New Work - Study Plan Available in Spring By Nancy Painter A Work-Study program for part-time employment will be offered for the first time this spring semester. This will be in addition to the regular part-time employment services supervised by KU's Office of Student Financial Aid. The new program is designed for students of low-income families or those who have no family, who need supplement funds for their education. Under the program a student may be employed in an on-campus job for not more than 15 hours a week during which classes are in session. However, during vacations or the summer, the student can work up to 40 hours per week. The maximum work load can be distributed over a seven day week. STUDENTS PARTICIPATING in the new Work Study program will not be paid less than $1 per hour. "Consideration will be given to the relation of the available job and the student's academic area of study," Mr. Doug Henning, Work-Study program representative, said. Although students will make application for participation in the program through the Office of Student Financial Aid,222 Strong Hall, final selection of the student will be made by the supervisor of the department in which the student will be employed. There is no deadline as to when the applications must be returned, as this will be a continuous program through the summer and into the fall term. W-S applications will be available after Feb. 1. GIVE YOURSELF A BREAK - TAKE YOUR STUDY BREAK AT THE SHANTY HOT WHOPPER SANDWICHES DELICIOUS SHANTY PIZZA COFFEE AND HOT CHOCOLATE DOWNSTAIR'S PARTY ROOMS PIANO AND ORGAN 644 Mass. VI 2-2500 BEAT K-STATE And after the game, stop by SANDY'S for a victory snack. Always better food at low prices and the fastest, most courteous service. Conveniently located. COLLEGE DESTINATION SANDY'S SWIFT AND THRIFT DRIVE-IN Fish ... 25c Grilled Cheese ... 15c Coffee, Milk ... 10c Orange, Root Beer and Pepsi ... 10c or 15c Hamburgers ... 15c French Fries ... 12c Cheeseburger ... 19c Chocolate, Strawberry and Vanilla Shakes ... 20c VISTA Recruiting Team Will Seek Workers Here A three-member team from Volunteers in Service to America will be on campus the week of Feb. 7 through 11, Tom Moore, executive secretary of the KU-Y, said Thursday. Moore said the group will be headed by Mary Grace Concannon, division of recruitment, VISTA. They will set up a booth in the lobby of the Kansas Union His Voice Did It Dr. Forrest C. Allen reportedly acquired his nickname "Phog" when he was refereeing baseball games. His voice reminded the listener of a fog-horn and it was not long afterwards that he was nicknamed, "Phog" Allen. to talk to students about jobs with VISTA. 12 Daily Kansan Friday, January 21, 1966 The members of the VISTA "VISTA is administered by the Office of Economic Opportunity and is sometimes referred to as the domestic peace corps." Moore said. team will bring a movie, "Small Miracles," to be shown Feb. 11, at 4:30 p.m. and Feb. 14, at 5 p.m., Moore said. The KU-Y is making arrangements for members of the team to speak to classes and student groups, Moore said. We will be closed this weekend. Drop in January 28 and 29. The Fiery Furnace 1116 Louisiana 8:30-12:30 © VOLKSWAGEN OF AMERICA, ING. ANTARCTICA 1 And the Volkswagen just happens to fill the bill. The big trick is the VW's air-cooled rear engine. It has no radiator. It uses no water or antifreeze. It just goes. The first car at the bottom of the world. The Australian National Research Expedition really had no choice. They wanted a car that "any member of the party could hop into and drive off without a moment's hesitation." (Antarctica #1 stood for days in $40^{\circ}$ below zero weather and started without a tremble.) The rear engine gave the VW so much extra traction it climbed "straight up and down the slopes." (But they cheated a little; sometimes they put chains on the back wheels.) The conditions got so fierce that one man said, "Now we know what it'll be like when Hell freezes over." Another reason the VW went where even the dogs wouldn't is the sealed bottom. It took an awful beating, but that's what it's there for: To protect the works inside against the weather outside. So if it ever does, you know what car to buy. "Lawrence's Only Authorized Volkswagen Dealer" CONZELMAN MOTORS SALES — SERVICE — PARTS Overseas Delivery Available 2522 Iowa AUTHORIZED DEALER (Hwy. 59 South) VI 3-2200 CLASSIFIEDS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in one section of the catalog are served to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. HELP WANTED Part-time work for students experienced in ad composition and make-up. Apply at Printing Service, Room 117, Flint Hall. tf Students looking for part time work use applicant person at Sandy's Drive-In, Wilmington, NC. Reliable student for selling imports. Apply 920 La, after 6 p.m. tf Need extra cash? Drive bus part-time, mornings and afternoons. A21, bus or truck experience, app. dial VI 2- 0544, ask for Mr. Ogle. 1-21 MISCELLANEOUS Die Bierstube: Singen, trinken und essen German style. Featuring student's favorite dark beverage and student's favorite light beverage from Golden, Colorado. Also serving deluxe bars and desserts on night Wednesday night. Party Room available. 12 and Tennessee. V1 2-9441. tt Need any Sewing or Mondayending rates Call after 5:00 p.m. 1-2:39pm BLANDING PARTY PHOTOGRAPHY Your satisfaction is my strongest contract. 48 hour service guaranteed; Gold embossed party titles; Koucacourt, Coca-Cola, and Starbucks. 60. WEDDING COLOR SPECIAL, 20 5x7 Prints, $35.00. Three years' experience at KU; for references and samples call Dave at VI 2-6515. tt Wanted: General house work preferably in sorority, fraternity, or princeps. Must have references and have references. Write to Housekeeping, 1132 Conn., Lawrence. tt PARTY TIME—Building available for calls. C声 VI 3-7458 Kalph Freed, TF Sports Car Maintenance and Repairs by and for the enthusiast. Super tuning, modifications and accessories for sports cars, East 23rd St. VI 2-2191. tt Tune-ups — Evenings and weekends only; also other automobile work. appointment only VI. Farmar's behind 23rd Connecticut St. Farmer's garage. Experienced photographer in children and family portraits. Reasonable rate. Will take pictures in your home. Call VI 2-6148. tf FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mecographed and bound for $4.25 delivery. Call VI 2-1801 for free delivery TYPEWRITERS-Office sites and portables, new and used, manual and electric. Several brands. Rental-purchased computers, rentals and service. Office supplies, equipment, and furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. St., VI 3-3644 Wolensak stereo 4-track tape recorder and Remington portable typewriter. Will consider trading for camera and Gary Grada, VI 1-843 or ff 2-6601. Across the burning sands of the Arabian Desert, at no little risk to my faithful Bedouin camel driver, I am knighted in bedlam and beautiful rarest and exotic black Meershaum pipe. Handearved by master artisans in the image of a notorious caliph of the Ottoman empire, this work of art features a piece of gold on a copper casting. A brave caravan has brought this treasure of the Near East to you at the most reasonable price of sixty American dollars. Address serious inquiries to Caravane Nile Valley Server for detailed treasures; Box 2. University Delly Kansan. tt 1964 Chevy, 2 dr. H.T., Grey Impala, black interior, 300 HP stack, P.S. Posttraction, Tinted glass, 22,000, origi- nal owner, must sell. Call Vi I 2-8-61 Portable Electric Clothes Dryer Portable Electric Clothes Dryer dries most garments in hangs on your close door. $28.88 Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. St. 1-21 1957 Chevy, 2 door ht. V-8, stick, good mechanical condition and paint. money for 2nd semester. Sue Jordan 1911 Stewart. VI 2-6351 VI 3-2310. 1963 Stingray, silver, removable top, top handle. 10x5x10. FM lug wheels, new tires, perfect condition, 31,000 miles. $2,455 Three wheels of Baldwin, T-1-21 Wellesley Save $85 on a new Minolta SR7 single lens Reflex F14 lens. Also庐索 Olympus Bronica Elmo Sony AE Phone VI 3-02ed. Eimco 5-10 to 3-10. 1-21 1961 Nash Rambler station wagon. Radio and heater—seat belts. New snow tires. One owner car. Call VI 2- 3901. Sports car owners, we have castigated prices. Blevins, 7th and Michigan, 1962 Buick Skylark power Coupe. With bucket seats, power steering and new tires. Call VI 3-2270 after 5:30 p.m. 1-21 1953 Chrysler Imperial, big four-door, automatic, white walls; power steering, brakes, windows, s e a t a- nchored, sweet. Best offer. VI 3-1458 1964 Corvette, low mileage, two tops, excellent condition. Priced to sell, call Kansas City, FA 1-5866 after 6 p.m. Southridge Plaza, Inc. Lawrence, Kansas. 66044 2350 Ridge Court Vacancies Available MRS. RAMON H. PICKERING Manager Snow Is Coming! Pair of Firestone's best snow tires (8.50 x 14). Used one seat in excellent tread. Reasonable坦 Cam Shelly, VI 3-7415, 1122-1 Campus Rd. Office VI 2-1160 1958 Great Lakes mobile home, 42x8, 2 bedrooms furnished, fully carpeted, newly painted, storm windows. Call VI 3-8791 for appointment. 1-21 Mobile home, 8x45, 2 bedroom, carpeting throughout, furnished, excel- ted office. Underwood Trailer Court, 623 Missouri. Curtis Harshaw. 1-21 Home VI 2-3755 1961 Pontiac Catalina Sport Coupe, white with maroon interior. One owner—low mileage, power steering and brakes, new tires and snow tires. Immaculate! Call Jim Suit, VI 3-7415. Rm. 232. 1-21 1958 Chevy Convertible, new top and 44 McColum. Call Gray or Army. 1-21 Comet '62, automatic transmission, good shape. Call Hernandez. V1-21 Trailer house 35', 2-bedroom, clean, $50.0 Mini box trailer $20. Refrigerator $18. storage for 4' by 8' room $40. VW front suspension $20. AM-FM radio and tape recorder with 26 reels of tapes $45.12 hp, air compressor with gallon tank $35. Lee Coburn, Malah Lawrence, first evening, 1-21 Cowboy boot sale. Now in progress, drastic reduction. Many styles and sizes. See complete Western wear store. Hyer Boot Co., Olathe, Kan, Corner Interstate Highway 1-35 and K-150. 1-21 FOR RENT Area Code 913 Married, graduate students, faculty- 2 bedroom apartment, $95.00. Two available January 1, one available February 1. Call for brochure, VI 2116. Santee Apartments office, 1123 Indiana. tf Vacancy in a contemporary home. Private entrance and bath. Five evening meals weekly. $70 monthly. Meals paid. CV I V1-3-9653 until t Vancancies in contemporary home for young man, prefer graduate student. Swimming pool, home cooked telephone. VI 3-693 call before 6 p.m. Extra nice quiet furnished apartment for mature man, carpeted, nice kitchen, utilizes paid. 2 blocks from Union. Available now. VI 3-8343. tf Rooms for graduate women, 3 single available at semester break. Kitchen facilities. One block from Union. Call VI 3-6979. 1-21 HERTZ RENT-A-CAR. Special rates. Call Gayle, V 3-1028. 1-21 Room for men students with or without kitchen privileges. Call 1-211 Single room and 12 meals per week. Call VI 3-9562. 1-21 Experienced typist has IBM electric to type your thesis, dissertation, term paper. Meet the team and neat and accurate work. Reasonable rates. Phone Mrs. Gilbert, VI 2-2088. Large room for rent—will accommodate one or two boys—large closet, shower, 2 blocks from campus—West Hills. VI 3-3077. 1-21 Experienced typist, 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electrician, accurate service R-roubleshoot rates, CALL MaR. Barrow 2407 Vale. Y12 6A8L Experienced typist; will type in my home. Accurate typing, reasonable rates and prompt service. Call Mrs. Brown at VI 2-0210. ff TYPING Wanted: Typing in my home. Experienced and accurate in term papers and theses. Call VI 3-2651 any time. Typist, experienced with term papers, typing with extra symbols, your typing immediate attention with electric machine with extra symbols. Gene Higley at 408 W. 13W. II 3-6048. Furnished apartment for young men for spring semester. Close to campus. I 3-4271, 12325 Louisiana. Skilled staff available for one man. Class, reasonable. Call Vi 3-0554, early or after 7:30 p.m. 1-21 Rooms for graduate women, kitchen, living room and dining room privately in Indiana, call Vi 2-1421-1212 VI 2-4475 Secretary familiar with legal terms will do typing—briefs, memorandums, dissertations. Fail accurately, reasonable rates. Marshta Goff, VI 3-2577. Experienced secretary will do typing VI 1-0399 after call VI 1-0399 if BUSINESS DIRECTORY GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING Experienced typist will do only theses and typewriter. Mrs. Fulcher H 3-0658 Accurate typing by experienced typist. Term papers, themes, theses and dissertations. Reasonable rates and fast. VI 2-1561. tf Secretary with many years experience, will type your term papers, work on fast reports. Fast, accurate work at reasonable rates. Call VI 6296 after 5 p.m. Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses, dissertations. Fast accurate service Electric typewriter. Call Mr. Rauckman. VI 2-2781. Experienced typist will do theses and term papers. 4 years experience at KU. Phone Mrs. Oxford at VI 2-0673. Former Harvard and University of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports, and theses. Phone VI 3-7207. tf TYPING — GESTETNER MIMEO- GRAPHING—Mrs. McEldowney, VI 3-8568. tf Typing done at reasonable rates by experienced typist. Fast accurate work. Call Betty Vincent, call VI 3-5504. tf Expert Typing-Theses, dissertations and term papers. Electric typewriter, standard rates. Mrs. Mishler, VI 3-1029. 1-21 Fast, accurate; immediate attention given to all term papers, reports, theses, etc. Mrs. Donna Stewart, VI 3-6621 1-21 Former teacher will give careful attention to typing your term papers. Accurate and neat work, 5 years experience. Call VI 3-3829. tf Typing Wanted - Thesses, essays, and Neal, neat and accurate. Call V-121 4156 Will do fast accurate typing in my Standard typewriter. 3-8103 1-21 Experienced typist will do dissertations, these manuscripts, and term papers. On Electronic typist, please contact Robert Cooke symbolists. Mrs. Robert Cooke, 2000 R.I., VI 3-7485. 1-21 Experience d typist, any kind, in her home. Call VI 3-7494. 1-21 Will Baby Sit in try home or jours. Call after 4:00 p.m. V2-39611 Anderson Rentals "We Rent Almost Anything" V1 3-2044 812 New Hampshire Street Bov's class ring, 1965 green stone with M.P. on it. Also a ring guard. Call Patsy Underwood, VI 3-4921. WANTED LOST Daily Kansan HONN'S Coin Operated Laundry and Dry Cleaning OPEN 24 HOURS Friday, January 21, 1966 Across From The High School Exclusive Representative L. G. Balfour Co. of 19th & La. For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry - Nonaltic - Badges - Guards - Guards - Lavaltiers Louvatiers - Favors Sportswear Musc Rinas Paddles - Sportswear - alterations 11 - Cups - Awards For the best in — - Trophies Al Lauter 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 8TH ST. SHOE REPAIR Quality work on half soles, heels. We repair purses Shoe dyeing 107 E. 8TH - dry cleaning - alterations NewYork Clean - reweaving 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 6-HOUR Photo Finishing Fast Color Service By Eastman Kodak "Our only business is photography" UNIVERSITY OF NEW ZEALAND 721 Mass. HIXON STUDIO VI 3-0330 YOUR GASOLINE DOLLAR GOES FARTHER GARY'S DERBY SERVICE 2330 Iowa Lawrence DERBY at... YOU CAN'T BUY A BETTER GAS...AT ANY PRICE We are always happy to serve you with HAVING A PARTY? Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Open to 10 p.m.Every Evening Ph.VI 3-0350 TRAVEL TIME 图示中有一架飞机,机身标有“空客A320”的型号。 LET MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Semester Reservations Now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Originality IN FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION especially for you by Alexander's 826 IDWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS FOR PROJECT DELIVERY JUNE VOL. 3-1900 Chinese New Year Starts Today With Dragons and Firecrackers The scene is a mixture of Independence Day and Halloween. The place is Chinatown, Hong Kong, and anywhere else Chinese live. The time is Jan. 21. The event? Chinese New Year. In Hong Kong, the New Year is welcomed with dragon dances in the streets, fireworks everywhere, and children wearing brand-new clothes, Maria Liu, Hong Kong sophomore, said. Miss Liu is one of about 150 140 Expected At Insurers' Forum Here About 140 students, faculty members, and insurance agents from the state and the region are expected to attend the annual Insurance Forum at 2 p.m. Saturday in 411 Summerfield Hall, Harold Krogh, program moderator, said Thursday. "I HAVE NOT seen Hedges' paper yet," Krogh said, "but it is probable that he will talk about current transit problems in life insurance, how to improve professional ethical standards and qualities; risk management; and property liability." The guest lecturer for Saturday's program will be J. Edward Hedges, professor of insurance at Indiana University. He will present a paper called "Insurance—Some Problems and Prospects." Hedges received his master's degree in Business Administration from the University of Kansas in 1932. He received his Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins University. In 1962 Hedges was elected to the Insurance Hall of Fame. Hedges is the author of several books and articles including Practical Fire and Casualty Insurance now in its seventh edition. Official Bulletin On Campus Interviews for Next Week: Tues., Jan. 25—North K.C. College, Jan. 26—State University Thurs., Jan. 27—Chico State College, Calif., college, 106 Ba. Class AA State Debate Tournament. All Day, Kaunas Union. ment, All Day, Kansas Union. LDS Institute of Religion, 4:30 p.m. Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Channel, CFM. 8 p.m. Popular Film, 7 and 9:30 p.m. "The Devil at 4 O'Clock" Dynee Aud. Hillel Friday Night Services, 7:30 Millie Center Community Center, 917 Highland Dr., TOMORROW Swimming. 1:30 p.m. Oklahoma State II, Robinson, Gym. Popular Film 7 and 9:30 p.m. "The Devil at 4 O'Clock" Dyche Aud. Catholic Mass, 8 a.m. St. Lawrence Channel; 3:40, 11 a.m. Houd Auch. Oread Friends Meeting, 10.30 a.m. Meeting for Worship, everyone welcome! Lutheran Services, 9:45 a.m. Bible study, and 11 a.m. worship, 15th and 16th Carillon Recital, 3 p.m. Albert Gerken. SHANTY PIZZA 10 Minutes VI 2-2500 Why read the New York Times when you can get a Kansan? Chinese students on the KU campus whose thoughts are with this colorful Chinese holiday, and not with the finals they must take next week. THERE ARE many customs connected with the Chinese New Year celebration and one dictates that whenever a child or unmarried person calls upon a family, the adults must give them a wrapped packet of pocket money, ranging from 50 cents to 20 to 30 Hong Kong dollars. "The children get rich, while the parents have to give money," Miss Liu said. Another custom connected with money is when poor children come knocking on doors, they give small pieces of red paper with the words "fai-choy" on them and receive money. The words are a part of the phrase "kung hai fai-choy," "Wishing you a very prosperous, happy New Year." During the holidays, "our parents are extra kind to us, therefore we are extra naughty," Miss Liu said. But then she added that the superstition is that if a child is bad on New Year's Day, he will have bad luck all year. SOME PEOPLE believe they cannot wash their hair or take a bath because all the good fortune will wash away. Miss Liu said. The dragon is one of the most important parts of the celebration. It is the traditional Chinese symbol of good fortune, since it is considered to be the mightiest of beasts. People of certain districts make the dragons from paper and dance in the streets, Miss Liu said. 10 Daily Kansan Friday, January 21, 1966 THUNDERBALL Original Soundtrack (Mono & Stereo) at BELL MUSIC CO., INC. 925 Mass. VI 3-2644 WHAT EVERY STUDENT SHOULD KNOW ABOUT EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES. Upon graduation, every young man and woman wants and needs a job. A good job. How will you find the right one? One with the right company . . . at the right salary . . . with the right opportunities for advancement. Ever considered enlisting the aid of a Professional Employment Service? We think you should. For a number of sound reasons. It's our business. Who could possibly be any better at it? Who works with more companies every day? Knows all about them and their people? Knows their employment needs, their growth possibilities, their philosophies? And another thing. Employment Services have come a long way since your father set out for his first job. Your knowledgeable guidance counsellors and career advisors are aware of this and recommend that you utilize a Professional Employment Service as a good way to obtain employment. Today, the best ones are staffed with thoroughly trained Employment Counsellors who are specialists in every phase of the business. They are interested in helping you . . . not just fitting someone into an available job. There are definite advantages when you seek the services of a Professional Employment Service that is national in scope. More job opportunities locally and nationally . . . for secretaries, accountants, bookkeepers, management trainees, receptionists, salesmen, engineers, and graduates looking for almost any type of job. But you must graduate. Professional Employment Services know that completing your schooling gives you a far better opportunity for a successful, profitable future, regardless of your academic standing in your class. The idea that the top $ \frac{1}{2} $ gets all the good opportunities is a myth. Check it out for yourself. Call us at HA 1-3410. Snelling AND Snelling World's Largest Professional Employment Service 200 Altman Bldg. 11th & Walnut Kansas City, Mo. KU Frosh Swim to Win By Gary Wright The KU freshman swimmers, who are currently undefeated this season, give the KU swimming future a bright look. Coach Dick Reamon said, "these freshmen deserve a lot of praise because they are such hard workers and have a 'never say die' attitude." O'Connor, like all the freshmen, is a hard worker. He is already starting to show signs of becoming a great swimmer for KU and a possible All-America. THE FRESHMEN have a well rounded and solid team. They are sparked by the top performing Roy O'Connor, Lawrence freshman. O'Connor, in freshman meets, is finishing just tenths of a second off several KU and Big 8 records. the freshman swimmers next meet will be Jan. 29. THE VARSITY SWIMMERS, who now stand 3-1 in the Big 8 Conference, meet Oklahoma State here Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m. Coach Dick Reamon said, "We are looking forward to a much better afternoon Saturday." The young varsity swimmers are "hungry for a win after their defeat at K-State last Saturday." Coach Reamon feels his men are hard workers and have a great desire to be a winning team. COACH REAMON said, "KU is a top contender for the Big 8 championship this season." The A top performer for the Jays is Don Pennington, Shawnee Mission junior. Pennington has done an excellent job for the Jays and is a possible All-America candidate. He is currently averaging 11 points a meet for the Jayhawks. dual meets mean nothing as far as determining a conference champion. The Big 8 swimming meet, which all Big 8 teams are entered, is March 6th and 7th at OU and it is at this meet that the Big 8 champion will be determined. Ph.D. Examination In French Feb. 12 The Ph.D. reading examination in French will take place at 9:30 a.m.Feb.12 in Room 411 Summerfield. Blue cards must be turned in one week before the exam. Daily Kansan 9 Friday, January 21, 1966 Fred Green has BOOTS Justin & Texas also Lee Jeans 910 Mass. We Absolutely Deliver VI 3-9111 Campus Hideaway Campus Hideaway 106 N. Park We Absolutely Deliver VI 3-9111 Campus Hideaway Campus Hideaway 106 N. Park Campus Hideaway Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Close Out Sale TAPE RECORDERS Revere TII Deck ... $139.88 Norelco 401 ... 268.88 Tandberg 5 ... 268.88 TURNTABLES AND CHANGERS Thorens TDA-184 used 34.88 Pioneer used 34.88 Garrard 4HF used 34.88 Garrard Mark IIT used 19.88 Bogen B50 used 24.88 Garrard AT6 (paint off corner) 45.88 Garrard AT6 used 34.88 Thorens CD43N used 24.88 Glaser Steer 77 used 34.88 2-Collaro used 24.88 SPEAKERS AND CABINETS 2 DWG systems used 54.88 2 Lafayette Criterion 50 used 24.88 Permoflux 12x81 used 24.88 GE Equipment cabinet, Cherry used 38.88 GE Speaker cabinet, Cherry used 48.88 Acousticraft 12" cabinet used 24.88 2 Argos cabinets used 29.88 used 24.88 AUDIOIRONICS RADIO TV PARTS-PA SYSTEMS-HIGH FIDELITY 928 Massachusetts POPULAR FILM SERIES "THE DEVIL AT 4 O'CLOCK" Starring: Spencer Tracy and Frank Sinatra 35c Friday, Jan. 21 & Saturday, Jan. 22 tonight tomorrow 7:00 p.m. & 9:30 p.m. Dyche Auditorium $ 3 5^{\mathrm{c}} $ Advanced Tickets At Kansas Union Information Booth. 8 Daily Kansan Friday, January 21, 1966 niW et miw2 r2oH UX ©SUN BIKI When the excitement at the KU-K. State game Saturday night gets too much to take, refresh yourself and visit... KU CONCESSIONS RED DOG INN THE Red Dog INK presents A Fabulous Line Up of Entertainment For Your Dancing Pleasure - Friday - Jan. 21 - Spider and the Crabs - Saturday - Jan. 22 - The Rising Sons - Jan. 28----The Group - Jan. 29 - Teddy Vale - Feb. 18 — The Fabulous Flippers --- Remember The Red Dog Is Open Wednesdays, Fridays And Saturdays - Coming Soon - - The Ike & Tina Turner Reyue - The Pacesetters R2c16 Daily Kansan Friday, January 21, 1966 7 ATTENTION SENIORS Last chance to get Senior Calendars - for the "Class of the Century." Calendars will be distributed Thursday and Friday, Feb. 3 and 4, in Strong Rotunda from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Available to Seniors with Class ID's only. Last chance, don't miss it. *(Watch the UDK for our 2nd big Senior PARTY coming up in a few weeks.) Law Grads Face 'Final of Finals' KU's School of Law will graduate ten students Feb. 1 but these students still have to face their "final of finals," the Kansas Bar Examination. Most, if not all, of these perspective lawyers will be taking the examination Feb. 14 and 15 in Topeka. Many of those taking the test have voiced apprehension. Stephen Todd, Sedan, said, "I'm scared to death of it." Ward Lawrence, Wichita, said, "I'm apprehensive about the test since last year it seemed that more flunked than in the past." MAURICE VORHIES, Augusta, said, "I regard it as something not to be taken lightly, but certainly not to be feared." Most of the 10 students plan to take the Kansas Bar Review Course, a two-week course sponsored by Washburn's Delta Theta Phi Legal fraternity and open to anyone taking the examination. Topeka attorneys, judges, and Washburn instructors will teach the review course beginning Jan. 31. Gary Hanna, Wichita, said, "I think the law school has prepared me. I think the law school has done a great job of preparing students for law, but I would like to see more courses in the area of trial practice." WARD LAWRENCE, Wichita, said he was apprehensive, but doesn't feel "sixty questions which are answered in two days should be stacked against three years of Rick Kastner of Salina will be taking both the Kansas and Missouri bar examinations as he plans to practice in Kansas City, Mo. law school. KU has prepared me well." "I am a little worried because it seems that the quality of student at school is not an indication of his passing," he said. "Often students pass whom professors thought could not, while at times honor students have flunked—none from KU, though." TODD SAID, "The law schools do not put out finished products. Legal education does not end with the law school. We are as well prepared as we could be with the type of legal education we have today." The only woman law school graduate Feb. 1, will be Mrs. Clarine Smissman, Lawrence. "I'm terrified of the examination but I feel the law school has prepared me. I don't expect it to be easy and I hope I pass," she said. "It will be up to the individual." Gallant Thief Hits According to a UDK report in 1941, a thief raided five fraternity houses taking an estimated $225. He was too chivalrous and gallant to nter any female houses. 6 Daily Kansan Friday, January 21, 1966 Men Elect Officers Three men's living groups have elected officers for spring semester. They are Stephenson Men's Scholarship Hall, Theta Chi fraternity, and Pearson Hall. Stephenson's new president is Mel O'Connor, Wichita senior. Theta Chi's spring president is Jim Bartelt, Joplin, Mo., senior. Other Stephenson officers are: Charles Burre, Leavenworth senior, vice-president; Ray Germonprez, Topeka senior, secretary; Bob Mowry, Phillipsburg junior, treasurer; Paul Bock, Dodge City junior, Men's Scholarship Hall Council representative. Mike Pretzer, Garnett sophomore, social chairman; and Mike Breeding. Blue Rapids junior, intramurals chairman. Other Theta Chi officers are Chuck England, Coffeyville senior, vice-president; Mike Farley, Leawood junior, secretary; Wayne Fisk, Flint, Mich., sophomore, treasurer; and Dave Evans, Kansas City sophomore, pledge marshall. Pearson Men's Scholarship Hall officers are: Bob Farney, Wilson senior, president; John Shapley, Wichita junior, vicepresident; Robert Schubert, Shawnee Mission sophomore, secretary; and Charles Kifer, Scott City junior, treasurer. RELAX... RELAX ... in candlelight after the game Saturday — visit the Hideaway. CAMPUS HIDEAWAY Open 11:30 a.m. Till 1:00 a.m. We Absolutely Deliver VI 3-9111 Campus Hideaway 106 NORTH PARK CAMPUS HIDEAWAY Campus Hideaway 106 NORTH PARK Fly Fly Fly Krhart Flying Service Leave the congested world beneath you . . . become pilot-in-command of a Cessna 172 after only 10 easy lessons. Pick up three hours of credit by enrolling in Mechanical Aeronautics Engineering 40, the best way to get your ground school training. By next summer you can be thrilling your friends with your piloting skills. Call or visit Erhart Flying Service, Lawrence Airport, VI 3-2167. 1966 JAYHAWKER 1966 AT LAST!! Distribution of Cover & First Issue February 2-4 Alcove A Kansas Union Cafeteria Pick up your Jayhawker right after you enroll. All you need is your I.D. Graduating seniors—leave your address at the Jayhawker office so it can be mailed to you. Seniors—make your appointments now for your senior picture at Hixon Studio. Daily Kansan Friday, January 21. 1966 5 An Open Letter to Jayhawkers WHAT ABOUT BOOKS? We realize you don't appreciate being reminded that finals are coming,but since final time is also used book buying time we thought we should discuss our policy for buying and selling used and new books. Used Books-What Can I Sell? How Much Can I Get? At each buy back period we are able to buy only those texts the teaching staff has indicated will be used again next semester. With this commitment we are able to offer 50% of the publisher's current list price for the title. We then sell the book for 75% of the current list price. For example, if the book lists for $4.00 new, we buy it back for $2.00 and resell it for $3.00. Our major problem is how many to buy. If we overbuy on used books it usually represents a loss to us. If we can't sell them to another store for the same price we paid for them or sell them to a wholesaler at the regular market wholesale price we must write them off as a total loss. Our used book policy stated simply in figures is as follows: Let's take a book which sells for $5.00 new and $3.75 used. You paid We buy back Patronage refund Total you get back For New Book $5.00 $2.50 or 50% .25 or 5% $2.75 or 55% For Used Book $3.75 $2.50 or 66 2/3% .19 or 5% $2.69 or 71 2/3% What About Books No Longer Used at KU? During this same period (final exams) we arrange to have a buyer from a used book wholesale jobber on duty who will make an offer on most books no longer being used at KU. The best offer he can make on good current books is about 25% of the current list price. He must pay the transportation costs to his warehouse, his warehouse overhead and take the chance on selling these books to some other store at 50% of the current list price. What Do Other Book Stores Do? The buying back at 50% and selling at 75% of current list price is the policy in most college stores. This policy has worked successfully in a large number of college stores and makes for economical and easier means of exchange in used books. What Are Old Books Worth? We indicated above that the book jobber can pay a top price of about 25% of current list price. This is for a book that has considerable use across the country and is not likely to be revised in the near future. An old edition is almost worthless, while a book that is in the process of being revised has some value. The jobber will make an offer on some of these, but the student must decide if the book is worth more to him than the jobber. Many students feel their books are worth more to them for their personal library than the amount either the store or the jobber can offer. This he must decide for himself. Even though we like to get all the used books we can in order to offer them to the next group of students at a saving, we have great respect for those students who keep their books to build a personal library. New Books We would like to point out that we have no control over publishers and their decisions to bring out new editions, or the price they set on textbooks. The publisher sets the price on a textbook and then allows us a 20% discount from this list price. In other words a book we buy new and sell for $4.00 costs us $3.20. With respect to the decisions to change texts being used on the campus, we firmly believe the faculty honestly and sincerely tries to select the best available text for their courses and that they take all factors into consideration when they do so. The faculty would be dilatory in their duty and obligations to you if they did not keep up with changing facts and developments in the selection of textbooks. We hope our explanations have been clear, that the book situation is now better understood and that we have given enough information to help you decide whether or not you will want to sell your used books. Your Kansas Union Book Store is a self supporting profit sharing division of the Kansas Union. It is the desire of your Union through its Book Store division to continue to offer you your books and supplies at a savings as long as it is economically sound to do so.The following chart showing how each dollar of income of the Book Store is divided and how it is used is based on the actual percentage figures appearing in the annual financial report. From Each Dollar Income: Paid to Manufacturers ... 73.0c Operating Expenses ... 18.0c NDEA Loan Funds ... 3.0c Patronage Refund to Customers ... 5.0c Reserve for Emergency & Expansion ... 1.0c Total ... 100 cents Net Profit ... 0. kansas union BOOKSTORE Knighted Conductor To Lead Orchestra Sir John Baribroli, conductor of the Houston Symphony Orchestra, will direct a mass ensemble of more than 140 high school musicians from seven states in the KU Regional String Orchestra concert on Feb. 12. The string department of the School of Fine Arts and the Kansas chapter of the American String Teachers Association are sponsoring the event. Raymond Stuhl, professor of cello and current president of the Kansas chapter, is the organizer of the program. Barbirolli will work with the Regional String Orchestra from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 2 p.m. The musicians, each of whom has taken private lessons at least three years, will come to Lawrence the previous evening from Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, Iowa, and Nebraska. PRIVATE TEACHERS, school music directors, and several conductors of youth symphony orchestras will be present. Sir John turned down invitations to conduct elsewhere to work with the high school musicians at KU and said, "In 20 years we will not have orchestras of today's high standards unless all of us do what we can to encourage young people to learn to play string instruments." Ranked among the world's greatest conductors, he was the personal choice of the late Arturo Toscanini to succeed the latter as musical director of the New York Philharmonic in 1936. He left in 1943 to make a wartime return to his native England where he began rebuilding the Hallé Orchestra of Manchester and was its permanent conductor until going to Houston in 1961. He has built that orchestra so that on its first big tour of the east a year ago it was acclaimed as one of the nation's best. THE REGIONAL orchestra and its day with Sir John was organized to encourage serious study of string instruments. String players are in short supply both in professional and amateur orchestras. "The conservatories and other schools of music have not been producing enough capable string players to replace qualitatively the performers lost to the nation's great symphony orchestras by death and retirement," he said. Professor Stuhl described Barbirolli as "ideal for this assignment. He is articulate, friendly and is a great teacher. "THE PRIVILEGE of playing under Sir John's direction will not only be a thrill for each participant, but it should be a great educational experience." 10000 4 Daily Kansan SIR JOHN BARBIROLI . . . Houston Symphony PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS FRATERNITY RUSH Open to All Undergraduate Men Friday, January 21, 1966 January 30 and February 1 Pick up Registration Forms Dean of Men's Office Must be turned in by January 25 PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE American Students Abroad The P-t-P Flight Program Still Has A Few Reservations Available. —CONTACT— P-t-P Office, UN 4-3853 or Jo Dallam, VI 3-5660 Take an Enjoyable SEMESTER BREAK Contact Maupintour for: - Skiing - Trip Home - Other Travel Maupintour Travel Agency VI 3-1211 Malls Shopping Center The Stables V.I.P. Room FRIENDS AT THE BAR Batman Fan Club — Join Today - Fully Carpeted - Drapes - Television (color soon) - Nice Quiet Atmosphere terrill's Final Week Final Sale 163 Skirts & Sweaters 40% to 50% off Reg. $8.00 Reg.$11.00 Reg.$15.00 Reg.$18.00 $3.99 $5.99 $7.99 $9.99 Sleepwear $ \frac{1}{2} price $ One Group "Jonathan Logan" Dresses 40% to 50% Off Petite & Junior Sizes terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS Graduate Honored by Vietnamese A 1558 petroleum engineering graduate from KU has been honored by the Republic of Viet Nam for actions during the battle of Plei Me. Capt. William A. Wittenberg, whose home is Kansas City, received the Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry for distinguished service to the Vietnamese Army during the battle for the special forces camp. Captain Wittenberg was commissioned through the Air Force R.O.T.C. at KU and later took pilot training. Thirteen faculty and staff members with 447 years of service to the University will retire to emeritus status June 30. Faculty Members Retiring with 447 Years of The 13, whose average term of service is nearly $34\frac{1}{2}$ years, will be honored at the All-University Retirement dinner May 4 in the Kansas Union. Service to KU They are: Laurel Everette Anderson, organ and music theory, 39 years; Miss Margaret Anderson, speech and drama, 42; Miss Wealthy Babcock, mathematics, 46; Raymond Cerf, violin, 17; Arthur W. Davidson, chemistry, 45; Miss Kathleen Doering, entomology, 42. Daily Kansan ? Friday, January 21, 1966 IT'S A RIOT OF FUN! About. a darn cute darn cat! Walt Disney's most hilarious comedy THAT DARN CAT TECHNICOLOR® ©1965 Walt Disney Productions STARTS TODAY! Tonight at 7:00 & 9:10 Cont. Sat. & Sun. from 2:30 p.m. Granada THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5780 NEXT -- Sean Connery in "Thunderball Don't Miss T.G.I.F. Jan. 28 HAWAII IN JANUARY??? Don't Knock It — SEE IT AT Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on n Highway 90 "Diamond Head" -plus- "Gidget Goes Hawaiian" Bonus Hit Fri. & Sat. — "House of Wax" Starts Sun. ● "Bye-Bye Birdie" & "Love and Kisses" "Hot Pizza Tonight" NOT FATAL Piping Hot Pizza Delivered In Humidity Controlled Ovens 10-MINUTE DELIVERY Mobile Oven Menu All King-Size 12" Pizzas ★ Sausage ★ Pepperoni Double Cheese ★ Pepperoni ★ Hamburger ★ Shanty International ★ And Other Varieties Most Delicious Pizza in Lawrence Open For Sunday Dining Delivering more pizzas than anyone in Lawrence —And still quicker—always hot DIAL VI 2-2500 NO DELIVERY CHARGE PIZZA MOBILE DELIVERY SERVICE (Radio-Controlled) THE SHANTY MENU 644 MASS. THE SHANTY We Are Equipped to Deliver 180 Fresh Pizzas at One Time LET US SERVE YOUR NEXT PARTY SUA Announces Interviews for Spring Concert Steering Committee February 9,1966 Applications Now Available in SUA Office. Main Floor Of Kansas Union 102 to xx02 Y 7H4 duar paint08 xx000 K zilu04 F Editorials Man-ruthless destroyer In the beginning there was the world. It was full of beautiful things; giant redwood trees towering majestically toward their heavenly creator; snow-capped mountain peaks reaching unknown summits; rich green prairies with grass standing 10 feet high. And then came man, AT FIRST, MAN was an integral part of his natural surroundings. But as he developed, he began to utilize the land without regard to the preservation of its natural beauty. The giant forests were stripped to supply lumber for his houses. Mountain sides were washed away by pneumatic mining methods in the frantic search for precious metals. And the prairies, which once were full of rich, black earth, were farmed down until only great clouds of dust remained. In lands which once were abundant with game and wildlife, there remained only the surviving remnants of those great herds of beasts as man slowly destroyed them one by one for various selfish reasons. Man had carried his devastating raid of his natural resources to the limit. His cities had polluted the streams which gave life to all beings, including man himself. The natural beauty of Mother Earth was dotted with congested traffic ways, billboards, slum areas and other scenes which accompany his metropolitan areas. FINALLY MAN BEGAN to take heed. His governments began to realize the importance of natural resources for man's future benefit. Laws were enacted to protect some of the great woodlands from complete destruction. National parks and monuments were formed to allow mankind's citizens to enjoy the beauty of nature in its rawest form. Cities realized the value of preserving some of the natural terrain through development of large parks and preservation of land not tainted by clusters of skyscrapers or the aroma of packing plants. Mankind had taken the first big step toward the preservation of his hallowed earth. Man has continued to take progressive action toward conservation, but he has one enemy who is constantly destroying much of his work: Himself. The concentrated efforts of government, industry and science will do no good if every citizen does not do his part toward conservation. Governments can set aside tracts of forest land, but one person can undo this action with one small, careless gesture with a match. The once-fluorishing resources are no longer so abundant that mankind can merely take them for granted. He needs to unite his forces to preserve the resources our earth once produced in abundance. He must eliminate the acts of thoughtlessness and carelessness which mar some of the beautiful scenery which surrounds him. HIS FUTURE DEPENDS on it. — E. C. Ballweg The People Say... pom-pon distress DEAR EDITOR: The layout of your front page Wednesday was sensational! However, it has been my impression that sensationalism is a journalistic device to attract attention and to sell newspapers when the quality of a publication fails to gain readership on its own merit. THE QUITE UNFLATTERing picture of a KU Pom-Pon girl which accompanied the front page Nebraska game story was certainly a contrived "feature." The Kansan staff knew the squad did not travel to the game at Lincoln, and there was not one reference to the picture in a story. Obviously some poor judgment was involved, and my primary concern, besides the quality of our University newspaper, is the young lady who has been caused unnecessary embarrassment by this purposeless and thoughtless act. I WONDER IF the journalist who thought this was such a great idea would have the It concerns me because I know the caliber of women who work so many hours to make the Pom-Pon squad a group of which KU can be proud. Besides the natural qualities of beauty which the girls possess, the combined squad grade average last semester was approximately 2.2. These ladies sacrificed much of their Christmas vacation in order to appear with the KU band at the Big 8 Tournament in Kansas City three consecutive nights. KU alumni and all Big 8 fans in attendance were greatly impressed by the Pom-Pon girls—their good public relations to the University through the year has been immeasurable. Daily Kansan Friday, January 21, 1966 2 courtesy to personally call the young lady involved and extend to her a genuine apology, even though the personal damage cannot be reclaimed. Vince Bilotta, Adviser Pom-Pon & Yell Leader Squads western civ TO THE EDITOR: Re; UDK editorial Wed., Jan. 19; entitled "Civ program fails test." Bob Curtright's editorial condemning the Western Civilization program alleges to represent "the majority student reaction." I did not spend my time counting the number of pages required in the program's reading or cramming and cribbing for the exam, but I did spend a lot of time reading the material and studying for the exam and I feel that the Western Civilization Program is a very worthy and deserving program. My only complaint is that the directors do not allow, or do not encourage students to attend more than one discussion group a week. Don Wahaus It is pretty unlikely that anything I say or do as a result of my studies in the Western Civ program will prevent any future wars, but I shudder to think what effect Curtright's "scholars," who spend their college careers "cribbing, cramming, and cussing," will have on this poor world. Lenexa sophomore I AM ENROLLED in 17 hours of work this semester (1 hour of which is Western Civ discussion) and I find that most of the professors in all my classes think their course is the only one that is important. It is a natural feeling and one that should not be condemned just because it necessitates studying. The Western Civ officials have not "created a monster," as Curtright says, rather it is the student who creates a monster through bad study habits and his inability to chew and digest knowledge by himself. Curtright's "perfect solution" would lead one to believe that the only thing that makes a "course worth the effort" is the number of credit hours for the course. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Founded 1889 Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office Founded. 1899 Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, N Y 10022. Mail subscription rates: $4 a semester or $7 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansas are offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. EXECUTIVE STAFF MANAGING EDITOR Judy Farrell BUSINESS MANAGER Ed Vaughn EDITORIAL EDITORS Janet Hamilton Karen Lemphet NEWS AND BUSINESS STAFF Assistant Managing Editors ... Suzy Black, Susan Hartley Jane Larson, Jacke Thayer Circulation Manager ... Mike Robe Advertising Manager ... Dale Reinecker City Editor ... Joan McCane Classified Manager ... Mike Wertz Feature Editor ... Mary Dunlap Merchandising ... John Hons Sports Editor ... Scotte Scott Promotion Manager ... Keith Issut LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS 102 HISTORY W-29 © PETER KLEINER KANSAS "DEAN BELLLOWS WOULD LIKE TO KNOW WHO OWNS THIS LITTLE FOREIGN JOB PARKED IN THE HALL?" Cure for sick cities Big cities are sick. Big cities are dying. It is solidly established in America that the big cities are suffering severe growing pains—both from their own growth and, as an indirect result, from the growth of other governmental units surrounding them. A major question that occurs, and that offends many American sensibilities, is "Are they worth saving?" Government by municipalities, all small in comparison to federal or state machineries, often is the most inefficient and least desirable way of getting something done. Efforts are duplicated in many fields, municipal borders end services abruptly and often create absurd situations, costs skyrocket in the smaller unit and the individual suffers in the plethora of cities, large and small, that has grown up in America. For the maintenance of our democracy it is necessary to keep some things on a local level. No one could argue, we think, for the establishment of a national police force. In other countries of the world this has happened too often and we have seen the results too often to consider such a measure seriously. THE FIRST REPLY, in this nation where everybody is for cities, is that the municipal unit can and does often provide a perfectly acceptable means of serving its citizens. This we will concede but we cannot give the cities credit in every endeavor. SCHOOLS ARE ANOTHER institution that should be run at a local level. If one power controlled the schools there would be too much possibility of creating "thought control" and, eventually, a tyrannical government of one form or another. The problem is, however, those things that still are, in a large measure, controlled by city government and should not be. ONE OF THE items that could best be handled on the national level is fire protection. America is notorious for situations in which a fire truck sits at its base a few blocks from a fire because it has no jurisdiction where the fire is located. A national fire protection plan would eliminate the small districts, the person outside any district and the uselsss multiplicity that often occurs. Obviously the federal government could not keep well enough informed to attempt to cope with the local traffic problems for every city. However, a nation-wide control system should be set up to coordinate and equalize at least the nation's highway program. An efficient, economical transportation system is essential in our society and a federal setup would insure such a system. RECREATION IS ANOTHER facet of modern life that cities are trying to take care of themselves. But, in general, a municipality doesn't have the resources or the land area to set up recreational areas sufficient for its populace. A state-wide or national organization would have the perspective necessary and would not be limited by borders or restrictive funds in an effort to provide recreation for all. And, finally, matters such as air and water pollution. Individual efforts in this field are fine and encouraging but they are just not enough when they occur in the random manner they usually do. National power and financial resources are needed here to provide enough widespread rigid control to do an effective job. Yes, the big cities are cramped and suffering. But, much of their suffering is self-caused. The nature of society has changed. The city no longer needs to do everything it is trying to do. Adapting the tasks undertaken by cities would help a lot. In fact, the patient might even recover. Glen Phillips I WINTER SKATING-Although Potter Lake has been crowded recently, skaters may be taking their lives in their own feet. According to Henry Shenk, —Photo by Earl Haehl director of physical education, only the south portion of the lake has the required three inches of ice. "The north side can be dangerous," he said. Last Edition Today's edition is the last UDK of the semester. The UDK will resume publication Tuesday, Feb. 8. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years LAWRENCE, KANSAS Weather 76th Year, No. 73 Cloudy skies with possible snow is forecast for the weekend by the U.S. Weather Bureau. Low tonight around zero, highs Saturday around 20 degrees. Friday, January 21, 1966 Classification QuandarytoSome By Irvana Keagy The possibility of a revised classification system for college students announced Thursday by draft officials was met with varied reaction from KU students. James K. Hitt, KU registrar, who returned earlier this week from a meeting in Washington with Selective Service officials said there will be a big reshuffling of the draft by June. He said the reclassification will be necessary because the stockpile of non-college draftees is rapidly being depleted, and the local draft boards will soon have to dip into colleges and universities. However, Hitt said, unless there is complete mobilization of the armed forces, the draft will not affect a large number of KU students. GUS DIZERGA, Wichita freshman, who is a member of Young Americans for Freedom, said he is opposed to the draft system in any form. "Our country was founded on the grounds that we have certain unalienable rights. But we are admitting that the state has the right to take away our freedom when we submit to the draft," diZerga said. "It is a direct violation of the principles that our country was founded upon," he said. David Leonard, Lawrence sophomore and vice-president of the Student Peace Union, said, "Most SPU members object to the draft, and object to its necessity." Leonard added that Congress has not given enough thought to any of the alternatives other than the compulsory draft. OFFICIALLY, the Student Peace Union has not formulated a decision on the possible revised classification system for drafting college students. Nursery Vote Ousts Moro ROME — (UPP) - Premier Aldo Moro's center-left government collapsed today when the coalition partners split over the question of setting up state nursery schools. Moro said he would offer his resignation. Moro's decision followed a five-minute cabinet meeting. He was expected to go to the Quirimal KU, Parsons To Share Public Health Grant The U.S. Public Health Service has announced a $2,104,200 grant to KU and the Parsons State Hospital to help expand or build mental retardation research facilities at Kansas City, Lawrence, and Parsons, Kan. KU will receive about $1,758,000 and the Parsons Hospital $392,000 KU's share will be divided approximately $1,238,000 at the Medical Center in Kansas City and $520,000 at Lawrence. The new facilities will house a comprehensive program of research and training. The comprehensive program will include a Center for Research on Mental Retardation and Human Development at the Kansas City and Lawrence campuses, and at Parsons. Palace shortly to notify President Giuseppe Saragat of his decision. The funds were granted for an addition to the Children's Rehabilitation Unit at the Kansas City Medical Center; a new two-story wing for the Bioscience Building at the Lawrence campus, plus a two-story building at the Parsons hospital. There had been two earlier confidence votes in Parliament in little more than a week—and the Moro government had passed both with flying colors. But the break came last night on a Chamber of Deputies vote on the controversial bill to establish state nursery schools that was not supposed to have been a confidence ballot. The Chamber of Deputies defeated the measure 250 to 221. The vote reflected sharp dissension between the Christian Democrats and their Socialist allies in the coalition. Leonardo Work Here Models of inventions of Leonardo da Vinci will be on display in the South Lounge of the Kansas Union from Feb. 24 through March 18. THE EXHIBITION, the property of International Business Machines Corporation, is described by the company as consisting of working models of the inventions rejected in Leonardo's time. These include a helicopter, a daring innovation in the 15th century, and the first tank. IBM says "Leonardo's genius is closest to us, perhaps, in his mechanical studies and devices . . . he devised a transmission mechanism that is reproduced in today's automobile." The first set of models —large enough to be operable — was built in Milan in 1938 It was exhibited in Milan and then went on tour. Law Students Lend Legal Aid to Prisoners An experimental prison legal counseling program for inmates of Leavenworth Penitentiary has been underway during the fall semester by the KU Law School, The Law School has been conducting the program with the approval and cooperation of the U.S. Department of Justice. Paul Wilson, professor of law, said two other university law schools are planning to operate similar programs next year. The University of Pennsylvania Law School will conduct its program at the Louisberg Federal Pententiary, the University of Colorado Law School at Colorado State Pententiary. Eighty-five prisoners applied for the legal counseling service during the past semester. Wilson said of these, 30 cases have been worked by KU law students. Others May Copy KU Experiment In Reviewing Inmates' Problems TEN OF THE cases investigated resulted in the conclusion by the students and Wilson that there was not sufficient merit in the case to start legal action. "In cases such as these, there is nothing we can do other than advise the prisoner that we can not help him. We hope he accepts our advice so that he accepts his position and tries to improve it by being on good behavior." Wilson said. Prisoners on good behavior for a long period of time can be given special privileges and may even have their sentences shortened, according to Wilson. KU STUDENTS are still working on 20 cases. About half may have grounds for further research and investigation by the students. "This is not to say that many or most cases will be implemented or that any prisoners will be released. We do have several interesting cases which can be questioned and perhaps have to be answered by a judge in another trial." Wilson said. In one case which Wilson described, a prisoner was questioning his relationship with a former wife who had remarried. He wanted to make sure that he was divorced and if not, wanted to file for one. Most cases brought by prisoners relate to their original trial in which many feel that their "rights" or that due process of law were not granted them. Wilson said. He said that many prisoners are just desperate and try to grasp at any straw in order for a chance to be released. "THEER ARE certainly enough cases involving true legal questions which should be raised to justify this program." Wilson said. Wilson said the program helps the student by giving him actual experience in interviewing prisoners, researching cases, and investigating circumstances of an offense. It is also helpful to the inmates of the prison, because it raises their morale to see someone working for them and caring about their specific cases. In light of the interest in the program and the importance of it to the prisoners and students, Wilson said, the program will be increased so that 16 students can work on it next semester instead of the 12 now involved. / 12 Daily Kansan Thursday, January 20, 1966 RED DOG INN presents A Fabulous Line Up of Entertainment For Your Dancing Pleasure Friday-January 21 SPider and the Crabs - Saturday - January 22 - The Rising Sons - January 28 - The Group - January 29 - Teddy Vale & The Valedares - February 18 - The Fabulous Flippers Coming Soon — The Ike & Tina Turner Revue And The Pacesetters Remember The Red Dog Is Open Wednesdays, Fridays And Saturdays The Red Dog Inn would like to take this opportunity to wish KU students good luck on your finals. Also, we would like to thank all graduating seniors for their patronage and not to forget us when visiting Lawrence. CLASSIFIED ADS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or religion. HELP WANTED Part-time work for students experienced in ad composition and make-up. Apply at Printing Service, Room 117, Flint Hall. tf ADS Studies needing for part time work apply in person at Sandy's Drive-In, Need extra cash? Drive bus part-time, mornings and afternoons. Age 21, bus or truck experience, app. dial VI 2- 6544, ask for Mr. Mogle. 1-21 Reliable student for selling imports. Apply 920 La. after 6 p.m. tf MISCELLANEOUS Died. Bierstube: Singen, trinken und essen German style. Featureting student's favorite dark beverage and student's favorite light beverage from Golden, Colorado. Also serving deluxe hamburgers and sandwiches. Pitcher available. Wednesday night. Party Room available. 14th and Tennessee. VI 2-8441. Need any Sewing or Monday after sale rates. Call after 5:00 p.m. 12-34-51 ELANDING PARTY PHOTOGRAPHY Your satisfaction is my strongest contract, 48 hour service guaranteed; 50% up-front, $1.00 per party; $1.00 custom back-baited B&W; $7.00, WEDDING COLOR SPECIAL 20 5x7 Prints, $35.00. Three years' experience at KU; for references and samples on Dave at TPCX; for work particularly in sorority, fraternity, or private home. Reliable, experienced and have references. Write to Housekeeping, 1132 Comp., Lawrence. tt PARTY TIME—Building available CALL VI-1458 Ralph Freed 'tf Sports Cat Maintenance and Repairs by and for the enthusiast. Super tuner Ray Pickering's Competition Sports Cars. East 23d St. VI 2-2191 ft Western Civilization Notes. Complete- Tune-ups — Evenings and weekends only; also other automobile appointments only via ST-2906, behind 837 Connecticut St. Farmer's tt FOR SALE Experienced photographer in children and family portraits. Reasonable rate. Will take pictures in your home. Call VI 2-6148. tf Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive, prehcognised and bound for $4.25 Call VI 2-190 for free delivery TYPEWRITERS - Office size and portables, new and used, manual and electric. Several table ware. Office medical sales, rentals and service. Office medicine supplies, equipment and furniture. Lawrence Typewriter. 700 Mass. St., VI 3-3644 1948 Butik Roadmaster Convertible. Perfect body, new upholstery, 4 new tires, engine rebuilt, top in fair shape. Power windows, power seats, power top. $450.00. Call Tom after 6 pm. VI 3-7334. tf Wollenas stereo 4-track tape recorder and Remington portable typewriter. Will consider trading for camera equipment Gary Grazda, VI T2-1483 ftl Across the burning sands of the Arabian Desert, at no little risk to my faithful Bedouin camel driver, Ben Akmel BEd Hazari of Al Mekkel E Hazari and exotic black Meershaum pipe. Handcarved by master artisans in the image of a notorious caliph of the Ottoman empire, this work of art features an intricate carving with a bone coupling. A brave caravan has brought this treasure of the Near East to you at the most reasonable price of sixty American dollars. Address serious requests for surveys or surveyors of rare art treasures, Box 2, University Daily Kansan. tt 1964 Chevy, 2 dr. H.T.H. Grey Impala, black interior, 300 HP stck, P.S. Posttraction. Tinted glass. 22,000, original owner, must sell. Call V1 2-684-8 Portable Electric Clothes Dryer — dries most garments in 10 minutes, hangs on your closet door. $28.88. Ray Stoneback's, 929-531-3911. 1-21 1957 Chevy, 2 door ht. V-8, stick, good mechanical condition and paint. Need money for 2nd semestr. S-m. 3-3310. 1911 Stewart. VI 2-6351. 1- 3-3310. 1-21 1963 Stingray, silver, removable top, base. FM, pug wheels, new tires, pelfect condition, 31,000 mills, $2.45* Three weeks of Baldwin, TU 3-241 Website. Save $25 on a Minolta SR1 single lens RFX FIA 41A, msr the Toshiba Omega II E50, Sankyo. Phone VI 3-0923. Best time 5:30 to 6:30. Gift Box Andrews Gifts Andrews Gifts VI 2-1523 Open Wednesday Evenings Malls Shopping Center Plenty of Free Parking 1961 Nash Rambler station wagon. Radio and heater-seat belts. New snow tires. One owner car. Call VI 2- 3001. Sports car owners, we have castrol oil, presilicate spark plugs at quality prices. Blevins, 7th and Michigan. 1962 Buck Skylark Sport Coupe. With bucket seats, power steering and new tires. Call VI 3-2270 after 5:30 p.m. 1-21 1833 Chrysler Imperial, big four-door, automatic, white walls; power steering, brakes, windows, seat a t, dressed sweet, elegant. Best offer 1-21 V1-1459 Snow Is Coming! Pair of Firestone best snow tires (8.50 x 14) Used one and two tire sizes, T1-7415, 1122 Call Tam Sheery, T1-3-7415, 1122 Campus Rd. 1964 Corvette, low mileage, two tops, excellent condition. Priced to sell, call Kansas City, FA 1-5866 after 6 p.m. 1-21 1958 Great Lakes mobile home, 42x8, b 2 brooms furnished, fully carpeted, newly painted, storm windows. Call VI 3-8791 for appointment. 1-21 Mobile home, 845x, 2 bedroom, carpeting throughout, furnished, excellent Trailer Court, 623 Missouri. Courts Curtis Harshaw, 1-21 1961 Pontiac Catalina Sport Coupe, white with maroon interior. One owner—low mileage, power steering and brakes, new tires and snow tires. Immaculate! Call Jim Suit, VI 3-7415. Rm. 232. 1-21 1958 Chevy Convertible, new top and top rear. Call Gray or warm 946 McCollum. 1-21 Comet 62, automatic transmission, shape. Call Hernandez. V-1 21 8765 Trailer house 35', 2-bedroom, clean, $500. Small box trailer $20. Refrigerator atos $10. Tandem wagon room $42. reserves for '8 by '8 room $40. VW front suspension $20. AM-FM TV and tape recorder with 26 reels of tapes $45. 6 hp compressor, compressor $15. Lee Curner, 141 Maple, North Lawrence, first trailer, evenings. 1-21 FOR RENT Married,graduate students,faculty- 2 bedroom apartment, $55.00. Two available January 1, one available February 1. Call for brochure, VICTOR JANEANTE Apartments office, 1123 Indiana. Extra nice quiet furnished apartment for mature man, carpeted, kite chicken, utilities paid. 2 blocks from Union. Available now. VI 3-8534 tf vacancy in a contemporary home. Private entrance and bath. Five evening meals weekly. $70 monthly. Mails paid. Call VI 3-9635 until tp Vancancies in contemporary home for young man, prefer graduate stu- dents. Swimming pool, home cooked meals call. Phone: VI 3-6357 call before 6 p.m. Rooms for graduate women, 3 single available at semester break. Kitchen facilities. One block from Union. Call VI. 3-6979. -121 HERTZ RENT A-CAR. Special rates Call Gayle, V 3-1028 1-21 Call Gayle, V 3-1028 1-21 Room for men students with or without kitchen privileges. Call 1-211 Single room and 12 meals per week. Call VI 3-9562. 1-21 Room for rent with kitchen privileges, one or two students, comp t-lily air-conditioned. See at 1625 W. 19th or call VI 7-3753. 1-20 Apartment for 2 for rent. VI 3-1427 wives with on calls 0-2120 Kentucky, Apt. F. TYPING Experienced typist has IBM electric to type your thesis, dissertation, term paper and accurate work. Warranty, reasonable rates Phone Mrs. Gilbert, VI 2-2088 Large room for rent—will accommodate one or two boys—large closet, shower, 2 blocks from campus—West Hills. VI 3-3077. 1-21 Furnished-apartment for young men VI 3-271, 1223 Louisiana 1-21 Top ka students desiring theses, diss- cations, rough drafts, or term paper typed fast and accurately on eltric tcpwriter by experienced toptist, call Mrs. O L Cook, CR 2-149, 1715 Sims, Topeka. 1-20 Experienced secretary will do typing in her home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 3-0300, after 5:00 call VI 3-0309, tf Experienced typist, 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electrician/writer, accurate service. Researcher, rates. CA,Ladies, Barlow. 2407 Yale, V. II-1648. Experienced typist; will type in my home. Accurate typing, reasonable rates and prompt service. Call Mrs. Brown at VI 2-0210. tf Wanted: Typing in my home. Experienced and accurate in term papers and theses. Call VI 3-2651 any time. Experienced typist will do only these typewriter. Mrs. Fulcher VI 3-0588 Accurate typing by experienced typist. Term papers, themes, theses and dissertations. Reasonable rates and fast. VI 2-1561. tf Secretary with many years experience, will type your term papers, thesis, or assignments. Fast, accurate rate. Call Rachel. Rate CV 12 6296 after 5 p.m. Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses, dissertations. sertificates, see Electronic type writer. Reasonable rates. Call Ms. Rauckman, V1 2-2817. tt Experienced typist will do theses and term papers. 4 years experience at KU. Phone Mrs. Oxford at VI 2-0673. tt Former Harvard and University of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports, and theses. Phone VI 3-7207. tf TYPING — GESTETNER MIMEO- GRAPHING—Mrs. McEldowney, VI 3-8568. Expert. Typing--Theses, dissertations and term papers. Electric typewriter, standard rates. Mrs. Mishler. VI 3-1029. 1-21 Typing done at reasonable rates by experienced typist. Fast accurate work. Call Betty Vincent, call VI 3-5504. tf Fast, accurate; immediate attention given to all term papers, reports, theses, etc. Mrs. Donna Stewart, VI 3-6621 1-21 Former teacher will give careful attention to typing your term papers. Accurate and neat work, 5 years experience. Call VI 3-3829. tt Secretary familiar with legal terms will do typing—briefs, memorandums, toppers, thesis, dissertations. Past secururions incurred rates. Mars. Goffi, VI 3-2577. Typing Wanted - Theses, essays, and Neat and accurate Call. 4156 1-21 Will do fast accurate typing in Standard typewriter. Call 3-8103 - 1-21 Typing wanted. IBM Selectric. Carol Tibbitts, 1909 Edgea Rd. V 3-1345 after 5 p.m. weekdays and all day on weekends. 1-20 Experienced typist will do dissertations, theses, manuscripts, and term papers. On Electric typist job duties. On Graphic typist symbols. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.J. V. 3-7485. 1-21 Experienced typist, any kind, in her home. Call VI 3-749. 1-21 WANTED Will Baby Sit in my home or yours. Call after 4:00 p.m. I 2-3961. Boy's class ring, 1965 green stone with M.P. on it. Also a ring guard. Call Patsey Underwood. VI 3-4221. L-21 LOST Pair of Ladies dark glasses, blue frames and case. Friday, Jan. 14, 2018. Office at Booth Javhawk, claims at UDK Business Office and pay for this ad. -1-20 FOUND Patronize your Kansan Advertisers Daily Kansan Thursday, January 20, 1966 TRAVEL TIME MAUPINTOUR TR SE TRAVEL SERVICE LET PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS Make Your Semester Pitcher Night Tonight-75c Then Come On (Come out and watch Batman) Tired Of Going To The Same Old Places? Reservations Now! Out To The The Stables has undergone extensive remodeling Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 New Stables - Mondays - 8:00-9:00 - Pitchers - 50c - Wednesdays - 7:30-8:00 - Tall Cans - 25c - Thursdays - Pitcher Night - 75c Visit Our V.I.P. Room - Fully Carpeted - Drapes - Television (color soon) - Nice Quiet Atmosphere 8TH ST. SHOE REPAIR Quality work on half soles, heels. We repair purses Shoe dyeing 107 E. 8TH Anderson Rentals "We Rent Almost Anything" V1 3-2044 812 New Hampshire Street P. O. Box 2038, K.C., Kan. Student With Sales Experience To Represent Our Company Part Time. Selling A Student Policy $10,000 Ins. Policy for $30.00 per yr. No War Clause Pyramid Life Ins. Co. Write Harold G. Parrott-V.P. COMPLETE CLASSICAL RECORD SELECTION COLUMBIA RECORDS WeaverS YOUR GASOLINE DOLLAR GOES FARTHER DERBY at... GARY'S DERBY SERVICE 2330 Iowa Lawrence YOU CAN'T BUY A BETTER GAS...AT ANY PRICE KU Extension Conducts School In cooperation with the traffic institute of Northwestern University, the KU extension division is conducting a course in the supervision of police personnel at the Kansas Highway Patrol Training Center in Salina Jan. 10-22. THE KANSAS Peace Officers Training School, Governmental Research Center of KU, the Kansas Highway Patrol, and the Kansas Peace Officers Association join with KU extension and the Traffic Institute of Northwestern University in sponsoring the course. E. P. Mooau, chief of the campus police and all the shift supervisors of the campus police have completed the course. Mooau completed the course in 1958 and the other members of the campus police completed the course last year. The course includes introduction to principles of management, elements of supervision, human relations in supervision, functions of supervision, effective communications, leadership in action, selection and training of supervisors, case studies in human relations, effective administration of discipline, and field supervision. Course enrollees are presented a certificate from KU extension upon completion of the course. Club Chops Issues The Hatchet Club, a men's club on the campus, was formed in the late 1950's, to discuss uninhibitedly, and informedly, what was going on on campus, from world crises to women's rights. 10 Daily Kansan Thursday, January 20, 1966 Granada THEATRE...telephone VI 3-5780 Hurry! Last 2 days! Evening Shows 7:00 & 9:00 DORIS DAY ? ROD TAYLOR DO NOT DISTURB CinemaScope Color by DE LUXE NEXT! "THAT DARN CAT" NOTE! Advance tickets for "Thunderball" on sale now for T.G.I.F. Premiere Peek Fri., Jan. 28, 11:30 p.m. Tickets also available for each performance Jan. 29-Feb. 11. - Sunset Drive-In * “Diamond Head”—Plus Bonus Hit $ \cdot $ A final exam in 15 minutes and you have only one spare? Call us our speedy service truck will have you going again in no time. CITGO FRITZ CO. 8th & New Hampshire VI 3-4321 Open Thursday Until 8:30 p.m. PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS —CONTACT— Downtown—Near Everything P-t-P Office, UN 4-3853 or Jo Dallam, VI 3-5660 PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE American Students Abroad The P-t-P Flight Program Still Has A Few Reservations Available. WINTER SALE OF MEN'S WEAR the town shop REDUCTIONS ONE HALF 1/2 ONE THIRD 1/3 ONE FOURTH 1/4 ONE FIFTH 1/5 REDUCTIONS - SUITS - SPORTCOATS - SLACKS TOPGOATS - SWEATERS CARCOATS WEEKEND SPECIAL 1/2 PRICE Winter Jackets THE Town Shop 839 Massachusetts CIA Seeks Students For Behind Scenes If you like novels with a contemporary, international setting, if you are co-operative and have an admirable scholastic record, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) is for you and vice-versa. Charles Pecinovsky, the agency recruiter for this seven-state area, so described the individual the CIA is interested in employing for behind-the-scenes work in this country and abroad. Pecinovsky, who operates from the Federal Building in Kansas City, Mo., was on campus yesterday to interview applicants. "WERE LOOKING for persons interested in international relations, who read more than the Kansas City Star and Time Magazine," Pecinovsky continued, listing qualifications. "We also try to select individuals who will become dedicated to the agency. That's important." Pecinovsky said the agency, which was created in 1947 and entrusted with intelligence activities "as related to the national security," listed one more requisite for applicants. "Persons who have relatives in other countries are generally rejected because of the possibility of blackmail," he said. "Such an activity is possible in this country but we have a good security force, the FBI, to help counteract such a possibility. Certainly none with relatives in one of the communist-controlled countries would be accepted." A CAREER training program for acceptable candidates was explained by Pecinovsky. The purpose of the program, he said, was to acquaint new employees with the agency and the relationship of the units within it. After a basic familiarization, individuals are channelled to one of the various branches according to interests, aptitude, and the needs of the agency. Local Art Not Found A valuable sculpture which was reported missing from its pedestal late last summer has not been found in spite of numerous investigations. The sculpture, made in terra cotta, was reported missing from the lawn of Justin Hill. THE ART PIECE represents the Biblical Rebecca, and was made in 1938 by Bernard Frazier, now a professor in the School of Engineering and Architecture. The sculpture has won several awards, including the top award in the national competition at the Springfield, Mass., Museum. It also has been on display in the Syracuse Museum of Art, and in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. If someone is found to be incompatible with his placement, he is reassessed and reassigned, Pecinovsky continued. If he is still dissatisfied, the individual is generally released because of the "improbability" of finding a place for him. The piece was purchased by Hill in 1940 and is valued at $350. The number of recruits varies considerably from year to year, Pecinovsky said, but there are always more applicants than there are positions to fill. "A NEWS-GATHERING group who, in addition to gathering it, has the responsibility of analyzing it, evaluating the over-all situation, and making forecasts—all for the benefit of the National Security Council," is how Pecinovsky described the purpose of the quasi-secret intelligence agency. He said the CIA becomes involved in activities other than strictly intelligence-gathering by virtue of a clause in the federal act creating the agency, which directs it "to perform such other functions and duties related to intelligence affecting the national security as the National Security Council may from time to time direct." SHANTY PIZZA 10 Minutes VI 2-2500 NDEA Fellows Meet Pecinovsky said close cooperation exists between the FBI which is primarily concerned with national security within the country—and the CIA. NDEA Title IV Fellows are to meet with Washington representatives Jan. 20 from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Daily Kansan 9 Thursday, January 20, 1966 WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Sargent Shriver today began full time duties as the war on poverty's director, his sights set on expansion of the program despite Republican criticism. War on Poverty to Expand Within minutes of President Johnson's announcement Monday that Shriver was leaving his dual role as Peace Corps director and poverty program chief, Shriver responded to GOP cutback demands. SAVE TIME NOW Finals are just around the corner. And we can help you get through them by saving you time. We can open a D.C. Checking Account for you in a few minutes which will save you a lot of needed time during final week. How? When you need money at the last minute during finals for necessities such as "final food" and that after finals celebration, it will be easy and quick to pay for what you want with a check. Why not visit us soon to save time during final week? DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK 9th & Kentucky "The Bank with the Student in Mind" Popular Film Series The Devil At 4 o'clock with Spencer Tracy and Frank Sinatra 1966 JAYHAWKER 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. Friday & Saturday Jan. 21st & 22nd Dyche Auditorium Admission 35¢ Advanced Tickets at Kansas Union Information Booth AT LAST!! Distribution of Cover & First Issue February 2-4 Alcove A Kansas Union Cafeteria Pick up your Jayhawker right after you enroll. All you need is your I.D. Graduating seniors—leave your address at the Jayhawker office so it can be mailed to you. Seniors—make your appointments now for your senior picture at Hixon Studio. $160 \times 13^{2}$ or $170 \times 14^{2}$ no TM 59th Year Hawks to Host'Cats Bv Emery Goad The nationally ranked KU Jayhawks meet the Kansas State University Wildcats Saturday night in Allen Field House in the top sunflower Basketball attraction of the season. The meet will be the second this year of the 59 year-old rivalry. Previously KU defeated the Next home game for the Jayhawks will be Saturday, Feb. 12, against the Oklahoma State Cowboys, Saturday, Feb. 5. KU travels to Missouri and Feb. 15 they host the Tigers. Wildcats 69-63 in the opening round of the pre-season Big Eight tournament in Kansas City in December. KANSAS ENTERS the game after suffering its first league defeat at the hands of Nebraska Tuesday, 83-75. Saturday, Jan. 15, KU defeated Iowa State on a last second shot by guard Bob Wilson. The score was 49-47. Playing since 1907 when the two teams first saw action, Kansas has 98 wins and 57 losses. Last year each team won on their home court, which is many times the deciding factor in these games. COACH TED OWENS will again keep his same starting line-up of Riney Lochmann, Ron Franz, Walt Wesley, Del Lewis, and Al Lopes. He also announced that Rodger Bohnenstichl, "66" reserve center, is certain to see more action in future games due to his improved performance. Usually Bohnenstichl works in K-State has a 7-6 overall record. In league play they have been defeated only by Nebraska. The Cornhuskers won last Saturday, 82-71. The Wildcat league record is 2-1. Wesley's center spot or at forward position. Wesley faces the tallest center in the conference, 7'1" Nick Pino, in Saturday's game. Wesley, who has scored a career total of 1.094 points, is the fourth best score in the history of Jayhawk basketball. Wesley has played against Kansas State five times as a varsity member of the team and has never tallied less than 18 points. In the Kansas City tournament, which KU won, Wesley scored 22 points against the Wildcats. Pino has averaged 15.6 scores per game in his first season. The probable K-State line-up includes: Larry Weigel, 6-3, and Roscoe Jackson, 6-5; forwards; Nick Pino, 7-1, center; and Sam Robinson, 6-0, and Dennis Berkholtz, 6-0, guards. The Jayhawks did not practice Wednesday to rest up after a rather heavy practice and game schedule the past week. Pino is the only Wildcat with an average score in double figures. Most of the K-State action will probably come from Weigel and Robinson, forwards. Coach Owens reports the team is working on their zone and half-court zone press defenses. K-State will probably use a zone or half-court man-to-man press. "There will be no drastic Stokes to Play Sim Stokes, who quit the KU football team under duress last fall, will complete his college football eligibility at Northern Arizona University at Flagstaff. He has a year of college eligibility remaining. See related story on Page 1. Gym Team Coasts To Easy Victory KU's gym team captured the first three places in all the events last night as they coasted to an easy 155.85 to 79.60 victory over Central Missouri State in Robinson Gymnasium. Kent Dobbins, KU captain, again led the winners with 49.30 points as he captured titles in the floor exercise, trampoline, horizontal bar, long horse and the rings. Dobbins also placed second in the parallel bars. RICHARD HEMPHILL followed Dobbins in KU scoring with 31.25 points. Other KU winners were Jim Gillispie on the side horse and Hemphill on the parallel bars. The victory was the fourth in five starts for the Jays this season. PLACING FOR KU WERE: Floor exercise — 1. Dobbins, 7.85; 2. Hemphill, 6.80; 3. Shields, 6.55. Side Horse 1: Gillispie, 7.10; 2. Estes, 6.10; 3. Kruger, 5.80. HORIZONTAL BAR—1. Dobbins, 8.45; 2. Dixon, 8.15; 3. Hemphill, 7.60. Long horse—1. Dobbins, 8.95; Hemubhil. 840: 3. Askins, 8.30. Trampoline—1. Dobbins, 7.60; 2. Pyle, 5.61; 3. Estes, 4.30. Parallel bars—1. Hemphill, 8:45; 2. Dobbins, 8:15; 3. Dixon, 7:80. Rings — 1. Dobbins, 8:30; 2. Worcester, 7.95; 3. Livesay, 7.60. Take an Enjoyable SEMESTER BREAK - Trip Home - Other Travel Contact Maupintour for: - Skiing Maupintour Travel Agency VI 3-1211 Malls Shopping Center changes in our team, we are just working out our mistakes," Owens said. PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS The game, the first sellout since the 1958 meet with K-State, is "always great," Owens said. Daily Kansan 8 Thursday, January 20, 1966 THIRSTY? VISIT THE OLD MISSION INN for for YOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGE (WE HAVE GREAT FOOD, TOO) 1904 Mass. VI 3-9737 I. The smilin' crew at the Pizza Hut wishes you the best of luck on finals. Left to right: Dave Butler, Benno Lederer, Steve Bey, Les Watson, Larry Maddux, Ron Brooks, Jim Knupp, Gary Potts, Jerry Koellsted, Larry Mellinger, John Kerfoot, Mike Mersmann, Tim Hadley. When you get a break, come out and see us — we don't care what you wear. P. S. — Watch for us next semester. IN BY 9 -- OUT BY 5 1606 W.23rd PIZZA HUT VI 3-3516 PIZZA HUT NEW TOPS Cleaners & Launderers Offers the Students SERVICE. When time is important let Tops In By 9 - Out By 5 service take care of your laundry problems. In addition Shirts Are Returned on Hangers and Tops offers a money back guarantee. TOPS Open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. (Monday thru Saturday) 1526 West 23rd (Next to the Pancake Man) Owens' Spouse Bolsters Team Behind every successful man there stands a woman, and KU's basketball coach is no exception to the rule. But KU's Ted Owens has more push than most, because behind him are three women, his wife, "Nana," and two daughters, Nancy, 6, and Kelly, 3. Mrs. Owens, who real name is Nancy, is one of KU's most avid basketball fans, and says she has never missed a home game since Owens has been at KU. "I FEEL DIFFERENT than the average spectator. I know what goes into each play. When I go to a game, I can get more out of it than other people, because I know what effort goes into the game," Mrs. Owens said. She prefers sitting directly behind the players' bench, but "I get so excited at the games, that I'm afraid they might be called on a technical four or something." THE OWENS MET at Cameron Junior College, Lawton, Okla., in 1958, when Owens was a combination coach and history teacher. Mrs. Owens, then Nana Amis, was a coed in one of his classes, the History Before the Civil War. "Students in the class used to call it 'Uncle Teddy's story hour,' because Ted would draw diagrams of plays and tell stories from a joke book about Columbus. "On game days he'd come in and say that he would take roll at the game." Mrs. Owens said. THE TWO EVENTUALLY found they had mutual friends and she began helping him grade papers "and one thing led to another." They began dating in March, and because they had kept their relationship quiet, several people were surprised when they were married that June. After they were married, Mrs. Owens enrolled in her husband's class of History After the Civil War. "I GOT A BETTER GRADE before the Civil War," the attractive young blond said. She completed her study at Cameron Junior College, and when she moved to Lawrence, enrolled as a junior in the School of Fine Arts. One painting she did, which Boner-of-Year Goes to NBC DALLAS—(UPI)—The Dallas Bonehead Club "Bonehead of the year" award will be presented Friday to the NBC news department for its broadcast of a professional football game and the Gemini 7 Launch Dec. 4 on the same screen at the same time. "THIS IS OUR only way of expressing the sorrow we have for those poor souls in the NBC TV news department who must have sat up many a night trying to decide which program should have priority, then in a moment of complete frustration, threw common sense to the wind and blundered their mistake across the screens of millions of unbelieving television viewers," the Bone-heads said. William B. Monroe, NBC Washington bureau chief, will accept the trophy of walnut and silver topped by a large silver nut. JIM MARSHALL, defensive end of the Minnesota Vikings,received the award last year for his 66-yard, wrong-way run with a fumble for a safety against San Francisco. hangs above the fireplace in the home, is an impressionistic picture of a busy European market place. One of the signs on the street reads. "Ted's." Marshall started out for Dallas to accept the trophy but got on a wrong flight and ended up some place else. "It just seemed to fit there," she said. Her life as wife of a basketball coach has been a string of strange episodes. ONE MORNING at about 3 a.m., a prankster called the Owens residence, posing as a water maintenance engineer. He said there was a leak in one of the water pipes, and was calling the neighborhood to locate the leak. He asked Owens to check the drains in his house, look at the floor in the basement, and finally to check for water standing in the yard. After Owens put on his hat and shoes, and had checked the house and yard, he hade his report to the man on the phone, that he could see no water. The Owens family asked their neighbors the next day about the water leak, and none had received any phone calls. But Sam Miranda, assistant coach, also had received a call. PLAYERS, who are unable to go home during holidays because of basketball practice, find the Owens' house a friendly home away from home. This Christmas, Walt Wesley and Al Lopes were dinner guests, she said. "They don't eat anything in particular. They just eat great quantities of everything." Daily Kansan 7 Thursday, January 20, 1966 PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS FREE PEPSI'S with each pizza delivered hot to your door from the ovens of Earl's Pizza Palace THREE SIZES TO CHOOSE FROM - 10 INCH . . . $1.05 - 12 INCH . . . $1.25 - 14 INCH . . . $1.65 OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK Earl's Pizza Palace 729 Mass. VI 3-0753 SHIRTS 25c Announcing Betty Brite's SUPERIOR SHIRT SERVICE Shirts are returned on hangers for only 25¢! Prices on shirts and dry cleaning are good every day of the week! Slacks, Skirts .50 Sweaters, Trousers Men's or Ladies' Men's or Ladies' Cloth $1.00 Coats Men's or Ladies' 2-piece $1.00 Suits Dresses, plain $1.10 NO LIMITS! * Betty Brite DRYCLEANING 715 Massachusetts Open 7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Monday Thru Saturday VI 2-2121 Massive Maze Students Desert Union The Kansas Union is a labyrinth that probably would puzzle even Theseus, the Greek hero who killed the Minotaur. The average KU student feels familiar with the Hawk's Nest, the cafeteria, first floor and the ballroom. But touring the rest of the building makes one understand why Theseus had that little ball of string. THE TINY DOOR under the stairway in the sub-sub basement across from the Jay Bowl leads to the trophy case. Stairs, leading to unknown destinations, are hidden in closets. The walls in the northwestern part of the cafeteria have several infinitesimal hooks—which serve no earthly purpose. Third floor is perhaps the most confusing part of the building. There are three different halls, all leading to the same place, and each has about 20 doors, some labeled and some not. While a ball of string is not necessary to extricate oneself from the third floor maze, a sense of direction is definitely required. As final week nears, the Kansas Union is hardly recognizable. Few meetings are scheduled. Second, third and the basement floors nearly are deserted. Even the television in first- floor lobby draws only a handful of tube fans. WANDERING through the halls gives one a sweeping sense of desolation, and it is made more acute by normal pangs of "final week panic." The dark and empty meeting rooms, stacked tables in the lonely hallways and even the deserted ballroom bear more than one resemblance to H. G. Welles" "Time Machine." A few notes of "Goldfinger" drift through a door as a piano major practices in a hallway. Except for the aspiring Ferrante or Teicher, the halls contain only a few students. Further life is alluded to by the whirr of an elevator and the occasional shuffle of feet on stairs. The front stairs are bypassed, leaving a wall hanging and the United States flag in solitary repose. The people, few that there are, can be found in the reading room, music and browsing room and the Hawk's Nest-deep in study. The signs of approaching final week are evident everywhere—in echoing halls, in the nearly blank calendar board in the lobby. Even the bridge tables in the Nest have been cleared for weightier thoughts. Shooting Again in Dominican SANTO DOMINGO—(UPI)—Gunfire crackled through the streets of downtown Santo Domingo in a series of unexplained shootings Tuesday and Wednesday nights, killing at least one person and wounding five. Archbishop Emanuel Clarizio, the Vatican's chief diplomat here, narrowly escaped injury in one accident. No Americans were injured in the gunfighting. Luis Quezada, an official of the education ministry, was shot and killed Wednesday night as he slept in his home in Santo Domingo's "rebel zone." Expert to Speak The KU Chapter of Sigma Xi, science honorary society, will sponsor an exchange lecturer from Kansas State University, Dr. John A. Johnson, expert on cereal chemistry, tonight at 7:30 in Room 411, Summerfield Hall. Johnson's subject will be "Bread Flavor and the Public," on which he has done extensive research. May I Take Your Order? WARM PEEK 15 CHEESEBURGER 40 FISH 85 GRILLED CHEESE 16 FRENCH FRIER 12 GRANDE 10 - 15 ROOT DEEN 15 - 18 GROTEL 10 MILK SHAKE 10 SANDY'S Always has the fastest, most courteous service in addition to their consistently low prices on delicious food. Conveniently located in the Hillcrest Shopping Area. Lill Becomes Council Head Don Lill, Emporia third-year law student, has been elected President of the Moot Court Council for the spring semester. The council is in charge of the James Barkley Smith Moot Court Competition which results in a KU law team entering regional and perhaps national competition. "I am looking forward to working on the Council," Lill said. "We have an excellent group and I am looking forward to working with them next semester." Stadium Dedicated The dedication of Memorial Stadium took place on the morning of Homecoming Day, 1922. The dedication was attended by more than 7,000 persons. One of the features of the day was a parade of 4,000 students and faculty. Tuition Once $10 As fees shoot upward, especially in the case of out-of-state students, we can think back to the days of 1898, when the entrance fee for a semester was ten dollars. 6 Daily Kansan Thursday, January 20, 1966 AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION Table Tops AUTO GLASS Sudden Service East End of 9th St. VI 3-4416 GIVE YOURSELF A BREAK — TAKE YOUR STUDY BREAK THE SHANTY ★ HOT WHOPPER SANDWICHES ★ DELICIOUS SHANTY PIZZA ★ COFFEE AND HOT CHOCOLATE ★ DOWNSTAIR'S PARTY ROOMS ★ PIANO AND ORGAN 644 Mass. VI 2-2500 H FREEMAN Town Squires Carefree comfort . . you'll praise the good looks and comfort fit of this soft chukka boot . . plantation crepe sole and heel . . Sand color. $6\frac{1}{2}$ to 13 N & M width $13.00 Royal College Shop 837 Mass. VI 3-4255 PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS Shaffer has been at KU since 1956. He came here after resigning from the University of Alabama, along with 32 other instructors, in protest of the rejection of a Negro girl trying to gain admittance to the school. He Authors Econ Books By Randy Senti The girl, Autherine Lucy, had actually gained admittance to the school at one time but was later expelled by the Board of Regents on unsubstantiated charges, Shaffer said. The author of two widely used books on economics is a well-known instructor to many students on campus. His other book, "The Soviet System in Theory and Practice: Selected Western and Soviet Views," was published in 1965. He is Harry G. Shaffer, associate professor of economics, who teaches the large introductory economics sections as well as courses in comparative systems and the course on the Soviet economy. In addition to his books, Shaffer has published many articles and book reviews, especially on the communists and their economies. 5 HIS FIRST BOOK, "The Soviet Economy: A Collection of Western and Soviet Views," was published in 1963 and has been used in 76 universities. Daily Kansan Thursday, January 20, 1966 DIAMOND BRIDAL SETS Feature Lock $200 Unusually large selection. Designs which complement your taste and the sparkling wonder of the love you share. Available in 14KT and 18KT white or yellow gold. Cannot turn or twist apart, stay in perfect position. BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 743 Mass. VI 3-4366 Your KU ID Is Your Pass To Instant Credit Open Monday and Thursday till 8:30 p.m. SUA ANNOUNCES Summer Flight To Europe via Air France $280.00 Round Trip New York-Paris-New York Leave June 10 — Return Aug.8 Due To Overwhelming Response We Are Extending The Deadline For Down Payment Contracts Are Still Available For More Information Call SUA Offices—UN 4:3477 PIZZA PUB PIZZA PUB THE EXCITING NEW CLUB OF LAWRENCE 1300 West 23rd 23rd & Naismith THE MIDWEST'S MOST DYNAMIC CLUB SEATING FOR 200 PEOPLE NOW FEATURING THE NEWEST ROCK GROUPS PRIVATE PARTY ROOM NOW AVAILABLE Fri. 21 - "Uglies" 5 IMPORTED CHEESES 3 SIZES 20 VARIETIES OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK- VI 3-0611 Sat. 22 - "The Kegs" CALL OUR PIZZA EXPRESS FOR FREE DELIVERY VI 2-9465 They Scale Stadium To Keep in Practice By Rich Lovett and Howard Pankratz Don't be alarmed. The students climbing the outside wall of Memorial Stadium are not psychotic, and they are not trying to sneak in while the gates are locked. They are sane, normal members of the KU Mountaineering Club brushing up on climbing techniques. The Mountaineering Club has about 40 active members, including three girls. Disbanded in 1958 because of lack of interest, it was revived this year, mainly through the efforts of Bob Taylor, La Jolla, Calif., junior, the new club's treasurer. PRESIDENT of the group is Al Gipson, Kansas City, Mo., junior. Soon Gipson, Taylor, and the other club members will be conducting a membership drive. The 1965 club was given a boost by the transfer of approximately $150 from the old club and has $235 in its treasury. "Tentative plans call for a field trip to Estes Uark, Colo., during Easter," says Taylor. "The old club has been to the Teton Mountains and into Colorado before, too." The club also plans a trip to Table Rock Lake and Roaring River State Park in Missouri over semester break. According to John Lewis, Prairie Village sophomore and club equipment chairman, the club goes about every three weeks to a quarry about 20 miles from Lawrence on Highway 10 near the Sunflower Ordnance Plant, where they practice climbing 70-foot cliffs. STATE LADY When you can't afford to be dull sharpen your wits with NoDoz $ ^{\mathrm{TM}} $ NoDoz Keep Alert Tablets fight off the hazy, lazy feelings of mental sluggishness. NoDoz helps restore your natural mental vitality...helps quicken physical reactions. You become more naturally alert to people and conditions around you. Yet NoDoz is as safe as coffee. Anytime...when you can't afford to be dull, sharpen your wits with NoDoz. SAFE AS COFFEE NoDoz KEEP ALERT TABLETS NoDoz SAFE AS COFFEE THE QUARRY has four different training routes: there is a 70 foot rappell, two direct-aid routes, and one 70 foot "permanent" route with footholds. Members bring sack lunches for the Sunday practice. Memorial Stadium is used for rappell practice. KU officials have given permission for this activity. The group will travel to the Flat Iron Mountain Range near Boulder, Colo., at Easter break. Taylor would tell you, "Most of us really don't know why we climb mountains. 'Because they're there' really isn't a very good answer, but we couldn't give you one much better. Yet, it's dangerous, but it's a calculated risk. Anyway, the worst accident in the history of the club was only a broken arm." 4 Daily Kansan Thursday, January 20, 1966 In Your Spare Time Correspondence Study Offered By Joyce Grist The correspondence study division of KU's University Extension has just published its new catalogue dated 1966-'67. All full time faculty members will receive a copy of the catalogue, Oliver Phillips, correspondence study director, said. Interested students can obtain a copy from the University Extension office. Correspondence study provides individual directed study in high school, college, and adult continuing education courses. Anyone able to do the required work may enroll in the correspondence study program. TO RECEIVE HIGH SCHOOL or college credit, a student must meet regular requirements and prerequisites for the course in which he is enrolling and of the school in which he desires credit. The correspondence study division decides admission on a non-credit basis individually. The correspondence study bureau does not itself give credit for the courses it offers. The bureau does not give any degrees or diplomas, nor does it certify primary or secondary teachers. The State Board of Regents determines the enrollment fee schedule for correspondence study. Residents of Kansas pay $10 a semester hour for college courses and non-residents pay $12 a semester hour for college courses. High school courses are $15 a half unit for residents and $17 a half unit for non-residents. STUDENTS ENROLLED in correspondence study may take a maximum of 18 months to complete a correspondence course. At the end of 18 months, the enrollment is terminated whether or not the student has completed the course. A maximum of five lessons may be submitted in a week. Three-hour college courses have a total of 24 assignments. Two-hour courses have a total of 16 assignments. To pass a course for credit, the student must pass the final examination. Some courses also require the student to pass a mid-course examination. Students enrolled on a non-credit basis need not take a final examination. College correspondence study courses are offered in anthropology, art history, astronomy, botany, business administration, comparative biochemistry and physiology, economics, education, and engineering. English, French, Italian, geography, geology, German, history, human development and family life, journalism, Latin, mathematics, music, philosophy, physical education, political science, psychology, religion, Slavic languages and literatures, sociology, and Spanish and Portuguese. Ford Motor Company is: inspiration Jim Weston B.A., Washington Univ. M.B.A., Washington Univ. (2) College graduates, new to Ford Motor Company, often comment on the comparative youth of many of our top executives. The example of these men in key positions is evidence that being young is no handicap at Ford to those who possess ability and ambition. In fact, new employees can expect challenging assignments while still participating in our College Graduate Program. This means an opportunity to demonstrate special skills and initiative while still learning the practical, day-to-day aspects of the business. Consider the experience of Jim Weston, who has been with Ford Motor Company for three years. Jim came to Ford in February, 1963. His first assignment was in marketing analysis where his principal job was evaluating present and potential dealer locations. For a time, he also gained experience in the actual purchasing of dealer locations. Later, an assignment forecasting sales and market potential with Ford Division's Truck Sales Programming Department gave him the background he needed to qualify for his present position. His job today? Only three years out of college, Jim is now a senior financial analyst in Ford Division's Business Management Department. Jim Weston's experience is not unusual. At Ford Motor Company, your twenties can be challenging and rewarding years. Like to learn more about it? Talk to our representative when he visits your campus. Ford The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan An equal opportunity employee World-Wide Wire President Johnson Flies to Kansas City WASHINGTON—(UPI)President Johnson flew to Missouri today to mark the inauguration of a $50,000 annual Harry S. Truman Peace Prize and at the same time get in a good word for the foreign aid program. The President, accompanied by Chief Justice Earl Warren, took off from Andrews Air Force Base outside Washington. He then drove to the Truman Library at Independence, Mo., for ceremonies to set up the prize and to unveil plans for a Truman Center for the Advancement of peace to be located in Israel. Johnson's remarks at the ceremonies dealt with the current foreign aid program, particularly with non-military efforts to bolster economies and standards of living in Southeast Asia. NEW DELHI—(UPI)—President Johnson today invited the world's only woman prime minister, Mrs. Indira Gandhi of India, to visit the United States Feb. 1. Mrs. Gandhi Invited to U.S. The invitation was delivered to Mrs. Gandhi by U.S. Ambassador Chester Bowles during a 30-minute formal call at her office. Viet Cong Break Cease Fire Bowles was the first foreign representative to call on the widowed daughter of late Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, who was chosen Wednesday by the ruling Congress party to succeed the late Lal Bahadur Shastri as the leader of India's 480 million citizens. SAIGON—(UPI)—Viet Cong guerrillas appeared to single out American troops for targets today at the start of the scheduled lunar New Year truce period. Apparently the Communists considered the Americans excluded from the conditions of the temporary cease-fire. Reports received in Saigon indicated the Viet Cong had stopped shooting at everyone else. At 12:30 p.m. a squad of Viet Cong gunners armed with automatic weapons blasted away at a U.S. Army HU1B helicopter on a medical evacuation mission to the Ba To Special Forces camp about 22 miles southwest of the capital. This was $11\frac{1}{2}$ hours after the time the Viet Cong had announced the new year holiday truce would begin. LBJ Asks Four Year Terms WASHINGTON—(UPI)—President Johnson today sends his proposal for four-year House terms to Congress where it faces the prospect of a fight among the lawmakers it would benefit. The proposed constitutional amendment would lengthen the present two-year term of congressmen. Another proposed amendment would streamline the Electoral College system of electing presidents. Both amendments will go to the Judiciary Committees of the House and the Senate. In the House this will put it under the wing of Rep. Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., a man who has won 22 two-year terms and likes the system the way it is. GotFinalFatigue? Your Date Bowls Every Other Game Take A Break Try Bowling And Billiards FREE (Remember Mom Bowls FREE) 6 p.m. Friday — 6 p.m. Sunday Regular Hours During Final Week And Semester Break at the Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION Foreign Students: Check the January issue of the International Campus for concerning some important obligations to be completed in January. Official Bulletin On Campus Interviews for Friday: Jake Johnson, Jr. at Roche, Wise, K-12, 109 Ba and Keri, H.S. Bakersfield, Calif., 3-12, 117B Kern Co. Junior College, 12B Ba TODAY Lutheran Worship, 4:30 p.m. Sponsored by all Lutherans. Danforth Chapel Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Channel University Women's Club, Newcomer's Event, 7:30 p.m. An evening of folk music with Prof. Oldfather, Watkins Room, Union. John Hawkes, Novell-in-Residency Banker, Workshops, works, 8 ppm. Forum Room, Union. 6 ppm. Forum Room, Union. TOMORROW Catholic Mass. 6:45 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel. CFM, 8 Class AA State Debate Tournament. All Day. Kansas Union. Muslim Society. 1 p.m. Friday pope's meeting of Religion (pope, Kansas Union). LDS Institute of Religion, 4:30 p.m. Union. ASC Gives Awards Popular Film, 7 and 9:30 p.m. "The Devil at 4 O'Clock." Dyche Aud. Hillel Friday Night Services, 7.30 Parkside Community Center, 917 Highland Drive Recipients are Judith Cady, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Cady, 217 S. River, Beloit, and Barbara Taggart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Taggart, 467 Valley St., Maplewood, NJ. All Student Council social committee scholarships have been awarded to two sophomores for the spring semester. Miss Cady, a graduate of St. John's High School, also holds Elks and state scholarships. She is a member of Student Union Activities and Cwens, sophomore Daily Kansan Miss Taggart holds a scholarship hall award and was cultural affairs chairman of her freshman hall. Bees and Bees 3 Thursday, January 20, 1966 women's honorary. Her freshman year she was a dormitory floor officer, and member of Frosh Hawks pep club. If a queen bee fertilizes an egg it develops into a female. If the egg is unfertilized it develops into a male. Southridge Plaza, Inc. 2350 Ridge Court Lawrence, Kansas, 66044 Vacancies Available MRS. RAMON H. PICKERING Manager Office V1 2-1160 Home V1 2-3755 Area Code 913 HAPPINESS IS AN INVESTMENT 1965 Sunbeam Tiger (Like New) Ford Powered 1965 Mustang 289 Convertible 1964 Triumph Spitfire (Choose From Two) 1964 Buick Skylark Convertible (Loaded & Air) A FULL LINE OF 1966 TRIUMPH CARS — Bank Financing—Sensible Trade Allowances COMPETITION - Invest only in a car that carries our guarantee. Sports Cars EAST 23 RD. ST. LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 NO DELIVERY CHARGE CAR TRANSPORT Piping Hot Pizza Delivered In Humidity Controlled Ovens 10-MINUTE DELIVERY Mobile Oven Menu Mobile Oven Menu All King-Size 12" Pizzas ★ Sausage ★ Pepperoni Hamburger ★ Double Cheese Shanty International And Other Varieties Most Delicious Pizza in Lawrence Open For Sunday Dining Delivering more pizzas than anyone in Lawrence —And still quicker—always hot DIAL VI 2-2500 PIZZA MOBILE DELIVERY SERVICE (Radio-Controlled) THE SHANTY MENU 644 MASS. THE SHANTY We Are Equipped to Deliver 180 Fresh Pizzas at One Time LET US SERVE YOUR NEXT PARTY . Censorship-a fable for modern Kansans Once upon a time not so very long ago in a place not far from here, there lived a group of very happy people. Every morning the sun would rise in fiery splendor through an azure sky, gilding everything within its reach and warming the rich black earth. In the village, houses would come to life as breakfast fires roared in the hearths. The men hurried off to their businesses and the women bustled about the houses discharging daily tasks and coping with minor emergencies. The children went whistling off to school except for those who had to stay behind and play because they were too young. COME EVENING, the men would hurry home from work, the women would place dinner on the table, and the whole family would enjoy a spirit of togetherness before the night's recreation. They were a hard-working, fun-loving people—no better nor worse than their ancestors had been. Life was simple. Life was calm. Life was good. Nothing ever changed. Then one day, one of the town's leading senior citizens was out walking when he happened to spy a four-letter Anglo-Saxon word crudely scrawled in cawen on a board fence. He was noticeably disturbed. A little further on, he spied another shocking display of human desire. "Forsooth," he declared, "methinks the country is going to the hounds!" So he hobbled as fast as his cane would allow back to his club where he wasted no time explaining to his cronies what he had seen. "No doubt 'tis the influence of all of today's dirty books and movies," he hypothesized, using the stock criteria that everything since his day was, of course, "dirty." The cronies nodded their aged heads in mute agreement. "I propose we form a board selected from our mature and knowledgeable group to eradicate all this dirt," he said. Again the graying heads bobbed. "IF WE REMOVE all dirty words, then we'll remove all dirty thoughts, too," he concluded profoundly. And so they set to work. The group hired squads of painters to repaint all fences and buildings where scrawlings appeared. Men's restrooms were invaded and given a gleaming new surface. Professional readers went through volumes at all the bookstands marking out questionable words with a magic marker. Even words in film dialogue were dubbed over with a "beep." Of course the happy people were at first taken aback, but they said nothing. The elders must be right, they said, because they had never been questioned before. The thought of constitutional freedoms never entered their heads. It was not until one fateful day a couple of months later that something had to give. One of the local college youths came home for a vacation. His first day back, he decided to go to a movie, but arriving early, he spent some time browsing through a book and record shop near the theater. "ODD," HE THOUGHT as he glanced over the titles. Some of the words had been blotted out by ink markers. "The Turn of the ...," by Henry James, he read. Glancing at the albums, he noted "Die Gotter erung" by Wagner. But he shrugged it off and went mercilily in to the movie. He was just settling himself comfortably in the plush seat when the house lights dimmed and the travelogue flickered on. It was about the man-made wonders of the country. At one point, it showed a guide leading a group around a huge reservoir. "And here, ladies and gentlemen," the guide explained, "is the incomparable Grand Coulee "beep." The student shot upright in amazement. Had he heard right? The guide continued, "Yes, Grand Coulee "beep" is the largest. .." The student's mind couldn't comprehend. He fled to a quiet cafe down the street to mull over what had happened. As he stepped through the door, he was assaulted by the strains of a then-popular recording coming from the jukebox. "Beep-o, Dolly. Well, Beep-o, Dolly," crooned the raspy bass voice. That did it. Armed with a crayon, the student set about to return vulgarity to its proper place. He scribbled on freshly painted fences. He wrote on clean restroom walls. Late at night, he stalked about serenading his neighbors with "Hello, Dolly." The elders were outraged at the impertinence. MORE PAINTERS WERE hired. This time, they were armed with paint sprayers. The student rallied again, spending many hours on his newly found project. It even looked as if he might win. The elders conferred. Then their painters were given cans of spray paint with instructions to blot out the offending words rather than to try to cover whole areas. The student became desperate. Try as he might, he couldn't keep ahead of the paint sprayers. So he gave up. The elders rejoiced. The fiend had been overcome at last, they said. Then an idea hit the student. He obtained a can of spray paint and went to work. The next morning, one of the elders was driving down a street when he came upon a partially vandalized sign. It should have read "No Parking." Instead, it read "No ... ing." He was puzzled. Why would anybody do a thing like that, he asked himself. THE ANSWER WAS NOT long in coming. At that moment, a couple of grade-schoolers skipped by the sign. Both stopped. One pointed at it and both sniggered knowingly. The elder's jaw dropped in horror. He hurried to his club to tell what he had seen. On his way he saw other examples of the new handiwork: "Eat ___ at Joe's." "Get ___ for Less." "Believe and ye shall be..." Truth dawned. To take away the word didn't necessarily take away the thought, too. In another part of town, the student drove around in his new sports car sounding the horn at frequent intervals. "Beep," he honked, and the conditioned townspeople reacted like Pavlov's dogs. Strong men blushed and women fainted right on the street. The snowball was gaining momentum. Pornographers worked day and night filling books with nothing but blanks and inked-in places. It was much easier and faster to produce, they agreed. Hundreds of teenagers dropped "Tropic of Cancer" and "Candy" in favor of the new books, "A Friend Is Someone Who ... You," "Winnie the ...," and others, as soon as they hit the stands. MEANWHILE THE ELDERS called an emergency meeting of the board. They were frantic. They didn't dare continue with their arbitrary censorship project now or they'd be contributing to the problem. In desperation, they called off the painters and inkers and "beepers." They conceded to the omnipresence of the human mind and sat down to discover another solution. "Perhaps we should try judging things on their overall worth?" one of them suggested "Maybe we should try a positive approach and try to make other things look more attractive?" another ventured. And so they did. Within a short while, regular editions of books, records, and movies reappeared, driving the inked-in pornography off the stands Grants were given to the encouragement of good literature and bursts of man's vulgarity were once again consigned to their places on bathroom walls and fences. Things returned to where they had been before the purge. Once upon a later time in that same place act so far from here, there lived another group of very happy people. The sun still rose every morning, gilding everything within its reach. The people were still hard-working, fun-loving people—no better nor worse than their ancestors had been. Nothing ever changed. Bestsellers in paperback Election to the "bestseller" lists continues to be the best way for later success as a paperback, and Morris L. West is regularly found on both bestseller and paperback lists. His ability is that of taking contempoary ideas, events and problems and giving them universality in a well-told story. Italy has been his recent scene, particularly Rome; in The Ambassador (Dell, 95 cents) he shifts to the Far East. For West's hero this time is Maxwell Gordon Amberley, LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS BURER W.35 OOMNETING I SUSPECT PROFESSOR SNARFS "RITICISM JUST AWEE BIT HARSH." assigned to South Viet Nam amidst turmoil both there and in his personal life. Not up to either "The Shoes of the Fisherman" or "The Devil's Advocate", this new book still makes telling comments about the United States and its political and moral role in Southeast Asia. American Chrome, by Edwin Gilbert (Dell, 85 cents), is another of the new volumes. This is one of those big old family epics, with considerable sex, controversy and striving for the successful heights of business. Gilbert's hero is one Codman Smith, boss of an automobile business. It is of special interest because it is one of the few novels written about that most symbolic of American possessions—the car. Also in paperback is Bernard Malamud's collection called Idiots First (Dell, 75 cents). Malamud has achieved considerable success, particularly with the avant-garde, for his stories and novels. He is a sharp commentator, especially, on the American college scene. New this month also is Calder Willingham's Natural Child (Dell, 60 cents). The publishers are dredging far back to find novels by this excessively sensational and occasionally depicter of the more sordid side of the American South. And what we might call the trivia, books, that is, quite unlikely to appear on anybody's reading list. First a new Hercule Poirot. Agatha Christie's Murder in Retrospect (Dell, 45 cents), about an artist, his wife, and his model; next Mary Roberts Rinehart's Episode of the Wandering Knife (Dell, 50 cents), which goes back a couple of decades and will fascinate especially the older generation; Ellery Queen's The Murderer Is a Fox (Dell, 50 cents), starring one of the most famous of detectives; Leonard Holton's Deliver Us from Wolves (Dell, 45 cents), which Plus two in the miscellaneous category—McCall's Easy Sewing Book (Dell, 95 cents), and 12th Book of Dell Crossword Puzzles (Dell, 45 cents). No plots or point of view to comment on. involves a sleuth named Father Bredder in spooky stuff about old castles and werewolves, and Wayne D. Overholser's Day of Judgment (Dell, 40 cents), an adventure about old times in Colorado. 