lose forward Don Carothers, who recently flunked a course. 15-Foot Pole Vaulters Gather NEW YORK — (UP) — Bob Richards, Don Bragg, Bob Gutowski and Jerry Welbourn—all 15-foot pole vaulters—will compete in the Millrose Games at Madison Square Garden Saturday night. Bill Johnson, former Nebraska center, scored 34 points in a game against Missouri in 1954. He holds the record for most points scored by a Nebraska basketball player. V1 3.4916 Audio House address 1011 New Hampshire Avenue LARRISON B. KANAS Having A Dance? Yesterday's Fraternity A team basketball action was highlighted by the clash of two unbeaten squads, Phi Psi and Phil Gam. Paced by Lee Meyer's 16 points the Phi Gams managed to overcome a 7 point half-time lead and go on to win 38-31. Dick Foreman scored 12 points for the losers. With Mike Greenleaf hitting 16 points, Beta downed AKL 42-32 in a contest played at Robinson Annex. Chuck Elvin had 12 points for the AKL's. Phi Gam Rocks Phi Psi,38-31 Still a few weekends open, hurry and get your order in for our HiFi recorded dance service. Remember, we can supply music to suit the most particular The Sigma Nu A team managed a quick lead over the Kappa Sig's and coasted to victory on Bill Bell's 15 points. Don Ryan dunked in 13 points for Kappa Sig. taste. Sigma Chi took advantage of a cold Phi Delt team and coated to an easy 40-32 victory. The Sigs were led by Diz Daharb's 15 points and Alan Hurst got 10 for the losers. Other results: Fraternity B—Phi Kappa 31, Acacia 26; Kapa Sig 34, Delta 30. Independent C—Navy 32, Army 20; Hoopoes 36, Knats 22; RHM 6 9'ers 0; CcCook 2, Liahona 0; Navy 2, Cats 0. 10.20 Laptop Bg 35. Deltas 8 Fraternity C—Phi Gam 44 DU 13. Fraternity A—Lambda Chi vs. Phi Kap. 4:15 p.m.; PiKA vs. ATO, 5:15; Sig Ep vs. DU, 6:15 p.m. Today's games Independent A - Pearson vs. Chicken Pickens, 7:15 p.m. Fraternity B—Delta Chi vs. DU, 4:15 p.m.; Beta vs. Sig Ep, 4:15 p.m. PIKA vs. Phi Kap Tau, 5:00 p.m. Kap Kiag Svs. Delt Sigma, 5:00 p.m. ATO vs. Phi Delt, 5:45 p.m. Kappa Psi vs. SAE, 5:45 p.m. Independent B—Jim Beam vs. G. Pearson, 7:15 p.m.; Cats vs. Geo Club, 7:15 p.m. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. Midwestern basketball fans who attend the Phillips 66-Wichita Vickers basketball game in Allen Field House at 7:30 p.m. tonight will be accomplishing a dual purpose, seeing a good basketball game and combating heart disease. Vickers Face OilersTonight All proceeds of the contest will go to the Kaw Valley Heart Association. Guard Bill Hoagland of Phillips and forward Bob Kenney of the Vickers, both former Kansas stars, will be meeting again on the court—this time on opposite teams. Hoagland and Kenney completed their college careers at Kansas in 1952 when the Jayhawkers won the Big Seven Conference, NCAA championship and then filled seven berths on the victorious U. S. Olympic basketball squad. The field house floor tonight will be full of former college greats. Three other 1956 Phillips Olympians (besides Hoagland who also played on the 1956 U.S. team) are 6-9 center Chuck Darling, the Iowa University All - American star; Burdy Haldorson, 6-8 former Colorado great and Jim Walsh, 6-4 ex-Stanford player. And for those who are used to Wilt Chamberlain's towering figure there are no disappointments in store. Wichita's 7-0 Don Boldebuck, former Houston star and 7-3 Wade Halbrook from Oregon State will provide plenty of height. In the 1955-56 Big Seven confer ence basketball race Nebraska finished sixth, winning three and losing nine. The Nebraska Coliseum, where the Cornhuskers play all their basketball games, seats 9,000 people. The University of Nebraska was founded Feb. 15, 1869. WINNER BOX PRESENT HENRY FONDA·VERA MILES In ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S The Wrong Man draa stamg aethetjouni drumu Directed by ALFRED HTTCHOOCK COMING SOON VARSITY GRANADA LAST TIMES TONITE GRANADA LAST TIMES TONITE CINEMAScope TELEVISION 4 Girls in Town THE FIGHT WAS TO ADAPT A NEW STORY FOR THE FILM A UNIVERSAL, INTERNATIONAL PICTURE CINEMASCOPE TECHNICOLOR 4 Girls in Town FOREIGN LANGUAGE USE ADULTS NO SMOKING OR BURNING A UNIVERSAL INTERNATIONAL PICTURE Color Cartoon - News WEDNESDAY 4 Days The Firey, Fascinating story of the famed sensualist Artist Vincent Van Gogh! "LUST FOR LIFE" With Kirk Douglas HEY! It's a brand new semester ...new classes new profs new files new dates REPAIR MAN ? but- don't forget your same, faithful old car Why not give it a chance to act like new ... Drive in—for your car's Semester Rejuvenation. 制図 827 Vermont Motor In Dial VI 3-4955 97 Pass Western Civ; Next Exam Is May 11 "We feel this will be looked upon as a bonus to the student for taking the course and test as it is educationally sound." Prof. Heller said. He also said the discussion group program, begun with the 1955 fall semester, has met with encouraging results and is serving as a stimulus for interest in Western Civilization. KU Debaters Place Third In Tourney Ninety-seven of 107 University students received passing grades in the Western Civilization final examination Jan. 12, according to Francis H. Heller, professor of political science and director of the program. Competing against 30 schools from six states, two KU debate teams tied for third place in the Invitational Tournament at Kansas State Teachers' College in Pittsburg Saturday. Prof. Heller announced a major change in the program this semester. The new policy states that six hours credit will be given only to students who enroll in the reading program as sophomores and take the test the same year. Otherwise only four hours credit will be given. Previously those who took the test before attaining junior classification received six hours credit. Of the five KU teams which entered, two teams, consisting of Bob Kimball, Kansas City, Kan. and John Knightly, Hutchinson, seniors; Don Bowen, Salina sophomore, and Brad Lashbrook, Kansas City, Kan. junior, entered the semi-finals in which they lost to Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, Ill. and Southwestern University, Winfield. Members of the other three KU teams entered in the tournament were Kenneth Irby, Fort Scott, Ralph Seger, Topeka, juniors; Bill Summers, Wichita sophomore; Evelyn Komarek, Ellinwood, Arly Allen and Ray Nichols, Lawrence, freshmen. University Daily Kansan Page 5. POGO Elects 1957 Officers Party of Greek Organizations elected William H. Jackson, Florence junior, president at a recent meeting. Jackson takes the position vacated by Tom Griffith, Pratt senior. Other officers are, Mike Randolph, Topeka senior, vice president; John Downing, Kansas City, Mo., junior, treasurer; Judy Heller, Pittsburgh sophomore, secretary, Sharon Harmon, Kansas City, Kah., sophomore, women's campaign manager. Dave Whalen, Overland Park sophomore, men's campaign manager; Joan Stafford, St. Joseph, Mo., sophomore, women's representative-at-large, and Richard Ohmart, Scott City junior, men's representative-at-large. The new officers will hold their positions for one year. Top Hats Are Bowling Champs The men's bowling championship was won by the Top Hats of the Jay League. Team members are David Stein, Mission, M. V. Deschamps, New York, Keith Harper, Phillipsburg, and Peter Nowin, Kansas City, Kan. All are seniors, except Deschamps who is a junior. Carl Lauterjung, Palos Heights Ill., freshman, had the highest average for the season with 182. Alpha Omicron Pi, Sunset League, won the women's league championship. The United States meat industry's output is 25 billion pounds annually, the world's largest. Medical Social Work Accredited Miss Eleanor Loeb, assistant professor of social work, is director of medical social work at the University. Students who complete this two-year course receive a master's degree in social work and are qualified to work in hospitals and clinics. The social work department has received special accreditation for its medical social work program. Previously, the department received special accreditation for psychiatric social work. The social work department's basic program is fully accredited. Nearly 10 million trucks serve the nation by traveling 102 billion miles annually. The trucks haul more than 11 billion tons of freight a year. J. Eldon Fields, associate professor of political science, and Dr. John H. Patton, professor of religion, were voted honorary members of the Kansas Commission for the U.N. Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) by the board of directors of the commission at a meeting in Lawrence recently. UNESCO Votes Honor To Two They were honored in recognition of their services in the radio work of the Commission. Dr. E. Jackson Baur, associate professor of sociology, was appointed chairman of a new committee on human rights. Prof. Fields and Dr. Patton have each made more than 25 interviews for the commission's radio program, "International Conversations." These 15-minute interviews are heard on six radio stations. KLWN, Lawrence's local station, broadcasts the program at 3:15 p. m. Sunday. The program has been on the air for six years. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. Tuesday, Feb. 5, 1957 Oh,Those 8 Non-Major Hours "It's not the 11 hours of math and science that have me worried," said Arian Ramsay, Dodge City junior, "its the eight hours in other fields that keep me busy." To many students this sounds like an unusual statement at least, but Ramsay is a Summerfield Scholar and has recently received a "Handbook of Chemistry and Physics" as an award for having the highest point total in Physics 5 last semester. "I'm interested in almost everything," said the 19 year old Ram-say, but specializing in math and physics take up most of my time." He added that his reason for studying in these fields is "They aren't any easier, but the other fields are harder." Nelick Gives First Of Last Lectures What would you say to a student body if it were to be your last lecture. This is the supposed situation in which Frank C. Nelick, assistant professor of English will place himself as he gives the first of the Last Lecture series to the KU-Y all-member meeting at 7:30 pm. Thursday in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union. The lecture was incorrectly reported for Monday in Monday's University Daily Kansan. Ramsay said his plans now call for continuing his schooling for a Ph. D, in mathematics. As to what he plans for the more distant future, he said, "Right now I'm not exactly sure what kind of work I'll do, but I feel that after a couple more years in school I'll have a more definite idea." WARNER BROS. PRESENT HENRY FONDA·VERA MILES in ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S The Wrong Man are strong attorney curved. Directed by ALFRED HITCHCOCKS COMING SOON VARSITY Walter Paulson asks Does Du Pont have summer jobs for students? ks: E Walter A. Paulson, honor student at Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, and member of the honorary engineering fraternity, Tau Beta Pi, expects to receive his B.S. in Chemical Engineering in June 1957. He is interested in the professional advantages that a student may derive from technical experience obtained during summer work. Bob Carter answers Ordinarily we try to assign summer employees to work which ties in with their fields of training in college and with their long-range interests. Informal or formal instruction on Company matters is usually provided. We're definitely in favor of these summer contacts, for they provide students with practical technical experience and make them more valuable to industry when they graduate. And it gives us a chance to become better acquainted, too, with some of the men we'll be considering for permanent employment, later. It's a program of mutual benefit. Robert G. Carter received his M.S. in industrial engineering from Ohio State in 1951 and joined Du Pont soon afterward. After varied plant experience, he recently undertook an interesting new assignment in the Polychemicals Department at Du Pont's Sabine River Works, Orange, Texas. The major function of his current work is to coordinate cost information as an aid in maintaining cost control. You bet we do, Walt! They're part of a regular Technical Training Program which Du Pont has had for years. In addition to the Formal Technical Training Program, we frequently have a number of vacation replacement jobs and other temporary positions which are available to college students. Last summer we hired a total of 720 students from 171 different colleges and universities. Most of these were juniors, or were graduate students about one year away from permanent employment. You can see our program is a fairly substantial one, Walt. FREE FILM: "Mechanical Engineering at Du Pont available on loan for showing before student groups and clubs. Write to the Du Pont Company, Wilmington, Delaware. OUPONT BEG. U. S. PAY. OFF. BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVING...THROUGH CHEMISTRY Watch "Du Pont Theater" on television Page 6 University. Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 5, 1957 THE JOHNSON EMPRESS Mary Louise McCormick KAY DAVIS MARGARET ARMSTRONG 1940 GLENNA RICHARDS Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Davis announce the engagement of their daughter, Kay Marilynn, to David Lee Windsor, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Windsor. All are of Kansas City, Mo. Three Announce Engagements Miss Davis, an "education senior is a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority, Mortar Board and is president of Pi Lambda Theta, women's education fraternity. Mr. Windsor attended Kansas City Junior College and the University of Kansas City, both in Kansas City, Mo. The wedding will take place May 25, at the Independence Boulevard --- Christian Church in Kansas City, Mo. Dr. and Mrs. Lorrimer Armstrong of Westfield, N. J., announce the engagement of their daughter, Margaret Louise, to Walter Herbert D'Ardenne, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. D'Ardenne of Jenkintown, Penn. Miss Armstrong is a senior in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information. She is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and of Theta Sigma Phi, honorary professional fraternity for women in journalism. Mr. D'Ardenne attended Pennsylvania State University. He has completed his service in the aviation branch of the United States Navy and will return to Penn State to continue his studies in the College of Engineering. The wedding will take place Aug. 24. Count Calories To Make Excess Pounds Disappear - * * Of all the known ways to lose weight, it is best to diet — to watch the daily intake of calories. It is urged that no one attempt a strict diet without first seeing a doctor and having a physical checkup. Beauty and weight-reducing salons usually offer, to those who can afford to pay, a "lazy man's" method of losing weight. Naturally, it does not take much effort to relax as a massager pounds off those extra pounds, but it does take a considerable amount of money. Exercising, done privately in the home or in a group by participating in a sport, usually will not in itself reduce one's weight. It almost always must be accompanied by diet. And, those who exercise at home frequently forget their good intentions. Exercises must be done every morning and evening, not just occasionally. Watch Daily Calories The theory of diet is relatively simple; if the body receives fewer food calories than it requires, weight is lost. For short women an intake of 1,100 calories a day will reduce weight; for women of average height, a daily intake of 1,200 calories will cause a loss and for tall women an intake no greater than 1,300 will eliminate pounds. Exercise And Diet Seldom does a woman complain about being too thin. Usually if she discusses her weight, it is in terms of excess poundage, and how to lose those pounds. One of a woman's main topics of conversation — but only to intimate friends, relatives, or her husband — is her weight. No matter if she is two or 20 pounds overweight according to a "perfect weight" chart, she is "fat." Keen Proteins High There is no perfect way to lose All methods or ways have their disadvantages, some more than others Some are actually harmful to the health. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn E. Richards of Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Glenna, to Robert Wilber, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Wilber of Kansas City, Kan. Protein intake should be kept high if a woman seriously wants to lose weight. She should omit salt from cooked foods or foods customarily eaten raw, avoid most sweets and starches, fats and oils and eat many kinds of low calorie vegetables. Meat, fish, poultry, milk, and eggs animal protein have a stimulating action which increases reduction. When these foods are eaten, the body fat is burned more rapidly. Miss Richards is a senior in the School of Education and a member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority. Mr. Wilber is a senior in the College and a member of Sigma Nu fraternity. Salt, sugar, and starch retain water in the body tissues, thereby reducing the weight loss. When dessert is omitted from a meal the calorie intake is reduced, and at the same time, no excess water is held in the body tissues by sugar and starch. Women who constantly complain about their weight should buy a calorie counter book — then start counting the calories! New or Used AUTO PARTS AND TIRES Auto Wrecking and Junk Co. East end of 9th St. VI 3-0956 An early June wedding is planned. Other new officers are Warren Gay, Topeka junior, vice president; Justin Cash, Kansas City, Mo., senior, house manager; John Murphy, Kansas City, Mo., junior, recording secretary; Bob Kirk, Oak Park, Ill., sophomore, corresponding secretary and Roger Mosshart, Stockton sophomore, treasurer. Marshell Havenhill, Blue Springs, Mo., chaplain; Neil Nelson, Shawnee, parliamentarian, seniors. Harry Stewart, Mission, social chairman; Eric Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity has elected Richard Lee, Mission senior, president for the spring semester. Alpha Kappa Lambda - Fraternity Badges—Rings—Novelties Bill Murray, Hutchinson, social chairman and Bob Hall, Sedgwick, song leader. They are juniors. Bill Doty, Mission, pledge trainer Bill Swartz, Kansas City, Mo. scholarship chairman; Richard Davenport, Kansas City, Mo., historian; Neil Perkins, Olathe, chaplain and Sam Reynolds, Kansas City, Kan., assistant treasurer. All are sophomores. Other officers are Jerry Eliott, Hutchinson junior, vice president; Gary Cooper, Colby junior, treasurer; Richard Arnold, Overland Park senior, corresponding secretary and Herb Weldon, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, recording secretary. Trophies and Awards Phi Kappa Psi John Runnels, Lyons senior, has been elected president of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity for the spring semester. - Personalized Mugs and Ceramics Phone VI 3-1571 Three Houses Elect Al Lauter 70 Reiner, Prairie Village, decorations and. Ron Wyant, St. Joseph, Mo. rush chairman, junior. should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 Tom Bath, Mission, song leader; Myron Margolis, Kansas City, Mo. scholarship chairman and Chuck Elvin, Haven, assistant house manager, sophomores. Other officers elected are Bob Plain, Garnett junior, vice president; Harold Bowman, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, treasurer; Ron Reifel, Overland Park junior, secretary and Bob Schaaf, Herington senior, social chairman. Don Craig, Lawrence freshman, historian; Wayne Woodruff, Cedar Vale sophomore, Hall Council representative; Don Loomis, Stafford senior, intramurals; Kent Richert, Wichita sophomore, scholarship chairman and Richard Wilhite, Toronto freshman, song leader. Foster Hall YOUR EYES Cottonseed meal is an excellent feed for cattle, but can be fed in only limited quantities to other farm animals. Bob Cook, Leavenworth junior, has been elected president of Foster Hall for the second semester. 411 West 14th L. G. BALFOUR CO. Fraternity Jewelers WARNER BROS. present HENRY FONDA - VERA MILES In ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S The Wrong Man WB COMING SOON VARSITY Sneak Preview of a new hit on campus The critics rate this Arrow Glen a smash hit on all counts. This handsome broadcloth shirt comes in a new hairline stripe. (Three new stripe widths available.) Wide range of colors. Famous clean-cut Arrow Glen collar. Shirt $4.50. Bias-striped shantung bow tie, $1.50. ARROW -first in fashion SHIRTS • TIES ge .50. , $1.50. 25 v Shop at CARL'S for all ARROW PRODUCTS 905 Mass. St. CARL'S Dial VI 3-5353 G Tuesday, Feb. 5, 1957 University Daily Kansan Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS 25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ad: must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in 'Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. FOR SALE BEVAREAGES- All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. Ground, 6th and Vermont. Phone: tt 3-03250. TIME, LIFE & Sports Illustrated magazines. Special students' prices of $1 reg. sub. rate. Prompt service, buy now if later, call VI 3-0124. LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas-complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and lily pads. Fruits, vegetables, henscies, etc. Sure we have alligators. fish. turtles chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Phone and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-9292 REFRIGERATOR. Servel, apartment size. good condition. Call VI 3-358. 2-6 SLIDE RULE. Post Versalog with leather case and instruction book. Bought it new and it's like new. Also biology dissecting kit. Ph. Vi 3-5239. 2-8 ELECTRONIC INSTRUMENTS. 200D precise 7 inch Oscilloscope, new, very reasonably priced. Phone VI 3-4728 or see at 1636 New Hampshire. 2-7 TRANSPORTATION TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. Ask us about Airbus A320 for itineraries and reservations. 8th & Mass. Phone VI 3-0152. tf RIDE to Topeka Naval Reserve Station Monday nights. Contact James Lons, 1115 Tennessee VI 3-3268. 2-6 RIDE. Want in car pool from Topeka 8 to 2 on Tuesday and Thursday and 11 to 4 Monday, Wednesday, Friday. Phone Topeka 5-9059. 2-6 Parties, Pinnings, Weddings Job Application Photos Gene Smoyer Gene's Photo Service 2144 Ohio - VI 3-0933 EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS FOR RENT ROOM FOR BOYS with or without board. Doubles & singles, twin beds, linens arranged, close to campus and available immediately. Call VI 3-1572, 1138 Miss. ROOM-Large, comfortable, for men students., single or double, with twin beds. Linens furnished. Large closet and garage. Call VI 3-6731. 2-8 TWO ROOM APARTMENT nicely furnished. Private entrance. Adults. No drinking. Utilities paid. Close to bus and KU. 1017 New Hampshire. Ph. VI 3-4638. ROOM next to bath, with TV and linens furnished and breakfast served. Located private home, a ride to the hill even morning. Boy or girl single. Ph. V3- 286184. ROOM well furnished, large single. Light cooking privileges for male student. Very close to campus. Reasonable rent. VI 3-6606. 2-6 SUNSET HILLS home. Two bedrooms completely furnished with attached garage. Rent reasonable. Phone for appointment. VI 3-8872 or VI 3-4767. 2-8 FURNISHED APARTMENT for students. Three rooms plus private bath and kitchen. See at 615 Louisiana or call VI 3-8540. 2-8 FURNISHED APARTMENTS 3 and 4 rooms with private bath. Close to campus. Also need a couple middle ages age to care for apartment house: 1- 9792. 2-8 ROOM AND BOARD for one student. $50.00 per month. Call VI 3-4385. 2-8 EFFICIENCY . APARTMENT. Furnished three room suite to town and bus line 1409-4609. SLEEPING ROOM for girls. Phone VI 3- 5175. 2-6 ROOM half a block from campus, very large for male student in nice house, telephone and laundry privileges. Reasonable rent. Ph. 3-6699. 2-6 --starring actress quinnie. directed by ALFRED HITCHCOCK COMING SOON WARNER BROS. PRESENT HENRY FONDA VERA MILES In ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S The Wrong Man COMING SOON VARSITY WATCH FOR . . . the Of The GRAND OPENING Featuring— Holiday Inn Restaurant - Chorcoal Broiled Steaks - Fresh Live Maine Lobster - Italian Dishes Holiday Inn Hotel Junction Hiway 10 and 59 on Iowa St. ARE YOU LOOKING for a fine new two bedroom apartment? Yes. It's new. Has new automatic washer, electric range and refrigerator. Otherwise unisex. Available. Phone VI. 3-7655 or KU. No. 402 mornings. 2-8 WHY WALK FARTHER, men? We have rooms, single and double, only half room, comfortable. Comfortable, reasonably priced. Bed linen lauers 1218 Miss. Ph. VI 3-8691. J2-8 ROOM for 2 or 3 boys, extra large, clean, quiet. Linens furnished. Close to KU. Phone VI 3-2961 or see 1022 Atabama. 2-11 BE INDEPENDENT. Live close to the campus. Room and board $45.00 per week. Phone (212) 367-8300; dale Co-op 15371* Tennessee. Ph. VI 3025. Ask for Tom. Arlan, or Jack. 2-13 LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students up to $500.00 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. Phone VI 3-8074 for 1 day service 833% Mass. FOR LEASE THREE ROOM APARTMENT unfurnished, on ground floor. Air conditioned. Ph. VI 3-2662 or VI 3-1277. 2-11 WANTED USED PHYSICAL GEOLOGY TEXT. No underlining H. D. Humphrey. Ph. VI 3-4841. 2-7 FOUND LADIES WRIST WATCH on the 17th of January in the rotunda at Strong Hall. Vicki Ann Voth, 1443 Alumni Place. PH. VI 3-8505. 2-8 CLASS RING - from Hogan High with OXO. paying for a ad. Ph. VI. 3-1944; 2-6 paying for a ad. Ph. VI. 3-1944; 2-6 BOOKS For gifts and for your own library, Art, Architecture, Cook Books, Childrens Books, Modern Library. THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPIST, experienced in; these, term papers, reportat. Fast; and accurate, student rates. Mrs. Betty Veqstol. 1935 Barker Aver. Phone VI 3-2001. tf TYPIST. Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1191 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6657, 1106 La. MISCELLANEOUS OLD FASHIONED TURKEY DRIVER with all the trimmings Thursday Feb. 7 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Community Building. All proceeds to the Assembly of God Fund. Tickets $1.25 each. 2-7 a flair for flattery Have you strayed away? From six to eleven each day, You'd be wise to stay Pointed at 630 for Station KUOK! We rent nationwide trailers any size, anywhere, anytime East 23rd VI 3-7377 CROFT TRAILER RENTAL CO. a flair for flattery and flattered you'll be when friends compliment your INDEPENDENT cared-for clothes! Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS VI 3-4011 740 Vermont 1903 Massachusetts I Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS K Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 5, 1957 ↑ ↓ (Dally Kansen photo) FOR THE BIRDS—Arrows show where "Mom" and "Dad" had their breakfast at the University greenhouse. Being selective, they chose only yellow orchids. Accounting Students Return From Business Internships Last weekend 33 student interns in public accounting returned to the KU campus after working for various firms throughout the region for the last six weeks. The internship is actual work experience as a junior accountant and terminates a 3-hour course titled, "Internship in Public Accounting," offered each fall semester by the accounting department in the School of Business. The object of this program which is in its third year is to put the students in direct contact with the business and accounting world and give them the chance to apply techniques learned in class. It is an adaptation of the internship program used by medical schools for many years. Gives Insight Into Field Official Bulletin Gives Insight Into Field Benefits gained from the program TODAY Iems for the official Bulletin must be brought to the Public Relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to publication. Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. KU cabinet meeting, 6:45 p.m., at Miss Johnson's home, 1644 Stratford Rd. All cabinet members please attend as assistants. Hayward law office, Green Hall. Law Woes. KU Presbyterian Women's Supper 5:30-7:30 p.m. Westminster House. Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. Korra del Destino Museum. Verdi: "La Forza del Destino" WEDNESDAY Looking Toward Marriage Class. p. 436 Center Center. Firs. p. six, wifty perigets KUKK (KU Kamera Klub) 7:30 p.m. Student Union. All persons interested in photography are urged to attend. Probably photographed: Snow and night-time photography. Quill Club organizational meeting, 7:30 p.m. National Union Insolie magazine, and mouvoy insolie magazines, Junior Kappa Alpha Theta alumnase, 7:30 p.m. of Mrs. Harry Jordan. 1800 Kentucky. Entomology Club. 4 p.m., 417 Snow Mountain on biological control will be shown. Student Court session, 7 p.m., Jayhawk Room. Student Union. Collegiate Council for United Nations executive board, 4 p.m., office, Student Union THURSDAY World University Service, 4 p.m., 306A Student Union. All representatives are brought. County correspondents' meeting, 4 p.m. Pine Room, Student Union, Jim Bedford, journalism instructor, will speak. "What is Real in Religion?" Series 4 - what is dead or kentglof? Selfers, a "God; Rent or Fission?" Open discussion. Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag mit 5 Uhr in 402 Fraser. Es wird deutsche Lieder, Spielle, Erfruhungen, alle gebes. Alle gebes. Gingelden KU-Y all-member meeting, 7:30 p.m. J. Lester, Professor of Speaker, Dr. Nellock. Last Lecture. Pre-Nursing Club, 7:30 p.m., 110 Fraser. "What Does the Bible Mean?" Study vitae Matthew 9 p.m., Methodist Student Center FRIDAY Museum of Art record concert. 11 a.m. and 3 p.m., Art Museum. Verdi: "La Forza del Destino." were expressed by Robert Long, McCune senior, who just returned from internship with a Houston, Tex. firm "The internship gave me a realization of what the life of a public accountant is really like. The purposes and reasons of why they do what they do becomes more vivid and real once you perform these functions yourself," said Long. Concerning the program itself, Long said, "I don't think there is anything like it. You can talk with people and think you know the profession, but it is not until you actually meet with the client that you see the problems facing you." Interns usually complete their class assignments and exams and enroll for the second semester prior to Christmas vacation. Typical assignments of the national firms are concerned with auditing processes, while in the smaller local firms a larger part of the time is spent in the preparation and review of tax materials. These firms work with the University in setting up a program that will give the student experience in accounting as well as adequate supervision. The firm pays the student's transportation costs from Lawrence to the office assigned. The student then receives the same rate of pay as a junior staff member. Students entering the program, which is offered only in the fall must have senior or graduate standing and have completed certain prescribed requirements. Firm Pays Cost A solution of baking soda may be used to wash baby's toys. Use a tablespoon of soda to a quart of warm water. He was a student in engineering at the University of Budapest. Last week he enrolled here as a sophomore in mechanical engineering. He underwent physical examination and other necessary procedures for any new student. WARNER BROS. PRESENT HENRY FONDA·VERA MILES in ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S The Wrong Man and NORRING AUTHORITY QUANTIES Directed by ALFRED HITCHCOCK COMING SOON VARSITY A 21-year-old Hungarian student is on the campus. He is placid and calm. There is no trace of that fierce student fighter for freedom in Budapest. On the night of Oct.22, a big student meeting was held in Budapest. They adopted a reform program and decided to stage a demonstration next day to demand the government for action. This is his story: "By the time of demonstration, all the students of the University of Budapest came to join," he said. "Ordinary people were happy to see that demonstration of this kind was possible after so long. They flew flags from every window. We were happy, too, because the people were happy." Freedom Fighter Tells Of Revolt University Students Join Students' demands, he said, were: 1) The independence of the university from the state. WARNER BROS. PRESENT HENRY FONDA·VERA MILES in ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S The Wrong Man 2) Free election throughout the country. His name or pictures will not be printed because he does not wish to see harm is done to his parents living in Budapest. 3) Freedom of the press, freedom of speech and freedom of radio. "Hungary is essentially an agricultural country," the student said. "Russia wanted to make us an industrial country. Industrialization in itself is a good thing but Russia made us manufacture weapons. It was not good. The Hungarian economy was run not in the interest of Hungary but in the interest of Russia." 4) Economic and political independence from Russia. Couldn't Make Automobiles VARSITY Couldn't make Automobiles for engineering students, for instance, instead to make automobiles, but Russia didn't let us and sold their cars instead. We were forced to sell Hungarian products cheap to Russia and she gave us unnecessary things. Everything was expensive," he said. Uranium mines in Hungary were also in the hands of Russians who took uranium ores without paying Hungary. Hungarians wanted to take back uranium mines for economic independence, he said. Factory Delegates Sent "On Oct. 23, students went to factories and gave to workers programs printed at the university press," he continued. "Workers at first wouldn't trust students because they feared the Communist party control. Two days later, they understood us and delegates to student meetings and joined demonstrations." Eventually, Russia poured tanks. guns, and troops into Hungary to quell the revolution. After the second Russian attack, the Hungarian student decided to cross the border. It took him one day to get to the border and another day to cross. "It is not an easy thing," he said. "I saw many miseries." Given Visa He was received by the Austrian officials and lived for a time in the student house in Vienna. There he was given a visa to the United States. From Munich, Germany, a United States Air Force plane took him to Camp Kilmer, N.J., Hungarian refugee center. He came to KU about two weeks ago, and was given a KU foreign student scholarship and residence in a scholarship hall. "I think more than 500 students escaped from Hungary," the young Hungarian said. "I don't know how the university is going on, but I think many schools were forced to close because many students escaped and not enough students should be in Budapest to open many courses," he said. V VARSITY Box Office Opens 6:45—Show 7 NOW ENDS WED. Adults Only ELIA KAZAN'S production of TENNESSEE WILLIAMS' boldest story! FROM WARNER BROS. STARRING KARL MALDEN • CARROLL BAKER STory and Screen Play by TENNESSEE WILLIAMS • ELIA KAZAN Feat. at 7:15—9:20 NEWS Color Cartoon “三 little Bons” IT'S FOR REAL! CONVERSATION WITH YOURSELF by Chester Field "Now there's an interesting face— Ugly, but not commonplace . . Full of charm, I must admit Full of character and wit! Why on earth can't women see All the things I see in me?" MORALs No matter what face you live behind, it will look happier with a real satisfying Chesterfield out front! Enjoy that BIG full flavor plus the smoothest taste today, because it's packed more smoothly by Accu·Ray! You'll be smoking smiles! Smoke for real... smoke Chesterfield! $250 for every philosophical verse accepted for publication. Chesterfield, P.O.Box 21, New York 46, N.Y. @Lignez & More Tobacco On. Chesterfield CIGARETTES LARGE & MEDIUM TICKETS ONLY California Debate Team Here Kenneth Irby, Fort Scott, and Ralph Seger, Topeka, juniors, members of the University debate squad, will debate the question, "Resolved: should economic aid to foreign countries be discontinued?" against a debate team from Los Angeles State College at 2 p. m. Friday in 103 Green. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. Hawk-talk A lavender-gold Mercedes Benz whipped to a stop before the Phi Chi Sigma sorority house. Out hopped Emil Fermish, his 337 pound weight hanging casually on his five-foot three inch frame. He skipped lightly up the walk, his great ears flapping in the January wind. Whistling "I'm starvin" to death cause my oil well's gone dry," he entered the house and screamed up the stairway for his date. Emil stared goggle-eyed as she descended toward him in all her glory. Delores Smooth, sevenfeet six inches of all woman. She moved with a certain grace which showed her to have a knowledge of the ways of the world. A large diamond inserted just below her lips evidenced her as being a past president of Zeta Alpha, a highly respected honorary organization composed of the daughters of K. U. grads who hold an inheritance of over ten million dollars and a grade average of less than .0. 540 S D D Emil finally found his voice and blurted out. "Gosh you look delicious." She gazed amazed and answered "Why thank you, Emil. Isn't it a lovely day. I like days like this. I slept late today. We had Salmon patties for lunch. For supper we had Perch. I missed breakfast. Isn't the snow slushy. I like snow. But not when it's slushy. I like boys. Boys like me. My roommate is Grace Greif. She doesn't belong to Zeta Alpha. I'm happy, etc. etc. etc." "Oh. you look delicious." All this was uttered in the true manner of a cultured woman. When the flood subsided, Emil replied. "That's what I meant. You're so wonderful Emil, asking me to the number one social event on campus which allows us to hear the enchanting music of Richard Maltby for only $2.50 a couple and sip SUA champagne into the wee small hours of the night. I will marry you now." Emil's great ears flushed at such compliments but he answered, "If you mean that I have forgotten to ask you to the Night Club Party which is to be held Feb. 9, in the Union ballroom, I'm asking you now. Is that what you mean, Delores?" Thus the evening was spent as the shining Mercedes roared up and down the streets of Lawrence. Delores saying in a woman's way, "Etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc." Emil replying, "Oh, you look delicious." As Emil staggered down the steps under the weight of his love, his cute little chubby face showed a smile of contentment, the smile of a man who's found what he wanted. At evening's end, when the closing hour's gong was about to sound, our couple stood at the door of the sorority. Delores said, "Thank you, Emil, but I can't marry you. You have forgotten the one thing that is dearest to a woman's heart. Even though you are handsome, sweet, kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty, brave, clean, and reverent, I can't marry you." And she jumped into his arms, shedding tears of joy and sadness as she waved goodbye to all her friends of Phi Chi Sigma. Student Union Activities Daily hansan 54th Year, No. 79 Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1957 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Science Bulletin Dedicated To Dr. Hungerford The latest issue of the University of Kansas Science Bulletin, semi-annual publication of the results of research by faculty members, is dedicated to Herbert Barker Hungerford, professor-emeritus of entomology. Dr. Hungerford retired last spring after 45 years on the KU faculty. He was chairman of the department of entomology from 1924 to 1949 and served as state entomologist during that time. He is a former president of the Society of Systematic Zoology, an international organization; the Entomological Society of America, and the Kansas Entomological Society. Although Dr. Hungerford is not teaching, he is continuing research in the classification of aquatic and semi-aquatic Hemiptera, commonly called waterbugs. A grant from the National Science Foundation provides assistance for this research. In a eulogy to the KU entomologist, Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students and professor of biology, writes, "...he has become the world's authority on the taxonomy of the aquatic Hemptera. As part of its dedication, the Science Bulletin includes a list of publications written by Dr. Hungerford, numbering more than 180 papers and including several books. "Across the years, by his own collecting or by trade and gift, he has amassed the world's largest collection of these insects, enriched largely by the type specimens of his own descriptions along with those which have been compared and found identical with the types in other collections. "His industry and resulting eminence as an authority in his field are reflected not alone by the hundreds of new species he himself has described and the many papers he has written, but also by the honor implied through the number of species named for him by others; indeed, few modern taxonomists have been so frequently and signally honored in the fashion of fellow systematists in expressing their esteem and respect for a colleague." Liahona Elects New Officers Liahona Fellowship has elected Wendell Wallace, Omaha, Neb. junior, president for the spring semester. Roger Acord, St. Joseph, Mosophore, and Les Canning, Youbou, B.C. junior, were elected vice presidents. Weather Other officers elected were Evelyn Hacker, Harrisonville, Mo. junior, secretary; Ralph Pratt, Imogene, Iowa 2nd year Law, treasurer; Howard Hays, Miami, Okla. senior, worship chairman; Beverly Doig, Independence Mo. junior, study chairman; Rilla Vickrey, Independence. Mo. freshman, social chairman; Clayton Barber, Gaylord, Mich. junior, service chairman, and Jim Christenson, Holden, Mo. senior, public relations chairman. Western portion fair with warmer days and cool nights through Thursday. Eastern Kansas partial clearing this afternoon and again Thursday afternoon but fog and drizzle again tonight and Thursday forenoon particularly southeast and extreme east. Little change in temperatures. Low tonight 20-25 northwest to lower 30s southeast. High Thursday 40s east to 50s west. Rock Chalk Revue Auditions At 3 Today Rock Chalk Revue auditions for between skit acts and a master of ceremonies will be today from 3 to 5 p.m. in Strong Auditorium. Six acts will be chosen from the auditions today. Those unable to audition may call Vera Stoough at VI 3-5660 to arrange for another time. Apply Now For Medical Test The Medical College Admission Test will be given Saturday, May 11, and Tuesday, Oct. 29. All premedical students are required to take the test before being admitted to the School of Medicine. The test is given nationally by the Educational Testing Service of Princeton, N. J. Application blanks are available in the School of Medicine office and must reach the testing service at least two weeks before the test is taken. Medical Study Program In Effect A development program for laboratory and clinical study has been begun through an association between Providence Hospital in Kansas City, Kan. and the University of Kansas Medical Center. Effective in January, the program is under the direction of Dr. Tom R. Hamilton, professor and chairman of the department of microbiology at the medical center. The funds for the activities at Providence will be supplied by the Sisters of Charity of Leavenworth and the recent Ford Foundation grant which was given to the hospital. Dean W. Clarke Wescoe of the medical school explained that the Sisters of Charity desire to establish a program which will provide clinical and pathological laboratories, support and stimulate clinical investigation and teaching; and encourage laboratory investigation and teaching. "It is to accomplish this purpose that the Sisters are associating Providence Hospital with the University of Kansas," said Dean Wescoe. Athletic Funds Eyed For State Revenue Murphy: Travel Rule Won't Affect University The University will not be affected by Gov. George Docking's proposal to have requests for out-of-state traveling expenses by state officials sent to his office, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy said this morning. The proposal calls for KU administrators and faculty members so send their requests to Gov. Docking instead of to Hubert Brighton, secretary of the Board of Regents. "The University will continue to operate as it has in the past," Dr. Murphy said. "We will continue to send our instructors to necessary conferences and meetings. "We don't use University funds to send professors on vacation. The University is allotted a total of $21,000 annual state money for traveling expenses. As I understand it, we still send our requests to Mr. Brighton but now he will send them to Gov. Docking for a final check." The University has other funds available that can be used for traveling, the chancellor said. A total of $30,000 is on hand from grants for research and take care of necessary expenses on research. However, Dr. Murphy pointed out, this is not state money and does not come from University funds. 25 Students Study Russian Although the Russian language has the reputation of being a difficult one to learn, 25 students are enrolled this semester in Russian language courses. Once a student has mastered the alphabet, according to Werner Winter, assistant professor of German and Russian, he finds that many of the words sound like those in English, German and French. The Russian alphabet is similar to the Greek. Students study Russian history and geography as well as the language. They can also use a set of Russian books on history and literature being acquired by Watson Library. Prof. Winter said writings of Tolstoy, Dostoevski and other Russian writers are important items in the world's literature. Russian scientific writings are of interest to scientists the world over. Scholarly works written behind the Iron Curtain are often printed in Russian or with Russian abstracts. Nearly 1/4 billion persons use Russian. Inside the main door of Watson Library is a display of some International Geophysical Year (IGY) prospects. Librarians Show IGY Projects From July, 1957 to December, 1958, scientists from forty countries will study earth sciences. They will measure and probe our planet, seek knowledge of its core and crust, and study the atmosphere and oceans. In the display are pictures and diagrams of the U.S. earth satellite program. The satellite is a step in rocket exploration of the upper atmosphere. Several journals concern rockets and space flight published by rocket societies that are members of the International Astronautical Federation. Books about pioneer rockets include those of the reactor engine of Hero of Alexandria, 2 B.C. His key idea helped develop the jet-propelled plane and the rocket. Former KU Cage Teammates Clash Neither have had much time. to watch the present Kansas basketball team in action, but Kenney Hougland, a two-time United States Olympic basketball team member and now playing with the Phillips squad, was a main cog in the Oilers 88-79 victory over the Vickers and his former teammate, Bob Kenney. Kansas basketball fans witnessed the return of two former Jayhawker stars last night, but this time instead of wearing the familiar Crimson and Blue, Bill Hougland and Bob Kenney opposed each other in a game between the Phillips Oilers and the Wichita Vickers. Both men agreed, that although they are continuing their basketball career in the National Industrial League, there jobs definitely take precedence over basketball. Hougland is employed in the sales department of the Phillips organization and Kenney is an engineer at Beech Aircraft Co. said he did see the first half of the freshman-varsity clash. Impressed by Defense "I think they have a real good team," Kenney said. "They impressed me especially on defense. Now that Loneski is back in action they should be even stronger." Kenney stressed the same thing Dick Harp has been stressing all season when questioned about KU's chances in the NCAA tournament. "First, you've got to win the Big Seven conference. If they accomplish this, they definitely have the potential to go ahead and win the NCAA championship." Referring to the present Jayhawker great, Wilt Chamberlain, Kenney added that Chamberlain has as much ability as any basketball player he has ever seen. He said the thing that amazed him, is Wilt's ability to jump. "Although he still has much room for improvement," Kenney said, "I think he is one of the Harp One Of Finest greatest players basketball has ever seen." Hougland, who is still looking forward to seeing the once-beaten Jayhawker five in action, said, "I'm sure that with the coach they have, they are bound to be good. Dick Harp is one of the finest men and coaches in basketball." Hougland was willing to discuss the U.S. basketball squad and the other teams which participated in the Olympics. He and Kenney both represented the U.S. on the 1952 squad along with the five other members of Jayhawker's national championship team. Hougland received his second berth on the Olympic squad on 1956 while playing with the Oilers. "In looking at the over-all picture of the 1956 Olympics, Hougland said, "A wonderful spirit prevailed among all the teams. They demonstrated a thing which you and I wish the whole world could be like all of the time." By BOB LYLE (Assistant Managing Editor Gov. George Docking tossed up a few-trial balloons for possible ways of obtaining revenue for the state Tuesday morning in a press conference, and in doing so touched on a subject dear to the hearts of many University supporters — the KU athletic program. In an informal gathering with representatives of several area newspapers and press services Gov. Docking said he was "wondering" about the possibility of the state taking a percentage of the gate receipts or charging the University rental for athletic activities held in Allen Field House or the Memorial Stadium. The money might be used to bolster the state general fund he added. He also suggested the possibility of installing parking meters in the field house area to raise money to black top the parking areas. "Non-Professional Athletes" He told reporters: At the same time the governor presented a few opinions on the general athletic policies in Kansas' colleges and Universities. "I would like to see our universities and colleges in this state become non-professional in athletics. I do not like the semi-professional approach that has been taken on some occasions. I believe everything, athletically or politically should be done in a gold fish bowl." When reporters asked him what was to be done about Oklahoma in view of his personal stand he laughed and admitted that he was a bit stumped by that question. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy said in regard to Gov. Docking's statements that he saw no reason why the state should not consider the possibilities of such a source of revenue. "The Legislature and the governor have a perfect right to examine such possibilities, and indeed the obligation," the chancellor said. "I just don't believe there is enough money there to take any out for state revenue," he said. "If something like this is carried out we would either have to cut out some of the non-paying sports or reduce the football and basketball budgets." Little Profit in Athletics Chancellor Murphy explained that although it may appear that athletics at KU is making money, little profit is realized once it is put back into the athletic program. "I think the whole thing is a bit of a tempest in a teapot and will blow over in a little while." KU athletic director A. C. (Dutch) Lonberg said last night he did not care to comment. He said that Gov. Docking may not have been serious in his statements and that they were just suggested as possibilities. In a front page story Tuesday the Lawrence Daily Journal World pointed out that Gov. Docking mentioned only KU as a possible means of revenue, completely ignoring the athletic program at Kansas State College. Gov. Docking, who attended the Phillips 66 Oilers—Wichita Vickers basketball game Tuesday night in the field house, said he did not care to comment on the story in the Journal-World. Has Exercise Laboratory The Allen Field House contains a physical exercise research laboratory and is planned to serve event- (Continued on Page 8.) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1957 Slanted Account— Loaded Story Unfair Good taste and unbiased reporting seem to have been tossed lightly aside when Bill Mayer, managing editor of the Lawrence Journal-World, expanded on what might well have been an off-hand comment by Gov. George Docking. The story, which was given the No. 1 position in Monday's Journal-World, leaves much to the reader's imagination—or rather prejudice. bGov. George Docking of Lawrence today stated in Topeka that he is viewing gate receipts at Allen Field House as a possible source of state revenue," was Mr. Mayer's opening statement. What the governor actually said or implied is lost in the obviously biased account of what transpired as reported by Mr. Mayer. When asked to comment on the story, Gov. Docking remarked, "I never comment on anything that self-styled newspaper ever says, and you may quote me." Whether or not the governor is considering gate receipts from ball games at the field house as a source of state revenue is beside the point. What is of first concern is the unfair advantage taken of the governor by the Journal-World. Coloring a news story with comments from unnamed individuals is a low trick, and could cause ill-will among associates of the governor if they allow themselves to be cajoled into believing what an inaccurate editorial in the news columns of the Journal-World spouts forth. If an editorial is to run in the news columns of any newspaper, it should be tabbed as such. Mr. Mayer's "story" would have been more appropriate on the editorial page. —Jerry Dawson 'Baby Doll' Year's Most Talked Of Film Is Worth Talking About "Baby Doll," the most cussed and discussed film of the year, isn't the best that the writer Tennessee Williams-director Elia Kazan combination has produced. The film, now playing at a local theater, is, however, an important contribution by both. Williams, as he has done in his other plays, searches for the worst in the South for both characters and plot—and finds it. The result is more than just a good movie — it is an excellent study of three characters endowed with more than their share of certain undesirable human traits. Kazan, who is the best director in Hollywood for a Williams written film, got nearly the exact effect that Williams must have desired. Baby Doll Meighan (Caroll Baker) has been married for two years to a man she has come to know as a failure. a braggart, a coward who backs down from any problem and takes his anger out on something that cannot fight back. To add to Archie Lee's frustrations his business is bad — in fact he has best all of it. A syndiacute cotton gin with new equipment has run him out of business. He solves this problem in a typical Archie Lee way — by burning down the competing gin. Her husband, Archie Lee, (Karl Malden) has his share of problems When he and Baby Doll married she decided that she wasn't ready. Archie Lee was forced to agree to wait until her 20th birthday before his marriage could be consummated with a wedding night. Silva Vacarro (Eli Wallach) is the manager of the gin that burned. He COLD NO'S NOW I REMEMBER! I WANTED TO GET THE DEFROSTERS FIXED! NATIONAL SAFETY COUNCIL No, your snow-snoot isn't of much help. And while you're at it, defrost your wires as well as your windshield so you won't get caught with your panes down again. You must see danger to avoid it, so keep those defrosters and wipers working. Don't forget the heater, tire chains and headlights, either, when preparing for winter. knows who burned it and his only interest is proving it and getting revenge. This he achieves but he goes about it in a strange way. The morning after Silva's gin is burned he appears at Archie Lee's gin to get the syndicate's cotton processed. Archie Lee sees himself as a success. He again has business for his cotton gin and at midnight that night Baby Doll becomes 20 years old. His money problems and physical frustrations are over. He leaves Silva at the house to be entertained his wife and goes to the gin to work. Silva starts his game to make Baby Doll sign a statement that her husband burned down the syndicate gin. Silva, a shrewd Sicilian who says he "lives by Biblical law — an eye for an eye" finds that the person that he must get the confession from is in most respects, a baby. He starts his subtle game of revenge by treating her as a child. Baby Doll, who pushed herself into a child's world because of her physical repulsion to her "fat, old man" likes the game and responds perfectly to the childish treatment. The game and the morning end in a game of hide and seek and a signed confession. What results during the course of the rainy afternoon brings Baby-Doll out of her dream world and she becomes 20 years old. This and the presence of Silva asleep in Baby Doll's crib has a disastrous effect upon Archie Lee. He takes action in the only way his mind will allow. He says, "I'm gonna wipe that smile off your greasy woj face." Baker, Malden, and Wallach do excellent acting jobs. There is too much of other Kazan directed actresses, however, in Baker to make her job really outstanding. It is for the characters that "Baby Doll" is worth seeing - the frustrated, inepth husband who is married but only in name, the wife who seeks the sanctuary of a baby crib to avoid her husband, the revengeful Sicilian who seeks his own justice for a wrong. Kazan, who has always done better with his male leads, got the best out of Malden and Wallach. Wallach, whose portrayal of Silva had to be much more subtle than what was called for in the relatively simple character of Archie Lee, does the best job of the three. The movie lacks one thing that could have made it stronger and more important - a proper mood. Williams and Kazen sprinkled the film with shots and lines that were out of place and unnecessary. The effect is damaging. "Baby Doll" is an almost film - it is almost equal to Hollywood's best - and it is much better than the usual fare that one gets from that city. Gen. Lew Wallace, appointed territorial Governor of New Mexico in 1878, wrote much of his 'celebrated novel "Ben Hur" while serving in office. Jerry Thomas Our first attempt at book reviewing is forthwith recorded. Two Cents' Worth The title of the book we decided to review, "Webster's Dictionary," was somewhat misleading, for "dictionary" was mentioned only once in the whole tome, and then only in passing. However, the author was extremely careful in his treatment of his subject, giving every possible bit of information We thought that perhaps his use of odd little marks and italic phrases was a bit overdone, but for continuity the work is unsurpassed. bit of information he could. For the convenience of the reader and to PAPERBACK Dawson save his eyes, the author broke up the treatise into many paragraphs. In the true spirit of good paragraphing, each dealt with one subject. As a matter of fact it was at times hard to determine the relationship of one to the next. The breaking up of the work into chapters had a unique touch. Whereas most people use numbers—either Arabic or Roman—to denote first, second, and third chapters, the author of "Webster's Dictionary" used letters of the alphabet. Though faulty phrasing and incomplete sentences were profuse throughout the work, it appears right from the first that the author knew what he was writing about. He evidently spent at least several weeks in completing the book. Incidentally, movie rights have not as yet been purchased, but as the trend is to make movies of almost any book that is printed, we feel sure that this will entertain movie goers the world over. The plot ends on a 'very weak note. We felt sure that the villian did it, even though he too was mentioned only once in the whole book, but a surprise ending leaves you breathless with the realization that Zyyzogeton (n.) (NL., fr. zyzza (prob. fr. Sp. zisza zigzag) is the real culprit. Daily Hansan Ad booki. Jerry Dawson University of Kansas student newspaper 1904, trilweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1913 1920, weekly 1917 Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 251, new room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. News service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every after-saturday. The University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Holidays, and examination periods. Entitled as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT Kent Theatre Company Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Jerry Dawson Editorial Editor Daisy Business DEPARTMENT Date BENIN Business Manager SAM DONAHUE Formerly Billy May Band ORCHESTRA Sat., Feb. 9 - Dance 9 to 1 Advance $1.75 — Box Office $2.00 PLA-MOR, KANSAS CITY, MO. 3142 Main — VA 1-7844 Use the Kansas Classified Want Ad Section to Get Best Results. Keep expenses down BUDGET POST CheckMaster CHECKING ACCOUNT BUDGET PUT YOUR MONEY IN A LOW-COST CheckMaster CHECKING ACCOUNT YOUR NAME printed on every check. No minimum balance required. No monthly service charge. √ Checkbooks free — No advance payment. ✓ Any amount starts an account. √ Only a small charge per check used. Lawrence National Bank 7th & Mass. V! 3-0260 Be Sure You Get Fresh-Baked Goods By Shopping At Drake's Bakery ... For snacks at coffee time try our tasty doughnuts Enjoy our light, fluffy dinner rolls. Get pastries baked just right for every occasion. Drop in and see for yourself. We deliver on the hill Drake's Bakery 907 Mass. VI 3-0561 Page $ Second Night Audience Gets Money's Worth, Actors Say Does a second-night audience see a "let-down" play performance? Dale J. Bellerose, Lawrence sophomore, paced the dressing room floor waiting for curtain time. He too has theatrical experience having appeared in numerous productions while in the Army. "There's not much difference in nights." Bellerose said. Five actors of "Of Thee I Sing" cast think a second-night audience gets a performance every bit as good as the "First Nighters' see. One actor seemed a bit doubtful. They were interviewed in the Fraser Hall dressing room Tuesday night before their second performance. "The idea of a second-night let-down hasn't got much to it." Roger D. Stanton, Marysville freshman commented; Beverly A. Rinkle, Pittsburgh junior, sat with a green towel over her shoulders and powdered her thighs, while a make-up artist prepared to work on her face. She said "Of Thee I Sing" is her fifth major show at KU. She traveled in Europe and North Africa last summer with the USO troupe from KU. She Says No Difference "It depends on how it went the first night," Mr. Stanton said. "Actors sometimes figure they have it made on the first night and think they can coast. There's a conscious effort to keep from talking about it. A unified cast won't talk." "I've done a lot of shows," Bev- erly said. "You can't have a let-down because the audience hasn't seen the show. There's nothing to it." Henry L. Walling, Independence senior; commented through a coat of grease paint that the second night is just as important as the first night, said. "We just want to be sure a show is as good as we can possibly make it. The jitters are because of the performance; rehearals have given confidence," he said. Donald B. Farrar, Kansas City Mo., junior, who has appeared in two operettas, called the second night "theory" supersition. Idea Is Superstition "I haven't experienced it, and no one has said anything to me about it," he said. Lewin Goff, director of University Theatre, offered the comment that a second-night audience is new. What may have been funny to an actor the first night may not be funny to him the second night, he said. Crisp new styles welcome as the first day of Spring Crisp new styles ...welcome as the first day of Spring Two-Eye Tie! Black $12.95 WEYENBERG Shoes for men Crisply fashioned . . . superbly crafted. . . . to give you miles of comfort and wear. Come in for a Weyenberg fitting today. Haynes & Keene Haynes & Keene 819 Mass Open Thurs. 9:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. "Spontaneity is the most important thing in theater," Mr. Goff said. Jack T. Brooking, assistant professor of speech and drama, who has acted and directed in community theaters for a number of years, said directors always caution casts against a let-down. Fraternities Oppose Ban DENVER, Colo — (IP) — Five of the fifteen fraternities at the University of Denver are affiliated with the same national organizations as the ones cited at the University of Colorado as having discriminatory clauses in their national charters. "There's just no reason why one should occur," he said. Seven fraternities at CU were named recently as having clauses which specified race, color or creed as having to be considered for membership. Of these seven fraternities, five of the same organizations are currently on the University of Denver campus. These are Alpha Tau Omega, Kappa Sigma, Sigma Chi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, and Theta Chi. Lawrence A. Long, chairman of the Denver alumni local of the National Inter-Fraternity Council, said that the Denver council is opposed to the proposal to end discrimination on the University of Colorado campus because it would require the organizations to certify whether there were "local or extracurricular restrictions of any nature that will prevent members of the chapter from selecting new members of their own choosing." Student Court Meets Tonight The Student Court will meet for the first time this semester at 7 p. m. today in the Jayhawk Room, of the Student Union. Decisions on traffic appeals will be handed down at that time. Conrad Lecture Thursday Professor George H. Ford of the University of Cincinnati will speak on "The Twilight of the Double Vision' in Conrad's Lord Jim," at 4 p.m. in Bailey Auditorium. Michigan's first automobile manufacturing company, the Olds Motor Vehicle Works, was started in Lansing in 1897. Flute, horn, piano, and voice will be featured by four students in a recital at 3 p. m. Thursday in Strong Auditorium. Four Students In Music Recital John Wood, Springfield, Mo. freshman, horn soloist, will play concerto No.1 by Hayden. Wednesday. Feb. 6, 1957 University Daily Kansan- Beverly Runkle, Pittsburg junior, contralto, will sing three compositions by Brahms, Immer Leiser, Wird Mein Schlummer Der Tod, Das Ist Die Nacht and Der Schmied. The booket, to be published soon, will have the following additional information: Mary Sharon Cole, Colby senior, flute soloist, will play a sonata by Walter Piston, featuring the Allegro Moderato E Con Grazia movement. Fraternities will list their scholastic house averages, house bills, assessments and initiation fees. Norman Chapman, Manitoba, Canada, graduate student, piano soloist will conclude the program by playing four movements of the Sonata, Op. 101, Allegro Ma Non troppo, Vivance Alla Marcia, Adagio and Allegro, by Beethoven. The fraternity scholarship list will be released within the next two weeks, it was announced. Changes in the Inter-Fraternity Council rush booklet for fall 1957 were approved at a recent meeting of the council. IFC Approves Rush Alterations By tradition, during the visit of an officer from the Inspector General's Corps, an enlisted man may approach this officer with any legitimate complaints without fear of reprisal. Lt. Col. Duke L. Bryant, Dept. of Army, Inspector General's Corps, stationed in Kansas City, made the annual general inspection of the Army R.O.T.C. department Tuesday. AROTC Receives Annual Inspection He inspected student records, class room instruction techniques, supplies and the administration. REPRINT PORTRAIT SPECIAL In Beautiful Natural Grain Wood Frame For That Special One. A Regular $10.50 Value. Reprint from any negative in our files made before Jan. 1, 1957 previously ordered from and delivered. 1 - 8x10 Portrait $5 95 $3 95 1 - 8x10 Portrait A Perfect Valentine Gift. A Regular $8.00 Value. $3.50 Perfect Gifts At A Tremendous Saving. A Regular $7.00 Value. 2 - 5x7 Portraits Offer expires Feb. 9,1957 HIXON STUDIO 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 One Aspirin Rating The sight of an BOTC sergeant passing out student class cards with a large aspirin bottle nearby startled an official supervising enrolment. There 'always had been stories about Prof. Snarf's class being a 3-aspirin.headache and Prof. Blat's having only a 1-aspirin rating. But had someone really applied the aspirin formula to ROTC courses? Inquiry revealed the sergeant had only been easing the after effects of a tooth extraction. Allen Smith, Lawrence junior was recently appointed editor of the Kansas Engineer, a publication of the School of Engineering ad Architecture. Smith was appointed to fill the vacancy caused by the graduation of Bill Franklin, Topeka. Engineer Appointed Editor YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 TONIGHT AT 8:30 P.M. HOLLYWOOD SNEAK PREVIEW We cannot divulge the title of the Sneak preview but assure you that it is one of the following Kirk Douglas in "Top Secret Affair" Gary Cooper in "Friendly Persuasion" Katharine Hepburn in "The Rainmaker" Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS See Baby Doll Before and After Sneak The New Sensation! CARS LUBRICATED While In Swaying Motion Opens up spring leaves and frees shackles. 汽车 Detects squeaks, rattles and defects. Inures 100% lubrication. Assures perfect lubrication of Knee- Action unit and entire front system. COIL STRAIN SPRING INCREASES THE LIFE OF YOUR CAR — DECREASES REPAIR BILLS MOTO-SWAY LUBRICATION PRACTICALLY UNDER DRIVING CONDITIONS LUBRICATION PRACTICALLY UNDER DRIVING CONDITIONS SWAYS SQUEAKS AWAY WE=Pull the spring leaves back into their space—we call it "Temporary Researching." WE—Put the proper lubricants where the grips are placed —place the highest points of friction. WE=Permit 100% lubrication, apply grease while the car is in motion and while the weight of the body is on the MOTO-SWAY. WE—Spread spring leaves even inside the covers to actually put lubricants between the leaves—not just smear on the outside. WE-Locate those HIDDEN BODY SQUEAKS, we detect impaired parts. WE~Lubricate "Knee-Action" cara. See it with movement in all motion ~floating action~ WE -S lubricate and free bearings even in WINTER so snow and water wont BRICANT OUT and FRESH LUBRICANT IN. WE→Make old cars ride like new ones, keen owners riding like NEO, WE→Prove he AT NO EXTRA COST Potter's "66" Service 1401 W. 6th - VI 3-9891 746 4-89 03 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1957 Phillips Tops Vickers, 88-79 In Exhibition Charity Game A crowd of approximately 6,500 in Allen Field House watched the Phillips Oilers down the Wichita Vickers, 88-79, in an exhibition game in which all receipts were donated to the heart fund. The return to action of two former KU stars, Bill Hougland and Bob Kenney, was of special interest to Kansas fans. Hougland bucketed 10 points for the winning Oilers, while Kenney scored six for the Vickers. Both played well, and had many KU fans recalling the days in 1952 when they sparked the Jaya-hawkers to the NCAA championship. Phillips Has Early Lead Phillips completely outplayed the Vickers during the first half and pulled into a commanding 46-29 half-time lead. Vickers made a brilliant come-back in the second half and with 11:40 remaining tied the score at 57-57. A turning jump shot by 7-3 Wade Halbrook put the Wichita team back in the game and kept them in contention until the closing seconds. Bob Kenney's two-pointer with 2:56 remaining brought the Vickers to within one point of the Oiliers at 78-77, but Phillips went on to add four buckets to gain their margin of victory. Halbrook, although held to eight points in the first half, ran wild in the second half to lead all scorers with 27 points. Dan Swartz scored 17 and Lester Lane, former Oklahoma speedster, added 13 to lead the losers scoring. Darling Tops Winners Nebraska finished in sixth place in the Big Seven basketball race last year. Darling Tops Winners Chuck Darling paced the winner's attack with 18 points. Jerry Harper Kansas State scored a record 108 points in beating the Nebraska basketball team in 1953. Colorado, in a game against Nebraska in 1950, fouled the Cornhuskers 60 times, a record in Lincoln. scored 15, Jim Ranglos, former Colorado star added 14, and Bill Houghland and Jim Walsh hit 10 each to lead the well-balanced Oilers. ATO Hits 82 Swamps PiKA With four men hitting in double figures, ATO completely snowed under PiKA 82-26 yesterday in a game played in Robinson Annex. The ATO's racked up the highest number of points scored by an intramural basketball team this season. Jim Trombold was the scoring ace for ATO with a total of 30 points, hitting 28 from the field and 2 from the charity stripe. Trombold was assisted in the scoring spree by Rich Billings, Stuart Luder and Marc Boxberger with 16, 16 and 13 points respectively. Dick Stroud had 6 points for the losers. Sig Ep 57. Du 51 Terry McIntosh lead Sig Ep to a 57-51 triumph over DU yesterday with 17 points. Vick McCall and Bob Boyer scored 14 points apiece for the DU's but it wasn't enough to turn the dues in the nip and tuck affair. Lam Chi 37. Phi Kans 28 In other fraternity A team action Lambda Chi trounced the Phi Kaps 37-28 in one of the few low scoring contests of the day. H.C. Palmer led the winners with 22 points, most which he made with a jump-turn shot from the center position. The Lambda Chi's were never pressed and had the situation well in hand all the way. Pickers 39. Pearson 38 Pickers 39, Pearson 50 The Chicken Pickers defeated Pearson Hall 39-38 in a see-saw battle to highlight Independent A team action yesterday. Pearson went into the second half with a slim 23-20 lead but couldn't hold it as Dick Welty led a well balanced OPEN TOMORROW 9:30 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M. Continuing Our MID WINTER SALE Substantial Reductions On The Following Items Shirts Wool Sport Shirts Topcoats, Jackets Slacks, Suits Sport Coats Flannel Pajamas Entire Stocks Not Included 905 Mass. St. CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Dial VI 3-5353 CHICAGO — (UP) — Joey Giardello, declaring himself the uncrowned world middleweight champion, said today his television battle tonight with Randy Sandy was a "nothing" fight. CARL'S GOOD CLOTHING Morale Is High Giardello Crowns Self "What I do with Randy Sandy doesn't matter. If it goes 10 rounds or if I knock him out," he said. "I've proved myself already." Chicken Picker attack with 12 points. Other Results **Fraternity B—Beta 37. Sig Ep 17;** DU 2, Delta Chi 0; Phi Kap Tau 38, PIKA 26; Delt Sig 2; Phi Kap Sig 0; Phi Delt 2; ATO 0; SAE 33, Sig Alpha Fsi 25; Phi Gam 31, Sigs 29; A Phi A 32, Sig Nu 25. Independent B - G. Pearson 34. Jim Beam 24; Cats 29, Geo Club 17. Games Today Ron pointed out that the team spirit and morale is still high after the big win over the Cyclones but the Jayhawkers are still playing the games one at a time. Independent A — Liahona vs. Sekan, 4:15 p.m.; Stephenson vs. Scrubs, 5:15 p.m.; Prelock vs. KUY, 7:15 p.m.; Oread vs. APhiA, 8:15 p.m.; Jolliffe vs. Battenfeld 6:15 p.m. Independent B — AFROTC vs. Nu Sig Nu, 5:45 p.m.; Basketteens vs. Foster, 6:30 p.m.; Stephenson vs. Newman, 4:15 p.m.; Hicks vs. Medics, 5:00 p.m.; UVO vs. Pearson, 5:00 p.m. No Phase Tops Rebounding For Self-Satisfaction—Loneski "The Missouri slaughter of Iowa State at Columbia showed us that any team can knock us off at any time if we start reading our press clippings." Speech A Natural another shot to go with my jump shot." Ron tears up the well developed idea that college athletes carry no more than 12 hours a semester and loaf through most of them in the physical education department. He is a speech major and is carrying 17 hours this semester. "Although I am known as a jump shooter, my favorite shot is really the hook." Ron said. "I learned the hook shot when I was a junior in high school. I had played center my first two years in high school but when a 6-6 boy transferred to school from California, he played the post and I figured I should get The contrast between Ron's feather soft shooting touch and the slam bang shooting of Chamberlain is interesting. It was Ron's hook shot, which he calls, "the best shot I have put up in my career," that enabled Kansas to tie Iowa State 49-49 late in the game. Fraternity C — Phi Gam vs. Delt, 5:45 p.m.; Kap Sig vs. Sig Nu, 6:30 p.m.; AKL vs. SAE, 4:15 p.m. Phi Gam vs. Delt, 7:15 p.m.; Phi Psi vs. Sig Nu, 7:15 p.m. Loneski spends considerable time practicing his timing off the backboards and the extra work payed off to the tune of 12 rebounds, second highest total recovered in the rugged battle with Iowa State Saturday. No movement in basketball is so graceful or so much a work of art as taking rebounds off the boards believes Ron Loneski, 6-4/2 sophomore Jayhawker forward. Works On Timing "Speech is a natural major for me; that is the one thing I do easily." Ron laughingly admitted. "Believe me, most of my courses really take the time. Spanish and Western Civilization really eat up my time, although I think Western Civ is probably the best course I have ever taken in college." Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results, Sale of OLDMAINE Trotters HANDSOME NAMP ORIGINALS American number A1 moccasin HITCHING POST Reg. 10.95 Values 7.90 & 8.90 Colors Grey Cocoa Black Blue SOFT AND FLEXIBLE SAGLESS RIKED ARCH TRIUMPHANT Sizes 3 to 10 AAAA to B Royal College Shop 837 Mass. Page 5 Along the JAYHAWKER trail Two men, one jumps higher than any Kansas track man in the history of the school and the other ties the U.S. record for the 60-yard dash, are ineligible for competition this semester, both for scholastic reasons. —(Daily Kansan photo) Bob Cannon and Charlie Tidwell are described by Coach Bill Easton as "wonderful, terrific" track men. Cannon cleared 6-7½ while jumping exhibition during the dual between Kansas and Oklahoma Friday and Tidwell, under a 5-yard handicap, covered the distance in 6.1, tying the national record. The performance of these two men isn't good, it's sensational and although they aren't eligible this year, they'll probably be back next season in even better condition. LOOK OUT BELOW—Bill Matthews, Ashland junior seems to be holding his breath as he starts a one and a half gainer dive. Bill is working out for the swimming meet with Emporia State today. Cannon, a very sincere man, has two great desires. He wants to jump as much as possible and he wants to be a geologist. The latter passion is what got him into trouble as far as the University's 60 per cent C rule goes. Bob's still at it though—jumping and geology. He's down at the field house every afternoon trying to raise himself just a little higher off the ground every time he jumps over the bar. Cannon credits Rex Grossart, assistant track coach, with teaching him how to get as much as six more inches out of his jump. It seems Cannon was bending his lead leg before he went over the bar, thus getting nothing out of it. Grosart taught him how to hold the leg stiff. "That was the secret," Cannon said. A Tidwell, by the way, is not just a track man. The Brooklyn Dodgers and St. Louis Cardinals have bid for his services as an outfielder. He hits about .315. Tidwell's scholastic problems centered around English but it really isn't as simple as that. Tidwell, a physical education major was carrying 14 hours last semester, a scholastic load with which many who devote full time to it have trouble. The Independence freshman, beside spending more than considerable time keeping into shape for track also works 15 hours per week at the Carruth-0'Leary hall for men Wednesday. Feb. 6, 1957 University Daily Kansas Tidwell seems to lean a little In high_school he ran the 100-yard dash in 9.5 and repeated that performance last fall. toward baseball in his own opinion but his own personal goal is to participate in the 1960 Olympics—if he continues at his present pace there is little doubt that he'll make it. "I'm as fast as I'll get this year," he said. "Right now I need to work on my start." If he does get any better the record book will have to be slightly rewritten. What leads up to a top performance by an athlete? Cannon said that before he jumped he felt as if he could not clear 6-feet. The $6-7\frac{1}{2}$, 165 pound veteran said he had plenty of rest and had been jumping hard in the last two weeks. Right now his main concern is getting more training. After seeing the Vickers-Oilers game last night we can't say we were just thrilled to death at seeing 7-3 Wade Holbrook and 7-0 Don Boldeuck. Holbrook, of course was playing under entirely different circumstances than those under which we have seen Wilt Chamberlain play. Still, Wilt has certain qualities, such as agility, in all the basic basketball maneuvers, that make him appear as a much better all-around player. Holbrook, in one instance almost stumbled over himself in trying to dribble the ball a few steps. Although he rebounded well he didn't seem to be getting those that were just a little out of his immediate reach—the ones we have seen Chamberlain snare time after time. The tall Vickers center only tried to dunk one shot all evening. He far from made it. He tends to shoot from a little farther out than does Chamberlain and late in the game Tuesday night he began to show great offensive strength. Chuck Darling, former Iowa star, used his fine hook shot to good advantage in getting over Holbrook. Holbrook, however, was the top scorer with 27 and Darling scored 18. Insects are man's chief competitor for the food, feed and fibre we produce. There are more than 10,000 species of destructive insects in the United States. New! Old Spice HAIR GROOM TONIC IN UNBREAKABLE PLASTIC! Grooms your hair while it treats your scalp. Controls loose dandruff. 1.00 plus tax SHULTON New York • Toronto New! Old Spice HAIR GROOM TONIC Old Spice HAIR GROOM TONIC COLUMBIA, Mo. — (UP) —Missouri won its seventh straight game from Oklahoma last night, 74-56, by evenly balancing its scoring. The Tigers also took advantage of Oklahoma fouling to open up their winning margin late in the game after the Sooners' four top scorers fouled out. It seems that Coach Frank McGuire's gloomy forecast of "three or four defeats" for his top-ranked North. Carolina basketball was starting to come true. Tigers Down Sooners,74-56 But instead, surviving their biggest scare so far this season, McGuire's Tar Heels rallied last night to beat Maryland, 65-61, in a double overtime game at College Park, Md., to remain today the nation's, only unbeaten major college team with a perfect mark of 17-0. sidelines were Don Schwall, Joe King, Bob Stoermer and Gene Hudson. Lionel Smith led Missouri with 15 points. Sonny Siebert got 12. Tar Heels Victorious 65-61 Over Terps The victory kept Missouri in fifth place in the Big 7 with a 3-3 mark, and dropped Oklahoma back into a tie for the cellar with Colorado at 1-4 marks. Although Missouri made only 36 of 59 free throw attempts, the four top Sooners fouling out aided considerably in its drive. Going to the Rex Ekwall, 6-4 senior, is Nebraska's basketball captain. Gerard L. (Jerry) Bush, Nebraska's varsity coach is a big man from any angle. He weighs 225, is 6-4, is married and the father of three daughters. He also coaches the Husker golf team. 18 Just around that corner is a new semester ACME sincerely hopes it will.be a successful one for each and every student. Start that semester right with sparkling clean clothes. ACME will be pleased to help you. See what wonders our expert cleaning service can do for your clothes. Call us now for quality service. ACME 1109 Mass. Bachelor Laundry & Dry Cleaners V1 3-5155 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Feb. 6, 1957 Student Financial Problems, Love, Posed To KU Pastors It may be surprising to many students to know that there are more than 20 religious advisers for students of KU. These advisers include members of the faculty, local pastors and the dean of the School of Religion, The Rev. Harold G. Barr. "The advisers are kept very busy," said Rev. Barr, "in addition to organizing religious activities and groups for the students, they also help them with any personal problems they might have." "The problems range from financial trouble to love and cover about everything in between," he continued. "Many of the problems are quite serious and some are a little unusual." Love a Problem Five of the advisers are on a full time basis, including Rev. Barr, and the rest are willing to give up their time to help students. The advisers represent most of the religious groups in the country. International Club To Hold Symposium "We can't always solve the student's problems, but it often helps The International Club will elect a vice-president and hold a symposium on "Love" at a meeting at 9 p.m. Friday in the Jayhawk room of the Student Union. Members of the panel will be: Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women; John Patton, professor of religion; Lawrence Bee, professor of home economics and sociology; and Max Dresden, professor of physics. The chairman of the symposium is Ernest Bayles, professor of education. just to have someone to talk to." concluded Rev. Barr.: "It seems that a student feels more able to talk to one of the campus advisers than to their own pastor." Havana U. Offers Study Fellowship American graduate students are eligible to compete for the Father Felix Varela Fellowship which enables them to study at the University of Havana during the 1957-58 academic year. The award covers tuition and nearly all maintenance expenses. The successful applicant must provide for his own travel, plus funds for incidentals and other expenses. Candidates in the fields of philosophy, Spanish and Spanish-American literature, history, education, social sciences, and law are preferred. Closing date for the competition is April 1. All applicants must be US citizens. Other eligibility requirements are: Bachelor's degree from an American college or university of recognized standing; demonstrated academic ability and capacity for independent study; good moral character, personality and adaptability; good knowledge of Spanish and good health. Applications may be secured from the Institute of International Education in New York City or its regional offices in Chicago, Denver, Houston, San Francisco and Washington, D.C. The American Medical Association says only five per cent of us have dreams in technicolor. Pedwin YOUNG IDEAS IN SHOES Pedwin YOUNG IDEAS IN SHOES 9.95 Styled for Styled for the young man of good taste SADDLE OXFORDS Trim looking, smooth fitting in a handsome black and white combination. A popular style, at Pedwin's modest price. m'Coy's SHOES 813 Mass. St. Magazine Lists Coeds To Board Seven University women are among the 650 students who competed with applicants from colleges all over the country to win places on Mademoiselle magazine's national College Board. Students representing KU are Mary Moore, Coffeyville, Jane Pecovinsky, Kansas City, Mo., Virginia Ward, Hays, seniors; Carol Barker, independence, Mo., Marilyn Mermis, Hays, Margaret Tremet, Overland Park, juniors and Donna Stough, Prairie Village sophomore. About 240,000 tons of cucumbers are used each year in the United States to make pickles. The wool of the Angora rabbit is valued for its length, softness, luster and fineness. As College Board members, they will represent the KU campus and report to Mademoiselle on college life. Each board member will complete assignments in either writing, editing, fashion, advertising or art. They will compete for the 20 guest editorships to be awarded by the magazine in May. The guest editors will be brought to New York for four weeks in June to help write, edit and illustrate Mademoiselle's 1957 August College issue. Their transportation will be paid to and from New York and they will receive a regular salary. FEB. 14th For Young Moderns We have a complete selection of Valentines for anyone's favorite guy or doll, Mom, Dad, Sis, or Kid Brother. We know you'll be pleased with our selection. Buy your cards now while our stock is complete. Vickers Gift Shop 1023 Massachusetts (Across from the Granada) A Campus-to-Career Case History THE JOHN R. WILLIAMS BANK OF MICHIGAN Planning for growth. Joe Hunt (left) talks with Jim Robinson (center). District Construction Foreman, and O.D.Frisbie, Supervising Repair Foreman. In Joe's district alone, 600 new telephones are put into service every month. "I'll take a growing company" 70,000 telephones to keep in operation ... $20,000,000 worth of telephone company property to watch over . . . 160 people to supervise - these are some of the salient facts about Joe Hunt's present job with Southwestern Bell. He's a District Plant Superintendent at Tulsa, Oklahoma. "It's a man-sized job,"says Joe, who graduated from Oklahoma A. & M. in 1949 as an E.E."And it's the kind of job I was looking for when I joined the telephone company. "I wanted an engineering career that would lead to management responsibilili ties. Moreover, I wanted that career to be in a growing company, because growth creates real opportunities to get ahead. "But to take advantage of opportunities as they come along, you must have sound training and experience. The telephone company sees that you get plenty of both. Really useful training, and experience that gives you know-how and confidence. Then, when bigger jobs come your way, you're equipped to handle them. "If I had it to do all over again, I'd make the same decision about where to find a career. Now—as then—I'll take a growing company." Joe Hunt is with Southwestern Bell Telephone Company. Interesting career opportunities exist in other Bell Telephone Companies, and in Bell Telephone Laboratories, Western Electric and Sandia Corporation. Your placement officer can give you more information about these companies. PARK SIDE CENTER & MUSEUM BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM rabbit is ness, lus= Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1957 University Daily Kansan Fake 7 CLASSIFIED ADS 25 words or less: one day, $6; three days, 75c; five days, $11.00. Terms: Cash Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All aus must be called or brought to the University Daily Kanten Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. FOR RENT SLEEPING ROOM for girls. Phone VI 3- 5175. 2-6 ROOM FOR BOYS with or without board. Doubles & singles, twin beds, lim- boards, close to campus and bus. Available immediately. Call VI 31-8750. 1138 Miss. 2-7 ROOM-Large, comfortable, for men students, single or double, with twin beds. Linens furnished. Large closet and garage. Call VI 3-6731. 2-8 ROOM next to bath, with TV and linens furnished and breakfast server. Located in private home, a ride to the hallway. Boy or girl single. Ph. VI 3-6184. FURNISHED APARTMENTS 3 and 4 rooms with private bath. Close to cam- sloo so need a couple middle aged older to care for apartment house 3-9792. 2-8 TWO ROOM APARTMENT nicely furnished. Private entrance. Adults. No drinking. Utilities paid. Close to bus and KU. 1017 New, Hampshire. Ph. VI 3-4438. SUNSET HILLS home. Two bedrooms completely furnished with attached garage. Rent reasonable. Phone for appointment. VI 3-8872 or VI 3-4767. 2-8 ROOM well furnished. large single. Light cooking privileges for male student. Very close to campus. Reasonable vi. VI 3-6696. 2-6 ROOM AND BOARD for one student, $50.00 per month. Call VI 3-4385. 2-8 FURNISHED APARTMENT for students. Three rooms plus private bath and kitchen. See at 615 Louisiana or call VI 3-8540. 2-8 ROOMS. friendly home, all privileges. includes kitchen, shower baths and pool. Call or inquire, VI 3-9635. 2-11 EFFICIENCY APARTMENT. Furnished three room. Close to town and bus line. Ph. VI 3-4069. 2-8 ROOM half a block from campus, very large for male student in nice house, telephone and laundry privileges. Reasonable rent. Ph. 3-6095. 2-6 ARE YOU LOOKING for a fine new b bedroom apartment? Yes, it's new. Has new automatic washer, electric range and refrigerator. See above. Also $899 or Available Feb. 15. Phone VI 3-7655 or K.U. No. 402 morn- ings. 2-8 WHY WALK FARTHER, men? We have rooms, single and double, only half rooms. We have four comfortable, reasonably priced. Bed linens laundered. 1218 Miss. Ph. VI - 3-869. 2-8 We rent nationwide trailers any size, anywhere, anytime CROFT TRAILER RENTAL CO. East 23rd VI 3-7377 ROOM for 2 or 3 books, extra large, clean, quiet. Linens furnished. Close to KU. Phone VI 3-2961 or see 1022 Ala- bama. 2-11 BE INDEPENDENT. Live close to the campus. Room and board $45.00 per month. Board $35.00 per month. Ph. Book $17.50/week. 327-8025 for Tupi, Arlan, or Jack. 2-13 ROOMS for boys. Tired of walking up the hill? Have two rooms half block from the union. Immediate possession. Ph. VI 3-5776. tf MEN, study in peace in your own room. single or double, next to bath. Linens armished. Near Campus and bus. Plen- lary parking space. 1701 Ohio. Phi- 1-5908. 2-12 QUIET one-man basement room with bath. I block from campus, outside entrance. very nice. $25.00 a month. Call VI 3-5291. 2-8 NICE CLEAN ROOM for 1 or 2 men, 821 Indiana. Phone VI 3-4168. 2-12 TYPIST, experienced in theses, term papers, reports. Fast and accurate, student rates. Mrs. Betty Veqstul. 1935 Barker Ave. Phone VI 3-2001. tf TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka 1191 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's' and women's' clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6657, 1106 La. tf BUSINESS SERVICES EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf FREE TUTORING IN ENGLISH. Review of grammar, sentence structure, outlines, paragraphs, and theme structure. Ph. VI 3-7401. FOR SALE LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete tufts on backs. Suffolk we have alligators, fish, turtles, chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. ELECTRONIC INSTRUMENTS. 200D precise 7 inch Oscilloscope, new, very reasonably priced. Phone VI 3-4728—or see at 1636 New Hampshire. 2-7 BOOKS For gifts and for your own library, Art, Architecture, Cook Books, Childrens Books, Modern Library. Library. THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 SLIDE RULE. Post Versalog with leather case and instruction book. Bought it new and it's like new. Also biology dissecting klt. Ph. VI 3-5239. 2-8 BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper, bag bags. Picnic, party supplies Ice pail, 6th and Vermont. Phone 7-3-0350. WATCH FOR... TIME, LIFE & Sports Illustrated magazines. Special students' prices of 1/2 reg. sub. rate. Prompt service, buy now pay later, call VI 3-0124. tf REFRIGERATOR. Servel, apartment size, good condition. Call VI 3-3358. 2-6 GRAND OPENING the - Fresh Live Maine Lobster Of The LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY WANTED USED PHYSICAL GELOGY TEXT. No. 1-38411 H. D Humphrey P. 2-7 3-48411 Junction Hiway 10 and 59 on Iowa St. - Charcoal Broiled Steaks FOR LEASE - Italian Dishes Holiday Inn Hotel Featuring---for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students Holiday Inn Restaurant up to $500.00 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. Phone VI 3-8074 for 1 day service THREE ROOM APARTMENT unfurnished, on ground floor. Air conditioned. Ph. VI 3-2662 or VI 3-1277. 2-11 FOUND LADIES WRIST WATCH found on the 17th of January in the rotunda at Strong Hall. Viell Ann Voth, 1443 Alumni Place. Ph. VI 3-8505. 2-8 CLASS RING from Hogan High with Oakland Oaks in Oakland, CA paying for the ad Ph. VI 3-3844. 2-47 LOST ARMY. BLANKET. Was left in Allen Field House after the Iowa State game. Will the finder please call James Fulton. VI 3-1695. 2-12 Parties, Pinnings, Weddings Job Application Photos Gene's Photo Service 2144 Ohio - VI 3-0933 Gene Smoyer NOTICE—Your Avon Representative will call on you by appointment or take orders by telephone. Ph. VI 3-2376. 2-12 RIDE to Topeka Naval Reserve Station Washington, James Lonson Tennessee, VI 3-3268. 2-6 MISCELLANEQUS TRANSPORTATION RIDE. Want in car pool from Topeka 8 to 2 on Tuesday and Thursday and 11 to 4 Monday, Wednesday, Friday. Phone Topeka 5-9059. 2-6 TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. Ask us about Kose Hlesman for the First National Bank for information on careers and reservations. 8th & Mass. Phone VI 3-0152. tf WANTED—Ride from Kansas City Plaza to Lawrence Monday thru / Thursday. Ph. Sol-7480. 2-8 OLD FASHIONED TURKEY DINNER with all the trimmings Thursday Feb. 7 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Community Building. All proceeds to the Assembly of God Fund. Tickets $1.25 each. 2-7 Have your car lubricated the MOTO SWAY WAY At POTTER'S "66" SERVICE 1401 W. 6th VI 3-9891 HERE ARE THE FIRST TWO TIE-BREAKERS IN OLD GOLD'S TANGLE SCHOOLS PUZZLES Remember-first prize is a tour for two around the world, and there are 85 other valuable prizes. IF YOUR answers to the first 24 puzzles conformed to the correct list of answers published at the end of the past semester, you can and must submit answers to eight tie-breaking puzzles, in order to compete for the prizes in the tie. The first two of the eight tie-breakers are published herein, according to rule 2(b) of the official Tangle Schools rules: 2(b) In case more than one person solves correctly the same number of puzzles, the prize tied for and as many subsequent prizes as there are persons tied will be reserved and those so tying will be required to solve a set of tiebreaking puzzles to determine the order in which the reserved prizes will be awarded. Each of the tie-breaking puzzles will contain scrambled letters forming the names of either one, two or three American colleges or universities. Do not mail these tie-breakers now! Save them until you have completed all eight tie-breaking puzzles. Details on when and where to mail the tie-breakers will be published with the eighth puzzle. TIE-BREAKING PUZZLE NO.1 ZZZ N E GB CLUE: A leading experimental college for women, this New England school features workshops as part of the regular social science, literature and performing arts programs. There is a 10-week nonresident term here. ANSWER Name___ Address___ City___ State___ College___ RN TxT SA SA TIE-BREAKING PUZZLE NO. 2 CLUE: This university, located in the Southwest, was originally named AddRan for its two founders. Its present name dates from 1902. One of its divisions is Brite College of the Bible. . ANSWER___ Name___ Address___ City___State___ College___ NO OTHER CIGARETTE CAN MATCH THE TASTE OF TODAY'S OLD GOLD'S Regular, King Size, or Filters, today's Old Golds taste terrific . . . thanks to an exclusive blend of the finest nature-ripened tobacco . . so rich . . . so light . . so golden bright! Old Gold CIGARETTES FILTER KINGS Copyright 1957, Harry H. Hollister Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1957 Speedy Mechanical 'Brain Will Soon Solve Problems The statisticians dream, IBM 650, a high speed computer, is coming to the campus. The University has purchased the computer for research work and as an aid in teaching mathematics, engineering and business courses, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the Chancellor's office, has announced. The machine can compute intricate figures and give tabulated results in a short time. It is used in industry for billing and for preparing complicated payrolls. The computer will fill an entire room 8C Strong Hall, when it arrives from Endicott, N.Y., March 29. When the School of Business has its own building, the machine will be stored there. It is planned to have many small rooms in the building to gather and verify or program information that will be computed in the IBM 650. Contest Open For Writers College students may enter the annual Washington Square Contest, sponsored by the Writing Center of New York University's Division of General Education. It will include competition in short stories, magazine articles and poetry. First prize in each category is $50; second prize, $25; and third prize, autographed books. Rules Are Outlined Short stories entries should be mailed to Dean Bower. Entries in the poetry contest must total at least 100 lines and should be sent to Dean Smith. Writers may submit personal experience articles or general magazine articles of the usual magazine length. Entries should be addressed to Professor Schmidt. All entries should be addressed to Washington Square Writing Center, N. Y. University, 1 Washington Square North, New York, N. Y. Photo Contest DeadlineThursday The deadline for University Daily Kansan picture contest entries has been extended to 5 p.m. Thursday. The winners of the contest will be announced Friday. The contest, which is open to all students, has been extended this month because of final week and enrollment which hampered students in preparing their entries. Those who entered the October, November and December contests are urged to pick up their pictures in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information library. Museum To Play Verdi Work VERDI's "La Forza del Destino" will be the featured selection this week in the Museum of Art's record concert series. The records will be played today and Friday at 11 a.m. and 3 p.m., and on Sunday at 2 p.m. The orchestra and chorus of Radio Italiana will be featured, with Gino Marinuzzi, conductor. Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results. Old Fashioned Turkey Dinner with all the trimmings $1.25 Community Building THURSDAY, FEB. 7 5 p.m.-8 p.m. All proceeds to the Assembly Of God Fund Mrs. Eva Anderson Mrs. Pearl Metsker Mr. Nichols said the machine will be used for all University computing needs. There will be a full time director appointed soon to handle details of installing and operating the machine and running the computation center, he said. Pharmacists Earn Honors Ten students in the School on Pharmacy at the University of Kansas are listed on the dean's fall honor roll. To earn a place on this honor roll, a freshman must have a grade point average of 2.1; a sophomore, 2:2; a junior 2.3, and a senior 2.4. The numerical rating of 2 equals a B. The honor roll: Seniors: John R. Kramer, Ottawa, and Bill J. Price. Anthony. Juniors: Jon B. Holman, Larned; James E. Salyer, Larned; Dan F. Schrepel, Pratt, and Max J. Starns, Cherryvale. Spohomores: Louis S. Colella, Pico. Calif. Freshmen: M, Orlene Crone, Satanta; Raymond E. Davis, Neodesha, and Robert O. Iott, Junction City. Athletic Funds Eyed (Continued from Page 1.) ually as a multi-purpose building. The past two years plans have been made to hold Commencement exercises in the building in case of rain. Karl Kloo, KU bursar said today that he did not understand Docking's statement that the stadium was to have been deeded to the state after bonds which financed it were paid off. "My understanding of the situation is that the University of Kansas Physical Education Corporation which has control over the property had its charter extended some years ago to run until 1975." Klooz said. Max Milbourn, assistant to the president of Kansas State College, said this morning that Ahearn Field House was financed and built in much the same manner as KU's field house. Mr. Milbourn said the field house proper and a connecting building are also used for intramural athletics and house some classrooms. He said the K-State field house has been used frequently as a site for livestock shows and the Little American Royal Show, for several student activities, and for commencement exercises. ROTC units have regularly scheduled days where they may drill before and after the basketball season, Mr. Milbourn said. Gov. Docking said the idea investigate the possibility of looking into the KU athletic program arose after he saw a report that KU had made a profit during the football season last fall. He said it might be a good idea to find out where the money is going. (Related editorial, "Loaded Story Unfair," Page 2.) Hallmark valentines For every age to perfectly express your sentiments. Come in today to shop from our complete selection. Mosser-Wolf Items for the official Bulletin must be brought to the Public Relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to any location. Hanssaas should include name, place, date, and time of function. Official Bulletin Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. Museum of Art Museum, Verdi: "La Faora del Destino." TODAY Looking Toward Marriage Class. 7. prior to Center. First of six weekly petitions KUKK (KU Kamera Klub) 7:30 p.m. Student Union. All persons interested in photography are urged to attend. Probable audience: Snow and night-time photography. KU Presbyterian Women's Supper, 5:30-7:30 p.m. .d.wm. Master's屋外 Quill Club organizational meeting, 7:30 p.m., 305 Student Union. Unsold magazines and money should be turned in. Junior Kappa Alpha Theta alumnae, 7:30 p.m. Home of Mrs. Harry Jordan, 1600 Kentucky. Student Court session. 7 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Student Union. Entomology Club, 4 p.m., 417 Snow Hill on biological control will be shown. Collegiate Council for United Nations assistance board. 4 p.m., office, Student University. Kappa Alpha Theta Alumnae, 7:30 p.m., home of Mrs. Harry Jordon, 1500 World University Service, 4 p.m., 306A School of Union. All representatives be present. Jay James, 5:00 p.m. Parlor A. Student Union. Attendance required. County correspondents' meeting, 4 p.m. Pine Room. Student Union. Jim Bedford. journalism instructor. will speak Der Deutsche Verein triff sich an Donnerstag mit 5 Uhr in 402 Fraser. Es wird deutsche Lieder, Spiele, Erfrischungen, alle alebes. Alle sieher eingeladen. p.m. Methodist Student Center; Topic: "God: Fact or Fiction?" Open discussion KU-Y all-member meeting, 7:30 p.m. jayhawk *Nell*, Belchuck *SUNTRAUP*. Nell, Belchuck *SUNTRAUP* Pre-Nursing Club, 7:30 p.m., 110 Fraser. "What Does the Bible Mean?" Study on Matthew, 9 p.m., Methodist Student Center AIME 7.30 p.m., 402 Lindley. R. E.Olefin, F. S. Cohen, and J. W. Fassett. 'Fantasy Plantation; and Uses of Uranium.' Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. forza del Destino Museum. Verdi: "La forza del Destino" Engineering Group Elects New Officers The American Society of Mechanical Engineers elected Robert L. Parker, Lawrence senior, president in a meeting Tuesday morning. Other officers elected include: Robert L. Love, Springfield, Mo, senior, vice-president; Kenneth W. Miller, Overland Park senior, secretary; and Jay Ochs, Wichita senior, treasurer. Ends Tonite "Baby Doll" VARSITY Open 6:45 - Show at 7:00 It Actually Happened See The Records Of QUEEN COUNTY COURT N.Y. Apr. 21-1953 Indictment No. 271-53 "The Basterester Case" TOMORROW HENRY FONDA·VERA MILES and the city of New York in ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S The Wrong Man STORK CLUB STORK CLUB PRODUCED BY WARNER BOOK ALBUM STORING ANTHONY ALFRED - ARIEL HYFIELD COCOH News—Color Cartoon Tau Sigma, modern dance fraternity, the intermediate modern dance class and the dance theory class will perform for the Music Tau Sigma To Perform Best Library To Win $100 If your private library is a good one you may win $100. This amount is provided by Mr. and Mrs. James W. Taylor of Kansas City, Mo., and will be known as the Taylor Student book collection contest. Contest judges will put little emphasis on the age, rarity or monetary value of the collection. They will be judged on quality and the insight with which the books have been gathered for the collector's purposes. The winning collection may be a group of cheap paper bound books, a collection of working references or one author's works. Contest rules will be announced later in the semester. Psychology Group To Meet Tonight The Psychology Colloquium will meet at 8:00 p.m. tonight in the Pine Room of the Student Union. Dr. Eugene Gollin, assistant professor of Child Welfare at the Institute of Child Welfare at the University of Minnesota will be the principal speaker. He will speak on "Individual Differences in Perception and Cognition." The meeting is open to anyone interested. Valentine Party For Students' Wives A get-acquainted valentine party for students' wives will be held at 8 p.m. Monday, Feb. 11, in the Spooner Hall lounge, 14th and Jayhawk Blvd. Refreshments will be served. Mr. Julius Driscoll of the Driscoll Beauty Shop will speak and demonstrate hair styling. Motorists paid $7.3 billion in special vehicular taxes in 1955. walk easy Hand-Sewn Genuine Moccasin in WEYENBERG Black or Tan Casuals Let your feet "LOAF" their way through the day! Casuals Haynes & Keene 819 Mass. Open Thurs. 9:30-8:30 p.m. Guild of the University of Kansas Medical Center at Kansas City Friday evening. The group of 20 students is taught and sponsored by Miss Shirley Hughes, instructor in physical education. Miss Hughes will lecture on modern dance and the classes will give demonstrations of the basic parts of the dance. They will illustrate such things as locomotion, the floor pattern and the class exercise routine. The scene of the last stage coen robbery in the old Northwest is the old stage road to Lake Gogebic in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. It took place in 1889. Heart Of America PREMIERE SHOWING **WARNERCOLOR** A JACQUERY PRESENTED BY WARNER BROS. ALAN VIRGINIA EDMOND LADD·MAYO·O'BRIEN THE BIG LAND WARNERCOLOR Open 6:45 — Show 7:00 p.m. News-Cartoon-Sports TODAY Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW PARK HOME CUSSION CHAIRS A remarkable likeness! A remarkable performance! VINCENT VAN GOGH M-G-M presents the fiery, fascinating story of the sensualist artist Vincent Van Gogh! KIRK DOUGLAS as Vincent Van Goeh Ji Ba Fo KIRK DOUGLAS in LUST FOR LIFE From M-G-M in MetroColar and CinemaScope Co-Starring ANTRONY QUINN Don ann urd wee term We and and NOW Mat. Thursday 2 p.m. Shows 7-9 GRANADA T hel bal puh V cor ma cat no wa the fin Qu rac C Daily hansan 54th Year, No. 80 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Thursday, Feb. 7, 1957 Jimmy Dorsey Band Will Play For Greek Week AFTER THE FIRST DANCE (Photo by KU Photo Bureau) The appearance of Jimmy Dorsey and his orchestra at the annual Greek Week dance Saturday, March 9, will climax a week of events involving KU fraternities and sororities. Greek Week officially begins March 3 and is sponsored by Panhellenic and the Inter-fraternity Council. King and Queen The 1957 Greek Week King and Queen will be crowned at the dance. Each sorority and fraternity will nominate a candidate for queen or king. Nominating procedure will be announced later. MUST BE FUN — One segment of the large and colorful cast featured in the current campus revival of George and Ira Gershwin's "Of The I Sing." Taken from the 1931 Pultitzer prize book by George S. Kaufman and Morril Ryskind, the The Inter-fraternity Sing will be held Wednesday, March 6, in the ballroom of the Student Union. The public is invited. Dean George R. Waggoner of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will be guest speaker Thursday, March 7, at the scholarship banquet in the Student Union, honoring fraternity and sorority presidents, honor initiates and IFC or Panhellenic representatives. Two $250 scholarships will be presented to outstanding sophomore fraternity men. Compete in Chariot Races The 1957 fraternity project, the resodding of the intra-mural ftotball and baseball field will be done Saturday, March 9. Chariot races in which fraternities compete with each other in homemade chariotis built to IFC specifications will be held Saturday afternoon. The race will be run as it was last year, with two men pulling the chariot and one riding. The three finalists for Greek Week King and Queen will be announced at the race. The cast has been chosen for the Studio Theatre production, Moliere's "The Doctor in Spite of Himself" Moliere Play Cast Chosen The production, directed by Nat Eek, instructor of speech and drama, will be given Feb. 27 to March 2 in the Student Union Ballroom. Robert Lawson, Lawrence graduate student; Ted Morris, Wichita freshman; Sara Davis, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Barbara Richards, Hays sophomore, and Joan Graham, Almena junior. The cast will include Duke Howze, Kansas City, Kan. senior; Tom Engel, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore; Robert Potter, Kansas City, Kan. freshman; Ned Norris, Salina sophomore; Don Sparlin, Lenexa senior and Jerry Bailey, Humboldt sophomore. Deadline Set For Enrollment Changes KU adaptation has played to sell-out crowds since its opening Monday. There will be no performance tonight. The final performance will be Friday. Students wishing to change courses have to Friday to make the changes, Gilbert Ulmer, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said today. To be admitted to a class in which he is not enrolled, a student must fill out a petition in the college office telling why he desires a change. The dean of the school in which the student is enrolled must approve the change. 150 To Attend Leadership Day More than 150 Kansas high school senior girls will attend the eighth annual High School Leadership Day Feb. 16. The day, sponsored by Associated Women Students, is planned to acquaint next year's freshman women with the possibilities of leadership on a large college campus. Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women, will address the group on "Basic Concepts of Leadership." Techniques of leadership will be discussed by six groups, led by these AWS members; Dona Seacat, Emporia; Wanda Wellier, Oberlin; Doloris Alpert, Paola; Sara Lawrence. Lawrence, juniors, and Eleanor Hawkinson, Hutchinson senior. To Attend Luncheon The high school seniors, members of the senate and house of representatives of the AWS, and two representatives from each women's living group on the campus will attend a luncheon. A panel discussion on activities and organizations at KU. Kala Lou Mays, Great Bend sophomore, is chairman of the Leadership Day steering committee Members are Jean Elson, Paola sophomore; Shirley Stout, Lombard, Ill., junior; Melisande Magers, Mission sophomore; Marietta Meigs, Mission freshman, and Megan Lloyd, Hutchinson junior. The final activity will be a discussion of "KU and You" by nine groups, assisted by KU women students. "The Mad Queen," a Spanish-language film with English titles, will be the feature of the University Film Series program at 7:30 p. m. Friday in Hoch Auditorium. 'The Mad Queen Next Film Feature A film of historical significance it tells the story of Dona Juana, the daughter of Queen Isabel of Spain, who was falsely declared insane by her husband, King Philip. This Class Battles 24 Different Profs Have you ever enrolled in a course that had 24 instructors? Such a course is Economics 99, Financial Institutions. At 2 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday, 55 students listen to men who occupy important positions in the financial community of Kansas tell of problems peculiar to their specific business and how they solve them. The purpose of the course is to fa- familiarize the student with the problems of business administration and the specialized services provided by some of the important non-governmental financial institutions. Problems Emphasized Emphasis is placed on actual problems and methods of administration in addition to a study of the structural characteristics of these institutions. Asked how instructors are chosen, Prof. Pritchard said, "I deal through several sponsoring associations, specifically an education commission or special group. I work with the people in the organization that are responsible for educational work." Prof. Leland J. Pritchard, chairman of the department of economics, was aided by Irvin Youngberg, executive secretary of the KU Endowment Association, in creating and launching this course. Instructor's Contribute Time "Most of the men consider it a privilege and honor to participate in the program," he said. "They contribute time and talent absolutely gratis. Sometimes their expenses are paid by their organizations or associations, but often they offer their talents at considerable personal cost to themselves." "Most of our students are in business administration and are future leaders of these institutions. Part of our training is to take them behind the scenes. But the course is useful to those who will one day be either borrowers or savers, or both." "The class arose from the need for a course that supplied more instruction in the internal and administrative levels of financial organizations. Vulnerable Contacts Made "It might enable the students to choose their vocation and will help them in making valuable contacts. In many cases contact with these institutions has led to summer, and then permanent employment," he said. Instructors Contribute Time Valuable Contacts Made Dr. Pritchard said the lectures are open to the public. Quill Club Elects Magazine Editor Elaine Morrison. Fort Scott junior, was elected as editor of Quill Magazine at a Quill Club meeting Wednesday. She will succeed Beverly Harvey, Wichita senior, who is not enrolled this semester. The club appointed a committee to plan the second semester program Marilyn Rose, Topeka senior; Robert Yaple, St. Joseph, Mo. sophomore; and Gretchen Nordstrom, Overland Park freshman are on the committee. A vice president to succeed David Edwards, Prairie Village graduate student, will be elected at the next meeting. Tickets On Sale For Maltby Dance KU students will dance Saturday night to the music of Richard Malby from 8 p.m. to midnight in the Student Union Ballroom. Mr. Malty with his 16-piece band will play such songs as "Sturdish Mambo," "Theme from The Man with the Golden Arm," "St. Louis Blues Mambo" and other numbers which he has also recorded. Tickets are on sale now in the information booth and may be purchased at the door. Weather Kansas-Generally fair northwest and extreme west today and tonight with fog and drizzle central and east, mostly in forenoon and again tonight. Tomorrow mostly fair west and extreme north with drizzle southeast. A little warmer east today. Little change in temperatures tonight and tomorrow. High today 40s east to 50s west. Low tonight 20s northwest to 30s southeast. Campus Leader Training Council Formally Set Up A Student Leadership Training Council was formally established by the All Student Council Wednesday. The council representatives will be selected at the beginning of each fall term from fifteen campus organizations. The training council, which has been unofficially in operation for over a year, is designed to promote training of future student organizations leaders and to acquaint present leaders with their responsibilities. The council will sponsor a workshop, tentatively set for March, for this purpose. A proposed amendment limiting the number of meetings members might miss before being dropped from the council was sent back to the charter committee for reconsideration. A proposal to issue activity tickets to student wives will be discussed at the next meeting. Feb. 19. The council voted to be host to the Kansas-Missouri regional National Student Assn. conference to be held in April. The conference is concerned with student government training. Two More Feature Wilt Ebony's article stressed Chamberlain's daily routine on the KU campus and pointed out how good-natured the "Stilt" is, both on and off the basketball court. Ebony and Look are the latest magazines to print picture-stories of Wilt Chamberlain. The March 1957 edition of Ebony and the Feb. 19, 1957 edition of Look have been added to the already long list of publications which have featured articles on the KU's cage star. Look devoted its space entirely to Wilt's basketball ability. The pictures are action shots, pointing out Wilt's ability on the court. A 3-sequence shot gives an idea of how he makes the dunk shot by going under the basket and laying the ball back over his head. Quality Of Schools Must Be Upheld A higher education is a necessity in an ever growing competitive field of skilled people, he said. "We cannot compromise the quality of our schools," Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy told the State Chamber of Commerce in Topeka Tuesday. Kansas cannot afford to make second class economic citizens of its University teachers or the best talent will be diverted away from the University, he added. Our Show People Work Quickly! It happened the other night while the "Of Thee 1 Sing" cast was having pictures taken after its performance. Don Farrar, Kansas City, Mo. junior and Jan Chelf, St. Joseph, Mo. freshman, slipped off the stage into the wings between shots. A few moments later they reappeared, a changed couple. It seems that in that short period of time Don proposed, was accepted, and slipped Jan an engagement ring. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Feb. 7, 1957 Faith, Hope And Money What is happening to higher education in Kansas? With higher fees for everyone and higher living costs for University dormitory residents effective next fall, enrollment may suffer because students who would otherwise enroll here may decide to enroll at smaller schools in the state because of more favorable expenses. With a $12.50 fee increase, in-state students can expect to pay a total of $103 each semester starting in September. Out-of-state students will pay a similar increase to their already-high fees. Each of the 1,700 students who live in University dormitories can expect to pay $310 a semester for that privilege, an increase of $17.50. Some may find the "privilege" not worth it, and either move to less expensive quarters, or leave the University altogether. The latter circumstance is regrettable. By comparison, it is usually more expensive to live in select groups (i.e., fraternities, sororites) than in University dormitories. However, barring an increase in select group living costs, the differential between living in a University dormitory and in a fraternity or sorority may be so slight that more and more students may switch from the former to the latter, or else to private quarters. Thus University officials may find it increasingly difficult to keep the dormitories filled. And what will become of the students who now are barely able to attend KU because of a tight budget? Increased costs will probably cause many to drop out entirely. It appears that a higher education in Kansas will eventually be only for a privileged few those who can find the funds. Jerry Dawson Dean Worship Carried Too Far The latest group to make money from James Dean's death are the mystics. A stage show has appeared recently in cities in this area with a feature attraction called "James Dean Returns From The Dead." There is also the usual collection of knife throwers, gorillas, and ghouls to round out the show. This is the ultimate in cheap commercialism and bad taste. It was not enough that Dean's death filled the pockets of movie magazine publishers for months (and still is filling them). It was not enough that his picture has been on the cover of each of these rags at least every other month and that their pages have carried the same old material about him presented in a little different way. It was not enough that all Hollywood helped add impetus to an unhealthy legend for the money that it would return. He must be returned from the dead. There can be only one group with poorer taste than those who try to make money from something like this - that group which pays the money to see it. Dean, of course, should be remembered. He should be remembered as a good young actor who did not get the chance to become a truly great one. His death was unfortunate, but not as unfortunate as the sick, commercial worship cult that followed it. If this is a precedent, let's hope that Dean is the last god in modern American mythology. Jerry Thomas And Behold, It Was Very Good ...Letters .. Editor: I had the dubious pleasure of seeing "Of Thee I Sing" Monday night. The show certainly had its merits, but I feel the completely complimentary review by your critic was unjustified. I would like to ask Mr. Sawyer exactly what his standards are. His criticisms range from one extreme to the other. First he tears a play to pieces and then he is in ecstasy and uses every superlative in the dictionary. I submit that our University Theatre is not this erratic. I enjoy the theater and have attended nearly all the productions this year. I go to the theater with the same hope that I go to Memorial Stadium; with the feeling that someday we'll have a winner. So far this hasn't happened. This is the largest school in Kansas, yet our productions compare poorly with such schools as Emporia State Teachers College and Kansas City University. I have admired Mr. Sawyer's attempts to honestly criticize our plays and I have agreed with him wholeheartedly until his review of "Of Thee I Sing." Surely Mr. Sawyer doesn't condone the absurdity of a director standing in the front row of the balcony waving his arms in time with the music! Or would he excuse this because the director is a frustrated actor? Was the director guilty or worried about another poor showing? Or was he just enjoying himself? And I'm certain Mr. Sawyer couldn't ignore the loud and distracting noises made by the chorus wandering in the aisles. The "talented" vocalists could not be heard and the chorus could not be understood. Has, Mr. Sawyer submitted to the pressures of petty antagonism? Controversial figures must necessarily be socially uncomfortable. But it would be almost criminal if his readers were to lose this valuable yardstick by which they measure their theatergoing. Jerry Haulen Cincinnati, Ohio special student I will look for the text in the image. It appears to be a black and white photo of two people smiling at each other. The person on the left is wearing a light-colored shirt with a dark tie, while the person on the right is wearing a dark jacket with a light collar. In your defense of your reviewer, Ray Wingerson, you are right that it is "just plain silly" to compare professor Hesseltine and journalism student Wingerson. No such comparison is possible, and if you read my letter once more, you will see that I did not attempt any. PORTRAIT OF THE CRITIC- In answer to several letters requesting a look at the Daily Kansan's critic Tom Sawyer, we decided to run this picture of him. He is taking time out for a cup of coffee while writing a review of one of the plays that he enjoyed best. Editor: I merely pointed out that Wingerson's review-like the huge majority of reviews-accepted MacKinlay Kantor's "Andersonville" uncritically. Substantial criticism of the book has been made by historians, and reviewers who know nothing about their subject should consult these authorities before writing. My main intention was not to attack your reviewer but to warn against "Andersonville." Sigurd Rambusch Aarhus, Denmark graduate student Daily Transan University of Kansas student newspaper 1904, daily journal 16, 182 trievery 1908, daily newspaper 16, 182 1376, business office. Member Inland Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press founded by National Advertising Service. 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. service; United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except holidays, and examination periods as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. Telephone Vlking 3-2700 Extension 251. news room Extension 251, news room Extension 278, business office Kent Thomas Managing Editor John Battin, Felecia Ann Fenberg, Bob Lyle, Beth Jean Stanford, Assistant Manager, Jean Banman, City Editor; Nancy Cunningham, Germerman, Assistant City Editors;Hiroshima Shionozaki, Telegraph Editor; Mary Beth Noyes, Delbert Haley, Assistant Telegraph Editors; Dick Brown, Sports Editor; George Anthan, Assistant Sports Editor; Marilyn Mermis, School Editor; Fat Swanson, Assistant Society Editor; John Eaton, Picture Editor. NEWS DEPARTMENT Kent Thomas EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Jerry Dawson ... Editorial Editor Jerry Thomas, Jlm Tice, Associate Editors. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Dole Bowers...Business Manager Fiber flax is processed in the United States only in the Willamette valley of Oregon. The estimated annual production of mushrooms in the United States is 62,000,000 pounds. A It's ... sleek rugged roomy glamorous . . . The 1957 Ford MORGAN – MACK 图 Peacock The New Sensation! CARS LUBRICATED While In Swaying Motion Opens up spring leaves and frees shackles. Opens up spring leaves and frees shackles. Assures perfect lubrication of Knee-Action unit and entire front system. Detects squeaks, ratiles and defects. Insures 100% lubrication. Vehicle Assures perfect lubrication of Knee-Action unit and entire front system. INCREASES THE LIFE OF YOUR CAR — DECREASES REPAIR BILLS MOTO-SWAY LUBRICATION PRACTICALLY UNDER DRIVING CONDITIONS SWAYS SQUEAKS AWAY WE—Full the spring leaves back into their world —we call it "Temporary Re-arching." WE—Put the proper lubricants where the wheels are placed —the place —the highest points of friction. WE-Permit 100% lubrication, apply grease while the car is in motion and while the weight of the body is on the MOTO-SWAY. WE—Spend spring leaves even inside the covers to actually put lubricants between the leaves—not just smear on the outside. WE—Locate those H1D DEN BODY SOUEAKS. we detect imminent nausea. WE—Lubricate and free bearings even in WINTER so snow and water won't hit them — AND FORCE OLD LU- BRICHT OUT and FRESH LUBRI- CANT IN. WE—Lubrinate "Jump-Action" cars. See it all in motion — floating action cars. All in motion — floating action cars. Fi n P€ WE—Make old kids ride like new ones, keen riding like NEW, —WE move it. Pers Navy p.m. t AT NO EXTRA COST The frater are Force also. Col. of mili L. Tov Militia initiate short midsidh Potter's "66" Service The have They hours drill dition courte Plec Calvir Willia Rober Lawre David James M. 1 Walte L. K Kirsel McClu McCu bourn Miller Moore land, Leave Overl 1401 W. 6th - VI 3-9891 Rok Mo; Pugilis F. Robert W. R Roser Schup Smarason, Missie City, Olathe dence Oketc Missi ROT Na Camp Lyon Wich Phoec Henr sophi Ste sopho St. J Army Ca Ch Jean of motional Music 10-12 Mil of st is a tive in a tive in th serve meet Mem First Midshipmen Join Pershing Rifle Ranks ? 400g Pershing Rifle pledges, including 38 Army ROTC cadets and 5 Navy midshipmen, will be initiated in a formal ceremony at 7:30 p.m. today in 306 Student Union. The five Navy midshipmen will be the first to be initiated into the fraternity at the University. Plans are being made to include Air Force cadets in the fraternity, also. Pledges to be initiated are Henry Calvin Asbell, Kansas City, Mo.; William F. Cronin, Kirkwood, Mo.; Robert H. Davis, Leavenworth; Lawrence L. Dieker, Westphalia; David L. Durfeen, Leavenworth; James Harry Gallant, Wichita; Con M. Henderson, Stanberry, Mo.; Walter L. Hocker, Courtland; Alfred L. Kaufman, St. Francis; Jerry B. Kirsch, Leavenworth; George E. McClintock, Topeka; Allen Larry McCue, Moscow; Billy G. Milbourne, Leavenworth; Merle J. Miller, Tulsa, Okla.; James W. Moore, Lawrence; Harlan G. Moreland, Wichita; Robert A. Nebrig, Leavenworth; Gunnard A. Nelson, Overland Park. Col. Ralph J. Hanchin, professor of military science, and Maj. Delbert L. Townsend, associate professor of Military Science, will be honor initiates. Col. Hanchin will give a short talk welcoming the cadets and midshipmen into the fraternity. The 43 cadets and midshipmen have been pledges since early fall. They have been drilling one to two hours a week, besides their regular drill period and have received additional instruction in military courtesy. Robert J. Nickel, Kansas City, Mo.; John B. Nowlin,洛恩; Joseph Pugliies, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Edward F. Reilly, Leavenworth; Roy E. Roberts, Independence, Mo.; Larry W. Robinson, Peabody; Avrom A. Rosen, Kansas City, Mo.; Don R. Schuyler, Great Bend; James David Smarsh, Wichita; Lawrence J. Sisson, Great Bend; Forest K. Walker, Mission; John E. Wheat, Kansas City, Mo.; Frank A. Williams, Olathe; D. L. Williamson, Independence, Mo.; Gary L. Zarybnicky, Oketo, and Henry James Zoyelle, Mission. All are freshmen in Army ROTC. Stephen C. Jenkins, Topica sophomore, and Thomas J. Kennedy, St. Joseph, Mo., sophomore, both in Army ROTC. Navy midshipmen are Ariott B. Camp, Shawnee; Ralph L. Chappell, Lyons; Kenneth M. Kreutziger, Wichita, and James M. McKean, Phoenix, Ariz. All are freshmen Henry C. Jeffries, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore. Jeanette Cass, associate professor of music theory, will attend the National Biennial Convention of the Music Teachers National Assn. Feb. 10-13 in Chicago. Cass To Attend Chicago Meeting Miss Cass is national adviser of student affairs in the MTNA and is a member of its national executive committee. She will take part in a discussion Feb. 12 on a cooperative plan for student membership in the MTNA. On Feb. 13 she will serve as chairman of a sectional meeting on the subject, "Student Membership in the Private Studios." Art Of Aztecs On Exhibit The Museum of Art has organized an exhibition, "Art of the Aztec Empire," dealing with those cultures under the rule of the Aztecs, the Mexican culture conquered by Cortez in the 16th century. The works, ranging from the pre-Christian era to the 16th century, are loans from institutions in New York, California, Oregon, etc. Also included in the exhibit are several gifts to the museum, given by Mr. Charles Collingwood of New York. An illustrated catalogue of the exhibition, on display in the basement of the museum until March 31, is available. The University Museum of Art has received a drawing by the English artist-poet William Blake which is a part of a collection of drawings, prints and books by Blake, left to KU by the late Sylvester A. Long of Wichita. The drawing, a pencil sketch, is of "Corinna, the Theban," one of the so-called "Visionary Heads." Blake is said to have done these drawings from visions in which famous personalities of the past appeared. He drew their portarits as he saw them. 'Vision' Drawing Is Museum Exhibit Organ Concert To Be Given Sunday The Blake drawing is being displayed in the main gallery of the museum with other recent gifts and acquisitions. Page 3 An organ concert will be presented by Guy Criss Simpson, associate professor of organ and theory, at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium. "Concerto No. 5" by Telemann will be the first selection. Mr. Simpson will also play "Soeur Monique" by Couperin". Variations on a Chorale by Walther, "Chorale Prelude", "Come Savior of the Gentiles" and "Prelude and Fugue in G" by Bach; "Chorale in B Minor" by Franck; "Scherzo-Fugue on B-A-C-H" by Schumann; "Pavane" from Rhythmic Suite by Elmore; "Berceuse" from Suite Britonne by Dupure and "Finale" from Second Symphony by E. S. Barnes. New K-Club officers have been elected. They are Wally Strauch, Elmhurst, Ill., president; Ron Wiley, Kansas City, Kan., vice-president; Jonn Cieland, Topeka, secretary, and Jerry McNeal, Wavzata, Minn., treasurer. All are juniors. K-Club Elects New Officers The Pacific, largest of all oceans, was the first to be spanned by commercial aircraft. The historic flight was made by Captain Eddie Musick, first chief pilot of Pan American Airways, in November, 1953. BOWL AT PLADIUM Open bowling weekdays 11 to 6:30; Sat. & Sun. 10 to 12 p.m. Friday night after 9 Pladium Lanes 9th & Mississippi Competition came from all parts of Kansas, along with servicemen from Ft. Riley, Kan. and Ft. Leonard Wood. Mo. Six Army ROTC students have received the medals they won at the eastern Kansas Gallery Championship Matches in Manhattan Jan. 12 and 13. Tompkins won 2 first place, 4 second place and 2 third place medals, and Keith won first and third place medals. Conrad placed first in one match and Riekenberg placed third in one match. Tompkins was classified expert; Conrad, Riekenberg, and Strong, sharpshooters, and Keith and Williams, marksmen. Cadets who participated in the shooting match were: Middleton Tompkins, Long Beach, Cal., freshman; Omar G. Conrad, Overland Park junior; Warren G. Riekenberg, Topeka junior; Ronald D. Strong, Abilene freshman; Gene R. Keith, Morland freshman, and Frank A. Williams, Olathe freshman. Medals are now on display on the top floor of the Military Science building. AROTC Shooters Win Medals Student To Tell KU-Y Of World Tour John Irby Hughes, Lawrence senior, will speak on his trip around the world at the all member meeting of the KU-Y at 7:30 p.m. today. The Last Lecture series speech to be given by Frank C. Nelick, assistant professor of English, has been postponed to a later date. Five classes of wheat are grown in the United States: hard red spring, soft red winter, hard red winter, durum and white. The Disc Den Records for your Valentine-Kay Braden, Hutchinson senior, and Jack Mull, Lawrence senior, look at Bill Doggett's album, "As You Desire Me" at the Disc Den. Select your valentine's favorite records and albums from the large collection at the Disc Den in Rowlands Book Store. (Paid Adv.) Use the Kansan Classified Want Ad Section to Get Best Results. SALE! SALE! NOW IN PROGRESS 25% OFF All Merchandise Tremendous Savings On Selective Merchandise At your service • Charlie Hoag • Rich Young • Jerry Cox Open 10 a.m. til 8 p.m. College Shop 1342 Ohio I'll bet you can do it. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Feb. 7, 1957 98 Practice Teaching Ninety-six seniors and two special students in the School of Education have taken positions as student teachers for the third quarter in Kansas elementary and secondary schools. They are Willis Armstrong, Atchison, Jane Ausherman, Kansas City, Kan, Alice Barling, Kansas City, Mo. Carolyn Beal, Fredonia, Carole Bird, Stafford, Virginia Blevins, Troy, Arlone Brown, Salina, Barbara Butler, Centralia, Shirley Carson, Emporia, Vaden Gene Child, Concordia, Phyllis Clark, Kansas City, Mc. Donald Clement and Carol Jane Clifton, Lawrence. Edra Lee Hanson, Concordia, Janie Harris, Lawrence, Howard Wayne Hays, Miami, Okla., Mignon Hirsch, Goodland, Judy Howard, Salina, Jan Howell, Macksville, Janice Iamo, Topeka, Myrna Jones, Kansas City, Mo., Mary Kearns, Wichita, Kaflehn Keck, Shawnee, Barbara Keeler, Lawrence, Sue Kirby, Wakefield, Donald Lamb, Leon Richard Laptad and Denis Lardner, Lawrence, Lois McClure, Wichita, Linda McDowell, Hays, Zoanne Mariner, Topeka, Joan McMillan, Stafford, Laurel Marshall, Onaga, Janet Martin, Larned. Ann Conrad, Garden City, Helen Cowen, Merriam, Joni Cramer and Barbara Cranor, Independence, Kan., Mary Sue Croker, Lawrence, Jane Crosby, Hutchinson, Judy Davis, Wellington, Janice Dawson, Topeka, Marilyn Donovan, Gardner, Lorne Dudley, St. Joseph, Norma Eddy, Wamego, Margaret Finney, Wichita, Sadly Foulks, Wellington, Larry Frisbie, Zenith, Sylvia Frost, Kansas City, Mo. Billie Charlene May, Mante, Roberta Mellinger, Milford, Jan Mietzner, Kansas City, Kan, Joan Miller, Gilard, Ruth Moberly, Lawrence, Patricia Mockler, Kansas City, Kan, Patricia Moon, Lawrence, Loren Martin, Overbrook, Carla Neuer, Mission, Clinton Noid, Milwaukee, Nancy Nixon, Concordia, Joan Payne, Kansas City, Kan, Edwin Petrik, Caldwell, Marilyn Priboth, Wichita, Rose Ratcliff, Atwood, Leila Ratzlaff, Rose Hill, Glennna Richards, Kansas City, Mo, Leland Roberts, Kansas City, Kan, Veda Rogers, Winchester, Joan Rosenwald, Topeka, Bobbion Robinson, Lawrence Margaret Salanski, Lawrence, Evalyn Scamell, Overland Park, Carol Shaffer, Fairview, Thomas Slakayer, Kansas City, Mo., Frances Smaley, Ft. Wayne, Ind., Dorothy Sorrels, Kansas City, Kan., Ann Straub, Lake Charles, La., Shirley Tawney, Kansas City, Kan., David Tams, Mission, Kenya Torrance, Kansas City, Kan., Richard Tucker, Stafford, Mary Waddell, Junction City, Barbara Wagner, Salina, Linda Wagoner, Louisville, Ky. Mary Jean Walterscheid, Coffeyville, Beverly Warner, Kansas City, 8th County Clerk School To Meet The eight annual County Clerk School will be held Feb. 12 and 13 at the University of Kansas. Seventy-five county clerks from Kansas are expected to attend. Speakers for the program will be George Yandell, office of the State Auditor, Topeka; Walter Kaufman, city clerk, Anthony; Kyle Trueblood, county superintendent of schools, Sumner county; Clay Hedrick, county clerk, Harvey County, and Elvin Kimsey, tax agent for the Santa Fe Railroad tax department, Topeka. Henkle To Address Democrats La. Gov. Joseph Henkle will address members of the Douglas County Young Democrats Club at 8 p.m. today in the Flame Room of the Dine-a-Mite. Mr. Henkle will talk about the Kansas State Legislature. A short discussion session will follow. There are more than 2000 varieties of tulips, according to Dutch exerts. Approximately 98 per cent of these spring-blooming flower bulbs come from Holland. You R YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 2025 Mass. VI 3-2966 Mo, Patricia Warnick, Wichita, Patricia Watters, Denver, Gary Westhusin, Plainville, Anne Wiedeman, Kansas City, Mo, Ramona Winters, Kansas City, Kan., Paul K. Worley, Topeka, Maryanna Wuttke, Mound City, Gayle Younger, Platte City, Mo., Richard Young, Salina, H David Zerfas, Ellis, Barbara Bray, Lawrence, and Clyde Gallehugh, Kansas City, Kan. KU-Y Group Does Hospital Volunteer Work Ten students at KU have found a different and rewarding way to spend Sunday afternoons. These students, locally sponsored by the Social Responsibility Commission of the KU-Y, drive to Topeka State Hospital to work as volunteer workers. The KU-Y group is just one of many groups who are participating in the SHARE program at the hospital. SHARE means State Hospital Aid in Recreation and Entertainment, and all who help are voluntary workers. KU students who visit on Sunday are Patricia Snyder, Great Bend senior; Sandra Graber, Hutchinson senior; Mary Sue Dunn, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Marcia Brooke, Edwardsville sophomore; Royalyn Law, Hays junior; Janice Johnson, Ottawa junior; Carolyn McNally, Lamar; Mo, sophomore; Roxie Brown, Ellis junior; Marilee Johnson, Leavenworth senior, and chairman of the group, Harry Stewart, Mission junior. "It is important to go often so that the patients can get to know you and take you into their confidence," said Stewart. In this way you can help them much more, he continued. tients so that they can be more rapidly understood. Before the meetings with the patients, the psychiatrist or occupational therapist at the hospital gives the workers the various backgrounds and problems of the pa- Duties of the worker consist of entertaining the patients, playing cards, or just talking with them. "We like to go ourselves as it gives us a chance to forget ourselves and help others. We can see how lucky we are," he said. The group began their visits with an orientation program in November, and they have gone every week since then. Students attending are not particularly majoring in the social fields. They are just interested, and invite any others who are interested to go with them. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. AVCO MANUFACTURING CORPORATION Crosley Division Foremost in Electronics Offers Engineers Many Advantages! WHEN THE PILOT CAN'T SEE "Volscan" Brings Him Down . . . SAFELY! SURELY! One of the major advances in aviation history is "Volscan". This remarkable electronic device enables the pilot to come in even though he can't see where he is or where he is going. Wouldn't you like to play a part in important achievements such as this? If so, we have openings for engineers in many different categories. Openings at all levels of Research, Advanced Development and Product Engineering in the following fields: Guided Missiles, Air Navigation, Radar Systems, Communications, Gyros, Magnetic Amplifiers, Servos, Computers, UHF, VHF, Printed Circuitry, Circuit Design, Transistor Circuitry, Fire-Control Systems, InfraRed Radiation, Detection Nucleonics, and Human Engineering. ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS SEE OUR BROCHURE "Partnership in Opportunity IN PLACEMENT OFFICE MR. K. H. SHRIVER Will Interview On Campus Thursday, February 14th AVCO AVCO MANUFACTURING CORPORATION Crosley Division 2630 Glendale-Milford Road Evendale, Cincinnati 15, Ohio State, National, International News ults. Rioting Utah Felons Give Up Guns, Hostages POINT*OF THE MOUNTAIN, Utah — (UP) — More than 500 embittered Utah prison inmates ended more than 11 hours of rioting early today by releasing all hostages and surrendering all weapons None of the men who had been held since before 7 o'clock last night appeared to have been harmed. There were preceded by two convicts—armed robbers Billy Randall and Joe Valdez—who turned over to authorities the weapons they had taken from a captured sentry turret. Eighteen men, including seven members of a Mormon church basketball team, came out behind Randall and Valdez. Earlier, 10 other men had been released or made their way to freedom after spending from two to nine hours as hostages. Fires were still burning in the warehouse near the kitchen as the riot ended. The kitchen itself was a shambles. Damage in other parts of the 6-year-old penitentiary was extensive, with few windows left intact. The governor said the "law will take its course" and prisoners causing damage would be dealt with, although there will be no reprisals. Four of the hostages—Dale Peters, Howard Condie, Brant MaeKay and Paul B. Smith said "they treated us royally . . . they just feel that too many 16, 17 and 18 year old kids are being sent to prison and that For Tighter Flight Supervision WASHINGTON—(UP)—House investigators looking into last week's fatal plane crashes in California and New York called today for tighter federal supervision of airline flights. The government within the last 48 hours had already issued a series of new safety regulations governing airline flights and plane tests. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results they don't get a fair shake in the parole pattern. Smith told newsmen that "one guy said he got eight years for just stealing $5." Cnodie said that many of the prisoners wanted racial segregation, particularly between Mexicans and Negroes. Legal Counsel Fees To Be Investigated TOPEKA — (UF) — The Democratic administration will "look into" all fees paid by the state for special counsel, Gov. George Docking said today. But he said no cases of unethical payments had, to his knowledge, come to light as yet. A survey of records revealed today that three major state agencies hiring outside legal counsel had paid out a total of about $163,144 for special legal counsel in the last two years. Who's Got The House? FRANKFURT, Germany—(UF)—Uncle Sam is playing embarrassed host to Russian Army officers in West Germany today. The Russians occupy houses which American occupation forces requisitioned from Germans after World War II. The Germans want their houses back. Truman Iniured In Fall KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UP)—Former President Harry S. Truman received a 2-inch scalp laceration Tuesday when he slipped and fell on an icy sidewalk at his home in Independence. Mo. Soviets Promote 'Spy' Propaganda MOSCOW —(UP)— The Soviet press, radio and television bombarded Russians today with the story of a "secret war" of espionage against the Soviet Union by the United States. Thursday, Feb. 7, 1957 University Daily Kansan Page Observers saw the full-scale publicity campaign as a spy-scene propaganda buildup for pending United Nations debate on Soviet charges of subversion by the United States against Communist countries. The propaganda campaign will continue until the Soviet Union has been completely saturated with the American "spy" reports, observers predicted. U.S., Arabia Near Air Base Agreement LONDON-(UP)—Teen-aged fans who had booed rock 'n roll king Bill Haley because his performance was "too short" battled police outside the Dominion Theater last night in an effort to get a closer look at their idol. WASHINGTON - (UP) - The United States and Saudi Arabia today were reported near twin agreements on a new U.S. lease on the Dhahran air base and American arms for Saudi Arabia. Diplomatic informants, said the only apparent question is whether the agreements will be signed while King Saud is visiting in Washington or later in Saudi Arabia, A report on the air base, arms and other agreements and understandings will be made public on Friday by President Eisenhower and King Saud at the conclusion of their Washington talks. The King is expected to leave Washington Saturday. Rock 'N' Roll King Mobbed In London Thousands of bobby soxers gathered outside the theater to see Haley and his "Comets" leave. When Haley emerged the crowd charged forward but 100 police sent the fans reeling back. 4 Teamster Officials Cited For Contempt Of Congress WASHINGTON — (UP) — The Senate Government Operations Committee voted today to cite four officials of the Teamsters' Union, including its no. 2 man, for contempt of Congress for refusing to testify about altered racketeering. Chairman John L. McChellan (D-Ark) said the vote was unanimous. Israeli Forces Begin Gaza Withdrawal EL ARISH, Sinai Peninsula—(UP) Israeli forces began withdrawing from the Gaza Strip and the Gulf of Aqaba coast earlier this week but moved back on instructions of the Israeli government, it was disclosed today. U. N. observers said the temporary withdrawal came soon after the United Nations General Assembly passed a resolution calling for immediate withdrawal of Israeli troops from Egyptian territory. The troops reoccupied the area when Israel's government announced it was not complying with the U.N. resolution. Only 17 per cent of the nation's motor vehicles are trucks but the trucking industry pays 33 per cent of the vehicular tax levy. He said the citations would be reported to the Senate today for final approval. From the Senate, they would go to the Justice Department for prosecution. The citations were against four teamster officials who refused to answer questions of the investigating subcommittee last month. They also challenged its right to question them even about financial reports which the teamsters, whose 1,400,000 members make it the nation's largest union, filed with the Labor Department. The subcommittee has power to investigate government operations. Daily Newspapers Reach New High NEW YORK — (UP) — The number of daily newspapers sold in the United States each day has reached a record high of more than 57 million. Editor & Publisher reported today. The weekly news magazine for the newspaper business said the number increased by nearly a million copies per day during 1856. Sunday newspaper circulation also set a new record of 47 million. VI 3.4916 Audio House 1011 WESTWATER AVENUE LAWRENCE, KANSAS Having A Dance? Still a few weekends open, hurry and get your order in for our HiFi recorded dance service. Remember, we can supply music to suit the most particular taste. WINSTON TASTES GOOD! LIKE A CIGARETTE SHOULD! WINSTON gives you the break on flavor! Time out for flavor!and what flavor! This filter cigarette tastes rich and full. And its pure, snowy-white filter does the job so well the flavor really comes through. Winston is the filter cigarette you enjoy-that's why it's America's favorite! Winston Winston FILTER·CIGARETTES FINER FILTER FINER FLAVOR Smoke WINSTON...enjoy the snow-white filter in the cork-smooth tip! R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO. WINSTON-BALEM, M. G. Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Feb. 7, 1957 Tankers Beat E-State; Even Season's Record The Kansas Jayhawker swimming team evened their record a 1-1 by trouncing the Emporia State Hornets 60-23 in Robinson pool Wednesday afternoon. Coach Chuck Edwards was very satisfied with the KU squad, as several performers bettered their marks made in the first meet against Oklahoma. "If we can keep on improving like we are, we will win the majority of our meets." Edwards said Two new pool records were established in two events run for the first time in the Jayhawker pool. Clevenger established a record in the butterfly in 2:38.6 and the 400-yard medley relay team of George Kreye, John Drowatzky, Steve Hill and Clevenger set a pool record in 4:44.2. 400-yard medley relay — 1, Kansas (Kreye, Drowatzky, Clevenger, Hill); 2, Emporia State. Time: 4:44.2. New event. New pool and school record.) The next meet for KU is 3 p.m. Friday at Lawrence when they face K-State. Edwards expects this match to be much closer. "K-State has improved a great deal over last year," he said. Droste Milledge, winner of the 220-yard free-style, Frank Fruedenthal, who was tops in the 200-yard backstroke, and swimming coach Edwards were the top performers for the Jayhawkers. All made improvements on their time as compared with the times they made in the first meet. Edwards won the 60 and 100-yard free style events, and Tom Clevenger grabbed two first places for KU, winning the 200-yard backstroke and the 200-yard butterfly. The results: 60-yard freestyle - 1, Edwards, (K); 2, Faerber, (E); 3, Jones, (E). Time: 30.6. 200-yard butterfly — 1, Clevenger, (K); 2, Williams, (E); 3, Wartick. (E). Time: 2:38.6. (New event. New pool and school record.) One-meter diving - 1, Matthews, (K) 177.7 points; 2, Kells, (E); 3, Ashercraft, (K). 100-vard freestyle — 1. Edwards, (K); 2. Faerber, (E); 3. Jones, (E). Time: 55.4. 200-yard backstroke — 1, Freudenthal, (K); 2, McDonald, (E) 3, Kreye, (K). Time 2:44. 440-yard freestyle — 1, Thyfault (E); 2, Peterson, (K); 3, Long, (E) Time: 6:12.3. Split Decision Ruins Sandy CHICAGO—(UP)—A victorious but thoroughly dissatisfied Joey. Giardello today rated Rory Calhoun as the next target on his path toward the middleweight title. "I'll do better against Calhoun than I did in this one," Giardello said after scoring a split decision over Randy Sandy, a 9-2 underdog in a 10-round battle at the Chicago stadium last night. The win was Giardello's seventh straight ring triumph and ended Sandy's string of five. "I was overconfident," Giardello said. "I thought I'd knock him out in two rounds. I thought that for the last couple of weeks, ever since I signed for the match." New England was the site of the first canning operation in the United States. About 1820 a export canning business was opened in Boston. GLASS Auto Glass Tabletops Sudden Service AUTO GLASS CO. East End of 9th Street 200-yard breaststroke — 1, Clevenger, (K); 2, Drowatzky, (K); 3, Post, (E). Time: 2:43.1. 400-yard freestyle relay — 1, Kansas (Edwards, Milledge, Hill, Freudenthal); 2, Emporia State. Time: 4:05.1. Louisville, the Nation's No. 6 team and highest-ranked independent squad, was handed its second straight upset, 85-74, by Morehead State of Kentucky and Caniusis. No.11 nationally, fell short in a late rally and bowed to Marquette in a thriller at Milwaukee. 81-80. Louisville Is Upset For Second Time Morehead used a "two-three" version of the zone against Louisville and forced the high-ranked cardinals to commit a bushel of fouls. It also held six-eight Charley Tyra, Louisville's All-America candidate, to nine points during the first half while Morehead was rolling up a 47-37 lead. Gamma Phi Tips KAT,38-35 Girls' intramural volleyball was highlighted last night by the Gamma Phi Beta and Kappa Alpha Theta game, in which Gamma Phi won 38-35. High scorers in the game were Mary Wade with 18 points for the victors and for the losing team, Judy Jones scored 11 points. Gamma Phi Beta now has won three games and Kappa Alpha Theta two. In another game, Kappa Kappa Gamma triumphed over Alpha Omicron Pi with a score of 53 to 20. Theresa Gainey was high scorer for the Kappas with a total of 16 points. The AOpi team has won one game and lost two, to the three victories and one loss of the Kappa's. The KU Relays record for the 100-yard dash is :09.4 by Cy Leland of Texas Christian. NU Leads League In Shooting Average Nebraska University is hitting a torrid 46 per cent of its shots from the field in Big Seven action despite their having only a 2-2 record. One of the big factors in this percentage is Gary Reimers, junior guard, who is hitting a fantastic 58 per cent of his shots. COLUMBIA CITY (Daily Kansan photo by Jim Sledd) LOOK OUT, HERE I COME — An unidentified Oread player drives in for a layup as his guard at the right, who is moving in to stop him, watches helplessly. A "I MAY PUT ON A GOOD ACT... But your battery will put on the best act for you these cold winter days if you give it a Slow, Full charge at Fritz Co. Never a 'Quickie' Battery Charge!" CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. Phone VI 3-4321 8th and New Hampshire CITIES SERVICE "Downtown - Near Everything" BEST SELLER Exclusive Engagement . . . . Starts Next Wednesday 4-Four-4 Nites Only Feb. 13, 14, 15, 16-Green Theater "Pity Poor Pearl" Featuring - Grand heart throbbing story of a beautiful woman with a wretched background - Glorious true-to-life color with true-to-life actions - Superb music by our newly acquired upright piano - Stupendous cast of thousands? - Gigantic sets. - Gorgeous lighting effects using smokeless kerosene. K KS Only 4 Bits - Tickets at Union Ticket Center 10 Page 7 KU Relays Committee Seeks New Members The Kansas Relays Student Committee, which does much of the administrative work for the KU Relays, will select freshman members within the next few weeks. Interested freshmen must apply before February 11. Applications must be addressed to Martin Hanna, Winfield senior or Bob Elliott, Wichita senior, CoSenior Student Managers of the Relays. Need Written Application Applications must be made in writing in which the applicant presents detailed information relative to experience in student activities. The managers pointed out strongly that the grades of the candidates must be such that they are eligible to participate in student activities. The candidate need not have competed in track but experience in the assisting with athletic events is considered important. Typing skill is not considered imperative, but is helpful. In addition to the written application, personal interviews will be conducted by the committee. These personal interviews are very important and will weigh heavily in the final decision of candidates. Relays Committee Retained The Student Relays Committee is a perpetuating body. Members are retained from year to year provided they meet certain merit requirements. Relays Committee Retained Committee members are Hanna; Elliott; Bill LaRue, Columbus; Edwin Petrik, Caldwell; Jay Dee Ochs, Wichita; Tom Hampton, Salina, seniors. David Lhuillier, Bartlesville, Okla.; Eldon Benson, Gorham; Ray Dean, Kansas City, Mo.; Wayne Rolley, Topeka; Bob Peterson, Fmoriaria; Minter Brown, Topeka, juniors. University Daily Kansan Walter C. Ashcraft, Asbill; John Barrett, Kansas City; Dan Casson, Topeka; David Graves, Kansas City; Stephen Hill, Lawrence; Charles Platz, Hutchinson; Ralph Wright, Paola, sophomores. Wilt Loses Top Scoring Position Five-foot, nine-inch Chet (The Jet) Forte of Columbia has taken the national scoring leadership away from seven-foot Wilt (The Stilt) Chamberlain of Kansas on the strength of a 36-point performance last night against Yale. "Forte's brilliant showing wasn't enough to save his team from an upset, for Yale notched a 103-87 decision to take undisputed possession of second place in the Ivy League. But it did give the little Lion an average of 30.2 points per game, passing the 29.8 mark held by Chamberlain—who has been no. 1 in the national scoring parade almost since the start of the season. The new national scoring leader doesn't come up to Chamberlain's shoulder, but Columbia Coach Lou Rossini compares him to Bill Sharman, former Southern California ace now with the pro Boston Celtics, and says Forte "Can't be stopped if he can see the rim of the basket." Forte's capture of the top scoring spot climaxes a season-long drive to overcome the Stilt's lead and also climaxes a fine personal comeback. He led the Ivy League in scoring in his sophomore year, but missed out last year when difficulties in his tough pre-medical course sidelined him for the last eight games. The United States has won the Olympic games team championship seven times. The Jayhawker track team will run against Pittsburg State College tomorrow night in a meet which could be considered a prep for Monday night's dual in East Lansing, Mich., with Michigan State's powerhouse squad. Trackmen To Host Pitt State Friday Coach Bill Easton will take the wraps off a new sprinter Friday night. He is Mike Cummins, Mt. San Antonia, Calif., graduate who joined the squad at the semester. Although Cummins is mainly a 440 runner he is expected to concentrate on the shorter hauls, such as the 60 and 100-yard dashes, in an effort to make up for the loss of speedster Charlie Tidwell. Tidwell, along with Bob Cannon in the high jump and Ernie Shelly in the broad jump, will be featured in exhibitions. The meet against Pittsburg State Friday night will be different from the usual KU indoor. The 300, 600 and 1000-yard runs will be included on the card because the three events are a part of the Big 10 indoor pattern. The Javhawkers will leave for East Lansing from Kansas City Sunday night for their meeting with the mighty Spartans who are rated at the top of the tough Big 10 Conference. Pittsburg State's Prentice Gudgeon has guided the Gorillas to four consecutive CIC titles. He will bring Mel Coates, conference high hurdles king and Lee Crawford, top 880 runner, to Allen Field House. Meet Spartans Monday Gudgeon, however, says, "We won't be ready. We've been running on grass and even on the street but we are looking forward to the meet and appreciate an opportunity to run on a good indoor layout." The pole vault Friday night will start at 7 p.m., the high jump at 7:30 p.m. and running events will begin at 8 p.m. It was an American naval explorer, Lieut. Charles Wilkes, who in 1840 first recognized that Antarctica probably was a great continent. APhiA Edges Oread 40-38 In Independent A Clash APhiA used Don Peterson's 18 points to eke out a 40-38 decision over Oread in an Independent A basketball game played yesterday in Robinson Annex. APhiA grabbed a 22-20 half-time lead and made that margin stand up for the victory. Tom Russell paced the losers with 15 points. Scrubs 29. Stenhenson 21 Scrubs 29, Stephenson 21 Scrubs posted a 29-21 victory over Stephenson in a low scoring Inde- pendent A game played yesterday. Trailing 17-16 at half-time, the scrubs threw up a rock wall defense in the last two periods to rout Stephenson. Larry Bale with 9 points and Bob McMullen with 8 topped the winner's scoring. Battenfeld 39. Jolliffee 27 Sekan 41, Liahona 36 Sekan used a balanced scoring attack to edge past Liahona 41-36 in another Independent A game played yesterday in Robinson Annex. Sekan rushed to a 25-19 half-time lead and played ball control most of the second half to protect the lead. Dick Devine racked up 11 points to top Sekan scoring. Batteteld 30, Junlee 21 Batteteld moved past Jolliffee 30-27 in a close battle of the two Independent A teams. Batteteld emerged from a bruising first half with a 20-17 lead and maintained it the rest of the way. Gary Shank poured in 12 points for Batteteld and took game scoring honors. Other Results Independent B $\leftarrow$ Foster 42, Basketeers 19; Nu Sig Nu 43, AFROTC 24; Medics 37, Hicks 25; Newman 2, Stephenson 3. Games today Fraternity C — SAE 44, AKL 24; Sig Nu 38, Kappa Sa 19; SIG Psi 32; Sig Nu 18; Phi Gam 23, Delt 21; Phi Gam 2, Delt 0. Independent A — Foster vs. Hookers. 4:15 p. m. Fraternity A — TKE vs, AKL, 5:15 p. m; Mii Delt vs, Sigma Nu, 6:15 p. m; Sigs vs. Phi Gam, 7:15 p. m. Fraternity — AKL vs. Sig Ep. 4:15 p. m. east; AEPI vs. Delt. 4:15 p. m. west; Phi Psi vs. SAE. 5:00 east; Beta vs. Lam Chi. 5:10 west; Phi Gam vs. Sigs. 5:45 p. m. east; Phi Delt vs. SAE. 5:45 p. m. west; Beta vs. ATO. 6:30 p. m. east; Phi Psi vs. Sigs. 6:30 p. m. west. C Of E Blasts Wesleyan 81-68 FMPORIA, Kan., Feb. 7—(UP) College of Emporia led nearly all the way last night to break a four-game losing streak and defeat Kansas Wesleyan, 81-68. Wes Santee holds the KU Relays record for the mile run of 4:03.1. Greece was the first winner of the Olympic games in 1896. L. G. BALFOUR CO. Fraternity Jewelers - Fraternity Badges—Rings—Novelties - Personalized Mugs and Ceramics - Trophies and Awards 411 West 14th Al Lauter Phone VI 3-1571 WATCH YOUR FOOD SAVINGS RISE and SHINE HERE! Every day will seem like a warm spring day when you start counting your savings at Rusty's or Cole's. This bleak weather may sometimes seem disheartening but the values we offer can make Free Parking even a blustery, snowy, winter day seem like spring. Rusty's or Cole's is just the place for young married students to stretch that monthly budget. Come see us often and we'll help you save. . Open Evenings and Sundays FREEDAILYCASHJACKPOT RUSTY'S Food Center 23rd & Louisiana IGA Food Center 2nd & Lincoln COLE'S Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Feb. 7, 1957 A Fresh New Sound... RICHARD MALTBY and his orchestra Featuring such famous 'RCA VIK' recordings as "The Man With the Golden Arm" "St. Louis Blues Mambo" "Theme From War & Peace" "Strictly Instrumental" "Heart of Paris" "Begin the Beguine March" A danceable brand of subtle swing at the NIGHTCLUB PARTY Student Union - February 9-8-12 $2.50 per couple Sponsored by SUA and Men's Scholarship Hall Council Page 9 MARIA G. BAKER TROY KENNETH WEBB GAYLE BARRY SUSAN TYLER MARTHA G. HUNTINGTON Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Barry of Kansas City, Kan., announce the engagement of their daughter, Gayle, to Jere A. Matchett, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Matchett of Topeka. CARROLL BEAR Three Announce Engagements Miss Barry is a sophomore in the College and a resident of Watkins Hall. Mr. Matchett is a graduate of the University. The wedding will take place June 16, in Danforth Chapel. Mr. and Mrs. Jack L. Bear of Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Carroll, to R. L. Brown III son of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Brown, Jr., of Kansas City, Kan. Greek Houses List New Pledges Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Tyler of Sabetha, announce the engagement of their daughter, Susan, to Albert Roberts, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Roberts of Sabetha. Miss Beer is a sophomore in the College and a member of Alpha Delta Pi sorority. Mr. Brown is a graduate of the University and a member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. Miss Tyler is a sophomore in the College and a member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority. Mr. Roberts is a graduate of the University and a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity. Phi Kappa Psi Phi Kappa Psi fraternity announces the pledging of Harold Archer, Olathe, Brian Bogass, Kansas City, Mo., and John Book, Mission. All are freshmen. Delta Gamma sorority announces the pediding of Susan House, Mission sophomore and Judith Ann Hood, Rochester. N. Y., sophomore. Delta Gamma Thursday, Feb. 7, 1957 University Dally Kansan Delta Delta Delta Delta Delta Delta sorority announces the pledging of Kay Rodrick, Independence sophomore. Gamma Phi Beta announces the pledging of Barbara Wilson, Wilmington, Del., sophomore. Gamma Phi Beta Four Pinnings Announced Gamma Phi Beta sorority announces the pinning of Sally Wyman, Coffeyville junior, to Peter Whitenight, Lawrence sophomore and a member of Sigma Chi fraternity. Wyman-Whitenight *** Mahan-Mackey Gerritude Sellard's Pearson Hall announces the pinning of Karen Mahan, freshman, to Earl Mackey, both of Cape Girardeau, Mo. Garver-Remsberg Gamma Phi Beta sorority annuores the pinning of Sandy Garver, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, to Jim. Remsberg, Iola senior and a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity. The pinning was announced by CURIOUS? About interesting and challenging opportunities in all phases of Petroleum and Chemical Research and Engineering? and ENGINEERS Standard Oil Company (Ind.) Has openings at all degree levels for CHEMISTS Chemical Mechanical Electrical Civil Metallurgical E. W. Adams and G. W. Larson of our Research and Engineering Technical Staff will visit your campus to answer your questions. Arrange for an interview on Thursday, February 14th At your placement office Dixie Heckerman and Ann Brenneisen, Kansas City, Kan., sophomores and Sandra Falkenstien, Lawrence junior. Golden-Cooper Delta Gamma sorority announces the pinning of Bonny Golden, Kansas City, Mo., junior, to Van Cooper, Berwyn, Ill., junior and a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraterni- Sorarity To. Give Scholarship Delta Delta Delta sorority is offering a general scholarship to any well-qualified woman student at KU. The scholarship will not exceed $200. Applications are available at the Dean of Women's office and must be turned in by Feb. 20. The scholarships will be given to the winners at the beginning of the term for which the awards are granted. Scholarships may be used for the 1957 summer session. TICKETS AND RESERVATIONS FIRST NATIONAL BANK Blaze The First National Bank of Lawrence TRAVEL AGENCY Miss Rose Gieseman, Manager 8th and Mass. Telephone VI 3-0152 - Airlines—Domestic-Foreign - Steamships • Cruises • Escorted Tours.
