Page 10 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 2, 1964 Eight Teams Advance To Bowl Semi-Finals Eight undefeated teams advanced to the semi-finals of the KU College Bowl contest which will be March 15. Stephenson hall, last year's College Bowl winner, and Alpha Kappa Lambda were the only undefeated teams in the second round of the preliminary matches yesterday. The other undefeated teams were determined in the round Feb. 23. The six teams are Delta Tau Delta fraternity, PROSE (Independent), Jolliffe, Battenfeld, Joseph R. Pearson No. 1, and Templin halls. Teams of four students, representing KU living groups, answered questions concerning the density of planets, frequency of music notes, and the U.S. monetary system. Fifty toss-up questions were prepared for each of the 48 matches; however, not all were used in any match, Bob The questions used in this year's competition are of a more serious type than in other years. Shenk, Lawrence junior, and chairman of the College Bowl, said. The contest began on Feb. 23 when half of the 32 entering teams competed in the first preliminary round. The second 16 teams competed yesterday. This is the first year that the preliminary match procedure has been followed. It replaces the single-elimination system in deciding the teams to compete in the semi-, quarter-, and final rounds. The exhibit includes drawings typical of the Oak Park period in which the Imperial Hotel was being built in Japan. Architects refer to this period as his most mature and creative. The exhibit also shows Wright's plan for the United States Embassy in Japan. The drawings represent a small chronological section of the life work of the famous architect. Two drawings date back to 1887 when the then 18-year-old Wright applied for employment as a craftsman with the firm of Adler and Sullivan. The majority of the drawings are done in colored pencil. Several drawings by architect Frank Lloyd Wright are on exhibit this week on the third floor of Marvin Hall. The exhibit includes Wright's drawing for the Golden Beacon Building, designed for Chicago in 1956. Another, drawn early in Wright's career, is of a home which combines the simple elegance of an old English cottage with the low, long lines of a modern day ranch home. Tests Keep Moscow 'Hot Line' Warm Frank L.Wright Art Exhibited Under the new procedure, each of the 32 teams meets three opponents. The drawings are the property of Curtis Besinger, associate professor of architecture, who for several years worked with Wright. WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Once every hour, seven days a week, a terse message crackles over wires between Washington and Moscow. It is gibberish. It may say "the quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog's back." It may be a line from a musty technical journal or a scrap of classical Russian literature. One hour the meaningless message goes from West to East; the next, East to West, hour upon hour, week upon week, month upon month. And yet "meaningless" may not be the right word. THE MESSAGES ARE test transmissions of the "hot line" Russia and the United States set up last year to communicate in the moments before—and hopefully to forestall—mutual nuclear destruction. THE THIRD, IN July, 1663, was the limited nuclear test ban agreement, finally signed in August. It banned nuclear testing in the atmosphere, under water and in space—all areas where tests can be detected from afar without inspection on Soviet soil, to which Russia objects. The second agreement, in June, 1963, was the hot line agreement. It grew out of a long deadlock in Geneva disarmament negotiations, after the Russians, in April, 1963, suddenly agreed to discuss "collateral measures." They reflect much about U.S.-Soviet relations—mistrust, fearful power, the unattainability of real disarmament, the nibbling efforts to achieve some protection from power. THE FIRST WAS THE Antarctic Treaty of 1959, which banned military operations including nuclear weapons and nuclear tests from the Antarctic continent and provided for inspection against cheating. Early this year the United States conducted the first inspection of Russian Antarctic scientific bases under the treaty. Russia and the United States stared into the abyss of war and had to exchange messages by press wires because diplomatic channels were too slow. In 18 years of negotiations Russia and the United States have achieved no agreement for even a modicum of real disarmament. They have achieved four agreements for steps designed to whittle away at the risk of war. The fourth, last October, was a U.S.-Soviet agreement which made possible a United Nations resolution calling on all nations to refrain from placing weapons of mass destruction in outer space. It also stemmed from the October, 1962. Cuba-missile crisis in which This last had a hollow ring inasmuch as military experts say it is impractical at present to try to put nuclear weapons into orbit. But the Russians wanted it—perhaps to demonstrate a mood of cooperation. OPEN HEARTH CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS - Pan-Fried Chicken - Shrimp Dinners Include: Garden fresh salad, choice of potatoes, onion rings, home made hot rolls, butter & drink. Pit Barbequed thes - Sandwiches - Pizza Burgers - Spanish Burgers - Cheese Burgers - Hal Burgers HAL'S STEAK HOUSE HIGHWAY 59 SOUTH ACROSS FROM HILLCREST GOLF COURSE Phone: VI2-9445 Closed Sundays Open: 4-Midnight DRESS RIGHT, DRESS! for HIM - Every Crease Knife Sharp - Inspection Perfect for HER GOOD CLEANING COSTS LESS! - Formals Finished to Perfection Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers 1959 after 1956 Rece cove Outi Bob COLOR BY DE LUXE Shows 7:00 & 9:00