2 Daily Kansan Thursday, January 20, 1936 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office Founded 1889 Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, N Y 10022. Mail subscription rates: $4 a semester or $7 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. EXECUTIVE STAFF MANAGING EDITOR Judy Farrell BUSINESS MANAGER Ed Vaughn EDITORIAL EDITORS Janet Hamilton. Karen Lambert NEWS AND BUSINESS STAFF Assistant Managing Editors ... Suzy Black, Susan Hardley ... Jon Lenson, Jake Thayer Circulation Manager ... Mike Robe Advertising Manager ... Dale Reinecker City Editor ... Joan McCabe Draft Eyes College Call WASHINGTON — UPI)— The Selective Service System will decide within the next 10 days whether to begin drafting college students to meet manpower needs of the war in Viet Nam. The decision will be up to Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, director of the system. If he decides to tap the college manpower pool, the poorest students, scholastically, will get the first 1-A classifications and some will be drafted by next year. HERSHEY TOLD A news conference Wednesday he will make up his mind sometime "in the next 10 days." If the blanket deferment system for college students is ended, Hershey said it would be replaced by a class-standing test used during the Korean War. Under this system, a college student takes a test to see where he stands in comparison to the rest of his class. If he scores well, he is generally considered safe from a draft call. If he does poorly, he may be called up. The testing system also applies to graduate students. IN THE CASE OF high school students who want to go to college, the system works basically the same. The high school student's test can determine whether he has the ability to do college work. During the Korean War, class-standing tests usually gave deferments to: - Freshmen in the upper half of the class. - Sophomores in the upper two-thirds. - JUNIORS IN THE upper three-fourths. Birth Control Help Assured INDEPENDENCE, Mo.—(UPI)—President Johnson today offered a renewed measure of American aid to nations seeking to control the size of their populations. The Chief Executive presented an expanded but generalized view of birth control in heavily over-population countries during a prepared speech saluting former President Harry S. Truman. THE OCCASION was a ceremony at the Truman Library here marking the establishment of a Harry S. Truman center for the advancement of peace in Israel and an annual $50,000 peace award named for the former President. At the outset, Johnson praised Truman for being "one of the world's most persistent searchers for peace" and for pioneering American foreign aid with his "Point IV" program of 1949. Against this background, Johnson presented his own version of foreign assistance in 1966, based on his recent State of the Union message when he called for "a major new effort . . . to improve the life of man." ONE OF Johnson's points of emphasis today was his pledge to "increase our efforts in the great field of human population." "The hungry world cannot be fed until and unless the growth in its resources and the growth in its population come into balance," he said. Each man and woman, and each nation, must make decisions of conscience and policy in the face of this great problem. "But the position of the United States is clear. We will give our help and support to nations which make their own decisions to insure an effective balance between the numbers of their people and the food they have to eat. And we will push forward the frontiers of research in this important field." Johnson planned to fly back to Washington in the early afternoon. A -Staff photo by Bill Stephens IT'S SNOWING IN KANSAS—"We're pumping white stuff," Jack Broach, manager of the Monte Bleu Ski Resort, said today. He reported that they had been manufacturing snow since 2 a.m., and would continue all day and Staff photo by Bill Stephens all night. He said the hill would be opened to skiers as soon as possible, hopefully some time Friday. The ski resort is a new venture for Kansas and is located six miles southeast of Lawrence. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years 76th Year, No. 72 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Thursday, January 20, 1966 Officers Chosen Stimley Heads CRC Sherman Stimley, Jackson, Miss., senior, was elected president of KU's Civil Rights Council (SRC) last night. The mid-term elections were held in room 306 of the Kansas Union. Stimley succeeds Sim Stokes, Mobile, Ala., senior. Stokes will be transferring to Northern Arizona University where he will continue his studies in history and language arts. STOKES WAS elected to his post last spring, succeeding Nathaniel Sims, Pasadena, Calif., senior. Stokes said he had felt honored to serve as president for the fall term and regretted leaving at this time. Before resigning, Stokes announced tentative plans for a CRC newsletter next semester. Editor of the planned publication will be announced later, he said. This year, Stokes said, the council has nearly 125 active members. Its regular meetings are the first Wednesday of each month in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Weather It will be mostly cloudy and colder tonight and Friday with occasional light snow, the U.S. Weather Bureau said. Easterly winds will be from 10 to 15 miles an hour. The low tonight from five to 10. Other officers elected at last night's meeting are Neil Stone, Shawnee Mission sophomore, vice-president; Beth Cox, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore, treasurer; and Ned Johnson, secretary. Stimley will serve as president until next year's officers are elected in May. He joined CRC this fall and is majoring in chemical engineering. The CRC was most active last spring when it sponsored the sitin demonstrations outside Chancellor Wescoe's office in Strong Hall. Since the formation of the University Human Relations Committee, the group has been less active, confining most of their activities to negotiations with the UHRC. A. S. HOPKINS Sherman Stimley . . . new CRC president Comments on Abortion Schwegler Is Hill's Top Medic By Jerry Kern Abortion, when medically unnecessary, is murder, said the elderly man as he sat slightly forward in his chair behind his office desk. HOWEVER, when this man speaks, all doubts about his alertness and awareness are erased. He gives the impression that he knows what he talks about and believes what he says. His hands were folded comfortably before him on the desk top. He appeared to be a quiet, mild-mannered man — perhaps even a little tired because of his age and his busy schedule. Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of Watkins Hospital, presents a professional image. And the image he presents is suggested He seems to be an intelligent and practical man with strong standards as he commented on the legality of abortion. "If medically necessary, certain abortions are already legal to some extent." Schwegler said. "The problem exists in the question of whether an abortion is done for social reasons or medical reasons." even more by the full-length white laboratory coat and bow tie which he always wears while working in the hospital. Schweegler pulled lightly at his ear while he formed his next thoughts. Then he continued. "IN A CHRISTIAN country it is difficult to try to decide this question. We experience moral overtones apart from medical reasons," he said. "From an ob- stetrician's point of view, very few cases can be treated by abortion to any great advantage unless medically necessary." He picked up a pencil and began to roll it slowly, end-over-end, in his hands. "To interrupt pregnancy is murder. It is the same as killing a 70-year-old man. I would favor some form of contraceptive program rather than legalizing murder. Abortion is dangerous. Half the women who die because of obstetrical reasons die from abortion," Schwegler said. "POPULATION control is inevitable. Birth control is simply a matter of what type to use and when it should be used. No contraceptive program should be available for unmarried people. This would not be good moral philosophy," he said. Dr. Schwegler's background forces one to recognize his knowledge and capabilities. He began his college education almost 50 years ago at KU as an engineering student. However, he graduated with a degree in bacteriology. He then decided to become a doctor, and received his medical degrees from the University of Minnesota. He practiced in Lawrence as an obstetrician before coming to KU's Health Center at Watkins. Illness forced him to make the move back to his alma mater. He explained he was not able to take the night work required of an obstetrician. DR. SCHWEGLER has definite opinions about the government's Medicare program, and did not hesitate to explain them. "I can not support a federally controlled medical program," he said. "Medical care for the patient is mandatory, but we cannot meet this need without some kind of insurance program. Blue Cross-Blue Shield can accomplish much more at a much lower cost than can a public program. "There are no political overtones in Blue Cross-Blue Shield. There would be in a public Medicare program," he explained. "The most important question we must answer," he continued, "is which program is cheapest for the patient. The government's Medicare program would be like jumping into a river without knowing how deep it is." TEL 0845-673-9122 CYCLE SAGA—April Knief, Mission senior, and her brother, Bill, a sophomore, are a familiar site on campus on Miss Knief's motorcycle. Although a cycle is unusual transportation for a woman, Miss Knief finds it handy for class and clearweather jaunts. Journal Surveys Indian in U.S. The American Indian and his relation to American culture and the federal government is the subject of the "Midcontinent American Studies Journal" coedited by a KU professor. The latest issue was co-edited by Nancy Oestreich Lurie, professor in the department of anthropology at the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, and Stuart Levine, KU professor in American Studies. JAMES A. CLIFTON, professor of anthropology, augmented the illustrated issue with his photography. Two of the eleven articles on the American Indian world were contributed by KU professors. Murray Wax, professor of sociology, and his wife write "Indian Education for What?" Another contribution by Clifton is his article on the Potawatomi Indians, "Prairie Potawatomie." COPIES OF THE SPECIAL American Indian issue may be ordered separately at $2.00 each, Levine said. Orders should be placed with the magazine's business office, Park College, Parkville, Mo. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers 12 Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 19, 1966 MONROE, Mich. —(UPI)—Unless someone can identify him, a 3-year-old boy will be routinely buried in this Southern Michigan town later this week, known only as "little boy blue." No One Knows 'Little Boy Blue' The boy, clad in a blue quilted ski jacket, red shirt, black corduroy pants and blue socks, was found by a rabbit hunter in an outhouse on an abandoned farm near here. AN AUTOPSY revealed the lad had been beaten to death. Their only clue, authorities said, is a label inside the boy's shirt: "Matt Peters Jr." They don't know whether the brand is a national one or what kind of distribution it has. No one has claimed the boy. His description; Brown hair, 35 inches tall, 25 pounds with that sturdy, well-fed look. POLICE THEORIZE that no one has claimed the boy because those who know him may be his murderer, or murderers. They believe either the parents slew the boy or they are dead themselves. Shortly after the body was discovered last Saturday, police sent out a nationwide alert for an identification of the lad. BY THE MIDDLE of this week, only two divorced fathers had come to take a look at the boy on the possibility he may have been a son. He wasn't. He remained unidentified. Meantime, the little body was being held in a freezer at Mercy Hospital. Monroe County officials will bury the youngster in a few days unless a loved one shows to give "little boy blue" a proper burial. PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS Clearance of Winter Merchandise 50% Reduction Includes Car Coats, Dresses, Blouses Slax, Sweaters, Skirts Sizes 3-14 Sale Starts Thursday, Jan. 20, 9:30 a.m. All sales final. No exchange, refunds or lay-away on sale merchandise. Ober's Jr. Miss 821 Massachusetts Elevator from Men's Store THE Red Dog INK VI2-0100 7th & Mass. RED DOG INN Girls Night Out Wednesday - Jan.19 NO COVER Eric & The Norsemen This Weekend A Fabulous Line Up Of Entertainment. - Friday - Spider And The Crabs - Saturday - The Rising Sons Coming Soon - Jan. 28 - The Group - Jan. 29 - Teddy Vale And The Valedares - The Fabulous Flippers 16 CLASSIFIED ADS - Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University manual are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. HELP WANTED Part-time work for students experienced in ad composition and make-up. Apply at Printing Service, Room 117, Flint Hall. tf Students looking for part time work apply in person at Sandy's Drive-In, Reliable student for selling imports. Apply 920 La. after 6 p.m. tf MISCELLANEOUS Die Bierstube: Singen, trinken und essen German style. Featuring student's favorite dark beverage and student's favorite light beverage from Golden, Colorado. Also serving deluxe room night Wednesday night. Party Room available. 14th and Tennessee. Vl 2-9441. Need any Sewing or Mending done before rates. Call after 5:00 p.m. I: 2-3901 BLANDING PARTY PHOTOGRAPHY Your satisfaction is my strongest contract. 48 hour service guaranteed; Gold embossed party titles; Kocacolor戏画; Wedding Favor; 60e. WEDDING COLOR SPECIAL. 20 x7f Prints, $35.00. Three years' experience at KU: for references and samples call Dave at VI 2-6151. tt Wanted: General house work preferably in office or fraternity. Please send a copy of your Reliable intelligence and have references. Write to Housekeeping. 1132 Conn., Lawrence. tf PARTY TIME - Building available to call. Calls 9-3-7458 Ralph, Freed Spots Car Maintenance and Repairs by and for the enthusiast. Super tuning, modifications and accessories, construction Coatings, Spots Car, East 23rd St. VI 2-2191. tt Tune-ups — Evenings and weekends only; also other automobile work appointment only. VI 2-2191 behind 88 Connecticut Street. Farmar'f Garage. Experienced photographer in child en- d family portraits. Reasonable rate. Will take pictures in your home. Call V1 2-6148. tt Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $425 copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. FOR SALE TYPEWRITERS - Office size and portables, new and used, manual and electric. Several brands Rental-purchase rentals and service. Office supplies, equipment, and furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. St., VI 3-3644 1948 Bulkc Roadmaster Convertible. Perfect body, new upholstery. Hardwood trim in fair shape. Power windows, power seats, power pedals. Call Tom after t. Phone: 8-7234 Wollensk stereo 4-track tape recorder and Remington portable typewriter. Will consider trading for camera equipment. Gary Grazda, VI 2-1483 fc Across the burning sands of the Arabian Desert, at no little risk to my faithful Bedouin camel driver, Ben Akmeld El Hazar, comes the most impressive black Meezham pipe. Handearved by master artisans in the image of a notorious caliph of the Ottoman empire, this work of art features a genuine amulett and camel painting. The caravan has brought this treasure of the Near East to you at the most reasonable price of sixty American dollars. Address serious inquiries in the catalogue or visit our library of real art treasures, Box 2, University Daily Kansan. tf 1964 Chevy, 2 dr. H.T. Grey Impala, black interior, 300 HP stack, P.S. Posttraction, Tinted glass, 22,000, orig. inventory, must sell. Call V1 II-2 1-211 1961 Nosh Rambler station wagon. Radio and heater-seat belts. New snow tires. One owner car. Call V1 2-3001 tf 1957 Chevy, 2 door ht. V-8, stick, good mechanical condition and paint. Need money for 2nd semester. Ses- Jordan, 1911 Stewart. VI 2-4351 VI 1-21 1962 Stingray, silver, removable top. 485 bp. 4-speed, postposition, AM- FM. mag wheels, new tires, perfect condition, 31,000 miles, $2,495. Three miles east of Baldwin, TU 3-6355, Wallisville. 1-21 Save $85 on a new Minolta SR7 single lens Reflex F1.4 lens. Also Canon Topcon Olympus Bronica or Sankyo. Phone VI 3-0263. Best tim 1-21 CAR-1956 Plymouth excel+nit run- mile 1956 Zeiger VI 3-5168 1-19 brand-new Gibson electric guitar priced at unbeatable price V2 6585, 1128 Ohio. 1-19 Andrews Gifts VI 2-1523 Open Wednesday Evenings Malls Shopping Center Plenty of Free Parking Sports car owners, we have castrol oil, prestolite svark plugs at quality prices. Blevins, 7th and Michigan. 1.21 4 15" Ford ramps, 2 "new" 4-ply nylon tubeless tires, 2 2-ply tubetype (with new tubes) snow tires. Call Irv, VI 2-3327 1962 Buick Skylark Sports Coupe. With bucket seats, power steering and new tires. Call VI 3-2270 after 5:30 p.m. 1-21 Portable Electric Clothes Dryer — dries most garments in 10 minutes, hangs on your closet door. $28.88. Ray Stoneback's, 929-531 Mass. 1953 Chrysler Imperial, big four-door, automatic, white walls; power steering, brakes, windows, s e t , i n sweet, sweet. Best offer. VI 3-1459 Snow Is Coming! Pair of Firestone's best snow tires (8.50 x 14). Used one season. Excellent tread, reasonable traction. Sheily, VT 37-5415. 1122-1 Campus Rd. 1964 Corvette, low mileage, two tops, excellent condition. Priced to sell, call Kansas City, FA 1-5866 after 6 p.m. 1-21 1958 Great Lakes mobile home, 42x8, 2 bedrooms furnished, fully carpeted, newly painted, storm windows. Call VI 3-8791 for appointment. 1-21 Mobile home. 8x45. 2 bedroom, carpeting throughout, furnished, excel- torial suites. Attend to Underwood Trails Court. 623 Missouri. Courts Curtis Harshaw. 1-21 1961 Poutiac Catalina Sport Coupe, white with maroon interior. One owner—low mileage, power steering and brakes, new tires and snow tires. Immaculate! Call Jim Suit, VI 2-7415. Rm. 232. 1-21 FOR RENT 1958 Chevy Convertible, new top and 1946 Call Gray or Magnet 946 McCollen 1-21 Married, graduate students, faculty- Married, graduate, from NYC. Available available January 1, one available February 1. Call for brochure. WANTED: Annee Apartments, 1123 Indiana. tt Extra nice quiet furnished apartment for mature man, carpeted, nice kitchen, utilities paid. 2 blocks from Union. Available now. VI 3-8534 tt Vacancy in a contemporary home. Private entrance and bath. Five evin- guel meals weekly $70.00 per meal. Paid calls. VI Cl 3-9635 until 6 p.m. Vancancies in contemporary home for young man, prefer graduate student. Swimming pool, home cookery. Call 3-8365 TV. VI 3-8365 call before 6 p.m. Rooms for graduate women, 3 single available at semester break. Kitchen facilities. One block from Union. Call VI. 3-6979. 1-21 HERTZ RENT A-CAR Special rates Call, Gayale, V 3-1028 1-21 Room for men students with kitchen privileges. Call V-1 3-1607. Single room and 12 meals per week. Call VI 3-9562. 1-21 Room for rent with kitchen privileges, one or two students, completely air-conditioned. See at 1625 W 19th or call VI 3-7535. 1-20 Large room for rent—will accommodate one or two boys—large closet, shower, 2 blocks from campus—West Hills, VI 3-3077. 1-21 Experienced typist, 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric service accurate service R/on lease rates, CAL Mrs. Barloff 2407 Yale, V1, 2-1648. Experienced typist has IBM electric to type your thesis, dissertation, term paper or report. Must be neat and accurate work. Reasonable rates. Phone Mrs. Gilbert. V 2-2088 TYPING Experienced secretary will do typing VI 3-0380, after 5:00 call VI 3-0398, if not. Typist, experienced with term papers, theses and dissertations, will give your typing immediate attention with electric machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048. tf Topeka students desiring theses, dissertations, rough drafts, or term papers typed fast and accurately on electric typewriter by exerciedion twpist, call Mrs. O. L. Cook, CR 2-1479, 1715 Sims. Topeka. 1-20 Experienced typist; will type in my home. Accurate typing, reasonable rates and prompt service. Call Mrs. Brown at VI 2-0210. PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS Wanted: Typing in my home. Experienced and accurate in term papers and theses. Call VI 3-2651 any time. ## Accurate typing by experienced typist. Term papers, themes, theses and dissertations. Reasonable rates and fast. VI 2-1561. tf Secretary with many years experience, will type your term papers, report cards. Fast, accurate work at reasonable rates. Call VI 9176296 after 5 p.m. Experienced typist will do only these typewriter. Mrs. Fulcher VI 3-0558 Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses, dissertations. For accurate service Electric typewriter equipment. Call Mr. Rauckman, VI 2-2781. Experienced typist will do theses and term papers, 4 years experience at KU. Phone Mrs. Oxford at VI 2-0673. tt Former Harvard and University of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports, and theses. Phone VI 3-7207. tf TYING — GESTETNER MIMEO- 8368G — Mrs. McEdlowen, W 3-8568 Typing done at reasonable rates by experienced typist. Fast accurate work. Call Betty Vincent, call VI 3-5504. tf Fast, accurate; immediate attention given to all term papers, reports, theses, etc. Mrs. Donna Stewart, VI 3-6621 1-21 Former teacher will give careful attention to typing your term papers. Accurate and neat work, 5 years experience. Call VI 3-3829. tf Secretary familiar with legal terms will do typing—briefs, memorandums, papers, letters, dissertation and accurate rates. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577. **marsha** tf Typing Wanted - Theses, essays, and Neat and accurate. Call v 1-21 4156 Will do fast accurate typing in my Standard typewriter. 1-21 3-8103 Typing wanted. IBM Selectric. Carol Tibbitts, 1909 Geleena Rd. V 3-1349 after 5 p.m. weekdays and all day on weekends. 1-20 Experienced typist will do dissertations, theses manuscripts, and term papers on typographic symbols on ribbon and type symbols. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I. V-1. 3-74-12 WANTED Will Baby Sit in my home or yours. Friends. Call after: 4:00 p.m. I V-2 39011. IRONING AND ALTERATIONS REPAIRING AND ALTERING 3983 or VI 3-9093 1-19 Two engineers with 5-room apart- ment need 2 roommates Call Vi- 8410. KU. faculty wife and mother of one child would like to care for one or two small children. Weekdays. References. 1721 Ken. VI 2-4429. 1-19 LOST Golden Labrador retriever, 13 months. No identification other than choke chain collar. Reward Answers to name of Ringo. Call VI 3-4660. 1-19 Boy's class ring, 1965 green stone with M.P. on it. Also a ring guard. Call Patsy Underwood. VI 3-4921. 1.21 Pair of Ladies dark glasses, blue frames and case. Friday, Jan. 14, 2016. Information Booth Jayhawk. Clay at UDK Business Office and pay for this. -1-20 FOUND Advertisers Patronize your Kansan Wednesday, January 19, 1966 TRAVEL TIME Daily Kansan [] 1000 MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE LET Tired Of Going To The Same Old Places? Make Your Semester Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Then Come On Out To The New Stables The Stables has undergone extensive remodeling Reservations Now! - Mondays - 8:00-9:00 - Pitchers - 50c - Wednesdays - 7:30-8:00 - Tall Cans - 25c - Thursdays - Pitcher Night - 75c Visit Our V.I.P. Room - Fully Carpeted - Drapes - Television (color soon) - Nice Quiet Atmosphere 8TH ST. SHOE REPAIR Quality work on half soles, heels. We repair purses Shoe dyeing 107 E. 8TH Anderson Rentals "We Rent Almost Anything" VI 3-2/44 812 New Hampshire Street Student With Sales Experience To Represent Our Company Part Time. Selling A Student Policy $10,000 Ins. Policy for $30.00 per yr. No War Clause Write Harold G. Parrott-V.P. Pyramid Life Ins. Co. P. O. Box 2038, K.C., Kan. COMPLETE CLASSICAL RECORD SELECTION COLUMBIA RECORDS WeaverS YOUR GASOLINE DOLLAR GOES FARTHER DERBY at... GARY'S DERBY SERVICE 2330 Iowa Lawrence YOU CAN'T BUY A BETTER GAS...AT ANY PRICE Phi Kap's Hit 78 Light Intramurals Score Heavy Light action took place in intramural basketball last night with three games in the Fraternity "A" league, division 1; and two in the Independent "B" league, one in division #1 and one in division #2. Uneven scoring marked the competition in the fraternity league. In a low-scoring duel, Phi Delta Theta beat Sigma Nu 36-21. High scorer for the Phi Delt's was John Arrowsmith, Kansas City freshman, with 12 points. Don Davis, Wichita senior, was high man for the Sigma Nu's with seven points. The scoring bolted in the next game in which Sigma Chi rolled over Kappa Sigma 67-21. Ron Reuter, Topeka senior, dumped in 29 points to lead the Sigma Chi's with two of his teammates hitting in double figures. Bill Southern, Ellinwood sophomore, scored 11 points and Bill Fenton, Wichita junior, put in 15. High scorer for the Kappa Sig's was Charles Dobson, Kansas City, Mo., junior, with seven points. PHI KAPPA THETA romped over Lambda Chi Alpha in the last game 78 to 43. All five of the Phi Kap's roundballers scored in double figures with Paul Bendix, Kansas City, Mo., junior, leading with 22 tallies. Larry Dercher, Kansas City junior, hit 16; John Volleyball Popular Since 1945, intramural volleyball has grown to the point where it is second only to basketball in the number of men and teams participating in the KU Intramural program. Cahill, Kansas City junior, 15; Joe Bendix, Kansas City, Mo. graduate student, 13; and Ed Williams, Leavenworth senior, 12. Rich Montgomery, Leawood freshman, was high for the Lambda Chi's with 14 points. The magic number was in the 30's for the two winning Independent teams. In division #1 of the "B" league the High Balls defeated the Ridge House team 36-26. High man for the High Balls was Scott Giffen, Prairie Village senior, with 12 points and Larry Howard, Elko, Nev., junior, was high for the Ridge House five with 10. Two other division #1 teams didn't play last night, the Joseph R. Pearson Hall team winning by a forfeit when the Law School team failed to show and the Swahill's drew a bye. In division #2 the Lawrence team edged the Beta Alpha Gamma's 34-32. Deck Newby, assistant professor of Naval Science, led the Lawrence charge with nine points and Larry Folks, Eudora freshman, was high with 18 points for the Beta Alpha Gamma's. The Rugby's and the Kucimats of division #2 saw no action last night as they both drew byes. Billings Was KU Star Robert Bimings, Director of Aids and Awards, received the "Phog" Allen Award as a senior basketball player in 1959. Billings was a three-letter guard on the basketball team. Ellsworth Women Win Second Title Seven Ellsworth women under team captain Suzie Geiger, Leavenworth junior, downed a tough team from Hashinger, 3-2, in the women's intramural volleyball semi-finals last night in Robinson gym and went on to defeat Lewis for the championship. The other semi-final match pitched Lewis Hall against Delta Gamma sorority. Lewis was the victor and went on to be easily taken by the Ellsworth team. 2-0. The same seven Ellsworth women who won the volleyball championship last night also defeated Delta Gamma and took the women's intramural basketball championship last month. 10 Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 19, 1966 Smoothly smart The smoothest of leathers add their glowing touch to this fashionable moccasin with its elegant handsewn vamp detailing. Wear it with all your loveliest casual clothes for the sporty look you love. Madison Dark Brown Golden Scotch Grain AAAA to B to 10 $13.00 Size 11 $14.00 naturally oldmaine trotters Royal College Shop 837 Mass. VI 3-4255 MFR.'S SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICE. VOLKSWAGEN OF AMERICA, INC. Need a part? Replacing part of a car is a pain. But it's even more painful when you need a part and can't get it. If you own a 6- or 8-year-old domestic car and need, say, a door handle or a water pump, you're liable to have quite a problem. (Unless you enjoy shopping in junkyards.) When cars change drastically every year, the dealer simply can't keep every part for every year in stock. But the VW doesn't change.drastically every year, so Volkswagen dealers don't have nearly the problem. We can replace an engine in 90 minutes (or a rear fender for $21,09*, plus labor). so tar as we're concerned, a hood is a hood and a door is a door. Above all, we can promise that you'll be able to get any part you need for any year Volkswagen you own. Not so long ago, there were people who wouldn't have any part of a VW at all. Now they get all they want. "Lawrence's Only Authorized Volkswagen Dealer" CONZELMAN MOTORS SALES — SERVICE — PARTS Overseas Delivery Available 2522 Iowa VW (Hwy.59 South) AUTHORIZED DEALER VI 3-2200 Travel Board Fills Needs During the semester break, most students will leave Lawrence to return home or visit new places, but getting there may be another matter. One possible way to find a ride is the "Anywhere, U.S.A." board in the lobby of the Kansas Union. THE BOARD functions as a travel agency. For example, if a student wants to see Tennessee, he might call David Ganoung, Memphis junior, who has filled out a request for two riders to share expenses when he goes home. If the student wants a traveling companion and is headed toward South Dakota, Jean Mowry, Shawnee Mission sophomore, would like to go along. Neil Stone, Kansas City, Kans. sophomore, isn't particular. He has requests for rides to St. Louis, Chicago, and St. Petersburg, Fla. ONE PERSON would like a companion to venture westward and offers to buy a car if his fellow traveler doesn't have one. From the requests on the board Florida seems to be the most popular area during vacation. Kansas City, Chicago, Colorado, and California follow in popularity. But regardless of where the student might want to go, there is a good chance he can make the necessary arrangements by posting his travel request on the board. World's Tallest Tree The world's tallest living thing is a California redwood tree, 367.8 feet high, on the bank of Redwood Creek, Humboldt City, Calif., according to the World Almanac. Daily Kansan 9 Wednesday, January 19, 1966 You can be driving a Brand New Sprite for $52.76 a month (taxes and all charges included) British Motors 1116 West 23rd VI 3-8367 Ladies Shoe Sale Heels—Stacked—Flats and Sports Miss Wonderful Fiances Cover Girl Reg. $6.99 to $14.99 NOW $2.90 to $7.90 Gordon's SHOE CENTER Ober's SALE Ober's Ober's Ober's This year, because of the unseasonable warm weather, not only are values rewarding but the selection is particularly good. All clearance items are from our regular stocks, so the savings are based on actual prices right up to the time of the sale. Although our entire stocks are not included, sale selections are so broad that you're sure to find exactly what you want. Famous brands such as Hart Schaffner & Marx, Kingsridge, Enro, Donegal, Lord Jeff and Alligator are all included. SUITS $59.95 values ... $48.95 69. 95 values... 56.95 75. 00 values... 59.95 89. 50 values... 69.95 100. 00 values... 78.95 SPORT COATS $35.00 values... $27.95 39. 50 values... 32.95 45. 00 values . . . 35.95 50. 00 values... 39.95 TOPCOATS $45.00 values... $37.95 65. 00 values... 49.95 69. 95 values... 56.95 85. 00 values... 69.95 125. 00 values... 89.95 All Weather Coats $29.95 values ... $19.95 42. 50 values... 31.95 49. 95 values... 39.95 65. 00 values... 49.95 SWEATERS $11.95 values . . . $6.95 15. 95 values... 8.95 19. 95 values ... 10.95 29. 95 values...15.95 $5.00 values . . . $3.95 SPORT SHIRTS 5. 95 values ... 4.45 6. 95 values ... 4.95 8. 95 values ... 5.95 TROUSERS $13.95 values . . . $9.95 15. 95 values...10.95 17. 95 values...12.95 OUTER COATS 24. 95 values...$19.95 29. 95 values... 21.95 39. 95 values... 27.95 Savings on Assorted - SOX - TIES - SHOES - BOYS' ITEMS Ober's Lawrence's Fashion Leader Since 1896 821 Mass. VI 3-1951 OPEN THURSDAY UNTIL 8:30 Students Named CYR Publication Heads Two KU students from Great Bend have been selected for new positions. Bob Miner, sophomore and KU Collegiate Young Republican (CYR) chairman, was elected chairman of the first District Young Republicans Saturday in Hays. Richard Smith, junior, is one of two students appointed to the editorial advisory board of "Motive," a magazine of the Methodist student movement. As chairman of the first district Young Republicans Miner said he will help direct the 1966 campaign for Congressman Bob Dole. This summer Miner will travel throughout Kansas as a field representative for Dole. Another major decision coming from their meeting on the Fort Hays State College campus in Hays, was the "reorganization of the constitution to provide for four vice-chairmen in the district." Miner said. The extra executive member will help unite and organize the growing first district, which includes 52 counties in the western half of Kansas, Miner said. His election to the district position will have no direct effect on the KU-CYR club. But Miner said he would try to initiate changes in all first district CYR clubs, and that any effect on the KU club would result from the overall program. Smith was elected to the editorial advisory board of the magazine by the Board of Education of the Methodist Church at their annual meeting earlier this month in Atlanta, Georgia. The function of the group is to discuss ideas and themes to be included in "Motive," Smith said. He will serve as an advisor rather than as a contributor. "Much of the content of "Motive" has been under fire from members of the church who don't like liberalism or the art in the magazine," the Rev. Don Hull, adviser to the KU Wesley Foundation said. "Those who don't understand the poetry have been attacking it lately. They says it's obscene," Smith said. "Motive" is published in Nashville, Tenn., by the division of higher education and the Board of Education of the Methodist Church. The magazine is aimed at the college students, their campus ministers, and faculty. "Motive" is not limited in circulation to Methodists, Rev. Hull said. "it is for all students." The Rev. B. J. Stiles of Nashville is editor of the magazine. The advisory board consists of 12 members elected by the Board of Education and three elected by the National Conference of the Methodist Student Movement. New Math for India Within the coming year, a number of parents in India are bound to experience the same sort of confusion that has been prevalent in American households during recent years: Peace Corps Volunteers will introduce the new math and science programs to many students there. At the request of the Indian government, the teachers will be sent to secondary schools in two or three states to introduce modern approaches to science and mathematics instruction. 8 Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 19, 1966 To Read Works Of German Poet Frederick Ritter, a faculty member of the Illinois Institute of Technology, will read from the poetic works of Christian Morgenstern at 7 p.m. tonight in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Ritter is a native German and has extensive experience on the German stage. Morgenstern, a noted German lyric poet of the early 20th Century, is famous for his verse which seems to be nonsense but imparts a deeper meaning. PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS The program is sponsored by the KU chapter of Delta Phi Alpha, a German honorary society. Refreshments will be served. There is no admission fee. Take an Enjoyable SEMESTER BREAK Contact Maupintour for: • Skiing • Trip Home • Other Travel Maupintour Travel Agency VI 3-1211 Malls Shopping Center Pronto! Although your pizza won't be delivered by an Indian messenger on a flashing white horse, rest assured that our delivery service is almost as fast. Why not phone in your order now? Campus Hideaway Open 11:30 a.m. Till 1:00 a.m. We Absolutely Deliver VI 3-9111 Campus Hideaway Campus Hideaway 106 NORTH PARK When you want to- SELL YOUR BOOKS! The Book Store Will be buying them through Final Week January 24-29 Please bring them to the lower level entrance 8-5 weekdays, till 1:30 Saturday We are paying patronage refund period 37, valid through June 1966 and period 38, valid through December 1966 kansas UNION BOOKSTORE When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds 199 Student Speaks Out Nigerian Democracy Will Return By Maury Breecher After smashing an attempted coup in Nigeria, Maj. Gen. Aguiyi Ironsi took control of Nigeria's government Sunday, swept aside its former leaders, and suspended the nation's constitution. Is this the beginning of a military dictatorship or a Communist oriented regime? Is this the end of the democratic dream in the most progressive state of the Black African nations? "NO," SAYS BODE LABODE, a KU student from Nigeria who was the African Club's President in 1964 and was active in the club's demonstration before the British Embassy last year in protesting the British government's stand on the Rhodesian problem. "I believe Nigeria will return to its normal form of democratic government soon," said Labode. The causes of Nigeria's present trouble can be traced to widespread disillusionment with Nigeria's regional elections and, indirectly, to 1957 when the British, then in control, divided Nigeria into three regions. "The upheaval was not unexpected to someone familiar to Nigeria's history prior to independence," said Labode. In 1957 Nigeria was divided by the British into three separate regions. These became known as the North, with over 60 per cent of the population, the East, and the West. Labode said that wide differences existed between the regions. The people in the North were mostly Moslems, while residents in the East and West were predominantly Christians. Different languages, customs, traditions, and viewpoints existed, too. Daily Kansan 7 Wednesday, January 19, 1966 THESE DIFFERENCES were the causes for many of Nigeria's problems, Labode said. The East and West have always supplied the talent and brains while the North has supplied the labor. Thus the East and West regions have considered themselves the leaders of Nigeria. When Nigeria received her independence, the North, being the largest of the regions, was able to control the entire nation. Efforts to lessen the North's power have been futile, according to Labode. Political parties are active in each of the regions. DURING REGIONAL elections last year, political parties, other than the Northern one, were terrorized and harnessed, Labode said. As a result these parties boycotted the regional elections. The Northern political party then took control on the regional level as well as the national. "When you look at the big picture you can see almost two different nations in Nigeria," Labode said. Both differ in background and value, but one controls most of the political life of the entire nation. This then is the basic reason for conflicts in Nigeria, according to Labode. at Ray Christian's Your Student ID Is Your Credit Card. Just present your ID and say CHARGE IT! "Private Diamond Selection In Our Exclusive Diamond Room" Ray Christian "The COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. Richard Mindlin's COACH HOUSE Sportswear Accessories A MINDLIN STORE 12th & Oread on Campus 1/3 to 1/2 off! SALE! SALE! SALE! 62 Coats & Car Coats! - 239 Dresses! - 110 Slacks! *221 Sweaters! * 247 Skirts! Exciting Sale of First Quality Fashions... Many From Our Kansas City Store... Brandnew to You! ALL SALES FINAL - 24 Robes! 176 Shirts! Shop 9:30 to 5:30 Mon, thru Sat. SUA Announces Interviews for Spring Concert Steering Committee February 9,1966 Applications Now Available in SUA Office. Main Floor Of Kansas Union KANSAS 48 ROOKIE OF THE YEAR— ROOKIE OF THE YEAR— Former KU fast back Gale Sayers was named the December winner in the Hickock Professional Athlete of the Month poll. Sayers, who now is a halfback for the Chicago Bears, was named the National Football League rookie of the year. Huskers - (Continued from page 1) by play. Area stations carrying the broadcast will include WIBWTV in Topeka and WDAF-TV in Kansas City. Stinson said television rights fees resulting from the game will be sent to the conference office where they are distributed among the members according to a league formula benefiting all members with the competing schools getting a little extra. Stinson said he has no idea yet what fees might total for the game. Other stations carrying the 8 p.m. telecast include stations at Wichita, Pittsburg, Hays, Goodland, and Dodge City. The box score for Tuesday night's loss is KANSAS (75) KANSAS (75) | | G | F | T | PF | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Franz | 8 | 1 | 17 | 5 | | Davis | 1 | 0 | 2 | 2 | | Wesley | 6 | 10 | 22 | 4 | | Wilson | 1 | 1 | 3 | 1 | | Lopes | 1 | 1 | 3 | 5 | | Lochmann | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Bohnenstiehl | 4 | 0 | 8 | 2 | | Lewis | 7 | 6 | 20 | 3 | | **Totals** | 28 | 19 | 75 | 22 | | **NEBRASKA (83)** | | | | | | Branch | 8 | 2 | 18 | 3 | | Simmons | 3 | 6 | 12 | 4 | | Baack | 3 | 8 | 14 | 2 | | Campbell | 5 | 1 | 11 | 4 | | Damm | 4 | 3 | 11 | 1 | | Webb | 1 | 0 | 2 | 2 | | Lantz | 6 | 3 | 15 | 5 | | **Totals** | 30 | 23 | 83 | 23 | | Kansas | 32 | 43 | — | 75 | | Nebraska | 43 | 40 | — | 83 | | Officials — Parr and Saggau | | | | | Officials — Parr and Saggau Attendance — 8,566 6 Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 19, 1966 SHANTY PIZZA 10 Minutes VI 2-2500 HS Debaters Coming Here Forum to Feature Alumnus Four-man debate teams from 10 Kansas high schools will participate in the Class AA State Debate Tournament at KU Friday and Saturday. The teams, first and secondplace winners in the district tournaments held last weekend, are: Shawnee Mission North, Shawnee Mission West, Hutchinson, Newton, Lawrence, Topeka West, Cof- First and second-place trophies will be awarded and medals will be given to members of the winning teams. feyville, Pittsburg, Wichita East, and Wichita Southeast. The tournament is sponsored by the Kansas State High School Activities Association, the KU speech department, and KU Extension. A KU alumnus, who fills a place in the Insurance Hall of Fame, will give the annual address Saturday for the School of Business Insurance Forum. J. Edward Hedges, of Indiana University, will speak on "Insurance—Some Problems and Prospects" at 2 p.m. in 411 Summerfield Hall. A native of Baldwin, Hedges earned the B.A. degree from Baker University in 1928, the M.B.A. from KU in 1932, and the Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins University in 1936. He is one of the few men holding both the Chartered Life Underwriter and Chartered Property and Liability Underwriter designations. Hedges' "Practical Fire and Casualty Insurance" is now in its seventh edition. Every Science, Engineering and Math student should know about CSSTP before he makes up his mind about a career. Sign up now at your placement office to get the story on CSSTP from the IBM interviewer MARCH 3 CSSTP means Computer Systems Science Training Program. It's an extraordinary IBM program that enables you to use your technical knowledge and problem-solving skills in new exciting ways.Ways that may never occur to you unless you talk to the IBM interviewer. He'll tell you about the vital role of IBM's Marketing Representative. How he goes into major businesses to help solve their urgent management and control problems. He'll spell out the challenges which face IBM's Systems Engineer. He'll show you how CSSTP leads to exceptional career opportunities with IBM Data Processing. In short, he'll describe all the unusual assignments in IBM's more than 200 offices from coast to coast. All are places where you can grow with IBM, leader in America's fastest growing major industry: information handling and control. How he studies customer needs and computer requirements, and develops systems solutions to their problems. So don't miss your IBM interview. Visit your placement office and sign up now. If for any reason you can't make it on campus, feel free to visit your nearest IBM branch office. Or write: Manager of College Relations, IBM Corporate Headquarters, Armonk, N.Y. 10504. Whatever your plans, before you hit upon a career, see if IBM doesn't make a hit with you. Whatever your area of study ask us how you might use your particular talents at IBM. Job opportunities at IBM lie in eight major career fields: (1) Marketing, (2) Systems Engineering, (3) Programming, (4) Research and Development, (5) Engineering, (6) Manufacturing, (7) Finance and Administration, (8) Field Engineering. IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer. IBM DATA PROCESSING DIVISION Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 19.1966 5 ACME LAUNDRY Gives you the Most Beautifully Laun dered Shirts Possible... With the Most Advanced Shirt Equipment Available. Final Week is Almost here so get your Laundry and Dry Cleaning done now at Acme. 3-convenient locations to serve you: - Downtown-1111 Mass. -On the Mall-711 West 23rd - Hillcrest Shopping Center-905 Iowa Acme First Mid-Term IFC Rush Set For those men students who were unable to participate in the fall fraternity rush program, the Inter-Fraternity Council (IFC) is offering a mid-term rush. This is the first time such a program has been sponsored by the IFC. Application forms should be picked up in the Dean of Men's Office, 228 Strong. These forms must be returned by January 25, to the IFC office located in room 112 of the Kansas Union. "So far, approximately 40 students have registered." Jim Howatt, Ft. Leavenworth, sophomore and on-campus rush chairman for the IFC, said. "All undergraduate men are cordially invited by the IFC to participate in the new rush program," Howatt added. "It is expected that about one hundred rushees will participate." Songs, Cheers Return to KU Plans are underway to publish a book of KU songs and cheers, according to Jerry Hutchison, assistant alumni secretary. Although the last book of this type was published 35 years ago, Hutchison said, KU song books had appeared regularly every five to ten years prior to 1930. The Centennial Committee submitted the idea and a list of songs and cheers is being prepared by the Alumni Association. Copyrights are also being checked and permission to publish the songs will be requested from the writers or publishing firms. Songs from various schools within the University and from Greek organizations will be considered, Hutchison said. A song written for KU by Fred Waring may be included. "The Banner of Old KU" was written by Waring at the request of the late Fred Ellsworth, former director of the Alumni Association. 4 Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 19, 1966 Granada THEATRE ...Telephone VI 9-5784 NOW! Shows 7:00 & 9:00 20TH ANNIVERSARY PRESENTATION DO NOT DISTURB CinemaScope - Color by DE LIXF CinemaScope Color by DE LUXE NEXT! Haley Mills Dean Jones "That Darn Cat" COMING! JAMES BORD DOES IT EVERYWHERE! *THUNDERRALL* - Advance tickets on sale now for play date Jan, 29-Feb. 11. - PANAVISION TEXTILE COLORS UNION ARTISTS - Attend T.G.L.F. Premiere Peek Fri., Jan. 28, 11:30 p.m. Tickets on sale! THOSE PARTICIPATING in the program will meet in the Kansas Union at 10 a.m. each day. Fraternity representatives will pick their guests up at the union. After each visitation, the various fraternity houses will provide transportation to the other houses for their guests. After the final party, transportation to the residence halls will be provided. - Sunset Drive-In - ALL MEN who have registered for rush will receive information and their schedule of parties on Jan. 28. "Diamond Head" "Gidget Goes Hawaiian" Good Morals a Must Candidates for admission to KU in 1866 had to be at least 14 years of age, and were "expected to present satisfactory evidence of good moral behavior." Students were asked to be prompt at the opening of the term, and "continue unto the end, and not absent themselves from town without permission of the President." On Campus Interviews for Friday: Wise, K-12, 106 Ba and Kern, 20. H.S. Bakersfield, Calif., 912, 117B Kern Co. Junior College, 12B Ba Foreign Students: Check the January issue of the International Campus and concerning some important obligations to be completed in January. Official Bulletin Right-Of-Way Conference, All day. Union TODAY Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel. = Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers = Gymnastics, 7 p.m. Central Mo. State and Alva. Oakl. Robinson Gym. Graduate Recital, 8 pm. David Holloway, Bartone. Swarthownt Recital Hall Catholic Mass, 6:45 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel. University Women's Club, Newcomer's Event, 7.30 p.m. An evening of folk music with Prof. Gidfather. Watkins Room, Union. Lutheran Worship, 4:30 p.m. Sponsored by all Lutherans. Danforth Chapel John Hawkes, Novelist-In-Residency at Rear Room, works 8, p.m. for Room, Union. The University of Nebraska is planning its centennial for 1967. Two of the biggest events include the appearance of Lyndon Johnson in March and the publication of a Nebraskan history by Dr. Robert Manley. LB.J to Visit NU Fred Green has BOOTS Justin & Texas also Lee Jeans 910 Mass. WHAT EVERY STUDENT SHOULD KNOW ABOUT EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES. Upon graduation, every young man and woman wants and needs a job. A good job. How will you find the right one? One with the right company . . . at the right salary . . . with the right opportunities for advancement. Ever considered enlisting the aid of a Professional Employment Service? We think you should. For a number of sound reasons. It's our business. Who could possibly be any better at it? Who works with more companies every day? Knows all about them and their people? Knows their employment needs, their growth possibilities, their philosophies? And another thing. Employment Services have come a long way since your father set out for his first job. Your knowledgeable guidance counsellors and career advisors are aware of this and recommend that you utilize a Professional Employment Service as a good way to obtain employment. Today, the best ones are staffed with thoroughly trained Employment Counsellors who are specialists in every phase of the business. They are interested in helping you...not just fitting someone into an available job. But you must graduate. Professional Employment Services know that completing your schooling gives you a far better opportunity for a successful profitable future, regardless of your academic standing in your class. The idea that the top $ _{1/2} $ gets all the good opportunities is a myth. Check it out for yourself. There are definite advantages when you seek the services of a Professional Employment Service that is national in scope. More job opportunities locally and nationally... for secretaries, accountants, bookkeepers, management trainees, receptionists, salesmen engineers, and graduates looking for almost any type of job. Call us at HA 1-3410. Snelling AND Snelling World's Largest Professional Employment Service 200 Altman Bldg. 11th & Walnut Kansas City, Mo. 工控设备及智能制造装备的应用越来越广泛,智能制造技术为工业生产带来了革命性的变革。智能制造技术能够实现对原材料、中间产品和最终产品的智能控制,提高生产效率,降低生产成本,同时还可以优化生产流程,提升产品质量,降低生产风险。因此,智能制造技术在工业生产中的应用越来越重要。 Professor Ise Is Still Active at 80 Remembers when 'North College' Hall Had Coal Stoves For Heat: When the Sun Set Over Rail Fences Behind Snow Hall By Judy McGhee Ten years ago a KU economics professor retired after becoming one of the most prominent and most often-quoted faculty member on campus. By the end of his teaching career the enrollment in his lecture classes had risen from 50 to 300 and he had written numerous economics texts. Today, at 80, John Ise is unknown to many KU students. He spends much of his time studying the history of the American West in his home library on Mississippi Street near the campus. Although he has only been out of his house twice in the past 16 months, he enjoys having visitors and is eager to talk. "I'm always real careful and take my time," he added. "Besides, I don't get around much now." "PEOPLE ASK ME why I live in a house that has all these steps leading up from the sidewalk," he said. "I figure I've been climbing them all this time and I don't see why I should quit now." As he sits behind his huge walnut desk smoking his pipe and wearing a green visor to protect his eyes, he can entertain a listener indefinitely with stories about his past, the campus, or even the library which he panelled himself. PART OF HIS interest in the American West stems from the fact that he is one of twelve children of a pioneer family who built a sod house in Downs, Kansas, shortly after the Civil War. His book Sod and Stubble is based upon childhood experiences and is now a collector's item which has sold for $65. He also wrote "Letters of a Kansas Homesteader," and "Our National Park Policy." Conservation and wildlife are two of his other interests. In 1958 he donated $35,000 to the Lawrence Humane Society so that an animal shelter might be built as a memorial to his son who was killed in a plane crash in 1955. IN "SOD AND STUBBLE" Ise tells how he was stricken with infantile paralysis and how his colle pulled him to school in a wagon every day. The dog wore a specially made harness and would wait outside the school to take his little master home. "Although both legs and one arm were paralyzed at first, I gradually recovered the use of my arm and one leg," he said, lighting his pipe. "I'd give anything if I could re-live those days when the collie was alive," he said. "I'll like to jjust treat him royally," he added. "As a child I never really appreciated all he did for me." AS HE FINISHED speaking he unconsciously readjusted his visor which had hidden a large shock of white hair. His glasses shined in the dim light of the massive lamp on his desk. In 1906 Ise came to KU as a student and majored in voice. His classes were in North College Hall which had no electric heating system and burned coal in stoves during the winter. The building has since been converted into Corbin Residence Hall. HE SPENT THREE additional years at Harvard earning his degree in economics. He was 21 when he entered college and 31 when he finished his work at Harvard. Ise majored in English in addition to music and then attended graduate school at KU and received a law degree. He began teaching at KU in 1916 and taught agricultural economies and economic reform in addition to the basic economies course. "At that time the campus extended no further than old Snow Hall." he said. "When I'd get lonesome for the farm I'd sit on the pasture fence at the west side of Snow to watch the sunset," he added, tapping his pipe. "AS THE UNIVERSITY began to expand, the east wing of Strong Library Is Listener's Lab Would you like to listen to Handel's "Messiah" or Beethoven's "Emperor Concerto?" How about a play to read . . . one by Shakespeare or Faulkner or Albee? You can listen to music and read famous plays in two unusual libraries located in 448 Murphy Hall. "THE MUSIC LIBRARY is a reference library for the use of all students," said Mrs. Julia E. Stuart, librarian. The branch library contains 2,500 long playing single records, 450 long playing albums, 600 78's and 5,000 scores. There is also a collection of rare records. Thirty turn tables can accommodate three listeners each for a total of 90 listening stations. THE MUSIC LIBRARY has extended its hours this year. They are 8 a.m.- 9 p.m. Monday through Go up a stairway in the Music Library and you arrive in the Script Library. Here you can check out a copy of a play, look at old theater posters and magazines, examine theater models built by students or use a publisher's catalog to order a copy of a play. Thursday; 8 a.m.-5 p.m. on Friday and 9 a.m.-12 noon on Saturday. "MANY STUDENTS DO not realize the source material available here. We not only have the scripts of plays, on on hand are histories, criticisms and anthologies of the theater," said Wright. There are also photographs and slides of all KU major theater productions, a collection of original scripts written by students and faculty, a collection of children's theater scripts and the vocal scores of many operas. 2350 Ridge Court Lawrence, Kansas, 66044 Southridge Plaza, Inc. Vacancies Available MRS. RAMON H. PICKERING Office VI 2-1160 Home VI 2-3755 Area Code 913 Manager Hall was built," he said. "The west wing was built next and the center section connecting the two was built later." After Ise retired, he spent three years lecturing at colleges throughout the nation. Looking back on his teaching at KU he remarked, "I liked my students more and more all through my career. As my classes got bigger I had to a hard time remembering their names though." He added that he never disliked large classes. "I hated to turn down students whom I thought I might help," he said. "Besides, small classes are costly to the University and being an economist, I'd naturally want to cut costs. "I still feel that teaching is the greatest privilege a man can have—it's the biggest business ever," he said. 1940. JOHN ISE . . in paneled library Anthropologists Dig for Indian Skeletons Working along a shoreline and racing rising waters of Ohae Reservoir, S. D., William M. Bass, associate professor of anthropology and his KU crew will again spend the summer digging in an Arikara Indian burial ground. They are working under a two-year National Science Foundation grant to excavate human skeletal material from the Leavenworth Site. The crew of eight have already dug what Bass estimates to be at least half, if not most, of the burials. ALL MEMBERS of the 1966 crew were with Bass last summer: Judy Wickland, Brooking, S.D., graduate student; Bob Gilbert, Lawrence graduate student; Doug Ubelaker, Everest sophomore; Bill Rhule, Holton junior; David Evans, Pittsburg graduate student; and Pat Willey, Lawrence High School senior. Whether assistant director Dick Jantz will return is undecided. Last summer, they uncovered 178 burials. The burial grounds are on a hill above the village site, now under water. THE VILLAGE is important because it is one of the only positively identified Arikara sites; the others are prehistoric. Shelled in 1823 by Colonel Leavenworth and abandoned in 1832, the people remained there and farmed the land for 30 years. The eight-week dig, probably beginning June 13, costs about $1,000 per week. BASS'S INITIAL prerequisites for working on the dig are a major in anthropology and a course in physical anthropology. The knowledge of osteology is important to him because the Leavenworth Site dig is a salvage program. "You've got to dig all you can while you're there. I can teach them archaeological technique while we're there, but they must first know osteology," he said. Next month, the anthropology department will begin an analysis of the specimens from last summer's dig. The finished report is sometimes 10 years in the making. Annual to be Out Feb. 2 The first issue of the 1966 Centennial Jayhawker will be distributed Feb. 2-4, during enrolment in Alcove A of the Kansas Union Cafeteria. Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 19, 1966 GIVE YOURSELF A BREAK — TAKE YOUR STUDY BREAK AT THE SHANTY ★ HOT WHOPPER SANDWICHES ★ DELICIOUS SHANTY PIZZA ★ COFFEE AND HOT CHOCOLATE ★ DOWNSTAIR'S PARTY ROOMS ★ PIANO AND ORGAN S VI 2-2500 ALE!! Maine Aire and Lady Bostonian Loafers Were $11 and $12 Now $8.90 Were $9 and $10 Now $6.90 Several Patterns to choose from in Green, Red, Black, Brown and Cordo Brown. M'Coy's SHOES 813 Moss. VI 3-2091 M'Coy's SHOES LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS Editorials Civ program fails test The Western Civilization comprehensive examination is one of the biggest jokes on KU students, but they aren't laughing. Indeed, for the 300 or so scholars who were forced to suffer the slings and arrows of this outrageous fortune Jan. 8, it was the culmination of at least two semesters of cribbing, cramming, and cussing. And for the 10 to 20 per cent of those taking the test who will be called upon for an encore performance, it will be remembered as the longest and, probably, most unsatisfactory four hours in their college careers. The entire Western Civilization program is unrealistic and, if you will pardon the pun, fails the average student. WHEN THE PROGRAM was established here in 1945, it was with two idealistic purposes in mind, according to the student manual. One was that "every educated person ought to possess knowledge and appreciation of the 'ideas' and 'ideals' that have shaped our civilization." PROMOTERS OF THE program, the faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, felt that "the challenge to the Western World that had exploded into the holocaust of World War II had left many thoughtful persons convinced that the meaning of free institutions needed to be explored and expounded both at length and in depth" if such wars were to be prevented in the future. It was in their minds to insure the survival of society as we know it today. The other was to encourage a "learning by doing" self-study method. THIS PURPOSE IS noble, but the current system of one credit hour a semester for two semesters followed by an all-encompassing final is not. Rather than forming a student-improvement course, the Western Civilization officials have created a monster. They also pointed out that careful study of past national failures would be valuable in solving future problems. To attain these goals, they conceived a program of enlightened readings by scientists, political scientists, economists and philosophers from the 16th century to the present. Robbie Burns, Scottish poet of some repute, said it best: "The best laid schemes of mice and men gang aft a-gley." In today's campus environment where students are encouraged to take more and stiffer courses, the second ideal tends to blot out the first. IT WOULD SEEM that the Western Civ planners need to be reminded of the great bulk of the reading material in the program—about 3.500 pages required from some of the most difficult treatises and philosophies in the western world. To devote sufficient time to this program to gain a degree of understanding that the department would prefer is nearly impossible for the average student. Two problems are immediately evident. First, the student who begins the course in the fall semester cannot take the examination until the following May—a time lapse of nearly nine months. It is highly improbable that anyone could remember, in detail necessary for a comprehensive exam, things he had read so long before. Second, the student will be taking an average load of 15 other credit hours along with the program. He will be expected to keep up with his other courses as well as complete term papers and prepare for finals at the time the comprehensive is given. Since it is impossible for him to reread all the material just before the test, he is forced to rely either upon his study notes (which, the manual warns, probably contain topics not covered on the test) or a set of crib notes. The perfect solution to this situation would compromise neither of the two course ideals. It would merely expand the number of credit hours to make the course worth the effort. Last spring the College Intermediary Board proposed a change that would make the program into a two-hour course both semesters—the class meeting twice a week—with a two-to- IN ESSENCE, THE Western Civilization officials are forcing the student either to devote himself to their program and slight other subjects, or to keep up in subjects that represent more credit hours and slight Western Civ. For the average student the choice is obvious. three hour comprehensive examination afterwards. Nothing further has been heard on this proposal. AN ALTERNATE PROPOSAL, however, is more practical from the student viewpoint. Since the course is a requirement for graduation that, unlike the English Proficiency test, influences the grade point average, the course would be divided into two semesters of three hours each. The first hour of the week would be devoted to a lecture by the instructor over some of the more difficult ideas in the week's reading list to give the students a frame of reference. The other two hours then would be left open for discussion. THE COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION would be dropped entirely and regular hour exams and finals substituted. But this would make Western Civilization more like an ordinary university course, the department officials will argue. They pride themselves that the present system distinguishes itself from other courses on the Hill. Considering the majority student reaction, however, they should question whether such a distinction is worth the sacrifice of educating students in the "ideas" and "ideals" of our civilization. Bob Curtright THE BOOM IN books about World War I continues. It will likely last for three more years, until the 50th anniversary of the end of the war has been celebrated. Then we will realize that we have been glutted, as we were recently by centennial books about the Civil War. No fictional shock This forgotten war (or relatively forgotten, at least), this last of the romantic wars is the subject of a worthy new paperback called The American Heritage History of World War I, by S. L. A. Marshall, Brig. Gen. U.S.A. (Ret.) (Dell, 75 cents). Like the recent paperback, The Horizon History of the Age of Napoleon, this one will have the most serious limitations for any who saw the beautiful illustrated gift edition. Yet it has a text by one of our most distinguished literary commentators. It is retrospective, and it goes back to set the stage for the war. There is an "American emphasis, as the title suggests, but that is quite predictable and quite all right, really. The style is bright and vivid; there are pace and excitement; the book goes to you with hearty recommendations. GAME ROOM CLICK CLICK CLICK CHANGE POT OR GOLD 50¢ JACK POT FREE 5-19 BIBER © ALVIN HART AEI. PO BOX 4, REMANT, KAWAII For the scholar in philosophy there is a bright and worthwhile new series, and amazingly not one of the three initial volumes will do you much good in reviewing for your Western Civilization exams. The series is called "The Laurel Great Lives and Thought"; the books are Jeremy Benthem, by Charles W. Everett; Blaise Pascal, by Morris Bishop, and Emile Durkheim, by Robert Bierstedt (all Dell Laurel, 75 cents each). BENTHAM IS BEST known for his utilitarian ideas, for placing legislation and jurisprudence on a foundation of science. "The greatest amount of happiness for the greater number of people"—that was his goal. Several generations of liberals drew inspiration from him. Pascal was both scientist and theologian. In the 17th century he became famous for experimentation with the barometer, but religion became the chief concern of his life. Durkheim is one of the giant names in sociology, particularly for his concern with formulating a science of society. He is the most recent and also the most contemporary of the three great men. The playwright endcaves to present the life of the Negro in America, especially the pain and humiliation he goes through. Yet it is not a fictional treatment. It is documentary in the exciting sense of some of the Living Theatre productions of the late thirties. "In White America" opened in an off-Broadway theater in late 1963, and it has been a shocking, stimulating and controversial topic ever since. IN WHITE AMERICA, by Martin B. Duberman (Signeet, 60 cents). Duberman has included actual testimony of whites and Negroes taken from speeches, diaries, letters, famous documents; excerpts from the writings of three presidents. Duberman's essay, "History and the Theater," is included. "FLOSSY SAYS TO AMUSE YOURSELF IN TH GAME ROOM SHE'LL BE DOWN IN A FEW MINUTES." The People Say... against CATV TO THE EDITOR: There are several important facts about cable TV which were left out of the January 17 UDK article about the subject. First of all, the purpose of CATV (not CA-TV) is to provide local television reception in areas (such as Manhattan) where it is not currently available with home antennas. Lawrence is not such a location since several area stations now provide good signals here. IT IS TRUE that there are outstanding independent television stations in some major cities (but not New Orleans) that provide additional programming. However, it was not mentioned that two such stations have been granted for channels 30 and 54 in Kansas City. When these stations go on the air, we will be able to receive them in Lawrence—and they'll be FREE! The price mentioned for the "service" is also misleading. The cost usually is higher and most companies require an installation charge. If prospective CATV subscribers consider the facts, they will realize it is less expensive to install a good antenna rather than subscribe to cable television. Dave Pomeroy Dave Pomeroy Lawrence graduate student Radio-TV-Film TO THE EDITOR: Simons wrong Tim Larson Rockford, Ill. Graduate student Radio-TV-Film The implied statement by Dolph Simons Jr., that cable TV would be needed in Stouffer Place, is in error. Good reception via home antennas is already available and the charge for CATV would be unnecessary. In fact, Channel 19 from Kansas City can be received here clearly with an inexpensive indoor UHF antenna. With the new independent UHF stations planned to begin soon in Kansas City, the important question is again raised . . . why CATV? 2 Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 19, 1966 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office Founded 1889 Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York. N.Y. 10022 Mail subscription rates: $4 a semester or $7 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. EXECUTIVE STAFF MANAGING EDITOR Judy Farrell BUSINESS MANAGER Ed Vaughn EDITORIAL EDITORS Janet Hamilton, Karen Lambert ONS ... Janet Hamilton, Karen Lambert NEWS AND BUSINESS STAFF Assistant Managing Editors ... Suzy Black, Susan Hartley ... Jae Lerman, Jackie Thayer sistant Managing Editors ... Suzy Black, Susan Harvey Jane Larson, Jacke Thayer Circulation Manager ... Mike Robe Advertising Manager ... Dale Reinecker City Editor ... Joan McCabe Classified Manager ... Mike Wertz Feature Editor ... Mary Dunlap Merchandising ... John Hons Sports Editor ... Scottie Scott Promotion Manager ... Keith Issitt Photo Editor ... Bill Stephens National Advertising ... Eugene Parrish Wire Editor ... Robert Stevens World-Wide Wire Decision Soon On Voting Rights Bill WASHINGTON—(UPI)The Supreme Court is expected to announce as soon as possible its judgment on the constitutionality of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. How soon the opinion will be forthcoming depends mostly on how far apart in their views the nine justices find themselves. The court took the case under advisement Tuesday after two days of arguments in which six Southern states attacked the law and U.S. Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach, assisted by Massachusetts and New Jersey, defended it. Viet Cong Remain Active SAIGON-(UPI)-The Communist Viet Cong swept through a refugee village south of Da Nang today, gunning down civilian men, women and children in what appeared to be a vicious act of revenge. A government spokesman said the Communists killed 33 civilians and wounded 54 in the pre-dawn attack on the village of Tu Hiep. A Viet Cong act of terrorism was reported in Da Nang itself shortly before daylight, about four hours after the attack on the refugee center. Da Nang is the site of a major American air base. A terrorist in a three-wheel cycle cab peddled up to an American building in Da Nang and exploded a bomb. Two U.S. servicemen and two Vietnamese were injured by the blast, but there was only moderate damage to the building. De Gaulle Faces Scandal PARIS—(UPI)—President De Gaulle faced a growing national scandal today over the disappearance and possible murder of Moroccan opposition leader Mehdi Ben Barka, who was kidnapped from a Paris street two and a half months ago. Many observers here feared the scandal, fanned by the French Press, could severely shake the second seven-year term of De Gaulle and threaten the political future of some of his cabinet ministers and closest advisers. NEW DEHLI — (UPI) — Mrs. Indira Nehru Gandhi today was elected Prime Minister of India by an overwhelming vote of the ruling Congress party's members of Parliament. The 48-year-old widow becomes the only woman head of government in the world. Mrs. Gandhi to Hold Reins India Elects Mrs. Gandhi, daughter of the late Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, was chosen to succeed Lal Bahadur Shastri who died of a heart attack Jan. 11. SHE RECEIVED 355 of the 526 votes cast by parliamentary members of the Congress party in secret balloting under the great dome of the legislative building. The lawmakers lustily cheered their decision. MRS. GANDHI, who was a close friend but not related to The frail black-haired mother of two is the second woman in modern history to attain the rank of prime minister. The first was Mrs. Sirimavo Bandaranike of Ceylon, who succeeded her late husband in September of 1559 but lost a bid for re-election in April, 1644. Mohandas Gandhi, India's revered spiritual leader during the independence movement, won out over former Finance Minister Morariji Desai. 69. The balloting marked the first contested election for prime minister since this teeming subcontinent gained independence from Britain in 1947. India is the world's most populous democracy. ★ ★ ★ ★ Cheer for Jayhawkers . . . —Safi photo by Bill Stephens Indian Students Comment KU students and faculty from India showed mixed reactions over the election of Mrs. Indira Gandhi as the new prime minister of their country. K. L. CHELLAPPA, graduate student in chemistry, said he had thought Mrs. Gandhi would "probably get it." However, he voiced support for Acting Prime Minister Nanda because Nanda "seems to be quite capable." S. M. Shah, visiting professor in Mathematics, said he thought one advantage Mrs. Gandhi holds over the other candidates is her youth. "I think her youth must be considered a definite advantage. The Acting Prime Minister and the previous leaders have all been in their late sixties. That must be one of the points to consider in her favor," Shah said. SESHADRINATHA IYER. Radiation Biophysics graduate student, also said he thought Mrs. Gandhi's youth was an asset and the fact she is a woman not a political liability. "We don't have any prejudice against women officials," Iyer said. India's ambassador to the United States for many years was a woman and many of the top governmental positions in the country are held by women. I think she is a good choice." MISSOURI 1973 kansan 76th Year, No. 71 Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years LAWRENCE, KANSAS Wednesday, January 19. 1966 Sows Title Seeds Huskers Thresh KU The title-hungry Nebraska Cornhuskers gobbled the Big Eight lead from the KU Jayhawks last night as they handed KU their first conference defeat, 83-75. Nebraska remains the only Big Eight team to be undefeated. KU falls to second place in the race for conference championship after taking the pre-season tourney. THE JAYHAWKS, a notorious come-back team, failed to catch fire in the second half. They pulled within 75-71 with 0:51 remaining, but could not pull the tilt from the grasp of NU. Frigid from the field, only hitting 33 per cent, the Jayhawkers led most of the way during the first half. The Huskers hit 51 per cent and controlled the entire second half. WALT WESLEY. KU center, led all scorers with 22 points but his superior height was no help More than 8,500 spectators packed into the Nebraska Coliseum, many arriving three hours before game time to obtain a seat. to the Jayhawks who were consistently outbattled for rebounds. KU, which dropped to 13-3 overall, saw its eight-game winning skein snapped and it was the Jayhawks' first loss at Lincoln since 1958 and the days of Wilt Chamberlain. NEBRASKA IS now 12-2 for the year and needs only one more victory to assure it of a winning season. The last Cornhusker winning basketball campaign was in 1949-50 when they finished 16-7. Wesley's 22 points pushed him one higher on the list of all time high scorers at KU. Clyde Lovellette leads the list, followed by Chamberlain, Wayne Hightower, then Wesley. Weather The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts increasing cloudiness and warmer weather today. Mostly cloudy tonight and Thursday. High today lower 48s, low tonight near 20. Southerly winds 10 to 20 miles per hour today. The Hawks were rated sixth in the Associated Press Poll of College round ballers and seventh in the United Press International ratings. The Huskers took 18th place in the UPI poll. The only other Cornhusker loss in the last ten games was to KU in the final round of the Big Eight Christmas Tournament in Kansas City. SATURDAY NIGHT the Jayhawks will take on the Kansas State Wildcats in Allen Field House. The game is already a sell-out according to Wade Stinson, who expects to pack the 17,300-capacity arena. This is the first sell-out in the Big Eight's largest field house since the K-State-KU match in 1958 which saw the Wildcats' Bob Boozer battle it out with Chamberlain. Because of the sell out, plans have been announced to televise the action on a seven station system. Dev Nelson of WIBW in Topeka will announce the play (Continued on page 6) Religion Fund Breaks $200,000 Over $200,000—nearly one-half of the total needed—already has been pledged for construction of a new school of religion building, according to Dean William Moore. "Before construction may begin, we must have half the cost of the building in hand and the rest in sight. We should have both by summer," Moore said. The fund drive goal for the Lawrence area, he added, is $30,000. THE NEW BUILDING, a modernistic structure costing about $500,000, will be constructed at 1300 Oread Avenue. Paul Shivel, development director, said operations would begin next fall on the present site of old Myers Hall. The construction of the new building will allow the school to keep pace with the University's expansion, Moore said. More than 700 students are expected to enroll in religion classes this year. Enrollment is expected to triple within the next ten years. The modern design of the building calls for 29,000 square feet of floor space and a 40-foot exterior tower. Another exterior feature will be a stained glass window showing the University seal. An $8,000 statue of Moses will be placed near this window. The statue has been donated by Mrs. Charles E. Miller of Tonganoxie in memory of her late husband. Hawks Tangle with Huskers Only Undefeated Teams in the Big Eight Battle To Secure No.1 Spot in Conference Play Tonight's the battle for the top spot in the Big Night Conference as the undefeated Jayhawks meet the Nebraska Cornhuskers in Lincoln. Kansas carries a 4-0 record into the Conference tilt. Nebraska posts three wins and no losses in the Big Eight this season. Tonight's winner will hold the top league spot and be the only undefeated team in Big Eight play. CONFERENCE STANDINGS | | W | L | Pct. | Pts. Opp. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | KANSAS ... | 4 | 0 | 1.000 | 289 235 | | Nebraska ... | 3 | 0 | 1.000 | 240 205 | | K-State ... | 2 | 1 | .667 | 216 188 | | Oklahoma ... | 2 | 1 | .667 | 196 200 | | Colorado ... | 2 | 1 | .500 | 240 251 | | I-State ... | 1 | 4 | .200 | 334 348 | | O-State ... | 0 | 3 | .000 | 155 192 | | Missouri ... | 0 | 3 | .000 | 189 245 | Intramurals There are indications that since 1866, the opening year of the university, intramural type sports were promoted and carried on. However, 1920 is regarded as the date that the intramural athletic program was formally organized. Kansas has defeated Colorado and Oklahoma once and Iowa State twice. Nebraska has beaten Missouri, Iowa State, and K-State. THE HAWKS LEFT Monday for Lincoln, Neb., after returning to Lawrence for only one day. The Hawks squeezed by Iowa State University in Ames Saturday night, 49-47. Kansas met the Huskies in the finals of the pre-season Big Eight tournament in Kansas City Dec. 30, and defeated the Nebraska five 71-61. The current leading league scorer Walter Wesley scored only eight points in the game. Starting line-up for KU will be Wesley, center; Ron Franz and Riney Lochmann, forwards; and Del Lewis and Al Lopes, guards. PROBABLE STARTERS for the Huskers will be Tom Baack, 6'5", and Nate Branch, 6'4", forwards; Willie Campsbell, 6'5", center; and Grant Simmons, 6'3", and Stuart Lantz, 6'3", or Fred Hare, 61T, as guards, according to coach Joe Cripiano. Nebraska, with an overall record of 12-2, uses a pressure defense and a fast break offense which has been the deciding factor in many close games this season. Lantz, Branch and Simmons are the outstanding scoring factors for the Huskers. Campbell, unable to play much last year because of an ankle injury, is playing full time this season. He is a top rebounder for the team. KU, CURRENTLY rated this week among the top ten teams in the country, would probably fail to place if they lost to Nebraska. A win would mean top spot in the powerful Big Eight, and a higher national rating. Ted Owens' Jayhawks fly back to Lawrence Wednesday to begin training for the Jan. 22 meet with the Kansas State University Wildcats in Allen Field House. K-State was undefeated in league play until the recent encounter with Nebraska in Manhattan. The KU-K-State game has already been sold out. Hawks Bolt High in AP UPI Ratings The KU Jayhawks jumped higher into the top ten press association ratings this week after completing another week of undefeated play. In the Associated Press survey, Kansas took the longest stride among the first 10 teams, climbing from 10th to sixth place. The top ten UPI are: Team Points 1. Duke (28) (14-1) 338 2. Kentucky (7) (12-0) 316 3. St. Josephs (11-2) 220 4. Providence (12-1) 189 5. Vanderbilt (14-2) 182 6. Bradley (14-2) 149 7. Kansas (13-2) 119 8. Texas Western (12-0) 97 9. Loyola (Ill.) (12-1) 53 10. Utah (12-3) 38 Second 10—11, Brigham Young 36; 12, UCLA 30; 13, Michigan 22; 14, Cincinnati 18; 15 tie, New Mexico and San Francisco 16; 17, Michigan State 15; 18, Nebraska 14; 19, Iowa 10; 20, North Carolina State 9. 8 Daily Kansan Tuesday, January 18, 1966 Granada THEATRE...telephone V13-5780 Now! A wild Bedtime Story- DORIS DAY ROD TAYLOR DO NOT DISTURB Eve. Shows 7:00 & 9:00 COMING SOON! JAMES BOND DOES IT EVERYWHERE "THUNDERBALL" PAMERANI UNITED ARCTICS - Advance tickets on sale now for play date Jan. 29-Feb. 11. - Attend T.G.I.F. Premiere Peek Fri., Jan. 28, 11:30 p.m. Tickets on sale! - Sunset Drive-In * "DIE MONSTER DIE" "PLANET OF VAMPIRES" Patronize your Kansan Advertisers Dwight Boring* says... 1967-82 "If You'd Like to Know How to Get the Most for your life insurance dollars, contact me and I'll tell you about College Life's BENEFACTOR, a famous policy designed expressly for college men and sold exclusively to college men because college men are preferred life insurance risks. No obligation. Give me a ring now." 2020 Harvard Lawrence, Kansas Phone VI 2-0767 *DWIGHT BORING representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA the only Company selling exclusively to College Men If you thought Batman was Cool wait until you see "THE NEW STABLES" The Stables has undergone extensive Remodeling O Grand Opening Tuesday - Mondays—8:00-9:00—Pitchers—50¢ - Wednesday - 7:30-8:00 - Tall Cans -25¢ - Thursday—Pitcher Night—75¢ Visit Our V.I.P. Room - Fully Carpeted - Drapes - Television - Nice Quiet Atmosphere THE STABLES KU "HOME OF THE KU STUDENT" CLASSIFIED ADS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. HELP WANTED Part-time work for students experienced in ed composition and make-up. Apply at Printing Service, Room 117, Flint Hall. tf Study skills onboarding for part time work Counselor present at Sandy's Drive-In $250 W. 9th Reliable student for selling imports. Apply 920 La. after 6 p.m. tf College girl to babysit in exchange for room. VI 3-9398. 1-18 MISCELLANEOUS Die Bierstücke: Singen, trinken und essen German style. Featuring students' favorite dark beverage and student's favorite light beverage from Golden, Colorado. Also serving deluxe wines in the morning, night, Wednesday night, Party Room available, 14th and Tennessee V1-2-9441. ff Need any Sewing on Monday morning the rates Call after 500 p.m. VI 2-3a01 BLANDING PARTY PHOTOGRAFFY Your satisfaction is my strongest contract. 48 hour service guaranteed; $57.90 for a studio; $57.70, $1.00; custom enclosed B&W $37. 60e. WEDDING COLOR SPECIAL. 20 xf1 Prints. $25.00. Three years' cx- called all for interviews and sam- plies to Dave at 2-8-60. Wanted: General house work prefer- ably in sorority, fraternity, or prive- ate home. Reliable, experienced and have references. Write to Housekeeper tf at Lawrence if fraternity lawrence PARTY TIME—Building available for dances. Call VI 3-7458 Rainy Freed **Sports Car. Maintenance and Repairs** by and for the enthusiast. Super tun- ing, body work, suspension, and Ray Pickering's Competition Sports Cars. East 23rd St., VI 2-2191. tf Tune-ups - Evenings and weekends only, also other automobile work appointments only. Vi 3-2080 behind 11th Connecticut St. Farmar's ff Garage. FOR SALE Experienced photographer in children and family portraits. Reasonable rate. Will take pictures in your home. Call VI 2-6148. tf Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mincograph and bound for $4.25 copy Call VI 2-1901 for free (even if you own it). TYPEWRITERS-Office size and portables, new and used, manual and electric. Several brands. Rental-purchase rentals and service. Office supplies, equipment and furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. St., V1 3-364-2 1948 Buick Roadmaster Convertible, Perfect body, new upholstery, 4 new tires, engine rebuilt, top in fair shape. Power windows, power seats, power top. $500.00. Call Tom after 6 p.m., V1.3-7334. tf Wolensak stercor 4-track tape recorder and Remington portable typewriter, consider trading for camera equipment Gary Grazda, VI 2-1483 fc I 2-6601 Clearance | Clearance! Tape recorders, stereos, stereo FM radios cut to $60. AM-FM radios cut to $19.99. Hurry to Ray Stoneback's, 928-351 Mass. 1-18 Across the burning sands of the Arabian Desert, at no little risk to my faithful Bedouin camel driver, the kmel el Kamel of Hazar, comes beautifully on a black Moerseham pipe. Handcarved by master artisans in the image of a notorious caliph of the Ottoman empire, this work of art features a genuine beauty and craftsmanship. Brave caravan has brought this treasure to the Near East to you at the most reasonable price of sixty American dollars. Address serious inquiries to Caravans of the Nile, purveyors of this caravan, Box 2, Unifersity Daily Kaspen. Clearance! Clearance! 500 tires at lowest prices ever. Example. 650-14 (695-14) white wall, 100 level Mountainer or Rammer side scrape kit. White walls. Volks (560-15)'s cut to $15 plus tax. Ray Stoneback's. 629-931 Mass. st. 1-18 1964 Chevy, 2 dr. H.T., Grey Impala, black interior, 300 HP stick, P.S. Pattraction, Tinted glass, 22,000, origi- nal owner, must sell. Call V1 2-641-8500 1961 Nash Rambler station wagon. Radio and heater—seat belts. Nw snow tires. One owner car. Call VI 2- 3001. 1857 Chevy, 2 door ht., V-8 stick, good mechanical condition and paint. Nosed money for 2nd stairm r. 1011 St. Stewart I V-2-6351 VI 3-3119 VI -1 sports car owners, we have castell town cars. Blevins, 7th and Micha- l's. 1983 SUNGray, silver, removable top, top handle. 2002 FM, wheat wheels, new tweel, perfect condition, 31,000 rolls, $2,455. Those from Baldwin, TW Baldwin, TW w-delville. Mannahai Hi-Fi components, Carrard RC-80 changer, Monarch FM-100 tuner, Pall "2351" 12-watt amplifier, "1550" 15-watt amplifier, in combination twocoiler woofer in cabinets. Over $400 new, sell for $135 or separately. VI 2-04963. 1-18 Save $5 on minolta S77 Canon Tecyon Olympic Bronze Elmo Sankvo Phone VI 3-0263 Best time 1:30 to 6:30 1-21 CAR-1056 Plumouth, excelent toms BARNZ Bierler, Zalger, 3 - 5165, 1 - 19 4 15" Ford tires, 2 "new" 4-ply nylon tubeless tires, 2 "poly-tubetype (with new tubes) snow tires. Call Irv, VI 2-3227. 1-10 Brand-new Gibson electric guitar roman-made price V12-6580, 1128 Ohio, US Clothes Never Fit Right? Custom tailors in Hong Kong can do the job right—for about $50. Suits, jackets, slacks, made to your measurements. Over 1,000 fabric samples. Satisfaction insured. Call VI 3-8344 at 6 p.m. Mossberg 22 Magnum Rimfire Rifle. 5 shot bolt shot action reaper. J.C. 7 shot bolt shot action reaper. J.c. Both scope sighted. Guncase. 4 shot capacity. Call VI 2-9267. 1-18 1962 Buick Skylark Sport Coupe, With bucket seats, power steering and new tires. Call VI 3-2270 after 5:30 p.m. 1-21 Portable Electric Clothes Dryer — dies most garments in 10 minutes, hangs on your closet door. $28.88 Ray Stoneback's. 929-851 Mass. 113.42 1633 Chrysler Imperial, big four-door, automatic, white walls; power steering, brakes, windows, s seat! and d sweet, elegant. Best offer VI- 31-1459 Snow Is Coming! Pair of Firestorm's best snow tires (850 x 14) Used one incident trend. Ressouan call Tam Shelyi V: 37-4145, 1129-W Campus Rd. FOR RENT 1364 Corvette, low mileage, two tops, excellent condition. Priced to sell, call Kansas City, FA 1-5866 after 6 p.m. 1-21 Married, graduate students, faculty- ly qualified. Available January 1, one available February 1. Call for brochure. VI 3-2500 Antoine Apartments office, 111 Indiana. Extra nice quiet furnished apartment for mature man, carpeted, kitchen, utilities paid. 2 blocks from Union. Available now. VI 3-8534 ¶¶ Vacancy in a contemporary home. Private entrance and bath. Five evening meals weekly. $70 monthly. Hits paid. Call VI 3-9635 until tm. Vancancies in contemporary home for young man, prefer graduate student to work in hotel, home cooks meals if desired, school. VI 3-3625, call bf-8.6 mn. Rooms or graduate women, 3 single available at semester break. Kitchen facilities. One block from Union. Call VI 3-6979. 1-21 HERTZ RENT A-CAR Special rates age Call Gayle, V 3-1028 1-21 Room for men students with c- kitchen privileges. Call 1-21 3-1677. Single room and 12 meals per week. Call VI 3-9562. 1-21 Room for rent with kitchen privileges, one or two students complete lv air-conditioned. See at 1625 W. 19th or call V 3-7353. 1-20 WANTED Will Baby Sit in my home or yours. Evenings. Attendends. Call after 1 2-3901 IRONING AND ALTERATIONS IRONING AND REASONABLE 3923 or VI 3-9069 1-19 Two engineers with 5-room apart- ment need 2 roommates Call V119 8210 KU. faculty wife and mother of one child would like to care for one or two small children. Weekdays. References. 1721 KEN. VI 2-4129. i-19 LOST Golden Labrador retriever, 13 months. No identification other than choce chain collar. Reward Answers to name of Ringo. Call VI 3-4600. -1-19 Boys's class ring, 1965 green stone with M.P. on it. Also a ring gua d Call Patsy Underwood, VI 3-4021. I:21 Pair of Ladies dark glasses, blue frames and case. Friday, Jan. 14, 2016 at 10:30 a.m. Booth Jayhawk, Claim at UDK Office and for this ad. 1-23 Experienced secretary will do training VI 3-0380, after 5.99 call VI 3-0390 if needed. FOUND Experienced typist, 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter. Fast. CALL Mrs. Barlow. 2407 Yale. VI 1-2548. Experienced typist has IBM electric to type your thesis, dissertation, term paper. Welcome to neat and accurate work. Reasonable rates. Phone Mrs. Gilbert, VI 2-2688. TYPING Wanted: Typing in my home. Experienced and accurate in term papers and theses. Call VJ 3-2651 any times. Typist, experienced with term papers, theses and dissertations, will give your typing immediate attention with electric machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Martene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048 Experienced typist; will type in my home. Accurate typing, reasonable rates and prompt service. Call Mrs Brown at VI 2-0210. ff NEW TOPS Cleaners & Launderers Offers the Students IN BY 9 - - OUT BY 5 SERVICE. When time is important let Tops In By 9 — Out By 5 service take care of your laundry problems. In addition Shirts Are Returned on Hangers and Tops offers a money back guarantee. TOPS Open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. (Monday thru Saturday) 1526 West 23rd Topcake students desiring theses, dissertations, rough drafts, or term papers typed fast and accurately on electric typewriter by experienced typist, call Mrs. O. L. Cook. CR 2-1479, 1715 Sims, Topeka. 1-20 (Next to the Pancake Man) Experienced typist will do only theses on electric typewriter. Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558 tf Accurate typing by experienced typist. Term papers, themes, theses and dissertations. Reasonable rates and fast. VI 2-1561. tf Secretary with many years experience, will type your term papers, assignments. Fast, accurate work at all levels. Call Vi 3-6296 after 5 p.m. Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses, dissertations, acronym secretaire rates. Electric typewriter. Responsible rates. Call Mr. Rauckman, I.V. 2-7813. Experienced typist will do thesis and term papers 4 years experience at KU. Phone Mrs. Oxford at VI 2-0673. Former Harvard and University of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports, and theses. Phone VI 3-7207. tf Typing done at reasonable rates by experienced typist. Fast accurate work. Call Betty Vineent, call VI 3-8504. tf TYPING — CESTETNER MIMEO- MRS—Mrs. McEidlewyn, 3-8568 If Expert Typing--Theses, dissertations and term papers. Electric typewriter, standard rates. Mrs. *Mishler, VI 3-1029. Fast, accurate; immediate attention given to all term papers, reports, theses, etc. Mrs. Donna Stewart, VI 3-6211 1-21 Tuesday, January 18, 1966 Former teacher will give careful attention to typing your term papers. Accurate and neat work, 5 years experience. Call VI 3-3291. tf Secretary familiar with legal terms will do typing—befits, memorandums, papers, memoranda, dissertations, rates, paperwork, account rates. Marsha Goff, V 3-1277 Typing done by experienced secretary for 25e each double spaced page. Call Ethel Henderson, 2565 Ridge Ct., VI 2-0122. tf Typing Wanted-Thessa, essays, and Neat and accurate. Custol V1-21 4156 Will do fast accessr typesing in my Standard typewriter 5-103 1-21 Experienced typist will do dissertation, thesis manuscripts, and term papers. Send resume to erben ibbun. Spatial symbol, Mrs Robert Cook, 2000 Rd., VI, L3-7485-1. Typing wanted. IEM Sebricic, Carol Toblite, 1900 Edgdea rd VI 3-3459 after 5 p.m. weekdays and all day on weekends. 1-20 Daily Kansan PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS 7 VI 2-1523 Open Wednesday Evenings Malls Shopping Center Plenty of Free Parking Andrews Gifts 8TH ST. SHOE REPAIR Quality work on half soles, heals. We repair purses Shoe dyeing 107 E. 8TH Anderson Rentals Anderson Rentals "We Rent Almost Anything" VI 3-2044 812 New Hampshire Street Student With Sales Experience To Represent Selling A Student Policy $10,000 Ins. Policy for $30.00 per yr. No War Clause Our Company Part Time. Write Harold G. Parrott-V.P. Pyramid Life Ins. Co. P. O. Box 2038, K.C., Kan. COMPLETE CLASSICAL RECORD SELECTION COLUMBIA RECORDS Weaver TRAVEL TIME AIRBUS LET MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Semester Reservations Now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Computer May Program Dates For Spring Fling A duckless Spring Fling is in store for KU this year. Spring Fling will get underway on March 25, and continue through March 27. The first Friday's activities will focus on a dance starting at 8 p.m. at the National Guard Armory. Although the dance band will be announced later, Hill said it was a nationally known band. EGG TOSSES, THREE-legged races and other games and races will be at 9 am. at Potter Lake on Saturday, weather permitting. In case of bad weather, these activities will take place in the Allen Field House. A picnic will be held at noon Grants to Finance Teaching, Research National Science Foundation grants totaling more than $180,000 have been given to KU for the operation of two summer institutes and support of a research project. Summer institutes in mathematics and radiation biophysics will be offered for teachers. Participants in the mathematics institute will take courses in probability and linear spaces and will attend lectures on computing. Twenty science teachers will attend the biophysics session. AN NSF GRANT for $72,380 will finance the summer sessions. A grant of $110,900 has been given for support of a project entitled "Research and Training in Systematics and Evolutionary Biology." Principal investigator is Dr. W. William A. Clemens, associate professor of zoology. on Saturday. Following the picnic the games and races will resume until 4 p.m. A banquet and the Spring Sing will be Sunday's activities. The time and place of the banquet will be announced at a later date. THE SPRING SING, sponsored by the Inter-Residence Council, will start at 7:30 p.m. in Murphy Hall. Trophies for the winners of the Spring Fling activities will be awarded at this time. This year, both members of the team will be awarded trophies. A major change from the past Spring Fling activities is that there will be no duck stealing or duck race. The elimination of this activity is caused by the over-enthusiasm of the Spring Fling participants. Organizing Spring Fling activities plus maintaining the functioning of the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) are concerns of the group's new president, John H. Hill, Waverly senior. Hill assumed the presidency when Ron Rardin, Leawood graduate student, resigned from the position in December. Hill said the race will be substituted by some other type of race or activity. A different type of activity is being considered for this year's Spring Fling. It is the use of a data computer service. KU men and women would fill out a computer card answering objective questions. 6 Daily Kansan Tuesday, January 18, 1966 SALE OF MAINEAIRE & OTHER FLEECE LINED BOOTS were $9 $12 $14 $15 $17 REDUCED 25% and 30% McCoy's SHOES 813 Mass. VI 3-209 THE COMPUTER will process the cards and then match KU men and women. "This is a pretty tentative idea, yet it is being considered a Spring Fling possibility." Hill said. "It will be the first time such an activity will be offered at a Spring Fling if the idea is approved." This activity would take place about a week before the Spring Fling. It would be used primarily for dates to the Saturday noon picnic. Spearheading the Spring Fling as general chairman is Thayne Coulter, Clyde sophomore. Committee members assisting are: Hill first started participating in the AURH during his sophomore year when he served as a member from Ellsworth Hall, then a men's residence hall. That same year he served on the Spring Fling committee. Sandy Nye, Kansas City junior; Scottie McArthur, Kansas City senior; Larry Geiger, Mission senior; and Linda Gurtler, Kansas City junior. Larry Seibel, Russell junior, will be handling Spring Fling publicity. UNFORTUNATELY FOR KU delegates, the National conference for AURH will be held March 24, 25, and 26. The conference will be held on Southern Illinois University campus in Carbondale, Ill. Ten AURH delegates will be representing KU at this conference. He has been a delegate to both regional and national AURH conferences. Presently he is a second vice-chairman to the midwestern regional association. Before being elected chairman, Hill served as vice-chairman of KU's AURH group. AURH officer election will be held in May. Introducing the 2 family car. The population explosion hasn't caught us sleeping. We made the Volkswagen Station Wagon big enough to hold about twice as much as a regular station wagon. So why not two families? There'd be seats enough (9). And luggage space enough (13 pieces). And enough windows to go around (21). Also, you'd be able to split fuel bills. (It averages 23 mpg to begin with). And you could park our 2 Family Wagon in 4' less space than a1 family wagon. The problem, naturally, is to find another family with the same tastes in drive-in restaurants and movies, and such. However,maybe you already have enough people and belongings around your house to fill two wagons. Then all your problems are solved. VOLKSWAGEN OF AMERICA, INC. "Lawrence's Only Authorized Volkswagen Dealer" CONZELMAN MOTORS SALES — SERVICE — PARTS Overseas Delivery Available 2522 Iowa VW (Hwy. 59 South) AUTHORIZED DEALER VI 3-2200 Boozing (Continued from page 1) out some drinking. And certainly, the phrase, 'a student's favorite beverage,' does not refer to soda pop. "This standard has a tremendous influence on impressionable freshmen. Therefore, if the aim of the proposal is to discourage excessive drinking, then it would fail. Rather they need to be taught what the good life is." Alonzo Flores, music education graduate student and parent, agreed: "A person as young as a grade school student wouldn't be able to make any differentiation between the good and the bad of drinking. In fact, it would probably tend to increase excessive drinking. It wouldn't really prove a thing." When asked if he thought alcoholic educators might become overzealous in their pre-class preparation, Flores replied, "No. They would be too scared of losing their jobs." In other words, a liberal alcoholic education would probably fail to eliminate excessive drinking simply because the next generation has to follow this one. KU to Receive Fellowship Grant The KU Graduate School will receive an $8,000 grant from the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation to provide future assistance to four Wilson fellows who are now studying at KU. The Wilson Foundation recruits outstanding students to the profession of college teaching. Its own awards are for one year of graduate study. The supplementary grants are to encourage the host institution to assist the fellow beyond the first year. Seventy-four graduate schools are on the grant list, and other institutions in the Big Eight area are: University of Iowa, $8,000; University of Nebraska, $6,000; St. Louis University, $4,000; Washington University, $8,000; Wichita State University, $2,000; Oklahoma State University, $2,000; and University of Oklahoma, $2,000. Debates Attract Guest Oxford University debated the KU debate team here on Oct. 24, 1924. The question was "Resolved that prohibition is unjustified." Special excursions of students came from the Kansas City, Kan., Lawrence, and Topeka high schools, from Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia, Washburn and Ottawa Universities. Daily Kansan 5 Tuesday, January 18, 1966 $2 Million Grant Aids Expansion KU and the Parsons State Hospital and Training Center will share a $2,150,000 grant from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Congressman Robert Ellsworth announced recently. The grant will go toward construction and equipment of a Center for Research on Mental Retardation and Human Development at Lawrence and KUMC campuses and at Parsons. THE NEW FACILITIES will house a comprehensive program of research and training developed from existing research groups and laboratories. The new center will continue the inter-campus, inter-departmental plan that has been in successful operation among the three sites over a 10-year period. Dr. Richard L. Schiefelbusch, professor of speech and director of the Bureau of Child Research on the Lawrence campus, will be coordinator for the Center. KU will receive $1,758,000 and Parsons State Hospital $392,000. KU's share will be divided approximately $1,238,000 at the Medical Center in Kansas City and $520,000 in Lawrence. THE MATCHING funds, which will bring the center's capital investment to nearly $3 million, will come from private funds and legislative appropriations. A 23,000-foot wing of two levels will be added to the new building for experimental biology, human development and family life for the project. Construction of the $2.9 million hall east of Summerfield Hall is expected to start this summer. The expanded research facilities at the medical center will contribute to studies in the basic sciences and in community studies of cultural deprivation, methods of improved classroom learning, better evaluations of behavior deficits, and a variety of studies calling for a combined behavioral and medical research team. KU Graduate Is Wounded A KU graduate of less than a year, Second Lieutenant George Lancaster, Junction City, lost a hand from fragmentation wounds suffered in action last Saturday outside Da Nang, South Viet Nam. Lancaster, a last year graduate in business, received his commission in the Marines in September and was sent to Viet Nam. Lancaster, a former member of Phi Kappa Psi social fraternity, is now at Clark Air Force Base Hospital in Manila. He was also wounded in the left leg. His wounds were described as serious; however, he was able to call his parents Sunday night. FRATERNITY RUSH Open to All Undergraduate Men January 30 and February 1 Anticipated research on the Lawrence campus will feature infant studies of behavioral acquisitions and studies of socialization, communication and learning. The emphasis will be on developmental and behavioral studies of normal and developmentally deviant children. Pick up Registration Forms Dean of Men's Office centrate on the content of the play. The life of Woodrow Wilson will be the subject of "Step Down to Glory," by Gary Heilsberg, a production of the Bishop's Company, 8 p.m. Monday, Jan. 24, at the Plymouth Congregational Church. Must be turned in by January 25 Play Tells Struggle Of Woodrow Wilson The company consists of 28 actors forming four separate groups. The groups together have given more than 6,000 performances in the United States and Canada. THE IDEA came from the religious and moral plays of the English Church about 500 years ago. The Bishop's Company's first production was "Boy With a Cart." THE MEMBERS of the company are volunteers who receive nominal fees. Many are drama students and the turnover among members of the company is high. The troupe performs in the sanctuaries of various churches using a minimum of physical props. Rather, the members conor foundations, private donors and foreign governments. Blair said most students who are placed are graduates. The Bishop's Company has received both praise and criticism from the clergy. International students studying at KU are discussing their experiences in American universities with Robert Blair of the Institute of International Education (IIE). U.S. Group Aids World Students Blair works in the Denver, Colo., office of IIE. He met with 66 IIE related students Wednesday and is conducting 46 private interviews. THE HE IS A private service agency which administrators student exchange programs. It was founded after World War I in 1919 in New York City when the need to contact people from other lands was realized. EIGHTY-TWO OF KU'S international students have IIE scholarships. Blair said he is very proud of their academic records as a whole. The New York office places international students in American universities by first asking universities for scholarship openings. The openings are then filled by students who have placed highest on tests and-interviews in their respective countries. The IIE places Fulbright scholars in addition to students who have received scholarships from the Department of State, large companies The Denver IIE office, in addition to corresponding with students, plans three-month observation tours for leaders from abroad whose visits are sponsored by the State Department. A vountee core from the Denver area helps conduct the tours. The main IIE office in New York is located directly across from the United Nations. The five regional offices are located in Denver, Colo.; Chicago, Ill.; San Francisco, Calif.; Houston, Tex., and Washington, D.C. A third function of the Denver IIE office is to maintain files on study abroad, and to publish a handbook on international study. The office also publishes the only census in the United States of international students studying in this country. THE NEW YORK office, which is in charge of placements, submits each student's name to ten universities. Once the student is placed he receives mail from the regional IIE office and then makes reports. TOWN & COUNTRY SHOES THE FIRST NAME IN FLATS IS Top Brass $11.00 Who but T&C could turn out such fashionable flats. Whether it's a tuned-in T-strap or a great looking ghillie, you'll find the forefront of fashion flats in our collection by Town & Country Shoes. Platinum or Bright Blue Buk Royal College Shop 837 Mass. VI 3-4255 Town & Country Shoes Nigerians Search For Missing Leaders LAGOS, Nigeria—(UPI)—The provisional military government ruling Nigeria today was making "every effort" to rescue two ranking officials kidnapped during Saturday's abortive revolt by a band of junior army officers. Maj. Gen. John Aguiyi Ironsi reported the surrender of 28- year-old Maj. Chukuma Nzugwu, reputed leader of the dissident officers who started the coup attempt. Nigerian President Nnamdi Azikiwe, recuperating from an operation in a London hospital, said Monday he did not plan to return to Lagos until requested to do so by the interim regime. He had said earlier he would return as soon as possible. Negro Joins Cabinet WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Robert C. Weaver today took command of a new federal department created to help order urban chaos. With swearing-in ceremonies he became the first Negro ever to hold a cabinet rank. The ceremonies completed the historic appointment which Monday received unanimous Senate approval, including that of one of the body's most vocal segregationists, Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C. U.S. Increases Viet Nam Force SAIGON—(UPI)—U.S. military strength in Viet Nam today soared to more than 100,000 men with the twin landings of thousands of fresh Marines and infantrymen from Hawaii and Okinawa. U. S. Military Commander Gen. William C. Westmoreland was on the beach at Vung Tau, 40 miles southeast of Saigon, when the first elements of the 4,000-man 2nd Brigade of the 25th Infantry Division from Schofield barracks, Hawaii, moved ashore. By nightfall, all of the men were ashore in an operation which went off without a hitch, a U.S. military spokesman said. Await Word on Shrimpers TAMPA, Fla.