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Operation Pronounced Successful— Operation Pronounced Successful— —so one more patient passes the final check-up at Leonard's auto hospital-ready to perform for a whole semester. If you want faithful performance from your favorite vehicle after a hard five months of straining up 14th street hill, careening around the Chi O fountain and ducking campus cops—you'll want to enlist the services of the Leonard "physicians" and just see how their professional, personalized techniques raise the morale, perk up the spirits and send back your auto - revitalized and purring like a kitten. LEONARD STANDARD SERVICE 706 W. 9th VI 3-9830 --- Page 10 University Dajly Kansan HAVE A GOOD DAY University Carillonneur- Arranges Own Music Playing the Sunday carillon concerts represents just a small part of the actual work of Ronald Barnes, University carillonneur and music theory instructor, here. Barnes not only plays the carillon, but he must first rearrange all the music he uses. Since there are about 100 carillons in North America and about 300 in the world, carillon music cannot be bought, Mr. Barnes said. A set of music for one carillon must be changed to accommodate the different sizes of keyboards on other carillons. Music Like Piano Music arranged by Mr. Barnes is similar in appearance to piano music. The hands on the keyboard are used to play the treble clef and the bass clef is played by the feet on the pedals below the keyboard. To practice his Sunday concerts, a separate keyboard with the same structure as the carillon keyboard has been devised, which causes small metal bars to produce tones. The keyboard is in Mr. Barnes' office about halfway up the tower. "My favorite practice time is Sunday mornings before the concert," Mr. Barnes said. During this early practice, he picks his concert and plans the sequence of the day's selections. Large Repertoire Because of many requests, here and elsewhere, he must keep a large working repertoire. Often, for concerts elsewhere, he must arrange his music to fit the keyboard after he arrives. VARSITY MIDNITE SHOW SATURDAY Open 11:00 - Show 11:30 THE BIG BEAT! BILL HALEY AND HIS COMETS Don't Knock The Rock co-starring ALAN DALE ALAN FREED A COLUMBA PICTURE — Plus — REBELS WITH PLENTY OF CAUSES RUMIBLE ON THE DOCKS Teen-age gang war? Introducing JAMES DARREN A CLOWER PRODUCTION • A COLUMNA PICTURE THE BIG BEAT! BILL HALEY AND HIS COMETS Don't Knock The Rock co-starring ALAN DALE ALAN FREED A COLUMBIA PICTURE REBELS WITH PLENTY OF CAUSE! RUMIBLE ON THE DOCKS Teen-age gang war! Introducing JAMES DARREN A CLOVER PRODUCTION • A COLUMBIA PICTURE He began playing the carillon as an occupation when he was the organist in high school at the Plymouth Congregational Church in Lincoln, Neb. He was asked to play the carillon along with organ duties at the church. As he became more interested, he abandoned his organ studies. Mr. Barnes graduated from the University of Nebraska and received a M.A. degree at Stanford. While at Stanford, he was campus carillonneur. In 1948, he studied with the carillonneur of the Dominion Carillon in Parliament in Ottawa, Canada. After studying in Canada, he came here and began to teach the instrument. He now has one student. Linen is a textile of great antiquity, and some that was manufactured 10,000 years ago has been found in Switzerland. Official Bulletin Items for the official Bulletin must be brought to the Public Relations office, 222-A Strang, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin in bulk. Kindly, Kansas State should include name, place, date, and time of function. World University Service, 4 p.m., 306A Student Union. All representatives be present. TODAY VARSITY Open 6:45 - Show at 7:00 NOW WARNER BROS. PRESENT HENRY FONDA VERA MILES in ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S The Wrong Man New Baring Authority district Directed by ALFRED HITCHCOCK Feature at 7:15 - 9:15 News - Bugs Bunny Cartoon County correspondents' meeting, a pina- pine Room, Student Union, Jim Bedford, journalism instructor, will speak. "What is Real in Religion?" Series. 4 What is Ideal inkligion? Methodist Student Center, Topic: *God and the Science of Discussion* Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag um 5 Uhr in 402 Fraser. Es wird deutsche Lieder, Spiele, Erfrisch- und Spaß im Geben gebes. Alle sind hertzlich einladen. KU-Y all-member meeting, 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk房, Student Union. Speak- Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW PARK BOOK CUSHIONED CHAIRS Open 6:45 - Show at 7:00 Thur. - Fri. Adults Only ELIA KAZAN'S production of TENNESSEE WILLIAMS' boldest story! baby doll FROM WARNER BROS. STARRING KARL MALDEN · CARROLL BAKER ELI WALLACH Story and Screen Play by TENNESSEE WILLIAMS · ELIA KAZAN Feat. at 7:15—9:20 **AIME** 7:30 p.m. 402 Lindley, R. E Owen 7:45 p.m. 402 Lindley, R. E Plant "Production and Uses of Uranium." Comfort! Convenience! JAXHAYER NEW Parkway CUSHIONED CHAIRS Pre-Nursing Club, 7:30 p.m., 110 Fraser. FRIDAY Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. Museum of Art Museum. Verdi: "La Forza del Destino." International Club presents a symposium on love in public. U.S.-American relationships SUNDAY Museum of Art record 'concert', 2 p.m. Art Museum. Donitzett; Pon Pasquale. Christopher's gallery, 330 - p.m. R.L.D.S. Church. Genesis of the New Semester. Food, sing, and fringe chat. Graduate Club meeting 8 p.m. Student- students invited. Refreshments. students invited. Refreshments. Museum of Art record concert, 2 p.m. Museum for Art (ttt) 9:10 a.m. for Free Phi Delta Kapra annual coffee, 3:30-4:45, faculty and education students. Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. and 3 p.m., Art Museum. Dontizetti "Don Tizetti" K. U. Dames Get-Acquainted Valentine's party, 8 p.m., Spooner Art Musuem, 567 W. 29th St., Memphis; Speaker: Mr. Julius Driscoll. I give demonstrations on hair styling. It would take American housewives 484,517,833 hours to can the same amount of corn that the canning industry puts up each year. There are seven national forests in New Mexico, covering more than 13,000 square miles. Coffee Service Proves Popular With Students M-G-M presents the fiery, fascinating story of the sensualist artist Vincent Van Gogh! A remarkable likeness! A remarkable performance! A survey of a number of students taking advantage of the coffee and doughnuts provided by the Student Union in the basements of Marvin and Strong halles every morning from 9:30 to 10:15 disclosed the wide popularity of the new service. The $100 Don Carlos Guffey Prize will be awarded to a student in the School of Medicine for the best paper written about the history of medicine. Medical Essay To Win $100 The catering service for faculty A second prize of $50 will be offered for the next best paper, and a 2-volume set of "A History of Medicine" by Major will be awarded for third prize. P. S. MURPHY The papers must be submitted before Sunday, Mar. 31 to the University Medical Center Library, Kansas City, Kan. Applicants may get additional information in the school office. VINCENT VAN GOGH Student Court Gets New Chief Justice P Kenneth I. Fligg Jr., Kansas City, Mo., third-year law student, has been appointed Chief Justice of the Student Court. He replaces Walter B. Ash, Wichita, third-year law student, whose term of office had expired. The Student Court handed down decision Wednesday on five appealed traffic violations. Ten violations lost by default. The Student Court will be in session again March 13. KIRK DOUGLAS as Vincent Van Gogh KIRK DOUGLAS in LUST FOR LIFE From M-G-M in MetroColor and CinemaScope Co-Starring ANTHONY QUINN One pound of peanut butter contains more calories, protein, minerals and vitamins than a pound of beefsteak. NOW Ends Saturday Mat. Saturday 2 p.m. GRANADA and students' unable to get to the Student Union for mid-morning breaks was begun after Christmas vacation. The coffee is prepared in the Student Union and the doughnuts, made in a new automatic machine, are pre-packaged. Probably the reason for the success of the service is the time it saves. Instead of going to the Union where they might waste a whole morning, students can take a break in half the time. Drying is the oldest form of fruit preservation. Happy Birthday GIFTS For Your Valentine! Poetry, Art, Cartoons Humor, Children's Books Architecture Complete Modern Library THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 Z It's Just Like Finding Money Big Bulova Trade-In Sale Your old watch is worth big money in trade toward a new 1957 Bulova! Never mind its age, make or condition! We'll take it...and give you the biggest trade-in allowance in town! Come in today! Offer limited! 18 Kt. Gold FIRST LADY 23 jewels, 18 kt. gold, timed to six precision adjustments, unbreakable mainspring. $5950 (Available in white or yellow 18 kt. gold) All prices incl. Fed. Tax PRESIDENT new miracle of THIN THIN watert design 17 jewels, unbreakable mainspring, shock resistant. $4950 (also available with charcoal dial) Big BULOVA Trade-In Sale 25 word EASIEST CREDIT TERMS! ROOM board. ens lau Availen 1138 M ROOM furnish in priv mornin 6184. ROOM student beds. I garage. Take Up To A Year To Pay W TWO nished. drinkin KU. 10 No Interest Or Carrying Charge SUNSH comple garage pointm olfson's FURNI Three kitche! VI 3-8 FURN rooms pus. A older 3-9792 HERE YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD" BE IN campu month dale 7025. ROOM include Call c 743 Mass. Have P07 VI 3-4366 Thursday, Feb. 7, 1957 University Daily Kansen CLASSIFIED ADS Page 11 25 words or less: one day, 30c; three days, 78c; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. FOR RENT ROOM FOR BOYS with or without board. Doubles & singles, twin beds, linens, undersed, close to campus and bus. Instruct immediately. Call VI 317-1138 Mlse 3-27 ROOM- Large, comfortable, for men students, single or double, with twin beds. Linens furnished. Large closet and garage. Call VI 3-6731. 2-8 ROOM next to bath, with TV and linens furnished and breakfast served. Located private home, a ride to the hill every morning. Boy or girl single. Ph. W. 6184. 2-8 TWO ROOM APARTMENT nicely furnished. Private entrance. Adults. No drinking. Utilities paid. Close to bus and KU. 1017 New Hampshire. Ph. VI 3-4638. SUNSET HILLS home. Two bedrooms completely furnished with attached garage. Rent reasonable. Phone for appointment. VI 3-8812 or VI 3-4767. 2-8 FURNISHED APARTMENT for students. Three rooms plus private bath and kitchen. See at 615 Louisiana or call VI 3-8540. 2-8 FURNISHED APARTMENTS 3 and 4 rooms with private bath. Close to cam- also need a couple middle aged or older to care for apartment house. 3-9792 2-8 BE INDEPENDENT Live close to the campus. Room and board $45.00 per month. Co-own $137.00 Text on phone. Ph. Y 3-2025 Asks for, Jonn. Arian, or Jack. J-2. Have your car lubricated the MOTO SWAY WAY At POTTER'S "66" SERVICE 1401 W.6th VI 3-9891 BIRD TV-Radio Service 𐓫 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS ROOM AND BOARD for one student. $50.00 per month. Call VI 3-4385. 2-8 ARE YOU LOOKING for a fine new two bedroom apartment? Yes, it's new Has new automatic washer, electric range and refrigerator. Other furnished unit 3650 or Available. Feb. 15 Phone VI 3-7655 or KU. No. 402 mom nings. 2- WHY WALK FARTHER, men? We have rooms, single and double, only half room, double and reasonably priced. Bed linens Jaunfured, 1218 Miss. Ph. VI 3-869. 2-7 ROOM for 2 or 3 boys, extra large, clean, quiet. Linens furnished. Close to KU. Phone VI 3-2961 or see 1022 Albama. 2-11 EFFICIENCY APARTMENT. Furnished three room. Close to town and bus line. Ph. VI 3-4069. 2-8 ROOMS for boys. Tired of walking up the hill? Have two rooms half block from the union. Immediate possession. Phi. VI 3-5776. tf MEN, study in peace in your own room. Single or double, next to bath. Linens furnished. Near Campus and bus. Plenum parking space. 1701 Ohio. Phi-2-123-5-3808. QUIET one-man basement room with bath. I block from campus, outside entrance, very nice. $25.00 a month. Call VI 3-5291. 2-8 NICE CLEAN ROOM for 1 or 2 men. 821 Indiana. Phone VI 3-4168. 2-12 EXTRA NICE 3 room newly decorated furnished apartment. Private bath and entrance. 825 Ohio. 2-13 WANTED USED PHYSICAL GEOLOGY TEXT. No underliming. H. D. Humphrey. Ph. VI 3-4841. FOR SALE LIVE GIFTS—Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete bunnies we have for dogaliators, fish, turtles chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Phone and Gift shop. I218 Connecticut. Pet VI 3-2921 ELECTRONIC INSTRUMENTS. 200Dprecise 7 inch Oscilloscope, new, very reasonably priced. Phone VI 3-4728—or see at 1636 New Hampshire. 2-7 BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent dress paper bags. Picnic, party supplies (ice) cake, 6th and Vermont. Phone: f-01350. FIME, LIFE & Sports Illustrated magazines. Special students' prices of 1/2 reg. sub. rate. Prompt service, buy now pay later, call VI 3-0124. tf REMINGTON STANDARD TYPEWRIT- ER. Good condition, reasonable. Ph. VI 3-4715 17F Sunnyside. 2-13 Parties, Pinnings, Weddings Job Application Photos Gene's Photo Service 2144 Ohio - VI 3-0933 Gene Smoyer SPECIAL Percy Faith, Andre Kostelanetz Paul Weston $2.98 Diamond Tip Neodles $15.00 and up BELL MUSIC COMPANY 925 Massachusetts Phone VI 3-2644 LOST ARMY BLANKET. Was left in Allen Field House after the Iowa State game. Will the finder please call James Futton. VI 3-1695. 2-12 BILLFOLD, Black, in Strong Hall. Important that billfold is returned. Keep money in billfold for reward. Ph. VI 3-4527. Ask for Gayle Cain. 2-7 MISCELLANEOUS OLD FASHIONED TURKEY DINNER with all the trimmings Thursday Feb. 7 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Community Building. All proceeds to the Assembly of God Fund. Tickets $1.25 each. 2-7 NOTICE—Your Avon Representative will call on you by appointment or take orders by telephone. Ph. VI 3-2376 2-12 LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY for Jr., Sr. Graduate Students up to $500.00 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. 8331½ Mass. Phone VI 3-8074 for 1 day service HELP WANTED READERS WANTED for 15 to 20 hours per week. Will pay 75c per hour. Call VI 3-2399 between 3 and 5:30 p.m. 2:13 TRANSPORTATION TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. Rose Glessem, National Bank for information for itineraries and reservations. 8th & Mass Phone VI 3-0152. tf WANTED—Ride from Kansas City Plaza to Lawrence Monday thru Thursday. Ph. Sol-7480. 2-8 RIDERS OR DRIVERS for car pool from K C K. Call F1-2-3287 after six for detail BOOKS Library. For gifts and for your own library. Art, Architecture, Cook Books, Childrens Books, Modern THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPIST, experienced in these, thesis paper, reports. Fast, and accurate, student rates. Mrs. Betty Veqstol. 1935 Barker Ave. Phone VI 8-2001. tf TYPIST: Experienced in fheses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka 1B11 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's' and women's' clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6857. 1106 La. tf FOR LEASE EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf FREE TUTORING IN ENGLISH. Review of grammar, sentence structure, outlines, paragraphs, and theme structure. Ph. VI 3-7401. THREE ROOM APARTMENT unfurnished, on ground floor. Air conditioned. Ph. VI 3-2662 or VI 3-1277 . 2-'11 We rent nationwide trailers any size, anywhere, anytime CROFT TRAILER RENTAL CO. East 23rd VI 3-7377 REMEMBER ... Thurs. Feb.14 with TO MY VALENTINE Valentine Flowers of Distinction from VI 3-3255 941 Mass. ALLISON Flower AT Shop THOMAS "We Are As Near As Your Phone" Phoen 19 University Dalv Korean V. K. PAVANOV —(Daily Kansan photo) Italian Flag Given To KU The University added the Italian flag to its United Nations collection Wednesday. The flag was purchased by Fabio Carniel, Trieste, Italy, graduate student, who is the only Italian student at KU. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy accepted the flag from Carnelian, a futuristic scholar studying political science. Both are shown above. The flag consists of three vertical stripes of red white and green and will hang with the other UN flags in the rotunda of Strong Hell Italy was admitted to the UN in December 1955. Carniel came here last September Wilcox Venus Has Mysterious Past Who the sculptor was and when the work was executed are unknown, but the magnificent marble statue of the Greek goddess Venus is one of the treasured possessions of the Louvre in Paris. Similarly, its imitation is one of the treasured possessions of Wilcox Museum in Fraser Hall, according to Miss Mary Grant, curator of the museum. The original statue was found by a peasant in 1820 on the island of Melos, where it had remained hidden for centuries in a niche of the wall of an ancient theater. It had suffered from time and neglect, and was in two parts when discovered. It was purchased by the Marquis de Riviere, French ambassador to Turkey, and after restoration was given to Louis XVIII of France, who presented it to the Louvre. The Venus de Milo is part of the display at Wilcox Museum. Most of the other pieces are also imitations of ancient Greek art. The bulkiest of living reptiles is the salt-water crocodile of Australia's tropical streams. Fiercely aggressive, this 30-foot dragon will go out of its way to attack men. The first mile of concrete road in the world was laid in 1908 on Woodward Avenue in Detroit. LARGE SELECTION Valentine GIFTS Elring's Gifts 924 Mass. VT 3-5160 and noticed the flags which had previously been ordered in one large shipment. "When we are studying aboard on a Fulbright scholarship," he said. "we are sometimes considered ambassadors of our country. I felt that this was one thing I could do to show my appreciation for the opportunity to study at KU." "I have always felt that I would like to see the Italian flag among those hanging in Strong," he said. "When you are abroad, you enjoy seeing something that reminds you of your country." Concerning his studies, Cariniel says he enjoys life here very much. "I like Kansas and the KU campus I feel very much at ease here," he said, "and have found the people with whom I have been associated The lectures will be given at 7 The lectures will be given at 7 p. m. every Wednesday through March 13. Axe To Attend Business Meet Axe To Attend Business Meet Dean Leonard H. Axe of the School of Business will attend an officer and executive committee meeting of the American Association of the Collegiate Schools of Business, Monday and Tuesday in New York City. Dean Axe is vice president of the organization. Want To Learn About Marriage? Students planning to marry soon or in the more distant future may find help and guidance in the series of lectures which began Wednesday night in the Methodist Student Center. The series is entitled "Looking Toward Marriage." The lecture will be given by the Rev. Edwin F. Price, director of the center. The subjects covered will include meaning of love, family-home background, health, personality, finances, engagement, sex and religion. "I want to show how each of these aspects of marriage contribute to the success of marriage," said the Rev. Mr. Price. "Many persons have questions about the importance of these fields to their future success," he said. The resolving of interfaith marriage problems should take place before they arise. "If persons can see the possible difficulties before marriage, they will have a better chance of working them out," he said. The lectures will be iven at 7 p. m. every Wednesday through March 13 Publish Catalog Of Snow Insect Study The first section of a proposed catalog of the insect types in the Snow Entomological Museum has been published. The author is Dr. Wallace E. La-berge of Iowa State College, who completed the section while he was a member of the KU faculty. The section contains a list of the Hymenoptera which is an order including bees, ants and wasps. There are 746 species listed. It is published in the current issue of the University of Kansas Science Bulletin. Now in progress is the cataloguing of flies by Dr. George W. Byers, assistant professor of entomology, and bird lice by Col. K. C. Emerson of Ft. Leavenworth. 14 Lutheran Students Go To Conference Fourteen members of the Lutheran Student Assn. will attend the annual mid-winter conference of the LSA at the University of Nebraska this weekend. Highlights of the conference will be the election of officers for the Midwest region of the LSA and various workshops. The students will be guests at the KU-NU basketball game. Winter wheat is sown in the fall and harvested the following spring. Could it be that the coffee bean is an indication of pressure, stress, and strain on students during final week? Well, so it would seem. According to Dwayne Hall, food service director of the Student Union, coffee sales in the Union were 23 per cent higher during final week than those of an average week. During final week, 640 gallons of coffee were consumed by students, as compared to 440 gallons regularly consumed a week. "Students didn't act normal during final week." Mrs. Clifford Stover, daytime cashier in the Hawks Nest, said. Mrs. Stover Motor Fleet Institute Set Coffee Drinking 23 Per Cent Higher During Final Week The first of seven institutes on Basic Principles of Supervision for Motor Fleet Personnel will begin Feb. 18 at the Continuation Center Building of the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. The topic for the first institute is "supervisors as managers." Topics for the six succeeding Monday evenings will be: Feb. 25, "The Administrative Operation"; Mar. 4, "Forecasting and Planning"; Mar. 11, "Organizing, Including Structure and Principles, and Responsibility and Authority, March 18, "Directing, Including Successful Direction Staffing and Training, and Command, Stimulation - Leadership; March 25, "Coordinating, Controlling"; April 1, 'Sound Management a Challenge.' Glenn C. Peterson, instructor in supervision for the KU Extension and the State Board for Vocational Education, will teach the course. Sponsors of the program are the Kansas Motor Carriers Association, Inc., Kansas State Board for Vocational Education, Missouri Bus and Truck Association, Kansas City Center for University Extension and University Extension Motor Fleet Training. Business Grad With Oil Co. A recent University graduate in business, Robert Donald Call, Caney, has accepted a position in Pampa Tex., with Cities Service Oil Co. Mr. Call is in the company's junior engineer training school. - Fresh Live Maine Lobster - Italian Dishes WATCH FOR... - Charcoal Broiled Steaks Holiday Inn Hotel Featuring- Junction Hiway 10 and 59 on Iowa St. Holiday Inn Restaurant the GRAND OPENING Of The said that students would hand her a twenty dollar bill and walk off without the change. They seemed to be in a dazed condition or a state of shock, she added. Mrs. Stover also said the sale of aspirin during final week was terrific. "Students would buy as many as 24 small boxes a day when normally it would take three or four weeks to sell that many aspirin," she said. Shop Brown First Men's Western Hats Beige - Black $2.98 Men's Western Dress Shirts $3.98 up "AFTER SIX" FORMAL WEAR RENTED Men's Genuine Levis $3.75 Genuine Lady Levis $4.25 Brown's TOGGERY 830 Mass. For Your Valentine For Your Valentine TO MY VALENTINE Lovely Heart Boxes Yellow-Pink-Red Lavender-Blue Detachable Corsages Satin Hearts ...2.79 - 7.98 Paper Hearts ...1.79 - 3.98 We Mail Your Dixie Candy Orders Di Dixie's CARMEL CORN SHOP 1033 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Open til 10 p.m. VI 3-6311 Daily Hansan 54th Year, No. 81 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Friday. Feb. 8, 1957 ... A foggy day in London town ... Junior Wins Cup For Color Photo In Picture Contest The Kansan picture contest for January was won by John Rodgers, Paradise junior. Rodgers received the Hixon cup given by Hixon Studios for his color entry "A Foggy Day in London Town." Second place was won by Lawrence Tretbar, Stafford freshman for "Dutch Fishing Village," and third place by Rodgers, "End of A Day's Work For a French Peasant." In the scenic division, first place was won by Joerg Roth, Switzerland graduate student, for "Evening in Venice"; second place by Herman Woodcock, Merriam senior, and Junior Injured In Cage Game Shoemaker, a Sigma Chi, fell on his back after shooting for a basket, his teammates said. The game was between Sigma Chi and Phi Gamma Delta fraternities. Dr. Dean L. Peterson, physician at Watkins, said today that Shoemaker's condition was not believed to be serious, but X-rays had not been taken. Philip Shoemaker, Lawrence junior, received an undetermined back injury Thursday night in an intramural basketball game in Robinson Gym. He was taken to Watkins Memorial Hospital. Has Anyone Seen The Sun Lately? Are you depressed? Grouchy? Don't want to study or go to class? Then you have the weather woes. This illness seems to be quite common lately, since Old Sol disappeared behind the fog and drizzle. One sleepy - eyed, depressed coed peered out at the fog this morning and remarked to a friend, "I can't decide whether to take a shower and wake up, or just give it all up and go back to bed." third place by Tretbar. In the black and white division, first place was won by Tretbar, for "Evening in Venice"; second place also by Tretbar, and third place by John Lang, Arkansas City, junior. Any normal student wouldn't stop to think about it, but just go to bed. At any rate, don't give up hope of seeing the sun again. Just remember that spring isn't too far away. Weather Judges for the contest were Jimmy Bedford, instructor in journalism; Bill Snead, photographer for the Lawrence Daily Journal World, and Harry Wright of the Photographic Bureau. Mrs. E. L. Novotny, hostess in the Student Union, fainted about 9:15 this morning at work. She was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Attendents reported her condition is fair. Union Hostess Faints Fog and occasional drizzle over most of state today and east tonight, becoming partly cloudy west tonight and over the state tomorrow. Warmer east and south this afternoon except extreme southeast. Little change in temperatures tonight and tomorrow. High today generally in lower 50s. Low tonight in the 30s. ... —(Dally Kansan photo) A foggy day at KU... Jazz Concerts To Begin Sunday Whether jazz popularity is on the upgrade or the downgrade is a subject of some controversy, but at KU jazz is beginning to get a foot-hold. A basic group of jazz enthusiasts called the Rhythm Heirs have gotten together with other music lovers to play a series of jazz concerts. The concerts, called Jazz Off Campus, are to be held twice a month at the Lawrence Community Building. Selection Of 3 Deans Near Screening for selection of deans for the Schools of Law, Business, and Engineering is nearly finished. A final list of four or five names will be presented to Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy in about a month, said George S. Smith', dean of the University. The screening committee, headed by Dean Smith, has compiled a list of over 100 nominees for the three positions since Jan. 1. "We hope to have all the basic screening finished and interview all the nominees soon, but we are not going to hurry the process because it is an extremely important matter." Dean Smith said. Dr. Murphy will make his final choice from the list. A penalty of $2 per day for late payment of fees goes into effect Friday, Feb. 22. The enrollment of any student whose fees are not paid by Monday, Feb. 18, will be canceled. "Since the Board of Regents has to approve the final choice, we are hoping to submit it to the Board at their February meeting or at the latest, the March meeting," Dean Smith said. The schedule for fee payment is: Monday: last names beginning with A through F; Tuesday: G through L; Wednesday: M through R; Thursday: S through Z. Students are to pay tuitions and fees Monday through Thursday, Feb. 18-21, at the business office in Strong Hall. Identification cards issued at the beginning of the fall semester should be brought to the business office at that time for validation for the spring semester. A student whose enrollment has been canceled for non-payment of fees will be re-enrolled only upon payment of penalties of $5 for late enrollment and $6 for late payment of fees, in addition to the full amount of his fees. Dig Deep— Fees Due Again St. Louis Editor Lectures Monday Irving Dillard, editorial page editor of the St. Louis Post Dispatch, will speak at 3 p. m. Monday in Fraser Theater. Alumni Elections To Be Studied The present method of electing officers is to select two sets of candidates for each office. The president and vice president are elected for 1-year terms and two directors are chosen every year for 5-year terms. A committee to study the possibility of changing the method of electing University alumni officers will meet at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in the alumni office. "The purpose of the concerts is to stimulate jazz at KU and to give the students a chance to hear local talent perform," said Nathan Davis, Kansas City, Kan. freshman, one of the performers. The first concert will be from 3 to 5 p. m. Sunday. Jazz Concert Series The Rhythm Heirs include Davis, John C. Spears, Ottawa senior; Elaine Brown, Kansas City, Kan freshman, and Dannie Gomez, Hutchinson junior. Bonnie Dinsmore, Oklahoma City, Okla. junior; John Rhodus, Kansas City, Kan sophomore and Ernie Douglas, Topeka band leader, will also perform. If there is enough demand for jazz,the group plans to perform weekly. For every concert, guest artists from different bands and combos on the campus and other guest artists will perform. Canadian Ballet Due Feb. 15 Tschaikovsky's "Nutcracker Suite" ballet and Delibes "Coppelia" will be featured by the National Ballet of Canada at 8:20 p.m. Feb.15 in Hoch Auditorium. This production is in the KU concert series and students can attend on their ID cards. There will be 62 dancers and a 20-piece orchestra under the direction of George Crum. The company was begun in 1951 by Celia Franca who was a star of Sadler's Wells Ballet for four years. Since the company's founding as a pioneer movement in Canada, it has grown so that now it takes five railroad cars to transport the troupe. The national Ballet spends four months of its seven month tour season in Canada. Quartet Here Monday The Smetana Quartet will feature Bohemian music at their concert at 8 p.m. Monday in Strong Auditorium. Members of the quartet are Jiri Novak and Lubomir Kostecky, violins; Milan Skampa, viola, and Antonin Kohout, cello. The program will include the Schubert "Quartet in E flat major," Janacek's "Second Quartet." "Secret Letters," and Smetana's Quartet in E minor. In Bohemia, chamber music has grown out of a deep seated musical tradition which reaches back into the pre-Mozart period. During this time, Bohemia was called "The conservatory of Europe." Members of the quartet first met as a group of students in the Prague Conservatory. During World War II, they worked under Prof. J. Micha. While still students, two members of the group supported the other two so they could study together. In 1945 the group made its first public appearance, and in 1951 the Czecholovakian government affiliated them as a chamber ensemble to the Czechoslovakia Philharmonic Orchestra. In 1954 they were awarded the honorary title of Laureate of the State Prize. President Off For Vacation WASHINGTTON — (UP) — President Eisenhower left today for a vacation in Georgia after his final conference with King Saud of Saudi Arabia. The President will stay "about a week" at the Thomasville, Ga., estate of Treasury Secretary George M. Humphrey. 1. ___ Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 8, 1957 --- Foreign Aid When Aid At Home Is Needed?— Skid Row Rears Its Ugly Head Why must we look outside our nation to find unfortunates who need American rehabilitation dollars, when our own Skid Rows are rearing their ghastly heads—regurgitating bits of human flotsam who need help badly? The Grimes murders case has brought Chicago's Skid Row into the news. Most of us choose to forget that there are such jungles where men may go to hide, to get drunk, or lose themselves. Most of us don't even realize that during the past few years women have joined Skid Row's men and that now teen-agers in increasing numbers have found that part of Hell called "Skid Row." Chicago, unfortunately, is not the only city which has a Skid Row. Not far from here there exist conditions similar to those in any large city's Skid Row. In the same issues of newspapers carrying the Grimes murders stories are appeals for aid to East Europe's refugees. Americans who have contributed their money, time and homes are to be commended for opening their hearts and pocketbooks and for striking Communism a mighty blow. But can any nation afford to give to outsiders when certain of its citizens are living in the sewers of society and need help? Or don't American citizens who are forced to exist in Skid Rows deserve aid and rehabilitation? What is the value of any man? Construction of trafficways and super highways has done much to clean up Skid Rows—to all outward appearances. Those who were forced out by these and other improvements simply move to other sections of the city. A section is only what the persons who live in them make them. What has been done about Skid Rows?— Project after project has been started and faded away; Thousands of homeless men have been counted in the nation's Skid Rows. Nobody_bothered to count the women. There are more and younger youths on Skid Row today. They are uneducated, incapable of earning anything but a bare existence. They come to Skid Row because it's cheap. Sociologists attribute the influx of women to the war. They blame the teen-agers on broken homes. Can't something be done to solve their problems? The answer is yes, but it will take funds. We've given immediate action to the needy abroad. Is it out of order to ask immediate action for those at home who need help? We have excellent organizations such as "Save The Children," the Hungarian Emergency Relief Organization, and others to which Americans gladly give. Why not a "Save Skid Row" program? We greet refugees from foreign countries with open arms, pocketbooks, hearts and homes. We give them what it takes to become good citizens. Is it too much to ask to give the same opportunities to those who can be rehabilitated from Skid Row? Jim Tice ... Letters .. Editor: The recent letter from a group of graduate students interested in longer library hours, as well as a library branch of the Hawk's Nest, speaks well for KU students and is flattering to the library. I have always been favorably impressed by the relatively heavy use of books by students here and by the crowding of the reading rooms, particularly during evening hours and on weekends. We too have been interested in the matter of library service hours, and we are aware that some students would prefer not to leave at 10 p.m. It might be feasible, with some expensive remodeling, to keep the undergraduate library open later hours while closing the remainder of the main building, nonetheless the demands for later hours in other parts of the main library would be as inconsistent as the demands for study space in the under graduate library. This suggests that the cost of longer library hours would be considerably larger than is anticipated by the group who raises this question in the Daily Kansan. A further and awkward cost factor is posed by the fact that the main library building, unlike some new library buildings elsewhere, is not designed for easy and inexpensive control. There is also some interest in longer hours for the larger branch libraries on campus. I'm sure, for example, that law students occasionally prefer to work quite late at night. Consequently, I must try to maintain an even standard of library service across the campus, one that is reasonably fair to all library users, without giving special privileges to any one group. This letter is not to suggest that I would not be disinclined to consider longer hours, but it proposes that the cost factor is not a small one and that such an extension would require careful consideration for all campus libraries and in comparison with other urgent budget needs. As we look hopefully toward a major addition to this building we might consider the possibility of asking the Memorial Union to provide some kind of canteen service in connection with an expanded smoking room. If we were to do this now, however, it would have to be at the expense of study space. I have indicated that we are unduly crowded already and that the student population is going to be much Gray Or Plaid? There is so much good in the worst of us, and so much bad in the best of us, that it behooves all of us not to talk about the rest of us. —Robert Louis Stevenson If white is good and black is bad, all of us are gray or plaid? —Oden Nash larger before we get an additional building. Consequently I'm disin elined to reduce study space at this time. Ogden Nash Robert Vosper director of libraries The first European to enter the Indian pueblo of Zuni, in western New Mexico, was the Moorish slave Estevan, who came to New Mexico in 1539 with the Franciscan friar Marcos de Niza. The first non-stop trans-Pacific flight by a jet plane was July 29, 1952, from Anchorage, Alaska to Yokota Air Base, Japan. The U. S. Military Academy at West Point was established March 16, 1802, and opened July 4, 1802. Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper 1904, daily Jan. 16, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, trilvine 1908, daily Jan. 16, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, Extension 376, business office Member Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Supported by National Advertising Services. 420 Madison Ave., New York. N. Y. News service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except holidays. University holidays, and examinations. As second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910 at Lawrence. Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. Telephone VIiking 3-2700 Extension 251, news room NEWS DEPARTMENT Kent Thomas ... Managing Editor John Battin, Fleecia Anfen Benbog, Bob Lyle, Betty Jean Stanford, Assistant Managing Editors; Jim Bunman, City Eagle, Nace Harmon, LeRoy Zimmerman, Assistant, shi Sinonzoak, Telegraph Editor; Mary Beth Noyes, Delbert Haley, Assistant Telegraph Editors; Dick Brown, Sports Editor; George Anthan, Assistant Telegraph Editor; Marlin Mermis, Society Editor; al Swanson, Assistant Society Editor; John Eaton, Picture Editor. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Jerry Dawson ... Editorial Editor Jerry Thomas, Jim Tice, Associate Editors. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Dale Bowers. Business Manager Dale Mclevey, Advertising Manager; John Hedley, Branding Manager; Harold Metz, Classified Advertising Manager; Conboy Brown, Circulation Manager. Two Cents' Worth Some confusion resulted when our good friend Elrod stepped up to a campus pliceman who -was tapping on the windows of parked cars near GSP, Corbin and North College Wednesday night. "What are you man?" our good friend Elrod asked. "I am tapping on the windows of parked cars near GSP, Corbin and North College" was the reply. doing, my good "Because it is late, and the female occupants of said parked cars I Dawson must be in the dorms before 11 o'clock which, as any fool knows, is closing time," was the reply. "By my troth, sir, but you are a scoundrel! Have you no faith in the youths integrity, fidelity and, more, honor? Is it mere presumption on your part that these people have not as yet learned the purpose of the timepiece? Is it further presumption on your part that these people would purposely flaunt the law, given that they are in fact aware of the approaching hour of goodbyes, and are you further presumptious by assuming authority which is by no means yours?" "But I was told to tap on car windows," the intrepid keeper of the peace replied, a tear bouncing from his left cheek onto the muddy sidewalk. "Oh," said Elrod, and departed in haste. The moral to the story will be announced at a later time. We note that a course is offered for those who wish to learn to drive. This appears to be a contradiction of the wish to reduce the number of cars on the campus. We propose that a course be offered on "How to Walk." Perhaps then we would not be so muddy after having battled the quagmire behind Carruth-O'Leary known as "Zone A." Wilt Chamberlain's scoring record has been broken. We trust he will adopt the battle cry, "Hold the Forte!" Ad booki. Jerry Dawson Most of the dehydrated potatoes now being produced are in the form of dice, with their biggest use in canned stews and hashes. NIGHT CLUB PARTY Featuring Music By RICHARD MALTBY SATURDAY, FEB. 9 Student Union 8:00 p.m. State, National, International News University Daily Kansan. 1 Page 2 Ben Gurion Rejects Ike's Plea For Israel To Leave Egypt UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. — (UP)*—Premier David Ben Gurion today rejected President Eisenhower's plea for an Israeli withdrawal from all Egyptian territory, an Israeli government spokesman announced in Tel Aviv. The spokesman said the rejection was contained in a 3-page letter sent today to Mr. Eisenhower. The spokesman said the situation had reached "rock bottom" and there could be no further retreat. Premier Ben Gurion's note was in reply to a letter sent by Mr. Eisenhower last Sunday. Informed sources in Israel described the President's note as "polite but firm" in its request that Israel should withdraw behind the 1949 armistice line. MADRID — (UP) — Club-swing police broke up demonstrations by an estimated 1,000 students who stoned police jeeps and paraded through downtown Madrid today chanting, "We want liberty." The student demonstrations were staged in connection with a citizens' boycott of the Madrid public transportation system. The Israeli spokesman said guarantees of freedom of navigation in USC Hires Head Coach Students Riot In Madrid LOS ANGELES—(UP)—Penalty-ridden University of Southern California has turned to a member of its own staff to assume the role of head football coach after vainly seeking a "name" coach. The school last night named line coach Don Clark, a member of the coaching staff for the past six years, as the replacement for Jess Hill, who takes over, as Athletic Director next fall. Eight Hurt In K.C. Riot KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UP) Eight firemen and policemen were injured Wednesday in a mass battle of at least 1,000 Westport school students. the gulf of Aqaba and adequate safeguard against new Egyptian attacks were vital for the security of Israel. Mysterious Illness Hits K-State Coeds MANHATTAN — (UP) — Seventeen coeds, residents of Van Zyle Hall at Kansas State College, have been stricken in what apparently is a new outbreak of a mysterious illness which first struck residents of the dormitory in December. Herbert J. Wunderlich, dean of students, said none of the women appears to be in serious condition. However, seven of those who became ill were hospitalized at the student health center. The illness is characterized by nausea and a slight fever. Dorsey Stricken In Wichita WICHITA — (UP) — Bandleader Jimmy Dorsey, who became ill suddenly Thursday night, is suffering from influenza, hospital attendants said today. He was reported in improved condition and attendants said he probably would be released Sunday. In the meantime the band, playing without Mr. Dorssey, will fill previously scheduled commitments, members said. It played without Mr. Dorssey Thursday night at a Moose lodge dance. (Mr. Dorsey and his band are scheduled to play at the annual Greek Week dance in the Student Union Ballroom March 9.) Ike, Macmillan To Meet LONDON — (UP) — President Eisenhower and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan have tentatively decided to meet in Bermuda March 21,diolomatic sources reported today. Bridge Tournament ❤ Wednesday, Feb. 13 ♠ 7 p.m. Memorial Union, Jayhawk Room EVERYONE IS WELCOME BRING A PARTNER Please Sign Up With The Hostess Sponsored By diamond shape Friday, Feb. 8, 1957 ♣ STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES NCAA Has New TV Control CHICAGO—(UP)—A plan to control television of college football next fall has been developed by the National Collegiate Athletic Association TV committee, and will be made public probably next week, it was announced today. 图 YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 YOUR EYES VOL Just the Thing for February 14 Satin Heart Boxes 2.79 - 7.98 Paper Heart Boxes ---- 1.79 - 3.98 Pink, red, lavender, yellow, blue Detachable Corsages Dixie's 1033 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Carmel Corn Shop V1 3-6311 Announcing! The Opening of The Holiday Inn Restaurant The most beautiful dining room in Lawrence LOOK! Charcoal Broiled Steaks Fresh Live Maine Lobster Italian Dishes Plan to use our spacious dining room for your private parties HOLIDAY INN RESTAURANT HOLIDAY Jct. Hiway 10 and 59 on Iowa St. abbreviations Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday. Feb. 8, 1957 Four KU Graduates Among 138 Who Pass CPA Exams Twelve of the 138 persons who took the certified public accountant examination November received passing grades. Four are KU graduates. Prof. Howard F. Stettler, secretary of the Kansas Board of Accountancy, said each successful candidate will be awarded the CPA certificate when he submits evidence of having obtained the required amount of accounting experience. Twenty-six additional candidates received conditional credit for passing two or more parts of the $2\frac{1}{2}$ day examination, which covers auditing, accounting theory, practical accounting and commercial law. VARSITY MIDNITE SHOW SATURDAY Open 11:00 - Show 11:30 THE BIG BEAT! BILL HALEY AND HIS COMETS Don't Knock The Rock co-starring ALAN DALE ALAN FREED A COLUMBIA PICTURE REBELS WITH PLENTY OF CAUSE! RUMBLE ON THE DOCKS Introducing JAMES DARREN Teen-age gang war! A CLOVER PRODUCTION - A COLUMBIA PICTURE! Prof. Stettler said 16 persons were issued certificates since July, including four KU graduates. They had previously passed the examination and have since complied with the experience requirement. A total of 307 CPA's are now practicing in Kansas. The 53,000 CPA's in the United States is more than double the number of 10 years ago, making public accounting the fastest growing profession in the nation, Prof. Stettler said. KU graduates who passed the examination: Robert A. Hollis, Prairie Village, '52; Larry D. Horner, Minneapolis, '56; Thomas J. Kennedy, Salina, '53; Alan R. Shaw, Kansas City, Kan., '56. KU graduates who passed the examination and received certificates: Frederick N. Bettge Sr., Kansas City, Kan., '54; William F. Grosses III, Salina, '51; Howard A. Schlundt, Arlington, Calif., '54; Loren E. White, North Kansas City, Mo., '51; D. Spencer Yohe, Mission, '50. Professor Attending Education Meeting Miss Joie Stapleton, associate professor of physical education, is attending the Kansas Athletic Federation of College Women conference Friday and Saturday at Fort Hays State College. At a luncheon today, Miss Stapleston spoke on the National Intramural Conference held last fall in Washington, D. C., which she attended as one of the state representatives. Nurses Plan Activities The Pre-Nursing Club has discussed inviting nurses from various fields to address the club on the duties of their jobs. A proposed tour through the University Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan. was also discussed. Engineers of the Dayton Rubber Co., say 42,000 tons of bead wire are used annually in the nation's passenger tires. Texas growing seasons range from fewer than 180 days to more than 330 days a year. REPRINT PORTRAIT SPECIAL Reprint from any negative in our files made before Jan. 1, 1957 previously ordered from and delivered. 1 - 8x10 Portrait In Beautiful Natural Grain Wood Frame For That Special One. A Regular $10.50 Value. $5 95 A Perfect Valentine Gift. A Regular $8.00 Value. 1 - 8x10 Portrait $3.95 Perfect Gifts At A Tremendous Saving. A Regular $7.00 Value. 2 - 5x7 Portraits $3.50 Offer expires Feb. 9,1957 Speakers will be C. L. Lunt, vice president, Spector Motor Service, Inc., Chicago, Ill.; Dave Padgett, regional director, Yellow Transit Freight Lines, Kansas City, Mo.; Tom Hutsell, supervisory trainer, More efficient terminal management is the goal of the First Annual Terminal Managers Conference to be held Wednesday at the University. Eighteen motor freight terminal managers, dispatchers, and warehouse foremen from Kansas and western Missouri are expected to attend the conference. Topics to be studied at the conference include case studies in terminal management, evaluation of terminal and warehousing operations, supervision and training of employees, and different systems of freight handling. New reference material giving tips and techniques of terminal management will be distributed at the conference. HIXON STUDIO Terminal Heads To Meet Feb.13 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 IT'S THE MOST! THE GREATEST! IT'S CRAZY, MAN CRAZY! IT'S THE MOST! THE GREATEST! IT'S CRAZY, MAN CRAZY! ROCK TO 12 WONDERFUL TUNES! ROCK, PRETTY BABY! ROCK TO 12 WONDERFUL TUNES! ROCK, PRETTY BABY! ROCK PRETTY BABY! SAL JOHN LUANA MINEO·SAXON·PATTEN Color Cartoon—News OWL PREVUE SAT 11:15 • SUNDAY • Sasnak Will Hold Dinner GRANADA Newly elected officers of Sasnak physical education club, will hold a dinner Thursday. The dinner will include all physical education majors and their husbands or wives. The Rev. Dale Turner, minister of the Plymouth Western Auto Supply Co., Kansas City, Mo.; Vernon Strickland, regional motor transport engineer, Liberty Mutual Insurance Co., St. Louis, Mo., and Al Fowler, Sr., president, Indianapolis-Kansas City Motor Express Co., Kansas City, Mo. The conference is sponsored by University Extension Motor Fleet Training, University of Kansas; Kansas Motor Carriers Assn., Inc.; Kansas State Board for Vocational Education, and the Missouri Bus and Truck Assn. T. H. BURGESS THE FIERY; FASCINATING STORY OF THE FAMED SENSUALIST ARTIST VINCENT VAN GOGH! M-G-M presents in CINEMASCOPE and METROCOLOR KIRK DOUGLAS LUST FOR LIFE LUST FOR LIFE Go starring ANTHONY QUINN NOW Ends Saturday Mat. Saturday 2 p.m. GRANADA Congregational Church, will be guest speaker. The officers of Sasnak are Barnie Gay, Gardner junior, president; Jay Pope, St. Joseph, Mo., junior, vice president; Peggy Epps, Topeka sophomore, secreary; and Bob Lockwood, Lawrence f resh man, treasurer. Reginald Strait, assistant professor of physical education, is the new adviser of Sasnak. He relates Don Henry, assistant professor of physical education, who is ill. Eight cents out of every dollar spent by consumers for food goes for transportation. A total of 894,575 persons visited Mount Rushmore National Memorial in South Dakota in 1956. VARSITY Open 6:45—Show at 7:00 Continuous Sat. - Sun. 1:00 p.m. NOW WARNING BROADWAY HENRY FONDA • VERA MILES In ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S The Wrong Man @THE MAIN ANTHONY QUARTZ Directed by ALFRED HITCHCOCK News BUGS BUNNY CARTOON ENDS TONITE "BABY DOLL" Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER MEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS Open 6:45 -- Show at 7:00 Matinee Sat. 1:30-Nite 6:45 NOW ONE MAN AGAINST A TOWN GONE MAD WITH LUST! JEFF CHANDLER "Drango" News Color Cartoon TITANIC ATTENTION: No other theater in this ENTIRE area will present our version of- "Pity Poor Pearl" Wed, Thur, Fri, Sat Feb.13,14,15,16 K KL Tickets-50c Union Ticket Center The com hus sho the Co ove On the same nite as we do KU Plays NU Saturday; League Lead At Stake The Kansas Jayhawkers will be out to protect their Big Seven conference lead when they face the hot-shooting Nebraska Cornhuskers at Lincoln Saturday. Nebraska has been the most accurate shooting in conference play thus far, hitting a torrid 46 per cent of their field goal attempts. Even with this astounding percentage, the Cornhuskers own only a 2-2 record in the Big Seven and an 8-7 over-all won and lost record. Top threat among the Nebraskans is Gary Reimers, 5-9½ inch guard. Reimers has hit 27 baskets in 46 shots for 58 per cent in conference play. He enjoyed a perfect night against Colorado at Lincoln, hitting seven for seven. This tied the Big Seven record of Dallas Dobbs, former KU guard, who hit exactly those figures against Oklahoma A&M last year in Stillwater. NU Always Tough Over-all Reimers is shooting at a 49. per cent pace and averaging 14.1, both tops in the Cornhusker statistical department. The Jayhawkers, on the other hand, have been outshot in three of their five loop contests, yet are in first place in the League standings with a 4-1 record. Iowa State outshot the Kansans in both of their conference meetings, but the Jayhawkers managed to split the series. K-State also held the edge in field goal percentage in the teams first meeting in Allen Field House, but the Jayhawkers came out on top, 51-45. Leading shooters for Kansas, which is hitting at a 39 clip, are Wilt Chamberlain and Gene Elstun. Both are firing at a 45 rate in field goal percentage. Although the Jayhawkers possess a 15-7 edge over Nebraska in conference play, KU has had trouble during the past few years beating NU at Lincoln. Kansas won last years game, 60-56, on great clutch shooting by Maurice King. The 1954 conference champions won only 67-62. The '53 NCAA runners-up won only 65-59, while the Olympic champions of '52 squeezed by 69-66. Nebraska won the '55 game, 66-65. Even though the Cornhuskers have usually played KU a close game on their home court, Nebraska Coach Gerald L. Bush thinks that this year's Jayhawker team is very outstanding. "Chamberlain is the greatest player I've ever seen," he said, "and with more experience he is going to get even better." Bush thinks that because of the Big Dipper's shooting FOR YOUR DANCING PLEASURE FOR YOUR DANCING PLEASURE THE EXCITING AND ENTERTAINING MUSIC OF SAM Donahue HIS SAXOPHONE AND HIS ORCHESTRA Formerly of the Billy May Orchestra 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. 8u ability, he is even better than San Francisco's All-American center last year, Bill Russell. The Jayhawkers are expected to start with the same line-up that started last Saturday's game against Iowa State. King and John Parker will man the guard positions. Chamberlain will fire the KU attack at his center post, with Elstun and Ronnie Loneski playing the forwards. Loneski, in his first start for the Jayhawkers last week, tied Chamberlain for scoring honors with 19 points. Friday. Feb. 8, 1957 University Daily Kansan Page 5 SAT. NITE, FEB 9 Dance 9 to 1 PLA-MOR Kansas City, Mo. 3142 Main—VA 1-7844 Lew Johnson, who started the first 12 Kansas games at forward, will be available to fill in where he is needed. Sophomore Bob Billings, who hit five clutch free throws against the Cyclones, is also expected to see a great deal of action, along with Blaine Hollinger. Phi Gam used Lee Meyer's 19- point first half burst to easily roll past Sigma Chi 49-33 in an intramural fraternity A game played Thursday in Robinson Annex. Phi Gam Blasts Sigma Chi, 49-33 Phi Delt had little trouble posting a 49-29 victory over outclassed Sigma Nu Thursday in Robinson Annex. AKL won the hardest fought match of the day when they beat TKE 30-28 in a fraternity A game played in Robinson Annex. Hookers blasted Foster 57-39 in the only independent A game action of the day. Other Results. Fraternity C—Phi Psi 37, SAE 18; Beta 22, Lambda Chi 18; Phi Gam 25, sigma Chi 23; Phi Delt 42, SAE 33; ATO 35, Beta 22; Phi Psi 32, sigma Chi 26; DU 33, sigma Pi 22; AEPi 2, Delt 0; AKL 2, Sig Ep 0. A rainfall of one inch over one acre of ground would measure 27,-143 gallons of water. Winston Churchill was made a Knight of the Garter by Queen Elizabeth on April 24,1953. CONTEMPORARY CARDS Gay cards with a sophisticated air. Smartly styled, Hallmark Contemporary Cards are a new concept in modern humor. And there are special designs for weddings, anniversaries, birthdays and congratulations. Come in today and see our new collection of Hallmark Contemporary Cards. MOSSER WOLF MOSSER WOLF 1107 Mass. Use the Kansan Classified Want Ad Section to Get Best Results. Stickler! RHYMING DICTIONARY SEND IT IN AND MAKE $25 WHAT DOES A KNIGHT USE TO BRING HOME THE BACON? Dragon Wagon LINDA CUMMINGS. U. OF ALABAMA WHAT ARE WISE MEN'S EARNINGS? Sages' Wager NANCY SMITH, U. OF CHICAGO DO YOU like to shirk work? Here's some easy money—start Stickling! We'll pay $25 for every Stickler we print—and for hundreds that never get used. Sticklers are simple riddles with two-word rhyming answers. Both words have the same number of syllables. (Don't do drawings.) Send your Sticklers with your name, address, college and class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A, Mount Vernon, N. Y. And remember you're bound to Stickle better when you're enjoying a Lucky, because Luckies taste better. Luckies' mild, good-tasting tobacco is TOASTED to taste even better. Fact is, you'll say Luckies are the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked! WHAT IS AN ANGRY EMPLOYER? Cross-Boss MAURICE GLENN. CREIGHTON U. WHAT IS A COWARDLY BIRD? Craven Raven GILMORE JEENNINGS ROLLINS COLLEGE WHAT IS AN AGILE INSECT? Spry Fly WARREN NYSTROM. U. OF MINN. Luckies Taste Better LUCKY STRIKE LUCKY STRIKE IT'S TOASTED CIGARETTES "IT'S TOASTED" TO TASTE BETTER . . . CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER! The American Tobacco Company ©A. T. Co. PRODUCT OF The American Tobacco Company AMERICA'S LEADING MANUFACTURER OZ CIGARETTES Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday. Feb. 8, 1957 3 Take Part In Convention Three members of the department of music education will take part in the national biennial convention of the Music Teachers National Assn. held Sunday to Wednesday in Chicago. Marcus E. Hahn, assistant professor, will present a paper, "Non-musical Factors in the Perception of Music." Mrs. Virginia Merritt Wilson, Lawrence graduate student, will present the results of her research on "Variations in Gastric Mobility Due to Musical Stimuli." Dr. E. Thayer Gaston, chairman of the department, will preside at a sectional meeting on the psychology and therapy in music. Business Fraternity Installed At Creighton Members of Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business fraternity, visited Creighton University in Omaha, Neb. recently for the installation of the fraternity's 102nd college chapter. Attending the installation were Morley C. Townsend of Buffalo, N.Y., grand national president, Wiley S. Mitchell, associate professor of accounting and the fraternity's Midwest district counselor, and Robert Long, McCune senior and president of the KU chapter. Saccharin is almost 500 times sweeter than sugar. Hems for the official Bulletin must be brought to the Public Relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9.30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to work without Katherine, should include name, place, date, and time of function. Official Bulletin TODAY Museum of Art record concerti 11 a.m. Museum of Art Museum Verdi: "La Forza del Destino" SUNDAY International Club presents a symposium on love Unit, after the Film Society Union Literature Conference. Museum of Art record concert, 2 p.m. Art Museum. Donizetti: "Don Pasquale" Liana Fellowship, 5:30 p.m. R.L.D.S. Citi Club. Donizetti: Semester. Eon; sing, and fladee band. Graduate Club meeting 8 p.m. Stud- uates in the library and stud- uates, students invited, Refreshments Lutheran Student Association cost sup- sure, 5:30 p.m. Transfer to Lutheran Church Museum of Art record concert, 11 n.m. Museum of Art Museum Donizetti, "Don Pasquale." Phi Delta Kappa annual coffee, 3:30-4:30, male faculty and education students. K. U. Dames Get-Acquainted Valentine's party, 8 p.m., Spooner Art Museum lounge. For all new and old memoirs, $15-$20; for all will give demonstrations on hair styling. Undergraduate Mathematics Seminar. 4 p.m., Room 203, Strong. Speaker: Prof. G. Springer. "The Geometry of Complex Numbers." All interested undergraduates are invited to attend these weekly meetings. Male phalaropes do the housekeeping. The father bird not only selects a nesting site and builds the home, but hatches the eggs and rears the young. Females, after laying the eggs, go on in flocks by themselves. FIELD ENGINEERS Electrical Mechanical Petroleum Geological Physicists AS A SERVICE COMPANY IN THE OIL INDUSTRY WE OFFER: Liberal Pay & 8 Benefits Locations In 20 States Outdoor Work No Close Supervision Promotions From Within Short Training Period We Interview On Your Campus Feb.21 See Your Placement Director For Particulars SCHLUMBERGER WELL SURVEYING CORP. Box 2175 Houston, Texas SENIORS AND GRADUATE STUDENTS IN ENGINEERING PHYSICS AND MATHEMATICS The Douglas Aircraft Company invites you to ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS FEBRUARY 13 Reserve your career decision until you have talked with the Douglas representative. It may be the most important interview of your life. Find out about the interesting positions, assistance in furthering your education and outstanding promotion opportunities with the world's largest manufacturer of aircraft and missiles. Get facts on living conditions, research facilities and opportunities to advance professionally at the various Douglas locations. SEE YOUR DEAN, SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURE FOR YOUR INTERVIEW APPOINTMENT University Club members will celebrate Valentine's Day with their annual dance at 8 p.m. Saturday at the University Club, $1007^{1/2}$ Massachusetts. University Club To Hold Dance Lynn Padan, is chairman of the committee to plan and arrange for the dance. Other members of his committee include Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kirkpatrick. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Mills, and Mrs. Padan. The dance is part of the University Club activity schedule which includes a social function each week. Blue Cross-Blue Shield has announced that unmarried children may now be covered under its parent's family membership until they are 21 years old. The present contract covers them only until their 19th birthday. Insurance Plan Announced Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. Automatic Pinspotters 4. Revolutionary high-intensity searchlight BOWL AT PLADIUM 5. First Gyropilot 2. First marine automatic pilot 3. First radio-controlled "guided missile" Pladium Lanes 1. First gyro-compass A FEW OF SPERRY'S ENGINEERING FIRSTS PICTURED ABOVE Engineers Texas has 168,732,160 acres of surface soil and 141,337,744 are in farms and ranches. 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 PHYSICISTS · MATHEMATICIANS 9th & Mississippi 6. First automatic computing gunsight 7. First automatic anti-aircraft 8. First radio-controlled pilotless jet 9. First electronic automatic pilot 10. Sparrow air to air guided missile Open bowling weekdays 11 to 6:30; Sat. & Sun. 10 to 12 p.m. Friday night after 9 Insulating and building materials were first made from sugarcane bagasse in 1920 in Louisiana. Consider Sperry on every count: choice of specialization, salary, advancement, stability, company benefits, location. Then take the first step toward the career of your life by talking to the Graduate to a LIFETIME CAREER with SPERRY These are modern, air-conditioned plants with up-to-the-minute equipment and facilities. Near-by are graduate schools at which you may continue your studies under Sperry's full tuition refund program. Step from school into the satisfying kind of lifework that only an expanding, nationwide organization like Sperry can offer. You'll be able to choose from a variety of fascinating fields. You'll share the excitement of contributing to the long list of Sperry engineering "firsts"—a list which has been growing steadily since 1910. You'll work side by side with noted engineers and scientists. And, with new divisions of Sperry located throughout the country, you will enjoy the unique advantage of "getting in on the ground floor" of a solid, 47-year-old organization! Openings Available at These Locations: SPEERM ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT HEAD) WHO WILL BE AT YOUR SCHOOL ON Operating at Pine Location SUNNYVALE,CALIFORNIA - Sunnyvale Development Center SALT LAKE CITY,UTAN - Sperry Utah Engineering Laboratory POINT MUOI,CALIFORNIA - Test & Evaluation Center GREAT NECK,LONG ISLAND,N.Y. - Sperry Gyroscope Co. GAINESWILLE,FLORIDA - Sperry Electronic Tube Division CHARLOTTEVILLE,VIRGINIA - Sperry Piedmont Co. FEBRUARY 12, 1957 Make an appointment at your placement office today Ma 10 Write for free illustrated booklet "Your Engineering Horizon With Sperry" To Mr. J. W.Dwyer Employment Manager SPERRY GYROSCOPE COMPANY Division of Sperry Rand Corp. Marcus Ave. & Lakeville Rd. Great Neck, Long Island, New York 25 words LIVE GIVERS, Paris. Texas— stands. outside chameled in the Shop. 12. REMING ER. Go 3-4715 BEVER cold. closed p Ice Plai 3-0350. TIME, I zines. : reg. sub pay late TYPIST papers student Barker TAILOl tions o Also du 3-6657. TYPIST papers. tion; fa 1911 Te FREE 7 of gran paragra VI 3-74 EXPERI tary wi theses. lar rate THREE nished. Ph.VI We any CRG READF per we VI 3-23 of W B TV Se 908 VI Z 12. a. 12 b. 13 c. 14 d. 15 e. 16 f. 17 g. 18 h. 19 i. 20 j. 21 k. 22 l. 23 m. 24 n. 25 o. 26 p. 27 q. 28 r. 29 s. 30 t. 31 u. 32 v. 33 w. 34 x. 35 y. 36 z. Friday, Feb. 8, 1957 University Daily Kansan Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS 25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansas Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas-complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete food supplies. Sure we have alligators, fish, turtles, chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Phone and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. FOR SALE BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent cloth. Paper bags. Plecic, party supplies. Plant, 6th and Vermont. Phone: 3-0350. TIME, LIFE & Sports Illustrated Magazines. Special students' prices of 1/2 reg. sub. rate Prompt service, buy now pay later, call VI 3-0124. toff BUSINESS SERVICES REMINGTON STANDARD TYPEWRIT- ER. Good condition, reasonable. Ph. VV. 3-4715 17F Sunnyside. 2-13 TYPIST, experienced in these, term papers, reports. Fast and accurate, student rates. Mrs. Betty Vequist. 1935 Barker Ave. Phone VI 3-2001. tf TVPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6657. 1106 La. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf FREE TUTORING IN ENGLISH. Review of grammar, sentence structure, outlines, paragraphs, and theme structure. Phi VI 3-7401. FOR LEASE HELP WANTED THREE ROOM APARTMENT unfurnished. on ground floor. Air conditioned. Ph. VI 3-2662 or VI 3-1277 2-11 READERS_WANTED for 15 to 20 hours DIAGRAMS FOR VI 3-298-between 3 and 3. 3 p.m. 2-13 We rent nationwide trailers any size, anywhere, anytime CROFT TRAILER RENTAL CO. East 23rd VI 3-7377 FLOUR Products Company of Whittier, Calif., Paola, Kansas, Santa Rosa, Calif. REPRESENTATIVE C. R. LEMENAGER, MGR. INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS Will Be on Campus Will Be on Campus WED. FEB. 20 To Interview MECH. ENG'G. June Graduates CHECK WITH YOUR ENG'G. PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR APPOINTMENT . 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 BIRD TV-Radio Service EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS MISCELLANEOUS NOTICE—Your Avon Representative will call on you by appointment or take orders by telephone. Ph. VI 3-2376. 2-12 LOST ARMY BLANKET. Was left in Allen Field House after the Iowa State game. Will the finder please call James Fulton. VI 3-1685. 2-12 FOUND LIGHT BROWN PUPPY. Small. Found near Student Union. Call VI 3-7404 TRANSPORTATION FICKETS to anywhere by airplane, teamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. Call Miss Rose Gieseman at the First Airlines for information for his jerries and reservations. 8th & Mass. phone VI 3-0152. WANTED>-Ride from Kansas City Plaza Monday thru Thursday Ph. Sol-7480 FOR RENT RIDERS OR DRIVERS for car pool from K C K. Call F1-2326 after six for delivery 9-12 ROOM—Large, comfortable, for men students, single or double, with twin beds. Linens furnished. Large closet and garage. CALL VI 3-6731. 2-8 BOOKS For gifts and for your own library. Art, Architecture, Cook Books, Childrens Books, Modern THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 ROOM next to bath, with TV and linens furnished and breakfast served. Located in private home, a ride to the hill every morning. Boy or girl single. Ph. V1 6184. V2-8 --for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students TWO ROOM APARTMENT nicely furnished. Private entrance. Adults. No drinking. Utilities paid. Close to bus and KU. 1017 New Hampshire. Ph. VI 3-4638. SUNSET HILLS home. Two bedrooms completely furnished with attached garage. Rent reasonable. Phone for appointment. VI 3-8782 or VI 3-4767. 2-8 NICE CLEAN ROOM for 1 or 2 men. 821 Indiana. Phone VI 3-4168. 2-12 FURNISHED APARTMENTS 3 and 4 rooms with private bath. Close to cam- soil, so need a couple middle age ado- ler to care for apartment house. VI 3-9792. 2-8 ROOMS, friendly home, all privileges. includes kitchen, shower baths and pool. Call or inquire, VI 3-9635. 2-11 ARE YOU LOOKING for a fine new two bedroom apartment? Yes, it's new. Has new automatic washer, electric range and refrigerator. Otherwise unimmuted 1000 watt Valve. I-Phone VI 3-7653 or K.U. No. 406 mornings. 2-8 BE INDEPENDENT. Live close to the campus. Room and board $45.00 per person. Please refer to page 176 of date Co-op 1537! Tennessee. Ph. VI-3025. Ask for Tom, Arian, or Jack. 2-13 ROOM AND BOARD for one student, $50.00 per month. Call VI 3-4385. 2-8 LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY up to $500.00 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. 833 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. Phone VI 3-8074 for 1 day service SYLVANIA will be THURSDAY, FEB. 21 for the purpose of interviewing engineering applicants See your Placement Director to arrange an appointment WHY WALK FARTHER, men? We have rooms, single and double, only half air conditioned. Bed linens reasonably priced. Bed linensJAunedear. 1218 Miss. Ph. VI 3-869. 2-8 SYLVANIA SYLVANIA ELECTRIC PRODUCTS INC. ROOM for 2 or 3 boys, extra large, clean, quiet. Linens furnished. Close to KU. Phone VI 3-2961 or see 1022 Al- bama. 2-11 ... SURE FIRE - Six Pacs Everything for the party! - Mix - Ready-Pac-Ice - Frozen Juices FURNISHED APARTMENT for students: Three rooms plus private bath and kitchen. See at 615 Louisiana or call VI 3-8540. 2-8 EFFICIENCY APARTMENT. Furnished three room. Close to town and bus line. Ph. VI 3-4069. 2-8 Parties, Pinnings, Weddings Job Application Photos - Glasses Open — 9:00 a.m. - 11:00 p.m. UNDERWOOD'S - Snacks Gene's Photo Service 2144 Ohio - VI 3-0933 1215 West Sixth Gene Smoyer MEN, study in peace in your own room. Single or double, next to bath. Linens fitted. Near Campus and school. of parking space. 1701 Ohio. Ph. V1- 3-5808. QUIET one-man basement room with bath. I block from campus, outside entrance, very nice. $25.00 a month. Call VI 3-3291. 2-8 ROOMS for boys. Tired of walking up the hill? Have two rooms half block from the union. Immediate possession. Ph. VI 3-5776. tf 2-14 TWO CLEAN W A R M S SLEEPING ROOMS. Single or double, serving home style meals reasonably. Ph. VI 3-1585. EXTRA NICE 3 room newly decorated furnished apartment. Private bath and entrance. 825 Ohio. 2-13 FOUR ROOM FURNISHED APART- MENT with private entrance, private bath, one bedroom, one study room, news paid, quiet home. Ph. V. 1826. 2-12 Have your car lubricated the MOTO-SWAY WAY At POTTER'S "66" SERVICE SERVICE 1401 W. 6th VI 3-9891 IN KANSAS CITY. ITS TIVOL DOWNTOWN altman building PLAZA 220-nichols road HAirrison 1-1888 WIsport 1-5333 WILL YOU DARE TO WEAR AN ENGAGEMENT RING THAT IS DIFFERENT? When you get married, will you dare to break with tradition and wear a ring that isn't "just like Mother's?" At TIVOL, we can show you a wide selection of rings designed in the contemporary vein. Contemporary—or if you prefer, modern. They are elegant—strikingly simple settings with diamonds of emerald cut, square, marquis, and baguette. And at prices as low as 100. The designs are exclusively TIVOL's—and, of course, we set every stone in our own workrooms. We have hundreds of rings in the traditional styles. But, if you choose to be different we have the unusual, stunning and dramatic modern ring for you. Visit TIVOL soonwe'd love to show you something different for your engagement ring. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 8, 1957 TULA —(Daily Kansan photo) Ancient Art Baffles KU Aztec Authorities Today the Yoke, Palma and Hacha fail to ring a bell, but to the preconquest Aztec civilization they evidently were of major importance. What they symbolized is a mystery to the experts. These thought-provoking art works are currently on display in the Art Museum for public inspection. Several theories have been offered about the history of the pieces. Donald Robertson visiting assistant professor of art history, describes the Hacka as "resembling a stone axe." Prof Roberton said, "The Hacka may have been a monumental form given to the people as plaques are given today. This is just a theory, but most talks on the Hacha use this theory." Another of the items on display is the Palma, shaped to resemble the palm of a hand. On this one the experts are stumped, and as yet no theory has been formulated. "The Palma is shaped at the bottom so that it may serve as a socket, but we have no idea what it fits." Prof. Robertson said. This piece is from the Nelson Gallery in Kansas City, Mo. The third major article on display that has no definite background is called the Yoke. It is shaped like a yoke or horse collar. "This may have been a monumental form of body armor for a game where a ring is used. A small rubber ball is struck by the player, and because the ball is of a hard material the body armor was needed to protect the player." Prof Robertson said. He added that again this is just a theory. "We believe this is some of the Firms Schedule Job Interviews Engineering students will be interviewed by the following companies in 111 Marvin next week: Wednesday - National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, Emerson Electric Co., Linde Air Products, and Douglas Aircraft Corp. Monday — McDonnell Aircraft Corp, Goodyear Tire and Aircraft Co. Akron, Ohio, and Caterpillar Tractor Co. Tuesday — McDonnell Aircraft Corp., Sperry Gyroscope, and Caterpillar Tractor Co. Thursday National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, Letourneau Westinghouse, Avco Division, Crosley Corp., Standard Oil of Indiana. Friday — Letourneau Westinghouse, Minneapolis Honeywell Co. Micro-Switch Co., and Mallinckrodt Chemical Co. Those interested should sign interview schedules in the dean's office, 111 Marvin, and pick up brochures and applications. most handsome sculpture work that has been done, but we have no idea why they were made." For the enterprising college student this field is wide open for theories. Anyone wishing experience in this field will find several copies of these works in the Art Museum. Jazz Group Slated For Topeka Show The Biggest Show of Stars for '57 will appear 3:30 p.m. Feb. 24 at the Municipal Auditorium, Topeka. The cast includes Fats Domino, Bill Doggett and his combo, Clyde McPhatter, LaVern Baker, The Five Keys, Chuck Berry, Ann Cole, The Moonglows, The Five Satins, Charles Brown, Eddie Cooley and the Dimels, The Schoolboys, and Paul Williams and his orchestra. Tickets are on sale at Walgreen Drugstore and Mills Music Store in Topeka. Geology Prof To Lecture At Washington U. Dr. Raymond C. Moore, professor of geology since 1916, will return to the state of his birth to be a visiting professor of geology at the University of Washington, Seattle, next fall. As a Walker-Ames Professor during the 1957 fall term at the University of Washington. Dr. Moore will deliver a series of lectures for graduate students and instructors. Dr. Moore's selection as a Walker-Ames Professor is only one of a series of honors he has received. Last fall he received the Hayden Memorial Geological Award for 1956, an award reserved for the all-time greats in geology, and recently was selected vice president of the Geological Society of America for 1957 and president for 1958. Although born in Washington state, Dr. Moore received most of his schooling in Kansas, Ohio and Illinois, obtaining his Ph.D. degree in geology from the University of Chicago. He came to Kansas in 1916 as a professor of geology. In the same year he was named state geologist of Kansas and director of the State Geological Survey, and in 1919 he also became chairman of the department of geology at KU. Dr. Moore now is devoting the major portion of his time to editing a comprehensive treatise on invertebrate paleontology. He is also doing much of the writing for the "Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology," which will consist of 24 volumes 7 of which have been published. Home Economics Display Featured Advantages and opportunities of a career in home economics are featured in a display in the home economics reading room. 112 Fraser. Information on foods, child education and care, and publications in home economics, clothing, and interior design are also available. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results A miner sitting in a shelter. There is an easier way at Duck's - Jumbo Shrimp - Block Island Swordfish - Rainbow Trout - Fried Oysters - Soft Shell Crabs DUCK'S Sea Food Tavern 824 Vermont To Discuss 'Essentials Of Methodism' Sunday "Essentials of Methodism" will be discussed at a fellowship supper at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at the Methodist Student Center, 1314 Oread by Rev. Ewart Watts of the First Methodist Church of Topeka. This is the first in a series of In Egypt, linen was the only fabric priests were permitted to wear. discussions on the theme, "What Are You Methodist?" Some 2,000,000 people visit the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., each year. No other national shrine or park attracts so large an audience, the National Geographic Society says. AS LONG AS IT RUNS... AS LON Head east on 23rd St. for the quickest drive-in service in Lawrence. SUNDAY SPECIAL Chicken and home-made, shoe string noodles with salad, hot rolls, and a drink...1.50 Home-made cherry pie ...20 The Blue Hills Drive-In Open Mon. thru Friday, 3 p.m. to 11 p.m. Sat. & Sun. 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. 1601 E. 23rd. Jay SHOPPE Don't Forget FEB. 14 Jay SHOPPE 835 Mass. VI 3-4833 5.98 lace-kissed Blouson by Bobbie Brooks The chic of the blouson is sparked with the perennial romance of lace for this fascinating fashion...Dacron and Cotton with roll-up sleeves..charm for you in charming pastels. Sizes 7 to 15. Editors Must Keep Personal Standards High, Dilliard Says A newspaper editor should elevate his standards like the pole valuter who keeps raising the bar, Irving Dillard, editorial page editor of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, said this afternoon in the eighth annual William Allen White Lecture. Rolla A. Clymer, editor-of the El Dorado Times, received the William Allen White Foundation's fourth annual Award for Journalistic Merit. The presentation was made at a luncheon meeting of the foundation in the Student Union. In his address, "The Editor I Wish I Were," presented in Fraser Theater. Mr. Dilliard pointed out the characteristics of his "ideal editor." "The editor is a man of conscience," he said. "He recoils from the dishonest and he abhors the untrue. He believes, as did William Allen White, that the only excuse an editor has for being is that his paper shall print the news." "Does Not Keep Silent" "My editor does not keep silent when his government tells him that he cannot send reporters to a country with which we are not at war," he said. "He speaks up at once in defense of his right to go after the news and to tell his readers what it is." "My editor knows that the United States can only harm itself in aping the restrictions that the Communists have imposed in the past." "And he can speak up on a country weekly as well as on a city daily, for if the metropolitan editor's freedom is trespassed by government so is the freedom of the rural or small town editor violated." He settles upon a rule for himself, then must stick closely to it, Mr. Dilliard continued. Mr. Dillard said that the press has nothing to fear from honest self examination. He said that the general news coverage in the 1952 and 1956 campaigns was "on the side of greater fairness." "When an editor begins monkeying with his conscience, stretching his rule to shield his friends or to punish his enemies he is lost." "My editor' criticizes others to point out their failures and shortcomings, but in turn he takes the criticism that is directed at him," the St. Louis editor said. "Criticizes Others" When the editor is criticized he "weighs with earnestness and humility the criticism for the truth that may be in it." In acting on the principle, "your opinion is no better than your information," the editor is continuously aware of how much more he needs to learn from others every day to be accurate and fair in dealing with the complex problems in news." Mr. Dilliard said. Mr. Dilliard said his ideal editor remembers what brave men in the past had done for his free press heritage, and works year after year to protect it and to improve it. He is always on guard against those who violate the people's right to know. Must Have Courage Whatever the situation the editor must have courage, he said. "The editor who has the imagination to see what he ought to do and the conscience to know how to do it falls short unless he has the courage to be the editor he knows he should be." He is careful not to engage in activities that will embarrass or compromise his independent position. He is sparing in his friendships because he knows that friendship outside his newspaper may force the hard choice between personal kindness to a friend and devotion to duty as an editor. Weather The editor does not ask conformity in others, Mr. Dilliard continued. He recognizes the right of people to be themselves in what they think, in how they live, in their likes and dislikes. He knows that William Allen White didn't come from an assembly line, that the individuality which is the essence of American democracy is not produced by a mold. Clymer Gets Merit Award In accepting the foundation Award for Journalistic Merit, Mr. Clymer expressed admiration for the younger men of the Kansas press, and their "swift, sure prowess." Generally partly cloudy this afternoon through Tuesday. Warmer over state tonight and in southeast Tuesday. Shifting winds and turning moderately colder west and north Tuesday. Low tonight 30 northwest to 40 southeast. High Tuesday 40 northwest to 60 southeast. "They are keen, clever craftsmen who are totally unappalled by the problems of the present, and wholly undismayed by any threat that the future may portend," he said. He called the progression of the Kansas press in a few decades "one of the proudest gains Kansas has established." Daily Hansan 54th Year, No. 82 LAWRENCE. KANSAS Greek King, Queen Entries Due Feb.28 The deadline for entries by KU fraternities for Greek Week king and queen candidates has been set for Thursday, Feb. 28 by Richard Patterson, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore and contest chairman. Letters will be sent this week to fraternities and sororities, stating the rules for entering candidates. Each fraternity will nominate a candidate for king and sororities will select a nominee each for queen. Announcement of the three finalists for King and Queen will be made following the judging. The identity of the winners will be disclosed at the Greek Week Dance, Saturday, March 9. Judges for the contest, which will be held Sunday, March 3, will be Lawrence Mayor John P. Crown and Mrs. Crown, Ralph B. Freed, president of the Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce, and Mrs. Freed, and Dolph Simons Jr., vice president of the Lawrence Daily Journal-World, and Mrs. Simon. Committee members for the 1957 Greek Week are John Downing, Kansas City, Mo., junior, and Nancy Shaver, Independence junior, Greek week dance; Bruce Rider, Wichita junior, chariot race; Shannon Brown, Topeka sophomore, and Kyra Ludlow, Pittsburg junior, scholarship banquet; Patterson, King and Queen; Ed Dittemor, Robinson junior, and Mollie Stamper, Hutchinson junior, inter-fraternity sing; Jerry Halderman, Wichita junior, community project; and Warner Sorenson, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, panel discussion. KUOK Back On Air Today The extra hour will provide longer disc jockey shows. Those handling disc jockey programs this semester are Bruce Adair, Lynos sophomore; Charles Drew, Kansas City, Mo; senior; Karen Hancock, Sunflower senior; Walt Fuller, Kansas City, Kan; junior; John Schick, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore, and Al Stevenson, St. Louis, Mo. senior. KUOK, the campus radio station, will resume broadcasting at 6 tonight. This semester KUOK will be on the air for an hour longer than previously. Broadcasting time is 6 p.m. to midnight Mondays through Fridays. Monday, Feb. 11, 1957 Apply Now For Exposition Offices Applications for general chairman and business manager of the Engineering Exposition should be submitted to Dean Carr's office, 111 Marvin by 5 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 19. The Engineering Council will select the officers and announce its choice Feb. 21. The general chairman will coordinate the activities of the different departments in the Exposition and plan the program. The business manager will be in charge of the advertising and public information. Fee Payment Now Underway Dates for paying tuition and fees are today through Thursday, and not Feb. 18-21 as reported in Friday's Daily Kansan. "While a different part of the alphabet pays fees each day, we do not turn back students who find it inconvenient to pay on the day assigned," James K. Hitt, registrar said. "The schedule is simply a method of regulating the flow of students." Mr. Hitt emphasized that students whose fees are to be paid by others' than themselves (scholarship funds, governmental agencies, and others) must pick up their own fee cards and take them to the business office. Students who are enrolled for work off-campus and who will not be on the campus during the days set aside for payment may pay fees by mail. However, a written request for this privilege must be made at the registrar's office. Religious Emphasis To Begin Sunday "Is Religion the Answer?" is the theme of Religious Emphasis Week to be held at the University Sunday through Friday, Feb. 22. The purpose of Religious Emphasis Week is to promote in the University community the understanding of the vital place of religion and spiritual values in personal life and in society. Teaching Interviews Held This Week Job interviews for seniors in the School of Education are scheduled for this week in 117 Bailey as follows. Today—M. J. Whitson, assistant superintendent, Topeka. Tuesday—Miss Delore Gammon director of education. Wichita. Wednesday-D. A. McConnell, superintendent, Junction City, and M. W. Story, personnel director, Norwalk, Calif. Saturday—M. J. Blaha, assistant superintendent, Azusa, Calif. Fees paid by mail must reach the registrar's office not later than Thursday in order to avoid the penalty for late payment of fees. JAYHAWKER FINALISTS — The eleven finalists for Jayhawker Queen were chosen Friday by the '57 Jayhawker staff. The finalists are, from left to right, front row, Ruth Rieder, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, Gertrude Sellards Pearson; Virginia Hancock, Topea sophomore, Delta Gamma; Mary Sanborn, Chapman junior, Alpha Delta Pi; Marcia Goodwin, Columbus junior, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Second row, Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students, emphasizes the importance of students filling out the activities inventory which they received during enrollment. "This sheet is the only record we have of your campus activities, so it is to the student's advantage to complete the form accurately and completely." Dean Woodruff said. Wansley Sharp, Kansas City, Mo., junior, Delta Delta Delta; Virginia Kihm, Hutchinson freshman, Sellards Hall; Jane Dean, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, North College; Peggy Garrison, Phillipsburg sophomore, Alpha Chi Omega. Third row; Mary J. Eckles, Fond du Lac, Wis., junior, Chi Omega; Frances Glenn, Kansas City, Mo., junior, Kappa Alpha Theta; and Janice Harper, Winchester, Ill., sophomore, Pt Beta Phi. Sixteen speakers will be featured. In addition to the scheduled speeches and discussions, they will speak to organized houses and classes. Keynote Speech By Rabbi A highlight of the week will be the keynote speech by Rabbi Ferdinand M. Isserman, of St. Louis, Mo., at an all-University convocation at 9:20 a.m. Monday in Hoch Auditorium. Rabbi Isserman will speak on "What is the World Like?" Dr. Roland Bainton, visiting Humanities lecturer and professor of ecclesiastical history at Yale University, will also participate. A reception will be held for the speakers at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union. Following the reception, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will give a welcoming address. Faculty forums will be held at noon in the north end of the Student Union cafeteria, Monday, Feb. 18 through Thursday, Feb.21. Faculty Forums Scheduled Religious Groups To Discuss Merger A proposed plan for merging campus religious youth groups of different denominations will be discussed at the Westminster Fellowship house, 1221 Oread from 12 to 12:50 p.m., Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. A panel discussion at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 20. in Bailey Auditorium will discuss the theme, "Is Religion the Answer?" Groups that may merge include the United Student Fellowship (student Christian movement of the Congregational-Evangelical Reformed Church), Disciples Student Christian Fellowship, Presbyterian Westminster Fellowship, and the Methodist Student Movement. Lunch will be served at the three seminars. All interested students are urged to attend. Lincoln, Marshall In Bailey Films Films on the lives of two great men in American history, Abraham Lincoln and John Marshall, will be shown at 4 p. m. Wednesday in 3, Bailey Hall. "The Face of Lincoln" shows Artist Merrell Gage sculpturing the head of Lincoln through the years to his death to show the development of his character. The film "John Marshall" portrays the life of the founder of American constitutional law and the developmentmen which led to his appointment as chief justice of the Supreme Court. --- ... Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 11, 1957 William Allen White Day- To An Anxious Friend (Editor's note: Following is William Allen White's famous Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial on freedom of expression which spread like wildfire across the nation after it was first printed in the Emporia Gazette July 27, 1922. It has been heralded as one of the outstanding works to assert freedom of the press and is reprinted here in honor of the 89th anniversary of his birthday.) You tell me that law is above freedom of utterance. And I reply that you can have no wise laws nor free enforcement of wise laws unless there is free expression of the wisdom of the people—and, alas, their folly with it. But if there is freedom, folly will die of its own poison, and the wisdom will survive. That is the history of the race. It is proof of man's kinship with God. You say that freedom of utterance is not for time of stress, and I reply with the sad truth that only in time of stress is freedom of utterance in danger. No one questions it in calm days, because it is not needed. And the reverse is true also; only when free utterance is suppressed is it needed, it is most vital to justice. Peace is good. But if you are interested in peace through force and without free discussion—that is to say, free utterance decently and in order your interest in justice is slight. And peace without justice is tyranny, no matter how you may sugar-coat it with expedition. This state-today is in more danger from suppression than from violence, because, in the end, suppression leads to violence. Violence, indeed, is the child of suppression. Whoever pleads for justice helps to keep the peace; and whoever tramples on the plea for justice temperately made in the name of peace only outrages peace and kills something fine in the heart of man which God put there when we got our manhood. When that is killed, brute meets brute on each side of the line. So, dear friend, put fear out of your heart. This nation will survive, this state will prosper, the orderly business of life will go forward if only men can speak in whatever way given them to utter what their hearts-hold—by voice, by posted card, by letter, or by press. Reason has never failed men. Only force and repression have made the wrecks in the world. —William Allen White Winter Comes To The Hills (Editor's note: "Winter Comes To The Hills," by R. A. Clymer, editor of the El Dorado Times and president of the William Allen White Foundation, first appeared in the Times Feb. 2, 1957. Mr. Clymer is the 1957 recipient of the Certificate of Journalistic Merit of the William Allen White Foundation which was awarded today.) The Flint Hills, at this season, are fast asleep. They are now resting under the pale rays of the winter's sun, their peaks and sides covered with light siftings of snow—not the heavy blankets of other years. Here and there limestone ledges which are part of their basic structure, peer through their winter dress. Streams and rills are silent. Tree clumps along the creek banks stand huddled in patient and immobile waiting. A few small furry creatures scurry about their business, while the bugle of the coyote sounds at intervals over the wastes. The bluestem lies dormant—and in the vast domain of the ranges all movement is at a standstill. As always, in every mood of nature, the hills contrive to present a scene of surpassing loveliness-one which casts its benediction upon the traveler in their midst. Today more wayfarers are passing through the hills than ever before since these mounds pushed up from the basin of the ancient sea. The questing race of men has carved a giant gash through the hills—a mighty roadway wriggling with sinuous curves upon whose surface swiftly passes the traffic burden of the outside world. Sleek and graceful vehicles, with monstrous power concealed within their mechanisms, glide along this winding path, intent upon speedy passage. More often than not, their human cargoes utterly fail to "lift up their eyes unto the hills," from whence might be gained strength to gird the sinews of the spirit. Thus, the race of man has always rushed from one objective to another, gaining its headlong momentum but losing its ultimate achievement. The hills look upon this display of animation tolerantly. They are changeless. They have vast patience—and they can wait. Now they are waiting again—waiting for the modicum of moisture to sink into the roots of their grass, waiting for the mildness of spring days to come again, waiting to welcome the Big Beef Steer back to their fastnesses, waiting to make beef food for a hungry world. The hills are ever beautiful—but never more so than in the grip of winter. Even June, in all its glory, can enhance but not magnify their appeal as they stand in snowy cover, brooding over ageless mysteries and holding their secrets deep within their massive breasts. —R. A. Clymer Letters Beg Pardon! Editor: I noted $ _{k} $ casually, and without alarm or any the least discomfortable of reactions, that Mr. Tice essayed to suggest with creditable fervor though regrettable imprecision, that we in college study English that we might learn a language different than our own. I find his enthusiasm wholly applaudable but beg to inject a more sobering thought, that when in those ecstatic flights to which a teacher may be given through absorption in his subject he use himself temperately and omit misprisons so ridiculous. The attempt abortive, the attribution uncertain, the defense of necessity, inadequate, I suggest to Mr. Tice that he identify his errors as well as his quotations. James A. Nash Rochester, N.Y., freshman (Editor's note: Many thanks to our young friend for his correction. Regarding the attribution for the direct quotation "College students should take a course in English so they'll be able to speak a language different than their own" another wit, Groucho Marx, said it and it was carried by a wire service as printed. We should have corrected this error as we corrected those in the letter which Mr. Nash sent to us. Again, many thanks!) --- Ultimately Defrauded Most of us are easily diverted. That is why many of us vacillate from one interest to another and end up by being simply bewildered, or with a deep sense of having ultimately defrauded. Editor. The El Dorado Times Gov. George Docking's recently expressed possibility of taking a percentage of the gate receipts from KU football and basketball games as a "fair rental" for the stadium and the field house should not come as too much of a surprise to the people of Kansas. One Man's Opinion -Irwin Edman To the Kansas voter it is becoming apparent (to paraphrase Gov. Docking's assertion that "Now that they have Wilt the Stilt Chamberlain they should be making good money at the gate") that now that we have Mr. Docking as our governor the people of Kansas are going to pay higher real and personal property taxes Rats multiply so fast that one pair could conceivably result in a rat population of 400 million in only three years. Robert S.Wunsch Kingman second-year-law Editor: Cornell University's 10,700 students come from 48 states and 70 foreign countries. The only stockaded post, between the Alleghani and the Mississippi River, still standing as originally built, is Fort Wilkin's in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. University of Kansas student newspaper triview 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 triview 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Daily Hansan Extension 376, business clinic. Memorial Advertising Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. News service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturday and Sundays. University hall. Subscription fee as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 251, news room Extension 276, business office NEWS DEPARTMENT Kent Thomas ... Managing Editor John Battin, Feeleia Ann Fenberg, Bob Lyle, Betty Jean Stanford, Assistant Managing Editors; Jim Banman, City Editor; Nancy Harmon, Community Editor; Edith Hiroshi Shiozuki, Telegraph Editor; Mary Beth Noyes, Delbert Haley, Assistant Telegraph Editors; Dick Brown, Sports Editor; George Anthan, Assistant Sports Editor; Marlyn Mermals, Social Media Pat Swanson, Antant Society Editor; John Eaton, Picture Editor. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Jerry Dawson ... Editorial Editor Jerry Thomas, Jim Tice, Associate Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Business Manager Dale Bowens. Business Manager Dave Dickey, Advertising Manager; John Hedley, National Advertising Manager; Harold Metz, Classified Advertising Manager; Conboy Brown, Circulation Manager. The two policemen stopped their prowl-car in front of Green Hall late the other night in order to watch two young men sneaking a long box into the building. A Painter Explains 'But I Ain't Got No Body' "Abstract Art" Detecting something suspicious, the two officers investigated, only to discover that two students, Glenn Discussion By John Armstrong Tuesday, February 12 Bickle, Spearfish, S. D., sophomore, and Ted Morris, Wichita sophomore, were delivering a casket box to be used in a class skit the next day. The policemen walked back to the car mumbling to each other something about theater people. 4:00 Trophy Room Student Union Student Union Activities HERE IS THE THIRD TIE-BREAKER IN OLD GOLD'S TANGLE SCHOOLS PUZZLES TIE-BREAKING PUZZLE NO. 3 N R F R E N CLUE: This West Coast state university, chartered in 1868, has campuses at various locations throughout the state. Degrees in oceanography are among those conferred by this institution. CLUE: Named for its founder, who also founded the Western Union Telegraph Company, this eastern university has many schools, among which is one for hotel administration. ANSWER 1 ___ ANSWER 2 ___ Name ___ Address ___ City ___ State ___ College ___ Note: Above puzzle requires 2 answers. Hold answers for mailing instructions. All participants who completed the initial set of twenty-four puzzles correctly are required to solve a series of eight tiebreakers, in order to compete for the prizes in the tie. Remember-first prize is a tour for two around the world and there are 85 other valuable prizes. Old Gold CIGARETTES FILTER KINGS . NO OTHER CIGARETTE CAN MATCH THE TASTE OF TODAY'S OLD GOLDS Regulars—Kings—or Filters, today's Old Gold taste terrific . . . thanks to an exclusive blend of the finest nature-ripened tobaccos . . so rich . . . so light . . so golden bright! Copyright 1957. Harry B. Hollister --- Page 3 $1,600 In Prizes Offered For Aeronautical Essays Aeronautical engineering students may enter two contests with prizes totaling $1,600 during the next two weeks. The deadline for entries is March 1. Here's A Chance To Win $3,000 "Alcohol and Safety" is this year's theme for an editorial writing contest sponsored by the Intercollegiate Assn. A total of $3,000 in prize money is offered. The contest is open to any full-time undergraduate student registered in a college, university, or junior college in the United States and Canada for the 1956-57 academic year. No student who has written professionally is eligible. The maximum length for each editorial is 800 words, the minimum 500. Deadline for all entries is May 1. The manuscript is to be typewritten, double spaced, or written in ink. The author's name is not to appear on the manuscript, but an entry blank must be attached to each paper submitted. The judging will be based on sound, objective, original thinking; quality of research, accuracy of basic information, editorial style, and clarity of expression. Application blanks and material for the contest may be obtained by sending a postcard to the awards secretary, Intercollegiate Assn., 12 N. Third St., Room 522, Columbus 15, Ohio. College instructors using the subject in their class programs may also obtain the material. Success. Religion Discussed Dean T. DeWitt Carr of the School of Engineering spoke on the aspects of success as related to religion at a rush smoker of Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity, at the chapter house Thursday. The paper must concern aeronautical sciences and should be from 1,000 to 3,000 words long. The student must give an oral presentation of his paper, which should be 15 to 20 minutes in length. Finals of the contest will be held April 25-27 at Fort Worth, Tex., and April 24-26 at St. Louis, Mo. The Texas section has a closing date of March 14, and the St. Louis section March 15. KU will send one graduate student and one undergraduate student to Fort Worth. Because there is no limit to entries at St. Louis, 15 or 20 students are expected to take part. Prizes at both cities will be $300 for first, $200 for second and $100 for third, and three $50 honorable mention prizes. At St. Louis an additional prize of $100 is given for the best oral presentation. "In the past we have taken our share of the prizes," said Ammon S. Andes, professor of aeronautical engineering."Last year we won first in the graduate section at Texas, and second and third in the oral presentation at St. Louis." "Industrial Forces and the Architect" will be the theme of the fourth annual architects' conference to be held Wednesday and Thursday in the Student Union. Architects Will Confer The conference is sponsored by the Kansas City and Kansas chapters of the American Institute of Architects and the KU department of architecture. Speakers at the conference will include: Edward X. Tuttle, vicepresident of Giffels and Vallet, Inc., Detroit, Mich.; John Sticher, director of the Kansas Industrial Development Commission; Stuart Parry Walsh, director of Industrial Planning Associates, San Francisco, and A. W. Zimmer, president of the A. W. Zimmer Co., Kansas City, Mo. PINNED? ENGAGED? GOING STEADY? Give That Special Guy A Valentine's Gift he'll wear with pride Jewelry 3.50 or 5.00 Sweaters 25% Off Sport Shirts ½ Price Our Winter SALE Is Still in Progress the university shop 1420 Crescent Rd. Across From Lindley University Daily Kansan Jewelry 3.50 or 5.00 Sweaters 25% Off Jewelry 3.50 or 5.00 Sport Shirts 1/2 Price Sweaters 25% Off Jewelry 3.50 or 5.00 Sweaters 25% Off Our Winter SALE Is Still in Progress the university shop KIDS' SPACE... LOST ORIGINAL GRAVE... IN WEST BROOK the university shop KING'S ENGINEERING, 1405 GREATEST DAYS... IN WEST MIDLAND... 1420 Crescent Rd. Across From Lindley 850 To Take Scholarship Tests Nearly 850 high school seniors, nominated by their high school principals, will take examinations for Watkins and Summerfield scholarships Feb. 18 and 19. This year the preliminary test will be combined with the Kansas State College Henry J. Putnam Memorial Scholarship test. Finalists who try for this scholarship will take the final examination at Kansas State, Manhattan. From the results of these exams, the Watkins Scholarship Committee will choose 40 women to take the final March 11 and 12. The Summerfield Scholarship Committee will choose 40 men for the final to be given March 18 and 19. These final tests will produce 10 Watkins and 15 Summerfield scholars. Following the convention in Chicago, Dean Anderson will attend the American Assn. of School Administrators' meeting in Atlantic City, Feb. 17-20. At this convention he will read a paper on "Study of Variability in Exceptional Kansas High School Seniors." Three University faculty members will attend conventions on education Thursday through Saturday in Chicago. 3 Will Attend Convention association is the accrediting agency for school of education. As official representative for the University, Dean Anderson will serve on the nominating committee to elect a new president. Dean Kenneth Anderson of the School of Education will attend the American Assn. of Colleges for Teacher Education convention. The Two Are Named Watkins Scholars Donna Mae Esslinger, Clifton sophomore, and Ruth Leaidig, Oberlin senior, have been selected as Elizabeth M. Watkins Scholars by the Elizabeth M. Watkins Scholarship committee. Miss Esslinger and Miss Laidig were chosen on the basis of their outstanding records, both scholastic and on campus. Karl D. Edwards, associate professor of education, will attend the national convention of the Assn. for Student Teaching, and will make a report on the activities of the bulletin publication committee of which he is chairman. Engineers PHYSICISTS·MATHEMATICIANS FEW OF SPERRY'S 1. First gyro-compass 2. First marine automatic pilot 2. First marine automatic pilot 3. First radio-controlled "guided missile" E. E. Bayles, professor of education, will attend the convention of the National Society for College Teachers of Education. 4. Revolutionary high-intensity searchlight 5. First Gyropilot 6. First automatic computing gun sight 7. First anti-aircraft 8. First radio-controlled pilotless je 1. First automatic anti-aircraft 2. First air-controlled militeres int 8. First electronic automatic pilot 10. Sparrow air to air guided missile Graduate to a LIFETIME CAREER with SPERRY Step from school into the satisfying kind of lifework that only an expanding, nationwide organization like Sperry can offer. You'll be able to choose from a variety of fascinating fields. You'll share the excitement of contributing to the long list of Sperry engineering "firsts"—a list which has been growing steadily since 1910. You'll work side by side with noted engineers and scientists. And, with new divisions of Sperry located throughout the country, you will enjoy the unique advantage of "getting in on the ground floor" of a solid, 47-year-old organization! Openings Available at These Locations: SUNNYVALE, CALIFORNIA — Sunnyvale Development Center SALT LAKE CITY, UTAN — Sperry Utah Engineering Laboratory POINT MUGU, CALIFORNIA — Test & Evaluation Center GREAT NECK, LONG ISLAND, N. Y. — Sperry Gyroscope Co. GAINESVILLE, FLORIDA — Sperry Electronic Tube Division CHARLTOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA — Sperry Piedmont Co. These are modern, air-conditioned plants with up-to-the-minute equipment and facilities. Near-by are graduate schools at which you may continue your studies under Sperry's full tuition refund program. Consider Sperry on every count: choice of specialization, salary, advancement, stability, company benefits, location. Then take the first step toward the career of your life by talking to the SPERRY ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT HEADS WHO WILL BE AT YOUR SCHOOL ON FEBRUARY 12, 1957 Make an appointment at your placement office today 10 Write for free illustrated booklet "Your Engineering Horizon With Sperry" To Mr. J. W.Dwyer Employment Manager SPERRY GYROSCOPE COMPANY Division of Sperry Rand Corp. Marcus Ave. & Lakeville Rd. Great Neck, Long Island, New York Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 11, 1957 ONE, TWO, THREE, EVERYBODY UP — Melvin Coates, Pittsburg State hurdler (middle) leads KU's Bill Tillman and Dave Freeman over the last hurdle and went on to win the 60- yard high hurdles in :07.7. —(Daily Kansan photo) Jayhawker Thin Clads Meet M-State Tonight Bill Easton and his track squad left Kansas City's Municipal Airport for East Lansing, Mich., Sunday night and it's a sure bet the Jayhawkers will not find Michigan State as easy to push over as the Pittsburg State team. Kansas won 13 of 15 events against the Gorillas Friday night, losing only the 60-yard dash and the 60- yard high hurdles. When the totals were in KU had won, 118-50. In East Lansing, however, Easton will find a team which is strong in just the events his team is, maybe a little stronger. In addition to a strong field and dash team, Michigan State will display an array of power in the distance events. The Spartans have won the NCAA cross country championship for the past two years while Kansas came in second both times. KU Strong In Distances Canadians Henry and Crawford Kennedy and Selwyn Jones are mainly responsible for the Spartan strength in the distance hauls. Australian Dave Lean copped fourth place in the 400-meter Olympic run as a member of the Aussie team. KU Strong In Distances Kansas also is a distance powerhouse. Such top notch performers as Jan Howell, Hal Long, Jerry McNeal, Verlyn Schmidt and Lowell Janzen give Easton the power he needs in the half-mile, mile and two-mile runs. Three new races, the 300, 600 and 1.000 yard runs, will be included in the meet and all dashes will be 75 yards instead of the accustomed 60 yards. In Friday's meet with Pittsburg, McNeal Big Seven Conference defending indoor and outdoor two-mile champion, shaved :07.7 off his Allen Field House record to win in 9:10.3. The only two KU losses in the meet came when Melvin Coates defeated Dave Freeman by posting a :07.7 in the high hurdles and when Bob Wooten, Pitt dashman, sped over the 60-yard dash in :06.2. Janzen Is Double Winner Janzen, KU's only double winner 2 BIG SHOWS Sun. Feb. 24 · 3:30 & 8:00 P.M. - Municipal Auditorium- Topeka Advance tickets-$2.00 at the door $2.50. Tickets on sale at Walgreen Drug-8th and Kansas and Mills Music-312 Kansas. SUPER ATTRACTIONS PRESENT THE BIGGEST SHOW of Stars for 57 All in Person Fats DOMINO Bill DOGGETT MAN'S CHEEK COURSE BY JONATHAN LYDY McPhatter LAVERN Baker ALL IN REPON SUPER ATTRACTIONS PRESENT THE BIGGEST SHOW of Stars for 57 Allin Arson Fats DOMINO JOE O'SHANN Bill DOGGETT ALEXDE McFhatter LAVERN Baker BILL IN PERSON Chuck BERRY * Five KEYS The MOONGLOWS * ANN COLE Five SATINS * Charles BROWN Eddie Cooley DRAPLES * The SCHOOL BOYS won the 1.000 yard run in 2:13.7, then copped the half-mile with a 1:56.6 time. The meet Friday night saw Dave Tams, KU's top valuer, jump up in the air joyfully after he had cleared 14-1, two inches short of a field house record but still a career high. Paul Williams BSc 2010 Kansas has won its first two indoor meets. Both, however, were against competition that did not provide a true criteria of the true strength of the Jayhawker team. Tonight is the real test. The Kansas track team is admittedly good. How good? We'll know tonight. Davidson Is Tennis Winner PARIS — (UP) — Sweden's Sven Davidson won the men's singles title of the French International Indoor tennis championships with a 6-4, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 victory over Torben Ulrich of Denmark yesterday. Along the JAYHAWKER trail By DICK BROWN (Daily Kansan Sports Editor) Perhaps the hardest working and most underrated athletic performers at the University are the members of Coach Chuck Edward's swimming team. For very little glory except the chance to win a varsity letter, these performers tackle a six-month season of daily workouts. Every day they splash in the pool for 2½ hours. These athletes are among the very few "simone pure" performers left in the sports world. There are no swimming scholarships offered at the University. However, John Jefferies, freshman swimmer from Bartlesville, Okla., does hold a Stansbury scholarship which is based on grades. He has to maintain a 1.76 average to keep the scholarship." "That is one of the main problems we have to face," Chuck Edwards said. "We are working on more scholarships for swimmers but with the demands of the major sports for scholarships, they are tough to acquire." Competitor-coach Edwards has done a great job under trying circumstances to give KU a winning swimming team. Besides being the ace of the squad for two years, Chuck spends a considerable amount of time in trying to improve the team and get KU swimming on a level with other Big Seven squads Operating on a small budget, it is Chuck's job to lure the best swimmers in the state to the University. With little athletic aid to offer prospects and without a winning tradition behind the team, his is a big job. give the varsity the stiffest competition they will run into in league action this year. Four tremendous performers, Charlie Tidwell, Bob Cannon, Ernie Shelby and Tom Skutka plus a strong freshman squad could give the varsity all the action they could stand. Three cheers for Chuck Edwards! A pickup team from Coach Bill Easton's trackmen not competing for the University could probably ok YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or A clear indication of how strong the team really is will be shown tonight when the Jayhawkers travel to East Lansing, Mich., to duel with the powerful Michigan State team. Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2906 The national track championship is about the only honer-Easton has not won. While he had the squad to be a hands down favorite to capture the flag before the unexpected set-backs, don't sell him short. He wants to win too badly to quit at this stage of the game. We'll wait until after the national meet before declaring Kansas a dead power in national track this year. IM Volleyball Season Closes The last round of intramural volleyball games will be played tonight and Wednesday night. Currently leading in the three divisions are Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Kappa Gamma and Gamma Phi Beta, Division 1, tied with three wins, one loss; Sellards, Division 2, with four wins, no losses; Delta Delta Delta, Division 3, with four wins, no losses. Eighteen halls and sororities have taken part in the volley ball games since the season began in December. By participating in intramural sports, girls may earn points toward becoming members of the Women's Athletic Assn. A total of 120 points are necessary for membership. Ten points are earned for each sport. BIRD TV-Radio Service 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 A New Service... STUDENTS - ORGANIZED HOUSES Note—Available now at HIXON'S TAPE RECORDERS FOR RENT RECORD IT YOURSELF!! Ideal for Skits, Parties, Dances Practicing Speech and Foreign Languages. RENTAL BY DAY OR WEEK! 摄影 Phone now for complete information HIXON STUDIO AND CAMERA SHOP 721 Mass. Don Crawford ● Bob Blank V1 3-0330 Exclusive Engagement . . . . Starts Next Wednesday 4-Four-4 Nites Only Feb.13,14,15,16-Green Theater "Pity Poor Pearl" Featuring - Grand heart throbbing story of a beautiful woman with a wretched background - Stupendous cast of thousands? - Gigantic sets. - Glorious true-to-life color with true-to-life actions - Superb music by our newly acquired upright piano - Gorgeous lighting effects using smokeless kerosene. Only 4 Bits - Tickets at Union Ticket Center Page 5 Kansas Zone Defense Stops Huskers, 69-54 A surprise Kansas zone defense and almost complete control of its defensive backboards helped the Jayhawkers romp to a 69-54 victory over the Nebraska Cornhuskers at Lincoln Saturday night. Coach Dick Harp said the Jayhawkers switched to the zone defense from their regular man-to-man in an attempt to stop the hot shooting Huskers. Not only did the Kansans stop the Huskers, but they shot a torrid 56 per cent themselves throughout the first half and were in complete control of the game after that. The Jayhawkers also swept to a 53-27 bound edge. With Wilt Chamberlain leading the way, the Cornhuskers were able to grab only seven offensive rebounds. The Big Dipper collected 21, and Maurice King grabbed 10, one more than Nebraska's highest. Rex Ekwall. In an attempt to stop Chamberlain the Nebraskans put the usual three man defense on him, but the big center scored 26 points to lead the Jayhawkers' scoring. Ron Loneski continued his fine play in his second game as a member of the starting five, scoring 13 points to place second in Jayhawker point totals. Gene Elistun and Maurice King hit 12 and 11 respectively to round out a well-balanced KU attack. KU's Lead A Full Game KU's Lead A Full Game The victory, giving Kansas a 5-1 conference record, stretched the Jayhawker's lead to a full game over second place Kansas State. Their season's record now stands at 14-1. For the Huskers, it was their first defeat at home and dropped them into fifth place at 2-3. A capacity coliseum crowd of 9,000 watched the Jayhawks soar to an early 23-8 lead. KU at one time built its lead to 22 points, while the closest the Cornhuskers came after the early Kansas lead was 12 points. KU broke out of an 8-8 tie at the 6-minute mark for a comfortable intermission lead of 36-20 and went on to a 55-33 lead seven minutes after the second half opened. Coach Harp thought the Jayhawkers played well throughout the entire game. Their zone defense made the Nebraskans shoot from outside all night. Only eight of the 21 Nebraska field goals were collected from within 20 feet of the basket. Rex Ekwall led the Nebraska attack with 14 points, while Gary Reimers collected 11 for the losers. Box Score Kansas (69) FE FT F Nebraska (54) FG FG FT F FA FA FT F L Jh'm'sn 1 0-2 0 Ekwall 5 4-7 4 Lowa'k 1 3-4 0 Erwood 5 3-4 0 M jm'sn 1 0-2 0 Smitt 3 2-4 0 Tmp'sn 1 0-2 1 Smitt 3 2-4 0 Ghmb'in 7 12-19 3 Parsons 3 0-4 0 King 5 1-2 0 Swank 0 0-0 0 Elstun 0 2-3 0 Howard 0 0-0 1 Dater 0 0-0 0 Wells 0 0-0 0 Parker 1 0-0 1 Nannen 3 0-1 2 Holl'ngr 1 1-3 0 Kubacki 3 0-0 2 Relmers 1 3-3 0 Kimdred 3 3-5 3 Totals 25 19-35 13 Totals 21 12-21 69 Kansas 36 33-69 Totals 25 19-35 13 | Totals 21 12-21 22 | Nebraska 20 19-35 13 | Nebraska 20 19-35 13 Israeli Absorbs 64-59 Loss BOSTON—(UP)—Boston College handed a touring Israeli Olympic basketball team its first defeat in this country, 64-59, yesterday in a preliminary to a National Basketball Association game between the Boston Celtics and Philadelphia Warriors. Every day 150,000 bottles of cognac brandy are shipped to all parts of the world from the town of Cognac, France. Baby Doll was a Cinderella compared with Pearl! See "Pity Poor Pearl" University Players' Melodrama Feb.13,14,15,16 Green Theater-7:30 Tickets 50c at Union Ticket Center Carol Heiss Takes NA Skating Crown ROCHESTER, N.Y. — (UP) — "It's 10 years of work for four minutes on the ice," but it all added up to the North American figure skating championship for 17-year-old Carol Heiss of Ozone Park. N.Y. The attractive, honey-haired Carol won the unanimous vote of all five judges to capture the women's crown yesterday while Dave Jenkins, a 20-year-old Colorado College student and brother of Olympic titleholder Hayes Alan Jenkins, won the men's crown. MICHAEL GIBBLE Ernie Shelby ---(Daily Kansan photo by John Eaton) With all the commotion over the ineligibility of KU track stars Charlie Tidwell and Bob Cannon, another ineligible Jayhawker trackman, equally as great in this field has gone unnoticed. KU Track Star In Shadows As Others Make Headlines That young man is Ernie Shelby, one of only three-men competing in the world today who has gone over 26 feet in the broad jump. Ernie's ineligibility is traced not to scholastic difficulties but to laying out a year of competition after transferring from Pierce Junior College, Los Angeles, last fall. Ernie owns an all-time best jump of 26 feet $1\frac{1}{4}$ inches which he used to win the national AAU track meet last year. He was fifth in the Olympic trials, jumping 25 feet $-1\frac{1}{4}$ Has Jumped 26 Feet inches away from making the team "There are three things essential to being a good broadjumper," Ernie said. "You need natural speed and spring plus coordination at the jump, which you simply have to develop." University Daily Kansas Ernie certainly fills the bill in the three categories. He has run 09.6 for the 100-yard dash and owns a best time in the 220-yard dash of 20.9. "I think hurdling is essential for broadjumpers," Ernie said, "because when you hurdle you must have perfect stepping between the hurdles and this timing carries over into broadjumping." Hurdling Is Essential "If you can take your steps mechanically before jumping and con- FEB. 14th For Young Moderns FEB. 14th Monday, Feb. 11, 1957 We have a complete selection of Valentines for anyone's favorite guy or doll, Mom, Dad, Sis, or Kid Brother. We know you'll be pleased with our selection. Buy your cards now while our stock is complete. 1023 Massachusetts Vickers Gift Shop (Across from the Granada) KU Swimmers Up Record To 3-1 With Two Victories The Kansas swimming team won meets from Kansas State and Fort Hays State Friday and Saturday to bring their season record to 3-1. On Friday the Jayhawkers nipped K-State 44-42 on the strength of a great anchor lap by coach-competitor Chuck Edwards in the 400-yard freestyle relay; the final event of the day. Edwards was the only double winner as he took the 60 and 100-yard freestyle events. On Saturday, Kansas again used a winning effort in the 400-yard freestyle event to clinch a 48-38 victory over Fort Hays State. Six pool records were hung up by the two teams and one KU varsity record. The KU medley relay team swam 4:34.4 in the 400-yard event to post the varsity record. centrate only on the jump it is an important advantage," he said. Tom Clevenger got two of the records for the Jayhawkers and was the meet's high scorer with 10 points. Chuck Edwards and Bill Matthews rang up the other records. Strangely enough, it is hurdling that gives Ernie the most pleasure out of track. In current practice sessions, he is tied with Charlie Tidwell for the best time in the 220-yard low hurdles. Moaning over the cold Kansas weather, Ernie declared that at this time of the year in California, he "I hope Gregg Bell and John Bennett (the other two men who have jumped 26 feet) can make it to the meet. I would like another crack at them," he said. "We did real well in both meets. I was especially impressed with the competitive spirit of the squad," Coach Edwards said. Asked whether or not the layoff from competition would hurt him, Charlie answered, "No, I don't think it will bother me as much as people think, although I suppose it will have some effect on my timing." Will Enter AAU Meets "While I am not eligible for college meets, I plan to take part in several AAU meets," Ernie declared. "This year, the KU Relays broad-jump event will be an open event instead of a college event as it has been in the past. was already working out on the outdoor jumping pit. Weather No Handicap "It will probably take me longer to get to my jumping peak here but I think once the weather warms up there shouldn't be any disadvantage," Ernie said. Ernie sees nothing but roses for the Jayhawker track team of next year. He said they should be a heavy favorite to win the national meet if the squad does not suffer any bad breaks. "I honestly think if KU's track team returns all undergraduate lettermen, and they make normal improvement, we should have a better squad than the ones that won the NCAA the last four years," he said. Bill Russell A Friend Two of Ernie's best friends in California athletic circles are Willie Naulls and Bill Russell, both All-American basketball players for UCLA and the University of San Francisco respectively. Naulls incidentally is engaged to Ernie's sister, Dennis. Use Our Handy thrifti-check Book of 20 personalized Checks – $1.50 PAY TO THE ORDER OF BLAKES VIRGINIA COUNTY thrifti-check Feb. 1932 PAY TO THE ORDER OF BRANCH & THOUSAND CENTS DEPT. OF MORTGAGE It's Good Business To Pay By Check! Your cancelled check provides a handy receipt and record of money spent. You don't have to worry about loss or theft of payments by mail. Save time and energy, open an account here! Douglas County State Bank The Bank of Friendly Service 900 Mass. Member F.D.I.C. Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 11, 1957 AWS Senate Election Slated For March 6 The Associated Women Students' Senate, top governmental body for women on the campus, will be elected March 6 in an election open to all women students. Petitions for the election will be distributed in the AWS House of Representatives Thursday. The Senate is composed of the winners of the spring election for the officers of president, vice president, secretary, treasurer, Greek and Independent representatives to the All Student Council, plus the runners-up for these six posts. The AWS supports the following objectives: 2. To promote and coordinate activities for women. 3. To work for better living conditions and wages for women on the campus. 4. To legislate rules and regulations that pertain to women. 5. To foster a living school spirit. 6. To provide leadership opportunities for women on the campus. Projects sponsored by AWS include the sophomore counseling group, which provides each freshman woman with a counselor. All Women's Day, a High School Leadership Day, and a housemother's party. Electricians Conclude 10-Week Course A 10-week industrial electronics course for practicing electricians will have its final meeting Tuesday evening. William Lansdown, instructor in electrical engineering, has been teaching the course. The 30 electricians enrolled meet in the Electrical Engineering Lab on Tuesday evenings. The course is the first of its kind to be offered here. Three Oklahoma University Interfraternity Council members visited the University last weekend to gather information about the organization of Negro fraternities. The OU representatives spoke with Gordon Ewy, Hill City senior and IFC president. OU Men Study KU Negro Frats Friday they exchanged IFC ideas with Ewy and spent Saturday afternoon visiting Alpha Phi Alpha and Kappa Alpha PSi fraternities. Ewy said they investigated KU fraternities as part of a plan to organize Negro fraternities at OU. Ewy said that they also discussed differences in Rush Week procedures. Oklahoma has a week before Rush Week in which there is a $50 fine if a fraternity member talks to a rushee. It does not have train dates, and the fraternities believe this does away with much of the train date trouble. Safety note: All stairs having four or more risers should have a handrail on one side. Stairways 44 to 66 inches wide should have a handrail on each side. Apartment Work Slowed; May Be Ready Sept.1 Work on the Stouffer Place apartments, married students' housing project near 19th and Iowa Streets, has been progressing slowly due Scholarships Offered By K.C. Press Club The Kansas City Press Club is offering two $200 scholarships to junior men who plan to major in the news-editorial sequence of the William Allen White Schol of Journalism and Public Information. The Press Club is giving two scholarships to each of the three undergraduates schools, University of Kansas, Kansas State, and University of Missouri. The successful candidates will be announced at the Press Club dinner Feb. 19, in the Hotel Muehlebach, Kansas City, Mo. North America's native elk used to range over much of the United States and Canada. Indians called it "wapiti"; English colonials named it elk after Europe's big deer. All entries must be submitted by 5 p.m. Thursday. to bad weather, but Mr. J. J. Wilson, director of dormitories, hopes they will be ready for occupancy by September. There are 120 apartments in the project; 80 with two bedrooms, living room, bath and kitchen, and 40 with one bedroom, living room, bath and kitchen. The apartments will be furnished with basic items such as divans, drop-leaf tables, occasional chairs, beds and venetian blinds, but not cooking utensils, linens, television sets, drapes or throw rugs. Occupants will pay for utilities. Over 300 applications have been received for the apartments. A lease for one calendar year must be signed: however, the apartment may be sublet to another married couple attending the University with the permission of the Dormitory Office. Look Your Well-Dressed Best For - Special Campus Events - Job Interviews - Dates - Any Occasion—when you want to make an extra special good impression A shoe shine, neatness and perfectly cleaned and pressed clothes from Lawrence Laundry give you the assurance and confidence of the successful person. Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners Dial VI 3-3711—You’ll be glad you did—1001 New Hamp. POLICE SUPERVISOR WILD AS THEIR MUSIC! CRAZY AS THEIR LOVE! ROCK. PRETTY BABY! STARRING SAL MINEO JOHN SAXON LUANA PATTEN with FAY WRAY ROCK TO 12 HIT TUNES! 兵 ROCK. PRETTY BABY! WILD AS THEIR MUSIC! CRAZY AS THEIR LOVE! ROCK. PRETTY BABY! STARRING SAL MINEO JOHN SAXON LUANA PATTEN with FAY WRAY ROCK TO 12 HIT TUNES! News—Color Cartoon NOW Ends Wednesday Mat. Tuesday 2 p.m. GRANADA VARSITY Open 6:45—Show at 7:00 TODAY WARNER BROS. PRESENT HENRY FONDA·VERA MILES in ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S The Wrong Man the wrong authority quartz Directed by ALFRED HITCHCOCK Feat. at 7:15-9:15 News — Bugs Bunny Cartoon Comfort! Conventions! JAYHAWKER NEW POST-BACK CUSHIONED CHAIRS Open 6:45—Show at 7:00 TODAY ONE MAN AGAINST A TOWN GONE MAD WITH LUST! JEFF CHANDLER "Drango" Released there United Artists Feature at 7:15-9:05 News—Color Cartoon GRANADA VARSITY Open 6:45-Show at 7:00 TODAY WARNER BROS. PRESENT HENRY FONDA - VERA MILES In ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S The Wrong Man NEW HAMING ANTHONY QUARTLEY Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW FASHION DRAFT CUSTOMED CHAIRS ONE MAN AGAINST A TOWN GONE MAD WITH LUST! JEFF CHANDLER "Drango" Released Here United Artists Feature at 7:15-9:05 News—Color Cartoon 25 word TIME. zlines. reg. sup pay lat LIVE C Pers. Texas- stands outfits chamele in the Shop. 1 REMIN ER. Go 3-4715 BEVER cold. ( closed Ice Pla 3-0350. NOTICE call or orders GLASS Charco Ph. V Office. ARMY Field 1 Will th VI 3-1 NICE 821 Inc LIGHT near S BE IN campus month. dale C 7025. A MEN. Single furnishi ty of 3-5908. FOUR MENT bath, Utility 7826. TWO ROOM style 1 EXTRA furnish entran TIRED Two r the u immed 1231 I NEWL Swimr privilege Have P01 of V Wilson they Sep- Monday, Feb. 11, 1954 University, Daily Kansas Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS in the lives, liv- and 40 bath We rent nationwide trailers any size, anywhere, anytime CROFT TRAILER RENTAL CO. 25 words or less; one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business-Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. nished divans, chairs, but not vision Oceu- East 23rd VI 3-7377 been lease ist be but may couple th the Office. CKT DAY 000 PIV A Y ege FOR SALE D AN T AD GST! F OILER AN T AD ST! FF MILLER " United Artists " LIVE GIFTS—Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs-beds, hammocks, harnesses, chameleons, hampsters, fish, turtles, chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Gift and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent close paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. 6th, 6th and Vermont. Phone 1-3050. TIME. LIFE & Sports Illustrated magazines. Special students' prices of ½ reg. sub. rate. Prompt service, buy now pay later, call VI 3-0124. tf REMINGTON STANDARD TYPEWRITER. Good condition, reasonable. Ph. VI 3-4715 17F Sunnyside. 2-13 MISCELLANEOUS 2-14 NOTICE-Your Avon Representative will call on you by appointment or take orders by telephone. Ph. VI 3-2376. 2-12 ARMY BLANKET. Was left in Allen Field House after the Iowa State game. Will the finder please call James Fulton. VI 3-1695. 2-12 LOST GLASSES between Strong and Malott. Charcoal frames in brown leather case. Ph. VI 3-9123 or turn in at Kansan Office. 2-13 10 FOUND LIGHT BROWN PUPPY. Small. Found near Student Union. Call VI 3-7404. FOR RENT NICE CLEAN ROOM For 1 or 2 men. 821 Indiana_Phone VI 3-4163. 2-12 BE INDEPENDENT. Live close to the campus. Room and board $45.00 per person, dorm room $6.00 per person. Co-op 1537! Tennessee. Ph. VI 3025. Ask for Tom. Anla, or Jack. 2-13 ROOM for 2 or 3 boys, extra large, clean, quiet. Linens furnished. Close to KU. Phone VI 3-2961 or see 1022 Alabama. 2-11 MEN, study in peace in your own-room. Single or double, next to bath. Liness Near Campus. Near Campus. ty of Burking Space. 170t. Ohio. Ph. VI 3-598 2-14 EXTRA NICE 3 room - newly decorated furnished apartment. Private bath and entrance. 825 Ohio. 2-13 TWO CLEAN WARM SLEEPING ROOMS. Single or double, serving home style meals reasonably. Ph. VI 3-1585. FOUR ROOM FURNISHED APART- MENT with private entrance, private one bedroom, one study room. Utilities paid, quiet home. Ph. V3-1 7826. TIRED OF WALKING UP THE HILL? Two rooms for boys one-half block from the invasion. Phone privileges. Available immediately. Phone VI 3-5766 or see tfr 1231 La. NEWLY DESIGNED AESTHETIC HOME Swimming pool and showers. Kitchen privileges if desired. Phone VI 3-9655. 7-11 FOR LEASE Have your car lubricated the MOTO-SWAY WAY POTTER'S "66" SERVICE 1401 W. 6th VI 3-9891 At FLOUR Products Company of Whittier, Calif., Paola, Kansas, Santa Rosa, Calif. REPRESENTATIVE C. R. LEMENAGER, MGR. INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS WED. FEB. 20 Will Be on Campus To Interview THREE ROOM APARTMENT unfur- ment condition Pb. VI w 2-3625 or vi W 3-1271 w 2-11 w 2-3625 or vi W 3-1271 w 2-11 MECH. ENG'G. June Graduates READERS WANTED for 15 to 20 hours per week. Will pay 75c per hour. Call VI 3-2399 between 3 and 5:30 p.m. 2-17 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPIST, experienced in theses, term papers, reports. Fast and accurate, student rates. Mrs. Betty Veqstul. 1935 Barker A. Phone VI 3-2001. tt TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 119 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf HELP WANTED CHECK WITH YOUR ENG'G. PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR APPOINTMENT LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6657, 1106 La. tf for Jr., Sr. Graduate Students up to $500.00 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. Phone VI 3-8074 for 1 day service 833 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf FREE TUTORING IN ENGLISH. Review of grammar, sentence structure, outlines, paragraphs, and theme structure. Ph. VI 3-7401. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast. accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow. 606 Maine. Phone VI 3-7645. tf TRANSPORTATION TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. Call Rose Glieser at 914-527-3080 for national airport for information for lighthouses and reservations. 8th & Mass. Phone VI 3-0152. tt RIDERS OR DRIVERS for car pool from K.C.K. Call F1 2-3267 after six for details. For gifts and for your own library, Art, Architecture, Cook Books, Childrens Books, Modern BOOKS Library. THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 GOT MY MAN RIGHT WHERE I WANT HIM 1 Thanks to Valentine Gifts For Men from a Real Men's Store For - Golfing - Tennis - Fishing - Camping - Boating VI 3-6106 715 Mass. Sportsman's Seniors and graduate students in ENGINEERING! PHYSICS! MATHEMATICS! e ry You can enjoy the kind of work, salary and living conditions you're training for in the Douglas Tulsa plant . one of the most modern, best air-conditioned Don't plan a dog's life plants in the country. VG --physicists and mathematicians working on big new Air Force Life is good at Tulsa It's particularly good for Douglas engineers, contracts. In challenge, in living conditions and contracts in challenges in living conditions and in opportunities for quick advancement, Douglas in Tulsa offers the utmost. Investigate today. Write Mr. E. F. Brown, Douglas Aircraft Company P.O. Box 763F, Tulsa, Oklahoma On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "Barefoot Boy With Cheek," etc.) On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "Barefoot Boy With Cheek;" etc.) LITERATURE CAN BE SCREAMS! To save you tiresome days of reading, days that can be more happily devoted to healthful winter activities like skiing, tobogganing, and three card monte, this column today presents digests of some classic novels that are sure to come up in your lit courses. The Scarlet Letter This is a heart rending story of a humble Boston lass named Hester Prynne who is so poor that she does not have enough to eat, nor a roof to cover her head. But she is a brave, brawny lass and she never complains and by and by her patience is rewarded: in the summer of 1859 she wins a football scholarship to Alabama. Hester works hard and makes the varsity and wins her letter. Everybody says she is a shoo-in for All-Conference honors, but along comes the War Between the States, and football, alas, is dropped for the duration. She was a Shoo-in for All-Conference honors. Poor Hester goes back to Boston. It is a bitter cold winter, and poor Hester, alas, does not have a roof over her head, and the only warm clothing she owns is the football sweater from Alabama, but that, alas, has a big scarlet "A" on the front of it, and she can hardly wear such a thing in Boston where Union sentiment runs so high. Poor Hester, alas, freezes to death. Little Women The Marches are a very happy family - and for no reason whatsoever. They are poor as snakes; they work from cockcrow to evensong; their dear old father Philip is away with the Union armies; and their mattresses are lumpy. Still, nothing can dampen the spirits of madcap Meg, jocular Jo, buoyant Beth, animated Amy, and crazy old Marmee, as the merry March girls lovingly call their lovable mother. Well sir, one Christmas the March girls get an invitation to a ball. But Beth reminds the sisters that they can hardly go traipsing off and leave poor Marmee alone at Christmas time. The sisters swear a lot, but they finally agree with Beth. Marmee, however, will not hear of it. "Land's sake, little women!" she cries. "You must go to the ball and have some fun. There will be punch and ginger snaps and confetti. Best of all, there will be morris dancing. Oh, how your father and I used to love that!" "I never knew father could dance," cries Meg. "Oh, yeah?" cries Marmee. "You should have seen Philip morris!" "The best," cries Marmee. "Philip could morris in long size and regular and was full of natural goodness and fresh and firm and unfiltered too." "Was Philip a good morriser?" cries Jo. The girls are cheered to hear this and go to the ball. Marmee stays home all alone, but soon gets a wonderful surprise: Philip comes back from the war! When the girls return from the ball, they find Marmee and Philip morrising, and they cry "Huzzah!" and throw their bonnets in the air, where they are to this day. $ \textcircled{C} $Max Shulman, 1957 Speaking of books, in our book today's new Philip Morris, made by the sponsors of this column, is the smoothest, fastest cigarette ever offered anywhere! Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 11, 1957 100 —(Daily Kansan photo) LONG ARM OF KEN PLUMB — In his familiar role as a policeman, Plumb makes an arrest in "Pity Poor Pearl." Here he apprehends the villainess, Jane Quaid, Norman, Okla., graduate student Chances Of Being The 'Cop' Are Slim With Him Around Fellow theater members claim his honest face is the reason Ken Plumb, Sunflower graduate student, almost inevitably has been cast as a policeman. Plumb, who will appear again in police uniform for the University Army ROTC Plans Hospital Show The Army ROTC will present a variety show March 12 at Winter General Hospital in Topeka. The program is being planned by Carl Anderson, Kansas City, Kan. and William Littell, Rolla, both seniors. Littell is the director of the ROTC band which will play in the show. The program will include a drill exhibition by members of Pershing Rifles; a 1-man magic show featuring Claude. Kean, Olathe junior; ballads sung by Dolan Ellis, Topeka sophomore; and a skating act by 12-year-old Stephanie J. Armstrong and 11-year-old Linda M. Rye, both of Lawrence. Players' production, "Pity Poor Pearl," has played the role of a policeman in six of ten plays within the past 2/3 years. "Pity Poor Pearl" starts at 8 p. m. Wednesday in Green Theater. Plumb, a 1956 journalism graduate, first appeared with the University Theater his junior year when he played a soldier in "A Spoon River Anthology" by Edgar Lee Masters. Since then he has been cast as a policeman in "No Mother to Guide Her" and "Drunkard; melodramas; "Great Catherine" by George Bernard Shaw; Oscar Hammerstein's "Carousel," and "Darkness at Noon" by Sydney Kingsey. Someday he said he would like to play the role of Caligula, the Roman emperor, or Stanley Kowalski of "Streetcar Named Desire." Next summer he will direct the melodrama "Davy Crockett." "There is no policeman in this script," Plumb said, "so I'll think I will write one in. Every good melodrama should have a cop." Your Wedding... A "Bridal Book" by Hixon Studio tells your wedding story as it happened to you. BOB KENNY And Bride, The Former SANDR JAMES ...at home you... ...at the church ... at the reception Your Cost . . . ...Surprisingly Economical! 施工 HIXON CAMERA SHOP STUDIO and Don Crawford ● Bob Blank 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Nems for the official Bulletin must be brought to the Public Relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to the Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. Official Bulletin Ph. D. French reading examination, 9 to 11 a.m. Saturday, in 110 Fraser. Leave books, with Miss Craig, 120 Fraser, by 10 a.m. Thursday. Phil Delta Kappa annual coffee, 3:30- o'clock male faculty and education students. TODAY Undergraduate mathematics seminar, 4 p.m., 203 Strong Speaker: Prof. G. F. Murray, Complex Numbers." All undergraduates invited to attend these weekly meetings. KU Dames get-acquainted party, 8 p.m., Museum of Art lounge. All new students wives cordially invited to at-teacher: Julius Driscoll, "Hail Styling." TUESDAY Seminar, noon-12:50 p.m., Westminster Fellowship house at 1221 Oread St. Discussions: proposed plan of merger for the Disciples Student Fellowship, Westminster Fellowship, United Student Fellowship, and Methodist Student Movement. Lunch will be served. All persons are invited. Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. and 3 p.m., Art Museum. Donizetti: "Don Zaccaria." Institute of Aeronautical Sciences, 7:30 p.m., Aero Hut. Speaker: George Edwards. "Problem in Supersonic and Hypersonic Research." Kuku Club, 6:45 p.m. Ballroom. Student University. Photo: Uni. University Meeting date, pic: Uni. WEDNESDAY Sociology Club, 4 p.m., 17 Strong Annex E. Speaker; Carrol D. Clark." Jazz." Public invited. Collegiate Council for United Nations, 8 p.m., Parlor A. Student Union. Speaker: George Beckmann. "Southeast Asia Today." FRIDAY Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. Melodrama Keynotes Tears, Hisses, Boos The music of an upright piano and an old-fashioned roll curtain will unveil the stage for the University Players' production of "Pity Poor Pearl" at 8 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday in Green Theater. Student ID cards do not admit. The melodrama is directed by Ted' Teichgraeber, Emporia junior, and is the sixth annual player production. It is unique in that the audience participates actively by booing and hissing the villain and cheering the hero. Only after she disappears is it discovered that a mistake has been made and she is not an outcast. The hero, Harper Barnes, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, goes to her rescue and saves her from the ruthlessness of the villain. The story takes place in New York in 1860, Laura, a young lady of good social standing, is played by Joyce Elliot, Independence, Mo., sophomore. She is discovered to be the daughter of the villain, George Edwards, Kansas City, Kan., senior, and villainess, Lois Quaid, Norman, Okla., graduate student. Laura is rejected immediately by all her friends. Other members of the cast are Paul Culp, Overland Park and Marvin Carlson, Wichita, seniors; Michigan's highest point, one of the peaks of the Porcupine Mountains in Ontanogan County, is only a few miles away from the state's lowest point. Margaret Chetlain, Glencoe, Ill., and Vera Stough, Lawrence, juniors; Susan Woodruff and Dale Bellerose, Lawrence, Bill Albright, Buhler, and Marilyn Honderick, La Crosse, sophomores; Judith Brosome, Kansas City, Mo.; Nancy O'Brien, Great Lakes, Ill., Sonja Flournoy, Olathe, Scott Stanley, Kansas City, Kan., freshmen; and Kenneth Plumb, Sunflower graduate student. Have a WORLD of FUN! Travel with SITA Unbelievable Low Cost Europe 60 Days incl. shipping from $525 Orient 43-65 Days incl. shipping from $998 SEE MORE LESS Many tours include college credit SEE MORE SPEND LESS SITA Also low-cost trips to Mexico $169 up, South America $699 up, Hawaii Study Tours $252 up and Around the World $139 up. ASK YOUR TRAVEL AGENT 332 S. Michigan Ave. Chicago 4. HA 7-257 GIVE-AWAY SALE Final Clearance of Entire Winter Stock 1/3 OFF - 1/2 OFF Many Reduced Even More 87 DRESSES We must sell our entire winter stock to make room for the beautiful springsummer styles arriving daily. A wonderful opportunity to buy beautiful clothes at BIG, BIG SAVINGS. Our entire winter stock from Kansas City has been brought to Lawrence to make this a great sale. All 1/2 Off and More Now 5.90 to 14.90 4 BOY COATS Were 45.00 to 49.95 Now 29.90 to 32.90 37 BLOUSES Were 3.95 to 10.95 Now 1.40 to 4.90 Also Drastically Reduced Raincoats Sweaters Skirts Bermuda Sox Bermudas Accessories 1237 Oread Lawrence Farmers Market Richard Mindlin's COACH HOUSE 5312 Brookside Kansas City Sportswear Accessories Daily hansan Tuesday, Feb. 12, 1957 JAY WATCHER'S KOU CLUB —(Daily Kansan photo) The KU Jay Watchers, an organization promoting the drive to get out-of-town television coverage for remaining basketball games, was organized Monday by two University students. YES, IT'S NEW—Bob Reck, Wichita senior, co-chairman of the KU Jay Watchers, admires the organization's poster. TV Coverage Sought For KU Road Games LAWRENCE, KANSAS The idea originated at the Hotel Eldridge Breakfast Club. Bryce Cooke, Overland Park senior, and Bob Reck, Wichita senior, were asked to organize the drive. Cooke and Reck plan coverage of at least one more regular season road game plus a telecast of the NCAA regional tournament at Dallas if Kansas makes the trip. The KU Jay Watchers have received the "go ahead" from a Kansas City, Mo., television station for the telecasting of one or more of the remaining KU basketball games, Bob Beck, Wichita senior and co-chairman of the organization, announced at noon. Bulletin A collection will be taken at tonight's game to help finance the venture. Arrangements for the Dallas telecast are being worked out now with a Dallas station. Kansas has regular season road games left with Missouri, Oklahoma A&M, Colorado, and Kansas State. To pay for the telecasts Reck said they would ask for contributions from KU students, alumni and friends of the University. "From early indications received Monday night, the student body is entirely behind the plan and many houses have already voted to subscribe $1 per member." Reck said. "This in itself will go a long way in starting the drive." "We feel that it is up to the students to really put the idea across." Cooke said. "We don't anticipate any difficulty in obtaining the funds because of the obvious benefit to everyone in this area." Up To The Students The group decided to incorpo rate when they found out yesterday that the television code would not permit viewers to pay for watching the telecasts. Scott Dole, Pratt sophomore, and Howard M. Johnson, Topeka sophomore, have been appointed to collect funds from men's organized houses. Nancy Parker, Bartlesville, Okla, sophomore, is in charge of collecting from women's organized houses. Need For Organization Cooke and Reck stressed the need for organization on the project and extended an invitation to any KU student who wants to help to telephone them as soon as possible. "If the plan is carried out successfully, we hope to be able to spread the television coverage to football next year and perhaps even telewise the KU Relays," Cooke said. Ruth Daniels, St. Francis junior, has been named spring semester station manager for KUOK, campus radio station. Other staff members are Jack Bertogolio, Medicine Lodge junior, sales manager; Vince Riley, Ottawa juniper, publicity manager; Charles Barnes, Mission junior, business manager; John Schick, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore, continuity editor. Lew Boles, Baldwin junior, traffic manager; Claude Kean, Olathe junior, production director; Burt Brewer, Beloit sophomore, news director; Karen Hancock, Sunflower senior, record librarian, and Bruce Adair, Lyons sophomore, sports director. Staff Picked For KUOK KUOK will broadcast to North College, Corbin, Templem, Battenfield, Douthart, Grace Pearson and Carnruth O'Leary halls. 54th Year, No. 83 USO Schedules 1957 Jamboree Tour Auditions Auditions for the 1957 Jayhawker Jamboree tour under the auspices of USO Camp Shows, Inc., for possible tour of military camps in Europe, Asia, will be held at 3 p.m. Feb. 24 in Strong Auditorium. Those on the committee organizing the show are Clayton Krebhel, assistant professor of music education; Lewin Goff, director of the University Theatre; Richard Winternote, field secretary of the Alumni Assn.; Dean of Students Laurence C. Woodruff, and two students who went on the tour last year, Sheila Nation, Chanute junior, and Roger Brown, Toneka junior. Auditions will be for dancers, instrument players, comedians, specialty actors, and masters of ceremonies. The auditions will be limited to five minutes for individuals, but after auditioning separately, a group may perform for a longer period of time. The committee has chosen Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Replogle to accompany the group as managers and chaperones. Mr. Replogle is freshman football coach. Students planning to audition should make an appointment with Mrs. Catharine Brand in the dean of students office, 228 Strong. K-Book Staff To Be Chosen Today Continued fair this afternoon, tonight and Wednesday. Cooler west portion this afternoon and over all but extreme northwest portion tonight. Warmer west portion Wednesday. Low tonight 20 northwest to 30 southeast. The All Student Council Publications Committee will meet at 4 p.m. in 306A Student Union to appoint the 1957 K-Book staff. There are eight applicants for the jobs of editor, assistant editor, business manager, and assistant business manager. Weather 50th Humanities Talk Due Feb.19 1.2.3.1.1.1.1.1 DR. ROLAND BAINTON The author of a book on the Western Civilization required reading list will give a Humanities Series lecture Tuesday, Feb. 19, on "Erasmus—Amid the Currents of the Renaissance and the Reformation." JACKSON He is the Rev. Dr. Roland H. Bainton, professor of ecclesiastical history at Yale University. His book, "The Age of the Reformation," has been read by hundreds of students in Western Civilization. Why study science elsewhere when KU is the best is the theme of the Chemistry Club project this semester. Come To KU For Science The club received $100 from the chemistry department to print posters advertising KU to be sent to all high schools in Kansas. "Attracting science students to KU is the main purpose of the project," said James H. McMechan, Independence, Mo. junior, president of the club. NEWSMAKERS — Two of these four newspapermen made news Monday at the eighth annual William Allen White Lecture and at the meeting of the William Allen White Foundation. From left: Alvin McCoy, Kansas correspondent of the Kansas City Star; Irving Dilliard, editorial page editor of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, who gave the lecture; Rolla A. Clymer, editor of the El Dorado Times, who received the foundation's fourth annual Award for Journalistic Merit; Fred Brinkerhoff, editor and manager of the Pittsburg Sun and Headlight, who made the presentation at the foundation lunchcon. —(Photo Bureau photo) THE FEDERAL SUPREME COURT OF NORWAY The posters will feature photos of the laboratories in Malott Hall and will be designed by club members. Dr. Bainton will be the 50th lecturer in the Humanities Series since it was started 10 years ago. The lecture will be at 8 p.m. in Fraser theater. The historian will also take part in a panel discussion in Bailey auditorium at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 20, on the topic, "Is Religion the Answer?"—the theme of Religious Emphasis Week. On the panel with Dr. Bainton, an ordained Congregational minister, will be Rabbi Myron M. Meyer of Temple Adath Joseph in St. Joseph, Mo., and the Rt. Rev. Msgr. George Towle, pastor of St. John the Evangelist Church in Lawrence. At noon Monday, Feb. 18, Dr. Bainton will speak in the north end of the Union cafeteria to the Faculty Forum and Christian Fellowship groups. During his 3-day visit, Dr. Bainton will also meet with faculty members and graduate students of the department of history and with the instructors in Western Civilization. He will also speak to classes is history, political science, philosophy, religion, and German literature. His two best-known books are "The Church of Our Fathers" and "Here I Stand," a biography of Martin Luther. His other works include "Hunted Heretic" a biography of Michael Servetus, who was burned for heresy in Geneva in 1553; "The Martin Luther Christmas Book," consisting of excerpts from Luther's sermons on the Nativity; "The Travail of Religious Liberty" and "The Reformation of the 16th Century." Several of his works have been translated into German, French, Italian, Spanish, Japanese, and modern Greek. Dr. Bainton has occupied the Titus Street chair of ecclesiastical history in the Yale Divinity School since 1936 and has been on the Yale faculty since 1919. He has received honorary degrees from the University of Marburg, the oldest Protestant seminary in Germany, and from Meadville Theological Seminary, Oberlin College, and Whitman College. Quill Contest Begins Today In World War I he was a member of a Quaker unit with the American Red Cross, and he and Mrs. Bainton have served as representatives of the American Friends' Service Committee. The Quill Club creative writing contest begins today and will end March 12. Cash prizes will be awarded for winners in the prose, poetry, and drama divisions. The winning entries will be printed in the spring issue of Quill, which will be on sale April 15, 16 and 17. All persons entering manuscripts will be considered for membership in the organization. Manuscripts must be printed in duplicate and signed with a pen name. A sealed envelope with the contributor's pen name and real name is to be submitted to Walter J. Meserve Jr., assistant professor of English, 311 Fraser. Present members in Quill Club are not eligible for the contest, but may submit manuscripts to be considered for publication. These entries also should be taken to 311 Fraser. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Feb. 12, 1 Strange Creatures On The Pike Oh give us a pike where strange things don't hitch-hike and the deer and the airplanes don't play! Local turnpike commuters between Lawrence and Kansas City who saw deer, airplanes and other strange creatures on the pike needn't doubt their sanity and sobriety any longer. A 140-pound doe was killed last Saturday morning when she leaped onto the hood of a passing auto. Damage to the car was estimated at $150. Another unusual intruder on the turnpike was a small plane which landed during the fog and taxied for several miles to a service area where officials finally permitted the pilot to take off after temporarily blocking traffic. Of course, aircraft and animals don't belong on super highways. But unfortunately, fences along the pike aren't high enough to keep large animals from going over them and small ones crawl under—to be killed by speeding vehicles. Turnpike authorities are hopeful that animals along the pike will develop a sense of danger and refrain from crossing the right-of-way. As for airplanes—they belong in airports when they're on the ground—any 4-year-old knows that! —Jim Tice ... And Fan Mail FROM A KANSAN READER: Dear Mr. Thomas, I think that your editorial was one of the most lonely, no- good, trashy, biased, editorial I have ever read. It even typed Jane Piccinelli's editorial on the same subject. Both editorials were trashy and it's a shame we can't get somebody on the KANSAN to say something good about Jamaica Dean. We became great in "East of Den" and his next two movies only proved it. THE ONLY OTHER UNFORTUNATE THING ABOUT HIS DEATH IS THE TWO-BIT CRITICS LIKENESS TO THE WORK, WRITING PRETTY GOOD! I'M NOT OF THE TASTE TO BUY THE ABRAMS WITH THE PICTURES, AND I SORRY FOR YOU. Just A Minute An 8 year-old-boy in Kansas City, Mo. tried to fly like Superman and had to have 24 stitches taken in his arm when his flight carried him through a glass panel. Wonder if it clipped his wings? When the State Legislature voted an appropriation to build Allen Field House, they voted against giving funds to pave the parking lot. One of the legislators who helped vote it down got his car stuck in the parking lot after the Iowa State game and had to have it towed out. Oh, the ways of justice. For some guys it grows on trees. For others, like us, it doesn't. If one of us bent down to pick up a quarter off the street, we'd get hit by a truck. And then there's the one about the guy who was so lazy that when he saw a dime in the gutter he threw a quarter of his own down to make it worth picking up. Rumor has it that Mike Todd, who is now Mr. Elizabeth Taylor, is going to buy two theaters in the same city and name them His and Hers. A news report states that a patriotism program at a Colorado state industrial school was called off after the Daughters of the American Revolution chairman said she would not permit a boy of Mexican decent to carry the American flag. Hope that Mayor Wagner puts the Daughters of the American Revolution on the same list that he put King Saud of Arabia and Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia. ...Two Cents' Worth ... The dog, a Tasmanian teahound, is somewhat ferocious by nature. Our good friend Elrod has chosen a noble dog for his companion in these trying times. When our good friend Elrod approached the old hermit, himself somewhat ferocious by nature, said hermit set upon him with an Elrod bartered for him from a well-meaning hermit who resides some six leagues from Flint Hall. Bernard Meyer Elrod remained undaunted, however, so the hermit called upon his mastiff-like teahound to drive Elrod away. Dawson olive branch, thinking Elrod to be a collector of internal revenue. "Stay your hound, hermit," re- buckled Eldro. "I am not a collector KUOK LOG TODAY 6:00 Dinner Music 6:30 Jayhawkers from Abroad 6:45 Public Service 7:00 Bookstore Hour 8:00 Wire News 8:05 University Theatre Concert 8:30 Show Tunes 9:00 Jazz 9:30 Lucky Strike News 9:45 Announcers Disc Jockey 10:00 Terry Bo with Al Stevenson 10:00 News 10:35 Terry Bo 11:00 Terry Bo 12:00 Sign Off Jerry Thomas of internal revenue, but am merely seeking a road home in these trackless parts." Whereupon the dog, recognizing Elrod's good intentions, immediately withdrew his fangs from Elrod's leg and whimpered dolefully. "How much for your hound?" queried Elred. "A pound sterling" replied the hermit, remembering that the currency had been taken off the gold standard. "I shall give you not more than two bits for this hound," said Elrod, folding his arms across his chest. The hermit concurred, the dog was Elrod's, and a good time was had by all. Another story without a moral. A telephone call to a sorority produced the following conversation: (Just thought we'd throw that in.) "Pity Poor Pearl" is coming up Wednesday night. If you have ever wanted to vent your passions by booing and hissing a genuine villain, here's your chance. All eggs and ripe tomatoes must be checked at the door. "Could she be at MONDAY dinner, today being Sunday?" "I'm sorry, but Lucinda is at Sundav dinner." the following conversation "May I speak to Lucinda, please?" The click at the other end of the line ended the conversation. —Jerry Dawson Ad booki. (Just thought we'd throw that in.) "What are you, a wise guy?" When a motorist speeds along a highway at 65 miles an hour, a pursuing police siren can't be heard until the police car is even with the rear bumper, even if the driver's window is open. Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founder, became bweekly 1904, triv. 1908, 1909. Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. News service: United Press. Mail subscription rates; $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University Holiday, examinations and second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence. Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. A hurricane's eye extends to the top of the storm and then comes back to earth in a second column of calm air 200 to 300 miles away. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 251, news room Extended 275, business area Rabbit Ear Mountain, in northeastern New Mexico, was named after a Cheyenne Indian chief, called Rabbit Ears because his ears had been frozen during a particularly severe winter in the 19th Century. The chief was killed in battle, and is buried on the mountain. NEWS DEPARTMENT Kent Thomas ... Managing Editor John Battin, Feelicia Ann Fenberg, Bob Lyle, Betty Jean Stanford, Assistant Managing Editor; Jim Bannan, City Editor; Nancy Harman, Lincoln Manager; Editor; Hillary Shenonakzi, Telegraph Editor; Mary Beth Hoyes, Delbert Haler, Assistant Telegraph Editor; Dick Brown, Sports Editor; George Anthan, Assistant Sports Editor; Marilyn Mermis, Society Editor; Pat Swanton, Assistant Sports Editor; John Eaton, Picture Editor A cow needs from three to five gallons of water for each gallon of milk she produces. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Jerry Jerry Thomas, Jim Jice, Associate Edi BUSINESS DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Dale Batey, Advertising Manager Dave Dickey, Advertising Manager; John Hedley, National Advertising Manager; Harold Metz, Classified Advertising Manager; Conboy Brown, Circulation Manager. Kansas produces about one-fifth of the nation's supply of winter wheat. MEMORIES ARE MADE OF THIS VINYL RECORDINGS Don't let that party, skit, speech, concert, or recital fade away without even a memory. Let The Audio House put that memorable event on a high-fi recording. $ 3 \frac {1}{2} $ 4578 Also - Audio Equipment Consultant VI 3.4916 Audio House proudly produced by 1011 New Hampshire LAWRENCE, KANSAS - Tape Players Cleaned - Dance Music Service Opening Tomorrow Nite! MR WARNING M "Pity Poor Pearl" Green Theater-7:30 p.m. She was a thief's daughter, raised in the best of New York society- University Players Can She Live Down Her Past?? Presented by Nite After That Tomorrow Nite Nite After That Nite After That, Too (Wed-Sat) Tickets - 50c-Union Ticket Center --- Page 3 Men's Council Reorganized A Men's Scholarship Hall Council has been reorganized to unite Jouiffe, Battenfeld, Foster, Pearson, and Stephenson. Halls. The organization will work in three fields—social, academic and service. Three permanent committees are composed of the presidents, social chairmen and scholarship chairmen of the halls. A traveling scholarship trophy will be awarded each year to the house with the highest grade average. The trophy, named for Miss Carlotta Nellis, former housemother at Battenfeld, was donated by her. A representative of the USAF Aeronautical Chart and Information Center of St. Louis will be here Thursday to talk to students about applying for cartography work. The council will take part in Campus Chest and other campus affairs. Vic Viola, Abilene senior, is the new preseident. The salary ranges from $3600 to $6300, depending on the applicant's qualifications. Air Force To Hold Map Work Talks Information can be obtained from James Drury, associate professor of political science. Walter Kollmorgen, professor of geography, or the political science placement office, 15 Strong C. To Take Club Picture Today K-Club members will have their pictures taken after the game today. Members should wear either their letter jackets or sweaters. The picture will be taken in the K-Club section. German Club Activities Activities of the German Club for March will include a study of Switzerland and Austria, and a program on German history and literature. Smetana Quartet Achieves Rare Harmony, Smoothness By IONE TRIMMING- (Of The Daily Kansan Staff) We heard the Smetana Quartet recital Monday night in Strong Auditorium. We liked it. The first touch of bows to the strings brought forth harmony and smoothness rarely achieved by string quartets. They warmed up to the audience gradually by first playing the familiar Schubert "Quartet in E flat major." After gaining the confidence of the audience, they introduced the works of two Czechoslovakian composers. "From My Life," a quartet in E minor. was written by Smetana after he became deaf. He tells of the events of his life in this, the last of two chamber compositions. The second quartet, "Secret Letters" by Janacek, offers "a bit of modern," said Lubomir Kostecky, second violinist and the only member of the group who spoke English. "He (Janacek) speaks the language of the modern Czechoslovakian country," Mr. Kostecky said. "Secret Letters," Janacek's last work, expresses his love for a much younger woman. The ringing of the high tones in the first movement depict Smetana's ensuing deafness, and the last movement tells of his sadness at losing his music forever. For an encore the quartet played the first movement of Dvorak's. "American Quartet." The quartet consists of Jiri Novak and Mr. Kostecky, violins; Milan Skampa, viola and Antonin Kohout cello. Air Engineer To Speak George G. Edwards, supervising aeronautics research engineer, Ames Aeronautical Laboratories, Moffett, Field, Calif., will speak to the Institute of Aeronautical Sciences on "Some Research Problems Concerning Flight at Supersonic and Hypersonic Speeds" at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Aeronautical Quonset Hut. Mr. Edwards, who is on the campus interviewing graduating engineering students for jobs, will also show a collection of slides with his talk. Bob Huston, Lawrence junior, and president of the Institute, said the public is invited. Following the talk, members of the Institute will formulate plans for a group exhibit in the Engineering Exposition, April 19-20. A diesel locomotive contains more than 70,000 individual parts. L. G. BALFOUR CO. Fraternity Jewelers - Fraternity Badges—Rings—Novelties - Personalized Mugs and Ceramics - Trophies and Awards 411 West 14th Al Lauter Phone VI 3-1571 Final Week - Final Reductions We have regrouped our sale merchandise and have made further reductions of many items. Come in and save. One more week only. ANNUAL WINTER SALE TOPCOATS • SUITS Now 1/3 Off SINGLE-BREASTED TUXEDOS V-NECK & CREW NECK SWEATERS Now 25% Off Our Famous "Half Price Table" has been expanded to include these items: All at 1/2 Price SHOES • SUMMER SLACKS • SPORTSHIRTS SUBURBAN JACKETS • MUFFLERS WHITE CORDUOYS • GLOVES Double Breasted TUXEDOS (Just 3 left) Tuesday, Feb. 12, 1957 University Dally Kansan SPECIAL - Double Breasted DINNER JACKETS (Just 4 Left) Reg. $26.95 Now $9.95 Reg. $45.00 Now $14.95 1420 Crescent Rd. the university shop Across from Lindley The KU Pershing Rifle unit was inspected Saturday by Maj. Robert G. Ownby and Capt. Lloyd G. Brown, Pershing Rifle staff officers from regiment headquarters at ROTC Unit Inspected N.Y. Times Covers White Lecture Don Janson, a regional correspondent for the New York Times, was on the campus to cover the speech by Irving Dilliard, editorial page editor of the St. Louis Post Dispatch, at the eighth annual William Allen White Lecture Monday. The sorry will be in today's New York Times. "Mr. Dillard is one of America's foremost newspapermen," Mr. Janson said, "and what he has to say is certainly worth reporting." Dklahoma A&M College, Stillwater, Dkla. The inspection is held annually. Uniforms, equipment, knowledge, and general military bearing of each individual, unit drill proficiency and records and supply facilities of the company are inspected. 170 A trophy for the outstanding company of the regiment will be awarded at the regimental assembly; to be held at Oklahoma A&M College this year. The KU unit won the award in 1954. YOUR EYES YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966. HOW'S YOUR IQ? QUESTION: Which one of the smiling faces below would you expect to see wearing "New York Clean" clothes? ANSWER: The gentlemen (plural) on the right and the gentlemen (also plural) on the left are all sold on the concept of "New York Clean" clothes. They are all dressed up and ready for the parties coming up during the "Be my Valentine" season. P. S. The gentleman in the middle is an "old foye" and takes his business elsewhere and the little boy says he only wears jeans but we don't want everyone's business Just Yours (However we would clean the boy's tie.) New York Cleaners Merchants of NEW YORK VI 3-0501 repairs, alterations, reweaving 926 Mass. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Feb. 12, 1957 Aggies Invade Kansas In Crucial Tilt Tonight Probable Starters Kansha Ht. P Gene Elstun (6-3) F Ron Loneski (6-4½) F Wilt Chamberlain (7-0) C John Parker (5-11) G Maurice King (6-2) G Oklahoma A&M Ht. Jerry Hale (6-4) Eddie Sutton (6-0) Henry Kemple (6-6) Jerry Adair (6-1) Mel Wright (6-0) The KU basketball team, gathering momentum with every outing; entertains the defense minded Oklahoma Aggies tonight in Allen Field House. Game time is 7:35 p.m. with no less than 11 radio stations carrying broadcasts of the game. KU Has Height Edge Kansas will be a definite favorite with its 14-1 season record and Wilt Chamberlain. However, the Aggies, although faring poorly in the Missouri, Valley League, have won 8 and lost only 1 in non-conference play. Drawing the unenviable job of guarding Chamberlain will be 6-6 Aggie center Henry Kemple. Kemple, who was ineligible the first semester, is averaging 17.5 for his two starts and is tough off the boards. RC Has Inception Age Aggie Coach Clarence (Hank) Iba, the Iron Duke of college basketball, will start a lineup that gives away two inches of height per man to the talented Jayhawkers. Phog Missing From Scene The Jayhawkers threw up a tight zone defense against Nebraska Saturday and could use the same medicine for the Aggies. With Wilt always playing under the basket in the zone, Kansas is assured of its share of the rebounds. This will be the first game since 1936 that there is no Phog Allen-Hank Iba rivalry in the heated KU-Aggie struggle. However, Iba's new opponent, Coach Dick Harp, learned his basketball from the old master, Allen. The Aggles will throw their barbed wire defense, which is currently ranked No. 1 in the nation and is an Iba trademark, around Wilt and his teammates. This could develop into a real low scoring affair as the Jayhawkers hold the No. 5 defensive position nationally. Teams have sought to cope with Chamberlain by shooting deliberately and going for the high percentage shots, thus lowering the point totals. Oklahoma A&M will counter its lack of team height with a withering fast break sparked by Mel Wright, 6-0 senior guard and the team's leading scorer. Aggies To Play Zone The Aggies usually use a tenacious man-for-man defense but will probably make the switch to zone for this game. The Jayhawkers will throw a balanced scoring attack at the Aggies, with Chamberlain's 29.8 average "So You're Going" TO EUROPE THIS SUMMER! Choose a CLARA LAUGHLIN TOUR Seven delightful small-member tours for COLLEGE GIRLS ONLY. Excellent iteraries and accommodations - select mem- bers June 11, 17, 21, 26, 28 and 3 Priced from $1675.00 Special "TOWN & COUNTRY" COLLEGE TOUR departing June 28. under direction of Society Editor of Town & Country magazine. Their members will appear in a Fall '57 issue of the magazine. ADULT TOUR June 11 S.S. LIBERTE Book early! Descriptive folder and full information on request. TOM MAUPIN Loneski, after laying out a month with a broken foot, has come back strong with 32 points in the two games since the injury. topping the team. However, three other Jayhawkers, Gene Elstun, Maurice King and Ron Loneski are hitting in double figures. Travel Service 1236 Massachusetts Phone VI 3-1211 Despite the Aggies' 10-5 season record, they rank only a slight underdog on the basis of comparative scores with Washington and Oklahoma. Pearson Edges Sekan 39-37 In Independent IM Basketball Pearson Hall edged Sekan 39-27 Monday in a hard fought Independent A basketball game in Robinson Annex. Pearson's attack of Orus Robuck and Jerry Jones with 14 and 9 points, and strong team play gave them the two points needed to overcome a 23-19 half-time score. Dick Devine and Bob Moya each contributed 12 points for the losers. Stephenson 37. Liahona 21 Stephenson posted a 37-21 victory over Liahona in another Independent A ball game in Robinson Annex. Phil Heinschel led the victory by posting 13 points. Ivan Mader led Liahona with 7. Oread, with strong play from Tom Russell, who scored 17 points and Dale Norwin with 11, won a hard fought game from Battenfeld 46-42. The two well matched teams played on even terms throughout the entire game. Battenfield's top scorer was Don Allen with 11 points. the game. The top scorer for the Scrubs was Larry Bale with nine points. Chicken Pickers with the help of Dick Welty and Bill Heatwole who scored 10 points apiece, topped the Scrubs 34-27 in an Independent A basketball game Monday in Robinson Annex. The Pickers balanced attack led the Scrubs throughout **Fraternity B**—Phi Delt 48, PiKA 26; Phi Kappa Tau 38, Delta Sig 31; Phi Gam 31, APhiA 25; PiPsi 2, Snig Nu 0; Theta Chi 20, Sigs I9, SAE 2, Phi Kap Sig 0; KAPsi 2, ATO 0. **Fraternity C**—Kappa Sig 2, Sig Ep 2; DHV 1, Pata 14. Others Results Fraternity C—Kappa Sig 2, Sig Ep 0; DU 21, Beta 14. No games today. NEW YORK — (UP) — The North Carolina Tar Heels headed the United Press college basketball ratings today for the fourth straight time but the runnerup Kansas Jayhawkers gained ground because the southern team won its two games last week by a total of six ponits. Jayhawkers Gain On North Carolina Kansas, Kentucky and Southern Methodist remained 2-3-4. Four of the other leading teams switched positions by California, which advanced from 12th to ninth, was the only newcomer in the top 10. Ohio State dropped from ninth to 15th. Wildcats Toughen Grip On Second Spot By United Press Kansas State toughened its grip on second place in the Big 7 Conference last night with a 74-45 triumph over Oklahoma while Colorado and Nebraska moved up a notch with wins over Iowa State and Missouri, respectively. For every age valentines to perfectly express your sentiments. Come in today to shop from our complete selection. Mosser - Wolf Sticklers! IF YOU WERE STUCK FOR DAYS WITHOUT LUCKIES, WHAT WOULD YOU HAVE ? ( SEE PARAGRAPH BELOW ) LUCKY STRIKE 14-6-1987ED CIGARETTES YOU'RE STRANDED high on a peak in the Andes. Wind's rising. Thermometer's dropping. And the next llama for Lima leaves in 7 days. You reach for a Lucky... try every pocket . . . but you're fresh out. Brother, you're in for a Bleak Week! No cigarette anywhere can match the taste of a Lucky. A Lucky is all cigarette . . . nothing but fine, mild, good-tasting tobacco that's TOASTED to taste even better. Try one right now. You'll say it's the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked! DO DON'T JUST STAND THERE . . . STICKLE! MAKE $25 Sticklers are simple riddles with two-word rhyming answers. Both words must have the same number of syllables. (No drawings, please!) We'll shell out $25 for all we use—and for hundreds that never see print. So send stacks of 'em with your name, address, college and class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A, Mount Vernon, N. Y. Luckies Taste Better "IT'S TOASTED" TO TASTE BETTER . . . CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER! WHAT IS A CONCEITED BOXER? B. L. UNDERBRINK. Smug Pug U. OF CHISCABO WHAT IS, A TOUGH GUY'S BREAKFAST? JOSEPH DIAMOND. WAYNE UNIVERSITY Yegg's Eggs WHAT IS A SODA FOUNTAIN? PANLION. Calorie Gallery U. OF SOUTHERN CAI MARTIN KATZ. Fistic Mystic CCXX WHAT IS A PUGNACIOUS FORTUNETELER? A BAT CATCHER YES! A BAT CATCHER NO! DANIEL CONSTANT. Brief Beef SANTA MONIA CITY COLL. A. JERONE EDISON, Mentor Center OBERLIN WHAT IS A COLEGE FACULTY ROOM? WHAT IS A SHORT ARGUMENT# WHAT IS FAKE FEROCITY? VIRGINIA HOUSSMAN. MICHIGAN STATE Stage Rage @ A.T. Co. PRODUCT OF The American Tobacco Company AMERICA'S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTES --- Swim Prospects Show Promise Swimming is coming up at Kansas says Chuck Edwards, coach-competitor of the varsity. The facts bear him out, too. Kansas is winning more meets and also beginning to draw some of the area's better high school swimmers. If the swimming program is to become successful, much emphasis must be placed on a freshman team. Kansas now has a freshman swimming team, according to Edwards, and the team has won two postal meets with Colorado. Jared Piety, Jim Laidlaw, John Jeffrey and Price Haren, all freshmen, will probably be among those who will form the nucleus of next year's varsity squad. "The freshmen," Edwards said, "look real good and will help the varsity considerably next year. In fact, they may make up the core of the team," he said. Piety swims the 220 and 440-yard freestyle while Laidlaw, former Wyandotte star, swims the breast-stroke and butterfly. Jeffrey is also a breaststroke and butterfly competitor. Haren is a freshman sprint man, swimming the 60 and 100-yard freestyle. Good Squad Depth Other top members of the team are Rex Fowler, backstoker; Bill Hoffman, freestyle and Herb Baker, backstroke. "With the freshman program on." Edwards said, "We will probably get some more good boys next year even though we have no scholarships available. Edwards said he would schedule three or four more postal meets for the freshman team. Shot Putter Seeks 5th Crown Shot Putter Seeks 5th Crown NEW YORK — (UP) — Parry O'Brien, the world's top shot putter, has entered the National A.A.U. indoor track and field championship at Madison Square Garden, Feb. 23. He will attempt to become the first man to win the indoor title in the 16-pound shot five straight years. The KU's indoor track team swept 11 out of 15 events which included two record-breaking performances from two distance stars to smash the powerful Michigan Stute team, 88-53, at East Lansing Monday night. Trackmen Swamp M-State Jerry McNeal, Jayhawker junior, became the third fastest two-miler in KU history by winning his specialty in 9:06.1. Other Kansas winners were Bernie Gay in the mile-run; Dave Freeman, 70-yard high hurdles; Al Oerter, shotput; Ray Wyatt, 600-yard run; Louie Stroup. 300-yard dash; Dave Tams, pole vault, and a Kansas team of Larry Stroup, Paul Baker, Louie Stroup, and Wyatt in the mile relay. Lowell Janzen set the only other field house record by winning the 1,000-yard run in 2:13.1. KU's Kent Floerke swept both jumps and State's Dave Lean won the half-mile and 440-yard run to be the meet's only double winners. Tuesday. Feb. 12, 1957 University Daily Kansas Page 9 Dibble Comes To Terms DETROIT—(UP)—Doren Dibble, veteran end, wandered into the Detroit Lions office yesterday to pay a bill and wound up signing his 1957 contract with the National Football League team. He also paid the bill. Detroit Edison Co. ELECTRICAL POWER CAREER OPPORTUNITIES Research and Development Plant and System Design Equipment Engineering Planning for Growth Purchasing Sales Electrical - Mechanical ENGINEERS Reserve Your Appointment Time At Placement Office To See Our Representative For Summer And Full-Time Employment Tuesday, Feb.19 Town & Country Shoes ...come out, come out, wherever you are and go walking in these marvelous walk-on-air wonders. They're favorites in comfort and style. America's Best Fashion Shoe Value. Bucks 8.95 Corkette 9.95 Sizes 4 A's to B's 5.2 to 11 Royal College Shop BIRD Use the Kansan Classified Want Ad Section to Get Best Results. All KU Students Have One Thing in Common- They Know That The Place for Fine Foods The Place To Meet Friends The Place for Dining Comfort Is Their Own ABAO ABAO xooo Friday & Saturday 7:30-11:15 Sunday 1:30-10:30 Student Union Hawk's Nest and Cafeteria Week Days 7:30-10:30 Hawk's Nest Hours Cafeteria Hours Morning 7:00-8:30 Noon 11:00-1:15 Evening 5:00-6:30 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 12, 1957 Electric Group Here Friday "Live Better—Electrically" is the theme of the Third Annual Electrical Women's Round Table Workshop Friday and Saturday. It is sponsored by the Greater Kansas City area chapter and University Extension. The workshop will begin with registration in the Student Union Ballroom Friday, and the first session will be in the Jayhawk Room at 9 a.m. Saturday. John S. McDermott, executive manager, Electric Assn., Kansas City, will speak on "The House that Reddy Built." The final session will begin at 1 p.m. Saturday. A fashion show will be held after the dinner at 6 p.m. Friday. Speakers at the workshop will be Mrs. Jessie Cartright, home service director, Norge Division, Borge Warner, Chicago; Miss Jane Creel, manager, home economist, General Electric Supply Co., Kansas City; Mrs. Julia Springer, home service representative, Kansas Power and Light Co.; Mrs. Betty Witte and Mrs. Helen Marshall, beauty counselors, Kansas City; Leonard C. Brown, manager-distributor and contractor sales, General Electric Co., Kansas City, and Robert Lawrence, district manager, Consumer Products Division, Monsanto Chemical Co., Kansas City. 5 Faculty Attend Chicago Meeting Five members of the School of Fine Arts faculty are attending the Music Teachers National Assn. meeting in Chicago Sunday through Wednesday. They are Thomas Gorton, Dean of the School of Fine Arts; Laurel Everette Anderson, professor of organ and theory; Raymond Cerf, professor of violin and ensemble; Miss Jeanette Cass, associate professor of music theory, Karel Blaas, assistant professor of music theory and viola, and Miss Marian Jersild, assistant professor of piano. Dean Gorton is a member of the executive committee for the North Central division and will help plan the regional meeting for 1958 in Denver. He will remain in Chicago for an executive committee meeting of the National Assn. of Schools of Music, of which he is vice president, and will return Friday. Pi Tau Sigma Elects Officers For Spring Pi Tau Sigma, national honorary mechanical engineering fraternity has elected Robert Parker, Lawrence senior, president for the spring semester. Other officers elected were Phillip Rein, Hillsboro junior, vice president; Dan Kratzer, Kansas City, Kan., junior, recording secretary; Robert Love, Springfield, Mo., senior, corresponding secretary; Richard Butler, Lawrence senior, treasurer, and Harold Rock, Hope junior, historian. Economics Professor To Talk Walton K. Weltmer, associate professor of economics spoke to the Wichita chapter of the Kansas Society of Certified Public Accountants today in Wichita on "Ethics and the Public Accounting Profession." Mr. Weltmer is executive secretary of the state organization. Over half of the assets of the University of Michigan, a state-supported school, have been obtained with funds from sources other than state appropriations. AUTO PARTS AND TIRES New or Used AUTO WRECKING and JUNK CO. East End of Ninth St. V1 3-0956 A Message from Harry Williams E. E. Class of '49 To KU GRADUATING ENGINEERS "Emerson is a growth company entering a terrific spiral of expansion from a solid base...just the place for the ambitious graduate." "You're in on the ground floor of a fast-growing, established company when you take on a job with Emerson-Electric. A vigorous, planned expansion program in our aircraft, electronic, and commercial divisions makes Emerson distinctly a "growth" company with wide-open opportunities for young men. We are at work on a great variety of projects, many of them fascinating jobs including aircraft of the 1960-65 era. "And believe me, it's to your advantage to get into a medium sized company. For one thing, you're in close touch with top management. They really get to know you as an individual, not as a cog in a giant machine. They give you a chance, too, to put your own theories into practice. If you have a new idea, they'll give it a try. Emerson's future is big. Your future can be big, too, as an Emerson engineer!" Harry Williams' Emerson career is a good example of the diversification of experience Emerson offers its engineering personnel. With his M.S. in Electrical Engineering under his arm, Harry came to Emerson in 1949 as Calibration Engineer in production. Next position—Flight Test Engineer and from there on to Flight Test Project Engineer, to Assistant Development Engineer and now Production Project Engineer. There you have Harry Williams' current career ladder at Emerson. Here, in brief, is a sample of Emerson's diversification of projects: the Commercial Division, established in 1890, ranks among the leaders in fractional horsepower motor, fans, and includes air conditioners, heaters, power saws and arc welders. The Electronics and Avionics Division has been a leader nationally since 1940 in the design, development and manufacture of the very latest fire control systems, missiles and rockets, supersonic air frame sections and mortar locators. Emerson is one of only five companies in the U.S. in production on missiles of any kind. Find out how you can get in on the ground floor of this fast growing, medium sized company. Meet Emerson's engineering representatives and talk it over with them. If it's impossible to make a date, be sure to write A. L. Depke for full details. ENGINEERS----A.E., C.E., E.E., M.E. ENGINEERS----A.E., C.E., E.E., M.E. INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13 Sign up for your interview with the Engineering Placement Office. Do it today! EMERSON 8100 W. FLORISSANT ELECTRIC SAINT LOUIS 21, MO. University Daily Kansas Page 7 1 family occupy the house, which touches the ground at only three points. It is the-latest trend in architecture. A hyperbolic paraboloid is just the roof for a modern house, believes Donald Dean, associate professor of civil engineering, who has recently built a house using this geometric design. CAVE IN, HMM? — The hyperbolic paraboloid house was built by Donald Dean, associate professor of civil engineering. He and his —(Daily Kansan photo) For That Dream House: A Hyperbolic Paraboloid The hyperbolic paraboloid is a geometric design for use as a roof on a house. It could well be used on the house of tomorrow and if this is true Prof. Dean now owns a house of tomorrow on the corner of 21st and Alabama streets. The design is a familiar sight to KU students passing by Lindley and Marvin Halls. It is between these two buildings that a model of this strange structural design was built for demonstrational purposes at last year's Engineering Exposition. Prof. Dean's house however was not built for demonstrational purposes. It was built primarily as a house to be lived in and to be called home by Prof. Dean, his wife and their 15-month-old son. The roof could be called a twisted rectangle with two corners of one side and the middle of the other side resting on the ground supporting the roof. The other two corners and middle flare upward into the air. The roof takes all strain off the walls and in building the house it was constructed first. The outside walls are built up to the roof. Inside the house there is no need for supporting walls which leaves the architecture with unlimited ideas for floor plans and room positions. We Were In A Hurry "I'm not sure if this is the best floor plan, but we were in such a hurry to began construction that we didn't waste too much time with small details," Prof. Dean said. Allen Long, 5th year architecture student from Ottawa, helped Prof. Dean design the floor plan. Even now carpenters are working inside the house finishing cupboards, of which there are an abundance. Insulating and heating problems are also simplified. Prof Dean said. "The walls between the rooms don't reach the ceiling so this leaves space for the return of heated or cooled air to the air conditioning and heating units. "When it comes to economy, Prof. Dean said, "there is nothing like it. Building costs and materials are much cheaper and heating costs are lower than for a house of comparable size." House Divided Into Areas House Divided Into Areas Prof. Dean does not like to think of his house divided into rooms, but rather areas. The house has a large living room, a dining area, three bedrooms, two bathrooms, a utility and laundry room, and a modern time-saving kitchen. Mrs. Dean is quite satisfied with the house and the ease with which she is able to clean it and keep it clean. Prof. Dean remarked about his master bedroom saying, "When people first walk into the room they are amazed at its size, which is only 16 by 16 feet. The reason for this, I suppose, is that it is at this point that one of the corners of the house flares upward giving the room an illusion of greater depth." Kansas ranks fifth in petroleum production, having in the southwestern part of the state the largest known gas reserve in the world. Lecture Highlights Math Meeting A lecture, "The Geometry of Complex Numbers," was given Monday by George Springer, associate professor of mathematics, at an undergraduate seminar in mathematics. Assistant Dean Gilbert Ulmer of the College will give a lecture on the historical development of calculus at 4 p.m. Monday in 205 Strong. Anthracite was discovered in Carbon County, Pa. in 1791. DARLY DINNE TEAS THE REAL STORY OF THE FIELDING FRANCIERS WHO WON THE BULL! Walt Disney presents Westward Ho the Wagons! CINEMAScope TECHNICOLOR FESS PARKER • KATHLEEN GROWLEY • JEFF YORK PRODUCTION BY DAVID STOLLEW BUTLER MUSIC • WILLIAM BOULDER • TOM BLUELUM CREA All the wonders of Walt Disney's fabulous new Magic Kingdom A TRIP TO Disneyland USA" CINEMAScope TECHNICOLOR GUILT DISNEY TELLS THE REAL STORM OF THE FOUNDIO FAMILIES WHO UPON THE WEST Plan Tour Of Steel Company Delta Sigma Pi, professional business fraternity, will visit the Sheffield Steel Corp. in Kansas City, Mo. Thursday. The purpose of the trip is to acquaint rushees with the activities of the fraternity. Walt Disney presents Westward Ho the Wagons! The winter issue of the Bulletin of Education was recently distributed, Oscar M. Haugh, professor of education and editor of the bulletin, announced. FESS FRANCIS • MATHILDE GRAMLEY • JEFF TURN BALL HILL STATION • CROWD STATION • DAVID STATION • THE BURGMAN CAUSE All the wonders of Walt Disney's fabulous new Magic Kingdom A TRIP TO DISNEYLAND USA" TECHNICOLOR Education Winter Bulletin Published Tuesday, Feb. 12, 1957 Published three years yearly by the School of Education, the bulletin is circulated to all educators in Kansas, every major university library in the United States and several foreign universities. STARTS WEDNESDAY John Armstrong, former instructor of drawing and painting at KU, now a teacher at the Art Institute in Kansas City, Mo., will speak at the Art Forum at 4 p. m. today in the Trophy Room of the Student Union. Mr. Armstrong's topic will be abstract painting. Candidates must have a working knowledge of Spanish and at least a B.A. or B.S. degree. Scholarships may be used for either session; from July 15 to Aug. 9 or July 15 to Aug. 23. Art Forum Lecture Today The University of Havang, Cuba, will offer five tuition scholarships for the 1957 summer session to U.S.'civil zens. GRANADA GRANADA Ends Tonite "ROCK, PRETTY BABY" In addition to articles contributed by University staff members, this issue contains an article, "Problems of School Health Administration," by Dr. Donald A. Dukelow of the Bureau of Health Education of the American Medical Assoc. Chiapusso In Piano Recital Wednesday Application blanks and further information may be obtained from the Section of Educational Interchange, Division of Education, Pan American Union, Washington, D.C. Havana University Offers Awards General Custer once commanded old Fort Hays, now the site of Fort Hays Kansas State College. A piano recital by Jan Chiapusso, professor of piano, will be presented at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Strong Auditorium. It will be the fourth in the faculty concert series. "Prelude, Aria and Finale" by Frank, "Symphonic Etudes" by Schumann and Chopin's "D Minor Sonata" will be featured. Prof. Chiapusso made tours in Europe, Hawaii and Mexico before joining the faculty in 1939. REMEMBER Thurs. Feb. 14 with Valentine Flowers of Distinction from V! 3-3255 Flower AT THOMAS 941 Mass. "We Are As Near As Your Phone" POP ART TO MY VALENTINE from V! 3-3255 ALLISON Flower AT Shop THOMAS 941 Mass. "We Are As Near As Your Phone" from ALLISON Flower AT Shop THOMAS $ ^ { \circ } $ 570110 39f f4-41 v2f b=a17 & 确保标签正确匹配要安装的数据库名称 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 12, 1957 Robert C. Jackson, Leawood senior, made his first solo flight in the new Air Force ROTC light plane pilot training program Monday afternoon, but he was less impressed with being first than with flying solo. Senior Makes First Solo Flight The program took to the air at KU Jan. 17 with Cadet Lt. Col. Gary D. Miller, Wichita senior, making a dual flight. The program is now in effect in 43 U.S. colleges and universities. The remaining 137 Air Force units are expected to be added to this program during the next two years. Felt Lucky Asked how he felt about being the first to solo under the new program, Jackson replied, "It was just nice to be able to solo, not the fact that I was the first. I feel I was lucky to be able to go up." Jackson flew alone for the first time Monday after 8 hours and 10 minutes of flying time and instruction at the Lawrence Airport. His instructor was Jim Topping, a former KU student. Jackson was not told until just before the flight whether he would solo or not. He lafer admitted, The 31 cadet seniors in the program are: "I never had any doubts about my ability to do it," Jackson answered when asked how he felt when he was told to take the plane up alone. "Most of the credit goes to Jim Topping who was a wonderful instructor. He gave me a lot of confidence." however, that he thought he probably would. The Ethart Flying Service is giving the flight instructions under the supervision of the Civil Aeronautics Administration. Sixty-five horsepower Aeronca Aircraft are used for the 18 hours of dual and 17 hours of solo instruction and the $ _{1/2} $ hour CAA examination. After passing the CAA flight proficiency ride and a written test, the cadets are qualified for their private pilot's license. Before taking the flight training, cadets have to qualify in a ground training program covering weather, navigation and flight regulations. This is taught in the regular curriculum by AFROTC instructor personnel. CAA Supervises Earl J. Wilson, Lawrence; Lawrence P. Ball, Cunningham; Marshall D. Biesterfeld, Minneapolis; Robert V. Brack, Fort Worth, Tex.; Albert S. Crane Jr., Topeka; Larry G. Davis, Wellington; Roger S. Edwards, McPherson; John G. Eriksen, Lawrence; James M. Flint, Kansas City, Mo.; Charles W. Garver, Jr., Mission. Weston W. George, Wichita; Jacob F. Goble, Caney; Harold C. Hill, Beloit. George C. Hitt, Wellington; James G. Hull, Wichita; William H. Jackson, Florence; Donald L. Johnson, Hickman Mills, Mo.; Jerry J. Jones, Frankfort; Glenn E. Kirk, Minneapolis; Richard L. Lee, Mission; Arthur V. Leonard, Leawood; Robert L. Meeker, Leavenworth. Paul E. Feters, Lawrence; Phillip A. Rein, Hillsboro; Gary L. Rohrer, Wichita; Elmore W. Snyder III, Leavenworth; Arthur A. Stanley, Columbia, Mo.; Walter H. Steffan, Nashville; John L. Travers, Great Bend; Jackson and Miller. Home Ec Group To Have Tea Omicron Nu. honorary home economics sorority, will have a tea for its alumni members at 7:30 p.m. today at the Alpha Omicron Pi house. An informal discussion will concern graduate opportunities in the field of home economics. Russell Stover CANDIES Sweeter than words on Valentine's Day THURSDAY FEB. 14 Russell Stover CANDIES Sweeter than words on Valentines Day THURSDAY FEB. 14 valentine hearts packed with a pound of fresh, delicious chocolates ... $1.85 Other “Hearts” 75¢ to $6.50 assorted chocolates $1.35 1 lb. box $2.60 2 lb. box exclusive at Stowits Rexall Drugs Inc. Your Downtown Store 847 Mass. VI 3-4516 Rush Hearth Walt Disney Journey THURSDAY FEB. 14 Shop Rose of Love Velvety Beauty THURSDAY FEB. 14 VI 3-7164 Sugarcane furnishes nearly 75 per cent of the world's supply of sucrose. No Extra Charge For Imprint Valentine Greetings Russell Stover Presents & Decorations FOR TOPS IN ALL SMOKING ACCESSORIES, COME TO THE FRIENDLY PIPE SHOP George's Don't Miss Those "Just Pinned" Cigars for Pinning Parties Kansas produces the most winter wheat, about one-fifth of the nation's supply. 727 Mass. a flair for flattery 10 Cared for costumes have a softer air, a lovelier look, a greater flair for flattering you INDEPENDENT WELCOME TO WESTERN RIDGE HIGH SCHOOL Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS VI 3-4011 740 Vermont 1903 Massechusetts --- K le g H so l th b D o I a u d l i b C li i h A T E D a M s l o L J p o l a L ly 75 ply of Page 9 Tuesday, Feb. 12, 1957 University Daily Kansar --- JUDITH DUNKLEY MARYBETH LANE A. R. K. --- Four Announce Engagements KRISTA BELLE WEIGAND *** Brig. Gen, and Mrs. Frank Dunkley of Topeka, announce the engagement of their daughter, Judith Hahn, to Walter Eugene McDaniel, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray McDaniel of Mulvane. Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Grant Lane announce the engagement of their daughter, Marybeth, to Herbert Rollin Lake, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert E. Lake. Both are of Kansas City, Mo. Miss Dunkley is a sophomore in the School of Fine Arts and a member of Alpha Phi sorority. Mr. McDaniel is a sophomore in the School of Engineering. Miss Lane is a junior in the William Allen White School of Journal- A June wedding is planned. --their daughter, Norma Jon, to Robert E. Chapman, son of Mrs. E. V. Chapman of Pleasanton. Mr. and Mrs. Victor T. Weigand of Ottawa, announce the engagement of their daughter, Krista Belle, to Robert L. Sutherland, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle W. Sutherland of Williamsburg. Miss Weigand is a sophomore in the College and is a resident of Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall. Mr. Sutherland is a sophomore in the School of Engineering. Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Bearley of Atwood, announce the engagement of Houses Elect New Officers To Serve Spring Semester Miss Bearley is a senior in occupational therapy at the Kansas University Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. Mr. Chapman is a sophomore in the School of Engineering. Kappa Alpha Theta Jane Coolidge, Emporia junior has been elected president of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Other officers are Shirley Andrish, Topeka, vice president; Mary Ann Evans, Lawrence, treasurer; Connie Deal Deal, Wichita, rush chairman, and Carol Bentrup, Kansas City, Mo., house manager. --- Joanne Beal, Lawrence, scholarship; Martha Maxwell, Columbus, social chairman; Pat Sterett, Leavenworth, pledge coordinator; Judy Carr, Junction City, corresponding secretary and Lyme Gerlack, Topeka, recording secretary. All are juniors. Jack Bevery, Burlingame junior, has been elected president of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity for the spring semester. Other officers elected are Tom Lance, Kansas City, Kan., senior; vice president; Gordon Sieker, Clafin sophomore, secretary and John Hedley, Coffeyville senior, historian. Two Students Announce Pinnings Sigma Phi Epsilon Delta Delta Tau Delta Delta Tau Tau elected Bill Wilson, Denver junior, president for the spring semester. Flournoy-Woo Other officers are Ron Fredrick, Mission, vice-president; Ralph Robinson, Humansville, Mo., corresponding secretary; Neil Parrett, Prairie Village, recording secretary; all juniors. Jim Fell, Kansas City, Mo., treasurer and Bob Thornton, Highland, sergeant-at-arms; both seniors. The words "Rock Chalk, Jayhawk, KU" come from the fact that there is much chalk in Kansas. Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall announces the pinning of Sonja Flourney, Olathe freshman, to Bill Woo, Kansas City, Mo. junior and a member of Phi Kappa Tau fraternity. LARGE SELECTION Valentine GIFTS Elring's Gifts 924 Mass. VI 3-5160 Elring's Gifts *** Eklund-Jenny Alpha Phi sorority announces the pinning of Carol Sue Eklund, Russell junior, to Charles B. Jenny, Salina senior and a member of Sigma Nu fraternity. The pinning was announced by Judy Weimer, Clay Center, and Jeanne Converse, Great Bend, sophomores; Myrna Dusenberry, Lyndon, and Betty Lou Douglas, Kansas City, Kan., juniors. Cinderella was a Baby Doll Compared with Pearl! See "Pity Poor Pearl" University Players' Melodrama Feb.13,14,15,16 Green Theater-7:30 Tickets 50c at Union Ticket Center FOR THAT '57 LOOK See The '57 Ford AUTO MARKETING Your Ford Dealer in Lawrence MORGAN-MACK Phone VI 3-3500 714 Vermont Give A Novelty For Valentine's Valentine's Day lurks just around the corner. If you're the ghoulish type and cannot go, along with the sentimentality of Valentine's Day, Lawrence novelty stores have the ideal gift. It is now, possible to buy "super deluxe shrunken hens" to send to your friends, gift wrapped. The heads are made of rubber, are the perfect ornament for the car, den or dormitory room. TICKETS AND RESERVATIONS FIRST NATIONAL BANK DBU The First National Bank of Lawrence TRAVEL AGENCY 8th and Mass. Telephone VI 3-0152 Miss Rose Gieseman, Manager - Airlines—Domestic-Foreign - Steamships Cruises Escorted Tours | From K.C. Via Air to: | tourist | (tax included) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Dallas | $ 55.00 | $ 71.06 | | Atlanta | 84.70 | 99.11 | | Albuquerque | 77.00 | 101.20 | | Phoenix | 112.20 | 148.50 | | San Francisco | 165.00 | 212.85 | | Havana | 188.10 | 201.96 | Welcome! To Our New SNACK BAR Welcome! SNACK BAR - Sandwiches - Soup Chili - Homemade Pastries - Relish Smorgasboard - Salads - Desserts 10:00 a.m.—Midnite PARTY HOUSE E 23rd Street --- 10. 2013.5.27 Page 10 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 12, 1957 Did They Sing The Blues? Ten students were taken ill or injured during the recent production of the University Theatre musical comedy, "Of Thee I Sing." Sara Jo Pursley, Coffeyville junior, who sang a lead, lost her voice before the Wednesday night performance. A week before that, Don Farrar, Kansas City, Mo., Beverly Runkle, Pittsburg, juniors, and Jane Neyer, Brownell sophomore, lost their voices. During the same week, Creta Carter, Lawrence sophomore, caught the flu; Wansley Sharp, Kansas City, Mo., junior, suffered from exhaustion; Suzi Pruitt, Independence freshman, stepped on a nail, and Mary Clark, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, sprained an ankle. As if all of these mishaps weren't enough, the opening curtain on Friday night had to be held for 10 minutes to give John Husar, Chicago sophomore, a chance to wake up after receiving a knock-out blow when he ran into a low beam in the makeup room. KUOK Offers News Variety If it's variety you want in your news, station KUOK has it. The campus radio station will feature 15-minute news specialties at 6:30 p. m. Mondays through Fridays. Mondays — "Personality," which features talks with personalities concerned with the University. Russell Wigglesworth, Lawrence sophomore, is host. Wednesdays — "Future Features." interviews on future campus and state events. Charles Belt, Columbus senior, in charge of the program, will interview Michael Mills, McPherson junior, and Barbara Beye, Larned senior, on Religious Emphasis Week in the first program Wednesday (tomorrow). The programs; Tuesdays — "It Happened Last Week," and on alternate weeks, "Jayhawkers from Abroad." The former program covers the major political events of the previous two weeks and is in charge of Ted Bahr, Soltar, Germany, and Charles Scott, Parsons graduate students. "Jayhawkers from Abroad" will discuss the problems of foreign students at KU, with Jim Fultz, Mound Valley junior, as master of ceremonies. Thursdays — "Kaleidoscope," consisting of comments on issues of the day. Ralph Butler, Leavenworth, and Bill Harmon, Topeka seniors, are the newscasters. Fridays — "Sportscope," a sports program with Bruce Adair, Lyons sophomore, as newscaster. 7 Have Painting Display In Union Paintings done by seven senior students in studio and illustration workshops are on display for two weeks in the main lobby of the Student Union Building. Students exhibiting paintings are Walter Kemper, St. Louis, Mo. graduate student; Floyd Smith, Edward Nichols, Lawrence, Joan Marsh, Chanute, Robert Edmonds, Kansas City, Kan., Derald Eastman, Garden City, and Vernon Rickman, Newton, seniors. 5 Cadets Win January Awards Each student has picked an adviser for his paintings and works under his direction. Technical adviser for the project is Dwight Burnham, assistant professor of drawing and painting. Five Air Force ROTC cadets were chosen Monday as January Cadet of the Month of their respective squadrons. The AFROTC cadet commander, Cadet Lt. Col. Gary D. Miller, Wichita senior, made the selections. The award is based upon. outstanding appearance and drill performance during the month. The winking glow between fireflies is a signal between sexes. The caddies chosen are Gerald E. Brown, Kansas City, Mo., and William S. Burnison, Ontario, Calif., freshmen; Roger W. Gramly, Caney, Donald E. Terpingen, Washington, Raymond L. Johnson, Lawrence, juniors. Official Bulletin Items for the official Bulletin must be brought to the Public Relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to the city plankan. Should include name, place, date, and time of function. Seminar, noon-12:50 p.m. Westminster Fellowship house at 1221 Oread St. Disciple's Student Fellowship, the Disciples Student Fellowship, Westminster Fellowship, United Student Fellowship, and Methodist Student Movement. Lunch will be served. All persons Fh. D. French reading examination, 9 to 11 am. Saturday, in 110 Fraser. Leave books with Miss Craig, 120 Fraser, by 10 am. Thursday. Roger Williams Fellowship coffee hour, 8:15 p.m., 1124 Mississippi. Speaker: Dr. A. H. Turney. The first of a series of Faculty Fireside discussions, WEDNESDAY KuKu Club. 6:45 p.m. Ballroom. Stud- uition. Information. Picture. Ui- formats. Meeting after midnight. Seminar, noon-12:50 p.m. Westminster Fellowship house at 1221 Oread St. Discussions: Proposed plan of merger for the Disciples Student Fellowship, Westminster Fellowship, United Student Fellowship, and Methodist Student Movement. Lunch will be served. All persons are invited. Institute of Aeronautical Sciences; 7:30 p.m., Aero Hut. Speaker: George Edwards. "Problem in Supersonic and Hypersonic Research." Newman - Club executive committee attending, 7:30 pm in the Castle, Please please. Phi Sigma meeting, 8 p.m. Pine Room, Student Union. Panel on "Views on Evolution" by Lawrence ministers. Open to the public. Collegiate Council for United Nations 8 p.m., Parler A, Student Union: Speaker: George Beckmann, "Southeast Asia Today." THURSDAY Le Cerulee Frances se reunite Jeudi laitier a centrer a Miller Hall, Ericre Bourcier. Der deutsche Verein trifft sich jeden Dammerung an den 20. Fraser. Amber berichte eingelassen. Collegiate Young Republicans meeting, 7 p.m. Jayhawk Room, Student Union. Speaker: Jim Pratt, state chairman of the Republican party, "Strategy to be Used in Winning Back the Governorship in 1958." American Society of Tool Engineers, Chapter No. 9, 7 p.m., 300 Fowler, Speaker: Bendix Aviation Corp., and president of engineers. 'New Developments in Ejectors.' Education wives and staff women dessert, 7:30 p.m. mrs. E. E. BAYES, 1480 Keke FRIDAY Sociology Club. 4 p.m. 17 Strong An- nex E. Spencer: Corral D. Clark "Jazz" Fubble! A group of 1907 graduates will meet at 11 a.m. Friday in the Pine Room of the Student Union to plan for their golden anniversary. The group will elect officers and appoint committees to plan for the reunion and class dinner to be held Sunday, June 2. Members of the group are John Gage, Kansas City, Mo.; Roy Moore, Grace Blair Emmett, Flora Shanklin Boynton, Lawrence; Dora Monahan Claffin, Ivy Brock Clark, Frank R. Grant, Kansas City, Mo.; Blanche Paulen Thomas, Lawrence; Harry F. Busch, Springfield, Mo.; Judge Nelson E. Johnson, Dr. Henry L. Regier, Kansas City, Mo. 1907 Alumni Plan Golden Reunion Women's Party Thursday The wives and staff women of the School of Education will have a Valentine's party 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the home of Mrs. E. E. Bayles, 1408 Kentucky St. IFPC Elects New Officers The Inter-fraternity Pledge Council elected officers for the remainder of the semester in a special meeting Monday. The elections were a continuation of the Feb. 4 meeting in which only two officers were elected as a result of a 7-ballot deadlock for president. Japan is drying out its coastal swamps to reclaim 185,000 acres where rice and wheat can be grown. Elected Monday were Norris Flagler, Collyer, treasurer; David Hanna, Newton, secretary; and George Ryan, Kansas City, Kan. Kenneth Gates, Kansas City, Mo., M. J. Johnston, Independence, Mo., Theodore Hall, Garden City, and Wendell Anschultz, Russell, board members. All are freshmen. The regular meeting will be held Monday, Feb. 18 in the Student Union. Elected at the Feb. 4 meeting were Lance Johnson, Wymore, Neb., president, and James Henderson, Wichita, vice president, freshmen. Donald Martin, Larned, who graduated from KU in January was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Marine Corps Friday morning. He will report to the Marine Corps Basic School at Quantico, Va. for nine months training. $1,000 Loan Fund Announced Gets Marine Commission Creation of the Henry S. Blake Student Loan Fund of $1,000 in memory of the late president of Capper Publications was announced at the William Allen White Foundation's Journalistic Award luncheon Monday by Jim Reed, executive editor of The Topeka Daily Capital and a member of the Foundation board. He presented the gift on behalf of Mrs. Blake, who specified that the fund is to be used for loans to needy students in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, Mr. Blake, who was also a trustee of the Foundation, died in March, 1956. The KuKu Club will meet at 6:45 p.m. Wednesday in the Student Union for the Jayhawker group picture and to discuss decorations and a band for a dance to be held Friday, Feb. 22 in the Student Union Ballroom with the Froshawks and Jay Janes. KuKu's Meet Wednesday To Discuss Banning Of Coeds The Graduate Club will hold a panel discussion on "Should Co-eds be Banned from the KU Campus" at 8 p.m. Sunday in the Student Union. Debaters Set For Emporia Six University debate teams will attend the second annual forensic tournament of Kansas State Teachers' College in Emporia Friday and Saturday. Debating in the senior division will be Bob Kimball, Kansas City, Kan., John Knightly, Hutchinson, both seniors; Kenneth L. Irby, Fort Scott, Ralph L. Seger, Topeka, Jack Gorelick, Kansas City, Kan., James Riley, Ottawa, all Juniors; Don Bowen, Salina sophomore, and Ray Nichols, Lawrence freshman. In the junior division the teams will be Neal Logan. Garden City, William Summers, Wichita, Allen Hickey, Liberal, all sophomores, and Evelyn Komarek, Ellinwood freshman. The teams will debate the national college question, "Resolved: That the United States should discontinue direct economic aid to foreign countries." Coaches attending the tournament are Wilmer A. Linkugel, instructor of speech and drama, and Ted Barnes and William Crews, assistant instructors. Surgeons employ a special lead pencil to mark the human skin prior to operations. A Campus-to-Career Case History ALEXANDRIC SCHNEIDER Manager Joseph S. Manning discusses a customer service request with Office Supervisor Catherine Haeston. "Like having your own $3,000,000 business" Joseph S. Manning graduated in 1950 from Wesleyan University with a B.A. degree and a major in Bio-Chemistry. But chemistry, he decided, was not to be his career. He became intrigued, instead, by the opportunities in the telephone business, and joined New York Telephone Company in 1951. Today Joe Manning is Business Office Manager in Parkchester, Bronx, New York. In this position he is responsible for about 27,000 telephone accounts which bill some $250,000 a month. 35 people work under him. "It's like having your own $3,000,000 business," Joe says."And it's pretty much "The phenomenal growth of the business is one of the reasons why advancement opportunities are so good in the telephone company. Since 1943, for example, the number of telephones in our area has almost tripled. Growth such as this, going on all over the country, makes the telephone business especially attractive to anyone seeking a career with a future." an independent operation, which I enjoy. I'm in charge of all business office functions, and of personnel training and development. I also spend a lot of time out with my customers, making sure that they have the telephone service they want and need. It's an absorbing job. Bell Telephone Companies offer many interesting career opportunities, as do Bell Telephone Laboratories, Western Electric and Sandia Corporation. Your placement officer has more information about all Bell System Companies. BALL TELEPHONE SYSTEM UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BUTTON FOR THE DECORATION OF THE STATE MUSEUM REMI ER. 3-471 BEN Tuesday, Feb. 12, 1957 University Daily Kansan --of Whittier, Calif., Paola, Kansas Santa Rosa, Calif. Page 11 CLASSIFIED ADS 25 words or less; one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All aus must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. FOR SALE 197 2.200 LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas-complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dog fights. Alligator hunters, alligator fish, turtles, chameleons, hammsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. TIME. LIFE & Sports Illustrated magazines. Special students' prices of 1/2 reg. sub. rate. Prompt service, buy now pay later, call VI 3-0124. tf REMINGTON STANDARD TYPEWRITER. Good condition, reasonable. Ph. VI 3-4715 17F Sunnyside. 2-13 LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY for Jr., Sr. Graduate Students up to $500.00 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO 8333 Mass. 833 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Phone VI 3-8074 for 1 day service BIRD TV-Radio Service 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 2 BIG SHOWS Sun, Feb. 24—31:30 & 8:00 P.M.-Municipal Auditrom- toppe-ToKape; Advance tickets= $2,00 at the door $2.50. Tickets on sale at Walgreen Drug - 8th and Kansas and Mills Music - 162 Kansas. EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS THE BIGGEST SHOW of Stars for 57 SUPER ATTRACTIONS PRESENT Allin Person Fats DOMINO DOGGETT and Nick O'Ream Billing Lawson CYLD E McPhatter LAVERN Baker ALL IN PERSON Chuck BERRY * Five KEYS The MOONGLOWS * ANN COLE The Five SATINS * Charles BROWN Eddie Cooley DIMPLES * THE SCHOOL BOYS Paul Williams BIG BAND Jazzing GIFTS For Your Valentine! Poetry, Art, Cartoons Humor, Children's Books Architecture Complete Modern Library BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent close-up paper bags. Picnic, party supply. Paper, 6th and Vermont. Phone w/ 3-0350. THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 NOTICE—Your Avon Representative will call on you by appointment or take orders by telephone. Ph. VI 3-2378. 2-12 MISCELLANEOUS SEWING to do of any kind. Ph. VI 3-6234. 2-18 WANTED. Male student to share one and one half rooms. Comfortable, plenty of room, private parking. $12.50 a month. Ph. VI 3-0414 evenings. 2-14 LOST ARMY BLANKET. Was left in Allen Field House after the Iowa State game. Will the finder please call James Fulton, VI 3-1695. 2-12 BUSINESS SERVICES GLASSES between Strong and Malott. Charcoal frames in brown leather case. Ph. VI 3-9123 or turn in at Kansan Office. 2-13 TYPIST, experienced in theses, term papers, reports. Fast and accurate, student rates. Mrs. Betty Vequist. 1935 Barker Ave. Phone VI 3-2001. tf TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6657, 1106 La. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine. Phone VI 3-7645. tf LIGHT BROWN PUPPY. Small. Found near Student Union Call VI 3-7404 FOUND We rent nationwide trailers any size, anywhere, anytime CROFT TRAILER RENTAL CO. East 23rd VI 3-7377 ___ FOR RENT NICE CLEAN ROOM for 1 or 2 men. 821 Indiana, Phone VI 3-4168. 2-12 BE INDEPENDENT. Live close to the campus. Room and board $45.00 per month on campus, $28.00 per month. Co-o- 18371; Tenant VI III - 8025. Ask for Tom, Arian, or Jack. 2-13 MEN, study in peace in your own room Single or double, next to bath. Linens furnished. Near Campus and bus. Plen- parking space, 1701 Ohio. Ph. 3-5809. 2-12 EXTRA NICE 3 room newly decorated room, private bath, entrance, 825 Ohio TWO CLEAN W A R M SLEEPING ROOMS. Single or double, serving home style meals reasonably. Ph. VI 3-1585. FOUR ROOM FURNISHED APART- MENT with private entrance, private one bedroom, one study room. Utilities paid, quiet home. Ph. VI 3-12- 7826. TIRED OF WALKING UP THE HILL? Two rooms for boys one-half block from the union. Phone privileges. Available to phone. VISE 3-5776 or see if 1231 La. - ADVERTISERS - PATRONIZE YOUR Parties, Pinnings, Weddings Job Application Photos Gene's Photo Service 2144 Ohio - VI 3-0933 Gene Smoyer tf Special Spring Sale 49 Ford ... $ 99.00 48 Pontiac ... 99.00 47 Pontiac ... 139.00 51 Nash ... 179.00 50 Hudson ... 179.00 49 Ford Sta. Wgn. ... 199.00 ~~ Pontiac ... 199.00 HELP WANTED See them at Jayhawk Motors Open eve. 1040 Vt. TERRIFIC! Contemporary Valentines By Hallmark Everyone is talking about Hallmark's Contemporary Cards. Designed for young moderns, they're the most revolutionary idea the greeting card industry has seen in years. See them now. To The Point Modern - Witty & Clever READERS WANTED for 15 to 20 hours per week. Will pay 75c per hour. Call VI 3-2399 between 3 and 5:30 p.m. 2-13 MOSSER-WOLF 1107 Mass. VI 3-4435 INSTRUCTOR'S WIFE or graduate student typist, must be experienced, fast and accurate. Prefer Audiograph-IBM typewriter experience. Part time work typing business correspondence from Audiograph record. Write P.O. Box 571 Lawrence postoffice giving experience typing speed and hours, days available. TRANSPORTATION TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. Call Miss Rose Glesman at the First Aid Station for information for injuries and reservations. 8th & Mass Phone VI 3-0152. If RIDERS OR DRIVERS for car pool from K.C.K. Call FI 2-3267 after sit for details -2-345 Have your car lubricated the MOTO-SWAY WAY At POTTER'S "66" SERVICE 1401 W. 6th VI 3-9891 FLOUR Products Company REPRESENTATIVE C. R. LEMENAGER, MGR. INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS Will Be on Campus WED. FEB. 20 MECH. ENG'G. June Graduates To Interview CHECK WITH YOUR ENG'G PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR APPOINTMENT Library. BOOKS For gifts and for your own library. Art, Architecture, Cook Books, Childrens Books, Modern THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 Weaver Our 100th Year of Service Shapely classics No-iron roll-up sleeve shirt it's in dacron and cotton that drip-dries—needs just a flick of the iron, if you're super-persnickety. In solid colors and prints. Just one of the smart new shapely classics. Size 10 to 18. $4.95 Others $4.95 to $7.50 Weavers Blouse Shop—Second Floor Page 12 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 12, 1957 T. H. BROWN RECEIVES GRANT—The Rev. Ernst E. Klein, associate professor of religion and Baptist student pastor, has received a 1957 Danforth Campus Christian Worker grant. He is one of 21 to receive the grant, and must spend at least two semesters or three terms during the next college year in full-time graduate work. He said that he has not decided on a school. Dow Chemical Co. Renews Fellowship The Dow Chemical Company is renewing its $2,500 fellowship for 1957-58 at KU, Dr. A. W. Davidson, chairman of the chemistry department, announced recently. The fellowship will be used to support summer research by one member of the chemistry faculty and by several graduate students, probably five. The wool from Angora rabbits is harvested every 10 to 12 months. Bridge Match Wednesday Trophies will be awarded to four winners in the annual duplicate bridge tournament to be held at 7 p. m. Wednesday in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union. It is sponsored by Student Union Activities. Students and faculty are eligible to enter the tournament and should sign at the information desk at the Student Union. The winners and high placers in the local bridge tournament may enter the 1957 National Intercollegiate Bridge Tournament to be held Wednesday, Feb. 20, in the card room of the Student Union. 2 Get Honors In Chemistry It pays to study. Ask James Cederberg, Herndon, and Larry Kevan, Kansas City, Kan., both freshmen. They were awarded copies of the Chemical Rubber Co. Hand-book for Freshman Chemistry for maintaining the highest averages in Chemistry 2 and Chemistry 2E. "A phenomenal average of over 99 was maintained by one of the students," Arthur W. Davidson, professor of chemistry, said, "but because of the different grading systems used in different schools I would rather not give their individual numerical grades." The handbooks have been returned to the company to have the names of the students engraved on the covers. Prof. Davidson said official recognition would be given at the annual awards dinner in April. You can't SEE all of Europe... You have to LIVE it! That's why American Express Student Tours are expertly planned to include a full measure of individual leisureample free time to discover your Europe-as well as the most comprehensive sight-seeing program available anywhere! Visit England, Scotland, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Holland, Belgium, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Italy and France—accompanied by distinguished tour leaders—enjoy superb American Express service throughout. 11 Special Tours . . . 53 to 63 days . . . via famous ships: Ile de France, United States, Liberté, Saturnia, Guilio Cesare, Flandre, $1,448 up Also Regular Tours . . . 42 days . . . $1,301 up T w. Fo TER press. see your council You can always TRAVEL NOW—PAY LATER when you go American Express. For complete information, see your Campus Representative, local Travel Agent or American Express Travel Service, member: Institute of international Education and Council on Student Travel ... or simply mail the handy coupon. Yes! Please do send me complete information C-19 about 1957 Student Tours to Europe! AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVEL SERVICE 65 Broadway, New York 6. N. Y. clo Travel Sales Division Name... Address... City...Zone...State... PROTECT YOUR TRAVEL FUNDS WITH AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVELERS CHECKS—SPONSOLED EVERYWHERE the Student Union. The meeting will provide an opportunity for professional public relations-practice. the Student Union. Public Relations Institute March 29,30 Michigan became a territory in 1805 with a population of less than 5,000. Thirty-two pharmaceutical students returned Friday from Michigan after a five-day inspection tour of two large pharmaceutical firms in Detroit and Kalamazoo. They were accompanied by Duane G. Wenzel, professor of pharmacy. The University Extension will hold its sixth annual Public Relations Institute March 29 and 30 in Pharmacy Students End Tour Ulysses S. Grant's second inaugural ball was a $20-a-ticket admission ceremony. ♠ ❤ Bridge Tournament Wednesday, Feb. 13 7 p.m. Memorial Union, Jayhawk Room C EVERYONE IS WELCOME BRING A PARTNER "Full Of Life" Please Sign Up With The Hostess Sponsored By STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES Judy Holiday In Fred Astaire In "Funny Face" Tonite At 8:45 p.m. HOLLYWOOD SNEAK PREVIEW Fred Astaire In We cannot divulge the title of the Sneak Preview but assure you that it is one of the following attractions. Kirk Douglas in Our Next ATTRACTION At Regular Prices "Top Secret Affair" Open 6:45 — Show at 7:00 See "Wrong Man" Before and After Sneak 世 VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD VARSITY Open 6:45—Show at 7:00 D. C. BROWN HIS GREATEST HIT SINCE "HIGH NOON!" ALLIED ARTISTS presents GARY COOPER "FRIENDLY PERSUASION" Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW PORTRAIT CUSHIONED CHAIRS TODAY Open 6:45—Show at 7:00 BLOOD- MAD KILLER! BLOOD- MAD KILLER! JEFF CHANDLER Drango Released Univ. United Artists Jeff Chandler Drango News-Cartoon, Feat 7:20-9:15 Hawk-Talk By JIM STEERMAN 54th The world stood in turmoil. In every direction could be seen the chaotic remains of once proud cultures and civilizations. The Eiffel tower lay broken and twisted in a dull atomic waste which had been Paris only a few short months before. The Thames flowed stagnant and thick, in the shadow of a wasted London, full of huge chunks of scorched steel which had roamed the earth as battleships and cruisers in the past. Te portals of The Kremlin were gone, and the only resemblance between Moscow and a world of life came in the form of a sad grey smoke which drifted up, and around, and over the stillness which enveloped even the smoke itself. No wheat grew in Kansas, no machinery clashed and groaned along the Atlantic seaboard, and no memorial to Abraham Lincoln guarded the placid waters of the Potomac as it journeyed along its twisting course to the sea. A little life remained. People still walked and talked, but seldom laughed, along an uneven, jagged strip of land in The United States. The opposing forces had come to a halt on either side of the Mississippi. A rest for the purpose of resting, and thinking, and wondering, wondering where they were going and what they would have after they reached their goal. There was a glimmer of humility in men who had never recognized its existence before. The leaders knew by now that whoever won the battle between men would lose an even greater struggle with nature, all possibilities of production would be gone when this last tiny island of green disappeared in a blast of high explosives. It was with this thought in their minds that a Russian named Khrushev and an American called Eisenhower sat in their individual tents, struggling with tired brains to find an answer. Could there be a solution, a challenging way to decide who was to rule without ending life on earth forever. You say that you are the best at Bridge, and that you could have won the all important hand on the edge of the big river. Why don't you find out, the S. U. A. is giving you your chance. There is going to be a highly challenging Bridge tournament held Wednesday, February 13 in the Jayhawk room of the Union. Pick up a partner, bring yourself, and come on over. A good time is guaranteed and trophies will be awarded to the winners. Who knows, the man in the tale might turn out to be you, not Ike. The democratic leader had an ideal. But did the communist know how to play the game? And even if he understood, would he accept the invitation? He had to try, it was the only chance, and the chance you have is the chance you take. Eisenhower sent a courier to the opposing camp under a flag of truce. The plan was proposed, and accepted by the enemy. Student Union Activities A hand of the most challenging card game ever devised, a game which required skill and brains, and in this case courage, courage to risk your way of life so that the world might continue. A solution which called for all the knowledge and might of spirit needed in war, but which resulted in no bloodshed. And in this manner the fate of life was settled. You ask who won? I do not know because my vision of the future ended at that point, all I know is that it is bound to happen. I have my own ideas about who won and you will have yours also. That is all that is important, anyway. The two men met in a sheltered bend of the Mississippi, a dimly lighted tent held two tired figures, a table, two chairs, and a deck of cards. It was to be a single hand of Cambridge Bridge, a single hand of cards for the rule of the world, or at least what was left of it after the war. It may sound silly, or even childish at first thought, but when you let your mind drift over the situation for a moment, what could be better? ion Ka 'G Pl "Pi melo Playa Thea Ad play, melo eight keen said junic Th melo ing Wea sic c Willi and drink perfo Th rang harb The W.F. Stage Helm Fo A For renceh on tl Po KU pelle Or over said. with Th 16, o ton, W. H Gen night after night Then Dailu hansan Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1957 54th Year, No. 84 LAWRENCE, KANSAS RICHARD C. MILLER AND MARY E. WILSON —(Daily Kansan photo) Peach Blossom, Vera Stough, Lawrence junior, is in the clasp of villain, George Edwards, Kansas City, Kan., senior, and his partner in crime, Old Judas, Lee Ann Johnston, Topeka senior, in the "wretched basement" scene from "Pity Poor Pearl." 'Gas Light'Era Play Tonight "Pity Poor Pearl," a musical melodrama presented by University Players, opens at 8 p. m. in Green Theater today for a 4-day run. Adapted from Augustian Daly's play, "Under the Gas Lights," the melodrama has a musical score of eight specially written songs which keep the action moving rapidly," said William Teichgraeber, Emporia junior and director. The mood of the old-fashioned melodrama is set by special lighting effects designed by Lawrence Weaver, Lawrence senior; the music of an upright piano played by William S. Timmons, Riley senior, and hustlers who sell popcorn and drinks in the audience during the performance. The play has nine scene changes ranging from Pier 30 in New York harbor to a fashionable parlor. The sets were designed by Richard W. Fanolio, Kansas City, Mo., senior. Stage manager is Kenneth Baker, Helmetta, N. J., freshman. Four local boys admitted to Lawrence police Monday night that they had committed two armed robberies on the KU campus last week. One of the boys will be turned over to juvenile authorities, police said. Three boys will be charged with armed robbery. Police said they admitted robbing KU students two times, and used a pellet gun. They wore parka hoods. The boys are: Dickie L. Johnson, 16, of 1237 N. J. St.; Larry E. Hamilton, 17, 1826 Tenn. St., and Charles W. Russell, 16, of 813 N. J. St. Weather Four Boys Admit Thefts Generally fair this afternoon, tonight and Thursday. Warmer this afternoon and northeast portion tonight. Low tonight in 30s. High Thursday in 60s. Actors To Try For USO Job The 1957 Jayhawk Jamboree will hold auditions for singers as well as dancers, instrument players, comedians, specialty actors and masters of ceremony at 3 p. m. Sunday, Feb. 24 in Strong Auditorium. Singers were omitted Tuesday from a story in the Kansan about the auditions. The show, sponsored by USO Camp Shovs, Inc., may tour military Individual auditions will be limited to five minutes, but after auditioning separately, a group may perform longer. camps in Europe and Asia this summer, Appointments for the audition must be made with Mrs. Catharine Brand in the office of the dean of students. 228 Strong. Jay Watchers Get $900 For TV Cost The Jay Watchers collected $900.43 at the game Tuesday to help finance the cost of televising the K-State basketball game. If Kansas plays in the NCAA tournament at Dallas, Jay Watchers will help pay the cost of the tournament telecast. Asia Talk Set For 8 Tonight George Beckmann, associate professor of history, will speak on "Southeast Asia Today" at a meeting of the Collegiate Council for the United Nations at 8 p.m. tonight in Parlor A of the Student Union. During his trip he had a press conference with Chinese Communist leader Chou En-lai and a conversation with Edward R. Murrow, CBS news analyst, who was there preparing a television program on Burmese neutralism. Mr. Beckmann recently returned from a six month tour of Southeast Asia and Japan. "This program, focusing on problems facing the small countries of Southeast Asia, is another in the CCUN series of discussions on areas undergoing rapid social, political, or economic change," said Judith J. Tice, Summerfield senior and president of the organization. "Several meetings last semester were concerned with the Near East," she said. "This semester we intend to concentrate on Asia and Africa." (Related Story, Page 3) Motor Fleet Meeting Set A series of eight meetings on the Basic Principles of Supervision for Motor Fleet Personnel will begin at 7 p.m., Monday in the cafeteria of the University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan. Joe Holt Julen Wohlmeier Ted Rohde —(Daily Kansan photo) SENIOR FOOTBALL LETTERMEN—These seven men were presented blankets with their names on them by Arthur C. Lonborg, director of athletics, at halftime of the KU-Oklahoma A&M basketball game. From left, front row: John Drake, Galen WahImeier, Ted Rohde; back row: Joe Held, Frank Black, Bill Bell and Don Pfutzenreuter, Don Martin was absent. "It looks like the ball has really started to roll with the fine cooperation we received Tuesday night," said Robert W. Reck, Wichita senior. Corporation Formed Corporation papers for the group were drawn Tuesday night by A. C. Cooke, a Kansas City, Kan., lawyer who represents the group. Members of the corporation are Otto Schnellbacher, Topeka; Gene Morgan, president of the Kansas City Alumni Assn., and Roy G. Borgen, Lawrence. KU student members are Reck: John B. Cooke, Overland Park senior, and Allan J. Hurst, Augusta senior, secretary-treasurer. "We will negotiate with television stations when we receive enough money to finance the plan," Cooke said. The group figures televising the K-State game would cost about $8,000. For the Dallas telecasts, stations in Dallas and from Oklahoma City, Wichita, Kansas City, Mo., and Topeka will televise the tournament, thus reducing Jay Watchers' costs, Cooke pointed out. Cooperation Assured Jay Barrington, program and sports director of WDFA-TV, said he is interested in the project and will cooperate in every way. "If things go as they should, there is no reason why we can't get the job done," he said. Contributions to the drive should be sent to Jay Watchers, Box 518, Lawrence. "Many of the fans have asked what will we do with the money if the project fails." Cooke said. "The corporatoin laws state that if the goal is not attained, the money will be turned over to the KU Endowment Assn. with suggestions for usage. "However, I am very confident we will cover the K-State and Dallas tournament games," he said. Oratorical Contest Will Be March 26 For the tenth and final year a complete set of the "Encyclopedia Americana" will be awarded to the winner of the annual oratorical contest, sponsored by Delta Sigma Rho, forensic fraternity. The contest, which is open to all students, will be held at 8 p.m. March 26 in Strong Auditorium. The dates of the preliminary tryouts will be announced later. For further information contact Ted Barnes, assistant instructor of speech and drama, in 5 Green Hall. Wichita Sophomore To Be K-Book Editor Norma L. Cornett, Wichita sophomore, has been named editor of the 1957-58 K-Book. Other staff members are Jane Crow, Topeka freshman, asst. editor; Larry Dunlap, Salina sophomore, business manager; and Jerry Halderman, Wichita junior, ast. business manager. Dean Barr To Attend Meeting Dean Harold G. Barr of the School of Religion will leave Thursday night for Evanston, Ill., where he will attend a meeting of the National Association of Biblical Instructors. It will be held at Garrett Biblical Institute Friday and Saturday in Evanston. The Rev. Dr. Barr was president last year. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1957 . This Younger Generation- Are Rock'n' Rollers Really Pagans? A local theater is showing the rock and roll movie "Rock, Pretty Baby." Scores of University students are flocking to see it, the same way more than 100 teenagers did at the Fairway Theater 10 days ago near Kansas City. Sheriff's deputies threw out the teenagers at the Fairway. A deputy sheriff at the scene said the teenagers kept time with the rock and roll music by clapping their hands, shouting, throwing clothing, running through the aisles, and swearing. The girls were the noisier, the deputy said, but the boys were the more rowdy. The girls screamed, while the boys threw things and pushed the girls. The movie is described as the "whole wonderful story of today's rock'n roll generation." Rock and roll music is a combination of jazz and hill billy music. Today-Elvis Presley, with his side-burns and side hip-motion, causes teenagers to scream and cry. Eleven years ago during World War II, Frank Sinatra caused teenagers across the nation to scream and faint in their seats. But now a married "cat" hoves into sight: Pat Boone. His stage antics cause girls to pull at his shoelaces, mob him, and ask for an autograph or a kiss. Talk to one of these teenagers about this music and he replies with these words: "All us cats are hep to it!" A new form of pagan music is appearing: calypso. In larger American cities, night club orchestras play nothing but calypso. Teenagers were hep to jazz more than 30 years ago. The New York Times, on Feb. 12, 1922 reported: "Jazz music has much the same effect on young people as liquor ..." said I. I. Cammack, Kansas City, Mo., school superintendent. In February, 1926, Paul Whiteman, the "jazz king," played at KU. Whiteman said he "enjoyed playing to a college audience because he knew that his music would be appreciated. "In some places people are still a little adverse to the word 'jazz' but the young folks in a college town, even the older people, all appreciate and enjoy it." During the same month, Dr. A. P. Fitch, professor of religious history at Carlton College, Northfield, Minn., spoke at KU. He said: "The young pagans are our most serious problem. They are noted for their muscular brawn and their intellectual innocence. Their language is painful, profane and frequent. Intellectually vacuous, sentimental, vulgar and Babbittish, is the typical young pagan, common to all universities and colleges." A University Daily Kansan editorial published Jan. 31, 1926, said: "... Some critics claim that the prevalent 'wildness' of youth is due to the modern 'immoral dances,' and that the foxtrot and Charleson are not conducive to refinement and culture. "Society is living a more furious pace. Many social conventions have been thrown to the four winds. There is freer intercourse between men and women. All these things have contributed to the development of the modern dance." Adolescents need emotional expression just as adults do. "Cat-action" to rock 'n roll music is destructive, useless, and wasteful of energy and talent. The very persons who danced in digy roadhouses 25 years ago are today parents of the modern adolescents—the college "cats." This "wildness" of today's adolescent college students is equal to the restless confusion of skidrow bums. Where will it lead? Through such expression, college adolescents betray themselves into thinking they're gaining freedom from their elders. Today's "cat-actors" could study, work at a hobby, join any one of the numerous organizations on the campus or marry, and contribute something worthwhile to civilization. Stated simply, either KU students become more responsible adolescents or they become more addicted to hound-dog records and the whining voice of a "circle-punching" hill billy from Tennessee. If you reject constructive expression because study is hard, or because living and working with people is trying, you'll never grow up. History Is Pretty Sexy "The Decline and Fall of Practically Everybody," by Will Cuppy (Henry Holt and Company, 230 pp.). (Editor's note: This is an appreciation review in honor of Will Coppy, who passed away in 1952. This book is considered by many to be Mr. Coppy's best work and will live on as a monument to his memory.) So you think you know everything there is to know about people like Nero and Cleopatra, or Lady Godiva and Lucrezia Borgia? You say Louis XIV, Peter the Great, and Catherine the Great had everything there is to know written about them? If you believe this, you are wrong for it has been said that the late Will Cuppy (1894-1952), author and historian of sorts, has wandered footloose in the footnotes of history in the writing of "The Decline and Fall of Practically Everybody." It took him 16 years to write, as only he could write, about these fabulous characters of history. With a friendly, but wry attitude toward everything and everybody, Will Cuppy sheds a new light on the famous and infamous of everyday history, all the way from Cheops to Miles Standish. Throughout the book are humorous footnotes. Mr. Cuppy takes a crack at historians by making the irrelevance of some of his footnotes so laughingly apparent. In a chapter entitled "A Few Greats," Mr. Cuppy goes into the private lives of Catherine the Great, Peter the Great, Madame du Barry, Frederick the Great and Louis XIV An example of the subtle, but vivid, descriptions which make up this interesting chapter and book comes from Mr. Cuppy's discussion of the private life of Catherine the Great of Russia: "In 1754 Catherine had a baby boy who looked a lot like Sergel Saltykov, a young man with whom Catherine often discussed current events. Some historians think Peter (her husband) may have been the father because the child grew up to resemble him in character and general uselessness. They were both fools, but what does that prove? ("Footnote) This child was afterward known as the Mad Tsar Paul, He was murdered by some other mad people and was succeeded by the Mad Tsar Alexander. "Then Saltykov moved away and Catherine got interested in Poland, or rather in Count Stanislaus Poniatowski. Her next baby was named Anna. ("Footnote) 'God knows where she gets them' Peter exclaimed at a state banquet." Through the unique eyes of Will Cuppy we are able to view the famous characters of history. Mr. Cuppy's remarkable turn of mind transforms them into human beings, not like we read of in history books, but foolish, fallible and certainly our very common ancestors. And as to the death of Peter, Mr. Cuppy writes: "It was pretty sad about Peter. A few days after his arrest he suddenly died at Ropha while Alexis Orlov and some other friends of the Empress were with him. Catherine announced that he died of hemorrhoidal colic, and people who went to the funeral wondered why, in that case, the large bandage was tied around his neck. And that, gentle reader comes of playing with dolls at the wrong time. (Peter played with dolls after he went to bed at night.) At first glance the pastime may seem as safe as the next one. It just doesn't work out in actual practice." Constitution Hall, 429 Kansa. Ave., Topeka, with the principal facade remodeled, is the original 2-story stone building erected in 1855 in which the "Topeka Constitution" for the state of Kanssa was written. Jim Tice 1-Armed Bandit? Correspondence between a thirsty, empty-pocketed patron in Flint Hall and a campus coke man: Cokeman:* A Salute To Advertising Will you PLEASE fix this 20th century mechanical monster so that it will consistently make change and thereby add silver to our pockets and ulcers to our stomachs? Advertising today is a vital and powerful force in our economy. Each of us is made aware of it every day in newspapers, on television and radio, in our magazines, in buses and on highway billboards. A Thirsty Patron Thirsty Patron: Your sad story touches my heart. Therefore I will attend to this matter immediately, if not sooner. Yet, advertising is something most of us take for granted. How did it become so important—and what does advertising mean to you and me in 1957? - A coined word and we might add, the only coin to be found. It takes all kinds to make up a world! From one nut to another. The Cokeman Daily Hansan Let's go back and see how it began. A hundred years ago mass production was non-existent; mass distribution unheard of. University of Kansas student newspaper 1904, daily press truestyle 1908, daily press, 16, 18, 12 Emerson, 376, business office Member of Press Association Associated Collegiate Press Association by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Sundays and holiday days, and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 251, news room Extension 276, business office But as America grew and prospered, businesses became larger. Manufacturers had to find ways of spreading the word about their products. Small advertisements began to appear in newspapers and orders for goods even came from far away. Kent Thomas ... Managing Editor John Battin, Fetelia Ann Fenberg, Bab Blyle, Betty Jean Stanford, Assistant Managing Editors; Jim Banman, City Editor; Nancy Harmon, Lelley Zim- mann, Susan Sillman, Shi Leonzaki, Telegraph Editor; Mary Bey Noyen, Delbert Haley, Asso- istant Telegraph Editors; Dick Brown, Sports Editor; George Anthan, Assis- tist Sports Editor; Marilyn Mermals, Society Editor; John Eaton, Picture ant Society Editor; John Eaton, Picture Editor. NEWS DEPARTMENT As people were separated by great distances in America, methods of communication developed rapidly. At first, manufacturers wrote advertisements themselves. Eventually they called upon others to do this work, and the advertising industry began. But how does advertising benefit us in 1957? EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Jerry Dawson Editorial Editor First of all, it brings us information. Advertising tells us where we can purchase the things we want BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Dale Bowers. Business Manager Danrey. Advertising Manager John Hedley, National Advertising Manager Harold Metz, Classified Advertising Manager; Conboy Brown, Circulation Manager. and how much our purchases will cost. Advertising is a chain reaction that stimulates demand and creates progress. By spreading the story of a new or better product, a market is created for which manufacturers compete. Cheaper, more efficient production methods are developed, and prices go down. Jim Pontius In the long run, the consumer is the one who profits most. Every time advertising helps to make a sale, it puts money in action. The consumer, salesman, manufacturer, employees all share in part from a sale advertising has stimulated. Consciously—as a reader of ads and a consumer—and unconsciously—working at our daily jobs—we are a part of advertising. During this week, Advertising Week, let us salute the positive force of advertising which benefits us all. Platinum was used for personal adornment by South American Indians long before Columbus discovered America. The egret is a species of white heron having white flowing plumes much in demand in the millinery world. LOOK SHARP with our expert DRY CLEANING ... To give that not-so-new outfit the young, fresh Valentine's Day Look... Try Lint-Free, Cling-Free Dry-Cleaning —the process that actually makes your wools and nylons repel dirt and lint—now newly installed at ... LOOK SHARP with our expert DRY CLEANING In 1 'B In "A type ACME Bow was profe in th Mist teach versit and sas in Bachelor Laundry & Dry Cleaners 1109 Mass. "Aa Austi ticular said. animat the k and strut wers At Twer larly ducte ticing versi two social facul An ery a cesco State Pa. nual day Stude unde ucati The Frida Unio day discué the I will s dinner sessie atiye the Iounp Th been AP Ba Leav en, and more seni ce sas Conv Te Ande Mary soph Kam tality senic peka Beth Moii Pat ] dent VI 3-5155 I will work for you. In The Land Down Under 'Boiling Billy' Was Most Intriguing Experience Boiling a billy over an open fire in the bush country of Australia was one of the most intriguing experiences Miss Esther E. Twenter professor of social work, had while teaching as a Fulbright lecturer in the land down-under. $ \textcircled{*} $ "A billy," she explained, "is a type of tea made with gum leaves." "Hue with gun leaves." Miss Twente spent a year as a teacher and consultant at the University of Adelaide, Melbourne and Sydney and returned to Kansas in time for spring enrollment. Page 3 "As a lover of the outdoors, the Australian bush country was particularly fascinating to me," she said. "There I saw wild birds and animals of near story-book fame—the kangaroo, the bear-like koalas, and the beautiful lyrebirds, which strut proudly and preen their feathers while calling their mate." University of Sydney she led a 4-week seminar for social workers and taught a 2-week class for 25 Asiatic students. At the University of Adelaide Mice Twente taught two courses for regularly enrolled students and conducted a 12-week seminar for practicing social workers. At the University of Melbourne she conducted two seminars, one for practicing social workers and the other for the faculty and field supervisors. At the "As a whole there was no great difference between American college students and those of Australia," Miss Twente said. "I felt that one might transplant the students from one country to the other and never know the difference." Those meeting with the executives James Dykes, assistant professor of journalism, was in Kansas City, Mo Tuesday to discuss a project for his Advertising Campaign class with Cliff Nothdurf of the Bruce B Brewer Advertising Agency and J. A. Thomas of Rutherford Food Corporation. Discuss Advertising Project Yesterday Six scholarships to women students are being offered by Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. The deadline for applying for the awards is March 1. Girls: Need Scholarships? were Prof. Dykes, Nan Porter, Wichita junior, Harold Metz, Lawrence junior, John Hedley, Coffeyville senior, Jim Pontius, Wichita senior, Conboy Brown, Larned senior, Karlowe Kohler, Lund, Sweden graduate student, Dale Bowers, Lyndon senior, and Dave Dickey, Kansas City, Mo., senior. The scholarships include an undergraduate scholarship, $250; an emergency scholarship, $100-$200; a graduate fellowship, $500; foreign study and student scholarship, up to $1.000; students' aid fund, and a rehabilitation scholarship for specialized study in the fields of physical therapy, speech, hearing, etc, up to $500. More information about the scholarships may be obtained at the dean of women's office, 220 Strong, or by writing Kappa Kappa Gamma Headquarters, 530 East Town St., Columbus 16, Ohio. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1957 University Daily Kansan Nationalism Strong Force In Japan, Professor Says Fresh impressions of the Far East and new studies in Japanese history are the result of six months of research in the Far East by George M. Beckmann, associate professor of history. Japan has become more modern since his last visit and it is "harder Prof. Beckmann left the KU campus following the 1956 summer session and returned the day before classes began this semester. Prof. Beckmann's studies in Japan led to the completion of a book, "Making of the Meiji Constitution," which is a study of the development of constitutional theory in late 19th century Japan. The book is the result of research begun in 1952 and 1953 when he spent 10 months in the Far East studying Japanese history and language. It will be published sometime this spring. His travels included a 4-month stay in Japan and two months of traveling in Southeast Asia. The purpose was to observe those areas and to gather information for a general text on the Far East. to realize there was a war," Prof. Beckman said. "There is also a stronger feeling of nationalism, but it is not a feeling of anti-Americanism. They simply want us to get out as soon as possible." "Unless Japan can improve tech- nologically, the picture is gloomy." The Japanese economy is precarious and any loss of markets, or strong competition from other nations on the world market would seriously endanger the future of it. Prof. Beckmann added. I had never understood before ... the tremendous problems of the area in such vital terms. I was particularly impressed with the medical problems of the area," he said. YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription dulicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2968 Art Group Plans Exhibit An exhibit on creative embroidery and talks by Dr. I. L. de Francesco, director of art education, State Teachers College, Kutztown, Pa., will highlight the Eighth Annual Art Education Conference Friday and Saturday, Feb. 22-23, at the Student Union. The conference is under the supervision of the Art Education Club on the campus. The conference will open at 9 a.m., Friday, with registration in the Union and will continue through the day with a general session, group discussions, films, and a dinner in the Kansas Room. Dr. de Francesco will speak at the general session, the dinner on Friday and the general session Saturday. The exhibit, creative embroidery, will be opened to the public Monday in the south lounge of the Union. The following committees have been named for the conference: Banquet, Pat Sterrett, chairman, Leavenworth junior, Ann Brenneisen, Kansas City, Kan, sophomore, and Barbara Rodd, Wichita sophomore; Exhibit, Jean Holt, Lawrence senior, chairman, Joy Monsees, Kansas City, Mo, freshman, and Kyle Conway, Independence, Mo., junior. Tea for Dr. dr. Francesco, Mildred Andes, Lawrence senior, chairman, Mary Ann Clark, Kansas City, Mo, sophomore, and Mariorie Jones, Kansas City, Kan, freshman; Hospitality; Sara Davis, Kansas City, Mo, senior, chairman, Judy Clark, Topeka freshman, Annette McEllinney, Bethany, Mo, sophomore, Marietta Moigs, Mission freshman, and Mrs. Pat Durden, Lawrence graduate student. TERRIFIC! Contemporary Valentines By Hallmark Everyone is talking about Hallmark's Contemporary Cards. Designed for young moderns, they're the most revolutionary idea the greeting card industry has seen in years. See them now. Modern - To The Point - Witty & Clever MOSSER-WOLF 1107 Mass. VI 3-4435 HEY FELLOWS! CHICKEN Here's how to make some points. Make plans now to dine out with that special gal on VALENTINE'S Day. Take her where the eatin's the best and top it off with a special touch, A FLAMING HEART Sundae at the KENTUCKIAN 1802 Massachusetts — 19th Street Shopping Area — Phone VI 3-9544 IT'S SMART TO PAY BY CHECK... You place yourself among those who appreciate safety and convenience in meeting obligations. The reserve balance in your checking account-even though small -increases your financial standing and self-confidence. $ \bullet $ From every standpoint, a checking account at this bank is a valuable business asset. LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK 7th & Mass. VI 3-0260 Detroit Edison Co. ELECTRICAL POWER CAREER OPPORTUNITIES Research and Development Plant and System Design Equipment Engineering Planning for Growth Purchasing Sales Electrical - Mechanical ENGINEERS Reserve Your Appointment Time At Placement Office To See Our Representative For Summer And Full-Time Employment Tuesday, Feb.19 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1957 KU Debaters To Meet Army The KU debate team will meet a U. S. Military Academy team in an English style debate during the first annual Heart of America Debate Conference. The conference will be held at the University from Wednesday to Saturday, Mar. 13 to 16. The teams will debate at 8 p.m. March 13 in the Pine Room of the Student Union. The topic is: "Resolved: That a policy of achieving world peace through military strength is obsolete." "This invitational tournament is one of the few debate conferences of the year where teams from all over the nation will be represented," said Ted J. Barnes, assistant instructor of speech and drama. On March 14 and 15, preliminary debates will be held on the national college question, "Resolved: That the United States should discontinue economic aid to foreign countries." Awards will be made on Saturday, Mar. 16. Debaters and coaches will talk in a forum with John P. Ferris, Frank N. Trager, and Clifford P. Hope on foreign aid policy Thursday. Mar. 14. Mr. Ferris is special assistant to regional director for the Near East and South Asia operation in the International Cooperation Administration, Washington, D.C.Mr. Trager is in charge of the Southeast Asia Program. Mr. Hope has served on the Agricultural Committee in the House of Representatives. Cello Orchestra To Give Concert The cello orchestra under the direction of Raymond Stuhl, associate professor of cello, will present a student recital at 3 p.m. Thursday in Strong Auditorium. The program will be "Suite for Cello Orchestra, Massig Schnell, Langsam, Sehr Rasche and Kraftvoll Beewigt" by Fredrich Metzler. "Cortege" by Theodore Holland, and "Bachianas Brasilieres No. 1 for Cello Orchestra" by Heitor Villa-Lobos. Members of the orchestra are Don Beene, Lawrence senior; Patricia Duerksen, Bartlesville, Okla.; freshman; Willeta Dove, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore; Sue Gewinner, Webster Groves, Mo., senior; Alan Harris, Lawrence junior; Verna Jarnot, Laconia, N. H., senior; Charles Mader, Lawrence senior; Mariane Marshall, Topeka freshman; Ted Schweitzer, 3rd year law, Wichita; David Siekman, Hastings, Neb. freshman; Robert Stewart, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student; and Carolyn Wilken, Lawrence sophomore. Youth Director To. Speak Miss Anderene Farmer, youth director of the Kansas City Southern Baptist Assn., will be guest speaker at the annual Baptist Student Union sweetheart banquet, Friday evening in the English Room of the Student Union. Entertainment by members will follow the dinner. Conrad Hilton, owner of 29 hotels in many of the major cities of the world, was born in San Antonio, N. M. White pelicans scoop fish from water; they don't dive as do the Brown pelicans. KUOK LOG Today 6:00 UDK News 6:00 Dinner Music 6:20 Episodes in Preview 6:20 Public Service 7:00 Bookstore Hour 8:00 Wire News 8:00 University Theatre Concert 8:00 Show Tunes 9:00 Music 9:00 Lucky Strike News 9:40 Music 10:00 Music 10:00 Night Life with Charlie Drew 10:00 News 10:00 Night Life 10:00 Night Life 12:00 Turn Off Those Ballet Dancers Are Sure Touah On Shoes The shoe bill for a ballet company must be terrific. Over the years, the National Ballet Company of Canada, which will appear at 8:20 p.m. Friday in Hoch Auditorium, wears out an average of 2,000 pairs a year. In the last three months, the troupe has thrown away 497 pairs. (Advertisement) It takes 18 yards of net to make a tutu (short ballet dress) and 60 yards go into the most voluminous costume. Over a mile of satin ribbon and two miles of frilling have been used in the last three months. Shoes are only one item of expense for the company. of satin ballet slippers. Celia Franca, ballerina and The list of universities located near Melpar laboratories that offer graduate and undergraduate courses in engineering subjects includes: Georgetown University, George Washington University, American University, Catholic University, University of Maryland, University of Virginia, Harvard, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Northeastern University, and Boston University. Melpar offers financial assistance for study at these distinguished schools. choreographer, is the troupe's artistic director. She helped found the company in 1951. Kay Ambrose is the ballet authority in artistic matters of scenery and costumes. Nearly as active as the dancers, David Haber, stage manager, travels an average of nearly two miles a show. are needed to transport the 70-member group and 16 sets valued at $200,000. Financial Assistance Offered by Melpar for Graduate Work A dancer's life, however, is not without reward. The dancers have received 257 bouquets from audiences. The college or university graduate who joins Melpar is not required to undergo a formal training program. Instead he immediately becomes a member of a project group and is assigned to work with an experienced engineer whose guidance and assistance enable him to advance rapidly. Members of Melpar project groups gain experience in all phases of engineering problems by free and frequent interchange of ideas during group meetings. Such experience is valuable in leading to eventual managerial responsibility. Since its beginning, the ballet has traveled over 27,000 miles in Canada. Its largest audience was 228,000 for a 12-day stand. Five railroad cars (Advertisement) No Formal Training Period At Melpar Their program Friday will include Tschaikovsky's "Nutcracker Suite" ballet and Delibes "Coppelia." ID cards will admit students. Melpar to Interview Engineers, Physicists and Mathematicians One Of Nation's Leading Electronic Firms Offers Unique Opportunities (Advertisement) Mechanical and electronic engineers, as well as those majoring in physics and math will want to investigate the unusual opportunities for rapid professional growth and advancement offered by Melpar, Inc., one of the Nation's leading electronic research and development organizations. A subsidiary of Westinghouse Air Brake Company, Melpar is now engaged in a program of expansion involving both increases in staff and facilities. The organization's headquarters laboratory is located in Fairfax County, Virginia, only 10 miles from Washington, D.C. Melpar Locales Offer Fine Living Conditions Melpar's Boston area plants allow engineers to enjoy the pleasant tempo of New England living coupled with Boston's splendid cultural and educational advantages. Melpar pays re-location expenses. Booklets Available An attractive, fully-illustrated booklet describing living conditions prevailing in the Washington, D.C. area can be obtained from your campus Placement Officer. Melpar's R & D operations are centered near and in Washington, D.C. and Boston, Mass. Both are rich in cultural and educational facilities. The Washington, D.C. area in which Melpar's headquarters laboratory is located is within easy driving range of beaches, lakes, mountains, as well as other recreational and scenic points. The climate allows outdoor recreation 215 days of the year. Fine homes and apartments in all price ranges are readily available. Performance Determines Advancement At Melpar At Melpar there is no waiting period for "automatic" advancement. Instead, an engineer, regardless of his age or tenure, may move ahead as rapidly as his skill and performance dictate. Each engineer's achievement is reviewed at least twice a year. In this manner engineers deserving advancement can be quickly "spotted" and promoted. As soon as an engineer is ready for more complex responsibilities they are given him. Qualified Graduates Offered Paid Inspection Trips After a personal interview on their campus, qualified candidates may be invited to visit Melpar's headquarters laboratory near Washington, D.C. at Company expense. Information on opportunities available for graduates together with details on living conditions in the Washington, D.C. area is available by simply writing: Mr. William Schaub, Melpar, Inc., 3000 Arlington Blvd., Falls Church, Virginia. Many University Courses Offered At Melpar's Main Lab Melpar staff members, both holders and non-holders of degrees, may take advantage of the many fully-accredited courses in engineering subjects which are offered at Melpar's headquarters laboratory. Company Policies Geared To Engineer's Needs Melpar's personnel policies emphasize individual consideration, objective treatment, and opportunity based on ability. Specifically, these policies are implemented by promotion from within, wherever possible, merit reviews that are truly meaningful, work assignments in keeping with the engineer's most obvious capabilities. In addition, of course, the Company makes available to each of its staff members a wide program of company benefits, including group insurance with life, sickness, hospitalization and major medical expense features, a retirement plan, and provides for paid sick leave, vacations and holidays. Salaries at Melpar compare most favorably with those of the industry as a whole. Founded in 1945. Melpar has doubled in size every 18 months for the past 11 years. Recently it completed erection of a complete new headquarters laboratory near the Nation's Capital, and is presently making substantial additions to its Watertown, Mass. laboratory (6 miles west of Boston), and to its research department in Boston. Located on a 44-acre landscaped tract, Melpar's main laboratories encompass over 265,000 square feet under a single roof. Fully air-conditioned, they are equipped with every facility. In addition to the new, ultra-modern headquarters plant, Melpar maintains additional facilities in Arlington, Virginia, Boston and Watertown, Massachusetts, encompassing a total of 460,000 square feet. Challenging Openings Available At Melpar In Many Fields Engineers who join Melpar may choose their assignments from one or more of these challenging fields: Flight Simulators • Radar and Countermeasures • Network Theory • Systems Evaluation • Microwave Techniques • Analog & Digital Computers • Magnetic Tape Handling • UHF, VHF, or SHF Receivers • Packaging Electronic Equipment • Pulse Circuitry • Microwave Filters • Servomechanisms • Subminiaturization • Electro-Mechanical Design • Small Mechanisms • Quality Control & Test Engineering. Members of Melpar's research and engineering staff are ably supported by many designers, draftsmen and technicians. Coordinated supporting services include a chemistry laboratory, a quality control group, an environmental test laboratory, a number of shops, and other specialized facilities. Make Appointment Now For Melpar Interview Feb.27th To secure an appointment with the Melpar representative when he visits your campus, contact your Placement Officer today. At the same time ask him for booklets on Melpar and the Washington, D.C. area. We believe you will find them of unusual interest. dmwf0110520C (m1b4) em- d at not have audi- ude quite" ID Page 3 nas for com- new the mently its (6 its n. uped ries feet con- with the terts onal nia, chu- ul of may one fields : and work on ● logg & agmetic f, or Elec- niture ervo- lation gn ● Con- and sup- afts ated hem- control labo and Paint and Plato — Paint cans, brushes and clothes bedaubed with assorted smear have been common sights around the men's scholarship halls lately as work progresses on their self-appointed task of redecorating their quarters. Scholarship Hall Men Drop Books For Brushes Four Men Work Recognizing the need for new color in their surroundings, men students at Battenfeld, Stephenson, Jolliffe and Foster have undertaken the job of repainting some of the rooms in their hallis, the University supplying the necessary materials. Students at Battenfield are brightening up study rooms. They began late last semester and expect to be finished before the end of this term. Four men have been detailed to the project and are doing a very nice job, Douglas Lusk. Olivet junior proctor said. They do most of their work on the weekends and are exempted from regular weekend work assignments. Roommates may have their choice of light brown, light green or light blue. When the Battenfeld residents encountered no difficulties, the University gave Stephenson the These Students Learn, Earn Correspondence courses in writing offered by the University are paying off for several students. Miss Ruth Kenney, director of correspondence study, claims. The latest of Miss Lottie Lesh's pupils to cash in on a correspondence course investment is Mrs. Eileen Nordstrom of Davenport, Iowa. An article she prepared as an assignment in magazine writing was sold to Today's Health for $125. The article, entitled "Adventure in Living—Following a Coronary," was written after Mrs. Nordstrom's husband had a heart attack. Another magazine, Journal of Lifetime Living, has invited Mrs. Nordstrom to prepare an article which she had suggested to the editor. Miss Kenny said Miss Stella Clark of Reserve, currently enrolled in feature writing, averages $100 a month from the sale of short newspaper features. Other KU correspondence students have sold their writings to professional and trade journals and to such magazines as American Mercury and Woman's Day. One. Mrs. Cleta Parker of Greensburg entered the radio field with a story she had written for her correspondence course in creative writing. Jewelry Fraternity To Install Officers Recently elected officers of Alpha Rho Gamma, professional jewelry fraternity, will be installed at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Bailey Annex. green light and the dining and recreation rooms there have taken on a new color and brightness. New officers are Mary Fischer, St. Louis, Mo. senior, president; Charles Hageman, Riley senior, vice-president; Sandra Falwell, Kansas City, Kan., junior, secretary-treasurer; Max Dunlevy, Emporia sophomore, program chairman, and Florence Hanline, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, pledge representative. University Daily Kansan Most of the work was done between semesters with the finishing touches added recently. Three students headed the job and the rest worked when they could. Proctor, Fred Misse, Highland junior, said everyone co-operated and the job turned out to be rather easy with no major catastrophes. The recreation rooms were the main eye-sore at Jollife Hall and the men volunteered to take over the task of its redecoration. Don Coyne, Hutchinson junior, said students have been volunteering for the work and it has been progressing rapidly. The public is invited to see the silversmithing movies which will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Phi Sigma To Hear 'Views On Evolution' At Foster, men as time and schedules permit, are repainting their individual rooms. "Views on Evolution" will be discussed by a panel of Lawrence Clergymen at the February meeting of Phi Sigma, honorary biological society, at 8 p.m. today in the Fine Room of the Student Union. Panel members will be the Rev. Ernst E. Klein, Baptist student pastor; the Rev. Edwin F. Price, Methodist student pastor; Dean Harold G. Barr of the School of Religion, and Msgr. George Towle, pastor of St. John's Catholic Church. Successful use of reactor waste heat for Hanford atomic plant buildings has shown that dirt-free atomic heating technically feasible. Trench For Cables, Not Aggies' Grave No, they weren't preparing a grave for the Aggie basketball team with the digging in front of Bailey Hall Tuesday. They were only laying new cable for the streetlights along Jayhawk Boulevard. Sigma Alpha Iota, women's music fraternity, will initiate six women, four students and two patronesses, at 5:30 today in 32 Strong Hall. The Aggies had nothing to fear. The trench was covered before the game started. Initiated will be Ernestine Bates, Burlington, Peggy O'Dell, Clarendon Hills, Ill., Janice Wanamaker, Stockton and Nancy Dixon, Lawrence, sophomores. Patronesses to be initiated are Mrs. Edward Masters and Mrs. Donald Scheid, wives of music faculty members. Initiate Six Into Music Fraternity The first illustrated daily newspaper was the New York Daily Graphic published in 1873. Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1957 Veterans See Operetta Cast Patients at Winter General Hospital, Topeka, were entertained Tuesday at a Valentine party given by members of the cast of "Of Thee I Sing." Cast members were Don Farrar, Kansas City, Mo., Sara J Pursley, Coffeyville, Beverly Runkle, Pittsburg, Bettie Sadler, Clinton, Mo., Wansley Sharp, Kansas City, Mo, Mary Beth Spena, Lecompton, Dick Easton, Lawrence, juniors; Marva Lou Powell, Topeka, George Smith, Lawrence, Gary White, Minneapolis, Mary Ann Clark, Kansas City, Mo., Linda Helfy, FT. Worth, sophomores; David Schnee, McDonald, Karl Garrett, Lawrence, Lois Pruitt, Independence, Mo., Janice Chelf, St. Joseph, Mo., freshmen, and Bruce Loganbill, Newton graduate student. Claude Kean, Olathe junior, acted as master of ceremonies and Beverley Baird, Topeka freshman, gave her ventilator act. Highland College, Highland, Kan.. now operating as a junior college, was established in 1858 as the first college for white settlers in the Kansas Territory. For the finest in DIAMONDS ...shop at Terry's Jewelry. At Terry's we're always happy to show you our fine selection of diamonds. Outstanding for cut, color and clarity...our reputation is your protection...ask about our convenient credit terms. Terry's Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. wilbur Marlboro LONG SIZE You get a lot to like with a Marlboro FILTER • FLAVOR • FLIP-TOP BOX FILTER CIGARETTES Marlboro LONG SIZE FILTER CIGARETTES Marlboro LONG SIZE Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1957 Coach Is Out For Season KU Tops Aggies 62-52 As Chamberlain Hits 36 Kansas, paced by Wilt Chamberlain's 36 points, never trailed in beating Oklahoma A&M 62-52 Tuesday night in Allen Field House. NEW YORK — (UP) — Fordham University basketball coach Johnny Bach, underwent an emergency appendectomy in St. Joseph's Hospital. Yonkers, Tuesday, may be lost to his team for the remainder of the season. Freshman Coach Al Larkin has been named to take over for Bach, whose condition was described as "good." Wilt was pretty much the whole show as he hogged the backboards, frustrated the Aggie close in shooting and racked in the most points ever scored by a KU player against the Angles. Clyde Has Former Record His 36 points topped the previous record of 27 set during the 1952 season by Clyde Lovellette. Ron Loneski's free throw got the Jayhawkers off to a 1-0 start and the Aggies could only manufacture one tie after that at 3-3. Wilt hit 10 of KU's first 15 points to put the Jayhawkers ahead 15-9. Kansas upped its margin to 23-13, longest lead of the first half when Gene Elstun hit a left hand hook with 7:50 to go in the half. The Aggies whittled away at the margin and cut it to 31-27 at halftime. The Aggies were only the second team this year to play a man-for-man defense against Kansas. They stayed with the defense all the way although it never really hampered the Jayhawkers' shooting. The Aggies, forced to shoot from outside by the tight KU zone, hit 41 per cent of their shots in the first half, including three straight long shots near the close of the half. HAVE TUX, WILL TRAVEL—The effect of a vaudeville balancing act is given by the familiar frame of Wilt Chamberlain, as the 7-0 center stretches for a rebound against Oklahoma Aggies In Man-For-Man Wilt moved more freely in the man-for-man defense and Kansas had little trouble getting the ball to him. He faked beautifully off the post and fed teammates for several easy layups. A feature of the fine KU floor play was the smooth passing by all the starters and Bob Billings. Near the end of the game when the Jayhawkers felt they had the game salted away, they cut loose with several behind-the-back passes, all finding their mark. The Aggies played the type of game usually displayed by all Hank Iba's fives. They worked the ball for good shots before firing, although they had difficulty piercing the Jayhawker zone in the first half. Aggies Stay Close The Aggies never got closer than three points in the second half of play, with the margin usually ranging from 5 to 7 points. However, Oklahoma A&M solved KU's zone defense and moved in for close-in jump shots in the second Harp: Chamberlain Is One Of Great Shooters In Game Jayhawker basketball coach Dick Harp, obviously happy with his team's play in the victory over Oklahoma A&M, said Wilt Chamberlain would be one of the great shooters in the game's history. Not Only A Dunker "We never doubted all season long that Wilt could hit away from the basket," Harp said "and tonight he showed that he will be one of the greatest basketball players in the game's history." Great Team Effort "We were never worried," Harp said. "I thought we would win all the way although they got a little close for comfort a couple of times." The Kansas team, showing the same quiet confidence they displayed throughout the game, showered quickly, leaving only the coaches and trainer in the locker room. "The whole team played a great game, but of course, Wilt's great shooting overshadowed their efforts. I thought Bob Billings did a wonderful job for us. Tonight he realized the greatness that has been forecast for him." The Jayhawkers used their 1-3-1 zone defense all the way and Harp voiced his amazement at the accuracy of the Aggie long range gunners. "When you zone a team and they start out hitting over top your figure that sooner or later the percentage will catch up with them," Harp said. "We waited all night for it to happen but those guys kept right on hitting." The game was smoothly played by both teams with few mistakes made. Harp said he figured 6 or 7 errors a game was about par for the course for his team. "However, Harp laughingly remarked, "We don't reach that figure very often. (Both teams had 10 errors for the game). Even our great 1952 Olympic team averaged 11 errors a game for the season. half. Most of their scoring came off 15-foot jump shots in front of the basket as they overloaded the zone. As the Aggies cooled slightly near the end of the game, Kansas quickly took charge and ran up its biggest lead 'of the night at 60-48 when Wilt hit a 20-foot fadeaway jump shot. The Javahawkers enjoyed their hottest shooting night of the year with a scorching 47 per cent average from the field. The average was padded by numerous layups, which came as a result of the sharp passing. Aggies Hit 43 Per Cent Aggies Hit 43 Per Cent The Aggies were forced to get their points the hard way, as they got only two crib shots out of their total of 17 field goals. They hit 43 per cent, fine shooting considering the tougher shots they had. Another advantage the Jayhawkers realized by using the zone defense was better rebounding position. They screened the Aggies away from the boards and out-rebounded them 34-21. Ron Loneski was the only other Jayhawker hitting in double figures as he popped in 11 points on a variety of shots. Only center Arlen Clark hit double figures for the Aggies as he pumped in 10 points. The scoring was balanced as the whole team took turns popping over the Jayhawker defense. The Box Score: Ohla A8M Kansas (62) OKla. A&M (52) FG FT F FG FT F L Jhn'sn 0 0-0 Carberry 1 0-2 Elstun 2 0-1 Cratch'f 1 0-0 Lonekil 19 5-7 Cratch'f 1 0-0 Chm'in 13 10-16 Suttone 1 0-0 Parker 1 2-2 Clark 3 4-1 King 2 0-0 Kemple 6 7-5 Billings 1 1-2 Adair 4 1-2 Deuch'df 0-0 Wright 3 5-7 Totals 22 18-28 12 Totals 17 18-22 16 The koala, the "Australian teddy bear," spends much of its life in eucalyptus tree feeding almost exclusively on its buds and foliage. The first woman presidential candidate was Victoria Claflin Woodhill, who was nominated by the National Women Suffrage Assn. May 10, 1872. Have You Ever Won a Loving Cup? HERE'S YOUR CHANCE! Enter the Kansan's Monthly Photo Contest When? Who? Any student or faculty member—A category for each. How? Bring your photos to The Daily Kansan Business office. Photos need not be mounted. Print your name, address and telephone number lightly on the backs. Enter as many times as you like. For the March contest, photos must be in by Feb.28. Huntington Newsroom John Rodgers, January's contest winner, receives his loving cup donated by Hixon's Studio from Dale Bowers, Lyndon senior and George Link, Instructor of Journalism. Enter Now! Any Subject, Any Pose, Any Picture This month's winning photos now on display in William Allen White reading room in Flint Page 7 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By GEORGE ANTHAN (Assistant Sports Editor of The Daily Kansan) Just tossing in a kind word to the many Big 7 schools whose teams can do no wrong. The popular sport of "razzing-the- ref- when- he-wrongs-out-boys" is getting so popular maybe it should be organized. Special razzleaders could be elected and prizes would be given to anyone thinking up a gripe with a poetic ring to it. The Aggies tried for $1\frac{1}{2}$ minutes to find an opening in KU's one defense at the beginning of play Tuesday night. Then John Parker, Kansas guard, stole the ball. The Aggies didn't score the second time they got their hands on the ball either. A rebound by Gene Elstun saw to that. Seriously, however, a Kapsas player does occasionally commit a foul, and the poor official, though awed by the mass of public opinion against him, must do his duty and point the accusing finger at a Jayhawker. Sometimes (God forbid) he even calls a foul on Wilt. A&M did its best to break up the zone with some accurate outside shooting and fancy footwork and passing. The trouble was, while they were taking an average of about 25 seconds to work the ball into position for a shot at the basket, Kansas was doing likewise in about half the time. Perhaps the biggest factor in the success of the zone was Wilt. The Aggies didn't have to much trouble getting the ball in to Center Arlen Clark but every time 6-8 Arlen turned around to shoot he stared right into a big red number 13. After giving Wilt our Hero Medal No. 1 for the night our No. 2 medal would go to Ron Loneski who drew even more applause with his left handed hook shot with 5:22 left in the game, than did Chamberlain after his one and only dunk basket early in the second half. Somebody said, "Why doesn't someone give the band a little credit." Well, here's to Ed Masters and the band. Sometimes they are taken for granted but we sure would miss them if they decided to stay home and watch the game on television. Kansas' track squad swept 11 of 15 events to defeat Michigan State in an indoor dual Monday night but even though the Spartans were rated as a tough team the victory does not show anything definite. The Jayhawkers will still have their hands full trying to win the Big 7 title again. Michigan State was strong in one department, the distances, and time posted in the meet were just ordinary. It will take much more than just ordinary times to win the Indoor Championship in Kansas City, March 1 and 2, especially when Missouri's well balanced team will be on hand. In fact, Bill Easton says the Tigers probably have the best balanced indoor varsity team in the conference. Easton says he expected a much stronger team at Michigan State and partially attaches the Jayhawkers success in East Lansing to the fact that Kansas was ahead of the Spartans in conditioning. Wilt's 36 Points Tops All Scorers By UNITED PRESS Wilt (The Stilt) Chamberlain, Kansas' 7-foot sensation who had been forced to take a back seat for a week, regained a razor-thin lead today in the three-cornered fight for the national basketball scoring lead. Whipping 36 points through the cords in a 62-52 triumph over the Oklahoma Aggies while Grady Wallace of South Carolina was scoring only 24 in a 79-71 loss to Clemson. Chamberlain boosted his scoring average to 29.94 points per game to Wallace's 29.90. Tonight the third and smallest contender, Columbia's 5-9 Chet (The Jet) Forte, goes into action against Pennsylvania. Forte's average stands at 29.3 and he needs 42 points in tonight's tussle to overtake Wilt. Hartack Gets Four Winners MIAMI, Fla.—(UP)—Willie Hartack, the nation's most successful jockey the past two years, accounted for four victories at Hialeah Park Tuesday, including both ends of a $40.10 daily double. Ethan Allen is usually credited with establishing the iron industry in Vermont. In truth, it was Matthew Lyon who built the state's first iron works at Fair Haven in 1775. Hunters of 29 states harvested nearly 10 million mourning doves during the open season of one year. WANT A VALENTINE THAT YOUR WHOLE FAMILY WILL ENJOY? 心形蛋糕 With only two days of regular season play remaining, men's intramural basketball is quickly drawing to a close. To assure top quality, each delicacy is baked fresh daily. When you're downtown, stop in and pick up a treat that your family will really love! Come to Drake's and pick out a fresh delicious treat for every meal. Because of the varsity game with Oklahoma A&M, there were no games scheduled yesterday. Both the Independent A and the Fraternity A leagues will end today, while the B leagues, because of some early-season postponements will not end until Thursday. All C league competition was completed Monday. The intramural office announced yesterday that the playoffs to decide the hill champions in the various leagues will get under way this weekend. The playoffs in the A league will begin Friday night, the C league Saturday afternoon and the B league will start Tuesday night. IM Basketball Ends Thursday Games Today Drake's Bakery Fraternity A — Triangle vs. Beta. 6:15 p.m.; Delt vs. AKL, 7:15 p.m. Independent A — Carruth vs. Hookers, 4:15 p.m.; Prelock vs. Foster, 5:15 p.m. 907 Mass. VI 3-0561 Basketball Star Is Ineligible Independent B — Jim Beam vs. Don Henry 4:15 p.m. E; Geo. Club vs. G. Pearson 4:15 p.m. W; AFROTC vs. Stephenson 5:00 p.m. E; Newman vs. Basketeers 5:00 p.m. W; Foster vs. NSN 5:45 p.m. E; Pearson vs. Hicks 5:45 p.m. W; Medics vs. Battenfeld 6:00 p.m. E. In geology, rock is the collection of mineral matter that forms the earth's crust. EASTON, Pa.—(UP)—Jim Radcliff, a six-six senior from Doylestown, Pa., and a star forward on the Lafayette College basketball team, left school Tuesday because of scholastic deficiencies along with another member of the cage team—sophomore Ernest Frank of New Gardens, N.Y. Their loss was a blow to the team, which has a 16-3 record—and is a contender for postseason tourney play. University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1957 Golf Meeting Today There will be a meeting of all students interested in freshman and varsity golf at 4 p.m. today in Room 103 Robinson Gymnasium. 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 BIRD TV-Radio Service k Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results, "Christian Rationalism" Will Be Discussed By Dr. J. V. Langmead Casserley Prof. of Dogmatic Theology General Theological Seminary, New York City at MEMORIAL UNION BANQUET Sunday, February 17 At 5:30 p.m. Tickets: $1.50 at The Canterbury House 1341 W. Campus Road- VI 3-8202 . Dr. Casserley will also preach at Trinity Episcopal Church, Sunday, February 17 at 10 a.m. Chemical Engineers Civil Engineers Mechanical Engineers Petroleum Engineers Geological Engineers Chemists Business Administration (Marketing) Liberal Arts (Marketing) TEXACO T REG. T. M. Opportunities with Texaco Find out, first hand, the broad range of opportunities in the fields of your study and interest made possible through TEXACO'S nation-wide and world-wide scope of operations. EXPLORATION REFINING MARKETING FINANCE & ECONOMICS PRODUCING RESEARCH PIPELINE OPERATION BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION LEARN HOW you can build a rewarding career for yourself with The Texas Company, a leader in the constantly expanding petroleum field. TEXACO'S representative will be interviewing on the campus soon. Sign up, now. SEE Texaco "Job Opportunities" and "Job Opportunity Descriptions" — and interview dates posted — in your placement office. THE TEXAS COMPANY TEXACO 816.7.6.1 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1957 Look What Advertising Does for You Kent Pelz, Little Man On Campus, shown picking up a Daily Kansan at one of the convenient Kansan newstands. To the Student You as a student are naturally curious about happenings in your environment. You learn some of these events from everyday acquaintances, radio or television, and possibly a large metropolitan newspaper. There are, however, many happenings of interest that you do not hear or see through these media. The University Daily Kansan serves to fill this gap by publishing news that is of interest to you. It gives you coverage of campus, state, national, and world news at less than 27 cents a month. This low cost is made possible by the United Press news service and a well-manned staff of student reporters, who write campus and local happenings. The University Daily Kansan serves you by giving you a guide to entertainment events both on the campus and in downtown Lawrence. It provides you with information concerning places to get food, housing, clothing, recreation and a host of other services. The display advertising tells you when and where sales are taking place. You get a guide to dependable merchants who sell quality merchandise. This, your University Daily Kansan gives to YOU. The 1957 Advertising Recognition Week is being co-sponsored on your campus by Alpha Delta Sigma and Gamma Alpha Chi, men's and women's professional advertising fraternities, to help show you that advertising constitutes an important service to the economy of your college community. ADS and GAX Sponsor An advertising display bulletin is set up on the main floor of the Memorial Union to further help the student appreciate the preparation and purposes of advertising. Other planned tie-ins on the campus include posters, a painted banner, and a dinner Friday evening featuring William Brooks, account executive for the Potts-Wooldbury advertising agency in Kansas City. To the Merchant To have a profitable business, with the intensity of present day competition, you must have a good product, friendly, ambitious selling ability and a quick economical way of reaching the largest potential market. You already have the product and salesmanship and here's how the University Daily Kansan can help you reach more customers at lower costs. The Daily Kansan is carefully read by some 8,000 students and faculty members who spend $9 million annually on food, housing, clothing, recreation and services. The majority of these readers are in a specific age group (from 18-25). This age group is characterized by its high potential, yet selective spending habits. To help you reach this market we offer you the lowest local advertising rate of any leading daily college newspaper (64c per col. inch). The more you advertise the cheaper this rate becomes: 25 to 49 inches per month earns a rate of 57c per inch; 50 to 99 inches per month earns a rate of 52c per inch; 100 to 199 inches per month earns a rate of 48c per inch, and 290 inches or over per month earns a rate of 45c per inch. You are entitled to free photography service for any display ad that is 10 inches or larger. You also get free scan-a-graving service for reproducing any illustrative matter you may want to use in display advertising. We offer modern mat service and if you wish, our staff members will lay out the ad for you. The next time a representative of our staff calls on you, he or she will be glad to tell you how the University Daily Kansan can help you get your share of a growing market. The Daily Kansan is of tabloid size, so that your ads are easily found by the reader. For further information, dial KU 376. PARKER AND HUGHSON Reading the paper, Kent sees an ad which interests him. JOKEE'S Arriving downtown Lawrence, Kent heads for the store which advertised in The Kansan WILLIAM JOHNSON The Purchase completed, Kent is glad he read about the savings in a Daily Kansan ad. Sponsored by the UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN For 1957 Advertising Recognition Week 1. Director Of Laboratories Looks For Economy In Job Page 9 University Daily Kansan Getting the best and most fortion for Duane Postlethwaite's department of chemistry. "The biggest job, and the most interesting is finding the equipment that will do the best job. Last the longest and be the most economical." Mr. Postlethwalte said. Expenses for Mr. Postlethwaite's job run very high. Last year the laboratory expenditures were about $77,000 and this figure is expected to be updied more this year. "In addition to the university expense, there are also a number of research projects paid for by independent firms and the government. Next year we are starting a project that has an estimated cost of $65,000." he said. "We have spent over $800 this year for new keys for locks on stu- the least expense is a good descrip-job, director of laboratories for the In addition to the many duties involved in the supplying, maintaining and co-ordinating the activities of the various laboratories, Mr. Postlethwaite is an instructor for a Western Civilization class every Friday morning. Westminster Party Thursday dent's desks," explained Mr. Postlethwaite. "These small items add a great deal to our"total over-all expenditures." P. G. Fleming, plastics engineer for Bendix Aviation Corp., and president of the American Society for Plastic Engineers, will address a regular meeting of the American Society of Tool Engineers on "New Developments in Plastics," at 7 p.m. Thursday, in 300 Fowler. Before the talk decisions will be made in the business meeting on the ASTE exhibit in the Engineering Exposition, April 19-20. The annual party for the KU Westminster Fellowship Council will be given 7.30 p. m. Thursday. The Presbyterian Men will be the guests of the Presbyterian Women, said Wanda Welliever, president of the women's group. One idea turned in at the recent executive council meeting was to have a robot which wrote his name on a piece of paper when a certain button was punched. Michigan State Police headquarters at East Lansing, Mich., has the largest file of fingerprints of any law-enforcement agency in the United States other than the FBI collection in Washington. Nearly 4,000,000 prints are cataloged by Michigan State Police. Party Leader To Talk Here Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1857 Jim Pratt of Colby, state chairman of the Republican Party, will speak on "The Strategy to be Used in Winning Back the Governorship" at the meeting of the College Young Republican Club at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union. Thirty-five delegates will be chosen at this meeting to attend the collegiate Young Republican State Convention, March 14, 15, and 16 at Emporia. Richard Billings. Russell senior and club chairman, said anyone wishing to attend the state convention should be present at the meeting Thursday. The first presidential message broadcast was on Dec. 6, 1923, when Calvin Coolidge delivered his message to the joint session of Congress. ASTE Will Hear Plastic Engineer 2 BIG SHOWS Official Bulletin Sun. Feb. 24 – 3:30 & 8:00 P.M. - Municipal Auditori rium – Toronto Advance tickets—$290 at the door $2.50 • Tickets on site at Wilsden Drug-8th and Kansas City Mills Museum 113 Kansas Items for the official Bulletin must be brought to the Public Relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin material. Daily Kansan Notices include name, place, date, and time of function. Fats Allin Person DOMINO BILL DOGGETT AND RUSH Closing soon McPhatter LAVERN Baker SUPER ATTRACTIONS PRESENT THE BIGGEST SHOW OF Stars for 57 Mini Person Fats DOMINO Bill DOGGETT AND THE ORCH CLYDE McPhallen LAVERN Baker ALL IN PERSON Chuck BERRY * Five KEYS The MOONGLOWS * ANN COLE * Five SATINS * Charles BROWN AND THE Eddie Cooley DIMPLES * The SCHOOL BOYS Paul Williams Big Bend TODAY Ph. D. French reading examination, 9 to 11 a.m. Saturday, in 110 Fraser. Leave books with Miss Craig, 120 Fraser, by 10 a.m. Thursday. Kuku Club, 6:45 p.m. Ballroom. Student Uni- tion. Meeting after picture. Institute of Aeronautical Sciences, 7:30 p.m., Aero Hut. Speaker: George Edwards. "Problem in Supersonic and Hypersonic Research." Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. Newman Club executive committee meeting 7.30 p.m. in the Castle. Please attend. Collegiate Council for United Nations 8 p.m., Parlier A, Student Union. Speaker: George Beckmann. "Southeast Asia Today." Phi Sigma meeting, 8 p.m. Pine Room. Student Union. Panel on "Views on Evolution" by Lawrence ministers. Open to the public. Seminar, noon-12:50 p.m. Westminster Fellowship house at 1212 Aerd St. Disciple's Student Church of the Disciples Student Fellowship, Westminster Fellowship, United Student Fellowship, and Methodist Student Movement.unch will be served. All permeability. THURSDAY Le Cercle Francais se reunit Jeudi 12 novembre au siège de Bonaventure na faire un discours. Jay James, 5 p.m. Pine Room. Student Union. Box supper. Attendance required. KU-Y Social Responsibility Meeting 7:30 p.m. Room 306A-Student Union. Der deutsche Verein triff sich jeden Der der Vereint die Fraser. Als Allt sind perchall eingegeben. Collegiate Young Republicans meeting. 7 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Student Union. Speaker: Jim Pratt, state chairman of the Republican party, "Strategy to be Used in Winning Back the Governorship in 1958." American Society of Tool Engineers, Chapter No. 3, 7 p.m., 300 Fowler, Speaker; P. G. Fleming, plastics engineer for Bendix Aviation Corp., and president of American Society for Plastic Engineers. "New Developments in Plastics." Education wives and staff women des- sert p.m., Mrs. E. B. Eayl, 1408 Kentucky FRIDAY Sociology Club, 4 p.m. 17 Strong Ann- ual. Carroll D. Clark "Jazz." Public invited. KU-Y Mexico Trip Meeting. 7 p.m. Room 305B, Student Union. Museum of Art Films on Art. 7:15 and 9 p.m., Art Museum. Rembrandt, a full length film biography starring Charles Laughton. American Institute of Architects, 7:30 p.m., 306 A. Student Union. Important business - Art show, architect banquet, exposition, field trip. Program; Special recording on "Future of Architecture." Refreshments. Monaco, the second smallest state of Europe has a population of about 19,000 whit an area of 370 acres. Anastasia Feb.13,14,15,16 Green Theater-8:00 Union Ticket Center Tickets 50c at was a Cinderella compared with Pearl! See "Pity Poor Pearl" University Players' Melodrama A. S. H. "What's it like to be A MANUFACTURING ENGINEER AT IBM?" Designing a paperwork system Four years ago, Yale senior Lee Baker asked himself this question. Today, as a Product Control Engineer in IBM Manufacturing Engineering, Lee reviews his experience and gives some pointers that may be helpful to you in taking the first, most important step in your engineering career. "It's tough," Lee sympathizes, "for a college senior to feel confident about choosing a job. For four years he's been trained to be critical and deliberate about making decisions. Now, faced with the biggest decision of all, he has only a few months in which to attend job interviews, separate the facts from the propaganda, and select a company—not to mention passing exams and graduating at the same time." Lee's career was temporarily interrupted by a two-year hitch with the Air Force in Korea. Back at IBM in 1955, he has since been promoted to Production Control Engineer. His present job is to design paperwork systems to insure a smooth flow of work through the plant where the famous IBM electronic computers are manufactured. "It takes creative engineering ability to design these systems," says Lee, "and it takes administrative ability to 'sell' a system to higher management and make it stick." Lee, with a B.S. in Industrial Administration, came to IBM in 1953. Starting as a Technical Engineer in Production Control, he was immediately assigned to the General Manufacturing Education program—a A. J. B. H. 10-month course with rotating assignments in all phases of the work manufacturer, purchasing, production. In addition to four weeks of formal classroom study, he also spent two in the Boston Sales Office, calling on accounts with the IBM salesmen. 937 1010760397 DATA PROCESSING How to select an employer "Selling" the system To the college senior faced with a job decision, Lee has this to say: "Pick your employer by this simple test.' Is the company expanding fast enough to provide adequate scope for your talents and ambitions?' Is it interested in your long-range management development? Will it treat you as an individual and match your abilities with the most challenging assignments?" For his part, Lee feels IBM has met this test. Since 1953, he has seen new plants open, dozens of new products evolve, hundreds of new management positions created. Greater authority, responsibility and reward have come his way. And he knows they will continue, for IBM sales 10 Recognition of individual merit have been doubling on the average every five years since 1930. He likes the "small-team" engineering system that assures ready recognition of individual merit. And he appreciates the fact that IBM hired him despite his impending service hitch. ELECTRIC TYPEWRITERS What's "life" like at IBM? At IBM, Poughkeepsie, Lee lives a "full life." He belongs to a local sports car group, drives an Austin Healy. He skis at Bromley. He is a member of the IBM Footlighters and a focal drama workshop. At present, he shares an apartment with two other engineers and a "medium-fi" set, but plans to marry "the girl next door" (in hometown Hamburg, Conn.), in the very near future. In this connection, Lee advises seniors to pay special attention to company benefits. "They may seem like a yawning matter when you're single, but they mean a lot when you assume responsibilities. IBM's are the best I know." Lee lives a full life (1) TIME EQUIPMENT . . . IBM hopes that this message will help to give you some idea of what it's like to work in Manufacturing Engineering at IBM. There are equal opportunities for E.E.'s, M.E.'s, physicists, mathematicians and Liberal Arts majors in IBM's many divisions—Research, Product Development, Sales and Technical Services. Why not drop in and discuss IBM with your Placement Director? He can supply our latest brochure and tell you when IBM will next interview on your campus. Meanwhile, our Manager of Engineering Recruitment, Mr.R.A. Whitehorne, will be happy to answer your questions. Just write him at IBM, Room 9201, 590 Madison Avenue, New York 22, N.Y. IBM INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION MILITARY PRODUCTS --- Page 10 289 2017 2023 2026 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1957 Houses Elect Officers For Second Semester Phi Gamma Delta Phi Gamma Delta fraternity pledge class has elected Joseph Reitz, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, president for the spring semester. Other officers elected are Richard Pollard, Topeka, vice president; Edward Dolson, Kansas City, Mo. secretary; William Goodman, Kansas City, Mo., treasurer; Larry Hill, Hutchinson, social chairman and Roger Boeger, Elmhurst, Ill., songleader. All are freshmen. Gamma Phi Beta Lelan Winchester, Hutchinson junior, has been elected president of Gamma Phi Beta sorority. Other officers are Margaret Peach, Topeka, first vice-president and pledge trainer; Marcia Johnson, Kansas City, Mo., second vice-president and social chariman; Pat Gallant, Wichita, treasurer; Kay Wright, Columbus, recording secretary; Jo Le Potucek, Wellington, rush chairman; Roxie Brown, Ellis, corresponding secretary, and Jan Johnson, Ottawa, activities chairman. All are juniors. Alpha Phi Betty Lou Douglas, Kansas City Kan., junior, has been elected president of Alpha Phi sorority. Other officers are Gayle Hoefener, Leavenworth junior, vice president; Carol Sue Ekland, Russell junior, treasurer; Jayne Ferrin, Topeka junior, recording secretary and Patricia Fountain, Onawa, Iowa, sophomore, corresponding secretary. Jean Hahn, Minneapolis, scholarship; Dee Daniels, Beloit, rush chairman; Anne Schowalter, Kansas City, Kan., chaplain; Margaret Throm, Overland Park, hostess; Patricia McCluggage, Topeka, marshal and Lucinda Pitman, Humhold guard. All are juniors. Theta Chi Theta Chi fraternity has elected Edgar Dittemore, Robinson junior president. Other officers are Ronald Akers, Dighton, vice-president; Robert Farris, Edson, secretary; both juniors. Gail Cobb, Lawrence sophomore, treasurer. ※※※ Gene Kurtz. Wellington junior has been elected president of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity for the spring semester. Other officers elected are Tom Knorr, Wichita district, vice president; Hugh Grant, Hutchinson junior, treasurer; Gary Grose, Dodge City senior historian; Douglas Henning, *Ogallalla*, Neb., sophomore, usher and Cooper Woodring, Topeka sophomore, sentinel. Greek Houses Pledge Alpha Omicron Pi Phi Gamma Delta Alpha Omicron Pi sorority announces the pledging of Sondra L. Pierce, Hutchinson sophomore. Phi-Gamma Delta fraternity announces the pledging of Jack Hennin, Ottawa sophomore. Playwright Tennessee Williams whose prize winning plays and films have been censored by religious authorities, was born in an Episcopal restory in Columbus, Miss. Walt Disney's Westward Ho the Wagons! PROHIBITED CINEMASCOPE Walt Disney's Westward Ho the Wagons! PHOTOGRAPHY CINEMA SCOPE —Plus— "DISNEYLAND U.S.A." Also: Color Cartoon—News NOW Ends Saturday GRANADA —Soon— "3 BRAVE MEN" F. B. S. W. M. R. ONA MARGARET FINNEY Engagement Announced Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Finney of Humboldt, announce the engagement of their daughter, Ona Margaret, to Richard Everett Walls, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Walls of Midland, Tex. Miss Finney is a senior in the School fo Education and a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority. Mr. Walls is a senior in the College and a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. On The Hill Miller Hall held an exchange dinner with Douthart Hall recently. Miller Hall Watkins Hall Watkins Hall will have its annual Heaven and Hell Party Saturday. Tau Kappa Epsilon Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity anno Gamma Phi Beta sorority held a dessert dance recently. Mrs. Virginia Brammer and Mrs. Ralph Park were chaperones. 女 女 女 Stephenson Hall Stephenson Hall and Watkins Hall held an hour dance recently. Chaperones were Mrs. Ruth Jeter and Miss Julia Willard. Kappa Sigma Kappa Sigma fraternity will hold its Black and White formal dinner dance Saturday at the chapter house. The Collegians will play for the dance. Gamma Phi Beta Gamma Phi Beta sorority announces the affiliation of Jeannette Barton, Wichita senior who transferred from Alpha Phi chapter at Colorado College in Colorado Springs. Colo. Kappa Eta Kappa --is yours with New England Life and the unexcelled contract, both liberal and flexible. You can change your plan as your needs change, for example. You can choose from 6 methods by which the money from a 'policy may be paid. Kappa Eta Kappa professional engineering fraternity will hold an informal smoker Friday at the chapter house. Dr. L. W. Seagondollar, associate professor of physics, will speak on his experience with the atomic bomb. *** Delta Gamma Jolliffe Hall Jollife Hall held an hour dance recently with Sellards Hall. Delta Gamma sorority held an exchange dinner with Kappa Kapka Gamma sorority Tuesday evening. ** Phi Kappa Psi Phi Kappa Psi fraternity will hold a date buffet tonight at the chapter house. --is yours with New England Life and the unexcelled contract, both liberal and flexible. You can change your plan as your needs change, for example. You can choose from 6 methods by which the money from a 'policy may be paid. Grace Pearson Hall Grace Pearson Hall will hold a dessert dance with Sellards Hall Tuesday. *** Alpha Chi Omega Alpha Chi Omega held its annual Father's Weekend recently. Chi Omega Chi Omega sorority will have its Mothers' Weekend Friday and Saturday. The mothers will be entertained at the house Saturday and will attend church and have dinner with their daughters on Sunday. Pi Beta Phi Pi Beta Phi sorority held its annual Valentine's Dance Friday in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union. Chaperones were Mrs. Gordon on Yockey, Mrs. Richard Blume, Mrs. Mary Lou Buckingham, Mrs. Thomas Clark, Mrs. Veta Lear, Mrs. Eleanor Mitchell, Mrs. Edward Rainey, Mrs. Ralph Rosebrough, Mrs. John Skie, Mrs. Sarah Stevenson, Mrs. Edna Stewart and Mrs. Mary Wigton. The first woman ambassador to the the U. S. was Madame Shrimati Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, ambassador from India, who presented her credentials to President Harry S. Truman May 12, 1949. The number of cigarette smokers in the United States increased from 40 million to 60 million between 1940 and 1952. 1942 A BETTER LIFE FOR YOU — for your loved ones — this contract provides present day peace of mind and future financial security. Let me tell you more about it, won't you? TOM DOWNS NEW ENGLAND Mutual LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY BOSTON MAKE $ 732^{1/2} $ Mass. Lawrence VI 3-1141 TWO-TIME ACADEMY AWARD WINNER: WILLIAM WYLER WHO GAVE YOU "MRS. MINIVER" and "The BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES" NOW BRINGS YOU HIS GREATEST HIT! ALLLIED ARTISTS PRESENTS GARY COOPER IN WILLIAM WYLER'S PRODUCTION "FRIENDLY PERSUASION" co-starring Dorothy McGuire Also co-starring Marjorie Main COLOR BY DE LUXE Introducing ANTHONY PERKINS, the most exciting screen discovery since James Dean! Starts Today At Regular Prices! VARSITY Feat. 7:00 9:30 Real Cool Valentine's Day Show THE TWIN BILL WITH THE BIG BEAT! REBELS WITH PLENTY OF CAUSE! RUNIBLE ON THE DOCKS *Teen-age gang war!* Introducing JAMES DARREN A CLOVER PRODUCTION - A COLUMBIA PICTURE News — Color Cartoon “Yankee Dood It” THE BIG BEAT! BILL HALEY AND HIS COMETS Don't Knock The Rock co-starring ALAN DALE ALAN FREED A COLUMBIA PICTURE Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS Open 6:45—Show 7:00 TODAY TWO-TIME ACADEMY AWARD WINNER: WILLIAM WYLER WHO GAVE YOU "MRS. MINIVER" and "THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES" NOW BRINGS YOU HIS GREATEST HIT! ALLIED ARTISTS PRESENTS GARY COOPER IN WILLIAM WYLER'S PRODUCTION "FRIENDLY PERSUASION" Introducing ANTHONY PERKINS, the most exciting screen discovery since James Dean! co-starring Dorothy McGuire Also co-starring Marjorie Main COLOR BY DE LUXE Starts Today At Regular Prices! VARSITY V REBELS WITH PLENTY OF CAUSE! RUNBLE ON THE DOCKS *Teen-age gang war!* Introducing JAMES DARREN A CLOVER PRODUCTION - A COLUMBIA PICTURE News — Color Cartoon "Yankee Dood It" Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW PUSH-BACK CUSSIONED CHAIRS REBELS WITH PLENTY OF CAUSE! RUMIBLE ON THE DOCKS *Teen-age gang war!* Introducing JAMES DARREN A CLOVER PRODUCTION • A COLUMBIA PICTURE News — Color Cartoon "Yankee Dood It" Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW York Park CUSHIONED CHAIRS Open 6:45—Show 7:00 THE BIG BEAT! BILL HALEY AND HIS COMETS Don't Knock The Rock co-starring ALAN DALE ALAN FREED A COLUMBIA PICTURE TODAY THE BIG BEAT! BILL HALEY AND HIS COMETS Don't Knock The Rock co-starring ALAN DALE ALAN FREED A COLUMBIA PICTURE Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW Parkway CUSIONED CHAIRS Jerry Gilden Interestingly pale and ladylike—this garland printed Everglaze cotton. Bare and bell-bouffant, sashed wide and handsome, it's bestowed with a neckline that dips low in back. Party-pretty tones of pink, pale blue, and lavender. Sizes 8 to 18...Price $12.95 Terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS 803 Mass. St. VI 3-224I Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1957 University Daily Kansan Page 11 CLASSIFIED ADS 25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.60. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ad must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. LOST GLASSES between Strong and Malotti Charcoal frames in brown leather case. Ph. VI 3-9123 or turn in at Kansan Office. 2-13 K&E SLIDE RULE. At the Military Science Bldg. Finder please return to Dean's office at Marvin Hall. 2-18 GRAY BILLFOLD, somewhere on campus, contains valuable papers. Reward for visiting the library. FRATERNITY RING. Lost somewhere between DU Fraternity House and Strong Hall. Gold black Oynx with 19730. Call Fat Bolein, B2 7370. BLUE SHEAFFER'S PEN. Left on table in Student Union Reading room Friday under tender please return Kansai Business Office. (One end is badly chewed.) 2-18 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPIST, experienced in theses, term papers, reports. Fast and accurate, student rates. Mrs. Betty Vequist. 1938 Barker Aeve. Phone VI 3-2001. tf Ideal for Skits, Parties, Dances. Practicing Speech and Foreign Languages. Recording tapes and accessories. RENT A TAPE RECORDER HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf FAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI - 6-657. 1106 La. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for these, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow. 606 Maine. Phone VI 3-7645. tf MISCELLANEOUS SEWING to do of any kind. Ph. VI 3- 2234. 2-18 WANTED. Male student to share one and one half rooms. Comfortable, plenty of room, private parking. $12.50 a month. Ph. VI 3-0414 evenings. 2-14 FOR SALE LIVE GIFTS--Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete stock of fish. Sure we have alligators, fish, turtles, chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Phone and Gift shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. REMINGTON STANDARD TYPEWRITER. Good condition, reasonable. Ph. VI 3-4715 17F Sunnyside. 2-13 '50 MERCURY. New paint, rebuilt engine, good rubber. Must see to appreciate. 1145 Louisiana or call Jerry Old—VI 3-6700. 2-19 BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plicin, party supplies. 4th and Vermont. Phone tl 3-0550. BOOKS For gifts and for your own library. Art, Architecture, Cook Books, Childrens Books, Modern Library NIKON S. CAMERA with 50, 35, 85 mm lenses. Call Bob at VI B at 3-1200 after six. THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 TIME, LIFE & Sports Illustrated magazines. Special students' prices of 1/2 reg. sub. rate. Prompt service, buy now pay later, call VI 3-0124. tf TUBE FREE with the purchase of practically new (only 250 miles) 670x15 Goodrich tire, price only $25. VI 3-1305 after 5 p.m. 2-19 HELP WANTED READERS WANTED for 15 to 20 hours per week. Will pay 75c per hour. Call VI 3-2399 between 3 and 5:30 p.m. 2-13 INSTRUCTOR'S WIFE or graduate student typist, must be experienced, fast, and accurate. Prefer Audiograph-IBM typewriter experience. Part time work typing business correspondence from Audigraph record. Write P.O. Box 571 Lawrence postoffice giving experience. typing speed and hours, days available. FOR RENT BE INDEPENDENT. Live close to the campus. Room and board $45.00 per person, or $80.00 per day. Co-op 15371; Tennessee. Ph. VI-302. Ask for Tom, Alan, or Jack. 2-13 EXTRA NICE 3 room newly decorated entrance, 825 Ohio. Private bath entrance, 825 Ohio. 2-13 FOUND TWO CLEAN WARM SLEEPING ROOMS. Single or double, serving home style meals reasonably. Ph. VI 3-1585. TIRED OF WALKING UP THE HILL? Two rooms for boys one-half block from immunity. Phone privileges. Available immediately. Phone VI 3-5776 or see tf 1231 La. STUDIO APARTMENT. Attractively furnished with telephone for 1 or 2 boys in nice house. Very close to KU. Call VI 3-6969. 2-18 LIGHT BROWN PUPPY, Small. Found near Student Union. Call VI 3-7404-3-14 2-14 TRANSPORTATION TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. Call Miss Rose Glesman at the First Aid Station for information for emergencies and reservations. 8th & Mass Phone VI 3-0152. **tf** RIDERS OR DRIVERS for car pool from K.C.K. Call F1 2-3267 after six for deta RIDE to south part of Kansas City on Fridays at 4 p.m. Call Kent Richardson VI 3-7537. Z-14 Have your car lubricated the MOTO-SWAY WAY A₂ POTTER'S "66" SERVICE Parties, Pinnings, Weddings Job Application Photos 1401 W. 6th VI 3-9891 Gene's Photo Service 2144 Ohio - VI 3-0933 Gene Smover Wexrent matsionwide trailers any size, anywhere, anytime CROFT TRAILER RENTAL CO. East 23rd VI.3-7377 LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY SIGNATURE ONLY for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students up to $500.00 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. 83312 Mass. Phone VI 3-8074 for 1 day service Special Spring Sale 49 Ford ... $ 59.00 48 Pontiac ... 99.00 47 Pontiac ... 139.00 51 Nash ... 179.00 50 Hudson ... 179.00 49 Ford Sta. Wgn. ... 199.00 50 Pontiac ... 199.00 See them at Jayhawk Motors Open eve. 1040 V6 BARBERSHOP OPENING TO-NITE! University Players' Production Of "Pity Poor Pearl" Feb. 13-16—Wed.-Sat. Green Theater - 8:00 Tickets-50c Union Ticket Center We Have Everything for the Engineer Slide Rules - Post Versalog - Keuffel & Esser See Our Make-Your-Own-Set We Have Extra Parts T-Squares - Drawing Boards Drawing Instruments Triangles-Curves-Papers Pencils-Erasers Log-Log Duplex Decitrig Log-Log Duplex Vector Polyphase Duplex - Pickett & Eckel STUDENT Union Book Store Page 12 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Feb. 13, 1957 1964 —(Daily Kansan photo) PART-TIME EXPERT — Dick Hensleigh, Winchester freshman, is pictured displaying some of the pictures and information useful in his work as a horse-training expert. Student Says— Training Horses Requires Special Knack, Patience How many times have you marvelled at the thorough training of a parade horse and wondered how long it must have taken to train an animal to such perfection? Dick Hensleigh, Winchester fresh-4 man, says training show horses is not really hard work, but it does require a special knock and patience. Hensleigh is an expert on the subject because his summers and spare weekends are spent doing this type of work. He is a trainer at the Fahew Farm, Lee's Summit, Mo., which specializes in the training show horses. Hensleigh grew up on his parents' farm near Winchester and has always enjoyed working with horses. He and his brother own nine horses which they have shown in Winchester, Salma, Hutchinson, and at the American Royal in Kansas City, Mo. His opportunity to train the norses at the Fahey farm came two years ago. The Hensleighs kept some of their horses at the farm for a time, Lee Fahey, owner, seeing Hensleigh's enthusiasm and skill with the animals, offered him a job. "Young colts are a pleasure to work with because they can be trained to lead or to stand without too much difficulty." Hensleigh said. Last year at the American Royal his colt won first prize in the National 4-H Colt Sweepstakes Division. Future plans? Dick laughed and said graduation is still a long time away. His work with the horses is strictly a hobby and probably will remain so. Women's in Navy, Denim Red, White Handsome Court "CHAMPION" Ping Pong A real asset to your style in games where you want light, speedy footwork. Shock proof arch cushion and insole, smart, white duck uppers; anti-slip crepe outsole. Full breathing upppers; pull-proof eyelets. Washable. White, blue. Red, too, for girls and children. Sizes for the whole family. U.S. US U.S. Keds The Shoe of Champions Haynes & Keene & 819 Mass. There will be an organizational meeting 7 p.m. Thursday in 305B Student Union. Open Thurs. 9:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m. The number of students taking the trip will be limited to 25 or 30 people, preference given to "Y" members. Students need not be enrolled in a particular course to go on the Mexico trip sponsored by the KU-Y during spring vacation. Stipulation Off Mexico Trip It was originally planned that students should either be enrolled in a Spanish, Latin American History or an art course. Since students had difficulty enrolling in these courses because of prerequisites, the stipulation has been removed. The trip will be to Mexico City and area during spring vacation, March 29 to April 8. The KU-Y will charter a bus for the trip. The KU-V will collect about $80 from each person taking the trip. This amount does not include the price of food which will average about $2.50 a day. Photo Short Course Set For April 11-13 The sixth annual photojournalism short course will be held April 11, 12 and 13, in Flint Hall. The course is sponsored by the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information and University Extension in cooperation with National Press Photographers Assn. and Kansas News Photographers Asm. More than American Indians live in Brooklyn, a part of New York City, than anywhere else in the country. For Your Valentine TO MY VALENTINE Lovely Heart Boxes Yellow-Pink-Red Lavender-Blue Detachable Corsages Satin Hearts ___2.79 - 7.98 Paper Hearts ___1.79 - 3.98 We Mail Your Dixie Candy Orders Dixie's Dixie's CARMEL CORN SHOP 1033 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Open til 10 p.m. VI 3-6311 Use the Kansan Classified Want Ad Section to Get Best Results. The '57 Casual Look-Arrow Style The 3. freshne siz dow (T — si This Arrow Squire sports a pattern with decided freshness. Black on white available in three different sized plaids. New medium-spread collar has button-down front plus button at back. Exact sleeve length. (This same shirt is also available in White Tartan six new miniature plaids.) Arrow Squire, "Sanforized" gingham, $5.95. HANDKERCHIEFS • UNDERWEAR ARROW CASUAL WEAR Shop at CARL'S for all ARROW PRODUCTS 905 Mass. St. CARL'S Dial VI 3-5353 Daily Hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 54th Year, No. 85 Thursday, Feb. 14, 1957 Greek Week Sing Entry Deadline Set For Friday The deadline for entries by fraternities and sororities for the Greek Week sing has been extended to Friday by Ed Dittemor, Robinson junior, chairman. PACIFIC THEATRE The sing will be held in the Student Union Ballroom at 7:30 p.m. March 6, with the public invited to attend. Dittemor said that entries must be in by Friday so that the program can be arranged in time to be printed. So far 11 sororities and 15 fraternities have entered. Those entered will be informed of the time they appear. Trophies have been purchased for the winners and will be on display in the Student Union during the last week of February. Dittemor said that each fraternity and sorority must sing one chapter song and one other in the competition. Those that have named only one song should see or call Dittemor by the end of this week. Last year's winners of the sing were Beta Theta Pi in the fraternity division and Chi Omega in the sorority division. 28 Admitted To Kansas Bar Twenty-eight KU Law School graduates were admitted to the Kansas Bar Wednesday. They are George T. Corbett, Kansas City; Keaton Duckworth, Rolla; Jerry Hannah, Lyons; John Knightly, Hutchinson; Richard Lashly, Girard; Charles Waugh, Eskridge; David Welsh, Kansas City; John Tenenbaum, Hewlett. New York. Gary Davis and John Emerson, Chanute; Charles Gallup, Kansas City; Loy Kirkpatrick, Council Grove; LaVerne Morin, Damar; Howard T. Payne, Olathe; Robert Sears, Kansas City, Mo.; John Stang, LaCrosse; Max Van Doren, Dearfield; John Worrall, Kansas City; and Harry Lyle, Ulysses. Frank Sabatini, Russell Yeager, Walter Ash, Henry Wilhelmsen, Robert Risley, George Docking and Winton Winter, are all of Lawrence. ON YOUR TOES—These attractive ballerinas with the National Ballet of Canada, seen here with the Nutcracker in the ballet of the same name, are just one small segment of the large touring company of 62 persons. The troupe will perform Leo Delibes "Coppelia" and the fourth act of Tschaikowsky's "Nutcracker" ballet 8:30 p.m. Friday in Hoch Auditorium. The company's artistic director is Celia Franca, internationally famous ballerina and choreographer, who was a member of Sadler's Wells Ballet for four years. The program, fourth to be presented this year by the KU Concert Course, will feature the entire company, which includes 12 leading dancers from the 25-person corps de ballet and a 20 piece orchestra conducted by George Crum. In the picture, left to right, Edelayne Brandt, Sylvia Mason, Mimi Loyvinova and Jacqueline Irvings. Is Modern Humor Ruining The Spirit Of Valentine's Day? Everything from clothes to cigarette ads speaks, "Live modern." One of the latest developments in this progress has been the change from the "Hearts to Flowers" valentine. No longer do the cards bear endearing verses of love, but rather they are tense, short poems such as "Do I want you for a Valentine? Things are that bad" or "Who loves you truly? I do-ly." was not what he had in mind as he went about bringing cheer to the poor and sick. But like the trend in music, art, and literature, contemporary humor is for the modern mind. It must have its stab at the world and while it is striving to survive will be found in everything from Christmas cards to Valentines. It's doubtful what the good St. Valentine of the 3rd century would have thought of this. It evidently No matter what the verses may say, the true sentiment of the day lies behind it in that the primary thought is to send to friends and loved ones a reminder you are thinking of them. The Gall Of These Acting Upstarts! The University Players erected a theatrical milestone, "Pity Poor Pearl," in Green Theater Wednesday. Which only proves that unsupervised student productions are a danger to the civilized theater. Director William Teichgraeber, Emporia junior, and his colleagues have had the unbelievable audacity to present an old-fashioned melodrama as if it were supposed to be entertaining! How dare they be so vulgar as to make an audience laugh continuously for two hours! What right do they have in encouraging spectators to boo, cheer, and enjoy themselves? How pedestrian of them to peddle popcorn and soft drinks during the performance! Moreover, incredible as it seems, they actually were enjoying presenting this blasphemous interpretation of a tale that is essentially tragic. Further, this lascivious evening was climaxed by the immodest cast taking five curtains Is nothing sacred? What has become of compassion and respect for one's elders? Is it no longer possible to attend the theater here and have an extended, quiet, boring time? With all that laughter and applause, the usual catnap was inconceivable! And with those screeching vendors running about, it was quite impossible to see or be seen by one's fellow dilettantes during the intermission. How revolting! calls amidst a thunderous ovation from the assembled clods. They Can Stay At Home Lovers of the more tasteful drama who admire and respect the three unities, powerful characterizations, superb makeup, brilliant direction, realistic settings, and an unusual plot will prefer to stay home and wallow in the academic trough of "good theataah." They Can Stay At Home But the animals, what ain't got no "couth," will getta lotta boffs and have a reel krazee baw! Popcorn, pennies, programs, and paper towels littered the stage each time villian George Edwards, Kansas City, Kan., senior, twirled his moustache and threatened herine Joyce Elliott, Independence, Mo., sophomore. But to the loudly audible satisfaction of the audience, heroic Harper Barnes, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, came to her rescue in time to thwart Edwards and villainess Lee Ann Johnston, Topeka senior. Woven into a plot commonly popular at the end of the last century were other standout characters played by Vera Stough, Lawrence junior, and Herbert Culp, Overland Park senior, who played a dual role. Comedy came thick and fast through the energetic antics of Marvin Carlson, Wichita senior, and triple threat Dale Bellerose, Lawrence sophomore, both of whom, it is said, contrived a hilarious sketch involving an apple. They Were Good. Too Musically, Margaret Chelglin, Glencoe, III, ill. junior, provided the comic showstopper with a solo of "A Good Man Is Hard To Find." All the principal characters sang solos, which, thank goodness, (Continued on Page 12) Food, Disease Problems In Asia Although Burma now is lacking in food and has a great disease problem, it is emphasizing education which should help it a great deal in a few years, George Beckman, associate professor of history told the CCUN Wednesday. Mr. Beckmann spoke on "Southeast Asia Today," relating some of his experiences on his recent visit to Burma, Thailand, Singapore, Saigon and Manila. In comparing Burma and Thailand, Mr. Beckmann said that although Thailand has progressed in combating disease, the lack of a vigorous government is expected to hinder its progressiveness in the near future. Thailand is governed by a dictator. The status of the political situation of the "SE" countries was of particular interest, Mr. Beckmann said. All the countries have large Chinese populations, and many of the children are sent to China to school where they are under Communist influence. The next meeting of the CCUN is scheduled for early March and will feature a debate on the Eisenhower doctrine. Graduate Student Rushed To Hospital Patricia Salyer, head resident at North College and a Larned graduate student, was taken to Watkins Hospital Wednesday night. She was unconscious on arrival. Miss Salyer was taken to the hospital by campus police officers shortly after an 11:45 call to the traffic office. The cause of illness and her condition were unknown. Rabbi Isserman Religious Week Key Speaker Keynote speaker for Religious Emphasis Week will be Rabbi Ferdinand M. Isserman, who will speak on "What Is The World Like," at an all-school convocation at 8:20 a.m. Monday in Hoch Auditorium. Dr. Isserman has been Rabbi of Temple Israel in St. Louis, Mo., since 1929. He just completed a trip around the world on which he spoke in Japan, New Zealand, Australia, India, France, England and Jerusalem. For the last 20 years, Dr. Isserman has held Jewish services on the radio. He broadcasts every Sunday over radio station KSD in St. Louis. He has spoken on the programs, "The Message of Israel," and the "Church of the Air." Besides holding many offices and serving on numerous boards, Dr. Iserman has found time to write four books: "Rebels and Saints," "The Social Message of the Prophets of Israel," "This Is Judaism," "Sentence to Death the Jews of Nazi Germany" and "The Jewish Jesus and the Christian Christ." Monday morning classes will be conducted on this schedule: 8 a.m. classes 8-8:30 9 a.m. classes 8:40-9:10 10 a.m. classes 10:40-11:10 11 a.m. classes 11:20-11:50 Religious Emphasis Week will begin Sunday with a reception for visiting speakers at 3:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union. Following the reception, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will deliver a welcoming address. In the evening about 10 churches and religious organizations will hear talks by visiting speakers. Lions To Help Jay Watchers The Lawrence Lions Club has agreed to collect funds in the Lawrence area for the Jay Watchers fund, Bob Reck, Wichita senior, said Wednesday. Palmer Dark Jr., Dodge City junior, is in charge of radio publicity for the campaign. "Right now, we want to raise about $3,000 to televise the K-State game," John B. Cooke, Overland Park senior, said. "We anticipate no difficulty in raising the amount. We want to get on the air so we can reach the people of surrounding areas and interest them in our plan." Cooke asked that anyone interested in helping with the project call Reck or him as soon as possible. To Talk On Near East Trip Mrs. H. A. Ireland, wife of Dr. Ireland, professor of geology, will speak on her recent trip to the Near East at the Housemothers Assn. meeting 2 p.m. Monday in the Museum of Art. A business meeting will follow. Weather Partly cloudy and cooler over central and east portions this afternoon. Mostly cloudy tonight with occasional light rain south-central and southeast portions. A little warmer east portion tonight. Friday considerable cloudiness turning colder northwest and warmer east portion. Chance of scattered showers east portion Friday. Low tonight 30 north to 40s south. High Friday 55 north to 60-65 south. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Feb. 14, 1957 The Water Problem Always Too Much Or Too Little Editor's note: Following is the first of a series of three editorials on one of Kansas' greatest problems - water. Farsighted and thinking people are saying that the nation, and especially the trans-Mississippi West will see a tremendous industrial boom in the coming years. It is necessary for Kansas. If our population continues to grow, as it surely will, we will not be able to rely wholly upon the agricultural economy. We must develop the industries we have now, and we must create new ones. But before Kansas will be able to develop or create, it must have an adequate and controlled supply of water. To expect an industry to settle in a dust bowl is like expecting rain. It doesn't happen. Before an industry would even begin to consider population trends, markets, transportation, or other important factors, it would have to be assured of an adequate water supply. Likewise, an area frequented by the flood specter is not economically sound. The Kansas Water Resources Board has estimated that by 1975 Kansas industries will be using approximately 803 billion gallons of water a year. Compared to the amount used annually by the entire state, that is only a drop in the bucket. We must have water for agriculture, municipalities, waste disposal, recreation, and hydroelectric power. Putting the demand on a per capita basis, the board reported that each person in Kansas uses about 155 gallons a day—56,575 gallons a year. That is only a drop in the bucket, too. Per capita use of water has increased phormonely during the past century, and it will continue to increase with the growth of industry and population. But even now the fresh water supply available for use in Kansas is insufficient to meet the needs of the growing state. It is limited by inflow and outflow, by runoff within the state, by lack of storage space, and by the quality of the water itself. These are some of the problem areas of water deficiency. But there is another extreme. The present problem—that of too little water—is only half of it. The other half which the citizens of Kansas have faced before, and undoubtedly will face again, is that of too much water". The cost of floods in Kansas since 1926 has been almost 35 million dollars a year. The chronic problem of water standing on farm land is being solved gradually by artificial drainage. The more acute problem of excess water is caused by floods. It is a problem bearing directly on both the urban and rural populations in potential flood areas, but the urban areas suffer most from the big floods. Cities in the Kansas River basin were damaged some 550 million dollars during the 1951 floods. At the core of the Kansas problem is the uneven distribution of water in the state. In both time and place, there is either too much or too little. Attempting to minimize this uneven distribution, in 1954 about 29 thousand Kansas farmers hauled water to their farms at a cost of over seven million dollars. Many cities, particularly in the eastern half of the state, began voluntary conservation. Some cities were even required to haul water for domestic use. Meanwhile, beneath the cloudless sky and scorching sun, the supply diminished. ... Painting Campus Artists' Exhibit Is Best In Several Years The painting exhibit in the south lounge of the Student Union is one of the best college shows the Union has had in several years. This comparison includes work from traveling shows from various parts of the country. All work in the show is by members of the Painting Workshop class in the'drawing and painting department. A painter has a two-fold purpose—to satisfy his need of self-expression and to communicate. The painter's ability to tell his story clearly is his only tool for building a bridge of expression or emotion between his work and the viewer. As a whole the show in the Union excellently creates this delicate bond. It is a painting of a dead plant in semi-abstract form. Even though it is in indefinite form, its strength of line and its simplicity, both in composition and meaning, creates perfectly that bridge between work and viewer. —Dale Morsch One of the best paintings in the show is excellent for its quality of simplicity. It is "Still Life No. 3" by Robert Edmonds, Kansas City, Kan., senior. Two paintings by Joan Marsh Smith, Lawrence senior, are also excellent. Her use of color and texture are the best in the show. "Study in Scrapiron" is another excellent work by Edmonds. Color Is Rich "Portrait of a Chair" is her best work. The color is rich and varied. The total effect is almost abstract but the colors are handled so well that they make both the lines and the composition strong and definite. Her "abstraction" is of value not so much for its expression but for its color and the way that that color is applied. Two other paintings by Mrs. Smith are excellent for color but the combination of an abstract design and abstraction in color weaken the total effect. These paintings are "Brilliance" and "Steamshovel." "Skylight" by E. E. Nichols, Lawrence senior, has strong emotional impact. Its style reminds one of the Ashcan school (not a derogatory term). The flat effect, the use of black, grey, and white, in definite pattern, the subject matter, and the view of the subject matter makes one compare it favorably with one of the classics of the Ashean school, "Nighthawks." Nichols' painting is abstract, however, not realistic. "Sun Bather," "Hagar," and "Shrine" by W. Kemper III, St. Louis, Mo. graduate student, have good color and good composition. "Shrine" has foliage so real looking that one can almost pull himself into the dense shade of the picture. The symbolism in all three pictures is too heavy. Floyd Smith, Lawrence graduate student, however, uses heavy symbolism in his "Book Illustration for Reluctance by Robert Frost" and leaves a favorable impression. His type of composition and color tone create a symbolic mood and not a symbol. Attempt Falls Short In "Still Life With Plaster Statue" Smith uses different methods to attempt almost the same effect as in "Book Illustration." The attempt falls short and the painting's mood is greatly weakened. The work of Derald Eastman, Garden City senior, lacks the necessary refinement in color to balance his indefinite lines. An exception to this is his "Deceased Calf." In it he has expressed himself perfectly. Vernon Rickman, Newton senior, in his "Speakeasy" and Shirley Pemberton, Muncie senior, in her "Figure Composition" offer studies in cafe life. Neither offer anything new, however, in an overworked area. The artist's choice of frames for the paintings is excellent. Each frame lives up to the credo of the Impressionist—a frame is a part of the work. Jerry Thomas Anyone who enjoys art can spend a profitable and enjoyable time at this excellent show. Daily Hansan Telephone VIkng 3-2760 University of Kansas student newspaper triweekly 1508, daily Jan. 16, 1912 triewheekly 1508, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Extension 316, business units Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 420 Madison Ave., New York. N. Y. News service: United Press. Mail subscription Extension 251, news room Extension 376, buskerr office Two Cents' Worth We have been accused of saying nothing in this column. With those who have voiced and thought this, we must agree. But "something" is being said in a lot of other publications—books, magazines, newspapers, tracts, reviews, Bibles, prayer books, congressional acts, treaties, declarations, conferences, testaments, letters, and court orders. Therefore, we thought it would be nice to say nothing. It is our hope that this will partially slake the thirst for nothing that is prevalent among sleepers. 10 bums, filthy rich, no-goods, lobsie-by-the-fire, college students, and our good friend Elrod. Dawson A headline in Wednesday's Daily Kansas said "KU Debaters To Meet Army." Whaissa matter? Having trouble with their draft boards? We cannot see the justice in allowing married students to compete with unmarried students in "Marriage and the Family." Perhaps an arrangement could be made where the unsingles would not be asked to come to class until the second half of the subject matter is taught. Placed in its proper perspective, fee payment is a good thing. But our sorely pressed bank account, if it could think, would probably wonder why, after all this education, more isn't coming in than is going out. Today is Valentine's Day. As Sam L. Jones might have said: "Bah! Humbug!" Ad booki. Jerry Dawson rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence. Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT Kent TITLE: Edgar J. Wadding Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Jerry Dawson ... Editorial Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Dale McKinney BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Dale Bowers Business Manager First Valentine's Day Wasn't Too Happy For Saint Florists will spend today delivering bouquets of red roses. Candy stores will have a last-minute rush on heart-shaped boxes. Mailmen will have an extra load with all the greetings it has become customary to send on St. Valentine's Day—to parents, relatives and friends, as well as to sweethearts. But St. Valentine's Day is not only a day for sweethearts to celebrate. It also is observed as the saint's day of seven "Valentines," according to the Acta Sanctorum, a collection of documents containing the biographies of saints and martyrrs. The most famous of the seven was a Roman bishop who was martyred on Feb. 14, 271 A. D. One story about his death relates that Claudius had abolished marriage, and this St. Valentine was secretly officiating at weddings. He was burned at the stake at the request of a Roman senator, who objected to his marrying the senator's son to the daughter of an impoverished miller. Webster says that the origin of the lover's festival had no connection with the saints, however. It is thought that the celebration is a survival of the pagan Roman festival, Lupercalia. At this festival it was the custom to place the names of all the young men and women in boxes and to draw them in pairs. Those whose names were drawn together had to exchange presents and be each other's valentines for the following year. During the Middle Ages, the day was observed particularly in England, and mention of it is found in Geoffrey Chaucer's writings. Love lotteries were the rage at that time. In the 1400's the first written valentines appeared. During the 1600's, a girl declared her choice of sweethearts in the morning on Feb. 14, and she received a gift later in the day. A helpful best seller on the book list of 1797 was "The Young Man's Valentine Writer." By the 19th century valentines had become so ornate and costly, that to receive one was almost equivalent to getting a proposal. In America valentines were imported until local manufacture began about 1840. There are some interesting applications of the word valentine. In prisoner's slang a valentine is a jail sentence, a carry-over from the old thriller, "Alias Jimmy Valentine." Arizona is often called the Valentine State, having been admitted to the Union on Feb. 14, 1912. St. Valentine's Day, with a history that began over 2,000 years ago at a pagan Roman festival, is one of the oldest holidays on record that we celebrate now. And why not? Love is as good an excuse as any for a celebration and better than many. Peggy Armstrong MAN ... this IS service! You too want real service for your car. But worry no more. Bring your car to us at Leonard's for friendly Standard service- - Lubrication - Complete check-up and overhaul - Gasoline fill up - Car wash LEONARD SERVICE STANDARD LEONARD STANDARD --- you are entering your --- T 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 21 Seniors Receive Air Force Commissions Twenty-one graduating seniors have been commissioned second lieutenants in the Air Force Reserve. All will be called into active duty within a year. Eight will enter pilot training, six observer training, six will be assigned to technical duties, and one to non-technical administrative duty. Those who received commissions were: Pilot training—Wendell A. Dutt, Topeka; Lawrence A. Goudie, Osawatomie; Charles L. Hedrick, Kansas City, Mo.; Wilbur D. Larkin, Kansas City, Kan.; Mxa Lynn, Mc Israel Offers Fellowship Competition for a fellowship offered by the government of Israel for research in Israel ends Feb. 28, 1957. The study begins in November and information and application blanks are available in 306 Fraser. Applicants must have U. S. citizenship by the date of application, a bachelor's degree by the date of departure, have demonstrated academic ability and capacity for independent study, good moral character, personality, adaptability, and good health. The winner may study in the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, the Hebrew Technical Institute in Haifa, or the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovoth. Approximately $900 will be allowed for the academic year to cover maintenance, sightseeing trips, and incidents. Free tuition at any of the three institutions listed above is also paid. Austria Offers 4 Scholarships Four scholarships for the academic year from Nov. 1, 1957 to June 30, 1958 are offered by the Austrian government to unmarried American students who will be graduates by this fall. The awards cover eight monthly allowances of approximately $100 which should be sufficient to cover room and board as well as tuition and incidental expenses. Competition for the scholarships closes March 1, 1957. To be eligible, a person must be a United States citizen by the date of application, have a bachelor's degree by the date of departure, must have demonstrated academic ability for independent study, and must be proficient in the German language. Information and application blanks for these scholarships may be obtained in 306 Fraser. Louth; Robert K. Melton, Kansas City, Kan.; Vernon F. Miller, Wichita, and Richard J. Reich, Steelton, Pa. Observer training—Charles W. Brown, Parsons; Ernest G. Collins, Kansas City, Mo.; Gary D. Cool, Concordia; Ellis D. Evans, Colorado Springs, Colo.; Charles T. Janik, Sunflower, and Carl R. Leonard, Howard. Technical duties—Francis M. Brinkmeyer, Independence; Robert A. Babcock, Jackson, Mich.; Dean E. Matthews, Ashland; Thomas F. McCall, Overland Park; Alfred L. Polski, Kansas City, Kan.; and James E. Sparks, Goodland Non-technical administrative duty —Jack M. Abercrombie, Beloit. Air Force Cadets Receive Honors Gary L. Miller, cadet commander of the Air Force ROTC, has named five cadets as "Cadet of the Month" for their squadrons for January. The honor is based upon outstanding drill performance and appearance during the month. The cadets honored were Gerald E. Brown, Kansas City, Mo., and William S. Burnison, Ontario, Calif., both freshmen. Roger W. Gramly, Caney, Raymond L. Johnson, Kansas City, Kan., and Donald E. Terpening, Washington, juniors. AFROTC Wins Rifle Meet With Washburn The Air Force ROTC rifle队 defeated Washburn University last night in a shoulder to shoulder match. 1,828 to 1,672. righn scorer for the Air Force team was Donald L. Johnson, Hickman Mills, Mo., senior, 383. Dan F. Schrepel, Pratt junior, scored 368; Ronald D. Strong, Abilene freshman, 363; Donald W. Catlin, Olathe freshman, 360; and John C. Kern, Colby freshman, 354. KUOK PROGRAMS Today Today 6:00 Daily Kansan 6:05 Dinner music 6:30 "Kaleidoscope" 6:45 Public service 7:00 "Bookstore Hour" 8:00 Wire news 8:05 University Theatre concert 8:30 Show tunes 9:00 Jazz 9:30 Lucky Strike news 9:45 Study break 10:00 "Nocturnal Notes" with Bruce Adair 10:30 News 10:35 "Nocturnal Notes" 11:00 "Nocturnal Notes" 12:00 Sign off PRE-MED SENIORS Microscopes at 20% DISCOUNT REICHERT MICROSCOPE CO. Campus Representative Hulse Wagner VI-3 4711 1425 Tenn. L. G. BALFOUR CO. Fraternity Jewelers - Fraternity Badges—Rings—Novelties - Trophies and Awards - Personalized Mugs and Ceramics 411 West 14th Al Lauter Phone VI 3-1571 The writing clinic has been moved to 7 Strong Annex E from 8 Strong Annex E, and is now open from 3 to 5 p. m. Monday through Friday. Writing Clinic Schedule Changed Students who failed the English Proficiency Examination but who have not yet picked up their examinations at the clinic are asked to pick them up as soon as possible. Taste includes four qualities: sweetness, sourness, saltiness and bitternes. Thursday, Feb. 14, 1957 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Engineering Talks In Book A record of the Petroleum Engineering Conference held at the University April 2-3, 1956, is now contained in a 170-page, clothbound book, "Fundamentals of Logging." The book contains seven lectures on logging, with illustrations of logs, charts, diagrams and formulas. "Fundamentals of Electrical Logging" and "Microlog and Microlaterolog" by M. P. Tixier, Schlumberger Well Surveying Corp., Houston, Tex.; "S. P. and Conventional Resistivity Logs," "Resistivity Measuring Devices Using Focusing Systems" and "Interpretation in Shaly Sands" by Maurice Martin, Schlumberger Well Surveying Corp, Ridgefield, Conn., and "Radiation Logging: Physical Principles" and "Radiation Logging: Applications" by Jay Tittman, also of the Schlumberger Well Surveying Corp. Several pages of "Summary and Conclusions" by M. P. Tixier, follow the lectures. Kansas is the only state in the Union that allows the counting of election ballots to begin before the polls are closed. Religious Emphasis Week February 17-23 BASIC BIBLE "Is God The Answer?" Organized House Speakers—Classroom Speakers Convocation—9:20 Monday. Speaker: Dr. Ferdinand M. Isserman “WHAT'S THE WORLD LIKE?” Sponsored by Campus Religious Organizations FINAL CLEARANCE -SALE- Drastic Reduction In The Following Departments! SUITS Ivy League Flannels & Tweeds Regular Sale Price $50.00 $37.50 $55.00 $39.50 $59.50- $65.00 $42.50 (Slight Charge For Alterations) SPORTCOATS Imported Wools Regular Sale Price $35.00 $24.50 $39.95 $27.50 $42.50 $29.50 $45.00 $32.50 Ivy Stripes Reg. $39.95, 1/2 price___$20.00 (Slight Charge For Alterations) SWEATERS Sleeveless Sale Price Reg. $7.95 ___ $4.99 ALL V NECKS 30% OFF GLOVES (Entire Stock) 25% off HATS-CAPS Regular $10 hats -- now ½ price $3.95 caps ------- now $2.69 SPORTSHIRTS Ivy League plaids, stripes, solids All Long Sleeves Regular Sale Price Group A $5.00-$6.95___$3.89 Group B $5.00-$7.95___$4.69 Group C $8.95-$10.95 30% off TROUSERS Flannel Ivys ------- 20% off White Corduroys Reg. $8.95 ------ Sale $5.89 White Twills White Twills Reg. $5.95 ___ Sale $3.89 (Slight Charge For Alterations) Polished cottons in black, green, tans ___ 10% off 1237 OREAD V1 3-0883 ALL SALES FINAL Jack Norman A Step from t A Step from the Campus Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Feb. 14, 1957 Increasing Enrollment Causes Major Problem The nation's colleges are facing a problem. With the increasing number of students crowding the already bulging physical plants, many colleges are being forced to select students from the list of applicants. In the past the nation's colleges had to compete strongly with each other for students. Now, with more and more students to choose from, the larger campuses are becoming more and more selective. In Kansas, over 30 per cent of the men and women of college age were actually in college in 1955-56, and it is predicted that the number will grow to 40 per cent by 1970. Many of the large Eastern schools such as Harvard, Yale, and Dartmouth are getting over twice as many applicants as they can accept. Double By 1970 The problem is also a real one for schools in Kansas. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy expects a University enrollment of approximately 18,000 by 1970; over double the present enrollment. + "We will continue to expand with the enrollment if the legislature sees fit to give us the money," Dr. Murphy said. One of the methods of holding down enrollment is to give entrance exams. However, selecting exams that will give an accurate analysis of a student's capabilities is a real problem that has not been completely solved. "I don't like entrance exams be cause they fail to measure the human element," Dr. Murphy said. "I don't believe we will need entrance exams because of a natural selection we have at KU. Almost all the students here graduated in the upper 50 per cent of their high school classes." A Small Age Group One sobering aspect of the problem has yet to be mentioned. And that is the fact that this problem has arisen with the smallest college age group in 25 years. What is to happen when the booming baby market of the war years descends upon this and other campuses? Col. S. W. Eldridge, first owner on the Eldridge Hotel in Lawrence, Kan., was a delegate to the first national Republican Convention in June, 1856, in Philadelphia. Dr. Murphy was very emphatic in saying, "We will not sacrifice the quality of our education at KU for the sake of building enrollment. We will not admit more than we can handle adequately." 4 Bridge Tourney Winners Told The four winners of the annual duplicate bridge tournament held Wednesday in the Student Union are Gilbert Cuthbertson and Arthur Vogel, Leavenworth, Bryan McCullough, Great Bend, all sophomores, and C. E. Cornell, Mission senior. Second place winners are James Callis, Wichita graduate student; Pingle Reddy, Hyderabad, DN, India senior; Walter Fuller, Kansas City junior, and James Redding, Kansas City, Mo., freshman. Wednesday's match ended the campus bridge competition. KU students will compete with students from more than 100 universities and colleges in the 1957 National Intercollegiate Bridge Tournament at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Card Room of the Student Union. Contestants will play the sixteen hands mailed to them. Lawrence Bodle, Plattsburg, Mo. senior will direct the KU tournament. Geoffrey Mott-Smith, contract bridge authority, will score the hands to determine campus, regional and national winners. The contest is open to any undergraduate student. Students need not sign up in the Student Union before the tournament. To Take Part In Citizenship Seminar Clayton M. Crosier, associate professor of civil engineering and chairman of the Kansas Commission for UNESCO, will be a resource leader at the Christian Citizenship Seminar for the Methodist Youth Fellowship to be held in Topeka today through Saturday. Mr. Crosier will take part in a discussion on international relations today. FRESHLY BAKED PIES N The HOLIDAY INN presents its special carry-out pie service. Just call us and within an hour your pie will be ready to go. Almost any flavor available including apple, cherry, blueberry, coconut cream, lemon, and others. Call VI 3-7991 To Carry Out Spontaneous ideas, ambition and enthusiasm are the only requirements for a new dramatics class being taught this semester. One Hour Service By JOHN HUSAR (Of The Dally Kansan Staff) Plan To Use Our Spacious Private Dining Room Kids Have Real Fun In This Course The course. Creative Dramatics, is Holiday Inn Restaurant 1950 Jet. Hiway 10 and 59 on Iowa St. According to Miss Six, "Creative Dramatics taught by Miss Sally Six, instructor in Speech and drama. The class works with and observes fourth grade pupils from the Lawrence public schools. is informal drama, planned by the players themselves, under the careful guidance of the teacher, and played spontaneously with improvised dialogue which is never the same twice. "Playing Out Of Ideas" "It is the playing out of Ideas, experiences and stories with improvised action and dialogue. Such stories may be original or from history or literature." Creative Dramatics is unlike regular theater in the sense that it is Slides from the Jayhawk Jamboree's USO tour in Europe last summer will be shown to members of the KU chapter of Music Educators National Conference at their meeting 3 p.m. Sunday in the lounge of Bailey Hall. Don Farrar, Kansas City, Mo., junior, and Sheila Nation, Chanute junior, will show the slides and tell of some of the groups' musical experiences in Europe. Hall Elected Science Officer not memorized, directed or rehearsed drama designed for the entertainment of an audience. Instead, it develops from the ideas of the children. Its value is only for those who participate. Miss Six said the course contributes to the personal development of children who participate, giving them: So far, students are using the course to help them in education, theater, speech correction and therapy for the physically and mentally handicapped. Others are taking it "just for pure fun," Miss Six said. A channel for their creative imaginations Conference To See USO Tour Slides Experience in working together in situations which strongly motivates cooperation. Emotional release through playing all kinds of characters. Sensitivity to the thoughts and feelings of others, which is the basis of understanding. Experience in thinking on their feet and expressing their ideas fearlessly and effectively. Live Literature History The aim of this course is to introduce the activity to the college student, explain its fundamentals and show how it can be used and integrated into many fields, she explained. Live Literature, History The course brings alive to children dramatic episodes in literature and history. Miss Six said. It may also teach them to see both sides of a current problem. E. Raymond Hall, professor of zoology and director of the Museum of Natural History, has been elected vice president and chairman of the zoological science section of the American Assn. for the Advancement of Science. Dr. Hall was nominated by the section and elected by the A.A.A.S. Council. He will serve a 1-year term. LOOK! INDEPENDENT "On the Campus" LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Cash and Carry Office Rowlands 1241 Oread Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS VI 3-4011 740 Vermont 1903 Massachusetts LOOK! LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Cash and Carry Office Rowlands 1241 Oread Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS VI 3-4011 740 Vermont 1903 Massachusetts Rowlands 1241 Oread Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS VI 3-4011 740 Vermont 1903 Massachusetts rwbnu2 GNA egninova noqG Kids Have Really Fun As This Course 10001000200003000004000500060007 State, National, International News U.N. Committee Rejects Russian Demand UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. — (UP)—The General Assembly's steering committee voted today to reject a Russian demand for full debate on a charge that U. S. policy is heading for atomic war. The Israeli cabinet was reported today to have accepted—subject to "certain conditions"—the American play for moving Israeli troops out of Sharm-el-Sheikh. But it rejected demands to give up the Gaza strip. The Soviet motion was defeated 7 to 6, with one nation abstaining. The United States had announced it would welcome debate on the Soviet charge, although U. S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., called it a "gigantic cock and bull story." He predicted the Russians would be unable to back up a single one of their charges against the United States, and that open debate will "expose their crudities for what they are." Israel Agrees To Withdrawal Plan By UNITED PRESS Informed sources in Jerusalem said the cabinet met today and decided to ask Ambassador Abba Eban to seek further clarification of the American stand on navigation of the Gulf of Aqaba. Sharm-El-Sheikh, a fortress on the gulf, was used by Egypt to blockade Israeli shipping. Jack Benny Goes To Nevada HOLLYWOOD — (UP) — Jack Benny, the miser of television, today joined a list of performers lured to the glittering desert resort of Las Vegas, Nev., by big money offers that even the famed comedian couldn't pass up. Benny Wednesday signed his name to a contract calling for him to make his nightclub debut at the Flamingo Hotel in Las Vegas at an estimated $50,000 a week in June. Mr. Lodge rejected vigorously the Soviet claims that U.S. foreign bases are a step toward atomic war and called the U.N. to witness that "the people of the free world are free to cry out in protest here in the United Nations if they object to United States bases." U.S. Is 'Living Up' To Oil Promises WASHINGTON — (UP) — Secretary of Interior Fred A. Seaton said today U. S. Oil companies are more than living up to their promise to supply Europe's emergency oil needs. Mr. Seaton also told Senate investigators that any oil firms or individuals found guilty of anti-trust violations in recent oil price hikes should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. Seaton testified before a combined Senate anti-monopoly and public lands subcommittee investigating oil price increases and shipments to Europe to meet the shortage caused by the Suez Canal blockade. Kansas Capital 100 Years Old TOPEKA — (UP) — One hundred years ago the city of Topeka, a town of 507 citizens, was officially incorporated by the Legislative assembly. Page 8 Today, the capital city of Kansas has a population of close to 100,000 cement sidewalks instead of oak walkways down Kansas avenue, three Kaw Rives. bridges instead of one wooden one that swung wide for steamboat traffic and thriving industries to replace its role as a gateway for emigrant teams. The smaller tires on the 14-inch wheels of the 1957 cars make 773 revolutions per mile compared with 748 revolutions per mile of tire mounted on the older 15-inch wheels. Allies See British Secret Outline LONDON — (UP) — Britain today handed its European allies a secret outline of military cuts it hopes to make, because of rapid advances in guided missile development. The Foreign Office announced "a certain proposal about the future pattern of our forces" was given to the ambassadors of the Western European Union nations in London this morning. No details were released. Independence River in Doniphan County, Kan., was named by Lewis and Clark on July 4, 1803, in honor of Independence Day. Informed sources said the other nations linked together in the North Atlantic Treaty Organizations would be filled in at a council meeting in Paris later in the day. The sources said Britain asked her allies to study the proposals. University Daily Kansan Tax Bills To Legislature TOPEKA — (UP) — House Democrats today introduced one of Gov. George Docking's revenue measures in calling for an increase from two to four per cent in the corporate income tax to raise an estimated $4.4 million annually. A second administration measure, one to combine the sales tax fund and general fund into one, was introduced as Democratic leaders The port of Aden, on the tip of the Arabian Peninsula, had scarcely 500 inhabitants when occupied by the British in 1839. Today the Crown Colony has some 4,400 Europeans and 134,000 Adenese, a modern oil refinery, and substantial trading firms. It is the only sizable port between the Suez Canal and India. speeded up the introduction of Gov. Docking's fiscal program. The administration measures highlighted the lower House session before the Chamber adjourned until 10 a.m. tomorrow. Some 16 new bills saw their first reading before the chamber gave final passage to four bills and sent them to the Senate. Most of the measures up for committee of the whole action were relatively minor in nature and caused little debate. YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO, 1025 Mass. VI 3-2566 HEY FELLOWS! Here's how to make some points. CROOKED CHOICE Make plans now to dine out with that special gal on VALENTINE'S Day. Take her where the eatin's the best and top it off with a special touch, A FLAMING HEART Sundae at the KENTUCKIAN 1802 Massachusetts — 19th Street Shopping Area — Phone VI 3-9544 Quality Foods ...AT REAL SAVINGS! SAVINGS... SAVINGS... SAVINGS Quality foods at low cost are the rule rather than the exception at Rusty's or Cole's. You get the best selection of fine foods available because we are always striving and searching for quality and savings to pass on to you, our patrons. Shop at Rusty's or Cole's where there is always plenty of free parking and where you can register for our daily free cash jackpot. And remember, we are open in the evenings and on Sundays too. FREE DAILY CASH JACKPOT RUSTY'S Food Center 23rd & Louisiana IGA COLE'S Food Center 2nd & Lincoln FREE Parking Open Evenings AND Sunday Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday. Feb. 14, 1957 —(Daily Kansan photo by Jim Sledd) AKL Tips Delts In IM Windup M. The men's intramural basketball season came to an exciting finish last night as a persistent AKL team nosed out the Delts 35 to 31 in overtime in a Fraternity A game. Tip-in Ties Game With less than 30 seconds remaining in the game, Jerry Cox, the Delt high scorer with 10 points, committed his fifth personal foul. AKL's Chuck Elvin, who won game scoring honors with 22 points, dropped in his first free throw to narrow the AKL deficit to two points. His next attempt failed, but teammate Warren Gay executed a tip-in to tie the score and send the game into overtime. FIRST AND TEN Jay Simpson, Delta Tau Delta, with the ball, is stopped by Charles Without Cox the Delts were unable to score in the three-minute overtime period and AKL went into a stall after hitting two quick field shots. Beta 61. Triangle 38 Two Games Different In another Fraternity A game last night the Betas led all the way in smashing Triangle, 61 to 38. Mixing a strong defense and some hot shooting, Beta got stronger as the game progressed. The half-time score was 28 to 16. Bill LaRue led the winners with 13 points, while John Rupf hit 17 for Triangle. A contrasting theme was set in the two Independent A games played yesterday. The Hookers, by holding Carruth to 8 points in the second half and hitting 30 themselves, ran away with the game, 50 to 22. Mo Courville and Fuzzy Martin led the Hookers with 8 points each. Bob Cunningham hit 11 to pace the losers. Only seven fouls were committed in the free-scoring affair. The Prelocks outlasted Foster, 40 to 34, in the other Independent A game. Jim Letcavits and Frank Gibson, with 11 and 7 points respectively paced the winners. Robert Dienes and Vic Viola with eight points each led the well-balanced Foster scoring attack. Mosshart and Don Rogers, AKL's, in the Fraternity A game won by AKL 33-31. Wednesday's Results Wednesday's Results Independent B—Jim Beam 2, Don Henry 0; G. Pearson 24, Geo. Club 20; Newman 39, Basketeers 30; AFROTC 36, Stephenson 16; Hicks 20, Pearson 15; NSN 50, Foster 20; Medics 25, Battenfeld 19. Games Today Fraternity B—Beta vs. Acacia, 4:15 p.m. E; Du vs. Kappa Sig, 5 p.m. E; K.A. Psi vs. PKT, 5:45 p.m. E; Delta Sig vs. PiKA, 6:30 p.m. W; Wigma Nu vs. Phi Gam, 7:15 p.m. E; Sigma Chi vs. Phi Psi, 7:15 p.m. W. Look Out Wilt Chamberlain The average yield of wool from an Angora rabbit is about 12 or more ounces a year. NEW DELHI, India — (UP) — Tip to basketball talent scouts: the world's tallest man may be springing up in a tribal village near here. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. He is Mansa Kalu who now stands 7-6. His doctor claims he may grow as tall as 10 feet. Champion Defeats Ex-Champ In TKO By CHARLES TAYLOR (UP Sports Writer) MIAMI BEACH—(UP)—Jubilant Joey Brown, fresh from a TKO victory in his first defense of the lightweight crown, aimed at some "Fast, big money" today in a May title bout with Southpaw Kenny Lane. Brown received $15,924 for stopping ex-champ Wallace (Bud) Smith in the 11th round of their return title fight Wednesday night before a sellout crowd of 4,129 at the Miami Beach auditorium. It was the first purse for Lanky Joe of New Orleans since he won the 135-pound crown from Smith of East Orange, N.J., Aug. 24. And, although it was the largest of his career, he said, "That's peanuts compared to what I'll make—now that Smith is out of the way and my right hand is in good shape." 2 BIG SHOWS In 1863 Abraham Lincoln gave $100 for a new building at Baker University, the only contribution of this kind he is known to have made. Sun. Feb. 24: 3:30 & 8:00 P.M. *Municipal Auditorium* - Topeka, Advance tickets = $2.00 at the door $2.50. Tickets on sale at Walgreen Drug -Sth and Kansas and Mills Music -325 Kansas. PER ATTRACTIONS PRESENT THE BIGGEST SHOW of Stars for 57 Allin Farron Fats DOMINO Mattis Orch Bill DOGGETT Onions, Tommy Brown CLYDE McFattor LAVERN Baker Milton SUPER ATTRACTIONS PRESENT THE BIGGEST SHOW OF Stars for 57 All in Person Fats DOMINO and his ORCH Bill DOGGETT and his ORCH MCYDE McPhatter LAVERN Baker ALL IN PERSON Chuck BERRY * Five KEYS The MOONGLOWS * ANN COLE the FIVE SATINS * Charles BROWN Eddie Cooley and the SCHOOL BOYS Paul Williams BIG BAND You smoke refreshed A new idea in smoking...all-new Salem Created by R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company. Menthol Fresh Salem FILTER CIGARETTES Salem menthol fresh ·rich tobacco taste ·most modern filter Take a puff—it's Springtime! Light up a filter-tip SALEM and find a smoke that refreshes your taste the way Springtime does you. It's a new idea in smoking—menthol-fresh comfort...rich tobacco taste...pure, white modern filter! They're all in SALEM to refresh your taste. Ask for SALEM—you'll love 'em! Salem refreshes your taste Thursday, Feb. 14, 1957 University Daily Kansan Page 7 Forte Hits 45 Points; Passes Wilt's Average --- UP Sports Writer A record-busting 45-point spree catapulted Chet (The Jet) Forte, the "champion of the little man," back into the national basketball scoring lead today ahead of 7-foot Wilt (The Stilt) Chamberlain. 5-9 Forte of Columbia needed a whopping 42 points in last night's tussle with Pennsylvania and he got it with three free throws to spare in a 93-75 triumph, smashing three scoring records and tying the Ivy League single-game record. With 513 points in 17 games, the little Lion now boasts an average of 30.2 points against 29.94 for Chamberlain of Kansas and 29.90 for 6-5 Grady Wallace of South Carolina. The "David vs. two Goliaths" scoring battle once again overshadowed another of North Carolina's close brushes with disaster. The nation's no. 1 team and only major unbeaten squad, managed to push its record to 20-0 but only by an eyelash in a 72-69 win at home over Wake Forest. It was the fourth straight "squeaker" for the Tarheels and the fourth straight game in which chunky Tommy Kearns saved the bacon. Wake Forest, ranked no. 14 nationally, had rallied from an 11-point deficit to trail by only 68-67 with 64 seconds left when the 5-11 "Tarheel" junior from Bergenfield, N.J., took charge. His two free throws with 45 seconds left boosted the edge to 70-67. After Carolina added a free throw and Wake Forest a basket Kearns dribbed for 13 seconds before being fouled and added the final point with just one second to go. Bradley, the nation's No. 5 team, gained a tie with Wichita for first place in the three-cornered Missouri Valley race by whipping St. The Plymouth Congregational Church, 923 Vermont St. a red brick structure with a modern community house on the south, houses the oldest church organization in Kansas. Louis' zone defense, 76-70. Jack Mimitz of St. Louis took scoring honors with 20 points, but his team dropped to a 7-2 mark while Bradley moved up with Wichita at 7-1. The end of volleyball season finds Sellars Hall champions of division 2 and two teams tied for first in divisions 1 and 3. Volleyball Finals Are Wednesday Kappa Kappa Gamma andGamma Phi Beta, division 1, and Delta Delta Delta and Gertrude Sellars Pearson (F), division 3, will play Monday night for the championship of their divisions. The hill championship finals are scheduled for Wednesday night. This Week's Results Monday night. Alpha Phi 1, Pi Beta Phi 0 (forfeit); Douthart 1, Alpha Delta Pi 0 (forfeit); Alpha Omicron Pi 55. Watkins 35; Sellards 44, Jay-ettes 28. Wednesday night Gertrude Sellards Pearson (F) 1, Delta Delta Delta 0 (forfeit); Kappa Kappa Gamma 42, Kappa Alpha Theta 31; Gamma Phi Beta 1, Corbin Hall 0 (forfeit); Delta Gamma 1, Chi Omega 0 (forfeit); Gertrude Sellards Pearson 28, Alpha Chi Omega 20. Delaney Seeks Second Title NEW YORK — (UIP) — Ron Delany of Ireland and Villanova, who entered the national indoor mile championship yesterday, will be shooting to become the first runner since Glenn Cunningham in 1938-39 to win the event two years in a row. Except for Gil Dodds, who won the race in 1942, 1944 and 1947, no other runner has won the indoor mile more than once in the last 18 years. TROUSERS END ROUGH RIDING IN YOUR CAR Lubricate your car the "Lithium" way. Lithium lubricates better, stays in longer, and will not pound out or wash out. Get a lithium lubrication today at... SERVICE CITIES FRITZ CO. Phone VI 3-4321 CITIES SERVICE 8th and New Hampshire We Cash Student Checks Fifty-two All-Americans Were K Club Members The University. K Club was start ed in 1947 by varsity lettermen. Today the K Club has an average membership of 70 boys who meet by-monthly. The K Club has its own meeting room in Allen Field House. The walls are covered with pictures of 52 All-Americans from the University that have been members of the organization. The club is given a special section at various athletic contests and an annual banquet is held during the Kansas Relays. To become a member of the organization an athlete must letter in one of the college sports offered at Kansas which include football, basketball, baseball, track, tennis, and swimming. He then must take part in an initiation period in which he wears signs on his back that signify what sport he lettered in. Gutowski To Try For Record NEW YORK — (UP) — Bob Gutowski, who tied his tutor, Bob Richards, at 15-6 in the Millrose Games pole vault event here Saturday, will compete in the New York Athletic Club meet at Madison Square Garden Saturday night. Gutowski is considered by many track observers as the most likely to break Cornelius Warmerdam's record of 15 feet-$8\frac{1}{2}$ inches. Modern tennis was introduced in the United States in 1874. The initiate is then herded around the track during half-time of one of our home football games. When he finishes this the letterman is a K Club member. The officers are Don Steinmeyer, Topeka senior, president; Lowell Janzen, York, Neb., senior, vice president; Lee Green, Kansas City, Kan., senior, treasurer, and Ted Rohde, Hubbard, Neb., senior, secretary. 2016 10 28 10:27 AM # 2016 10 29 10:30 AM # 2016 10 30 10:40 AM Golf Meeting Today There will be a meeting of all students interested in freshman and varsity golf at 4 pm today in 103 Robinson Gymnasium. BIRD TV-Radio Service B 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 SYLVANIA will be on this campus THURSDAY FEB 21 THURSDAY, FEB. 21 for the purpose of interviewing engineering applicants See your Placement Director to arrange an appointment S SYLVANIA SYLVANIA ELECTRIC PRODUCTS INC. is a Clifford's Snazmobile was in Sad Shape 一 So he drove it (to tell the truth, it had to be towed) into Motor In. There, courteous attendants (they even opened the car door for him) had his car tuned up, the oil changed. and the tires switched almost before his doleful, down-at-the-mouth pout had time to change to a wide smirk of satisfaction. And before he drove away, they cleaned his windshield and checked his tire pressure. His pleasure was complete when he received the bill from Motor In. Why, after all that service, it was even lower than the crown of his Ivy-League cap. But don't wait until your mobile is in as sad shape as Clifford's . . . for expert service and courteous treatment, come now to 827 Vermont Motor In Dial VI 3-4955 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Heres Kind JooJoo shoW 2082912 039102 WKJ Thursday. Feb. 14, 1957 A Dutch Lad Wouldn't! Would You Run If This Dutch Girl Said She Loved You? By MARYBETH LANE "Rock and roll is utterly distasteful," says Ann Tadema, a blue-eyed, 19-year-old freshman from Holland. "Maybe the teenagers are looking for something," she continued. "There is so much conformity of thinking here that American youth seem to be at a loss more than other young people." "They're nuts about anything that is new. They're looking for something that will say 'I'm me.' for some means of expressing their own individuality. Dutch teenagers want to excel, American youth to conform." JANE E. BRYANT ANN (DUTCHY) TADEMA Miss Tadema is living at Miller Hall and attending KU on a Fulbright Travel Grant. About 20 of these scholarships are awarded each year in Holland from about 2,000 applications. "I'm having a fabulous experience here, although the climate and food were strange at first," "I love hamburgers. We don't have them in Holland. We have no potato chips and little pop corn. There are lots more sweets and candy in Holland." American Movies Scorned "American movies are looked upon very scornfully in Europe," Miss Tadema said. "There are some good ones, of course. Only a few movies are made each year in European countries, but these are excellent." Miss Tadema's full name is Ann Elizabeth Tadema, but she likes to be called Dutchy because it's a friendly name." During Christmas vacation, she cared for two children in a Kansas City, Mo. home. "I wanted to see a real American Christmas and to earn some money," she said. "In Holland, everything is organized into clubs because there is no space to start your own sports activities." Miss Tadema said. She was a member of her school hockey and softball teams, the tennis club and the rowing and sailing club. She has learned to play golf at KU. She also plays the piano, tap dances, and likes to sing popular songs. MARGIE "There is no dating stance in the states when a boy and girl don't think of marriage," Miss Tadema said. "If I told an American boy I was in love with him, he would fall over and run away because I wanted to marry him. If I said that to a boy in Holland, he might say he loved me but we wouldn't think of marrying." "If an American boy doesn't want to marry a girl, he goes with a lot of other girls. If he likes her, he pins her in a week and within a year, they're married. That's why they marry so young here." "I rode my bike to school every day. In Holland, the boy comes on his bike for a date. You sit on the back even in your formal. If Liberal Arts For These Freshmen WINSTON-SALEM. N.C. - (IP) WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — (IP) Under the new Wake Forest curriculum set-up, effective this year all students will be enrolled in liberal arts during their freshman and sophomore years. Upon completion of the basic courses the student will then enter one of the college's several schools for specialization during his junior and senior years. Some of the basic requirements have not been changed: history, eight hours of any one of the three natural sciences and two hours of physical education are still required. The new course includes three hours of mathematics for all students, three hours of ancient philosophy, and six hours of either sociology or political science. Every student must also take or present the equivalent of credits for a foreign language. In order to prevent undue delay in meeting the basic requirements, freshmen must sign up for a minimum of 12 hours of required subjects; after the first year, a minimum of 9 hours is required until the basic course is completed. The last two college years will also hold other courses closely related with the student's major. There will be no requirement of a minor. A course of study including the major and related subjects must include a minimum of 42 hours beyond the basic course requirements, while not more than 40 hours may be taken in a single field of study. One hundred twenty-eight hours will be required for graduation—an increase of four hours—allowing a student from 20-34 hours of electives. Each candidate for graduation must present as many points as hours attempted, instead of hours passed. he is 18 and gets his father's car, he packs it full of kids." Miss Tadema plans to work in France as a housekeeper-nurse next fall. "That is very commonly done in Holland," she said. E. I. duPont de Nemours & Co., Dow Chemical Co., the Mid-West Research Institute, and Bell Telephone Laboratories sent speakers this last fall. Well-known chemical firms from all over the country are sending speakers to the Chemistry Club meetings this year. Well-Known Speakers Enliven Chemistry Club Speaking of — Collegiate — Modern — Ivy League -- See The New THUNDERBIRD tops in style for '57 at MORGAN-MACK — Your Ford Dealer in Lawrence — 714 Vermont Phone VI 3-3500 Featured speakers this spring will be from the Food & Drug Administration, Cook Paint & Varnish Co. and J. F. Prittchard Construction Co. They attended the Urban Renewal Institute sponsored by the National Urban League at which representatives from St. Louis, the two Kansas Citys, Wichita, Omaha and Denver — presented the problems they are facing in eliminating blighted areas and replacing them with modern houses or converting them to business or public uses. Two Participate In Housing Talks E. Jackson Baur, associate professor of sociology, and Paul Brotsman, associate professor of social work, took part in a round table discussion on urban housing problems Monday and Tuesday in Kansas City, Mo. Kansas has five state colleges, two municipal universities, fourteen private colleges, fourteen public junior colleges, and six two-year colleges. FTT Topics vary Topics range from where paints and varnishes are used to subjects like artificial crystal growth. One speaker this spring will even tell how dry ice is made. The students also learn about the latest in chemical processes such as gas phase chromatography. The Hall of Fame for Great Americans is located on the campus of New York University on University Heights in the Bronx, New York. N.Y. The Hall and adjoining buildings were built with funds contributed by the late Mrs. Finley J. Shepard. Only persons dead 25 years or more are now eligible. These speakers have brought a renewed interest in the club as well as a larger membership. To Hear 'Engineer's Dream' James H. McMechan, Independence, Mo., junior, has written letters to these companies asking for these speakers. Sometimes speakers come from companies at which the members of the club have worked during the summer. The club officers entertain the speaker in the evening before the meeting. If the speaker arrives during the day, the faculty shows him around Malott and entertains him at the Faculty Club. Dr. Charles R. Mischke, associate professor of mechanical engineering, will be guest speaker at a dinner meeting of Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity, at 6 p.m. Tuesday. Dr. Mischke will speak on the "Engineer's Dream." The talk is one in a series of talks on professional development sponsored by the fraternity. Speakers Are Entertained Speaking of — Collegiate — Modern — Ivy League -- See The New THUNDERBIRD tops in style for '57 at MORGAN-MACK — Your Ford Dealer in Lawrence — 714 Vermont Phone VI 3-3500 $9.95 Styled for the young man of good taste SADDLE OXFORDS Trim looking, smooth fitting in a handsome black and white combination. A popular style, at Pedwin's modest price. Sizes - 6½ to 12 Widths - A to D McCoy's SHOES 813 Mass. St. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results Pedwin YOUNG IDEAS IN SHOES Pedwin YOUNG IDEAS IN SHOES $9.95 Pedwin YOUNG IDEAS IN SHOES $9.95 Styled for the young man of good taste SADDLE OXFORDS Trim looking, smooth fitting in a handsome black and white combination. A popular style, at Pedwin's modest price. Sizes - 6½ to 12 Widths - A to D M'Coy's SHOES 813 Mass. St. M.Coy's SHOES Page 9 Law Course Stresses Work In Juvenile Delinquency A new course offered by the School of Law gives practical experience to students concerned with the field of juvenile delinquency. The course, A 'Seminar' in Juvenile Problems, was offered for the first time in the fall of 1855. Abugt 10, students are obsolete act as probation officers for the Douglas County Juvenile Court. These students receive no pay but, instead, two hours of academic credit a year. The acting probation officers interview their charges, meet the parents and conduct investigations. They have the authority of a regular probation officer and may suggest that a boy be sent to the Boys Industrial School at Topeka or whatever they feel best for him. The course, which gives law students, background and understanding in juvenile problems and provides Douglas County with free probation officers was suggested by Quinton Johnstone, former professor of law at KU and now of the Yale Extension Directs First Gas Institute The first annual Gas Conditioning Institute will be held Feb. 27 and 28 at Liberal under the direction of the University Southwest Extension Center at Garden City. Modern methods of dehydration and liquefiable hydrocarbon removal at the well and in the field will The institute is sponsored by the State Board for Vocational Education, the Southwest Kansas Petroleum Industry, the KU Extension, Southwest Kansas Center, and the KU Department of Petroleum Engineering. Physics Fraternity To Receive 45 Twelve new members and 33 chapter associates will be received into the honorary physics fraternity. Sigma Pi Sigma, at 7:30 today in 103 Malott. The new members are Lewis Bartel, Lawrence, Howard Norman, Linwood, Gary A. Williams, Paola, and John Beam, Ottawa, juniors; Victor Davis, Hutchinson, Robert Materson, Pittsburg, William Clow. Independence, Mo., and Richard Goldsbly, Kansas City, Mo., seniors; and Wesley Unruh, Newton, William Glass, Winfield, Harold Breedlove, Hannibal, Mo., and Dean Nehler, Lawrence, graduate students. Pre-Nursing Club Elects New Officers Officers of the Pre-Nursing Club for the second semester are Kay Jones, Overland Park sophomore, president; Suzanne Gausz, Leavenworth freshman, vice president; Carol Douglass, Newton sophomore, secretary; Margaret Malcolm, Almena sophomore, treasurer. Virginia Richards, Kansas City freshman, social chairman; Marilyn Briney, McDonald sophomore, program chairman; and Patricia Clary, Fort Dodge, Iowa freshman, publicity chairman. The next meeting will be at 8 p. m. Thursday in 110 Fraser. University Daily Kansan Engineering Group Elects. Officers Eta Kappa Nu. honorary electric engineering society, has elected Paul Peters, Lawrence senior, president for the spring semester. To Discuss Dylan Thomas Other officers elected are Cletus Isbell, Wichita junior, vice president; Richard Hinderliter, Wichita junior, recording secretary; Carl O. Pingry, Pittsburg, treasurer; John L. Lightstone, Coffeyville, corresponding secretary, and Russell Hayes, Wichita, bridge correspondent. All are seniors. The poetry of Dylan Thomas will be discussed by William D. Padin, professor of English, at an English graduate students' meeting at 8 p.m. today. Members of the English department are invited. A short business meeting will be held at 7:45 p.m. in Parlor Ariel of the Stu- 7. 45 p. m. in Parlor A r o d e n t Union. Law School. It is now under the direction of Dan Hopson, Jr., assistant professor of law. Students enrolled in the course this year are Robert Ditts, Larner; Herbert Horowitz, Kansas City, Mo.; John Kite, St. Francis, Stanford, Smith, Wichita, and Peter Martin, Olathe, third-year law students, Roth Gatewood, Sylvan Grove; Robert Howard, Wellington, and Robert Tanner, Hutchinson, second-year law students. Georgia Gibson, Kansas City, Kan., junior, is enrolled for no credit. Vosper To Give Rare Book Lecture Robert Vosper, director of libraries, will give the ninth in the University of Tennessee Library Lecture Series on March 7 in Knoxville. He will talk about rare books. Thursday, Feb. 14, 1957 The University of Tennessee Library Lectures began in 1890 to acquaint the faculty and the university community with the problems, opportunities and responsibilities of librarianship in relation to higher education. The lectures introduce outstanding libraries and library educators to the institution. Haskell Institute in Lawrence, is the largest Indian school in the United States. Brady To Help Produce Spanish Teaching Devices Miss Agnes M. Brady, associate professor of Romance languages, is one of the six professors chosen by the Modern Language Assn. to write and produce a text and tape recordings for teaching college Spanish. Shoemaker, professor of Romance languages and literature. KU is the only school with more than one person on the committee. Miss Brady, said that in addition to the six professors selected by the association, there will also be a group of 45 professors who will serve as advisers to the group. One The writing will be finished in the summer of 1958. A twelve year testing period will precede publication. KU has been selected as one of the testing locations. The project is supported by the Rockefeller Foundation. serve as advisers to the group. One of the advisers is Dr. William H. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. J. H. WILSON Sweet, smooth and sassy—that's Chevrolet all over. Above, you're looking at the Bel Air Sport Coupe. Clings to the road like a stripe of paint! The '57 Chevy can give lessons on taking curves and holding the road to just about any car going. Few cars at any price are so beautifully balanced and so smooth, sure and solid in action. A car has to have a special kind of build and balance to keep curves under control. And nobody outdoes Chevrolet in that department! It "corners" with all the solid assurance of an honest-to-goodness sports car. Chevy doesn't throw its weight around on turns because it carries its pounds in the right places. And if the road should turn upward, Chevy can take care of that nicely, too-with up to 245 h.p.* Come on in and take a turn at the wheel of a new Chevrolet. CHEVROLET 1 USA 57 CHEVROLET *270-h.p. high-performance V8 kern also available at extra cost CHEVROLET Only franchised Chevrolet dealers CHEVROLET display this famous trademark See Your Authorized Chevrolet Dealer XOAM-VADSOM GOBE-E IV 04019 E68 2014. 3. 24 10 78 23 45 67 89 101 112 123 134 145 156 167 178 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 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This describes George H. Edwards, Kansas City, Kan, senior, not because of his acting ability, but because of the roies he plays. He's always the villain. Edwards scored again as a bad man in "Pity Poor Pearl," playing the part of a murderous black-mailer named Byke. "Pity Poor Pearl" is the University Players annual melodrama which opened Wednesday in Green Theater. He played his part so well as Okaddi, the wicked Tartar chieftan in the Children's Theater production of "Marco Polo," that several children in the front of the theater cried. Edwards played the part of the father in "Servant of Two Masters" by Goldoni; Mr. Edwards, in Chadrov's "Kind Lady," a cockney gangster part, and a drunk in "Gammer Students Design 3-DPaper Mobiles Take a flat 2-dimensional piece of paper and make from it a mobile or original design in three dimensions. That's what art education majors and occupational therapy students in Miss Maud Ellsworth's, associate professor of education, and Miss Alice Schwartz's, instructor of education and design, classes have been doing. Interest in this project was aroused by the recent display of Alexander Calder's mobiles in Spooner Thayer Museum. A mobile is a design in space which has movement. With pieces of colored paper, and thread, the students have been designing mobiles in preparation for their art which they will teach. The first sawmill in America was built in 1608 on the James River in Virginia. Walt Disney's Westward Ho the Wagons! CINEMASCOPE —Plus— "DISNEYLAND U.S.A." Also: Color Cartoon—News Gurton's Needle." All were KU productions. NOW Ends Saturday GRANADA When Edwards, a geology major, was asked why he participated in University Theatre productions and why he always plays the bad man he said, "Guess I'm just a born ham with a nasty personality." GRANADA —Soon— "3 BRAVE MEN" Items for the official Bulletin must be brought to the Public Relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin material to the Daily Kansan. Notice included in place, date, and time of function. Ph. D. French Reading Examination, Ss. 25 to February 16 in Fraser 110, 9 to 11 a.m. Official Bulletin Der deutsche Verein trifft sich jeden Der Deutschland trifft sich jeden Fraser. Allerdings perilisch eingeladen. Le Carte Francaise se reunirs Jeudi 20.09.2016 au Bureau de la Bonne navoudu une faire un discours. Collegiate Young Republicans meeting, 7 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Student Union. Speaker: Jim Pratt, state chairman of the Republican party. "Strategy to Be Used in Winning Back the Governorship in 1958." American Society of Tool Engineers, Chapter No. 3, 7 p.m., 300 Fowler, Speaker; P. G. Fleming, plastics engineer for Bendix Aviation Corp, and president of American Society for Plastic Engineers,"New Developments in Plastics." Education wives and staff women des- tail 30 p.m., Mrs. E. E. Bayley, 1408 Kentucky TODAY KU-Y Mexico Trip Meeting. 7 p.m. Boom 305B, Student Union. Museum of Art Films on Art, 7.15 and 9 p.m., Art Museum. Rembrandt, a full length film biography starring Charles Laughton. American Institute of Architects, 7-30 p.m., 306A. Student Union, Important business - Art show, architects banquet, exposition, field trip. Program: Special Recording on "Future of Architecture." Refreshments. Christian Science organization meeting. 7:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel. All students, faculty and friends are invited. FRIDAY Sociology Club, 4 p.m. 17 Strong An- gle. Carroll D. Clark "Jazz." Public Involved. Friday night services; 7:30 p.m. Jewish Community Center, 1409 Tennessee. Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. & 5 p.m. Art Museum. Donizettli. Don ostau Hilley Cost Supper, 5 p.m., Jewish Community Center, 1409 Tennessee. Speaker: Rabbi Myron M. Meyer of St. Joseph, Mo. Supper, 50c. SUNDAY Liahona Fellowship, 7:30 p.m., at the The KU public relations office does a good job of sending news to Kansas newspapers about KU and students. Royal College Shop 8.95 NEOLITE CREPE SOLES Pinto they're so very, very soft! Penobscot Trampete Black & White Grey & White AAA's to B's to 10's Home Town Papers Rely On Student Correspondents Royal College Shop Firms Schedule Job Interviews Job interviews for School of Business students will be held next week in 216 Strong according to the following schedule: Monday Pillsbury Mills, Inc. (June graduates), Northern Trust Co. Tuesday—Bendix Aviation Corp. The Texas Co. Wednesday - The Texas Co. Campbell-Bossler Personnel Service. Royal College Shop 837 Mass. Thursday - Boeing Airplane Co. Friday - Boeing Airplane Co. Continental Oil Co. church. Worship service. Speaker wife. Heff, minister from Independence. Mo. museum of Art record concert, 2 p.m. Museum. Rossini. Bariberie di Sirani. On Dec. 9, 1952, the Department of Defense disclosed the first faster-than-sound flight by an American fighter, the Republic XF-91. See one of our Special VALENTINE'S SHOWS VARSITY Open 6:45—Show at 7:00 NOW At Regular Prices! HIS GREATEST SINCE "HIGH NOON" GARY COOPER FRIENDLY PERSUASION AN ALLIED ARTISTS PICTURE News—Color Cartoon "The Little Hawk" in "Henhouse Hennessy" Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW PACK/BACK CUSHIONED CHAIRS Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS Open 6:45 Weekdays NOW Ends Saturday Its Our Real Cool Twin Bill! THE BIG BEAT! BILL HALEY AND HIS COMETS Don't Knock The Rock co-starring ALAN DALE ALAN FREED A COLUMBIA PICTURE Plus— REBELS WITH PLENTY OF CAUSE! RUWIBLE ON THE DOCKS Teen-age gang war! Introducing AMES DARREN A CLOVER PRODUCTION - A COLUMBIA PICTURE Color Cartoon "Yankee Dood It" THE BIG BEAT! BILL HALEY AND HIS COMETS Don't Knock The Rock co-starring ALAN DALE ALAN FREED A COLUMBIA PICTURE REBELS WITH PLENTY OF CAUSE! RUMIBLE: ON THE DOCKS *Toon-age gang war!* Introducing JAMES DARREN A CLOVER PRODUCTION - A BOLINBINA PICTURE Color Cartoon "Yankee Dood It" Latest World News The newspapers do not reply upon this source entirely. Students or home town correspondents, selected at the Statewide Activities meetings at the beginning of the year, often do a good job of reporting to their home town newspapers. The students usually have an interest in writing and after they are chosen, contact their home town editor and get permission to write KU news for the paper. Home town correspondents have a much better opportunity to get a personal quality into their writing since they often personally know the students about whom they are writing. They are able to see what kinds of human interest stories would be of greatest interest to their particular area. Many of the correspondents have columns in which they write weekly about students and what they and the rest of the school are doing. A valuable source of news to the home town correspondents is the public relations office, where they can get news tips, tips on feature stories, and a list of all the students in their particular county. My show runs on BULOVA "My show runs on BULOVA time!" Sex JACKIE GLEASON Show-CBS-TV every Saturday night AMERICAN GIRL Bracelet and watch combined in one glamorous ensemble, 17 jewels, unbreakable mainspring $4950 Watches enlarged to show detail! BULOVA SELFWINDING AMERICAN CLIPPER 17 jewels, self-winding, certified waterproof, shock resistant, unbreakable mainspring, anti-magnetic, radium hands and dial, sweep second hand. all prices incl. fed. tax $4950 ONLY $100 DOWN EASIEST CREDIT TERMSI To be on time all the time, wear a Bulova — the watch featured on the Jackie Gleason all-live TV show! Unsurpassed for accuracy, dependability, styling! SEW 6234. Your ID Card Is Your Pass To Credit Never any interest or carrying charge TWO ROO style WAN and of ro Ph. Wolfson's WHERE YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD* STU furni in n VI 3 743 Mass. - VI 3-4366 TIRE Two the imm 1231 K&E Scier Dean ROO furni Adja doub LIGH near A Thursday, Feb. 14, 1957 University Daily Kansan Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS 25 words or less: one day, 50; three days, 75e; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly and must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansas Business Office In Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Gene's Photo Service BUSINESS SERVICES ROOM FOR MEN. Well heated, linens furnished, large closet, room service. Adjacent to bath. Will rent single or double. Mrs. C. W. N. Wuffer. 938 Missouri. STUDIO APARTMENT. Attractively furnished with telephone for 1 or 2 boys in nice house. Very close to KU. Call VI 3-6696. 2-18 TIRED OF WALKING UP THE HILL? Two rooms for boys one-half block from the town. Phone privileges. Available immediately. Phone VI 3-5776 or see ttf 1231 La. K&E SLIDE RULE. At the Military Science Bldg. Finder please return to Dean's office at Marvin Hall. 2-18 TYPIST, experienced in theses, term papers, reports. Fast and accurate, student rates. Mrs. Betty Vequist. 1935 Barker Ae. Phone VI 3-2001. tf GRAY BILLFOLD, somewhere on cam- paver 512, NYC, VT 3-6856. 2-18 Call Barbara Powell, VT 3-6856. TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 111 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tt FRATERNITY RING. Lost somewhere between DU Fraternity House and君 Hall. Gold black Oynx with Fraternity crest. Cail Pat Bolen, VI 3-18730 TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6575, 1106 La. tf LOST TWO CLEAN W A R M SLEEPING ROOMS. Single or double, serving home style meals reasonably. Ph. VI 3-1585. WANTED. Male student to share one and one half rooms. Comfortable, plenty of room, private parking $12.50 a month. PH. VI 3-0414 evenings. 2-14 FOR RENT EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Fast. accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow. 606 Maine. Phone VI 3-7645. tf SEWING to do of any kind. Ph. VI 3-6234. 2-18 MISCELLANEOUS BLUE SHEAFFER'S PEN. Left on table in Student Union Reading room Friday finder please return Kansan Business Office. (One end is bidly chewed.) 2-18 LIGHT BROWN PUPPY. Small. Found near Student Union. Call VI 3-7404. FOUND 2-14 We rent nationwide trailers any size, anywhere, anytime CROFT TRAILER RENTAL CO. Fest. 23rd, VI. 2,7277 Special Spring Sale East 23rd VI 3-7377 49 Ford ... $ 99.00 48 Pontiac ... 99.00 47 Pontiac ... 139.00 51 Nash ... 179.00 50 Hudson ... 179.00 49 Ford Sta. Wgn. ... 199.00 50 Pontiac ... 199.00 Jayhawk Motors Open eve. 1040 Vt. See them at Auto Glass Tabletops Sudden Service GLASS AUTO GLASS CO. East End of 9th Street 2144 Ohio - 1036933 Gene Smoyer TRANSPORTATION TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. Call Miss Rose Glesman at the First Monarch Hotel & information for hittineries and reservations 8th & Manor Phone VI 3-0152. RIDE to south part of Kansas City on Fridays at 4 p.m. Call Kent Richardson. VI 3-7537. 2-14 FOR SALE LIVE GIFTS—Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete storage. Same as the store. Sure we have all algitors, fish, turtles, chameleons, harpsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2821. '50 MERCURY. New paint, rebuilt engine, good rubber. Must see to appreciate. 1145 Louisiana or call Jerry Old- VI 3-6700. 2-19 TUBE FREE with the purchase of practically new (only 250 miles) 670x15 Goodrich tire, price only $25. VI 3-1505 after 5 p.m. 2-19 BEVERAGES—All kinds of six-paks, ice old. Crushed ice in water repellent dried paper bags. Picnic, party supplies in Park, 6th and Vermont. Phone 91- 3-0350. RENT A TAPE RECORDER Ideal for Skits, Parties, Dances, Practicing Speech and Foreign Languages. Recording tapes & ac- cessories. HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP Parties, Pinnings, Weddings Job Application Photos NIKON S. CAMERA with 50, 35, 85 mm lenses. Call BG at V1 AI 3-1200 after six. BOOKS For gifts and for your own library, Art, Architecture, Cook Books, Childrens Books, Modern Library. Library. THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 TIME. LIFE & Sports Illustrated magazines. Special students' prices of 19reg. sub. rate. Prompt service, buy now pay later, call VI 3-0124. tf FOR LEASE Have your car lubricated the MOTO-SWAY WAY At POTTER'S "66" SERVICE 1401 W. 6th VI 3-8991 NEW AND DIFFERENT Olympia portable typewriter. Choice: Single or two tone color and type style. Free demonstration. Phone Mr. Reams VI 3-1537 after 4 Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday. THREE ROOM APARTMENT. Unfinished, on ground floor. Off street parking. Air conditioned. Ph. VI 3-262 or VI 3-1277. 2-20 HELP WANTED TENOR SAX. See at 1109 Ohio. At home 5:30 to 9:00 on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday evenings. 2-20 INSTRUCTOR'S WIFE or graduate student typist, must be experienced, fast and accurate. Prefer Audigraph-IBM typewriter experience. Part time work typing business correspondence from Audigraph record. Write P.O. Box 571 Lawrence postoffice giving experience. typing speed and hours, days available. IT'S FOR REAL! OR REAL! by Chester Field HE-MAN DREW Rich man of the campus was Danny Drew Because of his wonderful chest tattoo— A beautiful lady exquisitely etched— When he flexed his muscles she got up and stretched His buddies all gave him their hard-earned dough For the pleasure of watching his pectoral show. $50 for every philosophical verse accepted for publication. Chesterfield, P.O. Box 21, New York 46, N.Y. Liggitt & Myers Tobacco Co. Smoke for real . . smoke Chesterfield MORAL: Accept no substitute for real enjoyment. Take your pleasure BIG. Smoke Chesterfield and smoke for real. Made better by ACCU-RAY, it's the smoothest tasting smoke today. CHESTERFIELD CIGARETTES LIMBERT & MIDDLE TERRACED CO. New! Old Spice HAIR GROOM TONIC Old Spice New! HAIR GROOM TONIC Grooms your hair while it treats your scalp. Controls loose dandruff. 1.00 Old Spice Old Spice HAIR GROOM TONIC SHULTON New York • Toronto IN UNBREAKABLE PLASTIC! LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY for Jr., Sr. Graduate Students up to $500.00 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. 8331 $1. Mass. Phone VI. 32074 for i.d. services Phone VI 3-8074 for 1 day service Jay SHOPPE JoDee Style 4850 Spring's easy relaxed silhouette perfectly adapted to Junior figure flattery. The reed slim skirt of the solid linen has a smart adjustable back, and tabbed jacket of a stripe for a perfectly matched costume. Scarf of skirt fabric pulls through a pearl pin which picks up the tones of the stripe. 14.98 Sizes: 5-13 Colors: Sea Sun Blue Taupe Dawn Pink Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday. Feb. 14, 1957 Celebrated Economist To Visit Campus Dr. Edwin G. Nourse, first chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers to the President, will be a visiting Phi Beta Kappa scholar on the campus next Thursday and Friday. Dr. Nourse, who is now vice chairman of the Joint Council on Economic Education with headquarters at the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C., will give a public lecture at 8 p.m. Thursday in Strong Auditorium. His subject will be "Intellectualism Under the Employment Act." Will Talk To Classes His 2-day schedule, arranged by Dr. Leland J. Pritchard, chairman of the department of economics, includes three other talks to classes and seminars. Dr. Nourse became chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers after its creation in 1946 and served until 1949 when he resigned following a policy disagreement with President Truman. He was a Guggenheim Foundation fellow from 1950 to 1952 when he assumed his present duties. Holds Two Degrees Dr. Nourse's career includes the vice presidency of the Brookings Institution, directorship of the Institute of Economics at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, and chairmanship of the Social Science Research Council. His earned degrees are from Cornell University and the University of Chicago. His special interests are price and income relations and full employment problems. S. M. C. DR. EDWIN G. NOURSE Dr. Nourse is a past president of the American Economic Association and of the American Farm Economic Association. Phi Beta Kappa Scholar As Phi Beta Kappa scholar Dr. Nourse will informally meet the graduate seminar in economics at 4 p.m. Thursday to discuss the "making of an economic adviser", as related to his own career. At 10 a.m. he will speak to students and faculty in Strong Auditorium, discussing the President's State of the Union message and economic report, with emphasis on the near-term outlook. He also will analyze sustainable trends in the various lines of construction and in the accumulation of durable goods. That afternoon he will talk to Money and Banking class, stressing the controversy over inflation and deflation. Camp Offers Art Classes Six weeks of classes in art will be offered at the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. The camp will be held from June 16 to July 28. Miss Marjorie Whitney, chairman of the design department, will again serve as director of the art division of the camp, which holds its sixth session next summer. The director of the camp is Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and orchestra. Students will attend regularly scheduled classes five days a week, which will include courses in oil painting, watercolor, fashion drawing, color and design, drawing techniques, sculpture, jewelry and silversmithing, figure and portrait drawing, commercial art, poster and lettering, pottery making and illustration and cartooning. Faculty members who will teach in the art division of the camp are Arvid Jacobson, associate professor of design; Eldon Teftt, assistant professor of design, and Robert Green, associate professor of drawing and painting. Big Bob Dougherty To Play For Dance Big Bob Dougherty's band will play for an all-student dance from 9 p.m. to midnight, Feb. 20, in the Student Union Ballroom. The dance is sponsored by the Ku Ku's, Jay Janes, Red Peppers and Froshawks. Tickets are $1 per couple and will be on sale in the information booth Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday, and in the Student Union ticket office all next week. Waqgoner To Address Actors Waggoner To Address Actors Dean George R. Waggoner of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will speak to the University Players on "The Other Elizabethans" at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Pine Room of the Student Union. DANCING ON THE CEILING George Shearing Jewish students at KU will benefit from the drive now under way to raise money for redecorating and refinishing the Lawrence Jewish Community Center, which is used by the student organization, Hillel. On 45's - $1.29 Panhellenic Council has passed a resolution to have a clearing committee function as an interpretive body for women's rush rules. The body will be especially concerned with normal contact, this being the association between freshman girls and the sororites. Drive Would Aid KU Jews The names of the houses drawn to be represented on the committee are Alpha Omicron Pi, Alpha Chi Omega, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Delta Gamma, and Gamma Phi Beta. There will be six students on the committee. One from each of the houses mentioned and one from the Panhellenic Council who will act as president. The women who will serve on the committee will be chosen by Eleanor Hawkinson, Hutchinson senior, president of Panhellenic. The committee will interpret and set down precedents concerning rushing but may not impose penalties for infractions of these rules which would be a Panhellenic Judiciary Board function. A benefit showing of the film "Battle Hymn" Wednesday at the Granada Theater will be the principal method of raising funds for the improvements of the center in the former Pi Kappa Alpha house, at 1409 Tennessee St. Ep's - $3.98 Group To Set Rush Rules Diamond Tip Needles Of the 110 Jewish students at KU, about 30 regularly participate in activities of Hillel according to Robert R. Sokal, assistant professor of entomology, who is the counselor for Hillel. Herman Cohn, president of the Lawrence Jewish Center, said that the present drive may result in having a rabbi assigned to the Lawrence center full time. Thus Jewish students would not need to go to Kansas City or Topeka for religious services. $15.00 and up BELL MUSIC COMPANY Agriculture and pottery were first brought to Michigan by the Indians about the start of the Christian era. 925 Massachusetts Phone VI3-2644 3. Learn to use reference sources the library, dictionary, special handbooks, textbooks, etc. To study effectively one must want to learn, whether for knowledge or for good grades. Perhaps what students need is to understand why they are attending college and what they hope to obtain from their education. With the second semester under way and assignments piling up, students should resolve now to get ahead before they get behind. 4. Be alert in class and relate material with what you have read and know. The Gall Of These Acting Upstarts! 2. Divide total study time for each subject. Don't study when you are very tired or have just eaten a large meal. Relax after periods of intense study. Good study habits put into practice reap high results. You might consider these suggestions: 1. Go to class prepared. You must study outside of class. (Continued from Page 1) could be heard. The ensemble dancing, originally choreographed by Lionel Barrymur, needed rehearsing, but was not without its aesthetic values. Grades Depend On You Understanding, And Rules Tremendous atmosphere was generated by musical director William Timmons, Riley senior, who accompanied all concerned on an out-of-tune piano. His tinklings complemented perfectly the settings designed by Richard A. Fanolio, Kansas City, Mo., senior, and lighted by Lawrence Weaver, Lawrence senior. (Continued from Page 1) Perhaps the bombastic interpretation is longwinded and Virginia-acured, but there is no doubt that as the cream of our acting group, the Players have whipped themselves up into a pleasant, frothy topping for an old dessert. Rivers To Locomotives Rivers To Locomotive Fanolillo's decor represented everything from rivers to locomotives. Kay Brown, Larned junior, collected many costumes and somehow stage manager Kenneth Baker, Helmetta, N. J., freshman, squeezed the whole works onto the small stage. The artistic coordination medal, however, must go to Teichgraeber. Apply these study suggestions to your problems and this semester may be a profitable one. 6. Review each week for your final exam. Read each exam question carefully. Outline the answer on essay questions before writing. Pay special attention to phrasing of questions on objective tests. 5. Take adequate notes. After class, study, revise and add to your notes. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. Shop Brown's First Suede Jacket Clearance Rust-Beige-Green-Gray Broken Sizes To 42 Sale $11.98 WE RENT "AFTER SIX" Tuxedos Winter Jacket $6.98 Winter Jacke Sale Gabardine Shell Quilted Linings Zipper Opening Brown's TOGGERY 830 Mass. ELEPHANT YOUNG REPUBLICANS MEETING Find Out What Goes On Inside Politics! Mr. Jim Pratt Republican State Chairman, Will Speak On: "STRATEGY TO BE USED IN WINNING BACK THE GOVERNORSHIP" 7:00 p.m., Thursday, Feb.14 Jayhawk Room - Student Union Daily hansan 54th Year, No. 86 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Friday, Feb. 15, 1957 Spring Fashions To Be Modeled At Style Review Coeds will model washable spring and summer fashions at a fashion show sponsored by the Electrical Women's Round Table Workshop, University Extension and the Jay Shoppe at 7:45 p.m. in the Student Union Ballroom. Ruth Roney, Lawrence senior, will narrate the show. While on a European summer tour last summer with the National Student Assn., she visited Jacque Fath Studio and the Christian Dior Boutique in Paris. Modeling for the show will be Judith Allen and Barbara Hodgson, Lawrence freshmen; Sandra Blankenship, Great Bend sophomore; Elaine Gill, sophomore; Jane Dean, freshman; Sherry Davis, junior, Barbara Golden, sophomore, and Nancy Hartwell, senior, all from Kansas City, Mo.; Sarah Shaffer, Russell freshman, and Kay Cronkite, St. Joseph, Mo., freshman. A dinner at 6:30 p. m. will precede the show. The style review is open to the public. 'Choose Better Candidate' "In Kansas and on the national scene, Republicans must select a better qualified candidate to win back losses suffered in the 1956 elections." Jim Pratt, state chairman of the Republican Party, said Thursday. "In Kansas the Republican Party must nominate a man who has not taken sides in the partie's differences." Mr. Pratt continued. "I firmly believe that such a man would win back the governorship for the Republicans in 1958." He also discussed a plan for reorganization of the Republican Party in Kansas, saying that it would begin with county organization and work up. In speaking of Gov. George Docking's proposed budget," he said, "The Republican legislators will go along with anything that is for the good of the people in Kansas, as long as the Governor's program is sound." Mr. Pratt praised the KU Young Republicans and said that the future of the party in Kansas, as soon as 1958, would rest in the cooperation received from such groups of young people. He is calling a meeting of Republican officials in March to discuss such a plan. He emphasized his stand by saying, "We are going to have to go to the grass roots of each county and better organize the county committees." Mr. Pratt said that no one has announced intentions of running for Governor in 1958, but that some names had been suggested. He mentioned those of Clyde Reed Jr., a member of the Board of Regents, and Clifford Hope, former representative to Congress from the Fifth District. Mr. Pratt is also chairman of the committee on second class cities and vice chairman of the committee on fees and salaries. "Because of my position in the party I try to stay out of party differences, but still serve actively in my positions on committees," he said. Senior's Fashion Work Shown Fashion illustrations by Beverly Van Dusen, Wichita, is featured in the February "Senior of the Mouth" exhibit in 3 Strong Hall. The display is sponsored by department of design. P —(Daily Kansan photo) NEW FASHIONS — Spring must be treading on the heels of winter. Barbara Hodgson, Lawrence, and Janie Dean, Kansas City, Mo., both freshmen, are modeling spring and summer fashions you'll see at the Electrical Women's Round Table Work-shan fashion show tonight. shop fashion show tonight Harp Guest At Dance Dick Harp, basketball coach, will be guest of honor at the all-school dance 9 p. m. to midnight Friday, Feb. 22. The date of the dance, sponsored by the Ku Ku's, Jay Janes Red Peppers, and Froshawks, was incorrectly reported as Feb. 20 in Thursday's University Daily Kansan. Wilson said that Coach Harp will probably let the basketball team attend the dance and that some team member probably would speak. "We hope to have the entire basketball team present at the dance," said David Wilson, Leawood junior, chairman of the dance committee. Chairmen of the dance are Robert Plain, Garnett junior, president of the Ku Ku's: Kathryn Ehlers, Kansas City, Mo. junior, president of the Jay James; and Marilyn Perry, Lawrence junior, Red Pepper adviser. Big Bob Dougherty's band will play for the dance. Admission will be $1 a couple. The dance will be held in the Student Union Ballroom. Members of the dance committee are John Patten, Kansas City, Kan. freshman; Sharolyn Justice, Neodesha sophomore; Dick Jones, McPherson sophomore and Anne Kibler, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore. Senate Group Backs Ike WASHINGTON — (UP) — The combined Senate Foreign Relations- Armed Service committee gave assurance today that it "strongly supports" President Eisenhower's policy of using armed force in the Near East. Weather Drill Teams To Go To New Orleans Generally fair this afternoon, tonight and Saturday. Cool west today and over state tonight and Saturday. Low tonight 20-25 north to 30 southeast. High Saturday 45-50. Members of the Air Force ROTC drill team and Angel Flight plan to travel to New Orleans for part of the Mardi Gras celebration. - Do You Gals Have Man Trouble? If you girls don't feel you are liked by KU men, maybe you should try teaching. One girl, while she was practice teaching, was supervising recess when a little boy ran to her, threw his arms around her and cried, "All I want is you, baby." Chariot Race Rules Announced Rules for construction of chariots and running of the Greek Week chariot race were announced by Bruce Rider, Wichita junior, chairman. Rider said entries must be turned in to the fraternity IFC representatives by Monday. The race will be at 2 p.m. March 9, on Jayhawk Boulevard. 1. The chariot is to be designed and the sides decorated in a Greek manner. Rules are: 2. Twenty-six inch bicycle tires will be used for wheels. 3. The rear of the chariot will be left open. 3. Greek letters of the fraternity are to be on the side. 5. Track and cross-country lettermen are not eligible to pull a chariot. 6. The driver must wear a toga. 7. Runners will wear white t-shirt and white shorts. 8. The chariot will be pulled by two runners. 9. The width of the chariot cannot be less than three feet, or more than four. The race will start at the west end of Strong Hall, go around the Chi Omega fountain and finish at the driveway between Snow and Strong Halls. U.S. Hits 170 Million Mark WASHINGTON — (UP) The population of the United States hit the 170 million mark today. The Census Bureau, which estimated the total, said the rate of growth will continue to rise rapidly. The largest increases in recent years have been among children in the school and pre-school age groups. A man looks up at a framed portrait of a man seated in a chair. The portrait is encased in a large frame and mounted on a wall with a neutral background. (Daily Kansan photo) PICTURE GIFT — John Schick, Kansas City freshman, admires a photograph of former KU Chancellor Dean W. Malott. The picture, a gift from Mrs. Malott, will hang permanently in Malott Hall. Dr. Malott was chancellor at KU from 1939 to 1951, and is now president of Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y. The picture was taken by Bachrach, New York portrait photographer. Fifteen members of the drill team and 12 members of the Angel Flight along with members of the Air Force staff and a woman faculty member appointed by Emily Taylor, dean of women, will leave the morning of Feb. 21 and return Feb. 26. Last year the drill team took a trip alone, but due to difficulties in obtaining enough eligible personnel, it was decided by the Air Force staff to take part of the Angel Flight. The Angel Flight is the girl drill team sponsored by the AFROTC. They have participated in the American Royal Parade, KU Relays Parade, television and high school tour of southern Kansas. For the trip to the Mardi Gras the drill team and the Angel Flight will be a combined unit. Both groups are spending many of their nights in practicing for the parade and their exhibition. The parade will be Sunday, Feb. 24, in the afternoon and is named after the Krewe of Carrollton Ball which will be held Sunday night. Following the parade the combined drill teams will perform a silent drill exhibition in the New Orleans City Auditorium where the ball will be held. After presenting their part of the entertainment they may remain at the ball and enjoy the rest of the evening. Those members of the drill teams and staff going are: Angel Flight—Merry June Greenway, Cleveland, Ohio junior; Janane Littrell, Kansas City, Kan. senior; Donna McClain, Cincinnati, Ohio sophomore; Marilyn Perry, Lawrence junior; Joy Watson, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore; Penny Gardner, Osawatomi freshman; Je Rue Gjovic, Mission senior; Beth Griffith, Hamilton junior; Joan Lackey, Matfield Green sophomore; Margaret Malcolm, Almena sophomore; Donna Oats, Sharon Springs sophomore, and Lois Tolbert, Topeka freshman. Drill Team—Harold Bergmann, Lenexa, Robert Bowersox, Kansas City, Kan., Howard Hammond. Glen Falls, N. Y., Orley Lake, Haven Robert McIntosh, Lawrence, William Ward, Hays, R. E. Shanklin, Minneapolis, freshmen; Jon Givovig, Mission sophomore; R. L. Jobe, Topeka, Donald Terpingen, Washington, Bruce Smith, Stockton, juniors; Herbert Culp, Overland Park, George Hitt, Wellington, Gale I. Harris, Lawrence, and Paul E. Peters, Lawrence, seniors. Air Force staff—Col. McHenry Hamilton ir., professor of air science, Capt. Arthur Gilliam, assistant professor of air science, and T-Sgt. Ward. Kansas House Adds Revenue Bills TOPEKA — (UP) — Two measures bearing the administration label today were introduced in the Kansas House today, including one to bring an estimated $3,100.00. The revenue measure, one of nine recommended by Gov. George Docking to balance the budget, would broaden the sales tax base to include motels, hotels, laundries and others. The other measure would permit the State Park Authority to charge admission fees at any future park site. Lions Won't Aid Fund Raising The Lawrence Lions Club will not aid in the fund raising drive of the Jay Watchers as announced Thursday. A group of Lawrence citizens, some of whom are Lions Club members, have agreed to take over the collection of funds in Lawrence. Correction The Religious Emphasis Week all-school convocation in Hoch Auditorium will begin at 9:30 a.m. Monday, not at 8:20 a.m. as reported in Thursday's University Daily Kansan. Rabbi Ferdinand M. Isserman. of Temple Israel in St. Louis, Mo. will sneak. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 15, 1957 Religion: A 'Must' For All In our helter skelter life on the Hill, there are "weeks" for this and "weeks" for that. So it only seems natural and proper that we also take one week out during the school year for emphasizing religion. Next week is that week—Religious Emphasis Week. "Is Religion the Answer?" is the theme of the annual Religious Emphasis Week, which this year is featuring 16 speakers who are being brought to the campus by 14 religious groups. Each year one keynote speaker is featured at an all-University convocation. This year, Rabbi Ferdinand M. Isserman of St. Louis, will give the keynote address at 9:20 a.m. Monday in Hoch Auditorium. Each speaker is given the opportunity to talk at faculty forums, at scheduled talks, and also to organized houses and in classrooms. Such speakers give the students a chance to hear religious leaders who are or have been working with religion throughout the country and the world. "It's an opportunity students on our campus should take advantage of," Harold G. Barr, dean of the School of Religion says. The purpose of Religious Emphasis Week is "to promote in the University community the understanding of the vital place of religion and spiritual values in personal life and in society." If such a goal is to be attained this year and in the coming years, it will take the complete backing and cooperation of the student body. Religion is one theme which in the general sense of the word should be supported without qualification. While everyone does not agree on exactly the same religion, most people do agree religion is a necessary part of our democratic and University way of life. Students should note that an opportunity such as Religious Emphasis Week is not provided for people in the Communist countries. However, our forefathers placed freedom of religion as one of the "musts" in our Constitution. Since then, it has become one of the basic characteristics of our democratic way of life. The true importance of religion has been increasingly emphasized since we have come in closer contact with communism and the view it has taken towards religion. This then is an appropriate time for the University to back a really worthwhile project. This is a chance for the University to show it still realizes the values of "all" of these characteristics that are necessary for a successful democracy. —Leroy Zimmerman Industry?—Not Without Water (Editor's note: This is the second of a series of three editorials on one of Kansas' water problems.) If Kansas is to get its share of a future industrial development and thereby increase or even maintain its present level of prosperity, a revolutionary state water plan will be needed. This is not a new consciousness. As early as 1917 the Kansas Legislature was interested in the development of the state's water resources and passed an act for that purpose. However, funds were not made available until 1941. By then the nation was at war and memories of the dust bowl of the 1930's had aged and faded. After the war there was a shortage of engineers. Finally, in 1955, the State Water Resources Board was created. It is in the hands of this board that the future of Kansas rests. The board has undertaken the tremendous task of developing a state plan of water conservation, distribution, and control. The task will include an accurate determination of the water supply available, its relative quantity and quality, present and future needs, and finally, a state and federal backed plan to satisfy those needs. What kind of water resources projects and what legislation will be recommended they do not know yet. In the past, the state of Kansas has had no part in the financing of water resources projects. The state constitution prohibits it. The development of the projects has been left to private or local interests or to the federal government. The larger projects have been done by the Bureau of Reclamation, the Corps of Engineers, and the Department of Agriculture. To date the federal government has proposed an expenditure of some 593 million dollars for water resources development, excluding projects immediately over the state lines. For these out-of-state projects the federal government has appropriated some 80 million dollars. New construction appropriations amount to 25 million. Federal aid helps, but it is not the panacea. It is too gradual, and the dust drifts are getting deeper. Report Of Royal 'Rift' Comes As Shock To Britain, World —Dale Morsch The report last week of a rift between Queen Elizabeth II and her husband, the Duke of Edinburgh, came as a shock to Great Britain as well as to the world. The validity of the rumor was universally questioned over the weekend, and after three days of silence, three London newspapers came out with stories that the rumors were "quite untrue." World opinion hopes this denial is true. An unjust smear on the royal family is not only base, but an abuse of the freedom of the press. The rumors began when a correspondent for the Baltimore Sun reported London cafe society was "talking openly" of a rift and whispering that the Duke had a "more than passing interest" in an anonymous woman whom he had been meeting for some time. It was said he had been sent on the 4-month Commonwealth tour to "cool off," and his plans to return to London to be with the Queen for a week before she started her state visit to Portugal were changed. The accusation against the Duke of Edinburgh is indeed hard to believe. Since his marriage to Queen Elizabeth II in November 1947, he has been the sparkling element in the sedate British royal family. His easy manner and sense of humor often have helped the stiff but shy Queen in awkward situations. And it was at his insistence The Duke is now sitting idly in Gibraltar waiting to sail to Lisbon next Monday to meet his wife. that Prince Charles was enrolled in a "public school," breaking the tradition of palace-educated heir-apparent. The British royal family is the most revered family in the Isles. Entire magazines are devoted to the activities of the Queen, Princess Margaret, the Queen Mother, and the Duke of Edinburgh, and school children as well as adults read the stories eagerly. Dinkelsbuhl, in German Bavaria, holds an annual pageant honoring the children who saved their town in 1632 from destruction by a Swedish conqueror. Tradition says one of the youngsters in the market place reminded the conqueror that his own son had died shortly before. The conqueror ordered his soldiers not to loot and burn. Through government and international crises, the British have looked to the royal family as a symbol of inspiration. True, royalty is merely a figurehead, but it is the cord which binds and holds together the Commonwealth. Will the press now attempt to destroy this cord of hope? Felecia Anne Fenberg Ancient Byzantium, called Istanbul by the moderns, sits astride two continents. It was long the center of the Roman Empire of the East from A. D. 330 until 1453, when the Turks seized control from Emperor Constantine. Roman women athletes in the fourth and fifth centuries wore garments like the "Bikini" bathing suit while playing games. Twenty-One'And VanDoren Are Synonymous To Viewers Friend Or Enemy? Your vocabulary is the middle man between you and the world. It is your representative in the congress of human and business relations, a representative that casts its vote in your interests or against them, according to its quality. Television's own health-restoring antidote to Elvis Presley has done it again! Charles Van Doren, 31-year-old English instructor at Columbia University, showed young and old that it is desirable to be intelligent, when he boosted his winnings to $138,000 on the television quiz program, "Twenty One." In only 11 weeks Mr. Van Doren, who has made a powerful impression on television viewers, has probably raised the level of public respect for the teaching profession more than all testimonials of recent years. University of Kansas student newspaper 1904, 1905, 1906, 1907, 1908, trifweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 16, 12, 11 Daily Hansan UNIVERSITY This is quite a feat for a college instructor who earned only $4,400 last year. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 251, news room Member Inland Daily Press Association* Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. In more days, periods. Entered second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. Extension 251, news room Extension 376, business office Mr. Van Doren, clamped in a vise of earphones and isolated in a glass-walled booth, has become a Monday night "must" for thousands of television viewers who eagerly anticipate his weekly visits to their living rooms. The public has been impressed Unlike contestants on the popular television quiz program, "The $64,000 Question," Mr. Van Doren is no narrow specialist. He must be able to answer questions in any of the 108 categories of information that scan all types of knowledge. by this intelligent, courteous and modest young man. Fans have deluged this wizard of quiz with 2,000 letters including 20 marriage proposals. So far, he has won over 12 opponents, including lawyers, writers, teachers and an ex-college president. He has become TV's top single show money winner. NEWS DEPARTMENT Mr. Van Doren has "made" the program "Twenty One," which has realized the importance of obtaining contestants of what is probably now known as the "Van Doren" type. Kent Thomas ... Managing Editor John Battin, Feciae Ann Fenberg, Bob Lyle, Betty Jean Stanford, Assistant Managing Editors; Jim Banman, City Editor; Nancy Harmon, LeRoy Mermer, Jim Hinkle, Shimonozaki, Telegraph Editor; Mary Beth Noyes, Delbert Haley, Assistant Telegraph Editors; Dick Brown, Sports Editor; George Anthan, Assistant Sports Editor; Marilyn Mermis, Society Editor; Pat Swanson, Assistant Society Editor; John Eaton, Picture Editor The week-to-week suspense on whether Van Doren will keep plunging or quit while he is far ahead continues to mount. Marilyn Mermis EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Jerry Dawley Editorial Editor INPRESS DEPARTMENT Dale Bowers...Business Manager Dave Dickey, Advertising Manager; John Hedley, National Advertising Manager; Harold Metz, Classified Advertising Manager; Conboy Brown, Circulation Manager. IN KANSAS CITY. IT'S TIVOL DOWNTOWN altman building Harrison 1-1898 PLAZA 220 nichols road Westport 1-5333 THE WIDE, WIDE WEDDING BAND FROM TIVOL Rose band, 14K gold, 44.00 Plain gold band, 18K, 36.30 Compass star band, 14K, 33.00 Cylinder of yellow gold, white gold center, 14K. 28.60 Veined band, 14K gold, 14.85 This year, the accent is on wide, wide wedding bands. And TIVOL has them for you — matching sets in many, many distinctive styles and designs. Come see them soon. State, National, International News Gromyko Replaces Shepilov As Soviet Foreign Minister MOSCOW — (UP) — The Soviet Union dropped Dmitri T. Shepilov as foreign minister today after only nine months in office — the nine moths of Hungary and Poland. Andrei Gromyko was promoted to replace him. Mr. Shepilov, 51, former editor of the Communist Party organ Pravda, replaced V. M. Molotov only last June. The new foreign minister was first deputy to both men. Mr. Shepilov now becomes one of the eight secretaries of the Communist Party Central Committee. The official Tass news agency announcement of Shepilbv's removal gave no reason for the sudden government change. Senior Gives Up Penny Collection OLATHE —(UP)—Four-hundredforty pounds of zinc pennies were deposited in a bank here Thursday by a college student who said his mother kent worrying about the shelves in his room collapsing from the weight of the money. Page 4 Bill Breyfogle, a senior at the University of Kansas, explained that he had started the collection when he was 11. The 42 milk bottles contained 57,738 pennies. Bill said he abandoned the collection because "the bank is paying interest rates at 3 per cent." COLBY. Kan. — (UP) — Water problems of Southwestern Kansas will be discussed at a session of the Kansas Watersheds District Wednesday. Southwest Kansas Water Talks Slated Many residents are worried about what growing irrigation demands might do to underground water supply in some sections of the area. 油 companies have conducted field tests in the Colby area that indicate the water table under the city has risen two feet during 1956 despite the heaviest use known. The rise was attributed to deep ground formations that hold the water like a huge dam. 'Litter-Bug Bill Proposed TOPEKÄ — (UP) — Rep. Karl A. Brueck (D-Paola) today proposed in a house bill to crack down on highway "litter bugs" by imposing penalties. Mr. Brueck's bill also had the unique provision that the person convicted of littering the highways should be forced to remove it himself, "or cause it to be removed" at his own cost. The design of the Kansas Capitol is based upon that of the Capitol at Washington, D. C. The plan is composed of four wings, extended in the form of a Greek cross with a rotunda at the center. Mr. Shepilov generally was associated with Soviet policy in the Middle East. It was his visit to Cairo while still editor of Pravda which preceded agreements for shipment of Communist arms to Egypt. Grimes Case 'Cover Up' CHICAGO — (UP) — Coroner Walter McCarran conferred with his chief aide today in a broiling dispute over the latter's charges of a "cover up" in the medical findings of the slain Grimes sisters. Harry Glos, coroner's investigator and former Suburban Oak Park policemen, told newsmen he believed the teen-aged sisters had been beaten, tortured and sexually molested before they were killed. McCarron later assailed Glos as being scientifically untrained to dispute the findings of pathologists and the state toxicologist who conducted exhaustive tests of the victims' bodies. "This may cost me my job," Goss said in an informal news conference, "but I cannot sleep knowing things are being covered up." "I was in that room for five hours while the pathologists conducted the autopsy," Glos said. "I know what I saw and heard. It is time that some of it came out." Teachers' Pay Raise Asked TOPEKA — (UP) — Representatives of the Kansas Board of Regents today appeared before the Senate Ways and Means committee to ask an additional appropriation of $857,787 for the five state supported schools to increase teachers' salaries. A. W. Hershberger, Wichita, told the board, "We are losing faculty members by the wholesale," in asking for an additional 5 per cent above what the board had previously requested from the 1957 Legislature for the next school year. The first newspaper with a perfumed advertising page was issued March 25, 1937, by the Daily News, Washington, D.C. It contained a page advertisement of the People's Drug Stores featuring flowers. Police said the blast, the eighth since Clinton's publicized school integration riots, apparently was from a dynamite-crammed suitcase left on a sidewalk in the Foley Hill community where most of the Negro high school students live. Negro witnesses said one occupant of a crowded car placed the suitcase on a sidewalk near the home of Alfred Williams, 21-year-old Negro student who recently was suspended from school for striking a 15-year-old white boy. CLINTON, Tenn. — (UP) — An explosion rocked a Negro section of this racially troubled town last night, slightly injuring two persons and damaging 30 homes and a Negro restaurant. Last night's explosion ripped through the front of a restaurant on West Broad Street in the heart of the Negro section area. "Enough dynamite was used to sink a battleship," one officer told reporters. Red China Asks Visit From Japan TOKYO — (UP) — Comunist China today invited Japanese Premier Tanzan Ishibashi and Foreign Minister Nobosuke Kishi to visit Peiping. Bomb Rocks Negro Sector Chou En-Lai, Communist Chinese Premier, said the Sino- Soviet Amiity Pact was directed against the United States and not against Japan. FOR THE FOOD YOU LOVE Western diplomats here said Chou was indulging in a typical maneuver to create divisions in Japan and coax it away from the West. To Eat . . . - Weekend specialty-Baked Ham on Rye Bread 'Russians Will Soon Have Best Scientists' 宴会 - All pastries homemade Visit Our New Snack Bar 10:00 a.m.—midnite WASHINGTON — (UP) — Dr. Edward Teller, "father of the H-bomb," said today Russia will have the "best scientists in the world" 10 years from now. Party House He said that it already is "too late" for the United States to hold the lead it has had for the past 10 years. E. 23rd Street Kill Bill To Ban Liquor Ads TOPEKA — (UP) — The House State Affairs Committee yesterday killed by a 14-4 vote a bill that would have prohibited news media in Kansas from accepting or carrying liquor advertisements. University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 15, 1957 Another MacArthur Goes To Japan TOKYO — (UP — Douglas Mac- Arthur II, nephew of General Mac- Arthur, arrived today to become U. S. ambassador to Japan. When the new ambassador stepped off the plane, it marked the return to Japan of a name missing since President Truman relieved General MacArthur of his command in April, 1951. Danish Air Force units have taken over the U. S. Air Force Base in Narssarsuak in Southern Greenland. Democrats Back Civil Rights SAN FRANCISCO — (UP) — A call for a strong civil rights stand highlights a 2-day meeting of the Democratic National committee that begins today. More than 1,000 Democratic leaders, including Adlai Stevenson and national chairman Paul Butler, gathered for the committee's first meeting to be held west of the Mississippi River. Medicine Lodge is the site of the peace treaty negotiated by U. S. government representatives and chiefs of five hostile Plains Indian tribes in 1867. GOOD GIFT HUNTING FOR THE FINEST ALL-PURPOSE GIFTS - Ceramics - Glassware - Toys and Games - Marlow Woodcuts - Imperial Milkglass - Imperial Candlewick Open — 9:00 a.m. - 11:00 p.m. UNDERWOOD'S 1215 West Sixth SUPERMARKET Honestly,folks... You'll Love DUCK'S Tasty Dinners! - Block Island Swordfish - Soft Shell Crabs - Maine Lobster - Fried Chicken - Fried Oysters - Steaks Good Food - Good Service DUCK'S Sea Food Tavern 824 Vt. . Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 15, 1957 Tigers Especially Tough In Own Lair The University of Missouri basketball team will await the Kansas Jayhawkers in Brewer Fieldhouse at Columbia Saturday night. Brewer Fieldhouse has always been a nemesis to the Jayhawkers. And even now, with a No.2 rating in the nation and Wilt Chamberlain galloping over the boards, Kansas can expect that the Tigers will be ready to live up to their reputation of being able to cope with any team on a given night. The 1952 NCAA champions, for instance, required a teetering righthander from Dean Kelley in the final 20 seconds to pull out a 60-59 victory. The 1953 NCAA runners-up trailed until the final seven minutes when Kelley's heroes again fueled a 69-60 victory. The title bound Jayhwakers had to settle for a tie for first in 1954 because the Tigers defeated them, 76-67, in the final game of the season. Kansas' last two visits to Brewer Fieldhouse have been disastrous. Last season Missouri won, 76-54, and in 1955 the Tigers thrashed the Jayhawkers, 90-71. Saturday night, however, Sparky Stalcup and his Tigers will have a chance to view first hand the zone defense which Kansas used to squeeze Nebraska, 69-54, and Oklahoma A&M. 62-52. But Dick Harp say, "This game presents one of our most serious problems. Given a good shooting night from the field and with their usual great free-throwing (Missouri is second on the latest NCAB major college statistics at .749) the Tigers can defeat Kansas or any other team." Another new item which will confront the Tigers is $6 - 4\frac{1}{2}$ forward, Ron Loneski who sparked the 75-41 Kansas victory over Iowa State in his first starting assignment. For the moment, at least, the Jayhawkers have shaken all pursuit save defending champion Kansas State in the race for the Big 7 title. Kansas could place tremendous pressure on the second place Wildcats by winning Saturday. K-State must play three of four games on the road before entertaining KU on March 6. These assignments include Iowa State twice and Nebraska and Missouri. The Kansas-Missouri game at Columbia Saturday night is the big one on a three-game conference card that finds Nebraska at Iowa State and Oklahoma at Colorado. WebbSeeks Boost Toward Crown NEW YORK — (UF) — Spider Webb of Chicago, hottest contender in the middleweight division, seeks his 18th straight victory tonight in a 10-rounder with Neal Rivers of Las Vegas, Nev., at Madison Square Garden. It will be televised and broadcast nationally by NBC at 10 p.m. (EST). Webb, ranked fourth among 160-pound contenders, and Rivers, eighth, are making their Garden debuts in a bout designed to boost the winner toward an ultimate title shot. Each belies he can beat champion Gene Fullmer. King Solomon didn't have a cent to his name, although he was the wealthiest man of his time. Money had not been coined in Palestine during his reign in the tenth century B. C. The 25-year-old Spider, an exceptionally balanced boxer-puncher, is favored at 13-5 because of his skill, punch and ruggedness. While beating 19 of his 20 professional opponents, he knocked out 12. The Great Barrier Reef of Australia, 1,250 miles long, is the world's largest coral structure, the National Geographic Society says. Most of the reef's 80,000-square-mile area lies underwater. 100% YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 4 NEW OBSTACLE FOR MU- Ron Loneski, 6-4/12 Jayhawker forward shown here hooking a left hander, will be a new obstacle in the path of Missouri's upset hopes when Kansas meets the Tigers in Brewer Fieldhouse Saturday night. Two Unbeaten Squads In Badminton Playoffs KU Swimmers Meet Colorado Saturday afternoon's playoffs in the badminton doubles will match Beverly Warner, Kansas City, Mo., senior, and Diane Hays, Kansas City, Kan., junior, against Mary Jean Waltersheid, Coffeyville senior, and Molly Godwin, St. Louis, Mo., junior. The Kansas University swimming team will be out to extend its winning streak to four Saturday as they meet Colorado at 3 p.m. in the Robinson Gymnasium pool. Coach Chuck Edwards said last night that the team has improved greatly after losing its opener to Oklahoma. "Our times are improving with every meet, and we're looking especially good in the sprint and backstroke events. It's hard to say how the meet will come out—the two teams seem to be pretty evenly matched." Edwards said. The lowest official temperature, 70 degrees below zero, ever recorded in the United States occurred at Rogers Pass, Mont., in 1954. The second lowest official temperature, 66 degrees below zero, occurred in 1933 near West Yellowstone Ranger Station in Yellowstone National Park. Both teams are undefeated. Colorado is strong in the distance races, which have proved to be a Kansas weak spot in past meets. Edwards, who is also a team member, said that existing pool records in the medley relay, 200-yard backstroke and 200-yard breaststroke are threatened. The team has meets with Kansas State, Iowa State, Emporia State, and Nebraska before traveling to this year's Big 7 meet at Norman, Oklahoma. KUOK PROGRAMS Eight presidents, Washington. John Adams, Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, J. Q. Adams, Jackson, and W. H. Harrison, were born British subjects. Today Today 6:00 Daily Kansan news 6:05 Dinner music 6:30 "Sports Scope" 6:45 Public service 7:00 "Bookstore Hour" 8:00 Wire news 8:05 University Theatre concert 8:30 Show tunes 9:00 Jazz 9:30 Lucky Strike news 9:45 Study break 10:00 "Musical Mixtures" with Walt Fuller 10:30 News 10:35 "Musical Mixtures" 11:00 "Musical Mixtures" 12:00 Sign off Coming to work for the University in 1954 after 30 years of farming, Mr. Parsons was first janitor in Snow Hall before moving into Allen Field-House with the team in 1955. Since then it has been his chief domain. MIAMI, Fla., — (UP) — Right-handed Pitcher Lou Kretlow of the Kansas City Athletics, the defending champion, was the solid favorite today when a field that included "most valuable players" Mickey Mantle and Don Newcombe opened play in the National Baseball Players Golf Tournament. You have probably seen him more than any other man in the basketball court, but the sports writers fail to mention his part in the game in their glowing write-ups. "My chief duty is chasing dirt," he said, but office employees in the building said that Mr. Parsons is always on hand when an emergency arises and is always willing to do a favor. Sportswriters Don't Mention This Allen Field House Star A's Lou Kretlow Heads Golf Field He's Al Parsons, custodian of Allen Field House, the man behind the broom, who sweeps the court at half-time. Except on days before and after the games Mr. Parsons is the only custodian working in the field house. An avid sports fan,Mr. Parsons said basketball is his favorite sport. closely on the radio. Now that I'm janitor of the field house it's my responsibility to be here for all the games. In the last two years I have missed only two or three games," he said. The greatest enjoyment of his job, he said, comes from the contact he has with the football, basketball and track coaches and teams. "When I was on the farm I never made it to town for any of the games, but I always followed them An 18-hole medal round was scheduled today and then the field of 111 will pair off into match play by divisions for two rounds each on Saturday and Sunday. Kretlow's chief rivals in the 39-player big league division were expected to be Shortstop Alvin Dark of the St. Louis Cardinals, manager Al Lopez of the Chicago White Sox, and Pitcher Johnny Gray of Kansas City, last year's medalist. A mighty good hobby is collecting friends. DINE OUT TONIGHT You'll enjoy a snack or dinner with any of these Fine Restaurants! Old Mission Inn "The best hamburgers in town!" 1904 Mass. VI 3-9737 MOORE BURGER "Moore" Burger Drive-In We invite you to join us for: "Moore" Burgers, Malts & Shakes "Less" Burgers, Soft Drinks Open 11 to 11 Everyday 1511 W.6th. Ten - Forty Cafe Shrimp-Chops-Broiled Steaks Open Weekdays 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sundays 1310 W. 6th A. C. B. MILK MACHINE Big Buy [ ] For the best in hamburgers & malts. . . Before the show & after the game Highway 10 & 59—Car Service Only Weekdays 11 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. Fridays & Saturdays 'till 1:00 a.m. University Daily Kansan Page 5 Along the JAYHAWKER trail In 1954 KU was defeated by an average of 31 points per game. This was brought down to 16 points in 1955 and last season the Jayhawkers were defeated by an average of $2 \frac{1}{2}$ points per game. This looks like the year when just a little more improvement will begin to make a big difference in the final scores, but even this early, a look at the Kansas schedule is a bit discouraging. By GEORGE ANTHAN (Assistant Sports Editor of The Daily Kansan) To start things off, Kansas faces three 1957 bowl games in its first three games. Texas Christian University, Oregon State and Colorado (Cotton, Rose and Orange bowls, respectively) are one-two-three on the KU schedule. However, Mather thinks he has more depth than last season and he will be able to send in a core of tried veterans with an eager bench waiting for one of the starters to slip a little. Spring football training begins March 15 and Jayhawker football fans can look at the coming season with more optimism than in any year since Chuck Mather came to Kansas. At this stage Mather thinks he will start things off with Lynn McCarthy and Jim Letcavits at ends, Mike Gibson and Jim Hall at tackles, Paul Swoboda and Bob Krause at guard, Wally Strauch at quarterback, Charles McCue and Bob Robinson at halfback and Jerry Baker at fullback. At center Mather thinks John Wertzberger did very well last season. Wertzberger, who now weighs 230 pounds, will have to shave off a little weight. Kansas football fortunes, although at a low ebb for the past few years, have shown marked improvement. "The boys are more interested in their weight and keeping in shape this year than ever before," Mather said. "They are realizing more and more that speed is very essential in football these days. You have to be able to catch the other fellow." Homer Floyd and Bob Marshall will also be figuring in the Kansas football picture. Floyd, according to Mather, may be switched from fullback to left half while Marshall will remain at quarterback. After playing the three bowl teams Kansas will meet Iowa State. At this time the Cyclones are always especially tough. They are tough because no one thinks they will be tough and that's when they pull an upset. Following Iowa State Kansas will play conference foes Nebraska, Kansas State and Missouri. Of course, Bud Wilkinson and his Oklahoma Sooners will be around and although their balloon may burst any year now, we don't think Kansas will carry a pin sharp enough to do the job in 1957. Mather will be permitted 20 days to practice out of a 36 day period. Practice will begin on a Friday and from then on will be held on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday for five weeks. "We plan to scrimmage a great deal," says Mather. "However, we must improve our defense," he added. The Kansas offense in 1956 did real well. The team ranked sixth among Kansas teams in scoring and ground gaining. However, a squad that wants to win games must hold its opponents to one or two touchdowns. So Mather and the team have their work cut out for them. With an improved defense and offense at least as good as last last season's, Kansas could very well win six games in 1957. The deepest place in the Pacific Ocean is believed to be in the Marianas Trench, discovered June 14. 1951 after a sounding of 35,640 feet. One burial ground of the Wyandotte Indians is on a bluff in the main business district of Kansas City, Kan. Star-Studded Aggies In Final Indoor Here KU's undefeated track and field squad meets the star-studded Oklahoma A&M Cowpokes tonight in Allen Field House. The pole vault is scheduled to open the dual at 7 p.m. with the first running event at 8 p.m. Friday, Feb. 15, 1957 Eddie Roberts is the top A&M hurdler, having run the high hurdles in 13.8 and the lows in 23.8 last year during the outdoor season. Larry Graham won the conference half-mile last year in 1:56.6. Kim Ellis has continually jumped over 24 feet in the broad jump, while sophomore Bobby Crump leaped 23' 73" while in high school. Jorge Madamba has jumped 6-5 in the high jump. Easton is particularly worried about the dashes. The Aggies top spinner is Orlando Hazley who has dipped to :06.2 in the 60 yard dash. "We're going to have to come up and plug that hole in the dash," said Easton, "or they're going to snow us." Easton was well pleased with his squad that beat Michigan State, 88-53, at East Lansing Monday. "If we can continue to improve," he said "we stand an even chance to retain our conference championship." Coach Bill Easton expects this to be the Jayhawkers toughest dual of the season. The Cowpokes are thin in numbers, but carry brilliant individual performers. They have continually swept the Missouri Valley track championship during the past years. Last year they finished with a total of $91 \frac{1}{2}$ points compared to runner-up Houston's $33 \frac{1}{2}$. Particularly outstanding for the Jayhawkers in the recent dual was Jerry McNeal, who may be the greatest two-miler yet to come off Bill Easton's endless Kansas assembly line. McNeal won the two-mile in 9:06.1 to beat State's Selwyn Jones by 13 seconds. Jones is the NCAA 10,000 meters champion and record holder. This was the fastest time ever recorded by a Big 7 runner in the two-mile event. Leading the Aggie parade is J. W. Mashburn, a two time Olympic team member. He heads a team which will pit seven of last year's Valley's champions against Kansas. Bernie Gay and Jan Howell also uncoiled their all-time best indoor miles against the Spartans, 4:15.1 and 4:15.2 in a surprise 1-2 finish ahead of Henry Kennedy, NCAA steeplechase champion. Captain Lowell Janzen set a field house mark of 2:13.1 in the 1000, then came back in 1:55.3 behind Olympian Dave Lean in the half-mile. Hal Long will press Janzen in both races, having recorded times of 2:13.7 and 1:56.0. Louie and Larry Stroup, Jayhawk quarter mile twins, reached personal indoor bests of :50.1 at Michigan State. Ray Wyatt ran a :49.7 in the anchor carry of a 3:21.8 mile relay victory. In the field, Dave Tams has consistently vaulted over 14-foot in the pole vault. Kent Florke and Al Oerter carry KU's hopes to win the high jump, broad jump and shotput. Floerke plugged the gap left by the ineligible Bob Cannon in the high jump and has always been an excellent broad jumper. Oerter, Olympic discus champion, has been throwing over 52 feet consistently in the shotput event. The Fort Wayne Pistons Thursday switched their professional basketball franchise to Detroit in the game's first realignment in more than two seasons. Fred Zollner, millionaire industrialist, announced that the Pistons will begin a six-year contract at Olympia Stadium next October. With these stars the Jayhawkers hope to make the Aggies their seventh straight dual victim since bowing to Michigan last winter. Valley Falls, Kan., was first named Grasshopper Falls because of the abundance of grasshoppers in Kansas. Fort Wayne Pistons Switch To Detroit The Pistons, champions of the National Basketball Association's Western Division for two years, is currently leading the division, Detroit had rejected the pro basketball game a decade ago. Wichita is the nation's third largest aircraft center in employment; ranks first in production of personal aircraft. FRESHLY BAKED PIES The HOLIDAY INN presents its special carry-out pie service. Just call us and within an hour your pie will be ready to go. Almost any flavor available including apple, cherry, to go. Almost any flavor available including apple, cherry, blueberry, coconut cream, lemon, and others. To Carry Out Call VI 3-7991 One Hour Service Plan To Use Our Spacious Private Dining Room Holiday Inn Restaurant Jet. Hiway 10 and 59 on Iowa St. Use the Kansan Classified Want Ad Section to Get Best Results. A GOOD IDEA! "Chicken Every Sunday" Chicken 'N Dressing Casserole with French Fries, Salad, Rolls, Drink .1.50 EAT In the Blue Room, in your car, or this dinner at home but make it at... Open Fri. & Sat. 11 a. m.- 12 p. m. VIEWING GUIDE The Blue Hills Drive-In 1601 E.23rd. Open Sun. thru Thurs. 11 a.m.-11 p.m. A INDEPENDENT "On The Campus" Laundry & Dry Cleaners Located At Rowlands. 1241 Oread Rowlands K Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 15, 1957 PART OF THE HISTORY Art Museum To Feature One-Woman Show A one-woman show featuring the paintings of Sara Ann Schroeder, Lawrence Graduate student, will be presented to the public at 3 p.m. Sunday at the Museum of Art. (See picture.) Miss Schroeder has received several Charles U. Heuser scholarships and a scholarship for a year's study in Mexico. Merger Plan Discussed Also on display will be a Sarouk rug, given by Dr. Darrell T. Shaw of Cleveland, Ohio. A number of other interesting pieces on exhibit, include a suit of armor and large 15th century English wooden cabinet, part of the gift of Mrs. Fred Wolferman of Kansas City, Mo. The loan exhibition, "Art of the Aztec Empire," will also be on display in the lower floor galleries. Representatives of student religious groups met in a series of three seminars, held at Westminster House Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, to discuss the proposed merger plan. The groups are Westminster Student Fellowship, Methodist Student Movement, United Student Fellowship of the Congregational-Christian-Evangelical Reform Church, the Disciples Student Fellowship of the Christian Church and any other student groups which want to join. These seminars were held in accordance with seminars of college students throughout the nation. Clifford Tatham, Lawrence sophomore, suggested the formation of a protestant council to be a part of the Student Religious Council. Thinking more favorably of a plan for co-operation instead of union, the group appointed Patricia Reynolds, Takoma Park, Md., graduate student, to meet with one representative from each denomination and to write a proposed plan of cooperation. Supper And Bridge For University Club The University Club will hold a covered dish supper and bridge party at 6:30 p. m. Saturday in the club rooms. Hosts for the evening will be Mr. and Mrs. Roy A. Ziesenis, 1627 Rhode Island St., Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kirkpatrick, 623 Indiana St., and Mr. and Mrs. Tom McMinn, 611 Illinois St. Writes Detective Story James E. Gunn, managing editor of alumni publications, is the author of a 6,500 word story, "Pill Roller," in the April issue of Saint Detective magazine. Mr. Gunn, who was graduated from the William Allen White School of Public Information in 1947, has written many science fiction stories. He is the author of a novel, "This Fortress World," and the co-author of another, "Star Bridge." Princess Hep To Rock 'N' Roll LONDON — (UP) — Princess Margaret enjoyed a rock 'n' roll movie so much last night she took her shoes off, propped her stockinged feet on a rail and waved them in time to the music. The princess, on the town for the third night in a row, went to see "The Girl Can't Help it." Applied Mechanics Has Graduate Student The department of applied mechanics has its first graduate student. This is the first year that this department has offered a masters degree. Paul E. Wilson, Kansas City, Mo. who graduated from KU in February is now the first graduate student to enroll in the department. He is majoring in stress analysis. Firms Schedule Job Interviews Engineering students will be interviewed by the following companies in 111 Marvin next week: Menday—Phillips Petroleum Co. and Socony Mobil Oil Corp. Tuesday—The Texas Co., Pillsbury Mills, Inc., and Detroit Edison Co. Wednesday-Gates Rubber Co. The Texas Co., Wagner Electric Co., Missouri State Highway Commission, Bethlehem Stee lCorp., and Flour Products Co. Thursday—Schlumberger We11 Surveying Corp., Sylium Electric Corp., Boeing Ariplane Co., and Dowell, Inc. Friday—Boeing Inc. and Continental Oil Corp. Those interested should sign interview schedules in the dean's office, 111 Marvin, and pick up brochures and applications. Bradshaw Speaks At Junior College G. W. Bradshaw, professor of civil engineering, spoke at Kansas City, Mo. Junior College Thursday to freshmen interested in engineering. He told them about opportunities in various fields of engineering, scholarships available at the University for the engineering students and about a special co-operative program that has been set up by the School of Engineering and Architecture and various industries. "Modern Netherlands" will be the subject of a talk by Thomas R. Smith, professor of geography, at the Faculty Club, 5 p.m., Sunday. Hosts for the event will be Mr. and Mrs. George F. Jenks. Mr. Jenks is an associate professor of geography. Faculty Club To Hear Talk Ad Groups Sponsor Dinner Petitions Out For Senate Alpha Delta Sigma and Gamma Alpha Chi, professional advertising fraternities will sponsor a dinner at 7 p.m. in the Student Union, in connection with National Advertising Work Petitions for election to the Associated Women Students' Senate, governmental body for women on the campus, may be obtained from any member of the AWS House of Representatives. The study guide for the test will be given to petitioners at a meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in 205 Flint Hall. The test over the study guide will be 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 205 Flint Hall. Items for the official Bulletin must be brought to the Public Relations office, 222-A Streng, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to the Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. Petitions may be turned in at the dean of women's office or at the meeting Tuesday. Requirements for election to an office in the AWS Senate are: The president must be a senior or junior and have been in the Senate at least one semester. The vire president must be a junior or senior and must have been a member of the AWS House of,Representatives for one semester. The ASC Greek representative must be affiliated with a social sorority. The ASC Independent representative must be unaffiliated with any social sorority. The secretary must be a freshman. The treasurer must be a member of AWS. Official Bulletin Ph.D. French reading examination, 9 to 11 a.m. Saturday, 110 Fraser. Friday night services, 7:30 p.m., Jewish Community Center, 1409 Tennessee. Sociology Club, 4 p.m. 17 Strong Anx. E. Speaker: Carroll D. Clark "Jazz" M. Speaker: Jerry P. Reid Wesley Foundation church vocations beacon Center, Speaker; Miss Marguerite Twiem, secretary of missionary personnel, New-York. Personal conferences in after- Photophobia is a morbid fear of strong light. TODAY Roger Williams Fellowship study group, 9:45 a.m. First Baptist Church, 8th and Kentucky. Fellowship supper, 5:50 p.m. Speaker; Dr. Stanley Stuber. "Baptist Liahona Fellowship, 7:30 p.m., at the church. Worship service. Speaker: Charles Neff, minister from Independence, Mo. Museum of Art Record Concert, 2 p.m. A Museum. Rossini "Il Barbiere di Svizella." Kappa Phi meeting. 3 p.m., Wesley Foundation, Mrs. Irmgard Olteater will give an interpretive dance. Open meeting for all Methodist girls interested in join- Hillel cost supper. 5 p.m., Jewish Community Center, 1469 Tennessee. Speaker: Rabbi Myron M. Meyer of St. Joseph Mo. Supper, 50 cents. LSA (Lutheran Students Assn.) Supper. 5:30 p.m., Trinity Lutheran Church. Discussion. LSA Worship Service. 9:45 p.m., Danforth LSA Worship Service, 9:45 p.m., Danforth Chapel. Roger Williams Fellowship coffee hour. 8 p.m.. 1124 Mississippi. Second of a series of "Faculty Fireside" discussions. Chemists To Hear Synthesis Talk Dr. D. Gutsche of Washington University, St. Louis, will speak to the KU American Chemical Society at 4 p.m. today in 122 Malott on the chemical reactions involved in the synthesis of Colchicine. It has been found that colchicine has some effect on the control of cancer and Dr. Gutsche has been attempting to derive the material synthetically. It can be found free in nature, but has never been synthesized. The society will have a dinner in the Oread Room of the Student Union after the meeting. Correction Sally Newbert, Prairie Village freshman, was taken to Watkins Hospital Wednesday night instead of Miss Patricia Salyer, head resident at North College, as reported in Thursday's University, Daily Kansan. Miss Salyer telephoned the police. Miss Neubert was suffering from fatigue. The hospital reported she is getting along fine. Design Group To Topeka Plans for future field trips were discussed at the Interior Design Club meeting last night. Members will go to Topeka Thursday for a tour of the Carpenter home in West-boro. A poltergeist is a noisy ghost that is assumed as the explanation of rappings and other unexplained noises. 3 BRAVE MEN From 20th Century Fox in CINEMA SCOPE starring RAY MILLAND · BORGNINE on starring FRANK HINA DEAN LOVEJOY · FOCH · JAGGER Produced by HERBERT B. SWOPE, Jr. It happened ...but it can never happen again! Owl Prevue Sat. 11:15 p.m. SUNDAY GRANADA Set Interviews For Fall Positions Cont. Sunday 1 p.m. Interviews for students in the School of Education for positions in the fall will be held with the following school representatives in 118 Bailey: Saturday — Citrus Union High School, Azusa, Calif. M, Jay Blaha, assistant superintendent (secondary). Monday — Tulsa, Byron L. Shepard, assistant superintendent, (morning). Continuous Sat.-Sun. . Wednesday — Garden Grove, Calif., Alton R. Morse, assistant superintendent. (elementary). VARSITY Open 6:45 Weekdays Cloudy days and frequent rains in Norway's fjord country rule out drynig hay on the ground. The crop is spread on wires like laundry so breezes can get at it. V TODAY HIS GREATEST SINCE "HIGH NOON" GARY COOPER FRIENDLY PERSUASION AN ALLIED ARTISTS PICTURE Feat. Tonite at 7:15-9:30 NEWS-CARTOON VARSITY SPECIAL MIDNITE SHOW SATURDAY Open 11:00-Show 11:15 SPIN A DARK WEB FAITH LEE COLUMBIA PICTURE DOMERGUE - PATTERSON AFTER RONA ANDERSON · MARTIN BENSON PLUS Special Cartoon Show MaGoo vs. Roadrunner PLUS Comfort! Convenience! JAYHANER NEW ELEPHANT CUSHIONED CHAIRS Open 6:45 Weekdays Matiée Sat. 1:30-Nite 6:45 Continuous Sun. from 1:00 ENDS SAT Bill Haley in "Don't Knock The Rock" "Rumble On The Docks" 25 words K&E S Science Dean's c GRAY 1 pus, cor Call Bar BLUE S in Stud evening. Kansan badly c SUNDAY Lisa Gaye-Touch Counners "Shake Rattle and Rock" -Plus- Marla English in "Runaway Daughters" SUNDAY FRATER between Strong Fraternit 7370. BROWN hill son ciate it VI 3-394 TICKET steamsh about S Call MI Nationa. eraries Phone THREE nished. ing. Ai VI 3-12 Ger 214 Partic Job BENE Phone 4 Sun. Fel rium—T $2.50. T Kansas SUPE THE I M CO ED M Friday, Feb. 15, 1957 University Daily Kansan Page 7 ns in the titutions with the ves in CLASSIFIED ADS High Blaha second- We rent nationwide trailers any size, anywhere anytime CROFT TRAILER RENTAL CO. East 23rd VI 3-7377 Shep dent, Groveistant ON'T rains le out The laun- Y N RK B inner B ADS RST days e 6:45 a 1:00 BENSON Rock'' rocks'' 25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. nnners Rock" ters" LOST K&E SLIDE RULE. At the Military Science Bldg. Finder please return to Dean's office at Marvur Hall. 2-18 GRAY BILLFOLD, somewhere on campus, contains valuable papers. Reward Call Barbara Powell, VI 3-6556. 2-18 FRATERNITY RING. Lost somewhere between DU Fraternity House and Strong Hall. crest. gold black Oynx with crown. cred. Call Pat Bolen. VI 3-18730. BLUE SHEAFFER'S PEN. Left on table in Student Union Reading room Friday evening. Keep finder please return! Nightingale Business Office. (One end is badly chewed.) 2-18 BROWN 'HAT,' "Wakefield," lost on the hill sometimes this week. Would appreciate its return. Contact Karl Kohier, VI 3-3944. 2-19 TRANSPORTATION TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. Call Rose Gusmane. National Bur for information for itineraries and reservations. 8th & Mass. Phone VI -3-0152. tf FOR LEASE THREE ROOM APARTMENT. Unfurnished, on ground floor. Off street parking. Air conditioned. Ph. VI 3-2662 or 3-1277. 2-20 Parties, Pinnings, Weddings Job Application Photos Gene's Photo Service 2144 Ohio - VI 3-0933 Gene Smoyer LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students up to $500.00 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. 8331'% Mass. Phone VI 3-8074 for 1 day service EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS 2 BIG SHOWS Sun, Feb. 24 - 3:30 & 8:00 P.M. - Municipal Auditorium - Topeka, Adapter支付 - tickets $2-00 at the door $2.50. Tickets on sale at Walgreen Drug - 5th and Kansas and Mills Music - 325 Kansas. SUPER ATTRACTIONS PRESENT THE BIGGEST Show of SHOWFIT for 57 Allin Perron Fats DOMINO and his ORCH Bill DOGGETT Growing like a tree CLYDE McPhatter LAVERN Baker Fats DOMINO DOGGETT Bill THE BIGGEST SHOW OF STUDIOS 10.29 All in Person Fats DOMINO JOND & ORCH Bill DOGGETT OMNIE DULCROY FLYDE McPhatter LAVERN Baker ALL IN PERSON Chuck BERRY • Five KEVS The MOONGLOWS • ANN COLE The Five SATINS • Charlee BROWN Eddie Cooley DIMPLES • The SCHOOLBOYS Paul Williams EIG BAND MISCELLANEOUS SEWING to do of any kind. Ph. VI 3-6234. 2-18 FOR SALE LIVE GIFTS—Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs and cats. For pets we hire allotiers, fish, turtles chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. '50 MERCURY. New paint, rebuilt engine, good rubber. Must see to appreciate. 1145 Louisiana or call Jerry Old-VI 3-6700. 2-19 TUBE FREE with the purchase of practically new (only 250 miles) 670x15 Goodrich tire, price only $25. VI 3-1505 after 5 p.m. 2-19 BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Plastic, party supplies (ice pack, 6th and Vermont. Phone V-3-0350. NIKON S. CAMERA with 50, 35, 85 mm lenses. Call Bob at Vib I-1200 after 21-12-2016 TIME, LIFE & Sports Illustrated magazines. Special students' prices of $1 reg. sub. rate. Prompt service, buy now pay later, call VI 3-0124. tf NEW AND DIFFERENT Olympia portable typewriter. Choice: Single or two tone color and type style. Free demonstration. Phone Mr. Reams VI 3-1537 after 4 Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday 9:00 TENOR SAX. See at 1109 Ohio. At home 5:30 to 9:00 on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday evenings. 2-20 RENT A TAPE RECORDER Ideal for Skits, Parties, Dances Practicing Speech and Foreign Languages. Recording tapes & ac- HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP BOOKS For gifts and for your own library, Art, Architecture, Cook Books, Childrens Books, Modern Library. 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 THE BOOK NOOK FOR RENT TIRED OF WALKING UP THE HILL? Two rooms for boys one-half block from immediate. Phone privilege. Available immediately. Phone VI 3-5776 or see 1231 La. STUDIO APARTMENT. Attractively furnished with telephone for 1 or 2 boys in nice house. Very close to KU. Call VI 3-6996. 2-18 ROOM FOR MEN, Well heated, linenis furnished, large closet, room service. Adjacent to bath. Will rent single or double. 938 Missouri. 2-21 BUSINESS SERVICES TNPIST, experienced in theses, term papers, reports. Fast and accurate, student rates. Mrs. Betty Veqsti. 1935 Barker Ae. Phone VI 3-2001. tf TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka. 1191 Tenn. Ph. VI-3-1240. tf TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6657. 1106 La. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8368. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine. Phone VI 3-7645. tf Have your car lubricated the MOTO-SWAY WAY Special Spring Sale 49 Ford ... $ 99.00 48 Pontiac ... 99.00 47 Pontiac ... 139.00 51 Nash ... 179.00 50 Hudson ... 179.00 49 Ford Sta. Wgn. ... 199.00 50 Pontiac ... 199.00 POTTER'S "66" SERVICE 1401 W. 6th VI 3-9891 See them at Jayhawk Motors Open eve. 1040 Vt. FIELD ENGINEERS Electrical Petroleum Mechanical Geological Physicists AS A SERVICE COMPANY IN THE OIL INDUSTRY WE OFFER: Holy Bible Liberal Pay & 8 Benefits No Close Supervision Locations In 20 States Promotions From Within Outdoor Work Short Training Period See Your Placement Director For Particulars We Interview On. Your Campus Feb.21 Box 2175 Houston, Texas SCHLUMBERGER WELL SURVEYING CORP. Convocation, Mon., Feb. 18 Dr. Ferdinand M. Isserman "What is the World Like?" Feb.17-23 Religious Emphasis Week "IS RELIGION THE ANSWER" Mon.-Wed., Feb. 18-20 Coffee Hour:4:00 p.m. Music Room, Union Tues.-Thur, Feb. 19-21 All-Student Forum 5:30 p.m. Union Cafeteria Sponsored By Campus Religious Groups THE WINTER WEAR Take a 2-minute preview of your path to RCA engineering Specialized training program Earn a regular professional engineering salary as you work on carefully rotated assignments giving you a comprehensive view of RCA engineering. Your individual interests are considered and you have every chance for permanent assignment in the area you prefer. Your work gets careful review under RCA's advancement plan and you benefit from guidance of experienced engineers and interested management. Following training, you will enter development and design engineering in such fields as Radar, Airborne Electronics, Computers, Missile Electronics. For manufacturing engineers, there are positions in quality, material or production control, test equipment design, methods. You may also enter development, design or manufacture of electron tubes, semiconductor components or television. Direct hire If you are qualified by experience or advanced education, your interests may point to a direct assignment. The RCA management representative will be glad to help you. Many fields are open . from research, systems, design and development to manufacturing engineering . in aviation and missile electronics, as well as radar, electron tubes, computers, and many other challenging fields. ... and you advance Small engineering groups mean recognition for initiative and ability, leading on to advancement that's professional as well as financial. RCA further helps your development through reimbursement for graduate study under a liberal tuition refund plan. Now...for a longer look at RCA See your placement director about an appointment with an RCA engineering management representative who will be on campus... Wednesday, February 27 & Thursday, February 28, 1957 Talk to your placement officer today . . . ask for literature about your RCA engineering future! If you are unable to see RCA's representative, send your resume to: Mr. Robert Haklisch, Manager College Relations, Dept. CR-633 Radio Corporation of America Camden 2, New Jersey RCA NO RADIO CORPORATION of AMERICA Page 8 University Daily Kansas Friday, Feb. 15, 1957 —(Daily Kansan photo) THEY ARGUE FOR KU—And they're arguing to uphold the University's debating prowess at the invitational debate tournament today and Saturday at Emporia State Teachers College. From left, seated: Wilmer Linkugel, assistant debate coach; Kim Giffin, debate coach; Bay Nichols, Arly Allen, Lawrence freshmen: Ralph Seger, Topeka, Kenneth Irby, Fort Scott, Brad Lashbrook, Kansas City, Kan., Vince Riley, Ottawa, all juniors. Standing; Ted Barnes, Salina first-year law, assistant debate coach; Neal Logan, Garden City, Bill Summers, Wichita, Allen Hickey, Liberal, all sophomores; Bob Kimball, Kansas City, Kan., senior. Leadership Day Scheduled For Saturday The eight annual High School Leadership Day sponsored by the Associated Women Students will be held Saturday. Kansas high school girls attending the event will follow this schedule: 9 a. m., register; 10 a. m., general meeting; 11 a. m., d'scussion groups; 12:30 p. m., lunch and entertainment; 1:45 p. m., discussion groups; 2:30 p. m., KU and You. Tonight the girls will see the National Ballet of Canada in Hock Auditorium. The discussion groups will be on leadership techniques and activities on a large campus. Entertainment will be supplied by KU talent and will give an introduction to the University. bilities of leadership on a large collega campus. The purpose of High School Leadership Day is to acquaint next year's freshman women with the possi- Journalists To Tour Star Members of Sigma Delta Chi honorary journalism fraternity, will tour the Kansas City Star newspaper plant Tuesday. The group will attend a reception and dinner of the Kansas City Press Club at the Hotel Muehlebach that evening. Liberal Arts Graduates Are In Demand-Ulmer There are many more job opportunities for the graduate with a liberal arts education than most students realize, Gilbert Ulmer, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences said Thursday. "About five years ago we made an attempt to arrange interviews between students of the college and prospective employers," he said. "We had a large number of replies from the employers, but had a difficult time finding any students for them to interview." "I know of at least one firm which tries to hire its accounts from students who have not had any previous business training." The political science department "We have representatives from firms every year looking for non-specialized students," he said. "Even such firms as IBM, General Electric and Westinghouse are trying to find these students." Dean Ulmer said he thought the poor response on the part of the students was due primarily to an ignorance of the many firms which want persons with a general education rather than a specialized one. The Baptist heritage and its importance since the time of Roger Williams will be the subject of talks by the Rev. Dr. Stanley I. Stuber, general secretary of the Council of Churches of Greater Kansas City. He will speak at 11 a.m. and 5:50 p.m. Sunday in the First Baptist Church. Sunday is the founders day of Roger Williams Fellowship, an American Baptist organization. Baptist Heritage Is Subject Of Talks Ring fingers are pointing to simplicity. The Feature Ring Co. reports a growing demand for tailored-type diamond rings. White gold is more fashionable than yellow gold for settings. Women in the country favor conservative styles, while fancy shapes are more popular in cities. is planning to have an office for the placement of graduates in government jobs, Dean Ulmer said. He hoped the office could someday be enlarged to become a central placement bureau for the entire college. 