Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 29, 1963 Boland Sees Split in UN (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) tions. But most of the peace-keeping activities since 1945 and the advent of the cold war have been conducted despite disapproval by at least one of the major powers. Boland pointed out the original military power of the UN was to be controlled by the big powers, but most of the recent UN military actions have been conducted by the armed forces of the small and non-aligned nations. The peace-keeping responsibility which the framers of the Charter College Bowl Finals To Be Held Sunday The winner of College Bowl competition will be decided Sunday. The championship round of the tournament will be held immediately following semi-final competition in the Kansas Union. The two semifinal matches, which begin at 2:15 p.m., are between Joseph R. Pearson-Beta Theta Pi and Pearson Hall-Stephenson Hall Winners will compete for the championship title. The final match will be held in the Forum Room at 3:00 p.m. Francis Heller, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, will moderate. Moderators for the semi-final rounds will be A. A. Strassenburg, associate professor of physics, and Richard Kuhn, associate professor of romance languages. Besides trophies, the winners will also earn the chance to compete for the Big Eight College Bowl championship. Frank Thompson, Iola junior, who is chairman of the College Bowl Committee said that all of the Big Eight Schools except Oklahoma have notified him that they are interested in participating. The Big Eight tournament will be held at KU, May 12. Back 40 Dies Beneath Plow By Blaine King All that furious activity at Jayhawk Boulevard and Plowed Ground is simply another sign of spring. Buildings and Grounds has decided the grass in front of Watson Library has given up the chlorophyll, and in keeping with the traditional rites of the season is planting new grass. Verdant foliage will once again grace the KU campus. OF COURSE, rain will make that plowed ground soft, hindering the thoughtless student who cares not at all for verdant foliage and traipsees across lawns with the carefree abandon of a puppy chewing on Janie Coed's Dear-Sweet-Favorite-Stuffed-Lion-She-Keeps-on-Her-Bed-And-Will-Treasure-Always That carefree student may well be the reason the grass has decided this life just isn't worth it. The only place where ruts are worn deeper than KU lawns is the Santa Fe Trail. The grass which will be planted in the newly-prepared ground is described as a mixture of blue grass, tescue, and whatever else will grow. Because of the varying degrees of sunlight and shade, different types of grass must be planted. AND UNLESS somebody has repealed the laws of nature recently, the mixture will also include dandelions and crab grass. Grass is expected to cover the area in about a month and a half. Until that time, keep off the grass. Give it a fighting chance. FRATERNITY JEWELRY expected to be discharged by the members of the Security Council have been discharged by the members as a whole." Boland said. He said the main threat to wompeace is now war between the bigpowers instead of between smallnations, as the framers of the UNCharter had expected. This new role for the small, nonaligned nations has been accompanied by the breakdown of the groups in the UN, Boland said. KHRUSHCHEV once described the membership of the United Nations as being divided into three groups—the Western bloc, the Communist bloc and the non-aligned nations. He used these classifications to support the Soviet proposal that the United Nations General Assembly be headed by a "troika" representing each of these three groups, Boland said. But the members of the United Nations had already had too much experience with the Soviet veto in the Security Council to allow it to be used in the General Assembly, he said. "But Mr. Khrushchev's classification does not appear quite so persuasive." The monolithic unity described by Khrushchev in his classifications simply does not exist, Be.and said. sive today as it did when he first presented it." Boland said. REFERRING to Charles de Gaulle, Boland said: "His decision that France should have her own nuclear deterrent . . . seems to constitute nothing less than a direct challenge to the leadership of the Western alliance." He described the armed conflict on the India-Chinese border has "a traumatic experience for the non-aligned nations." The conflict showed that a non-aligned nation must turn to one of the aligned blocs for aid, he said. Boland said these recent changes within the United Nations and within the major power blocs have created a new mood in the UN "a mood of reappraisal, reassessment; a mood to suspend judgment until the political situation can be seen in better perspective." "THIS IS a time for caution, for discretion" by the members of the United Nations, Boland said. CAPE CANAVERAL — (UPI) — The nation's most famous space scientist has announced that the United States is on the verge of matching the Soviet Union pound-for-pound in missile boosting power. Von Braun Says U.S. Will Match USSR Dr. Wernher von Braun said the government plans to put what may be the heaviest and oddest satellite ever built into earth orbit in August. Von Braun's casual announcement followed the thunderous flight of the 165-foot Saturn "super-rocket" across the Atlantic Ocean. It was the fourth success in a row for the mighty Saturn-1 and paved the way for something that had been planned all along — the first attempts this year to launch the big rockets with "live" upper stages powered by liquid hydrogen. The shot announced by Von Braun for August will weigh about 33,000 pounds, but it will do little more than tell ground tracking stations that it is in orbit = a sort of space-age equivalent to putting the brain of a flea inside the body of an elephant But the significance is that such a shot would mean America at last is on the brink of coming abreast of the Soviet Union in space booster power. The best estimates to date place the largest Russian satellites — the manned Vostocks and unmanned Cosmos moonlets — at about 18,000 to 20,000 pounds. ROBERTO'S SUNDAY SPECIAL on Spaghetti & Pizza DANCING FREE — FAST DELIVERY ON CAMPUS CALL VI 3-1086 Get Lucky Play "Crazy Questions" 50 CASH AWARDS A MONTH. ENTER NOW. HERE'S HOW: First, think of an answer. Any answer. Then come up with a nutty, surprising question for it, and you've done a "Crazy Question." It's the easy new way for students to make loot. Study the examples below; then do your own. 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