—(UPI)—Officials of Singleton Shrimp Co. awaited word today that two of its vessels had been allowed to leave a Cuban port where they have been detained since Sunday with nine men aboard. Fleetmaster Bobby Canady said Monday afternoon he had talked with the skippers by radio-telephone and they reported they would be leaving either Monday or early today. But no further word was heard from the vessels, the Penny Singleton and the Mark E. Singleton. Canady said that the skippers indicated in their call that the nine seamen, all from here, were being well treated by the Cubans. Market Compromise Proposed LUXEMBOURG—(UPI)—Belgium today proposed a compromise to help end the dramatic split between French President Charles de Gaulle and his five European Common Market partners. Gaullist delegates quickly telephoned Paris for advice. De Gaulle wants sole veto powers as the price for ending his six-month boycott of the market. He also would strip the organization's executive body of much of its power. Vaughn Takes Over Peace Corps WASHINGTON—(UPI) Jack Hood Vaughn today came home to the Peace Corps. The 45-year-old Vaughn was named Monday by President Johnson to succeed Sargent Shriver as corps director. Vaughn, presently assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs, became regional director for Latin America when the Peace Corps was founded in 1961. U.S. Forces to Three Million WASHINGTON—(UPI)—The United States, digging in for a long war in Viet Nam, is expanding its armed forces to more than three million men. Most of the manpower increase will be for the Army and Marines. Support Increases for Mrs. Gandhi NEW DELHI, India—(UPI)—Support mounted today for Mrs. Indira Gandhi as successor to the late Premier Lal Bahadur Shastri, who died last week of a heart attack at the Tashkent Peace Conference. Already, hundreds of persons were visiting the home of the 48-year-old daughter of the late Jawaharlal Nehru to congratulate her in anticipation of her election at Wednesday's ruling Congress party meeting. Observers here predicted she would get at least 400 of the 551 votes to be cast by party members who poured into the Indian capital for the meeting. Jazz Workshop Added to Festival Three collegiate jazz groups have accepted invitations to play in the 1966 KU Jazz Workshop, scheduled for Saturday. Feb. 26. Groups from North Texas State, University of Scranton, and Bucknell University will participate in the one-day session along with two other groups as yet unnamed. THE JAZZ WORKSHOP, which is sponsored by Student Union Activities, is an extension of the previous Oread Jazz Festivals, which were begun in 1964. The Workshop, says Blake Biles, Hutchinson sophomore and Workshop chairman, will give the musicians a chance to learn and improve rather than just participating for prizes as in the Festivals. The musicians will perform at morning and afternoon sessions in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union where they will be judged and coached by three top professionals in the jazz field: Donald Byrd, trumpet, New York City; Phil Woods, also sax, New Hope, Pa.; and Clare Fischer, a West Coast pianist. Both sessions will be open to the public. The two top groups will perform at a concert at 8 p.m. in Murphy Auditorium, each playing approximately 25 minutes. Byrd, Woods and Fischer will also perform along with other selected musicians from the groups. PRIZES CONSISTING of music scholarships, a chance to audition for Columbia Records, and an opportunity to play in the Newport Jazz Festival this summer will be offered to leading groups and individual performers. The 1965 winner of the Oread Jazz Festival, the KU Kicks Band, will not participate this year as only smaller groups have been invited. Participants were chosen by a KU committee who screened applicants from a 22-state area by listening to tapes submitted to them by interested groups. Block tickets for the evening concert will go on sale Monday, Feb. 14, and individual ticket sales will begin Feb. 21. Prices are $2 and $1.75. Assisting Biles on the committee are Dennis McFall, Concordia sophomore; Doug Curts, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Alan Cunningham, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore; Gary Shivers, Kansas City junior; Tim North, Emporia freshman; and Mike Ryan, Mission sophomore. Court Tests Civil Rights Law WASHINGTON—(UPI)—The Supreme Court today looked to U.S. Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach to defend the 1965 Voting Rights Act against a massive attack by six southern states. Katzenbach, author of the law, celebrated his 44th birthday Monday by listening to southern attorneys use such expressions as "the embodiment of tyranny" to describe his brainchild. "The case before the court has roots which go deep," Katzenbach told the court earlier in his brief. Bunnies Lose 'Vital Looks' CHICAGO—(UPI)—Nine unhappy bunnies charged Monday they were fired from Chicago's Playboy Club because they had lost their "young, happy, vital looks. A management spokesman said it was true. "They let me go because I'm not pretty enough to work there," said one of the group which ranged in age from 23 to 29. "I was pretty enough to work there for two years, but not now." Wayne Gottlieb, speaking for the club, said he "was sorry to see the girls go, but the fact is, they lost what we call the 'playboy image'—a young, vital, happy look," he said. "If a girl doesn't have it, she's not a bunny." First in Draft An entomology instructor from KU, Elmo D. Hardy, was the first man who was called from Douglas County in the country's first peacetime draft, initiated in 1940. 4 Daily Kansan Tuesday, January 18, 1966 AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION Table Tops AUTO GLASS Sudden Service East End of 9th St. VI 3-4416 FREE PEPSI'S with each pizza delivered hot to your door from the ovens of Earl's Pizza Palace THREE SIZES TO CHOOSE FROM - 10 INCH . . . . $1.05 - 12 INCH . . . . $1.25 - 14 INCH . . . $1.65 OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK TASTE Earl's Pizza Palace 729 Mass. VI 3-0753 1947 —Photo by John Carter JOHN HAWKES, NOVELIST—Hawkes will give a reading of his works Jan. 20 at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Hawkes has written such books as "The Cannibal," "The Beetle Leg," "The Lime Twig," "Second Skin," and a book of plays which has recently been published. His latest play was produced at Stanford University last week. In his three weeks on the KU campus, Hawkes has attended writing classes and talked to individual students about their writing. Hawkes also gave a reading of his works in Kansas City Monday night. Hawkes, who teaches at Brown University, is the second of two novelists to visit KU this semester. He was preceded in December by Wright Morris of San Francisco State College. KU to Teach 'Road' Course "Communicating—Personal and Group," unit two, of the Kansas program in supervisory development sponsored by KU extension will be taught to highway maintenance and construction people who work with the Kansas State Highway Commission beginning January 24. Carl G. Seashore is the program manager in supervisory development. He is headquartered in Kansas City. Seashore is a graduate engineer of the University of Iowa who taught industrial engineering for 10 years with the Pennsylvania State University Extension. THE SUPERVISORY development program in Kansas consists of seven separate and independent units. A certificate is awarded to an enrollee for every unit properly completed. A proficiency certificate in supervision is awarded to any supervisor completing five units. Each unit consists of 16 hours and covers a two day period. THE UNIT on communications will be held in Salina, Hutchinson, Ottawa, and Oakley. Two sessions will be held in Salina, one in January and one in March. The Ottawa session will be held in February, the Oakley session in March, and the Hutchinson session in January. The seven non-credit units offered in the program are, basic principles of supervision, communicating, human relations, instructing skills, supervising in a competitive market, improving work methods and procedures, and accident prevention. A heavy program is scheduled for the University Theatre during the second semester. It includes the presentation of some well-known plays, a children's theater production and two American premieres. KU Theater Reveals Busy Spring Season The theatre will open Feb. 9 with "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?", the controversial play by Edward Albee, which is considered by many to be the most magnificent American drama in the last 20 years. MARCH 11 brings "The Bedbug" by Vladimir Mayakowski and Anna Jablowa. Miss Jablowi,a former student at the Moscow Art Theater, will have a lead role in the Russian farce. CAST MEMBERS are James Hawes, assistant professor of speech and drama and a KU actor in residence; Nancy Vunovich. Arkansas City graduate student and member of the KU repertory company; Marcia Dalen, member of the repertory company, and Richard Kelton, Miami, Okla., senior. "The Physicists" by Frederick Durrenmatt, is scheduled to open March 23. "Two for the Seesaw," an Experimental Theatre production written by William Gibson, will be staged Feb. 17. It will be directed by Laurie Crew, Groton, Conn., graduate student. Members of the cast are Kip Niven, Prairie Village junior, and Kathy Melcher, Newton sophomore. An American premiere will be held March 3. It will be a Children's Theatre presentation on the musical "Tom Tumbler," written by Tadeusz Kierski. Director will be Jed Davis, professor of speech and drama. KU presents a world premiere April 28. "CARRY NATION," an opera by Douglas Moore, will be part of the spring KU Centennial celebration. It will be directed by Lewin Goff, professor of theater. Robert Baustian, professor of orchestra, will be musical director, and Clayton Krehbiel, professor of choral music, director of the opera chorus. Another American premiere will take place May 12. It will be the presentation of "The Blind Mouth," an Experimental Theatre production. Official Bulletin On Campus Interviews for Wednesday and Friday; Jan. 19—Antioch Dist., Overland Park, K-6, 306B Union; J. a.n. 19—Amer. Lutheran Church College Registry, Minneapolis, Mim. college, 306A Union; W. a.n. 19—Amer. Lutheran School, Wk-12, 106 Bap; Jan 19—Kern Co. H.S. Bakersfield, Calif.; 9-12, 117B Ba, and Kern Co. Junior College, 9-14, 12B Ba. TODAY Right-Of-Way Conference, All day. Union. Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, Prayer for Unity, Danforth Christian Science Organization, 7.30 p.m., Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW Catholic Mass, 6:45 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel. p Rights-of-Way Conference, All day. Kangas Union. Gymnastics, 7 p.m. Central Mo. State and Alva, Okla. Robinson Gymn- Graduate Recital, 8 p.m. Revil- hon, Baritone. Swarthout Recital, Daily Kansas Tuesday, January 18, 1966 THE Pet Dog Ink VI2-0100 7th & Mass. 3 RED RED DOG INN DOG INN Girls Night Out Wednesday-Jan.19 NO COVER Eric & The Norsemen This Weekend A Fabulous Line Up Of Entertainment. - Friday - Spider And The Crabs - Saturday - The Rising Sons Coming Soon - - Jan. 28 - The Group - Jan. 29 - Teddy Vale And The Valedares - The Fabulous Flippers revised TUX tones for UX American Presidency argument for democracy How well is the democratic form of government doing in the world today? A quick and easy answer is, "Not very well. It's slow and cumbersome. Its naiveté, in the face of what is considered to be human nature, is unbelievable. It looks to the good in man despite the concept of irrevocable original sin which seems to dominate world conditions." Yet in considering the accomplishments of the United States as a democratic force in the world, a force for good, the concept of democratic government comes out rather well. It is difficult to sit in the seat of the chosen people, but there is where all Americans sit today — certainly not through their questionable innate goodness or superior intellectual abilities, nor because of their military power or staggering economic advantage. Our nation occupies the seat of power because our land is the most productive, naturally endowed, and developed land on this earth — and perhaps because its people have a humanitarian vision of man's destiny. LITTLE MAN ON.CAMPUS BUT THAT WOULD not be unless we used this potential in a way that would benefit not only our land, our people, but also the peoples of the world. We have not gained that eminence by knighting ourselves as chosen people but by attempting to give those peoples democracy in action, government by and for the people, food, self-sufficiency — and, most of all, the free right to choose for themselves. It is not easy to justify those actions in the light of what may be thought of as imperialistic actions on the part of the United States. This nation long ago, at the time of Woodrow Wilson, attempted to move toward world peace and began to accept the responsibility for feeding the hungry multitudes of Europe. This was the first move of the United States toward world leadership and this movement still goes on. I believe it will continue until the problem of developing nations is solved—or until Communism seizes the leadership. Although the Communists may seem often to be winning the propaganda war, the fact remains that they cannot feed themselves, let alone the world or even their satellite nations. This is the advantage of the United States — money and food and resources—and it is easy to say, on the surface of things, that our advantage should be kept unto ourselves. What are we trying to do in assuming the Atlas-stance with the world on our shoulders? In the light of the wildly variant stages of development of the nations of this earth, it seems almost insane to imagine that one nation would attempt to enforce the right to free choice of government for every nation and hope to provide our own standard of living. MANY PEOPLES ARE not ready for this free choice or for economic stability or independence. Yet the United States is willing to pour men and money—most importantly men—into this fight in the hopes that other peoples will come to believe that democracy is the way for every man, for every nation, to realize the best life on this earth. This argument, I realize, means nothing to the Communist who is convinced that his way of life could be the best on earth despite the ever-growing failures that form of government reaps in many countries. And in our protestations of good will (not convincing, of course, to men of other beliefs) we can only point to the fact that democracy has worked magnificently for a long time in our modern world. Why it has worked can be explained explicitly in the story of our presidents. For there is where the ultimate success of our nation lies. And perhaps the best argument for the democratic form of government lies in the way the office of the president works, not only through the foresight of the men who wrote our Constitution but also in the way the freely-elected presidents of this country have interpreted the mandates and powers to which they fell heir upon election to the office. The record of the presidents of the United States is a glorious one, despite the failures and mistakes now recorded in the historicity of this country. By and large, given the demands of his period in office, each president has performed loyally, some imaginatively, to administer the needs of the country, whatever those needs may have been at that particular moment. When quick and moral action is needed, the president invariably uses the powers invested in his office to implement a sober and proper course for the nation to pursue IT SEEMS OBVIOUS from this record that democracy may rest assured, barring cataclysmic events, that the presidency (through the foresight of the Constitution makers, the common sense of the electorate, and the stature of the incumbent) will remain always in safe hands. For the mere act of election has given most occupants of that office a vision of the responsibilities to the whole nation, the dignity and grandeur the office demands of each incumbent, whatever the needs of his time in office. The controls and checks so wisely placed upon the president have served well, but in times of special need such as war and economic crisis the powers vested in that office have also worked well to serve the country. And we are seeing now, in the presidency of Lyndon Johnson, a continuation of these usages of power when the time is right. This is the way the executive powers of this government are growing and will continue to grow as this nation develops, so long as men of vision and inventiveness are occupying that office and the United States takes its place—not necessarily sought but forced upon it—as the leader of this world. WE COME AGAIN TO the question of why the United States must carry the load of leadership. It is simply that our way of government can and will accommodate itself to the humanitarian goals of this world where no other way of government could or would. It has many times over proved its strength and above all its ability to rise to the needs of a nation and a world when chaos threatens. Whether or not it is good and workable for all the peoples of this earth is yet to be decided. The path that this country, under the presidency as it is continuously developing, would appear to be pursuing may in the decades to come prove to be right—or it may fail. If it should fail then it would be the greatest failure yet seen on this globe and it, assuredly, will have proved to be a step forward to the realization of the destiny of man, whatever it may be—hopefully, a destiny of peace and good will. But if these accomplishments are not realized, I personally would say that human nature finally must have received only what it deserves. THEN I WOULD SAY — "Don't let it be forgot that once there was a spot for one brief shining moment that was known as Camelot." — Yvonne Willingham THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Saving Kill for 76 of its 100 Years University 4-3646, newsroom University 4-3198, business office Founded 1889 Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, N.Y. 10022. Mail subscription rates: $4 a semester or $7 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Of the 31 buildings on the 194) KU campus, 13, having a value of more than a million and a half dollars, were gifts to the university. Buildings Expensive 2 Daily Kansan Tuesday, January 18, 1966 FIRE ONLY YOU SHOULDA BEEN HERE YESTERDAY WHEN THIS GUY PINCHED TH' DOLL NEXT TO HIM." The People Say... To the Editor: RECENT ARTICES IN THE Kansan indicate an alarming complacency shared by KU students and their student government "representatives" concerning the extent of Administration control over student decisions. Blatant disregard for any concept of democratic decision-making manifests itself in the numerous screening processes manipulated by Administration officials to maintain "good housekeeping" by promoting adherence to the "generally accepted standards of propriety." Such articles as the recent series on the All Student Council have portrayed the student bureaucracy as imaginative and responsible to student interests, yet one article details the process of enacting legislation through the "student" council. The Legislative Committee, following a request by the Chancellor, meets with him "to discuss proposed legislation" which eliminates the Chancellor's having to return a bill for minor errors. "In addition, the committee obtains the Chancellor's viewpoint to incorporate with their findings." Other administration personnel assist in this screening process. Of candidates nominated for Panhellenic president the Dean of Women's Office requires an essay discussing what the candidates feel the "purpose and functions" of the organization are, to be followed by a personal interview. Similar regulations exist for officer candidates for the All Women Students. THE DEAN OF MEN is by no means left out of this maintenance of the "generally acceptable standards" of student behavior. A student who recently chose to stroll through the campus in the early morning wearing but his shoes was arrested by local police and suspended from the University. It awes me to think how a KU student can be any more indecent than a similarly-costumed Lawrence resident that he should suffer this double jeopardy. I am here opting for the minimization of administration control over student affairs; I seek the maximization of making students responsible for their own actions. The role of a moral agent lies in feeling the satisfaction and suffering the consequences of one's own actions. Does Miss Taylor's exercising responsibility for KU women's chastity make these girls any more moral? Or do KU men act any less indecent following Father Alderson's shielding of public decency? Certainly KU must be an efficient place to "train" a 20-year-old child. Donald Olson La Mesa, Calif., sophomore European classics in paperback Two volumes of European classics are hot off the paperback presses. One of them is fairly familiar stuff—short stories by Anton Chekhov, Ward Six and Other Stories (Signet Classics, 75 cents). These have been made available elsewhere; this is a very attractive volume, and the stories have that sharp perception of man and society that so marks Chekhov, particularly the title story "Ward Six" in which Chekhov's view of the world is that of a gigantic insane asylum. Another is Friedrich Holderlin's Hyperion, a new translation by Willard R. Trask. "Hyperion" appears in English here, and it is a work that takes the interesting form of letters from its 18th century here to a German friend. The book was said to have had a great impact upon Nietzsche. What's Inside Presidential Power . . p. 2. Novelist on Campus . . p. 3. Duckless Spring Fling . . p. 6. Big Nebraska Battle Tonight . . p. 8. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years LAWRENCE, KANSAS Weather 76th Year, No. 70 Partly cloudy and warmer with a low tonight in the teens. Southerly winds will be at 10 to 15 miles an hour. Tuesday, January 18, 1966 Viet War Policy Supported In GOP State of the Union WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Republican congressional leaders today stood firm in support of presidential policy in Viet Nam but charged the administration was silently stealing $8 billion a year from taxpayers. In a GOP "State of the Union" declaration Monday, the administration was blamed for a 2 per cent rise in the cost of living which was "the equivalent of a secret sales tax that silently steals $8 billion annually. . ." THE DECLARATION, delivered by Senate GOP Leader Everett M. Dirksen and House GOP Leader Gerald T. Ford, produced prompt Democratic rebuttals. President Johnson dampened the GOP bid for attention by releasing two major news announcements just before the Republicans went before color television cameras in the historic old Supreme Court chamber. National GOP Chairman Ray C. Bliss, a dozen senators, some 60 House members and their wives listened in silence as Dirksen replied to the President's foreign policy outline of last Wednesday night. THE ILLINOIS Republican offered this "rational course" for the war in Viet Nam: continued peace efforts combined with intensified military action as expert judgment deems this necessary. He said the nation cannot fight a costly war abroad without "setting priorities at home." He challenged the Democrats to help trim home front spending. THE REPUBLICANS gave this reply to the President's expressed concern for the nation's poor: "We will not sacrifice poor people. We will sacrifice poor programs, poorly conceived and poorly carried out. We will sacrifice poor administrators. We will sacrifice poor arithmetic in public accounting." Richard W, Connor, Oelwein, Iowa, and Patrick J. Morey, Royal Oak, Mich., were in satisfactory condition at Watkins Memorial Hospital this morning. Anticipating details of the President's forthcoming budget, Ford said that, "We need truth in budgeting by the White House." Two KU sophomores were injured early this morning in a one-car accident five and one-half miles west of Clinton. Auto Crash Two Hospitalized Police said the driver of the car, Connor, ran through a T-intersection with which he was unfamiliar. The car, a 1963 Ford convertible, jumped the ditch, plowed through a fence, and came to rest on its side with Connor pinned underneath. KU is Icy on Kid Boozing By Giles Lambertson The passenger, Morey, walked to a nearby farmhouse and, with the assistance of the tenant, righted the car. Both men left the scene in an ambulance, according to a police spokesman. The car was badly damaged. Alcohol Education or should tots be taught how to drink? The question—and all of its interesting sidelights—has been raised with the publication of a Harvard professor's proposal to instruct elementary and high school students in the art of social drinking. According to the professor, such coursework would help acquaint the next generation with the evils—and benefits—of alcoholic beverages and, hence, help eliminate excessive drinking. Mrs. Dorothy Elliott, journalism graduate student, mother, grandmother, and former elementary and high school teacher, was asked if she saw any merit in the proposal: "From the teachers' standpoint, it would be unwise. Elementary teachers have so many extra duties now—such as lunch count, the handling of activity tickets, and the filling-out "Absolutely none. In the first place, many parents wouldn't approve of such instruction. It would be too controversial a subject to be taught in a public school with anything less than the unanimous approval of the parents. of varied reports—that they wouldn't have time for such a program. Besides where would it all end. Would we next begin teaching sex education and experimentation, and the art of gambling? "And couldn't it pose the problem of teachers nibbling a little on the side?" (Can you imagine a plastered clay instructor or a tongue twisted phonics teacher?) If the proposal became a reality (a distinct impossibility in the Carry Nation State), would such activity-sponsoring organizations as the KU-Y sponsor one more activity, a Vodka Hour? Tom Moore, adviser of KU-Y, commented: "The Y at KU is not a temperance organization. Nor is it an advocate of drinking. We just accept the situation that there are some members who drink and some who don't and let it at that." "My own view is that people need to be taught good standards. The reasons people drink are as varied as are people but certainly there is a general standard. For instance, many students think no party can be a success with- (Continued on page 5) [Blurred image of three individuals in front of a building with large windows.] The image is blurry and difficult to discern details, but it appears to be a scene from an indoor setting, possibly a school or a similar educational institution. The figures are standing on a bench or platform, and the background includes windows and a wall with a decorative pattern. The lighting seems artificial, suggesting the photo was taken indoors during the day. —Staff photo by Bill Stephens "WINTER IS ICUMEN in, Lhude sing (profanity)," Ezra Pound, "Ancient Music." "Neither snow nor rain nor winter clothing shall keep these watchers from their appointed stations," U.S. Post Office (with editing). "Say, look at that, look at that, look at that," Charlie (007 GPA) Bheaver. Winter does not seem to have much of an effect on hardy souls who stand their positions as if it were the season "when a young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of etc." From the steps of Green Hall down Jayhawk Boulevard, it may be seen that it takes more than a cold wave to daunt or discourage certain hardy souls. No charges were filed. The Choice Full Load or Full Uniform Draft-eligible students wishing to remain in school next fall are advised by James K. Hitt, KU registrar, to carry at least 15 or 16 hours next semester. Hitt, who has recently returned from Washington where he has conferred with military and draft officials, said there will be a big "re-shuffling" of the draft by June. He explained the stockpile of non-college draftees is rapidly being depleted and local draft boards will soon have to dip into the ranks of college students. "MOST EVERYBODY will get through this semester," he added. HITT SAID the minimum hours a KU student must take under present policy is 12 hours, but he emphasized it is only the minimum. Such states as Oklahoma require the student to take a minimum of 15 hours before they are deferred. though this semester," he added. Students making satisfactory progress toward graduation stand the best chance of being deferred, he said. "Don't shut yourself out of the play by taking too few hours next semester," he said. The admission test for graduate study in business will be offered February 5, in room 303, Bailey Hall. "Only students with the best over-all records will be back next fall." Hitt added. he advised students to exert every effort to bring their grades up. Those running into difficulty this spring should consider going to summer school, he concluded. Tests Given Registration forms and a bulletin of information including sample questions should be obtained before January 29 at the Guidance Bureau. The law school examination is required for admission to all of the area law schools. The business school examination is required by 100 graduate business schools throughout the country. UMKC, MU, and KU law schools all require this examination plus various academic requirements for admission. Daily Kansan Monday, January 17, 1966 INDEPENDENT takes this opportunity to wish the graduating seniors the best possible success in the business world. For those of you who will still be attending classes, Independent will continue to give you the finest in cleaning service. Independent has free pick-up and delivery and two convenient locations waiting to serve you. For the best in cleaning see Independent or call VI3-4011. INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners 9th and Mississippi 740 Vermont YOUR SHOP CLASSIFIED ADS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. HELP WANTED Part-time work for students experienced in ad composition and makeup. Apply at Printing Service. Room 117, Flint Hall. Students looking for part time work apply to person at Sandy's Drive-In restaurant. Would like someone vicinity of 25th and Ridge Court to watch live-year-old girl, mornings only. Call VI 3-5947 or VI 1-0100. 1-17 Reliable student for selling imports. Apply 920 La, after 6 p.m. ff Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive, minicographed and bound for $425 Call Vi C1 2-1901 for free delivery College girl to babyst in exchange for room. VI 3-9398. 1-18 TYPEWRITERS-Office size and portable, new, new and used, manual and electric. Several brands. Rental-purchase rents and service. Office supplies, equipment and furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. St., V.) 3-3643 FOR SALE 1948 Buiek. Roadmaster Convertible, Perfect body, new upholstery, 4 new tires, engine rebuilt, top in air shape. Power windows, power seats, power top. $450.00. Call Tom after 6 p.m., VI 3-7334. tf Wollensak stereo 4-track tape recorder and Remington portable typewriter, under trading for camera equipment Gary Grazda, VI 2-1483 tft VI 2-6601 Clearance! Clearance! Tape recorders, stereos, stereo FM radios cut to $60. AM-FM radios cut to $19.99. Hurry to Ray Stoneback's, 923-314 Mass. S. S. Across the burning sands of the Arabian Desert, at no little risk to you, he has come. Ben Akmela El Hazar, comes a beautifully rare and exotic black ter artisans in the image of a notorious caliph of the Ottoman empire, the beloved Emir Abu Samarib amber bit, with a bone coupling. A brave caravan has brought this treasured relic to the most reasonable price of sixty American dollars. Address serious inquiries to: Caravans of the Nile, purveyors of the Nile, Box 2, University Daily Kapsan. Clearance! Clearance! 500 tires at lowest prices ever. Example 659-14 (695-14) white wall, 100 level Mustang or Rambler size, cut to $12 each for a 15' sht or $15 each for a 15' sht) to $15 plus tax. Ray Stoneback's, 929-319 Mass. St. 1-18 1964 Chevy, 2 dr. H.T. Grey Impala, black interior, 300 HP stick, P.S. Positraction, Tinted glass, 22,000, origi- nale owner, must call. Call VI 2-6842. Sports car owners, we have castrol prices. Biewins, 7th and Mich 1961 Nesh Rambler station wagon. Radio and heat-seat belts. New snow tires. One owner car. Call VI 2- 3301. 1957 Chevy, 2 door ht. V-8, stuck. good mechanical condition and paint. Need money for 2nd semester on Munster, 1911 Stewart. IV 2-f351 V-3-101 VI-21 1963 Stingray, silver, removable top, FM, mall bags. 1964, mag wheels, n.w. perfect condition, 31,000 mils. $2,495. T museum, gift of Baldwin. T 3-4835. Wellsville. I-121 1957 Ford test overdive, Very good for tests. V1 3-7052 after 5 p.m. or weekends. Monaural HI-FI components, Garrard RC-80 changer, Monarch FM-100 tuner, Bell "2315" 42-watt amplifier, Bell "1505" 16-watt amplifier, combination tweeter woofer in cabinets. Over $400 new, sell for $135 or separately. V2-0493. 1-18 Save $85 on minolta SR7 single lens Reflex camera new edition Prismacol Elmo Sankyo. Phone VI 3-0263. Best time 5:39 to 6:30. 1-21 CAR-1958 Plymouth, excellent fit roses. Barnis Zolger, V 3-5168. 1-19 4 15" Ford tires. 2 "new" 4-ply nylon tubeless tires. 2 1-nib tubyl tyres (with new tubes) snow tires. Call Irv, VI 2- 3327. 1-19 Brand-new Gibson electric guitar V 2-6358, 1128 Ohio 1-19 Clothes Never Fit Right? Custom tailors in Hong Kong can do the job right—for about $50. Suits, jeans, slacks made to your measurements. Over 1,000 fabric samples Satisfaction insured. Call VI 3-9344 after 6:18 Mossberg .22 Magnum Rimfire Rifle. 5 shot bolt action repative, J. C. 8 shot barrel repative, J. C. Both scope sighted. Gincass. 4 gun capacity. Call VI 2-9267. 1-18 FOR RENT Married, graduate students, faculty- 2 bedroom apartment, $95.00. Two available January 1. one available February 1. Call for brochure, VI. 2. 2116. Santee Apartments office, 1123 Indiana. tt Extra nice quiet furn shed apartment for mature man, carpeted, nike kitchen, utilities paid. 2 bibcs from Union. Available now. VI 3-8543. tf vacancy in a contemporary home. Private entrance and bath. Five evening meals weekly. $70 monthly meals paid. Call VI 3-903, until pm. Vancancies in contemporary home for young man, prefer graduate studen tial or bachelor's degree, home coorpora tion is desired, telephone. VI 6-385, call before 6 p.m. Wanted — woman graduate student roommate to share room 2-bedroom apartment, south location. VI 2-6234 a. ter 5:15 p.m. 1:17 HERTZ RENT A-CAR Special rates taxiate CALL Gayle V 3-1028 1-21 Rooms for graduate women, 3 single available at semester break. Kitchn facilities. One block from Union. Call VI 3-679. 1-21 Sleeping room with kitehen and laundry facilities for male student, graduating teacher. $40.00 a month CV I 2-6899 after 7 p.m. on end ends. I-17 Die Bierstube: Singen, trinken und essen German style. Featured student's favorite dark beverage and student's favorite light beverage from Golden, Colorado. Also serving deluxe night meals on Wednesday night. Party Room available, 14th and Tennessee. V1 2-9441 trt MISCELLANEOUS BLANDING PARTY PHOTOGRAPHY Your satisfaction is my strongest contract. 48 hour service guaranteed; Gold embossed party titles; Kocafon 5x7, $100; custom enrgled 3x7; SPECIAL 20 x 5x7 Print; $35.00. Three years' experience at KU; for references and samples call Dave at 1V2-6515. tt Need any Sewing or Mending done? Take the rates. Call after 5:00 p.m. Vi. 2-3011. Wanted: General house work preferably in sorority, fraternity, or priinary organizations and have references. Write to Housekeeping, 1132 Comm., Lawrence. PARTY TIME - Building available for dances. Call VI 3-7458 t Rainy Freed Sports Car Maintenance and Repairs by and for the enthusiast. Super tunnery and accessories Rack Pickerluring's Competition cars. Packerluring's Competition cars. Estd 23; d St. V 21-291. tt Tune-ups — Evenings and weekends only, also other automobile work appointment only VT 3-2866 behind 837 Connecticut St. Farmers Garage Experienced photograph or in childen and 'family portraits. Reasonable rate. Will take pictures in your home. Call VI 2-6148. tf WANTED Will lazy Sit in my home or yours. 1.00 p.m L 2-3901 Call after IRONING AND ALTERATIONS 1923 or VI 3-0069 1-19 Experienced typist; will type in my home. Accurate typing, reasonable rates and prompt service. Call Mrs. Brown at VI 2-0210. tt Two engineers with 5-room apart- ment need 2 roommates 8410. V1-19 N. dons one or possibly two male roommates to share apartment for second semester. Walking distance from campus. I 2-3301 after 3 p.m. 1-17 KU. faculty wife and mother of one child would like to care for one or two small children Weekdays. References. 1721 Ken, VI 2-4429. 1-19 Daily Kansan Monday, January 17. 1966 Accurate typing by experienced tynist. Term papers, themes, theses and dissertations. Reasonable rates and fast. VI 2-1561. tf Gold on Labrador retriever, 13 months. No identification other than choke chain collar. Reward. Answers to name of Ringo. Call VI 3-649. 1-19 Experienced typist, 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric Repairman. CALL SERVICE service. Bake rates. CALL Mrs. Barbaz 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648. Secretary with many years experience, will type your term papers, Fast accuracy work at reasonable rates. Call Vi 3-8629 after 5 a.m. Experienced typist has IBM electric to type your thesis, dissertation, term paper, book or report, at or and accurate work. Reasonable rates Phone Mrs. Gilbert, VI 2-2088 Experienced typist will do only these typewriter, Mrs. Palucher VI 3-0558 LOST Experienced secretary will do typing via VI 3-0390, after 5:00 call VI 3-0390 t VI 3-0390. Typist, experienced with term papers, theses and dissertations, will give your typing immediate attention with electric machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Matheson Higley at 408 W. 13th, VI 3-6048. TYPING Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses, dissertations, seals. Electric typewriter, Reasonable rates. Call Mr Haukman, VI 2-2817. Former Harvard and University of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports, and theses. Phone VI 3-7207. tf Experienced typist will do theses and term papers 4 years experience at KU. Phone Mrs. Oxford at VI 2-0673. Expert Typing—Theses, dissertations and term papers. Electric typewriter, standard rates. Mrs. Mishler. VI 3-1029. 1-17 TYPING — GESTETNER MIMEO- GRAPHING—Mrs. McEldowney, VI 3-8568. Wanted: Typing in my home. Expects: thesis and theses Call VI 3-2681 any time available. Topka students disiring thesis, dissertations, rough drafts, or turn papers typed fast and accurately on etic c type writer by expertise d typest, call Mrs. O. L. Cook, CR 2-147, 1715 Stipes, Tomato 1-20 Typing done at reasonable rates by experienced typist. Fast accurate work. Call Betty Vincent, call VI 3-5504. tt Typing done by experienced secretary for 25e each double spaced page. Call Ethel Henderson, 2565 Ridge Ct., VI 2-0122. tt Fast, accurate; immediate attention given to all term papers, reports, thases, etc. Mrs. Donna Stewart, VI 3-6621 1-21 Former teacher will give careful attention to typing your term papers. Accurate and neat work, 5 years experience. Call VI.3-3239. If Secretary familiar with legal terms will do typing—briefs, memandums, paper reports; waste distributions. Fast, accurate and reliable fares. Marsh Goff, I 3-2577. Will do fast accurate typing in my home Standard typewriter 1-21 Typing Wanted - Theses, essays, and thesis. Neat and accurate. Call V1-1 126 126 Typing wanted. IBM Selectric. Carol Tibbitts, 1909 *Edgelea Rd*. VI 3-1895 after 5 p.m. weekdays and all day on weekends. 1-20 Experienced typist will do dissertations, those manuscripts, and term papers. Please send resume to Mr. carbon ribbon. Special symbols. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I., VI 3-7481-125 For Fast Results READ and USE THE WANTADS REGULARLY! SENIORS Hixon Studio is your 1965-66 Jayhawker Photographer Please Call Now For Your Appointment R "Portraits of Distinction" HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Owner 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING New York Cleaner Northeast CO. ONLY SERVICES For the best in — or the best in - - dry cleaning - alterations - reweaving 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Andrews Gifts VI 2-1523 Open Wednesday Evenings Malls Shopping Center Plenty of Free Parking MID-WINTER CLEARANCE Lawrence Surplus OF OUTSTANDING VALUES AT SPORT COAT SALE! Entire Stock of Men's All Wool Sport Coats Reduced Men's Sizes 35 to 44-Regulars and Longs All $24.95 Sport Coats - - - - Now $18.88 All $22.50 Sport Coats - - - - Now $16.88 All $19.95 Sport Coats - - - - Now $14.88 PLUS One Special Group - - - - - at $12.88 WARM JACKET SALE! (If It Doesn't Turn Cold, They're Great Buys for Next Winter!) We Are Offering An Outstanding Assortment at 33 1/3% to 40% off! - Pile Linings - Fleece Linings - Wool / Pile Reversibles - Many with hoods Men's Sizes 34 to 46 SPORT SHIRT SALE! Long-Sleeve Sport Shirts Reduced! All $3.98 Shirts, Now $2.99 All $2.98 Shirts, Now $1.99 Selections are good CASUAL SLACKS SALE! Entire Stock of Our Famous Brand Permanent-Press Slacks Reduced 20% LAWRENCE SURPLUS 740 Massachusetts VI 3-3933 Mount Oread Frosts Mother Earth's Cake Few KU students realize that they are living on a layercake baked better than mother used to make. Geologically speaking, Mount Oread is an erosional remnant composed of layered rocks hundreds of feet deep. Natural forces have arranged the slightly wrinkled layers of the Kansas structural cake. MORE THAN 500 million years have passed since the oldest sediments were deposited on the granite rock of the Kansas "basement." Piled up to 10,000 feet above a granite base are several hundred layers of limestones, shales, clays, and sandstones. Oread limestone, one of the layers, was quarried from the slopes of KU when Lawrence was settled in the 1850's. Most of the older buildings on the campus—Marvin, Flint, Haworth, Robinson Gymnasium, Bailey, old Fraser, part of Dyche and Danforth Chapel—were constructed of Oread limestone. AT ONE TIME, the rock layers connected Mount Oread and Blue Mound, a landmark of comparable height and rock strata, several miles to the southeast. The "icing" spread over much of the Kansas cake consists of unconsolidated deposits of sands, gravels, silts, and clays left by glacial ice, rivers, and winds. School Changes Due Jan. 20 Students making a change from one school of the University to another, must notify the Office of Admissions and Records, 130 Strong, on or before Jan. 20. Notification is necessary so records can be processed and for a smoother enrollment procedure for the student. 10 Daily Kansas Monday, January 17, 1966 BUSINESS DIRECTORY 8TH ST. SHOE REPAIR Quality work on half soles, heels. We repair purses Shoe dyeing 107 E. 8TH HONN'S Coin Operated Laundry and Dry Cleaning OPEN 24 HOURS Across From The High School 19th & La. VI 3-9631 FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Specializes in semester break reservations. Exclusive Representative of L. G. Balfour Co. For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry - Badges - Budges - Nonelties - Guards Novelties Favors Lavalliers Rings - Lavatters - Sportswear Muas - Paddles - Trophies Cups Awards Al Lauter 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Open to 10 p.m. Every Evening Ph.VI 3-0350 Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy Originality IN FLOWERS FOR EVERY SOCIASION especially for gifts by Alexander* BROOKS IOWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS Ober's Ober's SALE Ober's Ober's This year, because of the unseasonable warm weather, not only are values rewarding but the selection is particularly good. All clearance items are from our regular stocks, so the savings are based on actual prices right up to the time of the sale. Although our entire stocks are not included, sale selections are so broad that you're sure to find exactly what you want. Famous brands such as Hart Schaffner & Marx, Kingsridge, Enro, Donegal, Lord Jeff and Alligator are all included. SUITS $59.95 values... $48.95 69. 95 values... 56.95 75. 00 values... 59.95 89. 50 values... 69.95 100. 00 values... 78.95 SPORT COATS $35.00 values ... $27.95 39. 50 values... 32.95 45. 00 values... 35.95 $45.00 values...$37.95 TOPCOATS 65. 00 values... 49.95 69. 95 values... 56.95 50. 00 values... 39.95 85. 00 values... 69.95 125. 00 values... 89.95 All Weather Coats $29.95 values...$19.95 SWEATERS $11.95 values... $6.95 42. 50 values... 31.95 49. 95 values... 39.95 15. 95 values... 8.95 65. 00 values... 49.95 19. 95 values ... 10.95 29. 95 values...15.95 $5.00 values . . . $3.95 SPORT SHIRTS 5. 95 values . . . 4.45 $13.95 values... $9.95 6. 95 values ... 4.95 TROUSERS 8. 95 values ... 5.95 15. 95 values...10.95 17. 95 values...12.95 OUTER COATS 24. 95 values . . . $19.95 29. 95 values . . . 21.95 39. 95 values... 27.95 Savings on Assorted - SOX - TIES - SHOES - BOYS' ITEMS Ober's Lawrence's Fashion Leader Since 1896 821 Mass. VI 3-1951 OPEN THURSDAY UNTIL 8:30 Wilson Hits at the Gun KU "Comeback" Edges ISU By Emery Goad Swoosh-Bang-Swish! It was a neck-and-neck to the line photo-finish and the Iowa State team and fans were left stunned. The Kansas Jayhawks defeated the Iowa State Cyclones, 49-47, on a long shot by guard Bob Wilson, in the final seconds of Saturday's game to break a tie and an almost inevitable overtime. It was the third KU win over Iowa State this season, playing in Ames for a capacity crowd of 7,000 persons in the Armory. They reversed the story of last year when the Hawks lost to the Cyclones in their third match after winning the first two. KNOWING THEY COULD only win the ballgame on a final last second shot, the Jayhawks stalled the game with five minutes left and only a two-point lead. The game was later tied at 47-47 and with two and one-half minutes left, the Hawks again stalled. With ball control that carried the time to within 1:14 in the game, the to be hero Wilson, lost the ball to the Iowa team on a traveling call. Within seconds, the same penalty returned the ball to the Jayhawkers and Wilson was able to score on an outside shot with two seconds to go. Following the same pattern as most KU games this season, the Kansas team, undefeated in conference play, came back with a scoring drive in the second half which eventually led them to victory. WITH WALTER WESLEY, 6'11" center, then high scorer in the Big Eight this season, held to only eight points in the tilt, KU looked to forward Al Lopes, who sank four field goals and eight of eight free throws. Losing the opening tip-off, the Hawks found it nearly impossible to lead in the entire first half. They trailed by four points at mid-time 26-30. The Kansas team caught and surpassed the Cyclones after the half on an uninterrupted eight-point scoring drive. The Jayhawks did not relinquish the lead to Iowa State from that time. IOWA'S DON SMITH, then second high scorer in the league, with 22.7 points per game, was held to only 11 points by the Kansas zone and zone press defense. Smith, also the leading league rebounder in the Big Eight Conference kept his average of 15 per game. Bob Ziegler, 6'3" Iowa guard, high scorer in the conference last year, was held to only eight points. He has been out of play several games this season with an injury and was reported to have an ailment prior to the game on Saturday. Ron Franz, KU forward, was the only player to foul out of the game. The KU win added the third loss to the Iowa State conference record this season. They have a season total of six wins and eight losses. KANSAS, THE FAVORED Big Eight team and currently rated tenth place in national ratings by the Associated Press and United Press International, now has a record of 13 wins and only two losses. Before returning to Allen Field House on Jan. 22, the Hawks will meet the Nebraska Cornhuskers in Lincoln on Tuesday. Nebraska, the only other Big Eight team still unbeaten in conference play, defeated Kansas State in Manhattan on Saturday, 82-71. Box Score KU Jayhawks G FT TP Franz 2 0 4 Lochmann 2 0 4 Wesley 3 2 8 Lewis 3 1 7 Lopes 4 8 16 Bohnenstiehl 3 0 6 Wilson 2 0 4 Total 19 11 49 Iowa State Cyclones G FT TP Koch 6 3 15 Duarte 2 2 6 Smith 3 5 11 B. Ziegler 4 0 8 McGonigle 0 2 2 Fleming 1 2 4 D. Ziegler 0 1 1 Total 16 15 47 Monday, January 17, 1966 Daily Kansan 9 NAPOLI $675 ALSO $400 TO 2250 TRADE UP to a larger diamond NAPOLI $675 ALSO $400 TO 2250 CELESTE $250 ALSO TO $1800 KISMET $425 ALSO $250 TO 1800 WEDDING RING $62.50 Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS Now . . . you can wear a larger, lovelier Keepsake diamond . . . in a superbly styled ring. Trade-in your ring for a larger Keepsake, and receive the famous Keepsake certificate of perfect quality, and permanent registration. Rings enlarged to show detail. Trade-Mark Box. Convenient monthly or weekly terms. “Private Diamond Selection In Our Exclusive Diamond Room” at Ray Christian’s Your Student ID Is Your Credit Card. Just present your ID and say CHARGE IT! Ray Christian "The COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. CELLEATE 4350 CELESTE $250 ALSO TO $1800 KISMET $425 ALSO $250 TO 1800 WEDDING RING 62.50 Keepsake® DIAMOND RINGS Kara Lia Marieanne GOOD OR FERMENTED BETWEEN GOOD & FERMENTED QUARANTIES OR REFERENCE TO COMMUNICATION 3 V Weaver RECORD DEPARTMENT ARE YOU MISSING ANY OF THESE FAVORITES? William Tell And Other Favorite Crawl Songs Leonard Bernstein New York Philharmonic MUSIC / PICTURE & AMPHONIX / SUNDAY TALK / SHOWER William Tell And Other Favorite Crawling Leonard Bernstein New York Philharmonic Wilson / Freit & Flugel, Bartholdt / Tallman ML 6143/MS 6743* Roverie CABINET CLASSIC AND MUSIC GREAT NEWSES, MOUSSIE AND OTHER BROADCAST FAVORITES THE PHILADELPHIA ORchestra EUGENE GRANDY ML 5975/MS 6575* William Sell And Other Favorite Covers Leonard Bernstein New York Philharmonic ML 6143/MS 6743* GODBLESS AMERICA THE ROMAN THOMAS P. COURTIN Richard P. Coudin, director PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA EUGENE ORMANDY, conductor ML 6121/MS 6721* Grand Cannon Suite Leonard Bernstein New York Philharmonic ML 6018/MS 6618* Roverie CLARIE DE LUPIN PARNE GREENSWEAVES ACTUATIONS AND ORIGINAL PICTURES THE PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA EUGENE ORMANDY STEREO LEONARD BERNSTEIN Rhapsody in Blue An American in Paris New York Philharmonic and The Columbia Symphony ML 5413/MS 5091* BOLERO LEONARD BERNSTEIN NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC ML 5293/MS 6011* Roverie CLAIM OF LUHUE, PRINCESS GREENSLIEVES, NOTISTINGEN, HOLLAND, ENGLAND THE PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA EUGENE ORKANDY ML 5925/MS A575* GOD BLESS AMERICA THE MORNON TRISMASZEL CHORE Richard P. Cooke, director PHIL ADEE PRMA ORCHESTRA EVGENIA ORRANDY, conductor Grand Canyon Suite Leonard Bernstein New York Philharmonic Croft Grand Canyon Suite Leonard Bernstein New York Philharmonie ML 6018/MS 6618* BOLERO BAYRID BOLERO LA VALLE DE HARPOQUE EN NEW YORK LEONARD BERNSTEIN NEW YORK PHILHARMONIE VOLUME I BOLERO MUSIC BY BERNARD DANIELS BERNSON LEONARD BERNSTEIN NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC Now you can own the world's favorite music by the world's greatest artists: Bernstein, Kostelanetz, Ormandy and others. Music that inspired radio and TV themes like: "The Lone Ranger" Theme, The Hitchcock TV Theme, The "Philip Morris" Theme... Music from Broadway hit musicals like: "Kismet," "Song of Norway" ... Stereo Romantic music from motion pictures like: "Song Without End," "The Story of Three Loves," "An American in Paris'... Great standards like: "The Lamp Is Low,""Tonight We Love," "My Reverie,""Full Moon and Empty Arms." ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Reg. $4.98 Now $3.59 NU Downs K-State, Awaits KU KU Matmen Fall KANSAS CITY — (UPI)— Nebraska basketball coach Joe Cipriano isn't exactly an optimist. But then he isn't a pessimist either. Cipriano didn't get that "Slippery Joe" nickname for nothing. LAST FALL he sized up his Cornhuskers' chances in the Big Eight Basketball race with a gleam in his eye: "We're moving better, our press has looked good and we feel we'll have more shooting ability." Cipriano's Cornhuskers, now after two weeks of the league season, are running neck-and-neck with 10th-ranked and preseason favorite Kansas. The Huskers are 3-0 in the conference, a half game behind KU 4-0. SLIPPERY JOE offered the idea that the Big Eight "will be much tougher this year, which may make our improvement less noticeable. But we certainly are aiming for a first-division spot if at all possible." Did this mean Cipriano's Huskers, who finished seventh in the conference and 10-15 last year, would be improved? NEBRASKA, with eight victories in its last night game, entertains Kansas Tuesday night at Lincoln and Cipriano feels the "This is a prime factor in the Free-style events because it enables the swimmers to know when to make their turns," Coach Reamon said. Cats Trickle Past Hawks In Swim Duo THE KU FROSH, however, drowned the K-State Frost 73-18 to leave them undefeated for the season. The varsity now stands 3-1 in the season. The next meet will be against Oklahoma State next Saturday at 2 p.m., in the Robinson pool. KU's Varsity swimmers had their first taste of defeat in Big Eight competition Saturday afternoon, bowing to the K-State Wildcats 48-47, at Manhattan. 200 yd. free-style—1. Van Slyke (KU). 2. Kegley (KSU). 3. Stebbins (KU). 1:56.8; 400 yd. medley relay—(KSU) 3:49.3; COACH DICK REAMON felt that all of his men turned in good efforts, but the pool conditions at K-State hampered the performance of both teams, he said. The K-State pool, unlike most other pools in the Big Eight, has no turn markers on the bottom or at the ends of the pool. RESULTS: 60 yd. free-style—1. Ball (KU), 2. Hanlon (KSU), 3. Hyde (KSU), ;283: Once again Don Pennington, Shawnee Mission junior, turned in the best performance for the Hawks by capturing one first and two seconds. 160 yd. individual medley—1. Duenkle (KSU), 2. Pennington (KU). 3. Dumford (KSU). 1,37:8. Diving—1. Rapliff (KSU), 2. Parker (KSU), 3. McPherson (KU); red-hot Jayhawks will have no advantage since coming off a tough 49-47 road win at Iowa State Saturday night. 200 yd. butterfly—1. Erickson (KSU), 2. Pennington (KU), 3. Miner (KU), 2.07:3; 100 yd. free-style—1. Hanlon, (KSU), 2. Henderson (KU), 3. Ball (KU), 50.4; 200 yd. backstroke—1. Johnson (KU), 2. Coughenour (KU), 3. Erickson (KSU), 2:05:9. The Cornhuskers kept pace Saturday night with a convincing 82-71 victory over Kansas State at Manhattan, to boost their season record to 11-2, second only to KU's 13-2 slate. 500 yd, free-style—1, Pennington (KU), 2. Van Slyke (KU), 3. Kegley (KSU), 5:26; 200 yd, breaststroke—1. Duen- kel (KSU), 2. Latham (KSU), 3. Basile (KU), 2:22:9. Kansas pits its eight-game winning streak against the Huskers, including a win over Nebraska for the Big Eight tourney title last month at Kansas City. NEBRASKA hasn't enjoyed a winning hardwood season since 1949-50 when Harry Good coached the Huskers to a 16-7 campaign. Nebraska needs just two more victories to assure its first winning season in 16 years. 400 yd. free-style relay—KU 3:31.9. of Missouri and the University of Omaha, both of which have good teams; and Iowa State University, which is rated one of the top teams in the nation. How does Slippery Joe feel about his chances? "I'll believe it when I see it," he says. Included in the Huskers' three league wins are tough road games with contenders Iowa State and K-State and a homecourt victory over Missouri. THE KANSAS-Nebraska clash is one of five league games set this week. Iowa State travels to Colorado to tip off the week's action tonight and K-State entertains the touring Mexico Nationals in a game which will not count on the Wildcats' record. Three games Saturday night conclude the week's card with K-State meeting Kansas at Lawrence in the headliner. Elsewhere Saturday Nebraska hosts Oklahoma and Oklahoma State travels to Iowa State. Missouri is idle this week during its first term final exams. Kansas University's wrestling team went down Friday night to a good team from Central Missouri State 36-5 in Allen Field House. THE FRIDAY summary: 123—Earl, CM, pinned Zackary 6:26; 130—Cannon, CM, dec. Warnock, KU, 7-6; 137—Gines CM, forfeit; 145—Boozell, CM, dec. Ryan 5-0; 152—Graham, CM, pinned Layle 6:49; 160—Matison, CM, pinned Nelson 4:45; 167-Smith, CM, pinned Simmons 3:51; 177—Coates, CM, pinned Crowther 5:05; Heavy—Sweatman, KU, default from Given. THE YOUNG Kansas squad never seemed to get started against the fast moving team from Warrensburg. Had it not been for the heavyweight division and footballer Mike Sweatman the KU team would have been completely shut out. But Sweatman needed only 12 seconds to beat his man by a default. Daily Kansan Monday, January 17, 1966 With the season half over the KU team has a 2-3 record. The second half of the season will be no easier. It schedules the Hawks against such teams as Kansas State and Central Missouri State, both of whom have beaten KU already this year, the University 8 This is Charger new leader of the Dodge Rebellion Tired of looking at dream cars you can't buy? The cars you see at the Auto Show and never see again? Well, then, do something about it. See the one you can buy, right now, today, at your Dodge dealer's. It's Charger, a full-sized, fastback action car that's all primed up and ready to go. With V8 power. Bucket seats, fore and aft. Full-length console. Disappearing headlights that disappear without a trace. Rear seats that quickly convert into a spacious cargo compartment. Just pop the rear buckets down and watch the cargo space go up. That's Charger—breathtaking new leader of the Dodge Rebellion. Until you've seen it, you haven't seen everything from Dodge for '66. Charger, a brawny, powerful dream car that made it—all the way to your Dodge dealer's. JOIN THE DODGE REBELLION Dodge Charger DODGE DIVISION CHRYSLER MOTORS CORPORATION See your Dodge Dealer now. REBELLION CHRYSLER MOTORS CORPORATION YOU HAVE A CHANCE OF WINNING A DODGE CHARGER—REGISTER AT YOUR DODGE DEALER'S. Familiar Campus 'Boys in Blue' Control, Patrol, Cajole Students Like tugboat captains, they sit —watching. Thousands of students pass by in a continual stream rarely glancing in their direction or giving them a thought, and yet they watch and wait. The familiar men in blue, as much a part of KU as red roofs and limestone, are on duty round the clock controlling the flow of traffic, patrolling the campus and parking lots, and, in general, looking out for student welfare, Lt. Bill Fenstemaker of the KU Campus Police, said. WORKING OUT of the Traffic and Security Office, the patrolmen operate on three shifts, he continued. Long before many students pry their eyes open each morning to greet the new day, the first shift has unlocked the five traffic control booths and settled down to business. That business is keeping most of the cars in the Lawrence area off campus between 7 a.m. and 4:45 p.m. This traffic control system, started in the fall of 1962, was designed to allow the students freer movement between classes without worrying about dodging cars, he said. However, visitors are given special permits and allowed to proceed. Fenstemaker added. THE SECOND shift relieves the first at 3 p.m. and closes the bootthes. Afterwards, this shift directs the evening traffic flow along Jayhawk, the peak hitting about 5:15 p.m. Later in the evening these same patrolmen police the campus until the third shift takes over at 11 p.m. This grave-yard shift is the one the students rarely see, Patrolman Lee Johnston said. Johnston, a "tugboat captain" by day and a Jeep patrolman by night, likes to joke about his mode of transportation on campus. "A four-cylinder Jeep isn't exactly a pursuit car," he laughs, "but it beats walking." Covering about half the campus on his rounds, Johnston checks parking lots, the campus in general and places on campus that many students do not even know exist. ACCORDING TO Johnston, campus parking tickets are the most common offenses encountered by the campus policemen, yet they keep alert for other offenses. The campus police are empowered to give regular city tickets if city ordinances are broken as well as the familiar Official Bulletin On Campus Interviews For This Week: J. Jan. 18—Township H.S. J. Jan. 25—School District Union; Jan. 18—Cypress School Dist. K-6, 106 Ba.; Jan. 19—Antioch Dist. Overland Park, Ka. K-6, Room 340 College Registry, Minneapolis, Munn. 306A, Inc.; Jan. 21—Unified Dist. 1, Racine, Wisc. K-12, 106 Ba. College Registry, Calif. Joint Union H.S., 9-12, 117B Ba. and Kern Co. Junior College, 9-12, 142 Ba. Right-Of-Way Conference, All day. Union. Ubioni Physics Collouquium, 4.30 p.m. Dr. Dr. Kim, Kip, 155 Malette Chung W. Kim, 155 Malotl. Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Duplicate Bridge, 7 p.m., 306 West, Union. "Man & The World" Informal Discussion, 7.30 p.m., p.c. Powerhouse, 260 West 4th St. Invited. Faculty Recital. 8:30 p.m. Paul Todd, violinist. Swarthout Recital Hall. TOMORROW Catholic Mass, 4:45 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel. 4:30 p.m., Prayer for Unity, Danfortch Chapel. *Bleight-of-Way Conference*, All day. Right-of-Way Conference, All day. Kansas, Union. Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel. blue KU parking tickets. They may also make agrests. Rules and regulations regarding motor vehicles on campus are passed by the State Board of Regents, according to E. P. Moomau, Chief of KU's Traffic & Security office. The regular city, county, and state ordinances are in effect on the campus also. Moomau said that a high degree of co-operation exists between the campus police and other law enforcement agencies in the area. "We give and get 100 per cent co-operation from all the various law enforcement agencies," Moomau said. TO KEEP IN touch with the local crime situation and insure close co-operation with these other agencies, Moomau meets with representatives of the Sheriff's Department, Lawrence City Police, Highway Patrol and FBI members. Unsolved KU cases, usually petty thefts, are reported Daily Kansan Monday, January 17, 1966 Most campus policemen have had outside experience in police work, Moomau said. He is a veteran of years of experience in Wichita and on the Kansas Highway Patrol. ALL CAMPUS police officers are trained in general police work, Moomau said. They are required to attend the Kansas Police Officers Training School every July and attend classes during the In-Service-Training Program run by the department during semester breaks. to these agencies to facilitate the solving of these cases through inter-agency co-operation. While a campus policeman is patrolling the streets giving traffic tickets, he is also on the alert for any danger to the life and property of the student and KU, for there is no clear division between the traffic and security functions of the Campus Police, Moomau said. Finals Bring Dishonesty Out ONE STUDENT owned a unique watch. It had two shafts drilled into it. Miniature notes appeared on a paper scroll when he "wound" his watch. It's that time of year again—the time when students resort to cheating. In the past, many ingenious plans and devices have been developed to help students pass examinations. 7 He was expelled, however, when an examiner noticed how often the watch required winding. THE CLUMSY CHEATER is usually caught quickly. Sometimes it takes longer for the more clever one. Cheaters work long and hard to find methods which will aid them; many times they work longer and harder than it would have taken to study for the exam. THE PERFECT CHEATER is as rare as the perfect student. The odds are against the cheater. Most of the conventional methods used to cheat are well known to examiners. As the cheater advances (in hours, not in knowledge), his chance of getting caught increases. Usually the size of the class decreases and it becomes more difficult to cheat. Undoubtedly, as long as examinations are given, students will continue to devise methods of cheating, but, in the long run, the one who is cheated is the cheater. WHAT EVERY STUDENT SHOULD KNOW ABOUT EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES. Upon graduation, every young man and woman wants and needs a job. A good job. How will you find the right one? One with the right company . . . at the right salary . . . with the right opportunities for advancement. Ever considered enlisting the aid of a Professional Employment Service? We think you should. For a number of sound reasons. It's our business. Who could possibly be any better at it? Who works with more companies every day? Knows all about them and their people? Knows their employment needs, their growth possibilities, their philosophies? And another thing. Employment Services have come a long way since your father set out for his first job. Your knowledgeable guidance counsellors and career advisors are aware of this and recommend that you utilize a Professional Employment Service as a good way to obtain employment. Today, the best ones are staffed with thoroughly trained Employment Counsellors who are specialists in every phase of the business. They are interested in helping you . . . not just fitting someone into an available job. There are definite advantages when you seek the services of a Professional Employment Service that is national in scope. More job opportunities locally and nationally . . . for secretaries, accountants, bookkeepers, management trainees, receptionists, salesmen, engineers, and graduates looking for almost any type of job. But you must graduate. Professional Employment Services know that completing your schooling gives you a far better opportunity for a successful, profitable future, regardless of your academic standing in your class. The idea that the top $ _{1/2} $ gets all the good opportunities is a myth. Check it out for yourself. Call us at HA 1-3410. Snelling AND Snelling World's Largest Professiona Employment Service 200 Altman Bldg. 11th & Walnut Kansas City, Mo. Industry, Research Ahead of Time in '06 In 1906 KU Professor Robert Kennedy Duncan had a theory that there should be cooperation between university research and industry. It seems commonplace in this age of interlocking education and technology, but the idea was revolutionary when Duncan propounded it. After his proposals were rejected in the east, Professor Duncan reluctantly headed inland, away from the major industrial centers of the East. He found a warm reception at KU. Chancellor Frank Strong approved of Duncan's proposals and encouraged him to come to KU. In 1907, his celebrated book, "The Chemistry of Commerce," was published. The book attracted wide attention. While Duncan went to KU as a professor of industrial chemistry, his primary concern was a program to interest industries in establishing research fellowships at universities to investigate problems of processing and manufacturing. As a result, Duncan was able to start his fellowship system at KU, and by the fall of 1909, a dozen fellows were at work on projects. Some of the projects were begun as early as 1907, and within two years Duncan was able to make a report of progress. Harper's Weekly reported that "... Duncan's fellowship system has given the university a reputation for energy and activity along modern lines of thought which other institutions might properly emulate." 6 Daily Kansan Monday, January 17, 1966 With the wide publicity given the fellowships, Duncan found himself with offers from so many industries that laboratory space in KU's Bailey Hall could not be provided for all the projects. Most of the firms supporting fellowships were located in the East, although Duncan's efforts were followed with interest in Kansas as well. The wealthy Mellon brothers in Pittsburgh, Pa., became interested in the program, and in 1911 Duncan was invited to undertake a fellowship program at the University of Pittsburgh. For two years he attempted to work at both institutions. In 1913 the Mellons decided to establish a research institution on a permanent basis and contributed some $500,000 for the facility and its operation. KU Debaters Win At Two Tourneys The KU Debate team had one of their most successful weekends, Jan. 8-9. At a tournament at Illinois State University, Bloomington, Ill., KU's four-man team won first place out of the 96 teams entered. THE FRESHMAN DEBATERS also went undefeated in the William Jewl College "Blizzard" tournament out of a field of 48. The two KU teams were among five not defeated in the tournaments. Members of the four-man varsity debate team are Ruth Hatch, Evansville, Ind., junior, Bill Sampson, Topeka sophomore, Robert Ward and William Ward both Wichita sophores. Members of the freshman team are Patricia Baldwin, Prairie Village, Hanan Bell, Prairie Village, John Irmen, Mission, and Dwayne Tieszen, Newton. KIEF'S Record & Stereo Malls Shopping Center TRAVELLIN' MAN Charlie Byrd Trio Recorded Live AM BYRDROAD WASINSTON O.C. CL 2435/CS 9235 Stereo ON COLUMBIA RECORDS The Charlie Byrd Trio—recorded "live" at The Showboat, Washington, D. C.—performs brilliantly in unique renditions of "Mama I'll Be Home Someday," "Do I Hear a Waltz?", "Yesterdays" and 9 more. Little Dave Girl Braebock Blues Quartet Over andOver My Favorite Things Circus on Parade Why Cant I in the World CL 2437/CS 9237 Stereo All Diamond Needles on Sale $5.95 Your favorite tunes, strikingly played by Dave Brubeck and the Quartet. Included are "Circus on Parade," "The Most Beautiful Girl in the World," "My Favorite Things" and 5 more. When you want to celebrate the end of another Semester- SELL YOUR BOOKS! The Bookstore will be buying them through Final Week, January 24-29 Please bring them to the lower level entrance 8-5 Weekdays, till 1:30 Saturday. We are paying patronage refund period 37,valid through June 1966 and period 38,valid through December 1966 kansas UNION BOOKSTORE KESU 13VGA NADRA 240G RAM Moslem Prayer Month Marked On the eve when Christians anticipate a holiday season of parties, feasting and merriment, the world's Moslems begin a month-long observance of fast and prayer. Its purpose, as stated in the Koran, is to teach self denial. Zafar Isaali, graduate student and president of the KU Muslim Society, is among those observing Ramadan, the Islamic month of fasting. Israali explained that Ramadan is the ninth month on the Islamic lunar calendar, beginning Dec. 24 and lasting until Jan. 22. THE KORAN STATES: "Ramadan is the month in which was revealed the Koran, a guide to mankind, and clear signs for guidance and judgment (between right and wrong). So every one of you who is present during "THE PHYSICAL side of fasting is one's abstention from eating, drinking, smoking, and marital relationship (for wife and husband) from astronomical dawn to sunset for the entire month," he said. "However, it has a much deeper philosophy than just physical abstention." Israeli said fasting was prescribed as an Islamic duty in the Moslem year one (623 A.D.) after Mohammed migrated from Mecca to Medina to teach. Many Paint Statue The statue of Jimmy Green in front of the Law School has been the luckless victim of many old rivalries. In past St. Patrick's Days, engineering students would attempt to pour green paint on it. Intercollegiate rivalries would also result in a paint bath such as the purple paint applied by K-State partisans at football seasons in the past. Daily Kansas 5 Monday, January 17, 1966 SAN FRANCISCO DORIS DAY ROD TAYLOR DO NOT DISTURB NOW! EVENINGS AT 7:00 & 9:10 Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI3-5788 Now At The SUNSET “Die Monster Die” & ‘Planet of Vampires’ DO NOT DISTURB Granada THEATRE ...telephone 813-5788 that month should spend it in fasting, but if anyone is ill or on a journey," the prescribed period should be made up by days later. God intends every facility for you; he does not want to put you to difficulties." "Ramadan is the month of devotion and praying." Israil said. "More time is spent, especially during the calm hours of late night and early morning, trying to attract the attention of the Almighty with absolute sincerity and honesty, in the hope that he might forgive sins and mistakes," he said. "SPECIAL PRAYERS are held at night in addition to the five regular prayers which a Moslem offers every day," he added. "A devout Moslem eats and sleeps less but prays and works harder during this month." Israili said Thanksgiving day for Moslems is the day after Ramadan (Jan. 23). It is called "Id" or "Eid." "People in every town gather early in the morning to offer Thanksgiving prayers together and to extend their congratulations to each other," he said. "Every family gives money and food to the needy people and receives blessings in exchange," he said. "The rest of the day is spent in celebration and festivities, visiting relatives and friends, exchanging gifts, and enjoying the best of the dishes. At some places the festival continues three days." Drama Majors Plan Spring Theatre Tour Six KU theater students and a faculty member will travel to four Iron Curtain countries this spring in a cultural exchange program sponsored by the State Department. In return, six Yugoslavian drama students and their instructor will visit the KU campus to attend classes and present scenes from several dramatic productions. THE KU TEAM will demonstrate acting and training techniques used in their classes here in Yugoslavia, Poland, Czechoslovakia and Rumania according to Lewin Goff, director of the University Theatre. The group will also perform a recent Experimental Theatre production, "An American Medley," in their fortnight stay in each country. Members of the team that will tour in April and May are William Kuhlke, assistant professor speech and drama; Paul Hough, Topeka junior; Mary Lynda Rapelye, Kansas City, Mo. senior; Richard Kelton, Miami, Okla. senior; Anne Glaze, Higginsville, Mo. graduate student; Brenda Currin, Rockville, Md. junior and Kip Niven, Prairie Village junior. Largest Field House Allen Field House, which seats 17,500 people and is the largest fieldhouse located on a college campus, was built in 1955. HODI KOYASU If you're looking for a nice comfy place to work after graduation, forget about General Electric. We don't have any place where you can curl up and snooze away the next forty years of your career. There are no quiet little nooks in any of General Electric's 130 operating businesses in 19 countries round the world. But if you're the wide-awake type, G.E. can provide the excitement to keep you that way. Your first assignment may be helping us find applications for a whole new family of plastics recently developed by G.E. Or you may be working at Cape Kennedy on the Apollo moon program. Or you may be working on the marketing team for a new home appliance. Progress Is Our Most Important Product One thing is certain: You'll be working. You'll have plenty of responsibility. What you won't have is a chance to doze off in the prime years of your career. Talk to the man from G.E. when he visits campus. Come to General Electric, where the young men are important men. GENERAL GE ELECTRIC PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS KU Continues to Grow KU will provide a major employment opportunity for area architects and construction companies for several years to come in order to keep pace with the current five-year building plan and meet expansion needs still far in the future. According to Keith Lawton, vice chancellor for operations, the university's five-year building plan is in full swing. ALTHOUGH ITS auditorium may not be completed, new Robinson Gymnasium will be ready to use by commencement this year. New Fraser Hall will be finished approximately a year from this January. New botany research facilities are also well under way on the west side of Iowa Street near the Holiday Inn. Lawton said students will be able to move into Oliver Hall, the new dormitory going up on Naismith Drive down from Allen Field House, by this coming September. He said that a new biological science building has already been funded and the architect is now working on the plans. Construction will start before next year and the tentative completion date Students Relate Experiences in Serving Others From the slums of cities to the open spaces of the Colorado Rockies there are opportunities to be of service. Opportunities for summer camp jobs were also discussed. The jobs include work in camps for mentally retarded, under-privileged and over-privileged children. LESLIE JOHNSON. Wilsey junior, spoke of his experience with Judson Memorial Church in New York City. He said he held a job during the day and attended a seminar and worked in the church at night. He said the church was unique in that it had the first off-off-Broadway theater in New York. "They brought the wrath of the press down on them a few years ago by having a nude dance in the sanctuary," he said. She said "no special training" was required where she worked. The two requirements were "interest and emotional stability." "Last year they almost brought down the press again by having a cocktail party as a get-acquainted function. They avoided it by having the party in an apartment near the church." is around February, 1968. The planned site for the new building is where the present Robinson Gym annex is located. Construction on a new humanities building should start about a year from this February, Lawton said. It will be built on the sites now occupied by Robinson Gym and Haworth Hall. The building will be built in halves because old Robinson will be torn down before Haworth and they want to start work as soon as possible. After Haworth is razed the second half will be started. The famous status of Jimmy Green before KU's law school cost $45,000, almost as much as Green Hall's $50,000. Until a few years ago, the monument was the only life-sized, full length statue of a faculty member on any American campus JOHNSON SAID THE church operated the seminar program by itself. Participants had to find their own jobs, though he said the church would give them leads. KU Methodist and Episcopalian students presented this idea last night in a discussion of summer service opportunities held at the Wesley Foundation. It Cost a Lot ALTHOUGH NOT DEFINITELY formulated, plans are on the five-year agenda for a new physical science building east of the present Malott Hall. Also, one and possibly two new dormitories are planned for construction near new Oliver Hall, Lawton said. Bea Baxter, Little River senior, also participated by holding a job in a hospital for the mentally retarded in California. She said she worked in a YMCA program for trying out careers. He continued by saying there are possible Kansas Union additions coming up in the next five years and the badly needed football stadium addition will come "YOU'D BE NUTS if you didn't do something of service in the summer. . You see so much you don't come into contact with in a normal middle-class neighborhood." Mary Newcomb, Independence, Miss., graduate student said. He said New York was to his liking and the value of the seminar was in the people he met. Judson Church is located in Greenwich Village, he said. Because most of the classes now being held in the Strong annexes will be transferred to new Fraser and the new humanities building, the annexes will be razed. Oread Hall, the wooden H-shaped dormitory on the west side of the stadium, will also be torn down in the near future. The site is a good possibility for another dormitory, said Lawton. 4 Daily Kansan Monday, January 17, 1966 within one or two years, depending on appropriations. You can be driving a Brand New Sprite for $52.76 a month (taxes and all charges included) Triumph British Motors 1116 West 23rd VI 3-8367 LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th & New Hampshire VI 3-3711 "Specialist In Fabric Care" ...A Sign Of Quality Lawrence Laundry policy is quality service. And to provide this quality, Lawrence Laundry uses Exclusive Sanitone Dry Cleaning. Your clothes are returned to you sparkling bright and fresh. To Lawrence Laundry,service means quality. We think you'll agree. Try Lawrence quality. Government Study Vast, Says Cape By Nancy Painter People; their names, faces, occupations, hometowns. People. They are the mainstream of William H. Cape's business world. As associate director of KU's Governmental Research Center, Cape meets scores of people each week. "Hi there Bill Cape! What are you doing in this part of the country?" the man says as he chummily slaps my back. Immediately I think, who is this man? Did he attend our county clerks' seminar, our peace officers' seminar or one of the in-service training programs?" Cape said. MANY TIMES WHILE traveling across the state this scene unfolds. "I try to remember people by associating them with the place I met them, such as the seminars or the in-service training programs," he added. On the other hand, Cape makes a sharp impression on the people he meets. The alertness of his clear, blue eyes expresses the vivaciousness of his mind. The quickness of his humor reinforces this impression. "THEERE IS NO mystery about this job of research. It is nothing but hard work," Cape said. "You must work daily to keep abreast of the political happenings and delve into them. This is especially true in the analytical field. You must derive sound reasoning or be laughed out of the field." Cape's office in Blake Hall depicts the efficiency with which he works in pursuing the center's objectives. Organization is the key that opens the realms of information stored in his office. The office walls have been transformed into book and reference shelves. THREE PERSONS CAME into his office unexpectedly within one hour. Within a fraction of a second Cape changed his course Housing, Buying To Be Studied The Family Life department has announced two new spring semester courses offered to juniors and seniors. "Housing and Society" will investigate housing as an economic and social process with emphasis on its role in the American economy and sociological implications for the family. NO PREREQUISITES are required for this course which will meet at 8:30 a.m. on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. "This course should be of specific interest to future architects, city planners, home economists, sociologists, public administration officials, management and labor leaders, as well as of general interest to all present and future users of housing," Mrs. Kathrine Sippola, department instructor, said. Also open to juniors and seniors is "Introduction to Consumer Economics." It will be held at 9:30 a.m. on Mondays, Wednesday and Fridays. A prerequisite of Economics 7 or 9 is required for this new course. Such topics as credit by consumers, the role of prices in consumer choice, the effect of advertising and producer aids on the consumer will be discussed. "THIS new Family Life course will help students become more adept in their roles as consumers," Mrs. Sippola said. of thinking to answer their diverse questions. And, before any of the three "Thank You's" had escaped the air he was back on the topic confronting him before the interruptions. "Everything which concerns the research center passes over my desk," explained Cape. "I read every bit of information released from the center. I also edit the various news releases, periodicals, articles, pamphlets and book-length monographs that are issued." CAPE ALSO OVERSEES the center's organizing and sponsoring of the various educational and training conferences. These schools, seminars and workshops vary in length from two or three days to two weeks. Daily Kansan Monday, January 17, 1966 Consultation and community service are another phase of the center's work. Cape actively participates in this area. Just recently he spent from Sunday through Wednesday in Wichita, attending the Kansas Officers' Council meeting. On Thursday and Friday of that same week he attended the annual fall meeting of the City Manager's Association in Newton. Saturday he addressed the Republican Governors' Association in Kansas City. ANOTHER PHASE OF the center's services in which Cape actively participates is that of contributing articles to various periodicals. Just recently, two books written by Cape were released. Each book contains more than 200 pages. Cape has also had several magazine articles published within the past weeks. He says he receives most of his article ideas from his numerous contacts. "You can't rehash what other people have said in published articles. What you say must be new, creative and fresh," Cape said. 3 "MOST UNIVERSITIES DO have Government Research Centers and this makes the competition for acceptance of articles more intensive," he added. "In everything we write we try to communicate in the clearest and most concise language," Cape said. Cape also teaches two courses in the Political Science department each semester. Five staff members, plus a librarian, assist Cape in handling the voluminous amount of work which confronts them weekly. land, political science department head. It was this man who influenced Cape the most to pursue a vocation in government research. After receiving both his A.B. and Master's degrees from Ft. Hays, Cape began graduate work toward his Ph.D. at KU. He spent one year here and then went to the University of Wyoming as an instructor. His Governmental Research duties do not end at the close of the spring semester. During the summer this work for the center continues full-time. In 1949 Cape returned to KU as a full-time assistant in the Political Science department. CAPE SAYS HIS interest in government research began during his undergraduate days at Fort Hays Kansas State College, Hays, Kansas. He attended this school for two years before joining the armed services during World War II. UPON RECEIVING his Ph.D in 1952, he went to the University of South Dakota, where he combined both teaching and governmental research work. Returning from the war, Cape re-entered Ft. Hays College. He enrolled in a political science course taught by William More- His summer participation in the in-service training schools and seminars held on KU's campus is in addition to his teaching during both summer school sessions. During the next several years Cape returned to KU as a visiting professor. In 1961 he accepted the position of associate director of KU's Governmental Research Center. Dr. Proud Receives Grant Dr. G. O. Proud of the University of Kansas School of Medicine in Kansas City has received a $6,600 research grant from the Deafness Research Foundation. Dr. Proud, who is chairman of the department of otorhinolaryngology, will make a light and electron microscopic study of normal and diseased temporal bones of the ear. If you thought Batman was Cool wait until you see "THE NEW STABLES" The Stables has undergone extensive Remodeling Grand Opening Tuesday - Mondays — 8:00-9:00 — Pitchers — 50¢ - Thursday—Pitcher Night----75¢ - Wednesday — 7:30-8:00 — Tall Cans—25 $ \psi $ Visit Our V.I.P. Room - Fully Carpeted - Drapes - Television - Nice Quiet Atmosphere THE STABLES KU "HOME OF THE KU STUDENT" THE STABLES KU "HOME OF THE KU STUDENT" --- Editorials Haskell diploma — ticket to unknown! The American Indian population is increasing at a rapid rate. Between 1500 and 1900 the Indian population decreased from about 850,000 to 250,000. The 1960 census reported 523,591 Indians in the United States. In addition there were 28,637 Eskimos and Alutes in the state of Alaska. After placing them on reservations, the government is in the process of disrupting their homes and attempting to move them back into the general society. MOST OF THE reservations are immersed in extreme poverty and Haskell does provide an excellent opportunity for training the young Indian. But can the school prepare a student adequately when the school remains segregated? Should it really Last in a series. cost $3,000 to train a student during an 18-month period. Couldn't the training, when it is largely of a vocational nature, be given over a much shorter period of time? DOES A STUDENT really benefit from eating in a Rose room five times,from living in a pseudoapartment type dwelling and preparing a paper budget? Does he learn how to cope with the problems of city living when he isn't allowed in Lawrence and punished when he takes a drink? When an Indian leaves his reservation he becomes a displaced person. His cultural pattern is destroyed. At Haskell it is not developed or recalled. He must learn a trade. But what kind of trade — painter, plumber, welder. What happens when he leaves Haskell? How well is he prepared to cope with such problems as closed shops and unionism? Students leave Haskell unaware of many of these problems. And what will happen when the union strikes? How will they support themselves? Would it be worse on a reservation? HASKELL OFFICIALS ARE proud of a new program which was instituted this month—a licensed practical nursing program for girls. There is a shortage of practical nurses. Undoubtedly all of the graduates will be placed without difficulty. But the average monthly salary for licensed practical nurses is about $275 a month. One might ask, why be poor on a reservation with your friends and relatives when you can go to the city alone and be poor? Haskell has almost 100 per cent placement each year of its graduates and many have jobs long before graduation. Haskell follows up on its graduates for a brief period, but what happens after a year or two years after the student has left Haskell? HOW MANY FAIL and return to the reservation or wander aimlessly, lost in big cities? Will the Haskell Institute of the future serve as a symbol of opportunity for the bronze-skinned man and woman? It is debatable—for two reasons. They are displeased with the methods used by the school to achieve its goals. They are not properly prepared to deal with the problems of city living. A third reason might be that they prefer their family and tribal customs and will eventually return to them. HASKELL IS NOT accredited. It is a member of the National Junior College Athletic Association. No training received there would transfer as college credit. Because of the poverty of most students and because Haskell is one of the few boarding schools for Indians, the school will continue to receive numerous applicants each year. But how many of those students might be college material? Several current students had no conception of how they might attend college, or the nature of the requirements. They were simply attending Haskell because of the free training. Is it better that the young Indian comes to Haskell to escape the reservation? It is better that, after two years of living in a vacuum at Haskell, he goes into the "major culture" as an "assimilated" person and begins drinking because of his socio-economic level and continues to drink to escape reality. Robert J. Rollins Cooperate for peace A Topeca radio station recently conducted a survey to see what listeners thought of an idea to send an American astronaut and a Russian cosmonaut into space in the same capsule. The results were disappointing. The pros and cons were split just about evenly. Those who opposed the idea gave irrational answers that have become characteristic of too many people and have had adverse effects on the judging of the general will of the nation. The word "Russians" is a dirty one to many Americans, and anything connected with it is bad. EXAMPLES OF THE answers show this. Some just flatly said they did not want a "stinking" Russian in the same satellite with an American. Some felt it would be giving information to the Russians that should be secret. Others thought it would work like the U.N. and that the U.S. would pay the way. There may be bona fide objections to such an idea, but none of the listeners gave any. Worrying about the "stinking" Russian is totally irrational. As for giving information to the Russians, we could both gain by the cooperative effort. If this were a major threat, the satellite sent up could be elementary and not really do advanced research. What if the U.S. did have to pay the entire bill? Would not a few million dollars be worth it to gain cooperation, peace in the cold war, peaceful co-existence, or better understanding? SUCH A PROGRAM could become a symbol of the need for peace, the advantage of cooperation, and the desire for better understanding. Such a move could become a rallying point for both nations. If our governments could perform such a feat, the peoples of both nations would begin to dispose of prejudices that have hampered relations. Many historians and political philosophers feel that the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. will be on the same side if another major world war should occur. If there is this possibility then we should get to know our future ally better. If there is this chance, and it may be a most beneficial one, we are foolish to ignore or reject a positive plan to better relations. FIGHTING A WAR is a high price to pay for security and freedom, although it is sometimes necessary. The price of friendship could be practically nothing. It is time for Americans to review their prejudices and ideas. Reason and planning could change the world's atmosphere. The Russians may reject ideas like this at first and the planning be wasted. But if we are persistent and present many such plans, they may realize our desire for world stability. Jim King Light reading for study breaks A novel study break for students bending under the weight of too many books already sample one of the many light entertainments now available in paperback. MURDER AND THE WANTON BRIDE, by Brett Halliday (Dell, 45 cents); SHOOT THEWORKS, by Brett Halliday (Dell, 45 cents); MURDER AFTER HOURS, by Agatha Christie (Dell, 45 cents)—Three more-or-less standards of mystery story writing. Hercule Poirot, not too surprisingly, is our hero in the third of these, which originally was called "The Hellew," and involves murder and marriage. The others are more in the tough-guy school, starring Mike Shayne, and not a thought will need to trouble your mind as you relax with them. MOSQUITOES, by William Faulkner, (Dell, 60 cents)—Faulkner in light and ribald vein, being awfully Evelyn Waughish (or "South Wind"ish) back in the twenties, before he achieved his reputation. This has appeared in previous paperback editions, and the new cover is about all to distinguish it from earlier volumes. The great man was performing in the Bohemian world of New Orleans and the Gulf of Mexico, and the book, let's face it, was a lesser effort. THE HORIZON BOOK OF THE AGE OF NAPOLEON, by J. Christopher Herold (Dell, 95 cents) — The magnificently illustrated-printed edition reduced to paperback. The text is an extremely solid matter, but if you know the big book this can only be a comedown. Heold, who has written extensively of Napoleon, fills us in on the French Revolution and then treats the entire age, not confining himself to conventional biography. Even without the illustrations this one deserves a recommendation. THE LAUREL CLASSICAL DRAMA—GREEK COMEDY, edited by Robert W. Corrigan (Dell, 75 cents)—Five plays in a worthwhile collection. Four are famous works by Aristophanes — "Lysistrata," "The B., 's," "Peace" and "The Plutus. The fifth is Menander's "The Grouch." Translations are modern. 2 Daily Kansan Monday, January 17, 1966 ENGLISH PSYCHOLOGY HOME MATH SPEECH SCIENCE ENGLISH NO VAN HAVE CLASS CAROUS ENROLL HERE R-A "—AN' NOW WHAT MAKES YOU THINK YOU'D LIKE TO ENROLL IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY?" The first panacea for a mismanaged nation is inflation of the currency; the second is war. Both bring a temporary prosperity; both bring a permanent ruin. But both are the refuge of political and economic opportunities. We were thinking... Great economic and social forces flow with a tidal sweep over communities that are only half conscious of that which is befalling them. Wise statesmen are those who foresee what time is thus bringing, and endeavor to shape institutions and to mold men's thought and purpose in accordance with the change that is silently surrounding them. — Ernest Hemingway * * * * * * * * * * * - Viscount Morley THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Saving KU for 76 of its 100 Years UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office Founded 1889 Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, N.Y. 10022. Mail subscription rates: $4 a semester or $7 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. World-Wide Wire Interim Government Rules Nigeria LAGOS, Nigeria—(UPI)—An interim military government today ruled Africa's most populous nation, brought to the brink of civil war in an abortive coup by dissident junior officers. Maj. Gen. Aguiyi Johnnie Irceni, 41, Nigerian Army chief of staff. Sunday night said in a radio broadcast he agreed to a request from the cabinet to head the temporary military regime. The posts of prime minister and president were suspended, as was parliament. The whereabouts of Prime Minister Sir Abubaker Tafawa Belewa and Finance Minister Chief Festus Okotie-Eboh remained unknown. They vanished Saturday during the lightning one-day coup attempt launched from key regions throughout the country. TUSKEGEE, Ala.—(UPI)Civil rights leaders planned a downtown parade today in this predominantly Negro rural community where racial violence flared over the weekend. Negro student leaders at Tuskegee Institute said, however, that, because of the racial atmosphere, the demonstrations would be confined to a parade—with no picketing. Voter registration was scheduled to begin in the Macon County courthouse. The youthful Negro leaders said they would bring into the city Negroes from rural areas to bolster the number of registered voters. Holiday Peace in Viet Nam SAIGON—(UPI)—Gen. William C. Westmoreland, U.S. military commander in Viet Nam, today ordered American troops to observe a formal ceasefire over Tet, the Chinese lunar New Year. The truce will begin at noon Thursday and last until 6 p.m. Sunday. It will be the second ceasefire in less than a month, although the 30-hour Christmas truce was broken by the Viet Cong almost as soon as it began. The Communists and the Vietnamese government previously announced a Lunar New Year truce. Civil Rights Parade Set Westmoreland's directive today ordered the 190,000 American troops in Viet Nam to fire only in self-defense during Tet. Peace Drive Questioned WASHINGTON—(UPI)—The Communists have not yet given any indication that would show whether President Johnson's campaign for peace in Viet Nam has been a success or a failure, according to two high administration officials. according to two high-ranking Vice-President Hubert H. Humphrey and McGeorge Bundy, Johnson's assistant for national security affairs, both said in public statements there has been a lack of clear response to U.S. efforts to lead the North Vietnamese to the negotiating table. Johnson, meanwhile, planned to meet today with William Porter, the U.S. deputy ambassador to South Viet Nam. Porter is returning to Saigon this week after a review of the Viet Nam situation with officials here. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years 76th Year, No. 69 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Monday, January 17, 1966 Weather Cable TV May Come To Lawrence, KU The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts generally fair skies and cold temperatures through Tuesday. High Tuesday lower 20s, low tonight 5 to 10 degrees. By Barbara Phillips Cable television may be introduced to Lawrence and KU, Dolph Simons Jr., publisher of the Lawrence Journal-World, said yesterday. Arthur M. Schlesinger, former adviser to the late President John F. Kennedy, has accepted a bid to speak at KU. according to John Sapp, Urbana, III. senior and officer of Student Union Activities. Simons said the group sponsoring the cable had a petition for a franchise up before the City Council, but that it would go through several readings and Schlesinger to Speak discussions in the Council before any definite action could be taken. Schlesinger, author of the current best selling book about the Kennedy administration, A Thousand Days, will appear in Hoch auditorium Feb. 16 at 8 p.m. The original topic of his speech was to concern a discussion of United States foreign policy and how to attain it, but according to Sapp this might be changed to a description of the Kennedy administration. STOUFFER PLACE, university housing for married students, would be the main group affected by the cable, Simons said. However, since the apartments are maintained as university housing, the University must agree to having the cable installed there, he explained. "If the people there want it, then we would definitely try to give it to them," Simons said. MARRIED STUDENTS at K-State already have the benefits of cable television. The rates for students at K-State living in government housing comparable to Stouffer Place will be $3.95 per month per resident if 100 households subscribe to the service, a recent article in the Kansas State Collegian said. The rate was agreed upon by the Government of Campus Married Housing and Manhattan Cable TV Services, Inc.; it is low because the rates for a group are lower than for individuals. Installation of the cable began last summer when residents in married-student housing petitioned the housing office to let Manhattan Cable TV Services, Inc., install their cable. Housing paid for all the materials and the company donated the labor, the Collegian said. CABLE TELEVISION in Lawrence is a long way off, Simons explained. "Originally, cable television or Community Antenna TV (CA-TV) was an attempt by an individual or company to provide television services for areas of the country which were beyond reception range." Glenn Price, assistant professor of journalism and production manager of KUOK radio, said. "In order to provide this service, huge antennas were built to pick up weak signals. That is where the term community antenna originated." Price said. NOW. THE CA-TV IDEA is moving into areas already well provided for by television," Price said. "Since we get all the networks from Kansas City, Channel 13 from Topeka, and the educational television channels 11 and 19, the question is: Why CA-TV in Lawrence?" Price said. "The answer: There are some pretty outstanding non-affiliated channels in New York, Los Angeles and other major cities, which we do not get," Price said. With a cable television network, Lawrence could get programs from New York, Los Angeles, New Orleans, and almost any other U.S. city, Price added. THERE ARE LINKS and connections between cities from coast to coast, he said. "Once a cable television program is brought in, then any channel which is not being used can be available." Price added. Even New York City, which has all the network channels and many non-affiliated stations, can make use of the CA-TV program since there are many high steel buildings which obstruct good reception, he said. Where to live, where to live Finding Suitable Housing Plagues Students By Earl Haehl One of the most expensive items on the college student's budget is housing. The question of where to live during the study years must be answered. Where do students live and what are some of the problems they face in making the decision? Housing office records show 5.586 students live off campus, not counting the 700 who commute. About 4.150 students live in university dormitories. Another 450 reside at scholarship halls and 56 men live in two co-operative projects. The population of the fraternity houses is nearly double that of sororities. In September there were 1,475 men living in fraternities and 748 women in sororities. ter Place. Married students face the most serious problem, though it is not so bad as the quonset hut era following World War II. KU now has Stouffer Place for married students. The husband must be enrolled at KU. About 400 students and their families live in Stouffer Place. There are 200 one-bedroom and 100 two-bedroom apartments in Stouffer Place. The rent is $70 a month, single bedroom, and $80 a month, two bedrooms. Students pay for their own utilities. The most important problem is size. Couples with more than two children are referred to private housing because the Stouffer apartments are too small. Capacity is important too. The Stouffer Place apartments are generally full. None will be available next semester. Private housing for married couples costs on the average about $20 a month more than Stouffer Place. Female undergraduates who are unmarried have three choices during their freshman year. They may live at home if they live in Lawrence. Otherwise they must live in a freshman women's dormitory or in a scholarship hall. Scholarship halls are less expensive than regular dormitories but the student on scholarship must work in the hall about nine hours a week. The cost is about $40 a month for women and $45 a month for men as compared to about $70 a month for a regular dormitory. The undergraduate woman who wants to live off-campus faces a shortage of housing unlike any that men face. A man may live where he pleases—an undergraduate woman must live in housing approved by the Dean of Women. Emily Taylor, dean of women, said "less than a hundred undergraduate women live off-campus." This figure does not include those who are married or live with parents. The list of facilities for undergraduate women issued by Dean Taylor's office does not represent all housing. "Some girls find their own and come to us for approval," she said. A number of women remarked about the lack of freedom, but they were not ready to go back to the dormitory. The need for off-campus housing is becoming greater as the enrollment at KU increases. Dean Taylor said the dormitories are crowded and off-campus housing for women is low in proportion. Presently there are ten houses on the approved list, not counting the houses women find for themselves. These will not hold as many women as will the relatively unlimited apartments for men. The need for more women's housing is important. Dean Taylor said she expects the list to expand. The private dormitory under construction will provide some housing. The number of women housed in the new facility will depend on the number of applicants. Housing will be by floors and the number of women will affect the number of floors to be used for housing. Dean Taylor's office also serves graduate women who request help in finding roommates, but the primary job is working with undergraduate women. Living off campus can give a student a sense of freedom from the regulations of the dormitory. However, the bulletin a man picks up at the housing office has some regulations on it: Women are not permitted in men's rooms. Liquor and other alcoholic beverages are not permitted in living quarters. Gambling is not permitted in living quarters. Men don't have to worry where to live at present, the expansion of Lawrence seems adequate to handle them. McCollum Hall is not entirely full and the women are vacating Ellsworth at the end of spring semester. KU Seeks Third Win Over I-State The Kansas Jayhawks will travel to Ames, Ia., Saturday, seeking their thirteenth win of the season against the Iowa State Cyclones. Kansas, favored to sweep the Big Eight conference, has defeated Iowa State twice this season. 82-65 in Lawrence last week, and 73-66 in the pre-season tournament. This was also the story last year when Iowa State defeated Kansas in the third game. THE STARTING LINEUP for KU will be: Walter Wesley, center; Del Lewis and Al Lopes, guards; and Ron Franz and Riney Lochmann, forwards, Ted Owens, head coach, announced. Walt Wesley became the fifth round-baller in KU history to break the 1,000 point mark, last Saturday night, at Allen Field House against Iowa State. Wesley, with 39 points against the Cyclones—his second high for points scored in one game—and 27 against the University of Oklahoma here Monday night, brought his career total to 1,064. He has now entered the ranks of KU greats Clyde Lovellette, center, 1950-'52, KU's top scorer with 1,979; Wilt "the Still" Chamberlain, center, '57-'58, 1,433; Wayne Hightower, forward, '60-'61, 1,128; and Charlie Black, forward and center, '42-'43 and '46-'47, 1,082. Iowa State will start Al Koch, 63" and Raul Duarte, 69", forwards; Don Smith, 68", center; and Bob Ziegler, 63", and John McGonigle, 62", guards. KU's Wesley, current high scorer in the Big Eight Conference averaging 23.6 points a game, will meet Iowa State's Don Smith, the league's number two KU Frosh "HotShots" Top Tigers Jo White's offense and Vernon Vanoy's defense led KU's Frosch cagers to a 82-60 victory over the Missouri Frosch last night at Allen Field House. It was the fourth straight victory for the Kansas yearlings and their second highest scoring total of the season. WHITE'S PASSING and 20 points, KU's high for the game, and Vanoy's blocking of Missouri shots were the key factors in the win. Vanoy and three other teammates also hit in double figures. Vanoy hit for 12, Howard Arndt 14, Bruce Sloan 11, and Rich Thomas 10. Sloan, White and Arndt grabbed 11 rebounds apiece to lead the Jayhawks to a 54-36 advantage in control of the boards. John Duft led the Tigers with 21 points, the game high, and Booker Brown grabbed a peak game performance of 12 rebounds. It was the second time this year the Jayhawks have beaten Missouri. They won 81-75 at Columbia in December. Last season the Tigers won both games. Daily Kansan Friday, January 14. 1966 scorer averaging 22.7 per game Smith is also the top rebounder with 15.7. IOWA STATES Bob Ziegler, a top scorer last year, was out most of the start of the season but "the hopes to be in top condition Saturday," Coach Glen Anderson said. Smith was also reported to have a physical ulment. "We cannot be anything less than 100 per cent physically if we are to entertain even a faint hope of upsetting Kansas," Coach Anderson said. The game begins at 7:35 p.m. in the Iowa State Armory in Ames. The Cyclones won their first league game Monday 85-70 over Missouri. Kansas is undefeated in conference play. The Jayhawks travel to undefeated Nebraska for a game on Tuesday and will return to Allen Field House on Saturday, Jan. 22, to play the Kansas State University Wildcats. KANSAS Walt Wesley . . . fifth all-time KU scorer. Intramural Scores Vary The victory margin came in all sizes last night as Templin =2, Phi Kappa Psi and Beta Theta Pi "A" teams won their intramural basketball games at Robinson Gym Annex. With these victories, Templin and the Beta's remained undefeated, both taking the lead in their respective divisions. In the first game Templin =2 tripped Delta Function 37-36. Kenneth Lieber, Allen Park, Mich., sophomore, led Templin with nine points while Joseph Gracey, Independence, Miss., graduate student, was high for Delta Function with 12. PHI KAPPA PSI blasted Sigma Phi Epsilon 67-44. Bill Wassinger, Council Bluffs, Ia., junior, was high scorer for the Phi Psi's and the game, with 16 points. Warren Massey, Jacksonville, Ill., junior led the Sig Ep's losing effort with 12. Beta Theta Pi beat a Sigma Alpha Epsilon press to win 39-23 WHAT EVERY STUDENT SHOULD KNOW ABOUT EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES. Upon graduation, every young man and woman wants and needs a job. A good job. How will you find the right one? One with the right company . . . at the right salary . . . with the right opportunities for advancement. Ever considered enlisting the aid of a Professional Employment Service? We think you should. For a number of sound reasons. It's our business. Who could possibly be any better at it? Who works with more companies every day? Knows all about them and their people? Knows their employment needs, their growth possibilities, their philosophies? And another thing. Employment Services have come a long way since your father set out for his first job. Your knowledgeable guidance counsellors and career advisors are aware of this and recommend that you utilize a Professional Employment Service as a good way to obtain employment. Today, the best ones are staffed with thoroughly trained Employment Counsellors who are specialists in every phase of the business. They are interested in helping you . . . not just fitting someone into an available job. There are definite advantages when you seek the services of a Professional Employment Service that is national in scope. More job opportunities locally and nationally . . . for secretaries, accountants, bookkeepers, management trainees, receptionists, salesmen, engineers, and graduates looking for almost any type of job. But you must graduate. Professional Employment Services know that completing your schooling gives you a far better opportunity for a successful, profitable future, regardless of your academic standing in your class. The idea that the top $ _{1/2} $ gets all the good opportunities is a myth. Check it out for yourself. Call us at HA 1-3410. Snelling AND Snelling World's Largest Professional Employment Service 200 Altman Bldg. 11th & Walnut Kansas City, Mo. YOUR SHOP CLASSIFIED ADS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Renault Dauphine, 1962, exceptionally clean inside and out, near new rubber, seat belts, big radio and heater. See to appreciate. Owner will pay for oil cover over $100 under daler price check for yourself. 1528 W 21st St I V-2983 Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive, encopagated and bound for $125 per call. Call VI 2-1001 for free delivery TYPEWRITERS -Office size and portables, new and used, manual and electric. Several brands. Rental-purchase rentals. Office supplies, rentals and service. Office supplies, equipment, and furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. St., VI 3-3644 1948 Buick Roadmaster Convertible, Perfect body, new upholstery, 4 new tires, engine rebuilt, top in fair shape, Power windows, power seats, power top $450.00. Call Tom after 6 p.m. VI - 3-7334. tf Wolkenski stereo 4-track tape recorder and Remington portable typewriter. Will consider trading for camera equipment. Gary Grazda, VI 2-1483 fc106 Clearance! Clearance! Tape recorders, stereos, stereo FM radios cut to $60. AM-FM radios cut to $19.99. Hurry to Ray Stoneback's, 929-331 Mass. Across the burning sands of the Arabian Desert, at no little risk to my faithful Bedouin camel driver, Ben Akmel the Bedouin who came from rare and exotic black Meersham pipe. Handcarved by master artisans in the image of a notorious caliph of the Ottoman empire, this work of art features a gamelin with a cappeling. A brave caravan has brought this treasure of the Near East to you at the most reasonable price of sixty American dollars. Address svious inquiries at [www.arabartisans.com] or true art treasures, Box 2, University Daily Kansan. Clearance! Clearance! 500 tires at lowest prices ever. Example 650-14 (695-14) white wall, 100 level Mus-tang or Ramber Shelter white wall, 100 level Volks (560-B's) cut to $15 plus tax. Ray Stoneback's. 929-931 Mass. St. 1-18 1646 Chevry, 2 dr. H.T., Grey Impala, black interior, 300 HP stack, P.S. Posttraction, Tinted glass, 22 000 orig. original owner, must sell. Call VI 2-1-24 Sports car owners, we have castrol oil, prestolite soak plugs at quality prices. Blevins, 7th and Michigan. 