800 To Take Scholar Exams About 800 high school students are expected to take preliminary tests for Watkins and Summerfield scholarships Monday and Tuesday, in nine Kansas high schools given by staff members of the Guidance Bureau. This year the tests are being given in conjunction with the Putnam Scholarships of Kansas State College. The candidates are nominated by their high school faculties. The University's Committee on Scholarships will choose approximately 70 finalists to invite to a 2-day session of testing and interviewing. The tests will be given in Great Bend, Colby, Dodge City, Stockton, Salina, Wichita, Manhattan, Lawrence and Kansas City, Kan. Will Speak In Salina To Faculty Confab Leonard H. Axe, dean of the school of business, will speak Saturday to the Five-Faculty Conference in Salina on "The Relation Between Professional and Liberal Education." The five schools to be represented are Friends University, Wichita; Bethel College, North Newton; McPherson College, McPherson; Bethany College, Lindsborg; and Kansas Wesleyan University, Salina. The site of the massacre of recruits near the sidewalk at 935 New Hampshire St. in Lawrence, is indicated by a stone marker. It was near that spot that Quantrill's guerillas shot down 20 unarmed boys during the raid of Aug. 21, 1863. Have You Ever Won a Loving Cup? HERE'S YOUR CHANCE! Enter the Kansan's Monthly Photo Contest Who? Any student or faculty member-A category for each. How? Bring your photos to The Daily Kansan Business office. Photos need not be mounted. Print your name, address and telephone number lightly on the backs. Enter as many times as you like. When? For the March contest, photos must be in by Feb.28. Sunday Chronicle George Link, Instructor of Journalism (far left) and Dale Bowers, Lyndon senior (far right) award John Rodgers, Paradise junior, his loving cup donated by Hixon's Studio. Rodgers is a member of the Sigma Chi social fraternity and a Business major. Enter Now! Any Subject, Any Pose, Any Picture This month's winning photos now on display in William Allen White reading room in Flint students nary field day, given ance givnam Cold by Uni- ships hists test- Great kton, Law- kchool way to Sa- Pro- tion." mented shita; Mc- 6eth- Kan- a. f re- New s in t was guer- boys 633. U.S. Not Isolated Isserman Says "We are far from an isolated people. We are part of the teeming mass of the world." That struck the keynote of Rabbi Ferdinand M. Isserman's talk at the all-student convocation this morning. His impressions of the world, gleaned from a 58,000-mile trip, were eloquently phrased by Rabbi Issserman, keynote speaker for Religious Emphasis Week. He is rabbi of Temple Israel in St. Louis, Mo. Speaking on "What the World Is" Speaking on "What the World - Like" Rabbi Issserman said, "Everyone in this world is attired in different garb, but they are concerned with the same things." "There are differences," he said, "but everywhere they all seek honor, dignity, and express their love for God." T. R. M. RABBI F. M. ISSERMAN Same God, Different Name I saw varied religions, but every- where people pray to the same God, though they call him by a different name, he said. "Everywhere love is the same, lovers are the same, and human beings the same," the rabbi continued. "We are working for a better world for our children and for our children's children until the end of their days," he said. Rabbit Isserman, who began his trip in the Far East and traveled He was impressed by the "tremendous energy" of the Japanese people and explained how they have endured great poverty and exhibited great energy and skill in rebuilding their country. Impressed by Japanese Rabbit Isserman said there is a "search for religion" in Japan today. Shintoism, a state religion, was the primary religion until World War II. Now that Shintoism has been destroyed the people are free and are searching for a new religion, he said. Of India, Rabbi Isserman said. "I think that under Nehru's guidance and leadership they will play an important role in the world's future." India is proud of her independence and is determined to have no alliances with other nations, he said. "It is a land of great contrasts, great art, and great religions" he added. He explained that the many religious cults in India have led to great religious tolerance. "There is no religious persecution in India." he said. Illiteracy and poverty are India's greatest problems, Rabbi Isserman said. He said that in Africa there is bound to be a change and that it will probably not be peaceful due to the attempt by the small majority of white men to subjugate the natives. No Peaceful Change He pointed out that it is not until one reaches Europe that he approaches a culture that is close to ours. "Europe is our culture," he said, "the whole North American continent is a projection of European civilization." Tuesday's faculty forum speaker will be Rabbi Myron Meyer, of the Temple-Adath Joseph. St. Joseph, Mo. His topic will be "Background of Prejudice." The forum will be held in the north end of the Student Union cafeteria. 100 Attend Reception, Start Religious Week Religious Emphasis Week was launched Sunday when nearly 100 persons attended a reception for visiting speakers at the Student Union. Coffee-hour discussions will be held at 4 p.m. each day through Thursday in the Music Room of the Student Union. Rabbi To Speak The speaker for Tuesday's coffee hour will be the Rev. M. C. Allen pastor of the First Baptist Church Lawrence. He will speak on "Religious Faith and Skeptici m." Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy delivered a welcoming address in which he pointed out the important role religion plays on the university campus. Humanities Lecturer Gives Talk Dr. Roland Bainton, visiting Humanities lecturer and professor of ecclesiastical history at Yale University, spoke to a faculty forum at noon today in the Student Union cafeteria. Dr. Werner Fallow, professor of religious education, Andover Newton Theological Seminary, Newton Center, Mass., spoke at a graduate luncheon at noon today in the Student Union. His topic was "Can Religion Save Civilization?" The first in a series of coffee hour discussions will be held at 4 p.m. today in the Music Room of the Student Union. Today's speaker will be Joseph G. Heard, supervisor of the college organization activities office of the First Church of Christ Scientist of Boston, Mass. He will speak on "The Religious Faith of the Christian Scientist." Discussions Begin Rabbi Mever will speak at the all student forum at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday in the north end of the Student Union cafeteria. His topic will be "What We Jews Believe." Daily hansan 54th Year, No. 87 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Monday, Feb. 18, 1957 Business, Engineering Deans Appointed Arthur Miller Indicted On Contempt Charges New deans for the School of Engineering and Architecture and the School of Business were announced today by the Board of Regents. The appointments will become effective July 1. WASHINGTON—(UP)—A federal grand jury today indicted Arthur Miller, playwright husband of Marilyn Monroe, on charges of contempt of Congress. Dr. McNown, 41, is the son of Prof. Emeritus and Mrs. W. C. McNown of Lawrence. He received the B. S. degree from KU in 1936 and the M. S. degree from the State University of Iowa in 1937. He was an instructor at the University of Minnesota while earning the Ph. D. degree, awarded in 1942. In 1951 he No announcement was made about a dean for the School of Law to succeed Frederick J. Moreau, whose resignation was announced Oct. 17, 1956. Dr. John S. McNown, professor of engineering mechanics at the University of Michigan, will succeed T. DeWitt Carr as dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture. Dean Carr became dean in 1947 after a long career in the Navy. The indictment accuses the 41-year-old playwright of unlawfully refusing to answer two questions asked by a subcommittee of the House Un-American Activities Committee last June 21. "Kansas Fortunate" Dr. James R. Surface, assistant of business administration at the Harvard Business School, will succeed Dr. Leonard H. Axe as dean of the School of Business. Dr. Axe, dean since 1947 and member of the faculty for 28 years, will become president of Kansas State Teachers College at Pittsburg. "Kansas is fortunate in reclaiming the talents of these men," Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy commented. "Both are young, native Kansans, married to Kansans, and are alumni of KU who have demonstrated outstanding professional competence at other institutions." I JAMES R. SURFACE received the doctor of science degree from the University of Grenoble, where he studied on a Fulbright fellowship. After a year of wartime research at San Diego, Calif., Dr. McNown became assistant professor at the University of Iowa in 1943. He was promoted to associate professor in 1947 and professor in 1952. He was associate director of the Iowa Institute of Hydraulic Research at the university from 1951 until joining the Michigan faculty as professor in 1954. Hydraulic Research Consultant Dr. McNown has been a hydraulic research consultant to the U.S. Bureau of Public Roads since 1949 and a consultant to the Sandia Corporation, Albuquerque, N.M., since 1954. He is a member of the executive committee for engineering mechanics of the American Society of Civil Engineers, and of the Council of the International Assn. for Hydraulic Research. The American Society of Civil Engineers has awarded Dr. McNown its J. C. Stevens award and Research Program prize. He has been a technical lecturer at Colorado A&M College, the universities of Lille, Grenoble, Toulouse and Poitiers in France, the University of Bogota, Colombia and the Ecole Polytechnique in Montreal, Canada. Business Dean from Salina Dr. Surface, 36, grew up in Salina. He earned an A. B. degree from KU in 1942. As an undergraduate he was president of Beta Theta Pi fraternity, editor of The Jayhawker and was elected to Owl and Sachem honorary societies for junior and senior men. After his discharge as a first lieutenant in 1945 after three years in the Marine Corps, he was a life underwriter in Salina for a year. Dr. Surface received the M. A. degree in political science from KU in 1948, making all A grades. Two years later he received the M.B.A. degree from the Harvard Business School. He remained on the Harvard staff and in 1953 was appointed assistant professor of business administration. He received the doctor of commercial science degree from Harvard in June, 1956. Bill Ross, MU guard (center) in Brewer Field House Saturday night at Columbia. Kansas won the game by a wide margin, 91-58. BALLET AT BREWER — An elusive basketball (at right) caused these graceful rebound poses by Maurice King, KU guard (left), and WARRENTON, Mo.—(UP)—Firemen and volunteer workers today resumed the grim task of searching the ruins of the Katie Jane Memorial Home, a home for the old people, for bodies buried in the debris of a fire in which at least 71 persons were missing and believed dead. 71 Believed Dead In Missouri Fire 10 The probe was called off Sunday night after 11 charred and unrecognizable bodies were brought out. The fire, which broke out Sunday afternoon during visiting hours, was one of the worst hospital fire disasters in the nation's history. Authorities believed more than 225 persons, including visitors, were in the building at the time. Most of the dead were trapped by smoke and flames in the upper floors of the 62-year-old, 3-story brick building. Although the fire was brought under control within hours, searchers were forced to halt the hunt for bodies until daylight because of the intense heat from the glowing ruins. Pay Fees Today, It's Last Chance Today is the last day for payment of fees. Anyone who has not paid his fees by tonight will no longer be considered enrolled in the University, James K. Hitt, registrar, sold. To be allowed to enroll today the student must state the reason he is late. He will then be re-enrolled and awarded $5 for late enrollment, $6 for late payment of fees, plus regular fees—all in advance. The cards may be picked up at the Registrar's Office and fees paid to the Business Office. Weather KANSAS—Cloudy tonight and Tuesday with snow in west and rain, possibly mixed with snow extreme south tonight, continuing Tuesday. Colder Tuesday and over cast and central portions tonight. Low tonight 20 to 30. High Tuesday in the 70s. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 18, 1957 What's Important— When you glance at a new car advertisement, what features of the car are usually stressed? If it is the average advertisement, it will stress such things as the smooth ride, ease in handling, power, compression-ratio, superchargers and above all horsepower. But less than 1 ad in 10 mentions the safety features and not one stresses these features. Safety Or Speed Apparatus? Statistics say no. In a National Safety Council study of 685,000 accidents during a one-year period, it was revealed that 87 per cent of these accidents occurred at 40 m.p.h or less. Even on the western part of the Pennsylvania Turnpike, where the speed limit is 70 m.p.h., 75 per cent of the accidents involved cars traveling at 50 m.p.h. or less Yet every day in this country more than 50 persons are killed as the result of auto accidents, and many others are injured. Is excessive speed entirely to blame? These figures indicate clearly that speed is not the big factor in causing accident injuries and fatalities. A safety writer states that most cars can kill passengers at 35 m.p.h., or bash in their faces in a mere panic-breaking operation. What, then, is the cause of bad injuries and fatalities in comparatively low speed accidents? The blame seems to lie in the car design. Some of the 1957 models still have hazardous knobs on the panels, sharp edges on some accessories under the seat, unsafe arrangement of door handles and window cranks and continued lack of center posts in four-door hardtops. Even in some of the higher-priced cars there are such shin-crushers as record players, heater casings and sharp heater panels. Still nearly all automobile designers fail to put much emphasis on safety features. A couple of companies have initiated crash research to help in safety advances, but few of the others seem very enthusiastic about following suit. Until the public shows enough interest in safety to make it a selling point, most car manufacturers aren't going to make any unnecessary effort to improve safety features as they need improved. Are car manufacturers entirely to blame for this lack of concern over safety? A lot of blame may well be placed on the general public. Few people who purchase new cars are vitally interested in the safety features offered. It's up to the public to recognize the need of the safety features, and then demand it as a standard feature in every car they purchase. Kansas Water Problem- —Del Haley You Can Help Solve It (Editor's note: This is the last in a series of three editorials on the Kansas water problem.) Kansas, itself, will have to participate if it is to share in the future industrial development and increase or maintain its level of prosperity. Kansas must give more than it has in the past. The 1944 Federal Flood Control Act requires the Chief of Engineers and the Secretary of Interior to submit plans and proposals to affected states for comment and recommendations. The act also requires state cooperation with the federal government in its investigations. Essentially, the State of Kansas has commented, recommended and cooperated. Aside from trips to Washington to clamor for federal aid in this drouth stricken or flood stricken area as the case may be, it has taken little positive action. legislation behind them to execute it. The state should make every effort to encourage competition among local and private interests, but if they fail to make adequate progress, the state government should be prepared to offer a financial program of its own. The Water Resources Board is a step in the right direction. Once we have a state water plan, once we have the basic facts of the problem, we will be able to act. When that time comes the state should be ready to step into the plan with the proper The water problem is one that confronts the entire population of Kansas, for although the water may be unevenly distributed. the problem itself permeates the whole economy. From this viewpoint, in a real sense the water problem belongs to the whole of the United States. Twenty-eight of the 48 states are currently struggling against drouth. With the exception of a few western states, all of them are plagued with periodic floods. But here in the Midwest, with virtually all of Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Texas going up in a gigantic cloud of dust, emergency aid from the federal government is only palliation. The long-range solution rests with the individual states and their citizens. This includes you. —Dale Morsch Not long ago a Kansas City TV station was bombarded with a deluge of letters enquiring the name of the "beautiful music used as the theme song of a late evening music program. Music By Mantovani "Faith," (Evans, Damercell; Huddleston) played by Mantovani and his orchestra is the name of that music which caused so many inquiries. Recorded in London, this hi-fi long playing recording (London, $3.98) is appropriately titled "An Enchanted Evening with Mantovani." Side 1 begins, of course, with Rodgers' and Hammerstein's "Some Enchanted Evening," followed by the old favorite "Tell Me That You Love Me Tonight" (Bixio). The popular German song "When the Lilac Blooms Again" (Doelle Mair) livens the tempo, but remains in the same dreamy vein. Also on side one are "Symphony" (Alstone, Tabet; Bernstein, Lawrence), "Armoureuse" ("So Madly in Love," by Berger) and "Agnes Waltz" (Hannah, Williams, Kennedy). Mantovani's careful choice of music to fit a certain mood and his brilliant orchestrations create forty minutes of musical relaxation. Side 2 begins with a light waltz "Belle of the Ball" (Anderson). The strains of "Speakeasy" (Gensler, Murphy; Simon) are as picturesque as their title. Franz Lehar's "Gypsy Love Waltz" blends remarkably well into the spell cast by some of the other, more popularized compositions. Other selections include "The Whistling Boy" (Stewart), "Faith" (Evans, Damerell; Huddleston), "Die Schonbrunner Waltz" (Lanner and "Czardas" (Monti). Mantovani's ability to take well-known compositions, regardless of how often they have been heard, and weave them into a mood is remarkable. The perfect balance of his arrangements are similar to Puccini's orchestrations of his own works. For soothing dinner music or a pleasant background for study, conversation or reading, this recording fills the bill. Jim Tice Daily Transan Extension 376, business office Memorial and Dale Press Association. Associated College Press Represented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. News service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturday. Published in Lawrence and examination periods. Entered as second-class-matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan. post office under act of March 3, 1879. University of Kansas student newspaper twice weekly in the biweekly, 1904, triday week, 1908, daily. Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 251, news room Extension 251, news room Extended 275, business office NEWS DEPARTMENT Kent Thomas NEWS DEPARTMENT Kent Thomas ... Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Jerry Dawson ... Editorial Editor Jerry Thomas, Jim Tice, Associate Edi- ation tors. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Date Power Bulge. Dale Bowers...Business Manager Dave Dickey, Advertising Manager; John Hedley, National Advertising Manager; Harold Metz, Classified Advertising Manager; Comboy Brown, Circulation Manager Two Cents' Worth We have spent much of our valuable time solving for your benefit Old Gold Tangle Schools Tiebreaker puzzles Nos. 1 and 2 (re Daily Kansan, Feb. 6). The names of the two schools are: No. 1: Tnoennigbn, a "leading experimental college for women." No. 2: Xerni Tathstics, whose "present name dates from 1902." P Another public service of the University Daily Kansan. Dawson We have decided that French I would be a snap. "Coup d'-etat" obviously means "put the cat in its cage." After looking over the U.S. attorney general's list of subversive organizations, we are wondering how soon we can renew our membership in the KuKus with impunity. A movie advertisement for "3 Brave Men" proclaims "it happened . . but it can never happen again." They must not have much faith in our generation. We note that Dmitri Shepilov is no longer Soviet foreign minister. Perhaps he will be appointed ambassador to Siberia. Jerry Dawson You, Too, Can Get Army Duty, Gals Ad booki. A new program of summer training with salary and no obligations, to female college juniors has been announced by the Women's Army Corps. The program provides four weeks of summer reserve training, "on the job," to show interested women what is available to them. Training for the program will be from July 14 to Aug. 10 at Ft. McClellan, Ala. *Applications must be in to the Fifth Army by May 1. Applications may be made at 607 Massachusetts St. any Tuesday or Thursday morning, or may be arranged by telephone after 6 p.m. every day. GOLFING On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "Barefoot Boy With Cheek," etc.) DIARY OF A COED MONDAY: Prof Pomfritt sprang quiz in English lit this morning. If Shakespeare didn't write Canterbury Tales, I'm back in the steam laundry... Lunch at the house - turkey hash. Question: how can we have turkey hash when we never had turkey?... Smoked a good, natural Philip Morris after lunch. Yum, yum!... Played bridge in the afternoon. When game was over, Mildred Olliphant stabbed me several times with hatpin. Must learn weak club bid... Dinner at house - lamb hash. Question: how can we have lamb hash when we never had lamb?... Smoked a Philip Morris after dinner. Good-O! - no filter, no foolin'!... Chapter meeting at night. Motion made to abolish capital punishment for pledges. Motion defeated... Smoked some more Philip Morrises. Natural! Dreamy!... And so to bed. TUESDAY: Faculty tea. Spilled pot of oolong on Dean of Women. She very snappish. Offered her a Philip Morris. Still snappish. Offered skin graft. No help... Dinner at Kozy Kampus Kafe - 14 hamburgers. But no dessert. Have to watch waistline... And so to bed. WEDNESDAY: Got our marks in English lit quiz. Lucky for me Shakespeare wrote Canterbury Tales! ... Date with Ralph Feldspar. Purely platonic. Ralph wanted to talk about love trouble he's been having with Mady Vanderklung. I said things were bound to improve. Ralph said he hopes so because the last four times he called on Mady she dumped vacuum cleaner bag on him. Smoked Philip Morris. Yumm! Dinner at house—bread. That's all; just bread. ... And so to bed. THURSDAY: Three packages from home — laundry, cookies, records. So hungry I ate all three. .. Quiz in American history. If James K. Polk didn't invent cotton gin, I'm in big trouble. .. Had afternoon date with Erwin Trull, pre-med. Nice boy but no loot. Took me to see another appendectomy. Ho-hum! .. But we had Philip Morrises afterwards. Goody, goody, gumdrops! .. Dinner at house. Big excitement — Vanessa Strength announced her engagement. While girls flocked around to congratulate Vanessa, I ate everybody's mackerel. .. Then smoked a good, natural Philip Morris. Divino! .. And so to bed. SURGERY GONNY CORO -- took me to see another appendectomy FRIDAY: Got our marks in American history quiz. Was dismayed to learn that James K. Polk did not invent cotton gin. He wrote Canterbury Tales... Odd!... Lunch at the house — bread hash. . . Philip Morris after lunch. Grandy-dandy!... Spent afternoon getting dressed for date tonight with Norman Twonkey. Norman is tall, dark, loaded — a perfect doll! Only thing wrong is he never tells girl where he is going to take her. So I put on a bathing suit, on top of that an evening gown, and on top of that a snowsuit. Thus I was ready for a splash party, dance, or toboggan slide... So what do you think happened? He entered me in a steeplechase, that's what! SATURDAY AND SUNDAY: Days of rest, play quiet, meditation, and - aaah! - Philip Morris!... And so to bed. © Max Shulman, 1957 Coeds and, of course, eds too in your busy campus week, a companion ever-constant, ever-true, and ever-welcome is today's new, natural Philip Morris Cigarette, made in regular and long size by the sponsors of this column. Orchestra Darkens Ballet's Bright Points Page 3 Celia Franca, in the role of Swanhilda in Delibes' "Coppelia," relieved an air of skepticism created by the unprofessional renditions of the orchestra when the National Ballet of Canada appeared Friday evening in Hoch Auditorium. Combining Miss Franca's performance with that of Glen Gibson and Ray Moller, the second ballet was decidedly the best. The lead dancers were amply supported by the mazurka dancers and Frances Greenwood's exacting imitations of the doll, Coppelia. Dancers Tightly Knit Dancers Tightly Knit The dynamic dancing of Miss Franca held the audience as well as the dancers in a tightly knit group. Clean costumes and vivid settings created, an air of professionalism to which most of the show conformed Orchestra director, George Crum, did his best to keep the orchestra with the dancers. It sounded as though he was struggling with several not-too-good sight readers in the brass section. Changes in moods and temps kept the audience interested in Act IV of Teachikovsky's "Nutrieracker Suite." The Bouffons, Lawrence Adams, Harold DeSilva and Robert Ito, did their dance on bended legs and received an enthusiastic response from the audience. Lilian Jarvis and Earl Kraul combined talents to create a ballet duet in the first of the Suite. "Coppelia" is the story of a doll and her maker, Dr. Coppelius, who tries to bring her to life. Frantz becomes infatuated with the doll even though he is betrothed to Swanhilda. Story Of Doll Films On Washington Next In Bailey Series Two films on George Washington from the television series "You Are There" will be shown at 4 p. m. Wednesday in 3 Bailey. The films, "Washington's Farewell to His Officers" and Washington Crosses the Delaware," are narrated by Walter Cronkite. Be it ever so homely, there's no face like your own. It's hard to get ahead in this world without one. Wanhilah reveals to Frantz that the doll is lifeless and the lovers run away. Dr. Coppelius is left alone and heart-broken. Act IV of the "Nutcracker Suite" is a visit of a little girl, Clara, to the Kingdom of Sweets by the Nutcracker, who has turned into a prince. The different dances depict the lives in this kingdom. Four women from organized houses will be selected to appear on the Rock Chalk Revue program, Wallace Richardson, Park Ridge, Ill. junior, publicity chairman, said today. Wanted: Girls With Poise, Etc. A candidate will represent each organized house in the competition. The name and picture of house candidates should be taken to the KU-Y office by 5 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 20. University Daily Kansan The girls will introduce some of the skits in a variety show fashion. They will be judged on poise, speaking voice, and appearance. The entries will be judged by the chairmen of the Rock Chalk Revue committees. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results Monday, Feb. 18, 1957 Debaters Win Trophies At Emporia Tourney The University debate squad won three top trophies Friday and Saturday at the second annual Emporia State College forensic tournament. Competing in the tournament with 230 students from 34 schools in eight states, the KU squad was awarded the division sweepstakes trophy on the basis of points, having an all-team record of 27 victories and 8 losses. Kenneth Irby, Fort Scott, and Ralph Seger, Topeka both juniors, won second place in the senior division with a record of eight-won, 2-lost. Southern Illinois was the winner. In the junior division, Neal Logan, Garden City, and William Summers, Wichita, both sophomores, placed third, losing to Hutchinson Junior College in the semi-finals. They had a record of six victories and two losses. Other KU debaters in the tournament were Robert Kimball, Kansas City, Kan, John Knightly, Hutchinson, seniors; Jack Gorelick, Kansas City, Kan., James Riley, Ottawa, juniors; Don Bowen, Salina, Allen Hickey, Liberal, sophomores; Ray Nichols, Lawrence, and Evelyn Komarek, Ellinwood, freshmen. MORRISON BLAIR INDEPENDENT "On The Campus" Laundry & Dry Cleaners Located At Rowlands 1241 Oread Rowlands K Religious Emphasis Week—Feb.17-23 "IS RELIGION THE ANSWER" Monday, February 18 4:00 p.m. Coffee Hour—Student Union, Music Room Speaker: Mr. J. G. Heard Tuesday, February 19 Topic: "Where Art Thou? A Christian Scientist Answers" 4:00 p.m. Coffee Hour—Student Union, Music Room Speaker: Rev. M. C. Allen leading "Skeptic's Corner" Topic:"Religious Faith and Skepticism" History Faculty and History Graduate Students Meeting Student Union, Oread Room 5:30 p.m. All Student Forum_Cafeteria North End Speaker: Rabbi Myron M. Meyen Topic:"What We Jews Believe" Speaker: Dr. Roland Bainton 8:00 p.m. Humanities Lecture—Bajley Auditorium Speaker: Dr. Roland H. Bainton Topic: "Erasmus . . . Amid the Currents of Renaissance and Reformation" 4:00 p.m. Coffee Hour—Student Union, Music Room Speaker: Dr. Martin H. Scharlemann Topic: "The Religious Faith of a Philosopher" Wednesday, February 20 5:30 p.m. All Student Forum—Cafeteria, North End Speaker: Rev. John H. Rosebaugh Topic: "The Church and Religious Faith" 8:00 p.m. Panel Discussion — Bailey Hall Auditorium Speakers: Dr. W. Stitt Robinson, moderator; Dr. Roland H. Bainton, Rabbi Myron M. Myer, Msgr. George Towle Topic: "Is Religion the Answer?" AME Youth Fellowship Baptist Student Union Christian Endeavor Christian Science Org. Christ's Ambassadors Disciples Student Fellowship Sponsored by these Hill Religious Groups EUB Youth Fellowship Free Methodist Youth Gamma Delta Hillel Kansas Canterbury Assn. KU Christian Fellowship KU-Y Liahona Fellowship Lutheran Student Assn. Newman Club Roger Williams Fellowship United Student Fellowship Wesley Foundation Westminster Fellowship Young Friends Roger Williams Fellowship Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday. Feb. 18. 1957 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By GEORGE ANTHAN (Assistant Sports Editor of The Daily Kansan) What's this Jay Watchers idea we've been kearing about lately? Most people know that this group, which was incorporated in the office of the secretary of state in Topeka Friday, is trying to raise funds to telewise one of KU's remaining out-of-town games and two games at the NCAA Tournament in Dallas, Texas. No Knowledge of Cost No Knowledge or Cost Most money will be needed much money will be needed. Even Jay Watcher-officials do not know how much money will be needed. Jay Barrington of WDAF, one of the stations which presumably would do the televising, says it would cost from $10,000 to $15,000 to televue the Kansas-Kansas State basketball game. We feel the price is outlandish. We don't think KU students would or should put that kind of money into a television broadcast. However, according to Bryce Cook, one of the men who helped hatch the Jay Watchers idea, that much money may not be needed. In fact, the K-State game probably will not be televised—the KU-Colorado game at Boulder probably will. We were getting confused too but Cooke told us that the cost of wires between Topeka and Manhattan would be about $8,800--after the one broadcast which the Jay Watchers would help pay for, these wires would be left to our dear friends at Kansas State for use by them whenever they pleased, compliments of Kansas University basketball fans. Sorry, we don't go for that. Costs Less for Colorado But the picture changes. Cooke says the cost of televising the Colorado game would be less than the cost of the K-State game because wires are already available between Boulder and Topeka. But where is the money coming from anyway? Certainly no more donations from KU students. They have given enough (about $900) in proportion to the potential audience which they represent. Advertisers—that's the answer. But advertisers hesitate to put up that much money just to present their product to a rather limited audience only once. Jay Barrington of WDAF says, "I don't know, the Jay Watchers will need a combination of both advertising and donations but there probably will not be enough of either one at the right price." Only Voluntary Contributions According to Eugene Morgan, Kansas City Alumni Association president, the Jay Watchers are trying to raise money entirely by voluntary contribution to supplement possible advertisers." Kansas City, Kansas, Chamber of Commerce officials say they received a letter from the Jay Watchers but George Marstall, Chamber official says, "I think it's silly. We are always in need of funds for our own civic projects and for KCK interests." Ben Craig, an official in charge of membership at the Kansas City, Kansas, Chamber, says the literature he received from the Jay Watchers stated that "They were trying to raise some fantastic figure like $60,000." According to Morgan, the alumni official, "the way to raise the money would be for about 200 KU students to make a concentrated effort in the Kansas City area." Sorry, we can't see 200 of our fellow students getting so enthused that they migrate to Kansas City for a day of fund raising. Alumni Can't Act Roy Edwards, Kansas City, Kansas, member of the board of the KU Alumni Assn. says, "Too many conflicts. I doubt if the alumni will be able to do anything. They have their hands full trying to carry out other projects such as the Greater University fund drive that was just completed. Every day must count and so far all we've heard is what we have read." Dr. John Billingsley, another Kansas City, Kansas, alumni who is active in the group says, "T'd rather go to a game myself, otherwise, not interested." The student body has donated enough. So far even that has probably hurt the chances of other worthwhile drives. As far as our dime or maybe even dollar goes, we think we'd just rather apply it toward finding a cure Three Records Broken By Kansas Track Squad KU's track and field team continued its unbeaten record in dual meets this year by gaining a surprisingly easy 67-37 victory over Oklahoma A&M in Allen Field House Saturday night. The Jayhawkers swept four events and shattered three field house records in recording their fourth victory of the year. Jerry McNeal continued to display ability which could make him one of KU's all-time greats as a distance runner, winning the two-mile in 9:07.7 and breaking his own mark of 9:10.3. Lowell Janzen of Kansas broke the 880-yard run mark by a full second in 1:54.6. Kansas' mile relay team of Larry Stroup, Mike Cummins, Bob Franklin and Ray Wyatt beat the existing field house record by two-tenths of a second, finishing in 3:24.3. Ken Covert of the Aggies set the only new record for the visitors when he won the 440-yard dash in :50.1 to beat the old record by one tenth of a second. Eddie Ray Roberts, A&M hurdler, tied the 60-yard high hurdle mark of :07.5. Mile Run—1. Howell, (KU); 2. Gay, (KU); 3. Schroeder, (KU). 4:19.0. The summary: Pole Vault--Tams, (KU); 2&3; Lewis and Potts, (KU). 13-10. 60-yard Dash—1. Hazley, (A&M); 2. Covert, (A&M); 3. Kingslover, (A&M); .06.3. 440-yard Dash—1. Covert, (A&M); 2. Wyatt, (KU); 3. Larry Stroup, (KU). .50.1. (New record. Old record held by Chuck Folsum, Okla, .50.2. 1956.) High Jump—1. Looper, (A&M); 2. Floerke, (KU); 3. Frisbie, (KU); 6-2 5-8. 60-yard High Hurdles—1. Roberts 60-yard High Hurdles—1. Roberts for the cancer that is slowly killing the 23-year old wife of a University of Kentucky basketball player or maybe the polio that killed a 12-year old girl we used to know last summer. Advertising money is what this idea needs. If it gets that it is fine but if not . . . well good luck anyway. The first world series game was played in 1882. LOUIE, THE LOUSE IT'S FOR REAL! A He strolled through a keyhole into my house, A distressed, well-behaved man. He strolled through a keyhole into my house, A dignified, well-bred upper-class louse; He smiled in a most superior way And said, "Man has just about seen his day. If you'll take my advice for what it's worth Treat insects nice, they'll inherit the earth! Try to be beyond reproach In your dealings with the roach . . Bedbugs, ants and spiders, too. Don't forget . . . WE'RE WATCHING YOU!' MORAL: Well . . . until Louie takes over, take your pleasure BIG. Smoke Chesterfield . . . and smoke for real! Packed more smoothly by ACCU-RAY, it's the smooihest tasting smoke today. (A&M); 2. Tillman, (KU); 3 Freeman, (KU). :07.5. (Tes record held by Frazier, Okla., 1957.) 880-yard Bum—1, Janzen, (KU); 2. Long (KU); 3. Gay, (KU), 1:54.6. (New Record. Old record held by Pete Gray, Mich. State, 1:55.6.) Two-Mile Run--1. McNeal, (KU); 2. Schmidt, (KU); 3. Crawford, 9:07.7. (New record. Old record held bv McNeal. KeU: 9:10.3. 1957.) 60-yard Low Hurdles-1. Roberts (A&M); 2. Freeman, (KU); 3. Tillman, (KU). :07.0. Chesterfield CIGARETTES BARRATT & HONDA TANKORES GAS MANE SAYO Smoke for real . . . smoke Chesterfield $50 for every philosophical verse accepted for publication. Chesterfield, P.O. Box 21, New York 46, N.Y. Liggett & More Tobacco Co. Barbara Richardson Delta Delta Delta Mile Relay — 1. KU, (Larry Stroup, Cummins, Franklin, Wyatt.) 3:24.3. (New record. Old record held by Oklahoma. 1956. 3:24.5.) Broad Jump—1. Ellis, (A&M); 2. Floerke, (KU); 3. Mastin, (KU). 22-7½. Wearing a cotton sheath dress and matching sweater from... Shot Put-1. Oerter, (KU);2. Coble, (A&M); 3. Claiborne, (KU). $52 - 7\%$ . Rohan, Madhuri COACH HOUSE Sports & Accounting 6312 Brookside, Kansas City On the Campus, Lawrence Swiss Capture Bobsled Title ST. MORITZ, Switzerland—(UP) —Switzerland's world champion crew, with Hans Zoller at the control, captured the four-seater title in the Swiss bobsled championships Sunday with an aggregate time of 2:34.91 for two runs. Golf was invented in Scotland in the 14th century. The first professional football game was played Aug. 31, 1895. SITA Have a WORLD of FUN! Travel with SITA Unbelievable Low Cost Europe 60 Days from $525 Orient 43-65 Days from $998 Many tours include college credit. Also low-cost trips to Mexico $169 up, South America $699 up, Hawaii Study Tours $528 up and Around the World $1398 up. ASK YOUR TRAVEL AGENT 332 S. Michigan Ave. Chicago 4. HA 7-2557 SITA "WE FIND A CHECKING ACCOUNT THE SAFE CONVENIENT WAY TO KEEP MONEY RECORDS!" PETER AND KATHRYN Start your thrifty-check checking account with us today. You can make deposits by mail and pay all your bills by check. Youill always have a record of your exact balance. Book of 20 personalized checks----$1.50 Douglas County State Bank The Bank of Friendly Service 900 Mass. Member F.D.I.C. It's Oklahoma's Turn To Face Wilt, KU Zone Probable Starters Page 5 Kansas Ht. P. Ht. Oklahoma Loneski (6-4½) F (6-6½) King Elstun (6-3) F (6-5½) Schwall Chamberlain (7-0) C (6-8) Stoermer Parker (5-11) G (6-0) Claiborne King (6-2) G (6-3) Hudson A brawny new starting forward, Ron Loneski, and a zone defense will be two new items on the Kansas basketball team which Oklahoma will have to face tonight in Allen Field House. The Jayhawkers will be trying for a season sweep of the Oklahoma series after having already defeated the Sooners twice, once in tournament play, 74-58 and then had to fight a battle down to the last minute to pull a 59-15 victory. out of the fire at Norman. Overwhelm Missouri. 91-58 A crowd of 13,000 is expected to be on hand for the tipoff at 7:35 p.m. Overwhelm Missouri, 91-58 The Jayhawkers got by another stumbling block in their drive toward the Big Seven championship with an overwhelming 91-58 victory over Missouri Saturday night at Columbia. Getting the maximum from a highly effective zone defense plus Wilt Chamberlain and Ron Loneski, the Jayhawkers topped the Tigers in 'every phase of the game. Even in the free throw department where Missouri leads the league, Kansas held a 64-45 per cent advantage. While Wilt scored 32 points and captured 20 rebounds, the entire squad got into the act with all 12 men seeing action and only Lynn Kindred and Monte Johnson failing to score. The Tigers were never able to muster a threat, thanks to the great first half work of Chamberlain who scored 15 points and took 12 rebounds and Loneski who added 14 points and 11 rebounds. Wilt left the game with 7½ minutes to play needing only four points to break the Brewer Field House record of 36 points set by the Tigers' Norm Stewart. Take Lead Early It was Maurice King's long jump shot with three minutes gone in the game that overcame the last Tiger lead and moved the Jayhawkers ahead, 7-6. From then on things got steadily worse for the Tigers as the Jayhawkers used their superior rebounding to set up easy scores and ended the evening with a 67-37 advantage in the rebounding department. IM Scores Fraternity A—ATO 44, Phi Psi 40. Independent A—Oread 35, Prelock 32; Hookers 57, Scrubs 42. Fraternity C—DU (1) 18, Pm Delt (4) 17; Phi Gam (5) 36, Phi Delt (1) 31; Phi Psi (2) 44, SAE (1) 1; Phi Gam (3) 29, ATO (2) 19; Phi Psi (3) 24, Beta (2) 21; Phi Gam (2) 34, Delta Chi (2) 29; Phi Psi (1) 39, Lambda Chi (1) 20; Phi Gam (1) 40, Kappa Sig (1) 19. No games today. A Skeleton Sled Speed Mark ST. MORITZ, Switzerland —(UP) —Douglas W. Connor of Canada, the world skeleton sled champion, broke his own track record on the cresta run with a time of 56 seconds flat for an average of 54 miles per hour Sunday. Ty Cobb holds the major league baseball record for stolen bases in one season with 96. KU Swimmers Lose To Buffs The Kansas Jayhawker swimming team drew its second loss of the season in a close contest with Colorado at the Robinson Gymnasium pool Saturday afternoon by a score of 47 to 39. The very first event of the afternoon was a preview of things to come for the Jayhawkers. In the 400 yard medley relay KU anchor man Chuck Edwards was beaten to the finish line by inches. In winning the event Colorado set a new pool record of 4:25.7. The old record of 4:42.0 was set by Kansas State. Perhaps the high point of the afternoon for Kansas fans was the performance of freshman Jared Piety in the 440 yard freestyle. Piety virtually ran away from the rest of the field, and won the race by more than 30 yards. But since he is a freshman and not eligible for varsity competition, Piety's first place did not count in the point totals. KU coach Chuck Edwards said that, "as usual Colorado was tough but we weren't quite deep enough. We need about four more good boys. The Results: 400-yard medley relay—1, Colorado; 2, Kansas (Kreye, Clevenger, Hill, Edwards). Time: 4.25.7. New pool record. 220-yard freestyle—1, Sheff (C); 2, Milledge (K); 3, Greenly (C). Time: 2:1.9 60-yard freestyle = 1, Edwards (K); 2, Dowdatsky (K); 3, Bodin (C); Time (3: 19) 200-yard Butterfly—1, Cleverenger (K) ; 2, Mills (C); 3, Priblebr (C). Time: 242.5. 4, Anderson (C) 209.3 points; 2, Matthews (K) 208.4 points; 3, Orgillue (C), 169.5. 100-yard freestyle—1, Hill (K); 2, Milledge (K); 3, Knudson (C). Time: 60.5. 200-yard backstroke — 1, Bodin (C); 2, Allen (C); 3, Kreye (K). Time: 2:35.6. 440-yard freestyle—1, Greenly (C); 2, Sheff (C); 3, Peterson (K). Time: 5:38.5. 200-yard breaststroke—1, Braeske (C); 2, Chevenger (K); 3, York (C). Time: 2:39.5 400-yard freestyle relay — 1, Kansas (Hill; Hill); 2, Colorado; Time: 3:58.2 Bobby Jones is the only golfer in history to win the U.S. amateur and open championships and British amateur and open championships in the same year. Monday, Feb. 18, 1957 University Daily Kansas Emporia State Into CIC League Lead Emporia State took over the lead in the CIC basketball struggle, but St. Benedict's still is in the running. Two victories last week pushed Emporia State to a 7-1 record. Just a notch away is the Atchison team with a mark of 6-1. Emporia State has two league games left while St. Benedict's has three. St. Benedict's meets Pittsburg Wednesday night in its only league meeting this week. The leaders have one conference contest this week, tangling with Washburn Friday. FRESHLY BAKED RIES The HOLIDAY INN presents its special carry-out pie service. Just call us and within an hour your pie will be ready to go. Almost any flavor available including apple, cherry. blueberry, coconut cream, lemon, and others. To Carry Out Call VI 3-7991 One Hour Service Plan To Use Our Spacious Private Dining Room Holiday Inn Restaurant Jct. Hiway 10 and 59 on Iowa St. ENGINEERS- APPLY NOW for General Chairman and Business Manager of 1957 ENGINEERING EXPOSITION Leave Applications at Office of Dean Carr by 5 p.m. Tuesday, February 19 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 18, 1957 Next Geophysical Talk Thursday Geography and its relationship to economy will be discussed by Dr. Charles F. Colby, professor emeritus of geography at the University of Chicago, at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Bailey Auditorium. Dr. Colby's lecture is one of a series sponsored by Sigma Xi, national honorary science fraternity, in connection with the International Geophysical Year. Dr. Colby will analyze the variations which nature has established or combined into the environments around. He will explain how the world acts upon environments and how, in doing so, its economy goes forward. Items for the official Bulletin must be brought to the Public Relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to duty. Only Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. In speaking of man's urgent need for water, Dr. Colby will explain how atomic energy can be used for power to convert sea water to fresh water. Official Bulletin Mathematical Colloquium, 4 p.m., 217 Strong Hall. Speaker: Dr. Annette Sinclair Harvard University. "A General Solution" A Class of Approximation Theorems. TODAY Undergraduate mathematics seminar, 4 p.m., 203 Strong. Speaker: Dean G. Uli- ner, M.D. This session will be the Calculus." All interested students are invited to attend these weekly meetings. Coffee Hour, 4 p.m., Music Room, 6 p.m. Thou? A Christian Scientist Answers" KU Engineerettes, 8 p.m., Kansas Power and Light Building, 700 Massachusetts. Speaker: Mrs. Julia Springer, home economist, will give a demonstration in food preparation, emphasizing the use of herbs and spices. TUESDAY Morning prayer, 6:45 a.m., Danforth Chapel, Holy Communion, 7 a.m. catereria, north end. Rabbi Myron Meyer Collegiate Council for United Nations, Coffee Hour 4 a.p. Music Room. Stud- dioskilled by the Rev. M. C. Allen. Skating Club. Roger Williams Fellowship coffee hour. Born in 1852. A member of "The Mortality Fireside" a series of female firefighter training camps. All-student forum, 5:30 p.m. cafeteria, math end Myron Meyer. "What We do" Belinda Belle. Alpha Phi Omega, 7:30 p.m., Parlor A, Student Union. All persons who have had any experience in Scouting are welcome. Bring a friend. Law Wives game night, 7:30 p.m., Student Union. WEDNESDAY Morning prayer, 6:45 a.m., Danforth Chapel, Holy Communion, 7 a.m., followed by breakfast at the Canterbury inn. Innerer's class will not meet until Feb. 27. Faculty Forum, noon, cafeteria, north end. Dr. M. H. Scharlemann. Coffee Hour, 4 p.m. Music Room, Studium Sociale, 10 a.m. The "Religious Faith of a Philosopher." Kuku Club meeting, 5 p.m., Student Union. All student forum, 5:30 p.m. cafeteria, nath end. The Rev. John H. Rosebaugh. nath end. The Rev. John H. Rosebaugh. Panel discussion, 8 p.m. Bailey Auditorium. "Is Religion the Answer?" THURSDAY Faculty Forum, noon, cafeteria, north end. The Rev, Theodore Gill. All-student forum, 5:30 p.m., cafeteria, north end. Phi Delta Kappa, 6 p.m., Kansas Room. Student Union. Joint meeting with Pi Lambda Theta. Your wife (or sweetheart) is invited to attend with you. Make reservations by Wednesday noon. Dinner will be $1.50 a plate. KU Young Democrats meeting, 7:30 p.m., 105 Green Hall. Rep. Dale Saffels, assistant minority leader, speaker. Scarab Officers Elected Scarab, professional architecture fraternity, has elected Jerry Eaton, Lawrence junior, president; Robert Simpson, Newton senior, vice president; Bruce Taber, Liberal senior, secretary; Douglas Smith, Topeka senior, treasurer, and Horst Engel, Overland Park senior, pledge trainer. It was an American naval explorer, Lt. Charles Wilkes, who in 1840 first recognized that Antarctica probably was a great continent. BIRD TV-Radio Service 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 i Acceptance A Must, H.S. Girls Told Outlining the basic concepts of leadership, Miss Emily. Taylor, dean of women, told the senior girls here for High School Leadership Day Saturday that the first principle of being a leader involved acceptance by others. The authority to lead comes from the members of the group, Miss Taylor said. The leader must also remember that each person is different and should not expect the same kind of He must watch that certain people do not dominate, try to bring shy people out and keep the group from wandering from its purpose, Miss Taylor continued. participation, from all the members, she said. In the afternoon members of the Mortar Board led discussions on University organizations and roles the girls could play in leadership at KU. After Miss Taylor's address, the girls discussed techniques of leadership. KU students Jan Cameron, Clay Center freshman, gave a humorous reading on the advantages of attending KU. Karlann Ison, Overland Park freshman, and Patricia Ryan, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, did an interpretative dance of "Shotgun Boogie." Entertainment was provided by Engineering Group Elects Officers Other performers were Phi Delta's singing five: Wally Strauch, Elmhurst, Ill., baritone, and Jim Suderman, Newton, bass, both juniors; Dan Casson, second tenor, and John Casson, first tenor, Topea sophomores and Howard Hammond, Glen Falls, N.Y., freshman, first tenor. Robert Parker, Lawrence senior, has been elected president of Pi Tau Sigma, honorary mechanical engineering fraternity. Other officers elected were Phillip Rein, Hillsboro junior, vice president; Daniel Kratzer, Kansas City, Kan., junior, recording secretary; Robert Love, Springfield, Mo.; senior, corresponding secretary; Richard Butler, Lawrence senior, treasurer, and Harold Rock, Hope junior, historian. Pointillism is a method of painting in which the colors are applied in dots on a white ground according to a systematic plan. What's doing... at Pratt & Whitney Aircraft JET ENGINE FRONTIER New "high-road" to in Florida Heralding important things to come, work was begun in late summer, 1956, on a wide access road in a remote section of Palm Beach County, Florida. At the end of that road, situated northwest of West Palm Beach, a 500,000-square-foot plant destined to be the newest addition to Pratt & Whitney Aircraft engineering facilities is already well under construction. Here, engineers and scientists will soon be hard at work dealing with new and increasingly complex problems relating to advanced jet aircraft engines. Working in close coordination with men at other P & W A establishments — particularly the company's multi-million-dollar Andrew Willgoos Turbine Laboratory in Connecticut— this newest section of the Pratt & Whitney Aircraft team will face a challenging assignment. They, too, will be concerned with design, testing and development of highly advanced, extremely powerful jet engines which will join a family already including J-57 and J-75 turbojets, currently playing important roles in the growing military and commercial air power of the United States. The engineering graduate who begins his career at this Florida facility will have the rare opportunity of keeping pace with its anticipated growth. In an organization renowned for development engineering superiority, he will gain invaluable experience working on vital, long-range projects that are a challenge to the imagination. 25 w WAIL RHITNEY NELSON RESIDENTIAL UNION World's foremost designer and builder of aircraft engines TIRE Two the imme 1231 TICK steam about Call Nation erian Phon ROO furni Adja doub FRA' betw Stror Frate 7370. PRATT & WHITNEY AIRCRAFT DIVISION OF UNITED AIRCRAFT CORPORATION EAST HARTFORD 8, CONNECTICUT --- Monday, Feb. 18, 1957 University Daily Kansan senior of Pi hanical Page 7 Phillip presi- sis City, retary; , sen- Rich treas- junior. paint-applied cording CLASSIFIED ADS T 25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Delray Kansas Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. TRANSPORTATION FOR RENT TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. Call Miss Rose Giesman at the First Bank for information for Mass eratiles and reservations. 8th andMass Phone VI 3-1052. . . tf TIRED OF WALKING UP THE HILL? Two rooms for boys one-half block from union. Phone privileges. Available immediately. Phone VI 3-5776 or see tff 1231 La ROOM FOR MEN. Well heated, linens furnished, large closet, room service. Adjacent to bath. Will rent single or double. 938 Missouri. 2-21 LOST K&E SLIDE RULE. At the Military Science Bldg. Finder please return to Dean's office at Marvin Hall. 2-18 FRATERNITY RING. Lost somewhere between DU Fraternity House and wedding Hall. Gold black Oynx with Fraternity crest. Call Pat Boten, VI 3-28730. We rent nationwide trailers any size, anywhere, anytime CROFT TRAILER RENTAL CO. 2 BIG SHOWS Sun. Feb. 24 -3:30 & 8:00 P.M.-Municipal Auditorium-Topeka Advance- ticket prices= $2.09 at the door $2.50. Tickets on sale at Walgaren Drug- 8th and Kansas. Mills Music -323 Kansas. East 23rd VI 3-7377 SUPER ATTRACTIONS PRESENT THE BIGGEST SHOW of Stars for 57 All in Person Fats DOMINO and his ORCH Bill DOGGETT Crying - Tamar Bennett CLYDE McPhatter LAVERN Baker fllin CHUCK BERRY ★ Five KEVS THE MOONGLOWS ★ ANN COLE ★ Five SATINS ★ Charles BROWN Eddie Dooley DIMPLES ★ THE SCHOOL BOYS Paul Williams BIG BAND GRAY BILLFOLD, somewhere on campus, contains valuable papers. Reward. Call Barbara Powell, VI 3-6556. 2-18 BLUE SHEAFFER'S PEN. Left on table in Student, Union Reading room Friday at 10 a.m. Find ainder please return Kapsam Business Office. (One end is badly chewed.) 2-18 BROWN HAT. "Wakefield." lost on the bill sometime this week. Would appreciate its return. Contact Karl Kohler. VI 3-3944. 2-19 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPIST, experienced in theses, term papers, reports. Fast and accurate, student rates. Mrs. Betty Veqist. 1855 Barker A. Phone VI 3-2001. tf TYPIST: Experienced in these, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka 119 Tenn. Ph. VI-3-1240. tf TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6575, 1106 La. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8588. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow. 606 Maine. Phone VI 3-7645. tf Have your car lubricated the MOTO-SWAY WAY At POTTER'S "66" SERVICE 1401 W. 6th VT 3-9891 KUOK PROGRAMS Today 6:00 Report one 6:05 Dinner music 6:30 "Personality" 6:45 "Tales in Fantasy" 7:00 Bookstore Hour" 8:00 It's 8 o'clock 8:05 University Theatre concert 8:30 Show tunes 8:00 Show tunes 9:30 Final scope 9:45 Study break 10:00 "Music Treasures" with John Schick 10:30 Lucky Strike news 10:35 "Music Treasures" 11:00 "Music Treasures" 12:00 Sign off TERRIFIC! IVY TWILLS Olive and Black Striped Fresh Shipment Just in - $4.95 Stop in NOW and replenish your supply of polished cotton Ivy Slacks All $4. Desert Tan All Black $4.95 Suntan A Pair Lawrence Surplus Your Friendly Army and Navy Stores 740 Massachusetts 935 Massachusetts FOR SALE LIVE GIFTS—Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs-hedds, harnesses, etc. Chameleons, hampshes, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2931. '50 MERCURY. New paint, rebuilt engine, good rubber. Must see to appreciate. 1145 Louisiana or call Jerry Old—VI 3-6700. 2-19 NEW AND DIFFERENT Olympia portable typewriter. Choice: Single or two tone color and type style. Free demonstr. Phone Mr. Reams VI 3-1537 after 4 Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday. 2-20 RENT A TAPE RECORDER Ideal for Skits, Parties, Dances, Practicing Speech and Foreign Languages. Recording tapes & ac- HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. 6th and Vermont. Phone W 3-0350. TIME, LIFE & Sports Illustrated magazines. Special students' prices of $1 reg. sub. rate. Prompt service, buy now pay later, call VI 3-0124. tf TUBE FREE with the purchase of practically new (only 250 miles) $670x15 Goodrich tire, price only $25. VI 3-1505 after 5 p.m. 2-19 TENOR SAX. See at 1109 Ohio. At home 5:30 to 9:00 on Monday, Tuesday, Wed- nesday evenings. 2-20 HARRIS TWEED brown sport coat, size 38-49. $10. Harris Tweed gray suit, size 38-49. $15. Almost new tire chains $6. R. Murrell, 101 Alabama, VI 3-6390 BOOKS For gifts and for your own library, Art, Architecture, Cook Books, Childrens Books, Modern Library THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 MISCELLANEOUS CLEKER-TVIST for full three week typing case work, data, and teaching material for classes in clinical psychology. Ph. KU, extension 332 for interview. HELP WANTED SEWING to do of any kind. Ph. VI 3- 6234. 2-18 NOTICE—Your Avon Representative will call on you by appointment or take orders by telephone. Ph. VI 3-2376. 2-18 FOR LEASE THREE ROOM APARTMENT. Unfurnished, on ground floor. Off street parking. Air conditioned. Ph. VI 3-2682 or VI 3-1277. 2-20 Parties, Pinnings, Weddings Job Application Photos Gene's Photo Service 2144 Ohio - VI 3-0933 Gene Smoyer tt LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY for Jr. Sr., Graduate Students up to $500.00 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. 833% Mass. Phone VI 3-8074 for 1 day service A Campus-to-Career Case History J. H. W. Ken Foekeloo (center foreground) at the scene of a cable installation project in Detroit. Ten years along in his telephone career After graduation in 1947 from Kalamazoo College with a B.A. in Physics and Mathematics, Ken Boekeloo joined Michigan Bell Telephone Company as a trainee. Today, ten years later, Ken is a Division Plant Superintendent in Detroit. Eight district supervisors report to him, and they supervise some 1700 people. Ken is responsible for the installation and maintenance of plant facilities valued at $135,000,000 including more than 500,000 telephones. A big jump in ten years? Here's what Ken Boekeloo says about it: "The way the telephone business is growing, you can advance just as fast, and just as far, as you're able. And all along the way, from the student period through each assignment, the training and experience you get really prepare you for advancement. "If you like to make contributions and take responsibility, and if you value the opportunities a growing business can offer, then the telephone company's the place to look for a career." Ken Boekeloo is one of many young men who are finding rewarding careers in Bell Telephone Companies, Bell Telephone Laboratories, Western Electric and Sandia Corporation. Your placement officer can give you more information about all Bell System Companies. BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM BELL HIGH SCHOOL Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, Feb. 18, 1957 German Study Deadline March 1 Applications for study fellowships in Germany must be made by March 1. Awards are offered in a wide variety of fields for both men and women between the ages of 20 and 35. Information and application blanks may be secured at 306 Fraser. Candidates for scholarships may file only one application for the various awards. To be eligible, a candidate must have a bachelor's degree by the time of departure. The academic year begins between Oct. 15 and Nov. 1. All candidates must be citizens of the U.S.. They must have command of the German language, a good academic record and capacity for independent study, and must be in good health. Most of the awards do not cover the cost of transportation to and from Europe. "The function of an advertising agency is to create business for someone else." William Brooks, account executive for Potts-Woodbury, Kansas City, Mo., advertising agency, said Friday at a dinner meeting of Alpha Delta Sigma and Gamma Alpha Chi, professional advertising fraternities. Ad Agency's Job Outlined Mr. Brooks said agencies must provide more and more services to get and retain accounts in this highly competitive field of advertising. Once they get an account, they must learn its advantages and problems in order to create advertising that will achieve its purpose. Mr. Brooks stressed the importance of a good scholarship record in getting a job after graduation. "After all," said Mr. Brooks, "scholarship is the only indication of your potential that the employer can check before he hires you. An advertising agency is divided into four general divisions, Mr. Brooks said, the copywriters, artists, and production and media men. Each has a definite job to do in creating the final piece of advertising that reaches the public, he said. THE MOST DARING PICTURE OF 1957! 3 BRAVE MEN SAMIR RAY MILLAND ERNEST BORGNINE From 20th Century-Fox CINEMASCORE Cartoon-Novelty-News NOW Ends Electricians To See Film Tuesday Night The Navy ROTC unit has resumed publication of the Seahawk, unit news magazine, after two years of inactivity. The first issue was distributed to midshipmen last week. The next issue will be published March 1. THE MOST DARING PICTURE OF 19571 3 BRAVE MEN Starring RAY MILLAND ERNEST BORGNINE CINEMASCORE Cartoon-Novelty-News NOW Ends Tuesday GRANADA 24 Hour Service JAYHAWK TAXI VI 3-2211 1012 Mass. Ward Thompson Richard Pickett Members of the staff are George W. Hunt, Merriam; Robert R. Seacat, Emporia; R. Kent Creason, Prairie Village; James B. Sorter, Kansas City, Kan.; Lance F. Johnson, Wymore, Neb.; Lawrence E. Seaman, Lenexa; Douglas R. Yocum, Lenora, and F. A. Coombs, Arlington, Va. All are freshmen. Two machines for testing and processing plastics have been donated to the manufacturing processes department of the School of Engineering and Architecture by the Imco Container Corp., Kansas City, Mo. Kappa Phi Holds Tea Navy's News Issued Again "Seismie Explorations," a film brought to KU by the Carter Oil Co. research department, Tulsa, Okla., will be shown to members of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers and Institute of Radio Engineers at a special meeting 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Lindley Auditorium. At a regular meeting of the AEEIRE at 7 p.m. Thursday, winners of the electrical engineering student paper competition will be announced. Election of a sophomore representative to the club and discussion of the exposition exhibit will follow. GRANADA 24 Hour Service JAYHAWK TAXI VI 3-2211 1012 Mass. Ward Thompson Richard Pickett New Plastics Machines Given To Engineers Julius Caesar is dead, Shakespeare is dead, Napoleon is dead, Abraham Lincoln is dead, and I am far from well myself.-Mark Twain. This is the second time within a year this company has made a gift to the University. Last spring W. K. Archer, president of Imco, gave a poly-ethene extruding and bottle blowing machine. The two new machines, an extruding and blending machine and a vacuum forming machine are worth about $1,500 according to Dean T. DeWitt Carr. "Gifts like this from private industry are very helpful in adding useful equipment to the school." Dean Carr said. Kappa Phi, Methodist woman's sorority, held a tea for prospective members Sunday. Mrs. Irmgart Altwater, dancing instructor in the Kansas City WYCA's gave an interpretive dance, called "Song of Praise." HIS GREATEST HIT SINCE "HIGH NOON"! GARY COOPER FRIENDLY PERSUASION VARSITY Open 6:45 Weekdays NOW HIS GREATEST HIT SINCE "HIGH NOON"! GARY COOPER FRIENDLY PERSUASION In The News ILLINOIS SCORES UPSET Color Cartoon Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW Push-Pull CUSHIONED CHAIRS Open 6:45 Week Days NOW Ends Wednesday Lisa Gaye in SHAKE, RATTLE AND ROCK! -Plus- Marla English in RUNAWAY DAUGHTERS News-Color Cartoon Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS Open 6:45 Week Days NOW Ends Wednesday Lisa Gaye in SHAKE, RATTLE AND ROCK! -Plus- Marla English in RUNAWAY DAUGHTERS News-Color Cartoon Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW PRODUCTS CUSHIONED CHAIRS Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW PUSH-BACK CUSHIONED CHAIRS Open 6:45 Week Days NOW Ends Wednesday Lisa Gaye in SHAKE RATTLE AND ROCK' -Plus- The world's largest furnace-type of carbon black plant is at Satanta. RUNAWAY DAUGHTERS News-Color Cartoon Paul G. Hausman, associate professor of engineering manufacturing processes, said this gift gives KU one of the most complete sets of plastics instruction equipment in the Midwest. A burnoose is a one-piece cloaklike garment and hood, worn by Arabs and Moors. KU offers two curricula in plastics, one for engineering students and one for industrial design, architectural and fine arts students. ? YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2986 The Case of the Mysterious Missing Button DRAFT Detective Kermit Kean was at a loss. He had solved the famous case of the missing faculty wife who had run off with a migrant scissors sharpener. Persistent sleuthing uncovered the thief of the C-flat campanile bell which was being used to notify freshmen women of closing hours. But the mystery now unsolved was closer to home. As a matter of fact, it was in his own bureau—all of his shirts had missing buttons. Kermit confided in Belinda Bottoms-up, his constant companion and secretary. Though the case was a dilemma to Kermit, Belinda became famous overnight through her quick insight into the matter. "It's as simple as majoring in coffeee," she cooed. "Your shirts are taking a beating at the laundry. What you need is a laundry that will take care of replacing buttons and give your shirts longer wear." Here Kermit had the drop on her. "I know the place," he breathed into her left ear. "Lawrence Laundry will replace lost buttons without charge," he said, ripping off his shirt and throwing it with the others, ready for a quick get-a-way to Lawrence Laundry. So Kermit solved the Mysterious Missing Button case, and his shirts were the most buttoned down in town. P. S. They also repaired several small knife holes and two bullet holes without charge. Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners Dial VI 3-3711—You'll be glad you did—1001 New Hamp. Next week: another thrilling case from our Lawrence Laundry case files RI Di Fc "F cism by 1 of rene p.m. Mus TiW Tr be c this K F An at 50 Studron St.J. We Daily hansan 54th Year, No. 88 Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1957 REW Includes Discussion, Forum, Panel LAWRENCE, KANSAS "Religious Faith and Skepticism" is the topic to be discussed by the Rev. M. C. Allen, pastor of the First Baptist Church, Lawrence, at the coffee hour at 4 p.m. today in the Student Union Music Room. An all student forum will be held at 5:30 p.m. in the north end of the Student Union cafeteria. Rabbi Myron Meyer, Temple Adath Joseph, St. Joseph, Mo., will speak on "What We Jews Believe." The Gamma Delta coffee hour will be held at 9 p.m. at the Lutheran Student Center. Dr. Martin Scharlemann, professor of New Testament Exegetical Theology, Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, Mo., will speak on "The Responsible Christian Student." "Is Religion the Answer?" will be the question before a panel at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Bailey Auditorium. Dr. Walter Stitt Robinson, associate professor of history, will be moderator and panel members will be Dr. Roland H. Bainton, visiting Humanities lecturer and professor of ecclesiastical history at Yale University, Rabbi Meyer, and the Rt. Rev. Msgr. George Towle, St. John's Catholic Church, Lawrence. The University of Kansas will not be considered for a USO camp show this summer. KU Ineligible For USO Tour Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students, said word was received from Lawrence Phillips, president of the USO-Camp Shows Inc., that the military authorities will not accept a show from the same school two consecutive years. He said they do not wish "to be in position of playing favorites." Auditions planned for Sunday will be cancelled. Tickets For Wives Will Be ASC Topic A committee report on proposed activity tickets for wives of married students will be given at the All Student Council meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 306 Student Union. Plans will be discussed for the "Meet Your A.S.C." program, designed to acquaint the student body with the workings of the ASC. Jim Schultz. Salina junior, will appoint members of a revision committee to begin work on the revision of the ASC constitution. Actors 'Egged' Audience To Action Although the invitation to throw things at the actors was extended to the audience, Ted Teichgraeber Emporia sophomore, director of the recent melodrama, "Pity Poor Pearl," never expected to carry it to extremes. So, when, on Saturday night, three eggs bombarded the cast from the audience and began to drip from the scenery, Teichgraeber was a bit put out. He felt that although former audiences have practiced the theater etiquette impeccably during the past, it is doubtful that they will be encouraged to throw things again at future melodramas. PETER E. CHEVENBERG DR. KOLAND H. BAINTON Humanities Talk At 8 Tonight The Rev. Dr. Roland H. Bainton, professor of ecclesiastical history at Yale University and author of many books, including a Western Civilization book will give the 50th Humanities lecture at 8 p. m. today. The topic of his talk in Fraser Theater, is "Erasmus—Amid the Currents of Renaissance and the Reformation. Dr. Bainton will be guest at an informal reception by the Faculty Club after the lecture. He will give talks Wednesday to three classes before winding up his schedule with a panel discussion Wednesday night. As one of the participants in the Religious Emphasis Week panel at 8 p. m. Wednesday, he will discuss with Rabbi Myron M. Meyer and the Rt. Rev. Msgr. George Towle. "Is Religion the Answer?" He will speak to the Age of Reformation class at 11 a. m. on "The Influence of the Reformation on Religious Liberty." At 2 p. m. he will address the History of the World's Living Religions class on 'Servetus and Calvin,' and at 3 p. m. he will discuss "Luther or Calvin or Zwingli" in the Main Currents of Modern Thought class. The Inquirer's class scheduled to meet Wednesday has been canceled. They will meet at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday, February 27. Inquirer's Class Canceled 2 Students Get W. A. White Interfaith Award The William Allen White Interfaith Awards were announced Monday at the Religious Emphasis Week convocation. Awards were presented to Miss Barbara Beye, Larned senior, and Michael Mills. McPherson junior. Beve, president of the Student Religious Council, accepted the award on behalf of that organization. The $150 cash award will be used by the S. R. C. to carry out a project that will be chosen at a later date. Mill's award will provide him with a $150 scholarship to a summer seminar or human relations workshop of his choice. Mills is chairman of the Religious Emphasis Week committee. Nourse Talk ScheduleTold The awards are sponsored by the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation and administered by the KU Religious Advisers. The President's State of the Union message to Congress and his economic report will be discussed for students and faculty at 10 a.m. Friday by Dr. Edwin G. Nourse, first chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers to President Eisenhower. Dr. Nourse, who is, now vice-chairman of the Joint Council on Economic Education, with headquarters at the Brookings Institute in Washington, D.C. will give a public lecture at 8 p.m. Thursday in Strong Auditorium. His lecture will be "intellectualism Under the Employment Act." His 2-day schedule includes three other talks to classes and seminars. In his Friday morning talk, Dr. Nourse will analyze sustainable trends in the various lines of construction and in the accumulation of durable goods. Dr. Nourse, a Phi Beta Kappa scholar, will meet informally with the graduate seminar in economics at 4 p.m. Thursday. NROTC Ring Dance To Be Held March 15 About 250 couples are expected to attend the 10th annual NROTC Ring Dance from 9 p.m. to midnight, March 15 in the Student Union Ballroom. The receiving line will include Capt. K. M. Krieger, professor of naval science and Lt. Col. Rodney Reighard, associate professor of If the midshipman leads his date from the ring, it means they are engaged; if she leads him out, they are pinned, and if they go out together, they consider themselves just "good friends." Given by the NROTC unit for the junior classmen, the Ring Dance a tradition which originated at the Naval Academy in Annapolis d. The cadet's class ring is hung around the neck of his date on a ribbon. During the ceremony, she removes the ring and dips it in water from the seven seas and places it on the finger of the cadet. They then walk to a position within the ring and there, he kisses his date. Skip Wantland's band from Kansas City. Mo. will play for the dance. Committee chairmen are Wayne Swenson, Topeka junior, decoration; Gary Bean, Kansas City. Mo. junior, invitations; Jerry Elliott, Hutchinson sophomore, publicity; Jim Davies, Dodge City junior, entertainment; Donald Bradford, Parsons sophomore, refreshments; Gary Ellis, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, reception line; Bill Walker, Parsons junior, clean-up; John Bowser, Springfield, Mo., sophomore, work detail. and Richard Glenn, Overland Park park guests. naval science and their wives; Max Mardick, Iola senior, and Charles D. Burton, Kansas City, Kan., senior, and their dates. Faculty May Get 10 Per Cent Raise University faculty and staff members will receive a 10 per cent raise instead of the 5 per cent raise originally planned if the recommendation of the Board of Regents is accepted. The Board made the recommendation to the Senate Ways and Means Committee in Topeka Friday. Under terms of the plan, KU would be allotted $240,000 out of a total of $657,787 asked for state schools. 180 Tested Here For Awards One-hundred-eighty seniors competed for the Watkins and Summerfield scholarships here Monday and today, Spencer E. Martin, director, Office of Aids and Awards announced. The scholarships carry stipends, based on need, up to as much as 100 percent support. Throughout the state, 782 Kansas high school seniors are competing for these awards. The examinations are being administered jointly for the first time by KU and Kansas State College. During the preliminary examinations, each student will declare which award he is competing for. The other testing centers are at Manhattan, Dodge City, Colby, Salina, Wichita, Great Bend, Chanute, Stockton, and Kansas City, Kan. Faculty On School Plan The Midwest School for Recreation Executives will be held Monday, Feb. 25 to March 2 in the Student Union. Harold W. Lathrop, district representative for the National Recreation Assn., was at KU Feb. 14 making arrangements for the school KU faculty members who are on the program are James W. Drury, associate professor of political science, and Kenneth Beasley, assistant professor; Lawrence Heeb, assistant professor of physical education; Emil L. Telfel, associate professor of journalism, and Bruce A. Linton, associate professor of speech and journalism. Recreational executives and their assistants will attend from Kansas, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Colorado, Iowa, Missouri, and Nebraska. Mr. Lathrop advises and consults with recreational executives and college faculty members concerned with music, drama, physical education and other forms of recreation. "Righ now there is a great need for more trained recreational leaders," Mr. Lathrop said. "People trained in physical education, industrial arts, dramatics, music, and sociology are needed." "The National Recreation Assn. is hoping that the minor in recreation in KU's physical education and recreation department will be changed to a major." he said. Recreation people work with persons of all age through city recreation departments, private agencies such as the YMCA, and social service agencies, Mr. Lathrop said. Weather Mostly cloudy through Wednesday. Occasional light rain extreme south central today becoming mixed with snow west and changing to snow extreme northwest. Occasional light snow tonight becoming mixed with rain central and south portions Wednesday. Colder today, much colder north central and northeast. Colder west tonight and continued cold over state Wednesday. High today in 30s. Low tonight in 20s. "We are losing faculty members to schools paying higher salaries," Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy said today. "We are not only having to compete with other universities for top level men but also with industry." Educators Into Industry "With our lower wage scale, many faculty men find it advantageous to go into the industrial field, not only hurting us but draining the field of education of top level faculty members," he said. The Board requested a five per cent increase in salaries over this year in December. This is included in Governor Docking's budget for 1957. However, it is believed that Kansas schools must get another raise in wages for their faculty members or risk losing more top men. "The five per cent raise in salaries in the budget now will just about allow us to stay even in the race with other schools for faculty talent," Dr. Murphy said. Grim Business "Finding and keeping top notch faculty members is a grim business these days," he said. "In this game its dog-eat-dog and you have to acquire good instructors wherever you can find them." "The Regents also asked the restoration of $43,000 to the KU budget which was cut out by Governor Docking. The Board seeks the restoration of the money so that the same salary scale can be paid in the summer term as in regular sessions. "I think maintaining the same wage scale throughout the year is very definitely a factor in getting and keeping the faculty members you want," Dr. Murphy said. "With all the raids going on on our campus and other surrounding schools, I believe this is the worst period we have faced in a long time," he said. 5 To Attend Music Parley Five students will represent Mu Phi Epsilon, women's professional music fraternity, at a 22-chapter district convention Saturday in Oklahoma City. Delegates to the convention are Kathryn Ehlers, Kansas City, Mo., Bonnie Dinsmore, Oklahoma City, Okla., and Beverly Runkle, Pittsburgh, juniors; Sharon Tripp, senior and Creta Carter, sophomore, both of Lawrence. Miss Runkle, the music delegate to the convention, will sing two art songs by Brahms at the convention recital Saturday afternoon. Oh, So That's Where It Is! A letter received yesterday from Callaghan & Co., Chicago, Ill. was addressed to: Watson Library, Kansas University Law Building, Lawrence, Kan. No wonder so many people couldn't find it this semester! Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Feb. 19. 1957 One Man's Opinion New Tax Sources Needed Early this month in Manchester, New Hampshire, 400 school teachers refused to teach their 9,500 students. All 24 of the city's school buildings closed. School Superintendent Augusta M. Nichols canceled classes. The reason: a wage dispute. Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, requested a higher 1958 budget for the University to raise wages and provide more classrooms for a greater number of students. Gov. George Docking, after saying Kansas must operate on an "austerity" budget in 1958, allowed a 5 per cent increase in instructor's wages even though he cut the KU budget by $745,395. Nichols said a 5 per cent raise is not enough. "We have lost some important faculty members recently," Nichols said, "because of our inability to keep pace with other institutions in wages. KU and Kansas State College are at the bottom of the list—any list you can compile—for authorized salary increases." "Thirty-one members of the faculty of the University of Kansas have resigned this year. Why? An editorial published in the University Daily Kansan Sept. 13, 1925, says: "Is it . . . because the recent legislature failed to make any provision for increases in salaries or personnel?" "The importance of education has been shouted from the house-tops and hailed from the streets. Each year student bodies grow larger and larger. Men and women everywhere are realizing the importance of college training. But what about the instructors? When they are dropping out one by one, what chance is there for future students?" "This University is not the only one which is asking itself this question. Other states are as slow in realizing that, without adequate instruction, schools and colleges can never go on. Each year the toll grows Thirty-one have gone this year. It is a matter of future citizenship." That was $ 31\frac{1}{2} $ years ago. Gov. Docking is a former banker. He knows when figures on a balance sheet indicate trouble. And Kansas is in financial trouble. The obvious thing for Gov. Docking to do is look around for sources of state revenue. He has speculated that gate receipts from Allen Field House might be a possible source of revenue. This plan should be put into operation without delay. The Student Union and Memorial stadium profits at KU, if any, should go into the state treasury. Profits from all other state schools should go into the state treasury. At the same time, other sources of revenue should be explored. Appropriate laws should be passed. Gov.Docking is entirely correct in investigating where Kansans spent state money the past two years. Other revenue sources are cabaret, tavern and amusement taxes, placed in effect from 5 p.m. till closing time; parimutuel betting at different kinds of race tracks and sporting events, game rooms, lotteries, etc. State taxes on gasoline, beer, liquor, and cigarettes should be increased. State taxes on cosmetics, candy, hair preparations, soft drinks, and other luxury items should be levied. State income taxes should be wiped out, and the retail sales tax rate should be lowered; people can't spend money the state takes away. But Kansas will remain a financially impotent state because Kansans live under a strict moral law that renders them fearful and impotent. Either Kansas citizens should allow money to be collected for the state treasury, or they should allow morality to keep money out of the state treasury. If Kansans wish to live under a high, exclusive moral law because their parents taught it, and because of fear, then they should stop agitating for higher salaries and more state spending. Morality means denial and sacrifice. Or Kansans can collect sufficient money to pay teachers, build dams, care for the needy, and set the state budget in order. John Battin The Old Campaigner Says— "Son, if you thhink I'm gonna keep comin' up here, you're gonna have to protect me. It's a fine thing when an innocent citizen can't even walk up on the Hill without takin' his life in jeopardy." "I came up here to talk and got from whence this frigid blast had come. Before we could get a good look another blast came. "I came up here to talk and got so dangged scared that I can't. Just let me set here and mumble until I catch my breath - then I'll talk." "Oh, you probably wonder who I am. Well, I oughtn't to tell you. Everybody else in town knows who I am. Why shouldn't you? Who are you not to know who I am? No Daily Hansan UNIVERSITY University of Kansas student newspaper trweryed 1908, dahl 6, 16, 1213 trweryed 1908, dahl 6, 16, 1213 Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 251, news room LANCASTER, Business office Member of Daily Press Association. Associated College Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. News service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except winter months and holiday days, and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. Kent Thomas ... Managing Editor John Battin, Felicia Ann Fienberg, Bob Lyle, Betty Jean Stanford, Assistant Managing Editors; Jim Banman, City Elections Manager; Brian Merman, Assistant City Editors; Hiroshi Shionozaki, Telegraph Editor; Mary Beth Noyes, Delbert Haley, Assistant Telegraph Editors; Dick Brown, Sports Editor; George Anthan, Assistant Sports Editor; Mermal Society Editor; St Swanson, Assistant Society Editor; John Eaten, Picture Editor. NEWS DEPARTMENT matter, I got my breath now and am ready to talk. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Jerry Dawson... Editorial Editor Jerry Thomas, Jim Tice, Associate Editors. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Dale Bowers...Business Manager Dave Dickey, Advertising Manager; John Hedley, National Advertising Manager; Harold Metz, Classified Advertising Manager; Conboy Brown, Circulation Manager BUSINESS DEPARTMENT "I am sure that you have heard of me by my title. I have not used my name since the war - the big war that is, the Spanish-American War, you know, Teddy's war. I got a number then in the army - the real army that is, not like the one today - and I just about decided to stop using any name. "Well sir, I came home after the war and the first person to see me says 'well, the old campaigner is back from the wars.' "I kinda' likes the sound of this so I decides to drop a few hints to the effect that I would not be adverse to being known by this nomenclature. It took like Teddy took San Juan and you should seen him. Wish I had myself. Never got out of the states. "Some folks I know wouldn't have told you that. Just let you think they was one of the first ones behind Teddy but not me. The truth just means too much. I've got enough things to talk about without makin' some up. The stories I could tell you. "Well, why I come clear up here. I am a believer in sayings — you know, the early bird catches cold, do unto others before they do onto you, the milk of human kindness is often sour. "Anyway, just call me the Old Campaigner. Fact is, son, I don't remember any given name or the other one for that matter. They're on my pension check but I never look at that. Just cash it." "But I could only afford to pay for one so I figured that the other one had to be cheap - and I say's what could be cheaper than talk. So those are my vices - smoking, drinking, and talking. Some people try to tell me that that's three but I figure that two of them are so slight that they only count as one. "I also believe in this one - talk is cheap. In fact it's the only thing I can afford in this day of high living and low pension checks. So I figured it this way - I've got to have two vices. That's everybody's limit - two." (Editor's note: "25 Years Ago" will appear as a regular feature in the University Daily Kansan.) 25 Years Ago Friday. Feb. 19. 1932 "GENEVA, Feb. 18—(UP) The League council today convoked an assembly to deal with the dispute between Japan and China." "There will be a vacation next Monday. An announcement from the chancellor's office brings the assurance that students will not have to show up for classes on George Washington's Birthday." Under the headline, "Students To Rest Monday," the following story appeared: "Here's where you come in. I read your page every day for want of something better to do - and believe me anything would be better. The truth sometimes hurts but like I said, I tell the truth about myself and you know the old saying - what's good enough for me everybody else thinks they're too good for. From a display ad: "... Entire meals for 30 cents. Nothing better elsewhere.-The Cafeteria." "But I'm still scared from my experience on the way over here and find I cannot talk. I shall come back when my voice does. Then I shall expostulate on this needless fear that I was exposed to on the Hill. You have been good listeners. I knew you were good for something." "I read that page of yours and I gets to thinkin'. These guys ain't got anything to say and don't know how to say it therefore they must be good listeners, so I'm gonna do my talkin' up here. And with the promise to return and tell us of his frightful experience when his voice returned the Old Campaigner walked out muttering to himself - obviously still too shaken to talk. Jerry Thomas A spotlight shines permanently (at night, of course) on the tomb of Huey Long near the state capitol building in Baton Rouge, La. LAST CHANCE TO GET THE BUY OF YOUR DREAMS Music by the orchestra of Andre Kostelanetz, Percy Faith and Paul Weston on Columbia Records. Get A 12" LP For $2.98 This special event ends March 1 Disc Den 1241 Oread Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers-They are Loyal Supporters. Attention We are sorry to tell you that we had a fire last Friday night. Due to the fire we will be closed for some time. We wish to thank each of you for your patronage and we will be looking forward to seeing you again before too long. Watch the Kansan for the date we will reopen. The McGills Golden Golden Arrow Arrow Across the Bridge 9th & Walnut Town & Country Shoes ...come out, come out, wherever you are and go walking in these marvelous walk-on-air wonders. They're favorites in comfort and style. America's Best Fashion Shoe Value. Bucks 8. Corkette Sizes A's to B's Bucks 8.95 Corkette 9.95 Sizes 4 A's to B's 3½ to 11 Royal College Shop Page 3 —(Daily Kansan photo) ALMOST DONE — Finishing touches are being made on the remodeling of the language sound room in Blake Annex. Germanic and Romance languages will use the sound room which will have 100 booths and 45 tape recorders. The Germanic and Romance soundrooms in Strong Annex and Fraser Hall will be vacated as soon as the new room is finished. 1964 Modern Languages Won't Have To Wait Much Longer The move to centralize the modern language departments into a central area is nearing completion with the remodeling of the language sound room in Blake Annex. "All physical remodeling for the new sound room is completed but the equipment has not been moved in yet," said Keith Lawton, administrative assistant for operations. "We will equip one part of the sound room in about three weeks and try it on an experimental basis to see if it will be satisfactory before we finish equipping the entire building," he said. Both Germanic and Romance languages will use the sound room which will have 100 booths and 45 tape recorders. The Romance language sound room in Strong Annex will be vacated and the space remodeled into offices for members of the business department. The Germanic sound room in the south tower or Fraser Hall, which was used only on an emergency Hallmark contemporary cards Hallmark contemporary cards Smart, witty distinctive cards for those who like humor with a modern flair. Come in and choose your Hallmark Cont- temporary Cards from our com- plete collection. Mosser-Wolf basis, will be closed for regular class work. Many equipment improvements have been planned for the sound room, according to Neale Carman, professor of Romance languages. Official Bulletin Items for the official Bulletin must be brought to the Public Relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of the event. Do not bring Bulletin material to the Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function Coffee Hour 4 p.m. Music Room, Stud- dies Room Rev. M. C. Allen, "Skeptics Cloak" Collegiate Council for United Nations 1 p.m., office. Executive board. TODAY Hilley open coffee hour 4 p.m. 1409 Tennessee欢迎来店 4 Ferdinand nationwide Everyone welcome All-student program, 5:30 p.m., cafeteria, north end Rabbi Myron Meyer, "What We Do" KU-Y cabinet meeting, 6:45 p.m., Henlev House. Occupational Therapy Club, 7.15 p.m. at Naval Recruitment well works naval recruitment office well works Alpha Phi Omega. 7:30 p.m., Parlor A, Student Union. Meeting for pledging members in persons who have had a degree in experience in Scouting are welcome. Bring a friend. Law Wives game night, 7:30 p.m. Student Union. Gamma Delta Lutheran student fellowship coffee hour, 9 p.m. Student Center, 17th & Vermont. Speaker: Dr. Martin H. Scharlemann. Morning prayer, 6:45 a.m. Danforth Chapel. Holy Communion, 7 a.m., followed breakfast at the Canterbury House (Indoor's class will not meet until Feb. 27). Faculty Forum, noon, cafeteria, north end. Dr. M. H. Scharlemann. WEDNESDAY Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. & Museum of Art museum. Rossini: I Barbiere di Sigivala. Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1957 University Daily Kansas Entomology Club, 4 p.m., Room 301, Snow Hall. Speaker: Dr. R. S. Sokal. Ateneo meeting, 4:15 p.m., Room 11, Fraser. Coffee Hour, 4 p.m. Music Room, Studio Daughter of the Poets, "The Religious Faith of a Philosopher." All student forum, 5:30 p.m. cafeteria, north entrance. Through the Church and Religious Kuku Club meeting, 5 p.m., Student Union. Undergraduate Psychology Club meeting presentation pane: www.undergradpsychology.com Tape recording on "Brain-Washing" Newman Club executive meeting. 7:30 p.m., in the Castle. Please attend. Nearly 20 colleges and universities will send representatives to KU's first Heart of America debate tournament March 13-16. Teams From 20 Schools To Debate Here March 13-16 The invited* schools have been strong contenders in the national debate tournaments over the past 10 years, according to Kim Griffin, associate professor of speech and director of the conference. The U. S. Military Academy, which won the national tournament last spring, will participate in an English-style debate with a KU team on the opening night of the conference. Another feature of the KU journey will be the appearance of three specialists in the fields in which the students are debating. The three, who will answer questions by the debaters, are John P. Ferris, special assistant to the regional director for De derutsche Verein trifft sich um 5 Uhr Donnerstag in 402 Fraser. Dr. Backus von der Abteilung der Gerschichte der Deutschland reden. Singen und Erfrischungen wird es auch geben. All-student forum, 5:30 p.m., cafeteria, north end. Phi Delta Kappa, 6 p.m., Kansas Room, Student Union. Joint meeting with Pi Lambda Theta. Your wife (or sweetheart) is invited to attend with you. Make reservations by Wednesday noon. Dinner will be $1.50 a plate. Circle K Club, 7 p.m., 305B, Student Union. Baptist Student Union, 12:30-12:50 p.m. Dr. John T. Speaker, Conrad Willard, "Sacred Heart" of St. Mary's University International Club, 7 p.m., Jayhawk Room. Student Union. Prof. Sam Anderson will give talk on U.S.S.R. Color slides will be shown. Everyone welcome. Panel discussion, 8 p.m., Bailey Auditorium. "Is Religion the Answer?" Faculty Forum, noon, cafeteria, north end. The Rev. Theodore Gill. KU Young Democrats meeting 7-30 pursuant to Rep. Dale Sailor's proposition, minority mobilization THURSDAY Near East and South Asia operations, International Cooperation Administration; Frank N. Trager, research professor of government in charge of the Southeast Asia program, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, New York University, and Clifford R. Hope, former congressman from Kansas' fifth district and former chairman of the House Agricultural Committee. --- YOUR EYES should be examined today. Can for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2968 DANCE To The Enchanting Music Of LARRY SMITH and the MOONLIGHT SERENADERS Six-Piece Dance Orchestra with Vocalist Available for Your Formals, Parties and Other Dancing Needs 1631 Leavenworth Manhattan, Kansas SAVE $$$ $1.77 Calling . . . Girls & Ladies Sizes 4, $ 4 \frac{1}{2} $ & 5 You Can Buy 'Em At REDMAN'S SHOES (Formerly Henry's Shoe Box) 815 Mass. SAVE $ Your choice of pumps, straps, ties $3.88 or Casuals & Flats $3.99 Men's Oxfords & Loafers $3.88 to $5.99 SAVE $F Come in now, and take advantage of our amazing stock disposal sale, featuring low-low prices. We have a variety of styles that must be moved now, in order to make room for new spring fashions. YOU GET DISCOUNTS ON ALL SHOES In addition we offer you our main lines of men's shoes at discounts of up to $3 a pair. These discounts include exclusive JARMAN and DOUGLAS styles for men. Regular $10.95 Values Now 土 $8.88 SHOP NOW AND SAVE! REDMAN'S SHOES (Formerly Henry's Shoe Box) 815 Mass. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 19. 1957 Chamberlain Fouls Out, Ragged KUWins76-56 Wilton Chamberlain watched the Kansas-Oklahoma basketball game from the bench for 8:56 Monday night in Allen Field House and Kansas, ragged but fired-up, came through with a 76-56 victory over the Sooners. Chamberlain fouled out of the game in the second half and without him, the team kept hot a resurgence which started shortly before he left. Johnson Replaces Wilt Lew Johnson replaced the r-footer, but not especially at center. Johnson galloped over the court, sometimes at center and sometimes at forward, too. The victory was the third by the Jayhawkers over the Sooners this year. It kept Kansas safely in the Big Seven lead while Kansas State was running roughshod over Nebraska. The game started smoothly enough with Oklahoma attempting to break up KU's zone with 'quick passes from man to man. The law of averages plus their own clumsiness usually caught up with them, however, and the Sooners often lost the ball before they could even get a shot at the basket. A few times, their speedy passes completely caught a Jayhawker off guard and they were presented with a clear shot but unfortunately, in their eagerness to devise a method of getting clear shots they forgot to practice shooting. Their first half field goal percentage was only 21 per cent compared to Kansas' 42 per cent. Billings. Elstun Sparkle The hero of the night for Kansas was Ron Loneski who scored 28 points, a couple of those on his now famous one-in-a-thousand left handed hook shots. Bob Billings and Gene Elstun both did an outstanding job for Kansas both offensively and defensively. Billings's floor game sparkled. Twice, after stealing the ball at mid-court he sped down for a field goal. Maurice King, who scored 10 points, showed real spark at times when his speedy dribbling completely threw off Sooner defenders but he gave the ball away a couple of times, as did Chamberlain. As for Chamberlain, he was his usual fine self in all departments, generally, although he was caught flat-footed once or twice. Chamberlain covered his man, Joe King, well in the first half. King only scored two points. But in the second half, as the game kept getting more and more ragged, King tossed in another 13 points. It was Don Schwall, Sooner forward, who took the scoring honors. Schwall penetrated KU's zone for 14 points in the first half and 16 in the second. His 30 points was more than the rest of the Oklahoma team put together. "So You're Going" to EUROPE THIS SUMMER! Choose a CLARA LAUGHLIN TOUR Seven delightful small-member tours for COLLEGE GIRLS ONLY. Excellent itineraries and accommodations - select mem- bers June 1, 17, 21, 26, 28 and July 3. Priced from $1675.00 Special "TOWN & COUNTRY" COLLEGE TOUR departing June 28, under direction of Society Editor of Town & Country magazine. The editors and its members will appear in a Fall '57 issue of the magazine. ADULT TOUR June 11 S.S. LIBERTE Book early! Descriptive folder and full information on request. TOM MAUPIN Travel Service 1236 Massachusetts Phone VI 3-1211 Officials Call 42 Fouls A total of 42 fouls were called in the game, 15 on Kansas and 27 on Oklahoma. Most of these were scored in a hectic second half which saw the crowd of 14,000 set up a continual uproar as soon as Chamberlain fouled out. The din of the crowd duly increased or subsided depending on whether Oklahoma or Kansas was shooting a free throw. The hay score. The box score: Kansas (76) FG FT F L Jhn'sn 0 4 3 Elstun 4 8 1 Cham'bln 3 5 5 Baker 5 5 1 King 3 4 4 Hollinger 3 4 0 Billings 2 3 0 Dater 0 0 0 Cleveland 0 0 0 Lordenkil 10 8 2 Totals 22 32 15 Oklahoma (56) | | GF FT | | :--- | :--- | | Anderson | 0 0 1 | | Ashcraft | 0 0 3 | | Schwall | 11 8 3 | | Anderson | 0 0 3 | | King | 5 5 4 | | Sterer | 1 0 2 | | Clairborne | 1 2 2 | | Hudson | 0 3 5 | | Jones | 1 0 2 | | Totals | 19 18 27 | 32 410 12 —(Dally Kansan photo) Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results I AM THINE OH MASTER — An unidentified Oklahoma player appears to be paying homage to Maurice King (No. 8). That pretty much tells the story of the game as KU romped 76-56. Arkansas has had five constitutions—in 1836, 1861, 1864, 1868 and 1874. The present constitution has been amended 42 times. Dartmouth University's first varsity football game, in 1881 against Amherst, was played in uniforms borrowed from Princeton. From 1942 to 1946 Dartmouth University set an intercollegiate hockey record of 46 consecutive games without defeat. Sticklers! WHAT IS THE NOISE IN A BOWLING ALLEY? IRVING PETERSON. Pin Din N. V. STATE COLL. FOR TEACHERS WHAT IS A TALL, BONY NORTHERNER? MRS. FRANK OLIVER. Lanky Yankee U. OF TAMPA IN POKER, WHAT IS A SHY KITTY? BLANCHE CHRISTOPHER. DOMINICAN COLLEGE Scanty Ante WHAT IS AN ANTEROOM IN AN ENGLISH POLICE STATION! JERRY EICHLER. NORTH TEXAS STATE COLL. Bobby Lobby WHAT WOULD A SOUTH SEA ISLANDER USE TO WASH WINDOWS? DAVID MOWRY. Fiji Squeegee IOWA STATE COLLEGE WHAT IS LUCKIES' FINE TOBACCO? (SEE PARAGRAPH BELOW) FROM WHOM DO SAILORS GET HAIRCUTS? CARL BRYSON, CLARK UNIVERSITY Harbor Barber WHAT IS A PALE ROMEO? Wan Don DOUG MARTIN. U. OF SOUTHERN CAL. BRAND × TEACH LUCKY STRIKE LUCKY STRIKE CIGARETTES MESSAGE to Botany majors: today's lesson is easy. No spore lore, plant cant or stalk talk. Just the fact that Luckies' fine tobacco is A-1 Puff Stuff! This information won't help you graduate, but it'll cue you to the best smoking you ever had. You see, fine tobacco means better taste. A Lucky is all fine tobacco . . . nothing but mild, good-tasting tobacco that's TOASTED to taste even better. Why settle for less? You'll say a Lucky is the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked! HAPPY MAN STUDENTS! MAKE $25 Do you like to shirk work? Here's some easy money —start Stickling! We'll pay $25 for every Stickler we print—and for hundreds more that never get bad. Sticklers are simple riddles with two-word rhyming answers. Both words must have the same number of syllables. (Don't do swings.) Send your Sticklers with your name, address, college class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A, Mount Vernon, N. Y. Luckies Taste Better “IT'S TOASTED” TO TASTE BETTER : . . CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER! $ \textcircled{A} $ A.T. Co. PRODUCT OF The American Tobacco Company AMERICA'S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTES Page 5 Golf Prospects Bright For Coming Season KU's golf prospects are bright this year despite the loss of last year's Big Seven individual champion, Bob Richards Depend on Sophomores "By and large," Coach Mike Chalfant said, "Our team depends on the sophomores. If they come through, we should be just as strong or stronger than last year." Lynn Kindred, Bill Toalson and Bob Wood are the three sophomores on whom much of the success of this year's team hinges. They were freshman numeral winners last year. Bill Sayler, senior and 2-year letterman; Jim Davies and Gene Elstun, both 1-year lettermen, return from last year's squad. Last year the Jayhawkers finished six strokes away from the team championship which was won by Oklahoma. Elstun Could Win Eastin Could Win "He should be a strong contender this year." Chalfant said, "and could possibly win the title." Elstum will take a break after the basketball season is over and will be available only for the Big Seven tournament. His competition was limited to the conference journey last year, in which he finished third. The Kansas squad is also bolstered by the addition of Pat Reidy, junior college transfer, and Lloyd Klaus, who was a member of last year's team. The conference playoffs are scheduled for Lincoln, Neb., on May 17-18. Chalfant said the Sooners would probably be favored to retain their crown, but Colorado and Iowa State could win if the Oklahoma golfers have a bad day. Freshman Wins Golden Gloves Bill Burnison, KU freshman football player from Ontario, Calif., won the novice heavyweight championship in the Golden Gloves tournament in Kansas City, Mo., Saturday night. The 215-pound center entered the tournament "just to get into shape for spring football practice," and ended up winning all of his fights by the knockout route. His first victim hit the canvas just 30 seconds after the opening bell. He won his second fight by a technical knockout in the first round, and the next night flattened his opponent in 43 seconds of the second round. He won the championship by knocking out J. C. Love of Chilicothe, Mo., in two rounds. Burnison, who won the right to participate in the Western Championships in Chicago, turned down the trip to concentrate on his studies and spring football which begins March 15. Another KU participant in the championships was Wesley Walker, who lost his first fight on a disputed split decision. Walker was the defending champion in the open division of the light-heavy class. Vernon Smith, a Lawrence resident, who is going to turn professional soon, coached these men and led them through their workouts at Robinson Gymnasium. Burnison said that he intends to defend his crown next year "just for the fun of it." Recital Wednesday Part Of Faculty Series Marian Jersilid, assistant professor of piano, will present a piano recital at 8 p. m. Wednesday in Strong Auditorium in the faculty recital series. She will play "Sonata," Op. 2 No. 3 in four movements, "Allegro Con Brio." "Adagio," "Scherzo" and "Allegro Assai" by Beethoven; "Kreisleriana," Op. 16, by Schumann and "Sonata No. 7" in three movements, "Allergo Inquieto," "Andante Caloroso," and "Precipitato" by Prokofiev. Practice for KU golfers started last week with the qualifications for the team scheduled for March 18-23. Gibson Reaches Semi-Finals COLOMBIA, Ceylon — (UP) — Althea Gibson of New York and Miss C. Fonseka of Ceylon Monday reached the women's doubles semifinals of the Asian lawn tennis championship when they beat Miss Unma Vasudeva and Mrs. Sundara of India, 6-0, 6-0. Long Hair Prank Backfires On Coach TEMPLE CITY, Calif. — (UP) — Baseball coach Bill Davis rues the day he decreed that the member of the Temple City high school team with the longest hair would have to carry the bat bag throughout the coming season. University Daily Kansan Davis, who weras a crew cut, wound up being the longhair himself yesterday when all the players showed up with their heads shaved as bald as baseballs. Amos Alonzo Stagg coached college football for 57 years. Babe Ruth's 177 runs scored in 1921/15 as a major league record. There were no Intramural games played yesterday because of the varsity game with Oklahoma. IM Playoffs Resume Today Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1957 Today's games Fraternity A—Beta vs. Lambda Chi, 6:15 p. m.; ATO vs. Phi Gam, 7:15 p. m. Independent A—Am. Ph. A. vs. Oread, 4:15 p. m.; Hookers vs. Chicken Pickers 5:15 p. m. Fraternity B—Delta Sig vs. Phi A, 4:15 p. m. east; Phi Gam vs. Kappa Sig, 4:15 p. m. west. Independent B—Jim Beam vs. Newman 5:00 p. m. east; NSN vs. Battenfeld, 5:00 p. m. west. Fraternity C—Phi Gam vs. DU, 5:45 p. m. east; Phi Psi vs. Phi Gam, 5:45 p. m. west; Phi Gam vs. Phi Psi, 6:30 p. m. west; Phi Psi vs. Phi Gam 6:30 p. m. west. Score Tops In 10 Years CHICAGO — (UP) — Cleveland Indian star Herb Score's total of 263 strikeouts last season was the most attained by any major league pitcher in 10 years. Ty Cobb's .367 lifetime batting average tops all major league baseball players. M. W. ENGINEERS and SCIENTISTS we'll be on the campus Thurs.Feb.21 Fri.Feb.22 to discuss ...where you can rise to the top Right now you're in the process of making one of the most important decisions of your life. Your decision is important to us, too, because we are interested in engineers and scientists who want to get ahead. We're coming to the campus to give you the facts you need to judge whether Boeing can help you reach the goal you have in mind. The fact that Boeing is an "engineers' company" is important to your success. At Boeing, you'd work with, and for, engineers—men who talk your language, understand and appreciate your work. Boeing encourages graduate study, reimbursing full tuition and fees, plus an additional amount for incidentals. Every six months, each Boeing engineer is given a merit review—a personal opportunity for recognition and advancement. The company's steady, rapid growth assures plenty of opportunities to move ahead. At Boeing, engineers hold positions right to the top. Personal interviews on Thurs., Feb. 21, Fri., Feb. 22 See your Placement Office for time and location Another advantage: Boeing assignments are interesting. You'll work on such famous projects as the 707, America's first jet transport; the intercontinental B-52, the nation's principal long-range jet bomber; the supersonic BOMARC guided missile, and top-secret programs that probe beyond the frontiers of the known. At Boeing, you'll be in a young, expanding industry, one with its major growth still ahead. So whether you plan a career in civil, mechanical, electrical, aeronautical or industrial engineering, physics or mathematics (or related fields), drop in for a person-to-person discussion about your future at Boeing. B AIRPLANE COMPANY Seattle, Washington Wichita, Kansas Melbourne, Florida BOEING O Page 6 University Daily Kansan THE CLEAR CONTROL OF THE HUMAN MIND Babbi Ferdinand M. Isserman, Monday's convocation speaker. was among the spectators at the KUOU basketball game. During halftime Rabbi Isserman was standing at the edge of the court when a practice ball bounced in his direction. He caught it like a veteran basketball player and tossed it back. "It's the first time I've had a basketball in my hands for a long time," said Rabbi Isserman, who played center on the University of Cincinnati team from 1919-1921. Dancing, Fencing In Acting Class Members of the acting class of Jack T. Brookings, assistant professor of speech and drama, received the first of five lessons in modern dance Monday from True Binford, Overland Park sophomore. Although the basis of the course is to give the student the fundamentals of acting, it is hoped that the student will gain stage grace and coordination. Special lessons in fencing, in addition to those in modern dance, will also be given. The leading tower of Pisa Jeans 16 feet out of the perpendicular, an amount gradually increasing. Some Engineer Will Win $1000 A trip to Las Cruces, N. M., and an opportunity to win nearly $1000 in prizes and expenses will be awarded to the winner of the annual KU American Institute of Electrical Engineering student paper contest. DAIRY QUEEN Now Open the DAIRY QUEEN 1835 Mass. Prizes in the seventh district competition are, first prize, $25, a certificate of merit and an expense-paid trip to the summer general meeting of the AIEE; second prize, $25 and a certificate, and third prize, $15 and a certificate. The winner will be announced at a meeting of the AIEE-IRE at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the electrical engineering laboratory. Second and third place winners will also be announced and their papers will be entered in two area contests in Kansas City, Mo. Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism is visiting Louisiana State University and the Tulane department of journalism at Baton Rouge and New Orleans this week Professor Beth is a member of an accrediting team for the American Council on Education in Journalism Assn. and is secretary-treasurer of that group. The winner of the seventh district will compete against winners of the 10 national districts, in the institute competition. The institute competition will be based on quality of the paper only and one prize of $100 will be awarded. Prof. Beth In Louisiana Saturday Dean Burton Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information will act as chairman for the accrediting teams at their annual spring meeting in New Orleans. The mazurka is a Polish dance resembling the polka. THE MOST DARING PICTURE OF 1957! 3 BRAVE MEN STARRING RAY MILLAND ERNEST BORGNINE CINEMA SCOPE From 20th Century-Fox Cartoon-Novelty-News ENDS TONITE GRANADA GRANADA The Hawk's Nest "looked like an army had camped for awhile" after the convoction yesterday morning, said Leon J. Stilwell, Lawrence junior and part-time bus boy at the Hawk's Nest. It was so crowded that students were squatting on the floor between the tables. Others were sitting on the steps. One sat on the steps with his tray on his lap trying to drink a cup of coffee. Per Usual - Hawk's Nest Has Convocation A steady line of students from the counter to the door continued for the first 30 minutes of the convocation hour. Some students just gave up and didn't try to order, Stilwell said. At 10:30 a. m. the Hawk's Nest was normal again, but trays and dishes stacked in the windows, under the seats and on the steps still showed the effects of the preceding hour. Bus boys hadn't been able to clear away dishes because of the crowd. At noon yesterday a few trays and dishes still could be seen in the hallway. Kappa Psi Pledges To Meet A meeting of the pledges of Kappa Psi, professional pharmacy fraternity, will be held at 7 p. m. in 324 Malott Hall. The second manganese mining on record was in the Batesville, Ark., region between 1850 and 1952. Quarries of whetstones are located in Garland and Hot Spring Counties, in Arkansas. Welcome! To Our New SNACK BAR - Sandwiches - Soup - Chili - Homemade Pastries - Relish Smorgasbord - Salads - Desserts 10:00 a.m.—Midnite E. 23rd Street PARTY HOUSE INDEPENDENT "On The Campus" Laundry & Dry Cleaners Located At Rowlands. 1241 Oread CITY LION Bayles To Give Theory Talk Rowlands K New ideas in education teaching theory, will be the subject of an address by E. E. Bayles, professor of education. He will address the Secondary Teachers Study Club of Kansas City, Mo. today at Lincoln Junior High School. Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAVER NEW WATER PARK CUSHIONED CHAIRS Open 6:45 p.m. Weekdays ENDS TONIGHT "Shake, Rattle and Rock" "Runaway Daughters" WED. - THUR. 2 Days Only Something New In Entertainment! In Our First VARIETY SHOW 150 Minutes Thrills, Spills Chills and Laughs! YOU WILL SEE "All Chimps Ashore" Comedy "Ski Valley" In Cinemascope and Color "Scrambled Aches" Roadrunner Cartoon "Wonders of New Orleans" The Jazz City "Candid Microphone" "Tee Topnotchers" Mind-Eye-Body Coordination "Thunder Beach" Auto Racing At Its Best "Meet Mother MaGoo" E'Nuff said! "Animal Kids" "American Engineer" Cinemascole and Color "Vista Vision Visits Austria" "Hot, Cold, Glides, Slides And Rides" 25 w COCI mont ored. ally stock VI 3 Open 6:45 Weekdays HELD OVER Thru Wed. NEW able tone strati after 102 ARSITY Par BEVI cold. closed Ice I 3-035 BE HIS GREATEST HIT SINCE "HIGH NOON"! GARY COOPER FRIENDLY PERSUASION Feature at 7:15-9:40 In The News: ILLINOIS SCORES UPSET Color Cartoon "HENHOUSE HENNERY" Filmed Entirely on Location In Kansas City, Mo. "The Delinguents" Coming Soon Jayhawker alk Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1957 University Daily Kansan irely on Mo. "S" "S" teaching of an professor the club of lincoln ii SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS 25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ad must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. FOR SALE COCKER PUPPIES. AKC registered, 2 months old. Brown, blond, or parti-colored. Also one grown male. Exceptionally nice for pets, show or breeding stock. See at 345 Mississippi St. Phone IV 3-2760. 2-25 NEW AND DIFFERENT Olympia portable typewriter. Choice: Single or two tone color and type set. Reams VI Gasket after 4 Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday. BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies 6th and Vermont. Phone w/3-0350. Parties, Pinnings, Weddings Job Application Photos Gene's Photo Service 2144 Ohio - VI 3-0933 Gene Smoyer LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students up to $500.00 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO BOOKS 535-2 mass. Phone VI 3-8074 for 1 day service For gifts and for your own library. Art, Architecture, Cook Books, Childrens Books, Modern THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-657, 1108 La. tf EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS LIVE GIFTS—Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete kitchenware and equipment. etc Sure we have alligators, fish, turkeys, chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI3-2921. TIME, LIFE & Sports Illustrated magazines. Special students' prices of ½ reg. sub. rate. Prompt service, buy now pay later, call VI 3-0124. tt TUBE FREE with the purchase of practically new (only 250 miles) 670x15 Goodrich tire, price only $25. V1 3-1505 after 5 p.m. 2-19 TENOR SAX. See at 1109 Ohio. At home 5:30 to 9:00 on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday evenings. 2-20 HARRISE TWEED brown sport coat, size 38-40. $10. Harris Tweed gray suit, size 38-40. $15. Almost new tire chains $6. R. Murrill, 101 Alabama, VI 3-6590. '50 MERCURY. New paint, rebuilt engine, good rubber. Must see to appreciate. 1145 Louisiana or call Jerry Old- VI 3-6700. 2-19 HELP WANTED CLERK-TYPIST for full time work typing case work, data, and teaching material for classes in clinical psychology Ph. KU, extension 332 for interview. RENT A TAPE RECORDER Ideal for Practicing Languages Skits, Parties, Dances, Speech and Foreign Recording tapes & accessories. HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type terms, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf AUTO PARTS AND TIRES New or Used Auto Wrecking and Junk Co. East end of 9th St. VI 3-0956 L. G. BALFOUR CO. Fraternity Jewelers - Fraternity Badges—Rings—Novelties - Trophies and Awards - Personalized Mugs and Ceramics 411 West 14th Phone VI 3-1571 Al Lauter PHONE Vi 3-3771 Reeves Grocery Telephone and get a week or a day's groceries, without stepping out of the house. 900 Miss. TRANSPORTATION We deliver every day of the week. TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. Steamship to Rose Gieseman at the First National Bank for information for itineraries and reservations. 8th & Mad Phone VI 3-0152. FOR RENT TIRED OF WALKING UP THE HILL? Two rooms for boys one-half block from the union. Phone privileges. Available immediate. Phone VI 3-3776 or see **tt** 1231 La. ROOM FOR MEN. Well heated, linens furnished, large closet, room service. Adjacent to bath. Will rent single or double. 938 Missouri. 2-21 NICELY FURNISHED APARTMENT. 4 rooms, available now. Fire place, full asement, garage. In west location. Couple only. Call VI 3-5780. 2-21 LOST Have your car lubricated the MOTO-SWAY WAY BROWN HAT. "Wakefield," lost on the hill sometime this week. Would appreciate its return. Contact Karl Kohler, VI 3-3944. 2-19 BUSINESS SERVICES We rent nationwide trailers any size, anywhere, anytime At POTTER'S "66" SERVICE 1401 W. 6th VI 3-9891 CROFT TRAILER RENTAL CO. East 23rd VI 3-7377 TYPIST, experienced in theses, term papers, reports. Fast and accurate, student rates. Mrs. Betty Veqist. 1935 Barker Ave. Phone VI 3-2001. tf TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka. 119 Tenn. Ph. VI S-1240. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine. Phone VI 3-7654. tf FOR LEASE THREE ROOM APARTMENT. Unfurnished, on ground floor. Off street parking. Air conditioned. Ph. VI 3-2662 or VI 3-1277. 2-20 the university shop's JUST 2 MORE DAYS ANNUAL WINTER SALE Ends Wednesday, Feb. 20 Reductions from 25% to 'Ridiculous' the university shop 1420 Crescent Rd. Across From Lindley Holy Bible Feb. 17-23 Mon.-Wed., Feb. 18-20 Coffee Hour:4:00 p.m. Music Room, Union Religious Emphasis Week "IS RELIGION THE ANSWER" Tues.-Thur., Feb. 19-21 All-Student Forum 5:30 p.m. Union Cafeteria Wed. Feb. 20 Panel Discussion 8:00 Bailey Auditorium Sponsored By Campus Religious Groups Old Spice PRE-ELECTRIC SHAVE LOTION use Old Spice PRE-ELECTRIC SHAVE LOTION to get a better shave! Quicker . . . closer . . . smoother . . . no matter what machine you use. 1.00 plus fat SHULTON New York • Toronto Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1957 TREY JONES UNLIKE SAMSON—John I. Hughes is "holding" up the royal marble temple in the King's palace, Bangkok, Thailand. Samson, as you may remember, shook down a temple. Student Sees World On $1,200 Budget When you travel 32,496 miles in six months you're bound to have something to talk about. And John I. Hughes, Lawrence senior, certainly has. For Hughes, whose itinerary reads like that of a secretary of state, spent last summer in Europe, went on to the Mediterranean area, then to Egypt, the Near East and the Holy Lands, Southeast Asia, to Australia for the Olympics, to the Fiji Islands, Hawaii and back home again to Kansas, Dec. 25. Few Luxuries He arrived in Singapore as the Chinese students were rioting and in Egypt a month and a half after the Suez crisis broke out. For the entire trip, Hughes spent about $1,200. He said he slept in only two hotels on the trip. He carries with him only a dacron suit, three shirts, two pair of shoes, one pair of levi's and a black sweater. Hughes said that since he and his travel companions, two Florida University students, camped out most of the time it was often impossible to wash clothing as often as they would have liked. "The food, in general, must not have been too bad," he said. "At least none of us were sick during the trip." Of the 24 countries he visited, Hughes liked England, Germany and Australia best and said he would like to return to those countries. BIRD TV-Radio Service 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 He found more prejudice against him in being a white and a Christian than as an American. He said that the American passport in most cases was a ticket to some of the finest hospitality in the world. Hitchhikes Across Australia Hitchhikes Across Australia Hughes believes he is one of the few Americans to have hitchhiked across Australia. This trip included 2,000 miles across the Nullabar Plain in the center of Australia. In India an old woman invited Hughes and his two friends to come and stay at her house. She told them there were no beds, but they could at least sleep in the living room on the floor and have a roof over their heads. So they did. After spending a restless night and hearing noises about the room, and seeing a wicker basket in the corner, Hughes decided the old woman must have been a snake charmer. 2 BIG SHOWS SUPER ATTRACTIONS PRESENT THE BIGGEST SHOW of Stars far 57 All in Person Fats DOMINO and his coach Bill DOGGETT Ginger Tinsley Smith CLYDE McPhatter LAVERN Baker Sun, Feb. 24 - 3:30 & 8:00 P.M.- Municipal Auditorium- Toopawa Advance tickets-$2.00 at the door $2.50. Tickets on sale at Walgern Drug- 8th and Kansas and Mills Music- 332 Kansas ALL IN PERSON Chuck BERRY * Five KEYS The MOONGLOWS * ANN COLE the FIVE SATINS * Charlie BROWN Eddie Cookey DUMPS * the SCHOOL BOYS Pier Williams BIG BAND PRE-MED SENIORS Campus Representative Microscopes at 20% DISCOUNT REICHERT MICROSCOPE CO. Hulse Wagner VI-3 4711 1425 Tenn. Quill Club meetings have been changed from Monday to Thursday nights. The next meeting will be Thursday, Feb. 28. A complete schedule of programs for the semester will be announced soon. Quill Club Changes Meetings KUOK PROGRAMS today 6:00 Report one 6:05 Dinner music 6:30 "Jayhawkers From Abroad" 6:45 Public service 7:00 "Bookstore Hour" 8:00 It's 8 o'clock 9:00 Show tunes 8:05 University Theatre concert 8:30 Show tunes 9:30 Final scope 9:45 Study break 10:00 "Terry Bo" with Al Steven- 10:30 Lucky Strike news 10:35 "Terry Bo" 11:00 "Terry Bo" 12:00 Sigh off Youths' Art Work On Display Embroidery and block prints by elementary and junior high school students are on exhibition this week as part of the eighth annual Art Education Conference which begins Friday. The exhibits are being shown in the south lounge of the Student Union and in the art education room, Bailey. The works are by students from the second grade to high school. They represent 12 cities in Kansas, Missouri, Iowa and Colorado. The exhibit is divided into two parts, creative embroidery and block prints being shown at the Student Union and block prints at Bailey. One example of the embroidery depicts "rub-a-dub-lub, three men in a tub." In it are yarn, toothpicks, buttons and appliqué. This wall hanging is shown on the west wall of the south lounge. FAULTY BRAKES headed the list... of mechanical failures contributing to automobile accidents last year. WHY TAKE CHANCES ON SOMETHING SO VITAL TO YOUR SAFETY Be sure your brakes are safe at all times— Let our experts do the job...because they know your car best BRAKE SAFETY SPECIAL - Pull one front wheel to determine condition of Drums, Lining and Wheel Bearings. - Adjust Brakes at all four wheels. - Replenish Brake Fluid, if needed. See MORGAN-MACK YOUR FORD DEALER 714. Vermont VI 3-3500 --- Graduating Seniors There are only 9 days left to have your senior picture taken for the Jayhawker. Deadline is Feb.28.Make your appointment now. Exclusive Jayhawker Senior Photographer $ \oint_{S} z^{5}+z^{3} $ 924 Vt. Phone VI 3-1171 Daily hansan 54th Year, No. 89 LAWRENCE, KANSAS "We are in the process of examining possibilities of televising the Colorado game and possibly the NCAA playoff games." K-State Game TV Given Up There will be no Jay Watchers telecast of the KU-K-State basketball game. Bryce Cooke, Overland Park senior and co-chairman of the Jay Watchers, said this after a 3-hour conference in Tooeka Tuesday with representatives of television stations, telephone companies and Kansas State College. The total cost of televising the K-State game would be almost $15,000. be said and is considerably higher than the group had originally planned. "The cost of the telecast is prohibitive to advertisers acceptable to the universities." Cooke said. The reason for the added expense is that no facilities exist for getting the signal from Manhattan to Warden, the nearest town to Topeka with a receiver. Three towers would have to be constructed to get the signal to Kansas City, Mo., where it could be sent out to other television stations. (Related story, "Students Like Jay Watchers' Idea," Page 3.) Press Club Gives $200 Grants To 2 Scholarships for $200 were awarded to two juniors in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information at the Kansas City Press Club dinner in Kansas City, Mo. Tuesday night. The winners are Dick Brown of St. Marys and Dale Morsch of Morganville. The scholarships are for the 1957-58 academic year. Fourteen journalism students and three faculty men, all members of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity, attended the annual dinner, to which the undergraduate chapters of the University of Kansas, Kanssa State College, and the University of Missouri are invited. The Kansas City Press Club is the professional chapter of Sigma Delta Chi. Bill Vaughan, Kansas City Star columnist, spoke at the dinner. J. M. G. Skepticism as a fundamental philosophy is bad, the Rev. M. C. Allen, pastor of the First Baptist Church in Lawrence, told students at a coffee hour Tuesday in the Student Union. BEV. M. C. ALLEN Skepticism Hit As Creed He said that one who leads a skeptic's life would be a big question mark. Religion must be an assumption that the best things are possible, he explained. Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1957 In answer to the question "How can we know there is a God, if we cannot prove He exists?" the Rev. Mr. Allen said that "nothing is proof over the will to disbelieve." Needs $550 For Trip To Father's Funeral To be 5.000 miles from home and hear of the sudden death of a parent is the plight of Tor Ek, Savsio, Sweden graduate student. He was notified Tuesday of the death of his father, but can't make the trip home because he hasn't the money. Many Causes Ratnam Swami, Ceylon graduate student and president of the International Club, told The University Daily Kansan today that $550 would be needed by Thursday noon if Ek is to make the trip. Contributions can be brought to the International Club at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union or to the business office of The Uniervity Daily Kansan before noon Thursday. "In the first two weeks of February, the KU aids and awards office has approved more than 400 student loans, mostly for the payment of fees." Youngberg added. No one need look far for the causes, he continued. Student Demand For Loans Aids, Take All The Money "First, there are more students at KU than ever before. Society is encouraging the good high school student of very modest financial means to try for a university education." Second,深深的农业 The demand and need for student loan funds and other aids has never been so great, according to Irvin Youngberg, executive secretary of the Endowment Assn. "The amount of the average loan is up," Mr. Youngberg said. "And if our resources hold out or new money is obtained, the number of loans also will increase. This was proved during the fee-paying period, he said. The demand has nearly exhausted the loan fund. Last year the Endowment Assn. made 2,112 loans totalling $193,000. In nine months of the fiscal year through January 31, 1,614 students had borrowed $202,226. For emergencies the short-term Flower Fund loans of not more than $100 for 60 days can be borrowed on the student's signature. Other loans require the co-signature of a parent or reliable person. Money is loaned on the basis of need if a student has a C average or better. An interest rate of 2 $ \frac{1}{4} $ per cent creates a reserve against losses. prices and layoffs in industries have curtailed the ability of many families to assist their children." He said a third factor is that stiffer requirements have reduced hours that a student can work for money and still get a degree. Mr. Youngberg estimated that 1,500 of KU's,8,864 students could not remain but for scholarship and lona funds. The aggregate loan limit for undergraduate is $600, repaid in a year after graduation, but medical students have been allowed a 4-year period to repay $2,500. Lower Fund Helps Mr. Youngbeg said the Endowment Assn. has never had to take legal action against a borrower. "What did you have to eat at the Press Club dinner in Kansas City last night?" the woman senior asked a journalism faculty member this morning. No Wonder Those Potatoes Tasted Odd "It was a wonderful buffet meal," he replied. "They served turkey, ham, roast beef, salad, axd for vegetables baked carrots and some tiny potatoes with a rather odd taste." "Those were turnips, sir," a male student who had been at the dinner said quietly. Anouilh Play Cast Selected The final cast for Jean Anouilh's play, "Thieves' Carnival," has been announced by Virgil Godfrey, assistant professor of speech and drama and director of the University Theatre production. It will be presented March 13-16. The members of the cast are John Callahan, Independence freshman; Marilyn Honderick, Lloyd Karnes, Sabetha, all sophomores; Ted Teichgraeber, Emporia, Vera Stough, Tomi Yadon, both of Lawrence, all juniors. Lee MacMorris, Hutchinson, John Branigan, Kansas City, Mo., Marvin Carlson, Wichita, all seniors, and Kenneth Flumb, Sunflower graduate student. Miss Yadon will do the choreography and E. Arthur Kean, instructor of speech and drama, will design the production. Dr. Beer Gets Summer Post Robert E. Beer, associate professor of entomology, has been appointed to a summer staff position at the University of Michigan Biological Station at Douglas Lake Mich. Dr. Beer replaces Dr. H.B. Hungerford, professor emeritus of entomology, who held the summer position for 31 years. The entomology department received word that a paper written by Dr. Preston E. Hunter, formerly of KU, who is teaching at the University of Minnesota, has been published. A result of four years' research at KU, the paper reveals that fruit flies with resistance to DDT have a longer larval stage than they do under ordinary circumstances. Rossini's "Barber of Seville" ("Il Barbiere di Siviglia") is the featured opera this week in the Museum of Art's Record Concert series. Barber Of Seville Next In Series The two-act lyric comedy, played by the orchestra of Radio Italiana and directed by Fernando Previtali, was the first opera sung in Italian in New York in 1825. The opera will be heard at 11 a. m. and 3 p.m. Wednesday and Friday, and at 2 p. m. Sunday in the museum. Chorale To Sing At Jewish Benefit The University of Kansas chorale will sing before premiere showing of "Battle Hymn," a film which will be shown at 8 p.m. today at the Granada Theater. Proceeds will be given to the Lawrence Jewish Community Center to refurbish the organization's building at 1400 Tennessee St. for synagogue and fellowship services for Jewish students. 'Erasmus, Modern Thinking In Accord' "To Erasmus God was clear, the scriptures confused," said the Rev. Dr. Ronald H. Bainton, professor of ecclesiastical history at Yale. "But the Luther, the idea of God was confused and only the clarity of the scriptures could be the salvation of mankind." Dr. Bainton spoke Tuesday in Fraser Theater in the 50th Humanities lecture. His subject was, "Erasmus and Luther—Amid Currents of the Renaissance and the Reformation." Religion Panel Speaks Today "Is Religion the Answer," the theme of Religious Emobasis Week, will be discussed by a panel of four at 8 p. m. today in Bailey Auditorium. Dr. W. Stitt Robinson, associate professor of history, will be the moderator. Panel members will be Dr. Roland H. Bainton, visiting Humanities lecturer and professor of ecclesiastical history at Yale University; Rabbi Myron Meyer, Temple Adath Joseph, St. Joseph, Mo. and the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Georce Towle, St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church, Lawrence. "The Church and Religious Faith." will be the topic of a speech by Dr. Martin H. Scharlemann, professor of New Testament exegetical theology, Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, Mo., at the coffee hour at 4 p. m. today in the Student Union Music Room. An all-student forum will be held at 5:30 p. m. today in the north end of the Student Union eafeteria. The Rev. John H. Rosebaugh, former pastor of Lutheran Trinity Church, Lawrence, will speak on "The Church and Religious Faith." Bridge Tourney Begins at 7 Today KU students will compete with students from more than 100 universities and colleges in the 1957 National Intercollegiate Bridge Tournament at 7 p.m. in the Card Room of the Student Union. The contest is open to any undergraduate student. Each must have a partner. Students need not register before the tournament. Students on all campuses will be playing bridge hands selected by Geoffrey Mott-Smith, author and authority on contract bridge. The scores from each campus will be sent to him and he will analyse them. Colleges will be given national and regional ratings and the names of individuals who played the best hands on their campuses. Weather Cloudy this afternoon with drizzle northwest and extreme west early afternoon, spreading over most of west and south portions by evening. Drizzle or light rain and considerable fog ontight and Thursday. A little warmer Thursday. Low tonight 30-35. High Thursday upper 30s north to lower 40s south. "Erasmus belived that we must search for truth, but Luther contended that truth can only be given," said Dr. Bainton, pointing out one of the major differences in the views of the two men. "Our religious thinking in America is now largely following the philosophy of Erasmus. There is a reaction against dogmatism and a willingness to concede the possibility of correctness of others' views," he said. "It is possible that in 10 years the trend of thought might go in the other direction. "Erasmus has been the epitome of northern or Christian Renaissance. He was more persistent and virulent than Luther," said Dr. Bainton. Although both men were reared in monasteries, even their reasons for being there were different, he said. "Luther entered the monastery with a feeling of reverence and a devout desire to gain salvation. Erasmus entered because he was an illegitimate child and his mother didn't know what else to do with him. Humanist Influence "Erasmus was influenced by the Humanists' tolerance of other religions, and while he did not go as far as the Humanists, he did Christianize the philosophy of Humanism and present the point of view which may well be the basis for our modern left-wing protestantism." Dr. Bainton defined the doctrine of Erasmus as the philosophy of Christ. He quoted a passage from Erasmus' writings in which he protested the tendency of the times to argue too many questions without regard to one's own sincere judgment. He quoted Erasmus as saying, "That which is forced cannot be sincere, and that which is not voluntary cannot please Christ." Pleas For Peace Erasmus was a philological historian who had a plan for changing the church through a program of education and peace. "Erasmus was the most eloquent person of his generation in his pleas for peace," Dr. Bainton said. "Luther believed that man has a freedom of choice in his actions, but that his actions are of no importance, as the final judgment is in the hands of God. Erasmus maintained that man has at least some ability to improve himself with the help of God." Film From Sweden Fridav film from Sweden with English titles, will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Friday in Hoch Auditorium. One of the University Film Series, the film stars Ulla Jacobsson, and was a grant prize winner at the Cannes Film Festival. KU Geologists Planning Trip To Florida Laboratory Four members of the geology department are planning a field trip to Florida and the University of Miami biological laboratory in connection with the Red Tide Studies on March 18-31. The faculty men, Richard H. Benson, assistant professor of geology; Stuart Grossman, Fall River, Mass., Frederic R. Siegel, Dorchester, Mass., and Glen Lloyd Foster, Galay, Va., all graduate students, will spend most of their time on the University of Miami's ship, Gerda, which makes about four such trips off the west coast of Florida every year. Tides Kill Sea Life The Red Tide Studies is carried on by the University of Miami because of the tides that come to the coasts of Florida occasionally and kill many fish, lobsters, shrimp, and other forms of sea life. The ship stops every hour or so and takes nitrate and phosphorus samples from the water along the coast. The KU faculty men will not only help with this project, but will work on one of their own. They will look for ostracodes, a microscopic organism with a shell similar to that of the shrimp. When it dies it leaves this shell, which forms a sort of crust. The purpose of the project is to discover the distribution of these ostracodes in the Florida waters. When the Gerda stops to pick up the mineral specimens of the water, the KU men will gather the ostracodes. They plan on getting about 50 samples if conditions are favorable. In a similar project last year only three samples were gathered because of faulty equipment and bad weather. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1957 Brotherhood's Seven Days This is Brotherhood Week. It's a shame, too. It's a shame that a special 7 days has to be set aside out of the 365 to remind folks "that people shall live as one family of man." But they do. Thinking people don't like trite phrases. Thinking people shouldn't like trite attitudes. At least the prevalence of one trite attitude discrimination—gives us to believe that because of its very prevalence people must think it's all right. It's a political rule of thumb that a Catholic will never be elected president of the United States. Neither will a Jew. Nor a Christian Scientist. Yet what man of an "unacceptable" religion has never felt that people might be against him because of it. But it's not. What Negro can ever aspire to the nation's highest office? BROTHERHOOD WEEK Sponsored By The National Conference of CHRISTIANS and JEWS This is Brotherhood Week. It's a shame next week isn't. —Jerry Dawson Talented 'Sally' Schroeder Exhibits Her Work An impressive exhibit of the work of talented young artist Sara Ann Schroeder is on display in the Art Museum. The work will be on display until March 31. Miss Schroeder is a 1955 graduate of drawing and painting and has studied in Mexico at the Instituto Allende at San Miguel de Allende in the state of Guanajuato where most of this exhibit's paintings and drawings were produced. The exhibit, which includes 28 paintings in lacquer and 4 drawings in india ink, clearly shows a period of experimentation in which the artist seeks her most significant means of expression. Although there are subtle variations, the style is fairly consistent throughout the work. In at least 26 of the paintings a strong angular motion is prominent; geometric design dominates. However, in "El Capote" (The Cape), a painting of a matador and bull, an interesting circular movement creates a pleasant contrast in background to the sharp angularity of the main figures. This circular movement which was not repeated in other works of the exhibit suggests the motion of works of Miguel Covarrubias. Coupled with the design of today's mode d'arte and Miss Schroeder's genius for depicting fantasy, it is an interesting work "Hermanos en Azul" (Brothers in World) In "Buddha Mexicana" Miss Schroeder has captured the flavor of one of Mexico's many moods. The piteous child portrayed might be titled "Epitome of Pathos." Blue) and "A la Luz de la Luna" (In the Moonlight) show the artist's interest in blues and greens. ("Hermanos en Azul") is owned by Mr. and Mrs. Kelvin Hoover of Lawrence and was lent for the exhibit.) One of Miss Schroeder's best works is "Paloma Blanca" (White Dove) which shows a tragic dark figure with large soft eyes dressed in a white veil. Perhaps this figure is the Mexican counterpart of the Miss Haversham in Dickens' "Great Expectations." The only portrait in the group is entitled "El Novillaro" (Portrait of a Young Man) which is a work of deep feeling. The technique on the face is remarkable. Upon close examination it is like looking at the texture of an actual human face. Miss Schroeder seems to revel in the manipulation of color and paints with a directness in most of her works that never grows monotonous or facile. Some of the enjoyment in Miss Schroeder's work is derived from the artist's own enjoyment in her effort. "La Misa" gives an impression of the Mass which both Catholics and non-Catholics can understand. It is somber and tells the story well Jim Tice Kansas Water More Dam Foolishness? Only after construction on the Tuttle Creek Dam was under way and much money had already been spent did Kansans sit up and ask "what happened — what're they trying to do to us?" Unless this generation of Kansans asserts itself and shows some foresight and sporting blood there may well be situations arise comparable to the Tuttle Creek multi-million dollar pile of dirt. But are big dams really the answer to Kansas' water problem NOW? Advocates of "big dam foolishness" (as their opponents have dubbed them) through continued effort, saw to it that legislation to spend millions of taxpayers dollars on a big dam project (of which the outcome is yet uncertain) was railroaded through. For their "do-something-now" attitude the "big dammers" are to be commended. The Army Corps of Engineers haven't consistently agreed on this question. Admittedly, if a flood situation (like the one in 1951) arose after completion of the big dam on Tuttle Creek it probably wouldn't be sufficient to keep the water in check. Water would back up behind the dam and flood areas which weren't previously flooded A plan to speed up water conservation, erosion prevention and tributary control programs has been heralded as the best means to solve the problem of "always too much or not enough." and then go around the dam and flood the other areas. What is the answer? But again, this involves—taxpayers' money. Only recently have Kansans begun to show signs of sporting blood in solving their water problem. Years ago on the barren wastes of Southern California there were gamblers — not the slick-talking, card-dealing kind, but the hard-working, farsighted kind — with sporting blood in their veins. They took a veritable desert with no natural watershed of its own and turned it into what has been called a garden spot of the world. Kansas has a natural watershed. It needn't rely on water from elsewhere to supply its needs to produce one-fifth of the nation's wheat. More conservation of water, control of tributaries and prevention of soil erosion are what Kansas needs now. Let's see it done. Only then, perhaps, can a system of major dams make Kansas a garden spot instead of a dust bowl. Jim Tice Poor Sarge! Fellow Jayhawkers attention! We must take notice of what lies before our eyes. It is a relatively new problem, but it is rapidly surmounting as the days pass by. What's this? You didn't realize that we had any problem? Well, we sure do. And it (the problem) is one that lies very near and dear to our collective hearts. What About It. People? People! What are we going to do about Sarge? As you know, Sarge isn't getting any younger, and he still appears to be without a home. The boys down at the Sigma Nu manse claim some attachment with him, but he constantly tends to seek refuge here on campus. Sarge is way past the prime of life. As a matter of fact, so are his children. He is in the stage where he merely wanders around campus looking very old and (let's face it) . . . very fat. I have a plan now, which is the reason for my calling Sarge's plight to your attention. If every warm-hearted individual on campus made a small contribution to the "Sarge Foundation," it would be a short time, indeed, until we could outfit Ol' Sarge securely for the rest of his illustrious life. Picture our campus watchdog lounging comfortably in his crimson and blue, all weather-proof, heat-insulated dog house; situated in front of picturesque Flint Hall. It would be complete with a campus police guard to protect him from over ambitious zoology students. Now isn't that a wonderful plan? And YOU can make it possible. YOU can make Sarge the happiest campus dog who ever bothered to retire. Just drop your contributions into an envelope and mail it to "Sarge Foundation"—University of Kansas. The world's most famous golf course is the Royal and Ancient of St. Andrew's in Scotland. Send Contributions To DO IT TODAY! —John Husar University of Kansas student newpaper 1904, david. 16. 16. 1812 trieweekly 1908, daly. Jan. 16. 1812 Daily Hansan Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, $20 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. News service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every after-friday and Sunday unless except Saturdays and Sundays. University days, and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan. post office under act of March 3, 1879. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 251, news room Extension 251, news room NEWS DEPARTMENT NEWS DEPARTMENT Kent Trust Management Editor EDITION DESK Jerry Dawson ... Editorial Editor Jerry Thomas, Jim Tice, Associate Edi- tion BUSINESS DEPARTMENT BUSINESS MANAGER Dale Dole, Business Manager Dave Dickey, Advertising Manager; John Hedley, National Advertising Manager; Harold Metz, Classified Advertising Manager; Cowboy Brown, Circulation Manager. Mentally Speaking Are You 1 In 16? Many charities compete for the time and money of the college student. In fact, there are so many that the average student groans and reaches for his wallet whenever he hears the word charity. But there is one way KU students can help those less fortunate than themselves without expending a great deal of either time or money. This is by participating in the visitation and entertainment programs for Winter General Hospital in Topeka. Statistics, such as the famed "1 in 16," are rather startling, but as Dr. William Menninger said, "they don't go far enough." Although about one person in every 16 will be treated for mental illness, there are thousands more who suffer disabling emotional disturbances, thus raising the ratio dramatically. In fact, Dr. Menninger said a ratio We, as a generation, are probably more conscious of mental illness as a threat to our own lives than any previous generation has been. We realize that with more than 750,000 patients under actual hospital care, mental illness is one of our nation's greatest problems. of "one in one" would not be too far amiss. But statistics are too easily ignored. One actual visit to a mental hospital and you will never again be oblivious of the need for increased treating facilities and more psychiatrists. You gain, perhaps for the first time, a small idea of the way the hours must drag for the patients. This is where we, as students, can help. There are many groups, such as church groups or the KU "Y," which sponsor visitation programs. And individual groups are always seeking talent for entertainment visits. But there will always be the students who demur and say, "Oh you couldn't pay me to perform in an insane asylum." These students are being not only very selfish and stupid, but very unfair to themselves and missing a great experience. There is something very gratifying in seeing a glimmer of recognition come into a usually blank face when you sing an old familiar song. Or to see tears come into the eyes of patients who get their only contact with the normal world through you. Seldom will you find an audience so receptive, but you have no chance to get conceited. It's a strange feeling to have your listeners turn over, pull the covers up over their heads and go to sleep. But the lump in your throat is hard to swallow when the ones who plainly don't remember what in the world you are doing there; smile and try to be friendly. Many of the wards which are opened to students on these various trips are normally closed wards. But you needn't feel afraid. Few of the patients are actually dangerous. If you take normal precautions, the reward gained by knowing you've helped just a little far outweighs any uncertainty you may have felt. But, you say, "I don't have any talents. I can't play a hot trumpet, pull a rabbit out of a hat or sing a note." These patients don't demand that you be a Houdini or even belong to the Musicians' Union. You can surely play checkers, can't you? Or read the comics page? Then you can help, and in doing so, gain a valuable experience and a clearer insight into one of our nation's most important problems—the care of the mentally ill. —Joan Graham LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler TINK Put Snarf PROF SNARF PRIVATE SECRETARY BITTER TEACHERS FOR A BITTER WORLD Put Snarf "THAT DON'T TAKE LONG—HOW'D HE LIKE YOUR TEAMMAPER?" Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1957 University Daily Kansas Page 3 Seminar Plan Tried In English Experimental classes are being conducted in the English department this semester and could be made part of the regular schedule next year. English 94 and 96 are courses which previously had been taught with one student having special conferences with his instructor. This semester English 94, Reading for Honors, is being taught in small seminar groups of about four students. English 96 is a directed reading course. During the past few years the enrollment has increased so much in these courses that the load has been getting too heavy for the teachers who try to hold the seminars along with their regular classes. "It all depends on what the students and teachers report as to whether this plan will be continued," Miss Calderwood said. "If this plan works," said Miss Natalie Calderwood, assistant professor of English, "we may set up a seminar plan for handling all the students in these courses." Small Art Works To Be At Museum "Major Work in Minor Scale" an Italian exhibition of distinguished small works by 10 contemporary Italian artists, will be featured later this month at the Museum of Art. The display will include three examples each by painters Caffe, Caruso, Flazoni, Music and Vespignani, and sculptors Fazzini, Greco, Manzu, Mascherini and Minguzzi. The selection of works was made by Gaspero del Corso, director of l'Obelisco Galleria d'Arte in Rome. Flax has produced an annual income of 50 million dollars in North Dakota the past five years. Students Like Jay Watchers' Idea Campus sentiment concerning the Jay Watchers' efforts to raise money to finance television of basketball games apparently is in favor of the project. A survey of 34 University students selected at random by The Daily Kansan showed .all were in favor of telecasting KU basketball games and many desired a continuation of the project during football season. Some of the comments: Strangely enough, there was not a single dissenting vote and almost all the students reached said they had contributed to the fund. Janice Brown, Colby junior — I think it is a good idea. It costs quite a bit, but it is well worth it. Richard Willhite, Toronto freshman—It's a tremendous idea, but I wish they could have started sooner to be sure of success. Kay Stoner, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore—It is a fine idea, especially if it can be carried out for the next two years when we should have great basketball teams. Pat Canary, Wichita senior—I'm all for it and hope they can come through. Roy Flint Jr., Oklahoma City junior—I'm in favor and I think it is one of the best ideas anyone has had around here for a long time. Wayne Coulter, Wichita freshman It is a pretty good idea, especially if they can carry it over into the football season. Suzanne Hamilton, Hutchinson sophomore—I'm all in favor of the project. I thought enough of it to contribute to it and I hope many others do, too. Clara Hall, Birmingham, Ala, senior- It is a very fine idea. Jim Kinderknecht, St. Marys sophomore—It really is a tremendous deal for the students and the people in this area. I wish more people would get behind the project because it will really benefit the students. Janice Johnson, Kansas City, Mo., senior-I am very much in favor of the program. I contributed to the fund and hope it will be a success. Future Parents To Hear Panel Preparation for parenthood will be discussed at 7:45 p.m. Wednesday at the KU infant Welfare Center, 1126 Louisiana. It will be the first of a series sponsored by the Home Economics department. A panel of parents with Allen Stallcup, Lawrence graduate student, as leader will discuss "What We Found Out About Babies." Within a few years there may be a business trend for national firms to hire college sophomores and juniors for summer jobs. Job Trend May Change Denmar A. Cope, assistant professor of business administration and director of the business placement bureau, said this would give the undergraduates an opportunity to become acquainted with the companies and to decide on the field which they want to enter. "The demand for college graduates Following meetings will deal with prenatal development, everyday problems during pregnancy,baby care, adjustments in family life with the coming of babies and readiness for parenthood. A brief introduction and conclusion to the recording will be given by Dr. John Michael, assistant professor of psychology. Plans of trips to Topeka State and Meninger Hospitals will be discussed. Psychology Club To Meet Tonight "Brainwashing" will be the subject of a tape recording to be heard at a meeting of the Undergraduate Psychology Club at 7:30 p.m. m today in the Pine Room of the Student Union. The recording was made by an Army psychologist and involves mass indoctrination techniques. is increasing each year and more and more major companies are finding it necessary to carry on college recruiting programs," he said. Young married people may attend the talk with other young parents and professional persons who will participate. Most graduates are being hired for the companies' management training programs and the need is also great for college-trained salesmen and accountants, he added. Discussion leaders trained in various fields will be announced each week. The Best Service For (Almost) Anything On Wheels At LEONARD STANDARD SERVICE Axe To Talk At Convocation Dean Leonard H. Axe of the School of Business will speak on scholarships at the honors convocation Friday at Missouri Valley College in Marshall, Mo. LEONARD SERVICE STANDARD The Student Union Bookstore will offer a picture lending library to students beginning next semester. The employees of the bookstore are painting picture frames and preparing glasses and prints for students' use next fall. For a small fee students will be able to borrow framed prints of famous paintings. Prints can be rented for a whole semester. North America's native elk used to range over much of the United States and Canada, says the National Geographic Society. Indians called it "wapiti"; English colonialnamed it elk after Europe's big deer. "For the graduate who does not object to moving, the opportunities with large companies are wide and prospects for advancement are increasing," Cope said. Cloudy days and frequent rains in Norway's fjord country rule out drying hay on the ground. The crop is spread on wires like laundry so breezes can get at it. Bookstore To Offer Picture Rental Plan The winter wheat acreage seeded in the United States for 1956-57 is the smallest since 1913. ... As lovely ... As lovely as the first day you wore it ... O Your sweaters will look newer,wear better and last longer if they are given special Acme Care. - re-blocked Have Them...folded to retain shape - packed in durable plastic ACME Bachelor Laundry & Dry Cleaners 1109 Mass. VI 3-5155 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1857 v.v Journalists Initiate 11 Eleven women were initiated Tuesday into Theta Sigma Phi, honorary professional fraternity for women in journalism, at the home of the faculty adviser, Miss Frances Grinstead, associate professor of journalism. Thev are: They are: Juniors—Betty J. Edwards, Kansas City, Kan.; Ardeth G. Nieman, Independence; Martha D. Billingsley, Kansas City, Mo.; Phyllis J. Graham, Almena; Nancy J. Harmon, Wichita; Dona L. Seacat, Emporia Jere Glover, Salina; Marilyn K. Mermis, Hays; Mary Beth Noyes, Troy, and Carol Ann Huston, Kansas City, Mo. Senior—Karolyn K. Hanson, Kansas City, Mo. Committees were appointed for the annual Theta Sigma Phi Matrix Table banquet to be held Tuesday, March 26, in the Student Union. Chairmen are; Miss Seacat, menu; Joan George, Caney senior, Matrix Table newspaper; Felecia A. Fenberg, Kansas City, Mo., senior, invitations; Miss Mermis, table decorations, and Miss Nieman, tickets. Margaret Armstrong, Westfield, NJ., senior, is general chairman of the Matrix Table. Two million people visit the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., each year. No other national shrine or park attracts so large an audience, the National Geographic Society says. WINTHROP SHOES Good looking and popular priced at 8.95 to 11.95 For Campus Wear $9.95 Smoked Buck Smooth Cordovan Brown, Black & White Saddles SHOE Rubber cushioned Crepe Soles for easy and long wear Haynes & Keene 819 Mass. Open Thurs. 