is a n the students sessions SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Mrs. Ariz. died int of nureka tims elow last KU KU nter- suf- Tuesday, July 2, 1957 45th Year, No. 7 LAWRENCE, KANSAS THE WORLD'S MOST FAMOUS ARTIST, JOHN HOWE, IS BACK TO ART WITH A NEW ECHO OF CHANGE. HE HAS BEEN A STILL-PROVOKING EXAMPLE FOR THE NURTURE OF CULTURE AND ENERGY IN AN ACHIEVEMENT BY TRANSFORMING IT INTO A SOIL FLEXIBLE, RECYCABLE AND REPUBLICAN ART. Pnoto Bureau MUSIC CAMP ART—A Midwestern Music and Art Camper, Larry Wollam, Powell, Wyo., admires artwork which is part of the display in the South Lounge of the Student Union. The present exhibit is a cross-section of work being done by the Art Camp students. It contains examples of work from classes in painting, drawing, and figure sketching. Later, the exhibit is expected to grow larger when examples of work from classes in sculpture, silversmithing, and pottery making are displayed. 'Come Back Little Sheba'A 'Hit' In Joplin Theatre "Last night's (Friday) opening performance of Come Back Little Sheba, Joplin Little Theatre's guest production being presented by the University of Kansas Players at the Park Playhouse, scored a hit with a large crowd of enthusiastic play-goers."—Joplin Globe. The paper went on to say, "superbly directed by Dr. Lewin Goff, the cast gave a well-polished, nearprofessional performance." The thirteen member KU troupe arrived in Jollin for its three day stay early Friday afternoon. Its hosts, the Jollin Little Theatre, Inc., welcomed the group. Weather Three hours before the opening performance, Dr. Goff, Bill Kuhke, Lee MacMorris, and Ned Norris appeared on a fifteen minute television interview program to plug the show. Meanwhile, Kay Brown, stage manager, and John Branigan, lighting designer, were busy arranging the set and hanging lights. The two performances went without incident except for a big red bug that joined the show on Saturday night. Bill Kuhlke dumped the bug out of an empty coffee cup soon after his first entrance. The bug apparently crawled into a water glass, for when the actor who played the role of the Postman was handed a glass of water to drink, friend bug climbed out and proceeded along his finger. Before the Saturday evening performance, the troupe was honored at a dinner at the Joplin Country Club. The dinner lasted too long, and the cast didn't get Saturday was uneventful with the show people swimming and loafing at their own leisure. Cloudy to partly cloudy today Scattered showers and thunderstorms beginning west and spreading across state tonight. Scattered showers east today and thunderstorms west this afternoon. Locally warmer southwest, otherwise no important temperature change. Low tonight 60s west to lower 70s east. back to the theatre in time, making the curtain twenty minutes late. According to a newspaper quote in Sunday Joplin Globe, C. A. Gaillist, president of the Joplin Little Theatre, said, "The University of Kansas' 'Come Back Little Sheba' was by far the best guest production we have had. We hope to have them back next year." After the closing final curtain Saturday night, the KU group reopened the theatre and partied on the discarded set for a couple of hours. The first annual award of the Charles A. Haskins Memorial Scholarship in Engineering at KU has been announced. Darrel Call Gets Haskins Award Darrel Leonard Call, Colby sophomore, will receive the $100 award for the schol year, 1967-58. Students To Have One-Day Vacation Selection is made from the sophomore class in the School of Engineering and Architecture and is based on financial need, character, leadership, promise of future growth as a University student and scholastic achievement. The scholarship was established in memory of Charles A. Haskins, an alumnus of the School of Engineering and Architecture, who died about a year ago. He was a well-known engineer in Kansas City, Mo. His widow and friends established the fund in his memory. Call was valedictorian of his high school graduating class and has made a 1.9 out of a possible 3.00 during his freshman year at K.U. Summer Session students and faculty will have a break from classes Thursday to celebrate the Fourth of July, the office of the director of the Summer Session said Monday. The one-day vacation will begin when classes end on Wednesday. Classes will resume at 7:00 a.m. Friday. 3 New KU Deans Take Over Duties Three new deans of KU schools officially assumed their duties Monday. The schools receiving new deans are the School of Business, the School of Engineering and Architecture, and the School of Law. M. Carl Slough, associate professor of law and a faculty member since 1946, is the new dean of the School of Law. He succeeds the resigning Dean Frederick J. Moreau. Professor Slough, 38, is a native of Fireworks Show Set For Stadium One thousand dollars worth of fireworks will light up the campus at 8:30 p.m. Thursday when the Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce presents their third annual Independence Day fireworks display in Memorial Stadium. An additional attraction will be a 30-minute musical program presented by the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Harry Starks, chairman of the Junior Chamber of Commerce committee on the display, cautioned spectators at sitting on the hill at the south end of the stadium. Starks said that the area is a bit dangerous and interies with the firing of sky displays. Starks added, however, that the committee is stressing safety and will have an expert to fire the displays. The approximately 45-minute ground and aerial display is expected to draw about 8,000 persons. Starks said that the event "carries the endorsement of Lawrence city officials" and is being held in cooperation with the University. Tickets for the event cost 25 cents, advance, and 35 cents at the door. They may be purchased from any Chamber of Commerce member, the Sportsman's Shop, the Carousel Shop and the Round Corner Drug Store. Proceeds are for civic benefit and fostering youth activities. I'll try to be more faithful. Wait, the image is black and white. Let's look at the text again. "SOME MORE TO LOVE" "AND THOSE WHO NEED IT" Actually, the text is split into two lines. "SOME MORE TO LOVE" "AND THOSE WHO NEED IT" Let's re-read the image. "SOME MORE TO LOVE" "AND THOSE WHO NEED IT" Okay, I'm ready to transcribe it. SOME MORE TO LOVE AND THOSE WHO NEED IT Photo Bureau A GOOD MOMENT—Gerald M. Carney, associate professor of music education and assistant director of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp beams happily as guest conductors José Vasquez and Wayne Hertz congratulate each other after Sunday's concerts. Cincinnati, Ohio. He received an A.B. degree from Columbia University in 1938 and the LLB. degree from the Indiana University of Law in 1941. After graduation he began practice with Kivett & Kivett in Indianapolis, Ind. He is the author of 20 articles that have appeared in national law reviews and has published a supplement to Dassler's Civil Code, a reference for practicing lawyers. He is a member of the American Bar Assn., Kansas State Bar Assn., Indiana State Bar Assn., Order of the Coif, national legal honor society; Phi Delta Phi legal fraternity and the American Judicature Society. He is president of United Fund, Inc. in Lawrence and past president of the Douglas County Mental Health Assn. Dr. John S. McNown, professor of engineering mechanics at the University of Michigan, succeeds 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. 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 Minnesota while earning the Ph.D. degree, which was awarded in 1942. In 1951 he received the doctor of science degree from the University of Grenoble, France, where he studied on a Fulbright Fellowship. Dr. James R. Surface assistant professor of business administration at the Harvard Business School, succeeds Dr. Leonard H. Axe as dean of the School of Business. Dr. Axe, dean since 1947 and member of the KU faculty for 28 years, became president of Kansas State Teachers College at Pittsburg Monday. The American Society of Civil Engineers has awarded Dr. McNewn the 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. 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, 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. He received the M.A. degree in political science from KU in 1948, making all A grades. Summer Kansan To Take Holiday Due to the 4th of July holiday, the Summer Session Kansan will not be published Friday. The next publication date will be Tuesday, July 9. Japanese Film to Be Shown The Summer Institute on Asia will show the second in a series of Japanese motion pictures on Wednesday at 7:30 in Bailey Auditorium. The title of the film is "Rashomon." It is a psychological study of the reactions of several witnesses to a crime of passion and violence. The setting is old Japan. The public is invited. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 2. 1957 Conformity: Blame The Liberals "Conformity—Strength In Numbers," our "un-American" editorial published in the June 25 issue of the Summer Session Kansan, snare-drummed opposition to a more tympanic crescendo than we expected. Not only were we forced—out of editorial fairness—to publish two letters from students-who showed no qualms about disagreeing, but we had to run an editorial that double-crossed us by carrying the idea of conformity to the point of absurdity. In many vague ways we agreed with both the letter writers and the opposing editorialist. We agree with the letter writers that the conforming tendency of today's youth is leading us like "anxious sheep . . . straight to the wolves." We also agree that "individualism can be dangerous, but that its dangers are preferable to those inherent in collectivism." We agree with the editorialist that a certain amount of conformity in society is necessary—that is the obvious, the fundamental. We cannot live without a few rules, formal and informal. We DO disagree, however, with the letter writer who wrote that he believes we are unaware of the implications of our statements. We believe the present generation youth HAS found strength in numbers, and that he learned it from the liberals of the past 40 years. The silent generation has learned conformity from the pragmatic liberal who neglected religion, ethics, and esthetics and over-emphasized the activities associated with the getting of a living-security. Pragmatic liberalism, this 18th Century child, grew out of the mastering of nature and machinery. For the liberals, this combination of science and technology was the answer, the panacea for an ailing society or an ailing individual. He latched onto a social fact and followed it blindly to its depressing, abyssmal end. He ignored a real and important fact: facts themselves change, even in the physical sciences. He ignored traditional thinkers—the ideals we inherited from Confucius, Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Voltaire, Rousseau, Jefferson, and Mill. He ignored the world of personality—the existence of feelings, emotions, values, purposes—for his great god, Science, that would save the world, he thought. Besides this pragmaticism, the silent generation has inherited the characteristic of affable compromise that grew out of the political ambivalence of the old liberals. During the 1930's, American liberals laid in a calm climate between the Marxian revolutionaries on the Left and the Fascist revolutionaries on the Right. Some fell in with the Marxists, some with the Fascists, but most of them never could wholeheartedly agree with either side and were consequently left without a voice, no longer daring to act. They were afraid of the soils of battle, so they all became pacifists. Force, was a dirty word then, and it still is. The main point of our editorial was that this college generation has learned from the liberals themselves that they should be nice quiet kids who should think everybody and everything is good, and who should be optimistic when the world has sunk to an all-time humanistic low. Even though most of the present generation did not experience Bolshevism, Nazism, and Stalinism, they have inherited the muddled thought that was typical of the liberals who did. Thus, in view of the liberal's history of pragmaticism and pacifism, it is no wonder that the present college generation has become withdrawn and blissfully unaware that the future is much more important than the present. This would seem the most pitiful characteristic of the American college generation today: their unwillingness to sacrifice for a better future, not only for themselves but for all the world. What they all must learn is that an ignominiously contented individual is of little value to society, and that while conformity offers security for the present, they are running, as our critic writes, "straight to the wolves." Can they be saved? We do not expect the savior to be a pragmatic liberal. If he comes at all, he will be awakened from this generation or the next. Old liberalism has died a natural death; procreation is no longer possible because the ideas are sterile. —Dale Morsch Two on the Isle - There are several reasons why people go to the movies. (1) They don't have an air conditioner, (2) They don't have a car, (3) The television set is broken, (4) They can't afford a six-pack, (5) They're wild about popcorn, or (6) They're not married. In its pre-holiday bid to attract moviegoers, the Granada theater has installed a lurid epic entitled "China Gate." This tantalizing tale explains the adventures of a Chinese female soldier-of-fortune who slops up cognac in a bombed-out bar somewhere in Indo-China. The local French commandant persuades her to lead a cosmopolitan group of French legionaires through the "China gate" in order to blow up a "dirty Communist arsenal." Included in the group are two red-blooded American boys, Gene Barry and Nat "King" Cole in his first dramatic (?) role. Everyone's taste differs in amusements, but until the film version of the Kinsey Report is released, Holloywood will continue to crank out its varied fare. If one doesn't mind wading through assortments of "sound" and "scopes" and other kindred flap-doodle, the local cinemas are featuring films designed to prove that "movies are buggier than ever." Newcomer Angie Dickinson as the broad who leads the charge is alternately Chinese and Brooklynese, but turns on the charm in time to make the "dirty Communists" let her Beavor Patrol into the arsenal. However, Mr. Barry goofs his assignment with the explosives and it remains for Wonder Woman to do the job. That she is successful is apparent as soon as one sees the close-up newsreel shot of the first atomic bomb test. Each of the low motor types in the film is asked why he is fighting: "I'm a-fightin' soes that this here whole Western World NATO and them other outfits, can be free forever." Mr. Cole does passably well in his conversion from piano to tommy-gun. Sam Fuller, trusting no one, has written, produced, and directed this story of love and war in the Far East with the able musical help of the late Victor Young. Across the street, at the Varsity theater, Columbia Pictures Corp has furnished two pieces of celluloid that, along with a good news-reel, round out a twin bill. The first of these is a Western called "Utah Blaine." Now this Blaine, as played by Rory Calhoun, is a real rustic Robin Hood. In 75 minutes he manages to woo and win heroine Susan Cummings, revenge his dead friend Max Baer, save the local citizenry from the bullyings of the "baddie" pay the mortgage, and shoot down one of the fastest gunslingers in the territory. The plot is relatively unique in that it revolves around how the hero wears his guns. They are so low-slung that only a trained gibbon could get them out of the holsters; in traditional fashion, they also fire approximately 300 times before reloading (Continued On Page 4) TV Notes NEW YORK—(UP)—The NBC Opera Company has five productions in English scheduled for TV next season. The first will be a new one, Francis Poulenc's "Dialogues of the Carmelites" on Dec. 8. The others are Menotti's Christmas special, "Amah and the Night Visitors," "Rigoleto" and a two-part presentation of "Meistersinger." NBC is offering 13 repeats of the "Sir Lancelot" series during the summer, the last eight of which will be color as well as black-and-white. United Press radio transmissions from New York reach 86 cities in the world simultaneously. "Climaxi" on CBs plans to integrate "remotes" into its live dramatic action to obtain use of actual backgrounds mentioned in the scripts SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Replacements for Hal March as master of ceremonies on "The $64,-000 Question" while he is in Hollywood making a movie include Gene Kelly (July 9) and Celeste Holm (July 16). (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) Ed. Phone 251 Bus. Phone 376 Editors ... Dale Morsch John Eaton Business Mgrs. ... Colby Rehmert Bill Irvine Reporters ... Martha Crosier John Husdr Janet Juneau Manager ... James E. Dykes CBS has announced construction of new facilities to increase the scope of its operations at Television City in Hollywood. Two new studios, seven new rehearsal halls, a major expansion of the service complex, including provision for making and storing the many articles necessary to a TV production and a new administration building are included in the program which is scheduled to be completed late in 1958. Steve Allen's Sunday NBC hour was a year old June 23. In days of old, when knights were bold. . They fed their horses HAY. . Centennial Goes Havwire APPLETON. Wis.- (UP) - A marching band and balloon nearly wrecked a centennial parade here Saturday. The band frightened a horse and the balloon made six shetland ponies bolt. The parade was held up until all seven animals were rounded up. When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Section. Sisters Lose The Battle NEW YORK—(UP) —Margaret Fisher and her older sister, Ann, put up a battle Sunday when two robbers invaded their home. The robbers were able to subdue the sisters and fled with $800 in cash and jewelry. Margaret is 82, and her sister, 92. But if you've got 200 horses under your hood You need Milemaster (at regular prices) or 5D Premium Gasolene CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. Phone VI 3-4321 CITIES SERVICE △ SERVICE 8th and New Hampshire CITIES SERVICE Sport clothes Sport cloth need frequent cleaning rhes to keep you looking fresh and neat in the summer rhes king n the n- rs Let Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners add to your appearance 11 Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners Call VI 3-3711 "You'll be glad you did" Margaret Ann, when two one. The dude in in cash 82, and Section. Page 3 High Button Shoes Comedy Opens Monday At Starlight The fun-filled musical comedy "High Button Shoes" opens at Kansas City's Starlight Theatre Monday, starring Paul Gilbert, one of the leading comics in the country today, and featuring television stars Denise Lor and Jill Corey with dancer Hal LeRoy. Curtain time is 8:15 o'clock nightly. "South Pacific" starring Howard Keel and Martha Wright, continues to draw enthusiastic crowds to the theatre during the second week of its current presentation. The Rodgers and Hammerstein show will run through Sunday, July 7. Keel, star of the M-G-M movies "Seven Brides For Seven Brothers" and "Kismet," has won his viewers with his resonant baritone voice and virile portrayal of the French planter, Emile de Becque. Miss Wright, who took over the Nurse Nellie Forbush role when Mary Martin retired from the original Broadway production, exhibits great vitality and exuberance in such numbers as,"I'm In Love With A Wonderful Guy," "Honey Bun," and "I'm Gonna Wash That Man Right Outa My Hair." An excellent supporting cast includes Benny Baker as the irrepressible Seabee, Luther Billis; Gloria Lane, who has received special critical acclaim for her interpretation of Bloody Mary; Jim Hawthorne, well-known tenor in the second romantic lead; and Joseph Macaulay, George S. Irving and Mort Marshall as war-time navy men. The third presentation of the 1957 season at the Swope Park playhouse, "High Button Shoes," is the rollingick story of a con man and his stooge and their slapstick antics in New Jersey in 1913. "Papa, Won't You Dance With Me," and "Nobody Ever Died For Dear Old Rutgers" are two of the larger production numbers in the show. Highlight of the show is a ballet of the Mack Sennett variety, full of fury and hokum, with an old time cops and robbers chase through Atlantic City, slamming bathhouse doors, squealing girls and a jittery gorilla. This scene in the original Broadway production of the show, which starred Phil Silvers, Joey Faye and Nanette Fabray, was classified by Eastern critics as "the fastest and best organized shambles to be seen on the stage in many years." Ralph Lowe and Mort Marshall will be seen in strong supporting roles. Filled with flambouyant hats and gowns and the styles of that period, "High Button Shoes" is considered by Starlight officials as one of the funniest comedies that will be produced this season at the theatre, and there's quite a lot about love, too. Gilbert and LeRoy are making return trips to Starlight, having been featured together in "The Red Mill" in 1952. Gilbert also was seen here in "East Wind" in 1952. From the age of seven, he has known no life but that of the theatre, progressing from family vaudeville to circus trapeze stunts to comedy routines which have booked him into some of the most exclusive supper clubs in the country, light opera and musical comedy in the nation's leading theatres and movies. He has numerous television appearances to his credit, including five NBC Spectaculars, the Colgate Comedy Hour and Lux Video Hour. Happy-toed Hal LeRoy, who last appeared at Starlight Threatre in the Cole Porter Festival of 1955, will be making a most welcome return to DES MOINES—Five swimming events this summer have been sanctioned by the Iowa Assn. of the A.A.U. Iowa Announces A.A.U. Schedule They are: July 7, Clinton Open at Clinton, Howard Judd, meet manager: July 13, Iowa A.A.U. junior championships at Muscatine, Gary Ackerman. meet manager: July 14, Iowa A.A.U. senior championships, at East Story County pool, Nevada, Jack McGuire, meet manager. Aug. 4, Iowa Open championships, Birdland pool, Des Moines, Lorin Graffa, 1049 Thirty-ninth street, meet manager: Aug. 10-11, Iowa Junior Olympics, Ottumwa Country Club, Max Rushmeyer, meet manager. Persons interested in the meets should write the managers for further information. McGuire, swimming coach at Iowa State College, is men's swimming chairman for the Iowa A.A.U. Bob Allen of Iowa U., is state A.A.U. swimming chairman for women. the Kansas City stage where his dancing has won him many fans and admirers. Denise Lor, feminine singing star of the daily Garry Moore television show, and Jill Carey, who has been named to replace Giselle MacKenzie on Your Hit Parade next season, will be making their Starlight debuts. The cutworm is not a worm but the caterpillar form of various moths. ANNUAL SUMMER SALE the university shop JUST FOUR DAYS LEFT! We Close For The Summer On July 6th So Don't Miss Our Slacks Summer Session Kansan COLOMBIA, N. J.—(UP)—Challenger Tommy (Hurricane) Jackson bloodied the noses of two sparring partners during a seven-round workout Sunday in training for his July 29 heavyweight championship fight against Floyd Patterson. Always That Two Percent Summer Slacks & Flannels (Excellent selection in sizes 29, 30, 31 and 32. Limited selection in other sizes 25% Off Suits Summer, Year-Round Entire Stock 25% Off Wash Slacks Reg. 4.95 $3.00 Reg. 6.95 $4.50 Jackson Controls Sparrers Short Sleeve Sportshirts Entire Stock 25% Off Sportcoats Now 25% Off Happy Hal's "enuff said" Specials 11 a.m. - 7 p.m. Three Suede Jackets, Reg. 25.00 ___ 1/2 Price Two Tuxedos, Reg. 45.00 ___ $14.95 (Sizes 35, 42) Seventeen Summer Caps, Reg. 2.95-4.95___ 1.00 Four White Dinner Jackets, Reg. 26.95___ 9.95 (Sizes 43L, 44, 44L, 46) East 23rd St. Tuesday, July 2. 1957 And Here's Something New: KENDALVILLE, Ind.—(UP)—Mrs. Dorothy Bruce spent four days buying goods for her new cotton shop but the store's opening was officially postponed. Police said Mrs. Bruce used bogus checks to pay for her goods. Ph. VI 3-9753 July 4th SMORGASBORD 50c $1 Bargain Table Items to 4.50 Now $1.00 each Or 3 for 2.50 50c Bargain Table Items to 2.95 Now 50c each Or 3 for 1.25 1420 Crescent Rd. the university shop When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Section. Across From Lindley WeaverS Our 100th Year of Service Special Purchase! Cotton Swimsuits Just arrived these eye-catching cotton swimsuits in several styles . . . exciting prints and plaids. You'll rate waves of admiration and enjoy free and easy swimming comfort, and it all starts with a swimsuit from our new group of slated-for-success suits. Come, see these bathing beauties now . choose the figure-flatterer that is just right for you. $7.95 WEAVER'S SWIM SUIT SHOP - Second Floor its Summer Session Kansan Page 4 Tuesday, July 2, 1957 Universe Cooperates In Celebrating IGY WASHINGTON — (UP) - If your radio is acting up or your television set picks up a San Diego, Calif., program, don't worry. It's just the universe celebrating the birth of IGY. IGY is the abbreviation for international Geophysical Year which officially began at 8 p.m. EDT Sunday. It may be a headache to you. But the scientists think it's wonderful. During the "year"—which actually will run until Dec. 31, 1958—some 10,000 scientists at more than 2,000 stations around the world will undertake the greatest study of the earth and its atmosphere ever conducted. President Eisenhower issued a special statement last night wishing IGY scientists of all nations "Godspeed and good luck" in their 18 month endeavors. The disturbances which might be caused in your radio and television sets results from a huge flare-up in the sun. The solar eruption—one of the greatest ever—set off violent electrical storms yesterday and today in the magnetic field stretching out 10,000 miles from the earth. Although Shapley regretted the communications trouble, he also was pleased that it came at this time. The flareup occurred two days ago but the effects reached the earth yesterday. A. H. Shapley, vice chairman of the National Academy of Sciences, said the storms also caused a blackout of shortwave radio communications in many parts of the world Sunday and Monday. Shapley said "the universe itself cooperated in heralding the beginning" of the geophysical year. He said the eruption will be covered as no other has in history. In previous disturbances scientists were caught unawares and could take only occasional photographs and were unable to measure them accurately, he said. To Test Jet Speedboat CANDAIAGUA, N. Y.-(UP)—Donald Campbell of England, the world's water speed king, plans to test his jet-propelled hydroplane, "Bluebird," on Canandaigua Lake Thursday. Campbell used the same craft to achieve 225.63 miles per hour last year in England. The egg came long before the chicken. Birds are an offshoot of reptile stock that was laying eggs millions of years before the first bird flew. In 1916 United Press started its first news service to South America. But with scientific posts set up throughout the world in connection with the IGY, Shapley said, photographs now will be taken of the flareup about once every five minutes. The solar eruption, which is big enough to envelope the earth, was first detected by Russian scientists in Moscow and flashed to IGY communications centers all over the world, including the IGY warning agency in Virginia. Shapley, son of famed astronomer Harlow Shapley, said scientists in both the northern and southern hemispheres "are witnessing one of the most brilliant displays of the aurora—the mysterious, brilliant northern and southern lights"—ever seen. One of the highlights of IGY will be the launching of earth satellites. American scientists expect to launch six satellites during the 18-month period, but believe only four will be successful in circling the earth. Police Helicopter Troubles Mayflower NEW YORK—(UP)—The Mayflower II arrived at its New York exhibition pier under tow Monday after a police helicopter took the wind out of her sails. The replica of the Pilgrims' 85-foot marque went out of control just off the Statue of Liberty Monday when the low-flying whirlybird sucked the wind out of the Mayflower's biflowing sails, reversing her course. A tug quickly put a line aboard after Captain Alan Villers ordered the sails temporarily furled. Later, under partial sail and with the aid of the tug, the Mayflower moved past the battery and up the north river to her pier at the foot of West 1st Street. Just before she moored at 12:30 p.m. EDT, the Mayflower almost collided with her tug and lost her line. LARRY CRUM MUSIC and RECORD CENTER 12 East Ninth VI 3-8678 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Open Evenings 'Til 9 o'clock Your Check BINDATIONAL BANK OF LAND O'GREEN BUY AT LIBRARY DATE 15 JUNE 1946 COUNTY AND ROUGH OF John H. Clunk SERVICE DATE INSTITUTE ORDERS DENOTED Your Check BROUT NATIONAL CAVE BOOK LAMBOCK COUNTY December 18, 1946 PAY IN THE PAYMENT OF John H. Clark SECOND TITHI TOU DISTRIBUTED BY Maude De Margo Tells All ● The exact amount you paid, the date, the person, or firm, that received the money, their receipt (endorsement) — all these are on every cancelled check. Such records are valuable, not only at income tax time—but at other times, as well. Pay your obligations the safe, convenient way—with checks of this bank. Fells All LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK 7th & Mass. "Where Your Savings Are Safe" Two On The Aisle Shot on location in Tongonoxie, the film features unusual scenery on the new Narrow Screen. (Continued From Page 2) The companion flick is a melodramatic piece about the woes of the returning Korean veteran. "Ride the High Iron" boasts the aging talents of Don Taylor and Sally Forrest as the social-climber and poor-little-rich-girl respectively. It is safe to assume that they make up the dialogue as they go along; it is rather mishy-mashy until arch-villain Raymond Burr furnishes the climax by collapsing in a drooling heap on the desk. NAIA President Assumes Duties The best fare in town, new, old, or otherwise is currently airing at the Jayhawker theater. "For Whom the Bell Tolls" is fifteen years old and still going strong. The magnificent cast includes Gary Cooper, Ingrid Bergman, Akim Timaroff, and Katrina Paxinou. Miss Paxinou received a well-deserved Academy Award for her efforts in this Hemingway story. Mr. Timaroff is equally brilliant as a leering guerilla fighter. With machine-gun in hand, he finally aids his American friend, Roberto, in blowing up the bridge. All three of the above-mentioned theaters are running matinees this week. Gazing into the crystal ball we find the Granada offering Van Johnson in "Kelly and Me" Thursday through Saturday, and the Jayhawker giving forth with "The Sweet Smell of Success" starring Burt Lancaster and Tony Curtis on the same days. The local drive-in theaters are presenting movie marathons which run 173 features beginning Saturday and ending late in October. Tom Sawyer CARBONDALE, ILL. —(UP)—Dr. Ross Merrick, newly elected president of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) took office Monday. Merrick is assistant dean of the College of Education and director of physical education and athletics at Southern Illinois University. The Mason-Dixon line was named after Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon, British astronomers whose calculations were used in determining the boundaries between colonial Maryland and Pennsylvania. Visit Our Shop Gifts for all occasions cards — figurines Costume Jewelry Elring's Gift Shop 924 Mass.—Ph. VI 3-5160 SMART BACHELORS (married men too) Send Their Laundry To ar finished Summer Wear finished to order for cool comfort 10% OFF FOR CASH AND CARRY DRY CLEANING WHERE QUALITY IS ALWAYS FIRST And ACME LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS 1109 Massachusetts TH Ll S other T to f lead boar Phone VI 3-5155 Me male ers a telle symcal cal publi Labo unus The cone and emo of pers are clus and tivit mar At up g Person tity tity enter The stude years G.W. sity Lu leadersion, observershyning religion Fourhandto d We feren but wom ing have their 14021211111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 --- 2019/7/32 15:37:27 am And KU Students? This Is What Leaders Are Like At Minn. University Student leaders are odd but some student leaders are older than others, at least at the University of Minnesota. That seems to be shown by the results of personality tests given to fraternity and sorority officers, student religious and political leaders and members of student publication staffs and governing boards. Measured against the average male freshman, male student leaders all show higher social and intellectual cultivation and hysteria symptoms. But male student political leaders of groups as Young Republicans, Young Democrat-Farmer-Laborites and radicals are the most unusual of group leaders. They are more abnormal in their concern over bodily functions, and show a greater lack of deep emotional response. Their feelings of suspicion, oversensitivity and persecution are more marked, they are more inclined to excessive seclusion, shyness, bizarre thoughts and behavior. And overproductivity in thought or action is more marked. At least that is how they show up on the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory, the personality test developed at the University that every freshman takes on entering. The comparison of freshmen with student leaders was made several years ago by Dean of Students E. G. Williamson and another University staff member. Women Differ Too Women student leaders are different too from women freshmen, but not in such a clear way. In fact women members of student governing boards and student publications have better emotional morale than their freshman sisters. Lutheran Student Association leaders are less inclined to depression, phobias or compulsive fears, obsessions and to schizophrenic shyness and bizarre behavior than religious leaders in general. Hillel Foundation leaders on the other hand showed themselves more liable to depression and overproductivity in thought and action than student religious leaders in general. High Hysteria Symptoms High Hysteria Symptoms Fraternity men on the whole score higher for hysteria symptoms, social and intellectual cultivation and over-productivity in thought and action than freshmen. Sorority women on the whole differ from freshmen women in the same way as fraternity men except they tend to greater concern over bodily functions rather than higher hysteria symptoms. Schofield Spends Summer In London "Scientific Research in Eighteenth Century England" is the topic of study for Robert E. Schofield, assistant professor of history, who is spending the summer in London as part of a $6,300 grant from the National Science Foundation. Schofield is doing research specifically on the history of the Lunar Society of Birmingham with particular reference to that organization's work in relation to the problems of the industrial revolution faced by its members. The second phase of the project involves research for a biography of Joseph Priestley. Page 5 He expects to complete his research in three years. He will return to KU in September. There are more than 12,000 trailer parks in the nation to serve more than two million persons who have become mobile home dwellers. Summer Session Kansan John Mayhan, Emporia junior, is a member of the American Wind Ensemble which opened its first season in Pittsburgh, Pa., June 23. The group will give three concerts weekly through July 22 in Point State Park in Pittsburgh. The Ensemble plays on a barge on the Allegheny River while the audience sits on the bank. It is composed of college students from all parts of the United States. All of the members were chosen by audition. Mayhan is a member of the University Orchestra, the University KU Student Joins Ensemble Jay SHOPPE 835 Mass. Jay SHOPPE Phone VI 3-4833 Our Big July Clearance Sale Starts Friday, July 5th 9:30 a.m. About 48 per cent of the nation's proved reserves of natural gas are located in Texas. Band, and the Little Symphony, which is composed of faculty members and outstanding music students. He plays clarinet. A former Midwestern Music and Art camper is also playing with the group. She is Carol Villarreal, who attended the KU summer camp in 1953. Miss Villarreal, a native Texan, plays flute. She will be a 'senior at the University of Texas this fall. Tuesday, July 2, 1957 (You will want to be here early—ask your friends about our season sales event) Harrell's Texaco 9th & Miss. St. will buy the unused mileage on your present tires when you purchase a set of new Safety-Liner Tubeless by B. F. Goodrich all popular standard sizes and prices Harrell's Texaco 9th & Miss. St. Ph. VI 3-9897 STUDENT UNION CAFETERIA STUDENT UNION CAFETERIA STUDENT UNION CAFETERIA STUDENT Do you want a really good meal the 4th of July? Then come to the Air-Conditioned - Student Union Cafeteria Wide Variety of Delicious Food KU KU AIR CONDITIONED Student Union Cafeteria STUDENT UNION CAFETERIA STUDENT UNION CAFETERIA STUDENT UNION CAFETERIA STUDENT Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 2, 1957 THIS WAS THE BEGINNING OF A NEW MAP IN THE HOUSE. THE MAN AND THE WOMAN ARE LOOKING AT THE MAP. THE MAN IS ON THE RIGHT, THE WOMAN IS ON THE LEFT. THE MAP IS ON THE WALL BEHIND THEM. —Photo Bureau THREE ADMIRERS — Preliminary oil sketches of planned murals of John Brown, The Plainsman, and Coronado by John Steuart Curry are admired by Mrs. Willie Fawhush, Dorothy Gerber, Kansas City, Kan. and Omar Henderson, Concordia freshman in the new John Steuart Curry Room in the Student Union. The late Curry was a native Kansan. This room was the former Sunflower Room. Music Camp Hits Enrollment High The six-week 20th Midwestern Music and Art Camp has the largest enrollment in its history with 556 students. It also has the largest geographie distribution with students from 31 states enrolled in the six divisions of the camp. Kansas has five less than half of the enrollees with 273. Other state enrollments are Missouri, 97; Oklahoma, 54; Nebraska and Texas; each 21; Illinois, 16; Ohio, 13; Iowa, 10; Indiana, 5, and Arkansas and Wisconsin, 4 each. States with 3 students enrolled are Arizona, Connecticut, Minnesota, New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington. States with 2 students enrolled are West Virginia, California, New Hampshire, South Dakota, North Carolina, and Nevada. States with 1 student enrolled are Louisiana, Virginia, New Jersey, Colorado, Alabama, Tennessee, Wyoming, and Oregon. The music section of the camp is the oldest and largest. It has 247 students enrolled. Other sections and their enrollments are art-100, science-87 (76 enrolled in a two-week camp and 11 enrolled as assistants to faculty members for a four-week period), the theater-55, ballet-39, and amth-28. The math section is a two-week camp. The two-week math and science sections were concluded June 28 and the six-week camp will end July 28. The campers have a full schedule of activities which begins at 6:30 a.m. and ends with 9:30 p.m. closing hours. Theater majors will present three major productions during the camp. They study stage movements, speech, make-up, and direction. Behind the scenes, student crews build the scenery and props. Music campers present weekly concerts in both indoor and outdoor theaters. Art majors study oils and watercolor painting, nature drawing, pottery making, fashion drawing, and color and design. The ballet section of the camp will present special programs with both beginning and advanced students taking part. Bar-B-Que Grills $2.98 & Up Also Charcoal, Lighters, And All The Accessories The discoloration of cherries can be prevented by care in picking and handling the fruit in the processing plant. Carnell University food experts say badly handled cherries usually "scald" and oxidize before the processor can pit them. Picnic Baskets $2.98 & Up Supplies - Thermos Jugs - Camp Stoves Student Desk Study Fans 6 inch fan $5.25-10 inch fan $13.98 Buy Now for the Sweltering Days Ahead. A Real Bargain. MALOTT'S HARDWARE LOST OUR LEASE 736 Mass. — VI 3-4121 WE QUIT! SELLING OUT To The BARE WALLS Ground-water levels in many wells in Kansas declined to new record lows during 1956, a year in which precipitation in the state was considerably below normal, according to a report released this week by the State Geological Survey at KU. Tee Shirts 3/$1.00 Briefs 3/$1.00 Under Shirts 3/$1.00 Levis $3.25 Lady Levis $3.85 Levi Jackets $3.95 Levi Skirts $3.85 Stretch Sox 2/79c White Sox 5/89c French Berets 89c RecordLow In Ground Water The report, the first in a proposed series of water-level reports, contains the records of 767 wells in 74 counties. Measurements of these water levels were made by the Federal Geological Survey in cooperation with the State Geological Survey of Kansas, the Division of Water Resources of the State Board of Agriculture, the Division of Sanitation of the State Board of Health, and the City of Wichita. The cooperative program was integrated with the program of the U.S. Department of Interior for the development of the Missouri Basin. Brown's TOGGERY 830 Mass. During 1956, according to the United States Weather Bureau, stations in 44 of the 105 counties of the state received the least annual precipitation of record. Six of the nine Weather Bureau climatic sections of the state received the least annual precipitation in 70 years. Pumping for irrigation has increased greatly in recent years in western Kansas and in the valleys of Kansas, Republican, Smoky Hill, and Arkansas Rivers. In areas of heavy pumping for irrigation and municipal use, the ground-water levels declined sharply during 1956 because of the combined effects of the pumping and drought. In areas' of little pumping the water levels declined as a result of the drought. In "Ground-Water Levels in Observation Wells in Kansas, 1956" by V. C. Fishel and Betty J. Mason, changes in water levels are discussed for western Kansas, central Kansas, and eastern Kansas. The fluctuations of the water levels are summarized in 22 figures and 5 tables. Copies of the 158-page report issued as Bulletin 125 may be obtained from the State Geological Survey at KU. U. P. was the first to send news to liberated newspapers in France, Italy and the Philippines after World War II. James Abott McNeill Whistler, American artist, was born July 10, 1834. A third of Minnesota's farm land is in hay and pasture. MID-YEAR MID-YEAR CLEARANCE Womens and Girls Better Shoes LIFE STRIDE — HANNASONS High and Medium Heels Pumps - Step-Ins - Slings White - Flax - Navy Patent Leather Were $9.95 to $10.95 $6.90 and $7.90 MAINEAIRES & VINER Loafers and Sports Patterns—Grey - Tan Natural & Assorted Colors $6.95 and $7.95 Shoes $4.90 McCoy's SHOES 813 Mass. MAINEAIRES & VINER Loafers and Sports Patterns—Grey - Tan Natural & Assorted Colors $6.95 and $7.95 Shoes $4.90 McCoy's SHOES llelles Hill, as of water 1956 affects t. In water of the Page 7 Ob- "3" by season, dis-central The are and 5 rt is ob ogical newsance, after istler ly 10, land New Methods Offered To Aid Poor Nations Editor's Note: A change has been proposed in U.S. methods of helping friendly underdeveloped nations. The administration wants to put this aid on a long-term loan basis. The idea has won approval of a bipartisan majority of the Senate. The House Foreign Affairs Committee, however, voted to limit the program to one year instead of three as President Eisenhower proposed. The following dispatch tells how the new plan would work. It was written by John B. Hollister, director of the International Cooperation Administration for the past two years. By John B. Hollister WASHINGTON, July 2—(UP)President Eisenhower's proposal to shift the emphasis of U.S. economic assistance to friendly foreign nations to loans instead of gifts should be welcomed by every American taxpayer. In brief, the President has asked Congress to appropriate 500 million dollars out of this year's mutual security program to establish a development Loan Fund. To operate effectively, this fund must have adequate money and adequate planning time. Therefore, the President has also asked Congress to authorize the government to borrow from the Treasury up to 750 million dollars in each of the two following years to finance the fund in those years. This three-year total of up to two billion dollars represents less than one-half of one per cent of our own yearly gross national product, which is running at the rate of 420 billion dollars. If this fund fulfills its purpose of speeding economic development among almost a billion people, the dividends to the United States will far exceed the investment. These proposals of the President's are now before Congress. The Senate has already authorized these requests in full. The new proposals signify a fundamental change in emphasis from the practice of past years and would accomplish the following important improvements: 1. The American taxpayer would know how much money was going toward helping the economic development of friendly nations, and would know that all of it was on a loan basis. 2. Foreign nations will know that the U.S. has certain limited funds (two billion dollars over three years) available for loans for really worthwhile projects that will contribute significantly to building economic strength. This, I am convinced, is the sound, business-like way for free nations to work together. The very creation of the fund will inspire borrowing nations with a greater sense of zeal and responsibility. Loans, rather than gifts, will encourage self-reliance, and the long-term availability of the fund will encourage thoughtful long-term planning rather than frantic emergency action. What Is the Purpose Of The Fund? 3. All parties will know this money is available until used—and not, as in the past, for a limited number of months. About a billion people—almost one-third of the world's population live in the underdeveloped areas, particularly in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia. The average income is about 100 dollars a year, in contrast to about 2,500 dollars in the U.S. Malnutrition, poverty, sickness take such a toll that their life expectancy is about 30 years, in contrast to 70 in the U.S. Nineteen of these nations have achieved political independence since World War II. They are determined to achieve economic growth and independence too. However, they do not have adequate capital and foreign exchange to begin essential development in roads, dams, railroads, utilities—the very sinews of economic growth. They must turn to the outside for help. Notwithstanding the blandishments of the Communist bloc, most of these new countries turn to us, and other industrialized nations of the free world, for this help. The purpose of the fund is to provide the most economical and effective way for the United States to assist in these nations' own efforts to progress. How Would The Loans Be Made? Within the International Cooperative Administration, I would expect to appoint a manager of the Development Loan Fund, and provide him with a small staff of um with a small staff of experts. Nations wishing to borrow will present to the fund manager projects for which they are requesting loans. These proposals would be fully documented by engineering and economic studies and similar justification. The requests would then be screened against these three criteria, which are specified in the proposed legislation: 1. Could the financing be obtained elsewhere in the free world on reasonable terms? This would insure that the fund's financing complemented, rather than was a substitute for, financing available from other sources. 2. Is the proposed activity of transaction economically and technically sound? 3. Does it give reasonable promise of contributing to economic growth as a sound investment should? And I should add, as does the proposed bill, that the fund would be administered so as to support and encourage private investment. The fund would be much more directly an instrument of our foreign policy than is the export-import bank. That is why the President recommends that the fund be administered by ICA, under the policy guidance of the State Department. However, just as with a regular bank, the obligation to repay would be unequivocal; although undoubtedly a substantial number of the loans would be repayable in local currencies. The terms in general would be long and frequently interest also would be paid in local currency. will Cooperate With Private Banks I wish to emphasize at the fund will not compete in any way with regular banking institutions. Rather, it will cooperate with them to the hilt. Suppose country "X" has known rich iron ore deposits, and needs loans to exploit them. Regular banks might finance such loans, but only if there was a railroad line to get the iron ore out and down to a port. The fund might make a loan to build the railroad, then the regular bank would make a loan to develop the mine. Thus, such a loan would be "seed" money to get private economic sources into development activities and get these under-developed nations onto their own economic feet. We want these countries' growth to go forward rapidly enough so that they can finance an increasing part of their development programs out of their own production and from normal financing sources. Senate Committee Votes Opens Files If we can do this, the requirement for the fund's resources will eventually be diminished, and eventually, as the fund revolves from its own earnings and repayments, no new funds will be needed. WASHINGTON—(UP)—The Senate Judiciary Committee unanimously approved Monday a bill to limit the effect of a recent Supreme Court decision opening FBI files to defendants in certain criminal cases. Sen. Joseph C. O'Mahoney (D-Wyo.) said he would report the bill to the Senate today and push to get it passed this week. The administration-backed bill would let federal judges examine the FBI files and submit to defendants only such material as is relevant to a particular case. The House Judiciary committee meets on similar legislation today. Pending before it are the Administration Bill and a stiffer measure drafted by Rep. Francis E. Walter (D-Pa.) and approved by Walter's subcommittee. Rep. Kenneth B. Keating (R-N.Y.) is expected to try to substitute the Administration bill The Supreme Court ruled June 3 in the so-called Jencks case that the government must make available to defendants in criminal cases FBI reports supplied by informers used by the government as witnesses in a trial. Otherwise, the court ruled, the government must drop prosecution in such cases. The bill approved by the Senate Committee today provides that after a government witness testifies on direct examination, the defense may ask the right to examine any statements he had made to the government. If we do less than this, the requirements for new funds will continue unabated. I submit that unending assistance is wasteful assistance. Not only that, but it will probably be ineffective assistance. For it will fail to meet the very real threat to our national safety which exists in the less developed areas. Therefore, to do its job, the fund must have adequate financing for an adequate time right from the start. How Has Congress Greeted How Has Congress Greet The Fund' Proposal? Congress consists of 531 different individuals with as many individual opinions. You cannot predict what will happen until the final authorization is approved and the final appropriation made. The special Senate committee to study foriegn aid recommended that development funds be put on a loan basis, and the Senate has already approved this part of this year's mutual security bill. This has been a recurring recommendation in almost every study made of the mutual security program. It is in the national interest to help other newer nations become strong and stay free—for our mutual benefit. In order to organize the Rough Riders for service in the Spanish-American War, Theodore Roosevelt resigned as assistant secretary of the Navy. Get your 4th of July PICNIC SUPPLIES in one stop Watermelon Ice Cold Beverages Watermelon Lunch Meat Groceries Crushed Ice Open 7 Days & Evenings Summer Session Kansan AMERICAN ServICE Company 616 Vt. - Ph. VI 3-0350 Tuesday. July 2. 1957 Stars Lack Glamour Today HOLLYWOOD-(UP)-The world's leading example of glamour has decided the new young stars of Hollywood don't have any. Marlene Dietrich, who pales even Ava Gardner and Rita Hayworth when it comes to true glamour, isn't quite sure what glamour is. She thinks "it has something to do with authority." But whatever the ingredient is, the new beauties of the screen don't have it, she observed with a shrug. There are no glamorous stars today because the people who give glamour to these women are not around—producers such as Irving Thalberg, L. B. Mayer," reflected Dietrich. "They took those little girls and did something with them. "Now," she sighed, "they measure them. "This bosom business is a national American disease. It has spread everywhere, to England, to Italy. Like, Coca-Cola. "The real glamour women in the history of movies are very few. There have not been many, just a handful. Today the French actresses probably have glamour, but the stars here just don't." "Except for Audrey Hepburn—she's in a class by herself! She's European. It's very reassuring and wonderful that with all these girls there still is Audrey. The 1906 earthquake in San Francisco began at 5:15 a.m. April 18. Dietrich's Glamour, Too, Was Created Mayer and Thalberg created glamour for Jean Harlow and Greta Garbo. Director Josef Von Sternberg was credited with building the fabulous creature that is Dietrich—a slender, blonde, husky-voiced woman now twice a grandmother but unequaled in her class. In "Witness for the Prosecution" Marlene wears a mamish, slouch hat. It's an exact copy of the hat she wore when she first arrived in Hollywood in 1930. In measurements and face as well as hat, she still looks the same. These day Marlene is working on her most important and most dramatic role in many years, the title role for "Witness for the Prosecution," which independent producer Arthur Hornblow is making from the stage hit. "I wore the hat then in publicity stills, but this is the first time I have worn it in a film," she said. "I usually play shady ladies in feathers." Parking Free With Meters CORAL GABLES, Fla. — (UP) — Traffic engineer William Wellons said motorists have taken the city for $7,000 in recent months. They have discovered, he said, they can make parking meters register by shaking them instead of using coins. United Press entered the picture field in 1952 with 292 clients. The total was 639 in 1957. --- BASEBALL The most popular outdoor game in America is And the most popular checking account is one in which no minimum balance is required, called ThriftyCheck available in this area only at Douglas County State Bank 900 Mass. "The Bank of Friendly Service" The 4th of July Is Never Complete Without "Varsity Velvet" Ice Cream Also Featuring "Lemon Chiffon" Ice Cream For July At Your Favorite Dealer Or Call VI 3-5511 LAWRENCE MILK ICE CREAM CO. 202 West 6th 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 202 West 6th 1.3.11 b 3025 3025 3025 C. B. A. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday. July 2, 1957 Army To Hire 300 For Auditing In the Fifth U.S. Army area the Army Audit Agency employs approximately 500 professional and administrative personnel. The audit work for which the Agency is responsible is highly technical and provides opportunities in the accounting and auditing profession for individuals having all necessary qualifications. The Army Audit Agency has all audit responsibilities covering internal activities and dealings with contractors for the Department of the Army. The Agency's work involves audit in contractors' plants, Army installations, and installations owned by the Government and operated by private contractors. A drive to secure professional civilian auditors for Civil Service positions with the United States Army Audit Agency has begun in the Fifth Army area. The announcement was made by the Kansas City Regional Office which services the 13 State Army area. It applies to operating branch offices in Chicago, Denver, Detroit, Minneapolis, and St. Louis. In addition, field offices at several Army installations and contractor activities are affected. Job Possibilities For Recent Grads Throughout Army Audit offices in the Fifth U.S. Army area approximately 300 professional civilian auditors are required. Opportunities exist for all grades of personnel ranging from college graduates to experienced unit supervisors and executives. Except for trainees, salary ranges are from $6,400 to $12,000 per year. Other benefits authorized by law and available to those auditors are a liberal retirement plan, employees' life insurance, and sick and annual vacation privileges. The audit responsibilities of the Agency are continually increasing. Improvements in accounting system installations throughout the Army have created an expanded program. A great need exists for qualified competent audit technicians who understand the application of recognized accounting techniques. These techniques are applied to the audit and evaluation of general and cost accounting systems and management operations. Further, the scope of the audit includes organizations, finance and cost accounting, budgeting, fund accounting, revolving and working capital funds, production and financial management, and utilization of goods and services. The Regional-Director of the Army Audit Agency stressed that the Army is as much interested in experienced older individuals as in the recent accounting graduate. Excellent professional positions are open on the basis of individual merit. Civil Service Announcement 7 (b), available at the Post Office, lists the criteria necessary to qualify for a job. Further information concerning opportunities within the Agency may be obtained by requesting an interview with or submitting a resume of personal qualifications to: The Director, Kansas City Regional Office, U.S. Army Audit Agency, 5505 Independence Avenue, Kansas City 23, Missouri. Send Checks To Father DES MOINES—(UP)—The Iowa Board of Social Welfare will send checks to the father instead of the mother in the aid to dependent children program. Mrs. Mary Hunke, board member, said many families are on welfare rolls because the women don't know how to manage their household budgets. Ballston Spa, N. Y. celebrates it 150th anniversary this year. The celebration moves into high gear July 20. South Pacific On LP and 45's BELL MUSIC COMPANY 925 Massachusetts Phone 13-2644 Entomologists Get $5,300 Carl W. Rettenncyer, KU graduate student and principal research assistant, collected samples on Barro Colorado Island, Panama. Canal Dr. Charles D. Michener, chairman of the department of entomology, and Dr. Robert E. Beer, associate professor of entomology, have been granted $5,300 by the National Science Foundation to continue their research on "Arthropod Associates of Army Ants." Zone, which are now being analyzed by KU entomologists. The associates of the army ants include beetles, roaches, flies, mites and other arthropods, members of the phylum Arthropoda, of which insects are an important class. Minnesota has 18,008,000 acres of land in commercial forest. The foundation made the first grant of $4,800 to Dr. Michener and Dr. Beer two years ago. Since that time the field work on the project has been completed and work now centers in the laboratory. LEBANON. Ind. — (UP) — Residents had just about finished bail-out out the water dumped in their cellars by a flooding creek when the water company announced it was increasing rates. They Pay For That, Too? Pay by Check Students and Parents like the convenience of a checking account, and everybody likes a low-cost First National Economy Checking Account - Free personalized checkbook O - 10c per check the only charge --- - Free statement each three months First National Bank Member F.D.I.C. Lazy CRISP CHEFS SALAD CHILLED FRUIT SALAD JELLO FRUIT TOSS CHILLED JUICES Susan Dance Every Wednesday Evening Trail Room Student Union Specialties TOSSED GREEN SALAD DELICIOUS FRUIT PLATE FRESH ICED FRUIT COTTAGE CHEESE SALADS Air Conditioned Hawk's Nest Sub-Basement Summer Session Kansan Page 9 British Press Comments On Korean Arms Build-up The decision of the United Nations in South Korea to modernize its armaments because of Communist breaches of the armistice agreement is one of the main topics of comment in the British press. The following are excerpts from leading British newspapers: The Daily Mail (Conservative) welcomes the decision. It says that the Western position has deteriorated every time the line of least resistance has been taken with the Russians but has improved every time the West has shown readiness to stand up against the Communist menace. The Times (independent) notes that the United States is to supply the new armaments, including jet aircraft, and says that the American action seems justified. At the same time the paper says that the news that armaments are being increased in Korea just at a time when their decrease elsewhere is in the air must cause anxiety. "For that reason," says the Mail, "we welcome the announcement by the U.N. Command that it proposes to reinforce its position in South Korea." "In this case, as in the Middle East, it is plainly the Communists who have taken the lead in stri- ring up trouble by the supply of arms. So long as they continue with these actions their verbal professions of peace can carry little weight with the Western world." The Manchester Guardian (Liberal) feels that the decision of the U.N. Command was no doubt inevitable. "If the Communists build up their strength, the U.N.' Command is bound to do the same. "Still, the move is regrettable. In Europe East and West are talking of reducing their armed strength. They are even beginning to do it. In Korea they are doing the opposite." The Scotsman (independent) argues that the decision is justified, and says that the outry from the North Korean side can safely be ignored. Lehigh University has purchased an analog computer, a network analyzer type, similar to the one obtained by KU several years ago. This type computer was designed and patented by a member of the KU faculty, E. B. Phillips, professor of electrical engineering. The 31st state admitted to the Union was California, in 1850. Lehigh University Buys Computer It is manufactured in Philadelphia, Pa., by one of the larger manufacturers of switchgear apparatus. The KU device is used for the instruction of electrical engineering students specializing in utility planning and operation. When not engaged for this work it is leased by electric and gas utility companies for the economic and feasible planning of system enlargements. Companies in several states send their design and transmission engineers to KU to use the device for long-range planning of system enlargements. For example, the computer predicted the need for the second expansion of the Kansas Power and Light Company's generating station at Cameron's Bluff, near Lawrence. Rainbow trout is the most migratory of all trout and is a native of the West Coast. Soviet Highways Are Opened To Foreign Tourist Traffic MOSCOW - (UP) - The Soviet Union this summer is permitting foreigners for the first time to bring their own automobiles into the country and spend a holiday crossing the Russian nation. Not many Americans are expected to take up the offer but those who do find an interesting contrast with the American road network of billboards, motels and speed traps. Vast as this country is, there is no chance of the visitor getting lost. For one thing, he must stick to one of the two trunk highways. To make sure he does, an Intourist Agency guide will join him at the frontier and accompany him throughout the trip. The highways especially the north-south route from Moscow to the Black Sea—are excellent by Russian standards and, in most places, good by European ones. They are three and sometimes four-lane roads with long stretches where you can put your foot to the floorboard. Gas stations, repair shops, snack bars and restaurants are to be found about every 100 miles. Hotels are spaced at reasonable distances and built right out on the highways in the remote steppes. Traffic is very light, consisting mostly of trucks and busses. There are no hitchhikers. When Russians travel, and they love to, they usually go by train. Few have private cars. Whether the foreign tourist stops in a village or small town, he will be surrounded by wide-eyed onlookers making comments on the mechanical features of his automobile. Rules for driving are simple: 2. Highway and traffic signs are pretty much the same as in Western Europe. One difference is that you can turn right on a red light. 3. Drivers must keep their cars clean. If a policeman spots a dirty, muddy car, he has the right to stop it and fine the occupants. 