1-21 1961 Nash Rambler station wagon. Radio and heater—seat belts. New snow tires. One owner car. Call VI 2-3901. tf 1957 Chevy, 2 door ht., V-8, stick, good mechanical condition and paint. Need money for 2nd semester. S Jordan, 1911 Stewart. VI 2-6311 1-21 1963 Stingray, silver, removable top 425 bp, 4-speed, posttraction, AM- FM, mag wheels, new tires, perfect condition, 31,000 miles, $2,495. Three miles east of Baldwin, TU 3-6355. Wolfeville. 1-21 1957 Ford Ford overdrive, Very good VI 3-7652 after 4 weeks 1-17 or weekends. Bicycle, English 3-speed, heavy saddle baskets. Call Vi1 2-3623. 1-14 Monaural HI-FI components. Garrard RC-80 changer. Monarch FM-100 tuner. Monarch FM-100 tachometer. Wollensak T-1500 tape recorder, combination tweeter/woofer in cabinets. Over $400 new, sell for $135 or separately. VI1 2-0493. 1-18 Must sacrifice. Wollensak tape recorder, mono four speed. Fortran typewheel $20. Both like hard $28 Tenn. Evenings. Ask for Hank. 1-14 Save $5 on a Miniota SR7 single lens Reflex F14 m3s. Also Canon Triton Olympus M6236. Best time 5:30 to 10:30. Phone VI 3-0263. Best time 1-21 CAR-1956 Plymouth, excellent run- er. Berrie Zeigler, T 3-5168 1-19 4 15" Ford rims, 2 "new" 4-ply nylon tubeless tires, 2 "ply tubeless (with new tubes) snow tires. Call Irv, VI 2-3327 1-19 Brand-new Gibson el-etric guitar V1 62358, 1128 Ohio. 1-19 V1 62358, 1128 Ohio. 1-19 Clothes Never Fit Right? Custom tailors in Hong Kong can do the job right—for about $50. Suits, jackets, slacks, made to your measurements. Over 1,000 fabric samples. Satisfaction insured. Call VI 3-9342 at 6 p.m. Mosberg 22 Magunm Rimfire Rifle 5 shot bolt action repeater, J. C. 6 shot double action shotgun, both scope sighted. Cascade 4 gun capacity. Call VI 2-9267. 1-18 TYPING Experienced typist has IBM electric to type your thesis, dissertation, term paper. Must have neat and accurate work. Reasonable rates. Phone Mrs. Gilbert. V2-2088 Experienced secretary will do typing in her home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 3-0380. after 5:00 call VI 3-0390. tf Experienced typist, 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric service reasonable rates. CALL Mrs. Barlow. 2407 Yale. V1. 2-1648. Wanted: Typing in my home. Experienced and accurate in term papers and theses. Test VI 3-2651 any time. Typist, experienced with term papers, theses and dissertations, will give your typing immediate attention with electric machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W. 13th, VI 3-6048. Secretary familiar with legal terms will do typing—briefs, memorandums, discussions, dissertations Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Marsh Goff, VI 3-2577 Experienced typist; will type in my home. Accurate typing, reasonable rates and prompt service. Call Mrs. Brown at VI 2-0210. tt Experiented typist will do only these typewriter Mrs. Fulcher wil 3-0658 Accurate typing by experienced typist. Term papers, themes, theses and dissertations. Reasonable rates and fast. VI 2-1561. tf Secretary with many years experience, will type your term papers, Fast, accurate work at reasonable rates. Call VI 6296 after 5 p.m. Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses, dissertations. sas, scilab, Electronic typet writer. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Rauckman, V1 2-781 237. tff Former Harvard and University of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports, and theses. Phone VI 3-7207. tf TYPING — GESTETNER MIMEO- MISGING—Mrs. McEldowney, Vf -3-8568 Expert Typing—Theses, dissertations and term papers. Electric typewriter, standard rates. Mrs. Mishler, VI 3-1023). 1-17 Typing done at reasonable rates by experience d typist. Fast accurate work. Call Betty Vincent, call VI 3-5804. tf Typing done by experienced secretary for 25e each double spaced page. Call Ethel Henderson, 2565 Ridge Ct., VI 2-0122. tf Fast, accurate; immediate attention given to all term papers, reports, theses, etc. Mrs. Donna Stewart, VI 3-6621 1-21 Former teacher will give careful attention to typing your term papers. Accurate and neat work, 5 years experience. Call VI 3-3829. tf Topcake students desiring theses,dispense typed test and accurately on elitic typwriter by experienced COOK STUDIO 1479, 1715 Sims. Topcake 1-20 Typing Wanted - Theses, essays, and Notat and accurate. Catur 1-21 4156 Will do fast accurate typing in my Standard typewriter in 1-21 3-8163 Typing wanted. IBM Selectric. Carol Tibbitts, 1909 Edgelen Rd. VI 3-1345 after 5 p.m. weekdays and all day on weekends. 1-20 FOR RENT Vacancy in a contemporary home. Private entrance and bath. Five evening meals weekly. $70 monthly hires paid. Call VI 3-9635 until p.m. Married, graduate students, faculty- 2 bedroom apartment, $95.00. Two available January 1, one available February 1. Call for brochure. VI 3-2116. Santee Apartments office, 1123 Indiana. tf Vancancies in contemporary home for young man, prefer graduate stu- me meals pool, home cooks meals if desired telephone. VI 3-8625 call before 6 p.m. Extra nice quiet furnished apartment for mature man, carpeted, nice kitchen, utilities paid. 2 blocks from Union. Available now. VI 3-8534 tf Wanted — woman graduate student roommate to share room 2-bedroom apartment, south location. VI 2-9234 after 5.15 p.m. 1-17 Sleeping room with kitchen and laundry facilities for male student, gradient preferred $40.00 a month CV 6899 after 7 p.m. on weekdays 1-17 Rooms for graduate women, 3 single available at semester break. Kitchen facilities. One block from Union. Call VI 3-6879. 1-21 MISCELLANEOUS HERTZ RENT A-CAR Special rates Rentals, 844-329-1077, www.hertz.com, Call Gayle, V 3-1028 1-21 Die Biertuerse: Singen, trinken und essen German style. Featureting student's 'favorite dark beverage and student's favorite light beverage from Golden, Colorado. Also serving deluxe night bedrooms on Wednesday night. Party Room available. 14th and Tennessee. VI P 29441. BLANDING PARTY PHOTOGRAPHY Your satisfaction is my strongest contract, 48 hour service guaranteed; Gold embossed party titles; Kacolor card; $75 per team; COLOUR 60; WEDDING; COLOR SPECIAL 20 5x1ft prints. $5.00. Three years' experience at KU; for references and samples call Dave at 12-6515. tt Need any Sewing or Monding done? Reasonable rates Call after 5:00 p.m. Call 412-345-6789 Wanted: General house work preferably in sorority, fraternity, or prj. duties; to have references. Have references. Write to Housekeeping. 1132 Conn., Lawrence. tf Sports Car Maintenance and Repairs by and for the enthusiast. Super tuning and maintenance. Ray Pickering's Competition Sports Cars, East 23d St., VI 2-1291. tf PARTY TIME—Building available for dances. Call VI 3-7458 Ralph Freed Tune-ups — Evenings and weekends only; also other automobile work. appointment only VI 3-2006, behind 837 Connecticut St. Farmer Garage. Experienced photographer in children and family portraits. Reasonable rate. Will take pictures in your home. Call VI 2-6148. tf HELP WANTED Part-time work for students experienced in ad composition and makeup. Apply at Printing Service, Room 117, Flint Hall. ff Students looking for part time work in 2016 person at Sandy's Drive-In 工作 W. 9th W. 9th Reliable student for selling imports. Apply 920 La. after 6 p.m. tf We have an opening for one male student to work. Two evening shifts on weekdays. Tom Dixon has 10 am at Dixon's Drive-In旅馆, I 3-7446. A proven part-time income opportunity for college men. You can fit into any of our management course is offered. If you need a year-round income that will finance your education, please email resume of yourself to Future Homes Box 128, Shawnee Mission, Kan. 1-14 Would like someone vicinity of 25th and Ridge Court to watch five-year-old girl, mornings only. Call VI 3-5947 or VI 2-0100. 1-17 College girl to babyst in exchange for room: VI 3-3998, 1-18 WANTED Will Baby Sit in my home or jour- ses. Attend friend's events. Call af- tle 4:00 p.m. VI 2-3001 IRONING AND ALTERATIONS 1985 OR VI 3-9609 1-19 Two engineers with 5-room anan- trac need 2 roommates Call Vi 8410. Need one or possibly two male roommates to share apartment for second semester. Walking distance from campus. VI 2-3301 after 3 p.m. 1-17 KU. faculty wife and mother of one child would like to care for one or two small children. Weekdays. Reference. 1721 Ken. VI. 24-129. Golden Labrador retriever, 13 months. No identification other than choke chain collar. Reward Answers to name of Ringo. Call VI 3-4660. - 1-19 LOST Daily Kansas Friday, January 14, 1966 Exclusive Representative of 11 L. G. Balfour Co. TRAVEL AGENCY For the finest in 8TH ST. SHOE REPAIR Quality work on half soles, heels. We repair purses Shoe dyeing 107 E. 8TH Fraternity Jewelry - Novelties - Lavalliers - Badges Specializes in semester break reservations. FIRST NATIONAL BANK - Guards Sportswear Mug Favors - Sportswear Paddles U-DRIVE-THRU CAR WASH 50¢ Stay in your car and drive away in a sparkling clean car. - Rings - Paddles * Trophies Extra power spray will be 10c extra. This service is optional. - Cups * Awards 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 Al Lauter No need to drive a dirty car anymore. U-DRIVE-THRU That's all you do. HONN'S 2315 Louisiana Lawrence, Kansas Coin Operated Laundry and Dry Cleaning OPEN 24 HOURS Across From The High School 19th & La. VI 3-9631 Try a "MOORE" BURGER MINT HAMBURGER MALTS - SHAKES 1414 W.6th VI 3-9588 HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with We are always happy to serve yo Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Open to 10 p.m. Every Evening Ph.VI 3-0350 Originality FOR TRAFFIC ENTRY PRESS TL 3-2000 Originality IN FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION especially for you Alexander's 826 IDWA LAWRENDE, KANADA FOR PRESENTATION PURPOSES INC. 5-1930 TRAVEL TIME C LET MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICI Make Your Semester Reservations Now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 YOUR GASOLINE DOLLAR GOES FARTHER DERBY at... GARY'S DERBY SERVICE 2330 Iowa Lawrence YOU CAN'T BUY A BETTER GAS...AT ANY PRICE New Laws Are Stricter Check Bouncers Have Rough Time By Jerry Kern Student check bouncers have been having a tough time in recent years, partly because the Kansas check law has been tightened. Before, if the guilty person made restitution, charges had to be dropped. The law now makes it clear that there will be no need to place false confidence in a written order for a bank to pay. The law on insufficient fund checks states that any person who is to offset the insurance rate and the general cost of keeping money on hand. "We receive a relatively small amount of bad checks. Most of them occur within a limited range. There are those students who have difficulty with their finances — accounting problems. But these offer no collection difficulty, and are prompt to settle up. Then there are others who know they have insufficient funds. Still others are just plain careless. It doesn't bother them. There is just a lack of concern. Students create a special credit problem, not because they cause more trouble, but because it is usually more difficult to collect from them," Stoner said. laws are so restrictive. The majority of student checks which bounce are not intentional. It is often the simple matter of getting the wrong address of the bank, or some one making a late deposit back home. The whole country is moving toward a credit system. I think the student is nearer today than ever before to having his credit recognized—especially in the University." "Only a small segment is causing most of the harm." Stoner added. "This is why the check Second in a Series is aware of insufficient funds or credit at his bank upon presentation of a check shall be deemed guilty of a crime. If the amount is less than $50, the crime is a misdemeanor, and the person can be fined $25 to $100 or sentenced to 30 days to one year in jail or both. If a person is guilty of this kind of misdemeanor three times in two years, he can be fined $100 to $500 or sentenced to one to five years in prison or both. If the amount is $50 or more, the crime is a felony, and the person can be fined $100 to $5,000 or sentenced to one to five years in prison or both. The guilty person is allowed seven days to make restitution after first notice by the payee. Such a notice must be in person and written. Postdated Checks No complaint may be filed upon any check which is postdated or which the payee has information that the check did not have sufficient funds. If the payee has furnished information, with intent to defraud, causing a complaint to be filed on a postdated check or a check which the payee knew did not have sufficient funds, he is guilty of a misdemeanor and can be fined $100 to $500 and court costs. The law also states that every person who falsely represents another to receive money, goods, or services shall upon conviction be punished in the same manner as for feloniously stealing the thing so received. The law is clear, yet a problem exists because, as mentioned before, many merchants will not prosecute for a small check. Student credit problems are not confined to the Lawrence merchant. The problem is also apparent at the University. No Student Credit For example, the Kansas Union Book Store will not carry student credit. The reason for this, explained manager Jim Stoner, is that students are not responsible enough, and most of them are under 21. The Book Store handles about 800 checks a day. According to Stoner, the Book Store will not cash a check for more than $10 over the purchase price. He pointed out, however, that they will entertain requests for larger amounts. Also, the Book Store, with its policy of no credit to students, is carrying about a dozen student accounts by special request, Stoner said. "This is not a recent policy, because student credit is not a recent problem. There have been recent discussions on this problem here and elsewhere. Some schools have tried and are trying to offer credit to the student, but none have done so successfully." Stoner said. Second Party Checks The Book Store does cash second party checks, but it charges a 10 cent charge for handling. Stoner explained that this charge Clutter Trial一 (Continued from page 1) said that the public thought that he and other attorneys were trying to free the convicted men. "We were simply trying for a new trial," said Jenkins. Jenkins was appointed in September of 1962 by a Federal Court to challenge the administration of the trial. Thus he was The Concert Choir will present its annual winter concert at 3:30 p.m. Jan. 16 in the University Theatre under the direction of James Ralston. Choir To Sing Sunday "The program will include significant choral music from different eras." Ralston said. THE DIRECTOR explained that the music to be sung was composed in "small form" as opposed to oratorio—music "you can hold in your hand and sing for five minutes rather than forty-five." The "Shofar Service" by Herman Berlinski is a work which will be used to usher in the new year, according to Ralston. A ram's horn used in Jewish high holiday services, the Shofar was once used to summon people to important events. In 'the "Shofar Service," Michael Riley, Columbus senior, will sing the baritone solo, and David Darnell, Plainville senior, and Dennis Anderson, Albuquerque, N.M. freshman, will play the trumpet solos. involved in a habeas corpus type action which is defined as civil action. In a civil action, if the lawyer is appointed by the Court, he serves without compensation, and also must pay his own expenses. "I DIDN'T ASK for this case and neither did other lawyers but we were all enriched by the experience and we got experience in how important but weak are our constitutional rights," said Jenkins. The American public still does not understand that our duty as lawyers is to help a man as much as possible, he continued. 10 Daily Kansan Friday, January 14, 1966 Jenkins said that he felt that poor prosecution, adverse public opinion, a circus atmosphere in the trial, and the amount of publicity by news media influenced the trial. The poor prosecution and a poor defense coupled with the irregularities in the investigation provided the elements and the reasons for the numerous appeals. About 36 different types of legal actions, motions and appeals took place in this case, Jenkins said. "But right or wrong, the courts had to draw the line somewhere and they did. I say they were wrong," stated Jenkins. JENKINS and his fellow attorneys tried every avenue of appeal including appeals to the Governor and the United States Supreme Court but all their efforts were finally stymied. The Clutter murderers, Richard Eugene Hickock and Perry Smith, were executed at 12:30 a.m., April 14, 1965. IN MANY CASES of this type you know that the defendant is guilty but you want to save his life. Jenkins continued by saying, "If we didn't have capital punishment, there would be less protracted trials." Ford You can be driving a Brand New Sprite for $52.76 a month (taxes and all charges included) British Motors 1116 West 23rd VI 3-8367 LP RECORD SALE! LP ALL Folk and Country Music 25% Off Baez, Dylan, Belafonte, Niles Peter, Paul & Mary, Yarbrough Weavers. Clancy Bros, & More 925 Mass. BELL'S VI 3-2644 Interviews Set For CIA Jobs Interviews for jobs in the United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) will be held Monday through Friday next week. Students with degrees in every field from accounting and anthropology to foreign languages, library science and physics are encouraged to apply for an interview. Appointments for the interviews can be made in the office of the College of Liberal Arts. The CIA reviews foreign trends and developments which involve national security. A Near Miss in 1957 The 1957 KU basketball team, led by All-American Wilt Chamberlain, nearly became the NCAA champions when they lost a triple overtime game in the finals of the tournament to North Carolina University. Anderson Rentals "We Rent Almost Anything" VI 3-2044 812 New Hampshire Street Gift Box Andrews Gifts VI 2-1523 Open Wednesday Evenings Malls Shopping Center Plenty of Free Parking NewYork Cleaner March, 2015 OF GOD LIFTING For the best in — ● dry cleaning ● alterations ● reweaving 926 Mass. VI C 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING 6-HOUR Photo Finishing Fast Color Service By Eastman Kodak "Our only business is photography" 摄影师 HIXON STUDIO 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Students Help Edit Scholastic Journal By Joel Ahlbrandt Two KU undergraduates are working as editorial assistants in a major scholarly journal, the "Midcontinent American Studies Journal," published here. They are Ginger Theimer, Colby junior, and Fred Krebs, Shawnee Mission sophomore. The students aid in the preparation of copy, provide liaison between contributors and editorial consultants, manage circulation and advertising, and handle the distribution of books under review. Occasionally, they travel to professional conventions to manage the "Midcontinent American Studies Journal's" exhibition booth, meeting contributors, subscribers and specialists in the various fields which the "Journal" covers. "THE JOURNAL tries to function as a kind of 'Scientific American' for the field of American Studies," Stuart Levine, chairman of the American Studies program, said. "It's the place in which specialists publish works which they feel will be of interest to people in other fields. When the American historian, for example, has something to say to the specialists in American Literature, or to the sociologist, he sends it to us. The magazine is a way to keep abreast of the direction of new research in all areas of American culture." The Journal is in its sixth year of publication. Its title was once the longest magazine title in the United States, "The Journal of the Central Mississippi Valley American Studies Association." Soon after its beginning in 1959, the title was changed "because 'Midcontinent' describes its location more exactly than Central Mississippi Valley," Levine said. PUBLISHED REGIONALLY, the "Journal" has always been nationally distributed to subscribers and to 400 libraries around the world, including many United States Information Agency libraries. The "Journal" yearly publishes approximately 16 articles and 100 book reviews, whose contents are covered in the standard index and bibliography services. Special issues have been published, including an oversized issue at the time of the Kansas Centennial. That issue was called "the best single introduction to Kansas history and culture ever published," Levine said. ANOTHER SPECIAL ISSUE covered Mark Twain. Articles in it have been reprinted widely, and the issue itself used as a textbook in literature courses. Make Living Easier Stuart Levine is the editor of the Journal. The editorial board includes Edward F. Grier, professor of English, chairman; Harold Davey, economist at Iowa State University, Social Science Editor; Professor Robert Johannsen, chairman of the History Department at the University of Illinois, History Editor; George Erlich, professor of Art History at UMKC, Arts Editor; and Warren French, professor of English at University of Missouri, Kansas City. Course Will Aid Heart Patients The KU extension is coordinating a program entitled "Work Simplification for Daily Living" to be held in Pittsburg, Hutchinson, Garden City, Great Bend, and Salina during the week of April 12. E. S. Avison, of the KU extension bureau, has just returned from visiting Pittsburg to talk with community leaders there to plan the program. Avison will also visit the other cities involved in the program in the next several weeks. The program is designed to explain to people who must know or who want to know how they can do more easily many of their daily chores. The primary purpose of the program is to serve people who have, or who have had, some form of heart trouble. Anyone who is interested, however, may attend the program. THE KANSAS STATE Health Department is financing the program with the help of a $5,000 federal grant. COOPERATING with the KU extension and the Kansas State Department of Health in sponsoring the program are the Kansas Heart Association, the Kansas Medical Society, the Kansas Agricultural Extension Service, the Kaw Valley Heart Association, Kansas Vocational Rehabilitation, and other community and health organizations. Dean Waggoner Appointed to Committee George R. Waggoner, dean of the college of liberal arts and sciences, has been appointed to a steering committee to consider an "International Year of the Arts and Humanities" to be observed about 1970. Others on the committee are Deans W. Todd Furniss, University of Hawaii, and Joseph L. Sutton, Indiana University. Impetus for the plan came from President Johnson's emphasis on international cooperation in various areas in his Smithsonian Institution address. Daily Kansan Friday, January 14, 1966 Finals Got You Down? 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 Why not take a study break at the Pizza Hut? You'll be amazed at how much better you can concentrate after having a Pizza Hut pizza. It's the thinking man's pizza. PIZZA HUT 1606 W.23rd VI 3-3516 POPULAR FILM SERIES THE NOTORIOUS LANDLADY Starring: Kim Novak and Jack Lemmon 35c Friday, Jan. 14 & Saturday, Jan. 15 tonight tomorrow 7:00 p.m. & 9:30 p.m. Dyche Auditorium 35c Advanced Tickets At Kansas Union Information Booth. World-Wide Wire LBJ's Hopes High For Tax Increases WASHINGTON—(UPI)—President Johnson, seeing "minimum opposition" in Congress, was pressing ahead today with his plans for extra tax revenues to finance the war in Viet Nam. The President Thursday sent the lawmakers detailed requests for tax realignments he estimates will bring in an extra $4.8 billion in the fiscal year beginning July 1. The biggest effect on the average taxpayer will come from a new income tax withholding plan. Officials stressed this actually would help some workers while at the same time speeding the flow of tax money into the treasury. U.S. Continues Arms Buildup Defense observers today regarded these as solid inferences that could be drawn from further study of President Johnson's State of the Union speech Wednesday night. WASHINGTON—(UPI)The U.S. military buildup in South Viet Nam will continue to gain speed and the hourglass may be running out on the bombing pause in the North. WASHINGTON—(UPI)The recent reduction in Communist activity in South Viet Nam brought some hope here today the Hanoi government might be getting ready to cut back military operations as a prelude to possible peace talks. There were increasing indications the American troop commitment to the Viet Nam war could equal the peak strength deployed during the Korean War. Administration officials from President Johnson down declined to express an opinion, however. Red War Effort Is Reduced LBJ Names Negro to Cabinet WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Robert C. Weaver was destined today to become the nation's first Negro cabinet member. There were no signs of Senate opposition to his nomination by President Johnson as head of the new Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). Johnson announced at his news conference Thursday he had chosen Weaver, 58, for the $35,000-a-year post. He has held the $30,000 job of head of the Housing and Home Finance Agency HHFA since 1961. Police Foil Kidnappers BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.—(UPI)—Police bullets killed two men who plotted to kidnap rubber magnate and sportsman Leonard K. Firestone from his mansion here Thursday night for $2-8 million ransom. Firestone, 58, part-owner of the California Angels and the Los Angeles Rams and president of the Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. of California, was hiding out with friends in San Francisco when the kidnap attempt was made shortly after dusk. Official Bulletin On Campus Interviews for Next Week; Jan. 17 - Hickman Mills, Mo., public schools, K-12 106 Ba. Jan. 18 - Bakersfield, Bakersfield, I9-12, Pine Ridge, Room, Jan. 18 - Cypress School Dist. K-6, 106 Ba.; Jan. 19 - Amer. Luth. Church, College, Registry, Minneapolis, Mnm. och dist. Overland Park, K-6, 300B Union; Jan. 21 - Unified Dist. 1, Racine, Wis. K-12 106 Ba.; Jan. 21 - Bakerville, TB 1Ba, and Kern Co. Junior College, 9-14, 12B. (Bakersfield, Calif.). TODAY LDS Institute of Religion, 4:30 p.m. Kansas Union. Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel. Popular Film, 7 and 9:30 p.m. "The Notorious Landlady." Dyche Aud. Foreign Film, 7:30 p.m. "Das Dreimaderhaus." Hoch Aud. Hilbert Friday Night Services. 7:30 P.m. Community Center, 917 Highland Dr. FIELD HOUSE SATURDAY Wrestling. 7:30 p.m. Central Mo. State, Allen Field House. Catholic Mass: 6.50A      and 5 p.m. Mass: 6.50A      Chapel. Confessions 4-5 and 7-8 p.m. Conference For Directors Of Public Schools Adult Education, All Day, Unit Popular Film, 7 and 9:30 p.m. "The Notorious Landlady" Dyea. Aud. Foreign Language Proficiency Exam, 1:30 p.m. Catholic Mass, 8 a.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 0-39-20 Tuggle, Cimarron junior; Jack Hurley, Lawrence freshman; and Robert Harrison, Paola freshman. Chapel; 9:30 and 11 a.m. Hoch Aud. Univ. Lutheran Church, 9:45 a.m. Bible study, 11 a.m. worship, 15th and Iowa. Only Three in 1866 SUNDAY The singers named are Pat Royce, Stillwell junior; Norma Sharp, Lawrence special student; Lauri Crocker, Lawrence graduate student; G. L. Johnson, Lakin freshman; Becky Bauer, Highland sophomore; Maggie Michael, Wichita junior; Jim Peukert, Webster Groves, Mo., sophomore; Burt Mitchell, Lawrence freshman; Rich Campin, Shawnee Mission sophomore; and Stan Morris, Yates Center sophomore. Daily Kansan Friday, January 14. 1966 BANDA 8 I dreamt I conducted the Philharmonic and they showered me with flowers from Rock Chalk Singers Named Allen Purvis, Topeka sophomore and Rock Chalk In-Between-Acts manager, announced the selection last night of nine dancers and ten singers for this year's In-Between-Acts. Sixty people auditioned for the roles. Purvis named Sharon Herowitz, Shawnee Mission junior, as choreographer for the production. Miss Herowitz was a dancer in last year's cast. He also appointed Sandy Gresham, Munice senior, to be in charge of the singers. Owens Flower Shop 9th & Indiana In a meeting last night of the newly named singers and dancers, Bill Boulware, Prairie Village senior and Rock Chalk producer, gave a "pep talk" on the importance of hard work and the limited time to prepare for the production. He announced that rehearsals will be six days a week for two to three hours each starting Feb. 7. PURVIS COMMENTED THAT this year's In-Between-Actions will have a different slant. "We are trying to link the theme of the acts together to give the illusion of continuous action. The theme will be kept a surprise," he explained. VI 3-6111 The dancers selected are Linda Price, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Diane Anderson, Kansas City senior; Karen Mills, Convert Station, N.J., freshman; Liz Harris, Lawrence freshman; Tom Irving, Wichita sophomore; Ray Bengston, Tribune sophomore; Dennis KATIE MINTEER, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore; Dwayne Tiezen, Newton freshman; and Barbara Burnett, Parsons freshman, have been writing the script since September. They are hampered in that In-Between-Actions are not supposed to be better than the other skits, but they are trying anyway. When KU opened in 1866, it had only three professors and 55 students. One of the professors, Francis Huntington Snow, taught mathematics and natural sciences even though his training was in theology and ancient languages. VOLKSWAGEN OF AMERICA, TRU. Even the bottom of a Volkswagen looks funny. We are speaking to you from underneath a Volkswagen. Not much to look at, is there? Too bad that big sheet of steel is in the way. Otherwise, you could see all of the Volkswagen's works. But don't feel cheated. That sheet of steel is the Volkswagen's bottom. No other car has anything quite like it. The steel bottom protects the VW's vital parts against everything. Including time. It's one of the big reasons why VWs last so long. The VW's bottom wasn't an afterthought. It's part of the design. The car is sealed to the bottom and the bottom is sealed to the car. Which is why a VW is practically air-tight. And why some of the rumors you've heard about floating Volkswagens aren't just rumors. The VW's funny-looking top and funny-looking bottom have one thing in common: they both work to make the Volkswagen as good as it is. It would be easy enough to change them. But we think we'll leave bad enough alone. "Lawrence's Only Authorized Volkswagen Dealer" CONZELMAN MOTORS SALES — SERVICE — PARTS Overseas Delivery Available W 2522 Iowa AUTHORIZED DEALER (Hwy.59 South) VI 3-2200 Guide Retarded Children Students Find Reward in Work By Howard Pankratz Guiding retarded children back to an accepted place in society is currently the job of two KU graduate students in social work, Jim Trast and Larry Woodward, working at the Kansas Neurological Institute (KNI) in Topeka. Their work requires complete trust of both the parents and child. They decide, among other things, when a child is ready to enter the center, if the child's parents should have visiting privileges, and when the child can leave. To determine this, they must know the child and parents well. This is accomplished by long periods of frank discussion which are successful only if trust and confidence has been gained. "Emotional involvement is part of it, I don't think anyone can avoid it, at least I can't. These people give of themselves and we must give in return," said Trast. PARENTAL FEELINGS range from shame that they have a child in an institution to guilt about bearing a mentally retarded child. The men must also uncover the child's feelings toward his mom, dad, and his retardation. Comparisons are made between the parents' reports of the child's trip home and the child's report. They are often dissimilar. Woodward added, "Of course, a professional detachment is necessary and every morning I go with that in mind, but at night I find myself thinking about my cases." The two students find the work satisfying because of the responsibility involved. Unlike some kinds of work, the final goal is not reached within a short time; their goal being the return of the retarded adolescents to a society where they can be both accepted and useful. But the fact that these young men to a large extent determine by themselves the steps to the goal and at what speed these can be taken is satisfying. 'Batty Days Students Enthralled With New TV Show "It's wild!" "It's Camp!" No. It's Batman and his sidekick, Boy Wonder Robin--the newest objects of mass campus attention. When they zoomed onto TV screens for the premiere of their weekly two segmented television shows, hundreds of KU students were crammed around resident hall sets waiting. A loud cheer went up from the students when Batman and Robin raced onto the tube in their atomic-powered Batmobile. The chase was on to trap Batman's arch-enemy, The Riddler ("How many sides does a circle have?" "Two, the inside and the outside.") The rush for chairs had started an hour before the program was scheduled. When the chairs were filled, trash cans, tables and boxes were used. In Templin Hall, 113 men crowded around one set and 93 around another. Similar scenes took place in most of the resident halls. It may be term paper and exam time, but the students seem to be able to find the time to watch that legendary nemesis of evil, the Caped Crusader whose very name strikes fear into the hearts of villainous villages everywhere. As one student commented, "We need a half hour break now and then and Batman is just great." Another student said, "I enjoy the puns; they're stupid, but that's why it's funny." No matter what their reasons, it is generally agreed that Batman, who was created by Bob Kane in 1939, is the new student hero, ZOCK! BOW! BOOM! "We ARE ON OUR OWN with the child and his parents. We conduct the interviews with them and do it without our supervisors. If our supervisors were involved, the spontaneity and trust built up would be lost," said Trast. Their reports are checked with great care and usually contain more questions from their supervisors than the most scrupulously graded English theme. They are graded by the same method as "Those sessions leave you limp," Woodward said. "Anything goes. I find myself rewriting my report which has to include everything that was said and done over-and-over to convey my own impressions." Get an Oily Bath If you're thinking of swimming at La Playa de Miramar in Tampico, Mexico, forget it. The water there is full of oil from nearby refineries. Rags, soaked in kerosene, are given bathers to remove tar from their bodies after a swim in the Caribbean. other KU students—the A, B, C method. "I HAVEN'T SEEN too many of that first kind, although I did hear of one about a week ago." Woodward laughed. Grades, however, are secondary to Trast and Woodward; they want to see their cases back in the world in a situation where they can be accepted and contribute. That is of primary importance. KU Presents Aborigine Art Daily Kansan Friday, January 14, 1966 An unusual collection of primitive paintings will be on exhibition next April in the Museum of Art. The collection will include 30 or 40 paintings by Australian aborigines, who used to paint on tree bark. Although this art is considered as a very primitive one, many experts have said that the work has a great similarity with Paul Klee's paintings. Klee is a contemporary Swiss painter. THE COLLECTION will be loaned to the Museum of Art by Ed Ruhe, who will be a professor at the English Department next semester. Ruhe collected the pieces while teaching at the University of Adelaide. 7 The Australian display will follow the exhibition of the works done by the winners of the Annual Contest organized by the American Drawing Society, which is now touring the country. THE SOUND OF JAMES BROWN New LP Hit I've Got You (I Feel Good) $1.99 KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO MALLS SHOPPING CENTER All Diamond Needles on Sale $5.95 396 TURBO-JET 325 HP Leaver Loafer. PERFORMANCE THE CHEVROLET WAY It's our Turbo-Jet 396: the V8 strong enough to run your Chevrolet and its automatic transmission, power steering, air conditioning, power windows, AM/FM Multiplex Stereo radio. And more. Without even breathing hard. Reason is, a Turbo-Jet V8 breathes deeper. Breathes freer. Delivers more usable power whenever you need it—like for safer passing. Works more efficiently. Where the smaller engine hurries, a Turbo-Jet V8 just loafs along. You try it, at your Chevrolet dealer's. And nowhere else. We offer two Turbo-Jet 396 V8s for '66. You can order 325 hp in any Chevrolet; 325 or 360 hp in a Chevelle SS 396. There's also a 427-cu.-in. Turbo-Jet (up to 425 hp) available in Chevrolets and Corvettes. Caprice Custom Coupe Corvette Sting Ray Coupe Chevelle SS 396 Sport Coupe All kinds of cars, all in one place . . . at your Chevrolet dealer's Chevrolet · Chevelle · Chevy II · Corvair · Corvette 6 Daily Kansan Friday, January 14, 1966 ACME LAUNDRY - Will return your shirts on hangers - Will give you one day Service - Will mark your laundry free for you - Will give you free laundry bags - Will starch your shirts if requested - Will give you the best service possible 3 locations to serve you best: - Downtown-1111 Massachusetts - On the Mall-711 West 23rd. - Hillcrest Shopping Center-925 Iowa ACME Glacial Geologist: Studies at 'Bottom of World' For Wakefield Dort Jr., associate professor of geology at KU, New Year's Eve 1966, meant a freighter's whistle and three fire crackers. Prof. Dort is currently doing geological research in Antarctica. Based at McMurdo Station, the main United States base in Antarctica, Prof. Dort described life at the "bottom of the world" in a recent letter to Diane Seaver, Prairie Village sophomore. HE DESCRIBED McMurdo Station as "a hodge-podge of buildings without much pattern because it has been built over the years under various plans. Some of the buildings are rather dismal, old, utilitarian huts—many modified with typical serviceman ingenuity to give some comfort and hominess. Other buildings are new, clean, comfortable, even luxurious, in this environment." He described his quarters as containing a "spacious lounge with a picture window looking out over McMurdo Sound (solid ice) to the Royal Society Range 40-190 miles away but clear as a bell. We also have the only fire place here and perhaps in the entire Antarctic," he continued, "a portable metal one that holds a lovely fire on occasion. "The base is filled with contrasts," the letter continues. "On the one hand, we have a nuclear power reactor here. It supplies electricity, thus conserving scarce fuel oil, and will someday provide water from the sea through evaporation. But there isn't a flush toilet in the place and showers must be taken shipboard style—use a little water to get wet, turn it off and soap and scrub, then use a little water to rinse it off. Do it once a week. This is because all water comes from snow that has to be scooped off the nearby hills, carried into base, and put into big melters. A slow, expensive process." Pinnings and Engagements ENGAGED Judith Shea, Merriam senior in Education, Alpha Chi Omega, to Ed Vaughn, Leawood senior in Advertising, Sigma Phi Epsilon. Pat Barker, Wellington sophomore in Education, Gamma Phi Beta, to Buzz Hatcher, Wellington sophomore at Wichita State University. Betty Burgat, Topeka senior in Education, Alpha Chi Omega, to Jim Mottin, Mission graduate student at York University, Toronto, Ontario. Pat Culea, La Grange Ill, senior in Education, Gamma Phi Beta, to Al Hardy, Shawnee Mission, second year law. Dana Franklyn, Kansas City, Mo., junior, Gamma Phi Beta, to Rick Harrington, Terre Haute, Ind., junior in Political Science, Delta Tau Delta. Jenny Jones, Oklahoma City, Okla., senior in Education, Delta Delta Delta, to Jim Bagley, Louisville, Ky., senior in Business, Delta Tau Delta. Diane Larson, Kansas City senior in Education, Kappa Alpha Theta, to Bill Smith, Shawnee Mission graduate student in Accounting, Delta Upsilon. Joyce Malloy, Houston, Tex. senior in Education at Indiana University, to Earle Ellis, Shawnee Mission senior in Electrical Engineering. Nancy Meyer, Shawnee Mission senior in Sociology, to Brouck Sleight, Kingston, N.Y., junior in History Education. Christina Meadows. Overland Park senior in Fashion Illustration. Sigma Kappa. to J. Patrick LaFrance, Overland Park senior in Geography. Diane Olsen, Topeka junior in Education, Alpha Chi Omega, to David Hutchins, Kansas City senior in International Relations, Phi Kappa Sigma. Caroline E. Richardson, Leawood senior in French and Spanish, to Blair Hosford, Shawnee Mission first law Law, Valera Richmond, Kansas City senior in education, Alpha Kapka Alpha, to Arnett Dixon, Kansas City, Kan. Bobbi Roberts, Leawood senior in Commercial Art, Alpha Chi Omega, to Tom Shortlidge, Park Ridge, Ill., senior in Commercial Art, Pi Kappa Alpha. Florence Sallatz, Kansas City senior in Family and Home Management, to Bill Dockery, Lawrence senior in Theatre Arts. Cindy Thompson, Overland Park senior in Apparel Merchandising, to David Frensley, Lawrence senior in Philosophy. .PINNED Melinda Ball, Coffeyville junior in Art Education, Kappa Alpha Theta, to Tyson Whiteside, Wichita senior in Political Science-History. Phi Gamma Delta. Peggy Sue Gossett, Overland Park student in Education, to Bill Schildberg, Shawnee Mission sohomore in History. Marti Elsen, Leawood sophmore in Commercial Art, Delta Delta Delta, to Steve Chinn, Prairie Village sophmore in Biology, Delta Chi. Patti Slider, Lyons sophomore in Apparel Merchandising, to George Mack, Lawrence junior, Delta Chi. OUT IN THE field, the exploration party takes a two-man tent, "but the addition of a gasoline lantern for heat rather than light makes it bearable for a bit of reading, or note compilation," he said. Because it is daylight 24 hours, the group maintained a general schedule in order to fit into the schedule of the base. "The field routine was to set the tent up in a centrally located region within an area to be studied," then the men would set out in hiking loops that each took almost a day. The average hiking loop was eight miles, but occasionally, the group made a 10-mile journey. The distances may not be great, but the 35-pound pack with survival gear and cameras, and bulky heavy clothing made the miles seem much more. Prof. Dort is currently using a special Army turbine helicopter that whisks him and his party out to the areas that they previously would have traversed by land. "The reason for such special service," he wrote, "is to enable me to check more areas in less time, and so gather more information. Using aerial photos and maps beforehand, I select likely-looking spots for this critical evidence. Prof. Dort went to Antarctica on a project of studying alpine glaciers in the mountains along the western side of the Ross Sea. (McMurdo is an island in this sea.) "I HAVE SEEN a lot of these (alpine glaciers), have walked on some, and around others. I didn't intend to do any work with the glaciers themselves, only the landscape features they have created," the geologist continued. "However, exposures along the Daily Kansan 5 Friday, January 14, 1966 Meraviglioso! Whether it be in a romantic gondola on the Venetian canals or in the privacy of your study room, you can't find better pizza and Italian specialties in the world. Campus Hideaway Open 11:30 a.m. Till 1:00 a.m. We Absolutely Deliver VI 3-9111 Campus Hideaway cliff-sided glaciers reveal such fantastic structures but seen in most temperate region glaciers, they simply can't be ignored by walking away." 106 NORTH PARK He said that igneous rock samples, and samples of unusual rock formations have been brought back. More than 40 varieties are being shipped back to Kansas for further study and description. The skin on his fingers has peeled more than once from being frozen. Even so, in the field, he has often stopped to note things of interest, such as a set of footprints in the sandy soil. They were found to be the footprints of a New Zealand exploring party, from several years before. THEN, BECAUSE this helicopter has excellent visibility from an almost-all-glass front, I can check as we go along, drop at other spots, or what seems best. After two days, he often has to call a halt to the flights, because they prove so fruitful. Prof. Dort playfully wished Diane "easy exams," and urged her to be "careful on the ice. "You," he quipped, "don't have to carry an ice-axe for safety." PETER J. HARRIS PROFESSOR DORT - The KU Geologist is doing research on alpine glaciers at McMurdo Station in Antarctica. Skimming over the snow and ice in a helicopter, Dort studies the landscape, stopping frequently to collect rock samples to be sent back to Kansas. K Tonight!"Movie"Party! SPECIAL PRE-RELEASE! A BONUS TREAT! AT NO EXTRA COST! way! IN ADDITION TO OUR REGULAR PROGRAM, A SPECIAL PREVIEW OF A NEW MOTION PICTURE! Zowie!* It's A Super Spy-Spoof Snear! — We'll tell you everything but the title — (We don't like the title) It's the maddest, most fantastic and wildly improbable of all the recent spy-spoofs. He's faced with the task of saving the world from G.A.L.A.X.Y. (A criminal organization worse than Spectre.) Our super hero has a plush penthouse, a harem of lovely female maids, a cigarette lighter with 82 different uses (83, if you include lighting a cigarette), and a ferocious bald eagle. Will our hero save us? Will he survive?—Don't wonder—come and find out for yourself— It's So Good We Want You To See It At No Extra Charge! "The Nanny" Shows at 7 & 11 Sneak at 8:40 See 'em Both No extra charge Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 Starts Tomorrow! Continuous From 2:30 p.m. Granada INEPATRE-telephone VI 3-5784 It's A Wild Bedtime Story! DORIS DAY ROD TAYLOR DO NOT DISTURB Aan Aaron Rosenberg Martin Melcher Production Also Starring HIRMONE MADDELEY- SERDIO FANTONI B --- Open 6:30—Show 7:00 3 Big Features Now Thru Sat.! ... "Who's Been Sleep- "Who's Minding ing In My Bed?" The Store?" Sunset DRIVE IN THE CREE - West on Highway 40 BONUS HIT FRIDAY & SATURDAY—"PARISH" Opinion Divided on "Stop Week" 127 ERIC PETERSON "... not in favor" By Jerry Kern The time for final exams is once again approaching. One of the perennial questions asked at this time by both students and faculty is should KU have a "stop week" before final examinations? George Matthews, Tescott sophomore, said KU should have a stop week. "A great percentage of students would take advantage of the extra time to review. I know I would. Classes which hold review sessions the last week usually cover the same material that you already have in your notebook," he said. Some students and faculty members were asked to give their opinions. MARILYN STOKSTAD, professor of Art History, agreed that a stop week would be a good idea. GEORGE MATTHEWS "...extra time" P. "I think it's good to give the student a little time to pull things together on his own; even to write some trial essays, I often give my classes sample essay questions to work on before finals. The students we are most concerned with up here are the type of students who would take advantage of this extra time," she said. Duane Johnson, graduate student from Redwing, Minn., said KU should not have stop week. "A week is too long. Perhaps one or two days of no classes before the first examination would do more good. If students are given too much free time on their own, they won't use it to their advantage." Johnson said. JOHN JACKSON, Memphis. Tenn., freshman, said he would like to have the extra time of a stop week. "I could learn more by reviewing for finals on my own than I could if I were going to class. However, it would be difficult to determine whether all students would use the time for reviewing." he said. John Callaghan, Leawood 100 4 JOHN JACKSON "... difficult to determine" Daily Kansan Friday, January 14. 1966 The valuable portrait by Manet of the French poet Stephane Mallarme left KU today and is on its way to Paris. Bret Waller, curator of the Museum of Art, is accompanying the priceless painting to the French capital. The portrait, painted in 1873, was loaned to the KU Museum of Art by the Louvre Musee of Paris, and was on exhibition at Mount Oread for more than a month. Portrait Back to Paris Waller will stay in Paris until Wednesday. "I have the mission to deliver the portrait in good condition and also I will visit some dealers in Paris looking for art pieces the Museum could acquire," Waller said. Randy Mallonee, Olathe freshman, was elected first vice-chairman of the KU-Collegiate Young Republicans last night. Mallonee is also chairman of the Kansas Teen-Age Republican (TAR) club and has served as the Johnson County TAR chairman. He was chosen as an alternate to the national Young Republican convention last June in Miami, Fla. CYR'S Elect Vice-Chairman Kay Orth, El Dorado junior, had been the other candidate, but she withdrew her name before the election. Mallonee was unopposed in the race for the vice-chairmanship. Patronize Kansan Advertisers "Punt Night" Friday Night Dorothy May (bring your guitars) Saturday Night The Fiery Furnace 1116 Louisiana 8:30-12:30 MARILYN STOKSTAD "... little time" A. A. D. freshman, does not want a stop week. "A student can get much more out of class. There are usually still a lot of lecture notes to be covered during the last week of the course," he said. JIM SIMMS "...time for review" F. MARK MCKIERNAN, Fort Madison, Iowa graduate student and instructor, said whether a class is dismissed during the week before finals should be left to the decision of each instructor. "This will depend on the type of class and the amount of material to be covered in the course. I don't dismiss any of my classes the week before finals," McKiernan said. Eric Peterson, Doughkeepiee, N. Y. senior and assistant instructor, said. "As an instructor, I am not in favor of stop week because the last week is often needed to cover the remaining material of the course, or an exam may have to be given that week. As a student, I am in favor of stop week because having to study for an exam during the last week on top of reviewing for SCHWAB finals can put a student into a bind." Jim Simms, Clarendon Hills, Iowa junior, said, "I would like to have a stop week, because students need the extra time for review. The amount of material covered in class session reviews isn't that much. I can do better on my own." Businessmen were expected to line up behind the Chief Executive, however, in his condemnation of a contract settlement estimated to cost between $52 and $70 million—double or nearly triple the administration's 3.2 per cent guidepost figure. WASHINGTON—(UPI)President Johnson's sharp attack on a king-size pay increase that ended New York's transit strike pointed today to a renewed clash with organized labor over wage-price guidepost erected to halt inflation. Johnson Attacks Settlement HAVE PLUSH SOFTNESS IN T&C'S BRUSHED PIGSKIN ) All Out $14.00 For a wonderful look, a fabulous feel there's nothing like the soft deep nap of T&C's plush pig. And the colors are Blue Chip and Platinum. Royal College Shop 837 MASS. VI 3-4255 Town & Country Shoes Through Week of Jan. 24-29 Final Schedule Announced Regulations of the University Senate provide that final examinations will be given at the end of the semester in most courses. To avoid confusion, final examinations must be given according to the accompanying schedule in all classes in which final examinations are given. Should adherence to the published schedule conflict with some other event which would be extremely difficult to reschedule, a request for examination at a time other than that prescribed in the schedule may be made. Such requests must be submitted in writing to the Chairman of the Calendar Committee, 122 Strong Hall, not later than Monday, January 10, 1966. The Calendar Committee may approve changes in the examination schedule only if the proposed time for examination falls within the regular examination period, without conflict with other examinations, and only for the most compelling reasons. 7:30 MWF sequence* ... 7:30- 9:20 Wednesday Jan. 26 7:30 TTS sequence** ... 3:10- 5:00 Wednesday Jan. 26 8:30 MWF sequence* ... 1:00- 2:50 Wednesday Jan. 26 8:30 TTS sequence** ... 9:40-11:30 Saturday Jan. 29 9:30 MWF sequence* ... 1:00- 2:50 Monday Jan. 24 9:30 TTS sequence** ... 9:40-11:30 Friday Jan. 28 10:30 MWF sequence* ... 1:00- 2:50 Tuesday Jan. 25 10:30 TTS sequence** ... 9:40-11:30 Tuesday Jan. 25 11:30 MWF sequence* ... 1:00- 2:50 Thursday Jan. 27 11:30 TTS sequence** ... 7:30- 9:20 Saturday Jan. 29 12:30 MWF sequence* ... 9:40-11:30 Thursday Jan. 27 12:30 TTS sequence** ... 7:30- 9:20 Saturday Jan. 29 1:30 MWF sequence* ... 1:00- 2:50 Friday Jan. 28 1:30 TTS sequence** ... 1:00- 2:50 Saturday Jan. 29 2:30 MWF sequence* ... 7:30- 9:20 Friday Jan. 28 2:30 TTS sequence** ... 9:40-11:30 Wednesday Jan. 26 3:30 MWF sequence* ... 7:30- 9:20 Monday Jan. 24 3:30 TTS sequence** ... 3:10- 5:00 Saturday Jan. 29 4:30 MWF sequence* ... 3:10- 5:00 Friday Jan. 28 4:30 TTS sequence** ... 3:10- 5:00 Monday Jan. 24 French 1 & 2 German A. 1, 2, 3, 4, & 5 (All Sections) 7:30-9:20 Tuesday Jan. 25 Spanish 1 & 2 General Biology (All Sections) 3:10-5:00 Tuesday Jan. 25 English 1 & 1a (All Sections) 9:40-11:30 Monday Jan. 24 Physics 3, 4, 5, 6, & 116 (All Sections) 7:30-9:20 Thursday Jan. 27 Business Administration 40, 41, & 50 (All Sections) 3:10-5:00 Monday Jan. 24 (5:10-7:00 for students who have 4:30 TTS exams at 3:10-5:00 Mon., Jan. 24) Mechanics and Aerospace Engineering 1, 2, 50, 51, 74, & 75 Earthospace Engineering 3:10-5:00 Tuesday Jan. 25 (All Sections) (5:10-7:00 for students who have biology exams at 3:10-5:00 Tues., Jan. 25) (5:10-7:00 for students who have 7:30 TTS exams at 3:10-5:00 Wed., Jan. 26) Bulletin 1 (All Sections) 3:10-5:00 Thursday, Jan. 27 Mechanics and Aerospace Engineering 5, 61, 63, & 64 (All Sections) ... 7:30-9:20 Tuesday Jan. 25 Geography 6 (All Sections) ... 3:10-5:00 Wednesday Jan. 26 (5:10-7:00 for students who have 7:30 TTS exams at 3:10-5:00 Wed., Jan. 26) - 5 and 4 hour classes; 3 hour classes meeting Monday, Wednesday and Friday; 2 hour classes meeting Monday and Wednesday, or Monday and Friday, or Wednesday and Friday; 1 hour classes meeting Monday, Wednesday or Friday, at the hour indicated. *** 3 hour classes meeting Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday; 2 hour classes meeting Tuesday and Thursday or Saturday, Thursday and Saturday; 1 hour classes meeting Tuesday or Saturday, at the hour indicated. Regular classes with laboratory work only will be examined as other classes except that the hour may be any one of the two. The instructor must be made by the first offer consultation with the students and with other instructors concerned. Irregular appointment classes and appointment laboratory classes will be examined at the time to be set by the instructor after consultation with the students and with any other instructors concerned. In case this option is insufficient to avoid conflicts the instructors concerned will submit a request for approval to the Calendar Committee a written substitute schedule of examination hours for the required courses. The School of Law is authorized to make its own examination schedule provided that it takes care of all non-law students without causing them conflicts with their other examinations. all non-law students without causing them to Grades should be reported by the faculty to the Registrar's Office as soon as possible following each examination. All grades must be in the Registrar's Office by 9:00 a.m. on Monday, January 31, 1966. NO DELIVERY CHARGE ALCOHOL REFILLING Mobile Oven Menu Piping Hot Pizza Delivered In Humidity Controlled Ovens 10-MINUTE DELIVERY ★ Double Cheese ★ Shanty International All King-Size 12" Pizzas Mobile Oven Menu All King-Size 12" Pizzas And Other Varieties ★ Hamburger Sausage ★ Pepperoni DIAL VI 2-2500 (Radio-Controlled) THE SHANTY MENU ★ Double Cheese Most Delicious Pizza in Lawrence Open For Sunday Dining Delivering more pizzas than anyone in Lawrence —And still quicker—always hot PIZZA MOBILE DELIVERY SERVICE THE SHANTY We Are Equipped to Deliver 180 Fresh Pizzas at One Time LET US SERVE YOUR NEXT PARTY 644 MASS. Dale Reinecker Heads Ad Club Dale Reinecker, Welling senior, was elected second-semester president of Alpha Delta Sigma (ADS), men's professional advertising fraternity, at a meeting last night in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. Six other officers also were elected. MEL ADAMS, ADS adviser and advertising instructor, explained that "ADS is a men's professional fraternity for anyone interested in advertising. It is not solely for advertising majors. "Current members are in a variety of fields, including business, apparel merchandising, economics, marketing and many more," he added. People interested in finding out more about ADS and prospective membership are urged to contact Adams or any of the new officers. Other officers elected were: Bob Basow, Wichita junior, vice- president; Bob Campbell, Topeka sophomore, executive secretary; Joe Godfrey, Topeka sophomore, treasurer; Jan Parkinson, Prairie Village senior, corresponding secretary; Carl Williams, Wichita junior, rush chairman; and Fred Black, Lakehurst, N.J., senior, communications. War Hero Poses For Green Statue The student pictured in the Green Hall statue along with the late Dean Jimmy Green, is Alfred Alford, '96, according to UDK records. Alford is also the first KU man to die in battle; he was killed during the Spanish-American War in the Philippines. Daily Kansan Friday. January 14, 1966 3 Gifts... SCANDIA $450 ALSO $250 TO 1975 WEDDING RING 24.75 Gifts... TO CHERISH FOR A LIFETIME GALAXY $350 ALSO $250 TO 1975 WEDDING RING $7.50 Keepsake® DIAMOND RINGS For birthday, anniversary or any special occasion there's no gift like a diamond ring and no diamond ring like a Keepsake. The matchless brilliance and beauty of its perfect center diamond, superb styling and fine quality mean lasting pride and satisfaction. Choose your very personal Keepsake from our wide selection. VERONA $900 ALSO TO $1650 Rings enlarged to show detail Trade-Mark Rug. Good Housekeeping GUARANTEES DELIVERY OR REFURBISHED “Private Diamond Selection In Our Exclusive Diamond Room” at Ray Christian’s Your Student ID Is Your Credit Card. Just present your ID and say CHARGE IT! Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. "Largest Diamond Selection In Lawrence" DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT RING SCANDIA $450 ALSO $250 TO 1975 WEDDING RING 24.75 Gifts... TO CHERISH FOR A LIFETIME GALAXY $350 ALSO $250 TO 1975 WEDDING RING $7.80 100 Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS Rings enlarged to show detail. Trade-Mark Reg. PRODUCT OR PERFORMANCE Good Housekeeping GUARANTEE ACQUIREMENT OR RÉSULT D'ONGRE UP at Ray Christian's Your Student ID Is Your Credit Card. Just present your ID and say CHARGE IT! Ray Christian Editorials The barbarian tradition The time is nigh for perpetuating the truly heinous custom of university life—final examinations. Soon an almost tangible pall will drift over this campus, and every campus across the country—an atmosphere spawned by excess tensions, gnawing anxiety, naked nerves and overwhelming pressures. THE UNIVERSITY POPULATION facing final examinations is similar to a citizenry whose country is at war. In normal times, we go our separate ways, exclusively engrossed in our individual quests for education. But in our biannual crisis periods, we are united. It is a period we universally deplore and abhor, something thrust upon us we didn't ask for, but which we must endure. And we ask, as we do in wartime—why? Is the victory worth the price? Whatever victory may be earned in this period pales before the fallacies of the comprehensive examination system and the effort poured into a useless venture. They are totally valueless, and prove nothing. Generally, they are nothing more than exercises in mental regurgitation. PERHAPS THE MOST positive evidence that final examinations are worthless institutions has been the development of the very fine art of passing an exam without studying for it. It takes as much time, but only half as much effort, to learn how to bull through an exam, instead of studying, and the end result is the same—a passing, and perhaps a high, grade. And this, after all, is the only aim of most students. For the minority of students who can avoid the horrendous pressures to make satisfactory grades and who study only to learn, a final examination is meaningless. These are the students who have studied all semester, not for grades, but because they enjoy the pursuit of knowledge. Professors know who their real students are, and neither professor nor student needs the ordeal of a final examination to prove anything. THERE IS A GREATER number of students who would like to study merely to learn but who, if they followed a relaxed pace, would not absorb enough fast enough to be ready to regurgitate on an exam. The majority of students may have come to college with ideals—what a wonderful opportunity for learning, how satisfying to study for the pleasure of learning, etc., etc. They were quickly and mercilessly disillusioned, however, for campuses across the country have lost sight of the true purpose of a university. Instead of being learning institutions, universities today are more like giant vending machines—insert the proper number of grade points and you will receive a diploma (this machine does not accept slugs). Therefore, most students, perhaps much against their will, become victims of the "gotta make my grades" syndrome. And so they bone and cram for final examinations, assimilating facts just long enough to spew them out on paper, forgetting most of what they "learned" as soon as the pressure is relieved. APPARENTLY, A FINAL examination is designed to "prove" to the professor that the student has absorbed some knowledge in the course. In knowledge as in physiology, we regurgitate what we can't use or assimilate and we retain what is beneficial. The student evaluation system in our universities is based on a false premise—that grades indicate the student's true performance and dedication. The system demands close scrutiny and sweeping changes whereby a student would be judged on his desire to learn rather than his ability to parrot. — Karen Lambert LITTLE MAN ON.CAMPUS CAFETERIA T-8 "SAY, THEY'VE SURE SPEEDED-UP THIS 'CHOW LINE' SINCE I WAS HERE LAST." THE UNIVERSITY DAILY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office Founded, 1889 Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, N.Y. 10022 Mail subscription rates: $4 a semester or $7 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Haskell: Students question faculty motives, methods Is there a conflict between the students and the administration at Haskell Institute? If so, how does it develop? What causes it? What are some of the problems? What are students' views as to how they are treated? The proud young Indian leaves his home and arrives at Haskell. He is poor in financial terms, but rich in dignity and in heritage. Families and tribes have helped finance his travel expenses to the Institute and provided him with clothing and some expense money. Many parents who own land borrow money so their sons and daughters can attend Haskell. IF THE YOUTH completes his training at Haskell the parent doesn't have to repay the loan because the government cancels the debt. Consequently the young Third of a series adult is aware of his responsibility to obtain the education Haskell offers. He is appreciative of that opportunity, but he is also afraid. He is afraid to challenge what he might consider an injustice. He is afraid to question, to speak up for what he might consider a wrongdoing. The student knows he can be expelled and sent home. THE STUDENT IS aware, too, that the government is providing him with the opportunity to learn. He is given free training, room, books, board and tuition. He doesn't object to the 12 hours a week of detail he performs to help pay for this privilege. THE YOUNG WOMEN are not permitted to leave the campus except for an hour, between 6 and 7 o'clock, during week days, and on Saturday afternoon from noon until 5 o'clock. They cannot go off Massachusetts Street when they go into town. No student is permitted to enter North Lawrence. What are some of the problems that students encounter? The main problem as far as the students are concerned is that they are "treated like children." Lights are turned off in the dormitories on week nights at 10:30 and at midnight on Saturday. Students must be in bed when the lights are turned out and they cannot study after that. One student commented, "We're not sleepy. We usually talk for an hour. I wish we could study longer." AN EARLY PUBLICATION of Haskell Institute contains this passage: "The University of Kansas is located in Lawrence and the facilities of that university would be of great value to the Indian school from a cultural standpoint." This was one of the points made by Dudley C. Haskell, a Congressman, in pointing out the advantages of locating one of the new Indian schools in Lawrence. The school later was named after him and Haskell was located at Lawrence, but the Haskell student is not permitted to visit the campus—unless he is with a tour group from the school. What is the cause of this restriction? The administration says it is because of the responsibility to protect the student while he attends Haskell. The student thinks it stems from the drinking problem. Is there a drinking problem on the campus? The administration says no, the students—yes. THE PRINCIPAL, Wallace E. Galluzzi, said the drinking problem is a "minor one." He said it was no more of a problem than any other school would encounter. Yet, during two months of school this semester, 48 girls were accused of drinking—47 in one dormitory, one in another hall. All of the women students in the three dormitories received punishment in the form of restriction from extracurricular activities. When a male student is caught drinking, or has the smell of alcohol on his breath, the first time he is given 20 hours of extra duty. The duty is usually custodial work, mapping and waxing floors. The second time he receives 40 hours and the third time, 60 hours. The next infraction brings a bus ticket for home. All privileges are taken away from a student during the period of punishment. STUDENTS DETEST the idea of staff members coming up to them in the Student Union at a dance or other activity and, while appearing to engage in friendly conversation, standing there and trying to smell liquor on their breaths. No drinking is tolerated. "What is wrong with having a drink? All of us are 18 and over. We're not allowed to drink socially. What will happen when we leave here and go into city life?" These are questions students want answered, but they are afraid to ask them outright to staff members. DR. KENNETH COEIN, school physician, says he has not made a study of the Indian drinking problem, but he contends that there is nothing in the metabolism of the Indian to crave drink. "It is more of a socioeconomic problem," he said. "The Indian uses alcohol as a mechanism of escape—an escape from reality." Is there a conflict? When you come to a school and you are poor, you are obligated, you are proud, you are afraid, you are treated as a child, your future is undecided and you are not expected to return home but rather go into the "major culture" and work as a semi-skilled or skilled worker. "There sure are a lot of relatives around here," one student said. This seems to be a standing joke among the students. A check in the school directory shows that about one-third of the staff members are married or blood relatives. At least 20 couples, 40 persons of the slightly more than 150-member staff are married and both work at the Institute. A student explained it this way: "Let's say Tom is going with Mary and Tom gets into trouble with his instructor. The instructor goes home and tells his wife, who is a matron at one of the girls' dormitories. Mary then begins to receive warnings or criticisms from the instructor's wife. It just isn't fair." WHAT KIND OF problem does this pose for the students? The school library contains about 10,000 volumes. Most of these are books for the high school student. NO HISTORY OF the Indian is taught at the school. "It's almost as if we are expected to forget cur rast." a student said. Officials at the school maintain that Haskell's emphasis is not on negating Indian customs and beliefs, but in stressing positively modern American mores, ideals and techniques. And so the young Indian comes to Haskell to learn a trade and the social graces so he can be assimilated into the American way of life. Is he prepared? Monday: Haskell and its graduates. — Robert J. Rollins What's Inside THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Exam schedule . . . p. 3. Batman fad hits KU . . . p. 7. Jayhawks travel to Iowa State . . . p. 12. Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years Weather LAWRENCE, KANSAS Fair with southerly winds 10 to 15 miles per hour tonight. Increasing cloudiness Saturday. Continued mild through Saturday. Low tonight around 30. 76th Year, No. 68 Friday, January 14, 1966 WILLIAM R. MURRAY -Staff photo by Bill Stephens Clutter Trial STUDY TIME—With finals just 10 days away, Bill Langsdorf, Topeka freshman, goes to work in Joseph R. Pearson Hall, reviewing the semester's courses in mechanical engineering. Defense Attorney Calls It 'Disgrace' The Defense Attorney for the executed killers of the Clutter family, Joseph P. Jenkins of Kansas City, spoke before a dinner meeting of the Phi Alpha Delta legal fraternity last night. Jenkins, who defended Perry Edward Smith and Richard Eugene Hickock for the murder, called the trial of these two men "the worst disgrace this country has ever seen." THE CLUTTER FAMILY was murdered in 1959 in Garden City. The trial and the six stays of execution lasted six years. Jenkins used the Clutter case as a "classic example of a protracted trial" and tried to show the future lawyers how such a trial came about, and why it is important, in certain instances, that a case be protracted. Five basic rights were denied to the defenders, Richard Eugene Hickock and Perry Smith, according to Jenkins. They involved protection from self-incrimination, illegal search and seizure, the right for counsel, equal protection, and due process of the law. Jenkins pointed out that a confession had been wrung from Hickock before he was allowed legal counsel. He also stated that certain evidence, used by the prosecution, had been obtained without the proper warrants. Illegally obtained evidence and an involuntary confession should have been thrown out, Jenkins said. Parker Gets Post On Progress Council "IF THE confession and the illegally obtained evidence had been thrown out, how in the world would they have been able to gain a conviction?" Jenkins question. "When such a heinous crime has been committed and a community suddenly aroused, it is amazing how due process, fair trial, and all these concepts literally go out the window," continued Jenkins. Paul J. Parker, Bartlesville, Okla., has been selected as chairman of information activities for the Council for Progress by Chairman Stanley Learned of Bartlesville, president of the Phillips Petroleum Company. The Council, composed of faculty members, alumni and friends of the University, is participating in planning for the University's second century which begins in 1966. PARKER RETIRED in 1964 as director and vice-president in charge of the International Department of Phillips. He is an attorney and presently serves as a consultant to the company. In his Council work Parker will direct the program to inform alumni and friends of the past accomplishments and present status of the University, to outline for them the University committee's Report of Objectives for the Second Century and the role of the Council in helping him to meet these objectives. Jenkins said that he felt that the public misunderstood why the many appeals and stays of execution were given. Jenkins (Continued on page 10) Team Send-Off Set Yell leaders, Pom Pon girls and a pep band will lead students in victory cheers as KU's roundball players board their bus to travel to Ames, Iowa, where they will play Iowa State University on Saturday. The pep rally will begin at 3:20 p.m. today in front of Strong Hall. Final Tips: Preparation In, Cramming Out by Rich Lovett With final examinations only a week away, KU students are once again consigned to a ghastly fate—they must study. And if anyone should know how to study for finals, it would be someone with all A's. So, for anyone wanting advice on finals preparation, here are some tips from several KU men in scholarship halls, all of whom made a 3.0 grade point average (GPA) last semester. As you might guess, in general these men think excessive noise and other distractions are a must to avoid. Would studying in the library solve this problem? Not according to Walt Bliss, Omaha, Neb. senior and triple major. "I prefer to sit in an easy chair in my room, not at a desk," says Munzer. "However, I can do this because most of my studies involve lots of reading, and I don't need a desk to write on. It might not work for others." Carl Gibson, Lawrence junior, agrees. He said he rarely goes to any of the libraries on camp... because he can study better in his room. So can double-major Steve Munzer, Salina senior and Rhodes Scholar. THOSE interviewed seemed to agree that organization of notes is immensely helpful in preparation for finals. They all stressed that notes must be comprehensive and must spotlight items "I AM A BUG ON NOISE," Bliss says. "I don't want anyone around when I'm trying to study. And I can't study in Watson Library. There are too many distractions." Ken Gray, Ulysses sophomore, said, "Sometimes in class I see students taking notes in a story- book fashion. The only division in the notes are new paragraphs. This would never work for me. emphasized in lecture. Outline- type notes were a favorite. Outlined notes can emphasize important facts, and this way it often isn't necessary to rewrite notes later." this way notes are easier to remember when studying for tests. MUNZER ADDS that when a teacher's lecture does not emerge in outline form, he imposes some sort of outline on it. He says that "I find that, in general, students with better-than-average grades are usually more organized and systematic in their study habits, and especially in their notes," he said. ✩ ✩ ✩ Finals Test Students' Spare Time Final week is many things to many people. For one thing it is the curse of every class at KU. Final week is studying to the wee hours of the morning reading that book that has never been opened beyond the third chapter. FINAL WEEK IS LEARNING how to play bridge, or chess, or jai-alai or something different that you'll probably never use. Final week is rereading all the James Bond books in anticipation of "Thunderball." Final week is spending most of your money on No-Doz, coffee, cigarettes, and anything else that will keep you awake. FINAL WEEK IS TRYING out all of the new ice cream flavors at the ice cream shop. Final week is bridge at the Wheel, pool at the Light, dance- ing at the Red Dog, and the students' favorite beverage at almost any place. FINAL WEEK IS GOING to bed at 6 a.m. when you have a final at 7:30 a.m. Final week is roasting marshmallows over a candle in your room. FINAL WEEK IS FINDING out who you are going to marry —via the ouija board. Final week is trying to figure out what you are going to do about four finals on the same day which are only worth nine hours. Final week is spent in wishing for totally hopeless things—like a stop week. Final week is going downtown and blowing $20 on a new outfit. FINAL WEEK IS THE LAST week of being nice to that professor you secretly hate. Final week is cars parked three deep around the library. Final week is doing something unusual that you have not done before—like studying. Final week is going to a horror movie the night before your biggest final and then not being able to sleep because of nightmares. Final week is wearing jeans and sweatshirts to class and no one's noticing. FINAL WEEK IS DISCOVERing that unless you ace all of your finals, that scholarship is going down the drain. Yes, final week is many things, but most of all—FINAL WEEK IS ALMOST HERE. Final week is telling five people to wake you up at 7 a.m. and setting three alarm clocks besides. IS SLEEP before a test important? John Shapley, Wichita junior, says no. He says that if he is faced with the choice of studying late or a good night's sleep, then he will always study at the expense of sleep. Others disagree. "Relax," says Bliss. "If you spend your time constructively, you should be able to get six to eight hours of sleep a night." Another 3.0 man adds, "For me, a good night's sleep cuts down on tension during the next day's test." CRAMMING before a test is out, preparation is in, for a majority of those interviewed. "It depends on what you mean by cramming," said one respondent. "There is a difference between intensive review, which involves study beforehand, and real cramming, where you are trying to pound facts into your head in a last-ditch effort to save your grade." 12 Daily Kansan y, January 13. 1966 Thursday, January 13, 1966 PIZZA PUB 1300 West 23rd 23rd & Naismith THE EXCITING NEW CLUB OF LAWRENCE THE MIDWEST'S MOST DYNAMIC CLUB SEATING FOR 200 PEOPLE NOW FEATURING THE NEWEST ROCK GROUPS PRIVATE PARTY ROOM NOW AVAILABLE OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK CALL OUR PIZZA EXPRESS FOR FREE DELIVERY VI 3-0611 VI 2-9465 THE ILLUSIONS Friday, January 14th THE FRUGIEST, THE JERKIEST. THE WILDEST GROUP TO HIT LAWRENCE Sat. Jan. 15th 一 THE SENSATIONAL "KEGS" 1300 West 23rd 23rd & Naismith YOUR SHOP CLASSIFIED ADS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to 8 students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Renault Dauphine, 1962, exceptionally clean inside and outside, near new rubber, seat belts, big radio and heater, to appreciate. Owner will pay for $450 premium for 300 under dealer price (chuck for you). 1528 W. 21st St. VI 2-9838 . tt Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive, themedraphic and bound for $425 per copy. Call VI 1-2901 for free librery TYPEWRITERS - Office size and portables, new and used, manual and elec- tric equipment, and plan available. Office machine sales, rentals and service. Office supplies, equipment, and furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. St. VI 3-3644 1948 Butek Roadmaster Convertible, Perfect body, new upholstery, 4 new tires, engine rebuilt, top in fun shape. Power windows, power seats, power top. $450.00. Call Tom after 6 p.m., VI. 3-7334. tt Wollenak stereo 4-track tape recorder and Remington portable typewriter. consider trading for camera Gary Grazda, VI 2-1435 or VI 2-6601 Clearance! Clearance! Tape recorders, stereos, stereo FM radios cut to $80. AM-FM radios cut to $1999 Hurry Ray Stoneback's, 923-831 Mass. St. 11 Across the burning sands of the Arabian Desert, at no little risk to my faithful Bedouin camel driver, minekine El Hazaz camel owner, beautiful white Eid Alazar cousin, black Meershaun pipe. Handearve by master artisans in the image of a notorious caliph of the Ottoman empire, or of the features a genuine amber bit with a delicate brave caravan has brought this treasure of the Near East to you at the most reasonable price of sixty American dollars. Address various inquiries via telephone or email to the details of rare art treasures, Box 2, University Daily Kansan. tt Clearance! Clearance! 500 tires at lowest prices ever. Example. 650-14 (695-14) white wall, 100 level MUSTang of any color. For example, Volks (650-15)'s cut to $15 plus tax. Ray Stoneback's, 929-131 Mass. St. 1-18 164 Chevy, 2 dr. H.T. Grew Impala, black interior, 300 HP stick. P.S. Posttraction, Tinted glass, 22,000 orig. original owner, must sell. Call VI 2-121- 1940 Ford 2-door sedan. Mechanically good, body excellent. Best offer. Call Mike Sullivan, 529 McCollum. 1961 Nash Rambler station wagon. Radio and heater—seat belts. New snow tires. One owner car. Call VI 2- 3901. tf 1957 Ford Ranchowagon, V-8, standard trans., good running order Phone Smith, VI 3-8292 or UN 4-3270. 1-13 Sports car owners, we have castrol oil, prestolite spark plugs at quality prices. Blevins, 7th and Michigan. 1.01 1963 Stingray, silver, removable top, 425 hp, 4-speed, postfixation, AMFM, mag wheels, new tires, perfect condition. 31,000 miles. $2,495. Three miles east of Baldwin. TU 3-6355. Wellsville. 1957 Ford stick, overdrive. Very good 1958 Ford stick, VI 3-7052 last 1-5 1-17 1957 Chevy, 2 door ht. V-8, stick. Good mechanical condition and paint. money for 2nd semester. San Jordain 1911 Stewart. VT 2-6351 1U- 3-3310 1957 Ford, automatic, two-door, snow tires. Good condition. Call VI 2-840-3670. Ferrari competition shell and frame, make offer. Imported Gerard model 361 turntable with empire arm and side rail. New body and best offer over $100. Heatkht i Somela V.H.F., transmitter. $120. Leave message. Don Ree, Rev. VI 2-1200. 1-13 Bicycle, English 3-speed, heavy saddle baskets. Call VI 2-3623. 1-14 Monaural HI-FI components. Garrard RC-80 change. Monarch FM-Bachi 752-159 tape recorder. Wollensak T-1500 tape recorder, combination tweeter/woofer in cabinets. Over $400 new, sell for $135 or separately. VI 2-0493. 1-18 Must sacrifice. Wollensak tape reconditioner. Portable typewriter. $20. Both like new. $828 Tenn. Evenings. Ask for Hank. 1-14 Save $85 on a new Minolta SRT single lens Rf-Expert F14 Lens. Also the Titan Olympus Conica Ronex Sankyo. Phone VI 3-0263. Best time 5:30 to 6:30. I-121 CAR-1956 Plymouth, excellent rom- tainer 8x400. BERNIE Zeigler, 3-5168. 1-19 4 15" Ford ramps, 2 "new" 4-ply nylon tubes& tires, 2 "ply二型 tube" (with n-w tubes) snow tires. Call Irr, VI 7-33227. 1-19 TYPING Brand-new Gibson el-critic guitar V1 6-3538, 1128 Ohio 1-19 Experienced typist has IEM electric to type your thesis, dissertation term paper, research report, neat and accurate work. Rossonable rates. Phone Mrs. Gilbert. VI 2-2088 Expertized secretary will do typing in her home. Reasonable rates Call VI 3-0389, after $5.00 call VI 3-0398, tf Experienced typist, 8 years experience in threes and term papers. Electrician for university courseurs service. R asonable role. CALL Barlow. 2407 Yale. V1. 2-1648. Barkow. Wanted: Kyping in my home. Experi- ence and theses. Call VI 3-2681 any time. Typist, experienced with term papers, theses and dissertations, will give your typing immediate attention with electric machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048. Secretary familiar with legal terms will do typing—briefs, memorandums, mem papers, those, dissertations. Fast, accurate, reliable rates. Marshal Goff. VI 3-257 Experienced typist; will type in my home. Accurate typing, reasonable rates and prompt service. Call Mr. Brown at VI 2-0210. Iff Experienced typist will do only theses on electric typewriter. Mrs. Fulchar, VI 3-0558. tf Security with many years experiences, will type your term papers, will handle rates. Fast, accurate works at reasonable rates. Call V11 6296 after 5 p.m. Accurate typing by experienced typist. Term papers, themes, theses and dissertations. Reasonable rates and fast. Vl. 2-1561. tf Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses, dissertations. Experienced Electric type writer. Reasonable rates. Call Ms. Rauckman, VL 2-2817. Experienced typist will do theses and term papers, 4 years experience at KU. Phone Mrs. Oxford at VI 2-0673. tt Former Harvard and University of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports, and theses. Phone VI 3-7207. tf TYPING — GESTETNER MIMEO- GRAPHING—Mrs. McEldowney, VI 3-8568. tf Expert Typing--Theses, dissertations and term papers. Electric typewriter, standard rates. Mrs. Mishler. VI 3-1029. 1-17 Typing done at reasonable rates by experienced typist. Fast accurate work. Call Betty Vincent, call VI 3-5504. tf Typing done by experienced secretary for 25e each double spaced page. Call Ethel Henderson, 2565 Ridge Ct., VI 2-0122. tf Fast, accurate; immediate attention given to all term papers, reports, theses, etc. Mrs. Donna Stewart, VI 3-6621 1-21 Former teacher will give careful attention to typing your term papers. Accurate and neat work, 5 years experience. Call VI.3-3829. tf Topeka students desiring theses, dissertations, rough drafts, or term papers typed fast and accurately on electric typewriter by experienced typist, call Mrs. O. L. Cook, CR 2-1479, 1715 Sims, Topeka 1-20 Typing Wantd->Thess, essays, and Neat and accurate. Calc V-1-21 4156 Will do fast accurate typing in tty 3-f113. Standard typewriter. 1-121 LOST Yellow Pickett Slide Rule in Gray Case with initials R.M.S. Lost in Malah Hall before Christmas vacation. Call Rob Shrader at VI 3-5770. REWARD — lost "Fundamentals of Physical Geography." Tewartha — author, Contact Marjorie Horwitz, VI 2-9100. 1-13 Vacancy in a contemporary home Private entrance and bath. Five evening meals weekly. $70 monthly living costs paid. Call VI 3-9485 until p.m. FOR RENT Married, graduate students, faculty- 2 bedroom apartment, $05.00. Two available January 1, one available February 1. Call for brochure. VI 3-2116. Santee Apartments office, 1123 Indiana. tf Extra nice quiet furnished apartment for mature man. carpeted, nice kitchen, utilities paid. 2 blocks from Union Available now. VI 3-8534 tf Vancanelles in contemporary home for young man, prefer graduate stud- es swimming pool, home cool- ing room telephone. VI 3-6535 call before 6 p.m. Furnished apartments for 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 men. Call VI 3-0131 or VI 3-1331 Wanted — woman graduate student recommits to start zero-2 b-digit account at. south location. VI 2-2024 after 5:15 p.m. 1:17 Rooms for graduate women, 3 single available at summer break. Kitchen facilities. One block from Union. Call VI 3-6979. 1-21 HERTZ RENT A-CAR. Spcial zat= age, Call Gayle, 3-1028. 1-21 age, Call Gayle, 3-1028. 1-21 Furnished 2-bedroom house. Prefer 4 boys. 1 block to campus. VI 3-bed- room. Sleeping room with kitchen and laundry facilities for male student, graduated, preferred $40.00 a month Call CSI 8599 after 7 p.m. on or until ends. 1-17 MISCELLANEOUS Die Bierstube: Singen, trinken und essenent German style. Featuring studen- t's favorite dark beverage and student's favorite light beverage from Golden, Colorado. Also serving deluxe beverages for the afternoon and night Wednesday night. Party Room available. 14th and Tennessee. VI 2- 944. tt Need any Sewing or Mending done? Reasonable rates. Call after 5:00 p.m. V1 2-3901. tt BLANDING PARTY PHOTOGRAPHY Your satisfaction is my strongest contract. 5-day service guaranteed; Gold embossed party titles: Kocadocol 5x7, $1.00; custom enlarged B&W x87, 60e. Three years' experience at B&W for references and samples call Dave at VI 2-6515. tf Wanted: General house work preferably in sorority, fraternity, or pri- brity. Requires travel and skilled and have references. Write to Housekeeper. 1132 Comm., Lawrence. PARTY TIME—Building available for parties and dances. Call VI 3-7453. Ralph Freed. tf Sports Car Maintenance and Repairs by and for the enthusiast. Super tun- nageer. Sports car accessories. Ray. Pickering's Competition. Sports cars. East 23rd St. VI 2-1291. Tune-ups — Evenings and weekends only; also other automobile work. appointment only St. I-3206, behind 87 Connecticut St. Farmer Garage. Experienced photographer in children and family portraits. Reasonable rate. Will take pictures in your home. Call VI 2-6148. tf HELP WANTED Students looking for part time work are in person at Sandy's Drive-In- 2120 W. 9th Reliable student for selling imports. Apply 920 La. after 6 p.m. tt We have an opening for one male student to work. Two evening shifts at TOM Dixon on the 10 a.m. at Dixon's Drive-In Reservation, TV 3-7446. A proven part-time income opportunity or college men. You can fit your desired requirements to a management course is offered. If you need a year-round income that will finance entire college education, send resume to Future College Box 128, Shawnee Mission, Kan. 1-14 Private room available, rent free to a dependable girl student for babysitting services. Call VI 3-9150 for interview. 1-13 Would like someone vicinity of 25th and Ridge Court to watch five-year-old girl, mornings only. Call VI 3-5947 or VI 2-0100. 1-17 WANTED Will) Baby Sit in my home or youtube. Call after 4:00 pm. VI 2-3901 I R O N G I N D A N D ALTERATIONS 19825 or VI 3-9693 reasonable 1-10 Two engineers with 5-room ment need 2 roommates. Call 8410. Need one or possibly two male roommates to share apartment for second semester. Walking distance from campus. VI 2-3301 after 3 p.m. 1-17 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Daily Kansan apart- VI 3- 1-19 Thursday, January 13, 1966 take advantage of the Yamaha Sale! visit Ern's Cycle Shop 8TH ST. SHOE REPAIR Quality work on half soles, heels. We repair purses Shoe dyeing 107 E. 8TH 950 N. 3rd VI 13-5815 Anderson Rentals "We Rent Almost Anything" VI 3-2044 812 New Hampshire Street Gift Box Andrews Gifts VI 2-1523 Open Wednesday Evenings Malls Shopping Center Plenty of Free Parking Now Leasing 10th and Eimery Rd. WEST HILLS Lawrence's First Total Electric Luxury Apartments for information call W. E. Almquist—VI 3-3610 Try a "MOORE BURGER HAMBURGER MALTS-SHAKES 1414 W.6th VI 3-9588 Student With Sales Experience To Represent Our Company Part Time. Selling A Student Policy $10,000 Ins. Policy for $30.00 per yr. No War Clause Pyramid Life Ins. Co. P.O. Box 2038, K.C., Kan. Write Harold G. Parrott-V.P. TRAVEL TIME LET 100% MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Semester Reservations Now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 COMPLETE CLASSICAL RECORD SELECTION COLUMBIA RECORDS Weavers YOUR GASOLINE DOLLAR GOES FARTHER DERBY at... GARY'S DERBY SERVICE 2330 Iowa Lawrence Lawrence YOU CAN'T BUY A BETTER GAS...AT ANY PRICE Schoewe Services Set Funeral services for Walter H. Schoewe, associate professor of geology emeritus at KU, will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday in the First Presbyterian Church in Lawrence. Schoewe, 74, died Tuesday following an extended illness. Burial will be in Memorial Park Cemetery. He was also editor of the Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science. More than half of his professional life was devoted to teaching and research at KU. From 1920 until his retirement in 1961, Dr. Schoewe taught courses in geology and geography. From 1930 to 1961, he was actively engaged in geologic research for the Survey and for 11 years was in charge of the Survey's Division of Mineral Economics and Coal. Until his illness, he worked daily in his office at the Geological Survey. SCHOEWE HELD A.B. and M.S. degrees in geology and geography from the University of Wisconsin, a Ph.D. from the University of Iowa, and an M.A. from Harvard. Before coming to KU, he worked briefly as a topographer for the U.S. Geological Survey and as an instructor in geology at the University of Iowa and Colorado School of Mines. He was a life fellow of the Geological Society of America and a fellow of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists and of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. A life member of the Kansas Academy of Science, he was president in 1938. He also belonged to the Grad Tests ToBeHeld Saturday "Graduate Record Examinations" (GRE) will be given on Saturday in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. These tests put out by the National Program for Graduate School Selection are administered by the Guidance Bureau. A Bulletin of Information with registration form providing details of registration and test administration may be obtained from the Guidance Bureau. Official Bulletin On Campus Interviews for Next Week: Jan. 17-Hickman Mills, Mo., public schools, K-12, 106 Ba.; Jan. 18-Hickman Mills, Mo., I-9, 12-Pine Road, Union; Jan 18-Cypress School Dist. K-6, 106 Ba.; Jan. 19-Amer. Luth. Church, College Registry, Amnesiac Schools, Montclair University, I-10-Antoich District, Overland Park, K-6, 306B Union; Jan. 21-Unified Dist. 1, Racine, Wis.; Jan. 24-Unified Dist. 2, Huntingdon, HS, I-9, 117B Ba.; and Kedn Co. Junior College, 9-14, 12B Ba. (Bakersfield, Calif.) Der Deutsche Verein wird am 13 januar um 130 in der Blersturbe um 140 Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Center. YCS meeting, 8 p.m. Student Center. Lutheran Worship, 4:30 p.m. Sponsored by all Lutherans. Danforth chapel. College Life, 9 p.m. Tau Kappa Epsilon, 1911 Stewart. Catholic Mass, 6:45 a.m. and 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel. Muslim Society 1 p.m. Friday papal visit to school of Religion (n.p., Kansas Union). LDS Institute of Religion, 4:30 p.m. Kansas Union. Notorious Landlady ? Dyne Aud *Foreign Film*, 7:30 p.m. "Das Dret- tiger" Billel Friday Night Services. 7:30 Millennium Community Center, 917 Bleighland Drive Foreign Film, 7:30 p.m. "Das Dremladeher minder" and "Sunday Night." Wrestling. 7:30 p.m. Central Mo. State, Allen Field House. Kansas Geological Society, the Kansas Historical Society, Sigma Xi (honorary science society) and other professional organizations. 10 Daily Kansan Thursday, January 13, 1966 He is survived by his wife and a daughter, Mrs. Bernie Sewell, of Lawrence. Notables Began at KU KU's William, Allen White School of Journalism roster of prominent graduates includes: Doris Fleeson, columnist; Ben Hibbs, former Saturday Evening Post editor; Roy Roberts, Kansas City Star president; and Raymond Clapper, columnist. PARK FREE IN "PROJECT 800" Jay SHOPPE Downtown PARK FREE IN "PROJECT 800" Jay SHOPPE Downtown January Clearance Sale! • Sweaters • Skirts • Dresses • Knee Sox • Slacks • Blouses REDUCEED 40% Jay SHOPPE Downtown Jay SHOPPE REDUCED 4C PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS to stop by the Douglas County State Bank and let us help you open a D.C. checking account. With a D.C. account, you can keep track of where, when, and for what you spent your money. NOW IS THE TIME And you cannot lose your money— your checks are worthless to anyone but you. We will be glad to help you with any of your money problems—why not visit us soon? DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK 9th and Kentucky "The bank with the student in mind" DOOR WINTER WINTER SALE!! GREAT REDUCTIONS!! 20% off 25% off $ 3 3^{1/3} \%$ off Suits, Sportcoats, Slacks, Wash Slacks, Jackets, Sportshirts, Dress Shirts, Sweaters. (entire stock not included) (no returns or exchanges) THE Town Shop 839 Massachusetts DOWNTOWN FREE PARKING Student Bad Checks (Continued from page 1) loss. We rely heavily on the identification given by a student ID card. We can stop this problem now by checking for the summer session receipt," he said. McNARY EXPLAINED why students create a special credit problem. "Students are poor bookkeepers. They too often depend on parents to make the deposits. To several students a notice of an insufficient fund check is no more serious than a parking ticket. I think much of it is a lack of responsibility. ACCORDING TO the Douglas County Attorney's Office, bad checks are only turned into the Sheriff's office for criminal prosecution. Too often, however, merchants are not after a prosecution, but only want their money. This is especially true of bad checks written by students, because the amount of a student check is usually small. James Glenn, manager of Rusty's IGA in Hillcrest, agrees that second party checks are the worst part of trying to recognize student credit. The reason, Glenn explained, is that the County Attorney will not handle a second party check. When a clerk initials such a check, the store is saying it will make up for the loss if the check is no good, he said. "STUDENTS ARE not a special credit problem. The percentage of checks which bounce is small, and most of them usually clear a second time through. The state check laws have made the situation so it is not difficult to collect Daily Kansan 9 Thursday, January 13, 1966 on a bad check. These laws are becoming even more rigid. Also, the University is more cooperative," he said. Students are generally a reliable group, and are treated no differently than anyone else, Jack Hughes, assistant manager of Penney's Department Store, said. The store will usually cash any check within reason and depend- HURON SET His. $22.50 Hers. $27.50 student checks is not significant; yet, in terms of time and effort, the loss is substantial. It is impractical to track down a small check. The problem wouldn't be helped any if the student's account was switched to a local bank. Daddy is most often responsible for keeping the account balanced, so it is easier for him if the money is at home," he said. Stores in Lawrence and manager of the Dillon's Plaza store, the student too often does not keep up his account. "He just forgets. No one has worse fiscal integrity than the student. We are the very best of friends with the student. We treat him as such, and he reciprocates that friendship," Raney said. "There are two kinds of checks that bounce; insufficient account, and no account at all. We get very few of either kind from students. The real problem now seems to be stolen billfolds and student ID's," Hughes said. HUSON SET His. $32.50 Hers. $27.50 JUST ONE OF OUR 300 DIFFERENT STYLES • 14 Karat yellow gold, white gold or elegant two-tone combinations. • Traditional, plain, modern, wide, medium or slim styles. • Satin-toned, bright cut or florentine finishes. Artcarved WEDDING KINGS All by Artcarved, the most trusted name in wedding rings since 1850. Starting at $8. As seen in BRIDE'S BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 743 Mass. VI 3-4366 Your KU ID Is Your Pass To Instant Credit Open Monday and Thursday till 8:30 p.m. Authorized Artcarved Jewelry ing on the identification, Hughes said. "THE MONEY LOST from bad Artcarved WEDDING KINGS According to Dick Raney, owner of the three Raney's Drug BRIMAN'S leading jeweler TERM PAPERS FINALS REPORTS 11 DAYS TO GO WE HAVE, FOR YOU... OUTLINES...ALL KINDS...PAPER BINDERS,PENS, COVERS, BLUEBOOKS ,TOO... kansas union BOOKSTORE Frosh Shatter Records Despite Loss to Varsity Two Allen Field House records and six meet records were shattered last night as the KU track team kicked off its 1966 season with the intersquad meet. The varsity beat the freshmen, 73-44. Although KU's world-famous freshman miler, Jim Ryun, did not compete because of a cold, the freshman squad made a remarkable showing. Both field house records were set by frsh. KENNY GAINS, Kinsley freshman, amazed the sparse crowd of 200 with a leap of $6'9\frac{1}{4}$ in the high jump. The height, his career best, eclipsed the old mark of $6'8\frac{3}{4}$ set by Tyce Smith in 1964. Gains cleared the bar on his final attempt. George Byers, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, tied the field house record in the 60-yard high hurdles with a 7.4 clocking. The record is also held by Curtis McClinton, 1961, and Bill Chambers, 1965. Byers also won the low hurdles in 6.8, a freshman record and only .1 second off Charley Tidwell's field house record set in 1959. THE MEET two-mile record fell to John Lawson, Kansas City senior, who was last fall's National Collegiate Athletic Association cross country champion and cross country All-American. He had a time of 9:17.6, breaking the old mark by two seconds. Steve Ashurst, Newark, N.J., junior, lowered the 440-yard dash meet mark 2 second with a 51.2 time. Dwight Peck, Woodcliff, N.J., junior, set the old mark last year. Reggie Young, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, zipped the 60-year dash in 6.2 seconds, tying Bob Hanson's meet mark of 1963. OTHER WINNERS: Long Jump: Cortez—23"14" Pole Vault: Steinhoff—14"6" Shot Put: Barr——52"412" Mile: Lawson——4:16 600: Silverburg, Peck (tie)— 1:14.6 1000: Yergovich—2:19.4 880: Paul—1:56.9 Walt Wesley Nears Record KANSAS CITY, Mo—(UPI)—Walt Wesley, who had a relatively rough time of it in the Big Eight Conference pre-season basketball tournament and scored only 13 points in the league opener, is back in the groove in his bid for a second consecutive league scoring championship. Eig Eight Service Bureau records showed today that Wesley is also moving up on the all-time leading scorers, with his 1.064 ranking 20th on the list. With an additional 117 points he will be 10th and 190 would boost him to fifth. KU Collegiate Young Republicans BUSINESS MEETING Anouncements - New Constitution Elect New Vice-Chairman If your car has the "shakes," drop in tomorrow for our "tranquilizing treatment." Citgo products will make your car purr smoothly. CITGO FRITZ CO. Big Eight Room Union 8th & New Hampshire VI 3-4321 Open Thursday Until 8:30 p.m. 7:00 8 Daily Kansan Thursday, January 13. 1966 PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS Downtown—Near Everything Tonight Granada HEXTRA - telephone 013-5968 Starts Saturday! T.G.I.F. PREMIERE PEEK "Thunderball" Fri., Jan. 28 Tickets On Sale Now Granada THEATRE----telephoneV13-5789 HURRY! Last 2 days — Bette Davis as "The Nanny" Shows—7:00 & 9:00 NEXT! DORIS DAY ROD TAYLOR DO NOT DISTURB DO NOT DISTURB DORIS DAY ROD TAYLOR V HARVEY'S GRAND OPENING Come See Us At Our New Location 802 W. 23rd (across from the Mall) OPEN 9-9 Weekdays 1-6 Sundays MEN'S TIES & LOAFERS $6.87 up 6½ TO 12 — CHOOSE FROM SEVERAL STYLES WOMEN'S HI HEELS $6.87 SIZES 5 TO 10 — NEW SPRING COLORS WOMEN'S FLATS 2 for $5 up 4½ TO 10 — NEW SPRING COLLECTION WOMEN'S FLATS 2 for $5 up 4½ TO 10 — NEW SPRING COLLECTION MEN'S BASKETBALL SHOES 2 for $5 6½ TO 12 — HI OR LO TOP — WHITE OR BLACK H Б MEN'S BASKETBALL SHOES 2 for $5 6½ TO 12 — HI OR LO TOP — WHITE OR BLACK Self-Service Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES Register for Free Television to be given away February 14th. Winner need not be present or make purchase to win. Victory Popular in Intramural Ball Unlike the collegiate basketball ratings the KU intramural basketball standings post an abundant supply of undefeated teams. In the Fraternity A league the Phi Delts top their division with three victories and no losses, while four other teams are sporting records of 2-0. They are Delta Upsilon, Delta Chi, Beta Theta Pi and Sigma Alpha Epsilon. JRP and MFU are tied for the lead of their division in the Independent A league at 3-0. The Black Hawks with two wins and no defeats lead their division followed by the Law and MBA teams with one victory apiece. Templin #2, 2-0, heads Delta Function, 1-0, in the other division. In the Fraternity B league Sigma Chi, Kappa Alpha Psi and Tau Kappa Epsilon all lead their respective divisions. 3-0, while Alpha Kappa Lambda and Beta follow with records of 2-0. Daily Kansan 7 Thursday, January 13, 1966 Take A Break From Pre-Final Term Papers Reports and Studies Try Bowling and Billiards Regular Hours During Final Week and Semester Break Enjoy Yourself at the KU Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION OPPORTUNITY TO LEARN AND WORK WITH KU MODEL U.N. Subcommittee Openings In - Secretarial - Physical Arrangements - Research - Publicity Possibility of Serving On General Assembly Floor Interviews This Afternoon and Evening Sign Up At The KU-Y Office Or Call UN 4-3761 or VI 2-0693 Ober's Ober's SALE Ober's This year, because of the unseasonable warm weather, not only are values rewarding but the selection is particularly good. All clearance items are from our regular stocks, so the savings are based on actual prices right up to the time of the sale. Although our entire stocks are not included, sale selections are so broad that you're sure to find exactly what you want. Famous brands such as Hart Schaffner & Marx, Kingsridge, Enro, Donegal, Lord Jeff and Alligator are all included. SUITS $59.95 values . . . $48.95 69. 95 values... 56.95 75. 00 values... 59.95 89. 50 values... 69.95 100. 00 values... 78.95 SPORT COATS $35.00 values ... $27.95 39. 50 values... 32.95 45. 00 values... 35.95 50. 00 values... 39.95 TOPCOATS 65. 00 values... 49.95 $45.00 values... $37.95 69.95 values... 56.95 85.00 values... 69.95 125.00 values... 89.95 125. 00 values... 89.95 All Weather Coats $29.95 values... $19.95 42.50 values... 31.95 49.95 values... 39.95 65.00 values... 49.95 65. 00 values... 49.95 SWEATERS $11.95 values . . . $6.95 15. 95 values... 8.95 29. 95 values...15.95 19. 95 values...10.95 SPORT SHIRTS $5.00 values ... $3.95 5. 95 values... 4.45 6. 95 values ... 4.95 8. 95 values ... 5.95 TROUSERS 15. 95 values . . . 10.95 $13.95 values... $9.95 17. 95 values ... 12.95 OUTER COATS 24. 95 values . . . $19.95 39. 95 values... 27.95 29. 95 values... 21.95 - SOX Savings on Assorted - TIES - SHOES - BOYS' ITEMS Ober's Lawrence's Fashion Leader Since 1896 821 Mass. VI 3-1951 OPEN THURSDAY UNTIL 8:30 Read and Use Kansan Classifieds Glenda Hord To Lead Panhell Names President Glenda Hord, Kansas City junior and member of Chi Omega sorority, has been selected Panhellenic Council president for 1966-67. She succeeds Jill Newburg, Carmel, Ind., senior and a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority. Final selection was made Tuesday night following interviews with the nine candidates. During the past week, the nominees were tested over the Panhellenic By-Laws and Constitution. Each woman also submitted an essay Pro Began in '38 The English Proficiency Exam was devised in 1938 and members of the class of 1940 were the first required to take the two-hour examination. Students who have completed four semesters of English are eligible and students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the Schools of Business, Education, Fine Arts and Journalism must pass the exam before graduation. on the meaning and purpose of the Panhellenic Council on the KU campus. She pledged Chi Omega during her freshman year and served as president of her pledge class. She represented her sorority on the Junior Panhellenic Council, Miss Hord is majoring in secondary education with an emphasis in social studies. "THIS IS A VERY great honor to be selected President of the Panhellenic Council," Miss Hord said. "It is also a great challenge to pursue the Panhellenic's primary aim of responsibility to sorority women and to broaden Panhellenic's scope so that sorority and other KU women can realize the conception of themselves and their place on campus." Sorority houses nominating a junior woman for the Panhellenic Council presidency were: Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Omicron Pi, Delta Delta Delta, Delta Gamma, Gamma Phi Beta Kappa Alpha Theta and Kappa Kappa Gamma in addition to Chi Omega. Miss Hord will officially assume her Panhellenic responsibilities during the last week of February. THIRSTY? VISIT THE OLD MISSION INN for YOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGE (WE HAVE GREAT FOOD, TOO) 1904 Mass. VI 3-9737 The little shoe that's very wow! very now! It's our sabot-strapped flattie in butter-soft crushed leather set on snippy little heels . . . has cloudlike tricot and foam linings, too! Colors like crazy. Plastic soles. 6 to 10AA, 5 to 10B. go strap-happy with the sharpest little flats around 5. 