Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday. June 23.1964 Health Rules Point Way To a Carefree Vacation NEW YORK — (UPI) — Make vacation time a carefree one by following these simple rules for summer health: —Avoid accidents, avoid infections. Business Agenda Has 2 Programs The 10th annual Executive Development Program and the United States Independent Telephone Association will highlight the business agenda in coming weeks. The Executive Development Program, now being held, is scheduled to run through July 3. The program is designed for men with major executive responsibilities and those training for important executive positions. Areas are not presented as separate compartments; rather, emphasis is on various elements of business administration and on their interrelatedness. In early July, following the executive program, 50 men will take part in the USITA for a series of meetings. Joseph W. McGuire, dean of the School of Business, reports that approximately 303 students are taking classes at Summerfield Hall. In addition, some faculty members are engaged in research. Another event will take place July 1, when the School of Business will replace their current 1610 computer with a new and larger 704 model. Open House Is Held At Student Union A crowd of summer school students squeezed in to the Student Union Friday to an open house sponsored by the Student Union Activities Board to enjoy free games and take part in art exhibits. Starting at 8 a.m., students and visitors began to wander in and observe the many features of the Union. Throughout the day, visitors as well as students took part in the day's activities. Constantly crowded throughout the evening was the Union recreation room, which offered free bowling and billiards between 5 p.m. and 11 p.m. Also seen throughout the day was a movie, "Picnic," which was viewed in the evening and at two different matinees. Many persons were just sight-seeing and came to take in the art exhibits and inspect the many different aspects of the Union. protect yourself against allergic reactions, avoid overexertion and overexposure, avoid insect bites, use common sense. HOW DOES ONE avoid accidents? Don't swim out one far, for example. Don't drive until your eyes glaze with fatigue. Don't attempt feats beyond your skill or strength. Proper equipment is another safeguard against accidents. Stock the boat with life preservers, one for each passenger. Wear boots in snake country. Proper equipment also means the right non-slip boots when climbing. And it means knowledge. FOR EXAMPLE, learn how to resuscitate the drowning the recommended mouth-to-mouth way. Know what to do for patients in shock. When packing vacation gear, remember a well-stocked personalized first-aid kit. Personalized means it should contain any medicines you or any member of your family must take regularly — particularly prescription drugs. TAKE ALONG the prescription for glasses worn by you or any member of the family. If you can't take along an extra pair of glasses. Consult your physician and your druggist for their suggestions—and heed them. Ask the same help from your sporting goods dealer. Make a resolution, meanwhile, to keep the sun your friend instead of an enemy of pleasure. The first exposure should not exceed 20 minutes—10 for children and light-haired adults. GRADUALLY INCREASE the length of sunbaths. But three straight hours in the sun are quite enough even after you've acquired a good tan. Use skin lotion, baby oil, or sunn lotion to further reduce negative effects of sun. Heat prostration—sunstroke—is something else to worry about. A combination of intense heat, glaring sun and overexertion add up to sunstroke, especially in persons unacustomed to excessive heat or activity. BE ON THE lookout for the warning symptoms: weakness, dizziness, vertigo, headache, dim or blurred vision, irritability and mild muscular cramps. These early symptoms of sunstroke call for rest in a cool place, salt tablets or salt water. Most persons recover quickly, but if the symptoms persist or become worse, call a doctor quickly. For A Real Summer Cooler Try A King Size Shake or Malt Extra thick - fruit in every spoonful. Vanilla, pineapple, chocolate, strawberry, cherry, blackberry, and lemon flavors. DIXON'S 2500 W. 6th V13-7446 Civil Rights Demonstrators, Police Achieve Rapport in San Francisco SAN FRANCISCO — (UPI)—San Francisco policemen are winning praise for their performance in a ticklish new field of law enforcement—civil rights demonstrations. According to Attorney Terry Francois, local leader of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Chief Tom Cahill's men are doing an excellent job. "The people involved in demonstrations have sensed a new understanding, a new objectivity on the part of police, and they have responded to it," Francois said. AT AN AUTO agency sit-in last spring, demonstrators crowded into autos on showroom floors. But when police arrived, demonstrators stepped out of the cars so they could be arrested without force. This success is due to a new program initiated by Chief Cahill, who tells his men that "demonstrators are not criminals and police officers must understand that." Cahill said the program began modestly with a human relations course for a handful of officers picked especially to work demonstrations. Oil Compact Meeting Draws Two from KU Kansas representatives at the summer meeting of the Interstate Oil Compact Commission in Billings, Mont., June 22-24, will be Dr. John M. Jewett, senior geologist, and Edwin D. Goebel, head of the oil and gas division of the State Geological Survey at KU. Dr. Jewett is a member of the research committee. Goebel serves on the secondary recovery and pressure maintenance committee. HE DESCRIBED the criteria for their selection as "intelligence and objectivity." Once picked, Cahill said, the men are schooled in the problems and goals of such groups as might demonstrate or sit-in. They are also taught to be alert for individuals in a crowd who could turn a peaceful parade into a riot. "All my men are instructed to use force only if absolutely necessary," said Cahill. "We are peace officers, of course, but we want to handle these situations intelligently." THE COURSE has proven so successful that Cahill has taken steps to make it mandatory for every officer on the force—a plan that will take at least 60 weeks to complete. He said that before the program there was general mistrust—"a lack of communication"—between leaders of civil rights groups and police. Then about a year ago the seeds of the program were planted when the department "intelligence section" made the first tentative attempts to contact demonstrators before a demonstration. CAHILL SAID his office heard of an upcoming protest involving about 50 pickets who intended to sit-in. Officers, on Cahill's instructions, called the NAACP and asked that the number of demonstrators be limited to 15 — since that number would accomplish their purpose and make work easier for police. "At first they refused to cooperate," Cahill said, "but they later agreed—apparently deciding, as we had, to give this new approach a try." IT WORKED so well that mistrust withered and was replaced by a new understanding of purpose on both sides. Cahill said. "Now," he said, "they call us and tell us what is planned, how many people will be involved and when and where the demonstration will take place. "They know that if they violate the law they will be arrested. But they also know that it is because we simply are doing our job, and by protecting the rights of others we are protecting their rights as well." Tito, Gheorghiu-Dej Hold Secret Meeting BELGRADE, Yugoslavia-(UPI)—Yugoslav President Marshal Tito and Romanian President Georgie Gheorhui-Dej, two Communist mavericks, held a secret meeting yesterday to discuss their positions in the Sino-Soviet dispute which has split the Communist camp. The official Yugoslav news agency Tanjug said only that the meeting place was on the border, presumably in a government hunting lodge. CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOP ...right off campus 1144 Indiana (12th & Oread) VI3-3034 Closed on Monday OLD WORLD HOSPITALITY . . . MODERN CONVENIENCE! SCF The Round Corner Drug has been serving Lawrence since 1855, providing Lawrence and, later, the Campus with every Pharmaceutical need and sundry item with Quality and complete service our constant goal. Round Corner Drug Store 801 MASS. VI 3-0200 MEL FISHER