4. The speed limit in a city is 35 mph. On the open road it is unlimiited. USE KANSAN WANT ADS Eat in one of these Drive-Ins or Dining Rooms for a Happier 4th of July for a Happier 4th of July for a Happier 4th of July These Restaurants Offer The Best Food In Lawrence Hamburgers Hot Dogs Bar-B-Q Chicken Shrimp Steaks Root Beer Malts Orange J & L Drive-In Root Beer, Orange Malts, Shakes Chicken & Shrimp – 98c 11 a.m. - 12 p.m. — 7 days A & W Root Beer Orange, Malts and Sandwiches Hours—Open Weekdays 11:00 a.m. Open Sundays 12:00 noon 1415 West 6th St. Old Mission Inn "The best hamburgers in town!" Air Conditioned 1904 Mass. VI 3-9737 Blue Hills Drive In 1601 East 23rd Jumbo Deluxe Steak Burgers Foot Long Hot Dogs Tasty Bar-B-Q Burgers — QUICK SPEAKER SERVICE — Hours 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Weekdays Big Buy For the best in burgers & 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. The Castle Tea Room Air Conditioned 1307 Mass. VI 3-1151 Hamburgers Hot Dogs Bar-B-Q Chicken Shrimp Shrimp Malts Steaks Orange work on it A & W Root Beer 1930s [Mind] What are you doing when you see a new person? How do you react to their appearance? What do you say to them if they look good or not? Do you have any special skills? Can you show them something special? Does it make them feel special? Are they happy with the new person? How do you interact with them? How do you make them feel comfortable? Is there anything else interesting about them? HENRY M. SMITH CENTER FOR EDUCATION SCHOOL OF ENGLISH HENRY M. SMITH CENTER FOR EDUCATION SCHOOL OF ENGLISH BLUE HILLS Big Buy The Castle Tea Room The Castle Tea Room Air Conditioned 1307 Mass. VI 3-1151 I Page 10 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 2, 1957 [Image of a group of people sitting in a dimly lit room, facing the camera. The individuals are seated on either side of the room, with some facing the camera and others facing away. They appear to be engaged in a conversation or activity, but the image is too blurry to identify specific details.] —Photo Bureau KU PREVIEW—Dean of Men Donald K. Alderson talks to a group of future students at the KU previews in room 306 in the Student Union Building. One of six such events during the summer, the preview is a series of examinations for high school graduates who plan to attend KU in September. Sick Bats Offer Little Danger Finding rabies in bats in Kansas is no occasion for special alarm. This is the opinion of E. Raymond Hall, chairman of the department of zoology. Dr. Hall advises that it is wise to avoid being bitten by a bat or by any kind of animal because infection may result. It is reasonable to suppose that all mammals can contract rabies and bats are no more likely to contract the disease than other mammals. Since a public health worker found a bat with rabies four years ago, vast sums of money have been spent to learn how widespread the disease is among bats, Dr. Hall said. Both the fecal and the hoary bat raise families from late June to August in the Midwest. Mother bats fly out each evening to obtain their daily food which consists of night flying insects. Young Bats Hitch-Hike Young bats cling to their mother's fur and take free rides. The young grow rapidly and by July the two or three offspring weigh more than the mother. Although adapted to support great weight while flying, the mother bats sometimes lose their hold on twigs while hanging in shade trees during the day. That is why mother bats with young attached are found on lawns in the summer months. Dr. Hall said. If left alone, most of these mothers climb back up a tree trunk to a position from which they can take flight the next evening, he said. Dr. Hall recommends using leather gloves to avoid possible bites when it is necessary to handle a bat. AUTO PARTS AND TIRES New or Used Auto Wrecking And Junk Co. East End of 9th St. VI 3-0956 FAST COLOR FILM PROCESSING HIXON Studio and Camera Shop 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 FAST COLOR FILM PROCESSING HIXON Studio and Camera Shop 721 Mass. VI 3.0330 Texas accounted for slightly more than 50 per cent of the nation's marketed natural gas production in 1956. Intellectuals, leaders of some small fellow-travelling political parties which are still tolerated, even Communist party members, started criticising enthusiastically. Apparently to his surprise, a lot of people in China took him at his word. "Let a hundred flowers bloom—let a hundred schools of thought contend," Mao said in inviting criticism. Prof. Ko Pei-Chi, a lecturer in literature at Peiping University, for instance, accused the Communist party of being too high-handed in its methods. Too High Handed Mao Tse-Tung's Invitation The speech in which Chinese Communist leader Mao Tse-Tung invited criticism of his regime has backfired. Seeking to show that the Communist dictatorship really was liberal, Mao admitted there were contradictions between various elements in China, including the government and the people. By Charles M. McCann UP Staff Correspondent Mao made the speech at a secret meeting in Peiping last Feb. 27. It started to leak out only weeks later and finally was broadcast officially on June 18. "The people can blow you down," Ko said. "They can kill Communists. The people can overthrow you." Campus Agency Available We need a Student to sell Nationally Advertised Drawing Sets and -Slide Rules (K&E, Dietzgen, etc.) at low Discount prices to entering engineering freshmen this fall. Tremendous profits. No investment required. Free posters. Write now: Empire Engineering Supply Company, P. O. Box 114, Canal Street Station, NYC 103, N.K. Gen. Lung Lun, vice chairman of the National Defense Committee, took advantage of the new freedom to direct a hearty swipe at Soviet Russia. He complained of the way in which Russia looted the industrial areas of Manchuria after World War II. He said that Russia ought to pay a share of Red China's costs in the Korean War. $200.00 EASY As the result of statements like these, Mao and his fellow-leaders appear to have had some sober second thoughts. Mao issued a long directive to the national police last Tuesday. He Sunset 1/2 MILE W of LAWRENCE on Hwy 90 STARTS THURSDAY 2 FIRST RUN HITS PAT BOONE BERNARDINE COLOR by DE LUXE CINEMA SCOPE 20th Century-Fox PLUS TIN STAR... MAN OF STEEL! THE BADGE OF MARSHAL BRENNAN starring JIM DAVIS CARL SMITH • ARLEEN WHELAN LEE VAN CEEF • LOUIS JEAN HEYDT AN ALLIED ARTISTS PICTURE TIN STAR... MAN OF STEEL! THE BADGE OF MARSHAL BRENNAN starring JIM DAVIS CARL SMITH • ARLEEN WHELAN LEE VAN CLEEF • LOUIS JEAN HEYDT AN ALLIED ARTISTS PICTURE Police Would Listen said that the police must hunt down "counter-revolutionaries." He said that they must keep close contact with the people," listen to their opinions" and regard themselves as public servants. FIREWORKS DISPLAY JULY 4th It looked somewhat as if "counterrevolutionaries" would prove to be those whose criticisms of the government and the Communist party were too frank, and that the police would be listening especially to people who dared to talk too much. Premier Chou En-Lai followed this up in a speech he made last Wednesday at the opening of a session of Parliament ip Peiping. Chou warned critics of the government that they might be branded as "enemies of the people." He called upon them to "repent and accept opportunities for remolding themselves." This all adds up to the fact that in a Communist country even a little liberalization is a dangerous thing. It is true that President Tito of Yugoslavia has materially liberalized his regime. But it still is a dictatorship. It is true also that in Backfires U.S. Gives Jordan Another 10 Million Poland Communist leader Wladys- slaw Gomulka has gone even farther than Tito. But Poland, too, is still a Communist dictatorship. Nikita S. Khrushchev found out in repudiating the methods of Josef Stalin that liberalization might get out of hand. His liberalization policy led to the Polish and Hungarian revolts. This raises to $31,500,000 the total amount of aid given to the anti-Communist Arab Kingdom since the start of the 1957 fiscal year which ended yesterday. WASHINGTON—(UP)—The United States has granted Jordan another 10 million dollars in aid beyond the 10 million grant announced Saturday. it was learned Monday. It means, in effect, that the United States has taken on the task—formerly borne by Britain—of keeping Jordan going economically. USE KANSAN WANT ADS CRAFT & HOBBY SUPPLIES Balsa Paint Flock Plastic Kits UNDERWOOD'S 1215 West Sixth 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 Summer Clearance Big Savings Now On Jacquelines Variety of styles and colors Reg. $8.95-$9.95 Your choice Now at $6.95 Connie Shell Flats Now $4.95 Also Paris Fashion Flats only $3.95 Men's Mesh Oxfords and Slip-ons Values to $14.95 — Now only $9.80 Haynes & Keene 819 Mass. Page 11 Summer Session Kansan CLASSIFIED ADS LOST MISCELLANEOUS A PAIR of ladies glasses with black frames in brown case with maiden name in case. If found please call Laree Morgenstern VI 3-6052. 7-5 SUMMER STUDENT: Take advantage of Special Student Rates on Time, Life & Sports Illustrated Magazines Save $1/2 of Regular Rate. Call VI 3-0124. tf THREE ROOM APARTMENT: Unfurnished, Clean and attractive, with range and refrigerator. Connections for automatic washer. Private entrance, private bath, two large closets, built-ins. Reasonable rent with utilities paid, Child accepted, Close to shopping center and KU. Phone VI 3-8514 or VI 3-7636. 7-5 FOR RENT LAST CHANCE. Rooms in home with swimming pool in back yard. Kitchen privileges, private entrances, reasonable rates. VI 3-9635. 7-9 FOUR ROOM APARTMENT, private entrance and bath. Garage. First floor, three stories. Parking $75 per month bills paid. Available Aug. 4. VI 3-8652 after 5 p.m. 7-9 FOR BOYS—Two single nicely furnished rooms for fall. Linens furnished. Call after 5:30 p.m. VI 3-2903, 839 Mississippi. 7-12 WANTED—one man to share nearly new three bedroom home with three stairs. Call 1-800-322-7922. The domestic washer. 1½ baths. Call VI 3-1619 between 5 and 6 p.m. See at 2132 Mitchel HR d. BUSINESS SERVICES KING FLOOR SERVICE. Floors laid, sanded, finished. For free estimates, call Harold King. Phone VI 3-2956. 7-3 BE WISE-LOOK NEAT. For longer wear-buy repair. Reasonable prices. Burgert's Shoe Service. 1113 Mass. VI 3- 0691. tf TYPING WANTED - Term papers, theses Experienced, accurate. Regular rates. Call VI 3-7184. tf BIRD TV-Radio Service 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 OPEN ALL SUMMER Flat tops a speciality. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St. Just under the hill. Clarence Adamson Mt. tf TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED Professional, prompt, and efficient service. Regular rates. INK 1827 Arkansas. VI 3-4573 or VI 3-8660. tt Tuesday, July 2, 1957 TYPIST: Experienced in these, 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 S-8568. tf LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas-complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete set of toys. 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 RENT A SEWING MACHINE only $1.00 per week. Free delivery, White Sewing Machine Dept. 936 Mass. Phone VI 3-2253. Beacon Appliance & Furniture TYPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. phone VI 3-2001. t THE ALPHA CHI OMEGA Western Civilization notes are now available_for supplementary study and review. Phone 610-3-70-39 p.m. Monday through Thursday. ff LAUNDRY WASHED, dried, 50c load. Blankets, $1.50. Rugs and upholstery for furniture. Have your Dior per service. Piekup and delivery. Smiffy's. East 23rd. VI 3-8077. FLATTOPS are the flattest, the magazines the most interesting, and the air conditioning the coolest at ENNIE'S BARBER SHOP. 730 Mass. 7-2 TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6857. 1106 La. WHAT A MEAL... Southern Pit He just had at the cool Bar-b-a Carry-outs Lunches Bar-b-q Carry-outs Lunches Air Conditioned 1834 Mass. TV-Radio Service. Get the best in guaranteed parts, tubes, and service at lowest prices. Lawrence's largest and oldest service shop. Equipped to rejuvenate or replace picture tube in your home. $7.50 cash discount on new picture tubes this month. Phone VI 3-1031, Bowman Radio-TV, 826 Vermont. if EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Malne, Phone V 3-7654. tf IMPORTANT NOTICE: Married students with or without family; I wash, iron, etc. for reasonable charge—also includes the cost of answering your questions. Ad appears only this week, but offer good year 1957 and 1958. Phone VI 3-03535. 7-9 BEVERAGES- All kinds of mix-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Picnic. Phone supply Ice Plant. 6th and Vermont. Phone VI t-03-3509 Sportsman's Shop The Sportsman's Shop IF YOU'RE A TENNIS PLAYER OR A FISHERMAN TENNIS HUNTING The Sportsman's Shop has the equipment to give you a HAPPY FOURTH OF JULY! 715 Mass. - VI 3-6106 College Outlines for Aid to Study by Barnes & Noble, Littlefield Outlines of... Economics Accounting History Chemistry Physics STUDENT Union Book Store Psychology . . . And Many Other Subjects KU KU by Schaums Theory & Sample Worked Problems in... Chemistry Physics Calculus Trigonometry Algebra Analytic Geometry KU Page 12 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 2, 1957 MR. MERCHANT: Even if you could shout your sales story from the rooftops of Lawrence for 24 hours. I am not here to hear you. ...You couldn't reach nearly as many college students as the SUMMER SESSION KANSAN does in one hour Each Tuesday and Friday morning beginning about 7 a.m., students, Art campers and faculty members pick up their copies of the Summer Kansan. And you can believe they really READ the Kansan . . . from the first page to the last . . . news, editorials, and advertisements. The point we're trying to make is this: THERE IS NO MORE DIRECT METHOD OF REACHING THE PROFITABLE CAMPUS MARKET THAN THROUGH AN ADVERTISEMENT IN THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN. The Kansan covers the college market to a degree unapproached by any other medium. When you place an ad in the Kansan( at our low rates),you may be sure that you are getting very little, if any, waste circulation. We think you'll find, as many already have, that advertising in the Kansan will prove very profitable to you. Why not give the Kansan a try? Just call VI 3-2700, extension 376, and a salesman will be sent to call on you with information as to rates, etc. Or write to: University Daily Kansan, Business office, Room 111 Flint. SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Business Office "The surest way to reach the campus market." KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 45th Year, No. 8 LAWRENCE, KANSAS KU Tuesday, July 9.1957 Steelworkers Hold Annual Meeting At KU The 11th annual Steelworkers Institute at KU began Monday with a hundred persons divided in the three divisions of the weeklong program. Most of the enrollees, who all are members of the United Steel-workers of America. are from the Greater Kansas City area. There are divisions for first year enrollees, second-year men, and a graduate seminar for those who have completed the first two courses. The seminar provides intensive study of one or more industry-union problems. All groups follow an 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. academic schedule. Bernard Grosdidier of Eudora will be the speaker for the now traditional Farm-Labor meeting tonight at 6 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union. The faculty includes Prof. John McCollum, University of Chicago; Irwin Klass, Federation News, Chicago; V. Iden Reese, Kansas City, Kan., Junior College; William Lavelle and Paul Fasser, United Steelworkers representatives, Pittsburgh, Pa.; and E. C. Buehler, Professor of Speech at KU. First and second-year students study speech,union history,credit unions and consumer finance,contracts,public and community relations,organization and procedure. KU Scientists Will Report Three research reports by members of the KU faculty will be given at the annual meeting of the American Institute of Biological Sciences August 25-29 at Stanford University, Palo Alto. Calif. Approximately 3,000 scientists will attend. Dr. Charles D. Michener, professor and chairman of the entomology department, will report on "Evolution of Social Behavior Among Halictine Bees." Much of the material for this was obtained by Dr. Michener during a year spent at the University of Parana in Brazil. The work is supported by the National Science Foundation. Showers in the east and south-central today and in the southeast in the evening, otherwise fair through tonight. Warmer in the northwest today. High today 90's in the southeast, ranging to 80's elsewhere. Low tonight in the 50's northwest and 60's elsewhere. A paper bearing the names of four staff members and reporting on portions of a large project supported for several years by the U.S. Public Health Service deals with "Inheritance of Reproductive Behavior Patterns in Male and Female Guinea Pigs." The researchers are Dr. W. C. Young, professor of anatomy; Dr. J. A. Weir, associate professor of zoology; Dr. Robert W. Goy, instructor in anatomy, and Mrs. Jacqueline Jakway, research assistant. Weather Dr. George R. Dubes, assistant professor of pediatrics at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., will report on "Polio Virus Mutants with Altered Responses to Cystine." This paper results from a large project supported by the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. ARTISTIC RECORDERS—Students in the art division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp gather in the shade near Haworth Hall to record Photo Bureau campus scenery in sketches and paintings. Some of the campers' work is already on display in the South Lounge of the Student Union. Visiting Professor Is Prominent Authority Ralph W. Powell, internationally known authority on applied mechanics and hydraulics, will be visiting professor at KU during the 1957-58 academic year. Accidents claimed a heavy toll of lives in Kansas during the long fourth of July weekend with traffic, as usual, death's principal agent. Professor Powell, 67, has just retired from a 30-year teaching career at Ohio State University. $ \textcircled{*} $ He received the B.S. degree from Michigan State University in 1911, the Civil Engineering degree from Cornell University in 1914. He also earned the Ph.D. degree from Yale in 1916. For 11 years, 1916-27, he was associate professor of applied mechanics at Yale-in-China University. In the latter year he joined the Ohio State faculty. During the 1955-56 year he was visiting professor at the University of Iowa. Powell is the author of many articles for professional journals, 12 having been published within the past five years. One of them, "Use and Misuse of Hydraulic Models," was translated and published by the The American Society of Civil Engineers recently appointed Professor Powell to a 5-man task force to study resistance coefficients for flow in open channels. He is secretary of the Rocky Mountain Hydraulic Laboratory at Allenspark, Colo., and is former chairman of the American Society for Engineering Education's committee on applied hydraulics . At least six persons died in mishaps on Kansas streets and highways between 6 p.m. Wednesday and midnight Sunday. One death was recorded in an accident classified in the miscellaneous category, to bring the overall total to seven. Only one fatality was reported in the final 36 hours of the period. Holiday Accidents Claim 7 Kansans Fred A. Bangerter, 22, of Lenora, was killed Saturday night in a two- car accident on a county road near Lenora. Hydraulic Laboratory in Hanover, Germany. His memberships include Tau Beta Pi and Sigma Xi, honorary engineering and scientific research societies; American Society of Civil Engineers; American Society for Engineering Education, and American Geophysical Union and International Association for Hydraulic Research. Baker Economics Professor Dies LAWRENCE — (UP) — Dr Harold W. Guest, 62, author and economics professor, died at a hospital here early Monday. Guest had been ill since Tuesday when stricken by a cerebral hemorrhage. Since 1956, Guest had taught economics and business administration at Baker University, Baldwin. He was author of a textbook, "Public Expenditure." He also had taught for the government in Blairitz. France and worked in the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Born in Otsego, Mich., Guest was graduated from Albion College in Michigan. He received his A.M. degree from the University of Illinois and his Ph.D. from Stanford. [Image of a group of people in a natural setting, with trees and rocks in the background. One person is standing upright, facing the camera. The others are seated or crouching around them.] —Photo Bureau KEEPING COOL—Students in a class conducted by Lawrence S. Bee, professor of home economics and sociology, take refuge from the summer indoor heat. Many classes have been held out-of-doors during the past two weeks in an attempt to escape rising summer temperatures. KU Gets Grant For Continuing Polio Research Studies of what happens when different strains of poliovirus invade will be continued at KU under a grant of $104,170 from the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. The grant, effective July 1, was announced jointly by Dr. W. Clarke Wescoe, dean of the School of Medicine and Basil O'Connor, president of the March of Dimes organization. The work will be directed by Dr. Herbert A. Wenner, research professor of pediatrics at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. Dr. Wenner and his associates are working with a large number of different types of strains of poliovirus. One of the questions they seek to answer is whether immunization with one type of virus will protect completely or partly against subsequent exposure to another type. Some of the viruses which are being used have been weakened by being grown in special environments in the laboratory. Part of the work to be conducted under the grant will be directed toward investigating sites of virus multiplication in the body and the moving of virus during an infection. Under a separate grant from the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis Dr. Wenner and his associates are preparing antisera to Coxsackie and Echo viruses. These are two large groups of relatively newly discovered viruses about which much remains unknown. The antisera prepared at KU are in a sense a kind of standard yardstick used in the study of these viruses. The antisera are shipped to laboratories in the United States and in many foreign countries, and are used by research teams in studying these new viruses. Associated with Dr. Wenner are Dr. George R. Dubes, assistant professor of pediatrics, and Dr. Italo Archetti, associate professor in virus research. William Inge Play To Open Thursday Directed by Dr. Lewin Goff, associate professor of speech and drama, and director of the University Theatre, the play recently returned from a highly successful stand at the Park Playhouse in Joplin, Mo. Tickets are now available for the University Theatre's summer production, "Come Back, Little Sheba." The drama will be presented Thursday and Friday at 7:30 p.m. in the Student Union Ballroom. A prize-winning drama by William Inge about the matrimonial disharmony of a middle-aged couple which drives the husband to alcoholism, the play features Bill Kuhike, Denver, Colo. graduate student; Lee MacMorris, Hutchinson graduate student; Kay Ewert, Abline senior, and John Husar, Chicago, Ill. junior. Others in the cast are Bernice Schear, Norton graduate student; Frank Moon, Pratt graduate student; John Schick, Kansas City senior; Ned Norris, Salina junior; Lloyd Karnes, Sabeth junior; and Brad Lashbrook, Kansas City senior. Chief technical assistants to Dr. Goff are, Kay Brown, Larned senior, assistant director! John Branigan, Kansas City, Mo. senior, lighting designer; Mary Jo Lowman, Lawrence senior, costumes; and Mr. Virgil Godfrey, assistant professor of speech and drama, set designer. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 9, 1957 - Two On The Aisle - Anyone wishing to retreat from the heat or the subsiding pains of mid-term exams will find acceptable diversion downtown at Filmland's Flickerhouses this week. With a couple of westerns, a sea story, and two dramas currently airing, no one should be anything but pleased as punch. If we use aroma as a basis for judgment, then the sweetest smell in town is at the Jayhawker: "Sweet Smell of Success." A top-notch drama, this photographic piece of cinematography brings into sharp focus the brutal dealings of the gossips, scandalongers and press agents operating in New York. If the picture smells of success, it reeks even more strongly of paralleling the life of Walter Winchell. As the powerful columnist J. J. Hunsecker, Burt Lancaster is impressive, curt, and loaded with acid remarks. As his stooge who scoops up dirt for publication, Tony Curtis is equally impressive in his first acting role. Prior to this film, Mr. Curtis had been suffering from delusions of adequacy, but as the snake-in-the-grasslands of Broadway, he is charmingly revolting. Newcomer Susan Harrison is the mongoose who finally flushes Curtis out of his hole in time to clash hotly with Uncle Burt for the climax. Miss Harrison does nothing that could appropriately be called acting and she has a face that resembles an unmade bed; however, her assignment is small, and the picture's fast pacing and surprising climax should place it on the movie-going list. The companion feature, "Buckskin Lady" is a western noteworthy only for the fact that a rather withered Medina furnishes viewers with a complexion that seems to fully justify the title. At the Varsity theatre is a pair of contrasting productions: "Stagecoach to Fury" and "The Big Boodle." As the more clever reader may have guessed, the first of these is a western. It features Forrest Tucker and Mari Blanchard as the hero and the schoolmarm. For a low budget picture, the suspense is fairly well sustained but the climax is a trifle mundane. On the other hand, "The Big Boodle" marks the welcome return of Errol Flynn. For 20 years Mr. Flynn's virility and boudou antics have been the focal point for millions of adoring feminine fans. However, the drag of nearly fifty years has taken its toll, for in this epic Errol, the maiden's peril, has only enough poop left to romance three young lovelies. Two of these, Gia Scala and Rosanna Rory, are certainly not without their decorative charms. In this tale of counterfeiters in Havana, the redoubtable Mr. Flynn is beaten, blackjacked, robbed, stabbed, and shot, but manages to traverse the island of Cuba often enough to furnish some very beautiful scenery. The plot is a little different and not bad entertainment, mainly because it is nurtured by Pedro Armendairez as the chief of police. Mr. Magoo in a short subject rounds out this compact bill. Ensconced at the Granada today and tomorrow is a soggy sea drama, "Battle Hell," which boasts Richard Todd and Akim Tamir-off as the "goodie" and "baddie" respectively. Mid shot and shell and much sea-spray, we find the semi-documentary story of the H.M.S. Amethyst of the British Navy. This is the frigate that in 1949 got stuck in the Yangtze River and, in lieu of something better to do, got into an artillery duel with 150 miles of Communist shore batteries. Good battle scenes coupled with much blood and mud help make this recap of the incident a fair-to-middling salty tale. William Hartnell as the comic relief is ably supported by Mr. Todd and a good cast of English actors. Verdict: a seafarer's delight. The above cinematic milestones will be shown today and tomorrow. The Varsity will show Jack Webb in "The D. I." presumably an account of Friday's sojourn with the United States Marine Corps. The Granada will replace "Battle Heli" with "The Night Runner" featuring Ray Danton; it is a story of people who are sick, sick, sick. Beginning Thursday at the Jayhawker will be Jerry Lewis in the "Delicate Delinquent;" it is his first effort sans Dean Martin. And the drive-ins are still running continuously night and day. —Tom Sawyer ... Letters Editor: I fear I can make little historical sense out of the vague tradition you called "pragmatic liberalism" and blamed for the ills to which the generation of silent sufferers is heir. Whoever or whatever constitutes this intellectual heritage of liberalism, I gather it is opposed by such "traditional thinkers" as Socrates, Voltaire, Jefferson and John Stuart Mill. (Western Civ Examiners please take note.) But about those "old liberals" of the thirties more immediately to blame for the confusions of our time: what a pity they always wanted to compromise with the enemy, as when they gave blood and money to the Spanish Republic, sent bundles to Britain, and joined the Royal Air Force before Pearl Harbor. Mudd-headed, they felt totalitarian government. Right or Left, was bad for people. When I think of how they "never could wholeheartedly agree with either side" I realize the dishonesty of going on principles and not joining crowds. It makes me so ashamed for these compromisers I could cheer. Kenneth Innis Kenneth Inns Lawrence graduate student Editor: Trusting that others will step forward to discuss the extent to which the term "liberal" may be misused, I would like to comment upon the lack of understanding of the editorial "we" implicit in Tuesday's "Conformity: Blame the Liberals." However, it is, I believe, journalistic practice to use "we" to refer to the editorial policy, to the weight of staff opinion behind the statements on the editorial page. Total consistency and mutual staff agreement cannot be expected, but the editorial page is no place to hash over intra-staff concerns. That Dale Morsch is one of the editors of the Summer Session Kansas as well as the writer of the editorials which occasioned my comments is evident from the masthead. Ordinarily, he would be using the editorial "we" properly in either capacity. In Tuesday's editorial Morsch assumes a petulant attitude regarding the publication of two student letters to the editor and an editorial that disagree with his statements in the original "Conformity" editorial and seems to regard these publications as a personal affront. Now he One of the major literary themes of the day is the battle of the individual vs. conformism. The organization man, the gray flannel suiter are obvious examples. Ernst Pawel, expatriate German freelance writer, takes issue with one of the dominant facets of conformism—the drive for "security"—in From the Dark Tower (Macmillan), a fine, though sometimes too heady, statement of the individual's necessity to be himself, rather than a stereotype ...Books Abe Rogoff, poet turned insurance salesman, does well enough by the latter trade to support a wife and son, and become a minor sort of pillar in his vaguely exclusive suburban town. But the suicide of his friend and immediate superior, Bill Norden, leads to the sooner-or-later inevitable questioning of the set of values he has been living by. Abe's problem is slightly different from that of the run-of-the-mill gray flannel suiter in revolt; the latter merely discovers that the standards of conformism by which he has been living ultimately do not apply. Abe, however, has never accepted these standards. Working nine to five in his insurance mill, he had believed he was the master of the rest of his time, that he could live a double life as it were, with the world of poetry and art occupying him when he was not chained to the Tower. The answer is the same, however; he finds that the Tower controls him 24 hours a day. Pawel has little new to offer here, but what he does give he delivers well and in a form readable enough to glide effortlessly over the occasional intellectual stumbling blocks in his way. . . . -Best Sellers- (Compiled by Publishers Weekly) THE SCAPEGOAT—Daphne du Maurier Maurer PEYTON PLACE—Grace Metalious COMPULSION—Meyer Levin THE LAST ANGRY MAN—Gerald Green THE TOWN—William Faulkner THE SHORT REIGN OF PIPPIN IV Stitchback —John Steinbeck SILVER SPOON -Edwin Gilbert THE INNOCENT AMBASSADORS Philip Wylie —Philip Wylie DAY OF INFAMY—Walter Lord STAY ALIVE ALL YOUR LIFE— THE TURN OF THE TIDE—Sir Arthur Bryant THE DAY CHRIST DIED—Jim Bishop Possibly Morsch was "forced" to print the letters, and "had to" run the back-stabbing editorial, but it would seem that the compelling agency, if external, would protect Morsch from such flagrant semantic lapses. certainly has a right to defend himself and his views, or at least to clarify his original statements. He does not have the right to regard a signed editorial, which he has presumably read, as a "double-cross" to "us." He himself may feel betrayed, but certainly the editorial policy remained more or less intact, and certainly the "we" could not refer to the staff. R. M. Davis Lawrence graduate student Russian composer Peter Iich Tchaikovsky was guest conductor when New York City's famous Carnegie Hall was opened on May 5, 1891. Sbx wire systems carry United Press news to clients in the United States-day news wires, night news wires, radio, sports, Teletypesteer and financial. TV viewers in Poland and East Germany beyond the Iron Curtain see United Press Movietone news film daily. SUMMER SESSION KANSAN (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) Ed. Phone 251 Bus. Phone 376 Editors ... Dale Morsch John Eaton Business Mgrs... Colby Rehnert Bill Irvine Reporters ... Martha Crosier John Husar Janet Juneau Manager ... James E. Dykes TV Notes "This Is Your Life" is showing 13 weeks of selected re-runs of kinescopes during the summer. The new stuff, on the usual live basis, will begin Sept. 25. Presentation of "The Long Flight" on NBC's "Kraft Television Theatre" July 3 marked the golden anniversary of the Air Force, which gave technical assistance in production of this drama about the Strategic Air Command. The Al Collins who is conducting the final stages of NBC's current "Tonight" format is a disk jockey who had not been billed until he attained this job as "Jazzbo" Collins. He and the format exit July 26 and comedian Jack Parr, takes over a revised "Tonight" July 29. June Havoc's appearance July 2 in "Moth and Flame," a drama on NBC's "Panic!" program, was sort of a family affair. Husband William Spier wrote the play. Ed Sullivan has welcomed his hird grandchild, a son born to his laughter. Mrs. Robert H. Precht. He now has two grandsons and a granddaughter. The ABC "Wednesday Night Fights" program will feature undefeated Eddie Machen, Redding, Calif., heavyweight, against Pittsburgh's Bob Baker at Chicago Stadium on July 10. The Floyd Patterson-Hurricane Jackson heavyweight title fight in New York, July 29 will be telecast by NBC, with the New York area blacked out. Famed sportscaster Ted Husing, seriously ill for several years, has been signed for his telefilm debut in one of the "Father Knows Best" shows for next season. He'll play himself. Choreographer for the new CBS show next fall, "The Big Record," starring Patti Page, will be James Starbuck, remembered for his seasons of such service on the old "Your Show of Shows" series. It is final that Jack Paar will take over NBC's "Tonight" show in mid-July. A variety format, with studio audience, will replace the program the network instituted during the past season to replace Steve Allen. PAT READ 445 Tennessee Street - INDIAN HANDICRAFT - SILVER JEWELRY - NAVAJO RUGS "A VERITABLE MUSEUM" Gifts in all price classes Open 9:00 to 5:00 HE LOOKS SHARP ...a hard thing to do in the summer Why not let Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners relieve you of this worry y Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners Call VI 3-3711 "You'll be glad you did" Night un- ding, Pitts- Sta- Page 3 using, has debut Best" play I take mid- studio ogram g the len. English Proficiency Test Announced By Registrar The following students passed the English Proficiency Examination which was given June 22: Mary Ann Clark, Dee Daniels, Jewel Dean, Dorothy Faulkender, Alta Friesen, Delberta Hollaway, John Hurst, Vernie Johnson, Mary Ann ones, Helen Keltcher, Helen Long LaMonica, David A. Laney, Richard Laptad, Denis Lardner, Charles E. Mader, Jeanne McMillian, Maxine Mott, Carolyn Oman, Margaret Peach, Marilyn Rogge, Ronald W. Shaffer, Ann Armstrong Tms, Joseph Towne, Bruce Voran, Katherine L. Westgate, Joan Wiggins, Linda Wright. Summer Session Kansan School of Fine Arts School of Education James Avery, Pat Bohannon, Sandra Falwell, Delmar Funk, Thomas Galloway, Heward Phillips, Lucy Remple, Merle Smith, Margaret Tessmann. School of Journalism Gerald Blatherwick, Martha Crozier, Gary Dean Hale, Dale Dean Morsch, George Pester, Colby Rehmert. School of Medicine John C. Adams, Thomas J. Allegri, Burton R. Baldwin, William H. Burden, Jr., William Emerson Cain, James E. Circle, Cherie N. Derks, Rita Rose Ficek, JeRue Gijovig, David T. Graves, M. H. Greenleaf, Rosemary Griffin, Jere Hodshire, Carolyn Huntley, Howard M. Johnson, Gayle Kenoyer, Jerry A. Kirkland, Leon G. Lants, Donald McGuirl, Julie Miller, Joseph R. Moya, Billy Phillips, Charles E. Platz, Jaqueline C. Pullman, Louise Rodenberg, Beverly D. Walker, Susan Woodruff. School of Medicine Arlene Abbott, Lois Beal, Lila Benson, Sandra Bettis, Marilyn Briney, Mary Catherine Brown, Marcia Coate, Mattye Dees, Carol Ann Douglass, Mary Ann Enna, Dorothy Fine, Sonya Forrere, Katie George, Trudy Gilman, Marje Hodgson, Barbara Hunt, Kan Jones, Elaine Lain, Margaret Malcolm, Loretta McCraney, Mary, Ann McGrew, Carole Means, Carolyn Miller, Merlyn Parsons, Barbara Peters, Paula Plunkett, Judy Powell, Shirley Quisenberry, Willa Swift, Sharon Thompson. Editors note: The following is a report from England by Jere Glover, Salina senior, who is currently touring Europe: After a hectic ship ride Miss Glover is now cycling through the English countryside. We are just halfway through England and already we are having trouble. First, one of our group cycled over her raincoat and yesterday, with more serious consequences. She dropped and ran over her camera. College By JERE GLOVER KU Student Enjoys England But Hates The Bicycles Our main complaint is the bicycle, our major mode of transportation here. Fateful was that day in Oxford when we first met two spindly wheels, hand brakes, 3-speed gear shifts, a saddle obviously never intended for human use, and began peddling on the left-hand side of the road. But for me, saddle sores, cramped muscles and assorted bruises are more than compensated for by the English countryside—the rolling hills, tree-lined green fields and quaint old villages with thatch-roofed or plain red brick houses are truly beautiful. Perhaps it is the similarity of homes—all surrounded by colorful flower gardens—that presents an appearance of serenity. These little towns seem to be flourishing. There is none of the abandonment and decay that mark some small Kansas towns. London is a very old city, with some blackened buildings and a few bombed out areas. It was far cleaner than we had expected. We all liked London. We will remember the surprising number of tiny shops, the myriad of people in Hyde Park, and the small cars and bicycles that make the streets look like ant hills. Getting lost hasn't been a problem. There's always somebody, in village or farm, more than willing to stop and chat, give directions, and sometimes invite us in for tea. This is rather different from the stiff, non-communicative British we were told to expect. All we have had to do is make the initial effort. During our three-day stay in London we visited dozens of pubs and tea shops, saw several plays and then at night we were back at the hotel by 10:30 p.m. By then, the city suddenly sleeps. We are working on our English accents—just to see how many tourists would stop to ask directions. But while we are cycling the ruse seldom works. English girls wear skirts—even to cycle. Our Bermuda shoats have drawn many a stare and comment. Naturally our group has taken in most of the sights "every tourist jolly well must see"; the tour of London, Buckingham Palace, Madame Tussaud's Wax Works Museum, Westminster Abbey, Oxford University, and a really story-book castle at Warwick. Those are just a few of the places, just enough to help us understand and appreciate the Englishman's pride in his tradition. He has a right to be proud of such beauty and grandeur. Other places I will remember when I think of England are Charlbury where we gathered with half the town in the hotel bar one evening for cider and beer; Stratfordon-Avon where we ran into so many American tourists we could hardly enjoy "As You Like It"; Cleve Hill where three of us stopped for tea at a hotel overlooking a green valley and sat all afternoon with tea and cakes reading magazines, and at Wells where we stayed at the Ancient Gate House and slept in canopied beds. To Continue Nicotine Study In a short time we will be in France. It will have to be impressive to measure up to England. Determination of the part nicotine does or does not play in hardening of the arteries and high blood pressure will be the subject for research at KU under the direction of Dr. Duane G. Wenzel, professor of pharmacy. were supported by a grant from the University's state-appropriated research fund. The Tobacco Industry grant will permit Dr. Wenzel to re-check the cholesterol determinations of the original study. He also will add electrocardiograph studies of the rabbits, both those subjected to nicotine and the control groups. Finally, the pathology of the heart and arterial systems of the rabbits will be determined. The Tobacco Industry Research Committee has made a first-year grant of $6.944 to Dr. Wenzel for "Determination of Effects of Nicotine on Atherosclerosis in Rabbits." Dr. James Turner, a member o the Veterans Administration Hospital staff, Kansas City, Mo., will be the pathologist for the project. Donald R. Kissil, New York graduate student, will be research assistant. Kissil is a candidate for the master of science degree in pharmacology. Dr. Wenzel already has found that nicotine will increase the amount of cholesterol in the blood of rabbits. Cholesterol is a fatty substance believed to be important in inducing arterial and coronary problems. These studies, the results of which have just been published, 10 Receive Engineering Awards A Kansas manufacturing company has awarded four students in the School of Engineering and Architecture at KU a total of $3,000 for the academic year of 1957-58. The recipients and the amounts of their awards as follows; Donald Harvey Kenward, Merriam junior, $1,000; Joe Edwin Sheldon, Lawrence, senior, $1,000; Bernard Lee Renyer, Wakarusa senior, $600, and William Edwin Harris, Atchison junior, $400.00. Harris will be considered for a renewal in 1958-59. The Foundation established the scholarships several years ago and since then returns from investments made from the principal scholarship fund by the KU Endowment Association have provided the cash awards. Sheldon has a grade point average of 1.9 out of a possible 3.00. He has been on the Dean's Honor roll and has participated in intramural basketball and football. Renyer has a 1.49 grade point average and has served Triangle Fraternity as business manager. He is a member of the American Society of Tool Engineers, American Society of Mechanical Engineers and Pi Tau Sigma, honorary mechanical engineering fraternity. Harris' grade point average is 1.6. He has been on the Honor Roll, played varsity basketball and participated in swimming events. Donald B. Pishny, Waterville, Kansas, who will be a freshman in engineering at KU this fall has been named the fourth recipient of a scholarship of the employees of Servis, Van Doren and Hazard, an engineering firm in Topeka. Pishny, like the other freshman engineering students receiving this scholarship, will receive $100 for the academic year, 1957-58. The other recipients are Clarence Henry Higdon, Rantoul, Larry Edward Miller, Coffeyville, and Ronald William Hatfield. Kinsley. Selection is on the basis of average grades from among the entering freshmen who intend to major in either civil, electrical or mechanical engineering. The selection committee is composed of members of the faculty of the Engineering School. Two new C. L. Burt Scholarships have been awarded to students in the School of Engineering and Architecture. The recipients are Norman Lee Mailen of Clay Center, and Jerry Clark Brown of Hutchinson. Both of them will be freshmen in the School of Engineering and Architecture this fall. The wards are for $925 each for the school year, 1957-58. Both students will be eligible for three additional renewals of the scholarships, provided their activities and grade point averages remain outstanding. Burt, who makes the awards is a Hutchinson contractor. The scholarship is for worthy and needy boys and girls attending KU. They are selected on the basis of financial need, character, scholarship and promise of future usefulness to society. Activeness in intercollegiate athletics are also considered. Brown graduated in the upper one-third of his class. He participated in football, basketball, track, Hi-Y and Pep Club. Mailen was valedictorian of his graduating class from high school and participated in football, basketball, track and golf. He plans to enroll in Electrical Engineering at KU. IF YOU SOILED YOUR CLOTHING OVER THE 4th OF JULY HOLIDAYS, then let our expert handling make them crisp and fresh again. 10% Off For CASH AND CARRY DRY CLEANING Where Quality is Always First ACME Laundry & Dry Cleaners 1109 Mass Phone VI 3.5155 Q2 1109 Mass. Phone VI 3-5155 Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 9. 1957 Recent Works Played In Sunday's Concert By JOHN HUSAR In undertaking a concert review, we usually confine ourselves to discussing the performance of the music played. However, in Sunday's Midwestern Music and Art Camp orchestra-chorus-band concert, we were given the rare opportunity of hearing two comparatively recent works. The first was guest conductor Paul Christiansen's own arrangement of a work called "Spring." Sung by the camp Chorus at the afternoon concert, this number was done exceptionally well, due primarily to Mr. Christiansen's conducting. The Chorus must be commended for singing this wonderful piece "way over their heads." The second work of special note, and possibly the more important, was the march, "World Freedom." Composed by Claude Smith, a KU music senior from Lawrence, this excellent march was written while he was in the Armed Forces. Performed by the band under the baton of Russell L. Wiley, "World Freedom" quickly overcame the many out-door distractions and caused the audience to perk up and listen. In the opinion of this writer, the "World Freedom March," as it is most likely destined to be called, should be adapted by some concern or cause synonymous with its title ... it is that inspiring. The afternoon concert by the orchestra and chorus was a fine display of talent-talent not only of the musicians, but of conductors Christiansen, Gerald Carney, and Gerhard Schroth. The outstanding individual performer of the day was Kathryn Meredith, who elicited a most pleasant violin solo in McDonald's "Legend of the Arkansas Traveler." This concert was done so well that even Granger's tired theme "Trish Tune from County Derry" was appealing. The evening concert provided by the band and chorus was marred by two rather impromptu speeches by the guest conductors. Granted that the intentions were fine, but the out-of-order speeches certainly took that intangible edge off of the evening, which is so vitally necessary in a concert hall. Outside of the "World Freedom March," three band numbers, Brahms' "Overture to 'Academic Festival,'" Hadley's admirable "Youth Triumphant" and "Pines of the Appian Way" from "Pines of Rome," by Respiph, conducted by Mr. Schroth, were outstanding. Two chorus songs stood above the others. "Lost in the Night" arranged by F. Melius Christiansen, brother of the conductor, appeared to be the better because of its pensiveness. Kay Kincaid sang a soprano. The litling German folk song, "Mary Sat Spinning," was highlighted by the fine, cultured voice of Judy Mayhan who sang the soprano solo. Maybe it was the Wakarusa view . . . or the American flag waving in the strong breeze . . . nevertheless, the Camp Band showed a marked improvement over the past two weeks. John Husar Regional Rivers Are Lower TOPEKA — (UP) — All rivers in the Topeka river district have returned to banks, the weather bureau said Monday. It added that all were stationary Sunday or showed falling stages, with the exception of the Kaw below Manhattan. A slight rise which was continuing there was expected to begin leveling off Monday night. Red meat production in 1957 is lagging behind 1956. With only scattered accident reports still to be counted, a United Press survey showed that between 6 p.m. Wednesday and midnight Sunday, 418 persons died in highway accidents. Drownings took 206 lives, fireworks accidents 3, plane crashes 16 and miscellaneous mishaps 69, for an overall total of 712. Safer July 4, Council Says California had more than one- tenth of the holiday deaths, with 47. New York had 32, Pennsylvania 29, Ohio 28, Texas 24, Michigan 19, Mississippi 18, and Illinois 16. TOPEKA — (UP) — Gov. George Docking today criticized "Research at taxpayers expense" when the results of such research are given to private firms without cost. The National Safety Council today took a look at the number of traffic deaths during the July 4 holiday period, and said that motorists and law enforcement agencies had done well. The Governor said the federal government had some projects in the research stage that would benefit private concerns, rather than turning the results of the research over "on a wide open basis to all." He cited the work of some KU professors who have done research on mellorine—an ice cream made from soybeans. Docking said he was not criticizing the KU work, but the practice in some instances of the government contracting for research and then turning over the product on a franchise basis without cost to private firms. "Whoever gets it should pay the government for the research," the governor said. "What kind of monopolies are being built up this way? Who's going to get the gravity of the free research?" The marketing research was done for the U.S. Agriculture Department. A number of KU professors, under a research grant by the federal government, made market surveys and trips to Los Angeles, St. Louis, Portland, Ore., Charleston, S.C., among other places, according to travel vouchers. Too Old To Salt Petunias The 4th of July toll not only was held far below the pre-holiday estimate of 535 but below the 465 that a non-holiday period of the same number of hours would be expected to bring," said Ned H. Dearborn, president of the council. COOLITIC, Ind. — (UP) — Fred Walden complained to a Justice of the Peace that a neighbor jumped over his four-foot fence and salted his Petunias. Docking Questions Free Research' But Mrs. Lily Lawyer, 55, said, "I'm too old and stiff to jump even a three-foot fence. Good catfish bait can be made with one cup flour, one cup corn meal and 10 tablespoons of thick molasses, mixed into stiff dough and rolled into balls. The balls should be boiled 10 minutes, then dropped into cold water. FAST COLOR FILM PROCESSING HIXON Studio and Camera Shop 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Jay SHOPPE Jay SHOPPE NEW SHIPMENT Black & Khaki Bermuda Shorts $598 Hamburgers IF YOU LOVE Dixon's is the place to go for the biggest and best selection. Try a TEXAN giant steakburger or a Double Steakburger EXCLUSIVE AUTO DINE SERVICE Di Dixon's DRIVE-IN 2500 West 6th NEW YORK — (UP) — A combination of sexual obsessions and nuclear weapons threatens to destroy civilization, evangelist Billy Graham warned Sunday. World Threatened-Graham The 38-year-old revivalist told a packed Madison Square Garden audience of 19,200 persons that there has never been a generation so obsessed with sex as the present one That obsession, coupled with materialism and atomic weapons, Graham said, threatens to bring an end to the present world system. "If any generation ever needed to prepare to meet thy God, it's this one." Graham said. Especially the people of New York. "One hydrogen bomb and you're done," he said. "The Bible teaches that the world system was once-destroyed and it can be done again," he said. "There are many signs to indicate that the end of the world may be near." The North Carolina Evangelist said sex and violence on television programs were having a bad influence on young people. "The sex conditions are the same today as they were in Noah's day." he told a jammed audience that included many standees. After Graham's sermon, 534 persons went forward to make "decisions for Christ," bringing to 29,-369 the total during the New York crusade which began May 15. Before his sermon, Graham spoke to an estimated 6,000 persons outside who had been unable to get into the huge sports arena. In 1804 the Lewis and Clark expedition reported first observing the Rocky Mountain mule deer near the mouth of Ponce Creek in northeastern Nebraska. The expedition's record also reported that white-tailed deer were abundant along the Missouri River on Nebraska's eastern boundary. Watch For The 'NEW LOOK' In Milk Cartons Red·White·Blue LAWRENCE Sanitary ALL STAR VITAMIN D HOMOGENIZED LAWRENCE Sanitary ALL STAR Grade A VITAMIN D PASTEURIZED HOMOGENIZED Milk FLAVOR CONTROLLED BY V-h PROCESS AND 8.5 F. URNS OF VITAMIN D ACTIVATED ENGUSTERIA AGREED PER QUARTY FOR A QUICK DELIGHTFUL DESSERT Variety Vulnerable ICE CREAM TYRY OUR OTHER FREE GRADE A DIFFY PRODUCTS SEEM HONEY BUTTERMEAD CHOCOLATE IHN MAIL AND MAKE WRINTUP CREAM SOAP CREAM BAKERY It Pours Like a Pitcher! ... of course from Lawrence Sanitary Milk & Ice Cream Co. WATCH FOR IT AT YOUR FAVORITE FOOD STORE B1 pres pres in th ford 38 Fi The Biolog and for o This Oread Medio Dr. "try to of its three merel chemi ology De aspe Four is ac in 1 phys Dwig bio- ten, and sista This course of course medicine more this y He diffie such book may react for. mem term Summer Session Kansan Page 5 Photo Bureau TOMMY EASTMAN BERMUDA SHORTS LAB—Dressed for the present climate two third-year nursing students present a picture of informality while working in the lab. They are (from left) Carol Hill, Stafford and Mary Ann McGrew, Lawrence. Tuesday, July 9, 1957 Photo Bureau AND THE RESULTS? — Three third-year nursing students hover over a laboratory experiment in Haworth Hall. They are (from left) Sue Walling, Kansas City, Kan.; Lois Beal, Fredonia, and Dorothy Fine, Coffeyville. (2) 38 Nurses Now Finishing Final Course On Oread Thirty-eight girls are currently taking their last course on Mount Oread before entering the last half of nurses training at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. this fall. The course Foundations of Human Biology is worth nine credit hours, and often keeps the girls in class for over five hours a day. Designed to integrate all of the aspects of the human body, Foundations of Human Biology is actually three separate courses in bio-chemistry, anatomy and physiology. It is taught by Dr. Dwight J. Mullford, professor of bio-chemistry, Dr. Nicholas Hoten, assistant professor of anatomy, and Dr. Guy N. Loofbourrow, assistant professor of physiology. Dr. Mulford said the professors "try to talk about the human in all of its aspects by integrating these three courses, instead of teaching merely three separate courses in biochemistry, anatomy and physiology." This is the third summer that the course is being taught. Integration of courses is also being worked with students studying for doctorates in medicine. "Actually, the nurses are more integrated than the medics in this way," said Dr. Mulford. He went on to say it was a very difficult task to set up a course such as this (there are no textbooks written in this way) and it may take quite a while before it reaches the point that is hoped for. "But," he added, "we as staff members must think in those terms." The only undesirable thing about the course according to Judy Powell, Bennington junior, are the required organic chemistry and the fact that it lasts ten weeks instead of the prescribed eight. KU Graduate Joins Geological Survey Stanton Ball, a native of Lawrence and graduate of KU, has joined the staff of the basic geology division of the State Geological Survey. Ball received his B.S. degree in geology in 1956 and has continued with graduate work at KU. He will be assisting Dr. J. M. Jewett, head of the Survey's division of stratigraphy, areal geology and paleontology. Most of the division's research this summer will be on rock formations in eastern Kansas. Dr. Jewett and Ball will be doing field work on the Pleasanton and lower Kansas City rocks that crop out in the southeastern counties of Miami, Linn, Bourbon, Allen, Neosho, Crawford, Labette and Montgomery. They also are planning a three-day field conference to be held in the fall in eastern Kansas for members of the Kansas Geological Society, an organization of professional geologists. SPECIAL LOST OUR LEASE - COMPLETE SELLOUT ACME COWBOY BOOTS Infants (to size 8) $2.98 Boys (to size 3) ___ $4.98 Youths (to size 6) ---------------- $5.98 Men's (to size 12) ___ $9.98 Brown's TOGGERY 830 Mass. Geologists Take Field Trip Four members of the State Geological Survey at KU were in southeastern Kansas last week selecting places of geologic interest to visit this fall. They were Dr. J. M. Jewett, Stanton Ball, Robert Kulstad, and William Mayhood. Dr. Jewett, Ball, and Kulstad are geologists of the Geological Survey, and Mayhood is a student-geologist of high school age. PARTIES PARTIES Mixer - Dinner - Bridge Call V13-8791 or V13-2828 Party House East 23rd Street Pfc. Charles E. Kynard who received his Bachelor of Music Education from KU in 1955, is one of the busiest men in Berlin Command. Kynard arrived in Berlin in March 1956 for assignment with the 298th Army Band. Kynard Busy In Army No sooner had he unpacked his bags than he was off again, this time for the All Army Talent Contest finals at Fort Dix, N. J. He then appeared on the Ed Sullivan television show along with other winners of the contest, and then toured for one year with the Army's big show, "Rolling Along." After the year's tour, which took him to almost every corner of the globe, he returned to the 289th Army Band in Berlin, where he is now arranger and director for the band's dance group, jazz septet, and chorus. Each week Kynard and his fellow bandsmen present a concert at one of the refugee camps within this divided city. The universal language of music speaks an eloquent welcome to these people and makes the 298th bandsmen important ambassadors of good will and sincerity. In June the band performed in Olympic Stadium for the opening of the Berlin Film Festival which attracted stars of the movie world from all over the globe. Kynard is the son of Mrs. F. R. Jackson, Kansas City, Kan. While at KU he was a member of Alpha Phi Alpha and Phi Mu Alpha fraternities. It is estimated that the average American woman walks 70,000 miles—nearly three times around the world—during her lifetime. If you're a THRIFTY SCOT (and what student doesn't need to be) you'll appreciate a AUTHORITY Douglas County State Bank ThriftiCheck Account Only 71/2c per check DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK 900 Massachusetts "THE HOME OF FRIENDLY SERVICE" --- Announcing A New Weekly Feature At The Holiday Inn Restaurant We are presenting the most complete buffet ever on Wednesday nights from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. There will be a countless number of items ranging from fresh shrimp cocktail to special imported dinner cheeses. Such entries as Roasted Round Beef, Pan Fried Chicken, deliciously baked Ham, and Roast Turkey that's carved in front of your very eyes are just a few of our many features on the Wednesday night buffet. Plan a buffet dinner every Wednesday night. Children under 12 one-half Price A complete menu will be available for those who do not wish to dine buffet style Holiday Inn Restaurant Junction Highways 59 & 10 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 9, 1957 Musical Hit On Starlight Stage Slapstick comedy in all its glory took over the Starlight Theatre stage here Monday with the opening of "High Button Shoes," and will continue through Sunday. With Comic Paul Gilbert in charge of the mad happenings, and dancer Hal LeRoy and television stars Denise Lor and Jill Corey to enliven the proceedings, the gala show is expected to be one of the most hilarious of the season. The lightning wit Gilbert displays in his television routines and supper club engagements across the nation are put to good use in his portrait of Harrison Floy. Floy, a con man who sells water-logged real estate in New Jersey, in no way resembles the "medic" Gilbert so ably mimics in his take-off of the television drama, but the comedy is just as riotous. As Floy, he is aided and abetted by Mort Marshall in the role of Mr. Pondue. United Funds Head Elected Joseph Cohen, Kansas attorney, was elected chairman of the Kansas Conference of United Funds, Chestis and Councils at the close of the group's first meeting at KU Saturday. He will serve until April 1958 when the next conference is scheduled. Other officers are Bill Adams, manager, Pratt Chamber of Commerce, vice chairman; and John Harrell, executive director, United Community Campaign, Kansas City, secretary. Two more members will be appointed to the committee by Cohen. This group will work in cooperation with E. A. McFarland, manager, Lawrence Center, University Extension, in planning the April meeting. Twenty-nine persons from 16 cities attended the program Friday and Saturday. Topics discussed were: "How to Organize a United Fund Campaign;" "How to Campaign;" "The One Campaign Plan and Its Growth;" "How to Get Publicity," and "Fund Raising Related to Budgeting and Planning." Professor Given Honorary Degree John Robinson Frazier, former professor of drawing and painting at KU has received the honorary degree Doctor of Fine Arts from Brown University in Providence, RI. Frazier, who taught at KU from 1917 to 1923, is now president of the Rhode Island School of Design, also in Providence. The citation reads: "In one decade of your middle years your painting earned you a permanent position among American artists. Since then you have successively sacrificed your own interests and desires to the demands of teaching and administration; finally, as President of the Rhode Island School of Design, you have assumed new and exhausting duties at a time when most men think only of rest. "We who are enriched by the resources of the School of Design rejoice in both your actions and your words, which together provide a sound program for the present and a set of guiding principles for the future." Illustrator Joins Museum Staff Gene Pacheco of Santa Fe, N. M., has joined the staff of the Museum of Natural History as taxidermist and scientific illustrator. He fills the position vacated several months ago by Victor Hogg, who went to Michigan State University. Pacheco will work with George P. Young, chief taxi-dermist at KU. Pacheco has been doing illustration work for the New Mexico State Game Commission and the widely distributed "New Mexico" magazine. Mrs. Pacheco and three children will move from Santa Fe later this summer. Miss Lor, feminine singing star of the daily "Gary Moore Show" on CBS-TV, is making her first Starlight appearance. This follows another recent success, her first supper club engagement, which was at New York's swank Hotel Plaza Persian Room. In "High Button Shoes," she joins with LeRoy as Mama and Papa Longstreet, unsuspecting dupes in the land-selling schemes of the two crooks. A Starlight favorite, LeRoy returns to the Swope Park stage after an absence of two years. This will be his fourth Starlight appearance. A jittery goorilla frightens lovely bathing beauties while cops chase robbers in and out of bathhouse doors. Miss Corey, as the sister who lives with the Longstreets, becomes romantically involved not only with the con man but also with the big, handsome football player from Rutgers, played by Ralph Lowe. The petite brunette recording star is making her musical comedy debut in Kansas City before returning to New York to begin preparations for "Your Hit Parade" this fall. A Mack Sennett-type ballet and beach frolic at Atlantic City will provide the highlight of the show. Nobody Ever Died For Dear Old Rutgers and Papa, Won't You Dance With Me? are two of the big musical numbers in the show, which also will feature LeRoy in two dance specialties and Gilbert, Miss Lor and Miss Corey in special musical routines. One of the most valuable properties ever to be shown on the Starlight stage is a feature of the show. It is a 1911 Ford "Torpedo Roadster," the sports car of the "Brass Era" in motoring. Owned by E. B. McCormack of Kansas City, it is a restored model, complete with 4-cylinder, 22-horsepower engine, acetylene headlights, kerosene-fuelled side and tail lights, and a crank. It will be the center of attraction during a big number entitled There's Nothing Like A Model "T." Dean Attends Conferences Theatre officials report good seats available for all performances, which begin nightly at 8:15 p.m. Tickets may be ordered by writing the Starlight Theatre Ticket Office at 1217 Walnut or by calling Grand 1-5510. Prices range from fifty cents to $3.50. Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts has returned from a 10-day business trip to Washington, D.C., and St. Louis. In Washington, June 25-26, he attended a workshop on accrediting conducted by the National Committee on Accrediting. Participants were representatives from 21 national professional accrediting agencies. Dean Gorton was one of two from the National Association of Schools of Music. Also in Washington, June 27-28 he attended a conference on chamber music, in universities, conducted by the Coolidge Foundation at the Library of Congress. From June 27 through July 2 he attended an executive committee meeting of the National Association of Schools of Music in St. Louis, Mo. Receives Assistantship George El Jakway, Twin Falls, Idaho graduate student in zoology, has been awarded a Research Assistantship in Vertebrate Paleontology to the University of Nebraska State Museum. Jakway will study Pleistocene Cave Faunas from New Mexico and Texas. CAR WASH U. Wash 50c We Wash $1.00 - With W.W. $1.25 ED DENNY'S CONOCO 9th & Indiana "Sure, I read all the ads in the Kansan. Here's five good reasons why you should, too." 1. Kansan ads show where the values are. 2. Kansan ads help you buy intelligently. 3. Kansan ads bring news of all the latest merchandise and services. 4. Kansan ads save you shopping time. 5. Kansan ads show where nationally-advertised brands can be bought. Remember: Lawrence merchants who advertise in the Kansan have your interests at heart Summer Session Kansan Page 7 2 he ittee nation ouis, Falls, dogy, Asseonbra- will from CLASSIFIED ADS BUSINESS SERVICES TYPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Phone VI 3-2001. tf BE WISE-LOOK NEAT. For longer wear-buy repair. Reasonable prices. Burgert's Shoe Service. 1113 Mass, VI 3-0691. tf TYPIST: Experienced in these, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf EXPERIENCED TYPE: Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf OPEN ALL SUMMER Flat tops a specialty. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St Just under the hill. Clarence Adamson Mgr. tf LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas-complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete storage. Sure we have alligators, fish, turtles, chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-209- Tuesday, July 9, 1957 RENT A SEWING MACHINE only $1.00 per week. Free delivery. White Sewing Machine Dept. 936 Mass. Phone VI 3-2253. Beacon Appliance & Furniture TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED Professional, prompt, and efficient service. Regular rates. INK 1827 Arkansas 3-1573 or V-3 18606. tf THE ALPHA CHI OMEGA Western Civilization notes are now available for supplementary study and review. Phone 6:30-7:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday. LAUNDRY WASHED, dried, 50c load. Blankets, $1.50. Rugs and upholstery supplies, $1.99. Dryer, hourly. Dlir per service. Pickup and delivery. Smith's. East 23rd. VI 3-8077. BIRD TV-Radio Service 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 KING FLOOR SERVICE. Floors laid, sanded, finished. For free estimates, call Harold King. Phone VI 3-2956. tf TYPING WANTED - Term papers, theses. IT WANTED - accurate. Regular rates. Caref. TI 3-71844 FLATTOPS are the flattest, the magazines the most interesting, and the air conditioning the coolest at ERNIE'S BARBER SHOP. 730 Mass. 7-2 TAILORING. DRESSS on men's and also draps and slip 3-6857. 1106 La. MAKING, altera- women's clothes covering Call VI IMPORTANT NOTICE: Married students with or without family: I wash, iron, etc. for reasonable charge—also includes diapers. We are busy, but never too busy if we have time; we only this week, but offer good year 1957 and 1958. Phone VI 3-0353. 7-9 FOR RENT 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 315 TV-Radio Service. Get the best in guaranteed parts, tubes, and service at lowest prices. Lawrence's largest and oldest service shop. Equipped to rejuvenate or replace picture tube in your home. $7.50 cash discount on new picture tubes this month. Phone VI 3-1031, Bowman Radio TV. 826 Vermont. tf NOTICE: Effective at once to new and old customers. I will be open for bust-up from 6 a.m. to 6 a.m. 7 days a week July and August. Maud Smith 420 Idaho VI II 3-0535. EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine. Phone V 3-7654. tf THREE ROOM APARTMENT: Unfurnished. Clean and attractive, with range and refrigerator. Connections for automatic washer. Private entrance, private bath, two large closets, built-ins. Reasonable rent with utilities paid. Child accepted. Close to shopping center and KU. Phone VI 3-8514 or VI 3-7636. 7-5 FOUR ROOM APARTMENT, private entrance and bath. Garage. First floor, three rooms per room. Privilege privilege $12 per month bills paid. Aug. 4. VI 3-8852 after 5 p.m. Availability 7-9 WANTED—one man to share nearly new three bedroom home with three students. Includes use of kitchen, TV, automatic washer. $1^{2}$ baths. Call VI 3-1619 between 5 and 6 p.m. See at 2132 Mitchell Rd. 7-9 THREE FURNISHED HOUSES, two furnished duplexes and one furnished apartment. Call T. A. Hemphill VI 3-3802. 7-19 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 - Personalized Mugs and Ceramics - Trophies and Awards 411 West 14th Al Lauter Phone VI 3-1571 LAST CHANCE. Rooms in home with swimming pool in back yard. Kitchen privileges, private entrances, reasonable rates. VI 3-9635. 7-9 FOR BOYS—Two single nicely furnished rooms for fall. Linens furnished. Call after 5:30 p.m. VI 3-2909, 839 Mississippi. 7-12 LOST MISCELLANEOUS SUMMER STUDENT; Take advantage of Special Student Rates on Time, Life & Sports Illustrated Magazines. Save ½ of Regular Rate. Call VI 3-0124. tf A PAIR of ladies glasses with black frames in brown case with maiden name in case. If found please call Laree Morgensen VI 3-6052. 7-5 See the Hallmark Contemporary Collection of Cards at Mosser - Wolf 1107 Mass. USE KANSAN WANT ADS Nothing serves so many USEFUL purposes so well as a Checking Account Nothing costs you so little for the service rendered. Why not start one at THIS BANK? First National Bank Member F.D.I.C. Home of the Economy Checking Account 16. VINCENT KU Take one home with you Stuffed Jayhawkers LITTLE JAYHAWK 1.95 +++ BIG JAYHAWK 3.95 These perky little stuffed Jayhawks are just two of the menagerie of homeless, plush animals temporarily housed on our shelves. Wonderful gifts which reflect your true KU spirit STUDENT Union Book Store. Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday. July 9. 195 ... Photo Bureau SEE MOM! I PULLED AND PULLED AND—While taking a break during a Sunday concert, an unidentified Midwestern Music and Art Camper thought he would perform twice as well if he put two clarinets together. However, the raucous squawk that ensued forced him to be more conservative when assembling his instruments in the future. Use the Kansan Classified Want Ad Section to Get Best Results. 'Stage Door' Has It's Gems Despite Out-dated Story Summer Theatre 57's production of "Stage Door" Friday and Saturday in the Student Union Ballroom had its gems, notwithstanding a somewhat out-dated story by George Kaufman and Edna Ferber. Actually, the play does not speak well of the theatre. Living in an establishment such as the Footlights Club, a boarding-house for budding actresses, the setting of the play would possibly drive any normal being crazy with despondent actresses committing suicide, movie-moguls telling talented young girls to stay poor but happy on the stage, irritating playwrights, girls joining the demimonde, and ex-actresses winding up as boarding-house matrons. Vicki Sue White, Jerry Holt, Don Blades and Kay Carroll were the four characters who had more to do with the actual plot than anybody else. Although nearly everybody in the enormous cast had an inflection problem from time to time, these four held the show together through the use of some excellent moments supplied by Dr. Jack Brooking's direction. Jerry Holt, in handling the role of Keith Burgess, a frustrated playwright who turns to Hollywood and eventual obscurity, was highly successful in showing a real person under the pseudo-sophisticate of his character. Miss White, playing the role of Terry Randall, a talented but poor actress who passes up a lucrative movie contract in favor of waiting for "the big break," added life and interest to the stage with each entrance. She creditably performed some fairly emotional scenes. Don Blades, as David Kingsley, the movie-producer who provides the "big break" for Terry Randall, displayed charm and heroism despite his vocal difficulties. CRAFT & HOBBY SUPPLIES Balsa Paint Flock Plastic Klits UNDERWOOD'S 1215 West Sixth Miss Carroll, playing Kaye Hamilton, the suicide victim, although on stage only the first half of the play, joined with Franz Von Sauer in one of the two most effective character portrayals of the performance. A victim of poverty and fear, she radiated emotional instability throughout her appearance. Other performers worthy of note in the cast were Katy Wright and Elaine Hartzell as "Big" and "Little" Mary, two comedians; Chuck Marvin and Mattie, the colored custodians; Barbara Foley as Bernice Niemeyer, a lovable little girl with big dreams; Delores Harris who deftly executed a sobbing scene; and Shirley Dickson as Judith Canfield. Widow Of Coolidge Dies NORTHMAPTON, Mass — (UP)— Mrs. Grace Goodhue Coolidge, 78, widow of former President Calvin Coolidge, died at 12:50 a.m. Monday at her home here. Mrs. Coolidge died in her sleep. With her was her son, John. Dr. James H. Averill who said death was due to a heart condition added that an autopsy would be performed. One of every four rural automobile accidents occur at crossroads and more than half of all rural accidents occur after dark. Musical Comedy Highlights Slated "Musical Moments," a surprise adition to the summer theatre repertoire, will be presented in the Student Union Ballroom at 7 p.m. on Monday, July 15. Performed by University singers, the show will present about twenty favorite musical numbers in a story form. In the cast of the University Theatre-sponsored program are Sara Jo Pursely, Coffeyville; Jack Davison, Bolivar, Mo.; Mary Joe Woofter, Colby; Merrilyn Coleman Potter, Lawrence, all are seniors; Bruce Voran, Kinsley junior; Mary Adams, Midwestern Music and Art Camp, and Barbara and "Dusty" James, Lawrence. Supervising the show is Dr. Lewin Goff, associate professor of speech and drama, director of University Theatre. Mr. Robert Bell, ballet director of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp is in charge of choreography, and Jan Marowitz, Music Camp, will accompany on the piano. There will be no admission charge. 30 Pooches Follow Mistress LIVERPOOL, England — (UP) — When an ambulance took Miss Mabel Lambel, 73, to a hospital here, seven other ambulances had to tag along too. They were sent by the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals to pick up 30 dogs. The pooches had nobody to look after them while Miss Lambie was in the hospital. FANCY GROCERIES - QUALITY MEATS FREE DELIVERY Phone VI 3-3771 900 Mississippi REEVE'S GROCERY Student Union Cafeteria Where Quality is Finest with always A Wide Variety to Choose from from Summer Catering Service Available urprise e rep- in the 7 p.m. KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN ingers twenty story KU versity e Sara Davi- oofter, Potter, Bruce dams, Camp, James 45th Year, No.9 ss UP) — s Ma- here, to tag Lewin speechiversity ballet Music shore-music piano.charge. Royal Crueless. The after in the Friday, July 12, 1957 LAWRENCE, KANSAS New Prof Named To Radio-TV Teaching Staff Gale Adkins, director of the Bureau of Research in Education by Radio-TV at the University of Texas, will become assistant professor of speech and journalism at KU effective September 1. the Chancellor's office announced Thursday. He earned the B.S. degree in education from the University of Texas in 1940, the M.S. in 1941, and is now completing the dissertation for the Ph. D. degree from Texas on television in education. He also has done graduate work at Northwestern and Denver Universities and the University of Illinois. Professor Adkins previously was acting director of radio-television training at the University of Texas, 1952-55. Professor Adkins has been chairman of the research committee of the Association for Professional Radio Education, a member of the research committee of the National Association of Educational Broadcasters, and a members of the advisory committee for the Austin, Tex., Symphony Orchestra. Many of his articles on educational radio have been published in the Journal of the Association for Education by Radio and other publications. He will be a member of the radio-television teaching staff and also will be responsible for investigation of methods by which KU might utilize television in on and off-campus teaching. Concerts Orchestra-Ballet-Chorus Sunday, July 14 3:30 p.m., Hoch Auditorium Theme Song; Irish Tune From County Derry. Orchestra: Toccata, Fracobaldikindl; Serenade for Flute, Harp and Strings (Cynthia Sellers, Flute, Margaret Ling, Harp), Hanson, Gerald Carney conducting. Chorus: Triestis Est Anima Mea, Kuhmau; Peace Comes to Me, Lynn Murray; Hallelujah from Mount of Olives, Beethoven (Calvert Shenk, organist). Clayton Krebblish conducting. Orchestra and Ballet: Ballet Overture, Luigini. Choreography by Robert Bell. Dancers: Sue Lyn Bumpas, Max Gourley, Eugenia Hoeflin, Nina Lucas, James Wilkins. Orchestra: Symphony No. 2, Romantic (first movement), Hanson; Mark Twain, Portrait for Orchestra, Kern. Russell L. Wiley, conducting. Band-Chorus Sunday, July 14 8:00 p.m., Outdoor Theater Theme Song: Irish Tune From County Derry. Band: Commando March, Barber; St. Agnes Eve Suite, Coleridge-Taylor; Bolero, Ravel. Russell L. Wiley, conducting. Band: Amparita Roca, Spanish March, Texidor; I Guarany, Overture, Gomez; Death and Transfiguration, Finale, Strauss: Toccata Marziale, R. Vaughan Williams. Gerald Carney, conducting. Theme Song: Irish Tune From County Desert Chorus: Oh Rejoice Yea Christians Loudly Bach;Oh Dear What Can the Matter Be,Kubik;Alleluia, Randall Thompson. Clayton Krehbiel, conducting. Theme Song: Irish Tune From County Derry. —Photo Bureau MISS SARAH BROTHERS "MUSICAL MOMENTS"—Rehearsals are now in progress for "Musical Moments." This is an addition to the summer theatre program and will be performed by the University singers at 7 p.m. Monday in the Student Union Ballroom. Rehearing for the show are (from left) Merrilyn Coleman Potter, Lawrence senior; Sara Joe Purlesly, Coffeyville junior; Jack Davidson, Bolivar, Mo. senior and director of the show and Janice Morawitz, New London Mo. senior New London, Mo. senior. Network Director Named Monte Moore, sports director of radio station KWHK in Hutchinson the past two years, has been appointed director of the KU Sports Network and instructor in the radiotelevision curriculum, the chancellor's office announced today. Moore, who will handle all administrative and production details for the network as well as do the play-by-play broadcasts of KU football and basketball games, is the first full-time network director since 1954, when Merle Harmon resigned. Since then the administrative and play-by-play duties have been divided. received the A. B. degree, with a radio-speech major, from the University of Oklahoma in 1952. He served two years in the Psychological Warfare section of the U. S. Army, leaving the service as a first lieutenant. In 1954 he became sports director of radio station KSWO in Lawton, Okla., and then went to Hutchinson. There he has handled broadcasts of the National Junior College basketball tournament and originated for his station numerous Big Seven athletic events, and was president of the Hutchinson Quartier-back Club. A native of Hollis, Okla., Moore Moore will also produce the week- ly Javhawk Lockerroom programs. Dormitory Contracts To Be Recommended The award of construction contracts totaling $1,383,110.29 for Joseph R. Pearson Hall at KU will be recommended to the Board of Regents by Joseph J. Wilson, director of dormitories at KU. Apparent low bidders for the 6-story project, to be located along West Campus Road north of Carruth Hall, are B. A. Green Construction Co., Lawrence, general contractor; Tucker Electric Co., Topeka, electrical work; Brune Plumbing, Heating & Electric Co., Lawrence, plumbing and heating work. Furnishings, equipment and other expenses would bring the cost of the 412-man dormitory to $1,586,110.29. Wilson said. Gifts totaling $247,100 from Mrs. Joseph R. Pearson of Corsicana, Tex., will help finance the hall, which memorializes her late husband. Mr. Pearson, who died in 1955, and Mrs. Pearson previously had been instrumental in making possible two dormitories for women and two scholarship halls for men and women. The Housing and Home Finance Agency will make a 40-year loan of $710,000 at 2% percent interest. Another $432,000 will be sought for KU's share of the state i-mill student housing fund levy. Of the latter, $357,S34 already has been allocated to KU on the basis of full-time enrolments in the state institutions of higher education, and $75,000 will be sought from KU's share pavable at the end of 1957. In appearance and construction Joseph R. Pearson will resemble the existing Carruth and O'Leary Halls, but will be twice as large. The hall will be of concrete frame with buff brick exterior, with basement and six floors extending north-south. The basement will have a central kitchen for cafeteria type serving with dining halls in the north and south basements. The main floor will have the central lounge. Each upper floor will have a recreation room dividing the north and south wings. There will be 2-man rooms, with lightweight cinder block walls. Construction of the new dormitory will begin in about a month with expected completion one and a half years away. When occupied in 1958, Joseph R. Pearson Hall will more than double KU's dormitory capacity for men. Funeral Rites Held For Hedrick By JOHN HUSAR Funeral services for Robert M. Hedrick, 24, who was found dead Monday on the KU Natural History Reservation four miles northeast of Lawrence, were held Thursday at South St. Paul, Minn., his hometown. A coroner's jury Tuesday night said the death was "accidental—cause unknown." Hedrick was living on the reservation at the home of Dr. Henry S. Fitch, associate professor of zoology, who was on a two-week vacation. Apparently dead for a long time, the partially-decomposed body was discovered by Dr. Fitch, upon his return, on a rocky hillside in the southeast section of the reservation. The lower third of his left arm was missing, apparently chewed off by an animal. Two possible causes of death have been listed. According to the personal opinion of Dr. Byron W. Walters, County Douglas Coroner, Hedrick's death was due to snake or insect-bite. Dr. Fitch and Dr. E. R. An entry in a notebook found some thirty feet above the body showed Hedrick possibly died on June 27. Hedrick was known to be in the field doing research at times up to a week, but a search party was not started until July 8, eleven days after the supposed date of death. Dr. Fitch said, "I feel that Hedrick slipped on the muddy hilltop and rolled down, meanwhile hitting his head on a sharp rock making him unconscious." But an inspection of the body by Coroner Walters showed no trace of a skull fracture, or any other fracture, save that of the arm. Hall, professor of zoology, attribute the death to a fall, resulting in a compound fracture of the arm and subsequent bleeding to death. According to a statement issued by Dr. Hall, head of the department of Zoology, Dr. Hall surmised, "Hedrick fell or rolled down a rocky slope. He removed his belt to make a loop, thus freeing his belt knife and canteen. The only poisonous snakes on the area are the timber rattlesnake and the copperhead. I know of no instance of a healthy, grown person dying from the bite of a copperhead. The bite of a timber rattlesnake is more serious but that species is rare on the area. Even its bite would allow a bitten person time to reach the headquarters building, where Hedrick knew antivenom was available. "The mutilated left arm of Mr. Hedrick is evidence of a fall into the rocks of the slope where the body lay. I think he tripped over a root at the top of the path. He made a loop in his belt, probably to support his left arm or to stanch the flow of blood from the arm. It is likely that his death was due to loss of blood and other effects of a fall." On the other hand, Coroner Walters, who has been practicing medicine for 22 years, said that a snake-bite can be immediately fatal in two ways: (1) if the venom gets into the bloodstream, and (2) an anaphylactoid reaction. An anaphylactoid reaction is a sensitivity reaction to foreign particles in the circulatory system. It causes loss of blood pressure and heartbeat. He said, "Hedrick's belt was formed into a tourniquet but was underneath the body. This shows that he became unconscious and rolled down the hill before he had a chance to apply the tourniquet. "I feel," Walters went on, "that the arm was chewed off by an animal such as a coyote. It must have occurred after death and coagulation, for there were no traces of blood to be found on the scene. Hedrick was gathering research material on the worm snake and the ring neck snake. Both are nonpoisonous. "Blood is of a nature that is hard to wash away. If blood has been let, traces of it can easily be found for a long time." Science Camp Extension Is Considered The two-week camp (June 16-28) enrolled 78 high school students from six states. This was nearly half again as many as attended the first camp in 1956. The ultimate yardstick of success will be the production of scientists ten years hence, but for the immediate future the prescription for the KU summer Science and Mathematics Camp is "more and more." "The number of qualified applicants we had to refuse admission coupled with the responses from the campers indicate the duration of the camp period should be extended," said Dr. David Paretsky, camp director and chairman of the bacteriology department. Increasing the camp to three weeks and scheduling of two sessions will be considered for next year. "We can accommodate more prospective scientists only by extending the camp." Dr. Paretsky said. "Otherwise we would lose the small groups to which the faculty can give individual attention." Twelve outstanding campers of 1956 are now at KU for 4-week research assistantships with faculty members. For this they receive their room and board. Orientation in Many Areas Dr. C. H. Phoenix, assistant professor of psychology, is associate camp director. The campers had a full two-week schedule getting orientation from KU faculty in 15 areas of science: anatomy, astronomy, bacteriology, biochemistry, botany, chemistry, entomology, geography, geology, mathematics, physics, physiology, psychology, radiation biophysics and zoology. Laboratory work and field trips supplemented lectures. The aim of the program is to expose talented high school students to a wide variety of scientific fields without special emphasis on any one, and to encourage their interest in science as a career. Science campers lived in KU dormitories and ate at the Memorial Union with other high school students attending the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. University Theatre Play Is A Sellout The University Theatre's summer production, "Come Back, Little Sheba," opened to a sell-out crowd Thursday night in the Student Union Ballroom. Directed by Dr. Lewin Goff, associate professor of speech and drama and director of the University Theatre, the play, which recently returned from a stand at the Park Playhouse in Joplin, Mo. will be presented again tonight at 7:30 p.m. Weather Fair to partly cloudy this afternoon. Widely scattered thunderstorms northwest portions this afternoon and evening. Warmer today. Low tonight 60s northwest to 70s elsewhere. High today 95-105. Free Movies Offered Tonight Two free movies will be shown tonight at 8 p.m. east of Robinson Gym. They are "Indian American" and "Hunting With a Camera." In case of rain they will be shown inside. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 12, 1957 British Comment On Soviet Shift The following are comments from prominent British newspapers on the recent upheaval in Soviet Russia's political hierarchy: The Daily Mail (Conservative) says: "Even in the blood-stained history of the Soviet Union the expulsion from office of Malenkov, Molotov and Kaganovich and the demotion of Shepilov are matters of first class importance." The paper thinks that the latest events are the final outcome of a struggle between Khrushchev and Malenkov, which Khrushchev has won. "Such a result," it continues, "is unexpected. That the fight was being waged had been well known for months, but most observers thought Malenkov would prevail. This was because of Khrushchev's disastrous failures in foreign policy." The Daily Mail wonders what the latest development in the Soviet Union will mean for the world. "Khrushchev," it says, "has shown himself to be cunning, ruthless and unreliable. The West must treat with him and with the regime he now dominates, but would be foolish to trust either. The same applies to all the top Communists. But it can at least be said of Malenkov that he appeared to have a more human approach to human beings than have the men who murdered Hungary." Another Conservative paper, the Western Mail, thinks, however, that the changes reported from the Kremlin give cause for cautious optimism: "The down-grading of Mr. Molotov, long known as the iron man of Russian foreign policy, could hardly be unwelcome to the nations who suffered his intransigence; nor will there be many regrets in the West for Mr. Shepilov, the architect of Russia's recent disruptive policy in the Middle East." The paper thinks that it is reasonable to hope for a lowering of the world temperature. The diplomatic correspondent of the Daily Herald (Labor) describes the changes as "the most startling purge of the Soviet Communist Party's high command since Stalin's time," and "a decisive move by Khrushev to complete personal supremacy." The correspondent says: "The charges in the communique announcing the dismissals are so serious that it seems certain there is more to follow—quite possibly trials." The News Chronicle (Liberal): "The new convulsion in the Kremlin is of double importance for the West. It shows more clearly than ever that there are now two forms of Communism—Soviet and Chinese—towering over Asia, and that for the immediate future in Europe the West must negotiate with Khrushchev's diplomacy, not Molotov's. At any time this would be a choice between two evils. Mr. Khrushchev, who at least is no icy robot, may yet prove the lesser." The paper makes the point that the Pravda editorial which preceded the news of the dismissals implicitly flouts the Chinese Communist doctrine of allowing anyone in the fold to differ. Beware Of Rhus Toxicodendron! Brothers and sisters, hear me now. So you're going on a vacation? All right, go already. But listen to the voice of sad experience. Namely mine. Take rod and reel, if you will. Take tent and mosquito net, gun, camera, geiger counter, racquet, boots and saddle. Take whatever implements you judge will help you tame the great outdoors, but take also this—caution in the presence of Rhus Toxicodendron. Lack of caution will get you the bleariest mess of billious exterior this side of the horrors of Hades. That is, unless you're a newborn babe. According to some medicos, newborn babes are resistant to the ravages of Rhus T.—which is the scientific name for poison ivy. Everybody else had better beware. You may think you're immune. That's what I thought all my life, up until last month. Brother...what a total disillusionment. I say total because during my bout with poison ivy the poison reached a totality of spread over my beautiful pink body. Immobility set in. For two weeks, I was a mottle of itchy decorum. While thus pinned down, you have plenty of time to think. When you have poison ivy, you think about only one thing—your own itching. You become a supreme authority on the subject. At the end of this pondering period, you realize there is no way to define itching properly except by invoking the concept of purposeful action. Which is exactly what Webster's unabridged Dictionary resorts to when trying to define the feeling: "Itching, adj. Having the irritated feeling that induces scratching." Even medical dictionaries take the easy way out and define itching as a sensation in the skin that produces the desire to scratch. Well, what kind of sensation is it? Widespread poison ivy is an army of angry ants goosestepping across your skin to a rock 'n' roll beat. It feels the way burning leaves sound. It is a terrible thirst that slakes itself in tabasco. It is a myriad of tiny explosions like popcorn endlessly popping. It is the supreme example of the kind of sensation that sets afire the desire to scratch. But with poison ivy you're not supposed to scratch. Musn't touch. Scowl and bear it. That brings us to the complex of the large itch that isn't scratched. When a massive, total itch is denied the historic remedy of the scratch, it gets moody and turns inward on itself. Ten thousand demons are set loose at skin level. Panic grows. You get the cold sweats in reverse. Crawling chills and underskin shivering rattle your frame Just thought you'd like to know how it feels. Had a wonderful time on vacation. Wished you were there—instead of me. Doc Quigg, United Press Twenty-four students at Indiana University are undergoing an intensified program of "rushin' your Russian," according to the Indiana Daily Student. Indiana Rushin' Russian The 24 have sworn to use the Russian language exclusively during their five-week stay at I.U. Indiana's workshop and the one at Middlebury Conn., college, are the only two of this kind in the United States. Awakening to an alarm clock which tingles to the "Song of the Volga Boatman," the students look forward to four hours of classes a day supplemented by supervised study periods in both the afternoon and evening. In addition to these "brainwashings," workshop officials thoughtfully provide a faculty member to be present at each meal. According to reports, the unfortunate who misplaces an accent during the course of a meal may well have to go with his coffee left unsweetened. Evenings are spent listening to Russian records or lectures on Russia, learning Ukrainian folk songs, or watching Russian movies. Men and women participants in the workshop are housed in adjacent dormitories which make it possible for them to shout their Russian "sleep tights" across the way. Coeds who cross their legs in public can be expelled from Bulgarian universities for "Bourgeois behavior," according to reports from the Crusade for Freedom. The weight of this offense is doubled if she happens to be smoking or drinking a glass of wine in this unseemly position. Indiana's workshop may sound somewhat restricting to many students, but it stacks up not at all alongside the rigors devised by Bulgaria's Red schoolmasters. To make the "system" unbreakable, the "Responsible" appoints one student as a "Watcher," and the "Watcher" may denounce the "Responsible" if he feels he isn't getting the job done. Confusing, isn't it? The behavior of Bulgarian university students is watched over by a professor called the "Responsible," who is appointed by the faculty rector to superintend a group of students. The Bulgarian cut system requires a student who misses more than two classes in one subject to repeat the entire year—or two full semesters. —Kansas State Collegian The first TV presentation of Francis Poulenc's opera, "Dialogues of the Carmelites," will be given next season by NBC's opera company. Date will be announced later. The work had its opera house premiere last Jan. 26 at La Scala in Milan, Italy. It was done there in Italian but the NBC presentation will be in English. TV Notes Lowell Thomas is going to make a series of seven hour-long color travel programs for CBS as his first venture in TV on a regular basis. Dates and times of showing remain to be decided. "The Charles Farrall Show" and "Dear Phoebe," series starring Peter Lawford, are back for another ground on NBC for the summer. The former is at 10 p.m. Tuesdays, the latter is Monday-through-Friday at 5 p.m. for seven weeks. A new NBC summer show is "The Big Moment," a filmed series of highlights in the sports history, with Bud Palmer as host. Fridays at 9:30 p.m. Summer replacement for "Tales of Wells Fargo" in the 8:30 p.m. Monday spot on NBC will be "Action Tonight," an action-suspense film series, July 15 through Sept. 2. Marie Antionette, a "dainty morsel" of a girl who became a queen and then a national scandal and tragedy, gains fresh life in a new biography. French historian Andre Castelot has fashioned in "Queen of France" (Harper) a scholarly work that bubbles with a novel's narrative pace and suspense. Embellished with the rich and racy words of Marie Antoinette herself and her relatives, friends and enemies, this is a personalized account of the 14-year-old arrogant child who wed the future king of France. Total espionage was a Japanese invention. A British former spy, Ronald Seth, says that for more than 50 years Japan was the unchallenged leader, numerically speaking, in the spy game. Its agents covered half the earth. They were so numerous that no one ever counted all of them. As the Queen gains dimensions through Castelot's masterful writing, so do King Louis XV, the strange apathetic ruler and husband and the score of hangers-on of high and low birth—who played their parts in the tragic collage of French royalty. Espionage had reduced the element of chance to a good gamble by the time Japan was ready to strike at Russia in 1904. The rest of the world was surprised by Japan's quick success but not the informed Japanese. . . . Japanese innovations improved on Stieber's art. One, according to Seth, was the Japanese patriotic society idea, such as Black Ocean and Black Dragon. Books. Seth has written "Secret Servants" (Farrar, Straus and Cudahy) an unofficial history of Japanese espionage. His most important sources of information were Japanese foreign office documents in Washington. They were brilliantly successful in paving the way for Russias defeat by Japan in 1904, and in the conquest of Manchuria. Collaborating with Germans, they made possible the grand coup against the U. S. fleet at Pearl Harbor in 1941. The Germans were the teachers at spying and the Japanese were eager pupils. In 1876, when Japan was expanding contacts with other nations, a Japanese delegation called upon Wilhelm Stieber. Bismarck's master spy. The father of modern espionage was by then retired. He was flattered that the Japanese regarded him as the best in his line. He taught them his methods. Marie Antoinette has never lived more vividly than in Castelot's retelling of the early years, the marriage, her brightest days as queen, her extravagances and shocking unworldiness, her supposed love affairs, the haunting melodrama of the purloned necklace, the revolution and the last ride to the guillotine. The French Academy has corated Castelot for this work. Everybody talks about the teenager, and Purdue University seems to feel it finally has done something about him. Purdue, after 15 years of opinion testing believes it has found out what he thinks about everything from brushing his teeth to the Bill of Rights. Tabulated, broken down by age, geography, religion, and economics, the findings of the Purdue Opinion Panel appear now in "The American Teenager" (Bobbs-Merrill) by Dr. H. H. Remmers, head of the Panel, and D. H. Radler, hired by the Panel to translate their graphs into words you or I can understand. The findings: From 25 to 50 per cent of American teenagers feel that the Bill of Rights should be done away with Eighty per cent like school. A number of them feel scientists are the nearest things to monsters since King Kong. Most of them are convinced politicians are crooks. Eighty per cent think it is all right to neck on dates, but 50 per cent know their parents would disapprove. SUMMER SESSION KANSAN (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) Ed. Phone 251 Bus. Phone 376 Editors ... Dale Morsch John Eaton Business Mgrs. ... Colby Rehmert Bill Irvine Reporters ... Martha Crosier John Husar Janet Juneau Manager ... James E. Dykes Most of those who don't suffer raging ennui are confused by all manner of things. And it's all the fault of parents and society. IT'S ON THE WAY A "New Look" in Milk Cartons - RED WHITE BLUE ... Why Sure From LAWRENCE SANITARY MILK And Ice Cream Co. HOMOGENIZED LAWRENCE Sandersy ALL STAR Grade A TITANIC WHITEGLAZED HOMOGENIZED Milk HAPPY GIRL'S MILK "Lawrence Sanitary On Dairy Products Is Like Sterling on Silver" WATCH FOR IT AT YOUR FAVORITE FOOD STORE Summer Session Kansan Page 3 —Photo Bureau 10 Annual WAKARUSA FLOODS—Several families of the Wakarusa valley south of Lawrence were forced from their homes Wednesday and Thursday as the river overflowed its banks and flooded the lowlands. Crops were damaged by the high water but no other loss of consequence was reported. The above picture was taken where Highway 59 crosses the Wakarusa south of Lawrence. For summer vacation employment you can't beat treasure hunting. It pays 70 bucks an hour. KU Students Get High Pay For Their Treasure Hunt At least, that's what it paid a pair of KU students from Wichita on the Fourth of July. Shortly after midnight on the holiday the pair, Pat Little and Bob Boyer, found a check worth $1,400 hidden in the hollow of an old tree. Their discovery climaxed some 10 hours of searching, and listening for clues as to the check's whereabouts over Radio Station KFBI. The check had been hidden on Monday, July 1 by the station as a listener promotion. Boyer, who will be a senior in pre-law next fall, and Little, a coming junior in political science, decided to play detective. Boyer works at Steffen Dairy Foods Company this summer, while Little is tutoring. The two alternately listened to clues over KFBI during the day, then launched into their search after working hours. By the tenth clue they had the check's location narrowed down to some park. Then came clue No. 11, which concerned an ancient French King named Pepin. "This tipped us to the possibility that it might be in the vicinity of a section called Pippin Court in North Riverside Park," explained Boyer. "And sure enough, that's where we found it, wrapped in a plastic bag in an old tree." The check's initial value was $2,000. This decreased as additional clues were offered by KFBI announcers, and eventually would have dropped to $200. The two Jayhawkers were racing not only against time, but against hundreds of other check-seekers. Some sections of several city parks, suspected as likely locations of the hidden loot, were scenes of swarms of hunters—folks obviously not pickniking. Station KFBI was swamped by callers asking for a repeat of clues (which was denied), accusing the station of fraud, or merely probing for additional information. "One practical joker even scattered printed cards around Correction Kathryn Meredith, Joplin, Mo. senior, was incorrectly listed as the violin soloist in the review, "Recent Works Played in Sunday's Concert" in Tuesday's Kansan. Judy Gorton, Lawrence, was the soloist. Friday, July 12. 1957 The Russians in Port Arthur, Manchuria, surrendered to the Japanese on Jan. 2, 1805. a section of the park which caused quite a bit of confusion," reported Jim O'Neill, KFBI program director. "The cards said Take This to KFBI and Receive Prize." And several people did." Little and Boyer, after finding the check, called the station immediately. However, only a technician was on duty at the early morning hour. He suggested they bring it in early the next morning, which they did. Upon reporting their success to the station, they were immediately put "on the air" on O'Neill's morning disc jockey show and interviewed. To the obvious question, what do they plan to do with the money, Boyer replied: "I guess we'll both just hang onto it a while, and use it where it helps the most. Going to college is a pretty expensive business, and I'm sure we'll find plenty of use for it." RICHLAND, Kan.—(UP) —The family dog in the household of Mrs. Georgia Neesec Clark, Treasurer of the U.S. in the Truman administration, lost considerable stature today in the eyes of Richland admirers. The animal had been something of a hero since its barking aroused the Grays during an attempted burglary at their home 18 months ago. Andrew Gray, husband of the woman Democratic leader, shot and killed the intruder. Dog Named Mamie No Heroine Now Carried to safety by Gray, who had waded through three blocks of swirling waters to rescue her, the dog jumped into the flood water and swam back some, where the Grays had left her in their first hurried exodus ahead of the flood. But in yesterday's flood crisis the dog appeared less than brilliant. The animal's name—Mamie. SAN DIEGO — (UP) — Graduates this year from San Diego State College voted to do away with the traditional handshake with the college president at graduation ceremonies. No Handshakes This Year They said eliminating the handshake would speed up the process of obtaining their sheepskins. Follow the Parad to the Pit's good Bar-b-q Quick lunches Fast carry-outs Cool atmosphere Southern Pit 1834 Mass. Kansas News In Brief A TOPEKA-Staff members of the Kansas State Historical Society here found a whiskey bottle embedded in the masonry behind a frame of a door to a room which houses state relies. It was bonded whiskey, sealed and aged in masonry since 1914. By UNITED PRESS RUSSELL — Agriculture officials here said many Russell County farmers were converting rain-beaten wheat into hay. TOPEKA—Flash floods here hit almost six years to the day after the 1951 flood disaster. On July 11, 1951, dikes along the swollen Kaw river broke, making more than 17,000 persons homeless within 48 hours in many parts of the same area hit by flash flooding here July 10. TOPEKA-Atty, Gen. John Anderson said the investigation into the death of a transient, Earl Perkins, 42, in an Ellis jail cell June 17 during floods there was "far from finished. I'm not satisfied yet." WICHITA—Twenty-one traffic deaths ranked Sedgewick County as tops in death toll during the first six months of fatality record-keeping by the State Highway Patrol. McPherson was second with 14 traffic fatalities. RICHLAND - Mrs. Pearl Weiss, lone telephone operator here, gave five long rings on all Richland telephones when flash flood waters from Camp Creek began pouring into the town at 2 a.m. Wednesday. Lacking a central civil defense warning system, the five rings in Richland means a major emergency to all residents. HOUSTON, Tex. — (UP) — Bystanders were astounded at the getaway anties of a pair of bandits who robbed Captain John's restaurant here. Bandits' Escape Is Stranae TOPEKA-William Murphy, Alcoholic Beverage Control director, said Kansas now has 1,002 retail liquor stores operating, who paid in an all-time record $2,317,736 in gallonage taxes last year. Police said the men jumped into separate cars and roared off in opposite directions. Bill Will Block Use Of Troops WASHINGTON — (UP) — Sen. Olin D. Johnston said Thursday he will introduce legislation forbidding President Eisenhower to enforce civil rights with federal troops. The South Carolina Democrat said he would introduce the legislation as an amendment to the President's Civil Rights Bill. Johnston anounced the plan shortly after Republican sources said Eisenhower was willing to change the bill to calm fears that troops might be sent into the South to force school integration. Supporters of the measure said there are no grounds for such fears, but its Southern foes were not convinced. Johnston said the bill in its present form "leaves unquestionable" the President's right to "bring the South ... to their knees at bayonet point." The Senate was debating for the fourth day a motion to bring the bill formally to the floor for consideration. USE KANSAN WANT ADS CRAFT & HOBBY SUPPLIES Balsa Paint Flock Plastic Kits UNDERWOOD'S 1215 West Sixth See the Hallmark Contemporary Collection of Cards at Mosser - Wolf 1107 Mass. CAR WASH U Wash 50c We Wash $1.00 - With W.W. $1.25 9th & Indiana ED DENNY'S CONOCO Get Your PICNIC SUPPLIES In One Stop Ice Cold Beverages Watermelon Lunch Meat Groceries Crushed Ice Open 7 Days & Evenings AMERICAN ServICE Company 616 Vt. - Ph. VI 3-0350 Summer Session Kansan Friday. July 12, 1957 —Photo Bureau --- STEELWORKERSOver a hundred members of the United Steelworkers of America, who are currently holding a convention at KU, held an indoor picnic in the Student Union Jayhawk Room Wednesday evening when weather forced them indoors. Law And Order Is Topic For Peace Officers School Techniques of "keeping law and order" will be the subject for 150 peace officers from Kansas and neighboring states at the 11th annual Kansas Peace Officers Training School July 22 to 27 at KU. The school is sponsored by the Kansas Peace Officers Association, Governmental Research Center at KU, and University Extension. The 1957 Kansas Legislature endorsed the training program and approved an appropriation of $5,000 to KU for instruction facilities. John Anderson Jr., attorney general, said he believes the school "will continue to serve a very useful purpose in raising the standards of law enforcement in Kansas." This year's school will be composed of a basic course for police officers, a police science course and a traffic course. Members of all courses will attend joint meetings during the mornings and specialized classes in the after- noons. On Monday and Tuesday, July 22-23. special classes will be offered to sheriffs and their deputies. Serving legal processes and jail administration will be stressed during these two days. The basic course is designed for relatively inexperienced peace officers. Subjects will include interview and interrogation, law of arrest, patrol techniques, report writing, burglary and larceny investigation and testify in court. One dav is set aside for the study of police radio procedures and techniques in an effort to establish standardized radio communication throughout the state. The traffic course will emphasize accident investigation, causes of accidents, traffic court evidence and traffic accident records. The police science course is designed to meet the needs of officers interested in scientific and laboratory aspects of police work. Among the subjects presented will be collection and preservation of evidence, fingerprinting, cast making, dermal nitrate tests and photography. Officers will apply the procedure to burglary, larcency, homicide, and suicide investigation. The peace officers will also participate in a target practice session and search and seizure techniques. A staff of well known Kansas and several noted out-of-state peace officers will be instructors and discussion leaders. Discussions will be supplemented with films and demonstrations. SALE Boston Pops LP's $266 BELL MUSIC COMPANY E. A. McFarland, manager of institutes and conferences at KU, said the four-year educational program has been compressed into a course that can be completed in three summers. A graduate year advanced management workshop has been added to provide intensive study of selected problems. More than 100 persons will be on the campus Sunday for the eighth annual Credit Bureau and Collection service Management Institute. They will come from 13 midwestern and Rocky Mountain states. The institute will last a week. "The graduate workshop, which makes possible at least eight years of study without repetition, is attracting the top executives of the credit bureaus of such cities as St. Louis, Denver and Houston," MacFarland said. 925 Massachusetts Phone VI3-2644 The people whose business is to know a lot more about your financial habits than you suspect will attend school next week at KU to learn how to better obtain, organize and utilize that information. 100 Enrolled For Annual Credit School The faculty includes Tom Huttsell, Western Auto Supply Co., and Freda Dixon of Dixon Associates, Kansas City, Mo.; Elmer F. Beth, professor of Journalism, and Prof. E. C. Buehler, Professor of Speech, both of KU; Leonard Berry, National Retail Credit Association, St. Louis, Mo.; Harry Boyd, Credit Bureau, Belleville, Ill.; Sherman Harris, Creditors Service Bureau, Houston, Tex.; Bert Hodge, Credit Bureau of Sacramento, Calif.; Richard Holmes, Credit Bureau, Atlanta, Ga.; Charles Schaffer, Credit Bureau, Mason City, Ia.; and Carl Roewe, Associated Credit Bureaus of America, St. Louis, Mo. About 10 species of the sunfish or Centrarchidae, family are common to Minnesota. In addition to the largemouth and smallmouth bass, there are five species of sunfish, two species of crappies and the rock bass. The Junior League of Kansas City, Mo., has contributed $950 for fellowships for graduate students in social work at KU. Fellowships Given By Junior League Holders of the fellowships may be either first or second-year graduate students at the KU Kansas City Social Work Center. Academic achievement and need will be the criteria used by the social work faculty in making the awards. The Junior League's fellowship program in social work was begun in 1956. Fellows the past year were Mrs. Evalyn Browne of 2624 Forest, Kansas City, Mo., and Mrs. Margaret MacLaren, 817 Missouri Lawrence. Preference will be given to students who plan to engage in professional practice in the Greater Kansas City area. Mrs. John Park is president of the Junior League of Kansas City, Mo., and Mrs. Charles Whitney Miller is chairman of the scholarship fund committee. Wrong Cat, But Good Try MADISON, Wis — (UP) — A newsboy found a Siemsie cat answering the description of one lost by Mrs. William D. Walker before she left on a trip to Michigan. At her direction, he put the cat on a plane for Detroit. Today the cat was back in Madison. It was the wrong one. What is old age for fish? Two to three years to grow up and four to five years' exposure to angling is typical. Few live longer than that. Wheat Harvest Hits New Low TOPEKA—(UP)—The U.S. Agriculture Department today forecast a 1957 wheat crop in Kansas of 94,054,000 bushels, the smallest crop in the nation's no. 1 wheat state in more than two decades. Crop officials said that Kansas hasn't had a year with a production of less than 100,000,000 bushels since 1935. The revised July forecast was down from the June estimate of 101,680,000 bushels. Farm experts traced the more pessimistic outlook to heavy rains and flooding which have severely damaged the harvest this year. The all-time low wheat crop in Kansas in modern times came in the drought year of 1935 when the state produced only 64,055,000 bushels. The all-time high came in the bumper crop year of 1952 when Kansas produced 307,629,000 bushels of wheat. Paul Revere was born Jan. 1, 1735. SUNDAY DINNERS from 12:30 CALL VI 3-8791 or VI 3-2828 for reservations PARTY HOUSE East 23rd Street L. G. BALFOUR CO. Fraternity Jewelers - Personalized Mugs and Ceramics - Fraternity Badges—Rings—Novelties - Trophies and Awards 411 West 14th Al Lauter If they aren't they need Independent care Are your white shirts white? INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY Courtesy of & Dry Cleaners 721 Vermont Page 5 Roofe Receives Fellowship Dr. Paul G. Roofe, chairman of the department of anatomy of KU will spend the 1957-58 academic year in California where he will participate in special research in the general field of neuro-anatomy. He has received a United States Public Health Fellowship for the research. Most of Dr. Roofe's work will be done in the University of California Medical Center at Los Angeles. He will concentrate specifically on reticular formation of the brain, the basic material from which the specialized areas of the brain have differentiated. He will have the opportunity to work for short periods at the California Institute of Technology at Pasadena with Roger Sperry in the field of psycho-biology. He also will work with Dr. Horace H. Magoun, a leading contributor to the new concept of brain function. Some work will be done at the Veterans Hospital at Long Beach, Calif. Dr. Roofe will leave here Aug Summer Session Kansan 24 to attend the American Institute of Biological Sciences at Stanford University in California, Aug. 25-29. His wife will follow later. His daughter, Nancy, will remain at KU to complete work for her A. B. degree in Fine Arts. During Dr. Roofe's absence, Dr. Howard Matke, associate professor of anatomy will be in charge of the department. Dr. Matzke came to KU in 1953 from the State University Medical Center of New York City where he was assistant professor for three years. Are You Missing A Letter KANU Broadcasting Band Camp Concerts MAYWOOD, Ill. — (UP) — A weary mail carrier who tried to deliver the neighborhood letters the hard way ran afoul of the law here. Police said postman James Williams, 19, admitted Wednesday he dumped the mail in the river because it was a hot day and his mailbag was too heavy. Band, orchestra, and choral concerts of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp are being broadcast on KANU each Sunday afternoon and evening this summer. The performances, each an hour and a half long, are being broadcast at 3:30 p.m. and 8 p.m.The last program will be broadcast July 28.In addition to the regular Sunday program, half-hour tape recorded package programs are being prepared by KANU and distributed to Kansas radio stations through the KU Tape Network. CHICAGO—(UP)—Robert Holmes was quiet enough but his shirt was too loud. Holmes and two others managed to elude police for six hours Wednesday by hiding behind false walls of a Chicago theater. But a policeman spotted Holmes' brightly striped shirt through a hole in the wall and arrested the trio on burglary charges. Shirt Was A Sauealer Friday, July 12, 1957 Anatomy Prof Is Appointed The appointment of James Hall as an assistant professor in the anatomy department at KU has been announced. He will each gross anatomy and neuro-anatomy. Dr. Hall earned his A. B. degree in zoology in 1951 at the American International College in Springfield, Mass. In 1953 he received his masters degree in the same field at Connecticut University, Storrs, Conn. He recently received his Ph. D. degree in neuro-anatomy at St. Louis University, St. Louis, Mo., where he has been teaching the past four years. Dr. Hall was the last student of the late neurologist, Dr. Albert Kuntz, who was known throughout the world for his studies on the autonomic nervous system. Dr. Hall used the latest microchemical techniques in studying the finer structure of the autonomic nervous system. In 1956-57 Hall held a U.S. Public Health Service Fellowship while working on his thesis. He has had a paper published entitled "Toluidine Blue Staining Reactions in Superior Cervical and Nodose Ganglia Following Stimulation and Drug Administration." Dr. Hall is a native of Springfield, Mass. In 1945-47 he was a pharmacist mate in the Navy. He and his wife plan to arrive in Lawrence in early August. Pizza Love Leads To Crime KALAMAZOO, Mich. — (UP) — A craving for Pizza pie proved the undoing of James Thurston, 22, a recent University of Michigan Graduate. Municipal Judge Clark M. O.lmstead fined him $25 for breaking into the Vicksburg police station and calling a Kalamazoo pizzeria to inquire about their hours. From Drive-Ins To Dining Rooms, These Restaurants Offer The Best Food In Lawrence Hamburgers Bar-b-q Shrimp Root Beer Campus Hideaway Pizza Call VI 3-9111 for 15 minute pickup service Hours — 5 to 1 every day 106 N. Park Hot Dogs Steaks J & L Drive-In J & L Drive-In Root Beer, Orange Malts, Shakes Chicken & Shrimp - 98c 11 a.m. - 12 p.m. — 7 days Chicken A & W Root Beer Malts A & W Root Beer Orange, Malts and Sandwiches Hours—Open Weekdays 11:00 a.m. Open Sundays 12:00 noon 1415 West 6th St. Old Mission Inn "The best hamburgers in town!" Air Conditioned 1904 Mass. VI 3-9737 Blue Hills Drive In 1601 East 23rd Jumbo Deluxe Steak Burgers Foot Long Hot Dogs Tasty Bar-B-Q Burgers — QUICK SPEAKER SERVICE — Hours 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Weekdays BLUE HILLS 100 Big Buy For the best in burgers & malts . . . Before the show & after the game Highway 10 & 59—Car Service Only Weekdays 11 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. Fridays & Saturdays 'til 1:00 a.m. The Castle Tea Room Air Conditioned 1307 Mass. VI 3-1151 Summer Session Kansan Page 6 Friday, July 12, 1957 KU Professor Visiting ROTC Training Camp Dr. George Bradshaw, chairman of the department of civil engineering, is one of the educators from 31 universities and colleges who are visiting Fort Riley today to observe Army ROTC cadets participating in a six-weeks field training course. Seventy-six ROTC students from KU are among the approximately 1,800 cadets from a 13-state area who are participating in the course. Two officers and five enlisted men from KU are members of the field training staff. The students must complete the course before becoming commissioned officers in the U.S. Army Reserve. Other Kansas educators who are observing the course are Dr. Herbert J. Wunderlich, dean of students, Kansas State College, and Dr. Walter A. Lucas, associate professor of education, University of Wichita. Greeted by Commander Greeted by Commander Upon arrival this morning at Custer Hill, site of the encampment, the educators were greeted by ROTC Camp Commander, Major General David H. Buchanan, commanding general of Fort Riley and the 1st Infantry Division, and Deputy Camp Commander Colonel William W. Harvey, Jr., professor of military science and tactics at Kansas State College. Escorted by senior officers from the various schools, the visitors saw cadets engaged in mine warfare training, scouting and patrolling, and 106mm Recoilless Rifle firing. Following lunch in the field, the school officials will observe M1 rifle firing and an engineering demonstration, after which they will return to Custer Hill to meet with cadets from their schools. At 5:15 p.m. they will attend a regimental review of the ROTC cadets from 41 universities and colleges attending the camp. cengages including the camp. Friday morning, after spending the night at Fort Riley the visitors will attend an artillery orientation and will see the cadets taking the leaders' reaction test, an important phase of leadership training. Moving in from the field, the educators will participate in a general discussion of the training course. A University of Kansas Science and Mathematics Camp alumna has been selected as a junior member of the petrography division of the State Geological Survey at KU for the month of July. Geological Survey Selects Assistant Ava Gager, 1956 Science camper and 1957 graduate of Joplin High School, Joplin. Mo., received honorable mention in this year's National Science Talent Search, sponsored by Westinghouse and the science clubs of America. Her winning project was "The Recovery of Low-Grade Uranium Through Leaching with an Organic Catalyst." During July, Miss Gager will be engaged, primarily, in research projects in the Geological Survey's division of petrography, mineralogy, and X-ray, under the direction of Dr. Ada Swineford, geologist with the Geological Survey. She will enter KU in the fall. She will hold a general scholarship at KU. She plans to enroll in the College, taking courses in geology. From College To University Oklahoma A &M College in Stillwater, recently admitted to the Big Seven, has changed its 67 year old name. The school will now be known as Oklahoma State University of Agriculture and Applied Science. British United Press was organized in 1922 to serve newspapers in the British Empire. Big-8 Luncheon Slated For August The second annual Big Eight football-alumni luncheon will be held in Kansas City, Mo., Aug. 23. The luncheon is held in connection with the annual press-radio conclave of the conference. All coaches and publicity men will be available to the press, radio and TV men of the conference area at that time. The press meeting is scheduled for 8:30 p.m. on Aug. 23 with the lunch-eon at 12 noon at the Hotel Muhlebach. At that time the coaches of each of the conference schools will speak for five minutes. In addition to the press, radio, coaching and publicity group, the presidents, faculty representatives, athletic directors and the governors of the six states in the Big Eight territory have all been invited to the luncheon. Last year about 400 alumni of the Big Seven schools attended the gathering. Kiddyland Bandits Are Real FARMINGDALE, N. J., — (UP)—State Police said that realism was carried a bit too far at nearby Cowboy City, a recreated old west town where bank holdups and train robberies are staged for tourists. Detectives said thieves weren't acting when they broke into Kiddyland and looted a safe of $5,800. Egyptian silversmiths, as early as 2000 B.C., used primitive forms of "wet" electric batteries in electroplating metals, according to recent archaeological discoveries. AUTO PARTS AND TIRES New or Used Auto Wrecking And Junk Co. East End of 9th St. VI 3-0956 Clearance of Men's SPRING & SUMMER SHOES Freeman and Edgerton Formerly Priced to 13.95 7.90 8.90 9.90 Mesh - Ventilated - Two Tones - Crepe Soles Group of Odd Lot Year Around Shoes Formerly Priced to 14.95 7.90 Brown Calf - Black Calf - Brown Calf Discontinued in Nunn Bush Formerly Priced to 21.95 13.90 - Black Calf - Sport Shoes Hundreds of Pairs to Go at Greatly Reduced Prices Royal College Shop 837 Mass. KU Professor Speaks At Missouri Meeting Dr. Oscar M. Haugh, Professor of Education, is one of three out-of-state speakers at the University of Missouri Summer Conference on the Teaching of Reading being held Thursday and today. Professor Haugh delivered the banquet address Thursday evening. His topic was "Ideas New and Old about the Teaching of Reading." Other out-of-state participants were Dr. Arthur Gates of Teachers College, Columbia University and Dr. Nancy Larrick, Children's Book Editor, Random House Publishing Co. The first woman to be elected to the U.S. Senate was Hattie W. Caraway (D-Ak-), widow of Sen. Thaddeus H. Coraway. U.S. May Deliver Girard For Trial WASHINGTON — (UP) — The Supreme Court ruled Thursday that the U. S. has a right to deliver GI William S. Girard to Japan for trial. The court said the narrow issue was whether the Constitution or legislation prevented carrying out the arrangement between the U.S. and Japan for trying soldiers who violated the laws of both. "We find no constitutional or statutory barrier to the provision (of the agreement) as applied here," the opinion said. Sunset 1/2 MILE W or LAWRENCE on Hwy 40 MOVIE MARATHON SATURDAY 4 FEATURES 4 CARTOONS Come when you like, leave when you like Nothing shown twice No.1 No.2 EARTHIVE THE FLYING CANCER'S MARC MARTIN - SOUND TECHNOLOGY Mary B. No. 3 JOHN PAYNE - ROXALD REAGAN RHONDA FUMING - COLSEN GRAY TENNESSEE'S PARTNER SUPERSCOPE SLIGHTLY SCARLET TECHNICOLOR SUPERSCOPE JOHN PAYNE ARLENE DAHL THREE Bad SISTERS marling MARLA ENGLISH KATHLEEN HUGHES SARA SHAKE JOHN BROMFIELD JOHN PATYNE-RONALD REAGAN RONDALE FLEMING-COLLEEN GRAY TENNESSEE'S PARTNER TENNESSEE.COM SUFFOCAL.COM No.4 A REGALSCOPE PICTURE SUNDAY thru WEDNESDAY EARTH-SHAKING SHOCKERS! SIGHTLY SCARLET TECHNICOLOR SUPERSCROPE JOHN PAYNE ARIENE DAHL NOSY starring JEFF MORROW BARBARA LAWRENCE JOEN EMERY Residential KRONOS SHE DEVIL starring Mariam BLANKARD Jack KELLY Albert BEKER A Raleigh Film, Inc. Production A MEMORIAL PICTURE Boxoffice Opens at 7:00 10167 Only at DIXON'S with the exclusive AUTO-DINE SERVICE - No lines to drive through - Delicious food brought to your car - No gas wasted - Music while you eat Di Dixon's DRIVE-IN 2500 West 6th --- JEWELRY Summer Session Kansan Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS FOR RENT THREE FURNISHED HOUSES, two furnished duplexes and one furnished apartment. Call T. A. Hemphill VI 3-3902. 7-19 FOR BOYS—Two single nicely furnished rooms for fall Linens furnished. Call after 5:30 p.m. VI 3-2909, 839 Mississippi . . . . . 7-12 NICELY FURNISHED all modern basement apartment. Private entrance and parking. Paid. For a couple of boys~adults only. Call after 5:30 p.m. 839 Miss, VI 3-2909. LOVELY 4-ROOM APARTMENT with bath. 2 bedrooms and garbage disposal. The kitchen furnished, all bills paid except electric. Not far from camph. Phone VI 3-7677. THREE ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT 3 blocks from KU. Private en- tities with chairs and lan- derry privileges. Prefer boys or couple. Phone VI 3-7830 after 5 p.m. 7-23 MISCELLANEOUS SUMMER STUDENT: Take advantage of Special Student Rates on Time, Life & Sports Illustrated Magazines. Save ½ of Regular Rate. Call VI 3-0124. WANTED Wanted for three black kittens. Phone VI 3-7317 after 4 p.m. 7-16 FOR SALE 1954 SOUTHWESTERN TRAILER 32 foot two bedroom, bath, like new. For information call VI 3-8495. 