99 Penneys ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY Plenty of FREE PARKING Behind Penney's 6 Daily Kansan Thursday, January 13, 1966 Popular Film Series The Notorious Landlady with Kim Novak and Jack Lemmon 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. Friday & Saturday Jan. 14th & 15th Admission 35¢ Dyche Auditorium Advanced Tickets at Kansas Union Information Booth SUAPRESENTS "An Evening With Don Friedman" Jazz Piano Recital Thursday, Jan.13th 8:00 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union Admission - $1.00 Tickets Can be Bought at the Information Desk at the Union Herd Addresses CYD Senator Says Avery Holds Line On Budget During Election Year One Democratic Senator's opinion of Governor William H. Avery's budget message was that it "reflected an attempt to hold the line on expenditures in this election year." Sen. Harold Herd, D-Coldwater, said that Gov. Avery is trying to "lure the public into forgetfulness about last year's inequitable tax increases." "It's hard to forget that the governor wanted to increase sales tax to three and one-half per cent, which was refused, and we now find that our balance of funds on hand is $55,000,000 in spite of the reduced rate," Herd said. GOV. AVERY in his budget message to a joint session of the legislature Wednesday, recommended a state budget of $569.9 million. It is a 4.9 per cent increase over estimated spending during the last fiscal year. In a speech to the KU-Collegiate Young Democrats, Herd also called on the Kansas Democratic party to step up programs and activities in the state. The Democrats are the minority party, because they deserve to be, Herd said. "WE ARE AN old party in Kansas, but we have been a minority party over 50 years." Some of his Democratic counterparts complain about the press coverage, he said, but "we probably get more press than we deserve." The only reason some Democrats have won was because of "defaults in the Republican party." Another reason Republicans get the majority of votes, is that "people vote their tradition, if they aren't offered a choice," Herd said. "WHAT WE ALL want is better government. But we (the Democrats) have been able to exist in the state, because of the national party. "We haven't been dynamic. The Republicans have not had to be either, because we have not made them work," he said. The Issue of reapportionment, which goes before a special legislative session in two weeks, also was evaluated. "When they try to reaportion the legislature, they are breaking up a power structure." Herd said. The Democrats contest that the Republicans have gerry-mandered district voting lines in order to maintain a Republican majority vote in the state, Herd said. THE DEMOCRATS want to apportion districts by population, rather than the present area divisions. "We reapportioned the congressional districts last year and the population was nearly equalized in five districts," but Wyandotte and Sedgwick Counties have been divided to produce Republican majorities. Herd said, "You subvert the will of the people when you start tampering with the boundaries. The Republicans are transgressing the county lines. "They did this to preserve their incumbents' leads," Herd said. Daily Kansan 5 Thursday, January 13, 1966 Richard Mindlin's COACH HOUSE Sportswear - Accessories A MINDLIN STORE 12th & Oread on Campus SALE! SALE! SALE! • 62 Coats & Car Coats • 239 Dresses! • 110 Slacks! • 221 Sweaters! • 247 Skirts! • 24 Robes! Exciting Sale of First Quality Fashions ... Many From Our Kansas City Store ... Brand-new to You! ALL SALES FINAL • 176 Shirts! Shop 9:30 to 5:30 Mon. thru Sat. 1/3 to 1/2 off! Lambda Chi Alpha Forms Auxiliary with other organizations on campus," said Gail Freiermuth, Kirkwood, Mo., sophomore and public relations chairman. Zeta Iota chapter of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity recently formed a women's auxiliary organization. Steve Smith, Mission sophomore, Lambda Chi vice-president is coordinator of the program. "The main purpose of Crescents is to help facilitate projects within the house and relations Other Crescent officers include Jackie Babcock, Shawnee Mission junior, president; Linda Weeks, Shawnee Mission freshman, vice-president; and Hallye Bergman, St. Louis, Mo., junior, secretary. PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS THE Pet Dog Ink 7th & Mass. RED DOG INN presents A Fabulous Line-up of Entertainment For Your Pleasure - Friday - FREE TGIF with The "Bluethings" Friday Evening The Fabulous Red Dogs. A Top Midwest Show Group. Saturday -The Roadrunners A Most Exciting Group VI2-0100 NEW Cleaners & Launderers Offers the Students IN BY 9 — OUT BY 5 SERVICE. When time is important let Tops In By 9 — Out By 5 service take care of your laundry problems. In addition Shirts Are Returned on Hangers and Tops offers a money back guarantee. TOPS Open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. (Monday thru Saturday) 1526 West 23rd (Next to the Pancake Man) TOPS New Device Protects the Sick Medic Alert Foundation's Latest Invention Helps Provide Ready Aid to Medically Weak The police officer received a report over his patrol car radio requesting him to investigate an incident at a local tavern. A man reportedly was drunk and was getting out of hand. When the officer arrived, the man appeared quite drunk. Consequently, he was taken to the station and jailed for drunkenness. Later that night he died in his cell. It was discovered that the man had not had an excess of alcohol. He was suffering, instead, from insulin shock. The man was diabetic. ALTHOUGH THIS INCIDENT, recalled by Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of Watkins Hospital, occurred 20 years ago in Lawrence, many similar incidents can and are occurring today. How can society check such mistakes? Currently, an attempt to answer this question is appearing in the form of an organization known as Medic Alert Foundation with headquarters in Turlock, Calif. The recently founded organization has been declared a non-profit, tax exempt organization by the United States Treasury Department. Medic Alert Foundation proposes a system of medical alert by which a person wears an emblem with vital information on it either as a bracelet or necklace. THIS EMBLEM MAY save many lives. The American Medical Association (AMA) estimates that 40 million persons in the United States—one person in five—should be wearing some sort of medical signaling device. According to Dr. Schwegler, many people could use Medic Alert with great profit. "In Lawrence we have cases where police have picked up diabetics who were in insulin shock. The police think these persons are drunk and treat them as such," he said. At KU, only about one student in 30 needs to wear any kind of medical signaling device, Dr. Schwegler said. "We at KU would gain less from a program such as Medic Alert than would the general population. The reason is that, medically, we already know a lot about everyone on campus. There were about 200 students this year who somehow avoided taking a physical and were not placed in our records. However, we are gradually tracking these persons down so that we will have a medical record on them also," he said. DR. SCHWELLER explained that Medic Alert would help the police a great deal, since they are usually the first to come in contact with medical alert situations. "We at the University have a standing rule or agreement with the police. Whenever they pick up a student for drunkenness, they bring him to the hospital first just to be sure there is not something medically wrong," he said. 4 Daily Kansan Thursday, January 13, 1966 TAYLOR-MADE CORDOVAN IMPERIALS Slow-tanned shell cordovan of magnificent quality is detailed with custom niceties by Taylor's Down-Maine craftsmen. Shoes of Custom Character Taylor-Made A to D to 13 Priced $33.00 Royal College Shop 837 Mass. VI 3-4255 Shoes of Custom Character Taylor-Made A to D to 13 Priced $33.00 In an emergency, such as an accident where unconsciousness occurs, the emblem will speak for the person who cannot speak for himself. The front of the emblem warns police, firemen, ambulance crews, nurses or doctors that the person has a special medical problem. THE BACK OF the emblem tells the nature of the problem. It could be diabetes, epilepsy, taking anticoagulants, or others. There also is a number where authorized persons may call collect 24 hours a day for additional information about the member. This may include his name, address, next of kin, family doctor's name and other brief medical data as filed by the member. Medic Alert Foundation has seven international associates in Canada, New Zealand, South Africa, the Netherlands, Philippines, England and Belgium. More than 140,000 persons around the world are members of Medic Alert. A lifetime Medic Alert membership costs $5.00. This includes the stainless steel emblem for neck or wrist. Sterling silver emblems are available for $7.50. The Clutter family murder is the subject Joseph P. Jenkins, Kansas City trial lawyer, will speak on during a Phi Alpha Delta legal fraternity dinner-meeting at 7 o'clock tonight at the Virginia Inn. Defender of Slayers Speaks Jenkins became involved in the case in September of 1962 when he was appointed by the Federal Court to defend the convicted murderers in a highly technical appeal. Prompt Electronic Service on TV Color TV Antennae Hi-fi Stereos Changers Radios Transistors Car Radios - We Service All Makes - RCA Motorola Airline GE Zenith Silvertone Philco Magnavox Coronado Bird TV-Radio Service PHONE VI 3-8855 908 Mass. St. — Lawrence, Kans. --- LP LP RECORD SALE! ALL Folk and Country Music 25% Off Baez, Dylan, Belafonte, Niles Peter, Paul & Mary, Yarbrough Weavers, Clancy Bros, & More 925 Mass. BELL'S VI 3-2644 FRED GREEN has BOOTS! Justin & Texas LEE Jeans & Square Dance Dresses & All Western Wear Open Till 8:30 Thursday 910 MASS. EN Piekalkiewicz Sees All Sides By Irvana Keagy In this age of the great protests, certain men stand from the rest carrying their own banners—banners reading "Freedom to Speak; Freedom to Disagree." This is one reason Jaroslaw Andrzej Piekalkiewicz, assistant professor in the Political Science Department, has invited Robert Shelton, Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, to visit KU. Piekalkiewicz, a native of Poland, who has lived under the oppression of both Nazi and Communist rule, said he strives to present all sides of a question. "INTEGRATION IS IN the majority here and segregation is not, so we have invited Mr. Shelton to express the point of view for his organization. This is the reason for the Minority Opinions Forum—to hear all minorities," Piekalkiewicz said. "We (of the Minority Opinions Forum) contacted him last summer and he said he would come, but in the meantime, he was put under investigation by the House Un-American Activities Committee. "I suppose he was advised by some of his loyalists not to go around making speeches. The last telephone conversation we had with him was about two weeks ago and he said he was not sure whether he could come. "I BELIEVE the students should be informed so they can talk intelligently and know what they are discussing." Pickalkiewicz said. As he leaned forward over his desk, its top hidden by papers and books. Piekalkiewicz took from one of the many stacks of papers a "Curriculum vitae," several pages containing a modest outline of his military status and educational qualifications. He picked a half smoked cigar from the ash tray, adjusted his thick black rimmed glasses, and quickly unfolded his life as both a military figure against Nazi occupation and a student. BORN IN POZNAN, Poland, Piekalkiewicz learned at an early age to fight suppression of speech when Nazi Armies occupied Poland. At the age of 18, in 1941, he joined the Polish Underground Army (A.K.) against the Germans. He later fought as a guerilla in the Warsaw uprising, but was taken prisoner of war by the Germans in 1944. At that stage of the war, the Russian army was closing in on Germany from the east and the Western allied armies were surging in from the west. The prisoners of war were transferred to camps inside more secure German territory as the allied forces reclaimed Nazi occupied land. The prisoners were marched, Daily Kansan 3 Thursday, January 13, 1966 AUTO WRECKING NEW AND USED PARTS Tires and Glass East End of 9th Street VI3-0956 MUNICH, Germany — (UPI) Police today arrested the Nazi general accused of sending Anne Frank to the gas chamber. cross-country, to each of the new camps. After three unsuccessful attempts to escape, Piekalkiewicz broke from the German guards during one of the transfers and made his way westward until he met with an American regiment. AFTER THE WAR, his duty to Poland still before him, Piekal-kiewicz joined with the First Lancers, a name given the Polish second corps of the British Army. He was stationed in Italy for almost a year. He said, he joined because he and the other men in the corps hoped to organize a war to recapture Poland after the Communist-Russian takeover. He went to Great Britain in 1946 and in 1948 settled there to begin a sporadic 25-year quest for a formal college education. Piekalkiewicz was maintaining a permanent home in London while attending the University of Dublin in Ireland. Through mutual friends, he met an Irish girl who was working as a trained nurse in London. In 1957 they were married and after his graduation from the University, they came to the United States. WHEN THEY ARRIVED in New York, Piekalkiewicz said they had exactly five dollars. To replenish their funds, Piekalkie- Police Arrest Nazi Officer wicz worked for a business journal and later was a tax clerk for a wine importing company in New York City. In 1959 they moved to Bloomington, Ind., and he enrolled at Indiana University. There he earned his Ph.D. degree and in 1963 came to KU as an assistant professor in the Political Science Department. In 1964, Piekalkiewicz became a citizen of the United States. Criminal police said they arrested ex-Maj. Gen. Wilhelm Harster and two aides, one of them a woman, on suspicion of complicity in mass murder in wartime Holland. "Although I was a bit nervous, my prestige was involved. After teaching U.S. constitution and American government, failing (the citizenship examination) would not be good," he said. Prosecuters said Harster bossed the Nazi security police—not gestapo—who rounded up the author of "The Diary of Anne Frank" and tens of thousands of other Dutch Jews and sent them to the Auschwitz death camp. "I know all about General Electric. They make toasters and irons and things like that." "Right. Things like the world's most powerful jet engines, the world's largest turbine-generator, the world's first Man-Made diamonds. Things like nuclear power plants, suitcase-size computers and a whole new family of plastics." "Yeah, yeah. Things like that." Only about one quarter of G.E. sales are in consumer goods. All the rest are in industrial, aerospace and defense products. A variety of products (over 200,000 in all). A variety of activities (everything from research and development to advertising and sales). A variety of challenges for young men who want to be recognized for their talents and rewarded for their work. Important responsibilities come to you early at General Electric. Talk to the man from G.E. about coming to work for us. This is where the young men are important men. Progress Is Our Most Important Product GENERAL ELECTRIC Indian-proud past, uncertain future Who are the Haskell Institute students? What are their backgrounds, their heritages? What is their attitude toward the white man, toward Haskell? What image do they have of Haskell? Haskell Institute serves as a melting pot of the Indian nation. It brings together Indians from 85 tribes in 29 states. During the past 20 years 126 tribes from 36 states have been represented in the enrollment. LAST NAMES FROM the school roster re-echo their linkage to the past when their ancestors roamed the plains to kill the buffalo and were pushed on reservations by the invaders: Bad Heart Bull, Bright Wings, Bringing Good, Chasing Hawk, Crazythunder, Fast Horse, Good Bird, Little Axe, Old Bull and War Bonnet. Second in a series They come from proud tribes: Arapahoe, Blackfeet, Creeks, Choctaws, Cherokee, Hopi, Kiowa, Seminole and Sioux. Their hatred of the white man is gone but they cling with stubborn tenacity to many of the ideals and cultural traits of their forefathers. TO UNDERSTAND THE young Indian who leaves his family and friends, his tribe and reservation to come to Haskell one needs only to recall the famous Kiowa legend. It is a legend that has a similar telling in all tribal histories. It is the story of how the Great Spirit created man. After the Great Spirit created the world he wanted to create the perfect man. So he built an oven. He found some light-colored clay under a maple tree, shaped it and baked it. The result did not please him because it was pale in color. He called him "white man" and sat him aside. Next the Great Spirit found a dark gumbo under a hackamore tree and baked it longer than the first. But when he opened the oven the man was black and was set aside. FINALLY THE GREAT Spirit searched until he found a rich, reddish-brown clay that was under an oak tree. He moulded it and took extreme care to bake it properly. The result was a strong, reddish-brown man that had the strength of the oak and the knowledge of the earth. Every Indian youth knows this legend and because of it he is proud He does not have a feeling of superiority, but he does not feel sorry that he is not a white man. Their childhood training is quite different from what is considered typical in America. Indian children look at the floor when their elders speak and they reply in a soft tone of voice. AN INSTRUCTOR AT Haskell, who has made a study of the Indian culture, C. Fayne Porter, said, "The Indians do not necessarily mistrust us, but they are skeptical." Porter said, "It takes about eight weeks before a new student here begins to communicate with an instructor. The Indian student takes a long time to make up his mind whether or not he thinks you are okay." The young Indian has been made aware of the white man's superiority and dominance. He watches it every night on television. And he has only to recall that almost every treaty has been violated at one time or another. Consequently, the Indian student often takes the role of a rabbit or fox and relies on cunning. THE RABBIT IS a key symbol of the Seminole Indians of Florida, and the Indian takes great pride in tricking or hoodwinking the white man; however, he does not consider it lying. One student told of a friend who worked at a service station near the Blackfeet reservation in Montana. The station was on a main highway where several tourists passed. They would stop and, seeing the Indian attendant, ask him if there were any Indians around and what time and where could they be seen. The student said his friend would look at his watch, ponder a moment and then say, "Well, it's about 3 o'clock—if you'll drive down the road three miles and wait on the hill, they'll be out in a few minutes." ONE WONDERS HOW many tourists waited on the hill and how long. And so the Indian comes to Haskell to receive his training. He is proud and he is shy. Many are uncertain as to what experiences will be encountered. They know Haskell and they consider it a great opportunity to learn a trade. They have heard their relatives and friends talk of Haskell. Older Indians know it as a school that used to massacre such football giants as Minnesota, Michigan State and Notre Dame. They know it as the school that was denied membership into the Missouri Valley Conference because the Haskell teams outclassed the others. THEY KNOW HASKELL as the school that produced John Levi, the All-America football player, and Billy Mills, who attended Haskell from 1953-1957, and who last year won the United States a gold medal by winning the 10,000 meter race in the Olympic games at Tokyo. Now the great football teams are gone and so is the high school that produced so many outstanding athletes. Former Haskell students associated these great athletes with the warriors of old age and the image of Haskell was a symbol of change for the Indian—from warrior to athlete. Now, with the great teams gone and Haskell offering only vocational training, the image has undergone another change—from athlete to welder. Thus, a conflict has arisen between the student and the institution. Tomorrow: The Conflict. — Robert J. Rollins The People Say... The editors welcome letters of opinion from all Kansan readers. We reserve the right to edit all letters for style, content and unreasonable length. All letters must be signed. Opinions expressed in letters do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the editors. *** To the Editor: THE STUDENT AND FACulty opponents of our Viet Nam policy have used many and varied concoctions of fancy and fact (always twisted) to show why we should abandon South Viet Nam, ranging from colored analyses, to parables, to pure bunk. However, each of their techniques utilizes rationalization. Some of the policy opponents have such sophisticated powers of rationalization that it makes one feel they could have, if called upon, given a suave set of excuses for handing Anne Frank over to her tormentors — provided, of course, her tormentors were Communists instead of Nazis. Doubtless, they could say "Anne Frank isn't concerned with ideological questions," or "It's none of my business; I'm not her guardian," or "She's ignorant." But who am I to suggest anything to the Pros! They have demonstrated they can handle themselves quite well in matters of rationalization. They have made an art of it. For example: They portray a campaign of aggression via internal subversion, terror, and guerrilla warfare as "a glorious, indigenous revolution." THEY CLAIM WE make Communists by resisting Communists; but they refuse to remember that Truman and Marshall, in explicit accordance with their viewpoint, left China alone . . . to become a Communist nation of 700 million. They spill crocodile tears over how much the war is hurting the South Vietnamese; yet, when the U.S. marines used tear gas in order to capture a village from the V.C. without injuring the civilian population, they decry it as a "monstrous atrocity." They tear their hair out about the prestige we are losing among such notable friends of peace and freedom as Sukarno, who has vowed to "crush Malaysia" and who threatened to "shoot" student demonstrators. Yet, they hold little regard for the opinions of the free people of Australia, New Zealand, or West Berlin, people who still have faith in our word. We were thinking... With malice toward none; with charity for all; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation's wounds; to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow and his orphan—to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations. - Abraham Lincoln They insist we should provide economic assistance alone, but remain silent about the Viet Cong destroying our medical aid stations and murdering their personnel. They apologize for practically every Communist action, but denounce all of ours. The rest of us want peace, also, but we know it can't be won by ignoring disguised aggression. Even from the Left. WE ARE PRESENTLY at both the brightest and, yes, the darkest moments in our history. We are in our brightest moment because we are keeping our word to defend millions of human beings (not their government) from a militant enslavement far more ruthless and permanent than anything they have ever known. We are doing this alone in the midst of a storm of howls from the Look - the - Other - Wayers, at great cost but no profit to ourselves. We are merciful enough to forgive the South Vietnamese for being a far away, yellow, poor, and ignorant people; we are keeping alive for them the hope, and chance at least, for freedom. And we are at our darkest moment because our own freedom is being threatened, not only by Communism and by a population explosion of the uneducated, but by some of the educated. The very people who have benefited most from freedom are taking it for granted and are denouncing its defense. Paul Lindouist Prairie Village Pharmacy 2 Daily Kansas Thursday, January 13, 1966 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom University 4-3198, business office Founded 1889 Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, N.Y. 10022. Mail subscription rates: $4 a semester or $7 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. EXECUTIVE STAFF MANAGING EDITOR ... Judy Farrell BUSINESS MANAGER ... Ed Vaughn EDITORIAL EDITORS ... Janet Hamilton, Karen Lambert NEWS AND BUSINESS STAFF Assistant Managing Editors Suzy Black, Susan Hartley Jose Lessen Jaekle Thouley Circulation Manager ... Mike Robe Advertising Manager ... Dale Reinecker City Editor ... Joan McCabe LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibier IT JUST TAKES A LITTLE 'COLLEGE' TO PUT A 'POLISH' ON A YOUNG MAN—YOU'LL SEE A REAL CHANGE WHEN HE COMES HOME FOR CHRISTMAS VACATION. HIYA FOLKS!! HOW'S ABOUT A HAND WITH TH' BAGS? What's Inside Doctor discusses medical identification, p. 4 . . . Frosh break field house records, p. 8 . . . Professor sees all sides to questions, p. 3. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years Weather LAWRENCE, KANSAS 76th Year, No. 67 The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts fair skies and warmer temperatures through Friday. Low tonight should be in the mid 20's. Thursday, January 13, 1966 A. 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. LISTENING, BUT NOT SEEING — These students were part of the overflow crowd of about 100 students who attended Robert DePugh's speech in the Forum Room of the —Photo by Earl Haehl Kansas Union. The speech drew more than the room could accommodate so many sat on couches and divans in two adjoining rooms, listening to DePugh over the intercom. Guns Last Freedom DePugh Speaks Out By Walt Jayro^ The right of private individuals to possess arms was termed the last means for securing individual freedom in a burgaucatic society by Robert DePugh, head of the Minuteur organization. DePugh, whose organization believes in militancy and guerilla warfare by private citizens in securing their freedom, spoke before an overflow crowd attending a Minority Opinions Forum yesterday. "One-fifth of the productive workers' income goes to pay these non-productive workers," he said. HE SAID GOVERNMENT bureacuracy was the chief danger in destroying personal freedom as it crippled the free enterprise system by creating so many nonproductive jobs. He referred to the bureaucrats as "parasites." "They call their government socialism instead of parasitism," he said. THE SECOND AMENDMENT to the U.S. Constitution, which permits private citizens to possess arms, was termed by DePugh as the last guarantee to individuals against the bureaucrats. "I was taught that you had to compromise, that you had to accommodate. This has brought us to a very dangerous situation," he said. Speaking more directly to the students, DePugh advised them "to accept very little and question everything." "YOUR EDUCATION will be of very little tangible value to you. Use your own reason and someday you'll have the chance to test it against the grindstone of reality," he said. DePugh emphasized over and over again the need for maximum amount of individual freedom. Following his speech, DePugh submitted to a question and answer session in which he voiced opinion on: THE DRAFT: "I'm against the draft." However, he added his son had volunteered for the draft and when the need arises other Americans would volunteer too. - Militancy in overthrowing the government: "Any means are justified to save our children for generations to come." - Protecting individual freedoms from bureaucracy: He admitted that there would have to be some bureaucracy, but "it should be kept as small as practicable. Agencies should be much smaller than they are now." - The bureaucracy and the Army: He said he did not consider the Army as bureaucratic, and that it did not represent a threat to the bureaucracy. He then added, "I wish they did." - Comparison of John Birch Society and Minutemen: He said the John Birch Society was merely an extension of Robert Welch's (the organization's founder and head) ideas and beliefs, while the Minutemen were constantly changing philosophies and ideas. Johnson Pledges 'War or Peace' WASHINGTON—(UPI)President Johnson has given North Viet Nam a choice between an olive branoh and the sword. In his State of the Union message to Congress, the President emphasized this country's desire to reduce rather than expand the scale of hostilities in Viet Nam. He invited the Communists to move toward a cease-fire with or without a formal peace conference and promised that "we will respond if others reduce their use of force." But in almost the same breath he reaffirmed the U.S. commitment to stay in Viet Nam "until aggression has stopped"—even if the war drags on for years. And he called on Congress to put muscle into the commitment by boosting U.S. defense spending $5.8 billion during the next fiscal year to a new total of $58.3 billion. This would be an increase of nearly $10 billion in military spending levels since last January. THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE estimated total federal spending at $112.8 billion but said the current prosperity would bring in $111 billion in revenue, leaving a deficit of only $1.8 billion. He called this the smallest deficit in many years. DePugh also said he was against the present graduated income tax, but not an advocate of the "freedom movement," which would do away with the entire tax structure. Mixed Feelings For KU Budget By Giles Lambertson Governor William H. Avery's recommended budget for KU is termed "good and adequate in some respects, disappointing in others" by Raymond Nichols, vice chancellor for finance. The budget request for $31,234,297 was part of a $569.9 million state budget. The 1967 fiscal year budget was presented to the legislature by the Governor yesterday in Topeka. NICHOLS SAID he was pleased with the 6 per cent salary increase recommendation, which "will help" improve the quality of the faculty, and the $599,433 request for improving state libraries. But he expressed disappointment at the one faculty for twenty students ratio for hiring more faculty members. The Regents requested a one-to-seventeen ratio. "The change by the Governor, which would create 55 new faculty positions next year, will cause a reduction of about 10 faculty members to be hired next year. This is disappointing Senator Harold Herd, D.—Coldwater, says Governor Avery is "holding line" on taxes during election year at Collegiate Young Democrats meeting. See story on page 5. because in a university as complex as ours, we need to get the overall average down near the one-to-twelve ratio that prevails in most large universities." He said the present ratio is about one-to-sixteen. NO FUNDS WERE requested for the installation of heating facilities in New Fraser Hall, Nichols said, on the theory the building would not be completed this year. This might prove to be an error, he continued, except that provisions were made for special appropriation for such a contingency. The $306,000 slashed from the University request was termed a "substantial cut." During a panel discussion on state education Tuesday, Nichols commented on university appropriations by saying: "There is not enough money to go around, never has been enough, and, in view of the rapidly increasing enrollments, probably never will be enough." NY Strike Ends As Buses Roll NEW YORK—(UPI)—Subways and buses rolled today for the first time in 12 days. A strike by 36,000 transit workers ended at 5:24 a.m., when chief Transport Workers Union negotiator Douglas MacMahon announced that union leaders had accepted the recommendation of Mayor John V. Lindsay's mediation panel for a new two-year contract providing a 15 per cent wage increase. THE STRIKE was estimated to have caused a loss of $1.2 billion in business in the nation's largest city. MacMahon said it was $70 million settlement, but the city Transit Authority said $60 million would be more accurate. Observers said an increase in the 15-cent subway and bus fare was inevitable and predicted a 20 or 25 cent fare, which would be more in line with fares in other large American cities. 'Poor Bookkeepers' — Student Bad Checks Vex Shops Bv Ierry Kern The Lawrence merchant sees the student through different eyes than does the bank or finance company. Because many local merchants estimate they do about Third in a Series one-third of their business with KU students, the student-store relationship is unique and often perplexing. According to Bill McNary, manager of Raney's Drug Store, 25 to 30 per cent of the store's business is done with KU students. This increases the store's chance of getting bad checks. "WE HAVE TWO or three student checks bounce each day. The situation is especially bad before Thanksgiving, Christmas, semester break, summer vacation, and the end of the month. The Student Union won't even cash checks after May 15. About 90 per cent of the checks which bounce with us are student checks," McNary said. "We check a student's ID card, local address, telephone number, and we compare signatures when possible. We have had recent trouble with stolen ID cards. We have also had trouble in the summer with students who say they are attending summer school, when in fact they are just passing through. They show us a student ID all right, but it is not of the summer session. When the checks come back to us marked insufficient, we usually take the (Continued on page 9) International Club Names Officers The KU International Club announced the names of the officers of the club for the Spring semester during a meeting yesterday. The officers are: Zuhair Duhaiby, president; Bernard Galton, vice-president; Linda Speaker, secretary; and John Dallal, treasurer; Vicki Gillespi is the social chairman. Positions Vacant In Model U.N. The KU-Y Model United Nations committee will interview applicants for subcommittees Thursday from 12:30 to 4:30 p.m. and 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union. Positions are open on publicity, physical arrangements, research, and secretarial subcommittees. Applications can be made by calling or dropping by the KU-Y office. News for Denmark In Denmark more people read newspapers than in any other country in the world. 12 Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 12, 1966 Dwight Boring* says... "College Men need a Specialist to help them get the most for their insurance dollars. That's because college men's insurance requirements differ from those of non-college men. I specialize in life insurance for college men, with College Life's famous policy, THE BENEFACTOR, designed expressly for college men. And since college men are preferred risks, The Benefactor is priced to sell exclusively to college men. Like to know more? Call me. No obligation, of course." *DWIGHT BORING 2020 Harvard Lawrence, Kansas Phone VI 2-0767 representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA ... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS Any student interested in graduate education in business, for either an M.B.A. or Ph.D. degree, is invited to meet with Mr. Paul Johnson of the Stanford Graduate School of Business today. Appointments should be made through Dean George W. Waggoner. The M.B.A. Program, in particular, is designed for majors in liberal arts and humanities, science, and engineering. Business School Applicants TEACH IN NIGERIA OR GHANA It's possible:—If you . . . 1. Are a graduate with a strong major in one of the following: a. chemistry, b. physics, c. biology, d. engineering, e. mathematics, f. French, g. home economics, or have a Master's Degree in English. 2. Be at least 18 years old of age, desire to teach at the secondary school or junior college level. 3. Are single; or married with no more than one under school age child. If interested, please write to: TEACHERS FOR WEST AFRICA PROGRAM Elizabethtown College Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania 17022 at Ray Christian's Your Student ID Is Your Credit Card. Just present your ID and say CHARGE IT! Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. WHAT EVERY STUDENT SHOULD KNOW ABOUT EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES. Upon graduation, every young man and woman wants and needs a job. A good job. How will you find the right one? One with the right company . . . at the right salary . . . with the right opportunities for advancement. Ever considered enlisting the aid of a Professional Employment Service? We think you should. For a number of sound reasons. It's our business. Who could possibly be any better at it? Who works with more companies every day? Knows all about them and their people? Knows their employment needs, their growth possibilities, their philosophies? And another thing. Employment Services have come a long way since your father set out for his first job. Your knowledgeable guidance counsellors and career advisors are aware of this and recommend that you utilize a Professional Employment Service as a good way to obtain employment. Today, the best ones are staffed with thoroughly trained Employment Counsellors who are specialists in every phase of the business. They are interested in helping you . . . not just fitting someone into an available job. There are definite advantages when you seek the services of a Professional Employment Service that is national in scope. More job opportunities locally and nationally . . . for secretaries, accountants, bookkeepers, management trainees, receptionists, salesmen, engineers, and graduates looking for almost any type of job. But you must graduate. Professional Employment Services know that completing your schooling gives you a far better opportunity for a successful, profitable future, regardless of your academic standing in your class. The idea that the top $ _{1/2} $ gets all the good opportunities is a myth. Check it out for yourself. Call us at HA 1-3410. Snelling AND Snelling World's Largest Professional Employment Service 200 Altman Bldg. 11th & Walnut Kansas City, Mo. YOUR SHOP CLASSIFIED ADS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to $ r$ students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Renault Dauphine, 1962 exceptionally clean inside and out, near new rubber, seat belts, big radio and heater. See to appreciate. Owner will pay for cash over $100 under dealer price or for yourself. 1528 W, 21st St, V 1-93883 Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive, micrographed and 2 bound for $4.25 cover. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery TYPEWRITERS -Office size and portables, new and used, manual and electric. Several brands. Rental-purchase rentals and service. Office supplies, equipment, and furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. St., V1 3-3644 1848 Built Roadmaster Convertible, Perfect body, new upholstery, 4 new tires, engine rebuilt, top in fair shape, Power windows, power seats, power top. $450.00. Call Tom after 6 p.m., VI. 3-7334. tf Wolensk stereo 4-track tape recorder and Remington portable typewriter, equipment trading for camera equipment. Gary Grazda, VI 1-21483 VI 1-2601. Clearance! Clearance! Tape recorders, stercos, stereo FM radios cut to $60. AM-FM radios cut to $19.99. Hurry to Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. -18 Across the burning sands of the Arabian Desert, at no little risk to my faithful Bedouin camel driver, I knew the humble beduin was beautiful, rare and exotic black Meershaum pipe. Handcarved by master artisans in the image of a notorious caliph of the Ottoman empire, this work of art features a genuine brown fur brave caravan has brought this treasure of the Near East to you at the most reasonable price of sixty American dollars. Address s serious inquiries to Caravans of the Nile, peruvian company, Art Treasures, Box 2, University Daily Kansan. Clearance! Clearance! 500 tires at lowest prices ever. Example. 659-14 (695-14) white wall, 100 level Mustang or Rambler size, cut to $12 each tax; taupe wall, 100 level Mustang, 15'x15' to $15 plus tax. Ray Stoneback's, 293-911 Mass. St. 1-18 Chevy, 2 dr. H.T. Gray Impala, black interior, 300 HP stack, P.S. Posttraction, Tinted glass, 22,000, original owner, must sell. Call V1 2-684-3177 1961 Nash Rambler station wagon, Radio and heater—seat belts. New snow tires. One owner car. Call VI 2- 3901. tt Must sell 1966 GTO, $550 under a seller's price, perfect condition, no groomicks. Call Doug Dienell, VI 3-5721. 1-12 1959 Corvette 283, 4-speed, dual quad VI 3-1875, Kent Sawyer 1-1219 Ohio Honda 1946 Ford 2-door sedan Mechanic- Call Mike Sullivan. 529 McCollum, 730 Call Mike Sullivan. 1957 Ford Ranchwagon. V-8. stand- ing. FOE-6290. FS VI 3-8292 or U 4-3270. Fossi VI, Sm 3-8292 or U 4-3270. Sports car owners, we have castrol oil, prestolite swark at quality prices. Blevins, 7th and Michigan. 1-21 1 / Chevy, 2 door ht. V-8, stick. good mechanical condition and paint. guitar for 1911 Stewart. VI 2-6351 VI 3-3310 VI -12 163 Stingray, silver, removable top, FMD, 240-watt FM, pug wheels, new tires, perfect condition, 31,000 miles. $2,485 Three-week condition of Baldwin. TU-1-21 W-diskle 1957 Ford truck overdrive. Very good condition. VI 3-7052 attest 5 p.m. or we can bring it. 1957 Ford, automatic, two-door, snow- good. Condition Call V1 2-9260. Ferrari competition shell and frame, make offer. Imported Gerard model 301 turntable with empire arm and bette arm, b-belt over $100. Haight-shot Sonica VH.F. transmitter. $120. Leave message. Don Reed. VI 2-1200. 1-13 Bicycle, English 3-speed, heavy saddle baskets. Call Vi I 2-3623. 1-14 Monaual HI-FI components. Garrard RC-80 changer, Monarch FM-80 charger, 1200 watt amplifier. Wollensk T-1500 tape recorder, combination tweeter/woofer in cabinets. Over $400 new, sell for $135 or separately. VI I 2-0433. 1-18 Must sacrifice. Wollensk tape recorder, mono four speed $40. Royal Portable typewriter $20. Both bluetooth $28 Tenn. Earnings. Ask or Hank. 1-14 Save $85 on a Minolta SR7 single lens Reflex F1.4 lns. Also to Tom Thomson Olympus 3023. Best time Sankyo. Phone VI: 3024. Best time 5:30 to 6:30 TYPING Experienced typist has IBM electric to type your thesis, dissertation, term paper, research report, journal, notet and accurate work. Reasonable rates Phone Mrs. Gilbert. VI 2-2088 Experienced typist, 8 years experience in these and term papers. Electric typewriter. Fast, accurate service. Receivable rates. ALL Mrs Barlow. 212-576-3041. Wanted: Typing in my home. Experienced and accurate in term papers and theses. Call VI 3-2651 any time Typist, experienced with term papers, theses and dissertations, with give your typing immediate attention with electric machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W. 13th. vii 3-6048. Secretary familiar with legal terms will do typing—briefs, memorandums, papers, these, dissertations, Fast, accurate billing rates. Marsh Goff. VI 3-2577 Experienced typist, will type in my home. Accurate typing, reasonable rates and prompt service. Call Mrs. Brown at VI 2-0210 **tf** Experienced typist will do only theses on electric typewriter. Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558. tf Accurate typing by experienced typist. Term papers, themes, theses and dissertations. Reasonable rates and fast. VI 2-1561. tt Secretary with many years experience, will type your term papers, Fast, accurate work at reasonable rates. Call VI 1176296 after 5 p.m. Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses, dissertations. Specifics are Saec Electric typetwriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mr Rauckman, M 2-7281. Experienced secretary will do typing VI 3-0380, after 5:99 call VI 3-0392, if it's not done. Experienced typist will do theses and term papers. 4 years experience at KU. Phone Mrs. Oxford at VI 2-6673. Former Harvard and University of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports, and theses. Phone VI 3-7207. tt TYPING — GESTETNER MIMEO- MING — Mrs. McEidowney, Vf 3-8568 Expert Typing -Theses, dissertations and term papers. Electric typewriter, standard rates. Mrs. Mishler. VI 3-1029. 1-17 Typing done at reasonable rates by experienced typist. Fast accurate work. Call Betty Vincent, call VI 3-5504. tf Typing done by experienced secretary for 25e each double spaced page. Call Ethel Henderson, 2565 Ridge Ct., VI 2-0122. tt Fast, accurate; immediate attention given to all term papers, reports, theses, etc. Mrs. Donna Stewart, VI 3-621) 1-21 Topela students desiring theses, dissertations, rough drafts, or term papers typed fast and accurately on electric typewriter by experienced typist, call Mrs. O. L. Cook, CR 2-1479, 1715 Sims, Topela 1-20 Typing Wanted—Thessa, essays, and Neat. Neat and accurate. Calc V 1-21 4156 Will do fast accurate typing in my Standard typewriter. 1-121 3-8103 FOR RENT Vacancy in a contemporary home. Private entrance and bath. Five evening meals weekly. $70 monthly. Mails paid. Call VI 3-9635 until tp. Extra nice quiet furnished apartment for mature man, carpeted, nice kitchen, utilities paid. 2 blocks from Union. Available now. VI 3-8534 tf Vancancies in contemporary home for young man, prefer graduate stud- meal. Home, pool, home eco- meals if desired. telephone VI 3-9655, call before 6 p.m. Married, graduate students, faculty- 2 bedroom apartment, $95.00. Two available January 1. one available February 1. Call for brochure, VI 3-2116. Santee Apartments office, 1123 India. Rooms for men students, some available NOW, some February 1, with or without kitchen privileges. Call VI 1-12 0-1607 Wanted — woman graduate student roommate to share: room 2-b-droom apartment, south location. VI 2-3234 after 5:15 p.m. Furnished apartments for 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5 men. Call VI 3-0131 or VI 3-013 1-13 Rooms for graduate women. 3 single available at semester or ask. Kitchen facilities. One block from Union. Call VI 3-6979. 1-21 HERTZ RENT A-CAR. Spcial rates Call: 617-320-5490, Call: 31-10251, Call: CALL Gayle, VI 3-10251 1-21 MISCELLANEOUS Die Bierstube: Stingen, trinken und essen German style. Featuring student's favorite dark beverage and student's favorite light beverage from Golden, Colorado. Also serving deluxe night Wednesday night. Party Room available. 14th and Tennessee VI 2-9441. BLANDING PARTY PHOTOGRAPHY Your satisfaction is my strongest Your Gold embosed party titles; Kocacole $x7, $11.0; custom enlarged B&W x57, surely our experts' experience at for references and samples call Dave at VI 2-6515. Need any Sewing or Mending done? Please rates Call after 9:00 p.m. 1-2-3901 Wanted: General house work preferably in sorority, fraternity, or prized academic institution and have references. Write to Housekeeping, 1132 Conn., Lawrence, tt PARTY TIME—Building available for parties and dances. Call VI 3-7453. Ralph Freed. tt Sports Car Maintenance and Repairs by car and for the enthusiast. Super tunshell modifications and accessories Ray Covers Coatings and accessories Cars, East 23d St. VI 2-1291. tt Tune-ups — Evenings and weekends only; also other automobile work. appointment only VI 3-2968, behind 837 Connecticut St. Farmers Garage. 837 Math Tutor: B.A. degree in Math from KU. Experienced in tutoring geometry, algebra, calculus, and analytic geometry. Phone VI 3-0927. Experienced photographer in children and family portraits. Reasonable rate. Will take pictures in your home. Call VI 2-6148. tf LOST Reward offered for lost glasses- black rimmed. Contact David M. Miller, room 635, Templin Hall, VI 2-1200. 1-12 Yellow Pickett Slide Rule in Grey Case with initials R.M.S. Lost in Malott Hall before Christmas vacation. Call Rob Shrader at V 3-5770. REWARD — lost "Fundamentals of Physical Geography," Trewartha — author. Contact Marjorie Horwitz, VI 2-9100. 1-13 FOUND Man's coat left in Hona's Laudry, and he wore a jacket with #1-12 for this ad. VI 3-19631. HELP WANTED Students looking for part time work Work experience at Sandy's Drive-In 2120 W. 9th Reliable student for selling imports. Apply 920 La. after 6 p.m. tf Room available for girl student free in exchange for baby-sitting services. Room with half-bath separated from room in mice neighborhood. Call VI 2-6445. 1-11 University family wishes mother's helper. Room and board in exchange for babystitting one child. Discuss terms. VI 3-4098, Mrs. Maher. 1-12 We have an opening for one male student to work. Two evening shifts per week. Tom Dixon after Dixon at Dickson Drive-In tauntant, VI 3-7464. I-14-1 A proven part-time income opportunity or college men. You can fit into a year-round placement course is offered. If you need a year-round income that will finance your entire college expenses, send resume to Box 128, Shawnee Mission, Kan. 1-14 Private room available, rent free to a dependable girl student for babysitting services. Call VI 3-9150 for interview. 1-13 Would like someone vicinity of 25th and Ridge Court to watch five-year-old girl, mornings only. Call VI 3-5947 or VI 2-0100. 1-17 WANTED Will Baby Sit In my home or yours Calls after 4:00 pm VI 1-23911 One or 2 men to share 2 bedroom apt. Utilities V-3-7251 Share $160 utilities. V-3-7251 CLASSIFIEDS Daily Kansan GET FAST RESULTS Wednesday, January 12, 1966 11 8TH ST. SHOE REPAIR 8TH ST. SHOE REPAIR Quality work on half soles, heels. We repair purses Shoe dyeing 107 E. 8TH HONN'S Across From The High School 19th & La. VI 3-9631 Coin Operated Laundry and Dry Cleaning OPEN 24 HOURS Now Leasing 10th and Ethery Rd. WEST HILLS Lawrence's First Total Electric Luxury Apartments for information call W. E. Almquist—VI 3-3610 "MOORE" BURGER 100% Try a MALTS - SHAKES Originality FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PHONE VI. 2 1800 1414 W.6th VI 3-9588 IN FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION especially for you by Alexander's 826 IDWA LAWRENCE, KANEAS We are always happy to serve you Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy We are always happy to serve you with HAVING A PARTY? LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Open to 10 p.m. Every Evening Ph.VI 3-0350 COMPLETE CLASSICAL RECORD SELECTION COLUMBIA RECORDS Weaver YOUR GASOLINE DOLLAR DERBY GOES FARTHER at... GARY'S DERBY SERVICE 2330 Iowa Lawrence YOU CAN'T BUY A BETTER GAS...AT ANY PRICE MU President Denies Replacement Rumor COLUMBIA, Mo. — (UPI) Elmer Ellis, president of the University of Missouri, today labeled a report that an Ohio State dean would succeed him as just a rumor. Ellis will retire in June at the mandatory age of 65. A Columbia radio station, KFRU, reported Tuesday night it had "learned authoritatively" that John C. Weaver, dean of faculties at Ohio State, "would be appointed to that post." Ellis said the matter of his successor is up to the university's It could not be confirmed by any board member that Weaver would be Ellis' successor. Board of Curators and they will make any such announcement. But John Schwada, chancellor of the university, said, "I've known about it for several days." Then he added: "No comment." New Dean Announced Howard E. Mossberg, associate dean of the School of Pharmacy at Southwestern State College, Weatherford, Okla., will be the new dean of pharmacy at KU beginning June 1, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe announced last night. SUA ANNOUNCES Summer Flight To Europe via Air France $280.00 Round Trip New York-Paris-New York Leave June 10—Return Aug.8 Due To Overwhelming Response We Are Extending Contracts Are Still Available For More Information Call SUA Offices—UN 4-3477 Look for our ad under Pizzerias in your new Lawrence Telephone Directory WE CARRY EXTRAS > NO DELIVERY CHARGE SAUSAGE 503-412-634 ★ PEPPERONI Piping Hat Pizza Delivered In Humidity Controlled Ovens 10-MINUTE DELIVERY PEPPERONI HAMBURGER ★ DOUBLE CHEESE All King-Size 12" Pixans ★ SHANTY INTERNATIONAL DIAL VI 2-2500 Mobile Oven Menu ★ AND OTHER VARIETIES Mossberg has research interests, primarily in the cardiovascular area and has published in the field. He will succeed Duane G. Wenzel, who resigned recently to return to teaching and research. Wenzel became dean in 1963 succeeding the late J. Allen Reese, who headed the School of Pharmacy for 23 years. Mossberg, born in Chicago, Ill., received most of his education in Florida, attending Orlando high school and Junior College. He earned the B.S. degree in pharmacy and the Ph.D. in pharmacology from the University of Florida. PIZZA MOBILE DELIVERY SERVICE (Radio-Controlled) MOST DELICIOUS PIZZA IN LAWRENCE At 33, he will become the youngest dean now at KU, taking that distinction from James K. Logan, dean of the School of Law. We Are Equipped to Deliver 180 Fresh Pizza's at One Time LET US SERVE YOUR NEXT PARTY Mossberg is a registered phar- THE SHANTY 10 Dining and player piano party facilities under the Red Dog Inn for OPEN FOR SUNDAY DINING 15 to 250. Call us for information. Wednesday, January 12, 1966 Delivering more pizzas than anyone in Lawrence THE SHANTY MENU 644 MASS. For the best in — —and still quicker — always hot New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD HOME SERVICES Daily Kansan for the best in — ● dry cleaning ● alterations ● reweaving 26 Mass 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 take advantage of the Yamaha Sale! visit Ern's Cycle Shop 950 N. 3rd VI 3-5815 FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Specializes in semester break reservations. of HOWARD E. MOSSBERG L. G. Balfour Co. For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry Gift Box Exclusive Representative - Novelties - Favors PETER M. BARNARD - Lavalliers * Rings macist in Oklahoma with five year's experience. His wife has also been practicing pharmacy in Weatherford. ● Badges ● Guards Sportswear Muas - Paddles - Trophies - Puddle - - Cup - - Award- Al Lauter 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 Andrews Gifts - Cups * Award* VI 2-1523 U-DRIVE-THRU That's all you do. 2315 Louisiana Lawrence, Kansas No need to drive a dirty car anymore. Open Wednesday Evenings Malls Shopping Center Plenty of Free Parking GRANT'S Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING Extra power spray will be 10c extra. This service is optional. Drive-In Pet Center Stay in your car and drive away in a sparkling clean car. U-DRIVE-THRU CAR WASH 50¢ SENIORS Hixon Studio is your 1965-66 Jayhawker Photographer Jayhawker Photographer Please Call Now For Your Appointment 摄影 HIXON STUDIO "Portraits of Distinction" Bob Blank, Owner 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 12, 1966 9 SUA presents "AN EVENING WITH DON FRIEDMAN" Jazz Piano Recital THURSDAY, JAN. 13 8:00 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union Admission $1.00 Tickets can be bought at the information Desk at the Union. PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS THE RD DOG MARK VI 2-0100 7th & Mass. RED DOG INN Girls Night Out Wednesday-Jan.12 "Bluethings" NO COVER - Friday — FREE TGIF with The "Bluethings." Friday Evening The Fabulous Red Dogs - Saturday-Jive Rockers An Excellent New Attraction in the Midwest.A combination of The Invincibles & The Sole Kings. A Great Rhythm & Blues & Top 40 Revue 8 Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 12, 1966 Me S cl IN Memo Save time with exams coming up by having clothes cleaned at INDEPENDENT INDEPENDENT 9th and Mississippi ★ TWO AVAILABLE LOCATIONS ★ ★ FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY ★ ★ SPECIAL INDEPENDENT ATTENTION ★ ★ ONE DAY SERVICE IF NEEDED ★ INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners VI 3-4011 740 Vermont Fraternity Plays Big Brother Role "Big Brother" will be watching over a nine-year-old Lawrence boy for one year. This is not the "Big Brother" of 1984 fame, but instead members of the Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity, who will be "Big Brothers" to the fatherless youth. EARLIER THIS year, several members of the fraternity thought of this idea and began working with the Lawrence Welfare Office to devise a workable plan. The program will consist of taking the boy to shows and games and providing anything he needs for school, and having him stay in the AKL house overnight on some weekends, Bruce Cook, Newton junior and chairman of the committee, said. If the idea works out, another boy might be sponsored later, Cook said. AKL will sponsor the program for a trial period of one year. The boy, who lives in a foster home, was chosen by the committee and the Lawrence Welfare Office. "THE YOUNG BOY will not be the only one to benefit from the program. The fraternity members will also gain by promoting one of our ideals, aggressive Christian character," Cook said. AKL is presently the only fraternity in Kansas sponsoring a program of this type; however, members of the committee hope that other fraternities at KU will be encouraged to start similar programs, Cook said. Sigma Chis Name Spring Officers Ben Hudson, Fort Scott sophomore, has been elected president of Sigma Chi fraternity for the spring semester. Other officers are Dave McClain, St. Joseph, Mo., sophomore, vice-president; Bill Southern, Ellinwood sophomore, secretary; Phil Hammons, Fort Scott senior, corresponding secretary; Rick Pinne, Kansas City sophomore, historian; Jeff Ellis, Casper, Wyo., senior, house manager; Steve Meyer, Leavenworth junior, treasurer; Gary Cullor, Fort Scott sophomore, pledge trainer; and Chuck Warner, Wichita junior, rush chairman. Only 26 Flunk Only 26 of the University's 2,000 students failed out of school in the 1911-12 school year. Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 12, 1966 Brown Cordovan Navy Green Camel WEEJUNS with love $13.95 Bass 017084 - 817798 ARENSBERG'S 819 Mass. VI 3-3470 Ober's Ober's SALE Ober's This year, because of the unseasonable warm weather, not only are values rewarding but the selection is particularly good. All clearance items are from our regular stocks, so the savings are based on actual prices right up to the time of the sale. Although our entire stocks are not included, sale selections are so broad that you're sure to find exactly what you want. Famous brands such as Hart Schaffner & Marx, Kingsridge, Enro, Donegal, Lord Jeff and Alligator are all included. SUITS $59.95 values ... $48.95 69. 95 values... 56.95 75. 00 values... 59.95 89. 50 values... 69.95 100. 00 values ... 78.95 SPORT COATS $35.00 values ... $27.95 39. 50 values... 32.95 45. 00 values... 35.95 50. 00 values... 39.95 65. 00 values... 49.95 TOPCOATS $45.00 values ... $37.95 69. 95 values... 56.95 85. 00 values... 69.95 125. 00 values... 89.95 All Weather Coats $29.95 values . . . $19.95 42. 50 values... 31.95 49. 95 values... 39.95 65. 00 values... 49.95 SWEATERS $11.95 values ... $6.95 15. 95 values... 8.95 19. 95 values...10.95 29. 95 values...15.95 $5.00 values . . . $3.95 SPORT SHIRTS 5. 95 values... 4.45 6. 95 values... 4.95 8. 95 values . . . 5.95 TROUSERS $13.95 values... $9.95 15. 95 values...10.95 17. 95 values...12.95 OUTER COATS 24. 95 values . . . $19.95 29. 95 values... 21.95 39. 95 values... 27.95 Savings on Assorted SOX - TIES - SHOES - BOYS' ITEMS Ober's Lawrence's Fashion Leader Since 1896 821 Mass. VI 3-1951 OPEN THURSDAY UNTIL 8:30 6 Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 12, 1966 ACME LAUNDRY - Will return your shirts on hangers - Will give you one day service - Will mark your laundry free for you - Will give you free laundry bags - Will starch your shirts if requested - Will give you the best service possible 3 locations to serve you best: - Downtown - 1111 Massachusetts - On the Mall-711 West 23rd. - Hillcrest Shopping Center -925 Iowa ACME Dynan Heads Sports Publicity Information Director Finishes One Year at KU After Replacing the Late Don Pierce By Emery Goad From Pom Pon girl advisor at UCLA to sports information director at KU, Phillip Dynan is leading quite a life. Dynan accepted the KU job one year ago this week upon the death of Don Pierce, killed in an auto accident. His office in Allen Field House is the scene of what might be called organized confusion. Each week there are from one to two mailings to over 500 outlets throughout the country. DYNAN WORKS closely with newspaper, radio, and television men to keep the public informed about the sporting world at KU. M. DAVID MCKINNEY Phil Dynan Not the least important and probably the most interesting aspect of his job is answering fan mail, which pours into his office daily. A typical letter, neatly printed by an obviously young fan, came the other day addressed to Information Office: Dear Sir. I am a fan of Walt Chamberlain from KU and now a fan of Walt Wesley's. I would like to see him come to Philadelphia and play for the 76ers. (Chamberlain is now a member of the team.) Please send me his picture and as many autographs of the team as possible. Yours truly, Richard Baker Mail, such as this, is never unusual in the director's office and Dynan says he always tries to answer every letter. "You never know, the kid might be 6'5" tall and only 10 years old." he said. Dynan first came to KU as a student in 1942 and even then it was his ambition to work in the sports publicity field. Since that time Dynan's list of prerequisites includes: students, Missouri State College; coach, University of Delaware; assistant sports information director, and basketball, and head baseball coach, St. Louis University; football, basketball land track coach, Central Collegiate, Regina, Saskatchewan; instructor, San Francisco University; assistant in charge of Pom Pon girls at U.C.L.A. for a summer; and English instructor and faculty advisor for the year book and newspaper, West Virginia Tech. DYNAN'S LOYALTY to KU is such that he reports, "On my wedding day my wife and I attended a KU football game in the rain." It is his wife whom he credits for the job he has today. "She pushed me back to school after I dropped out after one semester and joined the armed forces." After he returned from action in World War II at the age of 29, Dynan lettered in football and track at Kansas City Junior College. "Football was especially tough," he said. "I got beaten-up almost every day." Since that time, as a student he has never left the playing field as participant or coach. Then he came to KU. He feels that coaching gave him the background to carry out his current duties. "How can you write about something if you do not know what it's all about," he says. DYNAN SAID the sport curriculum at KU is extremely varied and versatile. Most schools have only three major sports: basketball, football, and baseball. Here, track is added to the major list. "I feel KU has the best balanced athletic department in the United States," he said. KU has won the "all sports" trophy in the Big Eight Conference the last two years. The distinguished-1ooking, grey-haired director said he is looking forward to opposing his brother later this season in the National Collegiate Athletic playoffs. His brother has an identical job with Bradley University. Jim Ryun Unable To Run Tonight The annual freshman-varsity track meet will be held at 6 p.m. tonight at Allen Field House. Jim Ryun was scheduled to run, but because of a cold will be unable to compete tonight. John Lawson will compete with six other runners in the mile. Admission by Student ID. MU Meets Pamex In Big Eight Action KANSAS CITY—(UPI)—Missouri's struggling Tigers tonight host the touring Pamex Oilers, comprised of players who participated on the 1960 Mexico Olympic basketball team. It's the only game tonight involving a Big Eight basketball team but will not count for Missouri because it was arranged by the People-to-People program. For the Oilers, whose tallest man is 6-4, it's the seventh game of a 10-game, 21-day tour which includes colleges in Texas, Oklahoma, Missouri, Kansas, Tennessee and Kentucky. The Pamex team lost to the Phillips Oilers Tuesday night, 79-88. Missouri coach Bob Vanatta indicated today that Ron Coleman, the Big Eight's No. 1 scorer with a 22.2 average, Charlie Rudd, Rob Vanatta and Tom Officer would draw starting assignments. The fifth starter will be either Gary Frazier or Bob Linseale. The Pamex tour started Jan. 2 and will end Jan. 23. Two crucial league games are scheduled Saturday. Kansas, ranked both nationally and undefeated in three league starts, invades Iowa State and Nebraska travels to K-State, where both clubs will put 2-0 loop records on the line. Dynan said, "This job certainly does not pay by the hour." He can always be seen traveling with the football and basketball teams whenever possible. Usually he is sending advance publications ahead of the teams to the site of a future contest. KU Coach Dr. James Naismith, originator of the game of basketball, served as professor of physical education for 36 years on Mount Oread. 5 Daily Kansan 5 Wednesday, January 12, 1966 Capote is currently enjoying the literary limelight, due to "In Cold Blood," the story of the Clutter family murders near Garden City, Kan. Truman Capote, author of the soon-to-be-published "In Cold Blood," and other books, will visit KU in late April, George Worth, professor of English, said today. Capote to Visit KU in April New Hours COOKIES 25 Varieties 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. 7:00 a.m. - Midnite Friday & Saturday 99¢ Luncheon Mon. thru Fri. AT The Pancake Man 1528 West 23rd WOLFSMAGEN OF AMERICA, INC. Who wears the pants in the Flint family? [Family Portrait] We get lots of nice mail about Volkswagen Station Wagons. But Mrs. Anidelle Flint of Fresno, Cal., gave us fits "Good grief!"she wrote.And we shuddered. Was she going to tell us her Volkswagen didn't get over 20 miles on a gallon? Or 35,000 miles on tires? It was much worse than that: She was angry because we'd said husbands are the only people who can appreciate a station wagon that looks like a bus. When it comes to appreciating the homely virtues of our homely wagon, Mrs. Flint (mother of six) is the undisputed man of the house. She not only appreciates it, but she made her husband (father of six) appreciate it. To the point where he went out and bought one. "I love the way it fits almost twice the packing space of a big wagon into 4 feet less parking space," she said. "But I'll bet you got the whole idea from your wife." Maybe we did. And maybe we didn't. VW "Lawrence's Only Authorized Volkswagen Dealer" CONZELMAN MOTORS SALES — SERVICE — PARTS Overseas Delivery Available 2522 Iowa VW (Hwy. 59 South) AUTHORIZED DEALER VI 3-2200 Colombian Students Tell Views On U.S. By Barbara Lynn Williams KU has been playing host to a group of six Colombian students, who have been sent here by their respective universities "in order to know America, to meet the people, learn their customs, and compare the American student with the Colombian student." Hector Jose Pulido, National University of Colombia; Horacio Mosquera, the Escuela de Administracion Y Finanzas; and Carlos Albertos Osorio, Julio Castellanos, Carlos Correal, and Nacho, all from the Universidad Industrial de Sonlanoer, are on a month's tour of the United States. AS TO WHAT impressed them most in the U.S., they all said it was the mechanization of the American Society. "There is a machine for everything," they said. The currency in Colombia is the peso, about the equivalent of seven cents in American currency. Hector Pulido attends the National University for 120 pesos (about eight dollars) a year. Education at the Universidad Industrial is expensive, he said. It is $60 a year. ON A GALA night in a Colombian town, an American dollar will buy four pitchers of beer and three packets of imported (American) cigarettes, one of the students said. The technical training given in the American universities has impressed them, they said; but, they added, the American student's interest in national and international affairs is much less than a Colombian student's. They feel the schools in Colombia give the students a better perspective of world affairs than do the American schools. One student was particularly offended when he told someone in the U.S. that he was from the Colombian University, and the person did not know where Colombia was. THERE ARE ONLY 28 universities for the 17 million people in that country. Bogota, the largest city, has the biggest university, the National University, with 10,000 students, and 13 smaller ones with between 1,000 and 2,000 students in each. After the Kennedy assassination, one of the Bogota universities was renamed Kennedy University. The six students will also be visiting Toledo, Buffalo, Washington D.C., and Miami before returning home. 4 Daily Kansan Wednesday January 18 1966 Wednesday, January 12, 1966 TEST - Are you a KU student? - Are you 18? - Are you 18? - Do you have a driver's license? - Are you planning a trip between semesters? - Are you going with a group or organization? GO BY CAR — HAVE A CAR THERE Special 7 Day Rate, FREE Mileage HERTZ RENT-A-CAR For Information CALL GAYLE VI3-1028 LET HERTZ PUT YOU IN THE DRIVER'S SEAT 20th ANNUAL CEREMONY Bette Davis as The Nanny Granada NWEATRE - Telephone V13-5780 First there was "Baby Jane" then—"Hush, Hush Sweet Charlotte" NOW ... 20th Anniversary Bette Davis as "The Nanny" EVE. Shows 7:00 & 9:00 Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 NEXT! A WILD BEDTIME STORY! Doris Rod Day Taylor "Do Not Disturb" Starts Sat. Look Up! Look Down! Look Out! JAMES DOND DOES IT EVERYWHERE! "THUNDERBALL" PANAVISION TECHNICOLORS UNITED ARTISTS Don't Miss Our T.G.I.F. Premiere Peek Friday, Jan. 28 11:30 p.m. Advance Tickets On Sale Now! Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 "THUNDE" "THUNDERBALL" Look Up! Look Down! Look Out! JAMES DOND DOES IT EVERYWHERE! "THUNDERBALL" PANAVISION TECHNICOLORS UNITED ARTISTS Don't Miss Our T.G.I.F. Premiere Peek Friday, Jan. 28 11:30 p.m. Advance Tickets On Sale Now! Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI3-5788 Granada THEATRE · Telephone VI 3-5788 PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS THE SOUND OF JAMES BROWN New LP Hit I've Got You (I Feel Good) $1.99 KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO MALLS SHOPPING CENTER MALLS SHOPPING CENTER All Diamond Needles on Sale $5.95 Royal College Shop 837 Mass. VI 3-4255 an oldmaine trotter is a work of art! As You kid ha th old C. B. Cardigan Black, Brown, Navy, Red AAAA to B to 10 $13.00 Size 11 $14.00 As seen in Harper's Bazaar You'll love this buttery soft kidskin sport casual with the handsewn vamp detailing and the silky-soft foam back lining. A moccasin so soft and so comfortable you'll hardly know you have it on. HORSE RACING oldmaine trotters Panel Sees Need For KU Change In an effort to determine where KU stands in the ranks of higher educational facilities in Kansas, a panel, sponsored by Collegiate Young Republicans, last night probed the problems of selective admission, increased tuition, and the impact of student demonstrations on legislation. Members of the panel included Sen. Joseph C. Harder, chairman of the Senate Education Committee; Sen. Charles Arthur, a member of the Senate Ways and Means Committee; Rep. Ed Boyd, vice-chairman of the House Education Committee; Rep. John Conard, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee; and Rep. Wayne Angell, a member of the House Ways and Means Committee. THE BOARD OF REGENTS was represented by Max Bickford, executive secretary, and the administration by Raymond Nichols, vice-chancellor for finance. Rep. Boyd, speaking on selective admission, listed the arguments for and against the principle and concluded by saying, "The time has come for us to consider whether or not the liberal admissions policy of this state should be tightened." On the possibility of an increased tuition, Bickford said, "We favor the lowest fees possible. The tuition charged in Kansas compares favorably with that charged in surrounding states. I can't predict when fees will be Credit — (Continued from page 1) HE POINTED out that banks must check a student's identification more thoroughly than a private merchant, because a student's credit request with a bank is usually mueh higher. Also, if a student is under 21, banks cannot make a loan to him. Dick Holzmeister, assistant vice-president of Capital Federal Savings and Loan, explained savings and loan companies can make only first mortgage loans. For the student, this includes only educational loans. Repayment on this type of loan is due five months after graduation. "WHEN MAKING this kind of loan, we check the Aids and Awards Department at the University for a student's scholastic standing. All such student loans have been paid on time. We have had very few credit problems with the student," Holzmeister said. Beneficial Finance Co. has made about 30 student loans till now, according to manager Sam Lipari. "The student does not cause as much a credit problem as the normal individual. Official Bulletin On Campus Interviews for Thursday: Albuquerque, N.M., public schools, K-12, 106 Ba; Jefferson Co. Dist. 51, Lakewood, Colo.; K-12, 305 Union; Omaha, Neb., public schools; K-12, Oread Room, Union. Foreign Students: I.E. meeting tonight, 7:15 p.m. Kansas Union. TODAY Oral Phase, Speech I Exemption Exam, 3:30 p.m. Lindley Annex 5. Psychology Colloquium 4. p.m. Prof. Maynard Shelly. Bailey Aud. Prof. Maynard Shelly. Bailey Aud. Bailey Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel. Bron Rectal, 7 p.m. Albert Gerken Classical Film, 7 p.m. "The Tempest" OAK. Critical Film, 7 p.m. "The 39 Steps." Dybe Auditorium. Opera Workshop, 8 p.m. Swarthout Recital Hall. TOMORROW raised again, but I do know they are being raised rather dramatically in nearby states" Der Deutsche Verein wird am 13 Juni 2015 in der Bierstruc zusammenkommien Catholic Mass, 6:45 a.m. and 5 p.m. 8 p.m. Student Center YCS meeting, 8 p.m. Student Center Lutheran Worship, 4:30 p.m. Sponsor by all Lutherans. Danforth chapel. ON THE IMPACT of student demonstrations on legislation, Sen. Arthur said, "It influenced me in no way. It might possibly have bothered some of my colleagues but no one ever mentioned it." Concerning the effect of political pressure upon the Board of Regents, Rep. Conard said, "It seems to me that rather than the energetic leadership we should expect, the Regents regularly present programs which, as a first consideration, they think will be acceptable to the Governor and the legislature. "This seems backward to me. It should be the Board's place to present programs which are in the best interests of the State's educational system and leave it up to the legislature and the Governor to prune, modify, and otherwise decide the program's acceptability." PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS Daily Kansan 3 Wednesday, January 12, 1966 presents The Classical Film Series THE 39 STEPS (1935 - U.S.A.) One of the earliest and best known of Alfred Hitchcock's films. Admission 60¢ Tonight-7:00 p.m. Dyche Auditorium diebolt's SEMI-ANNUAL SALE diebolt's Of Fine Quality Men's Wear SUITS - $59.50 Values ___ $44.95 $69.50 Values ___ $52.95 $79.50 Values ___ $56.95 $85.00 Values ___ $63.95 SPORT SHIRTS $5.00 Values ___ $3.95 $5.95 Values ___ $4.45 $6.95 Values ___ $4.95 $14.95 Values ___ $9.95 SPORTCOATS - $35.00 Values ___ $26.95 $39.95 Values ___ $28.95 $45.00 Values ___ $33.95 DRESS SHIRTS (Whites Included) SLACKS - $5.00 Values $3.39 $5.95 Values $3.95 $6.95 Values $4.45 $12.95 Values ___ $9.95 $15.95 Values ___ $11.95 $18.95 Values ___ $13.95 SWEATERS $11.95 Values ___ $7.95 $14.95 Values ___ $8.95 $17.95 Values ___ $11.95 $22.95 Values ___ $15.95 - JACKETS - 40% to 75% OFF CAR COATS 25% OFF diebolt's 843 Mass. VI 3-0454 Editorials Censorship confusion Ours is the most Christian nation on earth, yet obviously one of the most confused. We ask that the church teach us standards and that our police protect us, and then, like so many bumps on a log, we allow an ever-increasing wave of printed filth to sweep over the country. WE SIT PASSIVELY by as some of this "neo-literature" tears down doors and throws up shades on things that are forbidden in all other forms of communication because of decency, modesty, taste, or restraint. Since the stalemate in our courts over what is art and what is filth, too many of today's pseudo-sophisticates accept without question some of the vilest scribblings as "art." And the consequences of this apathy are indeed dire. Juvenile crime and delinquency have been directly connected to the increase in pornography. STATISTICS RELEASED this year by the Federal Bureau of Investigation reveal that the rate of forcible rape increased 37 per cent in the last 10 years—with the greatest increase in the 16 to 19 age bracket. Paralleling this has been the rapid rise in salacious and lewd literature. Other crimes, ranging from armed robbery to homicide, although not on so spectacular an increase, are nevertheless real and present dangers. The most important factor, however, is in the nature of today's juvenile delinquency. No longer are juvenile crimes the mischievous pranks of children, but the violent acts of sadistic young monsters spawned by an apathetic society. There can be no doubt that the dirty book business is booming. Go to any newsstand—even those in a relatively small town like Lawrence—and observe some of the tasteless displays. The trash sex novel, once limited to circulation through old men who sneaked around corners "pssting" people into dark alleys for sales, has now emerged into full view as an $18 million a year business. IT IS PREDICTED that this year alone, the smut industry will produce over 500 different books exploiting lesbianism, nymphomania, male homosexuality, sadism, masochism, fetishism, incest and other topics formerly found only in medical and psychological tomes. These literary masterpieces will be presented under such enlightened and sophisticated titles as "Gutter Girl," "Queer for Kicks," "AC-DC Lover." "Queer Hustler," "The French Way," and so on. AS IF THE titles were not enough, these books tend to reveal their true nature with illustrations of hypermammary girls in various stages of undress on the covers. What is the solution? How can we weed out such blatant dirt-for-dirt's sake stuff from legitimate satires and artistic erotica? How can we clean up our bookstands without endangering good literature? That's an excellent question and, historically, one not easily answered. Perhaps there is no concrete answer. WE HAVE ALREADY tried the negative approach by simply and arbitrarily banning anything approaching earthiness without considering the purpose of the work. That's what started the whole problem of how far censorship should go. Now, we are at the other extreme where no limits exist. The problem is manifesting itself in a gradual erosion of our moral foundations. The first step in the solution must be the recognition of the problem. When our society comprehends that sex and four-letter words do not necessarily equal art, and sees the danger of making such an assumption, then we will be making giant steps forward. Monetary misery Bob Curtright Over the past few years the KU student has been badgered by increased expenses. This year has been no exception, for increases of "a couple of dollars here, and a couple of dollars there" have placed a strain on some of us. THE KU STUDENT was going to be inflicted with a $4 charge for basketball tickets this season. A substantial increase in the price of football tickets is likely for next year. Will all these increases soon cease? Are there no limits? Tuition fees increased $12 per semester this year and similar increases can be noted in the past few years. Parking stickers went from $4 to $10 last year. Student health insurance is up this year. Even senior dues increased by $2. All questions should be considered by the Athletic Board over the next few months as it considers these increases for next year. MISS FITT Jim King MAYBE THIS... OR THIS... ... A NEW HAIR STYLE... A DIFFERENT GLANCE... W-45 GOLLY, IT MUST BE AN IMPORTANT DATE FOR ALL THIS! IT IS! I MADE AN APPOINTMENT WITH ONE OF MY PROFESSORS TO SEE IF I CAN GET A GRADE RAISED. IT IS! I MADE AN APPPOINTMENT WITH ONE OF MY PROFESSORS TO SEE IF I CAN GET A GRADE RAISED. 2 Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 12, 1966 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office Founded 1889 Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, N.Y. 10022. Mail subscription rates: $4 a semester or $7 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. EXECUTIVE STAFF EXECUTIVE SHIFT MANAGING EDITOR ... Judy Farrell BUSINESS MANAGER ... Ed Vaughn EDITORIAL EDITORS ... Janet Hamilton, Karen Lambert NEWS AND BUSINESS STAFF Assistant Managing Editors ... Suzy Black, Susan Hartley Jane Larson, Jacke Thayer Circulation Manager ... Mike Robe Advertising Manager .. Dale Reinecker City Editor .. Joan McCabe Haskell Institute-Instant acculturation Editor's Note: As we struggle to solve the social problems that have grown with our history, we are increasingly aware of a social group and culture that is older than America. Sometimes described as "the forgotten American," the American Indian today is attempting to resolve the conflict of the ancient culture of life on the reservation and the necessity for adjusting to a fast-paced, technological society. How is he doing it? Principally by attending schools like the one in Lawrence—Haskell Institute. In a series of four articles, a Kansan editorial writer will examine the programs, the students, the conflicts and the future of Haskell graduates. What is Haskell Institute? How is it operated? What function does it perform? What programs does it offer? How effective are these programs? What is the educational philosophy of the school? Why does it remain segregated? What is the attitude of the administration toward the student? HASKELL INSTITUTE, located in southeast Lawrence, was founded in 1884. It is a United States government school for Indians, operated by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Department of the Interior. First of a series. The school is financed by Congressional appropriations. There is no state support. This year's budget is about $1,600,000. The Institute, situated on 320 acres, is one of the oldest government boarding schools for Indians. It enrolls about 1.050 students, equally divided between young men and women, 18-22 years of age. The school's motto, "Learn to Earn," is amplified by the slogan, "Every Haskell graduate is prepared to earn a living." Another motto is instilled in the Indian while he attends Haskell—"Always act to reflect honor on Haskell and the Indian people." Requirements for admission include one quarter Indian blood, high school graduation and approval of agency officials. "HASKELL IS A symbol of education and opportunity to the Indian race," Floyd E. Stayton, superintendent, said. "It prepares young Indian students for assimilation into the major culture." The school is divided into five departments: - The academic department supplements training students receive in other departments by offering courses in English, related math and related business. - The guidance department provides counseling and testing services. It governs dormitory living and student activities. - The business department offers training in the secretarial, stenographic, typing, clerical and accounting fields. - The home economics department provides training in meat cutting, commercial and institutional baking, food service and dormitory management. - The printing department offers job training in linetype operation, letterpress and offset printing. MOST MALE STUDENTS enroll in the vocational department, where they prepare for jobs as auto mechanics, painters, plumbers and welders. "Our whole program is geared to offer a terminal type educational program that will provide students with the necessary skills and social knowledge to become good citizens and productive and contributing members of the American society." Wallace E. Gallucci, principal, said. Haskell no longer provides high school training. The high school was phased out over a four-year period. Beginning last September the school offers only a two-year post high school program. WHY DID HASKELL phase out its high school program? "There is a need for trade and technical training." Stayten said. "Our interest here is to provide a variety of vocational training fields so we will be able to work with any student." WHY DOES HASKELL remain segregated? "We don't look at it that way." Stayton said. "The government has Indian schools as a result of treaties. Reservations can't support Indians. Students would not be able to attend school if it weren't for Haskell." Two special programs designed to introduce Haskell students to the new life they will enter after graduation were highlighted by Stayton. ONE IS CALLED apartment living. A former staT residence has been converted into an apartment type dwelling with seven units. Four students live in each unit for four weeks during their last year at Haskell. "They prepare their own meals and plan an imaginary budget—just as though they were in city life," Stavien said. In another special program an instructional dining room has been set up for seniors. Each senior eats in the Rose Room about five times. "Here they learn the social graces," Stayton said. "They receive instruction in buffet, family style and formal dining." "THE PROGRAM AT Haskell stresses responsibility—being on time and learning to work," Galluzzi said. "Haskell prepares young Indian men and women for participation in the modern social and economic life of the nation. This philosophy is emphasized in orientation sessions, counseling services and training programs." Tomorrow—The Haskell Student — Robert J. Rollins LBJ Reports To Congress WASHINGTON - (UPI) President Johnson goes before Congress and the nation tonight, prepared to express new determination to fight on two fronts—for peace in Southeast Asia and to achieve the domestic goals of his Great Society. The Chief Executive will deliver his State of the Union message before a joint session of the House and Senate. It will be televised in color across the country, live at 8 p.m. The nation is anxiously awaiting the report from the President, particularly in view of his campaign to bring the Communists to the conference table in the war. But the highly delicate peace offensive, which has reached the point of direct contact with the government of North Viet Nam, is forcing Johnson to tread carefully. For this reason his message is designed to stress reality without sounding too grim to the home audience or overly anxious to the Communists. Avery Suggests Budget Increase The field of higher education in Kansas received special attention by Governor William H. Avery in his budget message to a joint session of the legislature this morning. e, s, e - a t s , a n Avery recommended a state budget of $569.9 million. This is an increase of $5.3 million for higher education to provide for an estimated increase of 5,400 full-time students in the fall of 1966. THIS EROUGHT to $107.1 million, the state's share in supporting the six institutions of higher learning. The amount is "almost one-fourth of the total state budget," said Avery. Avery took into account the effects of the draft call on higher education, but said if present "enrollment estimates are met, we are in the same situation this year as last, providing for the education of a number of additional students equivalent to a new institution as large as Pittsburg or Emporia. The Governor said he recommended to the Board of Regents that a "detailed study of classroom utilization be made so that we can more accurately assess the need for classroom and laboratory construction." THE GOVERNOR asked for a total of $34,390,790 for KU. This is an increase of $1,181,566 over spending for the current fiscal year. Recommended in the budget was a $30,000 item for a 16 per cent increase in law school faculty salaries and an increase of $50 a semester in KU Law School fees. Governor Avery recommended a total of $34,152,904 for Kansas State University. This is an increase of $1,396,405 over spending for the current year. kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years Minuteman to Forum Wednesday, January 12, 1966 LAWRENCE, KANSAS 76th Year. No. 66 1968 Speaking at 4 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union will be Robert B. DePugh, leader of the Minutemen. His return visit to the KU campus is sponsored by the Minority Opinions Forum. First speaking on the campus in April, 1963, DePugh criticized various organizations and the infiltration of government offices by communism. The Minutemen organization was formed, according to DePugh, because of the threat to the security of the United States posed by Russia. Last summer DePugh was under investigation in Jackson County, Missouri, for involvement in a kidnapping case and for possession of firearms. Reds Threaten U.S. MOSCOW—(UPI)—The Kremlin appears ready to offer Hanoi still more firepower to meet any new U.S. escalation of the war in Viet Nam, diplomatic observers said today. They attached this significance to a speech Tuesday night in the North Vietnamese capital by Alexander N. Shelepin, an ace Soviet trouble-shooter who is heading a high-level Kremlin mission to Hanoi. The mission, which arrived in Hanoi Friday, included top rocket and armament experts. IN HIS SPEECH, Shelepin delivered a stern warning to the United States about Viet Nam, which underlined the Communists' negative response to current American peace overtures. "If the United States imperialists do not stop their aggressive actions in Viet Nam," Shelepin warned, "still sterner retribution lies ahead of them." While the Kremlin's second ranking party official did not spell out what he meant by "sterner retribution," observers here said today Shelepin presumably referred to more North Vietnamese firepower to be supplied by the Soviets. WASHINGTON—(UPI) — Diplomatic authorities here are uneasy over the possible effects of the sudden death of Indian Prime Minister Lal Badahur Shastri. Officials Ponder India's Future They said today that Shastri's death Monday from a heart attack came at a particularly critical point in India's history. Slowly clearing weather is forecasted for tonight with northerly winds 10 to 15 mph. Thursday will be mostly fair and colder with temperatures in the upper 40's in the north and lower 50's in the south. There is a possibility the conflict with Pakistan over Kashmir may erupt again and add to the flames of war in Asia. The struggle was temporarily eased by the Tashkent agreement Shastri signed just a few hours before his death. American officials are relatively certain the new regime of acting Premier Gulzarilal Nanda will abide by the terms of the Tash-kent agreement. AT THE SAME TIME, Shelepin took what was considered a mild slap at the Communist Chinese when he called for the need of "unity" and "cohesion" in the ranks of the world Communist movement. However, the agreement is limited in nature and does not eliminate the basic conflict of issues which have kept India and Pakistan at each other's throat for 18 years. Weather Council Endorses KU 'Stop Week' Support for the establishment of a "Stop Week," the week before final examinations begin, was expressed by the All Student Council at last night's meeting. The Council, in a resolution, voted to support a "Stop Week" and requested the deans of each school to work toward the establishment of a University administered "Stop Week." VERNON VOORHEES, Kansas City sophomore (UP—Married) said the purpose of the resolution was to encourage the deans of the respective colleges to establish "Stop Week" within their own schools, and further, to bring about the establishment of a "Stop Week" for the entire University. A RESOLUTION, stating that the Council should urge the Administration to take immediate steps toward the expansion of the Hospital, was tabled, with the restriction that it be discussed at the Council's next meeting Feb. 8. Discussion of the proposal was postponed to give the members a chance to poll the opinion of their constituents and think it over before reaching a decision. The Council passed another resolution directing the ASC Current Events Committee to hold an informative session, open to all KU students, on the Selective Service System. It stated that members of the state and local draft boards and James K. Hitt, KU Registrar, be invited to explain the present and potential ramifications of the draft laws with regards to their effects on college students. BIOHUMAN MIGHTIER THAN THE SWORD—That's the pen that signs a check. Students at KU make up nearly one-fifth of the total checking and savings business with Lawrence banks. —Staff photo by Bill Stephens Credit: Student-Bank Worry By Jerry Kern The KU student has characteristics which can classify him as a special problem according to three Lawrence banks. But the banks, which do 15 to 20 per cent of their business with KU students, agree that the problems are not great. According to Russ Watkins, Douglas County State Bank official, the student presents a problem in loans because he has no steady source of income which he controls. Second in a Series "We DO HAVE some credit problems with students, but the number would be impossible to nail down. However, students are H. D. Flanders, vice-president of the First National Bank, said students do not present any problem with their check accounts. However, as regards loans, he said, "Students occasionally present a credit problem, but no more than any other group. "MOST OF OUR student loans are with the U.S. Aid Fund program. The student borrows the money through his local bank, and it is insured by the United Student Loan Fund. A student may borrow up to $2,000 at a six per cent interest," he said. generally a reliable group," Watkins said. term loans to fill the gaps in their income. Lawrence National makes 50 to 75 emergency or temporary loans to students each season, he said. "The student presents a special problem only because he has a minimum of resources and assets," Ryan said. According to George Ryan, president of Lawrence National Bank, students ask only for short How long a student will be in school, and when he will be out earning money are considered when making a student loan, said Flanders. The First National Bank uses references to check student identification. University records are not used because they do not reflect the changes in a student's financial or social status. Flanders pointed said. (Continued on Page 3) Misunderstood Library Bell It Used to Be Sends Students Pell-Mell Jan. 11, 1916 Students of the University of Kansas will be given an oppo tunity to learn something of their University if the Uni Senate is able to back up its recommendations to the Chan that such a course be established By Swaebou Conateh A whistle summons KU students to class, and a carillon bell tower set to time sings to them its chimes. A third device connected with time at the University is the bell at Watson library—and that wastes their time. In September 1960, the closing hours at Watson Library and a number of branch libraries on campus were extended to 11 p.m. Sunday to Friday. This was a daily gain of one hour. However, most students leave the library some 15 minutes early every night. The reason is apparently their confusion over the purpose of the warning bell. IN A TYPICAL day at the library, the warning bell rings 20 minutes before the hour. Donald Redmond, Reader's Service at the library, said the warning bell serves two purposes: ● It notifies students that there is 20 minutes of library time left so that those who want to check out books or return books could do so in plenty of time. - It also warns the library staff checking books in the stacks of the time they have left, thereby serving as a stop to new requests for books. Contrary evidence has, however, shown that there is no clear idea of the purpose of the warning bell both among students and among some of the library staff. Most students leave the library when the bell rings. There have even been occasions when the lights in the reserve section of the library have been put out as much as 15 minutes before the official closing hour. "IT CERTAINLY is not our policy to close the library just when the bell rings," Redmond said. "If it is done, we do not know about it." The mistake over the purpose of the warning bell and the consequent waste of time over it must lie with the students and some among the library staff who put out the lights in the reserve section before 11 p.m. Since final exams are coming, and the mistake is so costly in time, both students and library staff should now know why the warning bell rings. With that each student using the library at that time will save six hours of valuable time a month. By our reckoning, if a What can be done within that time is anybody's guess, but the loss to the individual student is still great. With 10 library staff members paid by the hour at work at that hour, the loss to the tax payer is a modest $48 per month, but to the student, it can be seen by an estimate of the amount of work possible in ix hours. student loses 15 minutes of his time every day, he is losing no less than $1\frac{1}{2}$ hours a week and that is six hours a month. For every 100 students, this amounts to 600 hours of wasted student time every month. Daily Kansan Tuesday, January 11, 1966 By Rich Lovett 8 At Basketball Games They Really Mop Up At every home basketball game there are two fellows who infallably make the evening a little more exciting, a little more fun. They are not the coaches, nor the referees. They are "Blue" and "Red," the basketball court sweepers who, in the performance of their jobs, give the fans an added kick every time they sweep. "Blue" is really Marion Affalter, 947 Louisiana St., an Allen Field House custodian who, among other things, has swept the KU basketball court for the past four years. His "opponent" in red is Raymond Vandeventer, 329 Missouri St., a KU Athletics department maintenance man. He has helped clean the court for two seasons, and at freshman games sweeps unchallenged. BOTH MEN derive their nicknames from the clothes they wear as they "race" across the court, pushing their colored dust mops in front of them. Affalter wears a blue shirt, blue pants, and pushes a blue mop. Vandeventer sports a red shirt, blue pants, and drives a red mop.Both men wear yellow tennis shoes and red caps. “It's just our job,” says Affalter. “The floors have to be kept clean. But right at the first of the year the kids started cheering us as we swept, so we figured we might as well add a little color to it. Really, though, we're only doing our job.” Job or not, the basketball fans love it, and probably so do Affalter and Vandeventer. Who knows?—KU may have started a tradition, and soon all colleges and universities will recruit floor sweepers who can push a mean broom. Time to Take Care of Your European Reservations Arrange: ★ Airline or Steamship Reservations ★ Student Tours ★ Rent or Lease a Car ★ Purchase a Car ★ Eurailpasses ★ All Other Travel Information At: Maupintour Assoc. 711 W.23rd (The Malls) VI 3-1211 M (These should be arranged as far in advance as possible.) Smiley Face On Campus with Max Shulman (By the author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!' "Dobie Gillis," etc.) ROMAN IN THE GLOAMIN' Now as the end of the first semester draws near, one fact emerges clearly: you are all going to flunk out of school. There are two things you can do about it. First, you can marry money. (I don't mean you marry the money itself; I mean you marry a person who has money. Weddings between people and currency have not been legal anywhere in the United States since the Smoot-Hawley Act. Personna $ ^{®}$ Stainless Steel Blades, on the other hand, are legal everywhere and are, indeed, used with great pleasure and satisfaction in all fifty states of the Union and Duluth. I bring up Personna Stainless Steel Blades because this column is sponsored by the makers of Personna Stainless Steel Blades, and they are inclined to get edgy if I omit to mention their product. Some of them get edgy and some get double-edgy because Personna Blades come both in Injector style and Double Edge style.) But I digress. I was saying you can marry money but, of course, you will not because you are a high-minded, clean-living, pure-hearted, freckle-faced American kid. Therefore, to keep from flunking, you must try the second method: you must learn how to take lecture notes. According to a recent survey, eleven out of ten American undergraduates do not know the proper way to take lecture notes. To illustrate this appalling statistic, let us suppose you are taking a course in history. Let us further suppose the lecturer is lecturing on the ruling houses of England. You listen intently. You write diligently in your notebook, making a topic outline as you have been taught. Like this: 1. House of Plantagenet. H. House of Managern U. House of Lancaster III. House of York. LXIV! CNLV! SIL NCVD LVVIE! Then you stop. You put aside your pen. You blink back a tear, for you cannot go on. Oh, yes, you know very well that the next ruling house is the House of Tudor. The trouble is you don't know the Roman numeral that comes after III. It may, incidentally, be of some comfort to learn that you are not the only people who don't know Roman numerals. The fact is, the Romans never knew them either. Oh, I suppose they could tell you how much V or X were or like that, but when it came to real zingers like LXI or MMC, they just flang away their styluses and went downtown to have a bath or take in a circus or maybe stab Caesar a few times. You may wonder why Rome stuck with these ridiculous numerals when the Arabs had such a nice, simple system. Well, sir, the fact is that Emperor Vespasian tried like crazy to buy the Arabic numerals from Suleiman The Magnificent, but Suleiman wouldn't do business—not even when Vespasian raised his bid to 100,000 gold piastres, plus he offered to throw in the Colosseum, the Appian Way, and Technicolor. So Rome stuck with Roman numerals—to its sorrow, as it turned out. One day in the Forum, Cicero and Pliny got to argue about how much is CDL times MVIX. Well, sir, pretty soon everyone in town came around to join the hassle. In all the excitement, nobody remembered to lock the north gate and —wham! before you could say *ars longa*—in pushed the Goths, the Visigoths, and the Green Bay Packers! rushed the cotches, and the linger. Well, sir, that's the way the empire crumbles, and I digress. Let's get back to lecture notes. Let's also say a word about Burma Shave®. Why? Because Burma Shave is made by the makers of Personna Blades who, it will be recalled, are the sponsors of this column. They are also the sponsors of the ultimate in shaving luxury. First coat your kisser with Burma Shave, regular or menthol—or, if you are the devil-may-care sort, some of each. Then whisk off your stubble with an incredibly sharp, unbelievably durable Personna Blade, Injector or Double Edge—remembering first to put the blade in a razor. The result: facial felicity, cutaneous cheer, epidermal elysium. Whether you shave every day, every III days, or every VII, you'll always find Personna and Burma Shave a winning combination. $$ * * * $$ $\textcircled{2}$ 1966, Max Shulman Personnam amo, Tom Personnam amat, Dick Personnam amat, Harry Personnam amat, quique Personnam amant — et quogue amabitis. YOUR SHOP CLASSIFIED ADS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Renault Dauphine, 1962, exceptionally clean inside and out, near new rubber, seat belts, big radio and heater, to appreciate Big Radio, special price for $100 over $100 wider price (check for yourself). 1528 W 21st St VI 2-9383. tf Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive, numegraphed and bound for $1.25. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery TYPEWRITERS - Office size and portables, new and used, manual and electric. Several brands. Rental-purchased equipment. Machines for sales, rentals and service. Office supplies, equipment, and furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. St., VI 3-3644 1948 Builek Roadmaster Convertible. Perfect body, new upholstery, 4 new tires, engine rebuilt, top in fair shape. Power windows, power seats, power top, $450.00. Call Tom after 6 num. VI 3-7334. **tt** Wollensk stereo 4-track tape recorder and Remington portable typewriter. Will consider trading for cameratrip. Gary Grazda, VI =1483 or 1f 2-6601 Clearance Clearance! Tape recorders, stereos, stereo FM radios cut to $60. AM-FM radios cut to $19.99. Hurry to Ray Stoneback's, 929-331 Mass. *18- Across the burning sands of the Arabian Desert, at no little risk to my faithful Bedouin camel driver, Ben Akmeld El Hazar, who has been an exotic black Meerrahaum pipe. Handcaved by master artisans in the image of a notorious caliph of the Ottoman empire, this work of art features a genuine amber bit, which was used by the caravan has brought this treasure of the Near East to you at the most reasonable price of sixty American dollars. Address serious inquiries to: Caravans of the Noe, Box 2, University Dial Kansan, tt 1350 Cadillac hearse, 65,000 miles. Good condition, $275. Call CE 3-7545 Topeka. Overhauled at 58,000 miles. 1-111 Like new Motorola portable record and radio combination. Also room and board for games. Winged wading board for Gail. Call VI 3-5659. 1-11 Insurance Clearance! 500 tires at lowest prices ever. Example 650-14 (695-14) white wall, 100 eye. 100 tang or Rowan's white to $12 each (660-15) white to $15 plus tax. Ray Stoneback's, 929-931 Mass. St. 1-18 1643 Chevy, 2 dr. H.T. Gray I贸澄 leather strap, 100 puck, S.I. Pintraction, Tinted glass, 22,000, original owner, must sell. Call VI 2-6842. 147. Chevy, Bel-Air, 283 V-8, radio, heater, very good condition. Mechan- ically, body and interior. $525. VI 3-7664 1-11 1861 Nash Rambler station wagon. Radio and heater—seat belts. New snow tires. One owner car. Call VI 2-3401. tf Mittel store 1966 GTO, $550 under dealer's price, perfect condition, no gimmicks. Call Doug Dienelt, VI 3- 5721. 1959 Corvette 283, 4-speed, dual quad engine V1 3-8750, Kent Skipper 1-12 Ohio. 1940 Ford 2-door sedan Mechanic- Call Mike Sullivan. 529 McCollum, 760 Carlin. Soler tenor sax. See it at room 502, Tempiolin 1-11 1958 Mercury, V-8 automatic, radio, Kim, VI 3-536. Leave your number. 1957 Ford Ranchwagon, V-8, stand- alone. Phone SI, 8-3292 or N-3-2720. Phone VI, 8-3292 or N-3-2720. Sports car owners, we have castrol oil. prestolite snark plugs at quality snarks. Blevins, 7th and Michigan. I-21 1957 Chevy, 2 door ht., V-8, stick, good mechanical condition and paint. Need money for 2nd semester. Sa- man, 1911 Stewart. VI 2-6351 VI 3-2310 1963 Stingray, silver, removable top, 425 bp, rear wheels. Windy wheels, new tires, perfect condition, 31,000 miles. $2,495. Three-thirds of Baldwin, TU. Westside. 1-21 1957 Ford stuck, overdrive. Very good condition. WI 3-7052 after 5 pts. 117 6005. Feari competition shell and frame, make offer. Imported Gerard model 319 turntable with empire arm and 201 bell speaker. Free offer over $100. Heathkit Seneca VHF. transmitter. $120. Leave message. Don Reele. VI. 2-1200. 1-13 1957 Ford, automatic, two-door, snow tire. Good condition. Call VI 2-904-836 TYPING Experienced typist has IBM electric to tune your thesis, dissertation, term bibliography and research plan, and accurate write. Reasonable rate Phone Mrs. Gilbert, VI 2-2088. Excellenced typist, 8 years experience in theses and term paners. Electric typwriter. Fast. accurate service. Volunteer. LIL Mrs. Barlow. 2497 Vale. VI 2-1648 Wanted Typing in my home Experi- ment and theses Call VI 3-2651 any time. Typist, experienced with term papers, theses and dissertations, will give your typing immediate attention with electric machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W. 13th, VI 3-6048. Secretary familiar with legal terms will do typing—briefs, memorandums, captions, notes, dissertation Fast,Accursors, access rates. Marsh Goff. VI 3-2577 Experienced typist, will type in my home. Accurate typing, reasonable rates and prompt service. Call Mrs. Brown at VI 2-0210. Experienced typist will do only theses and typewriter. Mrs. Fulcher II 3-0558 Accurate typing by experienced typist. Term papers, themes, theses and dissertations. Reasonable rates and fast. VI 2-1561. tf Secretary with many years experience, will type your term papers, Fast, accurate work at reasonable rate. Call V1 6296 after 5 p.m. Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses, dissertations, grant applications, Electric type writer, Reasonable rates. Call Mr. Knuckman, MJ 2-2781. Experienced secretary will do typing VI 3-0380, after 5-90 call VI 3-0390, tiff 6-7480, after 7-90 call VI 6-7490 Experienced typist will do theses and term papers. 4 years experience at KU. Phone Mrs. Oxford at VI 2-0673. Former Harvard and University of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports, and theses. Phone VI 3-7207. tf TYPING — GESThTNNER MIMEO- TYPING—MRS. McEdlowen, Yi $-8568. Expert Typing--Theses, dissertations and term papers. Electric typewriter, standard rates. Mrs. Mishler, VI 3-1029. 1-17 Typing done at reasonable rates by experienced typist. Fast accurate work. Call Betty Vincent, call VI 3-5504. tf Typing done by experienced secretary for 25e each double spaced page. Call Ethel Henderson, 2565 Ridge Ct., VI 2-0122. tf Fast, accurate; immediate attention given to all term papers, reports, theses, etc. Mrs. Donna Stewart, VI 3-6221 1-21 Former teacher will give careful attention to typing your term papers. Accurate and neat work, 5 years experience. Call VI 3-3829. Topeka students desiring theses, dissertations, rough drafts, or term papers typed fast and accurately on electric typewriter by experienced typist, call Mrs. O. L. Cook. CR 2-1479, 1715 Sims, Topeka. 1-20 Typing Wanted—Theses, essays, and papers. Neat and accurate. Call V-121 4156. FOR RENT Vacancy in a contemporary home. Private entrance and bath. Five evening meals weekly. $70 monthly. Teams paid. Call VI 3-9655 until pm. Married, graduate students, faculty- 2 bedroom apartment, $95.00. Two available January 1, one available February 1. Call for brochure, VI 3- 2116. Santee Apartments office, 1123 Indiana. tt Extra nice quiet furnished apartment for mature man, carpeted, nice kitchen, utilities paid. 2 blocks from Union. Available now. VI 3-8534. tt Vancancies in contemporary home for young man, prefer graduate stu- meal meals, pool, home cooks, meals if desired, telephone VI 3-8635, call before 6 p.m. Rooms for men students, some available NOW, some February 1, with or without kitchen privileges. Call VI 3-1607. 1-12 Wanted — woman graduate student roommate to share room 2-bedroom apartment, south location. VI 2-9234 after 5.15 p.m. Furnished apartments for 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 men. Call Vi 3-0131 or Vi 3-1431 MISCELLANEOUS Die Bierstube: Singen, trinken und essen German style. Featuring student's favorite dark beverage and student's favorite light beverage from Golden, Colorado. Seats sixteen and sandwiches. Pitcher night Wednesday night. Party Room available. 14th and Tennessee. VI 2-9441. tf BLANDING PARTY PHOTOGRAPHY Your satisfaction is my strongest Gold embosed party titles: Koehler $ 571. $1.00; custom enlarged B&W $3, 60. *Three years' experience at Dave* *in room and samples call Dave* t Vi 2-6155. Wanted: General house work preferably in sorority, fraternity, or prince william experience and have references. Written for Knappersp. 1132 Conn., Lawrence. tf Need any Sewing or Mending done? rate. Call after 5:00 p.m. VI 2-3901 PARTY TIME—Building available for parties and dances. Call VI 3-7453. Ralph Freed. tf Sports Car Maintenance and Repairs and by for the enthusiast. Super tuning, modification, and accessories, accessories, cars, Coaches, Sports Cars, E23rd St, V1 2-1911 Tune-ups — Evenings and weekends only; also other automobile appointments or appointment only. VI 2-9066, behind 337 Connecticut St. Farmer's tt Math Tutor; B.A. degree in Math from KU. Experienced in tutoring geometry, algebra, calculus, and analytic geometry. Phone VI 3-0927. Experienced photographer in children and family portraits. Reasonable rate. Will take pictures in your home. Call VI 2-6148. tt Reward offered for lost glasses- black rimmed. Contact David M. Miller, room 635, Templin Hall, VI 2- 1200. 1-12 LOST Yellow Pickett Slide Rule in Grey Case with initials R.M.S. Lost in Malott Hall before Christmas vacation. Call Rob Shrader at VI 31-5027. REWARD — lost "Fundamentals of Physical Geography." Trewartha — author. Contact Marjorie Horwitz, VI 2-9100. 1-13 FOUND Man's coat left in Hoon's Laundry, 19th and Louisiana. Claim and pay for this ad, VI 3-9631. 1-12 HELP WANTED Students looking for part time work work on a lesson at Sandy's Drive-In- Lodge 9th. Reliable student for selling imports. Apply 920 La. after 6 p.m. tf Room available for girl student free in exchange for baby-sitting services. Room built-in bake-basket separated from room located in nice neighborhood. Call VI 2-0445. -1-11 University family wishes mother's helper. Room and board in exchange for babysitting one child. Discuss terms. VI 3-4098, Mrs. Maher. 1-12 7 A position is now open on your campus. A Time Inc. college representative on a small or medium-sized campus can expel students annually selling subscriptions to TIME, LIFE, SPORTS ILLUSTRATED and FORTUNE at reduced students' and educator rates. On larger campuses this may be over $750 a year. They work hard, of course, but their hours are their own, and they gain valuable business experience in this year-round marketing program. Name and college class and other information you consider important to Time Inc., College Bureau, TIME & LIFE Building, Rockefeller Center, where all positions must be submitted by January 20, 1966. You will be contacted promptly. We have an opening for one male student to work. Two evening shop positions from Dom Friend After 10 am at Dixon's Drive-In Restaurant, 3 I-7446, 1-14 A proven part-time income opportunity for college men. You can manage a management course is offered. If you need a year-round income that will finance your entire education, you can teach yourself to Fundraising Home Box 128, Shawnee Mission, Kan. 1-14 Private room available, rent free to a dependable girl student for babysitting services. Call VI 3-9150 for interview. 1-13 Would like someone vicinity of 25th and Ridge Court to watch five-year-old girl, mornings only. Call VI 3-5947 or VI 2-0106. 1-17 Will Baby Sit in my home or yours? 4:00 p.m. VI 2-3911 Call after Need male roommate to share apartment for 2nd semester--uppercase man or graduate student preferred. Call VI 3-4349. 1-11 WANTED One or 2 men to share 2 bedroom apt. in University T terrace, Share $160 and utilities. VI 3-7251. 1-12 TRANSPORTATION Daily Kansan SPEE MORE IN EUROPE THIS SIMMER it better and saves-traveling with NSA—a choice of 33 flexible trips of 21 to 63 days with other college and graduate travel accommodations, travel accommodations admissions, etc., available only through NSA Trips to Europe, Israel, Latin America and the Far East. Stud-ntships available free book US D, 295 Medi-Ann Avenue New York NY, 10016. A nonprofit organization. 1-11 Patronize Kansan Advertisers Anderson Rentals VI 3-2044 812 New Hampshire Street WRECKING "We Rent Almost Anything" NEW AND USED PARTS Tires and Glass East End of 9th Street VI3-0956 TEACH IN NIGERIA OR GHANA It's possible:—If you . . . f. French, g. home economics, or have a Master's Degree in English. 2. Are a U.S. citizen, in good health, over the 55 year of age, have a bachelor's degree or higher college level 1. Are a graduate with a strong major in one of the following: following, business administration, nursing, French, g home economies or have a Master's Degree in English. If interested, please write to: 2. Are a U.S. citizen, in good health, less than 30 years desire to teach at the secondary school or junior college level. 3. Are single; or married with no more than one under school age child. TEACHERS FOR WEST AFRICA PROGRAM Elizabethtown College Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania 17022 Yamaha Sale! visit take advantage of the Ern's Cycle Shop 950 N. 3rd VI 1-5815 8TH ST. SHOE REPAIR Quality work on nail sores heels. We repair purses Shoe dyeing 107 E.8TH Andrews Gifts Gift Box Andrews Gifts U-DRIVE-THRU CAR WASH 50¢ VI 2-1523 Open Wednesday Evenings Malls Shopping Center Plenty of Free Parking Extra power spray will be 10c extra. This service is optional. Stay in your car and drive away in a sparkling clean car. 2315 Louisiana Lawrence, Kansas No need to drive a dirty car anymore. U-DRIVE-THRU That's all you do. Now Leasing 10th and Emery Rd. WEST HILLS Lawrence's First Total Electric Luxury Apartments for information call W. E. Almquist—VI 3-3610 COMPLETE CLASSICAL RECORD SELECTION COLUMBIA RECORDS WeaverS TRAVEL TIME LET MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Semester Reservations Now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Hawks Take First With 89-68 Win The Jayhawks scored an impressive 89-69 win over Oklahoma Monday night gaining a one-half game lead in the Big Eight Conference race. The hard and fast defensive game was the seventh consecutive win for KU. Walt Wesley, 611" center, led the scoring with 27 points and placed himself in fifth place in the total points of Jayhawk scoring greats. WESLEY TEAMED with roommate Al Lopes to bring the Jayhawks to an 18 point lead with eight minutes past in the first half. Wesley scored nine of the first KU 11 points. Lopes scored all of his 12 points in the first half. The KU zone defense again took its toll, holding the Sooners to only six points in the first eight minutes. The Oklahoma man to man defense seemed ineffective during the Jayhawks opening rally which saw the score 28-10 with 10:10 remaining in the first half, which ended 36-26. The Hawks rallied after the half on Oklahoma errors that totaled 22. Kansas had 18. with fouls during the entire game, especially in the last half. Three Jayhawks pouled out: Wesley, with 2:44 remaining; Lopes, 12:06; and Lochmann, 2:08. The total fouls numbered 47. KU scored heavily on Okla- homan errors midway in the final half and extended the score to 71-48. The greatest margin was 23 points with 6:10 left in the game. BOTH TEAMS were plagued The two other undefeated Big Eight teams, Nebraska and K-State, were idle Monday. KU will meet Iowa State in Ames Saturday. The next game in Allen Field House is with Kansas State on January 22. BOX SCORE | | PF | FG | FT | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Wesley | 5 | 9 | 9 | 27 | | Lewis | 1 | 5 | 4 | 14 | | Lopes | 5 | 6 | 0 | 12 | | Bohnenstiehl | 3 | 4 | 2 | 10 | | Franz | 3 | 5 | 0 | 10 | Wilson ... 4 4 0 8 Lochmann ... 5 2 0 4 Davis ... 0 2 0 4 J. Johnson ... 1 0 0 0 Rogers ... 4 7 4 18 Sidle ... 3 7 10 24 Due ... 2 0 4 4 Flood ... 1 4 1 9 Gott ... 2 1 5 7 Axley ... 4 0 1 1 Hawkins ... 1 2 1 5 Bogan ... 3 0 0 0 Dersey ... 0 0 0 0 Gymnasts Fall To Iowa State Unable to win first place in any event in the I-State and KU gymnastics meet at Ames Saturday afternoon KU bowed to the Cyclones 186.40-170.05. Kent Dobbins, Lawrence senior, showed the best for the Jayhawks with two seconds and two thirds. Dobbins was the leading scorer in the meet with 51.05. Fontana, ISU, was second with 45.20. Gymnastics coach Robert Lockwood said Saturday's meet was the best KU effort of the season. The Jayhawks missed one routine during the entire meet. Dobbins missed the trampoline and still scored a 73. Richard Hemphill tied ISU's Rich Paulsen on the parallel bars. Paulsen is the United States Gymnastics Federation Class A National Champion in the event. RESULTS: Floor exercise—1. Barber, ISU; 2. Wilcox, ISU; 3. Dobbins, KU. Side Horse—1. Flanigan, ISU; 2. Kranamen, ISU; 3. Buamann, ISU. Trampoline—1, Clarke, ISU; 2. Wilcox, ISU; 3. Constant, ISU. High Bar—1. Fontana, ISU; 2. Paulsen, ISU; 3. Dixon, KU. LONG HORSE—1, Wilcox, ISU; 2. Fontana, ISU; 3. Bobbins, KU. Parallel Bars—1, Crowder, ISU; 2. Fontana, ISU; 3. (tie) Hemp- bill, KU. and Paulsen, ISU. Still Rings—1. Fontana, ISU; 2. (tie) Dobbins, KU, and Bolton, ISU. All-around—1. Fontana, ISU; 2. Dobbins, KU. 6 Daily Kansan Tuesday, January 11, 1966 KU COLLEGIATE YOUNG REPUBLICANS Present A Panel Discussion On "HIGHER EDUCATION IN KANSAS: WHERE DO WE STAND?" A panel of seven guests representing the Kansas Board of Regents, the Ways and Means Committees and the Education Committees of the Kansas Senate and House of Representatives, and the KU administration will be questioned by a press panel made up of representatives from the Kansas City and Topeka papers and from the local and campus news media. Questions will be invited from the floor in the latter part of the program. 7:30 Everyone Is Tonight Welcome! Jayhawk Room Kansas Union RED RED DOG INN 7th & Mass. THE Rod Dog Inn DOG INN Wednesday - Jan.12 Girls Night Out NO COVER 'Bluethings' - Friday — FREE TGIF with The Bluethings — Friday Evening The Fabulous Red Dogs - Saturday — One of the most exciting Rhythm & Blues Combos in the country Come on Down To The Red Dog And Enjoy Yourself VI2-0100 World-Wide Wire Bus Strike Becomes Big Economic Drain NEW YORK—(UPI)—Negotiations disintegrated today in New York's subway and bus strike which Mayor John V. Lind-say angrily declared was now a battle between the people and "forces bent on laying siege to the city." He vowed to end the walkout and "to serve the people and to free them from the hold the collection of power brokers have had over our city." With the strike's cost in wage and business losses now above $1 billion, the city's economy was reported in the worst straits since the days of the depression of the 1930s. And the national economy felt repercussions. Christians will pray together for unity in Danforth Chapel for one week beginning next Monday. They will be following a practice set up more than 20 years ago as a January observance. The week of Prayer for Christian Unity is sponsored by the World Council and National Council of Churches. This year will have one difference—the Bishops' Commission on Ecumenical Affairs of the Christians Pray for Unity Roman Catholic Church helped to prepare the booklet to be used by millions of Christians during the Week of Prayer. ROMAN CATHOLICS will join Protestants, Anglicans and Orthodox in the prayer. At KU, students and chapians will gather daily at 4:30 p.m. all week as a united congregation in Danforth Chapel. Members of the Lawrence community will be asked to participate in their own churches and on the Hill. The purpose is to pray for the unity of Christians, for the ecumenical groups, for individual groups, and for justice and peace throughout the world. Several campus groups are participating. They are the Roger Williams Fellowship, the United Campus Christian Fellowship, the Lutheran Students' Association, the University Lutheran Church (Missouri Synod), the KU-Y, Canterbury Association, and Wesley Foundation. Ask Civil Rights Probe HATTIESBURG, Miss.