12 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Thursday, December 14. 1967 'Project' coeds plan caroling for tonight About 100 women from Gertrude Sellars Pearson Hall will sing Christmas carols tonight for the benefit of Project Concern, an international medical relief organization. The coeds are part of KU's Col- KU awarded speech grant The National Institute for Neurological Diseases and Blindness of the U.S. Public Health Service has awarded KU a grant of $18,132 for research into functions of the larynx. Director of the project is John F. Michel, research associate in the KU Bureau of Child Research. Michel said the study is concerned with unevenness of the vibratory cycle in the vocal folds during speech. "In other words, how we talk and make sounds when we talk," he said. Preliminary study shows unevenness may be connected to a problem in the vocal folds, Michel said. He said he hopes to establish some norms as a function of both intensity and frequency so deviations in speech can be detected accurately. Teachers- Continued from page 9 you learn by forcing knowledge into yourself," he said. "There really is another way—open, relaxed, and receptive." Quinn said those who have sought "another way" in the free university are "students who feel a need for something they're not getting. "They're going to have to offer something quite startlingly different," he said of free university coordinators. "I believe they do not go far outside the framework of what the university normally offers. "My guess is that in a few years the university will have adjusted to the demands being made from all sides," Quinn said. "Our course in 'Wonder' is evidence that the university is more flexible than it used to be." Christmas Art Sale Dec. 16, 10-6 p.m. 17, 2-6 p.m. Portfolio of Drawings, Prints, and Batiks 1242 Louisiana legiates for Concern, according to Dave Keesling, Herington junior and state chairman of Project Concern. Kesling called for "any interested group" to join the carolers. The caroling project has been endorsed by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce and by the KU Board of Class Officers. The board also will sponsor a variety show May 11 in connection with Project Concern. The total goal of the caroling project, Keesling said, is to collect $400,000 needed to build a pediatrics center in DaMpao, South Vietnam. "The show will be something like last year's 'Happiness Is' show," Keesling said. He asked that anyone interested in caroling notify him for needed materials. Salsich claims Kansan erred A Dec. 12 Daily Kansan headline and part of a story involving him were called "misrepresentations" by Hamilton Salsich, assistant instructor of English, when he spoke at a protest meeting in the Kansas Union Wednesday. Salsich said parts of his McCollum Hall talk on a "Freer School" two weeks ago were quoted "out of context" under the headline, "Salsich, ROTC heads debate military." (Editor's note: Indeed, no faceto-face debate between Mr. Salsich and ROTC faculty members ever took place. The story in question was a compilation of Mr. Salsich's earlier comments about KU ROTC and separate Kansan interviews with the ROTC faculty.) WESCOE SPEAKS Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe Wednesday night told members of the All Student Council that they should "deliberate then legislate." See story, page 1.