7-23 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Phone VI 3-2001. tf TV-Radio Service. Get the best in guaranteed parts, tubes, and service at lowest prices. Lawrence's largest and oldest service shop. Equipped to rejuvenate or replace picture tube in your home. $7.50 cash discount on new picture tubes this month. Phone VI 3-1031, Bowman Radio-TV, 826 Vermont. BIRD TV-Radio Service 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 Owl TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf OPEN ALL SUMMER Flat tops a specialty. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St. Just under the hill. Clarence Adamson Mgr. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas--complete stock of cages and canaries. Includes outfits for dogs-beds, harnesses, etc. Sure we have alligators, fish, turtles, chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-922-4760 TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED Professional, prompt, and efficient service. Regular rates. INK 1827 Arkansas, VI 3-4573 or VI 3-8660. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine, Phone VI 3-7654. tf BE WISE—LOOK NEAT. For longer wear–buy repair. Reasonable prices. Burgert's Shoe Service. 1113 Mass. VI 3-0691. tf TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Mrs. Leatherwood, VI 3-8931. tf RENT A SEWING MACHINE only $1.00 per week. Free delivery. White Sewing Machine Dept. 936 Mass. Phone VI 3-2253. Beacon Appliance & Furniture FAST COLOR FILM PROCESSING HIXON Studio and Camera Shop 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 BEVERAGES- All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Plicen, party supply Ice Plant, 6th and Vermont. Phone 1-03-550. THE ALPHA CHI OMEGA Western Civilization notes are now available for supplementary study and review. Phone 6:30-7:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday. tf WASHING & IRONING done at a new time. Effective at once to new and old customers. I will be open for business from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. 7 days a week July and August. Maud Smith 420 Indiana VI II 3-0535. tf LAUNDY WASHED. dried. $1.00. Loads. upholstery. Blankets. $1.50. Rugs and upholster- ing. In stock at an hour. Dinner service. Pickup and delivery. Smilf- y's. East 23rd. VI 3-8077. M-M-M-GOOD NOW TRY THIS! Friday, July 12, 1957 no wild dream, this WILD CHERRY sundae Freshly-frozen Dairy Queen . . . fat. juicy cherries. Don't tarry . . . make yours Wild Cherryl DRINK QUEEN © 1997, DAIRY QUEEN NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT CO. DAIRY QUEEN DAIRY HOME OF "THE SUNDAE WITH THE CURL ON TOP" KING FLOOR SERVICE. Floors late, manicure free. For free estimates, call King. Photos. 1835 MASSACHUSETTS TYPING WANTED—Term papers, theses. Experienced, accurate. Regular rates. Call taxi at (516) 273-8048. TAILORING, DRESSS on men's and Also draps and slip 3-6857, 1186 La. MAKING. altera- women's clothes. covering. Call VI "1." EAST SIDE BEAUTY SHOP 1345 New Jersey For Colored People TINTING, SHAMPOOING, CURLS AND ALL KINDS OF HAIR CONDITIONING Phone VI 3-9630 or VI 3-0650 Keep Your Car Looking New In Rain Or Shine With Our Expert Polish Service Porcelainize or Paste Wax $10 and up MORGAN-MACK YOUR FORD DEALER 714 Vermont VI 3-3500 Chat! in pleasing atmosphere Crisp Chefs Salad Chilled Fruit Salad Jello Fruit Toss Chilled Juices Tossed Green Salad Delicious Fruit Plate Fresh Iced Fruit Cottage Cheese Salads Think! Dance Every Wednesday Evening Trail Room Student Union Snack! wonderfully delicious food Big Seven Burger Pork Tenderloin Hot Beef Hamburger Fried Steak Burger Deluxe Cheese Burger Grilled Cheese Air Conditioned Hawk's Nest Sub-Basement Snack! KU --- Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 12, 1957 THE DIVINE COMMON LYRICS Photo Bureau MUSIC CAMP SINGERS—Three girls in the Midwestern Music and Art Camp chorus raise their voices while practicing a number for Sunday's concert. The chorus performs twice each Sunday, in the afternoon with the orchestra and in the evening with the band. KU Previews Give A Two Day Orientation To New Students By JANET JUNEAU The fifth in a series of six KU Previews for freshmen for Fall 1957 will be held Monday and Tuesday. The last dates for the previews this summer are July 29 and 30. Placement Examinations Given Preliminary orientation periods, with a full program of activities are under the direction of Carl G. Fahrbach, Jr., assistant director of admissions. Placement examinations consisting of aptitude and achievement tests, normally offered to new students at the beginning of school in September, are being given to the registered groups this summer. These tests are not used for determining entrance into the university but lead to better counseling of students in their choice of careers and courses of study. The review is not compulsory but it offers the students a chance to undergo orientation without the usual rush of fall semester. Physical examinations which are required of all new students are also on the schedule for previewers. Overnight housing for a maximum of 200 at each session is arranged and meals are served in the Student Union cafeteria. A banquet at which faculty members are present is held the evening of the first day at the Student Union. Shows To Feature Court Decisions "Your Rights Are on Trial," a series of thirteen half hour programs featuring authentic Supreme Court opinions, will be heard on KANU each Monday at 9 p.m. on the University of the Air beginning August 12. A production of the NAEB Tape Network, the programs will present authentic dramatizations and authoritative discussions of the court opinions. The series is based upon the idea that "your rights are not just what the Constitution says, but the ways in which the high courts interpret your constitutional guarantees." The first program in this series, "The Due Process of Law," is based upon the case of Rochin versus California in which Los Angeles County sheriffs had a stomach pump used on a suspect to extract evidence proving the possession of narcotics. The summary on this first program will be presented in a recording by William O. Douglas, Associate Justice of the U. S. Supreme Court. The conference with advisers and deans of the various schools and the orientation talks by the deans are perhaps the most important part of the previews. Getting acquainted with the campus and future classmates, making arrangements for housing, and learning something about Lawrence, while not on the agenda of activities, combine with the placement tests and physical exams to complete the two days at KU. The basic idea of the program is to offer first-hand information about KU and to make the student's transition to university life easier. CORRECTING THE TEXT IN THE BOTTOM OF THIS PAGE MAY BE Difficult. Please look at the image carefully and try to recognize any text that is clearly visible. If the text is not clear, please provide a description of the image. Dr. John Stephenson McNown, 41-year-old alumnus of KU, is the new dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture. Dean McNown, an internationally known authority on fluid mechanics and hydraulics, has held full professorships both at the State University of Iowa and the University of Michigan. He is a consultant to the U. S. Bureau of Public Roads and several corporations. The American Society of Civil Engineers has awarded him its J. C. Stevens Research Program prize. His father, W. C. McNown, was for 37 years professor of civil engineering at KU, retiring in 1950. Dean McNown took over from retiring Dean T. DeWitt Carr a school that enrolled 2,163 students last fall in 12 degree-granting departments. JOHN S. McNOWN NOW ON SALE U.S. Royal Air Rides - Safety-Bonded Blowout Protection - Quick-Stop, Steer-Easy Tread - Exceptional Mileage Only $1195* Size 6.00 x 16 Get a Set of "FOUR" $4780* $1295* each Size 6.70 x 15 $5180* 95 $ ^{*}$ Size 6.00 x 16 95* Size 6.00 x 16 Get a Set of "FOUR" $4780* Easy Terms from 75c per week $14.40* each Size 7.10 x 15 $5760 set of 4 eplus Tax and Your Recappable Tire RAPID TRANSIT SERVICE . 1000 Massachusetts KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN KU 45th Year, No. 10 Tuesday, July 16, 1957 LAWRENCE, KANSAS —Photo Bureau AH, FOR THE COOL OLD DAYS—Remember those wintry days when students plodded through this same snow, complete with parkas, snowshoes, et al., while visions of swimming pools danced in their heads? Now, five months hence, when our campus has turned into a veritable potpourri of heat and humidity, the call is frequently heard for those nippy days of cold ears and feet. Our Own Are Still The Best By JOHN HUSAR In the past three weeks four guest conductors have come and gone, leaving no doubt in our minds as to the compatibility of our own favorites, Messrs. Gerald M. Carney, Clayton Krehbiel and Russell L. Wiley as maestros of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp orchestra, chorus and band, respectively. Never before have the groups performed so well. The highlight of the afternoon concert was the last selection. Jerome Kern's "Portrait of Mark Twain," conducted by Wiley, in an orchestral way, told the story of Mr. Twain's colorful life. The orchestra portrayed his life from his boyhood days in Hannibal, Mo., to his European trips. In a final re-cap of the work, the impression was given of Mr. Twain sitting down to write of his many adventures. Featured in the afternoon's fare was a form of recital given by the ballet group. Whirling to the choreography of Robert Bell, and the music of Luigini, the five main dancers were Eugenia Hoefflin, Sue Lyn Bumpas, Max Gourley, Nina Lucas and James Wilkins. The simple ballet was performed very daintily, but would have been much nicer had the latter four principals worked more closely with the graceful ballerina, Miss Hoefflin. As a whole, the orchestra was fine. It opened with all of the glory of a blossoming flower with "Toccata" by Frescobaldi-Kinder. The first of two works by Hanson, "Serenade for Flute, Harp and String Orchestra" had Cynthia Sellers and Margaret Ling commendably doing the solos. The second Hanson piece, his erratic "Symphony No. 2," sounded just like it was—travelogue music. Of the six choral selections, "Hallujah from 'Mount of Olives'" by Beethoven saved the day from being almost "too peaceful," chorally-speaking. The evening band concert commenced with one of Samuel Barber's better marches, "Commande March," and swung into the emotionally moving "St. Agnes Eve Suite" by Coleridge-Taylor. The evening was climaxed by the fabulous, Ravel's "Bolero." Conducted by Wiley, this magnificent work was boosted by the effective solos of David Corn, bassoon; Johnny Woody, horn; Bob Grace, clarinet; and the combined efforts of the entire percussion section. Carnye finished the day with two excellent works, "Amparira Roca," the familiar march by Texidor, and the "Il Grerany Overture" by Gomez, one of the few overtures that seem to have been written for a band. 21 Graduate From Executive School Commencement exercises for 21 business and industrial executives who completed five weeks of study in the third annual Executive Development Program were held at noon Friday in the Student Union. Howard Stettler, acting dean of the School of Business at KU, presided with Walter A. Huxman, Judge of the U.S. Circuit Court, who gave the address. Judge Huxman's topic was "The Businessman's Responsibility." W. Keith Weltmer, director of the E executive Development Program and associate professor of business at KU, introduced the students. Certificates were presented by John H. Nelson, dean of the Graduate School. A short farewell talk was given by Weltmer. Entering Freshmen Given Scholarships Western Civ Deadline Set Wednesday will be the last day for students to register for the Western Civilization Examination which will be given at 8 a.m., July 27. Students may sign up for the exam at the Registrar's Office. Two high school graduates who will hold scholarships at KU this fall, have been awarded supplementary scholarships by the National Scholarship Service and Fund for Negro Students. Theresa Byers, Muskogee, Okla., will hold a general scholarship at KU, and Marilyn Jeanette Weston, Hillsdale, will hold a residence hall scholarship. Chancellor Appoints 3 Engineering Profs Languages Prof Is Appointed One assistant professor and two instructors have been appointed to the faculty of the department of mechanical engineering in the School of Engineering and Architecture, the Chancellor's office announced Friday. The professor will fill the vacancy on the teaching staff left by Dr. William H. Shoemaker who resigned as chairman of the department in June to become chairman of the department of Spanish and Italian at the University of Illinois. Dr. J. Neale Carman is the new chairman of the KU Romance language department. Cyrus C. DeCoster of Northfield, Minn., will join the department of Romance languages this fall as a professor, the chancellor's office announced Friday. Before teaching at Carleton College, Dr. DeCoster was an instructor at Chicago University. He is especially interested in 19th and 20th century Spanish literature and modern French literature. Prof. DeCoster has been teaching Spanish and French at Carleton College in Northfield since 1946. He received his secondary education at St. Paul Academy in Minnesota. In 1937 he was graduated magna cum laude with an A.B. degree from Harvard where he majored in French and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He earned his M.A. degree in French in 1940 at Chicago University and his Ph.D. in Spanish in 1951. —Pnoto Bureau Dr. DeCoster has studied in France, Mexico, and Spain, and traveled extensively in western Europe. He spent 15 months in Panama while in the Navy in 1941-46. Dr. DeCoster is married and has three children. The family will arrive in Lawrence in early September and make their home at 1025 Kentucky St. marked "Hers.' SADIE HAWKIN'S DANCE—The "Sadie Hawkin's Dance" Saturday night at the Student Union Ballroom was one of the social highlights of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Holding hands are the winners of the best couple dress at the dance. They are Clair Taylor, St. Joseph, Mo., and Jerry Holt, Lawrence. She wore a towel marked "His" and he wore a towel marked "How." Dr. Bayard Wilson will become assistant professor of applied mechanics, and James D. McClure and Neel Kanth D. Sharma will be instructors effective September 1. Dr. Wilson, a native of Texas, took his university work at the University of California at Berkeley, from which he received the Ph.D. degree last month. He earned the B.S. degree in 1953 and the M.S. degree in 1955. Elasticity is the special field of his research. He has made a study of the Russian work and theories regarding plates and elasticity. He was a teaching assistant at California two years and the past two years has held the Irving and Lucile Smith scholarship in civil engineering. Dr. Wilson is a member of Chi Epsilon, honorary civil engineering society; and Sigma Xi, honorary scientific society. McClure and Sharma will both teach and work part-time for the new M.S. degree in applied mechanics. Six other students are expected to start the recently authorized graduate program. McClure, whose home formerly was Leavenworth and now lives at Independence, Mo., received the B.S. degree in civil engineering from KU in 1955. He since has been in the 3rd Armored Division in Germany. At KU he was president of the student chapter of the American Society for Civil Engineering, secretary-treasurer of the Engineering Council, and secretary of Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity. Sharma, a native of the state of Bombay in India, holds the bachelor of engineering degree from Birla College, awarded in 1859. He was assistant professor at Birla for three years and the past two years has been lecturer in applied mechanics at Walchand College of Engineering. The map is issued by the U. S. Geological Survey under the cooperative Federal-State topographic mapping program in Kansas. An up-to-date map of the area of west-central Franklin County is now available from the State Geological Survey. The map shows the land in the vicinity of Pomona. Franklin County Map Available Included on the map are streams, ponds, and other bodies of water, woodland areas, highways and roads, railroads, towns and rural buildings, and other natural and man-made features. The 60 square miles of the Pomona quadrangle presents a rugged landscape, especially in the picturesque Chippewa Hills southeast of Pomona. Elevation along the Marias des Cygnes River, which flows from west to east south of Pomona, is about 900 feet above sea level and upland areas to the south of the river are generally 1,050 to 1,100 feet above sea level. Girard Case To Be Discussed "The Girard Case and American-Japanese Relations" will be the subject of a talk by Clifford P. Ketzel, assistant professor of political science, at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Pine Room of the Student Union. The public is invited to this open meeting of the Summer Institute on Asia. Weather Mostly fair and hot this afternoon and tonight but with few isolated thunderstorms western Kansas this afternoon or evening. High today near 100. 1 Summer Session Kansan Page 2 Tuesday, July 16, 1957 Passivity: The Deathless Problem Editor's Note: William Allen White and Pearl Buck had brought in the verdict. During 1936, American writers had been arguing the question which has been just as popular a topic during 1956: What is wrong with college youth? The answers of the midwestern editor and a writer just back from attending the birth of a new China indicated a mild enough sounding evil—passivity. They said American students were reacting to no such arguments as were shaking the walls of European universities. They wanted defiance and elenching fists. Like today's educators, they were tired of sophisticated languor and apathetic acceptances. Following is an editorial which appeared in a September, 1937, University Daily Kansan, commenting on the statements and demands by W. A. White and Pearl Buck: It would be pleasant merely to point out the fact that European student defiance consisting of bellowed banalities such as American youth refuses to employ, has not made a wiser nor a more peaceful continent. Disturbingly, however, there is not the mark of wisdom in putting away thinking because false philosophy is rife. College students in America have become interested spectators of a dramatic scene. They possess a keenly developed sense of the ridiculous with which to mock their elders, and a number of beautiful theories, they will rapidly forget. They are a little bewildered by the complexity of the world. They do not believe in dying for causes—but suspect they may be forced to. And they are passive. Now rebellious Europe is naturally the land of ideas, abstractions, and "solutions." The United States, though, is part of a new world where "freedom" is a synonym for the right to raise wheat or cotton. It is in the chaos between these two worlds as merged by the war that the college student is lost. He distrusts charming phrases. He has no frontier on which to vent his energy. Society has been at pains to tell him the horrors of mass murder without doing much about it. Communism, Socialism, and Fascism beckon enchantingly—often with a promise of a superman to do the thinking. It would be lovely to rebel—but exactly where to begin? William Allen White and Pearl Buck forgot to mention that. Yet, there is a slow breaking of the fetters of indolence and bewilderment. The last election had a deeper significance, perhaps, than Farley's machine politicians imagine. It was away for the new voters, from the bloated words of the post-war days in whose sound they were reared and whose spell was a thrice-magic circle around them. It was away from the shadows of Europe and her "isms"—even her interpretation of republianism. To fight a war to end war—glorious if it worked. It didn't. Forget saving the world for democracy then. Turn to the practical Pan-American League and strengthen the ties of two continents which want to be saved. Build long highways; run airlines; learn to talk Spanish—and to talk business. To feed the hungry and protect the laborer—noble if the rich did it. They didn't. Let the hungry and the laborer, therefore, fight in their nefarious greed for the principles mentioned in the preamble to the Constitution. State the facts crudely and plainly: You have too much; we have too little. Study ways to prevent the Midwest's becoming a desert. Dig into scientific methods of crime prevention. Criticize the administration constructively. Tinker with the atom and the molecule. The passive generation may develop an art or literature, but not a mythology. It may build skyscrapers, but not dream-castles. It must find a cold basis of actuality and stand firm while Europe swails and Asia surges. It must establish its kinship with the nation of both Americas. This is not a romantic task and it is a grueling one. It may not even save the present form of government intact. Yet, it will do much more. It will preserve whatever small degree of Whitman's brotherhood has been achieved. - Two On The Aisle - Though there are several schools of opinion on the subject, it is safe to say that there is only one comedy now playing at the downtown depots of histrionic art. "The Delicate Delinquent" stars the inimitable Jerry Lewis and we thoughtfully concluded that it would be good for a few boffs. However, it became increasingly apparent, as we sat gumming our buttered popcorn, that Mr. Lewis was making his debut in a "message" picture. The message was this: People are making a grave mistake when they classify in the same pidgeonhole students of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp and the bombthrowers of Carstrippers Local No. 17. In other words, not all teenagers are juvenile delinquents; some are delicate delinquents. That they are all, in some manner, delinquent was a subject that Jerry chose not to treat. The film began with three streeturchins and Mr. Lewis participating in a street brawl. Later, at the calaboose, one of the cops (Darren McGavin) decides that the comedian is not beyond reclamation. During much soul-searching and tomfoolery, McGavin steers the comic up the straight and narrow until he realizes his life's ambition: he becomes a policeman. Now Jerry Lewis makes an idiotic and hilariously funny delinquent, but his pose as an officer of the law is even more ludicrous. Unfortunately, this was not Mr. Lewis' intention. In the end, Jerry in his turn helps his old delinquent pals in the same corny way that McCavin helped him. Throughout the course of the action (?) one feels that Lewis was in dire need of the Italian street singer Dean Martin. There is one point at which the funnyman himself even tries to sing. If you subscribe to the traditional story of the clown with the hidden, broken heart, then this story is your meat. To others it will be poison because that tradition is not the Lewis tradition of fast-paced slapstick comedy. Even the veterans will want to re-enlist if they partake of the gem now at the Varsity Theatre. "The Drill Instructor" was apparently too long a title for its notoriously blunt star Jack Webb. Advertised under the initials, ("The D.I.) it is the story of the Marine Corps' efficiency as the world's largest brainwashing machine. The setting is Parris Island, South Carolina, where the Corps initiates all its new brothers with a candlelight ceremony and secret handclasp. The geographical location is significant in the film as it boasts swarms of sand fleas. Indeed, this was the title of the television play upon which the story was based. It is further supposed that the hot climate encourages diabetes as there are constant references to "getting Able Sugar" if the place gets any hotter. Jack Webb produces and directs and stars in this romanticized training film. As the flint-hearted technical sergeant Jim Moore, he is at once hated and admired by all recruits, Don Dubbins, as the boy whose "mudder, fadder, sizer, and brudder was all mureens," begins by hating the Corps, but is shown the folly of his ways by a (Continued on Page 6) TV Notes NEW YORK — (UP) — ABC has scheduled its new fall program, "The Patrice Munsel Show," to start Oct. 18. Fridays from 8:30 to 9 p.m. It immediately precedes the "Frank Sinatra Show," which also bows on that date. Miss Munsel will be the first Metropolitan Opera star to have her own regular TV series. Her husband, Robert Schuler, will produce the program. Miss Munsel still will appear with the Met next season, but, naturally, not on Friday nights. Forty-seven college stars will be in the squad of football players that will be pitted against the New York Giants, pro champs, in the annual College All-Star game to be played in Chicago Aug. 9. ABC will telecast the game beginning at 9:30 p.m. EDT. Jack Barry has picked up a third job with the debut of "High-Low" on NBC, Thursdays at 9:30 p.m. Like the same network's "Twenty-one" and "Tic Tac Dough," this new one is a creation of the firm of Barry and Enright, with the former master of ceremonies on all three. "Lux Video Theater" on NBC is presenting only new stories this summer, which is a pleasant departure from the general practice of most programs of offering repeats. These also will be TV originals. The July 18 play is "Summer Return" by Anne Howard Bailey. There will be 13 repeat shows of the "Blondie" series on NBC this summer. The last will be shown on Sept. 27. The program was not renewed for next season. Veteran film comedian Andy Clyde will have an important role in the TV serial, "The Mystery of Ghost Farm," which Walt Disney is making this summer for use on ABC's "Mickey Mouse Club" program next fall. "Tonight" will be retained by NBC as the title of its 11:30 p.m.-1 a.m. live program when Jack Paar takes control of the segment July 29. Books Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek believes that an all-Asian war against the Chinese Communists is the only way to defeat the Soviets and to prevent World War III. He advises the United States and other Western powers to keep out of it. "All we need from them is moral and material assistance and the supply of arms and technical aid," he says in his book, Soviet Russia In China (Earrar, Straus and Cudahy). Chiang has fought the Communists in China for more than 30 years. He went through three periods of "peaceful coexistence", each of which he described as disastrous to his government and his (Kuomintang) party. He urges the Western nations to employ "indirect warfare" against the Reds, and to depend upon a "strategy of detours." Russia's time-tested means of avoiding head-on collision with the West. The democracies, he said, must "revive the free world's confidence in the outcome of its anti-Communist efforts, shatter the neutralists' illusion about peaceful coexistence and bring about coordination between military and political tactics and between the nationalist movements outside the Iron Curtain and the Revolutionary movements inside the Iron Curtain all under one positive and unified strategy." Padraic Colum, who is this year celebrating his 50th anniversary as a writer, recently remarked that the Irish, excellent storytellers they are, have always found the construction of the novel somewhat difficult; due, he said, to the fact that they were forced to cater to (romantic) American and English markets, rather than being free to develop a native style for themselves. The Flying Swans (Crown)—if one doesn't count 1923's abortive Castle Conquer—and Colum would rather not count it—is his first novel and it both proves and disproves his contention. It is entirely Irish, so much so that the foreign reader may often feel—as he does with Joyce—that he is missing something. On the other hand, its construction drawn out over ten years of Colum's writing time, is rambling and episodic to the point of formlessness. Chiang said the West's containment policy and the "hydrogen bombs are all-powerful" theory have merely given the Communists time to paddle the peaceful coexistence line and to pave the way for a bloodless victory. . . The story is that, apparently most dear to the Irish fantasy, of alienation and expulsion. Young Ulick O'Rehill is rejected first by his father and his father's family, then by his country; a pattern of rejection growing from home to society to the last, most dangerous threat, of alienation from himself. A solution is found through art: "The sincere artist . . . is the man who reconciles." Colum is a poet, playwright, and story-teller. As was almost to be expected, the broad statement of his theme often becomes engulfed by the more vital by-play of his story. The matchless evocation of boyhood in Ireland, and the characters who people Uliker's never-quite-believable country: hunchback, patriarch, cynic and a rack of unforgettable females—all make Swans, a notable performance. Fire, Burn!, by John Dickson Carr: (Harper): A story about a woman killed by a bullet that couldn't logically have been fired in the presence of three witnesses, one of whom couldn't possibly have been there. As is Carr's recent custom, his new book is a historical novel as well as a detective story. The period he has chosen is one relatively untouched by fiction—the pre-Victorian era when London's uniformed police force was in its infancy and the idea of plain-clothes detectives was downright shocking. SUMMER SESSION KANSAN (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) Ed. Phone 251 Bus. Phone 376 Editors ... Dale Morsch John Eaton Business Mgrs. ... Colby Rehmert Bill Irvine Reporters ... Martha Crosier John Husar Janet Juneau Manager .. James E. Dykes The mystery is rather less mystifying than the plots of some of his semi-classic locked-room stories, but the hairbreadth pace of the accompanying historical adventure and romance more than makes up for any lack of Sherlockery. An engrossing story from cover to cover. IT'S ON THE WAY A "New Look" in Milk Cartons - RED WHITE BLUE ... Why Sure From LAWRENCE SANITARY MILK And Ice Cream Co. LAWRENCE Gustay HOMOGENIZED ALL STAR Grade A MITTELS MATERIALIZED HOMOGENIZED Milk "Lawrence Sanitary On Dairy Products Is Like Sterling on Silver" WATCH FOR IT AT YOUR FAVORITE FOOD STORE 1 Tuesday, July 16, 1957 Summer Session-Kansan Page 3 New Tools Find Twisters In Storm-breeding Areas "Tornado Alley," the incubator of nature's deadliest storms, is being watched this year as never before. Once a twister has bored down to earth, the only defense is to get out of the way. To save more lives, weather bureau scientists are devising new tools to quicken warning systems and learn more about the nature of the complex storms. Radar then starts tracking the dangerous squall line, according to Dr. Morris Tepper, chief of the bureau's severe-storms research unit. In recent years, the bureau has organized a radar network among key cities east of the Rockies. Volunteer ground corpsmen in a danger zone scan radarscopes for any sign of the dark pendant cloud that rakes the earth like a giant elephant's trunk. One new instrument forces potential tornadoes to flash their own alarm. Called a "pressure-jump indicator," it records the ominous rise in pressure that often signals the birth of a tornado in storm-breeding squall lines. Round-The-Clock Alert It is these long frontiers of thunder, wind, and rain that turn unstable air currents into roaring, spinning funnels of destruction. This year, more than 100 pressure-jump indicators are being operated in the severe storm belt—Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Texas. The instruments have been set up in police stations, fire houses, city jails, and other places where attendants voluntarily keep an eye on them 24 hours a day. If barometric pressure eises suddenly, a light goes on and a buzzer sounds until turned off. The observer alerts the nearest weather station by telephone. Spotters notify communities, which warn residents to take cover. One obstacle in learning more about the mechanism of tornadoes is their habit of striking quickly, devastatingly, and locally. Delicate instruments can't withstand 500-mile-an-hour winds. Few persons caught in a twister can be expected to give a scientific account of what they see—even if they live through it . Storm-Hopping Bv Plane Pilot James Cook, who flies under contract to the bureau, is again storm-hopping out of Kansas City this season. Cook ventures into squall lines in a plane laden with instruments to record pressure, temperature, moisture, wind speeds, and other phenomena. Not the least of a tornado's terror is its electrical display. Forked lightning—vividly outlined with yellow, green, blue, and purple—often dances against the dull glow of continuous sheet lightning. At several stations, the weather bureau has installed special equipment to record the presence and direction of such a display. If two stations spot it, the storm can be pin-pointed by triangulation. Spring brings tornado weather. Though factors are numerous, the time is ripe when cold, dry fronts moving easterly from the Pacific overruns warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico. Under certain conditions, the slightest updraft may trigger one or a series of twisters. Temperatures Continue High TOPEKA- (UP) -A summer heat-wave continued its uncomfortable hold on Kansas Monday as temperatures soared for the fifth straight day into the range of 100-degrees and above. The weather bureau said today "not much change" in the weather outlook. The state has had 100-degree marks and above starting last Thursday. Agriculture officials said the wheat harvest was proceeding more rapidly over most of the state as rain-soaked fields dried under a relentless sun. A few showers were expected in extreme northwest Kansas, but no rain and no break in the heat in other areas of the Sunflower State. Salina recorded 103 Sunday. Other cities with 100 and above included Garden City, Russell, and Wichita. Monotonous, But It Works CHICAGO — (UP) — A Spanish senator has turned out to be Lady Bountiful for three Chicago youths. The boys, who earn as much as $20 a day serenading passersby on Chicago's Night Club Row, know only one song, "Lady of Spain." Mid-Summer CLEARANCE SPECIALS All Short Sleeve Sport Shirts 1/3 Off Reg. 2.98 -- Now $1.98 Reg. 1.98 -- Now $1.33 Reg. 1.49 -- Now .99 30 inch Metal Foot Lockers $5.88 Ivy League Twills Reg. 3.98 -- Now $2.98 Black - Tan - Light Blue Reg. 69c and 79c Argyle Socks 49c Pr. White Sailor Hats 79c Nationally Advertised $19.95 Sleeping Bags $12.88 With Air-Mattress, Pocket and Waterproof Bottom Reg. $3.98 Bermuda Shorts $2.66 Lots Of Other Bargains, Too Very Special! 7x35 IMPORTED BINOCULARS WASHINGTON—(UP) - U. S. Surgeon General Leroy E. Burney said Monday government scientists have found a chemical agent in cigarette smoke which they suspect may cause lung cancer. $19.95 Individual eye focus-Complete with genuine pigskin carrying case. Burney, in an interview with the United Press, identified the substance as benzopyrene. He said it is formed when the aromatic oils in tobacco are burned at a high temperature and "cracked" much like a crude oil is cracked to make gasoline. LAWRENCE SURPLUS "Your Friendly Army and Navy Store" 740 Massachusetts St. Benzopyrene May Cause Cancer Helen Patch, who retired in June as professor of French on the Helen Day Gould Foundation at Mt. Holyoke College in South Hadley, Mass., will be a visiting professor in the Romance language department at KU during the 1957-58 academic year, the chancellor's office announced Monday. Operations Subcommittee which will start hearings Thursday, said the public is spending an extra half million dollars a day for filters. He said he wants to find out. "If the public is being fooled." Visiting Professor Is Announced Burney said benzopyrene was found in significant amounts only in cigarette smoke because only cigarettes burn at high enough temperatures—800 to 815 degrees Fahrenheit—to crack the aromatic oils. Pipe tobacco and cigars burn at much lower temperatures, he said. The chief of the Public Health Service emphasized that "no one has definitely isolated the cause of lung cancer." But he said researchers believe "excessive and prolonged" exposure to benzopyrene may be it. Last week Burney issued a statement declaring there is "increasing and consistent evidence" that "excessive" cigarette smoking is one of the causes of lung cancer. The Public Health Service made no recommendation to the public as to how it should act on this information. Her visit at KU will be sponsored by the Whitney Visiting Professors Program conducted in Cooperation with the New York Foundation. She will teach courses in French composition and literature and conduct a graduate seminar during the spring semester. Asked by a reporter whether the statement was a warning, Burney said: "It amounts to a warning to stop smoking cigarettes, but we would like to have more positive proof before issuing a warning as such. "In other words if you want to know what to do about cigarette smoking, see your doctor. "In our cigarette research laboratory we have 16 scientists—and 13 are continuing to smoke cigarettes." Burney commented. "I guess they feel this is a personal decision and will take the chance." Burney said he felt a recently-published magazine (Reader's Digest) report on filter cigarettes, which helped spark a Congressional inquiry, was "quite accurate." The report held that filters afford little if any health safeguard. Rep. John A. Blatnik (D-Minn.). chairman of a House Government Miss Patch received her A.B. degree from Mt. Holyoke and her Ph.D. degree from Bryn Mawr College in Bryn Mawr, Pa. Always Cool & Fresh Clean 10% Discount for Cash & Carry Dry Cleaning Where Quality Is Always First ACME BACHELOR LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS 1109 Mass.-Dial VI 3-5155 Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 16, 1957 Avoid Danger Of Lightning; Storm Fatalities Run High Lightning will kill approximately 230 persons in the United States this year. That is the annual average during the past decade. An additional 1,000 or so are injured every year. What are your chances of being hit by lightning? Not very great if you take commonsense precautions whenever you hear the warning rumble of thunder. Here are some suggestions from the National Safety Council: 1. If there is any choice of shelter, choose— (c) Large unprotected buildings. (d) Small unprotected buildings. (a) Large metal or metal-frame buildings. (b) Dwellings or other buildings protected by lightning rods. 2. Avoid the immediate vicinity of electric light circuits, lightning conductors and downspouts, screened doors and windows, especially if open; stoves and fireplaces, telephones and any metal object projecting through wall or roof. 3. If unavoidably out of doors, keep away from isolated trees, wire fences, hill-tops and wide open spaces, small sheds and shelters in an exposed location. Auto Safety Persons struck by lightning are sometimes revived by artificial respiration. A person struck does not carry a charge of electricity. It is perfectly safe to touch him. 4. Try to reach thick timber, a cave, a depression in the ground, a deep valley or canyon, or the vicinity of a steep cliff. The ordinary result of being struck is electric shock, or burns, or both. The usual first aid measures should be applied. Though usually associated with the thunderstorms, lightning strokes have been observed on clear days, giving rise to the expression "a bolt from the blue." There are many varieties of lightning—sheet, streak, beaded, ribbon, forked, heat and globular or ball lightning. References to lightning are found in the earliest known writings. God's control over lightning is often mentioned in the Old Testament. In ancient Greece, thunder and lightning were considered omens of Zeus. Records show that most lightning casualties in America occur in rural areas or small towns. The National Safety Council pointed out that one of the safest places for you in a thunderstorm is your automobile. Though the machine may be struck, a person inside it does not provide an easy path for the bolt of lightning to pass to the ground. Pharmacists Attend Meetina Dean J. Allen Reese of the School of Pharmacy, and Raymond Hoppenen, associate professor of pharmacy, attended a meeting of the Midwest Conference of the State Pharmaceutical Association Saturday and Sunday in Kansas City, Mo. Israeli Army Battles Syria JERUSALEM-(UP)-The Israeli army used tanks last Tuesday to silence Syrian artillery and mortars in a 10-hour border battle, it was disclosed Monday. The tanks were purchased from France several months before the Sinai campaign where they distinguished themselves in battles with Soviet-built T-34 tanks. Government sources said Israel sent the tanks into action in the Gonen sector of the Israeli-Syrian frontier because Syria had refused United Nations cease fire orders. The Israeli sources said this development may be the source of rumors broadcast by Jordan's radio Ramallah Sunday that U.N. investigators found "French troops" massing on the border. To Show Film On The Twenties The film, "The Golden Twenties," which reviews the historic events, personalities, sports, and fashions of the period 1920-1929, will be shown in Bailey Auditorium today at 2 and 3:30 p.m. The films to be shown Wednesday are "Art and Life in Italy," "The Geesebook," and "Two Borque Churches in Germany." Don't Miss Our Wednesday Night Buffet HOLIDAY RESTAURANT Highways 10 & 59 A He loves to follow in your rootsteps. Be sure you make him a "saver" tool NEW YORK—(UP) —Billy Graham told an overflow audience at Madison Square Garden Sunday that the greatest need in America is not jet planes and atomic weapons but "a revival that will shake the country from one end to the other." Billy Graham Says Revival Is Needed First National Bank Member F.D.I.C. The 38-year-old evangelist addressed an audience of some 19,200 persons only hours after holding, a large street-corner rally in Brooklyn. Earlier in the day the North Carolina preacher spoke to a crowd of approximately 8,000 from the steps of the Cornerstone Baptist Church in a Negro section of Brooklyn. "Will God allow us to see our cities destroyed by push button warfare? I don't know," Graham said, "God spared not the angels . . . God spared not the old world except Noah." Graham said there are a lot of people who think we are God's pets, but "the judgement of God is going to fall upon us unless we repent" Descriptive Address Works "You know I came from the South myself," he told the jampacked neighborhood audience, 'but after I made my decision at the age of 17 I began to see my brothers differently." ANAMOSA, Iowa — (UP) — Joe Klink left, a jacket here while traveling to the East Coast, so he mailed a letter to "First cafe, west of drug store, south side of the street, Anamosa. Iowa." He got the jacket back—prepaid, too. MEMPHIS, Tenn — (UF — Casey Jones told his fireman, "Jump, Sim!" Simeon T. Webb, 83, died Saturday 57 years after he thus survived the balladed wreck of the Cannon Ball Express. Casey Jones' Fireman Dies Casey piloted his over-due "Cannon Ball Express" over the Illinois Central tracks into a stalled freight at Vaughn. Miss., in 1900. Webb who retired from railroading in 1919, spent years touring the nation with Casey's widow who still lives at Jackson, Tenn., to tell the story of that fabled night. Casey was found—dead, still hanging onto the whistle to warn those ahead, they said. The ballad, "Cannon Ball Express," written by Wallace Saunders, a railroading friend of Casey, made the engineer immortal. "Sim" recounted how Casey took over the 188-mile run from Memphis to Canton, Miss, because another engineer was sick. Casey vowed he would make up the one hour and 35 minutes delay. Casey saw the red marker lights on the freight as he rounded a bend, and, the ballad recounts: "He said to the fireman, you'd better jump, cause the two locomotives are going to bump." Sim jumped. Casey slowed the train and saved his passengers' lives. Webb and an express messenger were the only persons injured. Casey alone died. Wenzel To Attend Seminar "He took his troubles to the promised land," the ballad says. Duane Wenzel, professor of pharmacy, will attend the 9th annual Teachers' Seminar July 14-19. This year's seminar will be on Pharmacology and is sponsored by the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy. Meetings will be held at the University of Washington in Seattle. 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 WHO AM I? A favorite, much read page am I I rent, I find, I sell, I buy His Sliderule Lost, A Student Beseeching— I'll Help Him Out, With a Search Far-Reaching! For a sure, quick, inexpensive method to reach the KU market, put the Mighty Midget-classified ad to work for you-buying-selling-hiring renting-finding.The little man with the powerful punch that can carry your message to 6,000 readers weekly For further information telephone KU 376 S Session Kansan Page 5 MISERIONA Photo Bureau COME BACK, LITTLE SHEBA—Lee MacMorris, Hutchinson graduate student, is shown at a tense moment with William Kuhlke, Denver, Colo. graduate student, during the opening of "Come Back Little Sheba." Single Talent Kuhlke Eclipses Company In 'Come Back Little Sheba' By TOM SAWYER The University of Kansas has one actor. His name is William Kuhlkhe and he is a graduate student from Denver, Colorado. As the protagonist in Thursday's University Theatre production of "Come Back Little Sheba," he understandably eclipsed an adequate company of supporting players. Nowhere has the sharp line between affected, hollow technique and warm, sincere acting been so graphically defined. The play itself, now well-worn, is the melodramatic account of an alcoholic doctor (Kuhlke) and his relationship with his sluttish wife Lola, played by Lee MacMorris, Hutchinson graduate student. After a shotgun wedding, Doc felt his career had been ruined and so was driven to drink. In spite of her love and devotion to Doc, Lola has allowed herself to become an unkempt, sloppy, middle-aged housewife. Following help from Alcoholics Anonymous, Doc seems to be progressing, but relapses when he discovers that his young female college boarder, Kay Ewert, Abilene senior, is being courted by an animalistic athlete, John Husar, Chicago, Ill, junior. Distrubed over the imminent defoliation of the young girl, Doc gets drunk and tries to kill Lola in a crescendo of delirium tremens. However, while he is in the hospital, Lola reforms, dons a girdle, and welcomes home a sober Doc. The performances were not so much a case of "good" and "bad" as they were "acceptable" and "brilliant." Though the other players did nothing grossly wrong, they never rang quite true; acting for them seemed to be an avocation. Kuhike, on the other hand, was a jewel in a rockpile. Mechanically, he knew his lines and spoke them well while losing nothing in inflective shadings; artistically, he was vibrant, sympathetic and, most importantly, he was real. He established the theatre's peculiar empathy through the cumulative effect of subtleties of gesture, movement, and concentration which achieved their maximum impact in what could very possibly be the finest piece of characterization ever seen in the University Theatre. LARRY CRUM MUSIC and RECORD CENTER 12 East Ninth V1 3-8678 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Open Evenings 'Til 9 o'clock Anyone working in such a trite play must run the hazards of comparison. Kuhike stood the test extremely well; he surpassed Burt Lancaster in the movie version and nearly equalled the brilliance of Sidney Blackmer in the original Broadway production. Miss MacMorris, however, was not as successful in her rather unartful interpretation; she seemed torn between imitating Shirley Booth and being herself. Only once did she appear enough the slattern to drive a man to drink. And if she did win our hearts in this instance, it was because she was more acceptably familiar with the dialogue at that point. Miss MacMorris is primarily a competent stage actress; in this attempt at versatility she tended to overact in proportion to the spatial closeness of the audience. Both Miss Ewert and Husar were charming as the frolices young couple. Husar was particularly effective as Cheeta, the overexposed javelin-thrower. He joined with Frank Moon, Lane graduate student, as the muscle-bound milkman in furnishing the only two significant bits of comic relief. Plans for the Presbyterian University Center, announced in late 1954, are nearing completion later this month. Still in the tentative stage, plans drawn by architects Bradley-Keene of Topeka, will be reviewed by the Synod Wesleyan Foundation board at a meeting July 29. Plans For Center Near Completion Construction of the three-story; $250,000 building should begin in late November, according to John H. Patton of the School of Region. It will be completed by the fall of 1958. From the technical departments came very good use of lighting, properties, and costuming. For two years the University Theatre has thrown everything but the kitchen sink on stage in an effort to impress audiences. After this offering of William Inge's play, absolutely nothing remains to be seen. There in the middle of the Union Ballroom, bathed in colored lights, was a bonafide kitchen complete with sink. Unfortunately, it boasted no garbage disposal unit, which would not be an inappropriate receptacle for many of Mr. Inge's sordid situations. For the uninitiated, William Inge is a native son. Because he is a graduate of this school, the University Theatre has seen fit to saturate local audiences with a long and dreary cycle of his plays. "Come Back Little Sheba" was his first and, so far, his best work; since its writing, the play-wright has spiralled downwards. Nevertheless, the administration has paraded in front of us the tiresheLL collection of prostitutes, perverts, drug addicts, alcoholics, and other pieces of flotsam that even Mr. Inge had the good taste to omit from his major works. The Center will be located at 12th St. between Oread and Louisiana. The plan includes a chapel which will seat 300 persons. As an isolated instance, this presentation was fairly well produced and acted. All in all, it proved to be quite the berries. But if this represents a trend to display the accomplishments of our alumni, we may console ourselves with the fact that Olsen & Johnson, the Minsky brothers, and John Wilkes Booth were graduates of other schools. The complete name of the village of Santa Cruz, N. M., is: La Villa Nueva de Santa Cruz de los Espanoles Mejicanos del Rey Nuestro Senor Carlos Segundo (The New City of the Spanish Mexicans of Our King Charles the Second). CRAFT & HOBBY SUPPLIES Balsa Paint Flock Plastic Kits UNDERWOOD'S 1215 West Sixth Tuesday, July 16, 1957 Summer Session Kansa Roller skating their money in ThriftiCheck Thirfty Scots put If you're Scotch by ancestry or by necessity, you'll like inexpensive Douglas County ThriftiCheck Accounts Douglas County State Bank 900 Mass. only 7 $ \frac{1}{2} $ c per check "The Bank of Friendly Service" Cole Porter's Musical Hit Opens At Starlight Theatre The Incomparable Hildegarde, a star of the entertainment world for two decades, took over the Starlight boards Monday for the one-week stay of Cole Porter's musical hit, "Can-Can." The lively, long-run Broadway success will run through July 21. A strong supporting cast is featured with Hildegarde. It includes John Tyers, popular baritone who is making his eighth Starlight appearance; Sherry O'Neil, attractive, strawberry blonde dancer; Ferdinand Hilt, who originated the role of a French art critic in the Broadway production of "Can-Can;" George S. Irving, who made an earlier appearance this season on the Swope Park stage as a navy officer in "South Pacific;" Mort Marshall, who has been cast in two major comedy roles at Starlight in "South Pacific;" and "High Button Shoes;" and Joseph Macaulay, who is making his fortieth character portral at the open air theater. The story of night life in Paris in the '90s has as its main setting a restaurant owned by a prancing Montmartre jeebel, played by Hildegarde. In a role that might easily have been written for her, the Milwaukee lass has an opportunity to sing some of the songs classed as her best-known numbers—"C'Est Magnifique," "I Love Paris," and "Allez-Veus-En." Debüt In Dallas Hildegarde made her legitimate stage debut in this role at the Dallas State musicals last summer and found herself successful in another new medium—which has been the story behind her enduring stay at the top of the entertainment world. Following her successes in European clubs, she moved into radio as mistress of ceremonies on "The Raleigh Room." which maintained a spot in the top ten radio shows for its three-year run. She went on to capture the concert stage with a "one-woman show" in a tour of North America, and has now entered the television field as an interviewer in a new series soon to be released by NBC-TV, called "Zero-1960." She continues to pull down top figures in her club engagements and plans another tour of the country this winter with a full orchestra and supporting acts. Abe Burrows write the book for "Can-Can," which has a double plot. The strongest plot deals primarily with a young, priggish judge who, intent on suppressing a new and rowdy dance called the "can-can," changes his mind when he falls in love with La Monc Pistache, who operates a restaurant. Their romance ends happily The second plot concerns a girl who dances her head off and some how drives her suitors at one another's throats. Miss O'Nielt, as the dancer, is making her second Kansas City appearance of the year. She was seen earlier as Lola in the national company version of "Dann Yankees." Tyers, last seen at Starlight in "Kiss Me, Kate" in 1953, returns in a role he has often portrayed with great success. Apache Team Signed An Apache team, Lucienne and Ashour, has been signed for special dance numbers. Veterans of vaudeville and top attractions in supper clubs, they demonstrate the fine art of a highly specialized dance routine. "I Am In Love," "Never Give Anything Away," "It's All Right With Me," and "Every Man Is a Stupid Man" are some of the Cole Porter tunes that make "Can-Can" a continuing success wherever it plays. The Difference between a Smart looking girl and a Mediocre one can be their cleaners Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners Call VI 3-3711 "You'll be glad you did" Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday. July 16, 1957 State, National, International News Newsmen May Be Able To Enter Red China WASHINGTON — (UP) — The way will probably be cleared within the next two weeks or so for American newsmen to enter Red China, authoritative sources said Monday. Plans for the long-awaited breakthrough of the Bamboo Curtain will be discussed at a meeting here Thursday of news media representatives with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and Assistant Secretary of State Andrew Berding. The State Department, uneo heavy pressure from news organizations and members of Congress, has gradually been softening its position on the newsman ban. Dulles has said recently that if plans could be worked out for a limited number of newsmen to go to China, something might be worked out. Since then suggestions from various news organizations have been received by the State Department. The majority of these proposals, it was said, favor entry into China of representatives of the 12 U. S. news organizations who had men in China prior to its seizure by the Communists. The 12 news organizations are the United Press, Associated Press, International News Service, National Broadcasting Co., American Broadcasting Co., Columbia Broadcasting System, New York Times, New York Herald Tribune, Chicago Tribune, Chicago Daily News, Christian Science Monitor and Time Magazine. While some of these organizations had more than one representative in China previously, it was expected any new representation probably would be limited to one man apiece. Peiping Regime Labeled "Barbarian" The chief State Department argument against letting U. S. newsmen enter Red China at present is that the Peiping regime is a "barbarian" government that should not be accorded the recognition and respect due a civilized nation. Administration officials said the arguments against letting newsmen go to Red China could not stand against the overriding right of the American people to know at first-hand from their own reporters what is happening in the world's most populous nation. The ban on travel by other Americans to Red China and on trade with and recognition of the Peiping regime are expected to continue for the foreseeable future. Red China itself is considered likely to admit most if not all the U. S. newsmen that may be authorized by this government to enter. The Reds, after a long ban on entry of American reporters, brushed aside the Bamboo Curtain last Fall with an invitation to 15 U. S. newsmen to enter. All the 15 invited complied, some reluctantly, with the U. S. ban on any travel to Red China. Since then three American newsmen entered and returned from China in violation of the ban. No punitive action has been taken against them but one-William Worthy of the Baltimore Afro-American—has been refused a renewal of his passport. He is appealing the decision. U.S. Editors Hear Sobering Thoughts SAN FRANCISCO—(UP)—Nearly 300 editors from newspapers across the United States returned to their homes today to reflect on two sobering predictions of things to come. The editors heard the predictions Saturday on the final day of the convention of the American Society of Newspaper Editors. It was a meeting marked by factual, hard-hitting reports from leaders in all walks of life. Industrial Civilization May Be Born Industrial Civilization May Perish One prediction came from Dr. Harrison Brown of the California Institute of Technology, one of a panel of nuclear scientists. Discussing the present behavior patterns of people and nations, he said, "I would be inclined to give rather substantial odds that sooner or later the boat will be rocked and industrial civilization will perish . . . almost certainly within the next century, quite possibly within the next 25 years, conceivably within the next five years." Brown said the world is "long past the point where agreement for the control of atomic weapons could be reached." Lester B. Pearson, Canada's former Minister of External Affairs and now member of Parliament, warned that high American tariff barriers threaten defense cooperation between his country and the United States. The ASNE elected Virginius Dabney of the Richmond, Va., TimesDispatch as its president. He succeeded Jenkin Lloyd Jones of the Tulsa Tribune. Insults Add To Injury JERSEY CITY — (UP) — Mrs. Thomas E. Smith won a divorce here because her husband added insult to injury. Besides beating her up, Mrs. Smith said, her husband forced her to sleep with his grandmother and turned her paycheck over to his mother. Economy Slash May Hurt AEC WASHINGTON — (UP) — The Atomic Energy Commission has told Congress it will have to cut nuclear weapon production drastically if it is required to comply with President Eisenhower's new economy order. This was disclosed Monday with publication of testimony taken by a House Appropriations Subcommittee on Friday. The transcript was released by Chairman Clarence Cannon (D-Mo.) under the heading: "Repudiation of the 1958 Budget." K. E. Fields, AEC general manager, told the Subcommittee he will "argue strongly" that the atomic energy program be exempted from the President's general economy rule. AFC, he said, could not meet the new economy test without shutting down "quite a number of plants" which would mean a "drastic" cut back in "the number of weapons that we have projected to be produced." Nebraska has 54 state-owned lakes and recreation grounds, four fish and game hatcheries, four public shooting grounds, three big game refuges and shooting grounds, three bird refuges, seven state parks, and one big game refuge. Fields indicated, however, that he believes weapons production comes under the list of possible exemptions Budget Director Percival F. Brunlage mentioned in circulating the President's new order. The Illinois Institute of Technology, (Chicago) formed by the merger of Armour Tech and Lewis Institute, now claims the largest engineering enrollment in the country. A drop of water contains six sextillion atoms. FAST COLOR FILM PROCESSING HIXON Studio and Camera Shop 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 FANCY GROCERIES - QUALITY MEATS FREE DELIVERY Phone VI 3-3771 900 Mississippi Big Summer Shoe Sale REEVE'S GROCERY Haynes & Keene Choice 7.95 6.95 4.95 3.85 and Pam Fashions Women's Vitalitys - "Jacquelines" & "Connies" Special for Men - Choice of All Ventilated Oxfordse Many Regular 12.95 Sale Price 9.80 Buy Now and Enjoy Them Haynes & Keene 819 Massachusetts Open Thursday 'til 8:30 —Tom Sawyer Two On The Aisle (Continued from Page 2) patriotic Webb. With throbbing heart we left the theatre knowing that this system of mental automation would forever produce stalwart defenders of the outposts of the American Empire. If the Varsity's presentation seemed patriotic, we found that only true blue Americans can patronize the Granada. You have to sign a loyalty oath to even buy, a ticket to see Walt Disney's "Johnny Tremain." Open 9:00 to 5:00 Moreover, the manager leads the audience in a community sing of the "Star Spangled Banner" before and after each performance of this story of the American Revolution. Included in this splashy panorama are such incidents as the Boston Tea Party and the Battle of Concord. All the quasi-Indian participants in the former put the Robert Shaw Chorale to shame as they chanted (in 32-part harmony) some flagwaving ditty while making Boston Harbor a teapot. The story is based on the kiddies' best-seller of the same name and features Hal Stalmaster, Luana Patten, and Jeff York as the three not-so-very-delicate delinquents who almost single-handedly win the War of Independence. As regards the battle, we waited in joyful anticipation to see precisely who had really fired "the shot heard 'round the world." When the great moment came, a shot was heard out of camera range; soldiers on both sides started like deer drinking at a pool in a forest. They had every reason to be excited, for it has since been rumored that in reality the shot was Mr. Disney committing suicide. The picture ends right smack dab in the middle of the war, but it is implied that Johnny will survive to create many more silver chamber pots for constitutionalists of future generations. And such is the American heritage. PAT READ 445 Tennessee Street - INDIAN HANDICRAFT • SILVER JEWELRY • NAVAJQ RUGS "A VERITABLE MUSEUM" Gifts in all price classes Why worry about food prices? 保証 An Electric Freezer... FREES HER! --- THREE FU nished du apartment. 3902. NICELY FU ment apart private battl of boys-ad 839 Miss LOVELY 4 bath, 2 bed Beautifully cept electric Phone VI M THREE RG MENT 3 b trance and privileges. VI 3-7830 a Do food prices have you—and your budget—down? An electric food freezer will save money for you. 1954 SOUT two bedro formation SUMMER 2 Special St Sports Illu Regular Ra With an electric freezer, you'll buy "specials" in large quantities. You'll buy more food at one time, pay less per pound. You'll buy seasonal foods when they're plentiful, at low prices, and store them for the future. WANTED Phone VI See the new electric freezers and combination refrigerator-freezers at your dealer's. Ask him how the freezer frees you from budget worries, how it will help you to live better . . . electricallyl BU See Your COMPLETEL clubs. Like ners. Very after 5 p Road. LIVE BETTER ELECTRICALLY DEALER TYPIST pers and prompt. M. er. Phone TV-Radio anew pared service shipe replace pic cash disco telecoms TV 826 TYPIST: papers, re- tion; fast 1911 Tenn KANSAS POWERED LIGHT COMPANY PAT A 1 Tuesday. July 16, 1957 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS FOR RENT THREE FURNISHED HOUSES, two furnished duplexes and one furnished apartment. Call T. A. Hemphil VI 3-3902. 7-19 NICELY FURNISHED all modern basement apartment. Private entrance and parking paid. For a couple of boys--adults only. Call after 5:30 p.m. 839. Miss VI 3-2909. LOVELY 4-ROOM APARTMENT with bath, 2 bedrooms and garbage disposal. Furnished, all bills paid except electricity. Not far from campus. Phone VI 3-7677 THREE ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT 3 blocks from KU. Private en- privileges. Prefects boy or couple. PHONE VI 3-780 for 5 p.m. 7-23 MISCELLANEOUS SUMMER STUDENT: Take advantage of Special Student Rates on Time, Life & Sports Illustrated Magazines. Save $ \frac{1}{2} $ of Regular Rate. Call VI 3-0124. WANTED house for three black kittens. Phone VI 3-7317 after 4 p.m. 7-16 FOR SALE 1954 SOUTHWESTERN TRAILER 32 foot cars. new for formation call VI 3-8405. 