—(UPI)—President Johnson Monday asked that the full resources of the Justice Department be thrown into the investigation of the nightrider firebombing slaying of a prominent Negro merchant and civil rights backer. The death of Vernon Dahmer, 58, late Monday from fatal burns set off a demonstration by 300 angry Negroes who marched on the courthouse and demanded action against his attackers. Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach said the President "expressed to me his deep concern over the tragedy," and asked the full resources of the Justice Department be employed in the investigation. Red Troops in Viet Nam SAIGON—(UPI)American troops operating along the Cambodian border have uncovered evidence that a Communist North Vietnamese antiaircraft battalion has infiltrated the South, a military spokesman disclosed today. It was the first such evidence of the war. The spokesman said the Communist force known as the H-13 antiaircraft unit, was equipped with 18 heavy guns capable of shooting down fighter planes and jet bombers. The guns also are effective against troop-carrying helicopters. The spokesman said the information on the antiaircraft battalion came from three North Vietnamese regulars captured during "Operation Matador" in the Central Highlands west of Pleiku near the Cambodian border. A multi-battalion force from the U.S. Army's 1st Air Cavalry Division is involved in the sweep. Kansan Board Okays Spring UDK Staff At a staff meeting of the University Daily Kansan Board yesterday, Fred Frailey, Sulphur Springs, Tex., senior, was named the managing editor of the paper for the spring semester. Also named by the Board and approved at the meeting were Dale Reinecker, Wellington senior, business manager; Justin Beck, Hastings on Hudson, N.Y., graduate student, and Jacke Thayer, Ellsworth junior, editorial editors. Frailey, in turn, announced his selections for the news staff, which were submitted to the Kansan Board for approval. THE SELECTIONS were: Ernie Ballweg, Cottonwood Falls senior; Rosalie Jenkins, Overland Park senior; Karen Lambert, Wadsworth senior; Nancy Scott, Council Grove senior; and Bob Stevens, Junction City junior, all assistant managing editors. Tom Rosenbaum, Overland Park senior, city editor; Bill Stephens, Topeka freshman, photo editor; Steve Russell, Topeka junior, sports editor; Barbara Phillips, Harrisonville, Mo., junior, feature and society editor; Socialist - (Continued from page 1) support from the people for Johnson and the war" He said a withdrawal slogan would eliminate all of these tactical errors and also appeal to the soldiers, who are "sick and tired of the war." and Joan McCabe, Lawrence junior, wire editor. Reinecker's selections for the business staff, also subject to Kansan Board approval, were: John Hons, Wichita junior, advertising manager; Fred Black, Lakehurst, N.J., senior, national advertising manager; Jan Parkinson, Prairie Village senior, circulation manager; Linda Simpson, Shawnee senior, merchandising manager; and Gary Wright, Wichita junior, promotion manager. Official Bulletin On Campus Interviews for Wed. and Thurs., Jan. 13, and Ibarger, Jr. public schools, K. 12, 106 Ba.; Jan. 12 and 13—Jefferson Co. Dist. R-1; Lakewood, Col.; K-12, Gribbellin, and Jan. 12- Ombra, Neb., public schools, K-12, Oread Rm., Union. KU Business Wines 7.30 p.m. Grad- ade 8 p.m. 22nd St. Also, election of officers Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m. Danforthe Chapel. Intervarsity Christian Fellowship, 7 p.m. Application from the teachings of Christ, Paul Steeves, Rm. 306 Union. TODAY Speech and Drama Colloquium, 3:30 pm. Prof. Lewin Goff, 301 Su. p. h. d. ordr. Llewin Gob, s. of St. Massachusetts, 5 p. m. in Lawrence Channel. Catholic Mass, 6.45 a.m. and 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel. Oral Phase, Speech I Exemption Exam, 3:30 p.m. Lindley Annex 5. Prof. Maynard Shelly Bailey Aud. Recital, 7 p.m. Albert Gerken. Classical Film, 7 p.m. "The 39 Steps." Dyche Auditorium. Opera Workshop, 8 p.m. Swarthout Recital Hall. Daily Kansan 5 Tuesday, January 11, 1966 SUA ANNOUNCES Summer Flight To Europe via Air France $280.00 Round Trip New York-Paris-New York Leave June 10 Return Aug.8 Due To Overwhelming Response We Are Extending The Deadline For Down Payment To Jan.23 Contracts Are Still Available For More Information Call SUA Offices—UN 4-3477 NEW TOPS Cleaners & Launderers Offers the Students IN BY 9 OUT BY 5 SERVICE. When time is important let Tops In By 9 — Out By 5 service take care of your laundry problems. In addition Shirts Are Returned on Hangers and Tops offers a money back guarantee. TOPS Open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. (Monday thru Saturday) 1526 West 23rd (Next to the Pancake Man) SUA Flight to Europe Lacks Only 25 People The deadline for signing up for the SUA-sponsored flight to Europe this summer has been extended according to Keith Baker, Hays sophomore and flight publicity chairman. The original deadline had been set for Jan. 10, but has now been moved ahead to Jan. 23, allowing KU students, faculty, staff members and their families to take advantage of about 25 vacancies remaining. Change Slips Due Jan.20 Students changing from one school of the University to another are requested to notify the Office of Admissions and Records in 130 Strong, before Jan. 20. Although a regular procedure, this is the first time a deadline has been set for notification. However, the deadline does not mean that any student desiring to change schools within the university cannot do so after Jan. 20. "This is an improvement of procedure for the benefit of the students," William L. Kelly, associate registrar and director, said. "It will provide a smoother enrollment procedure." IF THE STUDENT takes advantage of this new procedure, it will be a timesaving factor during enrollment week for both himself and the Office of Admissions and Records. Students may request the change at window number two in 130 Strong Hall from 8:30 a.m. to noon and 1-5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The office is open from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturdays. Students should bring their KU-ID when requesting the change. Campus West OLGA a Panti-slip 1777 White—Nude Black P-S-M Short. $6.00 1424 Crescent Road Cost of the round trip ticket from New York City to Paris and back is $280, a savings of about $70-$220 depending on the plan of travel. The flight is scheduled to leave New York City's John F. Kennedy Airport June 10 and return Aug. 8. Travel plans upon arrival in Europe will be up to the individual. A $100 DOWN payment is required when the contracts are signed and the balance will be due later in the year. People interested in making this trip should go to the SUA office in the Kansas Union. 4 Daily Kansan Tuesday, January 11, 1966 iBueno! Whether it be as a chaser for Tequila or a wonderful accompaniment for a soft drink, you can't find better pizza and Italian specialties in the world. Campus Hideaway Open 11:30 a.m. 'til 1:00 a.m. WE ABSOLUTELY DELIVER VI3-9111 106 North Park Campus Hideaway Campus Hideaway 106 North Park PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS Ford Motor Company is: encouragement WASHINGTON David Tenniswood B.S., Michigan State Univ. M.S., Michigan State Univ. Opportunity comes early at Ford Motor Company. Graduates who join us are often surprised at how quickly they receive personal assignments involving major responsibilities. This chance to demonstrate individual skills contrasts sharply with the experience of many young people entering the business world for the first time. At Ford Motor Company, for example, a graduate may initiate a project and carry it through to its final development. One who knows is David Tenniswood, of our research staff. Dave joined Ford Motor Company in July, 1961. Assigned to our steering and controls section, he helped develop a revolutionary steering system that will facilitate driving in future Ford-built cars. Currently a design engineer working on suspension design and analysis, Dave has been impressed by the extent to which management encourages personal initiative among recent graduates like himself. Here, management looks immediately to young engineers, like Dave, for fresh concepts that reflect their academic training and special abilities. Moreover, when the idea is accepted for development, the initiator is frequently given the opportunity to see the job through—from drawing board to production line! The experience of Dave Tenniswood is not unusual. Ford Motor Company believes that early incentive is fundamental to individual growth and a successful career. If you are interested in a job that challenges your abilities and rewards enterprise, we urge you to contact our representative when he visits your campus. Ford The American Road, Gearborn, Michigan An equal opportunity employer Computer May Depict Early Ancestors The time may not be far off when the computer will tell us what our earliest ancestors looked like, according to Robert Sokal, professor of statistical biology in the KU entomology department. Sokal, a pioneer developer of numerical taxonomy, a method for classifying organisms with high speed computers, is now attempting to discover the past through the electronic data processing. The results could fill many of the gaps in the present theory of biological evolution. THE PROJECT, pointly carried out with Prof. J. H. Camin of the same department, involves measuring the sizes, shapes, markings, and other characteristics of recent organisms. Then, one makes simple assumptions as to how these traits evolved. For instance, one may suppose that three teeth developed from two. Or, in assuming that five digits were primitive in vertebrates, one may consider any changes since then evolutionary. The computer, at the same time testing the validity of these assumptions, creates "family trees" that show the evolutionary process in the fewest number of steps. SO FAR THE method has been applied to bees, plants, flies and snakes. Answers have been quite reasonable, according to Sokal, particularly in the fossil groups. Eventually, he said, an authority on physical anthropology will apply the method to the evolution of man. The problem now, he continued, is to gather the data fast enough for the computer. One possibility is optical scanning, Daily Kansan If there's a black blip, the computer says 1. If there's no blip, it says 0. Organisms, then, may be compared by their patterns of blips. where the computer works with images like the "blips" of light and dark from a TV camera. 3 Tuesday, January 11, 1966 SINCE KU doesn't have a scanner as yet, Sokal has simulated one using IBM cards as a mask. Together with F. James Rohlf, newly appointed associate professor of statistical biology at KU, he has been able to create useful classification of organisms from such "automatically" generated data. Sokal's research is under the auspices of a $302,604 five-year grant given last year by the U.S. Public Health Service. The grant covers five areas of study, all of which require the use of com- Krzyzanowski Spells Citizen Foreign Students, Faculty from China to Mexico Bring International Knowledge to KU's Campus KU has been an active participant in the exchange of universal knowledge. From its Heart of America location, each year KU sends students and faculty abroad and in turn leavens its population with international students and faculty members. Four per cent of the student body at KU today is represented by 542 students from 85 nations. Nearly twice that proportion of the full-time faculty and library staff has foreign origin. COMING FROM 26 nations,73 full-time faculty and library staff positions are filled by persons who are not citizens of the United States. Some of these members are visiting for a single year, while others have been and will remain in the visiting status for several years. Others are acquiring U.S. citizenship and at that time will qualify for tenure. Jerzy Krzyzanowski, associate professor in the Slavic Language and Literature department, first came to the U.S. in 1959.His native country is Poland. BEFORE COMING to KU in the fall of 1964, Krzyzanowski taught Slavic language courses at Berkeley, Michigan and Colorado. "I like Lawrence very much. Since the Slavic Language and Literature department is rapidly growing I hope it will have a bright future," he said. He is acquiring U.S. citizenship while serving as a visiting associate professor. NATIONALIST CHINESE comprise the largest group with 12 serving on the faculty and library staff. There are nine from West Germany, seven from Great Britain. India is represented by five faculty and library staff members while Canada is represented by four members. THESE INTERNATIONAL faculty members serve in 27 departments on the campus. puters and statistical biology. The field of numerical taxonomy, included in the program, has aroused the attention of biologists all over the world. In The Startling Shocking Tradition of "Baby Jane" and "Hush, Hush Sweet Charlotte" Bette Davis "The Nanny" NOW! Evening Shows 7:00 & 9:00 Granada THEATRE - telephone 913-3780 COMING "Do Not Disturb" "That Darn Cat" "Thunderball" SOON! T CAMELOT $250 ALSO $200 TO 2100 To Cherish Forever DIAMOND RINGS BY Keepsake The matchless brilliance of a perfect center gem of fine color and precise cut is yours when you choose a Keepsake Diamond Engagement Ring. Rings enlarged to show detail. Trade-Mark Reg. at up Ray Christian's Your Student ID Is Your Credit Card. ent your ID and say CHARGE IT! Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER 809 Mass. WARNING TO PATRIOTS "If you are ever going to buy a gun, buy it now. Communist organizations that usually have good sources of information are expecting Johnson to be next president and Hubert Humphrey to be the next vice-president. Once this election is over they expect to be able to operate openly without any government interference whatsoever" ("On Target" April 1, 1964, page 1 & 2) "On Target" is a Minuteman publication Mr. Robert Depugh Leader Of The Minutemen 4:00 p.m. Wednesday, Jan.12, 1966 Forum Room, Kansas Union Minority Opinions Forum Editorials Blind to poverty A friend and I were in Kansas City one afternoon a few weeks ago just for some shopping. At one point in our jaunt we wandered into one of the city's large discount stores and ended up in the clothing department, looking at blouses. We were amazed at the prices which started at $.94 minimum and $2.67 maximum. At these prices, we couldn't afford to pass the blouses by and decided to buy one for fun—just to wear with slacks or loafing clothes, of course, never to wear seriously for good. We were talking and laughing and saying things like "I can't believe these prices, can you?" and "We've got to have one even if it falls apart in a month." AND, THEN, WE noticed the rather serious, yet wishful look, that another shopper, an older woman in a plain brown coat, gave us. It was almost a look of envy and surprise that we could say what we were. She was examining the clothes much more intently than we. She appeared to consider her shopping as desperate business. It struck us that we might be looking at what had always seemed a very vague, dimly perceived play in the U.S.-the tragedy of the American poor. The woman was part of a scene that was repeated daily in such stores. What we were buying for a lark was the limit of what she could afford and, perhaps, even that was too expensive. These cheap clothes, the discount stores are part of what Michael Harrington was talking about in his book The Other America when he said that we have a very convenient, comfortable poverty because this nation's 36-40,000,000 poor, 15 per cent of our population, are out of sight and out of mind. The poor aren't in rags, begging in the streets upon which their countrymen pass. The affluent 85 per cent are offered handy blinders in the form of discount stores that sell cheap clothes, super freeways that bypass the slums, and suburbs that protect them from the poor. THIS IS NOT TO advocate getting rid of any of these things, but only to note, that they help make it awfully easy for some to question, deride, and ignore the attempts to aid the poor—the War on Poverty, unemployment compensation, social security, and private programs. Apparently many Americans simply do not see (certainly, it couldn't be that they don't care) that some face barren lives in a vicious circle of slums, in migrant worker camps—wages $1 a day, on desert Indian reservations, in broken-down farms that they cannot change without outside help. It is a shame and outrage upon a nation, the richest in the world, that there are men, women, and children who must scrape and subsist in poverty while the rest go merrily along watching James Bond movies, deciding whether to buy Junior a GTO or Thunderbird, and choosing where to vacation next summer—Mexico or Canada. It would be interesting to learn the reasoning of those who can turn their heads and conclude that little needs to be done to give the poor a chance to find the dignity they, themselves, have and the ability and choice to buy a blouse somewhere besides a drugstore, which they enjoy. SCHWEITZER HAS said it best: "It became steadily clearer to me that I had not the inward right to take as a matter of course my happy youth, my good health and my power to work. Out of the depths of my feeling of happiness, there grew up gradually within me an understanding . . . that . . . whoever is spared personal pain must feel himself called to help in diminishing the pain of others." Oh yes, and the blouse that I bought? It looks fairly good. It is a little smaller than normal size and shrinks a little each washing. But, of course, you can't tell that it's starting to choke unless you're wearing it yourself. — Rosalie Jenkins The People Say... Mr. Justin Beck re: Your letter to the Editor printed in the Kansan on Nov. 30.1965. Dear Mr. Beck: SINCE OUR LAST MEETING (which was also our first) you have undertaken the worthy task of reorganizing student government at the University of Kansas. In this undertaking I offer you the assistance of myself and any of my 400+ colleagues within student government. However, before fully engaging in such a noble and admittedly needed task, I suggest that you garner more information than you have managed to consume to date. Within the last two-and-a-half years I have never seen you in attendance at a Vox Populi meeting, an All Student Council Meeting, and although I have not attended the University Party meetings this year, I have an irrefutable source who * * The editors welcome letters of opinion from all Kansan readers. We reserve the right to edit all letters for style, content and unreasonable length. All letters must be signed. Opinions expressed in letters do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the editors. Daily Kansan Tuesday, January 11, 1965 assures me that you are not a religious follower of that organization either. May I suggest that you owe it to yourself and your multitude of followers to make better use of the information sources available to you. 2 Everyone associated with student government realizes that changes are needed—however, such changes as are needed are not easily effected without damaging the efficiency of student government in carrying out the myriad of tasks currently charged to it. You have failed to mention in your letter just what programs you would see changed—you did mention the problem of "in loco parentis," which has been a major topic of discussion on this campus for as many years as many members of the administration can remember. Since you did specify this topic, I invite you to watch for the results of the meeting of the Human Rights Committee (an ASC Committee) Sunday, December 5, in the Pan American Room of the Union. I am certain that it will be a great relief to you to see the number and types of people actively concerned with this matter. In addition to the HRC, the Deans' Advisory Council is currently involved in discussions of this (and many other) tenies. Also, the AWS is faced with certain aspects of this situation every year, and reviews it with astonishing accuracy each time it is brought up. I don't wish to admonish you for your interests-I would instead suggest that you channel your interests into constructive criticism-i.e., suggesting improvements and/or changes in existing and/or proposed programs of the ASC, AWS, AURH, IFC, Panhellenic, etc. Those of us involved in these activities invite your questions and suggestions. Indeed, the improvements we so consistently seek should ideally come from you, the people we try to represent. Bill Robinson Great Bend junior Student Body vice-pres. Speech Colloquium Set for Today Professor Lewin Goff, director of the theater at KU, is scheduled to speak Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. in the monthly Speech and Drama Colloquium organized by the School of Fine Arts for graduate students and faculty. Prof. Goff will discuss his visit to the International Theater Institute 11th Congress that was held in Tel Aviv, Israel, last June. The Congress was a committee meeting which had to do with theater. Prof. Goff is going to report principally on papers and speeches that were made by people who attended the committee. The subject of the congress was "Problems of Training Students for the Classical Theater," particularly Shakespeare. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS ASSIGNMENT #2 PAGE 39 - 120 W-21 **SORRY ABOUT YESTERDAY. MISS LATOUR.** — IT'S JUST THAT WE VEGG SELFDOWN HAVE A GIRL ENROLLED IN AN ENGINEERING CLASS, 'Best-yet' look at Henry James HENRY JAMES, by F. W. Dupce (Delta, $1.95). Generally regarded as one of the best biographies of Henry James is this new paperback. Not nearly so detailed as the great volumes by Leon Edel, the book still is likely to be more satisfactory to the average reader—if the average reader reads about Henry James. For James, in all probability, still belongs more to the English professors than to the reading public. And this paperback is notwithstanding. Bookstalls offer the many James novels, but few of us likely read more than "The Turn of the Screw," "The American" or "The Portrait of a Lady." The Dupee book is both straight biography and critical evaluation. There is little doubt about the significance of Henry James, and it is unfortunate that he has never truly become one of the "popular" novelists. He was American to the roots, even though he spent much of his time abroad. Always America was his theme—the innocent American, usually, in conflict with the more sophisticated European. His ventures on American soil—in the literary sense—were never as successful, though "The Bostonians" is worth taking a new look at. We were thinking... Commonplace people dislike tragedy, because they dare not suffer and cannot exult. The truth and rapture of man are holy things, not lightly to be scorned. A carelessness of life and beauty marks the glutton, the idler, and the fool in their deadly path across history. John Masefield THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years Serving KU for 76 of its 100 years UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office Founded 1889 Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, N.Y. 10022. Mail subscription rates: $4 a semester or $7 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. EXECUTIVE STAFF MANAGING EDITOR ... Judy Farrell BUSINESS MANAGER ... Ed Vauchn EDITORIAL EDITORS ... Janet Hamilton, Karen Lambert NEWS AND BUSINESS STAFF Assistant Managing Editors ... Suzy Black, Susan Hartley Jane Larson, Jacke Thayer Circulation Manager ... Mike Robe Advertising Manager ... Dale Reinecker City Editor ... Joan McCabe Classified Manager ... Mike Wertz Feature Editor ... Mary Dunlap Merchandising ... John Hons Sports Editor ... Scottie Scott Promotion Manager ... Keith Issitt Photo Editor ... Bill Stephens National Advertising ... Eugene Parrish Wire Editor ... Robert Stevens JANUARY NOEL? Staff photo by Bill Stephens Early or late? Someone still seems to have the Christmas season in his heart, even though the Twelve Days have passed. Perched on the top of Naismith Hall, now under construction, this tree can be seen for quite a distance. Someone is either confused about the time or, perhaps, is experimenting with a new calendar. What we could use right now, though, is another Christmas vacation! Student Credit Stands Good With Lawrence Merchants By Jerry Kern The KU student is well sought after by Lawrence merchants and banks. He should be. According to a recent survey, the total annual income of all students at KU is $26,526,183.00. This amount suggests a very strong trade population; and it is as many local merchants will attest. However, there is a problem. How much credit can merchants recognize in a non-local group so young and so mobile? Webster's Dictionary defines credit as the influence or power derived from enjoying the confidence of others. For the KU student, there seems to be a question about how much financial First in a Series confidence is placed in him by Lawrence bank officials, merchants, and even by the University. ACCORDING TO Douglas County Under Sheriff Wayne Schmille, the percentage of KU students who are prosecuted during the year for insufficient fund or forged checks is very small. "Students themselves do not create a special credit problem," he continued. "But there are always a few rotten eggs. Merchants are so used to cashing checks for anyone who even looks like a student, that, indirectly, the student is a problem. "WE HAVE BEEN having trouble with students stealing another student's ID card. If this situation is not corrected, it could cause trouble for the legitimate student. We also have some students who load us up with bad checks when they know they are leaving and won't be back. Many students who cash bogus or insufficient fund checks simply are not concerned about it, Schmille said. "When they receive notice of such a check, they hope it will be forgotten and they can get away with it. However, after they graduate, we get a warranty for their arrest which doesn't impress prospective employers. Each year we receive hundreds of inquiries on students for prospective jobs. If we have in the records that a student has a $10 insufficient check against him, that student most likely will not get the job," he said. **OUT-OF-STATE** students cannot be extradited for a misdemeanor. Anything less than $50 constitutes a misdemeanor. However, any forgery is a felony and enjoys the privilege of extradition. Most insufficient fund checks written by students are misdemeanors. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years 76th Year, No. 65 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Shastri Dies Tuesday, January 11, 1966 India Mourns Death NEW DELHI—(UPI)— India's saddened millions today received the body of Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri, man of the people whose final hours were spent in pursuit of peace for a nation which has seen little but hardship and war. The young socialist official referred to a division within the A crowd estimated at 30,000 thronged New Delhi Airport for the arrival of a Soviet III18 proplet plane which returned Shastri's body from Tashkent, U.S.S.R., where he succumbed earlier today of a heart attack. RECEIVING THE body of the 61-year-old Prime Minister were Indian President Dr. S. Radhakrishnan and Shastri's eldest son, Hari Krishnan. It was placed on an open gun carriage flanked by six generals as the vast crowd, many weeping and others shouting "Long live Shastri," pressed forward for final glimpse of the dimunitive statesman. Shastri's face appeared serene Calls for Withdrawal Socialist Slams Viet War "The administration," whom Jones referred to on one occasion as Uncle Lyndon, "knows the anti-war movement can force it to stop the war," he said, and gave the draft-card burning law and distorted press releases as indications of their opposition. Complete withdrawal of American troops, not negotiation, is the only solution to ending the Viet Nam war, according to Lew Jones, a member of the National Council of Young Socialists' Alliance and the Committee to End the War in Viet Nam. Jones, speaking last night before about 30 persons in the Forum Room, commented on the strengths and weaknesses of the anti-war movement and its effect on the Johnson administration. He gave the logic of the war as a desperate attempt by the rulers of the country to stop world-wide colonial revolutions. Motivated by fear, the rulers may get bolder, Jones continued, and spread the war all over Southeast Asia and, ultimately, into China. "TO CALL FOR negotiation is exactly what Johnson wants. He has power, prestige, and money and will incorporate the movement into his own call for negotiation. It will merely mobilize (Continued on page 5) "I have difficulty understanding the argument for negotiation. To my knowledge, no war has ever ended at a negotiation table but only temporarily quieted." Jones explained, giving Korea and Laos as examples. "A negotiated peace is only a guarantee of a wider war later." "THE OFFICAL administration version is different," Jones explained, "because if the truth were known the American people would not allow themselves to be used as a tool for such rotten ends." movement as to its objective, urging negotiation or withdrawal. in death, reflecting the diplomatic triumph of Tashkent, where he signed a historic peace pact with Pakistani President Mohammed Ayub Khan just 12 hours before he was stricken. It will be cremated in Hindu rites Wednesday near Shanti Vana—the Woodland of Peace on the banks of the Jumna River. It was here that Shastri's predecessor —Jawaharlal Nehru— was Weather cremated 18 months ago before Shastri was sworn in to succeed him. The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts a low tonight in the upper 30's, becoming mostly cloudy. It will be mostly cloudy and mild Wednesday. EN ROUTE to New Delhi by jet airliner for the funeral were ranking government officials from throughout the world, including Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, Secretary of State Dean Rusk and former U.S. Ambassadors to India John Kenneth Galbraith and Sen. John Sherman Cooper, R-Ky., as official representatives of President Johnson. Home Affairs Minister Gulzarilal Nanda, 67, was sworn in earlier today as interim Prime Minister, a sorrowful task he undertook once before on the death of Nehru. ASC News The All Student Council will consider an appropriation of $100 requested by the College Intermediary Board at its meeting today, at 7 p.m., in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. The request was made in the form of a resolution to the Council. The money, if granted, will be used to finance a trip by the Board to the University of Michigan to investigate the residential college system being tested there. Gary Walker, Wichita senior and chairman of the Board, appeared before the Council at its last meeting to explain the reason for the request. HE SAID THE residential college system is a method of education, used primarily at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge in England, where both students and faculty live and attend class in the same building. MIKE McNALLY, Bartlesville, Okla., junior and ASC chairman, referred the resolution, at that last meeting, to the Finance and Auditing Committee for consideration, since the ASC Constitution requires this for any motion for appropriation of a sum in excess of $50 which is not on the regular ASC budget. THAT COMMITTEE'S decision and a vote from the Council on the request are both expected in today's meeting, McNally said. McNally added he will appoint a committee to investigate and rewrite the elections bill, ASC Bill No. 2 of the ASC Constitution. World-Wide Wire Congressmen Return For 89th Session WASHINGTON—(UPI)Lawmakers, worried about the war in Viet Nam, the one against poverty and the voters back home, assembled today for the opening of the second session of the 89th Congress. After routine opening ceremonies both the House and Senate planned to forego any real business until President Lyndon Johnson delivers his televised State-of-the-Union address to a joint session at 8 p.m. Wednesday. The big question was what Johnson would say about prospects for peace—or a hotter war—in Viet Nam and what sort of balance he proposed to strike between spending at home and abroad. Transit Talks Stall NEW YORK—(UPI)—Negotiations called at City Hall by Mayor John V. Lindsay in a personal effort to end the 10-day-old bus and subway strike broke up without visible result today while another mammoth traffic jam built up in the city's streets. About 5:15 a.m., CHT, negotiators for the striking Transit Workers Union, the Transit Authority, and members of the mediation panel emerged from a meeting room, mostly without comment. Koreans Hit VC Hard SAIGON—(UPI)—A South Korean military spokesman claimed today troops of the ROK "Tiger Division" trapped a Viet Cong regiment, killed 180 guerillas by body count and captured 609 others in bitter fighting 350 miles north of Saigon. A Communist regiment normally numbers from 800 to 1,500 men. The spokesman said another 300 Communists possibly were killed and dragged off by their comrades in the battle 10 miles north of Qui Nhon. Playmate Visits Viet Nam SAIGON—(UPI)—Pretty Jo Collins, Playboy Magazine's "Playmate of the Year," flew to Viet Nam today to deliver a kiss and a lifetime subscription to the magazine to a paratroop company now in combat against the Viet Cong. The project began last November when someone from the unit recalled that Playboy had offered to have a bunny make personal delivery to anyone purchasing a lifetime subscription to the magazine for $125. The money was quickly collected and Price wrote the magazine. He made it fairly plain that he and the rest of the men were more interested in delivery than the subscription. "We would appreciate so very much a real, living, breathing American girl," Price wrote. "We have unanimously decided it should be the 'Playmate of the Year.'" Students Plan Ski Trip at Break Skiers who can't wait for Mont Bleu have a chance to go skiing in Colorado between semesters. The KU-Y Ski Club bus leaves Lawrence late in the afternoon on Saturday, Jan. 29. On Sunday, Jan. 30 and Monday, Jan. 31, the group will ski at Breckenridge. TWO DAYS, FEB 1 and 2, will be spent skiing at Vail Pass. The Ski Club bus will leave Breckenridge late in the afternoon Wednesday, February 2. It will arrive in Lawrence Thursday, Feb. 3, in the morning. The fee for the trip includes transportation, boarding with two meals a day, tows and instruction. Those who go must either provide their own skis or rent them extra. The final plans for the ski trip Official Bulletin On Campus Interviews: Jan. 10—Tulsa, Okla., Public Schools, K-12, 106 Ba.; Jan. 11—Mesa Co. Dist. 51, 106 Ba.; Jan. 12—Ovead Rm. Union; Jan. 13–R-5 District, Park Hill, Kansas City, Mo., K-12, 106 Ba.; Jan. 12 & 13—Albuquerque, N.M. Public Schools, K-12, 106 Ba.; Jan. 12—Wood, Colo., K-12, 106 Union; Jan. 13—Ormah, Neb., Public Schools, K-12, Oread Rm., Union American Society Class, 7:15 p.m. Pall Hall, Jaeob Kleinberg, 330 Murphy Pall. Lew Jones-Young Socialist Alliance, 7:30 p.m. Immediate Withdrawal vs. Negotiations, Forum Room, Union. Daily Kansan Monday, January 10. 1966 8 will be announced at the KU-Y Ski Club meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. Other information can be obtained at the KU-Y office. STUDY IN SOUTHERN FRANCE An undergraduate liberal-arts year in Aix-en-Provence FRENCH LANGUAGE & LITERATURE EUROPEAN STUDIES ART & ART HISTORY MEDITERRANEAN STUDIES Classes in English and French satisfying American curriculum requirements Institute students enrolled at the University of Aix-Marseille founded in 1409 Students live in French homes Tuition, trans-Atlantic fares, room and board, about $1,950. The College Intermediary Board is sponsoring an intramural College Bowl contest again this year. Terry Hammons, Oswego senior, is chairman of the College Bowl Committee. College Bowl Now Accepts Team Applications Single elimination rounds will begin Sunday, February 27. Both a women's champion and a grand INSTITUTE FOR AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES 2 bis, rue du Bon-Pasteur Aix-en Provence, France champion will be determined. Teams will consist of four members and two alternates. Large dorms may enter two teams. Undergraduate students who have never lived in an organized living group may enter teams in the competition. A list of team members and alternates and a five-dollar participation fee are due in the College Office, 206 Strong Hall, by 5 p.m., Friday, January 14. The committee would prefer payment by check (payable to the KU College Bowl) or the five dollars enclosed in an envelope. The Classical Film Series presents THE 39 STEPS (1935-U.S.A.) One of the earliest and best known of Alfred Hitchcock's films. Admission 60¢ Wednesday-7:00 p.m. Dyche Auditorium WARNING TO PATRIOTS "If you are ever going to buy a gun, buy it now. Communist organizations that usually have good sources of information are expecting Johnson to be next president and Hubert Humphrey to be the next vice-president. Once this election is over they expect to be able to operate openly without any government interference whatsoever" ("On Target" April 1, 1964, page 1 & 2) "On Target" is a Minuteman publication Mr. Robert Depugh Leader Of The Minutemen 4:00 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 12, 1966 Forum Room, Kansas Union Minority Opinions Forum Minority Opinions Forum CLASSIFIEDS Accommodation and employment to all students color, creed, or FOR SALE s, goods, services, advertised in one location, not served without regard to national origin. Renault Dauphine. 1962, exceptionally clean inside and out, mar new engine. See to appreciate Best offer over $450. Call VI 2-3983. If TYPEWRITERS-Office size and portables, new and used, manual and electric. Seventy-eight. Seventy-eight. Office machine sales, rentals and service. Office supplies, equipment and furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. St., V1 3-3856. Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1491; for free use. 1984 Buick Roadmaster Convertible. Perfect body, non-slip tires, back seat, top, bottom in fair shape. Power windows, power seats, power lift. Call Tom after taff. # 73-2734 Wollenkast stereo 4-track tape recorder and Remington portable typewriter. Will consider trading for camera equipment. Gary Grazia, VI-21483 fc 1956 Fairlane, radio, heater, w/o wires, chains, gauges, new battery, other extras. Clean. Mechanically sound. Reasonable. Call 1-100. Clearance! Clearance! Tape recorders, stereos, stereo FM radios cut to $60. AM-FM radios cut to $19.99. Hurry to Ray Stoneback's, 929-931. Mass., 185. Across the burning sands of the Arabian Desert, at no little risk to my faithful Bedouin camel driver, Ben Akmeid El Hazar Djemai, a native of Axolotl black Meershaum pipe. Handcarved by master artisans in the image of a notorious caliph of the Ottoman empire, this work of art features an amber bowl, three bowling couplings. A caravan has brought this treasure of the Near East to you at the most reasonable price of sixty American can dollars. Address: 12345 Avenue to: Caravans, Nile, purveyors of treasures. Box 2, University Daily Kansan. tt 1950 Cadillac hearse, 65,000 miles. Good condition, $275. Call CE, 3-7554 Topeka. Overhauls at 58,000 miles. 1-11 Like new Motorola portable record and radio combination, with wired board for wireless with knob interface. Call VI 2-5650. 1-11 Clearance! Clearance! 500 fires at lowest prices ever. Example 659-14 (655-14) white, smaller size, cut to $12 each plus tax -New white Volks (560-15's) cut to $15 plus tax. Ray Sack's back! 929-931 Mass St. 184114. 164 Chevy CHEVY. Grey Impala, 300 HP stock, P.S. Posttraction. Tinted glass, 22,000 original owner, must sell. Call VI 2-121-7 1961 Nash Rambler station wagon. Radio and heater—sat ballts. New snow tires. One owner car. Call VI 2- 3401. tf 1957 Chevy, B.J.-Air. 283 V-8, radio. heat-r, very good condition. Mechanically, body and interior. $525. VI. 764. 1-11 Must sell 1966 GTO. $550 under dealer's price, perfect condition, no gimmicks. Call Doug Dienelt VI 3- 5731 1-12 1640 Ford 2-door sdan . Mechanic- Cali Mike Sullivan, 529 McColm, 1640 Joss M reuy, V-8, automatic, radio, bit but it good. Must sell, see. Call Kim, VI 3-5366. Leave your number. 1-11 1959 Corvette 283.4-speed, dual quad carbs, blue. V 3-8753, Kenyansai 1- 12/2011 S imer tenor sax See it at room 502. Tympkin. 1-11 1557 Ford Ranchwagon, Y-8 stand- ing on 3-wheel drive. Phone VI, SM 3-8292 or UN 4-3270. Sports car owners, we have castell o.l. prestolite spark plugs at quality prices. BL-vins, 7th and Michigan. 1-21 1957 Chevy, 2 door ht., V-8, stick, good mechanical condition and paint. Need money for 2nd same color. 1311 Stewart. VI 2-6351. VI 3x300I. 1-21 TYPING Experienced typist has IBM electric to type your thesis, dissertation, research paper, manuscript. Fastest and accurate work. Reasonable rates. Phone Mrs. Gilbert. V1 2-8688 Experienced typist, 8 years experience in thias and term papers. Electric wiperswipers. Fast CALL. Service incl. CALL, CALL, Mrs. Barbieri, 2407 Yale V1. J-1-684. Typist, experienced with term papers, those and dissertations, will give your typing immediate attention with elric machine with extra symbols. Mrs Machine Highly at 405 W. 13th, VI 3-0048 Secretary familiar with legal terms will do fyting—briefs, memorandums, desistration. Fast response reasonable rates. March 6. Goff V. 3-2777 Experienced typist, will type in my home. Accurate typing, reasonable rates and prompt service. Call Mrs. Frown at VI 2-6210 Experienced typist will do only theses on electric typewriter. Mrs. Fulchar. VI 3-0558. tf Accurate typing by experienced typist. Term papers, themes, theses and dissertations. Reasonable rates and fast. VI 2-1561. tf Wanted: Typing in my home. Experienced and accurate in term papers and theses. Call VI 3-2651 any time. ff Secretary with many years experience, will type your term papers, documents. Fast, accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Vi 626 25 after 5 p.m. Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses, dissertations, research service. Electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mr. Rauckman, VI, 2-2781. Expertise secretary will do typing VI 3-1038, after 5.99 call VI 3-1039 ff Expertise secretary will do typing VI 3-1038, after 5.99 call VI 3-1039 ff Experienced typist will do theses and ku. FU, Phlegms Mrs. Oxford at VI 2-0673, KU, Fighens Mrs. Oxford at VI 2-0673, Former Harvard and University of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports, and theses. Phone VI 3-7207. tf TYPING — GESTFTNER MIMEO- MRS—MGREM Mrs. McEdlowney, tt -8908. Expert Typing -Theses, dissertations and term papers. Electric typewriter, standard rates. Mrs. Mishler. VI 3-1029. 1-10 Typing done by experienced secretary for 256 each double spaced page. Call Ehrel Henderson, 2565 Ridge Ct., VI 2-0122. tf Typing done at reasonable rates by experienced typist. Fast accurate work. Call Betty Vincent, call VI 3-5504. tf Fast, accurate; immediate attention given to all term papers, reports, theses, etc. Mrs. Donna Stewart, VI 3-6621 1-21 Former teacher will give careful attention to typing your term papers. Accurate and neat, 72 years experience. Courses: 3-28294, 3-28295, students desiring theses, dissertations, rough drafts, or term papers typed fast and accurately on electric typewriter by experienced Cooks. Cook GR 2-1470, 1715, Sipoma. CT 2-120 Typing Wanted—Theses, essays and Neat and accurate. Calcs 1-21 4156. FOR RENT Vacancy in a contemporary home. Private entrance and bath. Five evening meals weekly. 70 monthly fees paid. Call VI 3-9635 until 6 pm. 2 bedrooms in newer home, linens and very clean. See at Minnesota 1-10 Extra nice quiet furnished apartment for mature man. carpeted, nice kitchen, utilizes paid. 2 blocks from Union. Available now. VI 3-8534 tf Married, graduate students, faculty, administrators available January 1, one available February 1. Call for brochure. V1. Vice President Appartments office, 1123 Indiana Emory Apts. 1423 Ohio. One one-bedroom apt., furnished. Gas and water paid $75. One efficiency apt. VI pa 3-8190. All utilities paid $1-7 Vancancies in contemporary home for young man, prefer graduate stu- meals in pool, home, cooke- meals if desired, telephone. VI 3-8625, call b-force 6 p.m. Rooms for men students, some available NOW, some February 1, with or without kitchen privileges. Call VI 3-1607. 1-12 Diese Bierstube: Singen, trinken und essen German style. Featureting student's favorite dark beverage and student's favorite light beverage from Golden, Colorado. Also serving Pitch-Pose night. Wednesday. Party Room available. 14th and Tennessee. VI 2-944. ttf MISCELLANEOUS Furnished apartments for 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 men. Call VI 5-0131 or VI 5-013- 1-3 BLANDING PARTY PHOTO GRAPHY Your satisfaction is my strongest Gold embossed party titles: Kodacole $17.10; custom enlarged B&W $37. Three years' experience at Hewlett for books and samples call Dave 6-5515 Need any Sewing or Mending done? Please rate the rates. Call after 5:00 p.m. V1-2:30p.m. Wanted: General house work preferably in sorority, fraternity, or private residence. Expained and have references. Written to Housekeeping 1132 Conn., Lawrence PARTY TIME—Building available for dances. Call Vi M-3-745- Rainy Friend Sports Car Maintenance and Repairs & for the enthusiast Super tuning modifications and accessories Ray Piekring's Competition Sports Car Maintenance & Repair School Line 10: - Evenings and weekends only also other automobile work behind appartment only VI 3-260 behind Garage 877 Connecticut Farmers Math Tutor: B.A. degree in Math from KU. Experienced in tutoring geometry, algebra, calculus and analytic geometry. Phone VI 3-0231 Experienced photographer in children and family portraits. Reasonable rate. Will take pictures in your home. Call VI 2-6148. tf Reward offered for lost glasses- black rimmed. Contact David M. Miller, room 635, Templin Hall, VI 2-1200. 1-12 LOST Gold, oval-shaped, brushed-texture woman's bracelet. Somewhere on campus Monday. VI 2-9100—Jullane in 842 Small reward. 1-10 Yellow Pickett Slide Rule in Grey Case with initials R.M.S. Lost in Malott Hall before Christmas vacation, Call Rob Shrader at VI 3-5770 FOUND Man's coat left in Henn's Laundry, Claim and this for the first p12 for this art Vl. 3-9683 HELP WANTED Students looking for part time work work on the job at Sandy's Drive-In, 2120 W. 9th Reliable student for selling imports. Apply 920 La, after 6 p.m. tf Room available for girl student free in exchange for baby-sitting services. Room with half-bath separated from bedroom in nice room called Call VI 2-0445 1-11 University family wishes mother's helper. Room and board in exchange for babysitting one child. Discuss terms VI 3-4098. Mrs. Maher. 1-12 A position is now open on your campus. A Time In. college representative on a small or medium-sized institution of $750 in commissions annually selling subscriptions to TIME. LIFE. SPORTS ILLUSTRATED and FORTUNE at reduced students' and educator rates. On large markets, you will receive an earn over $750 a year. They work hard, of course, but their hours are their own, and they gain valuable business experience in this year-round market. You will also be required to college class and any other information you consider important to Time Inc.. College Bureau, TIME & LIFE Building, Room 1020. All applications must be submitted by January 20. 1966. You will be contacted promptly. We have an opening for one male student to work. Two evening shifts per week. Tom Dixon at Dixon's Drive-In. Restaurant, VI 3-7446. A proven part-time income opportunity for college men. You can work in a management course is offered. If you need a year-round income that will finance resume of college expenses, send resume of college expenses to Box 128, Shawnee Mission, Kan 1-14 WANTED Will Baby Sit in my home or yours. 4:00 pm VI T 2-3901 Call after 6:00 pm Need male roommate to share apartment for 2nd semester—uppressman or graduate student preferred. Call VI 3-1349. 1-11 One or 2 men to share 2 bedroom apt. in University Terrace. Share $160 and utilities. VI 3-7251. 1-12 TRANSPORTATION SFE MORE IN EUROPE THIS SUMMER, see it better and save-traveling with NSA—a choice of 33 flexible trips of 21 to 63 days with other college and graduate students for travel, accommodations, admissions, etc., available only through NSA. Trips to Europe, Israel, Latin America and the Far East. Student shine available. Fee-free. Students receive Student Assistance. Dept. Z. 265 Madison Avenue New York, NY. 10016. A nonprofit organization. 1-11 (2) $ (1, 3 ) $ Daily Kansan Monday, January 10, 1966 7 FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Specializes in semester break reservations. New York Cleaner Murders of 2000 Persons For the best in — - dry cleaning - alterations 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 - reweaving VI 2-1523 Exclusive Representative Robettes Faucets Lattieres Rings of For the finest in L. G. Balfour Co. V1 2-1523 Open Wednesday Evenings Malls Shopping Center Plenty of Free Parking Fraternity Jewelry Novelties Favors - Sportswear - Mugs - Badges - Guards 8TH ST. SHOE REPAIR - Paddles - Trophies Gift Box - Cups * Award heels. We repair purses Shoe dyeing 107 E. 8TH Established - Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING Andrews Gifts GRANT'S 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 Drive-In Pet Center Hixon Studio is your 1965-66 Jayhawker Photographer Please Call Now For Your Appointment THE SHANTY MENU "Portraits of Distinction" Bob Blank, Owner 云 Across From The High School 19th & La. VI 3-9631 Bob Blank, Owner 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 - SAUSAGE * PEPPERONI * HAMBURGER SENIORS Mobile Oven Menu - Brake Adjustment . 98 HIXON STUDIO - Double Cheese (Friday only) * SHANTY INTERNATIONAL All King-Size 12" Pizzas - Tune Ups OPEN 24 HOURS SPECIALS HONN'S Coin Operated Laundry and Dry Cleaning Free 10-Minute Delivery (Normally) 5.00 to 12.00 p.m. Call VI 2-2500 - Lubrication . . . . $1.00 - 1819 W. 23rd V1 3-9694 - Automatic Transmission - Wheel Alignment - Wheel Alignment 25% Off Goodyear Tires Now for the first time in Lawrence we at THE SHANTY are able to deliver piping hot pizza to your door. We control oven. Our radio dispatched units offer lightning fast service and catering. Allow an extra 30 minutes for baking. The oven is not featured on the Mobile Units. CALL US! Order 8, get one free. Page Fina Service HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Open to 10 p.m. Every Evening Ph. VI 3-0350 Originality IN FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION especially for you by Alexander's 826 IDWA LAWRENCE, KANAB FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PROVE VL 2-1300 Second-Half Rally Sparks Victory With a second-half effort combining a half-court zone press and new-found inspiration, the KU Jayhawks surged to an 82-65 win over the Iowa State Cyclones Saturday night. Playing their first game on home soil since Dec. 10, the Jayhawks took advantage of the opportunity to show the campus and local fans what it took to win the Big Eight Tournament over the Christmas holidays. "Wonderful" Walt Wesley scored a season-high total of 39 points in pacing KU to its second conference victory without a defeat before 14,500 fans. In second place for game scoring honors was Don Smith of the Cyclones with 25. SMITH ASSUMED the task of guarding Wesley but was ineffective against his accurate hook shots, set shots, and jump shots. When one man proved ineffective, Iowa State began dropping its forwards on Wesley. This did little more than increase the traffic around the basket as he connected on 17 of 25 shots from the field. With five for seven at the charity strip, Weslay came within a scant three points of his career-high total of 42. Hawks Drown NU Bill Johnson Sets Big 8 Record As Swimmers Capture Third Win Coach Dick Reamon's KU Varsity swimmers brought home their third victory in three starts, by defeating Nebraska, 56-38 in Robinson Pool Saturday afternoon. The young and predominantly sophomore squad was paced by Don Pennington, Shawnee Mission junior, who won three first place positions for the Jays. Pennington captured the top spot in the 160-yd. Individual Medley, 200-yd. Butterfly and 500-yd. Freestyle. Wesley were the ultimate rebound leaders with 11 and nine, respectively. ANOTHER JAYHAWK who was doing big things Saturday was Bill Johnson, Tulsa, Okla., senior who set a Big Enght record in the 200-yd. backstroke with a time of 2:04.9. The old record was set by John Day of OU in 1962 with a time of 2:05.7. The varsity swimmers stand 3-0 for the season. They have defeated the Air Force Academy and Colorado. Saturday they take on K-State at Manhattan. THE RESULTS: 400-vd. Medley Relay—KU-3:48.1; NU-3:49.5. During the first half, KU demonstrated the opposite extreme to their second-half performance. Hitting only 32 per cent of their shots, the Jayhawks were forced to rely on the rebounding efforts of Wesley, Al Lopes, and Ron Franz to stay within range of the Cleyones. 400-yd. Freestyle—Tom Bowser, KU—1:55. 200-yd. Freestyle—Tom Bowling 60-yd. Freestyle—Keefe Lodwig—NU—28.2; Joe Henderson—KU—28.0. 160-yd. Ind. Med.—Pennington KU—I:40. Dave Frank—NU— 1:40.2 After only one day of rest, KU takes an unblemished 2-0 conference record into the contest with the Oklahoma Sooners at eight tonight in Allen Field House. Iowa State, 0-2 in league play, travels to Columbia for a meeting with the Missouri Tigers. 1 Meter Diving—Sorensen—NU; Jim Askins—KU. 200-yd. Backstroke—Johnson—KU—2:04.9; Jim Coughenour KU—2:09.3. 500-yd. Freestyle—Pennington—KU—5:15.5; Tom Van Slyke—KU—5:27.9. 100-yd. Freestyle—Keefe Lodwig—NU——:49.4; Dick Bisbee— KU——:50. only 44 per cent by the Cyclones. KU connected on 19 of 30 tries while Iowa State hit a scent 11 of 25. The final percentages found KU with 41 per cent after the dismal first half performance, to 44 per cent for the losers. 200-yd. Breaststroke-Mike Jackson-NU-2:52.2; Steve Goetz-NU-2:25.6. 400-yd. Freestyle Relay—KU; NU. Trench Coat THOUGH Wesley ruled when KU had the ball, a superb defensive show, engineered by small Delly Lewis, made it all possible. The second half defense was characterized by a harrowing half-court zone press which caused the Cyclones to make many mistakes and turn the ball over on 14 occasions. Iowa State gave up the ball 19 times on turnovers for the game to only five for the victors. Have your car coats and jackets cleaned during the mid-winter break, at . . . NewYork Cleaners Merchants of Good Appearance 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 ALTERATIONS — REPAIRS — REWEAVING After a less-than-medicore first half, the Jayhawks fired out of the dressing room after intermission to outscore their opponents by 50 to 28 in the final stanza. With 17:54 remaining in the game, KU trailed 39-41. The scrambling Jayhawks then ran the total to 59-48 with 10:54 remaining. Raul Duarte, 6-9 center for the Cyclones, fouled out with 17:54 remaining, and this was a severe blow to their rebounding efforts against 6-11 Wesley. Smith and 6 Daily Kansan Monday, January 10, 1966 During the second half comeback effort, KU shot 50 per cent from the field as compared to © VOLKSWAGEN OF AMERICA, IND. ANTARCTICA 1 The first car at the bottom of the world. They wanted a car that "any member of the party could hop into and drive off without a moment's hesitation." The Australian National Research Expedition really had no choice. And the Volkswagen just happens to fill the bill. The big trick is the VW's air-cooled rear engine. It has no radiator. It uses no water or antifreeze. It just goes. (Antarctica #1 stood for days in $40^{\circ}$ below zero weather and started without a tremble.) The rear engine gave the VW so much extra traction it climbed "straight up and down the slopes." (But they cheated a little; sometimes they put chains on the back wheels.) Another reason the VW went where even the dogs wouldn't is the sealed bottom. It took an awful beating, but that's what it's there for: To protect the works inside against the weather outside. The conditions got so fierce that one man said, "Now we know what it'll be like when Hell freezes over." So if it ever does, you know what car to buy. CONZELMAN MOTORS SALES — SERVICE — PARTS Overseas Delivery Available 2522 Iowa (Hwy.59 South) AUTHORIZED DEALER VI 3-2200 . Blood Drive Begins Students are still strongly pledging their support to the blood drive helmed by Alpha Tau Omega. The blood will be drawn Feb. 14 through Feb. 19, by the Lawrence Chapter of the American Red Cross. KU living groups are endorsing the drive as a service project in support of the American Viet Nam war effort. CAMPUS ASSOCIATIONS such as the Inter-Fraternity Council are supporting the drive in full. Donor lists will be circulated in the living groups possibly until the middle of next week. "Students are urged to sign the sheets rather than donating blood on a non-scheduled time basis during the drive," Nick Brocker, Prairie Village junior and member of ATO, said. Location of the drive has been tentatively set as Robinson Gym. Rides to and from the gym will be available for students participating in the blood drive. APPROXIMATELY 100 RED Cross workers will be needed to draw the blood during the drive. These workers are volunteers from the Lawrence community. Students can also lend their support to the blood drive through assisting the Red Cross workers at Robinson Gym. Anyone interested in volunteering in this capacity should contact Mrs. Joe Buyers at the Red Cross office located in the Community Building. Collection of 1,000 pints of blood is the aim of the university drive. Odd Wav to Die Recently in Japan a whale hunter accidentally fell into the vagina of a whale and suffocated. Daily Kansan Monday, January 10, 1966 JANUARY SHOE SALE 120 PAIRS TAYLOR-MADE • COLE-HAAN • BRITISH WALKER NOW 1/3 OFF - Scotch Grain Wing-Tips - "Burnt Ivory" loafers - Brown/Black Saddle Oxfords - "Burnt Ivory” Wing-Tip Brogues (Reg. $14.95 to $28.95 Now $9.95 to $19.30) Entire Stock Not Included THE University Shop ON THE HILL Kansas Union Cafeteria Help Us Keep Our New Year's Resolution We talked our employer into having a SPECIAL LUNCHEON AND DINNER on our CAFETERIA LINE five days a week during 1966. We resolved to our boss that we could give the STUDENT BODY AND FACULTY a well balanced meal at a good discount. But in order to do this, we must have more volume to off-set our discount. "So would you all come see,come try our good food, our good buy." Cafeteria Employees Kansas Union Law School Tries to Aid Convicts By Maury Breecher The amount of "time" and possibly the question of life or death hangs in the balance of work done by 10 KU Law students for prisoners at Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary. Their work is being carried out under the new Prison Legal Assistance Program which began Last of a Series of Law School Benefits this semester at KU under the supervision and sponsorship of Law School Professor Paul Wilson. According to Wilson, this program is serving as a pilot program for the Department of Justice and, if successful, will expand throughout the nation with many other law schools participating in similar programs under Justice Department supervision. THE DEPARTMENT of Justice is interested in the program from the standpoint of prison administration. Earlier this semester, Eugene Barkin, attorney for the Director of the U.S. Bureau of Prisons, flew from Washington to meet with Wilson and the students to plan and decide on the program's format. The Justice Department realizes the wholesome effects such a program has on prisoners, Wilson said. If a prisoner has suffered an injustice it can affect his morale and also serve to reaffirm the common belief of prisoners that "society" doesn't care about them. Thus a prisoner is liable to strike back at society either while still in prison or when he is freed. On the other hand, Wilson continued, the prisoner's morale can be lifted just by having someone not connected with the prison show that he cares by offering advice. IF A PRISONER thinks he has Daily Kansan Monday, January 10, 1966 First there was "Baby Jane." Then "Hush, Hush Sweet Charlotte" NOW! ANOTHER MEMORABLE DAVIS PORTRAIT! 20TH ANNIVERSARY Bette Davis as "The Nanny" WILLIAM DIX and PAMELA FRANKLIN Hire a Band of Four Produced from the Screenplay, Directed by JIMMY MANGSER: SEITH HOLT A SEVEN ARTS - NUMMER FILM PRODUCTION Evening Shows 7:00 & 9:00 Granada THEATRE...telephone VI 3-5786 been wronged but in reality hasn't, the situation is explained to him by the law students. In this way the prisoner will not have the feeling that "society is out to get him." Wilson said it was hoped the prisoner will then try to make the best of the situation and commence good behavior which can possibly lessen his sentence and make him eligible for parole. The cost of the Legal Assistance Program will be defrayed by a $3800 grant from the Metzenbaum Human Relations Fund of Cleveland. Students in the program receive one hour of credit this semester in their research requirements. Next semester they will receive three hours of credit. A common type of case upon which students will be working will be the question of the deposition of detainers on the prisoner. These are claims upon the prisoner made by various states of the Union usually resulting from the prisoner's breaking of a law which was both a federal and a state offense. Often the state may want to press its claim after the prisoner is released from the federal prison. THE PROGRAM works this way. Leavenworth prisoners are informed about the program by penitentiary authorities. Interested prisoners fill out applications in which they identify themselves and state their problem. Prof. Wilson, with the help of the prison authorities, checks on the financial condition of these prisoners to confirm that they cannot afford regular legal council. If they cannot afford council and seem to have potential merit in their cases, then students are assigned to interview them. The students work in teams of two. During the first interview the students get the background of the prisoner's case. Then they conduct a fact investigation consisting of legal research, examinations of the prisoner's records and letters to other authorities for more information. After this, the students confer with Prof. Wilson who is a member of the Kansas bar. Wilson said, "The students do the research and reach tentative conclusions but none of their conclusions are communicated until approved by me." If the student's conclusion is approved or changed by Wilson, a memorandum is drawn up for the prisoner's approval. If the conclusion is that the case has no real merit and could not be won the students then explain to the prisoner the reasons why. Wilson pointed out that this practice spares the courts the waste of time going through a fruitless case. This is an immediate benefit, he said. IF A CASE does have merit the memorandum from the student team will advise the prisoner to go to court. The prisoner must file his own petition, however. At this point, the court assigns a public defender to the The attorney then usually allows the student law team to observe the process of the trial and help with further research and investigation. case. This attorney usually serves without pay and welcomes the preliminary work which the student law team has made available to him. The student law team learns to develop skeptical attitudes since it is apparent the convict may not always tell the truth. They gain experience in research and investigation. More important to them is the fact they get a glimpse of actual situations which they may encounter in future criminal practice. Shakespeare-Indian One Indian newspaper has claimed that William Shakespeare was an Indian. His name was Villivakam Sheshappa Iyer; he was kidnapped by the East India Company and brought to England, the newspaper said. Did You Get New Clothes For Christmas? If so, you want to take the best possible care of them. Lawrence Laundry uses Exclusive Sanitone Dry Cleaning to keep them looking fresh and sparkling clean. Even if you did not receive new clothes, Lawrence Laundry keeps your clothes looking bright and new. Give us a try and see what we mean. ||||| LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners --- 10th & New Hampshire VI 3-3711 "Specialist In Fabric Care" Council Looks On to Future Standing Committees Seek Progress For The University and the Student Body As Well By Stephen Russell (This is the last in a series of articles about the All Student Council at KU. Today, the focus is on the Council's committees.) KU is a growing university. Corresponding to the modern world in which it exists, it is continually changing more students, new buildings, and new curricula. To keep pace with KU and the students, which it represents, the All Student Council must also be a adap t able to change. It must be capable of hand l i n g the new problems which a growing enrollment and a changing university create for its student body. Examples of the concern for the future which the ASC has built into its constitutional structure are two of the council's standing committees and provision in its constitution which allows it to create special temporary or "ad hoc" committees. THE STANDING committees referred to are the Committee Evaluation Board and the Student Athletic Seating Board. The Committee Evaluation Board evaluates and promotes the effectiveness of the 27 executive committees in the executive branch of KU's student government. Besides examining the work of the established executive committees to make sure they are performing their duties, the evaluation board is also responsible for evaluating the needs of the campus to provide for the necessary committees to handle new situations. It also investigates the "exec" committees to see if their purpose or function is outmoded. CHAIRMAN TOM RADER, Greensburg sophomore, said his committee, sometimes referred to as the "Little Hoover Committee," is also responsible to the council for reports on the status of the committees at any time throughout the year. At these times it can make any recommendations it deems necessary. ASC Chairman, Mike McNally, said the Student Athletic Seating Board is unique because it deals directly with student opinion. It is because of this, and because of the importance of the subject it deals with, the seating of students at university athletic events, that the board is a council committee and not an executive committee, he said. CHAIRMAN Jim Klumpp, Coffeyville sophomore, said the board is an "airing place" for student opinion on the seating of students at university athletic events. One of the more recent programs of the board, according to Klumpp, was the proposal for a student expansion of Memorial Stadium. He said the program, which was initially brought to the attention of the athletic department through an ASC resolution, is now "in the hands of the athletic department and the corporation from which the money to build the expansion will be borrowed." THE ASC RETREAT committee was established to investigate the possibilities for holding an ASC Retreat, a training program in student government for all council members. Spring Stidham, Park Ridge, Ill., junior and committee chairman, said she believes the program will be most beneficial to new members of the ASC in giving them some insight and ideas of the council before they begin work on it. The living group officers' meeting committee was established to investigate the possibilities of promoting meetings between the officers of the living groups on campus. The program would set up meetings which living group officers could attend to listen to guest speakers and exchange ideas and policies. It would hopefully make closer ties between the different living districts on campus. MG SPORTS SEDAN Room for five. Built for fun THE PRE-ENROLLMENT committee was established to assist the Registrar's Office in planning the pre-enrollment program for the university. James K. Hitt, registrar, requested the committee from the council to use as a sounding board of student opinion on pre-enrollment procedures. Room for dive—80% of the MG Sports Sedan is devoted to people. Result: room for five non-dieting humans to stretch out and relax. The travelling gear goes into the trunk (where it belongs). Plenty of window glass about, so relax and enjoy the view. Built for fun — the MG Sports Sedan will out-handle an embarrassed number of sports cars...thanks to front wheel drive, fade-free disc brakes and Hydrolastic suspension. 30-miles-to-a-gallon adds immeasurably to the f MG MG SPORTS SEDAN 30-miles-to-a-gailion adds immeasurably to the fun. As does the low initial price. British Motors 1116 W. 23rd It Used to Be.. Jan. 10. 1941 President Roosevelt has signed the WPA application to furnish federal funds for the proposed $125,000 Military Science building on the south side of the campus. VI 3-8367 KU Champs in 1952 By Hector Olave The 1952 KU basketball team, led by All-American Clyde Lovellette, scored a tremendous double victory by winning the NCAA championship and then continuing to the Olympic Games where they formed the nucleus of the United States Olympic team which won first place. The University of Kansas will do its share in making less the suffering of Europe's war-stricken millions. Money for the purchase of food will go to the much-persecuted Armenians, whose plight is almost beyond belief. Warm clothes will be sent to the people of Belgium and Northern France who are utterly destitute, and dependent solely upon American charity for their existences. Sororities and organized houses were busy green-eyeing the Valentine Queen's crown as they met all over the Hill to choose candidates for their election. Ballots and pictures of each girl will be printed in the Kansan. Only males will be allowed to cast ballots in the polling. Jan. 10, 1916 Daily Kansan Monday, January 10, 1966 3 KIEF'S Record & Stereo ARE YOU MISSING ANY OF THESE FAVORITES? 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CONSTANTINO CORNER PHILADELPHIA CIRCULAR TRAVEL KINGS COUNTY CITY OF CHEVROLET MA A121/ MS A721 STEREO COUNTRY FILM LEONARD BERNSTEIN Rhapsody in Blue An American in Paris New York Philharmonic and The Columbia Symphony Croft Grand Canyon State Leonard Beriston New York Platinum Now you can own the world's favorite music by the world's greatest artists: Bernstein, Kostelanetz, Ormandy and others. Music that inspired radio and TV themes like: "The Lone Ranger" Theme, The Hitchcock TV Theme, The "Philip Morris" Theme... Music from Broadway hit musicals like: "Kismet," "Song of Norway" ... BOLERO THE MUSIC HOUSE AND SHOWHALL OF LEONARD BERNSTEIN NEW YORK PHILHARMONIE MA 62371 MLAS 1011* Romantic music from motion pictures like: "Song Without End," "The Story of Three Loves," "An American in Paris"... Great standards like: "The Lamp Is Low,'" "Tonight We Love," "My Reverie," "Full Moon and Empty Arms." *Stereo ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Weaver Weaver RECORD DEPARTMENT Editorials LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS Cogito ergo finique Author's note for publication: Opinions expressed herein are in terms of Irony, Sarcasm, and/or Irreverence. CONSERVATUS: We're distributing free copies of that great American novel, "We Don't Dare Call It Gospel," because we hope it will start apathetic people like you, sir, thinking. LIBERALICUS: Haven't I heard something about that book? I think it's on "comrade" Chief Justice Warren's list of publications not to be read by the "faithful" or given as Christmas gifts. LIBERALICUS: This may be true, but my organization is trying to establish a better image by means of this book. We're cleverly sponsoring an "objective" essay contest in which a contestant must read this book and write whether or not he approves of its controversial accusations (although I don't see how he could disapprove). Of course, the usual "conservative" standards of documentation will be observed. I might also add that in the past we've never found an essay that was critical of the book that used the proper standards of documentation. CONSERVATUS: We're not giving a blanket endorsement of some or the over-zealous sentiment occasionally expressed, you understand. Actually, most of us think it has just gone too far in two or three sentences. Well, I don't know. Your group has got some pretty "right-o" tendencies. I just don't think an anti-flag, mother-hating, apple-pie-disdainting leftist like me should be reading something like this book. Somehow it might get out and it could ruin me. Besides the idea of getting connected with any "Fascist-leaning" causes is really frightening. I could get "black-listed" or "branded" a reactionary or something. CONSERVATUS: Don't you see, that's what we're fighting against! People must realize that conservatism is the wave of the future! We get new strength daily. Just yesterday a new branch of our movement, the Student Mars Society, picketed a missile factory that was behind in its quota. How's that for activism? LIBERALICUS: LIBERALICUS: Don't try to kid me. I know about the real move behind your group — intellectualism. You're simply trying to cover up for those fuzzy intellectuals in the background of your movement—Bill Buckley, Robert Welch, George Lincoln Rockley, John Wayne and the rest. You're just a coog in the wheel in another of those "egghead" movements that want to change the world and the status quo without thinking. If we let irresponsible people like you take over the government, who knows, maybe tomorrow the mail would be delivered by a private company like A.T. & T. Social Security would either be abolished or administered by Welch's Candy Company—no sir, I don't want your book! CONSERVATUS: Why don't you look at this from a more "materialistic" standpoint (that word "materialistic" always gets to these pinkos)? All you have to do is read the book and write a little of inoffensive essay saying it is the greatest thing since "Wealth of Nations" and you might make all sorts of money. Besides, don't you want to know all the marvelous truth about all the dirty reds and traitors in Washington, all about wonderful of "Genial Joe" McCarthy, all the simple methods the U.S. can use to run the world? Honestly, even if you don't write the essay, you can't afford to miss this book. LIBERALICUS: Well, maybe I'll take one—just skim it, you understand. — Terry Joslin The People Say... To the Editor: THIS IS IN REPLY to the editorial by Jane Larson, "Welfare Aims Miss Target," which appeared in the Friday, Dec. 10 UDK. The point of this article was very well taken. By making a short term cut in a budget, we do, many times, defeat our purpose by gaining long term financial dependents. No social worker would ever disagree. However, this editorial seemed to place the blame for the budget-cutting in the wrong place. The social worker in a public agency has no control over her budget. The elected officials, legislature and county boards of commissioners determine the budget within which the worker must operate. Neither can the worker det mine the number of people whom she must serve. Any Kansas resident falling below a certain economic level is eligible for financial aid. Thus, the social worker is caught in a situation of having to make a small amount of money stretch over a large number of people. She is forced to make budget cuts she does not wish to make because there simply is no money to be had and there is nothing else she can do. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Servung KU for 76 of its 100 Years UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office Founded 1889 Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, N.Y. 10022. Mail subscription rates: $4 a semester or $7 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. MANAGING EDITOR ... Judy Farrell BUSINESS MANAGER ... Ed Vaughn EDITORIAL EDITORS ... Janet Hamilton, Karen Lambert EXECUTIVE STAFF WHS AND BUSINESS STAFF Assistant Managing Editors ... Suzy Black, Susan Hartley Jane Larson, Jacke Thayer Circulation Manager ... Mike Robe Advertising Manager ... Dale Reineeker City Editor ... Joan McCabe Classified Manager ... Mike Wertz Feature Editor ... Mary Dunlap Merchandising ... John Hons Sports Editor ... Scottie Scott Promotion Manager ... Keith Issitt Photo Editor ... Bill Stephens National Advertising ... Eugene Parrish Wire Editor ... Robert Stevens Another problem is that each social worker has far too many cases under her jurisdiction and there is no money legislated to add enough caseworkers so that each worker can do a satisfactory job with her cases. The average caseworker is now carrying a caseload of between 80 and 90—if she is lucky. This is cases, not people. Her caseload may include as many as 300-500 people. These are most often people with not one, but many problems. The social worker is faced with the dilemma of knowing many services which should be given to these people to increase their self-esteem and improve their functioning in society, but she does not have enough time to devote to each of the 300 or so people to accomplish these goals. The article pointed out the very crucial fact that we are not saving money in the long run by cutting welfare expenditures now. But this should be pointed out to the boards of commissioners, the legislatures, and the governor. These are the people who hold the pursestrings. Social workers can't help the situation until they have more adequate operating funds and lower caseloads. Until everyone realizes this and works for more money, the problem will remain chronic. sharon Galichia Girard senior 2 Daily Kansan Monday. January 10, 1966 OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT MEN X-35 © Drew C. Clumpert, 1924 "SOMETIMES I THINK THE PRESIDENT KEeps TOO CLOSE TAES ON THE FACILITY." Bellow excellence marks "Herzog" One of the paperback publishing feats of the fall has been Fawcett's acquiring of Saul Bellow's Herzog (Crest, 95 cents). Already it's been on the drugstore and bookstore shelves for several weeks. It burst forth a year ago and began to create discussion—mainly, what's this book all about? There's reason for a more than vague suspicion that many people bought it and read it (or read at it) as they bought and read at Katherine Anne Porter's "Ships of Fools." For most readers "Herzog" is pretty obscure. None of Bellow is easy going for most readers; Augie March and Henderson are fascinating characters but they don't go down simply. Likewise with Moses Herzog. He's an academic type, an urban sort Montreal to Chicago and New York. He believes in the brotherhood of man, simply and honestly, even though there would be considerable evidence to persuade him otherwise—the genocide of his own people, for example. And he is a failure himself. Through his ramblings, his discourses, the endless letters to many persons, great and small, living and dead. Herzog is revealed. The book is marked by the beautiful style of Saul Bellow and his excellent timing. He may be the best writer on the American scene today. Quite different among new volumes is a collection edited by the distinguished Louis Filler, author of works on the Civil War and American liberalism and professor of American civilization at Antioch. It is called Wendell Phillips on Civil Rights and Freedom (American Century, $1.95). Garrison and most other abolitionists ended their battles when the war was over. Wendell Phillips, the "patrician agitator" of Hofstadter's work, kept on, as a pioneering protagonist for civil rights and the Negro, as well as for labor vs. capital. Filler has taken the Phillips' writings from Phillips' speeches, lectures and letters. The old man has wild and funny tales to tell, all in picaresque fashion. His friends and enemies include the Indians, Wild Bill Hickok, Wyatt Earp, General Custer, Calamity Jane—that bunch. It is in the tradition of American frontier humor and for many readers it will recapture the mood of those wild old times. Among the new books is a delightful satire on the old West that succeeds a good part of the time. It is Thomas Berger's Little Big Man (Crest, 95 cents). Here we have western comedy couched in the supposed reminiscences of Jack Crabb, age 111, oldtime frontiersman who dictates his story of the good old days. Another volume of fiction may be billed as mystery but it's a cut better than most such novels in its originality, style and humor. It is Harry Kemelman's Friday the Rabbi Slept Late (Crest, 50 cents), and it won first place in the Mystery Writers competition. Briefly, it's about Rabbi Small and a body found on the temple grounds and how the rabbi works with the Catholic police chief to find the killer. In non-fiction there is Peter Freuchen's Book of the Eskimos (Crest, 95 cents). This will appeal to a good many readers. It's a combination of fiction and non-fiction, a book of exotic appeal but also practical in its meaning. There also are two works in the "Profiles in Science" series: Gerard Lauzun's S'gmund Freud: The Man and His Theories (Premier, 60 cents) and Michel Rouze's Robert Oppenheimer: The Man and His Theories (Premier, 60 cents). The layman can manage either, and the student of history, psychology, Western Civilization—you name it—should find the volumes beneficial. January Grads Fade Away By Giles Lambertson Caps and gowns are nice, but who needs 'em. The majority of about 400 senior men and women expected to graduate at the end of this semester will put no stock in tassels if past experience repeats itself. January graduates may participate in spring graduation ceremonies conducted the previous or the following June. Usually, however, the majority of them elect to bypass the early ceremony or fail to return to campus for the late one. The make-up of a January graduating section varies little from the June class, according to Agnes R. Barnhill, assistant registrar. MEN OUTNUMBER WOMEN by an even greater proportion than last spring's class. Combining this with the fact the largest percentage of the graduates are a semester behind—rather than ahead—could be construed as reflecting on male student effort. But such is not the case. Miss Cheridah L. Kaufman, a Halstead education major, said she thought there was no particular advantage to a mid-year graduation, at least for education majors. Teaching contracts for the next school term are often signed and sealed by January. Another candidate for graduation, Mrs. Dick Shireman, a Clifton journalism major, is not concerned with the employment situation. She is leaving for Nice, France, in February to live with her husband's parents who work in a USO there. MRS. SHIREMAN'S COMMENT on not being able to march in full regalia to "Pomp and Circumstance" sums up the feelings of many. "It has no particular significance to me," she said. "I won't miss it at all." Aliens Must Report Addresses To Federal Agencies In January The International Campus newsletter stressed that all aliens in the U.S. must, during January, report their addresses and certain other information to the United States Department of Justice and its immigration and Naturalization Service. Report forms are available at any U.S. post office and at Dean Clark Coan's office, 228 Strong. THE FORMS MUST BE MAILED by January 31, 1966. Completion and mailing of the forms is an important legal requirement. Mr. Robert Blair of the Denver office of the Institute of International Education will visit KU from Jan. 12-19. He will meet with I.I.E. related students on Wednesday, Jan. 12, in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union at 7:15 p.m. He will also interview certain students privately. Dean Coan also noted that KU's international students have had little trouble with their visas expiring. Weather What's Inside Blood drive for Viet Nam soldiers, p. 5... Law students review Leavenworth prisoner cases, p.4... THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years 76th Year, No. 64 Fair and colder tonight with winds becoming southeastern. Increasing cloudiness and moderating temperatures tomorrow. Monday, January 10, 1966 LAWRENCE, KANSAS DePugh Revisits KU ToSpeaktoStudents By Irvana Keagy Robert Bolivar DePugh, leader of the Minutemen, will speak at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. DePugh spoke here April 18, 1963. During his visit he blasted various organizations and said Communists were infiltrating government offices, churches and the news media. The Minority Opinions Forum is sponsoring DePugh's return to the campus. "MR. DEPUGH IS a radical to say the least," Douglas L. Miller, Pittsburg senior and chairman of the Minority Opinions Forum, said. "We hope and expect to have a big crowd. We also hope the crowd is courteous to Mr. De-Pugh." Miller said. DePugh, a resident of Kansas City, was under investigation there last summer for involvement in a kidnapping case and for possession of firearms. The April 19, 1963 issue of the University Daily Kansas reported DePugh's speech: "TODAY I WONDER where the patriots are. Surely they didn't all die on the beaches of Normandy or the straits of Corregidor. "They (the Minutemen) felt they must do something if they are going to enjoy their freedom. "DePugh expressed more definite beliefs concerning some of President Kennedy's advisors, however, particularly Supreme Court Justice Arthur J. Goldberg (present U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations) and press secretary Pierre Salinger. "He said Goldberg has been connected with 11 Communist organizations and had organized or helped organize at least nine of them. "AS FOR SALINGER, DePugh said the press secretary's mother, . . . had helped form . . . a Communist youth organization in Northern California in 1938." Hill Highlights VP's Son to KU A former classmate of Douglas Humphrey said Sunday he was confident the son of Vice-President and Mrs. Hubert H. Humphrey would enroll at KU next fall. Steve Olsen, Alexandria, Minn., sophomore, said he was "pretty sure" young Humphrey would enter KU as a freshman in the fall of 1966. Humphrey is currently a senior at the Shattuck Military School. Press Panel Queries A panel of Kansas lawmakers and state school officials will face a corps of Kansas journalists Tuesday in a question and answer session on higher education. The session, sponsored by the Collegiate Young Republicans, will be at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Lew Jones Speaks Lew Jones, member of the National Council of Young Socialists' alliance, will speak at 7:30 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. U.S. Troops Sweep Cambodian Front SAIGON—(UPI)A U.S. force of several battalions has been sweeping the jungles near the Cambodian frontier for the past six days, it was declosed today. Many Viet Cong were sighted across the Se San River, which forms the boundary between Cambodia and South Viet Nam about 25 miles west of Pleiku in the Central Highlands and about 10 miles northwest of Saigon. UPI staff correspondent Martin Stuart-Fox reported from the scene that field commanders understood they had authorization to fire back across the border if fired upon first. A spokesman in Saigon for Gen. William C. Westmoreland, commander of American forces in Viet Nam, denied troops had blanket authorization for firing across the border. THE MISSION was officially called "Operation Matador" and involved a number of battalions of the U.S. Army's 1st Cavalry air mobile Division. Although the operation was kicked off nearly a week ago, it was not announced until tonight because of security reasons. ABOUT 25 MILES northwest of Saigon, about 8.000 U.S. 1st Infantry Division troops and 173rd Airborne Bridage paratroopers pushed through the Viet Cong's Ho Bo Wood sanctuary in the largest American operation of the war. Australian troops also were taking part in the operation, almed at trapping a major Viet Cong unit. Only light contact was reported Sunday and today, a U.S. spokesman said. Thus far, the massive operation in the "Iron Triangle" zone, long dominated by the Communists, had accounted for only 21 Viet Cong dead and 36 captured. P IT'S ALL OVER AT LAST!-Student reactions were varied as they left the Western Civilization examination rooms on Saturday afternoon. Pre-exam worries were increased due to an erroneous reporting of the examination time from 8 a.m. to noon, James E. Sea- T (Photo by Glen Phillips) ver, director of Western Civilization, reported receiving about 25 to 30 phone calls Friday evening from students questioning the time schedule differences. Just as the early bird gets the worm, the early exam riser got some extra "bone-up" hours. Demo Post Filled The KU Collegiate Young Democrats (CYD), unofficially announced yesterday that a KUCYD member has been appointed as a representative to the Douglas County Democrat Central Committee. Bruce Cook, Newton junior, will represent the KU Democrats at the Douglas County meetings, and will report between the two organizations, Bob VanCleave, Kansas City senior and president of the KU-CYD, said. COOK, WHO WAS asked to accept the position Tuesday, said his appointment may be part of an overall drive to "unite the Kansas Democratic party. "IT WILL BE A coordination between our club with the Douglas County Central Committee," Cook said. "I will be working with Dr. Richard Nelson (Douglas County Central Committee chairman) and will sit in on their meetings. When they need workers, we'll help them, and when we need help they will help us, both financially and otherwise," Cook said. "It will start uniting the Democratic groups instead of having them all spread out in different areas," he said. Cook speculated that his appointment also may have been a move on VanCleave's part to rebuild interest in the club after the resignation of the club's former president, George Groneman, Kansas City senior. IT WILL GIVE younger party members a chance to work with more experienced Democrats during election campaigns and benefit drives. Cook said. "It will open the door and give more students the chance to work for the party. The KU-CYDs do not have enough work for the members to do, while the Douglas County Central Committee has more work than workers," he said. Dr. Nelson, a Lawrence physician, said he had talked to VanCleave about coordinating the two clubs and approved the appointment. "IT WILL GET OUR Douglas County Central Committee on the ball better." Dr. Nelson said. Coordinating the elubs will help get local Democrats more interested in party work because of the enthusiasm of the KU-CYDs, Nelson added. International Election The International Club will hold its election of officers Saturday, January 8, in the Kansas Union. 12 2 Daily Kansan Friday, January 7, 1966 WEEJUNS ...naturally Black Brown Cordovan $16.95 ARENSBERG'S 819 Mass. VI 3-3470 Bass FINE WOODS Bailey Signs With Pirates PITTSBURGH—(UPI) Third baseman Bob Bailey, who hit 256 and had 11 home runs in 159 games last year, has signed his 1966 contract with the Pittsburgh Pirates. Send someone flowers by wire. We can guarantee the smileage Owens Flower Shop 9th & Indiana VI 3-6111 PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS Even Basketball Players Like Pizza After a tough game, many of KU's basketball players find that a Pizza Hut pizza gives them the energy to "bounce back." The relaxed atmosphere at the Pizza Hut also lets them calm down and enjoy themselves again. Why don't you come to the Pizza Hut after the game, too? You'll find the best-tasting pizza in Lawrence. 1606 W.23rd VI 3-3516 PIZZA HUT WARNING TO PATRIOTS "If you are ever going to buy a gun, buy it now. Communist organizations that usually have good sources of information are expecting Johnson to be next president and Hubert Humphrey to be the next vice-president. Once this election is over they expect to be able to operate openly without any government interference whatsoever" ("On Target" April 1, 1964, page 1 & 2) "On Target" is a Minuteman publication Mr. Robert Depugh Leader Of The Minutemen 4:00 p.m.Wednesday, Jan.12, 1966 Forum Room, Kansas Union Minority Opinions Forum YOUR SHOP CLASSIFIED ADS Acommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Renault Dauphin 1962, exceptionally clean inside and out, but new warm air conditioning. Best heaters. Sao to appreciate. Best offer over $450. Call VI 2-9833. Off ff Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive, minitagged and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-190 for free. TYPEWRITERS. Office size and portables, new and used, manual and electric. Several brands. Rental-purchased warehouses for rentals and service. Office supplies, equipment, and furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. St., VI 3-3644 1945 Buick Roadmaster Convertible, Perfect body, excellent upholstery, reduced hull, in fair shape. Power windows, power seats, power seat, Call 601-7384 Call after t, mv VT - 3-7384 Woll-mask stereo 4-track tape recorder and Rimington potable typewriter, stereo radio/trading equipment, Cary Grazdak, VI 2-1483 or VI 2-6601 1660 Opel station wagon, real good, $275.00, 1959 Plymouth V-S. Belvedre pullet and personal car, $500.00, 1955 Chrysler Station wagon, $250.00, automatic transmission, real nice, $260.00, 1955 Mercury, real sharp, $125.00, Bonson's Auto Sales, 1902 Harper, VI 3-0342. Open evenings. 1-7 1956 Ford Fairlane, radio, live, w/w tires, chains, goggles, new batches, mechanical sound. Mechanically sound. Call Alam at VI 3-7535 6 a.p. 1-10 Clearance! Clearance! Tape recorders, stereos, stereo FM radios cut to $60. AM-FM radios cut to $199.90. Hurry to Ray Stoneback's, 923-931 Mass. 1-18 Across the burning sands of the Arabian Desert, at no little risk to my faithful Bedouin camel, I came across the Hara tribe. Here comes a beautifully rare and exotic black M ershaum pipe. Handcarved by master artisans in the image of a notorious caliph of the Ottoman empire, this work of art is a bone coupling, a bone coupling. A brave caravan has brought this treasure of the N-ear East to you at the most reasonable price of sixty American dollars. Address serious inquiries to Caravanal of the Ivory Coasts for their treasures. Box 2, University Hall, Kansan. tf 1950 Cadillac hears, 65,000 miles. Good condition, $275. Call CE 3-7554 Topeka. Overhaired at 58,000 miles. 1-11 1957 Opel 2-door sedan, 47,000 miles, good tires, $200. Call VI 1-6125. Like new Motorola portation couch, board computer also Room board board student. Within walking distance. Call VI 3-5659. 1-11 Clearance! Clearance! 500 fires at lowest prices ever. Except for 1695-i and Rambler level Musi- cer or Rambler size, cut to $12 each plus tax—N-w white Volks (560- 5) cut to $15 plus ray Tax Stone- back's, 929-i Mass. 189-i Grey Impala, black interior, 200 HP screw, P.S. Posttraction, Tint d glass, 22,000 origi- nal owner, must sill. Call VI 1-261 1661 Nash Rambler station wagon. Radio'n and heater—gas ballts. New snow tires. One owner car. Call VI 2- 301. tf 105 Chavey, Bck-Air, 283 V-8, radio, hater, very good condition. Mechanically, body and interior. $525. VI 3-7646. 1-11 If atikit Monaural speaker system. two tweeters, 15 inch woofer, 8 inch midange, 2 inclosers, 35 two 16,000 cus. $25 VI 3-6389. 1-7 1961 Plymouth Savoy V-8, 4-door, transitional trans. Call Donna at 72877 Must sell 1966 GTO, $550 under dairy's price, perfect condition, no amnicks. Call Doug Dienstl, VI 3- 5721. 1959 Corvette 263, 4-speed, d-val quad 1419 Oh. Q1 3875 Kent Sailer - 1-12 1940 Ford 2-door zdan Mechanic- land Carl Mike Sullivan, 529 McCollium, Mike Mike Sullivan, 529 McCollium, S. minor tenor sax. See it at room 502. Termiln . 1-11 Must sill, see. Call Kim, VI 3-5460. Leave your number. 1057 Ford Ranchwagon, V-8, stand- ing room, front view, 1M+3/2 or 4M+3/20 front view, 1M+3/2 or 4M+3/20 TYPING Experienced typist has IBM electric to tip your thesis, dissect a research paper, test Fast and accurate work. Reasonable rates Phone Mrs Gilbert. VI 2-2088 Experienced typist, 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electrician with various rasonable rates. CALL Mrs. Barlow. 2407 Yale. VI. 2-1648. tf Toptix, experienced with term papers, booklet writing and your typing immediate attention with elcte machine with extra symbols. Genie Higley at 408 W. 13f. Inc V 3-6048 Secretary familiar with legal terms will do typing—briefs, memorandums, teepers, notes, dissertation Fast, accurate rates. Manage Goff, VI 3-2577. Experienced typist; will type in my home. Accurate typing, reasonable rates and prompt service. Call Mrs. Brown at VI 2-0210. Experience typist will do only these typewriter. Mrs. Fulcher VI 3-0558 Wanted? Typing in my home. Experience and accurate in term papers and theses. Call VI 3-2651 any time. ff Accurate typing by experienced typist. Term papers, themes, theses and dissertations. Reasonable rates and fast. VI 2-1561. tf Secretary with many years experience, will type your term papers. Fast, accurate work at reasonable rate. Call V11 @ 6296 after 5 p.m. Graduate student's wife, an experienced typist, will do all kinds of typing. Fast, accurate service. IBM Electric Phone Mrs. Langley, VI 2-214- Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses, dissertations. Professional Electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mr Raumanck, V. 2-2781. Experienced secretary will do typing VI 3-0380, after 5:00 call VI 3-0389, iff Experienced typist will do theses and term papers. 4 years experience at KU. Phone Mrs. Oxford at VI 2-0673. tt Former Harvard and University of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports, and theses. Phone VI 3-7207. TYPING — GESTETNER MIMEO- MULING—MRS. McEidlowen, 8-8564 Expert Typing -Theses, dissertations and term papers. Electric typewriter, standard rates. Mrs. Mishler. VI 3-1023. 1-10 Typing done at reasonable rates by experienced typist. Fast accurate work. Call Betty Vincent, call VI 3-5504. tf Typing done by experienced secretary for 256 each double spaced page. Call Ethel Henderson, 2565 Ridge Ct., VI 2-0122. tf Fast, accurate; immediate attention given to all term papers, reports, th.ss., etc. Mrs. Donna Stewart, VI 3-6211 1-21 Former teacher will give careful attention to typing your term papers. Accurate and neat work, 5 years experience. Call VI 3-3829. tf Topika students desiring theses, dissertations, rough drafts, or term papers typed fast and accurately by experienced typist, call Mrs. O. L. Cook, CR 2-1479, 1715 Sims, Topека. 1-20 Typing Wanted--Theses, essays, and thurs. Neat and accurate. Call VI 3-121 FOR RENT Married, graduate students, faculty- 2 bedroom apartment, $50.50. Two available January 1, one available February 1. Call for brochure, VI 3- 2116. Santee Apartments office, 1123 Indiana. tt 2 bedrooms in newer room, linens in new room and very clean. See at Minnesota. 1-10 Extra nice quiet furnished apartment for mature man, carpeted, nice kitchen, utilities paid. 2 blocks from Union. Available now. VI 3-8534 tf Emery Apts. 1423 Ohio. One on- bedroom apt. furnished. Gas and water heater. $75. One efficiency enlisted. All utilities paid. $75.0 3-8190. 1-7 Vancancies in contemporary home for young man, prefer graduate stu- meals at pool, home, cook- meals if desired, pool. VI 3-4051 call before 6 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS Rooms for men students, some available NOW, some February 1, with or without kitchen privileges. Call VI 3-1607. 1-12 Die. Bierstube; Singen, trinken undessen German style. Featuring student's favorite dark beverage and student's favorite light beverage from Goldm. Colorado. Also serving Pike night. Wednesday night. Party Room available. 14th and Tennessee. VI 2-9441. Furnished apartments for 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 man. Call VI 3-1031 or VI 3-1031- Need any Sewing or Monday done? Please rates Call after 5:00 p.m? 2:30am PARTY TIME—Building available for dance performances. Call Vi 3-7458, Ralph Freed. BLANDING PARTY PHOTOGRAPHY Your satisfaction is my strongest Gold embosed party titles: Kocasole 4x5, x7s; custom enlarged B&W 5x7, 3x5; ass' experience at dave for reference and samples call Dave at! VI 2-6515. Wanted: General house work preferably in sorority, fraternity, or prizegiving. Must have references. Write to Housekeeping. 1132 Conn., Lawrence. Sports Car Maintenance and Repairs by and for the enthusiast. Super tuning, modifications, accessories, pickles. Competition Sports Car East 23rd St, V-2 12911. Tune ups — Evenings and weekends only; also other automobile work, appointment only. V-3 2080 behind 23rd Connecticut St Farmers' garage. 837 Math Tutor; B.A. degree in Math from KU. Experienced in tutoring geometry, algebra, calculus, and analytic geometry. Phone VI 3-0927. Experienced photographer in children and family portraits. Reasonable rate. Will take pictures in your home. Call VI 2-6148. tf Entirely Free—Intelligent, independent and affectionate all black male cat. Suitably trained to avoid embarrassing situations. Forced to give up because of uncompromising landlord. VI 3-0046. 1-10 LOST Gold, oval-shaped, brushed-texture woman's bracelet. Somewhere on campus Monday. VI 2-9100—Juillean in 842. Small reward. 1-10 Reward offered for lost glasses- black rimmed. Contact David M. M- iller, room 635, Templin Hall, VI 2- 1200. Yellow Pickett Slide Rule in Grey Case with initials R.M.S. Lost in Malott Hall before Christmas vacation. Call Rob Shrader at VI 3-8770. FOUND Yellow tabby kitten with pink and blue necklace. Found in Strong base-mnt. Wed, morning. Please call RA 2-4923. 1-7 HELP WANTED Students booking for part time work in the room at Sandy's Drive-It 2120 W. 9th Reliable student for selling imports. Apply 220 La. after 6 p.m. tt Room available for girl student free in exchange for baby-sitting services. Room self-bath separated from home located in mice neighborhood. Call VI 2-0445-1-11 Student for secretarial work. 10-20 hrs. per week until end of school year during June and August. Must be excellent typist. UN 4-3796. 1-7 University family wishes mother's helper. Room and board in exchange for babysitting one child. Discuss terms. VI 3-4098. Mrs. Maher. 1-12 A position is now open on your campus. A Time Inc. college representative on a small or medium-sized campus can expect $10,000 annually selling subscriptions to TIME, LIFE, SPORTS ILLUSTRATED and FORTUNE at reduced students' and educator rates. On larger campuses this rate can exceed $750 a year. They work hard, of course, but their hours are their own, and they gain valuable business experience in this year-round address, college class and any other information you consider important to Time Inc., College Bureau, TIME & LIFE Building, New York 10020. All applications must be submitted by January 20, 1996. You will be contact promptly. 1-11 WANTED Need male roommate to share anat- mat for 2nd semester--app relass- man or graduate student preferred. Cell VI 3-4349. 1-11 Will Baby Sit in my home or yours. Will baby attend events. Call after 1:00 p.m. VI 2-3901 When You're in Doubt—Try It Out, Kansas Classifieds. Daily Kansas II Friday, January 7, 196 Anderson Rentals "We Rent Almost Anything" V1 3-2044 812 New Hampshire Street FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Specializes in semester break reservations. GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING Try a THIS BURGER IS A MEDIUM SIZE. THE POTATOES ARE SOFT AND THIN. THE MEAT IS MEDIUM AND JUST ENOUGH TO Satisfy YOUR Taste Needs. THE BREAD IS SO EASY TO SERVE. IT IS FULL OF FLAVORS AND NUTS. IT IS A DELICIOUS MESS. IT IS A GOOD DISH FOR YOU. "MOORE" BURGER MALTS-SHAKES 1414 W.6th VI 3-9588 COMPLETE CLASSICAL RECORD SELECTION COLUMBIA RECORDS WeaverS YOUR GASOLINE DOLLAR GOES FARTHER at... DERBY GARY'S DERBY SERVICE 2330 Iowa Lawrence YOU CAN'T BUY A BETTER GAS...AT ANY PRICE We are always happy to serve you Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy We are always happy to serve you with HAVING A PARTY? LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Open to 10 p.m. Every Evening Ph.VI 3-0350 TRAVEL TIME AIRBUS LET MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Semester Reservations Now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Originality IN FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION especially for you by Alexander's 926 10WA LAWRENDE, KANSAS FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PHONE YL 3-1238 Brain Reigns If all the complex mechanisms in the world used in every form of communication by man were microminaturized so they would fit into a gallon jar, the contents would not be as complex as man's own brain. So said Paul G. Roofe, KU professor of zoology, last night at the Humanities lecture in the University Theatre. His topic was "This Is Why We Are Human." THE HUMAN brain, he said, is the most mysterious machine in the universe. It contains 15 billion neurons surrounded by 150 million nerve cells, and each neuron makes at least 200,000 to 300,000 contacts with other neurons. "The possible combinations are uncountable," he said. According to Prof. Rooef, man, as he is, evolved with the freeing of his arms from locomotion to the service of his mind, coupled with the explosive action of mutation, a sudden genetic outburst which took place in the African veld over two million years ago. He said that increased size of the prefrontal lobes and of the association area of the brain is man's main difference from the apes. This area, and particularly the prefrontal lobes, are what makes us human, he said. "MAN HAS BEEN successful in controlling his plant and animal companions, but not so in controlling himself," Prof. Roofe said. "The frontal lobes are responsible for man's frequent reversions to beastial behavior. The prefrontal lobes are both a burden and a blessing." In the frontal lobes, he said, are man's main initiative, foresight, and persistence centers. An individual lacking frontal lobes cannot plan his future. He cannot organize material in any fashion. 10 New York Cleaner Northeastern of east Massachusetts New York Cleaner Mercantile of new york For the best in - ● dry cleaning ● alterations ● reweaving 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Daily Kansan Friday, January 7,1966 U-DRIVE-THRU CAR WASH 50¢ Stay in your car and drive away in a sparkling clean car. Extra power spray will be 10c extra. This service is optional. SPECIALS - 25% Off Goodyear Tires U-DRIVE-THRU That's all you do. No need to drive a dirty car anymore. 2315 Louisiana Lawrence, Kansas Tune Ups - Lubrication . . . $1.00 - Brake Adjustment . . 88 - 8TH ST. SHOE REPAIR Quality work on half soles, heels. We repair purses Shoe dyeing 107 E. 8TH - Wheel Alignment GIFT - Automatic Transmission Page Fina Service Andrews Gifts VI 2-1523 Open Wednesday Evenings Malls Shopping Center Plenty of Free Parking THE SHANTY MENU 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694 6-HOUR Photo Finishing VI 3-0330 Fast Color Service By Eastman Kodak HIXON STUDIO "Our only business is photography" 摄影师 L. G. Balfour Co. 721 Mass. Exclusive Representative of For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry - Badges - Guards - Novelties Favors - Sportswear - Mugs - Lavatters * Rings - Lavalliers Paddles Trophies Al Lauter 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 - Awards Wrong Customer Now for the first time in Lawrence we at THE SHANTY are able to deliver piping hot pizza to your door in a microwave or oven. We troiled oven. Our radio dispatched units offer lightning fast service and catering. Allow an extra 30 minutes to cook. Pizza varieties not featured on the Mobile units. CALL US! Order 8, get on free. Mobile Oven Menu The Even Menu All King-Size 12" Pizzas * SAUAGE * PEPPERONI * HAMBURGER * Double Cheese (Friday only) * SHANTY INTERNATIONAL Call VI 2-2500 Free 10-Minute Delivery (Normally) 5:00 to 12:00 p.m. SAN JOSE, Calif. — (UFI) — Melvin Nelson, 22, left his apartment to get a package of cigarettes Wednesday night and was stopped on his way home by two men who offered to sell him a television set. Nelson called for help and apprehended the two men, who were turned over to police. He got the television set—which was stolen from his apartment while he was gone. Lew Jones, a member of the National Council of Young Socialists, helped organize the national convention of the National Coordinating Committee to End the War in Viet Nam. Correction It was incorrectly stated in yesterday's Daily Kansan that he helped organize the national convention of the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy (SANE). Excerpts from five operas will be presented by students of the University of Kansas Opera Workshop Wednesday, Jan. 12, at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. Supervisors for the Opera Workshop are Robert Baustian, professor of orchestra, and Lewin Goff, professor of speech and drama. Operas Scheduled PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS Our Average Graduate Reads More Than 1500 Words Per Minute OVER 95% OF OUR GRADUATES HAVE INCREASED THEIR READING SPEED AT LEAST THREE TIMES — WITH GOOD COMPREHENSION The internationally famous EVELYN WOOD Reading Dynamics Institute INVITES YOU TO ATTEND A FREE DEMONSTRATION OF THIS UNIQUE METHOD Where you will: DEMONSTRATION OF THIS UNIQUE METHOD - See an amazing documented film about Reading Dynamics. * Learn how Reading Dynamics can help you to faster reading, improved comprehension, greater retention. HOW DID IT START? Eighteen years ago Mrs. Wood made a startling discovery that led to the founding of Reading Dynamics. While working toward her masters degree, she handed a term paper to a professor and watched him read the 80 pages at 6,000 words per minute—with outstanding recall and comprehension. Determined to find the secret behind such rapid reading, she spent the next two years tracking down 50 people who could read from 1,500 to 6,000 words per minute. She studied their techniques, taught herself to read at these faster rates. Now, after years of testing, you can benefit from this great discovery. DOES IT HAVE PROVEN RESULTS? Results have been reported in Time, Newsweek, Business Week, and Esquire. Demonstrators have appeared on television with Jack Paar, Garry Moore, and Art Linkletter. Senator Proxmire, Wisconsin: "I must say that this is one of the most useful education experiences I have ever had. It certainly compares favorably with the experiences I've had at Yale and Harvard." Senator Symington, Missouri: "I can read most material at speeds above 3000 W.P.M. and technical material in the 2000 W.P.M. range." HOW IS IT DIFFERENT FROM OTHER COURSES? No-machines are used. You learn, instead, to use your hand as a pacer—a tool you always have with you. Conventional rapid reading courses aspire to 450-600 words per minute. Most Reading Dynamics graduates can read between 1,500 and 3,000 words per minute,and many go even higher. GUARANTEE We guarantee to increase the reading efficiency of each student by at least three times with equal or better comprehension. We will refund the entire tuition of any student who does not begin reading as measured by the beginning subsessed course. The student may transfer the course free of charge. A refund is conditional upon the student attending all classes or having made up missed sessions with the teacher. The student must also have practiced the required number of hours, following the assignments as outlined by the teacher. The average student may expect a five-time increase in test performance comprehension and recall. Any student who must withdraw from the course for any reason may re-enter any subsequent courses at any future time, at no additional cost. --- FREE DEMONSTRATIONS FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1966 6 and 8 p.m. SATURDAY, JANUARY 8, 1966 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Community Building—11th & Vermont Just by being present you may win the course absolutely free. Classes registering now for these cities Colorado Denver Colorado Springs Fort Collins New Mexico Durango Albuquerque Wyoming Santa Fe Los Alamos Grand Junction Pueblo Missouri Farmington Kansas City Independence St. Joseph Joplin Kansas Kansas Kansas City Wichita Topeka Hutchinson For FREE BROCHURE and CLASS SCHEDULES contact EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS INSTITUTE 3706 Broadway Kansas City, Mo. TEAR OUT THIS AD Probation Officer Faces Challenge By Maury Breecher Second in a Series The KU student probation officer faces his greatest challenge when the juvenile offender is placed on probation and is required to make periodic reports to the student officer. Often the student officer is the only person directly concerned with the welfare f the offender. The student officer has the opportunity to help the juvenile. The juvenile hearing is conducted with the purpose of helping the child offender reform. The hearing is designed to give the juvenile the feeling that people are interested in helping him. THUS THE hearing is conducted in the judge's chambers and is attended only by persons directly concerned with the offender. This is the point where the student probation officer can really help the juvenile, through his recommendations to the probate judge. The juvenile probation officer may recommend that the offender needs corrective instruction which he cannot get at home. If the judge agrees, the juvenile may be placed in a correctional institution. This is done to help the juvenile offender and "protect the child who is a delinquent, or about to become a delinquent, or is deprived or neglected," said Judge Charles C. Rankin. "It is not a punitive approach, it is to protect the juvenile and help him before he gets worse," he added. PERHAPS THE student officer recommends that the juvenile does not need further instruction but his home environment is such that it will lead the juvenile into further breaking of the law. If the judge agrees the juvenile may be placed in a private home or agency. The student probation officer may help the offender in these ways but he can also help the juvenile by recommending probation for the offender. If the juvenile offender is placed on probation he must make periodical reports to the student probation officer. The officer continues to show an active interest in the boy. "It IS HOPED that the offender would be a better citizen than before and not be anti-social but be able to live in society and face his problems," said Chuck Hewitt, Pratt third-year law student and a student probation officer. Sometimes, he invites the offender to dinner. Above all, the officer tries to instill in the boy a sense of worth and self confidence. If the juvenile makes his periodic reports and has not committed any further offenses during the specified period, he is released. The Student Probation Officer Program provides law students with the maturity and intelligence to act as probation officers. The county could probably not afford to furnish full-time probation officers if the student program was stopped. Part three of this series will deal with the new Prison Counseling Project. Avery Delays Road Until Next Session KANSAS CITY, Mo. —(UPI)— Gov. William H. Avery announced Thursday deferment of his accelerated highway program until another session of the Legislature because of reapportionment. Grant Given KU For Students The Creole Foundation, with headquarters in Venezuela, has made an unrestricted grant of $1,000 to KU. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said the foundation, which is supported by the Creole Petroleum Corporation, made the grant because it provides scholarships for several Venezuelan students at KU. Dr. Clark Coan, international student adviser, said the manner of using the $1,000 grant is still under consideration but it will be for the benefit of foreign students. Daily Kansan Friday, January 7, 1966 Symphony Plans Concert 9 The KU chorus of approximately 300 voices and the University Symphony will appear in concert Sunday, Jan. 9, at 3:30 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. Friday Night Prof. Clayton Krehbiel will direct the massed musicians in Gabrielli's "In Excelsis" for chorus with brass accompaniment, and the "Missa Solemnis" composed by Haydn for Lord Nelson, the British naval hero. Jim Mcauley, guitarist Saturday Night Punt Night The Fiery Furnace 1116 Louisiana 8:30-12:30 This weekend ONLY!! 25 % OFF on all Opera and Vocal Records (Mono & Stereo) Price, Tucker, Merrill, Bjoerling, Corelli Peerce, Nilsson, Peters, Farrell, Freni and many others BELL MUSIC CO. 925 Mass. VI 3-2644 POPULAR FILM SERIES CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF Starring: Elizabeth Taylor and Paul Newman 35c Friday, Jan. 7 & Saturday, Jan. 8 tonight tomorrow 7:00 p.m. & 9:30 p.m. Dyche Auditorium 35c Advanced Tickets At Kansas Union Information Booth. Books Like Babes Bv Robert Jackson If you were a book, where do you suppose you would like to find your shelf in life? Chances are, you would pick the stacks of the Special Collections Department in Watson Library. The conditions there, as can be verified by Miss Alexandra Mason, head of that department, are just about the best imaginable for books. BOOKS, whether they are old or new, are very sensitive to heat, moisture, and insects, according to Miss Mason. The Special Collections Department is protected from excessive heat and cold by complete air conditioning which maintains a steadily recorded temperature of 70 degrees. Heat from fire is detected by special sensing devices which sound an alarm if the room becomes too hot. The humidity in the stacks is likewise regulated to stay at a constant 50 per cent. If more moisture was allowed the books would increase in weight by as much as 10 per cent. If the humidity dropped, the paper would become dry and brittle or even break. INSECTS, SUCH as roaches and silverfish, are very damaging to books because they eat paper. When these pests are noticed in any of the volumes, they are quickly destroyed with a special spray which does not harm the book. Leather-bound books are a particular problem because the leather must also be cared for periodically. Miss Mason said that a mixture of lanolin and neats油 oil is the least expensive way of handling the problem effectively. The collection in the library measures 192 linear feet of shelf space, which in more common terminology would be about 60.000 books. Books in the Special Collections Department are for use only in that section of the library. Some volumes are loaned to libraries at other universities, but only those which are not too old, rare, or fragile. Other books may be microfilmed or have photostatic copies made of them so that they may be shared by other schools. Panhellenic Candidates Nine junior women are taking written examinations, written essays, and being interviewed for the presidency of the Panhellenic Council. Each of the 13 sorority houses had an opportunity to nominate a candidate for the office: Nominees were named by nine of the sorority houses. THEOSE WHO are competing for the presidency and the living groups they represent are: Diane Olsen, Topkick sophomore, Alpha Chi Omega; Vicki Mathews, Leawood junior, Alpha Delta Pi; Carol Sahlberg, Western Springs junior, Alpha Omicron Pi; Glenda Hord, Kansas City junior, Chi Omega; Jo Lee, Kansas City junior, Delta Delta Delta; Louise Clovis, Salina junior, Delta Gamma; JoAnne Emerick, Murray Hill, N.J., junior, Gamma Phi Beta; Kay Orth, El Dorado junior, Kappa Alpha Theta; and Terry Hoyt, Kansas City, Mo., iunior. Kappa Kappa Gamma. The Pi Beta Phi house did not participate in the nominating of a Panhellenic Council president as this year's council president, Jill Newburg, Carmel, Ind., senior, is a member of that sorority. TODAY AT 12:30 p.m. the candidates took a written examination over the constitution and by-laws of Panhellenic. The examination was conducted in the Dean of Women's Office. Monday the nominees will submit an essay concerning what they feel the purpose and functions is of the Panhellenic Council on the KU campus. Interviews with the candidates will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Dean of Women's Office. Daily Kansan Friday, January 7, 1966 Granada THEATRE .. Telephone VI 3-5784 Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 Ends Tonite! 7:00 & 9:00 Starts tomorrow! “Never Too Late” First there was “Baby Jane” — Then “Hush Hush Sweet Charlotte” NOW! ANOTHER MEMORABLE DAVIS PORTRAIT! 20c Bette Davis as "The Nanny" with WILLIAM DIX and PAMELA FRANKLIN in the Children's Productions by JIMMY SANGSTER directed by SETH HOLT Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE - Most on highway 91. NOW THRU SAT.! Open 6:30 — Show 7:00 “Walk on the “New — plus — Wild Side” Interns” Extra Bonus Feature Friday and Saturday Nite! NOW! ANOTHER MEMORABLE DAVIS PORTRAIT! 20th Anniversary of Bette Davis as "The Nanny" BY WILLIAM DIX and PAMELA FRANKLIN AS THE CHILDREN Production from JIMMY SANGSTER Directed by SETH HOLT A BUCKLEY PICTURE AT THE BROADWAY, 1415 WEST 3RD STREET, NEW YORK 10017 NOW! Magnifique! Whether it be with a vintage French wine in a Parisian cafe or in the relaxed surroundings of Lawrence, you can't find better pizza and Italian specialties in the world. Open 11:30 a.m. Till 1:00 a.m. We Absolutely Deliver VI 3-9111 Campus Hideaway Campus Hideaway Campus Hideaway 106 NORTH PARK PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS MFR. 15 SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICE. VOLKSWAGEN OF AMERICA, IND. Need a part? Replacing part of a car is a pain. But it's even more painful when you need a part and can't get it. If you own a 6- or 8-year-old domestic car and need, say, a door handle or a water pump, you're liable to have quite a problem. (Unless you enjoy shopping in junkyards.) When cars change drastically every year, the dealer simply can't keep every part for every year in stock. But the VV doesn't change drastically every year, so Volkswagen dealers don't have nearly the problem. So far as we are concerned, a hood is a hood and a door is a door. We can replace an engine in 90 minutes (or a rear fender for $21.09, *plus labor*). Above all, we can promise that you'll be able to get any part you need for any year Volkswagen you own. Not so long ago, there were people who wouldn't have any part of a VW at all. Now they get all they want. CONZELMAN MOTORS SALES --- SERVICE -- PARTS Overseas Delivery Available 2522 Iowa VW AUTHORIZED DEALER (Hwy. 59 South) VI 3-2200 Daily Kansan Friday, January 7, 1966 7 Kansas Union Cafeteria Help Us Keep Our New Year's Resolution We talked our employer into having a SPECIAL LUNCHEON AND DINNER on our CAFETERIA LINE five days a week during 1966. We resolved to our boss that we could give the STUDENT BODY AND FACULTY a well balanced Meal at a good discount. But in order to do this we must have more volume to offset our discount. "So would you all come see, come try our good food, our good buy." Cafeteria Employees Kansas Union *** ** MIKE SWEATMAN (above), the only KU matman who won a match last night against a strong team from Northwest Missouri State. TOMMIE WILSON KU OVERPOWERED—The look of defeat tells the tale on the faces of the young Kansas University wrestling team, as they unsuccessfully tried to win their second meet of the season. BARRY MURPHY Photos by Bill Stephens The image shows a wrestler in a dynamic pose, likely during a match or training session. He is lying on his back with one arm extended upwards and the other bent at the elbow. His head is positioned over his chest, and his legs are tucked under him. The wrestler appears to be wearing tight-fitting athletic gear, including shorts and a sleeveless top. The background is blurred, focusing attention on the wrestler. Daily Kansan Friday, January 7,1966 6 Hawks to Host ISU Cyclones After playing the last seven games on the road, the Kansas Jayhawks meet the Iowa State Cyclones at 8 p.m. Saturday, in Allen Field House. The KU team captured first place in the Big Eight pre-season tournament in Kansas City during Christmas vacation. They defeated the Cyclones in the third round of play 69-55 for the title. STARTING LINE-UP for KU includes Walter Wesley, center; Riney Lochmann and Ron Franz, forwards; and Del Lewis and Al Lopes, guards, announced Ted Owens, head coach. After losing a five point lead in the final 90 seconds of the game, Iowa State was defeated 76-74 by the Nebraska Huskers in the tournament on Tuesday. Starters for the Cyclones include Raul Duarte, 6-9, and Al Koch, 6-3, at forward; Don Smith, 6-8, at center, and John McGonigle, 6-2, and either Bob Ziegler, 6-3, or Dave Fleming, 6-5, at guard Smith, center for Iowa State, took the Big Eight Conference scoring lead with 27 points against the Huskers in their opener. KU's Walt Wesley scored only 13 points in the Colorado opener which saw the Buffaloes downed 69-55. KU joins Nebraska, K-State, and Oklahoma in the undefeated ranks going into Saturday's game. KU plays Oklahoma Monday night in Lawrence. ZIEGLER HAS BEEN out the last several games with an injury. He was the league's second highest scorer last year. Volleyball Club Forms To Generate Interest A new addition this year to KU's ever growing list of organizations is the KU Volleyball club. Formed with the idea of building up interest in an obscure sport at KU, the club plans to organize in the Amateur Athletic Union and play in tournaments around the country, according to Dave Burckhalter, Ann Arbor, Mich., senior and treasurer of the club. "WE HAVE TRIED to get the best volleyball players from the various living groups at KU to join the club and so far we have 21 members." Burckhalter said. Daily Kansas Friday, January 7, 1936 5 Aside from creating an interest in volleyball at KU, the club's long range plan is to go to the AAU national championship volleyball tournament in East Lansing, Mich., in May. Already scheduled for the club is a trip to Denver, Colo., during semester break to play in a tournament with similar clubs from colleges throughout the country. "Right now we are just getting started, but who knows, maybe in a few years KU might have volleyball as a regular intercollegiate sport as do many schools in the far West." Burckhalter said. Sweatman Wins KU Wrestlers Fall KU's wrestling team suffered a decisive 26-3 defeat at the hands of Northwest Missouri State Thursday night in Allen Field House. The only bright spot for the Jayhawks was Mike Sweatman. Sweatman wrestled in the heavyweight division winning KU's only match. Coach Gary Duff said he was disappointed in the showing of his team, even though Northwest Missouri State is one of the best small college teams in the nation "WE HOPE THIS season will be the start of a winning tradition at KU but so far we have failed in this attempt," Duff said. "These boys have what it takes to make a winning team." Results in weight divisions were Harvel Hallum, NMS, over Fort Zackary, KU, 123 lbs., 3-0; Jerry Mason, NMS, over Andy Warnock, KU, 130 lbs., 3-0; Chuck Wilson, NMS, over Robin Savio, KU, 137 lbs., a pin, 5-0; Gary Grimes, NMS, over Marc Ryan, KU, 145 lbs., 3-0. Ron James, NMS, over Dennis Lyall, KU, 152 lbs., 3-0; Arnold Thomas, NMS, over Charlie Foster, KU, 160 lbs., 3-0; Allan Paeker, NMS, over Roger Simmons, 167 lbs., 3-0; Bob Decklever, NMS, over Darol Rodrock, KU, 177 lbs., 3-0, and Mike Sweatman, KU, over Allan Borkowski, NMS, HWT, 3-0. Tonight the Jayhawks travel to Emporia for a match with Kansas State Teachers College. Next home meet is Friday, Jan. 14, against Central Missouri State. THE SUNDAY SCHOLAR —Saff photo by Bill Stephens GARY DUFF, head wrestling coach for the Jayhawks, ponders the outcome of the wrestling match between KU and Northwest Missouri State. NMS matmen handed Kansas a 26-3 defeat by winning eight of nine matches. Mike Swetman won KU's only match by defeating Bob Deckleer 3-0 in the heavyweight division. (See picture page, page six.) RED DOG INN THE BD Dog Inc. This Weekend Marks the Red Dog Inn's First Year Anniversary Come Down and Help Us Celebrate - Friday — The Fabulous Red Dogs — FREE TGIF An Excellent Six Piece Show Band. - FREE Beverage for First100 - Saturday — The Rising Sons — Listen To The Rising Sons Sing Their Smash Hit Record "Concentration" FREE Door Prizes - Wednesday — Jan. 12 - Girls' Night Out No Cover Exhibit Features Belgian Printing By Hector Olave An historical printing collection, considered by experts as one of the most complete and valuable in the world, is on display in the Exhibition Gallery of Watson Library. From the large and famous collection of the old Plantim-Moretus printing house in Antwerp, Belgium, the material is touring leading museums and libraries under the auspices of the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service. The showing is sponsored by the Belgian Embassy. A manuscript of the celebrated medical treatise by Andreas Vesalius and Juan Valverda is another unusual item included. The manuscript shows the printer's corrections for typesetting. AMONG THE rare items are original woodblocks and copper-plates used to print woodcuts and engraving which illustrated books published by Plantin and the Moretuses in the 16th and 17th centuries. The founder of what was to become the finest printing house in Europe was Christopher Plantin. He was apprenticed to the famous printer Robert II Mace in Caen. In 1549, when he was 29 years old, he moved to Antwerp. An accident—a wound inflicted in a street fight—forced hjm into the printing profession. SOON AFTER, he obtained valuable protectors, including Gabriel de Cayas, secretary to Philip II of Spain. When he died, his inventory contained as many as 90 different bodies of type: romans, italics, greeks, hebrews, musical notes, and others. It was Plantin's house which published the Polyglot Bible, a massive edition of the book in five languages. The eight folio volumes appeared between 1568 and 1572. In 1589, upon Plantin's death, the house and the fine traditions he started passed into the hands of Jan Moretus, his son-in-law, and Moretus' sons, Balthasar and Jan II. IT HAS BEEN said, "The Officina Platiniana—more a palace than a printing house—in the Marche du Vendredi at Antwerp, has long been, and still is (as the Musee Plantin), one of the sights of Europe. It is probably the most beautiful building dedicated to the uses of printing in the world; nor is there any other establishment which gives such an accurate idea of an early printing house. . . . The place is full of charm, and its sunny, vine clad courtyard a haunt of ancient peace . . ." Since 1876 the house has been used as a museum. The "Treasures from the Plantin-Moretus Museum" will remain in Watson Library until Jan. 30. Lindley Construction Hammers and saws are busily reshaping the lower floors in the west end of Lindley Hall. Remodeling began Nov. 1, and will be completed late this month. The $25,000 contract was awarded the Lawrence Construction Co. Extra office space on the first floor, and laboratories and shops on the basement floor will be added. Exam Time Almost Upon Us, Friends 4 Friday, January 7, 1966 Daily Kansan By Barbara Phillips Yes, friends, tooth-gnashing time is here again in the form of the Western Civilization Comprehensive Examination to ge given Saturday from 8 to 12 a.m. Although the fall semester usually has the lowest enrollment of the three examination periods, a total of 308 students have signed up to take the test, according to the Registrar's office. This is about the normal enrollment, James Seaver, director of the Western Civilization Program, added. "ONLY ABOUT two-thirds of those enrolled will show up," he said. The test is graded on a curve, and from 9 to 10 per cent will probably fail the examination, Saver said. "I think that the reason many of the students fail is that they just don't bother to read the material. They put it off to the last minute. It must be absorbed gradually throughout the course." Seaver said. "ANOTHER REASON is that some of the students don't organize their essays. They know the material, but they don't organize it well. An outline helps a great deal," he added. Seaver also suggested that old examinations on reserve at Watson library would help the student to know what to expect. But, take heart, sufferers; many before you have faced the same ordeal and survived. THE WESTERN Civilization program began in 1945 as a "teacher-less" reading course. There were no discussion groups, but the students could confer with a proctor if they wished. PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS Keepsake ALTADENA Keepsake ALTADENA MAN'S $35 LADY'S 35 ALLENTON MAN'S 829.75 LADY'S 28 Keepsake ALBEMARLE MAN'S 839.75 LADY'S 35 Very Personally Yours... TRADITIONAL Keepsake WEDDING SETS Choose the design that matches your personal taste . . . traditional, modern, plain or fancy. Each set is perfectly matched and superbly crafted for a lifetime of pride and satisfaction. Look for the name, "Keepsake," in the ring and on the tag. Rings enlarged to show detail. Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" "Private Diamond Selection In Our Exclusive Diamond Room" © 2013 Walt Disney When The KU-Iowa State Basketball Game Gets Too Tense, Take A Break And Visit... KU Concessions Big Job Running Council By Stephen Russell Second in a Series Behind the scenes of every organization there lies a group of people who perform the tedious task of keeping the organization alive. KU's All Student Council, too, has its behind the scenes men. In the form of five administrative legislative committees, these people keep the legislative body running. They sustain its physical growth (the Elections Committee); guide as a nervous system, its legislative muscles (the Committee on Committees and Legislation); store, as a memory, its decisions (the Constitutional Committee); provide for it an internal communications system (the Secretarial Committee); and, pump through its organizational system monetary lifeblood (Finance and Auditing Committee). ASC Chairman Mike McNally, Bartlesville, Okla., junior, called these committees the "internal affairs" committees of the Council and said they keep the Council functioning actively and up to date. The Elections Committee, according to McNally is temporarily defunct. He said he neglected to appoint anybody to the committee when he reappointed the membership of the committees last Dec. 14 because of a proposal of the Council to investigate its entire election system. He plans to appoint a special committee at the next ASC meeting to investigate the feasibility of everything from the use of voting machines to the "Hare System" of counting ballots now in use. The Committee on Committees and Legislation, said committee chairman Jim Prager, Annandale, Va., junior and recently elected ASC Vice-chairman, is designed to review legislation brought up by individuals of the ASC. It investigates proposed legislation, discusses the implications the act will have in the area to be affected, and informs the council of its findings. Prager explained that all bills and amendments introduced to the Council have to go through this committee. Although the committee cannot kill a piece of legislation, it must, in a report to the Council, turn in either a recommendation for or against passage or no recommendation at all, and explain its decision. If necessary, the committee can appoint a subcommittee to study a piece of legislation and report back its findings. He said Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe has requested that they meet with him to discuss all proposed legislation. In this way, he said, the returning of a lot of legislation from the Chancellor after it passes the Council, because of minor errors is prevented. In addition, the committee obtains the Chancellor's viewpoint to incorporate with their own findings. Prager said he will make an attempt to hold regular open meetings next semester and he encourages everyone, both Council members and students, to attend. He especially wishes to induce the authors of legislation under consideration to be present to explain anything in their acts that is unclear to the committee. The Constitutional Committee, according to committee chairman Dick Darville, Shawnee Mission junior, is responsible for keeping up-to-date copies of the ASC Constitution and Bill Book, incorporating into them all changes passed by the Council. He said this has been especially difficult in the past few years because of the large amount of legislation the Council has passed. Darville said the committee is presently working with the Secretarial Committee to update the present edition of the Bill Book and to furnish copies for all of the newly elected Council members. It is also presently planning to go through the procedure of examining each of the bills and discussing with the chairman of the committees or departmental secretaries it affects to find out if the bill is still sufficient in providing for its original purpose, and if not, to seek suggestions for change from the chairman. Janet Anderson, Prairie Village sophomore and ASC Secretary, said the Secretarial Committee, which she chairs, is a center of communications, correspondence, and information for the Council and the students it represents. The ASC Constitution lists the duties of the Secretary and her committee as the following: - Recording the minutes of every ASC meeting, - Notifying ASC members of special meetings, - Aiding the Constitutional Committee in revising and publishing copies of the ASC Constitution and Bill Book. - Providing what information the ASC office may have on a certain subject to students and faculty members who request it, and. - Maintaining a filing system so that information coming into the ASC office may be retained and easily located. Appointing the assistant chairman of the Secretarial Committee to serve as secretary to the Committee on Committees and Legislation to keep permanent records of its meetings. Miss Anderson said the committee is a "catch all" body that is charged with a lot of work. Because of this she hopes to involve more people from the Council into the work of the committee thus providing for more efficient service and also for better informed representatives. Chairman Dan Vossman, Lawrence senior and ASC Treasurer, said the Finance and Auditing Committee supervises the financial records of all student organizations which receive funds from the University through the ASC. Vossman said the committee is part of the system of checks and balances the KU's student government imposes on itself to protect against corrupt practices, in this instance over financial matters. Official Bulletin TODAY LDS Institute of Religion, 4.30 p.m. Kansas, Union Popular Film, 7 and 9:30 p.m. "Cat on a Hot Tin Trap" Dyche Aud. on its Foreign Films, 7:30 p.m. "Woman in the Dunes." (Japanese.) Hoch Schreibung. Hulley Friday Night Services, 7:30 Community Center, 917 Highland Dr. Western Civ Exam, 8 a.m. SATURDAY North CV 11, 504-3260 9 a.m. Lawrence Post Office, 7th and Vernon St. Swimming, 2 p.m. Nebraska. Robinson Pool. Popular Film, 7 and 9:30 p.m. "Cat on a Hat Tin Tin." Dyche And. Basketball, 8 p.m. Iowa State. Allen Field House. International Club, 8 p.m. Final curses for all students only. Kansas union only. SUNDAY Catholic Mass, 8 a.m. St. Lawrence Channel, 9:30 and 11 a.m. Hoch. Lutheran Services, 9:45 Bible study; 11 worship. University Lutheran Church, 15th and Iowa. Narrative communion Oread Friends Meeting 10:30 a.m. Danforth Church meeting meeting with the community, welcome Duplicate Bridge-Master Point, 1:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. Carillon Recital, 3 p.m. Albert Gerken. University Chorus, 3:30 p.m. Hoch Auditorium. Lutheran Student Association, 5:30 p.m. Prof. Paul Hasvass will speak on Religion at KU. Alcove 6. Kansas Union. SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. — (UPD)—A young motorist and his girl left a pasture gate open while they enjoyed a moonlight stroll. A herd of five cows took the hint and made themselves scarce. Police Chase Cows Patrolmen subsequently spent two hours warning motorists and rounding up the strays from near by Riverside Freeway. PIZZA PUB The Original Crispy Crust Announces Its Grand Opening FRI. SAT. SUN. featuring THE FABULOUS "UGLIES" featuring Treat your date to something new at the Finest Club in Town. Seating for 200 in a dynamic atmosphere found only at the 23rd & Naismith Flying Saucers or No? Pizza Pub. DENVER —(UPI)— There are more than five types of "flying saucers," but they can be anything from soap bubbles to spider webs, according to the director of the Harvard College Observatory. He claimed that all sights of "flying saucers" are really natural phenomena. 1300 W.23rd The unidentified flying objects (UFO's) are not spaceships, but "some very plebian reflections from natural objects, Donald Menzel, one of the nation's leading astronomers, said. Daily Kansan Friday, January 7, 1966 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers 3 1961 PORSCHE 1600 SUPER CABRIOLET EXCELLENT CONDITION MANY EXTRAS - Abarth System - Tanneau - Head Rests - $1850.00 K.C. — EM 1-8081 Days Only - All Leather Interior MANY EXTRAS Semiannual Sale of Men's DRESS and CASUAL SHOES This Season's Patterns in Blacks, Browns and Waxhide. 10 pedwin YOUNG IDEAS IN SHOES Hush Puppies' BRAND BREATHIN' BRUSHED PIGSKIN* CASUALS ONLY BY WOLVERINE ROBLEE. THE SHOE WITH THE OPEN-COLLAR FEELING TIES AND SLIP-ONS 20% -- 35% Reduction McCoy'S SHOES 813 Mass. VI 3-2091 Editorials Job Corps-easy life Recruits in the Job Corps appear to be living the life of Riley. Designed to provide a new challenge to unemployed and/or misdirected youth, it has apparently been transformed into a sugar pill for juveniles. THE PRIDE OF the Job Corps is a wellkept, spacious camp in New Jersey. Abundant facilities featuring the latest in office equipment, factory machinery and agricultural tools are available for vocational training. Recruits are free to choose any program and regular attendance is apparently voluntary. After a hard day of three to five hours in class, the recruits line up in a spacious cafeteria for a selection of excellent and plentiful food. They are free to spend evenings as they choose. Even in this utopian environment, recruits are finding the pill a bit difficult to swallow. Directors of Job Corps camps were advised, during a 10 day recruits' Christmas leave period, to insure that the recruits returned to camp by sending a Christmas card to each recruit, calling him at home, and promising more entertainment to the recruit on his return to camp. Apparently the facts of the Job Corps program haven't measured up to the ideal. How can a boy be challenged when the program is served to him on a silver platter? Enticement shouldn't be necessary to bring the recruits back to camp. Who wouldn't want to return to such a rosy environment? THE RECRUITS HAVE been disappointed somewhere. Is it possible that these youths really want challenge instead of cosseting? If so, by all means they should be challenged. The Job Corps won't be doing its recruits a favor by making life easy for them. These young men can never hope to accept responsibility if all their demands are anticipated, and the program will have become a failure at the taxpayer's expense. CARVING A RESPONSIBLE life in a new environment is of course going to be difficult for these young men, and certainly they are entitled to the basic comforts, foreign to many of them, while they are in the program. But beyond this, how far should accommodation be carried? A line in a currently popular song runs, "A little bit of sugar helps the medicine go down." Yes, a little bit of sweet is good for all of us, but in excess it usually makes us ill, just as too much of the easy life is apt to be the ruination of the Job Corps. — Karen Lambert AWS image makers: Revisions needed in attitude KU women are suggesting constitutional changes in the AWS in order to make the campus women's organization more effective. Their interest is commendable, but hopefully they realize that more than constitutional changes are needed. When Lincoln Steffens wrote his famous series on American cities over 50 years ago, he made it a point never to read a city's charter, for he had learned that even the best charter cannot guarantee good government. At KU it should be equally apparent that even the most sweeping of constitutional changes in the AWS will not insure reform. WHAT THOSE girls should actually seek is a change in the attitudes of the AWS, an organization that has lost sight of reality. It has manufactured an image of KU women that has displaced and become more important than reality. To the AWS what KU women are really like is unimportant; what matters is what they seem to be and what others think of them. The AWS has created an image of the college educated career woman, but in reality the career that most KU women seek is marriage. It has created the image of the sophisticated and gracious career woman, but in reality the sophistication so dear to the AWS is only a veneer, existing only to hide shallow intellects. It has created an image of concerned women expanding their interests through a wide range of activities, but in reality it is only concern for prestige that makes KU women active. NOT ONLY HAS the AWS obscured reality, but it constantly promotes the preservation of its false images. In effect, it tells women, "Do the right thing, but if you don't, at least be discreet." In the eyes of the AWS, conscience is equal to reputation, and women are not expected to justify their actions to them selves, but rather to their peers, the Dean of Women, and the state. Unfortunately, the AWS is not alone in its creation of self-deceiving images. KU promotes the image of the scholar- athlete, playing only for the joy of sport, while, too often, the athlete is not a scholar and is at Kansas only because KU made the best offer. He is content with the image of having eliminated racial discrimination from fraternities and sororities, although no one really feels discrimination is gone. KU claims to harbor serious, inquiring students, but most of these students seek not knowledge, but grades. Fraternities proclaim their good scholarship, but members are too often here for four years of fun, not study. The Chancellor points to the higher morality of today's students on a campus where petty theft and cheating are uncomfortably frequent. IN AMERICA WE have had our images—the land of freedom and equality; the land of opportunity, where only the lazy are poor; and the land of justice where every man can have a fair trial. And it was only when those images were shown false that progress was made. Perhaps it is time KU once again faced reality. We have to see our problems before we can solve them. Justin Beck THE UNIVERSITY DAILY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office Founded 1889 Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, N.Y. 10022. Mail subscription rates: $4 a semester or $7 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturday and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. EXECUTIVE STAFF MANAGING EDITOR ... Judy Farrell BUSINESS MANAGER ... Ed Vaughn EDITORIAL EDITORS ... Janet Hamilton, Karen Lambert NEWS AND BUSINESS STAFF Assistant Managing Editors ... Suzy Black, Susan Hartley Jane Larson, Jacke Thayer Circulation Manager ... Mike Robe Advertising Manager ... Dale Reinecker City Editor ... Joan McCabe Classified Manager ... Mike Wertz Feature Editor ... Mary Dunlap Merchandising ... John Hons Sports Editor ... Scottie Scott Promotion Manager ... Keith Issitt Photo Editor ... Bill Stephens National Advertising ... Eugene Parrish Wire Editor ... Robert Stevens LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS We are firm believers in the maxim that, for all right judgment of any man or thing, it is useful, nay essential, to see his good qualities before pronouncing on his bad. We were thinking... * * No man lives without jestling and being jostled; in all ways he has to elbow himself through the world, giving and receiving offense. Thomas Carlyle 2 Daily Kansan Friday, January 7.1966 FROM FOR RENT ONE WAY SPN 14-31 COOPER ELLENANT 2015 "FOY, DID YOU GUILY EVER MAKE A LOTTA NOISE COMIN' IN LAST NITE?" On the side Hints from Heloise? They say that women, at certain periods in their lives, unexpectedly express a desire for such things as watermelon and ice cream or chocolate-covered cottage cheese with salted peanuts on top. Although not in their position, the other night I felt an urge to whip up some chocolate pudding. After gorging myself with 16 servings of the stuff, the urge suddenly, and, just as unexpectedly, let me. I even started wondering why anyone in his right mind would eat the stuff. PETER RANDALL Eric Johnson THE NEXT MORNING, I discarded almost all the reasons I had thought up the night before for distressing pudding and figured they were the result of the heavy stress at the moment. One reason though seems to be just as valid now as then. rudding recipes are dull. "COMBINE CONTENTS OF package and two cups of milk in sauce pan. (Blah) Cook and stir over medium heat until mixture comes to a full boil. (Eegah!) Serve warm or cold. Makes four servings, $ \frac{1}{2} $ cup each." (Just a note, they fail to mention that the lumps have to be picked out before eating.) It seems like pudding directions could be really perked up if a company would invest a little time and money and hire well-known authors to write their directions. The directions could be put in short story form, bound, and attached in booklet form to the package back for housewives to read in their leisure time before they started concocting the gocey brown stuff. THE POSSIBILITIES are unlimited. Let's take a look at some pudding directions written by some of these well-known authors. "For Whom the Pudding Boils" Hurriedly she began to work. Not even pausing to notice the militia regiment advancing toward their stronghold. TIME WAS ALL important. Her husband, Pferde Fleish, wounded by sniper fire, was losing strength and needed the lifegiving energy of pudding. "Obscenity!," she screamed. Moisture had wetted the lifegiving Jello chocolate pudding. Juanita bent low to uncover the package from the brown pine needles on the forest floor. Her muscled thighs quivered violently under the strain. Juanita, unbathed for weeks, with voluminous rolls of fat quivering with each move, unerringly emptied the contents of the package into a battered and stained old sauce pan. "EILEN SIE SICH. Eilen Sie sich!," gasped her Spanish husband, who had been taught German by Jesuit priests at the monastery up the road. "Obscenity! I have but one and one-half cups of goat's milk instead of the recommended two cups." Juanita screeched. She added the milk, stirring over the medium heat of her campfire while bullets riccoped nearby. The pudding came to a full boil. Without pause, she poured four servings, $ _{12} $ cup each, down her husband's parched throat without waiting for it to cool. "ACH!" cried Pferde, "Obscenity, I've been (obscenity) scalded; You Obscenity of Obscenities." Maddened as he was by Juanita's scalding, Pferde rose and with the lithe movement of a gazelle, bounded over the rocks with Juanita to the safety of the dense forest. Eric Johnson 91002229135925 --- JOKE A certain cough drop manufacturer wants to make the claim that his cough drops are non-habit forming and do not contain more than 1.4 kicks per gram. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years LAWRENCE, KANSAS 76th Year, No. 63 Weather Generally fair and mild tomorrow with light northwest-ly winds of one to two miles an hour. Low tonight is to be in the middle 20's. Friday, January 7, 1966 Dominican Askew Renew Revolts SANTO DOMINGO —(UPI)— The armed forces radio said today the air bases in Santiago and Barahona had joined a military revolt against President Hector García Godoy's efforts to exile some of his military rivals. Radio San Isidro, broadcasting in behalf of the Dominican armed forces and national police, said the presidential decision was illegal and would open the door to a Communist takeover of the Dominican Republic. The radio station returned to the air today after a comparative lull that followed an apparent military attempt to take over the country Thursday night. Troops threw up barricades and roadblocks in Santo Domingo, Santiago and Barahona and tanks guarded the presidential residence. RADIO SAN Isidro said Garcia Godoy's decision is assign his rival officers to diplomatic posts abroad could not be taken under the institutional act signed by both sides to end the civil war. The ruling already had been ignored once with the exile in early September of Gen. Elias Wessin v Wessin. As tension rose in the country four tanks took up positions in the grounds of the Dominican presidential palace while armored vehicles were moved to the Duarte bridge on the road leading to the big San Isidro air base. The radio had been silenced by Hold Rally To Support Professors NEW YORK—(UPI)—A group of St. John's University students scheduled a noon rally on campus today to support a three-day-old strike by faculty members seeking greater academic freedom at the Roman Catholic school. The students acted after the student council rejected resolutions to boycott classes or hold a protest teach-in at St. John's, one of the world's largest Catholic universities. The meeting, held on the school's sprawling Jamaica, Queens, campus, was closed to newsmen but students who attended said the council appeared unwilling to get involved in the controversy between the faculty and administration. Loud boos from the audience of about 800 greeted the council's 13-7 vote against a boycott Thursday night. The dissident students immediately announced their rally and said they would issue their own call for a boycott on Monday. The strike was called by the United Federation of College Teachers (UFCT) after 31 faculty members were fired for pressing a drive for greater academic freedom, more of a say in setting university policy and liberalized tenure arrangements. civilian authorities in September but it came back on the air to denounce the provisional government and to urge soldiers throughout the country to reject its authority. ARMY-HATING leftists in downtown Santo Domingo reacted to the menacing military moves Thursday night with an outburst of rioting, but so far as was known they did not clash with the troops. A number of cars were said to have been burned by the mobs. Although there was not known to have been any heavy fighting, there were reports that a number of persons who failed to stop at military checkpoints had been shot. fire. Dominican sources said the troops were waiting for daylight to determine whether there was any substantial opposition to their uprising. One unconfirmed report said Orlando Bonnelly, 39-year-old nephew of ex-President Rafael F. Bonnelly, was shot by sailors guarding the home of Capt. Ramon E. Jimenez Jr., the Navy chief of staff. EARLY TODAY, Santo Domingo was silent, except for occasional bursts of machine gun The trouble started with the government's announcement that 34 Dominican leaders, including top-ranking officers of the armed forces and leading rebel deserters, are being "assigned to diplomatic posts abroad" or "sent to Israel to study"-polite phrases understood to mean they are being forced into exile. THE 12 MEN on the "diplomatic list" - six top-ranking regular officers and six rebel leaders - included Armed Forces Minister Francisco J. Rivero Caminero and rebel Col. Francisco Caamano Deno. Also on this list were three of the four armed forces chiefs of staff. The one exception was Jimenez, who was said to have been selected to replace Rivero as armed forces minister. The 22 men "going to Israel" were lower-ranking leaders of the two factions. Traffic Gripes Swamp Court The KU student walked up to his car, "What, another ticket! It's unfair, I'll appeal!" And appeal traffic tickets is what more students have done this semester then ever before in the past. "The amount of traffic appeals brought before the Student Court has been heavier than in the past, at least in my opinion," stated Jack Duncan, Senior Court Justice and third-year Raytown, Mo., law student. DUNCAN SAID that the Student Court has heard 108 traffic appeals this semester. Of these 37 were granted, 33 denied or forfeited, four were appealed to the Court "en banc," 30 resulted in other dispositions, and four had to be dismissed because the Court lacked jurisdiction. Certain dispositions, of which there were 30, included cases in which the defense moves for a continuance; or in other words asks for more time to gather further evidence or locate a witness. When the dispositions include the Students interested in summer work projects can sign up for interviews with Felicia Oldfather, field representative of the American Friends' Service Committee, by calling or visiting the KU-Y. Interviewing Now For Summer Jobs Miss Oldfather will conduct interviews Monday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the KU-Y office. A program will be at 6:15 p.m. Monday at Westminster Center. The Rev. James Sinclair of Kansas City will speak on "Summer Service Opportunities." defense or prosecution moves for a directed verdict when the case is a clean-cut set of facts not requiring a full trial. The Traffic Court is composed of at least three court justices. Thus if a student feels the decision of the traffic court is wrong or unjust, he can appeal the decision to the entire court defined as a "Court en banc." JOHN FOULSTON, second-year law student and student court defense council said if the court handles bonified emergencies, where there is a University purpose involved; or an issued ticket which is defective on its face, such as those not signed by the issuing officer, are usually good defenses." Justice Duncan stated examples of actual cases which have never been successful. Among these cases was one where the student knowingly parked in a restricted area but felt he should not be ticketed since he felt it was the University's responsibility to provide him a parking spot. "ALL PARKING violations are chargeable. However, as a practical matter, both the University and the ASC have recognized that justifiable reasons should excuse some tickets. For this reason, the Student Court was established. One major premise is uppermost in the court's collective mind: That parking is a privilege. Therefore, idle excuses, and unjustified reasons will not excuse the violations," said Duncan. The Student Court operates on the American tradition that a man is innocent until proved guilty thus the "presumption is that the student defendant is telling the truth," said Duncan. Peace Corps— ... Ravenholt Lauds Corps Training The Peace Corps serves as an effective apprenticeship for responsibility abroad, according to Albert Ravenholt, a member of the American University Field Staff and a foreign correspondent for the Chicago Daily News. Ravenholt, who travels abroad under the auspices of both organizations, spoke last night at a joint meeting of Theta Sigma Phi and Sigma Delta Chi, men and women's journalistic societies. HE SAID the Peace Corps was a "proven opportunity for the college graduate to move from campus society to responsible involvement in life. "It affords the opportunity to relate with different levels of society," he explained, "and to learn what life is like - as far as tempo and expectations - in other portions of the world." Secret Satellite Shot VANDENBERG AFB, Calif. (UPI) — A satellite employing Thor-Altrair rocket combination was launched from this base Thursday night on an undisclosed mission, the Air Force reported. The launch apparently was successful, but there were no additional details under current Defense Department policy. Some residents of Los Angeles reported to police they sighted an unidentified flying object. Spokesmen for the Air Force said it was the satellite. He said it was not difficult to distinquish between the informed, experienced observer of world events, the novice, and "the apprentice and the non-apprentice. "The American people talk a lot about foreign policy, but rarely about the people concerned." Ravenholt, who returned from his latest trip abroad in September, said. The pipe-smoking correspondent mentioned such contemporary personalities as Dr. H. Byer, a cultural anthropologist now in his 80's who opened the door to native education in the Philippines and became an advisor to heads-of-state, and Father Hogan, an American Jesuit instrumental in instituting social order in the Philippines. Father Hogan is stationed in Hong Kong now, trying to accomplish the same on a regional scale. He also spoke of Arthur Lansdale, a Southeast Asian specialist who is in Viet Nam now on special assignment. "TO FORM a responsible judgment of a problem," he said, "an individual must have lived with it." A Peace Corps volunteer's statement was given as testimony to the advantages of having traveled abroad. She said her experiences as a volunteer away from the props of American society had given her confidence that she could live and work effectively anywhere in the world. 12 Daily Kansan Thursday, January 6, 1966 Red Dog Inn This Weekend Marks The Red Dog Inn's First Year Anniversary. Come Down and Help Us Celebrate. - Friday - The Fabulous Red Dogs - FREE TGIF An Excellent Six Piece Show Band FREE Beverage For The First 100 - Saturday — The Rising Sons — Listen To The Rising Sons Sing Their Smash Hit Record "Concentration" FREE Door Prizes THE FIVE STARS The Fabulous Red Dogs 7th & Mass. V12-0100 YOUR SHOP CLASSIFIED ADS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised In the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $45 delivery. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery TYPEWRITERS - Office size and portable, new and used, manual and electric. Several brands. Rental-purchase rentals. Delivery of rentals and service. Office supplies, equipment, and furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. St., VI 3-3644 1948 Bulket Roadmaster Convertible. Perfect body, new upholstery. Aphthos on front in fair shape. Power windows. power seats, power top. 00 Call Tom after tft - #73-4234 Wollensk stereo 4-track tape recorder and Remington portable typewriter. Will consider trading for camera equipment. Gary Grazda, VI 2-1483 fc 1966 Barracuda, Formula S, Commando engine, 4-speed, Blue stream tires, tachometer, fast steering door, steering wheel, club interior, 1300 miles. List price, $338. Will sell for $2,950. Contact Dick Beamgard, 316 McCollum Hall. 1-6 1962 Corvair, Fitsch type as seen in the New Yorker. Vected. Excellent for touring, racing or just economical transportation. Sacrifice. See at Champlin Station in North Lawrence after 6 p.m., or at Brownsville after 8:06 after 6 p.m. Limited time only. 1-6 1960 Opel station wagon, real good, $275.00. 1959 Plymouth V-8 Belvedere, cream puff and personal car, $450.00. 1956 Chevrolet station wagon, V-8. $250.00. 1956 Ford V-8 mat transmissible, real sharp, $200.00. 1956 Ford V-8 real sharp, $125.00. Banson's Auto Sales, 1902 Harper, I 3-0342. Open evening. 1-7 1956 Fairland, radio, heater, w/o wire, chains, gauges, new battery, other extras. Clean. Mechanical issue 3-7535 after 6 p.m. 1-10 Clearance! Clearance! Tape recorders, stereo, stereo FM radios切to $80. AM-FM radios切to $19.99. Hurry to Ray Stoneback's, '929-831 Mass. 1.18 Across the burning sands of the Arabian Desert, at no little risk to my faithful Bedouin friend El Hazar, comes a beautifully rare and exotic black Meershaum pipe. Handcarved by master artisans in the image of a notorious caliph of the Ottoman empire for the feathered garment amber bit, with a bone coupling. A brave caravan has brought this treasure of the Near East to you at the most reasonable price of sixty American dollars. Adhere to the instructions of the Nile, purveyors of rare art treasures. Box 2, University Dally Kansan. tf 1950 Cadillac harse, 65,000 miles. Good condition, $275 Call CE 3-7554 Topeka. Overhauled at 58,000 miles. 1-11 is57 Opel 2-door sedan, 47,000 miles, gift money, $200. Call VI 2-6125. 1-7 Like new Motorola portable record and radio combination. Also room and board for girl students in walking distance. CA VII 3-5659. 1-1 Clearance Cabin! Capable 500 tires for cars ever. Example 650-14 (695-14) white wall, 100 level Mustang or Rambler size, cut to $12 each plus tax—New white Volks (560- 15') cut to $15 plus Ray Stuart back' 629-931 Mass. St. Irma 1848 164 Chevy, 2 dr. HT., Grey Impala, black interior, 300 HP stock, P.S. Posttraction, Tinted glass, 22,000 initial owner, must sell. Call Vi I 2-6842- 1-221 1861 Nash Rambler station wagon. Radio and heater—seat belts. New snow tires. One owner car. Call VI 2-3901. tf H-athkith Monaural speaker system. Two tweeters, 15 inch woofer, 8 inch midrange, 2 inclosers, 35 two 16.000 cus. $25 VI 3-6389. 1-7 1557 Chevy, Bel-Air, 283 V-8, radio, hauler, very good condition. Mechan- ically, body and interior. $525. VI 3-7646 1-11 1961 Plymouth Savoy V-8, 4-door, automatic trans. Call Donna En- 7267 Must sell 1966 GTO. $550 under alder's price, perfect condition, no gimmicks. Call Doug Dienlet, VI 3-5721. 1-12 1659 Corvette 283, 4-speed, dual quad V1 VI 3-8750, Kent Sawyer 1415 Ohio Oil TYPING Experienced typist has IBM electric to type your thesis, dissertation, or report. Fast heat and accurate work. Reasonable rates. Phone Mrs. Gilbert. I 2-2088 Experienced typist, 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric power supplies, accurate service for hire rates CAL. Mrs. Barloff 2407 Yale, V1 - 21648 Typist, experienced with term papers, theses and dissertations, will give your typing immediate attention with elitic machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W. 13th, Vl 3-6048. tf Secretary familiar with legal terms will do typing—briefs, memorandums, paper masters, case dissertations, reasonable rates. Marsha Goff, I-3-2677. Experienced typist; will type in my home. Accurate typing, reasonable rates and prompt service. Call Ms. Brown at VI 2-0210. Tf Experienced typist will do only these typewriter. Mrs. Pulchef v1 3-0558 Wanted: Typing in my home. Experienced and accurate in term papers and theses. Call VI 3-2651 any time. ff Accurate typing by experienced typist. Term papers, themes, theses and dissertations. Reasonable rates and fast. VI 2-1561. tf Secretary with many years experience, will type your term papers, comments. Fast, accurate work at interview. Call V1. vi 6296 after 5 p.m. Graduate student's wife, an experienced typist, will do all kinds of typing. Fast, accurate service. IBM Electric. Phone.Mrs. Langley. VI 2-2144. Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses, dissertations, essays, senior Electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Me Rauckman, M. 2-2781. Experience secretary will do typing VI 3-0380, after 5:00 call VI 3-0390, tiff Experience secretary will do typing VI 3-0380, after 5:00 call VI 3-0390, tiff Experienced typist will do theses and term papers. 4 years experience at KU. Phone Mrs. Oxford at VI 2-0673. tt Former Harvard and University of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports, and theses. Phone VI 3-7207. tf TYPING -- GESTETNER MIMEO- THING -- Mrs. McEldowney, VI Expert Typing—Theses, dissertations and term papers. Electric typewriter, standard rates. Mrs. Mishler. VI 3-1029. 1-10 Typing done at reasonable rates by experienced typist. Fast accurate work. Call Betty Vincent, call VI 3-5504. tf Typing done by experienced secretary for 25¢ each double spaced page. Call Ethel Henderson, 2565 Ridge Ct., VI 2-0122. tf Fast, accurate; immediate attention given to all term papers, reports, theses, etc. Mrs. Donna Stewart, VI 3-6621 1-21 Former teacher will give careful attention to typing your term papers. Accurate and neat work, 5 years experience. Call VI 3-3829. tf MISCELLANEOUS Die Bierstube: Siugen, trinken und essen German style. Featuring student's favorite dark beverage and student's favorite light beverage from Golden, Colorado. Also serving deluxe hamburgers and hot chocolate night. Party Room available. 14th and Tennessee. VI 2-9441. tt Need music for that next dance or party? Have Johnnie Hayes play records from the KLWN Fun Forty Survey on famous Fisher Sound Equipment from The Sound. For complete information, call V1 2-6343. tt BLANDING PARTY PHOTOGRAPHY Your satisfaction is my strongest your creativity is our greatest Gold embossed party titles; Kocadol 4x5, 75; custom enlarged B&W 5x7, 60; Three years' experience at reservation and samples call Dave t VI 21-653 Need any Sewing or Mending done? Please rate the rates. Call after 5:00 p.m. VI 2-3901 Wanted: General house work preferably in sorority, fraternity, or pri- vate setting. Must have references. Write to Housekeeping, 1132 Conn., Lawrence. tf PARTY TIME—Building available for dances. Call Vi M-3-454 Ralph Freed Experienced photographer in children and family portraits. Reasonable rate. Will take pictures in your home. Call VI 2-6148. tf Sports Car Maintenance and Repairs by and for the enthusiast. Super tune-ups for new cars. Ray Pickering's Competition Sports Cars. East 23rd St. VI 2-2191. Tune-ups — Evenings and weekends only; also other automobile work appointments or appointment only. VI behind 83rd Connecticut St. Farmer's Garage. 83rd Connecticut St. Farmer's ff Math Tutor; B.A. degree in Math from KU. Experienced in tutoring geometry, algebra, calculus and analytic geometry. Phone VI 3-0527 Entirely Free-Intelligent, independent and affectionate all black male cat. Suitably trained to avoid embarrassing situations. Forced to give up because of uncompromising landlord. VI 3-0046. 1-10 FOR RENT Vacancy in a contemporary home Private entrance and bath. Five even- meals weekly. $70 monthly. Utilities paid. Call VI 3-963 until p.m. 2 bedrooms in newer home. linens and very clean. see Minnesota. 1-10 Married, graduate students, faculty- 2 bedroom apartment, $95.00. Two available January 1, one available February 1. Call for brochure. VI 3-2116. Santee Apartments office, 1123 Indiana. tt Extra nice quiet furnished apartment for mature man, carpeted, nice kitchen, utilities paid. 2 blocks from Union. Available now. VI 3-8534 tf Emery Apts. 1423 Ohio. One one- bedroom apt. furnished. Gas and water used. $75 One efficiency. All utilities used. $75.70 VI 3-8190. 1-7 Vancancies in contemporary home for young man, prefer graduate student. Provide pool, home care, meals if desired VI 3-9635, call before 6 p.m. VI 3-9635, call before 6 p.m. Rooms for men students, some available NOW, some February 1, with or without kitchen privileges. Call VI 3-1607. 1-12 Single room vacancy. Graduate male end or after 5 p.m. VI 3-03862. 1-12 Reward for lost Human Relations notebooks — Mark Sheel and Jack Alexander. Call UN 4-3633 or bring to 421 Blake. LOST Gold, oval-shaped, brushed-texture woman's bracelet. Somewhere on campus Monday. VI 2-9100-Juiliane in 842. Small reward. 1-10 Reward offered for lost glasses- black rimmed. Contact David M. Miller, room 635, Templin Hall, VI 2- 1200. 1-12 HELP WANTED Students looking for part time work- IN presence on Sandy's Drive-In-2120 W, 9th. Reliable student for selling imports. Apply 920 La. after 6 p.m. tf Room available for girl student free in exchange for baby-sitting services. Room located in nice neighborhood. Call VI 2-0445. 1-11 Student for secretarial work. 10-20 hrs, per week until end of school year time during June and July Must be excellent typist, call UR 3796 1-7 University family wishes mother's helper. Room and board in exchange for babysitting one child. Discuss terms. VI 3-4098, Mrs. Maher. 1-12 WANTED Will Baby Sit in my home or yours. Call after 4:00 p.m. IV 3-2001 Need male roommate to share apartment for 2nd semester~upperclassman or graduate student preferred. Call VI 3-4349. 1-11 Daily Kansan Thursday, January 6, 1966 Note Paper, Cards, Calendars 11 UNICEF On Sale at Union Bookstore Gift Box "We Rent Almost Anything" VI 3-2044 812 New Hampshire Street Anderson Rentals 8TH ST. SHOE REPAIR Quality work on half soles, heels. We repair purses Shoe dyeing 107 E. 8TH Andrews Gifts take advantage of the VI 2-1523 Yamaha Sale! Ern's Cycle Shop visit 950 N. 3rd VI 1-5815 Open Wednesday Evenings Malls Shopping Center Plenty of Free Parking SPECIALS - 25% Off Goodyear Tires - Tune Ups - Lubrication . . . $1.00 - Brake Adjustment . .98 - Brake Adjustment Plus - Wheel Alignment Page Fina Service 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694 Now Leasing - Automatic Transmission 10th and Emery Rd. WEST HILLS Lawrence's First Total Electric Luxury Apartments for information call W. E. Almquist—VI 3-3610 Try a "MOORE" BURGER BURGER MALTS-SHAKES 1414 W.6th VI 3-9588 COMPLETE CLASSICAL RECORD SELECTION COLUMBIA RECORDS Weavers THE SHANTY MENU Mobile Oven Menu - SAUSAGE * PEPPERONI - Now for the first time in Lawrence we at THE SHANTY are able to deliver piping hot pliza to your door in a temperature and humidity-controlled radio dispatched units offer lightning fast service and catering. Allow an extra 30 minutes for special orders or pet varieties for spaces near the Mobile Bells. CALL US! Order 8, get one free. - PEPPERONI * HAMBURGER All King-Size 12" Pizzas - Double Cheese (Friday only) * SHANTY INTERNATIONAL Call VI 2-2500 $1.50 $1.50 $1.50 $1.50 $2.25 Free 10-Minute Delivery (Normally) 5:00 to 12:00 p.m. YOUR GASOLINE DOLLAR GOES FARTHER DERBY at ... GARY'S DERBY SERVICE 2330 Iowa Lawrence YOU CAN'T BUY A BETTER GAS...AT ANY PRICE TRAVEL TIME LET MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICI Make Your Semester Reservations Now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Valuable Player Lewis Foresees 'Best Year' By Emery Goad Selection as the most valuable player in the Big Eight pre-season tournament was a pleasant surprise to Del Lewis, 6-2 Jayhawk guard. "I felt I had not played up to par the last two years and I was really out to play my best this year. The award really surprised me," the Topeka senior said. LEWIS BEGAN playing organized basketball in the fifth grade. He played his high school ball at Washburn Rural. Lewis, who likes to date and play golf whenever there is time, admits there will be a little added pressure after winning the tournament but, "That's what we like," he said, speaking for the team. "You cannot imagine what a great student section can do for a team. The students are what makes teams like K-State and Colorado so tough," Lewis said. SLIGHTLY OVER SIX feet, he admits he is usually the smallest man on the court, but "I don't notice it much," he said. Lewis scored 24 points against Nebraska in the finals of the Big Eight preseason tournament at Kansas City and 13 points against Colorado on Monday. "Actually scoring is not really my job," he adds. Besides spending a minimum of 25 hours each week with basketball, Lewis keeps a 1.5 grade point average and currently carries 18 hours. "I don't really have time for much else, but I did run for senior class president last year," he said. Lewis came to KU because "I was raised in a KU environment." Lewis currently lives at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. LEWIS ADMITS he has thought about the National College Athletic Association title but, "I think about us winning the Big Eight title first and then the others," he said. Lewis graduates this spring with a major in social studies and plans to return to KU in the fall again for master's work in guidance counseling. He also plans to be on the coaching staff, working with the Jayhawk freshman team. He predicts a coaching job later. "It will really be nice to be a free man after this year is over." he concedes. "There is so much to think about during school with basketball and grades." LEWIS LOOKS forward to his summer job with Goodyear and some water skiing. The last seven Jayhawk games have been out of town and Lewis says the team is looking forward to the games with Iowa State and Oklahoma this weekend in Allen Field House. "We have a tremendous field house and when it is filled with students it gives us that added lift to win," Lewis emphasized. Steve Sloan To be Ready MOBILE, Ala. —(UPI)— Improvements in both the weather and the bruised ribs of Alabama's Steve Sloan raised the spirits somewhat of the South coaches preparing here for Saturday's North-South Senior Bowl. The Alabama passing star was injured in the Orange Bowl, but seemed on the mend today. 10 Daily Kansan Thursday, January 6, 1966 -Staff photo by Bill Stephens 25 Addition For Sigma Chi Del Lewis . . . . tourney's most valuable player. Work on a $250,000 addition to the Sigma Chi fraternity house is due to begin soon. Vince Bilotta, adviser to the chapter, said the project will increase the chapter house capacity from 54 to 94 men. Completion is expected by September. Plans call for remodeling existing facilities and adding rooms, a dining room for 128 persons, kitchen, lounges, library and new housemother's quarters. FRED GREEN Western Wear has BOOTS Justin & Texas also LEE Jeans 910 Massachusetts Ford Motor Company is: stimulation A. S. H. M. James M. Mercerre B.A. Physics, Pomona College M.A. Physics, Univ. of Ili. Ph.D. Calif. Institute of Tech. What does it take to "spark" a man to his very best . . . to bring out the fullest expression of his ability and training? At Ford Motor Company we are convinced that an invigorating business and professional climate is one essential. A prime ingredient of this climate is the stimulation that comes from working with the top people in a field . . . such as Dr. James Mercereau. Jim Mercereau joined our Scientific Laboratory in 1962. Recently, he headed a team of physicists who verified aspects of the Quantum Theory by creating a giant, observable quantum effect in superconductors. This outstanding achievement was the major reason the U. S. Junior Chamber of Commerce selected Dr. Mercereau as one of "America's Ten Outstanding Young Men of 1964." Your area of interest may be far different from Dr. Mercereau's; however, you will come in contact with outstanding men in all fields at Ford Motor Company. We believe the coupling of top experience and talent with youth and enthusiasm is stimulating to all concerned. College graduates who join Ford Motor Company find themselves very much a part of this kind of team. If you are interested in a career that provides the stimulation of working with the best, see our representative when he visits your campus. We think you'll be impressed by the things he can tell you about working at Ford Motor Company. Ford The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan An equal opportunity employer They Serve While Training- Lawyers Work, Study By Maury Breecher KU's School of Law trains tomorrow's lawyers. It does this through the time old methods of classroom lectures, study, and tests as well as by providing opportunities for the student to gain experience at various legal actions. The Law School has many programs and courses which provide this on-the-job training. TWO OF THESE are the Student Probation Officer Program, which has proved its value during the 10 years it has been in operation, and the new Prison Counseling Program which began this semester. These programs, besides fulfilling the school's requirements, also serve the community and society at large. Presently there are 10 third year law students serving as student juvenile probation officers in Douglas County. They were appointed this semester, while taking the Juvenile Problems course, by Douglas County Probate Judge Charles C. Rankin. They act as actual probation officers while investigating, evaluating, and counseling cases involving juvenile offenders. THE JUVENILE PROBLEMS course is designed to be a seminar, according to Law School Professor Dan Hopson Jr., who teaches the course. Because of limitations imposed by the juvenile court, only 10 students can take part in the seminar and be appointed student probation officers. The bulk of their time is spent in their field work with the juveniles. Hopson said, "The key defect in the organization of the course is centered on the fact that the probation officers are working with the juveniles at the same time that they were attempting to learn the background material." The structure of the program will be changed in the spring semester. Hopson added. Douglas County's Chief Probation Officer is David Mitchell, a Lawrence graduate student in Sociology. It is he who assigns the juvenile offender's case to the student probation officer and arranges for his first meeting. This meeting, the initial contact, is one of the important functions of the student probation officer. During this meeting and throughout the subsequent investigation of the case, the student probation officer will get to know the offender personally, gain his confidence, and help him to solve his problems. THIS INITIAL INVESTIGATION by the student officer has been described by many of the officers as the most time-consuming and tedious job. The student officer later carries his investigation to the offender's family. He will try to determine what sort of family life the offender has had and whether or not the offender enjoyed parental guidance. The student will continue his investigation with visits to the offender's school. School officials may provide him with test scores and grades of the offender. These, together with the observations from the teachers will provide a picture of the juvenile's potential and attributes. This aspect of the investigation is felt to be very helpful to the student officer in deciding on the recommendation he has to make regarding the juvenile to the Court. Probate Judge Charles C. Rankin said, "Senior Law students have proven themselves to be capable probation officers; consequently the children of Douglas County have benefited." Tomorrow: The Probation Officer's Greatest Challenge! Daily Kansan Thursday, January 6,1966 Prompt Electronic Service on TV Color TV Antennae Hi-fi Stereos Changers Radios Transistors Car Radios - We Service All Makes RCA Motorola Airline GE Zenith Silvertone Philco Magnavox Coronado Bird TV-Radio Service PHONE VI 3-8855 908 Mass. St. — Lawrence, Kans. NEW TOPS Cleaners & Launderers Offers the Students IN BY 9 - - OUT BY 5 SERVICE. When time is important let Tops In By 9 — Out By 5 service take care of your laundry problems. In addition Shirts Are Returned on Hangers and Tops offers a money back guarantee. TOPS Open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. (Monday thru Saturday) 1526 West 23rd (Next to the Pancake Man) Festival Changed to March The annual International Festival will be the evening of Mar. 26 in Hoch Auditorium. Clark Coan, international student adviser, said the foreign students had not yet organized their committee. The festival usually is held the same weekend of the Kansas Relays but was moved ahead this year to avoid conflict with Centennial events. Loafer Sale Penobscott Trampeze Loafers were to $10.95 Now $6.90 Viner Loafers were to $8.95 Now $5.90 ARENSBERG'S 819 Mass. VI 3-3470 Did You Live It Up Over Christmas Vacation? Still Trying To Live It Down? You can still get a delicious, low cost meal at SANDY'S. Still the fastest service in town. SANDY'S, the Swift and Thrift Drive-In, is conveniently located in the Hillcrest Shopping Area. TOLLOSHAM SANDY'S SWIFT AND THRIFT DRIVE-IN DRIVE-IN Fish ... 25c Grilled Cheese ... 15c Coffee, Milk ... 10c Orange, Root Beer and Pepsi ... 10c or 15c Hamburgers ... 15c French Fries ... 12c Cheeseburger ... 19c Chocolate, Strawberry and Vanilla Shakes ... 20c When You're in Doubt—Try It Out, Kansan Classifieds. Patronize Kansan Advertisers World-Wide Wire- Lindsay Is Optimistic In City Transit Strike NEW YORK—(UPI)—John V. Lindsay today reported "some movement" toward ending the six-day-old bus and subway strike but warned weary New Yorkers against over optimism about a quick settlement. Lindsay, in a television and radio report, disclosed that both sides in the dispute had "made an additional offer" during marathon negotiations Wednesday. He would not elaborate. "However," he said, "the gap remains wide between the parties." The new Republican mayor told the city it would "have to sweat it out . . . be very tough about it and very brave about it." + Kennedy's Heart Stops, But Restarts PALM BEACH, Fla.—(UPI)— Joseph P. Kennedy, 77-year-old father of the late president and one-time U.S. ambassador to England, was hardly slowed today by a momentary stoppage of his heart. The patriarch of the Kennedy clan was stricken late Wednesday morning with what his physician, Dr. Saul D. Rotter, described as "a very fleeting and very momentary heart block." He said a block is a momentary stopping of the heart. * * ★ ★ Steel Price Compromise Is Predicted WASHINGTON —(UPI) The prospect of a replay of the steel industry's 1962 confrontation with the White House has evaporated in a price compromise which sees both sides giving a little and getting a little. The anticipated showdown was averted by a reported secret meeting in Washington Tuesday. Daily Kansan Thursday, January 6, 1966 Very Big On Campus! FINE NEW 1966 THE WORLD ALMANAC and book of facts. NEW YORK, N.Y. MARK TWAIN & CO. THIRD EDITION 1966 THE AUTHORITY - more than a million facts - over 10,000 subject headings - completely updated to '66 - headings - fully-indexed for instant use - use • indispensable study aid - Indispensable study aid Many Exclusive New Features! * ONLY $1.50 in soilproof heavy cover At Your Campus Store or Favorite Book Counter * GET YOUR COPY TODAY! NEW YORK—(UPI)—Twenty-five faculty members of St. John's University, striking in sympathy with 31 fired colleagues, today faced possible dismissal if they fail to attend their next scheduled classes. St. John's May Dismiss SUA QUARTERBACK CLUB "These methods will not succeed," he said. "We will continue the strike until we win reinstatement of the 31 dismissed teachers and establishment of the principles of academic freedom at the university." presents Dr. Israel Kugler, president of the United Federation of College Teachers (UFTC) which called the strike said the university was resorting "to coercive and threatening methods in an attempt to break the strike. 25 Faculty the films of the UCLA basketball game tonight at 7 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union.A member of the team will narrate the films. This weekend ONLY!! 25% OFF on all Opera and Vocal Records (Mono & Stereo) Price, Tucker, Merrill, Bjoerling, Corelli Peerce, Nilsson, Peters, Farrell, Freni and many others BELL MUSIC CO. 925 Mass. VI 3-2644 JANUARY SHOE SALE 1 120 PAIRS S TAYLOR-MADE COLE-HAAN BRITISH WALKER NOW 1/3 OFF - "Burnt Ivory" loafers - Scotch Grain Wing-Tips - Brown/Black Saddle Oxfords - "Burnt Ivory" Wing-Tip Brogues (Reg. $14.95 to $28.95 —— Now $9.95 to $19.30) Entire Stock Not Included University Shop ON THE HILL Daily Kansan Thursday, January 6, 1966 7 Let Your Parents and Friends Know You Are Proud of Your University WRITE ONLY ON ENGRAVED STATIONERY UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS University of Kansas University of Kansas University of Kansas University of Kansas ★ Eldridge Engravers - Gold Seal and University of Kansas 40 sheets 20 envelopes $1.00 - Basket Weave Gold Seal and University of Kansas Pink, White, Blue 36 sheets 20 envelopes $1.40 - Continental Engraved Gold Seal and University of Kansas Pink, White, Blue 36 sheets 20 envelopes $1.50 ★ Varsity Engravers - 3 Color Jayhawk and University of Kansas 30 sheets 20 envelopes $1.25 - Blue Campanile and University of Kansas 25 sheets 15 envelopes $1.00 kansas UNION BOOKSTORE Socialist Talks Here On Viet Nam Issue One of America's young Socialists will speak at KU next week during an anti-war speaking tour of 20 college and university campuses. Lew Jones, a member of the National Council of Young Socialists Alliance, is being sponsored by the KU Committee to End the War in Viet Nam (Viet Nam Committee) and will speak at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. HIS TOPIC will be "Immediate Withdrawal vs. Negotiations—A Socialist's Perspective on the Debate on the Anti-War Movement," Richard Hill, Manhattan junior and spokesman for the Viet Nam Committee, said. "The tour is designed to help the local independent committees organize. It will also help build and strengthen the anti-war movement," Hill said. "I think Jones should get a good reception," he said. SOME CAMPUSES Jones will visit include Roosevelt University and the University of Chicago, both in Chicago; University of California at Berkeley; and Columbia University, New York. Jones was graduated from Northwestern University, Chicago, in 1963, and did graduate work at the University of Minnesota. He now lives in Washington, D.C., and is active in East Coast anti-war work. JONES IS a member of the Washington, D.C., Committee to End the War in Viet Nam, and helped organize the national convention of the Committee for Sane Nuclear Policy (SANE). The national convention was held Nov. 25-28 in Washington during the march on the Capitol for peace in Viet Nam. Pozdro to Compose Sonata John Pozdro, chairman of the music theory department, has been commissioned to compose an original composition for the KU Brass Choir. Kenneth Bloomquist, who requested the composition, will conduct the premiere when the Brass Choir plays Mar.18 for the Music Educators National Conference in Kansas City, Mo. MEN'S SHOES 20% Off Royal College Shop 837 Mass. VI 3-4255 SCW.INC. Don't let your car fall to pieces. Our courteous service and Citgo products will keep it in continual top shape. Come see us soon. CITGO FRITZ CO. 8th & New Hampshire VI 3-4321 Open Thursday Until 8:30 p.m. Downtown—Near Everything Registration of College Bowl teams must be completed by 5 p.m. Friday, Jan.21, in the College office, 206 Strong Hall, according to Terry Hammons, Oswego senior and chairman of the College Bowl Committee. Each large residence hall may organize two 4-man teams. Greek houses and scholarship halls each may have one 4-man team. Students not presently living in organized houses may also enter teams. College Bowl: Register Now "We hope more students not in organized living groups will enter College Bowl teams this year," Dave Tilford, Wichita senior and chairman of the Arrangements Committee for College Bowl Committee, said. There will be a $5 team entry fee. It Used to be... By Hector Olave Jan. 6,1916 For the benefit of miners who cannot enjoy the advantages of specialized training at a School of mining the University may establish extension classes in the zinc and lead districts of southern Kansas. 6 Daily Kansan Thursday, January 6, 1966 WeaverS Our 109th Year - SOME STANDARD AND POPULAR BOOKS! - SOME UNUSUAL AND OUT-OF-THE WAY BOOKS! - SOME IMPORTANT SCHOLARLY BOOKS! - SOME LAVISH AND HIGHLY-ILLUSTRATED BOOKS! - FINE BOOKS FOR CHILDREN - TEACHERS - STUDENTS! - COLLECTORS - HOBBYISTS! - ALL ARE NEW CLOTHBOUND EDITIONS AT INCREDIBLE SAVINGS OF FROM $2 TO $8.23! - LISTED BELOW ARE ONLY A FEW FROM A LARGE STOCK 77c ea. COOKING THE AMERICAN WAY. By Pamela Kidd. Prepare favorite recipes, both traditional and regional. Island of the Damned — M O L O K A I. By O. A. Bushnell. M a g n i f l e c t. 539-page novel a bout o u b r brought together in a Hawaiian lecolony. BALL PLAYERS ARE HUMAN, TOO. By Ralph Jones, you might gout with the New York Kees. Pub. at $4.50. 99c ea. THE MISSILE LORDS. By Jefferson Sutton. Ex- tention. Titanium-titli-billion dollar missile pub. Pub. at $9.55. AFRICA'S RED HARVEST: Communism in Latin America Startling account of Russian and Chinese economy training of "guerrilla fighters," etc. Pub. at $3.95. Rocketry — Peenemunde to Canaveral. By Dieter K. Huzel. Story of German super-engineer who helped develop the V-2. Pub. at $4.95. Captured by the Nazis- KRIEGIE. By K. W. Simmons. American airman describes incredible P.O.W. experiences, rescue by Gen. Patton. $39.5. THE CENTURY OF SCIENCE. By Dr. Watson Davis. Surveys the most exciting, educational era history. Occupies 200 photos. Orig. $5.99. Sale 99c. THE PROFESSIONAL: LYNDON B. JOHNSON. What makes LBJ tick? Pub at $5.00. Sale 99c. THE GESELLE INSTITUTE PARTY BOOK. By Frances L. Ilg., et al. How to give children's parties for each year from ages 3 to 15. Pub. at $2.95. Sale 99% JAPANESE FLOWER ARRANGEMENT FOR BE- POWell. Complete introduction to the classic low mountments of the Ohara School. Pub. at $3.50. Sale 99c. A CONCISE DICTIONARY OF A B B R E V I L A- George Maybury Pub. at $3.75. YOUR MEMORY. By O. W. Haves. Amazing simple method for developing a super-power memory in less than a week! Pub. at $2.75. HIGHER PRICED THE HOLY BIBLE Marked in Four Colors. Complete King James Version of the Old and New Testaments. Sale 1.77. BOOKS The Man's Magazine — AN T H O L O G Y O F from 25 years of True, Pub. at 77.50. Sale 3.98. OUTSTANDING BUY OUTSTANDING BUY Complete Works of William Shakespeare The famous Shakespeare Head Edition of Robert F. King Press, 1,280 pages in all, handsomely bound Only $9.59. The Constitution — TO SECURE THESE BLESSINGS. Masterful compilation of the great debates (and compromise) at the meeting, 474 pp., 87 engravings. Pub.at $7.50. Sale 2.98. THE PRECARIOUS BALANCE: Four Centuries of the European Power Struggle. By Ludwig Dehio. Pub. at $5.95. Sale 1.98. Main Floor COLOR PRINT PORTFOLIOS CURRIER & IVES PRINTS, American folk art of irresistible charm and appeal. Pub at $4.00. Set of 6 color prints, sale 77c. BALLERINAS. 4 beautiful studies of young dancers. '17 x'14', Pub. at $2.50. Sale 77c. MODERN MASTERS. Four superb reproductions of priceless masterpieces of the great Impressionists. 11" x14". Sale 77c. FRENCH COSTUME PRINTS. 4 Full-color face-similes of rare old fashion plates. "12"x16". Sale 77c. DECORATIVE FRUIT 1 PRINTS. Six charming watercolors. 9"x12"; Pub. at $3.00. Sales 77c. DESERT PAINTINGS. By Robert Wood, Norman Yeckle, and Bill Bender, noted landscape painters. "20"x14", Orig. $5.00. Set of 4 color prints.-Sale 99c FLOREAL PRINTS by Jean-Louis Pforest. 4 large, lovely paintings. Pub. at $5.00. Sale 99c. FINEST QUALITY BRUSH-STROKE REPRODUCTIONS OF ART MASTERPIECES By Rembrandt, Picasso, Van Gogh, Renoir and other great masters - Give a fresh, modern look to your home with these fine art reproductions from our decorator-inspired picture collections. Each masterpiece is faithfully reproduced in four-to-six colors, mounted on heavy board, varnished, ready to frame. Maps and Small Prints for Grouping $1.00 Gallery Size Maps and Prints $1.98 Mural Size Pictures, 30” x 24” $2.98 Natural Oak Frames $1.69 to $3.95 White & Gold Frames $4.29 to $6.49 VI 3-6360 Third Floor 901 Mass. Winter Marks Pinnings PINNED Kathie Gardner, Atchison junior in Business, Delta Delta Delta, to Bob Nash, Bartlesville, Okla., junior in Business, Delta Chi. Jo Lee, Kansas City, Kan. junior in Design, Delta Delta Delta, to Steve Culbertson, Coffeyville senior in Architecture, Delta Tau Delta. Mary Meehan, Topeka, to Stephen Russell, Topeka junior in Journalism (News-Editorial), Phi Kappa Theta. Mary Morgan, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, sophomore in Secondary Education, to Richard Moody, Western Springs, Ill., junior, at Illinois Wesleyan University. ENGAGED Patricia Jo Bahm, Udall senior at Emporia State, Alpha Sigma Tau, to Dale Reinecker, Wellington senior in Advertising, Kappa Sigma. Marsha Barth, Leawood sophomore in Advertising, Sigma Kappa, to Jim Bennett, sophomore at Kansas State University. Sue Brown, Topeka sophomore in Occupational Therapy. Alpha Delta Pi, to Ronnie McVey, St. Joseph, Mo., fifth-year Pharmacy student. Theta Chi. Sherre George, Thayer senior in Physical Education, Alpha Delta Pi, to Danny McCue, fourth-year Pharmacy student, Theta Chi. Cheridah Kaufman, Halstead senior in Elementary Education, Alpha Delta Pi, to Larry Henrie, Wichita senior in Business. Linda Kinder, Topeka, to Bill Stephens, Topeka freshman in Photojournalism. Jackie Missildine, Hutchinson senior in Education, to John Pepper, Lenexa senior in Advertising. New Law Scholarship Law School Dean James K. Logan has announced that an annual $300 scholarship in the memory of Laverne Moin, a graduate of the Law School class of 1956, had been made available by a Wichita law firm. HURRY! Last 2 days Never too late Never late A TANDEM PRODUCTION TECHNICOLOR* PANWISIGN* FROM VIARNER BRUSS Eve. Shows 7:00 & 9:10 — EXTRA — Football Highlights of 1965 Never late A TANDEM PRODUCTION TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION* FROM VIARNER BROS. Eve. Shows 7:00 & 9:10 — EXTRA — Football Highlights of 1965 Granada THEATRE···Telephone VI 3-5788 First there was — "BABY JANE" then there was — "Hush Hush Sweet Charlotte" Now ... 20 Bette Davis as "The Nanny" Starts Saturday! Don't Win It! Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5784 20th Century Fox Bette Davis as "The Nanny" Starts Saturday! — Don't Miss It — Kansas ponds provides additional geological research for Miss Swineford's division. (Continued from page 3) She Loves Rocks and Her Job— Within the last two years, Miss Swineford helped complete the new 1964 Kansas State Geological Survey map which replaces the out-of-date 1937 version. Traveling alone in western Kansas during three summers, Miss Swineford mapped Clark, Comanche, and Barber Counties. Vandals Strike Despite the vision many people have of a geologist who lives close to nature, climbs over rocks, and makes mineral discoveries, a more accurate picture includes a Two KU living groups were struck by vandals early this morning who painted the letters TNE on the front door of Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity and the sidewalk of Chi Omega sorority. The two social organizations are combined in a Rock Chalk skit which is entitled "What TNE Means to Me or AWS I Love You Best. Daily Kansan 5 Thursday, January 6, 1966 Dwight Boring* says... FEDERAL POLICY ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE Q. Where can a college man get the most for his life insurance dollars? A. From College Life Insurance Company's famous policy, THE BENEFACTOR! Call me and I'll give you a fillin on all nine of The Benefactor's big benefits. No obligation, of course. A. Only college men are insured by College Life and college men are preferred risks. Q. How come? 2020 Harvard Lawrence, Kansas Phone VI 2-0767 *DWIGHT BORING geologist who sits at a desk and does paper work. THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA representing EVEN IN the field, a great deal of the geologist's work entails detailed desk work to plot maps and list data, said Miss Swineford. ... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men Today the field of geology offers many opportunities to women as well as men, she added. "Most jobs open to women are in industrial or government positions with federal or state geological surveys. Geology is a fascinating field for any woman who loves rocks," said Miss Swineford. PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS THIRSTY? VISIT THE OLD MISSION INN for YOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGE (WE HAVE GREAT FOOD, TOO) 1904 Mass. VI 3-9737 TEAR OUT THIS AD Our Average Graduate Reads More Than 1500 Words Per Minute OVER 95% OF OUR GRADUATES HAVE INCREASED THEIR READING SPEED AT LEAST THREE TIMES — WITH GOOD COMPREHENSION The internationally famous EVELYN WOOD Reading Dynamics Institute INVITES YOU TO ATTEND A FREE DEMONSTRATION OF THIS UNIQUE METHOD Where you will Where you will: - See an amazing documented film about Reading Dynamics. * Learn how Reading Dynamics can help you to faster reading, improved comprehension, greater retention. HOW DID IT START? Eighteen years ago Mrs. Wood made a startling discovery that led to the founding of Reading Dynamics. While working toward her masters degree, she handed a term paper to a professor and watched him read the 80 pages at 6,000 words per minute—with outstanding recall and comprehension. Determined to find the secret behind such rapid reading, she spent the next two years tracking down 50 people who could read from 1,500 to 6,000 words per minute. She studied their techniques, taught herself to read at these faster rates. Now, after years of testing, you can benefit from this great discovery. DOES IT HAVE PROVEN RESULTS? Senator Proximate, Wisconsin: "I must say that this is one of the most useful education experiences I have ever had. It certainly compares favorably with the experiences I've had at Tate and Harvard." Senator Symington, Missouri: "I can read most material at speeds above 3000 W.P.M. and technical material in the 2000 W.P.M. range." Results have been reported in Time, Newsweek, Business Week, and Esquire. Demonstrators have appeared on television with Jack Paar, Garry Moore, and Art Linkletter. HOW IS IT DIFFERENT FROM OTHER COURSES? No machines are used. You learn, instead, to use your hand as a pacer—a tool you always have with you. Conventional rapid reading courses aspire to 450-600 words per minute. Most Reading Dynamics graduates can read between 1,500 and 3,000 words per minute, and many go even higher. GUARANTEE We guarantee to increase the reading efficiency of each student by at least three times with equal or better comprehension. We will refund the entire tuition of any student who does not triple his reading efficiency as measured by the student's reading ability. The student may retake the course free of charge. A refund is conditional upon the student attending all classes or having made up missed sessions with the teacher. The student must also have practiced the required number of hours, following the assignments as outlined by the teacher. The average student may expect a fiveweek increase in reading speed and an eight-week increase in spelling ability. The student who must withdraw from the course for any reason may re-enter any subsequent courses at any future time, at no additional cost. --- FREE DEMONSTRATIONS 6 and 8 p.m. SATURDAY, JANUARY 8, 1966 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Community Building—11th & Vermont Just by being present you may win the course absolutely free. Classes registering now for these cities Colorado Denver Colorado Springs Fort Collins Grand Junction New Mexico Durango Boulder Greeley Pueblo Albuquerque Wyoming Albuquerque Santa Fe Santa Fe Cheyenne Missouri Farmington Kansas City Independence St. Joseph Jordan Rawlins Kansas Joplin Kansas City Wichita Topeka Hutchinson For FREE BROCHURE and CLASS SCHEDULES contact EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS INSTITUTE 3706 Broadway Kansas City, Mo. JE1-4321 TEAR OUT THIS AD Syrup Temptation- (Continued from page 1) red. It was like a stained glass window. I opened my eyes and they were still there," he said. THERE IS USUALLY no appetite the next day for a person who has taken dextro-methorphan. "It is 24 hours before you feel like a good meal," the student said. "It is also hard to sleep that night." The group sense becomes very strong when a whole group has taken a ride together, he said. 'It lets you have a sense of community. If just one person leaves, you feel you have lost something. The group feels, 'we have done it together.' wards your mind is very aware of what you've done," he said. "You think about the nature of the reality of being, and after- "ALTHOUGH YOU ARE incompetent during the high, you are non-violent. You're elsewhere than you've ever been before," the student added. One pharmacist, who said he had noted a slight increase in the sales of some of the leading cough syrups containing dextromethorphan, added he could not see how anyone could get kicks on the dextro-methorphan. "I would probably get sick first," he said. Another added that although many cough syrups contained from 8-10 per cent alcohol, he did not feel one could get high from them. "I think it's just a temporary phase, like glue-sniffing," he added. A THIRD SAID that the effects of the drug might be similar to codeine which is a narcotic. The call for cough syrups taken for kicks was concerned mainly with syrups containing narcotics such as codeine, another pharmacist said. "I turned down a customer the other night who wanted a syrup containing codeine, but there are no Federal restrictions on cough syrups containing dextro-methorphan." Another KU student from the East said that the idea had been around at least two years there. He added that some drug stores would not sell cough syrup to a minor. "It's not unusual for a junior high kid to get his kicks that way," he said. Official Bulletin **Foreign Students:** Special Tax Room 104, p.m. today, Jayhawk Union. International Club: Final meeting International Club: Final meeting Election of Other members only. Election of Other members only. TODAY **INDIA** Regional STATES Colloquium, 3-5 Sum. Dr. Brian Berry, Chicago U. M. D. Lutheran Worship, 4:30 p.m. Sponsored by all Lutherans. Danforth Der Deutche Verein, 4:30 p.m. wird der Donnerstag, den 6. Januar im 112 Blake zusammenkommen. Das Programm wird deutschlandreise im Lied. Lecture, 4 p.m. Dr. Victor LaMer, Columbia U. 122 Malott. KU SDS, 7:30 p.m. Room will be rooted. Kansas, Uplon. posted, Radisa Undergraduate Chemistry Seminar, 7.30 p.m., 230 Malott Dr. LaMer will speak in his memories of the Chem- department. Humanities Lecture, 8 p.m. Dr. Paul G. Roofe, KU. University The- ing College Life, 5 p.m. Tau Kappa Epsilon house. TOMORROW Muslim Society, 1 p.m. Friday 2 p.m. Sunday. Head of Religion Mars hall buss, Union LDS Institute of Religion, 4:30 p.m. Kansas, Union, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 971-865-2000, col Popular Film, 7 and 9:30 p.m. "Cat on a Hot Tin Tink." Dyche Aud. Foreign Film, 7:30 p.m. "Woman in the Dunes." (Japanese.) Hoch Hilifel Friday Night Services, 7:30 Community Center, 947 Highland Dr. Daily Kansan Thursday, January 6, 1966 Start the NEW YEAR OFF RIGHT! by improving your bowling score with regular practice. Your date bowls every other game FREE 6 p.m.Friday-6 p.m.Sunday at the TKU Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION Popular Film Series Cat On A Hot Tin Roof with Elizabeth Taylor & Paul Newman Jan. 7th & 8th 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. Friday & Saturday Dyche Auditorium Admission 35¢ Advanced Tickets at Kansas Union Information Booth Burnt Ivory® LEATHER Swagger Complement to Campus and Country Living Royal College Shop 837 $ M_{a_{55}}. $ V9 3-4255 THE Taylor-Made SHOE PENNYLOAF SHOE All styles from 62½ to 13 A to D Priced from $19.00 to $25.00 according to style and size and size 'I Have Something to Say...' Logan Takes Research Leave By Maury Breecher James K. Logan, dean of the Law School, announced yesterday that he will be taking a semester's sabbatical leave starting Feb. 1. Logan will be taking the Sabbatical for purposes of research and relaxation. "A DEAN never has time to do any sufficient amount of research," Logan said. "I feel the need for a change of pace. As a teacher I enjoyed classroom teaching and research. As a dean I have had the opportunity to do some teaching, but haven't had time for a substantial amount of research." Logan said that he has been working for several years on a book on the farm surplus problem. Many books have been written on this subject by political scientists and economists but never by a lawyer, from a lawyer's viewpoint, according to Logan. "I feel that I have something to say," Logan said, "and I want to say it. Thus, the only thing I can do is to write a book presenting a full and complete statement demonstrating all sides, qualities, exceptions, and angles that I can think of." LOGAN SAID that he had a substantial amount of research done on the book and hoped that he could finish it during his fivemonth sabbatical. He also plans to work on a casebook on wills, trusts, and estates, for use in American law schools. This casebook is being written by Logan in collaboration with W. Barton Leach of Harvard's Law School. Logan also plans to work on a handbook of Kansas corporate law in collaboration with KU law professors Lawrence E. Blades and Arthur Travers. He also plans a new approach for a casebook of business law. He said his publishers were quite enthusiastic about the casebook and were urging him to complete it. "The only way to accomplish these projects is by taking this leave," said Logan. Logan, one of the youngest law deans in America, said the job of a dean is wearying and that he is always worrying about not doing enough research. "I AM THE type of person who gets involved mentally and emotionally in what I am doing thus I think a change of pace is very good and I am looking forward to it," Logan said. Logan will do most of his research and writing on the KU campus but said that he would be operating in a cubicle in the library without a phone. He plans no speeches or committee duties while on his leave. He did say that he would be available for consultation on any long-term plans for the law school. She Loves Rocks and Her Job By Cheryl Hentsch Is it volcanic, metamorphic, or sedimentary? Does it contain fossils of leaves or animals? And what is it good for? Answers to these questions and many more from Kansas school children and private citizens are provided by Miss Ada Swineford, director of the petrography division of the Kansas Geological Survey and assistant associate professor of geology. In her dual capacity for the Survey and KU, Miss Swineford represents the woman who uses her college education. Presently, she is the only woman on the geology faculty. "I BELIEVE a woman does not need to retire from life after college and marriage. Too many young women in college fail to use the education they receive. I would hate to think that the majority of KU women were only in school to get married," Miss Swineford said. As a Lawrence resident since the early 1940's, Miss Swineford has seen many students come and go, buildings change, and educational attitudes alter. During World War II, Miss Swineford recalls, the newly constructed Lindley Hall was not used initially by the natural sciences, but by the navy servicemen stationed at KU. Miss Swineford has been with the Survey since 1947 and joined the KU geology staff in 1958. The petrography division which she directs identifies and describes rocks and their contained minerals. Daily Kansan 3 Thursday, January 6, 1966 DIVISION research work now includes studies of Dakota and Pliocene clays of central and extreme western Kansas. Volcano ash carried by the wind from New Mexico and deposited in (Continued on page 5) COACH HOUSE Clothes For Town and Country LE NAN ARBOGAST NAN ARBOGAST A good Coach House customer knows it's sales time and value time at the Coach House 12th & Oread (Continued on page 5) SAVE NOW On After Christmas Specials Special Sets Grundig Majestic Console ... used $88.88 Norelco 401 Stereo & Tape Recorder ... 279.95 Fisher 400-CX Fisher SA 300B ... used 188.88 DWG Speaker ... each 55.00 Fanon Stereo ... 78.88 Crestmark Receiver ... 158.88 Changers Collaro Coronation used 34.88 Glaser Steers 77 used 34.88 Garrard AT 6 used 34.88 Tape Recorders Telectro SA 121 ... 78.88 Recordio ... 78.88 Tandberg Model 5 ... 268.88 GBC ... 47.88 Thorens TPA 184 used 34.88 Garrard 4HF Turntable used 34.88 Pioneer Turntable used 34.88 Garrard TAMK II used 24.88 Bogen B50 used 24.88 Monarch AM/FM Tuner used 34.88 Knight KF-75 Tuner used 48.88 (not working) Knight KA-55 Amplifier used 28.88 AUDIOIRONICS 928 Massachusetts College Stores Hold Meet Two Kansans are among the 11 members of the planning committee for the 43rd annual meeting of the National Association of College Stores in Chicago April 18-22. They are James H. Stoner, manager of the University of Kansas Union bookstore, and Richard L. Adkisson of the bookstore at Wichita State University. MG SPORTS SEEDAN MU SPORTS SEDA Room for five. Built for fun Room for five —80% of the MG Sports 'Sedan is devoted to people. Result: room for five non-dieting humans to stretch out and relax. The travelling gear goes into the trunk (where it belongs). Plenty of window glass about, so relax and enjoy the view. Built for fun—the MG Sports Sedan will out-handle an embarrassed number of sports cars... thanks to front wheel drive, fade-free disc brakes and Hydrolastic suspension. 30-miles-to-a-gallon adds immeasurably to the fun. As does the low initial price. MG MG SPORTS SEDAN British Motors VI 3-8367 Penneys ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY BRAVE-COLOR ORLON®-WOOL BONDED KNITS pants sizes 8 to 16 498 banded top sizes 8 to 16 Sports sensationals make heroic fashions. The parallel striped top is right in step with smart ankle pants. Both in Orlon® acrylic 'n wool jersey bonded to acetate for a sure shape. In olive, tomato and navy. MATCHING SKIRTS AND SHELLS sheath skirt sizes 8 to 16 back zip shell sizes 8 to 16 398 498 Shaped for any-season smartness. The shell-look streaked with curvy stripes. A smart move with slim sheath skirt. Orlon® acrylic and wool jersey knit, bonded to acetate. In tomato, olive, navy. Plenty of Free Parking Behind Penney's Tues., Wed., Fri., Sat. 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.; Mon., Thurs., 9:30 to 9 p.m. Editorials Peace-wrong word? For a "peace feeler," Mr. Harriman carries a helluva big stick. Americans have always been called an impatient and stubborn people, but, just because the shoe fits is no reason for it to be worn in every situation. President Johnson's "peace-seeking mission" is certainly proving to be something quite the opposite. From where we stand, it looks like war. Averell Harriman's purpose seems to be to serve notice to world leaders that Ho Chih Minh's time has run out and that the United States is ready to extend bombings in North Viet Nam to targets considered safe in the past. He is also serving notice that the United States will carry the ground war to whichever international frontiers seem necessary. WITH THE SIGNIFICANT increase from 40,000 to 60,000 monthly in draft calls predicted for the future, we are left with no choice but to believe such reports. Thus, there is a possibility that targets heretofore neglected in Cambodia, Laos and even Red China may soon see American bombs and guns. Harriman delivered his message first to India, the chairman of the International Control Commission in Viet Nam, Laos and Cambodia which has so far failed to adequately convey to Hawaii the real substance of peace and war discussions by India with American officials. This message was intended to reach Soviet Premier Kosygin now emerging as a "peace maker." And, just to make sure the message reached its destination, Harriman repeated it to Pakistan president, Ayub Khan. Harriman has demonstrated his willingness to tell anyone wanting to listen that American patience has been rubbed raw. He wishes to remind them that Washington's peace moves have thus far made no dent in the Communist world. This time, he is saying, there will not be another Yalu river barrier to United States forces as there was during the Korean conflict. IT IS, OF COURSE, too early to say just what effect Harriman's "peace-making" mission will have on the war in Viet Nam. But, from any angle, it looks bad. Further escalation of the war in Viet Nam seems imminent. The really disgusting factor of the whole situation is that the United States has still not learned to call a spade a spade. Harriman's mission is definitely not a mission to gain peace, at least not in the usual sense of the word. When will the Administration start telling us what it really intends to gain by the various "feelers" it sends out? When it does, we may learn to have more faith in its ability to cope with the problem in Southeast Asia. Janet Hamilton Europe, 1965-new era For the first time since World War II are the fears and beliefs, then developed, beginning to break up. 1965 found the fear of Russia, the binding tie between the U.S. and its allies, dissipating; the Common Market stalemated; NATO, and nuclear authority questioned. And a new behind-the-scenes fear has grown in prominence—again, the unification of Germany. Why should the U.S. concern itself over the past year's happenings in Europe, when already we seem to have over-extended ourselves in Asia? Western Europe contains the most vital industrial sites in the world to the U.S. Twice we have fought to keep this power—military as well as economic—from falling into unfriendly hands. Now the stakes are different. Now the battle takes a different form. Now the importance of the U.S. is questioned. Now we must see what has happened and act. THE CENTRAL FIGURE throughout the past year has been France's Charles de Gaulle. His ideas have jarred and joined citizens of Europe and the United States alike, as they have seen his plan of ultimate domination of Europe appear and reappear. He has opposed Germany, the strongest industrial power in Western Europe, even having a voice in the defense of Europe. He has boycotted the Common Market, because the proposed agricultural plan did not favor France, and turned it into a loose-knit organization capable of little economic unification. He has backed out on some of France's commitments to NATO, threatened complete withdrawal in 1969, when the treaty runs out, and has talked of a possible "deal" with Russia. "Which way to split?" is the question echoing throughout Europe as the old year ends. British officials seem to be divided on the issue, but the professional diplomats side with strengthening the Western Alliance, and giving the Daily Kansan Germans a voice in the defense of Furone. Thursday, January 6, 1966 The Germans, for obvious reasons, are anxious to have equal status again in Europe, so their opinions remain on the side of NATO and strong U.S. support. All of Europe is leary of Germany's strength if Germany is permitted a voice in the nuclear issue, yet if Germany is not permitted a voice, the U.S. may withdraw its support, which would encourage a deal with France and Russia, with De Gaulle in the power seat of such an arrangement. Because of other developments in the world—on other continents—Europe was not in the spotlight in 1965. The "helpers" are busy elsewhere. Crisis, or near crisis in Africa, Viet Nam, Indonesia, India-Pakistan, and Latin America have tended toward status quo. 2 THE EUROPEAN SCENE, compared with the last two decades, has been relatively quiet. It has been a year of threats, broken promises, and changing attitudes. 1966 will not be so easy. The U.S. will have to do something. If France continues to be displeased, a Franco-Soviet deal may be near at hand, which would mean, in the future, that France probably would drop out of NATO. The U.S. then would have to reorganize its alliances and port centers. The ties binding NATO, because of the decline of threat from the Soviets, would have to be strengthened. Germany would have to have an answer. Prime Minister Wilson and Germany's Chancellor Erhard will visit President Johnson soon concerning the voice for Germany. But as the year-end approaches we may see this very period as the pacesetter in 1966. Will De Gaulle's near election defeat change his attitudes toward Europe? Will the increasing involvement of the U.S. in Viet Nam cause difficulty in preventing the breakup of such a vital concern as Europe? —Mike Friesen THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Founded 1889 Serving KU 761 of its 100 UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, N.Y. 10022. Mail subscription rates: $4 a semester or $7 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. EXECUTIVE STAFF MANAGING EDITOR ... Judy Farrell BUSINESS MANAGER ... Ed Vaughn EDITORIAL EDITORS ... Janet Hamilton, Karen Lambert NEWS AND BUSINESS STAFF LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS Assistant Managing Editors ... Suzy Black, Susan Hartley Jane Larson, Jacke Thayer Circulation Manager ... Mike Robe Advertising Manager ... Dale Reinecker City Editor ... Joan McCabe Classified Manager ... Mike Wertz Feature Editor ... Mary Dunlap Merchandising ... John Hons Sports Editor ... Scottie Scott Promotion Manager ... Keith Issitt Photo Editor ... Bill Stephens National Advertising ... Eugene Parrish Wire Editor ... Robert Stevens VISITORS 105 HOME ... O OTHER ... 2 E-48 Walter 700 YEAR ADVERTISING CAMP "I'VE A NOTION WE'RE A TERRIBLE DISAPPOINTMENT TO COACH." Paperbacks go international In these days of international ferment a book like Anthony Nutting's The Arabs (Mentor, 95 cents) is of particular interest. Nutting is one of those gentlemen who have helped to memorialize Lawrence of Arabia. His book is a new one, and it brings to bear his experience in government and knowledge of history. He begins the epic with Mohammed himself. It is his belief that the teachings of Mohammed, given to his people in a brief time, so permeated Arab thought that they have given an impetus to Arabism which still exists. Arab invaders spread the teachings of Mohammed with fervent zeal. And the Crusaders tasted the strength of the Arab. It is, all in all, an exciting as well as important story. Another new paperback is more conventionally known. It is John Locke's Two Treatises on Government (Mentor, 95 cents), and the book has special interest in that it is based on a recently unearthed manuscript corrected in the handwriting of Locke himself. Locke's impact on French, English and America is well known. He is one of the big three of the social contract, a fact commonly understood by most Western Civ students at KU. Charles M. Barker Jr., Helen Curran and Mary Metcalf have kindly presented us a book called The "New" Math (Signet, 60 cents). It is mainly for parents of school children and for teachers. Perhaps you should know about it. And there are two new volumes in the Signet Classic Shakespeare series (50 cents) each—The Comedy of Errors and Henry V. As usual they have attractive covers, are well annotated, and have much background on the great man. Another writer has reached paperback in a bright new edition. He is the celebrated Indian, Rabindranath Tagore, and the book is called The Housewarming and Other Selected Writings (Signet Classics, 75 cents). Tagore won the Nobel prize, and is generally recognized as one of the greatest writers of the East. Despite these facts he is not generally read in this country. This edition may help to remedy that matter. A new edition of Mary Shelley's incredible Frankenstein (Signet Classics, 50 cents) is available. And once again we are reminded of the amazing impact of Gothic letters, as demonstrated in this wild tale, and of how the Frankenstein symbol has lasted through many years. Those of you who eat up Frankenstein movies on television are advised that the story is just a bit different from the Boris Kaeloff films. There are, finally, four beautiful new volumes in the MentorUNESCO Art Book series. They are Ernst Kitzinger's Israeli Mosaics of the Byzantine Period, Richard Ettinghausen's Turkish Miniiaures, Martin Blindheim's The Stave Church Paintings and James Johnson Sweeney's Irish Illuminated Manuscripts. These are little gems. They cost 95 cents each and they are worth it, with art reproductions that you probably have seen nowhere else. We were thinking... We should be slower to think that the man at his worst is the real man, and certain that the better we are ourselves the less likely is he to be at worst in our company. Every time he talks away his own character before us he is signifying contempt for ours. James Matthew Barrie THE LARGEST INDEX OF THE WORLD'S EVERYTHING -Staff photo by Bill Stephens High Kicks Syrup Is Sensation By Barbara Phillips Cough syrup is a handy thing to have around. All you have to do is drink a bottle of syrup containing dextro-methorphan, and not only will your cough be cured, but you will be participating in the latest thing since glue-sniffing. QUITE A FEW of the leading cough syrups on the market—including Romilar, Pertussin, and Vick's Formula 44—contain the drug dextro-methorphan. The drug is not habit-forming, not narcotic, and, according to most pharmacists, not capable of giving anyone kicks. Yet students at both KU and Lawrence High School have tried drinking syrup which contains the drug, and do not agree with the pharmacists' opinions. One KU student who tried it said, "The best time is on an empty stomach. It hits more quickly. One feels a quick heart beat and starts to sweat. You feel as though your body goes at a pretty high speed, while your mind stays at the same rate. "IN THE NEXT HOUR, you begin feeling a certain effect, but it is two hours before you begin to go up. One becomes abstracted from things. Things seem to be happening very fast, but really, you have slowed down," he continued. "Then from two to three hours, you are up as high as you can go. At this point you are very abstracted from physical things. A situation seems to last forever. If it has been going on 20 minutes, it seems as if it's always been happening. And once a happening is over, it's as if it was a long time in the past," the student said. NOT ONLY IS TIME out of proportion, space, too, is different. "I was going towards a store and I walked and walked and walked, but although it got larger, I didn't feel any closer to it, until I was finally inside," the student said. Business transactions prove somewhat of a problem to a person who is high on cough syrup. The student continued, "I bought a package of gum. I had the gum and a nickel in my hands, but I couldn't decide which to give the cashier. Finally a friend told me." "While you're in the high period, you're above almost every bodily function," he said. ACCORDING TO A PHARMACIST, a bottle of cough syrup should have such side effects as nausea and dizziness. Yet those who try it, again, disagree. The student suggested drinking hot tea after the cough syrup. "Pop just doesn't go down well. You should have your tea simmering while you are drinking the cough syrup. "There is no hangover, but instead, a comedown. Sometimes you get thirsty for wine, then wine takes over the high. You can tell if you're coming down; you speak more rationally," he said. "The first time I was coming down off of it, I felt a bit zonked. I laid down on the floor to sleep. I closed my eyes and I could see geometrical forms and patterns swirling at me. They were colored—orange, and blue, green and some (Continued on page 4) THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years 76th Year, No. 62 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Thursday, January 6, 1966 Slopes of Mont Bleu Open Soon for Skiers By Jerry Kern The first ski slope and lodge in Kansas will be opened sometime within the next week if all goes well on today's test runs, according to the project's manager, Col. Ellis Moke of Topeka. THE SLOPE is named Mont Bleu after Blue Mound, a hill two miles southeast of Lawrence on which the ski area was built. The corporation which is financing the unique project is comprised of several business and professional men from Topeka. "We are going to mix snow today or tomorrow in a test run to determine the efficiency of our equipment. Unless something unforeseen comes up, we will be open within the week." Moke said. Three trails crisscross the slope. A beginner's trail about 285 feet long is the lowest and gentlest incline. Skiers with limited experience can attempt a 15-foot jump on another trail, while the experienced skier can take the third slope and make a 40-foot jump, avoiding numerous obstacles. "WHEN OUR equipment is perfected, we will be able to accommodate about 150 skiers at one time," Moke said. "We would like the snow to be as deep as possible because of the many thaws experienced in Kansas; perhaps a couple of feet. We want at least a one-foot base." After dark, when the slopes are empty, "guns" will be attached to the snow-blow system which creates the white stuff. Air and water are mixed under 200-lbs.