9:30 to 8:30 p.m. Names of candidates for Rock Chalk Revue program cover girls must be turned in to the KU-Y office by 5 p.m. today. Revue Cover Girl Deadline Today Four women will be selected to apapear on the Rock Chalk Revue program from the names submitted. In addition to apapearing on the program, the girls will introduce several of the skits during the Revue. Entries will be judged by the chairmen of the Rock Chalk Revue committees. The University of Kansas debate squad will compete in the University of Nebraska debate tournament in Lincoln, Neb. Thursday through Saturday. Debaters In Nebraska Meet The tournament is organized on a four-man team basis and the team with the largest number of total points will win the sweepstakes trophy. The KU team consists of Ray Nichols, Lawrence freshman; Don Bowen, Salina and Allen Hickey, Liberal, both sophomores, and William Lashbrook, Kansas City, Kan. junior. In addition to debating, Lashbrook will enter the oratorical division with his original oration, "The Measure of a Man." Nichols will compete in extemporaneous speaking and Bowen in interpretative poetry. Lashbrook, Bowen and Hickey will discuss the question, "What Should be the United States' Policy Toward Nations Under Communist Domination?" Debate coach Wilmer Linkugel, instructor of speech and drama, will accompany the debaters. A total of 32,017 farmeys and ranchers are cooperating in soil conservation districts in South Dakota. R. --- Graduating Seniors --- There are only 8 days left to have your senior picture taken for the Jayhawker. Deadline is Feb.28.Make your appointment now. Exclusive Jayhawker Senior Photographer $ \bigcirc^{5} $ $ \bigcirc^{6} $ 924 Vt. Phone VI.3-1171 A Religious Emphasis Week - Feb.17-23 "IS RELIGION THE ANSWER" Wednesday, February 20 4:00 p.m. Coffee Hour—Student Union, Music Room Speaker: Dr. Martin H. Scharlemann Topic: "The Religious Faith of a Philosopher" 5:30 p.m. All Student Forum-Cafeteria North End Speaker: Rev. John H. Rosebaugh Topic: "The Church and Religious Faith" 8:00 p.m. Panel Discussion — Bailey Hall Auditorium Topic: "Is Religion the Answer?" AME Youth Fellowship Baptist Student Union Christian Endeavor Christian Science Org. Christ's Ambassadors Disciples Student Fellowship Thursday, February 21 12:00 noon Faculty Forum-Cafeteria, North End Speaker: Rev. Theodore Gill 5:30 p.m. All Student Forum—Cafeteria, North End Speaker: Rev. Alan J. Pickering Topic: "The Religious Faith and Campus Life" 8:00 p.m. KU-Y. All-Member Meeting—Student Union, Jayhawk Room Speaker: Rev. Theodore Gill Baptist Student Union—Student Union, Room 306 Topic: "Individual Responsibility for Witnessing and Enlistment" Friday, February 22 4:00 p.m. Evaluation Session—Student Union, Pine Room To be attended by the REW Council, KURA, the speakers, SRC representatives Coffee Served!!!! Be Sure To Attend The Church Of Your Choice Sunday Sponsored by these Hill Religious Groups EUB Youth Fellowship Free Methodist Youth Gamma Delta Hillel Kansas Canterbury Assn. KU Christian Fellowship KU-Y Liahona Fellowship Lutheran Student Assn. Newman Club Roger Williams Fellowship United Student Fellowship Wesley Foundation Westminster Fellowship Young Friends Wednesday, Feb. 28, 1957 University Daily Kansan Page Freshman Track Team Is Loaded As Usual Two Good Milers Tom Skutka and Brian Travis are the two outstanding KU mile prospects. Skutka nosed out Travis by five seconds in the first postal meet in 4:23.0. Jim Hoffman tops the KU high jump prospects. He cleared 6-foot in the Colorado dual. Russell Garriott threw the shotput a winning 47" 10% against the Buffaloes. Kansas, which has dominated Big Seven track and field almost as consistently as the Oklahoma Sooners have dominated football, doesn't appear to be suffering any slackening off with this year's freshman squad. The Jayhawker freshman track team has many individual standouts on the squad, and the only apparent weakness could be a slight lack of depth. Cliff Cushman equaled Shelby's triple sweep by winning the 880-yard run, 440-yard dash and 60-yard high hurdles. His winning time in the 880 was 1:53.8, in the 440, 51.7, and in the 60-year highs, 307.9. The Jayhawkers completed their sweep against Colorado by winning the mile relay in 3:30.8. Travis came back to edge another Jayhawker outstanding distance prospect, Dale Lubs, in the two-mile run in 9:37.4. Ernie Shelby won the broad jump, 60-yard dash and 60-yard low hurdles in the Colorado meet. Shelby has recorded a jump of over 25 feet in the broad jump. His 60- yard dash time in the recent dual was :63. while he won the 60-yard low hurdles in :07.0 Five of the Jayhawker frosh made the All-American track team while in high school. In a recent indoor track meet the freshmen swamped Colorado, 78 $ _{1/2} $ -25 $ _{1/2}$ . KU swept all 12 first places in the meet. Logan topped the pole vaulters in the Colorado meet, vaulting 13' $ 9 \frac {1}{4} $ . Missouri, Nebraska and Oklahoma also appear to have teams which will push these Kansas stars of the future. The Sooners have the finest freshman track team they have had in many years. The Oklahoma freshmen topped the varsity in a recent dual, $ 53 \frac{1}{2} -50 \% $ . Edwards expects the Wildcats to hold a slight edge in the 220 and 440-yard races, but he said that the Kansans should make up for this edge by being stronger in the 60 and 100-yard dashes. Swimmers Face Tough K-State The University of Kansas swimming team meets the strong K-State Wildcat swimmers in a meet this afternoon in Manhattan. This could prove to be one of the closest matches of the year for the Jayhawker swimmers who now have a 2-1 record. The Jayhawkers are in top shape and will go with the same swimmers who have raced in the previous five meets. The outcome of this match could be a very good indication as to how Kansas will fare in the forthcoming Big Seven meet. Early season predictions figured the Jayhawkers and Wildcats to be battling for third place. Coach Chuck Edwards said he expects K-State to be very strong. "Our times are improving as the season progresses." Edwards said. "The teams should be very evenly matched in all events." KU has meets left with Iowa State, Emporia State, and Nebraska before traveling to Norman, Okla., for the Big Seven meet, March 8-9. The longest winning streak in major league baseball is 26 games by the New York Giants in 1916. Bogey was the first international term used in golf. CHOOSE A CAREER With The BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM There are unlimited opportunities in the communications industry for 1957 graduates in business administration, engineering and science. There will be openings for graduates in... ENGINEERING MATHEMATICS PHYSICAL SCIENCES With these Bell Telephone System Companies: Southwestern Bell Western Electric Bell Telephone Laboratories Sandia Corporation Long Lines Department of A.T. & T. Sign up now at the Engineering Office. BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION With these Bell Telephone System Companies: Southwestern Bell Long Lines Department of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company Sign up now at the Business School Office. Interview dates: Monday, February 25 and Tuesday, February 26, 1957 BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers—They are Loyal Supporters. Sheaffer The Pen With the Snorkel SHEAFFER'S. SNORKEL PEN the writing instrument that does something nice for everyone's handwriting! Sheaffer's Admiral Snorkel Pen $19.00 SHEAFFER'S. SNORKEL PEN the writing instrument that does something nice for everyone's handwriting! Sheaffer's Admiral Snorkel Pen $10.00 The Statesman $15.50 for the pen $ 7.25 for the pencil The Saratoga $11.95 for the pen $ 6.00 for the pencil The Special $ 7.95 for the pen $ 6.00 for the pencil STUDENT Union Book Store Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1957 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By GEORGE ANTHAN (Assistant Sports Editor of The Daily Kansan) What did the Jay Watchers do in Topeka Tuesday? The truth is that they didn't do a thing. True, there was a meeting at which was discussed the problem of televising one of KU's remaining regularly scheduled out-of-town games and, or two games at the NCAA playoffs in Dallas, Texas. No figures came out of the meeting, no concrete plans—only possibilities and desires. One solid tact seems to have been brought out—the televising of the K-State game would cost $15,000. That possibility was dropped. Bebe Lee At Meeting Bebe Lee, K-State athletic director was at the meeting as were four representatives from Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. and Jim Schmitz, an engineer from WAF-DTV. Jay Barrington, WDAF program and sports director, was there, too. There is nothing at all wrong with an organization like the Jay Watchers trying to do what they are. However, the Jay Watchers gave the impression at the KU-Oklahoma A & M basketball game that they were asking for donations which would be used to put the KU basketball team on television. It seems as if the Jay Watchers did not know positively whether or not those donations would or could be used to televise any games. They didn't know then and they don't seem to know now all the very necessary and orderly facts which are so essential in the launching of such a project. The money donated at that game has just as much chance of going into the KU Endowment Assn. as it has of putting the KU basketball team on television. Endowment Assn. All Right The KU Endowment Assn. is a good thing. It should be contributed to by all loyal Kansas students and alumni as they see fit. It does not seem, however, as if money collected by the Jay Watchers was meant by the donors to go into the Assn. We would like very much to see Kansas basketball on television. But it's advertising money that's needed so the job can be done in the tradition of American communications — with commercial sponsors. These sponsors, of course, must be acceptable to the University. The Jay Watchers may have the right idea but they are going about it wrong. It seems as if they rushed into the raising of money through donations too quickly. The place to raise sums like $10,000 is in, for example, Kansas City. But many members of the KU Alumni Assn. there are of the opinion, "that it's a good idea and we are for it but we have our hands full too." Eugene Morgan, the president of the group, suggested that KU students might make a concentrated effort at obtaining funds in the Kansas City area. That takes time and planning. If concrete figures, definite plans and a course of action had been evolved by the Jay Watchers weeks ago and if they had obtained the full backing of civic and alumni organizations, then there would have been nothing wrong with presenting the plan to the area's basketball fans. If the plan did not work, it would not be because of disorganization and lack of time. We have been accused of not backing our athletic teams. We must disagree with that. There are many ways in which a school newspaper attempts to back its teams and many of these ways are often misinterpreted by the shallow thinker. In this case we are all for the Jay Watchers idea, basically, but wed like to see it carried out in an orderly fashion. That way the chance of failure would be less and the final product would be something very satisfying. Up To Alumni Now What's going to happen now? The Jay Watchers do have some money and those funds should be used for the purpose the donors intended. It's now up to the area's baskelton fans to decide whether or not they want to lend full support. If nothing happens, well let it be a lesson to all future Jays who want to be Watchers . . . the commercial is the most important part of the program, once it has been arranged for, the rest falls into place naturally. College Basketball Results Dartmouth 73, Holy Cross 69. By UNITED PRESS Maine 86. Bates 84. Connecticut 90, Massachusetts 77. Georgetown 83, George Washington 75. Virginia 90. Duke 81. Virginia 90, Duke 81. Citadel 17, Newberry 63. South Carolina 85, Furman 77. Georgia Tech 87, Tennessee 85. Kent State 80, Bowling Green 75. Abilene Christian 90, Trinity (Tex.) 66. North Carolina 86, North Carolina State 57. Gustavus Adolphus 85, St. Johns (Minn.) 81 George Williams 61, University of Chicago.45 Rice 82. Arkansas 69. Wartburg 83, Dubuque 68. Southern State 77, Arkansas State 75. Southern Methodist 71, Texas A&M 55. Finks Leaves Notre Dame SOUTH BEND, Ind.—(UP) -Jim Finks, former star quarterback with the Pittsburgh Steelers of The National Football League, resigned yesterday as backfield coach at Notre Dame to become assistant coach in charge of player personnel for Calgary in the Canadian Football League. Michigan beat Stanford 49-0 in the first Rose Bowl football game in 1902. YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 BIRD TV-Radio Service 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 340 ENGINEERS and SCIENTISTS we'll be on the campus Thurs. Feb. 21 Fri. Feb. 22 to discuss your future at Boeing ...where you can rise to the top Right now you're in the process of making one of the most important decisions of your life. Your decision is important to us, too, because we are interested in engineers and scientists who want to get ahead. We're coming to the campus to give you the facts you need to judge whether Boeing can help you reach the goal you have in mind. The fact that Boeing is an "engineers' company" is important to your success. At Boeing, you'd work with, and for, engineers—men who talk your language, understand and appreciate your work. Boeing encourages graduate study, reimbursing full tuition and fees, plus an additional amount for incidentals. Every six months, each Boeing engineer is given a merit review—a personal opportunity for recognition and ad- Personal interviews on Thurs., Feb. 21, Fri., Feb. 22 See your Placement Office for time and location Another advantage: Boeing assignments are interesting. You'll work on such famous projects as the 707, America's first jet transport; the intercontinental B-52, the nation's principal long-range jet bomber; the supersonic BOMARC guided missile, and top-secret programs that probe beyond the frontiers of the known. At Boeing, you'll be in a young, expanding industry, one with its major growth still ahead. vanancement. The company's steady, rapid growth assures plenty of opportunities to move ahead. At Boeing, engineers hold positions right to the top. So whether you plan a career in civil, mechanical, electrical, aeronautical or industrial engineering, physics or mathematics (or related fields), drop in for a person-to-person discussion about your future at Boeing. AIRPLANE COMPANY Seattle, Washington Wichita, Kansas Melbourne, Florida BOEING --- Page 7 Four'A'Teams Advance To IM Basketball Finals A strong Phi Gamma Delta basketball team, led by John Peppercorn's 25 points, ran over ATO last night, 56-44, in a Fraternity A semi-final playoff game at Robinson Annex. American Tennis Ace Wins ATO, after jumping to a 17-12 $ ^{8} $ BRUSSELS, Belgium -- (UP)Budge Patty, American net ace living in Paris, beat Belgium's Jackie Brichant, 7-5, 6-4, yesterday in the opening day of a three-day exhibition tennis tournament. Patty also teamed with Phillippe Washer of Belgium to whip Sven Davidson of Sweden and Brichant, 6-2, 6-2, in the doubles competition. first quarter lead, faltered and then fell apart when Tom Jones, 6-7 freshman center, fouled out with six minutes left in the game. The biggest factor in the Phi Gam victory was their rebounding superiority; Peppercorn and big Jim Tierney saw to this. A 3-point play by Peppercorn with 13 seconds left in the first half gave Phi Gam a 1-point lead, 29-28. Then in the third quarter, with Jones picking up two fouls, the two teams set the stage for the climactic last quarter by scrapping to a 38-38 tie. After controlling the fourth quarter jump, Phi Gam hit six quick points before Jones committed his fifth personal. Without having to cope with Jones' rebounding strength, Phi Gam hit four more quick points and then went into a stall to kill the last four minutes of play. In the other semi-final playoff game, Beta Theta Pi overpowered Lambda Chi, 52-26. Forward Bill LaRue led the Betas with 16 points and did a great defensive job on Lambda Chi's H. C. Palmer, holding him to nine points. Betas Top Lambda Chi 1972-05-25 A full court press by Pharmacy rattled Oread and several times resulted in stolen balls and quick, easy layups. In the playoff semi-finals of the Independent A league, the American Pharmaceutical Association team, paced by Bill Brainard's 29 points, edged by Oread Hall after being down at the end of the third quarter. 27-30. Beta led 20-10 at halftime and never were threatened. Gary Evans chipped in 12 points for the winners, and Bob Ohmart hit 8 for Lambda Chi. With 42 seconds left in the game Brainard scored on a backhand drive shot to put Pharmacy ahead to stay. A last second half-court shot by Russell fell short, and the game ended. Hooker's Win Easily University Daily Kansas In the other Independent A game, the Hookers overwhelmed the Chicken Pickers, 73-25. Led by Mo Corvelle's 26 points, the Hookers took a 30-14 halftime lead and out-scored the losers 44-11 in the second half. Independent B — NSN 33, Battenfeld 14; Newman 2. Jim Beam 0. The finals in the two leagues will be played Thursday afternoon. Tuesday's Results TWO POINTS COMING UP — Tom Jones of ATO-goes up for a field goal in Tuesday's intramural playoff game which Phi Gamma won, 56-44. The players around Jones are unidentified. Tuesday's results Fraternity B — Phi Gam 39, Kappa Sig 16; Delta Sig 32, A Phi A 30. Independent B — NSN 33, Batten- HAPPY HAL'S Fraternity C — Phi Gam 5-1, DU 1-13; Phi Gam 1-40, Phi Psi 2-30; Phi Gam 2-33, Phi Psi 1-31; Phi Gam 3-34, Phi Psi 3-20. The accredited bilingual school sponsored by the Universidad Autonoma de Guadalajara and members of Stanford University faculty will offer in Guadalajara, Mexico, Julv 1 - Aug. 10. courses in art, folklore, geography, history, language and literature. $225 tuition, board and room. Write Prof. Juan B. Rael, Box K, Stanford University, Calif. Today's Games E. 23rd St.—Ph. VI 3-9753 For Your Convenience NEW HOURS 7 a.m. - MIDNIGHT 7 Days A Week Steaks Chicken - Bar-B-Q Today's Games Fraternity B — Delt Sig vs. Phi GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL Bank Lawrence National VI 3-026Q 7th & Mass. Claims that Wilt Chamberlain is getting a lot of money for attending the University of Kansas were "too ridiculous to dignify by comment." said Coach Dick Harp Tuesday. ENJOY ALL THE BENEFITS OF A BANK ACCOUNT DEPOSIT REGULARLY WITH US. Harp was asked for comment on charges by Walter Brown, owner of the Boston Celtics, who claimed that Chamberlain "proselyted himself" by attending Kansas. Brown said Chamberlain should be barred from the National Basketball Association because no "NBA team can afford to pay him what he gets at Kansas now." Harp's brief statement in reply was: "This statement is too ridiculous to dignify by comment". Cy Young won 511 games while pitching 22 years in the major leagues. "Well, you see, depositors in banks are creditors and your deposits are direct obligations of the bank. Your money is not an investment in the bank itself it is simply deposited for future withdrawal." There's nothing quite like money in the bank How's that? Chamberlain Pay'Ridiculous' Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1957 Delt, 6:30 p.m. east; Phi Gam vs. Beta 6:30 p.m. west. Independent B — Medics vs. New- man 5:45 p.m. east; NSN vs. Cats 5:45 p.m. west. Fraternity C — Phi Gam 5 vs. Phi Gam 1 4:15 p.m. east; Phi Gam 3 vs. Phi Gam 2 4:15 p.m. w. west. Independent C — Hoopoes vs. RHM 5:00 p.m. east; Navy 1 vs. Navy 2 5:00 p.m. west YOURS FOR THE ASKING... A Hallmark date book DateBook YOURS FOR THE ASKING ... A Hallmark date book DateBook A handy calendar reference book for all the birthdays, anniversaries and special occasions you want to remember throughout the year. And there's a place for memoranda and your Christmas list and addresses, too. Come in and get your Hallmark Date Book this week at Mosser-Wolf SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE Clip These Coupons To . . . SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! Gigantic coupon sale on all sweaters, flannel slacks and wool shirts in the store. You'll find a great selection of college styles in quality merchandise. Come in today! Coupon sale ends Saturday, February 23. --- This Coupon Worth $500 On any pair of Flannel Slacks in the store --- --- --- This Coupon Worth - $400 - On any Crew or V-neck Sweater or Wool Shirt L --- The College Shop 1342 Ohio • First Door South of Jayhawk Cafe SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 26, 1957 Official Bulletin Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office. 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring that material. The only Place, Kansas, Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. TODAY Coffee Hour, 4 p.m. Music Room, Student Union Office, Pennsylvanian. The Ribbon is a philosophy of the College. Eniomology Club, 4 p.m., 301 Show Hall. Speaker: Dr. R. S. Sokal. Ateneo meeting: 4:15 p.m., 11 Fraser Ateneo room. Student Union. Attendance required. Panel discussion, 8 p.m., Bailey Hall Auditorium. Speakers: Dr. Roland H Bainton, Rabbi Myron M. Myer, Dr. W Stitt Robinson, moderator, the Rt. Rev. Msgr. George Towle. "Is Religion the Answer?" KuKu Club meeting, 5 p.m., Student Union. All student forum, 5:30 p.m. cafeteria. Borough. "The Church and Religious Mass." Undergraduate Psychology Club meeting, 7:30 p.m., Pine Room. Student Union. Tape recording on "Brain-Washing." Newman Club executive meeting, 7:30 p. 107 Press Conference Circle K Club, 7 p.m., 365B, Student Union. International Club, 7 p.m. Jayhawk Room, Student Union. Prof. Sam Anderson will give talk on U.S.S.R. Color slides will be shown. Everyone welcome. THURSDAY Morning prayer, 6:45 a.m. Danforth Chapel, Holy Communion, 7 a.m. Faculty Forum, noon, cafeteria, north end. The Rev. Theodore Gill. septimil . Student Union. 12-30-12:50 Dr. Conrad Willard. "Sacrificial Living." Poetry hour, 4 p.m. Music Room, Student lounge, English department, well read, and kindle Der deutsche Verein trifft sich um 5 Uhr Donnerstag in 402 Fraser. Dr. Backus von der Abteilung der Gerschichte wird über Deutschland reden. Singen und Erfrischungen wird es auch geben. All-student forum, 3:00 p.m., cafeteria, All-student forum, 5:30 p.m., cafeteria, north end. Phi Delta Kappa, 6 p.m., Kansas Room, Student Union. Joint meeting with Pi Lambda Theta. Your wife (or sweet-heart) is invited to attend with you. Make reservations by Wednesday noon. Dinner will be $1.50 a plate. Archaeology Society, 7:30 p.m., 300B and C Student Union. Speaker: Dr. James E. Seaver. "The Archaeology of Sicily." Baptist Student Union. 8 p.m., 306 Student Union. Speaker: Dr. Conrad Willard, "Individual Responsibility for Witnessing and Enlistment." KU-Y all member meeting, 8 p.m. J.K. Room, Student Union, Speaker: Tell Gill Pre-Nursing Club, 8 p.m., 110 Fraser FRIIDAY Morning prayer, 6:45 a.m. Danforth Chapel. Holy Communion, 7 a.m. Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. Museum of Art Museum. Rossin: "T" Barburg e l'Silvian. Evaluation session, 4 p.m. Pine Room Student Union. Coffee served. Newman Club semiformal, 8:30-11:36 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Student Union. $1 a couple. Call Carol Kane, VI 3-7070, for tickets. Editor Will Talk To KU-Y "Is Religion the Answer? If You Ask the Right Questions?" is the title of a talk the Rev. Dr. Theodore Gill will give to the KU-Y at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union. The Rev. Dr. Gill is one of the editors of Christian Century magazine and is also the editor of Pulpit magazine. The KU-Y must know who will be taking the Mexico trip by Thursday, Feb. 28. Students who wish to go should get an application blank for a Mexican tourist card at the KU-Y office. There will be a meeting Feb. 28, to discuss the necessary arrangements for the trip. A $40 deposit will be collected at this time. The International club will elect a new president and hear a talk on Russia at 7:30 p.m. m today in the Jawhawk room of the Student Union. Club To Elect Officer, Hear Talk On Russia Ratnam Swami, Matale, Ceylon graduate student, president in the fall semester, has announced his resignation from the office. Dr. Sam F. Anderson instructor of German who visited Russia last year, will talk and show slides on the USSR after the regular business meeting. Calcium chloride melts ice at temperatures as low as 40 degrees below zero while salt generally is considered ineffective at temperatures lower than 20 degrees above zero. AWS Senate To Meet Today Rules and elections of AWS will be discussed at the President's Council meeting-at 4 p.m. in the dean of women's office, 220 Strong. The council, which has not convened in two years, is composed of presidents of women's organized houses. The meeting is called by the president of the AWS Senate when it is necessary. Harvard Professor To Talk Prof. Eugene C. Rochow of the Harvard University department of chemistry, will 'speak to' graduate students and staff of the University chemistry department Thursday in Malott Hall. He will speak on some aspects of group IV chemistry. Prof. Rochow received the Baeckeland Award in 1949 for research in this field. The Slainese cat at one time was used in Siam to hunt small game and is still often used as a watch cat. It is trained to jump on the backs of intruders and yowl. German Government Gives Films To KU The Federal Republic of Germany is depositing an archive of Germans films at the Bureau of Visual Education at the University of Kansas. The films will be available to schools throughout Kansas. The first three films sent will be available soon. The films include: "The Romantic Land of Castles," "From the Lake of Constance to Oberammergau" and "Old German Towns." Butter can be made from the milk of zebus. Pharmacy Seniors Elected Kenneth Huealet of Kansas City, Kan, has been elected senior class president in the School of Pharmacy. Other senior officers elected are Jack Arthur, Kansas City, Mo., vice president; William Price, Anthony, secretary; and Robert Feavel, Ventura, Calif., treasurer. (Advertisement) Male phalaropes do the housekeeping. The father bird not only selects a nesting site and builds the home, but hatches the eggs and rears the young. Females, after laying the eggs, go off in flocks by themselves. (Advertisement) ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES AT MELPAR TO BE DISCUSSED ON CAMPUS SOON (Advertisement) One Of Nation's Leading Electronic R&D Companies To Interview Engineering, Physics, Math Majors Unusual opportunities for rapid professional growth and advancement at Melpar, Inc., one of the Nation's leading electronic research and development organizations, will be detailed to interested engineering, math and physics majors in a series of interviews to be held on campus soon. A subsidiary of Westinghouse Air Brake Company, Melpar is now engaged in a program of expansion involving substantial increases in staff and facilities. Despite Melpar's rapid expansion, the highest standards of personnel selection are constantly maintained. This selective process has produced a vigorous organization of great experience and competence in all fields of electronics. Younger men who wish to apply their engineering knowledge to problems of a varied and challenging nature are required to fill important posts in Melpar project groups. Plan to interview the Melpar representative when he visits your campus. No Waiting For "Automatic" Advancement at Melpar At Melpar there is no waiting period for "automatic" advancement. Instead, an engineer, regardless of his age or tenure, may move ahead as rapidly as his skill and performance dictate. Each engineer's achievement is reviewed at Melpar's personnel policies and salary structure compare most favorably with those of the industry as a whole. The Company maintains a liberal program of benefits too extensive to detail in this space. Many Extra Benefits Melpar Gives Financial Assistance For Advanced Study least twice a year. In this manner engineers deserving advancement can be quickly "spotted" and promoted. As soon as an engineer is ready for more complex responsibilities they are given him. The list of universities located near Melpar laboratories that offer graduate and undergraduate courses in engineering subjects includes: Georgetown University, George Washington University, American University, Catholic University, University of Maryland, University of Virginia, Harvard, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Northeastern University, and Boston University.Melpar offers financial assistance for study at these distinguished schools. Choose Assignments From Varied Fields Engineers who join Melpar may choose their assignments from one or more of these challenging fields: Flight Simulators Radar and Countermeasures Network Theory Systems Evaluation Microwave Techniques Analog & Digital Computers Magnetic Tape Handling UHF, VHF, or SHF Receivers Packaging Electronic Equipment Pulse Circuitry Microwave Filters Servo-mechanisms Subminiaturization Electro-Mechanical Design Small Mechanisms Quality Control & Test Engineering Fine Living Conditions Offered By Melpar Locales Melpar's R & D operations are centered near and in Washington, D.C. and Boston, Mass. Both are rich in cultural and educational facilities. The Northern Virginia area in which Melpar's headquarters laboratory is located is within easy driving range of beaches, lakes, mountains, as well as other recreational and scenic points. The climate allows outdoor recreation 215 days of the year. Fine homes and apartments in all price ranges are readily available. Melipar's Boston area plants allow engineers to enjoy the pleasant tempo of New England living coupled with Boston's splendid cultural and educational advantages. Melipar pays re-location expenses. Booklets Available An attractive, fully-illustrated booklet describing living conditions prevailing in the Washington, D. C. area can be obtained from your campus Placement Officer. Grads Go To Work At Once The college or university graduate who joins Melpar is not required to undergo a formal training program. Instead, he immediately becomes a member of a project group and is assigned to work with an experienced engineer whose guidance and assistance enable him to advance rapidly. Members of Melpar project groups gain experience in all phases of engineering problems by free and frequent interchange of ideas during group meetings. Such experience is valuable in leading to eventual managerial responsibility. Founded in 1945, Melpar has doubled in size every 18 months for the past 11 years. Recently it completed erection of a complete new headquarters laboratory near the Nation's Capital, and is presently making substantial additions to its Watertown, Mass. laboratory (6 miles west of Boston), and to its research department in Boston. Located on a 44-acre landscaped tract in Fairfax County, Virginia, only 10 miles from Washington, D.C., Melpar's main laboratories encompass over 265,000 square feet under a single roof. Fully air-conditioned, they are equipped with every facility. In addition to the new, ultra-modern headquarters plant, Melpar maintains additional facilities in Arlington, Virginia, Boston and Watertown, Massachusetts, for a total of 460,000 square feet. University Courses Offered at Melpar Melpar staff members, both holders and non-holders of degrees, may take advantage of the many fully-accredited courses in engineering subjects which are offered at Melpar's headquarters laboratory. Qualified Graduates Offered Paid Inspection Trips After a personal interview on their campus, qualified candidates may be invited to visit Melpar's headquarters laboratory at Company expense. Information on opportunities available for graduates together with details on living conditions in Northern Virginia is available by simply writing: Mr. William Schaub, Melpar, Inc., 3000 Arlington Blvd., Falls Church, Virginia. Make Appointment Now For Melpar Interview Feb. 27th To secure an appointment with the Melpar representative when he visits your campus, contact your Placement Officer today. At the same time ask him for booklets on Melpar and the Northern Virginia area. We believe you will find them of unusual interest. AB E T H Si 4091 2. 3.1 100% Art Conference Begins Friday Italo L. de Francesco, director of art education at, State Teachers College, Kutztown, Pa., will give three talks at the eighth annual Art Education Conference Friday and Saturday. Mr. de Francesco will speak at the opening session on "Professional Responsibilities of Art Teachers." Friday night he will talk at a dinner in the Kansas Room of the Student Union on "Art Education Today," and Saturday at the general session on "Coordination of Art Education." Student leaders for the conference are Janice Brown, Colby junior, Barbara Everly, Eudora sophomore, and Carolynne Fisher, Lexington. Mass. and Jolen Lutz, Lawrence senior. A tea sponsored by the KU Art Education club will be given for Mr. de Francesco at 3:30 p.m. Friday in the South Lounge of the Student Union. The author of several books and articles and editor of numerous brochures and journals, Mr. de Francesco is also listed in "Who's Who in American Education" and "Who's Who in American Art." He has held his present position since 1939. George P. Woollard, professor of geophysics and engineering geology at the University of Wisconsin, will speak on "Implications of the International Geophysical Year" March 5 in Bailey Auditorium. IGY Speaker Here March 5 The talk will be part of the University Lecture series in observance of the International Geophysical Year. Prof. Woellard has studied the relation of gravity and magnetic irregularities in geological structure and the application of geology and geophysics to engineering. Education Groups To Hold Banquet Mutual fellowship will be the theme when Phi Delta Kappa and Pi Lambda Theta, education fraternities, hold their annual golf banquet at 6 p.m. Thursday in the English room of the Student Union. Representatives from classes of John H. Nicholson, associate professor of education and program chairman for the banquet, will perform in a skit. Gerald M. Carney, associate professor of music education, has arranged for Mary Jo Woofter, Colby senior, soloist, and Raymond L. Roberts, Kingman senior, accompanist, to present a musical interlude. Senior Wins Letter Of Commendation A letter of commendation was presented Tuesday to Lawrence W. Stroup, Topeka senior, by Col. Ralph J. Hanchin, professor of Military Science, at a formal ceremony The presentation was read by Stanley R. Ausemus, Madison senior, in front of the first ROTC battalion. The letter commended Stroup for his "superior performance as head of the Army ROTC Recruiting Committee during the fall semester." German Exhibit In Fraser Hall Featured is a German newspaper, the Leavenworth Tribune, of August 16, 1898. Atchison had 11 German newspapers at one time. "German in Kansas" is the title of a German department exhibit on the third floor of Fraser Hall. Pamphlets advertising Kansas as a place of refuge to German immigrants are also shown. Some were printed in Germany and one was printed by the Kansas Zeitung in Leavenworth in 1866. "Magna cum laude" means "with great honor, and is, at rare intervals, stamped" on the diplomas of college graduates. INDEPENDENT "On The Campus" Laundry & Dry Cleaners Located At Rowlands 1241 Oread Live Modern! Pick the Pack that Suits You Best! New! Crush-proof L&M BOX (COSTS NO MORE) Handy L&M PACK (KING & REGULAR) THE MIRACLE TIP L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. THE MIRACLE TIP L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO Co. © 1957, Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. Smoke modern L&M and always get full exciting flavor INDEPENDENT "On The Campus" Laundry & Dry Cleaners Located At Rowlands 1241 Oread New! Crush-proof L&M BOX (COSTS NO MORE) Handy L&M PACK (KING & REGULAR) THE MIRACLE TIP L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. THE MIRACLE TIP L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. © 1957, LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO Co. ...PLUS THE PURE WHITE MIRACLE TIP With L&M...and only L&M...can you pick the pack that suits you best. And only L&M gives you the flavor...the full, exciting flavor that makes L&M... AMERICA'S FASTEST GROWING CIGARETTE AMERICA'S FASTEST GROWING CIGARETTES Page 10 University Daily Kansas Wednesday, Feb. 29, 1957 MARCELA MARTIN Donna Hardman Natalie Carol Fluharty Engagements Announced Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Hardman of Blue Rapids announce the engagement of their daughter, Donna Ilene to John David Hallewell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hallewell of Topeka. --fraternity and Phi Chi medical fraternity. Miss Hardman is a student at the University of Kansas School of Nursing in Kansas City, Kan. Mr. Hallewell graduated from Washburn University in Topeka and is a sophomore at the University of Kansas School of Medicine. He is a member of Phi Delta Theta social Mrs. Wayne W. Fluhardy of Newton announces the engagement of her daughter Carol Elaine, to Robert Mack Simpson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Simpson of Newton. Miss Fluharty is a graduate of the University, and a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority. Mr. Simpson is a senior in the School of Architecture and a member of Delta Upsilon fraterniy. Seven Announce Pinnings James-Gatewood Alpha Chi Omega sorority announces the pinning of Hester James, Independence, Mo., junior to Roth Gatewood, 2nd year law student from Sylvan Grove and member of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity. The pinning was announced by Carol Barker, Independence, Mo., junior. Miss James' other attendants were Jane Pecinovsky, Leawood senior, and Ann Meeder, Kansas City, Mo., junior. --of Phi Beta Pi, professional medical fraternity. Hess-Conard Alpha Chi Omega sorority announces the pinning of Gayle Hess, Wichita junior, to Don Conard, Garden City senior and a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity. The pinning was announced at the chapter house by Jo Ann Sicking, Mission junior and Carol Dietz, Hickman Hills, Mo., sophomore. Blevins-Wright Kappa Alpha Theta sorority announces the pinning of Virginia Blevins, Troy graduate student, to Earl Wright, Independence, Mo., first year medical student and a member ✶ ✶ ✶ Black-Glenn North College Hall announces the pinning of Margot Black, Prairie Village freshman, to Richard T. Glenn, Overland Park junior and a member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. Morrison-Chase Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall announces the pinning of Ann Morrison, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, to manning Chase, Kansas City University sophomore and a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity. *** Warner-Dixon Delta Delta Delta sorority announces the pinning of Beverly Warner, Kansas City, Mo., senior, to Don Dixon, Topeka senior and member of Sigma Nu fraternity. Miss Warner's attendants were Jean Walterscheid, Coffeyville and Annette Degen, Kansas City, Mo., Coming Soon THE LENTEN SEASON Your Chance To Really Enjoy Our BAKERY TREATS HOME-BAKED QUALITY... OVEN FRESH! Other officers elected were Charles Hydeman, Mission,vice president, Jim Sortor, Kansas City, Kan., secretary and Cornelius Boersma, Kansas City, Mo., treasurer. All are freshmen. Phi Kappa Psi fraternity has elected Larry Ostertag, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, president of the pledge class for second semester. We Deliver On The Hill Alpha Delta Pi Mary Sandborn, Chapman junior, has been elected president of Alpha Delta Pi sorority for the second semester. Other officers elected were Ann Markwell, Gashland, Mo., vice president, Ann Proctor, Augusta, treasurer, Ann Johnson, Topeka recording secretary, Sue Markwell, Gashland, Mo., executive council representative, juniors; Paula Sutton, Overland Park sophomore, corresponding secretary. Drake's Bakery Houses Elect Officers For Second Semester Phi Kappa Psi Phi Kaops VI 3-0561 COOKIES Other officers elected were William Godfrey, Valley Stream, N. Y., vice president, Gerald Horese, Chicago, Ill., treasurer and Tom Tierney, Independence, Mo., secretary. All are freshmen. The pledge class of Phi Kappa fraternity has elected William McAdams, Kansas City, Mo., junior, president for the spring semester. Shirley Ward, Salina junior, has been elected president of Pi Beta Phi sorority. ... Pi Beta Phi Other officers elected were Ellen Proudfit, Kansas City, Kan., vice president, Ruth Anderson, Hutchinson, corresponding secretary, Megan Lloyd, Hutchinson, treasurer, juniors; Ginny Ward, Hays senior, recording secretary and Linda Miller, Dodge City sophomore, song leader. 907 Mass. Norman Dirks, Greensburg sophomore, was elected president of McCook Hall for the spring semester. McCook Hall Other officers elected were David Robertson, Des Moines, Iowa, sophomore, secretary-treasurer, Jim Kirk, Salina freshman, social chairman, John Moylan, Mission junior, intra murals and David Roberts, Wichita freshman, dormitory representative. Sigma Chi Other officers are David Hemsell, Bartlesville, Okla., vice president, George Hunt, Merriam, social chairman and Lance Johnson, Wymore, Neb., rush chairman. All are freshmen. Robert Seacat, Emporia freshman, has been elected president of Sigma Chi fraternity pledge class for second semester. ★ ★ ★ Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity elected Harvey Bodker, Mission senior president for the second semester. Other officers elected were Jack Gorelick, Kansas City, Kan., junior, vice president, Ronald Abrams, Brooklyn, N. Y., sophomore, secretary and Pelitzle, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, treasurer. Phi Beta Pi Phi Beta Pi, professional medical fraternity, has elected Joe Kyner, Wilson, president for the spring semester. Alpha Epsilon Pi Other officers elected were Bob Whitsell, St. Joseph, Mo., secretary, John Hutcherson, Norton, treasurer, Perry Rashleigh, Little River, song leader and Bob Lloyd, Joplin, Mo., historian. All are first year medical students. --- Pi Kappa Alpha Malcolm King, Topeka junior, was elected president of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity for the spring semester. Other officers elected were Rex Owen, Topeka, vice president, Cecil McDonald, Satanta, treasurer, Ron Hardten, Claflin, pledge trainer; and Jim Wilson, Lawrence senior, recording secretary. When heating milk in a saucepan, rinse the pan first with water, and the milk won't stick. ALL THE DRAMA...ALL THE SUSPENSE OF 'THE CAINE MUTINY'... M-G-M presents THE RACK STARRING PAUL WENDELL WALTER EDMOND ANNE LEE NEWMAN·COREY·PIDGEON·O'BRIEN·FRANCIS·MARVIN GRANADA Starts THURSDAY TONIGHT ONLY 7:30 p.m. Special Premiere Showing Dan Duryea ● Don Defore Rock Hudson Martha Hyer "BATTLE HYMN" -Benefit Of- Lawrence Jewish Community Center Tickets Available Student Union Ticket Office GRANADA ENDS TONITE "Friendly Persuasion" VARSITY The A. Arna Park Corporation Promotes JOSH JOHN DONALD MILLS • GREGSON • SINDEN ABOVE.US THE WAVES On Browns JAMES RADIANTTOM JUSTICE MICHAEL MEDOW JAMES KENNY A REPUBLIC RELEASE Open 6:45 p.m. Weekdays News—Cartoon—Sports CO mo oreally sto VI JAYHAWKER Filmed Endirely On Location In Kansas City, Mo. Midwest Premiere Showing 25 who live today as if there's no tomorrow... "The Delinguents" Released thru UNITED ARTISTS THEATRE P H Comfort! Convenience! JAY HAWKER'S NEW POINT-BREAK CUSHIONED CHAIRS Open 6:45 p.m. Weekdays TONITE And Thur. 2 Days Only Something New In Entertainment In Our First VARIETY SHOW YOU WILL SEE 150 Minutes Thrills, Spills Chills and Laughs! In Cinemascope and Color "Scrambled Aches Roadrunner Cartoon "All Chimps Ashore" Comedy "Wonders of New Orleans" The Jazz City "Tee Topnotchers" Mind-Eye-Body Coordination . "Candid Microphone" "Thunder Beach" Auto Racing At Its Best "Vista Vision Visits Austria" "Hot, Cold, Glides, Slides And Rides" --- "Meet Mother MaGoo" E'Nuff sald! "Animal Kids" "American Enqineer" Cinemascope and Color :7 --- Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1957 University, Daily Kansas Page 11 CLASSIFIED ADS 25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansam Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. FOR SALE COCKER PUPPIES, AKC registered, 2 months old. Brown, blond, or parti-colored. Also one grown male. Exceptionally nice for pets, show or breeding stock. See at 345 Mississippi St. Phone VI 3-2760. 2-25 NEW AND DIFFERENT Olympia portable typewriter. Choice: Single or two tone color and type style. Free demonstration. Phone Mr. Reams VI 3-1537 after 4 Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday. BEVERAGES- All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. 8th and Vermont. Phone 7-3-0350. TIME, LIFE & Sports Illustrated magazines. Special students' prices of 1/2 reg. sub. rate. Prompt service, buy now pay later, call VI 3-0124. tf PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS At Have your car lubricated the MOTO-SWAY WAY POTTER'S "66" SERVICE 1401 W. 6th VI 3-8891 East 23rd VI 3-7377 CROFT TRAILER RENTAL CO. We rent nationwide trailers any size, anywhere, anytime EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs—beds, harnesses, etc. For cats—chandeliers, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. TENOR SAX. See at 1109 Ohio. At home 5:30 to 9:00 on Monday, Tuesday, Wed- nesday evenings. 2-20 HARRIS TWEED brown sport coat, size 38-40. $10. Harris Tweed gray suit, size 38-40. $15. Almost new tire chains $6. R. Murrill, 101 Alabama, VI 3-6590. POST DRAWING INSTRUMENTS. Practically new, perfect condition. T-square, drawing board in good condition also for sale. Call Lowell Taney, VI 3-6988. TUBE FREE with the purchase of practically new (only 250 miles) 650x16 Goodrich tire, price only $25. VI 3-1505 after 5 p.m. 2-26 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPIST, experienced in theses, term papers, reports. Fast and accurate. student rates. Mrs. Betty Veqist. 1935 Barker A. Phone VI 3-2001. tf TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka. 119 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf 24 Hour Service JAYHAWK TAXI VI 3-2211 1012 Mass. Ward Thompson Richard Pickett 图 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. U LAWRENCE Sanitary MILK ICE CREAM CO. EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maline. Phone VI 3-7654. tf FAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men' and women's clothes Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6057, 1106 La. FOR LEASE THREE ROOM APARTMENT. Unfur- nished, on ground floor. Off street parking. Air conditioned. Ph. VI 3-2662 or VI 3-1277. RENT A TAPE RECORDER Ideal for Skits, Parties, Dances Practicing Speech and Foreign Languages. Recording tapes & ac- HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP Ice Cream — Cottage Cheese — Many Other Delicious Products Parties, Pinnings, Weddings Job Application Photos HERE ARE THE DG's This week's "Sorority on the Hill" Courtesy of- Gene Smoyer Sun. Feb. 24—3:30 & 8:00 P.M., Municipal Auditorium- Topeka. Advance tickets—$2.00—at the door $2.50. Tickets on sale at Walgreen Drug- 8th and Kansas and Mills Music—332 Kansas. 2 BIG SHOWS SUPER ATTRACTIONS PRESENT THE BIGGEST SHOW of Stars for 57 Allin Person Fats DOMINO and his OACH Bill DOGGETT COMING TONIGHT ROW CLYDE McPhatter LAVERN Baker Gene's Photo Service 2144 Ohio - VI 3-0933 Chuck BERRY *Five KEYS The MOONGLOWS *ANN COLE the Five SATINS *Charles BROWN Eddie Cooley DIMPLE *The SCHOOL BOYS Lancaster Society Milk Paul Williams BIG BAND The Delta Gamma house uses Sanitary Milk products for all occasions. CLERK-TYPIST for full time work typing case work, data, and teaching material for classes in clinical psychology Ph. KU extension 332 for interview. HELP WANTED TRANSPORTATION TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. Visit Jose Glesman at the First National Bank for information on enquiries and reservations. 8th & Mass Phone VI 3-0152. ff LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY for Jr., Sr, Graduate Students up to $500.00 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. 833% Mass. Phone VI 3-8074 for 1 day service BOOKS For gifts and for your own library, Art, Architecture, Cook THE BOOK NOOK THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 LOST SBP OF HOSPITAL AND PRESCHOOL, NEWS, between Bailey and Strong Monday afternoon. Finder please return to Daily Kansas Business Office. 2-28 FOR RENT TIRED OF WALKING UP THE HILL? Two rooms for boys one-half block from the union. Phone privileges. Available. Phone VI 3-3786 or see tfr 1231 La ROOM FOR MEN. Well heated, linens furnished, large close, room service. Adjacent to bath. Will rent single or double. 938 Missouri. 2-21 NICELY FURNISHED APARTMENT. 4 rooms, available, now. Fire place, full basement, garage. In west location. Couple only. Call VI 3-5780. 2-21 KUOK PROGRAMS 6:00 Report one 6:05 Dinner music Today 6:45 Public service 7:29 "Productive We 6:00 Report one 7:00 "Bookstore Hour" 8:00 1pm-9noon 8:05 University Theatre concert 8:00 Dinner music 6:30 "Episodes in Preview" 8:30 Show tunes 9:00 Show tunes 9:30 Study Break 9:45 Final exam 10:00 "Night Life" with Charlie 10:30 Lucky Strike news 10:35 Night Life 11:00 "Night Life" 12:00 Sign off New lightweight moc folds like a fielder's glove-the Pedwin Play relaxed in this heads-up Bonus Baby ds-up ED $895 Play relaxed in this head moccasin style—in the supplest of leathers. Unlined, to be extra soft and flexible. Come in today. advertised in SPORTS ILLUSTRATED 1 Pedwin. Flexible Comfort— Cushion Crepe Sole— In Neutral Bucko M'Coy's SHOES 813 Mass. St. Page 12. University.Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1957 1960 —(Daily Kansan photo) GOODBYE FLY — Dr. Robert Sokal (standing) director of a University study on resistance of flies to DDT checks a slide prepared for use in the project by Dr. Robert Sullivan, research associate. They hope to find the right combination of chemicals that will control the pests more efficiently. They Have An Important Job Raising Flies For Science By LEROY LORD (Of The Daily Kansan Staff) Fly raising is an important job carried on by four persons in the basement of Hoch Auditorium. Dr. Robert L. Sullivan, research associate, Sandra Cloe, research assistant, and Stella Pearce, Lawrence graduate student, are studying the effects of DDT when it is sprayed on flies. Dr. Robert R. Sckal, assistant professor of entomology, is directing the project, which is being sponsored by the United States Army Medical Corps. The laboratory is the only one in the U.S. where scientists work on the problem of how resistance is passed on from one generation to the next. Dr. Sckal said. Build Up Resistance Dr. Sokal and his associates have found out that many houseflies have built up a resistance to DDT by changing it to a non-toxic form by the use of enzymes. This resistance is probably passed down from one generation to the next through genes Dr. Sokal said. Along with the work being done with DDT, new generations of flies have produced regularly and a close tabulation on their background kept to trace different characteristics. To do this a male and female fly are placed in pint ice cream containers, where they lay their eggs. The eggs hatch out in a bottle, partly filled with a mixture of alfalfa, wheat and oat hulls, and ground corn, moistened with water. The eggs hatch in about 24 hours, and the larvae live off the grain mixture. After the fly emerges from the pupa stage it is fed milk. During the pupa stage the flies may be transferred to a box covered with fine Italy Offers Six Student Grants Six fellowships for advanced study or research are offered to American graduate students by the Italian government for the coming year. Each grant provides 600,000 lira (roughly $1,000) and free tuition. The minimum period of study is six months. A grantee may extend the duration of study if he has the funds. Fulbright travel grants may be applied for in addition to the scholarships. Applications may be secured from the Institute of International Education in New York, City or regional offices, in Chicago, Denver, Houston, San Francisco, or Washington, D. C. screen, where they will be tested under certain conditions. Die Easily From DDT Dr. Sokal and his associates have developed a strain of houseflies which die easily when sprayed with DDT. This strain was developed by breeding brothers and sisters of flies susceptible to DDT. Another strain is being developed by treating certain flies with X-rays and forming mutations. These mutations are bred over and over again until none of the young shows characteristics of the original strain before it was treated with the X-rays. Under these conditions it might be possible to develop a new strain, Dr. Sullivan said. Only DDT is being used in the experiments now. Other sprays may be introduced later, Dr. Sullivan said. Service Groups Aids Scouts 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. Thirty members of the KU chapter of Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity, will conduct a junior leader training conference at Wyandotte High School, Saturday, March 9. The conference was planned, at the Tuesday meeting of the fraternity. The purpose of the conference is to help train Boy Scout patrol and troop leaders in the Wvandotte county area. Helping the KU chapter with the conference will be members of the Kansas state chapter. to improve your financial position by sending money on ahead to meet future needs. It is both logical and necessary... IT MAKES SENSE TO PLAN a life insurance program just as carefully as you would any other step of great consequence. Let me draw up the plan for you. If it looks good to you we can put it to work. TOM DOWNS Eleven KU students pledged at the meeting. They are: James F. Branden, Kingman freshman; Tim T. Templin, Minneapolis sophomore; Robert A. Nebrig, Leavenworth freshman; Robert L. Luce, Ottawa freshman; Peter A. Lons, Stafford, Conn.; senior; Raleigh F. Saigman, Russell freshman; Kenneth M. Kreutziger, Wichita freshman; William R. Alward, Herington freshman; Neal J. Logan, Garden City sohomore; Kenneth O. McDowell, Mission freshman, and John B. Nowlin, Holton freshman. NEW ENGLAND Mutual LIFE 732½ Mass. Lawrence VI. 5-11d1 Many of New Mexico's Pueblo Indian women still bake bread in beehive-shade outdoor ovens, called "hornos." Heated rocks are first placed inside the ovens, and when the interior reaches the right temperature, the rocks are removed and the dough put in to bake. Greek Week Dance Tickets On Sale Friday In Houses Tickets will go on sale Friday in organized houses and the Student Union for the Greek Week dance Saturday, March 9. Jimmy Dorsey and his orchestra will play. Tickets will also be available during Greek Week at the information booth on Jayhawk Boulevard. "We have received no report from the booking agency about Jimmy Dorsey's health, and as far as we know he will appear with his band at the dance," said John Downing, Kansas City, Mo., junior, and舞 chairman. Mr. Dorsey was reported stricken ill while playing for a dance in Wichita recently. An audition to cut from 10 to 4 the number of small ensemble entries in the inter-fraternity sing has been announced for 7:30 p.m. Feb. 28 in Strong Hall auditorium bv Ed Dittemore, Robinson junior, chairman. Dittemore said the object is to Supplement To Library Cookbook An international flavor dominates the new supplement to "The Watson Gourmet," the Watson Libraryv cookbook which is now being sold. The supplement includes recipes from England, Germany, Russia, Israel, Poland, Sweden, China, and France said Mrs. Werner Winter, head of preparations. The recipes were contributed by staff members. cut the length of the program. Up to Tuesday 10 small ensembles and 26 choruses had entered. The sing will be March 6 in the Student Union Ballroom. "The audition is not to select a winner, but to pick four groups which will compete for first prize in the sing," Dittimore said. Judges for the audition are Austin Ledwith, assistant professor of music theory; Miss Elin K. Jorgensen, professor of music education, and Mrs. Floyd Strong, director of the youth choir at the First Presbyterian Church in Topeka. Food, Drug Chemist Here Thursday "What a Chemist Does for the Food and Drug Administration" will be the subject of Dr. Andrew Allison's speech at the Chemistry Club at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 233 Malott. Dr. Allison is the chief chemist of the Food and Drug Administration in Kansas City, Mo. He will also describe the opportunities for chemists in this field. A colorful character in the early territorial history of New Mexico was Lucien B. Maxwell, a hunter and trapper who became the sole owner of 1,714,765 acres of land near Taos. In 1870, he organized a bank in Santa Fe and issued stock certificates bearing a picture of himself smoking a large cigar. the day even Clifford smiled! Some folks are just natural born sour pusses. Getting one to smile is like chipping a crease in a concrete slab - against the grain. It's a bright day when a down-at-the-mouth pessimist like Clifford sees fit to make the effort—like the day Clifford drove out of Motor In after the cheerful Motor In folks had gone over his car - greased, oiled, filled the gas tank, checked the spark plugs, and the tires. They'd cleaned that car 'til it shone like the elbows of Clifford's navy blue suit. And then, when Clifford started the motor and could barely feel the smooth-purring action, why it was more than he could take. Almost unconsciously, he began to smile - that hesitating, try-it-on-for-size type of smile that sorts brings tears to the eyes. Take your car to be serviced at Motor In and you'll smile too (though we'll hope it's with less effort than our afore mentioned friend.) 827 Vermont Motor In Dial VI 3-4955 --- **F** **D** **E** **A** **B** **C Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 54th Year, No. 90 Religion Is Answer, 3-Faith Panel Says Religion is the answer to finding peace within the individual and peace among nations. This was the conclusion reached by members of the Interfaith Panel Discussion Wednesday night in Bailey Auditorium. The moderator was Dr. W. Stitt Robinson, associate professor of history. Panel members were the Rev. D. Roland H. Bainton, professor of ecclesiastical history at Yale University; Rabbi Myron Meyer, Temple Adath Joseph, St. Joseph, Mo., and the Rt. Rev. Msgr. George Towle, St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church, Lawrence. The three members found differ- The three members found ent answers to the question before the panel, "Is Religion The Answer?" but each agreed that religion is necessary to happiness of the individual and the peace of the world. Religion Alone The Answer "There are many perplexing problems facing the individual from birth to death," Rabbi Meyer said, "and the followers of Judaism feel that religion alone can answer these problems." "All three religions represented here advocate peace, and all three have been involved in war," the Rev. Dr. Bainton said. "The matter is not simple, but at least we are united. Religion states principles and lays down rules of behavior, but does not outline specific plans for action. It is complex, but religion is the answer." Religion and Segregation "Religion is the answer to life and our eternal destiny," Msgr. Towle said. "The more we make religion a part of our lives, the more we'll find peace in our lives and peace in the world." Kenigion and Segregation A member of the audience asked if religion is the answer to the problems of segregation. Thursday, Feb. 21, 1957 The Rev. Bainton added that one difficulty today is that we have come to take war as a matter of course. "One of the basic considerations of peace is the passionate will for peace." The Rev. Bainton answered, "I have recently been speaking in the South and I am proud of the way in which members of the clergy there have been speaking out in favor of desegregation." Rabbi Meyer pointed out that one of the earliest prophets had long ago emphasized complete equality. Display On Religion, Tolerance In Watson Religion and Tolerance is the subject of a Religious Emphasis Week book and magazine display on the second floor of Watson Library. Titles of articles in the exhibit are "Church vs. Christianity," "Can Sunday School Fight Prejudice?" "What Can Southern Ministers Do, regarding segregation?" and "Racism in Northern City Churches." Pamphlets on "Judaism and Christianity" and "What's the Difference in Protestant and Roman Catholic Beliefs" are also shown. TV-Film-Radio Workshop Here Eight colleges will attend the first TV-Film-Radio Workshop to be held Saturday at the University. Those attending are Wichita University, Tabor College, Southwestern College, Ottawa University, Pittsburg State Teachers College, Kansas State College, Central College, and Independence Community College. Registration will begin at 9 a. m. in the William Allen White Reading Room in Flint Hall. The welcoming address by Dr. Bruce A. Linton, associate professor of journalism, and Victor Hyden, instructor of speech and drama, will be at 9:45 a.m. Session 1 will begin at 10:15 with the subject "Local and Network Radio." Discussion will center around such questions as "What is the trend in radio programming?" and "As a vocation, is there much future for 'new blood'?" Heading the discussion will be James Dykes, assistant professor of journalism. Mr. Hyden, Mr. Bob Jeffries, station KLWN, and Ed Brown, assistant professor of journalism, radio-television. Session 2 will begin at 11:20 a. m. in Hoch television studios. The subject covered will be College TV-Film Programming. The discussion will be about film clips, camera rehearsal, and visual aids. Heading the discussion will be Mr. Gene Courtney, director of Centron Film Studios, Lawrence, Prof. Roland Fenz of Pittsburg State Teachers College and Dr. Linton. A luncheon is planned for 12:30 p. m. in the Student Union Entertainment will be furished by Beverly Baird, Topeka freshman and, Claude Kean, Olathe junior. John Bertoligo, Medicine Lodge junior, will act as master of ceremonies. Session 3 will begin at 2 p.m. with separate student and faculty discussion groups. Advertising for campus station and student interest in broadcasting will be discussed. Israel Cool To Ike's Call To Leave Egypt JERUSALEM, Israel, — (UP) — Government sources said today that Israel is expected to reject President Eisenhower's call for an unconditional withdrawal of its forces from the Gaza strip and the Sharm El Sheikh area of the Gulf of Aqaba. The sources said that Israeli Premier David Ben-Gurion, who met twice with his cabinet in emergency sessions today, was expected to telephone a "no" to Washington before he makes an announcement to an extraordinary session of the Knesset (parliament). The cabinet met in two sessions to approve Mr. Ben-Gurion's speech and to hear a full report from Abba Eban, Israeli ambassador to the United States who flew here for consultations before the final decision. Mr. Eban was returning to Washington tonight or Friday morning with new instructions. KUOK A Wired Wireless; Broadcasts To Seven Halls Government ministers sitting in restaurants during a break between cabinet sessions were approached by Israeli citizens urging that Israel not budge from its position in the Gaza strip or the Gulf of Aqaba. In his nationally televised and broadcast speech Wednesday night Mr. Eisenhower said he hoped Israel would withdraw behind the 1949 armistice line. If it does not, he said, "I believe that in the interests of peace the United States has no choice but to exert pressure upon Israel to comply." mainly of music, news and special features. The station has a news record library of more than 5,000 records with some 8,000 tunes. "Exert Pressure on Israel" Cloudy and warmer east and south central this afternoon. Much colder northwest this afternoon and turning much colder north central and southwest by evening. Snow beginning northwest this afternoon and snow and considerably colder overspreading state tonight and continuing Friday with 2 to 4 inches snow northwest by Friday morning. Considerable drifting of snow by northerly winds of 25 miles per hour west and north central tonight. Low tonight 5 to 10 northwest to 20s east. High Friday 20 northwest to 30 southeast. The White House said that Mr. Eisenhower sent Israel premier Ben-Gurion a "personal" message Wednesday before making his radio-TV address. KUOK, the campus radio station is known as a wired wireless. This amounts to a regular telephone line running from KUOK studios in Flint Hall to its listeners. About 75 students are involved in the station's operation as writers, announcers and engineers. The students plan and produce the program on their own. The programs consist Instead of going into a telephone received the line is hooked to a transmitter in the dormitories that receive KUOK. Instead of the radio signal coming through the air as in regular broadcasting, the KUOK signal comes in on the 110 volt power line. In London, Britain backed the Israel demands for guarantees of free passage for shipping through the Gulf of Aqaba in the face of Mr. Eisenhower's demand for unconditional withdrawal. A foreign office spokesman proposed that United Nations troops move in to guarantee Israel's rights when its forces withdraw. London Backs Israel KUOK broadcasts to seven University dormitories: Battenfeld, Douthart, Templin, Grace Pearson, North College, Corbin and Carruth-O'Leary. Weather In Cairo, Egyptian sources hailed President Eisenhower's decision to support United Nations "pressure" against Israel. Little Support In Congress In Washington, the President drew little immediate support in congress for his declaration that the United Nations must "exert pressure" on Israel to withdraw its troops from Egypt. Most reaction in Congress was noncommittal or critical of the President's speech. Swedish Student Leaves For Home Tor Ek, Savsjo, Sweden graduate student, is on his way home. The International Club collected $280 in cash to send Ek home after he received word Wednesday of the sudden death of his father. Ek left from Kansas City this morning by plane for New York and should arrive at home late Friday night. Money is still coming in to pay for the flight, but Ratnam Swami, former president of the International Club, stressed that more is still needed. Money received to date has been given by individuals on the campus, fraternities, sororities, and downtown businessmen. Office Created To Replace Bursar The appointment of a comptroller was announced today by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. The appointment will become effective July 1. Keith L. Nitcher, chief of the accounting control and service section in the State Department of Administration, Topeka will take over many of the duties performed by Karl Klooz, University bursar since 1917. Foley Appointed New Chairman Of Geology Dept. A new chairman of the geology department was announced Monday at a geology department meeting. Dr. Thompson will leave KU at the end of the spring semester to become director of the Illinois State Geological Survey and head of the geological resources section at the University of Illinois. He has been chairman of the department of geology since the fall of 1954 when he came from the University of Wisconsin. Dr. Frank C. Foley, professor of geology, state geologist and director of the State Geological Survey, will succeed Dr. Marcus Thompson, professor of geology, as department chairman. Dr. Foley came to KU in August 1954 from the University of Illinois. He received his bachelor of science in geology from the University of Toronto, and his doctorate from Princeton. He will continue his duties as state geologist and director of the State Geological Survey. Dinner To Honor Women Scholars Women having the highest scholastic records from each of the residence halls will be honored at a dinner 6 p. m. Wednesday at Douthart Hall. The dinner is being sponsored by the Inter-Residence Assn. Three women were chosen from each house on the basis of grade points earned last semester. The woman with the highest record will receive a certificate of merit. A traveling trophy will go to the house having the highest average. The trophy will be awarded each semester. The scholarship committee of the Intre-Residence Assn. is in charge of arrangements for the dinner. Shirley Stout, Lombard, Ill., junior, is chairman of the committee. Mr. Klooz who will be 65, the mandatory retirement age for administrators, will remain in the business office in a non-administrative capacity. The title of bursar will be abolished. Mr. Nitcher, 35, is a native of Pomona. He received his A. B. degree from Washburn University in 1948 with departmental honors in commerce. Mr. Nitcher will join the KU staff March 1 for four months of familiarization, working under Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University. ALFRED C. MAYER KEITH L. NITCHER He was assistant treasurer of Washburn 1948-51 and also a part-time accounting teacher at Clark Business College in Topeka. Later he was employed by Homer J. Henning and Co. of Ottawa as public accountant. Mr. Klooz as bursar has been treasurer of both the University proper and many related organizations such as the William Allen White Foundation, the Athletic Assn, and the Memorial Corp. For many years he has been chairman of the advisory board of the Jayhawker. Benefit Features World Tour Slides The annual benefit party given by the Business and Professional Women's club will be held at 8 p.m. Friday in the Community Building. Money raised at this party will be used as a scholarship for a Lawrence High School girl to KU. Slides and a talk by Irby Hughes, Lawrence senior, on his trip around the world will be a featured part of the entertainment. The frills and finery of 17th century France will highlight Moliere's play, "Doctor in Spite of Himself," to be presented in an arena-type production at 8 p. m. Feb. 28 through March 2 in the Student Union Ballroom. Symbolic Costumes Featured In Coming Arena-Type Play "Since the audience sits on all four sides of the stage area in an arean production every aspect of the costumes, props and scenery must be perfect," said Nat Eek, instructor of speech and drama and director of the play. The costumes, designed and supervised by Miss Sally Six, instructor of speech and drama, carry out the primary color, yellow, which symbolizes the elegance of the age. The colors of costumes are also used to differentiate between the three levels of society portrayed in th play. The peasants wear the earth colors, green and brown, while the aristocratic class will wear dominant colors of blue, yellow, black and white. The household servants' costumes will be of black and white with a touch of brown, showing their connections with aristocracy and yet relating them to the peasants. Wearing cavalier hats with large feather plumes over wigs of shoulder-length curls, aristocratic gentlemen in the play will be dressed in lace-trimmed knee-length trousers, knee stockings and shoes with large brass buckles. The ladies with their high pompadour wigs will wear dresses of satin and velvet with full sleeves. tight-fitting bodices and full skirts. Not only will the costumes add authenticity to the play, but the setting carries out the baroque style of the period, simplifying it a little, by using a few stylized props. Working with Miss Six on the costumes are Margaret Epps, Topeka, and Mary Ledgerwood, Kansas City, Mo., both somohomes; Hulda Goodson, Knox City, Mo., and Joyce Klemp, Leavenworth, juniors. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Feb. 21, 1957 Tuition - No Representation? By recently approving an increase in tuition and dormitory fees, effective the fall semester, 1957,the University Board of Regents may have initiated a new era of education finance at KU. Laboring under rising costs, growing enrollments and the need for increasing staff salaries, KU is caught in the cost-price squeeze now affecting U. S. education. University officials are faced with a state legislature which is reluctant to grant increased funds from already overworked tax revenues. Everyone at the University is of course hopeful that pleas for larger appropriations will be effective. But if these requests go unanswered, the school must manipulate available money, which will soon include the fee increases, to continue to provide good education. Kansas taxpayers have always insisted, and rightly so, that if their tax dollars are spent on education, they should have a share in determining the type of education provided. The Board of Regents serves to protect their interests. Student protests against certain policies of the schools have often met with the reminder that about $ \frac{2}{3} $ of the cost of their education is provided by tax money; only $ \frac{1}{3} $ by students' fees. From this arithmetic comes the conclusion that the $ \frac{3}{4} $ majority should rule overwhelmingly. Yet, if no new funds are given to the University the student may expect to shoulder more and more of the costs in coming years. In doing so, he has a right to demand more voice in shaping University policy. Tuition without representation would be just as tyrannical as taxation without representation. Educators have always been wary of student attempts to shape school policies. Some of their suspicions are justified. School authorities wouldn't think much of proposed "officials" who hang Santa Claus and assorted coaches in effigy and who paint orange trousers on Uncle Jimmy Green. A state legislature which is paid barely enough to meet living expenses while meeting in Topeka wouldn't be much impressed by a student council in which large percentages of members do not bother to attend meetings. In answer to expected protests that we don't have sufficient maturity or experience to make wise decisions, we students must show we do have these qualities. It would require the tightening of our belts to the serious responsibility of the job. Students are already well equipped to aid in University government. Councils now make policy for fraternities and residence halls. It is hard to srape up enough money to come to college. It would be even harder to convince authorities that we students are wise enough to share in governing an institution which we help finance. Toughest of all would be the task of being grown-up enough to do it. Another Seating Problem Larry Boston The seating problem at the football games at last has some competition. Vying with Memorial Stadium as a place that has too few seats for too many students is Allen Field House Basketball has come into the seating spotlight. The Iowa State game was a sad reminder that University students don't have enough seats on the west side of the field house. During the contest they stood along the top of the upper balcony and filled in the steps in an attempt to see the sellout game. It is obvious that the field house can't be enlarged in order to provide a greater seating area, but it is equally obvious that something must be done in order to solve the problem. Lines began to form at the student entrance at 4:45 p.m., nearly three hours before game time. By 5:30 p.m., when the doors were opened, a mob of 400 to 500 students was jammed against the entrances waiting to get in. When they were admitted they ran to the student section to get the choice seats south of the press and radio section. This time, however, something had been changed. The pep clubs were seated there and the seats they had previously occupied were filled with paying fans. That left the rest of the seats—those not occupied by the band, the press and radio section and the pep clubs-for the student fans. Very few of the seats that remain for the students are considered "choice" seats. What, then, can be done about the problem of student seats? The obvious solution would be to allow students to attend only half of the regularly scheduled home games. That would be the same situation that prevailed at Hoch Auditorium. Allen Field House was supposed to alleviate that problem. The question then arises—should students be turned away while letting in even more paying fans? Because this is a student institution and the Jayhawks are a student team it would seem reasonable to assume the student should have the first rights to seats in the field house. Another solution might be to move one or more of the three special groups. The band, it would seem, would be the logical group to be moved, as their music is audible from any part of the arena. The press and radio section, on the other band, must have an advantageous viewing point in order to transmit the game, both in word and sound, to the public. But, would a hanging press box be possible? And the pep clubs might conveniently move back to their original section, nearer the cheerleaders. Regardless of whether these suggestions are plausible, the University must decide whether the ordinary student, who isn't in any special group and pays only with his identification card, will be provided with sufficient seating space at the basketball games. —Mary Beth Noyes ... Letters ... Watchers Upheld Editor: Monday's article by George Anthan, assistant sports editor of The Daily Kansas, was confused and often incorrect. Mr. Anthan seems to think it absurd that some members of the student body and residents of the area would contribute money to see their basketball team on television when away from home. He mentions that the $900 collected from the students, (and as I recall this money was collected in the field house during the Oklahoma A & M game from all the spectators, not just the student minority), is surely all that should be expected from them. He also suggests that it would be far better to apply our "dimes and dollars" to cancer or polio funds. I personally can think of no better funds to contribute to, but I think it can be argued that it is all right for people to set aside a small part of their incomes for amusement. Mr. Anthan, have you never been to a movie, a dance, or a play? Do you donate all your money away? What a drab life you must lead. I agree that some concrete statement is due concerning what games it will be feasible to televise and at what cost. It appears the Colorado game is the only possibility. I would be happy to see the regionalals at Dallas, if nothing else. It is impossible at this time to ascertain what other participating schools and advertisers would be willing to do, but a decent fund raised at this school would certainly get the effort started. If the fund fails, the money will be turned over to the University Endowment Assm. for athletic scholarships, so I am sure sports fans would get their money's worth in the long run. The people who initiated this idea have worked hard, and the largest benefit they will receive is the enjoyment of watching their team on television. It is an effort to support the team. I think it would be proper to support this effort on the sports page. Apparently Mr. Anthan has a different opinion. James N. Snyder Jr. Leavenworth senior. Daily Transan Sincerely. University of Kansas student newspaper triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 251, news room Extension 276, business office Extension JN, business Memorial College Press, Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. News service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Days, days, and periods. Entered second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT Kent Thomas ... Managing Editor John Battin, Fleelea Ann Fenberg, Bob Lyle, Betty Jean Stanford, Assistant Managing Editor; John Bannan, City Editor; Nancy Harrington, City manager; Mary Editors; Hirosei Shionozaki, Telegraph Editor; Mary Beth Noyes, Delbert Hayle, Assistant Telegraph Editor; Dick Brown, Sports Editor; George Anthan, Assistant Sports Editor; Marilyn Mermis, Society Editor; Pat Swanson, Assistant Society Editor; John Eaton, Pic- Clerk EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Jerry Dawson Editorial Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Dale Bowers...Business Manager Dave Dickey, Advertising Manager; John Hedley, National Advertising Manager; Harold Metz, Classified Advertising Manager; Conboy Brown, Circulation Manager. St. Augustine, Fla., is the oldest Like hungry guests, a sitting audacity in the United States. It was eneer looks. The Inconstant Prologue settled by the Spaniards in 1565: by George Farquhar. THIS IS NO FISH STORY Obrigado a todos THIS IS NO FISH STORY Cities' Service 5-D 10-W-30, year 'round weight, motor oil will give you the best performance possible. Get it today at ... CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. Phone VI 3-4321 8th and New Hampshire CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. Phone VI 3-4321 8th and New Hampshire CITIES SERVICE By appointment perveyors of soap to the late King George VI, Yardley & Co., Ltd., London MILITARY AIR FORCE THIS AFTER SHAVE LOTION CONDITIONS YOUR FACE, TOO Invigorates and softens the skin; soothes razor burn after any shave, electric or lather...$1.10, plus tax. YARQUINA After Shaving Lotion YARDLEY OF LONDON, INC. Yardley products for America are created in England and finished in the U.S.A. from the original English formulae, combining imported and domestic ingredients. 620 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C. Student Forum To Hear Pastor Page 3 "The Religious Faith and Campus Life" is the topic of the speech to be given by the Rev. Alan J. Pickering, pastor of the Presbyterian Church in Ross, Ohio, at an all student forum at 5:30 p. m. in the Student Union Cafeteria. The Rev. Theodore Gill, managing editor of Christian Century Magazine, will speak on "Is Religion the Answer--If You Ask The Right Questions?" at the KU-Y all-member meeting at 8 p. m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union. The Baptist Student Union will meet at 8 p. m. in 306 Student Union. The Rev. Conrad Willard pastor of the Calvary Baptist Church in Kansas City, Mo., will speak on "Individual Responsibility for Witnessing and Enrolment." A Religious Emphasis Week evaluation session will be held at 4 p. m. Friday in the Pine Room of the Student Union. This session will conclude Religious Emphasis Week. Members of the REW council, KU religious advisers, Student Religious Council representatives, and the Religious Emphasis Week speakers will attend the session. Senior To Attend ChurchConvention Mary Swedlund, Salina senior, has been selected to attend the International Student Conference sponsored by the Lutheran Church Student Assn. of American. It will be held August 7-15 at Luther Theological Seminary in St. Paul, Minn. After the conference Miss Swedlund will attend the Ashram, national convention of the LSAA, at St.Olaf College in Northfield, Minn. Aug. 25-31. Miss Swedlund is central sectional representative for the LSAA and will lead a discussion group of regional LSAA presidents. She was president of the Midwest Region last year. Gets Marine Commission Kay J. Laessig, class of '56, has been commissioned a second lieutenant in the Marine Corps. Lt. Laessig, whose home is in Little Rock, Ark., received his BS degree in business. Items for the Official Bulletin, must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin in case you are in Kansas. Notice should include name, place, date, and time of function. Poetry hour 4 p.m. Music Room, Studio department will read Canadian poetry Official Bulletin TODAY Der deutsche Verein trifft sich um 5 Uhr Dennerstag in 402 Fraser. Dr. Backus von der Abteilung der Gerschichte wird über Deutschland reden. Singen und Erfrischungen wird es auch gaben. All-student forum, 5:30 p.m., cafetera. All-student forum, 5:30 p.m., cafeteria, north end. Phi Delta Kappa, 6 p.m., Kansas Room. Student Union. Joint meeting with PH Lambda Theta. Your wife (or sweet- heart) is invited to attend with you. Make reservations by Wednesday noon. Dinner will be $1.50 a plate. KU Young Democrats meeting 7:30 hourly, assistant minister, speaker, fellow, president Archaeology Society, 7:30 p.m., 306B and C Student Union. Speaker: Dr. James E. Seaver. "The Archaeology of Sicily." AIEE-IIRE meeting, 7:30 p.m., 201 E.E.L. Student Paper Competition. Election of Sophomore Representative. Refreshments. Christian Science organization meeting, 7:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel. All students, faculty members, and friends of the university are invited. Baptist Student Union, 8 p.m., 306 Student Union. Speaker: Dr. Conned Willard, "Individual Responsibility for Witnessing and Enlistment." KU-Y all member meeting, 8 p.m. Room, Student Union. Speaker. Fed Gill Pre-Nursing Club, 8 p.m., 110 Fraser. FRIADAY Morning prayer, 6:45 a.m., Danforth Chapel, Holy Communion 7 a.m. *Museum of Art record concert*, 11 a.m. *Museum of Art museum. Rossini: I* *Barbieri di Sigilga.* Evaluation session, 4 p.m., Pine Room, Student Union. Coffee served. Newman Club semiformal, 8:30-11:30 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Student Union. $1 a couple. Call Carol Kane, VI 3-7070. for tickets. SUNDAY Liahona Fellowship, 6:30 p.m., RLSD Church. Cost supper, 7:30 p.m. Movies of Colombia, Ecuador, Guatemala, and Mexico. MONDAY Museum of Art record concert 11 a.m. Museum of Art Record. Stravinsky: "The Rake's Progress." Undergraduate mathematics seminar, 4 p.m., Room 203. Strong. Speaker: John Hodgson. Join us for an evening of Algebra." All interested students invited to attend these weekly meetings. Only one minister has ever served as the governor of Arkansas. He was the Rev. James P. Eagle, who was elected in 1889, and served until 1893. Dartmouth University's internationally-famous annual Winter Carnival was first held in 1910. The test for the AWS Senate election will be given at 7:30 tonight in 205 Flint. John Talleur, instructor in drawing and painting, has received the $200 Oppenheimer prize from the Chicago Art Institute for his color intaglio print "Gray Daddy." The print, which is being shown at the art institute, is being added to its permanent collection. Faculty Artist Wins Prize Women who have petitioned for an office in the Senate will take the test. From the results the slate for the ballot will be chosen by the AWS election committee. Having Trouble With Those Difficult Courses This Semester? Phone VI 3-1571 AWS Senate Test To Be Given Tonight What you need is a good Reference Book Al Lauter 10c 49c 98c We have hundreds of Reference Books On Sale Hallmark contemporary cards Hallmark contemporary cards Smart, witty distinctive cards for those who like humor with a modern flair. Come in and choose your Hallmark Contemporary Cards from our complete collection. 20% discount on many new books Rowlands L. G. BALFOUR CO. Fraternity Jewelers 1241 Oread - Fraternity Badges—Rings—Novelties - Personalized Mugs and Ceramics - Trophies and Awards University Daily Kansam 411 West 14th Mosser-Wolf Shop Brown's First FINAL OFFER! B9 Parka COATS Zippered Full Mouton Fur Hood Button-Zipper Closure Chin Strap Storm Cuffs Thursday, Feb. 21, 1957 $14.98 Brown's TOGGERY 830 Mass. Photo Bureau Lists Services A brochure on the services offered by the KU Photographic Bureau is being sent to students and faculty by the University Extension. The bureau, located in the basement of Watson Library, provides faculty members and students with application pictures, record prints, photostats, color service, slides, thesis prints and passport prints. The bureau's main function is the taking of student identification card pictures during enrollment. Another service is making copies of records for the offices of dean of men and dean of students. The brochure includes prices and sizes for the finished product. The bureau is headed by Harry Wright, who employs experienced student help. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. Audio Hoggie RICHARD NOBUTT ONE MAN BAND — Here's Ed Down supplying music for the Sigma Nu Prohibition Party. The Audio House can supply music for any occasion. (Adv.) Royal College Shop 8.95 Pinto MEOLITS CREPE SOLES they're so very, very soft! Penobscot Trampese Black & White Grey & White AAA's to B's to 10' s Royal College Shop 837 Mass. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Feb. 21, 1957 Kansas Invades Aggies In Search Of No.17 Probable Starters | Kansas | Ht. | P. | Okla. A&M | Ht. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Gene Elstun | (6-3) | F | Jerry Hale | (6-4) | | Ron Loneski | (6-4½) | F | Eddie Sutton | (6-0) | | Wilt Chamberlain | (7-0) | C | Henry Kemple | (6-6) | | John Parker | (5-11) | G | Jerry Adair | (6-1) | | Maurice King | (6-2) | G | Mel Wright | (6-0) | A snarling band of Kansas Jayhawkers invade Gallagher Hall in Stillwater, Okla., tonight in search of their 17th basketball victim of the year against 1 loss. This is a return game with Oklahoma A&M and could be one of the Jayhawker's closest tests of the season. Kansas was hard pressed to pull out a 62-52 victory over the Iba men in Allen Field House Feb. 12. The Aggies can be expected to come up with something new in an attempt to stop Wilt Chamberlain who fired a 36-point salvo in the previous game while roaming unchecked against a man for man defense. Must Stop Wilt One of the prime tasks set out for the Aggies is keeping a center in the game to guard Wilt. In the game at Lawrence Oklahoma A&M was within three points with 10 minutes to play but lost regular center, Henry Kemple, on fouls. The Oklahoma Sooners found the defensive answer for Wilt Saturday night, getting him to foul out for the first time in his career, but found out that Kansas is a great team even with their giant center on the bench. KU Seeks No.26 With Kemple out of the game, Iba was forced to alternate two sophomores against Wilt—with little success. Although Kansas will be favored to take their 26th victory in 43 meetings with the Aggies, no one is shedding any tears for Coach Iba and his men. Playing before a packed crowd of 8,500 radical fans, the Aggies will give Kansas and Wilt a good going over win or lose. Then, too, veterans Gene Elstun and Maurice King provide good scoring punch for the Jayhawkers. Elstun ranks No. 6 on the all-time Kansas scoring list with 808 points. The Aggies won't be able to spend too much time eyeing Chamberlain as Ron Doneski. 6-4/2 Jayhawker forward, has been hitting from all over the court in the last few games and dumped in 28 points against Oklahoma Saturday night. King To No.10 King, besides being the ace of the Kansas defensive staff, can move into the top 10 KU all-time scorers with four points in this game. This would enable him to replace Ralph Miller at the No. 10 spot. This game could be the supreme test of the Jayhawker zone defense which they have used in the last four games. The Aggies hit a torrid 48 per cent over top the Kansas zone in the first contest and must approach that figure if they hope to win this one. Arkansas claims more navigable rivers than any other state in the Union, offering about 3,000 miles of waterways. BIRD TV-Radio Service 908 Mass. VI 3-885 b E. 23rd St.—Ph. VI 3-9753 For Your Convenience NEW HOURS 7 a.m. - MIDNIGHT 7 Days A Week Steaks Chicken - Bar-B-Q HAPPY HAL'S Swimmers Drop 52-33 Decision The Kansas Jayhawker swimming team evened its record at 3-3 by dropping a 52-33 decision to the Kansas State Wildcats in Manhattan Wednesday. K-State Much Improved The Jayhawkers met a much improved team over last year's K-State squad. KU Coach Chuck Edwards said, "We did fairly well. Our team showed improvement in some races, but in others our times were somewhat slower." The only double winner of the day was KU's Tom Clevenger. He won the 200-yard butterfly and the 200-yard breaststroke in addition to finishing third in the 100-yard freestyle. The most improved Jayhawker was Dusty Milledge, who bettered his time in the 220-yard freestyle by nearly three seconds. 69-yard freestyle—1. Onuma, (KS) 2. Edwards, (KU); 3. Drowatzky, (KU). Time: 31.10. Iowa State Next The next meet for the Kansas squad is Saturday when they travel o Ames to face the Iowa State Cyclones. 220-yard freestyle—1. Coblentz, (KS); 2. Mattsuoka, (KS); Milledge, (KU). Time: 2:30.2. The Results 220-yard butterfly—1. Clevenger, (KU); 2. Newman, (KS). Time; 2:38.1. 400-yard medley relay-1. K- State; 2. Kansas. Time: 4:54.4. 440-yard freestyle—1. Mattsuoka, (KS); 2. Dicken, (KS); 3. Peterson, (KU). Time: 5:35. One meter diving-1. Matthews, (KU); 2. Ashcraft, (KU); 3. Townes, (KS). 200-yard backstroke—1. Mariner, (KS); 2. Kreye, (KU); 3. Fruedent- thal, (KU). Time: 230.1. 100-yard freestyle—1. Edwards, (KU); 2. Onuma, (KS); 3. Clevenger, (KU). Time: 54.8. 200-yard breaststroke—1. Clevenger, (KU); 2. Nolen, (KS); 3. Newman, (KS). Time: 2:41.5. 400-yard freestyle relay—I. K- State; 2. Kansas, (disqualified). Relays Committee Selects Freshmen Freshman members of the KU Relays Committee were selected Wednesday by E. R. Elbel, professor of physical education, and general manager of the Relays; Martin Hanna, Winfield, and Bob Elliott, Wichita, both senior Co-Student Managers of the Relays. Members chosen are Robert L. Luce, Ottawa; Lance Johnson, Wymore, Neb.; Tom Van Dyke, Kansas City, Mo.; John R. Bolin, Mission; Stan Lehman, Abilene; William A. Godfrey, Arkansas City; Dick Endacott, Bartlesville, Okla.; Larry Ostertag, Kansas City, Kan., and Edward M. Dolson, Kansas City, Mo., all freshmen. The oldest masonry fort in the United States, the Castillo San Marcos, was built by the Spaniards in 1672 to defend their Florida settlement of St. Augustine. Leo Schick scored 100 points in a Walter Camp picked the first All- college football game in 1916. American football team in 1889. Automatic Pinspotters BOWL AT PLADIUM Open bowling weekdays 11 to 6:30; Sat. & Sun. 10 to 12 p.m. Friday night after 9 Pladium Lanes 9th & Mississippi CHOOSE A CAREER With The BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM There are unlimited opportunities in the communications industry for 1957 graduates in business administration, engineering and science. There will be openings for graduates in... ENGINEERING MATHEMATICS PHYSICAL SCIENCES With these Bell Telephone System Companies: Southwestern Bell Bell Telephone Laboratories Sandia Corporation Western Electric Long Lines Department of A.T. & T. Sign up now at the Engineering Office. BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION With these Bell Telephone System Companies: Southwestern Bell Long Lines Department of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company Sign up now at the Business School Office. Interview dates: Monday, February 25 and Tuesday, February 26, 1957 BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM INDEPENDENT "On The Campus" Laundry & Dry Cleaners Located At Rowlands. 1241 Oread Rowlands. K Page 5 IM B Teams Move To Basketball Finals Phi Gamma Delta, led by Nick Hoge's 11 points, beat Beta Theta Pi, 35-26, in a Fraternity B semi-final playoff game at Robinson Gymnasium Wednesday. After taking a slim 16-12 halftime lead Phi Gam widened the margin in the second half by good shooting from the free throw line. Endacott Tops Betas Dick Endacott was high point man for Beta with eight. In the other semi-final playoff game in the Fraternity B league. Phi Delta Theta hit 16 out of 18 from the free throw line, and ran over Delta Sigma, 40-20. Led by Dale Remsberg, who won game scoring honors with 21 points, the Phi Delts took a 22-6 lead at halftime and never were threatened. Phi Delt cleared the bench in the second half and the scoring increased. Verlin Meier was high for Delta Sig with 5 points, while Don Hearn chipped in 7 for the winners. In an Independent B semi-final playoff game the Medics pulled a big second half rally to dump the Newman Club, 30-19. The Newman Club held a 15-12 halftime lead but was to hold four points in the second half. In doing this great defensive job, the Medics committed only four fouls throughout the entire game. Bob Hawkenberry paced the winners with 15 points, and Bob Robl and John Kirk hit 6 each for the Newman Club. In the other Independent B playoff game Nu Sigma Nu, hitting 16 points from the free throw line, downed the Cats. 28-24. Medics Hit Free Throws Medics Hit Free Throws Steve Conn and Dick McGuire hit six points each from the field and all the rest of the Medics scoring was done from the line. Dick Honan and Bill Dickie were high for the Cats with seven points apiece. There were 30 fouls called in the game. The playoff finals in the Fraternity A and Independent A leagues will be played this afternoon. There will be no other games. Wednesday's Results Wednesday's Results Fraternity C—Phi Gam 1-31, Phi Gam 5-26; Phi Gam 2-32, Phi Gam 3-29. Independent C—RHM 27, Hoopoes 23; Navy 2-26, Navy 1-19. Today's Games Fraternity A—Beta vs. Phi Gam 6:15 p.m. Independent A—Am. Ph. A. vs Hookers, 5:15 p.m. Engineer Grad Enters Oil Company School Ronald A. Lenser, a January, 1957 graduate in petroleum engineering has entered the college graduate training school of the Cities Service Oil Co. Lenser, who is from Roxanna, Ill., was a member of Gamma Delta and the American Institute of Mechanical Engineers while at the University. By controlling smut in wheat, North Dakota farmers are adding a quarter to half a million dollars to their annual income. Every minute of a day 105,000 gallons of gasoline is used in the United States, the National Automobile Club estimates. Jumping You'll Jump For Joy Yes, you'll be jumping high and clicking your heels after you try Holiday Inn's Special- All you can eat for only-$1.95 - Sunday Buffet - Holiday Inn Restaurant Jct. Hiway 10 and 59 on Iowa St. Swim Team To Ames Saturday The University of Kansas swimming team will attempt to pull ahead of the .500 mark when they travel to Ames, Iowa, to meet the strong Iowa State Cyclones Saturday. KU's record was evened at 3-3 Wednesday when they lost to K-State at Manhattan. The Cyclones are expected to be even stronger than the Wildcats. "As usual," coach Chuck Edwards said, "Iowa State is very strong. They are favorites to retain their second place finish in the Big Seven conference meet behind Oklahoma." Edwards is satisfied with the Jayhawker swimmers' performances during the first six meets. "We're still coming along," he said. "Our times are improving a little in each outing, although we have lacked the necessary depth to win most of our matches. One bad break for one of our top performers is the difference between winning and losing." After the Iowa State meet, the Jayhawkers face Emporia State and Nebraska before they go to Norman, Okla., for the Big Seven meet, March 8-9. Thursday; Feb. 21, 1857 University Daily Kansan The bulkiest of living reptiles is the salt-water crocodile of Australia's tropical streams. Fiercely aggressive, this 30-foot dragon will go out of its way to attack men. Sellards Hall volleyball team defeated the Kappa Kappa Gamma team 47 to 30 Wednesday in Robinson Gym. It was a semi-final and moved Sellards into the finals. Sellards, Kappas To Meet In Women's Volleyball Finals The Kappas took an early lead, but Sellards took over after three minutes of play and at the half led 22 to 17. The second half saw Sellards leading all the way without the Kappas threatening seriously at any time. Peggy Peterson, Independence, Mo., sophomore, was high scorer for Contrary to popular belief, St Bernard dogs have never carried brandy casks in their work of rescue persons lost in the Alps. They wear the casks only in posing for visitors' photographs. GLASS Auto Glass Tabletops Sudden Service AUTO GLASS CO. East End of 9th Street Sellards with Shirley Stout, Lombard, Ill., junior, second in line. Donna White, Wichita sophomore, lead the Kappas in scoring. Sellards will play Delta Delta Delta Delta Monday for the championship. Two-year-old ewes in Montana produce nearly 60 per cent more pounds of lamb when wintered on hay and concentrate than those grazing on range and concentrate. 2 BIG SHOWS Sun. Feb. 24—1:30 & $8:00 P.M., Municipal Auditorium- Topeka, Advance tickets-$2.00 at the door $2.50. Tickets on sale at Walgreen Drug-$8 and Kansas and Mills Music--332 Kansas. SUPER ATTRACTIONS PRESENT THE BIGGEST SHOW OF STARS FOR 57 Allin Parson Fats DOMINO Bill DOGGETT MANIS CIRCH CLYDE McPhatter LAVERN Baker Chuck BERRY *Five KEYS The MOONGLOWS *ANN COLE *Five SATINS *Charlie BROWN Eddie Cooley DUMPLES *THE SCHOOLBOYS Paul Williamst Bye Band HERE ARE THIS WEEK'S TIE-BREAKERS IN OLD GOLD'S TANGLE SCHOOLS PUZZLES TIE-BREAKING PUZZLE NO.4 SAPNNNBEY CLUE: Benjamin Franklin participated in the founding of this school. Later, the first university medical school in the country was established here. CLUE: This New England university was chartered in 1869. A theological seminary, founded in 1839, was its forerunner, and was absorbed as the university's first department. ANSWER 1___ ANSWER 2___ Name___ Address___ City___ State___ College___ TIE-BREAKING PUZZLE NO.5 VAVAZ FR CDRNL CLUE: This Catholic university for men, conducted by Jesuit Fathers, is located in a town founded as a mission in 1777. The university was opened in 1851. ANSWER 1___ ANSWER 2___ Name___ Address___ City___ State___ College___ HOLD UNTIL YOU HAVE COMPLETED ALL EIGHT TIE-BREAKERS All participants who completed the initial set of twenty-four puzzles correctly are required to solve a series of eight tie-breakers, in order to compete for the prizes in the tie. Tie-breakers four and five are published herein and the remaining three puzzles will appear in successive issues. Remember—first prize is a TOUR FOR TWO AROUND THE WORLD—or $5,000 cash . . and there are 85 other valuable prizes now tied for. TRY TODAY'S OLD GOLDS No other cigarette can match the taste of today's Old Golds. Regulars—Kings or Filters . . . they taste terrific ... thanks to Old Gold's nature-ripened tobaccos . . so rich, so light, so golden bright. *Buy A Carton Today* Old Gold CIGARETTES FILTER KINGS Copyright 1957 Harry H. Hollister . University Daily Kansan Thursday, Feb. 21, 195 Page 6 Young GOP Delegates Picked Thirty-five delegates to the 1957 state Collegiate Young Republican Convention were approved at a recent meeting of the KU Young Republican Club. The convention is March 14-16 in Emporia. The KU representatives will join delegates from eight other Kansas Young Republican clubs to elect state officers and form resolutions. The KU club will also send 36 alternate delegates, to be named at a later date. Delegates are Robert L. Howard, Emporia first-year law; Frances Smoley, Fort Wayne, Ind.; Elaine Armbruster, Ellis; Mary Sharon Cole, Colby; William H. Oliver, Topeka; Vic Goering, Kingman; William Hagman, Pittsburgh, and Richard Billings, Russell, all seniors. Barbara Craig, Wichita; Katherine Berryman, Ashland; Carol Eklund, Russell; Patricia Moon, Lawrence; Jann Walker, Omaha, Neb.; Sally Rice, Abilene; Joan Graham, Almena; Walter F. McGinnis, Lawrence; Kent Pelz, Des Plaines, Ill.; James B. Steerman, Emporia; Joa Sterrett, Topeka; Fred Alline, Kansas City, Kan.; Marilyn Perrin, Topela, and Frederick M. Fuller, Ellis, all iuniors. Peggy Garrison, Phillipsburg; Judith Anderson, Lawrence; Betty Alexander, Onawa, Iowa; Charles D. Whalten, Overland Park; Michael Hayes, Zenith; John Casson, Topeka, and William Pendergrass, Kansas City, Kan., all sophomores. Sharon Hagman, Pittsburg; Sarah Shaffer, Russell; Jane Dean, Kansas City, Mo.; James Ranson, Wichita; Elizabeth Phillips, Merriam, and Marilyn Whelan, El Dorado, all freshmen. Democrats To Hear Rep. Dale Saffel Rep. Dale Saffels of the 115th district will speak on the Kansas Legislature in regard to Gov. George Docking's proposed budget at a meeting of the KU Young Democrats at 7:30 p.m. today in 105 Green. Rep. Suffels, one of the 43 Democrats in the House, is also assistant minority leader. He is one of the youngest ever to hold that position and is now serving his second term as representative. A business meeting will precede the talk. Mardi Gras is an annual fete celebrated in Roman Catholic communities for a month preceding Lent. It has been observed with gay festivities, processions and masquerades in New Orleans for a century. NOT SINCE THE CAINE MUTINY HAS THERE BEEN A DRAMA LIKE THIS! M-G-M presents THE RACK STARRING PAUL NEWMAN • WENDELL COREY WALTER PIDGEON • EDMOND O'BRIEN ANNE FRANGIS • LEE MARVIN Latest Fox News NOW Ends Saturday Mat. Saturday 2 p.m. The next day he asked to borrow the car again. When he found the car in Zone W, the doors were all locked, and the key did not fit. He called Flint Hall and asked if he had the right keys. It was the same car he driven the day before with the New Jersey license plates, he said. A member of the University Daily Kansan business staff was in a hurry to get downtown recently and asked to borrow someone's car. His request was granted, and he went down to Zone W to look for the car described. He heard the owner go into peals of laughter. "Yes." the now-confused student answered. He found a car fitting the description, got in and drove down to do his errand. He noticed the car had New Jersey license plates and thought this strange since the owner was from the Midwest. When he returned he asked the owner why she had New Jersey license plates, but thinking he was kidding she went along with the joke. "Were you serious about the New Jersey license plates?" she asked "Well, then, you must have driven someone else's car yesterday, because mine does not have New Jersey plates." Right Keys Start Wrong Car. GRANADA G This should explain to the owner how his car mysteriously moved itself to the parking lot behind Flint Hall from Zone W. Art Education Conference Friday Registration and a general session will begin the eighth annual Art Education Conference at 10 a.m. Friday in the Student Union. Italo L. de Francesco, director of art education at State Teacher's College, Kutztown, Pa., will speak at the first session on "Professional Responsibilities of Art Teachers." Mr. de Francesco will speak on "Art Education Today" at a banquet at 5:45 p.m. in the Kansas Room of the Union. A general session and group discussion by art supervisors will end the conference Saturday. Mr. de Francesco will talk on "Coordination of Art Education." The conference is sponsored by the KU Art Education Club. Agriculture Department agronomists gained more efficient forage production and increased returns per acre by applying nitrogen as ammonium nitrate to range grasses in North Dakota. International Club Elects New President Abdul Rahim Ola Ojikutu of Nigeria was elected president of the International Club at a meeting Wednesday. He succeeds Ratnam Swami, Ceylon graduate student, who resigned. Sam F. Anderson, instructor of German, talked and showed colored slides of his travels in Russia. Mr. Anderson visited the area around Moscow and south to Kieu last year. University Club Offers Class An instruction class in South American dances will be offered members of the University Club at 8 p.m. Friday in the club rooms. The class will be followed by a practice period and ballroom dancing. Shirley Hughes, instructor of physical education, will conduct the class. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mason, 2107 Ohio St., are hosts. We should all be concerned about the future because we will have to spend the rest of our lives there. Seed for Thought by Charles Francis Kettering. Archaeological points of interest in Sicily will be the subject of a talk by James Seaver, associate professor of history, at the Archaeology Club at 7:30 p.m. in 306 Student Union. Archaeology Club To Hear Of Sicily Announcing... Dr. Seaver traveled through Sicily in April 1954 with his wife and son and Miss Mary Grant, associate professor of Latin and Greek. He will stress in his talk the archaeological sites of Segesta, Selinus, Agrigento, and Syracuse where the group visited and took pictures. He will also tell about cathedrals and museums he visited and about a new archaeological site near Piazza Armerina which was the villa of the Roman Emperor Maximian (284-306 A.D.) The Pacific, largest of all oceans, was the first to be spanned by commercial aircraft, the National Geographic Society says. The historic flight was made by Capt. Eddie Musick, first chief pilot of Pan American Airways, in November, 1925. V VARSITY Reopening Today! Winter Hours 4 p.m.-12 p.m. Fri & Sat. 4 p.m.-1 a.m. Dixon's Drive.In Open 6:45 p.m. Weekdays NOW Thru Set West Edge of Lawrence on Hiway 40 1970 DIXON'S DRIVE-IN is proud to bring to Lawrence an all new, completely different service AUTO DINE. The Art of Active Rock Organization Presents JOHN JOHN RONALD MILLS • GREGSON • SINDEN MILLS·GREGSON·SINDEN ABOVE US THE WAVES On Storytime INSPIRATION JUSTICE MICHAEL MEDGE JAMES KENNEY A REPUBLIC PLEASE New, totally different Service AUTO DINE Feat. tonite at 7:20-9:15 News - N.C. Continues Lead! Cartoon-Sports Comfort! Commitee! JAYHAWKER NEW YORK GIRLHOUSE CHAIRS Ends Tonite "Variety Show" STARTS TOMORROW Midwest Premier The "Baby-faces" who have just taken their first stumbling step down Sin Street, U.S.A. "The Delinquents" The Hoods and Gun-Molls of Tomorrow! Released thru UNITED ARTISTS Street, U.S.A.! Delinguent's BETTER FRIENDS More than 90 per cent of all market milk is pasteurized. should YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2566 SPECIAL SALE Thursday, Feb. 21 Saturday, March 2 Cmoral st VI Bocl i c-3- Tzlze P LeTst cclin S H 38 R - T See These Values And Many Others Plastic Bowl Set $1.98 Value set of 3 handy sizes: 1, 2 and 3 quart capacity 99c Tools up to $2.50 14-inch hack saw 3-piece chisel set 8-inch pipe wrench $5\frac{1}{2}$-inch diagonal plier $6\frac{1}{2}$-inch long nose plier 7-inch insulated plier 8-piece screw driver set 3-piece nest of saws Reg. $1.00 9"x9"x2" 79c Covered Cake Pan Covered Loaf Pan Reg. 70c 9½"x1/2"x2½" 59c Steak Knives $3.95 Value set of six, stainless steel blade imported from England $2.99 $2.99 Kitchen Tools Reg. $2.98 8-piece Ekco set $2.29 Paring Knives stainless steel hollow ground 29c Value 2 for 39c . At MALOTT'S HARDWARE Phone VI 3-4121 736 Mass. St. Lawrence, Kans. Thursday, Feb. 21, 1957 University Daily Kansan 21 449064 f all mar= Avery. Call lens or ordered. AL CO. 3-2866 y Cell Page 7 ch 2 ers 21 Set izes: acity nw set ach plier plier plier er set aws Pam F Pan feel blade england ves v ground IT'S CARE 121 ence, Kans. CLASSIFIED ADS 25 words or less: one day, see; two days, see; three days, see; four days, see; five terms. Cash. Fone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. FOR SALE COCKER PUPPIES, AKC registered, 2 months old. Brown, blond, or pari-colored. Also one grown male. Exceptionally nice for pets, show or breeding stock. See at 345 Mississippi St. Phone VI 3-2760. 2-25 BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Plastic, party supply Ice Plant, Ice and Vermont. Phone 9-3-055. TIME. LIFE & Sports Illustrated magazines. Special students' prices of ½ reg. sub. rate. Prompt service, buy now pay later, call VI 3-0124. tt HARRIS TWEED brown sport coat, size 38-40. $10. Harris Tweed gray suit, size 38-40. $15. Almost new tire chains $6. R. Murrill, 1001 Alabama, VI 3-6950. LIVE GIFTS—Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dog names, manners, accessories, fishers, fish, turtles, chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2217. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. KUOK PROGRAMS Today TODAY 6:00 Report one 6:05 Dinner music 6:30 "Kaleidoscope" 6:45 "Storm in the Dorm" 7:00 "Bookstore Hour" 8:00 It's 8 o'clock 8:05 University Theatre concer 8:30 Show tunes 8:30 Show tunes 8:30 Final scope 8:45 Study break 10:00 "Nocturnal Notes" with Bruce Adair 10:30 Lucky Strike news 10:35 "Nocturnal Notes" 11:00 "Nocturnal Notes" 12:00 Sign off POST DRAWING INSTRUMENTS. Practically new, perfect condition. T-square, drawing board in good condition also for sale. Call Lowell Tawney, V 3-6989. TUBE FREE with the purchase of practically new (only 250 miles) 650x16 Goodrich tire, price only $25. VI 3-1505 after 5 p.m. 2-26 BRAND NEW CANON CAMERA with complete outfit. Leather case, lens hood, filter, self-timer, and flash unit. f/1.5 lens. Low price. Call Itofuji. V 3-1944. BUSINESS SERVICES TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka. 119 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf FAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's' and women's' clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6657, 1106 La. ff We rent nationwide trailers any size, anywhere, anytime TYPIST . . . Fast, accurate, neat service. Immediate attention to all typing. Call VI 3-3732. 2-27 CROFT TRAILER RENTAL CO. East 23rd VI 3-7377 Parties, Pinnings, Weddings Job Application Photos Gene's Photo Service 2144 Ohio - VI 3-0933 Gene Smoyer tt EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf Have your car lubricated the MOTO-SWAY WAY POTTER'S "66" SERVICE 1401 W. 6th VI 3-9891 EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine. Phone VI 3-7634. tf TYPIST, Skilled in theses, term papers, reports. Fast, accurate, and reliable. Educated to college at regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barke Ave. Phone VI 3-2001. HELP WANTED CLEKER-TYPIST for full time work typing case work, data, and teaching material for classes in clinical psychology. Ph. KU, extension 382 for interview. TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. Visit www.skycoach.com. National Bank for information for itineraries and reservations. 8th & Mass. Phone VI 3-0152. tf TRANSPORTATION FOR RENT LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students up to $500.00 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. 833 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. 8332 Mass. Phone VI 3-8074 for 1 day service BOOKS Library. For gifts and for your own library. Art, Architecture, Cook Books, Childrens Books, Modern THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 RENT A TAPE RECORDER Ideal for Skits, Parties, Dances, Practicing Speech and Foreign Languages. Recordting tapes & ac- TIRED OF WALKING UP THE HILL? Two rooms for boys one-half block from union. Phone privilleges. Available mobile. Phone VI 3-5778 or see if 1231 La. HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP ROOM FOR MEN. Well heated, linens furnished, large closet, room service. Adjacent to bath. Will rent single or double. 938 Missouri. 2-21 MISCELLANEOUS NICELY FURNISHED APARTMENT. 4 rooms, available now. Fire place, full basement, garage. In west location. Couple only. Call VI 3-5780. 2-21 VERY CLEAN THREE ROOM unfurnished apt. Close in, private bath, large kitchen, bed, and gym. Child accepted. Utilities paid. VI 3-7686 or VI 3-2055. Reasonable. 2-27 BOARDERS WANTED. For a pleasant change in dietary routine, contact John Hall at VI 3-2355, Phi Rd Medical fraternity, 1233 Orsed. Reasonable. 2-28 LOST SET OF HOUSE AND PERSONAL KEYS, between Bailey and Strong Monday af- ternoon. Finder please return to Daly Kansan Business Office. 2-28 GOLD AND PEARL ponytail clip. Christmas present from family. Lost somewhere on campus. Finder please call Betsy Post, VI 3-9123. 2-25 DARK BROWN GLASSES in case. Lost somewhere on campus. Finder please call Peggy Kiser, VI 3-9123. 2-25 Students and Faculty Trip insurance with personal baggage coverage The Barlow Agency 910 Mass, Vi 3-2455 AAA Memberships Available. BELAFONTE SINGS CALYPSO L. P. $3.98 E. P. $2.49 Diamond Tip Needles $15.00 and up BELL MUSIC COMPANY 925 Massachusetts Phone VI3-2644 $ Hoot Mon!! Just Like Growing a "Money Tree" Here's Why Trading at RUSTY'S or COLE'S Is Just Like Having a Money Tree— 1 - Free Daily Cash Jackpot 2 - Lowest Prices Possible 3-Highest Quality Available 4 - Fast Friendly Service 4 Plus - Plenty of Free Parking - Open Evenings and Sundays RUSTY'S Food Center 23rd & Louisiana IGA COLE'S Food Center 2nd & Lincoln Page 8 University Daily Kansas Thursday, Feb. 21, 1957 S. P. B. A. S. C. —(Dally Kansan photo) WHAT COLOR SHOULD A CHICKEN BE? —These young artists seem to be pondering just this sort of problem. This group of would-be Rockwells and Rembrandts is furnishing its student-teacher with valuable experience and, no doubt, a course in questions and answers. Grade-School Teachers Help KU Artists Lawrence grade-school art teachers are more than willing to enroll children in the University's "inschool" training program for art education students, Miss Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of education, said in a recent interview. Children from community schools attend art classes taught by University students for one hour each week. The teacher makes all plans for her class and determines what kind of work they shall do according to their interest and age level. These classes are a benefit to Music Fraternity To Initiate 11 Sunday Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, professional music fraternity, will initiate 11 new members at 2 p.m. Sunday to be followed by a banquet in the English room of the Student Union. Initiated will be De Ros Hogue, Dodge City junior; Gary White, Minneapolis; Bruce Voran, Kingsley; Ronald Thatcher, Salina; John Mayhan, Emporia; David Laney, Lawrence; Bill Hamm, Atchison; Mike Conner, Dodge City; Jack Colbert, St. Joseph, Mo.; Larlan Carlson, Wayne, Neb., and James Avery, Burlington. All are sophomores. both the children and the student teacher," Miss Maud Ellsworth said. "Children have an opportunity to do more work than their regular class work provides and teachers gain experience in working with children." There are six 10-week classes this semester. The teacher, who must be a junior, conducts the class as Sigma Alpha Iota Installs New Officers Doris Cinzcoll, Detroit junior, was installed Wednesday as president of Sigma Alpha Iota, girls professional music fraternity. Others were Janetha Schmalzried, Dighton junior, vice president; Sharon Regier, Newton junior, recording secretary; Marilyn Wiens. Belle Plaine sophomore, corresponding secretary; Sue Markwell, Gashland, Mo., junior, treasurer; Ann Markwell, Gashland, Mo., junior, rush chairman; Mary Beth Spena. Lecompton junior, captain; Joanna Lord, Shawnee junior, editor; Peggy O'Dell, Clarendon Hills, Ill, sophomore, patroness chair man; Ernestene Bates, Burlington sophomore, song leader, and Janice Wana-maker, Stockton sophomore, sergeant-at-arms. FIRST LORD LONDON MIDDLE SEASON FIRST LORD Man's Favorite SELF-WIND — Can't overwind WATERPROOF* — Can't rust HIDDEN STEM — Can't break off, stem doesn't protrude DUSTPROOF — Dust can't get in to mar its beauty Guaranteed Unbreakable Balance Staff & Mainspring CROTON NIVADA GRENCHEN 17 Jewels $59.50 laboratory in advanced art education. A teacher may choose the age group she wants and usually changes each semester to compare age groups. No interest or carrying charge, your I. D. card is your passport to credit. To Show Colombian Movies Classes are supervised by Miss Ellsworth and Miss Alice Schwartz, instructor in education and design. At the end of the 10-week period a seminar is held to discuss and evaluate the classes. Wolfson's HERE YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD" 743 Mass. VI 3-4366 W Jim Christenson, Holden, Mo., senior, will show movies of Colombia, Equador and Central America at the Liahona Fellowship meeting at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Christenson was assistant director of an American cultural Institution in Cali, Colombia. Violinist To Present Faculty Recital George Green, instructor in music theory, will give a faculty music recital at 8 p.m. Monday in Strong Auditorium. Mr. Green, a violinist, will be assisted by Janet Turk, assistant professor of piano. The program will include "Sonata in G Minor" by Purcell; "Concerto No. 2 in E Major" by Bach; "Sonata No. 1 in A Major" by Faure; "Precipitations (1946)" by Anthony Donato and "Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso" by Saint-Saens. A giant clam, the world's largest bivalve, reaches a length of four feet and weighs 600 pounds. Franklin Pierce was the 14th President of the United States. GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL The accredited bilingual school sponsored by the Universidad Autonoma de Guadalajara and members of Stanford University faculty will offer in Guadalajara, Mexico, July 1 - Aug. 10, courses in art, folklore, geography, history, language and literature. $225 covers tuition, board and room. Write Prof. Juan B. Reel, Box K, Stanford University, Calif. TICKETS AND RESERVATIONS FIRST NATIONAL BANK BIBLE The First National Bank of Lawrence TRAVEL AGENCY Miss Rose Gieseman, Manager 8th and Mass. Telephone VI 3-0152 Airlines—Domestic-Foreign - Steamships Cruises Escorted Tours | From K.C. Via Air to: | tourist | (tax included) 1st Class | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Oklahoma City | $ 35.20 | $ 46.86 | | St. Louis | 26.88 | 32.26 | | Pittsburgh | 85.80 | 105.38 | | Washington, D.C. | 101.20 | 126.61 | | Denver | 62.70 | 82.39 | | Atlanta | 84.70 | 99.11 | A MIRACLE ON WHEELS streamlined beauty - dependable performance combined in the 1957 Ford SEE IT NOW FORD MORGAN-MACK Your Ford Dealer in Lawrence 714 Vermont Phone VI 3-3500 Daily hansan 54th Year, No.91 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Friday, Feb. 22, 1957 1957-58 Seen As Adjustment Era In U.S. Economy American economy is entering the period of the amber light," Dr. Edwin G. Nourse, vice chairman of the Joint Council On Economic Education, told students and faculty this morning. Dr. Nourse sees the years 1957 and 1958 as a "rest period," a time for making adjustments in our economy. He said the lag in housing, automobiles and durable goods caused by the depression and the war has been remedied. The upward surge in the standard of living has meant increased purchases of durable goods. He used the meteoric rise of the automotive and housing industries as examples. —(Daily Kausan photo) The Tower of Knowledge Business Expects To Drop GROUND HOG DECEIVED — Rain glistened on the road Thursday and spring beat a retreat from the weather. Today the suit jacket of this unidentified man would not be warm enough. The Topeka weather bureau reported one-tenth inch of rain fell in Lawrence. Business Expects 10 Drop "We have moved into the period when a great number of our working people are in the $5,000 a year level." Dr. Nourse said. He attributed this rise in the wage scale to the big powerful unions. These people represent great buying power. Dr. Nourse said he doesn't think business can do as well in the years ahead as it has done while the nation was "catching up." "A large portion of men's incomes was committed during years of easy credit to pay for durable goods." There is little "stretch" left, and it is unrealistic to attempt to stretch buying power too far. We must make adjustment on the basis of less consumer buying, he said. In a public lecture Thursday night, Dr. Nourse said that "bleeding heart policies" are undercutting the uselessness to the nation of the economic planning techniques that have been so successful in business. Emotion Over Intelligence Dr. Nourse cited the maintenance of parity prices for farm products and efforts to maintain a stable dollar as policies based on initial soundness, but which had been badly weakened because the government in yielding to pleas of special interests had "put emotion ahead of intelligence in managing our affairs." Crack Drill Team To Perform Here He warned that economic and social planners cannot be expected to solve the problems of full employment and continued growth of the economy. Rather they can only keep the problems under survey and study and provide the facts upon which the nation can act. The crack drill team from St. John's Military Academy in Salina will perform at half-time Saturday at the Kansas-Nebraska game. The drill team has made several appearances throughout Kansas and is regarded as one of the top academy drill teams in the country. This will be the second appearance for the team at a basketball game in Allen Field House. The young music education instructor, receiving no reply to her call to "come in" walked to the door and opened it. To her astonishment, she was greeted by a statue of Mozart holding a birthday card in its outstretched hand. Strange Visitor Brings Greetings There was a knock on the studio door. Her students had remembered. Officials Review Counselor Study Four government officials visited the campus this week to review the progress made in developing the rehabilitation counselor training program of the University. The men were Leonard Miller from the United States Office of Vocational Rehabilitation, Department of Health, Education and Welfare; Paul Reid, assistant regional director; Norman Evans, supervisor of Kansas Vocational Rehabilitation; and Harry Haves, director of Kansas Services for the Blind. Ways of improving the program and the possibility of increasing the number of trainees were discussed with William C. Cottle, professor of education and director of KU's rehabilitation counselor program, and Gerald Green, instructor of education and co-ordinator of the program. A teaching grant given to the University by the United States Office of Vocational Rehabilitation makes the program possible. In addition grants of $1600 to $2800 annually are awarded to graduate students to permit them to train for rehabilitation counselors. "Any graduate student is eligible to apply if he has completed requirements for admission in psychology and education courses. However, usually only those with an undergraduate degree in education, psychology and social work apply," Mr. Cottle said. Explosion Iniures Seven PASADENA, Tex. — (UP) A tank filled with 100.000 gallons of caustic acid exploded today, sending fire through the Champion Paper & Fibre Co. plant. Seven men were injured in the blast. Engineering Show Deadline Changed The deadline for application for director and business manager of the Engineering Expositoin has been extended for another week. Applications should be submitted to the office of the School of Engineering and Architecture, 111 Marvin. Tommy Griffith, Pratt senior, president of the Engineering Council, said so few applications have been received that the deadline was extended to noon Thursday. Weather KANSAS — Cloudy and cold through Saturday with intermittent light snow or freezing drizzle west and south. Colder east and south today and southeast and extreme east tonight. Slow moderation beginning extreme west tonight and spreading over west and central portions Saturday. Low tonight 10-15, high Saturday in 20s. 2 Injured In Fight With Five Youths By PAT SWANSON A University student and another youth the registrar's office has no record of were taken to Watkins Memorial Hospital late Thursday afternoon after a fight with five Lawrence High School students (Of The Daily Kansan Staff) Speaker Outlines Geography's Economic Role He described the world as consisting of five forces which make up the natural environment: nature, the productive plant, man's occupations, governments and social thought. Geography was described by Dr. Colby as the science dealing with the relation between the features of the earth and the forces that have and are producing them. The relation between geography and the complex economic nature of this world of our was discussed Thursday night in Bailey Auditorium by Dr. Harold F. Colby, the sixth International Geophysical Year lecturer at the University this year. Dr. Colby explained how the energy minerals such as coal, iron etc., are found in most abundance on the earth between the 70th and 50th parallels and that these minerals lay very heavily at the basis of our economy. Dr. Colby, professor emeritus of geography at the University of Chicago, was introduced as the dean of American geographers. Included in this definition are the changes man is constantly engaged in producing on the earth. They include man's building of transportation systems, of dams, of waterways and of his utilizing the vast metal and mineral deposits near the surface of the earth. "This belt of energy minerals which completely encircles the globe is also a belt of high per capita production," he said. Engaged In Production As far as the U.S. is concerned Dr. Colby thinks it is probably one of the world's most fortunate areas. The Great Lakes alone are reputed to contain about half the earth's fresh water supply and this country needless to say, is well endowed with numerous minerals in abundance. U.S. Fortunate Area They Settle Rule Disputes "The U.S. has all the middle latitude types of climate and is a very diverse country in terms of a nation," said Dr. Colby. "It is the only major nation with ice-free access to both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans," he said. He went on to explain how no other country lies so squarely and definitely in the middle latitudes between two oceans with such an advantageous relation with the tropics. Another job is to assign officials to the ball games and to make sure here are always officials available. They have a staff of 8 regular and about 20 part-time referees. Regular referees have already Watching 35 basketball games a week for two months is only part of the job of Ray Cox, Lawrence and Don Lamb, Leon, both seniors. The two are in charge of the officiating program for intramural athletics at the University although Lamb has been practice teaching recently and Larry Bale, Omaha, Neb. graduate student replaced him. One of them was present at every intramural basketball game played this year. Their job is to settle disputes and interpret the rule book. They handle all team protests at the game if possible. taken an officiating class. The rest of the staff is made up of students taking the officiating class this semester. They must officiate at 16 basketball games to get credit for the course. Regular referees and officiating students who have worked over 16 games get paid $1 a game for regular season games. Referees in the playoffs get $2 a game and $5 a game in the finals. One of the headaches of the job occurs when officials can't make it to the games and Cox and Lamb have to referee. Although the job calls for the men to put in five hours a day watching basketball plus more time to organize the program, both men agree that it is a lot of fun and provides its own entertainment. John R. Bryant, Merriam freshman, was treated for cuts on the face and released, said Dr. Beatrice Lins, University Health Service physician. The other youth, Richard Kent Troughton, suffered bruises on the face and is still in the hospital. Troughton is listed on Watkins Hospital records as a Seneca junior, a spokesman said, but the registrar's office said it had no record of any such student. Dick Stanwix, Lawrence detective, said the fight took place on Missisippi Street just north of the Student Union. The University students were parallel parking, he said, and the high school youths had to slam on their breaks to avoid hitting the first car. Remarks were made by both sides, Detective Stanwix said, Bryant and Troughton got out of their car and began walking toward the Student Union. The high school students turned their car around and two of them got out. Detective Stanwix said the high school youths claimed that Bryant and Troughton made the first move by grabbing one of the boys around the neck. Bryant and Troughton charged that the high school youths first made abusive remarks, the detective said. Bryant and Troughton will meet with campus police, Detective Stanwix, and City Attorney Wesley Norwood Saturday to decide whether or not to press charges. Six students and faculty members will appear as soloists on the band and orchestra tour. March 18-22. Band, Orchestra Will Tour State Soloists will be Norman Chapman, Manitoba, Canada graduate student, piano soloist; Gewinner, Webster Groves, Mo. senior, cello soloist; Charmaine Asher, instructor in percussion instruments, cimbalon soloist; Carolyn Craft, Junction City senior, mezzo soprano; L. Don Scheid, instructor in band and orchestra, clarinet soloist and Edward L. Masters, assistant professor of band and orchestra, trumpet soloist. The tour will include Topeka, Abilene, Hays, Colby, St. Francis, Goodland, Oakley, Beloit and Minneapolis. Enrollment Up In Engineering The School of Engineering and Architecture reports an increase of 21.5 per cent in the enrollment of this semester over last spring's enrollment figures. The school has 1970 students enrolled as compared with 1621 last sorring or an increase of 349 students. The freshmen enrollment figure is up 31.9 per cent. All but three departments report increases. Architectural Engineering has had a drop of 6 per cent, Industrial Management has dropped 26 per cent, and Mechanical Engineering has the same number of students enrolled this semester as last year. There has been an increase of 120 per cent in the enrollment figures since the spring of 1952 or an increase of 1,073 students. Want To Teach In California? WANT TO TEACH IN CALIFORNIA Robert C. Morton, director of school personnel at Torrence, Calif. will interview seniors in the school of Education in 118 Bailey Wednesday. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 22, 1957 (1) CAMPUS NOTABLE REPLIES — Sarge, an institution at this noble institution, brings a letter to the editor. ... Letters Request Spurned (Editor's note: The following letter from a campus notable is written to John Husar in answer to his request printed in Wednesday's University Daily Kansan.) Dear John: Thank you very much for your impassoined plea concerning my welfare. I must admit that it's not as easy to get around as it used to be, but old age is a problem that we all must face. However, I have by no means reached such a position that I must resort to charity for my livelihood. You are right, some of my sons are becoming rather old and feeble. I feel fortunate in that I have enjoyed very good health in my life, and this fact I attribute to the care given me by my friends and associates on Windmill Hill. Often I wish I could spend less time on the campus( as does everyone else). Unfortunately coffee breaks and my required Western Civ classes keep me pretty busy. I thank you for your misguided efforts and hope that my fellow students will refrain from feeding me so many candy bars during my coffee breaks in Strong basement. Now if there are a few generous people who would like to contribute to a "Sarge Foundation" I thank them very much. I would, however, rather they gave their contributions to the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals for those less fortunate than I, or possibly to buy yourself a dictionary. Sarge, Sarge. Lawrence graduate student Some For Battin John Battin's "New Tax Sources Needed" deserves the Pulitzer Award. Extras should be printed, bound in leather to preserve from bigotry, perversity, and hypocrisy and distributed to the state legislature and churches throughout the state of Kansas. Now that the editorial 100 years past due has been written, maybe some of the religious panels meeting this week will be stimulated to elevate the Kansas moral code into the 20th century. Thanks, John, for the 'best editorial we've read this year. Larry Miles, Holyrood senior, Ken Ciboski, Goodland senior Some Against Him This is in rebuttal to the article written by John Battin in Tuesday's Kansan, whom inquiry reveals is a fourth-year journalism student. The inconsistencies in the article, the lack of knowledge of taxation, state problems, and people provide the amplest of proof that the University was more than justified in forbidding the Kansan the editorial privilege of engaging in politics. The article was written as though Mr.Battin had done only enough research to write a passing article to meet his journalism assignment requirement. . . . Mr. Battin suggests increased taxes on gasoline. Does he know that taxes, both direct and indirect now constitute half of what we pay for gasoline? Does he know that cigarettes aboard a boat at sea cost 5 cents a package only because state and federal taxes may not be imposed on them outside of the United States. Does Mr. Battin know that the federal government takes about $500,000 a year from you Kansans? When he and myself were born our national debt was such that each child was born with a debt of $113. Now each child owes almost $2,000 when he is born. Taxes increase this not decrease it. We agree that there definitely should be material reductions in government spending, but the first step is to cut it down at the federal level — so that when taxes are levied, the money so raised does not have to pass thru so many bureaucratic hands accompanied by the resultant shrinkage. If this could be accomplished, it would then be possible to increase local and state taxes to the point of adequacy, and still have a reduced budget. Let's earnestly hope when Mr. Battin graduates that he changes his residence to another part of the country or the world where his political and or tax philosophy will be more appreciated. His article is clearly an illustration that there is a need for more funds for instruction so that seniors will show more mature judgment than that shown in his article on problems or education and taxation. And to think, someday he may have a part in influencing public opinion through the press. Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper triview 1986, daily Jan. 16, 1912, triview 1986, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Lawrence sophomore Telephone Viking 3-2700 Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. News service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except holidays and special occasions, days, and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 2, 1879. Extension 251, news room Extension 276, business office NEWS DEPARTMENT Kend Thomas EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Imaging Editor Most newspaper headlines carried news of the thousands of people being left homeless in Louisiana as the Mississippi flooded its banks. The roaring 20's were still roaring, with speakeasies flourishing and socialites doing the town. Jerry Davenport ... Editorial Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DESIGN Dale Bessett Business Manager Dave Dickey, Advertising Manager; John Hedley, National Advertising Manager; Harold Metz, Classified Advertising Manager; Oshay Brown, Circulation Manager. Lillian Gish was the toast of Hollywood and was starring in her hit movie, "Annie Laurie." George White's Scandals had been running almost a year, a record for Broadway. Rogers Hornsby was leading the National League in batting, and the Pittsburgh Pirates were in first place. It was May 1927. The country was buzzing about the cross-continent flying record set by a young man named Charles Lindbergh. He had flown from San Diego to New York, with one stop in St. Louis, in 21 hours and 20 minutes. Now he was going to try a non-stop flight from New York to Paris. Attempts had been made before, but they had failed. 30 Years Ago- People read with wonder about Mr. Lindbergh's plane, "The Spirit of St. Louis," a huge monoplane weighing 1,515 pounds and propelled by a 225-horepower motor. It had a wingspread of 46 feet. On the afternoon of May 19 Mr Lindbergh received word that the weather might clear, and he arrived at Roosevelt Field before 5 a.m. the next day. "Is that all you're taking?" one bostander asked incredulously. The big gray plane was towed onto the runway at 5 a.m., and its tanks were filled with 445 gallons of the specially made fuel. Mr. Lindbergh was going to take no baggage with him and only five sand-wiches. On May 16 Mr. Lindbergh was ready to go. The plane had been test flown, and mechanics had made the necessary minor adjustments. The special gasoline made for the trip had arrived from the West Coast. Charles Lindbergh Flies Atlantic "Yes," he answered. "If I get to Paris, I won't need any more, and if I don't get to Paris, I won't need any more either." Crowds milled around the carefully guarded hanger, hoping to witness the beginning of a history-making flight, but the weather was foggy and rainy and the crowds and the impatient pilot had to bide their time. On May 17 the weather was still poor. Mr. Lindbergh had lunch at the Newspaper Club. A large crowd of admirers who recognized the tell, smiling figure, followed him wherever he went. At 7:52 a.m. that day, May 20, the gray monoplane taxied down the runway. It rose once and came down again almost at the end of the runway. Then it rose again just in time to avoid a crash and disappeared into the clouds on its way to Paris. All day people waited for news of the brave pilot. At 7:15 p.m. he was sighted over St. Johns, Newfoundland, the last land he would see until he arrived over the Irish coast. On May 21 all conversation in the subways, theaters and on the streets of New York centered around Mr. Lindbergh. At the newstands little groups gathered to scan the latest headlines and buy papers, looking for word of the flier. Newspaper offices were swamped with phone calls. The New York Times received 10,000 between 8:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Bulletins followed his progress, coming from Dublin, London and Cherbourg. At the Hotel Biltmore 1,500 school teachers at a convention stood for a moment of silent prayer when it was announced that he had passed the French coast. In Paris 25,000 people waited at Le Bourget airport for Mr. Lindbergh's arrival, stamping around in an effort to keep warm. They had been waiting for hours, hoping to see the American aviator land safely. The time he was expected had come and gone, but they still waited. No one wanted to be the first to give up. At 10:20 p.m. (5:20 p.m. New York time) they were rewarded with the sight of the gray plane coming in for a landing, 33 hours and 39 minutes after it took off. bergh!" Soldiers with bayonets tried to keep the crowd back, but unsuccessfully. They finally gave up and joined the race to the plane. Cheers went up in the crowd. "Vive 'I'Americanin'" "Vive A Lind- In New York an anxious crowd waited on Broadway outside The Times Building, eager to learn what had happened to the young American. At 5:30 p.m. the bulletin announcing his safe arrival was posted. One shout and then many arose in the crowd. Automobile horns took up the cheer and spread it around town. From the windows of the city's tall buildings a deluge of paper floated down to the street. In the theaters moving pictures were stopped for several minutes of celebration. Within a few minutes the factory whistles were blowing at the request of Mayor Walker. Fire stations sounded their sirens, and the boats in the harbor took up the cue. Radio stations broadcast the French and United States national anthems. Where there were loud-speakers on the streets men stood at attention until the anthems had been played and then rejoined the cheering throng. President Coolidge sent his greetings to the now famous man saying, "The American people rejoice with me at the brilliant termination of your heroic flight. The first non-stop flight of a lone aviator across the Atlantic crowns the record of American aviation, and in bringing the greetings of the American people to France, you likewise carry the assurance of our admiration of those intrepid Frenchmen, Nungesser and Coli whose bold spirits first ventured on your exploit and our continued anxiety about their fate." American Embassy. Newsmen crowded into the embassy wanting to talk to the hero. "It was easy after I hit Ireland." Mr.Lindbergh told him. He added that the most dangerous part of the trip was his reception in Paris. In Paris Mr. Lindbergh asked only for a bath and a glass of milk at the "Never in my life have I seen anything like that human sea." Explaining that there was nothing freakish about his trip, he told the reporters. "Airplanes and men can do it, and every attempt, even though they don't all succeed, is helping aviation forward. Though my monoplane is the first to make the trip from New York to Paris it is going to have many successors." The progress in aviation since he made his historic flight 30 years ago has been phenomenal. There have been many "firsts" in aviation since Mr. Lindbergh's flight, but none has been greeted by such a celebration as his. By flying across the Atlantic Mr. Lindbergh brought two continents to within hours of each other instead of days, and the closer two continents are the quicker the peoples on each can come to understand each other. Last month three B-52 jet bombers attempted and succeeded in setting another first. They flew around the world in 45 hours and 19 minutes to set a record. Their time was only about 11 hours longer than it took Lindbergh to fly from New York to Paris. As Lindbergh said, it is necessary to make the attempt in order to progress. It is to those who have made the attempts, whether successful or not, that we owe the great developments in aviation over the last 30 years. —Peggy Armstrong You'll Jump For Joy Jumping Yes, you'll be jumping high and clicking your heels after you try Holiday Inn's Special- - Sunday Buffet - All you can eat for only $1.95 Holiday Inn Restaurant Jct. Hiway 10 and 59 on Iowa St. AS TR University Daily Kansan 249 Page 3 —(Daily Kansan photo) Applications for admission to the 124-apartment Stouffer apartment building for married couples have reached 380, according to J. J. Wilson, director of dormitories. WHERE YOU MARRIED COUPLES WILL LIVE — That is, if you're not too late in applying. This is one of the Stouffer Place apartments being constructed to replace Sunnyside apartments. It will be ready for occupancy by September. Stouffer Apartment Applications Reach 380 "Naturally, we don't expect all applicants to make final arrangements for moving in," Mr. Wilson said. "We will send complete information to them soon and ask for a deposit from those interested." Three companies have renewed their fellowships for one year in chemical engineering, Fred Kurata, professor of chemical engineering, said Thursday. Three Companies RenewFellowships They are the Dow Chemical Co. Ethyl Corp., and Phillips Petroleum Co. Graduate students who now hold fellowships are Donald P. Sobocinski, Tonawanda, N.Y., Ethyl Corp.; Jerome Brewer, Kansas City, Mo.; Dow Chemical Co.; and George W. Swift, Lawrence, Phillips Petroleum Co. Swift will have the Phillips fellowship next year also. Official Bulletin TODAY Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day or publication, not bring to hand. Mail: The Daily Karnam Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. Evaluation session, 4 p.m., Pine Room. Student Union, Coffee served. SUNDAY Newman Club semiformal, 8:30-11:30 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Student Union. $1 a couple. Call Carol Kane, VI 3-7070, for tickets. Roger Williams Fellowship study group. Boston and Kentuck. Worship service, 11:30 a.m. Museum of Art record concert, 2 p.m. A museum. Stravinka: 'The Rake's Progress' Roger Williams Fellowship supper, 5:50 p.m., 8th and Kentucky. Speakers: Meena Tyagarajan and Faud Baali. "Religious Situations in Asia." Liahona Fellowship, 6:30 p.m., RLDS Church. Cost supper, 7:30 p.m. Movies of Colombia, Ecuador, Guatemala, and Mexico. MONDAY Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. "the Museum." Museum Stravinsky: "The Bake's Progress." Undergraduate mathematics seminar, 4 p.m., Room 203. Strong, Speaker: John Davis, Ph.D. Student in the Department of Algebra." All interested students invited to attend these weekly meetings. University Veterans Organization, 7:30 p.m. presentation. Special meeting. Election of Officers. TUESDAY Art History forum, 4 p.m. Trophy Room, Student Union. Speaker: Bernard "Poco" Frazier. "The Artist vs. The Art Historian." University Club To Hear Talk "Travels in Russia," a travelogue by Dr. Sam Anderson, instructor of German, will be presented at a meeting of the University Club at 4:30 p. m. Sunday in the club rooms, 1007] Massachusetts St. A mastiff is a large smooth-coated dog of a very old breed, originally used as a hunting dog. The apartments were financed through a million dollar loan from the Housing and Home Financing Agency. The construction cost is $330,000 with the remaining $70,-000 to be spent in furnishing the apartments. Rates for the apartments, which are expected to be ready for fall of 1957, will be approximately $60 for 1-bedroom apartments and $70 for 2-bedroom apartments, Mr. Wilson said. Because this amount is not enough to provide necessary furniture for all the rooms, funds will have to come from other sources to completely finish the apartments, Mr. Wilson said. Basic furniture supplied to renters will include an electric range, sink, refrigerator and cabinets for the kitchen; large chair, studio couch divan, desk and drop leaf table for the living room, and bed, dresser and odd chair for the bedroom. To Be Finished The rooms have painted plastered walls and asphalt tile floors, with private bath for each apartment. The tenants will pay cost of all utilities, and must buy any other furniture or living fixtures, such as draperies and throw rugs, Mr. Wilson said. A loan for $1,065,000 has been approved by the Federal government for construction of another Stouffier apartment building on a site just north of the present structure. The building will be similar to the present one with a capacity of 124 apartments. Mr. Wilson said he hoped construction could begin sometime in July, but no official starting date has been set. "We will finish the second apartment project and then begin a survey to see if a third one is needed to take care of an expanding enrollment," he said. With the establishment of modern University apartments, Sunnyside apartments will gradually be torn down. A bill was introduced into the Kansas Legislature Thursday to grant KU permission to tear down the Sunnyside buildings. Another Planned "With our increased enrollment there is a more recognizable trend of the need of housing for married students," Mr. Wilson said. To Tear Down Sunnyside "With the 240 modern apartments which we will have, we feel we will be in good position to take care of the housing needs of married students," Mr. Wilson said. More than 20 million acres of land in South Dakota have been brought under soil conservation practices. Byers Writes Paper On Fly George W. Byers, assistant professor of entomology, and curator of the entomology museum, recently published a paper on a rare scorpion fly of South America of which there are only 8 known specimens. In his paper, Mr. Byers gives a short history of the scorpion fly, a description of it, and some sketches of the entire fly and certain isolated parts. Friday, Feb. 22, 1957 A radio skit on the problems of a teacher-administration relationship highlighted the joint annual mutual fellowship banquet of Phi Delta Kappa and Pi Lambda Theta, education fraternities, Thursday night in the Student Union. The skit was written and presented by four students of Dr. John Nicholson, associate professor of education and program chairman, for the event. They were Kay Ewert, Abilene junior; Donna Duncan, Coffeyville, and John Cooper, Lawrence, both seniors; and Marvin Carlson, Wichita graduate student. The four flies that Mr. Byers used for his examination and paper were caught in Venezuela and are now part of the entomology collection at the University of Michigan. Harold Regier, Lawrence graduate student, president of Phi Delta Kappa, was master of ceremonies. Mary Jo Woofter, Colby, sang and Ray Roberts, Kingman, accompanied her. Both are seniors. Fellowship Dinner Held Dean Kenneth E. Anderson, of the School of Education was a guest of honor. The final event of Religious Emphasis Week will be an evaluation session to be held at 4 p. m. in the Pine Room of the Student Union. Religious Emphasis Evaluation Todav Members of the Religious Emphasis Week council, KU religious advisers, Student Religious Council representatives, and the Religious Emphasis Week speakers will attend the session. About 50 physical education teachers from Kansas colleges and universities will meet Saturday in the Student Union for a 1-day conference. Carl O. Pingry, Pittsburg senior, was named winner of the annual American Institute of Electrical Engineers contest for his paper on "Automatic Telephone Dialing." Senior Wins AIEE Contest Teachers who attended national meetings on physical education problems will present reports and discussions will follow. Some of the topics will be physical fitness, intramurals, training of recreation personnel and the physical education department's services to other on-campus units. Physical Education Teachers To Meet Some 25,000 highway buses served the travel needs of an estimated 275 million passengers last year. This huge volume makes the bus lines the second most heavily patronized of long-distance carriers. Railroads top the buses in total passenger traffic. Second and third prize went to John A. DiMarco, Kansas City, Mo. Eleven University music students will present a woodwind ensemble concert at 8 p.m. in Battenfeld Auditorium at the University Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan. Woodwinds To Play At Medical Center Mary Sharon Cole, Colby senior, will play the Walter Piston "Sonata for Flute," accompanied by Raymond L. Roberts, Kingman senior. Austin Ledwith, assistant professor of music theory and band, will introduce the program with brief remarks on the development of woodwind music. Other instruments will be: Other instruments will be: Oboe—Marilyn Jo Wiens, Belle Plaine sophomore, and Sharon Stauffer, Chillicothe. Mo. freshman. Clarinet—John R. Mayhan, Emporia, and John C. Watts, Leavenworth, sophomores. Bassoon—Mary Nason, Topeka, John P. Feighner, Wellsville, sophomores. Piano--James Avery, Burlington sophomore. Engineering students will be interviewed by the following companies in 111 Marvin next week; Firms Schedule Job Interviews Monday General Services Administration, and Bell Telephone System. Tuesday—Bell Telephone System. Wednesday— Radio Corp. of America, Cessna Aircraft Co., and Melbar, Inc. Thursday—Radio Corp. of America, Cities Service Co., O. A. Sutton Corp., and Esso Laboratories, Baton Rouge, La. Those interested should sign interview schedules in the dean's office, 111 Marvin, and pick up brochures and applications. Friday—Cities Service Co., and Chrysler Corp. Monkeys, with one exception, are found only in regions where furnaces and furs are unnecessary. The exception is a large Langur, the "Monkey of the Snows." It lives in the cold evergreen forests of the Himalayan foothills. sophomore and Gerald P. Stone, Holton senior. DiMarco's paper was "Unionization of Engineers," and Stone's was "Magnetic Oscillographs For Application to Strain Gauge Recording." Pingry will enter his paper in the 7th District competition at Las Cruces, N.M., in April. He will receive an expense-paid trip to Las Cruces and will have a chance to share in a total of $1,000 in prizes. His paper will also be entered in the Kansas City AIEE competition and the Kansas City Institute of Radio Engineers competition. At Las Cruces Pingry will be competing against winners from 17 other universities. The winner of the 7th District will receive $25 and a trip to the AIEE summer meeting. Lutherans To Have Speaker The average family car is driven 7,800 miles a year. Dr. Edwin Moll, past director of the Lutheran World Federation's Near East Branch for eight years, will speak Tuesday at Trinity Lutheran Church in Lawrence. YOURS FOR THE ASKING... A Hallmark date book YOURS FOR THE ASKING ... A Hallmark date book Hallmark DateBook Hallmarked DateBook A handy calendar reference book for all the birthdays, anniversaries and special occasions you want to remember throughout the year. And there's a place for memoranda and your Christmas list and addresses, too. Come in and get your Hallmark Date Book this week at Mosser - Wolf "I'm leading all the gang to Duck's for a tasty dinner and an evening out!" TROLLS - Block Island Swordfish - Soft Shell Crabs - Fried Chicken - Maine Lobster - Fried Oysters - Steaks DUCK'S Sea Food Tavern 824 Vermont Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 22, 1957 Come to Church S1 First Baptist Church 801 Kentucky M. C. Allen, Minister Morning Worship, 9:30 a.m., 11:00 East Heights Baptist Church 15th and Haskell Wilbur Noble, Minister Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m. Sunday Evangelical United Bredhren Church 1501 Massachusetts Street Leland H. Young, Minister Morning Worship, 10:50 a.m. North Lawrence Christian Church 7th and Elm Wesley Keltcher, Minister Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m. First Methodist Church 10th and Vermont A. F. Bramble, Minister Morning Worship, 9:30 a.m., 11:00 a.m. Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont Dale E. Turner, Minister Morning Worship, 9:00 a.m., 11:00 a.m. Trinity Lutheran Church 1245 New Hampshire Harold Hamilton, Minister Morning Worship, 9:30 a.m., 11:00 a.m. Trinity Episcopal Church 10th and Vermont John H. Rosebaugh, Rector Holy Eucharist, 8:00 a.m. Morning Prayer & Sermon, 10:00 a.m. First Christian Church 1000 Kentucky R. C. Tatsch, Minister Morning Worship, 10:45 a.m. "Give God A Chance " Immanuel Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod, 17th and Vermont W. J. Britton, Minister Morning Worship, 8:30 a.m., 11:00 a.m. St. Luke A. M. E. Church 9th and New York Vinton R. Anderson, Minister Morning Worship, 10:45 St. John's Catholic Church 1200 Kentucky Rt. Rev. Msgr. Geo. Towle, Pastor Mass, 6:00 a.m., 8:00 a.m., 9:30 a.m. 11:00 a.m. Wesleyan Methodist Church 7th and Alabama Lloyd V. Snodgrass, Minister Morning Worship, 10:50 a.m. Free Methodist Church 12th and Connecticut J. Paul Reid, Minister Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m. Studies Abroad Enrich School's Intellectual Life "According to college administrators, involvement in cross-cultural educational programs enriches the intellectual life of a university. Having faculty members and students participate in educational activities abroad and also having students from other lands on campus help create a more stimulating and cosmopolitan atmosphere," said Dr. John Gullahorn, visiting assistant professor of sociology and human relations. A study of Americans who have carried on educational pursuits abroad under United States government sponsorship and who have now returned to the Midwest is being conducted by Dr. Gullahorn under a contract with the Department of State. The purpose of the research is to determine the impact of their experiences on them and on their current roles as scholars and citizens. Approximately 660 scholars, researchers, teachers and students from Kansas, Arkansas, Iowa, Missouri, North and South Dakota have spent time abroad under the exchange program of the Department of State. Couples Need Housing URBANA, Ill. — (IP) — Married students are with us to stay—and universities must plan for adequate permanent housing for these young people and their families, according to V. L. Kretschmer, director of housing at the University of Illinois. A survey of family housing facilities made at 12 large Midwestern universities by the University of Illinois indicated that by 1965 married students will constitute 21.6 per cent of student enrollment. 1. Veterans have shown that marriage and school could be combined. The survey showed these factors will continue to cause increases in married student enrollment; 2. Draft age men students often marry during school rather than wait through the two-year period of armed forces service. 3. Social relationships between young people are developing at an earlier age and earlier marriages result. 4. A higher level of prosperity permits parents to give financial aid to their married student sons and daughters. 5. An increasing number of students are entering graduate school and graduate students show a higher percentage of married students. 6. Because of teacher shortage, institutions will be forced to rely more and more upon graduate students, many of whom are married. Permanent members of the faculty and staff should integrate with the local community, university officials believe. Most institutions are constructing married student housing because existing facilities were not available at prices students could afford. Visit Many Countries Countries they have visited include most of the countries in the world except those behind the iron curtain. At least 25 KU graduates or faculty members are included in this sample. Page 1 Visit Many Countries "Most people who have been abroad say it was one of the most important educational experiences in their lives from both a professional and personal viewpoint. The more we talk with these people, the more convinced we become of the importance of cross-cultural exchange programs," Dr. Gullahorn said. "More than half of the former grantees we have interviewed so far have written and published from two to fifteen articles as a result of their experience abroad," he added. "One scientist, for example, spent a year in Australia during which he began a 5-year project with colleagues there, and he still is collaborating with them on technical articles." "Another scholar who went to a European country found that no copies of journals prior to 1947 were kept in the university libraries. After returning to the United States, he sent his own back copies of journals to these libraries and had other members of the faculty send journals wherever duplicate copies were available. Sends Journals To Europe We could cite many other similar instances, but I think these illustrate some of the tangible and intangible benefits of the exchange of scholars," Dr. Gullahorn concluded. The Thanksgiving and Christmas vacations were busy times for the Gullahorns, who interviewed former grantees in South Dakota, Iowa Nebraska and Missouri. Spring vacation will find them off again on a research trip. The final report on this research will be submitted to the Department of State in October. Math Professor To Visit High School Dr. Griffith Baley Price, professor of mathematics, will speak to students of Wyandotte High School in Kansas City, Kan., Monday on "The Revolution in Mathematics." He will discuss recent changes in mathematics and what these changes mean to the student of mathematics. He will also explain the need for more mathematicians today. Meat proteins are called "complete" because they contain significant amounts of the kinds of amino acids that must be furnished in foods. Three To Attend Speech Meeting Three University faculty members will participate in the annual Speech and Hearing Conference at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City Friday and Saturday. Richard L. Schiefelbusch, associate professor of speech and drama and director of the Bureau of Child Research, will preside Saturday. Martin Scheerer, professor of psychology, will take part in a panel discussion of "Interpretation of Language Anomalies in Children and Adults" and Erik Wright, professor of clinical psychology, will act as moderator of the discussion. Special guest speakers will be Jon Eisenson, director of the speech and hearing center at Queens College, Flushing, N.Y.; Miss Mabel Gulick, teacher at Kansas State School for the Deaf, Olathe, Kan., and Miss Jacqueline Keaster, chief audiologist at the hearing and seech clinic, Children's Hospital Society of Los Angeles. Bayles Helps Produce Film As educational consultant for Coronet Instructional Films of Chicago, E. E. Bayles, professor of education helped produce the film, "Using the Laboratory." Mr. Bayles, who worked with the writing staff and producer, directed the factual accuracy, continuity and clarity of the film which was completed and distributed late last fall. "Using the Laboratory" was planned to help junior and senior high school students in the natural and physical sciences develop proper techniques and attitude with which to approach their work in the laboratory. College students in special methods classes in science education will use the film to see problems and opportunities in teaching laboratory courses. Six Cadets Solo In Flight Program Six Air Force ROTC cadets have soled in light planes in the new Air Force cadet flying program Robert Jackson, Leawood senior, was the first of the 31 cadets in the program to fly alone. The cadets who soigned for the first time are William H. Jackson, Florence junior; Richard Lee, Mission, Roger Edwards, McPhrerson, James Hull, Wichita and Charles Garver, Mission, all seniors. The cadets must have 31 hours of flying time to receive their private pilot's license. The purpose of the program is to familiarize the cadets with flying before they graduate and go to flight school. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results TOMATO Tired Of Eating At Home? Then why not eat at the most civilized drive-in in Lawrence? Eat at Blue Hills Drive-In where you get the quickest service possible. Open Fri. & Sat. 11 a. m.- 12 p. m. 1/2 Fried Chicken 1/2 Fried Chicken Jumbo Shrimp Sirloin Tip Steak Try one of these dinners for only $1.50 Salad, French Fries, Rolls, and Drink Included The Blue Hills Drive-In 1601 E. 23rd. Open Sun. thru Thurs. 1 a.m.-11 p.n. 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Friday, Feb. 22, 1957 University Daily Kansas Tau Sigma Show Due March 21-22 Paris through the eyes of a wandering painter is the feature of the show to be given by Tau Sigma, modern dance fraternity, and the modern dance classes March 21-22 in Fraser Theater. The program also includes the "Ritual Fire Dance" and the fable of the donkey being taken to market. This fable portrays the moral you can't please everyone. Tickets may be obtained at the women's physical education office in Robinson or from any member of Tau Sigma. 100 Take a Take a 2-minute preview of your path to RCA engineering Specialized training program Earn a regular professional engineering salary as you work on carefully rotated assignments giving you a comprehensive view of RCA engineering. Your individual interests are considered and you have every chance for permanent assignment in the area you prefer. Your work gets careful review under RCA's advancement plan and you benefit from guidance of experienced engineers and interested management. Following training, you will enter development and design engineering in such fields as Radar, Airborne Electronics, Computers, Missile Electronics. For manufacturing engineers, there are positions in quality, material or production control, test equipment design, methods. You may also enter development, design or manufacture of electron tubes, semiconductor components or television. Direct hire If you are qualified by experience or advanced education, your interests may point to a direct assignment. The RCA management representative will be glad to help you. Many fields are open . . . from research, systems, design and development to manufacturing engineering . . . in aviation and missile electronics, as well as radar, electron tubes, computers, and many other challenging fields. ... and you advance Small engineering groups mean recognition for initiative and ability, leading on to advancement that's professional as well as financial. RCA further helps your development through reimbursement for graduate study under a liberal tuition refund plan. Now . . . for a longer look at RCA See your placement director about an appointment with an RCA engineering management representative who will be on campus... Wednesday, February 27 & Thursday, February 28,1957 Talk to your placement officer today ... ask for literature about your RCA engineering future! If you are unable to see RCA's representative, send your resume to: Mr. Robert Haklisch, Manager M. P. Robert Haklsch, Manager College Relations, Dept. RC-633 Radio Corporation of America Camden 2, New Jersey RCA 105 RCA RADIO CORPORATION of AMERICA Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 22, 1957 Aggie Goal Upsets KU In Last Second Errors Plague Jayhawker Team The Iron Duke of college basketball, Hank Iba, and his Oklahoma A&M Aggies rose up Thursday night in Stillwater, Okla, and dealt Kansas, the nation's second ranked college basketball team, its second defeat of the season. 