7-23 COMPLETE SET OF McGreggor golf clubs. Like new. Just the set for beginners. Very reasonable. Phone VI 3-253-after 5 p.m. or see at 2035 Osundah Road. BUSINESS SERVICES TYPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Veqstel, 1935 Barker. Phone VI 3-2001. tff TV-Radio Service. Get the best in guaranteed parts, tubes, and service at low prices. Call or visit our service shop. Equipped to rejuvenate or replace picture tube in your home. $7.50 cash discount on new picture tubes this season. In stock! 1003, Bowman Radio-TV, 826 Vermont. TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka. 1191 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf PATRONIZE YOUR - ADVERTISERS • OPEN ALL SUMMER Flat tops a specialty. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St. Just under the hill. Clarence Adamson Mgr. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. 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-hearts, feathers, etc. we hatch chameleons, fish, turtles, chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2912. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates, Mrs. Barlow, 606 Malne, Phone VI 3-7654. tf TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED Professional, prompt, and efficient service. Regular rates. INK 1827 Arkansas. IV 3-4573 or VI 3-8660. tf TYPIST; Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8931. tf BE WISE-LOOK NEAT. For longer wear-buy repair. Reasonable prices. Burgert's Shoe Service. 1113 Mass. VI 3- 0691. tf BEVERAGES- All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies 6th, 4th and Vermont. Phone wl 3-0350. WASHING & IRONING done at a new time. Effective at once to new and old customers. I will be open for business from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. 7 days a week July and August. Maud Smith 420 Indiana VI 3-0535. tf EAST SIDE BEAUTY SHOP 1345 New Jersey For Colored People INTING, SHAMPOOING, CURLS AND ALL KINDS OF HAIR CONDITIONING Phone VI 3-9630 or VI 3-0650 CONDITIONING TV-Radio Service BIRD RENT A SEWING MACHINE only $1.00 per week. Free delivery. White Sewing Machine Dept. 936 Mass. Phone VI 3-2253. Beacon Appliance & Furniture. 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 THE ALPHA CHI OMEGA Western Civilization notes are now available for supplemental study and review. Phone 618-520-4739; 6:30 - 7:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday. If LAUNDRY WASHED, dried, 50c load. Blankets, $1.50 Rugs and upholstery blanket; Pickup and delivery. Sniff- service. Pickup and delivery. Smu- ty's. East $2rd. VI 3-8077. KING FLOOR SERVICE Floors laid; caf Harold King. Phone VI 3-2995. TYPING WAN TED—Term papers, theses. accurate. Regular rates. Car. 3-7184. TAILORING. DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6657, 1106 La. tf Drop in for a SUNDAY SNACK No Reservations Needed PARTY HOUSE E. 23rd St. CORNER STOCK MAKER Overloaded With Unwantables? Try Kansan Want Ads— Get Results U Wash 50c CAR WASH We Wash $1.00 - With W.W. $1.25 ED DENNY'S CONOCO 9th & Indiana Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers-They are Loyal Supporters. A Sign of Good Service The AUTO-DINE speaker and the music and delicious food it brings you is found only at Dixon's DRIVE-IN 2500 W. 6th Just West of Turnpike Interchange Hey Hey Come down You and eat Dance Every Wednesday Evening Trail Room Student Union Jayhawks! in Comfort Find Wonderful Friends Air Conditioned Hawk's Nest Sub-Basement --- --- KU 1. Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 16, 1957 U.S. Inflation Trend Is Ally Of Communism WASHINGTON — (UP) — Whatever the past week's political explosions in Moscow may mean, they cannot alter the fact that international Communism has a powerful ally working for it in America. That ally is currency inflation which could continue to the point of destruction for the American social and economic fabric in an era of United States bankruptcy. Inflation is an economic juvenile delinquent. Responsibility for it must be charged to the citizenry at large, just as in the case of the anti-social teen-agers who murder or rape. Stalin Lost Bets The late Josef Stalin thought and hoped he saw what was coming in the United States after World War II when he laid a course of fraud, chicanery and deceit toward the international Communist objective of world conquest. Stalin, however, lost two of the three big bets on which he placed Communism's blue chips after World War II. Bet No. 2 was that the United Nations lacked the will to meet aggression with bullets, as in Korea. det No. 1 was that the United States would suffer a shattering depression soon after the fighting ended. Bet No. 3 remains undecided. It was the biggest bet of all-that the United States would spend itself into bankruptcy. Lenin stated the proposition that any capitalist democracy (or republic) must eventually destroy itself by over-spending. That remains prime Communist doctrine. If the doctrine proves to be correct, the loss of bets one and two will mean nothing other than delay in Communism's conquest. If the doctrine is wrong, then it is only a question of time before the free world, led by the United States, triumphs over Communism in hot or cold war or a combination of both. Pegged On Dollar It does not make of the United States an ignoble materialistic society to concede that the American way of life is pegged securely to the integrity of the U. S. dollar and what it will buy at home and abroad. The purchasing power of the dollar is skidding downward, but not yet far enough to lose the respect and affection of men and women everywhere. The reputation of a well established piece of money such as the U. S. dollar can take a lot of abuse. The end, however, is devastatingly sudden and complete when it does come. The Institute of Life Insurance calculated nearly 10 years ago that from 1900 to 1950, the U.S. dollar had lost nearly two-thirds of its value. Largely responsible for this, said the institute, was government borrowing during World War I, throughout FDR's White House years and in all but two years of Harry S. Truman's presidency. In none of those many years did the elected representatives of a free people dare levy taxes sufficient to pay for the government spending they so freely authorized. President Eisenhower is getting the Treasury out of the red, but not much. He is spending at a rate which could make Stalin's Bet No. 3 look fairly good, especially if Congress cuts taxes and fails to cut federal spending. The first homesteader under the U.S. Homestead Act of 1863 was Daniel Freeman, a Union soldier who took a piece of land near Beatrice, Neb. The first Rose Bowl football game was played in Pasadena, Calif. on Jan. 1, 1902, with the University of Michigan defeating Stanford 49 to 0. 4 Governing Systems Available As a result of the development of municipal government in Kansas, cities have an opportunity to choose from four types of government, reports the Governmental Research Center of KU in a recent publication, "Forms of City Government in Kansas." The mayor-council form, used by 508 cities, is the basic governmental form employed in Kansas. Other governmental types available to Kansas cities are the commission, commission-manager, and the mayor-council-manager plans. In most cases, cities may adopt a governmental system after receiving approval of a majority of their legally qualified electors at a special election. The Mayor-Council Form The mayor-council form, until 1907 the only system of city government authorized by the Kansas Legislature, is still the favorite of smaller Kansas cities. In these cities the mayor and councilmen are elected for two year terms. The mayor is primarily an administrative officer with power to appoint and remove non-elective city officials, with consent of the council. The mayor also exercises a qualified veto over the acts of the council. The council is empowered to pass and amend ordinances necessary for the care, management, and control of the city, its property, and its finances. In some cities the mayor may be the principal moving force, with the council ratifying unreservedly all his recommendations, while in other cities, the council may assume the dominant role in administration. The Commission Form The commission form of government, presently used by 29 cities in Kansas, provides for the election of a mayor and commissioners who perform legislative and administrative duties. The mayor presides at the weekly meetings of the board of commissioners but does not have the veto power. Kansas made provision for the commission-manager plan of government in 1917 and authorized the mayor-council-manager plan in 1935. Although these two plans result in somewhat different systems of government, they have some basic elements in common. AUTO PARTS AND TIRES New or Used In all manager cities the governing body is the legislative and policy making authority and has the responsibility of selecting a manager to conduct the administration of the city. The city manager serves at the pleasure of the governing body, and has the power to appoint and dismiss other administrative employees. Auto Wrecking And Junk Co. East End of 9th St. VI 3-0956 Commission-Manager Form Under the commission-manager plan, presently used in 30 Kansas cities, the commission passes all ordinances, provides the necessary offices, and is responsible for the manager's efficient administration of the city. The commission is a small body ranging from three to seven members elected from the city at large. Annually the commission chooses its own chairman who has the title of mayor. Mayor-Council-Manager Form Five Kansas cities currently employ the mayor-council-manager plan. This plan provides for an elected mayor and council, usually selected by city wards. The council chooses a manager to supervise the enforcement and administration of laws and ordinances and empowered to appoint and remove all non-elective city employees. A recent trend in Kansas municipal legislation has been the development of governmental forms to deal with various metropolitan problems resulting from the growth of large cities. The 1957 Legislature provided for the establishment of the Mo-Kan Metropolitan Development District which includes three Kansas counties, but the Missouri Legislature did not pass the plan. Happy Hal's East 23rd St. — Ph. VI 1-9753 -Cool- - Students Favorite Beverage Chilled Fruit Plates Cold Salads & Cold Plates Complete Family Restaurant Big Servings - Small Prices Air-Conditioned KU KANSAS KU Monogrammed T-Shirts Bronze Jayhawk Paperweights 1.95 Featuring the Perfect Perfect Souvenir or Gift Gift Depicting the True KU Spirit Also-KU Monogrammed Caps, Figurines, Etc. KU Stuffed "Pudgie" Jayhawkers Small 1.95 Large 3.95 STUDENT Union Book Store. KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 45th Year, No.11 KU Friday, July 19, 1957 LAWRENCE, KANSAS New Personnel Named To Staff Of KU Extension John W. Pattinson and J. U. Adams have been appointed assistant managers for institutes and conferences at the KU Extension. Pattinson, who has been doing advertising work in Topeka, received a B. S. in journalism degree from KU in 1952. He later served in the U. S. Air Force. He has replaced Richard Taylor, who after 18 months at KU is leaving to become registrar and teacher in the Norman, Okla., senior high school. Pattinson and Adams, working under E. A. McFarland, director of institutes and conferences, will be coordinators for conference managers for events held on the Lawrence campus. Adams, who will assume his duties August 1, has been in the educational department of the State Penitentiary at Lansing the past 15 months as supervisor of secondary education. Previously he had 12 years of public school experience in Kansas. He holds a B. S. degree from Alva State Teachers College and an M. S. degree from Phillips University; both in Oklahoma. Concerts The guest conductor of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp concerts Sunday afternoon and evening will be Guy Fraser Harrison, conductor of the Oklahoma City Symphony Orchestra. Following are the programs for the two concerts: Orchestra-Chorus-Ballet Sunday, July 21 Theme Song: Irish Tune from County Derry, Grainger. Orchestra: La Princesse Jaune, Overture, Saint-Saens; Concerto No. 2, Wieniewski, Judy Gorton, Lawrence, violinist; Symphony No. 5, Beethoven, Mr. Carney, conducting. Ballet and Chorus; Excerpts from "The Nutcracker Suite," Tschaikowsky-arr. Waring, Choreography by Robert Bell, director of the Ballet division of the Camp. Dance of the Reed Flutes, Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairies, Russian Dance, Waltz of the Flowers; Margaret Ling, faculty member, harp; Kay Jorgensen, Lee's Summit, Mo. and Janet Barnes, Chillicothe. Mo., accompanists. Chorus: "Oh Cast Me Not Away"; "Grant Unto Me the Joy of Thy Salvation." Orchestra: La Gazza Ladra, Overture, Rossini; Symphony No. 2. Dean Thomas Gorton; Symphony No. 4 in G Major, Dvorak, Mr. Harrison, conducting. Theme Song. Band-Chorus Sunday, July 21 :00 p.m. Outdoor Theatre Theme Song; Irish Tune from County Derry, Grainger. Band: Meditation from "Thais" (features flute section), Massenet; Symphonic Paraphrase on Themes from "The Man With the Golden Arm" arr. Reed; Tulsa, Symphonic Portrait in Oil, Gillis; Mr. Wiley, Conducting. Chorus: Womens Chorus: Holiday Song, Schumann; Men's Chorus: Blow Trumpets Blow, James: Wanderin, arr. Churchill; Full Chorus: Psalm 47, Bourgise; Mr. Krehbiel, Conducting, Katherine Rassmussen, Manila, Iowa, accompanist. Band: Fanfare and Allegro, Williams; Verdiana, arr. Camerata; Legend, Dvorsk; Concert March "Jubilee." Kenny; Selections for Concert Band from "My Fair Lady." arr. Bennett; Mr. Harrison, Conducting. Theme Song. Photo Bureau WHAT NOW?—Blake Hall, unoccupied since the physics department moved into Malott Hall, became a problem again for the University when apparent low bids for its remodeling were turned down by the state architect because they exceeded the $350.000 available. Cellist Will Be Presented In Fine Arts Recital Monday Mrs. Verna Jarnot, cellist, will be presented by the KU School of Fine Arts in a senior recital on Monday, July 22, at 8:00 p.m. in Strong Auditorium. The program will include Sonata in D. Minor by Corelli, Concerto for Cello by J. Chr. Bach and Sonata in C Major, Op. 102, No. 1 by Beethoven. Sandra Harding, of Lawrence, a piano major from the studio of Angelica Morales von Sauer, will assist at the piano. Mrs. Jarnot is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Morin, Laconia, New Hampshire, and the widow of Lt. John J. Jarnot, Niagara Falls, New York, who was killed while on active duty with the U.S. Air Force during the Korean War. After the death of her husband Mrs. Jarnot turned to the pursuit of a nearly life-long ambition of becoming a cellist. She entered the University of New Hampshire and, upon the advice of a member of that music faculty, a KU graduate, later transferred to KU to study with Raymond Stuhl, associate professor of cello. At KU Mrs. Jarnot has been a member of the University Symphony Orchestra and the Cello Choir. She received her Bachelor of Music Education Degree in March of 1957 and this fall will begin her duties as a teacher of elementary music. Blake Future Hinges On Chancellor's Plans Apparent low bids for the remodeling of Blake Hall, turned down Tuesday by the state architect, exceeded construction costs, on a square foot basis, of the Music and Fine Arts building, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, said Wednesday. Studio Theater Gets Manager Gordon E. Beck, who has been on the faculty of Bowling Green State University in Ohio the past year, will become instructor in speech and drama at KU September 1, the chancellor's office announced Thursday. He will take over supervision of the Studio Theater work, replacing Nathaniel Eek, instructor in speech and drama, who will study for the Ph.D. degree in theater management at Ohio State University. The Studio Theater schedule involves productions less elaborate and difficult than those on the major University Theater list. It provides stage experience for the less advanced theater students and members of the general student body. Beck is working on a doctoral dissertation this summer at the University of Illinois. He holds the A.B. degree, in 1951, from Bowling Green State University; and the M.A. degree, in 1952, from Western Reserve University in Cleveland, O. Gilbert To Speak On 'Dead Sea Scrolls' The Ecumenical Youth Group will meet Sunday at 5:30 p.m. at Westminster House, 1221 Oread. The speaker will be William Gilbert, assistant professor of history, who will have as his topic, "The Dead Sea Scrolls." A supper will be served preceding the program. Weather Widely scattered afternoon and evening thunderstorms and turning a little cooler northwest otherwise fair and hot this afternoon and tonight. Low tonight 65 northwest to 70s elsewhere. High today 90s Northwest to near 100 elsewhere. Photo Bureau M. C. DAVIS LUTE SONG—Cast members rehearse for the University Theatre production of "Lute Song," which opened Thursday night in the Student Union Ballroom. The last performance will be tonight at 7:30 p.m. Shown above (from left) are Leslie Bliss, Anthony; Nancy Rate, Halstead, and Mike Rouse, Wichita. Nichols said that the state architect "appears to have no alternative but to reject all bids." Future plans will await Cancellor Franklin D. Murphy's return from Europe in August, he said. Howard Compton, assistant state architect, said the bids ran "way beyond the money available." The low bids totaled $550,675. About $350,000 is available. Total costs, including alternate construction, would have run the cost to about $602,000. The plan was to convert the 3-story building, formerly occupied by the physics department, into a 4-story building to be occupied by University Extension. Nichols said that "several alternatives face the University. We can abandon the project completely and turn the mosey back to the state, we could redesign the building, or we can build a new building." Apparent low bidders at a bid opening conducted by the state purchasing division were B. A. Green Construction Co., Inc., Lawrence, $320,644 on the general contract; P. F. Gough Construction Co., Lawrence, $134,666 on plumbing and seating; Beadnall Electric Co., St. Pospeh, Mo., $79,884 on electrical work, and Elevator Sales and Service, Inc., Kansas City, Mo., $15,481 for a hydraulic service elevator. (See related edificial, "Blake Hall: Ugly White Elephant," page 2.) Camp Annual To Be Issued Tempo, the Midwestern Music and Art Camp yearbook, is now in production and will be distributed to campers during the last week of the camp. The Tempo is produced under the supervision of art department instructors. The book is a word and picture record of all sections of the six-week camp. It will contain stories about camp history, activities, and objectives. Student fees cover the cost of printing and there is no extra charge for the Tempo. Arvid Jacobson, associate professor of design, is editor. Carlyle Smith, associate professor of design, is advertising adviser. Jim Dilley, Salina, is student editor. Philip Helburn, Cincinnati, is advertising chief, and Virginia Curtice, Lawrence, is chief typist. 468 Students Given Awards Four hundred and sixty-eight academic scholarships have been awarded to undergraduates for the 1957-58 year at KU. The report, by Spencer E. Martin, director of the Aids and Awards office, while not all-inclusive, covers the work of most of the major scholarship committees. However, it does not list renewals, of which there will be an estimated 250 to 300. Nor does the report include any awards to graduate students. Four Free Movies Tonight Movies to be shown tonight outside Robinson Gym are "Food Getting Among Animals," "Mt. Rainier National Park," "Children of the Sun," and "Spider Engineers." The films, which will begin at 8 p.m., will be moved inside in case of rain. Page 2 ge 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday. July 19, 1957 Blake Hall: Ugly White Elephant The ugliest building on the campus is back in the limelight. Blake Hall, with its Queen Anne front and Queen Mary back and the single, staring eye at its apex, has finally become the white elephant which so many have said it is. Apparent low bids for remodeling the hall have been turned down by the state architect because they considerably exceed the $352,000 available. The problem now—which Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will face on his return from Europe—is whether to try to get more money to meet the remodeling bids or whether to raze the building and start all over again. Such may be the end of poor old Blake, laughed at and sneered at since the first blueprint was finished and since the last bit of Berea sandstone was slapped on its facade. Original plans for Blake, drawn up in 1893, called for a building closely resembling the present-day Green Hall. Lucien Ira Blake, professor of physics at KU from 1887 to 1906, and Wells, a young architect from Wichita, drew up plans for a "physics building" at KU and submitted them to the state architect. Nobody is sure what happened after that, but it is certain that Blake Hall bears no resemblance to the original plans or to Green Hall. An article in the University Daily Kansan of Jan. 24, 1919, which gave no source of information, stated that "professional jealousy led the state architect to draw up plans as differently from those of Wells as possible. For this reason the unusual architecture of Blake Hall." Another version of what happened to the original blueprint was reported in a master's degree thesis by J. Howard Compton, now assistant to the state architect. Compton wrote that the state architect, Seymour Davis, kept the floor plan of the original design, but remodeled the outside to conform to the design of a French chateau that professor Blake admired. In March, 1893, the state legislature appropriated $50,000 for the building, designed in a style known as French Chateau, or Chateau Renaissance. Despite the controversial blueprint, the building was completed in March, 1895, at a cost of $58,000. The walls of the building (named Blake Hall in 1898 in honor of professor Blake) were of native limestone and brick, and faced on the front and sides with Berea sandstone from near Cleveland. Since Lawrence did not extend so far south as it does today, and since there was no south approach to the campus, the builders virtually ignored the rear view of the hall. No iron was used in the building below the roof because it would interfere with the needled galvanometer that was to be used in electricity experiments. All plumbing was of copper, brass, or lead for the same reason. To continue the poor old Blake hex, the experiments went haywire despite the precautions. Iron nails and sash weights used below the roof had been overlooked. Some time later, a moveable coil galvanometer, not affected by iron, was installed, so all the trouble and expense of the sans-iron construction went for nothing. When the building was completed, the University Review, a campus publication, stated that "nobody likes it." "The sandstone front of the building looks like a speckled chicken," the Review commented. "The iron in the stones shows more plainly than the stone itself. If there be no lotions that will remove these blemishes, let a screen be put before the building. The Regents should think twice before accepting unconditionally the sorry looking structure with its chubby, freckled face, its one eye with a cross above it, and its monstrous hat." To add to the hard times of Blake, the clock ("the eye"), operated by a master timepiece oh the first floor, was seldom in working order. The excuse for students who were late to class was "The clock in Blake has stopped again." Repairs were costing the department of physics some $150 annually. And then, with advancements in modern physics and increased numbers of students, Blake became too small. Only 50 students were in the physics department in 1895. By 1949 the department was serving 1,100 students and had a staff of 27.Eighteen instructors were sharing one office. Finally, the physics department left Blake for the new science building, Malott Hall. Present remodeling plans for Blake call for a complete gutting of the interior and the installation of a fourth floor. If this is done, the roof of the building must be removed so that a steel framework can be installed. The tremendous cost per square foot of the proposed remodeling has hanged the life of Blake in balance. The University needs the space now, and will need it even more in a couple of years. If beauty were the only determinent, the building would probably be razed in a hurry, and a new, more graceful structure erected in its place. It would be easier on the eyes. Tito Begins To Put Pressure On Russia For Promised Aid —Dale Morsch By CHARLES M. McCANN (United Press Staff Correspondent) President Tito of Yugoslavia is making a 250 million dollar test of Soviet Russia's expressed desire for better relations. Especially since the recent purge in the Kremlin leadership, Russian Communist Leader Nikita S. Khrushchev has said he wants to establish solid friendship with Tito. At the same time, he has sharply criticized some aspects of Yugoslav policy. Now, evidently, Tito has decided to find out exactly where Khrushchev stands. It had been made known that he is sending a delegation of economic experts to Moscow to ask the Soviet government to make good on two aid commitments on which it reneged. One was for a credit of 175 million dollars for the construction of an aluminum and electric power project. The other was for a 75 million dollar contribution toward the building of a fertilizer factory and an electric power plant in another part of Yugoslavia. Tito Plans Large Projects The Soviet government went back on them when Tito criticized the brutal Russian army suppression on the Hungarian revolt. These commitments were made last August, when the Soviet leaders were making a big bid for Tito's friendship. Tito has made it plain that he intends to preserve the independent Communist status that Yugoslavia attained when he broke with the late Jesfé Stalin in 1948 because he was tired of Russian domination. The Leaders Can Not Be Pleased The Soviet leaders can not be pleased with the attitude of either Tito or of Chinese Communist chiefs Mao Tse-Tung and Chou En-Lai. These three make no bones about criticising Soviet tactics when the occasion arises. For instance, during his tour of Czechoslovakia which ended Tuesday Khrushchev spoke almost angrily against Tito's system of putting industrial enterprises under the management of councils of the workers who operate them. Some versions of Khrushchev's statement said that he called the system "stupid." Khrushchev can not resist the impulse at times, particularly when he is taking part in a Vodka party, to criticize Tito. But the same day, Khrushchev intimated he might either visit Tito soon or ask Tito to visit him in Moscow. He said the men ousted in the Kremlin purge opposed friendship with Tito. Turning to a group of Yugoslav correspondents, he added: "Don't write this, because I shall tell comrade Tito myself at the first opportunity." The fact is that the Soviet leaders need the friendship of both Tito and the Chinese Red leaders. Khrushchev Mav Visit Tito Tito's price for cooperation apparently is 250 million dollars. TV Notes NEW YORK—(UP)—That singer whose couples introduce each week's episode of "The Adventures of Robin Hood" is Paul Hansard. He'll get a break in one of the shows for next season by playing a troubador at the court. ABC will inaugurate a half-hour dramatic series called "Theater Time" July 25; Thursdays at 9 p.m. Film star Anita Louise will serve as hostess. General Motors has bought two hours on NBC time, 9 to 11 p.m., Sunday. Nov. 17 for a musical variety show to celebrate its 50th anniversary year. Talent and other details remain to be set. "The Spike Jones Show" has beer, renewed by the sponsor to run through the summer on CBS Tuesdays at 10:30 p.m. "Person to Person" ended its season on CBS with the June 28 show. It will return for its fifth season on Sept. 13. Walter Cronkite has been assigned by CBS as narrator for the ambitious documentary series, "The Twentieth Century." which takes the air Oct. 20. "Seven Lively Arts," new CBS project for next season, will give employment to seven directors, including such outstanding ones as Franklin Schaffner, George Roy Hill and Sidney Lumet. Ed Sullivan is the newly elected president of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. Natalie, a thoroughly mixed-up girl of fourteen—and who can blame her—was born in Poland. Her father long unheard from on some eastern front, she was forced to emigrate with her mother and grandmother to Budapest and live in near-starvation. She was raised a stranger to almost all the people in a boarding house filled with expatriate Russian and Polish aristocracy, Hungarian ex-officers, Jewish refugees, German businesswomen, and women of easy virtue. . . . Books . . Alexandra Orme, a very displaced and very charming Polish refugee, currently settled in Wisconsin, tries her multilingual talent at English with her second novel, Natalie (Simon and Schuster.) It is an episodic tale of a girl's growing-up in wartime Hungary. Miss Orme, happily, never feels it necessary to expound at length on her theme. She presents her wealth of characters in taut, incisive little vignettes, and allows Natalie to wander from one to the other in apparently aimless fashion. Tender, harshly humorous, wistful, shocking and always faintly detached, Natalie is a fine study in consistent under-play. Actually, the Regina Pension is much more than a haven for refugees from all parts of Europe. As the roomers lost gradually all they have but their memories of the past, the Regina becomes more and more the embodiment of that past. It is this that Natalie, by nature bound to nothing but herself, must constantly fight in order to retain her identity. Advice for beginning journalists: "Get a good foundation in grammar and spelling if you want to go far in journalism. Get it, preferably, while you are still in school. Don't wait to acquire it the hard way—after you go out on your first job." This excellent advice is from Grammar for Journalists, by E. L. Callihan, professor and chairman of the Southern Methodist University department of journalism (Ronald Press). Professor Callihan found that candidates for his journalism courses came unprepared in the fundamentals of writing—especially grammar and spelling—which they should have acquired in elementary and high school. He queried newspaper editors and learned that journalism graduates were still unprepared in these basic skills when they reporter for their first jobs. They had come to work with dull tools which had to be sharpened before they could get on with their careers. The professor set to work compiling a book that could be used to remedy the shortcomings of students and of correspondents already in the field. He has brought out a first-rate book that treats lucidly and authoritatively all the elements of writing(the sentence, parts of speech, spelling usage, punctuation, etc. There are plenty of examples and tests based on material from newspapers, magazines and radioTV writing. It is both a text and reference book that any writing person could read or dip into with profit... Take Me To Your President, by Leonard Wibberley (Putnam) is the sort of spoof-with-a-moral that readers have learned to expect from Wibberley, the Englishman-turned-Californian who wrote The Mouse That Roared. In this case, his central character is Jerry Blackwood, a British war veteran with a passionate conviction that "half an hour's plain talk, man to man, with the big shots" is all that he'd need to insure world peace. He got his chance when he blum- dered into space on a runaway rock- et, and was identified when he came down as a "man from Mars." (He didn't feel it necessary to explain that the Mars he was from was a rural village in Yorkshire.) Wibberley spices this pleasant SUMMER SESSION KANSAN (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) Ed. Phone 251 Bus. Phone 376 Editors ... Dale Morsch John Eaton Business Mgrs. ... Colby Rehmer Bill Irvine Reporters ... Martha Crosier John Husar Janet Juneau Manager .. James E. Dykes fantasy with trenchant side glances at such matters as the public gullibility and the political cynicism that impelled the Big Three to take Jerry at face value, even though two of them knew him to be a phony and the third suspected it. This is the sort of book traditionally described as "good summer reading," with an added freight of food for thought. IT'S HERE A "New Look" in Milk Cartons WHITE - RED BLUE ... Why Sure From LAWRENCE SANITARY MILK And Ice Cream Co. HOMOGENIZED Lumbrella Fantasy ALL STAR Grade A VITAMIN D MATERIALIZED HOMOGENIZED Milk "Lawrence Sanitary On Dairy Products Is Like Sterling on Silver" GET IT AT YOUR FAVORITE FOOD STORE Page 3 14 University Students Win Summerfield Scholarships Fourteen men attending KU have been appointed Summerfield scholars, the highest scholarship and allaround leadership recognition accorded undergraduate men from Kansas high schools, it was announced Tuesday by Spencer E. Martin, secretary of the Summerfield committee. Each new scholar has been making grades above 2.5 average, counting all A as 3.0 and all B as 2.0, and has demonstrated leadership. Appointment as a Summerfield scholar guarantees the recipient whatever financial assistance he needs beyond his own resources to attend KU. However, many of the new scholars already hold other valuable awards or have no need. In those cases their Summerfield assistance will be small or nothing. The new Summerfield scholars who will be seniors are Date L. Gerboth, School of Business, Council Grove; Jack P. Reid, School of Engineering and Architecture, Johnson, and Newell C. Rodewald, School of Engineering and Architecture, Eudora. Summer Session Kansan The appointments constitute recognition of superior achievement at the University and fill vacancies among those who were chosen by competitive examinations as high school seniors. The juniors are Dale H. Hartung, School of Engineering and Architecture, Junction City; William N. Mullins, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Kansas City, Kan.; Gerald M. Simmons, School of Engineering and Architecture, Parsons, and Ralph L. Wright, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Paola. To be sophomores, and chosen on their records as freshmen, are James W. Cederberg, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Herndon; Spencer E. Dickson, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Topeka; Dennis K. Heffner, School of Engineering and Architecture, Dodge City; Gerald E. Holmberg, School of Engineering and Architecture, Lenexa; David E. Pellet, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Topeka; Charles H. Roberman, School of Engineering and Architecture, Lawrence and Kenneth W. Rock, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Abilene. CHARLESTON, W. Va.—(UP)—An attractive young woman stood in municipal court here recently and pleaded innocent to a charge of parking on a sidewalk. "I didn't do it your honor," she told the judge. "You see I have a Volkswagen, and somebody must have picked it up and put it there." Laughing, the judge dismissed the charge. Small Cars Can Be A Problem The territory of New Mexico, which became a state in 1912, once included much of present day Arizona, which was called "Arizona Country, New Mexico." The two territories were separated in 1863, during the Civil War. Two staff members of the State Geological Survey, University of Kansas, will be doing geologic field work in "chalk country" until July 25. The studies will be useful in determining the economic uses of the chalk deposits. Halsey Miller, who within the past year has done considerable research on fossils of the Niobrora rocks of Cretaceous age in western Kansas, and Robert Mann, a graduate student in geology who is assisting Miller this summer, will visit chalk localities in Ellis, Gove, Logan, Osborne, Trego, and Wallace Counties. Geologists Study Value Of Chalk Miller and Mann will make their headquarters in Hays, where they will confer with George F. Sternberg, curator of the Fort Hays Kansas State College Museum, and Merle Walker, geologist at Fort Hays College. They will study in particular fossil clams that are abundant in Cretaceous-age rocks in Kansas. Perhaps the most distinctive of these clams is a thin-shelled species called Inoceramus labiatus. An aim of these studies on Kansas chalk is to reconstruct in so far as possible the environment of the animals that lived in the Cretaceous Niobrara sea that existed in western Kansas more than 60 million years ago. Sudan grass seeded soon after corn planting will be ready for pasture or green-chop in July and August. 8 Reservoirs Planned For Kaw River Valley KANSAS CITY, Kan. - (UP) — Plans for eight additional reservoirs in the Kaw Valley were revealed last night by Col. E.C. Adams, Kansas City District Engineer. The local protection plan for Kansas City he said includes a levee raise involving no modifications near the mouth of the Kaw, but gradually increasing to about five to six feet at the upper limit of the project. The eight reservoir silts under consideration were the Wakarusa River, Soldier Creek, Rock Creek, Vermillion Creek near Belvue, Clarks Creek near Camp Funston, Lyons Creek near Junction City, Chapman Creek near Chapman and Turkey Creek near Abilene. The eight would be built in lieu of 22 others as originally planned. Adams, who will be succeeded tomorrow by Col. Lawrence Laurion, spoke at a meeting of the Mo-Aark Basins Flood Control and Conservation Commission. Adams said the group of eight would have a combined full flood pool acreage about the same as Tuttle Creek. Total flood storage would be somewhat less than Tuttle Creek, he said, and total cost somewhat greater than Tuttle Creek. Widening At Topeka At Topeka, Adams said, some widening is involved and "there is considerable urgency to reconcille Revenue Cutbacks Face Commission the overall plan since the project is under way and some modification and adjustment will be required. The Kansas Athletic Commission is composed of the athletic directors of Kansas University, Kansas State College and Emporia State Teachers College. Lawrence comes near to being the critical point and continues to rely heavily on additional reservoirs." he said. H. W. Hargiss, full-time executive secretary for the agency, will take a reduction in salary. TOPEKA-(UP)—Declining revenues for the Kansas Athletic Commission, which regulates "boxing, wrestling and sparring exhibitions" in Kansas, has faced a cutback in state funds going to the little-known state agency. It spent $16,296 regulating boxing events in the past fiscal year. It has only about $9,350 estimated income for the current fiscal year—thus forcing a retreat to the fiscal corner this year. Group of Sportswear One-half Price Group of Dresses One-half Price Adams said the problem at Manhattan was "relatively easy." Group of Swimsuits One-third and Less Sale Its revenues are gained from a $10 license fee from promoters and a five percent "take" on gate receipts of matches. LEWISBURG, Tenn. — (UP) — T. C. Holly figures he has a pretty smart cat. He accidently locked the feline in the pumphouse on the farm. Two days later the cat pulled the switch and cut off the water supply to the house. Holly figures that was the cat's way of letting him know it was locked in. Finders Are Keepers SALT LAKE CITY—(UP)—Police took a wait-and-see approach after Peter Moyes called to report that, under bushes at his home, he had uncovered the 70-foot cast of a dinosaur footprint. No one had reported one missing. Smart Cat Turns Off Water All Sales Final Private Parking Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. Campus WEST AUTO PARTS AND TIRES New or Used Auto Wrecking And Junk Co. East End of 9th St. VI 3-0956 AIR CONDITIONING—TEMPERATURES MADE TO ORDER—AT NEW LOW COST, GET A DEMONSTRATION! CAR FOR SALE DON'T BUY ANY CAR BEFORE YOU DRIVE A CHEVY . . . ITS BEST SHOWROOM IS THE ROAD. Chevrolet's got a corner on these fine things! Chevy's the only leading lowpriced car with any of these advantages . . . the only car at any price with all of 'em! SHORTEST STROKE V8. Its advanced design is the key to Chevy's alive, alert performance. BODY BY FISHER. No other low-priced car quite comes up to its craftsmanship and solid construction. BALL-BEARING STEERING, STANDARD. It's a big reason for Chevy's sure control and handling ease. POSITRACTION REAR AXLE. * Means better control and surer traction on any road surface. TRIPLE-TURBINE TURBOGLIDE.* No lags or jars; smooth from start through cruising. Your Chevrolet dealer will show you these and a lot more advantages any time you say! *Optional at extra cost.* CHEVROLET MORE PEOPLE DRIVE CHEVROLET'S THAN ANY OTHER CAR Only franchised Chevrolet dealers CHEVROLET display this famous trademark CHEVROLET See Your Local Authorized Chevrolet Dealer 14 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 19, 1957 TALK TO THE PAPERS. Photo Bureau AT EASE—Students in the theater division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, now hard at work on tonight's last performance of "Lute Song," take a brief rest in the South Lounge of the Student Union to swap tall stories. Swimming Is Most Popular In KU Recreation Program Swimming is one of the most popular forms of recreational activities on the department of physical education summer session schedule, and has been most popular during the recent hot weather. Swimming is only one of the varied activities offered by the department for summer students and faculty members. Henry Shenk, associate professor of physical education and recreation, has been director of the program for the past eleven years. Aiding the program by sponsoring the playground and outdoor movies is Reginald Strait, assistant professor of physical education. While not formally included in the recreational activities, the theater productions and concerts presented by the Midwestern Music and Art Camp are suggested as ingredients in a recipe for enjoyment. Union Activities Listed Another phase of recreation not specifically listed are those activities offered by the (completely air-conditioned) Memorial Union which include bowling, billiards, and snooker in the sub-basement; the books, magazines, newspapers, and classical records available in the Music and Browsing Room; the Craft and Hobby Room and Dark Room; and the Card Room. Frank R. Burge, director of the Student Union, is in charge of these activities. The intramural program for the summer is drawing to a close with awards to be made to winners in individual events and to the winning teams of the softball tournament. The activities in this program include softball, tennis, horseshoes, golf, handball, and badminton. Families and children of students and faculty have used the playground at Fowler Grove. It is open five days a week in the evenings until 9:30 p.m. Members of the class in Elementary School Playground Activities supervise the play of the youngsters. Playground apparatus and equipment for various outdoor games are available. Also in the schedule of activities are horseback riding and golf. Three trips to the Kansas City Starlight Theatre have been offered and a fourth is planned for Thursday, July 25. Anyone interested in seeing the production, "By the Beautiful Sea," should make reservations (Phone KU 460) on a "first come, first served" basis. Ticket prices are $2.25 which includes transportation and $1.00 ticket to Starlight Theatre; $3.25 which includes transportation and $2.00 tickets to the Starlight Theatre. Mr. Shenk emphasized the pleasure and convenience of this service since the trip is made by a bus which leaves Robinson Gym at 6:30 p.m. and returns to the Gym after the production. The pool in Robinson Gym is open for students in the afternoon six days a week. Co-recreational swimming for adults only is Monday through Friday from 7:30 to 9:00 p.m. "Flying birds" are pitting the face of the sun, and because of them strange ghosts ride the airwaves of earth. Sunspots Are Ghosts On Airwaves Television images flicker, dissolve, or suddenly speak Spanish. Police broadcasts reach unexpected distances, or nowhere at all. FM radios occasionally tune in telephone calls. For all this, blame falls roundly—and rightly—on sunspots. The phenomenon of sunspots, now at the peak of an 11-year cycle, holds nearly as much mystery today as when ancient Chinese saw flying birds on the sun, the National Geographic Society says. Rash On The Sun When the sun erupts in its periodic black rash, unseen storms of magnetic force sweep the earth's atmosphere. In the electrified layer known as the ionosphere, radio transmissions go astray. At the same time, over high latitudes, skies blaze with the glowing night fireworks of the auroras, or polar lights. Barrages of cosmic rays bombard the upper air, seeming to come in great streams from the sun. Mass To Be Said For French Student What is a sunspot? Scientists do A KU graduate student from France, Emmanuelle Homet, was killed in an automobile accident near Rabat, Morocco, July 4. Miss Homet was driving the car in which she and her mother were killed and her father and brother injured. Miss Emmanuelle attended KU last year and was to return to KU in September on a teaching assistantship in the Romance language department. A Mass will be said for her at 7 a.m. next Monday at the St. John's Catholic Church. Through their cycle of coming and going is both regular and long-known, there are few clues to why or how sunspots form. They seem to be simply dark holes that suddenly appear. not agree. Most describe it as a storm in the sun's atmosphere, a whirlpool or eddy in the swirling outer layers of that gaseous furnace. Despite their modern sun instruments, astronomers remain much like pilots flying in the stratosphere above a tornado. They can look down into the storm but cannot see how deep the dark funnel goes Once sunspots were thought to be cooler than their surroundings. But now they are regarded as much hotter, vents of energy so intense that much fells outside the visual range. Hence the spots seem dark. They are not absolutely black. If all the sun were blanked out except for a single large sunspot group, the earth would still receive as much light as from 100 full moons. 25 Times Earth Floor SWIM FINS & GOGGLES Until the eruptions of 1957 the largest sunspot occurred in early 1947, during the last peak period. It spread 200,000 miles across the sun's face, nearly a quarter of its Sportsman's 715 Mass. Shop diameter. Billions of square miles were dimmed. Such bleismishes, plainly visible to the naked eye through light overcast, fog, or dark glass, have fascinated man for countless centuries. Chinese astronomers recorded sunspots as early at 28 B.C. Between 500 to 600 years is required to build up one inch of topsoil. A huge sunspot about A.D. 807 was thought a portent of the death of Emporer Charlemagne seven years later. Sunspots have been blamed for war, bad weather, plagues, and even in modern times, for man's unrest. The first truly scientific study of sunspots was made by Galileo. He saw them forming and dissolving on the sun's surface and noticed that they moved. Thus he deduced that the sun, like the earth, rotates. CRAFT & HOBBY SUPPLIES Balsa Paint Flock Plastic Kits UNDERWOOD'S 1215 West Sixth I am sorry, but I cannot provide a transcription of the image as it is not clearly visible. Please provide more details or a different image to be processed. Take her to the Cool Southern Pit 1834 Mass. Bar-b-q — Quick Lunches — Carry Outs Pit 7 TURBO BUBBLE 8th and New Hampshire JUNIOR RUNS ON MILK... but YOUR CAR NEEDS GAS The best gas for all cars is Cities Service 5-D MILEMASTER Phone VI 3-4321 5-D PREMIUM GASOLENE or △ CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. HOT WEATHER IS HARD ON YOUR CAR-LET US Clean your filter . . . MILK COFFEE Put fresh oil in . . . PLUMBING MAN Clean or replace spark plugs . . . and check your battery! ALEXANDER'S HOMEWORKS MORGAN-MACK Your Ford 714 Vermont Dealer VI 3-3500 Friday, July 19, 1957 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 POLYMERIC MILK -Photo Bureau CAMPUS EXPLOSION — A 25 liter liquid nitrogen tank used by the department of chemical engineering for refrigeration in experiments with phase behavior equipment exploded shortly after 10 a.m. Thursday in the Mud Hut, the building that houses ZANU and KFKU and various engineering laboratories. The explosion carried the tank directly upward and through the roof of the building, but caused little damage to surrounding equipment. The cause of the explosion was believed to be a frozen exhaust line that resulted in excessive internal pressures. This is the first time such an explosion has occured in that department. Members of the department said that the lines connecting other nitrogen tanks will be disconnected and installed with safety devices. To the left, at the bottom of the picture, is the exploded tank. An intact unit is shown at right. Southwest Drought Ended? DALLAS, Tex.—(UP) —The end of one of the longest and most costly droughts in history is written in green across the landscape of the Southwest. The drought was almost as expensive as war. Texas Commissioner of Agriculture John White estimates it cost his state $2 billion. Oklahoma, New Mexico, Colorado Kansas, and Missouri suffered almost as much. Only eastern New Mexico has not enjoyed the rains—two or three times the normal. Now bears no longer terrorize the towns of New Mexico by invading them for food. There is food and water in the mountains again. The dairy in Dallas that made a fortune last summer by selling water in cartons at 40 cents a gallon now sells only milk. There is a five-year supply of water in the lakes north of Dallas. But Texas temperatures still range over 100 degrees and there has been no rain in the interior of the state for a month. This is normal for a Texas summer but seems out of character after two and one-half months of cloudbursts and floods. "More rain is a vital necessity, particularly in the western portion of the state," Commissioner White said. White agrees with H. L. Jacobson, chief meteorologist of the weather Forecasting Center at Kansas City, that the Southwestern drought is broken. But no one knows whether it will stay broken. Meanwhile, farmers in Kansas complained that excessive rain at harvest time reduced the first decrust wheat crop in years. COMPLETE LUBE POWER-UP TUNE-UP SPRUCE-UP MARFAK LUBRICATION TREND You may save many dollars in repair bills if you bring your car to us for thorough lubrication. Check your mileage today and see if your car is due for a lube, then come to us for guaranteed work by our expert lube men. Only $1.25 BOB HARRELL TEXACO SERVICE 9th & Miss. St., Lawrence, Kans. Army Expects Another Cut WASHINGTON — (UP) Informed sources said Thursday the Army expects to make a second 50.000-man cut in its strength possibly by next June. The new cut plus the 50,000-man cut ordered this week would reduce the Army to 900,000 men—the same strength as the Air Force will have at that time. The Army announced last night that it will trim its monthly draft calls as a result of the first 50,-000-man cut. It said it could not say at this time how much the draft calls will be reduced. Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson Tuesday ordered the armed forces to cut their authorized strength 100,000 men by the end of this year in a move expected to save 200 million dollars. Half the cut comes from the Army. It was considered likely that the Army does not yet know the full effects of Wilson's order, although there were assertions that the FAST COLOR FILM PROCESSING Army's overall combat strength will not be reduced. HIXON 721 Mass VI 3-0330 The draft call already issued for August is for 11,000 men,2,000 fewer than the monthly rate from April through July inclusive. Whether the August call will now be reduced was not known. The Wilson order also required a 5,530 reduction in officer strength. The Army said it will separate 2,000 commissioned officers from service but it would not say how they will be selected at this time. Studio and Camera M. R. E. Everybody Likes Food From DIXON'S DRIVE-IN Just West of Turnpike Interchange 2500 West 6th --- In One Stop Crushed Ice Get Your PICNIC SUPPLIES 616 Vt.- Ph. VI 3-0350 Ice Cold Beverages Watermelon ServlCE Company Lunch Meat Groceries Open 7 Days & Evenings AMERICAN SALE Boston Pops LP's $266 BELL MUSIC COMPANY 925 Massachusetts Phone VI 3-2644 Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 19, 1957 'Operation Deep Freeze' Aided By Air-Borne Methods When the late Richard Evelyn Byrd first flew over the South Pole 28 years ago, he opened the way for an air-borne technique of transport and supply that has now made possible the first scientific station at the bottom of the world. At that station, American scientists and Navy men are probing icebound secrets of earth and universe as part of the research program just getting under way for the International Geophysical Year. Their work, like that at other bases of the United States all but "Operation Deep Freeze," marks the culmination of Admiral Byrd's lifetime leadership in assaults on the frozen continent to the south. Reached Ends of Earth "No man in history contributed more to the knowledge of the Arctic and Antarctic than Byrd," writes Melville Bell Grosvenor, editor of the National Geographic Magazine, in the July issue. "What the round earth was to Columbus, what circumnavigation of the globe was to Magellan, polar exploration was to Richard Evelyn Byrd. If Columbus was Admiral of the Ocean Sea, Byrd, first man to fly over both Poles, was Admiral of the Ends of the Earth." Dr. Grosvenor recalls how, as a junior member of the National Geographic staff in 1925, he welcomed young Byrd at the Society's Washington headquarters. "Straight as a jack staff, handsome and forthright," Lieutenant Commander Byrd had some bold ideas to offer on exploring the Arctic from the air. His project appealed strongly to the Society, already keenly interested in aviation and air photography. Byrd's naval aviation unit joined the seagoing, Geographic-backed Donald B. MacMillan Expedition. From a base at Etah, Greenland, north of what is now Thule Air Base, Byrd and his companions covered thousands of square miles by plane. With Floyd Bennett, he became the first man to fly over Greenland's icecan. Prophhetically, he began a story in the November, 1925, Geographic with the words: "Aviation will conquer the Arctic—and the Antarctic, too." Sun Compass Invaluable Gift Editor Grosvenor points out that an important contribution made by the Society to Byrd's earlier exploits—in addition to financial and research aid—was a sun compass. Invented by Albert H. Bumstead, the Society's chief cartographer, this sun compass was constructed especially for Byrd's use in polar areas where neither the magnetic nor the gyroscopic compass works properly. "It was the sun compass," Byrd said later, "that made it possible for us to fly with confidence to the North and South Poles and to find our way back to our bases." Five times, beginning in 1928, Admiral Boryd led major expeditions into the South Polar mysteries. On his last trip south during the 1955-56 phase of the most ambitious undertaking of them all—U. S. Operation Deep Freeze—he was in overall command of a job involving the use of thousands of men, a dozen ships, and scores of aircraft. Of the many articles that Byrd wrote for the Geographic on polar subjects, the latest appears in the July issue with the tribute paid him by Dr. Grosvenor. Written as a salute "To the Men at the South Pole," it turned out instead to be his farewell. For his death, on March 11, 1957, occured only four days after he made final corrections in the manuscript. In these, the last words Admiral Byrd wrote for publication, he turns the spotlight on today's scientific leader at the South Pole, Dr. Paul A. Siple. Young Stiple, winner of a Boy Scout contest for the honor, accompanied Byrd on his first expedition into the Antarctic. From then on, he was staunch companion and friend on all Byrd's expeditions. With 17 colleagues, he has now dug in for a long polar winter such as no other man have ever experienced. Dramatic Story Tape-Recorded Dr. Siple's tape-recorded running account of the establishment of the South Polar base and the problems the wintering party faces there forms the third article of the Antarctic trilogy in the July Geographic. "It already has grown much colder," he dictated to the tape that was to out on the last plane before winter night set in. "The warm zero weather of summer is only an elusive memory." "Calculations show we may have to endure the frightening unknown of 120 degrees below zero, or even lower. "But the weather, after all, is one of the reasons we volunteered to come here...to study weather and stars, to measure earth tremors and magnetism, to investigate ions in the upper air and eons of time, recorded in depths of glacial ice beneath us." However trying the physical conditions at the South Pole Station. life there today is luxurious compared with the hardships undergone by Amundsen and Scott on their historic treks to the Pole in 1911 and 1912. Robert G. Schmidt, a chemical engineer, has been named project manager for the new $4 million plant of Callery Chemical Co. in Lawrence. New Local Plant Managers Named The appointment of Stanley J. Demski to the post of construction manager for the Lawrence Plant was also announced. The Lawrence Plant, now under construction, is designed to produce boron specialty chemicals for commercial use. It is another step in Callery's program of research and production in the field of boron chemistry. Schmidt, who lives in Bradford Woods, a Pittsburgh suburb, received the B. S. in chemical engineering and business administration at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1948. Schmidt has been with Callery Chemical Co. since September, 1954, in various supervisory capacities. He is a former employee of Iron City Chemical Co. and Pittsburgh Chemical Laboratory. He is a member of the Masonic Order, National and Pennsylvania Professional Engineers Societies and Theta Chi Fraternity. Mr. Demski received the B.S. inchemical engineering at Pennsylvania State University in 1943. He came to Callery this year from the Celanese Corp. of America plant at Amcelle. During World War II, Mr. Demski was a Navy aviation radar technician. He formerly lived at Gramlich Rd., Cumberland. Instead of wet sleeping bags and biscuit-pemmi can, modern Antarctic challengers—once they have built and equipped their quarters—enjoy T-bone steaks, comfortable beds, and movies in snug, heated buildings. Weather permitting, they may even talk by radio-phone connections to families back home. Trying to reach his wife with word of his safe arrival, one station newcomer was given a wrong number. The man who answered hung up when the caller said, "May I speak to my wife?" "I wonder," muses Dr. Siple, "if he was able to make his friends believe that he had been awakened at 1:30 a.m., by a wrong number from the South Pole." More than 5,000 scientists and engineers and 250 million dollars are estimated to be involved in the International Geophysical Year investigations. Sunset Sunset 1/2 MILE W. of LAWRENCE on Nov 40 TONIGHT thru TUESDAY 2 First Run Hits M-G-M presents SOMETHING OF VALUE NOVEL BY ROBERT RUARK AT LAST...SHOCKING STORY OF THE AFRICAN MAU-MAU! THE BEST-SELLING NOVEL COMES TO THE SCREEN! starring ROCK HUDSON DANA WYNTER SIDNEY POITIER Wendy with Juano HILLER • HERNANDEZ William MARSHALL Plus (Their Love Shadowed By An Ancient Threat) THE LIVING IDOL IN CINEMA SCOPE AND COLOR STARRING STEVE FORREST LILIANE MONTEVECCHI JAMES ROBERTSON-JUSTICE FROM MGM Baroffice Ones 7:00 Show Starts at Dusk M-G-M presents SOMETHING OF VALUE A NOVEL BY ROBERT RUARK N R Dr. Harris, chairman of Harvard's economics department, has been given a $70,000 grant from the Fund for the Advancement of Education for an extended study of the economics of private education. THE LIVING IDOL IN CINEMASCOPE AND COLOR STARRING STEVE FORREST LILIANE MONTEVECCHI JAMES ROBERTSON-JUSTICE FROM MGM CAMBRIDGE, Mass.—(UP)—Dr. Seymour E. Harris of Harvard University thinks he has the answer to the problem of higher education. He would let each student foot the entire bill. days of hearings whether the public is "being fooled" about the protection afforded to smokers by "filters." "In any Ivy League University," he said, "the average family income runs from $12,000 to $20,000. Yet the college charges $800 to $1,000 tuition and then subsidizes each student for another $1,000 out of its endowment. Right now, he said, too many parents are getting what amounts to a free ride on the coattails of either the university or the taxpayers. Penalize Corn? "I think that every student should pay the full cost of his education. If he is poor, then he should pay all he can at the time. The rest he should pay out over his lifetime." For Tobacco Growers Earlier, Rep Iris B. Blitch (D-Ga.) said Subconjugate Chairman John Blatnik (D-Minn.) had assured her that he is for the tobacco growers and has no wish to penalize them in any way. Mrs. Blitch said Blatnik told her his subcommittee hearings are not intended to effect tobacco price supports. An agriculture department spokesman called Neuberger's bill "completely unrealistic." Sen. Richard L. Neuberger (D-Orle.) yesterday introduced a bill that would cut farm price supports and soil bank payments to tobacco growers. Neuberger, a non-smoker, said it was ridiculous for the government to warm Americans about alleged dangers of smoking while spending millions of dollars to support tobacco growing. Blatnik said his subcommittee hopes to determine during six "If we penalize tobacco because of a possible health danger, are we going to penalize corn because we make bourbon whiskey out of that grain?" he said. Hammond made the prepared statement as an opening witness at House Government Operations Subcommittee investigation of filter cigarettes. WASHINGTON — (UP) — An American Cancer Society expert told Congress Thursday the "evidence is overwhelming" that cigarette smoking is a "cause of lung cancer." Witnesses also included a spokesman for the Tobacco Industry Research Committee which has contended that no cause-effect relationship has been established between cigarette smoking and cancer. Students Should Pay Whole Bill He said the subcommittee wants to determine whether manufacturers have made "false and misleading advertising" about filter cigarettes and, if so, why federal agencies haven't cracked down. The society's expert, Dr. E. Cuyler Hammond, also said smoking is a cause of death from heart disease. 'Evidence Is Overwhelming Says Cancer Society Expert Boxoffice Opens 7:00 Show Starts at Dusk The Western Union Telegraph Company was formed by financiers Jay Gould and William H. Vanderbilt in an 1881 amalgamation of several telegraph companies. 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 BE A CONFORMIST Give Your Clothes INDEPENDENT Care CLASSIFIED ADS BUSINESS SERVICES TYPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Phone VI 3-2001. OPEN ALL SUMMER Flat tops a specialty. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St. Just under the hill. Clarence Adamson Mgr. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates, Call VI 3-8568. 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-beds, barnes, etc. Pet grooming baskets, harnesses, chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED Professional, prompt, and efficient service. Regular rates. INK 1827 Arkansas. VI 3-4573 or VI 3-8660. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates, Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine, Phone VI 3-7854. tf TV-Radio Service. Get the best in guaranteed parts, tubes, and service at lowest prices. Lawrence's largest and oldest service shop. Equipped to rejuvenate or replace picture tube in your home. $7.50 cash discount on new picture tubes this month. Phone VI 3-1031, Bowman Radio TV, 826 Vermont. USE KANSAN WANT ADS TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. t TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Mrs. Leatherwood, VJ 3-8931. t BEVERAGES- All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent close paper bags. Plastic, party supplies 6-inch 6th and Vermont. **Phone** 3-0350. BE WISE-LOOK NEAT. For longer wear-buy repair. Reasonable prices. Burgert's Shoe Service. 1113 Mass. VI 3-0691. tf WASHING & IRONING done at a new time. Effective at once to new and old customers. I will be open for business from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. 7 days a week July and August. Maud Smith 420 Indiana VI 3-0535. tf RENT A SEWING MACHINE only $1.00 per week. Free delivery. White Sewing Machine Dept. $36 Mass. Phone VI 3-2253. Beacon Appliance & Furniture. THE ALPHA CHI OMEGA Western Civilization notes are now available for supplementary study and review. Phone 6-39-7-30 p.m. Monday through Thursday. ttf LAUNDRY WASHED. dried. 