-per-square-inch of pressure in the chamber of the "guns." The mixture is forced out and, upon contact with the cooler night air, explodes into "snow." "The temperature must be below 34 degrees and the humidity below 80 per cent before we can make snow. When these conditions occur, we will make snow," Moke said. Paul G. Roofe, professor of neurology, will present the fourth in a series of seven humanities lectures at 8 p.m. tonight in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall. Roofe Examines Human Brain The human brain has been termed by Roofe as "the most intriguing mechanism in the universe." His interest in the study of the human brain has been primarily on how it operates to produce the behavior in its possessor. His topic is "This Is Why We Are Human." Roofe will approach the subject from both scientific and humanistic points of view. MONT BLEU will feature a complete rental system which includes new ski equipment. Moke estimated that a charge of $2.50 would be made for the tow on weekdays. He stressed, however, this price is only an estimation, and has not been agreed upon by the board members. An interesting feature for the non-skier is a ski school. It will be conducted on a gently inclined ramp, apart from the regular ski area, by Rudi Voldrich, a former Olympic skier. A 30- by 60-foot lodge will contain a restaurant and an equipment shop. MONT BLEU will offer the only skiing facilities within a 200-mile radius of Lawrence, Moke said. Two similar ski areas are in Arkansas and Omaha, Neb. "The slope will seem primitive for the first year, because it was started so late in the season. There are a lot of bugs which will have to be ironed out of it. But I think this will be the fun area for this three-state region," Moke said. "We aren't too worried about competition," Moke continued. "We feel we have one of the most accessible areas for this type of project. The hill is perfect for it. Ski enthusiasts at KU, Kansas City, and Topeka are very interested in this slope. It will give people a chance to go out for some real fun at a relatively low cost. With Mont Bleu they will not have to take off for Colorado for three or four days." Exhibitions Planned Mallarme Ends; Museum Prints Faculty Design Work Begins By Hector Olave An abundant program of exhibitions has been planned at the Museum of Art for spring semester. The shows will include samples of art by KU graduate instructors, some contemporary foreign painters, and American artists. MEANWHILE, in the basement of the Museum, "Stephane Mallarme and the Artists of his Circle," which includes the priceless portrait of the French poet by Manet, is still being seen by students and public. Many persons, especially from out-of-town, have been asking if the valuable portrait is still on exhibition, a Museum spokesman said. ALTHOUGH the show has been officially closed, students and public may visit it during the few days the portrait remains. The exhibition schedule for the next two months includes: - Jan. 14—Contemporary prints from the Museum collection, including works by Picasso, Chagal, Kallowitz, Miro, etc. - Jan. 24—Works by new graduate student instructors of the Department of Design, including Jewelry made by Janet Skinner and Klaus Kallenberger; non-applied designs in two and three dimensions by Phillip Van Voorst; non-applied designs in two dimensions by Wayne Duquoin; commercial art by John Satterfield; works by Elganor Duquoin; and work by Joe Ison and Roger Thomason. - February—Winners of the Annual Contest organized by the American Drawing Society (Exact date of opening to be announced). What's Inside? Lady geologist loves her work, p. 3. . Logan takes research and writing leave, p. 3. . . Socialist speaks on Viet Nam, p. 6. Weather Weather The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts fair weather with colder temperatures tonight and Friday. Temperatures will be in the lower 30's today. 12 Daily Kansan nesday, January 5, 1966 THE RED DOG INN Wednesday-Jan. 5th Girls' Night Out-No Cover "Bluethings" Publication rights courtesy of Photo Services This Weekend Marks The Red Dog Inn's First Year Anniversary. Come Down and Help Us Celebrate. - Friday—The Fabulous Red Dogs-FREE TGIF An Excellent Six Piece Show Band FREE Beverage For The First 100 - Saturday - The Rising Sons - Listen To The Rising Sons Sing Their Smash Hit Record "Concentration" FREE DOOR PRIZES 7th & Mass. VI 2-0100 YOUR SHOP CLASSIFIED ADS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE 1930 Model A Ford Coupe. In excellent condition. Contact Rich Darnall. VI 3-4811, 1537 Tennessee. tf Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive, monographed and bound for $125 Copy VI Cail 1940 for free library TYEFWRITERS-Office size and portables, new and used, manual and electronic equipment, plan available. Office machine sales, rentals and service. Office supplies, equipment, and furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. St. VI 3-3644 1948 Buick Roadmaster, Convertible, Perfect body, new uphoiler, 4 new tires, engine rebuilt, top in fair shape. Power windows, power seats, power top. $450.00. Call Tom after 6 pm., VI. 3-7334. tf Wollenstake stereo 4-track tape recorder and Remington portable typewriter. consider trading for camera equipment Gary Grazda, VI-1-8438 tf I-2-6601 1966 Barracuda, Formula S. Commando engine, 4-speed, Blue stream tires, tachometer, fast steering, disk brakes, metallic handles, Price $2,380. NumbersList, price $3,380. Will sell for $2,550. Contact Dick E-bangard 216 McCollum Hail- 16 Bumper Stickers: "Back the Boys in Vietnam, two each, 3 for $10, 8 for S1, Postpaid. Vietnam Stickers, Box 1835, Topoka, Kansas, 66091. 1-5 1962 Corvain. Fifty item as seen in November Playboy. Nearly 4,000 inquiries or just economical transportation. Sacrifice. See at Champlin Station in North Lawrence after 6 p.m. or call only 8606 after 6 p.m. Limited on 1-6 1960 Opel station wagon, real good, $275.00; 1959 Plymouth V-8. Belvedere, cream puff and personal car, $450.00; 1956 Chevrolet station wagon, real nice; 1956 Chevrolet matic transmis- tion, real nice; $200.00; 1955 Mercury, real sharp; $125.00. Benson's Auto Sales, 1962 Harper, V 3-0342. Open evenings. 1-7 1956 Fairliar, radio, heater, w/w tires, chains, gauges, new bat- tles, lightweight. Mechanic's soundly. Reasonable. Atlantic at VI 3-7535 after 6 p.m. 1-10 Clearance! Clearance! Tape recorders, stereos, stereo FM radios cut to $60. AM-FM radios cut to $19.99. Hurry to Ray Stoneback's, 923-311 Massage. 1-18 Across the burning sands of the Arabian Desert, at no little risk to my faithful Bedouin camel driver, I have come upon beautifully rare and exotic black Meershaum pipe. Handcaved by master artisans in the image of a notorious caliph of the Ottoman empire, this work of art features a genuine leather belt, a brave caravan has brought this treasure of the Near East to you at the most reasonable price of sixty American dollars. Address serious inquiries to Caravant of the Nile, purveyors of the caravans of the cities, Box 2, University Daily Kansas. 1950 Cadillac hearse, 65,000 miles. Good condition. $275 Call CE 3-7554 Topeka. Overhaul d at 58,000 mils. 1-11 1557 Opel 2-door ssdan, 47,000 miles, good tires, $200. Call VI 621-1. 7-1 Like new Motorola portable record and radio combination. Also room and board for girl student. Within walking distance: Call VI 3-5659. 1-11 Clearance! Clearance! 500 tires at lowest prices ever. Example 650-14 (655-14) white wall, 100 level Mustang or Rambler wall, cut to $12 quadricly, $185-13'b) cut to $15 plus tax. Ray Stoneback's, 529-931 Mass. St. 164 Chaviy, 2 d. H., H.T. Gimpia, black interior, 300 HP stack, P.S. Postraction, Tinted glass, 22,000, origi- nial must, owner s.t. Call VI. Call I 2-1 241 1961 Nash Rambler station wagon. Radio and heater-scent belts. Nw snow tires. One owner car. Call VI 3-2301. Healthkit Monument speaker system, two tweeters, 15 inch woofer, 3 inch midrange, 2 inclosers, 35 two 16,000 cos. $25, VI 3-6380. 1-7 1957 Chevy, Bel-Air, 283 V-8, radio, heater, very good condition. Mechanically, body and interior. $525. VI 3-7646. 1-11 1981 Plymouth Savoy 4-door, transit trans. Call D-8a. 3-7267 1, 7 TYPING Experienced typist has IBM electric to type your thesis, dissertation term papers, research reports neat and accurate work. Reasonable rates. Phone Mrs. Gilbert. V 2-2688 Experienced typist; will type in my home. Accurate typing, reasonable rates and prompt service. Call Mrs. Brown at VI 3-0210 tt Experience typist, 8 years experience in those and term papers. Electric powerwriter, at least accurate service. Mail resume to: CASTCARM Mrs. Barlow. 2407 Yale, VI 1-2648. Secretary familiar with legal terms will do typing—briefs, memorandums, documents, dissertation. Pass accurate, reasonable rates. Marsh Goff, VI 3-2577 Experienced typist will do only these typewriter. Mrs. Fulcher VI 3-0558 Wanted: Typing in my home. Experienced, and accurate in term papers and theses. Call VI 3-2651 any time. Typist, experienced with term papers, using the Web. Use your typing immediate attention with electric machine with extra symbols. For example the Higley at 408 W. 13th I. 3-6048 Accurate typing by experienced typist. Term papers, themes, theses and dissertations. Reasonable rates and fast. VI 2-1561. tf Secretary with many years experience, will type your term papers, Fast accurate work at reasonable rate. Call Vi 6296 after 5 p.m. Graduate student's wife, an experienced typist, will do all kinds of typing. Fast, accurate service. IBM Electric. Phone Mrs. Langley, VI 2-1441. Experienced typist will type your torn papers, theses, dissertations. Involved in Electronic Literacy. Use Electric Typing writer. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Rauckman, V 2-2781. Experienced secretary will do typing VI 3-250, after S 590 call VI 3-0309, tt S 590 call VI 3-0309, tt Experienced typist will do theses and term papers. 4 years experience at KU. Phone Mrs. Oxford at VI 2-0673. tf Former Harvard and University of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports, and theses. Phone VI 3-7207. tf TYPING — CESTETNER MIMEO- 3-8508 — MRS. McEidlowen, Yf 3-8508 Expert Typing—Thesses, dissertations and term papers. Electric typewriter, standard rates. Mrs. Mishler, VI 3-1029. 1-10 Typing done at reasonable rates by experienced typist. Fast accurate work. Call Betty Vincent, call VI 3-5504. tf Typing done by experienced secretary for 25e each double spaced page. Call Ethel Henderson, 2565 Ridge Ct., II 2-0122. Fast, accurate; immediate attention given to all term papers, reports, theses, etc. Mrs. Donna Stewart, VI 3-6211 1-21 FOR RENT Vacancy in a contemporary home. Private entrance and bath. Five evening meals weekly. $70 monthly if meals paid. Call VI 3-7683 until 6 p.m. Extra nice quiet furnished apartment for mature man. carpeted, nice kitchen, utilities paid. 2 blocks from Union. Available now: VI 3-8534 tf Emery Apts. 1423 Ohio. One on- b-droom apt., furnished. Gas and water appl. $75. One efficiency apt. All utilities appl. $17. VI 3-8190. $1-7 Married, graduate students, faculty- 2 bbdroom apartment, $95.00. Two available January 1, one available February 1. Call for brochure, VI 3 2116. Santee Apartments office, 1123 Indiana. tf Vancancies in contemporary home for young man, prefer graduate student, pool, home cooked meals if desired, telephone. VI 5-4350 call before 6 p.m. Reward for lost Human Relations notebooks — Mark Sheel and Jack Al xand r. Call UN 4-3633 or bring to 421 Blake. R habs: student for selling imports. Apply 920 La. after 6 p.m. 11 Room available for girl student free in exhuse. Student for selling imported goods with half-bath separated from house located in nice neighborhood. Call VI 2-0445 1-11 Student for secretaryal work. 10-20 hrs. or week until end of school year. Must attend Juns and July. Most be excellent typist, iq. 3756. 1-7 LOST HELP WANTED Students looking for part time work person at Sandy's Drive-Hire- 2120 W. 9th MISCELLANEOUS Die Boerstube: Singen, tinkken and essen German style. Featuring students' favorite dark beverage and student's favorite light beverage from Goldin, Colorado. Also serving deluxe hamburgers and sandwiches. Pitcher available Wednesday night. Party Room available. 14th and Tennessee VI 2-9441 Need any Sewing or Mending done? The rates Call after 5:00 p.m. v. 2-3901 Need music for that next dance or party? Have Johnnie Hayes play records 'from the KLWN Fun Forty Survey on famous Fisher Sound Equipment from The Sound For complete information, call VI 2-6331. tf Wanted: General house work preferably in sorority, fraternity, or prereligious organizations. Must have references. Write to Housekeeping. 1132 Conn., Lawrence. tf BLANDING PARTY PHOTOGRAPHY Your satisfaction is my strongest Gold embossed d party titles; Koeadolac 4x, 75;s custom enlarged B&W #5x, 75; years experience at KU; for reference and samples call KU; at VI 2-6515. PARTY TIME—Building available for dances. Call VI 3-7455 Rabbi Fisch Sports Car Maintenance and Repairs by car and for the enthusiast. Super tuning accessories. Race Pleckinger's Competition Sports Cars. East 23d St. VI-21 291 Tune-ups — Evenings and weekends only; also other automobile work. Appointment only via ST S2-3 behind 817 Connecticut St. Garage 9 Math Tutor; B.A. degree in Math from KU. Experienced in tutoring geometrics on calculus, calculus and arithmetic geometry. VI 3-1212-10 tween 5 and 7 p.m. Experienced photographer in children and family portraits. Reasonable rate. Will take pictures in your home. Call VI 2-6148. tf WANTED Will Baby Sit in my home or jours. Call after 4:00 p.m. VI 2-3901 Need male roommate to share apartment for 2nd semester -uppl classman or graduate student preferred. CALL VI 3-4349. 1-11 ENTERTAINMENT AVOID THE DRAFT. See The Days and Nights of Beeeble Fenstmaker in the University Experimental Theatre. It's nice warm in there. 12-16 For Fast Results READ and USE THE WANT ADS REGULARLY! Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 5,1966 11 take advantage of the Yamaha Sale! 950 N. 3rd VI 13-5815 Ern's Cycle Shop visit Now Leasing 10th and Ehury Rd. 8TH ST. SHOE REPAIR Quality work on half soles, heels. We repair purses Shoe dyeing 107 E. 8TH WEST HILLS Exclusive Representative Lawrence's First Total Electric Luxury Apartments for information call W. E. Almquist—VI 3-3610 L. G. Balfour Co. of For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry Badges Guards - Bolney • Guarrett • Nuttelt • Fengor - Institutes FACULTIES Languages PINS - Lavatters - Rings - Sportswear - Mugs - Paddles - Trophies - Cups - Awards Al Lauter 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 Try a BURGER "MOORE" BURGER MALTS - SHAKES 1414 W.6th VI 3-9588 Originality IN FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION especially for you by Alexander's 826 10WA LAWRENDE, KANSAS FOR PROMPT DELIVERY PHONE VL 3-3200 COMPLETE CLASSICAL RECORD SELECTION COLUMBIA RECORDS Weaver re always happy to serve y Ice cold 6 pacs all kind Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, car HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Crushed ice, candy LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Open to 10 p.m. Every Evening Ph.VI 3-0350 THE SHANTY MENU Now for the first time in Lawrence we at THE SHANTY are able to deliver piping hot pizza to your door in tromped and impaled oven. We also have an infrared radio dispatched units offering lightning fast service and catering. Allow an extra 30 minutes for species not yet known or varieties not featured on the Mobile Units. CALL US! Order 8. get one free. Mobile Oven Menu All King-Size 12" Pizzas Mobile Oven Menu All King-Size 12" Pizzas - SAUAGE * $1.50 * PEPPERONI * $1.50 * LAMBURGER * $1.50 * Double Cheese (Friday only) * $1.25 * SHANTY INTERNATIONAL * $2.25 Call VI 2-2500 Free 10-Minute Delivery (Normally) 5.00 to 12.00 p.m. YOUR GASOLINE DOLLAR DERBY GOES FARTHER at... GARY'S DERBY SERVICE 2330 Iowa Lawrence YOU CAN'T BUY A BETTER GAS...AT ANY PRICE Lyle Enters Mat Meet Undefeated Coach Gary Duff and his Kansas matmen seek their second win of the season at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Allen Field House when they host the Northwest Missouri State team. Dennis Lyle, Des Moines, Ia. sophomore, enters the match with a perfect record of two pins. He is entered in the 152 pound class. The rapidly improving Kansas squad travels to Emporia Friday for a meet with the matmen of Kansas State Teachers College. It will be the fourth meet of the season for the Jayhawks. KU defeated Emporia in the season opener 26-8. Scoring in a dual meet is determined by individual performance. Five team points are awarded for a fall, forfeit or default; three for a decision and two are added to both scores for a draw. Coach Duff announced the following line-up for Thursday. Class Name 123 Fort Zackary 130 Andy Warnock 137 Dave Ward 145 Marc Ryan 152 Lyle 160 Charles Foster 167 Roger Simons 177 Darol Rodrock Hwt. Mike Sweatman NU Beats ISU, 76-74 Iowa State University, KU's next opponent on the basketball court, dropped a close decision to the Nebraska Cornhuskers last night on their home boards. After trailing by as much as ten points, the Cornhuskers were able to close the gap in the second half and scored a two-pointer just before the final gun sounded to win. 76-74. Nebraska joined the ranks of the undefeated with KU, Kansas State University and Oklahoma, who enjoyed opening night wins. The Cyclones will travel to Allen Field House Saturday night when they will tangle with the Jayhawks. KU has already defeated ISU once, in the third night of play in the pre-season tourney in Kansas City. Nebraska finished second in the pre-season tourney and Iowa State took third. KU led the pack, defeating K-State, Nebraska, and Iowa State. KU, who is favored to take the Big Eight Conference title, was tied for the ninth place spot in the United Press International poll of college teams. The Jayhawks failed to place in the Associated Press poll for this week. Basketball Results Nebraska 76, Iowa State 74. Texas Christian 88, Arkansas 85. Purdue 109, Notre Dame 92. Texas Tech 115, Baylor 77. Texas 94, Rice 85. Texas A & M 85, S.M.U. 78. Emporia State 79, Washburn 65. Pittsburgh 71, Fort Hays 65. Southwestern 85, Friends 82 OT). Dodge City 77, Colby 69. Ottawa 90, Bethel 80. College of Emporia 99, Kansas Weslevan 78. St. Benedict's 100, William Jewell 82. McPherson 76, Sterling 75. 10 Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 5, 1966 BUSINESS DIRECTORY U-DRIVE-THRU CAR WASH 50¢ Stay in your car and drive away in a sparkling clean car. Extra power spray will be 10c extra. This service is optional. No need to drive a dirty car anymore. U-DRIVE-THRU That's all you do. 2315 Louisiana Lawrence, Kansas PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established -- Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING Gift Box Andrews Gifts VI 2-1523 Open Wednesday Evenings Malls Shopping Center Plenty of Free Parking FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Specializes in Thanksgiving and Christmas reservations SPECIALS - 25% Off Goodyear Tires - Tune Ups - Lubrication . . . $1.00 - Brake Adjustment . .98 - Wheel Alignment - Automatic Transmission Page Fina Service 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-9694 UNICEF Note Paper, Cards, Calendars On Sale at Union Bookstore SENIORS Hixon Studio is your 1965-66 Jayhawker Photographer Please Call Now For Your Appointment HIXON STUDIO "Portraits of Distinction" Bob Blank, Owner 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 JANUARY SALE of Women's Apparel DRASTICALLY REDUCED UP TO $ \frac{1}{2} $ OFF famous brand Skirts famous brand Sweaters famous brand Coats car and dress famous brand Suits were now were now were now were now $15 . . . . $9.95 $13 . . . . $9.95 $30 . . . . $19.95 $25 . . . . $16.95 $17 . . . . $11.95 $15 . . . . $9.95 $35 . . . . $23.95 $35 . . . . $23.95 $18 . . . . $12.95 $16 . . . . $10.95 $40 . . . . $26.95 $40 . . . . $26.95 $20 . . . . $13.95 $20 . . . . $13.95 $45 . . . . $29.95 $45 . . . . $29.95 $20 . . . . $13.95 $45 . . . . $29.95 $50 . . . . $33.95 $75 . . . . $49.95 $23 . . . . $15.95 $50 . . . . $33.95 $75 . . . . $49.95 famous brand Slacks were now $11 . . . . $7.95 $13 . . . . $8.95 $15 . . . . $9.95 $18 . . . . $12.95 $20 . . . . $13.95 $\frac{1}{2}$ OFF $\frac{1}{2}$ OFF Dresses and Shirts were now $18 . . . . $11.95 $20 . . . . $13.95 $25 . . . . $16.95 $35 . . . . $23.95 $40 . . . . $26.95 $50 . . . . $33.95 The Alley Shop sorry, no refunds, exchanges, lay-aways, or approvals. entire stock not included. AT diebolt's 843 Mass. Daily Kansan 9 Wednesday, January 5, 1960 INDEPENDENT welcomes you back and reminds you that Independent is waiting to serve you, wishing to serve you, wanting to serve you. YOU GET ★ Prompt Courteous Attention Two Convenient Locations ★ Free Delivery and Pick-up ★ Starching Done To Suit Your Taste One-Day Service GIVE US A CALL TODAY VI 3-4011 INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners 9th and Mississippi VI 3-4011 740 Vermont Committees 'Mechanize' the ASC By Stephen Russell KU's All Student Council, the legislative branch of its student government which is officially called "The Associated Students of the University of Kansas," functions like a complex machine. It is constructed of simple machines which perform the intended function of student lawmaking. These simple machines are the seven standing committees of the First in a Series ASC, ie. the committee on committees and legislation,the elections committee,the finance and auditing committee,the constitutional committee,the secretarial committee,the committee evaluation board,and the student athletic seating board. THESE PERMANENT legislative committees were created by bills in the ASC Constitution and additional committees can be provided for through the additional bills. The ASC Constitution also allows the ASC to create special temporary or ad hoc committees. These committees enable the legislative machine to provide for matters which can't be predicted, or which don't come up on a yearly basis. They are temporary in that they are established either by the ASC chairman or a resolution. They exist only until they accomplish their purpose. It is possible they could be made into permanent standing committees if the ASC decided their function was of a major and lasting importance. This could be accomplished by the passage of a bill amending the section of the Constitution providing for the particular committee. THERE ARE THREE such temporary committees now in existence: the pre-enrollment committee, the living group officers' meeting committee, and the ASC retreat committee. Membership for all the legislative committees is taken directly from the ASC through appointments made by the ASC Chairman. The length of a member's term on a committee, according to the ASC Constitution, is left to the "pleasure of the appointing officer." Mike McNally, Bartlesville, Okla., junior and ASC chairman, said the implementation of everything the ASC does goes out through these committees. In his opinion, they perform the actual work of the ASC by researching proposed programs, keeping in contact with the students and faculty for their opinions and needs, and providing a place for the initial discussion of proposed legislation. IN THIS WAY, he said, the committees make the ASC more effective by allowing it to get more accomplished and by making it easier for its members to be more active representatives of their constituents. If the council had to perform all of the committees' functions in its assembly meetings, much time would be wasted and nothing would ever be accomplished. In the past, McNally added, criticism has arisen that student government functions through the work of only a few dedicated people. This is unfortunate since it takes the effort of all the council members to "get the job done." By better organizing the duties of representing the students, the committees also make it easier for the members to be more active in student government, he said. McNally described the seven standing committees as being of two types or classifications: "internal affairs" committees and "unique" committees. HE CALLED THE committee on committees and legislation, the elections committee, the finance and auditing committee, the constitutional committee, and the secretarial committee "internal affairs" committees because he said they deal with internal operations or functions of the ASC itself. "They are in existence primarily to carry out the administrative work of the council." McNally said. HE DESCRIBED the committee evaluation board and the student athletic seating board as being unique because he said they are not directly connected with the council's operating procedure, as the internal affairs committees are. They are legislative rather than executive committees though, because of their importance and in the case of the student athletic seating board, because it takes student opinion directly into consideration in its functions. The membership of the committees was renewed last December 14, because of the addition of the newly elected fall living district representatives. All 42 ASC representatives were appointed to positions on one of the committees and will be serving there until their term on the Council expires or until they are removed by the ASC Chairman. 8 Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 5, 1966 terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS January Clearance SALE Fur-Trimmed & Entire Untrimmed Stock Greatly Reduced Coats Fall & Holiday Dresses . . . Now 1/3 to 1/2 off Fall Suits . . . . Now 1/3 to 1/2 off Sleepwear..Now 1/4 to 1/3 off Sportswear . Now 1/4 to 1/2 off Thousands and Thousands of Yards Fabrics up to 1/2 off January Yarn Sale Now In Progress terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS Party time is any time there’s an Epic album around! ALL EPIC L.P.’s Available At Weaver's Record Department 901 Massachusetts ALL DIAMOND NEEDLES ON SALE $5.95 BOBBY VINTON sings SATIN PILLOWS CARELESS LN 24182/BN 26182* FROM THE WRISTS DOWN BUDDY GRECO PLAYS WITH STRINGS AND BRASS LN 24181/BN 26181* EPIC Records THE GREAT GOSPEL VOICE OF MARION WILLIAMS ACCOMPANIED BY THE STARS OF FAITH LN 24175/BN 26175* A String of Pearls Bobby Hackett LN 24174/BN 21674* A LARTE OF HONEY VILLAGE STORIES LN 24180/BN 26180* WeaverS Scholars Named for Woodrow Wilson Interviews Twenty-eight KU seniors will be interviewed next week for Woodrow Wilson Fellowships, Aldon Bell, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, has announced. There have been 88 Woodrow Wilson Fellowships won by KU scholars in the last five years. The present KU candidates and others from this region will be interviewed in Kansas City by the regional committee, Bell said. IN THIS year's competition, 92 students were nominated by the KU faculty, 69 of the nominees applied and 28 were called for interviews. The purpose of the Fellowships is to attract men and women to the college teaching profession. One-thousand prospective first-year graduate students are awarded the fellowships and another 1,500 receive honorable mention. A single Fellow or a married Fellow without children receives a living stipend of $2000 for one academic year. Married male Fellows with children receive an additional allowance of $1000 for the first child and $250 for each additional child. Notifications of awards and honorable mention are sent out by March 15, 1966. Bell said. STUDENTS CALLED for interviews and their proposed field of study are: Scott Colby, Wichita, History; Billie Thompson, Ballinw, Mo., Art History; Donald Maddox, Ozark, Mo., French; Vicki Gillespie, Indiana, Ia., Spanish; William Kerfoot, Lawrence, Entomology; Margaret Miller, Red Wing, Minn. History; Dennis Reardon, Goleta, Calif. English, and Wilson Kerfoot, Lawrence, Geology and Zoology. Patricia Hackney, Wellington, Psychology; Edward McBride, Garnett, History; Kay Smith, Newton, History; Robert Benson, Kansas City, Mo., Art History; Sheila Reynolds, Hutchinson, East Asian Studies. HIGH SCHOOL & COLLEGE STUDENTS Summer Job Opportunities Would You Like To Work and Play In The Rocky Mountains This Summer on Your Vacation? At A Mtn. Resort, Dude Ranch, Hotels Etc. For 150 Exclusive Resort Listings, Send $2.00 To Western Resort Review, P.O. Box 9, Commerce City, Colo. PARK FREE IN "PROJECT 800" Donald Malone, Lawrence, Classics; Ruth Bridges, Overland Park, Classics; Stephen Klemp, Lawrence, Russian; Neil Johnson, Kansas City, Mo., Russian; Richard Sheng, Lawrence, Philosophy; Nicholas Sharp, Lawrence, English; Lawrie Cena, Newton French; Christopher Pinet, Lawrence, French; Kathleen Powell, Jay SHOPPE 835 MASS SALE! (Starts Thursday, 9:30 a.m.) One Group— - Blouses Now $2.00 - P.J.'s were $4-$5 - Gowns Reduced - Sweaters Lawrence, Physics; Bruce Bikales, Prairie Village, Classics and Assyrian; James Nickum, Wichita, Economics; David Doane, Hutchinson, Economics; Stephen Munzer, Salina, Philosophy; Ann McElroy, Wichita, Anthropology; Robert French, Kansas City, Anthropology and East Asian Studies. - Skirts Daily Kansan 7 Wednesday, January 5, 1966 - Knee Sox 40% Dresses Fall - Formals Reduced - Car Coats - Dress Coats 30% TEAR OUT THIS AD Our Average Graduate Reads More Than 1500 Words Per Minute OVER 95% OF OUR GRADUATES HAVE INCREASED THEIR READING SPEED AT LEAST THREE TIMES — WITH GOOD COMPREHENSION 4 The internationally famous EVELYN WOOD Reading Dynamics Institute INVITES YOU TO ATTEND A FREE DEMONSTRATION OF THIS UNIQUE METHOD Where you will: - See an amazing documented film about Reading Dynamics. - Learn how Reading Dynamics can help you to faster reading, improved comprehension, greater retention. HOW DID IT START? Eighteen years ago Mrs.Wood made a startling discovery that led to the founding of Reading Dynamics. While working toward her masters degree, she handed a term paper to a professor and watched him read the 80 pages at 6,000 words per minute - with outstanding recall and comprehension. Determined to find the secret behind such rapid reading, she spent the next two years tracking down 50 people who could read from 1,500 to 6,000 words per minute. She studied their techniques, taught herself to read at these faster rates. Now, after years of testing, you can benefit from this great discovery. DOES IT HAVE PROVEN RESULTS? Senator Proxmie, Wisconsin. "I must say that this is one of the most useful education experiences I have ever had. It certainly compares favorably with the experiences I've had at Yale and Harvard." Senator Symington, Missouri. "I can read most material at speeds above 3000 W.P.M., and technical material in the 2000 W.P.M. range." Results have been reported in Time, Newsweek, Business Week, and Esquire. Demonstrators have appeared on television with Jack Paar, Garry Moore, and Art Linkletter. HOW IS IT DIFFERENT FROM OTHER COURSES? No-machines are used. You learn, instead, to use your hand as a pacer-a tool you always have with you. Conventional rapid reading courses aspire to 450-600 words per minute. Most Reading Dynamics graduates can read between 1,500 and 3,000 words per minute, and many go even higher. GUARANTEE We guarantee to increase the reading efficiency of each student by at least three times with equal or better comprehension. We will refund the entire tuition of any student who does not triple his reading efficiency as measured by the reading test. Students whose student may retake the course free of charge. A refund is conditional upon the student attending all classes or having made up sessions with the teacher. The student must also have practiced the required number of hours, following the assignments as outlined by the teacher. The average student may expect a five-time increase in reading speed and a two-time increase in math accuracy. Any student may withdraw from the course for any reason may reenter any subsequent courses at any future time, at no additional cost. --- FREE DEMONSTRATIONS FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1966 6 and 8 p.m. SATURDAY, JANUARY 8, 1966 Community Building一11th & Vermont 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Just by being present you may win the course absolutely free. Classes registering now for these cities Colorado Denver Colorado Springs New Mexico Durango Boulder Greeley Pueblo Wyoming Albuquerque Cheyenne Santa Fe Grand Junction Missouri Casper Kansas City Kansas City Independence Farmington Rawlins Kansas Kansas City Kansas City Wichita Joplin Hutchinson For FREE BROCHURE and CLASS SCHEDULES contact EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS INSTITUTE 3706 Broadway Kansas City, Mo. JE1-4321 TEAR OUT THIS AD Library Exchanges Go Around World By Alan Poland How do all the books and periodicals find their way to Watson Library? Many are bought through the normal operations of the library's acquisitions department. Others, however, are obtained free by a fascinating method of exchange which is the job of the Exchange and Gift section of the KU library. THERE ARE 15 University of Kansas Publications available for exchange with other universities and libraries throughout the world, including those in communist countries. Offered for exchange by KU are the Kansas Business Review, Bulletin of Education, Kansas Studies in Education, Bulletin of Engineering and Architecture, Humanistic Studies, University of Kansas Science Bulletin, Paleontological Contributions, Museum of Natural History Publications, Museum of Natural History Miscellaneous Publications, Museum of Art Register, Social Science Studies, Library Series, American Studies, Lindley Lectures, and occasional publications of the Center for Latin American Studies. THESE SCHOLARLY PUBLICATIONS, composed largely of faculty contributions and university lectures, often have such intriguing titles. In a form of scholarly bartering, these publications are traded for similar works from other institutions. KU exchanges publications with libraries in countries on the six major continents. As present, the Soviet Union is an active trader and exchanges have been made with Moscow and Leningrad universities and the Siberian Academy of Sciences, among others. There have also been exchanges with the National Library of Peking, and institutions in Outer Mongolia and Cuba. Official Bulletin **Peace Corps:** New Peace Corps training projects are being announced, training beginning in Feb. and March, 1966. Interested parties to the Congress Peace Corps Liaison Office 228 Strong, for additional information. **Foreign** Students Special Tax **Foreign** Students Special Tax Day, Jay- jayawk Koon, Kansas Union TODAY TODAY Sanitary Engineering Conference, Carillon Recital, 7 p.m. Albert Gerken Faculty Recital, 8 p.m. John Kozar, Pianist, Swarthout Recital Hall. Cinematical Film, 7 p.m. "Eclipse." Duke Auditorium Regional Studies Colloquium, 3-5 pm dr. Brian Berry, Chicago U. Der Deutsche Verein, 4:30 p.m. wird am Donnerstag, den 6. Januar im 112 Blake zusammenkommen. Das Rezept zu deutschenlandreise in Bild und Lied. Lutheran Worship, 4:30 p.m. Spon- b by all Lutherans. Danforth Dance Lecture, 4 p.m. Dr. Victor LaMer, Columbia U. 122 Malott. KU SDS, 7.30 p.m. Room will be posted. Kansas Union. Humanities Lecture. 8 p.m. Dr. Paul G. Roofe, KU. University Thea- tus 1961 PORSCHE 1600 SUPER CABRIOLET EXCELLENT CONDITION MANY EXTRAS "THE EXCHANGE PROGRAM is a very vital function of the library," L. E. James Helyar, who is in overall charge of the Acquisitions Department. - All Leather Interior He pointed out four major advantages of this program: Many libraries and academies do not have the funds to buy many periodicals and books from other countries. The exchange program enables them to obtain such materials without buying and selling - Head Rests - Tanneau - Abarth System $1850.00 By exchange, a library is able to receive material from many different areas where purchasing is often difficult. K. C. EM I-8081 Days Only In some countries, especially in Russia and Latin America, it is very hard to obtain old books from second hand book dealers. However, libraries in these countries often do have duplicate books that they are willing to exchange for materials they need. The exchange program provides an outlet for important specialized publications; many of which would not find a commercial market. PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS Time to Take Care of Your Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 5, 1966 European Reservations Arrange: ★ Airline or Steamship Reservations ★ Student Tours ★ Rent or Lease a Car ★ Eurailpasses ★ Purchase a Car ★ All Other Travel Information At: Maupintour Assoc. 711 W.23rd (The Malls) VI 3-1211 (These should be arranged as far in advance as possible.) --at 14th and Mass. ONE HOUR "MARTINIZING" the most in DRY CLEANING ONE HOUR MARTINIZING PRICES Suits ...1.20 Dress (plain) ...1.20 Pants ...60 Skirts ...60 Sweaters ...60 Sweaters ...60 Sport Shirts ...60 Blouses ...60 Sport Coats ...70 Short Coats ...1.10 Jackets ...75 Medium Coats ...1.25 Top Jackets ...1.35 Long Coats ...1.35 SHIRT SERVICE STILL TIME (Before the weekend) at across from Central Jr. High New 1-Hour Dry Cleaning No Extra Charge ONE HOUR MARTINIZING . . . the most in quality dry cleaning is in the "PERFECTED" one-hour process . . . by using the newest, most modern equipment, and applying our own spotting techniques, deep-cleaning methods and carefully finishing your garments, ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING ASSURES YOU: ONE HOUR MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING ★ ★ Odorless Cleaning ★ Garments Stay Fresh Longer Sanitary Clothes ★ Cleaner, Brighter Garments Gentle, Individual Treatment for Your Fine Fabrics 1407 MASS. FREE PARKING ONE HOUR MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING didn't roll to Oxmundval 80 5 Daily Kansan Wednesday. January 5, 1966 ACME LAUNDRY Gives You: - Shirts brought back on hangers if requested - Newest equipment available - Fast delivery and pick-ups - Same day service on dry cleaning - Bulk rates for socks and undergarments 3 Locations To Serve You Best— - Downtown—1111 Massachusetts - On The Mall—711 West 23rd - Hillcrest Shopping Center — 925 Iowa Acme '66 Jayhawker Out After Finals Features Centennial Sections The best is yet to come. The 1966 Jayhawker, with special centennial editions, will soon be available for students who have wondered where it has been for so long. The presses are rolling, John Casady, Wichita junior and Jayhawker editor, said yesterday, and the centennial editions of the "IT WOULD have been ready at an awkward time," Casady said, "right before or during Final Week. So, instead of distributing the first part of the yearbook during finals . . . which would cause troubles for everyone . . . we're going to wait until the week of enrollment for the second semester." yearbook will soon be ready for distribution. The 1966 Jayhawker will feature a six-page centennial section in each of the four parts. The sections, printed on special paper stock and with two-color printing processes, will contain selected—and chronologically arranged—fragments of University history during its first century. "Blueprints for Your Future" will be the theme of the KU 46th annual Engineering Exposition scheduled for April 22 and 23. Engineers' Theme Chosen The Exposition will feature about 15 student exhibits, plus displays created by faculty members and "action items" lent by various engineering firms. Scheduled events include the opening ceremony, display tours, an awards dinner, and presentation of the Engineering Exposition queen. Trophies will be awarded to the first, second, and third-place exhibits, selected by a panel of judges. The Sigma Tau trophy will be given for the best overall display. The Exposition is sponsored by the KU Engineering Council and the School of Engineering and Architecture. When You're in Doubt—Try It Out, Kansan Classifieds. 4 Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 5, 1966 McCoy's Semi-Annual Shoe Sale MaineAire, Dexter and Lady Bostonian $11 and $12 loafers in wanted colors and styles. $8.90 Two groups of assorted dress flats and loafers. Were to $9. $4.90 $5.90 One group of Sbicca little heels. Assorted colors. Were $15. $9.90 MaineAire loafers. Were $9 and $10. $6.90 Selected patterns of men's hush puppies. Ties and slip-ons. Reduced 20 % Men's Roblee and Pedwin dress and casual shoes. Were $12 to $20. Reduced 20 % to 30 % McCoy's SHOES McCoy's SHOES VI 3-2091 The Classical Film Series presents 813 Mass. ECLIPSE (1962—France) Michelangelo Antonioni's masterpiece about man's inability to communicate. Admission 60¢ Tonight-7:00 p.m. Dyche Auditorium "EVERYTHING FOR THE OUTDOORSMAN" Francis Sporting Goods Telephone VI 3-4191 731 Massachusetts Gib and George Francis for the best-dressed team on the court. . . . 3 Basketball Uniforms In Stock Now! - Jerseys: - high luster rayon & cotton - small, medium, large - small, medium, large - choice nine colors royal/gold, gold/black, white/royal Kelly/white, scarlet/white, royal/white black/white, purple/white, white/scarlet $2.25 team price - Pants: - rayon satin with color 3/4" side stripes - elastic waist quilted hip pad - $2.25 team price - $2.25 team price Newport Service! Numbering Service One Week Delivery One Week Delivery • high gloss tackle-twill numbers 5 colors: scarlet, blue, white, black and gold - 4 " 44c each, firmly sewn - 6" 60c each, firmly sewn Other One Stop Team Prices Intramural Supplies Basketballs rubber & leather—$5.95 to $23.75 Basketball Shoes Converse "all Stars" $8.95 --- UN Committee Applicants Interviewed Next Week Applicants for subcommittees of the KU-Y Model United Nations Steering Committee will be interviewed Wednesday, Jan. 12, and Thursday, Jan. 13, in the Kansas Union. The four subcommittees will be research, publicity, physical arrangements, and secretarial. "IN ADDITION to supplementing the steering committee, the subcommittees will also assist in bringing members for next year's steering committee," Rich White, Wakefield, Mass., senior and committee chairman, said. The research subcommittee will help disseminate information on various countries to the delegations. They will also help compile lists of voting records on issues which will be discussed when the Model UN meets. The subcommittee for publicity will help put up posters and displays to let those on campus know what is happening during the session. THE PHYSICAL arrangements subcommittee will work with the committee to arrange meeting places and for other facilities for the General Assembly, Security Council, and bloc meetings. The secretarial subcommittee will act as a messenger service during the meeting. The time for the interviews on the two days will be 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. Wednesday and 12:30 to 4:30 and 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday. The Model UN is scheduled for April 14, 15, and 16. Basketball Refund To Cease Thursday The final day for basketball ticket refunds is Thursday, Jan. 6, Ticket money will be refunded from 8:30 to 12 noon and from 1:30-4:30 p.m. at Allen Field House. Students must present their KU-ID cards, fall certificate of registration, and basketball season tickets. The ticket refund was the result of the Athletic Board's Dec. 6 announcement that it was revoking its recommendation of April 13, 1965, to place a charge on student admission to KU intercollegiate basketball games. The Student Athletic Seating Board notified the Athletic Board and the Athletic Department, Dec. 6, of its compliance with a Student Court order, Dec. 4. Pacifists Plan Viet Debate Cong and English Movies President Johnson's peace offensive and other Viet Nam developments were discussed by the KU Committee to End the War in Viet Nam at its meeting Tuesday. The group also planned pacifist activities for next semester. The members discussed the sincerity of the President's peace offensive; however, they reached no conclusion on just how sincere they thought it was. A member of the organization said no one would be happier than the committee if the administration's negotiations are sincerely designed to bring peace in Viet Nam. The KU committee plans to sponsor a debate next semester on U.S. involvement in the war. The stated purpose would be to help develop a free interplay of ideas on the Viet Nam question. Richard Hill, Lawrence junior and committee chairman, said, "It is hoped that students and faculty will participate in such a debate." Two movies, "Heroic Vietnam," produced by the Viet Cong, and "Viet Nam," by Wilford Burchett, English journalist, are also scheduled to be shown next semester. Daily Kansan 3 Wednesday, January 5, 1966 Colombian Students ToTourKU Twenty-six Colombian university students will arrive at KU Sunday, Jan. 9, and will spend five additional days touring the campus. Their visit is sponsored by the U.S. State Department, and they will be escorted by four interpreters. THE STUDENTS are participants in the Educational Travel Program of the U.S. Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. They arrived in New York yesterday and will be touring the United States until Feb. 3. After visiting KU the students will split into two groups for the remainder of their tour. The students' KU itinerary is being arranged by Louis Tyler, Clark Coan, assistant dean of men, and Burton Friedman, associate professor of Latin American Areas Studies. The group will meet with Dean George Waggoner and Professors Kenneth Anderson and Robert Ridgeway and will talk to professors in Latin America Area Studies. They will also visit dairy and beef farms near Lawrence. THE STUDENTS were chosen for the tour because of their leadership ability. They will stay at the Eldridge Hotel while in Lawrence. Granada THEATRE...phone VI 3-5788 Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5782 Broadway's bouncingest bundle of joy...on the screen! Never to Late PAUL CONNIE MAUREEN FORD STEVENS O'SULLIVAN and JIM HUTTON JANE HENRY WYATT JONES and LLOYD NOLAN Production by NUMMER LEAR - Directed by BAYUMIN TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION FROM WARNER BROS. NOW! Evenings 7:00 & 9:10 — EXTRA — Football Highlights of 1965 NEXT! Another Memorable Davis Portrait! Bette Davis as “THE NANNY” Broadway's bouncingest bundle of joy...on the screen! Never too Late A TIBUAN PORCINIA Sure we have desk jobs. Desk jobs at Cape Kennedy, helping check out the Apollo moon rocket. Desk jobs at an air base, testing the world's most powerful jet engines. Desk jobs in Samoa, setting up a TV network to help teach schoolchildren. The most interesting desk jobs in the world are at General Electric. (Have a seat.) First, why not sit down with the man from G.E. when he visits campus. Talk with him about your goals. He'll talk with you about the hundred different avenues available at G.E. to help you reach those goals. You may be working anywhere in the world, doing anything in the world. From marketing appliances like a new oven that cleans itself electrically . . . to designing a computer that's no bigger than a suitcase. Interesting problems. Important challenges. Real rewards, in money and opportunity. They're all part of holding down a desk job at G.E. Come to General Electric, where the young men are important men. Progress Is Our Most Important Product GENERAL GE ELECTRIC Editorials Africa '65: growing pains Africa, "the dark continent," as it has done for a decade, proved this ancient metaphor, implying mystery and other-world remoteness, was not relevant in 1965. Its people, its events, its destiny combined in a rumbling explosion into which the rest of the world was irrevocably drawn. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS Two countries which added force to the explosion were Rhodesia and the Congo. IN PREPARATION FOR his country's unilateral declaration of independence, UDI, Ian Smith dissolved his old parliament in April and held a general election in May, asking Rhodesian voters for a mandate to declare UDI. He got it, taking all 50 white seats in the 65 member assembly, which represents 250,000 whites and 4,000,000 Negroes—of which only 60,000 are even eligible to vote. Next followed an exchange of notes, threats, and talks between Britain and Rhodesia, which resulted in deadlock. Backed by most Rhodesian whites who feared the loss of "the good life" when Rhodesian Negroes were given control of an independent Rhodesia, Smith declared independence on Nov. 11. Britain immediately slapped embargos on her tobacco and sugar (major crops). However, at year's end, Smith still hoped to control power with the aid of friendly South Africa, also under apartheid. He held another trump card with his threat to isolate land-locked Zambia by cutting off its electrical power from the Kariba Dam. BRITAIN TIGHTENED HER efforts at subduing Rhodesia without armed force by banning almost all imports, allowing no pensions, dividends or interest to be paid from Britain to anyone in Rhodesia, and forbidding bank loans. Whether Britain can succeed quickly in its Rhodesian battle without armed force is yet to be seen. Time grows short and the anger of other independent African countries at Britain and Rhodesia increases. The country closed 1965 as a real threat for the start of further African racial and ideological revolution. THE BLOODY SLAUGHTER of white and Negro prisoners in the Congolese war between President Kasavubu's government troops and Russian and Red Chinese-armed rebels finally ended in March with the rebels' defeat. After five years of chaotic independence, four premiers, four civil wars, two constitutions, the Congo held its first parliamentary elections. Moise Tshombe won a dazzling victory as premier. However, his victory was squelched in October when leftist-leaning Kasavubu ousted him because he felt Tshombe was becoming too popular and feared he would try to win the presidency in the February election. THIS GROWING DISPUTE was ended when Maj. Gen. Joseph Mobutu seized power in a bloodless coup and decreed himself as five-year head of the regime. Kasavubu was given a senate seat and Tshombe said he desired to study this new coalition government before giving approval. A number of other African countries trod the election road this year and some found it rather crooked. - THREE WEEKS OF post-election violence marked the November outcome of regional assembly elections in Nigeria. The opposition party accused the ruling party of rigging the elections by fraud and terror. Faced with a civil uprising, the government now works at putting a coalition government together. - In Ghana, early in the year, Kwame Nkruma had the electorate approve a one-party constitution and dissolved the parliament, elected before Ghana's independence eight years ago, then nominated 198 Convention People's Party candidates. In June, he simply declared them all elected because of lack of opposition. - Tanzania conducted one-party elections in October but, surprisingly, 107 of the 113 Parliamentary seats still had two contenders, competing within the party for them. - Bechuanaland and Basutoland, two countries slated for independence next year, held elections for the first time, electing moderate-viewed leaders—Basutoland by only a two-seat majority. - 1965 also saw the further courting of African countries by the Communists, but they seemed to find, as did Westerners, that Africans were interested in nationalism first. - Tanzania's Nyerere continued to accept Red Chinese aid but told visiting Premier Chou En-lai in June that the country's future was still in the hands of Tanzanians. - Burundi ruler Mwanbutsa ordered the Chinese out of the country in January after he learned that moderate Premier Ngendandumve's assassination in January was committed by men sympathetic to the Reds. - In May, Kenya's President Kenyatta, as a slap at pro-Communist vice-president Odinga's open activities to swing Kenya to the Communist camp, rejected some Soviet arms which were on the way. There were other notable events in Africa's year. Gambia became the 37th African country to receive independence from Britain. More than 10 conferences and meetings were held by the countries, ranging from Afro-Asian unity meetings, where nothing was agreed upon, to a formation meeting of 14 French-speaking countries aimed at creation of a moderate center of gravity for the continent's politics. THUS, AFRICA 1965 WAS in motion—and it seemed to move in a basic direction, at times uncertain and confused, sometimes clear and decisive, toward greater nationalism and world importance. Before his death this year, Albert Schweitzer sensed this movement when he compared his early medical days in Africa to today's for colleague Dr. Fergus Pope: "Africans had confidence in the white man in those days. Today, they want to be independent..." — Rosalie Jenkins THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office Founded 1889 Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, N.Y. 10022. Mail subscription rates: $4 a semester or $7 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. EXECUTIVE STAFF MANAGING EDITOR ... Judy Farrell BUSINESS MANAGER ... Ed Vaughn EDITORIAL EDITORS ... Janet Hamilton, Karen Lambert NEWS AND BUSINESS STAFF Assistant Managing Editors ... Suzy Black, Susan Hartley Jane Larson, Jacke Thayer Circulation Manager ... Mike Robe Advertising Manager .. Dale Reinecker City Editor .. Joan McCabe Classified Manager .. Mike Wertz Feature Editor .. Mary Dunlap Merchandising .. John Hons Sports Editor .. Scottie Scott Promotion Manager .. Keith Issitt Photo Editor .. Bill Stephens National Advertising .. Eugene Parrish Wire Editor .. Robert Stevens The rung of a ladder was never meant to rest upon, but only to hold a man's foot long enough to enable him to put the other somewhat higher. We were thinking... Perhaps the most valuable result of all education is the ability to make yourself do the thing you have to do, when it ought to be done, whether you like it or not; it is the first lesson that ought to be learned; and however early a man's training begins, it is probably the last lesson that he learns thoroughly. 2 —Thomas Henry Huxley Daily Kansan Wednesday, January 5, 1966 E-52 WHILE THE REST OF THE BOYS ARE OFF FOR A WILD WEEK-END, WORTHAL ALWAYS BARRICADES HIMSELF ON THE THIRD FLOOR IN ORDER TO DEVOTE ALL HIS TIME TO HIS MUSIC,/ Space race orbits Newspapers across the nation last year devoted considerable portions of their front pages to two important topics-space and the military. Space achievements and military activities have dominated the headlines. Eight years ago, Oct. 4, 1957, the Russians placed a small Sputnik in orbit and the Space Age was born. Since then the progress has been fantastic. Significant space accomplishments last year included: FEB. 20: Ranger VIII sent back pictures from the Moon. MAR. 18: Co-pilot Alexi Leonov made the first "walk" in space from the Soviet launched Voskhod II. MAR. 23: U.S. space flight No. 7, Virgil Grissom and John Young became the first U.S. two-man crew when they made three orbits in Molly Brown. MAR. 24: Ranger IX broadcast TV pictures direct from moon. APR. 6: Successful launch of NASA Early Bird satellite. JUNE 4: Defense Department announced decision to give high priority to Air Force Manned Orbiting Laboratory program. JUNE 7: Astronauts Edward H. White and James A. McDivitt returned from four days in space. White walked in space, using propulsion gun. 62 orbits. JULY 15: Mariner 4 flew within 6,000 miles of Mars and sent back photographs of it. AUG. 21: Gemini 5 roared into space with Charles Conrad and Gordon Cooper for 7 days and 22 hours. NOV. 17: U.S. reported 330 U.S. space vehicles and rocket parts circling the earth as of June 30. DEC. 5: Gemini 7, with Frank Borman and James Lovell aboard, soared into orbit hoping to establish new time record in space—14 days, mission accomplished. The two astronauts recorded another space "first" when they kept a rendezvous with astronauts Schirra and Stafford in space. Officials have expressed optimism that the United States has at last caught up with the Soviet Union in manned flights. AND WHILE MEN were busy attempting to conquer space in 1965, they were plagued with the most difficult problem of all—how to get along with their fellow men. The most important military event of the year was the war between India and Pakistan. The United States provided weapons for both countries, but, when the threat of a world war spread, stopped supplies to both nations. VIET NAM WAS the cause of many important military decisions last year. In December, 1964, U.S. forces in Viet Nam numbered about 23,000. Now, one year later, that figure has increased to nearly 168,000 with an expected buildup of 200,000 by early this year. Last year was a year of decision in Viet Nam. The decision was announced to bomb North Viet Nam. Following this came the order for U.S. troops to stop functioning as advisers and enter into combat. One of the biggest developments in military history was recorded with the organization of the 1st Cavalry division. Ground warfare received tremendous mobility with the formation of the air cavalry unit with its 428 helicopters and 6 transport planes. The decision in July by President Johnson to expand military manpower caused the highest number of draft calls in 12 years. The 49 billion dollar defense budget for the fiscal year, beginning in July, has been increased by about 4 billion and will probably be increased again. WITH THE INCREASES in manpower and the budget came decreases in obsolete bases and military units. — Robert J. Rollins Orient Expert To Spend Week at KU Albert Ravenholt, specialist in Far Eastern affairs who said the best thing about being a foreign news correspondent is that it gives him a professional excuse for sticking his nose in other people's business, will be visiting the KU campus today through Jan. 12. Ravenholt, also a member of the American Universities Field Staff (AUFS), with his base in Manila in the Philippines, will be delivering a series of lectures to both individual classes and special interest groups. RAVENHOLT, who joined AUFS when it was founded in 1951, has worked in China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and countries throughout East and Southeast Asia. He was born on a farm in northwest Wisconsin in 1910. After high school, he "set to roaming and writing like all of us in the Thirties," he said, settling in Shanghai in Eastern China because it was a "cheap and interesting place to live." While there, he had himself tutored in four languages — Russian, Chinese, German, and French. In 1941, Ravenholt smuggled himself through Japanese milli- tary lines into the interior of Free China. He and a friend traveled part of the way on falsified visas and hired a professional smuggler to transport them farther into the interior. They had trouble with only one Japanese sentry, but Ravenholt bribed him with some cigarettes, and the two continued their hike through the Chinese mountains. Afterwards he traveled with the International Red Cross until the bombing of Pearl Harbor. Throughout the war years he worked as a correspondent for United Press wire service. IN 1950, through a series of articles, and with the cooperation of U.S. seed companies, Ravenholt began the famous Seeds for Democracy campaign to supply foreign countries with seeds to develop local agriculture. His work with the AUFS includes three years of living in the Far East, studying political and economic trends in the area, and writing a case study for AUFS Reports Service once a month. He returns to the United States once every four years to spend nine months visiting and speaking at the 12 member AUFS universities. Western Civ Review Western Civ Review A second Western Civilization review will be held tonight from 7:15-9:30 in Bailey Auditorium. All students who will take the Comprehensive Examination on Saturday are urged to attend this final review session. A passing grade on the Western Civ. exam is a graduation requirement of the College of Arts and Sciences and the schools of Education, Journalism, and Chemical Engineering. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years 76th Year. No. 61 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Wednesday, January 5. 1966 N.Y. Strike Persists NEW YORK —(UPI)— Traffic congestion of fantastic proportions forced the city today to institute a voluntary plan for staggered working hours for the duration of the million-dollar-a-day subway-bus strike, already in its fifth day with no end in sight. The only bright spot in the gloomy situation was Mayor John V. Lindsay's report that negotiations between the city's Transit Authority (TA) and the second-string leadership of Michael J. Quill's Transport Workers Union (TWU) was "starting to work constructively." "The negotiators worked most of the night and moved," said Lindsay. Quill and eight other top union brass were prisoners of the city for contempt of a court order for resumption of public transit service. Quill suffered a possible heart attack shortly after he was jailed Tuesday and remained in serious condition in Bellevue Hospital. Traffic Commissioner Henry A. Barnes asked employers with businesses between the battery and 59th street in Manhattan to release workers this afternoon in four shifts staggered according to four geographical areas. Barnes said he hoped this would ease the evening outbound jam of cars which poured into the city's business heart this morning at about the same Weather rate as Tuesday-five per cent higher than usual. Clear to partly cloudy skies with colder temperatures are predicted for Thursday by the U.S. Weather Bureau. The high Wednesday will be around 50 degrees, with the low tonight in the 20's. Lindsay left his office shortly after 8 a.m. to go to the Hotel Americana, scene of the strike negotiations, at the request of Dr. Nathan Feinsinger, chairman of the three-man mediation panel. Meetings were scheduled throughout the day. The first incident of violence was reported by Robert Carlesco, 30, driver of a bus chartered to transport New York Times employees. He said three men entered the bus at the end of his run Tuesday night, asked him if he worked for the Times and beat him up. Transit union boss Michael J. Quill blamed "editorial writers of the New York Times" and Lindsay for sending him to jail Tuesday. The peppery union leader was stricken, possibly by a heart seizure, and was removed to Bellevue Hospital. Watson Exhibits Tell History of Printing The early history of printing, publishing, and book design will be documented in a special exhibition which will be held in the Class of 1938 Exhibition Gallery in Watson Library from Jan. 8, until Jan. 30. "Treasures from the Plantin-Moretus Museum" is a collection lent from the large and famous old printing house in Antwerp. The material is touring leading museums and libraries across the country under the auspices of the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service. The showing is sponsored by the Belgian Embassy. AMONG THE RARE original items included in the exhibition are punches for the type face "ascedonica romaine," which has been widely copied down to the present day. A manuscript of the celebrated medical treatise by Andreas Vesalius and Juan Valverda, "Vivas figuras de las partes del cuerpo humano," prepared for the Spanish edition, is another unusual item included. The famous Plantin House, one of the finest printing houses in Europe during the 16th and 17th centuries, published the Polyglot Bible, a massive edition of the Bible in 5 languages (Latin, Greek, Hebrew, Syrian, and Chaldic). The eight folio volumes, appearing between 1568 and 1572, were an achievement of both scholarship and printing. Included in the exhibition are a number of documents and autographed letters, among them a privilege signed by Philip II of Spain granting Plantin a monopoly for the Polyglot Bible. SINCE 1876 the house was given to the city of Antwerp to become a museum. Before the American tour of this exhibition, which began at Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H., material from the museum had been shown outside of Antwerp only twice. ROAD CONSTRUCTION 500 FT. Staff photo by Bill Stephens Under the Overpass READY FOR WELDING—The bridge across Iowa Street at Seventeenth begins to take shape with the placement of the structural steel. All of the steel is in position now and ready for welding. The bridge will lead to a parking lot on the west side of Iowa for dormitory residents at KU on the east side. The project is sponsored by KU. Construction is by the State Highway Commission. Clyde Woods, resident engineer of the commission, said the weather will be the determining factor for the date of completion. Iowa Editor To Receive KU Award Gardner Cowles of Des Moines and New York City, newspaper and magazine editor and broadcast executive, will receive the ninth annual national citation for journalistic merit conferred by the William Allen White Foundation. The presentation will be made here on Feb. 10, when Cowles will deliver the 17th annual William Alien White lecture on the birthdate of the famed Emporia newspaper editor who died in 1944. FRED W. BRINKERHOFF of Pittsburg, foundation president, said Cowles was selected by the trustees as an editor who exemplifies the William Allen White ideals in journalism as well as service to his profession and the world. Cowles is president of the Des Moines Register and Tribune and is chairman of the board and editor in chief of Cowles Communications, Inc. TONIGHT AT LAWRENCE THEATRES Granada THEATER...telephone U.S. - 3784 ne Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI3-5782 It's never too soon to start laughing at Never too Late KINGSM PRODUCTION STARRING PAUL CONNIE MAUREEN FORD STEVENS O'SULLIVAN and JIM HUTTON JANE HENRY WYATT-JONES and PRODUced by NOLAN LEAH • Directed by BLOY VISION Screamery by WARNER ARNOLD LONG • Based upon his Stage Play *PANAVISION* TECHNICOLOR* WARNER BROS. NOW! 7:00 & 9:10 — EXTRA — Football Highlights of 1965 Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on highway 40 Open 6:45 — Show 7:00 James Lee Garner Remick "Wheeler Dealers" — Plus — "The Prize" — Starts Wednesday — "Walk On The Wilde Side" plus "新 Interns" Students Boost Avery on Education KU's Student Body President Leo Schrey, Leavenworth junior, led a group of delegates from Kansas' state-supported universities and colleges to Topeka Dec. 16 to discuss the future of higher learning in Kansas with Governor William Avery. Schey said the purpose of the mission was to let the Governor know that students are interested in the welfare of their universities and the things occurring at them. It was a chance for the students to express their opinions of what their schools need, to be able to better serve the students in their quest for higher learning. SCHREY SAID AVERY will be delivering his budget message to the state legislature when it convenes later this month, and that the section of the budget concerning education is expected to be quite high. He said he felt there was a critical need to give the Governor's program moral support by expressing to him the opinions and needs of the students. Schrey said the delegates named three specific areas in which they believed students are concerned and feel a need for continued improvement. These were: A need to provide for the retention of the schools' present faculty members through higher wages and the improvement of these faculties by enlarging them A NEED to provide for the continual growth and improvement of the schools' library systems, and. A need to provide for more research and laboratory facilities for students. THE IDEA for the mission was initiated by Schrey and it was he who contacted the student body presidents of the other schools and organized their trip to the state capital. It was also Schrey, with the help of KU's Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, who arranged for the appointment with Avery. Schrey said All Student Council Chairman Mike McNally, Bartlesville, Okla., junior, accompanied him to the governor's office to help him represent KU. He said the other state institutions represented at the meeting with delegates were: Kansas State Teachers' College of Emporia, Wichita State University, Fort Hays State College, and Pittsburg State College. He added that the delegation from Kansas State University was absent. MsNALLY SAID Governor Avery, after listening to the students' proposals, explained to the delegates how state funds are appropriated for the support of the state's educational institutions. Schrey said the trip was part He said Avery emphasized that his primary concern for higher education in Kansas is to make facilities available for every Kansas high school graduate. The Governor, a graduate of KU, said he was sure that the students who attended Kansas' state schools when he did were not as interested in the improvement and quality of their schools as this group had shown the students of today to be, McNally added. Schrey said Avery gave the delegates a very friendly reception and talked with them rather freely and at length. He said the Governor displayed a great deal of interest at what the students had to say, and a definite concern for the future of the state's education program. of a program which he called "KU in Kansas—The New Dimension," which had been a plank in his party's (Vox Populi) platform when he was elected to office in the spring of 1965 and had also been one of his campaign promises. It Used to be... A second epidemic of the gripe or a flaring up of the first is occurring among the students at the University. One case gives promise of going into pneumonia. According to reports, there are 50 people dying in Chicago daily from complications of the gripe. As there is no specific medicine to cure the disease, students are encouraged to follow instructions given by the Health Department. By Hector Olave Jan. 4.1916 Daily Kansan Tuesday, January 4, 1966 WELCOME BACK Lawrence Laundry welcomes you back and stands ready to again bring you the best service in town. Why not let Lawrence Laundry handle your laundry problems. Our exclusive Sanitone Dry Cleaning Process makes your clothes clean and fresh. LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners --- 10th & New Hampshire VI 3-3711 "Specialist In Fabric Care" CLASSIFIED ADS Acompodiments, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University of Kansas are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or nationality. FOR SALE 1930 Model A Ford Coupe. In excel- mation 3-4811, 5-4815. Tennessee. ADS Now your chance to save 50%—and more—on guaranteed quality diamonds. Your choice, beautiful settings. No obligation. Inquire: Harold Klee, VI 2-6528, University Diamond Company. tf Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive, graphed and bound for $45 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. **tf** TYPEWRITERS - Office size and portables, new and used, manual and electric. Several brands. Rental-purchase plant supplies and installation and service. Office supplies, equipment, and furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. St., VI 3-3644 Remington Portable typewriter. Good com- putersize for 3-93208 at 5 p.m. or weekends. If 1966 Barracaud, Formula S. Commando engine, 4-speed, blue streak tires, tachometer, fast steering brakes, metallic lining, list price, $3,380. Will sell for $2,550. Contact Dick Beamgard 316 McColm Hall. 1-6 1948 Buiek Roadmaster Convertible. Perfect body, new upholstery, 4 new tires, engine rebuilt, top in fair shape, Power windows, power seats, power top, $450.00. Call Tom after 6 p.m., VI 3-7334. tf For Sale: New 1985 V-M Stereo component system-Amphibian, turn- "24" speakers, ear phones—excellent tone. $150. New 10-gear Bristol racing bike $50. VI 2-0428 other six. 1-4 For Sale: 300 H.P. 327 Chev. engine for 1 piston, etc. V1-32500. 1-4 at 1 piston, etc. V1-32500. 1-4 VW, 1956. sun roof, metal gray. Good upholstery. tires. Good condition. Cheap transportation. Col call center Kansas City. Harry Baker. Victor 1-4 Wollensk stereo 4-track tape recorder and Remington portable typewriter. Will consider trading for camera equipment. Gary Grazda, VI 2-1483 tf Bumper Stickers: "Back the Boys in Vietnam," 25c each, 3 for 50c, 8 for 81. Postpaid. Vietnam Stickers, Box 1835. Topeka, Kansas, 6601. 1962 Corvair. Fifth type as seen in November Playboy. Nearly 40,000 vestitions. Just a racing just an economic transportation. Sacrifice. See at Champlin Station in North Lawrence after 6 p.m. on a 3-8506 after 6 p.m. Limited, one only 1952 Ford V-8, overdrive. Very good condition, motor and body. $160. Call Jack Prim at VI 3-7415. Leave your number. 1-4 1960 Opel station wagon, real good, $275.00 plus. 1959 Plymouth V-8 Belveder, cream puff and personal car, $450.00 plus. 1956 Chevrolet station wagon, V-8 $250.00 plus. 1955 Matisse real nice, $200.00 1955 Mercury, real sharp, $125.00 Benson's Auto Sales, 1902 Harper, VI 3-0342. Open evenings. 1-7 1956 Fairfell, radio, heater, w/w tires, chains, gauges, new bar- tech wires, acoustic microphone sound. Reasonable. Call Alan at VI J 3-7533 after 6 p.m. 1-10 TYPING Experienced typist has IBM electric to type your thesis, dissertation, term paper, Speech or lecture work. Ability to accurate work. Reasonable rates. Phone Mrs. Gilbert, V 2-2088. Experienced typist; will type in my home. Accurate typing, reasonable rates and prompt service. Call Mrs. Brown at VI 2-0210. tf Fast, accurate service. Reasonable rates. Experienced in theses, dissertations, and manuscript typing. 25s per standard page. 824 Miss Mrs. Cray. 1-4 Experienced typist, 8 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter. Fast, accurate service. Casson School, CALM Mrs. Barlow. Vol. VI, 31 - 642. Yale Experienced typist will do only these types of typewriter. Mrs. Fulcher vib 8-0554 Secretary familiar with legal terms will do typing—briefs, memorandums, accounts, reasonable rates. Marsha Goff. VI-3-2577. ta Wanted: Typing in my home. Experienced and accurate in term papers and theses.Call VI 3-2651 any time. Secretary with many years experience, will type your term papers, work at reasonable rates. Fast, accurate work at reasonable rates. Call VI 9769 after 5 p.m. Accurate typing by experienced typist. Term papers, themes, theses and dissertations. Reasonable rates and fast. VI 2-1561. tf Typtist, experienced with term papers, theses and dissertations, will give your typing immediate attention with electric machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048. tf Graduate student's wife, an experienced typist, will do all kinds of typing. Fast, accurate service. IBM Electric. Phone Mrs. Langley, VI 2-8144. Experienced typist will type your term papers, theses, dissertations, writer Resume. Electric typewriter, Reach high rates. Call Mr. Ranckman, VI, 2-2781. Experienced secretary will do typing in her home. Reasonable rates. Call VI 3-0380, after 5'00 call VI 3-0390, tf Experienced typist will do theses and term papers 4 years experience at KU. Phone Mrs. Oxford at VI 2-0673. tt Former Harvard and University of Minnesota secretary will type term papers, reports, and theses. Phone VI 3-7207. tf TYPING -- GESTETNER MIMEO- -8-6068 -Mrs. McEldowney, ® 3-8606 Expert Typing-Theses, dissertations and term papers. Electric typewriter, standard rates. Mrs. Mishler. VI 3-1023. 1-10 FOR RENT Vacancy in a contemporary home. Private entrance and bath. Five evening meals weekly. $70 monthly meals paid. Call VI 3-9853 until 6 p.m. Extra nice quiet furnished apartment for mature man, carpeted, nice kitchen, utilities paid. 2 blocks from Union. Available now. VI 3-8534. tf Married, graduate students, faculty- 2 bedroom apartment, $85.00. Two available January 1, one available February 1. Call for brochure, VI.3- 2116. Santee Apartments office, 1123 Indiana. tt LOST Reward for lost Human Relations notebooks — Mark Sheel and Jack Alexander. Call UN 4-3633 or bring to 421 Blake. 1-6 HELP WANTED Students looking for part time work in the Sandy's classroom at Sandy's Drive-In. 2120 W, 9th MISCELLANEOUS Die Bierstube; Singen, trinken und essen German style. Featuring student's favorite dark beverage and student's favorite light beverage from Golden, Colorado. Also serving hamburgers and pitcher Pitcher for Wednesday night. Party Room available, Wednesday night. VI 2-9441. tf Need music for that next dance or party? Have Johnnie Hayes play records from the KLWN Fun Forty Survey on famous Fisher Sound Equipment from The Sound. For complete information, call VI 2-1343. tf Need any Sewing or Mondding done? Reasonable rates. Call after 5:00 p.m. on tuesdays thru sundays BLANDING PARTY PHOTOGRAPHY Your satisfaction is my strongest contract. Please email us to embassed party titles: Kocacolor 4x5, 7x5; custom enlarged B&W 5x7, 60; Three years' experience at Dave Tv II- 65155; and samples call Dave Tv II- 65155. Wanted: General house work preferably in sorority, fraternity, or prince minister. Please have references. Write to Huskoceking, 1132 Conn., Lawrence, tr Sports Car Maintenance and Repairs by car and for the enthusiast Super tung- nage, Pickering Accessories RA. Pickering's Competition Cars, East 23d St. VI 21-291 tt PARTY TIME—Building available for parties and dances. Call VI 3-7453. Ralph Freed. tt CLASSIFIEDS GET FAST RESULTS presents The Classical Film Series ECLIPSE (1962—France) Michelangelo Antonioni's masterpiece about man's inability to communicate. Admission 60 $ \phi $ Wednesday-7:00 p.m. Dyche Auditorium Math Tutor; B.A. degree in Math from KU. Experienced in tutoring geometry, algebra, calculus, and analytic geometry. 1-6 LONELY GENIUS is looking for an understanding friend. The curious pay obliteration of "You can You" for $1 by writing on book 505. Portland, Ore. 97207. 1-4 WANTED Will Baby Sit in my home or yours. Call aff. 4:00 p.m. VI 2-3901. ENTERTAINMENT AVOID THE DRAFT. See The Days and Nights of Becbee Fenstermaker at the University Experimental Theatre. It's nice warm in there. 12-16 Daily Kansan Tuesday, January 4, 1966 8TH ST. SHOE REPAIR hairy moss soil heels. We repair purses Shoe dyeing 107 E. 8TH "We Rent Almost Anything" VI 3-2044 812 New Hampshire Street Anderson Rentals take advantage of the Yamaha Sale! Ern's Cycle Shop visit 950 N. 3rd VI 1-5815 SPECIALS - 25% Off Goodyear Tires - Tune Ups - Lubrication . . . $1.00 - Brake Adjustment . . 98 - Wheel Alignment - Automatic Transmission Patronize Kansan Advertisers 1819 W. 23rd Page Fina Service VI 3-9694 Gift Box Andrews Gifts VL 2-1523 Open Wednesday Evenings Malls Shopping Center Plenty of Free Parking U-DRIVE-THRU CAR WASH 50¢ Stay in your car and drive away in a sparkling clean car. Extra power spray will be 10c extra. This service is optional. No need to drive a dirty car anymore. U-DRIVE-THRU That's all you do. 2315 Louisiana Lawrence, Kansas UNICEF Note Paper, Cards, Calendars On Sale at Union Bookstore Now Leasing 10th and Emery Rd. WEST HILLS Lawrence's First Total Electric Luxury Apartments for information call W. E. Almquist—VI 3-3610 THE SHANTY MENU Now for the first time in Lawrence we at THE SHANTY are able to deliver piping hot pizza to your door in a temperature range of 20-40 degrees. Our radio dispatched units offer lightning fast service and catering. Allow an extra 30 minutes for special orders or when the Mobile Units, CALL US! Order 8, get one free. Mobile Oven Menu All King-Size 12" Pizzas - SAUAGE $1.50 * PEPPERONI $1.50 * HAMBURGER $2.00 * Double Course (Friday only) $2.25 * INTERNATIONAL $2.25 Call VI 2-2500 Free 10-Minute Delivery (Normally) 5.00 to 12.00 p.m. TRAVEL TIME O LET MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Christmas Reservations Now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Back From Mexico Busy Holiday Ends For Travelers Seventy-five tanned and exhausted travelers returned from International Club's Mexican trip Sunday at 2 p.m. The group left Saturday, Dec. 18, and visited San Miguel, Apalco, Mexico City, and Monterrey during the two week vacation. They made the entire trip by bus. "In Acapulco we swam and watched high diving off of 120 foot cliffs," said Margareta Asklund, a KU graduate student from Sweden. "WE SPENT SIX days in Mexico City and attended a folklorie ballet and a bullfight," she said. Yusuke Kawarabayashi, a Japanese graduate student and assistant instructor who helped organize the trip, said that changes in food, water, temperature and altitude made some group members sick. He added that some were simply exhausted from covering so much ground in such a short time. HERBERT KAMITZ, a KU graduate student from Austria who also helped organize the trip, said two small groups went deep sea fishing at Capulco. "Our group caught a shark and a sailfish and three dolphins," he said. "We also saw many tropical fish." "Some went skin diving and others took boat rides in the bay at Acapulco," he added. THE GROUP SPENT Christmas in Mexico City. Many attended a midnight mass on Christmas eve and continued sight-seeing on Christmas day. "Some of us visited the pyramids at San Juan Teotihuacan about 50 miles northwest of Mexico City," said Kamitz. "We also toured a modern art and an anthropology museum in Mexico City," he said. "The THE CITY HAS one very unusual feature," he said. "One of its suburbs, El Pedregal, is built upon a bed of lava. The homes are quite exclusive and many Americans live there." Graciela Moscato, a KU graduate student from Argentina, said she thought the trip was well-planned, the group was interesting, and the accommodations were good. Although the entire group always stayed in one hotel, travelers were free during the day to go where they pleased. Group members came from Finland, Sweden, Brazil, Germany, the United States, England, France, Japan, Colombia, Austria, Denmark, Chile, Argentina, Switzerland, Costa Rica, Lebanon, Israel, and Mexico. They ranged in age from students to elderly people. The group stopped last at Monterrey and spent New Year's eve and day there. PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS 6 Daily Kansan Tuesday, January 4. 1966 HIGH SCHOOL & COLLEGE STUDENTS Summer Job Opportunities Would You Like To Work and Play In The Rocky Mountains This Summer on Your Vacation? At A Mtn. Resort, Dude Ranch, Hotels Etc. For 150 Exclusive Resort Listings, Send $2.00 To Western Resort Review, P.O. Box 9, Commerce City, Colo. At The SOUND Record and Stereo Center Hillcrest Shopping Center—9th and Iowa NEW ALBUMS James Brown I Got You with "Good Good Lovin' " "Lost Someone""You've Got The Power" "Night Train" Rolling Stones — "December Children" And "Get Off My Cloud" Headquarters For Fabulous Fisher Components And Consoles 10 to 9 Weekdays and 1 to 7 Sundays RED DOG INN THE Rod Dog INN WEDNESDAY-JAN. 5th Girls Night Out - No Cover "Bluethings" - Friday - Red Dog's-FREE TGIF An Excellent Six Piece Show Band - Saturday The Rising Sons Listen To The Rising Sons Sing Their Smash Hit Record "Concentration" This Weekend Marks The Red Dog Inn's One Year Anniversary. Come On Down And Help Us Celebrate. Friday — Free Beverage For The First 100 Saturday—Free Door Prizes PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS KANSAS 13 31 —Staff photo by Bill Stephens Wesley Towers Over Pino Walt Wesley sinks a jump shot as Kansas State University's 7-1 center, Nick Pino, stands below unable to stop the 6-11 Jayhawk during the Big Eight Pre-Season tournament in Kansas City, Mo., during Christmas vacation. Ron Franz, No. 11, and Al Lopes, No. 31, look on. The Jayhawks defeated the Wildcats in the opening round of the tournament Tuesday, then continued on the victory path by downing Iowa State in the second round. Ted Owens' Jayhawks captured their second consecutive pre-season title when they secured a 71-61 triumph over the Nebraska Cornhuskers in the championship contest Thursday. FRED GREEN Western Wear has BOOTS Justin & Texas also LEE Jeans 910 Massachusetts NEW TOPS Cleaners & Launderers Offers the Students IN BY 9 -- OUT BY 5 SERVICE. TOPS When time is important let Tops In By 9 — Out By 5 service take care of your laundry problems. In addition Shirts Are Returned on Hangers and Tops offers a money back guarantee. TOPS Open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. (Monday thru Saturday) 1526 West 23rd (Next to the Pancake Man) Andy Williams CL 2389/CS 7189/CQ 7561 Andy Williams Newest Hits Adds New Excitement... Andy Williams CL 2389/CS 9138*/CQ 755† Andy Williams Newest Hits Adds New Excitement... CL 2338/CS 9138*/CQ 732† CL 2205/CS 9005*/CQ 648† CL 2171/CS 8971*/CQ 632† ANDY WILLIAMS' DEAR HEART ANDY WILLIAMS The Great Silent Funk MY GIRL Judy ANDY WILLIAMS ANDY WILLIAMS THE ACADEMY AWARD WINNING CALL ME IRRESPONSIBLE AND OTHER HIT SONGS FROM THE MOVIES CL 2015/CS 8815*/CQ 555† CL 1809/CS 8609*/CQ 463† ANDY WILLIAMS THE ACADEMY AWARD WINNING CALL ME IRRESPONSIBLE AND OTHER HIT SONGS FROM THE MOVIES CL 1879/CS 8679*/CQ 482† ANDY WILLIAMS Days of Wine and Roses And Other TV Requests ANDY WILLIAMS BINGO MUSIC andy williams warm and willing ANDY WILLIAMS' DEAR HEART ANDY WILLIAMS The Great Soul from MVGUR LADY AND COME AND THEY RIDE ANDY WILLIAMS Days of Wine and Roses And Other TV Requests ANDY WILLIAMS THE ACADEM AWARD WINNING LAST ME IRESPONSIBLE AND OTHER BEST SONG FROM THE MOVIES COSTUMES ANDY WILLIAMS MADON BIRD A FILM BY CALVIN HOFFMAN CL 1879/CS 86797/CO 4921 andy williams warm and willing ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Kief's Record & Stereo MALLS SHOPPING CENTER All Diamond Needles on Sale $5.95 11 3 -Staff photo by Bill Stephens Eyes Center on Lopes Attention focuses on Al Lopes as he prepares to pass the ball during the Big Eight Pre-Season tournament in Kansas City. Wildcat Sammy Robinson, No.11, guards Lopes as Ron Franz, No. 11, stands by. Back In Top 10 NEW YORK — (UPI) — Kansas climbed back into the top 10 of United Press International's major college basketball ratings announced today. The Jayhawks were voted a ninth place tie with Iowa. Kansas was ranked fourth nationally two weeks ago before suffering back-to-back losses to UCLA and Southern California. The Jayhawks sank to 12th in last week's ratings. AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION Table Tops AUTO GLASS Sudden Service East End of 9th St. VI 3-4416 Hawks Trounce CU Buffs The Jayhawks hit more than 60 per cent of its floor shots during the second half to wipe out a seven-point Colorado halftime advantage and storm to a 69-55 opening Big Eight Conference game victory Monday night. Kansas, paced by four men in double figures, hit 61.5 per cent of its shots in the second half, after suffering through a cold 27.6 per cent first half shooting percentage. The Jayhawks are now 10-2, while Colorado's season ledge is even at 6-6. Walt Wesley, Del Lewis and Al Lopes each scored 13 points for Kansas to pace the win. Chuck Gardner, Colorado's 6-foot-7 center, was game high scorer with 17 points. With 1:33 left in the game, Kansas built its biggest lead to 18 points, 69-51. Kansas outscored Colorado 48-27 during the second half. Kansas erased Colorado's lead early in the second half. During the first four minutes, the Jayhawks outscored Colorado 14-4, to take the lead for good at 35 to 32 with 16:10 left. Kansas also bested the Buffs in free throw shooting. The Jayhawks hit 72 per cent and the Colorado Buffs hashed in on only 41 per cent. Mike Rebich, a 6'-2" guard tallied 10 points as Colorado only double senior scorer. Riney Lochmann also got 10 for Kansas. Wesley, Kansas' 6'-11" all American candidate, was held to only two field goals, and those came in the second half. Kansas, winner of the Big Eight tourney last week, hosts Iowa State Saturday night in Allen Field House. Official Bulletin Peace Corps: New Peace Corps Training projects are being announced, training beginning in Feb. and March. 1966. Interested parties to the Applicant Peace Corps Liaison office. 228 Strong, for additional information. University Senate, 3:30 p.m. Swarthout, Reeval Hall. Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel... TODAY Sanitary Engineering Conference, All Day. Kansas Union. Classical Film, 7 p.m. "Eclipse." Dvehe Auditorium. Carillon Recital, 7 p.m. Albert Gerken. Faculty Recital, 8 p.m. John Kozar. Pianist. Swarthout Recital Hall. Daily Kansan Tuesday, January 4, 1966 the newest Detroit sound comes from a combo called 4-4-2 G.B.9624 4 Up-tempo all the way. With a 400-cube V-8 and 4-barrel carb to carry the lead. Heavy-duty front and rear suspension to smooth the beat. Acoustically tuned twin pipes to modulate the sound. And red-line tires to keep the whole score on track. That's 4-4-2. Try about four bars today. It's your kind of music! LOOK TO OLDS FOR THE NEW! STEP OUT FRONT IN 66 ..in a Rocket Action Car! 一 TORONADO • HINITY-EIGHT • DELTA 88 • DYNAMIC 88 • JETSTAR 86 • CUTLASS • F-85 • VISTA-CRUISER • STARFINE • 4-4-2 OLDSMOBILE GREAT TIME TO GO WHERE THE ACTION IS . . . SEE YOUR LOGAL AUTHORIZED OLDSMOBILE QUALITY DEALER TODAY! World-Wide Wire City Transit Strike Snarls N.Y. Traffic NEW YORK—(UPI)—Transit union chief Michael J. Quill, under threat of going to jail before noon, declined today to call off the unprecedented subway-bus strike which was costing untold millions in lost work, unsold goods and unpaid wages. Tens of thousands of workers, who Monday heeded pleas to stay home, converged on the city in droves today, causing massive traffic tie-ups and again raising the possibility of stern restrictions on the movement of private vehicles into Manhattan However, at 8 a.m. CST Traffic Commissioner Henry Barnes announced that the worst of the traffic jam was over. He said there had been 5 per cent more cars than Monday but people started for work an hour earlier. Quill, the acid-tongued Irishman who led 36 transit men on the four-day strike in defiance of a court order, was sure to appeal his contempt citation and it was virtually certain that he would not end the strike to avoid jail. Viet Nam War Disturbs Pope VATICAN CITY—(UPI)Pope Paul VI is worried by the lack of response to his messages urging world powers to negotiate a peace in Viet Nam, Vatican sources said today. So far there has been an almost total silence—at least publicly—to the pontiff's new year's messages to Soviet President Nikolai V. Podgorny, Chinese Communist party leader Mao Tse-tung and the North and South Vietnamese presidents. In the diplomatic messages, Pope Paul urged the Soviets and Chinese to "intervene" in the cause of peace and urged the Vietnamese not to take any actions that would escalate the war or force new bombings. College Faculty on Strike NEW YORK—(UPI)一A teachers union went on strike today at St. John's University, one of the largest Roman Catholic schools in the world. It was the first strike in American history by members of a college faculty. Pickets were thrown up outside all gates of the Queens and Brooklyn campuses of the university at 6:30 a.m. EST, as the school reopened after the Christmas holiday and a one-day postponement caused by the city-wide subway and bus strike. Kansas Senate Opens Next Week TOPEKA—(UPI) Legislative developments moved rapidly today, one week before the gavel sounds on the 1966 budget session and not all to the liking of Gov. William H. Avery. This session, it seems certain the governor won't get all he will ask for in his budget message to the Legislature Jan. 12. Legislative leaders today closed the door of the special session to all but reapportionment of the House and Senate and certain "emergency" matters. Kashmir Peace Meet Opens TASHKENT, U.S.S.R.—(UPI)India opened its summit conference with Pakistan in this colorful Soviet Asian city today by demanding that Pakistani troops respect its "territorial integrity and sovereignty." Indian Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri, in his opening speech at the conference, did not mention Kashmir by name. But he has already said that Indian sovereignty over the disputed province is not negotiable. Fuel Tanks Explode in France LYON, France—(UPI)—Exploding fuel tanks turned an oil-refinery fire near this southeastern French city into a holocaust today. Officials estimated 12 persons were killed in the fire and explosion. Another 97 were hospitalized in Lyon with burns, 2 of them in critical condition. "Many others" were reported in casualty wards in nearby towns. TEXAS WELCOME BACK! All of us at the Pizza Hut hope you had a great vacation. We're glad to have you back. PIZZA HUT 1606 W. 23rd VI 2 Students failing to obtain their $4 season basketball ticket refund before the Christmas holidays will have another chance to do so Thursday. PIZZA HUT Money Back Basketball Refund Resumes Thursday Athletic Director Wade Stinson said the ticket windows in Allen Field House will be open from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. to administer the student refund. THE ATHLETIC Board decided to refund the charge Dec. 6, after the Student Athletic Seating Board revoked its recommendation of April 13, 1985, that a charge be placed on student admission to KU's intercollegiate basketball games. The SASB notified both the Athletic Board and the Athletic Department of its revocation of the charge in compliance with a Student Court order Dec. 4. PIZZA HUT 1606 W.23rd VI 3-3516 Refunds were made the Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday before Christmas break began but Stinson said the windows would be opened again since there is still money which has not been refunded. Neurologist to Discuss Mechanism of Brain "This Is Why We Are Human" will be discussed from a scientific and humanistic approach by Paul G. Roofe, KU professor of neurology, at the Thursday meeting of the Humanities Lecture Series. He received his Ph.D. in 1934 from the University of Chicago. While there he studied under the renowned neuroanatomist, Dr. C. Judson Herrick. Roofe will speak at 8 p.m. in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall. A reception will be held afterward in the Faculty Club. IN 1945 he came to KU as chairman of the department of anatomy. When the medical Before coming to KU, Roofe taught at the University of Louisville. "MY INTEREST in the nervous system has been one primarily of how it operates to produce the behavior of its possessor, especially man. We are just now beginning to get basic facts concerning this most intriguing mechanism in the universe, the human brain," Rooef said. Roofe was named the first William Wilder Fellow in Neurology at the University of Chicago in 1932. school was moved to Kansas City, he became a member of the zoology department. Each year the Humanities Lecture Series sponsors six distinguished American and foreign scholars on the campus. In addition, it also invites one KU faculty member to address the lecture group. During the past 10 years KU faculty members who have taken part are: J. Neale Carman, French; L. R. Lind, Latin and Greek; M. Carl Slough, Law; William D. Paden, English; Jan Chiapusso, Music; Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe; Mary Grant, Latin and Greek; Errol Harris, philosophy; Elmer F. Beth, Journalism; Richard DeGeorge, Philosophy; and James Seaver, History. Daily Kansan Tuesday, January 4, 1966 Royal College Shop 837 Mass. VI 3-4255 WOMEN'S SHOE CLEARANCE SALE! DISCONTINUED STYLES NOW at GREAT SAVINGS ALL SALES FINAL DRESS SHOES Mademoiselle—De Lisos Life Stride—Town & Country Regularly $14.00 to $21.00 NOW $9.90 to $14.90 according to styles CASUALS – LOAFERS Old Maine Trotters—T&C Capezios—Frepelles Regularly $10.00 to $15.00 NOW $6.90 to $8.90 Entire Stock Not Included All Sales Final Please CLEARANCE Sale "Snug, Ain't It?" Editorials Protesting, up-to-date All these years I've been going on the assumption that everything is up-to-date in Kansas City. And since living in Lawrence, I've come to feel that everything is up-to-date at the University of Kansas, too. Back in the olden days when I first began the study of journalism, the students meekly took notes on departmental announcements, turned out little background features, tried to say something different each year about Hallowe'en—or Valentine's Day—or whatever. No one ever thought of advocating (in print, that is) beer on campus, sexual experimentation, smoking "pot" (in fact, it hadn't been too many years since no one was supposed to smoke anything, even Spuds), or doing away with curfew. THE BIGGEST—AND only—student demonstration I saw during two years at a girls' school to demand the privilege of wearing bobby socks during the day (not to dinner, of course; no one was so far out as not to dress for dinner). What it amounted to was sneaking out of the dorm at night to build a bonfire with hundreds of old stockings and set up appropriate signs. We never started the fire, because we were tipped off by a friendly teacher that it was an inopportune time since the president was approaching in a huff (something like an Essex). Now our local political activists manage to get in on about every idea that comes along. Several went to Washington recently to get in on that demonstration so people would know that KU (or a minute percentage of it) cares. The first march on Washington I remember was a bunch of hungry veterans (of World War I) who wanted pensions during the depression (of the Thirties) because there were not enough jobs available. They didn't get the pensions, but it certainly started a trend. Actually, the local demonstrators seem to be pretty quiet and thoughtful persons. We had one brandisher of an inappropriate sign, and one who marched unencumbered by any sign—in fact, by practically anything—so no one ever knew just what he was doing walking down Jayhawk Boulevard. I look on these efforts as sort of all-purpose demonstrations, and frankly I don't think I could top them. HAVING SUCH A POOR record as a demonstrator, I don't believe I'll try another protest march. I've decided I'll identify with those all-purpose marchers, and live dangerously by reading the UDK and attending Ingmar Bergman movies. That's up-to-date enough for me. Yvonne Willingham Home Sweet Home ELECTRONIC BOOGING IN THE U.S. © 1985 HERRLUND THE WAITINGTON PRESS One-party government in 1965 During 1965 the American people have had a first hand look at one-party government. Outnumbered more than two to one in the U.S. Congress, the Republican party has had little opportunity to carry out its programs at the national level. Having control of the executive and legislative branches of the national government, and the cooperation of the judicial branch, the Democratic party has had the rare chance to govern without having to seriously consider the views of the other party. What have the Democrats done with this chance? The "Medicare" Bill, which finances hospitalization and some other medical care for the elderly under the Social Security program, easily passed despite the vocal opposition of the American Medical Association. A Republican alternative which would have been voluntary, have covered all medical expenses, and have been paid for by general tax revenues and premium payments of the insured, was turned down. A MASSIVE "WAR on Poverty" was approved. Since it has gone into effect some of its programs, particularly the "Job Corps," have drawn heavy fire as being mismanaged, ineffective and mere tools to pass out political payola. Of all its programs, "Operation Head Start," which is designed to raise the educational and cultural level of preschool underprivileged children, has received the most acclaim. A voting rights bill to stop discrimination against Negroes who seek to register to vote was passed. The bill allows federal registrars to register voters in areas which have literacy tests and where less than 50 per cent of the voting age population voted in 1964, if there is evidence that Negroes seeking to register have been discriminated against in these areas. These federal registrars can register anyone who is of age, literate or illiterate. However, most political scientists feel that voters should meet some form of literacy requirement. Many persons have argued that literacy tests should be kept, but administered by federal registrars, where they have been used to discriminate against Negroes. The department of Housing and Community Affairs, a new cabinet agency, was created. Federal excise taxes were finally repealed to the joy of all users of such "luxuries" as automobiles and cosmetics. Both parties supported the measure. MANY OTHER administration programs were transformed into law. Only twice did Congress balk. The "Home Rule". Bill for Washington, D.C., did not pass, and the drive to reveal Section 14-b of the Taft-Hartley Act was stopped by a Senate filibuster. In the field of foreign affairs, the big issue was American THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan FOR RK to 76 of its 100 Years UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office Founded 1889 Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, N.Y. 10022. Mail subscription rates: $4 a semester or $7 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansas are offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Kevin KU for 76 of its 100 Years EXECUTIVE STAFF MANAGING EDITOR ... Judy Farrell BUSINESS MANAGER ... Ed Vaughn EDITORIAL EDITORS ... Janet Hamilton, Karen Lambert policy in Viet Nam. Republican members of Congress have given the President their support, while urging him to make victory, rather than neutralization, the goal of U.S. policy. Several Democratic congressmen and senators have called for a withdrawal from Viet Nam, but they are in the small minority. The past session of Congress has truly been one of great activity. Whether the massive spending programs and increased federal bureaucracy will benefit our country is another question, open to partisan replies from both sides. The 1966 election will give the people the chance to decide. The Democratats are split between Southern conservatives and the liberals from throughout the nation including Southern states. The switching to the Republican party of South Carolina Congressman Albert Watson and Sen. Strem Thurmond is evidence of this split. Two Mississippi Congressmen who supported Goldwater are reported to be considering the same thing. Some conservative Southern Democrats have undoubtedly felt uncomfortable in their party during the past year. Perhaps the 1966 elections will see a few more of them continue the "switching" trend. What has the past year shown about the parties themselves? Are they united or divided? ROBERT KENNEDY and his younger brother, Edward, have been very active the past year. This doesn't spell much danger for President Johnson's position, but Vice-President Humphrey's future ambitions may run into Kennedy opposition. Although the differences between the wings of the Republican party are not as great as in the Democratic party, they are still formidable. Also, although the conservatives appear to be strongest, the wings are of more equal strength than they are in the Democratic party. The conservatives conceded the first battle of the year when the then Republican National Chairman, Dean Burch, resigned without a fight. Burch was replaced by a moderate, Ray Bliss of Ohio. Since Bliss has taken over, most of the conservatives on the staff have resigned voluntarily or been forced to resign. During the Young Republican National Convention last summer, a conservative, State Sen. Tom Van Sickle of Kansas, was elected as Young Republican National Chairman by a three to two margin. Tom Pauken, a conservative although he avoids labels, was elected National College Young Republican Chairman with no significant opposition. At least two persons seem to already be running for the 1968 Republican presidential nomination. They are Richard Nixon and Michigan Gov, George Romney. Barry Goldwater hes said Nixon seems to be the front runner. Most conservatives feel that Nixon is the only moderate candidate of national stature they would support, since the defection of many others during the Goldwater campaign. Romney, more in the middle of the party than Rockefeller, would be an ideal candidate of the liberal wing. He could poll more moderate Republican support than Rockefeller could hope to. WHAT ABOUT SPECIAL elections during 1965? Did they show any significant trends? The Democrats won important victories in the New Jersey and Virginia gubernatorial elections. In New Jersey the Republican candidate based much of his campaign on the firing of a state university professor who said he would welcome a Viet Cong victory. The Democrat won in a landslide. In Virginia an alliance between the machine of former Sen, Harry Byrd, labor and the Negro vote, spelled defeat for the Republican. The Republicans didn't lose them all, though. In a special election for the reapportioned Georgia House of Representatives, Republicans tripled their representation to establish a 10 per cent minority. In South Carolina, U.S. Representative Albert Watson, who had switched to the Republican party, ran for his seat as a Republican, and defeated his Democratic opponent in a landslide. Republicans won mayoralty contests and other local elections in other areas of the once "Solid South." Outside of the South, Vermont was a tremendous victory for the Republicans. Vermont's popular Democratic governor, Phillip Hoff, had called for the election of a "Hoff team" to the state legislature in November. Instead, half of the Democrats were swept out of the State Senate, and Republicans gained a larger majority than they had before in the House of Representatives. Democratic representation in the State Senate fell from 43 per cent to 20 per cent. Rep. John Lindsay's victory in the New York City mayoral election was hailed by some as a great Republican victory. However, most observers feel it was more of a personnel victory for Lindsay than a victory for the party. THE ELECTIONS SEEM to indicate that Republicans are gaining strength in the Deep South, and for the first time may become a truly national party. They are also making a comeback in traditional Republican areas. However, with the exception of New York City, the Democrats have proved they can still win in the Democratic and border areas, and this is all they have to do to remain the majority party. —John Sharp Daily Kansan Tuesday, January 4, 1966 Rest Helps Scholar By Barbara Phillips A philosophy and English major at KU, who loves to dance and claims he sleeps slower than other people has been named a 1966 Rhodes scholar. Stephen R. Munzer, Salina senior, will travel to England in September or October to begin work at Oxford University as a Rhodes scholar. Munzer is the 18th KU graduate to be awarded the scholarship which has an approximate value of $2500 a year. He will study either two or three years for a Bachelor of Philosophy degree. MUNZER GETS nine to 10 hours of sleep a night because, he says, "I sleep slower than other people." Although he does not cram for a test, he said, "I've never gotten a paper finished ahead of time. I just kind of read along." Named a Phi Beta Kappa his junior year, Munzer is also the vice-chairman of the College Intermediary Board; a member of Owl Society, junior men's honorary; Sachem, senior men's honorary; and is on the editorial board of the University Review. Munzer said about the Rhodes scholarship. "I think it gives you the opportunity to live in a foreign country for two to three years in such a situation that you have a chance to develop your own personality." HIS PLANS AFTER Oxford are incomplete now, but they may include a future in university teaching or law. Munzer will join two other KU Rhodes scholars still studying at Oxford; Breon Mitchell (64), Salina, and George Barisas ('65), Kansas City, Mo. THIRTY-TWO UNIVERSITY or college seniors in the U.S. each year are named Rhodes Scholars and awarded two years of study at Oxford at the bequest of Cecil Rhodes, English philanthropist who built a diamond empire in South Africa. Rhodes stressed goals of public service and world understanding, indicating that he wished the Rhodes Scholar to be "the best man for the world's fight" in his will of 1902 which instituted the scholarships. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 76 of its 100 Years 76th Year, No. 60 Tuesday, January 4, 1966 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Non-resident Aim Fee Raise Discussed An increased tuition for nonresident students at Kansas state schools is being eyed by school officials and state legislators as an additional source of revenue for the 1967 fiscal year budget. The discussed increase comes in the light of the record-high request by the Board of Regents for $97.7 million for next year. Banker to Regents A 1945 graduate of KU, C.N. (Ned) Cushing, was appointed to the Kansas Board of Regents by Governor William H. Avery last week. The 42-year-old Cushing is president of the Downs National Bank and is a former vice president of the KU Alumni Association. Cushing replaces Whitley Austin, editor of the Salina Journal, who asked the Governor that he not be considered for reappointment. Austin had served on the board since January 1 1958. CUSHING HAS BEEN active in Republican political affairs both at the state and national level. One of his two children, Elizabeth Ann Cushing, is a soohomore at KU. Staff photo by Bill Stephens SCHOOL MONTHLY Governor Avery reappointed to new 4-year terms Dwight Klinger of Ashland and Henry Budd of Topeka. Klinger, a Democrat, was graduated from Kansas State University and has been on the Board since January 1, 1962. Budd, a Republican, is a KU graduate and has been on the Board since 1961. Klinger is a cattleman and farmer while Budd is president of Capitol Federal Savings and Loan. The new nine-member board will have seven KU graduates and two from Kansas State University. THE POSSIBILITY of increased fees for both non-resident and resident students was raised at the Dec. 17 meeting of the Board of Regents. The principal focus was on out-of-state students, however, since an overall tuition increase was effected this fall. The outcome of the meeting was a request that the State Department of Economic Analysis study the financial impact of non-resident students upon Kansas and its colleges. RHODES SCHOLAR TO RHODES SCHOLAR-James K. Logan, dean of the KU School of Law and Rhodes Scholarship winner in 1952, talks to Stephen Munzer, Salina senior and 1966 KU Rhodes Scholar. CHANCELLOR WESCOE said yesterday he sees little or no likelihood of an increase being enacted for the 1966-67 term. Only three Big Eight schools—Kansas State, Oklahoma, and Oklahoma State—have lower fees for resident students than does KU. Four schools, the three previously mentioned, and Missouri, have lower non-resident rates. Out-of-state students compose 16.8 per cent of total enrollment at state schools. Approximately 3,600 of the nearly 14,000 students at KU are non-residents. Revue Has Finals 'First' McCollum Hall Enters Independents returned from Christmas vacation to a special Christmas present. For the first time in 16 years, an independent had made it into the finals of Rock Chalk Revue. McCOLLUM HALL WITH Alpha Omicron Pi will represent the independents as well as the Greeks. Other pairings will be Beta Theta Pi and Gamma Phi Beta, Alpha Kappa Lambda and Chi Omega, and Sigma Chi and Kappa Kappa Gamma. The four pairings who advanced to the finals were announced Monday by Bill Boulware, Leawood senior and producer of the 1966 Rock Chalk. McCOLLUM HALL AND THE AOII's script is entitled "Where There's a Will, There's a Play." Jon Putnam, Prairie Village junior, is producer and director. "We're fortunate to be the first independent group in Rock The United States Weather Bureau predicts clear to partly cloudy skies for tonight and tomorrow. Temperatures should dip into the 30's tonight, with winds southwest 15 to 25 miles per hour. Weather Other skit titles are "Joust a Little Beat" by the Betas and Gamma Phi's, "What TNE Means to Me or AWS I Love Your Best," by AKL and Chi Omega, and "The Saga of Lt. Archibald Lunch or How to Survive a Sand Dune Party," by Sigma Chi and Kappa Kappa Gamma. organization of our two groups." Putnam added. "We've enjoyed harmonious relationships with the Alpha O's." "THE MYTH OF THE incompatibility of independents and Greeks has been dispelled by the Harold Crain, visiting professor of speech and drama, William Conboy, professor of speech and drama, and Tom Rea, instructor of speech and drama, judged the scripts. This is the first year for McColium hall, the newest KU residence hall, which opened its doors in September. Most of the returning residents had moved from Ellsworth, where they had attempted to enter Rock Chalk two years ago. Chalk," he said, "I think this is because we are the first independent group with the organization needed to make it to the final rounds." THE 1966 REVUE will be March 3, 4, and 5 in Hoch Auditorium. Final judging will be March 4 and 5 during performance. Boulware said. Rehearsals will begin February 14. Four-hundred and fifty women residents of Ellsworth Hall will "go home" to Lewis Hall next fall. Hall to Switch Sex With Fall of 1966 The proposed move was approved last night after Emily Taylor, dean of women, conferred with some 30 members of the Ellsworth Hall Senate to determine if the move were satisfactory to a majority of the residents. Members nearly unanimously agreed that it would be. ALTHOUGH SOME 625 women now live in Ellsworth Hall, the majority will be accommodated by the move. The remaining upperclass women will be able to live in Oliver Hall, and Naismith Hall, to be completed by next fall. J. J. Wilson, director of the dormitory system, said that no changes of major consequence would be needed in the conversion of the halls, merely minor physical changes would be made. He also mentioned that there will be a different parking problem, as Ellsworth is once again filled with men students. THE IDEA for the change was the collective effort of Dean Woodruff, Dean Taylor, Dean Alderson, and myself to forecast housing for next year's breakdown between men and women's balls." he said. THE DECISION was met, on the most part, with approval by Ellsworth residents. Mrs. Doris Sindt, resident director at Ellsworth, said, "We always need to take advantage of building space, to see that it is used appropriately. Moving groups to accommodate new students is always a very good idea. He mentioned that Naismith Hall will be available for the first time next year on a coeducational basis and that freshman women will probably not be allowed to live in it. There will be less need for space for upper-class women, who will be able to live in Naismith or Oliver Hall, he said. ELLSWORTH women expressed surprise and happiness at the move. Some mentioned that they will enjoy the added parking space, but most felt that they were going back to "their hall." Many of the women who now live in Ellsworth Hall were former residents of Lewis Hall, and hoped someday that they could move back. Dean Keeps Post Burton Marvin, former dean of the KU School of Journalism, has withdrawn his resignation from the University of Tel Aviv in Israel after a re-negotiation of his agreement with the University. Marvin, in a letter to Warren K. Agee, dean of the School of Journalism, said, "Unexpected developments in the politics of the situation led to the withdrawal of my resignation and a renegotiation of my agreement." A committee elected from his class protested Marvin's resignation. The committee conferred with the Rector and the President of the University. Marvin has agreed to remain at the Israeli University until the end of this school year. His original agreement had been for two years. Marvin is to return to teaching duties at KU this fall. Marvin left KU last August to accept the Israeli post and set up a new journalism program and mass communication center there. The basic misunderstanding which arose was between the two schools of thought, the Jerusalem Post. Dec. 24, stated. "One, inherited from Europe, is that a university is a place of pure learning, unconcerned with the practical side of man's day-to-day struggle for existence. The other school, the American attitude to higher learning, holds that a university should provide specialized training for the young people who will be asked to fill the country's executive posts."