56-54. The Jayhawkers will be playing their third game in a week when they meet Nebraska's Cornhuskers in Allen Field House Saturday night. Kansas has defeated Nebraska once and must do it again in order to maintain a one-game Big Seven lead ever Kansas State. As was the case when the Jayhawkers lost to Iowa State earlier in the season, a last second try for a field goal by the opposition was fatal for Kansas. Then it was Don Medstier of the Cyclones who made the do or die shot for his team and this time the hero was Melvin Wright, six foot senior from Amarillo, Texas. Kansas Errors Numerous Iba, who is known for his shrewdness as far as basketball is concerned, received unexpected help from the Jayhawkers who persisted in giving the ball away and in general making numerous mistakes which finally led to their downfall. Kansas led, 32-26, at halftime, mainly on Wilt Chamberlain's 24 points. When Wright's jump shot from 20 feet fell through the Oklahoma A&M net with two seconds left the 9,000 Aggie fans went understandably hysterical. Their team and their coach had defeated the mighty University of Kansas and while Kansas was trying to call time out and one Jayhawker was making a fuffle throw at the basket, thousands were rushing on to the playing floor lifting Wright onto their shoulders and carrying him off the court. Yes, it was a happy night in Skillwater. The fans were too happy to seem to care that Chamberlain had set a new Gallagher scoring record of 32 points. It was only the 13th victory against 8 losses for Iba's game Aggies. The Aggies finally succeeded in trying Kansas, 44-44, with 11 minutes to play in the game. Then it was touch and go all the way with the two teams alternating the lead. Finally Arlen Clark put A&M in front for the first time with a field goal, 54-52. Maurice King then came through with his first points of the night to tie the score at 54-54 then the Aggies went into their famous stall. It was the stall that kept Kansas from getting its hands on the ball in the last 3:47. It was the stall that the Aggies knew would give them one and only one shot at the basket. With Kansas trying desperately to get the ball yet knowing that they could not foul, Oklahoma A&M passed the basketball around and back and forth and around again. Only 11 seconds showed on the clock at Gallagher Hall when Wright looked at it and then at the basket. He speeded up a little, went softly into the air and pushed through the shot that caused 9,000 fans in Stillwater to jump for joy and 9,000 fans in Lawrence to quietly turn off their radios, think about it for a while then maybe begin to talk, quietly at first because of the numbing effect of that final score. Stall Is Fatal Chamberlain was magnificent as he romped through the Aggies man-to-man defense in the first half and brought down 14 rebounds. But it wasn't enough. Eddie Sutton led the Aggies with 18 points. The box score: Kings FG FT F King 1 0 1 Cham bln1 14 4 2 Elstun 1 0 1 Parker 1 2 3 Lonkeli 1 2 3 Billings 0 2 1 Johnson 0 2 0 SAS Okla A&M (56) FG FT F \Button 9 1 3 Hale 1 3 4 Kemple 2 4 3 Wright 3 2 1 Adair 1 4 0 Crutch fld 0 1 1 Clark 2 1 0 Carberry 0 1 1 Totals 20 16 12 ME GO IN FOR CHAMBERLAIN?—A junior Jayhawker fan seems to be ready to go into the game for Wilt Chamberlain but he is really only waiting for Chamberlain to autograph his popcorn holder. Sitting next to Chamberlain is Dick Harp. KU Trackmen Meet Tigers Tonight In Last Indoor Dual The KU track team meets Missouri tonight in Columbia in what will probably be the Jayhawkers' toughest dual meet of the year. KU's strength in the longer distances may be given a thorough testing tonight. Jim Sanders has run the mile in 4:19 and will give Jayhawkers, Jan Howell and Bernie Gay a stiff test. The Tigers are strong in the 60-yard dash and have three men who have recorded better times than the Kansas dashmen. Missouri will be particularly tough in the hurdles with a former Kansan, Henry Wiebe of Newton, leading the attack. The pole vault could be the most interesting event of the night. KU's Dave Tams recently vaulted 14-1 while the Tigers' Karl Englund has done $14-\frac{1}{2}$. The Tigers also have a $13-\frac{8}{2}$ vaulter in Bob Davis. Defending Big Seven champion 440-yard dashman, Pete Crr, will be favored in his specialty and as anchor man on the Tigers' mile relay team could push his team to a victory. Kansas will depend on better overall depth plus power in the half-mile, mile and 2-mile runs to take the meet. With the exception of the high jump, the Jayhawkers show strength in the field events, also. OKLAHOMA CITY — (UP) Six independent colleges have voted to stage a one-season trial run, starting in 1958-59, of a new major basketball conference that eventually is expected to have 10 teams. The Abyssinian cat is the oldest breed known. It is generally thought to be a direct descendant of the cat of ancient Egypt, where it was worshiped as a god. Delegates from Oklahoma City University, Marquette, Depaul, Detroit, Creighton and Regis reached the agreement Wednesday, pending approval of governing bodies of all schools involved. A representative from Memphis State attended the conference but admission of that school has been postponed pending settlement of racial problems. New Cage League In Trial Stage Louisville, Butler, Valparaiso, Rockhurst, St. Ambrose, and possibly Missouri Valley members St. Louis and Drake, are reported interested in the new league. North Dakota ranked first in the nation in 1956 in the production of durum, spring wheat, barley, rye and flax. PRE-MED SENIORS REICHERT MICROSCOPE CO. A's Sign Host, Shantz, Roberts Microscopes at 20% DISCOUNT Hulse Wagner VI-3 4711 1425 Tenn. KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UP) Signing of Pitcher Gene Host, catcher Bill Shantz and Second Baseman Curt Roberts for the 1957 season was announced yesterday by the Kansas City Athletics. The contracts raised the total to 34 for the A's, exclusive of those which may or may not have been signed by the players joining Kansas City from the New York Yankees in the recent 13-player deal. Campus Representative Shantz spent most of last season with Columbus and batted .243. He has been playing winter ball. Host, the A's draft choice, had a 13-15 record with Charleston of the American Association last season. Roberts batted .320 in 87 games at Columbus. Tobacco is grown in 54 counties. Quack Club Tryouts To Be Held Thursday Tryouts for Quack club membership will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Robinson gym pool. Girls interested in becoming members of the club must demonstrate ability in the front crawl, breast stroke, back crawl, side stroke, elementary backstroke. surface dive and standing front dive. Members of the club grade the swimmers and select the new members. The girls are asked to bring their own suits, caps and towels for the tryouts. Two K-State Games Reported Sold Out Ticket Manager Frank Mosier said that seats for the Iowa State game Saturday are all gone. Tickets for the Kansas game here March 6 have been gone for months. MANHATTAN — (UP) — Kansas State's two remaining home games this season, against Iowa State and Kansas, both are sellouts. Ahearn Field House seats 12,500. Basketball was first played with seven men on a side. KUOK PROGRAMS Today 6:00 Report one 6:05 Dinner music 6:30 "Sports Scope" 6:45 Public service 7:00 "Bookstore Hour" 8:00 It's 8 o'clock 8:05 University Theatre concert 8:30 Show tunes 9:00 Show tunes 9:30 Final scope 9:45 Study break 10:00 "Musical Mixtures" with Walt Fuller 10:30 Lucky Strike music 10:45 "Musical Mixtures" 12:00 Sign off WONDERING WHERE TO EAT? P Chili Sandwiches Desserts Relish Smorgasbord Salads Homemade Pastries V THE PARTY HOUS Is Your Answer! *New Snack Bar 10:00 a.m. to midnite E. 23rd Street Phi Gam, Hookers Win In Playoffs Page 7 Phi Gamma Delta won the Fraternity A basketball championship by defeating Beta Theta Pi, 46-32, in Robinson Annex last night. In the Independent A league finals the Hookers, aided by a last minute collapse of the American Pharmaceutical Association team, won by ten points, 67-57. The Phi Gams and Hookers will play for the Hill championship at 3 p.m. Saturday. Beta picked up a first quarter lead and held it throughout most of the second period, but the Ph Gam rebounding strength finally began to show as they hit five quick points to tie the score 17-17 at halftime. Tide Begins To Turn The tide began to turn at the beginning of the second half. Phi Gam controlled the tip and big Jim Tierney scored on a jump shot from the top of the circle to put his team ahead. Then Beta caught cold and after three short minutes of play Phi Gam was on top to stay. 24-19. By the time the third quarter was over, the Fijis were in definite control of both boards and held an eight point lead. 30-22. A short time after the start of the fourth quarter, Beta caught fire and narowed its deficit to four points, but Peppercorn and Wally Strauch hit jump shots and gave Phi Gam a large enough lead to go into a stall. Beta Zone Not Enough Beta used a tough one-three-one zone defense throughout the game in an attempt to stop the Phi Gam rebounding power and inside scoring power but this wasn't enough. Phi Gam's tight man for man defense kept Beta shooting outside and if the shots missed Beta usually didn't get a second chance. Hookers Can't Stop Brainard The Hookers used a tight three two zone defense to try to stop the Pharmacy's Bill Brainaird but this failed as Brainard hit 25 points to win game scoring honors. The Pharmacy, taking advantage of a Hooker cold spell hit ten straight points in the last part of the first quarter to gain a 15-15 tie. The start of the second quarter saw the Hookers use their wide open brand of ball as Rich Young broke away several times and took full court passes from his mates to score easy layups. The score at the half was 33-26, Hookers. During the third quarter both teams scored freely. Brainard cooled off, but teammate Don Peterson took up the slack for the Pharmacy. The Hookers started to hit from outside and at the end of the third quarter the score was 45-41. Hookers. In the last period Pharmacy pulled even and looked as if they could win, but they weren't quite deep enough. Brainard hit several deep corner jump shots, and Peterson's jump shot was still accurate. With only one minute and ten seconds left to play in the game, the score was tied at 55-55. Pharmacy Collanse Comes Late Then the collapse came Bob Preston hit an easy jump shot for the Hookers, Rich Young scored on two more full court break away plays. Preston was fouled and made both free throws, Fuzzy Martin hit two more free throws and the game was over. 67-57. TODAY'S GAMES FraternityB—Phi Delt vs. Phi Gam 7:15 Independent B—Medics vs. NSN 8:15. Fraternity C—Phi Gam 1 vs. Phi Gam 3 5:15. Independent C—RHM vs. Navy 2 4:15. Stevens Scores 31 As Wichita Wins WICHITA — (UP) — A 31-point shooting exhibition by Joe Stevens marked Wichita University's 73-85 basketball victory over Oklahoma City University Wednesday night. University Dally Kansan The Missouri Valley Conference all-star played one of the best games of his career, hitting 10 field goals and 11 of 14 free throw attempts to help Wichita break in its series with the Oklahomaans. The Kansans whipped back in theinal ten minutes to go in front 37-25 at the intermission. Hubert Reed was Oklahoma City's toon scorer with 21 points. The victory left Wichita with a 14-8 season record. Oklahoma City now has a 15-8 record. Basketball Scores Holy Cross 85, Providence 73 Temple 80, St. John's (N. Y.) 73 Seton Hall 80, Cincinnati 67 Phode Island 96, Maine 71 Clemson 91, Furman 79 Oklahoma A&M 56, Kansas 54 Washington U (Mo.) 90, Missouri Washington U (Mo.) 90, Missouri Mines 74 Wichita 73, Oklahoma City 65 Montana 78, Utah State 65 Utah 88, Brigham Young 66 Rolla Falls To Washington ROLLA, Mo. — (UP) — An accurate shooting Washington University team defeated Missouri School of Mines 90-74 here Wednesday night. Jim Barton of Washington led the scoring with 24 points. Charles Miller of Rolla got 22. At least four million acres of North Dakota crop-land should be farmed on the contour. The North Dakota Agricultural College estimated that improved yields on contoured land could add about 4 million dollars to the state's annual income. Butter can be made from the milk of zebus, but you won't find any in the United States. 8 JUST A LITTLE MORE EFFORT BOYS — Two Hooker players are shown trying to stop Pharmacy's Bill Brainard (center) as he goes up for a jump shot. The Hookers couldn't stop Brainard, who scored 25 points, but they defeated his team, 67-57, to win the Independent A League title Wednesday night in Robinson Annex. The two Hooker players are Bob Robinson, right, and Loren Martin, left. WINSTON TASTES GOOD! LIKE A CIGARETTE SHOULD! WINSTON gives you the break on flavor! Time out for flavor!-and what flavor! This filter cigarette tastes rich and full. And its pure, snowy-white filter does the job so well the flavor really comes through. Winston is the filter cigarette you enjoy--that's why it's America's favorite! Winston FILTER · CIGARETTES Winston FINER FILTTER FINER FLAVOR Smoke WINSTON...enjoy the snow-white filter in the cork-smooth tip! M. R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO.,, WINSTON-SALEM, M. G 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, Feb. 22, 1957 1. 如图,在直角三角形 ABC中,AC=5,BC=4,AC= WILLIAM W. SMITH LOU ANN PENDERGAST Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Pendergast of Wichita announce the engagement of their daughter, Lou Ann, to Mr. Roger Lee Wood, son of Mrs. Dale DeGroff of Wichita and Mr. Wendell Wood of Glenwood Springs, Colo. 4 Announce Engagements CAROLINE ROBINSON Miss Pendergast is a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Mr. Wood is a member of Delta Upsilon fraternity and member of Sigma Gamma Epsilon, honorary earth science fraternity. Both are college seniors. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Ambinder of Long Beach, N.Y., announce the engagement of their daughter, Trudy, to Mr. Marvin A. Seperson, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. Seperson of Kansas City, Mo. *** The wedding will take place in the summer. IDA MAE JOHNSON Miss Ambinder is a Long Beach High School senior. Mr. Seperson is a freshman in the College and is a member of Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity. *** Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Johnson of La Crosse, announce the engagement of their daughter, Ida Mae, to Mr. R. Mrs. Rignor Linderoth of Uppsala, Sweden, announces the engagement of her daughter, Brigitta, to Mr. Richard Wallace, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Wallace of Cincinnati, Ohio. A. Long, son of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Long of McCume. Miss Johnson is a Business School senior. She is president of Phi Chi Theta, professional business women's fraternity and a member of the Business School Association. Mr. Long is also a Business School senior. He is president of Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business men's fraternity and a member of Beta Gamma Sigma, honorary business fraternity. Miss Linderoth is a graduate student studying archeology. Mr. Wallace is a senior in the School of Engineering and is a member of Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity. . . . Worn bath towels make excellent cleaning rags when laundered and cut into convenient squares. Cut them with pinking shears to prevent the edges from traveling. On The Hill Foster Hall Foster Hall entertained four Religious Emphasis Week speakers at a dinner Wednesday. The guests, Dr.W. Stitt Robinson, Dr. Roland H. Bainton, Rabbi Myron M. Myer and the Rt. Rev. Msr. George Towle, previewed their panel discussion question, "Is Religion The Answer?" * * Pi Kapna Alpha Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity held an exchange dinner with Alpha Chi Omega sorority Thursday. Alpha Kappa Lambda Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity entertained Frederick Moreau, dean of the Law School, and Irving Dilliard, editorial editor of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, at a dinner recently. Dean Moreau is an AKL alumnus of the University of Wisconsin and Mr. Dillard is an AKL alumnus of the University of Illinois. Kappa Sigma fraternity held its annual Black and White formal dinner-dance in the chapter house Saturday. Kappa Sigma Among the guests were Dean and Mrs. T. DeWitt Carr, Dean and Mrs. George B. Smith, Dean and Mrs. F. J. Moreau, and Dean and Mrs. Burton W. Marvin. Chaperons were Mrs. Edna Stewart, Mrs. Ralph Rosebrough, Mrs. Richard Blume, Miss Merle Munson and Mrs. Gordon Yockey. Alpha Kappa Alpha --for Quick Results Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority held their 42nd annual Founders Day Banquet in the English Room of the Student Union recently. Alpha Tau Omega Alpha Tau Omega fraternity held its annual Apache Party Saturday in the chapter house. Chaperones were Mrs. Ruth File, Phi Gamma Delta fraternity housemother, Mrs. Frannie Spurrier, Sigma Chi fraternity housemother and Mrs. John Skie, Alpha Tau Omega fraternity housemother. Home Management House Students living at the Home Managemenlouse entertained guests * * Wednesday with a dessert-bridge. The hostesses were Judy Shelton, Kansas City, Mo., Barbara Beye, Larned, Kathy Keller, Wichita, Lora Stullken, Lawrence, Donna Forney, Newton and Jane Dunham, Beloit seniors. ... Pi Kanna Alpha Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity announces the affiliation of Bill Burnham, Hutchinson junior, and Bob Newton, Kansas City freshman. Pikes Peak in the Colorado Rockies is 14,108 feet high. Yellow Dominates Spring Fashions Look for various shades of yellow to show throughout spring fashions. Yellow was featured in the collections of designers who previewed their spring clothes during the semi-annual Fashion Press Week in New York. Designer Herbert Sondheim, for example, showed a bold yellow chiffon formal. Vary scrambled eggs this way. Beat 4 eggs slightly, and combine with 1 cup creamed cottage cheese, ½ teaspoon of salt, ½ teaspoon prepared mustard, and a dash of paprika. PARTY! PARTY! Penguin Running - Frozen Juices Even Willie the Penquin is stepping out tonight and he knows where to find everything for the party! - Glasses - Six Pacs - Ready-Pac-Ice Open—9:00 a.m. - 10:00 p.m. UNDERWOOD'S Mix - Snacks 1215 West Sixth NEED MONEY? Christmas shopping sure makes a dent in a student's bankroll. Here is your chance to sell some of those unused items around the house and make that needed money too. Clothes, radios, watches, cars-if you have them, Kansan Want Ads will help you sell them. Let a Kansan Want Ad be your salesman—low rates and quick results. Take advantage of Kansan Want Ads' high readership and low cost. (5 times for $1) Cash in on the KU Market! Try KANSAN WANT ADS Kansan Business Office—Flint Hall NEY? Friday, Feb. 22, 1957 University Daily Kansan Page 9 They're Stuffing Miles Of Life Into 500 Feet Life-like scenes depicting animals from the arctic to the tropic zone in North America is the subject of an extensive project now taking place in Dyche Museum. The exhibit being built will be the longest exhibit of its type in the world. It stretches approximately 500 feet around the outside wall on the main floor of the Museum. Although only one section of the mammoth project is completed, it is hoped that over half of the exhibit will be ready to open for the annual meeting of the American Society of Mammalologists, June 17-20. Shown At World's Fair The exhibit was built originally by Prof. L. L. Dyche, for whom the museum was named. He collected many of the animals being used. He had most of the animals mounted, and once exhibited them at World's Fair in Chicago. 'Writing Gives Low Returns' Dr. Pitman suggested that educators plunge the freshman headlong into writing, and leave the handbook in the briefcase until it is needed for a particular point. NEWARK, N.J., — (IP) — "Of all the required courses in the curriculum. English composition, as usually taught, seems to yield about the lowest return for the effort expanded," declares Dr. James H. Pittman, chairman of the Department of English at Newark College of Engineering. "If we (English teachers) are worth our salt, we must teach writing as an art," he said since, "communication on anything but the most elementary levels is still an art, not a craft. "Unless we give our students a sense of power and accomplishment we have given them nothing." "One learns to write by writing, not by picking flaws in someone else's isolated bad sentences. Something to say must come before the saying of it. "Our college freshmen have spoken English for years and have done some reading and writing. We do not have to teach them the language, though we will certainly have to help them polish it. They are devoid of ideas; they are not low in intelligence. "But they have had little or no training in the processes of thought, are therefore ill-equipped to develop their own ideas and arrange their available information so that they can communicate them to a reader. And worst of all, they know they are poor writers, every teacher has apparently told them so, and they have no confidence in their own powers. "First we should develop our students' confidence and respect for their own ideas. Subjects for writing will have to be suggested, but everything possible must be done to make each man write only what he feels is worth writing. "Obviously this is not something which can be accomplished by filling in blanks in exercise books. It must be done individually." Article Features Hawk's Nest INSTYLE FEATURES Hawk's Nest "Student Hangout at KU" is the title of an article published in the February issue of College and University Business magazine describing the Hawk's Nest in Student Union. Frank Burge, director of the union, wrote the article which describes the operation of the Hawk's Nest from the aspect of serving the most customers in the least possible time. HAPPY HAL'S E. 23rd St.-Ph. VI 3-9753 For Your Convenience NEW HOURS 7 a.m. - MIDNIGHT 7 Days A Week Steaks Chicken - Bar-B-Q A complete remodeling job was needed before the panorama could be placed in Dyche Museum. A new plastic wall about two feet from the outside wall was added for a new background that would endure. A new ceiling also was added. Great pains have been taken to make the exhibits accurate. Artists have made trips to Panama, Arizona, the Canal Zone, western Kansas, Minnestoa and the arctic region in Canada to obtain plants and photographs to use in making the individual plants accurate and to have the proper plants in association with the animals concerned. Another Use Of Plastic Each leaf has to be made artificially so that it will last for a long length of time. The leaves are made out of plastic, with each kind made in a separate cast. The rocks in the different scenes also are made out of plastic. The sod was obtained from the original territory in which the animals lived. The emphasis of the huge display is on big game animals, but there are also some small animals. Spring Fashions Will Be Shown A spring fashion show will be held by the Newcomer's and University Women's clubs at 7:30 p. m. m. March 13 in the Student Union Ballroom. This will be the third annual show given by these clubs for the benefit of the University Women's Club scholarship fund. Mrs. Betty Broat is in charge of the show and is now in New York buying fashions which will be used. Models have been chosen from the members of the two clubs. Tickets are available from all members. The ticket committee is Mrs. Laurence Woodruff, Mrs. Arthur C. Lonberg, Mrs. Edward Masters, and Mrs. L. Willard Shankel. Firms Schedule Job Interviews Job interviews for School of Business students will be held in 216 Strong next week according to the following schedule: Monday and Tuesday: Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. & Long Lines; Wednesday: Jones & Laughlin Supply Division, Procter & Gamble Distributing Co.; Thursday: Procter & Gamble Distributing Co.; Jensen-Salsbury Laboratories, Inc. (Vicks Chemical Co.); Friday: Jensen-Salesbury Laboratories, Inc. UVO Meeting Re-Scheduled Sun. Feb. 24 - 3:30 & 8:00 P.M. Municipal Anditron- Tupek - Advance tickets - 22-10z at the door $2.50. Tickets on sale at Walgreen Drug - 8th and Kansas and Mills Music - 32-10z Kansas. Bach Sellers, Lawrence graduate student and president of the University Veteran's Organization, said a meeting regularly scheduled for last Monday has been re-scheduled for Monday. Officers will be elected. The first telephone was established in Arkansas in 1879. 2 BIG SHOWS SUPER ATTRACTIONS PRESENT THE BIGGEST SHOW OF STARS FOR 57 All in Person Fats DOMINO Bill DOGGETT MASK ONLY CITYDE McPhatter LAVERN Baker All in Person SUPER ATTRACTIONS PRESENT THE BIGGEST SHOW OF STARS FOR 57 All in Person Fats DOMINO MUSIC ORCH Bill DOGGETT MUSIC ORCH FLYDE McFhatter ALL IN PERSON LAVERN Baker ALL IN PERSON Chuck BERRY • Five KEYS The MOONGLOWS • ANN COLE The Five SATINS • Charles BRADWYN Eddie Cookey DIAPERS • The SCHOOLBOYS Paul Williams Ec 820 SPRING OPENING A man seated inside a car holds up a phone to the window. Dixon's Drive-In Featuring The All New AUTO DINE SERVICE - No More Carrying Food - No More Driving With Food - Fast, Easy Reorder Service - Relax With The Best In Dinner Music - Food At Its Very Best KU 59 DIXON'S DRIVE - IN TO DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE HIWAY 40 TO TOPEKA Dixon's Drive-In West Edge of Lawrence on Hiway 40 --- 2. (1) $x = -1$; (2) $y = 3$; Page 10 104.29.37.66.66.66 University Daily Kansan --- State, National, International News U.S.Regrets Israel's No But Holds Door Open WASHINGTON — (UP) — The White House said today the United States regrets Israel's refusal to withdraw its troops from Egyptian soil but welcomes "further discussion" of the Middle East crisis. Senate Cool To Kanopolis TOPEKA — (UP) — The Kansas State Park Authority received little legislative encouragement for the proposed Kanopolis Lake recreation area when it appeared before a Senate committee today. The park authority has requested a $214,000 appropriation to begin work on the pilot mid-state park and Gov. George Docking has included the request in his budget. However, when members of the authority appeared before the federal and state affairs committee to sell the idea, Senators appeared unconvinced that the park system would be able to finance itself on revenues derived from the operation, without periodic sizable supplemental appropriations from the Legislature. 'Observe Peace, Justice' WASHINGTON —(UP)— "Observe good faith and justice toward all nations," George Washington said in his farewell address. Each year on his birthday, the House and Senate gather to hear the address read again. The House named freshman Rep. William S. Broomfield (R-Mich) to read it, and the Senate named Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz). Sukarno's New Idea? JAKARTA, Indonesia —(UP)—President Sukarno called on Indonesia Thursday to drop its western style democracy and adopt a "new conception", which would let the communists help run the government. The proposal brought immediate objections today from Christian and Moslem parties and warnings from newspapers that communist cabinet members seized power in Czechoslovakia. C-124 Crashes With 159 SEOUL, Korea—(UP)—A U.S. Air Force C-124 Globemaster with 159 persons aboard crash-landed tonight on a tiny island in the Han River near Seoul, injuring scores of persons. There were no immediate reports of fatalities but many passengers were reported seriously injured. The White House statement, issued after a conference between President Eisenhower and Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, said this country will say nothing in the United Nations on the subject of sanctions against Israel until later, possibly Monday. The White House said Mr. Dulles will confer with Israeli Ambassador Abba Eban, expected to return Saturday from Jerusalem, before the United States makes any presentation to the U.N. The U.N. general assembly meets on the middle east crisis this afternoon. Meanwhile Britain and France split with the United States over the question of reprisals against Israel, and Britain was reported seeking a compromise solution to prevent an open break. Reliable sources in Paris said Premier Guy Mollet would demand a strong declaration of support for Israel, and authoritative sources in London said Britain's conservative government was not prepared to go along with reprisals which the United States may now demand. But Israel prepared for the worst, and Jerusalem newspapers warned that sanctions and acute hardship may lie ahead as result of Premier David Ben-Gurion's "no" to President Eisenhower's call for unconditional withdrawal. Queen Elizabeth Promotes Husband LONDON —(UP)— Queen Elizabeth formally granted her husband the title of "Prince of the Kingdom" today in an apparent final answer to gossip about his status. The proclamation also declared that "the Queen has been pleased to declare her will and pleasure that His Royal Highness the Duke of Edinburgh shall henceforth be known as His Royal Highness the Prince Philip, duke of Edinburgh." like Gets "Best" Cherry Pie CHICAGO—(UP)—A blonde 17-year-old girl from Henrietta, N. X., has an appropriate present for President Eisenhower on George Washington's birthday—the best cherry pie in the nation. Mary Ann Bartholomey was named the best cherry pie baker in the Silver Jubilee National Cherry Pie Baking Contest. Missile Mishaps Rare, Public Told BANMETHUOT, Viet Nam—(UP) An unsuccessful attempt was made to assassinate pro-western South Vietnam Nam President Nego Dinh Diem today. The bullet meant for Diem hit land reform Minister Do Vau Cung. The Air Force today still sought to learn where the Matador crashed. One report indicated it may have crashed in Wyoming near Rock Springs, but this was proved erroneous. WASHINGTON—(UP)The Air Force today assured the public that runaway guided missiles are a rarity. Saves All But Self From Hotel Fire SALLIAIS, Okla. — (UP) — An elderly night clerk, who risked her life to awaken sleeping guests, was missing and presumed dead in a fire that destroyed a 36-room hotel early today. However, despite the assurance, the House Armed Services Committee directed its staff to make a preliminary investigation of how a Matador guided missile broke from control Thursday at Alamagordo, N.M. Three of 15 persons in the building were injured when they jumped from second story windows of the Bonham Hotel. Missing was Mrs. Gene Mosher, 73, who rushed to the second floor of the two-story building and warned 11 guests to flee when she smelled smoke. Witnesses said Mrs. Mosher then refused to jump from a window after flames blocked her escape down the sairway. SUNDAY Student Specials Assassination Attempt Pails Choice Prime Ribs of Beef $1.50 Student Club Steaks $1.50 Spectacular Complete FOIL WRAPPED Dinners to go, at no extra charge Spectacular MALTS and SHAKES Only Dairy Queen has the smooth texture and flavor-rich goodness that keeps malt and shake lovers coming back! Choice of flavors. DARK QUEEN Steaks • Chicken • Sea Food DINE-A-MITE D 23rd & Louisiana DAIRY QUEEN DAIRY 1835 Mass. Fire Destroys Grain Elevator NEW YORK—(UP)—An off-again on-again strike of 45,000 east coast longshoremen ended today and union leaders said dock workers would return to work tomorrow. Longshoremen Will Go Back To Work The strike, which had been "officially" called off Wednesday only to resume yesterday, ended a second time when Norfolk shippers and the Norfolk local of the International Longshoremen's Association (Ind.) reached agreement early today on a new contract. The Norfolk settlement was arrived at several hours after an accord had been reached at Baltimore, the next-to-the-last port to fall in line. KANSAS CITY. Kan. — (UP) — Fire swept through a grain elevator here Thursday where 800,000 bushels of wheat were stored. Flames threatened to spread to a soya mill used for grain storage and several tanks containing soap-making ingredients. The flames destroyed the head house of the International Harvester elevator. Extent of damage to the wheat, valued at more than $1,900,-000 was not estimated. M-G-M presents NOT SINCE THE CAINE MUTINY HAS THERE BEEN A DRAMA LIKE THIS! STARRING PAUL NEWMAN·WENDELL COREY WALTER PIDGEON·EDMOND O'BRIEN ANNE FRANGIS·LEE MARVIN THE RACK Latest Fox News NOW Ends Saturday Mat. Saturday 2 p.m. GRANADA A NEW TRIUMPH FOR The W THE LIFE STORY OF COMMANDER "SPIG" WEAD. FUN AND THRILLS! M-C-M PRESENTS METROCOLOR JOHN WAYNE DAN DAILEY MAUREEN O'HARA 8. The WINGS of EAGLES Twining, Docking To Talk At Air Base CO STARING WARD BOND • AN 16-6-9 PICTURE This jet bomber base of the strategic Air Command is being renamed Shilling Air Force Base in memory of the late Col. David C. Shilling, a native of Leavenworth, Kan., one of America's top aces of World War II. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results, SMOKY HILL AIR FORCE BASE—Gen Nathan F. Twinning, Air Force Chief of Staff, and Gov. George Docking of Kansas will be the principal speakers March 16 at the formal renaming ceremonies for Smoky Hill Air Force Base, Salina. Latest Fox News. ] GRANADA 908 YOUR EYES should be examined today. Can for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 25 v Con't. Sunday 1 p.m. 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 BIRD TV-Radio Service - SUNDAY - TYI papition 1911 VARSITY TAI tion Also 3-66 Open 6:45 p.m. Weekdays NOW Thru Sat. EXP serv pers Mai The Isle of Birsby Bank Organisation Presents JOHN JOHN DONALD EXF tary thes lar JOHN TOMRON UNDERDRA MILLS • GREGSON • SINDEN ABOVE US THE WAVES Feat. tonite at 7:20-9:15 News - N.C. Continues Lead! Cartoon-Sports Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW YORK CITY CELEBRATED CHARTS STARTS TODAY Midwest Premiere The "Baby-faces" who have just taken their first stumbling step down Sin Street, U.S.A.! Delinguents The Hoods and Gun-Molls of Tomorrow! Released thru UNITED ARTISTS Friday, Feb. 22, 1957 University Daily Kansan Page 11 --- CLASSIFIED ADS 25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka. 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf BUSINESS SERVICES TYPIST . . . Fast, accurate, neat service. Immediate attention to all typing. Call VI 3-3732. 2-27 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. ti TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6557. 1106 La. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine. Phone VI 3-7654. tf COCKER PUPPIES, AKC registered, 2 months old. Brown, blond, or parti-colored. Also one grown male. Exceptionally nice for pets, show or breeding stock. See at 345 Mississippi St. Phone VI 3-2760. 2-25 TYPIST. Skilled in theses, term papers, reports. Fast, accurate, and reliable. Quality work at regular rate. Mrs. Betty Jensen. 1935 Barke. Ave. Phone VI 3-2001. BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies 8th and 9th. Vermont. Phone 3-0350. FOR SALE PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Parties, Pinnings, Weddings Job Application Photos Gene's Photo Service 2144 Ohio - VI 3-0933 Gene Sunyer Gene Smoyer TIME, LIFE & Sports illustrated magazines. Special students' prices of 1/2eg. sub. rate. Prompt service, buy now later, call VI 3-0124. tf LIVE GIFTS—Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny texas-complete stock of cages and tands. Fresh foods and boys. Complete tutus for two. We have alligators, fish, turtles, chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything n the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. HARRIS TWEED brown sport coat, size 18-40. 10. Harris Tweed gray suit, size 18-40. 15. Almost new tire chains $6. R. Murrill, 101 Alabama, VI 3-6590. POST DRAWING INSTRUMENTS. Practically new, perfect condition. T-square, drawing board in good condition also for sale. Call Lowell Tawney, VI 3-628-4100 2-22 TUBE FREE with the purchase of practically new (only 250 miles) 650x16 Goodrich tire, price only $25. VI 3-1505 after 5 p.m. 2-26 BRAND NEW CANON CAMERA with complete outfit. Leather case, lens hood, filter, self-timer, and flash unit. f/1.5 lens. Low price. Call Kofuju. V 3-194-8. HELP WANTED CLEER-KTYPIST for full time work typing case work, data, and teaching material for classes in clinical psychology Ph. KU, extension 332 for interview. We rent nationwide trailers any size, anywhere, anytime CROFT TRAILER RENTAL CO. East 23rd VI 3-7377 LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY for Jr. Sr. Graduate Students up to $500.00 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. 8331½ Mass. Phone VI 3-8744 for 1 day service 8331½ Mass. Phone VI 3-8074 for 1 day service TRANSPORTATION TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. Visit the Sky-Coach steamship. National Bank for information for litter series and reservations. 8th & Mass Phone VI 3-0152. tf MISCELLANEOUS LOST BOARDERS WANTED. For a pleasant change in dietary routine, contact John Hall at VI 3-3255, Phi Chi medical fraternity, 1233 Oread. Reasonable. 2-25 BOARDERS WANTED. Good food, family style, reasonable rates, ½ block from Union. Call between 5 and 7. VI 3-2565. Nu Sigma Nu, 1241 Lai. 2-28 DARK BROWN GLASSES in case. Lost somewhere on campus. Finder please call Peggy Kiser, VI 3-9123. 2-25 GOLD AND PEARL ponytail clip. Christmas present from family. Lost somewhere on campus. Finder please call Betsy Post, VI 3-9123. 2-25 Have your car lubricated the MOTO-SWAY WAY At POTTER'S "66" SERVICE 1401 W. 6th VI 3-8891 BOOKS 1401 W. 6th VI 3-9891 For gifts and for your own library. Art, Architecture, Cook Books, Childrens Books, Modern Library. THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 Ideal for Skits, Parties, Dances Practicing Speech and Foreign Languages. Recording tapes & ac- RENT A TAPE RECORDER HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP With The There are unlimited opportunities in the communications industry for 1957 graduates in business administration, engineering and science. There will be openings for graduates in... CHOOSE A CAREER BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM ENGINEERING MATHEMATICS PHYSICAL SCIENCES With these Bell Telephone System Companies: Southwestern Bell FOR RENT Southwestern Bell Western Electric Bell Telephone Laboratories Sandia Corporation Long Lines Department of A.T. & T. BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Sign up now at the Engineering Office. Southwestern Bell With these Bell Telephone System Companies: Long Lines Department of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company TIRED OF WALKING UP THE HILL? Two rooms for boys one-half block from the room. Phone privileges. Available immediately. Phone VI 3-5776 or see it 1231 La. Sign up now at the Business School Office. VERY CLEAN THREE ROOM unfurnished apt. Close in, private bath, large kitchen, gym, playground, and playground. Child accepted. Utilities paid. VI 3-7686 or VI 3-2055. Reasonable. Monday, February 25 and Tuesday, February 26,1957 NEWLY DECORATED well furnished. large sleeping room, private entrance, phone, steam heat. Near KU and bus line. Reasonable rates. VI 3-103. 2-28 Interview dates: BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM Students and Faculty Trip insurance with personal baggage coverage LARGE, QUET ROOM FOR MEN- single or double. Halt back from Student Union. Linens furnished and lau- dered. Room service. Available immediately. 1216. Mississippi. VT 3-8669. The Barlow Agency 910 Mass. Vi 3-2455 AAA Memberships Available. 24 Hour Service JAYHAWK TAXI VI 3-2211 1012 Mass. Ward Thompson Richard Pickett IN KANSAS CITY, IT'S TIVOL DOWNTOWN / saltman building HArrison Place PLAZA / 220 nichols road Westport 1-5333 HOW TO BUY A DIAMOND RING You can buy a diamond ring out of a catalog; you can buy a diamond ring at a busy shop counter; but not at TIVOL. For that is not the way to buy a diamond ring. At TIVOL, you will be shown diamond after diamond, ring after ring. You will be shown emerald cut stones, round cuts, marquise stones. You may not be interested in purchasing a pastel diamond, but if it will help you make a choice, we will show you pink, blue or canary diamonds. And never the slightest pressure. If you will permit us, you will be shown your selection in a quiet private office. This is the way to buy a diamond ring and this is the way we do it at TIVOL. You are always welcome in either our Downtown or Plaza shop. Page 12 University, Daily: Kansas Fridav. Feb. 22. 1957 He Still Loves Jazz Saxophone Is Responsible For Professor's Career By HELEN SMOYER Of The Daily Kansan Staff During the warm fall nights of 1917, a young soldier from Ft. Crockett leaned against the wall outside a Galveston, Tex., cafe, listening to New Orleans jazz. Perhaps during the rest nights he heard Louis Armstrong and other famous musicians who had recently left Storyville in New Orleans. Jazz was music the soldier loved. He persuaded other members of the Coast Artillery Band to have jam sessions during their off-duty hours. THE WESTERN LIFE CARROLL D. CLARK Don Cossacks Here Again The original Don Cossack Chorus and Dancers will make their first appearance in Lawrence since 1976 at 8:20 p.m. Friday, March 1 in Hoch Auditorium. Students with ID cards will be admitted free. When formed in 1920, the men were a group of Russian soldiers who had left their homes to escape Communist domination. The men turned to song to alleviate their homesickness. Sege Jaroff, who had studied to be a choirmaster previous to being made a Cossack officer, selected the best voices from the soldiers and organized a choir. At first, they were a chorus of 30 men who sang Russian songs from their memory. They became the choir of the Orthodox Cathedral of St. Sofia in Bulgaria. One of the congregation, a concert manager, sent them on their first tour. 'Best' Paper Wins Prize George W. Swift, Lawrence graduate student, won first prize for the best student paper presented at a meet of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers in Kansas City, Mo. His paper was entitled, "The Determination of Liquid Viscosities of Normally Gaseous Hydrocarbons at Low Temperatures and High Pressures. Joseph A. Christy, Lawrence graduate student; Fred Kurata, professor of chemical engineering, and A. A. Heckes, who received his master's degree in chemical engineering in February, helped Swift collect information for his paper. Newman Club Dance Tonight Newman Club Dance Tonight A semi-formal dance will be held from 8:30 to 11:30 tonight by the Newman Club, a Catholic youth group. John Carlos' band will play for the dance which will be in the Jayhawker Room of the Student Union. The Rt. Rev. Msgr. George Towle and Miss Mary Towle will chaperon. The number of power boats on New Hamshire's inland waters totaled 25,851 in 1956, more than double the number of boats registered in 1948. Reminiscent of Circus The soldier was far from his Kansas home, but the music brought memories of his first saxophone and the many happy hours he had spent teaching himself ragtime music. It reminded him, too, of the circus bands which had visited his small Kansas town, and which gave him his first acquaintance with New Orleans jazz. After the war in France was over, the soldier returned to his home state to attend the University. Four years gave him lots of time to practice his playing technique but it left him little time to play jazz. By playing in bands and theater orchestras, he was able to pay for his college expenses. After graduation, he played in a band that accepted a job to play in a Wisconsin hotel resort. The pay was law, but the hours were short so the band accepted jobs at dances. They gained popularity by playing a few pieces of Chicago jazz along with the hits of Tin Pan Alley. Trailer A Convenience During one summer vacation he had chances to play jazz in mountain towns in Idaho. He and his family were living in a house trailer that summer and his wife was frightened when he left her and the children alone at night. He solved the problem by hooking the trailer to the car and parking it near the dance hall where he was playing. The offer of a position on the staff at KU meant that he must try to give up his interest in jazz because jazz wasn't looked upon too favorably by the academic community. For 12 years he devoted his time to teaching. His musical interest turned to some of his favorite old masters. Finally, he felt that jazz could be taken as a new, evolving American music. So he bought a new saxophone and again played his favorite music. Today you can find him in his office puffing on his curved pipe while watching cardinals in the feeding station outside his window. Perhaps, you think, he has given up this "wild" jazz. But evenings you might see him playing jazz with a faculty group or at home listening to his jazz records. Jazz has remained a great interest with Dr. Carroll D. Clark, professor of sociology. Faculty Star In Concert The Little Symphony Orchestra will make their second appearance of the year in a concert at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Strong Auditorium. The concert will feature Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice, bass-baritone soloist; Karel Blaas, assistant professor of viola and music theory, viola soloist and Roy Hamlin Johnson, assistant professor of piano, piano soloist. The program will include "Scene Andalouse" by Joaquin Turina and "Le Bal Masque" by Francis Poulenc, for baritone soloist and small orchestra. Other works on the program are "Symphony No. 39" in E flat major by Mozart and "Sonata for Chamber Orchestra" by Richard Arnell. The film which "made the Frenchmen blush." "One Summer of Happiness," will be shown at 7:30 p. m. today in Hoch Auditorium as one of the University Film Series. The Swedish film stars Ulla Jacobson, and was a grand prize winner at the Cannes Film Festival in 1855. Swedish Film Next In University Series Business Booming At Watson Library The film opens at a funeral in a small cemetery in Sweden. Goran, played by Folke Sundquist, enters the cemetery. When everyone gazes reproachfully at him he runs away. In a flashback the picture reveals the love story of Kirsten, played by Ulla Jacobsson and the person who has died, and Goran. Who says students don't know where Watson Library is? Between 250 and 600 books are checked out daily from the main circulation desk, librarians report. Turkey growers in North Dakota say they plan to raise three per cent less turkeys in 1957. The Lawrence Jewish Community Center received $1126.05 from the benefit showing of the film "Battle Hymn" Thursday night in the Granada Theater. during the week of Feb. 11-17, an average of 528 books were checked out each day from the undergraduate library. Monday, Feb. 11 was the peak day with 781 books checked out by students. Contributions have also come from several eastern cities. A social security check for $46.80 was received with the note "You can probably use this better than I can." "We have had wonderful cooperation from people on the Hill and in town," said Alex Donnelly, 1530 Stratford Rd., chairman of the ticket committee. Jewish Benefit Yields $1,126 Arkansas has been under four flags—Spanish, French, the Confederate and American. The money will be used to redecorate the Jewish Community Center. "In an economy such as our we can talk of inflation and recession at the same time," Edwin G. Nourse, first chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers to the President, told a Kansan reporter. "It's like driving along a mountain road. You look up at the towering cliffs above you and on the other side there is a sudden drop." He said that he did not think the nation is headed for another depression, despite predictions by government and business. Economic Situation Is Like Driving Along Mountain Road Mr. Nourse said that whether or not this recessional period will take place in 1957 is not certain. The next two months are critical ones. There is usually a large seasonal upturn in spring. So far, sales of automobiles, building of houses and European buying since the Middle East crisis have been low. If there is not a strong recovery this spring our economy will probably suffer a recession. "We can expect a slowing down period in our economy, a recession, because we have reached the peak of 12 years of inflation, but this is perfectly normal and can be combatted if we don't get excited," he said. "A recession does not mean that we will have a depression comparable to the one in the '30's," Mr. Nourse said. "Our whole economy is on a more stable basis. Our financial arrangements are more sound and the government has means of containing recession now. "There is today a waste in government spending which we ought to get rid of by prudent management, but if government curtails its spending at the same time that business and labor put more control on prices and wages we would most definitely fall into a slump. "If government can spend wisely on such things as schools, highways and public improvements, we can get caught up in these areas while we put an end to the inflation we now have and dispel any possibilities of a depression," he said. AWS Elects 3 To House Offices Wanda Welliever, Oberlin junior, was elected vice president of the Associated Women Students House of Representatives. Janet Jackson, Lawrence freshman, was elected secretary-treasurer and Dianne Hays, Kansas City, Kan., junior. House representative to the AWS Senate. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results DINE OUT TONIGHT You'll enjoy a snack or dinner with any of these Fine Restaurants! DRIVE IN Coca-Cola GOOD FOODS MENTUCKIAN Kentuckian 1802 Massachusetts 19th St. Shopping Area Chicken Dinners are Our Speciality "The best hamburgers in town!" Old Mission Inn 1904 Mass. VI 3-9737 MOSLEY BURGERS 1957 "Moore" Burger Drive-In We invite you to join us for: "Moore" Burgers, Malts & Shakes "Less" Burgers, Soft Drinks Open 11 to 11 Everyday 1511 W.6th. Ten - Forty Cafe Shrimp-Chops-Broiled Steaks Open Weekdays 11 a.m. to 11 p.m Closed Sundays 1310 W. 6th Daily hansan 65 —(Daily Kansan photo) UNDERWATER PHOTOGRAPHY - Methods of underwater photography were demonstrated Sunday to Kappa Alpha Mu, honorary photo-journalism fraternity, by Leonard Bacon, photographer for the Topeka Daily Capital. Miss Yvonne Schenck, Blue Springs, Mo. senior, is modeling in the water for Mr. Bacon. Watching from the pool side are Harry Wright, director of the KU photographic bureau, and Nancy Collins, Richmond studio. The camera is Babylon cooridator. School Of Education Lists 80 On Honor Roll senior. The demonstration was at Robinson swimming pool. Eighty University students with grade averages of 2.5 or better, including four who made straight A's, have been named to the fall semester honor roll of the School of Education. Monday, Feb. 25, 1957 Seniors led the list with 51 students, followed by 27 juniors and 2 special students. The students who earned straight A's are Ann Johnson, Topeka, Anne Miller, Dodge City, juniors; Ruby E. Schaulis, Clay Center, and Mary J. Walterscheid, Coffeyville senior. Others On The Honor Roll: Seniors—Janice Adriance, Seneca; Mildred Gladys Andes, Lawrence; Lorene J. Baldwin, Liberal; Joan Ryan Ball, Prairie Village; Carolyn Beal, Jackie Lee Beal, both of Fredonia; Dewey Dean Bernard, Kansas City, Kan.; Elizabeth Braine McCall, Newton; Nancy Jo Britton, Wichita; Albert J. Brox, Atchison; Marvin A. Carlson, Wichita; Mary Sharon Cole, Colby. John J. Cooper, Ray Lyn Cox, both of Lawrence; Kay Marilyn Davis, Sara Joanne Davis, both of Kansas City, Mo.; John Dickson, Atchison; Jane Ann Dunham, Belot; Florence Dunkak, Overland Park; Ellis D Evans, Colorado Springs; Donna Underwood Forney, Newton; Patricia Fox, Anthony; Patricia M. Gardner, Emporia; Phyllis E. Gish, Solomon; Marilyn J. Hafer, Mayetta; Nancy L. Herre, Kansas City, Mo.; Carole J. Holmes, Bangkok Siam. Judith R. Howard, Salina; Elizabeth Joy Imper, Kirkwood, Mo; Harriett C. James, Parsons; Jane Worth Joslin, Indianapolis; Ruth L. Laidig, Oberlin; Laureal A. Marshall, Onaga; Lois A. McClure, Curtis W. Miller, both of Wichita; Mily Dixon Moore, Donald E. Nense, both of Lawrence; Charles R. Parks, Utica; Robert A. Preston, Lawrence; Nancy M. Reich, Independence, Mo. Leland R. Roberts, Kansas City, Kan.; Joan M. Rosenwald, Topea; Judith A. Shelton, Kansas City, Mo; John Shroeder, Garnett; Patricia Snyder, Great Bend; Dorothy L. Sorrels, Kansas City, Kan.; Nancy J. Squires, Wakeeny; Lorna C. Stullken, Lawrence; Wynette S. Thien. Prairie Village. Juniors—Billy G. Aldridge, Kansas City, Kan.; Jeanette E. Barton, Wichita; Sharon Alice Bevan, Mission; Sally J. Billingsley, Kansas City, Kan.; Sharna F. Flumenfeld, Decatur, Ill.; John Waite Bowers, Alton, Iowa; Jo Ann Brown, Massena, N. Y.; Kathryn I. Ehlers, Mary Brown Garver, both of Kansas City, Mo.; Lynne M. Gerlach, Topea; Phyllis J. Graham, Almena; Sue Ann Haines, Daniel R. Jaimes, both of Lawrence; Martha L. Kew, Atchison; Sylvia L. Mahon, Oberlin; Letha Ann Markwell, Norma Ann Markwell, Gashaland, Mo. Cherie M. Miller, Fort Scott; Andrea W. Paul, Topeka; Sally C. Rice, Abilene; Jane R. Ross, St. Joseph; Ann P. Schlager, Denver; Shirley Ann Stout, Lombard, Ill., Donna Watts, Kansas City, Mo.; Jane A. Williamson, Prairie Village. Special Students Virginia L Blevins, Troy, and Nancy E. Periman, Milwaukee. 54th Year. No.92 Wednesday is the deadline for entries in the Greek Week King and Queen contests. Greek Week Entries Close Wednesday Finalists will be selected at 2:30 p.m. Sunday in the Student Union. Winners will be announced at the Greek Week dance, Saturday, March 9. The English Proficiency Examination will be given March 16. 19 Days To Brush Up Your English LAWRENCE. KANSAS All students of junior and senior standing in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Education, School of Journalism, School of Fine Arts and the department of nursing in the School of Medicine are required to pass the examination before graduation. Registration will be March 11, 12, and 13. College students should register in 229 Strong; education students in 105 Bailey; journalism students in 105 Flint; fine arts students in 128 Strong and nursing students in 104 Haworth. Two KU debate teams participated in a tournament at the University of Nebraska Friday and Saturday. Ray Nichols, Lawrence freshman, and Don Bowen, Salina junior, won 4 out of 5, and Allen Rickey, Liberal sophomore, and Brad Lashbrook, Kansas City, Kan., junior, won 3 out of 5. Any student who fails to register will not be admitted to the examination. Out of 42 schools competing, KU placed fourth in the overall sweepstakes score which includes speech and debate contests. Nichols gave an extemporaneous talk; Bowen, an interpretive reading; Lashbrook, an oration, and Hickey and Lashbrook took part in discussion. Northwestern University took first place in the competition. Debaters Place Fourth At NU In debate, Nichols and Bowen defeated Nebraska Wesleyan University, Illinois State Normal University, Nebraska University and Northwestern College and lost to University of Iowa. Hickey and Lashbrook defeated Colorado State College, Midland College and Morningside College and lost to Washington University and Black Hills Teachers College. Results of the Watkins and Summerfield scholarships and Putnam award preliminary examinations taken last week will be available Saturday. Next stop for the KU debaters will be St. Paul, Minn., for the tournament at Saint Thomas College Friday and Saturday. Results Of Exams Due Saturday The final tests will be March 11-12 for Watkins scholarships and March 18-19 for Summerfield scholarships. The finals for the Putnam award will be at Kansas State. Spencer E. Martin, director of aids and awards, said Thursday that the examinations were taken by 782 Kansas high school seniors nominated by their principals. The Putnam award is a Kansas State College scholarship. The winners will be announced April 8, and general scholarship awards on May 15. Greeks To Re-Sod Intramural Field The Inter-fraternity and Panhellenic councils will issue a call for "dirt workers" Saturday morning, March 9, when the Greek Week community project begins. Fraternity and sorority members will re-sod the lower intramural field as part of Greek Week activities. Each fraternity and sorority will have a plot of ground to complete by noon. In previous years only fraternity members took part in the work. Several accidents have occurred on the field because of the poor condition of the ground. "We feel that this is beneficial to both the University and fraternities to prevent accidents in intramural athletics," said Jerry Halderman, Wichita junior. In 1956 the fraternities helped to raise funds for the multiple sclerosis drive in Lawrence, and in 1955 they started the job of clearing an area on 6th street for a proposed park. Arena-Style Attraction At 8 p.m. Wednesday An arena-style production of Moliere's "The Doctor in Spite of Himself" will open at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Student Union Ballroom. Nat Eek, instructor of speech, will direct the play presented by the University Theatre. Moliere, who was dramatist in the court of Louis XIV, wrote plays of earthy humor—the shrewish wife, slapstick beatings and mistaken identity—and "The Doctor in Spite of Himself" reflects all these qualities. The play tells the story of Sganarele, a woodcutter, and his wife, played by Robert Potter, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, and Barbara Richards, Hays sophomore. The woodcutter is mistaken for a famous doctor by servants of a wealthy neighbor. The servants are played by Jerry Bailey, Humboldt sophomore, and Bob Lawson, Lawrence graduate student. The wealthy neighbor is played by William Duke Howze, Kansas City, Kan., senior. They bring Sganarelle to their master's house to cure his mute daughter, Sara Davis, Kansas City, Mo., senior. Knowing nothing about medicine, Sganarelle begins his "miraculous" cures. Others in the cast are: Don Sparlin, Lenexa sophomore; Joan Graham, Almena junior; Tom Engel, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Ned Norris, Salina sophomore, and Ted Morris, Wichita freshman. The Opera Workshop will present two short operas and a scene from "Alceste" by Gluck, at 3 p. m. Sunday in the Student Union Ballroom. Scene From 'Alceste,' Two Short Operas To Be Sunday "The Prodigal Son" by Debussy and "The Duped Cadi" by Gluck will complete the show. Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice, is music director for the shows. Kyusoon Lee, Seoul, Korea Housing Group Picks Woodruff Laurence C. Wodruff, dean of students, has been appointed chairman of a committee on housing for the National Assn. of Student Personnel Administrators. The committee will meet in April in Raleigh. N. C. It will cooperate with the residence halls study committee of the American Institute of Architects and the American Council on Education to help solve housing problems for the increasing number of students at American universities. The committee will make recommendations of what they consider to be adequate housing in residence halls and for married students. They will help the architects to arrive at a compromise between architectural standards and standard housing needs. Weather Partly cloudy to cloudy tonight and Tuesday with drizzle southeast tonight and light snow extreme northwest Tuesday. Turning colder extreme north tonight and over state Tuesday. Much colder northeast Tuesday. Low tonight 15 extreme northeast to 30's south. High Tuesday 30's northeast to 50's southwest. graduate student, will sing the lead in "Alceste." Dr. Lewin Goff, theater director, is stage director. Bonnie Dinsmore, Oklahoma City junior, Jonah C. Kliwer, Lawrence graduate student, and P. A. Davison Jr., instructor of voice, will be featured in "The Prodigal Son." Bruce Loganbill, Newton graduate student, is stage director. The cast for "The Duped Cadi" includes Jack Davison, Bolivar, Mo., junior; Kay Davis and Sharon Tripp, Lawrence seniors; Shirley Baker, Garden City senior; Joe Lewis, Mission graduate student and William Oldham, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student. Lee MacMorris, Hutchinson senior, is stage director. Dialogue translation of "The Duped Cadi" was made by the French department. Prof. Schmidt translated the songs. Gary G. Sick, Russel senior, has been awarded a Rotary Foundation Fellowship for advanced study abroad during the 1957-58 academic year. Senior Wins Rotary Award One of 123 students from 30 countries to receive the fellowship, Sick will study French language and literature at one of the major universities in Europe in preparation for a teaching career at the university level. Sick, a member of Lambda Chi Alpha social fraternity, has held the Summerfield Scholarship and the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps Scholarship four years. He was resident of the French Club and of La Confrerie, honorary French society, vice president of Delta Sigma Rho, honorary speech fraternity, and a member of the varsity debate squad. Page 2 University Daily Kansap Monday, Feb. 25, 1957 40 Years Plus - A Tribute To Karl Klooz Forty-five years ago a young man began working as an office employee in a University office. It didn't take long for administrators to nod their heads approvingly as they watched him work. "Responsibility plus," they said, "he'll do well and go far." That man was Karl Klooz. This year marks the emerald anniversary of Mr. Klooz' service as bursar of the University. Always efficient, but relaxed and friendly,Mr.Klooz has met the myriad complex duties which have faced him. Mr. Klooz began his career in 1912 working in the University office. Then he worked elsewhere for about three years to return in 1917 to the University to hold one of its most responsible positions—Bursar. During his 40 years as bursar Mr. Klooz has handled millions of dollars in preparing the University pay rolls and purchasing and inventorying supplies. Bookkeeping and accounting for these transactions have been a major part of his job. Along with these major functions Mr. Kloooz has offered services to students such as handling funds for student organizations and a check cashing service. This year also marks Mr. Klooz' 65th birthday anniversary. Since 65 is the mandatory retirement for administrative personnel he will be replaced by Keith L. Nitcher, new University comproller, July 1, and will remain in the business office in a non-administrative capacity. "The University will always be grateful to Karl Klooz for his loyalty and dedication to the work of the University," Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, said. "Everyone recognizes that he's given his entire career to the University and that such loyalty and dedication contribute to the strength of any organization. tribute to the struggle. Besides being a devoted KU alumnus Mr. Klooz has been treasurer of both the University and many related organizations such as the William Allen White Foundation, the Athletic Assn. and the Memorial Corp. For many years he has been chairman of the advisory board of the Jayhawker. The University offers tribute and gives thanks to Mr. Klooz for his continued interest, loyalty, dedication and friendship to the University. College Fee Increases - —Jim Tice We have always said that what this generation needs is another depression. Well, the day of the soul-stirred individualist is dawning. Gosh! Another Depression? When the Board of Regents increased board and room rates from $292.50 to $310 a semester we should have rushed into the streets and shouted with exuberance. Next year's expenses for the University boarder and roomer will be $700, at least! We wouldn't have even recognized it as the coming of a Great Student Depression if it hadn't been the second wallet-smashing increase in less than a month-only a few days after semester fees were upped. Also, we just happened to stick our hand in our pocket to feel the four coppers we had stashed away for an emergency. It's as slow as a turtle, and a little obscured by mud, but by gosh it's coming! Next year and the year after a few more of us will be living in garrets, undernourished, and maybe coughing with tb. in our undying struggle for an education. It will get better, too. Later, when we're gaunt graduate students, we'll be walking to classes with coffee stains on our trousers, cardboard in our shoes, and holes in our socks. But we'll walk proudly; and our steps will be firm with purpose. We'll be burning with a thousand odd convictions about the kind of social order we ought to have. There'll be riots in the rotunda of Strong Hall and we'll burn the Federal Reserve Board in effigy. We'll look wistfully to Russia, where the students are atheistic, but eating well. We'll have a cause! Academic standards will skyrocket out of sight. The student who's nursing a minus one point grade average will make the honor roll in the onslaught of that inexorable cause. The Board of Regents will resign, one and all, having failed to palliate the crowded classrooms problem by increasing the cost of education. Then, just as slowly as it came upon us, it will be all over. Kansas taxpayers will self-righteously sacrifice their second Cadillac and reduce board and room rates to $100 a semester. Fees will plunge to nothing. And once again, we'll all live like a Lewis Carroll character: as if we expected to stride off into something inexplicable. We won't feel like thinking on a full stomach and we'll forget all about the cause. Another revolution will have passed and we'll be ready for McCarthyism again. ... Two Cents' Worth ... Job-hunting will be in the offing for seniors ere long, and our good friend Elrod has letter-writing and interview suggestions for senior perusal. He says: "Be aggressive. Attack your prospective employer as being old-fashioned, and hypnotical. Denounce Dale Morsch him in vindictive language, and tell him that only by hiring you and your progressive ideas gained from four years of stellar study at this noble institution can his firm avert bankruptcy. This always leaves an impression. Dawson "Appeal to his sense of duty. Lay before him your plan of bettering his organization. Tell him you believe strongly in unions, and that you believe in the 24-hour week and high wages. Tell him that only through incorporation of his business can the true spirit of worker participation be realized. Tell him that you believe in high degree job protection, that strikes are your second nature, and that your sympathies lie with the labor bosses. This, too, never fails to leave an impression. If you are interviewed, Elrod suggests: "Appear in threadbare jeans "If possible, break your leg, and make a big thing of dragging your crooked foot behind you. Don't buy crutches, but get an old tree limb to lean on. and an athletic department sweat shirt. This will make your interviewer think you are aggressive and an athlete. "If you are married, take your wife and any children along, dressed as shabbily as possible. If your are not married, have someone pose as your wife, and grab three or foururchins as they leave Cordley just before your interview. (Note: Investigate thoroughly the Lindbergh Law prior to this latter action.)" "Make a mental note of any wages the interviewer promises. Better still, take a pocket size tape-recorder with you, so that legal action can be sustained if you later decide to sue for breach of promise. "Perhaps it would be wise to take your transcript along, if you are an 'A' student, and if not, make a fake one showing all 'A's." "Don't take just any old job. Insist on an expense account and a new car. If possible, investigate your employer to see if he is on good terms with Drew Pearson." Elrod testifies that all of the above mentioned devices will get quick results. For further advice, Elrod may be reached at the Acme Ditch-Digging Co. Ad booki. Jerry Dawson On Chilean sheep farms at the Strait of Magellan, the most serious losses are caused by thick fleeces. In rainy weather the wool becomes so wet and heavy that a sheep rolling on its back may be unable to get up. There it lies until it's rescued or dies. University of Kansas student newspaper 1906, trineweekly 1908, daily JAN. 16, 1912 Daily Hansan Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associate in Advertising Service, presented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except spring and summer days and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. Extension 251, news room Extension 276, busines office NEWS DEPARTMENT Kent Thomas ... Managing Editor John Battin, Felicae Ann Fenberg, Bob Lyle, Betty Jean Stanford, Assistant Managing Editor; Jim Banman, City Editor; Nancy Harmon, LeLoy Zimmerman, Assistant LeLoy Zimmerman, Telegraph Editor; Mary Beth Neyes, Delbert Haley, Assistant Telegraph Editor; Dick Brown, Sports Editor; George Anthan, Assistant Sports Editor; Marlyn Mermis, Sboley Editor; Pat Swanson, Assistant Sboley Editor; John Eaton, Picture Editor Jerry Thomas, Jim Tice, Associate Editors. EDITORIAL DEPARTMEN The extinct dodo bird was a large, heavy flightless bird related to pigeons, but larger than a turkey. EDITORIAL DEPT. Jerry Editorial Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Dale Howers...Business Manager Dave Dickey, Advertising Manager; John Hedley, National Advertising Manager; Harold Metz, Classified Advertising Manager; Conboy Brown. Circulation Manager A gondola is a long, narrow flat bottomed boat with a high prow and stern, used in the canals of Venice. BIRD TV-Radio Service 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 BIRD TV-Radio Service 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2968 YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2968 On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "Barefoot Boy With Check," etc.) TWO CAN LIVE AS CHEESILY AS ONE Now in the final months of the school year, one thing is certain: you and your roommate are not speaking. But it is not too late to patch things up. Examine the rift calmly. Search your soul with patience. Perhaps the fault is yours. Perhaps you are guilty of violating some of the basic rules of roommate etiquette. For instance, in decorating your room, have you forced your preferences on your roommate without regard to his or her tastes? This is a common cause of friction. Indeed, it once happened to me back in my freshman year when I was sharing a room with a boy named Rimsky Sigafoos who covered every inch of our wall with 850 pictures of James Dean. "Rimsky," I said to him in gentle reproof, "please don't think me unduly, but I had hoped to put a picture of my fiancée Mary Beth Thermidor on the wall." Well, that got my dander up, and I was mad as a wet hen till Rimsky gave me a Philip Morris Cigarette. Rimsky examined the picture of my fiancée Mary Beth Thermidor. "You're kidding, of course," he said, and dropped the picture in the wastebasket. As we all know, there is nothing like a mild, natural, Philip Morris. Treats a man right. No filter, no foolin'! Anger melts and frowns become smiles with Philip Morris, all seems right in the world, and no man's hand is turned against you, nor yours against any man. So, puffing a pacifying Philip Morris, I forgot all about Rimsky's slight to Mary Beth Thermidor. In fact, with her picture out of sight, I soon forgot all about Mary Beth Thermidor, too, and one night at the Freshman Frolic, spying a round young coed over in a corner, I came up to her and said with a fetching leer, "Excuse me, miss. We don't know each other, but I would like to rectify that sad omission." And she said, "Oh, you horrid, horrid youth! I am your fiancée Mary Beth Thermidor." With that she stomped furiously away, and though I tried to win her back with Philip Morrises, she was beyond recall. I, utterly shattered, signed on as a cabin boy with the Cunard Line and am today, aged 53, the oldest cabin boy on the North Atlantic run. But I digress. We were talking about roommate etiquette. Let us turn now to the matter of share and share alike. Have you shared everything equally? Drawer space? Closet space? Study space? And here's one that often causes trouble - hobby space. WILLOW FIELD it took two or three Philip Morrises to restore my native sweetness When, for example, I roomed with Rimsky Sigafoos, my hobby was stamp collecting. I did not take up much room. All I needed was a small corner for my stamps, my album, my magnifying glass, and my tongue. Rimsky, on the other hand, was by hobby a cat burglar. Hardly a night went by when he didn't burgle twenty or thirty cats. You can imagine how crowded our little room used to get! Many's the time I got so exasperated that it took two or three rich, natural Philip Morrises to restore my native sweetness. © Max Shulman, 1957 We, the makers of Philip Morris and sponsors of this column, know that you and your roommate are getting along just fine. But if you ever do have a little tiff, don't try a peace pipe. Try a good, natural smoke - Philip Morris! 2.3.1.4 Page 3 Recreation Schools Start Sessions Today University Daily Kansas KU is host to two recreation schools this week. One, the Midwest School for Recreation Executives began this morning and will continue through Friday, and the other, the fourth annual Kansas Recreational Superintendents School will be Friday and Saturday. Both are sponsored by the National Recreation Assn. and University Extension. Speakers at the executives school will include James Drury, associate professor of political science; Larry Heeb, assistant professor of physical education; Bruce Linton, associate professor of speech and journalism, and Emil Telfel, associate professor of journalism. Municipal government, public relations, principles and philosophy of recreation, and budget and finance will be discussed. The Kansas Recreational Superintendents School will meet with the executives school Friday and Saturday mornings, and will hold separate classes in the afternoon. The groups will meet together for a dinner Thursday in the Student Union. State, National, International News Communism Will Ruin Gains Ike Tells Middle East WASHINGTON —(UP)— President Eisenhower warned the people of the Middle East today to stand clear of the "menace of international Communism" lest it "smash all their hard-won accomplishments overnight." Mr. Eisenhower reiterated in a special shortwave broadcast beamed overseas that his Mid-East resolution, now pending in Congress, is designed "to help bring stability" to 'the troubled areas. The President spoke as U.S. officials voiced hope that the Israeli troop deadlock may be broken. Apparently a new American approach was being worked out to the question of guaranteeing Israel against future Egyptian attacks. Israel also was said to have modified its demands for safeguards before pulling out of Egyptian territory. After three years of preparation University Extension is offering a course in natural gas which has met with phenomenal success, according to T. Howard Walker, Extension director. Natural Gas Courses Offered "The course followed three years of cooperation with many prominent companies in industry," Mr. Walker said. "Thrity-four selected authors wrote in areas of their specialities. The course was first offered Jan. 1. Mr. Walker said the course serves busy executives and supervisors who find themselves unable to attend regularly scheduled classes, and for people whose occupation requires them to be located in sparsely settled areas. The last Roman emperor of the West, Romulus Augustulus, bore the names of the semi-mythological founder and first king of Rome, Romulus, and the first emperor, Caesar Augustus. Eugene A. Stephenson, professor emeritus of petroleum engineering, edited the writings and contributed to some of the sections. "Proof that the course is being accepted is indicated by the fact that 14 enrollments have been made during its first month of existence," Mr. Walker said. "Further evidence of success is that the registration fee is $65 and that the text sells for $14.85," he said. Monday, Feb. 25, 1957 Coaches Not Sole Recruiters An opening for an instructor in the department of aeronautical engineering next fall has sent Prof. Ammon S. Andes, department chairman, on several recruiting trips. Business Group Elects Officers John Reinert, Park Ridge, Ill. junior, Thursday was elected president of Delta Sigma Pi, professional business fraternity. Other officers elected were Cloyee Wiley, Lyndon sophomore, vice president; Darryl Kobler, Hays junior, vice president; Robert Valdois, Haven junior, secretary; John W. Sanders, Lawrence junior, treasurer; Jimmie Hills, Russell junior, chancellor, and Larry Miles, Holyrood junior, historian. Big Bob Drops Out For Pep Club Dance The 800 persons at the pep clubs' dance Friday night were surprised to find Claude Williams' combo playing instead of Big Bob Dougherty's band. Drivers Grow Tired Of Testing Pike Mr. Dougherty broke his contract at the last minute, but helped get the replacement for the dance, said Bob Flain, Garnett junior and KuKu president. The Claude Williams combo was formerly with the Dougherty group and plays the same type of music. Mosaics uncovered in an imperial villa on Sicily show them racing, hurling a discus, and tossing a ball. TOPEKA—(UP)—Kansas Turnpike officials said today radar checks have proven that early drivers who tested horsepower and curves have slowed to "an entriely safe and satisfactory average for driving." Gale Moss, general manager for the 236-mile pike, said drivers quickly learned that both tires and motors usually suffered from sustained high speds, with tires being the biggest losers. NAACP Called Communist-Inspired WASHINGTON—(UP)—Rep. A. S. Herlong Jr. (D-Fla.) charged today that the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) is "communist-inspired." Furthermore, he said, the NAACP "inadvertently has done a greater disservice to the Negro than all the 'Simon Legrees put together in the history of our country ever have done." U.S. Turncoat Fails To Show Up HONG KONG — (UP) — Samuel D. Hawkins of Oklahoma City, Okla. the eighth American turncoat who decided to leave Red China, failed to show up at the Hong Kong border today. The Chinese Red Cross said that Hawkins would arrive here today but when the border closed at 4:30 p.m. Hawkins had not appeared and Hong Kong police said that they had no indication he was on the communist side of the frontier. TOKYO — (UP) — Nobusuke, Kishi, 60, a proponent of cooperation with the West, friendship with Asia and expanded trade with Red China, was named Japan's eighth postwar Prime Minister today. His only rival was the Socialist Party chairman, Mosaburo Suzuki. Japan Has New Premier Kansas House Gets Severance Tax Bill Three Republicans sponsored the measure, which Senate sponsors earlier estimated would bring in about 7 million dollars to the state in new revenue. The controversial severance tax legislation has had a stormy career in the Kansas Legislature, having failed in one form or another for close to 20 years. TOPEKA — (UP) — A 5 per cent "in lieu of" oil and gas severance tax bill today made its appearance in the Kansas House. It was identical to one introduced earlier in the Senate. ATTENTION: all Cadets! "My superiors report that I have a sloppy Battalion. I got chewed so now it is my turn to do some chewing in return. Today I had the pleasure of 'issuing' two demerits to every cadet who had a soiled, wrinkled,—to put it in simple words—a scourngy uniform on his lowly body. Yeah, I know its tough, but that's the law of the jungle, the way the grapefruit squirts. There's really no excuse for this because we all know that New York Cleaners do such an excellent job of cleaning your uniform, in fact it is one of their specialities. Let's make our motto, 'I'll have my uniform Demerit Proofed at New York Cleaners today.'" Let's Make This "Uniform Clean-Up Week." JETTOT —DEMERIT PROOFING (All Branches of R.O.T.C.) —MENDING AND ALTERATIONS Specialties. New York Cleaners Merchant of GOLD APPERANCE His first trip was to California Jan. 17-21, where he visited Stanford, California Institute of Technology and the University of California at Los Angeles and Berkeley. The following week he went to New York City to a meeting of the Institute of Aeronautical Science and talked to men from the University of Minnesota, Iowa State, University of Illinois, University of Michigan, Cornell University and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. In the past five years the department of aeronautical engineering has grown from 37 students to 124. Sixty-three firms have interviewed the 24 students who are to be graduated this year. A few applications for the new position have been received. Crafton To Read Euripiedes "The Trojan Women" by Euripades will be read at the SUA Poetry Hour at 4 p.m. Thursday in the Browsing Room of the Student Union by Allen Crafton, professor of speech. --- Mister,would you spare a few cents...to save a dollar# worth of time? If you ride it costs money. If you walk it takes lots of time. The easy way to pay is the THRIFTICHECK way - each check costs just a few cents. - No minimum balance required - Start with as little as $5 - No charge for deposits - No charge for printing your name on all checks - Your cancelled checks serve as receipts - You can bank by mail if you prefer Save precious time-pay your bills with THRIFTICHECKS. Why not open an account today? DANCE ThriftyCheck AMERICA'S MOST POPULAR CHECKING ACCOUNT SERVICE this area only at Book of 20 Personalized Checks $1.50 Douglas County State Bank 900 Mass. Member F.D.I.C. Page 4 University Daily Kansan___ Jayhawkers Breeze Past Huskers 87-60 Kansas turned a close basketball game into a face by scoring 13 straight points late in the first half and went on to overwhelm Nebraska 87-60 Saturday in Allen Field House. The Jayhawkers, leading only 29-25 with 7:10 to play in the first half, suddenly exploded and before Rex Ekwall hit for Nebraska with 1:10 to play, Kansas had a 42-25 lead. Wilt Chamberlain scored 30 points for Kansas and pulled down 19 rebounds. The Huskers made it close for 12 minutes and managed to maneuver for six ties. Nebraska hit a phenomenal 60 percent of long shots in the first 12 minutes. They needed them however, as the Jayhawkers weren't giving up many shots. Nebraska got only two offensive rebounds during the entire first half so thoroughly did Wilt and the Jayhawkers dominate the backboards. Kansas opened with a zone defense and the Huskers promptly began to shoot over top with Ekwall and Gary Reimers doing the damage. Huskers Shoot Over Zone Meanwhile Kansas was shooting freely and working through the Husker zone defense for close range goals as the Huskers frantically gathered around Wilt. The Jayhawkers were guilty of some sloppy passing early in the game as they maneuvered to feed the ball to Chamberlain. In an effort to curb the poor ball handling, Coach Dick Harp substituted freely, even in the early stages of the game. A highlight of the first half of play was John Parker's 25-foot intended pass to Wilt that was a trifle too high and climbed over the rim on a straight line and into the basket. Switch To Man For Man Kansas switched to a man for man defense in the second half that stymied the Nebraska outside marksmen until the reserves began pouring into the game for Kansas. The second half of play was a continuation of the last few minutes of the first half. Nebraska would get the ball, shoot and miss, and KU would rebound. The Jayhawkers moved the ball down the court and shot until they hit. Kansas mounted its longest lead of the night at 64-34 with 13 minutes to go as Wilt hit a 10-foot iump shot. Coach Harp cleared the bench after that with all the regulars except Chamberlain coming out. Wilt stuck around until 5:15 to play in an effort to score enough points to move back into the national scoring lead. 16 See Action A total of 16 Jayhawkers saw action in the game as Coach Harp swept the entire bench with the exception of Dick Keith and Gary Mowry. The Jayhawkers' superiority was clearly shown in the whopping 85 shots they tossed up. They hit on 32 of them compared to 20 field goals in 65 attempts for the Huskers. Behind Chamberlain's 30 points, co-captains John Parker and Gene Eslun scored 10 points each. Ekwall scored 15 points and Terry Howard 10 to lead Husker shooters. Box Score Kansas (87) FG FG FT F L Jhn'sn 1 2-2 Elstun 1 6-6 Dickel 2 0-1 Thim'sn 0 0-0 Green 1 0-0 Jett 2 0-0 Chmn'bn 13 4-6 M Jhn'sn 1 2-2 Parker 2 2-2 Holngr 1 2-2 Kindred 0 0-0 Billings 0 2-2 Dater 2 0-0 Endsley 0 0-0 Kelley 1 0-0 Nebraska (60) FG FG FT L Jhn'sn 1 2-2 Elstun 1 6-6 Dickel 2 0-1 Thim'sn 0 0-0 Green 1 0-0 Jett 2 0-0 Chmn'bn 13 4-6 M Jhn'sn 1 2-2 Parker 2 2-2 Holngr 1 2-2 Kindred 0 0-0 Billings 0 2-2 Dater 2 0-0 Endsley 0 0-0 Kelley 1 0-0 Totals 20 30-27 15 Totals 22 21-27 16 | Totals 20 20-27 15 Resolved, never to do anything which I should be afraid to do if it were the last hour of my life. Seventy Resolutions by Jonathan Edwards. Do Jayhawk Men Know Their Women? Who Is The U.S.'s M.C. IT'S FOR REAL! by Chester Field A boy in a hat walking under the moon. HOW PRACTICAL IS MOONLIGHT? The bookworm said, "A moonlight night Is apt to be a worthwhile sight, But after you're through with it What can you do with it?" MORAL: Plenty, chum! Open up your libido and let in some moonlight. Take your pleasure BIG . . . smoke Chesterfield King. With that big size and that big taste . . . it's the smoothest tasting smoke today 'cause it's packed more smoothly by ACCU-RAY. Like your pleasure BIG? A Chesterfield King has Everything! $50 for each philosophical verse accepted for publication, Chesterfield, P.O. Box 21, New York 46, N. Y. © Liggett & Miyake Tuscany Co. Chesterfield KING CIGARETTES LIMITED & MOTOR FUNCTION CO. Owl Society Tops Sachem, 34-32 The Owl Society, honorary organization for juniors, defeated Sachem, honorary organization for seniors, 34-32 Saturday in a double overtime game in Robinson Gymnasium. Big Seven Showdown Match Is March 6 In Manhattan The score was tied at 28-28 at the end of regulation time. Bob Boyer scored 10 points and Jim Trombold 9 to lead the Owls. Bill LaRue hit 12 points for Sachem. Recent studies showed that 16-year-old boys and girls in the U.S. had an average of about 15 permanent teeth which had already suffered from tooth decay. KU's hold on first place in the Big Seven basketball race didn't figure today to be loosened this week when the Jayhawkers meet Colorado. But there's a showdown coming for the Wilt Chamberlain crowd March 6. The test, which may blow the roof right off Ahearn Fieldhouse in Manhattan, either will give Kansas a clear title or divide the championship between KU and Kansas State. There could be trouble for the Wildcats Saturday when they go to Ames for a return engagement with Iowa State. But the odds will favor K-State to end the week with a 9-2 league record, against a probable 9-1 Kansas figure. Iowa State crowded K-State all the way in regulation time Saturday before 12,500 fans at Manhattan. But after the game ended in a 68-68 knot, K-State breezed home in the overtime period. Missouri won a rough decision from Colorado, 72-62, at Columbia. Ted Williams was the last major league baseball player to hit 400. ? The Case of Wrinkled Shirt Wilfred How Kermit Kean, Kompetitor of the Kampus Kops solved another thrilling mystery JACKIE COBURY Belinda Bottoms-up frantically braked her two-speed, two-tone English velocipede to a halt. The time was 9:04 and her boss, famed detective Kermit Kean, was an absolute terror if she didn't serve him his first drink by 9:07. She rushed in, expecting at least 30 lashes with a wet spinach strip, but was surprised to see him wrapped in thought. Pulling off the wrappings, she discovered Kernit contemplating the infinite wrinkles of a dirty shirt. "Wrinkled Shirt Wilfred," he said, a tear dropping from his left eye, "has struck again." "First he stole the key to Phog's Cadillac, causing comments that were printed in 37 states. Then he ran off with the plans for the commemorative bronze Jayhawker, to the disappointment of at least 6 students. Now he has stolen $374.84 in Bookstore receipts from the S.A.M.M.T.C.F.*" A "We know he always wears a wrinkled shirt, but no one has been seen near the crimes with one on." Kermit continued. "We even have located his hide-out, but he's disappeared. Come on, we're going there now," he said, affectionately grabbing Belinda by the big toe and pulling her along. While examining the hide-out, Belinda suddenly noticed a clock. "Quitting time!" she yelled. "Let's finish this case. Look over there in the corner," she said, rolling her heliotrope eyes at Kermit. He picked them up and rolled them back, at the same time exclaiming. "Belinda Baby, you've done it. That small strip of paper is a shirt wrapper from Lawrence Laundry." Wrapper from Lawrence Library The next day Kermit stood (as best he could) on Jayhawk Boulevard until the cleanest and best pressed shirt of the day came by. Surprise! Inside the shirt was Wrinkled Shirt Wilfred, who was promptly hauled off to the local pokey. Moral: If you're a criminal, don't wear shirts laundered by Lawernce Laundry. If you're on the level, do. 12 Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners Dial VI 3-3711—You'll be glad you did—1001 New Hamp. - Send A Mau-Mau To Camp Fund! Page 5 Phi Gams Top Hookers; Win Basketball Crown Phi Gamma Delta defeated the Hookers, 34-27, in a low scoring rebounding battle to win the intramural basketball Hill championship Saturday in Robinson Annex. The Hookers employed a tough 2-1-2 zone defense to hold John Peppercorn, the Phi Gam high scorer in previous games, to six points, all of which came in the first quarter. Jim Tierney, however, took up the slack and won game scoring honors with 12 points. The game started out slowly with both teams using ball control tactics and waiting for good openings before taking their shots. The first three quarters proved to be a real defensive battle; seldom would either team get more than one shot at the basket. If they missed they lost possession. Phi Gam controlled the opening tip and for a few minutes it looked as if they would run away with the game as Peppercorn hit three straight field goals. But the Hooker zone clamped down and held him scoreless for the remainder of the game. In cracking the zone, Phi Gam used Pepercorn at the pivot and ran Tierney along the base line. When the Hooker defense pulled out to stop Pepercorn, Tierney was left open and was deadly with his jump shot. Game Settles Into Pattern Game Settles Into Pattern The second quarter was an indication of things to come as the Hookers began to pepper away from the outside and Tierney hit his first shot from the baseline. With about two minutes left to play in the first half the Hookers had a 12-8 lead, but Wally Strauch stole the ball and dribbled the length of the court to make the score 12-10. With only two seconds remaining in the half Tierney hit on both ends of a 1 and 1 opportunity to tie the score at halftime 12-12. At the start of the third quarter the Hookers tried new tactics. They moved their big men outside and let guard Mo Corvelle play the pivot. The Phi Gam defense started dropping off on him, however, and put a stop to this, but not before he had scored four points. The most spectacular play of the game occurred midway in the third period when Fiji Bill Crank cleared a rebound, dribbled the length of the court, and with a beautiful bounce pass set Tierney up for an easy score. This made the score 18-17 in favor of Phi Gam and Tierney added two more with a set shot from the corner to make it 20-17 as the quarter ended. Fiijis Score 8 Quick Points The fourth quarter saw Tierney and Leo Meuer combine to give Phi Gam 8 consecutive points and a 28-17 lead before Bobby Robinson scored for the Hookers with a jump shot. With three minutes and thirty seconds left in the game Phi Gam went into a stall and maintained their lead to the finish. Phi Gamma Delta also won the B championship by running over Nu Sigma Nu, 69-39. Phi Gam grabbed a big lead at the start of the game and was never threatened. The big gun for the winners was Don McNichols with 23 points. Ed Smith was high for Nu Sigma Nu with 14. In the fraternity C league playoffs two Phi Gam teams fought it out with the C3 team beating the C1 team, 41-35. Today's games: C League Hill Championship—Phi Gamma Delta vs. Navy II 4:15 p.m. Annex. Milwaukee Seeks Shoendienst PHOENIX, Ariz. — (UP) — The Milwaukee Braves are believed today to be close to a deal with the New York Giants in which they would acquire second-baseman Red Schoendienst. The KU swimming team lost its fourth match of the season at Ames, Iowa, Saturday when it dropped a 57-28 decision to the Iowa State Cyclones. Kansas Tankers In 57-28 Loss The Jayhawkers won five of the eight individual events, but the lack of depth and two relay victories resulted in the wide Iowa State margin. "We just didn't have enough strength to pick up those second and third places," Coach Chuck Edwards said. "We did do as well as I expected though." The top Kansas performer was Dusty Milledge, who won the 440 and 220-yard freestyle races. Edwards was the meet's only other double winner, capturing both the 60 and 100-yard freestyle events. Meet Results 440-yard medley relay -1, Iowa State; 2. Kansas, Time 4:17.9. University Daily Kansan 220-yard freestyle—1. Milledge, (K); 2. Jennings, (IS); 3. Gleason, (IS). Time: 2:27.3. 60-yard freestyle -1. Edwards, (K); 2. Carr, (IS); 3. Maris, (IS). Time: 30-6. 200-yard butterfly—1. Clevenger, (K); 2. Thompson, (IS). Time: 2:36.3. One meter diving—1. Wassmuth, (IS), 297 points; 2. De Young, (IS), 254; 3. Matthews, (K). 178 100-yard freestyle — 1. Edwards, (K); 2. Shearer, (IS); 3. Bridgeman, (IS). Time: 55.5. 200-yard backstroke — 1. Ewart, (IS); 2. Gleason, (IS); 3. Kreye, (K). Time: 2:27.2 440-yard freestyle — 1. Milledge, (K); 2. Carter, (K); 3. Jennings, (IS). Time: 5:30.7 220-yard breaststroke—1. Mlnarik, (IS); 2. Thompson, (IS); 3. Cleavenger, (K). Time: 2:26.6 440-yard freestyle relay-1. Iowa State; 2. Kansas. Time: 3:48.1. National Park Service reports that approximately 32 per cent of the visitors to the giant mountainside carvings at Mt. Rushmore National Memorial in South Dakota in 1958 had visited the memorial before. Emporia heads the standings in the central conference basketball race with an 8-1 record at the start of the final week of play. E-State Leads CIC With 8-1 St. Benedict's, with 7-1 and two games to go, still is in contention. The Atchison team plays Washburn Tuesday and a victory at Topeka would put it at 8-1. The Harvard football team scored 765 points in the 1886 season. LET'S PLAY BALL Intramural Baseball Practice Will Start Soon ORDER NOW To have your equipment for the coming season. Uniforms, bats, glove, everything for softball and hardball. Ph. VI 3-6106 Sportsman's Shop 715 Mass. Announcing THE PROJECTOGRAPH The Latest Addition to the Hawk's Nest Now you can see these delicious foods before you order on the Projectograph CLUB SANDWICHES HAMBURGERS SHRIMP PORK TENDER HOT BEEF All pictured in color for you to choose from Student Union HAWK'S NEST 9. Pare 6 . University Daily Kainan Monday. Feb. 25, 1957 Have A Good Book Collection? The Taylor Student Book Contest will award $75 to the best student book collection submitted in oper competition. The contest, sponsored by Mr. and Mrs. James W. Taylor of Kansas City, Mo., is open to all undergraduate and graduate students regularly enrolled at KU. Prospective contestants should see Robert L. Quinsey, assistant director of libraries. 416 Watson. The books must be owned by the student and have been collected by him. Entries are limited to no less than 20 nor more than 50. The student must also submit a statement of 400 words telling his purpose in making the collection and how the collection was made. Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. Museum of Stravinsky: "The Rake's Progress." Undergraduate mathematics seminar, 4 p.m., Room 203, Strong. Speaker: John Higgins, PhD, Assistant Professor of Algebra." All interested students invited to attend these weekly meeting; The closing date for the contest is March 25. Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office. 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin only by Karen Kunzey. Should include name, place, date, and time of function. Official Bulletin TODAY University Veterans Organization, 7:36 p.m. Special meeting Election of Officers U.S.C.C. Study Group seminar, 11:50 Lunch, #6 "Equational Conversations." Lunch, #7 "Equational Conversations." TUESDAY Art History forum, 4 p.m., Trophy Room, Student Union. Speaker: Bernard "Poco" Frazier. "The Artist vs. The Art Historian." Group for the Improvement of Human Reintroduction. p.m. Jayhawk Room. Student Roger Williams Fellowship Coffee Hour, 8:15 p.m., 1124 Mississippi. Dr. Robert Sokal, speaker: "Religion and Evolution." WEDNESDAY Museum of Art Record Concert, 11 a.m. Museum of Art Museum, Stravinsky: "The Rake's Progress" Foreign students meeting, 7 p.m., Jayhawk Room. Student Union. Tople for discussion; foreign student festival for 1957 KuKu's, 5 p.m., Student Union. Studio Theater, 8 p.m. Student Union Ballroom. "Doctor in Soite of Himself." Poetry Heart 4 p.m. Music & Brows through The Trojan Women reads "The Trojan Women." KU-Y Mexico trip meeting, 7:30 p.m. 306 C. Student Union. Les membres du Cercle Francais assistent a la representation du Medecin Malgré Lui jeudi soir. La reunion regulière naura pas lieu. Studio Theater, 8 p.m. Student Union Ballroom. "Doctor In Spite of Himself." KU-Y Advisory Board meeting, 8 p.m. Pine Room, Student Union. Anderson To Speak At WU Dean Kenneth E. Anderson of the School of Education will speak on meeting the problems encountered in first year teaching at a luncheon meeting Saturday at Wichita University. The meeting is for student teachers and graduates of the university who have been teaching for only one semester. Sam Houston is the subject of a new series now being filmed in Hollywood by Screen Gems. "The Man from Texas" is the title. WHAT-A-GUY WAYNE IN A WONDERFUL NEW ENTERTAINMENT! M-G-M PRESENTS IN METROCOLOR JOHN WAYNE DAN DAILEY MAUREEN O'HARA THE WINGS OF EAGLES WARD BOND AN M.G.M PICTURE NOW Ends Wednesday GRANADA KU Young Republicans are soliciting support for their candidate for state chairman of the Kansas Young Republicans, Walter McGinnis, Lawrence junior. When the 1957 convention convenes at Emporia, March 14-16, he will compete against candidates from eight other schools for the Kansas Young GOF's highest position. KU Young 'Republicans will crown "Miss GOP of KU" Thursday night in Bailey Auditorium. The deadline for entries is 10:30 p.m. Tuesday. McGinnis's campaign manager is Jack Turner of Wichita University. KU's Miss GOP' To Be Chosen Thursday Young GOP Pick State Candidate Thirty-five delegates will represent the KU group at the convention. Today's religion is one of content rather than context of the past, said the Rev. Theodore Gill at the KU-Y meeting Thursday night in the Student Union. Today's Religion 'One Of Content' Old context stated beliefs and the application of beliefs in moral, sociological and political aspects, he said. The new belief is intended to show a goal and give us love as a compass to reach it. GRANADA Faculty Club Hears History Of Ballads The tracing of American history by singing ballads was the subject of a talk given by Charles F. Old-father, associate professor of law, at a meeting of the Faculty Club Sunday. Prof. Oldfather sang many popular ballads and explained their origin. The program closed with group participation in several songs. Frazier To Speak At Art History Forum Bernard (Poco) Frazier, sculptor in residence, will speak on "The Artist the Art Historian" at the Art History Forum, at 4 p. m. Tuesday in the Trophy Room of the Student Union. Well known in Kansas for his work on the State Building in Topeka, Mr. Frazier also did the sculpture on the doors of the Campanile. In the face of today's accident-ridden highways, bus drivers have chalked up a phenomenal safety record - approximately one fatality per 100 million passenger miles. Preceding the announcement of queen, David S. Teeple, comptroller general of the United States, will speak at 7:30 on the mixing of atomic energy with politics. The winner of the contest, which will be judged by members, will receive an expense-paid trip to the state Young Republican convention March 14-16 at Emporia to compete for the "Miss GOP of Kansas" title. The winner at Emporia will receive an extensive-paid trip to Washington, D.C., to compete at the national convention for "Miss GOP." VARSITY A International Club Plans Festival Plans for the International Festival April 20 will be discussed by the International Club at a meeting at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Jayahwark Room of the Student Union. Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW PET FASHION CUSHIONED CHAIRS VARSITY Open 6:45 p.m. Weekdays NOW Paramount presents SUNDAY: LANCASTER • HEPBURN HALWALLIS THE RAINMAKER TECHNIOLOR® TISTAYSION News — Magoo Cartoon Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW Push-Back CUSHIONED CHAIRS Open 6.45 Weekdays NOW Thru Wednesday TEENAGERS IN TURMOIL! The Delingquents Released through UNITED ARTISTS News—Joe McDoakes Cartoon Abdul Rahim Ola Ojikutu, Nigeria, West Africa, president, said the club will begin a series of programs introducing different parts of the world on March 2. The first program is to be about the Scandinavian countries. TEENAGERS IN TURMOILI "The Delinquents" Released through UNITED ARTISTS News—Joe McDoakes Cartoon For the United States as a whole, the number of general hospital beds increased by 200 per cent from 1900 to 1855, according to a recent report of Health Information Foundation. Mr. Teeple, consultant to the Senate. Appropriations and Joint Congressional Atomic Energy committees, is being flown to KU for the meeting. He is contributing editor to the American Mercury magazine, and author of the book, "Atomic Energy, 1955." He said a means for financing the proposed budget will not be decided until late in the legislative session. On the probability of an increase in state sales tax Rep. Saffels said, "Gov. Docking has expressed strong opposition to an increased retail sales tax, except for a broadening of its base." Law Editors Attend National Conference Four editorial staff members of the Kansas Law Review attended the fourth bi-annual meeting of the National Conference of Law Reviews in St. Louis, Mo. over the weekend. "Gov. George Docking has inherited a financial mess of increased taxes which will need 20 to 25 million dollars' financing," Rep. Dale Saffels of the 115th District told members of the Young Democats Thursday. They are John Jutczyk, Kansas City, Kan., third-year law student, editor-in-chief; Heywood H. Davis, Kansas City, Mo., and Donald L. Burnett, Larned, associate editors; and Thomas A. Peschka, Great Bend, business manager. The latter three are second-year law students. "Charley's Aunt" still serves. CBS has the venerable force slated for a "Playhouse 90" production March 7. Tax Mess Left To Docking' "One of the biggest problems facing the Legislature is determining the position of the Republican Party on important issues. So far there has been no vote which would hint of a definite Republican stand on the budget," Bep. Saffels said. Rep. Saffels said of the governor, "I believe Gov. Docking is restoring integrity to the office of governor. He is certainly a governor of the people, and has shown no signs of being dictatorial." A Campus-to-Career Case History Al Morris (right) discusses a new amplifier system with Howard D. Thomas, one of his foremen. "After training...it's up to you" That's what Alfred E. Morris says about the Bell System. "And that's the way I like it," he adds. "Right now I'm in a job I didn't think I'd have for ten or fifteen years." The job Al thought was more than a decade away is Plant Superintendent for the Hutchinson district in Kansas with Southwestern Bell. "You can sum up my work by saying I'm responsible for the installation and maintenance of all telephone equipment in a large part of central Kansas," Al says. "In times of emergency—a tornado, for instance—I have complete charge of maintaining and restoring service." Here's how Al describes the steps that led up to his present job: "I started out in Bell's management training program in 1951. This gave me an excellent opportunity to learn about all jobs in the company—not just the job I'd be doing. The program was well organized, and I got a lot out of it. "My first assignment was to coordinate a dial conversion in La Crosse, Kansas, a quarter-million-dollar operation. My next assignments were in Abilene and Lawrence. Both carried increased responsibility. "I knew I was moving along pretty fast—but I was really surprised when my present job came up. It bears out what my wife and I thought when I joined Bell—there would be great chances for advancement." Al Morris graduated in 1951 from the University of Kansas with a B.S. in Industrial Management. He is typical of many young men who are finding interesting career opportunities in Bell Telephone Companies, Bell Telephone Laboratories, Western Electric and Sandia Corporation. Your placement officer has more information about these companies. DELIVERY WAREHOUSE PARK HILLS, NEW YORK PO BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM Ha --- Monday, Feb. 25, 1937 CLASSIFIED ADS University Daily Kansai 2 25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.60. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Dally Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. nor, ring nor. the s of MISCELLANEOUS BOARDERS WANTED. For a pleasant change in dietary routine, contact John Hall at VI 3-2255, Phi Chi medical fraternity, 1233 Ored, Reasonable. 2-25 BOARDERS WANTED. Good food, family style, reasonable rates, ½ block from Union. Call between 5 and 7. VI 3-2565. Nu Sigma Nu, 1241 La. 2-28 SPECIAL: 10 pounds clothes washed, spin dried, 65c. Same amount finished. 75c. Handicapped lady. Phone VI 3-0535 after 6 p.m. 3-1 NOTICE—Your Avon Representative will call on you by appointment or take orders by telephone. Ph. VI 3-2376 2-25 TIRED OF WALKING UP -THE HILL? Twq rooms for boys one-half block from Phone privilege. Available immediately. Phone VI 3-5776 or see 1231 La. FOR RENT VERY CLEAN THREE ROOM unfurnished apt. Close in, private bath, large kitchen. Child accepted. Utilities paid. VI 3-7688 or VI 3-2055. Reasonable. 2-27 NEWLY DECORATED well furnished, large sleeping room, private entrance, phone. steam heat. Near KU and bus line. Reasonable rates. VI 3-1031. 2-28 NICELY FURNISHED APARTMENT. 4 rooms, first floor, available now. Fire place, full basement, garage. In west location. Couple only. Call VI 3-5780. Students and Faculty Trip insurance with personal baggage coverage The Barlow Agency 910 Mass. Vi 3-2455 AAA Memberships Available. Have your car lubricated the MOTO-SWAY WAY POTTER'S "06" SERVICE 1401 W. 6th VI 3-9891 LARGE. QUET. ROOM. FOR MEN- single or double. Half block from Student Union. Linens furnished and laundered Room service. Available immediately. 1218 Mississippi. VI 3-8695. 2-28 TRANSPORTATION TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. Ask us about Sky-Coach and National Bank for information for itineraries and reservations. 8th & Mass. Phone VI 3-01S2. tf LOST GOLD AND PEARL ponytail clip. Christmas present from family. Lost somewhere on campus. Finder please call Betsy Post, VI 9-8123. 2-25 DARK BROWN GLASSES in case. Lost somewhere on campus. Finder please call Peggy Kiser, VI 3-9123. 2-25 BOOKS REGENCY TRANSISTOR RADIO. Gray, in carrying case. Lost in Alpha Chi Omega parking lot. Finder please call Peggy Garrison, Ph. VI 3-7600. Reward For gifts and for your own library, Art, Architecture, Cook Books, Childrens Books, Modern Library THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 HAPPY HAL'S YOUNG MAN for grill work. Part-time evenings and week-ends. Blue Hills Drive-In, VI 3-2098. 3-1 E. 23rd St.-Ph. VI 3-9753 For Your Convenience 7 Days A Week 7 a.m. - MJDNIGHT EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf NEW HOURS TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention: fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf HELP WANTED TVFIST, Skilled in theses, term papers, reports. Fast, accurate, and reliable. Isabel Pichler, Volunteer of regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Ave. Phone VI 3-2001. TVPIST ... Fast, accurate, neat service. Immediate attention to all typing. Call VI 3-3732. 2-27 Chicken - Bar-B-Q BUSINESS SERVICES FAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterna- tions on mens' and women's' clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6657, 1108 La. RENT A TAPE RECORDER Ideal for Skits, Parties, Dances, Practicing Speech and Foreign Languages. Recording tapes & ac- HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP Do Jayhawk Men Know Their Women? Who Is The U.S.'s M.C. M. C. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 608 Maine. Phone VI 3-7654. tf FOR SALE COCKER PUPPIES. AKC registered, 4 months old. Brown, blond, or parti-colored. Also one grown male. Exceptionally nice for pets, show or breeding stock. See at 345 Mississippi St. Phone VI 3-2760. 2-25 TUBE FREE with the purchase of practically new (only 250 miles) $650×16 Goodrich tire, price only $25. VI 3-1505 after 5 p.m. 2-26 TIME, LIFE & Sports Illustrated magazines. Special students' prices of 1/2 reg. sub. rate. Prompt service, buy now pay later, call VI 3-0124. tf We rent nationwide trailers any size, anywhere, anytime CROFT TRAILER RENTAL CO. East 23rd VI 3-7977 LIVE GIftE - Nightingale Canyon singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas-complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys.[Complete store]. Sure we have all animals, fish, turtles, chameleons, lampies, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Dog店, 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. SERVERAGES- All kinds' of six-paks, ice cold, Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Picnic, party supplie ice Paint, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI-3-0350. BRAND NEW CANON CAMERA with complete outfit. Leather case, lens hood, filter, self-timer, and flash unit. 1/1.5 lens. Low price. Call Ifouli, VI 3-274-6800. LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY for Jr., Sr. Graduate Students up to $500.00 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. 83314 Mam. Phone VI 3-8074 for 1 day service Parties, Pinnings, Weddings Job Application Photos Gene's Photo Service 2144 Ohio - VI 3-0933 Gene Smoyer "Artist vs Art Historian" Discussion By POCO FRAZIER Sculptor in Residence Trophy Room Student Union Tuesday, Feb. 26 4 p.m. Positions For 1957 ENGINEERING EXPOSITION GENERAL CHAIRMAN & PUBLICITY MANAGER Are Now Open APPLICATIONS DUE 12:00 NOON, THURSDAY, FEB. 28 Dean Carr's Office - Marvin Hall ENGINEER COUNCIL WILL SELECT POSITION FOR THE 1957 EXPOSITION Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday.Feb.25,1952 P VERNELL WELLS —(Daily Kansan photo) Musician Starts To College After12 Years Of Travel As a traveling professional musician for 12 years, Vernell Wells, Lawrence junior. followed a dream "to see the world" before coming to college. When she finit hed high school, she decided to play in an orchestra for a year before going to college. It took her 12 years to get back on the education track and start work on a college degree. After playing in a local girls' orchestra, Miss Wells accepted the opportunity to play trumpet for Phil Spitalany and his all-girl orchestra in 1941. The orchestra played a weekly "Hour of Charm" program until 1948 when it was replaced by the Fred Waring show. In Hollywood to make movie shorts, the group was in a Bud Abbot and Lou Costello movie, "Here Come the Coeds." During the war Miss Wells traveled with the orchestra to Army camps for benefit performances and gave concert tours all during the war. After her break with the Phil Spitalary orchestra, she played in the Kansas City Philharmonic and taught at Jenkins Music store in Kansas City, Mo. Two years ago she decided it was time to go to work on a music education degree. By going to summer school and carrying heavy class loads. Miss Wells expects to graduate in three years. This semester she is carrying 20 hours and works all day Saturday. However, she is very happy she postponed her education. "I am having so much fun going to college now and I'm getting so more out of my education than I could have before," she said. Religious Week Evaluated After five days and over 30 speeches, forums, panel discussions and coffee hours, Religious Emphasis Week drew to a close with an Teaching Group To Hear Edwards Karl Edwards, associate professor of education, will speak at the regional conference of the Kansas Assn. for Student Teaching Friday and Saturday in Lindsborg. He will talk at the opening session Friday on the work of the association in Kansas and at a general meeting Saturday on "The Forward Look in Student Teaching." The association consists of college and public school teachers who supervise student teachers. Former Student Leaves Hospital Richard Kent Troughton, former student from Soneca injured and hospitalized in a fight late Thursday afternoon between five Lawrence High School students and Troughton and John R. Bryant. Merriam freshman, was dismissed from Watkins Hospital this morning. City Attorney Wesley Norwood said no charges have yet been filed. Sleek, diesel-powered intercity buses provide the only public transportation to and from more than 40,000 United States communities. evaluation session Friday in the Student Union. Mills said the program that sent speakers to various organized houses and classrooms had been a success. He felt REW had, in one way or another, affected students not formally associated with religious groups. Michael Mills, McPherson junior ad REW chairman, said the purpose of the evaluation session was "to critically analyze the proceedings of the week and to determine where the strong and weak points were." Mills cited that attendance at coffee hour discussions and supper seminars had been good and that over-all interest in REW had been strong. "The week was very successful," said Mills, "particularly due to the fine speakers we had." Have 😊 The number of men majoring in education has increased steadily over the past few years, H. E. Chandler, associate professor of education and director of the teacher appointment bureau, said. Approximately 225 men are now enrolled in the School of Education. Have a WORLD of FUN! Travel with SITA Unbelievable Low Cost Europe 60 Days from $525 Orient 43.65 Days from $998 Have a WORLD of FUN! Travel with SITA Unbelievable Low Cost Europe 60 Days from $525 Orient 43-65 Days from $998 Many tours include college credit. Also low-cost trips to Mexico $169 up, South America $699 up, Hawaii Slave Tours $328 up and Around the World $1398 up ASK YOUR TRAVEL AGENT 332 S. Michigan ave. Washington, D.C. 10007 A happy man 2 Engineers To Get $250 One reason for the increase, he explained, has been the rise in salaries within the past five years. Kansas schools now pay an average annual salary of $3,500 for teachers with a bachelor of arts degree and no experience, while Two scholarships of $250 each will be awarded to engineering freshmen next fall. The students must be male graduates of Kansas high schools. More Men Turn To Teaching The engineering scholarship committee will award the scholarship again to the better of the two students for his sophomore year. Thereafter the scholarships will be awarded to freshmen taking electrical engineering and may be awarded again during the sophomore year if a B average is maintained. The scholarships are being awarded by the Kansas chapter of the National Electrical Contractors Asn 1. 3 Art Films Next In Bailey Series SIT Three art films in color will be shown at 4 p. m. Wednesday in 3 Bailey. "Dawn of Art" shows the beginnings of art among pre-historic people. The film, "Weaving: Warp and Weft," demonstrates the process of weaving various articles of Scottish and European traditional designs and contemporary Canadian work. "Rhythm in Paint" shows Eliot O'Hara, a watercolorist, illustrating the principle of rhythm in painting by using his own sketches and other well-known works of art. Eastern and Western states offer as much as $4,000 for a beginning salary. "With salaries such as these and the prospect of raises within a few years, a man is more able to support a family so education is opening up as a career field for men," Mr. Chandler said. "In talking with personnel directors of schools, I have found that the demand is for men to teach the upper grades from sixth through twelfth, but more men are entering the elementary field due to increased pay scales." As teachers men predominate in subjects such as physical education, industrial arts, vocational agriculture, physical sciences and in school administration jobs. "The demand is great for teachers of physics and chemistry." Mr. Chandler said, "but most men who show skill in these fields are hired by national firms offering 50-to 60 per cent higher salaries." Within the next 10 years he said that he expected to see a greater increase in teachers salaries which would remedy this critical situation. Stravinsky Records In Concert "The Rake's Progress" by Igor Stravinsky, is featured this week in the Museum of Art's record concert series. Mr. Stravinsky conducts the chorus and orchestra of the Metropolitan Opera Assm. in the work. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. Do Jayhawk Men Know Their Women? Who Is The U.S.'s M. C. The first college daily was the Yale News published at New Haven. Conn., Jan. 28, 1878. Jane Addams Ann Underwood PI Beta Phi Pi Beta Phi wears a checked two piece cotton dress from... C COACH HOUSE Sportswear & Accessories 6312 Broadside, Kansas City On the Campus, Lawrence With The CHOOSE A CAREER BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM There are unlimited opportunities in the communications industry for 1957 graduates in business administration, engineering and science. There will be openings for graduates in... ENGINEERING MATHEMATICS PHYSICAL SCIENCES With these Bell Telephone System Companies: Southwestern Bell Western Electric Bell Telephone Laboratories Sandia Corporation Long Lines Department of A.T. & T. Sign up now at the Engineering Office. BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION With these Bell Telephone System Companies: Southwestern Bell Long Lines Department of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company Sign up now at the Business School Office. Interview dates: Monday, February 25 and Tuesday, February 26, 1957 BELL BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM the ven. Daily Hansan Tuesday, Feb. 26, 1957 54th Year, No. 93 ASC Will Hear Plan To Stop Seat Saving A workable plan of enforcing seat saving rules at football games will be presented before the All Student Council Thursday night. The plan, an amendment to ASC Bill number 16, will be presented by Ted Barnes, Salina first year law student. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Barnes said the plan will ment the stand taken by the student body in the referendum vote on Dec. 12." The student body voted for no seat saving in Memorial Stadium in preference to any alternative plan. The proposed amendment calls for no seat or space saving by any person or persons by any means at any time in the student seating section of Memorial Stadium: Any exceptions to the above rule will be decided by the Student Athletic Board and exceptions will be restricted to uniformed groups and recognized KU organizations. The amendment also provides for the Campus Police to prevent seat saving and to allow no one to enter the stadium more than one and one-half hours before game time, with the exception of those whose employment requires their presence in the stadium in the pregame hours. Matrix Table March 23 The Kansas City area alumnae chapter of Theta Sigma Phi, national fraternity for women in journalism, will hold its annual Matrix table dinner at 7 p.m. March 23 at Hotel Muehlebach, Kansas City, Mo. The dinner is in observance of the founding of the organization. The speaker will be Mrs. Willie Snow Ethridge, humorist, author of several best sellers and wife of Mark Ethridge, noted editor-publisher of the Louisville Courier-Journal. Honors will be conferred on several women who have achieved outstanding success in their chosen fields. Reservations for the dinner may be made with Mrs. William V. McLeese, 3204 West 72nd St., Prairie Village, Kan. German Progress Shown In Exhibit "German Architecture Today," an exhibit of photographs, is being shown through March 17 in Marvin Hall. third floor. The exhibit, organized by the League of German Architects, consists of 150 photographs of German structures such as private dwellings, apartment houses and housing developments and office buildings, which were built since the end of World War II. The German Embassy and the Amercian Institute of Architects are circulating the exhibit in the United States with the cooperation of the Traveling Exhibition Service of the Smithsonian Institution. Weather Kansas—Partly cloudy southeast, generally fair elsewhere this afternoon. Generally fair tonight and Wednesday. Colder this afternoon and east portion tonight. Warmer Wednesday. Low tonight 20 north-east to 25-30 elsewhere. High Wednesday 55-60 west to 45-50 east. Senior Picture Deadline Thursday Feb. 28 is the deadline for taking senior pictures for the Jayawaker. Students who plan to have their pictures appear in the yearbook should call Estes Studios immediately for appointments. Oratory Contest Due March 27 The annual Delta Sigma Rho, forensic fraternity, oratorical contest will be held at 8 p. m. March 27 in Strong Auditorium. Dr. E. C. Buehler, professor of public speaking, said the contest is open to any undergraduate. The tryouts will be held on March 25 in 3 Green. From the general tryout, six to eight finalists will be chosen. In the contest the finalists must deliver a prepared 10-minute speech on any subject. The first prize is a set of the "Encyclopedia Americana." Second and third prizes of $15 and $10 are offered. Ted Barnes, assistant instructor of speech and drama and last year's winner is in charge of the contest. KU, Britain Offer Exchange Grants Three major British universities have completed exchange scholarship agreements with the University. It's New, Delicious- Sudsy Spinach Soup The University of Birmingham, Exeter and Reading each will receive one KU student at the graduate level beginning in 1957-58, and KU in turn will receive a graduate student from each of them. Each exchange scholar will receive tuition and maintenance covering room, board and incidentals Dean John H. Nelson of the Graduate School hoped that some organization or individuals would sponsor travel grants. Applications by KU students should be filed with J. A. Burzle, professor of German, 304 Fraser, by March 15. Any graduating senior or graduate student may apply. An elementary foods course has proved very discouraging to one coed who now claims that her calling is not the kitchen. After combining all the ingredients for the cream of spinach soup, she added a heaping teaspoon of salt which she got from a jar near the sink. But the green sudsy-looking mixture didn't meet with the approval of the instructor. "What have I done wrong this time?" the coed moaned. "You didn't put any salt in the soup," the patient instructor replied. "You have put in a teaspoon of soap." Mead To Talk Thursday Margaret Mead, well-known anthropologist and author, will give a public lecture at 4 p. m. Thursday in Strong Auditorium. Miss Mead, who is president of the World Federation of Mental Health, has concentrated much of her anthropological work on New Guinea and other South Pacific islands. Since 1926 she has been assistant curator of ethnology for the American Museum of Natural History in New York. Her talk will deal with the psychological implications of personal-ity changes in a New Guinea tribe. The department of psychology and of sociology and anthropology are sponsoring the lecture. Bert Kaplan, assistant professor of psychology, will hold a reception for Miss Mead at his residence following the lecture. Faculty of the psychology and sociology departments will honor her at a dinner. KU Cannot Keep Top-Rated Faculty IFC Admits Theta Tau Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity, became the 27th member of the Inter-Fraternity Council last night. KU is losing the battle to get and keep top-rated faculty members. Larger, better paying universities are coming to schools such as KU only to select students who have just gotten their Ph.D. degree with the idea of enlarging their own staffs, according to George B. Smith, dean of the University. Theta Tau had filed a petition for membership during the 1956 Fall semester, but committee consideration was not completed until last week. Theta Tau is the only professional fraternity in the IFC. An addition to Greek Week events was announced by Carroll Mock, Hutchinson senior, IFC chairman. Tuesday night each fraternity will be host at a dinner for two Lawrence citizens selected at random by the Greek Week committee. Invitations will be made this week and houses will be informed of their guests by this weekend. THE BOTTLE-TIPPING WOODCUTTER — Sganarelle, played by Robert Potter, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore, is tricked by his wife into pretending to be a doctor in the University Theatre production, "The Doctor in Spite of Himself," which opens Wednesday in the Student Union Ballroom. April 12 Is Poetry Deadline April 12 is the deadline for entries in the William Herbert Carruth Memorial poetry contest. There are no limitations as to the subject matter. The winner is awarded a $100 prize. Prizes of $50 and $25 are given for second and third place. The scholarship committee announced the deadline for fraternity scholarship reports as Monday. The list of house-rankings will be released as soon as the reports are verified and scholarship awards will be presented at the Scholarship Banquet Thursday, March 7, in the Student Union. COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY BROOKLYN, NEW YORK 1967 At the next meeting, March 12, members of the council will vote on the acceptance of the Delta Sigma Club for membership. Delta Sigma has been a colony at KU since the spring of 1956. Ward L. Miner, visiting assistant professor of English, Richard Eberhart, a poet teaching at Dartmouth College, and Bill Inge, KU almunus and playwright who wrote "Picnic" have been selected to judge the entries. Entries for the annual contest which was started in 1921 should be submitted unsigned. The contestant's name should be signed on a separate piece of paper along with his poem. Posters with information about the contest have been posted on bulletin boards over the campus. Entries should be submitted at 203 Fraser. Foundation Gets Letters An original letter from William Allen White and a printed address given by him are now the property of the William Allen White Foundation. The two gifts were given to the Foundation by Irving Dilliar, editorial editor of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, at the annual William Allen White lecture early this month. The letter was written by Mr. White to one of the readers of the Post-Dispatch who had written Mr. White expressing the view that this nation should avoid all involvement in World War II. Mr. White answered the reader that although he thought he was right, he believed that his critic had just as much right to an opinion. The address by Mr. White was written in 1940 and delivered to the Abraham Lincoln Assn. of Springfield, Ill. "They then use these men to fill junior vacancies on their staffs at the assistant professor level," he said. Need Department Heads "However, we are reaching a period when larger schools are doubling and tripling their staffs and are now picking senior staff members from institutions not paying the kind of salaries these schools can afford to pay." he continued. Need Department Heads Senior staff members are badly needed to take charge of departments and to set up new programs of instruction. There just isn't time to educate enough younger men to fill the vacancies suffered by all the schools, Dean Smith said. "This is basically the problem we are running into now as we are losing key men from many of our departments," he said. This is an unexpected problem for all universities in the country and all schools, both large and small, are feeling the pinch. "The competition for faculty members has been going on since before the war but it has stepped up since the war and the colleges and universities need larger staffs with the unexpectedly large enrollments," he said. East West Pav Well "When the enrollment was pretty much static, the raids for faculty talent were not noticed but now with schools growing so much larger, there are many schools large enough to raid us. "The areas which pay exceptionally high salaries and which have hired most of the faculty members away from the University are the Big Ten schools and the large schools in the East and on the West coast." Dean Smith said. Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, said there are simply not enough teachers at any level. "Kansas got into this low paying predicament several years ago when most universities throughout the nation began increasing salaries substantially, but we waited until some of the schools were paying from 25 to 40 per cent above our scale." Dean Smith said. KU ranks about in the middle position among American universities as far as salary scale goes. This means the University gets its instructors from all areas of the nation, he aid. Film, Discussion On Motherhood A film, "A Concept of Maternal and Neonatal Care," will be shown at 7:45 p. m. Wednesday in the KU Infant Study Center, 1126 Louisiana. Dr. H. L. Wilcox, Lawrence gynecologist, will lead a discussion on the care of young mothers and infants following the film. The discussion is the second in a series on preparation for motherhood sponsored by the department of home economics. The discussions are open to the public. Apple For Teacher, By Machine, Too Getting an apple for the teacher is made especially easy at this University for there is an apple vending machine in the basement of Strong Hall. Actually the vending machine serves an important function. They calm the growling stomachs of those who go without breakfast. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 26, 1957 Punch And Judy Someone Pulled The Strings The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics has its satellites and so apparently does the University Theatre. For it was recently decreed that either the University Players play the game according to the University Theatre rules or the administration would pick up its marbles and go home. It seems that the persons responsible for the annual Players' melodrama, "Pity Poor Pearl," were presented with the opportunity of performing this piece in a local theater. The benefits were to have been three-fold: Firstly, the Players would have had the experience of working in what is reverently called the "professional theater." Secondly, the prestige involved would have been no more than a fitting reward for achieving the highest standard of entertainment values displayed this season. Finally, the Players' treasury would have been considerably fattened. The entire project has since been vetoed. If "veto" be too strong a word, let us rather say that faculty advisers have "advised" the Players not to consider it. The organization's executive council took the "advice" and so this embarrassing all-student success was quickly and quietly buried. Though these operations were quite naturally disguised as the machinations of the great educational bulldozer, it is far better to have tried and failed than never to have bucked City Hall at all. Constitutionally, the University Players call themselves an honorary organization and affect an independence of the University Theatre. Certainly advisers are needed to insure a proper balance between gross radicalism and uniform smatterings of ignorance, but Justice is indeed blindfolded if such a simple negation can so easily turn the scales. A university, by definition, should be a place in which any and all ideas may be aired. Listening is often more important than lecturing as it demands infinitely more cultivation plus that virtue of all virtues: tolerance. Lack of tolerance reveals nothing but an equal lack of imagination. But perhaps there are too few left in the field of education who realize that the finest compliment they can receive is to be surpassed by the pupils. To assume that "inspired teaching" is engulfing us is akin to regarding Florence Nightingale as a homicidal maniac. The Theater is still engaged in a 2,500-year-old war with a society that chooses to look upon it as an avocation. Battles have been won and lost on both sides. It is unfortunate that the Players' executive council prefers to remain so tied to the apron strings of the University Theatre that it cannot muster the courage of its own convictions. For this is a battle truly lost—not to society this time, but to internal pressures. The taint is not unlike that old theatrical illusion, the Punch and Judy farce. —Tom Sawyer Busy, Busy Students No Time To Save One's Life In a few months the polio season will begin again. By July and August it will be at its height. Thousands of children and adults will contract poliomyelitis, and many of them will suffer the tragic result of paralysis. Most of who will get the disease and be permanently crippled will be persons who have not received the Salk vaccine injections for immunization against polio. In Kansas between 1951 and 1955, before the vaccine came into use, an average of 70 cases a week was reported to the State Board of Health at the height of the season. In 1956, when the Salk injections had been started, the highest number of cases reported for one week was 20. This should provide incentive enough for everyone to get his shots. At the University students have a bargain that cannot be obtained elsewhere. At Watkins Hospital those who are under 20 years old can receive the necessary three injections free of charge. The State Board of Health provides the vaccine for this age group. For students over 20 the charge is $1.50 a dose, because the hospital must purchase this vaccine. As of Feb. 16, the Watkins staff had given 1543 first doses of the vaccine. This is about 18 per cent of the student body. Those in the 82 per cent who have not started the series of injections are only narming themselves-paralytic polio is more frequent in adults than in children. In December in an attempt to encourage more students to take the injections, several nurses from Watkins were sent to give the injections at houses where 20 or more students agreed to have the shots. During that month 575 first doses were given. Of this number 280 have not gone to the clinic to receive their second dose. It is a waste of time to have only the first injection, for the vaccine will have no effect unless all three are received. The first dose is only a sensitizing dose. The second dose, given two to six weeks later, causes a rise in the polio antibodies, the particles in the blood which prevent paralysis as a result of polio. The third dose is given six to seven months after the second. It also increases the number of antibodies, and it acts as a booster. It is a short walk to Watkins Hospital, and the Salk vaccine is available to all students. Every student should have the injections, and they cost little or nothing depending on the age of the student. Surely the few minutes it takes to receive these injections are worthwhile in order to avoid the possible consequence of being crippled for life. Peggy Armstrong The Old Campaigner Says "Well, I'm sorry I have not been up here vicing sooner but I have been afraid to come. I have been spending the last couple of days working hard on my other vices to build up enough nerve to make the trip." "I had promised to come back up and tell you fellows just what scared me in the first place. Well, I have had similar scares since then and am ready to tell all. Am so dang mad that I could probably talk for days about it. Since I must not shirk my other vices I shall contain my wrath to an afternoon. "No. I do not drive. I have vices but none so bad as driving where people spend all day scaring children, women, and old men like myself. This traffic on the Hill sure bothers us people who like to stay close to the earth by walking. "I am sure it is not the fault of the drivers. It must be the cars. I have known lots of people who drive cars. I am not a snob. I do not make friends or keep them by the vices they do or do not have. I will associate with a driver of cars just as much as I will with walkers. "Let me give you a personal experience. This is not what I heard - brother, it happened. "Well, I struck out like I really weren't afraid and before I knew it I was smack in the middle - couldn't go back and couldn't go forward. Then the fear hit me and I was ready for the blindfold and that last cigarette. "Well, I stood there for a while and after a couple of whiles I got impatient what with no one to talk to and me achin' to vice. I did a foolish thing - I tried to get across the street. "I was trying to get across the street down by the Art Museum. It was almost 1 p.m. and cars were lined up every-which-way trying to go someplace. Me, all I wanted was across the street." "Well, I was almost saved by a miracle - a miracle, that's what it could a been. A feller in an old car stopped about ten feet from me. I was just about to wave my hand in gratitude when he started for me. I reckon he just stopped to line me up in his sights. "I looked up and I saw him right on top of me - he was a sittin' there a gloatin' and I knew that another fine fellow had fallen under the spell of a blasted car. Well, as you probably have guessed I wasn't killed. That wasn't the bird of death. It was that feller's hood ornament. I wasn't even hit. The breeze from the car threw me up on the sidewalk and me—the Old Campaigner, who was in the same big war that Teddy was, well, I fainted. I looked up at that car and knew I was a goner. All I could see was the bird of death a hoverin' over me lookin' all silver and not black atall like everybody who aint seen it say's it is. "I'm human. It could happen to anybody. Ain't I got two vices—that proves I'm human. Maybe just a little less human than most, that's all. But that's the story, son. And it's a shameful one. But like I said—it ain't the drivers but the cars." "Got to go to work now. Sorry I can't stay around and let you listen but me and the Night People are digging a tunnel from the Hill to one of the better downtown establishments. No more traffic problems for us. Far be it for me to be a walking temptation for them drivers to commit a wrong on. I ain't no martyr. Daily Transan Jerry Thomas University of Kansas student newspaper triview, 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 triview, 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 251, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York. N. Y. News service; United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $450 as amended. Knock. Every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan. post office under act of March 8, 1879. Kent Thomas ... Managing Editor John Battin, Felicia Ann Fenberg, Bob Lyle, Betty Jean Stanford, Assistant Managing Editor; Jim Banman, City Editor; Nancy Harmon, LeRoy Clemens, Himalayah Shionozaki, Telegraph Editor; Mary Beth Neyles, Delbert Haley, Assistant Telegraph Editors; Dick Brown, Sports Editor; George Anthan, Assistant Sports Editor; Marilyn Mermis, Society Editor; Paf Swanson, Association Society Editor; John Eaton, Picture Editor. NEWS DEPARTMENT EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Jerry Dawson ... Editorial Editor Jerry Thomas, Jim Tice, Associate Editors. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. "HAPPY HAL'S" Do Jayhawk Men Know Their Women? Who Is The U.S.'s M.C.? E. 23rd St. Ph. VI 3-9753 STUDENT BUDGET SPECIAL Tuesday Only— Fried Chicken + crisp tossed salad, french fries, hot rolls & butter. 80c 11:00 a.m.-Midnight Choose a CLARA LAUGHLIN TOUR "So You're Going" to EUROPE THIS SUMMER! Seven delightful small-membership tours for COLLEGE GIRLS ONLY. Excellent itineraries and accommodations - select membership. Deposit $78 and June 11, July 28 and July 3. Priced from $167.500. Special "TOWN & COUNTRY" COLLEGE TOUR depart June 28, under direction of Society Editor of Town & Country magazine. Our members will appear in a Fall '57 issue of the magazine. ADULT TOUR June 11 S.S. LIBERTE Book early! Descriptive folder and full information on request. TOM MAUPIN Travel Service 1236 Massachusetts Phone VI 3-1211 Jay SHOPPE Open till 8:30 Thurs. 835 Mass. JAY SHOPPB VI 3-4833 Ballet WARNER'S Circular-stitched Bra Warner's youth-lined cotton bra is the finest yet. If you haven't tried this figure-shaper, make this comfortable discovery in our fitting room and your life will be easier from now on! No. P21-70 in white cotton. A,B,C cups. $2.50 GILMORE Page 3 LOVE AND MARRIAGE—In the spring a young man's fancy turns to love. If you have problems with your love life this is the man to see, Dr. Lawrence S. Bee, professor of home economics and sociology, who teaches Marriage and Family Relations. Have A Marriage Problem? Dr. Bee Can Help Solve It Having troubles in your life? Need some help with a knotty problem? Then talk to Dr. Lawrence S. Bee, professor of home economics and sociology, who teaches Marriage and Family Relations and similar courses. Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to the Office. Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. Official Bulletin TODAY Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity: 7:30 p.m., Student Union Pledging of new members. All who have honors are urged to attend. All are welcome. Art History forum, 4 p.m., Trophy Room, Student Union. Speaker: Bernard "Poco" Frazier. "The Artist vs. The Art Historian." Group for the Improvement of Human Relations. 8 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Studen- American Institute of Architects, 7:30 p.m., 305 Student Union. Business: art show, engineering exposition, Goff field trip, committee reports. Delegate for the 1957-58 Architectural Forum will be chosen. Slides, and refreshments. Roger Williams Fellowship Coffee Hour. 8:15 p.m., 1124 Mississippi. Dr. Robert Sokal, speaker: "Religion and Evolution." WEDNESDAY Museum of Art Record Concert, 11 a.m. Museum of Art Museum. Stravinsky: "The Rake" Progress KuKu's, 5 p.m., Student Union KKK (KU Kamera Klub). 7:30 p.m. Activity Lounge. Student Union. Color slide competition. Bring 10 slides. All interested people invited. Foreign students meeting, 7 p.m., Jayhawk Room. Student Union. Topic for discussion; foreign student festival for 1957. Newman Club executive meeting, 7.30 p.m. Old and new officers will please attend. Studio Theater, 8 p.m. Student Union Ballroom. "Doctor In Spite of Himself." THURSDAY Deutscher Verein, 5 Uhr Donnerstag, 402 Fraser. Oesterreichisches Program mit Lichbildern und Musik. Alle will- kommen! Poetry Hour, 4 p.m. Music & Browsing in the Library Crafton reads The Trollean Women. Les membres du Cercle Francais assisteront a la representation du Medecin Malgré Lui jeudi soir. La reunion requille-nature naura pas lieu. KU-Y Mexico trip meeting, 7:30 p.m. 306 C. Student Union. KU-Y Advisory Board meeting, 8 p.m. Pine Room, Student Union. American Society of Tool Engineers field trip, 6 p.m., from Fowler Shops, or 5 p.m. at Plint Site. To TWA Overland site. Sign list in Fowler before Friday. FRIDAY University Daily Kansam Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. Museum of Art museum. Stravinsky: "The Rake's Progress." Studio Theater, 8 p.m. Student Union Ballroom. "Doctor In Spite of Himself." Dr. Bee's role is not to give advice, but to extend supportive and diagnostic assistance. He lets people talk themselves out and look at their problem more objectively, considering all the angles. The official state tree of Arkansas is the pine because 51 per cent of the forest land in the state is in pine. The most prevalent problems on the campus in regard to marriage are inter-faith marriages and the old question, "is this love or infatuation?" Religious faith is an important part of a person's life and when two people have decidedly opposite views regarding it, it is sometimes difficult to reconcile them after marriage. Though they may seem less important in the first light of love and fascination, these differences loom larger as time goes on. The question of love or infatuation is important, too. The answer usually hinges not on whether a person is old enough, but whether he is mature enough to marry. Other problems come up such as parental objection for one reason or another, finances, the desire of a couple to determine their future compatability and the time to marry. If a person needs help emotionally, Dr. Bee will refer him or her to some place like the Guidance Bureau or Student Health Service. Whatever the problem, Dr. Bee's willingness just to listen and let you talk is help enough in itself, for no problem seems really so insurmountable when you can talk about it to a third person. Students interested in receiving a commission in the Marine Corps Reserve or wanting information on their present military training obligations, should see Capt. William C. Drumright, of the U. S. Marine Corps, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday in the Student Union. USE KANSAN WANT ADS Want A Marine Commission? Marine Corps officer programs offer commissions only to college graduates. Members of the platoon leaders class train during two 6-week summer training periods and receive a commission upon graduation. Seniors and graduates may apply through the officer candidate course for a Marine Corps commission. Journalism Seniors Will Meet Sunday Seniors in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information will meet with Burton W. Marvin, dean of the school, and Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism and director of job placements for the school. The meeting concerning job placements will be 3 p. m. Sunday, 205 Flint. Tuesday, Feb. 26. 1957 Not all interviews present the same difficulties. A University Daily Kansan reporter interviewing Dr. Allan Ralph Barr, assistant professor of entomology, recently found himself and the entomologist locked in the Research Animal House mosquito laboratory. Shout Way To Freedom Not wishing to spend the night with the mosquitoes, the pair looked for a way out. A window in the door could have been broken, but they hesitated because they did not know the fine for destroying University property. Loud knocks on the door by Dr. Barr, supplemented by loud shouts from the reporter, finally brought the campus police who made a daring rescue. Professors' Assn. Dinner Tonight Reports on the KU counseling services and faculty participation in University government will be presented at a dinner meeting of the KU chapter of the American Assn. of University Professors. The dinner will be at 6 p. m. in the Kansan Room of the Student Union. The report on participation in government will be a survey of what the association has done in the past and the report on counseling will cover the past two years at KU. AUTO PARTS AND TIRES New or Used Auto Wrecking and Junk Co. East end of 9th St. VI 3-0956 What a man uses on his face is important CHOOSE QUALITY SHAVE WITH Old Spice Rich, creamy quality for shaving comfort and skin health. New formula Old Spice Shaving Creams in giant tubes: Brushless .60 Lather .65 Old Spice aerosol Smooth Shave 1.00 SHULTON NEW YORK · TORONTO formula Old Spice BRUSHLESS SHULTON formula Old Spice LATHER SHULTON Old Spice SMOOTH SHAVE LION Gentlemen! Gentlemen! Don't tear your hair The clothes you wear Need INDEPENDENT Care! INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS 740 Vt. 1241 Oread 1903 Mass. K Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 26, 1957 Phi Gam Takes C Basketball Crown; Sweeps All Divisions Phi Gamma Delta won the basketball C championship Monday afternoon by nosing out the Navy, 29-27. This gave the Phi Gams a sweep of the A, B and C crowns. It was a defensive battle all the way, with both teams holding the ball for periods of up to two minutes, waiting for the opponents to make a mistake. Navy was by far the most deliberate in their style of play, and at the end of the first quarter the Navy strategy was working, as they held a 9-5 lead. But Phi Gam switched its defense from a zone to a man for man during the second quarter and this resulted in sharper defensive play and increased rebounding power. With just minutes remaining in the second period, forward Ed Dolson pumped in a long set shot to put Ph Gam ahead to stay. The score at the end of the first half was 13-11 in favor of Ph Gam. Third Quarter Even The third quarter was a see-saw affair with Phi Gam hitting a hot streak in the first few minutes and taking a 19-12 lead. But Navy warmed up and brought the score to 21-18 at the end of the third quarter. Phi Gam guard Steve Bunten outmaneuvered the Navy defense to score an easy layup. Then Navy committed a lane violation in bringing the ball in bounds. This gave Phi Gam a four point lead and possession of the ball. Both teams caught fire in the fourth quarter and started hitting well from the outside. With three minutes remaining in the game Navy was only two points behind and were in striking position, but two mistakes hurt them. Go Into Stall With these two factors in their favor they decided to hold the ball and go into a stall. Navy obtained possession once and scored but this wasn't enough. Kentucky Wants NCAA Revenge Coach Adolph Rupp's dream of another NCAA basketball championship got another chance to come true today when his Kentucky Wildcats won a berth in the big post-season tournament. For the 12th time in the last 14 years Kentucky was crowned champ of the Southeastern Conference Monday night when it clinched first place with a 103-85 romp over Auburn. The title qualifies the Wildcats for a March 15 first game date in the NCAA carnival. Back four years ago when Kentucky was suspended from court competition for a year by the NCAA. Rupp, the "baron of the blue grass," said he'd never rest until Kentucky received a title trophy "from the man who suspended us." Marvin Heads Committee Burton W. Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information has been elected chairman of the accrediting committee for the American Council on Education for Journalism at the annual spring meeting in New Orleans last week. Dean Marvin is now chairman of that group and his new chairmanship will begin June 1. Cornell University maintains fulltime anthropological stations in India, Thailand, Peru, Nova Scotia and New Mexico. Do Jayhawk Men Know Their Women? Who Is The U.S.'s M.C.? Bunten and Dolson were high for the winners with eight points each. Navy was led by Dick Adam, also with eight points. This game ended the intramural basketball season. Kansas State Stays Close Behind KU Kansas State's fast-breaking Wildcats kept the form chart running for a showdown with Kansas for the Big Seven crown with a 78-71, victory over Missouri in a rough and tumble game at Columbia Monday night. Oklahoma, playing at home, overcame Nebraska, 55-53, but still couldn't move out of the cellar. The Sooners have a 2-7 mark and Nebraska is 3-7. Missouri is better at 4-7. Kansas State, which facas another big hurdle at Iowa State Saturday, has an 8-2 Kansas' league record is 8-1. TOPEKA, Kan.—(UP)—Harness racing will return to the Kansas Free Fair in Topeka next September after a 13-year layoff, Secretary Maurice Fager said Monday. Purses totaling $5,500 will be available for the three days of race, Sept. 9-11. Swarness Racing To Return Wheat is grown on more of the world's acreage than any other crop. KANSAS CITY, Mo. - (UP) Three more of the 13 players obtained by the Kansas City Athletics from the Yankees have come to terms, but the A's were still looking today for contracts from pitchers Tom Morgan and Maury McDermott. Three A's Come To Terms About 73 per cent of all American families own automobiles. BIRD TV-Radio Service 808 Mass. VI 3-8855 A denijohn is a large, narrow-necked bottle of glass or stoneware that is enclosed in wickerwork. UNDERWOOD'S CRAFTS GIFTS HOBBIES MIX ICE 9:AM. TILL 10:PM. 1215 W. 6th Ph.Vl-3-5281 Live Modern! Pick the Pack that Suits You Best! New! Crush proof L&M BOX (COSTS NO MORE) L&M FILTERS LIOGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. Handy L&M PACK (KING & REGULAR) THE MIRACLE TIP L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. HAY WALSH MISS BARBARA GIBSON On some occasions the Crush-proof box is a natural. Other times the pack will suit you better. You are free to choose . . . only when you smoke modern L&M. Smoke modern L&M and always get full exciting flavor ...PLUS THE PURE WHITE MIRACLE TIP With L&M...and only L&M... can you pick the pack that suits you best. And only L&M gives you the flavor...the full, exciting flavor that makes L&M AMERICA'S FASTEST-GROWING CIGARETTE MJT K P Co booos week State Dick Okla fereg paige home Ba play coach for first- point first- Nort lead 19 1 © 1957 LACETTE & METERS TOBACCO CO. Kansas Still In Second Place In UP Rankings NEW YORK—(UP)—The North Carolina Tar Heels, needing only victories over Wake Forest tonight and Duke Friday night to complete a perfect regular-season basketball campaign, led the runner-up Kansas Jayhawkers by a wide margin today in the United Press ratings. Kentucky (20-4) held third place and Southern Methodist (19-3) remained fourth. Coach Frank McGuires Tar Heels boosted their record to 22-0 last week by defeating North Carolina State and South Carolina. Coach Dick Harp's Jayhawkers whipped Oklahoma and Nebraska but suffered their second loss of the campaign when they bowed to Oklahoma A & M. U. C. L. A. (20-2) took sole possession of fifth place after sharing it with Bradley last week. Seattle (20-2) advanced from seventh to sixth. Bradley (18-4) drew a first-place vote for the first time this season but slipped from fifth to eighth. California (17-3) remained ninth and Louisville (18-5) slipped from eight to 10th while receiving the other first-place vote. Basing their ballots on games played through Feb. 23, the 35 coaches who rate the teams weekly for the UP gave North Carolina 29 first-place votes and a total of 344 points. Kansas (18-2) received four first-place votes and 300 points. North Carolina thus had a 44-point lead after leading Kansas by only 19 last week. North Carolina needs only two victories to round out an undefeated regular campaign but they could be tough tests because both are road games. The Tar Heels play Wake Forest tonight at Winston-Salem, N.C., and Duke at Durham, N.C. Friday night. Kansas has only one game this week, visiting Colorado Saturday night. Indiana (13-6) was the only newcomer in the top 10, advancing from 11th to seventh. Iowa State dropped from 10th to 14th following its Saturday night loss to Kansas State. Tar Heels Need Two Kentucky received 241 points and Southern Methodist 214. Then came U.C.L.A., 145; Seattle; Indiana, 105; Bradley, 92; California, 89; and Louisville, 65. Michigan State headed the second 10 with 29 points. St. Louis and Kansas State tied for 12th. Iowa State was 14th, while West Virginia and Vanderbilt tied for 15th. Brigham Young was 17th and Dayton 18th. Notre Dame, Oklahoma City University and Ohio State tied for 19th. Points are distributed on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis for votes from first to 10th place. Thirty-four schools were mentioned on the ballots this week. Entries Due For Men's Volleyball Volleyball is the next team sport sponsored by the intramural department. There will be Fraternity A, B, and C Division competition and Independent A and B Division competition. Each Fraternity may enter one A, one B, and as many C teams as they wish. In the Independent Division, each dormitory may enter one A and as many B teams as they wish. The deadline date for all volleyball entries is 4 p. m. Friday. A meeting for volleyball managers will be held at 4:30 p.m., Friday in 202 Robinson Gym. Volleyball competition will begin March 5. All members are urged to organize their teams now and start practice sessions immediately. The percentage of disposable income spent for drug preparations today is about one-fourth less than it was in 1939, reports the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U. S. Department of Labor. YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2968 Tri Delts Win IM Volleyball The Tri Delta defeated Sellards 45 to 34 Monday night in Robinson Gym to win the women's intramural volleyball championship. Both teams had trouble scoring early in the game. Neither team was able to gain substantial lead. Then the Tri Delta took control of the ball and at the half led 23 to 14. Tuesday, Feb 26, 1957 University Daily Kannan Page 8 In the second half, Sellards seriously threatened the Tri Delt lead several times, but was never able to get ahead. Mary Walterscheid, Coffeyville senior, led the Tri Delta in scoring. Peggy Peterson, Independence, Mo, sophomore, topped Sellards. DETROIT — (UP) — Detroit knocked Wichita completely out of the Missouri Valley Conference race with an 82-75 victory Monday night. Detroit Tops Wichita To Ruin Title Hopes However, the game was tight all the way with the lead changing hands more than 15 times. The contest was decided in the last 11 minutes when Detroit outscored Wichita, 19-8, after Wichita was ahead, 67-63. Doeskin gloves are named for the female deer because centuries ago the softest gloves were made in France from the skin of that animal. Today the skins are provided by baby lambs raised on French hillsides expressly for glove-making. Swimmers Meet E-State Today The Jayhawker swimming team will attempt to even their record at 4-4 when they face the Emporia State Hornets at Emporia today. KU has already defeated the Hornets 60-23 this year in a meet in Lawrence. The Jayhawkers are heavily favored to make it two in a row over the Emporia squad. Coach Chuck Edwards said, "I expect to win the match, even though the Emporia pool is narrower than ours and will be somewhat of a handicap." This is Emporia's first year of varsity swimming competition. The Hornets started the season without any experienced swimmers, but they have been improving rapidly. After today's match the Jayhawkers face the tough Nebraska Cornhuskers Saturday in their last dual meet of the season. Nebraska, K-State and Kansas are expected to battle for third place behind the defending champion Oklahoma Sooners and the strong Iowa State Cyclones in the Big Seven meet March 8-9. Today's meet with Emporia could give the Jayhawkers a chance to uncover some extra depth which has been needed all season and which will be necessary if they hope to subdue the Huskers Saturday. HOUSTON—(UP)—Arnold Palmer said today he "got all the breaks" over a mud-torn Memorial Park course as the front-runners faded and Palmer came from four strokes back with a three-under par 69 Monday to win the $36,000 Houston Open. Palmer Wins Houston Open According to the Veterans Administration, patients undergoing treatment for tuberculosis read about 58 books per year, or more books than all other types of patients combined. Why can't that Weatherman make up his Mind! Why can't that Weatherman make up his Mind! Well, Winter's back it seems! But you aren't the only one feeling the chill, friend. Your car has to adjust to the sudden change, too. Give that car an even break. Both Standard Gasolines, Standard White Crown Premium and Red Crown Regular, contain De-Icer - at no extra cost to you. Blended in at the refinery, De-Icer positively prevents gas line freeze! In cold weather, De-Icer in Standard Gasolines costs no more -- at LEONARD STANDARD SERVICE 706 W. 9th VI 3-9830 Use the Kansan Classified Want Ad Section to Get Best Results. WESTINGHOUSE INTERVIEWS FOR ENGINEERS & SCIENTISTS MARCH 7, 8 In this one diversified company, you can do the kind of work you prefer . . in the field of your choice. There's plenty of room to move around—and up! ★ See your placement officer and set up an appointment now! YOU CAN BE SURE...IF IT'S Westinghouse Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Feb. 26, 1952 A Lot Of Reading A 22-Mile High Book Store Grow A Mile A Year Imagine a stack 22 miles high and growing at the rate of about a mile a year—that should give you an idea of how many books Watson Library has. The 700,000 volumes in the building some of you should be more familiar with would form a stack looming about 22 miles into the stratosphere, give or take a few miles, figuring an average of two inches of thickness for each book. $ \textcircled{*} $ And as the library adds about 3,000 volumes a month, the stack would grow at the rate of about a mile a year. Or if you want to look at it another way, the 700,000 volumes mean about 80 for every student at KU. Rare Book Collection That 700,000-volumes figure cited by Robert Vosper, director of libraries, includes several rare book collections. The 20,000 volumes Robert Ellis collection on ornithology and the history of science is considered the "finest collection of its kind in private hands in North America." Mr. Vosper said. Other collections include some early printed books in modern English literature and some of the finest books, printed in Kansas about the history of Kansas. These rare and valuable books are available to students, but, because of their fragility and cost, they are asked to use them only in the library. The library in collecting books conducts an extensive international business. It does business with countries in Europe, South and Central America and Asia. In the past few months some books have been coming from Russia and Communist China. Library Has Problems A library of this size is not without its problems. Mr. Vosper said the two most frequent ones, common in all libraries, are the mutilation or disappearance of books. "Students do not seem to realize that some of the books are not replaceable," he said. The library would like to keep all the books out on open shelves where they would be easier for students to get. However, books with good pictures or which are required reading in large classes are too tempting, Mr. Vosper said. When the Western Civilization discussion group plan began and students had more pressure on them to do the required readings, hundreds of books disappeared from the library, he explained. Paper-Back Books Suggested The library suggested to the Western Civilization department that the students in the program buy the readings in paper-back volumes, Mr. Vosper said. This saves time for both the library and students. Sitting down to read a book on microfilm would be like sitting down to watch television, Mr. Vosper said. A new system which Mr. Vosper said he believes may in time come into widespread use is micro-reproduction. Books are filmed on microfilm and dozens can be stored in much less room than books take now. Civil Engineers To Meet March 8 The effect of heavy loads on concrete pavement will be one of the topics discussed at the seventh annual Soil Mechanics and Foundation Engineering Conference March 8 at KU. One hundred civil engineers are expected to attend. Conference speakers will be E. J. Yoder, associate professor of civil engineering, Purdue University; W. S. Housel, professor of civil engineering, University of Michigan; Howard McMasters of Woodward, Clyde and Associates, Omaha, Nebr., and Charles J. Berkel, regional manager, Intrusion Prepakt, Inc., Kansas City, Mo. Dartmouth College split even in its 1882 football campaign which had an international flavor—bating McGill of Canada, 5-0, using American rules one half and Canadian rules the second. Dartmouth then lost to Harvard in its only game against an American opponent. Professor Attends Concrete Institute Clayton M. Crosier, associate professor of civil engineering, is attending the annual meeting of the American Concrete Institute in Dallas. Tex. today through Thursday. The meeting concerns the technical developments in the field of concrete and reinforced concrete structures. A short paper by Prof. Crosier appeared in the December, 1956 issue of the Journal of the American Concrete Institute. It deals with special problems in the bond between concrete and reinforcing steel. What's the boy-girl ratio on this campus: two to one?" a blonde freshman asked recently. "I certainly haven't seen my two fellows." Will Spring Be Inspiration Enough? "I wonder where they're hiding," her friend teased. "There does seem to have been a slump in dating since before finals." "We haven't had any hour dances or exchange dinners later," said the blonde. "The boys at KU sit back and wait for you to make the first move. They just don't know how to flirt." "I hope spring inspires them," sighed her friend. Two guest speakers will address the senior class in Drugstore Problems Wednesday in Malott Hall. Pharmacy Seniors To Hear Speakers They are C. W. Gustafson, personnel director of the Parkview Drug Co., who will speak on chain store management, and Bernard Lambert, Lawrence pharmacist, who will speak on franchise operation. Fifty-three men were searching for the fashion and society section of Sunday's Kansas City Star Sunday afternoon. All other sections of the paper could be found but the society section was missing. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. Mu Phi Epsilon Elects Officers Now See Who Likes Society Mary Jo Woofter, Colby senior, has ben elected president of Mu Phi Epsilon, honorary fraternity for women in music. Other officers are Kathryn Ehlers, Kansas City, Mo. junior, vice president; Marva Lou Powell, Topeka sophomore, corresponding secretary; Kathryn Meredith, Joplin, Mo. senior, recording secretary; Mary Jo Pugh, Ferguson, Mo. junior, treasurer. Mary Nason, Topeka sophomore, rush chairman; Sara Jane Hopkins, Boonville, Mo. sophomore, historian; Creta Carter, Lawrence sophomore, chaplain; Martha Crowley, Pittsburg sophomore, warden; Joyce Nehrbass, Lawrence junior, chorister and Beverly Runkle, Pittsburg junior, alumni secretary. The trucking industry ranks second to agriculture as the nation's largest employer of labor. More than seven million persons are directly employed by the industry. Why the sudden interest in society news? Were they looking for women's swimming suit ads? No. The men were looking for a feature article about their house and their cooking which was placed, much to their disgust, in the society section. The article told about the scholarship hall system and used Battenfeld Hall as an example. The article had pictures of the men at work in the new kitchen at Battenfield, which was the gift of Mrs. Edward Hashinger of Kansas City. Mo. A recreation program for young adults and married couples is being planned by the Recreation Commission. The second meeting will be held at the Community Building at 7 p.m. Wednesday. Recreation Planned For Young Adults The project will provide recreational activities for a group not served previously by an organized program. People in Lawrence and vicinity, 19 through 35, may attend. It is planned that the group will meet twice monthly. Sticklers! LUCKY STRIKE IT'S TOASTED CIGARETTES WHAT IS A LUCKY AT DUSK? (SEE PARAGRAPH AT RIGHT) ASTRONOMERS! Long sunsets make you impatient? Do you hate standing around, twirling your telescope, waiting for dark? Cheer up . . . now you can fill that gap! Take out your Luckies—and you're in for a Twilight Highlight! Luckies are out of this world when it comes to taste. That's because a Lucky is all cigarette . . . nothing but fine, mild, naturally good-tasting tobacco that's TOASTED to taste even better. Light up a Lucky yourself. You'll say it's the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked! STUCK FOR DOUGH? START STICKLING! MAKE $25 Si We'll pay $25 for every Stickler we print—and for hundreds more that never get used! So start Stickling—they're so easy you can think of dozens in seconds! Sticklers are simple riddles with two-word rhyming answers. Both words must have the same number of syllables. (Don't do drawings.) Send 'em all with your name, address, college and class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 674, Mount Vernon, N. Y. WHAT IS AN ANGRY BUTCHER? Cleaver Heaver JAMES POWELL: ALABAMA WHAT IS A WOLF IN SHEEP'S CLOTHING? Sham Lamb HOLLY JENNINGS, U. OF N. CAROLINA WHAT IS A NOISY POLITICAL MEETING? VOTE FOR DON'T VOTE! Raucous Caucus JAMES BUTLER, BOSTON COLL. WHAT IS FAKE CLASSICAL MUSIC? Mock Bach AMNE FELL, OKLAHOMA WHAT IS A HOPPED-UP GONDOLA? Venice Menace MARTNA BACHNER. RADCLIFFE WHAT IS A HUG IN HOLLAND? Dutch Clutch CAROL POST. COLL. OF THE SEQUOIAS WHAT IS A BAD-NEWS TELEGRAM! TELEGRAM Dire Wire W. L. GARNER. IOWA LIGHT splash in poc day e David 25 word Luckies Taste Better REGEN in car Omega Peggy "IT'S TOASTED" TO TASTE BETTER . . . CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER! TYPI'S papers; tion; f 1911 TAILO TAILOITIONS Also c-36557. TYPI'S Immece VI 3:5 TYPI's tary wheses. lar ra' TYPI's service pers. Maine. TYPI'S report rates. Ave. EXPE type Fast wins race. YOUNG evening Drive- @A.T. Co. PRODUCT OF The American Tobacco Company AMERICA'S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTES Ideal Pract Lang --- Tuesday, Feb. 26, 1957 University Daily Hansen Page 7 re ung being mis- be g at rea- not uized and tend. will CLASSIFIED ADS 25 words or less: one day, 50;c three days, 75;c five days, $1.06. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ad must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. LOST REGENCY TRANSISTOR RADIO, Gray, in carrying case. Lost in Alpha Chi Omega parking lot. Finder please call Peggy Garrison, Ph. VI 3-7600. Revw 21 LIGHT GRAY TOPCOAT with blue splash weave. Contains important keys to school bag and Student Union School day evening. Renewal for finder. Call David Laney, N1 3-6827. Call 2-28 HELP WANTED TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf YOUNG MAN for grill work. Part-time evenings and week-ends. Blue Hills Drive-In, VI 3-2098. 3-1 BUSINESS SERVICES TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's' and women's' clothes Also drapes and slip covering. Call Vl 3-6575, 1106 La. tf TYPIST ... Fast, accurate, neat service. Immediate attention to all typing. Call VI 3-3732. 2-27 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for these, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine. Phone VI 3-7654. tf TYPIST. Skilled in theses, term papers, reports. Fast, accurate, and reliable. Perform work at regular rates. Mrs. Betty Barker, 1935 Banker Ave. Phone VI 3-2001. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Would like to type theses, term papers, reports, etc. and accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. John Norrist, 1609 Term. race. 3-4 RENT A TAPE RECORDER Ideal for Skits, Parties, Dances. Practicing Speech and Foreign Languages. Recording tapes & accessories. HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP FOR SALE TUBE FREE with the purchase of practically new (only 250 miles) 650x16 Goodrich tire, price only $25. VI 3-1505 after 5 p.m. 2-26 TIME, LIFE & Sports Illustrated magazines. Special students' prices of $3 reg. sub. rate. Prompt service, buy now pay later, call VI 3-0124. tf LIVE GIFTS--Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas—complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs, cats, manatees, dolphins, bananas, fish, turtles, chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921 BEVERAGES- All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent close-up paper bags. Plastic, party supplies 1- Plant, 4th and Vermont. Phone v=13750. BRAND NEW CANON CAMERA with complete outfit. Leather case, lens hood, filter, self-timer, and flash unit. f/1.5 lens. Low price. Call Kofuji VI. 3I-8437. COCKER PUPPIES, AKC registered, 2 months old. Brown, blond, or parti-colored. Also one grown male. Exceptionally nice for pets, show or breeding stock.. See at 345 Mississippi St. Phone VI 3-2760. 3-4 WESTINGHOUSE REFRIGERATOR. 4 cubic feet. Used, works fine. Phone VI 3-4243 or see at 1428 Ohio after 6 pm. Parties, Pinnings, Weddings Job Application Photos FOR RENT Gene's Photo Service 2144 Ohio - VI 3-0933 Gene Smoyer FIRED OF WALKING UP 'THE HILL? Two rooms for boys one-half block from the union. Phone privileges. Available to phone. VI形 3-5796 or see tf 1234 La. We rent nationwide trailers any size, anywhere, anytime CROFT TRAILER RENTAL CO. East 23rd VI 3-7377 NICELY FURNISHED APARTMENT. 4 rooms, first floor, available now. Fire place, full basement, garage. In west location. Couple only. Call VI 3-5780. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results LARGE. QUIET ROOM FOR MEN- single or double. Half block from Student Union. Linens furnished and lau- dered. Room service. Available im- mediately. 1218 Mississippi. VI 3-869 0.09 LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students up to $500.00 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. 833½ Mass. Phone VI 3-8074 for 1 day service BOOKS For gifts and for your own library. Art, Architecture, Cook Books, Childrens Books, Modern THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 THREE ROOM UNFURNISHED APARTMENT. Very clean, good closets, range, refrigerator, built-ins, furnace heat: Private entrance. Close-in. Utilities paid. Child accepted. Reasonable. Phone VI 3-7636 or VI 3-2055. 3-4 HAPPY HAL'S NEWLY DECORATED well furnished; large sleeping room, private entrance; phone, steam heat. Near KU and bus line. Reasonable rates. VI 3-0103. 2-28 E. 253d St—Ph. VI 3-9753 For Your Convenience NEW HOURS Students and Faculty Trip insurance with personal baggage coverage 7 a.m. - MIDNIGHT 7 Days A Week Steaks Chicken - Bar-B-Q The Barlow Agency 910 Mass. Vi 3-2455 AAA Memberships Available. RECORD IT YOURSELF! Tape Recorders Rent Sale HIXON'S 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 MISCELLANEOUS BOARDERS WANTED. Good food, family style, reasonable rates, % block from Union. Call between 5 and 7. VI 3-2565. Nuigma Nus 1241 La. 2-28 SPECIAL: 10 pounds clothes washed, spin dried, 65c. Same amount finished. 75c. Handicapped lady. Phone VI 3-0535 after 6 p.m. 3-1 TRANSPORTATION TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. Visit www.skycoach.com. National Bank for information for itineraries and reservations. 8th & Mass. Phone VI 3-0152. tf Have your car lubricated the MOTO-SWAY WAY POTTER'S "66" SERVICE 1401 W. 6th VI 3-9891 Do Jayhawk Men Know Their Women? Who Is The U.S.'s M.C.? L. G. BALFOUR CO. Fraternity Jewelers - Fraternity Badges—Rings—Novelties - Personalized Mugs and Ceramics - Trophies and Awards 411 West 14th Al Lauter Phone VI 3-1571 Positions For 1957 ENGINEERING EXPOSITION GENERAL CHAIRMAN & PUBLICITY MANAGER Are Now Open APPLICATIONS DUE 12:00 NOON,THURSDAY,FEB.28 * Dean Carr's Office - Marvin Hall ENGINEER COUNCIL WILL SELECT POSITION FOR THE 1957 EXPOSITION Page 8 University Daily Kansas Tuesday, Feb. 26, 1957 [Image] A person reaching up to grab a container. The background is blurry and indistinct. SOUP'S ON—Mrs. Gerald Raw, assistant to William H. Williams, catering service director of the Student Union, is busily preparing for one of the many banquets in the kitchen on third floor of the Union. Steaks, Salads, Parfaits For 8 To 800 Is Their Job Keeping the parfaits frozen and the salads from wilting is all part of the job, said William H. Williams, catering manager for the Student Union. Just before a large banquet, Mr. Williams found that the refrigerator had gone off during the night and all the parfaits had melted. The only thing to do was to make 30 new perfaults in 20 minutes, he said, and "we did it." Able To Serve 899 The Student Union catering service is able to serve from 8 to 800 guests at a meal. Most of them are students, faculty, alumni and their various organizations. The catering service serves breakfasts, lunches, suppers, teas and student wedding receptions. They also serve Saturday buffets in the ballroom for the University public after football games. They employ, beside Mr. Williams, two full time women, who prepare deserts and salads for the dinners, five part time waiters and waitresses, and about 40 girls from Haskell Institute who wait tables. And 200 Were Waiting Before desert once, at a lunch with 200 guests, the five student waiters and waitresses put on their coats to go to their classes. Mr. Williams said he had forgotten that the students would have to leave at that time. Some of the other Union employees helped him out and they finished the dinner without further complication. Salads, deserts, and steaks are prepared in the kitchen catering service on third floor of the Union. All other food is prepared by the Student Union cafeteria. Commencement is a big time for the catering service when they serve about 800 people in smaller rooms throughout the day and 800 in the Ballroom that night. A NEW TRIUMPH FOR WHAT-A-GUY WAYNE! M-G-M PRESENTS IN METROCOLOR JOHN WAYNE DAN DAILEY MAUREEN O'HARA THE WINGS OF EAGLES in premiere WARD BOND NOW Ends Wednesday GRANADA M-G-M PRESENTS IN METROCOLOR JOHN WAYNE DAN DAILEY MAUREEN O'HARA THE WINGS OF EAGLES WARD BOND Engineer To Discuss Municipal Problems "Professional Engineers and the Municipal Problems Facing Them," will be the topic of a talk by C. K. Mathews, partner of Burns and McDonnell Engineering Co., Kansas City, Mo., at a meeting of the American Society of Civil Engineers at 7:30 p.m. in 306 Student Union. Mr. Mathews is a member of the American Waterworks Assn. and has an honorary membership in the KU chapter of ASCE. USE KANSAN WANT ADS VARSITY Open 6:30 p.m. weekdays 3 Engineers Attend Meeting Three members of the faculty of the Engineering School are attending annual meeting of the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and Petroleum Engineers in New Orleans this week. NOW Ends Wed. "Best Picture of the Year" General Federation of Women's Clubs! PRESENTED BY TREK KATHARINE LANCASTER HEPBURN HAWTHORN THE RAINMAKER TECHNICOLOR VISTAVISION Feat. Tonie at 7:00-9:15 Plus: "Magoo Color Cartoon" Charles Fisher Weinaug, professor of petroleum engineering, left Friday and will return Wednesday. Kenneth Eugene Rose, professor of metallurgical engineering, and Hubert E. Risser, instructor of mining, engineering, left Saturday and will return this weekend. Comfort! Convenience! JAY HAWKERS NEW POP UP CUSHIONED CHAIRS Dr. Weinaug is attending the meeting as the representative of the Kansas section of the AIME. He will tour oil operations in the Gulf of Mexico by helicopter, plane, and shore boats, as the guest of California Co. Dr. Rose is attending the meeting as a member of the paper and publications committee of the mineral industries educational division. Dr. Risser will give a paper on "Some Basic Industrial Trends and Their Economic Influence on the Bituminous Coal Industry." TEENAGERS IN TURMOIL The Delinquents Released through UNITED ARTISTS Pershing Rifles Elects Officers Comfort! Convention! JAYHAWKER NEW Fashion Bout CUSHIONED CHAIRS Open 6:45 p.m. Weekdays NOW Ends Wed. TEENAGERS IN TURMOIL! The Delinguents Released thru UNITED ARTISTS New staff officers for Pershing Rifles were elected Thursday. The officers will take command of the company at a commissioning dance April 12. Feat. Tonite at 7:20-8:55 "Sallow The Leader" Cartoon Latest World News New officers are Robert E. Lied, Overland Park sophomore, company commander; Allan D. Smith, Lawrence junior, executive officer; Phillip Rankin, Prairie Village sophomore, public information officer. Tom Kennedy, St. Joseph, Mo. sophomore, personnel officer; Robert Nebrig, Leavenworth freshman, operations and training officer, and James Barbour, Independence Mo., junior, supply officer. One of the top tourist attractions at Garden City is the buffalo herd on the 2,600-acre preserve south of the city. housewives compete simultaneously with housewives in Olney, England, on Shrove Tuesday. During the 51 day season in 1866, 10,937 deer were killed in New Hampshire. Town & Country Shoes ... come out, come out, wherever you are and go walking in these marvelous walk-on-air wonders. They're favorites in comfort and style. America's Best Fashion Shoe Value. Bucks 8.95 Corkette 9.95 Sizes 4 A's to B's 3½ to 11 Bucks 8.95 Corkette 9.95 Sizes 4 A's to B's 3½ to 11 Royal College Shop A 17th Century Romp in "The Round" Opening Tomorrow— The Studio Theatre's Presentation of Moliere's February 27 & 28 March1&2 Student Union Ballroom The Doctor In Spite of Himself Students admitted by ID cards. Seats may be reserved now at the Union Ticket Center or by calling Ext. 469. III III III 1958 New Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 54th Year, No. 94 Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1957 I will do my best to ensure that the text is accurately preserved in this image. If there are any errors, please contact me directly for correction. The image contains three individuals standing side by side against a plain background. From left to right, the first person has long hair and is wearing a dark coat with a wide collar. The second person is also wearing a dark coat but appears slightly shorter than the first. The third person has short hair and is wearing a dark dress with a white collar. —(Daily Kansan photo) girls were selected by the chairmen of Rock Chalk Revue committees from entries submitted by the organized women's houses. The girls will introduce some of the in-between acts at the Rock Chalk Revue. ROCK CHALK GIRLS-Jane Idol, Robinson sophomore; Diana Guyot, Arkansas City junior; Polly Peppercorn, Lawrence junior, and Annette Willis, Wichita freshman, have been chosen to appear on the Rock Chalk Revue program. The Oregon Vacation Available To KU Scholarship Winner A week's vacation in a cabin on the slopes of Mount Hood in Oregon awaits the University student making the greatest improvement in scholarship between the fall and spring semesters. Owen Edgar, Truman Harding, and Mrs. Gertrude Beaty, proprietors of the Acme Bachelor Laundry and Dry Cleaners, and Simon Hurwitz, owner of the Lawrence Sanitary Milk and Ice Cream Co., are sponsoring this scholarship improvement award. The cabin is located two miles from Rhodedendron, Ore., and 40 miles southeast of Portland. Facilities include living room, three bedrooms, toilet, shower, firelace, combination wood and electric range, electric hot water, and refrigerator. The winner also will receive $100 toward transportation costs and $50 toward the costs of meals. He may have guests with the consent of the award sponsors. Any University student may enter if he or she earns grades for twelve or more semester credit hours in both the fall and spring semesters of the current year. A 1.5 grade point average must be earned for the spring semester. Basis of selection will be the greatest improvement in grade point average from the fall semester to the spring semester. In case of tie, the student earning credit for the greater number of credit hours will win. Entries in the contest will consist of two parts. The first, a self- nomination, must be filed with the Aids and Awards office, 222 Strong Hall, by May 10. The second part, a report of fall and spring semester grades, must be submitted to the office by June 8. Entry blanks may be obtaine from route men of the companies sponsoring the award and at the Aids and Awards office. Nuclear Research Project Receives $23,000 Grant The National Science Foundation has made a grant of $23,300 to the University for the support of a 2-year research project in the field of nuclear physics. L. W. Seagondollar, associate professor of physics, is directing the project. During the course of his experiments, Dr. Seagondollar hopes to find additional information that may be applied to the general problem of determining how nuclei are constructed. The grant will be used to partially support the operation of the Van de Graaf generator, or some new equipment and for the salaries of the graduate research assistants who will work with Dr. Seagadollar. The assistants are Joseph A. Weods, Onaga; William A. Glass, Winfield; Heitor Souza, Brazil; Lakchmann Ruhagan, India; and Lars Kaid, Norway. All are graduate students in physics. The work will be done in an underground laboratory in Malott Hall. Eighteen feet of earth over the laboratory shield the building from the X-rays emitted by the generator. The scientists are protected by a concrete wall three feet thick. A radiation pen worm in the shirt pocket measures the amount of radiation received during a day's work, thus enabling the wearer to avoid over-exposure. Liquor Sales Up For Vote Residents of Lawrence will vote on whether to allow the continued sales of package liquor in the city at a general election April 2. The election will be held three days after the University spring vacation berins. University Veterans Elect New Officers The action was taken Tuesday by the City Commission after a petition with 3,211 valid signatures had been filed with the City Clerk. Under the formula set by state law, a little more than 3,000 signatures were needed. Norman E. Blessman, La Cygne sophomore, was elected president of the University Veteran's Organization Monday. To be eligible for the vote, a person must have lived six months in permanent residence and 30 days in a precinct in Lawrence. Students who have given a home address other than Lawrence will not be eligible to vote. Unless the person voted in the November, 1956 election. he must register at the Lawrence City Hall. Other officers are John J. Kiefer, Independence, Mo., vice-president, Richard A. Boehm, St. Petersburg, Fin., secretary, both sophomores, and James L. Herron, Cimarron junior, treasurer. In the 1948 election, Douglas County voted 7,519 to 6,561 to repeal prohibition for the county. In Lawrence the vote was nearly half again as much for repeal of the law. Election observers said the 1948 outcome might have been influenced by the heavy University turnout. More than 20 women will be honored at the dinner sponsored by the Inter-Residence Assn. at 6 tonight in Douthart Hall. The women, chosen on basis of their grade point average of last semester, have the highest scholastic records in their halls. Dinner To Honor Women Today A coed was taking the customary afternoon study break in the Hawk's Nest and was waiting in line at the snack bar for a coke. Halls represented are Sellards, Douthart, Watkins, Miller and the upperclass section of Gertrude Sellards Pearson. That's Important These Days, Too The girl behind the counter asked, "Do you want a 20-cent sundae or a 25-cent one?" She heard the girl in front of her order a hot fudge sundae. "What's the difference?" asked the hungry coed. Fair east this afternoon, partly cloudy west. Partly cloudy tonight and Thursday. A little warmer west and central portions this afternoon, over state tonight and southeast portion. Thursday. Cooler northwest Thursday. Low tonight 20-35. High Thursday 50-55. Weather "The price" the waitress answered blandly. Rifle Teams To Compete In El Paso Meet Members of the combined Army and Air Force ROTC rifle teams left today for El Paso, Tex., to attend the eighth annual Southwest Invitational Small-bore Rifle Meet at Texas Western College Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Eight AFROTC cadets, Army ROTC cadets and three staff members are attending the meet. The cadets are divided into two combined teams of five men each, and the remaining cadets will serve as spotters and rifle handlers. The cadets will stay at Ft. Bliss while attending the meet. They left from Grandview Air Force Base, Grandview, Mo. this morning aboard an Air Force plane. Staff Members To Attend Staff members attending the meet are Capt. Samuel P. Davis, assistant professor of military science; Maj Herbert C. Birkhead, assistant professor of air science, and Sgt. Robert K. Bumpardner, Air Force. Cadets on the Air Force first team are Donald L. Johnson, Hickman Mills, Mo. senior; Larry L. Rice, Hoisington sophomore, and Dan F. Schrepel, Pratt junior. Rifflemen on the army team are Omar G. Conrad, Overland Park junior, and Middleton W. Tompkins, Long Beach, Calif., freshman. Cadets on the Air Force second team are Gerald E. Brown, Kansas City, Mo., Donald W. Catlin, Olathe, Ronald D. Strong, Abilene, freshmen. On the Army team are G. Riekenberg, Topeka junior, and Frank A. Williams. Olathe freshman. Other cadets making the trip are John L. Bourret, Mission sophomore, Peter D. Couture, Osawatomi freshman, Air Force; Arthur H. Ackerman, Fairbury, Neb., freshman, Stanley R. Ausemus, Madison senior, Nicholas W. Classen, El Paso, Tex., junior. Donald N. Johnson, Hays sophomore, Tom J. Knorr, Wichita junior, John N. Maddux, Kansas City Mo., senior. Army. 'Use Persuasion Woodruff Tells Integration Unit "Mixed feelings on methods" to be used by the Group for The Improvement of Human Relations in trying to desegregate Lawrence restaurants were expressed by Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students, at a meeting of the group in the Student Union Tuesday. The dean advised "quiet persuasion" and "non-violence," emphasizing that "overt action might crystalize the few who are against us." Dean Woodruff told a gathering of over 200 that although he was "pleased and amazed beyond measure of the progress we have made in the past six months, I have mixed feelings about where we go from here." "I would hesitate to do anything that smacked of violence," Dean Woodruff said. Situation Greatly Improved Situation Greatly Improved Dean Woodruff said that the segregation situation in Lawrence has improved greatly in recent years after receiving a "serious setback" about 10 year ago because of the quasi-violent activities of a group of University students. Earle A. Cross, Chicago graduate student, said that so far the group has succeeded in persuading "several" Lawrence restaurant owners to serve mixed groups. "We figured that those restaurants had about 100 per cent student tronage." Cross explained, "and that 90 per cent of the student body would get behind us if we could get the group started." Cross said that the most resistance to the efforts of the group has come from restaurants in the business district, but that even in the best restaurants the group has recieved some "encouragement." Cross said the group began at tempting to desegregate the restaurants by sending groups of Negro and white students into the restaurants on the hill. He pointed out that while most of the students may be interested in desegregating the city, some of them display prejudice in their own organized houses. Schulz said that these organizations should aim to strike segregation clauses from their constitutions. Suggests Support James Schultz, Salina junior and president of the All Student Council, suggested that other organizations on the campus support the activities of the Human Relations Group by inaugurating racial education programs. (Related story, "Segregation Made Him Leave Alabama U." Page 9.) ALEXANDRA MARTIN REHEARSING FOR SUNDAY—Bonnie Dinsmore, Oklahoma City, Okla., junior, as the mother, and J. C. Kliewer, Lawrence graduate student as the father, rehearse for "The Prodigal Son" to be presented as a part of the Opera-in-the-Round in the Student Union Ballroom. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday.Feb.27,1957 Can Can American Press Put — Hole In The Great China Wall? A small hole was opened in the great wall which surrounds Red China when Communist China invited 15 American journalists to visit the country last August. But the Bamboo Curtain, which had been opened from the inside for the first time in seven years, was closed from the outside when the State Department quickly plugged the gap by refusing to lift its ban on travel to the Chinese mainland. The group of American newsmen had been invited to spend September in that country, but the U.S. State Department refused to issue visas because China was still holding 10 Americans in violation of an agreement to release all prisoners. The department warned that anyone violating the ban might be subject to two years' imprisonment and $5,000 fine. But three reporters entered Communist China in defiance of the State Department ban. The reporters went to China hoping to get first hand information of the situation in Communist China which would help to guide the United States in its future dealings with this dictatorship which rules more than half a billion people. The State Department is now exploring the possibility of revoking the reporters' passports, in addition to prosecuting all three of them under the 1917 Trading With the Enemy Act. In Secretary of State John Foster Dulles' recent press conference, he implied that Red China would be willing to release the 10 American civilians it now holds prisoner, if the State Department would grant U.S. correspondents permission to travel in China. He said the Department also refused them permission to go on the ground that the United States does not recognize Red China and therefore cannot protect citizens who cross its borders. The State Department's action reveals distrust of the capacity of American reporters to learn and accurately report the truth, and of the American public to make the proper use of what our free press publishes. The newspapers should have the right to gather and disseminate information in all areas of the world. Our governmental freedom should enable American newsmen to travel, at their own risk, for a news-gathering purpose in any country in the world with which the U.S. is not at war. The government should not dictate the limits within which a free press can operate.-Marilyn Mermis University of Kaiser student newpaper weekly, 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912, twigweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 A fully charged storage battery will not freeze up and break. Daily Hansan Extension 251, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented Representing Service 420 Madison Ave., New York, NY; Service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon on during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holi- day on Saturday. Postage as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1916, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Jerry Dawson ... Editorial Editor Jerry Thomas, Jim Tice, Associate Editors. NEWS DEPARTMENT Kent Thomas... Managing Editor John Battin, Fieel Ann Fenberg, Bob Lyle, Betty Jean Stanford, Assistant Managing Editors; Jim Banman, City Editor; Nancy Harmon, LeRoy Zimmerman; Julian Shilonozakki, Telegraph Editor; Mary Beth Neely, Delbert Haley, Assistant Telegraph Editors; Dick Brown, Sports Editor; George Anthan, Assistant Sports Editor; Marilyn Mermis, Sportwriter; Elijah Ashman, Society Editor; John Eaton, Picture Editor. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Dale Bewers ... Business Manager Dave Dickey, Advertising Manager; John Heddle, National Advertising Manager; Harold Classified Advertising Manager; Conbey Brown, Circulation Manager RECORD IT YOURSELF! Tape Recorders Rent Sale HIXON'S 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 HAPPY HAL'S E. 23rd St.—Ph. VI 3-9753 For Your Convenience NEW HOURS 7 a.m. - MIDNIGHT Chicken - Bar-B-Q 7 Days A Week ...Two Cents' Worth... Our good friend Elrod approached us today on the verge of tears. "Why do you approach us on the verge of tears, Erod?" we asked. "Because," he stammered, "being a stalwart brother of the bond of Gamma Delta Iota, I was going to help sod the intramural field March 9." "And has something taken place that you cannot sod said in intra-nural field, our good friend Elrod?" ) "Oh no," he sobbed, "but prithee is not such an otherwise Dawson noble project somewhat tainted when many autos will be encamped on our newly sodded sod lo that same evening?" Elrod proceeded to tell us how the powers that be will park cars on the intramural field lo that same evening when five large fellows from a mountain school come to this noble institution to participate in trivilities with Wilton Chamberlain and commissions "But Elrod," we conjectured, "would it not be possible to alter the project somewhat, so that all that brotherly hard labor will not be for naught?" "Frithe what would you have us do?" "Why not," we expostulated, "clear all the trees and brush from Marvin Grove? What nobler project can there be than rid this hodge-podge of native limestone of that mass of nature's own?" "Eureka," quoth Elrod, "you are a veritable genius. I shall propose this to all my brothers in the bond post hastе." We blushed modestly. A very sneaky way of ousting liquor sales from the bounds of the fair borough of Lawrence has been proposed. In 1948 a vote was taken to decide whether or not package liquor sales should be continued in Douglas County. Voters, including University students, decided that liquor sales should continue. The student vote, it is believed, was instrumental in this decision. On April 2, a similar vote will be taken in the city of Lawrence. The sticker is this: Spring vacation begins March 30. Now we ask you! Now we ask you! —Jerry Dawson LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS By Dick Bibler Mr. Davis & C. Russell TOMMY JOHNSON D. 1948 A.D. .. Letters .. Bouquet To Sally "OK, IN THE BACK ROW — LETS HAVE THAT 'GIRLIE' MAGAZINE UP HERE IN THIS BASKET!" It is the duty of the artist to make beauty tangible to others, and Sally Schroeder has contributed her share by providing us with an exhibition of her works. Editor: X PALOMA BLANCA—One of Miss Schroeder's best works is pictured here. Perhaps this figure is the Mexican counterpart of the Miss Haversham in Dickens' "Great Expectations." She seems to have captured one phase of the Mexican spirit, namely its emotional life. By contemplating Miss Schroeder's works, we can picture in our minds how that Latin type of people, the Mexicans, radiate sentimentalism. Her pictures could take the place of the melancholic tone of a Mexican poem, or the sweet sadness of a Mexican song. Even though her paintings are derived from real facts and real beings, they proclaim their independence and erect themselves in autonomous value. Sally Schroeder does not express her intuition in a generic form, but rather seeks a form which reflects her personality. She pursues her own artistic ideal, and this ideal will have a prominent place in the manifestations of beauty. The union of two opposites to create form is well expressed by joining the active and the receptive. For example, in "Mission de San Antonio" we can sense the feeling of space through the good combination of the near and the far. In "Hermanos en Azul," the super-position of cold and warm colors intensifies the pictorial value. In short, Sally has shown a masterful ability to capture the serious aspect of a race which is Indian blood cast in a Spanish mold. Mike Cardenas Chihuahua, Mexico graduate student (Editor's note: Miss Schroeder's work is in the Art Museum. The exhibit will remain on the campus until March 21.) Attention Study-Bugs Make Your Efforts Worthwhile . You can earn a partial-expensepaid vacation this summer by being the KU student with the most improved grades. Watch for entry blanks to be distributed soon by- ACME Bachelor Laundry & Dry Cleaners 1111 Mass. V13-5155 And LAWRENCE MILK ICE CREAM CO. 206 W. 6th VI 3-5511 $ 6 \mathrm {元} A^{1 9} $ FANDA TESTING—Dr.. Bruce Linton checks an image on one of the monitor screens in the control room of the new KU television studios in the basement of Hoch auditorium. Page 3 TV Cameras May Cover Class Work The television studio and equipment now ready for use in Hoch Auditorium for courses in TV could enable a class lecture to be televised. The equipment consists of a 2-camera television system and facilities for making sound films. The TV circuit is capable of sending to 50 television receivers. "It is possible that a lecture could originate in the studio and be sent to Hoch Auditorium or Strong Auditorium," Bruce A. Linton, associate professor of speech and journalism and coordinator for radio and television said. It would be difficult but not impossible to move the TV equipment to a specific event. Dr. Linton said. However, it would take 8 hours maintenance procedure to move it. With the equipment, television classes can provide professional instruction, he said. They can also help to familiarize students with television, serve as a graduate study and be used as a tool for teaching large classes. Just as The University Daily Kansas is the laboratory for the I am very grateful to you for your service. I will be pleased to hear that you have been successful in your career. Thank you for your dedication and commitment to the field of law. I hope that you will continue to use our services with integrity and respect. A BETTER LIFE is yourss with New England Life and the unexcelled contract, both liberal and flexible. You can change your plan as your needs change, for example. You can choose from 6 methods by which the money from a policy may be paid. FOR YOU — for your loved ones — this contract provides present day peace of mind and future financial security. Let me tell you more about it, won't you? TOM DOWNS NEW ENGLAND Mutual LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY BOSTON, MA 732 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. news-editorial sequence of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, it is hoped the television programs can become the laboratory in radio and television, Dr. Linton said. VI 3-1141 Lawrence Family spending for food increased about 25 per cent per household between 1948 and 1955, while retail food prices increased only 63 per cent, according to a national survey by the U. S. Department of Agriculture. IGY Lecture Set For Monday George P. Woollard, professor of geophysics and engineering geology at the University of Wisconsin, will speak on "implications of The International Geophysical Year" at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Bailey Hall Auditorium. Prof. Woollard is primarily interested in gravity and magnetic fields related to the structure of the earth. Prof. Woolard received his doctor's degree in structural geology from Princeton in 1937. Since 1947 he has been an associate in geophysics and oceanography at Woods Hole, Mass. He is a fellow of the Geological Society, belongs to the Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers, the Geophysical Union, the Assn. of Petroleum Geologists, and a member of the Society for Exploration and Geophysics. Engineers To Hear Union President Joseph Amann, president of Engineers and Scientists of America Union, will speak at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Lindley Auditorium. His topic will be "Professional Engineering Unions." Mr. Amann represents the largest professional union in the United States. The lecture is sponsored by the University student chapter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. The public is invited. Discussion Planned On Einstein Bust An informal discussion will be held in the Malott Science Library at 4 p.m. Thursday to express appreciation to the Endowment Assn. for a bust of Albert Einstein placed in the library. Max Dresden, professor of physics, will speak on the role of theoretical physics in the 20th century, and Edward Maser, director of the Art Museum, on the Jacob Epstein bust of Einstein. WATCH THAT NEW KIND OF FORD DEVOUR THE MILES! CHEVROLET ... the same staying power that hustled the '57 FORD over 50,000 salt-encrusted miles at Bonneville in less than 20 days . . . at an average speed of more than 108 miles per hour! That's its new Thunderbird V-8 power! Action Test the new kind of FORD at MORGAN-MACK yourself. Feel the new solid, silent ride that stems from the all-new INNER FORD. Discover all the other reasons why FORD makes "luxury" a LOW-PRICED WORD! - . MORGAN-MACK Your Ford Dealer in Lawrence 714 Vermont Phone VI 3-3500 Wednesday, Feb. 27; 1857 University Daily Kansas Looking For A Mate? 2,000 Have Been Found At least one-fourth of the students on the campus are married. Two thousand students were married last year and the number has risen, said Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students. Dean Woodruff said no count has been made this year, but that in the past year the ratio of married students has risen along with total enrollment. The number of marriages is equally divided between graduates and undergraduates. "Married students do not exert a great deal of organized influence," Dean Woodruff said, "but many are active in numerous campus activities." "They don't need the organized activities necessary to the single student to keep them busy, they have their families and small groups of friends, as do young married people in any community." "Although married students have as many or more problems than single students they are somewhat better equipped to cope with them," Dean Woodruff said. "They have someone with whom they can discuss their problems and are able to arrive at a solution with less outside help." "Adequate housing is not much more of a problem in Lawrence than in other communities." Dean Woodruff said, "but the high rent still presents quite a problem. The construction of the new apartments for married students, which will accommodate 120 couples will help the situation considerably." The problem of taking care of the children of married students when both parents work or go to school is usually worked out independently by each couple. "Some leave their children with local nurseries," Dean Woodruff said, "and some have worked out a method of taking turns keeping the children whenever they have time." The Latin American Research Bureau says that only sugar now ranks above American tourists as a dollar producer. Do Jayhawk Men Know Their Women? Who Is The U.S.'s M.C.? BEAUTY CONTEST YOUNG REPUBLICAN MEETING ELECT MISS GOP OF K.U. Young Republican members will elect Miss GOP of Kansas University at a meeting this Thursday. She will receive an all-expense-paid trip to the state convention, March 14-16, at Emporia to compete for Miss GOP of Kansas. The winner at Emporia will receive an all-expense-paid trip to Washington, D.C., to compete for Miss GOP at the National Convention of Young Republicans. David Teeple, consultant to the Senate Appropriations and Joint Congressional Atomic Committees, is being flown to Lawrence from Washington, D.C., especially for the meeting. Teeple is also contributing editor to the American Mercury Magazine and author of the book, "Atomic Energy, 1955." He will talk about atomic energy in national politics. PUBLIC WELCOME KU Collegiate Young Republican Meeting 7:30, Thursday, Feb.28 Bailey Auditorium Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb.27, 1957 Tankers Beat E-State; Even Season's Record The Jayhawkers swimming team swept 9 of 10 events Tuesday at Emporia to sink the Emporia State Hornets, 57-29. The win evened KU's season record at 4-4. Dusty Milledge, Chuck Edwards and Tom Clevenger each captured two events to lead Kansas to victory. Milledge won the 220 and 440-yard freestyle races. Edwards was tops in the 50 and 100-yard freestyle, while Clevenger placed first in the 200-yard butterfly and 200-yard breaststroke. Coach Edwards said he thought it was a good KU team effort which enabled the Jayhawkers to pile up such a large margin of victory "Any improvement in our times is impossible to point out," Edwards said, "since the Emporia pool is only 52 feet long as compared to the regulation size of 60 feet." Edwards explained that this is Emporia's first year to have varsity competition in swimming which made them somewhat weaker than the Nebraska Cornhuskers, who will be KU's foe in Saturday. "We will have to improve a lot if we hope to beat Nebraska," Edwards said. The results 440-yard medley relay—1. Kansas, (Kreye, Drowatzky, Clevenger, Hill). 2. Emporia State. Time: 452.8. 220-yard freestyle—1. Milledge, (K); 2. Peterson, (K); 3. Thyfault, (FS); Time: 3:23.5 50-yard freestyle—1. Edwards, (K); 2. Jones, (ES); 3. Drowatzky, (K). Time; 26.5. 220-yard butterfly—1. Clevenger, K); 2. Weeks, (ES); 3. Wartick, ES). Time: 2:52.9. One meter diving—1. Kells, (E); 82.4 points. 2. Williams, (E); 3. Ashcraft, (K). 100-yard freestyle—1. Edwards, (K); 2 Jones, (ES); 3. Hill, (K). Time: 59.9. 200-yard backstroke—1. Kreye, (K); 2. McDonald, (ES); 3. Ryberg, (K). Time: 2:45.8. 440-yard freestyle—1. Milledge, (K); 2. Thyfauld, (ES); 3. Long, (K). Time: 5.37.2. 200-yard breaststroke—1. Clevenger, (K); 2. Brickell, (ES); 3. Nakaika, (ES). Time: 2:59.1. 440-yard freestyle relay-1. Kansas, (Milledge, Drowatzky, Hill, Edwards.) Time 4:16.1. Recent additions to the cast for "The George M. Cohen Story," slated for NBC Saturday, May 11, are Gloria de Haven, James Dunn and June Havoc. Mickey Rooney has the title role. VI 3-4833 835 Mass. Jay SHOPPE 55 seconds left, Roseenbluth swished in two free throws to put the Tar Heels back in front to stay. Wake Forest lost the ball after his clutch two points and then Pete Brennan, a Tar Heel from Brooklyn, sank two free throws to clinch the game. DOLLAR DAY SPECIALS NYLON HOSE Reg. $1.65 — Dollar Day only $1.00 Rosenbluth, who hails from the Yankees' home in the Bronx, New York City, but now lives in Greenville, Tenn., had one of his best nights for the Tar Heels. When they trailed, 47-39, after four minutes of the second half, he hit eight points in the next six minutes to put North Carolina ahead, 53-51. SPRING PLAID JACKETS Reg. $14.98 — Dollar Day only $10.00 LINEN SKIRTS Reg. $5.95 — Dollar Day only $5.00 Marty Marion Wants Lakers Wallace, a product of Mare Creek, Ky., pushed his scoring average to 30.48 points with last night's splurge. The idle Gibbon dropped to second at 30.3. Gibbon has only one more game—tomorrow night against Mississippi State. Wallace will play against Clemson Saturday and then, like North Carolina, he goes into the A.C. C. tourney. See Our Bargain Table of Blouses at $2.00 An Extra $1.00 Reduction on Every 1/2 Price Dress NEW YORK—(UP)—Unless a Minneapolis civic group can match his $150,000 offer by March 13, former big league manager Marty Marion will become owner of the Minneapolis Lakers pro basketball team and move it elsewhere. Marion and his associate, Milton Fischmann, agreed with Lakers' owner Ben Berger Tuesday on a "provisional" sale of the National Basketball Association club. Open till 8:30 on Thursdays North Carolina Needs One More For Perfect Season Lennie Rosenbluth, a Dixie basketball star who grew up in the shadow of Yankee Stadium, and Grady Wallace, a Kentucky-bred jump-shooter, brought new court honors to the Carolinas today. "Kansas City is the first choice among the towns we have surveyed so far," said the lanky former Chicago White Sox manager. "However, we can't worry too much about that until we learn whether we're actually going to own the ball club." The provision is that the Minneapolis group gets until March 13 for its effort to keep the team in that city. If the civic group fails, Marion and Fischmann say they will move the team "to Kansas City or possibly some other city." New Hampshire still has 59 old covered bridges. North Carolina's win gave coach Frank McGuire's Tar Heels a 23-0 record for the season and left only a Friday night game against Duke on their regular schedule. Then they go into the Atlantic Coast Conference post-season tournament, March 7-9. When Wake Forest led, 64-63, with Rosenbluth had all the clutch points in his bag of 30 Tuesday night to lead North Carolina to a dramatic 69-64 victory over Wake Forest--putting the nation's No. 1 team just one more win away from a perfect season. Elgin Baylor of Seattle scored a whopping 51 points last night in a 105-95 victory over Portland to jump from fourth place to third. Baylor winds up his regular season tonight against the same team—and 40 points will put him ahead of Wallace. In last night's top conference game, Southern California upset UCLA, the nation's No. 5 team, 84-80. The loss, only the third in 23 games for UCLA, left California alone in first place in the Pacific Coast Conference. Shop Till 8:30 Thursday DOLLAR DAYS the town shop At Wool Socks Beautiful Argyle by B, Altmann Plain Ribs by Towne and King LARGE GROUP 1/2 PRICE ITEMS Sport Shirts Cottons—Wools Plaids—Stripes Corduroy Trousers — Mufflers — Gloves SWEATERS Values to $14.95 Now $5.00 SPORTSHIRTS Values to $13.95 Now $6.00 BARGAIN TABLES Odds & Ends - But Terrific Buys $1.00 TABLE Values to $4.95 $1 $2.00 TABLE Values to $7.95 $3.00 TABLE Values to $9.95 the town shop Men's Apparel 841 Mass. Save Tomorrow! Take advantage of the Dollar Day Specials Offered by these Lawrence Merchants $ 6 626 What - Missouri Is Favored In Big Seven Indoor Track Big Seven track teams gather in Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium Friday and Saturday for the 29th annual indoor track and field meet. For the spectator there will be stars a-plenty to watch and for the athlete there will be competition a-plenty. Missouri's well balanced Tigers, who handed the Kansas Jayhawkers a $59\frac{1}{2}-44\frac{1}{2}$ defeat Friday in Columbia are probably the team to watch for the team title, an honor which has gone to Kansas for the past six years. The Jayhawkers have won the indoor crown seven times out of the last eight years. Missouri's Charles Batch, who did not run against Kansas Friday due to a pulled leg muscle, turned in a scratching 7.3 seconds in the 60-yard-high hurdles against Kansas State three weeks ago. The indoor mark is 1.4 seconds and is held by five men. So far, in an indoor season which has seen Kansas go undefeated except for the Missouri meet, two of the indoor records have been bettered. A 9:06:1 in the 2-mile run by Kansas' Jerry McNeal against Selwyn Jones, Michigan States NCAA 10,000 meter king, is. $ better than the 2-mile mark set by Jayhawker Herb Semper in 1954. However, when McNeal runs the 2-mile in the indoor this weekend he will be doubling from having run the mile—a maneuver which will be necessary if Kansas is to retain its title. McNeal Effective In Double Against Oklahoma this season McNeal did run the mile then ran his specialty in 9:18 setting a meet record. McNeal, the only returning indoor champion, ran the 2-mile in 9:103 against Pittsburg State and hit 9:077 against Oklahoma A & M. Batch, the man who defeated double 1956 outdoor 60-yard high hurdles champion Gene O'Conner of Kansas State, is probably the man most favored to break a record. The Missouri spied over the high hurdles in :073. 1 below the :074 indoor mark. Keith Gardner, Nebraska's Jamaican star, and Missouri's John Maletty have both tied the mark. And O'Conner, who ran a very close second to Batch in an early dual, could well have finished in .974. Since all are capable of norex breaking times, all four could possibly win a share of the record. The Municipal Auditorium's track is 147 yards long. This means there will be 48 curves in the 2-mile run, 16 more than are required in the normal indoor ovals. At Michigan State the track is 220 yards. Batch, however, has missed the last two Tiger meets due to a pulled hamstring and Gardner will have to run a total of nine races in the two nights. Batch Is Lame In the 60-yard dash, Gardner and Colorado's Larry Chase have already tied the .06.2 mark. Although Gardner edged Chase in the Cornhusker-Buff dual at Lincoln, the later equaled the indoor mark against the Buffalo freshmen. Another record could easily be in danger at the indoor if Kansas strengthens its already speedy mile relay team with the addition of half-miler Lowell Janzen. The Jayhawker relay squad dipped to 3.21.6 in sweeping past the Spartans in East Lansing, Mich. The indoor mark of 3:20 was set by the Sooner last year. One of the meet's closest races is expected to be in the 440-yard run where the favorite's spot must be conceded to Missouri's Pete Orr. Orr is the Big Seven 1956 outdoor champion and co-record holder. In a meet against Kansas last May, Orr ran the quarter in 48.2, 4 better than Kansas State's Thane Baker ran that race in the 1953 Indoor. In the conference meet last year, Orrt bid Baker's :47.1 league record. On a large Iowa track, however, Orrt the quarter in :49.9 and against Kansas in Columbia he turned in a :50.0. But outdoors and indoors are two different things and Orr, who has trouble with curves, may find it difficult because of the more numerous and sharper curves in the Auditorium's track. Page 4 Orr almost has to do better than that if he is to win, however. Kansas State sophomore, Deloss Dodds, Colorado's Chuck Carlson and Kansas' Ray Wyatt, and Louis and Larry Stroup have all dipped below :51.0 this season. A :50.2 by Oklahoma's Chuck Folsom was good enough to win the quarter last year. Orr Ties League Record In the shot put, Kansas' Al Oerter, who set a new Brewer Field House record of 54-4 Friday, is probably a favorite but he does not figure to break Bill Nieder's mark of $59-$19. The pole vault appears safe too. KU's Dave Tams and MU's Bill England tied Friday at 13-10 against an indoor mark of $14-6\frac{1}{2}$ set by Oklahoma's Hendrick Kruger in 1956. Shop Tomorrow 9:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. DOLLAR DAY At CARL'S Will Save You Dollars TOPCOATS 1/2 Price One Group Discounted 25% SHIRTS Final Close-Outs Were $4 to $5 $1.95 1/2 Price JACKETS 1/2 Price Wool Sport Shirts Discounted 25% SPORT SHIRTS NYLON SHORTS Quick-Dry, No Iron Were $1.50 69c 905 Mass. St. Entire Stocks Not Included SWEATERS 1/2 Price One group. Values to $11.95 $2.95 CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES University Daliy Kanson Dial VI 3-5353 Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1957 Carol Heiss Leads In World Skating COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — (UP)— Seventeen-year-old defending champion Carol Heiss of Ozone Park, N. Y., held a narrow lead over Ingrid Wendl of Austria today as the second stage of women's competition for the world figure skating title began at the Broadmoor Ice Palace. Miss Heiss, a pretty blonde who has been compared by American experts to Sonja Henie, scored 460.4 points yesterday when the first four compulsory figures were skated. Miss Wendl, the 1955 European campion, received 443.8 points in the complex judging. Hanna Eigel of Austria, the 1956 European champ, ranked third among the 20 competitors with 436.9 points. The National Basketball Assn. club owners, in their annual February meeting in New York, have reaffirmed the Philadelphia Warriors' draft rights to Wilt Chamberlain once he has been graduated from the University of Kansas. Reaffirm Rights to Wilt Try Kanson Want Ads. Get Results Villanova's Track Team 'Finest Ever' NEW YORK—(UP)—Villanova's track and field team is the finest team I've ever seen," Coach George Eastment said today as he prepared his Manhattan team for its defense of the IC4-A indoor track and field title Saturday. Villanova last Saturday became the second college team ever to take team honors in the National A. A. U. Championships and is heavily favored to dominate the college met at Madison Square Garden this Saturday. Writers Win, 23-21 Over Radio-TV For once they should have been listening instead of broadcasting. A team composed of students in the radio-TV sequence of journalism challenged students in the news-editorial sequence to a basketball game. The game was played Sunday in Robinson Annex, with the challenged news team, winning 23-21. The raido-TV team jumped into an early 8-0 lead, but the depth of the smaller news team preved too much in the second half. Thursday is DOLLAR DAY at Ober's 34 Men's Suits Values to $55 $29.95 Values to $65 $39.95 31 Topcoats Values to $55 $29.95 Values to $65 $39.95 Long Sleeve Sport Shirts Values to $10.00 1/2 Price Salesmen's Samples By Enro Dress Shirts 30% off Sport Shirts 30% off The above samples are all new 1957 spring and summer goods-styles and colors that will be shown this season. Ober's 821 Mass. Ph. VI 3-1951 Figure 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1957 International Meals? Phoocey! Kansans Still Prefer Plain Mashed Potatoes "It isn't that we don't like Indian rice ring. It's just that it takes too much time to prepare." "Oriental-pineapple-nut-balls and Russian cream may taste OK, but they cost too much. We'll go broke buying pecans and dates!" Such were the protests last week at the Hill Co-op, organized house for men, when the menu planner was Miguel Cardenas, Chihuahua, Mexico graduate student. Internationalism had gone to the extreme when Cardenas prepared a menu with each meal representative of a different country. Food Habits Really Confused House president Arthur Powell, Coffeyville freshman, said that by the end of the week "food habits were so confused that native Kan-ans had forgotten what mashed potatoes tasted like." Even the grocer wondered what had happened after he was hit every Quill Club To Elect Vice President The Quill Club will elect a vicepresident at 7:30 p. m. Thursday in the Trophy room of the Student Union. David A. Edwards, Prairie Village graduate student, who served as vice-president last semester, has resigned. Members of the club will also read and criticize student manuscripts. day of the week with a barrage ὑ requests for such items as sultanas, Chrysanthemum petals, truffles, and foie de gras paste. "No harm was intended." Cardenas mourned, "I just got tired of eating hamburgers, soup, mashed potatoes, and tossed salad." "I spent a lot of time on that menu," he said. "Some of it was good, some of it wasn't. I was just trying to give the meals an international flavor." International Flavor The Hill Co-op has made an effort to maintain an international atmosphere since it was organized in 1949. The number of foreign students in the house has always been high. Five of the present membership of 11 are foreign students. The weekly job of writing the menu is rotated among the members to assure variety in the foods served. It worked fine until the series of international meals last week. A few of the members were about decided it was time to put the menu writing in more conservative hands. This week, the menu is back to normal. The closest it comes to a foreign dish is the Spanish rice for Thursday dinner. Entries in the Nellie Barnes' Poetry contest will be accepted between April 15 and May 1. Poems should be submitted to 203 Fraser Hall. Poets May Enter Contest All resident students are eligible. Contestants must restrict their entries to formal verse. First prize is $50; second, $30, and third, $20. Poems submitted to the W. H. Carruth poetry contest are not eligible for this contest. Judges are Miss Marv Grant, associate professor of latin nad greek; A. C. Edwards, associate professor of english, and Mrs. Arthur Mix, instructor of English. Miss Barnes, former associate professor of English, retired last year after 30 years on the English department faculty. She published a book entitled "American Indian Love Lyrics and Other Verse." She is now in California working on another book. Assistant Pastor To Be Installed The Rev. Mr. A. J. Pickering will be installed at 3 p.m. Sunday at the First Presbyterian Church, 901 Vermont, to be assistant to Dr. John H. Patton, pastor of the Westminster Fellowship, the Presbyterian student organization at KU. The Rev. Mr. Pickering was graduated from KU in 1949 with a degree in industrial management. He attended Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati, where he did graduate work, serving as pastor at Venice Presbyterian Church in Ross, Ohio. He completed requirements for his Ph.D. last summer. THEATRE CLIFFORD SAYS- If you're like me, you figure this by dividing the cost of a gallon of gas by the miles per gallon you get from your car. But I've been told that for — know how much it costs you to drive your car one mile? The MOTOR IN folks are specialists at REPAIRING ANY MAKE of car. TRUE COST-PER-MILE FIGURES— Give them a try! divide the total cost of a year's driving (including oil, lubrication, repairs, parts, etc.) by total annual mileage. With this system, I decided to compare the cost of my car before and after I began to have it serviced at MOTOR IN. Man! Did my teeth nearly drop when I saw the difference! My little Snazmobile's cost-per-mile had gone WAY DOWN since the MOTOR IN mechanics started to keep it running at peak efficiency, making those minor preventive adjustments that ward off the major repairs. Motor In 827 Vermont Dial VI 3-4955 Official Bulletin Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, L22-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin material to any location. Karyn Koehler should include name, place, date, and time of function. Jay Janes, 5 p.m., Jayhawk Room. Student Union. Attendance required. TODAY KuKu's. 5 p.m., Student Union. LSA (Lutherin Student Assn.) 6:30 n.p. Trinity, Church, Business meeting. m., Trinity Church. Business meeting. Foreign students meeting, 7 p.m., Jaybarah Room. Student forum for discussion: foreign student festival for 1957. KKK (KU Kamera Klub). 7:30 p.m. Activity Lounge, Student Union. Color slide competition. Bring 10 slides. All interested people invited. Newman Club executive meeting, 7:30 morning. The old and new officers will please situate Studio Theatre, 8 p.m. Student Union Ballroom. "Doctor In Spite of Himself." THURSDAY Einstein lecture, 4 p.m. Science Library, Malott Hall. Dr Max Dresden will talk about Einstein, the scientists. E. A. Wheeler, the sculptor who did the hust of Einstein. Poetry hour, 4 p.m. Music and Dance hour, 10 a.m. Denton Craftion. The Trojan Women. Deutscher Verein, 5 Uhr Donnerstag, 402 Fraser. Oesterreichisches Program mit Lichbildern und Musik. Alle will- kommen! Christian Science Organization meet- tients, faculty members, and friends of the University are invited. (Note time change tos week only.) All-Student Council, 7:30 p.m. Student Union. KU Collegiate Young Republicans, 7:30 p.m., Bailey Auditorium. Speaker: David S. Teeple. "Atomic Energy and Politics." Public invited. AIChE, 7:30 p.m., Lindley Auditorium. Speaker: Joseph Amann, president of Engineers and Scientists of American University and Engineering Unions. Everyone welcome. Quill Club, 7:30 p.m., Trophy Room. Science Center, Criticism of student manuscripts. Les membres du Cercle Francais assistent a la representation du Medecin Malgré Lul Jeudil soir. La reunion regulière naura pas lieu. KU-Y Mexico trip meeting, 7:30 p.m. 306 C. Student Union. Studio Theater, 8 p.m. Student Union Ballroom. "Doctor In Spite of Himself." KU-Y Advisory Board meeting, 8 p.m. Pine Room. Student Union. Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. Museum. Stravinka. The Rake's Progress. American Society of Tool Engineers field trip, 6 p.m., from Fowler Shops, or 30 p.m. at plant site. To TWA Overland Park, Sign list in Fowler before Friday. Studio Theatre, 8 p.m., Student Union Ballroom. "Doctor In Spite of Himself." FRIDAY Arkansas was known as "The Bear State" until 1923 when the nickname was changed to "The Wonder State." K A $ TRUE True. Schools and individual instances vary, of course, but the national average cost is estimated at nearly $6,000. It costs more than $5,000 to send the average student through college HAPPY HOLIDAYS FALSE [ ] Most college men belong to fraternities False. Many schools don't permit fraternities, and at major state universities, there are always more independent than fraternity men. Fraternities are, however, at an all-time high in membership. TRUE Men in the know know true from false FALSE JEFFERY Jockey brand is America's best known brand of men's underwear □ TRUE [ ] FALSE True. Independent surveys prove that Jockey is not only the best known underwear in the U.S.A. but also in 75 other countries around the world. Just shows how much men value comfort and fit. Men on the go go for Jockey underwear BRAND made only by Coopers F Coopra® KU Differs From Helsinki U., And This Student Likes It Page 7 By PEGGY ARMSTRONG A young woman at the University of Helsinki in Finland had always wanted to come to the United States. While reading a newspaper one day, she saw an article about scholarships being offered by American universities and decided to apply. With 40 or 50 other students she took the application examination and was one of the dozen selected for the scholarships. This is how Hillevi Rintamaki made her wish come true. She is now studying English, her major at the University of Helsinki, here at KU. "I always wanted to see the United States and to meet the people," Hillevi said. Although she still has about a year to go to get her degree in Finland, she didn't want to pass up the opportunity to come here. "We have no final exams in Finland." Hillevi said, smiling, knowing that students here wish it could be that way. "We have tests all through the semester, though. They are bigger and usually last three hours," she said. "University students here get to know each other much better." Hillevi commented. "In Finland you just go to an institution, and you only care about your grades and your courses. The classes are much larger, too." She explained that most courses there have an enrollment of over 100 and are strictly lectures, with no discussion by the students. "We have longer holidays, too." Hillevi said, pointing to another advantage in Finland. There the Christmas vacation is one month. Classes end about May 10 and begin again about the middle of September. Shop Brown's First 40% DISCOUNT on all our stock of PARKAS JACKETS COATS TOPPERS $29.95 Items — $17.95 $24.95 Items — $14.95 $19.95 Items — $11.95 $14.95 Items — $ 8.95 $ 9.95 Items — $ 5.95 All Other Prices in Same Ratio WE RENT "AFTER SIX" TUXEDOS LEVI'S IN YOUR CORRECT SIZE Brown's TOGGERY 830 Mass. "Sports do not play the same role in Finland as they do here. They are not stressed as much," Hillevi said. She said there was some competition among the clubs at a university, but no contests among different schools. In explaining the differences between college women's customs in the two countries, Hillevi said that bobby socks are never worn in Finland. At the University of Helsinki most women wear wose with heels or flat shoes. Slacks are never worn to class. Hillevi does not smoke, but said that many college women do in Finland, though they don't start as young as in the United States. Help For Retarded To Be Studied Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1857 University Dolly Mason "A Total Community Program for the 'Trainable Retarded' will be the theme of a two-week teachers' workshop June 5-15 at the University. The workshop will be first of its kind in the midwest. Principal speaker for the workshop will be Dr. I. Ignacy Goldberg, educational consultant for the National Association for Retarded Children. Under a grant by the American Legion, Dr. Goldberg is participating in workshops and conferences in different parts of the country. Seven other instructors will complete the workshop staff. Hungarani, Finnish, and Turkish are related languages, belonging to the Finne-Ugric group. More People Now Participate In Music, Professor Says More of your younger brothers and sisters are participating in grade and high school music activities than ever before, said E. Thayer Gaston, professor of music education. There are two reasons for the added participation, he added. "One reason is that there are more people in school and the other is that more people, due to radios, television, phonographs and the development of high fidelity equipment, have found ways to appreciate and respond to nature music or art." Prof. Gaston said. Modern school's stress participation in musical activities, regardless of ability. This is the reason bands, orchestras, and choirs have been established. he said. While musicians will always aim for excellent performance, many persons enjoy their own dabblings with instrument or derive pleasure from listening to the music of their choice. A University of Michigan study indicates that three of four American adults have never taken an air trip, half have never been more than 100 miles by bus, 30 per cent have never traveled by train and 11 per cent have never traveled more than 100 miles by auto Graduates in Engineering...Physics...Mathematics LOCKHEED Aircraft Corporation California Division·Georgia Division Lockheed Representatives of the California Division and the Georgia Division will be on campus Monday, March 4 You are invited to consult your placement officer for an appointment. Separate interviews will be given for each division. Both divisions of Lockheed are engaged in a long-range expansion program in their fields of endeavor. California Division activities in Burbank cover virtually every phase of commercial and military aircraft. Seventeen different models of planes are in production, including cargo and passenger transports, high Mach performance fighters, jet trainers, radar search planes, patrol bombers. B. S. graduates who wish to attain a Master's Degree will be interested in the California Division's Masters-Degree Work-Study Program. In the program, participants achieve their M.S. while working concurrently on Lockheed's engineering staff. + At Lockheed in Marietta, Georgia, new C-130A turbo-prop transports and B-47 jet bombers are being manufactured in the country's largest aircraft plant under one roof. The division is already one of the South's largest industries. Moreover, a new engineering center is now in development as part of the division's expansion program. In addition, advanced research and development are underway on nuclear energy and its relationship to aircraft. A number of other highly significant classified projects augment the extensive production program. This broad expansion program is creating new positions in each division. Graduates in fields of: Aeronautical Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Mathematics and Physics are invited to investigate their role in Lockheed's expansion. Lockheed Aircraft Corporation California Division, Burbank, California · Georgia Division, Marietta, Georgia Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1957 For College Students Do You Have Problems? Try The Psychiatry Dept. Helping the student work out his own problems so he can continue his studies is the goal of the psychiatry department in Watkins Hospital. "Most of the students who come to us are not seriously ill, but have problems of adjustment, choice of vocation or being away from home," said Dr. L. Willard Shankel, director. "Our big problem is to help them adjust and stay in school." "The majority of our patients are self-referred, that is they come in voluntarily," Dr. Shankel explained. "This is much better than having them sent in by an instructor or adviser. Persons who come in on their own accord are much more at ease and we can help them more." Aid In 3 Fields Assistance in three fields is offered by the department which has a staff of four full time and two part time workers. The fields are psychiatry, psychology and social psychiatry. The largest section is psychiatric treatment in which Dr. Shankel and two psychiatrists from Menningers Clinic in Topeka work. "The treatment for each patient is determined by his individual needs," Dr. Shankel said. "Treatment ranges from an hour's session with the psychologist to 50 hours involving complete psychotherapy." The first four hours are provided free, and after that a nominal fee is charged, scaled to the student's ability to pay. Dr. Shankel said that although the department is kept busy, he does not feel that all the students who might be helped are taking advantage of the service. "We have treated about 300 patients since September," Dr. Shankel said. "This is about 5 per cent of the total student body. Some universities with similar set-ups aid about 10 per cent of their students. Records Confidential "I feel that many students needing help don't come in because they're afraid someone will see their records, other than persons at the clinic," Dr. Shankel continued. "Actually all case records are kept locked up at all times and the student's parents are not notified unless requested by the student!" The psychiatric department is about seven years old. "Many schools do not offer a similar service, and our psychiatric department which is seven years old, is the only facility for the college age group in the state," Dr. Shankel said. "One interesting point is the majority of male patients," Dr. Shankel said. "The ratio among our patients is higher than the ratio of men to women on the campus as a whole. "This is understandable when you consider that men have more pressing problems than women while in school," he continued. "In addition to the problems of leaving home and adjusting to a new environment they have to think about the possibility of being drafted and, in any case, going out to make a living and possibly supporting a wife." Cats live to an average age of 15 or 16 years, but some live longer than 20 years. The oldest one of which there is a record died at 32. Student Recital Set For Thursday Percussion instruments will be featured in the student recital at 3 p.m. Thursday in Strong Auditorium. Student soloists will be JoAnn Jersild, Brooklyn, N.Y. senior; Carolyn Bradley, Chillicothe, Mo., freshman; Mary Warren, Muskogee, Okla. sophomore; Fred Pendergraft, Atchison freshman and De Ros Hogue, Dodge City junior. Miss Jersild, piano soloist, will play "Sonata in C major" (Mozart). Miss Bradley, marimba soloist, will play one movement from "Sonata No. 3 for Violin" (Handel), and Miss Warren, piano soloist, will play "Suite Bergamese" (Debussy). Pendergraft, percussion solist, will play "Rudimental Solos" by (Wilcoxon), and Hogue, tympany solist, 'Sonatina for Three Tymp- anies and Piano' (Tcherepine). Professor Named To Committee Dr. E. O. Stene, professor of political science, has been appointed to a committee on professional ethics of the American Assn. of University Professors. There are over 40,000 members in the Association from various schools throughout the country. About 300 faculty members of the University are members. The committee will meet in New York on April 25 to start drafting a code of ethics. Previously, the Association has adopted a statement of principles on academic tenure and freedom and a policy regarding resignation. Cottle In Atchison Today William C. Cottle, professor of education and counselor of the Guidance Bureau, will speak today at Mount St. Scholastic College in Atchison. He will talk to the Catholic women students on "The Problems of Choosing a Career," and to the faculty on "Improving Counseling." Take 100 posters, a display case in the Student Union, enough programs for a 4-night stand, about 50 hours work done by one man, you have the publicity program for University Theatre. Student-Artist Keeps Busy Publicizing KU Theatricals Alpha Chi Sigma; professional chemical fraternity, will honor chemistry and chemical engineering professors with a dinner at 6:30 p. m. Wednesday at Happy Hal's, E. 23rd St. That one man is William Henry, Parkville, Mo., sophomore, who has been doing the publicity for the past year. His first show was George Bernard Shaw's "Pygmalion," presented in March, 1956. "Henry's work for the University Theatre has done a great deal to raise the quality and produce more continuity in the shows," said Jack T. Brooking, assistant professor of speech and drama. Henry talks with the director and set designer before each play, and his art work is planned so that the same basic design can be carried through in ads, posters, and the Student Union display. A drawing and painting art major, he has done more than 10 plays within the past year. Some of these include the melodrama, "The Drunkard"; the opera, "Cosi Van Tutte"; N. Richard Nash's "The Rainmaker"; George Gershwin's "Of Thee I sing," and Molieres "Doctor in Spite of Himself." Fraternity Will Honor Chemistry Professors Henry had to teach himself the silk screen process. A different screen must be made for each color The importance of Alpha Chi Sigma will be explained by Ernest Griswold, professor of chemistry, and a former president of the fraternity. A natural bridge 70 feet high on Petit Jean Mountain in Arkansas is the third highest in the United States. used on the poster. He makes about 100 for each play. "The display case in the Student Union is about a 15-hour job," Henry said. "The main problem is in planning and arranging it to get depth into the display." "The amazing thing about Henry is that he seems to have no distinctive style in his work, but adjusts to the style of the show in doing our publicity," Prof. Brooking said. should YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2008 BIRD TV-Radio Service ! 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 "HAPPY HAL'S" E. 23rd St. Ph. VI 3-9753 THURSDAY'S DOLLAR DAY SPECIAL 1/2 Ib. T-Bone Steak Crisp Tossed Salad, French Fries, Rolls & Butter $1.00 11 a.m.—Midnight You smoke refreshed Created by R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company. Menthol Fresh Salem FILTER CIGARETTES - menthol fresh · rich tobacco taste · most modern filter A new idea in smoking...all-new Salem Think of a Spring breeze blowing over fresh, green grass and you'll have a good idea how refreshing all-new SALEM Cigarettes taste. The freshest taste in cigarettes flows through SALEM's pure white filter. Rich tobacco taste with new surprise softness...menthol-fresh comfort. Try SALEM - you'll love 'em. Salem refreshes your taste Seg Lea Autho Authi In Fi become instruct because Mr. Sha pama for fration f until he witnesses specie Miss Luc "I did any kite full," he. Events shaffer tach on in the fhr following was not Mr. Sl he lived German italy. He Cuba beata tate he recei legrees oward years at Cork Ci He sai reports whole to mall g he back approve rightene "If o he was munist, In Ap of the I group openly. her treas "Even fraid gainst Fla No Practise be bainting ing in the trisingly age sen rader's. One K his quag the Va ground reckle- through aborning loices once do and a aid to "My l With quive loked and sai "I kn ood as 2. Grow Show Veteri ital in Monday iven borority ernity. The awren included olo by unior, umber Zool slide Slide egetat americ lub Tb Char ntomto whil he hear d abbati ry K Page 9. ough one Stu hour prob- nging y." about Henry instinc-djusts doing said. -9753 By BOB HARTLEY (Of The Daily Kansan Staff) Segregation Made Him Leave Alabama U. Authorine Lucy caused Harry Shaffer to come to KU. In February, 1956, Autherine Lucy tried without success to become the first Negro to enter Alabama University. Mr. Shaffer, instructor of economics, was one of several teachers who resigned because they were unhappy with the handling of the "Lucy case." Mr. Shaffer, who taught at Ala-pama for six years, favored integration from the time riots began until he resigned in May, 1956. He witnessed riots, listened to segregation speeches, and heard threats on Miss Lucy's life. Born in Austria "I didn't like discrimination of any kind, and my stomach was full." he said. Mr. Shaffer was born in Austria. He lived for three months under German rule in 1938, but escaped to Italy. He then went to France and Cuba before the U.S. department of state admitted him to this country. He received bachelor and master degrees and completed one course oward a doctor's degree in four years at New York University, New York City. He said that although newspaper reports made it sound as if the whole town rioted, it was only a mall group of students who had he backing of outsiders. People who approved of integration were too rightened to speak out. Events at Alabama prompted Mr. Shaffer to write an article, "Democracy on Trial." It describes his part in the first weeks of rioting and the following months of fear. The paper has not been published. "If one advocated integration, he was suspected of being a Communist," he said. In April he became an organizer of the Human Relations Forum, a group formed to discuss segregation openly. The group elected Mr. Shafer treasurer. "Even members of this group were fraid to voice a strong opinion gainst segregation," he said. Flattery Gets Nowhere Practice teaching for KU students be both frightening and a fascinating experience. For those teaching in the grades, it is often surprisingly difficult to adjust a college senior's vocabulary to a second rader's comprehension. "My but that's clever!" One KU woman, practice teaching his quarter in Topeka, was observing the second graders busily making Valentines. As she walked round the room, she noted one reckle-faced boy, tongue peeking through a wide gap in his teeth, aboring manfully with several pieces of red construction paper and ace doily. Seeing her chance to end a word of encouragement, she aid to him. With a dismayed countenance and quivering lip, the young artist looked at her with woebegone eyes and said "I know it, but I'm doing it as food as I can!" 2. Groups Present Show For Veterans Veterans at Winter General Hospital in Topeka were entertained monday night with a variety show given by members of Delta Gamma orority and Delta Tau Delta fraternity. The show, sponsored by the lawrence Red Cross chapter, included a mixed chorus, an accordion olo by Carolyn Bailey, Scranton unior, a combo, and two dance umbers. Zoology Club Sees Glides On Vegetation Slides depicting the terrain and vegetation of various parts of South America were shown to the Zoology Club Tuesday night. University Daily Kansan try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. Charles D. Michener, professor of ontology, collected the slides while he was in South America last ear doing research work on his abatical leave. Writes Letter Upon resigning he wrote a letter to the Tuscaloosa News, which said: "I want to take this opportunity to say goodbye to an area where I feel the principle of Democracy has been badly violated." He expressed surprise the letter was printed. Although Mr. Shaffer speaks of BALL CH the Alabama rioting with regret, he was very happy in Tuscaloosa for six years. "In the first excitement and bitterness, I decided to leave, and sometimes I wonder whether I have done the right thing." HARRY SHAFFER He expressed hope for the time when he can return to an integrated Alabama. They'll Elect 'Miss GOP' Election of "Miss GOP of KU" and a talk by David S. Teeple, comproller general of the United States, will highlight a meeting of the Young Republicans' at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Bailey Auditorium. The winner of the contest will win an expense-paid trip to the state's Young Republican convention March 14-16 in Emporia where she will compete for the "Miss GOP of Kansas" title. Mr. Teeple, consultant to the Senate Appropriations and Joint Congressional Atomic Energy committees, will speak on the mixing of atomic energy with politics. Quartetto Italiano Here Wednesday Quartetto Italiano, string quartet, will appear on the Chamber Music Series at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Strong Auditorium. Members of the group are Paolo Borciani, violin; Elisa Pegreffi, violin; Piero Farulni, viola and Franco Rossi, cello. Their program will include "Capiccio a Quattro" by Vittal, "Sonata a Quattro" by Neri and "Quartet No. 2 in F major" by Protoeff. Greensburg has the world's largest hand dug well, measuring 32 feet in diameter and 109 feet deep with steps leading to water level. Do Jayhawk Men Know Their Women? Who Is The U.S.'s Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1957 M. C.? Engineering Applications Due Applications for director and business manager of the Engineering. Exposition are due at noon Thursday. The deadline was extended one week to enable more people to apply for the positions, Tommy Griffith, Pratt senior and president of the Engineering Council said. Applications should be submitted to the office of Engineering, and Architecture, 111 Matvin Hall. LOW-COST AUTO LOANS :::: and you can place your car insurance locally. Get all the advantages with a BANK loan. Lawrence National Bank 7th & Mass. VI 3-0260 Dollar Day Special Purchase LASSIE MAID Special Purchase LASSIE MAID Spring Coats Reg, price $39.95----$45.00----$49.50 Sizes . . 8 to 16 7 to 15 Fabrics . . . Tweeds Flannels Checks Colors . . . Colors . . . Aqua Navy Grey Beige Blue Gold Parchment terri LAWRENCE. Use our Lay-Away Plan — $1 down holds your selection until April 15th. 's KANSAS DUSKKA GASO LICHTOVA Page 10 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Feb. 27. 1957 Houses Elect New Officers Phi Kappa Tau Phi Kappa Tau fraternity elected Peter Moore, Wichita senior, president for second semester. other officers elected were Vince Riley, Ottawa, vice president, Mike Coble, Kansas City, Mo., treasurer and Robert Nelson, Leawood, sec- retary. All are juniors. Triangle Triangle fraternity elected Monty Rogers, Kansas City, Mo., junior, president for second semester. Others elected were Bob Griffith, Pratt sophomore, vice president, Duane DeWerff, Ellinwood, sophomore, treasurer, Lynn Johnson, Gardner junior, recording secretary, Mark Yeokum, Belton, Mo., junior, corresponding secretary and Ron Clark, Kansas City, Mo., junior, sergeant-at-arms. Sigma Nu Gary Nitz, Goodland junior, was elected president of Sigma Nu fraternity for the spring semester. Other officers elected were George Blackburn, Joplin, Mo., junior, secretary. Stephen Jenkins, Topeka, treasurer, Michael Cusack, Joplin, Mo., executive member at large. --has been elected president of North College Hall for the spring semester. Other officers elected were Jean Garlinghouse, Linehock, Neb., vice president, Ann Humann, Mission, Kan., secretary, Sandra Owens, Kansas City, Kan., treasurer, Marilyn Mull, Chanute, social chairman and Judith Buck, Kansas City, Kan., song leader. Corbin Hall Corbin Hall elected Kay Allen, Rockport, Mo., freshman, president for the second semester. Other officers elected were Barbara Hamline, Kansas City, Kan., vice president, Virginia Baker, Wichita, secretary, Kay Perry, Liberal, treasurer, Sue Coffey, Prairie Village, social chairman and Lois Forney, Hiawatha, song leader. All are freshmen. ... North College Fran Swartz, Fredonia freshman has been elected president of North College Hall for the spring semester Phi Kappa Harold Hill. Beloit sophomore, has been elected president of Phi Kappa fraternity for second semester. Other officers elected were Nick Dileeone, Rosedale, N.Y., vice president, Robert Weltz, Goodland, treasurer, Gerald Bazan, St. Joseph, Mo. secretary and Waldo Schrepler, Potwin, rush chairman, sophomores; Jim Nero, Kansas City, Mo., first-year law student, social chairman. Fraternities Announce Pledges Alpha Tau Omega Alpha Tau Omega fraternity announces the pledging of Paul Willey, Caldwell, David Allen, Webster Groves, Mo., both freshmen; and Dick Vandervew, Concordia junior. Sigma Pi Sigma Pi fraternity announces the pledging of Gregory Edmonds, Basehor sophomore, James Herron, Cimarron senior, Mervin Martin, Cottonwood Falls junior and Gary Garber, Overland Park sophomore. Kappa Alpha Psi Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity announces the pledging of Thomas Cox, John Olds and Rodgar Taylor. Topeka freshmen: Homer Floyd, Massillon, Ohio, Billy Wedgeworth, Dallas, Tex., and Ernest Shelby, Los Angeles, Calif., sophomores, and William Blue, Pensacola, Fla., junior. To prevent the bottom button on a coat-style dress from ripping loose, sew it to an inch-long piece of elastic. Then sew the elastic flat to the dress, with the button in its proper place. The elastic will give the button enough stretch to prevent tearing from too long a step. The waxed wrapper from a loaf of bread will do a good job of polishing nickel on kitchen ranges, said the Alabama Extension Service. It also will work on the tea kettle. WHERE THE BEST OF HER LIFE IS ENOUGH TO BE KNOWN. SITTING PRETTY—Roberta Belt, Coffeyville sophomore, models the new cape ensemble that is making a hit in spring fashions. The cape and skirt are of pure Irish linen. The boat-neck blouse is made of cotton print and the cape is lined in the same material. The cape ensemble is available in Lawrence. Cape, Pegged Skirt Spotlight Spring Fashion With spring coming and the Easter season close behind, young ladies' thoughts turn to fashions. Designers are predicting longer skirts with a pegged effect, and a cape and its variations to accentuate the slimness of the new skirts and dresses. The youthful look of the cape is making it a popular style with women from 6 to 60. Suits with pegged skirts are being highlighted by the hip length cape which is replacing the boxed and fitted jacket. As part of dress ensembles, capes are designed to button on under the collar and are removable to give the wearer a sleeveless dress for warmer weather. The waist lenght cape makes a smart jacket over pleated skirts. Although full length capes have not taken the place of coats, variations in coats with fullness resembling the cape are the latest in spring coat fashion. Fabrics play an important part in thesecape-like wraps with materials of flannels, smooth worsted wools and fleeces in cashmere and camelhair. The short capelet of wool or fur is the most popular style for evening wear, in spite of predictions that floor length styles would prevail. But whether worn over a suit, as a coat or merely as a short V-pointed version over a sun dress. The U. S. Post Office Department owns 19,000 trucks and contracts for an additional 3,500 trucks. In addition, the department uses many more commercial trucks for bulk mail shipments between cities. HELD OVER ENDS THURSDAY A NEW TRUMPH FOR WHAT-A GUY WAYNE! M-G-M presents in METROCOLOR JOHN WAYNE DAN DAILEY MAUREEN O'HARA THE WINGS OF EAGLES WARD BOND Color Cartoon—News GRANADA the highlight of spring fashion is the cape, which looks like a jaunty afterthought to the new styles. VARSITY Bob Pettit, BASKETBALL CHAMPION, SAYS: VARSITY Open 6:45 p.m. Weekdays NOW "Best Picture of the Year!" General Federation of Women's Clubs! Paramount Pictures BRIE MATTHIAGN LANCASTER HEPBURN HAL WALLIS THE BARNMAKER TECHINICOLOR® WESTMASON News — Magoo Color Cartoo Feat. Tonite: 7:00 and 9:15 --- Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW wash back CUSHIONED CHAIRS Open 6:45 p.m. Weekdays ENDS TONITE "THE DELINQUENTS" STARTS THURS. The Hottest Combo of the Screen Today! IT'S ALL NEW! IT'S ALL TRUE! The World-Famous HARLEM GLOBETROTTERS and DANE CLARK in Go.Man. Go! New 50th Anniversary "Go.Man. Go!" SIZZLING! "Cha Cha Cha Boom!" PERE PRADO and His Orchestra MARY KAVE TUO HELEN GRAYCO LIUS ANGAAZ and His Orchestra MANNY LUPZ and His Orchestra A COLUMBIA PICTURE Cartoon "Slaphappy Mouse" Latest World News — also — "VICEROY HAS THE SMOOTHEST TASTE OF ALL!" SMOOTH! From the finest tobacco grown, Viceroy selects only the Smooth Flavor Leaf... Deep-Cured golden brown for extra smoothness! SUPER SMOOTH! Only Viceroy smooths each puff through 20,000 filters made from pure cellulose -soft,snow-white,natural! 20,000 FILTERS SMOKE SMOOTHER VICEROY! VICEROY Filter Tip CIGARETTES KING-SIZE SMOKE SMOOTHER VICEROY! © 1957, Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1957 University Daily Kansan Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED YS: ST !" ects only moothness? moothness! each puff natural! CERO HELP WANTED YOUNG MAN for grill work. Part-time eventings and week-end. Blue Hills Drive-In, VI 3-2099. 3-1 FOR RENT LARGE. QUET ROOM FOR MEN- single or double. Half block from Stu- dium. In room service or in- sured. Room service. Available im- mediately. 1218 Mississippi. VI- 3-8609 THREE ROOM UNFURNISHED APARTMENT. Very clean, good closets, range, refrigerator, built-ins, furnace heat. Private entrance. Close-in. Utilities paid. Child accepted. Reasonable. Phone VI 3-7636 or VI 3-2055. 3-4 MISCELLANEOUS NEWLY DECORATED well furnished, large sleeping room, private entrance, phone, steam heat. Near KU and bus line. Reasonable rates. VI 3-1013. 2-28 NICELY FURNISHED APARTMENT. 4 rooms, first floor, available now. Fire place, full basement, garage. In west location. Couple only. Call VI 3-5780. 30AORDERS WANTED. Good food, family style, reasonable rates, 1/2 block from Union. Call between 5 and 7. VI 3-2565. Nu Sigma Nu, 1241 La. 28 SPECIAL: 10 pounds clothes washed, spin dried, 65c. Same amount finished, 75c. Handicapped lady, Phone VI 3-0535 after 6 p.m. 3-1 nazwał liść nawoinily PLEASE WRITE M&L. TRANSPORTATION TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates for Rose Cleesman, National Bank for itineraries and reservations. 8th and Mass. Phone VI 3-0152. tf ADS LOST Students and Faculty Trip insurance with personal baggage coverage The Barlow Agency 910 Mass. Vi 3-2455 AAA Memberships Available. REGENCY TRANSISTOR RADIO, Gray, in carrying case. Lost in Alpha Chi Omega parking lot. Finder please call Peggy Garrison, ph. VI 3-7600. Reward LIGHT GRAY TOPCOAT with blue splash wavem. Contains important keys for the Union Sun day evening. Reward for Sunday David Laney, VI 3-6827. 2-28 TYPIST ... Fast, accurate, neat service. Immediate attention to all typing. Call VI 3-3732. 2-27 STERLING SILVER Zodiac charm bracelet. Initials, written on one charm, are MFV. Reward to finder. Karl Voldeng. VI 3-7922. 3-5 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Would like to type theses, term papers, reports, etc. and accurate service. Request rates. Mrs. John Norris, 1609 Tenn. Terrace. 3-4 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine. Phone VI 3-7654. tf TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka 1191 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf AILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's' and women's' clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6557, 1106 La. LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY TYPIST. Skilled in theses, term papers, reports. Fast, accurate, and reliable. Written for corps of regular rates. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 105 Barke Ave. Phone VI 3-2001 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. PARKER 21, between Strong and Union Monday. Bob Tanner, Law Schol. 3-1 for Jr., Sr. Graduate Students up to $500.00 BUSINESS SERVICES FOR SALE 6333½ buses. Phone VI 3-8074 for 1 day service NEW K & E Log Log Dup. Dec. Slide Rule and set of K & E Drawing Instruments. Call VI 3-3975. 3-1 LIVE GIFTS- Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas-complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs-beds, harnesses, etc. Kids' apparel. Outfits for chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent coat, squeeze bag. Plastic, party supply ice, paint, 6th and Vermont Phone 1-30350. BIOLOGY STUDENTS! Are you prepared for the first hour exam? Latest Biology Biodiversity Definitions now available. $2.50. Call VI 3-7553. Have your car lubricated the MOTO-SWAY WAY COCKER PUPPIES, AKC registered. 2 months old. Brown, blond, or parti-colored. Also one grown male. Exceptionally nice for pets, show or breeding stock. See at 345 Mississippi St. Phone VI 3-2760. 3-4 At POTTER'S "66" SERVICE 1401 W. 6th VI 3-9891 BOOKS For gifts and for your own library. Art. Architecture. Cook Books, Childrens Books, Modern THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 WESTINGHOUSE REFIGRATER. A cubic feet. Used, works fine. Phone VI 3-4243 or see at 1428 Ohio after 6 p.m. TIME. LIFE & Sports Illustrated magazines. Special students' prices of 1/2reg. sub. rate. Prompt service, buy now pay later, call VI 3-0124. tf Parties, Pinnings, Weddings Job Application Photos Gene's Photo Service 2144 Ohio - VI 3-0933 Gene Smoyer BRAND NEW CANON CAMERA with complete outfit. Leather case, lens hood, filter, self-timer, and flash unit. f/1.5 lens. Low price. Call Itofili, V 3-57-289 We rent nationwide trailers any size, anywhere, anytime CROFT TRAILER RENTAL CO. East 23rd VI 3-7377 RENT A TAPE RECORDER Ideal for Practicing Languages. Skits, Parties, Dances, Speech and Foreign Recording tapes & accessories. HIXON STUDIO and CAMERA SHOP goodness, YES! theyre bakery fresh! FOR AFTER-SCHOOL SNACKS Assorted cookies doughnuts rolls Fresh Deli Try Our Bakery Tr ? We deliver on the hill Drake's Bakery 907 Mass. VI 3-0561 Be Prepared— FOR WORK ON THAT THESIS OR PAPER Index Cards Ruled or Unruled Index Card Files Report Folders Bond Typing Paper Carbon Paper Rent a Portable Typewriter $1.25 per week __ $4.50 per month Or purchase a typewriter from our selection of good used or new portable typewriters For All Your Special Paper Writing Needs Come to STUDENT Union Book Store 0123456789 A Page 12 University, Belly Kansas Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1952 I am a man who is passionate about the arts. I love to paint, write, and play with my mind. I'm also a person who values integrity and respect for others. JIM HAMIL Pen Keeps Artist Busy Here's a candidate for "Busiest Man on Campus." He is Jim Hamil, Mission junior, who finds that his drawing work often brings his studies to a standstill. "My school work sometimes becomes incidental to my drawing," Hamil sums up If you haven't seen his work it's not his fault for his pen drawings have been distributed from Westportal, N. J. to San Francisco, Calif Last year his artwork appeared on the cover of the four issues of the Jayhawker. Last summer Hemil began a series of pen drawings of University buildings, fraternities, sororities and dormitories. The number of completed drawings has reached 34. On display in the Student Union the past week were his drawings of Fraser and String Hills, Danforth Chapel, Memorial Campanile, and Allen Field House. Busy At Christmas Last Christmas is an example of the time he puts into his work. In the two weeks before Christmas vacation he completed 24 portraits. "During the Christmas season I was so busy that I couldn't do more than go to class." he said. Recognition was given to Hamil in the November issue of the Alumni Magazine. In the article, several of his work's were discussed and pictures of his pen drawings were shown. "I'm afraid they spent a little too much space on me," said Hamil. As a result of the article he has had several requests from KU alumni for portraits and copies of his pen drawings. 4 Attend District Music Meeting Four members of the KU chapter of Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary fraternity for women in music, attended the district conference of Mu Phi Epsilon in Oklahoma City, Okla. recently. Thev were Kathryn Ehlers, Kansas City, Mo., junior, business delegate; Beverly Runkle, Pittsburg junior, music delegate; Creta Carter, Lawrence sophomore, and Bonnie Dinsmore, Oklahoma City, Okla. junior. Miss Runkle appeared in the recital given by the music delegates of each chapter. Program Features Austrian Customs Austrian customs, costumes and culture will be featured at a meeting of the German Club at 5 p.m. Thursday in 402 Fraser. Original music by a guitar, zither, and accordion trio will help provide atmosphere. Slides taken by Austrian students in their homeland will be shown. Please for the forthcoming Teachin's giftlist on Gustav Mardi Gras celebrate will also be discussed. The Plymouth Congregational Church of Lawrence is using his pen drawing of the church on their weekly bulletin and his work was featured on covers of pamphlets for Religious Emphasis Week. His artwork also appears on the cover of the Midwest Contractor magazine for 1556. Active On Campus Campus activities also divide his time as he is recording secretary for Delta Phi Delta, honorary art fraternity, and is president of the Crossroads Seminar, Presbyterian Westminster Fellowship program. Although his interest in art stems from high school, his work on pen drawings and mass productoin of portraits began when he came to KU in 1954. As early as 1953 he prepared most of the artwork for the Shawnee-Mission high school yearbook. With his time taken by work and activities some people might be curious about his grades. "I have done pretty well considering the time I put into my work," he said. He has been on the Dean's Honor Roll of the School of Fine Arts four of his five semesters in school. The deadline for fellowships which will enable a student to study in Germany, Netherlands and Switzerland is Friday. A similar fellowship program for study in Israel ends competition March 15. Fellowship Deadline Set Drill Teams Return From Mardi Gras The awards require that a candidate be a citizen of the U. S. and have a bachelor's degree by time of departure. The academic year begins between Oct. 15 and Nov. 1. Some fellowships require the contestant to have command of the language of the country in which he plans to study. Information concerning these awards can be obtained from Dr. J. A. Burzle, professor of German, in 306 Fraser Hall. Members of the Angel Flight and the Air Force ROTC drill team returned Tuesday from New Orleans and the Mardi Gras celebration. Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity, has elected two officers and pledged three university freshmen. Theta Tau Elects Officers, Pledges 3 The pledges are Donald Heimbach, Kansas City, Kan., Robert J. Rehagen, Kansas City, Mo., and Fredrick Herr Jones, Bloomington, Illinois. Officers elected were Bob Franklin, Topeka sophomore, correspondent, secretary, and John Michael Dealy, Wichita justice, treasurer. The teams marched in the Krewe of Carrollton parade and did a silent drill at the ball. Capt. Arthur W. Gilliam Jr., assistant professor of air science, said the unit practice drilled four times, and the students had the rest of the time to themselves. "One night, several men stopby radio station WWL where they were interviewed by a disc jockey," he said. "I believe the members of the team performed well and gained a great deal from the trip." The head resident of Corbin Hall. Miss Dorothy Bird, who chaperoned the group, said. Your French Quarter Joy Watson, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, said members of the team toured the French Quarter one night. Another night they sailed on the riverboat SS President up the Mississippi and back to the Canal Street dock. "We had a good time and though I have been to New Orleans, the trip proved very informative—different from my previous trip," Miss Watson said. "The trip by car was tiring but never too dull. The farther south we went, the air became humid and though the temperature was around 60 degrees, it felt quite warm. "It sprinkled occasionally during the parade." Went As Sponsors Col. McHenry Hamilton Jr., professor of air science, went as sponsor with Capt. Gilliam and Miss Bird. The group stayed overnight at Shreveport, La., where the men slept at Barksdale Air Force Base and the women slept in a motel. In New Orleans, the women slept at Camp LeRoy Johnson and the men slept at New Orleans Naval Air Station. Boswell Wins Art History Poster Contest Daniel C. Boswell, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, won the poster contest sponsored by the art history department with a free form lettering in ink on velum paper. The contest open to students in design and commercial art courses, was sponsored by the Art History Forum. Europe is named after Europa, in Greek mythology the daughter of the Phoenician king Agenor. The Greek ruler of the gods, Zeus, in the form of a white bull, carried her off and swam to the island of Crete. Do Jayhawk Men Know Their Women? Who Is The U.S.'s M.C.? NORTH AMERICAN HAS BUILT MORE AIRPLANES THAN ANY OTHER COMPANY IN THE WORLD + 7-28 Worthy successor to the world famous AT-6 F-86 The Sabre Jet that turned the tide in the Korean F. A U2314 B-45 America's first four engine iet bomber F. 100 America's first operational supersonic fighter USAF - ? America's first all-weather, one-man interceptor ? Engineers, scientists, physicists, mathematicians... The North American airplanes of the future will come from the creative potential of today's young men. Possibly you—or members of your graduating class—will help to engineer them. One thing is certain. They will have to be the best to merit the space reserved alongside the famous North American planes pictured in this ad. LIKE TO HELP WITH THE NEXT ONE? Designing the best airplanes to meet the demands of the future is the challenging work North American offers to graduate engineers and to specialists in other sciences. If you want to work on advanced projects right from the start...enjoy recognition and personal rewards...live and work in Southern California...then join North American's outstanding engineering team. See your Placement Officer today to arrange for an appointment with North American Engineering representatives ...they will be on campus on: MARCH 5 If you are not available at this time, please write: Dept. Col, Engineering Personnel Office North American Aviation, Inc., Los Angeles 45, California NORTH AMERICAN AVIATION, INC. A 12 Daily Hansan 北川羌族自治县曲山镇曲山村村民委员会 Thursday, Feb. 28, 1957 TRACKMAN? FLYER?- No, he is V. Sazepin, one of the Russian dancers who will appear with the Don Cossack troupe Friday night in Hoch Auditorium. Short Man Leads Cossacks Members of the Don Cossack Chorus who will appear at 8:20 p.m. Friday in Hoch Auditorium have taken principles of the U.S. Constitution to heart. While on tour, the majority vote determines all hotel arrangements, bus seats, berths on trains, the rooming of men who smoke with other smokers and poker players with poker players. After making several tours of the United States, they decided to become American citizens in 1936. To celebrate the occasion, they memorized the entire Constitution. The Cossacks are lead by 4 feet $10 \frac{1}{2}$ Serge Jaroff, who organized the chorus from a group of Russian soldiers who left their homes to escape communist aggression. The program Friday will include "The Creed" by A. Gretchaninoff, soloist, W. Magnuschevsky; "In the Church" by P. Tchaikovsky; "First Psalm of David" by Kievo-Pechersky Monastery, soloist, W. Magnuschevsky; "O God, Save Thy People" from 1812 Overture to Tchaikovsky. Excerpts from the opera, "A Life for the Tsar" by M. Glinka, soloists, A. Rojo, F. Stanislavsky, I. Corvin, I. Seifert and M. Bajanoff; "Parting" arranged by C. Shvedoff, soloists A. Levchenko and F. Stanislavsky; "Volga Boatmen's Song" arranged by S. Jaroff, soloist J. Berescoff; "Snowstorm Along the Street" by A. Vlamloop, soloist I. Corvin; "Russian Dance" by N. Bochkox, and V. Sazepin. An organizational meeting for all students interested in going to the Topeka State Mental Hospital on visitation will be held at 4 p. m. today in the Trophy Room of the Student Union. "Two Songs" arranged by S. Jaroff, soloists W. Magnuschevsky and I. Seifert; "Who Knows?" arranged by Shvedoff, soloists G. Tymezekeno and F. Stanislavsky; "Caucasian Melody" arranged by Jaroff, soloist A. Rojko; "Two Cossack Songs" arranged by Jaroff, soloists J. Beresoff and B. Bolotine, and "Cossack Dance" by dancers N. Bochko and V. Sazepin. Want To Visit State Hospital? Partly cloudy to cloudy this afternoon, tonight and Friday. Cooler west and north central portions tonight and a little cooler north central portion Friday. Low tonight 20s High Friday 45-50. Weather LAWRENCE, KANSAS 54th Year, No. 95 Freshman Gets Inter-Residence Scholarship Prize Marilyn Bell, McPherson freshman, received the certificate of merit for the highest scholastic record in the women's residence halls. Miss Bell was awarded the certificate at a dinner sponsored by the Inter-Residence Assa. at Douthart Hall Wednesday night. Carrying 17 hours, Miss Bell earned a 3-point grade average. Other women from the residence halls honored at the dinner for their outstanding scholastic records were Carol Schowengerd, Kansas City, Mo., and Johnita Forssberg, Logan seniors, and Brenda Johnson, Atchison freshman. Douthart Hall. Mary Swedlund, Salina senior; Carol J. Marble, Springfield, Ill.; sophomore, and Judith Aiken, Sunflower freshman, Miller Hall. Marilyn Shaw, Galena freshman; Beverly Runkle, Pittsburg junior; and Miss Bell, Watkins Hall. Annette Templin, St. John, and Ruth Laidig, Oberlin, seniors, and Diane Sandberg, Wichita junior, Sellards Hall. Elizabeth Titsworth, Greenridge, Mo., graduate student, Rochelle Cashdan, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Judith Temple, Cape Girardeau, Mo., Elaine Anderson Rolfe, Kansas City, Mo., Carolyn Huntley, Washington, Sue Ann Guest, Coffeyville, Virginia Miller, Wichita, and Rose Mary Roberts, Tarkio, Mo., all juniors; Frances Hare, Hilo, Hawaii, Mary Warren, Muskogee, Okla. Joyce Isaacson, Macksville, Helen Adler, Fredonia, and Laurian Seeber, Irvington, N. Y. sophomores. All are of Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall. (Picture On Page 8) Dr. Walter Starkie, Irish author and Hispanist, will return to the University April 26, to deliver two lectures in observance of Cervantes Day. Dr. Starkie, the director of the British Institute in Madrid, spoke here Jan. 16. "Gypsy Life, History and Music" is the subject chosen for Dr. Starkie's talk to be given at 8 p. m. in Bailey Auditorium, April 26. Cervantes Day Speaker Chosen Cervantes Day will be observed April 27 at KU by the Kansas Chapter of the American Assn. of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese. He will repeat his January speech, "The Wandering of Don Quixote and Sancho." Dr. Starkie is a visiting professor of Spanish literature at the University of Texas. AWS Candidates For Senate Chosen The slate for the Asociated Women Students Senate election Thursday, March 6, has been chosen by the AWS Elections Committee. University Bills To State Senate Four bills affecting the University were approved Wednesday by the Federal and State Affairs committee of the State Senate. Bill No. 251 permits the University to remove or tear down the Locksley Hall buildings located on 11th and Mississippi Streets and the eight Sunnyside apartments located on the site of the new business and economics building. Bill No. 249 empowers the Board of Regents to employ and commission campus police. On the KU campus this power is already held by the city of Lawrence and Douglas County, but if the bill is passed it would give the Board equal rights. Bill No. 250 gives the Board the power to charge fees for parking on campus and to use the money for enforcement costs and for repair and maintenance of parking lots and buildings. Bill No. 275 would enable the University to sell a tract of land 50 by 334.5 feet located on the south side of Delta Tau Delta fraternity to the fraternity. The bill was amended to require sale at full appraisal value rather than 75 per cent of the value. The fraternity is using the land now with University permission and plans to add on to the chapter house. An amendment to the plan of enforcement to prevent seat saving in Memorial Stadium, will be presented to the all student council at 7:30 p. m. in the Activities Lounge of the Student Union. This plan is a result of the referendum vote by the student body on Dec. 12, 1956, that decided there would be no seat saving in Memorial Stadium. Seat Saving Plan To ASC Tonight "Meet Your ASC," a program designed to acquaint students with the work of the ASC, will be discussed. Jim Schultz, Salina junior, ASC president, will appoint members to the ASC Constitution Revision Committee. The committee's job is to create a more flexible committee system. The candidates are: President—Megan Lloyd, Hutchinson, and Susan Frederick, Glendale, Mo., juniors. Vice president—Betty Seltsam, Topeka junior; Eleanor Youngberg, Lawrence, Rosemary Jones, Timken, and Betsy Shankland, Kansas City, Kan., sophomores. Secretary—Margaret Kurt, Kansas City, Mo., Nancy O'Brien, Great Lakes, Ill., Mary E. Phillips, Merriam, Martha Littrell, Kansas City, Mo., Gladys Knupp, Washington, Iowa, and Janet Cameron, Clay Center, freshmen. Treasurer—Mary Jo Pugh, Ferguson, Mo., junior; Ann Underwood, Emporia, Kala Mays, Great Bend, and Sharon Dye, Wichita, sophomores. ASC Independent-Shirley Stout, Lombard, Ill., Barbara Emison, Muncie, and Joy Yeo, Manhattan, juniors, and Gayle Kinemond, Bushton sonhomore. ASC Greek—Buth Anderson, Hutchinson, JoAnne Beal, Lawrence, and Judith Anthony, Kansas City, Mo., juniors, and Deanna Holmes, Lawrence sophomore. All women in the University are eligible to vote in the election by showing their identification cards. Mead Talk 4 P.M.Today Miss Margaret Meade, author and anthropologist, will lecture on the psychological implications of personality changes in a New Guinea tribe at 4 p.m. in Strong Auditorium. The lecture is sponsored by the departments of psychology and sociology and anthropology. MISS Mead is president of the World Federation of Mental Health and has been assistant curator of ethnology for the American Museum of Natural History in New York since 1926. Much of her anthropological work has been on New Guinea and other South Pacific islands. KU-Y Job Petitions Due At 5 p.m. Petitions for KU-Y offices are due at 5 p.m. today. Students interested in running for offices may pick petitions at the KU-Y office in the Student Union. The petitions will be used throughout the year to elect officers. 100 "MISS GOP OF KU"-The winner will be selected by the Young Republican Club at 7:30 tonight in Bailey Auditorium. She will receive an expense-paid trip to Emporia to compete for "Miss GOP of Kansas." Candidates are, from left: Beverly Wesonig, Pittsburg sophomore, Alpha Omicron Pi; Marcia Metcalf, El Dorado senior; Pi Beta Phi; Roxie Brown, Ellis junior, Gamma Phi Beta; Karen Howard, Wichita senior, Chi Omega; Pat Sorter, Kansas City, Kan. freshman, North College; Shirley Burnham, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, Delta Delta Delta; Marilyn Wiebke, Merriam freshman, Delta Gamma; Mar- cia Brooke, Edwardsville sophomore, Kappa Alpha Theta; Deane Boyson, Oak Park, Ill. St. Joseph, Mo. sophomore, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Kay Rathbone, Wichita freshman, GSP; Peggy McCormack, Kansas City ,Mo. freshman, GSP; Jane Ferrin, Topeka junior, Alpha Phi; Paula Sutton, Overland Park sophomore, Alpha Delta Pi, and Nancy Milligan, Baxter Spirngs junior, Alpha Chi Omega. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Feb. 28, 1952 'New' Doctrine Is Nothing New The recent and controversial "Eisenhower Doctrine" for the Middle East isn't the first such one the United States has proposed to soothe that turbulent part of the world. Former President Harry Truman on March 12, 1947, asked Congress for $400 million to aid warravaged Greece and her neighbor, Turkey. The request, labeled the "Truman Doctrine," was put into effect in the two countries. Mr. Truman said the United States was, at that time, the only country in a position to defend small democracies against totalitarian regimes and the spread of aggression. Communist-inspired skirmishes in Greece prompted him to ask for supplies and equipment to be sent to the Greek army. He said if Greece should fall into the hands of an armed minority, the result would have an immediate effect on Turkey and serious disorder might spread throughout the entire Middle East. Mr. Truman asked Congress to authorize American civilian and military persons in the two nations to help in reconstruction and in supervision of spending American dollars. There is evidence that spending more than two billion dollars in Greece has brought rewards to that country and to Western interests. A Communist take-over, which 10 years ago seemed inevitable, has been averted. The Greek economy has been boosted by industrial and agricultural increases of 50 per cent since 1952. An impressive air force and army have been built up, providing strength to Western defenses. Much of the American aid was used to alleviate refugee problems. But there have been unfavorable results, too, and many of them have been detected only in the past year or so. There are jeers now at American and British diplomats serving in Greece. There is still widespread poverty in the country. (The average worker gets less than $200 a year.) The Eisenhower Doctrine, so called since the President's speech to Congress Jan. 5, aims to show Russia that the Middle East can't be taken without war or the risk of war with the United States. It is concerned with the welfare of more countries than was the Truman Doctrine, and it has to cope with a problem of "little wars" now flaring throughout the Middle East. It faces a situation created by years of fear and distrust among unneighborly neighbors. In his appeal to Congress, President Eisenhower said the Russian interest in the Middle East was one of power politics and the hope of eventual domination there. The President asked Congress to authorize United States cooperation with nations in the Middle East in the development of economic strength. He wanted authorization for the Executive to undertake programs of military aid and cooperation with any nation wanting them. Such assistance, he said, would include using the armed forces of the United States to secure and protect the integrity and political independence of such nations against overt armed aggression from any nation controlled by international communism. He asked for $200 million to carry out these proposals. There has been, of course, clear-cut opposition or praise for the Eisenhower Doctrine. For the most part, it is probably regarded as another of the inevitable and necessary dollars and cents evils which has, as in the past, fallen to the lot of the United States. —Joan George Old Campaigner Says "Well, son, I was goin' tell you about the Night People today but I may not get to it. I'm still a little tied up about that traffic that is always most usually tied up. I feel the urge for a little expostulating on that subject." Before we had time to light up and listen the Old Campaigner had sat down and started talking. "I think I misjudged them fellers that dang near ran me down the other day while I was trying to cross the street by the Art Museum. I decided that I had better look into the matter and give it a little more personal study—from a distance, of course. "I settled myself in a tree about 100 yards from the street so I could not possibly get hit and watched that mess at noon yesterday. I used the very binoculars that Teddy used after sittin' on top of San Juan Hill. "Of course I did not come by these glasses personally. I only seen Teddy once—well, I seen his picture but it was a very good likeness I am sure. That's about the same thing. In fact, some people could talk all day about seein' Teddy that way and never get around to tellin' you that they met him through a picture. Not me though—truth, you know." "Anyway, I watched that mess and it was a pitiful sight to behold. There was a bumper crop of cars and that's just the way they was—bumper to bumper. That was on Here's the Dope WE'RE CLOSED FOR THE NIGHT, BUD! harry goff NATIONAL SAFETY COUNCIL Oread. They was acomin' and again' both ways and the poor fellers on 14th Street was left with two choices. "They could either push out in front of the cars on Oread and make them stop thus endangering the lives of them drivers and him drivein' and walkers like me or he could set there and suck his thumb until the traffic cleared up and enroll in some night classes. "Now that ain't much of a choice, is it? There must be a solution I says and when it comes to me it hits me so hard I almost falls out of my tree. Take the cars off the Hill. And then I says that this is a little extreme so why not put up a stop light. "I am on record as saying there is no place it is needed worse. I wonder why one hasn't been? This would be a fair thing for all and would keep someone from getting killed. "Well, when somebody does get killed they will probably put a light up. I will just nod my head smugly and say 'I told you so.' But there is the solution for you just like that. "I promised to tell you about the Night People but I don't have time today. They are waiting for me so we can go to work on that tunnel. I am not going to be the one that gets killed so somebody puts up a stoplight. I will not be a martyr and why pretend. Stick to the tunnel till somebody wakes up, I say. "You sure meet some strange fellers around here. Me and the Night People were down in that tunnel fixin' up a rest station—sort of a refreshment bar you might call it—when this feller walks in and asks can he live there. "Said his name was Orwell and he wanted to move in in 1984. That's really lookin' ahead to the housing shortage, I'd say. Wasn't all that I guess. Kept talkin' about bein' afraid of his big brother. Never saw anybody so afraid of his kin in my life. "Well, like I say, the world is full of strange animals and us humans has got our share. We just give him a little refreshment and told him to come back in 1983. The Night People are waitin'. I got to get back to work. I'll come back and tell you about 'em next time." Jerry Thomas Fames Italian tenor Enrico Caruso began his studies as a mechanical engineer, but became a singer instead in a choir in Naples. 25 Years Ago Feb.28,1935 Forrest C. Allen's Kansas Jayhawks come through to defeat the Oklahoma Sooners 33-29 and win the Big Six championship for the second straight year. Ad: Genuine government raincoats for $3, postpaid and money back. A Schaap & Sons, New York, N.Y. Ad: Starting Thursday—Marlene Dietrich, Clive Brook in "Shanghi Express." Ad: As beneficial as sulphur and molasses are the vegetables prepared as we serve them. Nothing is good enough but the best at the Student Union Cafeteria. The death rate from pneumonia and influenza together decreased from 140.6 per 100,000 in 1911 to 8.6 per 100,000 in 1955. Ad: New Eastman Kodaks. The ideal companion for an outing. Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1809, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1808, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 251, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associate of National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. News service: United Press. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $4.50 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except weekends, holidays, days, and examination periods. Entered as second-class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., post office under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS DEPARTMENT Kent Thomas ... Managing Editor John Battin, Felecia Ann Fenberg, Bob Lyle, Betty Jean Stanford, Assistant Managing Editor; Jim Banman, City Editor; Nancy Harmon, Leko Yim Zimman, Shilyn Zimman, Shi Shionozaki, Telegraph Editor; Mary Boynes, Delbert Haley, Assistant Telegraph Editors; Dick Brown, Sports Editor; George Anthan, Assistant Sports Editor; Marilyn Mermis, Society Editor; Pat Swanson, Assistant Society Editor; Pat Eaton, Picture Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Jerry Dawson ... Editorial Editor Jerry Thomas, Jim Tice, Associate Editors. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Dale Bowers ... Business Manager Dave Dickey, Advertising Manager; John Hancock, Digital Marketing; Harold Metz, Classified Advertising Manager; Conboy Brown, Circulation Manager. The University of Notre Dame "The shortest verse in the Bible is was founded in 1841. "Jesus wept." Automatic Pinspotters BOWL AT PLADIUM Open bowling weekdays 11 to 6:30; Sat. & Sun. 10 to 12 p.m. Friday night after 9 Pladium Lanes 9th & Mississippi Don Cossack Choir Sings SONGS OF MOTHER RUSSIA Decca LP - $3.98 BELL MUSIC COMPANY 925 Massachusetts Phone VI3-2644 BABY IN BATHING Take Real Life Action Movies At Home Join the fun and take your own home movies. Record the baby's first steps, your latest party, or your favorite sporting event. We carry a complete line of 8 mm and 16 mm films, cameras, and supplies. Come in and see us now and begin a pastime that you'll enjoy for life. Your Headquarters for Hallmark Contemporary Cards MOSSER-WOLF VI 3-4435 Thursday, Feb. 28, 1957 University Daily Kansan Page 3 KU, German Award Renewed The exchange program between KU and two German universities will be continued this year. One new program has also been established. A similar program will continue between KU and the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich Switzerland. To apply a student must send a letter of application, a short biography, a photograph, a complete transcript, and photostatic copies of University decrees and diplomas. The German exchange program involves exchanging students with Westfalsische Wilhelms University, Muenster, and Eberhard-Karls University, in Tuebingen. A program has also been established between KU and Christian-Albrechts University in Kiel. Three letters of recommendation from the student's professors at KU, a statement of his proficiency in German, and a certificate of health are also required. Information and application blanks for any of these programs are available at the German department, 306 Fraser. Applications and letters of reference must be in March 15. Selections will be made by the universities by May 1. Foreign Students' Trip Postponed The University-sponsored field trip for foreign students scheduled for Friday has been postponed for about two weeks. The exact date will be set as soon as former President Harry Truman returns from Florida. He is expected to return Saturday at which time definite plans will be made for the students to visit with him in his office. Besides visiting with Mr. Truman, the students will also tour the Buick, Oldsmobile and Pontiac plant in the Kansas City, Kan. Sigma Delta Pi, national Spanish honorary society, will hold its annual initiation and banquet today. Honorary Spanish Society To Initiate The society will be host to the officers and faculty adviser of the Emporia State Teachers College Sigma Delta Pi at the initiation and banquet. Mr. Eduardo Betoret of the University of Tennessee and former president of the KU chapter will also be a guest. Approximately 35 members of the American Institute of Tool Engineers will visit the TWA Overland Plant in Kansas City, Mo., Friday. The group will leave Fowler Schools at 6:30 p. m. and the tour of the plant will begin at 7:30 p. m. AITE Plans Field Trip To TWA Plant The TWA plant is used for the ovehauling of airplane engines that have been flown the maximum number of hours. The trip is part of a program of monthly field trips. A group of lions is called a "pride" of lions. BIRD TV-Radio Service ! 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 RECORD IT YOURSELF! Tape Recorders Rent • Sale HIXON'S 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Fine Arts Building Nears Completion The Music and Dramatic Arts Building, expected to be ready for classes next fall, is nearing the 75 per cent completion mark, according to Keith Lawton, administrative assistant for operations. The exterior of the 2.4 million dollar building is about finished with only final cleaning of the stonework and installation of a fire safety structure on the roof of the large theater still remaining. The U-shaped structure is located on the southwest slope of the hill south of Lindley Hall. Work being done on the interior now includes tile-setting in the restrooms and the laying of a terrazzo floor. Terrazzo is a type of flooring in which chips of marble are set in cement and polished. Some painting is being done, chiefly on the third floor of the music wing and in areas where scaffolds have been installed for plastering. The scaffolds are being left in place until the painting is finished, to save the added work of removing them and reinstalling them later. One of the highlights of the building is the 40-foot revolving stage being installed in the theater. The building will also house a 398-seat recital hall in the dramatic arts wing. With the exception of several rooms which will contain organs, the 70 practice rooms in the music wing will each contain a piano. The space in Fraser, Green and Strong Halls now occupied by speech, drama and music departments will be used by other departments. Most of the practice rooms in Strong will be turned over to the design and painting departments, which will remain in that building. Class of '32 Plans Reunion A planning committee of the class of 1932 will meet at 2:30 p. m. Saturday in the alumni office to make arrangements for the silver reunion June'1-2. The preliminary committee of 30 members has been selected by Fred L. Fleming, class president. Atomic Energy Expert To Talk "Atomic Energy in Politics" will be the talk given by David S. Teeple, consultant to the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy of the Senate Appropriations Committee and consultant on atomic energy to American industries, to the Young Republicans at 7:30 p. m. today in Bailey Auditorium. Mr. Temple is a contributing editor to the American Mercury magazine, is author of "Atomic Energy, 1955," and has written many magazine articles on atomic energy and American politics. Julius Caesar always wore a laurel wreath to hide his baldness. Graduates in Engineering...Physics...Mathematics LOCKHEED Aircraft Corporation California Division • Georgia Division Lockheed Representatives of the California Division and the Georgia Division will be on campus Monday, March 4 You are invited to consult your placement officer for an appointment. Separate interviews will be given for each division. Both divisions of Lockheed are engaged in a long-range expansion program in their fields of endeavor. California Division activities in Burbank cover virtually every phase of commercial and military aircraft. Seventeen different models of planes are in production, including cargo and passenger transports, high Mach performance fighters, jet trainers, radar search planes, patrol bombers. B. S. graduates who wish to attain a Master's Degree will be interested in the California Division’s Masters-Degree Work-Study Program. In the program, participants achieve their M.S. while working concurrently on Lockheed’s engineering staff. At Lockheed in Marietta, Georgia, new C-130A turbo-prop transports and B-47 jet bombers are being manufactured in the country's largest aircraft plant under one roof. The division is already one of the South's largest industries. Moreover, a new engineering center is now in development as part of the division’s expansion program. In addition, advanced research and development are underway on nuclear energy and its relationship to aircraft. A number of other highly significant classified projects augment the extensive production program. This broad expansion program is creating new positions in each division. Graduates in fields of: Aeronautical Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Mathematics and Physics are invited to investigate their role in Lockheed’s expansion. Lockheed Aircraft Corporation California Division, Burbank, California • Georgia Division, Marietta, Georgia Pare 4 University Daffy Kansan Thursday, Feb. 28, 1957 Baseball Squad Is Preparing For Tough 18-Game Slate Coach Floyd Temple's baseball team is now getting in shape for another rough season. During spring vacation, when the rest of the school is taking a rest, the baseball team will be on a southern tour, stopping off four days in Houston, Texas. There they play the University of Houston and Rice University twice each. They then move to Waco to play Baylor in a single game and return home to take on league teams for the remainder of the season. Coach Temple will be relying on the strong right arm of Ron Wiley and Larry Miller, a strong sophomore fast baller who played with the Topeka DX ball club that was made up of most of last years baseball staff. Supplying additional help to the mound staff will be reliefer Gary Fenity, a senior with tremendous poise. Behind the plate will be last years steady backstop Barry Donaldson. Barry Robertson will be the regular shortstop and Jim Trombold will see a lot of action at first base. Other than Ed Dater in center field the rest of the positions are still unsettled. Steinmeyer To Infield Don Steinmeyer will be moved into the infield to fill a large gap Left at third base by the graduation of Forrest Hoglund. The second base position looks like a battle between Don Pfutzenreuter and Dale Gulledge, the winner playing little more than the other. The two outfield positions remaining will be open to the ability of the remainder of the Kansas squad. Another bright star in the outlook for this year's ball club is the addition of Bob Shirley a speed ball pitcher who had a tough time with a sore arm in the past. With Shirley included in the Kansas mound staff we will have one of the strongest collections of good starters Kansas had had in a long time. The 1957 Kansas Baseball schedule: April 1, Houston at Houston; April 2, Rice at Houston; April 3, Rice at Houston; April 4, Houston at Houston; April 6, Baylor at Waco; April 12. Oklahoma at Norman (2); April 13, Oklahoma at Norman; April 19, Kansas State at Manhattan; April 20, Kansas State at Manhattan (2); April 26, Missouri at Lawrence; April 27, Missouri at Lawrence (2); May 3, Colorado at Lawrence; May 4, Colorado at Lawrence (2); May 7, To be announced; May 17, Iowa State at Ames, May 18, Iowa State at Ames (2); May 21, Nebraska at Lawrence; May 22, Nebraska at Lawrence (2). Connolly To Czechoslovakia LONDON — (UP) — According to the Czech news agency, Harold Connolly, American's Olympic hammer throwing champion, has arrived in Czechoslovakia to train with Czech athletes. The agency said Connolly will train with Czech athletes until March 6 and hold a "discussion evening" with them. Royal College Shop 8.95 NEOLITE CREPE SOLES Pinto they're so very, very soft! Penolscot Tramppez Black & White Grey & White AAA's to B's to 10's Royal College Shop 837 Mass. The University of Notre Dame library has the largest Dante collection in the United States. Forte, Thompson Head All-Stars NEW YORK — (UP) — Chet (The Jet) Forte of Columbia and Gary Thompson of Iowa State, two of the nation's nifftest basketball players regardless of size, headed the ninth annual "small America" team compiled today by the United Press. Cavalry did not become a potent military arm until the stirrup was invented. In addition to the high-scoring Forte (5-9) and Thompson (5-10), the first team included sophomore Don Hennon (5-9) of Pittsburgh, Tom Steinke (5-10) of Brigham Young and Jimmy Boothe (5-7) of Xavier. Boothe is the only repeater from last year's team. The "small America" is strictly for the little men-none taller than 5-10—but the 5 vest-pocket aces selected this year have proved week after week there's a definite place for the small man among the giants who dominate the modern game. Forte has been in and out of the national scoring lead at various stages and still boasts an average of 29.1 points per game. Thompson, a slick defensive star and playmaker, has a 21-point average and twice this year outscored Wilt Chamberlain in their three perusal duels. DON'T throw that pipe away Bring it to George's for a Tune-up THEN ENJOY YOUR FAVORITE JOE-COLLEGE STACK BETTER THAN EVER George Fixes Lighters Too So if your pipe won't smoke or your lighter won't light, bring it to— George's Shop PIPE NORTH AMERICAN HAS BUILT MORE AIRPLANES THAN ANY OTHER COMPANY IN THE WORLD VI 3-7164 + T-28 Worthy successor to the world famous AT-6 B-45 America's first four engine jet bomber F-86 The Sabre Jet that turned the tide in the Korean War F-86D America's first all-weather, one-man Interceptor F-100 America's first operational supersonic fighter ? + 102M + U.S.AF ? ? Engineers, scientists, physicists, mathematicians... LIKE TO HELP WITH THE NEXT ONE? The North American airplanes of the future will come from the creative potential of today's young men. Possibly you or members of your graduating class will help to engineer them. One thing is certain. They will have to be the best to merit the space reserved alongside the famous North American planes pictured in this ad. Designing the best airplanes to meet the demands of the future is the challenging work North American offers to graduate engineers and to specialists in other sciences. If you want to work on advanced projects right from the start...enjoy recognition and personal rewards...live and work in Southern California...then join North American's outstanding engineering team. See your Placement Officer today to arrange for an appointment with North American Engineering representatives ...they will be on campus on: MARCH 5 If you are not available at this time, please write: Dept. Col, Engineering Personnel Office North American Aviation, Inc., Los Angeles 45, California --- --- NORTH AMERICAN AVIATION, INC. N A A Along the JAYHAWKER trail With the Big Seven indoor track meet coming Friday and Saturday in Kansas City, Mo., Jayhawker cinder coach, Bill Easton, is maintaining the same confident spirit he has had for the five years in a row his team has won the indoor championship. By DICK BROWN (Daily Kansan Sports Editor) "Missouri, of course, will be our main challenger but Nebraska should finish a strong third and with same breaks could take the meet," Mr. Easton said. Missouri beat the Jayhawkers $59_{1/2}-44_{1/2}$ in a dual meet Friday at Columbia but did not show awesome power in doing it. It was simply a poor showing by the Jayhawkers. The Tigers showed real strength only in the hurdles, 440-yard pole vault and 60-yard dash. The other times posted by the Tigers would not be good enough to insure a high finish in these events in the Big Seven indoor. For example, Missouri won the high jump at 6-1/2, which will not be good enough to gain a place at Kansas City. The Tigers also finished first and third in the mile run, normally a Jayhawker strong point. The Jayhawkers' Bernie Gay actually won the event but was disqualified for bumping a Tiger runner while passing. Missouri took all three places in the 60-yard dash, with former Newton star, Henry Wiebe, winning in :06.3. Kansas came out of the meet with a clear indication of its strength for the coming Big Seven meet. The Jayhawkers have likely champions in Bernie Gay or Jan Howell in the mile run; Jerry McNeal in the 2-mile run; Lowell Janzen in the 880-yard run; Al Oerter in the put shot; Kent Floerke in the broad jump; Dave Tams in the pole vault, and the KU mile relay team. Depth Could Be Key In addition, the Jayhawkers have good depth in most departments which could give them placings in every event. Last year Kansas was blanked in only one event, the quartermile, in amassing a winning 51 points. Oklahoma was a close second with $45\frac{1}{2}$ points. "The difference between the first and second place team this year will probably be about three points." Mr. Easton said. Last year the Jayhawkers had probably the strongest track squad in league history, which ranked second in the nation outdoors, and won the indoor championship by only 51/2 points. "Our strength will be concentrated in the longer distances, shotput, pole vault, broad jump and mile relay." Mr. Easton said. "We will definitely double Jerry McNeal in the mile and 2-mile runs for added power." "Blaine Hollinger, who has broad-jumped over 24 feet, will compete for us in this event. He will then catch a plane to rejoin the basketball team at Boulder, Colo. "This could give us an unexpected lift although Blaine has not had a chance to work out this season." Hopes NU Will Split MU Hopes N. Witt Spat Eastern Michigan Missouri hurdling strength will be split by Nebraska's Jamaican import, Keith Gardner. However, he will be striving for an unprecedented triple—60-yard dash, 60-year lows and 60-yard highs—in the meet—and must run in 9 preliminaries. Just how high Nebraska finishes in the meet will be up to Gardner. If he can win all three events and the Huskers get peak performances from the rest of the squad, Nebraska could repeat its stunning 1951 indoor championship. Easton's track squads have a reputation for winning the "big ones." Last year they were beaten by Missouri in a dual meet prior to the indoor championships and came back to take the title. Easton summed up his team's chances pretty well with the remark, "After all, we're the champions you know." Refugee Wants Fights ROME — (UP) — Assen Ivanov, 39-year-old 7-foot Hungarian refugee, announced here Wednesday he is ready to go to America "or any- where else in the free world" to take on all comers in boxing or wrestling. PARTY! PARTY! Darn right I'm going and I know where to find everything for the party! - Ready-Pac-Ice - Frozen Juices - Six Pacs - Mix - Snacks - Glasses Thursday, Feb. 28, 1957 University Daily Kansas Page. 9 Open—9:00 a.m. - 10:00 p.m. UNDERWOOD'S 1215 West Sixth Quack Club Tryouts Set For Tonight Quack club membership tryouts will be at 7:30 tonight. The new members selected by the club will be announced Monday. A practice session for women in the intramural swimming meet Tuesday and Wednesday will follow the tryouts. Thirty-six points is the "target for tonight" for Mississippi's Joe Gibbon in his last attempt to beat out Grady Wallace for the national basketball scoring championship. Scoring Title Is Unclaimed Gibbon, the baseball whiz, who has been pitching strikes on the court all winter, plays his last regular season game tonight against Mississippi State. He goes into it with a 30.3 points per game average, needing those 36 markers to overhaul Wallace's 30.4 mark. Wallace, the South Carolina jumpshot artist, is idle until Saturday night when he plays his last regular season game against Clemson. But Wednesday night his lead withstood challenges by hot-shooting Elgin Baylor of Seattle and little Chet (the jet) Forte of Columbia. Baylor wound up his regular season by scoring 28 points in Seattle's 95-81 triumph over Portland. Only one night before he scored 51 points against the same team, and 40 points last night would have boosted him into the lead. But instead he remained in third place with 30.0. Fourth-place Wilt (the Stilt) Chamberlain of Kansas, who has three more games to go, was idle last night but Forte racked up 33 points for Columbia in an 80-62 win over Cornell. Dixon's DRIVE-IN Featuring the All New AUTO DINE SERVICE RAVE ITEM Genuine Hickory Smoked Bar-B-Q Beef or Ham - No More Carrying Food - No More Driving With Food - Fast, Easy Reorder Service - Relax With The Best in Dinner Music - Food At Its Very Best WINTER HOURS Weekdays, 4 p.m. to 12 p.m. - Fri. & Sat., 4 p.m. to 1 a.m. West Edge of Lawrence on Hiway 40 Use the Kansan Classified Want Ad Section to Get Best Results. New Version of a record seller Arrow's University collar has been on the campus hit parade right from the start. And now this famous button down collar (with center button in back) is also available in a smart knit shirt! Traditional Ivy League styling throughout in a pullover model, offered in a choice of two placket lengths: 7" (2 buttons) 12"(3 buttons). Available in solid colors, checks, stripes and plaids. $5.00. ARROW CASUAL WEAR ller Shop at CARL'S for all ARROW PRODUCTS 905 Mass. St. CARL'S Dial VI 3-5353 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday. Feb. 28, 1957 int i = 2; while (i < 3) { Women's Journalism Group To Hear Authority On Sewing An author, editor and educator in the field of sewing will speak at the annual Matrix Table banquet of Theta Sigma Phi, honorary professional fraternity for women in journalism, on March 26 in the Student Union. An outstanding Kansas woman in journalism will be honored at the banquet. The speaker, Mrs. Mary Brooks Picken is known to many housemakers through her "Singer Sewing Book," which has sold two million copies and has been translated into six languages since it was published in 1949. Her book, "Mending Made Easy" was one of only six textbooks authorized for publication in Great Britain during the war. It was approved because of its value in clothes conservation. Mrs. Picken produced the first dictionary ever compiled by a woman. It is "The Language of Fashion," a reference work of fashion and fabric terms. A new edition called "Dictionary of Fashion" will be released March 23. Mrs. Picken has written 93 books, many of which are being used as text books. She has taught sewing in places ranging from the women's division of Leavenworth Penitentiary to her own fashion and fabric studio in New York City. Newman Club To Hold Mixer The last mixer before Lent will be held by the Newman Club, Catholic students' organization, at 7:30 p.m. Sunday after the installation of officers. The new officers are John A. Di-Marco, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore president; Arden Weston, Blue Springs, Mo. sophomore, first vice president; Verlyn J. Schmidt, Hays junior, second vice president; Maryann Ward, McPherson freshman, secretary; Kathleen Kummer, Great Bend senior, treasurer. ENDS TONIGHT John Wayne "Wings of Eagles" FRIDAY-SATURDAY The lovers of PICNIC ...together again... closer... more wildly in love! How far can a man go before he loses ... A Woman's Devotion starring RALPH JANICE PAUL MEEKER · RULE · HENREII GRANADA Mrs. Picken was born on a farm near Arcadia, Kan. From 1925 to 1927 she was fashion and dressmaking editor of Pictorial Review Magazine. Official Bulletin Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office. 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day or publication. Do not bring Bulletin material. The only Kansam. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function TODAY Einstein lecture, 4 p.m. Science Library, Malott Hall Dr. Max Dresden will讲座 E. Poetry夜 4, p. 4. Music and Band夜 8, p. 10. Music of Alen Crafton, reads "The Trojan Women." Deutscher Verein, 5 Uhr Dommerstag, 402 Fraser. Oesterreichisches Program mit Lichbildern und Musik. Alle will- kommen! Christian Science Organization meeting, 7 p.m., Damforth Chapel. All students, faculty members, and friends of the class are invited. (Note time change; this week only.) All-Student Council, 7:30 p.m., Student Union. KU Collegiate Young Republicans, 7:30 p.m., Bailey Auditorium, Speaker: David S. Teeple "Atomic Energy and Politics." Public invited. AIChe. 7:30 p.m., Lindley Auditorium. Speaker: Joseph Amann, president of Engineers and Scientists of American Airlines. Prep for Engineering Unions." Everyone welcome. Quill Club, 7:30 p.m., Trophy Room, Staff Room, Criticism of student manuscripts. KU-Y Mexico trip meeting, 7:30 p.m. 306 C. Student Union. Les membres du Cercle Francais assisteront a la representation du Medecin Malgré Lui jeudi soir. La reunion regulille naura pups lieu. Studio Theater, 8 p.m. Student Union Ballroom. "Doctor In Spite of Himself." GLASS Auto Glass Tabletops Sudden Service East End of 9th Street AUTO GLASS CO. French Math ExpertHereToday A French mathematician, Jacques Louis Lions, of Nancy, France, will spend three months at KU under the terms of a $3,000 grant awarded to the KU department of mathematics by the National Science Foundation. Dr. Lions, a professor of mathematics at the University in Nancy, will work with Dr. Nachman Aronszain on a research project entitled "Boundary Value Problems." He is a specialist on partial differential equations and is the fourth mathematician from France to visit KU. Dr. Lions and his family will arrive in Lawrence today. Museum of Art record concert, 11 a.m. Museum of Art museum. Stravinky. "The Rake's Progress." KU-Y Advisory Board meeting, 8 p.m. Pine Room, Student Union. American Society of Tool Engineers field trip, 6 p.m., from Fowler Shops, or 30 p.m. at plant site. To TWA Overlain facility. Sign list in Fowler for Friday. Studio Theatre, 8 p.m., Student-Union Ballroom. "Doctor in Spite of Himself." FRIDAY Studio Theatre, 8 p.m. Student Union Ballroom. "Doctor In Spite of Himself." Kappa Phi, 7 p.m. Wesley Foundation. Fledging service is to be given. The Statewide Activities Assn. or which the hometown correspondents are a part, is giving prizes to the correspondent who compiles the best stringbook. The stringbook, or scrapbook, is to be composed of all the KU home town correspondents have a chance to win some money by sending news articles about the University to their home town newspapers. Stringers: Try For Prize Hillel To See Israel Slides The K-State Hillet Foundation will be the guests at a supper given by the KU Hillet at 5:30 p. m. Sunday. Slides of Israel will be shown by Dr. Max Milner, agricultural chemist and director of K-State's Hillet Foundation who recently visited Israel in behalf of the UNFAO. Butter made from the milk of zebus has a gamy taste. YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2866 By The Audio House 78 — 45 — 331-3 — 162-3 Hi Fi RECORDING TEL 800-743-2315 No matter what the sound, the Audio House can record it for you. So don't pass up the chance to get that recital, concert, skit, or speech recorded in any speed. VI 3.4916 Audio House PRESENTED BY WESTERN DISTRICT LAWRENCE, KANSAS - Hi Fi Consultant - Tape Players Cleaned - Dance Music Service Cottage Sigma Phi Epsilon This week's "Outstanding Fraternity" cottage Cheese LAWRENCE Sanitary MILK ICE CREAM CO. Sanitary MILK ICE CREAM Cottage Cheese Salad . . . the Best Yet The Sig Eps are among many other houses on the campus that are satisfied users of Dairy Products, especially during the Lenten Season coming soon. articles that the correspondent has published in his home town newspaper. The stringbooks will be judged by a University committee in the spring. Prizes will be awarded for the best clippings. Quantity will not be judged. Cash prizes will be awarded for the five best stringbooks. The first prize will be $35; second prize $20; third prize $10, and fourth and fifth prizes $5 each. FOR THE FOOD YOU PARTY HOUSE LOVE TO EAT . . . E. 23rd Street - NEW SNACK BAR 10 a.m.-Midnite Comfort Convenience JAYHAWKER NEW FURNITURE CUSTOMED CHAIRS Open 6:45 p.m. Weekdays NOW Thru Saturday SIZZLING! "Cha! Cha! Cha BOOM!" PERE PACO and his Orchestra MARY KATZ TRO HELEN GLAYCO LUCS ARARAZ and His Orchestra MANNY LOPEZ and his Orchestra A COLUMBIA PICTURE IT'S ALL NEW! IT'S ALL TRUE IT'S ALL NEW! IT'S ALL TRUE! The World Famous HARLEN GLOBETROTTERS and DAVE CLARK are Go. Man. Go! New Stars Make a Dare "Go. Man." Go! Color Cartoon "Slap Happy Mouse" Coming Soon "RIFIFI" 25 words VARSITY LARGE single dent U rdered. mediate Paramount Presents THREE MENT refriger Private Child 3-7636 NEWLY large s phone. line. Re ATTRA Bedroom entrance couple. Ph. VI . TYPIST papers, tion; fa 1911 Te Open 6:45 p.m. Weekdays HELD OVER Thru Saturday TAILO tions Also d 3-6657. LANCASLER HEPBURN HALWALLER THE RAINMAKER TYPIST reports. Prompt rates. Ave. P TECHNICOLOR VISITAESON We any CR EXPEI type ! Fast : rates. race. Feat. Tonite at 7:00-9:15 Magoo Color Cartoon Latest World News VARSITY Open 6:45 Weekdays Here is a peek at Our NEXT ATTRACTION Susan Kirk Hayward and Douglas are having a "Top Secret Affair" PRESENTED BY WARNER BROS. nrs-A:dnn Thursday, Feb. 28, 1957 University Daily Kansan nt has news- Page 7 gled by in the fed for will not need for the first size $20; need fifth CLASSIFIED ADS 销 RADO busthestra ETE TRIO RAYCO arARA busthestra OPEZ busthestra PICTURE ER 15 Switzerland Card United Artists Y tur ON erk rlas air 25 words or less: one day, 50c; three days, 75c; five days, $1.00. Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. FOR RENT TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Penn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's' and women's' clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6657, 1106 La. tf LARGE, QUET ROOM FOR MEN- single or double. Half block from Student Union. Linens furnished and laundered. Room service. Available immediately. 1218 Mississippi. VI 3-8669. 2-28 TYPIST. Skilled in theses, term papers, reports. Fast, accurate, and reliable. Prompt to work at region with Mrs. Betty Vesquiel, 1955 Avene. Phone VI 3-2001. **b** BUSINESS SERVICES THREE ROOM UNFURNISHED APARTMENT. Very clean, good closets, range, refrigerator, built-ins, furnace heat. Private entrance. Close-in. Utilities paid. Child accepted. Reasonable. Phone VI 3-7636 or VI 3-2055. 3-4 ATTRACTIVE sunny apartment. 4 rooms. Bedroom and den, private bath. Private chair. Stage, littered with flowers. Four suites. Six blocks north of University. Ph. VI 3-7826 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Would like to type these, term papers, reports, responsible rates. Mrs. John Norris, 1699 Term. Terrace. 3-4 NEWLY DECORATED well furnished, large sleeping room, private entrance, phone, steam heat. Neer KU and bus line. Reasonable rates. VI 3-0105. 2-28 PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS We rent nationwide trailers any size, anywhere, anytime CROFT TRAILER RENTAL CO. East 23rd VI 3-7377 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Fast, accurate service for these, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow. 608 Maine. Phone VI 3-7654. tf MISCELLANEOUS BOARDERS WANTED. Good food, family style, reasonable rates, ½ block from Union. Call between 5 and 7. VI 3-2565. Nu Sigma Nu, 1241 Lauren. 2-28 LIGHT GRAY TOPCOAT with blue splash weave. Contains important keys to unlocking the door. Union School day evening. Reward for finder. Call David Laney, VI 3-6827. 2-28 SPECIAL: 10 pounds clothes washed, spin dried, 65c. Same amount finished, 75c. Handicapped lady. Phone VI 3-0535 after 6 p.m. 3-1 LOST RESPONSIBLE PERSON to care for two young children in my home, two or three days a week to total about 20 hours. Days of week flexible to fit schedule of right person. 50c per hour. Call VI 3-7759. 18-C Sunnside. 3-4 PLEASE WRITE M&L. 3-5 WALLET, brown leather. Lost between Strong and Malot. Finder please call Gary Schooley. VI 3-7102. Reward. 3-4 PARKER 21. between Strong nd union Monday. Bob Tanner, Law Sch. 3-1 Have your car lubricated the MOTO-SWAY WAY POTTER'S "66" SERVICE 1401 W. 6th VI 3-9891 STERLING SILVER Zodiac charm bracelet. Initials, written on one charm, are MFV. Reward to finder. Karl Voldeng. VI 3-7922. 3-5 For gifts and for your own library, Art, Architecture, Cook Books, Childrens Books, Modern Languages BOOKS Library. THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. VI 3-1044 FOR SALE LIVE GIFTS-Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas-complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete outfits for dogs-beds, harnesses, etc. Chameleons, barnacles, chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. BIOLOGY STUDENTS! Are you prepared for the first hour exam? Latest in Biology Student Notes with Definitions now available. $2.40. CI VI 3-7553. 3-5 COCKER PUPPIES, AKC registered, 2 months old. Brown, blond, or parti-colored. Also one grown male. Exceptionally nice for pets, show or breeding stock. See at 345 Mississippi St. Phone 3-2760. 3-4 SEVERAGES- All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Plnic, party supplies ice Plant. 6th and Vermont Phone W 3-0350 Parties, Pinnings, Weddings Job Application Photos NEW H & E Lok Lot-Dim DBG Slide Rule and set of H & E Drawing Instruments. Call VI 3-3975. 3-1 Gene's Photo Service 2144 Ohio - VI 3-0933 Gene Spencer Gene Smoyer WESTINGHOUSE WEBERATOR. 4 cubic feet. Used, work fine. Phone VI 3-4243 or see at 1428 Ohio after 6 p.m. TIME, LIFE & Sports Illustrated magazines. Special students prices of 3% reg. sub. rate. Prompt service, buy now pay later, call VI 3-0124. tt TRANSPORTATION TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, bus, travelship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. All flights: Rose Chesman National Airlines for information for liner- aries and reservation. 8th & Mass. Phone VI 3-0152. LOANS ON YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY for Jr., Sr., Graduate Students up to $500.00 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. 8331½ Mass. Phone VI 3-8074 for 1 day service 1/4 14-K 14-K /4 Carat Bridal Set BRILLIANT DIAMONDS TOTAL WEIGHT Our greatest value! A sparkling center diamond set in 14K yellow or white gold UNUSUAL GOOD QUALITY AT THIS LOW SALE PRICE! $129.50 743 Mass. FRIENDLY CREDIT TERMS! W olfson's Your ID Card Is Your Pass to Credit Phone VI 3-4366 A Word to the Wives!! (of students that is) STOP! SHOP! SAVE! Stop at Rusty's or Cole's, Shop at Rusty's or Coles's, and Save at Rusty's or Cole's where your dollar buys more. You young married students can stretch your budgets to the limit here, and can sign up daily for our FREE DAILY CASH JACKPOT. Come in now and see our top quality groceries offered at the lowest possible prices. RUSTY'S Food Center 23rd & Louisiana IGA Plenty of Free Parking COLE'S Food Center 2nd & Lincoln --- Open Evenings & Sunday Page 8 University Daily Kissun Wednesday, Feb. 28, 1957 SHEPHERA —(Daily Kansan photo) PERFECT RECORD—Marilyn Bell, McPherson freshman, Watkins Hall, (center) receives the Inter-Residence Assn. certificate of merit for the highest scholastic record in the women's residence halls. Mary Swedlund, Salina senior, holds the trophy presented to Miller Hall for having the highest overall average. Shirley Stout, Lombard, Ill. junior, chairman of the IRA scholarship committee, appears to be at least as happy as either winner. Dress Blues Rule Of The Day At Midshipmen's Ring Dance Dress blues and white cap covers will be the dress when the midshipmen turn out March 15 for their annual Ring Dance. Skip Wantland's Band of Kansas City, Kan. will play from 9 p.m. to midnight. Students and faculty members who are Navy Reserve Officers will be guests. Charles D. Burton, Kansas City Kan, senior, president of Hawkwatch, will be master of ceremonies during the ring ceremony. The decorations committee headed by Wayne Swenson, Topeka junior, is renovating the ring used at previous dances. Chanorops for the dance will be Chaperons for the dance will be Business Firms Set Interviews Job interviews with business firms will be held next week in 216 Strong according to this schedule: Monday—U. S. Gypsum Co., J. C. Penney Co. Wednesday—Arthur Young and Co. Macy's, Kroger's. Thursday—Equitable Life Insurance Co., Continental Oil Co., Socony Mobil Oil Co. Friday—Westinghouse Electric Co., Maytag. Socony Awards $365 Scholarship A recipient for the $365.50 Socony- Mobil Oil Co., Inc. Scholarship has been chosen. Lowell D. Janzen, York Neb. senior, was awarded the scholarship for the spring semester. It is given by the New York City Corp. to promote interest in the petroleum engineering industry. Do Jayhawk Men Know Their Women? Who Is The U.S.'s M.C.? Lt. Cmdr. Ralph W. Corson, Lt. Cmdr. Marvin C. Lee, and Maj. Willard N. Christopher, assistant professors of naval science, and their wives. Moliere Play 'Impotent, Unfunny' The spirit of Moliere hobbled across three centuries to help the Studio Theatre present his comedy, "The Doctor In Spite of Himself," Wednesday in the Student Union Ballroom. Bv TOM SAWYER After this encounter, it is highly unlikely that the most brilliant wilt in theatrical history will ever be able to hobble back to his nice, quiet grave again. For though Moliere fought bravely and well, he fell before his age-old and virtually impregnable adversary, the English language. Translation Leaves Little Students of France's comic genius would rightly expect that great satirical pen to say something. But after much whitiling of a ragged translation, Molière's work retained little, if any, import. The term "revival" is most inappropriate as it usually means to reinforce with life, vigor and strength. The strength of this classic, though not Moliere's best, should lie in its contemporary meaning, significance and interest. Emasculation through translation has left the dramatist impotent and unfunny. And antiquarianism is an unfair and insufficient justification for presenting him thus. The artistic success of the evening was undoubtedly the brilliant array of period costumes designed by Sally Six, instructor of speech and drama. Robert Potter, Kansas City, Kan. freshman, as the woodcutter who finds wealth in posing as a doctor, was in rascally good voice. A briefly amusing caricature of the wealthy townman who coughed up the doctor's fee and a little phlegm besides Gary was created by William Howze. Kansas City, Kan. senior. Other cast members had little to do save Phyllis Graham, Almena junior and Don Scanlin (hometown unavailable) as the fetching maid L. G. BALFOUR CO. Fraternity Jewelers - Fraternity Badges—Rings—Novelties - Personalized Mugs and Ceramics - Trophies and Awards 411 West 14th AI Lauter Phone VI 3-1571 TICKETS AND RESERVATIONS FIRST NATIONAL BANK Blize The First National Bank of Lawrence TRAVEL AGENCY Miss Rose Gieseman, Manager 'Sweeping Country' - Steamships - Cruises - Escorted Tours - Airlines—Domestic-Foreign 8th and Mass. Telephone VI 3-0152 | From K.C. Via Air to: | tourist | 1st Class | | :--- | :--- | ---: | | Oklahoma City | $ 35.20 | $ 46.86 | | St. Louis | 26.88 | 32.26 | | Pittsburgh | 85.80 | 105.38 | | Washington, D.C. | 101.20 | 126.61 | | Denver | 62.70 | 82.39 | | Atlanta | 84.70 | 99.11 | and her jealous husband. Barbara Richards, Hays sophomore, was convincingly shrewish as Potter's wife and Sara Davis, Kansas City, Mo. senior and John Angel, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, were acceptable as the young lovers. You simply rent a barn, place chairs in a circle and sell seats. The audience, supposedly, "becomes part of the action" (most terrifying if the play were "Richard III"). For the uninitiated, the unique arena staging, or theater-in-the round, is a virus currently sweeping the country. It is an economical device used to avoid renting a theater. There is no scenery and all illusion is lost. What one sees, in this case, are a few familiar campus faces with greasepaint smeared on them. Though this medium may be adaptable for prize-fights, circuses, bullfights and crap games, one does not go to a ballroom to watch actors, but rather to dance. Moreover, it passes off this fru-gality as an artistic achievement. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. A TASTY SEA FOOD DINNER AT DUCK'S IS LIKE FINDING A SUNKEN... Our Specialties . . . - Block Island Swordfish - Soft Shell Crabs - Maine Lobster - Fried Oysters DUCK'S Sea Food Tavern 824 Vermont STAR GASOLENE WITH A PUNCH! Cities Service Milemaster Gasolene has more power, yet Milemaster is a new economical Gasolene at "Regular" Prices. Fill up today with the Gasolene with more punch at . . . SERVICE CITIES SERVICE PON FRITZ CO. Phone VI 3-4321 CITIES SERVICE 8th and New Hampshire