50c. 16ad. Blankets, $1.50. Rugs and upholstery from the room and an hour. Dip- per service. Pickup and delivery. Smilf- ly's. East 23rd. VI 3-8077. KING FLOOR SERVICE Floors incl. King, Phone VI 3-2394 Harold King, Phone VI 3-2394 TYPING WANTED—Term paper, theses. Experienced, accurate. Regular rates. Can work with 10-15 students. TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6857, 1106 La, tf Page 7 NICELY FURNISHED all modern basement apartment. Private entrance and entrance fee. For a couple of boys—adults only. Call after 5:30 p.m. **839** Miss, III 3-2909. FLATTOPS are the flattest, the magazines the most interesting, and the air conditioning the coolest at ERNIE'S BARBER SHOP. 730 Mass. tf FOR RENT LOVELY 4-ROOM APARTMENT with bath, 2 bedrooms and garbage disposal. The room is finished, all bills paid except electricity. Not far from campus. Phone VI 3-7677. THREE ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT 3 blocks from KU, Private env- lance with bath and laundry privileges. Prefer boys or couple. Phone 9-1-7800 after 5 p.m. THREE FURNISHED HOUSES, two furnished duplexes and one furnished apartment. Call T. A. Hemphill VI 3-3802. 71-9 Friday, July 19, 1957 APARTMENT attractively furnished, campus. Responsible required. Zoli V1 3-6066 7-39 VACANCY for male students in a new modern home with large swimming pool and diving board. Private entrance, bath shop and then privilges if desired. Call VI 3-9635. Summer Session Kansan THREE ROOM APARTMENT: Unfurnished. Clean and attractive, with range and refrigerator. Connections for automatic washer. Private entrance, private bath, two large closets, built-ins. Reasonable rent with utilities paid. Child accepted. Close to shopping center and KU. Phone VI 3-8514 or VI 3-7638. 7-23 MISCELLANEOUS SUMMER STUDENT: Take advantage of Special Student Rates on Time, Life & Sports Illustrated Magazines. Save ½ of Regular Rate. Call VI 3-0124. EAST SIDE BEAUTY SHOP 1345 New Jersey For Colored People TINTING, SHAMPOOING, CURLS AND ALL KINDS OF HAIR CONDITIONING Phone VI 3-0620 or VI 3-0650 Phone VI 3-9630 or VI 3-0650 FOR SALE CAR WASH 1954 SOUTHWESTERN TRAILER 32 foot two bedroom, bath, like new. For information call VI 3-8495. 7-23 COMPLETE SET of McGreggor golf clubs. Like new. Just the set for beginners. Very reasonable. Phone VI 3-2832 5 p.m. or see at 2033 Ousald Road. WANTED LIKE-NEW 31½ horsepower Sea King Outboard motor. Used less than 30 hours. bargain price. Colby Rrehmer KU 376 or more. Colby Jones Farm Supply, East 23rd St. tt SET of current notes for Western Civilization course. Call VI 3-9164. 7-23 BIRD TV-Radio Service 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 S U Wash 50c We Wash $1.00 - With W.W. $1.25 Home Made Pastries PARTY HOUSE E. 23rd St. 9th & Indiana ED DENNY'S CONOCO M'Coy's SHOES 813 Mass. St. Final Mark Downs On Women's & Girls Spring & Summer Shoes Now 3.90 and 4.90 Dress Flats, Flat Heel Sandals White, Biege, Black and Others Were to 6.95 2.90 and 3.90 Opera Pumps White Calf and White Linen — Medium or High Heels Were 9.95 Now 5.90 Medium & High Heels — White, Patent, Flax & Navy Blue — $ \frac{1}{2} $ Price and Less — Were 7.95 to 10.95 Now 5.90 Pumps, Sandals Dress Shoes High and Medium Heels the town shop ANNUAL Summer Sale Begins Today with the finest selection of men's wear at the lowest price!! Suits, Slacks Sportcoats Summer & Year-round Cords & Tropicals Authentic University Styling 25% Off 25% Off Socks Cotton Argyles Wool Argyles Values Now $1.25 .79 2.95 1.79 Sportshirts Short Sleeve Long Sleeve Button-down Collars Regular Collars 25% Off Sport Jackets Polished Cotton Suntan & Olive Were Now $22.50 $14.95 1/2 Price Bargains Belts - Ivy Caps - Lite-wate Jackets Special White Duck Trousers - Were 4.95, Now $3.00 the town shop 841 Mass. St. Summer Session Kansan Page 8 Friday, July 19, 1957 AEC Denies Security Lapse LAS VEGAS, Nev. — (UP) — The Atomic Energy Commission Thursday labeled as "ridiculous" a reporter's claim that he entered the atomic test grounds in Nevada to witness Monday's "diablo" shot by showing gag credentials including one card good for a free drink at a Las Vegas bar. Reporter Pat Michaelis, of the Orange County News Service and radio station KWIZ in Santa Ana, Calif. Wednesday said he got past security guards at Camp Mercury by showing the free drink card, another which certified he was a back seat driver and several personal cards. He said he was not questioned about a satchel he carried into the area. Lt. Col. William R. Hunter, director of the AEC's test information office, said Michaels last week requested to witness the test and his credentials were checked and cleared. Hunter said the reporter's name was placed on a list of authorized news media observers. When Michaels arrived at the test site he was issued his badge at my request," Hunter said. "He together with all other news observers were under security escort every minute on the test site." Hunter said Michaels was not questioned about his brief case because all authorized newsmen are permitted to carry items necessary to do their work into the test area. Has No Cause To Gripe MUSKEGON, Mich—(UP) —Patrolman Robert McClumber listened patiently as a trapped speeder assailed the use of Muskegon taxpayer's money for radar sets to time motorists. Then he asked to see the man's driver's license. The speeder lived outside the city limits. McKay Is Appointed To U.S.-Canadian Post WASHINGTON—(UP)—President Eisenhower Thursday appointed former Interior Secretary Douglas McKay to a $20,000-a-year job as commissioner on the U.S.-Canadian International Joint Commission. McKay, now living in Salem, Ore., will succeed Len Jordan who is resigning. Each country has three members on the joint commission. McKay resigned from his interior post last year to run unsuccessfully against Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Or.) The joint commission, which he will join at headquarters here, has jurisdiction over all boundary waters questions between this country and Canada. During the Olympic games as a test the United Press sent a message around the world in less than 60 seconds. More than 16,000 miles of wires linked United Press bureaus in Europe. NEW YORK—(UP)—Evangelist Billy Graham said Thursday he hopes to conduct crusades for Christ in Sydney, Australia and Birmingham, England, in 1959. Graham Reveals Tour Plans Graham revealed tentative plans for the new crusades as he prepared for the biggest revival meeting of his career, to be held in the 67,000-seat Yankee Stadium Saturday. Vice-President Richard M. Nixon confirmed in Washington late Wednesday an earlier United Press report he would come to New York to take part in the stadium rally. Graham said he would "give much prayer" to tentative plans to hold the Australian crusade in March, April and May of 1959. The crusade would have offshoots from Sydney into Melbourne and three other major cities, as well as Auckland, New Zealand. The projected Birmingham crusade, which would cover the entire "midlands" section of Great Britain, is tentatively planned for September, 1950. The evangelist preached a sermon on the Apostle Paul (Acts 18:17) before an audience of 19,200—including 700 standees in Madison Square Garden last night. He addressed an additional 3,000 persons who could not be admitted into the huge sports arena in the street outside. More than 1,074,000 persons have heard Graham's Garden sermons. A first count of 724 persons who recorded "decisions for Christ" last night brought the total since the New York crusade began May 15 to 33,846. Tulare County, Calif., considered by safety officials to be one of the best-signed road networks in the United States, has an average of four traffic signs per mile to warn and advise motorists. From Drive-Ins To Dining Rooms, These Restaurants Offer The Best Food In Lawrence Hamburgers Bar-b-q The Castle Tea Room Shrimp Air Conditioned Root Beer 1307 Mass. VI 3-1151 Steaks Chicken Malts The Castle Tea Room Air Conditioned 1307 Mass. VI 3-1151 The Castle Tea Room J&L Drive-In Root Beer, Orange Malts, Shakes Chicken & Shrimp - 98c 11 a.m. - 12 p.m. — 7 days ALLIANCE Hot Dogs Steaks Chicken Malts A & W Root Beer (1) Orange, Malts and Sandwiches Hours—Open Weekdays 11:00 a.m. Open Sundays 12:00 noon 1415 West 6th St. Old Mission Inn "The best hamburgers in town!" Air Conditioned 1904 Mass. VI 3-9737 --- Blue Hills Drive In 1601 East 23rd Jumbo Deluxe Steak Burgers Foot Long Hot Dogs Tasty Bar-B-Q Burgers QUICK SPEAKER SERVICE Hours 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Weekdays BLUE HILLS FACILITY Big Buy For the best in burgers & 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. Campus Hideaway Pizza Call VI 3-9111 for 15 minute pickup service Hours — 5 to 1 every day 106 N. Park KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN KU 45th Year, No.12 Tuesday, July 23, 1957 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Photo Bureau W KING AND QUEEN-After days of campaigning, the King and Queen of the Music and Art Camp were finally chosen Saturday night. They are Edward Szeman, Cleveland, Ohio, who plans to attend college in Dayton this fall, and Mary Ann Leibenderfer, Norman, Okla., who will attend Oklahoma University this fall this fall. Visiting Assistant Professor Named To Journalism Staff The appointment of. Maurice C. Lungren as visiting assistant professor in the School of Journalism at KU for the coming academic year was announced Monday by the Chancellor's Office. Lungren has been assistant to the director of the William Allen White Foundation at the University since 1953. He will replace assistant professor $ \textcircled{4} $ He will replace assistant protec- calder M. Pickett, who will be on Sabbatical leave to work for his Ph.D. degree at the University of Minnesota. Lungren also will assist Dean Burton W. Marvin in adminis- tration of the School of Journalism. Lungren was graduated from the KU School of Journalism in 1949 and received his masters degree from the School last spring. From 1949 to 1953 he was employed by weekly newspapers in Iowa. He was news editor of the Harlan Tribune, editor and manager of the Mapleton Press and of the Harlan News-Advertiser. A native of Carroll County, Missouri, Lungen served five years as a Navy pilot during World War II. He is a member of Sigma Delta Chi professional journalism fraternity. Assistant Profs Appointed To Chemistry Staff Dr. Richard J. Bearman of Yale University and Dr. Albert W. Burgstahler, research associate and instructor here the past year, will become assistant professors of chemistry September 1, the Chancellor's office said today. Dr. Bearman earned the A.B. degree with a major in chemistry from Cornell University in 1951 and the Ph.D. degree from Stanford University in 1956. During the past year he has held a National Science Foundation post doctoral fellowship at Yale University. Physical chemistry is his field. Weather Dr. Burgstahler received the B.S. degree magna cum laude from Notre Dame University in 1949, the A.M. degree from Harvard in 1950 and the Ph.D. degree from Harvard in 1952. He held a National Science Foundation post doctoral fellowship at the University of London the following year. He was an instructor at Notre Dame and for a year before coming to KU in 1956, he was research associate at the University of Wisconsin. His field is organic chemistry. Partly cloudy west mostly cloudy central and east this afternoon and tonight. Scattered thundershowers over eastern Kansas today forenoon and likely this afternoon or evening. Little change in temperature. Low tonight 60 northwest to 70 southeast. High today 85-92. The appointments represent a replacement for Prof. George W. Stratton, who retired last month after 45 years of service to KU, and an addition to the chemistry faculty. The department will have 14 teachers with professorial rank available for teaching during the coming year. Wisconsin Profs Directing MURA Dr. Ragner Rollefson is now acting director and Dr. Keith Symon technical director of the Midwestern Universities Research Assn. of which KU is one of 15 members. Both men are from the University of Wisconsin. Foreign Students Start Orientation This Week MURA is now designing and will build for the Atomic Energy Commission the world's largest accelerator for high energy and nuclear research. Forty eight foreign students from 27 different countries will come to KU Friday for the beginning of a six-week orientation period. The students, most of whom have never been in the United States before, are either graduate students or professional people. All but one of the students will go to a school other than KU during the academic year. They are sponsored by the Department of State and the Institute of International Education. The students are now arriving on both the east and west coasts. Most of them will travel by train to KU. KU is one of nine foreign student orientation centers created by an act of Congress in 1950. Six of the centers are general and three are for students from specific areas. KU is the only Midwest center. Students were selected by a bimational committee made up of educators from the applicant's country and cultural officers of U.S. legations in that country. Selections were made on a basis of a written exam and a personal interview. During their six weeks at KU the students will have an opportunity to increase their proficiency in written and spoken English and to become familiar with the customs and the culture of the United States and with classroom procedures of U. S. colleges and universities. Will Study U. S. Culture To Take Week-end Trips Dr. J. A. Burzle, professor of German, is director of the orientation center. Dr. J. D. Stranathan, chairman of the KU physics department, is Kansas representative on the board of directors. Dr. Robert Stump, associate professor of physics, and Lakshman K. Rangan graduate student from India, are in Madison, Wisc., this summer working on design of the accelerator. Highpoints of the six-week session will be week-end trips to Sabetha, August 8 to 11, and to Kansas City, Mo., August 23 to 25, and a visit with former President Harry S. Truman at the Truman Library. Each student will stay with a family in the towns visited. The purpose of week-end visits is to allow foreign students to observe closely small town family life and city family life. The MURA Laboratory is at Madison. SAN ANTONIO —Photo Bureau PEACE OFFICERS—Over 150 peace officers registered for the 11th annual Kansas Peace Officers Training School during the Monday registration period in the Student Union. The school will continue through Saturday and will be composed of a basic course for police officers, a police science course, and a traffic course. Members of all courses will attend joint meetings during the mornings and specialized classes in the afternoons. New Sociology Prof Is Named Ray Paul Cuzzort, research associate of the Population Research and Training Center at the University of Chicago, has been appointed assistant professor of sociology at KU, the Chancellor's office announced Friday. A. G. RAY PAUL CUZZORT In 1945 he participated in the U. S. Naval Radar Technical Training Program at Wright Junior College in Chicago, Ill. While working for his degree he taught at the University of Cincinnati and as a Ford Fellow at the University of Minnesota. Dr. Cuzzort received his B.A. degree cum laude and his M.A. degree in 1951 from the University of Cincinnati. He earned his Ph.D. degree in 1955 at the University of Minnesota with a major in sociology and minor in psychology. He spent three summers, 1952-54, as a research analyst for the Scripps Foundation for Research in Population Problems. In 1952 he also worked on an air site orientation project for the Air Force. Dr. Cuzzort was an instructor at Macalester College in St. Paul Minn., and are Carleton College in Northfield, Minn., before assuming his position at the University of Chicago. A number of his studies have been published in booklet form. He is a member of the American and-Midwest Sociological Societies, American Statistical Assn., Population Assn. of America and the American Assn. for the Advancement of Science. 19 Receive Credit Bureau Diplomas Nineteen persons received diplomas Friday signifying their graduation from the 4-year curriculum of the Credit Bureau and Collection Service Management Institute. Each of the graduates has completed 100 hours of intensive instruction in four summer institutes. Attending the KU institute, July 15-19, were 101 persons from a 13-state area. This was the eighth summer KU has conducted a school for the Associated Credit Bureaus of America. Summer Session Kansan Tuesday. July 23,1957 - Two On The Aisle - With "Man on Fire,""Fire Down Below," and Marilyn Monroe sizzling at the Varsity, downtown Lawrence is glowing even more brightly than when the city fathers entertained Quantrill and his band of mervymakers. Jayhawker Now "Fire Down Below" claims the talents of Rita Hayworth, Robert Mitchum, and histrionic abilities of child-actor (relatively speaking) Jack Lemmon. As the senile lovers, Mitchum and Hayworth give the impression of Scarlet and Rhett in a Home for the Aged. Visually, the only distinction that can be made is that Mr. Mitchum has a beard. They both weigh about the same, though Miss Hayworth may have a slight edge in the number of facial verescue veins. Both stars waddle about convincingly in this saga of pathos and bathos in the Caribbean. Rita plays an itinerant and cosmopolitan nymph of the pavement. Robert is a perspiring slob who agrees to smuggle her away from the police via his boat. Juvenile Jackie as the first mate completes the square triangle. Though the plot is slow motion, there is much balmy beauty to be seen in the background. The film marks the reincarnation of Miss Hayworth and her ultimate "comback." Filmoers over sixty, who remember her graceful dancing of yesteryear, will be charmed during one sequence in which she shimmies like an expectant ostrich to a hot calypso tune. If somewhere there was indeed "Fire Down Below," Miss Hayworth failed to give us our third degree burns. But if you are in a charitable mood, this is the film to see; Rita obviously must need the money. Granada The indefatiguable Harry Crosby as the "Man on Fire" undeniably has a wet fuse. Since his dramatic debut in "The Country Girl," the old groaner has decided to grunt rather than sing his way to oblivion. However in this melodramatic story of a father's fight for the custody of his son, his wheelchair is ably oiled by newcomer Inger Stevens. Now Miss Stevens is pert, pretty, and an adroit actress. Though at times she (along with the rest of the cast) bogged down in gooey platitudes afforded by the plot, she did not strain our credulity as the heroine. Mary Fickett, as Crosby's divorced wife, was sympathetically sickening during her long scenes of blubbering. The point of the whole affair was whether or not Miss Fickett or Mr. Crosby was to have possession of their son. They both want him, then they both don't want him, and finally they both want him. As the human ping-pong ball, Malcolm Broderick spent most of his time stepping on his own toes to indicate youth and the remainder trying to hide the fact that he is probably a spoiled Hollywood brat. Bing doesn't sing throughout the action, but in view of a weak story badly done, it might have been a welcome relief. As in all Crosby vehicles, one feels that all will be joy if you only start each day with a song. The same effect can be had by sitting down to a meal of two quarts of sorghum. Varsity At the Varsity is "The Prince and the Showgirl." Except for flagrant gaps in the story and the scenery, it is one of the most ludicrous funny pieces of flam-flop ever to grace the silver screen. Orson Welles has lost his title to the consummate ham Sir Laurence Olivier who produced and directed this pageant. Boasting a monocle and an accent willed him by Erich Von Stroheim, Olivier appears as the His Royal Ducal Highness, the Prince Regent of Carpathia. The action concerns the coronation festivities of England's George V in the London of 1911. And it must have indeed been a gleeful, laughing Larry who mixed shots of the anointing ceremony with close-ups of himself and with equally close views of Monroe. There are hilarious love scenes between the two during which Marilyn manages to keep her lips wet and to keep wiggling. The film has fair dialogue furnished by playwright Terrence Ratigan and excellent comedy characterization furnished by the redoubtable Dame Sybil Thorndike as the Dowager Queen. Olivier's comic touch shines throughout, though it is doubtful whether this justifies his risking his reputation with the twitching La Monroe. But then the whole affair is so ridiculous that no one cares. Tom Sawyer TV Notes The date for presentation of Irving Berlin's stage hit, "Annie Get Your Gun," on NBC is Nov. 27. It will get two hours, starting at 8:30 p.m. Mary Martin and John Raitt are the stars, and they will come to TV fresh from playing the show on the stage as part of the Civic Light Opera seasons in Los Angeles and San Francisco. Thus it will have careful preparation similar to that which marked one of TV's greatest triumphs—Mary Martin in "Peter Pan," which also came to the home screen after a thorough testing on the stage. . . . Mike Todd's theater movie, "Around the World in 80 Days," an Oscar winner this year, has inspired Screen Gems to create a TV filmed series called "The Further Adventures of Phileas Fogg." Production will start in Hollywood in June. Casting has not been announced. David Lowe, executive producer of NBC's educational TV project, will take a leave of absence to produce and direct a one-hour color film portraying activities of American doctors around the world. "The March of Medicine" program will present the result on NBC at 9:30 p.m. Dec. 3. Bob Hope has a sponsor for six one-hour variety programs on NBC next season. Dates and time periods will be announced later. Hope's first TV show was in the spring of 1950. "Armstrong Circle Theater," which has alternated weeks with the "Kaiser Aluminum Hour" on NBC this season, will be on CBS next season every other Wednesday, alternating with "U.S. Steel Hour." The "Kaiser Aluminum Hour," an important live drama show, seems destined to fade from the picture entirely. The Finest Stories of Sean O'Faolain (Atlantic-Little, Brown) is the author's own selection of the cream of the short fiction he has produced, along with three novels, a play and half a dozen works of miscellaneous non-fiction, in a prolific 30-year career as a professional writer. ...Books... O'Faolin is a chronicler of Ireland, and his stories are overwhelmingly Irish. One in this collection, "A Born Genius," reflects the knowledge of New York and Boston that the author acquired as a Harvard student 30-odd years ago, but even that is laid mainly in Ireland. The author loves his country, but he is sometimes exasperated by his countrymen. "When it comes to writing about people who, like the Irish of our day, combine beautiful, palpitating tea-rose souls with hard, cooly calculating heads, there does not seem to be any way at all of writing about them except satirically or angrily," he says in a foreword. The British submarine Seraph sank its share of Axis shipping in routine operations in the Mediterranean during World War II, but it achieved its greatest glory as a "passenger ship." "Once a writer's eye gets chilly about their beautiful souls he becomes like the only sober man at a drunken party, and the only decent thing to do then is either to get blind drunk . . . or else to go home and scrub himself clean in a raging satire." The Finest Stories are very fine indeed—vignettes of Irish life that are sometimes amusing, sometimes touching' and sometimes both. . . . The Ship With Two Captains by Terence Robertson (Dutton) is a history of Seraph, with special emphasis on the cloak-and-dagger operations that gave it its greatest fame—the secret landing of Gen. Mark W. Clark on the North African coast, the rescue of Gen. Henri H. Giraud from occupied France and the dropping of the anonymous corps of "the man who never was" off the coast of Spain. During most of World War II, Seraph's captain was Lt. Norman L. A. ("Bill") Jewell. It acquired its second master, U.S. Capt. Jerauld Wright, during the Giraud mission because the French general insisted that he must be pleked up by an American submarine. Wright's captainy was purely nominal. Jewell continued to run the ship, and the two men became fast friends. Seraph is now the oldest submarine still in service, part of a squadron commanded by Jewell, who is one of the youngest full captains in the British navy. Wright is a four-star admiral, supreme allied commander in the Atlantic. Robertson tells the story of Seraph's remarkable wartime career in the same pleasant, forthright prose with which he chronicled the exploits of U-Boat Ace Otto Kretschmer in Night Raider of the Atlantic. Horace Walpole's Castle of Otranto in generally considered to be the first historical novel as such in English history. The fact that it was preceded by two years by the anonymously published Longsword, Earl of Salisbury (New York University Press) makes the latter deserving of—at last—one reprint every century. The Earl of Salisbury wanders off to the wars in the 1220's; is shipwrecked coming home; his child-bride remains Penelope-virtuous despite the attempts of evil (lowborn) suitors to "contract an adulterous marriage with her by force"—besides, she's had a tip the Earl's still alive. As editor John C. Stephens remarks in his introduction, the book has not seen print since 1840, and there only in a 20-page, triple-columned, nine-point-type anthology. SUMMER SESSION KANSAN (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) Ed. Phone 251 Bus. Phone 376 Editors... Dale Morsch John Eaton Business Mgrs... Colby Rehbert Bill Irvine Reporters... Martha Crosser John Husar Janet Jimeau Manager... James E. Dykes Dr. Francis E. Townsend introduced his old-age pension plan in 1834. U.P. was the first American press association to serve European newspapers directly, starting in 1921. STEVE'S A Thrifty Scot will travel far to save money . . . but he only needs to go to 900 Mass. to save on checks ThriftiChecks are only 7½c Douglas County State Bank "The Bank of Friendly Service" 900 Mass. . UNBEATABLE CLASSIC NATURALLY. oldmaine trotters Square Kilt Black or Tan Leather Cocoa Buck Grey Buck Black Buck From the square toe, to the neatly trimmed kiltie, to the handsewn detailing — here's a handsome flat you can't beat for good country looks and easy going comfort. 9. 95 to 10.95 Sizes 3 to 10 AAAA to B Entire Fall Stock in many other styles and colors from which to choose. Su In NE you 1. Presl low- stare Royal College Shop 2.7 and "brus and 'cool, Norw tone, Amei 4. along Tie a head with cool, 3. back vacal lips heat. 5. the l a cu frien gree it's 837 Mass. 6. drauat y com ever time hold ing Page 3 Survive Summer Heat In 10 Sensible Steps NEW YORK — (UP) — How to beat the heat—10 sensible steps you may want to consider: 1. Dress correctly. Clothing holds heat. Discard it and don a Presleyesque ensemble. Go to work wearing only sideburns and a low-slung guitar. If your co-workers get all shook up, their cool stares will help lower the office temperature. 2. Talk correctly. Avoid hot words and phrases like "income tax," "brush-off pitch," "Khrushchev," and "sonali da gespu." Say easeful, cool, lulling things like "vacation in Norway," "Marilyn Monroe's skin tone," "Hammock-time in Little America," "ho-o- o hum." 4. Be Clever. When outdoors, take along a personal air conditioner. Tie a small record player atop your head and keep yourself drenched with modern advanced jazz. It's cool, man. 5. Try psychology. Withdraw from the hot world. Try to imagine you're a cucumber in a shady glen. If your friends remark that you're turning green, you're a success. Tell 'em, it's only your chlorophyll showing. 6. Be scientific. Use simple hydraulics. Keep a驴 of ice water at your feet. Your blood makes a complete circulation of your body every 20 minutes. From time to time, put your toe in the pail and hold it there 20 minutes—icewatering your system. 3. Work correctly. Sit down. Lean back. Put your feet on a desk. Stare vacantly. Avoid pursing your lips. Any muscle flexing produces heat. Don't even flex your brain. 7. Be calm. Particularly at the beach, with all those Blinkins sauntering around. Excitement only makes you warmer. Save it for next winter. 8. Eat properly. Food is heat. Avoid it. Instead, take frequent baths in a solution of water and equal parts of tranquilizer and pep pills. Save the solution for repeated use. 9. Drink properly. Sample the air conditioning before you patronize the bar. Select a very cold bar, slap down a dollar, and order a hot buttered rum. The bartender's reaction may send you both to the cooler. 10. Be a scream. Meet a friend and say: "know why it's warming up in Siberia? Because Khrushy turned on the heat in the Kremlin." This kind of thing will cool off any friendship. A vast area in southeastern New Mexico, known as the Permian Basin, was once covered with a shallow sea and supported a great deal of marine life. The waters receded some 150 million years ago, and today the area is widely-known as an important petroleum producing region. Senior To Edit Democrats' News John Lang, Arkansas City senior, was appointed by the president of the Young Democrats of Kansas as chairman of the "News Letter." The "News Letter" will be a monthly publication telling of events concerning the Young Democrats beginning in September. The publication will be sent to each county and collegiate Young Democrats Club in Kansas and to the Young Democrats Chairmen of the six Congressional Districts. Baustian To Conduct New Santa Fe Opera Robert Baustian, who will become director of the KU Symphony Orchestra this fall, has been engaged as a regular conductor of the new Santa Fe Opera Company in the capital city of New Mexico. During August he will conduct several performances of Rossini's "The Barber of Seville" and Mozart's "Cosi fan Tutte." Bauptian, believed to be the only American conductor on the regular staff of a European opera company, recently returned to this country from Germany, where he conducted for the Wiesbaden Opera Company and Symphony. There are more than 4,500 different varieties of grasses throughout the world. FAST COLOR FILM PROCESSING HIXON Studio and Camera Shop 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Brown To Defend In Iowa Masters Art & Music Campers Arrange reservations early for visiting parents & friends Joe Brown, defending champion in the twentieth annual Iowa Masters golf tournament, is definitely the golfer to beat when the best in Iowa tee off on the Iowa State course Saturday. Restaurant - Swimming Pool Air Conditioning - Free TV - Free Ice Holiday Inn Hotel It is not just because he is the defending champion, not that he ranks as one of Iowa's all-time best, either. The cold figures show that no golfer has "mastered" the masters as Brown has. Tuesday, July 23, 1957 Summer Session Hansan In winning four titles, including the 1955 and 1956 crowns, Brown has averaged 71.84 strokes in $24^{1/2}$ rounds shot on the Iowa State course. That gives him better than a stroke lead over Rodney Bliss II also of Des Moines. Bliss has averaged 72.93 strokes for 14 rounds of championship play. Junction of Hiways 59 & 10 Other leading averages by golfers who have played at least 10 rounds in the meet: Bob Leahy, Denison, 73.00; George Clark, Ottumwa, 73.91; Jim Rasley, Des Moines, 74.38; Jack Hall, Des Moines, 74.52; Pat Willcox, Des Moines, 74.53; Sarg Fontanini, Des Moines, 74.91, and Fred Gordon, Belmond, 75.40. Editor of the abolitionist newspaper, The Liberator, was William Lloyd Garrison. Northwestern Given Grant For Psychology Research A three-year program of teaching, research, and training in educational psychology will be supported at Northwestern University by a grant of $156,000 from Carnegie Corporation of New York. The Northwestern appropriation is included among grants totaling almost half a million dollars announced Monday by the philanthropic foundation. ment of a new approach to mathematics teaching; and one of $66,000$ to the University of Maryland for developing an experimental program of mathematics for the junior high school. Under the Northwestern program, faculty members of both the school of education and the department of psychology will join together to develop a new undergraduate and graduate courses in educational psychology. These courses will include more knowledge of basic research on human behavior than is provided in the usual teacher training curriculum. The Northwestern group will also outline a program of needed basic research in the field. A portion of the Carnegie funds will be used for the training of graduate students. Other Carnegie grants announced Monday include one of $55,000 to the National Education Association for a conference on gifted students; another of $36,000 to Illinois Institute of Technology for the develop- Barbecue Fools The Firemen HAMPDEN, Mass.—(UP)—A look-out at the Ludlow fire tower spotted smoke one evening, and the local fire department was sent to the scene. But it was only that a Cross Road resident and his guests had moved into the kitchen to barbecue their steaks because of the forest fire danger. A television screen employing a thin transparent film of phosphor rather than the opaque now used, is said to cut down reflectance, increase picture clarity and remains visible in bright daylight. USE KANSAN WANT ADS Lady Bachelors And Mrs.' Too Love ACME 10% Discount for Cash & Carry Dry Cleaning Where Quality Is Always First ACME Bachelor Laundry & Dry Cleaners 1109 Mass.—Dial VI 3-5155 Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 23, 1957 Giants To Quit Polo Grounds; Eye San Francisco Next Year Bv DOC QUIGG United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK — (UP) — "Somewhere in this favored land the sun is shinging bright." Somewhere is probably not San Francisco, which is one of the country's foggiest—and loveliest—cities. But since mighty Gotham has struck out as a home for the baseball Giants, the enchanting, hill-happy Metropolis on the West Coast is being touted as the town most likely to succeed in luring William Mays and friends to its midst. All right, let 'em go. God bless 'em. If they have to leave, it is a pleasure to know they're leaving while they're still ahead. Ahead of what? That's a good question. But there is at least one good answer. While they're winning, that's what. Since the turn of the century, they have won 4,784 games and lost only 3,837. They're ahead in games won over games lost while a New York club. It will be interesting for us Giant fans to wait one year and then see if San Francisco can make the same boast. In the face of the present trend, we feel rather safe. Still... earth-shaking events have happened out there before. May Play in Cow Palace May Play in Cow Palace There has been a suggestion that, until San Francisco can get a new stadium built, the Giants play their home games in the Cow Palace, the king size quonset hut in which the Republicans triumphed over Joe Smith last summer. This would provide long-ball hitters with outfield fences as close as they are in the Polo Grounds and almost as close as those in Ebbets Field. The news that the Giants will leave Coogan's Bluff for Nob Hill was not so disquieting as the additional utterance by Horace Stoneham, president of the ball club. "New York City is slipping," he said, adding that the potential baseball audience was moving to the suburbs and the city couldn't expect to support three baseball teams and maybe not even two. Slipping? Well, to tell you the truth, some of us around here have felt a bit unsteady of late, although we were hesitant to come right out and use an ominous word like "slipping." The town seems to be doing all right, on the surface. The Ground is Shifting However, according to the city official in charge of water mains, the rash of broken mains which has moistened our traffic arteries recently is due to unrest beneath the surface. The ground is shifting, he says, causing the breaks. And it is true that we've lost population, as shown by a recent quickie census. New York now must bow to both Tokyo and Greater London and take a third-biggest-city rating. Could it be that we're on our way to becoming a ghost town? What a prospect that is. One vast and empty pile of mouldering, shuttered skyscrapers, completely surrounded by the world's largest suburbs. Enemy Would Face Army WITH THE U. S. 24TH DIVISION IN KOREA — (UP) — Any foreign power with aggressive intentions better not start with Pvt. James McNames of Derby, Colo. McNames has six brothers and six sisters, all stationed with the Army in Europe. His father recently retired from the Army and only his mother has seen no military service. Fry Kansan Want Ads. Get Results CRAFT & HOBBY SUPPLIES Balsa Paint Flock Plastic Kits UNDERWOOD'S 1215 West Sixth To Present Paper At Lisbon Meeting Dr. John S. McNown, new dean of the KU School of Engineering and Architecture, will present a research paper at the seventh meeting of the International Association for Hydraulic Research in Lisbon, Portugual, July 25-29. Before returning in early August, Dean McNown will visit lab oratories in Paris, France, and Cambridge, England, to discuss scientific problems. This is his fourth European trip on research matters. Dean McNown, who is also professor of fluid mechanics, will speak on "Laboratory Tests of Flow Through a Liquid-Metal Reactor." He and Raymond A. Yagle of the University of Michigan are coauthors of the report, resulting from a study made at Michigan where the dean was a professor. Dean McNown directed the investigation under a continuing contract with the Atomic Power Development Associates, whose headquarters are in Detroit. Their reactor, to be built near Monroe, Mich., will be one of the first liquid-metal reactors in the world. The 1957 meeting of the International Association for Hydraulic Research is sponsored by the National Civil Engineering Laboratory of Portugal. Two members of the host organization assisted Dean McNown in conducting a research project at Grenoble, France, during 1951-52. Utah Insect Is A Menace To Kansas Cedar Trees Minneosta has 508 tree farms covering 439,799 acres. Increased activity by certain destructive pests of cedar trees has been observed in several Kansas localities in recent surveys, according to Dr. Charles D. Michener, state entomologist for the Kansas Entomological Commission, southern division, and chairman of the entomology department at KU. L. A. Calkins, assistant state entomologist performed the field work. Accompanying years of extreme drought during 1952-56, a gradual building up in numbers of the Utah cedar scale was noted, and damaged cedars again became noticeable. During the drought years of the 1930's, a tiny scale insect, Utah cedar scale, damaged or killed many beautiful red cedars in eastern Kansas. All known control methods had little effect on stopping the destruction. Finally, parasites of the scale gained sufficient headway to put a temporary halt to the destructive pest. A period of ten years of comparative freedom from the cedar scale followed, although existing infestations continued to show resistance to the newer insecticides that have been developed. The scale is a very small yellowish insect, covered by a protective scalelike armor, which is elongated oval in shape with a yellowish or reddish tip toward one end of the armor. While minute in size, the great number of scales on individual twigs can give the tree a greyish appearance. When occurring in damaging proportions the foliage of cedars soon turn brown and dead spots begin to appear. PAT READ 445 Tennessee Street Some experimental work on control has been accomplished with encouraging results. Apparently repeated spraying with some of the newer insecticides with a short time interval between applications may be the key to successful eradication. "When one sees a fifteen-foot cedar which spreads over an area approximately twenty feet in diameter that has been severely damaged or killed by the Utah cedar scale, then some idea can be obtained of the seriousness such an insect can mean to the owners of ornamental foundation plantings around homes," Dr. Michener said. - INDIAN HANDICRAFT - SILVER JEWELRY - NAVAJO RUGS Open 9:00 to 5:00 Don't Miss Our Wednesday Night Buffet "A VERITABLE MUSEUM" Gifts in all price classes HOLIDAY RESTAURANT Highways 10 & 59 Sell Your Used Books Thursday & Friday, August 1 & 2 We still need many titles for Fall Semester, 1957. An Off Campus Buyer will be on hand to make you an offer on those titles we cannot buy KU STUDENT Union Book Store KU Page 5 naging cedars ts be- foot area a discoverly Utah can be such ownerslant-therer con en hien re of the t time may location. Equality Dispute Rages In New York Council WASHINGTON - (UP) - For the record it should be noted that the United States Senate is not the only political forum in which a dispute rages over the rights of Negroes to equality and integration. It may surprise some persons, including the embattled Southern Democratic Senators here, to learn that the other forum in which such a dispute prevails is the General Welfare Committee of the Municipal Council of the City of New York. A considerable part of the pressure on Congress to enact the pending Civil Rights Bill without any softening of its provisions comes from New York City and similar great urban areas outside the south. Even so, New York's General Welfare Committee has been troubled since last May 21 by a simple proposal. The proposal would make it unlawful to discriminate for reasons of race, color, religion, national origin or ancestry in the rental or sale of dwelling space. The proposed ordinance is intended to open to Negroes dwelling units evidently now closed to them by reason of such discrimination. Newspapers and individuals which long have championed such a civil rights project as now confronts the Senate have been less enthusiastic about the anti-discrimination project in their home town. The real estate boards of all five boroughs of New York City vigorously opposed the proposed ordinance. Mail Count Against After public hearings in mid-June, the project was sent back to committee. The mail count against the proposition was 3 to 1 at city hall. Some councilmen said their mail was 4 to 1 against. What happens next is anybody's guess. The ordinance already has been substantially amended. It originally provided fines up to $500 for discrimination in the sale or rental of housing units. Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R-N.Y.) was among those stanchie advocates of the civil rights bill now pending in the Senate who urged modification of the New York proposition to eliminate certain punitive provisions. The $500 fine provision has been abandoned. Javits opposed the fine provision. He urged, instead, resort to "mediation, conciliation and technical assistance, with court injunctions as the primary enforcement medium to back it up." Charles Abrams, head of the New York State Commission against discrimination, took the same stand. The New York Times reported the Javits-Abrams action in this language: To Soften Legislation "Two champions of civil rights called yesterday (July 7) for amendments to soften proposed city legislation to outlaw discrimination in private housing." If, indeed, the proposal was to soften, then Javits' position toward the civil rights legislation pending in the Senate is substantially different. He opposes any softening there. The committee also amended the bill to eliminate all cooperative apartments. As introduced last May, the bill exempted only one and two-family houses except those sold in developments of more than 10 units. Councilmen Joseph T. Sharkey of Brooklyn and Earl Brown of Harlem, both Democrats, sponsored the ordinance with Councilman Stanley M. Isaacs of Manhattan, described as a Liberal-Republican. Brown, representing one of the great Negro constituencies, has bitterly protested the handling of the ordinance and the activities of Sharkey and of some of their fellow Democrats. Neither the sponsors nor others who might know will venture now to predict what may happen to this anti-descrimination project in the capital city of civil rights. Sharkey could offer no more than a "hope" that he could get the ordinance out of committee and before the council for final action. Comfortable Feet, Though MILWAUKEE—(UP) —Patricia Kelly had to pay all day for a moment of absentmindedness. She left her home to ride to her office job with a group of fellow workers in a car pool. She discovered too late that she had on her bedroom slippers and had to wear them all day at work. Six states now are using reflective automobile license plates as a nighttime safety device. They are Maine, Louisiana, Delaware, Wyoming, South Dakota and Minnesota. North Dakota joins the list in 1958. LARRY CRUM MUSIC and RECORD CENTER 12 East Ninth VI 3-8678 LAWRENCE, KANSAS' Open Evenings 'Til 9 o'clock TICKETS AND RESERVATIONS FIRST NATIONAL BANK FOR YOUR TRAVEL NEEDS - Airlines-Domestic-Foreign - Steamships - Cruises - Escorted Tours Miss Rose Gieseman, Mgr. Summer Session Kansam The First National Bank Of Lawrence Travel Agency 8th and Mass. Tel. VI 3-0152 Airman Sentenced OnHaircutDispute FUCHU, Japan — (UP) — A court martial board found a young American airman guilty of disobeying an order in refusing to get a "white-sidewall" haircut and sentenced him to four months imprisonment at hard labor. The board also reduced Airman Third Class Donald Wheeler of Cortez, Colo., to the rank of airman basic (private) and fined him $50 monthly for four months. "I do not think this is fair," Wheeler said as he choked back the tears after the sentencing. The 20-year-old Wheeler balked at getting the hairstuck—one with shaved sides and a fringe on the top—while a member of the honor guard at the U.N.-Far East Command Headquarters at Pershing Heights in downtown Tokyo. The four-month sentence given Wheeler conceivably could be stiffer than the one Specialist 3/c William S. Girard may receive from a Japanese court if found guilty of manslaughter in the shooting and killing of a Japanese woman. There has been some speculation the Japanese court may give Girard a suspended sentence. Wheeler could have been sentenced to six months imprisonment and given a bad conduct discharge. "This is a miscarriage of justice," said his civilian attorney, Murray Sprung of New York. He had asked the court to give Wheeler as light a sentence as possible. Wheeler will be confined for the four months at the Air Force stockade at Fifth Air Force Headquarters here. The sentence will be reviewed by a board of review. Illinois Institute of Technology engineers report they have developed a battery with 63 times greater potential voltage and 10 times longer storage life. Football Star Shot In Brawl SAN FRANCISCO—(UF) — Roy Barni, nationally known football star, died Monday of bullet wounds he received while trying to settle a row between two patrons of his tavern. Tuesday, July 23, 1957 Barni, 29, died in San Francisco hospital after undergoing emergency hospital treatment. He was wounded three times. Shortly before he succumbed, a priest administered the last rites of the Roman Catholic Church. Held in the shooting was James D. Invirnizzi, 62, a truck driver and old friend of Barni's. Police charged him with suspicion of murder. The shooting took place late Saturday night in front of Barni's Marina district tavern "The Huddle." Shaggy Dogs Chase The Bull An enraged bull challenged the Foix-Toulouse passenger train Saturday night charging the engine repeatedly. The passengers and crew did not dare step outside to drive the animal off but several dogs appeared and finally chased the bull. TOULOUSE, FRANCE—(UP)—An iron horse met its match near here and had to be rescued by some shaggy dogs. AUTO PARTS AND TIRES New or Used July Auto Wrecking And Junk Co. East End of 9th St. VI 3-0956 CLEARANCE SALE 20% - 40% Off Ready-to-Wear Balcony Dresses Sizes 7-15,8-18, $ 12 \frac{1}{2} - 24 \frac{1}{2} $ —One Group Separates 1/2 Price— Our Entire Stock Skirts Sleeveless Blouses Shorts Summer Sportswear 20% off One Group Blouses 50c Each terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS 803 Mass. Barni is married and the father of a 3-year-old daughter, Famcha. His wife is expecting another child in November. Barni was a member of the undefeated University of San Francisco team of 1951, the university's last. He played with Ollie Matson and other outstanding athletes as halfback. Later, he played with the the Philadelphia Eagles, the Chicago Cardinals and last year as defensive back with the Washington Redskins. He was to leave for training next week with the Redskins. IT'S HERE A "New Look" in Milk Cartons - RED - WHITE - BLUE ... Why Sure From LAWRENCE SANITARY MILK And Ice Cream Co. AMERICA'S Sunbury ALL STAR GIVING A FEATURE OF HOMOGENIZED Milk "Lawrence Sanitary On Dairy Products Is Like Sterling on Silver" GET IT AT YOUR FAVORITE FOOD STORE Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 23, 1957 State, National, International News Sheppard May Take Lie Test Wednesday COLUMBUS, Ohio — (UP) —Ohio Penitentiary Warden Ralph W. Alvis said Monday he expected the lie detector test for convicted wife-killer Dr. Samuel Sheppard will be given at the prison here Wednesday. The warden said he expected a definite time to be set although he has not heard from representatives of the Court of Last Resort which was authorized by the governor to give the test. Members of the unofficial court headed by mystery writer Erle Stanley Gardner, however, were scheduled to arrive in Columbus Monday. Hotel reservations were made also for Alex Gregory, Detroit; C. B Hanscom, head of the University of Minnesota's department of protection and safety; John Reed, Chicago; and Dr. Lemoine Synder of California. Gregory gave the series of tests to Donald J. Welder, 23, the convict held at Deland, Fla., who confessed killing a woman in the Cleveland area around the time Marilyn Shepard was bludgeoned to death at her Bay Village home on Lake Erie, July 4, 1954. Gov. C. William O'Neill Saturday announced after a conference with Alvis that the warden would be in complete charge of the polygraph test given Sheppard. The osteopath is serving a life term for second degree murder in the slaying of his wife. Sheboard Refused Previously Alvis said he has not determined if the rules agreed upon by himself and the governor at their meeting will change Sheppard's mind about taking the test. Sheppard previously refused to take such a test. He agreed to the test, however, when his attorney, Lt. Gov. Paul Herbert, said the Court of Last Resort would conduct the examination The new setup for the scheduled test calls for the polygraph of the State Highway Patrol to be used. The governor said Sgt. William George, the Patrol's polygraph expert, will represent the state. GMC Refuses Access To Books WASHINGTON—(UP) The General Accounting Office said Monday General Motors Corp. is refusing to let government auditors see its books on incomplete defense contracts. "I don't know what they are trying to cover up," said Rep. F. Edward Hebert (D.La.), chairman of an Armed Services Investigating Subcommittee, "but it's very suspicious." Herbert promptly offered the General Accounting Office (GAO) the use of Congressional subpoena to get at the books. Powers (GAO) testified on a report which said GM made $32,940,500 profit on the contract whereas a $15,481,300 profit has been "contemplated." General Motors, in a statement included in the GAO report, rejected the GAO charges. GM termed its profits reasonable. It also noted that its defense profits, on an overall basis, still are subject to renegotiation. The plane contract was "let in 1952 and completed in 1955. The planes were built in GM's Buick-Oldmobile-Pontiac assembly division in Kansas City, Kans. The contract called for "repricing" after delivery of the first 71 planes and again after delivery of the 209th plane. It was to this repricing procedure that the GAO directed its complaints. It said GM failed to report "known reductions" of $1,700,000 in subcontractors' prices; that it over-estimated its labor costs by $842,000; that it over-estimated its overhead costs by $15,000 per plane and its administrative expense by $355,000; and that it charged $333,000 too much for spare parts. Other representatives of the state will include an official from the State Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation at London, Ohio. O'Neill also said only practices and procedures followed by the patrol in conducting lie detector tests will be followed. Meanwhile, the Cuyahoga County common pleas judge who presided at the trial that ended in Sheppard's conviction took issue with "a. group of purely private individuals" entering the investigation. Docking Reported 'Satisfactory' Judge Edward Blyth called on the Ohio Attorney General to prevent further unofficial investigation of the murder case by the Court of Last Resort. LOS ANGELES—(UP)—Governor George Docking of Kansas today was reported in "satisfactory condition" at St. Vincent's Hospital where he underwent a hernia operation. the governor and his wife arrived here last Tuesday for a 10-day visit with friends. He was stricken Friday and a doctor ordered immediate surgery. The Governor was confined to bed in the executive mansion at Topeka over the July Fourth holiday when the hernia condition first was diagnosed. When it became worse doctors ordered immediate surgery. Docking was expected to remain in the hospital for a week and convalescce another week before returning to Topeka. It's All In The Line Of Duty LAS. VEGAS, Nev.-(UP)-James Argenbright learned the hard way than an umpire's word literally is law. Argenbright got into a heated dispute with Umire Bob Everett while watching a local baseball game Friday. At the height of the argument the umpine pulled out a police badge and arrested the startled spectator for disorderly conduct. Jay SHOPPE Exquisite Form UNIONED Comedian's Son Visits Pope Pius Circle - O - Form's curve - adding padding makes all the charms of a young figure yours! Its four-section cups are circle-stitched circles, and these shape you to new, lovelier proportions. With a breathe-easy center elastic insert, so you know it will give you glamour plus VATICAN CITY—(UP)—Nine- year-old Richard Skelton fingered a silver Palver paled Monday. comfort. He received the medal from Pope Pius XII during a private audience Sunday morning during which the Pontiff received comedian Red Skelton and his family. He didn't mention Richard's illness, but told them "life is eternal because of God." The Pope had read of Skelton's voyage to show his son the splendors of the world before death from Leukemia overtakes him. He immediately granted the family's request for an audience. comfort. Style 4472. Whitest white broad cloth. A cup 32-36; B cup 32-38 $2.50 /“So,” he said, “if life is taken away from one person in a family they are never separated because the family will always live together in eternal life with God.” Plus took Richard and sat him on his left behind the mahogany-topped desk where he receives kings and statesmen. Then the Pope gave Richard the silver medal. Skelton said it was "the most moving thing I've ever seen in my life." "It was the clearest feeling I've ever had," he said. "It was like walking into a room full of flowers." Water is the least expensive yet one of the most important items in egg or broiler production. An egg contains approximately 66 per cent water, while a bird's body carries about 55 per cent. Lana And 'Tarzan' Part Ways Screen star Lana Turner Monday was granted an interlocutory divorce from her movie Tarzan husband, Lex Barker after she testified he had an "uncontrollable temper" and hit her in the face during a breakfast table argument. The screen siren, dressed in a black silk suit and showing nervous strain, told Judge Edward R. Brand in Santa Monica Superior Court that Barker had been something less than a gentleman at times while in her company. Miss Turner, 37, said her husband engaged in frequent arguments with her "and had an uncontrollable temper which he showed too many times." gations because of her "upset and agitated" condition. On one occasion during an argument at the breakfast table Barker hit her in the face, she told Judge Brand. She said it was very difficult to look after the home and fulfill her professional obli- Her testimony was strengthened by Helen Young, a friend of 13 years who said the actress frequently was in tears after the arguments. The actress and Barker, 38, were wed Dec.24,1953 and separated in February of this year. Yeah. Some Double Life! A community property agreement had been reached earlier and the actress was given permission to resume use of her maiden name, Lana Turner, when the divorce becomes final. CHARLES CITY, Iowa — (UP) — Francis A. Weaver, 30, began a new double life Sunday as a bridegroom and a convict. The same justice of the peace who sentenced him Saturday to eight years in jail for involuntary manslaughter married him to Elsie Miller, 36. CAR WASH We Wash $1.00 - With W.W. $1.25 ED DENNY'S CONOCO 9th & Indiana U Wash 50c Play ... Movie ... Concert she'll look fresh and cool— her clothes were cleaned at LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and Dry CLEANERS Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners Call VI 3-3711 "You'll be glad you did" Page 1 nedearswas Summer Session Kansan ment the reame, be- CLASSIFIED ADS P) - new room of Sat-in-ried MISCELLANEOUS SUMMER STUDENT: Take advantage of Special Student Rates on Time, Life & Sports Illustrated Magazines. Save $ \frac{1}{2} $ of Regular Rate, Call VI 3-0124. HELP WANTED CLEKER TYPIST II; general typing, mineograph stencils; must be accurate; these should not be overwritten; no dictation- tion—Stenographic. Bureau, 117 Flint Hall. Phone KU 378. FOR RENT NICELY FURNISHED all modern basement apartment. Private entrance and parking. Child-friendly for a couple of boys—adults only. Call after 5:30 pm. 899, Moss, VI 3-2909. LOVELY 4-ROOM APARTMENT with bath, 2 bedrooms and garbage disposal. Room has air conditioning, all bills paid except electricity. Not far from campus. Phone VI 3-7677. ff THREE ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT 3 blocks from KU, Private en- trances and hallways, private privileges. Prefer boys or girls. Phone VI 3-7830 after 5 p.m. 7-23 VACANCY for male students in a new modern home with large swimming pool and showing board. Private entrance, bath and shower. Private privileges if desired. Call VI 3-9635. APARTMENT attractively furnished, very close to campus. Reasonable rent. Call VI 3-6958. 7-30 THREE ROOM. APARTMENT: Unfurnished. Clean and attractive, with range and refrigerator. Connections for automatic washer. Private entrance, private bath, two large closets, built-ins. Reasonable rent with utilities paid. Child accepted. Close to shopping center and KU. Phone VI 3-8514 or VI 3-7636. 7-23 PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS WANTED SET of current notes for Western Chill-ization course. Call VI - 3-1914. 7-23 FOR SALE 1954 SOUTHWESTERN TRAILER 32 foot bedroom, bedroom, new for room. M-3 8-3495 4-23 LIKE-NEW 31¹ horsepower Sea King Outboard motor. Used less than 30 hours. bargain! $269.80 Rehmerm KU 376¹; see model. Job Jones Farm Supply. East 23rd St. tt COMPLETE SET of McGreggor golf clubs. Like new, Just the set for beginners. Very reasonable. Phone VI 3-2835. 5 p.m. or see at 2035 Osundah Road. BUSINESS SERVICES TYPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Phone VI 3-2001. tf OPEN ALL SUMMER Flat tops a speciality. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St. Just under the hill. Clarence Adamson Mgr. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI - 3-8568. tt 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. we have hammocks, barns, chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Phone and Gift Shop. 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921 BIRD TV-Radio Service 908 Mass. VI 3-8555 B. 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 Continuing Our Mid-Summer CLEARANCE SPECIALS All Short Sleeve Sport Shirts 1/3 Off Reg. 2.98 -- Now $1.98 Reg. 1.98 -- Now 1.33 Reg. 1.49 -- Now .99 Ivy League Twills Reg. 3.98 __ Now $2.98 Black - Tan - Light Blue 30 Inch Metal Foot Lockers $5.88 Reg. 89c and 79c Argyle Socks 49c Pr. Air Mattresses $3.98 Nationally Advertised $19.95 Sleeping Bags $12.88 With Air-Mattress Pocket and Waterproof Bottom --- Unconditionally Guaranteed Plastic Raincoats $2.98 Lots of Other Bargains, Too Very Special! 7x35 IMPORTED BINOCULARS Individual eye focus-Complete with genuine pigskin carrying case. $19.95 LAWRENCE SURPLUS TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED Professional, prompt, and efficient service. Regular rates. INK 1827 Arkansas, VI 3-4573 or VI 3-8660. tf "Your Friendly Army and Navy Store" 740 Massachusetts St. WASHING & IRONING done at a new time. Effective at once to new and old customers. I will be open for business from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. 7 days a week July and August. Maud Smith 420 Indiana VI III 3-0535. tf BEVERAGES- All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies present, 6th and Vermont. Phone wi 3-0350. TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Ph. VI 3-1240. tf TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Mrs. Leatherwood, VI 3-8931. tf Tuesday, July 23, 1957 B BEISE-LOOK NEAT. For longer wear--buy repair. Reasonable prices. Burgett's Shoe Service. 1113 Mass. VI 3-0691. tf TV-Radio Service. Get the best in guaranteed parts, tubes, and service at lowest prices. Lawrence's largest and oldest service shop. Equipped to rejuvenate or replace picture tube in your home. $7.50 cash discount on new picture tubes this month. Phone VI 3-1031, Bowman Radio-TV, 826 Vermont. THE ALPHA CHI OMEGA Western Civilization notes are now available for supplementary study and review. Phone 6-308-7300 p.m. Monday through Thursday. Iff RENT A SEWING MACHINE only $1.00 per week. Free delivery. White Sewing Machine Dept. 936 Mass. Phone VI 3-2533. Beacon Appliance & Furniture KING FLOOR SERVICE. Floors laid, sanded, finished. For free estimates, call Harold King. Phone VI 3-2956. tf EAST SIDE BEAUTY SHOP 1345 New Jersey For Colored People For Colored People TINTING, SHAMPOOING, CURLS AND ALL KINDS OF HAIR CONDITIONING Phone VI 3-9630 or VI 3-0650 FOR SALE LAUNDRY WASHED. dried, $0.5c load. Blankets, $1.50. Rugs and upholstery materials for an hour. Diner service. Pickup and delivery. Smiffy's. East 23rd. VI 3-8077. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for these, reports and term papers. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow. 606 Maine, Phone VI 3-7854. tf TYPING WANTED—Term papers, theses. Experienced, accurate. Regular rates. Call VI 3-7184. tf TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call Vi 3-6657, 1106 La; **tf** FLATTOPS are the flattest, the magazines the most interesting, and the air conditioning the coolest at ERNIE'S BARBER SHOP. 730 Mass. if READ CLASSIFIED FOR RESULTS A Favorite, Much-Read Page Am I I Rent, I Find, I Sell, I Buy ROOM for 2 or 3 boys extra litter clean, quiet. Linens furnished. Close to KU. Phone VI 3-2001 or see 1023 A-bnum. BE INDEPENDENT Live classes for two campuses. Rooms and board $5.00 per month. Rockefeller Coup 18374. Tennessee Ph. VI 3-2025. Ask for Tom Aclian or Jack 2-12. ROOMS for boys. Tired of walking up the stairs. Move two rooms. Wait block from immediate possession. Near Vernon room. FOR CLEAN ROOM for 2 or 3 students. Phone VI 3-4169. BUSINESS SERVICES YPIST experienced in health care reports. Fast and accurate student roles. Mrs. Betty Vegetale. Parker Ave. Phone VI 3-2001. YPIST experienced in theatre, film, music, and art. Unmediate services. Mrs. Olivia Vilson. TV Tech 3-1240. TODAY'S DRESS SHOP on break schedule. Also drapes and slippers. 3-8527, J106 La. EXPERIENCED TECHNIQUE. Former area will type word term papers and thesis. Frequent server at right for satire. 