l r e t o s f f s y r y o s d s d. t e r a n s f s e r u m h- t o m l l y g t h g en 350 Devote Time To Heart Fund Three hundred and fifty KU students, representing 18 organized houses, solicited for door-to-door contributions yesterday during Douglas County's Heart Sunday. The women's houses represented included Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Omicron Pi, Alpha Phi, Delta Delta Delta, Gamma Phi Businessman Attacks Bias Page 3 Discrimination costs American businessmen $30 billion a year. This statement was made by the personnel director of the Samsonite Luggage Co. at the 16th annual Lawrence Brotherhood Banquet Thursday in the Kansas Union. HE TOLD the group, assembled to observe National Brotherhood Week, that the United States can wipe out its national debt in ten years by discontinuing discriminatory practices. MICHAEL L. FREED, the Samsonite official, spoke to 400 persons including Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, Rafer Johnson, 1960 Olympic champion, and Lawrence Mayor Ted Kennedy. He said businessmen in this nation lose money by turning minority groups away from their stores and businesses. He said this throttles an important source of income and leads to a basic misunderstanding of the people involved. FREED STRESSED the practice of the Golden Rule, "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you." He said this is a practical guideline in solving such problems as discrimination. He added that the color, race and religion of an employee, or a prospective employee, should be no cause for a difference in policy. Freed stated that unfair employment practices are a serious detriment to the education of skilled workers. "THIS LACK OF education of unskilled workers can paralyze the sinews of our nation," he said. He said that when an applicant is turned away, "the resulting lack of funds not only hampers his own education, but that of his family." Among the various organizations sponsoring the banquet were the KU-Y, the Lawrence Council of Churches, the Lawrence Human Relations Commission and the Parent-Teachers Association. Jr. College Conference Date Changed to March 9 Beta, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Lewis Hall, Pi Beta Phi and Watkins Hall. Alpha Phi furnished 75 women, the largest single house turnout. A change of date of the 1962 Junior College Conference has been announced by James K. Hitt, registrar. The conference, originally scheduled for Wednesday and published on the KU school events calendar for Thursday, March 1. will not take place on either of these dates. Conflicts with the junior colleges have made it necessary for the registrar's office to re-schedule the conference for Friday, March 9. Big Buy Burger 50c BIG BUY The Most Popular Burger in Lawrence The men's houses represented were Delta Tau Delta, Delta Upsilon, Kappa Sigma, Lambda Chi Alpha, Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Phi Epsilon and Theta Chi. The student volunteers met at 3:30 yesterday afternoon at the Eldridge Hotel before they split into groups to begin their soliciting. After canvassing their territory they returned to the hotel to deposit the money they had collected from Lawrence residents. Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE Mike Getto, owner of the Eldridge Hotel, furnished the volunteers with coffee and cookies before and after the drive. The Douglas County Heart Fund sponsored the drive, with Lawrence merchants providing the publicity. Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 The Heart Fund is not connected with the United Funds Campaign. Ceramics Senior Wins Art Contest A KU ceramics major won the first place, $150 cash prize at the Sixteenth Exhibition for Michigan Artists and Craftsmen recently. University Daily Kansan Jerry Campbell, Lavonia, Mich. senior, won the contest with his entry of three bottle forms. His work was cited as "work exemplifying the highest quality in aesthetic significance and excellence of craftsmanship" by the Michigan Potters Association who sponsored the exhibition. Bentley Glass to Lecture On Darwinism today at 4 Bentley Glass, professor of biology at John Hopkins University, will discuss "Darwinism and Ethical Values" at the Humanities Forum of the Union. Prof. Glass will deliver the fourth '61-62 Humanities Lecture at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Fraser Theater. He will speak on "Science and Liberal Education." During the next thousand years no revolution will take place in Germany. — Adolf Hitler Monday, Feb. 26, 1962 Farmers May See Export Barriers The American farmer may soon be in competition with the European Common Market. Charles E. Staley, assistant professor of economics, expressed this opinion at the Faculty Club last night. The goal of the 7 nations in the European Common Market is the formation of a unified economic Europe in 1970. This could exclude $1 to $2 billion worth of American farm products now exported to European countries, thus adding to our mounting agricultural surplus. Our problem is to find a way to trade with the economic bloc. costly price support and storage administration." Prof. Staley, admitting that the agriculture problem is a "puzzle," says that he favors something like the Brannan plan. "The Brannan plan is no more socialistic than what we have now, and it is much more simple. It would do away with Under the Brannan plan, the deficit between what it costs the farmer to produce and the return he must have to stay in business, would be made up by direct payments from the government to the farmer. This would allow farm prices to fluctuate with supply and demand, and place the prices of our agricultural products on a competitive basis in the world market. A culture is in its finest flower before it begins to analyze itself.—Alfred North Whitehead JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT LET'S TALK ABOUT CHANCE VOUGHT Now is the opportune time to share in Chance Vought's rapid expand dynamic management made possible by the creation of the Ling-Tem engineering, gain valuable experience and earn professional recogniti as these and many others: VTOL — One aircraft combining the best SLAM — The Air Force low-altitude, nuclear-powered supersonic mis operational fighter in the Mach 2 range... DYNA-SOAR — The Air SCOUT — NASA's space research rocket. Positions require bach Electrical or Civil Engineering or Math, Physics or Metallurgy. In you'll find living at its best in Dallas — the cultural, social and intel not get the complete story about your career with Vought by talking by writing Professional Placement, P.O.Box 5907,Dallas 22,Texas. sion and benefit from the vast resources and CHANCE VOUGHT co-Vought complex. You'll do creative tion on challenging aerospace projects such features of airplanes and helicopters... sile... CRUSADER - The Navy's first Force hypersonic manned space craft... elor degrees in Aeronautical, Mechanical, addition to these rewarding opportunities, lectual center of the Southwest. Why with the Chance Vought representative or an equal opportunity employer CAMPUS INTERVIEWS: MARCH 3, 6