8 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday, January 12, 1968 Greeks take corrective steps- Continued from page 7 Council has organized a series of programs in which University professors visit campus houses for dinner and to give lectures on their fields. Hazing of pledges has been The School of Fine Arts will present two events during the remainder of this semester, both open to the public without admission charge. The third annual Opera Workshop, directed by George Lawner, head of operatic activities and an orchestra director, will be at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday nights in Swarthout Recital Hall. Assistant director is David Holloway, voice instructor. Act III of Offenbach's "Tales of Hoffman" will be sung in French, and Act II, scene 2 of Verdi's "Falstaff" will be sung in Italian. The entire one-act comic opera, "Gianni Schichi" by Puccini, will be sung in English. Patrons are requested to park their cars in Zones E and C. Two shows to be given by Fine Arts The Chamber Music series will present the Chigianno Sextet at 8 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall. The program will include works by Boccherini, Martinu and Dvorak. KUOK on air Jan.28 KUOK, KU's radio station, will begin broadcasting on Sunday. Jan. 28 for second semester. For the first week of operation, the format will be all top-forty and golden hits. Listeners are encouraged to phone in requests. Don McClow, station adviser said. Student Special 1 to 4 p.m. Sundays WITH I.D. CARDS 2 Ench. 2 Tacos $1.50 Ench. Taco Beans Chile Verde $1.90 CASA DE MONTEZ VI 2-9475 807 Vt. If you see news happening— banned on most campuses by interfraternity councils and in some individual chapters. At all University of Texas houses, and a few of KU's,"hell week" has been replaced by "help week." institution that has been part of, and in many cases has dominated, their pulse beat for 133 years. If the attitude of today's college generation is in keeping with the national trend toward social organizations in general, college campuses might very well lose an Now that the objections are getting louder and more numerous it seems the fraternities are being forced to look around at the national trend toward social organizations—and conform. The intellect is moving ahead of the institution. Jay Strayer, assistant dean of men for fraternity affairs, was quoted in the last issue of the Greek Column: "We've got to start thinking of fraternities as more than mere social organizations. They are part of the University, and perhaps we should start thinking of them as general academic fraternities." January grads to march in June With the system of checking and double-checking prospective graduates' grades after finals, it is hard to get all the programs printed in time for the ceremony, Shenk said. It also is too short a time to prepare the diplomas for distribution, so they are mailed to the graduates a few weeks later, he said. Semester graduates again are leaving the Hill without pomp and circumstance. Shenk said diplomas formerly were handed out at the ceremony, but now there are too many students. There are 2,706 seniors this year, and more than 400 aoc expected to graduate at semester. These two figures do not include graduate students or medical school students who will receive degrees. Their glory must wait until June, when graduates of last summer and this spring march down Mt. Oread into Memorial Stadium. "It's nearly impossible to make ready a ceremony once a year in the short time between finals and graduation, let alone two times or more," said Henry Shenk, professor of physical education and former chairman of the committee on commencement ceremonies. call UN 4-3646 NOW!! Show Times 7:15 & 9:15 Matt Helm Rides Again Dean Martin in "THE AMBUSHERS" NOW! 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