3-8588. FOR SALING EN ENGLISH Review of casual social structure, outdoor environment, and alert structure. VI 3-7401. LIVE GIFT, Lightingale Campus. Mrs. Establer will collect confiscated stocks of firearms and fire hydrants. Pretty Useful, My Services; Low Cost, Too— Can I Find Something, Sell Something, Maybe, For You? KANSAN WANT ADS For Quick Results Kansan Business Office — Flint Hall Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 23, 1957 By The Beautiful Sea Now At K.C. Starlight Starlight Theatre's fifth production of the season, "By The Beautiful Sea," opened Monday night with Lillian Roth as the star. Miss Roth, author of the best-selling book, "I'll Cry Tomorrow," has made one of the most successful comebacks in show business history and will be appearing on the Starlight stage for the first time. Opposite her will be Webb Tilton, who played the role of Emile de Bequem here in the 1955 production of "South Pacific." Delores Martin, singer, and Danny Carroll, favorite young dancer of television and supper clubs, will- join Miss Roth and Tilton in presenting the period story. Miss Roth's fascinating biography, which told the story of her alcoholic downfall from the pinnacle of screen stardom, began a return to the star position which has been almost unprecedented in the entertainment field. In addition to regaining star status in supper clubs, she also has become nationally known as a television actress who has drawn accolades from the critics for her outstanding performances in such programs as the "U. S. Steel Hour" and "Plavhouse 90." Tilton, a veteran of over 1,200 performances in "South Pacific," began his Broadway career in "Very Warm For May." He has appeared in many of the favorite operettes, including "Blossom Time," "Rose Marie," and "The Merry Widow," and is a popular Frank Butler in "Annie, Get Your Gun." This summer she is touring the summer circuit in the drama, "The Primrose Path," and will star in "Lady In The Dark" at the South Shore Music Circus in Cohasset, Mass., in August. "By The Beautiful Sea," with music by Arthur Schwartz, lyrics by Call VI 3-8791 or VI 3-2828 and your hot rolls will be baked to order PARTY HOUSE E. 23rd St. Dorothy Fields, and book by Herbert and Dorothy Fields, was a successful vehicle for Shirley Booth on Brodaway. It tells the story of a vaudeville performer, Lottie Gibson, played by Miss Roth, who, with her father, owns a theatrical boarding house on the Coney Island Midway in 1907. Jacques d'Amboise and Allegra Kent of the New York City Center Ballet will appear in two special dance numbers—one a classic ballet and the other, an adagio dance. They recently performed together in the Broadway success, "Shinbone Alley," which starred Eartha Kitt and Eddie Bracken. Some of Miss Roth's big songs will be "By The Beautiful Sea," "Alone Too Long," and "In The Good Old Summertime." Joseph Macaulay, veteran character actor who has a flair for comedy, will portray Lottie's father and Joan Fagan, Starlight regular, will appear as the ex-wife of Dennis. "By The Beautiful Sea" runs through Sunday with curtain time at 8:15 p.m. Second Camp Recital Tonight The second advanced student recital by students enrolled in the Midwestern Music and Art Camp will be presented in Strong Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. today. Students from all divisions of the camp are allowed to audition for the recitals. The following are on the program. Trio I op. 1, no. 1—Beethoven: J. J. Hancock, violin, Wichita; Nancy Blanchard, cello, Garden City; and Dennis Pebworth, Dodge City. Impromptu No. 4 - Schubert: David Sewald, piano, Brooklyn, N. Y. The Lass With the Delicate Air—Afne: Meriam Mitchell, Meadows, Ill. Fantasia—Hue: Cynthia Sellers, Drumright. Okla. Fantasia Appassionata — Vieux-temps: Glen Hadsell, violin, Omaha, Neb. Sonate Pour Hautbois — Saint, Saens; Stewart Nowlin, oboe, Holton. Know'st Thou Not That Fair Land —Thomas: Nancy Reed, voice, Macon, Mo. Blue Bell of Scotland — Pryor: Tom Taylor, trombone, Kansas City, Mo. Pieces Breves-Ibert: Jan Herlinger, flute, Warrenton, Mo; Stewart Nowlin, oboe, Holton; David Corn, bassoon, Poth, Texas; Robert FANCY GROCERIES - QUALITY MEATS FREE DELIVERY Phone VI 3-3771 900 Mississippi EVANSTON, Ill.—(UP)—Laurence Popofsky, Oskaloosa, Iowa, and Spencer Stokes, jr., Seattle, Wash., Saturday were chosen to represent the United States in a debating tour of England next year. REEVE'S GROCERY Debaters To Represent U.S. Popofsky, representing the University of Iowa, and Stokes, competing for the College of Puget Sound, emerged as the top debaters in a two-day contest sponsored at Northwestern University by the Institute of International Education and the Speech Assn. of America. Richard Rieke, of Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, Grace, clarinet, and Dave Kinder- father, horn, Coffeville. Accompanists will be Carolyn Clitheroe, Vandalia; Dave Elliott, Merriam; Kay Jorgensen, Lee's Summit, Mo., Calvert Shenk, Osage City, Linda Street, Branson, Mo., and Austin Ledwitt and Max Waits, summer camp faculty members. and Charles Manatt, of Iowa State College, were named as alternates for the English tour in January, which will include Oxford and Cambridge Universities. The contest began Friday with two contestants each from five national districts. Other contestants were Stephen Breyer, Leeland Stanford university; Richard Cromie, University of Pittsburgh; Philip Hubbart, Augusta College, Rock Island, Ill.; John McDonald, Denison University, and Gerald Perry, University of California. 'Uaetsu' To Be Presented The Japanese film "Ugetsu" will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Bailey Auditorium. This is the third film presented by the Summer Institute on Asia. "Ugetsu" blends the violence and compassion of the Japanese people. The film depicts the turbulence in the late 16th century decline of Japanese feudalism. --- SAMANTHA MALONE "But I Thought Cokes Were All the Same" They are—but only at DIXON'S Most fountain cokes vary with the temperature of the ingredients, but at DIXONS they are always uniformly cold and delicious Dixon's Drive-In 2500 West 6th Just West of Turnpike Interchange KU Air-Conditioned And C-o-o-I KU The food is delicious, the people are friendly and the atmosphere is wonderful Try the Student Union Cafeteria your next meal and you'll come back often Always a Very Wide Variety to Choose From Student Union Cafeteria Student 31 Fil Or Dr Elliop point Dr. prof geol anno Dr. Assis state earn varden fromo noloo Serv serve Suru two gist 油 and morties. Dr grees sity degr Mich time KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN KU 45th Year, No.13 Friday, July 26, 1957 LAWRENCE, KANSAS 3 New Profs Fill Vacancies On Geology Staff Dr. Wakefield Dort, Jr., and Dr. Elliott Gillerman have been appointed associate professors and Dr. Kenneth Hamblin assistant professor in the department of geology, the Chancellor's office announced Thursday. Dr. Gillerman holds A.B, and M.S. degrees from Washington University, St. Louis, Mo., in 1934 and 1937 respectively; and the Ph.D. degree from the University of Texas, in 1953. He was with the U. S. Geological Survey for nine years before serving on the University of Texas faculty. He has given intensive study to florspar deposits in the Southwest and to uranium deposits in New Mexico. Dr. Dort comes from Pennsylvania State University, where he has been assistant professor since 1950. He earned the B.S. degree from Harvard University in 1944, the M.S. from California Institute of Technology in 1948 and the Ph.D. from Stanford University in 1952. He has served with the U. S. Geological Survey, taught at Duke University two years, and was a geomorphologist at Stanford from 1950 to 1952. Oil and gas geology, water supply and glacial and arid regional geomorphology are among his specialties. Hamblin From Michigan Dr. Hanblin earned the B. S. degree from Brigham Young University and has just received the Ph.D degree from the University of Michigan, where he has been a part-time teacher the past three years The three fill vacancies on the faculty. Dr. M. L. Thompson, former chairman, has become principal geologist for the Illinois State Geological Survey. Dr. Walter L. Youngquist has taken a professorship at the University of Oregon. Dr. Oswald C. Farquhar, assistant professor, is going to the University of Massachusetts where Dr. H. T. U. Smith, who left KU in 1956, is chairman of the geology department. In the realignment of departmental duties Dr. Frank C. Foley, director of the State Geological Survey, has added the position of department chairman and Dr. Charles W. Pitrat, assistant professor, has been made assistant chairman. Extra Preview Is Scheduled Late season demand has brought about the scheduling of an additional KU Preview for Friday and Saturday, Carl G. Fahrbach, Jr., assistant director of admissions, said Wednesday. Enrollment for the sixth preview Monday and Tuesday had to be cut off at 210. Fahrbach said. Already about 80 have applied for the additional event. Overnight housing for a maximum of 200 each session is arranged and meals are served in the Student Union cafeteria. At KU Previews, new students accomplish placement examinations, the physical examinations and confer with their advisers. This reduces their load during orientation week in September. Fahrbach said 803 freshmen and advanced standing students attended previews in 1956. Registrations this year have passed that figure. However, because the previews are a voluntary program they do not provide an accurate measure of September's new student total, he said. M. C. W. H. —Photo Bureau FOREIGN STUDENTS — Dr. J. A. Burkle, professor of German and director of the KU Foreign Student Orientation Center, greets two new arrivals at the center. The students are (from left) Marciano N. Patolot, Philippines, and Miss Mohini Chaddah, Kenya. KU is the Midwest center and one of nine such centers established throughout the U. S. by an act of Congress in 1950. 3 Physics Profs Appointed Dr. R. C. Sapp, Dr. Francis W. Prosser, Jr., and Dr. William R. Wright will become assistant professors of physics in September, it was announced Wednesday by the Chancellor's office. The addition of the three brings to 11 the number of professors on the physics faculty at KU. One vacancy remains, left by Prof. Max Dresden, theoretical physicist Dr. Prosser, a native of Wichita, was a Summerfield scholar at KU while earning the B.S. degree in engineering physics in 1950. He received the M.S. degree from Kansas in 1954 and the Ph.D. in 1955. He held a National Science Foundation fellowship for two years. His field is nuclear physics and for the past two years he has been a research associate in that field at Rice Institute, Houston, Texas. Dr. Sapp, who earned the Ph.D degree from Ohio State University in 1955, also has been research associate at Rice Institute for two years. Dr. Wright received the Ph.D degree in theoretical physics from Harvard University last month. He also earned the A.B. degree in 1951, and the M.A. in 1952 from Harvard. —Pnoto Bureau THE FEDERAL MILITARY CENTER, ANNEX OF THE COURT OF WARS. THIS PICTURE SHOWING THE FEDERAL MILITARY CENTER'S DESTINATION TO BE A REPRESENTATIVE IN NORTH AMERICA WAS PHOTOGRAPHED BY JOHN HARDY. THE PRESS CORNER BARRETT SHOWS THE CONTEXT OF THE EVENT. (AP) SEIZE AND SEARCH—Members of the Kansas Peace Officers Training School undergo instruction in methods of searching suspects for weapons. Sgt. Richard O. Hooper, Kansas City, Mo., (center) instructs as Don Pickett, Great Bend, practices search methods on his brother, Jim Pickett, Ellinwood. methods on his brother, Jim Pickett, Ellinwood Concerts The final concerts presented by the Midwestern Music and Art Camp will be Sunday, July 28. Guest conductors will be Lloyd Pfautsch, University of Illinois choral music director and Victor Allessandio, conductor of the San Antonio Symphony. Orchestra-Ballet-Chorus Sunday, July 28, 3:30 p.m. Hoch Auditorium Theme Song: Irish Tune from County Derry, Grainger. Orchestra: The Impresario, Overture. Mozart. Ballet and Orchestra: Petite Suite de Concert, Coleridge-Taylor, Choreography by Robert Bell. Gwen De Jong and Ernst De Jong, Guest artists. ry of the Karander Prince Rimsky-Korsakov, Mr. Carney, Conducting. Chorus: The Heavens Are Telling from "The Creation," Haydn, Judy Mayhan, Emporia, soprano; Kent Hirst, Leroy, tenor; Tom Schroeder, Ellinwood, baritone; Calvert Shenk, Osage City, organist; Mr. Krehbliel, Conducting. The Lobster Quadrille from Alice in Wonderland, Fine; The Lamb, George; Let Their Celestial Concerts All Unite from Samson," Handel; Mr. Plausch, Conducting; accompanist: Evelyn Orchestra: Scheherazade, The Story of the Kalander Prince Rimsky-Korsakov, Mr. Carnev, Conducting. Band-Chorus Sunday, July 28, 8:00 p.m. KU Outdoor Theater Theme Song: Irish Tune from County Derry, Grainger. Band: William Tell, Overture, Rossini, Mr. Wilev, Conducting. Chorus: Brazilian Psalm, Berger. Mr. Krehbiel, Conducting; Ave Maria, Bruckner; Riddle Me This-Answer: The Cow, Bergsma; Free At Last, Pfautsch, Mr. Pfautsch, Conducting; O God Our Help in Ages Past, Hatten, Mr. Krehbiel, Conducting. Band: Chorale and Alleluia, Hanson; Psalm, Marcello; Largo and Minuetto from Symphony 88, Haydn; Excerpts from the Manzoni Requiem, Verdi, Mr. Allessandro, Conducting. Announcement of Awards: Dean Thomas Gorton, University School of Fine Arts. Band: Overture 1812, Tschakowsky, Mr. Wilev, Conducting. Theme Song. Planning Starts For $3,000,000 KU Dormitories Preliminary planning and site testing now is underway at the University for the construction of two huge dormitories, each housing 432 students, in hopes that they can be completed by 1959, in time to alleviate the rapidly growing housing problem at KU, Joseph J. Wilson, director of dormitories, said today. Cost of the project will be approximately $3,000,000. Financing will be from gifts, from KU's share of the $1/4-mill statewide dormitory fund levy, and an anticipated $2,400,- 000 loan from the Federal Housing and Home Finance Agency. The two dormitories will be located on "the Daisy field" property of the KU Endowment Association. The hilltop meadow is west of the main campus. It is bounded on the west by Iowa Street, which carries the US 59 by-pass, by 15th Street on the north, by Engel Road on the east, and by the property of Prof. Emil B. Dade on the south. Donald R. Hollis, Kansas City, Kans., has been named associate architect for the project, working under John Brink, state architect of Kansas. Hollis will prepare plans for the unit to be known as Lewis Hall for men and will be responsible for developing the site. Brink's office in Topeka will draft plans for the second hall, which is unnamed. Lewis Hall will be named for the late L. N. Lewis, a Lawrence merchant who made a substantial bequest to KU. Hollis is making a study as to how many halls can be built on the site, how they can best be arranged and how the drives, walks, parking and recreational areas can be laid out. Wilson said use of the second hall will be determined by whether the need for men's or women's housing is greater at the time. The halls will resemble the $1,600,000 Joseph R. Pearson Hall for men on which construction will start next month. The frame will be re-enforced concrete, with block interior walls. Rooms will be 2-man capacity. Each hall will be an elongated "I" with lounges and other common facilities at the center, which is the pattern of Carruth and O'Leary Halls. The office of the state architect has used the pattern as a prototype in planning dormitories at all state schools. The plan permits the housing of enough students to gain efficient operation, Wilson said, but keeps the number in each corridor small enough for desirable living groups. Each building will have seven floors with no basement. The bedrock foundation makes excavation costs prohibitive. Wilson explained. Free Outdoor Movies Tonight The final Friday night movie, "The Golden Twenties" will be shown tonight at 8:00 p.m. east of Robinson Gym. It will be moved inside in case of rain. Weather Mostly cloudy this afternoon. Scattered thunderstorms extreme east tonight and over state this afternoon or evening. Little change in temperature. Low tonight in 60s except 70 southwest and extreme south, High today near 90. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 26, 1957 Japan-U.S. Relations Improving Japanese feeling toward the United States has taken a decided turn for the better. At the same time, there is growing resentment against Soviet Russia. The biggest development in Japanese-American relations was the decision of the United States to let a Japanese court try American Soldier William S. Girard for killing a Japanese woman This was a matter of national pride. Before the final decision came, there was heated talk that the United States was trying to trample on Japanese rights. But there has been another development resulting from the United States' decision to withdraw American combat troops from Japan. The "Yankee Go Home" slogan was long popular with a lot of Japanese people. Now, people in Japan are talking about the millions of dollars which the G. I.'s pour into Japanese economy. It has begun to occur to them also that the withdrawal of the troops jeopardizes the jobs of a lot of Japanese people. Since the troop withdrawn decision was made, about 6,000 Japanese employed at American troop bases have been dismissed. Another 7,000 are expected to lose their jobs by the end of September. About 127,000 Japanese are still employed by the American forces. Of these, about 70,000 work for the ground forces which are to be withdrawn. Provincial and city authorities face the loss of the various payments made by the United States forces for the use of firing ranges, drill grounds and other military establishments. Resentment toward Russia is growing largely because of the refusal of the Soviet government to enter into a fishing agreement. Fishing is a basic part of the Japanese economy. Negotiations for a treaty which would permit Japanese fishing vessels to operate in waters off the Siberian coast have been stalled again and again. To make the situation worse, Russia announced last Saturday that an area of more than 6,000 miles off the naval base of Vladivostok has been closed to foreign ships and planes. There has been a suggestion that the Russian decree was linked up with military security. But the area in question has been effectively closed to foreign shipping and aircraft without any decree. It appears that the decree really was intended to exclude Japanese fishing vessels from an exceedingly valuable fishing grounds. Japanese Foreign Minister Aiichiro Fujiyama announced Tuesday that he proposed to send a strong protest to Moscow. Japanese newspapers are denouncing the Soviet decree as a gross violation of international law. Japanese people never forget, either, that Russia still refuses to account for thousands of prisoners who are believed to be still in slave labor camps nearly 12 years after the end of World War II. Letters... Editor: United Press I am a teacher and resident of California. Recently I spent three days in Lawrence and I received some rather acute perspectives of the city and its University. Might I communicate some of these to you? Everyone has heard about the City Managership training program and the Governmental Research Center in KU's Department of Political Science. Out on our west coast the University's School of Education is being more and more acclaimed. Lawrence, Kan., is a perfect-sized city, between 20-25,000, not counting University students. It is ideally located, 22 miles (via the KTA) from Topeka, the state capital, and 35 miles from one of the nations top twenty cities in population, Kansas City, and its major league baseball, renowned commercial districts, its well known summer theatre, and the Kansas City Philharmonic orchestra. Lawrence has the right amount of industry, witness the new Hallmark and Callery Chemical plants. Lawrence has a top-notch senior high school building and several fine elementary buildings. It has several excellent residential sections and more are being built. And, mainly, it has the state's University. Isn't KU the only one in the U.S. to offer degree work in jewelry work and silversmithing? Isn't that new physical science building considered one of the top in the midwest and the new music and dramatics arts building is probably the best on any American university campus today. Kansas University is recognized far and wide in education. Of course, more in some areas. Basketball, cross-country, and track and field in athletics, for example, with its excellent physical facilities (Allen Field House and Memorial Stadium). Didn't the sports writers back east call the 1957 Kansas basketball team, "America's Greatest Collegiate Road Show?" The KU School of Medicine is noted far and wide for its medical and nursing education. I found out the past few days the KU School of Engineering and Architecture is among the top ten schools in the nation in having engineering members in Who's Who, who graduated from its curricula. Now, to some harder-to-face facts. KU has no social science building! Its several social science departments (economics, sociology, political science, history, psychology, geography, social work) are scattered over the hill-top campus. What, in this day of the H-bomb, could be more important than an adequate facility for the social studies? Kansas does not have adequate housing for its extension diversion! It does not have a continuation center! The home economics department is appalling. Why don't they have their own modern building and be of school stature? The new School of Business tobe-built building looks fine but the department of secretarial training therein looks antiquated. Even though the Kansas School of Engineering is top-rated quality-wise, it surely needs about four new engineering buildings. The KU art department needs a new building. It's too bad they can't have a structure like the dramatics and music folks. The University needs more library space. Say, an addition immediately to the east where that little nondescript building is. I also thought, by surveying the university general catalog, that the department of philosophy is rather weak in its offerings, as are the offerings in the Russian languages. A new department of library science would be important to a school of this size. I also feel that certain departments could be split to a great advantage: sociology and anthropology, speech and drama, physics and astronomy, and mining and metallurgical engineering. By the way, this has little to do with the keenness of this community but I did notice in a barbershop and restaurant downtown that the "odd" magazine, National Republic, was available for waiting readers. I wonder if these folks know that many consider this periodical to be quite subversive. Don't confuse it with the New Republic or the National Review however. But, it's a great university! It is generally recognized nation-wide as the most beautiful campus. I now believe it. May Lawrence and its fine educational institution expand and prosper. This is a fine state, and did you know that the city of Lawrence is, proportionately, the fastest growing city in the state, population-wise? Carl Sampson, Jr. San Jose, Calif. SUMMER SESSION KANSAN (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) Ed. Phone 251 Bus. Phone 378 Editors... Dale Morsch John Eaton Business Mgrs... Colby Rehmert Bill Irvine Reporters... Martha Crosier Janet Juneau Manager... James E. Dykes ...Books ... (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) The Hungarian Revolution (Praeager): A "white book" sponsored by the Congress for Cultural Freedom, this book edited by the American historian Melvin J. Lasky may well be called the testimonial of the free press to Hungary's fight for freedom. Similar to the recent report of the United Nations Special Committee on Hungary, it emphasizes that the uprising was spontaneous, and that its suppression by Soviet armed forces was premeditated aggression. The major part of the book consists of news reports and broadcasts before, during and after the revolution. It includes dramatic stories from major Western news services, newspapers and broadcasts, and reports from the pre-revolutionary Communist press in Hungary, from rebel newspapers and radio stations, as well as from the Communist press. Perhaps some of its most interesting features are the reports published in newspapers of Poland and Yugoslavia—reports written by Communist newsmen who, however much "independence from Moscow" their countries' leaderships were pursuing, were themselves Communists and indoctrinated by the Marxist philosophy. While these men may have had some initial sympathies towards the Hungarian cause, they went to the revolt-torn country filled with skepticism toward what was happening, half-believing Moscow's propaganda about "fascist counter-revolution." But once there, they had no choice but to recognize the true state of affairs. They reported these events to their Communist editors in Belgrade and Warsaw . . . The book covers the period from World War I armistice to the New Deal, slightly more than a decade but in reality a part of the Twenties. The Lawless Decade by Paul Sann (Crown) is the story of the 1920s with all its turbulence, scandals and unrest. George Hornby selected the pictures which go a long way toward making the book attractive to the viewers as well as the readers. Sann's prose is terse, fast-reading and highly condensed. His accounts of the famous scandals and trials of the era bring back to life for a new generation a period which only the oldsters can recall in any detail. Here are the Snyder-Gray trial, the Peaches Browning romance, the Hall-Mills murder, dapper Jimmy Walker, Al Capone, Al Smith, Gertrude Ederle, Lindbergh and the parade of people and events which filled the newspapers of the Jazz Age. ...TV Notes .. Those who have been missing the comical Marion Lorne, who played the school teacher on "Mr. Peepers" for several seasons, will find her back in a regular TV vehicle next fall. She will be with Joan Caulfield in a new situation comedy series, "Sally," for NBC. A new dramatic western series starring Richard ("Medic") Boone will occupy the 9:30 to 10 p.m. Saturday - spot on the CBS network in the fall. "Have Gun—Will Travel" is the title, and Boone, of course, plays as gunfighter. Another TV drama that will make the transition to the stage is "The Broading House," seen last year on the "U. S. Steel Hour." Will Lorin based it on a short story by James Joyce. He will write the version for the stage which the Theater Guild and George Kondolf plan to present next fall. Another filmed series prospect for fall is "The Reluctant Eye," concerning the humorous adventures of a private detective. Dancer Bobby Van has been signed for the leading part. IT'S HERE A "New Look" in Milk Cartons - RED WHITE BLUE AMERICA SUNDAY ALL STAR VITAMIN B RADIOGENIZED HOMOGENIZED Milk "Lawrence Sanitary On Dairy Products Is Like Sterling on Silver" ... Why Sure From LAWRENCE SANITARY MILK AND ICE CREAM CO. HEY-BOB-A-RE-BOB said the little wee bear! —Someone's been driving my hack HEY-BOB-A-RE-BOB Said the mother bear You'll be needing some jack HEY-BOB-A-RE-BOB Said the father bear Here's some jack, go fill up your hack with Milemaster or 5-D Premium B final Gre toni room SERVICE Phone VI 3-4321 Pe Co CITIES "Westab sion Peac FRITZ CO. Th from state nual sas Gov KU Tu "Peace model train Gove a me comr John edito E. CI Reco lishe H Okla Bur disc Th tions peac expl. in su CITIES SERVICE 8th and New Hampshire Page 3 will make "Is the last year will Lori存 y James version Theater plan to spect for e," conv- ventures er Bobby the lead- MADISON —Photo Bureau BLUE BIRD — Rehearsals continue as final preparations are made for "Scenes from Great Plays," to be presented for the last time tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Student Union Ballroom. Shown rehearsing for "Blue Bird," just one of the performances to be presented, are (from left) Lorraine Clark and John Weibe, Lawrence, and Virgil D. Godfrey, assistant professor of Speech and Drama. Peace Officer Discussions Center On Press Relations Summer Session Kansan "With mutual cooperation and trust, good public relations can be established between peace officers and the press," was the conclusion reached Tuesday morning at a general session of the Kansas Peace Officers Training School being held this week at KU. There are 162 peace officers from Kansas and neighboring states registered at the 11th annual school sponsored by the Kansas Peace Officers Association, Governmental Research Center at KU and University Extension. Tuesday morning's session on "Peace Officers and the Press" was moderated by John G. Grumm, training program coordinator of the Governmental Research Center and a member of the program planning committee. Featured speakers were John McCormally, night managing editor of the Hutchinson News, John E. Chandler, publisher of the Holton Recorder, and Angelo Scott, publisher of the Iola Register. Hubert H. Raney of El Reno, Okla., jail inspector for the U. S. Bureau of Prisons and one of the discussion leaders of the training They discussed numerous questions and problems brought up by peace officers in the audience and explained the position of the press in such matters. school, spoke for the open-door policy in relations with the press. "If we make news available to the press in an open-door policy, good press relations will result. If we don't, they think we are hiding something," he said. The Peace Officers Training School will continue through Saturday. It is composed of a basic course for police officers, a police science course and a traffic course. Members of all courses attend joint meetings in the mornings and specialized classes in the afternoons. Special classes for sheriffs and their deputies were held Monday and Tuesday. The peace officers will participate in a target practice session and search and seizure technique during the week. However he explained that it sometimes is advisable to modify the policy—for instance to protect a prisoner from "too much publicity." The staff for the school includes well known Kansas and several noted out-of-state peace officers. Grown Bobcat Is House Pet SALE Boston Pops LP's $266 BELL MUSIC COMPANY 925 Massachusetts Phone V13-2644 DUGWAY PROVING GROUNDS, Utah — (UP) — Even cat-lovers are beginning to shy away from Joel Norgren's favorite pet. Norgren found Kitty, a now nearly grown bobcat, about a year ago and has treated it pretty much like the house variety. The feline occasionally inflicts a scratch, but the patient master insists it's all in fun. Utah entered the Union as the 45th state in 1896. Friday, July 26, 1957 property. One man was killed in Reno County when struck by a roof blown through the air. June Storm Damages Totaled One man driving at 85 miles an hour toward Hutchinson reported that tumbleweeds driven by winds passed his car on the highway, Robb said. TOPEKA—(UP)—A total of 112 violent storms in June, 50 of them tornadoes, caused damages to crops and property in Kansas of $2,121,-075, a summary report by climatologist A. D. Robb said Thursday. Heavy rains caused crop damage in many areas. Doniphan County estimated erosion loss at $25,000. Severe windstorms were widespread and caused an estimated $245,000 in damages to crops and Robb said funnel clouds were seen in all parts of Kansas during June, but out of 50 sighted, only 14 caused damage. One north of Olathe struck a large barn, causing a $20,000 loss. A million-dollar loss was suffered in Smith County June 15 from tornadoes which struck Kensington and Athol, the State Weather Bureau official Robb said. Cattle, hogs, and many chickens were killed by falling buildings but no human beings were injured. A total of 29 halitals caused an estimated $801,000 damage to crops and $15,000 to property. Instruments sensitive enough to detect a white tennis ball at a distance of 1,000 miles are used to search for satellites other than the moon, according to the Illinois Institute of Technology. Twelve states now are using green, rather than white, signs to provide directional information to motorists. Get Your PICNIC SUPPLIES In One Stop Ice Cold Beverages Watermelon Lunch Meat Groceries Crushed Ice Open 7 Days & Evenings AMERICAN ServICE Company 616 Vt. - Ph. VI 3-0350 DON'T BE A SQUARE BE A WHEEL Give Your Clothes INDEPENDENT Core Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 26, 1957 Foreign Students Start Orientation Activities The 6-weeks orientation period for 48 foreign students from 27 different countries began officially Thursday. The students will have an opportunity to become familiar with U. S. customs and culture and classroom procedures of American colleges and universities before entering other schools for the academic year. Friday Following is a schedule of activities for today and the weekend, and a roster of the students participating in the program. 8:30 a.m. Breakfast. Student Union Cafeteria. 9:30-10:15 a.m. Introductory Lecture, "Informality in American Life" by Dr. Eldon Fields 316 Fraser. 10:15 a.m. Objectives of the Orientation Center by Dr. J. A. Burzle, Director, KUOC, 316 Fraser. 11:15 a.m. (Optional) Tour of the Campus and the City of Lawrence. 12:15 p.m. Lunch. English Room, Memorial Union. 2:00-5:00 p.m. Preliminary English tests. Flint Hall, 2nd floor. Detailed information will be issued. (Testing will comprise: 1-Vocabulary. 2-Comprehension and Pronunciation. 3-Composition). 6:00 p.m. Dinner. English Room, Student Union. 8:00 p.m. (Optional) Social Evening. “Get Acquainted” Party. Gertrude Sellard Pearson Hall. The members of KUOC will meet with KU students, KU faculty, and townpeople. Program: Mistress of Ceremonies — Bernice Harvey. Words of Welcome by Mayor John Weatherwax of Lawrence, and Dr. G. B. Smith, Dean of the University. Musical numbers:“Dearest Billie” (a folksong of North Carolina), “The Cuckoo” by Liza Lehman. Miss Joyce Uehrbass, Accompanist Sharon Tripp. Film: “Star 34,” a color film on the history of Kansas. “Orientation at KU,” a film of the 1955 Orientation Center, produced and narrated by Dr. William Conboy, Chairman of the Speech and Drama Department and member of the Orientation Center Staff Saturday 7:15-7:50 a.m. Breakfast, Student Union Cafeteria. 8:00 a.m. Orientation Trip to Kansas City, Missouri. 9:30 a.m. Visit to the William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art. Welcome by Mr. Laurence Sickman, Director of the Gallery. Guided Tour through the Gallery including the Oriental Collection, one of the outstanding collections in the world. 11:45 a.m. Tour of City Hall. 11:15 a.m. Departure for downtown Kansas City. 12:45 a.m. Tour of City Hall. 10:20-12:30 Lunch. Forum Cafeteria. 2:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m. Tour "A" (Optional) "Cinerama Holiday" Missouri Theatre, 14th and Main Streets. The group members may attend a performance of "Cinerama," a new form of film entertainment in three-dimensional approach. The program includes views of the U.S., and Europe, in the visits of a Kansas City couple to Europe and a Swiss couple to the U. S. Ticket Price: $2.00. 2:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m. Tour "B" (Optional) Shopping in Down-town Kansas City. 5:00 p.m. Departure from Kansas City, 13th and Wyandotte streets Music Hall. 6:45 p.m. Dinner, English Room, Memorial Union. 7:30 p.m. (Optional) Ballet Recital by high school students attending the Mid-Western Music and Art Camp. Hoch Auditorium. 7:00-8:00 a.m. Breakfast, Memorial Uhion Cafeteria. Sunday 6:30, 8:00, 9:00 a.m. (Catholic) (Optional) Church services. 10:00, 11:00 n.m. (Protestant) Members are welcome at all services. For details see General Information. 12:30 (noon) Dinner, English Room. Memorial Union. 3:00 p.m. (Optional) Carillon Recital, Memorial Carillon, Ronald Barnes, University Carillonneur. 3:30 p.m. (Optional) Final Concert, Mid-Western Music Camp Orchestra and Chorus. Mr. Lloyd Pfautsch, guest conductor of the Chorus, from the University of Illinois choral department; Mr. Victor Alessandro, conductor of the San Antonio Symphony, guest orchestral conductor. Ballet performance by the Music Camp Ballet Group. Hoch Auditorium . 6:00 p.m. Supper, English Room, Memorial Union. 8:00 p.m. (optional) Final Concert, Mid-Western Music Camp Band and Chorus, Professor Russell Wiley, Conductor. The Band and Chorus perform the complete 1812 Overture, complete with fireworks. K. U. Outdoor Theatre (between Hoch Auditorium and Haworth Hall). The musicians for both these concerts are composed of students from the Mid-Western Music and Art Camp. List of Students Axin, Mr. Cavit, Turkey, Chemistry, University of Ill.; Aung, Mr. Maung Hla, Burma, Pre-Medicine, Fresno State College; Bensaya, Miss Ana Merceda, Venezuela, Education, University of Mich.; Bergersen, Miss Dorothea Kirtsen, Norway, Business Administration, University of Calif.; Castro, Mr. Vincente, Spain, Electrical Engineering, Northwestern University; Chadah, Miss Mohini, Kenya, Education, University of Arizona; Choudhury, Mr. Niredra Chandra, India, Anthropology, Northwestern University; Chowdhury, Mr. Manzur Ahmed, Pakistan, Engineering, Iowa State University; Ennafa, Miss Lekbira, Morocco, English, Mills College; Estudillo Lopez, Mr. Jesus, Mexico, Veterinary Medicine, Colorado A. & M., and Ginman, Mr. Rolf Gustav, Finland, Chemistry, Institute of Paper Chemistry. Hache, Mr. Pedro Antonio, Jr., Dominican Republic, Architecture, University of Texas; Jain, Mr. Hari A public speaking and debate program, under the direction of Dr. Kim Giffin, associate professor of speech and drama, will be presented today at 2 p.m. in Room 306 of the Student Union by students in the Midwestern Music and Art Camp's theater division. Debate Program Set For Today The program, narrated by Lee Baird, a staff member, includes a debate between David Gray and Joan Clark (negative) and Carolyn Shull and Chuck Marvin (affirmative) on the resolution "That the United States should discontinue the testing of nuclear weapons." Included in the program will be an extemporaneous speech by Art Neis, Eudora; an oration by Shirley Mahoney, Great Bend, and an informative speech by Vickie Sue White, Great Bend. The public is invited. Refreshments will be served. Kishore, India, Public Admin., University of S. Cal.; Kodikara, Mr. Shelton Upatissa, Ceylon, International Relations, University of Denver; Koh, Mr. Yoon Suk, Korea, Physics, University of Nebr.; Komai, Mr. Akira, Japan, Linguistics, University of Mich.; Kun, Mr. Maung Maung, Burma, Pre-Medicine, University of Oregon; Kyaw, Mr. Melvin Thein, Burma, Pre-Medicine, University of Denver; Lenskin, Mr. Mario Salas, Mexico, Civil Engineering, Univ. of Washington, and Machimbarrena Monedero, Mr. Jose, Spain, Mining Engineering, New Mexico Institute of Mining & Technology. Mamalakis, Mr. Markos, Greece, Economics, University of Calif; Mifune, Mr. Osamu, Japan, Labor Management, Manhattan College; Motoyama,Mr. Kazno, Japan, Business, Manhattan College; Nabara,Mr. Koichiro, Japan, Chemical Engineering, University of Wisconsin; Nam, Mr. Duck-Woo, Korea, Economics, Oklahoma A. & M.; Naranjo, Mr. Plutarco, Equador, Pharmacology, University of Utah; Natur, Mr. Fahd Salih, Jordan, Agricultural Engineering, University of Calif; Neves, Miss Ineza Ramos, Brazil, Psychology, University of Kansas, (Continued on Page 5) 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 CORRECTION From Tuesday's Ad July Clearance Sale 20-40% Off Sizes 7-15,8-18, $ 1 2 \frac{1}{2} - 2 4 \frac{1}{2} $ Ready-to-wear Balcony DRESSES One Group Separates 1/2 Price Herrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS 803 Mass. Frank L. Brown, professor emeritus of applied mechanics and chairman of the Salvation Army Advisory Board has announced that the Salvation Army Temple, 946 New Hampshire, will be dedicated at 2:30 p.m. Sunday. To Dedicate Temple Sunday The financing of the new building, which cost approximately $69,736.05, has been from existing resources of the Salvation Army, and from public subscription from citizens of Lawrence and vicinity. The building, with a total floor area of about 6000 square feet has a basement containing a large social room, two craft rooms for youth activities, kitchen, furnace room, and two storage closets. The main floor contains a sanctuary with seating for 200, stage, mothers' room, classroom, inner and outer offices, two rest rooms, and three storage closets. The new building will be used for regularly conducted church services, youth activities, social service work,and possible emergencies. The public is invited to the dedication ceremony in the afternoon and to inspect the building. Big City Postmen Will Stop Walkina TOPEKA—(UP)—Postmen in Topeka, Wichita and Kansas City soon will start deliveries on a three-wheeled "mailsters" in residential routes. The weird-looking enclosed contraptions will have a box on the back of the scooter to carry parcel post as well as first class mail. The "mailsters" have been used in the South for some time, but will be used in Kansas for the first time in mid-August. Burma became an independent republic in 1948. TICKETS AND RESERVATIONS FIRST NATIONAL BANK Bill FOR YOUR TRAVEL RESERVATIONS - Airlines-Domestic-Foreign • Steamships - Cruises - Escorted Tours Miss Rose Gieseman, Mgr. The First National Bank Of Lawrence Travel Agency 8th and Mass. Tel.VI 3-0152 How Does Your Car Respond When You Say "Scat"? (With your foot) Does It Cough? Does It Sputter? Does It Hit on 2 $ _{1/2} $ ? Or does it just shiver and say I wish I could — I wish I could — I wish I could Let our factory trained mechanics give it a tune-up before you head home after school "then you'll say," I knew it could — I knew it could — I knew it could Call on Us Today MORGAN-MACK Your Ford Dealer Ford 714 Vermont VI 3-3500 ay social emer- e dedi- ternoon in Tooty soon three-idential TS d con- on the parcel nii. The in the wi will be st time S I pendent Researchers Argue Case For Cancer In Cigarettes WASHINGTON—(UP)—A Cleveland, Ohio, research firm claimed Thursday it has discovered a cancer-producing agent in cigarettes—and a way to eliminate it. ◎ However, Dr. S. Z. Cardon, a chemist for the Rand Development Corp. of Cleveland, said his firm found that a "known cancer-producing agent" called "3,4 benzypyrene" occurred in condensed tars of smoke from cigarettes as well as cigarette paper and cigars. At the same time, Prof. Harry S. N. Greene, head of the pathology department at Yale Medical School, pooh-poohed various medical reports indicating a relationship between smoking and lung cancer. He said such findings are based on statistical studies and that "statistics do not in themselves establish a cause and effect relationship." Cardon and Green made their statements in testimony prepared For example, Greene said, by using statistics alone it might be possible to conclude that since bald-headed men frequently occupy the front row in burlesque houses, "the continued close observation of chorus girls in tights caused loss of hair from the top of the head." for the House Government Operations Subcommittee investigating cigarette filters. Page 8 U. S. Surgeon General Leroy Burney said last week that more research is needed to substantiate "that benzyppyrene of itself is present in sufficient quantities in cigarette tars to cause human lung cancers." Cardon said, however, similar studies made at the Pasteur Institute in France and at the French Tobacco Monoply Laboratories have verified the results of Rand's research. Dr. John R. Heller, director of the National Cancer Institute, was reported earlier this week as saying that 3.4 benzpyrene is known to cause cancer in animals. But he said researchers are "not convinced that the agent is in the paper." He said laboratory tests by his firm showed that treating cigarette paper and tobacco with ammonium sulfamate "sharply reduced" benzypyrene in tars. 3 Chemical Plants Lead Kansas List TOPEKA — (UP) — Three new chemical plants led the list of 36 industries started in Kansas in the first six months this year. John C. Sticher, director of the Kansas Industrial Development Commission, said the rate of new industries was about the same as in the past two years. Wichita, Kansas City and Topeka will have four each to head the list of towns where the 36 industries will give employment to 1,800 persons. Newton has three new ones, while Russell, Lawrence and Blue Rapids each claim two. Summer Session Kansan The chemical plants are the multimillion dollar Du Font 'cellophane plant being built at Tecumseh, the Callery Co. plant at Lawrence, and the Vickers Petroleum Petro-Chemical plant at Potwin. Loot On An Installment Plan OMAHA, Neb. — (UP)—The Nebraska Sheet Metal Co. received a letter from the thief after the firm was burglarized. The letter contained 50 cents and read: "For tools taken." The company figures it will take the burglar some time to finish payment at that rate. The tools taken were valued at $200. Friday, July 26, 1957 Foreign Students Roster (Continued from Page 4) and Oen Som Hwa, Miss Mady, Indonesia, American & English Literature, University of Texas. Sato, Kinichi, Japan, Education, University of Minn.; Schreiber, Mr. Claude, France, Business Administration, University of Calif.; Sharma, Mr. Ram Karan, India, Linguistics, University of Calif.; Song, Mr. Wook, Korea, Education, University of Chicago; Susuki, Miss Toshiko, Japan, English Literature, University of Texas; Tarkkanen, Mr. Ahti Helge Armas, Finland, Medicine, Ohira, Mr. Hiroichi, Japan, Aeronautical Engineering, Purdue University; Ohno, Mr. Masaji, Japan, Chemistry, University of Ill.; Patolot, Mr. Marciano N., Philippines, Education, University of Mich.; Querozola, Miss Maria, Italy, Sociology, University of Chicago; Rioseco, Mr. Eugenio van Cauwaelert, Chile, Chemical Engineering, Rice Institute; Rodalan, Mr. Enrique Alfredo, Educuar, Economics, University of Minn.; Rustadi, Mr. Imaw, Indonesia, Law, University of Wisconsin, and Santa Cruz, Miss Nereida Asuncion, Paraguay, Library Administration, Our Lady of the Lake College. University of Washington; Topcoglu, Mr. Hikmet, Turkey; Engineering, U. S. Agricultural College; Volpini, Mr. Elton Eugenio, Brazil; Library Sciences, University of Denver; Wada, Mrs. Naoka, Japan; Linguistics, University of Texas; Wallgren, Mr. Georg Rabbe, Finland; Medicine, Denver Medical Center, and Win, Mr. Mg Mla, Burma, Pre-Medicine, University of Colo. Katz Co. To Build Biggest Drug Store KANSAS CITY, Mo.—(UP)—The "biggest" drug store in the world will be built at a cost of $1,000,000 at Overland Park, Kan., the Katz Drug Co. said today. The company said the new store (at 75th Street and U. S. Highway 69) will be about twice the size of a Katz store at (40th and Main Streets) Kansas City which the firm has long said is the "world's largest super drug store." Construction of the new store will begin about Nov. 1 and completion will be in late spring, 1958. USE KANSAN WANT ADS From Drive-Ins To Dining Rooms, These Restaurants Offer The Best Food In Lawrence Hamburgers Hot Dogs Bar-B-Q Root Beer Chicken Malts Shrimp J & L Drive-In 11 a.m. - 12 p.m. — 7 days Chicken & Shrimp - 98c Orange Root Beer, Orange Malts, Shakes Steaks Campus Hideaway Pizza Call VI 3-9111 for 15 minute pickup service Hours — 5 to 1 every day "The best hamburgers in town!" 106 N. Park Old Mission Inn 1. Air Conditioned Blue Hills Drive In 1601 East 23rd 1904 Mass. VI 3-9737 Jumbo Deluxe Steak Burgers Foot Long Hot Dogs Tasty Bar-B-Q Burgers — QUICK SPEAKER SERVICE — Hours 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Weekdays BLUE HILLS CITY CENTER Big Buy For the best in burgers & 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. The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. Air Conditioned VI 3-1151 MILITARY CENTER Page 6 Summer Session Kansan 1. Friday, July 26, 1957 Guest Artists To Dance In Camp Ballet Recital Ernst De Jong will be appearing in a slightly different role than the last time he visited KU when he and his wife perform as guest artists at the ballet recital of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp Saturday. De Jong, who was a scholarship student at Oklahoma University from the Union of South Africa, last appeared at KU representing OU in the diving contest at a swimming meet. Both he and his wife, Gwen, were graduated in 1956 from the University of Oklahoma where they majored in art. They are students of Robert E Bell, director of the ballet division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. "Gwen was my student for seven years," Bell said. "De Jong became interested in ballet through her and has been my student for three years. They were married two years ago." De Jongs Will Appear Sunday Mr. and Mrs. De Jong are employed by the art department of an advertising agency in Oklahoma City and were commissioned to do a mural in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of Oklahoma's statehood this year. The couple also will appear at the Camp's symphony orchestra concert Sunday afternoon The ballet recital will be held at 8 p.m. Saturday in Hoch Auditorium. Bell, a former member of the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo, will be completing his third year as director of the ballet division of the camp. For several years he was soloist with the Paris Opera and the Metropolitan Opera in New York. Solists in the recital will be Eugenia K. Hoefflin, Oklahoma City, dancing "Variation from Les Sylphides" by Chopin and "The Maiden and the Nightengale" by Granados; Marilyn Phillips, Oklahoma City, dancing "Oriental Dance" by Ketelby, and Judy Wilburn, Oklahoma City, dancing "Queen of Bohemia" by Chopin. Other numbers on the program will be: "Overture" (Faust) by Gounod, Ellen Ann Breitenbach, LaCrosse, Carolyn Callaway, Orleans, Nebr.; Mary Jean Cowell, St. Louis, Mo.; Elaine Davis, Amarillo, Tex.; Pennie Sue Cathey, Stillwater, Okla.; Mary Ann Clark, Kansas City, Mo.; Joanne Gasser, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Anite Guidry, Pampa, Tex.; Harriett Higgins, Enid, Okla.; Ani Hofress, Pampa Tex.; Carolyn Holcomb, Enid, Okla.; Nina Lucas, St. Louis, Mo.; Ann Madden, Yerington, Nev.; Marilyn Phillips; Margery Lee Rice, Tulsa, Okla.; Judy Ann Smith, Stillwater, Okla., and Gaylean Wells, Carargent, Neb. "Pas De Deum" by Kreisler, Sue Bumpas, Oklahoma City, Okla., and Max Gourley, Waynoke, Oklawa Violin solo Katherine Meredith, Joplin M., KU Fine Arts senior. "Chorale Prelude: Est ist ein Ros Enstspringen" by Brahms, "Fanfare and Chorus" by Bustehude. director Brass Choir Edward Masters, director "Danza Lucumi" by Lecuona, Elaine Davis; Shirley Dickson, Amarillo, Tex.; Cathy Hoeffner, St. Louis, Mo., and Star Polk, Amarillo, Tex. "Parisian Scene: Artist and Models" by Fahrbach, Sandra Bornholdt, LaCrosse, Kas.; Sue Lyn Bumpas; Joanne Gasser; Anita Guidry; Carmelita Hogan, Pampa, Tex.; Roni Klortses, Richmond Heights, Mo.; Mary Ann Leibenderfer, Norman, Okla.; Nina Lucas and Max Gourley. "Warsaw Concerto" by addinsell, Gwen and Ernst De Jong, guest Pro Ball System 'Is The Best Yet' WASHINGTON — (UP) — Harold (Red) Grange, one of football's all-time grants, praised the current setup in professional football Thursday as "the best system that's been worked out yet." Grange and four other gridiron giants were called by the House Anti-Trust Subcommittee to testify on workings of the National Football League. Two present-day players—Chuck Bednarik of the Philadelphia Eagles and Jack Jennings of the Chicago Cardinals—were to testify first. Then the subcommittee planned to hear from Grange, ex-Chicago Bears quarterback Sid Luckman and former Bear Lineman George Connor. Grange, whose exploits at the University of Illinois gained him nationwide fame in the 1920s, played pro ball for the Bears from 1925 through 1934 and then became an assistant coach for the team. He now handles telecasts for college and pro games. Grange was asked what he thought about football's reserve clause. A player signs a one-year contract with a team which then has an option to sign him up a second year. "In all my years in professional football I've never heard a player complain about it." Grange said. The subcommittee is studying bills which would ease the effects of a Supreme Court decision last Feb. 25 placing pro football under the anti-trust laws. artists; Fern Marsh and Helen Graves. nianists. "Acceleration Waltz" by Straus, Cathy Evans, Tulsa, Okla.; Ann Hofesess, and Marilyn Stewart, Oklahoma City, Okla. "Tarentella" by Beaumont, Jane Barr, Hennessey, Okla.; Sandra Bornholdt; Carolyn Callaway; Mary Jean Cowell; Harriett Higgins; Carolyn Holcom; Ann Madden; Star Polk; Gayle Stoneman, El Reno, Okla.; Gaylean Wells and Max Gourley. "Diversitement — II Andante III Allegro" by DeYoung. Brass Choir "Trepak" by Tchaikowsky, Ellen Ann Breitenbach, Belpre, Kas; Pennie Sue Cathey; Wynn Goff, Lawrence; Judy Ann Smith, and James Wilkins, Morrillian, Ark. "Petite Suite De Concert" by Coleridge-Taylor, Gwen and Ernst De Jong, guests artists, with Jane Barr; Sandra Bornholdt; Sue Lyn Bumpas; Phyllis Chewning, Tulsa, Okla.; Shirley Dickson; Cathy Evans; Cathy Effner; Eugenia K. Hoeflin; Carmelta Hogan; Roni Kiortes; Mary Ann Leibenderfer; Nella Nagy, Amarillo, Tex.; Star Polk; Marilyn Stewart; Gayle Stoneman and Judy Wilburn. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results Homemade Homemade Cinnamon Rolls Fresh - delicious PARTY HOUSE E. 23rd St. CAR WASH U Wash 50c We Wash $1.00 - With W.W. $1.25 ED DENNY'S CONOCO 9th & Indiana Summer Theater Is 70 Years Old The so-called Citronella Circuit (nicknamed for a mosquito repellent) began at Peaks Island, Me. in 1887 and now is a network of more than 200 intensive training centers for Brodaway, television and the movies. BOSTON - (UP) - The summer theater movement is 70 years old. The players love it, and so do the customers, in increasing numbers yearly. The summer theater has become the lifeline of experience for youthful thespians who have small chance to break directly into the Broadway theater these years. Neophyte players add to their acting experience by making sets and learning first hand the intricacies of stage, lighting. The young players also get a chance to rub elbows with professionals and appear before the public—and get paid for it 90 in New England New England, where the summer theater began, still is the most important part of the circuit. The Lake Whalom Playhouse at. Fitchberg, Mass., established in 1893, and the Lakewood Theater near Skowhegan, Me., which started about 1900, still are going strong. Latest count shows there are 90 straw-hat theaters in the sixstate region. Box office receipts are expected to top the $2,500,000 mark this summer. The popularity of the summer theater moved southward from Cape Cod into Connecticut and New Jersey and westward into New York and Pennsylvania. Summer theaters also flourished in Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky, North Carolina and are scattered across the country to the West Coast. Summer productions of spectacular Broadway musicals such as "Oklahoma" and "South Pacific" attract almost as much attention in scaled-down hot weather versions as they did originally. Thousands of theater-goers who were unable to get tickets for original productions flock to the summer theaters. New plays are born and others are revived on the straw-hat circuit. TV stars such as Imogene Coca and Faye Emerson use the summer productions to get the feel of playing before live audiences. Man Suffers Catastrophe WEST HARTFORD, Conn.—(UP) —Robert Carey has a better reason than most for hating cats. His new station wagon was smashed when it turned over after Carey swerved to miss a cat that darted into the vehicle's path. New Mark Twain Books May Be Published In Near Future BERKELEY, Calif.—(UF)—A million and a half words from the prolific pen of Mark Twain lie unpublished and untapped in 11 filing cabinets held by the author's estate. But if the plans of Prof. Henry Nash Smith materialize, Twain fans will have to build new shelves for their libraries. There is even a bit more Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn to come. Smith, fourth literary editor of the Twain estate, wants to publish six volumes of the unpublished material. Work has already started on another volume containing documents related to the composition of the Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn books. Edited by Walter Blair of the University of Chicago, it will include two unfinished pieces entitled, "Huck and Tom Among the Indians" and "Tom Sawyer's Conspiracy." In addition, the Harvard University Press will soon publish a book of the 40-year correspondence between Twain and novelist-editor William Dean Howells. All this, despite the fact that Smith and his three predecessors as literary editor of the estate—Albert Bigelow Paine, Bernard de Voto and Dixon Wecter—have already published 19 volumes since Twain's death in 1910. Little Trade Value "It is possible that there is little of commercial trade value left" Smith says, "but there is much that should be made available for historians, scholars and others interested in the life and works of this great American author. You could say we have now reached the scholarly phase of the publication of Twain's works." Smith is professor of English at the University of California, whose press recently published his "Mark Twain of the Enterprise," a volume taken from Twain's writings for the Virginia City, Nev., Territorial Enterprise. The university press said the book sold out within a month of publication. Smith thinks the "scholarly AUTO PARTS AND TIRES New or Used Auto Wrecking And Junk Co. East End of 9th St. VI 3-0956 phase" could include these volumes Additional Volumes 1. Additional notebooks to those already published, including the Mississippi River notebook of 1882. 2. Unpublished literary manuscripts, including sketches and stories, many incomplete. 3. Documents bearing on the "Mysterious Stranger," the book Twain directed withheld until after his death due to its pessimistic philosophy. 4. Twain's business letters dealing with such enterprises as the type-setting invention and the publishing house he backed. 5. A miscellaneous volume of letters which Smith calls a "mop-up," which would include a calendar of all Twain's letters. Sunset Tonight thru Sat. Richard Denning In Naked Paradise Plus John Marla Agar English Flesh & The Spur Sunday - Monday HE CARRIED NO GUNS ...IN THIS WILLOWNESS OF HATE... YET HIS COURAGE FACED GERONIMO'S LAST STANDB TECHNICOLOR CINEMASCOPE WALK the PROUD LAND AUDIE MURPHY ANNE BANKROFT BET CROWLEY Plus 8 Color Cartoons Jay SHOPPB 833 Mass. St. It's Time Again! Our Annual $1.00 Down Lay-A-Way Skirt 'n Sweater Sale Featuring Bobbie Brooks All-Wool Sweaters dyed-to-match sets of Banlon-Orlon-Zephyr Knit or Bulky Knit. Beautiful new Fall colors in matching Flannel or Tweed Skirts Paprika red, cinnamon brown, thistle blue, or carmel tan Sweaters $4.98 - $14.98 Skirts $8.98 - $12.98 Select Yours Now. Pay only $1.00 down on each garment reserved for you in "Will Call" till Sept. 10. CLASSIFIED ADS MISCELLANEOUS SUMMER STUDENT: Take advantage of Special Student Rates on Time, Life & Sports Illustrated Magazines. Save ½ of Regular Rate, Call VI 3-0124. HELP WANTED Page 7 CLERK TYPIST II; general typing milcimage stencils; must be accurate; their typewriters; no discretion- —Stenogrammetry Bureau, 117 Fil- hall Hall. Phone KU 373. LIKE-NEW 31% horsepower Sea King Outboard motor. Used less than 30 hours. bargain price. Cash in Colby Rhmh Rehm HAIR 376 or see Jones Farm Supply, East 23rd St. tt FOR SALE PERMANENTLY located trailer house, 22 foot Star, has 12x12 attached room, modern, natural gas, 30 gallon hot water heater, all metal roof, electric refrigerator apartment size range, 17 inch Tile excellent finish, $900 Senior will sacrifice for $900 cash. Mr.Sand, Drehers Trailer Court (2 miles south of Rusty's) V-3 01564. $^{t}$ PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS TRANSPORTATION WANTED: Ride to Boulder, Colorado o vicinity after finals. Graduate will share expenses, Call John Knightly VI 3-7079. FOR RENT NICE Y FURNISHED all modern basement apartment. Private entrance and private bath. Utilities paid. For a couple of days call Call after 5:30 p.m. 839. Miss. VI 3-2909. APARTMENT attractively furnished, very close to campus. Reasonable rent. Call VI 3-6696. 7-30 Summer Session Kansan VACANCY for male students in a new modern home with large swimming pool and diving board. Private entrance, bath facility. Entrance privileges if desired. Call VI 3-9635. EAST SIDE BEAUTY SHOP 1345 New Jersey For Colored People TINTING, SHAMPOOING, CURLS AND ALL KINDS OF HAIR CONDITIONING Phone VI 3-9630 or VI 3-0650 THREE ROOM furnished apartment on second floor. Three room unfurnished apartment with stove and refrigerator. Each apartment has private bath. One furnished sleeping room with bath. Phone VI 3-117 17 E. 11th. 7-30 LOVELY four room furnished house, for three boys, air conditioned and fire place, close to KU. Also semi-basement furnished apartment for two boys. Private entrance and private bath. Phone VI 3-2315. tf BUSINESS SERVICES FYPIST experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Veqstul, 1935 Barker. Phone VI 3-2001. OPEN ALL SUMMER Flat tops a specialty. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St. Just under the hill. Clarence Adamson Mgr. tf LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary singers, Parakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas-complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Complete storage for baskets. Sure 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. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 3-0350. TXPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED Professional, prompt, and efficient service. Regular rates. INK 1827 Arkansas. VI 3-4573 or VI 3-8660. tf WASHING & IRONING done at a new time. Effective at once to new and old customers. I will be open for business from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. 7 days a week July and August. Maud Smith 420 Indiana VI 3-0535. tf TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Immediate attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka. 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tf Bird on a Branch TV-Radio Service TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Mrs. Leatherwood. VI 3-8931. tf 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 BE WISE-LOOK NEAT. For longer wear-buy repair. Reasonable prices. Burgert's Shoe Service. 1113 Mass. VI 3-0691. tf BIRD TV-Radio Service. Get the best in guaranteed parts, tubes, and service at lowest prices. Lawrence's largest and oldest service shop. Equipped to rejuvenate or replace picture tube in your home. $7.50 cash discount on new picture tubes this month. Phone VI 3-1031, Bowman Radio-TV, 826 Vermont. THE ALPHA CHI OMEGA Western Civilization notes are now available for supplementary study and review. Phone 6:30-7:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday. tt WANTED—Washing, reasonable, reliable service. "Call Tippy." VI 3-8784. 7-26 RENT A SEWING MACHINE only $1.00 per week. Free delivery. White Sewing Machine Dept. 926 Mass. Phone VI 3-2253. Beacon Appliance & Furniture. KING FLOOR SERVICE. Floors laid, sanded, finished. For free estimates, call Harold King. Phone VI 3-2956. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Fast, accurate service for theses, reports and term papers. Regular rates, Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine, Phone VI 3-7654. tf TOM HOPKINS Overloaded With Unwantables? Friday, July 26. 