Tuesday, Sept. 21, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Patronize Kansan Advertisers Scientist, Composer Here As Visiting Profs A London professor who has lectured in the United States as an American Chemical Society visiting scientist, and a noted composer who has been commissioned for the Centennial opera, will be the 1965-66 CIA Rein Asked WASHINGTON —(UPI)— Sen. Stephen M. Young, D-Ohio, wants Congress to set up a "watchdog" committee to monitor the activities of the super-secret Central Intelligence Agency CIA. He told the Senate Monday the CIA had "in effect been making foreign policy" and had assumed responsibilities of the President and Congress. Young said "the CIA has gradually taken on the character of an invisible government, answerable only to itself." Rose Morgan visiting professors at KU. Martin L. Tobe of University College, London, will teach in the chemistry department during the fall semester, and Douglas Moore will premiere his opera, "Portrait of Carrie," during the spring semester Centennial celebration. Tobe received his bachelor's degree with first class honors in 1951, and his doctorate with the Ramsey Memorial Medal in 1954, both from University College. He was a research assistant for two years at Kings College. Newcastle-upon-Tyne, before returning to teach at University College. IN 1982 TOBE taught summer school at the University of Illinois and lectured widely in the U.S. under the American Chemical Society visiting scientist program. He has published widely on his specialty. substitution mechanisms of inorganic reactions. For the spring semester Fulitzer Prize-winning composer Douglas Moore will highlight the KU centennial with his opera on the fame of Carry Nation and teach in the School of Fine Arts. Moore is now MacDowell professor of music, emeritus, having retired from Columbia University in 1962. Moore won the Pulitzer Prize in 1950 for his "Giants in the Earth" and the New York Critics Circle Award in 1959 for "The Ballad of Baby Doe." Another well known composition, "The Devil and Daniel Webster," to a libretto by Stephen Vincent Benet, has become something of an American classic. HE ALSO HAS received the Henry Hadley Medal, the Columbia Great The young bucks of America go clean-white-sock in the new crew Adler calls Adlastic Meet the revolutionary crew of 65% lambswool plus 35% nylon with spandex for 100% stretch. Up and down. This way and that. That's Adlastic with the give to take on all sizes 10 to 15 and last far longer and fit far better. Size up Adlastic in 28 clean-white-sock colors. Clean-white-sock? The now notion with it even without the wherewithall. Whatever, get Adlastic at stores where clean- white-sock is all yours for just one young buck and a quarter. ADLER DIVISION OF BURLINGTON INDUSTRIES Available At University Shop Town Shop Diebolt's Teacher Award, and the Huntington Hartford Foundation Award in Music, and has been awarded honorary music doctor degrees from the Cincinnati Conservatory, Yale University, the University of Rochester and Adelphi College of New York. Moore joined the Columbia staff in 1926 after receiving bachelor's degrees from Yale University and studying in Paris. He became head of the Columbia music department in 1940, and from 1945-62 was the MacDowell professor of music. SPECIAL ON BOB DYLAN L.P.'s at Kief's Records & Hi-Fi CL 1986/CS 8786* CL 2193/CS 8993* CL 2328/CS 9128*/CQ 7291 BOB DYLAN ON COLUMBIA RECORDS $ 2^{69} $ Kief's Records & Hi-Fi Malls Shopping Center