1957 TYPING WANTED—Term papers, theses. Experienced, accurate. Regular rates. Call VI 3-7184. tf TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6857, 1106 La. tf FLATTOPS are the flattest, the magazines the most interesting, and the air conditioning the coolest at ERNIE'S BARBER SHOP. 730 Mass. tf Try Kansan Want Ads Get Results WANTED washing, ironing, baby sitting, also housework two half days. See Mrs Smith 420 Indiana. tf LAUNDRY WASHED. drilled, $0c load Blankets, $1.50. Rugs and upholstery, $120. Cleanup and an hour. Disper service. Pickup and delivery. Slipp'y's. East 23rd, VI 3-8077. CRAFT & HOBBY SUPPLIES Balsa Paint Flock Plastic Kits UNDERWOOD'S 1215 West Sixth OLATHE HIGH Robinson Gym. initials S. S. on V 3-6455. LOST FAST COLOR FILM PROCESSING SCHOOL RING lost in Black stone with the it. Reward. Call Stan. HIXON Studio and Camera Shop VOL. 13, NO. 25 21 Mass VI 3-033 What Is It I Like About the Pit? Cool Atmosphere Quick Lunches Delicious Bar-b-q Fast Carryouts . . . Naturally Southern Pit 1834 Mass. Summer School Enjoy these last Eat at the Hawk's Nest and live, man! Is Just waning Dance Every Wednesday Evening Trail Room Student Union About Complete days in comfort. Sip an ice cold drink and fill up with a hot sandwich Air Conditioned Hawk's Nest Sub-Basement Is Just KU Air Conditioned Hawk's Nest Sub-Basement --- About Completed --- KU Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 26, 1957 Burzle Sees Change As Germany Rebuilds "It's like being in two different worlds," Dr. J. A. Burzle, chairman of the Germanic languages department at KU said referring to his recent visit to Germany. The professor traveled in both the West and East sectors of Berlin. "The split between the sectors was brought home to me," he said. Burzle was one of 15 professors of German in the United States chosen by the West German Government to be its guests for a month's study tour of the Federal Republic and West Berlin. The KU professor was one of three representing mid-western United States. The group returned this month. Burzle has been instrumental in developing a large foreign student scholarship program at KU and in promoting study abroad by students and faculty. He is director of the Orientation Center for foreign students now being held at KU. It will last until Sept. 4. A native of Germany, Burzle had not visited his homeland since 1952. "Berlin was the climax of the trip for me," Burzle said. "It is perhaps the most fascinating in its tremendous rebuilding program because of the international competition. Also it was a chance to see the ideologies of the East and West meet. We could see on one hand the very alive spirit in every way on the West side. On the East side, there was very much of a depressed and barren look." Visits Refugee Camp Visits Refugee Camp The professor toured through the Eastern sector of Berlin by bus from an American mission and visited a refugee camp where persons were asking for asylum in the West. "We saw the fates of peasants and farmers ruined by a stroke of a pen of an Eastern official," Burzle said. "The street cars in the West sector stop at the line dividing the sectors," he said. "It may take an hour to telephone from the West to the East sector because the call goes by a roundabout way rather than directly across the city." "I feel it is of utmost importance to keep Berlin as a picture window of what is going on in the Eastern World," he said. Speaking of the problems of West Berlin Burzle said that they are much the same as those in the United States—problems of overcrowded schools, scarcity of teachers, youth problems and traffic problems. "And they complain of high prices," he added. The West German government sponsored the trip to give the professors "a picture of the Germany of today." "The purpose was accomplished." Burzle said. "We were in touch with the latest developments in German language and literature and dignitaries of government and education." Group Held Conferences With Leaders The group held a number of conferences with German professors, mayors and superintendents of schools. They attending regional conferences of German professors in the Harz Mountains. Among the cities they visited were Bonn, Hanover, Braunschweig, Munich and Frankfort. "The music of Germany at the moment is of sledge hammers, cranes and bulldozers. The country plans to have its building program finished by 1960, even though some cities were destroyed as much as 80 per cent during World War II. All improvements are modern and are making the pictures of German cities aesthetic in design," Burzle said. "Our hosts let us more or less set our schedule so we could spend time with the things that interested us most. The visit was excellently organized, and in the four weeks we saw an overall picture. "I was struck with the gain in material wealth since my visit in WASHINGTON — (UP) — Dr. David D. Rutstein, head of Harvard University's department of preventive medicine, said Wednesday there is a possibility of a major flu epidemic sweeping the nation this fall. Harvard Doctor Fears Flu Plague Rutstein, in an article written for Harper's magazine, said that the mild form of flu which recently broke out in the Far East, and has since spread to the U.S., may become more damaging and widespread with the approach of cool weather. He pointed out that two similarities exist between the Oriental flu and the worldwide epidemic of 1918, which killed more than 300,000 Americans and an estimated 21 to 25 million in the world: —Both were caused by a mutant virus unlike any other and against which no immunity had been built up in the population. -Both started as mild waves in the summer. He said it is "not possible at the moment" to give an "exact answer" as to whether the Oriental flu will burn itself out or is the forerunner of a worldwide plague. But he said the latter possibility should not be overlooked and that plans for fighting such an epidemic should be readied. Correction James Seaver, associate professor of history, was the speaker on "The Dead Sea Scrolls" at the meeting of the Ecumenical Youth Group Friday, instead of William Gilbert, assistant professor of history, as reported in the July 19 issue of the Summer Session Kansas. 1952," he said. "The roads are crowded with traffic and the rebuilding is tremendous. I feel that Germany is the most Americanized country in Europe now and is becoming more so each year." 'Scenes From Great Plays Will Be Presented Tonight "A number of times I heard Germans express the thought that the progress could not have been made without American help. They are very appreciative," Burzle concluded. The theater division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp at KU will complete its part of the six-weeks camp with the presentation of "Scenes from Great Plays" at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Student Union Ballroom. Most members of the cast will be from the rehearsal and performance class of the camp. Three of the scenes will be directed by KU summer school students. The performance is free to the public. John Branigan, Kansas City, Mo. senior will direct the scene from the play he has written, "My First Ten Thousand Years." Barbara Conroy, speech and drama summer student from Valley Center, will direct "Street Scene" by Elmer Rice. "The Importance of Being Earnest" by Oscar Wilde will be directed by DeLynne Humburg, language and arts summer school student from Ness City. Dr. Lewin Goff, director of University Theater, will direct the scenes from "Peter Pan" by James Barry and "Madwoman of Challot" by Giradoux. Dr. Jack Brooking, managing director of the summer camp theater division, will direct a scene from "Blue Bird" by Maurice Maeterlinck. Cast for "The Importance of Being Earnest": Bill Paronto, Kansas City, Mo.; Derrill Peabody, Muscotah; Julie Chipps, Brentwood, Mo.; Gale Lott, St. Joseph, Mo.; Marilyn Miller, Olathe; Katy Wright, Lawrence, and David Ragan, Lawrence. Cast for "Peter Pan": Judy McCoy, Lawrence and Jan Miner, Great Bend. Cast for "Madwoman of Chaillot": Anabelle Bayne, Lawrence; Nancy Blanchard, Winfield; Sharon Dobbins, Lawrence, and Doris Miller, Alma. Cast for "Street Scene": Franz Von Sauer, Lawrence; Bill Paronto, Kansas City, Mo.; Charles Marvin, Lawrence; Delores Harris, Lawrence; Sandra Bornhold, LaCrosse; Joanne Gasser, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Carolyn Holcomb, Enid, Okla., and Harriet Higgins, Enid, Okla. Cast for "Blue Bird": Joan Clark, Alma, Loraine Clark, Lawrence; Terry Connor, Lawrence; Mary Jane Hartzell, Lawrence; and Bette Marie Keele, Edwardsville; Shirley Maloney, Waukon, Iowa; Mike McWilliams, Lawrence; Jo Moore, Boise City, Okla.; Margie Noehl, Greene, Iowa; Tom Quinsey, Lawrence; Jeff Quinsey, Lawrence; Mick Rouse, Wichita; Karen Spradlin, Winfield, and Nancy Reed, Macon, Mo. Cast for "My First Ten Thousand Years": Marilyn Miller, Olathe; Derrill Peabody, Muscotah; Greg Turner, Lawrence; Leslie Bliss, Anthony; Jerry Holt, Lawrence; Julie Chipps, Brentwood, Mo.; Brenda Boyle, Burton; Phyllis Chewning, Tulaa, Okla.; Suzanne Calvin, Lawrence; Phil Harris, Columbus, and Shirley Dickson, Amickar. Tex. Prof Is Appointed Cancer Consultant Dr. Joseph H. Burckhalter, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry at KU, has been appointed a special consultant for the National Cancer Institute and named a member of the chemistry panel of the Cancer Chemotherapy National Service Center of the institute. Dr. Burckhalter will advise the director in the evaluation of applications for funds for cancer research. He will attend a meeting of the panel this week in Bethesda, Md. A member of the KU faculty for 10 years, Dr. Burckhalter previously conducted research for a pharmaceutical manufacturer. He has synthesized several drugs that have been accepted commercially. At KU he developed an instructional and research program leading to the Ph.D. degree in pharmaceutical chemistrv. The National Cancer Institute is a division of the U. S. Public Health Service. One Thing Everyone enjoys is A Subscription to the Daily Kansan Subscribe Now For Next Semester! One Semester $3.00 Available at the Kansan Business Office, Room 111, Flint Hall, Phone VI 3-2700, Ext. 376 KU SUMMER SESSION KANSAN KU 45th Year, No.14 Tuesday, July 30, 1957 LAWRENCE, KANSAS A —Pnoto Bureau SUNNYSIDE BITES THE DUST — Fortyeight apartments in the Sunnyside housing area are being torn down to make way for the new business and economics building. McHugh- Smith Wrecking Co. will complete work by late August. Bids for the new business and economics building have not been let yet. The buildings razed are on the western side. Anthropologists Find Signs Of Ancient Life In Kansas Human occupation dating from about 8,000 B. C. to sometime prior to the Coronado expedition to Kansas has been revealed in Marshall and Pottawatomie counties according to Dr. Carlyle S. Smith, associate professor of anthrology Dr. Smith and a party of 13 persons returned to KU Saturday after eight weeks of salvaging artifacts from ancient Indian sites near Bigelow. The artifacts collected were brought to KU where they will be analyzed by Dr. Smith. "The Blue Valley was a very popular place to live 2,000 to 3,000 years ago," Dr. Smith said. "We found evidence of human occupation dating from about 8,000 B. C. to about 1541, but there was no evidence of intensive occupation until the settlement of Europeans in the area." The most outstanding discovery was half of a clay pot made in the form of a human head. It is the first find of that nature made in Kansas, Dr. Smith said. The artifact relates the Kansas culture with those along the Mississippi River and finds made in Mexico and Central America, Dr Smith said. The KU expedition worked three main sites during the eight weeks of field work beginning early in June. The first sight revealed two different civilizations, centuries apart. From the first two levels, the group found tools made from flint and broken pottery, bones, mussel shells and cracked, burned rocks. The most important find there were several large spear heads and knives of flint. The absence of pottery indicated the second level to be from 2,000 to 3,000 years old. A second site was passed over as not worth investigation. The third site, in Pottawatomie County, the anthropologists found pottery fragments, arrow heads, stone scrapers, and pieces of grinding stones. Much laboratory work will be required to assess the significance of the findings that have been made. Dr. Smith said he probably will not be able to submit a report on the findings for about a year. (Continued on Page 6) Psuedo 'Prince Gets 30 Days Edward L. Woods, alias the Crown Prince of French Equatorial Africa, appeared in the Lawrence City Court Monday morning and was sentenced to 30 days in jail on a vagrancy charge. Woods was hospitalized at Lawrence Memorial Hospital with a kidney ailment when police filed the vagrancy charge against him. The man told a long story of how he was to inherit a vast tribal kingdom in Africa. He had many authentic-looking documents to back up his story. The documents later proved to be false. Some were simply change of address forms and telegrams that he had sent to himself containing fictional material concerning his realm in Africa. Woods admitted that he was born in Maclenny, Florida in 1932. Since June he has traveled throughout the northeastern sections of the United States using the false documents. He said he was coming to Lawrence to give a speech at KU. Later he said he was headed for Winfield, Kan. to speak at a meeting of christian youth. Both stories proved false. Woods first appeared in this area at the Truman Memorial Library at Independence, Mo. There doubt was cast on his story when he introduced himself as "Prince Edward Kaustiour." Weather Kansas -- fair and cooler north. Storms north and central. Today fair and warmer northwest, high today 90s north to near 100 south. Low tonight: 60s northwest to 70s east and south. Kansas UNESCO To Hold Elections The reelection of Miss Anna Reed of Abilene as 1957-58 chairman of the Kansas Commission for UNESCO will be recommended by the nominating committee, it was announced Monday by Wesley Darrow of Hutchinson, chairman of the committee. Miss Reed is the immediate past-president of the Kansas Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs. Other nominees will be: for vice chairman, Dr. John E. King, president of Kansas State Teachers College, Emporia; recording secretary, Miss Velma Hinze, teacher in the Hutchinson public schools; treasurer, Miss Mary R. Williams, teacher in the Seneca public schools, and executive secretary, Clayton M. Crosier, associate professor of civil engineering at KU. Outstanding Students Receive Camp Awards Outstanding students in the various divisions of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp were announced Sunday night during the final concert of the 6-week program on the KU campus. Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts conferred certificates upon the honorees,who were chosen by votes of the instructors. Robert Isle, Jacksonville, IL, received the special award of Phi Mu Alpha, national professional fraternity for men in music. The award is a medal and a $50 scholarship to the school of his choice, and was conferred for his being the boy making the greatest overall contribution to the music division of the camp. Isle played first trumpet in the symphony orchestra, first coronet in the band, and sang tenor in the chorus. Elizabeth Fleming. Larned, received the special Sigma Alpha Iota award, a silver pendant, from the national professional fraternity for women in music, as the girl making the greatest overall contribution to the music division. She played tympani in both the orchestra and band. The outstanding boy and girl awards in the other camp divisions, chosen from among the 556 students from 32 states, were: Mathematics—Mary Gale Schuster, Topeka; and Gilbert D. Chaitin, Philadelphia, Pa. Debate—Carolyn Shull, Lawrence; and David Gray, Lawrence. Drama—Vickie Sue White, Great Bend; and Bill Paronto, Kansas City, Mo. Ballet—Carmelita Hogan, Pampa, Texas; and Max Gourley, Waynoka, Okla. Art—Dottie Leech, Columbia, Mo; and Leland Payton, Sedalia,Mo. Chorus-Judy Mayhan, soprano, Emporia; and Calvert Shenk, tenor and organist, Osage City. Orchestra—Judy Gorton, violin, Lawrence; and Robert Grace, clarinet, Brentwood, Mo. Photo Bureau The band, orchestra, ballet and chorus presented their final concerts with a number of guest artists on the program. Victor Alessandro, conductor of the San Antonio Symphony Orchestra, was guest conductor of the orchestra and Lloyd Paufscht, director of choral music at the University of Illinois, was the chorus guest conductor. [Picture of two men in formal attire shaking hands, with one holding a document.] CONGRATULATIONS—The outstanding girl member of the Mathematics camp demonstration class receives her certificate from Dr. G. Baley Price, director of the Mathematics camp. She is Mary Gayle Schuster, Topeka. Ivask Is Named Assistant Prof George Ivask, who was visiting professor of Russian at KU in the spring of 1956, will return in September as an assistant professor of Russian, the chancellor's office announced today. Dr. Ivask will replace Werner Winter, assistant professor of German, who has accepted a position as assistant professor of linguistics at the University of Texas in Austin. 10 GEORGE IVASK Dr. Ivask now is teaching at Middlebury College in Middlebury, Vt., where he has taught during the summers since 1951. He was a visiting professor at the University of California in Berkeley last spring. In 1950-52 he was a lecturer of Russian at Harvard and in 1954 taught Russian conversation there. Now an American citizen, Dr. Ivask was born in Moscow, Russia, in 1907. He received his high school education in Estonia and was graduate in 1932 with a "jurist" degree from the University of Tartu in Estonia. From 1946 to 1949 he studied at the University of Hamburg in Germany where he majored in Slavic studies. He earned his Ph.D. degree in Slavic languages and literatures in 1955 at Harvard University. Among his many publications are magazine articles, poems, essays, short stories and sections of books. He has been editor in chief of the Russian Literary Review "Opyty" since 1954. Dr. Ivask and his wife will move to Lawrence in early September. Change Announced In Movie Series The film, "Martin Luther" will be shown Wednesday at 2 and 4 p.m. in Room 3, Bailey Hall, instead of "Hemo the Magnificent," as previously scheduled, the Bureau of Visual Instruction said today. "Hemo the Magnificent" was not received because of production difficulties. This will be the last movie of Summer Session Film Features of Fact and Fiction, a film series for faculty and students. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 30, 1957 - Two On The Aisle - For those who survived the Western Civilization Endurance Contest and need a brief respite before the onset of Finalitus, there are some good lantern slides currently being flashed upon the old bed-sheets that hang in the Varsity, Granada, and Jayhawker theatres. The Western fan, in particular, will wallow in delight; horsetracks and gunsmoke comprise this week's movie-going diet. Varsity Though the western half of this twin bill, "The Streets of Laredo," is nearly ten years old, it furnishes sorely-needed support for the main feature, "Shadow in the Window." The "up-and-coming" young stars of "Streets" are such now well-established stalwarts of screendom as William Holden, William Bendix, MacDonald Carey, and Mona Freeman. As a sort of mesquitized Three Musketeers, the boys appear as lovable bankrobbers. They have much esprit de corps, but this disintegrated when it became apparent that the corps in question was that of Miss Freeman. Inadvertently, Bendix and Holden send in their boxtops and become Texas Rangers; this is a sociable organization dedicated to the annexation of Lone Star Lake. The remainder of the story concerns itself with the chase and ultimate capture of their old buddy Carey. The companion feature is the melodramatic account of a policeman's attempt to rescue his hostaged spouse from the clutches of three murderous juvenile delinquents. In the role of the wife, a baggy-eyed Betty Garrett blubbers and bawls her way through many a tirade in trying to rejoin her man Friday, played by another Carey named Phil. However, the really bully part is taken by the Great Profile's most flagrant indiscretion: John Barrymore Jr. As the juvenile gangleader who has murdered Miss Garrett's employer, Barrymore combines all the assets of the clan. He has John Sr.'s paunch and dissipated air, Diana's hair, Lionel's snarl and aguish, and Ethel's voice. In short, he looks like a poochy Presley. That these three combined their dynamic talents effectively was shown by the sustained burst of applause and whistling at the conclusion of the piece. Granada Over the road is to be found an off-beat (i.e. dissonant) cowboy-and-Indian western involving more Indians than cowboys. "Run of the Arrow" is a patriotic catharsis about a Confederate soldier who renounces his citizenship to become a Sioux Indian and continue a personal war with the federal government. Rod Steiger as the rebel with a cause drools quite convincingly in front of Utah's beautiful scenery. He squires and finally squaws a fresh young face called Sarita Montell. A smashing company of supporting players helps the often inarticulate Mr. Steiger; Brian Keith of the television series "Crusader," Ralph Meeker of Broadway fame, and Jay C. Flippen all have important acting tasks in the film. After much tension and several massacres, the Indians (now get this, it's a precedent...) end up victorious! They win the coveted hunting grounds and the U. S. Cavalry slinks away to slap on Band-Aids. The film itself ends rhetorically with Rapid Rodney riding into the sunset with a superimposed shot of Sioux City, Iowa, glowing dimly in the foreground. The title of the picture refers to a picturesque bit of savage tribal custom; a condemned man has the option of trying to outrun an arrow or a bullet or something of the sort. It is really little more than a variant on the William Tell fable, except that in this instance the talented Mr. Steiger poses as the apple. Decision: Heap bloody. Jayhawker All else is tame stuff compared to the king of all shoot-em-ups, "Gunfight at the O.K. Corral." Drink for drink and bullet for bullet, this frontier fable makes all other sagebrush sagas seem like patty-cake. Now we went primarily to see Wyatt Earp. We didn't. But in the interim we saw a fine cast give new sparkle to a well-milked classic. The story studies the relationship between Wyatt the Wowser and the notorious Doc Holliday, drill-happy dentist of the old West. Burt Lancaster as the marshall and Kirk Douglas as a tubercular Holliday make a fine team, both as actors and as raunchy reformers. Offering brilliant support is Jo Van Fleet as Doc's hor de combat, and a rotund Rhonda Fleming as the broad who causes an Earpish Burt to finally turn in his badge. John Ireland as Johnny Ringo leads a long parade of badmen that the Douglas-Lancaster duo meet and gun down. With the rubbery voice of Frankie Laine singing a medley of old Welsh mining songs against the mountainous (?) setting of Dodge City, this collection of stars infuses real life into this long, over-romanticized version of history's greatest bang-bang ball. The showdown comes when Wyatt and his brothers shoot it out with the Clanton gang in the highly appropriate metropolis of Tombstone. To even the odds, Doc takes the Earl clan loyalty oath and one by one Clanton and Co. bite the dust. With shotguns, pistols, trench mortars, and other thermonuclear devices burping death, this small war belches up loads of excitement. Realistically enough, the heros are pretty lousy marksmen, but it is implied that most of the Clantons succumbed to a disease known as shotgun fallout. All in all, the film surpasses its prototype, "High Noon," and respects historical fact by leaving Holliday hacking over a deck of cards and Earp loping into the sunset. Verdict: The paramount pyrotechnical panorama. This marks the end of our summer of eyestrain. It is with no little nostalgia and neuralgia that we divest ourselves of the popcorn fetish and, with tear-dimmed eyes, bid farewell to the cinematic citadels. Viva television! Aloha Ohe, Ohne Wackpa! —Tom Sawyer As a correspondent for the New York Times, Walter Sullivan is covering his third expedition to the Antarctic. Simultaneously with his new trip to the frozen southern continent, McGraw Hill is publishing Sullivan's history of explorations of Antarctica, from the 18th century to the present, Quest for a Continent. ... Books ... Sulivan's engrossing account of man's harrowing adventures on this wasteland continent, which to him seems like another planet, describes the victories and defeats scored in less than 300 years of exploration. Men have gone mad in the long winter night of Artacities. They have lost fingers and toes and eyes in their battle to explore the continent. They have given their lives One of the most dramatic accounts is the story of the tragic battle to the death of the famous Scott expedition in 1903. While Robert F. Scott and his men were dying, Ronald Amundsen made his daring dash to the South Pole. Another striking story is that of Rear Adm. Richard E. Byrd's lonely vigil in the Antarctic wasteland in 1834. Byrd nearly lost his life during the weeks he spent living as a hermit in a little shack to gather important weather data. Sullivan has included in his book a geological description of the frozen continent and detailed accounts of the activities of penguins, seals and whales. . . In a thick book with a formidable title, *Stevling-Diller Dictionary* by Richard N. Gardner (Oxford), international economics is made an engrossing and at times an exciting matter. What's more, the puzzle has been taken out of what the layman usually considers entirely baffling. This is a history of the collaboration of the United States and Great Britain to replace the economic chaos following World War II with a liberal international economic system. Gardner takes the reader through the complex negotiations which created the Bretton Woods institutes, the Anglo-American Loan Agreement, the International Trade Organization and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, without lifting a single cloud of mental fog. Gardner is a young lawyer and economist of considerable scholastic attainments. After taking degrees at Harvard and Yale, he was a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford. The book is his doctorate thesis. TV Notes The first property announced for NBC's new one-hour suspense series, "Crisis," is "Split Second" by Daphne du Maurier. The series, in which Alfred Hitehock will be involved as producer, begins Sept. 9 in the 10 to 11 p.m. spbt. This will give you some idea of the cost of TV shows. The recent play, "A Night of Rain," on Kraft Television Theater" had just three persons in the cast. But there were 78 in the crew necessary to get the show on the air-11 in the control room, 19 on the technical staff, 15 on cameras and microphones, 12 on the physical production and 21 in the stage crew. And, of course, there were 53 office personnel involved who did not have to be present for the actual broadcast. Nothing succeeds like success—or Rin Tin Tin. The sponsor of the filmed adventure series involving this remarkable dog has renewed for two more years, starting next fall. One of the featured players in the syndicated series about submarines. "The Silent Service," is John Mitchum, brother of the movies' Robert Mitchum. SUMMER SESSION KANSAN (Published Tuesdays and Fridays) Ed. Phone 251 Bus. Phone 376 Editors ... Dale Morsch John Eaton Business Mgrs. ... Colby Rehertm Bill Irvine Reporters ... Martha Crosier Janet Juneau Manager ... James E. Dykes MONDAY LUNCHES Seafood Choice Steaks, Chicken Your favorite beverages with dancing DINE ASMITT 23rd & Louisiana When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Section. The ThriftiCheck Scots remind you . . ThriftiChecks are only 7½c DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK 900 Massachusetts "The Home of Friendly Service" IT'S HERE A "New Look" in Milk Cartons • RED • WHITE • BLUE IT'S HERE A "New Look" in Milk Cartons • RED • WHITE • BLUE LAWRENCE Sensing HOMOGENIZED ALL STAR PRESENT A PICTURE OF PRODUCED HOMOGENIZED Milk UPPLY YOUR MILK "Lawrence Sanitary On Dairy Products Is Like Sterling on Silver" ... Why Sure From LAWRENCE SANITARY B A MILK AND ICE CREAM CO. A fore area Mont tre romers NiC Page 2 Broadway Hit To Open At Starlight Monday A smash Broadway hit never before presented in the Kansas City area, "The Pajama Game," opens Monday night at the Starlight Theatre in Swope Park. Starring in the romantic musical comedy are singers Don Cornell and Fran Warren. Second of two record-smashing successes produced by the exciting team of George Abbott, Richard Adler and Jerry Ross (the first to hit Broadway was "Damn Yankees"), the national company of "The Pajama Game" was scheduled to appear in Kansas City last Spring but closed prior to the expected local showing. The musical, which boasted a net profit of over a million dollars after its successful Broadway run and national tour, will run through Sunday at the S. P. GANESHWAR Dr. Kenneth Lucas, assistant instructor of mathematics at KU for the past four years, has joined the staff of the mathematics department at New Mexico A & M College, State College, N. M. Dr. Lucas received his doctorate of philosophy from KU in June. He and his wife, Billie, and their daughter, Glenna, are living at 1101 Humbert in Las Cruces, N.M. Night Work Is Hazardous THREE RIVERS, Mich.—(UP)—J. B. Mikel, secretary-treasurer of a local savings and loan association, will think twice before he decides to work overtime again. Mikel was working alone in his office late one night when a few plaster bits fell to his desk. He looked up and dashed to safety under a nearby counter while the ceiling collapsed, smashing typewriters and covering the floor with a foot of rubble. open air theater with curtain time at 8:15 o'clock. Cornell is making his legitimate theater debut in his role as Sid, plant superintendent in a Midwestern pajama factory. One of the few recording stars to have sold over a million copies, each of six different recordings, Cornell recently returned from a 17-day tour of Australia during which he played to nearly 30,000 people each night. Starlight officials are highly gratified to have been able to sign Miss Warren in the role of Babe Williams, a grievance committee of one. The tiny singer with the powerful voice played the role in the national company for 16 months. Spoofing both management and labor, "The Pajama Game" tells the story of the lives and loves, as well as the intrigue, between workers and their bosses. Supporting the stars is a strong cast which includes dancers Neile Adams, Colee Worth, Stanley Prager, Justine Johnson, Lu Leonard, and Joseph Maculay. Miss Adams recently completed the movie "This Could Be The Night." Prior to her motion picture work, she had portrayed the secretary, Gladys, in the cast of the Broadway production of "The Pajama Game." Only Summer Performance Colee Worth made his Starlight debut in 1983 in "New Moon" and "Kiss Me Kate." A regular at the New York City Opera, his portrayal of a time study man brings on the efficiency expert's anthem, "Think Of The Time I Save." "I was so disappointed when we stopped the tour before opening in Kansas City," she said. "That's why I signed to do it here this summer." This is her only summer stock appearance this season. Prager Originated Role Prager plays the president of the union who has his charges' interests at heart, especially when they're girl-type workers. Prager originated the role on Broadway. Justine Johnston and Lu Leonard as two of the workers, and Joseph Maculay as the boss, raise havoc throughout the plant, and the whole show makes a sitdown strike over wages seem the next thing to a strawberry festival. Based on the Richard Bissell novel, "7½ Cents," the book for the musical was written by Bissell and Abbott. The score by Adler and Ross includes the hit numbers, "Hey There," "Steam Heat," and "Hernando's Hideaway" as well as the tunes "I'm Not At All In Love," "A New Town Is A Blue Town" TICKETS AND RESERVATIONS FIRST NATIONAL BANK Bien FOR YOUR TRAVEL RESERVATIONS - Airlines-Domestic-Foreign - Steamships - Ticketing - Cruises - Escorted Tours Miss Rose Gieseman, Mar. The First National Bank Of Lawrence Travel Agency 8th and Mass. Tel. VI 3-0152 19 Kansans Are In Award Finals NEW YORK—(UP) — Nineteen Kansas youngsters have been named finalists in a nation-wide college scholarship program sponsored by Fruit of the Loom Socks, a division of Chester H. Roth Co., Inc., New York. The 19, ranging in age from 3 to 15 years, were selected from a field of four million candidates. Five four-year scholarships winners will be named from a list of 1,105 remaining finalists, according to Merwin J. Joseph, foundation president. Scholarship winners will be named on the recommendation of local civic leaders and on the basis of personal and scholastic achievements. The program is designed to prepare promising youngsters for educated leadership in all areas of American life. Tuesday, July 30; 1967 Wrong Number Really Right BAY CITY, Mich. — (UP) — Mrs. Robert E. Treece made an error but not a mistake when she awoke at night and smelled smoke. She decided to call her husband who works the nightshift for a manufacturing company, but got the police instead. The police dispatched the fire department. Mayor-Council Government Remains Basic Kansas Form The mayor-council plan of government, employed by 508 cities, remains the basic type of municipal government in Kansas, reports the KU Governmental Research Center in a recent publication, Forms of City Government in Kansas. Until 1907 the mayor-council form was the only governmental system available for Kansas cities. Since that date, Kansas law has provided for three other types: commission, commission-manager, and mayor-council-manager. ciliman receives an income that makes it possible for him to devote full time to the job. In smaller Kansas cities, state law provides that the mayor and councilmen may not receive salaries in excess of $100 per year. In Kansas cities using the mayor-council plan, the mayor and councilmen are elected for two year terms. The mayor as the chief administrative officer, has the power to appoint and remove non-elective city officials, with consent of the council. The mayor also exercises a qualified veto over the acts of the council. The council is authorized to pass ordinances necessary for the care, management, and control of the city, its property, and its finances. Although the salaries of mayors and councilmen differ throughout Kansas cities, no mayor or coun- The actual division of powers and duties between the mayor and council may vary greatly from city to city. In some cities the mayor may be the principal moving force of the city government because the council ratifies all his recommendations. In other cities the council either as a group or through committees may assume the dominant role in city administration. Minnesota Farm Land Up ST. PAUL - (UP) - Minnesota farm land is worth an average of $126 an acre, according to Philip M. Raup, agricultural economist at the University of Minnesota. He said the price jumped an average of five dollars an acre last year. Land values increased seven per cent each year in 1954 and 1955. Where Quality Is Always First 10% discount for cash & carry dry cleaning ACME BACHELOR LAUNDRY and Dry Cleaners 1109 Mass.- Dial VI 3-5155 Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 30, 1957 State, National, International News Anderson Takes Over As Treasury Secretary WASHINGTON—(UP)—Robert B. Anderson Monday officially became the nation's 54th Secretary of the Treasury. The former Navy Secretary stepped into the shoes of Treasury Secretary George M. Humphrey as the nation experienced record prosperity and the Democrats increased their attacks on the administration's money policies. Before the 11 a.m. ceremonies, the Senate Finance Committee resumed its investigation of the nation's financial structure by summoning Treasury Undersecretary Randolph Burgess. He faced tough Democratic questioning on the Treasury Department's decision last week to refinance part of the huge national debt at 4 per cent interest—the highest interest rate offered in a quarter century. Anderson at confirmation hearings before Senators, hinted he will chart his own course. He made clear he is not irrevocably tied to the tight money policy which caused Humphrey's major headaches. But he said that is in the wait-and-see future. The 47-year-old Texan did emphasize that his final accounting will be to the people. "I have made no commitments; I have been asked for none," he said, "and I would feel under no obligation to anyone, except to the people, in the discharge of my duties." Anderson isn't new to money. He also had managed the $300,-000,000 Waggoner estate which covers six Texas counties and deals in oil, cattle, etc. He was a boy wonder from Burleson who graduated from law school and was elected to the state legislature on the same day—his 21st birthday. Between his Navy job and his new post he was board chairman of Ventures Ltd., a Canadian mining and investment firm. GMC Agrees To Auditing WASHINGTON—(UP)—General Motors Corp., reversing an earlier policy, agreed Monday to let government auditors see its books on all government contracts, regardless of whether performance has been completed. GM President Harlow H. Curtice announced the decision in a telegram to Rep. F. Edward Herbert (D-La.) chairman of a House Armed Services Investigation Subcommittee. Herbert had threatened to use a subpoena if necessary to open the firm's records. Curtice said he had not previously known of the issue, which arose when the firm's Cadillac division barred General Accounting Office auditors from its records on a tank contract under which work was being performed. GAO said the firm agreed then to open the contract to audit only after the work was finished. Herbert, making the Curtice telegram public, said the subcommittee was dropping plans to call Curtice for testimony. BARSTOW, Calif. — (UP) — An insurance investigator reportedly has handed the FBI "new evidence" indicating the possibility that dynamite hay have caused the mystery blast aboard a Western airliner. Evidence Given In Airliner Death A heavily-insured passenger was lost 10,000 feet over the California desert in the explosion. The investigator, who identified himself as with one of the insurance companies probing the incident, disclosed Sunday that he had uncovered the evidence and turned his findings over to the FBI. FBI agents refused to confirm or deny the report. The FBI already had entered the probe to determine if federal laws against setting off explosives aboard a plane may have been violated by Saul F. Binstock, 62, retired Canoga Park, Calif., iieweler. MILL VALLEY, Calif. — (UP) — Funeral services were held the Monday for Dr. John Earl Baker, the "Hoover of China," who died at his home Saturday at the age of 76. Binstock's body was found in the desert Friday, the day after the explosion ripped a hole in a Convair plane carrying 12 other passengers and three crewmen. The plane managed to make an emergency landing at George Air Force Base despite the hole. Binstock had taken out two flight policies totaling $125,000 before leaving Burbank, Calif., for Las Vegas, Nev. He was returning from the gambling resort when the blast took place in the lavatory of the plane. In the years between, Baker earned the name "Hoover of China" for his service in famine relief. He directed the Red Cross in China during the 1920's. Rural Reconstruction in Formosa, a post to which former president Truman appointed him in 1948. 'The Hoover Of China Dies' The FBI confirmed Saturday that an unexploded blasting cap was found in the lavatory of the plane, along with what appeared to be burned toilet tissue. Binstock reportedly had entered the lavatory shortly after the Los Angeles bound airliner took off from Las Vegas. His last service to China was on the Joint Commission on It takes approximately seven years for cultured pearls to develop. They are made by introducing an irritant inside the shells of oysters. For 34 years Baker was a key figure in relief and industrial programs in China. He first served in that country as adviser to the Ministry of Communications in 1916. He also served as chief adviser for the Ministry of Railways, manager of the Chinese-American wheat syndicate and Inspector-General of the Burma Road. Britain's R.A.F.Sends Jets Against Rebels In Oman SHARJA, Trucial Oman—(UP)—Britain's Royal Air Force sent 10 rocket-laden Venom Jets against Rebel fortresses Monday ending a two-day lull in the battle of Oman. Traps Thief With Golf Club INDIANAPOLIS-(UP)—An imaginative service station attendant captured a man who had just held him up by grabbing a golf club from his car and pretending it was a rifle. The surprised bandit, unable to tell the difference in the darkness, climbed meekly down from a rooftop and surrendered to the attendant and a police officer who had arrived just as the bandit learned the truth. Monday's primary target was the fortress of Birkat, five miles west of Izki in Theoani interior. The R.A.F. said warning leaflets were dropped in the area in the past 48 hours. The renewed fighter strikes underlined British determination to back up the beleaguered Sultan of Muscat and Oman despite condemnation from Russia and some Arab capitals. Today's wave of jets comprised the largest single attack since the R.A.F. started hammering the dug-in Rebel forces led by the Imam of Oman. The highlanders were reinforced from Kenya and East Africa. And Monday for the first time airmen from Kenya went into battle. (In Beirut, Lebanon, a spokesman for the Sultan said 200 rebellious tribesmen are "cornered in a mountainous region and troops are encircling them...the rest of the country is enjoying total peace.") British ground troops—the Cameron Highlanders — simultaneously built up their garrison in Buraiimi Oasis where the Sultan's own army was preparing for an infantry assault on the Rebel-held territory. CAR WASH Birkat is a big square-shaped fortress with two towers. Rebels hung out the Sultan of Oman's flag during the weekend in an attempt to prevent further attack. There Is Only One Drive-In In Town We Wash $1.00 - With W.W. $1.25 U Wash 50c ED DENNY'S CONOCO Where you can make an order over a speaker and have your food brought to your car. It's 9th & Indiana Dixon's DRIVE-IN 2500 W. 6th Just West of Turnpike Junction Don't Forget... You'll want a Subscription to next semester's UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TO KEEP UP WITH CAMPUS NEWS! ONE SEMESTER ___ $3.00 FULL YEAR ... $4.50 Subscribe NOW! Kansan Business Office, Journalism Building X sent loading on to con- shaped beebels man's at- k. 4-Day Gas Service School To Stress Education, Safety Page 5 Liquefied Petroleum Gas service men from Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Missouri will arrive Wednesday to attend a four-day school. The conference is sponsored by the central district of the L.P. Gas Association and University Extension. The program has been planned with the cooperation of the education and safety committee of the association. Among guest speakers at the school will be Dale Gaston, deputy state fire marshal, Topeka; Paul Witt of the bureau of mines, health and safety of district "G", Dallas, Tex.; Henry Wieckman, Skelgas division of Skelly Oil Co., Kansas City Mo., and James R. Shay of Hartford Accident and Indemnity Co., Wichita. Others will be Harry Kaye of Bastain-Blessing Co., Kansas City, Mo.; Norman D Partridge of William Wallace Co., Independence, Mo.; W. C. Teghtmeyer of Minneapolis - Honeywell Regulator Co., Kansas City, Mo., and R. C. Allen and Jerry Rapp of General Controls Co., Kansas City, Mo. Topics of study will include installations, regulators, piping, venting and controls. Special talks will be given on "Safety on the Job and on the Road." "The Service Man and the Customer," and "Magic of Fire." A "live fire demonstration" will be held Thursday night. The school will end Saturday with a graduation luncheon and presentation of certificates. Members of the school planning committee are Wieckman, Tom Akin, Central LP. Gas Service, Lawrence; Ed Souder, Tri-County Refrigeration, Manhattan; Dan Dalke, Dalke's Propane & Butane Service, Moundridge; Floyd Ricker, Garden City Co-op Equity Exchange, Garden City, and Ralph Johnson, Sterling Butane Co., Sterling. Thief Was Not Hungry MONON, Ind. — (UP) — Authorities are looking for a "vegetarian" who broke into the Monon locker plant here. The thief disregarded hundreds of pounds of choice meat cuts and escaped with a sheet of three-cent postage stamps. MANHATTAN—(UP)—Bids will be taken today for a new $1,900,000 home economics building at Kansas State College. Bids Open Today On KSC Building The structure will be called Margaret Justin Hall in honor of the woman who headed home economics instruction at K-State from 1923-54. The building will be three stories high, of native limestone, and will be air-conditioned. Work is to start 30 days after the contract is awarded. Construction will take about two years. Included in the facilities will be 28 teaching laboratories, 23 research laboratories and 8 classrooms. DETROIT—(UP)—Police spotted Roger Young, 22, breaking into a service station, gave chase when he tried to escape, and fired three shots as he disappeared. They watched a car parked near the gas station and arrested him when he appeared at the car 30 minutes later. A search of his pockets revealed a letter from the Detroit Police Department notifying him to take his written examination to become a policeman. Thief Has Conflictina Aims USE KANSAN WANT ADS Tuesday, July 30, 1957 Summer Session Kansan Chicago School Seeks Talent Through TV Writing Contest An intensive search for young writers who believe they have fresh, creative ideas for television is being launched today by Columbia College of Chicago, one of the oldest colleges in the country to specialize in communication arts education. The first contest entitled "What's Your TV Idea?" is open to anyone 25 years or younger who is not employed by a broadcasting station. Application blanks with detailed instructions may be obtained by writing to TV IDEA, Columbia College, 207 Wabash Avenue, Chicago 4, Illinois. All entries must be in by October 38, 1957 to be eligible for judging. Contestants may enter any type of program material suitable for presentation on television. Subject matter is unlimited, and the emphasis is placed on originality of thought and creative imagination applied to an already existing type of program such as a dramatic show, a quiz program or even a commercial on a real or made-up product. Or contestants may submit fully developed ideas for an entirely new kind of show. For the best entry, a prize of a one hundred dollar U. S. Savings Bond is offered. In addition, the winning idea will be produced by the Television Workshop of Columbia College through its closed circuit TV facilities, and presented to an audience composed of people most interested in the results. Together with the prize winner, other meritorious entries will be submitted to television and advertising agency executives. "All authoritative opinion in the field of television has emphasized repeatedly that the industry's most urgent need lies in the direction of creative, imaginative ideas and writing," states Daniel Howard, dean of students at Columbia College. "We believe that such talent exists; and we hope through these contests to discover the work of a number of talented unknowns. From Drive-Ins To Dining Rooms, These Restaurants Offer The Best Food In Lawrence Hamburgers Hot Dogs Bar-B-Q Root Beer Chicken Malts Shrimp A Orange J & L Drive-In Chicken & Shrimp - 98c Root Beer, Orange Malts, Shakes 11 a.m. - 12 p.m. — 7 days Steaks Campus Hideaway Pizza Pizza Call VI 3-9111 for 15 minute pickup service Hours — 5 to 1 every day 106 N. Park Old Mission Inn "The best hamburgers in town!" [Image of a group of people dancing together in a room with dim lighting.] Air Conditioned 1904 Mass. VI 3-9737 Blue Hills Drive In 1601 East 23rd Jumbo Deluxe Steak Burgers Foot Long Hot Dogs Tasty Bar-B-Q Burgers QUICK SPEAKER SERVICE Hours 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Weekdays BLUE HILLS STOCK CALL Big Buy Highway 10 & 59—Car Service Only Weekdays 11 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. Fridays & Saturdays 'till 1:00 a.m. For the best in burgers & malts... Before the show & after the game The Castle Tea Room Air Conditioned 1307 Mass. VI 3-1151 A Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 30, 1957 NATIONAL BARBELLE THEATRE Photo Bureau GUEST ARTISTS—Gwen and Ernst Do Jong of Oklahoma City, Okla. danced as guest artists in the ballet recital of the Midwestern Music and Art camp Saturday night in Hoch Auditorium. Both dancers are 1956 graduates of the University of Oklahoma, where they majored in art. Guatemalan Assassin Hoped To Restore Pro-Communist GUATEMALA CITY—(UP)—Guatemalan authorities said Monday the Communist guard who assassinated President Carlos Castillo Armas Friday hoped his death would restore pro-Communist Ex-President Juan J. Arevalo to power. They published excerpts from a propaganda-loaded diary kept by the killer which showed him to be an avid fan of Radio Moscow. Grieving men, women and children by the thousands flocked to Guatemala's "White House" Monday to pay their last respects to the slain president, who skyrocketed from obscurity to power to death in three short years. Not even heavy rains halted the sombre procession of mourners who filed past the bier in the presidential palace where Castillo's body lay, attested in a colonel's uniform with the presidential sash draped across the chest. Inside the palace, a small candle burns on the spot where the president fell. Underneath it is a furrow ploughed in the floor by the second of the two bullets that took Castillo's life while his wife looked on in horror. Vice President Luis A. Gonzales Lopez, who took over the presidency after Castillo was slain, announced at once that elections for a new president would be held within four months. The killer, Romeo Vasquez Sanchez, took his own life a minute or two after he shot the president, when he found that loyal guards attracted by the sound of the shots had cut off his escape. Terrill's Fashion Clearance Sale Dresses ---- Reduced 40% to 50% Blouses Reg. Price 3.98 --- Now 2.50 Reg. Price 2.98 --- Now 2.00 Swimsuits ... 20% Off All Sales Final - Please terrill's LAWRENCE KANSAS 803 Mass. VI 3-2241 Confidential Libel Trial Postponed HOLLYWOOD — (UP) — A postponement until Friday was granted Monday in the criminal libel trial of two representatives of Confidential Magazine as several Hollywood celebrities including Walter Pidgeon and Corrine Calvert appeared in court. The delay was sought by defense attorneys for Fred and Marjorie Meade. The attorney said those celebrities subpenaed also included Lana Turner, Gary Cooper and many others. Actor and ex-fighter Buddy Baer and Miss Calvert's husband, actor Jeffrey Stone, also showed up today in response to the defense subpenas. "I don't know why I'm here," Pidgeon told reporters. "I got a subpena, so I came down here." (Continued from Page 1) The defense said it called the celebrities to try to establish the truth of stories in the gossip magazine, but the state called the action "a reign of terror." A low-cost stabilizer_of gravel and dirt roads is bing made from wood chips. It is an amber liquid resulting when wood chips are processed into pulp for paper making. "It takes about twice as long to analyze the material as it does to dig it," Dr. Smith said. Anthropologists Find Signs Accompanying Dr. Smith on the trip were Alfred E. Johnson, Ellsworth; David A. Horr, Lawrence, and Charles E. Eyman, Wichita, all of whom received A. B. Degrees in anthropology at the June Commencement. Giants Rest After Iniuries BURLINGTON, Vt.—(UP) — Ron Nery, Rookie tackle from Kansas State suffered a broken bone in his hand and Emel Tunnell, defensive back who holds the national football league record for interceptions, sprained his right ankle during the New York Giants' two-hour Saturday scrimmage. The Giants rested Sunday after working twice daily for 10 days. USE KANSAN WANT ADS Bring Your Group Club - Party Call VI 3-8791 or VI 3-2828 for reservations PARTY HOUSE East 23rd St. Also with the group were Maria Wille, Costa Rica graduate student, Peter M. Gardner, Osawatomie junior; Barbara Richards, Hays junior, and Ehrhard Bahr, Germany graduate student. Richard Fisher, a member of the Science Field Club at Wyandotte "High School, Kansas City, Kan.; Vladimir Markotic, graduate student at Harvard University from Yugoslavia, and Joan Seibert, a student at the University of California at Los Angeles. FAST COLOR FILM PROCESSING HIXON Studio and Camera Shop 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 There's a Secret ... to looking fresh and neat on these hot days! This Fellow's Secret M. K. M. is having his sport shirts hand finished Sanitone Dry Cleaned and his slacks at 100 1 [ Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners Call VI 3-3711 "You'll Be Glad You Did" 7 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS MISCELLANEOUS SUMMER STUDENT; Take advantage of Special Student Rates on Time, Life & Sports Illustrated Magazines. Save $ \frac{1}{2} $ of Regular Rate. Call VI 3-0124. HELP WANTED FOR SALE CLEKER TYPIST II; general typing, minilogue stencils; must be accurate; letter-writers; no dictation—Stenographic Bureau, 117. Flat Hhone. Phone KU 373. LIKE-NEW 31% horsepower Sea King Outboard motor. Used less than 30 hours. Outboard motor. Used less than 30 hours. Rehertm at KU 376 or see motor at Jones Farm Supply. East 23rd St. **St.** PERMANENTLY located trailer house. 22 foot Star, has 12x12 attached room, modern, natural gas, 30 gallon hot water heater, all metal roof, electric refrigerator apartment size range, window desk, and desk, etc. Senior will sacrifice for $$00 cash. Mr. Sand, Drehers Trailer Court (2 miles south of Rusty's) VI 3-1056, tf LOST OLATHE HIGH SCHOOL RING lost in Robinson Gym. Black stone with the initials S. S. on it. Reward. Call Stan, VI 3-6455. tt NICELY FURNISHED all modern basement apartment. Private entrance and balcony. Free parking. All boys - adults only. Call after 5:30 p.m. 839 Miss, VI 3-2999. tf FOR RENT LOVELY four room furnished house, for three boys, air conditioned and fire place, close to KU. Also semi-basement furnished apartment for two boys. Private entrance and private bath. Phone VI 3-2315. tf THREE ROOM furnished apartment on second floor. Three room unfurnished apartement with stove and refrigerator. Each apartment has private bath. One furnished sleeping room with bath. Phone VI 3-117 17 E. 11th. 7-30 EAST SIDE BEAUTY SHOP 1345 New Jersey For Colored People TINTING, SHAMPOOING, CURLS AND ALL KINDS OF HAIR CONDITIONING Phone VI 3-9630 for VI 3-0650 VACANCY for male students in a new modern home with large swimming pool and diving board. Private entrance, bath facility. Private privileges if desired. Call VI 3-9635. LARGE SINGLE ROOM for young man. No drinking or smoking. See first house south of campus. 1616 Indiana. tf FURNISHED attractive and clean one room kitchenette apartment. First floor, close to town and KU. Ideal for one student. Phone VI 3-8514 or VI 3-7656. APARTMENT attractively furnished, very close to campus. Reasonable rent. Call VI 3-6696. 7-30 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPIF experienced in theses, term papers and reports. Neat, accurate and prompt. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Phone VI 3-2001.. tf OPEN ALL SUMMER Flat tops a speciality. KU Barbershop 411 W. 14th St. Just under the hilf. Clarence Adamson Mgr. tfr EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Former secretary will type themes, term papers, and theses. Fast accurate service at regular rates. Call VI 3-8568. tf LIVE GIFTS - Nightingale Canary singers, Pearakeets, all colors, from sunny Texas-complete stock of cages and stands. Fresh foods and toys. Outdoor activities, etc. Sure we have alligators, fish, turtles, chameleons, hampsters, etc. Everything in the pet field. Grant's Gift and Gift Shop 1218 Connecticut. Phone VI 3-2921. TYPING OF ALL KINDS SOLICITED Professional, prompt, and efficient service. Regular rates. INK 1827 Arkansas, VI 3-4573 or VI 3-8660. tf BEVERAGES - All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies 6th and 8th Vermont. Phone t 9-0350. Tuesday, July 30. 1957 WASHING & IRONING done at a new time. Effective at once to new and old customers. I will be open for business from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. 7 days a week July and August. Maud Smith 420 Indiana VI 3-0535. tf TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Important attention; fast accurate service. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Ph. VI 3-1240. tt TYPIST: Make reservations now to have theses, term papers, etc. typed by experienced typist. Mrs. Leatherwood, VI 3-8931. tf TVVRadio Service. Get the best in guaranteed parts, tubes, and service at lowest prices. Lawrence's largest and oldest service shop. Equipped to rejuvenate or replace picture tube in your home. $7.50 cash discount on new picture tubes this month. Phone VI 3-1031, Bowman Radio-TV. 826 Vermont. THE ALPHA CHI OMEGA Western Civilization notes are now available for our library study and review. Phone VI 3-839-7-30:38. Monday through Thursday. tf KING FLOOR SERVICE. Floors laid, sanded, finished. For free estimates, call Harold King. Phone VI 3-2956. tf LAUNDRY WASHED. dried, 50c load. Blankets, $1.50. Rugs and upholstery cleaned. Set service on an hour. Distance served. Pickup and delivery. Smiffy's. East. 23rd. VI 3-8077. RENT A SEWING MACHINE only $1.00 per week. Free delivery. White Sewing Machine Dept. 936 Mass. Phone VI 3-2253. Beacon Appliance & Furniture. BE WISE-LOOK NEAT. For longer wear-buy repair. Reasonable prices. Burgert's Shoe Service. 1113 Mass. VI 3- 0691. tf TYPING WANTED—Term papers, theses. Experienced, accurate. Regular rates. Call VI 3-7184. tt TAILORING, DRESS MAKING, alterations on men's and women's clothes. Also drapes and slip covering. Call VI 3-6657, 1106 La. ff FLATTOPS are the flattest, the magazines the most interesting, and the air conditioning the coolest at ERNIE'S BARBER SHOP, 730 Mass. WANTED washing, ironing, baby sitting, also housework two half days. See Mrs. Smith 420 Indiana. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Fast, accurate service for these, reports and term papers. Regular rates, Mrs. Barlow, 606 Maine, Phone VI 3-7654. tf BIRD TV-Radio Service 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 : LARRY CRUM MUSIC and RECORD CENTER 12 East Ninth V1 3-8678 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Open Evenings 'Til 9 o'clock AUTO PARTS AND TIRES MISCHA ENTRE LES DUFLIERS New or Used Overloaded With Unwantables? - Personalized Mugs and Ceramics Auto Wrecking And Junk Co. East End of 9th St. VI 3-0956 L. G. BALFOUR CO. Fraternity Jewelers Try Kansan Want Ads— Get Results - Fraternity Badges—Rings—Novelties 411 West 14th Al Lauter Phone VI 3-1571 - Trophies and Awards PAT READ 445 Tennessee Street - INDIAN HANDICRAFT - SILVER JEWELRY - NAVAJO RUGS "A VERITABLE MUSEUM" Gifts in all price classes Open 9:00 to 5:00 In the morning... Always delicious "morning" Fresh French Pastries Bear Claws Long Johns Student Union Danish Pastries Cherry Horns Donuts Air Conditioned Hawk's Nest Sub-Basement Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 30.1957 Young Executive Doubles As Slacks Maker And Actor By DOC QUIGG (United Press Staff Correspondent) NEW YORK—(UP)—Robert J. Evans gets to work at 8 a.m. in an office 33 stories above his native New York and doesn't leave until 7 p.m. He eats lunch in the office, barking orders apace into a squawk box on his fancy semi-circular desk. He's in love with his business. He's in ladies' slacks, a thing which is getting bigger all the time. The women's slack business is anything but slack. "I started seven years ago with one pair of slacks," he said. "Now the business is several million a year. (Dollars, he means.) We claim to be the largest better-slack firm in America." Whither slacks? "Becoming more tapered—but not skin-tight," Evans says. "Just the tight pant has lost its chicness—the type that hugs your leg. But they've got to enhance femininity. Right after the war, they used to be bell-bottomed trousers and men got the wrong idea that they masculined a woman." The big impetus for slacks, he says, has been the movement toward suburban living, with emphasis on casual attire. Evans, at 27, is in a skirts manufacturing firm as vice president in charge of its subsidiary which makes slacks, shorts, and active sportswear. A pertinent question right now is—whither Evans? A Vice President at 27 "Every buyer who comes in wants to know the whole story," he says. "They ask me: 'You gonna stay in business?' I can't answer. Right now, if I had to make a choice between movies and skirts, I'd choose skirts. I feel more secure here, where I can make decisions, have control over myself." During the last half year, Evans has been leading a divided life. Part slacks, part movie actor. Hollywood drafted him entirely by accident, he says. There he was, last November, at the pool of the Beverly Hills Hotel, barking business about slacks into a poolside telephone. Norma Shearer watched him project and decided he closely resembled her late husband, Irving Thalberg, who was a movie executive at age 21. Little Interest in Hollywood "I told her I had little interest in being a movie actor, that I was in business in New York," he says. "But she persuaded me to come for a screen test, and I think the movie bosses there sort of resented it—a dress man coming to play in a picture." Evans as a youngster had been in radio plays. He tested out fine and played Thalberg in the Lon Chaney life story, "The Man With a Thousand Faces." Not long afterward Darryl Zanuck saw him in a New York nightclub and picked him for a starring role as a matador in "Death in the Afternoon." Both pictures will open in New York next month. Evans doesn't know what the garment industry will think of him then. "Ive been away from my business four of the last seven months," he says. "While I was sweating off 17 pounds being a movie bullfighter in April and May, the buyers were converging on New York—the worst time I could have picked to be away. But when I got back, business was better than last year." Bare Foot Is The Only Clue FAIRFIELD, Conn.—(UP)—Police who found a shoe at a burglarized service station later arrested the 15-year-old culprit whom they spotted driving a truck, with a bare foot dangling out a window. Can the State of Kansas set the price of natural gas? Can it say how much oil any well can produce each day? Was Kansas among the first to adopt the "doctrine of correlated rights" and pioneer in the oil and gas conservation movement? Mineral Resources Book Available The answer to each question is "yes," as can be learned quickly from a 45-page survey published by the University of Kansas Governmental Research Center. Mrs. Marcene Grimes, senior analyst, is the author of "Minerals," the second in a series on "Government and Natural Resources in Kansas." Copies of "Minerals" and the first report, "Water," may be obtained upon request at the KU Governmental Research Center. Other pamphlets yet to come in the 4-part study deal with land and recreational resources. In simple language, Mrs. Grimes surveys the basic "A, B, C's" of minerals produced in Kansas, the oil and gas conservation program, and government's role in the development of mineral resources. Among Top 10 In 1955 mineral production in Barton county hit $40,907,000. Ellis and Russell counties topped $30,-000,000. Butler, Rice, Grant and Rooks counties were above $20,000,-000. In the $10-$20 million category, in descending order, were Stafford, Greenwood, Cowley, Graham, McPherson, Stevens, Allen and Cherokee. Among Top 10 For several years the Kansas mineral crop has outvalued the wheat crop, writes Mrs. Grimes. For a quarter century Kansas has been among the nation's top ten mineral producing states, and most recently has been ninth. In oil and gas production it ranks fifth. The mineral fuels, oil, gas, and some coal, account for 85 per cent of the dollar value. Two metals, lead and zinc, contribute 2 per cent. Thirteen per cent comes from the nonmetallic minerals. The doctrine of "correlative rights" forbids one producer to overpump oil or gas so as to drain the reservoir underlying the land of other producers. The State limits oil production, writes Mrs. Grimes, not only as a conservation measure to assure orderly and efficient production from a field, but to keep supply in relation to demand. Prevents Early Depletion Prevents Early Depletion In the case of natural gas, the Corporation Commission goes a step farther and sets the wellhead price per 1,000 cubic feet-11c since 1953. This authority tends to prevent excessive use of natural gas, a high grade fuel, for purposes that could as well be served by coal, and thus bringing an early depletion of natural gas supplies. Government does produce minerals in Kansas. The federal government is the sole producer of helium, which now has numerous uses other than as a lifting gas. The State and some counties produce stone, sand and gravel for roadbuilding. Second and third class cities can produce oil and natural gas for a municipal utility. Since 1945, third class cities in a natural gas field can acquire sites, drill wells, produce and sell natural gas to commercial channels. However, the proceeds must be used for governmental purposes, and can reduce or eliminate taxes. The State is the owner of all minerals in the beds of navigable streams. In 1956 the State Department of Administration collected $32,222 in sand and gravel royalties. Oil and gas production is taxed by the counties as personal property. The royalty owner pays the property tax on his share of the value of the leasehold (usually $1/4th) and the remainder is assessed to the producer. Severance Tax Added The 1957 Legislature added a severance tax. A severance tax is levied for the privilege of severing or taking irreplaceable natural resources from the ground, the theory being that all of the people in the State are entitled to share in the proceeds of this natural wealth. The Kansas severance tax law imposes a tax of one per cent on the value of oil and gas produced in the state each month. The tax is charged against the producers and the royalty owners in the proportion of their ownership at the time of severance. Thus the royalty owner usually pays $ \frac{1}{8}$th. The severance tax levied by the State is in addition to the property tax collected by counties. In recognition of the inevitable exhaustion of oil and gas and other mineral resources, Mrs. Grimes writes, both federal and Kansas income tax laws permit a depletion allowance to be taken in computing the tax due on income from minerals. The depletion allowance provides capital to encourage exploration for more oil and gas. Try Kansan Want Ads, Get Results CRAFT & HOBBY SUPPLIES Balsa Paint Flock Plastic Kids UNDERWOOD'S 1215 West Sixth FANCY GROCERIES - QUALITY MEATS FREE DELIVERY Phone VI 3-3771 900 Mississippi REEVE'S GROCERY 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 $10.00 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